ii , llow ON 1" --''For t + o first fiveyears of my professional life," nee s f id a gen• tleman to us, "I had to ors ag,dinst wind and stream and tide." "And i what did you do?" was our question. , "Do ?" re plied he, "why I rowed on, io be sure.' And so he did row on, and to a good pur pose too, nutil he came to open sea, took favorable breezes,and brought his voyage to a most successful terufipatioo, leaving behind him a most—ouvrable reputation for worth and wisdom,. impressing the 'mark of his strong- mind and excellent character deep , and clear'on the commu nity in which tie lived, and obtained an immortality worth more than a monarchs crown in the memory of thousands. His remark de.ferves to be remembered as a motto. The great business of all is to "row on" with unflinching courage and steady. perseverance. All trades and pro fessions have their difficulties, and almost every individual meets with di,couragc• meats. The only way, therefore, to go ahead is to "row on." Decision of char- acter,deterroination of will, the resolution to press on,wheo sure we a:e on the right _track or in pursuit of a good and honor- _able eod, this is the secret of living so as to come ont at last safe and sound. —The St. Paul (Miss )Press of May 5, contains an account of the murder of Mr. A. J. Jewett and his ( family, the entire party clambering five persons, and living en the east fork of the Blue Earth River near the rapids. The tragedy oils enact. ed on Wednesday, May,2, the aggressors being a gang of Sioux Indians. The in diet! all escaped capture for the time, although a half-breed, who was identified fully as one of the desperadoes, making bis appearanne at. ankato a day or two afterwards, Was hung by the people with out judge or jury. There was evidence for supposing that no less than nine sep trate .bands of Indian marauders were organized and ready for act attack upon Maukato, which place on the other hand was preparing for active resistance,by the organization of such military measures as were pos.tibla A Washington spedial to "The Phila delphia Inquirer". says : "Col. L. C. Ba ker bas bad photographs of Davis,Tucker, Clay, Saudcrs,Cleary;and Thowpson,with full descriptions of their stature,hair eyes, kc., prepared on large hand•bilis, stating the price set upon the beads of each one and their crime , of being accessories to the assassination. These baud-bills,sim• ilar to the rewards offered for horse thieves, will be posted through Canada 'and Europe,so that these °rim inals,should they he allowed toescape via Elalifax,will be tracked wherev.r they go and marked forever. There is no sequestered spot for them. 'No rest for them in this world." Capt. Robert Lincoln has returned to Washington laud will, in a few days, ac company his mother to Illinois. The President has issued a proclamation enjoining upon our naval vesse!s to cap ture all Rebel cruiser 3 and bring tli:m into port that their crews may no logger enjoy immunity for their crimes ; and he -warns all foreign nations that may pet mit them to enter their ports that ho-pitality will be refused to their vessels in the ports of the United States. The Proclamasion also recognizes the State of Virginia as restored to the Union and orders meas ures to be taken ior -the reestablish ment of her government and the rostora 'Lion If peace within her boundaries. The assassins awaiting their trial at 'Washington are 'kept under the strictest guard. and every preellut ion taken to bre• vent their eonituitting 'suicide. Padded masks cover their entire heads except - the mouth. It is ti °via that three of the Ford theater employcei wi:l be convicted, although Ford .himself seems innocent. Payne, the assassin of Seward,will be the first tried. A. verdict was rendered - on , Mouday in the Circuit Court sitting at New Albany, Ind., against the Louisville, New Albany and Chicago Railroad Company for SlO,- 000, on account of a boy named William Langdon having had his •legs cut off by being' run over by the,Compny's cars. Pennsylvania would not allow the Government to defray the expenses in. curred while transporting the President's remains through the State. Gov.Curtiu maintained that_ we should at least do so much to show",eur respect and love for our departed ohief,ood the whole expense 'iv a s paid by tbe.State Treasurer. ti • —The first election under' the new charter of City of Lockport was held to day. Benjamin Carpenter (Union) was elected Mayor by 160 majority. The Republicans have also elected six of the eight Aldermeu,and three out of the fou Supervisors. MOB.TLE TO BE A TTACK£I3.—A power. fill expedition is ready to sail from New Orleans to attack Mobile. There is are port however, which would seem to be confirmed, that Mobile has beon evactia. ted, the guns, Munition, &o, having been( rent tip the river to Selma. Thomas Martin, the guerrilla, who was re - spited last week by order of the- War Department, suffered the extreme penalty of the law at Cincinnati on Thursday, the 11th inst. The Riamouti Whig of Monday states it to be tbo intention of Gov. Pierpont to issue a proelatnation this ° week dee larine all - civil offices in. Virginia vacant, and orderin 3 133,411631403 i. _ , A Visit io Prettlasint Listicolo.f , ; Yoy pass into the Presidentll room of business through lan ante roottqwhiab has no doubt been paced by many lan appli. cant for office, and mauy an idtriguer.-- "There is no formality—nothing in the:. shape of a . gnarl ; and, if this Wan is really a tyrant "worse than Rofrespicrre," he must have great confidence in the O ng sufferance,of his kind. The room is a common office room—the only t ornament' that struck the writer's eye i betng a lage photograph of John Bright. •,('I 1 - - The President's fade andl figure are well known by like eases and Caricatures. The large boned a d sinewy 'frame, six feet four inches ip height, is, probably that of the yeomanry of the ; north of England--=the district, from ` . Which Lin colu's enure :11E4 suggests 'that iforefatere cawe—made spare and gaunt y the cli mate of America. The face it like man ner,denotes an English yeoman's solidity of character and good sense, with some i thing superadded from enterprising life and sharp habits of the western Yankee. The brutal fidelity; of the photograph, as usual, has given the features of the origi nal but left out the expressign. It was one-of kindness, and, except when opeei ally, moved to wirt,of seriousness and care. The wanner and address are; perfectly simple,modest and unaffected, and there fore free from vulgarity in theeyes of all who are rot vulgar iliemselve t s4 ' I 1 • In the course of the conversation he told two or three stories—it stories they may be called—always by'vvilylcif illustrat iug some remark he had !Made, rather than for the sake of the anecdote itself. The writer recognized in thi's'propensity as he thought, not a particularly joctilar temperment, much less an addiction to b'rutal levity, such as would call for a comic song among soldiers' graves, but the humor of the Nest, especially of "a Western man accustomed tojaddress pop ular audiences, and to Were° his ideas by wed and homely illustriations. . - You must have studied 'die American character--and indeed the English chati acter, of which it' is the offspring—very superficially if you do not know that tizi portant subjects, is perfectly compatible , with • great 'earnestness and seriousness beneath. The language of the Presided like his demeauor, was perfectly simple;', ha did not let' fall a ',single:oarae or vol., gar expression, and all his ;wards I had la meaning —Professor Goltlwin Smith ins illuckmillan's .211agzine. ,i MR. LINCOLN"; TOMB. The public has a cony sell unrlerstand ing of the fact that there i ns ad earnest struggle over the final 'restingtflace of the mortal remains of 'Abraham Lincoln, which was not terminated ill' the day ; ot their interment ; but it i ; not so well known as it should be that tberanever was any division or hesitation on the part ;of ' his family,- - who were uniforculy averse to his burial alone in an "eight acre square in the center.of Spiing6elcl,; but insisted ' that his dust should mingle with its kin dred clay in the public cemetry two miles from the whirl and roar of trafkand( not be made the chief advertisement o i l a smart and growing city. Itobett Lincoln did not decide the point, ;as some of; the reports have indieated; he simply; an nounced the nnanituois and .unehangea• ble resolve of the family that the ashes of him they loved should repose in a ceme' try—that of SpFingtielePlf that were allow. ed ; if not that, some other, While doing justice to the liberality and public spirit which dictated to- purchase of an eight acre lot for th tomb,at a cost of 855,000 we inust say ti at the deCision of the fam ily seems to u that whih good taste and ;right feelingould naturally prompt.— i,ll 1 And the menu ent to; 41r. Lincoln will I rise over his r mains in Oak'Ridge,Ceoi. et rj .-- Triti),e. • : 1 I The old :Not •Stato;odna es to be wheel. ing back into he Union i in good earnest Large and enthusiastic Union meetings have been held in Gold - borough, Snow- Ilill, Kinston, Sinithet'eld. Wilson and ; many other places. r Prominent; men in ail the coutites are taking an active part in this movement,' and the lrilding papers of the State are 'heartily supporting it. The decision of the Government not to recognize Gov. Vance is generally approv ed by the Unionists. WAIT. 11,olden,tbe rditor of The Raleig h .:' f .ltandard,' seem to be seected .by the majority of the Unionists as their candidate •for Govern l'or. The di' 7 mission of Slavery is yet avoided in the Unidnipapers and ;meet ings ; but. The Standcird,t he chief organ of the„Uniodisfs, declares tint it regards the settled v ilisi. Aim; instit.. lion of Kivery is goae ' • that it: could not save tpe iostitutioM if it would. It is safe to say that this view willim general ly coot:dried in by the I party,atd there; is of d reason for ;hoping . that gradually the anti Slavery sestinient may also in• erase in s‘rengtb ) and that Nortb Caro lttip,un the meeting of its Conventinn,will f now the example of Mat'yland,; West Virginia,; Missouri, Tennessee at4Lonis. tana,and adopt the Constitutional Ainend went abolishing Slavery. 1 9 , i Some.years ice, in a Gubernatorial 'contest, Andrew Johntion was told by his coleague; that lie would never beelected Governor of Tennessee Johnson, in his rejoinder, used language to this import: "I shall not only be elected Governor of Tennessee, but when Your name shall be a hissing and byword among the people,l expect to ,be, filling , the !Presidential chair." To day his competitor is a ref fugee from his native State+-a traitor of :he first water--in the pers'on Gaeta -1r ns A. Henry, a rebel ,Confederate Sena. - tor and Johnson is "tilling the Presiden tial chair." I “Southern chivlry.” Capture of Jefferson Davis'! I STEALS HIS WIFE'S PETTICOAT AND HUNS.! ° MAcetr, May 12. - I have the honor to report that at day. light of the 10r11 inst., Col. Pritchard, commanding 4th Michizan Cavalry. Cd!:- tured Jeff. Davis >and fatuity, with Reagan,Postmaster General; Col. Harrison Private E`ecretary ; Cot. Johnson, A. P. G. ; Col j Morrie, , Col. Lubbeck. Liens (Hathaway and others. Col. Pritchard iurpriscd their came at Irwinsville, in Irwin County; Ga , 75 miles south east of this plade. They will be here tn. morrow night. and will be forwarded under strong guard without delay. I will send furthet particulars at once. J. 11. WILSON 'Brevet llaj. Gen MAcoN, Ga., May 13. Hon. E. M. STANToN, Sec. of. War : 13$rden,commanding the "Ist Wisconsin. has, just arrived from Irwins. vale. He struck, the trail of Davis at • Dublin, Lauretis County, on the evening of the 17th, and followed him closely night and day through the pine wilder. nese of Aligator Creek and Greeli Swamp vit Cutnberlandville, to. Irwinvi le. • At Cumberlaudvillel Vol Holden met Col. Ilitchard with • 15D picked men and horses of The 4th Michigan. flarden,followed the trail directly south while Priteharil, haying- fresher horses. pushed down the'Ocmulgee toward Flop well, and thence by House Creek to Ir winsville, arriving there at midnight of the 9th. Jeff. Davis had not arrived. From a citizen Pritchard learned that hi- party were encamped two miles out o f the town. He made disposition of his men, and surrounded the' mop before day.. Harden had camped, at 9p. m.,-within two miles, as be afterward learned, from Davis. ( ' The trail being too indistinct to follow he pushed on at 3 a. m., and bad gone but little more than ope mile when his advance was fired upon by men of the 4th Michigan. A fight ensued, both parties exhibiting. the greatest determination. Fifteen min- , utes el4sed before the mistake was dis covered 1, , The firing id this skirmish was the first warning that Davis received. The captors report that be hastily put on one of his 'wife's dresses and started for the woods, closely 'followed by our men, who at first thought him a woman but seeing his boots while heivas running they suspected his sex 6t once. The race was a short! one, and the Reb el President was soon brought to bay.— He brandished a bowielknifeand showed' sigin4 of battle, but yifilded promptly to / the persuasions of Coltis r volvers, with out compelling the teen to fire. i He expressed greatindignation at the energy with which he was! pursued, say ing that he had believed our Governinent more magnanimous than to hunt down women and children. ' . Mrs. Davit remarked to Col. Harden after the excitement!' whs over that the men had better not provoke the President or "he might him some of 'em." • Regan behaves himself with dignity and resignation. • • The party evidently, were making for the coast. J. H. WILSON, BrOvet Major General WASHINGTON, May 14 The public here manifest the utmost enthiniasm over the Captuie of Jellerson Davis. Soma timid politicians,however, express a wish that he had been shot as Booth was for fear his posiiession may be embarrassing to the Government.' If he is placed to the prisoner's dock at the court, by the side of Harrold and Payne he will certainly be convicted of complic ity in the assassination of' Mr. Lincoln. It is urged strenuously, however, ( by some in high position that the dignity of the nation demands, that on his arrival here the assassination, charge ought to be waived,and he be arraigned and tried for treason, the highest criwo known to our laws, and, OD conviction, banged. See. Stanton will order Jeff. Davis to be put on a gunboat and forwarded direct to WaSl3lDg,ton. A new idea connected with the asses illation of tho President is broached by the Washington correspondent of the . ginteburg cotrinNernita,who aftya • i.We hear it stated, that on the night of the assassination, there were in the theatre over one hundred persons who had direct or indirect know!edge of what was to happen. Many of thsse persons had a victim vlected, but their part of the murder failed, from the fact .that the parson selected to turn off the gas at the clack of Booth'a ptstol, from some cause OT other failed to erform his part. if the gas had been turned off Booth would have escaped recoinitibn. Had Grant' been there he would lave fallen an easy victim. Booth did not expect the failure of. the person to turn off,the gas and after the deed was done had to make` the most of it." I._ One year men are to be returned to their respective State Capitals and mustered out of the service. Edwin' Booth, in a private letter to a friend in Washiocton, announces his de• terroinat on to quit the stage forever. I Gueir rearirog: illae are said to be rapidly diaap• in Virginia, National Debts and if S. Stocks. The creation of national debts is no: a modern imprevement, but ihe ability of a great nation to provide for ~a great debt, and to•make it the most convenient and best form of personal property is a modern wonder. Thu debt of Great Britain was begtin by raising a tuilkon sterling by loan in 1692 and ellen hergrest eptest ' with Louis XI V. was ternnnated,the debt I had reached fifty Millions. Many states I men and economists were then alarated l at the great burden which had been imposed upon the industiy of the country,' but when the war of the Austrian'sneces sion had swelled this amount to eichty millions, Macaulay says that historians and orators pronounced the case to be desperate. Bat when the war again broke out, and the national debt. was rapidly ,carried up to one hundred and forty mil lions, men of theory and business both pronounced that the fatal daylad main ly arrived. David flume said that, although, by taxing its energies to the utmost, the country might possibly live through it, tiM experiment must never be repeated,--eren a small increase might be fatal. Granville said the nation must sink under h unless some portion of the load was borne by the Ainerican Colonies, and the attempt to impose this load produced the war of the revolution, and, instead of II hashivg, added another hundred millions to the burden. Again, says Macaulay,was England given over, but again she was more prosprous than ever before. But when at the close of her Napoleonic wars in 1816, this debt had been swelled - up to the enormous sum of over eight hundred millions sterling. or four thousand three hundred million dollars, or nearly one half the entire property of the United I(ingdom, ,the stoutest heart, the &meet believer in national progress and :national develop ment, might well have been appalled.-- But in the very face of this mountain of obligation,—to say nothnig of her vast colonial possessions.---the property a the British nation has been more than trebled,• and her debt is now'a chafge of but 12i per cent, against it. All that Great Brit ain has done In paying her debt, we shall do, and more, with ours. iWe have vast territories untouched by the plow, mine- of precious metals of which we have hardly opened the doors; a population full of life; energy, enterprise and indus try, and the accumulated Wealth of money and labor of the old coaoiries pout, into the r lap of our giant ;tol ever•to h. united republic. During, the .tiererst , most exhaustible of alt possible wars, we hive demonstrated our national strength— end all' the world over, nationl strength is but another name for na,tionl credit.-- 2 "As good as UnitedStoelts" will socn be synonymone the world over with "as: good as British Consols." For our part, we 'think a U. S Treasury note, bearing seven and three-tenths, annual interest, ds just as much better than British Consols as the rate of interest is higher. Some of oar i timid brethren, who shipped their gold to London and invested in consols, are pow glad to sell out and invest at , a , round loso,—and served them right. Andy Johnson says the Debt must he paid We hear that Andy Johnson, who was barn poor, and raised Poor, and is yet of the people in his property and expecta tions, has given the order for Retrench ment audi Economy, and declared that the Nation must go right Co work to pay its Debts. Good ! The National Debt as been ciphered up, and the sum totallis a big one,—but the American People is a big one too. On the Ist of July next our debt will foot uplin round nunibers Three Thou sand Millions. We 'c / an pay it without strain, without oppression." We can pay it, and add to our wealth. But we have got to practice cconoMy, public and pri vate. We have pati i ticulary to apply economy and watchfullness to the Leg. islation of Congress, and to ihe ad minis. tration of the Departments and Bureaus in. Washington. The expenses of the Government must be rj hoved back rapidly and in good faith toward the 'old peace footing of 1860.. We may never again get quite t 6 that,—blit let us git as near to it as Nye can. 1 1 The ablest statists in the service of the' Treasury DeparttuentLhave been directed to measure the wealth nd resources of the nation, and to calcul4te wheu it will be possible for mi to pay and probable that we will pay, that immense debt of Three Thousand Millions. They have reported iliac fife - -bottom - °Dar" ;of it can. Le paid in twenty years front 1870 !! cl Good again I Le the watchword of all Politics be—PAY OFF THE NATIONAL DEDT! • 1 , The'7.3os and the End of the War. i The gaeatest war of modern history has ended in triurnpb. The country has demonstrated the v#tnesis of its power. We know it was great ; now all the world knows it. Our nvghbers across the i water, who said our• very greatness was weakness—Ahat wo should never hold together—that we, must fall to pieces and very small pies s at that—nom take off their bats and 'beg to assure us of their ''most dieting ished consideration." ation that can raise s of money, just for y of being "consider. e could not carry on without begging for markets. We did war as they never , ur years, and never • ridthe; DOR Whitt to _ _ _ _ _ Verily ! a young two thousand millio the asking; is worth ad." They told ns the war six months loans in .;uropea carry on such a , dreamed for f asked for 4) dollar; • I buy our bonds at an advance of fifty per cent. over last year's prices. Government stocks are quoted as brisk and in demand, and well they may be, . for. the time, will soon come whenbo more Will be offered. The national expenses till be down to a peace footing, and, instead of, a Trettiury bugdet of nice hundred millieds,Seeretary McCulloch will ask us for about a , third of that suw. And bow mtieh easier it will be Ito r j aise this in peade, that in war 1 The millions of .soldiers who have so long made it; business to destroy life and property ill return to pursuits of indus try,. and the now ravaged fields will whiten :with new harvests. Instead of reading: every morning that so many miles of railroad ; have been destroyed, it will be-that "so many new avenues to material wealth have been opened." The, South itself Will be compelled .to bear its share of the b rden it imposed! on the country, and its cotton—so much greater than gold. and still so !much less than king—will bar no ;attribnte of royalty but what it pays into the revenue. , A tax on SOuthern cotton will 'be quite as easily collected as on Northern petroleum or manufaetures,, and besides the article must be had—the World wants it. 'lt would take tint a fraction of our property to pay our national debt 'now : but if we do no pay a dollar of the prin cipal in ten years, that fraction will be reduced one-half--by the development of the national resources. We shall doubt less wind op the war and square all j accqunta with the national debt of less than three thousand millions on about 18 per cent. of the present national wealth; but, according to its rate of increase (127 per cent.) frouj 1850 to 1860,—in 1875 this debt will be less than nine per dent. But our abtliti, to pay thenational debt needs no demonstration ; bin as some of us tave looked upon the dark side, we may as well,haFe a glance at: the sunshine The national loans will soonbe out of the market,-- 7 -but for a short time the Government will need money to pay off the army and Isettle up the expenses of the war. Only about two hundred millions more I ,of the second series of the 7-30 Loan :remain to be taken, and when it is finally wi l thdrawn, there is no doubt that it will raise to a handsome premium and at the'Jate it is nw going', some time within the next sixty days will see the , last of this series. Mr. Jay Cooke, the subscription agent, announced in Febru ary t that the first two hundt ea millions of 7.30's will probably be taken in at par from three of four months"—bnt they were taken in less than two. So that parties who desire to invest at par in the U. S. Loan, bearing seven and three tenths annual interest, and in three years contertible into 5.20 six per cent. gold interest bond should make their prepa rationaccordin_tly , ',.\ tab) , ~I it., best financial auth , rities believe I ha, the Government will be able to folid such portions of its debt, as it may ii. t be ready to pay as it falls due at 4i per ' cent. • The subscriptions to the Seven Thirty Loan yesterday reached the enormous sum of $15;165,300. One banking house in this city seta an order for $5,039,400 the largest single subscription ever toads to a Government loan in tho country. Large subscriptions were alsol received from other; parts of the country in single names, but a large'proportion of them,un, doubtedly, go to fill orders from individ uals. The loan is emPhatieally a popular one, the people seeking in it an invest ment for their surplus means. It is not only a striking evidence of the faith of the people in the strength,and permanen cy of the Government, of which indeed there was never any doubt, but of the general prosperity of the country and of its recuperative energy after four years exhausting war. If foreign capitalists' want to invest in our National loan they had better be quick about it, for ht the I rate at which it is now goi i ng Amhriean bonds will not be inn!: in the market except at a high premitaw --Tribune, May, 10. FRON EUROPE.—Later news frourEu rope represents that the assassanation of President Lincoln continued to call forth throughout Europe,and especially io Eng land, the strongest manifestations of sympathy for the American people and the severest denunciatitin of the crime. Immense meetin g s have been held in London, Liverpool and other' places at which speechles were made! and resolu tions adopted expressive of the people'p grief at_ our loss and condemnation of the infamous conspiratins. It is expected that Queen Victoria will send an address of condolence to our. governtrient. • The matter was officially noticed in both houses of Parliament. The excitement on the first announcement of the assassination in the various English cities was of the most intense character. The latest news from Mexico,leaves nti doubt that the Republican forces' have of late made considerable progrea. It is reported that several of the Governors and othCr officers appointo by Maximil ian, have, like Cortioals, pronounced against him. There must be some truth -in these reports, for the Estafette, a semi official paper, gives as its profound con viction. that Mexico must be ruled for many years yet without calling Mexican statesmen to power. Maximilian, on receiving the news 'of the surrender of. Lee, sent the Chief of his Cabinet as a special envoy to the 'United States. It is reported that James ,Murdoch, the well known actor, is lying dangerously ill at Cincinnati. SIMMONS' COLLIN. iRIENDS AND CTSTOMERS: I return you , my sincere thanks for your liberal patronage ; for the past few years, and would say to you! that ,I hare located myselfat N. Y., and may 'hereafter b found at the . EMPIRE STORE AND NEW YORE STORE (Having bought out the Store formerly *Cm , pied by Geo. Asher), I Atilt Continue to, WHOLESALE AND' RETAtb in both of the above Stores, and hope to; see all of my old friends and ctistomers, as they are in want of Goods, and mill try to sell them low enough to pay them for coming. - We are now selling the best PRINTS from 12 to 18 cents. .; Extra GINGHAMS from 'l5 to 25,cente. Good MEETINGS from 12 to 25 cents. TICKS, DENIMS, STRIPES, and all alms Goods in proportion. CLOTRIXG.-- Good suits for $lO to• $l5 and Extra Eno witsi in proportion. And as I have an over stock of Clothing I will sell at. Whole sale 15 per cent. less than the same can be bought in New York. BOOTS S. HATS' & CAPS, SHAWLS, CLOAKS, &c., at reduced prices, GROCERIES AND very low RICH DRESS SILKS, EMPRESS CLOTH POPLINS,j, and all other styles of Ladies' Dress Goods, very low. Hoping to receive an early call, I remain your friend, C.lll. SIMMONS. Wellsville, N. Y., March 26, 1866. FOR SALE Tlng ES t u r b a s c e ts or ribcr ia •o n il d to ersfo w r i S t ale the follow One tract of One Hundred and Forty-three and serbn-tenths ..acres in Pike township; Potter county, on the Genesee Forks. Price $llOO. Sixty acres are improved, with one log barn, frame isitcben, frame barn, forty good fruit trees; and two hundred sugar maple trees.- The farm will cut grass, in a good season, sufficient, at present prices, to pay for it. Also, another ,tract 'of Fifty-six andtwo tenths acres, in.Eulalia!township. four miles from Coudersport, Thirty acres of which are improved, with one frame house, log barn, awl some fruit trees thereon. Price $450. Also, a Wagon Shop; and ha;f lot in the Borough of Coudersport, one lot west of P. A. Stebbins' &.Co's Store dear Glassmire's Hotel. The tools, lumber, kc 4 can be bought ree sonably or a portion of thern;if the purchaser so desires. One - half can be paid in Wagon- Work. A reductioli of ten tier cent will be made for Cash down. .1 For further Particulars enquire of the sub. scriber at his Wagon-Shop in Coudersport. Feb. 20, 1865. W. ' . IVES. oes •=1 - • if r:l4 E. fif I wish all. persona having open aceciunt with me to call and settle immediately. I will sell All my stoc C ic. h of e ll a e p reh f an r dis? h Consisting of .CLOTAING, BOOTS, and SHOES, DRUGS, CROCKERY, , 1 GROCERIES, TOOLS, &e., 1 Good Horse and Harness. ' 3 Wagons, 1 1 Cutter, 1 SU'key, The privilege of a good Ashery in Conn• piece warping prder. 15 Cents paid for good ASHES. LIiCLEN BIRD. Brookland. Pa., Sept., 1864. WAGON ,SHOP ! MBE subseriber 'having located in Lewis- Tullel. is prepared to do all kinds of work in his line, on short notice and in the but manner. Making' and RePairing of all kinds. - 1 am'enabled by.the aid of ma. cliinery to do work; in the wagon-lina better and cheaper than any other establishisent in the county. I am also prepared to maks COFFINS. i EDSON HYDE.. Ulysses, Penn t a," Dec. 1, 1884 P CROCKERY O
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers