Bradford reporter. (Towanda, Pa.) 1844-1884, February 01, 1872, Image 2

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    News From' all Nations,
. 1
—The city paupers mat Alton 111,
$l2OOO last year. - ..
—Aria is to have lan American
charitable society.
-The Empress Doviager has freed
AU her persinuil slaves. 1
- 1 .
--Baltimore averages one hundred
anligarty deaths a week;
—Fort Hill, at Boiton, will be lev
elled entirely in a fortnight. -;
—An Atlanta, Ga., ilover bought
off his rival for twenty dollars.
—The 'outskirts of 'Mobile are to
be guarded by mounted polli e.
—There were sixteen deaths from
imall-pox to Broo lyll N. Y. last week.
—The small-pox-haa broken out in
«everal parka of the closninkiu Of \Canada. -
—Springfield, (Ill.) papers demand
compulsory vaccination for the whole city..
Peoria, In, the- wells are all
oat'of tater. The_draught is quite severe.
1 -
—The snow at the summit of the
Sierra Nevada, ou a, level, is sixteen feet deep.
—About- one-half of the town of
lifoiticello Drew county, Ark., was recently
- burned tip:: •
—The year 1871 - WU the most des
'istyous to shipping on the great lakes, ofliny
on record.
.
—,There are now nine hundied'
and hirty-threo inmates of tho Ohio Peniten
tiary. ,
—The city officials of Paterson, N.
3.. are in a bad way ; they have not been paid
since June . last.
—Late reports from Sant StAlarie
say that nothing has been dine toward deepen
ing the canal
—Senor Herrera is j the candidate
nt the ministerial party for President of the
Spanisii Cartes.
—The Toledo Blide warns the
stultll bop'', of that place that a city ordinance
forbiclt antnrb.alling. •
—A. IST onvich, Conn.,,man ththks
he can curb the toothache by binding a rna l sted
onion on his right wrist.
•
Superintendent Rolander,i, of
San Fran has ippointed two ladies on•the
State 13eard of Examination.
I •
_ .
—A man in Winchester, MASA.,
bought a tract of land last week for $ll,OOO,
arid s.ld it the same day for $26,000.
—Twcnty-eight.woman - have been
znatrie l lated in the University of Edinburg dur
tug Ile present' term. -
Fifty-nine new. theatrical !and
mnsicsl jeurnals were started in Spain last
car AU but fotir of them died.
—The Kentucky House of .Re t res•
sentatives• have voted the repeal of th law
making insanity a cause for divorce. r
Ts., is to lia*e new
ter-works'to cost five - hundred thousand,' dol
• fare. Ground was broken last week.
—The next wheat 'crop of Califor
nia is estimated at J 2,0-0.000 sacks, worth, at
the least, 121,000,000 on the ground, • '
-The Virginia peanut crop for
1871 amonnted to two hundred and twenty-the
thousicd four ho dred and fifty bneheLa•
—The deposits in. the savings
hanks of Massachusetts averaged about eighty
tive thousand dollars a day throughout 1871.
---The Sheriff of Andrain, county,
Ark., is receiving • wolf-sealp4 in payment of
taxes. They are worth fire dollars a scalp.
—Buffalo is jubilant because she
is the only city where the young men tiart their
hair ih the middle, and a . ear velvet cloalta."
—Over fifteen thousand people at
tend the grand ball.of the Knight Templar' in
the New York Academy of Music Tuesday night.
Thelce-boat Maryland, recently
built for l3altimor.e at a coat of slso,ooo,was de
stroyed.by fire on Saturday night.
. The dengressional committee
appointed to investigate the Louisiana Legis
lature- troubles arrived at New Orleans on Sat
urday. '
Bony
Ras,..a prominent, Algerian
chief, has fallen. into the hands of the French
treopi now fighting against the revolutionists.
—Reports frOin the Union. Pacific
Railroad Aar that the road is blocked 1.1 Y" show
betncen Cheyenne and Laramie and 1111 Yale.
—The wedding outfit of the celes
tial yotrag lady who is to marry the . Eniperor
of China.will cost only one million of dollars.
—The girl-in Brighton, England,
who erntitted herself by feeding die neighbor
lux*. vith poisoned cboclate drops - lies been
convicted:
—The Jewelry store of James Me-
MurraT, fir Fulton street,l3rooklyn, Rae robbed
of $35,000 worth of property on Wednesday
rnorniug.
—The attempts, 'made thus far to
dceportlic Saut St. Marie canal have failed,
owing to:the repeated breaking of the coffer
dam. :
—A dispatch from St. Petersburg
announces the hine of an imperial decree ent•
jectiug all male citizens of itialifitt to military
service.
Deese, the liberal candidate
feerarliament from the county of Kerry, Ire
land, was violently assaulted by a mob on Bat ,
urijay.
dispatch from London an
nonnees r tbe loss of two tessels—tbe Urchin
off earnarvon, and the Mary 8., off Lltmelly
with all:on board.
•
i—Massachusetts Las now a mile
of completed railway for every Ave square
miles of territory and for cacti ouo tkOusand ol
population.
—Archbishop Spaulding, of Milli
more, is again : seriously ill. Apprehension is
felt by his phySicians as to his ultimate lecor
ery.
—Dispatches from Gen. Emory
to the War Department announce that nearly
all the members ot the Louisiana Leglature
tank their-seats at New Orleans on Thfirsday:
—By the destruction by fire of the
steamer America, - plyin— between Rio and
Montevideo. on tho night of the 221 of Decem
ber, eighty passengers lost their lives.
—As soon is pleasant weathersets
in the Prince of Wales contemplates a voyage
in the Mediterranean, and to the Madeira W
ail/L.
4_
—London diplomatic circles think
that Great Britain relies for the acmes' of her
cue Before the German Conference on the Ala
batnp. claims.
—Oithe eve of - their departure
from Paris for Italy GeneralSberidenand Lieu
tenant Grant wore entertaingd at a banquet by
Minister Wdshburne.
—ltaly evidently intends seeking
a now limn. The Committee of the Chamber
of Commerce of Deputies have agreed to repoit
in facer , of a loan of 300 F 000,030 litres.
It
—ln accordance with the direction
or the , tate Mr. Peabody, five hundred houses.
under the control o► the Peabody Fund in Lon
dm. baye been let to small families.
Official statements show that
since Juno. 1847, when • the ant consignment
of Chinese arrived at Havana. there have been
introduced Mts Cuba 109,00 Q Asiatic colonists.
boy in. Chillicothe, Ohio,,mis:
took a Unim , terpedo fur a gam-drop and only
discovered his mistake atter the toper his head
bad been blown off. • •
—Weston, the walkist, is up for a
dilorce, because be is of a sensitive nature, and
wife talks so eatwilv to him as to endanger
his life?. Poor fellow!'
—They have very lenient judges'
out there in Nilscormin. One Gage was hauled
tit, or havuag two wives, but was released on
condition that ho should get divorced from .one
of them.
—AceOrding to a writer in the Chi
cago 21ibuue the Indian chief Cochin thump
to be a Son of Winian3 Morgan. who- was sup
posed to have boen murdered by the Masons
many years ago. • -
—The young lady _who slighted.
the awing gentleman at the leap-year party,
katVeiday night, is informed that the young
gentleman 7
will send his big sister to demand
201 n
A Connecticut man - hue con-.
traded at Tecumseh for 50.000 feet: of baswood
lumber. He saes he is going to. make mlkse
team but this doeseta amount for the recent
fall in the price of nutmegs.
. ,
" —The Journal de &. Petersburg. in
a recent bane, speaks in the tried complimen
tary terms of the reception given to the Grand
Duke Alexis In this country: It says all Russia
feels gratefhl, and will never forget it.
A.4lancoelz, aged fifty-five
- rears nesiding with his eon in the town of Pelt.
county, Ohio, bunted his house ant
whip Liz wire,and son were absot, and
Idnintif talks ntioda hi 1 git atanamp.
fradfitol..:Wittft,
'EDIT 0,1111, s
C. 0. GOODRICH. ar,
Towanda. Thoriday, Feb 1,1878.
Republican Oounty Omprentim
At a meeting of the' Betinbliciin Sanding C.
Skits! , of Bradford County. bald at Treands on the
bath of Mom% }B7l. the. !MB *BMW. •
Wham. raii lopublicans of Bridford County
w
ill be celled upon to choose delegable to
them in a State Convention. mon tO be =ar t
the purpose of piecing in nommation candidate for
Governor. and also to take action with rearms to
the mode of choosing a del gate I *present this
Congressional Dietriet to the ltspnblicen Itatamal
Convention for choke of eandidates for Pres&
dent and Vice Presideat of ths Matra Metes, and
also with reference to she
v chisfont IPreeidential
sector for this Congreestonal UMinft.••
Reached. That the following i Committees
of triellance. which were epposted for tiasseveral
election districts on the 18th day lof July. 1871.
to act for the ensuing year. are hereby requested to
Call elections foe the choice of .two Meats, to rep
resent their respective dlatrietri in a County Con,
elation hereby called. to meet 'et the Come Home
in Towanda, on Monday evening. Irebruary L
at 7 o'clock p.m.. for the purpose above mentioned
Said delegate elections to be opened at 7 p.m., and
close at tts p.m.. of listroday evening. Mown Id.
Sashed. That in visa of the importance of the
convention the Republicans of tbe county ere
earnestly requested to eive the sadist their Mes
tan in order that the county mart* fully wpm.
sensed. and the wit. and wishes of the majority be
fairly expressed.
J. licancrup.
Joie Paseastors.
Wm Lew &
Jam vAsering:
- C. Ir. Kansa
A. C. leasion...
•
Rom= *sum
' Standing Camille..
•sanaae= CCMITII/XL
Jam tarp.—W. P. Sam Nathan E. We.
Ovenshire. -
Athens boro.—J. M. Ely. Jr.. Chas. . H. C
Hays. ...
Aryhs.—B. E. Gilbert. John O. H.
Kilmer. I
Ai sy.—Warnm Ann. P'esnk Jones, James Tani
Annatia.—Lena Rialey.Obas. =Ales. Cease. •
Alba.-13. D. Carman. Dr. Hooker. At Dunbar
Etio•day.—W. E. Taylor, Wm. A. HMI& L 0. Blight.
Burlington top.—W. A. Lane * B. IX Knapp. P.
Boras. •
Burlington boro.—.l. S. Clark. Scott IPtats..Thornaa
Bm•th. I •
Deritiseow Wed.—C. 1.. Rockwell, Geo. D. Bourne,
. 1 ,
Sam. Bailey,.
*Latest tity).—Wm. L. Manley, Deal Gee, juries I.
Bothwell.
Cantos boro.—.o: W. Orlisn, M. P. Levis, 8. r can.
leach.
Caliable.—P. Peahens. W. E Gernet. R. Ferguson.
Franklin —4u. C. Ridgway, Chas. I alarms.. F. F.
Fairchild. •
Grairrilic.—L. D. Taylor, Seth rosier, John Far-
geson.
flerriret.—D. C. Barnes. Joseph Lee.' NV= Nesbit',
Le Rapti/k.—M. & Coddlng, J. Johnson. J. J.
Gorham.
Le Ree.—a atone. Benj. Tears. Sidney Morse.
Lila*id.—Wm. Bottle. Ilansol McKinney, H.
Cooper. •
Monroe tarp: -Chat. Bonen. F. Sweet, M. T. Van.
garde?. •
Monroe bsro.—J. B. M. hipßan. S. C. Tracy. 0.
. • ;
Prisbie. A. G. !Matthews. Isaac
Marsik,
Orertos;--Daniel Heverly, James 1141Insann, )L P.
Mathews.
Pae.-41. N. DeWolf H. B. Chaffee. isey Stevens.
Ridgbw-y.-3. C. Robinson. H. S. Owens. James P.
Squires. 1
Rn,,e tirp —Wm. Park. L. Prince. J A. Woody.
Row born.—A. S Keefe. 0. W. Young. D. Vonght.
sisitafirid.--Geo, T. Beech. Bluebird Tracy. R. S.
Daeldo.
gpriamield.—Robert Allen. 0. P...llarknesa, Wm.
Tracy.
gyicania.—E- G. Tracy. A. 7lnkhanr. l G. P Warman.
Snunt Creek.—E. C. Winona, John Craig. Ira bane.
Sheshequin —G. L. Fuller, Jean Brown, 0. Gore..
Standing Storm—Myron Friable.- Wm. Steven/. P.
Landme•er.
Mm Barton, Hiram L. Tr—
Ea
Tona*da tarp —U. L. Scott, - 43,_D. OCadeaough, Jafl
sou Bmntiza.
Towanda boro.—C. M. Hall. Robert hicCatcheon. W.
H. Marshall.
Towanda NortA.—E. B. DeLong. H. B. MM., Al,.
Smith. .
Troy brp..—Scott Manly. W. H. Simi. H. BuckwelL
Troy boro.--Benj. Bedew, Jas. Bustin. John-J.
Spalding.
Trarearora.—k. B. Sumner, Wm. Shumway, B.
Cogswell.
L'irter.—Ed. Lockwood. E. B. Mince Leal Noble.
Warren.--U. W. Stone. EL Howell, John Beards
ley. - I •
Wiedhkst .—L. Olmstead, James I Johnson. Asa
McliFe.—
'valesiorsi.;.-S. C. Gaylord. H. Btlngham, S. S.
Betts.
iferer od. B. E. C. Myer. W. M. Skewer': George A.
Wo
Wilmot.—John S. Quick, 8 Meeks'. Jr.. G. W. Ing.
ham. -
We Shepard. E. Perham', IJamea H. Brink.
DS. Hos. :431.Esx W. IscorrELD has
writen to a gentleman is Erie posi
tively refusing, to be a candidate for
re-election to Congress. He is one of
the ablest and most truoed men in
the national councils,and it would be
a loss indeed, not only to the people
of his district, but to the country to
lose his services.
I.A sprinkling of Democrats, of
the kind found down in Berks who
vote annually for Jackson, are calcu
lating the chances of electing a Dem
ocrat President next fall Faith,they
say will remove a mountain, but we
don't believe there's enongh to remove
tire Rocky Mountain barrier of Re
!?
p •
üblieanism. However well let them
try, •
....14•,1. ,
tie . The Pennsylvania editorial
convention which met in Harrisburg
last week was very well attended , by
the editors from rural dOtricts. The
only members of the pre.ss of Harris
burg present were two colored gen
tlemen i c connected with the Progress
of Librty.
The convention passed resolutions
requesting the legislat u re to. 'amend
the libel laws of the stnte, and also
to pass a law compelling the publi
cation of all legal advertisements in
one paper of each politi4al party,hav
ing the large 4 circultion in the
county.
IS. Hoi. lons Scort,Senator from
this State, has ,presented a petition to
Conss_ asking for an amendment
to th Constitution frbiding men
who 'zik spirituous liqours from hol
ding office. Should melt a provision
be adopted, it would nuke a good
many changes. Their ii no inconsist
ency in Congress imp4ing such a re
shit Lion uponyarties holding Nation
aloffices,because the Nailonal Govern
ment does not authorizn the issue of
licenses to sell rum.
.What is good
for the public, ought th be good for
the office-holders. If it is wrong for
the latter totdrink intOzicating 'lig
uors, it is wrong to authorize its 'sale
to the public. - 1 -'
in.. According to the Rochester
Democrat there is an illustrious rela
tive of the still more illustrious Beeth
oven in that city. It sa's: "Adversity
worls singular transformations. In
another column the wife of the great
Beethoven's grandson advertises for
music pupils. She is a pianist of rare
excellence—indeed, an artist upon
the piano forte—and never dreamed
that she would be obliged to utilize
the accomplishment in the manner
indicated by the - advertisment. But
her husband,. a. formai officer irrthe
Austrian army, was overtaken , by
misfortune; and preferred to cross
the Atlantic rather than live upoik the
chairty of relatives ; so she cast her
lot with him, like a lolving wife, and
left the fatherland. Thus we find a
representative of the illustrious Bee
thoven aralitig yea, where neither title
nor here4iiitty social distinetions
provailei
laaNula or' .
-
The&publioan State Central Coni
=Nee omit' at the Lod* Haus is
Ilatridasp onTistrad4 bat, 12!"11116
1 7 wig emult7,h l the Ittete \ airelo
mated. if* sLu **imp
of opinion the followlig resobitiata
were adopted :
ALPO RD
That the Chaim's' be directed to
inte tel i tel A for a State Conventioo,_ equal in
numbers to the representation In both Rows
of the liere, to meet in. Rantsburg on
WednesdaYAprillo., .1872, at moat* nominate
candidates for Govanier,l3opreme Court Jedge.
Auditor General (should the, Legislature au
thorize thei election atone). an Electoral Tick.
etshand to elect &Wade' and Representative
delegates to re't the ROO in the :Repub..
Bonn National fttiote.
Resolved. That this committee desires to
urge upon the Republican voters of the Fourth
Senatorial district the great sispostance of the
election kw /Attestor In' that district on
spec
80th instant. Upon the malt of that elec."
stiecoL=ds'tbe
having the been lefts tie by the
death of Ur. Connell, and the Republicans of
the entire State are boo Mft with deep interest
to the maintenance of thelnfeerity tithe Re.
publican organization in that district by the
BEMmaxis of the regular Republican nominee,
W. Oen. --
Rewired That the thanks Of this committee
. are hereby tendered to the Rim. Rearm Es
aarr. :chairman of this committee, to Gen.
&somas, treasurer of the sante, and also the
- respective secretaries, fa- the iiiithful and efli•
dent manner in which they lave discharged
their duties.
Every member of the Committee
expressed the 'utmost confidence in
the success of the corning elections.
Col. A. G. M.Asos is the member for
this county.
M. The steamer Charleston ar
rived in this city last evening from
Charleston, S. C., having on board
twenty-four convicted , HuHlux pris
oners, in charge of ,a detachment
from the 18th infantry, under the
command of First Lieutenant Pot
ter. These prisoners were tried and
convicted at the recent term of United
States Circuit Court, held at Colum
bia, S. 6., and were on their way to
the Albany penitentiary. The sen
tence vary from.one year to five,with
fines from $lOO to $l.OOO. They
were confined in a bulkhead in the
forward part of the ship, which had
been temporarily fitted up for their
accommodation. They were all ap
parently white men, but a more for
lorn, woe-begone, haggard-looking
crew could scarcely be found. All
were furnished , with gray blankets,
which they wore in the manner of
cloaks over their shoulders, fastened
with strings. With one or two ex
ceptions they bore upon their faces
' the stolid look of utter ignorance.
The reporter was told that only one
or . two could read or write. Their
rough, haggard faces, ragged gar
ments, and unkempt hair presented
a singular speetacie-seen by the dim
light of the ship's lantern. Among
the former was an old :than, over six
ty-five years'of age, who is the head
of a large family. He has received
one of the heaviest sentences, viz: :
five years' imprisonment and a fine
of $l,OOO. They were taken on to Al
bany last evening.—N.Y. "es Snf
u rday.
Albert Mil-
MO
war The Scranton Bepublicitin is
not pleased with the bill introd4ed
by Senator Buckalew a few days ago,
to amend the, apportiOnment bill, by
giving to Luzerne county an'addition
al representative, taking one from
'that district having the smallest frac
tion above the quota of representa
tion. The Republica is of the opin
ion that therais an Ethiopian some
where concealed in this particular
pile of wood. Mr. Ba 1
ckalew, it says,
has an idea that Li,:rne county is
permanently secured to. the Demo
cratic 4 party, and as the apportion
ment of last year di not appear to
work right at the t election, Mr
Buckalew proposes t remedy tby
the bill above refert to. The peo•
pie of Luzerne count have not asked
for this. change, „nor do they want it.
What they
.do want, 0 the apportion
ment is' to be changed, is to be cut
loose from Pike and Monroe counties
and made an indepel?ldent Senatorial
district. The .Reptiblican' says the
smallest fraction` represented is that
composed
. of Beaver, ifyashington and
Butler counties. This is a Republi
can district,and Bud:aloes bill would
simply increase the Democratic
strength ine House b y one vote.
It is a part ' trick and deserves to fail.
ims. It is idle in the. Democratic
leaders to deny that they Sympathile
with die Ku-Klux, 4 large body of
men in all the South . = States. who
nave solemnly sworn that they prefer
the old Constitution ito the present
amended instrument' ? and who. are,
therefore, on oath opposed to the ex
isting .Nati. nal Ckeilernment. It is
equally idle for _thew leaders to at
tempt to produce th 4 impression that
they are in favor of the reconstruction
acts and the recent I amendments to
the Constitution, foi . on no occasion
have they, as a party, professed more
than a sullen acqui scene° in them.
We feel sure, and w believe all in
telligent persons in e country are
of the opinion, that nothing would
give_ these Democratic leaders more
pleasure than to rip up these acts
and these amendments, root and
branch. I . .
`ler The next Aimual Methodist
COnference will hart several bishop
rics to fill and dr Zion's Herald trusts
that one of the new "Overseers" will
be of Africai decent and thinks that
will serve to settle for all time the
Mooted question of , quality so far as
the Church is contained. The -Trib
une Bays a black bishop will be a good
beginning, but the ihief_point of in-,
terest will be to observe his treat
ment by his brotheti . white bishops.
• 41%...
SS. Hon. 11. Illiacrra, now rep
resenting the Bradford district in
Congress, is favorably referred to by
Republican journals in the North - as
a candidate, on the *publican tick
et, for Supreme Jtdge. He is a jurist
of very high attainments and consid
erable, experience d i n the bench; be
sides being a man of unimpeachable
character. Withoutia doubt he would
make a string candidate.-.-81de Ann%
sus ILIBMILATIPMIII.
The leggislatureweainasssker three
days last week and adjourned until
Wednesday of this ire& It is bon
btail! thishist adjournment
el anylesigth; the close of till)
- The load Option bint for the 23d
ward of Pluladidplda passed the
Hoc& by s large majority.
The following bill in Moreno. to
the isle of liquors on election days
has also plumed thelicsise.
demos 1. That from sad alter the pimp
of this sot. it shall not tow lawfulperson
in this Oossalosratelth. whether lionised or nu.
licensed. to buy. sell. or titre stray to be need
as a drink. any opinions or malt km=
at disc. or any sutishinoe containing
on An/ Part rit ie V set apart Air any gener
al or special • by any citizens in or -with
in any weft.* towastup. county or otb.
• ide distlial or Mimi is et istthin this
Commonwealth.
Sac. 2. Any person -viola t*/ any oetediro.
visions of the drat swam tarthis act be
deemed guilty Gis t misdemeanor. and cm am
t
ment in theWea sbW tie subject to
U fa
a pe
of thegroper
_eomity Air a r term
of not mots - than cm hundred days. and to ad
dition to the abate shall alt be su bjec t to a
Grie of not more than five hundred tus and
costs, at the discretion of the must.
DILIPXAT OF A. X .XeCI4II7IIX.
Repubtans througout the State
will be gratified at the result of the
election in the 4th Senatorial Dis
trict, on Vuesday.• CoL GUY the
regular Republican eanditate was
elected 'by a majority of one thous
and, notwithstanding the ncilating
ad unprincipled course of most of
the Republican pipers in the city.
CoL McCizas, like a few °tin r
disaffected men in the Republican
party, who have been kept in office
for years, has for several years past
been sowing the seeds of disaffection
in our ranks, for the purpose of com
. '.g leaders of the party to yield
to his demand for place. His fate
may prove a warning to odors Of his
llk.
is. List of Patents tamed from
the United States Patent Office to
citizens of the State of Pennsylvania,
for the week ending Jan. 23, 4872
Reported for the Baeziosa Itzporr
za, by J. McC. Pumas & Co., Conn
selors-at-Law and Selicitors for Pat•
eats and Claims, No. 513 Seventh
street, Washington, D. C.
Coal Screen—a J. Frrvzn, of Ts
miqns. •
Bracket Hook for Show Windows
-4. HoDolma, Harrisburg.
Machine for making Horse Shoes
.—W. J. Jurrus,'Pittsburg.
Journal Bearing—J. H: LINDSAT,
Alleghenny.
Mang i tacture of Sheet Iron—Wu.
Room, Anollo.
Washing Machine —J. Scan,
Charleston.
Ejector for Artesian Wells—M.
laarre, Oil City. .
Steam Engine—H.W. Ansms,Thil
adelphia.
Padlock—S. W. ' Brno, Philadel
phia. ,
Device for locking Nnts—A. B.
D.vr.a, Philadelphia.
Chopping Machine-4. A. Erman-,
Reamatown.,
Preserving Wood—H. W. Etwerrr,
Mule for spinning Wm. Uzi,
Coatesville.-
Stop Cock—Jomi MADAMS, Scran
ton.
Combined Mechanical nigvement
and 'Gas Burner —E. Gsmssyrras,
Philadelphia.
' Wash Boiler Tnos. 11. PARKER,
Nlifllintown.
Tobacco Cutter—T. Saco & Also.
vea, Easton. •
Grain Door for Cars—H. STAIILNE
cum, Allentown.
Door for Grain Cars—To same.
Construction of Walls for build
ings—W. L. SUMPTER, Allentown:
Bed Bottom—ls. Tnomis & J. A.
Kinn; Pittsburg:
Steam Power Air Brake=—G. Wrsr-
MOHAN; Jr., Pittsburg.
Locomotive Boiler Furnace—J.
WOOD, Jr., Conshohocken.
:Washing Machine—J. 31. Cults,
Lancaster.
Machine for washing and other
purposes—To same.
Mr An action has been commenced
in the U. S. Circuit Court against
Mark IL Pomeroy, for alleged breach
of promise of marriage. The com
plaintfilled by Commissioner Shields
with the Clerk of the Court states
that the plaintiff, Miss Sadie E.V. , ilk
/moon, of New Haven, Ct. became so
qUainted with the defendant in 1862;
that he subsequently solicited her
hand in marriage, and that she con-
seated to accept him. The complaint
further states, that Miss Wilkinson
has received many offers of marriage
from various suitors, and that she lost
the opportunity to bncome a bride by
reason of the breach of contract of
the defendant. The lady claitna $25,-
000 damages. r
MT Thu trial of Mrs. Wharton,
charged with the murder of Gen.
Ketchum, by poisoning, •at her own
house in Baltimore, some month'.
ago, was brought to a close on Wed
nesday last, by a verdict of acquital
The case was tried at Annapolis, Md.,
and occupied the court about seven
leeks. Mrs. Wharton is also under
bonds to appear at the court in Aprll.
to answer the cage of attempting
to poison a CoL TanNess, while at
her house last summet.
us. Senator Frrcu has introduced
in the Senate a bill repealing the
Midland and Mattamorria a B.
charter. -
A bill has been, introduced in the
House by Mr. Warn providing for
the election of an Auditor General,
at the next general election, to fill
the vacancy occaaiord by the death
of VoL Burros.
sir The Apportionment Bill, passe_
ed by the Spine of Representatiies,
has been materially changed by the
Senate Committee. The number is
reduced from 281 to 243, by whicL
Pennsylvania loses two members. If
is believed that the Senate amend
ment vnil not puma
MUM 11101 OMBOUJIL
• . ?MX UV lICLIIX 11114111,111.
, Ongfeta, Ike., Da&AIM.
movriosamuciedimitursiiiii,ias Odd
of els Zaibig lOsalliillaWildillide 'IC Illi lau'
ter pert of iftwillaisis In* 111111 pular
lag. • The WI. Meld Affiffsietindithe Mime
neyeengral of the Siete appeired fkr 110 t 0..,
ernment. Ex-Attottitity Oelberile Ileildr Ali.
MI sod Henry &anthem sodded by some of
the best keel talent in the State, appeseul as
counsel for the pismire. •
Whet the Court °peat' On abed o.
hundred and fifty pillows In etenthenne..t it
thisibies. and a moth larger number ni clam
of the military authorities at Yukio' points in
thteupper =mike of the Btata. The attire
comber under bonds smith coodnement with
in the State amounted to neady ' eve huedred.
The Indictments clamed etampleacy in each
case, In Wing by intimidation and violeoce,
attempted to prevent the free exercise of the
debt to vote; and in nearly every case other
equate were added charging murder, horglary,
arson. etc., eta. '
By far the pester part of these ;Owners
belonged to the clam known as" poor whites."
Very awry of the more prominent members of
the order selected the approaching danger and
tied the country, leaving their dupes to fell in
to the clutches of the law and soar for the
crimes performed at - their instigation and under
their leadersbip.
When the first cues were soiled, the defence
opened the legal tournament by a motion to
quash the indictments; first. on the general
ground of the unteinstitutkmality of the Kn.
Klux Bill under which they were drawn, and
the consequent want of jurtsdietion of the
Court. and secondly, even granting the author
ity of the Coen to try the charge otemispiracy,
denying he jurisdiction In cases containing the
count of murder. barglary..etu . •
The war of argument lasted nearly a fort
night, The distinguished counsel for the de
fence urged their cause with all the earnestness
and skill of which they were masters.- Upon
the Tuition of the jurisdiction of the •Csmirt in
ewes where special crimes were charged the
Court was divided. and the matter referred to
the Supreme Court for decision. Upon the' oth
er points raised their motion was overruled and
they were compelled to go to trial. • • '
The first ease called was that of William
Hayes Mitchell, an ex-captain in the Confeder
ate army, and a young man of evidently more
than ordinary intelligence. He 'was charged
Vila having conspired with others to injure and
oppress certain persons for having voted the
Radical ticket at the,election in 1870, and with
having been present on a raid when the Klan of
which be was a member'murdered a noted ;te
am Radial named Jim Williams,
When arraigned bonus the' Court be plead
"not veiny." The first witnesses called be the
moseention were ex-members of the Ith•lClux-
Klan, who bad turned States'-evidence. After
ward the iseerrees who had been whipped, out.
raged and threatened were put upon the stand.
The objects and purposes of the order were
find shown, then the partienlar wits perthrtried
in carrying them out, and the prisoners' con
neetion therewith.
The raid upon Jim Williams was characteris
tic and will slimy bow these 'mealtime were
organized anti carried out Jim Williams metes
to have been a man of considerable intelligence
and to - have possessed a clearer idea of his
rights and their value than most or biro class.
For months the Klan hut' been raiding through
the length and breadth of York county. ninr ;
Bering and whipping. and bad so far succeeded
in their purpose as to make large numbers of
the Degrees foremrear their political faith and
promiee 'to become "good Democrats." But
amid all this terrorism Jim Williams stood oat
bravely for his rights. Re 1,111 coaxed anti
threptened, but all to no purpose. He told
them plainly that if they didn't let him alone
he would take justice into his own hands. Such
heresy we. unpardonable. All of York county
had been regenerated save a little belt where
dwelt Jim Williams. He alone stands out, and
we than see bow he is to be converted to the
principles of that "Constitutional liberty as be
qnesthed to us by our forefathers."
Late one afternoon in the early part of /larch
last those ominous Night Hatelz.—the couriers
of the "Invisible Empire,"—might have been
seen riding from house to house, leaving their
message and galloping on to interview some
other "brother." Ten o'clock comes and one by
one men monnted.armed, disguised gathered at
the usual place of meeting- : .the " Old Briar
Patch." Few words are spoken. The Chief.
gives each member his number—for no names
are used—gives the signal and the cavalcade
moves nut. Other members are met on the
road, challenged. and take 'their places in We
ranks. After inferefezeing one ex two Dezroes
on the way, the party arrive at the cabin of Tao
Williams. Halting in a thicket they dismount.
a detail of a dozen 'men is told oft whit give
their animals to their comrades and disappear
in the darkness. Those men in the thicket wait
natiently for half an hour. They can see noth
ing, hear nothing, save the faint cry a; of a wo
man in distress By and by the party return
as silently as they went, mount end ride away
in silence. At last one, more inquisitive than
the rest, rides to the bead of the column and
asks his disguised Chief,--" Where is run NU
tamer The answer], short end to the point,
"In bell, I expect," and then Sdds. - "We have
no time to lose, we have got to visit four or five
more to-night." The next morning Tun Wil
liams is found swinging from the limb of a pine
tree. All night long the troops keep up the
march, halting now and then to hunt for some
obnoxious negro, or to refresh themselves .ltb
a lunch of crackers and whiskey. Just es the
day is - breaking they remove their disguises
and scatter to their different homes.
The defence tried hard to break down the
testimony of the Government witnesses; partie
-.dart', that of the negroes, many of whom were
erossly ignorant, and very foii, if any of them,
had ever been in the witness-box before. Atter
they had been examined by the prosecution they
were turned over to the trade" mercies of Mr : .
Stanberry for cross-examination. But ever be,
with all his legal stratagems, brow-beating; ar
tifices, did not, in a single instance, obtain con
tradictory statements. Their manner of giv
ing their testimony was -often very amusing.
It seemed impossible for them to give a des
cription without acting it out. One witness, to
illustrate how he had been knocked dowii with
a cudgel in the hands of a Ru 7 Klux , tenth him,
melt a blow on the part, indiaited d threw
himself fall length tip - in the ffocir.
The following extracts &can the testimony
may be of interest : An ex-member f the Klan
having been put upon the *tend, some
preliminary questions, was asked to state lbe
cencralpurpose and object the order, as he
understood them. Answer,
"I heard them stated to e. It was to put
down the Radial party and rule the negro soi
lage. It was told to me by members of the
Klan that it was to be by whipping negro!' and
intimidate= them and keeping them from vot
ing, and to kill all Inch white men rs took Rad
ical °toes, and who then occupied offices."
An - other witness, in reply to the same queer
eon,- replied : " Those present ai . the meeting
I attended, told me the pieties against whom
'barges had been pref. reed =fist be visited
end asked to change their opinion, and to vote
the Democratic ticket. In ease they did not do
it, they were to be visited again and corrected
by members of the Klan, and if they refused, to
be whipped ; and if they again refused they
were required to leave the county ; in case they
lid not comply they were to be killed. Meer..
teatime of the Rlatorere to be directed against
Republicans."
Another said: " I took the Ka-Klux oath. I
remember I was to be on the side of confetti
tional liberty as bequeathed to us by our fore
fathe.s, and that I was to oppose and reject the
eincipleti of the Radical party. I rode on the
-aid that killed Jim Williams. We 'met at the
Iris Patch ; traversed the road; met Robert
bayed Mitchel at the Cross Roads ; be joined us
.n disguise and reds with us on the raid. We
hang Jim Williams 01a - II pine tree. I MAO, go
-11 P and see the banging. but after it was over I
asked Dr. - Brattotiwhit they had done with the
nigger and where be was; and be said, "he hi
hell, I expect.'
The widow of Jim Williams said: "They
came to my house that night, they took my
hatband out and the last I l heard of him he was
4truggling as though be was choking. I follow
-4d them to the door and tried to go aid beg
ged them not to hurt hint, but they drove me
back and told me to go to bed with the chit
tree. but I did not. I looked through the win
dow and saw them set:Satin, to the woods. I
'weer saw him again &hie ; I saw him the next
morning dead, with a rope_ around his neck,
'lengths on a pine free." - .
&either victim testified': "I was quietly
sleeping sith My wife at home; my house was
saneardid ad era dotal blokes Is, r i nd %or
&WA 'when is the dimmed nigger? I dal
to the led sod v6sa my mid 'be is gook'
they emereenemi tasting her wiz dm. bead,
telbeig Ye that she led lid that Ow would
.11111 kit habil& Portly alder OW dilmiwer'
ad Illire I was abattoir' Iron& down ; and
tiMeillbe party abided beater wits returned
dad Wei Mr Wan; nag then hawked_ me to
tbr atroadtokmaw . My uwe
dmighter robediticaa saddler nos and cried.
40 0 kill my papa.' Then they fired on her
hitting her in the bead. Liter riddling the
home with bullets" they Wit' me out swearing
they would kill me. One of than said. 'let as
talk to him before we kill him,' std be turned
to me and said. "Are yer it Radical r I says
yo .' Then be said will yer raise your nigh
band and swear that you will never vote the,
Radical ticket any more? I told hint I would
do eaythins to save my life. I then raised my
light basil to Heaven and swore against my
swinciple, never to vote the Radical ticket any
more.'
Another one says : "They came to my home
and told me to make ups light; then they took"
me into the open arc and said, we will make
Democrat of you IS night; pull city= clothes
and stretch out.' I strethed out and they beat
me mall they wars tired, and then asked me it
I would hereafter rote the Democratic ticket,
and I said I would."
'Another testifies: "They knocked at my
door; a dozen seized me; a gun was before me
and a mnaket behind me, and they panclied
my held with a pistol until it bled. They then
took zee oat to No. 6, of the Klan. No. 6 makes
me a very low bowl and with his horns hooka
and gorges me in the breast, and asked nie
where Jiro Williams fired. I told him I didn't
know. He said tome, don't you Tote the Radi
cal ticket again. We are going to kill Jim WU
hams and all you damned nigge.rs who vote that
ticket." .
In the summing up, the argumetit of Kr
Stanberry was a disappondinent. Beyond one
or two good points that he raised, it was nu.
worthy of his great reputation. It was a speech
hill of bitterness, make*, and pettifoggery.
Ilevezdy Johns• •n, on the.contrary. did himself
full Justice, but he seemed to be addressing the
country at large more than the jury in the box.
The worth ex-Minister evidently cared not for
get his favorite role of" the guardian of the
Constitution." He had much to say in lauda
tion of the heroes of the first revolution, but
very little of the heroes of the ?second, tiniest.
we exoopt those who fought•thoee on " the oth
er aide." .
When the can was closed the jury returned
a verdict of "guilty." As ova a week -elapsed
between the conviction of Kitchell and his sen
tence, the press throughout the State took nu
the cry of "packed juries," " itar-chamber
courts," "bribed witnesses," etc.. etc. When,
however, he was arraigned before the Court to
recei4 his sentence, and was asked what he
had to say in mitigatiim of punishment, he re
plied : "I was a manlier of the Sn-Slux•Slan
and came here intending to plead guilty a d
confess what I knew of the order. My lawyers
would not allow me 16 do so but made mo plead
as I did, I was lead to join the order by men
older and better informed than myself. I con
fess that I was wrong and ask the Court to-be
as lenient with me as possible."
The prisoner was sentenced to eighteen
months confinement in the Albany penitentiary.
In closing the case for the Government Dia-
trict Attorney Corbin used the following strong
and unmistakable' . langnsge—language which .
expreues, we believe, the feelings orthe mass
of the loyal people of the country : * •
"The sound of arms and the smoke of battle
of the great rebellion have just passed away.
With the close of that great tragedy humanity
has swept onward. -f The arm of the nation has
been stretched out to protect the as yet ig
norant but enfranchised freemen. The bonds
of the slave have been broken; and the voice of
the American people is, and the people of South
Carolina, and the people of the South must
hear it,•listen to it, and be overned by it, that
the rights of the newly enfranchised citizen
shall be protected. We have discovered, gen
tlemenoklearful conspiracy against these rights
in.an armed, equipped organization, composed
alas, of many soldiers of the late war who prom
mused to lay, do .n their arms, retire to their
homes, and behave Jae good citizens. This.or
ganization, composed of many soldiers of the
rebellion. is found bearing arms, marching in
Squadrons at night, and for what? To defeat
the very principles achieved in that - contest by
the Government of the United States. I ray to
every individual - in thni aimed organization—in
the name of God, disband! Go to your homes,.
meet no more ; because the uplifted arm of the
nation otherwise will crush you, will grind you
to powder I If the arm Of the American pec
ple has again to be raised to put down this or
ganization. I fear it will make your homes a
desert
fi nd your fields a wilderness."
•
• •
CALL FOR THE BATIONAL BEPUB-
LIOAN OONVENTION.
The following is the calk adopted
by the , Committee:
In calling this Convention the
Committee remind the country that
the many promises of the Union. Re
publican Convention of ;868 have
been fulfilled. The States lately in
rebellion have been, restored *to their
former relations with the Govern
ment; the laws of the country have
been faithfully' executed; the public
faith has been preserved, and the na
tional credit firmly established; gov
ernmental economy , has been illus,
trated by the reduction of the publia
debt and of taxation, and the fund
ing of the national debt at a lower
rate_of interest, now successfully in
augurated; the rights of naturalized
citizens have been protected by treat
ies and immigration , encouraged ` by
liberal proldsions;• the defenders of
the Union, have been gratefuly_n
membered; the rights andtinterest of
labOr have been recognized; laws have
, been enacted and are being enforced
for the. protection . of persons and
property in all sections; equal suf
frage has been engrafted on the Na
tional Constitution; the privilege and
immunities of 'American citizenship
have become part of the law; a fiber- -
al policy has been adopted - toward'all
who, have engaged in rebellion; cota
e
plica,tions in foreign xel tions have
been adjusted in the into st of peace
throughout the world, w ile national
honor has been maintained;. corrup
tion has been exposed, and offenders
punished, reiponsibility ; enforced and
;safeguards established. , Now, as
Ihereafter,the Republican party stands
pledged to - correct all abuses and c
ry, out all reforms necessary to main
tain the purity and efficiency of the
public service. To continue, firmly
to establish its fundamental' privfieg
ea we invite the co-operation of all
citizens of the' United States.
gar Senator Scott has nearly corn=
pleated the report of the joint com
mittee on Southern outrages, and it
will be submitted-to Congress in the
- Course of the next ten days. Senator
BLAII will make a minority report at
the same tinie. The committee have
oonsidered and will report a bill ex
tending the time in which the Presi
dent can swipend the writ of habeas
corpus to the end of the next, session
of Congress.
iNgi. The lad number of the Fla-.
Po=Es,suggesb3 the name of Hon. 11.
Watt's for 'the Supreme Court of the
State. Mr. Mortar would fill the of
fice with great satisfaction to the
people of the state;and his legal abil
ity fits him for tLe position in an em
inent degree.--N.T.Gazette.
18rA - resolution to adjourn sine
die on Thursde.y, the 28th day of
March, has passed both bronco* of
tits lAgisisturso; Oda 84144
cnizOrnms.
—A Bo= Pam*.--lefr. Spurgeon.
has been staying in Bowe, and, -on a recent
Sunday, preached inthe !'rsebytetien Church.
outside the Phetit ail Spa), the reviler nib.
islet of which is -Dr.ll‘swie. correspondent I
of the London fide , describing_the
fee
rice, writes: ."Petiutps the boldest thing Kr.
Spurgeon ere ask, In Us life was said in his
running comments before the sermon while
reading a chapter of See ptnre. Somehow or
other be introduced • Rome and Roman affairs
Into his discourse. and raising his bands and
eyes at the same time—the hands clasped, the
eyes tamed to the celllng—he broke out. with-,
out warning or preparation of any kind, in the
fallowing terms: '0 Victor Emanuel! 0 Eman-.
eel of Heaven. thou tree Victor! help the Ital
tans, bless and sanctify , their cause, and snake
them prospercins.' 'I donot think the cry of
'Fire or • Stbp thief? uttered in the middle of
the sermon, .wonld have canted much more
.sensation than his prayer did. Some of the con,
gregatton looked frightened. some indignant,
some painfully amused. At few old ladies kern
el u if they Would risk' oht'of the church, but;
being too tar from the door, kept their seats.
Othevs appeared bewildered, hardly knowing
whether to laugh or to cry, and Anite beside
themselves. Others; again—and they formed
the greater portion of the tiongregation, both
as regards men and women—sat, as it were -
spell-bound and devout looking, wondering
what would come neat." •
OP THE FUTURE. — III
the January number , of Old and New, Edward
Everett Hale predicts that five years hence the
literary journal for which and from which there
is most to be hoped, will bo one not destined
for what please to call themselves the literary
classes, and that the progress- of newspaper
pliblicatiiin in point of frequency, will by that
time us into the era of tbe hourly press.
He Says: • "It need =prise nobody to see the
nest great typical 'enterprising journalist , ' es
tablishing a periodical Whose al:left/sire: issues
shall appear punctually every bonr,twenty-four
times a day,withoUt any intermission for nights.
Sundays or holidays. The first will fail, as the
first.penny paper did ; hut the
_second or third
will make a great f.rtuee an& a great repeti
tion."
—Rev. W. IL H. Murray says: "I
hold it to bet prime obligation resting ou ev;
ery man to succeed up to the fullest measure
of that niecess which is possible to him in life.
Snd ess ht not only pleasant; it is a duty. Look
at man along whatever range of faculties, and
you will see In the perfect equipment of capaci
ty, in the presences of every energy, the obliga.
tion to succeed. In the wings ofshircl you see
that the Maker has suggested flight; in the
build of a dog and a horse., speed ; m the ox,
strength ; and so, throngh' . ill the grades of life,
God, in the organiistion, ip the capaettiex.
'towed, has pointed out thin wide - and mannf
life. lint 'Amon this is most observable. Look
at yourself, my friend, your faculties, in your
endowments by nature, and see in the liberal, I
had almost said- nay, I will say.:-in the super
abundant resotir. es of your organization, yea,
the et mmand, of your Maker. All the elements
and means necessary to success in any branch
of worthy industry,' in any line of noble ambi
tion, are in you. A. young man tas no right to
fail in life. It may not be his duty to succeed
In the direction and to the extent that his am
bition may suggest, for ignorance may miadi
rect,
and vanity exagerate ; but it is his duty to
succeed in the direction and to that extent, in
which his - natural capacltie*. point and make
possible. Society is full of failures thit need
never have been made ; ,full of men who have
never succeeded, when they might have, and
should have, succeeded ; full of women who, in
the first half of their days,.did nothing but eat
and drink and simper, and in the last half have
done nothing but repent their follies and weak
nesses. The world Is felt.' say, of such people;
full of menip every trade or pr...fession who do
not amount - do anything, and of girls and irct
men without any trade or.prof. ssien, who have
no desire 'to amount to anything; and I do not
`speak irreverently, and, I trustmot without duo
charity, without making due allowance for the
inevitable in life, when I say that God and
houghtfed men are weary of their presence.
Every boy ought to improve on his ,fa ther ; ev
gry girl grow into a nobler, gentler, more s eelf.
denying Womanhood than tne Mother. No re
production of former tyres will give the world
the perfixt, type- I snow riot where the
niileni
um is, as measured distance of time ; but I di,
know, and so do you all, that it is a great
way off as measured by human growth and ex
pansion. We have no such men and women
yet, no age has ever had any, as Shall stand on
the earth in that age of peace that still not come
until men are worthy of it."
—Norn,INTENTION.—There is in
the Bureau of Steam Engineering at the Navy
Department a met alic working m- del on a large
scale'of a gun-carriage designed for operating
basil. grins in fortifications. The gun itselt is ,
mounkel a.pair of levers, connec ed about
the nilddle of their k ngth by a -shaft which
vi
brates in the ordinary trunnion bearings: The
lower calf, of these levers are connected by
mean's of a cross-head and rod. to a piston
working- in an air-cylinder, which lice between
the frames of the ordinary carriage. The air
compressed in this cylinder acts like an elastic
cushion In taking up the recoil of the gun.
When the gun is in position to fire it stands
above the ramparts, where aim can be taken. at
any object in the harbor or roads. The recoil
ellasequent npon its discharge forces the gun
several feet below the. level at which it is fired,
where it may be loaded,:out of danger of an en
emy's shot. It is retained in this position by
an ingenious combination of a pawl with a rack
-sliding on an incliucd plane. When again reads.
to fire it is thrown into position Ly simply mos ,
ing a smalliever, which disengages the l awl
and allows the air compressed in the cylinder
by the recoil to act as a powerful spring. The
idea of firing the gnu above the ramparts and
loading it out of danger below belongs to Cap
tain Moncrieff, an English cfficer, and bis car
riage is being introduced in British fortifica
tions. But this invention is from th 6 - brain of
the clebrated Western engin:er, J. B. Eads. It
has few parts, is simple, and in ill reipects far .
ahead of the Moi,crieff carriage. Mr. Eadalm
' protised and constructed the first iron-clad
vessel (the Benton) befit on this continent, and
is now building tLe great steel bridge acmes
the Mississippi river at St. Lords, to cost $7,-
000.000.
New Advertisements.
FOR SALE - The Finhgeribor offers
_a; for sale the following property in tTlater. Brad
'ord county*Pa., to wit: One Cartage hop 'doing a
good busitievi, alio his Mime and Lot containing
one.acre of hind all +n the Tillage of 81-ter, buildings
nearly new awl in good order -with plchty of fruit
and good water, also a Hat farm containing one
hundred acres of Tangent land w.thin one mile of
the Tillage, SeTerty-tire acres improved, writ f-nced
and well watered. with good buildings. The above
property will be mold low and on reasonab e terms,
for further particulars Inquires of the subacriberat
Miter.
Ulster Jan; 23;72. Ira. T. r.
NOTlCNcnpsegnence of the
E drub of Charles G. Helium. late of the firm of
Kellum it Mulluck. it becomes necessary Um all
outstanding accounts of the firm of Selina' & Hut
h,* due the Seth. dat , of fieptemher. 1871. must be
paid. by Starch 1., 1872. or costs roll me male.
though the busineu trill be continued under' the
old firm acme untd further notice. The books are
at the market ready for settlement.
Jan. M.'72. .4CELLUM k traixocs.
DWIGHT BELILI7II Adniluistmter.
ISSOLUTION.—. The co-partner
slip heretofore existing between Camp .5," Vin
cent is this day dissolved by mutual consent., and
tbs business w U be continued by 1%13. Camp, who
will settle all 'Accounts of the said firm. A n persons
indebted to the firm,sre requested to maim ire „cc:lista
payment.
ADHLNISTRATOR'S NOTICE.-:
Notice Is hereby Oren that all peiions indebted
to the estate of CHARLES G. KELLUM. Late of Tow
anda bum docesaed.are rsquested to make.immediate
payment. and an persons baring clairds against - said
estate mud present them duly anthentiestM for Bet
tina...lM. IMIGHT:HEI LEW,
nisr.Bll-w6 - -Administrator.
CAIITION.—Whereas my 'wife
Sarah. has let my bed and board. without just
moan or provootlan, all persons aro hereby forbid
bartawing or trustbuf her 'on my account. as I will
pat r apbts of her contracting' attoratnly date.
jap1312w3 6, PHILIP SHER.
$l,OO-ofrusTilE lADE ON
The sabsceibei now offers for sale his new
Pr.eouniN li MILL, CHEAP
OTroIIILLT CUM, ELLA scr nir •3301. nrirrarts.
The property is sittiste.l In Stevensville , . Bradford
county Pa.. on the floe or the proposed intilvosd
from nryida.itg to BD gbamton. and a depot will
probably be located on the property. •
The proaerty consists r I Aiken acres of WO. a
large oew MIL. two Dwelling HOWIHI. two Darnit,
outbuildings, and a never-101 , 0g rare power.
For Dither wilco' .rs.enquire o._ 0. D Bartlett.
WOO. Grote. or N. N. Bette. Jr.. Cashier Pirs.t.lll,
tonal Bane. Towanda. PL. Martin cos Tell. griller t.
sula6 or Lewis. Wyslusine. • -
— lolll2.lLag memi l anw lTolli k
tiarftia.
NOVEMBER 22,.1871.
BOY YOUR ItARDWARE, IROR
STOVES, NAILS, (LASS,- ,Perms,
htEcumcs TpoLs, &c., OH'
CODDING,RUSSELL &TO.
Who not only sell at the lowest cash
prices, which cannot be undersold in
the county, bnt who, from their long
experience in the trade, are able to,
and do, keep a variety of goods of
all kinds which is not equalled in
this part, of the State. It is their
aim to 144 goods that shall give
satisfaction,' and they have only to
refer to their customers in the past
as to what they will perform in the
future. As the ordinary spacj: o
an aduertisenient would fail to en-
=erste the goods kept by them,
whoever may wish to purchase
should not fail to visit their store.
They lava a great variety of
Cooking and Heating Stoves,aanong
which arc the American, Morning
Glory, - Oriental, and -many other
patterns of Base Burners. Thpy
have it large lot of Werry Christmas
Stoves at Reduced Prices, although
the tendency of prices is decidedlY
upiard. Americais Cook, Magic
Shield, Tribune, Union, and many
others. They -are the only agents
for the two. best Heaters ever sold,
the Oriental and Reynolds.- Also
Chaffee's National and Harrisburg
Feed Cutters, Corn Shellers, Pock
Knives and Table Knives; very
cheap, Silver Plated Ware, Lard
Whale and Machine Oils, Brass and
Copper Kettles, Clothes ;Wringers,
Boys' Sleds, , Skates, Hay Rope,
Lath, Tinware, Drain Tile, Cement,
Patent Iron Benches, Planes,
REP BOOTS,
BOOTS AND SHOES
Boots. 33cx:otis.
L. L. MOODY - & CO.,
Have the sole eoetrol for - the Refill
Iltunplirey 13ros.
Manufactured in Towanda
And wo are retailing them u low as other houses are
Be Sara that you ire buying these }Soots. for It Wont
stand to reason that an Eastern Boot, made by ma
chine throughout. will begin to wear - with the cele
brated
RUBBERS !
-
RUBBERS!
A large areiartruent, which we aro selling at a large
rrduction in prices. We keep none but liret_quality
Itubbers._
FLNE SHOES! -
FINE SHOES!
• FINE SHOES
C %MT' lc VttCEN-i.
For Ladies. Misses and Children. in. Peb, Goat, Kid,
French Kid, Serge and French Call, in tact all-thi)
styles niannfactureo by: the 'best Factories in the
country.. . . - •
'A FULL LINE OF . DURT'S 0068 ON HAND
ROBES!
Mild received. a larger at*rt of Wolf. Buffalo and
Lap Baas. also Boras Blankets. WhiPs. dc., which
we are selling cheap for (web.
The largest assortment In this aertioa at correspond-.
log prima,. • -
Give ors call and low will bevelled
L. L. MOODY k CO.
L. L. MOODY. I
Z 4 W,1=110.1
animus arr. u an. -
Nardwara •
TOWANDA, PA.,
STOGA BOOTS,
CALF 1300 TS,
RUBBER BOOTS,
In endless variety
trade of
SAND-MADE
BOOTS . AND 010 ES
re. Ailing Loud= Goods
DON'T BE DECEIVED !
TOWANDA BOOTS
BLANKETS 1
Tataots, TaLvimmo BAGS. ke.
Xlsceumui.
DOR THE HOLIDAYS.
WATOIES,
JEWELRY
- Are iinUed tom inspilettenicl the
twr A..n• MOB? coxerzrz Azsorran
1 •
Of goods in this Iles Beier offered in "Iva bda
Comprising
GOLD AND SILVER' 'WATCHES.
From the elaavest to the best
JPINGrMI_JR;Y,
or the !AM quality aria latest st:llee, it tabl t
HOLIDAY -AM) 'WEDDING' rnraNis, •
TABLE CUTLERY,
A Urge asaortmetA Aul every style
,of
to erktUesa variety. Selid adeer and plated
GOLD k SILVER SPECTACLES;
To suit all eyts.
In (+4 I bare everything in the Jewelry line; and
at the very lowest price's::
MTM!FM, 341
de14"71
POWANDA: MARKETS
WHOLESALE PRICES. . -
,Corrected every et ednesdsy, by C. B. PATCH
subject to changes daily.
Wheat. it bush
Rye, busn
Buckwheat: lit bush
Corn, irt trash • -
Oats. lit - bush;
Beans. it. bush
Butter (rolls) p lb
do (dairy.)
Hags. IlHus
Potatoes, 11 bush.
Flour, VI barrel.
Onions: It bush
Wl6Olllll or Oaare.—Wheat 60 lb. ; Corn 36 1b..;
Rye 56 lbst ; Oats 32 ibis; Barley 46 lbs. ;.Ilueiwbest
48 lbs.; Hearts 62 lbs.; Bran 201b5.: Clover geed 60;
lbs. ; Timetby Seed 44 lbs. • Dried Peaches 53 lbs.;
Dried Apples 22 lbs.. Flu Seed 50 lbs.
p RICE LIST—CAScADE MILLS.
Flour, best Winter wheat, pr. sack $2O)
'• " •• hundred 1b5....... ... 400
barrel - 8 g.O
-Custom grinding tumidly done-at once. as the.ci
pietty of the mill is sufficient for • large amount c
cork. H. 8. - INGEtAII.
Camptown. July 23, 1870.
CENTRAL COAL YARD,
Until further notice pikes at pu.,l„ are, per ,et tnn
. of 2%)0 pound s
• - /NCH:LIME COAL,
Egg. or No. 2
Stove; or•Noa. 3 and 4
:Int, or No. 5 ....
. SCLISCAR ANISEAC;TE COAL.
.. .
-
Broken... .54 03 .
Large Stove it 03
, Small Stove r 51.00
Nut '53 ::5 .
The foltowing additional charges will boinadebr
•
delivering coal within the tiorougli limits:
Per t0n.r......50 cts. - Extra for carrying In 50 cu.
Balt t0n.... :..SS " .0 0 -.. .. 25
Quarter t0n...23 " 0 0 0 .. 25
ilar Leave Orders at my Coal Offlre. No. 9. Mu.
curs New Block. south side, or at Dr.. H. C. Pone:
Son & Co.'s Drug Store...
sir Orders must in all case be - accompaulel
the cash.
Towanda. Feb. 1.12. '
TOWANDA COAL YARD. f•
A....nTinuerry. AND BITMILNOCS COALS.:
The ende reigned. having leased yne Cool Yard
Dock at th e old ..Barday Basin." and Just comp:et:ea
a large Coral - house and Office npor2the premises, s: .
now prepared tq furnish the citirwas of YowsndSsn
vicinity with thedifferentktndaartaaizeeoftbeabove
named coals upon the most reasonable terms in try
quantity desired. Prices at. the Yard until (Mee
notice per net ton-of 2uoo pounds:
Egg, or 4..:......
Store, or Nos S wad 4
Nut or No. 5
Broker'
- - • • • ..
Large Bteve 4 St ,
Small ST '.. 4 0
Nut - • • 333
- '
"Barclay °..., Lump 4 00
'
. Iftnn of Mines IV
" • Fine. or Blacksmith sao
The following additional charges will be mita Co?
'delivering Coal within the borough limits :
Per r 0322; . 35 50 cents: Extra for carrying i l i. se cecti•
Half 'Fon.." .. .. .. .. 25 "
Qr.T0n..:25 " .. '.. .4, 4. 23 ..4
iiir Orders ma) be left at the Tard. cornet:of Ran•
road and Elizabeth Street. or at Porter& Kirk''
Druz Store. • •
StS.Orders mint in all cues be ace,mrsnied with
the cash. - di AHD & MOSTANTE..
Towanda. Feb. 1,. 18'2—.i.
RUBBERS
'HALL'S VEGETABLE SICILIAN
Ever}' year increases the poptuanty of th's isles
ble Hair , _Preparation; which ii due to merit atone.
We can assure our old Patrons that it is kel t fury
up to its high' standard; and it is the only reliable
and perfected preparation for restoring Orin' 'cr .
Faded Hair to its youthful color. makipg 4t solt I y*'
thous, and silken. The scalp. by its med. becoa"
white and clean. It. removes all' eruptions and dual•
ruff and, by its tonic properties, prevents the hair
from falling out, ma it stimulates and nourishes the
baintlintda. By ate use the hair grows thicker end
stronger. In baldness it restores the capiliSl7 Oa °
to their normal vigor. and will create a new growth ,
except to extreme - old age. It is the most economi
cal Hair Diming ever used , as it requires fewer sr*
plications, and gives the hair a sPleedid - gioeC
pearance. A. A. Hayes. M. D.," Stare Assayer
of
MaissiacbuSetts. 'aye.' "The const,thents are pare
and carefully selected for excellent qufditY and I
consider It the Beat Preparation for its 0141 11 1$
purposes:" • 4. • '
Sold by all Drwitgisth caul Dialtil in Ili/edict *a: _
. 'PRICE ONE DOLLAR.
Du. J. C. AYES Lowl.u. Manx.
• ' . Practical andarmlytieal Chemists,
ROBES
• • AND %OLD ALL. R017%1). THE WORLD. O lt.
Dr. U. C. PORTAL SON wbo , e.de
Towanda. Pa.. and for sale by dealers throughout
the odfuty.
Dec. 1, 1871.—lyeow
MIDTISTRATOWS . NOTICE. -
.1.31-Notki3 la hereby given that all perilous Indebted
to the estate of BleHt./P. tate or
demised, are wrineetedtu make tnattedude paitut
and all pervious' hating chums +aid -estate
must pram lbws duly aullionsusted tut seuta
&I& MOM
i'dlikaltile •
- I
Buyers
AND SILVERWARE,
NAPKIN RINGS
W. A: CHAMBERLIN
11 40 @ 1 b 3
8 00 10 00-
- R. M. WELLES, Proprietor,
R. M. WELM3.
Eigil;=ilMMl
1 - -
HAIR RENEWER
/ r
1
•
0) 1 10
20 (4, ',3
21(x' V
u OO
$3 no
11 73
SSN
5 Oa
. 4 75