The POTTER JOURNAL AND NEWS ITEM. COUDERSPORT, PA., July 9, 1873 F THE farmers' organization under the name of Granges, skeins to be rapidly gaining ground at the west -and it lias recently made its power felt in Illinois by the election of its candidate for judge of the supreme court. Its primary object is understood to be to protect the interest of farmers against the extortionate demands of railroad monopolies and other trans portation companies. That there are two sides to this question of transportation admits of no doubt, but when it costs three bushels of grain to market one from the state'of Minnesota, with direct lines of railroad connecting that state with the seaboard and when, with the high price of breadstuff's in the east, thousands of bushels of corn are daily burned for fuel, as was the case in the states west of the Mississippi last spring, we naturally come to the conclusion that there is something wrong. J The farmers claim that the rail roads charge rates that are not only ruinous to the farming interest, but much higher than are necessary to cover their running expenses and pay fair dividends on their stock. They have not indicated just how they propose to remedy this state of things, though their late action in Illinois seems to point to judicial and legislative means. Many of the papers throughout the country seem horrified at a judiciary being elected to carry out a particular object. It does not necessarily follow that such is the case. In all of the states that elect their judges, there is a political contest to secure control of the courts, yet this control contemplates nothing more than security from ad verse partisan decisions. The action of the Supreme Court of the United States on the slavery question has warned the country of the danger that lurks around judicial bodies when powerful combinations have interests at stake. The railroad monopolies of the country are a power that is as yet but partially de veloped. but its influence is tremen dous and the Granges are working wisely for the accomplishment of their object when they place their candidates on the benches of the supreme courts of the several states. The Last Day of June. The crown of the year is come and almost gone. The summit of warmth, of verdure, of beauty, of balmy, dewy freshness is passing away to give place to other lovely days and great treasures of summer fullness, but to be equalled never more, until another June shall come, queen of another year, to shed its brief blessing on the world again. It seems as though any grief or disappointment weuld be harder to endure in this sunny, floweiy month than in any other; that any joy or crown of blessing should come in it, as the fitting time. New hopes should spring, old ones be crowned with fulfillment, new zeal for all noble enterprises, new love for all earth's children. New efforts to spread the blessings of life over all the land and to heal, as far as human effort may, all its ills; because we feel the fullness of this time of outward bless- ing ourselves. mi? June is passing away. Happy be who in this mountain time hath done nothing to cloud his own life or another's. Happy still whosoever hath made it memorable by any good, kind deed, or by the turning away from any evil. For him will the sunlight of all future Junes be blighter, the air purer, the roses love lier and more fragrant. THE Philadelphia Press in some articles on Preventable Disease, made very timely now by the approach of cholera as well as the usual deathly accompaniments of the hot weather, lias many valuable suggestions aliout means of health especially among the poorer classes. It speaks of the "Children's excur sions""Summer Sanitariums" that is, "free parks in some elevated regions near the cities, furnished with cot tages and has the following account of THE CHILDREN'S SEA-SHORE HOUSE. —One, and that which is more advanced toward completion, is a home for children at the sea-shore, within easy distance from the city, viz., 'The Children's Sea-shore House at Atlantic City." The formation of this home was as follows: In the early part of last summer a few ladies and gentlemen of Phila delphia rented a cottage at Atlantic City, and calling it "The Children's House," furnished it with the neces sary appliances for the comfortable maintenance of some ten or twelve invalid children during the summer months, who were under the charge of a competent resident physician and efficient female assistants. The undertaking was experimental, and of the most simple character, putting to practical proof an idea that had presented itself to some of the manag ers. in view of the large number of poor children who suffered from the effects of close confinement in the city and in many cases died from actual want of pure air. The con trast between their wasted little frames and the blooming faces and sturdy figures of other children, who were able to spend most or all of the summer in the country or at the seaside, pointed significantly to the remedy, which the managers hoped to prove practicable by a modest trial. That trial has been success fully made, twenty-seven children having been received during the sum mer and enlarging their member ship, they have procured the neces sary legislation from the State of New Jersey, under the corporate title of ''The Children's Sea-shore House at Atlantic City," and are now prepared to make an effort on a larger scale, working from the foot hold they have already established. One of their own members having purchased and presented to "The Children's House" a large and de lightful lot at Atlantic City, running to the sea, with a depth of eight hun dred feet and one hundred and fifty feet wide, they have had plans drawn up, and expect to begin the building as soon as the season permits. The managers have now before them a defined work almost limitless in its power for good, which will re quire time and money to accomplish. They believe that it will at once car ry a waft of health into many sick homes and trust that it will in the end make itself felt in ever}- dark corner and alley of our city, giving to the children of the poor a short escape from the summer's pestilence —a chance of life—u little happiness of the kind that to them is almost unknown—the happiness of sea breeze and abundant. sunshine. They will begin with accommodations for fifty or sixty children and while they will aim to make the institution in a measure self-supporting by the charge of a small weekly board, no child will be turned away because it comes to them without means, but will rather be doubly welcomed. It will, tlierelore, be necessary to col lect a large sum of money, not only to build the house (which will cost about $ 12,000), but also to meet the weekly needs ot its inmates. It is also very desirable to establish a permanent fund and while the man agers hope to receive a sufficient amount in donations to pay for the building they trust that every parent and child in our community who feels an interest in this object will give it such support as will be neces sary to secure its success by becom ing a yearly subscriber. The mem bers of the board of management are James S. Whitney, president, 1815 Vine street; J. Shipley Xewlin, secretary and treasurer, 1018 Clinton street; Rene Guillou, 1722 Vino street; Francis W. Lewis, 2010 Spruce street; James S. Riddle, 1714 Locust street; Christian J. Hoffman, 1017 Arch street; Mrs. James S. Whitney, Mrs. Rene Guil lou, Mrs. S. Middleton; Miss Cath arine C. Riddle, 1315 Locust street. This house is of wood and is rap idly approaching its completion, from which we infer that the benevolent public are contributing liberally. It is a good, a beneficent work, NATVRE isnever silent. No matter how faint the breeze, how calmly the trees stand in the so-called silent night, how breathless the air, let our ears but be startled into listening and many and mysterious sounds can be instantly detected. We get so accustomed to these many noises as not to notice them at ordinary times, as we do to the ticking of a clock or the hum of a mill and so when we do catch them they often seem to us strange and new and are counted, or were in the days of superstition, as omens. SAD EYES. A writer long ago, Elizabeth Oakes Smith, 1 think, wrote of "presaging eyes;" those in whose brightness and depth lurked a foreshadowing of sorrows to come; of the tears that the} r should shed. Perhaps there aie such, indeed we fancy we have seen them more times than we like to think. May God keep us from the foreshadowing unless it be also a preparation. Looking down the dinner table to-day, there met mv view so many sad eyes—One pair close on my right, that always bring up the words of the Holy One "Woman! why weepest thou?" Only that yesterday her husband, of whom she is tender and careful, came to the table with a very red face and an odor of strong drink about him, the question was answered. A little farther down sat an invalid of many years; a maiden lady wearied, pro bably with much pain and her eyes showed it. But beyond her sat a young wife and mother, of only 22 years; animated and cheerful incon- versation and ready to join in any game or frolic, but at every pause her face settled into a look so sad, so hopeless that I wondered. I had heard of her as in very poor health and asked myself "is this all ?" 1 hen glancing at an invalid of many years at my side I felt "No, this is not all. There is a worm at the root of all her youth and beauty and pros perity. Her eyes rest on a pathway strewn with withered hopes. She is succumbing to her first great bitter disappointment." Another on my left was plump and fair, but when she raised her eyes to mine they too were sad; but there came a sudden relief in the voice and glance of a bright girl of ten or so, who with glowing cheek and dancing eyes, black fringed ones like our own darling's, looked up to tell of the morning's play. Heaven bless her! WJiat will her eyes show fifteen years from now ? Only one gentleman is in this ; eompanj', with bowed figure and whitened hair. He has been a sue ! cessful man. Like other strong men, he bore the burden and heat of the day, but now with broken health and some bereavement, he, too, is passing j through the deep waters. His wife ■ and other elderly women, meet and 1 greet each other cheerfully, with figures erect and with more or less of peace and quietness on all their countenances. They have been through the troubles. They have learned, each for herself, that "The rivers of sorrow shall not overflow," I as these younger women will learn it, j perhaps, by and by. STONING A "NIGGER." It is weil known that there are human beings so constituted that they can find amusement in the sufferings of the weak and unfortunate. One species of this class is made up of those whose self-re spect and superiority of social station can be maintained in no other way than by inflicting personal violence —usually in the most cowardly way—upon some member of the human family whose skin happens to be of a darker color than their own. In this class seven young rascals who, for the honor of the American navy, we are glad to say are not, by reason of a failure to pass their examinations, mem bers of the Naval Academy at Annapo lis, stand pre-eminent, and these are their names: Young, of Mississippi; Butterlield, of Kansas; Lockett, of Georgia; Rowan, of West Virginia; and Munn, O'Keefe and Gridley, of New York. These young gentlemen in part made up for their failure as scholars by stoning Conyers, a negro boy, who likewise, it is now reported, failed in his examination. We have no sentimental feeling on this matter because Conyers has a black skin. We believe that the negro must "take his chance" with the rest of us, and so long as the laws do not make unjust discrimination against him he has no ground to complain of his posi tion. But when seven young men unite in stoning any other single person they one and severally ought to be taken to Delaware and soundly Hogged. A de cent punishment is altogether above their deserts. If the facts are as given we hope that the Navy Department will devise some suitable punishment for their cowardly brutality. ♦ ♦ ♦ The Thought-Quickening Process. We often find ourselves looking for j ward for the result of the next few gen ! erations, wishing to know ahout it, as I we wish to know the end of an exciting romance: but never more keenly than I when we have seen a school that is kept, I as some schools are nowadays, on priu | ciples that we cannot call new, since they are as old as Socrates, but which, j be they new or old, evoke all that is j brilliant in a child in the place of those ; principles of routine, certainly as old as ' stupidity itself, which can be beaten j into any blockdead, and which, in the | tiresome iteration of their processes, | are enough to make a dunce of any 1 prodigy. | Indeed, if the children that are to i follow us do not constitute a race of i vast superiority it will not be the fault jof their teaching. Not that we claim j to see the germs of future wings already ! sprouting on the infantile shoulders, or expect our posterity to lie armed with tipstaves charged with the magic vril, nor that we wish every child to be as learned as the little five-year-old pedant of our acquaintance who cried at the table because his father was helped to a right angle of pie while lie was con demned to an acute angle; but that we believe the gentle stimulation of this method of instruction so well develops the powers of thought that when the intellect has reached maturity it will lie ready at once to work on what it finds rather than be forced to waste its best years in learning how to utilize its ability. Take, for instance, the single study of geography as we lately saw it taught. Every one remembers the tears and trouble which that simple and delight ful study used to cost till the memory refused to note any distinction between cape, peninsula or promontory. Hut by the system of which we spea£ all that painful memorizing from state ments in language beyond childish com prehension is rendered unnecessary and the whole thing becomes something as charming as it would be on the field. The first act of the scholars, for ex ample, is to make a "map"—of a table or a bench —upon the blackboard, or rather, the teacher makes it, obediently to their instructions, This map is then to be transferred from blackboard to slate. It was easy enough to measure the table by a string and order a line of that length to be measured and drawn ou the board; but it is a different thing to transfer that line to their slates and thus learn at once the significance of the "scale." This done at last, though, a map of the school-room is made; then j one of tie way to school with the streets and*patlis diverging from it. Froin this arises the necesity of knowing the points ! of the compass—nothing being taught | till its need is felt —and the instruction is given in a calistheuic exercise in which the children are formed in a hol low square, facing outward, and the sides of the square are marched to their respective points till they are under stood and remembered, upon which , their application to the map on the ljoard is mere play. When sufficient j elementary knowledge lias thus been I acquired intelligence is called more pos | itively into play and the children are • told, for instance, as one way of doing I this, that they may colonize an island. | A rough sketch, a sort of land in the J distance, being made on the board every : point in the shape of the island is left ' to be arranged by the children, who are I to give reasons for their decisions, j Some would have it a smooth plain, 1 such as a hoop could l)e trundled on all i day; some are for mountains and ad | ventures. Mountains carry the day j and determine the nature of the shores. The reason assigned for the choice of ; mountains is that they are places for i mines; iron and copper, if not silver and gold, will lie wanted in the colony i —mines will afford them ; pasturage j will be wanted for cattle, too—the mountain-sides will give it; rain will be wanted—the mountain-tops arrest the slouds and produce it; lastly, as the teacher suggests, rivers will be wanted. Shall the rivers flow from the sea into ! the mountains? Criticism is invited. ; Whoever heard of water running up i hill? The teacher draws a river, start ing nowhere in particular and going anywhere in general, and requires the pupils to say why it is not right till they see that nature does nothing at hap-haz ard; the rivers, as well as other things, always run from some cause to some end, so that in this island they must rise among the hills in the springs that the rains and vapors make and swell, and then flow downward to their outlet | where they feed the sea. And here, if i the teacher is able, a digression explains i the dead livers of California and the j rivers lost upon the desert. But why I do they want rivers at all on the island? j For roads, one says; for fishing, says I another; to drain the lands; to water i them; to turn wheels; to carry mer- I chandise. As voice after voice resounds a zest springs up till the scene is as (ager, if not as clamorous, as the Gold Room. And what kind of rivers is wanted for these things, is then asked. For carrying merchandise let us say, a stream full of eddies and rapids that a vessel must skirt and struggle with, or a deep and quiet one that upbuoys the vessel which the wind carries along? And for turning wheels shall it be a slow and sluggish current or a "swift one full of falls? All these things hav ing been settled, the map of the island drawn in a satisfactory manner and the colony being supposed to be on the way to it, the teacher asks if it is desirable to plant the colony in the interior or on the sea-shore; and the subject being well weighed and the opposing reasons given it is resolved to have it on the sea shore on account of the unexplored and uncleared nature of the interior, and from considerations of safety and of accessibility—all of which the children i appreciate quite as much as they would j the exploits of Hans or the escapes of Gretchen in their story-books. In this method the colony being established, so far as its geographical condition is 1 concerned, it is proposed to send off a j second colony to a point farther in the interior. Shall they strike out at a venture? Follow the river, cries one. Follow the river, by all means, and have your way open behind you. But how far? to the source? to the falls? To the falls. There they are; to move machinery, to saw lumber, to grind corn; ships can go no farther; the tide i rises no farther. The falls, then, are; at the head of tide-water. And thus j the imagination is kindled, the intellect is used and a fact and a series of facts ! are made alive with meaning—facts! which never had any meaning at all before. Sometimes this kind of exercise alter nates with one which affords as much pleasure as the old game of "Dr. Bus hy." This is a game played with cards, | evenly distributed, and on the back of each of which is written the name of a town or city and on the face, in double ! rows, a statement of the usual imports | and exports of the place. Any one can prepare these cards by the help of a school gazetteer. The scholar who be gins the game, examining the cards al lotted, finds that Rio Janeiro, it maybe, has rose-wood and diamonds and tapio ca to export, with other tropical staples, J and is in sore need of linen for her la dies, cotten goods for her slaves, cord age for her ships, and straightway de mands these articles. Liverpool can furnish them and take Rio Janeiro's goods in payment! If, then, the scho lar having the card Liverpool does not j immediately cry "Here!" the Rio Ja neiro merchant can take that card with out further ado. If, however, the pos sessor of it does cry " Here!" then Rio Janeiro cannot take it unless able to give its name—Liverpool. But suppos ! ing it taken, the Rio Janeiro merchant tlierf looks at the Liverpool card and set's luirdwarc to spare there, and cut lery and cotten goods; an immense bus iness to be done, in short, in all sorts of exiHu ts and imports; and if Monrovia, glistening like the lady in the dentist s chair with gold, gums and ivory, does not answer at the call for them, or for palm-oil and feathers and spices, then Monrovia also goes to swell the stock of the first merchant. But if. on the con- j trary, Rio Janeiro, having asked for the Liverpool goods, or for the Monrovian or other, cannot give the name of the place furnishing them —Liverpool or Monrovia, or as the case may be—then the Rio Janeiro card is forfeited to the ownen of the card with that place on the back, who then proceeds to make i exchanges until brought up with some round turn which affords opportunity to the next. Thus a knowledge of the world and i its balances and counter-balances is gained that books could hardly teach, and that are usually only half learned ; in the maturer life of the men of busi ; iness, And by this method of instrac tiou, not alone in one science but in all, and which a mother or sister can use as well as a public teacher, study be i comes amusement and the thought-pro ducing qualities of the brain are early | strengthened and ripened for service.— ! Harper's Bazar. \ SABUU PKAIRIK, < Out West, June 27, 1573. En. JOURNAL: Western letters seem to be so fashionable that you, of course, want some and perhaps I would like them as well from verit ! able travelers as those that arc "All I our fancy painted them." I am making a short stay here, | how short, it is hard to tell; pro ' bably long enough to finish this let ter and having used my eyes and a ! spyglass for the last half hour am ! prepared to describe the country,"its ! society, customs, - prospects, educa tional advantages, mineral and manu facturing resources, etc. The buildings here are mostly of wood, (I cannot tell you where the wood comes from; possibiy northern Pennsylvania) with flat roofs project ing very little beyond the walls, pro bably to give less" purchase to the winds. But here and there is a Goth ic cottage. One, a small brown one with its pointed roof and projecting gables, stands just across an alley from my chamber window. It was lightly closed, but - awhile ago some men came, opened one of the upper i blinds and began to pitch hay in it from a wagon. I can't imagine; where the hay came from. After- j wards they opened the lower part of the cottage and drew thence a carri ° age and a basket-phaeton. The yard across the way is full of trees, willows, aspens and sliver maples. There are fioyers, a great many roses in the yards, and wild roses, the single ones, along thcxroad sides where in many places they are ] the only green thing. A patch of; clover here and there sends up its j homelike fragrance, making one think of all quiet domestic j ys as does the singing of a tea kettle. There are many trees, shady walks of hard sand and sunny walks of soft, | fine sand, but the shaded ones are j preferable, almost constantly a strong ! breeze and a wide expanse of beauti fill cloudless sky. Yesterday a party ! of us went down to see the lighthouse,! for we have a lighthouse even here,! with a flight of one hundred and j thirty-seven steps up the tower, j From here a deer or an antelope might be seen at a great distance if one were there. The young ladies of course, wanted to go up and enjoy I the view from the top, but for some j reason or other the keeper was not in a very complaisant mood and object ed. "The machinery had just been oiled, it was dirty up there, the ladies would soil their dresses." Asi this did not seem sufficient he said | "the wind is so strong to-day it is not safe." "Ah!" said Judge W., "yes, can you not see the building swaying in the wind?" makinS the motion with his hand, "and perhaps we had better not stand so near, it might topple over on to you in this wind." Then turning to the keeper who' was looking at him with some irrita tion in his face, he asked with great ; apparent interest. "llow much do you think it moves sometimes in these strong gales?" "A quarter of an inch, perhaps" said the keeper, impatiently and the judge turned away, leaving the ladies to make what progress they wished up the winding stairway. Going fishing is a great pastime here as in Potter County but we do not see the substantial results, that we do there. Fish are plenty on the table but are mostly obtained from professional operators. 1 cannot think what the amateurs do with theirs. A party of equestrians passed the other evening—three ladies and a gentleman—they and their four horses ! i seeming to enjoy the exorcise ex tremely as did we who looked on. Traveling gets to be of small ac count when one gets away out here. Gentlemen and ladies think nothing of starting any morning on a trip to one of the eastern cities—custom makes all things easy. PRAISE. Clover blossom, tell me true, Wbv was your perfume given to you? | "That all might know," the flower con fessed, "llow God blesses the lowliest." Robin-redbreast, let me hear Wherefore your voice is so sweet and clear? "A thankful heart," then whistled he, "Is the secret of all melody." i Smiling corn field, speak me fair, llow did you come by your yellow hair? "When the sun gave me kiss after kiss. What return could 1 make but this?" Stars illuming the dead of night, Where did you borrow your kindly light? "From the fountain whence all beauty flows A drop was given to us that glows." Brooklet, running away in the sun. Where did you gather your bubbles, j each one? J :j "God's snows and rains have lent unto ! me That which I hasten to give to the sea." I Where did you find your colors seven That paint your picture, rainbow, in heaven? • "When first God said, 'Let light begin,": i These were the colors that entered in." j —Heritor's Bazar. : ,| | 1.l | h'u ■ll . ■ BUFFALO, July 7. —Another shock of • an earthquake occurred at six o'clock j this morning. The only damage done l>y the shock ; of yesterday was the throwing down of I a chimney in the center of the city. ! JAMESTOWN, July 7.— About 9:l' ; ; yesterday morning a shock of ail earth- ' | quake was distinctly felt, causing the ! breaking of crockery, throwing picture frames from walls, etc. NEW YOKK. July 7. —A fatal case of ' cholera is reported in Jersey City to-day. j l)r. W. King. No. 109G rand street, died at two o'clock this morning of what is; j described as spasmodic cholera, i A German emigrant died in the same city last week of cholera, but the report j ■ I uf the fact was suppressed. ! MEW \ OKK, July 7.— The steamship ; : City of 1 V'i.shine harvested. The I fall wheat in shock was beginning to sprout in the bottom lands, but was sub-1 merged and will be almost totally de stroyed and even that on the uplands in many places is under water and will suf- j | for greatly. l'cn and Scissors. - — i BOOK-KEEPING may be taught in a: single lesson of three words; Never leud them. WOMEN like to marry men by the name of William, so they can have a will of their own. WE do our best to believe all the queer stories that we find, for we could not conscientiously present them to our readers unless we believed them to be i true, but here is one that, we caution the public, seems to us a little doubtful. We will not say it is a lie, but it is im probable. A horse in St. Paul, Minne sota, drank lieer till he was in a beast ly state of intoxication. His owner, knowing that his previous habits were exemplary, thought he was dead and i | skinned him. Next morning a ghastly i steed, without hide or grazing on the public coim skillful veterinary surge, u j in planting his supaVrV H from a neighboring tannery STRONGER contrasts 0 f never presented than those 7 j the Southern Presbyterian ■, ' 1 ; which recently met at Little : kansas. and the meeting 0 f ; Carolina Diocese (Episcopal Bishop Stevens, tendering n, tliies of the northern dioo N . southern, was so warmly r,.,.. : Southern Presbyterians, on • hand, regarded the overtup',' northern Assembly for union ness, if not aversion. The In-, showed its sincerity in th.. expunging everything from i;., or at least voting everythitii; void, that reflected in any u,., Southern brethren and ofTev free hand of fellowship; but, j clined. "I SAY, old boy," cried P. an excavator whom lie e|.| j bottom .of a yawning gulf. ! you digging there?" "A hi old boy replied. Paul was Ul , t • off in this fashion. "What ,r. ! ing to do with the liole?"| lf j "Going to cut it up into JWUJ-;; ; rejoined the old boy, "and re. to farmers for gate-jiosts," MR. GOCGH tells a good stor I trative of quaint Scottish hum sparks from London once came decent looking shepherd in ,\ r . I and accosted him with, "Yen very line view here—you i-msv way." "Ytt aye, yu aye, a ferry gj^ "Ah! you can see America 1.-a pose?" i "Farrar than that." "How is that?" "Gu jist wait tide the n | away, and you'll set Tie m THE Elmira GuztW. issm-,-- | supple meat, which is jrix v i-. foy i weekly subscribers. It is in e ; form and contains illustr.uioi &■ J erature, whicli is readable and ii | live. This monthly pub!;..,;, : supplement of this description i ly creditable to the enterpr> i publishers of the Gaz'ttc. JUDGE Rockefeller MUNI! ; ' licenses in Montour count) at; session of court, lie said'v : cracker at ten cents and giving j drink is 'played out." " SOUTHERN FEELING.—A R j dent of the New York i made a tour through Yinrasu | Tennessee and North Alal in a tone of agreeable dis*.j. I that in all his experience iuth-, j through which he has passed lie i heard an allusion to any politic; i He lias improved numerous op; j tics, lie says, to mingle with pw j they talk about everything hut; . are generally cheerfntand tuwar: ; eni men are frank, often, curd are thorotigldy adapted to tie- s:: with respect to thecolo ,d p-. ' while the colored population ly cheerful and contented. T: • rose-colored view of the situ;. • true, but there is sufficient k' j nevertheless, t<• suggest t!:i 1 ! the Smith is making toward si business view of things, lu ti guage of the corres|n indent, tK the Southern people are sati '- j t he methods of reconstruction* 1 | folly to affirm, but they have | I wisdom by experience in the p i [Kilitics under difficulties. 1} OYER WHEEL CO., .i) 376 West Tt ir l St., Cisd Manufacturers of the celebrated Wheel, the Rover < < UIIWO i Old Style Wagons. AIM I and Wagon Woodwork of l script ion. Actual wear and hard best test of the strength and of a wheel, and they h:iv< p Sarven Patent to wearloayi'' or four sets of the l> >t eld stylH When about to purchase at' l iage or wagon, see tlr.it your - maker uses our make of tin ' wheel. There are so many in ' tent wheels in the market tic be to your interest to stipub ' Sarven—as it is now conceded only perfectly reliable wheel it l 2512—tf UOUSE MOVING .-y WARDS, Oswavo, Pa., " farm,) has all the necessary: •).' prepared to move barns or short neitice. I farmers wishing to P ultll *\ tM MACHINES, *iil do *** g "NOW Model IluoUcj a!l proved Wood." Sold by W. T. DIKE, Agent. <' W. W. MOO# DEAI.HK IS MOHUMIKTS, 10 AMERICAN AND lM r '' MARHI l- s ' ltC " I Third St.. opposite ( I COLDtRSPORT, All work done lu a workman" 1 ) , I ders sent by mail prowl My prices are the lowest In th " count rv.