Bradford reporter. (Towanda, Pa.) 1844-1884, February 03, 1876, Image 2

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NM Mal ALL 11.4TIONS.
I.luNtUrr Dtwrry 1?0N has lucid inter-
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EtltErt O : tN - is in the' 'lndian
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( ;1.:01;:ikr: ',V 1 i.m;s,. of Wilkes'
iht: Ti , ,ii.s.\luts g,,.nle tai Europe,
lost a 1-nit
for $70,+!. 1, 1 in aexnt at' V ickFlnarg,
1,
:41(1 Birth cons, rics 1:1;k:
l'oat the Celes
kti.ll.; 1".1 lighting I,:ngLapl, sun
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E Turk , : rceently
'tear Duzi d4nl
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1.1.011. re, -,17 , 1: ,, 1 work . qu MtetcKy on their
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in this cr,aa, r y a re, r o .r „a.
their sm:ik rstition.'
61;iy 01 . 11 . 1 i() 1 11141 IN'ordi
was not home ; '
or
7.,,n.e Paeitic . Ita."..l%rny .Cominitt
ar:zunients
will
L'rat.er - tipan
.the" consi . ticrathn of
I.lw P.ll.
it AV ‘:1IN , T0)!•:(1.i•paie.11 tone Trib)iriei
ar iti':•l , ll'l , i'd that 1 3 teSident I 71 1 at.t
1„•of tile viitaos.er: in the ea , ' of
his tlepositiAn in
.
Weis /If a serionsiiiature have been
r,,7, I I. 7 liitctLlSlates
TAX nt.. l tali. Ivitielt - 7 - „it . trite, Will
ue
ee=-iiate Ii removal. 'The At torney .
(3etru: NN n 1 at ortiernn invest i! ,. ation. ,
.4)\ - I.:n the poreil cif tilt! Oh Snail
:it I have
set: Ir•:4 y,ta an open :ma tinder.
(1;i no' .!..; pa it tied iti c -empit at it: let
ters. "L'o , ar_vely tuJ 3,lnOtt of..
Tr.. - ..-N.Ellsos's 16C,, is in jail at Rock
Was s , )
oro&t: tigif lo!r. Fite tez•titied, that
stand ,it, She killed
lain:-:rith a%,and cut his throat to
.2.make sure.: .
Tlri: minal - l - nisersity )mat rac . be
tvreini tic C:atitbridge 'find Oxfords crMvs.,
is 11 . xed 'for Saturday:- iho t . 11.11 of April.
the r:mrso the tt , ttai oue fr,ra pultney to ,
Mortlake. - IV; tn.; au , l (nu:-
fourth tuilt , s. •
• tII".ST I.rnwl(l 4 STor.nr.:ll,l has nine
pairs of top huots_und eight pairs bf shoes
in thd.NewiYork Custom House, which
he` she intends to Wear, while the.oili
e,n-s insist that he intends `to sell them.
knoWs , .
•. TM , . Treasury Department is-. prepar
ing a t•iatement slicr.iing what, changes
, tvere;:iitlit ciUti'es th - C revised
stit—t.s.. The list is understood to be very
1.):1:-;, It ~till be sent the Ways and
3b.. , alys Committee for,!their, information.
Minister elortschhoff. of Russia
is 314 inion that affairs in ('uba need uo
interference-from -the Powers; and that
if rie.t and S 1 ain have any difference
it is titolie of fune:al."' Perhaps it
might itelfntized in on-the wrong
.
side.
l' 'Pronto We Saturday putilisbes
a letter fl '"ln Afclibisliop Lynch, of TO
ronto, to the Pl-'l:flier, in which he says
that the priests in his dincese,areistrietly
I'm - hidden to make the altar or 'pulpit of
their elturches a tribune of political ha
ratiute for or against any party or candi
date.
• CoNtruz.sonv voting is advocated asa
cure for pclilical . evil's by Mr. Bethune, a
member of the Ontario Legislattire. He
has intredne(4l a hill which would punish
by aline:Of dve _dollars every man also
minlit - vote but did:not. • '
!Dn.' DANIEL Donor, of .Clinton
county. formerly superintendent of the
Inebriate Asiilum at. Binghamptnn, Was
again appobried to till the same position,
at the meeting: a the trustees held in
Nei - Fork on Friday last.
TIIE Rex. Jolin S. Glendenning has, at
I )16 own request, been , dismissed from the
er,:tiy City PreslJetery to'the care of that'
or'P,eoriu, The Piesbytery added an
ofrieial stateMent of 'Glendenning's yell
. tiou withithat body.
IlAnrEr D. Wts:cin, of Detroit, was
arrested at Buffalo im Saturday, by U. S.
3larsk.l Simpson, of l3lilwaukee; 1F in.,
on the charge of robbing, the mails thir
teen years ago, whe employed in the
lxist office at the latter plate.
Iti.vrx and Charity Ilaywood,•busband
and wife, lived together in extreme pover
ty in San 'Fmncisco for many years.
Mining'speeulations has enriched them to
the exteat often nzillions; and now when
both ue over sixty years old, ;' they have
decided that They will be happier apart.
7 1 ,:a enormous estate is to be divided even
ly between Vieth by' mutual agreement,'
nod he is to allow her to get a divorce'on
1.. c grounds of,desertima.
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E. 0. GOODALCII. f ALTaItD.
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REPT.: ISILICAN N.itiON.ll. coNVLN-
The n..xt Nati,•ll3! Ck.uvt,l.lt,ll
th • an,T,
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L has
ailopied a ties4in:f4n• the 4.1ni), - . 15 . : 4e1
stamp on. ti.'. CLanennial starnpoll
envelop. staini) 1 ~ p r., l3 :atte,l
hv a shiet,,l. lwai•ing tlietci:.l,l . in a
.3(.1,11', the 11:01 . ..1.-4 tt U. S. ,
bane:ith wh1C.:! ! 1 is a re!)I'eSJIIL iIDIt of
mounter! post-IL T,' Olt a groatt.l.
work of telegraph poles: . and wirk
beneath thi-; is an engine awl a Potal
car. anti at the bottofn of the
withili a scroll are the words'illiree
cents." The dates 1,77 r, and I st!l it re
at-the top alai bottorn.of the shield
re , pectivelv. These euv:lolicc.:. -
be manufAetureg anal soil the
Government I.lullling . on the Ceriten
ial -. .Lt . tounds awl : will be furrikhed
'under the hr: sent contract for stamp
ed envelopes Without afhlitional cost.
REPRESENTATIVE S'r.lli. KW ESTHEit
of Coimetrcut died in Washington,
on l Friday, of pnetunoaia. His birth
place-was - Pre , iton. Ile was - educated
in the public 'school, = fdrzne,l; and
tau ht until he was ;21 years old.
lie studied and practiced at
Norwich, Ikssillanee having been
th4e, for Catty yeari. Ile , Was
member of the Legislature, and: : : dele
gate to botli National Rcptiblicah
Conventions of I S1;0 andl-Ss.:Pre.4l
- LiscoLN nude him postinaster
of -Norwich. He vas reappointed by
President JituNSON, tint resigned
after, his:notalde speech of February
In he was made a
member of the Fortieth Congress,
and Was returned at each suceessive
election • since, -his present having
been his fifth term. He belonged to
the yadical Republican wing and rep
resented a strong 'constitueney of
the same way of thinking, who Will
elect a successor of Abe same stripe
in April.
BILL has been introduced in the,
leir,islature to: protect dealers in mus
ical instruments: The bill provides
that such instruments when held un-:
der lease shall be exempt front sale
or distress from rent. The proposi
tion is a just one; and shouldibecoMe
a law.
THE-Argus says there was ii great
er percentage of deaths arming the
Rebel prisoners in the North, than
among the &ion soldiers in the
Rebel prison pens: Comntentlis nn
neeessary.:
17 [ 11E douse of Representatives has
fixed the Judges
.Salaries at Olit same
they were under the old
1 '
Feb. 3,-187.5
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for I:2t , yl.:tr.
from .A.vpral to
th..• 11:1111e )! tOertrall
7. , fNT 7.17. ( 11'11r.:11111.
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Among all the kind words spoken
in eulogy of the late Vice-President,
none were more sincere and appro
priate than the remarks of Senator
CA MERON: An intimate acquaintance.
extending over a period of the most
eventful history of the countrV )
served to.bind the deceased and NIL
C.l NI ritoN in the strongest bonds of
fpi , ..trlship. The tribute to his dead
friend (I,3es honor to the .head awl
heart elf our venerable. Senator.
CAl!unox sail: •
mr. P I ( , ident, tla• lavatory of a man
in t.,:reat
:losvt•.l ini•nt forct.. trap to I!i, ,
, nviet,ion: , of ri in, anti ear:test in tho
of d:ity. staily tttoil ,
,11w Ays ct r uiard respect. ant: honor; ami
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• ..1. - !1 :1 1: , :01. W:LS tho
vf his tk: his principlos it may II,•
i.l tliat tiii,ll:44an at a pPrioil.
ail was df,playi.il on a thvater, n • hcr' it
111111r:A ra.:p• than hnlinars cntlii‘iasin
1., p s-ot.‘i.s rin:r. anti pion.
!la n !le to hoop 'him firm.
!hit c:irri•i• no eviden,
in: iiniati. that 'Toffy WO-ion
IMEIM=!I
I:t4iketi tntlitisiitsm or the
reqz - iirotl for Ivolk ; .2nel Vl= '
Lut that 1;1,i,1 snaky.
pittliwity lit iti, , st ;litor. , slituz to mt. i,
iu liiiiiildeness uf his the erierLty
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avenao,
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A. Amlrew. this exee•lhlit ft re c:
•11:d :lien :he u.d0n..1 late& (i. 00,11
10 i•Vilt.
Nv I • his 1.,215t strvice; could he L t ivvit
1. t!io country. lta:ing
t i 1 , 214 the lit in tilt..
11. Lie:t Le W.V..• lit it , l nii4l
c.liCrUlly
.1110 , 0 n. Viti..t foriomcda p a rt
ul t! histocy of the mttion )et iison
setst. , adtastty L,ved. His r.t.iiotio con
stittn :it: again rt;tittmed him to this bedy.
And ilieu the tit:ui:try denmntled of .1t. , .. , ,-
s.tchusetts the situ•'she had delightcif tit
h•.nei - ..that zni , lit be et further ex:dt. ,
.we trim ti-:Ale from the
dittie, of the L un t te, rt.e , viii,
imv.,•ver icebly and inipe:fectly. our Ili- .
llittt's to his latrioti,m. his tie% otiou.
ontra.4e. acid lit,. tratiQ,.
his reNV,lfd, awl we lily
Gratin li.is.
The New York (icaphic of
giyes a N - "ry g , :)1 likeness cc
l'ongrossnvin PLATT,: Of Owogo, N.
Y., with the fillowing biographicq
sketch. The article will bt real with
int:r._bst : h Mr. I'LATT's many friends
on this iii4e of the line:
" Mr. Thonias C. Platt now repre
sents for the seeond, time the TWenty
yighth tiokgressional 1 1)istrict of the
'Slate 0j :S
l ew 'York, which is com
posed Of the counties of Broome,
Tompkins,,and Schuyler. lie
born at pweL , o, iii . . Tioga County.,
on the 15th day of July. 1833. His,
tauter. who was one of the earliest
settlers of that county : , was a -promi-!
milt lawyer and a leading citizen,,
and was universally respected for his'
purity and uprightness of character.
His yOunfrest sun, Thomas C. Platt,
received his earlier education and fit
ted foreollcg s re at the On - ego
ray—an institution then justly noted
for the thoroughness and etlicienev
' of its prekratory course. From the
A e. - Itit.My Mr. Platt entered Yale Colj
leg as: a member of the class of 185:3
•find t , iok a high stand among its
scholars. He was—compelled, howl
evc,r, by continued ill-hcalth,to leave
college before graduating' and , enter
into the less sedentary oceupation of
a business life. He returned to Owe!
_go, soon became actively engaged iti
mercantile pursiiik, and has ever]
since resided there. Mr. Platt pos
sesses indomitable energy and an ex
ecutive ability rarely equalled. kese
characteristics, added to a repti‘tion
fof integrity and honorable defiling;
early acquired and ever since main
tained, soon placed him •among the
prongnent business men of the
Southern Tier. . He organized the
'Tiotm National Bank, of which he is
StilrPresident, is very
. extenSively
engaged in the lumbering business of
Michigan, and has been for some
time Vice-President of the Southern
Central Railroad Company,. an enter
prise which he was prominent in or
ganizing, and though still a young
man he has alreadyworked out for.
himself a large share of financial stte 7
cess. As -a politician' he has been
identified with the Republican party
since its organization. lle took into
politics the same fixedness of pur
pose and energy which he manifested
in business life. His political con
nections Were very decided and elev..
ly defined, and. as he possessed the
entire confidence of the community,
and had an exceedingly large per.
BEAUTIFUL TILIBUTE.
-4 , 1 . his , -•: 110).,r!tbi
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11 T. C. PLATS
sonal acquintance, he was enabled to
exert great influence in building up
and shaping and sustaining the or
ganizatinn-of his party in his own
district. During the war be was one
of those who never; faltered nor
dreamed about compromise ; he gave
liberally - of his time, his personal ex
ertion, and his money in support cif
the national administration, and has
never ceased to be a radical Republi
can. But although so long a promi
nent party leader Mr. Platt, with the
exception of • one term as
,County .
Clerk in 1859, steadily,refustO to ac
eept.any office until his election to
Congress in 187'2. ; Although nomi
nated to that otlie6 in 1810, and
strong - 13 - urged by the convention
:Ind his to accept as the only
means of harmonizing the district,
Mr. Platt positively declined. In
however, he was nominated for
Copgress
, by a unanimous conven
tion, and was elected by a majority
of over 3,200. Ile served during the
Forty-third Congress on the Com
mittee on I'6st-offices and Post-roads.
Ile readilygained the iconlidence and
t ti cto of his colleagnes, anti was
ehosen by the delegation from New
17ork as their member of the Repub
'li to Congres , ional Committee. To
his, own district his course and infib
e:: in Congress was entirely satis
itet,,iy,.. lie was, in the fall of 1814,
reatuninated without a dissenting
\ OitY and re-elected: Ile is a mem
. iwr the Committee on Pacific Rail
roads, a po,ition for which his prior
r:Liiroad ewvrience admirably fits
him, atr.l he is ranked among the
mo-t experiented and influential
mcnibers of the present New York
(li-14-41i:ctn. Mr. Platt is a:•vigorous,
ac , .tir-tto. anil ready writer.; a man of
~h.,tarly attainments; thoroughly
with the litentture and
"knowletl; , e ot: the tizzy, very true to
hi; c:):lvietiOns of duty. and never at
for argument to support them.
Tll Ugh I inlet in his manners. he has
a :. - eln•rolis and genial disposition,
:10 . a rich fund of, humor and wit,
r.'lli6-11 makes him a most agreeable
eoliipattion. 'He is at once a clear
prartical l,u ineas Inata anti a
ati.l e,lueateil gentleman.
Ile is not 12,i . eti to itittell speech
-I»:iliing. hut lie is always to he idled
pronwte. practical :ilia useful
and. to enforeeau honest
e,:oilotilieal administration."
tr.:4 4 . 4;1,4 721011 THE PEOPLE.
TEE SCHOOL-BOOK QUESTION
•a
Th e hot!th of newspaper article is in
,
:111i1C1111t to give a thorough review of any.
iil tev,kq, -chieh the Committee on
Text- nooks have reported to the Assocht
their recommendation to the peo
ple ef the eonnty. Of all the books now
in general use •through the county, the
taain complaint is in regard to the Gram-
Mar: and as this was made the excuse, or
at I. as! on, of the excuses for revising the
list and saddling upon iqtrents in the coun
ty the expL me of inure than t'2tl,ool), it
may be Reath the while to call attention
to :-ome of the remarkable beauties in the
h0,.1..; which this committee recominendeil,
Byinp relieved from the pressure of bOok
tzents.
I in oldor to inulti,rstand the perfect atlap
i:d.:on of pa! agmi of lrattitlitirs to the
rant, or our common schools, nib ftalow
ng limy lie mentioned as am l on:, , tile nee
re.mirements Which must. he filet by
v . :ran:Mal', in redder it valuable as it
I:4_:,t-lirik br curt:1111ot school instruction:
I. ft ought to exhibit accurately the
titre or the language ; not only the
whir;: prevail in our own and
1:::te language . ., hut the ltliume which
of 0 tkcilli:ll - to our ' own tongue. It should
ti,: the struct• re of language ;off it
i•,.11y and not twi,t, tramiome and
',lll-titute other ‘tords, until the original
• •
has 1 , 1!( - 11 t 1 a lINrOIIII . II into an
of ait, , gether different structure, be
-I,u, ii CAII be analefied and the words coal
i‘t rued .
r•Ni
MEM
c:111, -,ql
41,!;•:1.t, ;•:ut
t 2. The arrin. , ement. should be natural.
The want of such an arrangement was the
:, fault ~ f . gisminars. They
,•;:n- iicd Sbeir t , Tics sulf r onling to a strict
'l}• log;(.al stria ngem ent,Which to the young
student is not the natural one. W e fi rs t.
death latliculars, and then generalize ;
la,sltb•ation is an induction. The facts
'of et':uninar bmst be learned this way. It
ire , t unes e.nisiderable mental discipline
'and :owe knowledge of the facts of a sci
ence. IK; ferrc a student can generalize those
1 , 1 P; a
1 he dethalons should be concise and.
;exact. Every seienee rests : largely upon
!its d, tinit ions, •and when,they are imper
i, et the whole subsequent treatment will
!be nmirtd by the imperfection. Incorrect
;definitions lead to incorrect thinking. In
!mammas' every sliOnld be given
I wi:h mathematical exactitndc. In fact,
(Inc of the reasons why the Mathematics
l bas been considered par excellence an ex
act science, is owing largely to the perfect
fi't.itaitions which have been given to the
terms - used.
4. The text-book ought to contain only
these things which are news:try to the
sub;eil. cisc is embarrassing to the
, slink nt, 'discouraging to the beginner,
and adds useless cost to thy!book.
:Now let us see how this - Butler's Gram
mar, to which this committee have given
•their endorsement and to which they ask
the teachers of this , county to add their
ecommendation,
_as a book aliove all oat
! ers in the market fit to he placed in . the
hands of our children from which to learn
the structure of their Mother tongue,
" ! nicets,the requirements. ,
Haw does it represent the language?
Bat; two or three instances out of a multi
tude need be given. " William is study
' in g . stndying is a participle—it partakes
of the nature of the verb and of the adjec
tive. Note.—here studying belongs to
the noun William, like an adjective."--
Page Does it? Let us see what an
' adjectives is. "An adjective is a;, ! word
.joined to_a noun to show the extent of its
application or to denote some quality of
the object."—Paso 84. Now how the
woe d studying in the sentence above given
dues either, 1" think would tax; even Mr.
Butler's acuteness to tell: "John can;
read. Can is a verb in the ihdicative
mood—it is used to express direct asser-'
that. Lead is in the infinitive mood, to
being omitted after i:an—it partakes of
the' natnre of the verb, and the noun."
Well, this is morvelous ! What alasting
debt of gratitude we Owe to Mr. Butler
ftir this new enlightenment ! But let us
hear him further:on this subject in a note
on the above exposition ; he rises to ex
plain : "Here read is used as a noun in
sthe objective.case, the object of the verb
keit R. The origiMil meaning of the verb
con is to know.
f John knows what? He
knows to read." Examples of this kind
can be-multiplied (or knows to be multi
plied.2',,Butler) ad nauseam.
• Let fis look at his rules under Rule I.
"The subject of a finite verb must be in
the nominative case." Is remark 6,. as fol
lows : "In but with the nominative the
verb is disguised by coaraction ; as, All
perished but (be out) he," .! but what • be
came, of "lie be out" we fail to learn.
.Igain, under Rule IV.,
for the govern
r.,ent of the possessive, Remark 1: "The
modified noun is sometimes omitted ;
this book is Henry's [book], &c. :With
the pronouns ours, yours, hers, theirs, the
inoliiied noun is never expressed, these
forms being appropriated for use when
the modified nouns are °witted; as, This
hook is yours [book]." Instead of telling
us what is true, that in ;such examples
simple possessiou s is predicated, we have
all this ienscless jargon about omitted
nouns ; and if it were merely senseless it
would not be so bail, but iit is absolutely
false. There is no word omitted. The
sentences are complete as they stand with
out the addition of the bracketed words,
'He fails to account for the usage, but sub
stitutes something else and then attempts
to account for that. • And when we say
the book abounds in just such blunders,
we only say what every one who has given
it but a cursory examination must readily
have discovered. . •
But passing by the second qualification
—although here the book is open to criti
cism, for neither the natural nor the logi.
4541 order is followed—we , proceed to call
attention to some of the definitions.
310111.1 is the name of an objeet."—Page 29.
,Tow, what can have mines but oblecti,
or to what part of speeth such names
1
wonld belong, we are not to ld. Turning
to' page 32, we find that a f. Pronoun is a
nontrof very general signification,• denot
-lii relation to the act of speaking or Some
other noun." If any one, dither Mr. But
leror the committee who have' endorsed
hinx, can tell what this means, can make
this definition intelligible,,t, hope they will
give thepublia the bene fi t a it, for I con
fess T cannot tell what "'the name of, an
objeet' of very generatsignitiation, denot
ing relation to the act of speaking or some
other name of an object,'? can possibly
mean. On sage 58 we have the follow
ing luminous definition of p erson : "Per
son • is' that property of nouns which '.de
mitcs relation to the act of speaking."
hist Lefore on page 54, wn are told "case
is that property of nouns which denotes
their relatioato other words:" Here both,
case; and perion are defined as a reafion,
but Whether person is a cage, as would bo
inferred from the definition,. or what.it is,.
no tine can tell from the words used -to
define it. To begin with, Person is no re=
lation at all, and expreSses none. Yon
May call it-properiy,. quality Or, modifica
tion of the noun, but it shows no relation.
Person has ne relation if it expresses any,.
te the "hct of speaking ;1 it simply des-%
• ignates the speaker, the one spoken to, or.
what is spoken of. TheSe are but exam-.
ples of blunders in which the book abounds,
and which mustebe a source of perpetual
annoyance to the learnet and the teacher
wherevcr the book is used. It is doubtful
if it be pOssible for a.sy one to obtain a
clear and distinct knowledge of any sub
, ject withent having clear and distinct un
derstanding of the tern s in which that
knowledge is expressed. I if the accuracy
of the knowledge of Grammar awaited
by the pupils in our com Mon schools is to
be measured bythe accuracy of these defi
nitions, it would be far be:tt6r to banish the
whole subject froth the euriculum of study.
Again, the hook is lumbered %%WI a
large amount o usele l ss matter. The
"Practical 'and rCritical,r - from which I
quote, and which , bas bden sent out for
examination, contains :;12 pages and re
tails for one dolhr. Of this, :1:1 pages are,
taken up with preface. orthography tendl
ortletcpy, subjectS which are learned front
spelling-books and dictiOnaries, and !is :40
much absolutely wortithiss stuff added to
the lox 4; ; 58:pages are hired to embody a
miserable rehaidi' of that part of rhetoric
which relates to .punctitation and poette
measure, in all more than one-fourth o
the volthne. In additio tto this, at leas
one-half of the examples and quotations,
which add not one Wllit. tO the value Doi
the Itsefulue.i of the wiirk as a text-book l
could be (unit tetl, and flu. hook would hl.
the better for it. Rut Mr. Butler. evident:
ly. was intent on making a book, and i '
lie uould do it. in no other way le. e mil:
string together a great miss of quot.ition r
and so "what i.e LlCktd ill meat make tip
With 'malt." r 1
I low, with such glaritig defect~ as flies(
EMU of which have heat noted. the teid l
ers of this county ean so stultify then]
selves as to endorse stn.tt a !wok told s:t:.
as they will do by thaOtet, that it it. the'l
standard, this meets tlieiridea of \Vilat
grammar ought to be, iuul ti 14
is”.o
tcarh all this Leyoliii illy c,,11
iittlictiAioll. I tlo not
it : anti it' they do. I :u - 1 coloident thpi
intelligence oiougli Itinong our ilheew
to re,:utliate
1=110=21:211
I SAY 'NO
There is a pr , vo,ution to utterly repe
the Bankrupt law, hotlatre stone rogti
take advantage of its provisions. To In,
that is not a forcible argument, as rogo
take advantage of all talcs, if they
and our legislators arc' constantly coot
l i
ing to perfect raiVs. % ere all abused I:
repealed, we soon sin uld have no la
Better ome mi. than to Ili 11, al them.
I object, becanmr wfoin:xbotte»2
b.lnkrryfry is required by ot4 Nat4oi
Constitution. It is f.ir better to Layr of
equal and universal 1:1w, than to 'hal
thirty or forty differcy laws, ono for (..1
ry >,rate. It being, then, a peNitivc Co l
stitutional duty•to• o . .rfect a system
banl(riiptCy s(i as I t• prevent a variety
stems In crilt. .ount,ry. reform of a
•ernirs in our prefmit itrooni is; the rpn
dy, instead of repeal.). It liar b..en o
j happy thing in our country that, intltc.i
of attetnptiti” any refil in that might hal
been wise, utter reptal has been demandi
and accomplished.
The fart that atirat
of it (being a tli
eared its continuance,
;Bankrupt Act allowed the srttrus stiva
ages—a repetition of the same ram:alai..
which would, have been avoided by , t i
continuance of the law. Repeal' the a ,
and the wild and unb i ridled spcculatitin
former years would figain be rushed i!
—thousands of men woull a , rain
hopelessly in debt—lhard times" W• 01
again come—a "Bankrupt Act" wut
be again dein:holed. and thousands'wo
"sponge Out" their Idebts--"defratli
their creditors," as it is s:sid—Under t
Act. It is of no use!to keep a titan ho
lessly in debt, underlthe harrow. Lent'
up, and give him another chance, 'held
lie becomes a hopelqs, aimless lluisai
ill society.
A Bankrupt Act 4 a standiug wand
against the lmse credit system which s
prevails. There perhaps no bet
check to that folly.than•the certainty tt
debtors have a chance to repudiate th, ,
'debts if nut successful. Horace tree
never gave better advice than when
recommended city merchants and mar
facturers (when money wai, more Ow
than it ever was before 4r ,ever will
again, perhaps) to let not ,la dollar's v,•.) li
of goeds leave the city on credit. When
.a dealer pays down he requires the Inr
to pay down, and then there ie little chance
for failure anywhere from manufacturer
to consumer ; and, then, no need or
Bankrupt laws. Blit when persons buy
and consume before they earn, the .world's
history shows that lesses.embarrassmci ts,
final bankruptcies imust 1 ensue. Bank
ruptcy is the natural offspring of credit,.
everywhere. 1 I
No rule is universal. Beady-pay men
may fail, and sonic may give and tike
credit, and still survive and prosper; nit
the tendency, the natural ) result of buy in
on credit , is injurious if not disastrou to
both parties in greater or less deg •ee.i
But when one and all • y down for all
,goods bought, the tende icy is .to sa ety
and solvency; and F our laws should be
Made to help the safer.sy tern, nut the un
safe. I am
,not sure bu it would be bet
ter for all concerned to abolish alflaws
for the collection of orinary goods after
a certain date. Sonic haii ships wouldl fol.:
low, but net as many as accompany the
credit system, as one maysee by car ing
out iu his mind its i r e suit fi during a w ole
generation. f
Without enlarging, I commend the üb
ject to gendal attention.' AS a nation, we
have been idling; !spectilatin , ", wasting,
until we have brought "1 hard times' .to
many. We Must work,, economize, ',get
out of debt, and then we shall have om
fortable tithes mot before. Enaiting
"stay laws" will only postpone the evil
dity. Repealing the Bankrupt laws would
remove one barrier to the loose credit
mania. We should devote this hearted
year 1816 to obtaining personal independ
ence by getting out of debt, helping koth
ers, and putting in'practice a golden ulc:
"Pay as you go." No law, no party, no
society (open or secret) can do everything
to remove the evil.• Every one Mush act
for himself in this line of personal re t inm.
. ExrEntES E.
Borrow RsronTEn :, Had we a few . ore
Liberal Republicans and a few more smil
ing yaw-shakers; and a slight iecreabe of
rt.4 e
the eager personages who immo li ned
themselves in a Fishing Creek exc ion,
we should soon be' infested with a bel
camp and a rebel flag right here at home.
The 4, Johneys " have been mananivi3ring
to take Washington for the past fipeen
years, and it is not a little humiliati
the friends of humanity to bear testis
to the fact that they have attained
long-sought-for prize. They have
unable to sustain . the siege through
own disordered Old polhited rank:
have been able to win, by their bray,
slaughtering definseless prisoners
carving out the tills of our brave
the sympathy of quite a number o
publican dupes in every State in th:
ion ; hence their majority in the House.
It appears the Democratic party is! ever
partial to ex-rebels, no matter whether
their unwashed hands have been cleiriniPd
or not. Tbo Northern Dermieratsi dare
not disparage their Southern brethren in
it single natertaking, whether right or
wrong. They atii actuated by the same
fear which existed in ISM, when Win.
Lloyd Garrison Nvius dragged through the
streets of Roston for preaching the ithom;
inable doctrine 'ghat all men are created
equal." The fOul spirit of Denidcracy
IS so timid in its I!.zadden elevation that it
k e
feebilurnsafe without an ex-rebel - at ." very
door read cat-hole in the halls of Con ss.
N. P. Banks, pfl Mess ., advocated the
i tt n i t se "That Jefferson Davis Waßilot re= .
11 ciblefor the ntrOcities - eotnin
ittmist - ~,-,---------=- — - -
;: • ..- • ,_
• •
4ndersonville. " !lave . often heard Oh ' I. '
A lSi.it, AL REPORT OF Tiff`, RECEIVALS AND EXPENDITURE
rtmark that "New England f - ' h I
1y71114 ler 1 .
OF BRADFORD COUNTY FROM JANUARY lit TO DtECEMUER 3 1 st, 1675:' 4:: r- . • i
tie: poorest soldiers 'daring tha'"wss .' •
. . ~,, •
, ,
lo li o ether this.le true or not) I
. believe N ew_ l • ..
.. , • xxPrxt!tr unts•
____.
__.: _
.
!Hand Deriwerate to bathe most bitter --------- ---,------- -- ,---------"---- -- ---J-- -- - •
. - • i
pperheads north of Dixon's Itmt; except 1 Auditors ' 140 00 fiPrisoners support Di county Jail S II . ..I,strt;r4 1
the red-headed Democrats - of Newlersey.
1 ai: m ii e t e o s os foe Protlionota - reand itegi3tet 'it ~4 • " ' " 1 Penitentiary '-. , so:74
o wonder M r. Banks desired th e e arth Bridge contraettrand repairs
.
Lido the crimes of Jeff.iDavis. It is in' Bridge vies
f
alit for these howling economists:lD tiny i
hat this Tory is I . lot re.SpOuSiblelor9o 00 ',Conveying prlioners to peninentlary I - 713 Z) I
3,917 II I rlProthunotary and oTerk sessions ...... • ,. „: .. 136 37
' itiO 60 ;Repairs on promo building. '
Bradford County agrirotattsi tiociety.:.. 100 00 , ittent of mon tot
_ , court at Tres . .
. ' , . 010 31 1
. • too, Do,
' Constaides making rettillo awl at/gilding ~Rent of county superintendent's olnee ...'. :.
2-'4lO O
courtLeal :3 f strut of county surveyor's o ff ice • . 25790
• cts of his despotic hirelings at Anderson- I Assessors
.
ille, who could barn and staiVe and 1 , 1 ,,; ( 1 1 ," `;`,,7 l , l :„",','„" ea'Ai " . " l ' 4 -
t
reege to death sixty thousand bravo de- 1 ti:, ' ‘i - u . ., n ot c ii : i . crl;l . l . l - all suits . 1,210 25 ~,, IterllT tot summoning Jurors
2.49 3 451 Sheriff for relpovlngeelweirs
5 cO,Sinte Lunatle Asylum
7.5 u otl Making duplicates and•registers r igtl 00
Sr)'
W.{ 79
04 ixi
enders of liberty, who, were helpless - in I Counsel to commissioner; 10 001 Stenograpchr and court rein,rfrr . 2.52 73
their " hands, and nobody lin to blame. It 1 (7rter or court 216 l Expoimo= treasurer Troy courts 47; 00
District attorney
lab recently iom( - i to light that Wtlrta was i E
leetion exp..nses L.s Oti ;
00I.! Teachers Inititute, act of 18r,7 11 4 , 95
1,257 7(4 Tax refunded ..• ' I ' 51
• d Lights ..., 171 nr. , Townsittp Intl school tax , . 12 0 9
05
.._, .. ..
Jets: Davis' familybutullerbeforcithewar.
Davis, knowhig his thirst for blood and
realizing the Aearcityof uptadrufsids in his
degenerating iConfederacy, grasped the
opportunity of promoting the dOil's own
butcher to
° the- command of :the Union
prisoners at Andersonvilla; hence, the ter
rible. deluge of blood which enstrOl.
Ap
palled by the cry of indignation which
I burst from the lips of the loyal.lniiliens,
Jeff:Davis shrank back, and ou:tanned :
"IL .was nut I who did tl i le-bail deed."
Innocent petticoat ! Thum liduet, do it ;
and both God and man will ever hold the
responsible for the unholy deed. The
writer was
. a prisoner at one, tint° during
the war, and cu - robably selefered;-:es much
in the prison pees of the :- , ,outliu:6 any man
ever did who came out with,his 14()Int;S, Mal
he could not feel otherwise h,ut:indignant
toward an'y
' set of men of party who
should restore Jeff. Davis to full
rights as a citizen of the United states.
Ile should have been; hanged tWthe same
tree and with the same rope which eneir
cled the neck of hiS agent and private
butcher, \Vurtz. Let the Democratic
party submit to every wish uerniu-notien of
ex-rebels, and instead of thisheing the
"Centennial era of , Democratic wisdom,
good government and 'practical couunum
sense," as the'...frgaut predicts evidently
it will be the Coitennial cruColiDelnocrat
iv dissolution. OccgsioN
Shesheumin, Jan. Std, 1876.
LEAVEN WORTH: Jan...29.—,A special
to tin!. Leavenworth Ti'i"4e.i from
Camp Supply. L-ays: Abe night
ot* the 19th instant, 4 . Messenger
arrived at this post with news that a. •
party of Osag•es had stokti:lifty head
of cattle front Camps Lqe and Rept
/Ads, :Own:, miles :2,ontlr of this
i r laco. Major tiortion. Fiftli Cavalry.
vommlndin! , 11.1" ( ost,putinedintelv
ordero:l pursuit, awl
with 150 'Men. started the g,azne:night
with orders to, puni , ...11 thti Indians.
should the latter be ovei!tal.en ; if
nerl.ssary. to lairsue thelit to the
agency and demand 0 so4ender
the theives awl stoien-'stov4.
.The tit•taeinnellt returhO to -rlay.
bringing as prisoners tiasi.! sTa . ms,
one boy and Jhirty-livt.i' Indians
Ironies. •.
About Doom on the 25t1i; Lieuten-li
ant Bishop arrived. near th , t;_jtuliap
camp located in; high gra.S.. _Their
ponies were
Dismonntiitg, his ntetiall.l favor
ed by the hazy atmosOltela% the In
dians were taken by surprise. The
latter being dmnounted i N r e u nat,i e
to escape, and tiailter tkare.:surrender
made a determined tight.. ;:Three In
(bans were killed. several Ivonnded
who escapefl, and the v,thole Inlnd
dispersed with one exeePtion. All
thy. lod! , es were / Miled: : Ile 11/i /
Spi!tW declared she w4 - Hild. rather be
killed thatfgo as a prisoner. and site
tray left the sole oi•-ttpant of the
camp. Tht: stolen t;attle, had been
Oatt.rhtered before the Indians were
overtaken. The prisoner -3 aeknotl
edge: the guilt of their b.kntl.
Il
tage had been talc
l ing) shoi:id have
rer the next
WAsniNnToS., January. 30.—M r.
Morrison, the Chairman cif the Coin
mittce of Ways and \lc4 .4. has,
is understood, prepared :); bill amen
ding flip Tariff act of last - Con ! rress,
by imposiag a tax on tea and coffee
and on incomes of over .:$'5.000! It
also proposes to simpliffthe collect
ions upon duties by striking , from the
free 1e.4 certain :u the collection
upon' which will not be i.!.innplicatcd„
and itni)osipg tip - bn!thi:nf spocitie
, $•
SoNtuTtlms a Cold will not;yield or
dinary remedies, because °fine severe in
flammation of the delicatelining of• the
tubes through which the air we breathe
is distributed to the lungs. This condi
tion produce.4 ; Pain and Soreness, Hoarse
ness, Cough, Difficulty of Bri:athing. Hec
tic Fever, and a Spitting of Wood, Matter
or Phlegm, finally exhausting the strength
of the patient. and develf,ping very Serious
disease. Dr. JavNE's Expectorant seldom
fails to remove these symptoms, by reliev
ing the lungs of all obstructing matter,
and healing all sorenes:*. Pleurisy, Asth
ma and Bronchitis, are like Wise cured by
this standard remedy, and the reputation
it has maintained for so nniny years, af
fords the best guaranty of it's merit.
M O N TAN.X.ES!
MONTANYES OFFER A. FINE
ASSORTMENT OF GOODS,
SUITABLE FOR THE SEASON,
AT - BOTTOM PRICES!
M O N T AN:YES!
g t°
ony
their
been
their
THE FARMERS'::. MUTUAL
INSURANCE CO.; OF TUSCARORA,
Is now Issuing perpetual policies on
•
FARM PROPERTY ONLY.
Each member paya a fee, at the time of insuring;
to rover charter and incidental expenses of the Co..
attar which no further payment Is required, except
to meet actual loss by tire among the membership.
This plan of insurance tot FATINI PROPERTY,
is coming rapidly Into favor,
• Place of Business, SPRING BILL, PA.
The Agent will canvass the Tow/reships of 'Duca
rota, Pike. Renick and Wyalusing. and farmers In
there Townships wishing Insurance or Italormatlau,
nutyadtlress,
A. B. SUMNER. Ser. and Agt.,'
• spring lIRI, Bradford Co., Pa
W.M BIIUSIWAY Pres. octran
but
ry in
and
• ead,
Re-
Un-
CIGARS AND TOBACCO ,
• u low rates. Itetwerolser
NERCUR BLOCK. opposite COURT MOONS
stow or Tux, "INDIAIII SQUAW
spr2l.7S.
AN INDIAN FIGHT.
cApTt:itE WAS k;FFEcTER
' r -'-~ mss► f—;
Mis:ellate - ons Aivertheitrats.
Towandi, ra., Dec. S. IV3.
0 I a•
Tug LITTLE STORE 'ROOM Ms CORNER
Is the best place In Towanda toloa good
Fuel ;mei Lak...,
Grind Jtiror.4
Travr , r,e jurorg
Itimirmit , 101 l pillille
.111StICP'R 111,111j,10411.4 ..
corninishigltiviS:3!lti
0111 n• book 4 and stAtlonery
Palate Pritlllitg, hal'nei. I,r mil!,
•' 187 r.
Arrotot with the-irreraT, r , ,110 - efors rottlity ta.rem for the royally of Bradford fo
year 1,175 4od prerjoti,!
'l"Wps and tyloo's
D. M. I,:tinpliwtr
...! di. W. WIW.'S.—
NV. li. )1;1r-43311
'll.trlos 1:1I
11. 1„
.1. s.
I:.
(Vll.-at
..,.. 1.. 11. Smit h
ilet ^ l/ NV Nee.
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=EU
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(~,: rev.: stflf , do-lit of tit , rveolvd:s and f.A.p• oaf f till, of :rdd ~,110 :;" 1“ , .•••••Ftp.: linA t4ay of Jan
.thd d: t v of lyerember. Ittl(do‘h ~ I A. ID., 1,7:4
~,,,,,,„ our 1 ,„,1, “ ud o . ou L I ,•11,,, "t."1'..,1%.i - ada this /VII day or dar.aary. At 1). 117 , 4
4:. W. X lI.M fat.
310111ZIS ,1)111111,1t
J 011:•: ILA 1.1.AV1N.1
(\num
IRE
Atte,t—WILLIAM k i rk
Ili:AOrevulkictiCNT
4 . hr. und0r.:i 7 .,,,,i -aid eotinly, .1 ,, Kerrie (Trtlfy that we liaVe examined th i
atatetatent and the Nuuet f the .1,1111, WPC:n.II4 it tot,' cerrect.
ottirc .I.•ritinry 13. 1576
Nov dtszti:cm= s
PERFECT ST3 CCESS
±
Tlie,tralversal sat!sfactlt n givi% by t!i
ORANGE COUNTY' MILK PAN
.
In quality and tputidlty nt Ind u.r made- and:::by
rr
muving tro, druE3*•: , .. lu• (I.kirytuuiti,
prulaptt , to :1,7.1111 l'AVlie
ATTENTION
(COI.
tt
PROGRESSI yE FARMERS
?
To the most
COMPLETE ARTICLE,
of the kind now before the pane
Itidatry•s of 15 to '2O cows. the Inconvent@nce of
funntshtug• au extra datry-tuaid Is avoided. We
guarauteL to ghe
PERFECT SATISFACTION,
Or remove the "Pans — Mier 3o days' trip)
Our references are :Anne of the Live Dairy Olen of
Bradford an 4 Subquehanna Counties, witit have
used the pans.
BEARIPSLF.4.
Jan'27W. Warrenhanf, pa.
AJ. NOBLE it, C 0.,.
.
—Main street, opposite the Court #onse
TOWANDA, PENN'A
I "+
PROPERTY FOR RENT, FOR DWELLING
AND BUSINESS PURPOSES.
Writs collected and remitted on reasonable terms
Money Loaned & Lyons Negotiated.
PASSAGE TICKETS,
And
- rOREI(I\' DRAFTS
ALWAYS ON BAND AT 13ARGAINS.
0.0:0 703 iW. B. VIN‘INT
r 321
Le*.
.
H 93 81. Fvr
:V2O trii' Wildcat certificate.
:4 7 ' !Sewlitirtin Kuyionrdali. comintisskitcer.
111 s A bc:lttk et!minissloiter
242 2( Morris Shepard, vannilsA"ner
•.!I() !II • E; IL Coolbaugh, clerk of CointniasiUtiera
3 i 9
ECM]
_
harge4.
C.llO 'Ow
.1 1 11
1111
. • 174
'1
11 41 1474
tr., 1
1574
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1 71
1.74
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1774
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71
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15 31
21;9 209 51
1;7 02 59 74: -
49 52 17 31.
90 79 71 11 '
OW SOi 593':
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72 1 0 tl4 13
370 G 7, 3,9; 0.1
299 91 240 87
519 99 470 95 .
27 91 tt 95
317 49 V. 7 32
2.:1 01 271 22,
72 14 • 41:
24 ?.7ii
132 9 , 432.
1,4(1:", 71 1.230 07
321 to 390
. 01
14') '
3(. , r; . 20 37
7. • :; 1 7 21'1' 79
Gr, SI :,7,1 1::
11911 11509,
1,719 20, 1,e1,3
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IN 11
1..19 ,
El
BilE
Ell
INE
MEE
I - :1I • f i 4
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. ..11 V, ,
ME
MEN
I:••turn , -1hn, , )11,, Zed for P,75 and lire% lotr.
lall I , r
to t•no-et 4
I ?.‘tnji• Tr,-,ozrrr . .......
71 ;I'.‘l4ll,lnk
r.
!.!!.' Nitln ()II ;1:34.-ra :12,
liva•-11r2, .I.thimry 1. I ti
•
t !I7
17 hydel • p.sH
J. 0. Pl l ,l S-T•
w - , rasprNtrill:y ann9uneo, Waal th
. . .
. .
1 . 4' Our usortrne4t is
I -
VA.RGER THAN.
GOODS THE BE
of any in the MARKET. Oar prig
reached
.having just returned front the c
fnnx
ATTRACTIVE LOT 0
Dec. 9, 1879
Emu tot a!
el 0.,
a IV)
,I 1,/
5 96
1 19
6(
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SEE
it
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3 a I
ME
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MI
t, 1.f+67 54
ENE
1) bot IC
.1. It. ISIC
I% .1 L k
Wrest 3 Sots
FIRST CLASS FLT.IINI
AaLl.that. our prices arc the LOWY.
TILE BVT T 0
And now Is rho
TIME TO BU
Volt Tim
HOLIDAY SEA
COME AND SEE T
E7rytblng Ite
U ND EU T,k
AT BOTTOM PRI
FROST'S
OWELI: &'
r
1
Would respuOtinily inform
Cnstomera, and the !Public 'gene
that they are nowl
H IN E.W:
with ihereased 4
business, and hayin
El
•
to each of tkir
ri 10
4l
"2
IMO
H .
S. 01 .
1$ x 1
212)
110
F:
4, 44
fat
1:7 1.7
Ift 94
EMI
ETS
BEI
OE
S Wek. ever *es
36() Oti
42 1.)
BIM
3 tO3
131 41
En
EMS
4D "4
22 43
They will offer
EH
MEM
BEI
a.i 14
,~„ h~
...
;jil h~
HEIM
EEZI
GM
IBM
30 9"
r.
r.-1
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• I h .,
Ell
MEM
ME
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4 ".I
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ME
EiEa
lEEE
Pt FLA SE CAL
REIM
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( • I; -11
fr.:MI 19 1
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1 .' 4;7 54 L ..-1 It CfcE 'iD
. 2,96 , ,1 69 f 'r
1.61 14 _. i -
33,2 , 3 Z 17 , ' ,
724 S.
341 54
2."37 53 ! i
45.3C0 70 ' . Opposite their.
y 33 n 2 17
a true an 4
.Jan, 1: 2 1 876.
art.* to the
ssiouer, A Y L 0
•
foreg dug
STED,
TZ,
,kuttnorg„
0\
s
to want
TIRE,
V -I E R . .
t
=I
.T, a:td our
Tom.
Lave now
EIMER
H 0 L I
We brie. •
GOODS
CO
DM
NG
ES AT
& SONS.
towsitio; Doc. 0, go.
Prms
,
El
ttlel in the
R E ,
ilities for
MEM
N E W
.1
0, 0 1) S
irer+l depart
T
have no
the most,
FM
MEM
ATTR
1 4.CTIVE
113 ELIE
BM
their good
MEM
(IREAT R
I.:DUCTiONI
;j.c ~
Ta cfc..o. t
, 0 Winter
L AN t) SEE?
In tlwir
UPZE
ate place of
o w E LL
EZIM
R C
1 I
AUTIFITLI
b - R ix . tiSr T
A S 8
INII
`OF .
M
Al GOOD
IE E
MIN
TA
YLOR & CO'S
=I
IMI
THIS WEEK.
El
IMI
CO