Bradford reporter. (Towanda, Pa.) 1844-1884, July 25, 1872, Image 2

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EDITORS'
V.. 0. GOODRICH. S. W. AIDSDRDI
Towanda, Thcrsday, Nay 25,1872)
Republican Ticket.
rafiglalarr,
OM ULYSSES S. GRANT.
Natio
roa PILIMIDIRC; •
lime; HENRY WILSON.
Republican State ticket.
!Olt GOIrtMIOB.
G; m: JOIIN F. TIARTRANT
!VII SUPREME JtDGZ,
lION. ULYSSES MtRCUR.
vol AUDITOR OWLILLI.
GEN. HARRISON ALLEN.
von onanzstaues. AT LEG&
Ci EN. HARRY WHITE,
'GEN. LEMUEL TODD.
. _
*Sk(tio)44:oDl
Republican Co. Coromitte
The weathers of the Republictin
Committee Of Bradford County are
requested to meet at the Grand J.tify
Room, Court House, Towfuida, qn
1
FRIDAY, the 2(1 • day of AUGUST,
11 - `2.-, at 1 p. in
The atteutlance of even• member
of the Committee is earnestly re-
. quested.
110LCOMB,
chatrinitn.
Tun :inch, July 21, 1672.
TILE CAMPAIGN REPORTER
AVedirect especiatattention to the
prospectus for the Campaign ifr.
ruit.TER in .another column. We hoiie
cver'v subscriber will interest biiindelf
enough to secure at least one . new,
name, and forward us the money.llt
'is unnecessary for us to refer to the
fidelity of the REPORTER in past yea r ss i ,
nor allude to the urgent necessity of
giving circalatiOn to a journal which
has stood by the
. Republican party
and its principles,from the day ofits
oil.fan4atiOu, and enjoys the respe l ct
and. confidence of - tine and loyal Re
publicans wherever it is read. An
exciting State and National contest is
upon us, and eery gocd Republican
igust be brought to the polls on elec.
tiou days. To this end, no rinstru- -
,
mentality is so powerful as the news
paper, as it meets and combatsithe
errors and misrepresentations efithe
• i
nemy, which, if left unproVen, might
mislead.. valued friends, honest then,
and cause division in oni ranks.
Therefore every good Republican is
earnestly requested to aid us-incir
culating the 11Faquirsn.
===
‘ , ll[Yr AN ORGAN."
•
The 'fribunr does not. confinn its
opposition now to Gen. PItAXT, but
to the whole Republican- 1 party.; In
its weekly issue.of the 10th inSt, in
an article entitled,' "A few more 'fig
tires, we find tile following:
We eel tali ly are-thankful that the Army and
Navy have been reduced in size since the year
15w,s; that they are loss burdensome to the na
tion, at least in a pecuniary Bernie, and that the
motley which might have been lavished on idle
..16 1 , 6 . and idle regiments remains in the Treas
ury. We rejoice -that the country has been
proap erons. the revenue large,
the debt dimin
-1,11,,,i, and the. nation's credit sustained; but
when w.O are called upon to give Preinlent
;rant, or even the Republican Congress, credit
t. , r then blessings, we respectfully demur.
Tie ro is a middle ground between an econoreh.
at and a corrupt 'administration. ' Economy is
picdtive (polity: To administer a great pub
lic trust with wise economy is not simply to ab
atain from embeszling the funds. If theiclahn
which is put forth in support of the economy of
tL, President and Congress has any foundation,
ixe to look for it in the ordinary Matters
:,,N or which the President and Congress have
e , ,ntrot Had the, Government maintained the
Army and Navy on a war footing, they Would
ha ve committed an outrage. Much money has
, coa saved by reducing the military and naval
..ttiiilisliments, but whether more could not be
-aved we have no means of knowing. We wish
t. , find out whether or not the_ Grant Adminis
ti at ion has Nies economical, and to do this we
select proper.objects for comparison.
The expenset of Congress itself seem to fut.
All this requirement: Now we find that the
of the XLth Congress; from June 30; 1867,
1 , , June 30, 1869, was 56;051,074, Including
and that of the !List Congress' from
Juno 30, 1869, to June 30, 1871, was $11,223,012.
We find no evidence of economy here ; but, on
the contrary, a startling increase in the lull.
We are at a loss to conceive what we have had
f‘d all 'these millions. It scarcely seeni%posai
hir;''tlist the XLlst Congress was wOrtji five
millions More than the XLth.
The Tribane knows that during
tie XLlst Congress, the Southern
S!ates which had not been represent
ed for several years, sent members
and &nators to Congress, which. ac-
c..ints for the increase in exp Mises.
What
,do the very cousientiouslmen
who now , feel constrained to give
dieir support.to GItEg.LEY beat" he
is honest, think of such misrepresen
t:itions on the par. of the Tribune,
The "Philadelphia Pr ey s says,
Chief Justice TLIOMPSO:4 friend are
dCfending his record during the war.
The Judge was then, as he is rq)w, a
thorough - going Democrat, siding
with his party on all questiOns; and
among them‘he denial of the right
of the soldiers to rote: The position
of the Democracy ou this point is
unpardonable—that of the Judge in
defensible. •
Attr• We arc pleased to obsers 4 i e in
dications that a more genera) interest
is to be manifested in the Republican
Caucuses this season. The Wlsple
are determined to have a good ticket
nominated, and to this end willtturn
out to the primaries, and select the
best.men for delegates. The welfare
of the;party - is paramount to the in
tcreSts of any of the various candi
dates for the 'several offices;
- Evcry Republican should in
form himself in regard to the candi
dates seeking noruinations,and Make
no pledges. Let the merits of All be,
discussed at- the cirml- •••'
riri;il r . - I 10.,
lire( - 1% - dita'ld
f..!4:110.1.1t r the party.
. 7
N A ILLltlea =UFA"
The Triberte, Ailing, and :other
copperhead sheets profess the great
est horror at the discoveiry. that Mr.
ilowoms,Chairman our county Com
mittee. had addressed a circular to
the Postmasters of the county, te
questing them to furbish him with a
list of subseribets to the New York
Tribune." Not a word in the letter
against the Tribune or its editor . ; nor
a suggestion that anything should
be done to curtail its circulation, and
yet these very conscientious editors,'
some of whom fortaerly advised ,dem
ocratic postmasters to destroy the
Tribune, see a great and flagrant vi
olation of duty in Postmasters com
plying with the request. We fail to
see it in that light. ' By means of a
'dishonest and culpable trick, many
Republicans were induced at the
commencement of the prOsent year,
to subscribe !or the Tribune as a lie
publican paper. Mr. Grant= having
seen it fit to carry out an arrange
ment made with the democrats pre
vious to receiving the subscriptions,
to make the Tribune a Democratic
sheet it is no more than right that those
who were duped should be: looked
out, and supplied with political read
ing matter suited to their tastes. The
following letter from Mr. Howome
will answer the 'charges made by the
democratic Gionam organs:
TOWANDA, July 23, 1872.
1 ninon RaPoavvis : I see that lam assailed
by Democratic papers—including the New York
tribune—for having, - as Chairman of the Re
publican Committee of Bradford County, ad
dressed a circular to the Postmasters - of this
County, .requesting them to furnish me lista of
the subscribers to the New York Tribune at
their respective offices. I am unable to learn
from these attacks what is the gum of my offend
ing. And I care but little what the friends of
Horace Greeley think about it. Lot them pitch
in! It is a free fight! lam confident that my
defense in the minds of all Republicans is a sure
justification of the object of the circular.
The New York Tribune, having committed a
fraud upon its Republican patrons,by obtaining
large crabs of rubecnirers while professing Re
publican princijiles, and then having' declared
that it "has ceased to be an organ" of Repub
licanism, and gone over to the enemy and be
come an advocate and defender of the enemies
of Republicanism, and its editor a candidate
against General Grant the regular candidate of
the Republican party, it is thought eminently
Ret and entirely proper to obtain beta of the
publicans thus defranded,and take measures
to ha . ve them supplied with a paper advocating
Republican principles. With this I' trust . no
Republican will find canes to complain. When
Republicans make up their minds to vote for
Jefferson Davis, they will prefer to do so direst,
and not-over the shoulders of his erratic bonds
man. J. HOLCON:D.
S In the proceedings of the Bal
timore Convention which were tele
graphed over the wires, it was stated
that 15,000 Germans had asked for
the nomination of GREELEY.
"TlLe New York Sidles Zeilktng, the
German organ of New York.city,pro
flounces the whole thing a fraud and
forgery. The Stales Zeltdng says:
"The document in question, we
understand, was drawn up by
Messrs. Magnus,Gross, Ex-Alderman
Schlichting,and some of their friends,
and was presented to the convention
by Governor Hoffman. In collecting
and adding up these fifteen thousand
signatures probably the same arith
metical tricks were resorted to as in
certifying to the accounts for the
new Court House in this city, the
addition of a cypher being consider
ed a very innocent thing. This sup
position is the more probable, as the
'gentleman who had, this business in
hand had many opportunities'of being
initiated into the mysteries of these
mathematical tricks..
It would be surprising, however,
that Governor Hoffman:should have
undertaken to lay these assertions
befofe the convention without further
proof, were it not well known that in
signing, during his term as Mayor of.
New York, in 1868, warrants of the
most questionable character, in,. re
gard ,to which similar arithmetical
tricks were undoubtedly restored to,
he may have acquired the pernicious
habit of accepting, „without further
examination, assertions coming Irma
such bad sources, and of enhancing
their importance by 9cid weight of his
name."
TIIE TRUTH IN A FEW WORDS.—The
New,York Independent thus closes a
leader upon the Baltimore 'nomina-
Lions
" Democracy, having nominated
Mr. Greeley, and constituting nine
tenths of his popular support, if it
elects
,him will control him. This
may be set down as certain. The
use to which it proposes to put him
during the canvass is simply that of
a stool-pigeon to entrap Republican
voters; and, if the plan succetds,then
it will have other uses for. Mb as a
Democratic President. It is the
sheerest nonsense in the world to
suppose that having gone so far as
he has already gone, he would not, if
elected,be to all intents and purposes
a Democrat. It is not in human Da,
ture,and especially not in his nature,
for him to be otherwise. Let Repub
licans now defeat the Democratic
party in this, its last,move by defeat
ing Mr. Greeley, and that will be
politically the end of both. This is
the work to be done, and which, as
we believe, will be done neat Novem
ber."
ta. One of the most interesting
features of the GRANT and WiLsox
ratification meeting in Fanenil Hall
was the portion of ex-Attoiney Gen
eral 110.ta's speech in which he gave
particulars of his intercourse with
President GRANT as a Cabinet officer.
Referring to his position in Gmxis
Cabinet,le said: "I &Eire to testi
fy that during the whole period I sat
at the Cabinet council, I never heard
any measure of administration dis
cussed or considered except with the
single reference fo the'public good;
rapplanie and.cheersd and when I
remember the simple, direct and
modest man who sat at the head of
the table therc,and take up Mr. nii
ziaa's speech, I can but think be is
talking about some one else." The
testimony to GitANT's good conduct
of a man of the uncompromising
candor of Judge Ho.ut is worth a
thousand stump speeches and • cam
paign documents.
Seer In reply to an earnest invita
tion from a committee of the Balti
more Convention, to take the stump
for GIZELLY, Senator SUM:LIt replies
that while he has the highest
regard for Mr. G. and does
. 1: • %.;T. rfq " the' Minda
•
=I
11111 rt ~
IV)_ H. 0." ie biIVW dtfin e d to
Gh.. 1 . ..ti 1. .
imam= -
The mien of tr i bune need
not bejmithldbd.464,*; Alig“
hai *etetienite
Gl:at - sad tbilegilibibut4e*tel
4 x*O7 6 .#o l 4abilgralc4„ *the
Government ' Since it hat ceased to
be an "organ" it plays another tune :
til-oni Ihbuste of 7idlr Sth. 18721.
• We make des broad sestessM that than is
nothirg in the officio/ reports of Gorerffirsest ET.-
the boast
trim 1867 to the issue to coma-
Centime is the sZillatest ths boast of supe
rior economy ulna is so mods by the par
tisans q/ (ten . Grant. It b tan easy mallet
fora great and unwieldy Government. such as
that of the Unitei States bat now teem., to
mike progress to the direction of economy.
For the last three years, leaving out of the eo , I
count the Army and !Am t
the e = has
been the other way. WWithcollar =mg r the the
Ifarries and C
subserviency otOftV of aM *hat else Could
be expected? Let Us bbar • Mare, then, of
this false pretence or •• • • • as an fripsenent
fora second term of • • • govetmnent.
The above paragra . . is a re-hash
of the stale Wadi... which the
Democratic journals hAys not ceased
to utter from the firstlhour of Gen.
Graves administratkon to the mi.
ent moment. In this indietmentthe
Tribune goes back to 11367—a year
before Glen. t3noar's *dim Now
let us see what the same Tribune
said in 1870.:
• (num the 7S-tleme grAardi 3,1870}
The things, however, fol' which the ittlithib
tration deserves the lughest credit In otwanectim
with tha improvement of our financial condi
tion. are anch as relate to the outlying out of
Grant's policy at brandy and Yetrenehment.
When Grant annoaneed bial•brief and simple
policy for remedying the confusion otour &wt.
cial state ; when he began carrying out
ally the programme be bad nonounced,ri a llt
evident that we were shunt to take a long
stride toward the settlement of out trou_Mai.
Bat a v t r o t d erperirace if this potujO has
gone far public apectation. sa
that the deb has been • decreased during o
the y
year of his adininiatistbn * lOOOOO , OOO Is but to
represent • small part of what has been actual
achieved. To say that daring the first half of
the current year the revenues were increased
by More Waft' collection, et the rate of MO,-
000,000 a.vear over theprevious year, does not
indicate the actual emit gained for the public
Treasury, 2b say that the minuses of !he Goo
eminent hare been easily reduced ind *mit the
interest has been decreased by the diminution
of the debt, is only to give a hint of the retrench
merit that has been carried ant. But these
things have told with immense effect upon our
financial condition, and it is to the admirable
pair!' of the Administration Oat tee otre.the im
prorenieni which is novo, going on to its COnSvni
motion.
A Democratic paper recently took the troublek
to attempi to show that neither Grant nor his
aserved any credit kyr the brightening
I outlook. But Grant and his policy
deserve the very highest. Suppose his pl y
had been of a different kind from what has
been.? Suppose he had collected the - revenue
Im,
in the reckless manner, of which we had so
much experience ? Stip the debt had
been increased as It was the latter part Of
Johnson% administration—suppose the toasteftd
expenditures of Johnson's time had been con/in
iied7-supPose we were experimenting with
greenback theory and the repudiation fraud—
does any one suppose that our bonds would
now be at or near par, or that gold would be
quoted at the present price, or that one credit
would stand where it does abroad? 2b ask the
region is to answer it; ands to show the atituril
ity of the reasonini j o the Democratic organ.
It is not by the ' lay of any immense gen
ius or of any gigan tic or mysterious " plan "
that those great results have been wrought.
It is by the carrying out of few simple princi
ples of honesty and econordy, which President
Grant annonneed_a year ago. Thee can be no
more beneficent n a tural genius than is found in
the power toperceure and enforce those princi
ples. And having aided in therelection of Grant,
it g ires us pride and joiZ4e4 a ble at the close of
the fi rst year of hied • ion to point the
country to the results that , hare atreatly been
achterect ; to speak of the growth of the nation
al welfare as shown in thi financial izeprove
ment no less than . in the consummation of the
peaceful policy of reoonstnietion.
Smurruso FACTS. The Washing
ton ' Chronicle says hat since the
dose of the rebellio not 4 less . than
twenty-three thonsan' persons,black
and - white, have been i scourged, ,
ban
ished or murdered Y the 'Ku-klux
klans of the South. The victims of
their horrible barbarity have been
Republicans. Not a _single Demo
crat has suffered.
.ILoialty to the
United States goveTntnent brought
persecution ; disloyalty exemption - .
Since the enforcemoint of the Ku-
Klux acts by the present. adminis
tration, peace and; security have
reigned throughout those. States in.:
felted by , the Klaus. 1 The defeat of
this administration will be the re.
neval of these organizations and a
repetition of past ottirages. Is there
a Republican in the l a nd base enough
to be a party to so ,great a wrong ?
Millions of loyal
_Men and women
South are depinding on our party
and its:strong arm Of justice for con
tinued protection. The government
must protect them.
MS
have answered by soine of the friends
of Judge THOMPSON, the Democratic
candidate forSuprente Judge. -
During the war di p . he not declare
the law to raise me for our armies
to be illegal?
Daring the same
, I time did ho not
t .
declare the law to re' money to pay
our armies to be ills I? •
Was he 'not on e Bench when
'the position of the Prothonotary of
the Court--his son-in-law being Pro
thonotary—was used to manufacture
fraudulent naturaliation papers to
send over the State aid in fraudu
lently carrying the S to for the Dem
ocrats ?
Did he not decide in favor of the
State in the Credit llobiller case,and
thereafter in the same case, decide
against the 'State, losing our Com
monwealth $3,000,010 ?
is- The Toledo
I t lade says : "It
is a good thing to take care of one's
relations, if it be done in a ' modest,
quiet way. 'GRAN appointed his
father postmaster a Covington, Sy.,
at the insignifican t salary of $BOO.
,Tows T. Horrmss ( w ho sv is to be made
United' States Senator in place of
i ,
CoNnuxo, in case the Cincinnati
coalition is success , al) made his fa
ther-in-law, STABSWATimn, commis
sioner of the Chnrci street widening
at New York,whereby he made $650,-
000, in four years. [
..
•
mod" The New York 'Tribune speaks
of the tariff as " a mere question of
detail for the consideration of a
Ways and BUT, Committee."
Which considering the past record
of the Tribune on 1 that subject, is
about as if item IVOLEr had said in
his old days /that j saltatitin was a
mere question of detail, to be settled
between the sinner nd the devil:
PA. Let every • :publican who
contemplates vot' _ for GaEntir,look
a littleleyond the! November elec
tion., Will yon joint the Democrats
ivi t.
_I • ,tii t ~..1 ..-011_ Pt. ' , I- :% - t ul -
Chia tiviDg Is
leaulib g ytnil
Ma
.. w4x'-x r. a!e_....:~rb'L:.'K.'P ".'llya ~.~+,Y,+++.,~n.. ._ ~_ _... w.
Men
I=
A ..4 77rig a.
oaf Ana
. 4 14.
dz o th past
• - s e atitttlmrest•
o#llol l o l ol' PIOMMU Id% a n
01011*411110,44110Mag efkOts
1 . 1 1.01 00111 **1 1 01011„ . 14.0- 11 14 1 e. " wore
Thilight exollesatit orsahal OWE the Bahl
&sore amehialloos,' bas quietly WNW .The
`mall jraPa at amil4eddag politiciseti shala
bast of hotels and macaw mere discomaiag the
political primped" of their eaodidallea, bate
pal:ally dispense dl moarning over the dew-
Wiwi of their hopes. •
With elany wry hews. can tailless VA dire
corrrolsioes of fte stotruml6. - the lkintrwley at
Baltimore Sadly saceseded in tbalr great boa
of wallowgibe nominee at the Claramati Con
vention. 110 alestr as be Iris bosered (*would
carefully ea he was negar-cealed with " awy
thing to beat Grant." it is bat becoming ed.
dent dial the unpalatable doffs is not going
to stay down. Like the gallant Kentrakian.
who, on wager to eat a crow cried oat hal'
"1 can eat cr, •. but ru be darned if
banker arter
From every seetion of the• conary, evidence
is befog daily reedited of the repadiatka dt tbe
nomination. / by those who hare been lifb•loog
democrats; who declare that thity tan no long•
er do rioliwe to their feelings of consistency,
and to their sense of troth and honor. They
bare not forgotten bow—in times put—the
greatloarnabst's tub was wade to wind itself
so wickedly mound them g and, smarting with
every. =Cit. hoW they were tauntingly Jeered
• 2 'thing that was rile, Infamous, and
To this class of men who are doubtless hon
est in theii erfirrictices,and who profess to have
a claim to 'some principle, and to some integri
ty of cintrUcter the veils of ono present no
charm. They unliadtatingly declare, that they
will not be made a party to the lnfkmous bar
gain and sale, and that hi Acmsmber nest,they
will show by their votes their dlitOprobation
and teething of the men who have thus 00 Mud-.
fly betrayed them. Allured by the glittering
promises Of place, of power, and of patronage,
so temptingly held out to them by the sage of
Cluipaqua, the democratic leaders willingly.
=seated: to the- surrender of their party or
ganisation ; and to the abandonment and burial
of every prineiple - and • issue that the honest
portion of the party onisciontionsly belierred,to
have been founded in right and justice: With
these facte staring them squarely infthe face,
there is nothing wonderful In the fact4that this
portion of the party do not choose to cut their
fort clues with the originators of the sore-head
Liberal Ilepablican movement. Fully awake
to the humiliating situation in which they have
been pieced, they are earnestly protesting
against being led into that destruction to which
the Ihtb,ine Philosopher has . so, long and so
vainly endavored to drive them.
It is plainly evident that the race of this new
party ushered into existence without a single
vital principle, will be ended before it has been
fairly began. it ii composed of no element
which recommends itself to the consideration
of the thinking and reflecting muses. Its nom
inations meet with no response—except from
sore-head Itepablimns, Democrats and defeat
ed Rebels. Its nominee has none of the char
acteristic; demanded in one who should rep
resent a eeforming and elevating influence ; he
is not the possessor of those elements which stir
the heart; be cannot arouse the conscience; and
in no way, can be Inspire the confidence of the
people.
In the reluctant step, the heaviness of spirit,
and the want of earnestness manifested by ev
en his warmest supporters, is beheld unmistak
able evidence of this. In all their outward show
of enthusiasm, flourish of trumpets, noise and
blowing of horns over the Baltimore nomina
tion,Shere is an evident want of sincerity. In
the praises which they are bestowing, there . is
a want of feeling. The shouts andcbeers,
which they are so londly uttering oCer the
" gOod•old . sord," " honest old man," "wise old
philosopher," bear in their echoes,' hollowness
and mo kery which plainly indicate the bitter-
mesa of their hearts and the forlornness of their
holies. They have consnmmated the bargain
and sale ; but the most difficult part of the con
tract remains to be completed—the votes are
yet to be delivered.
Instead of the thousands, that in the most
glowing' language we were told, would eagerly
flock *the standard' of the pew Republican
Democratic party, that would rally to the sup
port of preeley and Brown, Hke some great
tidal wave sweeping 'everything heft& it, we
see only those who sanctioned, aided,and abet
ted all the crimes against the republic, that
darken ;the pages of its history during the last
decade; : These aro the men— together with a
set of disappointed office-seekers, and disap
pointed Presidential aspirants—,who are found
rushing to the support of the ticket, combined
with those, whe,since the close of the war have
entertained but one idea and one purpose, to
get back into power to again obtain control of
the government, that they spat and trampled
upon,and persistently fought for five long years.
It is quite evident, that no one is' going to be
deceived, by the little game of brag in which
they are L now indulging. M.
Governor BOOTH, of California,
thus conclides his speech at a re
cent ratification meeting in San
Franeisco : ft is creditable to the
Republican party that its choice
should have been so nearly equal be
tween two as pure men as Sennytra
COLFAX and 13-mm Wu.sas. Either
would have been a nomination fit to
be made. Of 'TIMMY WrisoN it •is
great' and deserved praise to say
that be neither boasts nor is shamed
of his humblearigin—that no one re
alizes more than ho that manhood is
superior to circumstances, and that
whetier on,thC shoemaker's bench or
in th e
m council chair of State, the
leather apron and the Senatorial
toga are alike badges of shame or
honor, as the wearer makes them.
Republicans of San Francisco are
you Content with GRANT and Wnsos
for standard-bearers? Then yon
have got a tanner and shoemaker,
and in the storied East . there was
a tine whenthe army that went
into battle with a leather apron on
its banner was never defeated. Let
the device still be a symbol of victo
rY 1"
a few
like to
Oar. sun or TuE 3iranon.7-- Greeley
Democrat to an undecided Democrat--
As you say, HORACE was a Republi
minx' Abolitionist and a Free Trad
er, but be's changed. He's as good
a Democrat to-day as I am.—(lm
pressively) Look at UK Idler and the
real•
TITE OTIIEE SlDE.—Greeley Republi
can to a -wavering RiTublimn—Hon
ACE 6RIMLET a Democrat! Bosh i
He has never changed a particle, and
riever will change. ( With great earn
ethaw) Look at his Idler and the
platform.
GovEason- GEABY. One of the
best 'abused men in the State at pres
ent is His,Excellency Governor GEA•
Mr. Every invective which malice
and 'jealousy can invent is hurled
against him, but he keeps on- the ev
en tenor of his ways, "regardless of
denunciation. While the Governor
has undoubtedly erred frequently, in
the discharge of his duties, .yet we
believe, that we have seldom had a
more conscientious, able had upright
Chief Magistrate. History will me
, to s high place.
4 ( littNT hArt 11V 11 . 1" bt . ( ll 11. = %" E' 14
and
never will be.—H. Cireeleat
TOM 4. , 1 - OP TEE NATIO=
.DEBT, .1 111 A: UN ADYIBTI4I4'
TlOSAnElagil
ablic
• *,;
On thelbVidey 4.lllhothlB69,the
= • -
debt itt the triltteMetee4acc
the amount oI auk*
according to the official 'statement
then published, was $2,5•25,460,01.
Suppose that daring the first four
days of the month the debt was re
duced by 33,673,10, which is four
ihfrlieths of the reduction for•the en
tire month. The amount of indebt
edness' lemma' in the treatury, on
thefiftis day of March, 1869,- was $2,-
525,437,680,94 On the first day of
June, 1872, the, total public indebt-'
edness, lees cash in the, treasury, was
$,193,517,878,94, showing the enor
mous reduction of $331,910,30.7,97 in
the amount of the debt since the
fourth of March, 1869.
It thus appears that -during a lit
tle mdre than three years of _Presi
dent Graties,administration the. pub
lic debt existing at its commence
ment has been reduced by nearly one ,
seventh of its entire amount., „Europe
an journals commenting upon this
achievement, have spoken of it with
astonishment, ns
,something wholly
unparalled in finacial history. To
appreciate its full value to the peo
ple, however, we must consider the
immense saving which it involved in
our public ex pe nditures
,; for the in
terest on the debt existing .on the first
day of June, 1872, W4B lex..? by 42.2,- 1
002,519 a year than that on the debt e.r
isting on the first-day of March, 180.
Had administration adopted the pol
icy, of postponing the payment . of the'
debt to an Indent its time in the fl
- as some persons have censured
it for not doing, this twenty-twO mill
ions a year would still have to by
drawn out of the pockets of the peo
ple. The money they would thus be
compelled to link forever in the pay
ment of interest, would in ten years
without compounding amount to the
enormous-sum : of $220,000,000, and
in titentY-five years would jxceed
one-fourth of the .entire national
debt. The tree economy of the poli- 1
cy of prompt payment adopted by
President Grant and his excellent
minister of finance is thus made
manifest Already he has prodneed
annual saving,'as we have seen, of
more than twenty-two million xiol
lars,a monthly mixing of $1 833,513;-
25, and a daily ;laving of $611,181,-
08. Other plane of relieving the
people from taxes, (which have, from
time to time, been iput forward, have
been mere temporary expedients
whose sole effect would have been. to
prolong the period, and greatly aug
ment the aggregate 'amount, Of taxa
tion ; but this plan brings penna
nent relief, and is acconwanied by
no haunting thought of evil days to
come.
Moreover tae process of a reduc
tion is still rapidly going 9n, and ev
ery year the diminution of the amount
required for interest, renders it
possible to apply so much the nsiore
to the payment of the 41it. Even
the twenty-two millions 'a year al
ready saved, if deposited annually in
a sinking fund, at five per cent. in
terest, compounded semi-annually,
would alone suffice to rimy off the en
tire National debt inthirty-sib and
one-quarter years, and compounded
at six per cent, would pay it in'thir
ty-three years. Well might Presi
dent Grant cherish the sanguine
hope, expressed in his letter of ste
ceptance,of leaving to his snceessar,at
the end of this term or another, a
country with credit at home and
abroad, and without embarrassing
questions to threaten its future pros
perity.
.-4•1101.0
GREELEY AND HIS SUPPORTERS
The.. Springfield Reiiib/i , vi, the
leading GREELEY organ of, New Eng
land, says :
"That some of the worst - men in
the country ha' o donned white hats
and are hurrahing lustily for Gree
ley, is a fact patent to all who I!ve,
eyes and cars. This is especially'
true of his own State! Hardly any
trhere has his nomination finnniand.d.
more demonstrative fotypr or al. non'
zealots Pupport than among the N;•a•
York politicians (2f lioth part ivs ?rho
tchilom sat al the feet r.f Mr. l'reed
and ran at his beel.,_"
The Cincinnati Cunarceinl, the
ablest supporter of Gr.w.Er in the
West, says- :
"It is true, we - believe, that the
Democratic party machinery in New
York, including Tammany,is at work
for Greeley. le i.l true, -- also, tPithin
our own knowledge, that some rf the
worst men in this 'community, those
who hare tired and
. fattened upon pub
lic plunder, and are.notorions schem
ers to empty the pockets of the many
into (he hands of the fete, are Greeley
nten and most anxious to be known
as such, evidently- pushing -them
selves, hoping to have profitable rec
ognition. Thal in Gincitinati which
corretponds more closely to Tittitutang,
is for Greeley.- Our Ross Tweed is a
Greeley man."
my. Speaking of the party that is
expected to elect Mr. CatimaN,HuNr.Y
WARD BEECHER says :
"In six months there will not be
the shadow of a 'doubt that the Dem
ocratic.party has swallowed and di
gested .all . the erratic Republicans
that helped it, and will stand forth,
no-new creation, but front inevitable
inward necessity it will lie the old
Democratic party. The voice may
be - Jacob's, bnt the hand will be
Esau's."
And the end will be as when .Joab
took. Amasa by the beard with the
right hand to kiS4 him :
" But ArnaSa took tio heed to the
sword that was in Joab's hand ; eo
he smote him therewith in the fifth
rib, and shed out his bowels to the
ground, and struck him ni t again ;
and he died."
DEBT OF NEW YORK. New
York affords a fair sample of Demo
cratic honesty_ and financial skill.
The Mayor reports the neat little
sum of $127,000,000 as the debt Of
the city. The taxes to be raised this
year are stated at $30,437,000, - be.
sides $900,000 for streets. With this
pretty picture under our eyes, the
questions arises, Is it desisAble to
elect GREELEY and " transfer 1 1 a,
domination of Tatuarinv to
ingion ? "
Tratli not all in jest—Oa the
order of proete lings at Cam'-xi.eig,e
Con '! fl -.-7 -
etnii Latin a. U Ii;
Tranxeript., -
VIE EFFECT OF A JOUEE/FT,,IRFINE
.T., , ;( , 4ION,A..CIEIOELIGY t.
:1 1 0 1 10 41. 11 . t * 1 44:0 1 4141.1 r 3 . .40 01- a
'4riptithrotigh • tia 13#4110iiii :Bigot is -
UAW Et. '7. B. *iitiC iiii4dent .
at: Watkins,
No* Terk: lanitan is
widely known in the central part of
Southern New York, and
.Lis state
ment with. regard to these ?natters
will not be disputed by thine aq
(painted with him. He has just re
turned froni Kentucky, where he had
taken his wits to spend the Summer
w'th relatives. The doctor, who is a
shrewd observer, and a man of intel
.ligence, reporta that "the - malignant
rebels are unanimous in their, sup
port of GREELET,not as the New York
Tribriw claims, because they accept
the situation and are willing to be-1'
come patriotic' citizens of the Repub
lic, but, as they themselves openly
assert,ln.order that they may obtain
power, and as farces possible. restore
the condition of society which exist
ed before the war?" - The unionists,
on the other hand, are for ; President
Grant almost to a man,. believeing
that their safety
. depends on his re
election. Mr.- SLZLEN left home a
warm supporter of the Cincinnati
nominees—his name way_ attached to
a call kw - a GULT.L4Y and BROWN
meeting in Watkins, but he . has re
turned, detertnined to do his best
fur the cause of Republicanism. He
convinced by what he - saw and
he:o.l' while in Kentucky, that the
peac:; of the country would be jeop
ardiz,:d by the• snecess of Hon_ . len
The Southern Democrats
Want him fOr Presidentbecauso they
know he will be in their hands all
they could wish or desire. The fact
that the whilom rebels are so very
anNlous for Garna.Ey's election ought
to i,c enough to cause every Union
_man to vote ag,ainst
The Hon. Baam. , Piaci:, of
lowa, has just, started for a visit to
Europe with his family. - Some
Democratic journal, on the hunt for
GREELLV sail he had gene to
get rid of voting for On.ANT 7
happened to see the statement,
and tints Sf'S thu seal of falsehood
upon it:
"Li lily lillagli/tAlt, 110 greater po- -
liticalsalawity could happen to this
nation than the defeat. (..in ANT at
this time. It would place in the
seats of power, and placail in their
hands the reins of ' "overnment, The
very men who say them.se4es that
they accept the situation only until
they can change . it. It would rrive
the' control of the government to the
men have advocated theiray
went of the rebel debt, and the re
pudiation of the debt incurred in
maintaining the integrity of the na
tiop; to3the men oppo.cd to the aboli
tiim of shivery, and all the a-
Membnents to the Constitution guar
antee, to all men,. of all conditions,
for all the years of the combig future s
the immortal principles of the D6clar
ration of Independence given to
by our fathers.
"So well am I satisfied of these
facts t4lat, if it were necessary to se
cure the reelection of General.GßANT
and the contirmanc.e in pov:er of his
administration, I would travel ba're
foot to every election precinct that I
could reach, and let rev voice be
heard from every- stump avid plat
form to which I could have access
until the day of (.12dion.
"But I know, and everybody else
in this State knows, that if I and a
thousand more such were to leitve
and-never return, lowa would
_r o ll
up a majority for the reelection of
tht.k - N-r of not less than -30,00.
Williamsport turabermen's
strike has assumed a dangerous phase-
We give in another column a dispatch
from Williamsport, giving an ac
connt of the Eituati.,n of aflairs.
WlLLlAlisroar,July :22.—The strike
of the mill workalen in this city has*
assumed a serious phase. The strik
ers assembled about, tea o'clock this
morning and moved to the upper
mill-yards. At the mill of Filbert
Otto police were drawly line,when
the crowd assailed they with brick
bats, charged through them, and
went into the mP.I.
From there they went through all
the milL7, the- men at work . fleeing
through the lumber piles 'for their
lives. Several fights occurred" and
many were wounded. Ono boy was
struck with a hand•spiko by the fore;
man of a mill,and is seriously wound
ed. The chief of police came near
having his arm broken by a club. A'
special policeman was severely
Wounded by being struck on the head
with an iron bar. Policeman 'Pores
man was Lit in the face with a brick
and badly wounded. P,oliceman
Strycker was struck by two clubs
thrown at him, and (Nicer Pratt had
his clothes badly torn.
They then Moved to the mills be
low the city, closing those.at work.
Tho military has been called'unt and
are now parading the streets. The
greatest excitement prevails. The
strikers arc to meet to-morrow morn
ing at 9.30. some shooting occur- -
red about 7 o'clock this ,veniiig, but
was not of.a serious eliaraetcr. '
The New York Tini , •.-• reecntly
published au elaborate review of the
political situation in that State, re
turns from two counties only being
missing. The conelnsion of the Times
is that New York not only give
her electoral vote to Gi:•.::•r and Wu:
! , z, but will do so bra majority of
'25,000 or 30,000.
• Cam' Would Hor.Act: , if
elected, suspend the writ of habeas
corpus in• a South Carolina district
where the Kn-klux were rampant?
As an editor, one year ago, he advis
ed President to perform this
service for . the cause of humanity.
Now he denounces him for the same
act. Who has changed?
Wuza!at
Mciftu.LiN, a notorious democratic
politician of Philadelphia, was shot
and prof •:1 1 .1y ' fatally wounaed un
Monday, night la t, by lib 1: of his
friends.
pa- After Novemb2r 5, Mr. Gy.EE
LEY will 11170 11,:`.V n - Teat his
• --
r 111 . 1 Ci i et•ti ,Eurva,l4: ( l , -an a
/:'. I ~,
,never w;1,1
CC
rmi
DELAIO
THE POSITI.OX WHIGS TUE Lyl,llL
a •-•
- DATE WOULD iqr (1911 , 1116,1121 - 70 rm./
,;ji••
IF ELECTED. - -":
. _
WLBIIINOTOS
Delano conclude...Ms Cipieciiit Alex- •
andria, Va., .last night by , arguing
that Mr. Greeley, if elected, would
place himself wider obligations to
the Democratic pasty; that,in some
degree, at least, le would b the ex-
ponent of the principles of- that phr
ty; that it could not be otherwise
than so, unless Mr. Greeley designed -
to-deceive and abwie the confidence
which the Demwatio party was be
stowing upon him.. Mr. Greeley was
incapable of .such .
deception, and
therefore the conclusiOn was inevita
ble that his administration would, in
some degree at least, be shaped in
accordance with democratic ideas .
and sentiments. He disclaimed any
design or desire t o . do injustice to
Ur. Greeley, or to doubt his person
al integrity; bat he claimed that it
was fair to argue from his [Mr. Gree
ley's] position that, if elected, he
would be compelled to deviate from
the old landmarks of the Republican
party,tuid to fall into ways and prac
tices in accord with Democratic ideas,
and ho asked therefore that the Re
publican party, which had sacrificed
so much fo i . the salvation of the
lJnion and for the adoption of the
Constitutional amendments, should
pause and consider What they were
doing before they fall into what, ho
regards as a political trap, intended
to deceive and to destroy in part the
work which had cost so much blood
and sp much treasure.
New Advertisemonts.
Fon THE CAMPAIGN OF 1872!
The Rradibrd Reporter
You .
JULY 1 ITIt TO DECEMBER IST
FOIL 50 c}:-NTs•
To r a ivance thu luterents of tfie Great Ito.
~ , blicanrartc, and aid in 'the election of Gl:Alit
mid WILSON, wo will farnislt the aItrOUTZIL from
July 12 to litetml cr 1. at tlw. 16w p•ice of Set,ernic,
HORSE -BAKES,
MOWING MACHINES,
MACHINE SECTIONS,
SCYTHES,
SNATIIS,
cliociirET sra;s,
Frolll $-1 to $l2 per bet-,
NVUODEN PUMPS,
DRAIN TILE,
REFRIGERATORS,
For sale cheap nt
CODDLW, RUSSELL CO:S.
TOWANDA, PA
Who also sell all kinds of
BLACKSMITH,
C.IIWEN'T
IND OTHIZ TOOLS;
Anti my Agehts for
NOiZTIIUMBERLAND NAILS:
IFEE'LOES,
I'.\.TENT WHEELS
SPO.KES,
W:(4IONS,
U tiIVEIIBA_L,
lIMEI
L• XC,EI.4IOIt
WOOD AND STONE CHURNS!
BIRD CAUES,
CREAM. ifREEZEI3, :
KNINT,S AND 'FORKS,
'AND SCISSORS
Purc!,a..crs of Itazoni aud Pocket
do well to call.
STOVES,
HEATEiiS,
IZANGLS,
GAS FIXTURES
GLOBES.
•
s tur4iAieil With Gas Pipe,
and Cold !Water, Closets, &e., on
short notice :ma work guarranteed
satisfactors
NAGLEE k CO.'S C,LST STEEL
WI - TEEM...ARROWS, •
BELTING, •••
LIGHTNING SAWS
CODING, IMSSEft, tk Co.
TO AND.I MUSICAI,ACADEMY
FINi,UR; H. SHERWOOD. runictrAt..
S u5;21 , 1.1 .1N ; ., ;.1 COLLEGIATE INSTITUTE,
TOW . ..LYDA, PA.
N., ill tv,l . ective.l at any tlme at the following
rat :
Piano FurtA 0015. 'per ,narter •$l5 00
Including llacium- and Vocal class, per. 'fr. 20 00
Szatc - rtvrlista. Qrsr.re.uvr tit At VANCT.
llo'citations twice a work. No deduction or lime
made ttp," excrpt in case of illness of more than
one week's duration.
This Sinsic School is i.lassified into throe depot
: 41.1111.,tiary. Priiiiaty Advsuced.
in Is . certlhcale ;;iv,at the con:ph:Win of
each course wi the musical standing of the pupil.
Pupils from' r distance will find accommodations
for board and piano practice in the institution at
very moderate[pricelf,
Sherwood Las a pre,gressile Nurse
comprising the best modern methods ,Ineint.ing thei
prominent features and appliances of the once port
ular I.yrins 3filsic..o Academy, of Which his lirctber.
ltov, L- IT. Sloirwo , -.1 was forcrrle prieci7sl'and
1.;
Sir. d#. ri d. etdt•cl ta!ebt,
acquirements amt rvionslve experience in
tkai hint! ter tbrrica! Timer.
Towanda. SIYy 9, 1!•72
' OF THE BIG BONNET ON
WONTED - AND DOMITiC
OM]
EVIILTEES .OF THE SEASON
T nda. May 1, IST:
FRUIT
AXLES
.IND SPRINGS.
NCYVELTY
WRINGERS.
New hivorthements.
GOODS
IN GREAT VARIETY,
AT THE
'MAIN STREET.
CONSISTING IN. :VAIIT OF
IrrY . .,:- . 3.0Q.D5.,.
E. KEE NOTIONS,
ESIBROLDRIES,
FANCY , g LIAIVS,
PARASOLS,
GLOVES,
HOSIERY,
MILIANERY. GOODS,
1311311 - ACIN . G ALL 111 F,
IL A. PETTES, & Co.
•
DVANS ak.IirILDRETH
Arc c•ficrlr .grcat trargallas in
1tY.7(40 . 0D5 .
Look at the t.,llowing low prices
•
.'ANESF. SILKS, .
E PANESE CLOTHS, 25 to 371 c
13LACK
All prices
Au immense stock of
'D 11ESS. GOODS
From 2) tieuta upwards
ripe and Figured Grenadines,
lack Grenadines,
Cf.llABB CLOTHS,
MEESE
RES'S LINENS, ALL SHADES
PIQUES, VICTORIA LAWNS. and otter
DRESS GOODS,
tact year'e pricco
S• II AWLS,
Irt 't , 1.00 upwards, aleu
6 VIIITE - GRENADINE, IaIiEGE,
SIIAWLS,
',IAISLEY AND WOOL SHAWLS,
Iu great variety
N - I'AI3ASOLS 1
ME
.1f educed price?,
• 'OTEN:IGIISAI CITILTADI LACES,
'at crute atkl upwards
untorpanes,
able Linens,
owcls and Cra.sh,
dkerchicfs,
ar.cy Goods,
Tickings;
Denims,
CottonadeS,
Prints,
Ginghams,
Cheeks,
Stripes;
And many uther.gocule mulch below Molay'e mar
et value.
EVANS -HILDRETII
Towanda, Jnno 12, 1872
IyOUNCi WARRIOR
IXIMOVED
ALE . 0 W M !
.
The Lightest tiraft..Meet 'Durable and Easiest.Cen
droned Maktino in the World! Iles recereived
tho First Premium . wherever exhibited at
Agricultural Town and County Fairs.
Manufactured by '
CITkS. PIIRRIGO &
Groton, Tompkins county, N. T.
THE YOUNG WARRIOR
Bas two Driving Wheels, Iron Frame, Steel Cut Bar
Steel• Plated Guards, Planetary Gearing, has no Side
Draft is a Close Guarded Machine. It will mow the
Anent grass WITHOUT CLOGGING. - Can treat the
world mowing on Rough_ or Stony ground. :ate
gearing is protected from dirt and grass.— The
Wheel on the Outer Shoo runs inside of the Swather.
Beason* why it should be purchased in prefer ,
cure to any other Mowci 1. Being Wider Track,
holds its position on side-hill;' the wheels running
on the ground instead of on the cut grass; for the
same reason mowitwel or swab) land, leaving the
cut grass -lying lo6se and light; 2, Being close
guarded, the knives are protected from stones. 3.
The rolling motion of the Cut liar allowing it to
pass' ver stones and obstructions.: paining in and
out of dead furrows without Stopping or Clogging,
The chief beauty of this Machine is : It can mow
the heaviest lodged or tine *et Grass, without stop.
pingnrarorrying the team, and no team - can walk
slow enough to clog it. - Farmers should try this
Machine before they buy.
THE AMENS PLOW.
3ltoofActive(' by Chas. Perrigo S Co., Grototi,
THE AIRMIS PATENT SIDE HILL PLOW
Was invented and patented as a Side 11111 Plow, but
experience has demonstrated that it is as well adap
ted to Leval Land Plowing as the best Flat Land
Flows. We claim for it .superiority over any other
plow In use, for the reason that it works well both
on side 11111 and Level LanL It Is no experiment,
ft has been naanutactored for the past eight years,
and, of the hundreds sold in that time not one has
been retnrned. ' Every Plow warranted. Retail
price $15.00. Orders promptly attended to.
Fur further information in regard to the Young
Warrior Muwer or Aliens Flow, call on or address
C. W. HOLCOMB. Agent,
Ulster. Bradofrd Co., Pa
May 16;,187:.-3m,
. F t)lt
scriber oilers iot r. le hie farm iiituatisl_aLsot
mains from the Borough., of Towanda, on the road
leading to konroeton. at a bargain. The farm con=
tains between ;0 anitiio &Tea, all improved except
10 acres, which hi well timbered. The land Ls under.
a good state nr. cultivation, good buildings, well
fenced, and plenty of water. I will also sell all my
persons! property, eoiiiii•ting of farm.
trg r %F.;
:u3nre , :tlr 1,:7± SAlli Li. .YLE
STUMUS \VIIF - 1.11 I)RIPS.a
k .4 1 • sulk
toys .
POW A:N D A MARKETS.
WHOLESALE PRIM
Cloweetoa miry
onb mottotoemy. O. P4TcH
hoot to disarm dotty.
Wheat, sash
are•Ma
.NlCklthelli. 9 busb
cam bush
Oda, 9 Mug
Demur, b05h..........
Butts/ trolis) ir tb
do (dairy.)} lb new.
M o ros
boaknew
roan bind 10 00 t 3 ; I msri
°Moo; 9 bush
wampum, thunr..Wheat 60 lb. 75
; Corn 56 15, 4 , •
87s 86-lbs.; Oats 82 1b0..; Earley 46 lbo.;
48 lbs.; Bans 62 Dm.; Bras 20 ; chne r
iba ; Timothy Seed 44 lbs._ ; Dried Peaches
Dried Apples 22 lb.. Max Seed 60 lbs. , ';
PRICE LIST--CASCADE MILL&
Mow, beidWin la e xheal,
P r -_ ll . r e • ........ $2
ea% " hunwi
.... . ...... .5 :19
••
I. barrel ....... ..... ..... ee
Pend. per mat ............ ..... . .... . el
chliewee sertrullrig ummlly done
.at once . Y the ca.
parity of the mlll 1a anfddent for a large anv nit i
of
work.
Camptoarn. May 22. 1872. H. B. /N(illeY.
TOWANDA COAL YARD.
ANTHRACITE AND BrrtnaNous COAL?.
The nn.lM•idg basing laird the Coal Yard;
Dock at the old Barclay Basin," and put enttro..t,e,
a large Coal.hoeute and Office upon the prcell.,, , r
Dmzepared to franisdi the citizens of Towanda It
with the different ldnds and /1/7."1, Of UV Itiorn.
'. . j eciLls upon the most reasonaid.. . n ,
qnantity desired. Prices At the Yard not No
notice per net tqn of 2000 pounds;
Egg. or-No 2
Stove, or N A. 3 and 4
1 4 .:ut or :So. 5
. . gULLJYAN AATIIALCITY craft,.
Broken
Lamm St o o
Small More - -
&C., &C
• • ............ •• • :I 2.•:.
"Barclay". Lump •
-
" lien of Mines ...............
•'• Fine. or
.................
3
The following additional charges Will be wd.. •
delivering Cad within the borough : a
Per T0n...50 cents. Extra for carrying in. r.O erLas.
Half Ton :.63 " " " "
.•
gr.T0n...25 .. ........23 .•
Sir Orders may be left at the Yard. corner et list
road and Elisabeth litregt; or at rorkr
Drag Store.
*3..Orders must in all *es be accotn-pamed
the cash. & MONTOYE.
Towanda, Feb. I„ 1822—tf.
CENTRAL COAL YARD,
Until further notice price a 1 yard,' kre. per net ten
of 2000 pounds :
ANTAILIern COAL.
For. or No. 2
Stove, or Nos. 3 and 4.-.
Nat, or NO. 5... ..
Cartago at usual priers.
4fir Order' . Mast in all cats) 14. accompanied by
tbe caah.
Towanda. Feb. 1,12.
NEW COAL Filtil
50 to 75c.
ja,We are ircetsing direct from t . tie tntte...• the rery
bed rITTSTO:S, - rLysrour. and SULLIVAN AN
TIIILACITE COAL, which we prr-pos. to Fta at ffi e
owest anarket price
We rE4poctfully insito thoso w;hj tnigli c hu t
call ka3exardine our Coal.
We also keep Lime, fresh front the ills.
We trill deliver Coal or 1.11110 Wit , TIPS.? d,PIrOd
on short notice, adding only the-cu!b•Laary
erp2U'7l-tt
. .
C DR. UItQU.HART"S -
H CHOLERA CORDIAL
O ll av
been favorably known for y. , aro.:arvlu,
L ! c with s.
E never•faalng ane,:e;4
is warranted to aive. r ,
R CHOLERA,
CHOLERA - MORDUS ; •
SUMMER COMPLAINT,
From 23 to rOcrnte
25 mut* and upward ' .
islervoug excitability from Alf-rAlf,lir
lb lion, and in painful periodical !anal,
:it IA a sovereign remedy. D
II
cad ttreirenlar and. nq , tun• , nla);
J. ';
rntper... . •
IF Ken., Ired at Wilkcelnarre,Luzertle Co., Pa.
50 CENTS.
Slay .3. 187!.1.,6m •
B. CAMP. •• A. J. NOBLI..
CAMP & 0 - B L
Insurance Agezy. -
OFFICE ON MAIN STREd,
Insurance against
None but
Represent issue? and
Losses
ADJUSTED AND PALD AT THIS
noop'Skirts,
Corsets,
Glove's, -
All kills of
LIFE INSURANCE -POLICIES
Laces,
,Ituffiings,
Weekly Induninity iu case of iojurv,
•
PaTable iu case of Death. Ilalkvg
TICO OTIIER BUSINESS ON OVII-11:\NUS
Bridge Street..
To divide our attention, ire are able
to give strict and careful attention tij.
Insuraucc--
any kind, are rt!spectfully trotted to
try us
Towan44,..inly 21 1672'
Q WOODFORD,
NEW YORK BOOT AN!) SIEVE
STORE, .
..
. /
No. 3. tATNON .l; GRIFFITIISMX7R.BF.IDO 1: S: .
Is receiving one of th(3 largest Ityi
best stock of BOOTS' A SHOES/ver
brought in Towanda . ' which/lie is
offering at the veiys.lOu•est ppees for
Cash, consistin. , .of GENTLE, hll' . .
& STOGA, 'Bons CALF 805..:1T5, LAWES, '
MrssFs and Cuti.nn's / ShOes of 4
kinds, all bought direct from : the .
3lanufacturers, - and /hand . made, all
goods warranted. Artus, sTocK 01
LF \Turn tNt.;-,FUN / t INtiS4. .
Thankfulfor/paAt favor', I -.Att*Lt
.: .
a coutitinance/ot the. same. . .
Towanda. MAY. .
ME
/1
7
Meelowa
3-711)1ACTTZ
31. WET T FS, I,roprietur
E• M• WEIJJ'..
Ou Canal Streit, frontiu,e,Williaal Street,
TOWANDA, PA:
L 9. C 1 1. 41.: k Co.
DIAREHitA,
DYSENTERY,
COLIC;
DR. UINCHART's
CHOLERA CORDIAL
CIENEItAL
Opposite the Court Ltous(.,
FIRE AND. NG!'
St7l . :Cl), CLis6 I'oSIF.I E.
OFFICE - :
Prordrcd,
ACCIDENT INSUCANCE
Atrecte), for
FIVE - To FIFTY DOLLAIN
$5OO TO $10,009
.:ViD WE DO-IT!
.111 persons desiring In, urlrci of
CA3I - 1 & NottLE.
AT TB E
11 , I so)
Qv 160
14 ‘ 1 li
In 1 21
.. 4 75
IPS 001
$ (J
.$1 75