The POTTER JOURNAL AND NEWS ITEM. COUDERSPORT. Fa.. Sept. 3.1873 Republican Ticket. STATE TREASURER. It. W. MACKEV, of Pittsburgh. JUDGE OF SUPREME COURT. HON*. ISAAC G. GORDON",' of .Jefferson County. Rfpresentatrr Delegate. C C CORN FORTH, of MeKean County. Senatorial Delegate. HUGH YOUNG, of Tioga County. Countti Commlttri DAN RAKER, Chairman, J M HAMILTON, Secretary, GWColviu OG Gushing * It I, Nichols J M Kilbourne It K Young 1 'igilance Com mitt e.<. Ahbott— Chas Meisner, Jos Seinvart/enbaeh and Chas Henschel , Allegan n— David L Raymond, A G I reslio and W'R Gardner . , _ ffingliom —l B Carpenter, A H Cobb and L J Thompson Clara—.] I. Allen, TV in Graves and W A Cole Cowii rsr/ort—S E Hamilton, W K Jones and J C Davidson , ._ „ , Eaialia— Lewis A Glace, G Stearns an I J I> Earl O' /iev" —J C Cavanaugli, Win Baker and Josian Webster . , Harrison— J L Haynes, A A Swetland and W W Lawrence „ Hector —D W Havens, John Skint and Cyrus Sunderlin , Hebron— Win Greenman, L M Coy and Geo \\ Stiltman , _ „ Homer— Levi S Qitiinby, Jacoli Peet anil W H Crosbv Keating— G" C Lewis, Henry Harris and Hiram Bridges Isvcixrilfe —C E Baker, Henry C Hosley and O It Bassett O*wauo— A S Lyman, J V Brown and Win Fes senden J'tke —M V Prowtv. SII Martin and Sam 1 Brown jrteaxont I 'alley— Ernest Wriglit, I.ewis Lyman and J K F Judkiiis PorVvn —citas Young. Chas Austin and Dan 1 Everett , Jtoulet —M V Liirrabce, Win Hazen and Ciias Barr Sharon— N Parmenter, A A Newton and J S IVtirsoll • Stoxrcrr?*on —H Amlresoii, .THINGS Barton and Eu Jerg Summit— Alvin Itennells, James Reed and J L Peiree , , Nirerlcn —R L White, Edwin Lyman and Joseph Butler fiylrania —Duttou Stiles, A R Jordan and (I C Roes l~lyaws —A F Raymond, J M Benton anil BJay Cnsliing II" sf Drone/ >—E Crippen, S W Conablc and O . Wetmore jn.c/ffon—J I, Barclay, A R Burlingaine and Slutfer Logue Republican County Convention. The Republicans of Potter County are request ed to meet at their usual n!a'-e uf holding their General Election, on Tuesday, September 2. 1-Ct. between the hours of 4 and si i>. in , to elect Dele gates to repre-.eut them in County Convention to be held at the Borough of Coudersport on Thurs day, the 4th day of September next, at I o'clock, ]). in., to put in nomination candidates to he vol ed for at the October election, anil to transact Mien other business as may come before the < on vention. Tlie Vigilance Committees of the several town ships and boroughs are requested to give notice of the time and place of holding the primary meetings and to' attend them to organize and act as Boards of Election. The number of Delegates t<> he elected from the several townships and bo roughs areas follows: Harrison6; Hebron and Sharon, each A; Bingham, <"ntulU ff-snhw.) ,ie dveision of Republican ( ouuly j Convention. En. JoutwAT. .1 ITEM.—Please niniotiiiee the; name <>i * A. Kivetlimtl. of Harrison town-1 siii'i. as candidate for Comity Commissioner, .> the decision of the Repnb'ican County ' Convention. Eytvi- En. Joraxvr, A TTKM. —PI >.se announce the name "i Samuel liee)K>,ol i s\vavo Township, as a Candidate for ti:e olllce of C im'.:- Auditor— . subject t i the divNi ill of tile P'publican Cooatv . Conventi'iti. Oovavo, Aug. 21, 4513. i School. The graded school at this place opened on tlie twenty-fifth of Au-' gust, uniler very promising auspices.' and is giving signs of :t flourishing growth and happy influence. The school hoard have been very fortu-1 liate in securing as principal one emi nently qualified to raise the school to a high degree of usefulness ami prosperity. Miss Stock well has been so long and so favorably known here, that her name alone will be a power in the school. Mrs. Gridley who has become almost identified with the Second department, and is an admir able teacher, continues in her place; and the Primary department is in good hands. An effort is making to have the school more united than it has been heretofore, which will be a great im provement and increase the influence of each teacher and the interest of every scholar. The three depart ment?- are all well filled and look bright and earnest. Indeed we congratulate ourselves ami the comunity on our school and its prospects. There is a fine set of students, too; eager and intelligent. It is hope! that our citizens will feel and show increased interest in and sympathy with the school. Here are our future teachers; those who will tram the next generation; the little ones we now hold in our arms and for whose good we would make any exertion ami sacrifice. Let us see that these now in the schools shall have our heartiest sympathy and as sistance from the highest to the low est of them, and that the school shall maintain its high position and have every possible facility for advance ment and success. Coudersport Library Association. At the opening of the school, which we hope will make free use of all fa cilities for obtaining information, we should give some attention to the.' Library. It stands next to the school in importance to the educa tion and improvement of our people, and the directors should not full be hind the school directors in their; ixni 1 and attention to its care and im provement. Let there be everything done that can be to improve our Library. Let it be kept equal in its department to the school and all be done that can be to render it acces sible and useful to the scholars. LIMITATIONS. There is hardly anything more ; hard to learn, more difficult to recon cile one's self to, than the bounds that hedge us in on every side, the impossibility of doing even what we see clearly we ought to do. Apart from those that we owe to physical weakness or mental imperfection, the circumstances of our life, or tlic ob tuse perception to which too many of us are subject, there is such a terrible i lack of power to do, when we do see, such an impossibility to get others to : help in the labors that need many, or to find out how to work with others according to their vision. In this country, where the will of the people is sovereign, and that will lies prone before great abuses, the few, perhaps the many who seek re form, labor, and struggle, and lift— | by the sweat of their brows, by the careful watching and the ceaseless energy—until it seems as though something was about to be accoin ! plished, when some weak one gives way, and the "sovereign B ill" is idle ; and inert. Perhaps a reform is needed in our laws. It is plain and simple, and most people see it, but you cannot get them to take the needful steps to ward a change, or if some do so many stand in the way of any progress that it is only by a long, weary process that anj- reform is effected. Still worse is it with the administration of laws when made. We suffer abuses at our very doors because we do not execute vigorously the good laws that we have. We see incalculable mis chief done to the young people, on ' whom rests the hope of the country, because so many lie supine when need is of active, strong, determined resis tance. There are those willing and anxious to work, fettered, not so much by the will to be overcome as by the want !of effective help. And this effective help is lacking most from want of power to see plainly how and what to do—a limitation of perception, i i. ■ ; Each one's great defect bej'>_, r . the limit, not only of Ins own usefulness , but of that of others. In view of all these difficulties, of so many abortive efforts and misuc-1 cessful struggles, it sometimes be comes a question how the world can move on at all, how any progress can be made. Yet we do make progress, some; little by little, the laws are i improved and the power given us to 1 hope for further amendment—but so ' 1 , ! slow, so wearily, does the good time come. Like the march of a great army which has to bring on all its strag glers and all its baggage, provisions, its cannon, tents, and all else that it needs, very slowly, even with its per fect discipline and despotic command, so march we, fettered in every limb, almost in every thought, by all the circumstances of our lives; limited,! each one of us, by all our relations!, to each other, yet, perhaps, aided in mass by these same ties that bind us all together. Wo think most of these limits to all our power to help the world; to benefit one another when the lawless liquor traffic flaunts itself before our eyes; when following evil examples, one after another, violates the law and the honest sense of the communi ty and escapes thai punishment that should stop him and deter others from tin shameful business. For it seems so strange that all the chris tian people, all the moral and legal • force should lie torpid in presence of this dreadful wrong. Oh, how long? An Interesting Experiment. 1 We suppose the most zealous ad vocate ot the emancipation, and of equal political rights to all men, without regard to previous condi tion, had some anxieties as to the effect of such a revolution on the I colored people ot the South and on the nation itself. It is too soon to sav that all cause for anxiety lias passed away, but the general character of the emancipated people has dissipa ted many fears. Fhe following from the Philadelphia Press gives a de scription of one of many movements oi the people of great interest: In Colleton county (the facts arc derived from a South Carolina paper of Democratic sympathies) colored men now own and successfully eon duct, in communities, some of the largest plantations. A number of families, often as many as fifty, or ganize themselves into a society, electing the proper officers and adopt ing suitable laws, and then for sever -1 months, at regular meeting-, pay a | certain sum into a common treasury, i When a sufficient fund has accumu lated, a large plantation is purchased, '> payments being made annually for two or three years. The land thus acquired is divided equally among the members, each being free to la bor as much and as often as lie wish i es, and to sell his crops at his own | prices. A system of dues is. main tained to provide for the care and cure of the sick. A board of arbitra- I tion is also appointed to settle dis i putes. Nearly all of these experiments, we are assured by the Waterboro i News, have proved successful. In instances where the officers have been i found incompetent or dishonest, they j have been removed. When any j member desires to retire, he is re- I turned all the moneys he has paid in to the treasury, with a fair compen sation for the improvements he has ! made. The News further says: "We ido not say that only the colored people who have formed themselves into these societies show thrift and ' the accumulation of property, for a number who, six or seven years ago, were not worth a dollar, now carry on successfully large rice and cotton plantations and are becoming heavy taxpayers. But in the particular section in which these societies are formed, more property exists among those who are now lighting the battle of life and death on their own ac • count, while from the formation ol these societies they are enabled to i purchase more valuable property and 1 secure greater privileges." Every | friend of the colored people and true patriot will watch these experiments with anxiety. Their eifect upon the interests of South Carolina and the future well-being of the new citizens, if they continue to be successful, must be very great. It is a rule ol | political economy that with the sub division of labor the distribution ol wealth is wider and prosperity more general, and it will work in South Carolina as well as elsewhere. IT IS an interesting fact to know that the hornet is a deadly enemy ol the locust, upon which it and its young feed. |*o + 0 WE AGAIN call the attention of our readers to the proposed new Consti tution. We publish on the outside j of this paper two of the articles pro posed by the Constitutional Conven tion—that on the Legislature makes very radical changes and ought to i Y receive careful attention. We can not say that it commands itsetf to our mind as an on the present Const'AiCion, except in one two particulars. We arc in favor of an increase in the number of which each House shall be composed, but we are opposed to bi-ennial elec tions and sessions, and we think the article entirely too long and too cumbersome. But our readers are asked to read and ju Ige for them selves. THE Modocs were captured months ago, and now Captain Jack and sev eral others are condemned to die for the murder of General Can by; but the Indian difficulties seem to be as exciting as ever. A dispatch was recently brought into Fort Berton by two hunters from the Yellow Stone Expedition, dated Muscle Shell River, August 19, which gives the particulars of two lights with the Indians, who in both instances at tacked in large numbers but were finally routed by charges of the cav alry. The savages were said to be well armed with heavy rifles and had plenty of ammunition. These articles are alleged to have been furnished them at Fort Beck, a trading port on the Missouri River, which was made a Military Post by Congress last winter and to which large shipments of hardware were made by traders in the spring. It seems to be impossible to deal with this Indian question successful ly. Unprincipled speculators and; traders cheat and exasperate the sav ages, then sell them arms and am munition, while the government sends its Canbys to treat with them or its Custars and Stanleys to fight : them—the result in either ease being almost always disastrous. The fights on the Yellow Stone ! resulted in the death of three soldiers and the wounding of twenty others. General Custarand Adjutant Ketch- j am both had horses shot under them. The Indians had about forty killed and wounded. SOMETHING is the matter with this j year. Several of our exchanges say the days are growing shorter. OUK agricultural standing and im- j provement is now well assured. Not only are we to have a fair, but al ready quite a number of gentlemen farmers have "taken stock" in the' soil and all the appurtenances and hereditaments thereunto belonging. We congratulate them and the Coun ty. No better way of spending mon- j ev or recruiting over-strung energies, i No going to the sen-shore, UA travel-' I " ' j ing up and down dusty highways, not even, if we may dare to say so, is railioading, either present or pro | spective, so good and nourishing as j a little easy farming. Of course i those who take it hard and in earn -1 est have some over-strung energies that need recruiting other ways. But just ride up past Lymansville , and see how nice farming may be. j "I n England," said an old inhab ! itant of that country who had "sailed : the seas over," " In England the days ; in summer are very much longer than they are here, and you wouldn't be lieve it but the nights are just as much shorter." • • • "Tiif, Baptist and Methodist Sun ! day Schools have united in a picnic, ! which is to come oil* to-morrow at McKuue's grove." Where is McKuue's grove? We ; want to go. CHEER. The limit that bound us, the weak j ness of body and the narrowness of mind, the moral incapacity to per ceive and act on great truths would i . . •j l>e far more discouraging and disas trous than we find them were it not that the little word at the top of this 'article mixes in with almost all the affairs of life, as sunshine does with every landscape, and soothes, bright ens and harmonizes until we almost j find our troubles chhrrning, as beet . ling rocks and frightful chasms or | decaying stumps grow beautiful, 'j A confirmed invalid, with sunken ; cheeks and pain-wearied eyes, will as t often excite our admiration as com j passion by the sunny cheerfulness j that spreads, not only over his own countenance and sounds through his ' words, but shines on all around him. And who so weak of thought or pur pose but that cheeriuess can make I him a desirable, a welcome compan ion. Even those who cannot always set ; nor choose the right path are some times so cordial and cheery in tht wrong one that we have only pleas ant words with which to answer them. Onlv those itufV lOrruuate whose good spirits have left them, who sink under affliction, } who cannot gather hope amid their maladies, nor faith t<> brighten their < sorrows, nor charity to turn them i right where they are wrong. Ski'Temuer has come, and with it the fullness of the year. We had the seed-time, and now the harvest is far advanced, and we have certainly rea son for gratitude that the season has yielded so plenteouslv. The spring was cold and backward and the sum mer has been more than ordinarily cool, but the crops already harvested have been fair and the fall promises to (ill our barns and granaries ami cellars with a plentiful supply of mother Earth's good things. l"l> here among these hills seed-time and harvest have never failed, and though we have heavier yields of grass and grain some years than others we have often noticed that 110 year failed to supply the needs of the people, or to produce enough to prevent suffering and want until the succeeding har vest. The present year we have some other things to congratulate ourselves on as well as the supply of food for man and heast. Our cool climate and pure air have rendered us entirely exempt from the fear of those diseases that prove so terrible to other localities. We have fre quently been almost amused to hear strangers talk of precaution against cholera during the last month or two. Physicians say it cannot reach up here. At all events we will be thank ful for our past safety from such scourges and enjoy our exemption as long as it lasts, while we grow more and more attached to our home among the hills. - From the Washington ]{<>i>nbfic we cut the following notice of the work of one of the heroic spirits who, equally with any soldier or statesman, spent life and energv in behalf of the country and humanity. If we are not mistaken this Myrtilla Miner was a native, or at least a resi dent in her early years, of Friend ship, Allegany county, X. Y., a place that has reason to be proud of her. A Leaf from History A few years before the war Miss Myrtilla Miner began a school in Washington for the education of colored youth. She met with fierce opposition. Iler school was assailed and her life and property endangered. She was threatened with mob violence unless she desisted from her nefraeious and ridiculous project of educating col ored girls, for she had so far confined her efforts to female scholars; and strange as it may serm in this day. he Mayor of Washington counseled ler to close the school, saying he hould be unable to protect her lrom i mob which seemed then inevitable. Tins mayor was, as the world then an in the capital of our " Free Ile mblic," a most worthy, public-spirit ■d and benevolent man. But lew esidents of Washington, of course, •ared or dared to sustain Miss Mi icr. Amid all the opposition she, levertheless, carried on her school vith varied fortunes and frequent in errnptions. Her great aim was to it girls to become teachers. The mblie schools of Washington to-dav ittest the success of her labors in this diiection. Her ideas of education expanded with experience. The work before her enlarged. She appealed to friends in the North to assist her. Liberal people responded and some four thou sand dollars were contributed to hei cause. This sum she invested, in trust, by the purchase of a square ol ground near Twentieth and I' street*, on which was a small frame building in which she kept her school. Until within a year or two past this loca tion was in a distant and seeludc! part of the city. The war caine on, her health brokt down and her school was suspended She visited California in the vail hoi >e of . improving her condition Her great desire was to regaii strength to pursue her vocatioi again as an educator of colored youtl in Washington. During her absenc* Congress incorporated the "instiiu tion for the Education of Colore* Youth," of which Miss Miner wai made one of the corporators. This was in ISO.'k She was not success ful in her visit to the Pacific eoasi and returned to Washington, to die in 1805. The institution created bj Congress succeeded to her trust I he little property she had endowei it with had increasd in value. Othei schools had been opened for colore* children and emancipation had beei effected in the District of Columbia The remaining corporators deter mined to devote the income of tin property to the education of e.lore< teachers. The piece of ground bough by Miss Miner doubled,trebled, quad rupltd iu value, until the-corporator: sold it for ten times the price sin paid for it. This placed a fund o over forty thousand dollars in tin possession of the institution. Vari oils plans were discu sed for uliiiziiu tiie income of this fund so that tin object of its founder might best b< attained—the education of colore* 3011 th for teachers. At present tin income is devoted to the payment o tiie salaries of two professors iu tin normal department of Howard Uni rersity. This arrangement is ex pected to furnish a large number of competent teachers and supply the increasing demand among the schools springing up in the recent land of slavery. The trustees of Howard University have named one of their largest buildings "Miner Hall," and the professors in the normal depart ment are called "the Miner profes sors." Thus the work of a single woman, begun amid trials and pov erty, has come to be a benifieent and success!ui institution, ID the heroic efforts of Miss Miner we may also, to some extent, ascribe the prosper ous and meritorious character of the public colored schools of Washing ton. The same people who a few years ago scouted the idea of educa ting a negro, now see thousands of colored youth in this city acquiring the same education that the children r>f the most favored whites receive. K SEE the following item in some of our exchanges: "The Virginia Educational Association has "voted against teaching girls algebia." We are not informed 011 what ground that august body concluded to cast such a vote. It 111 ay have been the members thought the feminine mind was incapable of understanding the abstruse principles of the science, and feared to assume the responsi bility of taxing it with the mysteries of minus and plus quantities; may be they thought girls did not need such discipline as that study gives, that, as one of Dickens' characters says. "There is but one phenomenon and she's a girl," and there was no need of making her more phenomenal; but the lirst reason that suggested itself to us 011 reading the item was. that the Association being probably composed to a large extent of teach ers the}' voted as"tliej* did because their own acquirements did not ex tend much beyond Robinson's Higher Arithmetic,and if they could exclude the girls from venturing farther in the mathematical field, by the terri ble interdict of an Assoeiational vote, they could get along with the bovs in almost any way. And why not? For what scion of Virginia's chivalry would study algebra in a school where the girls were excluded from the same privilege? '1 HE Republic, Washington, D. C'., in commenting on General Butler's plea in favor of the action of Con gress in increasing the salary of members; has the following which has peculiar pertinency, it is get ting so common for public servants to measure themselves only with the exceptional wealthy few, to the neg- i leet, apparently, of the mass of their I constituents that tliev need to le con-' I tiuually reminded of who the real people are. A gain, when we are told ot the stupendous private fort unes of a very few rich nun in the country who, by their tact, talent, perseverance and a series of favoring circumstances, have amassed immense fortunes, and that Congressmen are to be pampered by funds from the public Treasury to enable them to approximate or to ape the style and manners of this plutocracy, while the vast body of the people are left in the background and far down in the scale of life, the proposition is simply astounding. One fact of prodigious import must be noted here. The late income re turns show that not one man in a hundred out of the whole population had an income of SSOOO a year! Where one man luxuriated in a sum more than this ninety-nine others fell below it. Why does not General Butler— who would wish to make it appear that he is par excellence a tribune of the people; a man to be trusted in every emergency; a man who always stands up for the weak against the strong, for the poor against the rich . •—argue the question from the stand point of the ninety-nine out of the hundred of his fellow-citizens rather than from the standpoint of the few , monopolists in the country, to rank ! with whom he would enrich Con- L gressmeu by wringing from the mass , of the population a further measure of taxation? He will surely find that I this argument from the splendid pri . vate fortunes of a few individuals ; will not conduce to the populariza tion of tiie action of the last Congress 011 the salary question. In this his usual sagacity has been strangely at • fault, for he has forgotten the ninety nine men whose income per year is [ not equal to the salary of a Congress . man at SSOOO, and lie has remom- I bered only the one man, the annual , increase of whose private fortune far exceeding this, is set up as the model of imitation for the lawmakers of the . country. But how will it be when I the voles came to be counted ? Be fore the ballot-box all are equal; the vote oi the poor man weighs as much . as that ot tiie rich, and ninety-nine . votes of the common people will out f weigh so many times Use one vote ot . the millionaire. Men wdl say, we prefer to be represented in Congress r l>y men ol' our own cla-s and condi , tion—men of frugal habits, of econ . oniy and moderate living rather than i by those of greater extravagance and . larger wealth. Tims the jealousy ot [■ caste creeps in, and immeasurable , evils How from me struggle. i, ~ i GENEVA, Aug. 2h.— The funeral) of tiie Duke of iu uuswiek took place i >to day with royal obsequies. The ! ceremonies were very imposing. SHERIFFS SALE* j! VI lITC Kof sundry writs of Yen- JL> iitioiil K.v {)!*;;•, Fie.": ! v ias, Levari Fa< ia .thd !' id" ttOii >'* in tlio C'Jiirt 'jf tiio.-i IMea-uif Pot'- r Oo'iiity, i'a., aiui to int-!ir -ct el, I li li expose to ptihiic sa< ;n on ••>*, at tUc i 'ourt House in Coo b-i'.-pott, on .tIoXD.VV. tile FlhTi >;m ii day of S.-jit or, 1-71, at one o'clock, P. m., til ■ follow! ;g ■! rihe I : or par.vls of !hii :, to wit: Certain real estate situate in the Bo rough of Coudei-poi i, Potter Co.. Pa., bounded and as follows: N by lauds wf K, N. liite; E by the Allegheny River; s by lands of A. M. Ke\ uoltls: ui'i W by the Puh.ic Highway. < \mt'iinhir/ah ul thi.ty-tw ■> -nuarerodsof lan I. j iiioi t or less, nil of which is improved and Ling port of Wi. No. '.IPSO. To be sold as the proper!! i of John Si i.i i\ \n. ALSO, certain real estate situate in ' Harrison tp . bounded X by lands of 1". \. Eng . lisli and Waldo lfohinsoii : 1". by lauds of J. K. j llano and J. W. Slovens: south b\ iands of 11. N. Stone: and Wby lands of r,. Phillips. <\m t-iiniynj tifty-one acres of land, with allow ance of -i\ per cent for roads, etc., more or less, alMint lorty-iive acres are improved, with one jrautc house, one flame l ai n and some fruit I rees there on. beingpur! of Wi. No. 1316. A1 so. oueoth er loi of huid situate in Hanison tp., bounded N by lands oi Hamilton White: K ii\ Hie Highway ; by the Highway : and W by lands of H. N. Stone. . (■■fit'tinin?/ one acre of laiid, more or less, ali ot which is impr wed. with one franc iiousa and ' ■mnc out bni'dings thereon, with mill niivihge thereto belonging: and beii.e j, ;ll | ~j \\ |s. No-, lap; and To be -old as the proi>erty of Mounts Ki/.r.it. S. I'. Hi!YXOIjDS. Sheriff. Cotldel'spori, Augu-i 2i'i. 1.173. TRIAL LI3T--Sept. Term, 1873. J L Allen, et al rs. (Leo Nichols, I, H Kin . , icy. etai Lnkc Stevens " Sala Stevens. Lvdia A Stevens ami J una Stevens. Joseph Smith " M T Scibert (leo Niello's, i, H Kin ii-y, etal " J L Allen Solomon I.am'.iert >n " Heurv Lanilierton Hill. Ed Brizzee 1 I ike—W m Aiisiey, S II Martin Roulet—Belden Burt, Hans Hansen Sharon A 1. Newton. John Voorhees, <; y | VOII * Aiims New ton, G W Wood V Wt ttmCm , W '° bH:i " inßt,,n ' 11,11 CJ.VSSM—.John Franeis, rtios Gridley West Branch—Lemuel Hammond Wharton— Vtour.o N>lon, Jas i. Barclay HAMOSiI Lilifi of Stfiisii STKAMEES SAIL WEEKLY To : £.\'JfrtKK, /:VV,V.W.I7A THE IE £\- EE I. V ' "tin AVERAGE TIME OF LIVERPOOL , v TOWN LINE ABOI i M.\r. i.iy ' The Company have added re.<-!,- . read) splemlld rteet ax new .. ' 1 are tin.- large-1, ami have proved p. fastest, l;i the world. Those ad.iit ciul'oie lis to iiruvi.il* meivssi-d ,' 1 accomodations lor our passcnr •• . 1 makes this the ler'ijpr line on th The "National Line St. ■•HITS"' an' 1 speed, strcurih a.ul eea-jniiijrf|u . ed inn. Air, H'fter Tiultt nn'l / /Kirtmnits, thus nhtalniiiir jfiv.it are iltted up in every renp''' with..;;-. iinprort jm ittx to insure the com;., ami safety of passengers, to w!i. m' luettt anil kind uttention 1< a!wu.> sons visit!nir the old Gountrv, nr sin . friends, should eertnltily avail t!;. n,. * many advantages of this weii-km , ' Line; the liest and cheapest lietiu. America, Great Reduction of Pas.*-. To or from children under Twelve Years, Hal'-'.,, fants under One Year, i hree ft j," No Charge for Infanrs ot Outward Tiek ets. .VO 'EE.- 'Jherr rn/ex of pa fx •■' r-Ar/r/trr limn any ttiher Eirtt-'.... crotxiuy the sit/uutie. Siee'atre pas'seniors will tv sop.-i::-s r much nr. v.stons and water a- Pi.".' . > 1 use; tin- provisions are or the test ,; are examined and put on imar l mii- r. tion of Government onieiTK. n .• ; purpose, and are cooked and ••-; w i > Company's Stewards three time,iho. Kaeh Passe-.'ger is assigned a sepant, uiarrii'd rouplcn liertlcd together; ;r i plaeeil in rooms l.v tlteniseives. Tap i tptired to furnish themselves \iitii I.eC: ' tins, etc. Ten rnlile feet of Injrtrntre '"'iiia! t<> : trunk; > allowed to each adult. An experienced Physician iit's h*' Steamer. jMetlfaiii a atiil medical atttaahi Catiin Piitscmrers provided with mew:,: uiisiations at low rates, —+ +- - EXCHANGE 01 111! r.ANK liKtm issued from jc i n> •> est rates, payable on deinaiid m ant. - land, Ireland, Neot.'atul and Male*.' . for any amount, payable in The i i Norway, Sweden. Denmark, Aiistrn, i France, Spaih aad Italy. The arrangements in this ■ -imT • res : are ve.'t extensive a id • ; facilities which enable ua to ul ' • latc.s. Those Willi flat . :.t •• ;y price for their remittal" < ; shoiiid * and i'.t.iil tiietnselVes of ■rr l.nvpr. lor PASSAUK, RTNK In: .1 •or . ' i fonnation, apply to S. F. HAfYoLTCt CQUDERSPORT GRADED SCI ANXorXCEMENT FOR Tin; H'IIW OF LS7;I 4, The Directors, ha vine seen red. e I'r i I.vk.v A. STOCK w 1:1.1., a y;,.d •nil!" I •on.*;'". t\ I!'. >••**. v.;: cr of the luteniiediate lie; o .: t * flid.KX Ei.'.is for the I'm . d sueeessfp: teachers of lot." e\ r • ' In-.; 1.1 eaiiinu t.a;;* . '.i.,., ; to fl.** itdvaiitaß"s of this s. ' F.M.I. TERM eoiniiteiiees 'e ' V. INTER TERM coiiimei. •* hi ' ' ' SPi.i.,;; TERM volume! . - MA' Fill! and winter terms t'e is ' •-' one we 'k Vacation dariny ' 1 ti"-' sp.dtig term eoiitiuues two tat 1! TUITION, per term. HIGH SCHOOL.. ... ' INTERMEDIA 1+: 4 PRIMARY $ 1 (HI per term le .s for t .. s|..uiS : Hoard aad rooms can lie - rates. Those wtshiugroeias for-• 1 - apply early. A teachers' class will he orjran;/.''''-' attention gtveii to those fi 1.111 aic" l ' 1 , prepare themselves fur tein tunr . ers who wish to post up In "ne or B " hranelies. 1). C. LARRABEE, -l' Secretory, August r>, tsj3 tf AND ORNAMENT^ 1 .HUS PB?I> 'M- I I rROMPTI.V EXEd I 1" I AT THE OFFICE OF T uS JOURNAL AND NEWS