`•i. .'o • Taira . iiida, Pa, 'Match 5t,':4161. THE Democrats don't like 38 to 37. THE Prisident on Saturday decided not to call an extra session ot Congress.. Tat time has at Last come when the ice ident is something more than ornamental. E. H. NErnt, Jr., editor of the &en ing Sfar, Philadelphia, it is laver said wiU be appointed Barseyor•of the Port in that city. •• • • THE President of Fnince has accepted the invitation of the -.United States to wend representitives. to the Yorktown centennary celebration. Ilmtv Ann Cot.mis is to have a full length portraitzof es-President Hairs; to be hung in Memorial Hall, by the side of the pictures of Jous : "ADAKS and JOHN QUINCT ADA 346. CALIFORNIA has• jUit apportioned among its counties.-the latgest amount which the State has ever devoted to a single year to the public schOols. Alto gether it ONE of the peculiarities of the National administration is that the Presirient and his Constitutional advisers ate not 'dis pose d to make confidants of inanypeople, nor talk much in priblic about birsiniss. SENATOR. MILLER, Of Calif p tnia, Bays his fur seal ciitripany hail:raid the govern ment $3,000,000 out of the 47 t i100 ,000 we paid for Alaska, and before his grant'ex• pires will hive paid the whole 'sum we . paid Russia, while the seals, honestly protected, are more plentiful than ever. GRAXD editorial excursion is being arranged:for a trip to Now Mezko,..pther Territories and California this ikastm Arrangements have already been 'made for transportation and the route laiout. The points - for stoppages and reception 1111 the route are the.only matters }et in complete. • - f. Tut: Secretary of the Treasury announ ces that silver coin or standard dollars Rill be sent by efpress free of charge, in sums of 4100 or multiples thereof, or by registered mail in sums of $6O, or• any multiples thereof, not exceedi4 $3OO, at the risk of the person to whom sent, in eNchange for coin or cnriency. Ms people of Indiana last week adopt, ed again by more than a two-third major ity, the constitutional amendments Which they had previously adopted, but which the Supreme Court Of that State declared not to have been constitutionally adopted. This puts Indiana into the list of Novem ber States'as to the time of holding its regular elections. • PnEst DENT- GAIWIELD is reported to have remarked to a. distinguished West, ern . Senatoron Saturday : " Senator, as a personal favor to me, I want you to take Op and ottani/ion this Mormon question in the Senate. We must stamp out po lygamy.. I want this to be one of the dis tinguishing features of my admtnistra• t ion." Every one will wish the President God-speed in this noble work. AN order has been issued by Adjutant _ Clefieral LATTA announcing that the sea son, for rifle practice by the National Guard will open on Wednesday , April 6. Any officer or man in possession of a Springfield rifle, calibre forty-five, issue'. to him by the State will be permitted_Ao use it ; but the inspectors of rifle practice will see that the scorer carefully notes the fact on the score shept for future ref erence. PENNSYLVANIA has a big baud in the Cabinet after alli , The Secretary of State was born in WaVgton county ana Atte Attorney Genital-ti*Chester county. The Secretary of (,tie Treasury's mother was of Pennsylvania stock, and ROBERT LlN cow: • himself traces his family 'descent back to the =Me. Secretary KIRK WOOD too comes very near us, for he was born iu Farford county, Maryland,. just across the line. Oiat of the_, immediate enactments which•will be required of the Forty-sev. enth Cougress;_will be one harmonizing or defining moreclearly than they are now Understood the naturalization laws. In some parts of the country Chinese are granted certificates of naturalization, while in others they are refused. Ain what principle this difference can be,sws. fained;laymen are not able to say, but It -is a difference which ought not to exist. A movEmsvi is on foot in different parts of the State to call together the sur viving members of the first defenders, or three months volanteerri, of - this State, who left at the first call of President Lix ot,s 'for 'seventy-five thousand troops to , suppress the rebellion to April, 1861, for the purpose of celebrating the coming f,llst of April , the twentieth anniversari of the day the first armed and organized holdiers left the State of Pennsylvania for the seat of war in Virginia& Gnictr Dia resigned the Presidency of the World's Fair to be held in New York City in 1883. He haegone to Mexico to look after his railway interests, being President of the line which is to be built to the 'city of Mexico to ;Connect with the Trans-Atlantic lines of the Unit ed States. The Presidency of the Fair was tendered Mr. Watt J. .Jairsrr, President of the Erie Railroad, who held the matter under advisement tor, a few days, bit - finallfdeclined the position in consequence of ptessure of business. A aim has teen offered, in the State Senate for another commission, composed mostly of utemberis of the Legbdainte, to revise the revenue laws of this State. Two or three committees of thhi kind bare 6011 gottenup in late years without ever perfteting anything, or even report ing anything in y Of bettering the taxing system of the_ State. They have simply been an expense. If the tax laws are ever properly revised, it' will have to be time by competent men appointed for that purpose. Tax city of Chicago proposes to venture upon a new field of achievement and an gered. It is now maturing the details of a musical festival similar to Abase which have been bald in Cincinnati for several years past + and haw already settled upon the fbllowing points 1 The festival win occur in May , of next year ; its conductor will be TIZODOZE Tubs" who win hare entire sad sole control of the music ; a chorus pf atthousand rotors will be gotten together as tipeedily as posdble and put into training ; an orchestra of two bun-, dyed of the best instrumentalists will be drilled by Taos" and the enlists win' be the greatest living artists. The orchestra will be used in May Asti* bi New York city sod Cincinnati, and thi solids will be the same in all, • , • - MRS- GARFIELD, mother of the Presi dent, is a type of the Northern Ohio pio neer mothers, and has 'not yet forgotten the lessons of thrift and economy taught her in life by necessity. The follow:, lug illustrative incident'a - relited by one of the newspaper correspondents (Vim traiu that bore the President and family to Washingtent. In the burry and bustle' of the rooming, the porter forgot to ea tingnish:tbe la.nps itt the"car, and' they burned at full. bead long after daylight. At last the lighted lamps attracted the old lady's attention, when she said to tbei . President-elect : "JAMES, put out those lamps. It's . no use wasting the oilwhen it is doing no good." General GA.ttnat.n called the porter's attention to the matter, and the paste of illuminating fluid was stopped immediately. ILAZIONZ.-.1)A,11. We sometimes wonder if, during all this noise about political indepen dence the people, iho go on about their bdairiess, on their farms and in their workshops, bear in mind that sauce for the goose is sauce for the gander. Senator DAVID DAVIS; of lllinois, is par excellence, the independent'Sena tor. All the others are supposed to _ wear some sort of a collar, to be ser vile, cringing, and in mortal fear lest they may vote their convictions. When Senator Dam arose the other day to give his reasons for voting to continue the Democratic Committees, he went into the facts of his election. He was elected, he said, by Demo cratic votes, and in deference to the party which elected him she voted frith the Democrats. • And therefOre the high-jinks independent press went into ecstacies and declared the course of Senator DAVIS to be the very es sence of independence.F Now suppose that Senator LINO had arisen and saidtthat be Was elected by Republicans, and in defer ence to the men- who voted for him he would vote for a Republican or ganiza:tion of the Senate. Would the higlejinks irulependent press have lauded Senator CONKLINU for, his in dependence? The real and the sup posed') cases are exactly alike, you pereeive,-but what is independence . in DAVID 'DAT& would become nar row partisanship Roscor. CONK GIN. We hope we have male this plain to people of common - honesty and commonsense. We do not ex pect to reach the other art of peo ple. Hotiever, these were-two real cases, ankboth"Sin the Senate. When Senator Mauottr. arose and declared that he was= elected by Virginia Re publicans, anti that' he would vote for Republican Committees in the Senate, the high-jinks independent press put up a yell of disapproval. MA/10\E was a traitor, it declared, and a party to a bargain, and all that sort of thing. It was grand in DAVID DAVIS to vote with the Demoernts. It was infamous in MAII9 . NE to vote with the Republicans. • What do the sensible people, the people who have 'no axes to grind on pseudo-independent grindstones, think of such independent journal ism ? These .are the 'newspapers which have taken the . contract to ele vate politics above the partisan plane. They represent ',what they call re form. But you notice that this- sort of reform always sets its stakes at the maintenance, ` of the lines .1: - 71 - "the Dimocratie, - . party and the Oblitent : lion of the lines of the Republican party. Such is " indepeinlencee, cording to tie weak-cambric-tea order of political' humbug.: Its apOstles regard honesty and honor •as un known beyond their - Own bosoms. Nobody is honest who does not straggle along the borderland where to have convictions is a crime, and to believe in the existence of certain fixed principles is a sort of wild in famy. BUt , - - tull-grosirn men under stand that what is good tot. Davis is good for ManoNE, or any other per-' son, and that there cannot rightly be two - sauces—one for the Democratic goose, and another for the Republi can- gander. There cannot 'be too kinds of, independence. , THE SVP/Pfleall 1117111.1 PM Such- peOple as limit their readbig of current news and rumor to Denia attic and brent-Demoirttic papers, may conclude that there is the loftiest sort of a _war going on between the President and certain Republicans who are , denominatid "stalwarts." The report in such . papers is that'vither Cow.nio, Lo tJAN, CAMERON, and others' will run the - Administration, or failing to do that, will destroy it This is as much as to say that were Mr.reormaso President Gen. GARrir.LD and a few other Republiestus would either run the Administration, or destroy it. There is no sense -in either supposi dog, and there is no war such as Deinocratte journals _would ire glad to have the public ,believe going on the stalwart leadersand the President. The reason why such papers re port hostilities between the parties named is that no Democrat lance Gen. Jecicsox..who, by the' way was the first Democratic President—has ever run hie own_Administration. Certain Democratic leaders, and gem. entity the worst of the ')ot, hairoal- Ways taken posweesion of the Presi dent as soon as he was inkuiptruted: Hence, to a Democrat, the idea that Preildent can . run the Executive office hinue%'fi - pitetosterous. This is one of the twice in which Demo- Crate 'sliced not judge others by themselves. Neither intellectually or by tubing iri. public service has any Democratic Pneddent ever been the peer of r r tAltdat Warret,p, Es . is one who is mote likely to control men ths949 - be ixrntroUed too men. /110,,!tePPIPIWIY 1 .,,,.!-! / ‘? grirel atiteiOliarif:tilgt* the 11444 , 14it , # - tiligiOle verge II rOlisai e but ir!ne. arite,sollo), niiit9**terl neeoOhiltdy eArfeeted*Winiosetelk. idly conscientioni in the discharge iti public duties. - This will - be. a la: publican Administration just as Us- COLN% was, and just as was , Gasleri. It will not be exactly like either, or course, because the times and the issues have been modified soinewhat ... by time and events. . It is not at all probable - that Mr. CONKtINO desires - to run the Govern went. It is quite probable that he desiies the . preferment of men who are friendly to him. It, is scarcely necessary_to say that &,patronage of the . Executive cannot be distribut ed among the following of any lead er of the party. There are, hosts of leaders,. each of Whom has friends whom he naturalirliesires to see re warded. The policy of tbPres ident ; releites i to the distribution dipstien _.rige equitably among the Republican ' leaders. He will recognize no fee iien to the excluidon of another, be cause _the 'Republican party is one, or it is nothing. It iti not a family Where concora reigns unlin. N 9 political family- can havWiehrokee concord.- . There are many eiribitions and vario us selfishness, conflicting 'interests and various divisioni. The true policy is to ignore ' these pett i ; , conflicts in the party by recognizing all interests as integers of the com mon interest': This is the policy of ill ?Ir. OARFILLD. It does not suit the Democrats, bee use tkeysee.in it the ruin of all th it _ hopes of victory through , divisio a in the Republican party, But # . people may dismiss all apprehensro. s of a 'war between the President .nd certain leaders of thew, could. be only such a war t and that n issue favorable to the party.i) . - P one issue out o would not he any political I 'ader who would de clare war upoit the Adminiatmtion. The people d wand a Republican Adininiattatiq#, and furthermore de mand nothing:, ''AN odd-looking car has been run over the eastern part of the Erie railrbad cently. .The top of the car was covered with windmills and revolving cups, so that looked like the roof of a signal service station. The:Object was to test the pressure of the atmosphere ottani; going at different rates of speed, so as to determine of what shape to make the front of the cars in Order beat to resist this pressure, which is very great. In the cabooses attached to' freight trains on the Erie railroad there is placed an auto• matic Contrivance called the "tell-tale," whielf registers all the stoppages and the rate of speed over every foot)ef the road. Freight trains are not 'allowed to run More than fifteen miles an hour, and if this rate is exceeded - the fact is at once disclosed on 'inspections-0 the apparatus. Mn. MAYEA'S alleged savings while President having been made the subject of criticism in various quarters, the fol lowing statement in regard to the matter has recently been published, by authority. The *lnnate of the ex:President's sala ry for the fonr.years was $200,000. The expenses of Abe position during that time was $134,000. Had Congress refunded the $4,000 he paid for• the expenses of the visiting statesmenio L?uisiana, his sav ings would haie been $70,000. As it is, he went out of office with 460,000 to be carried from his account As President to the benefit ofihis account as a private cit izen.' When he became President he was burdened with debts to the amount of $llOOO, mostly on account of -bequests charged upon the Btu:cumin estate. Of this amount he has paid $60,000 out of his Presidential selary, so that the net Available result 'in cash of his. Presiden tial term is 46,000. Many people arelarzzbxl to kw" why Fmrice has jritiriissned a new three per vent. loan of 0)0,900,000. Them is no loan coming due and there is no prospect that Trance IS preparing for war. Under the policy of the present government the money is wArited for internal improve- -.pi tor malts. Last; year oiler 800,000,00) francs were spent tor th9i , ' purpose, tills year 400,000,000 Ganes Will be otspended, . and annually thereafte4 until 1890, 600,000,- 1 000 - francs will be paid out. It is estimat4 ed that (t 000,000,000 francs will be-spent on railroads, canals and other internal ins provenients. Hew can Fnume carry such a load" Her national blessing is al ready three times the size of our and is still on the increase. , But if the - people are agreed to submit to a heavy , increase of the debt for the purpose of reeking in- 1 ternal imprefements; they have the con solation of heowing that if their treasury goes bankrupt, they walleye something Urshow for their money. Ex-Sscurrzei &num presented his views on the Indian question toe compa ny of prominent citizens assembled at Amockstion Hall, in New: - York, a few days ago. • No man hr the country is bet ter qualified to ape* intelligently•on this subject.- During the whole 'penile of his ilecustariship of the' Interior be made the Indian question the theme of °mutant study, and on several occasions made ex- , tensive visits among the reserva tions, for the purpose of seeing for him self. '' There are two alternatives," he says, " which the Indiant will have to face in this country : extermination or civilization. No Amer-kin can con template, the former of these with any patience, ;and it isour duty W .- Consider the best way, in which the latter can be brought about." The ex.lilemetaiy b i n firm believer in the practicability' of br dian civilization. Not in . a moment why a Angle step ; but by pp Ildnal processes, steadily pursued, which will in the end terminate tribal organizations of DAM' mei their OOMMIUnd system of land _ter nra, and make them citizeasof the reibt States, on an awl Paths; withal), Aer citizens. The reservation system for hunting grounds and Indian • peaparient mat give *ice to iadividual Whole the. landin nesnUidt, 7, and to ,agriealtural and mechanical hutattyrinsoug.ths Ismintas, by' which theilidil be enabled tp support theuumbess: El-Seeietaary Sontrailkoon— lident,ls the Molitor bipolar/Paton and experience forams last four yews, that by educating aadtelidiag ibis Indiash'ind not -M fighting and Istossithilf Inay at , ao distant &WIWI - Wait* civilisation and seer' nu theIMOD* into ' 010 bed,' Oitsie tbstiblied itatah HAIGSBBURG. L TTEL ardal Cat . 1410411 "..v/ iii ZIP° Ma . jliplllll4l l 7 11401 - ,211, 1881.—Tbe lomiammti& tiensliont*elti*:plised the Home tinalltiMi'll4l:theinhe 22a inst. A sup 40114, - ,iik printing sbeti, sip/Mittinktivagieiedligs ohm passed An: act to grant' pensinns to the surviving veibrans'erthe Mexican war, sod to the widows of deceased soldier> Ind ialloM . said war, awe - (*taw reading, and after some discoed:me ib farther consideration waspo' stponed for the present. An -act to provide for tin mbar:4ton of all practitioners of medi 'cinejuid surggsiy was dim stimiest& enable length, ennead and laid over foi final plumage, vibe - tithe ligiMis-adjourned. In She /3emate on Wednesday the 28d bust., the epeolil order was the considers-, tion, in Committee of the Whole, 'of the bill to e s cheat to the Commonwealth all telegraph companies; corporatiOns and assoctstidaa which violate the provisions of the ConititUtion prohibiting the con• solidation with or the holding of a con trolling interest in stock of a competing line. This bill provides. that when any telegraph corporation shall consolidate with my other telegraph association, the property eball be forfeited to the State, and after a final decree by the propel Court, of Common Pleas establishing the forfeitanee r the Auditor General shall ex pose to sale by public auction theltran 'chime, props:llV, "Melts and bonds of said einflllaDY ; the name shall be sokl to On highest bidder, but no telegraph corpora tion or competing lines of telegraph shall become the, purchaser. / The disitussion upon this bill occupied the p rincipal time of the session, when' it Wis amended, passed third reading and laid over. A resolution was adopted authorizing a committee of five Senators and ten Rep tesentatives;independent of the Imes:Mine officers of both Bonsai, the Governor and Lienticant Governor, to make artange inept& for the proper celebration of the anniversary of the surrender -of Lord Cornwallis at Yorktown, on - the 19th of October. Mr. 'Jones presented the report of the joint committee in connection with the celebration of, the two hundredth an niversary of the landing of William Penn. The Chair announced the appointment of Messrs. Alexander and Lawrence as the committee on the part of the Senate to draft resolutions expressive of the loss sustained by the State in the death of ex- Governor Bigler. Bills • paired finally : Relating to insolvent traders and the ed• ministration of estates, commonly known as the bankruptcy act ; providing for the printing and Wining of certificates of sat emit:ration on parchment skin only, and providing a penalty.. The vote by which the till to fix the rate of boarding prison ers at fifty cents, a day was defeated, was reconsidered, and the act was discussed at 'considerable length, but without divots ng of it the Senate adjourned. In the Senate on Thursday Abe 24th inst., the bill to authorize railroad comps- . ales- owning railroads 'not exceeding fif teen miles in length to extend their lines, passed finally. The bill fixing the rate - of boarding prisoners at fifty cents a day in counties wham no ipechil law applies, was wised 'finally. The bill ~appropriating $3,000 for the erection of a monument over the grava of ' Governor Snyder com ing up on third refuting,' Mr. Wolverton stated that there was no stone in the graveyard in which the GOvernor's re mains lie to indicate the- plaCe where be was buried. A high trifilate was paid to the worth of the deceased Governor, and the bill pasied. At the morning session of the House on Thursday.the 24th inst., the bill to create a'loan for the rOdemption of the maturing bonds of the Commonwealth passed sec ond reading. The bill empowers the Gov ernor, Auditor General and State Treas urer to borrow= $10,000,000 at four per cent. interest, to pay loans of the Com monwealth maturing daring 'At the afternoon session a resolution was of fered, that the Attorney General's opinion in ;regard to the session of the Legilda tune and their salaries bereferred to. a Committee of seven, with power to report to the House. Agreed to. The object of the committee is to arrive at the motives -which inspired the opinion. ; The consid eration* of' the General Appropriatinnbill was resumed, when it passed secondr4ad ing. In the Senate:u Friday the 2.5 th Senator Morris read in place an act fixing salaries of Senators and members of the House ; also, a bill to increase the jwis diction of the Court of Common Pleas of Dauphin county. This bill revives a jurisdiction and places it in the Court here, which fornierly existed 'Only in the SupTema Court, m reference to issuing writa of mandamus where State officers are parties. Its application will be general if passed, but the anticipated conflict with the State on the salary question is what suggested the introduction of the Insolation now.-- Mr. Stewart introduced e concurrent resolution, which was adopted, cailieg.en Pennsylvania's representatives in Con gress to do aS in their power to hive the bills for, ttke t relief of pereems of this State who sufferedibteitigh - depredations by our armies during the war. A .preautble and resolutions_rehttive to the opinion of the Attorney General On the Salary question; that members bi - the Legislature. were entitled only to 41,000, let the session he long or Short, werkin. troduced, and gave rise to a free itals** skin of views on tbe part of a nuMber of Senators, some of which were not Very eomplimentary‘to the Attorney General. Senators bird, Newmyer and Rayburn opposed the resolutions because it was beneath the dignity !iff the Senate to take any notice of the opinion of the Atto rn ey General, for the reason that it was not before the Senate - se a public ;document, but an opinion asked for by private par ties; therefore the resolutions were un necessary—the question of pay would anvil up on 'the romintion for teal all jog:reliant. Mr. 'Stewed also . Opposed the ;resobition because it was sn assesuip tke of authority on the part of the State Treasurer to ask' the Attorney General's opinion, when the proper body to refer this question to war, the Supreme Court. It was an insult to the dignity of this body by the Attorney Gemmel, and the House of Representatives war the proper pirty to prevent* raid on the Treasury. Mr. Hellen moved - that the whole ques tion be postponed indeirdtely, width was An act to moue to osiergived and la: .. boron engeved in and &Unitise's' mines, Mc., tie :Payment of their yaps at revi ler intetials and in tortni money of the Vatted &MINN Ana moldered on thud reading, mho* , mended andlaid ores,: 'when the Smite' adjourned until Monday In the liodisca Feiday the rti last,' 114. Bdd n made a i , emlo the effect thatoa Vokkedw i - emitusittne Rr - formed to the' Boom tombs of szOoloiall daawasat Men the Moonier lead* sad relating to the selstiee Of ledielatire. The Ma- nabs sicadd Oki to sonotapHak its par po tbolosittd); old be :41 1 0 ‘ 14..1t, 44 0 SlSlOntista . ; Alltholtd4 4 1111 " mr :# 10 1 .14411** **W it ' , 6 0 10 - 0 4 41 ,41 11111,1 *, -1 114 ",-O t W IC - 1 !: YOr mal t# l4 :4 l 4 t 4l4lt r ‘-- 4 'igaterklolol • mhk4 .4 loptqd finite olds, Recorder 0111161 t ; .Nol second and third leading fon i neld l l7, Starch 29th and April stb, at 8 o'clock r. rt. .The fact that this.tioublesmire buel tress bad at last been Married of, celled thrtb ungratulations on all aides: ma dation yeas abo adopted thing- a special 414M1011 for Thursday evening next, to ' s ecumiller mod rending the proposed amendreent to the Constitution, prohibits -Mg tha_manufacturc 11114 intoziT cafing liquors In this State. The Speaker retained. thanks for the good order of the morning, sometbhrg annual for , ' Friday, when the }puss ad jourUd untilltforulay evening: X. I GENERAL NEWS. _J .—They had four shocks of an earth quake at Port Jervis, recently. —;AhOut 1140,000 want to the desdlettet office at Washington lait year. • —A eumpubsory educiition bill , has been psssed by the Blinols,Legbdatare. —One Factory in Buffalo turns out 10%- 000 pounds of oleomargarine per week. —A Republican two-cent daily, with a, Capital or. $BOO,OOO, is' soon to be toned in New York. ' l —Seventy patentswere issued to ladies in Mayen 1880 by the Pnient.Depart merit in Washington. ' -Now South > Wales ; Still spend £4O,- 000 in promoting emigration from Great Britain to that colony. —The American Sunday School Union will hold its 57th Anniversary in Music Ball, Chicago, May 12. - .—The MormOn Elder Staines asserts that the number of polygamous mar riages in Utah is decreasing. .. --In 1880 there were in the United States 170 boiler explosions, which'killed. •250; persons and wounded 55.5. -Small pox has broken out in Rich mond, Virginia. The disease was intro dpoed by rags,used in a paper mill. . —A new, variety of silkwcirm, found in the mountains of Nevada, is said to pro. duce a very strong and valuable fibre: —The introduction of the postal card, it is saidi.has decreased the sale of writ ing paper $1.1,000,000 aunaully in' the United States. —The new postmaster of New: Fork giTes public notice - that be will make no changes in the subordinate employees of the office. -Edison claims that his electric light is now perfect in all its branches. He has left his laboratory and is organizing com... panies in differentcites. .-Alta_Govertiors of t New Y k and Pennsylvania each receive .$lO,OOO per annum, the Governor of Louisiana $B,OOO, and the others from $O,OOO to $l,OOO. —lt is claimed that the Cincinnati schools have greatly deteriorated in the , past few years. Of the 87,618 children, in the city 41,390 do not attend - school. —According to the Railway Gazette, the locomotive builders throughout the country have enough orders on hand to keep them employed during the current year. • —The Western States, taken together, have been expending for their publiO: schools an annual sum of $341,202,492. They have a' total school population of 5,590,075. —After a long period of plocrastinatlon, the Illinois has at last ap propriated five thousand dollars for the erection of a monument to-Abraham Lin coln In the city of Bpringffeld: - 7 -.lndge Spier, of New York 1114 -Mon day morning, granted an injunction to re strain the issue of nearly $18,000,090 of common stock recently ordered by the Northern Pacific Railway. ,—AL correspondent of St. -Alexis, Can ada, says that 196 people are stricken with the small-pox in that parish; and there hare been 28 . deaths. Much distress ex ists, and appeals are made for aid. _ —Ten cows stood: in a row in a stable at Plattsville, Wis., with their heads fast ened in the usual way between stanchions. The floor wre away in' the night, and in the morning they were found, hanging dead. —Peter Herdic is making arrangements to give the people of Gotham cheap trans portation by the introduction of his cabs into that:busy city.- The price of a cab, holding four persons, will. he twenty-five cents for half an' hour. - , —The Delaware Assembly has agreed upon . a bill providing that $2,400 shall be, distributed by the Delaware Association , for the ediumtion of Colored Poliple to the different schools e Mate, Each coun ty is to get $BOO. William F. Dalrymile, of the famous grain farm in Dakota,-says that his clean profits for 1880 are over $250,000. He raised more than half a million bushels of wheat on 24,000 acres, and disposed of it in Buffalo at fifty cents a —The Beminary for ,Yo4g Ladies at Naskviller Tenii., under the charge of the proprietor,.the Rev. W. E. Ward, is said to be the largest institution - of tte kind •in the South.. It was opened in 1865 and hai graduated 563 students. 9 The present at tendance is 245.. —ln Chicago a movement istaking form to build an underground railway from the north to the city limits connecting with the proposed rapid transit system to Evanston and Lake Forest.' The cost of the tunnel and track is estimated at $2,. .—The Truitees of, Western . Reserve College, Hudson, Ohlo, iteelded on aka. day to remove it to Cleveland 'as a con dition of the gift of 1.500,000 to , the Col= lege by Amass Stone, of Cleveland. The name is to be changed to Adelbert College in honor of a son of Mr. Stone who died some tiMe ago. , —A young Gean who waiwi imaging the shoeing of: a horse was struck by a small particle of , iron, whist penetrated the pupil of his eye burying itself deep in the body of the , organ. In an eye hospi tal at Wiesbaden the extraordinary oper ation of withdrawing the iron by MUM of a magnet was recently performed with entire moons. 7 -It. dispatch from Jonesville, Lee own ty, Va., reports that a desperate battle took place on Tuesday in the mountains between twenty revenue officers and twen ty-three moonthineirs near Middleton's stillhonse, iu , which Jai, Jake and Bill Middketon were killed.- The revenue of t** failed to dislo dgm the - moonshiners than theharrimuled still ' home, and sent tor rehdbeeements to take the home by swim- "The moonshiners sallied out and drove the beskiipsrs away. The. de Herald has gone to the *Ole to ascertain the number of failurce mon the GA 0111111184011 . ; and seisms that during, the last ten ycers five hun dred five insurance • companies, represent ing eapltatto the aggregate-of- more than -687,000,000, have been withdrawn from tits business in the United States. O f' three, three hawked were destroyed by lb° Chicago and BOL4OR;#1111, 441071 and ' ponies 1872—ileaving Rio F IVIA 11 , ;. „ 1 04 1 % — O O 4 *:# o tig ed to A pitipi l lpuppollbuisg4 : isOte imit, number Of ,mines are Apt • At, Oir'ikod wider la ocean. In North -440,, PtIW the - set sTitpal: Ae.wutetity of nciiifulider the sea iiiiiettgitiaat 403,000,- 309 tow, and on thettorham coast uoder hoses, including a briidiii"Of three and. ,t belt mile! with are a, of sevutY - Pno .quaro 73 4 ,500,00 0 to w '. The taw rar ohm is a vein of an aggregate thick, nem of thirty feet. distributed in biz. • team. Engineers are considering . how It pan pp worked anciessfully, in the fu ture. —Nine _hdttdred Canadian emigrants filling with their stock and baggage nine ti-one.cari, were, snovi-boind °nibs out. skirts of Chicago forl a number of days at the time of the recent severe -western storm. Tbey are a superior , Chum of far .. ars bound for Matititobit. , They' take with. them all kinds of farm stock includ ing blooded. 'horses. Instead of looking like ordinary emigrants they resemble a belated picnic party, and bore • the en forced stoppage with reasonable equa nimity. ' CCAMMAI3O: - • —An effort Will be made to groa . T - sugar cane in Erie and northern countiesL \ l —Sizty.Wight persons joined the Pres byteFian 'Church at ()lean Sunday, 20th Dr. Tanner is attending a patient at Black. Creek who has not tasted food for fifty-six days.- —lt is estimated that eight years more will be consumed in building the'Middle Penitentiary at Huntingdon. —One of the main features of the gigantic scheme of Philadelphia capital ists to reclaim the Florida everglades, is'a ship, canal across Florida. • —The mean length of Pennsyivania is 280.39 miles ; mean breadth, 157.05 miles; its great'st length 302 13-46 miles, great-,. est breadth, 175 miles and 172. perches. / —A young mail - in Danville, Pa.,, takes s bath - in the creek every evening, staying, in the water ten minutes. He has follow ed this practice summer and winter, for years. st —Attorney , General Palmer decidps that the Act of 1874, allowing members of the Legislature extra compensation, is nneonstitutional, - Mtd members are not en titled to more than a thousand dollars pay. —Common laborers are in Much dr mend - at this time Mall parts of the State, aOd the prospect Is that there' will not be the same emigration westward this spring and summer that there has been for ger eial years past, ' • ; —A Germau.peddler, named John John, while being tormented by 'a party of young men at M'Keansburg, Pa., iu a fit of anger Cut Monroe Seltzer with a razor, severing the jugulv vein, causing death 'within an hour. gilin escaped. —Lumbermen agree that this spring will end, to a large degree; the'rafting on the West Branch of the Susquehanna river, for the; reason thatrilie . sources of friiPPy have been so reduced that when the run of' this spring_is - over,' which it is estimated , will agkregate three hundred million feet," it Will be impossible to make; another such a float. It must be borne in mind that this lumber field has been worked as no other region of like area on the continent has been cut at by the woodsmen. -It has been the source - of . supply for the Middle States for many years, furnishing the material for con structing nearly all the buildings therein. It is now nearly exhausted. ttii a source of Wealth, 'it will net soon-be surpassed by any other region in the same products, all things connected therewith fully con sidered. , - PERSONAL AND POLITICAL. - .=-Mr. Tennyson is in illlealtb. -Horatio Seyrnour is very weak and confined to hii,room. —M. de Lesser* will go to the Isthmus of Panama in June next. —Mr. Evarts will sail * for Prance on April 2. None of his family will go with him. —Hon. A. D. White will return home in July and resume his duties as President of Cornell University. —Dr. Loring, of Massachusetts, has been appointed Commissioner of Agricul ture in the place of Wm. G. LeDuc. —Ex-Secretary Schurz, at his Boston banquet, suggested that probationary up pointmenbi be made-in the civil service. — , Through the efforts of Mr. George Jones, of the New. York Titii4g, a fund of t 250,000 has been subscribed by individ uals-to be given to Gen. Grant. —The Pennsylvania House of - _Repre sentatives has passed a resolution -formal: ly - thanking President Garfield for .ap pointing Mr. MacVeagh 'as . a member of his Cabinet. —Fred. Decker, known as the Ossian giantwhen:tiaveling with Barnum snipe' years ago, is new at work in Canisteo. lie is growing old and bent over, . but wizen erect measured seven feet two. —Mr.'John qbaacy, of Franklin County, 0hi0,35 44iii to toe the oldest living ex member of Congress. His term was from 1832 to 1838. He was also once Speaker of the Ohio House of RepresentatiVei. Although ninety-one years old, he has at tended to his own business natil,the first of this mouth. lie is now dankerously —Gen. Benjamin Lincoln was the first secretary of war. Be was appointed in 1781. The last secretary of war is Rob ert Lincoln, appointed in 1881—just one hundred years 'difference . between the dates of appointmenfl A picture of the first secretary hangs upon the walls of the department, and a picture of the present will be placed alongside of it. There is no relationship between the two. —The statue of Gen.' McPherion, kill ed on July 22; 1864, before Atlanta, will be unveiled on the occasion of the annual minion of the Society of the Army of Char Tennessee, at Columbus, on April 6th and 7th next. The statute will be placed' over the General's _grave at Clyde, Ohio. --Secretary Blaine may take courage from the fact that quite a number of those who served as Secretary of State after wards becarne•President. Theurer' Jeffer son served under Washington, Jamei Mon.: roe under Madison, John Quincy Adams under Monroe, Martin Van Buren under Jackson, and James Binhanan under Polk. --.When President Garfield was a repre-, sentative in Congress several years - ago he called on United States Treastirer_ Spinner and said : "Gen. Spinner, dt you know that in one of the lower rooms of !this building there is at work , a class mate of mine? Be was wonderfully apt 'at college. He could beat me at my les sons, and is quick and honest." "What _ls his same?"• asked Geu. Spinner. "James was the reply. W,Atere uponTressarerSpinnersent for him, made arrangements to promote( him, • and ad.: yawed him rapidly. The same James .Giltfils* is, today, the. Treasurer or the Untied Staten. STATE NEWS. Matters of General Interest 64 ilr:s* nuebastaa4.l The Philadelphia Reeerd''Of . a ,re- . cent date.pnblished the confeSsion : of the ixigtOk diPlOrne. vendor, John Buchanan, in prison; It says tiri all the books., he had, the ,;:inatrieelation.)3oOk4 the minutes of faculty, Minutes of Ants tees,'account books, alumni minutes, and it mass of 'Valuable - -information; ,including a list Of. foreign diplomas Sold, a catalogue, of n - ddresses, in cluding over 5;0'30 .names of persons who had coiresioeil with him: He gives the names of 'wholesale-drug gists in Philadelphia who have Sal his diplomas, and he gives the names of .J)ersor.s to whom--his diplomas - were issued. , He relates bow diplo mas were signed by the faculty, bow in one instance three- professors; for five dollars each, signed five hundred 'diplomas for him, at.d how for live .dollars and fifty' cents the diplomas. which were. to go abroad, were certi fied to by v Spanish. Consul:: In all about ten thousand wanes are &angled bp in his-, , diselosureS. . -his given the names 'of many professiOnl abor tionists, and the means wherebY they destroy life. • He tells of the tricks of his trade; the quack nostrums that arc a4ertised to cure all diseases, and of the: imposters who • prey - on public credulity.' .He recites` inci deuWwherein he robbed grave* and how -on one- Saturday morning he stole five dead- bodies from Biabkley almshouse.. He tells .how •he kept himself clear of the courts -and their penalties.. He . tells of twenty-five concerns in this. country and in Eu rope by which degrees are sold. - lie 'figures that fully twenty thousand bogus diplomas are current is Amer lea, and. fort} thousand more in En- rope. He gives the authorities a lever by 'which they eau uproot every diplomat dealer in Aincrica., Kalloeh Acquitted of liAnrcier. ,SAN Paitscisdo., March 25:—After being nut twenty-four hours, the jury in the Kalloch case yest,eplay after noon brought in a verdet of not guil ty.- 'The verdict was received. with, pinch applause, and the defendant was heartily congratulated by his friends: When Kalloch was diseharg edadd got into a cArrhige to-go home ai . I - n iminense crowd took - the horses froth vehicle and pulled him. to his hbuse, about three miles distant. It ,h' s been whispered for - months pastl. , hat the sister of Charles Pe-. Yom g, g murdere:l - by Kalloch, , will avenie--her brother's death. In refl. eremie to theacquittal, the San Fran cisco! Chrwaele says : ":The jury prefefrred the testimony - of i perjured. characterless witnessess, to that of repnable citizens... The verdict is a blot on the fair fame of California." i -,. AnliAtiserlean °Meer to TaktCom.; ) tumid of the Chinese Navy,— Vi o • N AsunioToN, March . 25.—Corn mod, re Shufehlt will shortly be or- tiered on duty as naval attache to the. United States Legation at Pekin, for the Purpose of allowing ' bim to accept the command of the Chinese, navy.. The Viceroy of . China has '4,ffered him the command of the navy, being desirous of. re-organizing lt-on . modern Principles.' '6e , :retary Blaine is hearpy in favor of the proposition, believing that WI Will. have 'the effect of breaking up :England's supreinacy in' the- East. The order attaching the Com'thodore to the Legation at Pekin was Made so that his expenses could be paid 'by the' government. The, salary of Co MITI odore Shufeldt's new pAsition . is 1.120,004-a . year. • PITTSBURG . , Ya., March 25.—Seven masked men entered the house of John Connor, aged eiglity-one, who; with his wifeias :his only companion. lives at Catfish, - Pa.,;about fifty miles from here,, bowl& and gagged both, compelled the 'Old gentleman to giVe the combination of his safe and stole, $5;000 worth of gOverfiiiient coupon bondi, unregistered, and from $5,000 to $lO,OOO in• cash. The Alicouple Were roughly handled and may not survive the shock of the outrage._ —lt is asserted that the notorious Kal loch will be re-eleete:l .Nlayor of SanFran ctice. TOWANDA. MARKETS. ItEPORTi39 11Y ST & LONG. Genieralde:aiers in Groceiles 'au.] Produce, corner ' -Main and Me Screet:;. WgRINESDAY E N'TN IN G, it It(11, - Jo% Lsgi , - . Pion'' , per hi1t:.,.... Flttur per sack . Corn ]teat per Mt. Chop treed Wheat, ! t or ?,.1 CO 6,4,, I Cora Ry. t 7., - ca Oar. ..."t1 nueltwheat to (.13 Rurkwheat}ltem 6'l t 1':+) Clover SPCfI Timothy, resters, Beaus, Ii the, pork, raes s • • Laril flutter, tubs Rubs Eggs. fresh., Cheese Potatoes. per push.. 45 (03, Beeswax t L t L • , 20 ce,. 22 - . Ccal it , Cir.]) 1:r, 1:1:0. A. DATToN Bides CC CO: 0i?, Veal skins • - .30 SheepSlclPs Crab 65 Sheep INkitli,,c tt. 50 fll - U. DAN ID , )1V .4 Dlt O. tildes • Veil Skip! , Deacon Skins. Sheep • _ `~-- - 7 ---- - • . Miliorton. !sal lust., by • Rey. 11. 13. Troxel.3oel Lucas, Or East Troy, and 11la Bryant, Af-111111crtori. COLES—STACY.- - -In Leona. '.3Q lust., W. Statham, Sheridan E. Colei, of Smethport, Pa., and Mlas,Nora'Stary, of Leona. , • YROMAN—BOSS.—Ity' Elder J. L. Phoenix, nt his residence in Alba. COtlr inst., M. Miner Woman and Miss I, a 80.., both of Granville: MASON—VAN HORN.—At the residence of the bride's father, Mr.,Nelson Wood, by Elder J. L. Phoenix, 16th Inst.: Mr: Arthur %. Mason, of eauton, and Mrs. Sate Van Herb, of Tloy. • WAINWRIGHT—WICKWIRE...—At the bottle of the bride, ?Oth Inst., by Her, A. W. Hood. David Wainwright, of Corning, N. Y.. and 'Miss 31=1, - Wickwire, o( .Athens. • HA . NEV—ALL V —At the Parmittalre, Athens. - T. 3,1 Inst.; I,v Rmr. A. 'W. Hood. 31r. Robert Haney, of Rii•ibville, tinmwebauna conu. ty, and... Miss Tressa T. Allyn, of Ortvull. _ kNSCOM--SARNIIART.-1n GrinVllle, March 16, 1331, by Rev. S. T. Bovier,.N. T. ilanKeorn, or Granville, Bradford county; and Idessa M. Barnhart, of Gaines, Tloga county. KELLEY AMItEItIAN.—At • the ii! , -ntral 'Ramie, Canton, Starch 9tb, 7 by• the km S. P. Gates, Edmund Kelley, dr.. el- Leltoy, and Estella Chamberlin, ul Eranyille. EIMALL.—in East Troy, 19th inst., of general debility, .1. Edl4ll, aged 66 years. OWEK.—In Wymoi, 27th Inst., a daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Fred. Owen. aged 2 yearn. • UISNTEIt.—In Ea.st Troy, lath Inst.. of eausntnp• • tion, Kate Tibbets, wife of Leroy Hunter, aged '2B years. BRAGUE.—In East Smithfield. :Out Inst., of Mea sles. Josephine. wife of Wm. Bravo, aged 43 yeas. BOSWORTif.—kt teßaysyille,. Friday, the 13th. inst., Winifred Gray.ageill six months,.only child of Mr. and Mrs. J. P. liosworth.. ELNIS.—At the residence of her parents, In Mon roe township. near- Liberty Corners, on Thum ' day. 'March 17th, 1811. Miss 1)011 Ennis. daughter. of 'lsaac 'Ennis, aged 27 yeam, of consumption. •to • • • WANTED—On a farm at Ath ens, Pa.' a man and wife by the year. Man to do general farm work. Wife to take charge of and do the work at tenant licuse where other tarot help la bearded. , F.: BITCH ANA N. • 'River Bide "PAM, Athens, t'a., March ItifibAlwk. • • NoTicg.—An persons are forbid cutting liinber otlliie I:Aide's:A' the late Ed• ward McGovern, In Overton Township, without the written consent of the undersigned, under the penalty of the law. ' ' JOHN MetKIVEMM. Nrocuier, °Tartan, Mei Mt, 10 1A047 - 1 * • MEI MEM =DM 57 - 74: 7 .V./ '!.l (i) 1 fr. 4(1 lEZINITZ t.; 0 0 ;! 25 ICKEZEI 'fd b . Xl9 00 (q. 00 0/ 10 (4. 1 '2O 16 _ , 4, It; 4 2.1%. fiip IS 0724 75 a $1 25 90(4, 63 4 75 ei4 i so MARRIED. DIED. Igor jibsitilseando. 14 SUSQUEHANNA* CoLtsou.TElN 'Tierra. --14PUING T Ell A comber:tees EIAIr,W MM I. 4th. . . Expellee% for J nd board, tuition furnished room. front 1173 to 1180 per year . r Par estalorse or further parties. ;ars address the Prfecipal.' ElrMli E. QUIIIItAL A. W. Tetra .de. . October 24, rato. DEPORT OF. THE CONDITION IN of thil Fltal National . Bank at Towanda, lu-the Stato of Podasylvanla, at tt dust of.lnisl• ess Much 11th, 18. st t • aviovitcv.es. / ' Loa and dlscouuts . . • 4446.8:: 94 Overtlriwfts I=2M=== - - U. S. Bands on hand i 75.300 00 Other stocks. bonds, and mortgafta...... 16.641 00 Dim from Approved reserve agents 107.000,50 1)00 front other Natiolat Ranks. : 2,971 16 1)0e fronilStav, "Ranks and . bankers.— Iteal esialKiurniture, and dx.rores a 4,176 00 Current ekpmises and takes paid 3,919 15 Checks and other eash Items 7,H1 G 7 • Bills of other flanks • .840 00 • Fractious' currency (Including rtiekVs) IDI 31 Sp•rto 12,540 15 Lrgst-teutlPr uoteft 20.501 00 Relpt fund. with Ufi Tr. (5 pr et. of dr.) 2.175 do Total = . Capitst sloes pod tri..,,. lilts , c q 0 00 Sitrpluslittl6s. ooo 00 . • fTtultvided 000 ts _ 11.033 S 3 National flank notesputstanding - ", 40,500 00 individual deposit's 'subject to v.-beck 4 134 4 .0613 27 - . • Demand es.rt's of derosit,... 184,650 02. . ' • - I flue to othe National 'tanks ' ~ 11077 4,1 Due to Stag !tanks and bankers - 440 45 • . . . Total pea,:zis 73 State of Penbsylvaitta..Vottnty, of Ilradfopl. na: I. N. N. BETTS, Cashier of the above named bank. do solemnly swear that the aig)ve statement Is true to the beat Of Illy knowledge and hell;!. N. N. It F:rTS, Cashler. • Subserll,ed and tw . orttlo before me this 19th day of Match. I sd 1.• • W. 11. DODGE, Notary rubtic Col:ll,ll.CT—Allt.‘t : ' • C. M. stANNtLLE. .101.:F".1 P. .Dlrectf , rs .E. 114 I. E, Towanda, S!arrlixt. 1484-wl. _ . NEW GALLERY! • Patton',o3look, Towanda, Pa. 1 - •Y irMil GEO. H. WOOD -& . %ILL. RE READY F•OR LuzllNEss • THE VIINT.MON DAY APRII For the first f..rw weeks we sll3ll 'mak.: a specialty or. lin fur .vork eopylt.7.,of a!I iuk Of . p!alti out-door work, 'Stetto ,eopt, 3n4 large V tev,.. also mat.. Vi", haw.. 3 t,l:tblVl7eii: 4 to take four pletUrr% at outs ~ I ffing la very tflak limo. We shall make four gooLtz Tin 2.104 -rta fifty ee - n t 4 TIN: TYPES FOR i 0 Cts. EtATALLY 1.4 W. ---- • rg" REMEMBER r—PattOn's Block, earner Iltiti.r.Te and Maiipsts„Towanda T'asrati , l3, itardi at, IRS C:0231.1 - y - S2O stYle Equa/ coati, tr, t Itenisluburp• err /triad tf1 . .507 examined 6rib - re you Ty for it. ...Chia Cte 'Altb.r cork..rnmr-s f ,, r 4 .5z0 Auct.invs warn:4ll.d V, !A... .rs. Fewl rnr r.ur:lllurtrAt. fir. iar and TrstimrAlistls. A .1.: A. ITIMID • 17 11..1eui It, Pro..acCr i tiix, is EE 9! • Willi:take the reason of . owtotr's Ma k& iu Milan, Pa. TEL:II% 4 I -14:i to c•ne ware %it'll foal : two mares-owned by ff lad It get foal. I f mare ha. , proper txeatutent and her cult: dins before it Is tithe days old. only halt prlee will be ithargttd. -GA:Mt:ETTA "is a th.it - • pie roars oh). If hawk high. and Weigh , 247.1,1,4404 is ; s,tylt,h• and h,tlve, letrfcot (rite the around up. .11e I, iti very fine . condition, as lie has lie , tti &bon carefully a/I the pail v, itti. r in double and sit:We harnes.• Ai. rolta arc large. reit-formed. wilt: l i iuo action. They arc to good demand : s,e.filt each has been refused for yearling colts, sired by hint. 'food pasture (imbued for mares at rea•tar.ltie R. S. EDMISTON. Own. r Mitan. Itradrutil ('n., Pa.. )tareli 21, 1981..310, Burchill Brothers MARBLE WORKS ! Niatotrattkirt:rs ct MAIZBLE AND GRANITE MONUMENTS =EMI T Olia:S TONES Main Street, Towanda, Pa. [Ono door v?uth o( 11;.nrs plat:lira! 3tat'Ae Workers our,efv4n , , we eau an,,rd to sell elfeaper than tlni%..'who entpkoy their labor. w•ork warranted aid no defective marble 11 A. THE EQICTITOLE LIFE ASSURANCE SOcaIETY. t+f the V. 5., N,w Y ,, rk City Aqsots:.; $11,1i1ti,602: an increase of more than Three ,I_Mllars i IS'NO. . 1 S arplus,•sti,2'2)...i i ,294 : an iner%tni; of (nii ! and Three-quarter Atillions.of I)L. , llars in 1 4 1).. • . . busine:i s . $3,5,4111,5iri;'. the largest amount i ', sned - y any company in I.*So. polirirx IN( 'O,S TVS TAM, E •alte r ei t ree yt." rs. $1.900.000 paid to Policy holder; in 11040. NOt A CLAIM . • co:it EsT Tontine Savings Fund Polieies may be terminated at the close br certain defined periods, on terms more advantageous than. upon any other plan. These . policies piOve more profitable to the :policy-holder than anv , other form of insurance. For full particulars of TONTINE, :mil all other forma of policy IFi,ued Vy this Society, apply to JOHN ll„ STRY KER, 'Agent, • '• At VirstNatiotoYigatit, Tom:1'11(1a, l'a. L. c.ct,,, • ;20, llrtm4,lwa'y, Y. 3lrtA N E W DINNER SETS! -AT C. P. WELLES' CROCKERY --AN li, 99-CENT STORE This ware is called, Flown Dark Blue Asiatic Pattern on Parisian Granite. The body of the ware is a rich creamy white, resembling china ; • the figuring is varie gated and very handsome. There are 127 pieces in each :ier, and it; is worth at least: s2:i, but having bought them at less than Market rates, - will sell at alow price. ALSO—Have just opened a Pattern called Blue Peony. It is a han*once blue on Ironstone, and .at samu prifies as white. This ware is in open ifeck—for sale froirt one plate or cup and saucer to a . full set. Our stock of White Seral-Porct.lain and 1 Ironstone was it..:% - cr so large - and complete now. we ask 4S-it -eornparisou"ori QUALITY and --4.lfouse Furnishing Goods hi great %nle t*. Bargains, in Table Cutlery and ti lass 'rare, Trunks and Traveling Bags.' . Mast cult incl OMMITTEE'S SALE.-4By r- - toe of an Order Of the Court et Cameo Pleas 0 the countiof Bradford, the sinderstgned. corn. mittee of the pencilled estate of litklutet Manor. rill expose and sell at ptiblto said; on the rem lee In the township of ()meter', 11l Mid Cbanty, on MONDAY. the. Iltb day of APRIL, net, at on, creirtek In the afteTtinnti, the fallowing deserti.d real estate of said Michael Macon. gunned in t he township of Overton aforesaid and bounded Is 141. lows ,'six : B-ginning at a cherry tree the amt beast corner of lot Ito. a, and the northeast of No. : thence 'writ ascr ewers.. perches to ,a hesell the •eoneleset cornet of the warrant; tberme 'north 55-, west 161 perches to a post the northeast torus r let No. 11 ; thence south 11 0 west 10$ pest hen !I, 3, beech sapling comer of tots Nock • and 7:-tber.. south-0 4, tut 161 perches to the piste of hegi o ffing; containing 10s serer. Wore or Leta. atone acres Improved,' with I log house, 1 framed taut tarn, and an orchard of fruit trees thereon. ' TERRI, OP SALE—fine-third of the portha--; money to be paid when the property is situ. 'down, one-third In one year, sad one-third years; same to be secured hi judgment agalip.t the premises. ' JOiIU. OA lilt+, "March 17, Met. - Committee,' 0 Ill'llANS' COURT`SALE.- Bv visine of an order issued out of the Orphan.' Court-of Bradford County. Ptuusylvanla, the u::. designed, administrator of the estate of lb!tsy Coburn, late of Tuscarora township, deceased. s it sell at hubile sale ou the premises. on 4 , WEILN D A Y. APRIL 7.oth. 1981, at ono o'clock P. )t.. ti foilondus described real estate: All that CP Mc. messuage, tenement or tract of-land lying and te. tug i n the towns, 1p of Tuscarora, County of - limd ford and dtaw Of Pennaylsaula, bounded norb lands of: the estate of Wilmot robins, 4i , eea..ed: east by lands formerly ow. ed by Merman H.., and other lands of Martin ifontgoinury and A..,. Taylor; south by lands of Charks Lart Ka, . a i ,.; west by the public highwayqFadingtf, 1tay.%;;1.: contains 43 acres. more or le!.s . ab nil lthimprove with I fram•-d. house. r framed barn With bu,Cn,..of. ans.4l.feet. fruit trees. Arr., thereon. .TEttltS SY SA L.F.---IdOo of the puiehase noMey to be paid 6n the property being stroll: down, and theLhalanee .conflernat Mo. : ,200 00 .S.OOO CO 117 ,, 1 = 75 Spring, 1111, March 21, 1:5.51 ORPIIANS'. COURT B s sir:ue of an order itt4Ued out of 0.6; Hrphans' Court of firadfo4leounty, Peelisylva:,l2„ the 'undersigned, Adininlitrator of ' the ss:stri of Mary A. Reinhart, late of Herrick township, deceased, nil! sed ai public rale. on the premises: of the_ tate de:cella:AO-on TU ESI) A APRIL .7 . ,ra: 1•.1„ the. following (feu:Ms d real rikate, : One lot, !.ituate In the township of Herrick, botiudeslas fellows: .On the awl!, by land nose In the poSsesslou of James Wetniore, ea,t by the piddle highway running from the sillar of CamptoWn tcrtfriveil HIII, south by land of Ij,lV, Partly, anti on the west by land of W. A. Wetwore: containing about !S an acre of land, be the .2ito, • !Mao •or lets , with ..! , tnall framed house, ft awe , : barn audit few fruit trees tbereou. TEksis OP sAT,E.—tine buntired tit:Harsco the property being struck down.; balance on , ronti r . W. A ..1V ETAI lier,rl.-k% file, Pit., :Ware lk I CTDITOII'S re e.g.te of. 31n-,ex W. tortielf, late of '444.r ro world p of 1, iiiiiipold! ducoantur; e . Tlva oltlersignol, an Auditor appointed 1,,y the Cour: Of Bradford Comity to distribute the' fur,!..Llti the liaLtis of. the Adtutnistralor paitial account, will aftend. to tlo• appr.'l,rlnentou SATURDAY, the 2:01 tii,y of 1111:1I., 1.,11. :14;10 0%1004 A. M.., at ',O. in - Chu Borough - of Towanda, writ ti a nd claidus t , rst.. neu4l e -1,, furori l dftliurr.d from cowing la up.in J JUN CODDING, Towatala, March 24, Ittr,w ra, Auditor. A D.NIINISTRATORIS NOTICE-. ..—Letters of adratillstratlon havitit; been granted to the uuderslgnetl, upon tbd:ttsta , o of e ts.y . Cohn ra, late of Tottarura no: nx t, giro•li that an indebted to ,aid ft.tate ate requested to image liorne.ltate pay-. wet.% awl alt person: hartng legal etatnn agar! ,t the ,Wlitt , r ,, , , t:t witlinut delay pro. t.er o tier for ,a.tteteent to I. 11, Cohan., ldumt istratnr, at his re,sloeitre la.ajoltig 11111. Pa. . • Spring / 1 / 1 1..31:At*, 21, ADMINISTRATOR'S' NOTICF.. Letter. of Atlii,thiiitrattrn having li(en zthl 01:‘ , the undersigned, up: ti the relate of hi.raeii Tolini.T.fatif of East sini t field tn - p„ decesNed, nolo e lieFetiy green that Indebted to said eztate are reiwun.eit to ofs•te honied's* p.viiieLt. and all persons "havitig ciainLi again,: saiii must pre.ent the ' , atop atltlwn; kat-. d tit -he thutersiiguetli for Re:Airmen:: • II EN YC. IMIGII.I, ‘I, East • Pa., ± I Nlarr h. ::1. 1,11, ti k, • • AnNEINIsTRAToitis Let tpr.,. of a , :roit,i'irati•4l Lath g ~c cu graNt r• Pa tLe utAtt,lg fleet. the ..e,l,Ce Nillel).,l,Ve I.ltchfteA e I Ilerel:y ;;;ret; that pereoLt, indented to t es.late ere r:,111:!•1e0 1,7 1, 141ake !bine:Mate vav- Int . • 1, awl :IA 1,3 Laving .:1113 1:11Int 1.1e9t - Let duly authetqlcat±...l u. the r..r .\thous. Pa- ..M.111:11 3; IsArtoo • A• D:qiNISTEATOIt'S I.•!tters of Ail tothis;ralion haylug 1;4.,«n var,t• ell to di,• untlet•Azuetl.,4ll.....o the eNtate of _Mary A. 1:&. , ..11:.rt, lace 0.1 ii rti, deceased. e r_i• twveby give!, that att tr?rsons iudebte4l to t 1 . 1. , , at.l e,tate are .reque,tell .M ak.e 'lame-Mate p..l 7 ii.,ht, 411 pt•rs , n- r 1 . 4111 h. .agaiD4 ?said to i:et present the same duly authetalcated tinden.l7,:led.ro'r • . NV. A:. NV.T.T310121., lien ti•hv9lir, I*.i.,Ntardi 3, IS.SI-o . w. • • DMINISTItAI'OII•.'S -NOTICE. 1 /.et ter, adtlilnipt rat tvi: -has ,een orsnt eJ'.o the ender. gned, Tipp!' tile .state-of ler.dilla . flariiih late of 1.1,-rrii-k, Pa., deceased, .notice Is herb. given that all Tenons Inddidtd to til t . 4”itato am re-quested tU male Inniirdiste ha T nie:d. tiersidis having. claims against said eita?tt io•ist jaresi'..ht llte. sf.toe duly ailtheuticated to th, for ....-ttlrol , , ht . , 11.trri.,;3. ..0,1-tlsw I)3EINISTIr.ATOIt'S -NOTICE. having.b,:agrant v't upon thr e . mtate of E. 0 . G. ndrle b. 1:::•. Towatols .Borcugh; ih tit'TV) , S.glV;ll Oh! all prssonm Indebt. d to sard rstato Sro nlittehted to trial - .1 - tintnettt.ste lorrs 0. lovlt.g ciaitna again 4. v.:ate• r oo f: I.rer.ens 'any. dolt autl“”iti. to no: t40... , ..t5igh0l for svtittloe:,t. N. AdminlstrAt,r. T,0ar. , 1;1; Pa.. Feb. '24, 1,.1. -, 17 . t-Tc e•••-ti-tilelrt:ASr.:ll:l?;:ft:ll,:leCut granted E. — !: C t! t /e ." !..I,,ter.:itto•dt ruder land tegameht or 1)T. .te,-.• 11:trta,, L i t. , of rwnrell.twp.. deoza,e.i. at' ip.ttrstAis tutlehted:to the e,tate of said dreedy:nt an, h. relic .nwitted to . Ina k , itomediat t ,.• ; _wy. :tt:d at! having' malt.. against 51id .. .144We 111W•[ , : tt:tedtity authenticaled to the (,r Herr!..1.v111.., l'a.. Mari ti.k ECUTORS'N' N btice .t. j givett that 41: perstitis (.1 o ,4•••:tsi mak:. abil an c1a111.4 , agaiii , t