Tkrildfotdigepottet o. t " GOODRICH, lI,DITOB. Towanda, Pa., Sept. z 6, zBSo. Republican NatiOnal.Ticket. pp": PRESIDENT, atlttrai JAMES A. GLBSEMD, Or ORIO. FOR VICE-PII,IBTDEMT, General CHESTER A. .9P NEW-YORK• Republican State Ticket. 4 . I7DGE 07 IMPREME COVET, Nom BMW GREEN, Northampton. AUDITOR GESBRAL. Hon. 301111 A. LEMON, Moir County. I: :clip Of- 4..111141/44(ii:4441 f PRESIDENT .IIJDOE, BON. PAUL D. MORROW.e • CONORFJ4, 4 % CoL. EDWARD OVERTOP, (Subject to decision of Conference;) SENATOR, RirLfWiLLIAM T. D ? AVIES, (Subject to decision of Conference.) REPRESENTATIVES, , JOSEPH R. MARS?, PIKE, ELISHA L. HILLIS., TOWANDA, L. D. TATLOR, Ga i tEvILLE. DISTRICT A.TTORNEY, A. Y. FANNING}, TROY. COUNTY SURVEYOR,' T. A.- SEWARD, SMITHFIELD. - WE SHOULD NEVER BE BEATEN UNTIL . 4ERT•MAN WHO cpmyrs OR REPRESENTS THOSE WHO COUNT, IN THE ENUMERATION TO'OIVE REPRESENTATION IN TILE ELEC tank', COLLEGE, CAN CAST nis VOTE JUST AS HE PLEASES, AND CAN HAVE IT COUNT ED JUST - AS‘HE . CASTS IT.—Cieneral U. S. Ora/ Tres " ll'AticocK boona " evidently had not reached Vermont. ft ' • Dt.TRING die rebellion the ' Democratic — papers were busy belittlidg Union victo ries. Now tbey . are engaged in belittling Republican victories at the polls. Tas POOr Directors of the State bane been holding eVonvention at Harrisburg, and considering the grave questions as to how the paupers should be treated. Ei:Pgilmaster General KEY may 'ba•6 been thorougbli reconstructed, bUt it is now evident that 'he made the Depart ; went a refuge and abyluin for uprepent ant rebels. Tivssan is now turning his forty (lays of ?asting to some practical account. lie lectured at Boom's theatre, New York, on Thursday night to a large audi ence. lie says his aim is to convince the public that they sould rely upon the re cuperative power of self and nature not upon burnt toads, mercury and arsenic. IN refutation of the Democratic allega tion that Pennsylvania is invariably car ried by the Republicans by majorities manufactured in• Philadelphia, the Har risburg Telegraph gives the figutes for State and city since 1800, showing that in twenty years the Republicans have car ried the State with the help of 'Philadel phia four times, without the help of Phil adelphia ten tines. A Fria. vote, a free ballot and fair count General Ihuccocs - says ho wants, in his letter of acceptance. In 1868 TWEED and TILDEN .had that in New York, when they, gave SEYMOtTR the State 10 counting the ballots not cast, and Al. derman liicllinaang stuffed andcounted, and save SEYMOUR in the' Fourth Ward, Philadelphia, a majority of 3,364, more of a majority by 1,200. than the honeit Democratic vote of the Ward. It is only by that kind of a "free ballot" and count in the North, that General Basco m Can —carry a':single State. Tea Republican Convention of Chester County-was held on the Ist instant. Hon. 'WARD, the present member of Congress, carried the county almost unanimously, and for State Senator Hon. JamEs B. Ev- URITATIT, was notiduated by acclamation. A strong legislative ticket was placed in the field, and the instructions for Hon. G. Gnow for United States Senatorwere unanimously pas.ed. The. Convention vas remarkably harmonious throughout. Chester county will give an unusually large majdlity in November. "iota expressed determination to see that General GARFIELD shall be defendad against all unjust'' , aspersions upon his personal character, is equally pleasant reading to tile; I hvere been airs devoted friend for many oats, and I am resolved that I will never beliere that he does not deserve - the affection I hare bestowed Upon him. If he will carry the principles which regulate his private life into his ton tine he would make THE BEST ' 3LIGISTRATE ` WE HAVE EVER JEREMIATI S. I BLACR's LET` TO COLONEL MCCLURE, "400 28, • f THE tate Central Committee has made a careful examination of the Republican electoral ticket for the purpose of ascer taining if any of the persons named were, disqualified from serving; The mishit hai been several changes, mid the substitu tion of other namesi'and the ticket is now comp4sed of persoits who are, willing to i aerve.'and qualified in every particular, as folloys : ,7 •/: - .• 0 - rukcTons. - E t twin le„ -Benson. ;Charles B. 'Pommy, Hi net W, 01!Ter, Jr., jNathan C. Elshret, Johu - L.! Lawson, 'Andrew Stout, Ed.ln . Fttter, ,George M. Meade, R. Hall Stanton. !George-W. Wiestling, it,' James ilea on. . 'Michael &hall. George! de B. o• lieliot • 'Walter W. Ames, in.rld F. ilounteu,!' •Jubn P.Teagarden, m.,rran R. %IRS,'• !Nelson P. Reed, henry S. Eckert, !Augustus E. W. Painter . 3 041 M. St••hman, 'Tlitttum IlicEennan, ilaut S. Moyer, . jJamea,T. Maffett, Edgar Penehot, ,George W. Delsmater, John Mitchell, ;Calvin W. Gilfillan, !Conrad F. Shlndel, ,' Tttg Tribune prints a fac-simile of the I noted Bmtzebovzi letter, and ids au thenticity is undeniable. The ap welfs to have bad a very bad Memory. The incident illustrates bow ,couipletely the Democracy are under the control of the rebel - brigadiers. A Democratic inern bcr may write to a constituent what ,he really thinks of the situation, but he dare not go back to Washington and face the Confederites with his . written opinion, so he weakly and cowardly denies that lie -"ever said it." The contempt of every right-minded map Will be 'Visitedi: upon _ B„ and their rye cast evdnet the • party which place" Rebel Generale a the head of rension Cpmtnittees to pees ur i m the el4iole of treiGna tioldiool htife 'Ott thOrPmtko themn. Al the r)r. , vOlon of. Of!: Voloni GSSERAZ Awn= mild ; to a reporter of the Tratinsp,turday evening : "Sen. ator ConstuniV will proceed from here West Ward, where - he will. be engaged dur ing The rest of ate campaign making ad dresses. It wa dositted to have General OnAsyr preside at the ; Meeting, but the General cannot reach ,York before the end of the month: He , will, however, 'Meet Mr. Costxu;a: at some point in'the West, probably,* Ohio, and begin his campaign work presiding at a meeting where the SenatO is to speak. I !hive received a letter from General GRANT as suring me that beiwill be East at the end of the Month and will place himself at the command of our State Gommittee. Ito will first preside at a grand mass meeting in this city, and will enterppon an native and arduous line•of duty for the rest .of the campaign.; He will certainly , preside at very tnany e meetings in the East, and. will be found in the front rank of the l most active during the ba'ance iof the Campaign." ntarFEte years ago to-day eleven States of this Union were waging a tenible war to destroy this nation, and erect an em pire based upon slavery. To-14y" those aameg Statei are,. i by the most inhuthan atrocities upon defenseless voters) and by frauds . whih area disgrace to the nation, counted i as solid for the Democratic party f and its tandidatei3, To put (loan their wicked rebellion against the best govern ment the worldfever saw, c),st, live thous and million of 4,llatrs.. Isit safe to trust these same men with the, till control of the government th 4 so recently tried to destroy ? Esi)ecially, ia„4! safe when the man who at Cincinnati prbmised -the 138 votes of the latejlebel - Stites a• - •11,-unit for their candidate, iiiit,t,s in a public speecti that the principles 'they are contending for now are the same they -fought for, and the North foaght'against? • THE foolish notion that the Nokhern wing of the Detnocratie party will o,i , 01 Cie HANCOCK administration and.luild in cheelc,the eager and ambitionS,rtlies of late Confederacy will be brushed : out Of the way like a cobweb by the Ilrifia-- diers, who know their power and will-use it fearlessly. They may ,not -see tit to improve the old flag into the emblem of the lost cause, but if tliey decided, to do it their admiring follOring of the North would fall down an say: amen. The old flag and an appropriation, Will probably content them for a few years. THE full returns from Vermont are more than satisfactry. There is a Re publican gain of 3000 • over the vote of 1876, being proportionally larger than the Demberatie gain. The _people of that State are true to their principles and firm in their determination 'Unit' the rtfbel brigadiers shall not control the govein : molt. :;Tate. Wayne Cotttity Republicans 'Lave • ‘: . , nofmnatto „„ , for Congress, ISI:LSON, F. CNI)E.RWOOI) and JAMES ft.r Reprtsentative:l, aiitti J. MARTIN BAUMANN ' for Treasurer. Resolutions in structing for Gttow for :Senator were adoptt d. TII4:IWENEET IN MAINE At the election inOlaine Monday the people voted for a Gcrvernor, for five members of Congress-and for a Legislature which will elect: a sue- . cessor to the present United States Senator, Hon. HANNIBAL I.lAmils. A Constitutional amendment was also voted fox' making a plurality of the votes cast for Governor sulficient•tio elect. Th: nominees for Governor were DANIEL F. DAVIS ( Istepublican), Mums NV PLAISTr.D, .( Fusion), sup ported by the Deinoerats and Green backeis. The 'Prohibitionists also had. a candidate .for Governor, Josit-' tie .*E, who . likas really pot forward in the interest of the. Democrats. Last year the combined Democratic and Greenback vote was a„, majority of 49i. The result of Monday's election is unexpectedly close, and *the majority which 7111 be small, is claimed by . both the Republicans and Fusionists. We should judo the chances.to favor the election f PLAisTEn, Fusion. „. The Republicans elect to Congress, REED, in the First District, FRYE, in the Second, and LINDSEY, in the l e Third; whilo the . .'usionists elect LADD and 31 tiltel „; he present Green back members. There i$ a Republi can majority in the Legislature which will choose a United. States Senator to succeed Mr. Il A\III N. WC frankly confess that we are somewhat disappointed by the result in Maine. The Vote in Vermont gave . every assurance that the people were thoroughly awake to the importance of the Contest, and determined to preserve the Government from the grasp of the spoiler. Maine has thrown a chill over the prospectsF of an easy victory. "It Will be difficult to make . the '.ll-verage voter under statid,why the brilliant campaign led tikWAINE has been so barren of re- Suits. Reasons will be Plenty, but they are not half so satisfactory as the stern : logio of figures. And though the Fusionists may not have succeeded in electing their . Governor,' yet the closeness of the vote has disap: pointed those..who were led to believe that a Republican majority/Of thous- . ,ands would gladden the country. In . nolother State was such a combine tion.of Democrats - with Greenback ers possible. In no other State has the Greenback element so much strength,becanse the people of Maine are largely engned ,in . I :lumbering and ship-building, and those interests' have not felt the general revival of business, and financial depression still spreads its gloom.. The coali tion has been unprincipled andac tive., Money has been spent freely by the Unhmists, furnished by the, Democratic National Committee, and has been effectually used 'als shown . by the vote in .the.:large - towna. ' The effect . Of . this disappointment in Maine will beto arouse the Re publicans from -the, dangerous feeling' of security and over-confidenee into which they were drifting. in the end, undoubtedly prove a bless inao if it does come in this unwelcome , guise. 4 will arouse the ,Republi can hosts to a proper' sense of the daniFTs tturei4p, gpit pwakio 1.14 rOligstiOn. 0r..:1 , 40w0r4 • whipb , i4lloo.olim , It o j , ft littsti and stubborn battle which is , to be fought. :Every Republican should be active and vigilant from this time Until the second of Novembhr. ,Sue. cess awaits us, if we go boldly and cfnfldently forward, determined. to ave the-Union. TOE DANGER TO BE AVERTED. Vere are two prominent consider- • - sttions which Should be pressed upon every voter in the North, and which. should., rrest the seribus:nttention of every ilstriotic citizen Who does not wish the Government to be handed over to those who sought to destioy it. The first is the well-known his." !erical fact, that , the Democratic party when in power has always been ruled, bY' Ihi;South., and that the wise and well.:ineaning Men in the Democratic ranks have" never been able successfully to. Combat the schemva of the fire-eaters and disin ionifits, but have been either driven out of the party, or cajoled or driven into subservient submission to the plans of the Southern scheiners. Those , who remember the struggles of the past, or have studiedjai4tory .carefully, know that the outrageous demands of the South were in many ins aces received with rebellious in dications by their Northern tools. But in every instance the Northern Democracy has been obliged, Bow e dr unwillingly, to. become the tool and servile •ally of the South, and endorse and support the most object ionable meaures. The second fact, is very clearly- and: forcibly stated in the Press. Of late years Congress 'has been ruled. by the Caucul:. 'This has not been con fined to one party ; but the course of each party has been `settled upon in caucus, and 'the decisions of the C3liellS 'lase been considered as bind ing. This has 'been preeminently true since the democratic party hast t heen in a majoritilin both branches. The Democratic majority has. not pretend ed to act 'upon any important public question except, in obedience to the mandateS of the caucus. It has even refused to correct the most glaring grammatical blunders in Public meas. ores when pointed out, because the caucus had decided that the bills must be passed' precisely as framed. ; The majoritylparty rules Congress; and the caucus l 'rules the majority party. glow is the i pernocratict' caucus constituted ? hi the pres*Scuate there are _42 Dtimocrats. i ' Of these 29 come trom S'itiithLrn . •* , :is, leav ingck only 13 from•the, Non ', Thus the South hasttiore than two-thirds. In the House there are 149 Demo:: crats, and 9 of them represent the South; with but fifty from. the North. Taking the • Democratic members of the two Houses , together—and . they act together in joint caueue—the South has 12,S out of 191, leaving but il3 for the North, and giving the SOuth more Ostia two-thirds majority: That majority is absolute in the eau ens. It decides its policy and its meas ures. It binds the action of the min-: ority; It determines how the vote of the whole shall be cast, just asmuch as'if it were itself, the whole. Its , will is law. . Democratic Representa tives'from the North may hesitate and deprecate f but. King Caucus . rules with aoirOn hand, and his seep , tre is - wielded,4 the South. The wrong - is the more -apparent when the relative strength of the two sectiOns is considered. In the Senate the North has .47 SenatOrs and the South s 9 ; in the House the North has" 185: members And the South DM. Thus the North largely outnumbers the South.. liutin spice of this tele South rules,, because the North is divided between the two parties, while the Sb r utli, pract4Tly Solid, controls the Democratic' cau cus and carries. the Northern -*Demo - -rtic Representatives with it. the inexorable command of - the caucus the Northern :Democrats are in' reality made to do• the behest of the South and not of their own sec- Lion. A minority of Congress die tates its policY, - ;:and action because though a minority of the whole k is a majority of the majority,- Under this caucus principle the _plastery of the. South in Congress. labsolute just so long tts the body is Democrat ic. 'The only way to escape from it islie elect a Republican Congress. With the rule of King Caucus and of the South thus established, it be hooves the intelligent and:patriotic people of the North to consideroiery carefully'the spirit and the purposes of this dominant element in the .Democratie party. What would it do with bothn Democratic Congress and President ? WOuld it then hesi tate to press its' Southern claims? Would it falter in reorganizing and se 'Caring possession. of the Supreme Court? Would it oot be More "averSe" to paying Union peo skin s than the reb el General at the head of the Senate ,Committee is now said to be, unless they were coupled with pensions to the Confederates ?;..i Would it not re peal evEry law to Vitalize the 'Consti tutional amendnients ? Would it not demand and tarry payinent for all its losses during the 'car ?• This r plain statement of the power, of the caucus and the certainty that the Democrata if. in •a majority would still continue' to be ruled by the Southern members,shows how utter ly futile is { the hope that Gen. HAN eocit,,if he were is the, Presidential ' chairc - would be allowed, even if he desired, to purshe such • a course as would meet the Approbation of the patriotic Democrat in the North. The Southern majority in caucus Vittul4 completely .control the action of Congress, would dictate the'poli nf the administration: grid be ell. t9' (wry . aril - 4)00 fli . ;411101 oro-tho hop of t 4. 1301.0411.1. politician, whereby. the public tress ury,may. be used to : repay the losses susUined the, rebellion. It is well for the voter.- in the North to reflect upon the consequences before he votesto 010 the Government'and the' Treasury in the hands of the grasping, needy South. Elti PHILADELPHIA LFTE,R. PHILADELPIIIA, Selitettpier la. 18M. The political bosses have returned from their summer sojourn beside the wild sea waves, and amidst the shady mountain resorts, and "things are working." The - nominating conventions are held this week; and the, excitement ixat fever heat. t was given out 134, week, that the Boss- boss had iistied'ordera for the defeat of dongreestartu:Pingham, State Senator La. mon, aLd otjt.r proruiuout aspirants who had supi.osi4:that the way was cleprifor their Fuccess. Sometimes the people in the cotimiy are inclined to imagine• that, flies aretfftilea by bosses and dictated to by leaders. Bless their simple souls, they hhven't the slightest conception- of what such a condition of things is. Imagine, caa, that single elan rules the political destinies of agreat city, of near-, million inhabitants, where over 150,- f 000 freemenhave the right - tpittse the bal lot-box. That he dictate4 . 6lio shall till the offices, from the highest to the low est,'and at his supreme,:.cominand, Con gressmen are mate_and'iunnacle,.and leg isators selected. , At his Welt hungry ex peetants tremble, and needy sycophants while they may hate, cringe at his feet that " thrift may follow fawning." This is not an overdrawn picture, but is the history of politics in every great city. To-be-sure the reign tof the autocrat is generally short, for against his suprema cy' is finally united the interests and opposition of the dis4kiointed expect ants, and the envious alataimbitious, un- til they finally succeed- in overtbroWing the ruler and set ap sonic new king. It is said that the Boss has . relented. so far as Bingham is concerned, but is decided that Lamm AO not go back_ to the State Senate. The, friends of the latter held a meeting Friday evening to - - sustain the latter and .to .detidnuce the arbitrary power which would displace him for a new and untried man. These little'side shows do not affect the main issue: The Republicans of this city. may fight like cats and dogs about local matters, but they come up like a band of brothers and battle in solid phalanx. Thhi city will give an unusually large majority for Gar field, and don't doubt it for a moment. As the day tiled for the opening of the Second General Council of the 1.-.piresbyte rian Alliance, ju Philadelphia, September approaches, the work of the diner brit committees progrese t es, alid the rangements arc almost completed, On, the evening preceding the opening of the Council, a full dress reception will be held at. the Academy - of Fine Arts; on woich Occaision the visiting delegates will be tendered the courtesies of the State and city by Governor Hoyt and. Mayor Stokley. At eleven o'clock on the follow- leg morning, the,opening sermon of the Council will be delivered at the Academy. Ofmusic, by the Rev. .William M. Pat ton, D. D., of New York. On thet,after noon of the same day, beginning af half past two o'cicek, theiirst session if the Council will be held 3n Horticultu I Hall where the regular sessions will hereafter be held. Rev. Dr. William P. Breed; of Philadelphia, will deliver the addresi of welcome; The one-bundred borse-poser ezOne which Was ordered by Inventor Edison is receiving its tinishing‘totiches at the Per ter-Allen' Engine Company's shop, on Washington avenue, and in three weeks will be ready for shipment to its destina tion at Menlo Park. It is with this ma chine that Mr. Edison proposes to .pro duce the power to enable ,him to light the 800 electric lamps - for which the work men have just laid Si miles of mains. The new test of the light will be made about the Ist of October; Dr. Buchanan, of `bogus diploma fame, and who was reported as having dramati caßY jumped from a Camden ferry-boat with'snicidal intent, has been captured at St. Clair,. Michigan, by John Norris, city editor of the itteiird, and Charles Miller, a detective connected with the District Attorney's office. The capture of the wily doctor was made upon a bail piece taken out in the Court of Quarter Session, where the Doctor is Under au je dietment prepared by the State. "11-is bondsmen were interested in producing him, as his bail iv:s fiirtelted last week. 'MS served as the incentive -for ids: cap ture. Chapman, the brother-in-lace-for litcbanan, was'altio taken into custody at ,the same time, and as he did some tall Aiwearing recently in connection with the . Doctor's dtsappearanee, he will probably ave soniething to answer for. The Indian chiefs YellOcf Bear, Big Horse, Little Raven, flanAtaild' Hand, Mad. Wolf, and Man-on-the-Clond, acteonlii'inied by Agent Stiles, arrived, in this city Friday' afternoon, , and wfre Met. at the Pennsylvania Railroad .depot by prominent metribtlis of the - ':Society of Friend, whose guests they will biLduring their visit. Tlfe object i t corolla ! : East wkii to bring With them forq-one chil dren, whom they have placed bathe train. •inft - school at Carlisle. The swords of Anthony Wayne and of Edward King, a soldier in thew i nr of 1812,.. were pz eseuted to the city of India delphia, rec'ently, .throngh its chief ma gistrate, Bayer Stokley, at the day Or's office. The swords were the gifts of the late Medical Inspector, Dr. Will King; Who, by a clause in his• will, bequeathed them to the city. The two swords are dub workinanship; and are highly‘ttnn pered, "Mad " ' Anthony's is purred form and is rather- heavy. They will be placed among the archives in Independ ence Hall. The State Fair is now in full blast, and is a deckled improvement over that of last. year. The rainy weather has some. what interfered with ' , the attendance; though the number of visitors has been quite large, and this preekr will probably be larger, ,as excursions frOm the country are coining every day, some of thehi from quite, a distance. L - ; Everything hoes on pleasantly, and the= glit-seers are teen in every nook and k& - ner discussing the merits of the machinery- or horses or cows br hogs, and there are plenty at the fair who know all about the points of dif ferent animals, the place being literally alive with farmers and others from the country whose business it is to khovt all abut stocking farms. At, the :different commercial stands. where trinkets, - pic tures, wooden . vare, toilet articles, maul household nickhacits, knives, sewing ma chines, cutlery, and a "thousayd other things ate sold there, are grants invest ing for the benefit of those ieft at home and as mementoes of the present success ful exhibition. The centre 144 attraction ,i!; the exhibition is undoubtedly.the. tie department. The diepl4 fiXtnt ant? .14 tot pm %trio WAR siNlq4ll 1 1 Oefovi There isithree entries of Guernseys, end of abort borzi, four if .Devons,, fa mous alike* fdr their.. beauty, . - s try and twotertis of .yerslgresoind three large nerds‘of th e famous Holsteins. . •Tite‘departmetit devoted to °tablas and fruit ic is well filled with ei hibits, which attract attention not only for size, but . for the superior character of the products shoWn. , Amonst the hors, General Grant's Arabian stallioncdre the objects of the greatest interest, 'almost every visitor ask ing to be shown Uo their stalls. 'Endoubt edly they have points which are not read ily noticed by the casual esbstirver. • . The Eureka mower is a pleat favorite with farmers, and is attracting the same attention at the Fair as at• the .Centenni. at. Otte of the,reports,in the city papers says, " t 1 the numberleiaintrentions that have' sprung into 'existeria fOr the. benefit of our progressive farmers, ,rho mower mist certainly take first piace. A careful inspection of the apparatus ,inade by -the Eureka Mower Company, of • Towanda, Bradford County, Pa., will .coniincethe most skepticil that it is the "mower of mowers" and is entitled to 'the, favorable comments which it everivrhere', .receives. That itis receiving the warmest eu4rse. ment wherever used, is an established fact." ' WASHINGTON' LETTEk. TASIZINGTO.N. D. C., Sept. N UM. '- With the President d family absent, and many 'Government Mcials and others still a-ay lingering the healthful breez es of mountain and shore, the Capital, both socially and politically, continues to be ratlier.a barren peld for newts. Since the recent grand kraradp of the Democra cy; there has been no more-pole-raisings with beery declarations from noisy-ors- tore.. The,display.ptit forth on that occa sion ;ref . evidently the last grand effort of the pemocratic Jackson Association, in whiar all, their political 'Capital wassex- banked, and :consequently the boisterous and demortArative elements of that organ ization have for the time being- sub Sided. • Put 'from some cause, not'explained, it appears that on that occasion the venera ble President of the organization was snubbed outrageously snuubed and that; too, in the house of his friends; and now there is not only 4 !trobble on the 'old maws mind," but trouble in the Demo:. cratic camp: ` The_tocsin of war has been sounded, and instead of chewing tip Ile!. publicaits they are busily engaged in com mitting, latri kuri Unfortunately for the "superb- 'soldier " and - the IlemociAtic cause generally, while this little light has been progressing, all the enthusiasm.wit- tiesscd here during the past few weeks tins faded away; revealing the stern fact that the great Hancock boom iu Washing ton has collapsed, is defunct, dead and buried. 'From the quiet shades of the War De-, partment, where it was supposed that everything was-lovely, there comes sud `denly a cry of distress. The Democrats motto havelong found au aViiling place in and about the corridors of that ofllce, eat ing the brFad that belongs to the Union Seidlers and iipying upon the. Administr ation, in DemOcnitic interest, begin to be aware that they ate a little out o 4 place. The mouthpiece of their party here puts the number.of recently-made outcasts at one hundred, and consequently a howl goes up from the Democratic camp be cause there' l lt.s been ono officer flund in the Government who has the phlitieal courage toi apply the doctrine, !"to the victors belong the spoils." If One hundred Democrats have lice hiding in the War Departnent, subsistin lipou a Republiat Atintinistratiot - to the exclusiou of an'ilqual Humber of Republi- cans, praised be the hand thatliasllircet cd the work of expulsion and reform. If hotisceleaning promotes bowling, let the work go o i n;entil all that sort of music is outside the;Government, where the lead ; ers of the choir can have all the perform ers and the music•centralized in one rand chorus.. It will be better for the country and better for, the Music. Since the nomination of ltlancoek, the eflrontery of the Democratic speakers in the North, in proclaiming that the Demo cratic party is -the friend 6t , the Union soldier, has never been elualril cal mendacity. The political speakers in the Sough_ make no sueti claim. They rather point to, what the party has done for the rebel soldier, and bocci themselves hoarse. iu tellingsthat * 'Lee and Jackson weak'. have "kown! 'While it 'cannot be d6.niedthat many members of the Demo, cratie p_arty went it the Union artily, during the war, it also cannot be denied that the war made Republif4ins of the rivet of therm :. Pf all the 'Dernocratstbat went _into the' Uniefti army', only, One of anylicteat„distinctioii remains a DeniOcrat to-day, and that one Gas' been made the party's,canditlate for the Presidency. ;If there are, as claimed by the, Democratic orators, as many Democratic trtion.iol diers in the Niirth Republicans, why should 'the Democrats in Congress select Confederate soldiers, for their officers? The truth is, there are , not many Deino; ,cratic soldiers hi the North, and the few that., are do • witc represent their party.' 'The Democratic Party is the old Southern Confederacy, and that is the only issue it 'has. It discharges Union 'soldiers and ap „Ninth- rebel soldiers; because the rebel soldiers 'represent the bone and sinew of. `the . party. Since the Democrats have had Possession of Congress, the records on tile show that serenly:st.e Union soldiers hare been discharged from rolls of ' the two houses"; puriug, the same time; eighty eight rebel sotrtiers hare been plleed upon the' roils. licarl4 every _officer elected by both houses was ,In the rebel army. The piistMasters and theiF assistnts, the sec retaries, chief cler , ksi executive clerks, bill clerks, duance clerks, stationery keepets and door keepers—ali f iti the rebel army. ! 'How Democratic speakers in the face of this record dare say- that their party is a 'friend of , the Union soldier, , passes understanding. 0 , • There are i plen \ 4 , of instances that might be cited, ihowing how the applica.: 'Rona of disabled Democratic 'Union sot= diers fol. place, have been regarded by the brigadiers Made .;they have obtained pos sessio o the / Capitol. Invariably they np been tol* 'flat Ithere were too many,sol diers in the South that bad to be taken care of..'Tho disgrace of having fought for, thir;Union was a sufficienetrar to any' consideiation or claim upon - the party. While soldier after soldier of the Conte& crate army were being put into place, the' DemOemtie.Uniort soldier , was 'given to understand that he was tolerated by the brigadiers only so far as his vote might go in helping them to continue in power. ' It is said that straws show which way the wind blows. During the vist week thaFe has sprung into existence in the in terests of the Republican' party a new Organization styled the, "Towpath Boys," en the' rolls of which , theie is found the itatues of many of the heaviest land mast , . prominent business men of the city . .The formation or political clubs le *ashingtMi Is perbitps At Au 10)041064a or.,loogi , Impottipo i mir Wet Map they Wife to .peat the sentlmentspf 'the 'Peeple. That 'tesson given by- *ninon nuM for taking- , an active part ilk the for iat* of Uds club* that their business was never better now,. and that they doh! no .- cbangiey ISISIM , that theivent of to ateNzes,thecitePubilese ticket they can Make ealculstionaiforthe future on a solid ; that phis:gag the Democracy in.paiirerwilibe, for, the fkuumial interests of tho country, taking a leap inthe dark, and that their business is worth mote to them than party allegiance. Such aro the feelings and, sentiments which appear to• be previtiiing among the business classes here; and; in this respect, it is doubtless sate tot infer that the business 'men of Washiegton are. by no means an creep tion. " . . The ievestigations which aro now being tstado,bft4e . census office aro revealing the fietiAtat,in several of the &anthem] States, tiny amount of fraudulent returns with regardicryie population bay° been made. There is' no rascality, it would seem, that the Bourbons of the South, in their desperiltiuu to obtain control of the 451Ovornment, again, will net attempt. After the rebellion came the murderous kn-klux and w:bite leagues, then the bull dozer 7 ith / pis•or and bludgeon, then stuffed' and now the latest is a fiiiilulent enumeration, to be followed by. 4 . kiauduleut representation in Con gress ''ond in'thttleePral college. STOE -NEWS. .—Atpost of the Grand Army of the Re public has just been established at Hawley, Wayne county,. —Albert Griswold, a prominent citiz of_county, was killed by the cars at nowise ,* ou Tuesday night. • The giowityg corn crop of the Cum berland Valley will be the largeSt gathered there within twenty years. . --31artin llagens and John,Reespan, of Altoona, ware run over by carsolOatretergblifg. on Sunday, and kilted. • —Geo;;Edge, of Cain township, Chester county. aged - 35 yearS , cutninitted suicide 'it Sun day, %sidle lutatte. Seth 11. Yoetnn - has .np Wilted Charles liartold Hayes.. of Louisburg, Union coinity, a cadet at-Annapolis. —Some vamla) ptailcd up•alrttallowers ex-Govitrnor Curthes front yard, stillelifoute, tho other night, by the max, —Willie: only 7 years of age, and a * Mete picker, was biped an fbe .Elk breaker, near Scranton, a few days ago. —John Shenk, a weiVacuown farmer in Canestoga township. Lancaster county; consmitted suicide kr Winging. Cal Tuesday or Jos; week. .Toliu B. Packer, of stiribury, has declined to be a candldate for the ILettbltean Senatorial nomination In thu Twenty..seventh dls trlet. 2•:-S. B. 3litnning, chief miller in Mar shall. K . ,91114%dy k Co.'s tiaur mitt, at Pritisturg, V.'as ktUcd by the bursting of ,a burr, ors Tuesday of /set week. . . . —Miss Sue L. Beatty has been appoint, 0d by the United States Circuit Court at Pittsburg: a M>celal e,ranltner to take and reroq teMlawaly In au oil —A. 3-yoa!r-old child of ,Mr. llnzinga G.' 31lielmer, of Pottstown, fell Crow a t die twice of twenty-fire feet, on Saturday!, and escaped serious 'tipsy. fT —A. water snake that has destroye number of ,vl,l 41,11 In Oakland Ceinetery, e.it Chester, was dlapaiched recently, veldle trying to swallow one of the tokh„ —Ex.Gove.rnor Gilbert C. Walker, of Virginia,-will make the address at the twenty third anneal tair'ot the Hartont Agritultural So. Summohatioa county, at tlartord, on the 2241 Vast. —Governor Hoyt has decided to grant a charter fora new railroad, trtextend from Sharp. burg down the Pittsburg stile of the Allegheny, and to he called the Pittsburg and Allegheny River Railroad. —Ther:Pollock family, descendants of 'Thomas Pollock, who settled In Clarion outlay lu 180.1, celebrated a reunion at PoHoek. that court!. on Saturday last. There were'lls members of thd fatally tpresent. -Tile Lehi:tit Valley Railroad's new engini,, , John It. Fatishawe, built at Om company's shops at Ilasleton, took the northern expsess train eighteen znlies in eighteen ,thluntes on her trial trip the other t:ay. —The temporary bridge of the Reading Railroad over the canal at Harrisburg, at the went, of the late accident, win net be rdiiaced by a new iron bridge until next spring. It is,cotislitered safe until that titne. —The Ea gar T.hompseti Steel 'Coinpany . I.3td fOr the prtvrh•ge of ininihg :300 scree ,•f brown hematite ore land, and 4109,000 for the opt!ros of mining , :ILO additional :terns. The Laud', are situated in Patton ton•uship, Centre county. • —There wails a free distribution of beer at the lf.kreenbaelc kneeling at Titusville on Saturday bight. and the result before the meeting way to if Over shoe ed, according to the tilt City Derrick., that the tree beer had itiore - frimis than free speech. • --Chides Hoffman, of Gilbertsville, Berk+ county, atteinpted to climb out of a well on Thursday. to escape sulphur that had an umulatett after the .exploslon of a blast, and fed back a tance of twenty-seven feet, atlglitlnr, ou the should!. crs of a compauLn. They were conidderably luJtired. —At 10:30 ; .k. • Thiirsilliy; al mixed freight.and coal train was wrecked by a inbplaced slorltch uu the Lehigh Valley mad tear White Ten freight And shout twenty coal cars Wert. tirokru-up. Lehigh Valley [rants will rim oa the Lehigh and Susquehanna llaCkS until repatra are ritade. • —A correspondent of the Reading Times and Dispatch, writing from Slieflau ioalt. says that 400 men are tittowi, out of employiumt at the Keeley. Run Anines. The prospect for put• dug out the fire seetus.gicemty, and if this is Hot accomplisheil,it will burn from gangway to gang• way, aestroying five connecting collieries. Gg.NERAL NEWS. ''. . • . . :—Grdat &maize to the tobacco crop is feared trent rhlus to the eh:Wily or tiansllle, Vlr 'Millet . • —A - digpatch received at Washington froan .Pensaelota, Fla., annom cts the death of the wife of Sena or Jones. , r Harvey Holmes, of litlonticello„ Y...drowird, her child, aged 4 months, ey'ittic laboring and 'r temporary Insanity. at i • —GenCihr A: T. A. Torbort's remair(s. were taken froin ts.t. Auguattno.to Jsekeonettle, Fla., to be iont,direet to Sew York by steaftter. —Dr: Thomas- ` } Williams , a promis ing young pityalclan or Texas. was run over by a railroad aunt at Merhilan, bliss„ and 'natant* , killed. —The boiler of a mill on Lontenbut's place, at Lake Concord; ]figs., expkvied - ThurSday, killing William P00:0 and severely scalding four negrees. —On• Sunday night 'Omer Richards, formerly I.:lrak! of the Leath'We (Cot.) pollee force. fatally 00: Edward Jones as ate result of an Add tanwi-el. —Michael -Melia and William Stiles, :notorious thieves. were captured on ,londay while in the act of breaking into a tea stove at Allwiy, —Two hiindred lambs *ere confiscdLfd by A met - Iran ',mu..tom office rg at Rouse's Point.lh% Tuefithy, for undervaluation while putting our of Cammin. - -:-GeOral Joseph R. Mirky ;,having declined a renomination, the Republicans of the Flri't Connecticut District nominated lion. John R. Rack for Congress. —Thomas Cathern, an extensivo,,grgeor of Montrral, dlr . d from a dose of tourtthine, takets with - had been of late Involved in flu:metal difficulties. —Captain Peter E. Muller, of the Noi weglan bark. 11.3 i. Width, wag drowned on Alegi day nigbt at Ilichrnond, Va, by wa!kir.gOVelboaA during a severe storm. ' .1. .—Captain Alexander M. Hamilton, who. committed snicide by rhonting at diarriyonborg, Va., on Tuesday of last week. was a brother-in-law of CyrusSicCortnick, of Chicago. --R. Q. Adams, the defaulting ex-Pos - of Deadwood. P. T.. wlup recently cer4ca from custody 'after conviction of embeziletaent, Etas been captured at Fort Bully. • --Ca l4in Alexander M. liamilton, 'a weiminror,a oithom ,of Harrisonburg, Ts, was - found dead. Thuridaylieeening, in his mace, near the railroad depot, stioilthrongli the head. —The''breakink 'of ad axle caused railroad accident at- Stamford. Conn., by Which sesen Acura efintalnlnk furniture and hats were .wrecited. and MI trains delayed about Sec hours.' - Nobody was Ottrt. • --At SIT Ibroolr , Mass., on 'Monday" night, of Ast Writ, the residence of Orme! White ' was broken Into and tiZ.S In money, with between , ..14.000 and 0,000 worth of bank stock' and railroad certlficates, were stolen. • —An 'investigation into the case Of suicide by a one-armed man found drowned In the East River. at New York., to the discovery that his mune was Christian- Wlehn, aged GO, who resided 'on Second street. ' —Rev. It. D. E. UM es, who "wasone of a ratline party fronOSlMlthrille, Ni. Y was knocked from the: yaont4. - gra Pope, by the boom striking him, and was drowned, -near campbeira Point, in Black Myer Bay. :—Terrible forest fires ' Aase raged in Lower Canada, in the PrevitienNf Quebec, for houte daya.And on Tuesday. of 4iat ticket, aorerat personate the village of Upton bast their lice. !n. fighting the flames near their homes. , ' --Petersburg, ••a., audits vicuntiwere vlatted. on Monday night of last week, by one of therhearlest rainstorms that has °courted there to 1n541.1 tecutbs. Muting the progress of the storm thejeustom Meese WS% struck by lightning, and several persons Were severely stunned. rurkdown- mars, about. 30 years old, was found otk nfth avenue, on Moaday . sdest of tut week. intesleved. with SI _head out l and was tatea to the martin howle._Sraerto ho lie wore Vatted Stares detective sbleld,*.and papers ea MS person Wraps name of A.p. Gewttt. —On Friday last, as a party of eon trseters seep starring a fire re tt same lathe shaft bOille of tblFreampilihts fiend near LeMyl3l., COI,. yea allitt Peficiall Vratm4r 4 open.abign yseuty if% 14, PPR IV. tAryhE OM - 11. WirtW4.l4 . 1 0 4 50 11 1 " DIED m The' 'Big. rood oorrespoodektOt Mg! Elmira Atiper‘iser, *Wei - Alai or Beitomier,ll3th, =ids that p!iporlthe ;lowing: otodiriok.Ciandall;tt tesident this! town, living ibout one Mile north Of this . Idace," Met with horrible death on'the night of September Oat::: Crandall -luue a town charge fora number of years, 'and ha& been in the habit of picking up his wood Sllvasul the fields and woods ad joining his house. - Crandall and his wife *lag out in the rain Thursday afternoon, got wet and cold, anti just before dark Crandall. went i lifter some wood,. as he had been in the habit' of- doing. The tdelit being pitcbr dark and raining oi folly, 'Crandall got lost near his own nse. andwas heard calling for assist 'afire about- eleven and' again about one ; bur rhe vyrson 'that heard him, thinking that the-old man was calling his cow, - did noktiunk anything unusual was the mat ter. -Crandall. has been in tne habit of gett'nelost in the daytime near his own h, and it is not a strange thing:that he slatuhliffplet got lost this time. ! Cran dall' vitia about 72 years old. He was found Friday morning about nine o'clock by a neighbor. His face was scratchod fear fully by the itrieri. Fe had crawled . quite a eis'auce on his liands'and knees. The ft lowing jury was 'called: William Ctstoper, Lyman -nuggins, M. Sniper, F. lluugius, Lyinari Crandall'inad D. C. Leonard, who rendered a .. verdict accord ing to the above facts, NIA : • Deathlrom e xposure 'and exhaustion:7" WE understand ttiat; 8 the Athens OAR- F MUD Club boys biro icceived their hats, capes end toiches, and present a vvri tine apN :trance on parade. The eampaigri is develf•pin; much interest tip.' There, .and tly3 ITANcOetc boom will be likely to rest iracefuily toThe end. A meeting of e Denioeratic forces on Saturday evening, faiied to draw-moie than "a guard ofr.bon o. tt34,fhcit ll.s•cocs Club. - 1 'STRAY PARAGRAPH:: -1 t rrrrible Tigh Betwoen Two !oi. . CiIICAGO September; 12. —hist ii)j,liC ivrq %rorkmen engaged in un -1 •ading ore at Union and Steel Foun t ( r :I y: d , Oc ii k .te la r e a ca t i l u e e sp i e n ra vo te le e d ie i n n el a l qtthsery ..iTatiated, And each seized - a kerosene it} paiid htirled it at the head of the - ottier: , ' Both lamps ,struck their Inetrk and explosions followed. In a moment both combatants Were wrap pcd iti dames and before -their com rades could extinguish them both men were unconscious and , terribly burned. One of the. men William Doyle. died to-day, while tbe other, Timothy Connell, is not expected to live. • LoSnoN, September terrible colliery. explosion oecored at 2.30 o'clock this mor6ing• ittSealiam pit, on'the coast. six miles south of Sup derlatidind betiveen ten and t*elve miles . from Durham. Nearly 200 men were in the pit at the time. ComMunication has been opened with eighteen or - the men in the pit who are now in a safe position. 'Later accounts state that the eigh teen men have bein rescued, but that the loss, of life lia,4been fearful. This is the third serious accident of this sort that has taken place in Great Britian within the year. In the ex plosion' which occurred at the Lyeett colliery in Stafford Shire in January last sixty-two of the sixty-eighE,per sons in the pit at the time 'were kiß: ed. at.similar disaSter in a pit near Newport, belonging to the Lon don and New 'South Wales Colliery Company, the'killed included all who were in the pit. 119 in number. 'The cause of the explosion is not stated, but it was doubtleis due. to the aeci dental or careless ignition of the aas or tire-damp. IMIT TO GET SWK.—Expose yotirself day and night. eat too much without ex ercise ; work too hard without rest ; doc tor all the tittle ; take all the vile -nos trums advertised ; and then you will want to know EIOW TO GET WELL. Which is :inswereci in.three Aron's—Take Hop Bitters.! tae trtacr e 011.1411. BUSINESS LOCAL. TETE-It-TETE cTS. WINE SETT: 4 ., Llqt:(.g . ,4ETTS—nt !o.tt.hz tar BYE - it. i - Li C —.I ust re ce iV ed—luotiier car 1,4.1 sept% • P. 3!: 3V ELLEs. 'CASH PA 1 - '0 I'l °DUCE 4t Pet. 30. /111 - 1E4:8 & VOI-Gllrg. .:17" The frvr , i'n)!;E quarters tor ea - et - I:Mill; th 11.. e or L.l M I'S Ad LAMP (7,61-,DS • 1,1, 7 15 - YVAN-71,11'.--An Agent for * the ton Sleatal lrye Vie; ks. to ra!lvass Tovrauda, .tidiens. Waverly an I :le- tetrr..tted`.ne reentry. eau do iv^dt at It. For. lerinf, w id ress . w l.l, v.r."!..'0.t. - S. in ttStt 11, Celts Elt bag . t bPst. wear:lig Zi/IOCS for 11,-ri„ Roy! , and Youths`; welt el.r..r or-.z4 to Tow:.n.la, and at prleoß within the of all. RM..' Our • poods are NEW anti of the BEST WA i.ITY. t.NION CIDER iSk • an excellent Portable Mill—mte et.turnendb Itself sit Edght•.. Fartnent appiev clot to sta.t . o. will do well to give.tpe . Cli;er Mid atrial. It grinds ea~itpand rapidly-4.1 , 3,11111g ties In& WO. ad of grating,. Capacity, live barrel,'_ per clay. Vor:kain .heap. -•• Tuirant Pa.,-4ept. SEWING AACIPNE NEEDLES Ally an attachments at thejm,C.mt Ra'r'e, - MM" Vitirns of vr'asted energies. find sure relief in AYER'S' .It i. the most potent .puritier and a fountain of health and'etrongil. . wl. • efr There are mani forms of nervous 'debility In. men that yield to the rise or Carters trim Pills. Those who are, troubled with nerimus ',weakness, night sweats. d c., should try them.. "I have used several bottles of SIMMONS' LIVER REGULATOR, and you may. record the fact, that my teellngs are so far ganged that I can eat hearty, and am more like swell man than I have been for years part. .1 bare rutftwd four years mid am grate ul for relief. .1. ICA Pk:J.:Tar; • w 4. Perbitllcal Score, itsS.C> . far Fnr a good,' eturible and neat-fitting §IfoE; call at F. J. BLUM'S, oppssthlrkeley's lotet. . , ' Noi.• , -t f ' .;1 ,. Dr PENNSYLVANIA' STATE COL; EGE admits' both sears: , PENNSYLVANIA' 1ta11..4 • Illtorr. Tuition free: Courses of study, Classt: - eat, Seleottlie, awl Agrlcultutal. A thorough Pie poratory Department. Expenses Itt toy: per week. `For catalog:tie, 'addresl Jortrit szionrutma. A. it., Crest; unite :College. Pat' . Aug. 12-wlii. ___- . . lay - PrOvisious of all kindsoif the best ItY.,.at , -.: DECK EU 8 VOL\GIIT'S. '! 11; 1.177 Try our Now IAP. TEA. Best in town. - • .nEtwan & Voyouv. far Choieff • TEAS 4nd COFFEE a specialty at V lilitatEtt VovaiT's. rffr WANTED hIMEDIATELT. Local mate on the lire of Delcri/J Aat is A—GARFIELD, " Carieton,"She popular, brilliant and fasettant. lug writer. The linear blegrarldcal publication which tsiil bo offered to eanra.iaera during the campaign. LIBERAL TER3IB4- For tehltory, etc.. apply at once to Jon x IroLLarrn - A eo'4, elO Arch atrret,Thltadelphla. , Ang. le. Ur A tail assortment or , WlllPg and UMBUELLAS at the 99-cera Store! ist'.PRICES WAY DOWN on Gents ? Pine and Coarse ll4.a;La at liLlind'S, opposite See- kg's flout. ' Nov. 274 f. Ben and Cheapest Una at Sleet ler 1.0 0 11#14 Nivea' =I Chflareer Mq~h %UPI St QOBOLVA litWlitsle t effeStMala riftAtfiettte! 100411 4 !Nriti - a 1 1'411.1 , tom" Buck . a be Is almost finiedistili reileired by westing roe of (iinvga 4 ll glitart Weed Beile4ones Beekiiehe Platen. Try one and" be fere Pace 23 e.eats, urnayto q - 4k: Rockwell baying tbor ocattly overhauled the sky-14M, feel confident that with ImproVed facilities, they cannot f#ll to give entire satissadisci to all desirine lint Blass pictures. - - cir L. 11. liori9Eßs challkiges compe tition forqualltypt goods and low prices on /bib, Doors, Blinds s-'` MOW ' bonding ma: titust-tf). , It is imposailide; or a womatiafter faithful vastest of ,treatment with L 41.4. E. PluffilAm'S VEGETABLE COMPOUND t 4 cotifinue to suffer with Wweakness of the uterus. Eneloie a stamp to Mrs:LT - DIA Z. PI xxsialf. Western Avenue; Lynn., Maas., for pamphlets. Sold hy Dr. Ml-1. l'ontan s Druggist; Towanda, Pa.- • - • „ - 112 r A IiTtAXII/ ItIVPIITATION.—rWarIierS Sate Kidney an fi Liver Cure has reached a repels- Aloe that is not Dratted by the confines of Section oreottutry. There are no Injurious substineksner false and teinpoinr,y stimulants In the preparation. ft Is - purely vegetable and compounded Rader a formula that has passed severe tests and won en dorsements from wane; of the btßheit medical latent In the country.—.yeto York' World. Vir lot weather produces inaction of the liver. Inaction of the liver causes diseased kidneys, and dlseasint kidneys, and diseased kid neys underinl ue the lire quicker than consuruption. All these troubles- can t:e avoided by.using War ners Safe 'Kidney and, .Liver Cure, the purest and best remedy ever discovered. MARRIED. • . •MOBSE—WIT.I. —ln Leßoy, September 9. ISSO, by.ll.a. Mr.• M. Morse and Miss Ella Williams, both of Leßoy, P. 310110AN,-PIIILIt'S.--At the residence of J. Hinds, In Wysox, Septetuttr erh, 100, by lies. lie,orge W. Stone, Mr. WU lam M. Morgan. of-ph/130001a, to Mrs. Samantha C. Philip., of '• T OWANDA MARKETS. • REPORTED BY STEVENS &LONG. Generaldealens in Groceries and Product, corner Alain and !nue Streets. WEDNESDAY EVENING, STEP. 15, 1880. . - . eitadsa Fleur per hblIR .00 (a 7 50 Flour per sack 11151 (a 1 ,4 Corn Meal per 100... (a ' - :: .- :ll - Chop Vend - 06 ~1 10 Wheat, per bush—. el 00 (a 1 10 el 20 fee t 25 Corn 0 56 ' 05 , . IlYe. - 53 66 'As MO =!= ClOverfteed.. Timothy, western, Bean h. 67. lbs, Pork. moss itatni Lard Rutter, tube Eggs, fiesh enres... Paixtnes. per Lash titml appalsßecAirax , t'.s A 30 firl 37. ~,. 20 6 .22 , q , •= 4 A. COB BIXTBD BY G KO. A..BA I ToSz, hides Or, A IN'S 4eal slons , ..k:, 50 (d. el 30 'lleacou Ski g 5 4 40 (3 65 Sheep Pei ty. .. im co 0 2 au , . i'ORI:ECTED BY 11. DAVIDoW k, BRO. Veal Shins... Ul•aam Stzlep Sittep Tlew Abvertisrutento. EN FIIZE tNSI.7.RAN . CE. - . . - •L-7 flayin l g areepted the arteney of the ... LA:NCASHIICE. I.NSCI:AN'CE COMPANY, (Assetts over 513,000.000 00. ) • I ant int-payed to writ o I..ollc:ten at enrient. T...te,i ,- M. D. S.w.tuTh.";Ag'.•nt. - Office with WM:7% ,V lucent, Towanda. Pa. i.yr QUSk'itrEITANNA COLLEGIATE "'N- O iertT.P.T-;-Fall Term of the I.7th year will be ,inSIO.N.D.II:I% AI GusT 23D. taro. Expenses for board, tuition and furnished room, front 1172 .to 4180 perlyear. For catalogue or further particu lars address the Principal. EDWIN E. QUINLAN, A. 1.1 • Tovrar.da, Jan. , lh. IRS°. Tv • r 11. DORMAUL, • 325 East Water St., Elmira, N.Y. Tst Tlimr • • ORA" 11001)S VI Floor MILLINERY" 3d Flckir CARPETS. 4th Floor ' CLOAKS & SHAWLS pper flours accessible by elevator. Its? A vhdt of lirpectlon Is respectfully t elicited .. . tytriTANs , - couRT SALE.- k _, lay virtue of an order Issued-Mit of the Or. t. pilaus'' Co ' rt of Bradford County, the. tinders:plod. :violinist l . tor, do Po , on is non, of the estate of 'Charles Welles, deceased. will eapose to polite sale at fh Exchamfe Hotel. In Athens Borough. Bradford Smutty, lea., on SATURDAT. OCTo_ lIER 70didSse, at. 1 o'clock. I'. 11., the billowlbe lot, piece or parcel of land el iu.ae hi the Township of Athens. 51t.tirity of Bradford, boantitql and de serlbed as ,tirnetv,: ' On the slo,ttri be lands of Edward Murray. on the west by Taw, of . i". Thurston and If. Wfllls'on. north b: land of Owen Spalding and the Common wetith of O'er Wsvivanta. and easterly by t ho'Clie mull river:. cootaloing, about two hundred acres, I so about th/rty gents. 'needed to' John Driike by deed dilly recorded to whieff. refermic., Is made for description. and excepting and reserving - al.; from the renblor i piece. of land bminded as foiled,: Regaining tian feet west of the west side of alo e:mat bridge abutment on the east side of th e , , t anal a; the'llrS; crossing of the canal from the' ehemung bridge; thence north . ii 7 it° west •Ifet free to th- road that leads up the nth: thence south nicbg lire cot side of said road' Go went in-. 1 feet i, l throve Soul!, 10° west. 341 feet; thence smith 21 0 ; west 1713 I feet; thence south. alit° went Int fent : th-nre -.omit Y. west 10 feet to a corner on the north linicot Mutt be onging to the estaae 0 Edward Murray &ceased : thetee south s7' 2 ?.eas? along nab! II ue 591 feet to a corner :ft feet west If tit/. centre of the bed of the canal: thence nwith 4, 4 0 15' cast fig:3'feet to place of beginning; containing ten acres and 4,-10 of an acre. aid exoeTaing also about ttsi eighteen arres of flats adjoining the Chewing river being the saute land relAned from mortgage by release recorded in the ;Mee for re ,tortillig. de-.is art! mortga,gro In ~td 4or u d County in Rwitifoitt County. to Mortgage Boek. NO. 7. page .144, about one hundred acr, spispreved. with frame !emote and ban, and fruit fre•es thereon. ". • t Also the following tiosortbed lot. piece or pat eel of 1311.1 -dtuar • In the f1+.1,4 , gh of Attienf s mato and County UtoreAal.l, and 1.0un4-141 a:Hottors, to lett : slit the north lot No . . 32 on the Pit by Water streco, on the aotith tby lot \o, 35. anti on the nest by lot No, 3..;, I.eing hot No. Gil tlyirty-funr lit a plot or lower)* ovule by Z. F. 'Walker. known as the Sttterlee loot. atot rneordedi In Bradford rt cords !or the rec.ntit (; iU I), d Book. No. 110. page tlV,...l+eing tto mo l e lot conveyed tri one .1. 11. s4ek , ,e, b, 41.bn C. 'WM,. by deed dat..l May ' TFt:3ls 1:1 7 SAI.E.—The pkirrhaser to nay ten 'per e...nt. or 'the vurrhaae prq.e. of each lot on its being strue‘ down trivnt,y.ftve- per cent. of the Intlanre on contlrtnatlon'Of the Mlle, and the r+ , l. Brie Ininue yrar front sate laterok: 'MITES 11. wEnn. AdMtnlstrator...o 4.,n0 non, 1-000 nnn ~_,___ Acres -Choice la nd s -u; • ~ w,t.,0,,rc0., 11% tbe C"---- 00-o.l7l::Vesollie7rio...l.lt! II , Ole 0:14,,°1',,r icre, on wia trec.b .1 f at- 61 to . . no cst. tOreL _ A clunstOt I liAll tl'ict:l;a't; lottel:,,i,. ttoW% Fate Tc...„,t'ea or ttooltltt.47.Ade sioa 741,0 T:. ' unoliir., ode. AIX :-..,i,.. - lex. Adas;ert. 'so ..11tOgrtotortostVint:acoccitoWt°03.. O 040% 5r0.10.44 • citAteroxsilicsi__,,,,,, tO•V'' 4,0 1410e* e 01033.4 1•94—. actactsVospois. Ws' „, i ... A . • c'IN I . N , . DAK OT A , lt I - AL,LIST FOR:SEPTEMBER T Tartu ut Cour, to t*telikat Towanda : . , C.-o. Strong vs. C. W. Chatie..,... Iti)Pea Clement ll, , nkel vs. Forte locherak - debt 4. T. yin, assignee, vs. V. E.. Piollet - staid Itoso I.lncent vs. Pa. & li:Y.C.T& IE It. Co - .7.ra , e Tempera: ce Sinith vs M. W. Wheelock (10.1 C. A, Ifeavener. vs. David It eaveneq ex'r....asspt .1. II Il i rnttley T. A Innzii4llll et 111,...,4 , ' eject P. _Ragan's adra'r vs. A. J. Lay ten et ; e 1.... appeal :Mary: I.l..gan's use vs. .t. I. La; ton el al.._ A ii .l wa t Runde!! & Matlock vi. nolcont'i & A agns..trus i .ass .1. L. Elstare v.. 11 itch Clark Iss.le MlMl . f.ipt ,Sp'g Itn.Co vs. Pottsville WI Iti.Co.deld Lertora Heath et at vs..lnhii Corm!! .. "... -trespass ;MP. W. Ei.ser vs. .inn. 0. Ward.. trespass WIS. H. Barnes vs. Win. )lay • tr spass! W. P. Coburn vs. 11. 11. Ilan appeal 111tnnt Horton's use vs. E. Shepard ' net Is ' '.. • - ... ) David King vF. env. Vial' sppeal Win. H. tialstlan V!i. 4., V. Owen : act Is J. Carroll, vs. Liverpool, 1.1 & G. lu.. C 0.,.. .dent First Weslavan Church vs. S. Powell et. aE..eject, C. F. tinetchltis vs. Win. Girdner tient; .1. Svrackhaudner vs. Chas. & lai Sill Fdect tldiptenas for second week retnrnible Itfunday. Sivetnbertl3th. at 2 o'clock, P. M.: [Mid week, Monday, Septemher 20th.. at 2 o'clock. P. M. F.O. W. 116ACK:11 AN', Prottoludary Towanda. July ad, 180. GOLIA Great chance to mike money. I.N,Voven tne:dtakat; bic u rlp h tlos e ts ter .the largest. cheapest and best Ilysistruted family ishbllepttots In the world. Any on curt bi3eoale SuceCAstfitt agent, gig elegantd , art given free to asibiscrt.wrs, The price Is so ;ow that tomcod even, bod sob:Tribes. Ore agent repot Is taking 1211 entLicilbers - in a day. A lacy ageot reports making over >t:00 clear profit to ten day a. All who engage mokeioney fast. Year c n ti-vote all your time to the bo s siness, or only your 'pans time. Yort 'need not be away from botne.ovor, night. t eirean do It HA well as others. Pull directions antl.4erms free. It yotr,want profit.ble widk scud its 'your address at ogee.. .It coats nothing to try the bust. nese. No once who engager faits, to make great pay, 4.llsleess stmsos a CO., Portland, Maine. Julyrao. Cl ir ET 013 R G lOII= p r -.. , :ptrzit 1.7 i q„,, R'FPO BM is Or Vitil 1715E3 (4+ =Mr , 41 4 g • a bt,t: _6 (4; - 75 • „4 1 1 0/ 125 - el :I a a i s WA. OLS o r 24 00 i'd) • 14 el (,* 1. 2r/ , 46 :6 37 fiti ^ -110 :5 , 1.1 a 15 1,1 16 St. 16. 05 Co 06'i 75 (10 1 , 1. 3 . an t 1 WO €9 2 25 = "AWltbDatnado. EQ. W. KIMBERLEY, ATTORNEY•AT•LAW, TowA*DA. • 012ree9temid door south of First ItOttow Itsuir+ • ~ • August 12. MO. 111DEAIRSVILLE (PA.). LADIES' EMLNARY.--Isesutifal grounds. ot mime tit uitdiug. , new end superior pianos for pie. Lice, and linoaocu %NKr UCCTION. Ten 11610.711 t, tors: Terms moderato. Thirtieth year 'begins September a, Mk rot CalllOglteS, to REV. T. U. 'MING, Prluelpsl. . utr 27 112 1.4 4 r. 03 o g 4 - 4 es .? e ) g .m@,. « ; 7 •. »gym; c g • ; ,„-r g 2 81 8 0 5 . 0 o •••$ •-• z o .7 0 - . r 44 • 'ke L-• X• " .. s. is E. Z a I= t\\oJ •:;! • •6-•, 3 \\~~♦ pPORTANT AGENTS!: ; THE LIFE OF . CEN. JAMES A. CARFIELD, By his perm/nal friend, MAJOR BUNDY. Editor N. Y. Mail, is the only *Killion to which Geo. Garfield has Oven personal attention or fa. D. Beautifully illustrated, printed and 11.15711.1. "MO best."—N. F. Coinno!eclai Adrertisee. "The neatest. - -N.. F. ileraid; •-nu, glens treful, pr,ll- bible and Yatisfrwtory. - -2V. rivikun?. Full length steel portrait bXHall, froina.tilciture taken expressly, for this- w - iTrit. Aettve , Agents Wanted. !Ahem! terms, 'Sep complete otafit. A. S. ILAI: & 112 William , New York • ( - 111ARTEIt NOTICE, hereby gds - en that an applb. at. the Art.of. Assetu.dc of the t r k of .I.ennqylranla, etAllUed:' "Ab 4 1, ' l6 . thO — .lntorporation and regalatko of leers, .rattotis,"nptiroved Aprll :."Jth, tall. and the sere rat iorpterneuta thereto, for the charter Of an intended Innded ~ : oripratton.'to be. called the •• 1: ub a A glicalt oral lkopoclationr”,tl.l4 character aryl ehjecter which la to encourage agriculture and horttrultureland the 4,alntenance'ot a driving park r .and for tTse.pur- I.Dsrs to bare, pv 4 tses: , aftd..Mioy . :lllll he rig ts. !ma c:tit:l and privlb. 4 g , s e,,uf.-rred by ..sab. Atl i of As seinNy mad its t•eppittliftltS. W t W. STON. Solcitok Ca on. PA.. Sept. .5. 1359 tca, SALE OIL • - • VALUABLE REAL ESTATE , . The invierf:hmed offer 11,r We';;fhe balance of th•• e..tate of 6. F. NIA:-.O\,yhlch irhlch he Lads as -Vustee, on - TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 21 'IBBIV e.sirserretrre sr IC; f'clo<•k, A. M. at the STIAlit; - 7 FI.OiTHIN - 6 MILL Ln Tow.aaa Borough. awl w1:1 s,ontlaue the same to the pretolses hereafter . The Fr. perty to 1.0 s,th.l Is a , STENM:- rLouitING•& GRIST MILL, WITH A PLASTER MILL ATTACIIED. Mtn. the 11.‘ILItO.sal , SWITCH CollltPeittd. Writ Th•• 1,4 on which thy ud 11K N'And 105 feet front en Main t.trtet and about ALSO -TI IE- -lARG BI :ICK HOUSE; LATE THE HESITANCE OF C. F. MASON. Also, LAll4.ll , f' lIANK BARN and CA I'IRIA‘IIt atotse, len linitse; dte., on saon• lot: Thk: btt ha , 3 fronlagr of 'a', int. :7:50 feet on '"filifti street, a'l4.;: - t id the olEtaw. • running [lir-in : oil I:3ilrrttd st.t .h o. the 11 - 3trr'r.ight... belong ling. A I,SO—A lot: on Slisin e root, tto• dwelling hon se lot on 'the north; :%1-4.41ti foot front and about 3241 tort drop. A fohowlnz lotA on the west stile Main street: Lot No. {. Cefitaining 5 acres: N o , 9, • S ;Neves (th:s lot ha+ the farm houie alol other ;o:•- 15olnllog, on 10 : No, 10, eontalatne. 4am es avid 23 pereht, (this lot has a barn ti 1;): No. coatalte. S Beres. ALSO—The forowing build ng lots all VII the east side of Nat'l ,tire[ : r cm, No 127 and 125. The two lots together 1:z a -triangular at ape. with two slde,i about 150 fee , each. Low 1-31 an.t 149. ' Each face Centre street an.l are 597650. No. 151 also facing I:eutte steect, 30 -fret front, . No. JOT on Maln street. SCzl•io. No..InG on Stafn .reef, :i01.150 (Small corner taken oft by sLtree!). No. 10, on Main ',tree!, 100 feet front and In ltl- • angular Film.. No. I-ht on Centre street, 34thiral, (lets on It the resere..ir hula by the Iron Company) No. 146, tN'„ , tr,g , both Centro and !.'reek streets. No. 71; with squall boome with brick basement. Creek street. • . No. 75 on ('reek and Cent re streets, G 65150 (Mball corner tiy,ken tit by ~':reet). ' N.. :4 "on er titre street, 661150. No. 75 on Cen tre 'tract. arixl 50., - . i NO. VI of CVIIIIV street, 54!,150„. Nos. SI and M . ' Mw (.'«ntre and Hickory streets, with hone upon, Nos.:o and 71 otr Main street, 95x123, with hon.,!. NO. PI! on Mairi:•trect,lSxll-1. No. 93 nn -31 4 in stret..t. 501,y alw4it 109. No. to - Maln.st reert, 50136. N0:37 on Catre st rue 30;1 . 03. ° No. b.') on C.`ntro stre,,t. No. 9on 1411n , a,1 stn•ot.'sezl:.o. \e•; fi On 'Ceti ;ro street, alv•ut - 591/25, with b 04,1) a,t/ fruit Irera \o, flil 1111 (h street `Any of the al.nveftle. , erihed property ea...he lea ehitytecl at Private s.3.le. l ..rappltoz to the T i n. tee. or Hun. J 014.01 POWet : Win. M. Manory;A , ..q., or, Cel:: J. F. Aleavot, toenther, of . the euunditire. .X.lnap of the property may be seen at the . Ilts.t Nation& Batik. • rk:Ois t;£ SALF,,—One..lllltil 31 tlnte'of sale. ~ n e•thlrd in one rear, and the re tnaintog third in .twoyeanovith Inlenen from Aare of :,,ate. • . . H. L. nCOTT, Trus.ee Towanda, Pa.; Sept. 1,.181,e. L. B. POWELL, PIANOS, OIIGANS .)IUSICAL MERCHANIUSE. WiOII I 7INO4VE., SCRANTON ,r . C 141 .NG 1:7 , OF ' Not baring romitieted the arringentetit to s,LI ,any It nste Ittettue3,3 to i lit. WALTER OUR, it wit 'hereafter he eotylicete ,. ti in any (1%11 name. E: J. SMITII. C.. 1 NV lIITTEN3JOR ri. e.. 1. POWICI.L 31t V. 1... (.i.C.111;0 i.; , 11l remain with turas bt,Ttqut..re; ~. t f , 11. .B: POW ELL S .1 .,. . , . 1 . , • Scranton, Va., July 1141830. 1 - NCORIJORATION NOTICE.; . - To all whom It may e ourern : The undersigned elltzens of Cohnobta, Bradford ''nuns. Ponnryl viola, hereby glYe nvtie,e that they Intend to aild.r to .a Law Judge or Bradford Cott uty for a chat ter a nd to no tor.orp?rated into a body politic In law,. with perpetual stlleieStiloll. tinder the name, style and title of The , Columbia Valley rernetr elation." to to' treated at Columbia, fitmirord; Comity aforesaid, rot the purpose, of the' the de.M, and, to nrotide suitable grounds for said. purpose,. F.ll 11 It MALEY, ' . J( . 11:1'N NIKSI.V.Y. 011 i: CATESI EY, , . .4 ,SA Nil:El:7i IV Altil. . . . ~ (.1:111N B. fIOWI.A.NII, NY. E. CITILSIAN, Solicitor. " ~ • and otr...rg. Colro pbla, S . 7lltt,rotx . .. rt, ISI.O-vt S. ' - .. NOTICE.LA-11- persons are forbid ,mttin,..Thi l be r on the lOrklift or 'the Ihto F.t• ANL Slalopiern, In OvertotC , Town,hlp, Ar;thout the writtou cioo , rnt of the untlkrtlised, uuth.r ttin penaity Lair. • JOHN; McGirtTßS t Execut9r Ovetton.lNY 9d, 15!.50.1.yt• " ! • ' WhILLES'- MILLS, Stauufecturers oil OM = WYALCITIN47, t PA. '- Cash p. 4 ,1 for grain. a. 11. irELLES iinclersined having_ ka. , ed the obi Saillabuty MW. would xolli It Md. patemkkge ul the. eekninimity. 4;ustom W.ek dour immediately Brat In annet order,;; all Irak, In the Mill have been reivireCand hereafter it wIII he . kept order. Fred. rfunr, 31eatraqt Bran ~, Constantly on, haul. Caih rata for grain ut Ma 3 . o / 1 /+ ,, liniltY W. Wh1,14 4 . • lkieneuetop,Anne,l7, VXECUTOR'g NOTICE. - --- Let irj ter% totanutotariltirtEr leteb granted 11. tte undersigned. under title tilset will rue tet4ano Itt , t George Shay, Imo -Ot Sllyaburing, deemetrd. alt persons Indebted to the estate of said tleeetlet.t are hereby notlfied to.reike latuiedtate payment, stet ell has tnitetatms ii&thAt sahrentate mint sno' tho same wily atttheDt cated to the ureters ,wttioniott, dt W1 41 ,1110., , ,.f)'3 , t A tirt It 101- ~i~ _.~ - ; -4