II Lin ta n * * new *moor is riiii t !I . - t aghte4o-11010:14*04. e ,ca”vteOlka#,./11•:, . 101 l . 044441.: , , f H :l 6obigirbOditid ".* -4-“O6•4PgAn .7 i =Men • r9 24 1 1 4 1 01t Old *PeoPagiatgaarrilik.: - :--4)3Sordlihktiorlit* -- etiOtefig. one 110,Aurawrenoty Ohmic. : A "ruin tfictiti is of tramicAtid" goes S -0 0/ the e 1 k " , 061 —4aratiiga lysi • mi.; phur shower 1,14.11:5111411,7.: I —Toni imistoro4, %65.1,316, ft tue, in 141o:caw. - - - ---Lawretee: • *ABC. : glipPle7 B- 1 ,4'1 090 %endives hz bet thane . eieenite„ The. cost: the Nitv i 4 1° 3 tar /MA ikIIMPAod at Sitooo,ooo. , - • - —" earb Itt - is WI Hoolv, stir cis me for,litrest Imams - : • • I Ayers, Off' : Bitalingham; Eug.; has lined 1100 to giving "'poor ieri :Aug girl a goud chszsgtor., - 1 . ; —How: to. trest‘* ,bankrupt no; quaintattce—tOs ao,ucle,tif him. There - 141 " Old Men's Club" " rtuwar•Ohe sinusgems or whosiegimbeni is sc. _ . I • -13airaria, aceordink to the recent census, has s popaktion of 1,850,C138 inhabit tants. , • --The annual income, to the lady bo presides direr the -medic of bonnets, in Paris if tiao,ooo. • I —An upright popcorn' peddler iii Hartford has printed bis "Thoughts on lies ligion an44TamperazieL" 0 i —Delawartr.will T/ 1,2513,- peach 000 baskets this year, the product of 5,000,000. Pesch trees: 1 —The yearly amount of tea con" Burned in the United States is I 40,000,0E1 pound& • • —A bo.v at Terre Sante, Ind), jumped into the river after . his tisk:and was drowned. • , "girl" died , recently, bit rortsaionth 12,014 rho bad Iron in the salvia? of one family 69 yews. —Thousands of acres of sugar beets are - being planted in the vicinity nf Free port Yd., this year. r , . '.l —lt costs a Calcutta Sind iko about a &liar and a half to Iwo his body buried in good style. ' ' I —Somebody define.s mock turtle as kissing before company and fighting after- Wards: ,. . ,It is said that. more ice-, houses are struck by lightning along the Hawn river • than any other class of buildings. Pghty 'barrels' of silver ore, worth ti5SO,OOO tram the northern shore of Lake • finperior, attired in Detroit $ few days ago. ; —Partial returns of the; aawiesors in California indicate that the Indus Of property ' in the State is over $600,000,000.1 ; . - —An lowa man refused to i'see his• wife die, 1 because he was afraid she would pledge him not to rentatl7. • :. ; - ' —John B. Gough still b o las on. The Beaton Lyseum Bureau had *etre huh _dred applacanti for him last year.L o ; —A Chinese poem, Li.Bl writ ten 2,200 years ago, ta acid to prove dud Amer ica was known to the Chinaman of that day. •• i • Another mammoth cave his been discovered. in western New. York, with • natural summer-houses and sodarater foun tains. . • _ , . , . —The United States stemer Ju , nista is daily expected borne from the Mediter ranean squadron, having Gibraltar,lbe Boston about the middle of hay. I • —Treasurer Spinner has i received a contribution of $lOO from s eonsoienee•strich cn Neir Yorker who had failed to iv his Clin t om-honsp dam - . —Several Ip rominent English 'no r blnmen NI.V.e will make the hearts of Sir toga hotel keepers leap by speruillmi some time itas summer at the sprutga. I • In the House of Lords thezei are roueprjnces of the royal family. two archblsh. 4.p4, 27'dnkes, 32 marquises 167 etirls, 36 cis comas; 21 bishops and 185 bitrims.: —Captain Thomas ,Patterson has been ordered to the command of the receiving• ship.o.lgo, relieving Captain R. B. Lowry, who • is placed on'weiting orders. —The New York ~ Standard, in re porting the departure of the Twoode in the • steamer Cuba, nye, "An unusual 'qnantity of virtue loft this port yesterday for Europe. •4The Russian Embassy at Teher an has Informed the government of i3t. Peters , burg that fever end cholera have *dray die. nppearatfrom Poole. The berrestl prosPente, aro good: —IV Washington special says that, owing to the condition of the Treaty, the Soo ,rotary or the . Treasury hai decidedth be. • will negotiate no mom bane ,Enrope t our the pres e nt. :• : - I i , The " Rognete March " has been' foistea apon the innocent yrohlie of Davenport, lowa, j tinder, the title of the "Greeley and Brown Polonaise." . ' • • - li . ; — The citizens -_.. of Battle Creek, ' Itichigatt,:havo 'rewarded NW. Emma Pearl. of that city, with s fine gold watch for taking care or a small -pm afflicted family. ' , • I • . —Lieutenant Sidney _l3. Dickens, of the IBritish nary, died while ea made from England to Bonbay recently. He was the fifth son of Charles Dickens, the novelists. , I 1 , -4 examination of the ; records in the Endowment House at Salt take City discloses the feet that but three plural mar riagea uerneelebrated during the three Months ending 'lnn° Ist. , . —The glass works of Ril,y 4t.Co. IC Birmingham, near littsburg, were , burned Thursday night. The packing room, with' s large amount of noir stock, was saved., Lam, - SAOOO. Fully ins,urcd., , -=The Juno report of the !Depart ment of Agrionitural will not be ready for pub. lieation before early nett wool/. The :dare' hare not been compiled, and therefore no in. telligenec can be procured concerning —The husband. of the hEchigin ty, who attempted to fill keroiene lamp • while it was lighted, was obliged to accept the offer of a friend's bonito ht to hold his funeraL - . • !' --Justice Dunn, convicted 'of man slaughter in the fourth degree for killing Sam. net Calvert, keeper of .the noose of Refuge, New York. trairen sentenced to One -year's imprisonment, the lowest petislty allowed by law. —The total value of whale cateli iiio impeded into the New Bedford district during 1871 WY 743;82,593. total for .1870. 190,960 ; for 1869, 911.067.563 ; for 1801. $1,019,-. -452 ; for 1867,'. sl,39l,ooB—showiog a mgree. Rive dearue. —Tenni° C. (lain has been elect eft colonel of ttio 83th regiment, coke;! The first vote taken was 193 for Was •Ittallln.aul 50 in opposition.. Great confusion occurred. but the election was finally made nnuninpna. —Put not your faith in lihn who predicts shot reason—he keeps Ice; itor In him who predicts a cold one—be ewat • cheap clothing dote ; nor yet _in him who declares a wet one—,he hue nniWeffas tttor a itlOy one—he sells burr. —X respectable - citizen -of Esseic, Miss...bas dng hu own gray&the past week. Ile wanted to be hinted new his nearest and dearest friend,' and fearing his wishes would not be complied ititha bethought he weak] do his own work. • —Thee simple expedient of driving down an iron pipet sand the life of Levi Mari* chard; mho wax recently buried a well In Melrose, lifaxsubusetts. It was three hours before he was rescued.but the pipe *am /dm air to lima / the, and he reeoveced. -—4 e 4e Cart* of Now Tilt,. has rendered a decision that, the wirrant of Governor Roffman surrendering, Carl Vnt to the Belgian authorities, is tmoonstitupma4md Vogt has been remanded far trill on; *amp of carrying stolen property into the State. —The ace of Anson Burlingame), et Mount An Cemetery, Csanthiste,Mass. has boon recently adorned with a ssreopbagns. On the host Inscription; in old Bngllsh letter* Whig natne,and on the rear slab are the words: "Born Nor. 11, UM Died AU 13 9 P 11 4 "• I —The tummy& of,_/ 0 6" 41 1 1 in tie Mate of Michigan last winter was 2. SAWA* feet, or 181,5e3,000 mb.to feet, hoardi mama. Ur this steam* 1,k15,6. 1 4 002 feet 1 "" era afloat in 11, 4 wo itom::,1 11 00 ,) , The lumbar is nrktly 1 ' 444°4 from•f2-5,00,1,thei to 115,0tAvot; I EMI taibriftpatt .1001VORS s M. 0. GOODMIOU. .11V: ALV Towanda, Thursby, 2gno 20; SUM:IIMOANS ;aIWASZ! An, effort us being made wage Dezneaustie auspices, to organize Gion and lizcwor Clubs in the Nev. eral election districts 0 this minty.. Republicans Will do well to consider before being drawn into such a movement, Whethei theY are preps* ed to go' vez to the Demexuntki par 7 ty, and lend !their influence is bring ing back,to control. in the . Government, the — *en who would have destroyed it, had not the, 1111tri otic_people of the • North lent' their aid in defence of the Tinian. Is it wise thus early, to become comMitted to the fortunes of the Cincinnati tick. et? Aelnowkaging that there may be in the minds of some men, at tachments for Enlace Chuumstgrow- IN out of old associations in politics; yet his present political iimociatame„ and political sentiments,when reflect ed by. the National Democratic Con vention about to assemble at Balti more, may be utterly distasteful and repulsive to all earnest &publicize ° I. Democrats are busy, and eaPeehdly *so in this Borough, pushing Republi, cans forward to make haste in or ganizing Gamer and Baowa Clubs; in the hope that every Republican they can inveigle into the movement, will be commita to the defeat of the Republican ticket, both State. and National.. It is :gale for Republicans to eon= elude, that when a man has so far hUmilisted himself by crawling and cringing to the late rebellious element in Deinftratk: polities — , as to make him an acceptable candidate of the Democratic - party, he ;is: not 'a safe man for Republicans to vote for. We say again in all candor , - wait for further agvelopmenta. Se... The democrats make a hue and cry about waste cif money by the Be publicans. They give no prookbut ex pect people to believe them, although every assertion they ever made about the currency was a falsehood. We can now present a. democratic gov ernment of twenty- square miles of territory,where five times the amount has been stolen and squandered in two years, than has been lost , by the Administration of the° United States in seven years. We refer to New York City and county. This unfor tunate place is managed by . a ring of pure democrats. Some democrats excuse the party for this robbery by saying it was foreigners who plunder= ed the city and county, others say it was the Catholics holding the offices of trust. Whether this is so or not We do not meddle; it is - enough for us and the people of this country to know that they were all deniocrds. The first mob was a political riokand the last a Catholic 'riot, but -they Were purely democratic.. The plun dering was done alder the nose of Mr. Gems: and• he did not - disclose it, but rather apologiied for it. Yet he prates abiint losses at Washington city. How IT STANDS.—We notice tluit some of the laleral journals, of the sanguine order, are (macidating that Greeley will receive' four-fifths of the DeMocratic vote, should the more Convention indorse his nomi nation. Supposing this estimate to be correct, this could not elect him. One thing is pretty certain : that in the degree in which the Democratic masses come up to his support, there will be a corresponding falling off in his Republica's( followers. The ag gregate Democratic vote may be pet down at 3,000,000. Deduct one-fifth therefrom, and -the ' , result is 2,400, 000. Add 200,000 Liberal Republi cans (h 6 would - hprdly, =der. such circumstances, receive more,) and We have 2,600,000—0 r rim= Um 100,000 less then Mr. Sijrniotir recei ved at the last election, when the Re publican. majority exceeded SOO,OOO. To Succeed, Mr.' Greeley watdd_ have to receive all the DeMocratic• votes, and: at least 800,900 des from ince other than Democratic. Can he .get them. ' The New York Staitdord says: 'No word of dissatisfaction comes from any !mon or press pretending to represent the Republican party, while many outside of its ranks give th.e ticket a hearty approval, and will cast for it their votes. Froin pres ent appearances it is certain that the' Republican nominations of Grant aril Wilsou . will receive larger ele ctoral vote than has been cast in the last thirty years. No defection di videa the RepublimuS'and in voting for the nominees they will be joined by the large class of the people who vote upon their' free convictions of right and 4tress. The Philadelphia Convention na m ed our nemt:Tresi dent and Vice Preiiident." 'Good - Teinpiart have •••.. • - : . . ,41.4* , ik..tai 11 tl:e irk tt 'State filcha. • - • •tiviotthe New York World, and in ihd conversation whi.h ensued ex .. 'Pressed himself as tows: • "Ton know that am nei a Briublicaa nor a Great roan; whom I shall vote for or 4rbetherliriftwobtatrakt rbtiT certainly ant, for Grant. We,asirs Will not tun the risk of get , anoth in. and _Horace Aimed a et moms dad& ed (Ireelsymd Besides, I omsider seandidata The, *kW nominsti kiitebsd by-sonthern ' erhttorebele 451,4 t erre and:has , beim nidnly, by thmos. „I advise say One , Otto meow • vt4efilt Min Ltd Ond ouvlirst what__ • : sidenbarti bantam& loyie.OreS• I lei_Men with-JIM. Datil sok biz stet/ gur Offio wad pitri=r a us t a i rrfeetti certain that thentiiii distieretietahnn• if not it positive eontrad, 'between' iblito If Home Greeley enters - the t iiVhite ai ,... 4.4. 0n5e left Da n is will be as Win ou of the' tkm as Seward was hi i.Wolatilay. can veto for Greeley who Tabs, his. Me or pree cares fOrtis raid If by, a' frown of ra ones be is elected, 'L 'hall adltie rry Southern loyalist to load tbwrevolvera that Grant's arrest of Stalk Carolina Ets•lism,has • allowed .o be Wand& If be lalleeied hir =live in maids of Afly,whons no amaze re to shoot awn, and. show no after sunset. Lonely men WU be sliot Pll: =l' and no-blaek man MU awn a - nmile 6**,10 tours If any rebel knows the fact. .Ikir a loyal Administrstion to protect SO negro, t wo the rebel. and ,srhs the woa chance. Grant's little anger is wor ts damn at Gr e deA m - • • • This opinion; very catididly pressed. shows that Wnsesu. Piturs has read Holum thonoughly. It hibits the "Liberals inns:Mato as 'is. Thnpietnre is pOlmt. - • A 1501SURAW Loyal Soldiers, of . Pennsylvania, here is the ticket the Democracy present to your suff7: ll : - For Governor ' B. BUCK= ALM, the patron of the Fishing Creek rebellion against the draft; the man who refused to iete to refund to 4: 1 his own State, which he then misre presented in the Ifni States Seri te, the money she ha expended for your equipMent an comfort, and , never raised his voi against the re. bellion until it h been crushed without him. : For Auditor ral Wnar.ur NArrz.zr, who,when t o rebels threat ened our State, . was twice - arrested by Gralsrm. Coven, en commanding the Department of nnsylvinia, for giving aid,andcomf tto the ene4. • I n For ,Tri Supreme a--Jas . p omp. i son, who decided th draft law and the legal tender set constitutional, intending on the on hand to prevent the i the reinforcement of your armies in the field, and by des °yin our : cur _ rency, on the o ,to withdraw your.pay and suppli and drive you out of service. 1 • , This is the buzzer 's femt to which the Readingtonverition invites yon. tgl...The Chicago Times— seconds the World in oppositi ns to: Greeley. the Times is one ' the foremost Democratic paper in the country and has been very " liber " and progres sive hitherto. It sa : Asa presideuti candidate Mr. 4 Greeley has tio sitive strength ti. among Republicans , and is a cause of fatal division ,am ng Democrats. 'While there are tho 'sands of Repub licans who will . vote or neitherGnint nor Greeley, there ale stilt larg num bers of Democrats who will not vote for Greeley, though{ the election of Grant be a certain alternative. The e i daily - accumulating evidence of thii fact are such as no rational person can ignore. Mr G eley his utterly failed 4o mite th opposition to "Grant i ho has su ed only in ren dering the disunity ore pronounced and irreconcilable. a Presidential candidate for the op cisition he is al ready politically des f .. His election is among the thin gs p that are imposi mi ble. This is the table conclusion to which events' already come. There is no longer th least use, there is no longer any de. , —es aids' lom in arguing against this unalterable get. The nomination of c reeloy at.l3alti more means . the ebction of Grant. There is no other rae . .aning to it. As au avai Nte for the opposition of the question is. 13vcsiuw 18G3 an armed 1 1 Lion was formed (Mr. Btreimarte the draft. Its the "Fishing Creek the misguide tliis excess by ALES' and Mit loligth of Um to r e pel thi United Stater finally after pease by the word from Mr. terminated it, unspoken, shun .ALEW sat, in silence in the Senate of the Uniied States,dreaniing of cumulative voting and smiling I at the struggle of the Government for lit e. - Gen.' AIirIITNAL has resigned his nhembership of t e New Yorkl4- beral Republican . omwittee. He fa•rr: f However highly the ,candidate of the Cincinnati Contention may be esteemed as a citizen, and may have justly earned au em?able reputation for benevolence and kmd-heartcdness certainly the facilikf with which he. swing aroOd- the Orcle and indul ges „iii eitraorainft4 smers.aults entitles him to be Onsidered as the , 4 ‘first Serobat" in th political circus. - Hogs far he may be successful in the present 'atteuipt-rthat of riding two horses at oneci—remaius to be seen. Ifaursaarr.—The I following froth Gon. Bousen , L, in hie speech at Phil adelphia last weekj is a handsome but deserved complithent to our can date for Goierner: "driers' itertrand Joined mo hi the war %naval' an ellitient, boneitt eliacer. and prayed Innis& a perfect man. .I flare great confidence in him, and can trust Mimi I earnestly implore Ton to stand by soar Mete ticket. ?{o ?man ttolltirift !In Ifni woundid soldier* b.• 1141.t.011,A, Ix'. Wit erni and ‘ll . f r t.! I r 1872. 'the 1 1113 Love. Aber— UOlO - wally exportlag *elms sad selves plaied Aida spopulses t tee., bustnesay energy. sod sraoklag iselcuies. —svoll4/1011- • wareticoos% *ranged 'koala ilia with balessot bpi ggykadrivillesiek of (61 *SP* ind: sneeisi. f ind' as la bore at ,-movioaktommelsorsee- Od . Visitte the not howei; er 4 fult Itt ailuilininssudere;onelitre it there', the gin iii and PlildelgrAllkitotdidwrWitit thousands of oth ors-troiMbraood o,4Portlulitt. Mos* , deddlecidOne 4 .4 k icrest 144:4 ' ,Sational Clotireitikaii4ota4attaeronaettbul airibitiOuleariAnOi and diaeirpoktited licks* id0Pi05.19.91.4 libel lien • hepubl3o--bni .Iniresentetieen .Of party; iromiiimed otthn houest7maisies oT the As folly aa we Wire er ups:taint/4191d *edi t the utiniteiainesibled eatireke, bzeied-: ad ohr greatest eminstatiott. I. Pe rber& ht hit time since the kunatinis - the Oevereitent, has therebeeisetuly elite satablauttlatircionvan- Uons, a ge.nsterigetheehee otile,peOple (vibe. 'telling. Um lOgrester lunotiet: of enthribiam. 'At the Academy Of Hu*, genboombined the snout: briltiaat!,eiteruale with in:dm:tided Patriotic Shiaand baths:aisle. The brinAiwg, tuide and ott was a. perfect 'marvel of 'decora tivesit; and withiUnaillenee of four thousand specitakore, elieeting:with the wildest outbursts of anurrisisinii delegation 'after '-deiegstion 4 they cut their votes solid for Grant. was a untie novii to be forgottenby those Sitio wit ceased it. Every living being of the grim . is somblageweeenhis feet. Hats, hatelterchiefa, and canes were exclleilly waved, as shout upon shoat aroie aid echoed and surged with deg erdng roar rein pit to dozes. The mighty Mau outside, anxiously awaiting 1 ,'the tette:nog the 'great body - within, Were DO less' melted: l and received the announcement of the renombutlori of Oen. Grant with the wild tit. demon4trstious of delight. Cheer after cheer went up and out upon the air with s will that gave tenni/datable evidence of Its earnest adornment, and that Thiladidphils with the ' old Keystone State, would be found rolling up one of its greatest majorities In October end November next. The harmony and runty which . prevailed throughout the witire proceedings , of the Con vention/mhst afford but a' gloomy and sorrow fhi to the Democracy, who had looked in this coming campaign,for a split and demor alization WI the Republican ranks. Their hopes and anikiplations, bright and flattering as they may tteve deemed them'are doomed to asap, poiutment.l The Republican party Is composed ,of to much intelligence, and too much patriotf •ism to allow • division of its strength, or to break and go 'to pieces—cspeiUlly when there is not a ahiclow of reason for it. It has already been tried in every way, In which it was possildo to try a party. During the lest tee years; its .pathway hsi beep sur rounded with darknerd and danger. But with nnwavarini, firmness, it has met and reentered every manta; it has refuted every calumny I heaped Upon it by its. enemies; it has met and crushed out a civil war that threatened the life of the Milton ;- .it has reduced an appalling mountalent debt; it has lessened the burdens of the people; and, with its snug and and Silo .rions record, the brightest chapter in the his tory of theliation. it stands forth to-day,firm, united, and unshaken. No ono man or set of Men, not even the Cincinnati Convention; with its brilliant band of plotters. an conspirators, conspirators, is otimflicient power to are, cooUrol, or intimi date it, much less effect its dlsorginization. The Liberal movementorbich was bit-a trick gotten up by a few ambitions and disappointed Republican leaders to distract and divide the Path is rapidly being deserted, and its Chief,. instigators, and advisers, arc at the same thee being as rapidly !Oregon by their_ friends and -folloWers. MET. out .—ln ganiza, "linty, resist wu as and f©bellion, re led to of BUCK.. lit to the Ificatione of the suppressed and ex- rities. A °tad have remained The fact can no longer Lc ditguiscd, that during Ilk peat few weeks, its prospects have steadily declined. A marked cha..go has taken plac'eln public sentiment, and the sore-head cry of "anything to beat Grant," receives from the mimes no sympathy or support. Trumbull and iir..linrs bare suddenly become cold and si lent. Sumner stands aloof, gloomy and discon tented. While the assistant democrats and sore heads that helped to make up the pally, are all in a bad way generally. No two of them are sore in the sauce place, or to the same extent. First on' the list aro the complaint; and Ads of the disappointed' oMee-seekers; then those who failed to log roll their fraudulent claims through Congress with the men . that didn't conquer Cuba, and those who have not been appreciated by the people of their Districts. Such a hungry, dilapidated, and discordant company. never before attempted the formal. tion of a National party, and upcin so little cap; ital. Their whole stock in trade is iltaippoint-, mont and defeat. These are the burdens ig their songs—their food by day and their lodge ing by night. Smith capital indeed, but great• er thin they can manage with profit to thorn* . selves, or advantage to their friends. Drifting on the po,litical sea without captain. or pllot,or rudder, or compass, the boat which contains them must soon part asunder or sink with the weight ofets cargo of inherent rottenness. Notwithstanding the recent Berm attack of Senator &Winer; who, from his place in tho Senate,threatened and threw all the filth and mud that himself and his friends bad been for months capable- of scraping together, the Convention paw +fit to renominate Geu. Grant for the Presidency. With this great body of delegates fresh from the homes of the people, gathered from the North and the South, from the East and the West,thero was to be found to dissenting voice. It was an eloquent answer to the charges and vituperation heapc4 upon the President by tbo hisaaachusetts orator, who, to gatify his spleen and personal animosities, iron d seem= ingly be willing to overturn the party if poissi ble,• and transfer the Government w otbe hands. Arrogant, egotistical and vain,hc cantio/t will not believe that any ono rising 19Am tl e ranks of the common people, can poasibly pos sess the qualities neoeswary to administer the. affairs of the Government. Blind 10 the happy • and prosPerous condition of the eonntry,!blincl to the fact that, during the-t / erm of the present Administiation,the mostditticult questions tbr eign demestic,eves(presented to any party of the couribry, have / been rind and dissolved . he descendi from / the dignity of 'a Senator to pour fortkitipon the President only* tirade of detraction, Each as might issue from the lips of some iristi4 fish-sconian., Cep:Grant' inniiig again_ been placed in nomination, twenty-five Millions of people will *November next, prove their devotion.and loYalty to the party and its Chief, whose sword severed the bonds of the alaie,fortglit.and On . Tiered a pricked and gigantic rebellion, and saved the American Union. • N. . • • ser- "How long since the demo crats ionnd, out that Eleszusi nraa honest?;" asked a Republican of a Bourbon the other evening: "The day ho f signed Jur. DAvis's bail bond," said the democrat.. How very _ consoling ,to the few Re public ans who support Guns; to hear-Men who were known to be' reb el-sympathizers during the war, and who still believe, that their Southern brethren were in-the right,hurrahing for the.old Philosophei. stir 31r. BuczarmT's nomination ( says the Perry Frecnum) creates no enthrudasm on the part of the Dem ocracy. On the contrary ho is regard : - ed as the Gail= fagleman in the State, and therefore those in favor Of a straight out nomination can hardly express their ill-concealed thoughts that " for ways that are dark and tricks that are vnini".he has flevelopell conili , rl,:hle 1 referred - y e w s ibio w r y nt E 7 ;Ty tookpart 1 2 a v e.& glatriiiigres :sw,"= mho th. t fros Wee tekedeeea thiroame of Genera spoko ca we for the IPr IrM I ZZZ : nada eStin'iii. .tehtroll the Yellowing TienTaal ` , o;:_by Setnici!in* Stersollk .14#0 1 'pinvon 'ol6oitio.in,i'd 3#= tcOxii nntXtle. -3 1 irilf Eh° qua ,in2d g , the;GAinax 1 36 Peroi Ow" it 4. PIA"Fxs in the& cabman:- 710mrsan000 tdc Noboby ever; accused - Str: l EriA264olC of ialidioco; w rong:be 216;3::: told Mr. Svn anything of - the kind that he quoits, is`fOrtnniteli - pro Ted hy the record: 'Everybody in pas delphia :remerabera - Mr. STANTON'S great; V** at 'Um AneademY of Muaie, jmst before: President Gams electim, and the following extracts show; the complete falsity of Mr. Sua6vu'a tcatimony: MIL vrAsirox's sr ex. . Ladles awl Gatti:ernes, • Fclbste.egiseus If Pkikuldpitia :—Thts mighty:, ooneceitsa. s the largest them* eyes: ever beheld, is atgniflcant of two' Ching. :• Fast, it Is 'a ,Indgawat Ayer of Liberal, *ante • w. • , rpon,the election next Tuesday, the Srd of ,t;il. 'craft, I behold the rock of one tuitional Part j entapon the triumph of the tanner which As held la the heads of Ulysaea 8. Ottent, 1 ,be hold the victory of the principles of freedom end Driest government, now, end in ell, time. • a- . • • • * . _ Why then, tellow-eitiseits,have you this night passed indgmeut in favor of Vlyssea 8. Grant and against Horatio Seymour? The first rea son is from the Persons who put them in nom- Mathes before the people, anti ; s he are now virgin them - forward as Molt tes for the of the _Milted States. They met In New York s. abort time ago ; and who were they? They were red-handed rebels prisoners of war to the 'United States, they and their as sociates. These are this man who, pain nom ination Horatio Seymour. ' WhO pus in nomin ation Ulysses S. Grant? The great Republican party, that bore this nation triumphantly through the war,, ender the Divine blessing, amid the trials and dangers • arid all the vicissi tudes of the great war that we have just passed through. Ho weir nominated by the great Re- publican party. The first reason,then, why we should prefer, Grant, on next Titesday, to Sey mour, is to be found in the organisation and persons who placed them in nouunation,end in those whom they 'represent. Grant represents the loyal heart of America ; Seymour is a hat cling agent of Wade Hampton, and Forrest. Another reason for your Judgment I is to be Eland in the merits of the persons themselves. a In Greet we behold the loader of our armies in the pith of victory. [Appisnse.) In Grant we behold the groat General who, under Divine Frosidence. led our armies, supported sis they were by some of those who argil before you to night. The same gallant General who, assist ed by your Governor, John W. Geary. sod aid ed by your Late Governor, Andrew G. Curtin, here at home, in the executive council and State Administration, led you onward from the Mississippi to the Potomac eastward; until •no rebel-flag poisoned the gale on this, continent, These then are the reasons which hilly justi fy the choice which you will make next Tues day; but these reasons are denied by others, and chiefly by the agent, the representative of Forrest and of Hampton, who has recently been traversing this continent fbr onethbusand miles, giving rea.sons why Grant should not be elected, and why the banner of the Union, dis honored and Inglerions, should not be entrust ed to his bands. • • • ' • • • • • • The mistakes Mentioned are, Seymour sacs, "the mistakes of the RepubliCan party." Whit then, has General Grant - got to do with them? (Cheers for Grant.] While congress may have made ndstskes, if you please withoet namber— day by day made nustakes—Grant was- before the enemy's face fighting him ; ho was taking no surrender, exeeptthat it was 1 . Vocondltion al l"- [Applause.] ?io terms loft his lips but "Unconditional surrender" of the enemy of his country: • • • • • • • Upon the ith der of July, V363,notwithatand tog the conduct of Horatio Seymour, the sun of nor country's gtory burst forth. in splendor through the dark cloud of rebellion that hsd for vette years oicraliadowed It, and the bale ful Exhalations of treaaon were, scattered. Do your ditty next Tuesdaj,and the sun of our pa liticarglory will shine as brightly and with as great a lustre as it shone on the day of the ith of July at Vicksburg and at - Gettysburg: [Ap plause. Vote against Grant, and the darkness and gloom that will settle over this country like the pall of midnight will settle deeper and deeper over the land, over its prosperity, over all the elements of national honor, over ail the elements of national strength, and She greatest calamity that ever befel a people will happen. May divine Providence avert, that catastrophe I STILL 'llonE mrratoNT On the same night,' Mr. ST.VNTON was serenaded at the *Union League, and spoke as follows: “Fetlow-Gitizens :—Gen. Grant never lobed upon an army of the onelny of his country but to =quer it. Applanse.File never sat down before a rebel stronghold to besiege it , but it fell before him. The same arm that supported him at the head of ha army, and the gallant troops that !allowed him wi ll continue to ui* bold and support him, !wawa ho repreaents the great American Heart ; and the triumphs thatluvre been won by the physical arvaies,will be more than repaid, thrice repaid, by the glo rious victory of next Tuesday.” -1 It is a fortimate thing. that th dead Secretary has left it out of power of the living Senator t him LAw Surr.—Governor / Geary is en • gaged in some heavy litigation in the courts of San Francisco. , When he was Aleslde of that city he loaned money,aand it i for the recovery of it w that ala • is now pending ; if i t the result • : favorable, it will make, him one ~:f the inillior.aires of the lane:l76o Sin •Francisco P.vmuiner in its`court•reports thus notice the • .rtant case : "A moo was corn .. ()need in the Fourth District Court yesterday that illustrates the high rate of interest paid in early times. It is the suit of John W. Geary, formely Alealde of San Franciscan= i Governer of Pennsylvania, to recov er nearly a million of dellara from the estate of- Simmons, Hutchinson A co. The amount on A,ugast 11,18. 50, was $62,000, bearing interest at five per cent, per month. The firm failedAn September, 1850, but Geary after , gettrng judgment couldzfind no property. He now brings - suit against the assignees of the firm to lenjoin them from making any con- _ veyances of the firm they still retain. At compound. interest., which was generally the rule in early, times, this loan would have nearly -equalled our national debt. - va...Trts Rachman's Journal (Clear field)says : "the Democrats have con-' stand) , professed to be friends of the - working men, but by their action at Reading they have shown the cloven foot completely. Franklin CONVCID, the greatest enemy . of the laboring men to the coal region, was nominat ed by the convention to a very important position---delegake to the Constitutional Convention and Judge . Woodward, thiice defeated by the workingnum of Luzerncounty,. was particularty honored by being placed at the head of the ticket. Such is the treatment of labeling Melt by , the Damocrata" It is really amusing to soothe weak and silly attempts of a..few democrats to defeat the nomination of Col PieLLET for Congress.. The Colonel owns the party in this coun ty and ho knows it; and when the convention day arrives, will set aside his adversariegoa wire the reA with the sum' conte4t he Manages . the laboring men about him. 1:33 "Dating the war Greeley made triota and minded troops ; Grant lead them death or called relm t vic anza tb4 GIN IVi i r t a li s li stree vale : Grant piaataafibw in the Adestima, on the Aimee, Mai '67etersborg. Viuttevcrive may _think and say. - 4113 - raiitiiii - a - eitgan,' we are free to Tenn= itif•lserviccelasus soldier, •and tti.. aided* this 'method of acting a campaign nand hip: 7 We among nail Who hate a strong faith.irt "the ozunraou sense of the peopleand in their love of jos ticzt, and -we_ ire firmly pecsniabKl that newsperra'rescatmg to covert Witch of this sort to belittle Grant the soldier are doing more to . • elect him to the Itrceideney than warmest friends .could ask. * • to,„ • * * • Equally,;Latino with the ,implied base reflection in this naikliwest or gan upon _Grant- as a solllier is the praise . of Greeley me " patriot. If the campaign is to bo fought on the issue of conduct during the „war, we know of nobody, this side of Hawn and Dizon's line, on whom a poorer fight can be made thin Horace Gree! ' ley. We arfert without the slightht fear of succesefal contradiction, that Greeley never wide a " patriot " in any each sense es ; is here. meant ; never enlisted a single man for the war ; never called a single volunteer " from the hillside and vale," online it was to' serve _in the rebel army. This sort of stuff may do in tho rural districts of the far West, where the Cardiff Giant and -Horace Greeley are still believed in as among the wonders of the age, but no respecta ble newspaper in this , part of the country would so venture to pre sume upon the cre4uliV-of its read , CM. The cowardly assertion by Mr. Greeley of the right of:secession, be fore the war broke out, encouraged the rebels to enter upon the war, if we may believe the testimony . of some of - the most upright and clear-minded among them. No sooner was the first ill-judged and hasty blow struck on our side et Bull Butt-..a blow which his own paper did its best to precipitate— than. Greeley turned upon Mr. Lincoln to induce, and :so far as his influence went,. to -constrain him to give up the contest - then ' and there. Ho used over personal appeal ho could urge, and all'the power of the public confidence he was supposed to com mand, to persuade the President that that was the only course that was, left him. Not less frantic nor less pusillanimous was the appeal he addressed to Ur. Lincoln when he issued his first proclamation for three hundred thousandmolunteers. That , act, he thought. unwise and unfortu nate, but as it was committed and could not be receded from, his advice to the President was' to make, as the next best thing, only a single effort with that array, and if that effort was unsuccessful then to give up the contest and make the best terms he could With the South. Mr. Lincoln did not, we hardly need say, even entertain such corm -1 sel as this, which,whatever may have [ been its motive, was counsel for which none but, ' rebels could be grateful. But private-effort with the President havuig thus failed, Mr. ,Greeley thereafter made his appeals to the public under the signature of his own ini ti als - in his own paper. He urged a settlemest at any cost of honor, with all the zeal of Cole Jewett, and in intimate, almost . teri:ud, labors with that ble Patriot ; ho propoied that fonr hun dred millions of dollars : , !idd be paid to the alaveholders • . the price of their slaves, and as , . inducement ii to them ' to give up e war-; and, failing in these eff ts, as he had in others, to pa: cl .h r : a peace to destroy , confidence in . Lincoln's adnainis -1 tration he evored to inveigle the ei n President i to a conference with such creatar ‘s,George Sanders and oth ers, pre ding to represent the reb els at/Ningara,by which they hoped to time and erabarrasis the gm eat. It did not increase Mr. / Greelefa 'complacency, which in those times was so oftenand so rude ly shaken, nor check the deep hostil ity-which he felt toward Mr.-Lincoln, that these famous efforts at peacAi making only covered its author with ridicule. Then, at another time, he was actively interested in the elder Blair's attempt ,to patch up a peace on the Potomac ; and atanother put himself in correspondence with 'the French Minister at:Washington, who hoped to induce his master, the Em peoror Napoleon, to intercede be tween the -United States and the Confederacy, and to bring about the recognition of the- letter, ostensibly on the plea of humanity, but without, regard to the fate of four millions of negroes, whose special champion Mr.. Greeley is now said to have been. Through the whole of the war, in short, from the firing upon Sumter to the capture of Richmond, the 'of ? forts and the influence of Mr. Gree ley. were exercised virtually on be half of the rebels, inasmuch as they were constant and unwearied to bring the war to an end, no matter at what cost of honor or of territory. This he was ready to do at any mo ment at the instigation of the north • ern friends of the rebels, while ho never went near Mr. Lincoln to give him one word of comfort or cheer, to offer to sustain him before the peo ple, or to hold up this weary ' hands of the mini on whose firmness and judgement depended such tre mendous-issues And, finally, when the ,war' was over, when. differences of.opinion among ourselves, at least, should have been forgotten and for given, in view of the magnificient re sult of a Union preserved and slavery - abolished, the vindictiveness of Mr. [Greeley against a President who had scorned his advice, that he might save his country, was still cherished as a virtue. In " The American Con ilict,"—a book which , some of our readers may remember as written / by Mr. Greeley,— thongh . consisting of two large volt:Meg arid mean t to be anexhaustive Motor? ofyi "war, the name of Abraham Linc oln' never ap pears except' as' it w * absolutely necessm to it in its , fficial relations. ,If the student of e ery a hundred years hence s , . . d 'resort to that work— if su f a case is possible— for inform s on in regard to the war, he would, ever. gather from it that he Pregident h.ul any thing to do with its successful termination : that thepeople then and posterity forever ,ow‘xl it to liiiii more than to any oth er man that Freedom had not veiled her face in sorrow, and Civilization had not turned her footsteps bad:- -- - . JUDGE THOMPSON A sTHE s 3 • =The follewin' g rMele from the unsport fpikniiist will give SP mnidtni of _r the loirther.:.. ing interests' ...ink of : judge Thomp- WM The 1 of ,the West Brach ey have. a veal , lively . of , the -action -of ; .. , Judge ThoMpson in On important case at their interests. After the law . Prilat paised'allowing . the 'boom corn la9y.to levy sn'extra tax on all logs passing through the boom to pity for erecting the dam, the company coin= alibied to exact pay one yserbefore the work was done, thus obliging the lumbermen to , advance money to, aid in fastening an extra monopoly upon themselves. lAn injunction; was asked' for, 4 restridning them from_ collecting the tai before the dam .was erected. Taill wee granted by judge Jordan. •The'tsse wail' taken to the Snpreme Court and'. the boom company, with their usual determination to win at all hum* dropped their 'Mims poll counsel and employed the son ctjudip, - Thonajoanit , to argue_ their case bdorli hi& father. Ife was not paid a spWAH fee ; bata contingent one, the amount - being one third'of the extra bOomige collected from the West Branch lumbermen that ;ear,; ,in case he shanld win. If he did not win the ease, he was to receive no fee. He did win and the extra tax collected amounted to about $70,000. By this decision judge Thompson put over $20,000" into his own eon's , pocket and took it oat of the pock eta of the lumbermen. We have 'read of judges who (refused to - tit on the bench when their son's 'were engaged in even criminal snits, but that was old fashioned honesty. dndge Thompson had no such scruples.. He could put a small fortune into the hands of his, son by a decision and it is not strange that he decided ins way to do it. To say that such a, combination of circumstances bad no inftneree on the decision, is an easy natter ,• but it is a very hard, matter fora father to discharge from his mind . all fath erly feeling in a ;case where so much was at stake for his son. Some Judges would not have allowed them selves to be placed in such &position. Bat the lamb:lnnen have paid the tax and. the Philadelphia lawyer, son of the Democratic candidate for judge, has his big fee at their ex pense. They still remember the very equivocal transaction and will vote for Judge Mereur, who is not mixed np with say such complications. 1119. The Republican Party prf sents a candidate ',for Presidentyrlio has been tried in every 7capacity in this great Republic ; the ic.diliate for Vice President is the jending 'Re publican 'statesman of the age. The American people ow and ,have confident() in both. "Allvortisemets. A & H ILDI:ET .H El' /Eir /' 4 offering great bargairs iu DE - 0 . 0 DS Look at the following low pekoe JAPANESE SILKS, JAPANESE CLOTIIS, 25 to 37!,c. BLACK SILKS, An iniMenso stock of DRESS GOODS Tram 20 cents upwards Stripe and Figured Grenadines, Black Grcuagliucs, GRASS CLOTHS..., DRESS LINENS, ALL SHADES. 11QUICS; VItTORIA LAW VB, and other WRITE DRESS GOODS. At much below last year's II A WL g, rrotu $l.OO upwatda, &Ina WHITE GRENADINE, BARECIE, AND SNIT riILAWLS, PAISLEY AND WOOL S In gnat tlnicty P A B 'At j ced pdcea Counterpanes, Table 'Linens, Towels and Crash, Handkerchiefs, Fancy Goods, Tickiugs, Denims, - Cottonades, . - " Prints, Ginghams, Cheeks, Stripes, • And tunny other combs much belmr ttuday'r mar het Titre. EVAITS & IMDIOCTEL 'rowan,.la. June 12, 1872. - • Bible Street CAMP ~& NOBLE" . Insurance Agenc3r. DMIESO A ris.t.vcirAL (...711$1S prada4 men put their trust In hunks of undooaski saveisty. sit*Umtai-lielwriemoklirani;v l lNl&ftMli!NO - ercse ki4eseihoitli.."&_4lAlC snot di'iiiiniuriug pub• lic t ha t t he, r t ' th*Vl-att ln tip Po* ir f, aZih t F!"1" Itkilw ''' ll"l 'i e : 11 19- itits rfste oppriiiihnp! ember thin a 40itotfia _ iirtkie; i offered aLlskalexer . pia a Vuy-ir.c/II ikar*/ ietirpnizal onslrunit:ance Agency. inSCUII4IIII.I4: Our c iNisosiatt Onitpazi in.4 . 44iiriug the axney of others at grealcr co and 'mare ante cvitat the tatitraisit fiat . ot col:aptite:a fig Abe catilliaglw lion of propertrowiers and others, aiiil solicit tlo patronage of allthore desiring 50 to 75c MI mitts. Fiom 23 to 50 cats. 25 coata aatl upwards. MI 'shales. EMI 'S 0 L S Id CURTAIN LACES, cards and upwards Hoop Skirts, Corsets, Gloves, Laces, Pl.rMll • ! ; • F I lts.trivivivan U'I~IDOUI rED i ; ECUEI ' I!Y ', Therotore It It Vs lel Odin": Cutafleure we present INSUII4SCEI4 I .1.0.31• pital awl Aavotta.. .. ... $ 10.9.,000 10,009.000 1.187,090 1,123,68$ rithGVIL 600.000 2,000,91 X) 300.000 Apt 3111LIW- .!I ME TZTUNIPBr- - - . Oaress--- " • WrOunia— " " - Tlllllllllra Lurx-Aani Axt. - toiarr DAILWAT Pmaauctiza AktfiatiNCT, c 0.•.. DAILY AC:CII?.EST TICKETS. T. li CAMP.I a. NOITLX. I CAMP & NOBLE, Tcnrazois. mach .20, 1872.-Uct AgeniaL E TOSS COUNTY SELF_ T - DISCIELMOING WHEEL. 11.ANit: PLAftlit: SOWER Alp) DILOADZAST 011,A.Vi AND GpA SIZDEEL - . . , This to the best Wheel litate and the hest Grata and Grau Seeder and best .PhiPter S In the market. . , THE BEST IS THE C .gc - EST I , . . The attention of Bradford C ty Farriers La in vited. to these vaLVABLE MACUI CP, either combined or separate. . . . .. . . ' THE TOISPICUIS Co7llll' 'IMIT.L MILE 07 =ce . . hat bean Unproved las: season, ,so that Al.!, TM rams s Dr rso sus tear is antowu arson Ton new s. This is dorm by a very simple device, and with t any gears, rate he te, or brakes upon the wheel!): - A 12 year'old boy can manage the dumping with ease with one finger. f aria warrant it to a much hearten weadrookin greener hay, Mid to much store easily ; !managed and Aamdkd then agmeouspesting wheel rate. __ It h the best clearinearrangemants, and is the best ed, simplest, wait eerily operated, atoremegA mor ' and durable wheel rat. mow neared-to the public.' . . , . , Sir The Twirling County Wheel !take rill rind kus etsiaseor Isere Revolvers than tke remold...! tlheTeWeeila tAe t ii "f r ike I lat le ter; has beenacentndefaide in weer/ sesy. send foe my Bake enrols?, which gives ftfteen reasons why a good. Wheel !take le...bet ter and cheaper. for. the tan ic.% than the eo'utuon Iterolver. . . I" • TORPEINS COUNTY SEEDER AND ItASTFit sowzr: I ran xecommend as the best Itpaa.lcast Sowing machine I veer saw; and will warrant it to give good satisfaction -to the • farmer. It will sow perfectly _Plaster, Lime. Ashes and other Fertilizers; Clover and Timothy Seeds, Wheat. /40,, Oats. Barley, Feu awl Wick-wheat. PRIM OF TOMPKINS COUNTY. lI&IEF.AND crigne ER, DIZIVEurD AT LNI RAIL :rpm) STATION. - Wheel Rake. ctioaplete.. Plaster Sower and Seeder, attachment extra:. 23.00 Wheel Itake.Plaster Sower and Seeder combined ,e 5 ,09 Plaster Sower and Scalper. complete without loose Rake parts - 45,00 Wheel Bake attachment. or loose Dike parts.. ZOO Ithaca Wheel Mlle, at reduced prices ..... 35,00 ALL MACHINES WARRA.NTED The Wheel Rake will pigr the !weer. The Plaster Sower will pay-the tanner. • ` The Seed Sower aril pay the farmer. The tarzderneeda the Wheel Sake. The farmer needs the plaster Sower, The farmer needs itie Grain aid Grass Seeder. - e - 4.- Send for •Cterulars; vr, call and tee mi goo& cowards. April 23,11 SYRACUSE UNIVERSITY Term Examinations, Wednesday, Thumlity,and Friday, June 19.90. and 21. llaimalsareste Sermon. by , Daniel Steele. &T.D., Sunday. inne - 23, at 103 i a.m., fn the. First Dresby tertanDhureb. . , Sermon before_ tho Society of nedigious Inquiry; by Rev. Wm. Lloyd. of Rochester, Sunday, Juno 23, at 7i4 p.m., In thaFirst Presbyterian Church, Clandktates for admission will be examined in Lath:4 Monday, dune 24; in Greek and Mathematics Tuesclay, Juno 25; ann'other preparatory studies, Wednesday, Jane 48. Examinations 'F ill commence at 9 astr. • tnteatiee Esanthationa will also be held in the same order. Mondiky. Tuesday; and Wednesday, Angnai 26, r,-and 28. — Annual Meeting of the Doan' of Timsteer, Tues. 'ay, June 25, at 2 am. Animal Day, Wednesday, Slane 26. Mee esec Alma. 111 will meet at the Vnlversity at 10 a.m. • . Address before the University . Senate; by .7. P. Newman, D.D., Chaplain - of the U.S. Sw-nate, Jl/130 26. at 8 p.m., to `Meting Hall. Thtersday, Jnue 27, at 9 an., In Kir Fel T opens Angnst V. • .. J. R. rnizini SynamJ e soe'y of Faculty 111_1001D ek CO., 6bll militate t) taauttracturetbetr celebrated HORSE POWERS & CLEANER, and will sell a hence machine. for less money than can be had elsewhere in tie world. • We claim for iier machines that they will do as moth. Or mere, than alay other. and. aro more durably Wit. We personalty anperitited ear rift and me that It Is irelidewn. We will send , Drinuftms aTALOOTTES, _ of our- machine% on'applkation. - ONES TWO HORSE POWERS, Ontd rae rifRESETER SEPERATORS, THRESHER and CLVA YAMS. ANNING MIL L.k --r CLIKVIAIAND MAO UR 11117.1.6„ HAN AND GNI§T MILL work. doite; to order Olre us a caltbefore purchasing elsowberr "oo `sranv "00 ClOOrla 2.11t59. - 1 • AMERICAN M WING MACHINE ntscbtzto considered by moclutzgealmunt to =ST CONSTRUCTED, MOST DURABLE ing Machine orer offered to tho gobjle. lit .racrry or poNsTituarfox, EASE OF am vaiiirrxor WOIMMITEOUT-CTIANGE its' unparalleled meccas. wherever It has been need. speaks wonderfully for U as being the complete Family Sewing Machine iaow lu use. • aplatlen to LIGHT OR HEAVY WORE IBilMMiNiiiME WILLSON & MAXWEIJJ,. Di! TOWANDA. D.i Au their 'winner - of conducting their ',wetness to feet winning for them the ennftdence of the mibbe. To can examine Able machine at their unite to M •'a Block, or they. will cheerfully show.it at • • house without charge or grumbling. Don't t ther agents sell you a machine out of d de. or nd the Wiles before examining the AxeszcAs. , o den by or oUierwiee, will receive pronirt atte • lion.. Towanda; May 1, 1372. . . , _ LOST.—Oit Satnrday, May 25, 1g72. either in Towanda llorongli, or 'between T • And Water. *MACK LEATarit "Lcontaining shout S2O in money. The finder beliberally .rewarded by loaving the.semo at. thi office or with 11,17..1ituf II bAlibOt7B. pastor, ••' MaY 1b72 —3t• =I . iii c •4. - -.4,}3e.aled pro p•adsmobitritainituccwitca,,, Hamm, co nacctrions Waste es %Imams, J toss r, IXI2. until 3 o'clock. 1:4 Mt - 6e the banding m 1.4 mosshletlftirs Ilfsklte - liscols Masa Creek, Martha ; house of Joseph Hilton In WS Tovasblp. Sped", imams for the missrlally be Soso st the -Com m ), sooner's °film and tt lifli;a 01 0* of Joseph lb, far ten daps previous to slid kith*. O. =LOCK), XOB2lB OILEPARD, My 21. L 1172. com•r„. ME Eli I:A.N,DA. MARKETS. 1 1110:221AU. MICE& • sivillAoraglbaollay. by C. D. I.a7eil eabjadriskebabged 4:111.1‘ t • • 311 knob . GO :JO;arm. 4Etna' • • ' Omni II 01:44 blistr S .Beass,lll : Batter frothy* • U - 40 ,( . 1 - 411k :b. n o i, v !••; er 2"" bomb • • Hoar 111 barrel ip 10 00 I§ 12, .osione, 15 bush - 75. "sumo Ortam—Wbeatikllli. Cane 54 • are 56 lb& ; Ode 32 Lbs.; .BarleyaB lbs.; Lud,wh,..; Ss lbs. ; 13eaas 02 lbs.; lbws 20 Tbs.; Clover tbs. ; .Tfteettly Seed et Dried Pesehre TS 11)3 ; Dried Apples TS Ibt.. - 11ez 114;e4,50,1b5. • ' pRICE LIST-CASCADE MiTIAS . Mar. bed Mater iqiest„ pr. .... 4. _ WOd .$2 7, , , -•. ..... 5 4,4 , fa to 1.) 0 .Zalirlo - Ver. Vid.....0.01. Ni.• At. o.la .. , Onitoin pinatas: tart2Z7 demi it one, ii th,, ca . parity of tbrientlirsufllsitatpe a liry.,•.• it-,,,,,,,t 0 wail. . „ .-, _ -. • -t , IL-B. LiCil{A.M: Cariptara, May 22, 1872. PRI'DGE viu be toqind. lithe 'bowie of Alwri Seeley, In 'Welles Tarp., on Tuesday, Jun e 'until 2 o'elmik, pan.. for the building and ontel..ti. big a pridge across Willertown Creek, near the bowie cot Albert kleeley. lit sand TOmasnly, tioitrift. 'cations for this same may baleen at Pic ()immix. toner's office, and atdbe house of'dlbert- Seeley fur ten days previorus to said letting. • . ' II: imms, _ - . C. wurbe4; - • " MORRIS • conuninidonoes 90/ce.:llay 27;1872. COnrs. EMI - gELEANG ,Ori. AT _COST ! 11.11WAINSTliED account of a contemplated clangs in hsnin..., my entire stock of Goods, con/is/tog of a tarty /took bf READY MADE .CLOTHING BOOTS, SHOES, HATS & CAPS, TIkUNKS, VALISES, &C., IVIT for Maly days be offered AT. CO ! FOB CASH II .Purchascrs axe aolia to ek roeoe and price the goods • ' • E. scilwAra. One door son% oT PO 11 k Co., Main Street. Tcorands, ! Way SO, 1872. - - PORTANT L IP EE DismorEt OF DIFILOV/NG „THEIR BTOCI{.—The tmdersigned hartr4i, , Percha.‘ed a Doi: Durham Bull, sire the. celebrated ZoMe of (Wool, imported by Samuel Thorn, wouldplier ti k n for RN'. ilea the present semen at $2 per CVIT:. I wo n.E . D KIM 2nd, two years old in dune: at ' fl p\c[x. For either, the money taunt be paid Utilise v: ;Iry hie. cow. Would also offer either of the abea.p sale and warrant them kind and gentle. A. 60 co* - young cattle and six homes. B. F. lIOWSIA - Towanda, la. Nay 23, 1872.-43* 4 HRESHING MACHINES.—The biaiber has for sale a WHEELER Tf • LTA and /11cosZ Tyrtas to 411 d rumho•rr. .t.. 7. BLAKF.SLI. Lake, Pa., Juno 1. 141. Itonntaia • CAUTION.—AII persons- are can uonal against parrhastag a not.-zivea lA . Q.W. PnThuPsour t5l Bd. dated Apni the-same has licau.oar.a paid: .31.115. A. PAYNE. Shesbagal.a. Jane 31872.-w3 J . G. LOVELAND SON, CLOTHS, .CASSIMERES, - • itifEKDS, SATLNETTS, STOCKING YARN, ROLLS, ,k( COTTON & WOOL SHEEnNO Wool received and tlefli‘crcil fr!. .1‘,7. to those bz •thg wool to cant, or card nth] Ply:ll. at thtt followthg plAce4: , Ilentley Crerk. at. :Le store et Eulen.eqi c r r,.4; F , ultli,neld Centre, at 0. IL. .t C. G. Wc1,1,',.; at C. G. Manlerk. Fen's; West Franklin, at C. Y. Br:urn t Co.'s; LeE4 , y, at B. S. Tears's; 1Ntc...,11e, at E. It. 13ceker's: Mansfield, at J. W. Wilben,,%: Mainsburg, J. M. Clark; :girth .Tilwanda. Myer Milla. Weol Car,lod. Oar& and spun for '2.5 cutts per ponnd. • . J. C. LOVELVNII Troy. Sundt. I' 72.—Ini. CDrt.Urt(AjELART'S CHOLER A . CORDIAL tflf.Vra for years. snit it .0.! Lkith nettr-talling sucTet , s -fp thousand !ewes. It is warranted to Lire . Inouctliatt. E 5,t0.00 . It . -- CIIOLEPA, ; , I - CHOLERA.IIOI{BUS, A -8133111 ER COMPLAINT, .. 'DLi.RIIIICEA; C i . DYSENTEI3,Y, 0 .' • ' COLIC, - • ' 1 s , serycniK ,e.ricitabiliti from Aloolkolic Homiti- IA Ition, and in painful periodical teniale ailanidai . r „ lit is a isovereign remedy. ll ! Read tht7ular and le:tinioutal ,- in, id e . •wrapperi : ,i , . I L . . . . • 1 - CHOLEIZA • COIkDIAL i _ . • Is prepared at Wilkesl , :te e.l.E. , rrie're.. Pa- .1'1:10: 50 CENTS. - - May 3, 1t7"....4;:n . • . -_ _ ' . _.. _ B. M. WELLES KIRBY TWO WHEEL 'HOVER THE COMPLETFASUCCES'S of the Kirby Two- Wheel Mower has niver been in the his of miming and raping movie:neg. From every part - of the , con.ntryMconies ere nutted in regard to its perfectly satisfactory performance In every possible kind of work.. Last year I sold forty of these - Kirby mowers pearly all to be need in this eeunty. It.was the first season of introduction into this territory. During the season's use, the Kirby - has established for itself an enviable replita dion for itself - as a .complete - and i'aluable tno , ‘ In machine. Its rreputation as a light draft and powerful tailing mower, for adoption to aft -kinds cl grass and sm - - face, and for the COMPLETE CONTROL OVER THE CUTTING APPARATUS, have never been equalled, uithaut being .what is called a high iteared" chinoit has nevertheless exhibited WONDERFULCUTTIICC. CUl."11NO POWER when .driven, at a VERY SLOW walk t—securing thereby all the advantages of a high - geared " machine, With Ont eecry Ecitrivian! .disadvantage namely wearing out T . :Rid/Y . 3TA belm short lived, in consequence of extreme high motion. Send for circulars. '" It. M. WELLE', Towanda, Pa., June 5,1572. tlaneral Ar.,ent. 110WAls. i ;DA USICAL A(.III)ENY SUSQUEUANN% CpuEulATI: n•ri:; .- , Pupils will be received at any time at the fellesiw.: rates : PLatio Ports pupils. per quarter . til os Including narmony and yocal clans. per (r. :t) eu STrarrix FILLY cpuzzenux ArrlNcE: Reciations twice a week. blo deduction or made ups' except in case, of illness of fllOre 1104 one.week4 duration. - 4 - This Music School is classified into thrce , brarl• Ments, tiz : Preliminary, Primary and ,t , lynct 4 . There will !sea certificate given at the contpliiia of cach'course with the ;nudes.' standing of the mil Pitplht from a distance will find seconite ,, latlon . ; for board and piano practice in the -ip•t:tntikla very moderato prices, lioricia.—Mr.fthe.rwecal has a pro:in-4 - comprising the best modern methods, in . ••• 4 t"` . prominen. features and appliances ofthe • twt. War Lyons 3lusical Academy, of which 1:14 • t! , - Bev. L. IL Sherwood, was formerly princi proprietor. . . Mr. Edgar H. Sherwood has deeidrdlairsi •'-' r. musicil acquirements mad extensive cap-ri..a , • In teaching.—Editor Roc/taster Muskat Tine,:s.- Towanda, May 9.1872. - SPECKLED BROOR TROUT EILENLERGER S risflJ~i' NY-ilt TOWANDA, rA., • • Persons printing:mg trout 1111 hare the p!eacirii or Tinning tho ^ opeckleil beanies '• from the pist a /a L.ilac Walton A neat and commodious' honso Las hero elv. lol for the accommodation of .Nisitors, and furatiihcd with efinveniences for cooking trout.sportP il and pleasure scoters will nod this . one. of the - interesting resort* In the oituitry. It la &redly mi the lino of the S. At E. U. It. - • P. S. Orders for trout promptiy.tilled. _acid pcd t) any point, securely - packod in ice. swan trout for stocking Fisheries at.. 130 per stuileiarit•. MOSES EILE2IDEIIOEIt & A.addsburg, Stay 20. 1872. . , NITANT onorgetio Agen t, Maio or Female, who has acme Capital. an , l who can giro Roof] Were. ncesotrut !4•cluity4 requir• ed. To Tart TIIE AGIMer or the IrSrnIVNE. LoCk. britett totto'CrLS ?Amax ISLWISO MAOfll,5 for this , Ph". Address, y. D. firmtss, General Agent ter Pfmns3lTani 4 . R Corner Thirteenth and Chest.. rut rArrets. V.11.1111 , 11i5, bring . irpur produce an,;hlkx k , 741gReulr.. ).n. 19, 1871. for five,. dollars FROST Sri:sig. 11S14:11.)11K,11131S A.N.PLARD 41 - • I 0 1 41.16 is AlVtirS - • ___ . 'T -50 1 , 74 - ‘ 4 113vIt Litt • hte. : 4(- _F IT a 1141 f el 14 64 n MEE Jfannfcctorcrs and tleale:l , in MRII=MBJI DR. LIIQTIII.IIiTS TIIIL'III , IIIN . T EDGAR 11: SIIERWOOD, TONVAIN - DA,. PA ror. s kLE 0