Bradford reporter. (Towanda, Pa.) 1844-1884, May 04, 1871, Image 2

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    II
ii:iTc;‘g.-' -. .i . ti1.. all --Nations:
h
-. 7 The Ohio Lgislaturo adjOurned
II
,lAst Wednesday. ' '
Now p 4
s 5,C0,000,-
paper Dollars atiniall?. s
I -
— 7 .strawberrieslaro selling fol. forti
i 4
cents a quart in New YorM
.1 —Hirrun ' Powers r ernes that he
' has abandoned art foragrieulturd. •
-r-Theodore Thornas - is giving
Series of concerts in Chicago. •
-LPresident Grant.nails the' guest
of Jr. J. D. Cameron in Harrisburg. • .
-=,—N'apileoys , estato.Annenberg,
iu thvitierlandos worth about zn,oce.
-s • -
—Victor. Hugo aeniauds- 200,000
francs for his kinpe and garden at Guernsey.
has been surveyed , -and
4rilund to Contain 70,000,000 acre's. •
1 ! .
- , -There are itrihtitt4 ShijSpedirom .
Ilaltlnioro 40,000,000,er cant! ornytttere. • ''' ,
i
I -j=-Direct telegrr.iiiic 'comm-uniCa
iion'ilas-Ix)af-oltAblisW etweenF England and,
4 0 4- • . ..•:. i .`. 1. 17 '
, ;.. ..
. , .
-Rev ...- c , ..
; --The .. tephen H. Tyng,- Jr.,
liar: real:7.llod the c , d 74 ...‹, ,i,r,kal change -of t ihn Chris
, ,
", • --.Thirty persons were discharged.
from thp •Ilitadvlphial,custoan house on Satur
day. - . i , ,
serious break has oceurro4 on
the Erir:„ Canal at Cixliou - , _Jefferapn county,
'aid require tiften • liiya to repair. .
: -Tne 'manuscript of It nearly;-fin
iilca oratorio by Ifetideissohn6Bartholdy has
'been, fonthlin a private library at Dessau.
1 •.
—Lonisallnhlbagh has jrust pub-
Milled another 'caw historical nover. It is 'en..-
.ti i 1 "Mc ViCtims of 14igious Famiticienn"
.
- -4-Goveinor fitncisay,. of Alabama,
bhs lost thre of 'his children by death vine
-.lctivcniber t. • .
—John E. Owens has been having
.aver; emcees:Ad season at Melrielier's Theatre, -
in Chicago. --
Itichardsoes saw mill at La
Vi - o;ise,_Wis.; was aestrOyeil by fife on Sittnrday
morning. Los's ttentv•fvo thousa nd -Thcre are only six Episc4alians
z..in New Florenee..2llB..btit these - sis aro byiltling
to-tost about $2,000..• • .
—Him Old. negro. wilowara county,
wears ri hat which Is fully thirty soars old.
It is , raij to bo a trifle Shorter than a fionr bar
' TA , I • i
•
The Secretary of the ; Treasury
pnromse two millions of bondsceaclytWerl
nciOlav, - and soil ftro.nillioits of gold each
'l'hursll.-.y, during thisinionth.
•
1 --There are Ulm three - ex;emtions
iu NQW Orleans on the 13th—linit.; for =lrani%
viz: Martin Worms,
17.inooq Bayonne and Ve
dro Abriel. • ,Z 1
„
1. . .
-
- Poo. B. Wdoils, for several -ears ,
e'nultile.tcd_with the editorial department of the
I`,oston; Daily kirertii ,, y, died on Saturday of
consumption. . .
i -
: 1 1 —Secretary Doutweil is in chicag,o.
• 110 nir. , lo a brief Fpebell, in the Board,of 4radO.
Ithi ruifarks, had no relation to financial' or
p;•litita-l-mattcr.. , a' •\ . ' • -
.
°Orattoii \ iron fuvnace in
ohioT was ilCstrovra he fr.ro Sntur
ilay,oveuing. • Loss tiftyl thousand dollars. l'ar
tialry ineurthl. •
- San Franemeo grand mury Sat-
nr,(lay i - etnnioil four indictments for libel against
tlic pkil,ri( tors - and' ono against
of that city.
•
—The Cooperst it
r own Jotti'at: says
. that`°am, vinkio 1101 1 4.1: of .Exerciserill soon
Meet to reeeixe akpriicti,tions fon liecinso! to fell
. liquor." •
lit-13nffa1 ' o, Mr: Ettizo the. ex
.
* • pressman, is lyniklimi tt house overloolling the
which, when it is finished, tkiritarel_
m
oat s
him the•odett.buLl . C 44750,000. •
—An, Otttima; •111.,..undeitaker.
vertisestthat he'oTh2lalid "an elc"ant i Sioek
t of
oat and nobbr shrottil4,
warranted' to'give
m
isfitetion to the ost iiilrtiettlar."
N Hampshire l i n.dy, Mat*
Brockwar: recently evhil,rated her 104th birth
day in East Washington by Oclitting and carry.:
'ing into the house lialf-a-tiord of "werod.
•
Indiansll.lM have beeril on'
tkc F . ...1115:i Pacific ItaSi end are the. Cheyennes,
si , .ux and Ara} .tlir,r;•,;athl :xi; en,their way to
nit' Ark:ll'6-1i
—Ftleagtell, the' Gerintin philoso
pher at Weimar, is .-10 poor that he has to be
supported by the.' tie Line mast
r Stiftune—tihich
be the at thing tola stillip'peri lip;
J;111,1 ‘l3 ih6,, , terniurtis" of the
42t. Paul kfid Sioux (j . 3. Railroad, there is such
a rush on inirrlgnit:o,7 .and• people looking for
land r.ial ;gat it i almost 'impossible
o ht. lit.
I
=Ex-Senator games M. Mason, of
Virtiuia, ;and during t'.• tsar Confederate
in Engin AO at his retidehee near
Akx.andrit,: 1 a., to Vriday night, 4tteiatinger
ilig
1111
-The workmen in the Ifekay iron
and loeomotive..workkat Jer:sei 'City are on a
ri.lic.to 'recover bactiwages, and threaten that
unless they aro paid try Thursday they. will at
taqh the .property iztifto. , :einiipany: •
—Seventeen. rnp . resentatives of the
JapancAmcovernmenton addition to th'ose ,al
riltdy in )yashington;-.arrivod in that city on
Son They will remain only a day or two,
w4iCli they wiltleave for Europe..
—ll. C. Yonng, - a printer in the,
I ulden ~.-310.; Entorprise office, shot his wife CO.'
ittarday eTening,killing herinstantly,and then
lint 4ntemperanco. is supposed to
bucit the ,etuse.l
•
Sunday Free Press, an organ
el re i zting tboYoung Ihnucieracv, and which
now r the editorial-management of Mr. Ilar-
Gallagher formerly of the Tribvrie; - Made
apt earanco in fiew York / lain Sunday.
Vienna dispatch • of. Saturday
ntaies that tho ilowtr house of tho Austrian•
I:,.k.leirotli has rdtillod filer% naturalization
tnsett with the United Stires. The Hungarian
lict has not:yet takeia action upon the subject.,
•
—An old bachelor gas. hat giving
Hot to women would net amount to ay
thing practiertilywhooane , o they would insist that
..th,•v,tv, re tooyounglo icite"iintil - th - ey" got t
M;l'tt') tahe anyainterrt
• ••-4_ Knoxville paper last NVeelt
tc:-.11:: published au advertisement announcing
hat au umlirella had , been " found a Lae
gingharri umbrella" at that—,whEch !`tin:
identifying it."
by
—Prince Napolon has Oven $lOO,-
t ,, r a house at f,aneaster Cate, 'London,
.t.‘r w)ieh, Mitil judicious forethdught, he - eon
trivc d to said the ch6ie, st farDituro, piefureq,
and oljt!etti of art. that Lino, ;;litterud at Metulou
Shurp'll T.yl'alale, late .See
ro,ary of the State of Illinois,was murdered in a,
~trot in ~, : pringli.,!d,,lll.;- c arly liaturday
morning, NSliilo Cis . way 'fr.uti his residence
take the ears for tit. Louis,. Nu eine has yr:i
Lc a 01:ff,:ined ~ f tilt;
. .
—During the ipast Ivinterl upward
of lCifi bortts'llavei shelter in the kon,
-Itoch bairn dt Jersilv City. Each hoitti - on
averate contained three pCr3oxis, malting a to
tal of over loon. E,-;i4i(les,Allcle are trelD) ,
linikwxonycrtkid into,residowcti:lyhich accont:.
motlate an average- family of five riereops.-
I
- 4-Two criilihien, aged eight and
tire years; somi, of, Mrs.'Castel,. df. Fairmount,.
West Virginia, in cpinlian,y with Iti lad twelve
yearii old, were earriciaiver the dam ix the Afo,
notigaltela river rt that .village on Saturday.
eldezt th:i,y clung to
The other two were drown', d.. -
:!—Senator Capieroti,.it batman of
tite,Stnrate cltnurnitt,:e on-Foreign Relations, is
expected in 11'ashit.i44:011 this week,' fo consult
with . 1114..1're:dd.( Aatid Scerciar . y'of State. rela ;
tiro to a trc.41.2,- t‘,., be -- :*.tilanitte.d..to the Scsaate ,
for a sr . ttlement ofr'thn questions: it clifference
bchrcua the'UnitttLStates and G i t"gat Britain.
L.-The •new cligines for the cotton
fp.,"tery ofti . .fection fiashville are
tio , ,ible horizontal, Having cylinders of twenty
four inchetitithatnlter and stroke of forty-eight
iunlns. The bid-144es are t*enty-three feet
long. and weigh'heady 10,0001 "poninil.l, They•
helve capacity to 'r::riTi.o.o spindles and 350
. ,
—The No
Tprk `Tribitile of Fri
a&:: says : The . tvet4 price of milk has been
refittetd this wee1.:,14, a large number of dealers,
tonn tt n'to eight: ivrits a quart .delivered to
familks. . The v. - 418 Trice of butter'is also rap.
WAY -Ailing. The supply of these two
_eominod
hies from tkango 'counts'. hi 3 doublod
114#.11,in ten dztv.i. "
. w .
Tlio . Erie-RailwaCompruay' icon
twnnlate building a - branelilold from Mancee.k
ur b p isit,
.on. the Delaware Division,- ..and is
tusking prdiruinary survent. The dsign . -is to
intersect the. Albany and Biniquebanns Railroad
ut Afton, and to pass, through Coventry,tiroene,
F,te!ttr. itl-;'lVillett and -Marston to Cortland,_
%;.1 I tip %A': to Auburn and i/sn'eP•
•
—Tiiis-wivoB of ta - en of Isrptatu . " eut
• Li% zye. tho ulost ,appreciatiVo wbarlen.
• n revresentk Ilebender an reading. one
Egi ip:autitill. Imaginings to .1)18 Wire, who
iDtt•-.1...1 with eyes-cast down and Latest breathe
t& he ehr,44; the sharer of his 'joys twinned
'f,rth with : ".Dou't rfat:fu) 'your left?. stoeldru;
P fW; tunas Mend tb 14e if/ it.,"
s' • \
•
0-,.....--,.-. - "
- -1 j44iitt . liiiiiiii:
• EDITOPESs •
E. Q.-cocipltl,Cll. S. W. )Ii;VOED
;match Thursday, May 4, 1871.
Hull COIIIIIII , SSION...ITS
SULTS.
THE
understood that the commis
virtually closed its labors,
=ps 'having, it s reported,
nt from London to the Brit-
signers ratifying the terms
proposed treaty—a draft
,of
it is known, Was sent from
time ng,o. - That draft- is
It is
sion h
desua
beeu
ish co
of the
which,
here el
iod to have embraaecl : •
. The"Alidaama and other reb-
Leer claims. .• '
enders'
Fir:,
el priv.l
;Seca ?d , . The claims of tritisli-sub
jeetsU minfst us during the rebelliot
- The ',Canadian fisheries, an
our fir 'ermen's relations thereto:
4 11)vrtit. - The free Or equal naviga
-1
lion of the St. Lawfer.oe river.
Some. minsW-matters were involv
ed, such as a rectification of bounda-,
ries, &e. But these are comparative- .
lyLof but small importance ; It, is al=
most idle_to speculate •on the terms
agreed to, as there is nothing knot'
reliably. outside of the commissioners
themselves. Almost all that has boon
said heretofore is guesswork, though
some of it Alas been very slzewdly
done. It is certain, however, that
'the treaty signed by Gen. SCHENK,
and the other American eonrnission
z
"ers, does not contain the abstird eon
di,tiong reported in the N. Y. Herald ,
specials. , Senator SITALNEI% is- report- ,
ed,to have said that-aslar as he can
learn, the conditions are quite, favor
-
able tofthe American-s.ew:
With regaT4 to the fisheries so
. .
! know*
tatte4 L . that it may be said
With (decal:4e positiveness' that
no in, -riot a dpllar-tis designed.
he 'paid to the New Do- .
miniA lie mere privilege of fish
#lg the marine leanle,-or of
„land; repairs and obtaining
supi -British iericaa .ports:
The probable report yet made
• -
is that for the free navi&t,gtion ,of the
St,. Lawrence and thkright of fishing
in Canadian waters, given our• skip
pers and . ilshermen ; the Canadians
tire to have reciprocal . privileges - IS
far south as forty degrees,
Or e
tilde. of Philadelphia,
„ thus giving
them access to o-ur maclie - ra
ies, we beliee—a privilege, we are
told, more valuable than that - which
they bestow.
116.; - It is a sure . i4dicttiort that
congress has done something really
profitable When the wliole Opposition
Set up ou.d_continuous howl against
A review of the legislation since
4861 — W111.feinrm this2l . -ominencingf
with th. 7 raising of trvps,"to,subgal•
gate our , Southern
dOwn ! to the "enform*rit act,". .the
howl over each step to preserve
the Union has been just as 'earnest
and persiktent asit. is to4lay overrthe'
last named enactment. - The Denioc
raey hoast of. their devotion to thb
Union in ene breath, and in the very
t:xt denounce alliefforts to' preserve
that Union; legislation to -suppress
the murderous Kul - dux is designated
as a scheme. to defeat the Democratic
paVty in 1872; an attempt to protect
Union men, is denounced aura effort
to , deprive Demoerats of their rights;
and so- it . is. with 'eVery movement
made in good faith -by the dominant
Tarty to protect ,he ;country and
Maintain the rights of the people:
• The truth of What we state is self 4
cadent and can' not be denied; and
Jet tllt purblind opposition continue' :
tTie rod ! which-.has broht,lit their par 4.
t series of disasters extending',
through one of the most busy decades
known - in the history of • the world;
WhSn will ithe Democracy discoVer
that-the World moves? - • ,
re- The Democrats in CongresS
have issued an address tO the public,
reiterating their old
,stereetyped
charges against the Republican' par
ty,, many of which are entirely base
less, and many of the others so ex
•.,Ege,rated as to make theni glaringly
untrue. Centralization, Tiolation of
Ilie „ Conaitution, &c., are harped up
on as much unction as if the .
people had, not heard it with in differ-
elice, or dis2qst since 1861, 'when:De.-
nloCrae:,+ • maintained that there was
ti\ver in the Constitution to put
down .T(!bc..lkion, and : that all clifotts
Ito*. re.t:,•ain rebels were ilangrotts
kcentraliza.tion.' ThiS _address shOs
that DetnOcracy' has not Changed. It
skill tbiiik.4,there is no power in the
Constitution 4 arrest the ruur " derous
Operations of the litt* Klux, that
all eficirls Io comperthem to behave
li t ke .d
. ; went citizens is dangerous cen ,
tlalizatron. This address was. hard
ly nwiled- to . Coalirm the public in its
.cOnvietionerthat Dernotra.cy synipa-.
thizes; with Ku littt isrt as it did
with treason,.
ipV. The Tfuntsvtlle, (Ala.)
says 'that, the', South " ri ll not foigive
the r4bery Of four thouciandluillions
of dollars; - property guaranteed to
C i onstitutiOn of 'the tfnit
.:467 States." ! , -What ' , property ? Pro 7
3er tiii gavcs, of 'course. But when
Senator Moßrox that the South
ern democracy 'intend tu, demand
restitution in -money for _ that :pre
tended property,
,does he, aftei nit
hit wide of the mark
SpzEcu.-We di
rect attentio,l to the imech of &alga
Mratoun on the.' Ku Iglu bill, in this
piper. The spceeh hben more
extensively published in tHis district
and out of it, that any othordeliver ;
ed en tho subject.-
rel.. The _NatiOnal Debt was de
treased during the mooth,of..aril to
the tune, of $6,124,05?.13.
that forl an' extravagant .Republicanadminisration? Who..evel..heard . of
public debtidesreasing un4q: : ,Demo-;
_antic - . -
vntAir zwmovmumie - gitetsm
WEANS. . •
7 We have seen ne better, clearer or
more forcible itatemenfof the effeet
of Peraoczatie slabs* Ulla the
words = on tiait mai* sp9ken - by
Senator . lapriTon, d iiiitlmm4, -on the
cvocaskox of - a recent ciirenadete. :the
gentleman by his Indiana..4l3los,
then in Washington.' He
•"..Lej considex.iar_a:lew—mo.
momwts to ; nigbt what would bo the
ineviffble result of the success of the
Democratic party should they elect a
President and. get control of the
National Government. In the first
place 'the Party cart only succeed by
carrying all the. Southern States. In
that. case the Southern Democracy
will constants a. majority of, the 'par
ty, and 'All, as - a, matter of course,
dictate the policy of the_ party, and
will control it in the future as they
have'controlled it in the past. - Nov
I submit this question to intelligent
men : Should the-Southern Democ
racy come, into power will they vote
to tax' themselves? ,Will they vote
appropriations to pay pensions to'
Northern soldiers, and- the i widows
and orphans of Northern .soldiers,
and unless theirs at the same- time
are provided for? Does anY intelli l
gent man believe for a moment, that
'when they, are placed in power they
would appropria4one cent for pen - -
sions except upon;the condition that
the soldiers:of the 'Confederate Ar
my, their widowaand orphans-should
be placed upon the .same footing?
[Cries- of 'No, no.'] That would,
perhaps,-be the first effect—:the first
result of the success of Ihe Demo
antic party. Again, does any inter
ligent man believe that the Southern
Democracy, when placed in power,
will tax themselves, will make appro
priations to pay the interest and the
principal of the, national debt, unless
there is some provision first made for,
the payment of their slaveS? They'
invested their money, their proftrty
in the Confederate debt: They lest
it. ' Ili addition to that they lost their
slaves, and they will never tax them
selves one cent, to pay the national
debts that'wa.s - contracted for their
subjug,ation r uriless their debt is in
some way provided for., What, then
'will -they . ask 'at the hands of the
Northern Democracy ? What 'will
they require ? They will require that
the United States shall assume and
pay for the loss of their slaves; and
we shall have added from fifteen
- Hundred to two thousand millions to
the nationaldebt. Ville the North
ern Democracy consent to thiS? I
answer i that they will. If they 'can
- hold bower upon no -other terms ;
they will consent to that or to almost
any . other pore.position. Besides,
these Northern Dunocrats are com
mitted in principle and in declara
tion to the payment of their slaves
From the time that Mr. Lincoln is
sued his first proclamation, in 18(12,
-the Demodratic party has 'not failed
to declare that slavery was unlawful
ly and unconstitutionally abolished.
In legions of resolutions, in years of
declaration; party is_comnaitted
'to the'doctrino that slavery is uncon
stitutionally abolished, and if it is
bronght into power it cannot 'avoid
making payment" for those slates.
The, sentiments of the mass of the
Democratic .Party in the well rase all
inclined to think that thdlargii- body
.of the Demecracy would consent to
pay the South for their - slaws With :
more cheerfulness than they would
consent -to .pay the national debt.
This then would be the second result
of the triumph c 4., the Democratic
party, paying the'South - for • theit
slaves and adding two-thousand mil
lions to the national debt. Now, my,
friends, what will be, the third re
sult? It , will be the disfranchise
ment of the colored. people and .talz
insx from them the rightiof suffrage.
When these-Southern States pass.nal'
to the bands of the- DereOciatie par
ty; and when the' Natit4ial Govern
,
mentpasses into the lands of ;that
party, they. will be ab16..t0 clisfran
ebise.the colored man in . .sixty days.
It would be attempted now_by some
of the Southern States, - if it were not
for the - reqtraining presence of a ;to-
publican President, the fact that tke
Natronal Government isin the hands
of the 'Republican party. But; if the
State governmentsand the National
G-Overnment Tshali pass into -their
hands,
..they, having all • the •aims
down there, having . the Military ex
perience, would drive the., colored,
men from the polls or compel them
to vote their own r diefanchisfaent,
an stripping the colinid.pcoplo. of
all their rights, aid reducing theni„
if not to slavery; to the condition of
serfdom, would be the third result of
having the Democratic party in pow
-
-o ,
rsisgbrus. AND GIDTEDS.—Thpre
arc but few whohave any r idea o~ the
al'agnitude Of the suspender and gar
ter
.-buiiness, and .feWer still who
_have the slightest conception, of. the
high prices some of the fancy articles
in both lines. command. According
to Bostonrpaper, two factories, one
at Watca-hury, Cenn:, the other at
East Hampton, Mass., have each a
capital- of $"300,000, 'And produce
..,!abont ,4,.'2,000,000 each 'per annum.
Their'suspender production alone is
500 dozonsiier day each. There are
about one hundred smaller manufac
turers of suspenders,, whose average
daily maim is from twenty to., one
hundred dozens. The •ranging sale
of suspenders is sixty cent per pair;
and of garters eighty-five Oats!. The
highest cost suspenders are fifteen
dollars per. pair; - 'high cost garters
te , vin at fifteen ,doilari. and run ,up
.c
'much 'higher. rWe havej the same
authority that the last n'Oelly in the
Hue of ladieslgarteri are.: broad v.el
;vet bands, heavily fringed 'and gilt
,mounted.
The amount of antracite coal
in the United. Sues has bery
accurately determined, the area and
the thickness of the veins being
known. The Central coal fields, com
prising 1: 11 16 square miles, have been
calculated to contain 0,854,961,500
tons;. The Southern coal fie1d13,146
square miles, 11,308,842,000 Loris, and
'the..''.tOrthern coal fields 198 square
miles, 9, 178,872.600 tons, mating.
t fat of 470 squar4...miles and '26,342,-
- 05,500 tons, frorit which deducting
.one-half for, waste in mining, there
remains 13,171,837,-500 tons of maAt
etable coal, which will give . us an an
supply of 20,000,000 - rflr: 600
yelirs, or for four centuries' after the
coal fields of Eliglau4 dual lutv#4 6 eil
ont4ely oximustol.
EMI
wor NEED ow TanPUBLICAN
rum°.
The - New '-YOrk Indepc drt very
jruitly i=arlarlutt the na 'on and
\
the hip= ratee - -never need . the
popubliewpaity more than the do
orrer.H4,',lfe./ui:Ve only just come to
undetelariortho the war b etty
slavery and barberican, on- the one
hind,'lrsd liberty and civilization on
the , other, is not. yet fought out.
..
Beaten in the open field, the_ rebel
lion yet lives in the - lawlessnars of
Southern acearrulrelion. - Beaten by
ballots auk beater) by bullets, it
shows, ilk*, other venomous . crest-'
tiire" s;;ri wonderful - 16Mo* of life.
Liberty is not: established_ at the
South.mof the press; free
.dom of pc= aCtion arc yet hard-1
ly known there. If the Democratic ' ;
party were to come into power to
morrow, the - whole stork of mon-
structiOn*ould be rmdene ; the fran
chise would be taken from the •ne
grOes, and under some form or other
slavery or its equivalent would be re
stored. let us remember ono thing.
The lost cause.is not an abandoned
cause. When the rebellion . fights us
again, it will be with the anus, : the
forts, the ships,frind the • prestige of
the:Government itself. When we
vote at the next PreSidential elec
titn, N'''e vote face to fa'co and ballot
to 'ballot with the rebellion. The
battle_ of the next Sear will be-more
decisive than the biting of New. Or
leans and Vicksburg and Richmond .
together. If under a Reptiblican ad
ministration die whole South is full
of lawlessness, what would be -the
state of things with Trartarmo WOOD
and Sussrr Cox in the , Cabinet ? -If
mayors of cities are shot, banished
and abducted while GRANT is Presi
dentwhat will be done when • llo;T:
war reigns? If they do these things
in a green tree, what will they do in
the dry`? The lesson of the hour is
plain. Every patriotic ooM3ideration
demands that Republicans should
stand by the party of liberty and hu
man rights. No disatisfaction with
the president, or Fith any other .
tender, can histify lukewarnmoss. in
the cause.
THE AMY - AND WUEREFORIS.
The I.lhure ./Itpubtican, pnblished
at Havre Do Grace, Md., has :always
a-goo,d word:for , home interests and
Ammiean labor. In the
brief editorial Mr. McCoouns has
given the pith of tho arguments for
Protection :
Protection 4 fosters and develops
home productions and domestic man,
ufactures. Vlore is no getting' Over
that
Free .tr.adii encourag,es" . foreign
manufactures; and necessarily de
presses hams) industries. There is
no getting over that. Then why this
great Free Trade crusade neminst
American manufaOtnres? VI% are
these Free Trade advocates? Who
are their hauliers? What• interest
do they represent ?
• •
The whole Free 'Trade movement
is anti-American in. its ' inception,
gotten up andtn:lpported, by' 13ritis : h
gold in the aid and interest of Brt
ish manufacturers and London boOk
publishers, brokers, and insurance
companies and tifeir { agents in 134s
ton and New r York, and American
importers and dealers in foreign
merchandisb, atocks, aril securities;l
and who have .110 interest in common
with the treat mass of our people,
or their home indnstries-,except as
th6y afford nourishment to tlicse
vampyrcs and their paid emissariepoi
If Americtin manufacturers 'are
reaping suchlmmense fortunes, and
the road is so open to wealth in this
direction, as thtse • Free-Traders
would have us b lieve, why don't
they change their occupation; " ac
cept 'the situation," 'and take ii
hand?
Not until the intelligent working
men of this country 'are, by a reduc
tion of wages, brought to the pitiful
condition of the pauper laborers. of
Europe, pan we afford to do without
Protection, and every \ man rho ad
vocates, Free Trade is helping' SO
bring about such a state of things.
Every corifideration of
,rdriotism,
lave of country and humanity, de
mand Protection to American home ,
indristries, agabist the foreign mon
eyed monopolies that fatten on
paupers of Europe. _
•. LETT-EA TROM WASHINGTON.
• • Washington, D. C.,/April 1671..
Mn. Ebrrian : With Congress atijonrited, the
election In the district over, and the numbers
of lobbyists and lookers-on who fled when The
Speaker's gavel announced the laborVof the
session closcd,,tog,cthej with the warm weather
already upon, us, it may Le truly said, we have
'gone back to our normal cciulition of sober
quiet, if not absoltitu dullness. The last few
weeks :have r,itnessed huge loads of trunks and
box':7a on their way to chpota and steamboat
landings, indicating that the flight of our win
tcr . vititors, like the .birds of
,t,assage, had al-
Ccrsmcne and,that during tic next
sia months, at least, we ars to be left "alone in
"'o glory." glory."
'l2lie great halls ind cprriclors r.ntl-thecp
tion,roonas of
Tun cArrroL,
so recently filled with the hurrying feet ~cor the
jobber, the lobbyist, and the law-maker, :se
deserted, and there is not; a mound otnclinesit
in the echo of the footfall upon then marble
floors. The legislative chambers, with their
excited speakers in acrimonious debate, are ei
lent, and their galleries empty wherp was wont
to throng the votatics of fashion, Me cuireus
spectator, with theansious listener and listless
idler. The bright eyt)of beauty no longer looks
complacently down upon the bald heads and
gray locks of the sages and saver's of the 3w
ate ; uur are the pc i lito cars of the famous Mass
achu.setta 11Spropeldative saluted with the int
pJHt (alit hc - is a "d—d r.iscall' as
with curious eyil.t,,,s 4 c peers into the wrdienl
countenance of the garrulous Davis, of Ken
tucky.
The Crst session of the
Fonrr-si'conD coNtlnTzsg,
although a short tone, will he memorable in
le siative laistorifor the pasiago of the Ku-
Elul bill, the debate over which was character
is..Nl with intense biltentetis and party spirit.
Its constitutionality, together with its measures
and passage, were fought step by step, by the
Democratic ;nembers, and the_ most disastrons
results iirexlicted if the .power caked for tie
'placed in the hands of tLe President.
In this debate t 6 Deineerats were beaten,
the Republicans triumphed, and the country
may assuredly rely open the President for the
faithful execution and enforcement of the pro- -
viir:ons of the bill. , That he will go, to the ut
termost for tho protection of the people, white
or black, so, urgently and justly demanded,
need not be questioned; and no fears need be
entertained but-that the reign of terror which
now distracts ruidibisolatel the iiouth, will be
brought to a speedy terurhuttieri, and,prosperi
ty oneemore prevail.' - .
.
..This present conditinn of afTaird
.asp 14e at-'
*finned fn part final entireir, to: Afte caurbe
onreneil by Anninw Joiffsfin, l while acting in
gnidant. By lila disloyalty and iremllol.y to
party and principle, tha expiring dames of trea
son and rebellion were strul:tho ele
ments of crime and hatred inspired with a now
vigor. culminating in iho present scones of ter
ror and bloodshed; that ire now swooping ifki
soMo soirching blight over, their entire laud:-
rzlia Democrats Iwtho - Aolah) oTer tine p
sego tbOall boldly 0090 xtrat, th9:4 3 0 or
lite noise a34lsitblStslrlimly . 4terdod the e;dat
(Mee of such facts, proirlancmg tiro wliolo bht
tissue of Ilepnblican ft4cloxids arid draggers
ti. ; yet in their recent Address, homed to the
poo •lo of the South, they call upon their Ku:
Ina ends to iclist froM committing those•
crimes, • barbarisms. 2, c44u,a, spirit pt just
ice and nullity do the y -make the call, but
tn view of 4 0 damage the Democratic party is
sustaining b fllGir pgrppt4ntion. At. firtFt
IYingtartirely. cialsterice, then. alt in
the WOO breath dmitting tho faet,..is doubt.
less goOd Domocra *c corodstency, however the
same may appear to n outside barbarian.
I The excitement and\ m;itbuziasra maulfei.ted
;in the District during tht4past low wools over
the election of a
DIZILEGATE aU CON(IILLS3
under the now form of govel - nrunnt, has
sided, : the speaterS' stands d:zer tod, the ciroa r ibi
that gatlicred.around - them scattered, and the
torch -lights that did,,,service in the procession
extinguished. The eleeticin was hotly contest
ed, sad in the absence of 14a1 issues, was
fought fairly between Republican and Demo
crat, resulting in the suocess of the Republi
cans with a majority exceeding the most san
guine expectations. It was a; strnggle for prin
ciples rather than men; - and' is hailed as not
merely a municipal triumph, but an emphatic
declaration in favor ~?!of the distinct and un
equivocal - principles of the Depublican plat
form, the prehole! to triumphs yet to follow,
and the trumpet call to the groat battle to be
fought'-in eighteen handred and seventy-two.
Since the close orthe war, this ij the first time
the Democrat,: hero Lave tWUght to draw
strictly: the party lines. The (tat time that
they bare sought tolrevire their defunct here
sies and dead issase ; and fairly and squarely
were they met, and as fairly..ind squarely were
they defeated, giving the, election more than a
al importance, as it proelaires to the country
'at large, that hero at the Capital of the nation,
the justice and wisdom of Republican measures
and principles are triumphantly sustained ; the
honesty and Integrity of the. Administration•
fully endorsed. Owing tcithelsage number of
precincts made by the b , Dazd of registry, there
was 'RUC or no difileulty experienced in voting,
and no disturbances or eullision;occurred be-,
tween the while and colored voters throughont
the entire city. -
AND ITT =ET 41 . a. Nar 4.4111."
• There was Beane wonder. and aurpiso creattxl
by tho appearance at some , of the voting pre
cincts, of a number of women Who claim tbo
right of I:min - age, villa having vainly attempted
te rssgister, still persisted int - nutting thentselveC
'ore notorious by offering their voter which
they Well knew could not possibly be reecics•d
withou .i t perjui l y upon the part of the oflicon,sof
the tx,srdy. They mast have known that their•
presenco , amid the crowd . asccinblod -could not
picduce that, respect usually accorded to wo-
manhood, anti would tuxezureistt notl,ing, mon:
ti n'- r. , ,torkty,
; and urczting iu tiro public mind &clings'.
only of ger.cral disgust. • •
The time inay P - m2--p;11;.. , 0 4 it 212.F.y not lie
v.1.1...11 the fittestiolt tiriil have to ht.:
dealt with 'practically, and tita eonncrit cemes,
and the I.o.:mer ( 1 .!Fp.1.-• . .41c1f, the better it will be
tho,t 71. e, allured Ly "glittyring_;;(•::crali
tlis," forsake • the (Itincstic circle, the sacred
precincts of borne, lin" take advantage of e-ery
occr.cion prescuted to give theraeelves a z:oteri
ety of a rcry cheap character indeed.
Tur. :alIXF1)
utllct.olise cant d the Democratic candhlates' .
"baby," T vas a Dcmocratic dodge that was-not
asuccess. Thole ras no foree-in the jaMa made
by them that they L,tood is C;ppo,,itio l to the
mixture of )111ite anal black in the schools.
Perhaps the reason niq their Avoie
ttiterly disfq.garded, arose from the fact that
there is ;no ranch living icstbuony existing that
in days gone IT if they Nrere opposed to mix,ccl
schOolA, they certai!tly were nut oppe!-ed to
!nixed e?,i7drrn, and no or:donee is oxhitited
that their diTositien in tali re Peet hai yot
undergone a change.
On the nth of May vest, •
11331SZEI
will again crime tai ether for the purpose •of
acting upon the rePort, of the Joint High Cott
nession,• which will then be submitted, and
which it is generally understood will be in trea
ty form, It is believed that the fishery ques
tion Las been adjusted in such a way that
Ann.rican'ilshormett wilt be secured in all their
rights, whit at the; sr.nte time the. Canadians
Inee nothing, but v, ill also be protectd, and
that free . riavig,ation of the St. L:awretec river
is to be conceded, In roglrd td the
.Alabatua.,
Claims it is -tindershiedVitifid the Cuinmissi
have definitely-settled certain principles o in
ternational law Which are to govern th
settlement of the claims,' the "siljnAtm‘itt and
payment which arc to be mule by -another
C'eninilysion composed of creinent / pubds, to be
selected respectively' by the „American and
British Gu‘ oral:writs. The Sin, Jwin Llaad)
not considered by either tiy.vVerilout as being'
of ranch intrinsic value, bet tI b possesiion and
ownership 4 matter ~f,if/sonte importance, the
right ' fr , -- allied by the
arbiti
CON
CI
May .k.---inere was
larg6'number of nleinbers of the bar
present at the Supreine. Court Chum, :
her to-day, inciding - Stilicitor Oen
eta! Bristownd.Senators-Trumbull
and Cole, as it was : known the Court
would announce many opinions pre
, pared during the Week's recess, pre-,
vious to adjournino• until the 16th of
October next, All the judges were
on the bench ,with the
.exception. of
Mr. Justice Nelson, who' is absent
from the city. \ Chief Justice Chase
retired at about , two 'O'clock.- None
of The opinions, were announced by
him. At three o'clock, Mr. Justice
Clifford read a brief paper in the le
gal tender cases of Knox - Ts. See, and
Parker.vii. Davis, as follows :
" In these two cases two questions
were heretofore directed to be argu
ed; viz : First,—ls tire act of Con
gress, knoWn as the, Legal Tender
Act, constitutional as to contracts
before its passage? 5 , T ,, :3(7—1s it'
valid, as applicable Ito transactions,
since its passage? These 'questions
have been considered .by tha court,
and both been decided in the affirm
ative. The decree of the Supremo
Judicial Court of Massachusetts in
the case of Parker vs. Davis, is there
fore afiirmed, and the judgment of
the Crrenit; Court of the United
States of the Western. District of
Texas, is also afflrmed,
The Chief Jukice, with Associate
Justices Nelson, Clifford and Field
dissent from the majority of the
court upon both the propoSitions
and result; holding that the act of
Congress, se far as•applicablo to con
tradts made before its passage, it re
pugnant to the constitution; and
void so far, as applicable to contracts
made before itt passage, is repug•
nant to the constitution, and void so
far as applicable to contracts made
since its passage. The opinion of
the court and the reasons for dissent
will be read.before the close of the
adjourned term.
In ll:tanning against, Scars - anc
othets. Two. ceses from'tte Supreme
Court of Michigan, the 'contracts
were fdr Ulu: delivery of a , specitied
weight of gold solidly as coined mo
ney. The courtibelow held that they
were discharged by the psYment of
treasury notes, equivalent; u 4 anarliet
value to the value of the coined mo
ney of the stipnlated.weight of pure
gold. This court reverses that judg
ment, holding that it should have
been entered for Coined dollars and
parts of dollars, in, accordance with
the decision in Bronson vs. Rhoades
and Butler vs. liaryitz, 7 Wall 2p9
and Z5B.
• • ITASHINGTOIL - •
IVAstuxorou Kay L--Tto pay
tribute by war r ant -during ex
clusive. of the public debt, were :
WO," #3,603,986.21;' Navy, $1,475,
988.92; Interior; $1,280,693.21; Civil
sad .raisoellanomis, $6,136,039,77.
P:44:02,446.6613;11.
- The total stdreriptions to the nevi
loan to-day weras6l3,ooo. The in
ternal revenue reairsts - were $1,033,-
000. .
The Tarkist CharEOW Altai* in
this city, received from- this Sultan;
to=day, a magnificent carpet, manu
factured expressly as - a gift to this
government, and designed 'for. the
East Room of the White Howe. In
amordanee r with his instructions he
has by letter informed the President;
through the Secretary •of State, of
the - Sultan's desire to make the pres
ent as a testimonial of the friendly
feelings entertained by the Sublime
Porte towards the government. and
people of the United States, and has
been officially notified of its accept
ance. ' Tlfe carpet was• made - at. the
Imperial factory, and was a complete
year•in preparation. It weighs fif
teen hundred pounds. • Competent
inliges say it is iwitrth from nine to
ten thousand dollars. It is woven in
one piece, and was this afternoon put
mile floor of the East Room.
The Southevi Claims Commission
will shortly distributoprinted lists of
all claimants, to bo•hulletijed at the
post Offices in the Southern States,
for the purpose of throwing-addition
al light on the loyalty of the multi
plying claimants.
New Advertisements.
I=
pO - V7M1.11. 4 CO.
Would respectfully, invite the
attention of their customers to their
Grand Displziy • of NEW SPRIN
•
4-.
GOODS, which they arc no •rc
•
eciving in large quantitlt.s/.
Each depa
careful attcnt
may rely on finding a • splendid
sort)aicnt of goods -at attractive
prices.
Towanda, April 19, IS7I
!HE LE
MED.
TOWANDA
Mar-ble` Works.
CEO. McCABE SON
Ilivo just ruceirtS the. largyst amortment 'of
AMERICA AND ITALIAN
M k HI
tver:cildbl44l to which thry
imvite the httoution of the public.
They kLep on hand or tarnish to order.
,MONII3IgNTS,
TOMO STONES, MANTLES, &c.,
Afi TEE LOWEST TERMS.
Persona in pant of anything in our line aro ro:
spc..ttally invited to call and examine our stock.
Towanda, May 1. 071.
13BGE ROBEFORDS , BREAD
Preparation,.at C. iS. PATCH'S.
received
eustomOrs
KEYSTONE STORE.
„,”
~
~,.-
Of every btyle.
/41001/It & SON. ,
=
BEI
WI
w .
.._ Ad g .
c
6
i
-
.. _.:„.,- t g - 5.
i s a " - p4 g4O
fq A . .
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2 tri . 0 0 EA • 1 .. 4 i .
a a vil ii 0 cc •' 0 5.)
, i - ... • Fr 4 p, s. gr :ul
ti - 4 . - •...4. p ' a 0 I:1
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W W ? a §
t. ~., O i t
4
to , o 1. -, t 1 c , l
.as ii A .
t - -Y2 2 4: 1-c h l e ' ,4
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t i c 4 1 E-4 -s i: 4,# l l , ' f l •V
ri w g . Al.,
; 4 .4
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fq ,Itf A N t 0 8 „.4 5 i` Le i P- u -4r , '
4 = '
t. PI
A ,z 4it ;,.„,g .s g
i a -,1 0- al ~.,, pm
-I_, .! 4 .. E E-4,2 z 1 2 . ret
i • 4 • e. co • g -e. -1 ‘
14 ~ . c I
~.,
IQ ~.., a
4;- 48, ;
0 g
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• ol a, p 4
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1 7 1 1.4 .g C.D ti. 2 i 1
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'''' gr 4 t:,' 0 - - E -4 i :4 4 .
4 E. 4 21E4 0 7 ti g
~u „ ... ueal co .4 g ",
'
i - it. .4,- La
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,-.: . 5 T.T4 gat 4
A• - t'r-' 0 ' 4- 1v
...4
:4.1 P4 ti f• 1 •Q• '.4 kg t
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a
11
II
TWENTY -NIFTY ANNTAL
8 I! A -T.E MENT
I=
CON - NIXTICUT 1.113T11
To poltcy-boMerfr for elskim 1,1.1 - ;,Z;4 4 ).Z
Frtrisluit prewinnyi rrre,2,1M.k...0.91
44 Purrendered 864.06N.2•2
Total payments to policy boldtrP....
P'd for conuii.ion. Agt'5,V48;1.0.4.,j
alaries. Medic:.!
irPrintin g . .tdv c•rtleiug, kc., 155,70.71
Total expcses of martogeml, $80f,:;42.64
137.-45G.21
Puftl for taxes
.$2f.r,747,1.9..70
Pre mums in theltanda of Agents and
to course of traumata:non
Aecruetlinterest, iuctadini.; $12.333:52
duo and Unpaid • • c0t,110.417
Value of Stneke and Donde over coAt. 32.1,026A5
Setnitatinual and quarterly payment*,
deftaped pretunutes.
•
ASS/as.
CAW deposited in brink, • '
mostly on $731,71'2.32
1.1,*1 estate owned by '
Company in liartlord •
and elsewhere
Ronda and mortors nn '
real estate , ' (Wile'
• 11 539,971.77
Stocks and 'minds. owned
by .the Company kt,
market. value 4,851,7C2.00
Bank and railroad sfocka . ,
owned by the ocaupany
Loans ;an stooks and
bonds, (value $222 : 72-45). atf,;:n.to
'rremituu tmte.satulloati
.. 11145,519.14
Ilatinci , due fro,: ag,uts
:mil others.— ••• 57a,%:.58
.1 , 0-ve,-t ace:vital t.t
$12,3:33,52 is due and
-ZG0,10.07
rm . :tint:as iu Mu bands .
i.f agents and dklerrea
1...•P1111,12MS
Toth! apEAN
1...1.1.1317.2.1LES- - 4
It(4,,rve t. rße•luaaraucr,
1. 1 An
11..s , rve iur loss<49 notes
rplns
'58,403,137.71
.5.110 c, IZI'M;SJE: OF NANA() EALEN.iT TO
TiYTAL INCUME 8.33 PEIL CENT.
issued during the year,
10,018 Policies, 1133111?-
424,707,707.90
Policies in Woo, 60,507, •
insuring. 181,263,767.00'
Told amount -of lows
paid to Dec. 31, 1870..
Total amount of' divid
ends paid to Doc. 31,
18101 - 9,215,100.06
E. W. TTAT,E Agent, '
.
TOWANDA. Ps
apl.2C-3%3
RAWSON s
1V,401Vi1N. 1 , 1 ; NEsiehine.
U.VIZVEST OF 1871
A N'Ellr. INVENTION
PATENTED NOSTAIDIat
And applied to evert Buchire; is so couttructc,
that you do not have to use the lever 'in turnip;,
either way. It will run on any line just as easy a,
en a straight line, taking all the side prOssrue trim
the horses. It has a full joint and will describe a.
full 6re/043W/of-Ally: saving half the labor for tie
horses and driver: ..The upper - frame is so jointed
or attached to the lower tram°, as to form a liftim
kverjaking a large part of the weight of the bee
from the ground and placitit it back upon thedelv-
Mg-wheels, and lessening the draft of the maeldtie,
nuking one of the lightest draft Machines in nee. .
The machine has been greatly improved and it
manufactiMed by,using wtonght Iron and steel it
the place of cast iron. The Castor Wheel is upon a
diel spring with wrougbt iron holders. making it
light and strong. We can say to farmers that they
can depend upon ,having a machine that has no
equal. It has cast - steel- shafts, and both shoes'
plated with east•pteel, Machines are warranted in
every particular. Tinny part brints from defects in.
material or workmanship new pits sent
without extra charge.
. The Finger Bar is carried at both ands on Wheels;
can change the wheels so as to f rit three heights of
stubble. The machine has a tler.blil finger bal., and
will conform to the ineyialitlea of 'the - ground over
which it is drawn, doing as good work upon 'IIIIJVC/1
ground as upon aver groun,L
ITLE REAR BAR MACHINE
Mu. a tiOatie•folaillg ringdi Dar, bavino, a longitu.
osdllating"motion. This taachiger Las wheels
at both oaths of the finger har t anti is Ile irratwil
that you can set theta• to cut 'alai height, and can
bach out tritheratzair,ir.l . the lover.
SUI.rE.Ii RAKES. • • •
bare alno . two manoActoriea MO Sulky
Rakes; the well-lruokn Taller Rake and' Me Dayton
'Manufacturing Comp=y Rake-% 14akio g two of the.
beet Rakes In use, at whotesale or retail.
Maaufacturcil at Almond; Allegauy county.
by I. k S. RAWSON:
C. F. NICHOLS, Gelfl-.W.,
40. 2 G 71 -
ALMON.—Wheiess my \wife Eli-
N_l za has left my bed. and board without just
cause or provocation. All persons are hereby forbid
hirboring or inutilig her on my_ lc:chant u I will
pay no debts of her oonixaeting after this data
t Barclay. April 26, 1811..w4 eDmizeir. •
DISSOLUTION:—The fi rm , here
- Solaro known as Hines & Elliott is this day
theszAtied try mutual consent. 'Ail amounts to bo
sctt!ed by T. Hines, T. HINER. •
• • i• • • ' • •, JOV. ELLIOTT.
Vyaltising.' April 2a, 1871.-w3.
NV F WOOLEN: • FACTORY 0 E
SALE Oil 1t4".--Ito subscriber otters his
WOolan Eudooa's-. situated ono tulle south of Wye.
iveton, on the Sullivan ti Brie Usilroscl. for, sale ov ,
rent. .Also'ono or two drcbiling bosuns near the
Factory wbkli trill bo dispoaeil pf. Terms nisihs
irobwn,on application to BENJAMIN ICOATii.
Monroston, Es., April 12,1971-Sm. • . •
!!!!!
CODDING, RId : S . SELL & CO.l
•
n A. It EP W A. 1R,4
OM
- - 810.VES; - ,CAARIAGE: - liVitg.
' 1 .:‘• --1 1 - .- :''' . ' iiii,iuriiitira-. - • t;e l . ' '-'-'
.. ~ -.
TINWA4',TOAS FIXTE/M, ' be:
VEi YhtsT 3.1 E NT
• MdMnCAN and Flt~lv ' Gfi (LASS;
HIIRD.'.g.tNG;tIgn
RET_JAI344 PAINTS and pOLORS.
Gook stovitzi;
itanf,tes, , : ;Churns,
Clothes Wringers, Wash Tnhs;
-TailetSets, I • Tamps,,
leo Creatn•Aeezers, RefrieratorE,
...Water Coolers, Tee Pitchers,
Mowing Arnel,liups,
Taunt
nal
To w tack t 1.16 partlatlarittlnttionA It t9itt; likely to
• '•
•
: Lu iutereetuil, let
• . •
E CO-,
Lard Oil; ,*
• )Vbale Oil • • • • • •
B . periu Oit -7. . ; -
Coa - c4 Yaririsl);.
4ruitarcisyarnisli,
MEMO
Manilla lope, - •
Marline, • ,
. lle:np and It.io)her Pticiiite c .* 2
Soapsi.c.nle
• • oa.laitil •
I
Sawa,,
Treather
i , 26,1t13,711.9
S.tils.`SD.~:l
5,987,1;87.1S 3.64;;,7 1.78
2TI 311.711
47 331 80
„t450,91;i,357.(r).
wh 1)7.O
.42640.4.00
. T. 21,4 12,1E1..31
11.316,356.00
Nnr Advert 'ementa.
Drauxas • E.. 1
~__.d.._._ .~_,_, asx~u ziii:~
Eva used In the'cOuntly
` ,
z*ous. smxpo. ,
J;WLTratE.U); - 4;qD ALL G It.%D7P OF
SLL limps
- uhtirn 'Powers,
51X Ne. 1 NEW 'STYLEq:O4.)
C -_A_ TZ,' G- E B
. .
Can 1,4:.5.4,4..4.1
. ST E C 0
I' li: I C 11 . ti li iik v;
MI
Hubs,
SpokL.l,
riiloc.
Axlca,
PirelSkti,tis; - .- • • •
Norway • • '
• , Nail llod* . ' • •
• Iron,
klluw~,
Visc c,
.\,ll'. II::
liorse -
,Dash,Lealhor,
Entioauleti Cloth.
'AS in•, le past in the luturo
titer will keep an unequalled assort=
went of r.
CARPENTERS TOQ'LS;
POQII 0116 i '
PO CK ET •Ii: N I V. ES, -.SHEA.II,S;
T tkt.r SMITES
,
PLATED WAEZ, rozOrts, cIUNS,
CI lIL - VOLNT.II.S..C.I.I:IIiIDak.B.
PLASkS AND SHOT i'OI7OII.ES
T'Lcy tike trade
MON,
NAILS,
POWDER
SHOT,
0 415M3.. 1-
. SEN,E,
1,)0 CKET - ENIXES,
WAIIE, •
• -
SCITHY:S, •
SNATHS;
yOAKS,
Mil
WM
lit,toi- - .b.ii. - .76e-AL - :
H , R.TI. I '~BRS.
• venil 15rTr4cle. d:crll4r.j
, .
•
• •
FAIRBANKS COUNTER
RE
PLATFORM., S.G,A-L) S,
PA.T.XIiT AtAr6l •
31 0 N Y • 17111 A- IV 4R S .
110,USES F'IPED FOR ,\
, • •
GA i ' o wA.•T E tt „
,Or iuritiabvtl iriUi
E A E T R 0 . -U - Cr 11 - §‘, •
AND
CONDUCTORS
Ou ulkort
Contract, fur Slate or Tin .Itoot!int,
,liOWE
SEWING
, , . .
. , .
• CODDING4 , IIfTSSE 413 .A(0.
Towan,l4; Aprill9 ;1.871.4 ti
• '.
ITT 4 N.l) A 1.1 Alt ..Ti El , Q
4..'!' . . ... ! WiI.OLEALI: Putcyz 0- "
ch -ctoti every
..:
znh , ) to changes daily.
, Viednvaday, - bp c,. -8.1, , •• LC!'
Whoa it WWI. ..... :.. • * 1..1' ,1
,-,•,
Rye. it . Inter ... _ ..... , ..
.....-
unt„lcittest. 1 6 Dina .. . , .
~
......, ... '.. .....
Corn. 'l9 Lush - _ , •
Ilearo , , .11.v41.1.. -.- •••-• ~ .. ....
Butter (rolls) '5, 1) , ._...._,....
dO (AtilrY.Y* lb' Iv-rw•'-
'E,gga; "4 dor '
Totitoca."„o bite... 11,.
iota, * B arrel'
.1111n4 0ki . 03,- I t .................... .. .. .. ........ ...... :.. ~
-,- wzroirrs Or Oft.liM.-4.-WbTlt ; : 2 ' ) pi. ; Cc t rr 1 .
Eyo - 4511181.1 0a1532. lb!. • liarhiy.4o 1i,,,, ; i.,, " '' ".
4.3
.114,„ • Boana 0 Dm.; It . ran 20 lba.; ch . , .„' r ,1 4t
, '''' , .t , ..
Mg:, inia.h3r Saul 44 )La. • Dri•7.4-1 l'ax. ,s ), \ •:. , , ::-
.Erlgl Ay leo /2 llaft.. rlax B;a.d 50 ,b, - 'C '''',•'
.._............__. ..„„,._.... .__ ~„..... .- _ _ _
TONV • DA. (X)41.-ftA I. --
. ANTllylien'E;Alib I:l73mors ~..p. t. i .4,
Tho 4-14..iiiig d, having )caw] the Co*Jock y a „„
ockli tho old .. clay llaaill,:* in,lir, m A
•.,. '-::'
a Largo V•oal-h 4 ( Afire nyou the I,c. ~'„' ~..'
:`• .tc pri:pared to f/trutl 4 s the eitizelt of 'l bw ~,„ . a.
vlelnfty Wail thedltrert. t i.itidm.atulKiz.,..s GI ti • ii . '
nautod p:ala rayon the zo- t riNuoual.,le.t,..m.,
Uzlatity deiired. .Prk.t• at thu furl I„,,Li
nuttee r. ~ .
.„,
Stovo • - -
Largo - .
Soaall E•gg .44.. ,
•• -
Lump
gistnoth N'ta.:..
Isitthn Nut ' .
•filarsiLoy " Lump__
-••••- • 1. - - ....
~ .. • tau of Inure ..:- ...-,. ` \ 4 , 4 4
'•., . Fine . or lilackeiarat
.... ;, :::' .
.z.:111 I w.l a .&4.14 - 4cite....... • . .... :\
.. ;
Th e fogowing athilti9ntli f .
q.:7l:7Pg Iri:i !, ) .. . 'T
, reiirdrixurCeal withitrthe bomngh ri:-. , .. " ' . '
l'er T0n.... bet-co.:lts. Extra MT nir.r.:,.,
Italt• Tan.. tr; ••- . .. .
- cir.lon.. . :2Z .':
.64 - - Ordisa may, be kft at th , 1a.r..,1, rte.:
re343,..itpl ElizZdh Strvct.;, ,jr 4 t 1.,, ; ,
Drtig Store,
im.erclers nail in el ver,s be
tfic rant- ' It'
- LT
Towanda,. Jan. 10, .1.5i71--tf.-
....._..,-.....--.-,..—.._--__
Caul tain)ol
Or
'
,
Nol.. 3 ana
.....
ir No. 5
Ryan Anthra,fitu ...... .
tthafget
: :‘,•crin;, , ,:coal within thq
_ T tou sUcte latxa fc.r
1110 f Via 3.5 "
Qn.ari,2r '!,
Cultkvators,
•
Seed. Drilla,
. .
• 18',5 ,- . yeare OrrlfTe al any Coal Oince,: . ,
Curl, ticAr Mock. southlgtte.
_
f, - 4,-Ordere gust in all caeo ler accomict.-1 ...
tl , e cpc.1 . 1..
rowatitla, ilit. 11, '7l. ' - - 11.. .!..1. V , 1":1.1.1n..
Fax t - , - Atialcult are npw. re ,- ...{:i'.-
ing a freeh aDe.k.ot °note In thi.lr fine, t. ~...!
slne.; the Ist January, to whielt they ine;te' t : .. ~,
trution or I.lteictrieteb. IV , Iz , - I , c. , ler. , -t ... _
ii; ; ,.t..,it t;.. On: goNld. are .tre ,- ,ll..yau'l de,irt.:.l, .t , :
e,-il at 1tr...-e-t nrc-1".,t prlc-e.
.7an..19 0 -1.i71. - • , 1, '
._,
..I.4 lrl llT,Sil.2ll\ ' llNE It' Tt -- AS, bonri - :,
-sit k en the rCerut decl:ne:i prit - c. a:.1„ ,-. r..t..
c.'..".-ele zip-, 1..r..1. - • . .1Tu:1; .1,.. N11.:1:Ct.'..:
.7an.'o. 1 / 7 1. •
-
OZ & .....11.F.:Ti.6-1;11 Itre (
':.-(illirr o• 4 I , c .
~, -
-0- :.cerieq et rfttlil... % . 1 ' ' ..)^..t.:. 1-.7, I--•
rtn. ,
I '
(;1•,,
F
.
1 7 0 N
c. 1 -7'
1111
FC C I'
arc;
-
,4-1,1. ,ila.
•
# r.16....‘1.1\'' FINE -CUT 101:x:
• •
71,7 i. J,: C 1:41
, •
tTlt OUSTO' 'Xi:ELS eful 1r,31v, Ili, ::
:. ,- it.i -' ti.,- '.. 4 -. ...it, - :: , ...t: ,• ..1 - .• t ri:: - 1 . 1.- :_.•.,-11,„,
In ...,h: i ro. , A. l ' . .."- L. ',V. Ft :...',
Towau , ..l:„ ..7:;:i. 111:71..
.-. Ilt.!:::Y :%:1'!:. '.-1'
,3)..r:,t-.1 3
,'l, 21.-6,'L L• 4 t
1•571
C'i.A.NNED F. 0. 1 7.11" very low, ;,t
ism PO X !:...P_;;:
•
TPARAERS; . pr 0. 1 ,1
•
• •
;all, :1).,,.71.
- - •
11 .1,6 I SN.-N.T.1:1-0.1,6
prrklucind any Med.".:if.el-14••••ro
l'Urt'S ?'_L..
:y. i 1.7'...L.,4:11 fv1.1,1
..at1.1,1-• i •
1y ..-ur.b ill eV.,:ry 106 Vati.,ll:S
..!..11 years. testurionyl. Iti, the erl•.:Lt.i..
- . 1.1d 1 . - ..1! of Prot..Joq. Flqer, V. 11..
lifvorrity Pennfylyauia. A. D., •.
0716. of Plnladeiplua's oitlcst ri-gular
Prot.t.sor of Chpfnistrp mitt
•••
1:•.:u FpecialtY of his entire •-
ta• t Voneht'il'for by the signatuie4.
,oath-h: We, aml other testimonials of ihany pr•
inlatuou'netlphyt:iilfaus a:id eb,rgyr.ll:ll. 1 ff - •
test sitil.ll•rers from IxSisonDus qua.-5 rAw•trnrs. ..
-11:-eresA enwttaddre of money; a
ante-. •,,,tat; . ng eraot nunilner ,if hi I‘arraln...l
'rare, milli r forwar , .l,.d gr.ati: , alt Fdt11.1.1.1
leftor a'full de.eript: , :q if al111.• ••:: 1:
0t . fa1i117,.• core; amount pa1.,1 no.-Auf thy rir.: •,
Modionte ',•on.t-a.!ir.vliere by 0Npr04... ct
Alllieti , d invitla to ‘lrite : :.'• ' •
, forinatirn and tnodleal adriee - sent t- lf-iter ;•-•: .
A 6 Evs, riTLErt. 1.1•••itlf - V,
i o.
'1. ,10,1-: !11/ 11 a. Pa. alin
1 y -t.:. sr
EA
I-
~:11 ; :iculi,
Tliills,
WANTED ApEsTs roil • .
•
~,5.\ how ; on 2-1:4
ANI, nut:aHs or °cr.. sio..r-m,r,E.
Prokascly ilivaCrat 1 aid
-Tba 1-`ro-3l instruct:l c,atV.l Itunfr
et,ll44l.;PWri.X.Ok issocd for nays.
as . history, pruLt:,-..a1:•,-; 4 I• r
won,
irtv,i - •?sps, 'thou C.2e....lcoftnractsst
urr rt•••-krith.7, fr.‘m ttql to ;7•2 , 05e5.u . .. , ath, •-
-••••.:: . t.: of hard z.utl -",••
\szrs fur CiN•ulari •
719 San,out.
; -
pors - Ts - EXChf,LENC:i:.
..At tltt.'CirtAt'Tr;a; ‘..f Sou - in g, 1 ,
kn o, :n •.• The licAnd 1.• ark,".%.!
- th% r0tn1 , 4411;iv..; meats of the two - 1,7,141111 - S.,
Stith. an
?hilt(le St.itelii :rpre , tla nrain einest.in6 , ,tt 1..,n - .... -
IVl(fen7c k C÷'ol , :z la..lfinc use (.I,.c!dvil to t-me,
tots,
1. - 1.. - 4:t of
—it is tl:;
~f
••; • • •
u 'N
_• .
t - ~-;•ente..lt :4,y
i'att.%t rl/1,1+.,r u:aln;—v••`•'
1,141)1e
- • •ei ,
: • ,
;:I.g .lint
1.-
ritui)lielty of iitl tension.; "-Ind. ,-•'-
'l.l!:n'a •
t 1Th;...,11:%.:1,.--wlilelt prutt (14 111,.,,
n t he" w heel: .
-• a,tin,tation t,
11.11,,541g r.e.o're 14114
ailed of wort to a iotLrr.' •
lit tnt.ro,l , :rluct 41.1a1 , 1.:Itiofi
11.1 ; •. •
MEI
• 111 PA . blit4` . ..i tl(e Mtt,t v t d
IT; ft, .
51.Z...h1.,11 i
In ltd b,anz
"rear •7z .
, .
•
Itt.barr.ol.l.te b. , et Hemmer.= ;—t.to ,
•ta...rt::. (r turn- the ,
11.1 \ best
W , Tl:tt -
=TT fvr
wilts oth• A r 1..6M, , of esc:Fitll , ..i.
N7.11 , ,• - c F.•.witig. Y.
• 11 11Altr0:".
'
MailE=
A l [ILL FOR 5A1,11
r.t
ort'tato ot Jallot• 4 l./ . -
(43 largo (rist.7\l"'...(
a1).1 dwelliog
tso wslttr bt•rt.tit.in4
al:(1 tLrzas apply 'to C. I... Witt, Art ,
T,wanda, or to Mr,
ifoliltoy.i.iveiltilx, at MorristoWit. Iltorr.k
V'S Propt`tty,C3ll be .:17 - ..11•1.:,*::::;.•!_
te o:Mut at liusto , re. •
•
• • •
•
VERY ' CHOICE •CTREEN ANt
-, 7 L . 1.1,1 Tta sclipit • cheap- at istzil by ' • '
• - 4. • • PON. 1 / 4 Aft11 1 :;: -
. . ..
. •
.-,IFT_ILL ASSORTMENT Or_
' '13424:13 anal ct.N n :urns.
March It% 11'69. 'LO,NO NEELF.I;s.....
z
SIPICES OF. ALL EINDS.W.LIOLE .
"and Ortmuil gt I FOX.-& -
YEUr; ANA MOLASSES CH EA
kJ 4 • • • . _ Yox . 51k:RcUlt -8 ••
•
YAL
RO EAALNIG reiw - DERs
. row-ELT,„.k :macs .
IgA.OII,IN ES.
_Lik , 64latoort.'
tal
SERI
E
El
ES
CO
L Y.A ILD
eto prichyt.-at
MEE
E _ILT.:
FON
FOX a 'V C
.";(,) WILL 'DE PAili
GRKST FORTUNES.-
=
. .
e
•
. ; k"
=Mb
I sri ~ 1 ;
„ i ,
V
7
12';..
.11 '
• S'
II Ed
r, ,
Wr-
i ...l .\ ....~[:t .
'