v ratitiVWMTT - =rarl CIACION, ItTrePolirrspermijou 87'lictillbea+1191890•?1.g*1011 otsabilliP tioa to Um paper. aPECIAL ROTICZB Manta at Iwo; aorrapar Pm or arst inseetton. and rpm amp pee llostee an bssq.eat 3O waIaiOTICE4 nme.stei Rola* MAO. rap= mom a Una. . ADVESTISEXICSIB will to, tondo, loom** to the tol3Fming table- at rate. Sue tot 1 1 ir I Or •y- SIM I &Oa I 6.00 S.Olll • 2 Inches 12.00 1 5.00 I 19.00 110.00 CAOO I. 3 - h : 4l 1 1.30 1 4.00 110401 WS 10A11111Ale. ~ ~'-~-~iD)T~.~p c =I c damn — l — s.e." --- 1 moo 1 malts* moot am' 30.00 f 40.00 column 10.00 P 4.0.06 t-eo"inmn r.OO to.ool ,so. Administrator's std treedliiicat, ttindl. two:woes, $2 •, lissinedflards, Oar yen) IL adtlitlonel thies Welch. ' • y ea rly onertlaers are entitleate quatteetteliesdel. Transient advertisers'smnd be rid for ix Odednes: MI Resolutions of lagodations ; COMUNIUMOdiCaII d Headed or individual Interest. and notices of *t riages and Deaths. =ending Ara lines, &redwing!' rgs cane per line. 'The Rremirent Using I larger clngallien Rigs all the papers troths countinombined. melee Rashest advertising ni)•dium 1R Bortbern Pen_meglemda. JOB 'MINIM of elegy lead. fn MUS and tem - colors, done with 'neatness and Ilandbilhs; Blanks. Cants, Pamphlets. .Ift.lsbestmealls.an. of every satiety and style, minted at the ndeadest notice. 'Thy Baron= Office la Well soppZed ialth rower preases. s good itswenunt of new type. and everything In the Printing 'Una an be egeouted In the meet artistic runner and at the loved sates. TERMS INVARIABLY CASH. 331:MNISS 193DS. BLACK SPANISH EGGS FOR lIATCECING. Warranted 'Arm Moeda Tiro Dollars pee dozen, • sent - eststalty pieta% on receipt of prim. :aims Dos 14 . 6, , 2:lnths, New TerV.. • spl6-22n - OH YES 1 OH YES !-AUCTION ! A. It MOE. Lit:cued datetionser. All calla promptly attended to and satisfsetlon emeanteed. Call or address. A. E. Mot, Moaroeton, Bradford county, Pa. 0et.26.1%). I E RANSVILLE MILLS The subscriber. liming purchased the Loßaysvill• Stills, and refitted the same in good order • is now, prepared to do good work, and to gtre general 1' action. ST. J. PPLUTCHEIN LeTtarieille, Sept. 22.1869.-1 y ENI'S' COATS, TESTS, AND , 01 Pants and Shirts, also Boys' end Children'. (nothing, Ladies' Underclothing Ind Timms made by 31:idam OLsrirrnti, Mermen Block, second door front the neat House , . Satinfactionguanintaid . Towanda, April 21, 1820--kt (ZIFFORD'S NATiQNAL PAIN VA Killer and 'Life oil, are! the Great Yangly slawifirs that find a welcome every home u a ki , ,vereien Remedy for more of - ithe common illa of than any other Medicine in the market. Bold by dealers. in medicine generally. Manufactured 1, V. T. (11rFORD, Chicago. El., and 143 Main xi., iiidt:CELLSVILLE. )iamb 10, 10-5. 0 S. RUSSELL'S l. . OMMII/L INSURANCE AGENCY nasy23'7o.—tl PRICE LIST-CASCADE MILLS: Best quality Winter 'Wheat Vicar per 5ack....51 82% Per hundred pounds 3 25 Per liarrcL 850 Bye 'Flour per hundred pounds S 00 Iluctubeat ° 0 3 00 Feed, Rye. Corn and Oat,' peihrindred lbs... 200 Criainni grinding usually done at once, u the Ci• p trity of the mill is sufficient for • large amount of work. H. B. n. 131. camptown. 'March 23. 1879. ToTILE LADIES AND CHILD BEN OY 1T11Y.1418. F , I • 311121NERr .4ND DRESS AND CLOAK MAKING ESTABLISILMENT. l'Ailitr.xs or . LL THE Lrlzsr Brass YOU SALE. Rooms over Post 011too—Mrs. Hoyt's old staid. MRS. MARY A. wsomirEa, Athens. Dec.2o, 1862. Agent. DRESS'M&KING! The ondereigned begs leave to inform the ladies T,,a auda and vicinity that she has Yost received LATEST FASHIONS FItOX NEW YORK. 11,..0kf0l for past favors, Elbe hopes to receive a r.-. 1 portion of public patronage. One door south 1 P.n. Stevens. Mercor & Co's, corer Miss E. 1. niallfierY Store. Dllt3B ]I.B. MOSCUIP. Towanda, Ps. April 14, 1870 A ir .• • - JE IVELP.R, ~ o rtired the centres et Mr. O. A. MOntois, a tnrrtt al Watchmaker and Engraver. Ho la prepared to du Watch repairing and Engraving in all Its branch es. Masonic Sens*. Weld or silverl Sleeve Brttiona• and snube made to order. Particular attention paid 140 mounting of sEAL RINGS. PRECIOUS STONES. de. l . , 46,o , iiiiii . ,'.*ri . 4l3,iiifri ,Adyc.o,' Ell • f Mil ME! I=lll EZI • ti k kl 7 ' EMNA E 33 2 , • Mii NUMBER 3 NEE - erninetit Pan-bring." It Ar4s not, at terapted the car agent on his Own authOritY, for'ho said to we it was the:order' of the directors or superin tendent of the'roacl when he left Sa , Vg 11:11 1 4 • • ..` i • • SeA74.. Senator al me-n, queetiOrr? Mr. ' Certainly; Sawyer. Did you enquire whether' the , suiwrintendent of the road was, it licalhyu man? 31i. *Canieron.. I aid' not inquire anything aboa that. That is noth ing: to , tho point. have seen North ern. men -humble themselves before the Sonth wore than Southern RIM yoaM do. Sawyer. I.should.lilm fo make it suggestfori on this point, if the Sea iitor wiThellUwine. 1 can say that witli\-re.gard, to the State of South Carolina the colored man rides in the .same car that. the Senator .or I would ride and nobody disputes his passage anywhere in the street, in the:steam rill cars or theistrcet can. That haa 'been allowed 1.);,‘ the Repub lican government. of the State of South Carolina....: Whatever - the .dis position_may be,. T know nothing; 1 would riot deal With men's disposi tions, - .bnt with their lLa Catneron This was not MI South Carolina:: believe what the S,enitor • says of South Carolina is true, for the: reasonthat the neg,roel, there have the majority. It is one of the-few States, if there be any at all, - ,that will ever-send , a Republicaii to Congress when the real South gets a chance. This sax, in Georgia. Why srr; only the.Otherdr.y Gen. Lee; the head. and front of the rebellion, re ceived suchan ovation at Portsmouth 'Virginia, as - no conquerer in all his tory ever received; that man who led all the forees-Of the rebellion against his Government; that man who was educated at-West-Point by the boun ty of the Government; that Man who had been willing to take command of the Ariny. of the United States; and that man now, if :the South had the power, would be elected President of these United States. Doce, hay man, here, who thinks on " the subject, believothat there - is not an idea:now in the Souther 4, mind that' allthe debt incurred by the. Southern traitors in the rebellion shall be paid by this Government ? If he does he . is more ignorant than I believe. him to be. That idea is there in the mind of everybody; and some day,' not far distant from now, if you bike: ottall the disabilities from these people, and allow' the traitors to come nere i iii law will be passed •which will Compel this Government to pay the debt' of the rebellious States: The Moment these,Southern ' men come herelis they were before; yon viii find., plenty .of Weak-kneed people - Mt - he. North willing to bow down to that Southern power again and give' thetM the control of this Government as they had before. I had no idea of speaking On , this subject; T had: made no preparation to-speak, All I. desiro.teray now Is that 1.. hope we shall pliss this bill, Make it alal. Let uS do. what we all rime shall he done, that the ne-. grb under - - his emancipation : shall have his rights under the law t. vote as other men do; and hereafter we will take up the question of relieNing the Southern -people from ties, I will espress my sentiments then; and I give imy vote asTthink an in telligent and honest man ought to give it. E=!M 11.031 V * One of those whose-lot in life-has been to go Out into an • unfriendly world at an 'early age; and of nearly twenty fam tilesin.which I made my home in ihe'conrse of about nine years; there were only-three- that could be desig nated as happy faluilies; and the source of trouble 4 was not so Irma the bock ofluve as care to manifest it. -The closing Words of this senteucegive ns the fruitful source: of family aliena tions, of heart aches inmunerable, .of sad faces and filoomy home circles. "Not so much the lack of love as the lack of care„te manifest it." • - What a world of misery is suggested Iy - this brief remarkl 'Not more than three happy hones 'l4' fweuty!-.-•and the cause so manifest, and `so easily rem edied! : in -the " small, sweet courtesies of life," what power re sides!. In it,look r a word, a tone, how much of happintiss or disquie tude maybe communicated Think of it, reader, atitl take the lesson with 5911. • • • • EFYEMINITERAN.-116effemi nate man is a weak poultice. -He is across between a root ' beer and a ginger pOp; With the cork left out of the bottle over,night.- He is a fresh_ water mermaid sfound • - in a. Cow-pas titre with liandki filled with dande liOns. lie is a teacup full of ftlla bub----a kitten in. pantalettes—a • sick monkey with. la blonde moustache; He:is a - vine vtiAliout. f any fly drowntl in sweet oil—a paper kite in a dead calm.' He lives like a but terfly—nobody can tell. why. He is as harmless as a cent's worth of - spruce gum, and rsuseless as. a shirt button without .any - button-hole. He is as lazy as.a.bread pill, and has no more hope than's. hid year's grasshopper. He goes through life on tiptoes, aud. dies like cologne • water over the . . IT is mid that. once in the company -of • a literary gentleman, Mr. Webster was asked if ho .could couiprehend how4e.sus Christ. could be both God • and . num. "NO sir," he replied, and added; "I should be ashanied to ac kuordedge- Him as my Saviour if I could comprehend Him. If I could comprehend - Him He could not . greater.. than myself, such 'is 'my settee Of sin and con ecioustiess of my inability ter save ! myself; that . l-feel•l need , a sUpevliu th4aSaviou;, one so great and 'glori- Ous that I cannot comprehend Him." torn GOOD. Etsrra.---Punetuality. `Without Stiadhiess and dispatch `Without the first; time is wasted; without the second, : mistakes, the ineethirrtful to. our own credit and in terest, and that of others, al:Riling can be - done ,well, and without the fourth opportunities - of advantages are lost which it is iinposSil&le to recall. rotronoott in yearn aidef fhn point Of - &slaw he *rat, his_son •to• who kept the gate rarase, to pray tar thpilotmestr s apAatt. he coidd-be healed. - The segotimswer ,ed that it corddnot he rmtAWfive hundred Years,' but lin -yarn:, a branch of thQ • otiwhiairH Ada* hid eaten, „ 411ing ,f , n Moult Lebanon, =a that. When it bore fruit bia'fathar.ehord4 be Baled, both plimted - the braneVon his hith er's grave took' riiot 'int grew, and from it were made Aaron's rod, and Moses' staff withwldehhe struck the rock and sweetened thewsteri of •Italso forniedthe ,pole on which the brawn 'Bement was- lifted,. and the srlcot . :the, tostkaony.- At lust it carne into the hands of, Solo men, who used it in building his pal ace, but it' continually resisted the ef forts =of the builders to adjust it. Now it was too long, and then again t oo short. ; The builders, WO:4; II2I MP' therrthievr it into a raprab, so that it - might serve as a bridge. The ,queen of Sheba-:wool knot walk upon it, but adored - it, and told Solomon that up on it should be !depended .the man through whose death the kingdom shouldtke destroyed. °Solomon then bad it buried deep in the ground, 'where afterward the Pool of Bethesda - was dug, andfrom the virtues of this twe healing Properties wereimparted to the waters. After it bad been buried three hundred Years it rosf to Abe surface- of thp water, and the Jews took it and made it the cross of our Savior.—Lippihwit's Magazine. , EMI BE ADVICE TO Y-01/214 IfINENTEES.-13i/ih pp Simpson recently gave a unique chars() to several young Methodist ministers who were ordained at Phil adelphia. In the course of it he said: " Talk nbither too long nor too. lend. The measure of our duty is the meas ure of our ability. You must use the tone and power of 3 , ottr own voice and nothing else. Be as God wide you, and rise what he has given yen. Guard yourselves strongly and thor oughly, both mentally andphydically: By your care you can work for S t are. - An earnest heart, • With . thought, reaches the people. The more natti- _ rally we talk the trnbre effective will we be. 'Take time for speaking. Speak naturally and earnestly,. and 'stand erect in the feai. of God. Be • careful about „your diet. Don't eat late suppers. • I have found that nine out of ten ministers who eat after' preaching' die early. Endeavor to live -long; and try to do as much goodas you can. Oh ! after we have learned to live, if we could - lima thou-. sand y ears, what.a great amount of good-we could do here! lam more aniions now to live than I ever:was. TITLES or OLD TIME Sramoss.-LThe title's of some seventeenth and . eigh teenth century sermons were strange and to-modern apprehensions comic- . al and irreverent: "Baruch's Sore Gently Opened, and Salve skillfully- Applied." " The Church's Bowel Complaint." "The Smiffer's of Di= vine Love." " Thrf Spiritual 'Mustard Pot, to Make the Soul Sneeze with Devotion." "A Pack of, Cards to Win ,Ch rist." "A Spiritual Spicerie; containing ,Sundrie sweet Tractates of Devotion and Piety," written by Richard Braithwaite - in , 1638. " The Divine La.nthorne ' " Cuck oldem's Glory; or, the. Hob's of the Righteous Ezalted,"-with an emblem atical engraved frontispiece. "Crumbs of -Comfort for- Chiekens.. of • Grace.". A Funeral Handkerchief, to which added;" etc., `1691. "A . Divine _Bal lance to weigh Religious Fasts in," 1543; " Leap Year .Lectures: a Col lection of - Discourses delivered• on the 29th of February to a select So ciety; ^committed to - the -Press, be cause improper for the Pulpit,"-17-77. And last, not least, this: "Some fine .Biscuits baked in the Oven of Chari ty; carefully conserved for the Chick ens o the Church, the Sparrows of the Spi ri t,-and the. Sheet Swallows of Salvation." • dress " TV' OMAN passion for du l y accounted for .by her intuitive per ception of the fact, that it is her spe cial mission to secure the love of man by revealing to him the', beautiful, al though she is ignorant of the inti mate , relation existing between fe male beauty and masculine wisdom. Dress, including all that relates to the pieservation and ornamentation of the person, is and ought to be a fine' art with woman.: There .is a clothes-philpsophy pregnant with more spiritual truth than Carlyle and his school ever imagined.. She who does not seek to beautify herself es pecially after ruarriage,and for the influence of beauty in the home-cir cle, has not fully comprehended the nature of love or the dutieva;of life. A , woman ,without that ' assistanee which a refined and delicate taste can give her, is like a spring withOrtt flow ers, a feast without music, s. night without stars." • . Um—Homer was a beggar; Plautus turned a mill_; Terrence was a slave. Biethins died in <;_a , jail, Borgheshad fourteen trades, - yet, starved with them all; Tasso was oft- ' en distressed for a few Wafflings ; Cervantes died of hunger ; Camoens, the writer of Lusiad,' ended his days in an almahouse,and Vangelas left his body to the surgdons as pay for his debts. In - ngland, 'Bacon, lived a life of meanness and distress; Sir Walter Raleigh died on the sca ffold ;. Spencir died in_ want ; Milton sell his right of "Paradise Lost'! for £'ls, and died. in ,obscnrity ; Diyden lived in, poverty and distress; Otway -died of linnger; Lee perished in the streets, . Steele Was in pertietual wallets with the baillffs ; , Goldsmith's "Vicar of Wakefield," was sold for . a trifle to save him-from the grasp of the law. LuaauL Orrcu.—A paragraph is going the rormds — about gm; in Chester, .Verinent, dying from bght lacing Au edi .r, ecimmenting the feet, says : ui ese elusefi should be done away with, and. if the girls can't live without being &in , sered, we suppose men can be found wbo would sacrifice themselves. 'As old as we are, we would rather devote three hours a day, without, a cent of pay, as a 'brevet corset, than kee these girls dying off in that manner. Mee hours almost any time." • Sidi; Seas.-1. _Refusing to take your own county paper. , 2 Taking a paper and then not ria,yhig for it. _ rt Not adverasing. t 4. Getting married and forgetting the printer. 5. Asking newspapers to publish ?natter that is for ones' benefit with out reniimeation- • 6. Reading manuscript on a cora pasitiirls case. 7. Never pa7ing your 'subscription until the publisher goes to the trou ble of asking for it. . - EISEC El