Independent Republican. (Montrose, Pa.) 1855-1926, March 24, 1859, Image 2

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UIRCULATION, 2176.
C, F. READ A. H. 11: FRAZIER. EDITORS
P. IL LOOMIS. CORRESPONDING-EDITOR.
mono son. co., PA.
'Thursday. Nam* 94. 1149.
REPUBLICAN MASS MEETING.
The Republcans of Sn4quehanna County will bold
a NassCorieilticat at the Court Rouse in Montrose.on
Monday EVlMillg, April 11th, '59,
for the election oi delegates to a Republican State
Cuilveotio,u, and.for th e transaction of such other
-imminent as ma be deemed adviable.
Ron. G. A ~ G itcar all be present at the meeting,
and address his fellow citizens on political topics.
_
g * This season we believe has been Limo:able
for makhig maple sugar, and a consid . ernble quantity
of that article has been made in Susquehanna county.
Much of the hard maple with which parts of the
. county formerly absented, leas been destrov4 in
cleating the land; but sonic 'of the pioneers were
provident entragh to save their : sugar orchanis, from
. which they and their euccesors now receive a sweet
reward. probably more sugar is made in Thomson
tharilin'tuly othiv township in the county.
•We observe that. a paper published in Somerset
ceordy, in the .southwestern part of this State, claims
that that county prodneeintore maple- sugar than
any ether fit the United Sates. We should hare
said that the "banner county" in this respect, would
. ' be road atiiievrbere in -Vermont
correspondent writes na a long letter from
•
'Asset, - complaining that he has been unfairly treat
ea bribe Hume Loage; of Oad•Fellows, of which he
is or was a member. We are sorry for our friend's
•Misfirrtornm, and if he has been wronged, should' be
'glad to me his selvage redressed.; but we bare not
' - 'jmiedletbn of the cue: Were we a knight errant,
it would acem,from the many cries of distress which
read} us from erery side, that we should find shun&
ant employment in the lists. As it is, we cannot
momiour Rosinante, and ride, Quixote iffie, with
lance in mat, *Mat eiery "indicator of whom re
portmachea Why can't the !suffering Ararater
call an hut gnidimi meeting, and
: hare' his wrongs
righted' We think of selling one on our own ae- .
count before Mot We, too, are martyrs, 'and hare
our Mosses to . beer,as Well as another. Even the
-mei with which the chair edithrial is cushioned, are
- not without thaens. lob-lake patience itself would
now and then gine way under the load of afflictions
and 'afflictions sometimes heaped upon us. These
come mostly in the 'shape of original" (would-be)
• " poetry I" _And such poetry! Borne of knot only
without rhyme br reason, but without orthography,
or pansemiLor penmanship. An tortk.rf of ' the
sweet Sowers of poesy as the Pyramids of Egypt,
ideas" as the skull of an Esquimau', unthythmical
the intermittent Bow of half-fro;en cider from a
bung-Dole, these things are 'sent to tut, - is a special
farce, kw ptibUestion; and if we-declin' e the fame,
the author thinks himself a misused indiridnal. We
mishit au ispiringfriands to add a little poetry and
polish to their &nations, and send them to 7%e At
/node NirstAlg n• Consteration—Chen we may
mew teteifi;.aad for their Sears We are truly thank
, ful ; -bat as W onetal rule it would aeon that those
• who as write wall:at, and those who cannot
The . tioisttpiewerewe halm** safer.. We bare now
shout a mat-load d tpoetry". oo band—anne toler
able, some harily that., some intolerable--and if the
irritate
thereof don't utop adding to the pee, we win
eines theta toile public by publiftdag some of
their tenet just as we receive them; with the au
thors' min attached. ,
W. have blanched off somewhat from the subject
with which we started; but we trust the columns of
the public press may be used to lay -err grievances
be fore , a sympathising pobffc as well es others'. And
aid we not rightly that we, too, bare wrongs to re
dress f When and where shall that indignation
metiing be held, end these otetreliturdering poetas
ters be , brought to trial-and condign punishment for
their manifold offences l'
ur 50..) of tile Weeks:4ton letter-writes are
stietoptinetO Make e" Boo". of Sales, probabli
: hoping thereby to mita a public Tyznpathy to oper
ots hrlis &Tor otiliiT
The 'lll'ithington Star thinks, that the United
18Intee attorney, will prosecute the case ; thoroughly,
andgn into a rigorous istrestlpticei of all the circum.
wane* end that be will beiided to the - utmost by
ths friends of Key. The trial, which I. f likely to oc
cupy some days, wDI escite much interest through-
~111rDiapateisea hoe Washlttigueo lay that there
La kerne aoeleterminatioa yet with regard to an ex
.toi imam lit Cowin. •
Irk the Pennsylvania Boom of. Represent:a.
tivas, 'lamb the bill to abash the Board of
Swims Cormalsaiiman, and the bill relating to the
esilattiosof lazes in the several courniat l et this
Banst, wen Ifslated. supplement to tie several
ants Muting to amelisnici and material men, en
dl -'
•
• • ar W. observe that many lenge:ratio papers in
shelled* seems Mr. Grow of barite defeated the
lihetdireAppreriation bill. Will they please ex
. idaii so theitendas bow Ir. Grow could do each a
&WM a items taring a Depsocratic majority ? The
Saire led pained the blli, but the Senate added an
mosessei4eional amendeseut,---esasely i ea sasead- .
suet Writing the Sirs of pieta" and therefore
a revenue mere re, width thorthestira' aeon aye shall
nalmilleasa ie thellaaate—mal retuned the bill to
thelloiss fakietroricantoce fti the amendment; and
Aiwa it I teatikellEr. lime eared hit resolution to
returrtheldlis the Senate, Mama as this mend:
meat vas in violation of the Constitutional Prerstee
tire of the Home to originate revalue niessures.—
Alter fise t wise so returned, by the cote of a large
sagacity of the Theis, a Committee of Conference,
-more* of -three Senate r and three Steadiers of
thelesse, ,an appointed, who teseerseeds report
ed a lee te,,ptecisely Eke the old .one as it came
from thellonsi. In this report the House acquiesced,
and jawed the nee bill; but when it went to the
Shines, of the Souther' Senators Teri deter-
Mist' ed that it should be defeated; and, as a are, ob
jet mild preverthe reading of_ the bill twice
in the moo day s Br. Tom*, of Georgie, made the
*Orkin , on the het day of "the session, and thin the
bill was kiss
, To show is a uleipetftittthe want of tain*.s ex
kpited.ay *se wLo pretend ibat the defeat of the
ratiike APPlAPiiitron iiattathutable to Xr.'iboer,
isetw Wad that lb: Gewe's resolution was Mort!d by
and twenty ailirmaties Totes to
bid then dirt, : apiost it, lad tint . Watt it sot
quite Brat awl Prwevirards Reatoersts is the
Rogow voteillorit:. - ; 'rat these papers, so fir as we
bevieisetcaleff 16 iientkitt this that.
is' s= tbe orPonalengoc.ocere B 4 Kr- Glow
6 . 11 . 11 4 1 46141 1 .5 0 1.31104gre azd Cos-
V4 lllllll O Olt 1k will %Mt WV
fliOnti t il4tW#4* : 7 _
Wi copy from. . the Harrisburg correspond
ence of the York (Pc) Garage, the following notice
of our Representative. It was written by Mr. Mielsh
late 4eakertaft the Senate: ,-
The past Week was gul l a btsfytmetr more practi
cal results flowed • from the numerous sessions that
were held, than marked tlid proceedings of any pre
vious week . . The House wax particularly actimand
remained in session unt il nearly midnight on Friday,
engaged in the Parange'of_the general appropriation
WI, which hu been sent to the Senate for concur
rence. Great credit is due to Mr. Chase, the efficient
and accomplished Chairman of the Committee of
Ways and Means in the lower branch, for the prompt
and energetic manner in which he "carried this im
portant b9l through': and I feel that I am ottly echo
ing the general sentiment when I accord to him a
character and abilities, of the highest order a 4 a leg
.
Witte.
An exchange remarks that "the Democratic
party has moved down South." This accounts for
what to a stranger might seem aingular-,thitt, not
withatindingthe vast numerico preponderance of
the North, the South, under Democratic rule, mo
nopolises most of the federal MUMS. The Southi
has a majority of the Judges of the Supreine Court t
of the United States, of foreign ambassadors, and of
members of the Cabinet. The recent death of Post
master.Ceneral Brown, a Southerner, made room for
Mr. Holt, another Southerner, in tilit office; so that
the Cabinet ie now constituted as follows:
Secretary of State--benis CAM, of ichigsn.
Secretary of the Treasury—Howell Cobb. of Ga.
Secretary of War--John B. Flpyti, of Virginia.
.Secretary of tne Nary—lsaac Titucey, of Coon.
Secretary of the Interior—Jacob Thompson, MiSS
Postmaster Getteriti—joiephijolt, or Kentucky. •
Attorney General—Jeremiah S. Black, of Pa.
ur The Sham Democracy did a good. day's work
in their State Convention at Ilarritiburg last week.—
A brief report of the proceedings appears in another
column. ,The Conyention could endorse President
Buchanan, but could not endorse Govelnor Packer,
on account of his " dishonesty." Eadn't they heard
of the l'resident'.e doings with regard to navy con
tracts Sc., as exposed by a Congressional Committee
of Investigation/ Rut we may be sure that
_dere
tipn to Slavery, alias Democracy, uakes all the dif
ference. The Convention could not have managed
better to ensure their party a good beadng.ueit Fall.
l ir The lion. Mike Walsh, who in the course of
his remarkable career lute been a printer, a State
Representative, and a Member of Congress, was
found dead at the foot of a Bight of steps in front of
the premises 138 Eighth eyesore, New York, on the
morning of the 17th inst. Ile was one of the rowdy
Demoixatic politk;iana of-Sew York, and is said to
havebeen intoxicated when last seen alive. The
Coroner's jury rendered a verdict that he , died of ap•
oplexy caused by being precipitated down the steps;
and that, from the absence of his watch and chain,
violence had been used by some person br persons
unknown.
ti' view of the Fry divorce'cit.% which is
exciting so much attention at Harrisburg, the Tele
graph—taking it for granted, we suppose, that the
members of the Legislature have left their Bibles at
home—quotes the following seriptural authority on
the subject:
"What therefore God has joined together let not
man put asunder. Whosoever shall put away his
Wife and marry another, committeth adultery against
'her; and if • women shall put away ber buskand and
be married to another, she committeth adultery."—
Hark 10: 9-12.
Or At the municipal ekction in Reading, Berke
county, on the f9th inet., the People's candidate for
Mayor, BennerilleMeim, was elected Geer Dr. d. 11.
McCurdy, Buchanan Democrat; by 934 majority.—
The candidates for Councils, School Directors, kc.,
on the People's ticket, were elected by large majori
ties.
gar John C. Eyck, Repubfican, was elected
on the 13th inst. The term for w _ - ~. oustx years - nom meats of larch inst. • Ile
sumeedi William Wright, Democrat. Mr. Ten Eyck
was a warm supporter of Fremont and Dayton, and
mart,e counted another valuable addition made by
the misrule of the Democracy to the fast grOwing
Republican strength in the Senate.
U corr col-
_,ur The State Journal is the name oi"*. a new pa
per pulartalied at Philadelphia, the object of which
is stated to be, " to a limited field, and ocen ;
py it thoroughly; to make - it a journal worthy its
name and our State." Judging from a single num
ber, we think it will prate a valuable accession to the
list of Philadelphia weeklies.
Ur We have received from T. B. Peterson and
Brothers, publishers, (3O Chestnut street, Philadel
phia,) a copy of Ivanhoe. They are publishing a
eotirplete cheap edition of the Warerley novels, re
printed-from the original Edinburgh edition, and to
be comprised in twenty-six Loge AVAITO volumes;
in paper covers, et twenty-five .oems a volume, or
fire dollars for the whole. The twenty-sit volumes
will be forwarded by mail, free of Postage, t 1 any
-part of the United Stnes, for fire dollars, or the first
twelve volumes for three dollars, or the first four
rolurcutlvanhoe, Bob Boy, Guy Msnuering, and
the one dollar. The first volume was
issued March sth, and one novel will be published.
regularly every, Saturday until the whole- twenty-six
volumes are issued. We advise all biers 'of light
literature to supply themselves with these great his
torical romancers of Sir Welter Scott, instead of, the
sickly and -unwholesome trash with which so many
modern norelaare filled.
. Er:mai for Parsing.
Mum. Eorrota:ZWillson please ask 'borne of
the students of English Grammar to parse the'words
in italics in the following passage, and tell to what
part of speech or clam of words each belongs
"She bath no faith in Holy Church, 'tie true,"
. Yet sull a tale of spirits works upon her.
•Rhe is alone entloutieutt,' sensitive
Skivers, and cannot keep the tears in her eye: •
And such do lore thefmarrelons too well not ' to
beEexe it." . f
The extract is from Coleridge 's tragedy, h'smorse.
EDITORM :—Can you, or any of your farm
ers in Suquebanna county, inform me where I can
get some of the Brown, or 'lnipiOved Ring Philip
Corp, u described in the Patent °pee Report for
185 1 1 Is it raised in your comity t If eo , will some
one:who is bundler with it, gin their experience in
a4ing it, Its adaptability to ore 'ulnae, yield per
mire, time of puritiii g , to. Any information with re.
bard to the above, through the columns of the Re
paldicatt, (with your leave) or Rimy address, -would
be thanlifally - received by
- Tours its., B. B. MITCHILL.
Lemon, Wyoming Co., Pa.
- ?ter the Inefejerectent Republics),
Polabium Ts. Editor.
iicettmnsma Dimly, Werth 14th„
Mum. EDITORS EZIFTSLICAS t--In the•hat Lace
of The Northern' Pressybranists there ippean, at
the head of the editorial (!) column, a partitalar
"Take Notice," from which the inference might be
drawn that game other person then W. J. Hunter had
been in the Wit of receiving subsetMions for that
paper. Permit me to say, through the' columns of
the Rip/Mean, that, notwithstanding the agree
ment between myselfand Brow, that I was to bare
all moneyi Paid in,cw subscription, for "My Services
in the Lilac, furnishing blankpapm for the - Prvutiyt.
• Ite., be was the lest mew to itep &toward end
receive such - moneys, and place than to my' credit .
oo Us day-book, when, there was no sccorint whiter
er cabala; between myself and him. This "notice"
*M. 10, grie very much like 'a link of Mr. Hunter's.
pole which bewouldgindly e f ee e n me bid he not
the kwenriedge that nearly all of this unnounity
know what teitmodoct his been while in the 4:1100y
CIE iblie / 44 4; " tr4ll 4.4.; l*4ll S hoi linett
retneA
.. _
...2 4,l4iiintr: •
Pbr £Ai lnd.pen dtu t R•pudlicaa
Por tie Ituispendnit RepasUican
The Brown CoL
The Penneylnnis Thisitt
To secure ttie sttpport of the . Democratic
p*l y fh Pelitaylvania, a Democratic office.
bade"' raist,sacrifict his principles to theso
called principles orthe party. HO, Must get
rid of its conscience and put, in its Once a
platform. Governor Packeilins not yet per.
fpriod thIS piece ;4if polticareuriery.ll. He
presumid to preserve - his' cmiSelence. and to
obey it in preference to platforms and presi.
dents. Ile recognized popular rights and
condemned executive and Cong ressional usur
pation.
pation. ' Th e President of di:United Sates
regarded this as a personal injury, and he set
the , whole pack-of party houtids upon the of.
fouling Governor of Pennsylvania. The re
sult is that the Democratic State Convention.
which met yeaterday in Harrisburg, passed
resolutions approving of 'Tames Buchanan and
his course, and rejected a resolution approv
ing of William F. Packer and his course.
It must be a matter of very small conso.
qpenee to Governor Packer to berebuked by
a packed Convention, the most active spirits
of which were depraved hunters of federal
place and patronage, or disappointed appli.
cants for the favor of the State - Government.
Nay, a man of delicacy or fine sense must
cnngratullite himself that he does not receive
the compliments of it body. that can comp.'
tent James Buchanan. The mere circum.
stance of the convention's sustaining the pres
ent federal administration, with its corrup.
Lions, its usurpations, its extravagances, .and
its manifold outrages upon the people_. , and
the constitution, makes its praise a mockery,
its endorseMent an insult. The Democratic
party of Petnellyanla, which contain so ma
ny pure - and worthy. men, should have been
spared the degradation of having the iniqui
ties:of ",J. B." attached to its skirts. It woad
have been much more decent to have passed
in silence over the .pings of the President
during the last two years. Oblivion is the
best boon tb be asked for by the true friends
—if such there are—of James Buchanan.
Doubtless the political friends of Governo'r
Packer will be able to make an ample and
handsome vindication of his course and his
administration,_ It is not our o ffi ce, nor do
we think 'i t it required in the
pecidiar circumstances.of the case. But the
act of the Convention deserves notice as uti
important initiative step in the - State canvass
of 1859. and as having thus a decided bearing
on the. residential canvass of 1890. Mews.
'Richardson L. Wright and John Rowe were
respectively nominated by this same Conven
tion for the offices of Auditor General - and
Surveyor General. These gentlemen, whose
Worthiness we are not going to, dispute, have
fOrced upon their backs, at the veryl opebing
of the contest, thS burden of' James: Buthari
an's sins and weaknesses. They are branded
"J. B." by the'hot iron of the State Conven
tion. They are made, while in this disabled
and degraded Condition, to declare war against
Governor Packer, his administration, and the
hOst of Democratic voters that agree with
him in his. differences with the President, his
advocacy of the sovereign rights of the peo
ple, and his opposition _to slavery 'extension.
The Conventioh could not have entirely con
sidered this, when they rejected the packer
resolution. They cer not;, have
insulted their candidates, whoever they might
have been, by driving them into the field and
forcing them to run the gauntlet of the peo
ple of Pennsylvania, with such obloquy on
their shoulders. -
An etTort-will be made, by way of abating
the injurious effect that the condemnation of
Gov. Packer must have upon the DeimaeracY
at the next election, to represent that it was
owing to hia course on local and State ques
tions. But the-people are not, quite so asi-
O*Sti". - 1 - 6e - ikiiii — tEirt'fi - C - Wa - eri — fa'liii
- condemnation came from Washington. They
know-that it is solely owing to the fact that
Gov. Packer, in his messages, instead of
adopting the. President's southern view in te
gard to Kansas, presumed to adopt the view
of the people of Pennsylvania , to whotn alone
he was responsible. There was a time when
any kind of doctrine could be forced upon
Pennsylvania by federal administrations, and
when pro-slaveryism was humored and con
sented to, if not absolutely and positively
sustained. But this time has passed. - The
election of October, 1858, when the candi
dates of the Buchanan Democracy for State
officers were defeated by, from twenty-five to
thirty thousand majority, and when the
- total
combined opposition and anti-Lecompton
democratic majority on Congressmen was
about seventy thousand, was the most con
vincing illustration of this. Did the Conven
tion reflect that this majority was against
them, and must be overcome befOre Messrs.
Wright and Rows can be elected ? Did they
reflect that by rejecting the -Packer resolu
tion they *ere widening the existing schism
in the party, were driving further from them
the mass of independent voters, and were
making,the vote fur the party candidates
more hopeless minority than - it was lust Oc
tet er ? Did they know that they were giv
ing the opPoaitton a .strength they could not
have dreamed of, and were thrusting upon
them facilities, not only for a s ictory in Oc
tober 1859, but for a magnificent national
victory in November 18 iO ?—Philadelphia
Balkan.
A Charge, like Chickens, cope Home to
Roost ,
A correspondent from Kirkwood yrrites us
as follows:
"I hate had my attention called to an ar
ticle in the Binghamton Democrat, taken from
the Montrose Democrat, of Feb. 24; giving
a history of the marriage of a 'nigger' to a
white woman, in Hai-ford, Susquehanna Co.,
f Pa., which, after saying tint there could not
'be a ministerfOund 'in liarford that would
marry them, uses the following language :
Of course, note "would bee party to so black
a crime, whereupon the parties weut to Now
Milford and other 0141, to search' of some
being who had not decency'onough to deter
him from lending himself to so degrading an
'act. 'And on the next day'it austiO of the
Peace of Kirkwood, N. Y., consented to give
legal sanction to an alliance, forbidden alike
by God acid ."man.' -
From some words used in the.'artiele:re
(erred to, such is 'Negro Equalitv,"Arnal
gamallon,'.the bogus Democra4 'take up the
cry of 'Black Republicanism,'Amalgama
don,' &c. ;Now for the information of the
Democracy, we would say that. the Justice
referred to, is the Democratiii just
endotsed by the Democracy of Conklin , and
last fall elected a Justice of Sessions f the
County of Broome, - Horatio N. Benjamin,
who not only boasted of having married
them, but in addition to the usual fee, of hav
ing had the pleasure cif kissing the bride—or,
as he termed it, 'putting On the 'seal.' This
is true" history Comments unnec ensa
ryApr .
Will those Democratic papers who have
tried-to make political twintal ont"of this af-
Ltir, base the honesty ;to, publish . theincts of
the cisell—Bretints Repn6liecui:,
f An Alabatila correspondent of the
National Inteltigeneer says that the question
_respecting Andrew Jackson's birth-place is
settled by his proclamation: elicited , by the
South Carolina ordinance, which* begins 'Fe!-
low-citizens Of my native State." ' • '
jar The dwellers cc the gnint of_ New
Brunswick husk* disco** *ll c odfish
Mg be PPitilt kV Mg* *tint! the ice, in
*.
Aw l 49'sinAd_rkiPlL -
, . . .
Demomatio State Conve n tion . • Rema rk able Deielopments in Connterfeit-'
flanutemnte, March 16.--:The Democratic • - „
„„. ! • Mg.
State Contention met in the, hall of the house The arrest and examination of several
of'Repreientatives at 10 o'clock A. M. coungeefelters,of, gold and silver coits - „in Es-
The Convention was organized by the ap s ' 'Sex Cciiiintis i by Petinil United , Stab*. Mar.
pointment of George M. Wharton; Eq. - , of Awl' Schuyler Hubbsird, line Yievealed aorta
Philadelphia, as temporary..Chairtnanr, miriodifacts, ThioM 7 tbe per* oflames H.
Mr. Win. Hopkins (Lecomptein) moved I Farns*orth; one of tint persist* areititektests
that the Chairmanappoint a- Conimittee to I found a iertilleate ofMentheribip itfitier„ On
select perninnent officers. , " Mystic Circle IX Alchemy:" There. .was
• Mr. John..W.Tate,(Anti-Lecompten) moil- also found in the possession of Farnsworth a
ed to emend the motion; so a s to select book of some 300 pages, containing the rules
a Chairman 'Cirri race. Loit by a large ma- and regulations cf the "Mystic Circle of. Al.
jority., „ lehenly,' but principally devoted to a full ex.
Mr. Hopkins's motion was sdopted,
„andiplanation t of the processes of galvanism and
the Convention took a recess for one hour. electrotyping, as applied to gold and silver
On the re-assembling of the Convention plating, and the making ef dies and moulds.
the Committee reported that they had select- It also-givei numerous : reteipls 'for mixing
ed Arnold Plumer, of Venango, as perma- nieses"so its to produce Cheap compounds re
nent Chairman. , , - • sembling gold and silver.— As the publisher.
On faking the Chair, Mr. limner made aof the-book is now in custody for counter-1
long speech. felting, and-the sale of the book is arrested,
A motion was made that the ap- there is no danger to the pbblic in making
I point a Ceminittee of fifteen on resolutions, these facts known. It appears from the book,
An amendment was offered that the Com- (which has been extensively advertised in a
mittee be composed of one .ccoin each Seiquiet way,) that any persan paying $5 was
m-
1
tonal District, to be elected by the Dole-
instructedin the secrets, received a certificate
of membership in the "Mystic Circle of Al
-1 gates. This led to an exciting debate and
! was finally rot agreed to. ehemy," stnd - a copy •of this book containing
The original resolution was agreed to, and
full instructions for imitating , coins and for
1
the Convention adjourned to three o'clock. plating base metals by the most- approved
. AFTERNOON SEsSION. seiensifie methods. We arc unable to state
The Convention met at three p. m. I how fur the " Mystiairele" extends, but as
Theyresident'announced the Committee
success in circulating-counterfeit coins re
of fillebe on resolutiows and they retired for quires the 'concert of a number of persons, it
the purpose of deliberatioe• cannot be doubted that the operators have.
The Committee were absent three hours Made large use of the fraternity and secrecy
before they. agreed on the resolutions; in the which such an association vissuld afford.—
Mean time the Convention took several re- However this may lie, it is certain that the
influence of the book has been most perni
cious. In several districts in Northern New
York, particularly in Essex county. I srge
numbers of pera.ms have been-Seduced from
honest occupations by the tempting opportu
nity seeniugfy . altrded for getting rich with
out labor, ~na have entered the nefarious
business of manufacturing counterfeit coin.
The business is carried on to a large extent
its•the deserted iron trines of that region.—
Although but a few persons' have been ar
rested, general suspicion rests upon hundreds
of others who pursue no re:gular business,
and have no ; apparent means' of gaining a
livelihood. In other parts of the State the
officers are closely watching the movements
of indiViduals who are suspected of the same
crimes.—Utica Observer,
OEM
Tho follouing is an abstract of the resolu
tions :
The first resolution sustains President Ru
chanan'y Administration.
The second bestows praise on the Admin
istration for settling questions with Great
Britain, Kansas, Iva,
The third advocates incidental protection
the Iron and Coal interests,. and holds the
present tariff to be inefficient. It also ,rec•
ornmends the views as advanced on the sub
ject of the tariff by, the President in his , mes
sage.
The fourth defends the Paraguay Expedi
tion.
The filth advOcates the acquisition of Cuba
The 'sixth commends the Administration
for opening a highway to the Pacific, to ena
ble tile public to travel with safety,
The seventh supports the doetrint of Pop
lar Sovereignty.
The eighth favors an honest and econotni
cal administration of the Oars of the
. Cotm
monwealthonail the people are relieve& of
thb enormous dent, and opposes
of
.unne
eessavy expenditures or redaction of the pres
ent sources of reveaue.
The ninth recommends the establishment
of an independent. Trrast4, Sur. the safe
keeping of the money of the Comminmealth;
on the principle of the United States Sub.
Treasury.
- - .
The tenth appfovcs of Senator Bigler's
course in Congress.
The eleventh opposes the.granting.of cor
pfirme privileges, and holds-that individual
capital sliwild.be. encouraged.
• The resolutions were read separately and.
adopted,
Mr. Lumberton oft red- a resolution tip•
proving of the State policy of Gov. Packer,
his fearless exercise of the veto power, and,
his administratinit 'of the of the Coin-,
moo ealth, particularly the exemption laws,
as trorthy of commanding commendation.
Mr. Lamberton supported the resolution
Mr. Monagen, of Chester, spoke against
the resolution.el:arging Gov. Packer with dis
honesty, in his public acts b, the transfer and
sale of the Delaware Division and other Ca
nals of the State.
Meßsrs. Jenks and Hopkins supported the
resolution.
Mr. Johnion denounced Gov. hacker in
uNmeasured tennis.
The previous question was called by Mr.
Gillis and sustained. The resolution was
lost. Ayes 87, Noes 94.
The,Conyention then proceeded to ballot
for a eamlidate for Auditor General, with the
tbllowing result :
Wright.- 99:Zeigler 27
Salisbury "lin 8
Richardson L. Wright was thereupon. de
cilared the choice of the Conventoon.,.
John Rowe was re-nominated fur Survey
or General by acclamation.
At a late flour in the evening the Conven
tion adjourned. •
TUE PRESIDENT READ. OUT OF THE PARTY.
—The Washington Stafis (Runter.Douglas
organ) thus disposes of President Buchanan's
platform:
" Will any ,Democrat venture to justify
the - enormous expendithres of the Federal
Governinent ! Can any Democrat approve
the President's pro - met i ve-tariff policy ?. _Does
any Democrat of the Sta•e•rights schoril sup
port the Pacific railroad, or the military pro
tectorate of Nipyr.ico, or the proposition to
arm the. Eseeutise with The war-making pow
er, or th,i'e other enterprises of Federal ag
grandizement which are too farniliarto re
quire 'recapitulation ? Then why attempt an
apology for measures which fidelity to prin
ciple obliges us to repudiate? Such conduct
would not only place the Democratic party
in an equivocal attitude before the country,
but would &tally impair the effect of its re
sistance to the attacks of the opposition."
M; there is within left to approve but
Lecomptonism, which The States has already.
condemned, we conclude that the President
is now counted as one of the opposition.
DEMOCRACY MIEN AND NOW.—Seventy
years ,ago, says the Albany Jottnial,- • tile
Democrats drew s tine around the States,
ar.d said to:the slave trader; "Thus- far.. you
may goi'bot no farthe4" . This was the. Jef
'firsonian-Proeiso. Thirty years ago , they
rubbed out part of the line, and said to him,
"You may go into lands soutk but not :into
landetkirth." This was the ,Missouri Com
promise. Fire years ago, they rubbed out
the rest of the line, and said to him,. "We
will leave it to the settlers to decide - whether
you shall come i>i or not." This was- - the
Nebraska Bill. Now they turn humbly to
him, hat in hand, and say, "Go whera you
please; the land is- all yours; the -national
flag shall protect you, and the national troop!
shoot - down-whoever resists yotii.." This is
the Dred Scott Decision..
THAT ismoskrios,Marrnm.—The people
of Ilerford, Susquehanne - County, have held
en indignation meeting, at which 'resolutions
were passed condemning amalgamation. The
meeting, was presided over by a " Black Re.
publican," but party distincd(ms_do not seem
to have been very strictly on the oc
casion.. It was altogether a "moral move
ment," we conclude,, for ,which the people of,
.that vicinity should:llse all due credit;, but
they must be aware that suekresalutiona (=-
damning the institutions _of one half, the
States in the Confederacy, will•,-have a ten.:
dency to ".dissolve the Ilnion.”.* The F.
V's will not , brook 'such, insinuations, from
Old Susqueluinna. We do not ,understand
that a committee WAS appointed the
":Old Domipiotr,", to try to arrest the ; prac,-,
. t i e k o f o , m o ganu o m I n that _slavoexporting
cecT1i1 1 9 12 .1,9410... Why Roi-i-.^!afdkflAiltls' ,
Sy, Tim%
•
=I
• Salizi.=We have long supposed this cel
ebrated drug, had come to be an exploded
humbu but we are assured by those skilled
in the healing art, that- not the Sarsaparilla
itself is to he blamed for this conclusion, but
the miserable worthless preparatiObs of it,
that have been palmed ofl upon the commu
nity—preparations which contain about as
much of its virtues as they do of &Old dust.
It is-n eenimercial fact that alinost allot the
Sarsaparilla gathered In , the world, is con. smiled in the old Countries of tlurOpe, where
the science of medicine has reached its high,
est perfection, and wheri , ;-theY knew the beit
what to employ fur the mastery of disease.
Hence we are glad to find that we are now.
to haven compound of this excellent altera
tive, which can be relied on and our commu
nity Will not need be assured, that any thing
Doer. AYER makes, is worthy of their ecinfi
deuce. lie has been for years engaged in
elimlnatiug this remedy, (see itdv'g eels,) de
signing to make it his "chef ouvre" which
should add the crowning glory to his already
enviable keptitatioh.—Anteritito Cell,V. J
A Goon Inen.:=—The English druggists are
about adopting a hexangular bottle with deep
flutings, to put poisons in which are sold by
Ynni 3111f1 IS (0 preyrist, FLITIOII, nncaln
Mistakes 'by getting hold of the wrong bottle.
As an additional secatity t the neck-of the bot
tle is so contracted that.but a drop at a time
can bit poured out. The very deliberate and
cautious (teflon thus produced will, it is be
lieved, defer any-one from taking Overdoses
of medicine while it is difflcult to imagine a
ease in which aperson could pour b out and
take the whole contents of one of these bot
tles in mistake for something else.
The author of, " Child° Harold,"
while in Italy; had a helmet made for his own
use in the battle fields of Greece. That
identical :thick, never worn as originally in
tended, but which must have covered the
brain of the poet many a time and oft,'r
is now the ornament of a house in SouCh Bos
ton. It is so small that nine heads. out of
ten trying it on would more than fill it.
A Chisel , NEORo A limplc—"-Near the eity
of Savannah, in georgia;.. there it' as held,
about three weeks ago; one of the largest
public sales allegro slaves that has ever oc
curred in this - land of freedom and equal
rights. Four 'hundred and twenty•nine men,
vvotnen and children were knocked oil' to the
highest bidders during the sale, which lasted
two days.' -They were — all ;he chattels of
Pierce Butler, of Philadelphia, a personage
known by reputation at least, to most of our"
readers. They were inherited by him from
his father's estate, amt - Pntif now none of
them had ever been sold or tra6ferted from
their original honie. They were " family
niggers." But Mr. Butler, having engaged
in Some speculations which turned 'Out ad
versely, sought torecrult his purse by selling
efl'hia live stock: The total proceeds of the
sale_ amounted to $303,850, which . proves
that the price of flesh and blood is at a high
standard in the Savannah market. It is but
justice tellr. Butler to redi:44 that he gave
the heroes a dellar apieee'op of their pur
chase money—all in nciv quarters.
,`ln order
to preserve the hiiitorTorthkryire oecurrente
for the'enlightenment • of! 'fatufeltenerations
of American freemen; a reporter for the Tri
bune Attended the wile, and has reported the
attendant . :eireeinstance.s at lingth. 'Mita' -re.
tort; writt4i . hi•the giapiik kyle of the'
'rated !!Tinesticks: picture* in vivid colors
the feature 4 of a slave itaction; - atni the'
lierities of the,institetion'rrs'ieeri
eyes;SrOrth
erk in its . It:littlest' and most faiorable
Bipeds.
Tin LaraarGovansoa or 'KANSAS TOM.
DIG FREN Srxre.—Gov. . .BlllU , Medary is get
in bad odoy,witli the Border Ruffians; as
tbt• following Jinni the Westport Border Star
of the would. indicate :
.-" It seems that Medary is in secret corres
pondence with Vaughanmud theleading kid.
mappers of the Territory. and that tfiey are
all working , together.. ThiJ surprises some
of our friends, but we are-sorry to say that
.we are not at all astonished, :Wa have heard
enough of Mr. Medary's operations .to be
convinced that he has gone over, body, soul,
and breeches, to - thoistihaNkAra." •
lt wonid not be strange if Medary:aboidd
be obliged to "tread in the footsteps mf his
illustrious predecessors." It is not , enough
that a Governor of -KansaaJeans &star as the
laws 'will permktoo t the aide of slavery. , He
must violate, thqse laws to "crush oitt".'. the
_Free Boil sentiment of the 'l'irritery,, gmub.
ject himself to the 'abuse of tg! B.nrilitr nut-
Eutu,s.7--441balsy /pima
:" NO, a North cer
olina candidate 4 `l int a Democrat and nev
er was anything Ther,e are- three tap
ice that now. . . agitde the Stain % the Iliftu'd
Stateitiank, the Tariff; end the Penitentiary.
I shalt pase,aver the first ~tie very briefly,
As my sentiments Ara Xell'itrown,.4i4PFlTe
•to,the Pinite.ntiary tgori 1;44 ProFq souse.
ENE
General News.
Teniiyson's 'hew -pOF.to; " Merlin,"
will aootiVe4niblished„in Londtin..
n9n em !irk t Captain
many *giot:l3. - 'll MOM)y
successor oryenitittork;Coottee,Y .
'170 1 1,4n-Ifiiiitrielect,Tairs states
that:Vicketis has refused - 1150,000, to lecture
for une year in the United Status:
The Earl of Dcvon has prayed the I
Divorce Court for a legal separation fromd
his wife,- whom.he accuses of "cruelty" to
him.
.. The Philadelphia ligielinssays "A
fair census would show that PhiladelpLils
the largetit inan'utacturinn city ort this Ccinti
nent„and, excepting Paris, the largest in the
- Mr. Svveeny„the oldest tnanln.Venn
sylvania, died in Butler county on the 27th
tilt., aged 1,22 years. Ile was a native 'of
Ireland, and emigratld to the United States
when tie was. 100 years nld.
.. The editor of the Minnesota
Tytnzs
says he " can generally manage, by hook 'or
by crook, to get up a pretty good paper.”—
lie does it pripeip . ally by hook.—Leufssille
Journal.
.... The Journal of Vommerre consoles
ithelf over the idea of* empty United States
Treasury, by the reflection that: " there is no
money -to steal" CGsinplimentary to the
Democratic party, who have the handling of
Uncle Sam'y purse strings.
.... We learn - that ,in addition . to the
veins of coal formerly discovered in Sullivan
County. and which have been worked to a
limited nxtento vein of superior coal, tiv el ve
feet thick, has recently been discovered with
in three miles of Laporte.
.... Lowe, who was recently murdered
by a - mob in Louisville Ky.; had on -a 'shirt
of mail, which turned rifle balls from the dis
tancoof six feet. It-is supposed that such-an
article of dress will become a favorite wear.-
in•t hat part of the country. • - •
Als,the truly wonderful imerits of the
• Oxygenated Bitters in curing Dyspepsia in
its worst developments, become knowti and
appreciated, orders for-it are pouring in from
all parts of the country—North, South, test
and West. This tells the story.
....Moose are very plenty in the Aroos
took region- of Maine,
and the hunters are
bringing them into the
.settlements -for sale
at Presque Isle ; the steak; said to be very
fine eating, cells for 6 -- cents, per pound, while
the fore quarters bring 44 cents.
.... Mr. M. 11. Cobb, late editor of the
Tioga' Agitator, was united -in the ," holy
bonds of matrinionl," on the .8d inst., to
Miss Betsey B. Bixby - .. Our best wishes still
continue w ith him, in thisiateatorrangement._
By the way,.is this the " pioneer's work" al
luded to in his valedietoty. = ,Dratlforel Rep.'
The `editer'orthe Meridian saw a
Ger Man Bible at O r e:residence - Of Dr. Grove,
of that pla*it few evenings since, which was
printed' in 1537 and is, 'consequently, 322
years old, It- was.presetiled to the' Doctor's
mother by hie grandmother as a Christinas
present, upwards of fifty years ago.
Koss - uth is living 'in straitened cir
cumstances, itt:London ; molt 'of' his Wire's
fortune has been lost in railroad investments
in this country; and the 000,000 colle'eted
j by him in the United States .has been All ex
pended on-the objects for which it was Origi-
I natty intended.
' • Mr. Williams,:of Bucks, has- intro-,
duced a joint resolution - into the House, pro,
1 riding for the removal of the seat of Govern
' meat from Harrisburg to Philadelphia, The
' general opinion in this section of the State is,
IL" _ i d— ha, -il4. IMao ia
now too near Philadelphia.--Bucks County
intelligencer. •.: • ,
s. I
Deatk,hets rarely,. Invaded. the. pre
cibcte lof a Presidential Cabinet. The only -
instances•prior• to the death of: Governor
Aaron Brown, were in the-death of Abel P.
Upshot ,
,and, Thomas W. ,Gilmer by the
bunting of a cannon orilisctird ihe'Ainceton,
'and that of Hugh S. Legere, at Boston, - when
accompanying Mr. Tyler upon a Presidential
.... The bill 'increasing the salaries of the
Judges of the District Court, and Court of
Common Pleas.of Philadelphia, and of cep.
tain JUdges".througlut the Gammon
;smith, now receiving a salary of 82,000, to
$2,561), and the salaries of the , Judges of the
Supreme Court frOm $3,000 to $3,500, was
defeated in the Senate a. few days ago, by, a
vote of 11 to 13. • .
.... We understand that Messrs. Chase
dr Keeler, are about to commence the
,publi
catiori of ati Administration paper in this
borough, to be called the Bradford ./Irralc(:
Thu first number.-tee bellev'e; is to he issued
about the first of. April. The propriettos are
well qualified to conduct a first class paper,
and in everything except . , their politiw, we'
wish them abundant success.—Brad, Argus.
The•Soinerset remarks :
—The'settson . duts,far has been , very , propi
tious for our maple sugar Manufacturers.—
More, sugar has .been !Tiede the present sea
son, at this date, than iit any previous one.
We hear of several farmers who have already
.made more than four thousand pounds.—
There is no means of exactly ascertaining the
amount of this article annually , produced in
Somerset county, but we think five hundred
thousand pounds Would, fall beloW the mark
—more-than is manufactured in ally' other
et : may in the. Union. - ••
A great t deniand for skunk's, fur; or
in the polite language 01'641th:qt. the " mount
sin fisher,?' has suddenly. sprang up among ,1
fashionable feptiiiines and continues to such
an elm ming , extent. an to threaten the des
truction.of the ,whole. race " essence ~ped•
prlces.pai4 ip. ,thp west. during
t Falk:and. Winter ler the.. hides of • these
per Ain.: - The demamilor.this, kind ,of, fur'.
0ue4 1 414 - 4avetentapaled,from thelashlopabla
ladies of „gueope,,, whence pretty,.much rsli
our fashions ,ara ,deriired, and Where lour 2,taku.nt's'? ; i.l better known by, the
poetical
ine
- Pa ot . t4e fi# 14 491 5 4.4 1 ‘„.
. •
7 ' ±h43 Trinity; (Texas) .firurnal-•says :
We.met imindtau on Trinity-river, traveling
by. himselfr.and carry ing4st-buge pine bur,
which be had provided. fotdinuer.) ll,e stop
ped.on,a big flat rock and preparedto dine, 1
and having beaten.- the seeds front the bur
with a snlall stone;he atethem with manifest
ations of an extremely good - appetite. - Hav
ing dined, the, rascal had the audacity to pick
his teeth with-the apparent -satisfaction of ,a
casual Astor House boarder, and stinted on DIEISOIIOIOIII.
'his journey, with nothing ',on but- a shir.t...,• of . 1 n ~
'u a.. of KOTT Ai:ROBERTS dis,ol:Csi
Ver. , / 1:t1-141y;,•• - . -we - um:Tot he by mutualconsent, on the 18th inst. The i.
nflorded a very striking illustration of Aixter- counts of the firm may be' found in the hands of f.
Independence.„ _ B. Iteberts at the place of business.
SCOTT.
.... article in the Jainuary:ntuuber of • ''. - E.l3:itonEuv..
. the Edittlnuß.Fterieto reiterates some curious • h Issf • it •
ntrose,
factsksbout the iontents-.of the. library the -
BriOsb.Mwmum. .It clippers that -witen?tril • B n- f
Beef !
of. gentlenien; have , ;been - etnplityed twenty .
:years upon a new,tetalogue of the books. i;lt
bas airway reached the siia of' twwittousand • '7,
,i,ogether,wittf.
711 .and oropßiemid " 111211-" of fresh
W HAT DP TUAT !' ietiing--oaty that pred , ,
follwvolumea. - :Thera arelopy,Wait of book' 1111 . 140
shelves., :.Therie are five hundreil, and- sixty tniy b l e
had in the Basement of. Bead at iFeWP •:".
, thotteaud !einem. , 114 • is, perhaps, -the liew,Banctiag r illt kip!.cede's Hotel.
largest iw world,; though_ the . E.' ll . MDERTA , Rouitris.s: tat„
Bibliotheqap imperial, . at . Vane; -has eight ,„ •
-thettentrlseparate - volumes and pire
ri., Alte, Mtwara , heit• a coilectinn a. abo ut - =EI wAir-r
30,900 books.published,lnsibolioited Stoics; • • '
Athh4tie tflorObillydeable the bitten' of ittlY Isiox - ED tax,: Coma, Meant', CO/11 Meal,
I o,h w h tm oi our , p r ioz Apples, Dried Bonk:,
Amiletoollectiew.Df Areerfean books in our . t , f oxtE ,„l 4• j, tioys
.I):Ksz.ooootry.':: , )140io n litptrgi 31/,-1114t.
. .
10•11 11 /1/011Cas.—Bey. Gamma Lonna
witl lireach'• Mantroire, on
- Saturday and. Sabbath, the 26th and 27th of March.
Preaching on Saturday,' at 11'o'clock, and at
1 t o'clock, a. IQ., on Sabbath:
The term orbffice of Br. Landon, as Presiding E.
der of thd WYalusing District, being ribald to etrre,
It will perhaps ha his last visit to us in that capacity.
March. 23, 1869. B. B. Eaciar,.
Soclables.—The Sociable" of the U. E. .Be.
clay will be,held this week, (Thursday evening) at
'the Parsonage..‘ , •
The Ladies' Sociable of the Presbytegan Church,
will he held this {Wednesday) evening, March MI.
At the house of Charles Avery, .
GROVER & BAKER'S
FAMILY c
S l iniG TEittCiiINES
F49S Broadway, New York,
18 SUMMER 'STREET, BOSTON
730 Chestnut Ntreet, Phil.
137 BALTIMOBE STILEET, BALTIMORE.
58 West4tirlit" Cincinnati.
1 ---..--
- -
l , ,, .
A.New.Style—Pnoe.,s.o.
rriHIS matilinetana, Own two opnials. an porcharl from il:” 0 ,
1 ragnltlng no row indtn)coH?t,..l: tt Ilennn 1 e11a,175a1,,,,,,
'riche, It, s 411,/,11 , tr stole. Er i...hicx each .r.si,, Ly Its otsz: operd .ot.,
nittontt renotsmo to tie hand.tvdlr, no Is required by other nta
'dd.... It 0 , 111 do Letter mad elvaper awning than a ! , ,Alrect t, 4., ra,
roe. it olio 'sod. Oa. one cent An how_ F,E.2.1. r 4 P. CutcrLAt.
It retintien no re-spooling.—N. F-, angeliat.
We like Giover & Blker's best.— its' iVreall,
This niaChine:finishes its work.—Northamplou Go..
The best patent now in use.—Eartnn Whir/.
To all or which the Tribune says auten.—..V..F. ..7 r
. - F. B. LIIAI.IIILER, Autni.
I 311:dTHUSE, Deceibber 8, 1...
W. RILEY
AQI'JT FOR
ineeler & Wllscii's Spting Machfues,
THE BEST IN USE.
K.E. , a .4 lido th, woe on Anth aide* and that 'width non , I
.1131: rip. It n-nrta equally well utaak Mit, l.fnra, Woolen, and cn•
Inn good, Acatalna, t+therttlg.gWltl hmlminr.kc., with atre.l.lY
tomoty Puptli, to any bpd wort.
We prefer wurEcK4 & wiLsos-s se.in g Machine.
for ~e.—Tuttit;
re cannot imagine any_!hipt.wore pe r i e n,_
Nrw YORK EVA
• lioutrose, Dec. 29,
11101T1tOSE PftleES CiJARENT.
cotuaernTwszuor /OE 7RS SLECIIBLIVAL
Wheat 1 1 bushel, . $l.OO 651,2;.,
Rie 1 0 builiel,:. -- .., , 62/ @69 cis.
Corn,"fl bushel, .621 Et , 69 cis.
Buckwheat, .1 1 busbnl, •-•- • 50 rte.
Oats, 11 - bushel • ' • 40 ( 44 cts.
',Beans, white,/.1 bushel, *I 00
,
Potatoes, lil bu5he1,...... ..... .. • :1-7,} eta.
Wheat flour,A! bbl. .$7,0 . 0 to tty. , ,
Rye flour, .l hundretl
.....
..
~ ' , ..2 ..,1:8 0 :2 .2 , . ..;
Corns Meal, ' a hundred , 1,50 ® 1,7:,
Pork; ? lb .... 10 ®l2}cts.
DreSsedaogs,... :. • iii• ® 6,1 cents.
Lard, 11 1 • . , ...... ... . Itll ets.
Butter. 11 It •
Eggs, "••0 doz. 12.4 cts.
- . -
' The Oxygenated Bitters. for the cure
of Dyapepria or lodization. Liver Complaint. Aotlitoa. Cott, Use..,
Lose of Appetite. Fever aral Ague, Ifeart Item. Water Crash. A. '..!.
j it, •, , ,,St,goe, *clamor, Xan..A. ifeadarbe. Eutetd.'"atut (kyr.:
I Irehintv, or one Iti..-.0.0 havio"..ltAtaildnin-lroyerfrtt d1ge.11.,,
I Them:. RITTER:S. an all es of Our feßoareittrens. lorlctr-,.
, Members of l'ooerrar. lawyer*. Phyalrlone. Clergymen, PLoitert
i Fanner. and other:. [...rutty-are the oat.r.ara ciatAlS. nr..1.,..
madrCeTECIFIf %for the 101no.liato retlefand uentmownt ruse w..'
• many cruel cOtori.lii.:,. la lair,b to roar ph...sot other of Dysimkea
allet oaf ram. Tin, turrEtts were dlscovered by ,Vr. far::,..
/1.4; men. and to their remain differ entirety front that of any oti r
prorroranon ~f tooth inn. contalutug no alcholost—no adorn"-,
, tionoot....trug.—in their tut...retook, tort rtlmnblint.—relalolt. e 0 , .
, 6 z,, , .• in ant clime; they an, "a combination and a form indref -•
Meetivine a lib* ki.oweno rhalln exterotbrattog dbrease vat r s -t,
mgthe syeterri fait, prietlpe riOr and heallb...No - matter of how
Wait ltandttit or however Induced or Anode hi In-evader the d.
eatoaraay be.--no matter that it ban Infited It. *Mot the pbrdrit,
ao.I tr-drted the 4.lforta of Medletne, a oblate trlsl of door Bits., w:.
I utfsfy the at:refer that Ida 41,t1e la ametedde to the proper n toed).
i to (...timonv of the nitny corr. effected by db. Remedy. refro.r,
to tail fo Dd. u'rlnru renttleateo from dixtinguldnd indlr Wool, 05,..e.
all ever the laud. % . . —.
• JYyipepsia Cured.
Tlk great rut:o,er of core. elf" ted hr Rut acteutil,:campound.t , ,
[for fah.' OXYGENATED BITTERS: ha. establl-hed It is ti,..
rfannaittlly XS the oldy relkth!e uze , licine for the tip...VV.:ID' of to'..
l{ yobs or hail:v - 2.41r, A.Ltm.a., lAver Complaint, Freer and At,..
, IA :art Rm.), Acidity. heart INN. COdlventaa. l'tk.a. lie.ol .1,,, ,
I Njrvonowa_ Ih•bility,oll :.11 .ILowder. of the Stomach and plea=
1.. orzota. ..,Inale trial Urtn adhlythe rarlfeter of its Wtl/.le7f.
I.LOW , :f aud auperiorife.
I - • SETH W. FOWLE & CO_ Proptleton, Rolm,
I Aees - ra.—AREL TVRItF:L.L. Montroe. WM. C. WARP, M..
1 Aftlfont. J. T. C AItLISLE.G teat Read, G. W. WIJODREIE. D',...r
I tu.tc, DR. J.4'. OLIISTEA D. DundatT. EATOVA: II OXLEY, U.,
I ord. September 15. 1cZ.,•4.-Tleqe
MARRIED.
in Dunmore, Lutenio Nu. 2S, 1858, Lr
Calvin Spencri, E.N., Mr. I.ruta:Miacura and' Mi.:
Alitomr. 11. T . ITCWJA. allorMunntore,p
In the Y. E . Ctiurcb, at Rohrstiurk; Pa., March
by the Rev. IL B. Emory, Dr. 1. N. ROE: arid
SARAH A. EIIORT, both of Rohrsburg. . ,
In Montmoc, 3larch.l3,.by 11. Emory, Mr.
JAstt. , 3H. Bisskt.r., of Jessup, and Miss {{EDE.,
Klaus, of 7.ew Milford.
in Monte, Feb. 12, by Rev. 1013. Emory, Mr.
JAMF.3 E. }Uwe: and alias
- th Brooklyt., bit - M.3'16 , by Rey. ki.Dooin
tie, Mr. ilosia A. TIFFANY, and Mias - dAtp..M. Jet
rams, both of Barford, Snag. Co., Pa.
• DI 1E.11)
In Forestlake, on the, 14th inst., Mr: ; d
iliwks, aged 13 years and Id rnontinr,'
- In Bridgewater, March 161 b, MARY, daughter of
llorace and Augusta Brewster, aged 4 years. •
In Gibson, Jan. '29,'-'59, of congestion of the lung',
Mr. SILASJOHRET, aged 74 yeaes.• , •
In Bridgewater, on the 7thinst., MIS. PERIULT
( * ATHA RINE, wife of Mr.- - Cyrus• Warner, aged tr.'
years and R dare. : •
`She early professed religion, and united with th ,
Methodist Church while.living with licr•sather, Ana.
Maras, in Liherty. married Stearns short, no;
quite two and.alalf years, nud yet ion& enough to
prove a..fitithful and devoted wife and moiler, and
a remarkably kind and affectionate,step-mother.—
She leaves a hustiandi a child; and 'step-child, and
numerous friends to ineurn Mer decease. She is la-.
mented however nos Ai the4e. Who die without no.
Christian's hok.""Mlesseditrolhe cad who dir
.
in-the Lord." [Cox.
. .
NEW GOODS
• 9
my
line of business, arriving EVERY WEEK
_ . ABEL TtiRRELL'>.
•
Montrose, Mitreh - 23; 1659
ettgles 777 4, :,'Turtell's.
HOWE'S
PATENT ELLIPTIC SPRING BED.
Luxury, Coruforl, aiuloVose Combined.
1714 ESE CELEBRATED BEDS.FOR SALE EY
W. W. - SMITH & CO.
• Montr*,
_
Ethibitionratis.
XTOW on Exhibition—and to be eaen gratis, et
1111
V. INESI.TAJEOR SHOP,
i 666 6 .11,2*.:T0 1...14,
The Latest Pashions!! '
comprising the greatest. variety of GENTLEMEN':
cOS CURE ever
.pnbirshcl? - " •
....Mootivioe,.Marchl 4 .2, 1851.-8 w
RD.
TAU: TIEIAIEig. 'of . the- Binghamton
Walter Care, will be at Stualuehanna l il",..
pot,\ (Nicore ifotel,),evolle-tith of Cdell tar- --)„,
ing the Spring dSinufM4, for CiSue..mn,,; a ",-„Z
Ode will find it to their advanta.." .l°
Patients received n i ii it...ones - st his F,STABWII
MENT, te.IIINGRAIITON, Ir.,* - whlre erer?you a
fort Ike.; convenience may be found fbr the 11.11C..:44 .
ful treatmencolluvands. ; .
3inghandon, Marelt 23, 185t).-tf