NEWS FROM ALL NATIONS. —A number of the leading citizens of New York, among whom are Moses Taylor, August Belmont, Thurlow Weed, Marshall O. Roberts,and others, have made up the handsome purse of sl,- 600 for the brave soldier, Robinson, who, while ac ting as nurse saved Secretary Seward's life. —Extensive preparations are being made by the shipping interest for the reopening of trade with the South. There are now three lines of steamers running between New York and New-Or leans—one connecting with Charleston, S. C., one with Alexandria, Va., and independent steamers are advertised to sail for Charleston and Rich mond. —Col. Alexander has been appointed a supervising special agent of the Treasury Depart ment, and will proceed to Pensacola. Col. Alex ander's station is understood to be Mobile, where he will act until more permanent arrangements are made. —The trustees of the East Windsor (Conn.) Theological Seminary have voted to re move that institution to Hartford, and to make an effort to raise $200,000 further for its permanent endowment, $50,000 of which are already pledged bv friends. —There was a heavy lall in cattle at Bull's Head Thursday, and those of the drovers j who had bought at high figures lost heavily. The I average for good steers was below 17c.—a fall of j over five per cent from opening prices. —Tlio President has ordered that ex-Gov ernor Aiken of South Carolina shall no longer be ; considered as under arrest. It is understood that j there was no just cause for his arrest by the mili- j tary authorities at Charleston. —The Secretary of the Treasury has is- ' sued an order allowing such vessels to clear from ' New York for Richmond as may be designated by the French Consul to remove the French tobacco i from that city. —Last Wednesday a barrel found float-! ing in the river at Cincinnati was found to contain ! the body of a negro in a decomposing state. The head had been severed from the trunk, which had | been cut in two ; the feet were separated at the j ankles, and the legs divided at the knees, whilst ! the arms had been disjointed at the shoulders and elbows. —A watchman in the Lacouia Mills, Bid deford, Maine, while oiling up, Monday morning, was caught on a shaft revolving one hundred and sixty times a minute, and was carried ronnd with it many times, hiclothes torn off, one arm bro ken, and severely injured internally; yet, singular to say, he was not killed, and may recover. —The statue of Senator Benton, which was ordered six years ago by the citizens ot St. Louis, from Miss Harriet Hosmer, arrived in that city on the 2d inst. It is of bronze, ten feet high, and was cast at the Royal foundry in Munich.— Its weight is over 5, (MX) pounds. —Among the new fashions iu New York, at present, is this, that no lady goes to the grave with a husband, child, orfriend. Women are com pelled to sit solitary in the house, while the gen tlemen attend the burial. Many lament the heart less custom, but fashion is inexorable. —The Washington correspondent of the Boston Journal says that copies of the full confes sion of Ham >ld, and of the equally important evi dence reported to have been found on the person of Booth, were sent to London by the steamer which sailed on Saturday last. —A merchant at .San Francisco, having the misfortune to lose his wife, invited his clerks to attend the funeral. He is said afterwards to have charged each of them for the day as lost time, and made them pay for the carriages. —A peddler recently lost a box, while riding in a horse-ear in Boston, and the court in which he brought the suit gave him SIOO damages, holding that, as the peddler paid transportation on the box, the company was responsible for it. —On the site selected for the " Aritietam National Cemetery " is a spot called "Lee's Rock," the place where Gen. Lee stood during the battle of Antietam. —A new weekly paper, the Colored Ten nesseean, a journal edited wholly by members of the Anglo-African persuasion, bus made its appear ance at Nashville. —The city Council of Bath will place neat blue casks in the differeut parts of the city, and keep them constantly filled with cool water during the hot weather. —A farmer at Bridgeport, Conn., is about to set a mile and a half of living fence of white willow. He claims that it will, within two years, keep out swine, sheep, and poultry. —The Baltimore and Ohio Railroad Com pany has begun the survey of the Metropolitan Railroad, for which a charter was given at the last session of the Maryland Legislature. —Mr. Roscoe C. Green, formerly a refu gee from Richmond, but for three years past a clerk in the Treasury Department, has been ap pointed post-master at Petersburg. —The Alexandria papers are calling up on the Government to have the stockades around the city removed. —We understand that the caterpillars are doing incalculable mischief to fruit trees in the vicinity of Boston. —Gov. Seymour, of New York, duriug the year 1864, pardoned one hundred and twenty convicts and commuted the sentence of ninety-two others. —A new breech-loading musket, on au original principle, '.as been invented by two work men in the American Machine Works at Spring field, Conn. —Strawberries and green peas are plen ty at Washington. At New York strawberries are rathar scarce at $1,50 per quart. —The provost marshals of Indiana are to be mustered out of the service at once, orders to that effect have already been issued. —Gen. Lee is said by a cotemporary to wear his old gray uniform, because his poverty will not permit him to buy other clothes. —The crews of the Rebel rams and other steamers which escaped up the Tomhigbee River, have all deserted. News from Demopolis says that Maury's rebel cavalry are perpetrating horri ble cruelties among the people there, hanging and shooting theni for expressing the slightest sym pathy with Union sentiment. —Gen. Grant was before the Committee on the Conduct of the War on Wednesday, to give evidence in relation to the negotiations between ; Gen. Sherman and Johnston, (ten. Sherman will appear before the same Committee on Saturday. —The Rebels imprisoned on Johnson's Island have become tired of imprisonment, and lost all faith in their ability to carry on the war longer. Out of the 2,800 confined, all but about 25 have asked permission to take the umnesty oath. —Gen. Sherman is now in Richmond. He rode at the head of the line of his troops on Wednesday, as the Fonrteenth Army Corps passed through the streets of that city. —Gen. Ijee, who remains very quiet in li.ii hm.>nd, is said to be engaged in writing up a history of his closing campaigns. —Caroline Miller, a girl of Louisville, Ky., thirteen years of age, killed her father the other day by giving him arsenic. Her excuse was that she thought she could get a better home with less work, if her father was dead. fStatlfortl Towanda, Thursday, May 18,1865. THE ASSASSINATION OK THE PRESIDENT. From our way of judging, from habits ot thought, impulse and education, we are forced to the conviction that the assassina tion of President LINCOLN, was the most fiendish and damnable crime, we have ever known of, and one we did not believe would be committed. It is well for society that there are but few capable of committing such atrocious outrages. People in the free States, where obedience to, and respect for law, where shame and fear of punish ment, where religion and God's threatened denunciations are strictly inculcated, and have a prevailing influence, such a deed can not be perpetrated. There can not be found in this country, nor in this district or State, no not in any of the free States — out of the larger cities—a man so hard ened, so bold, so fierce, so despicable, as to ' work up to its full measure such an act ; and nothing amazes us more than the details of the commission of this crime. That the villian who had undertaken it, could, un moved, undisturbed in body or mind—not only so—but who could, with all conceiv able coolness, calculate, plan, take advan tage of every little turn, to carry out his purpose, just as if he was performing a proper duty, or pleasant act, surprises us. But when he has committed the foulest deed on record, without emotion, without excitement, without nervous twitchings, but with a steady hand, and purpose, and then, with circumstantial deliberation, step in front of his victim, with dagger drawn !te see whether his work was well done, | ready if not, to follow it up with poniard, i no fears of man, no fears of hell, no fears 1 of God, in the least disturbing his equini inity, confounds us. The blasting thun i ders of Almighty, the smoking flumes, the tortured groans of the damned, can create no terrors for such an one ; and we repeat, ' we are astounded at the perfection of his j villauy. We can imagine how a man overcome by impetuous anger, can shoot another down ; i or how want, avarice, and revenge, may nerve a man for the commission of murder; but how a man can, with such matchless ! self-possession, shoot down the President of the United States, to whom half the na tion cannot say a word without trembling, i and the other half could not say a word from sheer fright, is more than we can i comprehend ; and it indicates a personal ; condition equal only in its abhorance by its frightfulness. Nor is it possible to edu j cate such a criminal, save in the system of i slavery abounding in the Southern States of this Union. No other place could give birth to such K monstrosities. Where the hireling is rob bed of his wages by law, where a man can make concubines of his children, where the 1 cock-pit, the race-course, and prize fights, are Sunday amusements. Where revolvers and bowie-knives are as muchiu requsition for dressing men's flesh, as the axe and the | butclier-knife, for dressing oxen and sheep, ! such men as murdered President LINCOLN, and slashed the Seward's, will come up. — They are indigenous to the soil ; but only in such places ; and the sooner all such con ditions of society, and the causes which be | get them, are wiped out of our land, the ! better. We do not mean washed out, or pardoned over, or glossed over, so that the stain remains in the cloth, or the board. No, it must be cut, or planed out, so that it can neither be seen or smelled again. But if we pardon rebels, and let tlieni sneak back to their kennels, the cause of slavery will revive Northern dough-faces and i copperheads, will strike hands with slave I propagandists, for new leases of power. 1 Then, under States Right theories, the mu nicipal regulations of the States will secure 1 enlarged constructions, and new guaran tees, and then will follow the master's lash, his corruption of black women, Presiden ' tial murders. Perhaps it is well that President LINCOLN, the best public man we have had since the days of Washington, should be murdered by tlic slave and rebel interests. He, of all others, could best afford to die, as lie had attained fame's pinnacle, and his name was in danger of losing some of its lus | ter; but more than all, because his death | alone could stir the American heart to its lowest depths, and bring the government and the people up to the necessities of the times. The weak, insinuating, and fatal delusion of mercy and pardon to the rebels was rapidly stealing upon both, and was unfitting the nation for the stern duty of punishing crime according to its deserts. Now LINCOLN is gone, we grieve his depar ture, and yet more the maimer of his de parture ; we hoped for him a better fate, lie deserved a long, quiet, happy decline in the sun's full effulgence, and we did what we could to this end; but he has gone home, and justice demands, and will execute ven geance on his, and the murderers of our other people. toy Forney's Press has obtained impor tant information regarding the recent plot to burn Philadelphia. It discloses the fact that on Wednesday night previous to the night when the city was to be burned, a large barn located within 50 yards of the State magazine situated near Point Breeze was tired by au incendiary, but the flames were fortunately extinguished. The maga zine contains nearly 100 tons of powder, part belonging to the United States. The Legislature had passed a law for the re moval of the magazine, but the new build ing has not been erected, and the magazine : remains within two miles of the city with out a guard to protect it. to?* The Second and Fifth Army Corps have reached Washington. They are to be paid off, and a portion, at least, mustered out of service. Gold on Saturday, at New York, sold down to 1,39 J. The rebel ram Stonewall lias at last make her appearance iii American waters. She arrived at Nassau, in the Bahamas, on i the 6th inst., from Tenerifi'e, whence she sailed on the Ist of April. The Herald, cor respondent at Nassau visited her incog nito, and furnishes a most interesting de scription of what he saw on board. She is a formidable vessel, strongly iron-plated, with two stationary turrets, three heavy guns, and a solid steel pointed beak of twenty feet in length, for ramming, projec- i ting from her bow. Altogether she is con sidered a very staunch and dangerous an tagonist. Her entire crew, officers and men, numbers about seventy, and every thing about her presented the appearance 1 of the best man-of-war order, neatness and rigid discipline. The Stonewall's officers, many of whom were on shore, sporting their rebel uniforms in the streets of Nas sau, acknowledged that they were too late in getting afloat to be of any service to the Jeff. Davis cause, and admitted that the war is ended. They said she was origi nally intended to break the Wilmington blockade, but that now, as she could be of no use to the rebels here, she would prob ably be taken back to Europe and sold. She was to leave Nassau on the evening of the 7th inst., having obtained a supply ol coal. One report said she was bound for Galveston ; but others gave her a different destination. It was understood that our Consul at Nassau, immediately after the arrival of the Stonewall at that place, des patched a fast vessel for Kej West, Fla., with the information. THE ATTACK ON MR. SEWARD.—A corres pondent of the N. Y. Ere, Post, writing from Washington under date of May 2d, says:— Mr. Seward is so well that he is expected to take his place in Cabinet meetings in a few days. The newspaper accounts of the attempt to assassinate him were generally incorrect Payne, the assassin, only had an opportunity to strike one blow at Mr Sew ard, who was at that moment sitting up in bed. The knife struck the swelling over the fractured jaw and did not touch the throat. At that instant Robinson, the nurse, clutched Payne from behind, and did not for a moment let go his hold, though stabbed four times. Mr. Seward rolled off upon the floor, feigning death. To Mr. Robinson he owes his life. This heroic sol dier is in hospital here and is doing well, though very badly wounded. Mr. Seward now dictates the foreign dispatches to Mr. Hunter. to?" On the arrival of the Sixth corps at Danville, Va., the negroes were so rejoiced that they commenced to desert the planta tions in all the surrounding country, and flock into the town. This so seriously in terfered with the prosecution of agricul tural labor that General Wright deemed it necessary to issue an order instituting reg ulations to put a stop to this hegira ol the negroes, and requiring thern to remain at home and attend to their usual work. Gen. Wright has also warned all guerillas and paroled rebel soldiers who break their pa roles that they will be immediately hung when caught. The glory has entirely departed from that little pesthole of the Bahamas, Nassau, since the close of the blockade running business. Everybody who can get away is leaving, goods intended to run the block ade are daily being auctioned off at merely nominal prices, and the principal hotel of the place has closed for want of business. Eight former blockade running steamers were laid up there on the 7th inst., entirely out of employment. toT" Gov. Curtin has issued his proclama tion lixing the Ist of June—the same des ignated by the President—for "humiliation and mourning for the death by assassina- I tion of our late beloved President, Abra- I ham Lincoln, and for humbling ourselves before Almighty God, in order that the be reavement may be sanctioned to the na tion." THE NATIONAL LOAN. —For the week end ing May 13, the subscriptions to the Na tional Loan amounted to the stupendous amount of $89,384,660. On Saturday over thirty millions were subscribed. to?" The trial of the Conspirators is pro gressing at Washington. Reporters are now admitted, and a portion of the testi mony is published. le testimony at the trials in Wash ington, leaves no doubt of the fact that the : life of President Johnson was to have beeu taken by Atzerot, but the courage of the j wretch deserted him. The Centerville (Md.) Citizen of the I 3d has the following : I We learn from a gentleman of Denton, Caroline county, that on Wednesday night last some fiends opened the tomb of ex- Governor Hicks, in Dorchester county, ami stole his coffin and body therefrom, and broke the tombstone to pieces. The body and coffin had not been found at last re ports, and it is believed they have been sunk in the Choptank river. Governor, afterwards Senator Hicks, was the loyal, energetic Governor of Maryland who pre served that State from the toils of the se ; cession conspiracy, when it was in the i greatest danger of being enveloped in them. 1 He died last February, in Washington.— This brutal, disgusting act ; this dishonor ing of a patriot's dust is but a natural out- 1 cropping from the same foul treason that has bred assassination and wholesale mur | der of captives. to?* About fifteen hundred of the Union soldiers formerly imprisoned at Anderson ville, Ga., having been transferred to Flor ida, were, on the morning of the 28th ult., j transported by the rebels down the Florida Central Railroad to within ten miles of Jack sonville, where they were unconditionally released and left to make their way into j the Union lines which several hundred of them reached before night. All presented j a pitiful appearance aad many were barely able to walk ; but their joy was great on finding themselves once again under the i protection of the old flag. CAPTURE OF JEFF DAVIS. The Rebel Post Master General Taken ! ./#•//' Tries to Escape in Women '* Clothes! WAK DEPARTMENT, WASHINGTON, May 13. Major-Gen. I)ix : The following dispatch, just received from Gen. Wilson, announces the surprise and capture of Jefferson Davis ami his staff, by Go!. Pritchard and the Michigan Cavalry, on the morning of the 10th inst., at Trwinsville, in Irwin County. Georgia. EDWIN M. STANTON, Secretary of War. MACON, Ga., May 12, 1805—11 a. m. Lieut.-(fen. U. S. GRANT AND Hon. Seeretnri/ of War, ' Washington. I). V. : 1 have the honor to report that at day-! light of the 10th inst., Col Pritchard, com- j inaiidiiig 4th Michigan Cavalry , capture d Jeff. Davis and family, with Reagan, Post master-General ; Col. Harrison, Private j Secretary ; Col. Johnson, A. I). C.; Col. Morris, Col. Lubbock, Lieut. Hathway and i others. Col Pritchard surprised their caiup ' at Irwinsville, in Irwin County, Ga., 15 miles south-east of this place. They will | be here to-morrow night, and will he for j warded under strong guard without delay. 1 will send further particulars at once. J. H. WILSON, Brevet Major-General. MACON, Ga., Friday, May 13, —9:30 a. ui. ; HON. E. M. STANTON, Secretary of War: Lieut.-Col. Harden, commanding the Ist Wisconsin, has just arrived from Irwinville. He struck the trail of Davis at Dublin, Lau rens County, on the evening of the 7th, and followed him closely night and day through the pine wilderness of Alligator Creek and . Green Swamp, via Cumberiandville to Ir winville. At Cumberiandville, Cul. Harden met | Col. Pritchard with 160 picked men and horses of the 4th Michigan. Harden followed the trail directly south, while Pritchard, having fresher horses, pushed down the Ocmulgee toward Hope well, and thence by House Creek to Irwins ville, arriving there at midnight of the oth. Jeff. Davis had not arrived. From a citizen Pritchard learned that his j party were encamped two miles out of the town. He made dispositions of his j men, and surrounded the camp before day. Harden had camped, at 9 p. m., within | two miles, as he afterward learned, from I Davis. The trail being too indistinct to follow, he pushed on at 3 a. in., and had gone but little more than one mile when his advance | was fired upon by men of the 4th Michi i £ iin - . A tight ensued, both parties exhibiting the greatest determination. Fifteen min utes elapsed before the mistake was dis covered. The tiring in this skirmish was the first : warning that Davis received. The captors report that lie hastily put on jone of his wife's dresses and started for i the woods, closely followed by our men, i who at first thought him a woman, but ! seeing his boots while he was running, I they suspected his sex at once. The race was a short one, and the Rebel President was soon brought to bay. He brandished a bowie-knife and showed ' signs of battle, but yielded promptly to the persuasions ol Colt's revolvers, without j compelling the men to lire. He expressed great indignation at the energy with which he was pursued, saying that he had believed our Government more magnanimous than to hunt down women and children. Mrs. Davis remarked to Col. Harden after the excitement was over that the men i had better not provoke the President, or j "he might hurt some of 'em." Reagan behaves himself with dignity ; and resignation. The party, evidently, were making for j the coast. J. H. WILSON, Brevet Major-General. WASHINGTON, May 14, 1865. The public here manifest the utmost en thusiasm over the capture of Jeff. Davis, j Some timid politicians, however, express a wish that he had been shot as Booth was, ; for fear his possession may be embarrassing to the Government. If lie is placed in the prisoner's dock at the court, by the side of Ilarrold and Payne lie will certainly be convicted of complicity in the assassination of Mr. Lincoln. It is urged strenuously, however, by some in high position, that the dignity of the na tion demands that on his arrival here the assassination charge ought to be waived, and he be arraigned and tried for treason, the highest crime known to our laws, and, on conviction, hanged. Secretary Stanton will order Jeff.Davis to be put on a gun boat and forwarded direct to Washington. ASSASSINATION OK A WELL-KNOWN CITIZEN IN SYRACUSE. —The oity of Syracuse was thrown into great excitement, on Friday morning last, by a report that the Hon. Burr Burton, a prominent citizen, had been assassinated. Mrs. Burton was awakened at an early hour on Friday morning, by the noise of some person rattling the front doorknob. While endeavoring to awaken Mr. Burton, something hard was thrown against a pane of glass, smashing it to at oms. Mr. Burton then became thorough ly aroused, and stepped from his bed-room into his private office, which communicated by a door. The Syracuse Journal contin ues : The upper half of this door was of glass, I and a curtain was hanging on the inside. I Mr. Burton asked, "Who is there? What do ! you want?" But, receiving no answer, he called out to them to go away, supposing them t lie burglars. As he finished speak ing, a pistol was discharged from the door, j and the ball struck Mr. Burton in the right j breast, one and a half inches above the nip : ' >l( \ l'he assassin, or assassins, immediately fled. The ball was found to have penetra ; ted the right lung, passing through it and i falling down behind it it. At ten o'clock this morning, Mr. B. was in a very preca i lions condition, with very few hopes of his j life. Rumors as to who committed this daring j assassination (for assassination, not rob-: I bery, was the intent of the perpetrator,) i j are rife, and several parties are looked up lon with suspicion. Chief-of-Police Otis I this morning arrested Mr Fred. Granier, of the First ward, on suspicion of being the I ! assassin, as he was heard to make threats | at different times. t>a? One I)r. Blackburn, a prominent and particularly vindictive traitor, has been un dergoing an examination at Bermuda on charges of an attempt to introduce yellow fever in New York and Philadelphia. It appears that he gathered a quantity of cloth ing from infected persons, which he packed in trunks, with orders to have it forwarded this Spring, of course as soou as the weath er was warm enough to spread the con tagion. The trunks were thus pi*epared, three of which have been found and the con tents buried by the Board of Health of Ber muda. FIVE-THOUSAND DOLLARS REWARD FOR ISHAM G. HARRIS. The Legislature of Tennessee having adopted resolutions authorizing the gover-1 H' Oim iitatli Commercial of May (> states that 011 tin* previous evcniug the Cairo express train on tie Ohio and Mississippi Railroad was stopped, throwp from the track and robls-d near North Bend, not more than fourteen miles from the city tirst named by a party of twenty guerrillas from Boon Co., Ky.— Tlie account says: The robbers had torn up eleven rails, and j the locomotive and four cars were thrown from the track. The first point of attrac tion was the Adams Express car. The iron j safes were blown open with gunpowder, and their contents taken. The sum of mon ey in the safes was much smaller than is j usually carried by the company over that road. The passengers were all relieved of) their watches and money. After complet ing the job, the robbers crossed the river, in skiffs. Several shots were fired. No one was seriously hurt. A party of of cav alry started out last night to try to entrap the scoundrels. The Cincinnati press call upon Gen. Cal mer for the most vigorous efforts on the part of the United States authorities for the prevention of any more such outrages. Mi "STKM .vo our OK I'KNNSYI.VANIA REGIMENTS. -—Arrangements have been made with the War Department by which Pennsylvania regiments will be mustered out in the lo calities where they were organized. This will necessarily brine - a large number of ; troops to this city for muster out at Camp ! Curtin. It is also hoped that arrangements will be completed with the War Department, by which paymasters will be detailed to pay these troops in the localities of their dis i bandmcnt, taking care that the men are : paid at the time of being mustered out. If these arrangements can be effected, i (and Gov. Curtin has made a great effort | to accomplish such a purpose,) the result ! will be to send the brave fellows, alio have 'justcrushed treason, home satisfied with the service and the authorities. It is to be ; hoped, whatever the arrangements may be, that the dissatisfaction and delays here tofore attending such proceedings, wib be avoided in the future. — IfarrLsburg T'b | graph. New Slboertisfincnts. /M)OD NEWS. REBELLION ENDED! THE I'lt ICE OF CLOTH ISO G O N E D 0 W X W I T II G OLD! The best stock of good, well made Clothing ever ' brought to this market is now open for inspection at the STORE OF R. W. EDDY, Bought since the fall of Gold and the Rebellion, which will enable biiu to give bis customers the benefit ot very low figures, and the decline in prices. My go-ids as u*u al are stylish, and n la mode. No second rate shoddy goods, every article guaranteed as represented or no I sale. My gimdr are ail THE LATEST FASHIONS, And equal to the best city custom made, and tit to a T. As usual the best quality all wool Business Suits, Black Frock Coats, Black Doe Pants and Vests, Linen Coats, Dusters, acd Pants, The Latest Style Fine Silk Hats, Soft, Straw. Panama and Cloth Hats, White and i Negligee Shirts, Cotton Neck Ties, Gloves, Sus penders, Under Shirts and Drawers, Best quality 1 English Hab Hose, Over Alls, Over Shirts, Linen Hand i kerchiefs, Ladies Fine Mcrocco Travelling Bags. In fact everything usually found ill a First Class ; Gentleman's Furnishing Store. My motto is good | Goods at a fair price are cheaper than poor goods at any I price. All goods sold at one price, no bantering nor teasing to make an otter, but every one gets the same goods at the same price, which is the bottom of the market. All old goods marked down to the gold base, and will be sold regardless of sacri fice. If yon want good goods at a fair price, go to EDDY'S, where you will find him ready to show his goods and sell them too at the lowest fig ure to correspond with Gold. Bear in mind the place to buy good, well made, reliable Clothing is at B. W. EDDY "S, next door to Powell A Co. 11. W. EDDY. Towanda, May 17, Is;.',. > PIRST NATIONAL BANK OF ATHENS TREASURY DEPARTMENT, ) OFFICE OK COMPTKOI.LKR OF THE CURRENCY V WASHINGTON, May 1,1*65. ) WHEREAS, by satisfactory evidence presented to the | undersigned, it has been made to appeal that the "First | National Bank ot Athens,"' in the borough ot Athens, in the county ol Bradford and State of Pennsylvania, has been duly organized under and according to the re quirements of the Act of Congress, entitled an " Act to provide a National Currency, secured by a pledge of United States Bonds, and to provide for the circulation and redempt ion thereof," approved June 3,18t!4, and has complied with all the provisions ol said Act, re quired to be complied with, before commencing the bu siness of hanking under said Act. Now. therefore, I, FREEMAN CLARKE, Comptroller of the Currency, do hereby certify that •• The First Na tional Batik of Athens," in the borough of Athens, in the county ol Bradford, iu the State of Pennsylvania, is authorized to commence the business of Banking under the Act aforesaid. In testimony whereof, witness my band and seal ol of [i,. s.] lice, this first day of May, 1865. FREEMAN CLARKE, Comptroller of the Currency. J?AGLE HOTEL IN TOWANDA, FOR SALE. Location, on the south side of tlie Square, by the Presby terian Chinch. Apply to W. A. PECK, office, Union Block, north side of Square. May 18,18G5. TRAVELLERS IRSURANCE COMPANY Hartford, Conn. Capital. 500.000. Insures against Accidents of every description. General Accident Poli cies tor five liui dred dollars, with $3 per week compen sation. can be bad tor $3 per annum, or any other sum between SSOO and slo.oooat proportionate rites. Ten Dollars Premium secures a policy for $2,000 or, $lO per week compensation tor all and every description of accident—traveling or otherwise—nuder a General Accident Policy,at the Ordinary Rate, i Thirty Dollars Premium secures a lull Policy lor i $3 000 or, $23 per week compensation, as above, at the I Special rate. j FOREIGN RlSKS. —Policies issued tor Foreign. West In- J dies, and California Travel. Rates can be learned by 1 application to tlie Office or agencies. ; SHORT TIME TlCKETS.— Arrangements are in course of I I completion by which the traveler will be able to pur- I chase, at any RaTway Ticket Olfice. Insurance Tickets, I lor one or thirty days' travel. Ten ceuts will buy a tick let lor one day's travel, insuring $2,000, or sl3 weekly i compensation. Ticket Policies may be had lor 3, 6 and ; ; 12 mouths in the same manner. Hazardous Risks taken at Hazardous Rates. No Med I ical Examination required. Policies written by the ; Companies' Agents. Policies for SIO,OOO. and lor 3 years can be bad by ap plication to the Home Office, I DIRECTORS.— Gustavus F. Davis, W. H. D. Cullender, j .las. L. Howard. Thomas Belknap, Jr., Charles White, . Cornelius B. Erwin. Hugh Harrison, George S. Oilman, i Jonathan B. Bunce, Geo. W. Moore. Marshall Jewell. Ehenezer Roberts. J. G. BATTERSON, President. RODNEY DENNIS, Secretary. G. P. DAVIS, Vice President. HENRY A. DYER, General Agent. *#-C. S. RUSSELL, Agent, Towanda. Pa. May 17,1865. AUDITOR'S NOTICE.— wiii. J. t'. Joseph Kingsbui y. In the Conrt of Common Pleas of Bradford County, No. 144, May Term 1865. The undersigned, an auditor appointed to distribute the proceeds of the Sheriff's sale of defendant's real es tate, will attend to the duties ot his appoiutmeut at his office in the borough of Towanda, on SATURDAY, the "24th day ot JUNE. 1863, at 10 o'clock, a.m., and all persons having claims upon said funds must present them or else be forever debarred from the same. W. A. PECK, May 11. 1865. Auditor. PLANTS, GRAP E VINES,EVER-BLOOM ROSES. Fine variety of VERBENAS, DAHLAS, Ac., for sale at the Garden ot HARRY MIX. Early Wimiingstadt. do Ox Heart, do Sugar Loaf, do Large Y'ork Cabbage Plants, 8 cents per dozen ; Early and late Cauliflowers 8 cents perjdozen ; Smooth, Fejee, Perfected, Red and Yellow Tomato Plants, 10 cents pet dozen : Egg Plants and Sweet and Bell shaped Pepper Pluuts , 10 cents per dozen ; Melon and Cucumber Plants in pots 25 cents, including pots ; Celery Plants 35 ccuts per 100 ; all kinds' late Cabbage 35 cents per 100. To insure safety all plants are put up nicely in moss. Towanda, April 13, 1865. BOUNTY, BACK PAY AND PENSIONS. The undersigned Agent for collecting Pensions, Bounty Money, Arrears of Pay of all kinds due Officers, Privates, Sutlers, Officers' Accounts settled and Certifi cates of nun indebtedness procured. No charge unless successful. W. T. DA VIES. , Towanda. March 16,1865, &~n 3bocrtiscmcnt6. RPUE EMPORIUM OF FASHION. J. W. TAYLOR. Is now receiving one of the finest JS-ortmoiit- ~R nery and Fancy Goods ever brought in THE market slating ot all the newest styles of Bonnets || al . Caps the new Function Bonnet, the Faust and Coburg Hats. Misses and Infants Hats AND SR,, Caps. All the new colors of Bonnet Ribbon the Lake,the new shades of Green. Purple AND JJ A large stock ol Ribbons, Trimmings and I)re q, tilings All styles of Hoop Skirts. Duplex . Miiltij,,, and Corset Skirt. Silk Umbre las and Parasol-, Linen, Hem Stitched and Embroidered Handkeri-),;.. Chenelle Head Presses and Silk Nets. A Fine ash- MEN! of Kid Gloves, French Corsets, Plain Limn.} broidered a:id Valencia Collars, Linen Thread* Smyrna Edging, Dimity Bands and Ruffling, Embn„.\ ing and Tucked Edgings. A good assortment ot 1;..... and Hosiery. Blai k Silk Mitts. Yankee Notion- v. Bells and Belt Buckles, Hair and Clothe- Brush*- R, and Fancy Combs. ALL colors Zephyrs. Bonnets and Hats trimmed in the very latest S'. York styles. Millinery Work done on short notice . warranted to please. Bonnets and Hats shaped in New Style, AC. N. B.—l have added to my stock aniec lint „ Goods. Prints. Delaines, Challis. Black and (Y,. Alapuccas. All Wool Delaines, Gingham Bleached M liu, Plain and Plaid Nansook, Jaconets. A full | m , Swiss, Mull, Bobinett Laces, Black and White j l .. Lace, Black, Black and White Dolled Lace, and a . many other tliiags too numerous to mention, out, north ot Cowles A Co. A Book Store, and op|j,j.;;.- a Court House, Towanda. May 1,1- SPRING ! SPRING! SPFI!\. 1 8 (i 5 . Plt/ CE 8 N O IF WIT H/ X THE REACH <> E ALL 1 T R A C Y & M 0 0 R K. Are now opening a FINE STOCK OF SPRING GOOII Including a handsome variety ot DRESS GOODS, SPRING STIAWIi FANCY GOODS A NOT 10N - A Good Stock ol PRINTS, DOMESTICS, CARPETING- I LADIES' AND GENT'S HATS GROCERIES, BOOTS AND SHOE.*, April 10. CROCKERY, HARDWARE, it Ucal (Estate, j PROPERTY FOR "ALE The subscriber offers for sale his house and l it.-:tt ted on the corner of Second and Elizabeth strw:- I boiough of Towanda. The House is a large tv. | house, with basement, near lv new and in com! G- - | pair. It would answer admirably lor two famiiir.-. I | lot is a corner one, well fenced, hiving a lap.- of thrifty fruit trees upon it. There is ui>"n ti ises a tine well of soft water. This property i the inost eligible in the borough. Terms tn.'.Jc u- March 25,1865. PHILIP SEEBII R OR R K N T : A good Country Tavern stand, with about - live acres ot land attached, is being tit'ED up ol der and will be ready to occupy by the tirst > the improvements will be so lai advanced a- TO ■- ; parties to live in the house by the first ol April j is two orchards, and two barns on the place, TIE J for the rent required. For terras apply to the subscriber, box 1 *lo . Fiiii pbia. or P. D. Morrow, Esq., Towanda. Brad lord I Penn'a. j March 20, 1865. E. REED ITS FARM FOR SALE! The undersigned offers his Farm tor sale, coots about 110 acres; about 70 acres improved : UNC-.' good state of cultivation ; large Dwelling HOI.-C • tenement houses : barns, and outhouses of A!. - saw mill, wagon shop, tannery and tobacco (act- ry J in good repair. Situate ill Wyalnsing township - :Wy a losing creek, one mile from the river. G. , 1 and schools close by. For terms, Ac., enqc owner, J. T. STALFORD. on the farm, or to H. B. M'KEAS. March 27, 1865. Towanda. D__ POR SAL E ! A good Dwellin: House and Bam, situate ia Boiough, enquire of Towanda, March 20, '65. JOHN N. CALI .financial. CURST NATIONAL RANK OF TO R ANDA! OBSIGNATED DEPOSITOBY OF THE U. S. Capital $1(10 DIRECTORS: E. H. SMITH, I G. F. MASON, I JOSEPH IV', Tilt ;C. S. RUSSELL, E. T. FOX, 1 GEORGE ST/ V T V E. W. HALE. IJ. I). MONTANYK, | O I>. BA TLEV This Bank lieing a depository of tlie United and in daily communication with the Treasury fie - meut , affords to iLs dealers unusual facilities'"! ing in Government Securities, or lor tlie PAYMENT j tcrest Coupons as they become due. A supply of U. S. Bonds and Treasury Note- arc ■ constantly on hand , and tlie officers of the Bank *: ways be pleased to I Ornish any inlormation ICON;' regard to the various Government Loans. Deposits received and interest allowed a> usual. Persons wishing to send money to any PARTY! ■/ own or the Old Country, will be furnished with T-L i change at curreut rates. E. 11. SMITH. PresiJ'B N. N. BETTB JR . Cashier. FIRST NATIONAL BANK OF TOWANDA May 2,1865. The Board of Directors have declared a seiiiis" ll ' dividend of live (5) per cent, on the old capita' -'; ' this Bank, and two (21 per cent, (earned since Ic - on the new stock, tree from Government tax, PAY 1 * and alter the 10th inst. N. N. BETTS. Jr. G'-L: ' JF ©N K Y T 0 L 0 A N ! Money to loan, in large or small sums, tor •"- short term of years, on good securities. , |E I Money advauccd upon Claims again-T the T°' ! " States. R Persons having money to lend will find it to LFL vantage to uotilv me ol the lact. Sales of Real Estate negotiated and Couvey. '!"■•- low charges. Particular attention paid to matters iu the W Court. , Those who have farms or dwellings to let. : 'UC , , des'ring to rent the same, will consult their urtere calling on me. . Abstracts of Title—without which no owner estate should suffer himself to be— prepared witn most carefulness. . IIMEI'- Sales of property attended to, and responsible *® found tor the transaction of business iu other . ' References when ro<|uired. oarOfficcone il'' o - . of PATCH'S, up stairs, over the room formerly 0 ' by the Telegratili Office, Towaiida, Pa. IVR EDWARD T. ELLIOT Attorney and Counsellor A' Towanda, March '2, 1865. -—' IPOK SALE UHEAF.—A SHINGLE chine of a very good kind. Apply 'TO WROS. April 20, 1865. W. PAH"-