MI wood. Neportet - EDITONX E. 0: GOODRICH. L W.ALTOILD. tvratda, Pa.., Thtisday, MT. 28, 1878. ANNOt'NCFMIENT. _ Tor several years; past we have been rending ihe REPORTER to quite a number of subscribers without receiving any pay therefor. Finding that this system is not a tueee6ss, we have determined to adhere efrietly tfi ( the advance, system . hereafter.' Therefore, all subscribers .in arrears on the 314 of 'December will have their-in persdis.contluaed; 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 : • l'aril+errnore, experience has taught us that the lowest price at which the REPOR TL P. call be furnished is One Dollar and rift;! Ce-04, in clubs. Postmasters and others who have kindly intemsteki" them selves': increasing' our circulation will le it the filet in mind, and collect $1.50 from ca Ii subscriber, as nothing less than this sum will be accepted by us. , After the lit st 'of January next we shall notify all subscribers two weeks in ad vance of the expiration of their subscrip tion. THE RECONCILED FierTH. Itei , orts having reached Gov. Nwit ro.s that a large number of negroes had been murdered fu Tensas parish white Dernociats k the Governor SOlit Cu!. 'ZiNIABIE to • investigate the 'matter. That chivalroui gen tlemail reports no disturbance of any account. lie says - that despite all the reports of murders committed th'e utmost he could find in that line • wtis that only Omit a dozen* negroes her ln 'rn 1 ill d. Only a dozen ; they were all the marders for political pur poses of schie4olonel ZAcniai be came satisfied during his brief visit to Tensa parish, and they were only ".niggers." Here the coun try has from an official Democratic - Gotiree the fact that murders were 'committed in one parish. of Louisiana by the Democrats to intimidate Re publicans from voting, and it is im portant because it is the first admis sion pf .the kind from native South. eitn Defiiocrats that, such crimes were committed. The reader must de ttrmine whether,. twelve murders having been admitted by the party prbliting by 'them in one parish, a great many Indic, not admitted, hate or lave not -been committed. In a paiish near •Tgisas seventy-five ne groes were ki&d, and altogether in the States wi Republican majori ties have been ull-dozed out of exis through—tli e instrumentality of shut titer and violence, several hun drc(l human lives have been sacrificed in the interests of Southern Demo ,,crat s. .1s there any decent Northern Democrat who can affordto say that until these crying crimes are sup- 'Tressed, there can be too much " wa ; ving of the bloody, shirt? " Suppose in any one county of pcnnsylvania twelve or seVentyAve murders had been eolum:tted by a minority party, and the offices secured through those - m-urders, would there be. any MSS thin of indignation until the perpe • vrators had been brought to justice? Not while Republicans have control. of the State, but where Democrats bare the poWer in the South precise ly such situations are Sound, and the eilOrts of State and county officials have *been . ‘directed to conceal - them. Public sentiment at the North has at last about said tliat this state col afr -fair; must be corrected, and demands ,tln the prosecutions for election crimes in.the south be pushed vigor ous! v. • Tnom:is CocnnAN, Chief Clerk of ,the state Senate .during the last session, is a candidate for the same position main. Mr. C. is perfectly familiar with the - duties of the onkel and is very-popUlar with Senators. Welidve no doubt he Will be re-elec. te(l. Th Lancaster Examiner, in reterrinu to this subject says,: " There never was a tithe when liarrisi.urg was not ready to supply all the Clerkships and offices in the several departments of the • State Government, as well as 011ie offices in both houses of the ,Legislature. At the present time the capital is honored with the Resident Clerk and .iyurbal Clerk of the House, the Pres , hient o 1 the Senate, the Librarian of the Senate, the Watchman . of the Sk:nate, and the Janitor lof the Sen , ate, and now want.. 3 the Clerk of the senate also. We guess not. Thom as B. Cochran, FN., of this city, the villei . ent and obliging assistant. to Errett during _lite latter's elerkship,.Was by unanbribus consent promoted to his chiefs place, and has ever since been universally re garded aS - the right man in the right pinee. 31r. Cochran did most ell r :s•nt work for his party in the cam p:6gn just ended; both here-at home and in Philadelphia as One of the sveretaries of the State Committee, :old he will .be.rezelected Chief Clerk with little or no opposition, as he well deserves to be." • i I Thai Chicago Times gives ' some interesting statistics eiMeerning thOj pork packing business 9f the west froni . weeli we make a few extracts. The whole number. of hogs packed in the entire west durtng -last winter 1454: - ,,44n, representing an increase of 1,404,139 head, as compared with the'preceeding wintei, and at the av erage Nqight-of 187 G-77 equal to an increase' of 1,809,117 pounds?- The largest number packed in any previ ous printer was in I's 74-75, when the aggregate reached 5,566,226, For the rear ending March 1,1878, the whole _ number packed was 9,048,566 bead, -_or 1,638, 392 more than the previous year, which was the largest on record for any twelve months.: Q 1 this ineluding-more dm:1250 points, Chicago packed more than two-fifths. Or nearly onc-half. Tht averagecost I of hogs Tor.the past winter: wiS $4.99 per hundred pounds, net ors2.l9 less than the preceedingyear,and the ag ,T:vgate impact of money Whirled • ME was $5,672,224 less The total ag gregate of of mess pork was 728,368 barrels. IBIrsINEss ritoSPECTS. ~One' year ago, says the Easton Free Press, four-fifths of all the car- shops in the country were idle—pow they all have orderi more or less ex- tensive. The P. it R. R. 11... Compa ny has over two hundred locomotives that have been Used -for eighteen years, while a locomotive is only.eal. culated to wear Meet years'; and all these must be replaced. What is true of the Reuling Railroad ap ;plks alsocio an equal or less degree to the other great roads of-the coun try,. mid this necessary renewal .of rolling stock , will cause a very con siderable home demand for iron. It is just . becomingi 'generally .knoin and talked about that none of the railroads have failed to economize during, the panic on cars and locomo- - tiveS, and as 'a consequence the raiz ing stock of railroads generally, witli scarcely any exception's. has hewn:ie . very much run down. Rolling stock must be secured and repaired before almosLany other expenditure is au thorized, and theirSde, jonrnalsare just beginning to J ealcalate .. the amount of money that will be paid out for labor by the railroads for this replenishment. The figures are large and the contracts that have already been made, are being made, arid to be made within the next few months, will probbly keep the shops going on full time all through Sumner and the following Winter. - These facts are encouraging, and - indicate some important steps in-our_gradual ascent towards -a stable and lasting prosper ity. With our finances in good con dition, .with resumption absolutely accomplished, confidence will come back and . the natural demand for manufactured articles, so , long with held, will enlarge the consumption ; but no sensible man expects that the feverish activity in trade and the big Imargins of 1866-72-. are coming bask, rand does not want them.; for when i the aggregate of losses during these years is subtracted from the differ ence between the cost and selling prices, the actual profits enjoyed be came seduced below what would have been realized from .a healthy and paid-for business. What wise men are looking for is a condition of af fairs where they will get the muney I for the goods delivered and where Ithe margins on salei will be regula ted by the certainty of payment ; and this is the only condition upon l 'which a permanent prosperity can be built up.. With all the imniense crops and unexampled, incalculable mineral wealth of this country, the welfare of the people at large must result from industry in the various pursuits, which v ill be rewarded'fairly in fixed and definite money value, and the savings, the foundation of future wealth, must come from economy, self-denial and the cutting off of lux luries until the 'savings have become suf icient . to warrant them. " times," as they are called, benefit the few careful, shrewd individuals, but only corrupt working people by tem porarily removing from them the ne cessity of economy and self-denial, giving them unwarranted credit for necessaries, and inducing them_ to spend their cash for things they could !get along without. Good . wages are what labor is worth and not compen sation in excess of its value to em- Ayers. With the return of indus trial activity, permanent prosperity will largely depend on the ability of labor to sees and act as though it re alized that twelve years of uninter rupted , • employment at fair wages,ale worth more to Working people than seven years of exorbitant wages and five years of comparative idleness. THE bounty of the people of the United• States toward the cities and towns afflicted with yellow fever, sur asses anything of the kind hereto re known. Some millions of dOI - have been contributed, and now, t when the epidemic has nearly ceased, e authorities and the relief socie ties in Merophis,'New Orleans and oilier places, have large funds unex pended, while in many of the con tributing cities there are considera ble balances that could be remitted if they were needed. All these sur plus funds should be united, and ei ther invested for future emergencies, oriemploy&l to provide against fu ture invasions of the pestilence, with t. a special appropriation to pay the expense of a scientific commission to inquire into the origin and nature of the disease. "Grant, in 1880," is the radical war cry. There is little doubt that he will be nominated and, unless democracy shows far more wisdom. unity and courage than we have seen for yeais, there is just as little doubt of his election. Then there-is little less doubt that hell is just ahead of the republic generally, and of the south in. particular. [Bentonville, Ark., Advance. Row the rebels do hate and fear GRANT ! They know him; they fully titidertan , c_l that he will firmly execute the lavis with a steady hand, and that under his administration the bulldoz er will come to grief. "That's what's the matter with' 'em I " "IN the death of TuomAs H. Pow sue Philadelphia loses one of'its rich est pitizens, and certainly one who has . fused his vast 'wealth for other purpiises than his own personal grat ification and the feeding of his own vanity. He was a thorough business man, and — though ttM foundation . If his fortune was already laid when he entered the firm, much of its increase is due to his' energy and foresight. He was unostentatious but generous in his charities, and many a pt•pd work will feel the last-of his eantest 1 - % ell ISEI ~._~_; :. ffEE=Mil= MEI ' ~... - j. ~'~ EMI mritoviED isirsia;Ess psepzers, Giold(itiya.4he` Tribune, .remains sieady at a pieptiam of one.aightli, and imports fifinr:Europe are nosy_ thought not improbable at in early day. Our grain,and provisions have been going forward freely: The cot ton crop 'begins to go abroad large ly ; the experts last . _ week were 7s,- 443 bales, and during ten weeks since; September 1, ttie exports of the 'new_ crop have amounted t 0.493,88; Weti; whereas only 344,75 i bales had, at ' the corresPonding date, gone abrOaa ; from the crop of 1877. There is no longer a 'dOubt that the crop is the • largest ever grown ;in this country, and the prOspects - in Great Britain and on the Continent are decidOly more favorable for large purchases than they • were a month ago. Mean. while, no material increase of-imports has occurred, and the London market is searched in vain for United- States• blinds to send back in settlement of jiallances. There is some, reason to , . 'kuppose that considerable sales of • American . ' shares formerly held abroad have helped of late to Meet the merchandise '.Valance in favor of this country, but the prices:of stocks . • biefly held in Europe are 'generally so low that a viovemest to realize can hardly become imPiirtant. der all the circumstances some re mittances •af . specie seem not impro bable. ", Business. throughout the country is recovering strength. At the South, the long prostration caused in - the Valley States by the yellow fever has nearly passed, though transactions are still somewhat smaller than they . were last year, and collections from that quarter . are- naturally slow and difficult. At the West, the political campaign has interrupted business to some extent, but ka greater activi:y will now be stimulated by the in creased confidence of dealers and lenders in the financial future. The crop movement continues larger on the whotnthan that of last year, and the shipments of grain from the west ern ports have amounted' from Au gust 1 to November 2 , , to 89.397,217 bushels.this year, against 75.317,149 bushels during \the corresponding weeks last year. With No. 2 spring wheat selling in 'Chien° at 81 cents per bushel, the tact that the move ment continues so large at a time when the farmers - have been for sev eral 3 ears reducing their debts, and 1 when no especial stress for pay s ments is itii4iew to exist, is sufficient 'roof that the . crop still in reserve is extra ordinarily large. All the *tidings from Europe appear to favor an in \• crease in the demand for American grain. The supply thus far, since the seasoii began, has been less than at the same date last year by about 410;1,000 cwts; scarcely .any wheat was being shipped for Great Britain frOm South Russia; the exports of , grain from Hungary have . almost , wholly Ceased because of the itiferior ity° of the crop ; ,France is importing largely, having ,taken in September 1:• - '32,440 quarters, againt 89,853,quar t8rs in September, 1877 ; the old crop .of Australia is reported to have been nearly exhausted, so that only -about 1,200,000 busbeissemain mail able for export; and the exports of wheat from Bi itisk India, from Jan nary 1 to September 27, were only 4,103,100 bushels, against 10,485,151 bushels last year, the mice being such as to prevent shipments to Great Britain.. The new crop will not, be harvested until npril f Apparently; Great Britain will lit any 'case be obliged to depend on this country for a supply of grain materially exceed ing the enormous exports of last year, and other supplies will 'be still further reduced shoulT difficulties be tween Great Britain 'and Russia be- come serious again. Confidence in the success and ease of resumption has been strengthened, not.only by 'the elections, but by re cent statements of Secretary Slim :gam.. If he he uses his power, there is no doubt that he has power enough. Pear of interruption by congress is at an end .for the present, and the plan of substituting silver for small notes indicates that it is not intended to let the silver legislation defeat 're . - SIMIIIIOII. IF the government .can greate mon ey simply by stamping what theyare pleased to call its st , vereignty upon . a piece of paper, why should it. waste . ' that sovereignity upon a -one dollar bill, why not create 'a ten dollar bill, a hundred, a thousand, a million ? Why should we stop ? The other day I'had a conversation with one of the principal • &entleman upon thfit side and I told him. "Whenever yo» can • successfuly palm off on a maid a bill - of fare fora dinner, I shall ; believe in your doctrine and when I l ean satisfy my pangs of hunger by reading a• cook book, I shall. join your party." Only that is money which stands for labor. Only thA is money which will buy in all other directions the result of the same In, bor expended in its production. As a 'natter of . fact, there money enough in the country to - transact the business of the country. Asa matter of fact, there , is more money than is needed to transact the busi ness. Never was money so. cheap, that is to say, was . interest so low,; never. g . There is plenty.. of - money, and we could borrow all we wished' had we the . collaterals. We could borrow all we wished if there' were some business in which we couldem. bark that promised a sure and rea - - minable - return:, •If we should come to'a man who kept a ferry, and find Ins boat on a sand-bar and the river dry, what would he think of us should we tell him thathe had not. enough beat ? He would probably reply . ' that he'had plenty of boat but not I - enough water. We have plenty of 'xiieney; 'but not enough business, The reason we have not enough bus-. mess is wa have not enough confi dene, and. the reason we have not 'enough confidence is because .the • market is slowly filling:and the rea-'' san it is slowly fallibg islhatit.bas f not yet . quite resnmed t tlat have rIPV9. I *-lOucliell - • : the --140iite.ted . rock ",, I :~~ul~`.k3.' - - ."• • laza MEE ME MIE =I = The Cora . erop, which is the most important single Mop grown: in the United §tates, this year is one of the largest - end hestekme grown. Con.' siderable districts where corn is the leading crop s suffered from excessive rains in June, and at the end of that month it was reported tobe extreme ly backward, and' there were dismal , prognostications of the result. - But the fall has been dry lard frosts have been late, so that the fields planted latest—some in Illinois 'near the end of June—have matured perfectly, the latest being the best;.anff the crop -was never in better conditionto har vest so early in the season. And when corn has once become fully ripe and hard and dry, there is little or no anxiety about - the gathering of it. The work -maybe more 'or less disagreeable or costly, but with al most_ any imaginable weather, the whole crop can be •gathered with comparatively little damage—in that respect .being very different from the small grains, which must be gathered within a few days, and suffer very greatly if the weather is wet in- har vest time. The abundant corn crop, however, is not marketed to any ex tent for some months after the Bath cring of it is begun; but it has an immediate effect upon shipments,.be cause ,n any event most of the grain is consumed .on the farms, and the producer is able to market his old crop as soon as _he is sure of a sur plus from the new crop. And 'this assurance has been having an effect ever since the middle of last July, , which is stimulated by the favorable maturing of the crop. The largest crops of the country have been about 1 ,300,000,000 bushels, which is four • times as niuch . as the largest crop 'of wheat previous to 1878; and this year's corn crop is probably equal to the largest. In value, this is equal to twice that of the cotton crop, and to about one-fourth more than that of-the wheat crop. In weight it is equivalent to about 36,000,000 tons, against 1,125,000 tons of the cotton crop, and 10,500 of the wheat. For transpOrtation, however, corn is not nearly so important as these figures would make it appear, but, a small portion of the crop being marketed. But a good crop has a great effect on transportation, as a comparatively small percentage of surplus gives a very large bulk to be carried. The effect of an'abundant crop at a time when wheat is abundant and cheaN is reflected in 'the very low price of corn, and will be seen later in great supplies of well-fatted hogs and corn ed cattle. When corn is so cheap, however, only very low rates can be had\for carrying it, and it is, not like ly to\come foiward very freely this winter; at least not for export, at rates which will much more than pay the cost Of \ hauling by rail. . Timso s _o \ f \ another terrible marine disaster cornes\from Folkestone, via London, the result, prestimably of a dense fog, in . which a bark ran into the Hamburg atearneqomerania,the latter sinking in less 'tan ten min utes. Among the ‘pasSengers lost were ,Mrs. W. B; Ct.vmma \nd son. The family were on their 7ay . to. England where they expected to make their future home. The mother and son perished, while' two daught ers were saved. WILMINGTON, Del.,Nov. 21—Early yesterday a n gro, covered with blood, dragged himself to a house. near Tandike station. Ile said two unmarried daughters of a woman na-nied Dobson, at :Chestertown, Md., recently gave birth to children, which were murdered, and he was compell ed to bury -them, and warned not to reveal the crime. He told the story 'to a colored woMan, and on Tuesday was seized by the cousins of the girls,named Vincent and Jones, who, with Mrs. Dobson,took him in a carriage to a dense woods and pre pared to kill hith. Re begged hard 'for - life and promised never to return, but the-woman told them-to kill him and have done with it. Theylired two bullets taking effect in the negro's head, and then dragfed him to the woods and let him for dead. He canna live. The two men have been arrested ; and the woman will be ar rested to day. WAsunktoTos; Nov. 21. -In pur suance of the instructions from' the Secretark of State, Minister Welsh today tendered to the British . Gov ernment $5,500,000 in gold, accom panying the payment with the fol lowing communication : (Receipt of payment was acknowledged by Lord Salesbury in due form.) • M. LORD : I have been instructed by the President of the United States to tender to Her' Majesty's government the stun 0f'55,500,000 in gold coin, this being the sum named by two members of the Fisheries Commission (lately sitting at Halifax under authority imparted thereto by ‘ the treaty. of Washington) to be paid by the Government of the United States to the Government of Her Britannic Ma jesty. l'am also instructed by the Presi-. dent to say that such payment is made upon the ground that the Government of the United States, desires to place the a.aintenance of good - faith in thn treaties, and the security and value of arbitration between nations - above all question in in; relations with Her Britannic Majesty's Government, as with all other govern - \ • ments. Under this motive the Government of the United States desires to seperate the question, off - withholding payment, from considerations touching the obligation of this payment, which have been presented to Her 31ajest!,'s Government in corres pondence and which it reserves and insists upon. I am; besides, instructed by the Presi dent to say that the . Government of the United States deems it of the greatest im portance to' he common and friendly in terests of the two (overnments - in aU future treatment of any qiestious relating to the North American fisheries, that her Britannic Majesty's--Government should be *distinctlyadvised that the Government of the Unita Stateseannot accept the re: suit of the Halifax commission as furnish ing anylust measure of value of partici pation -by our citizens in the inshore fish eries of the Betistr Provinces; and its protests against actual payment - now made, being considered by Her Ma jeste.stilovernment as in any sense_an acqualence hi mach meaanni• or as war , f an* any inference to that - affect. - A ltqrlf MAIL - ' - - EKE +e - : ss;cosb[~a~i~: A HORRIBLE TRADEGY PAYMENT OF THE AWARD. LEGATION OF ITICITED STATES, 1. LONDON, N0v..21, 1878. \ I / Earaail inlet; 7spositatbeir died atthe' affil T \Blielt bridd eralr AratOtediry: .:,l ' amed: to biallM 4 Dn*x %%NIX, worse band than Horace Greeley did. • 46 114 ii Bituriwort Leland' has steady employment on the London , Press. • 11 H. 13E0DIMED, the poet, writer' with his left hind--tee other is pandyzed. - Tue. bodies* of the cotton and Troika mills of the eastas impstrring. Two illegal medical establishments have bLen discovered in New York. Tint reasiphi otthe New York Catholic Cathedral &dr thus far are $105,000. Tux House Committer on Appropriam Lions in making geod, headway on the several appropriatitni - Tag grand jury in NewTork, has thus far ind ict ed over fifty liquor dealers for violation of the excise law. \ ' GENERAL JANES TILTON, fOrMelly Sur veyor General of Washington \Territom died in Washington, Saturday night. J. Names & Co., of West Tr4,N.Y., have _recently shipped twenty horse-cars to Minneapolis, Minn. , • \ MINNEAPOLIS, Is to have cer manufactory located there by Pittsburg parties. \ s Uercit (N.Y.) Steam Cotton MiUs Com pany is shipping large orders of goods to South America. SzilitTon BAYAUE and SenatorEd mu nds live next door to each other in Washing ton. . _ Donn► GOODALZ, one of the regular con tributors -to Scribner, is only eleven years old.= Tait most eminent 03 , 81418ns in btew. York makes from $40,000 to $70,000 a year. GREAT numbers of Americans are visit ing Mount Vesuvius, which is in opera tion: Ex-GovEssou Join T. 110VFMAN Sod family, of New York, have. arrived home from Europe. - .TEur. widow and childNn of the late Dr. Ayer hive gone into court for their rights under his will. THE Catholics „Ream says : "Mr. Tal mage, whether he knows it not, is doing, the work of the deviL" GENERAL &moll CAMMION is enjoying remarkably good health in Washington where he is spending the week. Mn. Baacnorr recently presented' the lady who read the.proof of his work with $5O for discovering an error in a Latin quotation. * Tau New York Pilot Commissiimers complain that they cannot prevent the , dumping :of , refuse. matter in the' ship channel. Dm C. H: TERRY, of Brooklyn, fi;rmer ly police surgeon, has been missing since Tbnrsday. Be is suppoied to be derang ed.. NINE "convicts, six blacks. and. three whites, were publicly 'whipped .at the jail yard in New Castle, Del., Saturday, and five piloried. TEE Cleveland Rolling min Company are atm emidoying 3,500 men. Ninety days ago they had but 3,2oo—thus having increased their Ririe 300. , • . • Tea Leb.,hton Bridge and Iron Works at Rochester, N. Y., are running over. time, chiefly on orders from. New Eng land: Tax Indianapolis Rolling Mill has the contract for the rails for the new exten-` sion of the Havana, Rantoul and Eastern Road., - Tux Ohio Falls Car Company of Jeffer sonville, Ind., has a contract for 220 box cars for the Pekin, Linden and Decatur Road. ' Ma. WILLIAM TYLER, of 'Whitehall, Mich., has been left $lOO,OOO on , condition that he marries before he comes twenty one years MAJOR WILLIAM - H. Dons, of New castle, Del., who was bitten by a small dog some weeks ago, died of hydrophobia -Monday morning., Miss, Axmit DEVLIN, daughter of Charles Devlin, the wealthy' contractor, formerly. Tweed's bondsman, has eloped with Wm. H. Craft, a young builder. COMMANDER Arthur R. Yates, on duty at League Island Navy-yard, has been ordered to the command of the Alliance, on the European station. Tax cast of Portugal was visited by a heavy storm Saturday. At the mouth of the Tagus three vessels and eighteen lives were lost. 0 A cant.,Z dispatch has been received • from Colonel Thomas A. SCott, President of the Pennsylvania Railroad Company, stating that his health is very much im proved. • THE Mayor of Barrow;÷ in Furness, England, has called a public meeting to adopt means to relieve the distress sprevailing in conrequence of the depres- sion of trade. 'Mils. Laßan, daughter of Commodore Vanderbilt, and contestant in the pending will case, will be married soon to Francis Berger;\ Consul General from Luxem burg. Arromt.,\ the fugitive secretary of the Pullman Pallace Car Company,. is confin ed in civil prisec. The, $BO,OOO which he stole were found‘deposited in his name in the Bank of Portugal. GARIBALDI dcies not like Lord Beacons field or his policy. In :a letter to an Eng lish friend, the old. Italian patriot says : " If they do not: send him away, he will ruin England and the COLONEL JAMES MADISON STRONG, member of the California ConStitutimual 1 Convention from the IdatiPosa and Merced district, and the .pinneer(:ctton grower of that State is dead. AMONG the students in the Classkal and Biblical Biblical College at Binghamton, N. Y., is, a Russian'Jewess whose birthplace was on the top of Mount Trois, half-way betweer the houses of David and Solomon. , • I • AT a meeting of prominent , military officers in New York Saturday, it was 'resolved that an executive committee should be appointed to arrrnge e plan of military service reform for the 'different States. GENERAL JoinisTatt, the newy-elected RepublMan from the Third Virginia dis tnct, is represented as' expressing views in, favo of bard money, and hrlding the opinion! that long before 1890 the solid South will be forgotten. I • Ex-CANDIDATE MASON found,himself at the feather end of the finaneial scales 'tbe other day, and the Rev. Plealant W. -Bishop, a prominent Greenbaik orator. and advocate, of Bloomington, EL, is now adjudged insane by the county Court. • AT a - meeting of the Workingmen's' Club of Boston last 'Wednesday; Kearney was advised to go back to California and attend to his waning cause in his •own State. The —workingmen of Boston ;re pudiate his \interference in I their af fairs. 4 A mem. to the New York iiournoi Commerce says that the commission of Dr, Linderman, director of the Minf, will expire next month; and it is understood that Secretary Sherman is opposed to his reappointment. Colonel , Snowden and lion. James Pollock are said to be the most proMinent competitors • for the posi tion. - - As. a matrimonial agency the White House has gained the front rank. Miss Cook, Mrs. Hayes" niece, who was mar ried the other day, is the fifth of the young ladies who haire visited there and who have married within eighteen months, The others are thetwo Misses enllivant,. Miss Platt, and Miss Macfarland. Tan discovery of a new gold region in India Is described as follows: "Within an area of twentS-five by thirteen miles - ninety outcrops were, discover ed -of 'auriferous 'quartz, from two to four feet thick, - yielding from a few pennyweights to two hundred ounces per ton. The richer stone shows,wben broken, fine and course: 1103111111 and Jagged pieces the site of a pea. In some of the reefs much of the stone will probably not pay for workhig, but, it is believed that, on the whole, a very hap and pnalltable in dustry will be ensured with the aid of capital and good - management." Tan Teachers' Institute of Lancaster Pa., last week held its melon in the Conrtlouse. Nearly all the teacheni of the county belong .to the association. The daily 'attendance was one thousand: Among the leetunns fnim a distance were Rev. Dr. Willets and Rev. Edwin I B. Itailenspirger of Philadelphia. Dr,,W. gave the teachers "Mental Dyspeheia," and Mr. IL gave them "Humors of the Pulpit and te. Ate " and them Oe ,!‘ IS NM ■ MI E=F.I ISM . SUM Orgy, 1 --,7tHlSSHAnirirtiOnir**tb4Heittihtief.. Jtestkeorthe I ! l 4s4‘;' ala anceeiikettairclnrice in -000nEg Ott Wednealat __,,Taitt-oll'buslilesi Wirt itandSill•,ln Warrencennty. . . I THERE has already been neighing in, parts, of Erie county. TAZ'Gaysport furnace baa been started up - ' - • • I • Tits Reading Terra Cotta works. are very busy. - • - • . ,LEsi leather was =Win Peausy — !rani* thus this year than for live years past. TnE Rending. Sheet Iron Mill will soon giinto operation, and give employment to 250 men and boys. • „ Tug Varity Iron - Works - 4 Pittsburg are building fifty tanks to be used for shipping oil to California; : . ” Tni manufacture of insulated teligzapb wire ling been commenced attbeNatiOnal Tube Workti; McKeesport. • 1 Tint Pennsybania Steel Company. at Bald*in, turned out in October 0,715- tons of rails and 500 tons of other steel. I' Tu l u Reading Hardware Company is more stetively engaged now than at any l tprevious period during the past year. SMITH Styrrow & Co,-of Allegheny, are' ' putting in two steam hainmers—one ton nd three and a half tons. • ' ' \Tiire second Paxton furnace, near Har risking, bail just blown in after a rest of I over \ four 'years.. ! - Tait \ Lebanon manufacturing works are runningb . n full time, "with a" fall force in all departments.. . - TnEnskeems to be a 'fair revival of business when all the steel works in Pitts . burg are anneunced as running in double turn: \ A NEW line of\telegraph is being built through Potter county to 'operate in con ' Election with the pipe lino. - ' THE effectaof theßlienandoah Hirald, - . which 'suspended publication last week, -Wrere sold by the• Slietilf.. 41,298 _being realized. _ EMPI,HTEEB of the Rea Reading Railroa d Company sell their time to brokers at I five per cent. disconat, in order to get money before payAay. \ WEiT CriesTencitizena are organizing against, tramps. 'The police force, ,is to be dotibled and persons who prowl around , nights are to be arrested. Tuts iron ore minors of the Messrs. Brooke, at the falls of French Creelc,, Berks county, are run day and night to meet the demand upon them. ; Tite \ car shop, rolling mills, and other Manufacturing concerns;-of Erie, Pa, are said to be employing 2,500 more laborers now than at this time last year. • 1 AT the Beaver Falls cutlery works a large force is working ten hours a day. Myers & Co., have ,put in a five hundred , pound steam hammer. • - J. FERRAN MINH, of ' Bellefonte; has received an order" from Brazil for his "Red Mann" axe.' He has also sent-a few goods to Mexico. . H. E. PACKER; son of Asa Packer, has i heen • elected a director of the Lehigh Valley :Railroad in place of J. Gillingham Fell, lately decased. THE Lebanon .Manufactoring Company works aro busy. On Wednesday last the first lot of twenty-five cars, under the contract, were shipped to Newark, N. J. 131tanvoen is already building up the ruins of- the late fire. A handsome brick hotel will be erected on the sight of the Old one; and, other- buildings are already started. - , ~ , Joint Coen - tax, the embezzling Tax Collector of Mahanoy, Schuylkill county, will spend six months iti jail and pay a fine of one bun ,red dollars for:his 'irreg ularity." AT the expiration of the tern of Gover nor •Hoyt, January 1, 1883, the Republi cans will have had au unbroken line of Governors in this State, covering a period of twenty-two years. ' I i - CIIMIP of Police Sullivan, James Bern and Frank Marley, 'who were :arrested at Pittston for the murder of Michael Walsh; have been admitted to bail in the sum of $3,000 each. • . . Tut; striking glass-workers of .Pitts burg flow so signs.of yielding. At many of the factories the fires are being drawn. There is little prospect of resuming busi ness. PATRICE CONNEL . L . Y, who tiled a man named . McCarty several ye Is, ago at Mount Carbon in a light, and who has been en trial at Pottsville, was convicted of manslaughter. • THE Ditbridge Chimney Company, limited, at. Allegheny, lia.te 'commenced the erection of a new factory, it being their purpose to enlarge their productive capacity. THE furnace of the Reading Iron Com pany,. which was, out of blast several years, is in full operation, and turning out pig metal at the rate 'of about 25(1 tons_per week. DURING the past forty-one weeks 13,027 tons of iron were made at_ the •blast fur nace of the Warwick Iron Company, in Pottstown; being an average of about 317 tons weekly. • THE Hollidaysburgb rolling-mill and nail factory are running day and night, add the several foundries and machine shOps have all the orders theY? can till for some months. "LIES ! . 1310 LIES !"—Not so fact n) friend ; for ! if you would see ~the strong, healthy, blooming men, women and OW dren that have been raised from beds ,of sickness, by the use of flop Bi.ters, you would say " Truth, glorious truth." See Truths, - " in another column, A cm \TO THE LADIES I ON - ACCOITN+.OF TUE OVERCROWDED I,I4'SHET pqn MILLINIERY TOWAN A , ' I am about to engage' in b ELSEWFIET:E. aad noir offer my 'ENTIRE BT4* I NEW AND .4EGAN Millinery and Fancy !'tll SALE -= AT COST • • PLEASE CALL AND GET MY; PRICES bErollt GOIRG MISS M. L. -'COOS, Six Doors igorth of PostaMce, MAIN STREET. TOW-;iND4 - PA. - , . Ostia Nor. din, lb% 4 1,;- .1. EMI 41 4, ' "rik.....sfft.l"‘l, • 3, "!. , 1.1; " , - Ef".‘" • "" • - - _ " MSS SEM niom SILVER: PLAT*D - ITAtqa Aeriairou4rxi or - ROGERS...4 BROS: : KNIVES, - - -F9R SIdONS - • , . MUGS, • BIITTERDISBES, CASTERS; Am, &c. • . • - NEW AND DESIRABLE GOODS • A? EXTREMELY LOW-PRICES-I CALL , AND, SEE THEM. • .T. W. EIAMORE, 131 EAST . WATER STREET. Minna. Ant. 15, UM-- A STONISii.INCI RISCLOSIIRES =3 PREMIUM HARNESS STORE! C. 11. WHEADON 41; SON Have In stock the largest and most complete assort meet of FARM AND FINE HARNESS That eau . be found In any store between Albany - and Elmira,. More gPORTING AND TURF GOODS! ♦ largo variety of tRErNK§ AND SATCHELS ! A mate Vaaptote Mock of TEAM AND TRACE-MUUPS! MMiIM LADIES' AND GENTS' RIDING SADDLES, sze., Ae. In conclusion, we say that ire .have everything that can he named connected with A business of this kind, that we are itnalOus to sell. Wake upend PULL DOWN-YOUR VEST And come up and see us, and we will derionstrate whill — we say. At 20,6 E. WATER- STREET, EL3tlfeA, N. Y. IE6 Sign of the Gold Collar:VI CHAS. H. k SON. : 0 r•••• 7,2 0 •• • s - c* t I - r rn t • : 4:2 ; * 0 D F 1:1 - , crt _ . sz t- 3 '.g .= ' B .g: t p„ . -.# ... 14 8., .. ; 4 • •0 ' s - 3 • r 2 H . : fr > i A - F' . I' M 1 "..: ' i • lii a C3' •• . , SO ' tit i ).. it , d. s r r i it . 7 . . P. tl .E. ri .11 ; g g . 0.3 "o' -r; le! II i .- : :. E.: , t; i 1 = 6. 3. U 4 = tl m .1 g . mi . . - ' „g 1 :. — 2 f; - tt g Eri t'l hi (I) • ~,,* . " • 4 . *g ' m 10 ..; ...,• • p...3 9 ;,•-„, - • x . .t. i sa 0 ez -% 4 t" al ... 0.0.! .-0 7 1 , 5 ix 0 • :71 n R LROSEN BA • DRY 'GOODS, MILLINERY, 4.11T5., ic.. duo 201 U East• Water Street, ELMIRA, Y. The' Cheapest and _Best flare in the City - to Bair , - °us Guous Are bought for Cash; anal prlrrs aro glut ranteed to be as low as the lowest EVERY 11EPAIITMENT • 18 . KEPT 81.1PPLIPD .WITII TUE LATEST NovELTIES. Are claim to do tho HOST EXTENSIVE ATILLINERT BUSINE IN ELMIRA, Ati4 parties desiring anything in that line win End it to their interest to tall and see us. At we conduct no fancy establlsliment,onr vices are always plain and moderate. The trade supplied at the lowest wholesale piS ees. Special ludueetneutsle Cash customers. Don't (met, the ptaeo— 201 EAST WATER-ST.. intikMin Hausa Block Elmira, N. Y., May 23 . ISIS. CALL AND SEE US AT-THY DELEVAN HOUSE, ELMIRA, N. Y Opposite the.Depot.' C. T. SMITH. - PROPRIETOR. Formerly of the Ward iiool.o. Towanda,Pa., • • THE OLD MARBLE YARD STILL. IN:OPERATION. • The undersigned having pnrehasitd the MAR BLE YARD the late 0.1:01IGE McCARE, de sires to inform the public that having es toyed experienced men. he Is prepared to do an - kinds of weak in the line of MONUMENTS, ; . HEAD STONES , MANTLES and -SHELVES • . • In the very best.roanner and at lowest rates.. • Persons desiring anything In the Marble Sue are Invited to call and examine wort, and save agents' commission. JAMES Mee ATIE.• ToWanda. Pa., Nov. 18. Ib7B. 2411 smess Goods PROCLAMATION. WtiEßiAs, Hon. Paul. Honnow. President Judge of the 18th Judicial District, consisting of the county of Bradford. and lion. C. 9. -Ituseatt.„ Associate Judge in and for said county of Bradford. have is sued theirprecept b-aring date lb •Mth day of Oct,' :11118,30 me directed, for hdding a Court of- Oyer and Terimner. General Jail Delivery, Quarter :ses sions of the Peace, Common Pleas and Orphans' Court, at Towanda; for the county of Bedford, commencing on Monday, Dqc. 2; lilts, to continuo .thred weeks.— Notice is therefore hereby given to the Conners and Justices of the Peace of the county of Brad ford, that they be then and there in their proper persons, at 10 o'clock In the forenoon of said day, with records, Inquisitions and other remembrances to do those things which to their office appertal os to be done; and those wbo are bound by recogni zance) or otherwise, to pthwernte against the priso ners who are or may be in the jail of saldscounty, are to be then and there to prosecute maraud thorn as shall be just. Jurors are requested to be Oune teal in theleattendanee. agreeably to their notice. Dated at Towanda. the 10th day of MC. In the year at our Lent one tiunuane eight hundred and sevenb‘eight.. and of 'the: Independence or the United States the one hundred and third. J 4 J. Larrois. " mews Olice,*ov: . EN ME MEE ME } ve• ••••2 Deal .r. In MEM Ell MEE E=Mll3 UM . . Q,IIERIFF'S SALES:-13y vtetue :, of Unproved., with a ffsined - hmma and few tru• - g,.:30f attn;lry , 'elite baited out. of the Court ; tbereon,';. &Axed and taken Into fve:011ml - at the 'lDetnuifitt Mello,. nradfOrd County: and•Vt me di ' t suit Of Goo. C. 'Atwood vs. Bee. W. Hendrick*. • reeted. I will expose to public sale at the door oft ..K0.25. ALSO ()needier lot of land, in Towanda ss the Court I.loutie, to Towanda, On FRIISAY, DE- ' born • belie the mullyltled enii.efghth (30 Inter,ei , 'fit:MOM eih, 1878, at 1 o'clock P. it., the fellow- lof defendant In the following deseribed lot: boon '. ,fiatt.4eserlteld property . to-wit! ", ,P 4 on the, north by lands of "N. N. Tietts: east by , - :co. 1. ONE lot of land In Towanda hero., boon- Main-d. Mal N. Ti. Bette; south by State-at...and on . :gad as follows: liogluntng at a corr,er of alone on - tie west by Seconded.; containing One acre of lead, • the - weat side of Mein street, about 50 feet south of ;_mere or hem, with a large franm d„n wg , imm . ,2, a lot formerly owned by Itorritt Wens, thence West. ' lames frame barn a nernher. of grape vines and erly on a parallel line - .with 'said Wenn futtorhei ot a bae d tromaretat mei thereea. ,. centre elan alloytivhielt . alky being halt from N 0.7.1. A LEO-The• deb.:afar:Vs equal and undt• Main 'street - to Second street; thence souther - 1v f Yided ,ll,lnterestins one when lot ot land. altnated along the center of said alley to lot . Wed by:J. I- t , "paritylietTowarela bolo „ and partly In ' Totintrola - Means aud wife to'ltobert Mclntosh; thence rait- 1 twp.„ hounded as follows,; „On t iter.orth by thel'ow• - erly Mont slid Melntestes line to the westside , -- - of 'ell farm. in railed on the cast 17:ands of tbA Bar. • •Main street; - thence northerly .along said - line of I .a „.„ eiato; ea the watt , -by Cite 04u/to highway; . Main street to place of begloulug I tieing about 14 0 ;: ee d ~a, the west by the public blggway Ater lands feet front on said Main ' treat, auel aim " ISO feet ' of the Ward estate: 'containing- 50 attract land: deep, with 2 two story trained buildlnis thereon ;:. more „ .1 ,, w . a b a „ a u trapreyrd wi th a Geared being the liamagilece of land deeded by J.P . Steams ~.de.ei, km how ,. framed barn and orchard or !not and wife to J. W. Means, by deed dated April 1 . . i trees ,bereym, Senzed and taken foto exeentlon at J 575, a•-41 - tecorded In 'WA -Amu/ \ o, 129 , it pag e ' the sett of fames Msrenr vs. Charles Merely.; • 106. Seized and taken into execution at the atilt of - No. 7.7._ALSO-One other lot of land. in Albany Brown Brothers vs. J. W. Steams. • ~,.. ~ t op.. Tainnded ou - he north bylstals of Wm. R - 10g; ~ - .. No:2. '.11.r.150-- 4 Mte othei tot or land iate ...- east by lands a - Frederick ' l'urchs: :south by beds Sayre tillage, Athens tap.. bounded on the north 1, or o n .„J am i e ,plr i e h; aro} west by - lands of Widow by lands of /toward Eliner,& f'u.: on the teat by- ; .;...._......-..-; containing 74 'acres of ;ands.. more or - the plibilc hlghwpy ; on the s'eath by lands of Da, ' l less, about 50 aeres ItliprOVcd, with a log home. a - yid Reeves: on the west by an alley; bring lee r---, i futruml barn and few !lett trees thereon. Sel.-01 trout on said pahlic highway, and Ibo, tent deep. ; and taken Intoexecutlon at - theattit of Clark Swot:n - 4' witlt.t framed building :: storks high, toted for two , estsn vs. F. F ..y .yo „. . . .stuns.(, a nd I framed 2qory hathling used' Jolene • No. 28. ALvO-4.ine Other. lot of bed. in ;tome store. and 1 trout( :I barn thereon. Nero, bounded on the north. 17 the academy tot; N 4. O. ALSO-One other lot of land In Sayre, ,east by lands of B."Tc.Adame: tooth by tie, Odd village. Athena twp.„ bounded ou the mirth by lau d ;1 Folki'S lot; and west by Mahn-st.: being about ))In - - of Howard. Elmer •& Co.; on the east by the ratline . ; , . feet trout on 3111 n-st.. and 150 feet deep, with a - hi g "n Y;' . et ; the eosin 11 laid of William "19; '•frairicti Ifouse, framed barn , framed shop and few and on Lie west by an 311( . 1;1p:tug 160 feet trout, I lirnit trees titerCim. '. , anti 150 feet deep, with': tramuil 11WellIng luilgita 1. NO. 29. ALSO--0•45 other lot of land, In norm, th e reon„ seized mortal:et: into execution at the two. . bam , ded nort h by a t wat, teat.; east b y n th suit Of Wm. IL Lyon & Co. vs. Adonljah Hunt- I 1 IVysox creek; south by lands of Wm. Coctloatigh; ' No. 4._ 4.4..b0- 4 .tue other lot of land situated 10.1 and west by lan •s of br..11.1e,?: containing an acro ~ • Towanda twp., hounded on the north by lauds of J: „,, of. band, more or less. all itnprorel. no hii.iding,. P. / 06 1 ; on the east by the Shiite highway; - --- No. W. ALSO-One ether 101 Of .Land, In . flrwell • the south by lands of Mrs Lyman Blackman; and twp . bounded on the north inl lands. of Manson - in the west fly totals Of 11... W. Nohies' and S. C. I Log: ram by bed, of ..p . w . part, and L. Halo , Means; containing Si of au aer. of laud, more or 1.... soft; oath by , lands of. J. Si. Parks and C. S. Da less, all I.B*ml:a d, * iii 1 framed. house. 1 framed i vise, aim „„ the west. by taw! , ..4 . 11 . . W . p ar k . , ~, , i barn, corn crib, hog pen, &c - I - . titeretea.• Selze!l and-1 ' taken Into executi at the suit Almond Taylor:"ccutalning 120 acres of land. wore - on ~ f Jiro,. J. Hackles ' +, Almond or less,..ahenit 85 acres imprievd. with a I=o-.1 - mu t ro• Dello 4 PoMlauttLe en'l Patrick Ce- 1 Pinto. framed barn aad 2 . orcharda of troll tie. a tine. - - 'thereon. Seized and taken Into exl ll l. - I :it the No. 5. ALSO-One other lot of laud sltuatod In ; snit of Sfephen ElWell ys. Ateiandur Keefe and IL Monroe, twp.. bound , d us follows: Beginning' n -s. • I - L. 'Parks. -- - . . the aunt{ bank of ilie...tient run, at a tdrco, run-. No. at. ALwO--one othsr ins or-land In Albany Mug; north 141) perches to the north-east corner - of and 3totiroe twps.„ bounded as' thumbs: Itegentifuts, ---5 s .A. Johnstoub land to a pest corner:. th ence , east 25 at a fallen oak, thentm south 32 4 4 0 west 212 Id. • ptreLcs to a post .torner on the Ellis line: thence 1 perches to a pool am , at - oar , : owner , torth ~.7 ?.. 0 south ••::: perches to a pine stomp corner ; tiles n'a 1 west 317 perches to a post awl fito/1.111: thence tioritt east 35 larches ton post corner; thence south Ile , I 37.'"0 east 21 2 4-10 perches tea metier: thence ',Ann . 'perches lo ale maibuin the south hank of fient'run't Lb' _-,!„, ca st __ at: perches tn . the 'Mice, of Ir.-ginning; tliesice'rrest along said road 63 perches to the place' ~.„--1 as o l o , z , 4,„, metes or taw!, mire or t „, „ ‘ . , ,,,. i0 , of licgint.lng rcontalning 50 act Cu of and, more or 1 ' the Joseph Aliderstet wareatit I. excop ire' and re. • inks, about 3.acres Improved. with I - leg house, 1 . . 1 r from ihlsemtv,•Vatiee all that portion the r,,. cow -tied and teW fruit trees tin-ream Seized and I str ` n • -, - ' of heretofore e(Atreyea to !Mole/ Peckham & C4;as. , taken Into exeemiou at the suit of Lovice Sharp VS. I Drown. by said Lyn in 11 , ...-ci , .lnan; thl.corre ,4 yarnai Moses C.Jolin•mh . . Is intended to Include only that portion Wog west N o .a. Af,so-one other lot or land situated : ln } -. .. , ... of the cresdc. (excepting and res. • •rving therefrom Wm rett twp., bound, 4 ls f6 r"' w "' ..ile g laa ' a g a `. a 1 about 25 aeres heretotOreconveye Ito Welled Peet- , "ate ami stones wrote "r lot 3"j'l lit 31an.""' E. ' '. ha re): emit:Jibing:32s acresofl 111 or, r !es:, Ti') ain , i o .. ... t .bree by party of the test parr. N. C. Mania"' hr.w .,,, myats. • thence to.rth" igs,ly° east Ib4 foils to a -stake and \o, :1- ALSO-01M 'other int of land In s.lorirei.' • .tours for a coiner, eta. -a twilit rOf lots Nos. 10 $ t l tys b0a ,,,, b , 1 as r0 ,,,,, a5 ., I .,.. gia . sing 2 , a is.i . , , 11 , • 12 of the Lukens tract; thence north 21 t o east 12.0. I th e ?" rand : leading from the Bern lek tutuolke tol rods to a rock In the creek; thence w nth 57° east I ' • ' llrackniuM's nil' I, andoutl the er s t side of s, & ; , t, L. . - 121 rods to a corner ;- thence smith 2,1 0 west 52 bats 1 It R....ca,a,,e sling , •tne line of sell railroad south ' ton- pare of bogie:dug: containing 55 acres and 1. ,,, , ,, „ a.. ., 20 roil'. to. a .p unt; tne tu t.,, south to east - 141 roils of land, more or tess : excepting . and re- I some said railroad lo rods. tn a post; thence south • serving to the party.of the 01,E parr. his heirs tioil I . : 1 W0..1 . :flung said railroad _4l Tads, tea post; - hew e aisign -, 1 he tight of way across the aboVe deSCiilied -7,,, i ,„ ~,,,,, . ‘ ,... 1 23 ~,1.,, t o i suel4-: 111.-,,i: . ptritliees Irvin the road ton the other half of lot. No. ' ~„ t'ati° east Ii .5-10 perches, to a Est. t; ihonee north 12. in the tonst t,iiicectlent [dace ; 1 0. -- gliilg' 1 - 1 . 1 1 ( 0,0 w u,,t ic 3-to rods id a lientlo-k stump: thence said party , t the seeniid part tlie ,fight of way wherel t tnuth,77l, o east - I5 4-10 pi-relies , to south corner of hesecy gets 'on said 1.4 ; partlylinproved, no build- ' bride:en:mit abutment oa the east ,lite o f the ereejr. logs. .. • 10.7. ALSO-One other lot of land situated ltr 'theoeteuorth 179.. , -esz 20 52.410 ,pert 1, to g._ 1 06'1;• . 4tatreu twp., bound. d'a. foltow ;On the weat by thence '''r th 51° east 692 l'rs:' roil', I° err ~"1 . a''' '. lands of M. 'Bon El. ? l,ree. oh the, north by lands t.1: , 1 1 ," „ in 0 1,V . - „ , ,, mt . t e i l l ' h i " . s o n a e w t "a' . ;n i d a i ,' , '' . l l ,l7..' , " . ',7 l s , , ° ' u nl o n li . ..., - held by the Lai ens estate. on :1,.. ea'st by lands for- , by.i;,,,,i,.1 .1.1x,5it...14,,,,; 1.;;;:i;;;Aug at the south- th'et:con. • Seized and .talon Int.. ere . e . ist I, ,L a g t nt tho welly owned. by Thonnts Calm Waller, on the south western corti..r of said ti3et, t h roe i.orth 45° east ' •" • ''• ' ' • , lsi perches to r. post ; thence north 8 3 'a° east lii - sii ‘ it n ot a chr ,k lit c or , h_ 4 er m ia o tt q l . .s .r . l io y t ni t. a f it ia li , ,.a d els i n it ia ti. n l . 4,, , , twp ; bounded on the nor th by lands of hate 1..01, , Aleut cast he the swelnehanna ricer; inutli by lanes v.:reties to a post ; th ence south 45. watt 21;7 3.10 .. irr, Ors to a pest: litenee tior , h, 45,v,', 0 'west_ fl 7-10'l nt 7.k1: S. Si and wotd by punlle bigh.. - ay Awl . • Fwd.; of - Co., lit w.rtainlog ICo•acres of land , - prrclie to the begliddirg ; vontalnlng - 50 3in - es am t ' , " ~- • i - ST p•-rellw , ituf laud. pion. or to-s, nue, 1y iniproved, more or less. al, improved. -w.th a. rain -.1 nweuliw.:' whit I trained lion,", 1 - franied barn with altees at- Immo, (caned tiani;hrt; rem other out Inildings taelsed, other outbuiltllto•S :Vol, orchard oft fruit and tan orchards of fruit ?fres thereon., sndz.s.l. s tree-. thereon. So 'zed and taken into execution at' '''.."'i• t ak" 0 " 1° ""e' ll t"" . at the '"lt orW. S. - the snit of Manson Etsbrees - sonavia Wilson. -, P ierre's ailm's vs.•ll. V. Khmer and . it. B. Minter, No. 9. A 1..ft , 0-0:le other lot of laud situated in I N" , 31 - A 1 -$ O- Po•••t - t I 'l 1 ' 1 " labs'. lit Canino Athens twp., bounded Ott the Dort. by lands of bin., bout: Mal as fo w llos: 17 -gltinicg at a . one r In Georg., Ereanbeck ; ont the east by land; or Albert the rent.'r of the Main r.a.E.leaning from cabton - C 3,,,,,,,,, „., „,, the- ,„ th b y la i„i, of N . C. Mattis,; .boro . .to Towanil3.-aud on th e line be.ww.a sail -a...1 on the nest- by lands of itorace Wiiiisuln es, - - - Rog' 1-5 and "'lb° - 11 onie.y. l'orl'i - hioa ° °ll " 0 ' ‘ r "'...... . late : containing 125 art - es of latul, more or fess and rintniog thent•c• nortki Vs° e vs , 1.7 a f.r.......1it about 90 acres improved, with 2 emoted litalsco, 11 hearing along the same -13 PArebes toe post ws u i • framed barns, 1 hog house. 1 cure bouse, othe'r out- Stone.. on the north tido of a. • mill st remit of w ater buildings and orchard .4 fruit Ireits thereon. ' , funning to Iho rigid': am! 1111.11(, bort ft ....I ',....t0.t ' Nu. fl. A1.:45-011e ~'her lot of laud :limited in 7, . Tow Pert -11, 4 11 3 pot ,ti the not tit bank Ls' the . Athens twp.„ bnuoled on the tenth by lands of Her- main or titlll creek. 'and In the I la. of SO.1)11111 a , trilli s i., a estate; east by lands of Jam, it ',b et 1.17011,r adjoining On th.• ..-tr. I; and :li-•l'a 'Aolth south by lands of J. G. - filth awl putole 'highway ; 42',1,0 w' ct as a eorr,"leo to-sting l'l'-' l .lt "t* 1,1 4.:r• - t• . and nest by lands of Sedni Kirby: containing 55 i Li's lire Lo the center of the ('bites, 1 1 -.. d To ~Oda acres of land, taorwor less: no linprolenients. welz- I 1. "'"/ . er"re 1 ""o'''"" °•"" e l " ; '"'"'e t't 55 44 ' P n rcl' - • en and taken int.' rareivion 'tt . the suit of- A C. '' ''' zu'l it , " ,, OLc the. eett' r of , h 1.1. mad north - E.si,ree ;loci .1. 61. Pike c-4, Abram ilunsiclo ' 51 '._, ° w" 1 "1' 51 "-1 , li , icht sto th e Pisci. of beghttling; . Ni'. 10. A 1.:-4 t-One of er lot to land sit L in. cootiiiiteg IC :.e: 0 , and la 2 po , rches. e:ri.-t 111 , 11'111 , .... the tonal of Parton. State ~ 4 New lark, airy tots u- /"' n''''' ,l ""'Pl'e" " 1 '‘''" , _" t i:' "'T`r i 'v e d * ith a tran ship of Athol:J. State- or ronosytNaola. known as ett t''l"'" cud trano-'1 'a:- ii t'....."'"n -villngs le; No. 5. tea map recorded Jan. 2 , 1.068, A f.so-..-41: t e other-lot or other-lot'! In ('ante-ti IriT.„ Its the other for rectnyllog of dcedi for. Bradf o rd lultinded a. follows: l'egibblng at a- corner in the . county. In book 14 iLeds No, 7-h at 'l;age . l t a, and I the c-nfer of! .i be main road Jeadlog Crow the Tot ilailbdod as follows: liegintillig in the sunlit tine. o f We.'";a r.. . ,../ 'to„ . ..che nom of Alea. and enjoining E Rahway - the Erie Raua ßahway - Co.'s lat ast - Amt . ul. at the north - e- lord' ' l ' iStors!„ - tet.• W-loter on the ',or; h. awl 1111/. tier or lot N0..1. foirtu•riy ,L,1,1 to J. li. Murry. awl 0t0.L." th'•l , '''' s ' - lith S T C' ° '''''' tee a ''`laa'S'''t l'at log. room tiiftlierasi :motherly along said lot 174 It. an d 9 along tine or •al,l w e t, u e r t ,11,t aa ,s, o r . '..., •,..nu r .,.,.. Incites to tho emiti,r of Rm.:ford street; t he-nor I, clo:F', In a owner in the . this of -Schnin.ll Litnity - a,.. a'untug ins center of said sirs.-1' 50 feet to the sollib-:11t.l. a , toftultlg un the Jest; and th., , ..,.• aim::: ....‘i,t esst cornet of lot No, It, Lehigh Valley 110115 e let:; tibil::..'s thie south 2'_° %est by Si Pre,r-111 . 10.'1:T.:lig throe. north, , rte a ;o n g f , a t,t tot IN r,,, I fott,,, to :4 - / p , rehes to a etbtior 'Colo trg oib--r iaroi4 or the ' he - Err - ltalixtt . 'y Co.'s-aiol : thenee west.,,ely a:oi.g ~, t rentor in rose - fa - alien for Minerva Ili,gers. is blow rsa..l land TO tee', nettle place of beginning: er.yori.. ..f It. It Itot;"re. Ilee - .1. - Tor tam! .1n: trig her I Ifs. - log 12 feet In width aloug the Ele hallway Co.'s Moei atoll lowee by,tutolm - Itlt tin- salve north :.•'/A ' land for a highway. Seized a.et taken into ex:eel'. f'.' , , , .t 22 Perches to Ile` center of Ile•- , ..Cha road: and ...__. - ilori attn.,' salt Lit Charles (1, Ilaiii, i zoo' t.„..aiat,,r. ttonce 1•Y cod vela, the eellle :110i1g the, center - Welter, Et.r*; bf lieertze W. il..inba. deed. is. Juts. u9 ll l l t r'S d east 2 5 perehos to the pear.,of 1,, zip. tirlok atat Jetniaia it 'nat. • f1!' , 7.: containing 5 ,fe , e• mid 122 perches. stilrt No. 11, A 1: 4 0*-inte other lot of laud sltliAted Irk au' e'er . ..! Al: 1111 r . ....." 1 : t o l'el!'i pigs. . A iii.iny twp„ bounded on th e north 'l.y huff of F y A Lat , ..4 , tt, .s t ns ` : ',I - id . .1111.1 in e t unton tw p.. N. Wile-o, :mil E. A. Wilcox; east bYtamis of Van. b'oftoled as fulitf'f. ,, 11 " p til t at 3 I.'" , e 1.1,, i ‘'f - --- wit,. Dibble; :-otiili by kiwis or co - ore;-, 11o; kills es- land before deeded tr. s-r:tl ,I:dill It Ma•v:•. ~.,„1 in tate; and west by lands of_LeonartiCarye: cold:tin- it.,- 1111 " of 4 ' 114 ' l'i.'.',!.":ZT:'' the 'ors'''' ..f, it ''''''t - leg so cares of lard, noire ur Ics..". :stand - 5. - 1 acres Marlir'Y.- deed, I eing Inv ti , r.th-Ceeit corner of :aid haltered, with I (saw: a house, 1 log elenve. 1 t'il`toa 1,--t 0- el i t '''° l-- ""rn 9'_° 'tart " 1 ” :13 ' l ' - '' l framed barn, I Pruned grain home stint st,",-.1,i at- I Ma :ley's due a illl. 1 1. y lauds 01 1.e., Il• - •rt,-y; ,•,,,, at, '.g 7. ef an-acre 0' boo, I,ooe or tes... ad ,• inti iye o, e i.te , 'le.; r.,,,.. ,1 Seidl. , { used for :.: ,a 'won :her, on. .S-•i.,....i .I'l , l t,1: , •11 /WO 4-X,.. , :i101 - I ;It ti, salt ,Y -I , titt it. else vs. Jolla A. Catkins:4nd NI. 11. Valk:us. . S'. 1,. A 1,1.. , ' f -One . tier lot or land in fiverion 1.5. boatalen , il Cl,! tectli n:... lands el the Edword Niel tu , n.- to ...bac: t as: l'y ,ands of tharle Strevy duet Alfred z'..iery; south by t. c public highwai; alai . wt , t by late.. of Ain-a.„llevet iy awl Punnet Meter;}: cot,twnivg -II aere....4 had, mute or 1,-so. I ail twi,roce,l„ in 1/11i1.111,g.1. but sew link. trees (her, en. 5.12. Li and toiteit Into es, ,-oasts at the stilt ud WlttLint Dint lei's us, os. Malin. 31. Chase. No. Itt. AI-Sit-One ililwr lot of laud. In Slte'slie-' , epd•l 11 , p., I, lit - ' •tt berth :mil east by hoof; of „tolut CalbAll . ; south t y lands of rat rick Mark nod Wirth 1 1 . Stbres; and tarsi !1) - 13 .lb of . IlairY rsbores, ii aMic.: Shiites. - L. 11, Pi,,,t and Clmsici Childs; contaming 53 art es of laud, more oi t.-:s; aia:nt to nens inipitivcdt ulth 1 leg l'. 'mac with !tamed ad dition, 1-4-F.ttned Mon Wu: otehard of fault tree. :het con::. Seized and taken Into eleention at the soil of 11. II . tiiliett 01,4 1.. 11. Vos: vs. w imam No. 17. ALSO—One other lot of l aid.fu Towati da boio bounded as follows: Beginning o'. the soul It side of 441:cr-st.. at a corner of a r2;-fi a o al ley, thole,Sl 111 erly at, rig west litie of , said alley 21 f , er . :l Inehes UP a corner of John tviiii-t• us-es.h.te 1,4 ; thence we'terly 13 feet to a curittfr flieun'e along line of same s,nillierly -t9 feet dud 3 tonnes to •cortior of lat,d of Wm; Cluttn,crilti ; the: cc along Chlmberlin's north line neon ray 13 ft. and 9 In, to •-fotita Hose" but south-east nor.; thence atom:dine of -Lima noose - lot !tort tiers 73 feet anti 6 bottles to the south line td•Poplar-.t hercto;one mentiouPd: tio , nce along sou. it line of salt Poplar-st.„ ea s terly 26 !net 11 Inches. to the place of beginning; with I three story brick building with basement, com monly known as the ••Vance II ouse.'-'llwrtote Be- In;;- the same Wet' of land -CO veycti by C. M. Mali. vine to said J. L. Mellalion by deed dated DK-. IS, 1:174, and recorded in deed book No. 124, at page tu..A:O. Also all the right, title and Intmed of sold L. Mc3lahon in and to a certain Mick Wall on the treat •tile of said bd. being the east wall if the ' said' LI to Bose CoMpa building or engine nonm, as set forth lit of agreement ti .i6d Angust 1576, and recorded in deedlst;t ..„ ,k No. 132, at hire 1. • • No; is. AiSO—One other . lot of land Itt7towatitia horo., hounded as follows: Iteginning'at a 0. 1, Bartlett's line, the center of att,alley, and running west along bald Baillett's BIM to C. L. Ward's line; lb nee along - silt! Ward's line math.. , mar,by 6 feet ; thence on a flue parallel . to O. 1): Ilartlett's,,to the, ceoter of said aliey; thence along the neuter of said alley to the place of beginitlng ; ills lug the sane piece of laud unineyed L0y..1 no. J. a I.:rt/s and unite to J. L. 31tditalion,' by deed -da ted July 4, 1875, and recorded An deed - hook No itn, at pays 347. SIC. Selied aMI take., into e lven_ lion at the stilt of Ilia: National Bank of - Towan- I dab use vs. J. L. 3teMalion. No. 19. ALI-11—One other lot of Isla, in TOA an- I flatuvp:. boun4e.4l I.ottit lay lauds of E:.W. Bale; east by a milnie stri.et not 501 opened; south by -lauds of Par. ConstunCtit ; and west by public highwgy.:- being 30 .feet front on said, public !ugh way, and 300 tees deep; with a (mum d.honse the" e• on. :seized ann taken Into elocution lit the suit of P. L. Ward'i use vs. linen M. Crania/et'. At .Sti—One other lot Of ;and, in Arme nia :tsp.. (ottiolu.ti not iii by the, pribite highway; :east by lands of and Peter Monroe; booth by Lauds of Alfred 'Ripley; and west by lanils of Riley Hawkins; containing 25 acros of land; more or acres improved, with a trained "building used for b..rti. and few fruit tress thereon. -Nor 21.-A Lhli—One other lot of fatal, In Armeatta tap., ianindkd ew.t by the public high Way;. south by lands of John Smith; north by lands of Alfred Itip ley; and West by lands of Nancy.Bullurd; contain leg 1 acres of land, fibre or lest, about 6 acres Im proved, with a board shanty. all - anted barn and or chard of flak trees thereon. h tart' and tat e n Into exact:ll44k at the suit 4/. Franklin W; PeaS,ee, to use of Jewell er Pomeroy rs L. E: Cleat:eland - Ind Lucy P. Cloaxeland. . No. 22. A Lsi )—tlate other lot ol landin Pike twp:, bounded as folitAysa Beginning. nt a post on the warrant line of thu Kingsbury 13111.1, at tile corner of lands of Miner Itrlster and Theodore IL Brad shaw. thence .on sand warrant line c0nt6.7. 0 was perches to the wetter of Miner dlrlsterand lands thrned by Sanford and Childs White; *hone,: north 4 6 west 26 ',etches; theme north 46 6 _east 32 per chesL to the price of tiegliming: containing 214 antes of land. more or he-is. at improved. with.a mimed house, dc., thereon_ Slant and taken Into exec*. 1 lino .the suit of Alkel 'roma es. Theodore It. I Bradshaw:. , •No 23. ALF-O—One other lot of latill. Staialling S ono twp., b , ended :is follows: BM:lonlog .at a bondock swim, corner. formeny an hemlock stub; thet et. along tends of G. tiaras northlnow %. 2 E.) 2S 7-1111:erclies to a at tie corner mid land of ilat no) , C.ark; thence west (now N. 87 W..) along lands of said Clark and estate of ttyrea Stevens 17 perch or to a comer to creek; thew,' 500111 23° west down Said urea of purnm,zrfirld 22 5-10 perches to a cor ner; thence south JOS* oast-aloug said crook 3e-10 perches to a corner and lands of tireggs; thence along the 5..1t1 Urreggs awn It 87 0 cast 24 7-10 peter:ea to tile place of beginning; coutalubly: "aiii acres of laud. more or less, all Improved. will) au old framed bulldtpg awl few trait -trees thereon. .Solseti and taken In ai eiecution at the butt of Geo. C. Ittwoo use tr. John tirang - Er. ..- • . .N0.'7.1. • A1.551.-I.)ne other lot of land, In Tusca flora twp.,bounded north by lands of 4.4:Conner land tyro ht.. NI. Mattison; cast by the public hlgh ,way called the county:Hue road; situ d by /ands of Jerro If all and V. L. Halls estate; and went. by Math of Williams' Pierce and Ed. alarbalter cod. %slain Owes of land, !west less, atom; N'aeres . . . V 1 • - ,\, MR=!I =IS .. 141,1)4 ~ I). I. 1:41: I V of 1.1 , • I•s.• 1,1 J:ou•ts 1:4'0 You'.: 1 :‘ , tar Cn . :ITnnir Vi 41:'!: 0"a1r , 4 Jr.d and t:11,-.:1 n at 4:1.- -tl!t 0t tit.ach ti nry ' ;;.: 0'1; • r ;or 4,1 'llFul, tr y.. t:::"r• of .r• 7,r Al nr irn;,1,•1•:!. %lit% a' :1114ro.:t ti' ;a. Sorz taketilizto •-•;,•ooion at tli Ast ti r!:6•) N cwroar, Goo. K. :51:11 , , , it Nn. 1,50.-4vp, lt , htl. Tot..-1- t•ra t ~ ,,n h p. tjt:t trt•tth t•trlntl.l ,- ttt Ittltzt•t: 1.•: th,ptt:. hr.:II%I%AV: OA :11 , - SOW, by li n g at:rl 1•: ter Ixarn; and on ,` by :tt:ltltt or. Pt , ter Learn; rttntnlt..4l.nt.r . 4 . cif f t t•r.• tp,.. all Itil.t,vt!. NI I th . a llWCillag h,u.e ar a 'reW ftuic o. otlmr lot of Fula in TRFC.I• rut a twm, ti minted on tlto north !.y of 7%12.4hi cu Lt.;1711: (.:1 UV: watt Limits Thlger, decd: on the motilt",l.:: Milf,is of Arin Jayne!, mid rry, ive,t nf Airs .I.ryn,t , Cintaining iii 1,, , , , b.-zof land. more or ationt m•ros imprtivtl, ty ',tit a plank Itont.o. a frJuurd iturn; other 1,0. :mil few fruit Inn.% thereon. -proVpii With In houses and their out boolfeti. and an orebard of ft nit treos theretoi. avol :a1 cU Infu exocutioa at the suit of Dantol lte::,h•y MIR M ME ;4* pr !awl U: • ...I,trz`l.o col tto• Leid. 1),I41- AL!•tt--4)ne oth,r lot of !tot ra hip.. tonniPtl on the Lot th l v 110,h,0f huger: .•r . to• eas,t7 by !lib! of -- Wtber: Gn s.nt.h iy 1:41,1d+ Ar.eii Joyne al:d I•Pa.• e r: trflt,h the we-t I.y the pti4ilehTghwat-z-N.7,:;Litkilig• = =ZIEZE=I MEM Netts d'and .117[•n into evtvallota Ir. the suit ilt Atorn.l.earn'f.;4l , e V.. Isaac Boger,.]?., ex.-'r of Isttr at-rhit of sante vs. wu.e. No. 46 A LSO—One, other pi , •re of land in Athens bor.,. ai; ino e.noiwc pr. 11: NO. ti,l'or tht. Herrick iiiot st• 11,;00 by S , ll an in the sngth Har of- ztrt , te tilt ....awl.% small tr,st 9 f-et 41.!! os cor... of Ili: No. 249; IMMEM=2=I of ISte coat yaro.l.l MEMO ti:enee• st.t)th 5, 0 .71,'1re.i '226 CMlff==l feet to try. rust hank of no• (Iv moog river; then , e along . .river back ,not tit 45 0 400 feet; th,nee rorM :1.. 0 11' wt.:4 rktot It) Iht• t,outh nv4, tor t,f. Vranel. Tyler farm, or,v; 0w.,,t lir rfp: sc Itrit. CO.: thew ell z o mv .r, orlgiftal F. fylor farm not lb S‘ts 5 • ••::2 fi•fq . to trx 0,1% ho. .0! Of ttforor,ll.l4lot: thence t,ottllt 0 ,1 - 'west 11 11.10 foot to th.: seal 111.wro r I..Rsabt tI.OOIC nttrtlf fto o . f.O" east 212 1-10 feet to tto, we,t - 110 , - of It 11:11 v nt strrett'Ut..lice along the ,anu.•• soith 45 ,1 1 0 t:tt , r ISO 340 feet to the port lovn at . eor. of hit NQ. trat Moore ivoth St.° 511'(39 50a.11113.1 0 east 20!'. S , lO feet - to the suuth-wet.t e',r. of lo; thence north eat 110 fee: to the %•`•••1 E'intrm. thrneaWong thq. oattie -outh .1174° .'0? , 1 62 1 6.10 feet to th , to;rth.;asit eor. of lot No: 12.3: 1 hon . re o:mtth r.,tt 114 fort; 1117:1100 1,4 to the beffluttintz... Colt:0111h g ill 77-100 a... 1 of cling to r. survey I' N. F. V. at her .fitho 14'1.. more or Wing and relerr ;lig 09 . 100 gotll 11 01 treat l ho hoi 01+4 ~4 0. 0. the.rro , _ as cim.. v• ops,l horetoroto to the its. r - e - .ILA it. it. rO. Also. ex , eptlnn• Ferv.nr, th.!.• toliow!o4 h0h4211,„.• to I ' l7. OteNel 0N!a1.., to wit: Lots - No. 1 1 2. 16 . 2. 172,102. 192. 2i.t. 212, 222,212. 31/,tr21,. 7,11. and 371. Ir!ing I h., :..ato, pttrt•ha,tol. Noble at an: A.intlolotrator'o , l,ol,, a: the estate of Jolvt Saqinart.h d• 50.31., and %Hell i•oottrined ;said porettor hy tad llttat ttoo ' Court o; ikract fold Cutinty..Srpf. to, 1071. Alt loi• • Chuleg E- N4ble A. J. 1. VYTON; :h. r 11: SherlVA VAlee, Towanda; Pa.. Nov. 13, is7l, IN BANKRUPTCY.—:-.ln the MA - triet , nurt of the United States for the West ern Dtm r et of Pennsylvanta. Mahlon Merydr. a Bankrupt, of Tt.wande, I'a.. a I.:eel:n:111 undeillte• Art of tganrret“ nr Ittarett 2, 1' , :•7. It:vim: applied or a ditc•bal frqa all Ida • 4 , •rds, and ot.L r eb,lnas pr , rable ta,d.)a /4.ligt by of In-! court botlee Is tolr.-by Oren ti•all ore dit9ta Fbu have.jireved - thr I r 1): MA Otivs: o (1% , vittpletr or, the 12;11 (133: of 1)E --eV:MUER; .87$, at IC otelt.rt; A. at., bPfore. V. E. Smith. Roirfeter Irt_itaptiritptcy. at the t•Zeo Overfon 1 M:tour, Its Towanda. Irvin. strattl3, eart,e, IL gny :110kb:tee. why a dlsellargo should not be grat.ted m tlto Bald bankrnia. novl4-2w. ' • . tit C. 'NICCANW.F.S.S, Clerk. • APPLICATION .IN DIVORCE. —To Margaret HerrloV. in BP .Court' td' common Mas of -Brad to .1 County,- No, 117. Niay . Term. 1677. Voil are horoll too`Med that' Martin lierriett, your Intaband, has rppliod to - the Coati of Ctsllllllloll PirS4 of Bradford county for a tliv. , rim from !I l bond• of matrimony, and the t : aid Court ha:. appointed Motniar, IMe-ettther 2, IS:3. in II Court ilotme'at Towanda. for bearing the I•ald„ . Mat , tin In the prentl.seA, ;it %Odell &Imo - and placw yon may attend if yell thenk proper. noes, • • A. J. L ATTON..sllriff. AI) MINISTAT9It 7 S. NOTICII. —!.iotteesls. hereby qtyrn thit all per,ons In• detited to the e;stat9 of kntera U. enrich tate of Towanda Bor9ugh, deceased, nee requested to mats immediate poynient, acid aft penouis having claims lizitnyt SAM eAr:atts must preseht tbeut July authenticated for settlement.- • 000DRICII, Aduilalstfitor. "4,0. BM EZEMIERI IMEMIEMEEI