TERNS OF PUBLICATION. Tile BaaI:WORD it SPOUT XIX Is published every Thursday morning by uoountCM i HITCHCOCK, at One Dollar par annum. in advance. e Advertising in all cases exclusive of Bab• scr:pt ion to the paper. SrECIAL Nom.; Es Inserted at TIN Ciaresper line for first insertion, and pivec earrelperline for each ,uosequent Insertion, but no notice Inserted for less than fifty cents. 4 , ICE kitI,VADVER CtSEIIENTS will beinsert ed at reasonable rate s. • A,,liututstraior's an I Executor's - Notices, 112; A u Mors Nottecs,3); aimless Cards, Ave nave, (per year) SS, latillkOLAl lines /leach. 1. - early soirertisers areentitled tc • quarterly sages. Transient adverilselnentSMust be paid 'for In advance. Ali re solutions of a 430Ctsit lon's ; communications of limited or individual interest, and notices of, marriages or deat hs,e icee ding five lines are charg- Fl vs c exts per line, but simple noticesof mar: riAges and de sths will be published withoutcharge. he It KrouTTM having a larger circulation than any other paper in the county. akes It the best a dv.rtising medium in Norther M n Pennsylvania. Jou PRINTING of every kind, in plain and: fancy colors, done with neatness and dispatch. Handbills, Blanks. Cards, 'Pamphlets, 13111heads, - , /3 tateinents. Ikc..of every varietyand stylc,printed at the shortest notice. The ItErOitvEtt once is well supplied with power presses, - a good assort ment of new type, and everything in the printing I Die can be executed in the most artistic manner and at thelowestratc 3 . TERMS INVARIABLY C ASU. Vusir►ess grubs. D AVIES, & HALL, .krfOILIC ES a-vr-Lsw, SOUTH SIPE OF WARD HOUSE. Dec 23-78. SAM W. BUCK, • A TTORNE Y-A d W:- E0y.1319. TOWANDA, PEl:lrd. 'Office—At Treasurers Office, In Court Pollee • XV" 11. E. A: - ; THOMPSON, • T • A TTORNK F AT:LAW. TOR ANNA. PA. Other lu Mercer Block,. over C. T. Kirby's Drug Store. All business t rusted.to their care will be attended to promptly. Kspecial attention given to claims against the United States for PENSIONS, BOUNTIES, VAT EN TS, etc; to collections and to the settlement of decedent's estates:- W. H. THOMPSON, EDWARD A. IlicilersoN .Apr.l - 8111 7 "it BEVERLY S_MITII & CO., BOOKBINDERS, Aud dealers In Frei, Saws and' *matqurs • Supplies. Send for prlee-lists. REVOnTEn,Bullding. • - 1107: 1512., Towanda, Pa V . - L. 110L1,181,i4f.t, D. D.. S., DE.NTIST, . . Successor to E. II Anglo). OF FICE-Seronil floor of Dr. Pratt's office. Toßanda, i'a.,^ l lautiiry 6, 1681 AI ADILL & KLNNEY, 41701INEYS-AT - LAW. o:llce—Rims formerly occupied Dy Y. 31. C. A. Reading - 11. J. MADILL. 3,14,50 O. D. KILINV.V. JOHN W. CODDING, ATTORN AW;TOWAyNDA, PA. ' °Dice over Kirby 's Drug Store: TI-10MA.S E. RYER. ATTORNEY-AT-LAW, WYALUSING, PENS,A, Varticular attention paid to business In the Or• Omit: Court and to the settlement of estates, :ieptember Yi. 1879. 11)E9K. & OVERTON ATTORNEYS-AT L ASV, • . TOW&ICI)A, ?'A. I) 4 A. OVEAtTON, BEN.' M. PECK r p ODNEY A. MERCUIV, _L ATTI I It7 4 LEY AT-LAW S • 'TOWANDA, - solieitnr:nc Patents: Particular 3DCllo3ll._pald to bitNita•S in the Orphans Court anti fo tans settle ... lotlit e,tates. 41:11co tai Mentanyes mock "May 1,'79.. -- - OVERTON & SANDERSON ' , • -t , • , ' ATTORNI:Y-AT-LAW ' . .. TpWAtillA i , PA: E. i•; EnTON. Jn. - aon N F. SANDERFSP.7 .. - . • ....- . Y • . _., ATTORNEY AND CoYNRY.L.LOIC-AILAIV,. • NIONYI:Or. 4 .E. P.V. . • z ' .. .111.1ge Jessup having resumed the pracHeeof the 1;1'X in Northern l'eunhylvanta,*lll attend to any I, ;; ;.11 ;,,p,11, e :, in t ruNted tohltn In itrailfortl - county. 1',1 ,, .ns wl•Zhlnt.: to cant:l:lt hint, chn .call en H. 1 cgrreetL:r, E,11,, Towanda, Pa., when an appol ntmen t e.,n h,t malt. . FIENAY STREETE, . i i• ATTORNEY AND COCNSELLOp.-AT-LAIV, , .• -... TOWANVA, PA: . . - ! Feb 27,'7J L. HILLIS, ATTonNLY-AT-I.A*, TOWA!ZDA, PA. T_TIRAM. E. BULL, 1-1- SURVEYOR. F:NGI trlS,Ertf;cG, ? , 1" aI:LYING A\D IDRATTING. f 3. F. Mason, over Patch & Traer 313111 street, TuivaUda, ra. 4.15.80. ELSBREE & SON, ATTOUNEYS:AT - LAW, TOW A N A, PA. N. C. E!.SllltEti. 011N•ly. fr Al r.)itNET-AT-LAW ANN) U. S. COMMISSIONLII, TriV; AN DA, PA. tlic; , —Monti Side Putdic . Square. Jan. 1,1875 ANDREW WILT, II ,tirronNET:iv-LAW. I ithe.k, Maln.st. over J. L. Henri st,•7e, . May Le consulted In Orman. (April 1:,'76.] Mil J. YOITNG, i • „Tro„NEY-AT-LAW, TdWANDA, PA ililica—Merrur Block, Park street:, iap Rtafrr S. IL WQODBURN, Physi c r clan and Surgeon. Office at residence, on brain street, first doer north of M. E. Church. Tuwatiaa, Aprll 1, Ibz.l Teeth inserted on Cif;ld, Silver, Rubber, and Ar. Tunlum base. Teeth extracted without pain. 0rt.34-72. rD. 'PAYNE,.III; D., .PHYSICIAN AND SL EON. lr:tck..lTer Mootanyes• Store. °thee hours from 10 _ • to 12 A. M., and - from,2 6)1 r. M. Special attention given to DISF ISES 1 • rISEASES Or' - and i 432, Tii P. EYE THE EAR MRS. R. J. PERRIGO, • TEACHER OF PIANO AND ORGAN Lessens given In Vl:am:ugh Has and Harmony ultiratlon of thr Varre a Fpeciaity. Located at J. P. VanFleers, State Stree:. Reference: Holmes Passage. Towanda, t'a., March 4, 1880. MMW COUNTY S.urEitix;rENDE olive day last Saturday of each mohth, over Turner & tiurdon'S Drug Store, Towatida, Pa. Towanda, June 20. '1 S. RUSSELL'S G F.NF.T:AL I,NSURANCE AGENCY ‘4•43•2-70tt. TOWANDA, PA-. E DWARDWILLIAMS, PRACTICAL PLUMBER h-GAS FITTER Plan of.bustness, a fee• doors north of Post-Office Pionildng; Gas Fitting, Repairing Pumps of all kinds, and all kinds of !clearing promptly attended to. All wanting, work lu his line should glveJilm a Dee. 4. 1879. FIRST NATIONAL BANK, TOWA'SDA, PA. CAPITAL PAID IN 6123,000 SURPLUS FUND ' 73,000 Wills Bank offers unusual facilities for Millman* action of a general banking business. • N. N. BETTS, Cashier Jos. TOW ELL, President. lIENRY HOUSE, C ZS ER MAIN & WASHINGTON STRIEETS FIRST WARD, TOWANDA, PA. Ideals at all hours. Terms to stilt the times. Lugs stable attached. HENRY', PSOPEIZTOI. Temlittalt. jtilv.ll. '7a.tt. AFEW COPIES OF THE ROAD LAWS omilio two st tbit'OXci. • GOODRICH h HITCHCOCK. Publishers. VOLUME EMPLOYMENT' FOR ALL TO SELL A. HOUSE ,- HOLD ARTICLE. The poor as well as the rich, the- old as Well as the young, the wife all welter' the husband, the young maiden as - well as the young man, the gir al well as the boy, may Just as well earn a few dol lars In honest employment, as to alt around the house and waft for others to earn it for thein. We can give you employment, all the' time, or during your spare hours on t traveling, or in your own neighborhood, -among your friends and acquaint ances. If you do not care for employment. we can impart valuable informationlo you free of coat. It will cost you only one cent for A Postal card to write for our Prospectus, and It May be the means of making you a good many dollars. - Po not neglect this opportunity. You do. not have to invest a large sum of money, •suid - run a great risk of ,losing it. You will readily see that It will be an easy matter to make from .10 wpm a week, and establish .a lucrative, and independent business, honorable, straightforward end profits. ble. Attend to 'this matter NOW, for - there is MONEY IN IT for ail who engage with us.. Yee will surprise you and you will - wonder why you never wrote to us before. We - enuf pelt pericer ldre free. Address BUCKEYE Will GO.. (Name this paper.) octli.me Manton, OHIO, 'EOWARDA PA. BELLING OUT Mari!" 1, 1881. AT COST! E.A.R ErWAß'ik .NAILS-NAILS,. :‘ STOVES, WAGONMAKERS' BLACKSMITHS' SUPPLIES. [novll-75 , The Entire Stock of the late firm L.EtsunEE of Mclntyre 13rothers Enlist be closed out at , Cost s within 'Thirty Days, by the pureha- ser Goods recently bought at Sheriff's sale. TOranda, July 18, 1881-ml. 20 OLD S'T.A.I4-1) Are now better prepared than over to supply the p blic , with first-class r t . 1. ..- • . FURNITUREi Wo manufacture our own goods and warrant them to bend . represented-. - • PARLOR SUITS In all the leading styles. DINING-ROOM, KITCHEN AND OFFICE FURNITURE. IN ,INDERTAKING While we - furnish the finest HEARSE and Equipments, a larger and better stock of CASKETS and TRIACKIGS, with a large experi ence. In our business, we' guarantee as low, If sot lower, prices than those who have not as good facilities as ourselves. ST We furnish Chairs, Pall and Corpse 'Pm servers, free of charge. CALL ! - EXAMINE! COMP.ARE An 4 thee purchase where you can do the hest J.. 0. FROST'S SONS • Imia43 l Sept. 11 1 1111, IWO Abvatisnunib. IRON, TINWARE, ---AND--- M E JAS. S. KUHN. YEARS 20 AT THE J. O. rost's Sons Of every deso BEDROOM SUITS In Walnut, Asb, Cherry, CnTTAGE SUITS In all desirable styles Drown children of the autumn wood, You tell mo of the oldntrtima, When o'er the hillside paths Onanied, !it bright October's golden prime. When Meath the maples all aflame, . I dreamed the plerirant . hours away ; While round me lite s'pletare r falr The woodlands In thole beauty lay. And the white, mist•like fairy veil,' Came slowly creeping up the hill, From where the river haate4i4 uul To the broad pond beside the mill There Mild the grass and fragrant ferns, Just ratted from their burg home, _ Amid the Maims all saffron died, The chestnuts lay around me strewn. Ab tib what Joyous twits was mine, My `ti et with brown nuts to till; Whl the boughs the light-winged Jay Gives sue a welcome loud and shrill. Bow well I love eat fi woodland voice. The squirrel's chirp, the brook:a low Borg, The merle of the alr•harps wild, Borne by the.wonderlng winds alone.' That mossy seat beneath the trees. The wood with spicy perfume sweet, The carpet golden, green and brown. Ity Nature spread beneath my feet. I ne•er shall see Inch woods again, _ Those autumn days can come no more ; For life has drifted me away From youth's enchanted, flowery shore. Bow strong the tie that binds the heart To all It loved when life Was new; The atllstde path, the orehardalope, The pastures where the berrievgrew„ MI Aodhere in commerce-crowded Mart, Amid the restless, busy life, -Where all the world seems met to see Who shall be foremost In the strye., • . 'Mid all the sounds that 1111 the street, These small 'brown noting boxeapiled s.. tiring bacii to wormy vanished youth, And I am'onee again a child. —Forest and Stream. The Spoiled Pie Dish. Many'years ago, before these days when everybody talks about decora tive art, and in each large family is to be found at least one young lady who paints on silk and china, a young artist was born in a country- house many miles from any city: How he came to be born an artist was a mystery to his family. From; the summer in which the Barberrys took a young artist to board with them, who, when be went away, presented his paint-box to the admiring boy who bad followed him about from dawn until dark, peace fled the Barberry mansion'. Fences, barn-doors, halls -- heaven only knows What—bore traces of figures, flowers, trees, cue s , and buildings in all the colors of the rainbow. —When scolded, Barberry junior only replied : 'WO, then, give me canvases and thingk I want to be 'a painter.' ; But the Barberrys did not intend to encourage madness. 'What kind of a business does thee think painting would be for a •max P asked Quaker Grandmother Barber ry. 'To sit twiddling thy lingers all day at an easel. It the.t want to be a farmer we'll prenticePthee to thy Uncle Charles, the hatter. _ That's light and easy, and thee is delicate.' So the Barberrys, taking counsel together, decided that •grindmother had, had a 'call to speak,' and placed Dudley with the hatter. Be worked patently enough, but painted more than ever in the eve ningsi for Uncle Charles was liberal, ancl:.he had a little money of his own in' those days. On Christmai he came home, andiwas'received kindly, and found his little cousin Clara in th'e house—an orphan in a black frock, whose parents had been lost at sea: The child liked the boy very much, and he painted her old doll's face into new beauty for her, and put a - red flower on. the back of the doll's chair. . She admired- his work very much as he had admired that of the 'artist who ha, given - him his !first colors. Ile was a hero to heron!) a genius, as- well as - the -kindest boy living. 'Wandering around the house one day, hejound a great pottery pie dish, one of a - dozen bOught 9f a ped dler for Old Christmas pies, and for getting. its_ purpose, spent a whole bright morning painting upon it .a splashing but spirited likeness of his mother's - favorite Lady Washington geranium, which stood' in a pot on a stand. It was a wonderful success in the eyes of little Clara ; and, indeed; it was not bad, for . a little prifctice goes a -good ways-with a born artist, and a winter Of - study without a master had - greatly improved the young fel low's work. Adoration was - in Clara's eyes as she looked at the dish and at Dud ley. - 'You're a great, great artist, Dud ley,' said-she. think you will .be famous some day.. Pie . read the "Lives of Famous Painters." The big brown book in the case -in the. parlor—and.kings and queens thought kits of them and made them paint their portraits. You remember what I wry when you are grown up, Dud ley.'* She was thirteen, Dudley was six teen. He lifted up his head from his work and looked at her. 'lf ever I am, Clara,' he said, 'I hope I. shan't have , to remember you. I never knew anybody .before who understood me. They think me so queer to like to paint. You know all about it, sissy.' 'Yes,' said Clara, understand, and I hope we'll alw,ays be just like brother and sister—Only you know I might die like pa and ma.' 'Don't cry,' said Dudley, 'and don't talk ,abOut dying, my good little pet cousin; ' Whatever comes-- 1 'But he said- no more. - A voice sharp an] shrill with anger broke in upon the pleasant talk—Aunt Mar tha's voice : 'Land of liberty I Jerusha, come here 1 Dudley has spoiled the big gest pie dish l' --iut afternoon Farmer Barberry Whipped Dudley. That evening the boy dig not come to supper. Later on, when the moon had risen, little Cbira, who had gone to her own room , to cry, beard a tapping at the win dow. She opened it and looked out. Dudley stood there. , 'Clara,' ,he said, 'tell me, do you think it was right that I shoiiid be whipped at my age?' V‘ TOW.ANDA, BRADFORD COUNTY, PA., THURSDAY MORNING, OCTOBER 13, 1881. I • CHESTNUTS:' (~‘ 'Right?' robbed Clara. 'Oh, it was wicked! wicked! wicked!' 'Z'o one shall ever do it again,' said Dudley. - /Clar3, I am going to be . a great artist. It's in meyl know, and:—and don't forget me, Clara. I'll come back _ ; and oh„Clara, Ican not bear leaving you. - Leaning' over the sill the child put her innocent arms about the boy's .neck. 'Don% -go - away,' she said;, 'it would break my heart.' , And then he kissed her and ran away. There waj sorrow in the house on Christmas *ming, and the pie went uneaten, fqf Dudley was gone, and he had left a little note in which he declared his intention of returning no more.' He . never did comeback._ lilts pother; ivho loved him more .thati - he knew, shed bitter tears asXlitisElnas i:lay_came around each year. The 'father, yho had flogged him, grew old repenting jit. There was a gen eral, Impression in . the family that Dudley had not been a good boy,-blit the doubt as . to his fate softened their thoughts of him. Probably he was ; dead - Poor old Grandmother Barberry believed that he,had - starved to death. Atid Aunt Martha hid the • , spoiled.pie dish'-away up garret, as though it .had been sonic relic of .a funeral. 1- When Clara married—yes, I mean . it--when Clara married the . consump 7 tiv© young clergyman;; from Boston , arid went ' , away, she went up to the, garret to look for a winter cloak found there the pie dish yet brilliant' with its „geranium's. And she sat down on the floor and cried over. it, and remembered the innocent child. love:she had given the painter, and then wiping her 'eyes, carried the dish,' down stairs and put it into her trunk. - It was still the ; pie dish.L. nothing more, except a souvenir of the past. 'lf he is not dead, he must have forgotten me,' she said to herself. 'He is twenty-six years old now if he lives.'. Andithough she highly respected the Rev. Joel Bird, she sighed once or twice even on her- weddifig eve. Settled ' in Boston, she _was very happy. She 'liked the style or the people she met; • their culture,_their, bookishness. -She 'saw the: shining , lights of the literary world and she wrote a . piece. of poetry which was publlsbed. One day somebody saw 'the pie dish—the spoiled pie dish of the. Barberry family. It -was - an artistic lady who had gone to_ take her bat off in the spare room of .the parson- . age. . - - • . 'What aloVely plaque!' she cried: 'But why don't you have it glazed It will be spoile4.'. The pie dish, promoted to pltique. hood, was glazed nest week. It ha a brass hOok faitened to it, and' was hung on the parlor wall,, and on its back was painted the name 'Of the . boy who, from the Barberry point of view, bad spoiled it... • • . The Rev, Joel Bird ~ died young. He - was good to. his wife while he lived, and she mourned him ; but there had been no. romance in s their courtship; and they had rever congenial. • - The widois recovered .her placidity soon, and lived contentedly on'• her sm i all income, amidst-a circle of 'at- • tached _friends. The last survivor of the Barberry family—Dudley's moth ervarae to live with 40, and . Mrs. Bird had pulled two gray hairs out of her Emily black hair, when 'the great fair Of SL Susan's church took place, and a committee called to beg her -to contribute something. The, pie-dish no longer hung on the wall; a glimpse ofit< had thrown - Mrs. Bar berry into gentle hysterics. It. was therefore locked away, and a.thought came into Mrs. I3arberry's head. 'I 'have a plaque, ' she Said. 'lt was painted long-ago .by somebody; who must . have become. a very. great artist 'if he- lived, I think. I'll give _the plaque .as well as my.- little