NEWS FROM ALL NATIONS. —Secretary Harlan has signed the con tract for the extension of the Congressional Libra ry. A New York company undertakes the work for the stun of $146,000. Operations will begin ou Monday next. The North wing is to be finished by the Ist of January. 1866, and the whole by the first of April, 1866. —The Universal Suffrage Committee at New Orleans recently asked Gov. Wells, prior to the election, to order a registry to be made of all the loyal citizens, independent of race or origin, to which the Gov. declined to accede. —Stephen Hiss, a worthy citizen, was aceidentlv shot dead in Baltimore on Tuesday week, by a policeman who shot a mad dog. The ball passed through the dog and then through Hiss, three hundred feet off, killing both. rhe relatives of Admiral Dupont con tradict the report that he left his prize money— which they say does not exceed sso,ooo—to found an asylum for the orphans of soldiers and sailors. —Mrs. Trehune, the wife of a respectable mechanic at Chicago, on Tuesday week attacked Miss Amelia Frasted with a knife, injuring her so severely that life is despaired of. Cause, jealousy. —An extensive fraud has just been dis covered in Cook Co., 111., bonds, $20,000 worth of bogus script having been negotiated. Six banks were victimized by the forgers. —J he ashington Chronicle denies the published statement that Secretary Stanton intends to give up his portfolio as soon as the President can find a successor. —Joseph Bradley, the lawyer for the de fense of Miss Harris, was on the witness stand at Washington Thursday last, and made some affec ting revelations. —Advices from Texas report that Gen. Steele has demanded of the Imperialists the sur render of the ordinance given them by Gen. Slaugh ter. —A Mr. Logue has been appointed Col lector of Customs at Memphis, Tennessee, and Mr. Prentice re-appointed at New-London, Conn. —Colonel John Logan, Brother of Gen. Logan, is in Washington applying for the Marshal ship of the Southern District of Illinois. General Sheridan has issued an order dated New-Orleans,[June 90, to the effect that the State ot Texas is uow held by L T uited States troops, and inviting all refugees to return. No Lome guards or armed bands will be allowed, and neigh borhoods will be held responsible for the acts of guerrillas. All acts of the Governor and Legisla ture of Texas since the passage of the Ordinance of Secession are declared illegitimate. —-The Grand Jury of the United States District Court in Baltimore, has found indictments for being engaged in the Rebellion, against thir teen prominent Marylanders, including Bradly T. Johnson and the railroad raider, Harry Gilmor. —Several vessels, lately attached to the East Gulf Squadron, w ere sold at Key West on the 28th of June—among them the notorious yatch t\ anderer. The squadron is being rapidly reduced to a small complement. —Ex-Gov. Letcher was released from im prisonment at Washington on Monday week oa giving his parole that he would immediately pro ceed to his home and remain there subject to the President's order. '1 he census of Providence, 11. 1., which has just been completed, shows that the popula tion of that city is 52,787. There are 3,994 more females than males. The entire colored popula tion is 1,711. * —lt is rumored that a member of the late Assassination Commission has been assigned as a member of the new one which will try the late President of the Southern Confederacy. —Gov. Brownlow of Tennesse has issued a proclamation declaring the Franchise Law the supreme law of the State, and denouncing all as Rebels who oppose its execution. —A Convention of tin? Adjutant-Generals of the loyal States met at Boston Thursday. The establishment of a proper State militia system and other reforms were discussed. —The President, accompanied by a dis tinguished party, Thursday, visited AdmiraPDahl gren ou board his flagship, the Pawnee, and was received with the customary honors. —Emerson Etheridge lias been arrested at Columbus, Ky., by the military authorities, on a charge of delivering incendiary speeches in Tenn essee. —A Miss Xeeley of Mockville, X. C., shot a negro woman through the heart, on the 2d inst, while the latter was arguing with her master. —One commissioned and 84 non-commis sioned Rebel officers, together with 510 privates, were released from prison during the past week. -Recent arrivals from Fortress Monroe report the health of Jeff Davis us better now than at any time during his incarceration. —Mr. B. S. Osbou, naval-reporter, has been fiually acquitted by the court-martial by which he lias beeu tried. —A new agricultural weekly has appear ed at Raleigh, N. C., and a new daily is soon to appear in Newborn. —Michigan furnished more than ninety one thousand men for the war, or one-eight of her population. —The Richmond Whig was taken pos session of oil Tuesday week by the military author ities, and its publication snsjiended on account of an article by the new editor, Mr. Ridgway, in which he denounced the Confiscation law as " mean, bru tal and cowardly." Ibe Superintendent of Freedmen at Shreveport, La., has given notice to the planters ! that they will not lie allowed to drive their aged, helpless und infirm slaves from their plantations, as is being practiced by those who desire to get I rid of them. —The Connecticut Legislature has just passed a bill compelling railroads in that State not j to abolish the commutation system, nor to in- i crease the rate of commuters'fare in a greater ratio tliau they increased way-fares as they existed July Ist. J —A strike has occurred among the mi ners and railroad laborers in the Lake Superior re gion. Itailroads have been taken possession of and only passenger trains allowed to run. One company has already acceded to their demands. —Maj.-Gen. Sherman was publicly re ceived at Columbus, Ghio, Friday. Iu the course of au address he indorsed Gen. Cox, and, for him- j self, declined in advance all Gubernatorial or Pres- ' idental honors. —The bodies of the executed assassins ; are still witbeld from their friends, in order to al low time for passion to subside and prevent the) intended imposing funerals, which, it was appre- i i bended, might provoke violence. , A young girl named Alice Bnrnes was , brutally outraged at Weston, Mass., while attend- ' , ing a pic-nio, by three young ruffians, who have . been secured. Ihe girl lk-s iu a critical condition. lhe treasure ot the State of Tennessee recaptured recently from cx-Gov e ruor Harris, has , ' been converted by Parson Brownlow into Seven- ( thirties. It amounted to SSOO, uuo in gold. t —Rolling stock of all kinds and engines will soon be sold by Government to the amount of i 1 $5,000,000. | 1 I Itaulfottl Towanda, Thursday, July 20, 1865. THE UNION STATE CONVENTION. The Xorristown Herald and Rejmbliran lias a very timely and appropriate article concerning the action to be taken by the coming Union State Convention, in giving expression to the public will as to the ques tions which are now in process of settle ment. That paper very justly claims that a declaration should be made, that " the loyal men of Pennsylvania declare this to j be their unalterable opinion : That, " No loyal man in the rebellious States should be refused a right conferred upon a rebel. And that, "No loyal man in the rebellious States, competent to vote, should be deprived of that right be his color what it may." It would seem as if propositions so emi nently self-evident, and conclusions so just, as those laid down by the Republican, would ' not need discussion, and that the assem bled representatives of the loyal people of the State would make haste to proclaim their belief in their correctness, and unal terable determination to support and ad here to these truths. The people of this Commonwealth, expect no less of the Union State Convention than a declaration of priiJ ciples which shall contain all, if not morqj than is here asked for. Less will bring disappointment, create disgust, and power . fully contribute to bring defeat upou the • great party which should carry the State this fall by an overwhelming majority. Another matter is worthy of the consid ' eratiou of those who are engaged in en deavoring to "fix up" the Convention, its resolutions and its nominees. The brave soldiers who have for the last four years fought the battles of the country, have mostly returned home. They have rescued the Union from its enemies. Surely some , recognition is due from the Union party of ■ the State to the valor, the endurance, the f loyalty, which has animated these tried and true men. The Union State Convention must select some capable and worthy vet eran as one of the candidates it presents t for the suffrages of the people. It will not . he enough that it adopts resolutions ap plauding the returned soldiers. Sonic more direct and tangible evidence of our cordial ■ and hearty sympathy is needed. ■ In enforcing this fact, we have no motive ' except the success of the Union party, and 1 what we believe is due to the soldiers. We have no candidate to bring forward, and shall he satisfied with any man who truly represents that worthy hand who have iip . on so many bloody fields upheld the stand ard of the Union. SaT 1 It would seem as if the leaders of , the Democratic party had been smitten - with a terrible madness—a madness that made them blind and deaf to the savagery s j of treason and ke*n-seented and eagle-eyed 1 j in detecting and exposing purely imaginary ' j offences on the part of faithful public offi cers. They have made repeated efforts to ' ! show that they had got rid of all affection ! for the authors of the rebellion. Every few 1 days their organs made spasmodic efforts s , to support the General Administration. Mr. ,; Lincoln was the frequent subject of these [ ! evanescent manifestations of Democratic I candor, and President Johnson was liter ■ I ally covered with early praise and prorni i ses, coming voluntarily from these same politicians. And yet in every case they j have broke their protestations and pledges, | and have sought the meanest pretexts to 1 j resume the robes of faction and of hate. Is j it any wonder that a party thus championed I and counselled has become the synonym of ! disaster at every election ? Is it any won j der that even the rebels turn away from i men who, fearing to light openly against 1 the Government, have embarrassed it all j through the war, and are now toiling with ; satanic energy to hinder its efforts to sc j cure an honorable reconstruction of the Union. MAJOR SIIU MAX, of the Ist Wisconsin ea i velry, arrived in \V ashington on Saturday, I from Macon, Ga., having in charge forty i boxes of the captured archives of the rebel | government. They consist of a complete ; record of the proceedings of the rebel Pro i visional Congress held at Montgomery, J Ala., in the spring of 1861. These docn j ments were captured from Howell Cobb, . | in whose possession tliey had long ago been placed for safe keeping. The entire official history of the rebel army of the Tennesee, comprising all its records while under the command of Bragg, Johnston, ' Hood, are a part of this let; also the hooks ot the rebel Treasury Department, captured at Albany, Ga., which point they had reach j ed as a part of Jeff. Davis' train. BARN en's MUSEUM, New York city, was | totally destroyed by tire, on Thursday last. The fire was discovered about 12$ o'clock, and the entire building was soon enveloped ; inflames, notwithstanding the efforts of the i firemen. Most of the contents were lost. The loss of the Prince of Showmen is esti mated at $250,000 upon which there was an insurance of about $60,000. BARNTM informs the public that he will open a new Museum at the earliest possible moment. The fire spread to the adjacent buildings on Ann and Fulton streets, involving a large destruction of property estimated at $2,000,000. tee*" Mr. Miles Cragin, residing at Sus quchanna depot, Susquehanna county, Pa., on Tuesday night, 10th inst., sat down on ! a stoop in Canal street, New York, and while there fell asleep. When he awoke | four deeds for certain houses and tracts of land in Susquehanna county, Pennsylva nia, and Broome county, New York, made out in his name, and valued at fifteen thous and dollars, which were in his possession • at the time he sat down on the stoop, were missing, they having been abstracted from 1 his pocket. j j I SECRETARY STANTON AND THE TRIBUNE. ! The New York- Tribune makes the closing | of Ford's theatre, at Washington, the pre text for an untimely and unjust assault up- j on Mr. STANTON, and his official conduct as | Secretary of War. The Times retorts, that " It does stand 011 record that the Tribune has re sisted nearly every vigorous proceeding which the Government has deemed essential to the prosecu tion of the war and the suppression of the Rebel lion. " Without endorsing the sweeping aver ment of the Times, \\ i- cannot refrain from remarking that the erratic and inconsistent course of the Tribune during tie- j ast two years, has lost that paper the dence once reposed iu it by the people. , There is a feeling, which has grown out ul \ the unwise counsels of the Tribune, that it is an unsafe guide, not to he blindly follow ed. The occasions have not been few, dur- ■ ing the progress of the late war, in which its suggestions or recommendations have shocked the sense of the loyal people, and I have evoked public disapprobation, as be-' ing calculated to embarrass the Govern-! > rneut in the prosecution of the war, und to | • dishearten the patriotic. As regards Secretary STANTON,the enven-1 1 oined shafts of the Tribune fail to aceont ■ plished the intended purpose for which they ■ I are sent. That he has committed errors j > since he held the portfolio of the War De -1 uMtnu nt, none will care to assert. The ! *un!Sjritude of the duties pressing upon him, HILT J^ ( ' cn * OO luuc l' f° r one man, however r or wise, to discharge with entire ac-1 • curacy. But the country recognizes the 2 faithfulness with which he has applied hirn -2 self to the great work before him—his un tiring energy, his industry, and above all - the incorruptible integrity, which lias pre - served his reputation from the faintest sus • picion of corruption. - When the history of the Great Rebellion 5 shall he written, EDWIN M. STANTON will re - eeive the credit which is pre-eminently his 1 due, for his herculean labors, iu providing 2 the means of carrying 011 the conflict, and 1 for his sagacity in arrang ing the plans and 2 details, to which in a great measure is due 1 the success of our arms. That he should 1 he bitterly assailed is owing to the fact, - that* contractors, speculators and office ' seekers have found no special favors at his t hands. Having the interests of the coun - try at heart, he has faithfully guarded 2 against corruption, and has saved his De -1 , partinent from the horde of plunderers, at j traded by the magnitude of the opera'.ions 2 j rendered necessary by the prosecution of I I the War. ' I The occasional reports of the retirement 1 of Mr. STANTON originate from those with ' j whom " the wish is father to the thought." ■ I We are pleased to learn, from the highest ■ | authority, that the best understanding ex | ists between the President and the Secre i tary e able to present some consider- ' ations that may prove useful to those who eontein- ' I plate removing to that section of country. I 1, JLiii. CLIMATE.—In general, Delaware enjoys a | mild and equable climate, with none of the rigors j of a Northern winter. It is the testimony of Nor ! thern men, resident in Delaware during the sum | rner, that they suffer no more from the heat thau ' •at the North* This is accounted for, in part, by . tiio tact that the Stutc lies between two bodies of ' . salt water, which have a tendency to soften and ' equalize the climate. A prominent Life Insurance officer wrote me a few months since, saying, "Del awaie. is considered a healthy and delightful loca tion." 2, SOIL. —lt is only moderately fertile, but pre eminently adapted to the purposes intended by the | Creator. Some varieties of soil were made for the I growth of cereals, others for fruits andfvegetables, | still other varieties to furnish materials for cloth- i I iug. It is evident that the soil of Delaware was j I designed by the Creator to promote the happiness j I of the human family in the production of the most i I delicious fruits. 3, LOCATION.—Most of the land offered for sale, lies along the line of liailroad in Kent and Sussex ' counties. Persons in love with New England in , stitutions, and visiting the State, should not fail to stop at Canterbury Station where is located an en- i | terprising settlement of Congregationalists, who i j are now building a new church edifice, with other > ! institutions of Northern pattern. The Del. It. R. | which is completed and in operation as far as Sals- ! ) bury, in lower Maryland, is destined to be a grand thoroughfare of travel from the North along the Atlantic coast. By this road there will be a sav- j 1 ing of sixty miles over the old route through Bal- ! : timore. It is easy to see that land thus located j I must rapidly appreciate its value. 4, PiiieEs.—Prices of land in market are exceed- I ingly variable, and range from ten to one hundred j 1 dollars per acre. It is safe and sufficient to say ! ' that persons, with limited means and a little Nor- ' i thern energy, can at moderate expense, procure for ! themselves pleasant and valuable homesteds in ] Delaware. 5, EMPLOYMENT.—To persons who have a fond ness for fruit culture, Delaware offers surpassing j inducements. This branch of industry is fast be [ coming highly remunerative. Prices will vary,but the best varieties of the peach, pear, and straw | berry, will hardly become a drug in the markets of ■ New York, and Philadelphia, or even in our own | rural village. A few dpspeptic and misanthropes 1 have expressed fears that mankind will speedily be | glutted b} - a surplnssage of Rareripes and Bart ' letts ; but healthy men with sound stomachs en- I tertain no such apprehensions. To men of good . politics who want to raise good peaches and get ' • well paid for the same, we say, go to Delaware | and you w ill find a promising field for both politics and peaches. ' I (i. SCHOOLS AND CHURCHES. —With the exception of New Castle county, the religious and education- | al advantages of Delaware are rather limited, al- j though greatly superior to those in the new States : and Territories of the West. In all parts of" the j State there are schools and churches accessible to \ the inhabitants. These will be greatly improved j by the introduction of Northern intelligence and j j enterprise. Much more might be said to show that Delaware j i offers rare advantages to those who wish to procure j pleasant homes, with useful and profitable avoea- j , tton. With genial and fruitful seasons, with daily access to the best markets in the world, with ex | cellent water and wood in abundance, Delaware ; I now invites Northern families to come in and oc- \ , cupy. I can only add in conclusion, that men of j I decided Union sentiments who shall remove to the ; j Diamond State will do the country an important , i service. The final passage of the Constitutional j I Amendment depends as much upon this rusty lit- j tie hinge as upon the great key of Pennsylvania, j It is well known that Delaware is big with bad pol- j : ities, The present Legislature is not simply cop- j i perliead ami benighted, but a "body of death* to j j all progress in the right direction. A few hundred j more loyalists from the North would speedily turn ; this state of things upside down and right side up. I Are there any such men in Bradford who want Delaware? Then Delaware wants such men. The j country wants them there. To such we say, go and give your influence towards theperpuify ol'the ! best government and the grandest nation on earth. Towandy, July 13, 1805. It. C. THE CHENANGO CANAL- The Bingham ton Republican, speaking of the canal extension, says that contractors Dennison and Gere are Syraenseans, Lord is of Rochester, and Donoltls and Ross of Albion, Orleans county. In relation to the work, the Republican says : The work is to he finished by September Ist, 18GG. The sections let above take the canal from the Rock Bottom Mills, or the I point where the canal crosses the river,and | | carry it to a point below Union. Each sec tion is about a mile iu length, and they are uumhered from the commencement of the extension at a point near the fair grounds, the first section extending from there to the Susquchaunak river, and section number two commencing there and extending down the river. By this the position of each section can i be calculated on the map, or will he readily inferred by persons familiar with the geog raphy of the canal route as far as let. Sec j tion No. 1 leaves the present Chenango Ca | nal at the fair grounds, as before stated, | and takes an almost direct course for the j river at a point a little above the Brandy | wine premises. It goes under the tracks I of the Syracuse and Erie roads very near their junction. Arriving at the river it i continues down the river to the Rock Bot j torn bridge. Here Section No. 1 ends. On J this section arc located all the locks let, (three) the nine other sections not having 1 a lock their entire length. The river is crossed by raising the dam at present there, i and then using a wire rope. This work is not let, nor will it he under- i dertaken until the canal is likely to he j nearly finished, as no interference with the I mills is desired until necessary. Only j s2Bß,i.i6t>, are required to build these nine ■ sections. Section No. lis far more expen sive, hut even that at a reasonable figure, , ; and adding in all other charges, it would 1 seem that quite a sum would he left of the : first appropriation after finishing the first < i ten. It looks now like work, and the ex- ] tension should he pushed to ..n early com- 1 pletion. ] 1 tit&° The duty of placing the manacles ' upon Mrs. Surratt, escorting her to the gal- • lows, and supporting her until the trap fell, ( devolved upon Lieut. Col. W. H. 11. M'Call, 1 of this place. When placing the irons up- 1 on her wrists, she told him lie was no gen- ( tleman, or he would not do so. Col. M'C. ' told her it was his unpleasant duty, in obe- r dfence to orders, and not liis choice. Her 1 parting salute to him was, "You are a i scoundrel !" which were about the last au- l ' dible words she uttered. Several other cit izens of Lewisburg witnessed the sad spec tacle.—Lewixburg Chronicle. t t IMPORTANT TO SOLDIERS.—It is understood r that an order will shortly emenate from the t War Department discharging all volunteer v organizations. n ADDRESS TO THE OLD 57th REGIMENT ! HARBLSUCRO, Pa., July 6, 18(15. To the Officer* and Soldier* of the old :uth Penn'a: Four years ago our thoughts were turn ed upon War to come. To-day our thoughts are upon War passed and Fuace to come. 1 The bloody strife is over andyou with many of your fellow soldiers are now to return to your homes. We part joyfully, for the life we have I led as soldiers has been a severe oue, uud we are glad the task is over,and that hence forth we can enjoy the comforts of peace ful life. Yet the associations we have form ed are very hard to sever, and during our whole course of life in the future we will revert with pleasure and pride to the asso ciations and companionships formed during those three or four years in which the reg iment fought twenty-seven engagements and marched hundreds of miles. Let us not forgetcach other, l'arting as a hand of brothers, let us cling to the mem ory of those tattered banners, under which we fought together and which, without dis honor, we have just now restored to the au thorities who placed them in onr hands.— Till we grow grey-headed and pass away let us sustain the reputation of the noble old regiment,—for we can point to none more glorious ! Fortune threw together two organizations—the 84th I'. V. and 57th P. V.—to make up the present command. Both regiments have been in service since the beginning of the strife, and the records of both will demand respect through all coming time. Very many of those who have been en ; rolled with us have fallen, and their graves ; are scattered here and there throughout the i South. We will not forget these ; and the : people of this nation will and must honor their memory :—for how can they avoid it ! when they sec little children pointing their ! fingers at the portrait on the wall and hear them saying, "Ho died for our Country !" Comrades, God bless you all ! Farewell ! GEO. /INN, GEO. W. PERKINS, SAM'L BRYAN, Field Officer* of the late blth P. V. V. A CHOLERA PANIC IN EUROPE. ' From the London Telegraph, June 22. The cholera is on its travels—that fierce, | pitiless plague, which has its residence in the East, hut sallies forth at periodical in tervals to decimate West, North and South. From time to time we hear of the visita tion in distant places—deaths by whole sale in Ceutral Asia, deathsj in Southern Russia, regiments disbanded by death on Indian marches, and rivers choked with corpses in the islands of the Eastern Ocean, i The last Red Sea news brought word that Mecca and Medina are this year vast lazar 1 houses of cholera smitten vict rns, the pil grims perishing all along the road to the I shrines from Jeddah and the southern ports, i and Sheiks who had come to kiss the Kaa- I ha turning hack in horror, with their trains, I to succumb in tents and houses where they j has shut themselves up. Already Egypt j has been reached, and the fellahs there i are perishing by thousands ; so much so | that the Italian and French harbors are j shut against vessels from Alexandria, i Marseilles has kept all the mail boats iu ! quarantine ever since two moribund pas i sengers were landed in the Jolliette ; and 1 at last we ourselves have heeu obliged to I confront a peril which cannot be disregard ed. The newspapers and letters which j went out of the general post office on i Tuesday last were sent in boxes instead of | hags, to prevent infections being carried out of Egypt hv the mail passing through | the country. That, indeed, is not a prc j caution on our own behalf, hut it will also i he observed with regard to the overland ! dispatches coming homeward. All the in- I stances we enumerate, and others which j might he cited, prove that the cholera is on | its periodical march ; and, without ascrib ing to the same source the out-breaks in North Russia, Poland and Prussia, it is at the least possible that the year may be signalized by the invasion of that enemy which patriotism and courage cannot keep out of our island. DAVIS, CLAY AND MITCHEL.—A Fortress Monroe letter says that every morning Mr. Clay takes his hour's permitted walk, but Jeff Davis and Mitchel no one sees or can see, except General Miles, the officer of the day, and the guard. Imaginary stories as to their treatment and deportment have been written, but they amount to nothing. Davis is in much better health than when he came here, and evidently has no inten tion of dying hj- starvation or the halter, or anything but old age. He has plenty to eat, and of good quality. He is in no dun ' geon, hut has half a casemate, and plenty of air and a fine view of the water. lie is not allowed to read and write, hut can keep up as much and as vigorous thinking as he pleases. lie cannot attempt self violence without detection, and there is no possibility of his escape. AFFAIRS IN SOUTH CAROLINA.—A corres pondent who has been travelling exten sively through South Carolina, is satisfied that the amount of cotton still remaining ir. the interior of that State, is very large, exceeding any estimate that has yet been published. There is much difficulty in get ting it to the seabord, owing, in a consider able degree, to the slow progress which is being made by the railroad companies in repairing their lines. These roads were most effectually destroyed by General Sherman, and the iron to relay the tracks lias yet to he bought, and the money to buy it will have to he borrowed at the North. So greatly lias the collapse of the rebel currency shattered the faith of the South Carolina planters in paper money of all kinds that they generally prefer "ten cents per pound in gold for their cotton to fifteen cents in greenbacks. A NARROW ESCAPE FROM DEATH. —During the storm of Saturday afternoon the resi dence of Rev. George W. Cleveland, pastor of the Presbyterian church at Harbor Creek, Eric county. Pa., was struck by lightning, setting the house on fire and doing consid erable damage in no less than six of the rooms. The roof was burned through, and the house was much injured by the flames. Mr. Cleveland was knocked senseless, and the rest of the family were severely stunn ed. Mr. C., despite the persistent efforts of his friends, remained unconscious for a considerable period, which gave rise to a report of his death. He is now, happily, recovered. During the excitement conse quent upon the fire, the valuable library of Mr. Cleveland was carried out into the rain, with the intention of carrying it to a place of safety, and it sustained serious injury. The honse will he put in complete repair at an early day. A SWEET little girl the daughter of a dis-' tinguished poet, lias on her face a mole or ! two, by which its beauty is somewhat mar-! red. Hearing one day a compliment paid ! to her sister, she demurely asked, "Papa, would I be as pretty as sister if I wasn't 1 mouldy?" PRISONERS OK \Y AH. —Two hundred and twenty-six were released, Friday, the last remnant able to be moved. A baggage | waggon load of maimed and lame ones was carried from the transportation office; to the , depot. All now left of the sick will be ta ken charge of by the Post Hospital and dis charged fast as their recovery will permit. 1 The business of the Prison ('amp is at an' end and that bureau will be abolished soon as all needful matters can be finished j up. — E/mira A TEIIMS-Hij ment to In- made on deliver mg ~, Please remember the place, which will he:-,lll*,';' known as the "Bee Hive " Orwell, June 15, Istis. L. H. BltONsoy BLACK SILK SHAVV L > At the Bee Hive. B ROC HE LONG AND SIMII At the Bee Hive. SUMM E R SUA WL S , Beautiful styles, at the Bee Hive. MoRJ: XI X G sN A W LK, Finest qualities, at the Bee Hive. ELE G A X T SH A WL S All seasons of the year at the Bee Hive. PARASOLS AND SI X UMBRELLA- 5 At the Bee Hive. L A DIES' DRESS GOOIB Splendid Styles, at the Bee Hive. LADI ES ' (J LOT II , At the Bee Hive. LA D I E S' W A T E R PR 0 0 F N; REPELLENT CLOTH, at the Bee Hive. LA DIE S ' CO R SETT < Best quality, at the Bee Hive. CHILDREN'S' SHOES, GLOVE.- A.V. HOSIERY, at the Bee Hive. HATS OF TIIE LATEST STYLES. At the Bee Hive. 800 T S A X I) SII() ES . Large assortment, at the Bee Hive. CROCKERYK G L A S - \V \; latest Patterns, at the Bee Hive. TEAS! TEA E T E A T • E E TEA E T I All kind.-, Oolong. Japan. Young H>>< no.'. ; ' siud Imperial Teas ol all the finest' tlavo:s. . ! the last crop, at the lowest prices, and won.. bee Fie ' DAI R Y BAL T , At the Bee Hive. A GREAT MANY GOODS THAT WANTED IN EVERY FAMILY, a! the Pee L ■ COATS, VESTS AND J'A.MS At the BEE HIVE, Orwell. P... Please call and see. • 1-. H. BROXsuj RPHE EMPORIUM OF FASHIONS J. W. TAYLOR, Is now receiving one of the finest assortment- •iS , nery and Fancy Goods ever brought in the markt ! sisting of ail the newest styies of Bonnet-, Caps the new Fanchon Bonnet, the Faust. - and Coburg Hats. Misses and Infants Hats and s Caps. All the new colors of Bonnet liibluh 1 the Lake, the new shades ot Green, I'( • A lurge stock ot Ribbons, Trimmings and D:e-- .- ' i mings. All styles ot Hoop Skirt-, Duplex. and Corset Skirt. Silk UmbreJas and I'ar.i.- - Linen, Hem Stitched and Embroidered HanAe-- Cbcnelle Head Dresses and Silk Nets. A Ficei ment ot Kid Gloves, French Corsets. Plain Ltocn - broidered and Valencia Collars, l.ineti Tnresi - Smyrna Edging, Dimity Bands and Ruffling. P ing and Tucked Edgings. A good assortment j and Hosiery. Black Silk Mitts. Yankee Noli Belts and Belt Buckles. Hair and Clothes Brus!" ■ and Fancy Combs. All colors Zephyrs. Bonnets and Hats trimmed iu the ,very Lit' 51 | York styles. Millinery Wurk done on short warranted to please. Bonnets and Hats -haped | New Style, Ac. j N. B—l have added to my stock a nice liar I ■Goods. Prints, Delaines, Ohallis, Black ar.d ' ; Alapaccas. All Wool Delaines, Gingham, BiP.nL- ! ; lin, Plain and Tlaid Nansook, Jaconets. AtA i Swiss, Mull, Bobiuett Laces, Black and White' ' j Lace, Black, Black and White Dolled 1.:..v. ao 3 ' * ' many other things too numerous to mention. '*' north of Cowles Co.'s* Book Store, auil * j Court House, Towandn. May 1 ;gPIX X 1 X G WHtfiELS! WHOLESALE AND RET A ;L To the citizens and farmers of Bradford j counties : The subscriber would respectfully that he is prepared to furnish them with WOOL-WHEELS, FLAX-WHEELS, WHEEL-HEADS, SNAP-REELS, SWIVES, FLIERS, &(' LV " p! I In short everything oonuected with the HOIM I'acture ol Woolen and I.inen Goods. l Merchants wishing to purchase to sell j please address bv mail, when list of prices I All goods packed in shipping order. , { N.B. Particular attention is called to the . Wheel-Head," an article far superior to any now All articles warranted to givceutire satisfaction -, C. M. CHAN' J j Montrose, Pa., June 10, IStij.