The Potter Journal A ST) r-J £"W S IX . COUDERSPORT. PA., May 2, 1873. Agricultural. The papers of late have had vari ous notices of agricultural societies, associations, etc., some of which seem to combine literary with agricultural improvement, and to be very com forting and cheering sign of the times. Farmers' families, from ex cess of work and by being compara tively remote from educational and social centres/are deprived of very many opportunities of improvement that are open to other classes of peo ple; while they arc, by ti.eir close association with nature's processes, possessed of much information and many ideas that would benefit others. Anything, therefore, that will extend j their social spheres and cause them to be felt as an intellectual as well as! a productive power in the laud, must be a help to all other members of the community as well as to them. The Buffalo Express, shaking of a new organization called k * The Pat rons of Husbandry," says: 4k It was organized in 1868 and already num bers more that half a million of mem bers. * * The principle is asso ciation in rural districts. It is a good one and for this reason we be lieve the Western granges will in some form spread throughout the 1 I country and Itecome a permanent' part of modern American life." This seems to be a western plant, ; but there are some farther cast, though more circumscribed and lo cal, that seem to have found a very , excellent way. As THE pfesent term of our bor-; ough school is drawing to a close, j we venture to remind our friends, that it is also near the close of the j school year and that the t>ctter we | acquaint ourselves with its character j and management the better we shall ! know what is required on our part j to ensure its greatest success and usefulness. After the summer vacation it may ; re-assemble under the same teachers and with a good proportion of the; same students—never all the same. Experience and observation teach us that present opportunities never last. If we wish to know how well and faithfully those employed to lead our children as we would have them go have fulfilled their duties during the present year, now is the time to see and to determine. We owe it to the children, who spend hours-there everv day, to encourage them by our presence and interest; we owe it to the teachers, to show our value of their labor and skill; to ourselves, most of all, that we. may feel that for the good of the community in which we live we ha\e not been idle and careless, hut attentive, earnest and watchful. THANKS to M. E. <>. for copy of the " Reports of the Several Ranks and Saving Institutions of Pennsyl vania." TIN, JOLKNAL has received from the publishers a copy of " Lives of the Governors of Pennsylvania," by W. C. Armor. It is very handsome-! Iy printed in large clear type on fine; paper and contains portraits of all the Governors from the womanly face of William Penn to the bearded one of Geary, so strong in contrast to it. These portraits alone would make the book very desirable, but from the slight examination we have been able to give it we should think the history also valuable and interesting. It will make it handsome addition to any library. Sold by subscription only at from $3.50 to $1.50. Agents desired in this County. Published by James K. Simon, ND.29 S. Sixth St., Phila. Beee her on Heroism. It would be hardly right for ine, when the public indignation is so justly excited against the Indians, to say that there is heroism there; but there is. There is cruelty and mean ness and revenges, and almost every vice that disgraces manhood; but nevertheless there are some among them that rise superior to the average of their fellows and really love their nation. They are standing for what they regard to l>e right in away that shows them to be heroes. In their darkness, in tlthir narrow limit let us not fully despise them. There were multitudes of heroes when the Atlantic went upon the rocks, but there was one—nor am 1 sorry that he belongs to my own pro fession,the Rev. Mr. Ancient—under circumstances sufficient to daunt even professional seamen, amid the form and raging sea, went out in li.c boat and unclasped the man bound to the rigging mid brought him in. 'ills' wa h<-roie: the man was no relative of his bat he said what is my life to his humanity; it is good for nothing. That man was or iained then; before tliat he had somebody's hand put upon him, but f God put his hand upon him then, and so his name will go down in story forever upon the roll of honor:'lt is proposed to raise a purse and send it Mr. Ancient: Well; I have no j objection to tb:it: I presume a set-' tied pastor on that rock is not over burdened with revenue, yet I should ' be sorry that he should think that was the oily regard he had. His; name—we will teach it to our cliil- ; dren; his name, like that of Mary that broke the alabaster box, shall be known and revered forever; and we will say that in the storm and the {jtril he did an act tliat made him dear to the race and to manhood.> Another one, nearer to our door—l don't know his name, but I mean tin- j engineer on the ill-fated Stonington, train—when he was found in the . morning he, unwarned, standing out uj>on his engine, dashing forward at • all speed, s?.',v by the head-light the i danger he was approaching, and he j W3- found upon his engine with one ! hand on the throttle and the other uj>on the brake. Instead of leaping off he stood and died at his post. Rushing into death he was a hero, j He did not know it; it was not for the sake of having men say he was a ; hero that he did it. It was easy for j him to die; but being dead he yet j lives, for such men shall not be lor-, gotten. It is the fashion to heap opprobrium on the rqce of aborigines, such of them as remain the poor dregs of a mighty people, and also on the mighty people as they were before the Anglo Saxon race had, step In step, crowded them out of all they had and look down upon them be cause they are helpless. But it is strange to sec one so large souled as lieecher almost apologising for the good word he says of them in his sermon on heroism. It seems to some of us, at least, that in their hunted, waning, perishing condi tion; even in their occasional out breaks of helpless violence, they are the incarnation of the heroic element. It would have been nothing strange for an Indian to do what Rev. Mr. Ancient did so noblv—but w! - would have spoken of it or though + of it if it had been one. Nothing strange, almost a matter of course, for an Indian to be found meeting death as quietly, as bravely as did the engineer Mr. Beeeher alludes to, in any place he felt to be his proper position. M r. Beeeher says "There is cruelty, meanness, revenges and almost every vice that disgraces manhood" but 1 believe that it has never been denied that in the lowest, most debasing forms of vice the Indians are far sur passed by the white and negro races. it seems like a poor illustration of one's appreciation of heroism to speak with untruthful severity of those who have no means of defense. It is proposed to bestow 011 the Reverend Ilero of the Atlantic dis aster (there were many heroes) a purse in token of our appreciation of his wonderful bravery and achieve ment. It is probable that he could use some money wisely and satisfac torily, but judging of him by what he lias shown to toe world is it not probable that he would feel humili ated by receiving it in such away. It seems like a low tendency in the present age to set a money value on everything; even to express our ad miration of high and noble qualities, in dollars. Almost it seems as though we knew 110 way to crown a victor but with gold. Laurels arc obsolete honors are considered empty, we may have—nay we are thankful to know we do feel some thrills of apprecia tion of grand and noble deeds, but they are very vain if they do not consummate in n dull, prosy bank note way. "There were giants in the earth in those days'' but if there were giants in the earth now and they did great deeds, they would have more money than they could use, and we might he obliged to recurr to some old-fashioned poetic way of admir ing them, or perhaps,.grow ourselves into some new mode of sympalhy with them. TIIE Keystone Good Templar, speaking of the advancement made in temperance organization among the Irish Catholics within the past year, says:. The great procession in this city on St. Patrick's Day was the largest aiul grandest demonstration of the kind ever witnessed in this country, numbering thousands and requiring considerably over an hour to pass any particular point, and tin* greater part of this im mense procession of Catholic Irishmen was made up of total abstinence socie ties, including several thousand juve niles, and all clothed in Iteautiful rega lias and marching under appropriate banners with music, flags, etc. This part of the procession was probably the largest and most successful, and we think also the most impressive ami sig nificant public temperance demonstra tion ever witnessed iuoai state. And not a single individual in any jurt ol • the great procession was to be seen who gave evidence of la-ing under the influ ence of liquor. X>>t even a single cigar was to be seen, nor a single strarggler, or anything savo ing of impropriety or ir regularity. The excellent order which prevailed and the eompicndable deport ment of all who participated was the subject of comment by thousands of ad mirers stationed along the sidewalks. It admits that "Our Irish friends are now aheau " and urges increased zeal and activity on the part of Pro testant churches to come "up to ami even with the Cat hoi hj in the good ; work."' "W"eights arid Measures. Several years ago the following question and answer were given in a Literary Society in Coudersport: - "If weights and measures were i lost from the earth is there any natu ral standards by which to find them. If found would they be the same as now?'' " The original standards of weights and measures were not formed from one basis, neither were they all mace at one time. Formerly every pro vince, and nearly every place of im portaaee, had its own measures. Few of these were governed by fixed nat ural laws; some of them came into existence by mere accident or caprice and could never be recovered with certainty if lost, while others will be the same while materials exist and the laws of mature remain in force. "The troy weight appears to be the ancient weight of England, hav ing existed in the same state from the time of Edward the Confessor and avoirdupois was used then and for a long time before. " By an act of Parliament in June. 1824, the standard Loudon measures and weights were declared to he the standard throughout the realm. This act, called the act of uniformity, took effect January 1, lx2f>. " The standard brass weight of one pound troy made in 1758, ami in th custody of the Clerk of the House of Commons, should be the genuine rtamlard; denominated the imperial standard troy pound containing 5700 grains and that 7000 such grains should-be a pound avoirdupois, (inak- ing 430 grains to the ounce of troy and 437 \ grains to the ounce avoir dupois.) •- . v "By comparing the number of grains it appears that the troy pound is less than the avoirdupois in the proportion of 14 to 17 nearly, but the troy ounce is greater than the avoirdupois.in the proportion of 70 to 72jiearly. "The English system of weights and measures has lteen followed in the United States. The original standards are evidently deemed of small importance. An act of Con gress regulating and establishing the weight of one pound troy merely fixed it to be the same as a brass pound troy weight brought from London by a government minister in the year 1827. If the standard pound shall he lost, destroyed or defaced the act directs that it shall he recovered hy reference to the weight of a cubic inch of water; it having been ascer tained that a cubic inch of distilled water weighed in air by brass weights at the temperature of (52° (Fahren heit) and the barometer at 30 inches, is equal to 252.458 grains. As the standard troy pound contains 57C0 such grains, it it therefore established that the original standard pound mav be at any time recovered by making another weight to bear the propor tion just mentioned, to a cubic inch of water. The English vard is determined by the oscillations of a pendulum at London." The rationale is as fol-' lows: Take a pendulum which will vibrate once in a second oFtime in : London on a level with the sea, in a vacuum; divide all that part there of which lies between the axis of; suspension and the centre of oscilla tion into 391.393 equal parts; then will 10,000 of those parts be an im perial inch, twelve whereof make a foot and thirty six make a yard. "The standard yard is 'that dis tance between the centres of the two points, the gold studs in the straight brass rod, now in the charge of the of the clerk of the House of Com mons, whereon the words and figures i 'Standard yard, 17(50 are engraved;' j which is declared to be the genuine ■ and as expansibility of the metal would cause some variation in the length of the rod in different de grees of temperature the Act deter mines that the brass rod shall be of the temperature of (52", Fahrenheit. This measure is to be the only stand ard whereby all the lineal measures shall be computed. Thus the foot, inch, pole, furlong and mile shall besr the same projvortion to the im perial standard yard as they have hitherto borne to the yard measure in geueral use. "The Act makes provision for the restoration of the standard yard in case of loss, by reference to an unva riable natural standard which shall be that proportion which the yard bears to the length of a pendulum vibrating seconds of time. "Thus a sure mean is established to supply the loss that might possibly occur. "It is but a few years since the table of lineal measure commenced thus; 3 barley corus make one inch, and barley comes being tii" same year after year, may certainly be considered as .a standard. Indeed it would be difficult to find one that could, with greater truth, be called a natural standard." Little Sammy and Hia Indian Protege. Mrs. Columbia. "What is all this trouble about ?" Sammy, "800-hoo! I got all his playthings, an' kicked him into the corner, an' was a going to chuck him out of the winder, when he up an' slapped me. An', ma, wouldn't you please exterminate him?''— Harper's Weekly. SFKINVUALK, Neb., Ap:! 22, 1573. KB. JOURNAL: AS 4 have a large circle of acquaintances in your vicini ty 1 would like to inform them through your columns of one of the most perilous and destructive storms that was ever known in Nebraska. It commenced raining the lOth inst., turning to snow in the evening with high wind from the north—snowing and blowing for three nights and days—the snow so filling the air that no object could be discerned at ten feet distance. A number of jieople perished and one-quarter of all the stock is esti mated to have been lost as-far as the storm reaehed. Seven persons of my acquaintance perished by ventur ing out to reach some near point for assistance or to lie more comfortable. One man, wife and daughter were chilled to death attempting to make a neighbor's house; one child two years old survived the storm. When found it was encircled by its dead mother's arms and the sister, dead, lying upon her lap, about half a mile fi ui home; the-man some three miles in an opposite 'direction from the ;ioiut he attempted to make. To all appearance he had wandered about until his strength was ex hausted. A mother and two young ladies being left alone, the roof blew off the house; the children started out for assistance, making no point they de sired. Due died after being out in the storm lbr forty-eight hours, the other fell exhausted in .sight of a house and being seen by the inmates was taken in and is doing r*4 She tells a heartrending tale of their suf ferings:—her clothing being mostly torn from her. The mother, starting in purSQit of the girls, was found dead a short distance from home. 'l he Indians, supposed to be Sioux, had made a raid in our neighborhood six days before thestorm commenced taking what stock they could get handy and capturing eleven hors s. Fortunately 1 lost nothing. The Indians showed no violence to the settlers until pursued by a party of the settlement on whom when over taken they opened fire. The pursuing party retreated a mile to a ravine and returned their shots for about an hour, knocking one Indian from his horse, upon which the rest retreat ed. The supposed wounded Indiai h.y for a moment upon the ground, then got up and mounting his pony rode off at a slow walk until he over took the rest of his party, which had halted half a mile otf. They went off together, the settlers returning home. The soldiers were ordered out to pro tect the settlers. Sixty cavalrymen were caught out in the storm; fortunately they struck a house where" they could all get in by standing up. They suffered in tensely though none of them perish es! but they lost heavily in stock— twenty-seven horses and four mules. Manv of the settlers lost all their stock and there are few but have lost some by not being prepared for the storm or not looking alter their stock in time. Stock will always g<, with the wind : .Ti these storms unless they be ob structed; many were found in the Loup and Platte rivers. One man on Wood river lost two hundred head, another one hundred and thir ty-two; one on Loup, near rne, lost thirty-nine ponies and sixteen head of horned cattle. 1 lost no stock by the storm. The spring is later by one mont h than last or two years ago. The Indians are committing some depredations which indicate trouble. We are looking for an outbreak of the Sioux. One of the agents of the Sioux tril>e has resigned. WM. K. FREEMAN. For the Journal & Item. Memorial Day, OK DECORATION OF SO I. LULUS" GRAVES. Come one and all with floral wreaths Of tribute and respect, "Come st rew them on our soldiers' graves. Who peacefully have slept Since war. so cruel and tevere, Snatched loved ones from their homes Who ne'er returned our hearts to cheer: Our fathers, brothers, sons. 1 j Time tlii-s, but never can efface The memory of the past, When men in blue proved ever true — i Fought treason to the last. : Our stars and stripes must ever wave, Nor stop to count the cost; 1 Though thousands lie in soldiers"graves, j Though limbs and health are lost. I would not check the flowing tear For these, our fallen brave, Who faced death's missiles without fear Our Nation's flag to save. I leave these flowers bedewed with tears ; (Jit graves of comrades brave; I too have hied by rebel lead, Which I carry to my grave. Don't talk that.Congress must erase From regimental flags ■ Those heroes' deeds when face to face With rebels and their rags.* We can forgive—we do forgive Those erring men, and yet. While soldiers' graves lie thick around We never can forget. No more they hear the cannon's roar. Nor heed the bugle's blast; i Perhaps their spirits round us soar 'Midst our offerings of the past. Then gently strew redolent flowers Where soldiers' graves are found— They died to save these homes of ours And leave us freedom's ground. SOLDIER. | * Couffdfr-rate colors were known to our boys I by the name of rebel rags. DEATH OF A BRAVE GlßL.— Miss i Lottie Dougherty, a young lady of Mill ville. New Jersey, died a few thtys ago J of consumption, thesuperiudueingea use • of which was an accident occurring un der the following circumstances: Last summer Miss Dougherty was I employed as a telegraph operator at i ! Radnor, on the Pennsylvania Central j [ Railroad. A severe thunderstorm one niglit in August rendered the telegraph j apparatus useless. A large tree was j blown down by the gale directly across i the track at Eagle station and Miss j Dougherty, upon becoming aware ol this, seized a danger lamp and ran j through the storm up the track to warn j the Western Express, then due, of the ! danger. !3he saved the train, which stopped when it reached tire tree, a branch of which struck Miss Lottie on j the shoulder, hurling her down,an em bankment into a ditch and inflicting in juries which ultimately resulted in her death. THE man wlio was killed near the J Haytou depot on the Milwaukee & Xorthern Railway, last week, wasdrunk. His death was caused by a fall from his j wagon. The adder stung poor Packard i to death, and it is stinging thousands, who are unwilling to admit that there ! is any danger. I The man in East on, Pennsylvania, ; who pounded the life out of the mother j of his own helpless children, last Mon day, was drunk at the time. The woman in New York who, bust •Saturday, staggered and let her helpless babe fall upon a red-hot stove and cook to death, was in a state of beastly intox ication at the time. The Chicago father who kicked his | little five-year-old girl out of a saloon, i where she had followed him to plead j for his return to a sick mother, and' broke the darling's leg was brutally drunk at the time. We are called a i blind fanatic because we urge people not to drink —because we brand the i liquor traffic as a curse —because we j give our influence on the side of sobrie ty and good order. —JTon du Lac Corn- \ monwealth. 7L I fu ami £ussors. A WASHINGTON dispatch says: In telligence has been received from New Orleans to the effect that the Democrats in St. Mary's Parish are organizing themselves into military companies. They are armed with Winchester re peating rifies, and parade the town. Spain.— MADRID, Apr. 27.—The Min ister of Finance announces that ar rangements have been made for the payment of the Treasury bills due at the end of .May—one-third in specie and two-thirds in new acceptances payable one month from date. The band commanded by the famous chieftain Saballs has been routed, and its leader has disappeared. France.—Paris, April 27.—The elec tion of a Deputy to fill the vacant seat for this city in the Assembly was held to-day. The vote cast was unusually large, and the following are the latest returns: M. Barodet, Radical, 160,000 ; Baron Stoffel, Conservative, 127,000; Coiuit de Remusat. supporter of Presi dent Thiers, 25,500. The official returns will probably differ a little from these figures, which insure the election of M. Barodet. Large and animated crowds are in the streets, notwithstanding a cold rain which is falling, awaiting tho ; latest news, and are eagerly discussing ! the result. Elections were held to-day ;in Marseilles and Bonk;.ax, in which the Radical candidates were also suc [ cessfuL t TOPEKA, Kan., April 25.—Several parties just arrived from Barltoux i county deny the accounts of Indian j troubles in that country recently re ported by Atchison and Leavenworth : newspapers. Travelers are constantly : passing between Medicine Lodge and ! Hutchinson and no troubles with the ! Indians have been heard of. Three citizens returned yesterday from a jour : ney of 200 miles southwest, crossing the 1 Ciuimaron and Canadian Rivers, visit ingt'amp Supply, and returning through the Camanclie country, traveling all the time in jierfect safety. LINCOLN, Nebraska, April 22. —The first train for the week on the Burling ton and Missouri River Railroad came jin yesterday. The rejiorts of the late j storm show it to have been the severest 1 ever known here. Men were frozen to j death within two rods of their houses ; while trying to get to their stock to feed i them. Near Grafton a man named ; Keeler attempted to reach a neighbor, scarcely half a mile away, accompanied by his wife and child, and the two latter were frozen to death. Mr. Marshall, of Hastings, perished while trying to reach i his stock from his house. The wife and : child of Mr. Bent, living near Red Cloud, were frozen while attempt ing to reach the neighbors afterthe house had been rendered uninhabit able. Their bodies were found on Fri day ten rods from the house. Families were compelled to take refuge in cellars or keep their bed for three days. Houses were blown down and tilled with snow. The loss of cattle and horses was great; some farmers lost all they had. One party lost a whole herd of seventy fine head. The gullies on the railroads were tilled with snow as hard as ice, and snow-plows were use less. SEN ATOR Bayard has paid his extra compensation as Memlier of the Forty second Congress into the United States Treasury. f I A BRILLIANT starry triangle is now I visible in the early evening. It is made' up of the three brightest stars tlvat are j ever in our latitude, with the exception ! of Mars, when in opposition. Venus. ' Jupiter and Sirius form the shining j points of the celestial triangle and make the geometrical marvel easy to recog- j nize. Venus must be looked for in the j West. Jupiter towards the zenith in the East and Sen us in the South. THE first Protestant Easter service! ever held in Cuba occurred at the Epis- j copal Church here last Sunday. WE RECORD with great pleasure the : fact that Senator Schurz declined to re • ceive the SSOOO of back pay voted by : the last Congress; and with equal pleasure we record a similar fact in favor of Vice President Wilson. But we confess to more concern for the fu -1 tme than for tlie past of this increased pay. When all is told about the monej refunded, it niaks an honorable record for those who refunded, but it only re duces bv a trifle the amount of a steal ! which will at any rate foot up a million and a half. Let those who have gm ' the money keep it, and much goixl may iit do them. We object, however, to ; having the steal repeated at every future j Congress, and therefore we insist upon 1 agitating the question of repeal as an i issue in all future campaigns, until ac j complished. Mr. Erastus Wells, meni ! her from the Second District of this | city, promises to introduce a bill on the first day of December session to ie-es- I tablish tiie old rate of SSO(M) per annum. By so doing lie will entitle himself to the applause of the country, and the men who vote against him may bid farewell to public life. Aluekma.y Ottendorfer refuses to I receive bis salary both as a member of ' the Board of Supervisors and Aldermen, ; on the ground that the salaries paid are | excessive, and that $2,500, instead of i SO,OOO, as now paid, would be amply le | muuerative. A comparison made between smok | ers and non-smokers belongir g to the Polytechnic School of Paris shows that j the non-smokers take the highest rank ,in every grade. Further, it is found that the smokers lost grade constantly. In 1801 the Minister of Public Instruc -1 tion accordingly issued a circular forbid i ding the use of tobacco by pupils in public schools. — Pop. Science Month. j - Tim Popular Science Monthly CONDUCTED BY Prof. E. Li. Youmans The crowing Importance of scientific knowledge to all clauses of the community calls for more erti clent means of >ll (fusing it. The Popular Science Monthly has been started- to promote this object and supplies a want met by no other periodical in | the Putted States. j It contalus instructive and attractive articles, j and aiattracts of articles, original, selected aud U l ustrate.l, from the leading scientitlc men of dif -1 lerent countries, giving the latest Interpretations 1 of natural phenomena, explaining the applica i tsons of science to the practical arts aud to the i operations of domestic life. | It is designed to give (.special p:.,,nlnence to ' V -* which help to a better •"" ' the nature of man; to present 1 tie _ l= tms of scientific education; and the itear [ ii g of science upon questions o socle ya. d gov !en >ierit. How the various subjects of current 1 opiniou are affected by the advance of scientific inquiry will also le considered, i In its literary character this periodical aims to tie popular without being superficial tid appeals j to the Intelligent reading classes of the cotimm.nl ; ty. It seeks to procure authentic statements from men who know their subjects and who win address the non-scientific public lor purposes of exposition and explanation. It will have contributions from Herbert Spen ; cer, Prof. liuxley, Prof. Tyndall. Mr. Darwm ard ' other writers Identified with speculative thought aod scientific explanation. The Popular Science Monthly is published in a large octavo, handsomely printed on clear tvpe Terms, Five Dollars per annum, or Fifty Cents per copy. Published by I>. APPI.KTOX A- CO., 649 and 651 Broadway, N. Y. OYSTERS I ' I j A. H. PEIR.QJ TFfto We anil j OYSTER DEAJJ COUDERSPORT, p 4 1 j Oysters by the Can. Quart Gil , Thousand received Families, Parties and Festivals .! notice. " *1 The Trade furnished at I Give me a trial audi can sua yoiL 1 24-2JI . „ A - H - p £s| Finger, (hover A Baker, ij , common Needles. Thread and (J ! constantlv in Rami ' A. M. Reynolds, J E. O. It EEs. | WATCHMAKER anil JEfjj I __ DKALKR IN Wa lelieti, Cloekx, , r •Jewelry, SILVER-PLAT od \YJ G'HlH.'icH S: S]H>C(A(>]J Fisliiug Tu<*lile, T C- isiisi nl AiiiinnniJ &<•., &c., J '' VVALTHAM WATCHJ SOLI) AT PRICE LIST OF j HOWARD & C 0..1 (FC'GS iiYouJcfP/, A*, l'.j ! REr.Mr.iNn done in A iipc-l',r .'Banner is? Hasrt.o. SECOND NT RETT, East of m (DIKE'S BlII.OINli,) COUDEP-SPORT, PA. A. M. Reynolds lias constant!} the new SINGER SEWING CHINE, with all the latest in. ments. THE Contepri 1 AND General Stage 0 | /lit* been REPUTED lli't KEtTKNISHEIIM GARRET c CELL'.?, "lid in noir ojien to th<- I'l r ])Lie. The TABLE fill he k;pt in RILUTAJ and no labor or exjeennc spared l mat- J FIRST-CLASS HOTL OOOIJ STAItLIXG, and carfj\d always in attti*elance. The OLD TIME popularity of the Hm pi 1.1.T MAINTAINED hy the present I"- icho noir solicits the p<itrun<ivr triee/U the pu'ii ie r/enera!ly. 1). F. ULASSMIKF,] 131 „oii Old Sewing Machines of at.; ■ rejKtired in a workmanlike iiwimi A. M. lIKV.NCI.I'-j J THE BAKER Hot) f J N. E. oor. SECOND and EAST if (East of Court House SSUP j b ' COUDERSPORT, F 'l I Has been purchased by BRO^O i I (formerly of the COCDEKSPOKT Hot®* fl The House is completely furnish*"' 1 # ■ bottom, ami has all the convenient ■ the people; the table b the i>est inJ the barn is under the charge of the ■ the .SA/te; and, in short, everything" ■ that can bedonc to make it c<>iii'" rti ' r I gers or others who visit the house. H . ■*' The long experience of the R r "P' ■ Hotel business makes tht-n) pW" ■ cater to the varied v* ants of the ■ ■ i*W 1 They solicit their old custom. ■ thev are able to supply the io- T ° r W all. ~| BROWN A
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