The POTTER JOURNAL AND I NEWS ITEM. COTJDERSPORT. Pa., Oct.l, 1813 REPUBLICAN TICKET. JRPGE OF SURRF.ME COUKT. HON. ISAAC G. GORDON, of Jefferson County, j STATE TREASURER. R. \V. MACKEY, of Pittsburgh. ASSEMBLY. HON. CHAS. S. JONES. COUNTY COMMISSIONER. RODNEY L. WHITE. COUNTY AUDITOR. SAMUEL BEEBE. JURY COMMISSIONER. HUDSON HENDRYX. - County Committee. T) \N BAKER, Ciwirman, .1 M HAMILTON, Secretary, CJ W Col via C G Cashing R L Nichols J M kilbouriie R K Young Vigilance Committee.*. A'/tolt—Chii- MeLsner, Jos Schwartzenbach and ; Chas Honschel . . _ „ , . | Allegan"— David L Raymond, A G Fresboand ' WR Gardner , T J Bingham— l B Carpenter, A H Cobb and L J J Thompson , „ . „ . Clara-.) L Allen, Win Graves and W A Cole I Oowtersvort—s K Hamilton, W K Jones and J ; C Davidson , - _ „ , 1 Bulalia—U-u, A Glace, C Stearns and J D Earl ; (j. near —J C Cavanaugh, V in Baker and Josiali , \\ ebstcr „ , . ,i- i Harris",i—A L Haynes, A A Swetlaml and V. ; \Y Lawrem-E J Hector— D W Havens, John Skutt and Cyrus , Sunileriin , „ ~ Hebron— Win Greeninan, L M Coy and Geo J Stlliinan . , _ . , _ Homer — Levi S Quimby, Jacob Pcet and \V H | Cro9bv I Keating—(l C Lewis, Henry Harris ami Hiram Bridges Lcicifilfe — C E Baker. Henry C Hoslev and O K Bassctt Osteai/o —A S Lyman, J V Brown and V m Fes senden Bike— M V Frontv, S H Martin and SamT Brown Bicasunt Vo'lev— Ernest Wright, Lewis Lyman and .IKF Jtidkins Portage— Chas Young, Chas Austin and Dan 1 Evereit Itoulel— M V Larrabee, Win liazen and Chas Barr Bbaron —N Parmenter, A A Newton and J S I'earsoll Btev:aerfsjii—U. Amlresen, James Barton and Ed Joerg Summit —A1 viu Rennells, James Reed and J L Peiree Stecden— U L White, Edwin Lyman and Joseph Butler SyUania —l Hilton Stiles, A R Jordan and G C ROES Ulysses —A F Raymond, J M Benton and B Jay Cashing West Branch—E Crippen, S W Conable and O Wetmore Wharton —J L Barclay, A R Burlingame and ■Sliafer Logue THE necessities of the opposition to the Republican ticket are very clearly shown by their tactics in the conduct of the campaign just open ing in this County. Finding the principles of the Republican party to be invaluable and the general management of county, state and national art airs to be such as the peo ple approve and ought to approve, they have nothing left them but to find fault with and create prejudice against candidates. They are there fore slyly engaged in trying to make the people believe that our candidate for Representative, lion. C. S. Jones, is a salary-grabber, one who goes in for heavy salaries and back-pay steals. The insincerity of those en gaged in this dirty business is very clear when ii is remembered that tiiose most active in it, although pro fessedly Republicans, are men who ■voted for the re-election to Congress of lion. Henry Sherwood, a Dem ocrat, and one who did last winter i:i Congress not only vote for in crease of salary and back pay, but who actually received it from the U. S. Treasury and still holds it and justifies the act. In the Legislature of Pennsylvania last winter there was a proposition to increase the pay of members from one thousand dollars to fifteen hun dred dollars per session. This pro position our member of the Legisla ture. and present candidate for re flection, opposed consistently and earnestly in every stage of its pro gress. and it was defeated. Now, gentlemen of the opposition, professed Republican especially, you who are so loudly berating increase of salaries, and especially back-pay, here is a chance for you to demon strate your sincerity ly voting for the return to the Legislature of one who voted as you profess to desire. If you cannot or will not do that you ought at least to come out under your real colors. To all honest Republicans we would say, that so far as candidates merely are concerned you can cer tainly do no better than to vote for your whole ticket and nothing but your ticket. There is not a man on it who is not eminently worthy of your cordial support, and certainly if comparison be made, man by man, with the candidates who ate reputed to be out in opposition we find in the personelle of the men only strong er reasons why we should stand by our ticket. THE papers for the past week have been full of money disasters, failures of great firms, corporations, banks and bankers. Every ay or tao there is an announcement that the panic is subsiding; that confidence is restored; that the "scare" is over; that it is not near so serious a > .v.. supposed, etc., but daily the JiinCi'U'-.es and ev ry daily paper comes freighted with accounts of fresh disaster. If it were not so serious, it would be laughable to. read the cheerful editorials, the la bored attempts they make to show that their long columns of financial news do not mean much—really. Some say this trouble has been long anticipated, and some of those not concerned with flashing the news over the country consider the finan cial difficulty deeper and more seri ous than the papers allow, and attri bute it chiefly to railroad projects. The New York Evening Post says: Nevertheless, there is something more than a senseless panic in Wall street; the loud squealing does not come altogether from one or two poor pigs that have been accidental ly caught in the fence; it has a deep er cause than the temporary embar rassment of this or that firm, or this or that railroad comp^nj r . One of the most immediate and obvious of these causes is the extent to which we have invested our funds in non paying railroad enterprises that con tinue to cry "Give, give," when there is nothing more to give. During the last four years we have undertaken to construct and equip 25,01)0 miles of railroad, involving an outlay of nearly 50U0,000.000, of which a con ! siderable part cannot for years bring in anv return. A profounder aiul more powerful cause of the crisis, however, is to be sought iu the condition of the cur rency, which, consisting exclusively of paper, it is impossible to render stable and worthy of trust. All ex perience—and it lias been a broad, impressive and lasting experience— l shows that you can no more rely j upon an inconvertible paper as a | medium ot exchange, than you can ; upon an Arctic tloe for a permanent j habitation. All the civilized nations that have been through great war's, domestic or foreign, have tried the experiment, but always with a disas trous result. is this present outbreak, as some of the papers phrase it, "the begin ning of the end," or only a transient spasm, which will pass off of itself ? Thus far it would seem to be merely the latter. The downfalls have been confined to those who for years past have been riding on imaginary rail roads. But whether the ruin will extend further no one is prepared to say, because it depends upon contin gencies that it is almost impossible to foresee. The general commerce of the country is as sound as it can be on the fluctuating basis we have j provided for it. The crops have been good, the markets are active, and, though money is high and scarce, we have as yet no unfavorable reports from the banks; all which are favor able signs. In the midst of so much conflict ing opinion and feeling as the pa pers show over this panic, as it is Called, there seems to be a very gen | oral approval of the President's con duct in refusing to be drawn, official -I}', into the vortex of financial calam ity. The Buffalo Express says: The sober second thought and the calm judgment of President Grant were never more to be commended than in the present crisis. His firrn ! ness in refusing to tamper with the I currency has hastened the restora i Lion of firm confidence as much as any other event. When urged by | many of the most skilled capitalists, j backed by Yanderbilt's own personal offer of ten millions, lie refused to j commit such an illegal act of power, j We are aware that competent legal I authority has since pronounced that ! his first advisory step would have j been proper, but the second course, . pursued by the President, has been | infinitely better. Go; would never guess, on read \ ing the title of the opening article of Harper's Magazine for October, "A Lady's Enterprise," what the real subject is. But the illustrations so profusely interspersed among the reading—of all our old friends, the | chickens, with new and improved ac commodations for them. The writer speaks a good and true word also with regard to their usefulness in destroying insects, which we are glad to see. In these years when insects have multiplied so abundantly and threaten almost every fruit and vege table with destruction, birds and i domestic fowls seem to be our only ( protection. We can better afford to lose what they destroy than to suffer j the loss of a great deal more by the insects they would consume. Pestilence and Charity. The sympathetic principle in hu man nature lias become largely de vt loped in these days of intellectual and christian enlightenment. The bare announcement that a great ca lamity has fallen upon a community I is sufficient to call out a generous resjronse that finds expression, not in words alone, but in deeds. After! the first outburst of charity, however, out own personal affairs and excite-! incuts are apt to become uppermost and cause us, in a measure, to lose sight of the misfortunes of our neigh- j bors, and especially if they do not come under our immediate observa tion. So it happens that amid the financial excitement of the past few days the great scourge which is rag ing so fearfully in the most flourish ing city of Northern Louisiana has j almost passed out of our minil, and the cries of a suffering people for as sistance have been unheard amid the racing of tiie Wall Street tempest and the crash of falling houses. Reports, nevertheless, are constant ly reaching us of the fearful havoc the fever is making at Shreveport and other Southern cities. In the form er place it is said there only remains 3000 souls out of a population of about 9000, and of those who still brave the pestilence 1000 are pros trated by it. The terrible picture can only be viewed through a com parison. Suppose two-thirds of the population of Buffalo to have left the city, and that of the 50,000 remain ing 15,000 were prostrated by yellow fever, and a fair idea will be obtained of the horrors which afflict that un happy town and in a less degree are known in other Southwestern cities. It is said the fever at Shreveport 's abating for want of victims, but the sick and the widows and orphans are there. Untold suffering and want are there, and they appeal loudly for prompt and plentiful help. Here is a field for the exercise of practical sympathy which should not go un cultivated. Some Women Workers. Said a very distinguished woman to us one day, "there is nothing in the world, either in law or in public sentiment, to prevent an American woman from following any business she is competent to follow;" and it begins to look as if a good many women had tound this fact out. A delvcr in the late census of the Uni ted States has brought to light some interesting figures on the subject. Beginning with art matters we find that there was, in 1870, one woman architect, four sculptors and twenty nine engravers. Three hundred and I seventy-three thousand three liun ! dred and thirty-two women put thcrn- I selves down as.agricultural laborers, j Seventy-live called themselves stock raisers, two were hostlers, and eleven kept livery stables. In the profes sions we find five lawyers, twenty | lour dentists, sixty-seven preachers, j and live hundred and fifty-five doc tors. In the trades there were one ; hundred and six bell and brass foun ; ders, four gas makers, seventeen tiu j smiths, thirty-three gunsmiths, sixty j tanners, seventy brick makers, thirty -1 four wood turners and carvers, four teen hundred and ninety-five printers, eleven hundred seventy-eight bar bers, and eighty-four shingle and lath makers. There were also distil lers, brewers, bout hands, bankers, undertakers, fisherwomeu, white washers, dray drivers, and charcoal burners. After this, who shall say that women can not work or are not allowed to do so? But even this is not all. One woman, the census tells us, is a regularly licensed pilot, twelve are auctioneers, and two are scavengers. Now we do not cite these figures merely for curiosity's sake, though they are interesting enough even in that way. They ought to carrj T with them a lesson, and that lesson is that any woman may follow any business she chooses quite as freely as a man may; and this lieing the case it is well worth the while of people having daughters to train them to some business or other, so that when the necessity for work shall come, as it must to many women, they may bring skilled hands to the task on which their bread de pends.—Hearth and Home. I THE Constitutional Convention j has concluded the second reading of i the legislative article. The section I | defining the number of members that j shall compose the Legislature was | passed as follows : "The members of the house of ! Representatives shall be apportioned i among the several counties according ! to population, on a ratio to be ob tained by dividing the whole popula ! tion of the State, as ascertained by the most recent United States census, !by two hundred. Any county, iuclu -1 ding Philadelphia, having more than | one ratio shall be entitled to a mem ber for each full ratio, but each county shall be given at least one | member, and counties shall not be joined to form a district. Any coun | ty having less than five ratios shall have an additional member for a sur ' plus exceeding one-half a ratio over one or more full ratios. Any county, j including Philadelphia, having over j one hundred thousand inhabitants shall bo divided into districts, and I every city shall be entitled to sepa ! rate representation when its popula tion equals the ratio, but no district ! shall elect more than four members. ! [NOTE. —Under the apportionment plan now determined upon, the whole number of the House of Representa tives is estimated at 211, of which Philadelphia will have 38 members.] "den. White's section authorizing the Legislature to apportion the State every ten years was to-day (Sept. 24.) adopted after a full dis cussion bj- 56 for, and 47 against— only two Democrats for and two Republicans against it." The Lyman Company Coal Veins. A few weeks ago, while absent in another state, we read in an exchange that a five-foot vein of coal has been discovered in McKean County. We confess to have been somewhat skep tical as to the truth of the statement, and noted the item with a somewhat incredulous comment. Since return ing, we have been permitted, through the kindness of a prominent member j of the Lyman Coal Company, upon ' whose lands the vein was opened, to test the truth of the claim by per sonal observation and examination. After doing ample justice to an ampler dinner at the hospitable ho tel of J. Kimball's, twelve miles from Smethport, at present the headquar ters of the company, we were driven about two miles on the Sinnemaho ning road, from whence it was ueces sarv to leave the carriage and trust to the endurance of our legs and a j stout walking-stick. The openings ! of which we were in search we found to be on the north side of the ridge Iving between the East Branch and Havens Brook, about a mile and a half from the road, and less than half a mile from the bed of the East Branch ; thus affording, by the con- i struction of a branch road up the valley of the creek, an admirable chance to dump any quantity of coal from all the openings directly into i the cars by means of one shute. The first opening we visited was what is called the Big Opening. It is about 100 rods west from the j "shanty," and 50 feet from the top of the ridge. Much care and pains have been taken in making this open ing, and the work seems to have been done in a skillful and workman like manner. This, as in the case of the other openings, is substantially timbered on the sides and overhead. The gallery is 7 feet high, (H feet wide, and iio feet in extent. A care fill examination and accurate meas | urement of the wall at the extreme i end of the gallery furnished conclu -1 sive evidence to our minds that the five-toot vein statement was no ex aggeration. In fact the vein by ac tual measurement will equal if not ■ exceed five and a half feet. It is ap | parently the finest quality of bitumi nous coal. That mined during the j early stages of the opening is as : good coal as we have seen in the j county, and seems to improve in quality and depth. Though we do not profess to be well up in the j knowledge of eoul deposits and for mations, we stand fully convinced j that the Big Opening presents as < good a show for coal of the best kind ' in as large and paying quantities as the most eager operator need desire, and with very little cost and trouble of mining. We next proceeded to what is c ill j ed the Fenner Opening, so called in honor of its discoverer. This 's ! about 120 rods west of the Big Open j ing and 20 feet below, making ii 170 feet below the top of the ridge. The | gallery is 65 feet in length and of the same width and height as the former. By measurement we found this oj>en j ing to reveal two strata of coal—4 feet of bituminous coal covered by i one foot of canuel coal, thus making in reality a second five foot vein, j 'litis opening bids fair to equal if not I exceed the Big Opening in the quan ; tity and quality of its coal produc- I tion. i The Cannel Opening, still farther 1 west aloiit half a mile, has only been I opened up about 30 feet into the j ridge. It has been a source of more I expense to the company than either | of the others, but patience and perse i veranee overcame all obstacles, and ; | a 21 inch vein of cannel coal, covered I by a 3 foot vein of bituminous coal. ! is the reward. Several other partial openings were visited, all of which gave indu bitable evidence of a generous yield of coal. Our visit had the effect to ! convert us from our skepticism as to : presence of coal on the Lyman Com pany's lands, aad we cheerfully give the foregoing brief statement of the result of actual and impartial exami nation for the benefit of any who | may be in a like manner skeptical as j we were.— McKean Miner. A SIGNIFICANT article appeared in j the New York Times yesterday on : the geographical advantages of Phil-; adelpliia. The writer admits that Philadelphia is nearer the South and West than New York city, and is nearer also to a large portion of the j state of New York than its own me-j tropolis. It is conceded that from Chicago to New York is fifty miles; further and from the southern cities ! some eighty miles further than to Philadelphia. Warning is given, too, that our business men are striv ing zealously to Vienefit by their ad vantages, and that the New Yorkers must be up and doing if they would not suffer increasing inroads upon their foreign trade. MR. JOSEPH G. CANNON, Congress man-elect from Illinois, says he will make it his first business when he gets to Washington to find out what sum a representative of the people can live on in a decent, befitting manner, and will then exert himself to have the salary fixed at that fig ure. Mr. Cannon will find that the cost of "a decent befitting" support will range from nine hundred dollars to a hundred and fifty thousand, ac cording as Mr. and Mrs. Congress man shall define those very uncer tain adjectives, "decent" and "befit ting."—Buffalo Express. TERRA COTTA. —But little is known in this country of terra cotta , which abroad enters so largely into orna mental architecture. In its manufac ture clay, flint, glass, and fossils con taining phosphate of lime are pow dered and mixed with water into a paste, which is then ground and beaten until all air bubbles are ex pelled. It is then molded directly by the artist and burned, having first been glazed or tinted to suit the taste. The material thus formed is both cheap and durable. Neither heat, cold, nor moisture affect it. And there is this further advantage in its use, that it can be molded by the artist himself as it were so much clay; whereas stone must be cut by the hand of an intervening workman. There seems to be no good reason why terra cotta should not come into general uc in this country for build ing purposes. In England it lias long been a favorite material, and it enters largely into parts of the ele gant Albert Memorial Hall, as also of the South Kensington Museum. American architects have so far had a prejudice against it, which it is hoped will soon yield before enlight enment' as to its many admirable qualities. THE Popular Science Monthly for October, gives some plates showing the appearance of our world to an observer stationed on the moon. One is entitled "Lunar Landscape— Full Earth" and the other "Lunar Landscape—New Earth," the land • scape being in each instance a plane i set so full of what are supposed to , be extinct craters, as to look like a table covered with dishes for a meal. Fancy, of course, supplies the earth view from such a locality but the stars among which the earth appears are so well arranged that one can recognize some of the constella tions. The reading matter opens with a very interesting article on "Silk Worms and Sericulture." profusely ■ illustrated; "Mental Science and ' Sciology;" "A National I niversity; "Agassiz and Darwinism," by Prof, i John Fiske; "Finding the Way at Sea;" "Secular Prophecy," taken from the Saturday Be dew ; "Sympa jtbetic Vibrations in Machinery," which will interest the philosophical; "Speculation in Science;" "The Gla ciers and their Investigators;" and ! "Proctor on the Moon." to which the frontispiece plates belong—bring us to the "Editor's Table" "Lit erarv Notices," '•Miscellany anil "Notes," and make a very valuable number. The naily Graphic truly savs that ! there is more danger of Croesus than of Ciesar; of the money power than the military power. In the late cri sis L was the financiers who wanted the law violated, and the soldier President who maintained it.—Buf falo E.~ 'press. "SAM," said a darkey to his ebonv brother, "how am it dat fis yaa tele graf carriesde news IVomdem wires?" "Well, Ciesar, now s'pose dar am a : dog free miles long." Nebber was such big dog; don' b'leib dat!" "You jess wait minit; Use only iilus tratin', you stupid nigger. Now, dis i yaa dog, you sec, jess put his front i l'eets on do lloboken slio', and he puts his behind feets on de New York sho'." "Yasser." "Now, s'pose you walk on dis yaa dog's tail in New York—" "Yesser." "He'll bark, won't he?" "Yesser." "Well, where will dat dog bark?" "In lloboken, 1 calc'late." "Dat am just it. You walk on de dog's tail in New oik. | an'he bark in lloboken; an'dat's de i way de telegraf works." "Yesser; dasso—dasso! 'i on's right." A MASTODON skeleton has been dis covered on a farm eight miles from Richmond, Ind., near New Paris, O. j About a quarter of a ton of bones i were exhumed which, according to ! acknowledged proportions of the animal, indicate this one to have been very large, probably seven feet high and thirty-eight feet long. One tusk unearthed is twelve feet long and its weight one hundred and fifty pounds. They hope to get the entire skeleton. Hail, Wedded Love! | The Danbury Mews man remarks: You know her. She lives on your street. Her features are either pinched or full and frowsy. Her dress is wet , ill-fitting and of no pat tern; her slippers are broken down; her hair is uncombed; her voice is I either shrill or coarse. You have seen her stand out in the back yard and put a bare arm up to her eyes, ! and under it peer out to the fence or barn where a man in an ill-fitting coat is searching for something, and have heard her shout—"John! can't George bring me some water?" And you have heard him cry back—"lf lie don't get that water I will take every inch of flesh off his bones." And when you have looked at her again does it seem possible that those angry eyes have drooped in maidenly reserve, or raised in coquettish light to the face of the man in the ill-fit ting coat. Can you, by any possible wrench of the imagination, conceive of his tenderly passing peppermints to her; of his taking that hand in his I and bashfully squeezing it. But it was so. Many a "God bless you", has been uttered above that bare head, many a kiss pressed on that uncombed hair. The tightly-com pressed lips have lovingly framed tender invitations to him to take : another bite of cake and pickle. The l hands that are now par-boiled and! blistered and marked with scars from the bread-knife and scratches from! the last setting hen were once twined lovingly about his neck, and the nose, I which is now peaked and red, and looks as if it would stand on its legs and scream with rage, onee followed the figures of his new vest pattern or bore heavily against his jugular vein. As little probable as this seems to you it seems less to lier. She has forgotten it. She won't hear it talked of by others She cannot bear to see it acted br others. Two lovers are to her "a passel of fools." And—but George is rubbing his head and we turn aside while our heroine readjusts her slipper. Covered up—buried—not extin guished—not dead. The beautiful, divine gift to mankind cannot perish, but it is little wonder that amid the rough cares of the world and the evil i things that are mixed up with all hu man love it should shrink away and hide until its verv existence is for gotten. But sometime it will come out bright and pure. A CORRESPONDENT of the Country Gentleman has discovered that, as a law of nature, every spotted dog has the end of his tail white and every spotted cat the end of the tail black. This may be important, as it will enable people always to tell whether the spotted animal before them is a cat or a dog. REMEMBER THE FAIR IS OX I, Y OWE WEEK FROM TO-DAY. Wholesale Watches, J .-welry, etc.—- The house of <•. 15. Barrett Co.. UO Fifth Avenue. Pittsburgh, Pa., is be coming well known to the trade general 1\ for the largeness and stqiei ionty of their stock. The firm d> an cxclusivt ly wholesale trade. See advertisement on the fourth page. A splendid stock of Paisley shawls may be found at Simmons" Hegulato at prices far Oeiuw their preseut market value. Great run on a well known Institu tion. —The famous Regulator man, ! 11. Simmons" Xos. g. 3. t and o, Wells ville, X. Y. has recently been subjected to an extraordinary pressure—the pres sure of crowds of sufferers that have | 'iK-en in the habit of buying from small dealers and. paying enormous prices. Money being scarce, they have seem ingly all made a grand rush to the place where they get the greatest amount of goods for the smallest amount of mon ey. The popularity of this establish ment is boundless and will last, for it is built on a solid foundation; one hun dred thousand dollars being the corner stone. This well known establishment ! might justly be called a savings Kink from the u umbel's of dollars it has saved the people for the last ten years. From its very infancy high prices have had jto vanish like dew before the morning sun. TWO DAILY LINES OF STAGES FROM Coudersport to fort Allegany. The MAIL STAC E leaves Coudersport at 7 a. m. and arrives at Port Allegany in time fr trains to Philadelphia. Leaves Port Allegan vat 1 p.m.. arriving at Coudersport at 4 p. m. The EXPRESS STACE leaves Coudersport at 1 p. m., arrive- at Port Allegany at 4 o'eloek, in time for irain to KutLCo and to connect w ill< N. V. iV E. K. It. Stage returns for Coudersport on arrival of trains. 02-tl It. F. Glassmire, Staff* Proprietor a n't Erprets Agent A< n ibid ratorN Not Ice, "ITTHEItEAS, letter*; of administration to the yy estate of HERMANN GKABE. late of Eulalia I township.. Potter Co , deceased, having l>een ' granted to the subseril>ers. all IMMNOIIS indebted | to said est at' 1 are reipiesu d to make immediate payment, and those having claims <>r demands against the estate ol s.i.i decedent will make known the same without delay to CATHAKINA GRABK, Eulalia, Sept 10, 1873.-41 Admr. ]) KICK.—Get your BRICK from ) WM. BRINE. Koulet, Pa. speci mens can le seen at the office of .Jouu- XAL A: ITEM. Price, SB.OO per thou ; sand —reduction made when ordered in ! large quantities. ! 2502-tf John V. Brown, PKOPHIETOR OF LINE OF STAGES BET W KEN Coudersport & Wells villa ( Yin OSWAYO, PA.) Persons going to OSWAYO by stage, ana desirm, to return same day, will l>e accommodated at stage rates. Passengers wishing to reach any of the neighbot nig towns will be conveyed by Livery at reasonable rates. A good Livery rig kept constantly on hand or passengers by the stage. OSWAYO HOUSE. (Jons V. BROWN, Propr., OSWAYO, 1 A . I 114-tf BASSETT'S LIVER) Corner MAKKKTnntI HI'MFH S, (SOl'Tlf SIDE of the Rjyfy I WOCLI respectfully invite the ap, ~ public to my LIVERY ESTABLISH^.,, with the assurance that I in„. maud for a first-class turnout Having purchased the Livery ol AN,, have the only Establishment of tlie (. section. "'I J. IM. liASsi 'p 132—tr k 1 -n \cw SING EH Sewing MACH changed for ones of any kind, by A. M. REYNOLDS, .J*. Edward Forster, DEALER 15 Groceries & PTOTISI MAIN STREET above SF.(tj\p COUDERSPORT, PA. A FULL SUPPLY or FLOUR, Stttj SPICES, SYRUP, CHEES , HAM, FISH, TOBACCO, S.Vl'f, &c., &e., KEPT CONSTANTLY ON 11 AN,. A specialty made Teas and Coffees, of which 1 have the Ijjii'getst ami IScM Stock in town. All Goods sold ("HEAP for CASH u • Call and examine before purchasingclvni LDWAKI) I OKI 5. H. &00DSEIL Carpenter and Joini SOUTH SIDE of the RIVE (aliove EAST Street. Cotidertsport. I'IG CONTRACTS taken and materials .'uriii -' , all kinds of BITLDINO PLANING and MATCHING done.—Moo.ns descriptions. SASII, BLINDS and In Kilts on Baud . ' factured to order. CASH paid for Pine I ninher. Your patronage is solicited. N. H. GOOl^ COUDERSPORT GRADED SCHft ANNOUNCEMENT COR THK SCH<- OF 1573 4. The Directors, having secured, a? CI.AKA A. IDNIIRIU,a gradnate , inalc College, with Mrs. ' I er of the Intermediate Heparin"' HELEN ELLIS for the Primary , t successful teachers of long expertni' • j lied in calling the attention of parent - to the advantages of this School. FALL TERM commences MOSPAV. N' W INTER TERM commences I'Et [ ' , SPRING TERM commeuces V.\K<U Fall and winter terms three one week vacation during the ChrP 1 Spring term continues two months. TUITION, per term. HIGH SCHOOL , INTERMEDIATE PRIMARY I I 00 per term less for the spring Board and rooms can IN- secure rates. Tbosewtshing rooms for- 1 apply early. , A teachers'class w ill be or F ß "j.^' ! , iw attention given to those from*" prepare themselves for tear, dug' • ers who wish to post up IB "he branches. 1). C. LARRABEB, " fr* Secretary. Angttat A, lft73-tf
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers