Timis OF FVRLICATIOI. The BRADTORD Raeder= s published *very, Thursday morning by GOODRICH HITCHCOCK; One Dollar per annum, In lidfanela. ifirkdverOsing In all cases exclusive of sub scription to the paper. -SPECIAL NOTlCESlnsertedat TBS . / Caere per line for , first insertion, and rive, c erre paellas for each subsequent Insertion, but no notice Inserted for less)than ilfty cents.. Y E A RLY ADS E itTIBEME NTS will be insert ed at reasonable rates. Administrator's and Executor's Notices, 12; Auditor's No:dm:MIN ; Business Cards, liVelines, f !mt. year) iS, additional lines 'I each. Yearly advertisers are entitled to quarterly cry snges. Transient advertisements mast be paid fdr fit advance,. . JAll resolutions of associations: communications • of limited or individual interest, and notices of marriages or deaths, e seceding flue lines are charg ed FIVE CENTS per line, but simple notices of mar risges and de Ghs will be published wlthout charge. Te Itgronign having a larger circulation than any other paper in the county, makes It the best advertising medium in Northern Pennsylvania. .1011 PRINT' NG of every kind, in plain and Taney colors, done with neatness and dispatch. Handbills, Blanks, Cards, Pamphlets, Blithest's', Statements, &c., of every variety and style, printed at the shortest notice. The REPORTER,' office is well supplied with power. presses, a good assort ment of new type, and everything in the printing line can be excepted in the most artistic manner and at the lowest rites. TERMS INVARIABLY C ASII. xissiness garbs. MADILL&, IiINNEY, -A- t A TTORNETS-AT-LAW, (1111 ,. e —Rooms formerlytoccupied by Y. M. C. A Iteading Room. .r. A DIU.. 3,10.00 0. P. KINNEY. Ay RS. E. J. PERRIGO, _AL _ TEACHER Or PIANO AND ; ' ORGAN. Le...on, given in Thorough Basi and harmony Col:iv:elm of thy voice a speclap. Located at A Su..ll': 1111. in St. Reference: Imes S Passage Towanda, Pa, March 4, teen. JOAN W. CODDING; ATTORNEV-AT,LAW TOWANDA, rA (Mice carer Kirby 's Drug StorU MENNE A TTORN Er-AT-LAM, TOWANDA, PA with Patrick and Foyie DECK & OVERTON ATTmsNEVS-AT TOWANI)A, l'A. IMIEBEIM TI ODNEY A. MEM.' CR, ATTolt N EY AT-LAW, ' ToWANDA. PA l'atent.a. Parti rular attention paid t.. t.ustneAs In the Orphahs Court and to the Bettie 'two! of t,rate::. "Ave in - Montanyes !Stock OVERTO; & SAND:RSON,. ATI - MINIFY-AT-LAW, 1 . 4 WANDA. PA. F.. ~V EItTON, Jm W IL JEISSUP, ri. , 11 NEY A4t , , 01"!:.-F.ILelt-AT-LAW, \ll )STRosE. l'A. .Iwltte 'tossup trlvlng rtwitmol the proetteent the law 111 Northorn I'euu-vivanta, «111 attend to ally 1,2 0 hn-in+•.s intrusted To hilll In Ilmlfor,l county. 1.•v.,m: tvi.tking to oopsult him, Call e:111 011.1 f . S: rootvr, Esq.,;fowautla, I'a., when all appointment c.oL 1 , 0 main lIEN-R1 STREETER, F ATTORNEY A•\I) ouNSE.LLOR-AT-LIW, ICOWA NbA, PA T . I"TOWS ER, M. D., mot EvpAyttip pity:iv:lAN AND SURGEON Itokhl«ur•• and jn , l North f COT 111 iCh, on :1131h btxt•et, A z hot,. P.t. Jain.h;-tito. 1-4• • , A TTY 11 Y-A T -I. A W TO AND A, I! A. F: GOFF, A TT. N AW E=El 4z•nrc for the tale :I . llli plirell.T.e of all kinds of :s.•enriLte, and for making loans on Heal Estate. A.l I.:niu.•s, till. rue lee careful and prompt ritme 4. I:1791 WH. THOMPSON, ATTORNEY T •AT LAW,"WVALFS'ING. PA. Will attend lan tiro'. entru-ted le his care in s ltradfoyd, isalicau and W2,sdning Counties. •Odice with Esq. MEI ME= I= 1=I!= "S 111••• with (i. F. over & Teary Nlalo street.. T414,11 . 14:1, I * .l. 4. 1.", /I. L' N , I). I). S. • - L. : AND MECHANICAL DENTIST t..tlee99 State Street, second 11,,a of Dr. Prat Is 3pr 3 79, - I, I A .SBEEE ATTORSEVP , -AT-LAW, TI WA N DA, PA. ME=EI McPHERSON, ATTI,I::!.. EY-AT-LAW, .r ., l* A N DA, l'A. _ Atry Brad. Co W. MIX, A I TiMNEY•AT-LAW AND r. S. COMMISSIONER Tii'll.".ANDA, PA. Unice—No[lli Side Public idunare MEE A T T , vIZ.V E r- A T- IT TOWANDA, PESN'A OM ,e—South shit. Pepiar street, r,rposite ward Nov. 13. 1179. DAVIES CARNOCHAN, A TTO.I( &Y`-AT-i. AW, SoUTII SLVE OF WALD HOUSE Dee 2345. J,.ANDREW WILT, =l2elllM9 1:1...•k. Nialicst., °roc .1. I!. Rent's F: , a^ ' . May he consulted in German. (April 1.. '76..; AV J. YOUNG, A rt,o;r, EY -AT , T. AV: S DA, l'A. .1•••• r [l.lO Fir,t Nat'rknal NI On Sr_ np••a!t,. W M n XAV ELL, ATT•oItNEY-AT LAW MW A S DA, PA. I= A 1 , 01 12, I m 76 11)1i. S. M. WO.ODBURN, Physi elan and Slity.-nn. Inflre at re,ninnen, on • ..t Man!. Stay 1,1,.721j• r - TIT B. KELLY, DENTlST.—thlice y • 9ver M. E. Rosenfield's, T , ,wanda. Pa. 'l',•eth Inserted on liohl, Sliver, !tubber. and Al base. Teeth a ItTarted without 1). PAYNF„ M. 1).. • P V , II lAN AN I, SI ItCF,ON. rr.r4. oN't• r S; 01, I Iffic•S bourn I'7olll i 0 t.n Ir. A. N.. and rrnm T to 4 I'. N. Special A!lvntion given 1 , 11 , E V.RES and • Of 71l i. E rill , : EAR .1/1• NV. K 1 AN, I=l Mee day last Saturday ur e:u•h now h , over Turner & It ordon's Drug Store, Towanda, l'a. =I (1 S. RUSSELL'S GENERAL. INSURANCE AGENCY TowANDA, PA. It ay2F,7otf FIRST NATIONAL BANK, TOWANDA, PA PITA], PAID TN BURPI.I" FL.'N Ti:l.4 Hank oiTers unusual farllttles forthe trans action of a general banking business. N. N. IIf.TTS, Canhler Joti. POW ELL, President MRS. H. PEET, EACIIEIt nr PlAti'ff !irate, TEltltS.—.l.opertertn. • (Residence hlvd street, Ist ward.) J3n.. (SET YOUR Jon PRI.NTING at the RI:POUTER OFFICE', opposite the Hoose, T.,wends. Colortel work a specialty • COODRICH & HlTCHCOCK.Publishers. VOLUME XL. I' Jo._ H. DORMAUL 325 East Water. St., Elmira, N.Y. Ist Floor LIRA' HOODS • 24 Floor 11ILLI . NERY 3d Floor CARPETS 4th Floor. CLOAKS & SHAWLS Upper floors accessible by elevator. Sir A visit of Inspection Is respectfully solicited 1 - 1 1 DWARD WILLIAMS, Place of, business, a fesr doors north of £uat-o®ce Plumbing, Gas Fitting. Repotting Pumps of all kind,. and all kinds* Gearing promptly attended to. All wanting work In his line should give him a roll. I Doe. 4. 1579. " INSURANCE! Sep 25,19 EIRE, LIFE, AND ACCIDENT C 33213113113 None b4t. reliable companies repesente,d EIBIEMEO Towanda, soy. 13, 1879. HENRY MERCUR, JoII N F. SANDEIeSON A.NTIMACITE AND CORNER PARK AND RIVER STItEIiTS, TO.W.A4NDA ''Coat screened, and delivered to any partof the itoroli4ll. ALL UlthiratS MUST hE ACCONIPANIED DY 11i¢ CAbll. ii. MEM: tilt. Towanda, Dec. 1, 1679, THE OLD .MARBLE . YARD =MEI The 1111derStrned having purchased the :MAR BLE YA Ri) the late ti EoltGE McCA IRE, de siren to:inform the public that having employed existrlonced men. he lb prepared to do all kinds of uerk lit tire line of Enovll-75 NIONOIENT,S; Persons deeiring anything in the Marble line are Invited ,to rail and examine work, and save agents' commisidon. rnovl9-74 JAMES McCABE, Towanda, Fa., Nov. IS. I$ a, 241! MEAT MARKETii E. D. RUNDELL, would respect fully ar flounce that he le continuing the Market bustnesii at the old stand of Mullnek & Ruudell, übd will at all times keep a full supply of FRESH 13 E=! Constantly on hand. ennui rytlealers supplied a eit rates. [fel; 1 7A FRESH & SALT MEATS, Jan. 1,1875 Sir All delivered Free of Cbarge.. E. IL RUNIYELL Towanda. Pa. Nov.:7 1879. mEAT MA 1-K Er • ' I _ 1 I,,itated iii - .. • ! , . . ~. 11,E,111,I.E:11AN'S I:LOCK, 111:11/G E STREET FRESIMSZI FRESH AND SALT -MEATS, DRIEP REEF, FISH, POULTRY, GARDEN VEGETABLES AND BERRIES IN •3' All peels delivered free of charge Towanda. l'a., May 28. 1b79 NEW ARRANGEMENT The undersigned having purchased from Mr. McKean the CoAt. YARD AT THE FOOT OF ['IN F. STREET, NEAR THE 4 r:( /UHT II( 'USE. I livi'tet the patron:lge of . his old friends and fhe public generally. I shall lo.ep a full assortment PITTSTON, WILK ESISAIIRE AND LOYAL S )CK• COAL, AND SHALL SELL AT LOWEST PRICES FOR CASH NATHAN TIDD Towanda. rm.. A ng. 2.1. ISM 12y1 • SlOtertl. 1 - 4 1 4, AGLE HOTEL, • (SOUTH slnx PrBLIC FQVAIIE.) • This well-known hose has been thoroughly Ten novated and mpalred throughout, and the proprie tor Is now prepared to offer tlrst-class acromnioda nuns to the piddle, on the most reasonable terms. E. A. JENNINGS. Towanda. Pa.; May 2, 1578. T • • 8 / 25 . 00 0ENRY 11017 SE, I . z • 60,b00 • CORNER. MAIN A WASHINGTON STREETS Meals at 611 hours. Terms to suit the times. Large stable attached. Aril I. 1517.9 Towanda, .Inly a, '79-tf SEELEY'S OYSTER BAY AND EUROPEAN HOUSE.—A . few doors southol the Means House. Hoard by the day or week - on reasonable terms. 'Warm meals served at all hours Oysters at wholesale and retell. TABER HOUSE, CANTON, PENN'A.- Near the I 1 pot, Dee.lo.l•m JOHN N. W a, V3usiness garbs. PRACTICAL PLUMBER & GAS FITTER i C. S. RUSSELL, Agent, - • TOWANDA, PA POLICIES Issued ou the most reasonable terms Li7SsaB adjusted and paid here. IS) S 1 SULIAVAN ANTHRACITE oGi 0 A. STILL IN OPERATION HEAD STONES,. MANTLES and In the very hest 'manner and at lowest rates OYSTERS GARDEN VEGETABLES:, FRUITS, &c MYER & DEVOE K 6t.p on hand, THEIR SEASON, &c MYER ds DEVOE MIZEO COAL BUSINESS =! FIItST WARD, TOWANDA, PA Wl4l. FPCNRY, PIIOPRIZTOR All gone to the opera, Kitty, but me • _ We're alone to this ra m bling old house. Afraid ? Come sit on my knee And tell me your dreams of dog and mouse. Do you hear the wind? How it sobs and And the rain falls down on the mess-grown eaves. Let us turn off the gas, and sit on the rug; How the twilight brightens the long old room. With its sc a rlet fancies I Puss, are you snug? You know in one's youth ono should never know gloom ; That is what mamma told me today, When I sighed and forgot one should always be gay. Do you see any pictures In the fire, Kitty, my dear, with your solemn eyes— Pl(lares of river, and castle, and spire, (Jr only of milk, and ' a mouse's surprise ? 1 see, all, pussy I eyes of .brown, And a brow that is royal enough for a crows I see s smile that is sweet and rare, A hand that Is gentle, sod,strong and true; I see a summer-tide swift and fair, - • - With golden Sunshine and skits of blue. 0 what shall I - diiwith thefiehg, long years? Kitty, forgive me. You dotrt like Wars. The flr,light flickers on picture and wall. On bookcase, and bracket, and statue white— Pussy, have you forgotten a ball That happened a ycarago to-night? One little year—how the seasons bring Changes that only plight and sting ! "Sorrow Is sorrow to,the But despair to the young,' 0 pussy, I've read. Perhaps if these curls were gray, and not gold, I wouldn't wish to•ntght I were dead. Not twenty yet, and all love o'er, O pussy, pussy, forevermore! , , There ! There 1-my kitty , no more tears = Let's have a romp In the firelight's glow: Other heart:. hive beat through f the years When Lose and Faith were lying low: biaf hap In soothing Smothers pain We forget our own. Just hear the ruin.: But to-morrow, I doubt not, the-sun will shine, And the clouds be only adi eam of night. i Why should we cherish a woe divine? Let us hide it away from the sun and light. Forgetting one's self is hard, I tear, But well each try bravely, Kitty, my dear. Let us say "Good:bye " to the dreams of the past, And Kitty, my comfort, never you tell Of the chat that has made hours fly fast, One more run—tt there it the bell Eternal eecreey, pussy, wear ' I hear them laughing npon the stair A TALK ABOUT "MOTHS." Olivia put down " Motihs " on the table as she rose to greet her friends. `• Sorry to interrupt your reading," said Angeline: "What is the book you find so interesting ?" " Ouida's last novel, Moths.' " "Then you read Ouida with an accent •of mingled amazement anal disgust.- Angeline i 5 young and un compromising in the severity of her judgments. " Quids is worth reading in many respects," remarked Anna, a matron. SHELVES But says it is a bad book," rejoined Angeline, naming a well known litterateur. "1 will not take upon myself to Aitipute C—'s sentence," said Olivia, smilingly, who is a young widow. " Let me tell you something of the story. A pretty, frivolous English girl, the seventh daughter of r a poor peer; at seventeen, marries her cousin,. a young clergyman. In two years he dies, leaving her poor, with a girl baby. To her light nature , life with out amusement is martyrdom, duty a bore. She is very wearied with-her life in the quiet country parsonage, and leaving her baby in care of her mother-in-law, the old duchess, she goes to France, where in the gayeties of fashionable society she soon for gets-her weariness and sorrow, and in a year marries a rich man who is absorbed iii ' business and gives her plenty of liberty and' money. To have fine clothes, constant amusement and much admiration, is all she de sires. Meanwhile her child: is brought up by the stern old. (lochess in her English home on the' Northumbrian seashore, mid is imbued with ideas of duty, t obedience and sincerity, which the author term "old-fashioned." She roams at will along the breezy ithores and under the old forest treea; - It'er mental .training is as wholesome and invigorating, and she grows, up strong and healthy in 'body and mind Her mother, to vent her dislike of mother-in-law, quarrels about being deprived of her child. The duchess, losing patience, takes her at her word, and sends the gill to her mother at a watering place on the French coast. Here a goodly portion of Parisian society is amusing itself and into the glitter and gaiety, the fashion and frivolity, the girl, scarcely sixteen, . Times from the solitude of her En'- dish home, fresh and fair as the !Horning, pure as the deer, earnest, s t ihgle-hearted anti high-minded. Her, mother is the emptiest bubble in the whole'sea of froth around her. It hi the story of this girl, Vera, that is told—her unhappy marriage, by which she is made a sacrifice to her mother's duplicity and wickedness— her sufferings, her martyr-like en durance in loyalty to what she deems to be right and her duty. ` I have read several of Oujda's. novels, and I : do not remember that in any : of them th4re was'So pure and lave'y a character," said Anna. " She is most noble, and - Well em bodies the significance of her name, ' Vera, or Truth," said Olivia. " The desCription of her early morning walk along the shore and meeting with the great singer, Correze, is one of the 'most beautiful word pictures I have read in all modern fiction. Let me read you a portion." Olivia read, and Angeline listened with rapt intentness. . " Oujda is a consummate artist - ," exclaimed Anna, as she ceased read ing. Angeline's eves glistened; she said : '-' How beautiful that is! Why did C— say it is a bad book ?" _ Olivia hesitated. "There are had. characters in the book," she replied,‘, slowly. " - era's mother is a detest able creature; the Russian prince, Vera, marries in - , a mistaken convic tion of duty is horrible; the others, their friends, are about as bad. 'Oujda is scathing in her judgment of mod ern society, particularly of women, and pictures their foilies and vices with an unsparinghand." "The class she depicts make up but a small portion of so-called mod ern society,"' rejoined Arina; "at least in our own land, and it is to be , hoped in Europe. "One of the women in this book," Olivia resumed, "is a hut American, IN THE TWILIGHT -11t . nny Driscoll ••, TOWANDA, BRADFORD COUNTY, PA., !THURSDAY MORNING, MAY 27, 1880. girl, something like Daisy Miller," but much more vulgar and coarse. Her portraiture is unequalind faulty. A smart American who, when she had crossed the Atlantic, caught up the ways and words, and habits and graces of the great world, and adapt ed herself 'to the new sphere with versatile cleverness," would not be liable to lapse into forgetfulness and use such words as " Wal " and "disremember," when talking. with her high-born acquaintances: Ouida bar, however, the justice not to say she is representative; she writes: "In New York she and hers were deemed 'shoddy,'---the very shod diest of shoddy—and were coldly looked on and left uninvited." " Why depict such a class at all, if not representative ?" asked Angeline, whose ~thoughts dwelt on Anna's last remark. "Why should not Vera's companions be suited to her ? The story would then lose its repulsive ness and be far more edifying." "Anna has said that Ouida -is a true artist," replied Olivia. "There would be no contrast; in art, as in nature, when there is a great light there must be somewhat . deep shadow." "I agree with Angeline," remark ed Anna, "that the depiction of vice is repulsive, but without it would the power of the story in teaching its lesson be - as' great? • Would it be really,.in that sense as edifying ?" " You mean," said Olivia, musing ly,-" that the women of a class of modern socjety, Ouida writes of them, who urea dikgrace to their sex, who break almost every, com mandment except_ the modern one, 'Thou shalt not get found out,' are shown up so ruthlessly, (*en coarse ly, that we may, see vice - stripped of all glamour and shudder at its nude deformity." " Precisely," rejoined Anna, "I hold that fiction in which vice, if al luded .to at all, is smoothed over,Ur but partially revealed, like a poison ous asp lurking'ainid fruits and flow ers, has a more baleful influence than that in which it 'is unveiled, and-its hideous features closely shown." " But why know anything about it at all?" queried Angeline, "when there is so much that is wholly pure and good that we ought to know " " Knowledge is protection," re plied Anna. " She who walks warily, knowing that pitfalls may be along her path; is 'in less danger than she who walks unwittingly." "Ignorance is not necessary to in nocence but it is far pleasanter to combine the two," said Olivia, with a sigh. " Yes, indeed," assented Angeline. "1 for one, lin;fer to keep my ignor ance and take!. my. chances. • And I do not beliOve there is such wide spread corruption in society. There is and always will :be !wickedness in the world, but can also always find good if we look fo)i it." Her elders smiled. • Anna - asked : " What is the • meaning of the title ?" Olivia took up the book and read "It is a . vvoild of moths. Half the moths are consuming themselves in feverish frailty, the other halt are Corroding and consuming all that they touch."—lbnie Journal. Who Struck Billy Patterson Many persons have heard the ques tion, "Who struck Billy Patterson ?" without knowing the origin of it. I propose to enlighten their a little on the subject. William Patterson was a very wealthy tradesman or mer chant of Baltimore, in the State of Maryland. In the, early days of Franklin county he bought up a great many tracts of land in the county, and spent a good portion of his time in looking after his interests there. Ile was said to be as strong as a bear-and as bravo as a lion, but like all bra men he was a lover of peace, and -indeed, a good, pious man. NevertheleSs, his wrath could be ex cited to a fighting Fitch. On one oc casion he attended a- public gather ing in the lower part of Franklin county, at some district court ground. During the day two opposing bullies and their friends raised a row, and general figljt was the consequence. At the beginning of the -agray, and before the fighting began, Billy Pat terson ran into the crimil to persuade them not to fight, but to make peace and be friends. But his efforts for peace were unavailing, and while making theM some one of the crowd struck Billy Patterson a severe blow from behind. Billy at once became fighting mad, and cried out at the top of his voice, " who struck Billy Patterson ?" No one 'could or would tell Idm who was the guilty party . . He then proposed to give any man $lOO who would tell hiM "who struck Billy Patterson." From slou-he rose t o $1,0(00, but that would not induce -any man to tell him "who struck Billy Patterson." And years after ward, in his will, he related the above facts, and • bequeathed, $l,OOO to be paid by his executors to the man who would tell who struck Billy Patter son." His will is recorded in the Oidinary's office at Carnesville, Franklin county, Ga., and any one curious about- the matter can there find it and verify the preceding state- Thents.-Froni the Carta:rule ((:a.) Register. As eminent divine from Now England, travelling in Texas for his health, im paired by arduous clerical duties, - upon arriving at one of the towns went.in search of the barber's shop for repairs arid- improvements. On entering an es tablishment of this kind he observed a big double-barreled -gun leaning against the wall. Having a constitutional awe of fire-arins he hastily asked the ' barber if the gun was loaded. A half-shaved native,'who s occupied • the chair, turned around in hid` latter-beaten face and ex claimed : "'Stranger ! of you're, in au all-fired burry you'll find a six-shooter what is loaded in my coat-tail pocket !" A won Trix doctor of divinity approach. ed Paddy Ryan, and placing one hand on the athlete's shoulder, said : "My dear sir, anyone blessed with such a physique and such shapely proportions ought to be a good man." The clergyman was start led by Paddy's reply " A good man Well, you can bet your life I'm a better man than Dwyer." It is needles "to add' that the assertion was not contradicted. EVIL doers try to get others to do evil ; they do not like to be alone. . • t.\\ C:, 1 REGARDLESS OF DMittNOL&TION FROM ANY QUARTER. HON. GALUSHA A. GROW The name of GALL:MA A. Gnow is a dour and the laboring classes and adhered ihousehold word in Northern Permillt'a- to it steadfagtly to the end. ills uu- Inia, - but his reputation is not bounded by wavering dotiotion throughout his whole, any County or State. Ile has achieved Congressional career. to . the passage of already a National renown, and is known the Ilothestead Bill has endeared his throughout the country as the brave and name to the hearts of the people -every able champion of FrceSoil, the adVocate where.. " Laud for the landless" was of the Homestead bin and the defender not with him a political catchword with and exponent of sound political and 'balm. which to win votes. It was a deep. well cial doctrines.' Whealver ids name is settled conviction and he followed it with mentioned it isreeornized as that — of a an earnestuess worthy of both- of him and' public man against wine fair-reputation it, until he saw it adopted as one of the has never been breathed a suspicion of principles or a National Party ; and the want of consistencj and uprightness, :finally under the sanction of that party who has come out of :he fierce polßiCal • he saw this, his early conviction become a contests of the past with credit to' his fixed fact established by. law, and bearing ability and complimems to his integrity. ! his own signature as Speaker of the That the people where.he has lived since ' House of Representatives. childhood, who have had an opportunity I Besides his devotion to the interests of to know the simplicity of his life and the !'the industrial poor . he' hag ever been the enterprising and democratic character determibed atatunlinching friend of un his- employments, should feel a pride in S iversal freedom. Ws pposition to human the young man Who by the force of his bondage was a natural sequence to his native talents and, hi straightforwaidness 'devotion to free hotnesteads. I le has al achieved such high 4position, is both nat- I rays remembered the people—the great ural and laudable , and they look with I masses who are Most deeply,inteeested in great interest to the future ads ancemem wise legislation and in sound, 'wholesome of the man who tiniteS in an eminent de- government. In the entire record -of his gree the qualities and requirements which I public career there cannot be found a entitle him to public rispect and elevation. blot or stain. In all his public and Ofli- Familiar as is then:nue and person of Mr. Guow toour pep*, a short biograph ical sketch may not le.unintercst Mg. Ile wa.s born in Ashfu-d (now Eastford), Windham county, Ccnuecticut, in 1S 4, and came to Susquthanua county ten years later with his widowed mother, who brought two of her ayes and a daughter to Lenox township, where she bought a small farm, which IT a time was Oniti vated mainly by the tvo boys—GmtsuA being the,youn,,est. Hisearly eduCation was much the same its that of many of the self-made men of the country. Toil duringt the :Milliner months, mith such knowledge as cothl ie acquired dining leisure hours, and at winter the slender advantages of the district school: As the circumstances-of tie family improsed un der the industry of the b4s, (lAm - stie,, who had shown the possess on of ability, was placed at Franklin Academy, at Ilar ford, Susquehanna county, and in 15.4.0 entered Amherst Gillege. l'is indomita ble energy and sttdiou.4 habits were ap parent in the fact fiat he graduated with high honors , in his dass, and with the rep utation of being a ready debater and a fine extemporanems speaker. Ile com menced studying aw with Hon. F. 11. STREETER, of Mon rose, in the winter of 1845, and was admtted to the bar of Sus quelinnua county Apiil 19, 1547. came t 4 Towanda i.lls-es as the law part ner of iron, J . ).kvio Wit. so rr, but in 1519, his health failing, he recegnized the ne cessity for a return to out-door-pursuits, and returned to lusquebanna comity, VI here he spent soup time in surreyiu l 4, land, peelings hemlock bark for the tan ners, and working .n Ow farm. 'While thus employed he .ecjived, ui ISO, the unanimous nomination fur the State Leg islature by the Denocraticl'onvent ion of , Susquehanna couut7, which he declined. The irrepressible auti-Aavery conflict had in 183 n engagei the. attention of The country,. disintegrating parties . and cieat big divisions, particula6 in the Demo-, cratic ranks. Dxviti %%11'.stirr had offcred his famous proviso, in 3 had fought a val iant tight against the extension of slavery. A few pro-slavery looker Democrats in his district, at the bidding of the stare oligarchy, were esdeavoring to bring about his defeat, aid had • placed in the field as the candidne of the hunkers, JAMES IJOWILETi of Tiogis county. Mr. WILMOT was assailed with great bitter ness, and his enemies asserted that ho was governed in his actions by i selfish motives, and not by a regard for the gistil of the Democratic party and the country. To meet this allegation, Mr. WiLmor declared thatif the Democratic party of ' the District would agree upon a candi date for Congress who was identified with the Free Sod movement, and thor oughly represented the sentiment of up position to the extension of slavery, he would cheerfOly give way. At the same time, he named Mr. Gnow as a man who fully came up to his requirements: The Congressional' Conference was re-con vened. - Mr. Onow was placed in nomina tion, just ono week before election, by both branches of the patty, and though there was a uecp sested feeling of-disap pointment and dissatisfaction at the with , drawal of Mr. WILMOT, yet such was the confidence in Mr. Onow, as endorsed by Mr. WILMOT, that he was elected by a majority of 1200 °Ter Joux C. ADAMS, Esq., the Whig candidate. lie took his seat in Congress, December, 1851, at that time but 27 years of age—the youngest member of that body. The•entry of Mr. ( - Now into political life'was an eventful period in the history of the country. Grave questions of half. a ceut.try's agitation had quhninated and demanded conclusive settlement ; new in dustrial . questions had assumed, promi nonce, all of which finally disrupted the old political parties.. Mr. (Now took his stand from the tiret ou the eide,of free t~ 12=1E1 vial sorts he, manifested and; lived uP.to the same rule of . purity, honor, and hon esty that characterized his private life. name will be recorded in history among those who have .zealously struggled to benefit and improVe the condition of all races of men. " In ISs2•liis majority was 5777 ; at the next election his vote in the district was unanimous, opting to his opposition to the Kansas-Nclnaskabill. "From the date of the repeal of. the Missouri Compromise, Mr. 6now severed his onnection with the Democratic party; still he continued to reprisent the Wilmot District until the 4th of March, His defeat at the election the -previous fall was owing •to the Congressional appor tionment which united Sin:quell:ulna county with Luzerne. , Mr. (lnow's ' maiden speech ' in ( . 011,4-ass was 'mole on. the Homestead bill, and was reported as among the best speecheS in its behalf—a measure he per sistently brought forward every CongresS for ten years, when he had at last the sat isfaction of signing the bill as Speaker of the House ..f Representatives. " Ills passage at arms with Keitt, of South Carolina (a timely and appropriate answer to former Southern insolence), during the attempt in. Congress to adMit Kansas as a slave State, is yet fresh in the ndralti of manv.'" Ile exhibited equal if nut greater cour age in l its letter of reply to a challenge Of L. lluAtsen, member of Congress from North Carolina, for words spoken in debate in the House.: "Regarding; diegling as at variance with the precepts of the Christian religion and the seuti ments „f :r Christian people ; and it being ohibited and declared a crime by the laws enacted by the body of which we are members, I cannot recognize it—even in cases of 'unwarranted provocation—as a Mstitiable mode of Settling among men. my personal rights and the freedom!Of debate' guaranteed by the constitution, I shall defend whenever and wherever they are assailed." In April, IStil, he was in Waspingtott when the Baltimore mob broke, otr com munication with the North. Ile joined CLAY'S brigade (as it was called), a vol untary military association armed by the government, in which he served till it was disbanded, on the arrival of the Massa chusetts' and • Now York soldiers from Annapolis. July 4th, I-e was elected Speaker of the House of Repiesentatives, and at the Buse of his term received a undi,i rnnrre r , ,le of thanks, which was the first unanimous cute given to . a4 Speaker in many yehrs. In 1659,, lie was mainly Instrumental iii . defeating the attempt of the Senate to in crease the rate's of postage from three to live and ten cents and double old rates on printed matter. Mr. GREELEY, in an article at the clos of that Congress, said : "And ju closing, let us pay a tribute of gratitude ti.) 'two members of Congress, fur their active'ser vices at the late session—Wheteas so many did well, it may seem invidious to specify ; but we feel that no true Itepub- - lican will dispute the justice of our award 'to Senator Want , : of Ohio, and Mr. (now of Pennsylvania, of -the highe4 honors.. Gnow this session has evincear4 fer tility ,of rcsom - ce, a command of . parlia nientary. tactics, a prOniptitude in seizing an opportunity, a wisdom in acti .and it brevity - iof speech, such as havetnirely been exhibited on that flour. The Paits:kge of the Homestead hill under his !,eider ship would of itself have Sufficed toonfer honorable distinction. So the Siitate's attempt to force the House•to raise the rates of postage was met by Mr.,thtow in a manner and - spirit that at once de cided the contest." 111 1855 be spent six et4Mths in Europe, and. most of the summer of 1857 in the jr , Western Territories. He was one of the victims of the National Hotel poisoning in 1857, from which he did not recover fora long time, but is now in better . 1 health than for matey years. ) Mr. (knew left Congress March 4, 1863, ifeeble health, - with a , nervous systeity , a most prostrated fro the severe labor . d long strain of hia,twelve years' ser vice in Congress dnring the most exciting li t and eventful period- in the history of the' country. In ordei to regain health,• and if possible eure.a disease of the throat, contracted in too much out-door speaking at political meetingS, he spent the sum- . mer of 1871 on the Pacific coast in Cali- . fornia, Oregon, and Washington Territo ry, going as far North as Victoria, in British Columbia. In the fall of that year he went to Texas, where he remain ed as President of the Houston and G reat Northern Railroad Company until the spring of 18754 During the Onir years be was in - Texas he neither voted nor took any part in politica, his time. being wholly occupi-, ed with railro,d construction and: man agement. lint on his return to his old home in - Pennsylvania, he entered active ly into the canvass for .t he' election of HauTztalsFT in the fall of 1875, and -for HavEs in the Presidential election -of 1876, not only in Pennsylvania, but in In diana, Ohio, and New York. • . In 1878 he was urged for the nomind tion.of governor by a large and iutluen- . tial portion of the Republican newspaper press of the State, and was the choice of the deleg ttes from a majority of tho Re publican Counties of the State. After ,the nomination .• of Governor Horr, the convention was very decided in their wish to nominate Mr. Guow for Lieutenant Govertior,lnt he persistently 'lefused to accept it if tendered. In the campaign that followed for the election of Governor no one took a in ,ro active part in securing the election of Governor HOYT. The perch at Oil City, with which he opened the campaign, was ad mitted by every one to be a most master. ty.discussiun of the 'financial question ; and was the key -note of victory for the Republican party of Pennsylvania. . Into the political canvass of 1879 he en tered with all his accustomed zeal and power, beginning in Maine, in August, and continuing almost without interrup tion, speaking in Ohio, Pennsylvania, and-New York, fill the I l.lectioni in No vember. Early in the fall lie declined the mission to Russia, tende)r d by 'preSi dent HATER. I . The language of the Ne w York Trib; ens ill 1S7:1, commenting on the represen tative men of the country, is a fitting chAse for this short and cursory biogral ll graphical sketch : " Mr.l; now represents a class of public men that has almost be come extinct—men of strong moral sense and 'convictions, unselfish purposes, and a patriotism which - overrules all consider ations of personal interest or partisan ex pediency. The long struggle between , freedom and slavery , naturally carried , him to the frlont in. the Republican p rey. , Anti when th e War • brought the e ntro versy to a close he withdrew fro i - the i al arena of active politics [with greatly it.im paired heal:lib:and has ever since de ot ed himself to the care of his private , isf- nes , .." it is in obedience to the unmistakable demand from the masses of patriotic, men who constitute the Republican party, that the Independent Republi,',dn, 01 '4l,ontrose; has joined with scores of other prominent Republican journals of Pennsylvania in presentihg lion. GaLusitAA. CROW for. the seat ln the United States Senile, which will become vacant on the 4th of March, 1881.. Ithere is no truer man, nd purer patriot, no more consistent states matt liVing within the bounds of 'the Re public. I Clean handed and clean headed ; ' with. a record resplendent with great . works, and replete with the proofs of en lightened statesmanship, he is the man of all men to honor the great State of Penn sylvania,as one of her two representatives in the highest legisl stir() body of the nation. lle will bring to the position ex-: Lenience, intellectual power, and exten sive and - intnntte knowledge of all great public qa, , sti et; and measures, and a re cord for ability and, purity not excelled bY'any matt who has been in public life. during this generation. The Republican party has reached a- crisis in its career :When a return of its tried and true men to the councils of the nation' is impera tively demanded. That demand has-been lapidly growing during the east-, few yetirs, and cannot now be disregarded ot ignored. GALCSRA A. (=now is a man ,of more than State reputation. Throughout the length and breadth of the land his name and fame -are fainiliitr. Ile is. honored everywhere as one of the purest and ab lestof American statesmen - ; a man whom the people of any State would feel honor ed to have as--a representative ; a man who entering the Chited States Senate would at onceake rank with the fore most men in tihat ,body. Shall Pennsyl, vaniaßepublieans honor themselves and their State and earn the applause of the people everywhere by placing Hon, ht:sux A. Gnow in the position be is so well qualified to tin. We cannot and do not believe that the Legislature to be chosen next Nbvember will ignore the voice of the Republican masses of our Commonwealth.. That voice will be heard from this time forward with ever increasing volume and unanimity. ft is - the voice of State pride, of pa - tiotism, of true Republicanism, of love and rever ence for true statesmanship, and we have the faith to believe that that voice - Will be respected, and in January, ISSI, GA, i.vsnA A. GROW will be elected by -the Legislature of . Pennsylvania to the Unit !ed States Senate. I= The vesper 1411 s wore ringing To the wort./ their solemn tones, As 3 111311 1;1 a Skle-barbuggy Cried '• r. ' •" to a pair of roans. It was the dauntless diy goods clerk, Who.dlsposed or Mite by the yard. lie was g.,lng to Sl'le ills ho Jived Olt the botilevard. Sped away dr cedar pavement Fr. to the Stens'of tlw roans on true And t h e ToM , rache, of the driver Waved slid o'er hit necktie blue. . • Alt ! sa! 1 , 4 lite In a city. . A rontanee In errry-hlock. For to take that girl out a.rldlng An oTtrveal - went In the hock. —CPltca;o Ti tst, no . . . 151.00'aer Annum In Advance. NUMBER 62 II FROM COLORADO. 'eda correspondenee of the Raroitrm. • DENVER, CoL, May 12. DEAR REPoarzu —We reached Denver in font days and four nights from PhiladeiPhia, and within that time stopping over one night in Omaha. From Cheyenne; we came via: of the Denver . Pacific Railroad, and through thetemperate. city of Gree ley, Colorado... The country - along the-road South of Cheyenne ia the same rollinu, batren, dried np pas ture land, which We had seen farther Easynowater„ no springs, no trees', no; grass, biit if 'anything more bar ren and sandy than . any section. we have ever seen.' Yet the country is all taken up with ranches and fre qu'ent herds of cattle are seen. :jilt mountains covereit•witLi pnovr, re ever in sight. Long's Peak rises _ . . before us a monument of greatness, its summit touchil"y* the very elmids, a • cool, • delightful, -health-giVing breeze blows from off these' snow capped peaks, which irr conjunction with this eleVated atmoSphere,'is ex !aerating in the extreme yet; with so much snow in . .sight, the weather this day was very mania; and we al most felt the need of summer cloth - • ing. • As Re approached Greeley hi the South Platte Valley the . country grew better, and we began to see ev. idences of-eiVilization ; an ;occasional farm-house. :dotted 'the plain, and vast areas of plowed fields meet our 'view; we now frequently crossed great irrigating canals many miles in length, which bring down from thp 'snowy range the -Very essence of life and Vigor to tlie - growing crops. Indeed, without irOgati9n,- t the farm ers of Greeley , would be" unable Co raise even a seanty'' , subsistence,' ex cept iii the way of cattle, which here as-elsewhere in Colorado is' a leading industry. ";greeley claims 3,500 pop ulation; its elevation is 4,400 feet. t has rifit , :t single saloon or bar in the . whole city, it is in fact a • cold water •Aown... The fOunders of the city, prohibited - the sille of liquors ,ion these lands by inserting con tracts to this effect in the deeds.giv en for lets'. and parties violating this rule forfeit their-titles. - It.is rer' , y -dry in this section, (not on account of above facts), very, lit tle rain: ever failing , . A gentleman told us that it had been about eight months since rain had fallen, though snOw had fallen within the time. We arrived in Denver tietween sev en and eight o'clock iii the evenin , 4, in time to:get a. glimp..e of the eitV by daylight: To .all appearances Denver bust- city: At the ost office we.found a crowd in line -waiting for their turn to get mall. At the banks one has to wait' in a similar manner, and the stores,i, shops., and other places present the same crowded- appearance; iind the hotels are liloo than full', ',and 'for sleeping arrangements mostiof them have 'what they term a " corralt" i. e. a large room - .or.hall with many rows of bunks - close together, with a. capa cjiy tO . accommodate a " herd'' of people.. when the rooms are alllfilled. Even the barber shops were rsb. full as to cause us considerable (14ntion in ' f.T. etting, our shave. 1. Motels and' boarding housqs are thriving. and the prosperity setins to extend-to merchants-and• tradesmen of all classe.. • , AV - Ishii - I.g to hire a room . .we enquir ed prices where wO saw i shingle out Roums to .Let," and were told that the rooms ,had just been taken at per'. month—a. Small room with one bed—and the landlady said she ,had received forty. applications fur it, up to three o'clock lust outside of the city licople are liVing in tents and shanties of all de scriptions. •A little calculation gives us some idea of-the amount of money I, coming here froth abroad, and being spent monthly, Which helps. to keep up the present "prosperity. here are 5-,'!) arrivals daily they spend for board from $1.50 tii $ t.Olll per day, besides this "many are spending mo 'ney freely fOr drink and cigars; and at the theatre, and, some are - buying blankets and supplies. It is proba ble that five dollars per day is less than the average expense of each ar rival. But soay :15u arrivalS at, $4 per day, equ'als . s2,...2i`O per day, equals $1;6,000 per month, left here by stran rs ;alone.: The •` alr'Ond-eyeti " race are well represented in this' qty, one sees them every Where - Near - our hotel, from probably the poorest and old est shanty. in the city, hairs a. sign, " Sinfr - Lee, Laundry." Wishing to view the premises, and . havin7 some collars to wash - , we rapped at the. door of Sing Lee. and were greeted -by " Come in," spoken in good Eng lish, we opened tlni door, and to our surprise, ,in a little room twelve feet square, saw five Chinamen btisy as bees, washing, ironing, and 'folding clothes; . one was, upon his knees. bending over a !ow -box i on `which was spread a shirt which he was rub bing hard-with some sort - of a brush, dipping, it occasionally , into Water.' All about the room iu c;yery conceiv able:shape, and °Outlying nearly ev ery foot of space, except that oven= pied. byethe stove, were hollering (lr lying in,, piles clothes of everyde seription. Everything in their line of ;bed. ding orimiture, was of the !most squalid and dirty,. sort. 'We enciair ed prices of washing, and found them to be fifteen, cents -for 'shirts - live cents for collars and handkelidets, and five cents for stockings. Aceord ingly we took Sing to our room to set our bundle,.wifen• it s oeeurr,ed to us to otter • him a bargain.- Wil; had with us a couple of boxes of IJ i rovis:. ions, containing cake, cookies, bis cuit, bread, and in fact the best of everything needed'for white men to eat ; this we showed Sing Lee, and Offered it to hini for, washing two cel lars._ Jut fal, no! Sing had rather eat boiled- rice, stewed and :Chinese supplies- than such tr6h, and he-Shook..his-head and an swered, "No!. nor' , . However,. we mtr,St 'say' that -Sing Lee did m i s good job-in washing, and shirt* ;Ind collars wore the finest possible gloss and -finish. The streets of Denver are very dusty and dirty, notwithstanding they sprinkle constantly. It being : very dry and sandy, the-wind brings in a regular shower ofshust and sand which is so full of alkalies that it: parches the lips and causes the eyes to smart, and is far from ,agreeable„ yet the clear sky and dry pleasant weather is delightful, : and one soon gets accustomed to the sand storms and will icidgris cloud upon its ap. proach by stepping inside a Shop or behind a corner 4 Many eastern peo ple•soon get sick of the country and return—nine families started East from here ,one day:this Week; and hundreds of young men who' have come here to seek their fortunes are starting back, if they have money to take them. Many poor fellows get " - dead broke," some get 'sick, and their conditions are pitiful. We met some acquaintances from Bradford County, who told us of a. companion of their*? strong is:bust fellow, who .came with them only three weeki ago in good health, and went on up to Leadville. He came back to them , in this city .very sick: and helpless :with rheumatism, without money or friends—save them, mere acquaint. antes—and they were caring for him in .their room, but feared .he might die. The -sick man is from- lowa. All agree that Meadville is a terribly sickly anti unhealthy place, and we. would .warn-young men not aceliruat ed to.this country to stay away from there. Hundreds are returning ex ery week. • There is a great excitement about, the Gunnison country, and even the old grey-headed miners of twenty rears ago, who have resided here so ., long, arc all more 'or less affected by it ; many of them are going. Howe ver we have . no very great faith in the country, thbugh the re - havelieen rich discoveries made. ' The hardships and trials that men will endure for the sake of -prospect ing fora old, is wonderful. Hundreds of people (lave already gone to - the Gunnison; and are camping. out in tents on snow which is in places two feet deep. An old prospector. -told one, of our party.that .at one time in. his experience., he I liVed . in the San Juan country fro) 'months on ‘ruts baga. turnips." He retlarked that it "didn't make him verAd—n fat, but "it was better than - nothing:" • . There has been a skirmish between miners.and Indians on the Trte AO ervAti-on in Gunnison county, and the report that the whites were.kill cd is believed in this 'city. More anon. X. Uncle Remtis' Folk-Lore Beer Rabbit Meetn Blis msth Again H" Dere - a-nz nudder man dat sorter lily it sharp on Brer Rabbit," - said 1_:.r.,71c Rem us as : • 1.) . y spine tifysteriobs process, he twisted a, hog's bristle In to the end of a pieCe'of thread-Lan . operation. which thd . little boys: watchtd , with ..great interest. ." In " item days, - " continued the old man, " de•beaS's kyar 4 d on marters same_ ,ez , fokes. Dcy went inter • fahmin' and I sheets et de t.roof wn ter come' out dcy kep' ,st,o' en had der camp ineetin'. times en-der bobbycties w'en • ile welder waz 4, reeble.' s - Uncle Remus eyidently thought that the i little boy wouldn't like td hear of any further discomfiture. of Bre'r Rabbit, Wilt) had' come to be a sort of hero, and he was not mista ken. ."I - thtught the Terrapin was the only on that fooled the 'Rabbit,"' said the l little boy dismally. Hits des like hell you, honey. bey air it no smart -man,. 'cep' wat HI ley's a. smarter. El ofe Brer Rab bit hand't ter got.: kotch- up wid de nabors er. tuck 'im for a h'ant, en deny times dey bu'xit witches 'fo' you could squinch yo'. Steballs. Rey did dat." Who fooled the, Rabbit this time?" the little boy asked.. By this time Uncle Remus had the bristle. sot " in the thread;-and, he ri+o ceeded with the' story.: • - One time Brer-Jtabbit en old , firer Buzzud 'eluded dey'd sorter gO snacks en crap togedder. -Hit wuz -ii,' a ini, , dtty good year, en de trutk tu'it Out Inonst'us well, but bimeby, we'eu de time come for dividj n, hit come ter _light. dat ole Brer B zit& ain't got nuthln'. De crap ww. 111 gone, en dey Want nuthin' der fetter show for it. Brer Rabbit, he make like lie, in a.wus-4 tix'n Rrcr Buzzud, en _he 'mope *ronii," he did, like he fear'd cl . ey ;winter s sell 'im out. , : - Brer Buzzud, he aint .sayin' nuth in', but he keep up a Itnons'us think- . in'. en one dap he conic 'long en 1101 , ler en tell • Firer Rabbit eat he done 1 tine rich gold wine :dp e r 'cross t et river. _ , You come, - en go longer .14!A Biter Rabbit,' sez Brer Tukky Buz.: sezee. 11l scratch en you.kin grkbble, ; en 'tween ale two,un us we'll make short wuk -er dat gole mine,?- - Sezee. " Brer Rabbit,-he wuz high up fur de job, .but , he 'study en study, he . did, how he gwineter git 'cross de water, haze ev'y time he git his foot wet all de fambly kotch . co'e Den_ he up'n' ax Brer Buzzud 'hoW he e i n Brer, Buzzud he 1101 say dat he'd kyar "Brer Rabbit 'cross, - en .wid dat qle Brer Buzzud, be Nl* aown,he did, en spread his wings Rrer Rabbit, he ;mounted, en up de riz:" There was a pause. -44- Whatdid the buzzard do then ?" asked theilittl boy. 1- - Doy . nz," . continued Uncle -Re mus, " en - w'en day lit,, cley lit in de top of de highiSt l sorter pine, - en de pine w'trdey, lit. in "wui growin' Op er ilu" de in de T"'' ilun wnz• . in de niiddVe er de river, Wid de deep water runnin' all 'roun.. Dey hadn't mo'n' lit 'fo Brer Babbit t , he know wle.h. way de blowin', en by de time old Brer Buziud got ballunenon a lim', Bret Brbbit,- he Up'n say,. sezee : ." W'ilst we . a reS'n - here, liter Buzzoii, en bein's•you bin so good, I got sump's fer ter tell you," sezee. • I got-a gole mine er my own, -one Wa'til make myself', en Ispeci we better go backter '-fo• we bod der 'longer yone,' sezee.. "Den ole.Bree_Buzzud, he lafT, he twell ee shake, .en i Brer Rabbit, he sing.out: " • Hole on,l Brer. zzud. Don't flop yo' wings we'll you latt, caze den of 'you duz, slmp'n 'II (trap fum up yer, en my g i le - mine .wO : n't do you no good, en n• , eder will yone do me no rood.' • - "But.'f(i' thy got clown. fum dar, Brer Rabbit One tole all 'bout de crap,- en lie batter promus fer to 'vide fa'r en squar. Bret Buzzud, he dyar 'em back, en Brer Rabbit he walked weak in de knees ix : Mont' atterwuds." AT a trial of a criminal case - the prison er entered a plea of 'toot - guilty," whei► one of the :jurymen Put 'on his hat Mul started for' the door. ' The judge called him back and informed- him that he could not leave .until .t.he' 'case wait tried; "Tried ?" queried the juror ; t 4 why ho &cheep:led - pa that be is not guilty. •