Nradford ggettet 0. GOODRICH, EDITOR. Towanda, Pa., January z, 2880. ztl&). !",Another year t another year 1 So whispers In his fleet career, Wild, reckless Time. Bat on the past Ito leaves the shadow of his wing To hide the cantering griefs that cast A gloom o'er memory's sunny spring:, With this number of the 'RkPORTER, we commence a New Year, and we tender to our readers the Compliments of the Season. We wish them not only a Happy New Year, but that each succeeding day of the three hundred and sixty-six shall be full of peace and contentment, while they shall be blessed in basket and in store. On the threshold of the year it is well _ - to pause, and looking back over the past, learn the lessons of experience, that er rors may be av,eided - in the future. It is a time of introspection as well as retro- spection—for the calm and serious con sideration of self, as well as of reviewing the past, forecasting the future, and mak- ing solemn resolutions' and forming good . intentions. It is well that in the bustle and battle of life, there oC.,urs these peri odit,:nl reminders how swiftly the sands are'running out, and how soon we sha arrive at the goal which ends our fretfu fevered existence."' As a Nation we are enteri promises to be a'.year of . , prosperity. The financial 91 for six years darkened the lai happily dissipated, and all dustries of the country h Public confidence has been the streams of business are and steady'.,There is every sieve that by the aid of thr year every trace of financial embarrasstheht will be obliterated, and the country will have reached a height of prosptity such as has never before been knoWn. During the past year, wehave paid our - weekly visit to our subscribers punctually and regularly, and have every manifesta tion ibat oin)ators to make a valuable and welcome newspaper have been thor oughly appFeciatNE ComMencing under the moot unfavorable circumstances, we have labored patiently and industriously to hava,every number of the. REPORTER I * an "abstract and brief chronicle of the times. %Velar° aimed to mak? a mo del newspaper, so far . as sl t ae\an4 oppor tunity would permit. Wel shall continue our exertions, with renew(id energy, and with increased facilities. The present .year will be an eventful one, as the coun try will choose a President, and the con test will be unusually animated and im portant: It will dill for the active labors of every Republican journal, and wo shall ilevote Our best eMieavorst to promote the success of the candidate of the party. As heretofore, the ItEetntrEtt will blttle zeal ously for the advancement of thp- cause which we deem-so essential for the good tof the country. We shall endeavor to ,make our paper a powerful and valuable "auxiliary, and worthy of .;the encourage ntent and support of RepUblicans. . I • FRANCE has a new Ministry—though ,P „ , just why it was wanted , iive nowt 'lnger- , talui. THE State Treasurer should be careful not to mislay tiny State 'bends, for another investigating committee would bankrupt the Treasury. ' LATEST reports indicate that Gen. Rou t:lll's , had achieved a complete victory ..ver the Afghans, and that he will soon be, in possession of Cabul. . too_ tad to , charge BEN. BUTLER with the responsibility of ',the Maine con spiracy. As bad, as ho may be, be was never guilty of such an indecent proceed- Ti t.DEN for President - atid GAIICEILON for Vice President, would make an oxcel- Win Democratic ticket •;for 1880. - One could open Abe bar'l and the other do the •tealinf,r GovEuxon ConsEt.t.; df Yew York, will enter upon his official duties to-day. t Ile will be the first llepublkcan govbrnor since the expiration of Gay. Dix's term - in 1874. Tim Sunday issue of the Lancaster E.r a,iiirier made its first appearance last Sab bath. It ,is creditable - to the of of the editors and the enterprise of the pub lisher, and will undoubtedly be vastly popular with the Laticastirians. . TIF: Paris Exposition cost the govern- Meld $1, ; 0,000. and Mr. 31eColistics; the Commi4ione'r General. of the United ' Stateii reports an unexpended balance of 10,u(st. The Bond-investigating Com mittee of tilts State would have spent this balance in visiting a single watering-place. • IT WAS fortunate that the corn J ettient memorandum on the tip-leaf of a ledger in the Treasury was foUnd, explaining what became of the missing bonds, or the State would have been obliged to make a new issue to pay the expenses of the com mittee. By the way, what was the date of the discovery'? IlosToN suffered the loss of $2,1*0,000 oceasimied by a fire. which, began t;intSun day night last in the pap4r warehouse of IttcE; KENDALL & Co., onrederatstreet, and raged, for several hours before its prqgress was stayed. , Ilocairro r s, Os000r). 4.k. Co., publisyers of the A ibildir..3lonthly, i t ere among those bUrned Out. A i MEETING of the State Republican Convention was held itabiladelphia, fln Tuesday last_ 1 A resolution was passed calling a State. Convent* at Harrisburg, on the first Wednesday of February next. The Evening Telegraph «lye.'" that there is very little doubt that ~he Committee is for a third term almost to a man." TIRE,. Spanish Senate :has passed by a large majority a billfori the abolition or slavery in Cuba. It Provides for the gradual emancipation or slaves in Cuba in ISS7 and 1888,1 after eight, years. of provisional - servitude thiler the present masters. It is propoied i to enact severe statutes. : against vagraFicy in connection. ' with .this scheme, and tol extend the juris diction of courts-martial. The West In dian menibers of the C amber of Depu ties declare that the aw will satisfy neither the owners nor e slaves. • Zr is asserted that EDISON:B ezl eriment with his electric light last Week, was a complete success—that be bas discovered a method of sub-dividing the electrio cur. rent, and that he can keep up a brilliant light at a nominal expense. The process is ingenious and too scientific for common understanding, but if he ,an adapt it to practical use it will work as great a revo. 'lotion in illuminating purposes as did the discovery of coal oil. • OCEAN disasters, fortunately, are not frequent, but they ,are usually attended with fearful , consequences. Considering the large fleet which is constantly crossing the Atlantic and the great num ber of passengers carried it is surprising there are not more disasters. The latest is the loss of the steamship Borussia, trim Liverpool to New Orleans, which was abandoned at sea, December 2d, in a sinking condition. There were on the steamer a crew of 54, and 180 passengers. Ten of the crew picked up in a sman boat and landed at Queenstown, are sup posed to be all the persons saved. CHICAGO has been selected as the place of holding the Republican National Con! vention, because it is convenient of access from every part of the country, and has a building large enough' to accommodate the immense crowd vvhd will attend its deliberations. It is said that the adjourn mCnt without an evening session of the Convention at Cincinnati in 1876 was owing to the fact that there was no gas in the building, and that the failure to hold a night session was fatal to BLAINE'S prospects. It is to be hoped that the Chicago building will 'be amply provided with gas, so that there will be no such disastrous results to any candidate. g upon what unexampled ,louds which THE President bas been expressing his views about the way to crush out polyga my very freely. He believes that the Mormons should be deprived of political power by applying tests which disfran chise all who were practically polygamists or encouraged the violation of law in that manner. The great danger in regard to the future of Mormonism, in the estima tion of Mr. HAYES, is that before the power of the institution is broken there may be a conjunction of Democratic op portunity and necessity that will result in the admissioiu of Utah as a State. If the Democracy should ever control both houses'of Congress and the .executive branch of the Government, and the elec toral vote of Utah should be needed by that party in a Presidential vote, it would certainly be erected into a State, no mat ter how strongly opposed popular senti ment might be to such a proceeding. lnd have been the great in- ave revived stored, and flowing full reason to be-' THE MITIGATION IN MAINE It is sincerely to be hoped that no conflict will grow out of the Maine affair. Any disturbance of the peace would be greatly deplored. But it, must be confessed that there are circumstances so aggravating as to make it almost impossible for the people to tamely, and quietly submit, should the conspirators obstinately determine to consummate the great Baud. It cannot be expected that-a' free and independent people would submit to be disfranchised, even if it' was done under the'pretended forms of legal technicalities. ; The safe- guards and restrictions cast around the ballot are not intended to dis franchise the freeman, but to make.it Certain that his will asexpressed at the polls shall be respected and car ried out. If the State authorities can overthrow the popular verdict this year, what guarantee is there that any expression next year of the popular will would be treated . with any more respect ? That there. are legal methods for remedying such Wrongs as.have been perpetrated by the Fusionists in Maine, is poor-con solation to the voters who see their ballots treated with indignity and nullified because of quibbles and irregularities on the part of election' officers, all the,while that their inten tion is so plain as not to be misun derstood. It is not surprising that gieat excitement should be the con sequence, nor that the people should rise up to remedy the wrongs which have become so gross and flagrant as pOt to be endured by freemen. ' How sensitive and vigilant the y people have become, and how much danger there is of a collision, was shown in Bangor on Christmas day, when the citizens of that town like vented the transfer of State arms and ammunition from the arsenal to 'Augusta. The tgams which were conveying them to the depot were surrounded by an excited crowd, and at the instance of the Mayor the weapons were returned to the aise nal by order of a clerk in the Adju tant-General's office, who said he was' acting under verbal instructions frcim' Governor GARCELON to remove the arms to Augusta. Ex-Senator MoitaiLL has addressed a letter to the Governor, in which he Proposes that the election cases be submitted to the Supreme Court for decision on each law point involved on the variation of 'the count irom he face of the official returns. This fair'proposition Gov. GABCELON could not well refuse, and he has ansireied that it may be accepted. It is possi ble that the peaceful solution of the difficulties may - be brought and the Fusionist& relieved froM the dangerous and unpleasant dilema in which they have placed theniselves by their atteruptjo "count out " the Republican; majority of the Legisla-, illre. .' Later reports fail to confirm the .xpectatior that a peaceable settle inent of the difficulties would be effected, as Gov. GARCELON shows no disposition to accept the-proposition to submit all the disputed points to he Supreme Court. The Republi! ans are prepared for this, and will • resent the questions through a nut ority'lof the members of the last l i rSenate, as it is thought such a pro 'Feeding would conform to the law. : Meanwhile much excitement pre: rails, Which is not allayed by indica tions that the Governor is preparing lby force of arms to carry out the conspiracy by concentrating all, the iavailable military companies at Au= ignita before the meeting ofthe Leg iSfatuie, which o,9,4,Virednesdaynext, (11 4 f ‘ 7 /j 1 71, M A The _progress of Gen. GRANT from San Franc:4Boo to Philadelphia was a sort of conflated ovation, but his reception by the people of Philadel phia was undoubtedly, both hi mag• nitude and In displaq, the finest demonstratien ever made in . honor of an individual in this western world. One of the most striking features of the demonstration was the appearance of men in the very front seats who have heretofore rather sneered at GRANT as a sort of political . failure. In, fact, many of the warmest admir-i era of the General and the President looked on quietly while, the anti-, GRANT men did the cheering and handshaking. And these hitherto rather, cool friends appeared to vie with each other in doing the honors. one or two, perhaps more, of the i'hiladelphia newspapers, which have sneered and jeered at the ! General whineVer they have' said anything for several years, ate their .crow and called it good in a manner truly re freshing. Such is the foice of public opinion not made by newspapers: Public sentiment compelled the great ovation, just as public sentiment compelled his nomination and re nomination, and just as it will com pel his nomination again should the occasion arise. The people have always kept a warm place ,in their hearts for the man tinier whose lead the Union armies were able to iestore thd Un ion. But there arose a class'of men who affected to discover very serious defect's in his Administrations. - This class very freely admitted his claims as the first military man of the age. But he was no statesman, they said. He had no knowledge of men, and no capacity for civil rule. The ques tion was not whether Gen. GRANT had made mistakes as President, for nobody denied that he made mistakes. The real question was, whether his Administration , under the rule of peculiar • eirc,umstances would or would not compare favorably with that of any of his predecessors. But the critics never discussed that ques tion. They avoided it. And they avoided it for the reason that-the decision would inevitably go against them. The fact is, and history will bear us out in the assertion, that GRANT'S Administration of civil af fairs for eight years has as few blem ishes, as any Administration on rec ord,and fewer than any save not to exceed three. The duty laid upon him NV,as more difficult to discharge with 'aeceptableness to the entire country-than had been laid upon any President before him. LINCOLN had a great task to perform, and he per formed it; not acceptably to all, but with great conscientiousness. HE made serious mistakes, and he was severely criticised. But LINcoLN will always rank second to WASII- ItiGTON in the hearts of the people. The honors accorded to Gen. 'GRANT since his return are in the nature of a payment of past due ob ligations. A good many people in this country never knew that h was one of the first men of the age)nntil the world rang with the news his receptions in the old world. That is the effect always produced (upon common minds when they behold men and tbngs beyond the haze of their own shadows. Some persons always measure public men by - their own shadow. And since such' per sons think their own shadnw: the biggest thing under the sun, they come to regard other people as pig mies. We congratulate them upon , their happy riddance of an illusion whichaid not in any way affect Gen. GRANT or his fame, but simply ren dered the deluded ones ridiculous. i • IT was supposed- that there was some crookedness about the certain state bonds of the issue of 1853, 4 and a Committee of Investigation as appointed. ,An idea of the nature. and extent of the arduous labors of the Committee may be formed from a knowledge of the fact, that during the heated term; .they were obliged to visit all the watering places, commencing at Bedford' and winding up amidst the murmuring of the wild_ sea waves at Atlantic City. Fortunately a memoran dum on the fly-leaf of some ledger was discovered which explained the whole transaction, and satisfied the perplexed and overworked Committee that no loss has been sustained by the' State. It is gratifying to know that the summer ex cursions; whiskey, cigars and carriages of the abstemious and frugal Committee only cost a trifle over $lO,OOO. At least bills have been flied for that amount, but so self-sacrificing are the members of the Committee, that the accounting officers after allowing bills for $8531,06 are in formed that no claim would be , made for the balance as shown by the vouchers, amounting to nearly $2OOO. By all means let us have the names of this economical and self-sacrificing Committee that a grateful, tax-paying public may award them the credit due. THE Tribune probably talks by the ,book when it says :—" Secretary SHER MAN is much- misrepresented by those, who find in the late action of the Nation al 'Committee and in his presence at Philadelphia proofs of a disposition on his part to retire from the Presidential contest in favor of General GRANT. There is the best reason for saying that the SeCretary has never Changed the, views cOncerning;the third term which he expressed with sick emkhalis four years ago. He has had ne coal/citation what ever with General GRANT pa the subject, and was not even in Philadelphia at the time of some of 'the alleged interviews. He favored DON CAMERON as a well quaii fled and moat capable 'nazi for the Chair manship of the National Committee, when, there seemed to be no Other promii nent candidate,, and when he suppOsed that selection likely to be acquiesced in by. all.. Seven of the CAMENON votes xverOgiven by SinutstAx me; so that the GRANT element in the Committee was de cidedly in the i minority. 'Whatever the result of the campaign now opening, it is evident that they make a . great mistake who fancy -. that ' L JOHN SHERMAN can be 10ft out of t i he calculations." Tat Greenback test case Wakes is to come up before the Supreme Court of the United States foi emu:neat eltbough an amicable one, is bona tide, and the ques tion to be decided is whether - these note; which have once been redeemed,' can be i reirsued or made-a hind tender. If the decision of the Court is that Congress has no authority under the Constitution to provide for the hauling of money in time of peace, then the Greenback question is settled, and nothing remains but tocanoel them as fast as - they come unto the Treasury, and the Government payments must be made, in gold and silver. Of eourse such a decision would stop all dis cueden, and leave the Greenback party without a single plank-for their platform; for while Congress might pass a law authorizing their re-iesue, they could not be made a legal-tender, and it would be optional with the creditor whether or not to receive them. Acuoss the Frith of Tay, : Scotlsnd, was built in 1877 a magnificent iron 'railroad bridge, two miles in length. The Frith is a mile south of Dundee, and is a wide bay, exceedingly rough in stormy weath er. The bridge was -built on piers and bad 89 spans, 15 feet wide, with a single track. This bridge fell and dropped a distance of 90 feet into 4.5 feet of water on Sunday night last, while a train was passing over carrying with It coaches and passengers, and every soul on the train perished. The number of lives lust is ninety. It is not known whether the bridge had fallen before the train bad entered upon it, or whether it fell with the weight of the train. Thirteen of the central spans are gone. ,Vast quantities of wreckage are coming ashore, but few bodies have been recovered. THE abrdgation of the legal tender quality of the Greenbacks, is not a with drawal-from circulation of the currency thus affected, but merely the initial step to its gradual retirement and cancellation in accordance with the natural and un- , hindered operation of tho laws of busi ness. No real value would be taken from the United States notes. They would con tinue to be used by the people as prefera ble in the minor transactions of trade— the aggregate of which is so iinportant— to the specie itself, into which, by reason of their superior co,i'venience, they are readily convertible. When the green backs cease, under any possible new con dition in the future, to possess this prac tical convertibility they will find their Way back to the United States Treasury, and not before.' ON and after to-day the legal rate of interest in New York will be 6 per cent. per Annum, instead of 7 per cent. Of couise, notes, bowls, mortgages and other interest-bearing obligations entered into before January 1, are not affected by the new law, and, unless otherwise agreed, interest will be computed at 7 per cent., the present legal rate. There is some doubt as to whether there will be any law against usury in New York after the Ist of January. The new law seems to repeal all the other laws relating to the rate of interest, and, inasmuch ae it prescribes no penalties for usury, the reasonable in ference is that the taking of usuri us in terest will not be illegal, or, at least, ;lot punishable by forfeiture or otherwise. cIIIEF OURAY has failed to secure the surrender of the Utes who participated in the MEEKER massacre. /le was unable to perform his part of the contract. The guilty chiefs, probabl z , were not desirous of visiting their great Father on such an errand. It required an immense amount of credulity to believe that the murderers would voluntarily come forward and be taken to Washington for trial. A war with them next spring may be set down amongst the certainties, for the Govern ment cannot *treat from the position it has taken, and must punish the offenders, if it can catch them. ' Two brutes had a rough-and-tumble fight at St. Louis on Christmas day. One was a prize fighter in human form, the other a Siberian bloodhound. The con test was most , brutal and bloody, and we regret to say that the 'lnman brute was the victor. The degrading spectacle was witnessed by many spectators, amongst whom were persons of prominence and assumed respectability. GEN. GARFIELD is said to be the choice of a large majority of the Republican. members of the Ohto Legislature 'for United Statis Senator to succeed Tann ic...l:, and that he will be chosen without serious oppoSition. Gen. G. is acknowl edged to be the Republican leader in the. House, arid his transfer to the Senate will be a loss, as he is both aide, and honest. PHILADELPHIA LE' TER. PHILADZLPHIA, December 29, 1479. Well, the. Grant aflair is ended,, so far as the receiving and feasting and drinking is concerned.' For it will not do to think that because General Grant does not drink intoxicating fluids that those who were honoring him imitated that laudable ex ample. Per contra, there flowed rivers of old Bourbon, and oceans of champagne. The distinguished guest was in charge of the city fathers,. and what they can't 'do in the way of eating and drinking had better not be attempted. They - each have a crowd of ward stnkers and bummers, who expect and receive , invitations to all the " feeds " where the city pays the pi, per, and for a week they have lived in clover. But that not the General's fault, and it is greatly 0 his credit that he made but a short stay on there convivi al occasions. Several times be but bare ly put in an appearancei and then retired. It is pretty_generally felt, that - notwith standing the General's great fanie, and the high estimation in which be is deserv .edly held by the people, that there has been quite too much rims made here, in a certain direction, for 'public appreciation, arid that if those who ilanaged the matter had been influenced bya desire either to honor.the General, kar promote his politi cal adv,ancement, ,they! would have :dis plaged more tact and diOstion. Christmas in this city ie the "day of days:" The German element in the pop- ulation is very large, and they cling with great tenacity to the customs and usages of the vaderland. Christmas eve is made hideous by the blowing of horns, while persons dressed in all sorts of fantastic costumes parade the streets. The house hold must be very poor Indeed which can not afford a Christmas tree, and a few pendant trifle* as presents to the children. The streets were thronged with old and young who appeared to enjoy heartily the festive occasion. Christmas day was as disagreeable as rain andomow could make it, and but few people cared to wade through the mud and slush, preferring the comforts of the fireside. The display of line things intended for Christmas presents has not been equalled, - both as to elegance and cost, for years, and the number sold , was evidence :that "hard times" had not only passed away; but had been forgotten. - The importation of iron AM eontinues. It is said there is not enough iron in this countmtesuiply the demand. itibt but a few months_ since that pig lion was piled up by the acre about tbe flatness. sritb no - sale at 618 per. ton. It is now. visaed at $89.50 with a prospect of odours. It is estimated that* two, %boo milm of railroad will 'be Uotablieted, :`while ,the 90,000 miles alieadY in operation irM re quire a large quantity of new ,rails, _rod ,1 the number of tons of iron which will be need is estimated at nearly -2,500,000 for railroads alone, more that the fur- Dams are capable of producting. 'At the Close of last year there were 092 furnaces, and only 265 in blast. It .is calculated .. that on the., day of the new VW, there will not be less than WO in blast A. season of profit and prosperity for the iron interest has evidently commeaced. General Grant was a guest of George W. Childs, the publisher of the Ledger, during a part of his atay in this city. Mr. C. is pne of the most hospitable men in the world, and the Ledger gives him a daily income of one thouiand dollars, which enables him to do it handsomely. Most of the noted men, both native and foreign, have been entertained by him, and his benefactions are freely and gener ously lestowcd. His private office in the Ledger, building is filled with rare said, costly objects of art, and be has bad there many of the presents given to General Grant, which were. freely shown to visi tors. Mr. Childs is a public spirited citi zen, whose unostentatious charities have dissipated the gloom which darkened many a suffering household. • A vitriol-throwing case occurred in Kensingtqn on Christmas eve, which shows what may come from brooding over real or fancied wrongs. George Shepard, a boat-builder, aged sixty - five years, was tailed to the door •of his residence by George Wood, .a noted ship-builder, an old friend and partner in business. As the door was opened_Wood said : in a very disagreeable evening. I have got some.nredicide for my wife; smell it:" As Mr. Shepard leaned forward to com ply with his request Wood threw half a mugful of oil of vitriol in his face. In an. instant tlie burning acid was eating into his flesh, bUrning the clothing from his body, and running down his neck, caus ing frightful pain at every point it touch ed. 'His left eye was entirely destroyed, and his agopy for some time was intense. Wood was arrested and held in $3,000 bail. Several years ago Mr. Shepard pre vailed upon Mr. Wood to engage with him a stock speculation, 'which proved failure. The result preyed upon' the old man's mind until he became melancholy. President Hayes arrived Friday after noon, and dined with General Grant at the residence of Hon. John Welsh, re turning to Washington Saturday. Saturday afternoon General and Mrs.- Grant, General and Mrs. Sherman, Colo nel and Frederick Grant and Miss Felt, of Galena, Illinois, left this city for Wash ington. Reaching the capitol the ex-Pres ident and his wife were driven to the res idence of Genend Beale, where he wfll re main until Tuesday, when he departs for Key West, at which place he will take a steamer for Havana. 111 A coal bin of Joseph B. Hanceck's Sons & Co.'s coal yard, Ninth streetand Girard avenue, burst Sunday afternoon, submerging David Clay, colored, aged twenty-three years, `and Wedleu Bader, a German, aged twenty-five years. Clay was smothered to death, and his body ex tricated and taken to his late residence, 1016 Hart:street., Bader was removed to his home, at Fifth and Girard avenue, with severe injuries about his head and body. . • St. David's Episcopal Church, a small edifice at Canton and Baker streets, Man ayunk, was entirely destroyed by fire Tuesday afternoon, involving a loss of about $lO,OOO, upon which 'there is a full insurance. The flames started about five o'clock from a heater in the cellar, and burned with such rapidity that it was not much over an hour before the destruction' was complete. The pastor of the church is the Rev. Charles Logan, Over 16,000 persons in this city crossed the dark river during this year, as shown by the report of the Health Officer. Of thee, 8,272- were males, 8,609 females ; 3,658 were boys, 3,320 were girls; 9,207 were adults, and 6,989 were minors. The largest number died in July. 11,774 were natives of the United States, and 3,783 persons of foreign birth, while the nation ality of 724 was unknown. 760 were be.: tween the ages of i riighty and • one hun dred. The Pennsylvania Railroad Company purposes advancing the wages of its.em• ployes next spring, increased business warranting the advance. WASHINGTON LETTER. WAtUINfTOX, D. C., Dee. 7 1e79 A new sensation from Maine in the form of a threatened riot in Bangor has caused considerable talk, and the inability of Garcelon to guide in a storm becomes apparent. His attempt to take from the Bangor arsenal the arms was, consider ing the .excited .condition of the public mind, foolish and inconsiderate. After stealing from the Republican party the fruits of their honest victory, and . from the people of the State their rights, the Governor, while are smarting under the great wrongs he has inflicted upon them, as if to force upon the injured public his fraudulent Legislature, attempts to draw together all the arms of the State and summon the militia to Augusta. It is no . wonder that the respectable . people of Bangor stand . forth like men to defend their rights. We honor and applaud them for it The claim that the cases in Maine and Louisiana am identical is false, and known to be so by every intelligent man in the country. In Louisiana, canvassing boards were by law obliged to throw out parishes where intimidation was proven, and they did so. In Maine, no fraud at the polls was committee, and every man voted as be pleased. Republicans under stand the difference between Maine and Louisiana affairs, and it 'is due to the ,Senators from Maine, and more especially to Mr. Blaine, that the enormity of crime committed by Garcelon and his cohorts has been fittingly explained and -denounced. Capt. James B. Rada, the eminent American civil engineer, has just returned from a tour in Europe, and an extensive examination of all the great engineering projects there, including the improve ment of navigationon the Danube, Suez Canal, and other great works: His scheme for connecting the two oceans will now receive attention. The Captain is of opinion that the construction of a canal to convey the largest ships across, the . Isthmus would require an immense tap'. tal, and fifteen years would be required to complete the work, and when complet ed its successful operation be not assured. He proposes to build-a railroad across the Isthmus, which, he says, would not cost one-fourth as much as the canal, and could be built in three years ; and he is confident it would transport the largest ships with their cargoes from ocean to ocean with more safety than could be possible by canal. The distance is forty miles,. and a Joon.) , of twenty-four hours would be sufficient to take a ship oat og the Atlantic ocean and place it in the Pik: chic ready. to proceed oa its; C'sptairt Bad, thotengbly understands hit fedmilkm, sod 1 11 4. ilia pro Posed by him is wortbrof careful examimition. &mad Ontut.will arrive here to-niiht, entwithataridb* the Win 19 the -cm' fairy. No formal 'receptlim has been arranged. but it is expected that the peo ple will find a way to get a look at him and a shaken: his Word. .. A few words will not be out 4. place hire in behalf of one of our most experi enced legislators.' I leim that .a report being industriously eirculated.in Ohio to the effect that - General Garfield is a member of the British Cobden Club, and is therefore a free-trader. This is intend ed to injure his chances for the U. 8. Sen atorship, of which he is now pretty cer tain. Gen. Garfield is simply an honorary member of the Cobden Club. This lathe way it came about : He wai one of the earliest and stoutest advocates of a return to specie payments after the war,, having made an elaborate speech in favor of that object in 1866, and followed it up by another in 1868 likr able and exhaustive were these efforts that the Secretary of the Treasury requested and obtained copies to send abroad for the purPose of strengthening the creditiof the Govern ment. These were widely. read in En- , gland, and to sh9w theirf appreciation of his merits as a financial authority, the Cobden Club elected him an honorary member without any reference to his views on any other subject—as they also cleated Sumner, Adams, Garrison, and othe'r em inent Americans. General Garfield's views on the tariff have been equally well expressed. He made speeches in 1868, 1870 and in 1878 which attracted wide attention, and showed that no man in Congress has been more faithful to the interests of American industry than he. He - vies Instrumental in defeating the Wood free-trade tariff bill in thelast-Con grin, and has been consistently opposed to all rinkering - of the laws against our honie interests. - STATE NEWS. A ' A CORONER'S jury in Tioga county found. that a man who had bung him seltdied of " self-immolation." _ BRADFORD, McKean county, is to have a new lock-up, and the people of that place are celebrate the- event. THE number of oil-producing. wells in the Bradford field was estimated at 5,000 on the Ist day of Novem ber. JOHN RALTz, a miner was injured in Cross Creek slope, near Hazelton, on, Saturday, and died soon after ward. REV. A. Fun; a well-known Ger man minister, died in Bath, North aMpton county, on Saturday in his 76th year. DR. JESE3fIAII ELSWORTH, a prom inent physician and drag dealer of Corry, died in, that place on Thurs day of old age. HON. NATHAN KIMBLE, Of i Will iamsport, is talked of as the succes. sor of the late George D. Jackson in the State Senate. CORA DESIOND, of Silverlyville, near Oil City, fell into *tub of boil. ing water on Sunday afternoon, and was scalded to death. A Imo disease is prevailing to an alarming extent in portions of Berks bounty. One farmer of Heidelberg township has lost nine.. Tint postmaster at Kittanning, W. H. Dickey, died on Sunday last. He served, through the late war, and died from the effect of wounds. HAavi TROUP, a well-known farmer residing a ghort distanee from Newport, Perry county, committed suicide by banging on Sunday after noon. DRILLING for . oil near Petrolia shows° such favorable; signs that it is thought a large tract has been dis covered that was heretofore thought valueless. THE total shipments of lumber from Lock Haven for the year end, ing December 21, were 11,000,000 feet, an increase of 900,000 over the previous year. THE Oil City Derrick reports a case of a teamster driving his wagon containing glycerine, over an em bankment, and that, too without causing an explosion: THE Blossburg. Register proposes a railroad from :Arnot or Antrim, TiogNcounty, to Williamsport. It would', that paper contends, be an excellent outlet for coat. Mn: F. H. BARRER, of Ebensburg, Cambria county, announces that he will lie a cOdidate before the Re publican- Noininating Convention of that county for Congress. - MARTIN FALIAY i a brakeman on the Atlantic and Freat Western Railroad, was- run over and killed at Atlantic - Station, near Meadville, early Saturday morning. t • A COLORED man named Lamb, of Ridley township, Delaware ,county, was killed on the P., W. and R. Rail road, at Eddystone, just above Ches ter, by the 6.15 south-bohnd train. THE Pittsburg papers report that the card rate in the nail trade has been advanced to $4, which is an in crease of thirty-five cents, makinc , a total advance since the panic of $2720 per keg. THE Johnstown • Silliday Time'rs re-. ports that General Jacob M. Camp bell, of that place, is again asking his friends to aid him' to be nomi nated as the Republican candidate for Congress. THE tobacco crop of Lancaster county this year will be excellent.l Its value is set down at $3,000;000. Choice farms devoted to tobacco ture now command from $250, to $350 per acre. - MRS. YARNED, of Derrick City, prevented a serious conilagation at that place by breaking open a door and dashing water on an incipient fire, among in a lot of oil barrels, in a grocery store. MARTIN LAWLER, sometimes called "Muff" Lawler, and notorious in Schuylkill county as a Mollie Ma. guire a squealer," it is said, is troubl ed in his sleep with visions of those who he betrayed. - Tan Carlisle Herald records the fact that Frank Ilackenbirg, of that place, aged 11 years, swallowed a percussion cap on the morning of the 13th instant and died with little suf fering the same day. • HON. WILLIAM GODSCJIALK, mem ber of Congress_ from the Seventh district, is enjoying his holiday at Norristown and has told the Herald of that place that Mr. Cameron's election to the Chairmanship of the National Republican Committee means Grant , for 1880. Mr. God schalk, is a Republican, and ought to know what he is talking about. mum MADzank, of the ATM of Melot '4S; Maderia, merchants, .of Fle l etwood, Berke county, who acct. dentally shot himself 'utile iblomen on Thursday while examining re., volver, died Saturday morning. GROUND pfit in tobacco in Lycom.; ing county has not bee.n wasted. The farmers have shown an excell ent ktiowledge of the celtiviation of the plant, and the crop in that coun ty this year will reach 'tell 10,000 Tumax was an explosion in the malt room of Overholt . & Co., dis tillers, at Broad Ford, Faye tte coun ty, on Saturday 'last, when Jack Myers and A. C. Hamilton, a Gover ment storckeepe* were painfully in jured , LAWRENCE Lzhaa, a pickpocket, claiming to be from Connellsville, died in the alm-house at Pittsburg on Monday. •Ho was arrested on the day of the Grant reception -in that city while in the act of playing his vocation. JUDGE ,OUMMIN, at Williamsport, has dismissed the petition for the re moval of Mr. William H. Harrison for alleged incompetency as Oil Inspector, at that place, and ordered his restoration to office. The Solar Oil Company was the:complainant. A DOG came to the ,residence of Mr. George . Peck, in Custer City, the other day, with his heid and neck containing over two hundred porcupine quills. It is supposed that the dog, in hunting birds, had at tacked a porcnpine that had escaped from -a menagerie. Mae. PEGGY CRAIG, daughter of General CRAIG, of Revolutionary fame, lives at New Alexandria,West moreaand county. She has in her possession a "rattlesnake" nag that was carried-through the War for in dependence by the Independent Battalion, of Westmoreland county. - AT Harrisburg, the records of the trial and conviction of Mrs. Catha rine Zell,' alias Windowmaker, for the murder of Mrs. 'Mary Kiehl, by poisoning in 'Cumberland county, were Sled with 'the Governor. The time for her execution has not been fixed. It is said her case will be taken to the Supreme Court. • , HOWARD A Womzit in West Newton, Alle gheny comity. has caused any amount of trouble. A man was found dead near that place two weeks ag o, and a' 'Coroner's jury found that th death was accidental. The woman acciased three men of having committed the Murder, and they all. established their innocence. She refused to ap. pear before a magistrate, and had to be.dragged before that officer. The constable who i llrrested one of the men was brutally beaten by him. GENERAL NEWS:. BOSTON has a Chinese • Sunday school of fifty pupils. FIFTEEN thousand loyal whites have emigrated west from North Carolina in ten years past.. SENATOR SHARON, the - Nevada silver boss, thinks greenbacks will become the sole currency. (CAPTAIN Kips, who visited Szeg sedin, the inundated Hungarian city, says that only 600 houses remain of 6600. A New York woman makes a specialty of attending to finger nails for a living. She calls herself a manicure. - • THE granite monument for Antie tam Cemetery fell overboard at Washington, but, has been fished up in good condition. 4 GENERAL GRANT says his visit to his mother in Jersey City was the first real bit of peace he has had since he got home. TILE funeral of Alexander Stuart, the New York sugar refiner, - took place from the Fifth Avenue Piesby terian,Church Thursday. MAJOR WADE IJAMPTO7. , :, Jr.;_son of Senator Wade Hampton, died at his plantation, near Greenville, MiSs., on itfonday, of malarial fever. RODE* CLINTON WRIGIIT., who -was the l oldest and best known. American merchant in Brazil, is dead. He was a Baltimorean. _ PRESIDENT NJCKERSON, of the At chison; Topeka and Santa Fe Rail road, denies that the road has passed into the hands of Jay Gould. GEORGE Hamm and Wesley Long, both colored, 'had a fight near Augusta, Ga , when Harris struck Lon, over the head with a gun and killed him. - GOVERNOR BISHOP Of, Ohio has taken rooms - at Washingto'n, so anx ious' is he said to be to escape from the multitude of pardon-Seekers that beset Columbus. VIANLON says he will wait two weeks longer - to hear from Courtney. He seenis, disposed to row him in April iCairace cannot be arranged before that time: JOHN H. MAzENER, aged 30, atwell knofvii Baltimore salesman, and a man of family, was found ead in a cell at a police station in that city Thursday morning. HENRI SAY'S steam yacht Hen rivtte, with her tender Follet arrived at Baltimore Saturday. She will re ceive a new shaft- and continue her voyage around the world. PETER FOLEY, of Boston, was' struck on the head Thursday by a heavy iron girder which he was as sisting to hoist to a building being erected, and was instantly killed. M. SAY'S steam yatch Henriette, heretofore reported disabled 2. off Hatteras, left Fortres Monroe' , Sat urday in tow for Baltimore, where thesnecessary repairs will be made, HENRY• STEIK, aged 31, the son of a widow living at 248 Stanton street, New York, weary of life on account of long illness with consumption, ended his Miseries by 4 cutting his throat with a penknife. MISS JULIA JACKSON, daughter of the rebel, hero Stonewall Jackson, got a handsome Christmas , gift—.a silver pitcher—presented to her by Maryland ex-confederate soldiers. She is at school in Baltimore. THE body of an unknown man was found drowned on Tuesday morning in. Long Island Sound, near Oak Neck Beach. It has been• in the ,water a short time. He was dressed like a Bailor, and was fifty years of age. Hon,ac GREELEY'S first article for the press was written when an ap. pretitice in a newspaper office at Poulttiey, Vt. He described a big squash which had been sent to the editor, but the latter wouldn't insert the article. A gentleman, about GO years of age, respectably dressed, and sup posed"to be S. A. Sikes, of Kennedy. ville, N. Y., jumped from the new suspension bridge at Niagara FallS, into' the river below. The body has not been found, GILMAN'S bOtitk and jewelry stoie, Glllespie's drug store and- Brill's dry good store, at Newton, Jasper county, lowa, were 'Aimed on Wed nesday night:- Loss, $30,009; in surance, $10,000., Burglars are supposed to have s tarted the fire. CALVIN WILLIAMS, a colored preacher at Stoningten, Conn., was arrested the other day , for keeping an. Unlicensed dog. tHe had no counsel in court, and when told to plead his own case, said he would open court with 'prayer, and did so. Tax iron 'Masters of North Staf fordshire have issued circularti de clining to receive further orders ex cept eubject:to prices current at the time of delivery. The trade is in'a most nourishing condition and ad ditional furnaces are being blown Tun London Time's' 'Vienna cor- 'respondent s assert that a compro mise has been officially suggested by 'France, by which the line of frontier proposed by Turkey would be accept ed in Epirus while that proposed by the Greeks' would be accepted in Thessaly. ..„. THOMAS 11 itA3IBEY and John C. Dow were arraigned in Boston Thursday, charged with a series of ,peciilations from - the Waverly But • ter 'Company, of that ; city, for the `past two years, amounting '.to about $10,000.. They were held in $5,000 bail each. ' • A special dispatch from Worthing, Minn., says.: " Lester T. Turner, a merchant' of Sioux falls, was set upon On coming out of an out-house ad joining a hotel by' two men, who knocked him down 4nd robbed him $1 of " r _ o r ,o 0, which. he had just receiv ed as proceeds of the sale of his busi ness. The men were traced a short distance by railrOad, but were finally lost track of.'? ' . • A PliEsomvsow LmEttxrimE.--An dreits' Bazar, to-day the leading fashion* paper of this continent, is an example of what bUsiness energy and business prom= icesfaithfully fulfilled can do. Prop the start this magnificent journal has - , corn-. manded the admiration of everrone who has seen it. Its Fashion Departments are always fresh and reliable • its literary ex cellence unsurpassed ; and its fun joyous. and refined. Notwithstanding- its 19w price—onlv *l per annum—every subscri, ber, new or old, for 1580, will be preient-, ed free with 50c worth of Andrews' Bazar Patterns, and, furthermore, those who iiiiqscrib; in time to secure the January`: riuMber, will receive as ; a - New Year's (Mt. an .immense supplement sheet—the largest ever printed—filled with useful and „practical designs fur making laces, Worsted and 'other fancy work, for paint ing on china, silk and satin, etc., which could not be purchased separately fOr $lO. Every lady should subscribe for 'the, splendid journal, or ay' least send ten cents for a sample copy, to W. R. ANDREIV3, I Publisher, Tribune Building, New York. CAUSE AND EFFECT.The main cause o'4 nervousness is indigestion,' and that is caused by weakness of the stomach. No one can have sound nerves- and good. health without using Hop Bitters to strengthen the stomach, purify the blood, and keep the liver and -kidneys active, to carry off all the poisonous and waste mat ter of the - system. See other column.— Advo nee. giesn 40:leftism:cuts. H. DORMAXIL, I. , 325 East Water St.,. Elmira, N.Y. _ . _ Ist Floor DRY GOODS 24 Floor : MILLINERY •3d Floor ' ' CARPETS' 4th Floor CLOAKS It SHAWLS Upper floors accessible by elevator: - Sir A visit of Inspection Is respectfully solicited I - gaarficts. HEAT HARKETo E. D. RUNDELL, - Would - rerpeetfUllyannounee that he Is contlnulnk the Market business at the old stand•of Mullock & Sandell, and will at all ktnies keep a full supply of FRESH OYSTERS' Constantly on hand. Countri dealeVa' supplied at city rates. FRESH '& SALT MEATS, GARDEN VEGETABLES, FRUITS ) , .Xf. sir Alf Goods delivered Free oil charge. E. D: Towanda, Pa. Nov..TI, 1879. - , MARKET. . , -I RfOSECRANS & BREWER, Announce to the . people of Towanda and vicinity that they are now prepared to turnlah FRESII .ND SALT MEATS, POULTRY, FISH, OYSTERS, And Vegetables In thelrseason. at the most reason able rates. Everything purchased of us • delivered promptly free of charge. air Our location, ONE . DOOR' FORTE OF SCOTT'S BAKERY, to conientent-for We buy - the best stock. and. take great Pains to keep everything In the best order: °trees a call. ROSECRANSE BREWER Towanda, Doe. 5, 187 8. • MEAT MARKET! -MY ER ttz. DEVOE • .1! , Located in BEIDLEMAN'S BLOCK, lIIIIISGE' STBEET, - Keep on'hand, FRESH AND SALT - .MEATS, DRIED BEEF, FISH, POIiLTRY, GARDEN VEGETABLES AND BERRIES IN THEIR SEASON, Jar All goods delivered free of charge. MA ER k DaV OE. , Towanda, Pa., May 28, 1529. - dart 1e 'arcs. THE OLD MARBLE YARD'H STILL IN OPERATION. The undersigned having purchased the MAR BLE YARD of the late GEORGE McCABE, de sires to inform the public that having employed. experienced men. ho is prepared to do all lands of work In the line of MONUMENTS,I HEAD 4 TONE, MANTLES and SHELVES, - .2J - In the:reri best manner and it lowest :wick .-{ ; Persons desiring anything In tbe Marble line an Invited to call and examine work, and save agente commission. ' JAMES McCABIL Towanda, Pa., li7oc:_ti. 1878. ; .24tt EDWARD WILLIAMS, :• PRACTICAL FLEMBER & GAS FITTER, Plato of - business in -Mirror Block, next door to Journal Office, opposite Public Square, _ Plumbing, Gas Fitting, Repairing Ptimps of all kinds, and all kinds of clearing promptly attended to. All wanting" wprk in his ilue ahould give him a call. llee. 4, 1879. ' • 'Verfobicar. Reporter , Clubbing List for 1380. ' We have made arrangements with the publishers_ of the following periodicals by which we tawnier anyone of them 14 connection with the Bar nitran at greatly reduced rates. We will send the Br, roirmin with any of the papers named below, for, one year, at the figures indicated : !Reporter and Weekly Tribune. fienti-Wewlily.:... • " • " Weekly Times_ " • " Semi-Weekly " ' " Weekly Evening Post 64 - 66 Semi-Weekly . " Philadelphia Press 2 10 " •" ' Times —2 24 - " Anierican Aglicultnrhit...,... 210 • " " Country Gent1eman....'..... 940 " Rural New Yorker 2 e .3 " .Harpers Witkly 4 24 - 4 25 • ' ~• < Magazine " Scribner 14 " St. ' Nicholas • " Wide Awake, " " Batty Lind tittel's Listing Age 8 Co ai The Nursery 25 " " Appleton's ,lournal - 3 50 • Popular Science Monthly.... 5 25. " ••" Petersein's Magazine • 2GS ' Goiters 26.5 Lipptocott'e " .. . 4 7.5 " ." Atlantic Monthly 4 25 . " • •r" Ohio Firmer 30 • " Lancaster Fanner .2 GO :Den/ores; wtthout premium 2 80 ' " " : with premium..., 313 A NEW BOOK. ORDERS NOW tAKEN.I • AGENTS can make most by &Aug a new If Orr —the mantle of the kind Issued. • 4 The Rights and' Duties of ConnitT and Towneditp• Oineers,” by W. It. ltiEnz.v, Esq.. of the WILI.-• tampon (Pa.) Bar. Con - tains all . the act* and de-. ;felons In relation to the various county,antl town-- ship Mimes, Is a complete hand book for eleetion officers, and treats the tax laws fully. It contains 300 pages, neatly printed, bound In cloth and i and Kid at r 2 per volume. For agencies and terms ' apply with stamp • W. It. BIEItLY. Dec.ll-se3, ' - Wllllatnsport, Pa. THE BEST READING Foi THE FA MIL 1; See Socember Wide Awake fo r 1850 Proerpeeive WIDE AWAKE: , An Illustrated Maeazlne for Yonne' People and the Family. Only gr 2 a Year. BAB VIAND. A Pictorial Montbli for Very:Little Folk% Only be Cents a Year. . . If ever a Magazine could disarm all criticism. It would be WiDE'AWAtig. It is Just the thing to. fill the children's waking hours with delight. and give them happy dreams at niglat,'—f.halok t : Transcript. , '-Little five-year-old fairly dances with Joy (If she a Methodist preachers daughter) mien snr sees BABYLatin. It Is a noble, grand work, to. make , glad the. hearts of, the little ones and many' a father and mother will bless the pubilshers.''— Confrrenee ddroctite. Agents wanted everywhere. „Liberal rash com missions.. Send 30 cents for sample copies, outfit, terms, Cr. /I,ddress, • D. LUTHROP i& CO.; PUIILISirEnc, • Franklin St.. Bostm, THE GREA LT TEST LIVING A- A. thors, such as Prof. Max Muller. Rt. lion. W. di!..lGladstone. das A. Fronde, Prot. Huxley. R. A. Proctor, Edw. A. Freeman, PrOf. Tyndall, Dr. W. .11.1 Carpenter. Frauces Power Cfobbe, The Duke of Aigyll. Wm. Black, MlsATltackeray, Mrs. Moloch- Cralk. Geo. 3liteDunald, Mts. Oliphant. Matthew Arnold, Henry Rlitpley, WW .Story. Turguenief„ Carlyle, Ruskin, Tennyson. 114,Junli s g, and many others, are represented In the pages of • , Litton's Living Age. In . 1880 Title LIVING As; enters'upon Its thirty seventh year, admittedly unrivalled and ertutinu ously successful. During the year it will furnish to its readers the productions of the most eminent authors; atcOve-named and many 'others; e nth rm. ug. the choicest Serial and short - 4h,rleN. Iq the Lead,- Ing - Foreign Novelists, and an amount Uriapproached Ey any other Periodical hi the world, of the inogt valuable , Literary and Scientific matter In the day, from' the pens of tote t „ foremost Essayists. Scientists, Critics; likeoserers, ant Editors, representing every department of Knowledge ant Progress. 'Tits LIVING AGI: is a weekly magazine geeing more than - THREE ANTI A gI_TAR f kit T 1.1011.. N D double-column °etas', pages of matter yearly. It presents in in Itlexpens'sve foal, considering Its great amount Of matter, with freih ?less, ening to its weekly Ismw, and with a saris - factory, complettiw,s attempted by,tm othcr potd-• - ration. the bettlt4says. Reviews, eriticistus. TsUs, Sketches of Travel and Discovery, Poetry, scleu- 1 title. Biographical; llistoi - loal anti Polito:al infer mation, from the entire body of Foreign Periodi&al Literature. The importance of THE LIVING ACs to ly nt AeMean reader; as the cityi satisfactorily fr '4" autI,CO3IPLETE compilation of an' liidispensal current literature.—lndhpemable because it eta-- braces the productions ut , the • ABLEST LIVIN: WRITERS. • is sullicientic Indicated by the following - OPINIONS . It covers the whole - field of literature. told eorr•rpl It completely,thoroughly Cincinnati. It affords the beet, the cheapest and most con venient means of keeping abreast with tn.:- pregre'ss of-thought in, all its phases.—Yort4 4ineriran, Philadelphia. tt by all adds, the best eCleetic published.— Southern C'hurchraon, Richmond. Gives the best of aft at she ' , flee of one.—Neuf .York /hdkpen4rient. The prince among tuagazines.—.)7. T. CAs,rror. It no fully supplies the wants of the reading put tic that through Its pave atop, It Is possible to lie itsithoroUghly . well Informed in current literature as tyr the perusal or a long list of irtufeer m . -To read I t ;weekly is a liberal ettnottlon.-Zien4 Herald. Ilostu 71. alinte a reader May fairly keekup .with all that le Ittiportaut in the literature. litstttry, tics and seletice of the day.. The .;.11', , f Acta Ist, Nell, Fork.--f_ : • It lidas the palm -against all rlitals.-z-Com nusr , Louixri I It -'s indkpensahle to every one who desires a thorough compendium of ail that LA witulrable and noteworthy in the literiry world.-1 orfon Post. There .le no other ~;:ay of procnring the same amount of eiccHent !tier:lmre for anything . like the tne.price.-734610n ..I ,l rceffeee. The best literature.of the Putalsbed.wEEKL - Y at ts.oo a year, free elfk po , • . ' ".EXTRA OFFER FOR 1880. ..40 - •• To all new suh&crlbers for iSso will log sent gratis those ?lima rrs of 1579 Which contain: besides other Interesting matter. the first chapters or Itlt Who WILL NOT'WIIEN lIE 31.1.1*,*• a new story by MRS. oLI PH A NT, now afjpearlpg In THE Ana .from advance sheett,.. slab -prices for the Best Home and Foreign Literature. . [Possessed oft t•E Lt Pull AG E. and one or other of our vivaelods American mouthile - s. a subscriber wit! tell Minself in command of the whole tion.—Phi/of/r/ph Errning Butietin PoR:„Ii0.50 Tits: Lir z AGE and either one of the American ;Li 31Olithlirs, (Or - llarper'k Weekly or Bazar) Will he sent for nyear, lsnh mr , r,nald; or, for 0.50 'l 4 t.lvl so AGE and the St. tiirhu /as or ..Ippleton'a Journal. Address, LITTELL do CO., Boston. Only_ Two Dollars a Year . , Tfie Boys and Girls - and their Friends, nill Lind in Wlp..E!, : cA.n7 - A.K.O Foil 1810 Hosts of things to enjoy. Among them' wl7l` be TWO CAPITAL SERIAL STOIC]. ES FIVE LITTLE PEPPERS l• And Flow_Tho Grew.. • By Margaret Sidney. l lllusgrated by :Je'sste.eurtie • . TWO YOUNG HOMESTEADERS. By Theodora R. Jenness. Illustrated - by R. Lolls There will also be Four Two•partjSforfex, I : Billyti 11Ound. ' . . . The Boy Thol. - .WMi Too lienritiful. . , : Onr store. . 1 • , At Plymouth Oak Farm. I pUR -Ur-ERICA ti L4RTIST.s,:. ,_, Mr: S. G. W. USNJAmEX Wllltontinue these 1.3 pers which. have been se gladly welcomed by the people at large, brit g the fatly, Art Stlies-evvr r ,pared for young readerit; anu. as during they will he largely illustrated by the art t• - •:sib• and wilt also take lo.your SculKois i';:yd and rleiker Painters, Book and Magaztut ) I.!n•-tratars, and Engravers. -i„ CONCORD PIC=NIO DAYS .Unger thlt title Mr. Gr.°. B. LA ttri.t.;-T will .PreSent. a aeries Out-of-doors Games for both Boys and Girls. Thiess amusement papers will be tulLot Coneoill reminkeenets oT famous haunts, "and noted peopM uto..e name. are familiar to Rio literature and art of fat, continent,. Profeasoe 31: P. Paul and his , llisbot -erieltin the Starry 'leavens. Ch4nlnled In verse by JOHN-II EMIT .1.11( 7 1C. _ ,t ' • nillStr3telL by AltIATItAlt ANN. I • Theentlrb collection wlll be arranged and edtte.l by John Ittinctilehn. and the drawings re-teurttra by Miss Mary A, Lathbury, =ED= A - series nr Twelve Original Exevelle tiongn,lor use hi Puttit, Setiootr,nri, brtn r I , re. red for.3r IDE AWAKE, under th'u StllocrVi3it.D u( Mr. S.gnts C. Elson, a gonthronn, well known to the muskip public of Ituston and Nov Nork. Delightful Surprhsen Every Mouth: Now Is thettoos to subset-the. turd), ;:t.OO n yeor. Aleuts flouted. Liberal eotutni , ,.loa.•• • Address'all ofdeis and luiptirie...4 to D. LOTIIROP at Franklin strbet, Boston, flans, • =zi 4 2 r p.B 10 •f 40 t . 20 1, 2 33 .. 3 GO ... 1 2.5 ... 4 25 ...E 60 ... 1 i• 5