Wed gotta a • EDITORS t L.O. GOODRICH. O. H. ALVORD. Towszda, Ps., Thursday, May 30, 1878. REPUBLICAN STATE TICKET. 00VERNM:. GENERA!, HENRY M HOYT, Of 'Lucern e. LtECTENANT-43OVERNOR: HON. CHARLES. W. STONE, Of Warren NEM:VAT:LT OF INfERNAL AFFAIRS: tiON. AARON K. DUNKEL ); 'Of 3V113Y. OF SGPRSMY,CO'CAT JUDGE JAMES P. STERRETT, Of Allegjrny. TITS platform adopted by the "Republican Convention Will com mend itself to the best . judgment of all candid voters. It is crisp, solid and sound. Protection to American industry ; the . encouragement of AmericanicoMmerce and labor; pub lic lands for.the people; no rebel war elaims; fair rates of transportation; equality of Southern Republicans with their Confederate neighbors— these are the plinciples we inscribe on our flag, confidently appealing to, theipeOple of this great State fur their vindication at the polls. The pl ink, ich commends the adminis tration of Governor ITARTRANFT, is as gratifying to his earliest and beSt friernds as it must be to that faithful and eminently successful official. HARTRA.VFT has more than justified the lwedietions of his most partial supporter s, and is to-day the most universally popular Executive Penn sYlvania has eyer:. known. Added-to such a platforin, is a' ticket 'beyond 'reproach. A glorious. Republican triumph ins-November, is assured. IT must not be forgotten that the Only Florida . evidence the Democrats have obtained, , and the only further evidence they can hope, for from that State or Louisiana, proceeds from •Republican sources that are inimical I to M. -The MAINs and DE:itsF.s are Republicans with griev- anees ofvarious kinds. The guilt= knowledge they arc relied upon to reveal did not trouble their consei-" ences until the ,Administration failed toroward them according to their own estimate of their deserts. The more important RepubliCans who are se cretly playing into the hands of the Democratic investigators are sub ject to the .same criticism. . The 'country will regard with suspicion 'aught that emanates from either of • these classes. :The great men who sitibeltind..the scenes and pull the wires, and the small men who act as puppets,. are of course weieozne a ux ,iliaries to the Democracy. . Their motiVes,. however, detract from the trustworthiness of whatever theY may say - or do in connection with the investigation.' AmoNG the important laws enacted by the late legislature was one -pro riding for the erection of a Centra ' penitentary. The Eastern and 'Western penitentaries are' both crowded with "several hunared more convicts than they were designed for, - and the recent additions to the Eastern penitentary will afford only temporary relief. The territorylaid out_ in the new district 'embraces twenty, counties,.as follows McKean, Potter, Tiog,a, Bradford4Sullivan, Lyeomin4,Y, Northumberland, Cohnii -bia,Nontour, Fulton, Bedford, Cum . berland Franklin, Adams' Cameron; Somerset, Blair, Cann>ria, don, 15Moti, Snyder, Dauphin, Perry, Juniat4i,.)tifllin, ; Clearfield, Clinton and Centre. The Govenor to a-P -, point seven commissioners, none of *limn shall be residents of the dis trict, to-select a- site of iiptdess than thirteen acre .4, and a hundred thou; sand dollars is appropriated to Start the work with. ME reported strikes soou to occur in varibus parts of this State have probobly aS'mueli fancy as, fact in them. It is impossible to believe that twenty thousand ncen . can be found in any county, or even in any State; wlio will refus-towork unless for higher Wages whin capital- is a drug, when great industries arc con ducted at a loss, when thousands of unemployed are seeking employMent; or that in such a prostration of ac'-' tivity, when all are rather hoping for better times not yet visible, and when • teduetions in wages are continuous through all England, American labor should demand higher, wages and less hours for a day's labor. tiuch a coii dition implies a degree oil ignorance ,American labor was never gUilty of. Ti; Demochitie platform is a sin= gular - inedley - of contradictions. kt says to the workingmen of Pennsyl vania, you ow l ; your present condi tion . to - a lack of proper laWs for pro,. tection, and then goes del iberately for the repeal of the tariff which has really - prevented the - workingmen from falling into -absolute beggary. Then on the subject of the Presi dent's title it is nen-con*iiitni, evad ing all fair - 911usion to it; if. not en, lleavoring to c-reate the impression that it flivors'it while its party in Congress is working to precipitate a revolution to eject Mr. ll.krr.s from the .'White 'House. What kind of stuff is this to be set up as a &clam, Lion of principles for a party. claim-, ink the support-of 'the people ? WIIO'LL BE TUE NEXT ?-,A 7 6 learn that a resolution Was introduced in -the Greenback Club at its last Enget ing proposing to _strike the name or Col. Smrrif from the roll of member s,: The Colonel-win probablyikant ihat Bmixtl3.l,tlie showman, and Btrrzi the Magician were want to announee ,publibky that they.. intended to de := ceive in their perforutances. They warned their'followprs that their - rnp monkeys Cardiff giants, altd all their presto tricks were clever fi:auds, ex pressly devised - to impose upon the' ereduloni. mind. By this m eans they disclosed their honesty or purpose and avoided violating thesihith of the people.. nut what shall we say of the po. litital mountebanks who' hrats„ s pro. claimed that the majority for the\re. publican candidates was secured lay rand, then inVented a method for trying tale that was to decide which party had fairly elected its candhlates; and . now set on foot a one-side investigation for the double purpose of et - posing alleged Repub.." !lean crookedness, which they have determined to find whether it exiSts or not; while they ignore Democratic frauds: that arc so numerous ands apparant asto neeil no searching out; and of impeaching the f title of President, whose' election they con- . ceded by acquiescing in the decision of the tribunal —mated at their own urraestion Should they lot I have the candor to.,deelare that their object is to de ceive, to garble, and to \distort the ]acts developed, that theeountry may be induced to see themn. the role of innocent DemOcratic h shaken and thri l l by, the crafty unscrupulous t eiwiilican-wolf? are about to• aather in material to make up their case.` In short, they are preparing,to deceive the people. Let the people, therefore, be careful to estimate their performances at Their true value. • THE Norristown // Ovid on the Platform of \ the Demi - patio party : Ifating noini.ted DILL for Govenor, a notorious rin,:ter and corporation attorney, the D noeratie 'Machine managers, to lthod *nk the People, pass a set of resolutions• filled with pretended. denunciation of railroad corporations: • Platform• are not generally regarded by eitik party after their adoption, but this spec:- .men is such a tissue of ineonsiste cies that even' tliesiruplest- minded Den o erat cannot fail to be ashamed ofit. Ipn the question of tariff we have a reference the ten per cent. reduct io; to 157 . 2, snd the Ilepublicans are Mimed for. this legislation, whin is notorious that it was only through the_persisteitt exertions o,'S the Re publieau, membeps from Pennsylva nia in Cimffress that the reduction !" • was notstill greater. This" resolution is put in the platform, "too, i the face of the percent etrorts of th4_Dem oeratie majority. in the House to pass the Wood outrage on "the industries and lab9r of our State. The people are - told that "any at-, tack upon the Presidential title" is "dangerous to Mir institutions ank fruitless iii its• results." But every Democrat in Congress from Penn-kyl vania has vote] 6ver3,' time in favor of an investigation made solely, for the purpose of unseating the Presi dent. It is only fair to some mem i,ers •of the coi;vention, probably the majority, however,. to say that this - feature of. the . platform! they seriously objected to. motice the -proceedings of the " Prohibition meeting" called to as semble in this place recently are published in two of our town papers- We happened to see the gathering re ferred' to,•and can asstire our renders that it was an immense (?) assemblite, coif posed of one delegate to the late Greenback convention, one chronic sore-head, who has betu kicked out of the Itepubliean party, and one consistent temperanbe man from Granville, who took no pains to conceal his disgust at the Political jugglery Its r his associates. ALL the Democratic organs tell their readers that the Republicans in !`Congress voted against an investiga- Oer of the alleged frauds in the.elee tion of 1S; s.. This is untrue. The Republicans voted. in favor of extend ing the investigatton to cover the whole field, and the DemotWAs in fa . . vor of limiting it to \two Mates, This is a confession of fraud on the part Of the Democrats in :"-9regdn,. Mississippi, and- South Caolina, of which they Jaye not permit an inycs- Ligation. Plot.t.es 113 ° S• one MOW chance to be nominated; Let Pol. SMITH be sent to the Prohilitory Covention and advocate his . elaints as eloquent& ly as he did belbre the preenbackers in Philadelphia, and—.l:int.t.ET may yet be a tinbenatorial candidate. Of course Plot4ier is a temperance man, for has not Col. Smyrn and others who folhw him in his advocacy of the old granger publicly declared they would :rapport none but pledked prohibitonists. • THE Germantown relegraph sayS that it -is admitted oa i hands L-. that is by both parties—that thf ticket nominated at the Republican Contention is-a strong and unexcep tionable one, and seems to reach the sentiment of every brinch of .the party. .Colorel Rorr will undoubt ly make a bold light. fore . Governor ship, and will inspire a great deal of enthusiasm among the active young politicians, and will be elected by a overwhelming majority. THAT Republican Congressional address seems to have stirred up the Democratic brethern. They did not expect, evidently to haVe .the Cover removed from their little game in so precipitate a manner. They declare they: do. niiti-paean _rev9l4tiT4, but -:-Tns NATIONAE PLATEVIM.---Witat: lis the Platform ? It is not-proposed hdre to do more than to take rip the . , fellient porpts. rust, uenotmees tlie \ Nott- - P Wrodfleet.--hu be Is, icpUld be difficult to discover, eteepe that the presiding officer of 'the Conven , with , a score More of dee gaten, *era aimed d, and a gentle intimatioru . given them that instead sit* being Consimiers they must come down to hard pan, and till the Soil - or ' in other ways hecOme Producers, and .thus further over'stok the market with goods of all kinds. Ent the Natioalists propose, as : li\7medy for exhisting troubles, "A \icious financial system formed in tinter !est of the pioduetive labor o 1 the country." What this means we \pro fess an inability to comprehend. ,"Fi- \ nancial 'system"---" Productive la; bor." These be bravo words, but what do they mean ? Do they mean that lll:Gass, who 'framed the-- plat form and who has always been an office-hunter instead of a laborer, shall drop the demagogue and revert to labor? Then again - the platform declares that neither the Republicans nor the Democrats arc entitled :to re spect, and yet all the bunkers for Voth were present, and actually. hus tled the real laboring men out and framed the Dollyarden platform which was given to the Convention. To discuss more .of the Conven tion'ajesolves ua applicable to the maney-queAtion would be an insult to our readers. They know what it and knosir how skillfully it has lieen drawn in the interest of a fu ,l tur)3 \ hoped4or ComMune. . _ - - Tug *rile,. :American : THE press throughott the State gives a varying reply to the Worth American's inter rogatory. whether Pennsylvania shall give fiftythousand majority to. ena ble FERN.kNDO NVOOD and - Speaker R.MTDALL to saddle \ us ,'with free trade, or an equal Republican major ity -against communism, \smuggling, inflation i and free-trade t\ But the Republican cry is united andesolv ed: It comes back' froM all \sides that if Philadelphia does its dutY\l \ in. November the deqsion will be happy and final—that !" if Philadelphia' will do this the •emainder of the State will send up • a majority that an candidates Philadelphia 11 issues—rare shall not fail •od chance for o feel jealous sower of their they can do the country vphia were neu- . , Tug Philadelphia Tin• .s—always Democratic,, and " frequent • malig , nattly so,—elaiming to be i epen dent, is alarmed at the bad r ord its party is making in Congr and utters this cry of distress: ' The Democrats will be held to ac count for the grossest partisaorY in the organization of the House, for their coneubinage" with communism, for perverted investigations and for shameless misuse of their opportuni ty to correct the wrongs that have grown up under the - Republican reg ime—those wrongs which as a mi nority they condemned which as a majority they practice. We look for another -reconnoisance in, force by the Independent voters, who have been sleeping - on their arms for a while, under the deitlsion that their work was done. When this, demon stration shall take_ place there will be a terrible shaking up of the politi cians. It may be sin 1813(4, .'or it may he earlier; the party that 'makes the best record in the meantime will es cape with‘the least loss. Tux predictions so freilly made of the prospective failure of the Woman's Hotel have been' fulfilled quite as soon as ap.);_one expected. Of the two hundred accepted applicants, whielt - is about one-fifth of the num ber that the hOtel could accommo date, only forty took rooms, and these petscins have enjoyed the act', vantages i of the Woman's Hotel at an average cost to the STEWART, es tate of about ten dollars for each one. Failure was prophesied because the regulations were: onerous, but the more probable reason is the n.a-. tural objection to being confined to associates of 'one's own sex. If it were possible to make a hotel suc cessful from which one of the sexes was excluded, the -experiment would have been, tried long ago. EVEN ALEX McCtuttE admits • the ticketn9minated by the Harrisburg Convention is a strong One. In an editorials in the Titnrx he says : "Those who dream that Colonel Hoyt will be easily vanquished in the coming battle are but idle dream ers. lie is personally popular and deservedly so: . Ile is intelligent, manly and has no common share of creditable attributes. He was a gal lant soldier, and outside of the single issue Of a widely-hated rule that has favored. him he. has every element of popular strength. If lie shall com mand-the united and cordial support of the voters who cherish sincere de , votion , to Republicanism, he will prove to be the most available candi date ofall those named for. the posi tion." Tux Beaver Radical : lion. GA LUSIJA A. Grthw says he will at . once take the stump, especially in the northwestern counties in the State, and will urge the people_to give their very . heartiest support to the entire Republican ticket. This unselfish conduct will' not surprise his very numerous friends. Arren,natnre - reflection Judge BVITLY has decided to follow _ tho example-of gRILMER and bas declin e) th - j - 1P104 1 44 41 of thP' Prt!ook" 0 4 1- rirloc.filupren*ijudge;:iuulleidef tr,,01),„.„ L GENEIIIAL lizirinr at. 110*r. We dopy itosi 13,41120 itdrtiat Peede Ptelittsytoanitt i tho tolitrirL ing skath of Cletieral Roe, "Henry Martin .Hoyt; Colonel of the Fitty-seeend Reginient,stld bre vet rfriptiler-Cieneiall * al both lh liineanelionrity- on the Bth of Jibs% 1830. His parents were natives of Connecticut. He was educated at Lafayette and Williams college, ,graduated at the latter In 1849. He studied law In the office of George W. Woodward, and early took a good rank at the bar. The national cause found no more ready support. er, and he was commissioned Lieu tenant Colonel of the Fitly-second, in August, 1801. While on an ext aming board at - Washington he stud ied diligently books upon tactics engineeering, , fortfications and the various 'requirements of a soldier. On the Fe ‘ ninsula he was of Nagle's ,brigade, and partidipated in the re connoissance from Bottom's Bridge toeven • Pines in advance of the whole army, and commanded the 'party\which constructed the bridge across the Chickahominy. When \late battle of Fair Oaks opened be rendered signal service by communicating to General Sum mer the exactSsitiT t i of 'the Union troops, joining §ummet's celumn ,as it moved to the support of Heintsel man in that battle, lend fighting tin der him to the end. This brigade had the honer of being aelepted to hold the enemy in check at the,passage of the Chidlcahominy, and when recall ed joined Franklin at White Oak Swamp, in both situations exhibiting the most iinduanted courage. At the close of this campai g n Col onel Hoyt was ordered fi rst toNorili \ Carolina, where he was engaged in the, siege of Fort Wagner, the first serious obstacle in the reduction of Charleston. The operations were laborious and conducted under 'the .terrible fire of the enemy and the more wasting' effect of - the summer's heat. For forty days the work was pushed, A single paragraph written by Colonel Hoyt at the time will I illustrate 'its nature. After describ ing the busy scenes of the details, he says: "Over all this diversity of labor - were constantly exploding at night the shells of the enemy. Cover. Johnson I' would be called out from the lookout. There was a flash across, the harbor. In ten or fifteen seconds comes a-report. away up in the air is seen a steady twinkle. Presently it whistles' and wabbles' and roars like a coming storm. Down down on the heads of the men crouch= floe behind the mounds of sand, lower and lower still, and hi very imminent proximity, it winds up with a bang and\a, villainous wliir-r-r of halt' a hundred pieces humming into the marshes or mayhaps into the living muscles of its poor victims. Then the Bull olt, the Woods would open its pyrotechtty, and Bee and Beau regard and the, Peanutind Haskell, anil„so the thing was k pt up until, tired and weary and mangled, the detail went out of the trenches at , dawn." When all was ready, a hundred guns ofie - ned upon devoted Wagner and. the troops were held in readi ness to assault, Col. Hoyt having been assigned the task of charging Fort Gregg, but before the time 'for the movement had come the enemy evac uated and the, stronghold fell without a blow: • In June 1864, a plan was devised to capture Charleston by surprising the garrison guarding its approaches. beyond, where beginning ,to open: their hoarse throats, while the inter , vals were filled with the sharp rattle of musketry. .- No sign of wavering was seen in the entrepid baud as they moved steadily forward, led by Col. Hoyt. They crossed the parapet, struggled at the crest face to face with the foe, and began to leap into the fort, when the astounding- and mortifyiny fact was disclosed that`they were unsup ported. The whole garrison was now alive and swarming upon all skies. It was plain that a further struggle would be useless and the detachment surrendered an prisoners of war. The skiil and daring -dis played by Col. Hoyt and his meh extorted- the highest praise froM. friend and foe. The Charleston Mercury of July 6th, said " The second column under .Colo.‘. net Hoyt of the Fifty-Second Penn. Sylvania, who also had command - of . the exixtdition attacked - th,e Bropke gun, and landing, Lieut. Bowortli of the 'sonti: South Carolina Artillery was •Comp6lled-, to fall 'back, after himself and men fighting bravely. The enemy cheered by this success, •witiiktheir commander at therr head waving li is , sword, advanced in heavy force ,npon Fort ..Johnson ; but these were receceived with a terrific Tire by the light and heavy batteries on the line.'• . . QCeral Foster in command of the department said 'in orders: f , ' The boat commanded by. Colonel Hoyt, Lieutenant -Colonel Conyngbain, and, Lieutenants Stevens and Evans, all of the Fifty-Second „Pennsylvania, rowed rapidly to the Shore, and these officers with Adjutant Bunyan (after ward killed) and 135 men, landed and drove the enemy, but deserted by their comrades were obliged to surrender to superintnunibers. 0431. Hoyt be:stowesinnonalified praise - on the officers and men who landed with him ; of these seven were killed 'and Sixteen wounded. He himself de serves great credit for his ene&J in urging. the boats forward and bring ing them through the narrow *chan nel, and the feeling which led him to land a 'the - head of his men was the prompting of a gallant spirit which deserves to find more imitators:" General Schemmellinning said, after recounting the preliminaries : ".After this you placed yourself at the head of the column and led them most gallantly, faithfully coming out as far as possible; with the small number of men who lauded wi tilVßi . ibeorder.a given you ) ) 3`naa.n4a or6ed.sui * operatituit* b ising,earrled in front of 0 %OP. , Coiasel vy 4 With WO , thieb °niers, irafseit te M+ci stab: sequently to_Cluirieskon r itheie they were ei#osed to the sweep of the 110- lon sena On Mt - WRY thither_ he, Wah loilititshiptinionisi lea , troni the Ws and lindertcmk to site theft Way to he 'Union fleet,' but were tracked by bloodhounds and all cap tured. After his exchange he return ed to his regiment, and at the close of hostilities, which occurred not long after, resumed the practice ,of his procession:. In 1867 he was ap pointed by Governor Geary Addi tional Law Judge of the Eleventh IDS; trier. lie discharged its duties with honor and dignity until the ensuing election, when one of the dominent party was chosen to supceed hitn. In person be is full six feet in height s . well proportioned, and of a dignified presence, He was married in. 18.05 to Miss Mary Ei tottlindel TSB' DESOCSATIC SLOT. We commend- to the careful Peru-, sal of our readers the able and argil rnentative address of the Congres sional Committee touching the revo lutionary doings of the Democratic Majority in Congress. It is not quite a score of years since' the same Dem ocratic party revolted against the election of AnitAUA.AI Lracour and deluged the country in a bloody war; common prudence and precaution demand that a recurrence of such a calamity carefully guarded against. The party, in this district can clisz charge their duty in the 'matter by COL OVERTON, our present id influential member, to the, ingress. Republican Congressional ;tee has issued the following address i \ _....,.... • Its,s tutnrrox, May 17, 1878. - To the Voters Of the United States : The Democrats House of Reprdsenta tives has to-day-b :a party vote adopted s e.. i a resolution which tinder the pretense of investigation, is to laintrni foundation for a revhlutionary expulsion of the President from his office. This is the 'culmination of a plot which has been on foot from the day that Hayes and Wheeler \were coma tutionally declared elected. , Ilk made its first, public appearazioe in the resolution of the last Democratic House adapted at the close of the session, deelarim, that 1 Tilden and Hendricks were erected. \Til den and Ilendries subsequently made gm= flak public declarations themseirea. few timid members have long. held back, and some of them, after being coerced to the final vote, still pretend that they will halt as soon as their.partial and one-sided investigation stall have ended. In other words, they intend, after hearing suborn ed evidence, to bring in a verdict that Hayes, is a usurper and that ho shall not remain in office. These men have no con trol in , the Democratic party. They dor; I'd not even follow Alexander H. Steph ens in a unit against caucus dictation to the extent of showing some sereldance_of fair play. They will be impotent in the future as ; they have been in the pxst. Moreover, his ditlictilt to believe in their sincerity in view of the public avowal of their party that its purpose is, if possible to displace the President. It is a matter. of history that the resolution just adopted was framed to express this object. The Speaker of the Honse was consulted in advance as to whether he would rule that it was a privileged question. The party managers were anxious to e•Aiceal their:purposes if. possible. In this they Were defeated by the Speaker, who would not rule it a question of privilege unless it clearly assailed the title' of the Presi- I dent. The resolution being offered, he I read a carefully prepared opinion, decid ing it to be a question of the highest priv -1 ilege because it involved the question of 1 the validity . of Hayes' title. Here are the very words : "A. higher privilige than the one here involved and broadly and directly present ed as to the rightful occupancy of the ref Executive chair of the goverment, 4 al l d the connection of the Ugh govern. _meta officials with frauds alleged, the Chair is unable to conceive. The Chair finds enumerated among the questions of privilige set down in the Manual the fol lowing: "Election of President." The Chair therefore, rules that the preamble and resolution embrace questions of priv. liege of the - higbest character,d meg-, cusizes the right of the gentleman frord New York to offer the same." Upon. this the Republins commenced a • struggle against the. revolutionary scheme which, after five days' duration terminated in the success of the conspira= tors: The Republicans offered the full est investigation into alleged fra.ids, by whichever party, charged to have been committed,,but the. Democracy pursued its _course . shamelessly and relentlelisly, party, rally.again to the support of the law, or der and stable government, and to over whelm with defeat the reckless agitators who to gain political power, would add to tbo present distresses of the country, by shaking the foundation of the government they failed in four years war to destroy. By unanimous order of the committee. EUGENE HALF., Chairman GronEE C. Goßß.l.l4.BePretary. THE DENOCALTIC CONTENTION. That was a :gay old time the Democracy had at Pittsburg last week. When the Convention finally assembled it was found. nee asary to have the roll called by a Republican. After a stormy session, occupying nearly a whole day, in which persgnal encounters were frequently imminent, the maehinl watput in motion. WAD. LACE wast e such men as licCuuLtan and his . Philadelphisi roughs,' made a ticket, follows : Gocerner--ANDREW H. Dux, Gorernor—Toe! Plume. Judge of Supreme Court--41. P. Ross, &Wall,/ of internal Affairs—,l. B incA, Col. PIOLLET received .16 votes on the .first ballot and 5 on the last. Gmr. DAWN writing from Paris, says that the United States will excel all the world at the Exhibition in such articles as these : Agricultural implimenta and machinery ; saws, tacks and nails, watches, dentists' instruments and artificial teeth, bolts, tool 4 tin and - Wooden wareoued owl& oilcloth; screws, firearms, inolFS 0 4 1 4 0 0 r hi - Oa/A =PP Ad hi I r, Olieraitk* tga crwsmallorrs voz, than uWat aitoth wit Ppe* eaticsjiondeitt. tbeibOtta' MUM to be, " S et,triard t Ito it! and pith. that Wview we will take a Utile jaunt and see what we can see. Oa .s May day we start on our wanderings, dpa reatililog Mtn& the same night_ no. thifig r of Menet oclints4,,l'he.neet. ing, taking the Great Western Kolitt- of Canada, it is but a short ride distil the far. fatted Niagara Falls are reached. After stopping a short time we are 134011 whirl lag our way through the Queen's Domin ion. The country for about 50 miles after leaving Niagara is very level, and with Lake Ontario to our left the scenes along the Hon i ara 'very lino; For the nest AO to 50 miles the ootintry it rough and hilly, and then we opine to plains again and very flho farms. "Passing.flamilton, Paris and London in rapid saccession seen' Dea l troit is reached,-and we : pass into an even ' country again. From Detroit the route to Chicago is across Southern Michigan and, through the towns •of Ypsilante, Badan,Altott, Jackson. Battle Cleek, Kal ammo and Alatistiold. Through this ter ritory the' country the most of the *sir is lottel and the farms will cultivated stet itt geed Onaboticeablo thing along this flue is that almost ever farm house has a, wind-mill near by taptiinp water. On nearing Chicago the country is covered nearly all over with a white sand - raid with very little vegetation ; and still further on is a hnig swamp which ex tends up to the city of Chicago. . Chicago of the present day still shows the ravages of the big lire. A great many places are not yee'rebuilt; though. that_ portion that has been built over has some very Goland elegant: stores and i blisintss places, and - its hotels surpass ail other cities •The work df tyliug the vacant places is fast going on, and it will be but a few years before very little will remain of the landmarks of the great fire. Leaving Chicagoby the Chicago Al ton road, our rout is towards Kansas. City. - The Chicag o& Alton road is one of the finest roads in the West, and makes two limns' quicker titoo to :Kansas - City than any other route. The route is down over the Illinois prairies and crossing the Mississippi Itiver at Louisiana, 310., then direct across the State of Missouri to Kan sas. The cars for through passengers are fitted up with reclining ,chairs which turn-on a-pivqt, and are equal to and fitted up with all the convenience of palace cars.' For this no extra charge is made. Dining Cars are attached to all through trains, and meals argoOd as those obtain ed at any brat-class hotel are served while traveling at tile rate of 30 miles per hour, and at the reasonable charge of 7i cents each. Arriving at Kansas City' after a 21 hours' ride we are now at the portals Kansas, and in future will give you an opinion of that State. - . %FA. TED SATRE ELNOT/OR, DISTRICT SAYRE,ra,, May 21, 1571 Din. EDITOR 7 The great injuStice done to the Sayre election district by the late County Conventidn, in shutting out , Ilw delegates from that astrict, and thus do privingthe people of any representation, is exciting a good deal of coniteent 'throughout the county, and so far as I can e,arti, the tone of that comment is any- I thing but flattering to the action of the , Cotiventien or the instigator of the great I wrong, We think it comes with an ill grace for a delegate, and a substitute delegate at that, from s bdrough tnaile up of several election dis acts, and each district repre sented by two delegates to get up in a ' Convention au start such a movement. As an exhibition f cheek it is about . the 'cheekiest thing ou cord. The usage of 'the Ifephblican Corrientima and-the Dem ocratic•Coovention fol\years, has been to admit two delegates from each glection district.' And further thali c tbat, the Dem-. octatic Convention and Greentiackt Con vention admitted delep,ates, from the sev eral election districts of Athens township. Taken why this sudden change in the face. of 'all iisnage and precedingS? There looks tette something dark in tlu\free somewhere. All we ask' eveu ha ded just!, e 4 Our delegates will not go to \tic. convention begging the privilege of a seat, They will take's scat as their right to rep resent their constituents. Wetwlieve the next convention will cheerfully accord us -that righ.:. • -. As to the suggestion, that a convention °film County Committee.he called to fix the basis of representing throughout the County. Sty opinion is, that inasmuch as no such action was contemplated when that committee was appointed, such a course would be very injudicious-- . • And I believe it is, a matter that be longs properly to the convention itself, to be acted on onlly after fair notice is given. The suggestion to cut flown the lumber of delegates would not be satisfatory. .• The fabric of onr government seems to be founded on a representation of two delegates from each State, whether large or small to represent us in the. United States Senate. And when we make up our Electoral College we ' elect two dele gates nt large and firo balance is made up on the number of voters. I would adopt this same plan. And in conclusion allots me to say .that I think the best thing the convention can do, is to right the great wrong done to our election dlstrieta, and then: go on and attend to its legitimate business, and. put up a ticket made'np of good sound honest men ; sdcb men as will give character to the several offices, and then they can go before the people,.4ith a prospect of electing them, Yours Truly, • J. F. OVENSIII LETTER FROM ILLINOIS. • infitAND. l ll.rliY6, / 878 • EDITOR EEPORTBR I Through the kind ness of friends in lister, in your county. I am. frequently favored with .copies of your excellent paper, and the thought has come to me that -perhaps a feti words fiMo Illinois might be..of some intbrest to your readers, as notes froth-your county are to me. Towanda was the place Of my birth; and ivbile I have but little knowl-, edge of anything 'connected with your citY, 1. am always pleased to read your, paper and to note the improvements that' are being made from time to time. • Our farmers are nearly through with their seeding. We have had the. earliest Spring that has been known for years. Wheat was sown as .early as the' 20th of February., There has been more.acres of his article sown than formerly, with pres ets of a good crop. Vern is our main c s , and is just now being planted by the . undred acres. The weather has been bad f early planting on account of rains. The fog swing are the prices for produce; Wheat, . t cts. to $1 ; oats, 18 to 22 ets.; corn, 28 s 35 ets.; rye, 00 ets.: barley; 25 to 50 ets. :r bushel ; tame hay K wild hay 5 - ton; butter, oto 19 ets.; cheese, 10 to'l. ts. per timed ; eggs, 0 cts. per doz., and eveiything else propOr tionately lowi cons.quently many of our farmer:: complain 11 terly, of hard times. The trouble is, the tri , st of them den't know bow 'to economize. ; Our people are wideass tke on the sub ject of Temperance, and old topers arc being converted,—which laddeus the !marts of wives, children and riends. I. believe 'that the day is not fa distant when it will be much more point i r to be and advocate right than, it now is ' .our midst. Whisky men het:b have draw the lines and we propose to stay with 'the , feeling confident that the tight'will even. natty prevail. ' With kind wishesfor success of yotir paper, I am, very:rapeetfully, Examos. THEIM are 188 candidated for office in' Ruda county. Frsn cattle are being shipped troth York county tO Europe. 111tssount. with 13 Congressional dis tricts, has 78 - willing candidates. ' TIMER hundred 'thousand Texas Cattld arc moving toward the northern markets: Tan Russian; positions, at San Stefano have' been moved nearer those of the Turks. Lexcxwrzn county's tobacco Product for pounds the year is expected to reach 150,000 . , Timm hundred and nine oil wells were completed bat month, an increase of 107 over March. A CorusisET (Hass.) man has been glued 45 and cost for assulting his grand mother, 'who has weathered ninety-one yeas*. Tstit 4:Outcast for:the Schuylkill county InitriskAttonsephipitillasitinnal. Mr. , 4 01 .E_Atc, Ags:: - Ight 4114 ••. • r , Purist:own claims to bark the fingist. sliade trees in the State. • - A Eir.lcrrcu trip in the Lancaster world; house k astonish ng people by hit vionder frii vocal powers. ACMittlisi3 to a dkpatel from Vieiillll tho Montenegrins threaten to ocCupy the promised territory... TUE. Trenton Gazzette pronounces. in favor of nominating'General Grant for President in 1880. 4 A CilAtiAiteifiCiA. Tenn 4 mill recently rolled the ant bar cif cited error manure°. Lured "in the south. b. THE scheme of the English government to readjust all taxation has caused intorno* excitement at Malta. Tui lectures .fif Charley Ross' father are well attended in the northern portion of the State. . Ov all the States in the Union, Colorado stands alone in not promising'" an except ionally heavy harvest. exports from Philadelphia for April were greater than ever known in the business of the, city. 115011011 E TILTO* galledjfdr zurope, Iday 18. 11e win visit his daughters, who are in Btuttgarti Germany. Tuv. business men of New Orleans are moving actively in the niatter of .a emu (nerd:a:treaty with France. E. IT. CowLEs; patentee 'of Cowles' feather renovate?, dropped dead • on the_ street at sbaron a - few days ago. • R. W. EVAN : i at Co.'s oil tank at Brad ford burst on Wednesday night, resulting in the loss 422,900 barrels of oil. • ' THE , taukago to be erected for the now pipe line at Sharon,-, Mercer county, will have a eal*eity of 50,000 barrels.. Qnt•;rx ArtcrontA will shortly visit Wooltnelt fur the first time in twenty-tlo years. She will inspect tbo troops. A RE:Pentacatki paper in Kentucky sug gests Ont. Oristrow's name as the party candidate for (Inventor of the State. ' . . . tl p 111111.1,11.4 is NO ill, rOViaCd,With Oblllial- ON and clergymen ' hat there - is only one of the latter to ab ' ut 8500 of the. people. -- Granon,t's tirth-rate since 1885 has ucen slightly over thirty . per cent, among the whi t ies and over fifty among the blacks. Tin; Porte will allow no further addition to the British fleet at Ismia. An ex change of bhips will, be pernotted, how. COUNT MOLTKE recently-visited Copen hagen for the first -time in nearly fifty years, when he l' ft the Danish service as a sub•lieutenan A_Scluticut3, ibbled the reeds of an organ in a chum , . near Stouchburg , Berke county, recently causing damage to the amount of twee y dollars. Tut: fact cam s : out .in -a trial in San Francisco the .ther day that . a woman bad carried t120;100 - in greenbacks iu her - bustle for neart , six mouths. Ax old man: n'Lebanon, who has vreth. eyed seventy-fire wintets, wants to bet that he can walk trout that place to Reading and back in ono day. Ilikcrox's city debt has been reduced $1,133,475 during the year ending 4iwit . 30, and is now: 42,4.57,0'22, and, the sink . ing fund amounts to $15,110,000.. 1 THE ancientlower of OsPerment, SWit zerland, which was connected with a Icastle built by the Roman Emperor -Val entitle in the year 368, fell recelatly. Nonouy IS convicted of murder out in Deadwood. If this crime deserves any notice at all, he lined from $5 tolo sfor shooting at a mark within the city limits. T/LTON is announced to sail fir Europe on Satiirday, to visit ids daughters, %vim are in Stuttgart,' Germa ny. Mrs. 'Pilaw: wilt 'not Accompany Inm. TE:t.Eilioxr•.s are placed a few miles apart along the mountainous part of the Central Pacific Railroad, so ' that track-' walkers may report Whenever they pass -them. • A-7..!,• Epson salt Mine bas been found twelve miles from Chattanooga. The de posit is two feetthibk and is easy of ac cess. It is pure, and oily requires Crush lug. to make it maketable. _ Boors silver dollars, made of bloat tin bismuth and pulverized glass, arc being freely circulated in the west. They" ituit ito exactly the the true color and ring; a di x are about in weight. 1 'ATElltt;, the young Harvard senior-who reettiqy died in the Wircestor -Insane Asylnil? is said to have killed himself by study-in nineteen 110Uli. without cessa tion eithe for satin; or sleep. Vous''' . ; IFILEWSKI, regarded as" the richest man ii Russia, and who had for -many yeqs. pa. enjoyed an % hicoine of 5,000,000 a year, lied at St. Petersburg, • reeently,.at the ag -of ninety-two. , . Mn. LANG Bo=sr, : ge4 - seventy'-three years, who achieved some prominence early in the war by urg g the Confeder ate forces to-. take no p isoners, is the most 'prominent candidate or Govenor of Alabama. As attack was made on Set 's circus at Oil City on Monday, and one o the em ployees, William Bailey, fatally injured by a blow_over the head. This ts the same circus that was badly treated ret. nt ly at a 'Kentucky town. Gus. E. P ALExamisa, GEN. 1.131 Chief of Artillery during, the last years of the war, has been elected President of ' the t;Coigia railroad, defeating Judge Eiso, who has been president of the road for - the past thirty yeam j• Ma. CuILISTMN K. Ross rayi'Altat of the large number ' of boys who . have at one time or other been supposed to be the lost boy Charlie, only three were found to have been kidnapped, the others being poor little friendless waifs. • minor. ISATsoN and Alfred Rankin, who lodged•it Gorman'S lintel, Bellefonte on Thursday night; arose and drank by mistake from a bottle of carbolic acid.- One of them died soon , afterwards, and the other is not expected to recover. The Pittsburg Leader had a telePhinie conneetng,its (Alice With the ball in which the DeMocratie Convention was held on Wednesday, and, was thus enabled to bulletin reports of the doings several niin utes in adjance of its contemporaries. Tun London Tinzet advoeatas enlisting boys of fourteen to sixteen years, and fieeping them in a training-selmol until they 011111 have attained sufficient strength and kuocvlUdgb of their duties to render them lit to take, their places in the muks. Tin , : appointment of -coal production for the mouth of June, as arranged , by the hoard of control, assures 'four weeks work next mouth. The quota assigned for the mouth, with the 70,000 tons re maining to be mined of the amount prey, iousiy assigned,. makes about 700,000 tens,-or 175,000 tons per week for four weeks. MANUS Letter 'known as the " The Burn " has been discharged froin imprisonment under the two term rule. lio Ns'as the pilneipal witness ag:a.inst Pat Rester. Peter. M' Hugh and Patrick Tully hanged at .111bonisburg on the 2,lth of March. With the shaking of this Bloom dust• from his feet Columbia county is rid of her last 'caged 'Mollie 11.iguire • TILE Pennsylvania State Sabbath School Association will.meet in mass convention in Williamsport, June 11, 13, 13. The leading railroads haVe granted reduced rates of fare, tickets good from June 10 to IS, which'will• give all who desire, After the adjanniment of the convention n opportunity ,to extend their trip ti> a Watkin's Glen, oil regions, or_ other ad jacent resorts. H. CaJ. NO 'WOE I TEOUBLES ANTICIPATED Animating,. May 25.—Inquiries at the executive and military depart - j meats of the ,State Government to day failed to elicit a corroboration of alarming 'stories. of anticipated I labor troubles .which lia, f recently come from certain 'sections' ,of the State, No intelligence has heen re ceived here which would justify the statement that thingslook decidedly . had nothing is known of any con 7 templated 'concentration of 'troops, as no orders hive .gone forth' from either - the Governor -or Adjutant General' to that 'effect. •No unusual . military preparations .4r , Movements have been or are beim& Made, and. none are neeessarn for the reason that; the Governor and his .. staff are now, andarways- have. been .on the alert ler, trouble, and the 'dine ta ry fgreis:4, their command are •• •14.;affeAXletaligerii;aCoapt4.00 use • , Atiaisi4,4o4ooo,7 ,; 'l - 7 ,- ;7•;“ 4. ' 7 7*:4' ~_~;, iately npon being called into service. The :military history of the State for the past-ten years ianutlicient proof of thilartith'of this assertion. &me arms were sent town eastern county, i but they Were merely sent in ex change for old-fashioned weapons whieh were returned to the State Arsenal. When interrogated on the Subject to-day, the Governor said that if trouble was anticipated in any section of the state it is quite lately that the civil authorities would inform him, but as yet he has receiv ed no such notification. There are many rumors from all parts of the country,-and there may be trouble in the future, but there is none what ever at Present. A" gentleman who arrived in this city yesterday from the western part of the State said that trouble is apprehended at Greens burg, Westmore:and County, where several Mollie Maguires are on trial for arson and murder, and it is fear ed, the miners of that section may , attempt a. disturbance. It may be that = from this small speck have grown the clouds of war which trouble so many persons throughout the State.- The friends of law and orderi can rest assured, that when trouble of that character comes. if eonie'it will, it will be 'suppressed a vigor and thoroughness which will tend greatly to prevent a' speedy recurrence of the disorder.' ' , DENOCTRATS ON'THE TIONET. • A special Waehington dispatch says : Democratic Congressmen 40 not'hesitate ..to say that there was na -enthusiasm for the ticket at' Pitts burg, and they , fear it will be impa gable to arouse any as the canvass progresses. They express the future fear-that the dissensions so apparant in the Convention will not be smooth.; ed over in tirne to solidity the party and organize it for . effective service. i Not a man of them expects to see the ticket win. Some or them say. that the nomination of Dill will cost the party 25,000 votes in the oil . re gions; they do not think that Fertig will be strong with that interest. They also anticipate trouble in the west, which had set its heart first on Hopkins, and next on defeating Dill. Colonel Marsh, of York, who was himselta candidate for Clover nor,. says that the ticket might have been much better, and is strong only because the Republican ticket is very weak. He believes Dill to be a 'man of ( unexceptionable • character, and thinks he would make a' good • GoveriCor if he could be elected. Of his election nobody here has any serious thought. Colonel Mackey, of Lock Haven district, thinks the ticket a good one, but regreta dissensions which cropped out so strongly in: the convention. Col. Mackey and Mr. Collins were the only two Dill men in the Penn sylvania delegation. Messis Maish, Stinger, I'urney, Reilly, Bridges, Wriglit, and, of course, were strongly against him ; some be cause they' had individual preferen=• ces, and the Speaker because his motto was anything to beat Wallace. The speaker's• defeat at the Con.- vention has been the subject of Gen eral conversation to-day. There are those who go so far as to predict that Senator Wallace will carry( ,the war into the Speaker's district, and, by defeating him for nomination, !punish him for leading the field 'against Dill and the rest of the state. In this connection, it is said that 'Squire M'Mullen gaye it to be • un derstood that lie wanted to be solid' with the winning man, and would, .if ' called on, use his power against Ran, dell's re-nomination. A Pennsylva nia Democratic Consgressman said to-day that there was but one man in the delegation upon . whose sup port Randall could rely "in making his fight for the Speakership of t he next House. TOWANDA MARKETS. REPORTED UT STEVENS & LONG, General dealers In G niceties and produce, Patton's corner Vain and Rrldkeltreeti. WEDNESDAY EVENING, Ii Al 29, 1878. W Hot KS At R, It 11.T.A t. .t 6 00017 50 VI 51 . `043 00 1 650 2 00 • I . 2 .546 I 250 1 274 130 1 44‘ . (4 149 45 50 seg. Iso(4 . 24 • --40 50 5 NI 7:34 , 70. Peal t SCA 2 00 12 5C@) et® At) OS Cheese Green apples, Cranberries per quart Potatoes, per burial.. Orisons ileessvax ................. coninkcilip H DAYTON' Jk LIAO Veal, 5ki05•.•1...• flans Sheep pelt.: New Advertisements. MEDICAL ;ELECTRICITY I MRS: W.,It:COVEILDALII, In her practice in tills borough during the past year, has etrected minty wetiderfol cures. Her in creased knowledge plaices' her fru)/ competent to treat nearly all diseases incident to our race. SPECIAL ATTENTION Punk LY FEMALE COMPLAIii'M AU kinds ofrovert, Almoplesj, inflammation of the Eyes, Quinsy, Croup, Pneumonia, Pleurisy, , ltt-, hrmmathen e t the Liver ; Inflammatory Rheuma tism, Amens's. Deafness, Aphonla, Diabetes, Dropsy,. Chronic. Rheumatism. st. Vitus Dance, Epilepsy, Gaiter,' Neuralgia, Fever Sore, Cancer, Catarrh; Curvature or the Spine. Asthma, Bright's Disease of the Kidneys, and other diseases too numerous ttrineution. Charges moderate, Terms cash.. Residence nn Poplar st., west of Western +Avenue, where spe may be found at all hours.. - May".. e. ,S6l..;l:7la k k.""El°.llreylP ',rut t' vr . at s l a ll b u ti t s f l t i t te f o rt at which persons or either MI can make • great pay all the time they work, write. far partlenlats to H. tra c LA:re' Cu., rertrand, Sistine. may.39,iy: , . O TIIE roil !--DADEYILLE T—Forty lots for sale (iki mile from .the tan centre) At the low price of Twenty•tive 'Dollars pei lot (CIAI. Location healthy: two. miles from the lead mines, and Work plenty : dictlng In the mines, cutting, calls, - wood, ktc., or. farming; provisions. cheap. neuarter of an acre in each lot. Terms, one-half down, f down. balance in siz months. 'Editor of this paper agent; for further particulars address . ' 3129. C. A. MILLER, . . • Dadesille I'. 0., Jan.7r4ll. - • battle Co., :kin; . . • ITARD_WARE . .. , . . . _ AND TINWARE, SToVEs, : R.A.wa.ms, Sold eery cheap at B. T. June's, IN MERCUR BLOCK, VYWArivi. z. t . . == aILT-EDGED BUTTER MAY ‘fi Made by using the Submerged Or Cooley Cana for raising cream. The undersigned !savor tot Jelling Cooler's Portabie Patent Creamer in Iftwsford Coanty. All communications trace bal.. rymen promptly attended to. A -cheater glebog lull descriptions neat free by u Piths, to . WILMOT COBURN. • mayaCuStn. . Sllrsra, Bradford coanq. AUDITOR'S NOTICE. Fiist Nations] Bank of Athens, rs., vs. T. Lywao our. In the Court of COmmett Pleas of Bead ford County, Sept Tenn. x 617. No. U 4. The Imaersicomil. an Auditor &wallah:id by m Court of Common Pleas of Bradford County to dis tribute the money arising from the Shertra age of defendant's personal property. will attend to the datitta of hie appointment at Ms Mee In Athena Boro'. on NONDAT. JILL! tar. 1871. et9o`eioelt. A. 14., st which time and place all persons Inter. estind will present their chantey or be forever de barred from coming In on geld fund.. ' RECVE, -Auditor. • Athens, May 30-4 w. T" BRIDGE STREET • FURNITURE STORE, )Ceerm a Full Stack of Gnoda. for .the parlor, Reel- Bllting•lira 00, lnaing-poom and . . . _ SOFAS, LOUNGES, CHAIRS,. MARBLE TOI'. TABLES,,.. FINE WALNUT CHAMBER SUITS, , • : Axo WALNUT -. • PI IN(3 TABLES CHAIRS.. BEDSTEADS, BITREAtrS, IVORESTANDS, CANE AND WOOD-SEAT CHAIRS, EXTENSION & FALL-LEAP' TABLES, LOOKING -GLASSES, ' CRADLES, CENTRE TABLES, , &c, &c., IN GREAT VARIETY. We make a !.. 4 tweialty of BED SPRINGS Ai MATTRESSES UNDERTAKING DEPAR TMENT p• o have COFFINS AND CASKETS Of, all kinds and sixes. A large at tk of Trim mings, and the latest improvements In Corpse Pre-, servers, Palls. ge. All funerals are attended by a, competent, experienced undertaker. Ire make a specialty "MAMA branch, and GrARA,NTEKRAT ISPACTiON Loth as to WORK 241 PRICE. PICTURE FRAMES made to order from a tine stock of the latest styleirof moulding. •N. P. nics, BRIDGE -BT., TOTy A'ND A. towanda, May . 30, 180.. , CREAMERY BUTTER The f.'OOLEY rftn:CES of making Butter Lh fast supereedieg aH other systeme. . The Ifutter In FINER PLANORED, and brings a htsher price In the market. . The YIELD IS GREATER than . from any other way of setting. ' -Tbe Riles now average nver ONE- HUNDRED CREAMERS PER WEEK. NO OTHER SYSTEM cau show such a record Itead the TESTIIHONZAT.S--- . , . . . OaI.FIX‘F W anis, NF.r011.1% it. 1., i i. Vareh iii, 1478. i ... . . Voimont Farm Manufacturing CO-: _ Gentitrinen:—We are more and more pleased with "the Cooley Creamer as Re rant lune to use tr. and we feel confident that we shall produce .a better quality of Imam''this summer by means of It than, we .•ror hare before. tFo,' are now gettleg ft.di a tioutiii , for our butter. ,-.S . cy truly your. . ./. . MELVii.LE BOLL. (From Editor of thk A mpriean Agrlcuttrirlat.l Ew TORE. Jan. 9, 478. • Vermont Farm Machine Co. Dear Sirs—l have set up the No. COO/eSC3e3Ther which I procured of yoa; and , have now had It In use on my farm' in New Jersey several weeks. I Sod that it does all you represented that It would do, and that besides ALL of the cream from the milk In less ilia' n hours, and keeping the funk p-rfeetty sweet ; Ti occupies verYtittle space ; may- be kept anywhere In a gttclien, tit a barn if desired. because being . claird completely against access of air the cream tali ilnidbe no odors*: also that It produces more cream from the milk limo I can procure from shallow pans.and is a great labor saver. I strongly recommend It to every boiler maker. lam sure I have- gabled In both quality snd aaricity over any kind of. pan I have yet used fur qting milk for cream. , 1, tors very truly, HENRY STISWAST. Btittlinitsirtu.r.„ Lancaster CO., Pa. • Vermont Farm Machine Co.: • . • Sir—the Cooler anolCatis I ordered arrirod the fore Icirt of June. t am renridvut from repeated nteasuriogs, o eighinvand comparison., that I get more butter, of as floe s quality, from the Isamu amount offmilic by your way of setting than by an other heretofore pursued. So mush so. that I am changing llty entire factory, and than soon require more emus, • Yours truly. COLIN CAMERON. Yr.iiMONT MANITVACTURING COMPANY, BELLOWS FALLS, VT. -•' May 23, 07.04 WYCKOFF IJOUq, (PorrnerlY Pennsylvania House.) ; - • 'l - 17 WEST WATER STREET; ELMIRA, N.. Y. - R. R. HoLiDaY r Agent. • Street Carg pus the house every fifteen minuter. Rates., f2.4)0 per tray. Jpecial rates evert to - ,rote mereisil men stopping over Sunday'. Laptollti. 07 08 ° 9 10 06 ~ 08 tfl. 03' 10 12(al - It -162 IS 11/4 , 1S 1.5® lB ' . 10 'l_ . 14 - -. . 18 ) - 2 , 4 35- 65 04(&03 4000 .... 21:103ao :. lobe tts .... o Wie I. Ci. ••cto • . 0 44' '93 h4 1:4 IN - 11' CALL AND SEE lIS AT PELEVAN 116 USE, ELMIRA, N. F. opposite the Depot. C. T, 8311TLI, Puototorroh. Yomierly of the Ward Dome' Towandayra,4iris. FOR FINE MILLINERY, TRIMMINGS, AND LADIES' GARMENTS OF EVERY DESCRIPTION, At Low Frites, RAPELYEA - HILL. - 7 UST WAVES STORM', JKILNIRA,.N. T., apt • Competitors. • WM Isit Arretimairds. TO WANDA, PENNA., -It'conslatit of In Cowmen Goode, there ir In the Advertisement ..., ei m *c :I 4 g 1::, 7 .- 7: • c 77,' S ~_ ~ m m P O G 0 0 4 lob. e••• •m; ws r '1 11 1 1 =1• t 7 1 0 C) t 4 1 FANCY GOOD S ,