■what appears to be a mosaic of a house standing by a palm tree. The inscription is "Carthage, David Por ter Heap, 1855." Japan and China are both represented by queer sage green blocks covered with untrans lated characters. There is another from China presented by "the citi zens of the United States of America residing in Foo-Chow-Foo, China. Feb. 22, ISST." Next to this is a block of strange brown marble with gilt devices and letters saying "Das Befreundate lire men, Washington dem glossen guten und grechten."' There is an exquisite piece of marble with a Grecian in scription, to which my guide kindly furnished the translation: "To Geo. Washington, the General, the ruler, the patriot of the men and illustrious liberty, the land of Solon, Themisto cles and Pericles, the mother of an cient liberty, sends this ancient stone as a testimony of honor and admira tion. From the Parthenon." The American Medical Association is represented by a slab with a relievo, which to my meagre classical knowl edge was unintelligible; the inscrip tion is: "Vincent Amor I'atrife." One stone bears the inscription: A tribute of respect from the ladies and gentlemen of the dramatic profession of America, 1853. And another that impressed me very much as a sincere and unaffected offering was inscribed: To Washington, an humble tribute from two disciples of Daguerre. There is a block of lava brought from Vesuvius by William Terrell, of Georgia- On a tablet of brownish marble is written in raised gilt let ters, To the memory of Washington. The Free Swiss Confederation, 1852. Near the door is a small slab from the Temple of Esculapius, Island of I'aros: Presented by the officers of the United States steamer Sarana-'-, August 13, 1353. And further along we read on a white marble block, Presented by the Governor and Com mune of the Islands of Paros and Naxos, Grecian Archipelago, Au gust 13, 1853. A white marble slab with blue shield, inscribed in golden Turkish characters, is presented by the r-ultan of Turkey, to increase the friendship between the United States and his own country. Abdul Majid Kahn desires to inscribe his name on the monument to Washington. The last and most valuable relic is an Egyptian head wrought in dark stone. It is fastened to a white marble tab let, on which we read: This head was carved between two and three thousand years ago, by the Egyp tians for the temple in honor of Au gustus on the banks of the Nile. Brought from there by J. A. Leh man and presented to the Washing ton Monument, 1850. A little box for contributions stands in the ante-room, but it has a lean, hungry look. The entire amount subscribed since 1783 to the present day is not over § 3,000,000, if that much. A Senator (Senator Corbett, I think) subscribed his back pay. But the generosity of this was ques tionable, lbr if he thought himself unentitled to it, it was grim wrong to offer to Washington the money taken from the very people in whose service Washington earned his right to a monument. Besides it only amounted to $ 3U. So the monument stands, the bro ken fulfillment of one of the most magnificent promises ever made. And the sermon in tiiose stones might perhaps resolve itself into an old maxim : The ingratitude of Re publics is proverbial. The POTTER JOURNAL AX'D r<T E "W S ITEM. COUDERSPORT, PA.. June 13, 1873 A Burning Shamo. Again we hear news of a dastardly outrage committed, it is said, by some Oregon volunteers in killing unarmed prisoners who had surrendered. This savage and cowardly act, if committed by the Modocs or any other savage people would have raised an outcrv over the whole country, but white people, calling themselves civilized and enlightened, some of whom may have had christian mothers or friends, some may have gone to church, possibly to Sabbath school, or read or even had a Bible, these have shown themselves the equals in heartless, inhuman butchery of any savage, heathen people under the sun. The}- are like those who this spring, in Louisiana, burnedout and then shot down and lieat to death those who politically thought differ ently from them ; add both horrors go to show that in dastardly mean- UCSj and blood-thirsty cowardice no body can out do the savage Anglo- A merioan. This treachery to the Government which accepted their proffered aid to capture the Modocs is evidently part of the scheme of the desperadoes of the West, to prevent any ending of Indian wars, to frustrate every at tempt of the Government to keep faith with the Indians, to make the difficulties with all Indian tribes im possible to settle. If obliged to live in any frontier land we should fear and dread the white savages far more than the rod : ones, even with such deeds as this to rouse all the evil that is in them. LISTENING to bird sounds, wind whispers and rustling leaves, one's attention is suddenly called by an other scene. On the air like the echoes, far off, yet close by, one can not think where it is, we become con scious of an odor, sweet and pervad ing, that is at once delicious and in spiring. It may be the "Perfume like a thousand Junes" but it is con densed into this June. We search and there are many fragrant plants, many sweet flowers and the dewy evening air seems to mingle their odors in the most deli cate and harmonious proportion. Wonderful are the capacities of en joyment bestowed on us. Wonder ful and mysterious the separate senses,so different,so entirely discon nected, and each opening into a world of experience and observation which to any or all of the others would be utterly closed and incom prehensible. It seems impossible to imagine another sense just as it would have been to imagine any of these and their uses if they had been hitherto unknown. The evening air laden with sweet ness. the fresh, dewy morning bright and joyous after the rest of the night, hold delight in their balmy breath, but noisome stenches come to us through the same avenue from the outer to the inner world. The knowl edge of good and evil extends even here and warns us of dangers to be avoided, of evils to be removed or overcome, ot disease and death and decay. We need not only to '"keep our hearts pure," but our senses as well, each in its perfection for the enjoyment of present good and the subduing or avoidance of danger or calamity that we know of only thro' them. Pensions. '•Republics are ungrateful," it is said. Perhaps monarchies are no less so, but they do not concern us. But when we think of the noble en thusiasm with which our people rushed to the rescue of the life of the nation only a few years ago; of the eager, warm sjmpath) with which we who could not go promised care and support to the families and inter ests they left unprotected; and how ever)- body, from the remotest borders to the government at Washington, repeated and endorsed these prom ises, we are ready to hide our heads with shame to see how soon they were forgotten or neglected. There was no talk then about whether a man "could make more by attending to his private business;" no telling that "a man could not be expected to serve the public unless reasonably paid; "no saying by them, although it was far more true of sol diers than of legislators, that the nation was "not niggardly and would not begrudge a proper remuneration" to its servants. No! there was no need: there was manliness and patriotism and heroic devotion in thousands, millions of hearts where we would not have looked for them, and so the country was saved and we pay to the maimed, the helpless, the widows and the old mothers a paltry pittance; a tenth or a fiftieth or a hundredth part of what our legislators or judges or congressmen value their services at. Our brave soldiers suffered want and privation, and to our shame and sorrow, their families and many of them who survive are still pinched with poverty and difficulty; but not one, so far as we know, regrets the sacrifice or begrudges its great cost. Is not this because there is a sus taining power in a great purpose, a wortlyy devotion ? 1 hey take their pittance and out of it pay their share of the taxes that support the government and they do not complain. But not the less should we blush to offer it to them. It should be, doubtless we all feel it so. the least we should do to place all our soldiers and their families in ease and comfort, or furnish them with such a pension as might with good management make them so and so secured that it could not be squan dered by those who are careless or idle. The bare necessaries of lilt are not enough for our brave defend ers while anybody in the land enjoys its luxuries, certainly not while any public servant enjoys them. A wound ed soldier has as much need of home and comforts, of wife and children, of the sweet joys and cares of domestic* life as others have, and all the more for the years of pain and ! suffering he has passed. THE Times says: At the Library Association Soci able not only Ice Cream, but Straw berries will be furnished and the Oiean Brass Band will furnish good music, for which they are noted. Everybody should attend the .ee Cream and Strawberry Festival for the benefit of the Public Library, at the Town Hall m-xt Wednesday even ing. The proceeds will be immedi ately used for the purchase of new books. The affair should, of right, net the association two or three hun dred dollars. Let no one stay away. It is very interesting to hear of some Library Association getting up a celebration or festival. THOUGH our own school closed so quietly and our Literary Society seems to be, like one of baby Mid get's " husbands," " very dead''—we get bright, cheery announcements of literary life and doings from else where, showing that school festivals and windings-up are still used and made very interesting. Here comes a card with a monogram in such dainty sty le that it seems as though some of our friends were just mar ried; but instead of that it bears the "Compliments of the Amaranthine Literary Society," of Wilmington. Delaware, for June 9th, at S o'clock. Very sorry we cannot attend. QUARTERLY Meeting was held in the M. K. Church on Saturday and Sunday last. It had a rather more full attendance than usual, and the sermon on Sunday morning contained much that was valuable and sugges- i tive. THE lrost of May 31 left its traces very plainly on many of the tre s that had just put out ile ir tender leaves. The locusts seem scarcelv able to make any further attempt to grow, while the butternut, chestnut, hickory, poplar and ashes are trying to In? green again. Grape vines also, though they are far behind what they were before they were frosted. HARPER'S Weekly for June 7. 1 -73. furnishes a map of New York City and parts of the surrounding cities, with all ferries, the proposed bridge over the East Itiver, a great part of Central Park, with the Croton reser voir, and all the street railroad lines. it gives the location of 291 church es and I -74 other public buildings in New York, and many in Brookland. j Jersey City and other neighboring places. To any one visiting the City or huving friends or business interest there, this map must he very valua ble and interesting for reference. IN this lovely June time the woods offer us a means of rest and delight greater than at any other season, and we cannot imagine a greater treat than a day spent in them. We have heard thus far of no picnics, no excursions; no time, hardly, since tlie warm weather came, for the cold held on so long we were not ready for the summer. But we should drop everything and go. Singly, with a microscope and a trowel in a basket, if we are covetous, or with something else in the basket if we like—or two or three together—or a large company, perhaps, with music and refresh ments, or whatever accompaniments we 111 o-it desire; but some wav or other let us all have some June joy ing in the green, fragrant woods. Two little steps toward universal liberty are announced by telegraph this morning; the Governor of the Spanish West India Island of Porto Rico has authorized meetings of the people for all lawful purposes, and the Government of the < -entral Ameri can Republic of Guatemala has ac corded religious liberty to the inhal>- itants of that State. Small laves thankfully received and larger ones in proportion. REPORTS of cholera come from Louisiana and Mississippi and the scarcely less alarming disease, spot ted fever, is raging in many parts of the Western States. If only these reports and alarms make us more careful to live rightly and wisely, to make no needless exposures of our own health, or require none of those who are connected with us. they will be beneficial to us all. If we let fear or anxiety wear away any portion of vigor or strength that we might possess, it will be a preparation for the ravages of dis ease should it come near us. For two years there have been threats ol cholera but it has not come. Wheth er it is coming this summer or not, let us be temperate in eating, in drinking, in working; and especially in anticipating ills to come. PERILS BY TEMPEST. In the days long ago, say half a century and longer, we heard terrific ; stories of tornadoes in tiie West In dies; some farther oil', too, but that was the nearest region of terror then known. When Cowper wrote " Tue Negro's Complaint," where these lines occur: "Is Uu-re as ye sometimes tell us, Is there Oue who rules on high? 11.is He bid you buy ami sen us. Speaking from His throne, the sky? iAsk Him if your knotted scourges, Matches, blood-extorting screws i Are the means wldeli duty urges, Agents of His wili, to use. "Hark! He answers. Wiid tornadoes, Strewing yonder sea with wrecks. Washing towns, plantations, meadows, Are Ure Voice with which He speaks. lie, foreseeing what vexations Ahie's -ens shouid undergo, Fixed their tyrant's habitations Where llis whirlwinds answer, No." we thought with alfright of tropical climc-s and islands of perpetual ver dure, for it seemed that to them be longed the tornado and destruction. Dnt with our greater knowledge of other parts of the world we find that storm and tempest are, or may be, j everywhere. We knew nothing then of the country now comprising our Western States, where but very late ly the most awful storms ever de ; scribed have taken place. After the fearful cold of the winter and ilie terrible snow-fall early in May, by which many persons and innumera ble cattle and she-p peri -he 1, eanie the cyclone of May in lowa and Nebraska. We do not remember ever seeing before any account so fearful. Here ! are some extracts: HuII I.IX o TON, lowa, .1/1/1/24, 1- 73. —N >t far from Washington t >wn is i the most accessible scene of disaster. Here the storm swooped down upon some dozen houses, the residences of wealthy farmers, and swept them from the face of the earth, as it' with the tiesoiu of destruction. Mr. Cun ningham's house and barn were blown into splinters and carried away, but the storm compensated for the theft i>v a shower of saivered wood, boards an i ratters which fell in the fields. .Some of tue fowls were found dead with but tew feathers upon them, the feathers having been chafed olfv hile rhe birds were whirling about in the slot ,n atnid the myriads of abrading substances. There were four persons in the !i Hise, women and children, who were only slightly injured, though the wind took the house away and sucked them out of the cellar in which they had taken refuge. To crown all, the large granary near the house was unroofed and several liun jdred bushels of grain poured from it into the cellar of the house as neatly as if it had been done by an elevator. The next farm was that of Mi'. Davison. He, his wife and child and his brother-in-law, Mr. Ilounsel, were in the house when the storm struck it. The house and barn were wiped out as if tliev had been chalk figures on a blackboard. Mr. Davison was instantly killed, and Mr. Ilounsel crushed so that he died in a few hours. The wind tore some of the clothing lVoin hm body, leaving onlj selvages at his wrists and his ankles and round his waist. Mr. Alexander Gibson lias the fin est house and outbuildings in the county- The wind blew the barns to bits. The house was in two part-. One of these was turned quite around, the other soared away iike a bird, dropping the five inhabitants into the cellar. One woman was sick in bed having her little child with her. Both were cut and torn to pieces and blown in various direction-. About twenty people were killed. The Modocs. —Massacre of tho Pris oners. SAN FRANC ISCO, June 9. —Dispatch- es from Boyle's camp, dated yesterday, relate the particulars of an atrocious massacre of Modoc prisoners, supposed to have been perpetrated l>y Oregon vol unteers. On Saturday morning James Fair child and about a dozen other men left Fairchild's ranehe, on Cottonwood Creek, with seventeen Modoc captives, including women and children, Miack- Nasty .Jim. Bogus Charley, Tehee Jack, Pony and Little John. The Indians were in a wagon drawn by four mules. At the crossing of Lost Hiver the party encountered a body of Oregon volunteers under command of Captain Kiser. The soldiers gathered about the wagon and questioned Fairchild. The latter told them the Indians were all Hot Creeks except Little John, and that there were no charges against tin in. Fairchild undertook to push to Boyle's Camp, near Crawkys. On the road Fairchild noticed two men ahead riding to Rocky Point, as if to intercept him. "When the team ap proached the two men one of I hem pre r present- d a needle gun at Fairchild say- I, iwg. ''Get down you old white-headed "By what authority?" said Fairchild. "By mine. lam going to kill the Indians and you too." was the r reply. The leader caught hold of the f mules and unhitched them, cutting the - harness. Fairchild, clinging to the lines, leaped to the ground. The poor wretches implored for mer ev. and begged Fairchild to save them. • The warriors Were unarmed and knew j that resistance was itseli ss. They were th<- coolest in the party, although facing inevitable death, but the women and I children shrieked, groaned and wept piteously. Fairchild had nothing but L " a small pistol, and six inches from his - ear was the muzzle of the needle gun. t fie says that tears came into his eyes i and he mingled his entreaties with those e of the Modocs, in hopes that a massacre might be avoided. He adds: "Itwas a terrible scene, one I shall never forget. ' t shudder when I think of what I saw 1 and heard. The tearful voices of those women and children still ring in my | ears." But the cowardly hounds were not to lie bulked. A shot, and Little John lay dead in the wagon with a bullet in his i brain. The mules dashed away with Fairchild, who became entangled in the ; lines. Five more shots, by which Te li e Jack, Pony and Mooch were killed j and Little John's squaw frightfully wounded m the shoulder. Away ahead | ou tin road in the direction of Boyle's j Camp a cloud of dust was perceived, indicating the approach of a team. The murd rers espied the dust and -; shortly afterwards were riding rapidly; .' away. {• Sergeant Murphy, of Battery G, 4th t Artillery, with ten men and a teamster i came upon the scene of the massacre. ' The S< rgeant took charge of affairs and 1 remained with his men oii the ground, i" Fairchild. tHe teamster and the wound - t<! squaw with her two children came _iin at two o'clock this morning. Fair child reached General Davis" headquar tn - and related his storv. Teams with an escort were at once sent to bring in ' the prisoners, dead and alive, -j No steps were taken for the appre -3 heiision of the fellows who ]>erfonn< <l j the bloody work. It is generally sup posed that the guiity parties were Ore gon volunteers. Fairchild is of that ' opinion himself. The warriors killed 5 , were not charged with murder. Those ; who know them best say they have only participated in open fights. Every one , here condemns t lie affair as atrocious and without any excuse. \ There is no doubt but that the nnir- I" d< is were carried out upon a carefully i arranged plan, as Fairchild noticed i horsemen on the road ahead and behind - him when the shots were fired. Had i John Fairchild, instead of James, la en ■ pi t-cut. another murder might have been added to the list, as the Oregon ; ians are bitter in their hatred to John,! the old man. and other Californium-. 1 The Warm Spring Indians have only a few weeks longer to serve. Sergeant ( but on is last failing. THE readers of the JOURNAL may • be interested in the following extract ' from a private letter, written by a 1 voting teacher a few hundred miles l ! • , away. The article is the one on - Best, a letter in the paper of May "Yesterday mv mail consisted of the For T!,R JOURNAL. I went up stairs feeling a little unsatisfied and restless, opened it and found ju-i . the word, the thought I needed. It was strong and good, full of help and rest. I enjoyed it alone until my cup ran over and then called ; to share it with me. The JOURNAL • has a good "Friend'' and I wish she would write often. The suggestion in your letter to read the piece made me resolve to read it soon and know ; ing a little of the author will lend fresh interest. I asked Fannie thi> evening to read it. 1 thought it was just what she needed and I hope it may be as much to her as it was to . me." We hope none of our readers fail ' to read these letters from "Friend of the JOURNAL," They will do us all ' j good. „ New Cura for Insanity. A new cure for insanity has been dis j covered. A few days ago a handsome young Irishman, of 24 years, was taken to an insane hospital in New York, a raving maniac. He was thrust into one, of the cells in the lower part of the build ing and with great difficulty pinioned to bis bed. He yelled and struggled at such a rate that lie was ordered to In put into a straight jacket. The next morning, while the physicians were try ing to devise some proper treatment, the warden sent for the young man's sweetheart and in an hour's time a pret ty blue-eyed Irish girl, blushing and laughing came to the warden and said she guessed she was "the only svvate lieart Peter had." Slipping into the cell of the madman, she went to his bedside, put her arm about his neck and kissed him. He ceased to struggle and became quiet, she smoothed his forehead, gently stroked his face, and fed liim as though he were a child. The hearty warden watched with delight the progress of his remedy, which he called homeopathic. At 6 o'clock, when the rosy little physician kissed her patient good-by, be was as sane as ever he was. The warden now warrants a cure in every case of insanity where the patient lias a swi etheart. 1 HE first, news-carrier—Noah's dove. Incendiarism. The National Board of Fire Under wliters, at their late meeting in the ' City of New York, resolved to raise a fund of §IOO,OOO for the detection, con viction and punishment of parties en gaged in the nefarious business of in cendiarism and arson. The Executive ! Committee of that Board, at their meet ing 011 May 14th, 1*73, carried out the resolution and ojiened the subscription. We hail this movement as a step in the right direction and condemn the action as one not only likely to benefit Underwriters, but also to protect the public from wholesale loss. This action is the more important when it is re tnembered that the exjierience of the large companies transacting the busi ness of lire insurance in the United . States shows that the proportion of loss to be attributed to the above causes is not less than 33 per cent, of the whole, or a loss to the country of at least twenty-five millions of dollars per an num. — Evening Bulletin. yen and jMfIMI. THE Teacher's Association of the sec ond District of Allegany County, will hold its next session in this village on the 13th and 14th of June. A very in teresting programme has been prepared and the occasion promises to be a profit able one to all interested in educational matters. We trust that there will be a good turn-out of teachers and persons interested in educational progress, as these re-unions are at once pleasant so cial gatherings and practical experience ; meetings. SPEAKING of the Constitutional Con vention, the Ilarrisburg Patriot says: Forewarned is forearmed! Tiie sincere and earnest advocates of reform in the convention must see that the work in which they are engaged does not unnec essarily lag a single second. Summer vacations are for school-boys, not for full-grown men. The heated term finds the lawyer in court, the editor at his disk. the smith at his anvil, the farmer in the harvest field. Constitution-mak ing is not more exhaustive of the m -n --tal faculties than the employments of the first two classes, and certainly not more severe <>n the physical man than the lalKirs of the last two. At any rate such is the reasoning of the common mind and the convention cannot half so well afford to disregard that as to dis card thesugg. stions of tliedilettanteism which lias such mortal terror of a little dust and sweat. In plain words, indus trious ;> ople hate idleness and sloth and will not tolerate them even in a Consti tutional Convention. IN the Constitutional Convention, y< sterday a section of the article on leg islation. embodying a prohibitory liquor j law. was voted down. It was proposed i | to submit the section as a separate pro- 1 I position, but even thus divorced it was contended it would injure the chances of the new instimnent. Many friends of temperance in the convention voted against the s. ction beeau.se they believed the local option law sufiicient in the j pr< mises.— Phi i 'phi' Pr<ss. ABPSE OK POSTAL CARDS. —The Daily Uraphin says: We are requested to slat-- that parties who propose to use the new postal cards for any unlawful purpose spend their money in vain, us i the cards go no further than the Pwt i Office lire. It is well to have this mat- U r understood, as the law says that all 1 cards on which are written abusive or < obscene languagt shall be destroyed. j THEGEXEVA AWARD.— lnformation rcaci.es here to-day from London that ! the governor lit oi Great Britain have made arrangement through the Bank of England witli certain bankers to deliver to the Secretary of State in Wasirtng-! ton, on or b- fore the 13th of SepteniL r, fifteen and one-half millions of dollars in gold, i he amount awarded by the Gen eva Tribunal to the United States. THE repoit of proceedings of the. Board of Inquiry at \ ienna in the case of General Van Buren, and the testi mony of witnesses, is in part, but these, | while they do not impugn the honesty - of Gen. Van Buren, show his incapacity for the business placed in his charge and hence the irregularities winch led lo his suspension. HALIFAX, N. S., June 9. —During a high wind on Sunday sparks from a chimney at the Lingeii Mines ignited the coal in the pit. The fire up to a lat< hour last night showed no signs of abating. An explosion is feared and the men refuse to approach the mines. THE massacre of the Modoc captives at Lost liiver crossing is denounced b\ every one here. Both Gen. Sherman i with the military, and Attorney-Gene- i nil Williams with the judicial authori-' ties, w ill t xcreise every jiossibk means to i capture and punish the culprits. The' Attorney-General expresses the opinion that the murder was committed by ruf fians and outlaws who infest that local ity, and that it will be almost impossible to catch them. The War Department received no dispatches on the subject to-day.— Bujfalo Express. LONDON, June 9.—ln the House of Lords to-day Karl Russell introduced a bill tor the better government of Ireland, which abolishes tlie office of Lord Lieutenant and provides that the voice of eight jurors out of twelve | will suffice for a verdict. The object of this measure is to restrict the I power of the priesthood and secure! the conviction of criminals. STEAMER 1 hurinyia, from Hamburg, bearing the. remains of the late Minister ! Orr arrived at New York on the 11th instant. ELDRIDGE BROTHERS, T* I SPECIAL AIIE.VTS FOR I j - WOODWARD & BROWN. TVEBEB, MATHrSHKK, auj CHICIIERING ■ P I A IST os 1 5 ALSO. ! (Jeorgp Wood's Celebrated Organs. 1 PI'LLAK'S SKW MASONIC HALL BULIus (Xctr Howell House.) WELLSVILLE, N. Y. I Dealers 111 all kinds of MUSICAL MEKI li \> . DISK, SHEET Ml SIC, AC. TUNING au<l REPAIRING PIANOS A SI-BCT , . We Invite the Publie to examine ami eric . WOODWARD A BROWN Pianos, anAUt.. \V„ Orgaus. H. D. TREAD WEIL, [ —OF— I i Wellsville, N. Y., i > Haa just returned from New York ,• •. stock of . Eccts sr,d Eh::;, LEATHER i SHOE 111 LOOK AT THE PRICES! WOMEN'S SLIPPERS from C c to St " LEATHER LACK BOOTS •. '• I •' MOROCCO " " 81.00 " i MEN'S THICK BOOTS (3.30 " 1 KLP " ti. ?.J J , ' > -all Slices, 'ram 33 cents or* ar.'s. Sole Lea tiler, 30 rnd 31 cents pr p nr' Slw Kin-dings of hM k; . very ' Remember the place, —dire t.y opposite J Howell House. BOOTS and SHOZ: John Denhof, WOULD re-qwrtfullv inform THE EI H-I-N, th continues the manufacture of BOOTS AND SHOE; , at his new Stand, MAIN STREET below i\*AFiK {South of the Britbjef) ALL work dotty in a workmanlike mann reasonable rates, AND A GOOD FIT GI'AKASTI il Give him a call. Johri V. Drown, PKOI'WETOB OF LINE OF STAGE! HETWFEN Cou&orsport & Wollsvi ( i'/o OS TOI YO, PA. Persons going to OSYVAYO by stan. ana to return same day, will b- ae nan at stage i ates. Passenget s wishing to reach anv of tfcr r -i ing towns will lie convey..' M Lit reasonable rates. A good Livery rig kept constantly ■ n ta passengers by the stage. OSV/AYO Hous (JOHN V. BROWN, /' OKV\ AYO, l'A. lit-tr THE Popular Science lout CONDUCTED BY Prof. EL L. "Yon man* The crowing importance of - ' K to all classes of the co uinunit "'" r , ■ lent means ofdiffusii g it. Ti:- P> Monthly has Iteen staled to i ami supplies u want ml by ii" tlu ri' ' ! the t'nited States. . It contains instructive and attru 1 " 1 i and abstracts of articles, origb ■■■ " " i lust rated, from the leading - ' 1 fergnt countries, giving the lan-f c of natural phenomena, explain"*? | tlons of science to the practical operations of domestic life. It is designed to give especial aP'*; I those branches of science wht<' • i understanding of the nature • j the claims of scientific education; 1 . , ings of science upon questions of •' " , I enunent. How the various opinion are affected in ti c advance J inquiry will also be eouMdered. I In its literarv character this p< : 1 , ; lie popular without being superif ' to the intelligent readingclass* " ty. It seeks to procure authentic men who know their subjects a * theiKin-scieiitific puiilic for pnri l "** - - and explanation. .....s ! It will have contributions ir"'®; I < cr. Prof. Huxley, Prof. Tvi.da ' j other writers identified with -i ' ■■■' I ami scientific explanation. -i i The I'o/tnlar ScUnc j large octavo, handsomely P" 1 v;::j 1 Terms, Five Dollars per annum, per copy. Published by . I. APPLETU* * , My auti Nil ro *
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers