' . fl.t - godford Aciottrt E. O.__OOODRICII, EDITOR. Towanda, Pa., Thtliay, No-.. 20,1879 THERE may be reasonable and moder ate mein in•the South, but they allowed themselves to be governed by the shot gun and rough-riders of the 'community, who are perhaps few in numbers, but rea dy with the•revolver"and bowie-knife. CoN4 . :nson CitogswELL, of l'ilichig4n, biz"; . appointed. Hon. FEn.k:klixt C. 13$a at-As United States lienator in place of Hob. ZacuAni.o.; CHANDLER deceased. He is a native of Vermont, but has lied in Michigan for over kitty years. Ife - bas been Probate Judge wig Prosecuting At torney of Laurence colinty ; vas a,mem her of the Thirty-eighth and Thirty-ninth C7' . ()Tii.;resses THAT one star differeth from another star, is apparent from the 'fact that new planeth afe occasionally discovered and. added to the list of the heaveidybOdies. Professor PETKIIS; of Clinton, t. N. Y., dis covered on the 12th inst., a planet of the eleventh magnitude,. whose light prob ably, after Struggling .for hundreds of millions of years, has suiTeeded in reach ing the earth. _ , 11 II RT l'obm us, the II re teati n g Toom Bs of Georgia, was asked to sand his congratulations to the .on...Ni• reception. Ile complied r by sending his "personal congratulate ms to General GRANT on his sue arrival t ih this country.'" And then the hardened old rebel says : "lie fought for his country' honorably and won. I fought for Mine and lost.: I am ready to try iO rr over again. Death to the Union !" This reconstructed - rebel haft needs ei ther.a strailtht-jacket or a halter. y - -,Tike leading Issues in the Preipential canvass gill be the financial i . piesCiou and the s,, u th ern qUestion. The position of the Itepubliban party on both meets with cordial appropriation of the great major ity of the lieople in the North. We eau next. scar with any of the distinguish _ oil :will prinuinent . Republicans named in c•oonucctiou with the . Presidency. Any candidate who is!sound upon these ques- tines and has the confidence of the people will be elected: We have a dozon Repub- leaders, wbo would be acceptable to the masses, and would be chosen, if nuininated A ItErum.“ - NN, or at least au Inde ndent, United States Senator is a Vir ginia possibility. The leading Republi can, of the State having lost . their in fluence over the colored vote, which went almost Unanimously to, the repudiators, will pr,bably unite the - DOA-payers, who ar: willing to shelVe Withers if necessary to save the State's honor. Among the possible candidates is Judge R. W. of the Cnited States Court, of wlMse record as a Republican the Demo crits Speal; highly. Mani' prefer him to .31.aucloNR, who is the repudiation can didate. Ton Gttlyr Booni has teaebeil -the Ex. ccutive Chamber of this Commonwealth. its inspiration Governor liorr sent the f"llowing telegram to the Chicago lte el.ti,.m Committee : 1:.•, Penn., Neveniher Il.—Fite people of note With plea4ure the compleflea of t 1:e circuit afolll.l the globe by General Grant. sell naiad by - theft :ter-hams they w1:1 re.t him hero on a "lap," until In teal he shall I,l,4:orate, the Magi,trate of the Nation, the foil poi-ill/NUS of 4 tree people and, In lass, An. In nof us will J led him *.riorlsiaed to the nIMOSOPI,T ~ T a perfect earner, HENRY NI. HOYT, Covenair of PesinNylvania Mu. A ! , TIIONY toNticroct:, of New Yolk, is aiding . the Post Office. Depart innt hi the ethtrtto put down lotteries, ay.'d no suppress immoral publications. lie hcis heen making raids upon tie agents of the Southern IottVIAC.S, in New York, and hml quite a number of t-hem arrested. Ills we: dings deserve 'c,;nimendation„ and ti 4 is to he hoped sill prOve the means of cradie d tho 4 the lottery business in the North. Quite a number of the .newspa p-rs we receier publish the advertise nientN . of the lottery companies, in doing which. they violate the'law, and subject themselves which should be enfoeced. Tni.: /1,411 n, of the elections Baring teNted Tiirnm N'S stivnoll in Ohio, :111.1 Tit.ntl:N's in New . tork, and proi eonehisiVely that neithd will an :,:ser as Presidential candidates, the 12c niocntcy iaro in a had way—iA fact, in such a desj . )erate state that even SAM N 1).12, , MUM' has been suggested as a possihh. ca n didate. But the boom seems he - toward 11 tun, of Delaware, --111, , w4h the only teas,m we have seen urg td_ni his betalf, is that the Republican papers sonic time since apillanded his ac tion, in not being hull-dozed by the soft money oleo. It's so seldom that praise of that kind is deserved, we don't won der that the Democracy prize it highly. But it's of tto use; the people will not elect ai President in 'P:oql, any Southern man, however: ii";:timatile he may. be. There are equally good men in the North whose associations and• feelings are more in consonance with those of the Solid North. Tate coolest pi.oposition we have en cOuntered lately comes from a Confederate Soldier ticlie suggests that the Confederate sMdier - s in - Philadelphia take part in gen eral Ona yes reception. It seems to us that it is in shocking bad time for the re liels thus to daunt in the faces of the loy al men of the country the evidence of their great crime, as if it was creditable and not disgraceful. If they have repent ed of their 'treason, and have become good and loyal citizens, loving the Union,' the most theydeserye, or should ask, is to have their mirieedivforgottep, if not for gotten. Would :they renew the memories kif the Rebellion by putting fOrward and recognizing the actors in the' great folly and crime which cast a sorrow over so many Northern hearts? If the Confeder ates desire to honor the man who served his country so br f avely and so well, there is no objection to their doing so l but. in so (loin , they should not bealloWed to lion& their treason and insult the loyal senti ment of the country. ;NElphia otrrespondent of the New York Time , Os :peculates about the next seuxtuiship i from this State : 4 , t me-of the inost in4Xesting features of sso in Pennsylvania' will be the selection of a successor to Senator IVAILA6S. There k not the most remote prospect that he orany other :Democrat can be elected to the Senate by the next Legisla ture.. The contest for the place is popu laxly presumed to lie between ex-Speaker (;nv aed Colonel the present isecraary of the Commonweaith. One or two other names are suggested, lint none will he serio4sly eunsicbired froth present pto-peet,-. Mr. Gluilv is quite in earnest, te has declined very decidedly all sugges tiCmx of going to St. Petersburg to suc ceed' Mr. STourattos, and will stay at home to attend to the senatorship : , In the just closed, he took an fictive part, making much more effort, than any other !Republican speaker, and he has strong claims upon the party for his ser vices during the last five years. That ho can be elected, however, tshrewif otterv ers profess to doubt, declaring that the !",machine" will surely be used in behalf of Colonel QUAY, and that agaiu.st its free Mr. Ono* can make no effective opposition. Upon these points it is to be said that Mr. GRow is regarded with de cided favor by many of the men who are now active in the control of the party, and some of them Ay unreservedly that they,are for him ; further,-the CAMERON influence, though it might be sueces4ully invoked for Colonel Qup,v, has no un friendliness now to Mr. GROW, and might easily• be elected in his I favor. colonel QuAl 3 , it is also fair to say, Tatar dis coura4s the expectation that be will be a candidate at.all, and the opinion is held in same quarter{ that a dear field may be made when ' ? titne comes for the ex Speaker." Thei.b is a general feeling amongst the Republicans bf the State, that it would be wise aid proper to:elect Mr. Gnow as the successor of Senatof WALLy.F. ; a feeling whip is finding, expression in many quarters of the Commonwealth. Should the desire of the people be respected, he would be chosen with unanimity. And the feeling is so unanimous and so strong that it would not be safe to ignore it, 'ror defy it by any "machine" tactics. GENERAL. WADE HAMPTON, Senator from South Carolina" refused to unite in an expression of welcome to General GRANT upon his reception at Chicago. We are 'not surprised at this, nor should, it be a matter of astenishment . nor regret. It is an illustration of the insincerity of the Southern leaders. No rebel was more profuse, in proclaiming his determination to co-operate in the policy of conciliation in the South, nor in his promises to re spect the rights of the Southern Itcpuldi dabs. So long as he was permitted to use the Federal patronage for his own pur poseshe kept up the decept.ionpbut when his unreasonable demands were refused, he became again the bitter and intolerant Confederate. He has notified the north tern Democratic leaders that the State of South Carolina will not under any circum stances support a Northern Presidentia candidate ; that they are unanimously colt BAYARD, because as a Southern man he has always been identified with their sec tion, and his sympathies have always been with them in their troubles, both during and since the late war. TUERF.: are indications of :a plot on the, part of the Democratic State authorities of Maine to set aside the popular will ex- Tessed at the late ele.2tion by 'trickery_ The matter stands thus : In . September the Republicans failed to elect their can 'date for Governor by a majority of the 'popular' vote. Hence the Legislature Must elect. But the Republicans elected nineteen of the thirty-ouc Senators, anti ninety-one of the one hundred and fifty Representatives.. This, of course, gave {he Legislature overwhelmingly to the Reptiblicans, and uttper the constitution 4.1 f Maine would render the . election of the Republican candidate for Governor cer tain: But the rumor credits the Demo cratic State officials with the purpose of issuing certificates to so many Democrat ic defeated candidates as shall give that party a majority in both Hou s es, a nd thus, supposing the scheme carried out, to ensue the eleetiontof the Democratic candidate for Governor. We do not be lieved that such a tare-faced °scheme of rascality can be carried out in - Maine, and its exposure will probably be sufficient to prevent the conspirators from attempting it. Ii Now, see here! This thing of Gen GRANT'S intentions has got to stop !" There not room in the insane asy lums for all the Crazy, people it will make; unless an end is put to it:! Why should the whole country - be . kept in a fever of expectancy and in the tremor of desired information, when a single word would restore the Nation (with a big N) to its, state of normal quietude ? For two years the attention of the people •has been centered with painful anxiety upon one man who was hobnobbing with the crowned heads of the Eas't—and now he comes back to upset his own country. It's enough to mak4.l the heavenly bodies fly from their spheres. And all because nobody knows Wheth er or not Gen: GRANT is a . comilidate . fur a third Presidential term,. And the more it is discussed, and the murc there is peiiited about it, the greater groWs the Mystery, the more unendurable -the . !suspense. Mean while the imperturable soldier accepts the honors offered hide, and even makes speeches, and yet does ;not announce hiniself as a candidate, nor decline: the "kingly crown." And the - Mystification becomes inure in tense and the anxiety increases; still .- thequeStion is no nearer a solution. Shall the business of the : country come to a stand-still—shall the mo mentous issues of life be forg,ott,eri— all because a stubborn man defiantly ignores the great question of the day, and refuses to gratify the curiosity of the ncwsmongers? We opine not. But what are they going. to do about it? Nearly every other day some Bo hemian of the press, blessed with unusual imaginatie powers and with the faculty of concocting sensational items, frames and publishes a pro gramme of Gen. GRANT'S movements, and discloses the plans of his friends to bring about his nomination. The latest we have seen is that in dtie time GRANT will let it be knoWn authoritatively that he is at the dispo sal of the American people ; or, in other Words, that if nominated by the . Republican partyle will accept. At the same time, it is asserted that GRANT will not he a sectional candi date. lie expects support from the South, and if elected President he will not be a sectional President: He is to play the role of the great con, ciliatnr. This, his Presidential man agers think, will be most appropriate. They argue that, after the election,of ISl o the people of the North will be hemtkily tired of the sectional issue, andithat the South will be perfectly wiling to abandon its preference for Demogratic doctrines and State rights theories and gp in. with • ; for a great nation, a strong Clovern went -and plenty or , spoils. He is . not going to remain in the country . this winter, bit will go to Cuba and Mexico, and will not return to the United- States until next spring. Then lie will land at New-Winans and make a tour through the South ern States.. • All of which May come to pass, but. we have no faith that an electoral vote in the South Wilt be cast fur any except a Democrat of Sokhern sym pathies. As to Gen. GlaANT's possi „ hie candidacy, it can onlycome about because of a necessity, or supposed necessity, fora man at the head of. the Government who has the courage to stand up against the. designs and machinations mf the Democratic lead-1 ers. There is .abroad throughout the land a universal and undefined appre hension of impendiug danger to the institutions of the country, or at least threatening the rights and privileges of the citizen —an ,apprehension growiri out of the treason of the rebellion, and revived by the pro ceedings of the Confederate Congress. This feeling of alarm caused the peo ple to turn instinctively to the great Ciener who had led the armies of U/iionthe to victory and preservdd the Union. The same causes Which produced this feeling of dread, can bring abiint the unanimous renomi nation of GRANT and . MS triumphant electiOn, in spite of the general senti ment against a third term as -being contrary4o the respected precedent§ of the fathers. Gen. GRANT, we take it, with his usual shrewdness; appreciates the situation. We have faith In his as sertion that be does not want the Presidency again. But an. aroused Northern feeling may carry him into the Presidential chair against his in clinations and despite the judgment of the cooler and more considerate men of the Republican party. There is no accounting for, nor controlling certain movements' of the people. Unreasoning action sometimes results fron — suliposed public necessities or e%igencie,s. It would, in our judg ment, be wiser- to make President some other tried and capable public man—such as SHERMAN, BLAINE or Com:LlN—but there may arise such a whirlwind of public feeling as will set aside the plans of politicians and the judgment of shrewd and cool ad visers, and force upon Gen. GRANT the' Presidency, with We - furor which characterized the political victories of Old Hickory. The regret, of a result would be,. that.tthere whs such a condition of thiii l / 4 41 as made, it even an apparent ,necessity. It Cannot lie brought about by the man-r -;gement of politicians-, nor can it be c i prevented by those. whiTiresire some hing else, but it can come it th tutions of the country are menaced by those who once unsuccessfully attempted to (le4..ia: the Union. - • G ENERA I, G RANT arrived iu Chicagd early Wednesday- afternoon. lle was re ceived by the mendicip of the Society of the .Irmy of the Tennessee, which had met in the morning, and also by th city Wheels, military and civic orgainza 'tins, and citizens of all parties. The pr ces sion which escorted the General to the Palmer House, and was there reviewed by him,. ocer4ted more than two hours passing a given ',mutt , There was a dense throng along the route, which loudly ap'- plauded General GRANT," :!;111.101AN aliii SHERIDAN. At ter . - the review General I ;IcANT was formally welcomed by Mayor 11AitittsoN and made an appropriate re ply. - An the ei - ening there was a grand .., reception to the General at Ilaverly's Theatre, which was crowded by an enthu siastic- audience. Upon the stage were Generals SHERMAN, SotEntnAN and other distinguished..flicers, al , o Governor Cot.- LC M. Mayor II A RRISUN and other officials. I n response to repeated calls General GRANT, on this Occasion, made a speech, in which he alluded to the reception given him abroad was a tribUte to the country, and an evidenm of our standing and.inr portinice as a nation. - TiE prohibition candidate for State Treasurer rectives in the State 3,219 votes, of which 2:24 votes Were polled in thiscounty. The cause of Temperance is worthy of the respect and encouragement of, all good Citizens, . but mil should be glad to have some of the voters who threw away their votes foOticttA list*: enlighten us to the possibility a any good result to the Temperance movement by stand ing in a h6Stile attitude to the two great political parties, and making such a sorry show of strength at the p 0115.% In our perskiellee in Ealell course damages the cruise, and rctidrds the consummation which should have the good. gishes and cordial support of every one who'desires to put down the demon intemperance. The majority of di& votes given to the Prohibition can didate came from the Republican •party, and while we do not intend to set up any claims that the party comprises all the law And order and temperance part of the community, yet we,do not assert without the fear of successful contradiction that there has never been any legislation in the interest'of temperance which has nut been enacted, by the Republican party, and when -our temperance friends cast their vntes . in such a way as to contribute to the danger of defeating the Republi cans, they act unwisely and to the detri ment of the cause they profess to con sider of the first importance. , , Tur_, decision Of the tax-payers 4ssexi pressed at the baßot-box by a majority of 1637 that the county should assume the call and support of the poor, throw upon the county Commissioners the;laWr• and responsibility of providing fotithe carry ing out of the wishes of the ptkoPle. They have already- - Oven notice that they will receive proposals for the sale of farms suitable for the purpose intended. 'When this undesirable duty ds performed, will come the task of erectimi•+ the necessary buddings and electing the officers. In doing this the Commissidnerswill not be able to satisfy and please everybody, but it is fortunate that the Board is compor. ed of men whose reputation for integrity and practicatgoed sense is io well . estab lisped, that their, jUdj,rment will be cheer fo.By accepted by the great body of the peOple. These who4re desirous of sell ing their farina to the comity, bliuum make their propositions to the Commit siouers, and should put the prat at the lowest - figures, as there will not he a 4 diportuoity Offered for reduction Or change, after the proposals are Opened.. In selecting a farm there are several con, sidemtions tittibo weighed,' and the Cotil misSiOners will undoubtedly be guided by what they judge tti be •the best interests of the tax-payerti. • Tit E fin niath.n of Supervisors' distriets under the il'OVibiollB of tlie Cetisus.Aet, has been Atortipleted by Superintendent WALKER. The district in which this county is iriclUded is the sixth, aild corn prises the counties of Bradford, Cameron, Lycoiniug, McKean, Potter, Susgyelianna and Tioga. The SuperviSors wiOe made by selection . from applicants w4iiling in thiki distvict, and will be announced about the first of nett JantutiT. Tire tfandly Of the late Senator eitlrcii inxit, whiefixonsists of a' widow and ene daughter (married to Congressman 11/0x) is`'entitled to sympathy.. It turns ;out .that the estate of. the deceased Senator amounts• to a littlO lessAliati two milljons Of dollar's—at least a million less than ' was exiiected. JOIES HAY, of Cleve Ohio, has.been appointed First Assititant Secretary of State at Washington, tip till the vacancy caused by the retireincnt. of lion. FitEmutt-K - W. SEWAItD. • • , NEW YOM: elicts the Republican State ticket with a single exception=i-StatorSen ator. The vote• has not yet been fully canvassed, but the 'majorities aro sinall. GOVEIMOR-ELECT FoSTER, of not/net49A he is not debiroui of b'eing United States Senator. LETTER PIM! P-lIILADELPHIA, PUtt.APEcettrx, November 17,'879 The vast extent and imptirtanca Of the manufacturing interests of this city is hut imperfectly known to the general }ollie. It ih a vast.bee-hive of industry, and the . statistics place it far ahead of many a manufacturing centre which mijoys , more notoriety for the amount of its produc; Gen:. In nothing is this more forcibly illustrated than in the single branch of carpet-making. At a recent meeting of the Wool Growers Association, Mr; Dob son, a heavy manufacturer, made I,sonie statements iii regard to the growth and extent of that business which are_ worthy of notice. Ile said that there is riraiiti factured in this city every grade of car pets, from the finest td the commonest quality. There is to-d:ty iu the United States scarcely anything still! but A.mori cm' carpets. Five years ago the leading carpet dealers in the country scouted the idea of selling domestic Brussels carpets ; and, nine-tenths of all the goods of this description manufactured in this 'country were sold as foreign goods: Why- is this ch:mged 4 ? Simply beciluse of the excel lence of American manufactures 'and a protective tariff. Without the, litter many of the mills that now employ thous ands of wnrkpcople would never havethad an existence. Iu 1572, abopt five and a half Millions yards of earpe4 were imported init4his Country—in 1616, only 270,000 yards.; are making to-daYl. six million more yards of carpet than we were in 1672, and of a quality equal, if nut sujullior,. to any for eign make. It has often been asserted that here in this city more yards of carpet 'were man ufactured than iu the whole of C.reat Bri tain. According to the latest statistics before us, we are now mamifacturing fully twenty million yards of all kinds of carpets annually. The latest • published statements of the exports' of the United Kingdom for the year 1574 are ;six mil lioti seven hundred and .lifty Oionsand yaids. • Allowing the same, s quaritity for their .owa home consumptim, !it gave Great, I;ritain a producing capacity 1575.0 f 1:1,:500,000 yaids, while this quiet City of Brotherly Lott, has an animal ino. duct ion of 20,000,0!tn. The Basteitt States will swefl the total to 39, 01 5), 01)0 annually, showing that we manufacture and sell more than twice as many yards of carpets as the. • wiude United Kingdom manufac tured and sold in 1878. While these state ments might appear incredible, they are, nevertheless; facts, compiled from official documents. It is not safe even to ride o on a load of hay. )n Wednesday eveying,' a wagon loaded with fodder, strucli and demolish ed a street lamp at Fourth and Cittivcrt streets. The ,hay Was set on Aire, and about half consumed,. besides bringing out the steamers and creating a general excitement in the neighborhood.! Mrs. Potts, the ,woman who' reeently completed a walk from Philadelphia to New ()!leans and return, attenpted to commit suiOde by planing her bead upon the railroad track at Germantown , June tine. She was observed in time and her suicidal purposes frustrated. { Letters were found upon. her addressed to the New York Herald, Baltimore American, Charlotte, N. C., ObAerrer, Atlanta Con-: :dilution,. and the New Orlea l is statirg, amongst other( things, that pov ertfand failure to find employment led tp the act. Mayor Stokely has received a message {from General Grant announcing that he { had made arrangements to be in this city on the litth. of Decepber.. iW i lien the Ginicral left this city lie had a `,` send citr which be Ought to have been 'proud of, but from appearances it was a feeble show iu comparison with the greeting which will be given hint: A sickening and painful accident occur red ou Friday to a{ young girl in Itestine's ' Mil)s, at seventh and Deekman streets. The unfortunate girl, Jennie Hall, fifteen years of age, was engaged in winding when her loose hair got entangled in perpendicular shaft. In a Moment she was being whirled around and her scalp began to tear. Before the {Machinery could be stopped, her scalp from the eye brows torfthe 'neck "was completely torn oft. T 4 poor girl vas removed to . - the Penusylvimia Hospital, and died on Mon day from the effects of her injuries: { 'The foundations for the two western piers fo"r the elevated railroad bridge over the Schnylkill at Filbert streetliave been laid, and the work will be pushed with the energy which usually marks theioper ations of the Pennsyliania railroad. Thomas Iti. Kirkbride, M.; ll.; 'physi cian-in-chief, and superintendent of the Pennsylvania hospital thd Insane, is lying dangerously ill at his residence on the grounds of the institution, at Forty fourth, street and flaverford aVetme. his illness is supposed to be malarial fever: The exports of grain• have fallen off very much, owing to the Welt prices of the last few weeks. .\ot a single cargo of wheat has been I cleared t' during the ;week, and only 1!30,000 bushels of corn have to en shipped. The importation of iron from- Eurcipe sEll continues. It is, now "coming in the shape of pig, old rails and iserap. Some of the commission men have ;`'made - large large profits in the busiuess but it looks now as if the business was !being over- done, and that the market would be over stocked. During the past month 8 7 4085 cars wore moved over the Philadelphia division of the Pennsylvania Railroad,' the , freight Work being performed with si4y-live lo- Comotives, ility-four of which ail, of the largest class. This transit is said to be the heavierit ever made in a single month, over.any one division of this railroad. A woman had a hearing. before a Jus tice of the Peace at Camden; on Saturday last, on the charge of cruelty to an adopt edchild, in having sat the little ono on a hot stove plate, by which it was so severely burned that its recovery is not expected. She was held'in $3OO for tfild. • The Italian bark Luigi, which arrived at the lheakwater oh Monday night last, from Amsterdam; Holland, reached Glou;• cesterpn Wednesday afternoin,' and dis played,signals for help. She was boarded ,by persons from the Police tug Stokely, andltthe captain's request, two of the Crew Were arrested, who, when the vessel wair , two days out from An.sterdatn had, in. an affray, kiile.t) one of ,their compan ions. • They were held by the authorities until they can be removed to Italy fur-tri al, under existing treaties. , The trustees of the Jefferson College, at the suggestion of the faculty of the chi lege, at their meeting on last Tuesday ev 'ening, elected Dr..fltiiiiy C. Chapman to till the chair of physiology dining the present session, made vacant bithe death of Professor .I.'Aitken ?ileigs. 'A locomotive attached to a train on the West Chester Railroad, on Monday of last week, at one of the way statiOns, refused . to move. The engineer worked the throt tle and the indicator, showed plenty of steam. On a further examination it was 'Comid that an eel had got into the injec tor. It was taken out and the train start ed for \Vest Chester where it arrived ilf - teen minutes behind time. Ex-A:Heiman Peter Hay died Saturday at his residence, 33:1 North Sixth street. Ile was ninetY : one years old, and was President of the' Veterans of 1812.- ale smved at Fort Mifflin and Camp Dupont, (luring that war. Ile Was at l :one time a member of the lower House of the Legis- latitre, and.afterwards of the Senate. In 18'3'2 he was appointed Alderman of .this city and served ten years. In 1856 he ws elected Alderman and served until 1877. There was a boom in Pennsylvania Railroad - stock Thursday, and prices run ning above par set the brokers all agog. The scene at the Board was of the wildest description. When the room Was opened the brokers rushed in. pell-mell and crowd ed around the President's stand and 'be gan operations. he galleries were filled with spectators, many of whom were in terested,. becausti they held -stock,' and who hung over the railing and viewed the scene with mingled feelings of amazonent and trepidation. Before the Boardclosed the stock went up to par, and a large number of shares were disposed of. The speculation in stocks is ruttniug wild, and it will he a fortunate occurrence if the ex eitemat does not end in a grand crash _ and panic. - An order has been made for the trans fer of 551,000 ounces of gold bullion ft om the New York a.csay office to the Mint in this city for coinage. The value of tlth bullion is about $10,250,000, and i 4 part of that recently received from Europe. The Mints will first coin eagles and half- eagles PENNSYLVANIA'S OFFICIAL IVY* The official returns from all the counties have been filed in the office of the Secretary of State, at Harris burg, as follows : COUNTIES. 5 AdantB .;.... .... ...• 2375, 2f,70 . 114 ..., Allegheny.... al 17 9 13 11 Ile. 1431 79 .149.841901 g 3752 3997 612 .... Ilettol.r 3397 210:. 137 13 ' liedtertl 2073 209.5 60 2 Iterks • ' 4 9 22' 8E025 260 1 • 11131 r 39.12. 313“ 271 51 f :rad fer,l : 458 9 2140 124 2111 litlek 8 ' 6626 6213 2.9 Butler l 21,1 2/09 272 5 Cambria 2514' 3117 319 22 1 1 .1dt-roil ' .127 352 - 19 . Carlem : 1926 23 61 180 67 Centre , • 1776 2710 299 61 Clie.ter n92.3 3399 72 254 Clarlon 1939! :103a 217 4 Clearfield -. 13 - 2 2494 429 „.. Clinton ••. • I 1327 14..:. 61 GC, ( 1 01nnttda.... ...... ' 1166! 2111 378 210 Iran . turd_ 36061 2011 1$ I, 2 7 C4nol.erlatel •••• - • • • 3 , 1.1 11 0 7 .118 32 Danidtln '5138' 3216 709 32 1)01:mare • 3.62, 16,7 35 49 Ell: • 1190 1 , 901 119.... h:rie 52411 3211 . 718 I Fayette - 250 ll 2941 31S 6 Ferest • 271 , 1 11111 .290 •:. Frani:lln 8259 2768 C2O . ' Finkel : 59,1 0_9..... 5 1; r•••• 110. ... 1382 21178 51 10 • 11 +lnt ditztlon 21.98: 1479 2.8.1 3 . reliant 27221 µllh 1799 .., .le tlf ore at 1,2 i : 1576 165 1 --.51:n1,119 1 t 1.1 , 1731 134 ..:. , 1..,-1 1 an tuna - . ' 536 I : 3613 1•• • 9 1411 Imnea,ter , 1174 :.:11'.1 4`4. 1112 I.3Virellel. ' 2 , 11111 /tr.] 11,1 11 , 7 .. Leila ii.m :13;4i 21 1 ;7 23 In Leh t/211.,1 37 o; :i Ir, Imzerne 3 7:4.. , i 47:43 3.1 1. :4 1.y.111i Me 21 , 4!? 241 i b.iol 152 M efie:tii - i ;Kul n7O 1113 Mercer ;let 20161 4 05 242 Mifflin 12.1. 12:0 lo 10 Monore 3llll, 1371 23 0 311/11Ighmery 0777' a A:t()' 111 I. Mon hour._ • $47 0,7 -2,4 14 Northampton , 2110 i ! 4224 I:, 47 N orth um herlittul ;. 25931 30-11 214 73 Perry t - 01:- 2340 lOO Philadelphla 741741 . 411.13 24 Ni. 104 Pike j 240 1 051 .. !, . Potter ; 739 . 37/1 2.191.. , . Schuylkill : 4030 4.17 25,1: 01 Snyder 1 Pwl, $7lll 411, *...5 S(1111er1C4 , A'''' ' :111 ,1, 1: 7 1' 1 0 Sullivan ! 2 ,:: 412 2'5 I .40,14Ielianna 32:11, 247 3011 G. Tioga r - 3%01 1.10 , Vo,3' 1113 1.51.111.1 t . 17271 1140, 40. 71 V.•nangO • • 2579 17 ,0 4411 115 Warren 1... 2041 935' 1237. 1:, %Va., Illuictoil.... 5274 471:5 274.... NV ayn o 4901 1003 2or, 1.5.4 We,tmortland , 3009 A-172 442. ~.. NV yoni Mg ...... ..... ' 1472 1071 - 0 2', York , .... .......... 415 N 57:4 5 3 BM Scattering, sa The following are the totals. for Governor in 1878 and Treasurer this year: Butler, 1' 2 4 0,1153 Ilnyl r lL. Barr. II 221,115 11111, 11.. Sutton, G 27,207 Al am , n. 6 Illehardson, P.;. .- 3,219 Law, P. Se:Wl:ring.. .... 35 Grand total ramd tut to - , 12.03tt Butler over Barr.. 5v,43 , 1 Hoyt over DBL.:. .12,5n7 . Butler over STATE NEWS. NAVIGATION on the Lehigh Canal will dose on the 25th of the present moan. T LIE eigarmakers of Pittsburg have formed an organization for the protec tion of'themselves and their men. THE .miners of the :Lehigh and Wilkes-Barre Coal Company are soon to make a demand for higher wages. Juno FRANKLIN FRASER, a prom inent member of the Bar of Susque hanna county; died of ,typhoid fever on Monday last. TUE Chester county, lead mines, which have been idle for fifteen or twenty years, will soon,' be put in operation again. • Associate Judge Joseph Light, of Lebanon county, died at Lebanon. The court adjourned in; respect to his memory. ' 1 - ON. the first of 'October, George C. Howe, C. Marvin, A. R. Walker and F. C. Babcock,. well known oil men, purchased the Moody tract or oil land, south of Bradford. It consists of seven thoUsand acres and thepriee paid was $105,000. . SEVEN of the twenty-four mine accidents in Lucerne county during the month of October Were fatal, and nearly were due to the care lessness able men. A enscx drawn fifty years ago by the acting managers of the Lehigh Coal and Navigation Company was recently sent back from Machias, Me., for redemption. • A2' the Lackawanna Iron and Coal Company's mill .at .Seranton a ball used for breaking iron, and weighing: nearly a ton, fell upon and killed Anthony Berry. Ma. J. P. HINE, a merchant at West Lebanon, Indiana county, while endeavoring to stop a runaway team last Saturday, was kicked'by one of the horses and instantly kill ed. MARTIN WILLIAMI, aged thirty five, while in the Exeter Colliery at Pittston, was instantly killed by a coal car jumping the track and run ning into the•Ch7arnber where be was standing. WATTX W. TERWILLIGER, a con ductor, 'on 'the Southern Railroad, was instantly killed at Williamsport, where he resided, on Tuesday morn ing. He was jammed against iiicar. TIIE Indian school at Carlisle has just • received an addition of 'two more boys and six girls froni Dakota and Wisconsin, making 15s in all. Ut' in Papho township, Lebanon county, Henry Geisher who had a reputation for. strength, helped to lift a slaughtered hog to the scaffold the other day. He ,strained himself so badly that he died in a Tow hours afterward. THE large planing and shingle milli of R. S. Brown & Co., together with the office and lumber-sheds and two dwelling-houses,. in Lock Haven, were totally destroyed by fire. Loss, $25,000 ; mill and machinery insured for $5,50Q, . A WHITE swan, „measuring .5'61 ; inches from the tip of the •toes. to the end of the Leak, and 8 inches amass the wings, and" 'weighing Ill; pounds, was shot on Teti Mile creek, Wasliington county, on Wednesday. It will be presented' to the Sports men's Club of l'ittsbtrg.- ALi.EN T. FosTEtC'while lugging home a huge (leer throsugh a wilder ness in McKean county, on Monday afternoon, dropp(o - his rifle, which was discharged, and the ball striking him in the leg he was so , disanled that he could not., walk. He bound up the wound with a handkerchief and crawled borne on his bands and knees, a distance of three miles. JAMES M. Miwin, the missing linsiness manager of the Harrisburg Telegraph, has -been heard from. Mrs. Miller and Mr. Bergner, of the Telegraph, both received letters frbni Charlotte, N. V., saying that it was the first time he had been able to write singe he left home, on account of severe illness. Tin: strike among the coal miners of La Salle, 111., has increased until about one thousand are r.Ow idle, and only one co4icry is running. Mu. AMMpiSE, clerk of the United States Visitict Court aMineinnati, was arrested for making a fals'e claim .against the government and for col lecting illegal fees. JumrsErni. was hanged at Sherman, Texas, fur the murder of Joseph A. 'Brenner, in Denison, on the 15th of January. About; six thousand people witnessed the execu tion. ,—State'rrtusur,r-- s_ a As investigation now going on .in New York into the prison labor sys tem shows that it. van only be i safely conducted by means of contracts as lung as partisan iniluence prevails in the State government. F. RonEnTsoN i of Hinsdale, N. 11., dropped dead in the -Revere House at Springfield, 111., while removing his coat. The cause of his death was strangulation from the breaking of an ulcer in his throat. A Yosturts, N. V., thief on Wed nesday stole a large number of val uable wedding. presents from the house of R. G. I►ouglass, while the newly-made husband and wife, with their friends, were enjoying the marl. riage feast. ' • A NEotto fired a gun from the A merle:La side of the Rio G'ionde, at El Paso. Texas, on Wednevlay, and killed one Mexican and , wounded another on the opposite side of the stream: Great excitement- ensued, but the murderer escaped. Mits. CLINTON Pint.t.lPs died at Providence, IL 1., on Monday, of in juries caused by the exploi;iun of a lamp tilled with what was bought for `astral oil," but which proved to .be some explosive fluid. • MASKED burglars visited the resi dence of. the cashier of the national bank at Germantown, Ohio, ou Mon day night and made him go with . them to the bank, but a time lock kept them out of the safe. WILLIAM .1. RolussoN, colored, a market gardener of Anne Arundel county,'Mtl., was shot and killed at Baltimore, Wednesday; by George Trust, white, who was drunk at the time. There was no provocation. A Dist.Aveu from llbiland, Mich.. says Louis Melzae, a trenchman liv ing near there, was killed on Sunday morning by Moses B. Marsh, a neigh bor, in self-defense. Marsh and a. woman named Legrews were fatally injured. 2Sor,:i 2 1713 n'7207 3211 l Jouv Wm.no, ot_, Todd counts, Minn., basin,confessed that himself and his brother 3tiehael bad murder ed a man named Coldall and . a man who lived with him, he was hanged by.a mob on Sunday. MichaeV has been arrested. 119.567 :97.060 81,758 03 AT ThomaStown, Me., on -Wednes_ day; two sons of Robert an- were scuffling,. when pistol 1* the pocket of one of them was accidentally dis charged, the ball entering the body of a three-year-old child of Captain W. R. Harringtpn, inflicting a prob. , ably fatal wound. I MASKED burglars' entered the hOus of .1 oseph .1161:ley, oDekalb steeett, Chicago, on Wednesday night, anti when cornered by him fired three shots into his body, from the effects of which he died in a few minutes. Ng, reliable eine to the thiirderrer's has been obtained. WILLIAM Tittiorn, proprietor- of a large flouring,mill - at Meadville, Pa., made an assignment at Cleveland„ Ohio. Judgments amounting to over $160,000 are- entered against him. It isliidieved that the assets would Meet the liabilities were they available. (loyEaxott CnosswEm. has appoint ed ex-Governor Henry P. Bahtwin United States Senator froM gan, in place of Hon. Zaeliariah Chandler, deceased, Hon. T. C. Bea man having deelined the ollice in consequence of ill health. GENtRAL ITE;I7S.: ' THERE was a rumor current in New York Monday that Mayor Coo per is to be suspended froth office. Two appraisers were dismissed by General - Merritt at the Custom House Monday' for crookedness. COURTNEY persists in hie refusal 41 row Ilanlan, and the- latter will no doubt get the.s6,ooo pat up on the re cent fiasco. TIM French catdc was• operated successfully Monday under the ~aus piees ot-the American Union :Tele graph Company. GENERAL GRANT spent - several hours with thousands of happy-school children at the Chicago Exposition 'Building Monday. - JocitNEvmAs cutters in several large tailoring establishments in 1103- ton struck Monday for an advance of about twenty per cent. in wages, PRESIDENT HAYES formally open ed the comthodious and magnificent new armory of the Seventh Regi ment, National Guard, at New York, Monday.. THE schooner Rreed, loaded with grain, capsized iu Lake Erie on Fri day. •Captain Rose and seven men were.drown.ed. Only; one man was saved. ADELAID.E ROBERTS, who kill ed .lfhcodore X4,'eber, was Monday ac quitted on the ground of insanity: She will be taken to the Elgin In sane Asylum. • Most of the emploYers have ac ceded to their demands for higher wages, the longshorenien of BroOk lyn have" decided not to strike. Mohr of the St. Louis millers have concluded to make no more flourun til the price of 'wheat declines, as they say thelnsiness is unprofitable. LEwrs Scowls has' been convicted of the murder of one Waddell, in Elliott county, Kentuelq,*and sen tenced to eight years' imprisonthent. - lIENny SIMANMAKER, a well-known resident of Plainsboro, N. J.; was struck by a train on the :Penni:ylva nia Railroad at that place.i.Monday morning and instantly killed. MARY .I«ves, bf lirownsburg, Ind., has been arrested for poisoning her child, Minnie,' bY putting arsenic in a slice of pie which the little girl eat. It is believed the murderess' is de mented. Tir boiler of an engine "attached ton material train on the Greenville and Columbia Railroad exploded Monday, near Bolton, 5 .:1 ,C., and in stantly killed the, engineet,' _fireman and another man. SAMUEL ALmEs, of Chillicothe, a comedian of the Globe Comedy Company, was" thrown from 'a carriage and inMtantly kill ed at the Episcopal Church;. LE Edward. Grammar. aged eighty-five, A•eitizen - of Prince George eniMty,, Va.; was asleep on Thursday night his house • was set on fire, and before he could escape he was burned to death. THE drought which has prevailed for three months in eastern Virginia still continues', and people have to travel miles to obtain water. At Petersburg Sunday ,prayers .were ()tiered up for rOn. ALL the students at thOliadle bum College at q in rehellun, and hnv voluntarily suspended themselve,s .beeause of what they call the " unjust action 'of the faculty to one of their fellows." Mits. Emily Smalley was acciden tally shot and killed by her ten-year old son, at Marietta, on Friday. She had bought the revolver to defend. herself against robbers, and the boy. picked .it up to look at . it; when it went oft • A STRIKE among the miners in the Tuscarawas Valley, Ohio, is immi nent, on account of the refusal of the ,owners and operators to increase the pay of the miners from seventy cents to eighty-five cents per 2100 pounds. H ENRY W. WORTIIINCT6N, while delirious from typhoid fever, leaped from a window of his room in the fourth story of the ManSion House', Baltimore, to the pavement below, on Saturday afternoon, and was instant ly killed. SIMON A tutu and his son Abraham, of Franklin, Conn., attempted to drive across the New London, Nor thern Railroad track at Yantie, While a train was approaching. They were struck by the engine, and Simon Abell was instantly killed. The son was .badly hurt, a horse was killed and the.darriago smashed. •then •case of Stafford' against Kcllogrr at New Orleans, the tes.ti mony of several witnesses was taken to show that the latter"-fixed " the Legislature so as, to secure his own, election, although the Senate has al ready decided that the 'Legislature which. elected Kellogg was the legal one. Porn weeks ago 150 operatives in the piano manufactory of William Knape & Co., Baltimore, struck for an advance of twenty per cent. in their wages. The strike ended Mon day and' the men returned. to their work, the firm conceding to the res toration of one-half of the deduction made in , their wages about ten months ago. TuE work of laying double tracks between Tine - Grove. Pa., and Sfock p6rt. N.Y., on the Delaware Division of the New" York, Lake Erie and Western - Railroad, a - distance of, for ty-two miles. is now completed. Trains over this division. a distance of one hundred and four miles, will now. have the benefit : of a double track. ON Sunday evening about seven miles south of Lawrence, Kansas, a negro named Strowder - Hines went to the house '!of Samuel - Odell, and seeing Odell sitting near a window inside the house, placed the muzzle of a gun near the glass and tired at Odell's head, killing him instantly. Odell had threatened to punish Hines for •offering• an indignity to Mrs. Odell. • , MoNna.v a terrible fight took place at the rolling mill In Atlanta, Ga., between fotir•employea about wages, On one side were a young man named. Harris, son ,of . A. S. Harris, and David Reid, foreman of the pat tern department. On the other side were tWo brothers.Uamed Sheats, Reid tired several shots at the Sheats brother Without effect, when Frank Sheats struck Reid on the head with a scantling, inflicting a painful wound. Harris then struck Edward Sheats on the head, crushing his - Edward Sheets cannot liVu. All the parties are under arrest. A.i.mosT_ YOU.NO AuAIN..--My mother was afflicted a long time with Neuralga and' a dull, heavy inactive condition of the *be le system ; headache, nervous pro:illation, and was almost helpless. No, physicians or medicines did her,any good. Three months ago she began to use Hop Bitters, with such good affect that she! seems and feels young again, although over 70 years old. We think these i. uo other medicine fit to--: . use in the familY• A ladg the Providence. R. c fcgaf. SIIERIFF'S SALE&- - --By virtue: of sundry arl cm Issued out of thepourt Of eorto: . . Mon Picas of Bradford County and fo me directed, 1 will eipose . to public sale at Om/Court iluusuis Towanda, on - • dritifIAY,.NOVEMBEI 1 2.1vit, 1570, . at 1 o'cloek, P. If., the following t s Mod proper ty, to wit: 1 No. I. One lot of landhltualn Slivehequin township, bounded and descrltectiV °Bows tt Be ginning at a post the southeast corner of lot set to „Peter Brooks of the map; thence south 1 0 Vit:st 100 perches to a post for a corner ; thence north 50 0 ra m 106 perches to a post; thence north 1° east 100 perches to a post; thence south 50 0 c . ast, 101 perhes' to the place of beginning; coutalui lig, 103 acres 120 .perches of land, more or less tit being the whole of lot No. 62. the salon as conveyed hydtarptt DeCater and Earnest DeCater by their 'attorney' in fact. Burton Kingsbury, by deed dated L.bmsm ber 10, 1805, and recorded in deed book 73, page 331, Ste.), about 30 acres improved, with -I board house, 1 barn 311(1 row fruit trees' thereon.. Seized and taken Into execution at the suit of.Wln. E. Letting getl .7. ;[ewer. No. 2. ALSO—Ono other lot of land,. situate in Overton township, bounded and described as fol lows: Beginning at acorner of Henry Snerionn's estate; thence south 4 rods to a corner and street thence west along said Street 10 - rods to corner; thence north 4 rode along lands of Hannon to router ; thence cast to rods alpwr la'ndsot Henry Sherman's tstate to the p ace of beginning ; coo tattling !,‘ tit en acre of land. incite or kiis, all Itn• proved. Stilted and. taken infoexecution at the suit of F. Ileicheiner vs. Perry G. Eply. • No. 3. ALSO—One other lot of• land, situate In Springfield 'township, bounded north by Miele of Morris Brown and A. Dunbar, east by lands of John Huggins and Wm. Lane, south by lands of John Huggins and Andrew Hubert, • and west by land{ Lyman" Crandall and• A. Dunbar; contain int Ilif acres of land, twirl; or loss, about 5t int: proved, with I trained housn, 2 frazzled barite, trained granary and an orchard of ft nit trees Met, Seized and taken Int', exeetztion•aphe'sult of E: rumeroy's use vs. William )lontanye. • NIF. - 4. ALSO—One othet lot of land, iltuate In Spriztglient township, hotanded' north by:lands of John i , argt ant and S. It. Aspinwall, east by land of Russell Young. south by lands of E. Pomeroy, and west by land- of Lafayette Leonattl and John sat: vant ; containing 50 arms of land, more fir less, about 25 lin ;Moved. W ith 1 trained house't Itereou. Seized and taken Into execution at Oa snit of James C. Sargeant vs. Henry Patterson: No. 5. A I;St).—ltite other-144 of land; sithate In Springfield township, ',minded north by the public highway, east by lands of Calvin Wood dint, south by lands of Her,ick Gates, and west by •lands or Harry or Derrfek Smith ; contalfilng gt) aetes of land, more or 10,1, about li IlilprOVed, with I !ranted house, I framed barn and an orchard of fruit trees thereon, Seized and taken Into excel'. Mon at the suit of Sylvanns Vat, Buskirk's same vs.'Job 1,1.1W13. at atilt of same saute. — No.B: ALSO—One other lot of land, situate in {lntl hang township, Iwunded north by lands of E: .I:Sickler, cast by lands of Myron Nichols, 00110/ by lands of Ezra Reynolds, and .west:by the public pigfiway, containing 00 501., of land, stare or le—, :kb dit 63 iinprovell, with 1 framed house, I trained barn,. flamed horse-biro, 1 .granary, 14 her out dbyliMg'A and an orchard of frolt trees thereon. ied and taken into execution at the Athol Hen ry Gibbs vs. Reniantiu Gleason. Na. 7. ALISQ-1-inin other lot 6.f land.. situate In . 14164,6;16ury tow hship, bOunded north by _;and a of George and I /ante! thainbers, - east by lac,ls for me, ly owned by John Ilurleyhan, ,tonin by }Will% of Widow 11 urlrt and lands I orni,i)y own pd by Desnw•tt. and west by John Chainhers; 6666:6tainit.g Ito bores bf land, snore or leak. all.uld 01, with I trained house, I framed Intro and all orchard of (roll trees thereon. 3 No. a. A /no other bit land, .ill . tuard in Ithlgbury town,l4, bounded north by land , of 11e1ige east by lands of ..la,,,,Nl,Vbry and Anthony Alit D., and swat by lands of Ilenis MA Went by lands farni,•lly .111(11 Iliirleyhan and Geotite l'hainbers; cnutaildng 30 arr., or inult•r 1,1,; Willi I !ranted house. 1 old 1%T.1101100 at... 1 an of chord of fruit trees thereon. r3tll4etl and taken int , ,,ixe- Clition Al the suit of .1. 11. Webb; administrator of Berry !turf. deeeaseil. vs. Morris - 4 ' No. 9. ALSO—line other lot of land. situate lit ANyhtM 0,0 n,tdp. bournled north , by'laidls ofl,latn liel Kelhtm, eant 'by land, of Joel ::•levtiis,isoiall and West by t lor piddle hlghway 110..41111g frffin Yens . rerry_to NV iit. It. Storrs'; eontalblog 1 a:rl of land, Wort: or Icsa, all ruiptiiveil, with 1 frattp.d hotim!, L.framtd barn and an oichat.l .fr•ilt :lees theriudif. Seined and taker, into exte lii In nt the suit of J. If Chaapel and Jane (~Vs u,t:V.t.. Peter No. 10. 1. - 9—one other lot of law!. ,i 10.1.1,3 ii Atlo•nri too tiouitili•il north br laud. ur_ Ed uard Limber? on and It. L. F. th littiiitc highway al,fl taipl t Jacob A, Wiiiirr. by laud, of Michai - 1 Met art 311 , 1 dostioll 11 , ,V1, omit, br lands of the Willbodui 1,4:11.;• ; cm; " ialnin:f 63 auto:, of land, inoro or bi-,. v , ith I frano . if hour, 7 trauoill barn, It ' fiaubol kkaiiKhts . r..itoii-e t I li : aliteir bil4 franwit corn-lionse ah l gYitriary fire has , !; of fruit tray , aria takt . 11,1:110 eX.CCII tiOTI at the butt of A. C. Eibbrue'i. tro, Grifilth. No. ll..\Lcn—Unc other lot of litod.. , t-linitte in Wend Iturlitigton t.m.mship hotisidr.l north by put.. 11, highway Iv I l,g from rryy by hind of tirorgr W. Go ard. 6f I. 11. Ward. and train Bahl highway t, 31111,; .atiott ,miare.fort of Ls :d, tifor.• iirovt•d: I (rained idimi and 1 Ira:M..llmm, I..t•lLed Mid taken 1111 , , e.,?.e.•lltioli :It it • .lee rN & Ptiiner ,, y, to tvo• of N. M. d'ontoi. y. Womdi.r. . No. lft. ...her lot of A44ylum it:41114,144 north Iteti fatula :Stint4...;., cast by Loot, of ott, 111111 tce , t by :at!: of ilcol.tetto ego.: c• 14;allti:4g aertos of • Ifttpi. Istitre i!4.arly v. 1 .1 41:14. I .fratitc4f./44.,::-•e. I /arg, fiarte4 of a framed ;Ore. oto , ..half, of a to% otl;cr out.l4lllt , nl4..;N:tlld d oretiard or ft.nt tr....• - therco, Se./ett'atol taken th, , d 1; abet!, Kipp, Isle, of 'P.. it. Pctry Kipp. No. 13—.s.1..,H—Cine , :fit-r lot of :a:id. ,itti.tt•• I,otiltded rre , crl'...l lows: g at a 4.4.ri:cr of a . . - t;sc nit Ito 1. eat 51.1... 41! M.itn 4trvt•t, atualt fie; ineriy foetted l'crritt n a parallel Hue nith salt! Co'tko• ecntre 4,1 ati alley, lettlell a;toy half 111 1 y frottlilatt, str,ot to 5,..,10d Street . ; filet.... , ditltly•rty ;Von coat:, of said allete to lot ,oeol by .1, F.74cm,, a 1,41 wife to nol•crt thoLett it 4 said Mehlt , elt Itt,e to ;ht. 'Ole of MAin el; tliemte Itortherly line or MlOll !wing Pi rrov.i..on t.tti4l Main and ahem teet d•-0p,..1%1ttl 1 framed IntlNThig ,ame plero of latel by .1. F. Mi.:1:1 , ...,1.1w' fe to .1. W. Aleanz, , le.l dat. , (l, Apt H I. af,.! I.2+,'at uag, jet a.pl taken into executlol at the cult m •Ceuta ti It rothers vs. J.IV. }fears, No. 14. ALso—t )11,, other lot of land.,.sitnat.? leer! , zutth It, ra , t• o; and 11.. , pvi Laker, tact ...yland , of IV r. =DBMM=ILMIIM=I ;C:1 ls:t11.. lov I , f, ht. G. z,vNz.'r a 3.1 i;rlsvo,lcl r,:,;:t!,:n.. , ; ;07 acre,- ~f Lind, no•re nr ss, Imp rt•Ved, n Itkt 4 lioti+c:. 3 ,artlsa,,sl.-La,,rs-!laz!ls• f: nit tt,,, +I an,l Ina, at the sett ~t Elhanna :•••il.ttlt and F. L. HEIL: Seiall kith:tin. • • No. 111. AL:el -. e ttnt3 alder lot at :an , L ettnat,rla Xt.,: '1 1 . ,,5t 3111.1 ft.):011 • : 1NI:EMI/1W 41,r laud , : It W. It.teh , , in the ;In- or i,7 31 . :bent, :11(41* the I1:,1. of ,al,l'ma%vit!,. ttnrtti 27.:n,' Nv,...t pttrt hest" etalt,' atal , eton, 1.,r cornt.r eolith ','2° an' wee: t:e coperch , s a meter In the Brig of Iffrtfu throct , alotsg tho goo •ala Mcc:l3l..v and .Irt n and Tingua, Ifegan 20° I'so p,.llbes to. rt: tiorthlve‘t corugr of 'alit NVll,ltatu f. , r a Ureter; throve north e a,t i.. per e h e , t,, t h e place of beginning conta , niog lii ago, of land, strict er 10 2.111ployg41: and Laken into ex. , entrenuf the stilt of It ni, Mcitlor4il v.,. I.:du-Ird S.'•pgr, No. 17. A to othrr oof I:Ind.:At:J:1o'; in A then, Borough, b, , untied tioril, by ;.,11.1.0r I;. 1... r.3.t.brooks and others, east ny Main sir et, Ne:h land of the gotale of C. F, dgegiged, anti we , ,t hot lof Clguitgr being 12 f•-gi (rout sai",l Main street and lOR Prot the nitro pione t f lah.!e4.nveyed It, said ~; tlo• tint .gait by. Cdwaid ailinlithdr44,4r of Or ..r docrased. No. I.! 4,121, r lot of land, -Bum,. in A thei.norongfi, Iwintitled and .24,5 - rila.,l at. fo2d4w-• T , llr, 0 !i•lq 01, it rit:go 11•••il.g 1.1, No, 2)7, 24' and. 91••• : • ig•ingl4o fret 1.1, , :;t on Bridgc ['re/. and 4....101 110 fort each ou a plot 4 , t' plan nuolg by tit. 5.11 Ifi, 1,. y foot:: llgrrick. , :ut I rcr.:l-,i -ed In Brrotford 'ounty ti o • 111 , r, .or • pito g' , ...,•cu110n, :t: tit: Snit it The 21::g1 ford a n d filWdlintf clatlC , t: of, .011.',., Toun-hip vs, NV tn. h' ill. No. 2,9. A other !,t of •land.51:112:0 Itl Wilinot - towtodtip, bounded and dr: i•t &noel flu' mior, cigar Bun wltne.,ll by a 1tut:t.0w.,,,1; ; up ereol: 24 0 west BipercheS te , h..nliock t thence 'north 7.. y, Avest '2 , 42,, , ,chea to ,IrV hethlogk ; thenhe n er it n es , t it. perelit , rtenee 0 1 11111 21 , 1,.1 - 031•4 to th< , lpsiee of Nl:hitt/Ng: e , tlt3!tiPfg :teres of land, noire or Inv:Poi:oil, Nt tr. few fruit tret, thercco, Selegd, and 2:19.•:, •1111., I , x,•, , tition - at the stilt itr the c0.:01,1,90t0.r, or neut Nit' infant Inslotv• No.f, A ,St 2,(111, , ;and. sit :Id in Canton Borough, hounded and (lgserit,e,l as fol.' Iteglioong at lie ig.rtlx•tst r oi - nor N,,, 511; thew, easterly along the line • •ai•l No. and lot, \o, 57, 167 fegt. Wore or toss, 1,1 the gorugr ~t Ti''') ; throve 1,, , r heriy ntogg th,4 tr, frel, mon. or le-‘,lo:tieeenrre of I'asqo/I , tre , l ; I hence vresturly along Ow centre of (••,,on .•r• 1107 ft et 4,,the nortirr of lot Ni'. 0 ,, t 121 , 1,,a, •,-ott: het dy adong,tll:: lint: of sa!,l lot N "12 fret to 12, 2 , 91 - .. e of lif i ginuitig, to , the st i lt , more or Iv,. !wing 11.• Sf atid 511 as till on 0.7 go piot'af Canton toad. , by 0 , 10. NV. C, Circuit for Ning , ,intry, Ngwrnat t S. 1 :dean, pholitig,nuili, it lilt all in4cilln ery.and fixture , helooging tt gretn, 1 ,1 luititter sheds alit I fr-indd Intro thergihn, 44etz, 0 1 awl Aiken Into 'execution at t_tut .oft of Etta, 4'. it•gynion: V.. d route Br. :•••gtog , u aid .1 No. ttt. °Mgr 1, , :. pl,o, or t areci of land, sprite sit age of l.ayre., A tleen, f.. 0 :1 , 1 ip,1,451n , 10.1 norlll by land,of pints_ tel Eltogr co..et-.2 :dig I , v lands of Iht‘i,l 22.fnve4, and o"''. l•ti an alley; h•,11g2 :go f,.. • ft, n" .1 15 , 1 frgi v ;Ili I fr.toted hillAleg two 7terit, high, Used for /We, :4011 . I VIA •dory li l t. lug used for one Afore, and I f Tl'll,l 1,1 n thereog. No. 22. ALSO—tun• other lot,. pier , or par.', 1 of land, silli-itil In the , sultan;.' of ;sae r•,... - Athons township, leitinilinl :.;asst I.y land.. 14 ilow ard }:inner & t in.. ca. , , by tits: latiriii• 'highway. south by lands of Witll:llit 1:E1.:,' and Wrsl. by iv: alloy: beink toi , feet' front and 1:io ferrdrip, with 2 framed. de rillna Itinisr, tko , re.,.. ls.d z'-i and taken two emeent!,, n •at the suit of Samuel hunt Vs, AdonlJ4li Lunt. . . No. 2:i. ALsc)—fltio' other lot of, land, sit nate. In North Towanda lownslii„p, Lourdled and dose:Tided -- as follows: !foga:al:z at P. E. Wllitg's Sollitu'ivif corder not lands of - - Fit'. , :ferald : theneo al-ng lands of C. E. White 11 vorritel to .lainr.s at reel_; thence alollg .tames sttrrt is,.t 14.p.w., to I no, of 1 Freilerlek T. 11.4:‘ ran ors li; l 1..4 , alCit:a ... id f.ev • eitwortit's land it perches att„lntrt of d'itzger. alit: ' , Them , along said 1." I Li:et:kid I. k'ar..11. , ::•,-rch,, to plave-of beginning 1 • containing . 11.1 I.•rilirs of land, more or less, all littpc%int, with I frattird poise and * few fruit trees . Ito' -n. Selo -d and taken into raerittion at the suit of Moses Walters vs. liievelltini Ilors. N 0.2.1. A I.Std--011 , :. other b I of land, elto,te ill Wio , t Epriing,ton township, b.-andeil Toil 111 to lands of Edward Swain, oast l a ,. latois of .leijrrsoit Henry: sou:11 by land,, of tiort7n, se „d n. and weri Ly laud. of Job Morley :• containing la acros of land, noire or les., all lit:proved, wlth I boarit stiant,y, 1 (ratio II liain. i -framed liorse-born,. I fratnea Irtv-tarn, other nottiolnlings anA an ord.- ant of fruit trees thereon. Srlzett and taken - into 'went', a at the suit of Estella Swaim., trustee, Curtis T. Sir:tine ;ma FAwarti. tltraolo, - 'So. 83..1 1.5.1-000 Other tot or 'awl, .1 1 1,;;Ito Towanoa too :-.lllp, bvtuoled and deser{htql follono: : Itegiloonct at Ino north, aq collier f,L,v,;ii,.k tot No. ; th..noo ',oath 20° east a 1,, -and ulnae; corner: I tionve south Co.? --- I !wren to a Lowlier ; t belled ,011111 7 0. weer 30 per. hes to 5 for nor : thrum son:0 too east 51 ,Vlolitorell,, to a car nor thence smith tiro: i. 2 porill-s to 3 eonwr In tne'oentro of tho I , lOkV. ay ;.:thence. north:at° Ra=llEl=l=2N tlipneo north 110° 42351. 14 pyrrhys to a post and non,lns.rnert..tnenve north :;.? tv,itst 1111 2- to It .K.ll- . • on lin, of laint or the 11. Cliallott,. Nvanty , t...t.•: lllrurr alotn: ;k n . of not lh L.z east VII pur - olnt, to thy plAce Kt acros and 71 pyrrhos of. hoot, ;or.• or li r sr. 3/.4.fit ti Improved. witli and nskyn Into exteutloo at' lilt. Mill . of VILA,. 1.. Tracy, giutrdltm, N. N, Betts. ,gle.r.llin; 4cila E. , . _John .W. 'Woodhara, guardian. add Justin.Jd. Yr!, dy %qr.. Orrin E. Ilarrht ancrtThAhlty llarrls. " . • . No. '-'6I. AV : in—One other lot of )and. situate In Orwelidownsillp. i4mutled vast by lauds of Ifw y . Norton, F. C. Maynard. J. If.. and li, it. Alm ; ,sotiSts by , lands of. ft !ram ISongherty, went by lands of Vela K. Adams awl If. C. AMR. and 'north tly :lands of .1. lir. Parks: containing bet Ween fd?. and na acres of land, ISO to t Itaprovedl, with I frame' house; - 1 trained barn vifYli sheds attaulied. as fo'. inns: 1 shed 16x:SIS feet, , ased as wagOtrys. tit,ti t aod eorn•erfb below, and - for , toring bay and stalk,' atxote: 1 other shed itlx3ll.feet, - ased for horse-stabl e :and for .shelterlng farm Implements; I fithrrei,,,i 1n441 feet, used for 2tabllng cattle belt w mid_ for slorlog hay, etc., above., and a portion as Si, op on shed 1,40,e, aa.l.an orchard of frills trees .th,,r,..:, • dieixed and taken Into e ecut ion at the salt 'Of I,_ sou Rickey and H. C. A I Is, executors of •11.1. s A Lit, dereased,_vs. IT. IC:, AIII ' other lot 1,1" land. situate la Wysox tren4hip, bounded and described as. 'Beginning at the northwest cot tier of 4. 3fa10n , •;, - , Jot; thence along Wind line Routh 54' cant to pet chin.; to a corner : thence Mono jlnl of sald Maloney north 1° heel 15 perches'to the scutthr.,4l, rdrner of tin (so rant-a) i'ltsstorp lot on ttirrig!: hink descending the Wysox creek thence doe, the earn.' the several. connelt thftroor .aboilt r 14 , perches to a corner; thence itortis 01° won it ts:rriteifo'a Coiner on. the road - loading front lets to strrsinirg ; thenet; : ilon,T the cent v.. of ‘ll.l road .north Srs ° oa.st 6 fo'reotes to a - corner ;i theca, along the nam., north tart 17 ft to twirtivi to the Vaito of Intglottlo . g ; i . ontallang o.a.n.vs of titA. users or linpr..ved : no fitiliding.Y. 314,1 taken in 1, "! elo , ntlnn at tile ollt of 'row:to.., s Ottibilotrand Slavin?, Fond ASroCtattoo vs.. Mvrt,:s 'soath ;sod Franris St. . N 0.25. A1..740-obe. othrr-14t of land. situate :rz Aitetily toy/m.lllr, I - 5411.40 I 1 all.l tleetrllte.l o,,tsta,iv•: 11, ttkining at -a t55,:k t to, , t 3 i4 1 . 1 4 3, Jattivsby't . .3. L. W j ird thr-t , ee alat, s 3 lot / rrt - a.! , *take: f herire w.ath Si pert hey tux tir3tatork t e ; P.!" 1 /''S !" a I, "&tik -la , : ' perelics hr cle,t Stake(kw eerlier Ch:spatlans W-irklz-or) len , ' horth ttm the of fizteni . 00.11; fe•n•li., ple , e.of Legle tileg ; a•-t••, aril 77 pc rI•11.e .Ntrig•!t.r•,r••rl.iilth i 1- , -ar.l hart], ;;I:d thereon. :N.:7,1 end tAkvit th-', suit ,of E.-T. Fut', V,. u, rin.l:. Emery. : No. 2'9. AL!,(I.--t 'no other lot, Mee , / or puree! or hind, altrsute In /Ilp. elhago of South A Clem. tawiiill. buunde.l and de•-erile-ft as 171- I Mw n: 1 - I,g bit or, a Inap-ret . ora...ll 011 for ding he„-lo • deed bind: Nn. 1, 1, at paw•,tio lot le-ing 2 1 1 feet frmit un -Coder street al • 1 hi feet the_pretnise.,lsereny eonvoyed extenilMg fo the c. iitr, or ral , l Lonlvr street; all fflirrOVeq. with I framed nonse and -few f:mlt. - tree , I h,reJ,n. an: - 1 taken Into 4,74,6:- .Cf.th. at Um ,ult of Thonm, 'Ward el, ratrick Fl l O4 .a4l Ilem,Frmq. • . 'tier lot of land. sdroate in fil.ter I' :ship, hounded arol des.eflhed ltettlanlott at aSr _t the south, Or OP: ti/f4h,r cornt.r of the let herein I P;f ll f,e2Ol -41. : theme ahrolg tho ta,t, sl,le of an Idly r 4 o11:0119 west ir. , ;••,.t 1.0 land .con , yed ,aid 'Charles ‘Ve11 , .......0nt1: ~ : ttnta as '*° Tert.to the canal th.2we along the aawr north ::n 's,, , t,t(i eet to 11,- south tlw.A..fon.-rrwn oun.t rf f a.l along' the ,:tte.north ; ' ll „we,t - Ine feet to the plae,'ut 14.gln:tinz*: !; "1 an acre of, Ian:I.:01 Improvell, With I :dean: grktlidll, I steam ..atvdfrill. I shit:Wed:oll al,l nil Inlliflxteres I.elueglng thereto. -oetze , l :slot taken . . . . nto rx,•.•ution Itt th•• dila of ..f?,lnes Vau'itylte t ..t3:1414 Ivrn,. N,.. at. A I,so-1 Inc. , 111wr lot ‘.4' law% situ.:•.: I❑ =:= lk nod•&t] north hy. . .. . ere, :,:44:t5 , . 1 .3. lar,,t' ~I Pi,rson ito'r.•ial,." ~., u th'!•:: a 5it....11.1 ri0 , .44. „11.w4 4, , A144-41 by E. T. P0iti41441... 4 ,-.•1 %14. toy . I:.IrT, of ,Vinirt•r ff4 , 14.40:4.14 - .4.1,1a:0i0:t.t!,04. :53 Icrrs or 1 ,cl, Ito.r.f. or I••ts, a: , ,..it. 11 ii:11,, - ,t,...!. Niltb I f tan 1 ,44,1 1)011, , , 2 franca/,:irt,i,-14.,rr,-..1.,•, orlz,r outUttit.lir.gs ai,1:,11.,rc1.n.r..1 of fil,it tr, • tberr-nrt. 34. A Lt.. , t—rthe 0E1..r lot of land. situat• , Ir.otoled IN I:1;A , , of .Jar:.. 3irtfiarn.y. , olitt; by tha 11:0* I h.. ,chra.t.. - r 1,1 - onipan.y. awl v.t,t by I:1,0, Of, ./a , i,l octrait.hoz /314,, Itopr, , vvol lu? ;;11 I ta4to, ~x . V cation. : V.: salt .11 lay L. I •4 1 :1;r1i: use of I'r, nvn:c firs VA. E. T., Ittirfmn. No. r.:l. A 1,54 10, ..t r'rc. - 1. h-N;p. rwrth R_ -• :::a 1 , fin litg-hway land, ~1 JIAn :i1.41. wt , tl,o I.trds and a:rl.•t 1 / 1 110,3111 ; t, 1;111 , I, L11..1 t• :C/ IZi.. ft;.n.,•.1 1 la,rL , ..4 s r.• pare,otitt, and .1 1 ;ii: ;t• : :And itikk•rf lik.k vkit lieti , v," Ikt. If. _ Nkk. A ! , ok:t.kklf,z,l F', • k fr ,, ,ri"kkkatii prc,k, 1. Is it ki 1v!, ..,•. , s•irain• .1 I 4•1'• V , • N”. /• • t T , ' , tyakkklkk.V...kk tky•kkkki kktk • Alkl kktikor ,„„,1 • N .% k kr),• I' TliR111:11, .. mth Ikyi t •t'a t. )f; C. Weft.: lar kk•trk , . - I a kf :kk , , , kkt t i^n • ! I • r}•frank-II •: . 1:14 11,•to- 1 , •lv :r kW, the k•krit.(4 Lan , k .kkkk. ki tt. T T.. t xltor ' • • t` .f. Dl:3 N, N INTHE DiST I C t) •, ttt, 11 12M11=11 n 11ra 1r.,1 ry Lttt li`r ':t4- At t 4 . ..1.4, 1-• r. tlitti.tit't 3411,t•Ittlitlit ,t 4 .4441 2 ,414t••••1• Illitntlit. t,, ' '-,' tat a tlitta'll'Lrg fat t tn .411 NA .4teitts.- at ittr itayat•.' .1. r -111 A..... I ry , r•l* r t4,-rlet I , h-r..1•:: ).:,‘,••.1 1it:4114 li4-4 , 4t t %%444 I.4ve p•t4l - 4•41 tl.•14:, 4, 4 ,4) „oh., tt'li• ' 4 '4l• lit '"!tlit'it, 4-11 tt-tyt4!. St 4 - 4 . ! I; El:, 1-7 1 1. ,• 1 :,• A. ''4l I A.l4trt r Ittl:M krip•11•11, c 1•• • ••: T.,vra:1,,1 , ...t t t - t4 r• M . , II 11,2, why :1 , 11,. 1. Irge Tlitt 11,. tZfattli•4l rtt-tlat . 4 OM • IWO •4.:E: 1 !:I-, Lt • 1,,q,..fit la I p ;.• N. - .71. F. ciry 4 r• 00. 1•1 - • . 0 1 0 0100, 1,0 :1010•:,! 1)..% V.O! 100 1 0 E.' .1.111 N; \\-: IjES.IIZ,I BEE •11E.A L ESTATE VOIC:-A I. k:.—rho r.` "•• i•c••.k, •... 1:1,•••,‘,, it ;:i wan vat—. pi; nos :wit. :nun. put ham -r, If . the s4!:' Apyy to c.ir u•l'dr•-• • • :: , "1.:C1;AI - M. k fOl N 1 lIIIMEMBEI 7),:iisrerrancons, The independent. "nit: iNDr.I . I.NIIPA 31.p.A1•1" ellitiv.C , •, ;•,,t1 uor.:••Ii. A; 411-ctt,... , r• p It is nLi 1. It. to 11:12:1:;: 1:- tr.W.II. It ha-, numnrnr,, .1 .1.3,1- ~ • nt, . ,•; :•• !,•,•tty •tr•.trif-4 : t ti•,l III.••p 111 41:!; 1 1,. 1ta• , •1•1,0 . ; ,, ',...,11• titan :pi :.11:Vtki it toe:. 1.1V;:•'1 ..k!.1.• • ": ••I 3 any tart of tt, NU.N. 11.i7.• r.!•4.liased I-h.. 30. , - , ptip, , Is 2. I .gn: •.f tho , •1 M..:141ay e, !Ire, fog. 1,7.2_4 I.y ;Ale CO" NOV. ieq. the. ,1 ell' II“. of Fill •6.y. t;:t. 1 Nl S. IMMIII =MI ..".c.rietowt by Einineist - elcra•yineit ItL p.;:r:,•; 11..6 lIINS/A A 1!1 i 1.1 6 ! to PREMIUMS. e- 3 1. Lave to liellltflyvy on ~f; 57 . , :01 Eh , n n• oro•n; I , .11' , ..j•rft:•rs, a , !n!! of wt.n h af.rear: ~71..nv; so :tul; %,./10 as.. I I :r sin W , •!: , 'E•VI-liZ'S I'N . .1:1:11p; ED Pictorial Quarto Tictfonary. M=M/M1 v.I•11 :h'•l,,l'll \ :113 =EMI , Ciro Ilie!tori try In .tottuot:•• It. , exitir:llltrt4i . r a t Uro sp^lt ..tt• . ;,•-•'y giro :01 . 0tto tt, 0 that tor •ttloo•rtiter , Ch. , lit gun, I urn 'as ail Ihettotohe. of the .14: itt fo tttr.,• g tth 11tc . :locRry. to cot ;tot T il I. 1, W.,. it I 3 , 1 y !tett ot, hoZt.,, illsnybrs fkr Ti • • n't - Csyl , i, It :11i , Op; 1011. 111 adA,lr.. r I l I t N:intett t t, I , ~1 „ ; ?4u,„,; r , t‘ ,, It tit low , :.n rip: ion tor Ciao ?).iv; Or, (Or Vo.:{ St:!l:4..Ti__ yom, . Tat , F":7,ll44rth,..l)frtl.mary a',‘D, at A l I`, SIL :Wl' 'llO b•we,t tlirro :1 , t II ` 3,111 !h. Thr b r f,ry ,rtA Thy RE v., .1 tr.: COO-li. • S 114)f)liS eittitl,l •• ••Trait,e'vzh•r:;, , ,,;,a;•• ••i , th0ti0xy."•••1' ,, 11,11•14..r." ••• lier , •,111)," millnir:: . pre% lens tea M , anlay I.crtur ,, . • ThiTy - ar..i.ab 9 isn, ,1 In mono, Look form. by dame.. Osgood •.r mall a city of elther s,. nr 0, ir',..tpalilota AEI) Tull; •-f -who, rt•mit, ns 83.00 for a ii ar In advance; any subsertber May nlnit K,.50 3:. - 1 cc, %In •I 141171 Tll F. I , f:NT for 0.4." yea, tzi a 411. 1, • . aad two pkstpaid ; of any thyrt, aid: L., any cure sul , ,erlbar tt•tits S',111) I, r throe years In S.V ,, vrlptl4 , ll !'r r, , i.00 poe n*tvnn frr.Flci,:irq; au. or,Lyer rtni fOi/••% fug Ny oite v, , lntro l'h•tr; , .+ Dirk. 11" , r;:r, •1:1-- trA•lotis 1.12. ' Ilyjr;hr rt.. f • Lii;,/hL ft.! l.iv (,',0471. •11 . . :•,1 Rea.,l;c.? the Erwitw•ilyeli , n port I:, I,— S.tcel Engr.,111,4 - . By ltitchi, - ===n= . . . — l'horley viz., SI o'l El 4r,.Y Is 4. 1:7-.1nt nr Irafs , ,a , St1.1;1 Fr.[ .•:f F'd,rin 7t. Stwit , tiE . Flue Sts. •t Eng IZlt,hie. of ;Om ( . 3rponter. in . 413,:1t. 3 , 0 irtg..e. utter one ureintiliii ynly p.r SI - 11. 4 11:1t"f1ON fir:l iN AtIVAN. I:. • tla"i , •• (n IL: t ! Tll E I ni Dia•EN DE NT, Nem lorA 4'11:1 P. O. no. *27%7, 'icr Out thin .111r< . 1 - 1 t,c ua ta E =II =I 1111111 AT7.I 1.3 (:•,1 =II —lre t':. MEE 11211 1 ti 1. 1 • 1 • .1.•1 1 of 11, J.; iv- Tbo MEI=