NEW; nom ,az NATIOVS. Orr jitClrieaiagi:s is down to $lO5 per ' • thousand. ENGLAND paid about $70,000 tax on playing cards last\year: Ix Kentucky working iron ore is paid in ictoro goods at the rate of $2 25 per ton. IT is not generally known, but it is nevertheless a fact, that Kansas in almost in the centre of the United States. Tits- strike_of the Bolton (England) cotton spinners is approaching a close. .Iloth sides will make concessions. Tug India famine will coat the,',govern ment fifteen million pounds besides the loss•of revenue and other indirect effects. VEttmoNT has an actual debt sneonly about thirty-six thousand dollars, and yet she never gave a Democratic majority., AT last accounts one hundred-and thir:ty eight persons . were undergoing treatment in Yokohama for Asiatic cholera. GOO) to the amount of £531,000 arriv ed in London on Saturday - from Australia, India and China. Most of this sum went into the Bank-of England , Tirefteare three hundre'd- and thirty students at the .rniversity of Virginip with a certanty of a considerable i crease. - -- THE YaleTollege faculay have refused the a etition of the students to revoke the decision to abolish - the Thanksgiving ju- ME Tim person who gets the seat, in the United ~States. Senate now • claimed by Enstie and Pinchback will draw 'f'.41,1100 back pay. •, A SAL - - Pnvirtseo firm offer to supply Chicago with strawberries this month if the &gland justifies the shipment by the .car load. • , .(lENkliAl, BEDFORD FOILIV.qT the great Confederate cavalry, officer died Monday evening at the rosidence of his brother, Colonel 'Jesse Forrest in Memphis Tenn.' • PRESIDENT HAVEB i 8 SOM to be saving money out of his yearly salary of $ 5 0.00P, his expenses for the first! six mountbs in the White Ilouse i not being over 14,000.. To of Dartmouth College's, most dig nified professors were locked up in the college chapel :ill night xeently, by some inischievons students. .7: FIVE sisters, who ,are- nuns in a Cana dian convent, have turned into the ~conv ent treasury their combined fortunes' amounting' to Vi 00,090. - 'Mon E. than eighty-four thousand mod ris and thirty-three thousand_ origin drawings were - .destroyed in the recen, tire in the Patent Office. • . . . ES TIMATES 1)13.C.43 the yitaf preciou' metals in Nevada•and Calif° is for th current year at $33,000.000 in gold and t2.7,00(1,000 in silver. Whew ! ' ' 'Lvattcti VALLEY ra t ilrOad •3s shipping mere freight over they road s now than they have for many years there was a lack of 500 cars at 'Bufralo on Friday. • . li'aoEs.izi the Sonthern-cotton mills are froin.:l4 to 30 'per cent. less than in the Ea'stern and middle States, and they dR. elate dividends' of 13 and 14 per cent. l• • •Ttitt ship Cora Linn, from -Quebec for Leith, encountered a terrific gale on the Atlantic and became water-logged. .Her crew Were ta - keu off and landed iii Live rpool: TUE Iron mill .of Lewis, Oliver ‘F , Phil lip.:, in the Tvrepty-ninth ward, Pittsburg, lwgan 'rvinninildimlde, turn - on :Monday m , rning, thus giVing employment to an d.bitional number of hands. Tuv. 01( 1 Dominion Iron and Nail Works and the Tredeger• Works, Rich mon:h arc driven to their full capacity, and are doing inure work than at any . 0 inn; in the past four: years. , Ex . -0 T I DEN, ' Secretary of Stah, IligcLow and Congressman Dewitt, t; . , and d;tughtter,. , arrivcd -from Europe ; Thursday morning in the steamer Scy thia. . A illisTos school4eactier3an skeagerly after a street car ou Friday morning on her way to school, that'Ae burst a-blood 7 resliiA, and died in a few hours. - She was thirty. four yefrs ot age. ' is reportal at London that the mar; rime of King,Alfvso of Spain to Princess Mercedes, - daughter of fife Duke de Want penSifr; has been fixed for 23d of Jan -, a talsynexi. A DEspATeu to the State Department from the United States n,inister to Japan i-ntiins a copy of 'a notification from the '.l:ip . atiese Prime Minister, announcing the complete suppression of the Satiuma-re bAhon. Mn. Z. MosEs, pi:is - ate secretary to Mr. Ferry, President4ro tempore of the.E,3,en a te•tto ring the session of Congtiis, has beett . appajfited - Clerk to the Senate committee on •Posi. Offices and Post • 111.oN tits made a great fortune by his rope-walking. A few years, ago he went into the' Wine trade and lost all his money. Nosi he ri2tUrtis to his old business, and says he fo x f presentemint that he will his TO e fall. Mn..Osi•Aft BARNET, the?iron founder of Newark, N.' J., has received from St. 'Peteothiirg. Russia, an Oitkr for the casting . Of four hundred thousand United Statt4: pis!tols for the government. . t'ily.:toial number of persons who regis tered in Brooklyn on Monday was 27,620, rnaging a.`total for the three days of 78,, 111, The total numlier registered last ye.ii• was 68,366, showing a falling off of • ns:w making machines are now being . 4i.inufaetured at the Cambria iron work 4; It Johnstown, and if they prove a success it 1: proposed to erect buildings and estab ::ll works of sails:tent capacity , to turn ow:1301004pm of screws a day. - Mn. I'..M, M.E•rcit.r, Minnesota's Corn tuissioneepf Statistics, estimates that the wneat crop of that State this year will ;each the enormous amount of 4,000,000 notwithstanding the ravages of ;the g„ - assinipper. ; • - On, of 'Fairfax, Vt:i went in,. the night and` threw rotten eggs at the .;tiotise in which Nisi Coffee lived. 'They had been lovers, and had quarreled. The egg throwing was an expression of his anger. She tired several pistol- shots. at him as a reply. ' t f.:I.IAMICR4II` -4k Buis, of Philadel phia, are building- an-iron tugboat for the -Delaware Bay' 120 feet long, witb coom:' pound enzirie,s.- The latter "having , in tiers of 15 and 31 inches diameter-and -28 inches stroke. ' , The owners are , Captain G. NV. I'ride and others; Mit. 11AvAttli TAvt.on is giving his se-' les of lectures on German literature twice a Nyeek at the 'Lowell Institute. The tickets issued by the Intitute-4,200 in ±tinniber--were all taken twenty minutes alter the -distribution began, and a very „Lug,. number of applicants were unable io obtain any.. Miss AD A SWEET, the titicagii pension a: R ut is a childish modest lady who lo4s iit4t more than twenty years of age. Her h:,ir is golden brown; woren curled about her forelicall and in'A braided coil-low in the tie , A., 'her eyes L blue and laughing, figure blender, voice loci. • A MAN in Sprague. Conn., during the 11A slimmer not iced bees going from the 4 , 3% -,, s of iris liot:jci. and returning loaded with honey. f.a..ie . ek he took a few dap l),iaids'friilll honsei and seemed sev enty-five poniei., of honey in the comb. ' l'ortieNt water tanks at Newport, R. 1., %kilt be in operation 'on the first of next N 1 iv 'Thriv will cost more than',4oo,ooo the buildcr,tGcorge H. Norman, will bare till the revenues from the water trots, acnoirling to agreements with the city. A TRAMP who is,no* is jail at Litch field, Conn., tor shooting a'bonstable in a Wry _ atrocious and cold-blocs:led spirit ~ n4ives to be a son of a W - estford(llass.) ilaptist minister, who had not beard of him ` for six ' year. The man is only twenty-one years old; • A Tputim.E t hurricami is reported as having swept over the island of Curacao, Ilutch AVest Indies,',on the 23d of Septem b..r. The damage to property is estimat ed at over #2,000,0,00. Many livertirere lost and several vessels, wrecked. The Ntorni may have been in some, way.zon nected with . our own cyclone, . which wrought such widespread devastation tabout two week's later. As Dr. varts, of Scranton, was tilling isome cartridges a few evening,' ago, ,his little son awoke crying,- and said that he had dreamed that his father was shot. 'fbo father 'quieted knit, went on with his %work, and' 15 minutes later one of the 'cartridges exploded, burning his face se verely, and the grains of powder ponetra • Wig ono eye, theca is a oseihlllty that hg May leie the nee vfi it. , . aibul gepodtt Entre= a R. O. GOODRICH. ; S. W. AIMORD Towanda, Pa., Thursday, Not 1 1877. - REPOBLICAN NTATi:IICKET. FOB MOE Or THE SUPREME COURT, Sox. JAMES P. .STEREETT, Of Allegheny County. Fog AUDITOR GENERAL, 1 . J. A. M. PASSMORE, \ Of Schuylkill County. -FOR STATE TREASURER, WM. B. HART, Of Montgoriiery County. REPUBLICAN COUNTY TICKET. FDR. DISTRICT ATTORNEY, I. McPIIERSON, Of Toicanda Borough. rug COUNTY SURVEYOR, - T. A. SEWARD, Of Spiithfield Township. Republican ~Meetings .. REPUBLICAN MEETINGS wilebe held as follows : S.Tnithfield Centri, Friday EveAing *v. 2. Orwell Bill. Monday Evening, Oct.' 29th. Lersysville, Liesday Evening, Oct. 30th. Oa \ Wyalusing / " • • nesday Evening, 31. Springhill, • • relay Evening, ,Nov. t. Albany, Frida/Evening, Nov. 2nd. -WE have assurance that able speakers from abroad will be at the above iwtiogs. The namespt the speitkers will be duly aut*Ounced. Republicans in above locili \ tins are requested to , make arrangement*. for these meetings and sea that notice is given. . W. 11. CARNOCIIAN, Chm. CO, COM. Examisa your ballot and see that it is all right. , BE sure that your trallot ,contains the names of STERRETT, PASRMORE, HART, SiCrIIERSON and SEWARIN _ :- • Dots ,anybody believe that if bitilv the Democratic or Republican party hadl nominated the leader Of the pro hibitionists for Register and Recbrd er two years ago, he would now ,be denouncing both as so corrupt that no honest man can remain in them 2 JUDGE iSi!ERRETeB election is de sired by tending lawiers everywhere in the State ot only because he is eminently qualified, but because he is already on the bench, and has proved aceeptable to all., When ran for President Judge Ip Alleghe ny County, if we remember correctly. he had no opposition. The. great Pittsburgh,region should be repre sented. His opponent is now a Pres ident Judge, whose removal would i create some trouble, and who, ha plenty of time for future honors. " Tue Methodist Church and Tem perance " is the title of a circular which is being extensively circulated in this coubtiOthe 'Methodist Church hasfor alongliMe been sound on the temperance question, 'but we have some faint recollection of being in a meeting in. the lecture room of the M. E. Church some ,three years since, when O. J. C JUBBUCK was ask- \ ed to serve ori a committee to prose cutoliquor sellers,.and he respectful /yr declined: He expected tb- be a candidate on the Republican ticket the following fall. 'Tue..Ohio election proved that the quickest way to' defeat _the Republi eau party is to vote Indepetident, Greenback, Labor, and Temperance tickets, thus showing that the intelli gerit men Who want reforms of all kinds are chiefly Republicans. Would'it not be better to support, the great party of progress, and trust to it making as ,brilliant a record in the future , as it has in the past. ratiter than to tura the over to" the ,Demcrats, who have always opposed' every measure de= signed to benefit the people? THE Republican deleg,ation in Con gress from this State, after consulta tion last week unanimously presentH the name or Gen. Sisfori C43SERoN tas Minister td England. The position was unsplicitedTm the part of Gen. C., and it is very doubtful' that he would accept the-position, but the high, compliment paid him by the delegation from his State, must have been peculiarly gratifying to the old veteran. '. His appointment would meet the hearty approval of the par ty in thieState, and a fitter one could not be made. His . experience as Minister to Russia, and Chairman of 'the foreign. Relations - Committee, added to his enlarged, practical statesmanship,Would enable him to represent the Government at the Court of St., James in a manner to reflect credit upon this great nation. _ Wm.. B. HART,- the Republican can didate fur State Treasurer, is a rep resentative man in` the truest sense of the word. He` went into office as a clerk of the lowest class, and grad ually worked his way forward, recog nized - at every Step for his personal worth, until he reached the responsi ble poSition of the Chief Clerk of the Treasury. Be IS a mechanic,. hav ing served a regular - apprenticeship to 'a. trade. He left hicratiVe em 'ployment to enter the army. and fight. for the defense of his country, which hedid as valiantly as any 'man - who stood loyally by theold _flag: When the war was over he received an appoint ment unasked, and. has retained his . pcisition in the Treasury by force alone of his personal merits. The same : influence—his own perional worth--secured for him the nomina tiim,for State Tteasurer. - That was sficntarieous, and it ever the' o ffi ce sought the man it did in this case. Iti.gifra'r was nominated because he MCl:ken tried and found true in eve# teat applied to hips. /leis faith= I)lll.otukte4t and • • colvasom - lirnthing of _ importance has yet transpired in congress. The Com mittees were announced onlionday, and itis probable 4,luit the business . fon 11;616 the session was called, will be taken up. - Over 900 bills; covering every con ceivable subject were introduced on Monday. Mr. BLAND, •of introduced a bill for the remonetina 'don Of silver, and moved to suspend the rules and lint it , upon its passage; but u motion to adjourn carried._ In the distribution of the Chair 'men, the South of :course gets - the licin's share. WOOD, of - New York, is Chairman of Ways and Means, Nit most of the other important commit tees arcpresided over by eithir Southern Or - of *Nu POTT‘, view Y 11 of the lin- citic 11?grp: undistikod up iq the ICE The local follo$Ts: Southern States, DI Newl.lfri;itiew.Jenty and Pentisylvanis..i.... to The Eastern States are enti:rclrig . nored. • ›, Col. - OVERTON is a member of the Commerce Committee. THE POOR HOUSE F. ]G_ - —; The following lettek.4i + esi, by some of the best farrnresz in Wysox . , township, does not indieSef that the county would .he greatly swindled should the voters decide on Tuesday \. to build a poor house. It will be • . aeen that the names .attached repre sentboth,lalitical parties, indie:Aing \ as. We have all'the time insisted, that the question is not a Political one: This is to certify that We are acqUaint. ed with the property selected by the. County Cominissioners:for a Poor House Farm, and inmir.opinion it is worth the price agreed to be paid for it, tratnely, 'thirteen thousand dollars, ($1:1i0(0)•:, W. A. Benedict, H. Beecher. Morgan, A. Cooley, It. S. Barnes, John B. Hindi, S. W. Bull, E. C. Spencer, Geo. Gard, A. K. Lent, C. Shores, Ira D. Bull, Shores, A. A. Whitney, Sarfitiel Owen, 11. C. Spencer, L. G. Vought, E. Whitney, .T. E,. Piollet, A. Coolba ugh, D. 'Meehan, Hiram Davenport, .1. Gi Dougherty, J. W. Bartlett, 'L. Culver, .1. L. Morgan, J. $I; Piollet, ,Wm. 11. King, E. T.; Bull, T. V. Madill, C. E. Itarilqf, E. It. Bishop, E. G - Owens, E.. 1. Newell. Ntxr Tuesday the election takes 61ace, and are the Republicans of the county awake to the importance. of the event 'The only danger the party has to contend against is that of, indifference. The seventy, thots and stay r at-hoMes in Ohio made the pernoe?acy victorious in that - 'Stalc. ItepublicansliOuld see to itlhat the same,apathy does not-exist here. The Denfoeraey, while apparently very quiet, e • perfectini;' , their arrange ments to \ b ‘ ringonttheir entire vote. Your candidai -Vet. more worthy, itul enemy is active for th taking pos seSsion of- tl rnment a's , A; -- that their Far as possil chances to ior and a U. S. &flat( Lay; -be en .chanced. .ery one .:$e the few ifays yet left us. in intelligent work; and' when eleCtion day. comes et us see tot that. every' Republican - vOte is polfed > and . victory will perch upnn . our bantierS, and Pennsylvania will remain true 'to her Republican Kin ! ciples. , Ii any man ir4 the country is enti `tied to the respect\and, confidence of the laboring class ibis fltkn. G. A. Gnow. As a. Republican member of ConoTess l he devoted. his \ best ever= des to the interest of the gre . ruas,s es of the people, and his-nanie is a " household Word " in thousand of comfortable, balmy homes on the western prairies, secured by industri ous; frugal husbandman, who ' Were enabled to become posseisors of them -through tl.m . _,wise. provisions of the Homestead Law, of which be has the proud •SatisfaCtibivof being the.origi- - nator. In - a - re,pent issue the Montrose Re liiib/icatCprinced a" speech of Mr. ditow's,idelivered while the bill was before: 'ovgress in 1800, which shbuld be. read by every laboring man in the State. • The free'' : ‘liomestead policy then advoetited by Mr; GROW . Iyas adopted by a Republican Congress, and the laws then enacted for the benefit of homeless citizens -are still in full force. What the so-called Labor party can never hope to do the Re, publican party did nearly twenty years ago ;'and, in fact; every practi cal step for the-gool of the poor hut industrious laboring .men in this tountry that has ever been taken is due to the efforts and votes of Re publicans. VALUABLE TESTISION y .FROM 'AN OPPONENT.—CoI. MCC Lune, although opposed to Capt. 1 - lAar's election as a State Treasurer has the candor to do him justice. In The Times; of Fri day, we find the following paragraph, undoubtedly Mint the pen of Col. MCCLinrE himself: ,t,- "The Harrisburg Telegraph must read the Times upside down if it be lieves that it has warrant.tor saying that Captain HART, the Republii&n candidate- for -- State Treasurer, has ever been depreciated in these col-. umns, and that-diSpai:aging compari sons have been Inaile between HART and NOYES. We. have uniformly borne testimony to7Captain _'ART' S blameless character as a gentleman ; to his gallantry as a soldier; • 'to his competency for the office for which he bus beet", - noninated—and to his fidelity as whit:nib rthe Treasu ry SoßEsri Ross ex member of Con gress shot himself thropgh the heart in his barn in Coudersport last.week. Re Atm been in - poor health, and melancholy mood for dome time. THE AVIIIITOR4OIIriIIALII,IIIIIIP. I?emperatie journals are en. deavoring, by inueucto and Other- wise to tarnish the ebaracterofJ._A. 111. Pieititotte, the Reptiblieen Candi date for the office of Auditor Gener- al, we will give our. readers• a' brief libitory of his career , and a few facts , • relative to his gbinding where he is _knoWn. M. Passmore was Worn in Cirsier County, in 1836. He was one. -of' a• respected Quakeru family, whose ancestors had settled in Penn syl,vania in 1682. The family has al waYs bdentheld in-highesteem among heir neighbors. • • - No man has warmer friends or more earnest supporters than are the relatives and former neighbors of Passmore, in theold Qualier set ? tlement.bi Chester County, his for mer' home. As an expression of the estimate which Chester County places on him we may also refer to the action of the Repuhlican Convention Of Ches ter County, in passing the following resolution a few months ago: ' tee, but it is, Ituittee is Set Texas Pa • !LResolved, That we, the repiesen tadves of the Republican partly of Chester County assembled; recognio in John A. M. Passmore; Esci., (a na tive of this county, but now a' resi- a,irmen is Mt \ . i dent of Sehuylkill-County,), who is suggested:, as the next Republican candidate for the office . of Auditor . General, a gentleman of culture and rellaement, an ,earnest and thorough got. . * Republican, and a man in eve ry waYeminently quapied for the r :'properdistihazge of the duties of the oilice.forwhich he -is ,named, and that_we ins duct our delegates to the State ~Convention to support him,. and do all in their power „to secure his nomination."\ - . Mr. Passmore's \ f4her :died poor, and left his son an orphan, without property\ a t the age . of\twelve years. When onlreighty_ears Ohl, thee boy 'scathe a mincr by.,, working in the chrome mines., wheree toil t 9 faith fully' year year, until at the age of fifteen, beingrdiSableoy an\acei dent, he was obliged\to glie up ihat employment. Meanwhile' - he' liatk been: able to attend school for a few weeks each winter, where he began to acquire the educationwhich his . natural thirst for knowledge prompt him to` seek. Leaving the Mines r he' worked - Iwo years on a farm, teaCh fly, in the winter a district school. rl, tibsequently, he taught in order ~.o support himself while at y the Bain& ti - -- to pursued his, studies in the State Normal School at Millersville. Dating. those years of labor it rc- uired strenuous exertions' for • the young man tiiAscharge his respon sible duties as teacher. and at the same time - keep up with his class. Young PaSsmore's energy was equal to the emergency, and after four years of 'continued eitott, he gradu ated with honor in 18130 in the Nor mal School. His health had become impaired. He stepped out into thc, world beyond the pupil's life to es say his "commencement" asa man. Without monctv,. without health, without aid to place, he began a new struggle in a .new • , I-ic then came to Pottsville to re side, and after faithful management Of the public - school during fVe years; he was desired to open a select school, which-under the name of the Paschall Institute, he controlled un til 'he abandoned tevhing, in .1869: 1 In the Meantime he had studied law, and in 1 . 866 had been admitted to the . bar, but never enured into its active practice. In- 1869 lie was • made an • age*, .of ,the Metropolitan Life, In= surance Company, of which he after- Ivard became manager and' attorney for Pennsylvania. , .. . ` We•thus see that J: A. N. Pass more 'is a self-made man. Ile -owes his-succtss to his own 'efforts. e lle, . conies trom the ranks of the laborsrs, and in elevating him to the position for which he has been' nominated; \ 'each workingman can feel that he is p6eing in offiee one-of his own class: Ilow.mueli wiser is it for the labor-- Mg Man. to honor -laboring men by, voting \ for Mr. Passmorc; : who is of their nuMber, than by voting for a labor reform candidate wh6 cannot be elected,- and thusindirectly-ailling Mr. Schell, the \ Democratic nominee l. 1 •Mr. Passmorb s - duties : as ,State agent for the Metropolitan have for years requited hiin\to travel about from point to point ill the State, and the large and friendly \acquaintance which he has thus made ,tirough all I\ parts of the 'Coinmonwealtivas one cansc of his strength. in the conven tion,,. at Harrisburg, and, will give him inanYxvotes in November. Then Ims .I.'A.'3. Passmorc.the esteem oe\9,e peoplca ong whom he isbest knowtq When It relinquished his position' I, \ as teacher, he was chosen a schbol . .director. The, School Board in turn elected him President, and Re is ow nearthe end of his fourth term of service. The public, schools of Potts ville 'rank high in the-ComMonwealth, and he people of Pottsville are proud orthe character which those, schools liavc attained.' About 1867 Mr. Passmore was fic tively engaged, with W. L. Whitney its .President, as one of the organiz era. of the Pottsville Benevolent" As sociation, which is still- in successful operation. • The Berievolent,AsSociii , , t.. Lion's Rome for Children, has sine , been founded, in 1873, as a branch of that. Association, and has for- its objects "to afford a home, food, schooling and clothing for destitute, neglected and friendless children, and, at a suitable age; to place them with ressectable . personS - and families, to learn some useful trade or occupa tion, and thuS aid the benevolent As sociation in its work, as one of its greatest diffisulties ,a4s-- that many children needed helif- whose parents 'were . poor and worthy, and that soine children, without parents and friends, were growing up neglected; wicked, ignorant and depraved Of the Home for Children Mr: Passmore filled the office of President for four years. Speaking of these two Institutions, the Miner's Jour nal some time since said : " There are no public or private institutions in our community of which our peo ple are more proud than these'; and it may be said that through 'their. able management they have become the most effectual medium through which to distribute charities and pro vide homes for the friendless that hare been established in any pait of the Commonwealth." The Republican county' meeting of 187,7 "Resolved; That the. Republi caifs of : Schuylkill County present the name of, their fellow-Citizen, John A. M..Passaiore, to the consideration of the 'Republicans of Pennsylvania for the nomination for Auditor Gen eral of this .State; and our delegates I to the State Convention are request- I ed to earnestly insist upon his nom= ioatiou, and that the nomination of John A:11. Passmore' will insure for the CoracsioßlFltlt a thitbfql, pep, getic:and able omcer, and by his pop. Warn,- will materially strengthen the kepubilean party in the Anthracite coal region in the coming campaign. A *SAL VOAXISMIL*3I. The Philadelphia Daily Telegraph,' independent, gi4es this goxi ,i 'sound advice to honest working men : 'There is no reason or. excuse for the organization •of a: new party of any kind except • that good govern ment cannot be accomplished under those. already in existence; and a new party when it• comes into the field is bound to justify its existence by proVing that a desire 'for good governatent and not a greed for pluniler is the animating motive' of those' who conip'roie Its rank and file and those who figure as its represen , tative Men. A new party, must have dearly defined principles and aims, or it ;lever can 'achieve any thing more 'than mere transient' success, and to achieve even a transient sue- . cess it must seek to accomplish its' end by' fair,. open and honorable means. The great trouble with the old Know Nothing, par was that It sought to accomplish it ;ends by tors tuous, underhand and grossly im proper methods—the, principles , o af that party are not necessarily now under discussion—the so called United :Labor party, which to all seeming is even less animated, by principle than the Know Nothing organization 'was, can scarcely. ex-. 1 • pect to be More successful in ensleav:- I ors to ifin a • permanent- grasp of, power by means th at will not bear examination of hOnorable men. The, so-called Labor party is.a class party,. and is consequently anatgonistic to the genius of republicanism. • Bat the men who are .attempting to rtin it sic not tyue even to their own per-.. formances or pretensions... It was easil* within their poWer to have demonstrated that they aimed at something more than a grab at power for the benefit of a certain clique, by ebill:rining the t omination of such candidates-on the ticket of the older party organizations who were unex ceptionalilercirwho, by having risen from the. rank s\ through their own. \ merit and exertiOns . ; especially com mend theruseli , es to ,the suffrages of intAligent workingmen. For in stan'ee, .by confirming the nomination of stOka man as Captain Hart, the . Itepubliean candidate for state Treasurer-, hey could have . done very -much to his,:election a certain ty beyond° pe..olventnre, while they would - have Won,credit Tor an in telli geitt Obit to gi4 their principles a practical application Captain Ihrt is a.. Workingman—Mat is, he is a man who, until he_ obtained a pohi stion in ,the SW" Treasu'ry Depart ment, made his living by folloWing trade; Brield:tying, was the trade mllet' Captain Hart was hronght up to, and w.j►ich he follbwed until the hreakineout of the war... .I.:hfring the war he served as a soldier, and won distinction as a gallant one; and when the war was .over he ►Miff.. d hii uniform nnd'weut back to brieklay-' in!! again: Gov. Hartranft knew l.i►n to bean honest, industrious and trustworthy m in,zho, when he had ) a job of bi icklay ili7' to do, l a a n ii ( l l b c i o u n k . TE .l o , f t b ni t, / ) ,(7 it or 0, 0 — a, w iro, 1 7 R I joi , ,i raft with the same earnestness alao(d hate !.dice t t' il t ied ""L"1""""in s( ienttonsness that he performed Ins. soldierly duties, and had him called lett •r, and in your I t v- e t n u n tti t i,‘ ln of il )r first to Harrisburg to till a clerkship in dt,t4. ct, not 0111 , J a'l moil but a s. i Lt ‘ t ou design on my 1 tit To repeat I is, 1 ( L i). l the State Treasurer's office. Flomunpur.ttioa, and to clerk he rose to Cashier, and his thet r l7(rt i ii 4 i t t "cf"'"v" do mo l t .bear the con qbaittei, experience, talents and in. St Ind 1011 y 0 l .) % t. ) r'lls silence, n i:CC 1 1""" tegiity in tint discharge of his duties A MAI 111 , t It mit 1, )a p, . 1 1 .1 1 1 L. littet• v.ould Ihoss• i s n o ' u % a s te ns Casino pointed Inin out to the+ f"lll 7 t a l i r 1 outs quote nts 1111 roa -,1 : Republicans as the most ht man to , moron„ reiteration r s i o t ti t . it 3 011 may ia. 11 / 1 1NCII ( * tom a r nominite for then candidate foi .itn departure.lly 'golds ..i,tAte Treasurer. The nomination of w tie as i t ',l ll t u ° A 3 , , iplain Hart by the Republicans "flip qui , tio ) submitted to the ci not dittaall, opus the cl. uce of the was it VI oper one, but it would haa par titular al estate,but it 14 the gintt real been an even more proper one for 4...: qu , i, , ,t i nin wkata r 1.1....% Ile In t nor of . Libor party to make, and 1)3 makin , * all, ;Intl tile Legislature has it the man igers of the Labor party' titscl3, l V. l l: . i a i t til tip %tun) (he II . ' it ! n i ‘ i! 4 l' , ' n p lin i big I iii:' blight have demonstrated that they.. we ie aiming at somethin g more than i " T 7" t, 1 lir On ii the 111 :: 1 1,T I T f ,c, r d h a I , : i' d C , 7:: : ,, 1 : 11 Communism. In fact, the man i q.I Sf l l 'i l I e rtl h len ert 1 , .. ta,toOnted, -,o that if the• of the Labor party might have.look- N 2 ( 1 )': IMI (IslilAgLaittStll lzriuit ,litt'll'e, " Will b ed the -whole State over without find- , •u h,0 1 ,:, ;',. signifi e s"'m On it .idt 1 , x% filkd 1 of the b tlkt, mg a man who so in e‘ cry 1 ~.. , i tion to the pool I t te , e S\ Sei1111 " ;I ( NA I LI: the condittons,which one NA•01;1(1;1 pose ought to be filled hy the iamb- ` I ' ' " 1 '" 14 " Va P"'''`" l " eiw ' 6"T i e 11 e '1 toff.''' . date of a political organization which f if it has any intelli g ent ,and honor- i 'able aims, seeks to devate the work- i work ingman. morally, socially and,politi- 1 cally. Instead of. nominating‘, him ! ! hoWever,.a nobody was put up tosfig ; I tire as the Labor party candidate fort ; State Treasurer-a nobody f.r wliontl it will be impossible to : secure a sin- i gle vote outside of the-cotninunis- i tied 'organizations which are now! seeking to accomplish thrOugh the ballot box what riot and arson failed ; to accomplish last July: These 'filets-I speak for, themselves to all thinking - people, and. they ought to sp . eak with particular' force to ,well meaning ) workingmen. who -have been deluded i Il duder one specious pretext or anoti- \. er tato joining a party which has no realsOnable excuse' g .for bein, anti I which, if it succeeds pin obtaining 1 control f the .) \I Government, will work Die:at:nab einpries tothose for whose ostensible 13enelit it was organized. I . . • . -' - . IIEnE are af\ ew "thoughts. for the I Grtenbackers. •TheY are from the Philadelphia /?A/, one of the sprightliest dailies in be State: Ira farmer sells his faim and agrees to-take payments. therelcor : in one, two or three years, what:Surety: has he`mitil specie resumption i4ffected, i that lie will get the contraet)e ? Asiong as irredeemable paper GI-. .lars arelt legal .tender he cannot be certain Whether he will receive his' , pay" in dollars worth , 1-00 cents or worth 50 cents: A builder Who contracts to erect. a 1 building next year for $20,000, if for ' tiny reason the value of* paper -legal. ; tenders . should fall, off twenty per cent. before the completion of his eOn- tract, he would be obliged- to rose $4,000. Who suffers- for this risk.? • A merchant who wishesato.make a venture 'with a cargo to\Calcutta, and to purchase a return cargo, in addition to the risk incident to Men.- cantile transactions, takes the risk of 41iat 'Congress may do in in flatingor contracting the currency. Ale dares not calculate, upon a, gold basis. . N A manufacturer wishes to embark in business requiring . extensive out lay and years of preparation—what, assurance can he have that the cur rency tinkering-will not hring'all his -calculations to nought? Laboring men whose, industry is paid - for in this shifting' paper • cur rency, and who are the first to suffer from the - pinch of depression rind the - last to profit by returning prosperity, what hent fit accrues . . to Ahem in a policy that ,keeps commerce, 'manu facturing industry and industrial md,verrients at a standstill ? EVERY Republican vote cast for Xi. LITTLE, helps . the Democratic ealididate for Difitritt A - ttt)rney. No- body expeqi Ulna to be azetc.d. TIiA.3I*SGIV,IIIIIIO DAT. .Presi4est hits issued his proclamation setting apart Thursday / 11ovember - 29th, sa i',4 - ay cif' general The dtxtupent reads as follovrs s . p • \ • The complete& circle of FA, tumor and seed-time and %harvest,' has bro't us to the acenstonfedl season at ithielua religious people • celebrates with praise itrittthatikWiting the enduring merry, of Almig,lityiGOrl. This devoit and public confession* the constant dependence of man upon the Divine Father for all good gifts of We' and health and peace and happihessr, ;fin .eavly in our history made the habit 0:r our people, finds in the sur vey of -thefpast year nest grounds for its jeyful and grateful manifestation. lu all blessings which' depend upon benignant seasons this has indeed been a memorable year. Over the wide: territory. of • our country,•with all its diversity of soil and climate and precincts, the earth has, yield ed a bountiful return to the labor of the husbandman. The' health of the people has been blighted by' e prevalent or wide spread diselses. • NO great disasters of shipwreck upon our coasts. or to our com merce on the seas have brought loss and hardship to merchants or mariners, and clouded the liappineSs of the community with Sympathetic sorrew." In all that Concerns our !strength and peace 'and great ness as a nation .; in f all 'that• touches the permanence and security of our Govern ment and the\.benilleent institutions On Which 'it rests ; iu all that affects the character and dispositions of our people,, and tests our capacity to enjoy and up hold the .equal and free condition of so ciety, now. permanent and universal throughout the land, the experience of the last year is conspicuously marked by. ..the protecting providence of God, and is full of promise and hope for the coming generations. Coder a sense of these infi nite obligations to .the • Great Ruler of tinier and seasons and events, let us hum bly ascribe it to our own faults and frail ties, if, hi any sdvglee, that perfect eon cord and happinct, peace awl justice, which such eat• - mercies should diffuse through the hearts and lives of our peo plc do not altogethei' and , always and everywhere prevail. Let us, with one itirit and • with otia voice, lilt up praise and thanksgiving to God for his' manifold giiirtinet•S it/ rur 1:1:111 :Ind his IllflitileSt rare for our natioti. X , ew, thtrefo're, 1, Rutherford 13.1layeri President of t T'a'tted States,. do appoint Thursday, t 1 ;nit day of November n e m., as a tl.ly of natimsal thank: , .giving. and pcayei., 'Ms..' I earnestly yeeommend that, withdralt lag thesmelven'fn on !Teti la t e arcs a ad labors, tlm tre4le of the United States do meet together 'on that day in their respectilo .I,l:tees of 'kV( IrSh p, Ilwre to give for and praise to AltujOsty God for ffis r mereies, and to devoutly he seedli 'their contitmance., In Wit/105N Whereof 1 have hereunto set braid and eau:AA the seal of the 1.7„i -it it States to be affixed. • Pone at the City of SN:ashington this , . t'wentv-itinth day of OctuLer, in '" your of ( lur Lord one thousand Avight inuniered:itnd seventy-:.even, aitd of the Indevetalence of the United States the one Intralred.and second.. It. IL HAYES. Ily the Pre•hlenf. : 1V tttt.°ol M. EV.kltTs, SeurCtary of Stain ILSTTEII3 TZE PEOPLII. TEE COUTITTOOI7EOtISE Ttr THE EIHTor, THE 131:AJW0pD REPORTEI:—..S4 . r : subjoined comniu nieation wa , ; offered. to the RejmW-an,, bat the Editor of that paper, (who has been liberal heretofore), i.. tumble to find sp.le.. for it thl:: wed:. You will oblige 'me by publishing. it. .YOur note upon, the letter•of :the Com- misl.ioners - leaves little diftOrence between us on the stiliject, of taxation. Your views of the matter has- undergone czinsiderable modification. since your first editorial up -on the s.zdhject, and itshows a diaposition oreyour pail - to be convinced by .lfeet and tita:;on. But I cannot . understand, Mr. Editore, why,yon stionhi devote so mu c h attention to the eieposure of the interest ed motives of Itt. Diller Luther, when that gentleman truly. writes in favor of the theory of the poor house systeni, a thin;; wlthAi you have hitherto—so far as the theint.gocs—cmphatically endorted, Nor enn T understand how that-gentle man's opinions are to be impeached ter. the gronnits,Of itiftTiViii. -- viliblittie thing fa vored by hint de.ieN not increaAe his emol ument, while it does increase his .labor. Quite as consistent is " WC:Steil/ Brad ford." whose epistle thundeels in the index, with the statement-that lie is• tied- Hier a lawyer, an nilice-holdcrotor.an of fice-seeker—but id M 010130116 never will lie either—who says he - desires to sulimit facts, but IN fsains front doing it, whose only point is the advice free—that the Commissioners abrogate the,ptc.sent e con- , tract and Matt anew,. His advice is as .worthlcss as it is cheap. St 4 being a lawyer,. lie is as ignorant that the, consent of Mr. Myer and his assignee wjuld -be to carry oat his scheme. • The tact that those:who attempt to write against-411e poor house say nothing,. is strong evidence that little can lie said. I have in my mind notably thecommuni=\ catkin of "Ulster." His composition "is, not prose btitloetry run mad," and be longei to that elay.s of. writing significantly styled "hog-wash." When a measure can only be at.a Aed by ribaldry,' its suc cess is near, There in a elaizs of Persons who am op posed to the ii-or house, becatteas they • honestly believe the choice of real estate is an improper one. To them the marle. \follow-ing is not addressed :. They can be • fd Clll Met. by t aoroaga cxammanon of the facts. But I find, Mr. Editor, that thelondest - Oppcisition to the poor house' come' from a class of persons who make. disappr dtation of the selection, the pre text me ely of their resistance., They shrink - ire m the. imputation of inlonnani \ ty, they too to be thoutht the friends 'of the poor, rid they belong to that nu merous and short-sighted class of persons -whose visiOns ate so obscured by a penny expense, that they cannot see a dollar sav ing. Hence, while \ their real motivo - is selfishness, and t lick real opposition is t o the system, they lack\the honesty to ad mit the one and true cnttrage to son less the other, and—making\the attack that admits the greatest amount of misrepre ,sentation—they oppose the \ selection of I s the farm. Let no one be misled by. thm. They, rtre \ not the only inhabitants o the tield which they cause to ring with tit sir shrill. ' and chirping clanior. Others, and • \ larger r e \ class than I at first supposed, are satisfied with thespresent system, and to the,tits, I desire to Offer a few considerations in ad dition to those contained in mydirst lette, ,Oui towntiltip system of relieving the\ poor is., copied' closely. from the system which formerly oxisted In? England. Cu t tier this system,' the expense of mair.tain—, log the poor in that pauper tursed• coun try was, in 181'4, It:,:;;Si001;, when her; popolation,wasamt .14,5 - 71,000. : ,`let 18:13 the,expense was .£6,500,,Gt10. In 1:•. 4 .34,.the work how° system, very \ ritintilar, in its.de tails to our poor , howtee tlYStent was intro duced, resulting in a reduction of expend iture of -4:2,500,0tkl - over the - previons year. I In 1874, ,with a poptitt:on of denble tt at i in 181t3, Ler,notir expenses - *ere less than lin that lean ' ~ . . . , \ , I While in this nonwy no are neatly free from an evil which greatly burdens our large - cities, to wit, foreign *pauperism; yet it must not be suppoSed on the other hand our pamper class composed of those"who have beentroduced through loss otproperty. The eseeptional cases are those of paupers who halm owned and Possessed any amount of property: Ccms• paratively few paupers -come from the ranks of, mechanics and farmer more than half (in the State of New -I cork 60 .per cent. of the whole), come from the classes of laborers and domestics: Old age and disease find numbers of these classes. cestitute. disability,. blindness, insanity, idiocy, are.prolific causes of paw perism, and are frequently the consequen-. ces of intetnr,erapce or crime .Deserted w6men and children,. the witloWed and the orphaned, help tomake'up the num ber of the destitute. Ml' of these, the waifs, the wrecks. and estrays of social have 'claims upon us not to'be lightly rey,attltal. 'While some are not entitled to our sympathy; many are justly the objecs of compassion,‘"and all have alight to hu mane and decent,„treatineut. „ .. Under our township system, the case of 1 these devolves upoti , ,the overseers of • the' poor. These gentlemen geueraliy•-come 1 from the class of well-to-do-farmers, they aka usually fully ocettpled, with their own affairs, have little time tO \devote - to in quiring into the manner of treatment Of their cf , arges, and iiaually consider their whole duty performed when they have, seruteniztd the regidarity of the‘ottler of relief, - satisfied themselves of• the 'proper settlement-of flee pauner, Sn(Fina(l6:4-hat disposition' of the person that involves the least expense to their constituents. 'Their tenure of utile° is short, and grievances: are, usually left to be corrected by their', successors. - It devolves upon no. 'one to espouse the cause of . tho, pauper: Few will act in a paitieukte eitse for him who is without friend, money, and bodily force. These considerations make it manifest that great wrongs and abuses arc thif'ne tessary fruits of such a system, and I nerd cite but few of the many cases that have come to my knowledge, to provy thit!. In a western town4hip of this county.. a per stio,of respectalhlity and Wordi. became 'reduced in circumstances ankai eharge' upon the town. Ile was put NI at flue , t um, sold to the lowest bidder, - And felt to tie, cafe of OHO who was morea brute tient a man, and \ilium: dwelling was mote like a hug-pen than a leinse. In an east- i to - Mtownship, a man dl ;eased and old was • fit: fOICII a state that it was difficult to in- (Inert any one to take him, , Finally sit:ni g= was made with, a .relativtPto care for him at fr, her week; Complaint was soon made that the price wall inadequate, but, the poormasters insisted that tlii (se:tract must be complied with, and rerwed. to lakif him away.' lie died soon after nu; der suspicious eireumstauees,'imt no for mal inquiry was ever made, Theleestom of selling the poor to the Lowest bidder obtains - imdminy of our,. ti mrnshi ps, and in one til i tt has come to my. notice the bargain made with the pur fbeSer is for a fixed MOO !wt. :tunne. .01 coutse if the poor p.:;rfioll drew Or i:; e..tin plled by hard usage to escape the town - sliip, no one is the wiser, and evi,ry - . ism lis better off. Another case thar may be tra:litioliefi, IS that oft worthy old lady in an eastern township, .v, ho, while suffering frier a esneer, was m'oul'tted,t o the ten der ti tHes of alioll,A3llOld, masy of the members of which wrre criminals ; Tiis . poor unfortunate.imly fell , ,pmong.thieves - after she hart come to the core of tile mod. e ,r l • Good Samaritao. Doubtless many till be stai tied by the mention or these . cases, but oe coesiilerati,m'Uf the teethed. t hat gives rise to their, 1110' Hill see that set& results can hard!y. he aviiitied,:. aml t hat the eausett that leild to proditeethein tend also, to keep them from our tun lee. ' Under the Poor haute syst •!.n stick i,c= currences are next \to impossible: Tit is tor are reflected 4,ogether, the re Tomo ' ltility is fixed and permanent, everyilting is done under public eye, and booty the linsecotion of th'e jadgr,e, and or the Chrts. ...tan ministers of thectrudy terry lie relied upon as a safeguard.. Th, poorsystem a:i anion; ' 11% iA a di , : 1;,110r. I,Ci'din, disg , raca, dcvores, apon Cfiristiall men and women of ilr:alfyrd County, aptai all who profess and call tliemselves I tsc friend:: of Futforing and abused humanity, to drive thiol,ita2: from us. B m; v 'o,rvr En:Ton, or• IlEromrEn:-1 have ohiZel'y t d fur simic time grew. • deal of nun: ease on the part of the editor Cif the Nrpt,,Vica a. I feli,piPellts (0 he very tuna chagrined, becaust he catmet cApt nye the public printing from the REPoi:TEit and have it all himself.. The, bold pretense of. party services that he sets tip as a reason shonlit lie given 111 M; is nothing more nor less than a - cat covered up with very nice meal, in filet. he admits that - alt he well with the party and its man mmrs, lw was accorded the lion's share —that's the "rub " - that gives tit :el - mime to It philipics ; \-%w, let; us censlider a moment the elaims Of the editor to.the public, printing of Eraile.ord Count y, anti see if his demands , could be compiled without detriment to Ca. public interest.. Thir. 11:-::•on; established papal-, mak . the Pat'lj.prilft ing has linen publiAed in it- for the pa r twenty-11'6%2 . t . i.saa - A. The s . .i com..mratively a. Here . paper, an , k,as a mat ter of equrse i 4; Jah,trittg under dify t _ eulties iticAcnt to i;t , trtinga new p tp.er to cxt 1 nt•• tht•la. of he 1. - rt•ver ilebarlvd iron: 1j1.1.1, f h •,i !kW, }II X. A 1111;11Ir. MEESE A 1'1)1T011'S NO, a.—\C —IV. V. 4, ! •, h. in t'lloCwirt ••: (-1 i',•:'11:, - ',1.! !"••,:r1 1. , : 1 / .1 , Pot:, •rw 11.• ot, roal !H. 1::•. •A1)1, ;,:r ,•7A,1 1 , •••{1.1so: :11 8 1 41 , .471 v • in •4 1 :1 1 1 ”1 . )I , ll‘. 1 1 )1 . , OH: 7•••:!, il:)y , ./ 11)111r.11. to a: 10 oN•1•1, 1.. A. NT at v.1,1•:11 1 0 ,1••• 113% lug elen:s 10 pt0.,.;1:m rl.•,r forA t. 011.1 C1 . 1:11:11.: 10. / i I'llo. ' * 1:. , 1:(; E ' A t - t)uroit's ioa:tvr of Ito , ~...rat.• , zr %II: , of !tr.! Ifor.ll - 4 , . looiorsiant!..l. nn Aeolltor aptm,a;va ;he Coarl t , l : y 41,4 cowls Itt the 1.. F. W1111:1111 nelvezi, A4lllltii%; rana, slioxr.ll ! , y ?holt- rimy; i!.:111•1•4 dEllit!S apporalu,n: at ,Illek• in Troy Vor ,tif,•,ll7 on Till: 1::,11.1.Y. .layl.:lA - FM. /1.1.:R., A,. I. 117'7 . It , ye': „ time and p;act• all 1k,r , 111., claim:: 'on gai.l :ire i..,v0.5t..d to pr......nt i!/..m. ur lris. inrevcr , leharre'o, frwa f MIME A upiToit , s No•ricE.:=-In the L,biatter of tit , es: t. , or. ri..R. 1111w4t11, I,le 41 , pra ,‘lrtot Ecad ford C,pitty, Nk - P. 14, Sept. T. Tn...tnti•rsi,troett, an A tolft , tr atiT..tot,) by . the Court to tlt,tii 11/11 . I,;thetS . lll . the All 4 ,al.l oeLitr, at isi.•t: t It.t .s ;1 1,. at ;at ,tttitt•, atit‘tl to tire lu!h,, of 111, a pnolot tOt:nt tat the 01ft. ,, .tf Mott 111 At. 'alt It.on NW"; DAN - . I.ltns:l9llt tt•:r NttVE:Nllll'.lf., 1.37 ,at to o'vlork a. vlo a awl oto.rn' rII po - son.i baring ,t,tot, ittfott prt,st.nt tlntni. or be ("Icy tlt•t,iSkrott front coittlng In on the satin , „,. orTl2:r. i lirDrfOß'S NO'r (CF. Estate "r acoh cimbhnvi:. 4,-m:ed. In. the 0r r:m...0 ronrt Itwaatow TLo ittakrAitta,4l, 1:1 'a.... I,in! ell 1 , 2; the Conn( to titstrittatt, att.nry•ta'tlo, hand, ot, lino Ad ailliktt Mot', ail,tog from Ili , ~tt.• puena airpoliktito.nt a I oftlev in Toivatata Brno'. pa YIN I).lY_ NOV. .2.a. 1077, at 1 ti'vtoett. %%Iwo atnl u ta•tt , having Flat tat 4 agaltt,,t tivatsatutst rto4cut tiV't - ntnG fn,cover Inc nom coutit.",. to uu thr Sallie.. A.:4.11,4 • . 0e125. .A.taatta• • r a X EC I_l'.o R'S N i.yric 17 .-,N otice , - . ...-• _,,i is'herehy given that a!I p,rhon4 imlobtr,i to , the ,state of Wi-ajart Sit.eti 0., lati, of Pik,. ilo1';11., 11111 , 4 MAO 11111MM:tie 4):1j11t,Ilt, Una all p”rsi. n:s Laving. claims against said e.stato .ni list Tret.cnt' &twin citify au:brunt:llM for Fmtirio.mt, . ' ' I • "A %RV F. si.4.fiA7M, . l' . . • • (At m. , ....W, .1..0C1:31, i Len/ling/IC, Pa.;Octll-9p. • riC6.ttore.l ~. . . . SOMETHING NEW. lINIMIMII GOODS,' BLACK :vA.§HmEaui-, hare a great - earlsty of ftlack floods. errytpi NT that Is kept lo a ft rat class how:— - 3LACK , ' AND _FANCY : SILKS U my ',..10,;:. is very lirge; and eh(!apci -, than knowi t f4r fifto,ii years. ticr.ladt.stifiuldbuy a silk ,Ire.i., withodt first r.a.likiig at . - . . '- -' rz Ir,, • • • / . . .L,,L. KENT'S. , . 1 FULL f: OF LA ES P N (I . lOiT EILAY ILAC. Ea V Et/. 4 • • \• , r A. , 2.; NE LS • CLOTIN CASSIMERES, Te , 7l.lV:"ti Ill:if*, stork t'd Hosiery, :7 , ltawis. zt.k it t 6, etc., etc., to peat variety. _ . Nrow. I,s YOUR TAKE- ADVANTAGE ot"rtlF; TIDT: •!- r:fr!i:{p. . . Mani- dealers wonder why there. • . always such rush • 1. •• • CLOTHING • STORE But custoiners of this populartalt lislnent; know that is Because R .0 'S E N E - I 11 - I, 1) • Keeps:a better ti.soritt)ent * of ASII . IO N A II:LE G 0 0, , P Thin :1.6: other establiMunc‘itt MEM IIVA.P1:11 ! If you have never sat= isfied your:wit' :on ,thii; point. delay. nolonger, hut - eonvinee „yotfrseif-tiwt you ui sav=e least 25 . percent. in iniyirez yonli IlEAro,.. MADE (..71,o•rniNii .of II Oslnfr t.m.n. Ills stock: eonsisis of everything' in the line of Ileally Made clothing for -Men and Boys. liats; • .Gaps; Fine shirts, Neekties',' Iloise , ry„ GlOrrs. and in fact Gents' Furnishitir , toil of every degeription. D . on't be fle cei‘''`ed, but. be not satisfied until you litid • • • V. F. TYIII.II.E. I. 31. - 11"11.1.11.1.: I.:,e,:rutors =I A. C. YANNIN't:. Audito'r FF.' tEntor 3. L. Bent. J. L. K . E N'T 11%8JustsiceIved his Fill Stasi air • I. .v Eity r% ME OF . EVER.): El DESCRIPTION, Colfiir and grdde just opened A FULL LINE OF. Beier the siren-14ton of • . HARRIS TUE TAILOR.. • J. L . . KENT , t Towanda' Ifni 7 rh IS7' OPPORTUNITY! 77 re is rt tide in th. , qffair, th , V . 4 “, re! the flood, /fad. , ": I IN - BCj'ISC wait READ\ M:thE cLoTiIING orthef Peqnsylvania 110St;N_FiEtd ) MEER 4 - Ac o s Is now Yeeeiving tiffs VALI, AND".WINTERSRWK C L 0 -T II I N Which Ims,iiever-livrn EQuam.f.P.e fore in this market, (tither for QUALIT LOW PRICES If yoU doubt, calt.and examine I'atton's Block Main-Strect Towanda, Sept: 4, I§7 7. II FM TOWANDA, PA `i , ham_ ----