=1 aNS4 *4ol:tet ' l4 " 703 01 saa, tvinda7, Oat. 10,=1578. W. A. CHAMBERLIN Dealer In .FINE eTE.II 7 .ELRY, WATCEES • . SILVER PLATED WARE, wmorroa.. A. ; • Towands,lnn.l4, 2977. LOCAL. AND cvie.RAL. ittlt;3l.tELD will gibe a spiritual se anc.e. at Murcia llallthis Weiluesday Q 23 Mr,, and Mrs. JonN oncurr have been afflicted in Vic-death of one of their inter esiing little girls,. WE have received fiern.B. SATAnnE.x. of North Towanda, two apples of the Toni pkins County King variety, weighing about three rounds.. • dosr.tu RuiNEnor,u, of Towanda town ship, lms also presented us With an apple of the same kind' weighing one and a halt pounds. . • Cnoricitlaf the Messiah (Universalist). Sunday' next Bev. Mr. 31 . 1)., of Philadelphia, will preach at 10:30 A. v. StliAjet--" GOD'S Ways and Our Ways'} and. at 7 P. at., subject—" Shall wo Know' and be KnoWn in - the \Voila to Clime." LAST week we noticed the loss of a car .pet-bag on the Fair Groonds, and on Sat. urday the lost property was returned to this rodiee try the holiest tinder, W. 'B. STROF, of Burlington township. " 'lnn Christian Temperance Women's Convention for the Fifteenth Congress ional District, vitt be held at So“pteluto na Depot from October Bth, at t!, O'clecit r. M., to the evening of the hit), • • . By Order of Vice-President.' Tay: death of kr. Fos leaves a vacancy in the mail agency on the S. L. & S: - R.R. By direptirin of Superintendent of B. W. M. S., ono of the clerks in the Towanda -Post Office has been detailed to perform the service until a new appointment is made. A. sot - I.IIILE will be Mu by the stm dents .of the Susquehanna Collegiate In stitute, at the himse of Prof. -QUIST,Ati, Friday evening best. Proceeds:to be ap plieWtovyard paying the remaining tlebt, on t 1 Mathushel: piano Purchased Lytle school last winter. l'FitsoNAL.--Mrs. A..J. :Cann and daugitter„of IViS., •ill 3 at NI - I,c rh%•POI:TE:II7S, .LRey. ..10.tsys has been tt . ssigned to this parish by the Conference.. —Rev. G. CHANDI.rit :!! ,e, toßuftt loo to the tnii:t det•imbie 'Church in the Conference.' —GEottr.E - E. Fuy. Min) 11:1F been spehd ing- the sunnner ehikircn in .)111- ryl;infl is in t 07,11. We are, sort yto learn that he has been s•lllering from ili health, not loOkiog is well as usual. . I)E.kTTI OF C. S. FOX,; M ITT. AGENT ON TIJI.: S. L. P.. H.—lt is with pee rtlin Inest; that we atmou tire Ihe dealt !+: S. Fox''. 11:1- yountz man appal ently in vig•arous Loaith, but ht.ving inherited a not Ft rung conNtittni, n nom his 1110ther, \An) riled of ronsumiti. , e when CIiA:.:I.IF. tray only eleven ;teat old, lre pr:/red an easy prey to disease. Tl!e which resulted it: his death ' wa.; tylitoid fever, teing very ill from the beginning, three/ weeks ahce, the best medical skill and careful ne4inzundonbt-, ally ht oronge,d his life.= Mi. Fox was nat ;trail? of a bright; genial (lisi‘usiton, and attracted to iiintkelf friends all with 'whom because • contact.in Afier-the death of his mother he came to live iu the family .his uncle, E. T. Estl., and %Vat; always treated ,as he' could not laYe * hcen tnore•eare fully and tenderly eared for r by Ls roan parents. and his devotion to his mal oe and aunt was strong and filial. Duiii:g .his last illness, he expresi , ed a great sire to recover, hat fikqueetly said to his aunt, who was almost constantly by his side. that if it,was the Lord's will he was rearly to Ilk funeral n•ns ntrentied , - rster4l:ty nf .ternoott from tin ;Nt Church. The (le tho only gun of the late Crt.ts. - nix, of Jersey City. IVE briefly noticed last week the death of Mrs. SHIPMAN. 1\ c HMI in the Athens GQ:ette the follnwing; brier sketch of the' deceased, whi4b we copy, as sirs. S. has many frietalsl and relatives among our readeis : Long Branch, N.J., SPpt. 19„ 1 S - :S o in the fifty-fifth year 44' her aue. Mrs. Ma ly Ana Shipllll . ol4 NtiflOW of the l a t,. 0. O. Shipman, and eldest dariulAr 01 the hue \Vm. 11. Overton. • The dece Feil had Leen skk for sere ) al wonths t • but through, fear 4)l' alarming.' those 41Varest to her, carefully coml.:11(d the dangerous nature of•.her malady amid its progress, b•r her nlicomplailag and cheer fel di , peshion, and Caused - eV( n physicians on the last everdeg of her life to ass•ae them that they peed 17 , 4 avert land any inneediate danger. Fmk:IC . I4IY, 11,,w -et e, ! and,jus• after one of her :anti bad left le , r drithi NMI - 1611)g speedy ret ai it: t b e• Morning, the peacefully breathed her last. Tither Many friends everywhere Micro ht r lot has been. east, and especially to those in thisregi .on where Iter childh o od and early married lifteu'as spent, nothing net trzte said . of the loss sustained by her death. To her three sons—grown to man hood though they are—it is irreparable. the eatly death of her husband site was Itipi to stenggle with the world in lea ri t? her t hire children, the titb yourg- Ofti• s Wag mere infants, and the . thles.t yolmg as to requite 'aim eSt the sallle • cof:sfa care•and watchfulness : , • I . lleneetitlly she found herself without an r• sem cos but her trite woraint leeart ; and a 11.21o;C W.4 , natti's courage ro brave tit:ierslty and confider 1 !"% 1 well she here heisele Aiming .111 the sad that litterierted, and how will she sace« , ded cveti:lcitilel the crushing iteight of her sorrow: Made the " hop en ter her very Soul "—can Only be kno*n to I IM 1 ; tornitom sho trusted, and to 'atom alone , confided her grief. Beautiful in reason, endowedity nature with splen l'attlfal gifts, carefully and initially (titivated. and piisessing an engaging ntataa•r and a sweetness of disposition chaimiti all who canto within the eitele of her acquit : int:ince. "Kkalf! s t.twotv tier Intim lore her, .XGne lawe4 hor but to prs.hie." :Coe was this all. 'The grace which Christ alone cah give was hers, and tlitse ho have u : r.lehrti her earnest' Christian life, desire tin further assurance that her • 6 last end 'was Mace." - On t lie quiet Sabbath 'after her" death, iireeoli (1 _by simple but most beebruing services, she was borne to het last resting place in the quiet old church yard ati sta routictt d by those who had known . her in all the bright Irnmise. of her early Years, and still lovelier life other maitirer nes. The; eby the side of hits) she !eyed co melt: and near to the ashes of brother. and 's4:ter, and father end another for pout inns, all of her,ttiatr is [aortal Yits in the quiet ' peace of 'death. 1 • I;ear uncomplaining. Chrht . tion, foud_and affectro'llate - sister 'and Mother, farewelh , - We shall meet again, for while "so Ile giv, th tits beloved oleatkii , Heis at the same tiMe "the resurrection and the' life:." THE MURPHY CiSIitI4ICIAP.-1110 anai versary of the hundredth birthday of G.l3olME.3lttltritY, of Shoshequin, was Celebrated Ott the BOthi regret that We were prevented from being pros= , • ent the interesting Occasion. V learn that nearly - fifteen hundr ed , people parti cipated* the ceutennial, among the num ber several aged ones. SHORES, a neighbor of Mr.- ldnunity, who is 07 years old made some . interesting remarks. DEACON Eriaorr Vas 'also present, and related some early experiences. Wltt. Sxvtgat was president.of the day. 0.11. P.- KtN'tv.er delivered 'an -address; 'and B. FRENCII an oration. ' - ltev. S. B&ll.Ntilt read au original poem. The Waverly Band, furnished the music. .The venerable taiSt appeared upon .the plat font; although in very feeble health. thelirgent request of-the-committee Mr. Ktxl.e.r furnished his address for publica tion, SO we append it below. It is - ,an exceptionally interestitqf paper.: • utt ItINNVII'S AnDltESti.• • • It is Well,, In this exceedingly 'fast age, to halt occasionally and review the ground over which we have traveled. Not that I would place the head-light on the. rear of the train and waste our time- in - gazing, gloriously over the wrecks and failures of the past, but at proper times and on 'pro per occasions to study our history • with, the view tri utilize one experiences, make them ministerjo the present; and _guide us the future. The American people are given to looking and going ahead, but the prudent suiveyer takes lelriegs front the attainment in the rear in order to proper: Iy adjust the one in front. Unless there b e Some ~ c ession to halt; sonic Way sta tion tin-a-Ales ountraie, we drive ahead, intent on reaching the grand depot yet in' the future, to which our tickets pass. us. Tealay we have .occasion to stop the train -and review `the past. Our aged friend Who is spared to see this day, and to say to his younger fricnds, "I have now, had the violed experiences of one hued, cd yems," furnishes the occasion. George MOrphy was born one -hundred years ago to-clay, and his neighbors are here.to do reverence_ to the' ciente/madam, and to express their - . gratitude fur what he and his compeers of the . cent ury have dime for them. ' Mr. Mtn-idly 's mother. who was a sister 'of Judge Obadiah Gore; Vas at the battle and matt•sacre of Wyoming. licr.husLutd,. Jelin 31 aridly, was. kilhat in that battle. but she zual ethers broke through the gust' tti stationed .trou g h Forty Port. 4-l i efe. they were prisoners, made their escape to the liver where it boat was in waiting, and with that floated clown to Sunbury,: thence nat. eled acmss the wilderness to the Del:male river, near- Stroudsburg. where Our venerable frieud was born on the 30th day of Septeibber of that memo . table year. . When peace and quiet had been ye -ter ed, and Artier reigned once 11101 e iLI toe Valley orWyoming, the family returned thence mild permanently resided ; but, at the age . of seven years, the boy, George, came . Slictin quill and lived with his nude; judge GOIC, who had been settled there. three 3 eels. iiti•e he has livett and labeled abide tears—it longer peri od., l el-laps, titan any other man iii this conatry ever resided in one immediate vi- Melly. 'lt may proneily be said that t he lived' t h at Wel y b u . lial or time Our tr4li ; fur , althetr a ji a uorlion of time was spent in the lownbi - tip of th at p i nt Engle in which tie ...sided was .taken ft ten ithesitequin, to create the new town. hientarkahle have occurred in Itte'time of ?Jr. _Murphy. • When he litst-saw tile lhrld tie country was in the tII that gles 1. revolutionary stmt . - g e -which will pot,s. down the annals of time as a memoratde epoch in the errory the wol.:(1. - - When h e etime the war had just eked ; aiej he was ill eautign to reniewher, more Or less dis tine, ly, the atilt:alit:a of the Constitutiim tt; the United States, acid its tioitietition the chc teea ce)onie, 111 ob cont., it tut d s;- a n in in the great lanthy ui nations. lit .at:t t t:outi y pass thiougl , and c•-ill vietoriensly out of the war of 1S:12, a war ct heir stitth-4 forever some of the impottant internatioaal question:. ..;.1 submitted to the arbiteitrent entlie swepl. lie tiwen among lbt,it Trills dnr • - :g • tic w;ir and siw almost c.111•::e adiii . rl to our-domain as the re: salt of ti n t conflict. lie took much list it the gi cat eivll war Which Amok to the reit . , tomniat tCC tlovernint-i.l Lc s.r.w if.lab,ished in it , iliconCy *, and I.ewes to see it 'come eut thence stro!ig er by the four years contlia, ere so pet e. rtie I and so five that Witte •bitt free wen ri--W tread Am. tic.rit Soft Ile new as Ltsceti; till of lift a amoryiee ccl pe,..n.n„ , ...grown---to-- tam ' ; and spicatliivcr a turrittal larger than any empire of the cat th. NO u;ation in. t he history of t;ao woi Id has evil 11.:1/i0 hill'h 1.2 Nli'lf - N2S increase nl p.t . ; t.n-i tot litory in - a einele centeQ. 1/icee, etc biitily akw of the I.,reat uatintal evtlitf.; 111(Latio;etitelits NNI out in a tingle liro time. And the:, are of 1-10 r;l cinuriCrtsl with of coitii:fy in thentore poi 1,:t.1 elctta :,is of. human ndvancement 1:1,7 tiviliza•nod. Inn:tiled years ago this . Whole re oitoitiy, chitin acing . au area -of 0 i§ 110 W I, , el , erili w.is an 111, 'net's, occupied ill th e nar.i - :.tiiitedilial nay by triLeA of rev ile; I:4am, From Wyereing on; the t lekes (tic iicq north, the wtimi had i . e.inc.:ly yet avi Ist el the rein se of these bills.; 111111 it Mai nuf till ( 4'll. a large up these %a!leys lii 'the t;'4.tu • 4,- fe , p.m)! ry, and t,orophlcly uta,troyed the I ewer or the Six 'Nations, and sea tt c r. d to the tilllatlitN, that- this W;;A Cly , elml to a higher order of ci:tlizat , Vuln.it me to elal.orate snncewhat on the campaign of Get. e'ulsiviin, which ac-' CI SO 11111C11 fur thi s per , ion of tLt emnitry. for I re g ard it as l i tti tna t e ly e.t.a...A*lyd with Ihe puseilt occasion. The . col-bviteit Six 'Nations of Indians, which 1 fur lute; been, a dreatled power ' inthe laud, heal tented with the tories e.l2d kit tlienisilves with the eause of the tritish in their piitalieg sit intgle. 'I hey. 11.. d given umeil nimble •tii liute Pelim-ylvaaja raid. New York ; had perpetrated their great- Cat (mil - ago on'tlie citizens of siVyieniing atai r stime lesser ones in the interim of N e w York . --Their attacks Nem the pl,)- -11i.el lettiothehts, destination of b00.41-Ir towns amounted to a in the - tear of our cont h:etita I army of: rich grave itnrati lance that Gen. tVashitigten .reselv . eit tic put Alt l ' itTectittii entl to it. .No an a:•- my of 11 , ,1110 w; i s raised - in ins , or 1:79,' and the enierntred tendered 10! Gen. (:ate*, who on account of ill lutalth, atti . l 11,11 AntoStimpapsable wilderness re- I gion through which' it must Mara, du- Oiled if l i t ec, eemeriiiinficel e'en. • SUM- V 5 11; Of . 7 .ticw- liamie.hire, 1N 110 accepted and eonduet \ ed it to n :Irked success. The dtftietilljes of thig'c.ampaign may he judg ed from the fact, flint fetch or the 'way roads had to constructed for his art il hiry,, and When tan rows were reacher' his guns were elllbalked - en boats and towed around than, and tliendelauked for hied ettirilage. • .At the marlowF, Itelt.w 115 thfs .-coin se sat pursued, sited, and the niain,at my. ma:clad mound the mountain arid reached the valley, of Shet-lit tiuin by It Most difficult anti cireni tee s rent(' through 'the forest. IA t Theta, peint,he halted, Constructed rort Sulli van which extended from river .to titer, and there- established-his depot of sup plies. Bete be was met. by Gen: lames Clinton with 1,54i0 turn, who. Came froth . litany byway of Cherry Valley' and Ot sego Lake,•and 'hyper down the Susqae-, henna river. - Here-plans of the campaigil ti were ilerfected, and in their exetution en countered-their only serious opposition at ! the largest Indian village in 1 the valley. Gen. Clinton in -his report says they had about $1 1 11) acres of the finest j corn be ever saw. - They had large crops of beaus . rittd.aptite extensive! apple Or chm4, It was evident. that in their rieUltund'efforts. they had instniction and aid firm the trines who for some time had bola eniong them. ,:',They planted in rows 1 and cultivated ater the manlier of white men, !though in 'a Much ,cruderway. They I saved thetroontirreribs •et pits durrtru the title hills where it was'strung . empides land dried.: Many of their corn pits are still to be seen near the village of Chef • tautly ; some IA: thetn..itt suds stateof pri!s i'ervaricn as - to, disclose their hcethed of presehing their lirOaticea Itis claimed I by Mil Craft and ethers that their surplus',, corn and beans found their *ay Into the.! .1 commissary ,ofethe British array. Tie I village, and - - all the corn tleigs and or- I, chards about it, Raw - all as elSeftere along, I the lire - of Muth, Weie:destrOYed by Gen: j BE Brant, who otrrinninded the tndiiuts, and-Butler who oomanded the Tories, bad tinitehed the progress of 'Sullivan;; and Clinton, and' resolved to oppose them at the first favorable opportunity. They ac cordingly collected all their . avallable for ces,' numbering 1;000 men;• and selected the strongest position alonictlie and fortified it as completely as their lim ited means would allow. This point win; about four miles above the present tillage of- six .and.'six miles below the city of Ilcire,they desired te give the decisive battle,, and here the 'decisive bat- tle was fought." The battle :lasted about. six hours, including the skirniishing, and although it was not remarkable for the numbers killednuij, wounded, yet in its results it was one of the most important engagements of the year,l779, for it of: fectually broke, up the power of the jrct quoit; and the Tories allied with them, for they fled,•mainly.to Canada, 'and never again offered any•resistance to the cam paign,nor to the cause of the colonies which:Alley had damaged so seriously, nor yet to the advance of eiviliiation in Northern Pennsylvania and Southern and Western'•New York. This campaign open effup tJtese rich valleys and these fruitful hills to settlement, and In the higher or tier of agriculture which_ we find here to day. '" ' • - , - the s treets of your neighboring take of Way' ss et - 8 n'elooltorthet same"daY.:' - 1 .was. ti Nead York titiesfeeint ago' daring r ~,,„zeitie=l,olll 1'44- 'Match ., at Do mat, bells ' ;'and the *fait eircii . - - cry: hot. sue in: that «-uitys beton: theeeack of the fillet couldi have ',reached - it raird a New York daily watt elrdnlating upon the streettecentaining -seenrste dia. - , grams of the targets; ' and every - 06V made upon - them, before the "Mach ' Was concluded. Of course, in Wile , we .itakee• - account of the difference of time between the, two countries, which is about. live . „boas: But Georgeolturphy has , heed,to ee'elhe time of 'communication between Loudon and New 'York reduced from thir- , tydayi toless than thirty seconds. One *blind redjea M . Igo newspapers were printe', .ed ent the old Ramage press.; and a good pressman could turn 'out complete - about , lctfltiewspapers an hour, Now the "Bul- - lock:Sag Roe, times cafe run o ff ,. perfectly ; Printed Mr both` sides,,. and .countett and folded ready for the mails, abOut 80,000 - an, hour ; and all withouahe aid 'of hu man bands after the maebiliery is started. More mailmatter is'earried- to-day on the .Lehigh Valley Railroad t han was then eats *mei throtighontilietengthand breadth of our land. - . .' . • .. . I The telephone haS passed' into , history I as a fact of the present ago: • Maiveilluus as it may seem, intelligible conversation in the ordinary tone of voice; may be' eases tied on through this little ineteumentv atel a distance of many onilei. - Its utility is not yet very apparent, but the discovery 1 is in its infancy, and its future can. only, be conjectitred:c'hise.'opeo the telepherOn comes the'plionegraph, 'the - transeendrint wonder of the , niueteenth century: By ' thisinstrument o no larger than a man's hat, the address U.aita now delivering could be bottled up as safely astlar house wife bottles up her blackberries, and a' year hence—or a hundred yeare ' for that matter—it could be reprodueed with adelr accuracy - that all the intonations ofvoice, ; and dll the inaccuracies of statement aid'. speech would be readily recognized. ,Like.' the'photograph, it reproduces imperfec-' lions as well as the perfect and the ot rue. To - some this may seem like a myth, but its-reality is establiehed, and its _wonders . not overstated. • ' In agriculture the improvements. have -not been less marked or important.. ' Mr. 'Murphy,. in common with others of that day, used the wooden plow and the wood ea-toothed harrow, and he reaped 'his - grain with the primitive sycklo. Now tne polielted 'GOA plow, the improved drags; 1 . Cultivators, seed drills,' etc., reduce the labor : of tilling the soil fully one-half; while the mower, reaper,-'huise-rake and herse-ferk have- almost antidifiated -the , dreaded throe months of haying _and 10r , vekini , ; and with it has . disappeared the inevitable pail - of milk -punch with which the close of that heated. term of toil was ? celebrated. Tim "death maul" witch •resounded among the hills dirmigh the long dreary mouths of whiter,' has g iven • place to- the....ttueshing machine -whose. ; marvels' are hardly second to the -mower and reaper. , A recent report from lowa tells; us that wheat standing in the field, w. 31:: cut, threshed, ground and baked into bfead inside of live minutes. ' Att he great eenteenial ExpositioM.at Philadelphia two years ago were gathered together for the first time in this country represeutatives from almost, every nation of the earth. 'They came to prepare notes. of progress in all things .that pertain ,to the material and eduemikal iutesests of %Man. The Extee-itten was a great study, mid it taught the nations many great les s-ins. : Ole comparison of exhibits, and I ie free interchange of views among rep resentative total took the copeck out of all people. Ail 'carne to know more about aed to think better of each other: -Amer icons 1. worm:ice to Karp oil le .Japanese, the Russian, and the 'rink, and all learn ed much fi - iiin this young American na tio:L.: They tit down together In peace . and harmony' eu study the best iuterests of man ; anti rose up s - wiser and mole strongly 'imbued with• . The principles of fraternal love aid a con;mull tqut litaimud. vc, ?pithy , ' touch by the exhibitien - of Tito delicate letudituaft of the Chinese; - in.ploved our fine arts by a careful study of french and Italian painting and sculp turC"; learned useful lessons from the strength stud perfection of English maim- Met ures ; were captivated with the deli cate and almost etherial ornametatilin of the Japanese. We absorbed solo:thing tileful and beautiful from all oations ,• and they carried back leSsons of Aineric-tt lib erty, Americus genius,„aud American hu-, manity'whiCh must change for the better their stolid and nuprogi . essive institutions. They were profoundly unprcssed with our labor-saving • inventions. They saw a broad practical humanity in everythieg we - prodneeds Egypt exhibited Models of Arthe earth %-a, skk a?id-fanilflied ; those great pyramids, built hyshe Phara- II ;tit L r r s was the ale an :patuii,le, ohs for no apparent put poste - requiritig u,...gry w., [l/, ky «boto them: • hundreds t.f years in their construction,' .rasa lb:. liim.zvy..4An, in heaven . 1 1 1 1 alai absorbing life ;mil labor of thin,MintiS Like Its' ey •, 0' wilt, . , ; !sued a t t i ieet ,e I upon t housands of . saves; wl die we 0:- ' 'Yet, however' strongly our syi pat hi es . bibited our mow ers and • reariers iv I•osl!' i1,:.:,* go out in poetic rapture ts; these an-t clatter tohl of labor saved, and toil and cieet poo l s,. Ise , eternal and i mmutable drudgery ended. • The -Chinese pointed . :awe or God will have their perfect -work with pride to a royal bedstead which 're. —t lie dal Itet;ss must flee hciore the ap- (inked a lifetime to carve and ornament, ' prciaillitig, light.- - but-we made the little sewing in:whine Ft,lll 110 white man th 6., s - Mice a hum to the music of a liberated and eman lual'ldat i o n -pr 1. (;00 industrious mid pros- ciliated woumuhood. The Germane boast, ed.of their great Krup gun-ea s monstrous peons people tiow. Tim II then dominated by „, f, w ~,„.i „ g , „ sag „ , engine of bureau destruction, while one are deluged to bodily cultivated farms, great Geueral, returned from military to producing _sich anal . Man:dant harvests, civil life. touched the lever of the great aed the whole et:entry .is beautified with Carcass engine, and set the wonderful and plea ant residences, comfortable school eoteplicated machinery of that great Ex lee:, essand steepled churches. The war- P osition into busy and usual activity. 'whoop or the Indians, and the *howl of- nglitestsliewed'us modelsof her imineuse wolves, have given phice to the bum ails iren.clad war-ships sand we put in mo. immix of busy lives ;old peaceful put suits. lion our great engine of peace and mosion - \Y e all realize, - in some faint degree. al delense—tho lbws printing press,• run the toils anti lesitiships incident to cord- • "Ing 011 iwws P a P ets at th e rate " 1 .250-lut) ineueing life in the vs ilderncss: For long "" Wit'' , e""t"t"4ll4^"ew't from all the "a :, V:ilt. our ratlwts st niggled a Wl' titg;:,,,ed .tiglivt or tile world.. Italy displayed tier twi tir, .a woug these hails, securing by the l'''eldlAwcs - wil ow ( - 1111 '' by wbich the p""r• vet al most eistent toil but a arduou. ai of Italy are fed; France spread before us scanty subsistence. The valley of Sheshe- her paintings, and we touched the tele ilein wars most f a ,„,, T d „ f .. in t hi s sec t ion graph key which has brought the people of the country. The lands being p i a i t i e of the world into closer and time friendly in their natures, rich of soil but sparsely -relations.• Arid so on through that entire \emitted, ' wide frequent wide openings exposition, we gave them the fruits of t, ,t, , ,,,, e t h e Imisms had •,„i t i vat -, d t o ss i s a hundred years 01' our freedom and free their crude way, tin-y ii: - ,en became pre-institutions all tined with the ;growth of .d active, and aifinded a stirpluk to their liberty,. love and humanity ; while we re . , tot tunate, owners. They became that c ' t `" -e "‘" ' l ' m the 1-* ""'" " tt ` t wan ' 14;mit or this country whence the seffer- d" a of 111;"ii: line' arts, l 'ut sadly stained nag tetoiters of other and less favored lo- with the teai aof styli', gies and pore' le. eat ii , ns drew their sations of corm:genets. All profited by the intercourse,'.. but none rally „ ith„ln 11),J„.y and We 1,, t pm ice, so nitieh as they who carried . hack from As ,the st ttlemeets extended east--and our shores the ionelers wrought in a butt west. the settlers made pflgrimages every d, 1 - 11 . 1 :gem sOf freedom, free men, wad free sparing to the VidleY ef .isheshey-itin f 1 or "stitruu"-L lB- 1 : -' - a previsions, and Alto' were never sent emp- ' Mr. Murphy saw the :inception of. our ty, away. There ate sonic here today._ ao e o f libe r ty and pe g s-esp.' And he - has myself among them—who remember Deo lived to behold the cousi - nem' tiou of the ple coming from rtmote portions of the work. AN lien I speak of. the cousumma s . county with their crude carts on beggin g dim of fair work, I mean only what has errands for - the poor of their localities. been attained_ up so the present. tithe s I have always felt meal of die .kindness There is no end to elm work.: True; the and . generosity which in those early : days future is , a sealed work, but reasoning characterized my native town of ttheShe- from what we know, we must not suPpette quill. Her, humanity became- proverbial .we have reached-0e end of progress • In. ' all the, car-.try through. Our' venerable fact, ire tire. bat itseia the threstadd orbs: . anti a ced frieud was among the toilers every and invention. The - possibilities - who hefted to feed the'hungry and clothe of the future are infinite. A. hundred the naked ad' those stsuggliog times: . Ile years hence. our grandchildren r_ will -look did lei' share in converting the . .stubliorn ba4k to this day and „wonder that we wilderness, into wh e at we Ste about us to- slachild feel proud , griper advancement - and day. We 'cannot. be too grateful to those achievemeifte." They will regard our status pioneers for t be-wonderS wrought by their much as: e iroW do that .of oueaticestoes brave lei arts a• , and strung arena, and for the of a hundred years ago. We are in the' , . . rich inheritance receiv. dat their hands. very center of the eternity- of all things. NM( ty-i }tree years ago he Saw the far- There is as much eternity before as asbe mi.rs going to Wilkes-13a rre ip canoes to hind us. We can grasp but a _small see; *et their gra Mground, the trip reqiiirifig •tion of it at best. Our capacities ere so - ?rem ten days to two weeks. - A horse 1 limited that.we , can Like' in brit a mere - • 171:1i1 passed through the valley once a week fragment of what is around and about us. on its sioy to the lake countries of New Wolearn of new things, new truths and, York, aid he lit onetime had the honor . , new forces only as we grow up to Illetre., of being post boy on that route. A daily Could we be elevated. a • thousand feet • newspaper was unknown, and a weekly from where we now stand we would see from PhiladOphia reached the valley in range after range of mountains hidden about ten drys after it was printed„ con- from our present view. 'Nevi planets-arid. • tainieg.lateet news fterri 'England forty new suns are discovered only an we per days alt?.. To-day.o . railroad threads the I. the means of seeing.' The lightnings vieley. dropping daily paperS front Neivenown to the -oldest of humanity, ' 'York and Philadelphi a within ten hems ' Wre known it was left for Ibis generation'to Make after they leaVe the Pre s es. Passengers them the 'vehiele albumen thought :T :4,4o take a sleeping coach a evening, and and water haVe always . been; - but Mau. :i waken s at - early inorrensen Bit, et of bad tusgrosi unto greater Perfection. him those cities. 'refreshed, and 'ready for' a self before he could drive -the:steamship day of business. Not less than filly trains across the ocean,: onthe Fteam ear hems. aolay whirl op and down the Sueoqchan- thecontinents Oar capacities must en- . na, carrying a daily average of !if, pass- large, and our senseS..beconiesrnores ha.' -engers ; freighting a million and •a`'inif. tensely mite before we can lay held of itemise' coal anrinallyto northern markets, and utilize the feretevoe nature all about and returelug over a half million tons Of US, but as yet.unknown to us. The eye - miscellaneous ruerehandize for southernsees but *even primary:eolots - and th eir consumption. The timber, so abundant embirrations ; but, it is net. reptiogO)o,.to, -then that thweettlers.butned,it %stet get rsuppoiiitottt. naterettni.tiraited Miter it out of their war, ha, now become so weLlith of gorgeous beauty. It is not only ' seam that tamitleofurtriabes much of the - Poeeible. but, highly irroltrableeethat ,there - - e I. . Itunber used fur blunting purposes. Ben is tiniatinity of colors, Mit oar Incultieti: jintin Franklin had 'not yet centeludedhis' for obstking them arts limited to the very experiiiienti with o the liglitninke,'. which) few•corningowithin the rouge of our papa ,- lael the foundation for the wondera which i cities. ~ ...The`ancients.knews o f : - but Attle e . have followed ; but :now we step to the I primary nolors\ In some of, the records telegraph office and dis Patch _some - of lasi of antiquity onlY s the reds arid yellow are ',,bottled , up - eleetricity on.errandS_ all dieri'Stioken of; and itiNthe earli.-Ranserit,,and ! the world.,vents.sreenrring,:iplF t etrope., lit ilemer'averitingaonly the red, .yellow are'kniftin and 'Pr m 'Printed de' bailee 'they aid orange ate- - Ther tioloire transpire. -.:- The. resulLof. a celebrated se- have 'slot Changed. Or intMniseti in nuMber; , gat* -on • the . Thames ei -row; yeersogo , :.nor do they: strike - the, 'lie -tO•dey with which tenkiiiiice 0;0,0 o'cioek - thoent:,.. - Ant ; Morn intenriWbtuintheirilint_lttan Ltereeem; Wei!iti:PiihtMld'ritietkaPgAlP2llAlo detilkiNkliklinkt : c*Miaiti.'-0f,4 3 94* . :,",s - - .: • - . s .• - ' :-- ~ .-. sr:: os- - ;- ,- :- , 5 . .e. ,. _::.: ',- .- ,-, '.. 5. , ... - -' -. Ss s , seo s„ •=o- , - ..,..;:-: ,- Sss - Soss's'isv...::: : .:...s;3:'s: - S-,Ss - s - ' - 's:: , ""'''. 4 ' - 's.'s's - T*4''';`..,',lS s „s s s s,, s ,, oss...s-s„ ;s . os ss osse , s asse,„sos oseAssoesessisati'eAkes4,lo.W'''' 'SS-JO:Ss-S.l,es t c 'C .:.---,p,,..1z,.,,,.,_ ~. .. Many of the - soldiers who tonk part' in this campaign returned in 1783 .an.l set. tied upon the /ands which four years be. fore they bad•Mirched over with weapons of war in their hands. Among the early settlers;of that year were Judge Obadiah Gore and his brother Samuel, Alen, Simon Spalding, Joseph Kinney, Stephen Fuller, Zebulou Butler, Arnold Ft:midi:rand oth ers. These formed the nueluus of settlers mho subdued and-tamed the savage. and unbroken wilderuess,.and 'beautified it by the peaceful puisuits of civilized:We: It seems a terrible, and almost wicked necessity, which could juStify them - in lay ing vhdent hands-upon the rirao deaizens of the forest, and, at the point of the bA,y onct, drive them away to make; room fot themselveS. BO the laws of progress are inexorable. A-hew and better. order of things is always built upon tho; ruins of what st. lids in its way. . The higher crowds out the lower and inferior. The Darwinian theory, which compels the low est and feeblest to yield to the: strongest and fittest, applies to men and natives as . well as to all nature below theta. However much the laws of necessity and progress seem at tliat time to' have justified the destruction a - fought by this exi•rdition, we cannot look back• upon it, at this remote 'day, without feelings of re gret, and deep symi.athy" for the rade people this forcibly dispossessed of their coin-fields and bunting giounds. Longfellow, in his beautiful song of Hi awatha, voy aptly describes their condi tion of peace and plenty previons to their expulsion : ' ••There was pette'e tstneng the nattonm, layo.te,ted roved the twitters, I;TrAt the Ittrett canoe for :.:d111:‘,;., Caught the In lake at! th - er. Shet the deer and t heaver, U121u4 w. , thed t 1 w,dnen, t Mich. it:' skkgar from Ilk, biathored wild ;ire iik (lie iIIF3dOIV, lln :i..1 the i,lakts of deer ark' I•enver All at - ouhd the happy ‘lllnge Stood the inaizediehlt,grech and fdthtlt.g, W.aved green plumes of 31 andandn, Wav, d the a.,ft and I nrry tresses VS , littg all the hand eiti, pieinty. •Twai wobi•th who In ,prlng-tinm Planted the bread flOon and frOtfnl, Bark,' In the earth:ll:nnlann - ILawatha's lattiehtatiotis over his peo ple «Lrn overtook thew, and ,st , trvation,thittateival them, vi - erit a per feet realization of the terrible tAttrerings . of the. Ireitio•isJtiler the thareli I)I Sulli van tbroiLli villageh and corn-fields, for the Winter Atllowitez was tl,e sever. st known tlnriug the Revolution;anct hiu In, jallS %yen: seatteted,.wit boat home, halt hati, ut or fooitl : . • ••• I I the h.ttg• :mt 41r,ary winter: _ ' th, ctt: , l;:tttl eruct Ever II:JO - J.1% thr44l,er tire 1;e Mt la,ltt aqd river, I.2v.v*.le;•p•r, flet , por, tkeper, • Fe,l the show o'er WI the lauchcale, Fell Iltecovoirlug , snow, acid •Iriftpd twig)) the fore,f, to.mn‘l the f tom his burled 5, Iwcall, ,1114 ibu hunter tome i.p.tssaw•; *. IVI-01 his mit t,ns and tifs s•ww-shoe4 Vainly 55:1.11;ed through the foresz, fur Lint or but and funnd none, Saw :to tr.let: deer or i-n!,b.t, • In th.; shqw It; the Wia,tly, Weawl.,g h.rest at:o ‘,.n1.1 fOll wealcues., Perish...A tiler* rem (fold and hunger, ME . • _. perfettioa _ th at - seven - (Aid lirtio - clearly Aeon where' only those .were mit , bereft' Thn ear is so coristtuilittaithattittirtaltalcii Cognizance of but a few odavesof sound; • The muilti ofilittari iiiiiiiiiliiiiklas nal. tare herself:. Who sutiposea there are no Sollb-vibrations ritstrteioir- : ,r a w IQsl/14it a Y -we bear? : As well' M w e Might 'thtie are IiccIIUTIS beyond' our contract vialen, and no, hills 1'61111AV:1s. rani •Slitir la st.'. _c '..'• 'Ws sUbjeCt'srastfilifillyllitistititted by Prof. 'Tyndall it a lecture. dethroned re- Ofintly in; London. latibilthiPlatform ho hard a harp of ais,octayett,- ) F lu ; Alis base, meat of thd,building a:Plano of tight 'OO taveit—an.oetairtilbbili It 4>i &timid bb-1, lotshis :harp., A. deal board .extenti4„from the winding - bOard -- ) .of;,.aviolliillo .up through the.retimitti). the ,P)atrPitri. ,Q. this holtil - Militated die:tiara/vitt& WO tuned in perfect acord ..with the piano. When music 'was played..m.the piano in the baseinent it was reproduced by the harp on the platform.. Aril., i. was. observ ed that 04 When the reache d notes above or tielOW thil capacity,oftlibb? 'bop uu sound was heird. i .- illie -fact- ilir the Sharp bad no povier to hea*" tditpeaky or recoSniziriiiitinds".aborbOor isalto*/ its own limitedemxicity. ! .llsdotheroctsvon been added to ths;barp ifr,WpsXid; tIAVAI , lit oncereprogueedall Ale sou nds of . tliti piano;. - . .-, .... 1....Z.1' .4 ..til . r. .-. • 3 - ~;.-I.t. t t - So with men; he heass,_ sees , ate} feels just what 'he ,hue cap,acity, for and "notlaing ,more. Bp krioirsjustilib pOriwitt, l foreei an beauties Ofnittore that -ho.httrt grown up to maths able to graisp;ruld eetripiebteniN and notliifii inore.-- It be - iii a latimor a thonsand strings - he cannot re- Balled to triun e played irporrirharp of a million strings. But be is ,growing up to these new winders just so fast as he has capacity to otepriehenit iand'. Lida - Ahem:, So, as he di covers some•Jusier force or power in net re htt,§terimpon graft in-or. der to grasp iloniething above and - beyo nd. What is still put of km — reach nal man; fan know till be atepir upoit the coat round of the ladder and takes a; wider and Ihigher view of the world.. "L ' ';‘,l:, - • , r • , ..- .. No, we hive no more right to say WO have reached the: end of - dilleovory- and progress than the Indisn'ilad'Whelrhe inc. vented-the tunsitotti on- :wAncli--- he drum ' ined and called ,jt. - iiin'sie,, t ci, Jet .1133 be .gratefui to; ifiiiiiie in the' PaiiV. - Who rolled along the great ball of hunittir - progress, and particularly to those Who , g oriousiy iti. continued it by consummating t work the ReVolution, which establis ed lib erty and equality in our lend. Nothing has, contributed so - much to the expansion and perfection of human poWers, and the 1 permanent elevation of race in ail the elements of a perfect, manhood, as that liberty of thought and 'speech and action guaranteed by the constitution of our 1 co:tutry. Where thoughtis suppressed there is mental slavery: Any restriction upon the powers of man.warps and dwarfs them. 'Any class distinctions recognized hy law represses growth, and 'hinders de velopment. While we may not have pro duced, ulidor our free saystem, the great est men in the world, we have developed I the greatest untidier of great men, and the greatest average humanity among the masses of people. Could we weigh the real manhood (if-our 45,000,000 of people we would make an equal number of any , other nation kick the beam.. And in this weighing of matilitiOd 1 would include the intelligence, 'imargy; enterprise, inverithe geniu,.reihrlon anti morality which 'eon! slitate the moral luau, This 'way multi like - boasting, f but I regard it as a record ed fact of the ipresent age. that lot us look forward with laid' that the promises Of to-day. shall be fulfilled by the realities of to-morrow ; and that *hen we have put aside the dull lenseit, of this body, we. !than, in the great eternal future, have all out faculties and senses enlarged, expand ed and quickened to that degree of spirit ual perfection that We shall' realize,- re spond to, aid enjoy the wonders, beauties and harmonies (kid has in store fortis. • Again,' let us. be thankful for' what has be en accomplished in the Inuit- hundred Sears, and especially grateful to the ven erable men - Who Him the eenteni3arien -- of to-day have wrought it out for us, for... The aged sler, alto slot ut stands , Nyith ttr i llttglimbs and feeble hands, At , otrAind (1111 t the sluggish muds . ; nirent.titi Ilath seen the tqlllSlllllo and the shade A Ilitudrrd = clrcUng years hare trade Irons frozen'ell we to rrarglad;}— ~ A century of strife. '.'hen manliood•s clays were strong and Idig,ht. le.t.truggiNt with 111:, will and might ,tanong the wrests, dark as night, And glorious vleVry.won. xr,ork of Iltq is u•er, dimly bees t 4!• other bhure, Ahid laoars 1136 graellog &termer() .• • (Al dune, good celut, well d.ua.'• : • Y i .ik of Preniiiiins awarded by the Bras C•.§utity Agricalturai Socipty at ziOual Fair held i at B.tst Towanda on the 2:4; 2 . tyh ;and Iqtb Sus of Seoetat e .; 57 1S1:• I C1.)04.' 4 1.-110IISE$—NO. I—ROAD :: , T.S.l.l.li)Mi. ti it reantyle, Surrr:nteulent, 5 51$ Ilona lover, S ( tirsolfoord, t :'P Von art. 2 do 4 S'4lsind under fi, ii C Nowmnn, 1 do du' 4,,1/ C Dewitt.. VA,lttt iTALltitit; ra acid orpr, S Elnu.sou, d u I,llllbur. 2 pre au . . riparr.i, J Cruala, NO. 3-1 4 1 A RES ANT) COLTS. ,31ein, 4.3 rt. and Liver %I ith colt, A, tr?imilli: ' ' i • - 1 pri niit,n.,l!...i'; e 3 (~0 , . t: V Blorkman.. 1- do Z?-.J 3oa Ito -ol 1111i7V . , It ti Soo t, 2 do • 3 i it) -1 % r obit:tit, IlOrite, Ilorton, •1 du 3 . :13 do do I do 1 C-0 3 do .101% "I Wrlllw, 2 till 2 00 041 A 1:oordmon, I- do , Oil 1 lto do (111 I:ox, 1 do , do 1 oil 2 do do . 2 do; 109 Yr:lv - 101g c o lt, St: 11nolford, I do ' -2 Illi ' 4lO it . W Cote, 2 do : Said:big cat, ildia Tbritifir, ' • I - do i ' •1 to do A It. Ibittou, 2 do ! 50 Rib 4--1161R 4 ES,AN ti MULLS, FOR k 4 Anm VSE. • Pair Driiii. ilior,l. 01 Ridgeway, I iwebilittu,P•cii .54 60 du A J Webb,2 do i i 00 Aliitalia- !whirr, T(I i-iiiiili. I do ! do 4 1.0 Mii.• finer( mato+. J. 04, Zeta/ter, I 'do do 4 111 Mateloal ware., 31 T Iloilo n, I do do 4bd Lome, Mot Ctg lttwell, 1 do ...d... :t itt . 4 3t , .:• 11.41,m, I .d , , du :I ilo 3 re, M EW,rre, 1 do 6 ()f, !ch.,' iutd,•4, C 6 Die. ii, 1 do 400 . 6 . 11 - 111 , 11. . W 31 11 6 l' t.VENS, 16AAC Ll'o:s, r J Oil gt.o. I),lkt, i g ti,ldli.g 31, ~ 4 Lair MA 5-110RsES KEPT TOR. PLEASURE Singlollehling:, A D 91nnn. 1.1 pr,lniuni,ll3 IA) .1. llama+ rod I. t, 2 4.' 2 00 lairese., ill Wilson,• 1 do 10 00 ,• do . II Horton, 2 5 1)11 0 3 (P,Jtio Piullrt. 1 du :1 00 No. 6--11012...1121 FOlt ALL WQllli. St•tlion2o.lyrrudorh,Sl .o6 d o 1 A - • ••• - 1 - • Sllo* 'tare 4•,y,r awl oter, r_ t Hager- - - .*/ t atik 3 09 Mare under 4, FII nage:man, 1 do 300 Gelding 4 - yrn and over, C J li , ctrhroolt.„ •-•.; , 1 Z do - : 4 4 410. 11,42• IV:Ming, ^ 2 do • 2.00 i;efetok; 9o , irr 4, t; 41.1 e, 1 • do 3. 00 2. . do • 1131. 11wri, 7 z r for Lenity nntl :tcttrity, . • 1 do Il• Suliuti under 4 yr. C . do . 4 7-11111 FIN( A BIDING 11013. 4 F.5. )14,41,,r0 rat ringe 1113•41, J Nichol+, ' 1. do carriage ttlreindlt(ll l A • .I:Sporte. • "2 110" A 1111VITON, EV3EII ••••• 41'410_061114"1";' - ' • 4101. CLASS , 2—CATILE--.ltio„s—sturra lions. . A 0 Cunt t...7uperisitettde4. thigillotb I'nll,l )r antler 2, V U 11,4ternmil, - hit prejoinnt,,B3 (11 . Multi - born !if ift+g4r;lt ,• german, .1 do . 200 Shert horn 1,1011 yr and under 2, LI J1;111r..r.1. do . GO Sawn born bulb 2 yr, 0 Icidlcdr, - 1 do 4 00 do do ; . 2 - 1 'do" ;_ pp • di -do tbuti,ni,a bred; ~Alex Ennis, 1 • do - 5 (0 Pep ornaces, ti, E A Ennis. 1 ' de 000 Con In milk and butter, A'S • • . • 1 . do SOO r. 31 11 1,•1nclo„; 4.41111)&4.1i short horn 4,0142 you". Order 3, POll ti cue. rotated I; ter prtiolurn had be britu entered for rrerollitu. •' s 7,-Jki;t3Ell if l i • , 14105 yr, Jacob Stalker, lerwrrniuni, S. OU, C-,w 4,r, Chas S Davis, . 1 do. 400 SuH tor, dd, • 1. do . t -tit* .••" ' XIX - . 111-i—AIR4IIIIIE. Dal 2 yrr., 11: Dutton; - preratnru, 84 00 , C. 7-, .- ~ I, ,d(1 , 00.1 Cour 4; dd.': .`! • ficr :.:CAS 1471 yr, 1 do , - 1 300 ' ki.. calf, i du • 1 do' 100 Dull call, ; • • 1 du. 1 1.4/ I.x - • , , , 14 try,l ' 16—'SiT T IPE ANDUADE. Q • _ Sitade Peco:i OCOR 4 yrs, S J A3T05...1a4 premium, 400 an jentLy nariang, -do 1 ,do - 2 60- do 7 do do .: .do 2- • do 1 110 .11 ido Lys...ll4'lo2er. - - 2., do • Ph' r. . 6 5.. Attrrd Hot. a, . 1 do 400 ari4A buil 1 3r, 6.l,,Webt. 1 - .do • 3 W N.tho buil et lA' f e l . thorn, : 1 . do', ~A t 9 Ordde,4l.ort, ta,2yr;Plolleti, 1' ': do "- ' •Ctx(i ttfin WT . +, IV Lew, - '.. Ull ' 1 . ? S .127cW1:lilE143 , FilrkS. , j i. ,l I bl ot 5 yri; t i tle P melt; .. • - . 1 - • . 1,4 ia•riiiiiii;ill,• 66 3 Alla 1 ps, Id In Sunni, - 1 - do .- a lid •i• . J Park. - - 2 :do 3 1,1) ''. '' r . -•- - el/C.127E221100E, 1.. I. 7 frii.• 'A. tt ltill WOLCOTT, } - '' ' SIIDAVik, -, . : ,111. taltixAuT, -'. ..::::-,. • ' .•',:' - r; -- : ~-z. . sAgirovalir -. --.......•-: -, '...•::; . :„. , . : :,-.,- ; _.;.v.inf,,lk ... Si. . - .....f. '''''':-•;:,' ';,.:'..-.,:::,..:i.Y.':;:j*,•:)...k•'-'::::Citilliftql: ~.i'.J:=:~ ~: iM ~~~~~f ~ rf; ~~, . A blase, Otipo wick ,•. ". -y . - Vdfoick 0 frateeract, ~,, ',, , 203210011014 112-CX tin** 120 Xittli '' 1: - • 'do' 7. .3'oo - , - Ain 6 yg,,-:.' 46 -,, 71 ' 1' - tt' - ' 'de -.: _io _ do? 'WWI yk` - - cki -:. , ' ,, - , 1: - - 'ir die:.,.i.,. , 1 20 Soothdtnro bact,2 I's X X • • • - Welles cod iliram p titelk. 1 do :,., aOO Cotswold back Syr. ligtreilePr? , o4o' l 3 , 1 0 do lye, 11 D Bolles, 9 - do. ' . 1 to do • -do leo wick .1 . 'do gon 1 . 1 1, 0,4 %0 0 0 0. 7r.. a it do _ .-.ii :::, I ~., i da ik - 11 00 0 0 Ctotsitol4 buck ,lauslis Ooidlisg,l .do - 900 3 owe lialbe (tiolinegdhr •11- -,---v- 1 . , ,..-, , ,• a l Bolick:, • ".,r ..-; 3 owe iambi 4 "- - . - -.- ' -- -i . .___i• X 0 Cu)odio& - . ' 9 do I°/ atitugebif ilbsc A.a.griX 11 Coup, ,1 , do. •2 00 do -. ' 3 ewes 2 yr, do . I'. ' !do -"3 00 do' bock 2 yr, M B,Colop, 1 • do 3 00 , Viitlic,k l Asiok - 20 Xarridouo, 9 , ,'' ~ ~ do. , 9.W, Morino buck', Itt 114toegei - li, 1' J do= 300 , do *do iimbe3„ do 1 do .2 OU di): do ewes 3, d o . 2 do iOO . . ' - J X 10111311011, '-'"" 1111111163X11, • r -- - Xit BACON, 1 1. YOUNG, 111.&11X011 119511.11 3 NO=B, '.. Judges. ' • Bentare sow 0 num ' . • 41(1•,-. - ' Ligefigilin, du. ay lit .. proultuu, 52 00 Schedyr whits pigs. W 1 Cool- Drub, Duricsktre boar 1. r, R Welk* 4n4 iltra;u Mown, . do 3 00 grrirchiru burr 1 yr, riull.o4 2 do 1 .18r • . du 5 snos . , rll Hagar tun, 1 : dio" . ;- 1 00 Der k7bire pigs andoirtl inns, Jt It Welles Aid 14, Vanua, 1 do 2 00 Berkshire Ur riling soap Caring*, • li, 11 Writes and lltlitisun, 2 • ' do 200 134 - 111, Ire sor Qpigyribliet4, 1 • 'Au`"soo Iterksbires ut 21 14 Lanning's nes2 On. And worthy of 11 31.--nut etiterel fur prowl:um A. Judson, J Billies d Vir Durk, • Gabeiri King, JR011". CLASS ritobouss. A 'Bra, Sold /Firkin butter,-Dias Ist preU.ll 00 l'uti Loiter, du du . 1 dd 4ou .du • 1: B Vangbri, - 2 .do Bhu du , Job 11 Wrbb, du IVU It.olllundter, II SNoutigse, Lt Prow.% 1 bit -do A D Duo •-1 d0.1, 1 i 100 ' (Judges ennui!' discriminate u besseen shear two traits Sue.) Mittlidst Cochltti;ES,lhiiii,'„, ' ' , lit prim. ots fluothoss, F W Smith. ' 1 do 75 sdirr Hamburg, V S lAlfill, 1. do 75 Wade Ltgliorui du - 1 do 75 Brown letittorne do • Ido Vi co • do ' • -,- -, 2 ";"' do CO Gulden tirabrlght Bantoms. V W go:Mill' do 75 EA Game Ltatotous I W Smith. 1 - do Pair PlituB4otltaut:atos,,ol; Audits 1 . ' 75 . . . i, i.VVIERVIL Ennis Tint4t,t, ditaiii, - du • do Slate TiJr:tts, E A Coollmogh. Nurtory, S 11,8.burra, .Pdkau. C S Parts, • • Bourn,. do °dead* (Thicken., 8 II Shone Pl 3 to••.uslririorka:C•B4itrls, 60:11en rullab, 3 W Park, Mar dean thwirtack,J W.Park, do •• • . X? Park " ISObt 8.511, • ilendtmoo Roof, . • lodges. VASS'S—TAM PRODUCTS —IBO,'„,:2:—GRA IN AND SEED. 2 L 6 ,1 I A It.rk, F;aperi*adipg - Eantide byilitietioll4)ll'utritl, L.. 1 Culril,l.prett;. $2 OD do ' WPC , du •1 W &with, . do' fill Fultz wheat, NA Black, 1 Du de Jes Tux urr, .. dU #.ll White oats, E A Codbaugh, ' 0414, crvy, Altml burcou, A , Black. BEANIE Eltinb Marrofat beim*, Irtit 31 bkres, 1-- do 100 &Ample crop curp, 1111N0-110tton, -.1 1 :40 S OD. • WUEAT Ac•AIN • Led sinter crop, sam . ple bush, 0 Burnt's, - - 3.mple of crop, E 11. Vougbf, Collection of reigetabirs, K. A. Packer, 1•do• 3 00 Cabbage, Toin.toos, ' do do 60 P4s3Uils'y - do do 50 V.10114.110u et, do - ~. do 60 Egg; *quo t, do , do • 517 Celery, ----- ---- -do ^ -- do-- ,-- Ms si wild o.rn, • do du 50 Beets, 3/0 , L 0 Ifollod, - -- :- --- - -: do 60 'CArstds, do do 60 ' 00100n,r3 II Shores. • -. • do 60 . Turnips, All Sunlit, .. „ . dd 60 l'uolvidaA, 13 Uortou, ' - • - - , ,do .. 60 ths , ,,el potatoes, II co :,tonl Eellurn, do 50 Limo Beane, E A Ccolbaugh, . - do • .50 •: i - FLOC U. ANU MEAL.. White wheat 6our,. l lagermuss a Co; • • p . Huck% he4l . uou,r, do do . I) li,st corn csoii, 11 8 Viiiiiii3B, , ;-- 26 1 00 C..ou on stalk, do do I) Creamery 'cooler, Wilmot Cob Urn,:, - L:,ot tai . .4d, lirs 1) 0 Hollow, iii•wo t, do do coined fruit, do _. do A GA/Waugh, buctilt, tautly A ItuUbit,4, Lett plate practivt, Milton -If .1 prem 50 Scediug pe..clice, 1 3) itebt.tatapte, Mrs Same Kelton; nate. Derico lection, 6 varittlea, liarry Scott, I do 1 00 do ' inside, A'D Mann, . 60 . 1. ' • GUM. - li , et CO icction, 7 tarietles, J E Fu; , I do 1 00 du et Ler Delaware, du do lOu du. wl i tite ill ',t no, do. do - 1 W do it lteettlitlO, - do do. 100 do Di tht, '. du -..:.._ -do /00 du INtbelia, do do . Icu do I..)UtdriV r do do VOO AFTLVI. . . Special:a cot lets than peck, S V Ryland,'l prem. in o • ' do Raul Scull 2 do UM 12 !tart Res apples, 4 each; do 1 du 2 W 12 'du ' - Rl6 °Melt 2 do 1. 00 UolleC On Of tai., 4 each, Harry dant; 1 do 200 do ' . 'do - Jli ruY '. 2 do PF Real n3ntinci4 tielt,, • do • Ido 1 (It du 1_ du • B Hutton ; • 2 du 1111 C sr. FAR applea RarrY Scott, I do 1 110 du ." ''.l K.F.11 ' 2 do AN Grotteit varioty, 1 A York, 2 du ail J,i• /105 ET. .5 pouod, and over, G. 0 liiittodurnew, ntraitteil, B E Whitney, Int Plerbinm.,.EB 4 Ws c yo lAt protniottu ,) 2 do 4 (pi do 4 4kg T 1LL1N4.4, , A A ST ..:Judgms. 1. do 50 '1 du .1 - Burroughs, •• J B Binds,' • ' Jos Newell, o e Vincent, Francis Gregg, Jedg , a. CLASS B—NO. 17—FANN 131PL6.11CNT8. • Smith's Adjatting,§tanchin Forest . l Kelly, Diplom zzomy 'ilow,.. •- t' Gregg ' 4 (Si,. ''• , - , do _ K tog Cuidrator, - du • - • do I awn Ling Mower 44 - ' do .31,....dnv hing,sldwer do du It . ee lteaper, It M. Welles & Son, do Itaell4 Frio.' Ttuck do ' , do 'lc m id; lei to- LeaderWlieelAtiliii :do ; . 'do •Cnnuninas Fred Cotn-r • do • du AdAate hog and tdieep.Chn,Power ,-‘, ' do Groin /WM; It C gilbrrt, •,, . ' , • do, - Sy raeusetlitilt•4l Plow, two bon's,' ' . do Centenbial Moser, ti 8 Peek ' - ' .do eflo.:totiver:Piow,. • bon men The Enrelleiind Sjeadow-.lglncgowert stuod 1 1 1,9 , high In *no' estinod ion of the 6,nanitte.„ 7 We t.-ronitueno the tb.qco . lb-ovve to be i tolebinv eeeit od..pt , il to the_tatts a the Winters; exhibited by 1: A Write' , • Forthk.urtt , des of fattningta to,slo not mrntion.4l givrb to the etbibition of Rll W lleu & Sou. • C W 11,41,nds P W Btko . e.T,. DO flollon, • R Vokughti, 'll II ant, B titalfutd. - Judge*. CLASS - IV-1111:1%.ralliAtry. - LICATHER ARTI. CLES. . • Copt, I. A. Park, Superintendent. , • Best and greatest display harness, Chas N Beidlematv , • • • ••, - . grz oc! Taney m.utile harness; Chas N Bettilentan;Dlpionna (yrsi Rio ••• - Diploma ivy double , Diploma !ogle plain harness " Diploma Di-play of ruldier gtolli." I. Cm:Mho & fo, Mtptoo4 Display of Wats, Ilutoptiret• lime It Tracylliplouta Ito: Coarse boots, 1 ..Dlplotus 1)0a too WU, • • " " Diploma Pair ladies ii,,ots; ' Diploma Pair coarse hoots, " . - • - , Diphsam Pairdino boots, , ••• Diploma Deriadies boots, 1. , • '' Diploo Ladies Loots and shoes,or 0 • • - Diplomas T REACH', • • CHAS A CUMMINGS.. ,f BMJENsiNGB, - 0.1) FERGUSON, • SMITH FOR.OES. ' • •• ,„ • WM:CLARK 110 WEN, Judges. , CLASS . ArriyLEs. R W Weilea;.firgierintendint.. E. 00 EEI 'ol.ei, baggy, It St 'Welles:* Son Diploma Too li4ggy. " " \!` • Diploma Skeleton blifliS."' - Diploma: Cortland wagon. Davis spring.MM Welles ' ' \ DiOloma Flatforto wagon, Clarra spring, A M Welles & §ou . - Diploma TOrin der.y wagon. (with Clark's : flexible • r wing gear) H $ Clark Diploma Cisrks flexible Apriug gear, A D Dye diCu Diploma Light , vatform with Cbutie - spring gear, • !A Dye & Co. ._ • - . Diploma Platform. Bryant's patent, flexible sprlng. . James Bryant . Diploma Henry pit/twin. plant', Patent, nexatko" • spring. James Slyant, Dlptoma Top buggy, eliplie sprint James Bryant Diploma Side aping boggy. - Diploma Refrigerator,4eff S Carey Diploma • L G ARNOT, • F'ARNHA'M BARNES, . LW MUNDELL, • ' • •• ••, N N BLACK, - •: Judges. - CLASS ii,;:J-1111kOltiglie MANUFACTURES. , . • Rupertataidest. Rog iimpet, EMI A: illifibloso, Ist premium, .50' "Wool4o blaaketael•- -- ;do . ••• ,50 Holt counterpalnet'Phtla A Ousa " .69 t'stehwork quilt.by s lagiyMlynt, old, Mrs. Cool. Womb, lot - prosolum .20 'Woolen yarn. Emily A Robbins, " .50 Hearth rot, Mrs Henry WOW% . .:" 43 : 1 iipt bed quilt, tattle W Keeler, " • " 1.00 A/el:doe qulB,slm, 8. /1 Stereos. ti bite bedoouotespline; lies 23 'alb* hips' .so Hearth Rog. Mrs 8 B Stevens. Ant premlatt . .50 White be speed made 44 yeammgo " .60 t 10010 stocking& open sad ktilt by a - IRO 74 Teats old, 1124418#01., ,11101pldBrat" peddles...2l3 2 dig taut pieces tag eluVet,'Nh. talsolog.sllP2, • Kat G. W. *YAK. . 4 . 1 -lumgetiCiiarr 9 . .!rw !I.r7 lol nnanrour..' livau ,jtv„ 1.4.60= sismotorp VIOI4I* .r-}~) .• A DNws,'Sion I do 2 CV Oeo Stevens, E J Mcasntez, 11 Wlleus, . W )(alien, . „ J.ldges CLASS 6—NO. TO—POULTRY. L *oft. Supt. . cuiewtss. 00 2 .do SU 1 tra EMI! prno, 0 00 do 80 1 du 40 Lon. wentiou :, • do do l' 06 2' do 200 Ilan E 333 I= :3—blicrts—imAcats MIM Sheet tSbaa.Choehjliteel Up* Murals. Milt Embroidered MAMA , blanket& O hilde' Afghan. Zspeclid Mention. to be made of AM Codes ,aed Card ADAM= Mary " Ist primlum 'Watch Sate. ". " " " . ao Caniza to .46 44' ! lttlltasrrMahibitica and Needlework. Mr& E Misigocy_ • - - - • Diploma EkikekleMrs. Mika Madden' Dlploma Crotchsteed Bacque t Mn . Ellen Wadden AO limb, Night Ora*. Mr& D V lionon, 2d prm .50 Pllkrw Shant Mrs Z B Plate, let " .50 Tidy. Km X Z um. • .4 1160 Larabrequhh Mrs It Z 11111 .50 Crochetted My, Miss Helen Mason, let' 1.00 " . -Cushion Corer. Miss Bolen Mason .50 Pr Netted Oulpere, Mho Helen Mason, 20 pros .50 Worked Muslin, Mrs D O Bolles, Ist pnn .50 Lamp list. Mrs. O. M. Jillson. • Embr Tidy, Linnio Nichols, 64 44, .80 .Tidy, Mn Sand Kellam. 24 " -- "Bead Pin Cushion. Mrs ONi Jlllson, let . 4 - •AO Spec Einti, Xrs M E Hill. 2d •• " Pin Cushitic. Katie Watts. Ist '. 6 .50 Lace Work. Miss Mettle 'Wickham. " 50 Crocheted Collars , Miss Helen Mason, " " .50 Sots Cushion, Miss Lottle W Keeler, 6 . .. .50 Catchall, Mn O W Jtlison . . " .50 EinbTid " " " 16 -tied 11 -- Nettelt - Ttd9. 3tht Helen Mason. Custitou Covar. -•• • " "' '5O Tidy, W* Mame Wickham, . •• " .50 Cuff and rollara, Situ 3tattle Wickham" *• .50 adkerchiefs .60 Mug. D. F. PARK.' . . " 43. B. 3111.1.9, - • " E. W. NEM., • " D. W. SCOTT. Mn. 0. A. BLACK. • " •D. A. LAMENT, Judges CLASS 13--PAINTING AND FANCY WORK. - 0.11. Fox, Superintendent. Water colors, S 'Pir Gerould, 1.00 or Diploma Crayon Drawing. d W Carport!. • , Diploma. Speen. OR Painting.. J F Bender.. . ' Diploma flp”cut Crayon Drawing. Frank V Shaw, Diploma 5 Photographs, A J Fisher, . Diploma Specimen Rair Work, Mrs Allyn, Mil Men Crayon Portrait. C 8 Dayton, • Diploma 011 Painting 1 1i:tette! at the Well," C. B`. • Dayton. • . - lion. Men. Oil Painting, 8 W Cerontd. • . ~, fit , Worsted Wreath, Flora Part, - Ist premitim -.SO Paintings-by Mica Sarah Moody, mot entered for premium) yeti much admired and worthy of honerableineuticm. - Coliregon of. Phetograpbs by A d Fisher wor thy of houorliShi menden. Specimen Pointing. S .Y Gerould. Don. Mon .!tits. 1.. M. ADAMS, " • N. E. PARK. • ' `• G. D. STROUD, " Judges. CLASS 14—CULTIVATED FLOWERS. G. H. For, Superintendent. Basket of Flosern, Mary.L. El lout. ist prem. 1.00 fins. Q(?UINLAN. Chairman Committee of Ladies: CLASS 15—STOVES. At. • Capt. I. A, Park, Stzpirtntendent. - , "Crown Jewell"! heating stove, Mclutylre & ' Russell. Diploma "Revere" Range. Mclntyre A Russell - Diploma Displayl'of Tinware.-31clutyre A Russell, Diploma Corn Sheller (Cornell) " • " Diploma Favorable mention of wood stares, Mc/a. tyre k Russell, Diploma ..Dee mark" Sante (wood cook) closet and reservoir, A D Dyo & Co. • Diploma ELI IV, GALE. JOHN KELLY, C. IS. RIGGS, • CLASS 17—MISCELLANEOUS. B. M. Weller, Superintendent. Roller and Feel Steamer, J W Park, Diploma Hater Patent PortatJe, Worm Fence, ff. H. ' Coburn, - Diploma Buckwheat Polisher. 0 II Kendall, Diploma Display of Cabinet Work, sr 0 F rosts & eons. • . .Diploma, Piano, Ilathushek. 'Upright, Holmes & ra?sage, Diploma Organ, (leo Woods , Parlor, Holmes & Pass a?.e, ftev - Citig Machine. dirnet feed. 0 A Black, Diploma The two ott p r machines. the "Singer •• and the " Hone •• are excellent machines and deserve hon. orable mention, - CLASS .18—HLACKSMIVILNO. • G . . 11:1 Van Dyke. Supfrintrittlene. No. 37. lion - eAiloeln4 A C 3fcCaslia, 114-premlurn 100 C S Day i% 2fl " V.%) . H. V. -DECWER. • .Chat man Committee of J udges. Tim .".Spalding Hose" of Waverly, are to have a benefit on Thursday eiening next, and offer_two prizes for best waltz ers, one for a lady and the other for a gentleman. • - OM A 3sosT stupid and annoying blunder occurred in the signature of the obituary notice ofJAlms litrow.tr last week. The author of •tbe notice was flis. E. H. CILAIIMEI, of Monreeton, whoprepared it at the particular request of the deceased. THE people. of Windliam met with a great loss last week in the death of the estimable and highly esteemed wife of Dr. H. 'A. riv Any. _The deceased was a duugh.; ter-of the late PETER. KITYEENDALL, and sister of our tpwnsman, BENJAMIN BUT KENDALL. 31h. K. had - a large circle of warm friends, - who sincerely condole with the bereaved husband and family. She was 39 years old. do PE do Pr do PP do PE 2 PF I do 50 E. o'3lruA CIIAArtL, SOIL of JAY CHAA PEL, who was run over by the cars some two weeks since, after having both legs amputated and lingering and suffering throngh the greatest pain, died on Tuei, dap morning at-Addison, N. Y., where he was hurt. He was about 17 years of age. - The funeral will be held at Le Roy to-day (Thursday), at 2 o'clock r. St. WE last Waek received a letter from our friend and - former townsman, ADOLPH 501.03101 V, dated Solomonville, Arizona, and coltaininra generous remittance on subscription to the REPORTER.: Mr. S. and his brother IsArxmE are engaged in business in that place. The fact_ that the town has been named fcir them is evidence of their popularity. • A NAnttoar EscAPE.On Friday morn ing', recently, during a .severe storm of wind and tlitin, the house of Mr. E. AYERS,. near the County line between Fox and . Clinton townships; was crushed by a large maple tree which felt directly acrobs it. The fan:lily,- which consists of Mr. and. Mrs. AYERS and' three small children, were all 'in the house at the time, but all escaped injury except' Mrs. AYERS,, who received quite a bruise on her head. The chair in which Mr. -Arias was sitting, s and froM which' he sprang as' the shock came, was-literally broken in'pieces. She learn from the Laporte Democrat that the Stove, beds, 'and all the chairs were brok en, the floor crushed in, and yet, as by a miracle, nOlives were lost.--Canton -Sen- Mut.' MG UAUL OF COUNTEtIFF4TERS.VOF some Weeks past; Messrs., Ilarms„ and PrusiNS, two government detectives, have /l en- " working up " a case against a gang - of 'counterfeiters in this county,' and on , Monday succeeded in .capturing their men, or at least a portioti - of them. The suspected parties.,who' have been arrested are : Prtentu, of Warren ; THEO- . DORE CAA?, of Wyalusing ; At.r.Mrr Wirxwinr, J. W. Mesmand Jon: limy of Athens. The parties were. Ibrought. before Commissioner Mix, • and are now having a learing. examination. took place yesterday, and be was held in eil,ooo bonds. Among , the evidences of guilt found on the parties were seven Sets, of moulds for snaking 5. cent and 50 cent pieceS, the trade dollar 'and the' Bland'dollar ; also a quantity of those coins finished and unfinished, and some; metal. • Tns G. A. R. Encampment which we briefly mentioned last week, came to a close on Thursday afternoon. We regret that spice does not permit us to refer, to it mote.ct length. After the unfortunate occurrences noticed last week nothing oc curred to mar the pleasure of the occasion. Nearly a thousand old itoldiers tea, many of them accompanied by their wives.. 'Che time - Was spent to drill, dress parade review, relating camp fire anec dotes, etc. The sham battle was witness ed by 'at least ,0,000 People. • Too much credit cannot be awarded Commander ANDltti, Adjutant WILT,: Captains KILMER :tin! WA/INVIC for their efforts. to make tho -affair pleasant and profitable. Co. X, - of this place; was corn- 4 manded by Lieut.. TAYLOR and Firat Ser geant Lvos. The boys leoked every inch the sehllei,' and;their behavior was such ite.to merit tbidipprobe at their . cbaya4ltitii:l444l4#.;!o *-- 4.41 1 14P , 0r. 4.7:t MEM Judps D!p!oma I'. C. V.Altr GELDER, • If. R. CHAFFEE. DENJ. ACRLEY, P. P. ItUR.Sg. W.II. S. 3/ARVIN, , Judges IT LA WM= s TRIAL.-- gl I was tarn bledlor lusty years with Kidney Com. plaint, Gravel, &c.; my blood became thin' I was dull and inactive' could hardly crawl shoat, and was an old worn oat man all over, and could get nothing to help me, until I got Hop Bitters; and noii am a boy again. My blood and kidneys are all right, and lam as active as a matt of 30, although I am 72, and I have no doubt it will do as well for others of my age. It is worth a trial.;-(Father.) -11 ENRY E. DRAKE, WELSI2, Cornet Lake and Water Streets, urxa, L r. Elmira, 14. Y.. Apr 11.18: "784 y. MARRIED. CASTLE—MILLES.—ett Lawrence. ra.. Oct. a, 1578, by Bev. S.D. Merrick, Mr. George' E. Cu tie, of ibmitbfleM, m 1,1311511 Katie E. Milks, of Lawrence. , 8.11.N503r-001CTON.—Ar - the house •of the br det's parents. Ifornbrook, Pa.. Sept. 25th, 1878, ~bp Rey. .1. Davies, Mr. It. W. Itansom,-oL (Thent,•Pa., and Mies Ell= Horton, of—Horn .brook. Pit. • • •COLEMAN.PEAT.—At - the how of Manson Todor, In Standing Stone, on the 2Sth of. Sept. I B ' B ,jbe O. Beers. Mr. It assei/ cole • man, of Herrick, Bradford county, Pa., and Miss Nancy M. Prat. of 'Wyaltusing. Bradford Co. Pa. JE.W ETT—BROsitt NING.—Iti East Bridgewater, : Susquehanna county. Pa., Sept. !6th, ten. at the -• • residence of the bride's mother, Miss Elizabeth Jewett, to 4. It. Browning, Esq., of Bowe, Brad ' ford county. Pa. DIED. FO.S•-ln this•borough, on Monday momlnenct. 7, 4 typhoid feVer,.:(lharles 'S. Von, aged. 24 _ New Advertisements. p W. L L & C O. INVITE SPECIAL ATTENTION TO Al LARGE AND ELEGANT ASSORTMENT LADIES CLOAKS, NOW BEING Itg.CEIVED. These garmeuts ate MANTIFACTUREI) .SPECIALLY JOB VS, Man IN=l ..NEWEST AND MOST APPROVED STYLES 'NV'e oerer,thefri VarIOUS qualities AT PRICES RARGIA FROM THREE DOLLARS TWENTY • DOLLARS . -EACHi and among them Iv . lll be found many Decided Bargains.. We also Invite attention to our stock of LADIES SHAWLS, which embraces ALL TIIE NOVELTIES OF TOE SEASON, and to our stock-of LADIES FELT SKIRTS, which will be SOLD VOCY 311.7C11 11,ELOYS" THEM VAT:Ur *rilsatla, Pa., Oct. 10. 1873 AUDITOR'S NOTlCE.—Overton kNcereura ii, v*. John .1. Griffith. In the Court of if.',,rils» , :u Ploai of Brad tor.l County—No. 1407, , live:Merin. 1577. • - The, raide.Nignml. nil auditor appointed by sail eourt to - (ll,fribute the Ifdads' arising from tiii• shoal sa'e of dere:Marrs real er.tate, will attend to tliodlit.lo of its appolntmont at hl9 office , In the beroogh of T‘Ovanda, on Friday. 'November 15th. 1575. at In o'clock A. 'M. wh..11 and %chef% all per son, haring otatin. ar,af g rod Aaal fund tunt present 111.. m. or bo forever debarred from eoniltn: 'in on :mkt food. _ 13. 'KINNEY,Iitor Towanda, Oct. 15;* ADMINISTRATORS' NOTICE. '=Notice, la hereby even that all per Sons In. debtedlo the eslate of % kiii.ltu E. Itleharda. late of Rome trtp,, deed, are, requested to make Immed iate payment. and all peratme having claims against said estate must present • them duly authenticated (et settlement. MAHLON C; ELLIOTT; Rome ea.. Oct. 3,1978.-6 w .4 ITDITOR'S the' matter of the estnte4 of .feretntati 4lt•kler arid rg ben Sickler,:tu the Orphan's Court of Brad ford rotity. '. ", • . . Tl, undersigned an auditor appointed by said Court 1.11 distribute mencritt the hands.of the ad ' MI nistrator of the estate df Jeremiah Sickle?, de ceased, arising from the sale of real estate and also to dt.trlbute fund., In the hands of the adynioistra torortliff estate of Egbert Ling frau sale of Personal propertyvnig attend to the dutles of his appnlntinent at his office in To wairta ]tore. On MON iv ror. the 1101' day of NO VEMBER, A. J.l 1870, at 10 A. 3f...when and where all persons having elainis 013 said funds must .pre sent the - sante or be forever debarred. tiOVF, A.nclttor. Towanda. Pa., Oct. 10, 1876. latvs . . p EPORT . CONDITION it , of the Vitt National Dank at Towanda, th. , State of P nusylyanfa, at the close of bus'. nesi Oct 1.1878 I imsoritil:S. Loans and discounts#32s.os4. 57 Overdrafts 4.3e5 89 U. S.-11onds to secure circulation 55.000 Di U. S.lBott,t , on hand 8.11.0 or .otber bunk., bonds. and mortgages....: 13.241 10 rhie front app , •pred reserve agents .4a.N54 41 `fine from oth National Bunks 8.037 27 ,Due'fretu Statt, ~arks and banters • 4.070'71 Ttettl estate,l'arnittite. and fixtures..... 20.286 02 Cittr.rit e-XpOttPOS Isd taxes paid... 3.6 , 83 35 Gbeelcs and, Miter 4asit Items ' 4 . 7.314 its Bills of either flanks 721 on Frac-Ilona) Currette,t(inetuttliag carkels) 114 4; Spt•cb: (i13040161:gold Treas'y gentile's) 3,252 11 LegablendkAttntity ' ' 12,013. 00 Redid fund with It 8 Tr. (5 pr ct. of Or.) . 2,475 no - Due frOm U. 8. Tr. other than if per et red. fund • -tom.; ',- Ci . 31.711: cg =I 2rpi tat AtOCIII raatl 1itmu510ud........ 'telliridedprofit's.. NationSl Hank notes outstanding. .... Dividends.nnpaid lndivnils deposits sutijectio check • $211,1:7 71 Time certificates of deposit... 70.4011 7S 254.6 3 / 1 49 bS 60 Doe t 9 other 'N attohal B a ths Total • - 4531792 59 Slate oc.'renosllvtibls. Oofin ty of Bradford, Is: BETTS; Cashier of the above named bank, do solemnly swesr that tiro above statement Is true to the best of my knowledge and belief. - • ~ N.-N. BETTS, Cashier. fuliserlbed and sworn to - before me MI& dtb fit l y of October, BBL' - W. B. DOME, Wotitrf:Public• 'COzger.cl-7Attest t• - • - 5 •It'• ItAlNVitale.;y = Tew Attivetizeinnts. powELL a co. ISM AIIL NOW lIZC EVER); AND ,OPINE A 3 IMMENSE STOCK BtAVER Cto-7118,, SIT ITINUS, CLOTHS AND CASSIMERES, NEWEST AND BEST STYLES Ii TILE , 31AIIKE . T, AT Exceedingly Low Prices SPECIAL' . BARGAINS: cASS IMER ES at 550.1, por yd., worth 80c. t0.90C. CASSIMEItES at 60 h Micts„ per yd . , worth $l.OO CAS:3I3IEIIES at ; 75 cents per yard, worth 11,25 CASSI3fiIt ES at 11.00.per24.,iworth $1.50 to 41.76 CA:et: 4 :IIIEI:ES at $1.25 Per yd.,.w0rth11.23 to 12.00 OUR - STOCK ALSO ISCLUDES IN= 2500. -YDS. KENTUCKY ..JEANS, AT Lzki CENTS PER YD.:WORTH CWITS JEANS, D_OEISKINS.,* I -- -1, TWEEDS, .&c., . GREAT - VARIETY, t'AT EQ.VALLY LOW PRICES. Towanda,. Pa Oct:10,1878 • RIAL LIST for October'. Term Jot Coon', Ink at Troy. Pa.. : ' El. azer Pomeroy vs C C mccaeld DeWitt.( Strait vs George S E Pomeroy vs C C 31cClellatair. Mary Barrett TS K L Compton isms E W 'VA Elias Rockwell, air debt W A Nixon vs L G Van fibril et al trespass. Levi Sanford vs CFellows appeal 'W'm 3 Dobbins vs O.P Ballard, ear wept li Miller vs Blake Wales appeal ' 3 II and H H Fitch vs C V Dare eel fa Miller and Clark vs Peter Hardin : asapt • Barnabus Braino„vs John Yuman Issue John F Gillette TB Win R Hawirlns Rep . • F H Person vs Frank Fish " .app 0 F , Taylor vs L N Finkham • silo Mary Ann Williams 11 IV Williams— app Enterpriie Mfg Co vs .10 Locklaud a flon..cci fit ~ Henry card F„J Angle Gorlashee alt ex Lawrence Riley vs Peter Herdic asspt John L KieNted vs John F. Gillette " tress Michael Flynn ye William Doggan. ,sispt listen Wortiruse vs liosea Huntley et al - fleet C.O Bailey vs .1 31 Strnble . MT li 31 and C Goff vs Peter Hardie /MP Weisner .1 Roy vs David McWharter tress - Subpienaes returnable on Monday; Oct. -23. MTS.'. BENJAMIN M. 'PECS., Prothonotary. Towanda, Pa., Sept. 27, 18211. pen , ASSIGNEE'S' NOTICE.,4n District Court of the United States, for the 'Western District of Pennsylvania. In the nuttier of C. A. bonier, bankrupt, in bankrupt Ye. To wtiont it moy concern:—The undersigned' hereby gives natieu of his appointment as Asia/glee of C. A. Fowler, of Monroe township, In the county of Bradford. and State of Pennsylvania, within said. District. who has, been adjudged a bankrupt on hie own petition by . the District Court ut said District: EMI Monroeten; Pn.. Ott. sth. A. D. Ir.B. ASSIGNEE'S SALE.-By of an order Issuing out of the District Courts et the United States for the Western - District of pennsytcania, in the matter el the estate of , M - Slue:maker. bankrupt, in bankruptcy. i will ez po