=II II ZWS FROM ;ALL Nan= IN —Sir Charles Mike is only 30 years old. 7 --An . Atlanta journalist finds it seceisaly to reit r to htmeelf u "We, the aa see:4e editur." -j—Senators AloOm, Gordon, sad ransom were generale m the Confederate army during the war. . 4 7 111 r. Leigh &pith, an experienced and i ivealthy explorer, propesee to make a Pular espethtion with; very tompiete equip= silents. exchangetays : "Bret Herta hasi been- translated into France."' We wish that Walt Whitman at:d Joaquin Miller could be translated into Chinese, and kept there. -,—Washington gossips are oircula :,tlng a rumor to the effect that Vice President 'Witson t a about to marry Miss Edes, a wealthy and accorup.iihed young lady resident of the fine - ; ma.i , read R. Tist pinxit, on , fg,n of Savannah, Ga. . I. -Texas counted up stooo immi permanent settlers, in 1872. - Dr. Huston's libel suit vst tno roltimord'Americmt has been drop ) —A. North Carolina physician was' k,ked to death by a Mule a tow days ago. ! - ,-1 slight shock of earthquake was kit at Beautott, Canada Wednesday, Feb. 26. !—Two little girls, eleven and thir teen years till, light; the street-lamps in - Des 31bies, lowa. , . —Senator Hannibal\ Hamlin, of Mine, is said to be. Comparatively poor, con trary to a report tvidely published.- - — 1 •Thirty years ago, Boston .lad iiii,ny "fenfoot'' dwelling-houses. 'he hit one romining is about 0 dissappear. Id -The office Mayor id Utica 7 went begging, Over riffy Republicans refused the nomination, and the party was defeated. , --TCVO meual l T of the Senate of liaitie have resigned livc,inse they hold offices uhcer the General Government. 1 —Thi; Boston Inspector of- Build :alga has condemned 11.10,000 bricks in one lot, declaring 'them unfit for use. • —lt seems unusually bLa. for a .coal dealer to freeze; t death, but that is the tate that Las„jkist brallen one in Buffalo. J —Thn people .of Sama.nq appeal for a nu.versitY' to citicate the youth of the jihad and its : neighbors. —The Boston Transcript seems to think that it i&nseless for an} body to invem a briek-eleaning macifine; now that the bricks iu .Boston and C.lneagd are all clearted. —Somebody! sold a deatei#il hu man hair iu Cieve;u.nd, Ohio, same hair that had beep cot from the head of a small-pox pa tient, and the dealdr took the disease and died. • • —A \ Montreal man, in a fit of drunken rage at , ltis Wire,'went to the cemetery anti mutulatecl 'costly monument she bad placed over the' remains of her first husband. —CA H. B. 11 - of .ansas citv, Me:, has written a lonOetter to Gem Joseph O: Shelby; adviring that the old Co.ll federates act hereafter with the Reptiblican Party. famity_ of the late Dr. Low- Mason tots pre.-ented nig valuable library of books relating so sacred music to the Theolog ical dei)artmeut of Yale College. I The full official returns of the . ejection for King of the Satidatch Islands, on , the Ist ofJannary, snow that Lunalito had 12,- 540 , v0t es, and that ithere were fifty-one eeatter jrg. • %=-The La Crosse (Wis.) Republieda (A' the: Ist instant, says that the New-York Chit ikon's Aid Society recently sent eighteen boys to Black River Fails, that State, where they -I)ave beeu tasen Into families. —A. Nevada paper Says that the alkali which abounds iu the water in ruinous to brass and iron in Machinery Gold Hill. It is Necessary t i •replace stop coclis,4 - alres, 'about four tunes a year. —Nova Scotia is now raising about ,000,000, tons or.codi annually. —Louisville, Ky., claims the only i.viginal Toni Thumb, who is colored. • einef -engineer La's in- N entail a nozzle that will throw wata "i4ronad eoarwr. —A epnipany has been formed in \A - Ltlotpa, Tern, to vol k the coal deposits at !Coto has. • I —A young lawyer in '..North Caro Tina was latefy talita pornarl'q but ter for tega MEE —lt is intended to erect a per inaneut strtt , inro ea• the In turnational Etta hitl.)n to be lit Id in Chilli in 1575. —Goot.gia 111.6 joint stock corn- Taw' c , ;nipoi,e , texer F tsively of uegroes, for the I , ntlin-e btulthug cidored hold. —A diTatcl4 from iSnake river, Id:tho, says that be c , t,itle arevtlying iu large huntb,Ci, cad Ith7 sL7ert"ctid weather. • o 'ewer thaii 176 aluianaes for ,11173 bare been pubitsited, in Paris, at prices running ah the war', from three 140118 to one • ; , —it has bee proposed in the ' ;Nebr a ,c, a trgisleJui . to offer a reward of MO, 1)00 to the limier pt , four-foot vein of coal in Pitt, Sta:!•.- ! ' — Miss Jenni Brown, of Wiseon 'in, ha,: received fifty Yards of watered silk ta a rev. - 47(1 Mr sa‘ine• force men from a watery I ' - i- , --I.inolvillei ! (Tenn. ' ) has discover iAtlil.t. $5O ii- - ionifrls the highe.t salary that itiglit to be l'tA to a teacher; Tao people of r libV , ville undottfillv know whether their chil dren ar< worth tie 'attention of :spore sxpen-, Isiveite , tructor. . ' —A LoWel t othario is threatened Iwith . six sillllitt,itie•JUß Stfiti tor breach of (prom:,,. 4 I : —A. niimber ;of Chinese • workmen .reee - nt!vll,.llF4 traiployer b: blting him to I —Laura-. D. Fair declares there a"wollin the fold . ' when oho took Mr CI-A lton:len to her arms:. —A. young girl in Jacksonville, 111., has rolo . s , :d flop for her hair. It. reaches the floor when she stands erect. I —ln their present state takes a lbo r ;-:fitt,ten fret high - to Int Alic throngh the ice or !he untiatleota . lakes and drown Elncecestally. Women ' s farmers, clubs are apriugitig up in titti West. Tie tueniht Ts die. eus!,, es butterand babies, soft-soap and scandal, An eminent Weßtern doctor has discovored that veciniitiori With tartar-emetic is gooci,a preventive for small poz as the lianal style of vam,thation. —A Kansas.papor annzmuces that it recently received a load of ' , splendid coal" from a newly opened mine in the vicinity of , Fort Sec , ll-4n that 'tate. —The - stock holders of , the Utica, Clicnango and tiosqueliatinah Valley Railroad.. recentl , ,-ro•olverl to increase the capital stock of that company fr0pt , 3 ,000,000 to . ---A L t CrosSe ( Wis.) girl rubbed her elieek . sgainst her Si-ter' , 4 husband's hand to zet no a bosithv glovr for abet and she has tem.turned out the house for it. Chicago, proposes a grand mem orial industrial exhibition in Oett ber next, the second anniversary of the gre.t fire when, it is predicted, the cutrnill practically be rebuilt. . • —Austrian 'soldiers relieve the police at night in guarding the Vienna Exposit : ion building. A gentleman wines that one cannot get within Iten feet of the walls save npan the as.urance of business inside. '• —The. Silk Association of America is a crunparatirely new organization which has a large number ci members, and :promises t 3 he of great terric3 . to the in Instry which it represents. its headquarters are in Ijost-York. --Old toperEi in. England ,feel them to be patriots, and bear a becoming part elms the Earl of :Derby has said. speaking the tax on liquors, "We :hare drunk 01; felres out of the Alabama diffiCalty during ,i past year.' . . —Reels of Parisian ladies' boots are sa d't be so high and -io brought under the foot that, the Chine:ire ladies must be sensibly shod in comparison. --"Sambo, what is dar dat nebber was, nebber can be and nebber will be r (limbo. Caesar, I gibbe it tip." "Why, Chile, a 1110118b'S nest 19 a cat's tar. —Round -dances are all the rage in AYasbington this win'er. It has raised the hogging of "fair women" 11 ."brave men" to the dignity.of a tine art. —Michigan has just discovered the value for tannin g Prop e 4 o f ,sn inoshans tible 'xi orowth ot sowt tt fern, which it Lao hitherto re,garled as good-fern rdhieg. is said. (hit one of the louvers who mnviet-,1 t,„ the Illinois who mur .• dyer. who was titsgail tesi. week, objected to p-tlttor, tow "is naniAa because his llor% ather - aid the itontrect, for but:ding the gal • padiatiftpotter Towanda, Thursday, March 13,1878. ZDIT,ORS e E. O. 000muOtt. X. W. A.LVORD. " pipit is itivA." t_.-- Several communications have ap peared of ly t te in the Elmira Adver tiser,-purpsirting to hove been writ ten by citizens residing in different localities in this county, in favor . I pf HERDIC'S new eounty. We can scarce ly believe that the editors of the Ad• vertiser are ignorant of the fact that these articles are either written or instigated by !Mr. iir.nrac's hired lobbyist, 11. N. WILLIAMS, E5q.1.,44 Canton, and the Advertiser belittles itself in giving credit and respecta bility to a, scheme calculated to do great injui r itice to the pOple to be affected by it. It is alleged in the articles referred to, that the opposi- tion to the measure eminates from interested and selfish motives. The territory to lie cut ,from Bradford would make bat little - difference with us, but the inhabitants of that un fortunate district would be the great sufferers, and therefore we fed it to be a duty to them (to oppose the , measure, for the/reason that Prima HERDIC is pushing it for his personal aggrandizement atone, regardless of the wishes or interests of the people he seeks to coerse into his insignifi cant county, for the sake of filching from them their hard earned savings ta fill his own pockets. If a large majority of . the inlitibitauts of the townships to be included in the pro 'posed county, are so earnest fpr the 'pasSage of Mr. HERDIC'S bill, why do they not stly, so, either by their votes or petitions,Y This county question has heel?. an issue for the past three years at4least, and each year the del egates troin these townships have supported - Ipr Representatives men known to be hostile to the move ment. The people are not for it, and the author of these articles 'knows it: The only argument Mr. llesmc has ever advanced, is the one which Mr. PAIZEB said would have to answered in the same way—mon- ev. The fact that. every newspaper in all the counties to be affected by the bill, except one Owned .by Mr. linu- DIC, in Williamsport, oppose it,onght to be satisfactory evidence to the Advertiser that the people don't want it. DIVISION OF BRADFORD COUNTY. A correspondent of the Elmira Advertiser, writing from Athens, ex plains the origin of the several let ters which have appeared in that pa per on the division question: Enirosts ADvEivrina :—Your correspoir'ent " w." of this place, has more impudence of the brazen kind than is at all necessary for the sor ry cause he alone in this section, represents. A few (lave ago,. Williams, of Canton, was sent up from Hatrisburg to work the rich vein of se cessionism that W. had reported existed in Athens and vicinity. Be dug faithfully for a low days, but atter the hardest king of work, he, succeeded in getting out one lamp and that labeled " W." But W. was a lirst‘class lawyer and so he war put on the job as a valu able acquistion to the working forces of Peter the Great in doing all in his power to further the iniquity that the Williamsport adventurer is tying to perpetrate upon the good old coun ty of Bradford. In'the first place W. writes a letter fur the AtivErrisEn advocating division— hien in the same paper of tu-day's date he speaks of the first as the "bomb-shell" that waked up his drowsy faculties and q .ickened ts'permption to see the beauty there is in ilerd , c and Minnego& Then, being omni-res ident, he writes a letter fromLatelitleld to the Canton Sentinel saying that the citizens of that town are in favor of division—when it is a no torious fact, a fact which W. will not deny,that not one man of any charatter in that place, is in fivor of the measure. Williams or " W." wrote also from' Ulster to the stme paper, making 'statements equally false. Thus it is that this job is worked—with all sorts of deception, and all imaginable false hoods. The masses of the people of Bradford look with horror on the bare idea of a division of our noble county. They cannot see anything to be gained for themselves by the measure but an increased burden of taxation and the humiliation of seeing the; noble county of Brad ford reduced tb a thud rate county. Disguise it as they may, still the scheme is one born in iniquity—au egg of the ambition of ono man, the incubation of which can bo tostered only by the grossest corruption and the use of money. X; •i ATAtNS, Pa., March_6, 1873. : t in. The Harrisburg !Telegraph waxes wroth over the charge made by the REPORTER 'several weeks since, that the chairman of the committee on townships and' counties, Mr. Franc, of Chester county, was cor ruptly influenced in his action ,on the Minnequa scheme, and calktup on the Legislature to investigate the matter. All right, Mr. BERGNER, if the House takes your advice and raises the committee, we will furnish competent and reliable witnesses to prove our assertion. If the Telegraph would tell all its editor knows about the " roosters " in the Legislature, we presume there would be occasion for several investigating committees. We know that it ik3 very common for the press to Make wholesale charges of 'corruption!. against the Legisla ture, and we deprecate and discohn tenanee the practice as unfair and cowardly ; but when a man is known to be corrupt, we the it to be the solemn duty of the press to 'expose and denounce his corrupt practices. Until this course is adopted and faithfully adhered to, the innocent -must suffer suspicion with the guilty. If the Telegraph and other journals at the State Capitol were more inde pendent, and less influenced by the hope of favors from they "roosters," oar legislature would cease to be a by-word and reproach. The few corrupt men like Mr. Pram would never be elected the second time. ler Judge 'WILLIAM Btrnia, of Chester county, is spoken of as a candidate for the Supreme Bench neat fall. Judge 8.. was a candidate in the Republican State Convention last spring, and received a very com plimentary vote. MS. The work 4 of filling up - the canal and putting down a second track between this place and Waver ly, will ,be pushed rapidly forward, Li, LA-del:to accomodate the rapidly inc Er.,; The officers of the road scums determined to offer the public 141 facilities possible for the transaction of bushman T 11062 paTrricias. The Weekly Itegyttv i '' pnblishea at Willitunsport the a i)1 Pam • Hume, tfins refers to the petition* preimted to the Legidature in favor of the new county. Everybody sc . grutinted with Manta and - his ob sequions followers, know that they: will bear watching : Having !decided - that these citizens had bet ter not become the - subjets of Peter Herdic, their duty to reject the pe titions and the meas ure is perfectly plain. rWe apprehend, too, that it will require more than mere petitions to convince the Legislators that the new county is really wanted, and that it will benefit any body besides Herdic and a fin! of his "swamp angels." eta But, as we hue sewested before, in an hon est tindesear of titeitiWs of the Legislature to arrive at the truth. it is not safe to take for granted that thou petitions were signed by all or even half of the persona whose names ap pear upon them. It, is alien-known fact 014 the chief parties interested in the now coanty scheme, are not the most Moral, rena:di and serupulotte of cititens slid churchmen..' - Nind what has weed through! their handl, with but a probability of rwrsonal interest attsching, in variably needs the best! proof of genuineness known to the law. It will be remembered. by our readers, that not long since we exposed a, frAnd in the swipe of a lambeestatementorhich purported to have been signed by certain prominent Williamsport lumbermen. Although wewithheld the names of tparties who em phatically and indignantly r ep udiated the doc ument which gulled the ereility of a number of editors and others, it Was One the lea true that those parties never tsigned the document nor authorised it to be signed for them. Now this statement was in the shape of a petition to the Legislature to stay the devastation of tim ber, and was gotten ;IC and circulated with characteristic industry, by the same parties who have gotten up the! petitions for the new county. The f , rmer was fraudulently gotten up for the purpose of indirectly affecting legis• lotion, and may not the hitter have been man ufactured largely to the same end. in the di rect interests of the same parties?.lt is, to our mind, the. most likely thing that could have happened. And; with the experience that former legislsturce,haye had with the ir reputable "member from ldinnequa." it is hardly possible that the present legislature *lll unwittingly and credidcinitly receive his representations as correct Withoutrequiring the beet corroborative proof in the world. " Whosoever is deceived thereby is not wise." The only power that can pass the Mitineqiis bill is money ; and we hope the parse which leedi the friends of the•messure, in the Legis lature, may-give out its last dollar, before the greedy maws of the legislature asses, who bray for that kind of food, may be hall satiated. PRIZEB will do' his part toward emptying the Min l nequa bag. THE EVANS CABE. The case of the Commonwealth vs. GEO. 0. Evan was concluded in Harrisburg last week. Thejary ren dered a verdict in favor of the State of $149,726 53. Gov. GEM being (load, Der. Ers.us was, principally, his own Witness in the case, and hence the Common wealth ,Vas unable to contradict any thing he asserted about arrange ments made at the time of his ap pointment. Mr. EVANS seemed to be well satis fied with the •verdict, since, under the decision of the court, it is under stood that it is only a common debt. It is believed that the rise will be carried to the Supreme Court by the State authorities. Thia settles one of the numerous slanders against Gen. H.Airrasitrr It will be remembered that the opposi tion, during' the campaign last fall, charged that , the case would never , be pressed •to trial, for the reason that litirrnaarr was !implicated with EVANS. This, with the other false hoods uttevt , d against the Governor, is emphatically disproved by his offi cial condtici. WHAT OUTSIDERS THINK OEIT. The Harrisburg , correspondent of the Chambersbarg. Repository ;says concerning the new county project of the "Proprietor of 31innequa" : The better p n.tioa of the House were sur prised the other day by the report that the committee on counties and townships bad agreed to a bill creating a new county. called Minnequa, out of Vega,. Bradford, Sullivan and 14 coming in the north-eastern part of the State. This county is to be created for the especial benefit of the notorious Peter. Herdic. who is on hand with hie cash, ready to push his pet scheme throngh. By tho bill a piece IS cut from each of th so counties, making sad havoc with their symmetry; but making a beautitul•and square county, to please Peter and no one else. The people in the counties above alluded tore opposed to this,and their representatives are with their constituents against this glaring outrage. Time will alone tell tsbether Herdic aid his corrupt friends are strong enough to accomplish their purpos es. I watch this spicy piece of legislation and keep you informed. • The BedfoF.d Liquzrer remarks on he lichEme " Peter Herdic, of Williamsport, is said to have a neat job set up at Harrisburg. It is neither more nor less than a new amity to be erected with Idinuequa ,as the county seat. lillonequit was built for a watering place a few years ago, based on a slpggish, almost stag nant spring, tainted with sulpher in a dry time, and a pet bear, housed in a molasses hogshead with tie head knocked out. Of a necessity the thing was a failure, - and now it is to be made to pay by making a new county for the purpose of making Miunequa the county seat. Peter is clever at devices to make things pay, but ! whether be can worry this through remains to be seen, as there seems to be con siderable objection made to creating a new county in order to bolster up the bad invest ment of-a single individual." • SCHVYLLU COLFAX. Ex-Vice President COLFAX arrived at his home in South-Bend, Ind., on Saturday last and was received by a large concourse of people with bands of music. A speech of welcome was delivered by the Mayor of the city. Mr. Cows replied in an address of eansiderabie length in which he re viewed the Credit Mobilier scandal, and closed by reading a letter from Mr. DILON, castutr of the Ser geant-at-Arms, in which this gentle man says, upon referring to the books and refreshing his memory he is under the strong impression that he paid all the cheeks with initials on them to OAKES Axes himself, and closes his letter to Comex bye con gratnlatfng him upon his triumphal vindication from a well arranged plot to injure him "in the estimation of the public. - President Gaksrr also authoriSed the publication of the following let ter : Eurtrrivs MAssnox. WA6HISCITON, Much ith. 1873. MT Dzatt Hit COLFAX :—Allow me to say that sympathize With you In the recent Oottgree pional rove stigations ; that I have watched 'them closely, and I. am to satisfied now, as I Inas.* ever been, of your integrity, patriotism and freedom from the charges imputed, as if I knew of my own knowledge of your innocence. Oar official relations have been so pleapant, that I would like tokeeif up the personal re lations through life. Affectionally run, . 11. S. GRANT. If Mr. Coma was gniltr of any wrong or impropriety in connection with the. Credit Mobilier affair, it must be apparent to every unpreju diced, candid man, that his action was not of a criminal character, and that. the .disposition manifested by certain newspapers to hold him up to public scein -and contempt, is cowardly and malicious. A man's standing among his neighbois is the very best ctiterhin by which to judge VIIMAIEVI. The raiders be. Argus will re member with what warmth -that pa per bit year. &tended Col. Pious: from- the charge ofthe Raioarra, that he went to:Purisburg And ad voctiied.the passaged the bin sawn dosing the North Branch &nal. Last week, hoVvtiver, the' tirdnettlats Colohel, threW off the mask. and ap peared in the Argus in-an iill,l6lEil of a column's length defending the mown* which Ate and the Argus professed to oppose to ,bltterly,. end denottbcin the action of Represen tative /tin, in his endeavare to re peal the abandonmeut bill. • The hypocracy of the_ Colonel so appareht that the most unsophis ticated readily perceive it. His cant about. the roosters in the legis lature,- sounds very much like "eaten reproving sin," when it is well known that his own legislatiVe career was never abOve suspicion, and that no 'longer ago than last winter he en tered into a corrupt conspiracy with Pima HERDIC to secure a division of this county. Mr. Maw -is as far abofeVol. Piourr, in moral and pa litical integrity, as the east is from the west During his long career as a public officer, no one has ever ap - proached him with a bribe.' Can PloLmr say as much ? THE NEW COUNTY OP.nueNr.qua. The last Northern Tier Gazette,pub lished at Troy, gives the following truthful, concise and clear statement of the sentiment of this county on the division question, It it{ an effect ual rejoinder to the allegation of Hamm and his friends that the peo ple of the western part of the county, desire a division : The Stale Journal of the 26th ult. contains an elaborate article under this captian. Although published as an editorial, its 'unblushing impu dence ofr-assertion—ita canning ad mixture of a little truth with mach falsehood„, and its' cool appropriation of the reasons in 1841 for creating a new county of fifteen townships from Bradford and','lloga, as arguments in favor of attaching three towns and a fraction to the wild-cat region of Sullivan and Lycoming in 1873, in dicate its.author as certainly as his disheveled locks and portly form would point out Lawyer Williams in the streets of Canton. Professing to give a dispassionate statement of facts, he puts forward a specious ar gument, written for,mbney in the interest of Peter Herdic . : Published as it has been at the State Capital, it is perhaps entitled to a somewhat detailed consideration. It is true that in 1841 an effort was made to. Create the new county of Penn.. It is not true that anybody ever dream ed of taking any part of Sullivan and Lycoming for the purposi of a coun ty until the present speculation was conceived, and it became necessary to have territory without population, in order to evade the constitution. For 'introducing, this bill into the Legislature, his own party made Stephen Pierce a "yearling." Some years later another attempt at division was made and failed. During the past twenty years the sleep of death has veiled the divis ion scheme. No candidate has been, nominated or elected on-that: ques tion, until Major Dartt was elected against it. No effort daring all . this time has been put forth towards di Tiding Bradford county. Yet we are told that for thirty-five years, our people have " struggled with great earnestness and warmth to create a new county" 'and been " beaten back," and that this mountain of la bor has brought forth Minnequa-- Parfuriunt mantes, naseetur.ridicidus 17110. mar A Harrisburg letter says : "Your broadside on PRIEER made a fluttering among HERDIC'S poultry." We give the " roosters" notice that we shall continue to expose their corrupt practices, " regardless of de- . nunciation." Men who secure seats in the Legislature for the purpose of selling their votes deserve to be ex- . posed, and the press fails in its duty, to the public when it fails to hold them up to' the execration of their constiOients: Thelfollowing letter from or Har risburg correspondent came too late for publication litst week. We take great pleasitre in giving it a place, in order that our people may know who the honest men in the T.Jegiala tnre are : R.►=araacao, March 3, 1873. Rzeowrza :—Permit me to say as an act of simple justice that Myer, Mitchell, Jones,- (of Susquehanna), Bates, of Crawford, and Morris, of Westmoreland, all stood equally firm in the committee on the division question. They are all square men, neither tempted by the waters nor the greenbacks of the Minnequa chief. E3WLT. f!!~• The preachers of the Gospel in Kansas have taken- the Ponxitor- YOWL bribery case in hand, and are making good use of it in pointing moral and a warning to their congre gations. We notice that some of these ministers are handling the two principals without gloves, and if the reports of some of the sermons are an index to popular feeling, then it is only too apparent that To= is looked upon with about as little favor as Pommam, in Kansas. The Rev. Dr. Raw, of Lawrence, Kansas, recently, after giving his opinion of Senator Poltraor in very plain and emphatic Saxon, thus ref4red to Yoax's con. duct in going to Poxtao: and prOm sing to vote for hi M. This Prmeise was a deliberate lie— s promise to do what he did not in tend to do. It will not hPlp the matter to say that when he promised to vote for Mr. Pawnor, Colonel Yost meant that he would vote for him to w) to the penitentiary. He knew that Mr. Possum understood him to make a bona fide promise to vote for his return to the Senate, and he took the money on that condition In making that promise he told a lie. It is vain) to say that motive was good; that cannot justify the lie. On the same principle, Mr. Pow :sofa friends who used bribery to. ware I& oioe;1 don might joist* their worse. KATITOBA. Great 111111b1111611 . 10, ,Lt Wiaaepeg— The Speaker sir sa. laghlakere Dragged Mau kis Elleema seatiOraared. . M arch , , TORONTO, Chit., c 111=-4 special dispata(froni Pod Garry, Manitoba, to Aii Gk says: that tense excitement prevails in 'Winne peg, owing to the fact that it was sought to pass a bill through the legislature which would have let the Ribbon Say Company "and other landed proprietors of the pay ment of one-third the usual taxation on their lands. An indignation ; meeting was held, and a committee appointed to plead at the' bar of the Howe, 'Whither they were followed by four hundred people. The bill was ultimately thrown out. On account of the tyrabical ruling sof the Speaker, be was drag gedfrom fro his house at midnight and adminis tered a coat of tar. The government hs,s offered one thonsand dollars ward for the conviction of the perpe trators. Fearing a further breach of the peace, a military guard bas been placed over the Parliament, House. TMr , : Upon the whOle (says the North American) considering solely the im portance of the public business in troduced, and the very grave results that must follow legislation, the bit ter and desperate 'animus of the de feated opposition and the scandal they imcceeded in foisting into the place of business, we apprehend that when the effects of the short session which closed on Tuesday last are seen, the country will award it no mean or ordinary praise. It did not attain perfection. It did not, proba bly, all that it might have done wise ly—nor left all undone that shonld haVe been so treated. There were Liberals and Democrats, and too many of both in ite constitution to peimit a close approach to the abso lute. - But it did all that bad to be done; and, not less meritorious, it gave the good-bye to a whole firma ment of schemes and plots, and plans designed for partisan, for per tumid, for ideal and limited ends, without reference to the welfare of the country—unless to leech it. This negative action cannot have its mer its overestimated. In a day when legislation is ex pected to cure everything, from the toothache to schism ; and to benefit everybody, so that be can estimate his advantage to the cent instantly ; and when the whole pack are hunger scented for plunders that will sup- Port them, the Forty-second Con gress dissolved with a record whose wise mean between action and ioac- tion will benefit the nation in every way, and' so adjust the work of its successor - that great good_ can be readily made greater, and the first century of national being rounded into' a larger proniise and more crescent future. The true ends of legislation, the true apportionment of action and inaction, have beeri considered with rare judgment and observed with rare resolution. SAVING $5,000,000. A Washington dispatch says the opinion-of the Supreme Court of the United Statis in the Philadelphia and Reading railroad case, snstain lit the right of the government to, tax railroad dividends, will save the. government nearly $5,000,000: There are now On file in the Internal Reve nue Bureau about three hundred cases for a refund of the tax on divi dends, the same question being in volved as was embraced in the case just decided by the court, which was to the effect- that the dividends of the road were taxable. Besides these three hundred applicatioias on file, the law office of the bureau has in , formation that agents hal- prepared a very lirge number of similar ap plications, which were to be present ed had the court decided that the dividend tax was illegal. RESFLT OF No LICENSE. -SOlllO3 ears ago, HOWELL Purr was a member of the Legislature, he obtained the pas sage of an act prohibiting license in the borough and township of Spring, Crawford county. The Judges and attorneys of that county now unite in published testimony that during the twelve years of no license in that place, containing a population of 3,000, not a single criminal charge has been brought to the court of Crawford county. Who will say .that this is not a powerful argument in behalf of no license every where?' Let there be a general trial. agi.. The British- estimate of the gain to the United States from the award by the Emperor of Germany on the San Juan Boundary 1 e ought to gratify us. This award 'las only taken from us," an English journal says, "sixty three thousand square miles of territory - , and gold regions rich enough to. sot any num ber of limited companies afloat." The Table to the United States of this acquisition is estimated by tho same authority as at least twenty millions sterling. se. Mr. 341:11 has introduced a bill in the House for the incorpora.: Con of the Towanda and Troy nar row-page 11. R. Co., and will, with out doubt, secure its passage through both Houses. The incorporators named in the bill are among our most energetic and subitantial busi ness men, and will undoubtedly " push things " as soon as the com pany is organized. MIL.The biggest joke of the is Prrza's proposition 'to build": a street railway from lifmnequa to Can ton. He has had a bill introduced in the Legislature to incorporate the company. A little too thin, Prim IS. Secretary Boum:L replies to an inquiry that it is not his intention to inflate the currency by permanent ly, keeping out any part of the $44, 000,00 J, of legal tenders in reserve. He believes, bowever, D9twitlifitand ing the Ways and Means Committee, that he has the right . to Woo them Irbetievor he deems lb proper. ADDRESS or MB COLFAX AID ME WILSON. The following are the addromes delivered. ,respectively t by the out going and the incoming Vice lient,at thc.,close, of the Sedate ses sion otiTiteiday morning; March immedistelyiafter the entrance af_the Preaident,. a few minutes before 12 o'clock, if ' ADDRESS OF VICE PRESIDENT CaLFAX. Senators4-The :time fixed by the Constitution for the dissolution of the Forty-A=lnd COngress has ar rived, and with a few parting words I shill resitn.thii - to tbo hon ored son of Massachusetts who his been closet' by,tbe people as ng successor. !Adnainistrat ! unas terint- mite, and Clongressei expire as ; the years pass by, but the nation lives and grows and prospers, to be served in .the future by those . equally faith ful to its interests, and equally proud of,its growing influence among the nations of tLe earth. To be culled by the representatives of the people and rafterwis by the people themselves to the responsible duty of presiding successively over the two Houses' of Congress for the past ten years, from the era of war• through the era of reconstruction to the era of peace, more than fills the measure of an houqrable ambition. Looking back over these ten exciting sears I can claim not that I have committed no act which has proved the confidence misplaced that called me 'to this position, 'but alto that 1 hare striven in its official - duties to administer the parliamentary law with the same impartiartiality width which the upright judge upon the bench decides questions of life and liberty. To faithfully protect the rights of the minority, as well as.to uphold the rights of the majority in the advancement of the public business, to retuhin calm and unmoved amid the excitements of debate, to tetepir and restrain asperitie,-, and to guard against personal antagonisms, to per form acceptably the complex and of ten perplexing duties of the •Chair without partisan biasi, has been my constant endeavor. It is gratifying, therefore, that of theomany hundreds of decisions made by ‘me, often on the instant, none have been reversed, and scarce any seriously questioned. • How much I owe to the uniform kindness and support of the members over whom I have presided is diffi cult to express in- words. It has been - bounded by: no party lines and controlled l b ) - no political affiliations, and I rejoice that I have been able to attest my appreciation of this sup; port while zealously .defending priu ciples before the people. This de fense 'has never been coupled with personal assaults on any of the enii nent public men with I have differed. No aspeisie:,s. (AI their character have dish moral 'tongue, No epithets or invective have fallen from my lips, But,the clock 'admonishes me that the- Forty-second Congress has already passed into history, and, hap py lives for your country, and happy lives for yourselves, and thanking you for- the resolution spread on your journal; and invoking the favor 'of Him who holds the destinies of nations and of men in the hollow of His hand, I an; ready . to administer, the oath of office to flea President elect, whom I nowt introduce to yen. Mr. Wilson, standing at_ the Secre tary'idesk, addresied the senate as follows:. • VICE PEESIDEN - r WILSON ' S ADDRFSS Senators—ln assuming the position assigned me the voice of the na tion, I am not I trust, unmindful of the obligations it imposes. A servico here somewhat. prolonged, covering a period crowded with great events, and an association here with two hundred and thirty, Senators,.manv of them statesman of large and vari .ed experience, have iinpress:_ti upon cue exalted ideas of the responsibd ities resting upon the occupant. of this chair,' under the .rules of the Senate, parliamentary. law, and the Constitution. Iu passing, then, from the seat I have held for more than eighteen years, to this ehair,l trust I compre hend something of its just require ments—something, too, of the tone and.temper of the Senate. • In pre siding over your deliberations I shag ever ,strive to be. free - from _personal prejudice'himl partisan bin- A sense of public duty and the Obligations of personal friendship alike require that L shall be as considerate us just, and as impartial as the lot. o_f humanity permits. To the justice, generosity and friendly regard of Senators I 'trustfully -appeal for that counsel and encouragement, that forbearance and indulgence which ram sure I shall often require as your presiding officer. COMMODORE VANDERBILT AND GREF.- LEY'S D.tuenrEss. , --:It has been gener ally known in political circles for sev eral years "that HORACE GREVLEY en dorsed a note of fifteen thousand dol lars for COMMODORE VANDERBILT'S mis erable son, CORNELIUS, and had it to pity. Young COR.VELIUS was never h a cent of his own and was never able in the life time of Grimm to make him good. Bence the claim has been spoken of since his death in connection with his assets as being probably worthless. Bat on Satur day last the Commodore, unwittingly probably, said that IBIr. Gavrir.vr's daughters -should not' suffer for the delinquency of his profligate boy, and N;-ithotit any intimation to or from any person' sent the daughters , his check for $lO,OOO, with a written leave to them whenever they were out of money to call on him for moil), This was an exhibittun of sympathy and goodness on the tart the Com modoie which the most of those who know him did not suppose he pos sessed. Id. Hon. WIL HOPKINS, a member of the S ate Constituttonal Conven tion, died on WeAnesday, at Pitts burg. Mr. HOPKINS was twill in 1804. He was a member of the State Legu3- lature from 1834 to 1840, Cahat Com misioner from 1853 to 1855, and member of the State Senate from 1864 to 1866. - For - many years he was an active leader of tue.Demoera cy in this State. Resolutions of re spect to his . memory were adopted in the Constitutional Convention, and Judge LAWRENCE ' of Washington county, paid an eloquent tribute to his personal attributgs. A commit tee attended the funeral of the de ceased delegate, who was a good man, and possessed in a large degree of the affeCtioiie of his asexiates.: New Alliterthements., REPORT OF THE CONDITIOI of the "Fars Nanoaras flati, of Tearanda Pa.. at close of bosinete, Feb. 28. lag : . azsovsca~ Loans and discounts 1 - 4 .9214497 Over drafts . .. „:'.... . ' ... ..... ' 'Lin 15 t U.S. - Bonds io secure elteraiiiiii... - ' - 192,000 tilf .Due from redeeming and :awe amts. 44 304'94 Due from National Banks - 11.910 90 Due from State banks and bankers ...-- . 13 231 03 Banking House 6 000 00 Panama and dirturca - - 2,000'00 Current expenses . 1 IP2 66 Taxes Paid - 'or''" ..\- 1.141 30 Deihl/ems 11i3 It E rrr.,..0. '5 2,193 07 Bills of National Bank, ~.. 0 603 . 00 Fractional Currencl (including nickel)... 1,29. 19 Specie 141 60 Legal tender notes .. 21.104 00 LIABILITIES. Capital Stock paid in..l. :; . ... .......... $12.5.000 00 . I= e ltuuL . - 50,000 00 998 45 Profit and loss ' _ - - 4.532 05 National Dank circulation otdadattding... 109.120 00 Dividends u,.patd..• - • 1,640 i 0 Itulleidual Deposits2 sB . 667 38 Due to National Banks ' ' - 2,922 81 Due to State Banks and Bankers ... CIT 35 Etrirtg or .zkyysyr.vrasts, I B s. c County of Bradford. I, N. N. BETTS, Jr., enabler of thu First National Bank of Towanda, do soletanly swear that the above statement Is true, to the best of my knowledge a n d, belief. N. N. BETTS. Jr.. e . Subscribed and sworn to before me, this loth day of Bar. b. isT3. • W. Et. DOWN. Notary Public. Cciasteus—Attu: C. IL MUINTLVE. E. F. , ;I, Directord JOS. POWELL. ' TOiVANDA PLANlticis SASH. BLLND. ANI? DOOR FA.QTORY. • The subscribers having purchased the Planing Mill formerly owned by C. D. Cash k Co.. and haring W r n:hly repaired the same, are now prepared , to d PLANING, Ana to riamufadore MOUi,DINGs, .VVELS. BALLUSTERS, &v., Ia the best toenner and on reteT;able terms rerun's tram a dittance can 'hale their Winter dre.ecd. to take back with them the same day. - A large atoci of SEASONED Lt.'3IIIEG ALWAYS ON HAND MI SASH, BLINDS. DOOUS. MOULDINGS. STAIR BAIJX3TERS, SIDING, FLOORING, kc• In fact everything In th xiice. alrof which will be Noll cheap Kr cash. • Wo also pay cash for lumber. For further tutor matioa eng9ire at our Furniture Store on Mena bticcr, or at the Factory cm. Charoa Street. • 3. 0. FROST k SONS. 12., 1973. LOOK HERE! • Having bought ihe mo ck and fix tures of George Itiksray, at the old st4ud of the . RED, WHITE, AND BLUE, - I would inform my friends and cnsteutera that 1 shall endeavor to keep on hand a actect stock of (YOFFEES, AND ,FINT. GROCERT.ES AND PROVISIONS Wlitell I w;.11 f.•!111. bottom price% Tlittiking a gimereus,publie fur their sympathy for my Iste imiA•urtune. I hope ITithet attention to business. to merit a i , hve of its patronage. T.maud.s, Mardi 12. 1S7:1 „ CLOVER, 'ASP ti 31011117 SEIiD Farmers and dealers %rill Lads good sti-NA PEA VI:iE L ARGE 3 ,CLOVER SEED. Warranted true to nan,e: alto Ohio Ar, - State Clover k Timothy seed Feb 20 . 73 At FOX S mEncurco. W YOMING SEMINARY AND cOMMERCT XL „COLLEGE. Ons of the largest sell 'tole of the kinit in the Cnite,l Staten. Prepares students for College. G.-ailuates yonog lathes. English b-auch4s thoroughly tan.,ht. A. German Pro , essor ut music. Military tactics. Commercial College—% thorough ruerc..iiti e tosi—oooks taken eirectly from ttusine.is establish. cuen,s. Telegraphic depirtntsitt Stpriu3 term opens tprtl. - AdtiVa‘a UeV. C. Wet:UV% it M.. Presidont, er 1.. t. SPRAGUE. Principal cf Coranteretil Collr e, Kingston, Pa. Feb .10 • JEWELRY ! JE WE LRY CHRISTMAS AND NEW YEARS HUGUENIN BROTHERS, EMLILLA!2M;.A3i2L&E . I, A. M. WARNER, Have just reelved a large assortment of Jewelry o all the late.t styles. American and Swiss Watches, Gold and Silver, from the ehespest to the best. Also a large assortment of . . CLOCKS. GOLD, AND STEEL SPECTACLES Remember the place, two doors south of Powell k Co.'s, Towanda, Ps. Watches, Clue.ILL and Jewelry carefully repaired No.. Oil THE MOST SUCCESSFUL and Girls' Monthly Magazine. Deinoreat's Young America. Brilliant with Instruct ve and In teresting stories, poems. pructles, travels. games. editorials, correspondence, etc.. fully 11 nitrated in all its departments. U an ever welcome guest to the family table of instruction and amusement. Single copies 10 cents post fete. Yearly $l, or with choice of the following beautiful and valuable premiums to each subscriber, far 60 cents extra; a choice trom Ave fine Parlor Chromos, worth $5 each. or two in teresting Juvenile nooks. bound to cloth and guilt. worth $1.7.1. post free ;for a due pearl-hanqled trio blade Pocket Knife and a pallet of best Paints, post free; - Or a very powerful brass•meunted, doube cylinder. Ivory-tipped adjustable alicroscop, worth $2. postage 6 cents; or $ good Stereoscope with a 'Wiwi of viewl.,FOstage 5 cents; or au elegant Pilo. to rash Album for holding 50 pictures. postage 16 cents: and valuable premiums tor clubs- Address W. JENNINGS DEMOSEdY, 635 Broadway, New York. Feb 32 $ 5 giR”E. that WA ate aD r txu.-41;toticeate no it t a he thwwill rebi s allowed in the Tamarac rend without consent of the undersigned. Also all persons are: forbidden peeling Temente and other trees. The anove to ward will be paid soy person furnishing informa tion of any violation of the above order. PATRICK KA= - T. J. ROOF. Standing StOne. Feb. 19. MS-TS* . LI OTIOE.-1 A. RECORD:. of To-wan da. has received the Agedcy of the Water-, town Piro Company, of Watertown'. N. Y., which is • Ana-class Company In all respects, with cash auntie of 423 OM— condned by its character - to Farm Property and Dwelling House Blake; la therefore perfectly safe Pays all loss or damage of bode; to pieces. whether dre ensues or net. Alio pays for live stock killed by lightning la the barus or at large ou_the premises You cab save money by seeing Mr. /tea ord beforoinsnring elsewhere. " and • Clr• cabr or sled Ow ow • /‘• w. ZSCORD. Art* oti teleran Ibirands, FPANS ttz EtiLDRETA'S 131/"Y' a-oo3Ds $553,336 04 STOCK LARGEST $553,356 Q WE OFFER FOR TUE NEXT, of THIRTY . tr ' DAS SHAWLS, RES4tVING, k'e CLpTHS, J. D. JoHICS.Y.C.C' ELTIMINTN B ROIL `Mitceasneono. THIRD ABEIVAL - Oi NEW AWES LOWELL TIIAN ZYEB. SPECIAL ssmasme m DRESS G o'o D 8, CLOAKS, WATERPROOFS, FLANNELS, Also a full line of LADIES LINEN HANDKERCH'S, ; LACE 111 FANCY EMBROIDERED. " • . LACE COLLARS, LINEN COLLARS, N U ; 131 A-S , And many other new ,goods suitable for the • • HOLIDAY TRADE. , Plearm) call and examine • EVANS & HILDRETH, Towanda. Dec. - 10. 1871. 100:*al I' REPORTER OFFICE IS THE IS THE IS THE . IS THE PLACE TO GET' Y PLACE TO GET PLACE TO GET PLAGE TO GET FT - zvq poavii M.te►9 NEAT JOB. PRINTING JOB PRINTINC JOB PRINTINC AZ REASONABLE RATES. • AT REASONABLE RATES AT REASONABLE RATES. i 1 , • : F°R 8 EVLE —A t,S. for sale near the Rolling 11111, at a gotimg s u d on easy terms.' 100 feet front. and 243 feel derv. street on three, aides of it: Large house thereon. ,For rant 11 not;110/3- - , Marsh 3'73 - VOR -Very' dqsjrable Property In Camphrarn.Thadtord Conn y e ll The' house is in good order and the hi.rn only lye; years old ?lie terms are very easy. tor froth.... era apply to Dr:V. Mood. Camplewzi, Pi aa 8 - SALE.-A, farm of abilnt serve. eV dated wlthin ere° mites Tfreandt, \./ Donnish. Well +stared. ielth good °retard. Rases Bud teem tberson, and about - 7mila cr. ,wO O . l i n 4 . •ud Umber. r tering studs to W; P. X r prit , °Mee corner Main en/ ittsts Wrests, Tows+4 . N'r • .14011.150 ' F 0 R:REN T.--11e, three etor z Brick Ifiore 1 i 8 klattifitreet , clearly opposin, Lt Mans House, Towanda.. Pa. The ft!st dont. finished off for a store midi the asenek u4 , Lit 4 floors am Puitable Sof a dwelling. W.tet, 6.rtil sto le*. Possession risen Britt et ,•pril Enquire o; Jo Carrolt;Barclay. Pa.. or Wm . Fop!, sttorip, at- Ira. Tergatals, Pa. ' • r 0) '4p; p. R vAmil& FruitF4 F fin of 12rf acres. 73; mile frora town, Suarez county. I),isareire, shout six.or handfed Mach Trees net to hewing iirebirea.rrr.ir.. Mao about ISO appie Trees. entne R ars au: nth., fru t. Ordinary flonse and Barn— .11inaty of tit, b.r. iitd ellinat: good water, &c. Per fartiar parUctitars enquire 9: the ownair.• JESSE Rinexr; • - Lo - Roy. Bradford (;?,,,rey. Febl2:%l 4 ' F°`{ S:L • :--A. place abot 24 safes of good land . Tocatuf Itradteril D es, Bieseh Grove school house The tuprfteineet.l are a good beams and barn togethry with wit Innid tugs blood wavr • and a - .• smug. ortusrd ca th e premises. This is an eicellent chants.. Terms:very, easy, as the Dauer :es Lancaster County. For further particulars tti Wm. B. Stevens. Leßaystil.e, , a. 7.1a.S REAL ESTATE CHEAP .. 1 -1' he utopr;igried. 4lfers for sale very 'cli;‘•p. the following desclbe,t real estare: - Imo lam coutalnlow 100 acres. mortly Unproved. Winged lu Towanda ton - using, Also oue lot contaiumw acres. c -One Tartu contain nig lin ; acre% iR Asylitai Walt ship. partl3 truproaeit... One firm ecmtaining 30 icren in W:PIOX and tome townships - . One house and lot in Towanda BorOugh. • Two hones in South Towanda, near the leerou. , l J. Also two lots Jan.l6.7:t HERD ANNUAL .COURSE -a- N 46- • - I. cnr - T . &c. Ditp, -• • • H. eukre.t. 4Lui Lira. - ax .WAI4) irLECIIT.6 Lin the other Itctu. ers U then iservlte% can Le Rer.rre. , .. Otherwise 'other keturers'Aut bu erigagett. 'L SCA RFS, General AOmiPs!on Beeerre4 !'2l_, 1873. Bridge Street 1 - i 1•11 MI ' • C For Sale a test. lIPBCBT ifelliTrysz Xizteanewas, LEX7II7RE FOIMITTEE Make the felloaring-annomeementa for 'SEASON (1 11372-3: • ROBEItr GOLLY RR, January 3. I inbject - -" The Insith. Track.".: JOHN B. ODUGH, E=l Subject—" MI ANNA. E. DICKINSON, D.llO S.l j ct— What's to Iliuder.l 111211 FKEDERICK DOUGLASS. Dat.' , February 24,15724: • 6blte SEASON TICKETS, $3 211 ale at Kirby'ot Drag Store IN,' F. S.lNtimuso.N; ' S: W. AL.v0u1.,,. 13, Its 7 FAIRBANKS' PI:II:EOM AND COU .- ti TER "SC ALL pE:KTEr.c ciCtiTur, FEED.CUTTER S: THU.III3 I'M'S ANTI-Ili fCr TON META.f, BIALN'ILIJA & SIR AL . HAY ROPE Co4s4iiig; Fussell' 4 Co .' s, TOWANDA., MEV,RY CHRISTMAS Q001“.NO I, - . STOVES TRIBUNE COOKING 'STOAT:, EXCELSIOR RANGE With Patent .Warming FLUTD.;G MACHISES Ind SCISSORS, CEMENT, LIME, LATH, SHI\ 3LES, An all kinds 31 BUILDING .MATEIIIAL 'row a. 10 cent Door Latch UI _ . LAMPS,I;A;AIP SILVER PLATED WARE • GAS FIXTURES, GAS FITTING AND PLI*4BING Pf all sorts„by workmen who e.Alr nct-beexeelled if equalled bY these freni any othei local tc:: COD.bIN,G - , RUSSELL CO: / Tonal:dm, Jan. 30. 11373. ?RICE LIST-CASCADE lELLLS. '‘,. ~ . Flour. boat whea.:;ger sack ... ................ f 2 3 "" .4 hundred Iba. ..... ..... 5 54) " .r... • o° "- t. '' barrel ......... ........ 11 1 reed. th. ca -I,or cwt • . - • iltistoru grinding - nraally done at once. as , pacity of the mill is aufectelif for a great iononnt of work - ~.- .11. ft.r..ltH . ilamptrorn. Thiv . 1241%1'. .i•:, . . • • FARMLII,4 —bring your produce and seam - 4os scii/B. Ai* 19, -tall. • 1 1 JOHN -H61,4 . 1 37:11:11y Februiry h. iv:: GEE ERE L. It. Fa. , ..st P. IMI ME