Nradfora Pporttt EDITORS I E. 0: GOODRICH. S. W. ALVOIRD. 7 1 .ivands, Pa., Thurs.:ay, Nov. 21, 1878. ♦NNOriCENENT. Fur several years past . we have been sending the REPORTER to quite a number of subscriber's without receiving any pay therefor. Finding that this system is not a success, we have determined to adhere strictly to the adanee system hereafter. Therefore, all subscribers in arrears on the alst of December will have their pa perssdiscontinued ; and the .amounts due will be collected. Those who do not wish to ,pay costs must heed this notice and pay up before that date. • Furthermore, experience has taught us that the lowest price at which the AEPOR- TElt ` tan be furnished is One Dollar .and 'Fifty • Cents, in , clubs. Postmasters and others who have kindly interested them selnves in increasing our 'circulation will ' bear the fact in mind, and collect $1.50 from' each subscriber, as nothing less than this sum wilKbe accepted by us. After the first of January next we shall notify all subscribers two weeks iR ad , vance of the expiration of their sUbscrip- DEMOCRATIC ECONOMY - AND TILE • The Democrats have made great ado over their professed reduction in the expenses of the Government. We .have repeatedly shown that this claim.was false. Wherever the ap propriations have been reduzed the efficiency of the service has been tatr tailed. Last week fifty faithful em 7 il'ilOyes were discharged frOm the In terior Department, not because they were not wanted, but for the-reason that there is no money to pay them. The work which is now abandoned will have to be performed some other time, so that no saving to the de partment is accomplished, but the public is greatly" inponvenienced, to pay tribute to the demagOguery of . the Democratic party. Postmaster-General KEY has pre, pared his -annual report, and in it . calls attention to the great inconven ience suffered in his department' by reason of insufficient appropriations. After describing the rates of com pensation prescribed by law for rail- Way mail service, the • Postmaster- General says - "The appropriation ' made by Congress - at its last session was not sufficient to pay the existing service on the railroads thus pre scribed. In additiOn to this fact, the weight - of the mails carried is . con- Stant-Iy, increasing, and new railroads and parts of railroads are being con tinually added to our postal routes. It became an embarraSsing question to the department whether the rail; *ay mail service should be reduced so as to corresponit with the appro priation, or whether it should be con tiuued;as it then was until Congress shoUld meet and the question might . to it for its judgment and It was believed by the de ,hat it would not do to with -service from such a number Ls as would reduce the cost of ~tion within the amount ap d. The _only other. method ing the expenses of this ser vice would have been to discontinue the service as carried on and conduc ted by our postal-car system entirely,. or to such an extent as would bring the .expenditure within the appropri ation. To have adopted this course would- have led to great confusion and delay, and to great dissatisfac tion and complaint on,the part of the public. It Would have carried us back to the system in vogue before postal-cars were used. Separation ~otliees, would hate been required on the lines of railways, at which mail would have been stopped and depos ited for separation and distribution, instead of having this separation and distribution made without detention or delay on the moving- trains, as is now done. k ..Should no additional appropria tion be made for this service, I ,shalll feel it my duty under 'the laws solo' ;curtail the service as to fall within the appropriation, however much I might consider the public interest's injured thereby. I am satisfied it Would lead justly - to much.complaint. Mails .would l be delayed at the offices of separation hardly ever less than twelve hours, and- most generally twenty-four honis. Letters, papers and packages passing over great dis tances or Circuitous routes would , be detained at more than one such office in very many cases, and there would lie delay in th,e_ immense number of transactions which are initiated, con ducted and completed by communi cations through the mails. FOr this • can-;e business men would send their inssages by telegraph instead of the mails,' to a great extent,.and -the de-• lay in the transmission of the'reinit- : tances of business men would add . largely to sums they .pay by-way of interest and exchange.' In my opin ion it would cause a shock fo bur postal system from which it Would . not soon recover. Railroad compd. nies which have been' at the expense of furnishing Postal : cars might be slow to furniSh us such conveyances a second time,-and there is no law to compel them to do so." • Are the business men - of the cowl ; try willing to' ave their postal facilj. ities curtailed;qn•order that, the Demi ()critic party may have Credit for re - clueing the government expenseS? Tus Washington Star : It ct;i n - be stated on good authority that when the resumption of specie payments by the United States Treasury begins, it will be a gold resumption, although if the run on the Treasury foy gold in exchange . for United States notes should come close io the amount of that 'coin in the possession ¶f the Government, it is stated itli4ar re treat:may be made to bji . 4 , I =I Tan OumooK.---One of the good indications, since the election, as we gather from our exchanges, ' is the ex-, pr ion of confidence by prominent :business men' at the great financial • centres, that the effect of the Repub lican Victories on trade of every class would be Every beneficial: Iti is well understood that the Greenback move r [meat locked up immense capital,.in itimidated by the fears that the coun 'try was en the eve of a-financial rev- - olution. • This laving been demon strated as not now likely to occur, capital is shOwing signs of greater actiVify, and business men are very hopefill in the - warm, giowing light of 'a magnificent Republican victory. Investments will now be freely made in enterprises that will doubtless give employment to thousands of men. This fact shows the genuine force and influence of the Republican par ty. The first effect of its victories is to stimulate capital, impel enterprise and strengthen business confidence. These are all gratifying facts, but they are logical, and therefore we are not surprised to hear that the busi ness men of the country are delighted with the series of brilliant victories achieved this month by the Republi can party. THE REPORTER does not belong to that class of journals which announce about this, season of the year. that "political` subjects will be tropped." . We believe it to be the province of the press to endeavor to educate the people " in season and out of season," giving them "line upon line, precept upon precept." Much that is printed during the heat of a political cams paign, is taken with many grains of allowance by the public; ituis there fore-, the more important that the questions which are to be voted upon shall be calmly and dispassion t ately discussed while the public mind is udbiased to a 'degree it never cari be on the eve of an important electiau. Taking this iiew — of the subject, we do not deed it necessary to apolo gize - for the appearance of political articles in the REPORTER. The fact that eighteen hundred voters in this county cast their ballots for the Greenback ticket, is a sufficient rea_ son to us why we should continue to expose the deceptive falacy of that organization, as well as the .dishon esty and duplicity of the Democrats. A SAD story of suffering occasioned by the yellow fever comes from Pro- Lvidence, R: I. A few nights ago a richly dressed infant was left on a door-step there, with a bundle of costly clothing and • a letter. Mrs. Jose HALL, the writer of the letter, said in it that she had lost her fath er, mother, brother, husband and three ,children by yellow fever at New Orleans. With her baby she fled to' Cairo, 111., • but there the plague attacked them. Both recov ered, Mrs. HALL being left . ici a weak mental condition, however. Remem bering that former friends of her fam ily liVed at Psovidenee, she determ ined to take her child to them before .she became crazy. In her note Mrs. HALL, said, " Don't try to find me out," but a day or tvio later the gen tleman addressed learned that she was dying in a Boston inn. S,-111?, was found before she died, and assured that her baby would be cared for by friends. • PUILADEtPLIIA North American: The railroads are now ,paying about seven dollars - each for the privilege of carrying passengers from Cincinnati to New York—that is to say', the rate of fare. is clown to one dollar from that point to this city and New York: Two bankrupt roads; whose, stockholders have not had a penny of dividends" since their incorpora tion, and neither of which is paying the interest on its debt, finding that they could not compete with the Oth: er roads in anything except fares,are responsible for this outrageous !attack upon invested capital. 'They can nothing themselves, and are deterfnined that no one else shall. Every new Legislature is petitioned for laws to prevent extortionate charges. Is it not about time that some, stockholders set to work to se . - cure some legislation to prevent the sacrifice - of their interests by bankrupt corporations, whose reckless mann ge:s. , have no interest whatever in earning any profit upon their busi- news ? TIE Commissioner of the General Land Office has confirmed a survey under Which titles to land and prop erty worth $1t)0,000,.1)0 are held in San Francisco. 'The city of San Fran i cisco, and private individuals inter ested, insisted that an old error should be corrected, and that titles should pass in accordance with a la ter survey, which would inure to 'the. benefit of the city andito the injury of the . State as original grantor. Such a correction would, have result ed in the practical confiscation of vast estates, the lands upon • which stand the Bank of California, and the Balace Hotel being among, them. Ihe Commissioner has decided that, by reason of ..tlie acquiescence of the City of San Francisco in , the originil title, and for other technical reasons cited, thg city is barred from any. at tempt to invalidate the ancient title; and 'flat the original' survey must stand. ' RECORDER QUAY, who, as Chair man of the Republican State Central Committee, managed to so successful an issue the campaign in this Stiite, has been tendered a banquet and re celition by the Republicans of Phila delPhia, as a testimonial of their ap preciation of his.services. The affair Will come off at the Union Club-house next Saturd,ay afternoon. ktrf. vont received 319,507' Totes I= OM THERE are; some very interesting features of the November ireturne pointed,: out. Dividing .States into sections, we find that the east elects seventy Republicans - out oft ninety five 'Representatives,. and the west fifty-nine out :Of ninety-twb, but of the 106 Representatives sent from .the South, only ',five are Republicans, the Democrats having ninety-four and the Independents' three. The twelve Greenbackers are equally divided be tween the three sections, thouily all but one of them were originally class= ed as Republicans.. Should they stand out as a third party with the Independents, they would dictate the organization of the House, the Dem ocrats having, according to the latest returns, only eight pluralicy. If, the - Republicans . should carry Nalifornia as every one expects, the net House would choose a Republican Presi dent if it hadthe opportunity. Again, the States that went Republican have 213 electoral votes, so. that it they shoUld vote the same way in. 1880, the country would he equally divided between north and south, with the exception of Oregon arid Indiana, which . .would belong to the l )Democratg. it is pretty dry picking to get any Democratic crumbs of tom fort out of :the figures, any way that you look at them. IN one -county' id South Carolina, Where the Republicans had a majori ty of Over 1,500 in 1876, and where the negroes again voted almost solid ly for the Republican candidates and expected a majority of at least 1,800, the Democratic returns make a ma jority for that party, of over 2,800 ; this being 500 more than the number of white voters iu the county. It is related that during the election the Democratic managers were seen to be frequently '.'stirring up" the votes• This was to mix .in the tissue paper ballots with which the boxes were stuffed, and a Tribune correspondent makes the suggestion that hereafter it will be better to weigh the votes. If this should be done, Southern Democrats would vote with lead. It has already proved a potent factor in the Democratic politics of the South on more than one occasion. MR. HEWITT'S Congressional La bor Committee met at Scranton last week. to hear some of 'the labor lead- , ers and local politicians, on questions that affect the prostrate industries of the coal regions. J. R. THOMAS, a former blacksmith, testified that there was great distress among the poor men, .who often went to work with empty dinner-pails . ; mush was a luxury and Milk a,rare treat not to be thinglit'of-lailt on Sundays. In a general way the principle evil seemed to be scarcity of work . Some of the witnesses ivanted laws passed restrict ing the hours . of , labor and-the use of machinery,-andabolishing the prison Contract system; ONE Fare.--The importance of one vote is often plead as a reason for voters to go to the polls. Here is an instance at the late election ;11 Bucks county. TTIPMAS S. FOLWELL and ,THOMAS T. Ocus, the Republi can and Democratic eandidees' for •Prqthonotary in Bucks county, each received 7,610 votes. As neither is elected the var:iney wilt iMve to be filled by the Governor until after the next general election a. year hence. In such event the appointment will go to Mr. FOLWELL, the Republican candidate. The vote for member of the Legislature in Clinton county is also said to be a tie. CLIAMBERSIICRO RepOSitOry: QUAY, the CAMERt>NS, GO y. HARTRANFT, GROW, MACKEY, KEMBLE :till some others are leadersof whom the Repub lican party have just reason to feel proud. The party in this State nev er was in better fighting trim than it is under their leadership. What is the use in snapping and snarling at them, as some do, simply because they arc leaders ? It is just as necessary for a great party to have leaders as it is for a great army to have generals, and the Republican party is fortu nate in having leaders the-most able. Why try to dethrone them and stib stitute a lot of incompetents? ' - WELL SAM—The Philadelphia American says the lesson 'of the election is-very simple. Here it is : " Honesty is the best'policy. The . itepublican party has never won once in the quarter of a eentury of its existence by trading 'with fraud. Whenever it has taken a firm stand for the fulfillment of contracts and the payment of debts in an honest currency, it has. always won, and when it has truckled to th'e spirit of Cummunism it has always been beat en. ,The Republican party is the party of honest money, and 'in any other guise its friends and sup porters cannot recognize it:" THE whole north has pronounced. for a sound national currency. Why did not the "solid south" go and do likewise ? What is there sectional in such an issue that the array of the. north in its favor should excite un easiness? If the "solid south" prefers irredeemable rags to -gold and silver, is that any reason why. the north should imitate. so bad an example ? HENRY CLAY and ANDREW JACKSON were both Southern men, and yet both wanted a sound national eurren- ••• • • y. - , f"_•;• A • "." - ' • - THE truth is—and it is admitted by all who have made any investiga tion—that this is the first country to apply machinery to the manufacture of watches. We make them with hundreds of parts precisely alike and fitting into.each.other. In this way have succeeded in making a good watch at a lower price than any other nation.,ln this . respect, we challenge the world, and always shall. _ , A FM broke out at nine o'clock Thu; one of the numerous 04 at . the foot of Main atreet f theatre Comique. The Lad , ly spread, and•soon the Itidi Opera House were on fire. The department at Olean was sent fi biit did not arrive • 'until the fire. lidel swept over about five tidies. Among the principal losses are the Theatre Comique. with fire other buildings on Main. street, $2,000; ten 'tiifildings south of the - Theatre Comique, $5,000; United 4tates Express office, estima ted loss, $5,000 ; Riddle House, ss:,- 000 1 and no insurance; eight build ings north of the Riddle HOuse, on Davis stfeet,-$8,0.00; Bovard g 4: fang's machine shops, $5,000 ; Irv ing, lumber and wheel factory, $1 . 0,- 00.01 together with several oil wells, value *unknown ; also, the The House, loss . not known.. The union de iot was saved. THE electoral . fraud -issue, - upon which the Democratic .manattera had bestowed so much attention, and spent so much publib Money, is now confessedly dead and buried.. It was expected . to carry the Statet t anci Congressional elections in 18 S,•and it has failed ignominiously. Mr. TM . DEN and his friends. are tossed aside of no further use. Two years liae been wastedtiPon that•rruitless strife. How dignified will •be POTTER and his friends when Congress meets. ._ DEMOCRATS! Put this in your pipes and smoke it ! The States carried by the Republicans in October and No - Vember of this year, cast 205 elec.; toral votes. As 185 is enough. to elect the nest President, what com fort is there in a " Solid South ? ", TILE efforts to recover the remains of the late A. T. :STEWART,-,Which were stolen from the family vault in New York last week, have thus' far proved unavailing. - Several arrests have been made, but nothing,-definite as to the whereabouts of the oody or identity of the ghouls has transpired. KEHOE . has got tos-Wing at last, the Governor having signed his death warrant. This notorious Mollie and four other convicts are to pay the penalty of the law on the It•th of Do cembeO. It is 'said KEHOE's friends mill apply to the Board of Pardons RIZ THE Nationals polled g1,;58 totes in this State, and the Prohibitionists 3,653. - -AND who are these bloated bond holders? They are the American people of every class and condition, rich and poor, lazy and industrious,' wise and ignorant. About ten or fifteen per cent. of-the bonds are held abroad, eighty-tire or ninety per cent. are held at home. Within two years nearly $150,000,i;09 of four per cent. boi.ds have beill sold all over the country,largely in the WeA, and they are held in small suni•by small investors, wh& prefer •to place the surplus of their i savings from wages and trtuie in a• United !States bond rather than in," a saving r s-bank. A large amount of other bonds are held by banks, insurance companies, trst companies, satangs-baiuks, in which widows and orpbans and the Vast mul titude-who own bends have their all involved. Every man - 'who has a -national bank note in his packet is to that degree interested in the hon orable maintenance of the value of the bonds. It is not Wail Street and the great capitalists. who hold the bonds: The holders have generally paid the full vain:, or nearly thefull value, for •them, and . the country could not recede from its plighted fai:ll without destroying the whole base of credit upon which financial transactions rest. Those who really wish "the laborer's dollar" to be, of full value will begin by insisting that the country shall keep its word-and not break it. For every dollar bill in his puoket the country has promis ed to pay every man a dollar. But if it begins by refusing to pay some of its promises, it will end by repudiat ing all. If it will not keep faith with those whq lent it money, it will break faith with _:those who - gave thirservicls and their lives. "God has somehow so fixed the world that we can adofil to. doabout right," said the old sailor. Honesty is the best policy," says the experience of man kind.-7-Mgrdtall(Mich Slalesman. • THE •demagogue preaches that, a law of Congress can make money out of paper, and that the people can get hold of it somehow without hard work when it is made he tells that the rich, the • banker, the "bloated bondholder," the "respectable aristo 7 erht," oppose it because he is an ene- my of the people and wants to stake a monopoly of life's good things to himself. All this nonsense, however, collapses like a gas : bag, as it is, when you can . get a man intelligently to ask and answer the question, what is money ? Money f is la commodity, ! that must be of intrinsic value, and the only way to get it is to bring it into the market and pay for it.. There is not a piece of paper money in the' world. All the ffreenbacks,, bank notes, notes of hand, and everything of the kind, in this or any other coun try, are only certificates of indebtness; they are only promises to pay mon ey or its equivalent in some kind of real value. When men. say : that greenbacks carried us through the war and saved the life of the nation, and then ask why greenbacks are not good for us in time of peace, we only need to answer, it was the World's faith in us that carried' us through the war, and ,greenbacks and bonds were only certificates of credit. We promised the world at.large that if it would trust us and help us thro;l 7 ,rh we wonld pay when the war was over. Greenbacks and •bondS then are yet only unredeemed pledges to pay.a debt, the price of our deliverence and now refuse to pay would be as wicked and mean as to promise a man . when drowning, and then lie to and cheat 1 Tun Russian gbvernment has offered a him after he has helped us out. In I reward of 56,000 trances for the the ar. dealing, then, with disease of - the ! rest of a young beautiful peasant girl, the times, anti trying -to get r id . o r t h e i chief of a band of 200 brigands in the dis demagogue,l Ala of Panlotisk, in Southern Russia. imate nature of this desire for, money ;• let us recognize the legit- THERE are 200,000 /Aneniaus in Con andstant;topple. They have more than forty _et it as easily as possible, and '- schools, .of which the "Nubarian," found let us try and educate the people into ied by Nubar Pacha, now once more Pre the simple knowledge that value can- mier of Egypt, a very able man, is . chief. not be created .by popular -vote, and ! THE Si. Paul Press says there are 28,- that we are freed from sacred pledges all acrei of amber sugar cane planted in and moral obligation's because it . Minnesota, which will average about 210 gallons % of syrup to-the acre. Last year costs us serious and prolonged eff o rt i the gross yield of syrup was 2,140,000 to meet them.--Rev. AL J. Savage. 'gallons.- , • _ taradford;Ta:, 3,y , evening in 11 buildings near the . , &Armin fever is =Usually fatal laPar ion county. - . . - • • Tua State Grange meets at Bellefonte, December 10: •. • . Timm are thirteen 'Churches 'in the borough of Shenandoah. . • Ata. the tobacco factories of the - State amworkleg full time. . A 110 T: tight against round-dancing is oing on at Uhambersburg. Tun Pittston Sunday Plain-Dealer has removed to Wilkesbarris. county voted against the poor house t the. late election by 1,187 to 907. . r..ine tme from prison labOr in Le high county is about a hundred dollars a month.. ELK county •: 1- of pheasants; im mense numbe rs o - which aro shot for the' eastern market. THE ,roterg of Lac, awanna county vot ed on the question of. County , last week, and Scranton got it una 'musty. • ' Pirfsnuito paperiS warn inskilled labor not to seek work in the ' regions, as hundreds there are out of mu toyment. - A RICH vein . ef copper ore as been struck by a' prospecting party on e farm of &doinon Fegeley, Pottsgrove to • Ship, Montgomery country. . THE tramp is an unusually troubles me human being in likKean county, Bradford, the oil center of the north, has\ difficulty in dealing with him.' • •-' 'nit Oil City Derrick has news that Whitelaw Recd, •T. De Witt Tnlmage , and -George Francis Train are the three: persons who rifled Stewart's grave. µ AT the Spring Colliery, near Pottsville.' on Tuesday, two cars became uncoupled and ran down the Elope and killed three workmen before they could get out of the way. . - LEVI SIIITIL of Williamsport was tonne dead in,the woods on Thursday night. - It is supposed he was killed on TueSday ley the limb of a tree which he I n chopped down. • • rapid and re ISAAC WALLACE, onf: of the famous- Welsh Mountain gang in-Lancaster county has ' , cell arrested for the shooting mid probable murderof a women named •Ra- • did Dunlap. eu.kntts Hoot - ., a- poor shoemaker, or Pittsburgh. left that place, sortie years ago, without a dollar, to find work in the West. lle .dame back n, - few da,i T ago, worth SIZI,OOO in gold. THF: lumber Tmill4 of -IN illiams it are now clTsing up business for the :eason and cutting - math° stock of logs on hand. There has been a fair prbdution, consider ing-the general condition of the trade. Jrnc.E Ctruiten, of Crawford county, has just decided that the- -bill .pasted by the last Legislature, providing for a sit ting of the, .Court at, Titusville, is uncoil .titutional. 'The MSC will be appealed to the Sum eme Court. JOHN R. CocnitAN, one of the oldest residents - of I,rie, died on Monday night. lie %lent to that city in •1842 since which time he has been -more or less prominent in its affairs. -He was a member of - the Legislature in 1864 and 1885: Tit E Indian Bureau denies the truth of a recent statement that Spotted Tail's In dians are in dan v er of starvation by ne, gist to provide 'their ' supplies. On the contrary, it is_ stated that there is an • A ituNGRY man sauntered into a Lack awanna avenue (Scranton) restaurant the other day, awl :Isked rather angrily why there was no roast chicken on the bill of fare. The proprietor coolly answered that no chicken had died - that day. Cuant.Es Ptimm, 'of Pittston, oPeried his ice house a few evenings since, and was surprised to tittd a cow at the bottom quietly chewing her cud. The laivine must have stepped in and fell a distance of 20 ft•et the evening previcins, and. had a nar row escape from a liroken neck. M. C. ;Malta:Gott. of the Standard Oil Company.of Cleveland, cl,nies the story published in Pittsburg. to the efttiet that his company is removing its crude oil from the ',producing .regions to tanks in Cleveland, and that.the tanks in the oil regions, as they are emptied, are tiled with water. ! SUNS 7/11W3. tbuudant supply , of beef; Hour and pork Sulu :Emit GENERAL. JOHN M., WbOD- Nyman. has begun the preparation 'of a history of the yellow fever relief move ment, He is sending out blanks to all relief societies whose names can be pro, cured, and it. is desired that the secre taries of the societies shall send. an ac count of the work that was done during the summer and fall. OIL tankage, in the Bradford field is being largely increased that oil may be stored at, present low rated and held I'4 a h :tied-for better market. On the lst of January last there was about 200,000 barrels of tankage in the Bradford field, and it is'estimated that by the Ist of next January there will le two and a calf millions. A man bulldog suddenly appeitred in the little Village of - Leiperville, I)ele ware county, on Monday afternoon. All but a little child, who was playing in the street, tzot tint of the aniutals way. She was badly , bitten in - the leg. About twenty dogs belonging, to the village were bitten, and some of them have since died. The dog. disappeared us suddenly as it came. Tun Harrisburg Patriot calls attention to thr fact that in 1F 4l the- Hun. Daniel L. Sherwood, of Northumberhinil l county, was Speaker of the Senate of Pennsylva= nia, and the Hon. Findley Patfei:smi k of Washington county; was at the same time Speaker of the House. Mr. Sher Man and Mr. Patterson will meet. again as-Demo cratic Representatives in the House next .Tanuary, after a lam of thirty-three 512:101. Nis Ni vis, of Lancaster, who has re leciVed the award to make the statue of the lighting parson of- the revolution General Mublenberg, who has done sonic good work,aud now has tne opportunity to immortalize herself. The report that Miss-Nevin has never been in Europe is untrue, she having spent two years study ing at Rome with the most eminent sculp tors. • She has tried her .hand at a life size." Eve " and a statuette "Cinderella." The statute of Fulton is to be intrusted to Howard Roberts, of Philadelphia., Mr. Roberts has received instructions in the best schools of French sculpture, and a few .of his Works, such as " Hester Prynne," "Hypatia,", and "Lott's Wife," have been exhibited. Sixot - tmLfacts have recently come to light in Lancaster in regard-to a law-suit settled some ten years ago. Merritt Smith left at the Lancaster Nadonal Bank .$3,500 in government bonds in' 1860. About a year after he called for .them, when they could not be found, and ho was charged with having alrcAdy re ceived them. lie sued the bank; and received the full amount with interest. On the trial the officers of the bank score to having returned the bonds to him, and Mr. Champneys, the teller,_ detailed on oath the circumstances of the delivery. Much hard feeling has existed ever since over the result of the trial. ; A few days awl the identical bonds were found in an old book in the lumber room,in the envel- I ope endorsed, by Champneys. 31n. BAKEU, of Hollisterville, Wayne , county, returned from Susquelwinua coun ty a few nights ago with q. 3,000. During the night his outbuilding:4 were fired and destroyed, with three valuable horses and I other - property.. While the family, except Mrs. Baker, .were endiasoring to skim ! their propert,:some one knocked at the door of the duelling. Mrs. Baker opened ; it, : when two rough-looking - men rushed in, locking the door after them. One of them then dealt the frightened woman a violent 'blow,' - knocking her senseless. They then ransacked the !ionic, finding I $lOO. They strong efforts - to - open the safe, in which were the $3,000, but ! were frightened away. Some other fires and robberies were committed at the same I time, and r large amount of - property ;was ; stolen. The incendiaries were belieVed to have been two tramps who were seen about the house the previous day. amanita - • • . TUE old Romans never ste between meals. , Gursiinlns owns a pleoi3 of Land at agars.' Wniconstrt - hue turnips - three feetli . n circumference. . - SwirzEntkun is shipping all her pau .pers to this country . .., • ' ON the average tt inlns In Wand 220 days in the year. • Is 1872 Mianesota had ten mileikar rail roads; iu 1877, 2,225; SECRETARY STANTON'S widow will spend the winter in Washington. Foun young Creek , Indiens have been placed in schools at Nashville. A xitunasra . man has a tame buffalo that works in harness with an ox. -4 TEE Duke of Sutherland looSes $5,000,- 000 by the bank of Glasgow failure. TEE Sugar !imam are all in full blast-iii Louisiana and the yield is a good one. Six hundred aii fifty thousand children attend the Sunday schools of New York State EX•SECRETARY BOUTWELL has prepar ed a new lecture on "Labor and Machine •Labor." - IN a population of 40„ 000, Rutland county. Vermont, averages thirty divorces an_nually.4 I.: IT is the fashion in Paris now for a lady to adopt a certain perfume for herself and 41 o abide by it. DavisD J. KtNo, who was nominated for M, - or by the Workingmen of Bosten,has \ deel ed to run. A T NOR got !sick and . the $41,000 m eeipts a the Grand Opera House, Paris, had to be turned. ' ' TilE Snu ay e th at in New York there are ,20, 589 II n and women who can Del. the read nor write. \ Orr of thirty figh t printers employed upon ilte Memphi Appeal, only' two \es caped the yellow fe r. MRS. BAYARD short story in German 4 the December. St. Niilto A SENATOR MAINE . ha . 1\ chairman of the Maine Reriu 1 committee for the twentieth 1," I AN English agricultural pa I __ a farmer as having planted six ' t varieties of potatoes the past seaso . • TIIF. system of double transmis.st 1 despatches , was successfully. worked the Anglo-American cable last week. ' Tim Railteo News of London gives a list of railways of Great Britain which pay no - dividend on their ordinary stock. TIIF. Swiss Government.will give notice on the first of January of its intention to withdraw from the Latin Monetary Con vention. _ Fete r Richardson, in Texas, which cost the government about $BOO,OOO was -abandoned last sririnff. and is now going to ruin'. Ot t Mns.-Dr.NNIs KEARNEY has-come east, and there is an appalling possibility that - the Kearney family will not return to California. • t 1 GEttitANv wants sixty million marks at four per cent. She can' get all the marks she wants, by the powers, by simply de claring war. ' WREN the Princess. Louise -reaches Can -da, the Royal Guards will welcome her singing. "This is the Maidea all it Lorne," etc. . Ttia discharge of , ; a large number of men from the bonan4l mines at Virginia City, Nevada, he's caused a rapid fall of the bonanza stocks at San Francisco. A - STNOtit.Alt filet in relation ,to the president judges of the state is that four fifths of them .are fond of the sports of the field, the rod, andgun and the dog. . Tim American bark DevonMdre, Cap. tain Falkner, has been seized a Chili lan ccrvette while loading guano -in the Strait of Magellian, and taken to Punta Arenas. . A LETTER of William Lloyd -Garrison, advcwating woman Sliffrays. was read at, a session of the American Woman Suf.' frage Association in Indianapolis (Ind.) Wednesday. - IT is a remarkable fact that the city council at Baltimore is composed excltt sively of Democrats ; however, they will soon divide into factions, creating a prac tical opposition. L'xnnit the direction of -the spirits of his two dead wives, a Mr. Wheaton had crected'a flagpole on Mount Washington and placed upon it a banner of a strange device, costing t?t,io. SnEltnAN D. PHELPS, a leading capitalist, ex-Mayor, and president of the Susquehanna Valley Bank, died at his residence in Binghamptou,N. day,- aged C-t. years. GERMANY .ha: invited England to co operate in demanding. from Samoa equal rights for traders, settlers and mariners with any other natitim, probably on ac count of the treaty between- Samoa and the United States. WILLIAM LLOYD GARRISON did Mot pre side at the Women's Suffrage Conycntion which met at Indian:mons, .altbouol be is nominally at the -head of the movement. Mr. Garrison is nearly eighty years of ago and is quite feeble. LINE Footiset.—",For ten year my wife was confiued to her bed witli such a complicatit;n of ailments that no doctor could tell whit was the matter or cure her, and I used up a small fortune humbug stuff. Six months ago I . saw a U. flag with Hop Bitters on it, and I thought 3 would be a fool•once • more. I tried it, but my fully proved 'to. be wis dom-. Two huttles cured her, she is now as well and strong as any. man's wife, and it C.:)St 141 C only tae dollars.• Be ye like wise foolish."—li. W.. Detroit, Mich. Vew Aivertisements. T V L. KENT, AOENT, • , lIAS JUST RETURND FROM NEW YORK WITH A LARGE STOCK OY WINTER GOODS CONSIz,TING OF SILKS, VELVETS,. pREss GOODS, SKIRTS, FLIINNELS, TICKINGS, NOTIOXS, Which he le selling at -PRI,CFS NEVER BEFORE KNOWN Nov. 6, 1300 K. BINDING. acing mistimed charge' of the Bindery connect ed with this Mitre, I am prepared to do all Linde o MAGAZINE` AND BLANK-BOOK BINDING, *IL, AT THE LOWEST PRICES, lig Consistent with good workmanship Vino Blank Books a ifeelalty. Magazines and 014 Books rebound neatly and cheaply. Call and see me before going elsewhere. A. BEVERLY SMITH. Bindery in 11nroarta building. Park Street, Towanda. Orders by EssU promptly attended to, Zom2 SILVER PLATED' WARE' , ,A SPLUNDII/ STOCK OT RO . GERS I A, BROS' KNIVES, ' FORKS, SPOONS, , • - MUGS, BUTTERDIStES, CASTERS, &c.; &c. NEW AND DESIRABLE GOODS AT • • EXTREMELY LOW _PRICES ! CALL AND-SEE THEM. T. W. ELMORE, - 131 EAST WATER STREET. Maim, N 1 Y, Aug. 16, 1878. ASTONISHING PREMIUM HARNESS STORE ! Hare in stock the largest and most complete assort ment of FARM ANI) FINE . HARNESS That t n be found Ifi any store between Albany • • and Elmira, More • SPORTING AND TURF GOODS! TRUNKS yt,on is to give a to tho readers of TEAM . AND TRACK WHIPS! been chosen Mean central LADIES' AND GENTS' RIDING SADDLES, &c., &c. 1- r reports 'iundred In conclusion, we may that we have everything that can be }tamed conneet:ol with a Illtsaless of this kind,.that we are anxious to rkll. I'altelir and n of ,on nd come up and see us, and we will deoionstmte what we say. At 1 cx -II , CI = • " te••• .ft. 4 • ", Z. V . , ' - ''''' - 1 n V p> re C ' . O a . Fi-s 6. t , . .= CO a •-• fl • 3 "4 .= ,„› . D i 7. .--, -. 64 Li -44 . c.; '' L' ::.,.. . = -.. • 3. - .....; et 4. .: RI re? = 11 ~..., co ri, • • .:... • .4 F. t " 5 . e 7. 1 • ' ` e-i ; a c.: e . V ••• t. 4.1 "r-... a ,t CI 4 • Of . - r• os.: Q .., • n • . V. a c . c, . ~.!, , a 4 t"" 'O 4 }- 3 ri 171 n L . ROSENBAUM & SONS, DRY GoODS,'MILLINEIZY, SLITS, Sic.. 6:c SHAWLS, PR INTS, MUSLIN S, HOSIERY, &c J. L. KENT, AGENT M!MIT2M DISCLOSUR E'S •S C. H. WIEEADON & SON A. large var s lety of • AND SATCUELS A more complete stock of A larger and better tiaeortrnent of PULL DOWN YOUR VEST rl 0 I= Dealers In 201 East Water Street, EGNIIIZA, N. Y The Chmpeet and Be.t Place in the City to Buy! 01.111 GOODS Are bought for Cai:ll, and prices are guaranteed to Ml!===l EVERY DEPARTMENT S KEPT_ SUPT M) WITH TILE LATEST NOVELTIES We claim to do the MOST EXTENSIVE MILLINERY. RUSINF IN ELMIRA, And parties &siring anything In that lino will End ==! As we conduct no faury.establishrnent, our pt Ices are always - plain and moderate. The trachi supplied at the lowest wholeilale pri cos. Special Inducements to Cash customers. Don't forget the place— 201 EAST WATEB-ST.. Rathbub nous° Block Elmira, N. T., 11iay.23, lay CALL AND SEE US !MEM DELEyziN HOUSE, ELMIRA, N. Y Cliposlte the Depot. C. T. SMITH; Formerly or the Ward Hoose. Towanda.Pa T 1 I. C I= DRUNK- etmes a Intemperance and the u..,e of Opium, To harro, Nat'Cotioi and Slime ants, removing all taste, desire and habit of using any of them, ren dering the taste or desire for any of them perfectly odious and disgusting. Giving everyone' perfect and trreslstable c,•ntrol of the sobriety of them selves and their friends. It prevents that absolute physlealand moral 1110S trntion that follows the stiti.len breaking off front using Ptuulants or oat cotks. • Package. prepaid, to cure one to five persons. r. or at your Drtigelsts. 0.75. Temperance and char- Ital , le MICi.III,I should use It. It 14 liarmiegm.atitl ❑ever-fulling.' 1101' HITTERS :111 , 0. CO., Sole Agvuts ItOCIIESTF.4, THE HOP COUGH CURE I)estroys all pain. loosens the rough; quiet.; the nerves and produces rest. it neve, fails In per. forsulnga perfect cure where there Is a shadow of Wipe. Try It once and you will find it so. ft • FOR SALE BY ALL DRUGGISTS ATTENTION FARMERS If you wtsh to well your HAY, GRAIN,'BUTTER PROpIICE generally for UZADY CASH, at the Mena market Aces call at SMITH & PARK'S WYSAITIIIKii, PA, wbeke you will also end a well selected stock o good's, selling at bottom pikes. Wysaukluit. Sept: 20, II?7. TNCORPOItATION NOTICE.- J. Is hereby - gh•en that an appllcalloo w1:1 he made to the Court of Coln - ea:on Please! Ilea , lford County . at Its next ses,lort. for a charter of Ineorpo rattop for the East Merrick Cemetery. • P. E. WCODITUFF, J. J. BARNES. S. B. CANFIECD, N. W. BARNES. OEO. C. ATWOOD. East Herrick. Nix. 7, 1878. u'.~"., .."%?. _, . '~"~,. ..: ._ .t'";~:,';E. _i;.., nom, ; r7{~r:~r^.;.~`~~_:':i;; y'S„ ~3~. . • • Q a ll ER I FF'S.. /344.1.E8.—8y ;, hou virtue ' hapro y ed . with a f rame d :. se and' few fruit trees of Sundry a r fr a fa eo egcait of the Court of . the reon. fbelzed and taken 'lnfos:scent - ion at the Itj Common Pleas of, Bradford county, and tome tit. • suit of-gem C. Atwood vs. (leo. W. Hendricks. rected. 1 will elpose to public sale at the door of • No. 25: ALSO- One oilier lot of Lunt, h., tf mr . rda boxy., beam the undlvided One-eighth this interest We Court noose. In Towanda, on Intl-BAY. DE, evatistit gth, 1873, at 1 u'etoet P. Sir,the,follow- - of defendant In the following detterilool tof, - : 1,,,„,,,, Ina' described property. te.ortr : • • • - ded on the , ;:nortli by lambi of N. N. Betts; east. by No. 1. ONE, lefuf land In Towanda bona., loon- sfalutat. and N. N. Betts; smith by Statetst.. m o t ~1 2 ded as follows; Beginning at a corner of a lane on Itte west by gecoonl-st.; containing one acre of Moo, the west side of Main street, about 20 feet South'of more or lISSB, with a large frame dwelling. house. 4 ,a lot formerly-owned by Perrin Welle;titouett west. lergl frame two a number of .grape. vino I and. erly on a parallel line VIC*. Said Wells lot bailie , ' fruiten ornamental [ryes fhcrftn, centre of an alloy, which alley lacing half way from No. 29. A.l,S.thrtThe deft".llantts equal and mll. Main street to ttecnutt street; thence _southerly !,shied Iti Interest in -one tt: her Mt of land, sltnat,-,1 along the center of said alley to lot 'sold by 3.-F, partly 111 Towanda, boria.,•anti partly lit Toter.mla Means and wife to Robert Mclntosh; i heneo east- . twit., bounded as fellow's; Onthe north by the Poo. erly along said Mcllitosh'a line to the west bble Of • ell farm. so called ; on thu easF by Lords o f ti d . Is.u. Main street; thence northerly along said line of stow estate; ..n the south by the puldle tOgilway4 Main street toplace of beg:Offing; being aboin 146 : anti on the west by the public. highway and tai t. fent front oh said Main street, aod about 156 Feet of tine 'Ward estate; containing 50 r.cres of - land, deep, with 2-two story trained truildhLs thereOti; more or WIN. about all improved with a Pam,' btdng the tattle - piece of /anti deeded by .3. F. Means dwelling house. framed barn and orchard or !nil: and wife to J. IV..3leutts. by- deed Uste.tl April I, ~tires 'bombs'. Solzed and taken into executt o ,,. a ; 1875, tt..d recorded' la deed book No. 129, at, page • the author lames Idercor s'll. Charier. Merco c. 101. .Selsed and taken into eleelltion at the suit of 1 No. 27. ALSO-One other lot of land. In Apr a " Brown Brothers. vs. J.-W. Hearty. . • . I twp.. !thunder! on .h 3 north" by lads of Wro. Eton; No. 2. ALSO-One other lot of land situate to , east by lam:aid VrCderlek lurch/. wuith b., : 4 „a ; Sayre village. Athens tem., bounded on the north i of B e njamin ;tones; and tenet by N o d, of A ,.. , ,„ by lands of Ifeward Elmer & Co.; cite the east by: —.....----; containing 74 acres of [atria, snort- ~, the public highway A on the south by lands of Da, i levu. about 50 acres Reproved, with a log I, , 0 ,... , Yid Reeves; on the west 1 1 an alley; being 100 feet I trained barn and iew, fie& triers there o n. 5..;, - rt front on said - public highway. and 15u feet deep, and taken InhtezerittiOn at Mosul: of Clark te,,ret.•.. - with 1 framed building 2 stories high, Osed for two ' ...orn. vs F. r. I.yon. . . stores, and 1 frae•ed 2 etory building used •fOr Otte i A 7..; ri, 28. ALSO-One other -Mt of latol. In it,... store, and I flaw fl barn thereon Town.. bonneted ,rtn the north by-the ataib0 a: ,..!.,,.. No. 3. ALSO-One other lot of - land tn. Sayre , east by lands of 11.. K. Adams:- south by fie- tom village. Athens twp..hounded on the north by land l Ft How's lot; and weet by Maim:O.:l..loz at,,,et 1 ,, of Howard Elmer & Co.; on the east' by the public I feet front nn m.,l„.ar, tend l a n f r et 4 ,,,„ p. ..., t;, , , highway ;on tile south by ;and "f WIIIIII•In 5 : 11 i 3 I1 framed novae , frame d barn, framed strop and A :: • andOtt tine - west by an alley; being lOU feet front, ' ; fruit trees th ertrun .. . and 1W feet deep, with I framed dwelling hoinets I No. 29. A I,Sti--t.me other lot of lami. l e in,,,,. thereon. Seized and taken Into execution at the "t boro..•bountled north by a public taro-, I t't: lIV tit,. '6llll of Wm. If. Lyon Vett. vs. AtionlJah,,,Kunt. 1 _Wyatt: creek ':•aoutli •by lande of Win. ent,r,,,,,v, No. 4. ALSO--Une Mlles lot - of land eltuated in I and west by lan -a of Or. Rice: meth:4,ll,g an a , r. Towanda twp., bounded on the north brisiele of J. I of laud. more or Ins., ail Improved. nn 1.u:1.1in0;.. I'. Kirby ;ou the east by the . puldie highway ; oat No. 39. A LSO-One 011 ) ,.r lot of lamb Itt t,•.,...,1 the south by lauds of Mr. Lyman Illackuitin ; and t w p .bourdled Oil 1b0,,1,01.111 Int hod-, o r - al . ~_,,,, en the west. by lands of IL W. Nolges nod S. E. Lung; east by lands of .1. W. Park wand. L. 11. Yr. r . Means; containing 11 of an aer , of land, inure or arm; south by land., of J. W. 1 , „, k r , a , i i t. „.,, ~ _ less, all Improved, ulth I framed liOnso.,l framed sin, ar l d.on the west 'lry lamb, of J. W. rail.- ~, , barn, corn crib, hog pen. Be.. thereon. Seized and Amoord Taylor; containing 120 acres of foul. n• o e taken Into execution at the s uit of J t io. 3, finekle't or Inosf. storm 83' arre4 illttlTOVvlt. Vtit In :1 !rib rrl . use vs. Dennis ta Constantine and l'atrlek COlistaii. 1,,,,,,,--frotil7.ll barn and 2 Orcllard-. of trot' it • A tine, . • thereon. liii7tot RTltt taken ant, t -,,t • - 0 tt,•...., I , No. 6. ALSO-Ono other lot of land situated inn 6111 c of Stephen Elwellvri. Alexander Iti,!,,fr. ar,d It. „ 'Monroe twit:, bounded as follows: Beglonnig on 1,. Parks. • • - , . the south bank ot the dent • ern; at abirch• nun•. N, - ..31. ALSO-One other tot er !:•.,nd In Albeb: nine north 140 perches to the nbrtir-east corner of and Monroe twfre."..leontMd tot follow:: 11. gd ,,,,,, A. Johnson's land to a post co n fer; thence east '-'8 at a fallen oak. Ito-nee, south 32:i0 not 2 1 .2 , .., ',craws to a post enruer. tot the 'Elf% !ill-.; thence perches (OR pod and sliTnew; Menne nor 0 south 22 perelertl to a pine illnun cornier ; th.mco wt :-: 317 p,,,rches to a pryA atel'stbee.: [ben'' , t, cant 3% perches to a post corner 1 thence Sontli Ili 32 , 40 east 212 1.10 bemires to aen rot r: th.•;,,..... •,• , peaches to the road on the stria!, bank of Kent run:r,7„!,_, o least 217 .1t ics . -,rel . r 0 the place or nn-4::nin . r7: thence west along said coati ea perches to the place containing 420 actes or tai % upon, 't,r it,..-P, I „ '• i'l. of beginning ; contain:be, T.i.: acres of andAnore or the Jo , epli A nder,ott warrant I. exeep•l., Ft ~d T ,. less, about 3 acres iiiiproleil. 511111 I it g house, I serving from this convefane , it !hit poi. too It, •... cow sited and few ft tilt trees thereon. Seized and of h..retirf:nr, conveyed to Dan! •11',-e 01,,,, 4, l'lt t ,.. Liken Into exeenthin at the full of Lovice Sharp vs. Brown, by ,ald Lyn, in iliac/truant th1,cr0,..,--2,, , .. s . moses C. Johnson. , Is Int:may-a to inclode only that Pollios :ytot: v. , ..: No, lb A LSO--One other lot of land sittinted In. of thin cre:di, (excepting and reserving ; tr,o .f t n , Warren twit.. boiled: it as follows: Beginning tit a' anent 28 :tyros lwre'ofore t'fOlOVye-1 to li t e i • - •• 1... ~., stake and Stones corner of lot , old to 01511550 Els- ham); contr,lning 3'25 acres of laird, nor:, u : ;.,.... „., been by party of the- lirst part. (N. (s:.Elstheel; improvenemts. thence north Bal 2 ° east 164 rods to •a takß and 10, ,2 - A 1,:-0-tta'.• oth,r - lot of` land in ‘4,...., ; .,. stones for a earner as , a rornt r oflots t Noi. le & t‘ ,. / ... h„,,,,,ii.,i, as forloWS: 111.0IIRIII11 ;It ti Ito: : t• 12 of the Lukens tract ; thence north 2!....0? east 120 the road learlin,, ,, fruit, the Berei,.o. Atm; ,', • to rods to a rock 11, the creek : thence tltith,s7 o east f lnn o c „, o „,, m i,i, and on the 00,1 slits bi rn 1-. I. 111 reds 10 aet Clint ; thenue sootlt '2..i. west 52 rods It 8., thence :Jot:. Olio •Ilee of anti ...ill nee! -• ,ti;• to the p l ace of 1/1101111411:1 centalning's7, acres and 14c 0 6:1,1 20 Tl'd ,"'fil a post: :10.tr0... ,r, :Or 1 0 .-,,-: 141 rode of land, more or less ; e3eep;ing and re- along said e d ln•ond 10 r o d., t o , a fe,tl: tio•:•••• ••••• • •n, i....rvlng to the party of the first part, his heirs and 2.,ttest .rdongF-thl rallrond 4! rid, It, t: too , '; i'..•,t t•• w-igns. the i i ht of way scions the above described north 83;•-, 0 welt 21 toils. ,to a s::0-; th r, - to ptel!...e: from the road tt - ; the totter half of ha No. 2,0_4? east Is 5-10 p , relo.;:-. It, a po4t; !hero... .:-a I I'2: I. the n. . 61 Itolttettltittlf t place : also glide:: to ; o l i o e „.,-, t o to 3-10ods to a bet:lto-1c ..rt.;,,,,;,:,th... ,r sold party ot the tce....1.4 part the.. ightof way where ~,,,,T i : 77 . . T 0 , toot Ir, 1-10 it ,,, 1,,...., Id ..,., I , „.,,..., ~.., les now gots oil bald let ; partly imprOved, no bullet- brtogemeot alai:lt:cot oa the t ant ei h• -•f It, et,•• ', I hags. thenoe north 17. w es: 2002-11.0 hod.,•lie-, lo a pea; No. 7. ALSO-One other Mt• of land situated bu thence north el 0 'otiet 592 MO rod . .. to V.a,..,.. ,:1 I ttt . WartlMl 111111, 1.1011114111 as fultows ;On the west by ginning; ronta thing 5 arms and 1341,1,1,1 sod t,,,,1, !Mills of Munson,.. Klshree. on the north by lands more or less, with a. -- 7-a-Ty mill abd dwe::ing Se,- •• held Iry the Lint -to, estate. tat the east by lands for- th,rer,. s.,d 3 cd. ar r d taken into e a. ~,,,i,.,, ~._ ..,.,.... merly owned 1,5 Tlannas t relwalader, on the south :nit of Christopher:Matt vs- Lyibal t 1;:no - ki,.,•,. Inc labels of .'anion- lArgers; beginning at lane south- No. 33. A Lsti-Imo .other Jot of 4.u.d. In l'.•ter western corner of said tract, thence north 450 east twi t , 1.:w001...a On the nortn.by 1an.,!.. or na:: I ; ~:. 181 perches to r. post: thence north tra•l t 0 east CI i.1.-ii: east by Ills C.l•aptobarant r: Vert eolith by 2,3'0•S pc re ;es to a post: thence sunlit ell , wxst 22.7 3.10 of 31. S. Warn- r: and vv.sst• by publl.• ittgir , ay a' .1 p..t.,•1.1. , :i to a post : thrum- north 45.1i° west 41 7 , C -10 Jamie-of an: I.: cor r tal trim; II 0 ail ......,; . .i a • ,-i27 p .rcLes to (Mr irsglnaltig : 1-Iflirtlillll7, ~40 111 - 1 , 6 and too re o v O t t,. alb - li tt proVA, sill) a (1.461•1 t'1.,,•'1:-'{ n 7 perches of Lind. 1,11,1"1` Or. items. u-',,: ' y ill , Pr` v" , i• h o ur, (mined oart:.•iloff t :..., ,, ..!:er ~,:t b1e.; ;. ,. ...; . Willi 1 framed house. 1 framed barn with sheds a:- and two orchards of trait nee, th,-r •,,,,, .s b... 1 Melted. other onthathltngs an.l orchard of Quit and mi•on itito . i.,7c .. ....:1.1,nr at lb., suit of W. ~ trees thereon. RittiZtlll 31111 taken iti . a. , execution at pi er ,- ; ,..,,,,T 0ir , x ~i. 11. V. 1411„,„, and 1 e ... It. m u. , , the mit. of Y 1 3,1 , , , 11 Elsbree vs. Dwiitl. Wll,on, 1 No. 34. ALSO--f lino other 1,1 of !ate!. It , I at, •,-, No. 6. AU:tit-4/m; other lot' of land situated In top.. 1,, ut01 , ,,1 :14 foilt.v.•,: lit globlrg nil a , orn•:.ta Athens tw 1,., hounded on the norm 4y-1at01.., of • toe renter of theEmitl r. r. , 1 !t-5d in;! (ion, I"2', ;,.n Georg , Ereantr,cl,.; on the east by lands of Albert 1 „,„,,,,..„ T o „ : „,i a. „„,i. ~ th e 11 1 ,, !,,,,,. -a- sir , C amphell :on the south by ta:nnin, ref N. C: flat rt: : 1: ,,,,; ~,.. ~„,,,1 1 i a1 .„, 1 . m ,,,,,,,,,„ „ 41 , 4 ,, h .,, i 1 10,.. ~,. a. It ~„in t, west by lands of. I lotace NS:fills:on es- aril r,,,,,,,-,4 11,1-lirel. „f h ~.., 0 „.,,,,,.. hy.„ 1•„•-•1•„•-• ~ tate ; cobtainlog 12 . 4 nen,” of d. . iae more or les , . 1 ,..,,,,,,, , „ a 1.,„ g T h.. , a ,.,,,, 43 I , ~,.1,,, , , l o a 1 ,:i..; ,:•.,t about JO :fetes ittiproVeil. With 2 framed lioilrei, - , t , 1,-- on alo. :,one. -bit of:, •inall sti ea to of •••• - a - •-r trawled barns,l hog tion-e. I corn lonise. other oat- T„n,,„,.,„, Sr. T h e T. 10,,, and TT , T . T , T . T . T ,, T . T , ~.1, ... , , „ ,.., T buildings and orchard of frailh tree:, thtreon. :e. 7,-1. , ie. elies, f . a post , n Ili • 1. , rt.: nat. l. of :r. , - No. 0. 'ALSO-One oilier lot of land situAted in „,.,,,, „,, .„, m ..,,,,,, :k. „„ri In , h „ ~„,..;,,, ~., „,,„ ktlrens-teinolod 1.11 the north by : tads of 1101„ ~,,,.,,,, .. n.1i„ .„ ,1 , ,,t . ~ u 0,, ..,,,, ~,, ,„.,... .., ~..:,, ~,,,.. w-1,11„; 1 „„ estate; ~ a nt hy iatolsoi .latilt•ii Is lilf el ..• 0 , yeT , T • ,T, T .„'„,„ T „,T . •:, ..., T •i,,, 4 •-,, , ,, ~T : ~,,,,I L.d. south ily taidlZilf J. fir tfith and potrde hlghway : 1 - , ".., li„.; lo .i.,• cent-r of I:, Car-tot, r.• ri T.,,,,,,,t3 and VI coat by lands. of Sellut Kirby; contl.taing 5:, ,-„,,, i ~f , ,,,, ~,,,,,,,,,..„1. ~, „;...,,,.... of 7, -,,,,:, !,, ...:, acres of Intel, tribre or le•S': r_o Imp, occtitoto.. sole- ; aml thonce by the: r 'it.' r ~f ,thi i,, , 1 1,1 trtl oil :11.1,1 1:01,11 fa'. V Xertltltt.l ,1 the - sult of A. C - • 0 ... . - , • . • .1 •, , • I . 1... •., • 1 r• •i• r,- Elsbree arol J. 11. Pike ss. Abratalionsicker. ~„;,„.„.,,,..: ~,, arse "and 1 , 12 ~.; , .1,„..... - 5 , 1 ,-, 0 „,,,,,,,,.., No. 10. A I.St t-Or.r• t.ther lot Of lewd :tit:41111 111 ho 11I , LItilltItt f. ~,,-.A. In -.. n,nl II tit: .. V . '‘l 'llOl a 1ra...1- [li° !own • f Manion, tst.ite •-f NOVI' I% rk. tool town- ,_, l ~,,,,,,,,, ~,.,.,1 trnm ,,, l ..„,,, th , r , „„. • - ship of Allem, State of pcnoeylvaolo, koowt, an ,t, , t 1,,,,,,,, ~,h , .., It , 't o : 1. ',„1 I t o (-„„,, t0 top., Villtlgtt Iltt No. rt, In a•twil, tt,,l'••111,1 'lan. '2 . Ilii1;, ~,, , , , ,, o a.., .. f ., , ,,,,,,.: : 1 ..4 .11 „,,,„,..„ al , a ~, 1,, ~,,. le 11:, orli , e 1- r rr cortl ( ,4; tit ,I. ells fo r . lirad ford ~,,, ~.,,,..,,., , t , Ili ,. m , , ,, , i .,,,,,, ~,„,„,,g cr .,,,,„ t „. „. ,_ .I.olllllly, in oot•0. of ire Is No. 74. lit la , g.• 23. an,l ~„,„ 1 .,,,,, 1 to ii „ 1. ,,,„ 0 . ..", 2 „.. ~.„1 adj ,„„ , i „ : tormti-t1 as fo•ams: Bet:nano); In the ' ,vol t tine o f t .. . _ 1'1,4 I 111 /.1.1:11, Wl'l'ttlt I 11't Iir1.1• Ltlttlll. am! rob i e Erie , Hallway C,,.'s nand. at the t. ,, ri It ea,: cot.- T ., T ,,, T , „..,,,.-„,,a6.7a,0 , a„: by a I,m, to i I..• , :ing tic or not NZ. I, fortilerty •0;d to J. 11. Moriy. WO „,..,.‘,. S il , ~r _ a i, 1 .w..:. .....„.„ . It ,„ ~ ~1 - 2 , ., ~,„ r "'" .i " g " ' ln ' e • '''' ” ' tc). '''''''g''` i ' l l " I 171 f t'' an ' t 9 ch., to „ col tier I „ the 1:10. r.• 501.,nr, , ,, Li od •,.'s it,clb. to tle• cent.2r of illaol• rd siteet ; th,•nee .‘,„„ : ,,,, , ,,,,,, 12 ,..,„ it.. . ~:„..,: „ .d ,:.,.„..,,. „,., 4r . ,;,, /1:1,11C , e enter of said air- •-t s el fe-t to'llie south- T. ,,, , ,,,, ii ,, , ~,,,,T T.. „, , „...-„, .., a. . f. ,,,., .„ ~, ~T . 4 , ea-t col •et or Mt No, 6. Lehlgl, Valley ilousz. lot : ar , „ .r ,, h , ,„ „,„„. t . a , i ,,,,...;,,, - ~,! , ..i l i..„ . ,L. ~f 1! 11,!1 ,, . 11.! 110 rly 3101 , g ,3011 i 0( 1:4 feet a ',,cites. TO., ' rantor re-en-31.4i for 3: lir rya ba.get-o, ,ia,a the Ertel. Ile. ay Co.'s •antl : theto•est,ster.y a nog .. , „ il l. t g o a. -.nn-n I.s. ninnynt. foe n il alitil,-.; het ,wit inirl 50 eel, t,, :Ile p:aee ~: br•gint.n..„;: le-et v• thn. ,. ~,,,,i i, ,,,, ~,..: u.„ l ~,,, , 22 ., ~,,,,,;,„.„,i , ~.7 . ing I'2 fret In e.itltli along illa I:-te Railway Co.'s T. ',... c .,:: T, ~,,,. T „, , 1 ,, ,. . T ,,,, , ...,,,, Th ., A IT. , nr , : ,, T , , T, land 'or a lilgl x ,.ty. t5:. ,, L , •0l and tak• a lot. carer.- :.' ','„ . ~,, s . 0 1, lt , t • ~n ot, •,,,,, ot • bt. ,t ~.• 0.11 tit rho 61111 i e'llaries tl. Ilanna:.;..l Leanilte: l ''' r ''' . ' l'''' ' , " ' ' •-- - ' ' ''''' ' ' noelit 7' .. l'fit 36 r•tbt.t'lltS 1.1 Itt, p',1•••• or I. Wati . .-er. I.:Vr',....lNieerg.-- W. itanna, d,..'d. vs. Jas. . ' - , -., . . , ~ .. . 111 ir, 0 and Joni., Iltn.k. \ n•ce: 0./3 • 13.1 . 1!Ig , , 1.., 1, I. i.. 2 1...,., 1.,, Z.i 0. It. r%1.,5t1•- , t e oiler lot 01 lanna ,heaved in ''' ''''''''' ' - ' Hil ' ' ' - - k i„.•:, t 2.1 , „ : ": . ',7 : :: d i . , " ... .1 .. ; ' 1 ' ' ' l ,T t' l ..,”, ( An. u .g 1,1,...1.1.unde .1011 tees (101.111 hy I.ll4itS 01 F. , ~,,!„.,, ~:, („0„, .; it. .•..1.11 :, ' ,1 aTI • X. "-"''" itch 1:- A ' 1 -Ikl '" 'l'4 by i '"" l ' ''' r \'''''' la-: L i . l.--f, r-- •lo:ol•ol :nr „.1 , 1 .0., ,G. M. t.tke1.),1,14e: ."oth . bY •• wds,to (i• mg.- lioi Rios ,•::.- ~,", jr „ . ~.,, :: . ,..;„1., ,:, •,., ....,•. -,, ,il„. ~:,,• 1a ,,,. : .,, a t ~, by ~,„4, „ I.,._,,,,ar,t.t'are: ~.rnialn- m „,..'.... ,i„ •,I . , - ." I . it g 'JO acme, Or lIIZItt. fee•re or out:: ri acres ".... '-' '. ' Meier .- - a .r ,o , ;:no th ~:-•• :.tai 2 Ino, rove ,I, with 1 if .iIIIIIti tt , .0.11,e,:.'1 It1„.1 .. j . /011.,. I ~,., i.v t, ~,,,. „ ~,... , ~ .. ..,;• tratoril Ito - R.-1 friintol grain ts..,Li ac With sh, ds at. ' • ~ , i' , „ .., ~ , .., I , ...11 , i,1, 0.1,1 ~:ch.,....1 of iota! t • It. t t•t11 , ...-V •tt ti- Ilit'.ll I , llott !Luxe lOU, ttlertat•tll at Ilk. :4111 . 01 10:115: IL, ~,, ....' : t. NVO'blt'S Il t rIlt..1.)01.1 . 11 Mencli. No. i 2. Al. l.tt-Ittle other in , - vibe' 11411. .tlrulelt north Ay 1 tbris . ..t.,t 55 1,1- v,- 11..1. 1 k,rk; ,•:,•,. I.y L., ,1- ,N .,, . . . •N,..., ~ .t.: ~ nth 1.) . latal.. -- s , f 4 n..stei ManN.: aud we-t by mats of BeesM of 11.4I,It: t . 44.:',4"144i..Jr,"4 Licit ~ or titt.i, inure er It . ,'. about 1.11 laproted ot‘li I (rano ..i holt-% 1 111,111•..! tar,, 0I th sheds nttaloe .1 and few ft ,tit irt.,, iii, , ct‘tor. itit •iliz 14,,; itot tit \ . it r of the Canal Moo t 0.... st. Se.zed alai taken lan) e...:- ...at. ion at Ito suit . t MO.!) 1'a*.4.; . 11, wile of L •....o. Itart•ott. S. A1.1:211:4,4 L. 4 '4lllptett. N 0.13. A Lli i-1111.• 0;11, r lot or land lit Multi ; •• t•at b0r.0.. bounded on the loath by 1a.i.1. , ..!„ J.• ‘ Morl , y and ilha.ist,r I stoup; eti , i 4 , .): 1 6 ! Sense., 1 : 4 . 4,5, 1 1,1 l'Y W. A. 1,1 •": -"ufli by I - I • `' P l ll'il'' 111 . 411 . .,,,' -.ay; :Ind west Ity 1:113! 44f .1..1, Stoney:. on:al:nog , .., au a. le 441 Is. 41, na,re 4,r I. s., o i.ll 1 fitatied I lonia., I ,franted tarn :.net sew' I rust [rat, 'llan ...ti. No. IL. ALS' t—anie . I la . r 10, of - Ittinl in lieri 1 tic :: ti bon,. bontoled. i• .the tooth ty 1ta..1. of 11..1ik. tor 111,111,[114 and Jut formerly .3 , 30...1 by it. titan , m,,r,,y: 3a..1 by TIP' punt!. hig . ..oav; 5e.1.111 by land, I of Loo r, brother , : and IN e.l. by :trot', 4 . 1 .11414 M.4n.4y; I ... , 1113ibr.4g , ! 4 , of tut o :and. Tome or . as , , all itilialival,oll:l 0'... 4 (Lt....Lb tiniag 11.3.1 fort 4...1- 1,4011 11101... n. Seliod a:, I u.!: , '.itit4:l at the suit of .14.111 r 31. r'il'e Is. Julia A. Call.iit , aal 31. i.i. citikitt-. _No. V. ALSO—nu, n utiar lot or la:A i,, 0,,,,i 01 i . twit_ .totit.tied . n ti.- ot.i...i .s. i.f S' Lend , of ilf... 1: -. 11).3r.1 I, M. I.3..cerit ..• rat : en'.!en'.!l. 'ones:! . ..f C !Vara , Sir, ry :nol Alt tot Str. vy : ,uut . ll i ) I. 3. pablie high, it . ..; Vaal iieSt by .1n,..!, of Alma Ilev..riv a nd ltatilTal 11. - very; rentainieg 4i .....re, ut land..idol... or rt.,:, 1 all Improvt .1. a, bra ding , . but few fruit tr" , .. ital. on. ....to.- .1 and tal.en into 4.X4 cl.tJ;ll al the ~...tout of Wil.i.ant UM,!, IC, ti, vs. Mahlon•M.l...a , e. j N... In. 31.:u—(1,e other Ica or 1,1101, In 51....454. 0 ; (loin top ,I. ,rod-. 1 Ittorllt a1t.1..3.4 133 lan!, of aolui Calial:: south Ly ;and-. (.1 , rat. let .liltals atat %Va. lIL Slates: and w 0...: -by . 1a...1, GT' !tarry stioi..., 1%11.1,11••, s iiert•s. - L.' lir I'l,l and Cla,tec t hi ,d. cold...thing 53.;x, ..., . f lard:in...re or b:•.: al.otit 40 tier, law., ea; with I i•••,,hottse.with trained ad ....tan, 1 - tramed barli 31141 4 , 441i311.1 Of Trait 'lra - ... ;114.1 , 011. Splietl antl lal. - , 4 1: Into o,,entiuit at 11,,, suit of 11. M l ....illett :mil 1.. LI. 1 . .. it ),. William Ikon. V Ni'. 17. :)1.).4)—0ne ot to.r h.: of 1.,t.:1 in Toaan. I tl3 1,010 4441,41.114414:41 as 101403 s : 1:4 . 4i1411114; 4, • tin, 54 , 1114 44 4 1.;• of r. i•ltir-,.t.. al• a Coltt. l r of a 12-f. ui a:- ter, thou., s altherly al. t'g we , : Ilia at ..4.1 a.a y 2 I f, et It meta', 10 a corner .4 John .t.laon. estate Ilot: tlanee WV •.•rly l'i :vet to a' - ...ttrtter : tuan., I :that); line or "auto southerly 49 fecr l and 1 it.i less ~.. I - corner of Cant of Win. iilliam .... , rli?1 t•thei ... aloi.g I I tuttott...rihil's north line oaderly 1I ft' and ~ in, :44 ••1,1; 4 t3 1:44, - lot soltlll',el ... , r.; Lite:.`: ttiong tut.' or ••Litqrittitt,c" 4 , 1 :to ;hell?: 73 feet .0.41 1. I . .yrtn.- 1 to 01. F -swath Mau; Pop.: rod hereto:of 3 ti,,33;;',..ii,,1; 1. i 1 then,',' along 44011411 line of 5a1a,J1'4 4 14;4 , rt4.1.... - a3t.rly ‘ ; 2S,Vet 9 incluo 3 , to the pli,ce oft lailnia . ngt. will, I 1 thfee story brick buinling 'Mai-A:Qat:aut. con.- ; nont.y knot nas 11,,, - V - .01et . )1 , nn. , P.. • '' th,,r,,,,it. Ho. lug the same piece oriatidso teyt .1 by l'. 31. Man i ~ ille to said .1. 1.. McMalati by 34-ezl 413!t.41 Dec.l:.n 1 1 . .74, and rre.....13..1 in .1..e.1 boots No. rzt,lat. 1,4:,'. pro, $...... Also all the right, title and niteiestol tato .1. 1. 3101,11 mi it, and to a eartalit '..41'10; Wail 01l the U.. 4.4 nit! , 0t Sal4l lot, 2,4•111 g I,:w cast Mall of - the 1 . ' ,tot I i• ,a 11444, Cmapti y • s t attain 4. .: or . I.:Z.ltt. ' liotiso• - 11,4 . .wl. forth 'ln Al n k•, of a-Teri:ant .1.1. : .t - . ••agnst 2. 1170, and rt . ...trot.: la d , ee book N... 132, 1.1. A at ;nage I. No. Ist Me other to: of land in Towanda I ; burn„ bounded as follows :• 1: ,, 01111111g 3c3 1 ,4, 1nt 4 n 1 1 11. 1) Barth At's line, 111,) orno-r of line alley. and 1411allitig nest 31 , 1ng saki 1:411311.41t's line 4to C. L. Ward's lin"; Ina nee 31013 g szild Wait's Illit• no, Lk_ ward:y . 6 feet; thence en a !lie' paia.let to IL U. Itartatit's, to the center of stud wiry; then,. alorg the ,'curer of said alley t.. the Ware of . t.egiiinlng : ' it beiug the , 31114. 1,113 , uf hind ~.mv..)e.l by .tuns J. 1;13111113, and Wlit . to J.. I.: alt . Mation, • ny ,1,...d 'to ted July 3. 11370. and 'ter tail mta in deed nook 1 . ... . 12ii, at png,) 347. \a, Solre.1 . :11.1 tak• • 'alto eiteca lion at 11,13 sii.t of Fit's: 5at:4.4 4 1A1 113111: of foitat,- .I:Ca u , ..3) a.. 1. 1...N1(.31:th0u. \o. 111. 25.1.541-4.11 n.: ":11.:1 1..; of 1..,n41, i - 271 . 44‘,,,.. ila twp., bounded I orth '._y Wins of E. It'. i 1,.....; 10.4 by a plIbl:414 street toh y...: u1.m....1; :arum by i lands 01 Vtil. l't4I1,41:41t1.11V; 3101 11001 145 11.';liill• tilglic. - ay: Is Ilig 53 feet Irony ou 1 , ;(11i pubiie nigh ' way, 11n41::00 lee: ilrer 51:111a fr . :nod - non, their ; on. he:10"d amt taken ;tit.) 33).c...titbit' ilt. 11,0 suit of P. C. Wir.i's use vs. Helen M. Crannies'. No. ZOi .1 I.so—filw: , 4 1, 44 ,,4. 1 4 n „t. ,n ,A . i n . kn ., itlaroqt.7. - Tantinlnq north b..: the public higltv...); tas{ by lands ot- .1. It,, 3'131 enter .Vionf.n.: , atia by bud...o A area 111pley; and 140 , 1 I , l' lamb , 01 Ilti, y Liar. lila.; containttg 2:',1141 . 4•S or 1:1131,•11r.rt. 441' 144 , ..., Antal! awes improved. ,Wllll a framed ;tailidlng used for h.rit, and few Trait trrss Carton. No. 21. ALL!—' Inn 011 i,, II,: 01 land, in .1111.1.'llia twit., 133/10.1,(IcaSt by the )4411411e. highway: solitb 145 lands of . .101111 Smith; north b) land, of Ai - fit-11 111 - ley; and 0051. by land, of Halley II 1 111:341: 1. 011..1 1 / 1 .. Jl 4 :4g'a lier , S 0113101, more or 1e.. , , anout 4.: aeres in, Iltuyt.3l; 1 , 4 WI 3 b. , Z111:41,1414I), a tram,!! bat ii alit! or. Otani of fruit Cie.., thet.....n. S' - ir...d. and taken Into , exc. tit hat at the suit u Franklin 'W. 1'ea5.,.... to 0.., or .1..wa1l 44.1'4 4 1ner0y IS 1.. E. ( I le:we:and mal laa) P. Chas , out. No. '2'2. A LS')—'me other litt "%land In Pike twp„ both/Jed 104 foi.yiv s.: liegltailtig at a pa; on the warrant Ilue of the Kingsbury land. at tint corner ~.f lauds of Miner lirister and • I'lLiodure. IL Itrao shaw, thence on sal.' was rant line , oath 3 . ive..t ,2 'pet t . 1.(•. to the , once. of Milo r Itrist. r and lands owned by Sanford and 1.1.11(1, Whlttit thei.,:" tart,': 4: 0 t5...,t 2, petelie , : thence ' north 4) 0 - eat.: 32 rel.' c 11..: to the place. or beginhiug; emitattiflig-,:li aci..., or land. More or less, all amp: '4.0,1, with a tranatal 'house, 0z..., I 1rm0,,. Sc ![rd ...5.4 'falt-11 1111.4 f :4:4'n 114,11 at the suit of Abel Tur......l.l•.;Elitaitiote 11. 1111131,113 W.. • No. 23. Al.:it:l-4'rue other lot of lan.); in Standing Sante twin., I)..uniled as follows I Iteoutilbig 1,! .1 'heinfock Ntuu.v corner. foituorty an liemlnek nttili; thence along latidgiof G. Bartis.rfOrtli (now N. 2'0.1 26 - 1.10 perches to a, stale corner and 1act.1.6( Ino noyAnark; thence welt (now N. 87 W.) afoug lauds of (..41.1 Clark and estate of Byron, Sti:viths 17 porch. es to a corner In crock: thence Souili 2:1 0 1% 0: , tloi.t it said creek of Itiminu.rtield 22 3.1e0r .. ..1 li 1..5i0 a ;oi er; thence south 1e , ..,.. east a4oll' 4.44.1.1 creel, 5 :3.10 ...)e p ponchos to a COrlier And 0 4 31- of lategg..; tiatiee along the 1.14 4.; reixs .. ....littli s7 ° .: . ant 25 7-lortici..., 1-0 Rue place , or beguating; cutitainin l g tile' taros or land. mute or lei,s, ail improved oil hi are U. 4 1. 4r.t ) n440 liniallt g amt few fruit trills thereon. Seioed and tat:ill into et.'..entlott at the suit 3.1 C., o, LI. Atwooi's use Vs. John I iitinge:t. . : ,,,s, - .., No. 24. A LS4l—ta other 10' . ..hf ;tad, 111 Tots . ...t: rota twp., noulidell north by lan: . - .1..1„ Ca.......r and CO ni11i.,..M.. Mat 11500; cast ~y Ole I.tth;te high way calla.l thy county line road; sOU r il !:y find. of Jerre Ilan and F. U. halt's estate.'4, , •allnt west I, lands of William Pierce awl lild./tartail.ert c0. ,- ughilog 45 acres of land, more or leelf, about 30 acr e s 1 PROPIIIETOIt ,1 1•• u.. • , ti latt4 in:Gra! , f oi r. OM 6.; c.f •,'4l !, .• ii• 7. ri 11 I:. ti '•1 I, y .I.tl I. :tt,l T. wl! )!•!! lit, II -•••; !.y 'IL:. • , . :II: .:::.... 1 : li. r:. y I'. \ 4,•••1•: - .: , 11. ' •. N(.. :;',',. -Vt.S: l --.4 , :::'tr'11 , .r lr•t .; 'a'id. in o,:nr, tsp .1,,,..,n.i.vi ~-', .a., r —rt!l 1••• • y• 1,1t.i, "f I bt ) . I (~,,,, 1. , : •••,, !..: 1,1,1. of I\" s in 2. :yr:: .s. 'rift to, • : ', l irt, :iv !..i1:1:.,..% • :01 I ,••,' ,:.: :I.,is i 4 .1..:1•1 .11..‘.. 'V.,: k :',:;.,: •.!,:!.:,' I ::,,,, ": i:II,i :fr. , I; i•r 1.,, ::1, , , :ma row trait, tr,..• ,klO-ro.3k. ••••• ',.. .1 awl tat -3 In 050 • ~ i . 0.. 3; 31,'• •-:3I . N•f Et •I,ita Nell'1113:i -V, I; -\,. •• AI.•; , , -1.;,•• \illoT 1f or lalol. In T,1., - .3. r..r t t. , ,,J.,11 1, . 1- 11,1 ,, l \O. 111• 10.'111 1 oy t.t 11. of \,. T.,,ie Ling. r; en 111,• 0n , .. • v T 1,4. 1.11 1 1,..1c• lii,.!4w:•y; on i i,.,',.,,,, , • by I'i 0 1, ..• t: b. 1:11.:. - A:1. •i;.11 ,wt.. ~' l'cicr 1,..3r.1: ii,l ...:1 Iti , V:, .. toy vi o l: . r.; It .:,•r Lo.-.ri, ; .n0.117.1..,'....4..^ f iin ~. •r.• of i. 0.1. iwi,,• ~, 1,...,. all 111:1•1 •e. 1.. oili r. li n di, .7::., - .7, ii , 1-.• an.] lois - fratt. No. 31.' A I.SL ,—rtpr! ( !tier !of o I tint in Ta-,3- 1 .. .r:1 twl, homolL &ill 111••-..Lorii , I .Ktf...is or Ma: ii• i.w Lanirll: oictlio , a I. , liy ... .-ilso - 1...ia.: 1:.n..- r. 1 1 - ,1, 1: ..ri lin. • ,al , it I.y Pan 1, of A 1i0 , ..\( , ..0..,-; ..al o, in', •w•-,1 1.,c - iatni. "; :11 1 v11 J:tyl.,7t - , .k1..,!.1i1.....:: - ,1 1.‘1• ,1.111.1 ~./- p 0 1 .1.11- 44 1: - .1.1. :nor, Le' IV 41k,.., 11. i \ .... %.,....1.:n.1%ey, t:. ,i.l", :1 loank loon-% ii it :1S ',IT .•oi ''',...lioriJar I•nift! la -;.:, an I fon' fi - aii iro;iiThor on. No. al. ...1... , )--1,1•• ~ ii•r 1,.: ~f .:.:,.il in 'l'. ~.-, i r - i i :1.. , o'rl , l - oli tho za•ril. I,v hat, 1,...,1 .; .r,.. ,i 0,, \ 1;n:;•.;: .11 tio- t•a•.: l•c 1,...•.... ”i :...-- Nv0..•1, •.;, ro• • 11 1, oy iai..i• ofAti ....lar!..• .i. ,I I i 11. 11.1.:, 1 - .0„1 011 111% N. 1.••• I.V 1.110 j.,1 1 .1 1 .. Ti 1.:11v,:1. - : 4 . .•111..1,1- 11 . 070 • 1. .Nrlii;❑l,,tr.i 'll, .tit nutl t 1 11 p 11 .0 :1 0 - ti-e V 14.ir0• iZtk:c-r. Jr.. tot whor z 1„ !. , 111,.:--1 f.:l' : at th.• I. N.. tit- U.. 10,1:: - 1:y •.:1 - 01: .11: t 4! 1(..• OZE =I iir ilk. 6 WI , , Vt' , •.I`i Tr!! t,f t f..et t 4. ;ti • ,r , ..t.t-t I •nni, .•!" I it. 3, 0 w•••t _ ty: 0... tyr r %,1 & N.l". (%,,131 & ICit. C. 1.1 t!tk mz . ":", • -•• - . 17..• 'i•••• •••( t..lg,a! ry:or t east -.a:: 1•0•rtil•n••-:. • •••. I. t 1 o.'t arm. c•i.l p:ol: thcoco `t°. .':e-t 113 6-io fet•l II• c r. raid N , .. oopti So o ,1-1 1.10 feet tl'.• !tot• of t . linirt tltclicca.:oti-z 211111,4:r; 4,1 1,. 21'2'4 204 N... 1. s: s 2, 1.1. k!...“ 'N 1 . t•01 11/ 1 ~,,1111.,‘ 4 ,1 c6Ol. of to 1...' 1 1 the, c: u.,rlh 4. 2 1'.1 . 4. nit 1 , 1 . 1 It , 1 1 1 e 1 ,.• 1 - E 1.22 ,- .1 str,2 , 411.:1222.2 2..22T1. 12 2 2',*2 2 2 :1221. 4:2" 2 . 1. 10:11,22 c•.r..,4 2.1 N,,. 7.222% 12.:24,22 2 ..2 , 1 4 4.2, 3 21.4 1e.•14 v. 2.222: 414 s 4.,2.2: 41 t. 2 1 2 2.24.41t...12225. 4 2 . , n2.,1.,11.44 14 1 2.2 71 :2,24,2, - .11.,7. 12, :4 slit ~.y 1122.412. ipy . ..7• V. 212 k' 2 1-, 2. HMI,: or 2- , 22 . 2,-- s. p .1 , 4; 420.1 11,01% : :hit 14,t, (1,111 1,1111-11 t , v.. 52424 12. tu., 1'4.; .!C N. V.. 22442,1 ,2 2 4 A :42, 1 4 -.241.1244 111, 1.4! "v. !222-12 , !,.. 4*211,„2; 141 . 111 , 1)1. T.• • • .;11.f. 11: . .1.1•1 1. • I'. N' 2,2.• :21 24,1 .1,1471 t'k..: t t t of .1. It•I ;lAA ,•on'tlrno , .l to ~ .....,41.1,,treitasor tit t 'rt.!" tti: . ...irfmt 1 , , 1,71. i i•f„t , vtlloor .40 , :k:,1 of fr,tif t roe:, 501z.0.1 1 113 , , , x,va110n at tot• suit. of Dat..o! flail:, E. Noble. T , Aran.l3. IN •BA NK rreli.-1n the 1) aicJolat o't the •t• the 1:1,:t et or aof:). • rlOott r, 11. , rettr.. a P.:tot. r Ital. ol Towahrta, I' a t.arthrrert the or r'rrattr”, Itt7, hat ft:}: apptterl for n ..I , ettatge front tot I !dn. 34,4 etir r lir .rnt•te 111.1141 Irrll:'r of the court TVA ive i, hereby tot - e” r t ., r5 h.tv, proved th.ttr ra„tt o zh..r I.ar , res‘ert. to appear or. the of !) I' V.)! 1tE1Lt.,74.. tre1.3.14 A. .1•• t,etnr.rr• J. 7 Inc ;” rl , it 1-try rt.. \thy . a rit •Cilar 1, • 4 grano.,l to the ,thl_trankinpr. trovl4.2tv. Clerk EAT 31 Alt MULLOCIi 11UNDELL 11-z .!rave L401:110; th.• roopb• TO X. th, it v , ry to t , tr...3* • Iblt a cubttuna uf NVU t!nu, ket.l• a, full ply'uf FILLS!' AND SALT MEATS, FSSIt AND i)rsTF.ltz, IN TIM SEASON Wv , alst, keep Zi tYr GAlit/IEN NT.GETABLES; Fl±ti ST, is g.odi delivered tree of eLlttir.• 371.7L1..04•1S- Towandi, Pa.;gort. 19, 1878., 1611 T. tool 1 '1 . 1 • II , (I,:', :1:..r t:s MEI ME BEBE MEM ;• 19i :t t; r ;;•;• MEI =MU EMIT DEM ro, b• 1.., ,i•,:f g : '2 •. • :11.• 1..• 14,1; BE ME SSE 111131 MIME 4‘i7 tt•th •rut :"XJ' t - I 111." - 114111;.! 7i vcr; f••••( • • r.t:l.r.wrai•• of. =I MEE MEE