'.'Bl.laiTCt) KtKtlT WKfoNESDAT, BY y. R, DUNN. TC2 W 4 SOfllTER'B BUILD 1X3, Ut STREET, TI0NE8TA) PA. TKRMS, $2.00 A YEAR. ' flubanrlptintis received for a shorter ;1d than tliroo month. '"Vrresrtondonce solicited from all part tii country. No notice wtll be ttyken of aonytnoiia communications. BUSINESS DIRECTORY. TIONESTA LODGE A'. 309, I. O. of O.F". 1ETCTS every Friday evening, at 8 o'clock, In the Hall tbrmerly occupied y the OooJ Templara. 8. II. 1IASLET, N. r. . J. T. DALE, Sec'y. 27-tf. 1 Samuel D. Irvvtn, TTGENEY, COUNSELLOR AT LAW A and REAL ESTATE AGENT. Leiral ualnesa promptly attended to. Tionesta, s. ' 40-ly. i, WBWTOX PBTTia. MILES W. TATB. PKTTIS A. TATE, ATTORNEYS AT LAW, .ftlm Str, TIONESTA, PA. Qwrf A. Jk amktiiM, r.. TtaaaM. h. Masoiy A Jeiyks, ATTORNEYS AT LAW. Office on Elm Street, above Walnut, Tionesta, Pa. " r. W. Haya, ATTORNEY AT LAW, and Notart Public, Reynold Iluklll A Co.'a lok, Seneoa 8t., Oil City, Pa. -ly r. XIKVIAa. r. B. SMILCT. K IK KB A It S JfiX E r, Attorneys at Law, ... Franklin, Pa. PRACTICE in the eereral Conrta of Ve nango, Crawford, Forest, aud adjoin ing eountlee. 9-ly. . HAaKU, O. D. FAaiBTT, t HARRIS A FASSETT, vernay at Law, TltuavUl Ponn'a. PRACTICE In all the Court of Warren, . Ljawrura, forest ana Venango ( oun- ; rnrsiciAxs suroeoxs. J.WIfAS3,M.D.udJ.B.ELAINE,M.n. ' . flarloc entered into a co-partnership, all : aalla. night or day, will receive immodlnto istMeutlom Ofllce"at residence of Dr. Wl ! aans, Klui St., fTionesta, Pa. SO-ly Clarla B- Arart, BHTIST, Centre Street, Oil City, Fa. Injitmona Block. ' Lawrence House, W M. LAWRENCE, PRorrtiirron. This . . house has fimt been opened to the ' cmbllo and the furniture and fittings are ? all new. Guest will ho well entertained - at rtuontMo rate. I situated on Km KL, , VfplUt Superior Lumber Co. Store. 39-1 y Tionesta House. a YTTirT Trim c, T. netaPa.. at the mouth of the creek, Mr. Iille' ha' thoroughly renovated the Tionesta Mouse, and re-furnished it com pletely. All who patronize him will be Vail entertained fit reasonable ruton. 20 ly FOR.KST HOUSE, T BLACK PROPRIETOR. Opposite J. Court Uouse, Tionesta, Pa. Just ,Insd. Everything now and clean and fresh. The best of liquors kept constantly ion hand. A portion of the publio patron- ... km pc.nnor ni 1 1 0 uniiniimi -1 f -1 v .- . -L j - . . - ' National Hotel, TIDIOUTE, PA., Benl. Elliott, propria tor. Tbi houso has been newly turn tohed and is kept in Rood style. Guests will be made conuoriaoienere at reason Lie rates. ly, Scott House, FAGCNDVR. PA., K. A. Roberts, Pro prietor. This ho el has been recently re-furnished and now offors superior ac commodations to guos'.a. 25-ly. Dr. J. I Aconb, TJHYSICIAN AND SURQEOX. who has l liad fifteen years' ex perionoe in a lar(tn ana suooessmi praciine, win attend all V 1 J ' 1 1 I 1 1 1 ;lreery fetore, looated la Tidioute, near r njiwunmi vaiia. viiiuv til nil uruK iiu aioiOQia nous. XnTXHIg STORE WILL BE.FOTJND . Xi mil assortment or .noaicinea, liquors K-i ; l.', .... .11 . ' Oils, Cutlery, all of the best quality, and ;wlll be sold at roasonable rates. DR. CHA3. O. DAY, an experienced Pbysiolau aud Drujjjlst (rem New York, feaa charge of the Store. All proscriptions 4kat p aocuraieiy. av a. uaj. jse. r. nu. jl. a. isixt. If A T, PARK CO., ' raar of Ilra'A Walnut Sta. Tlonesla. Baak of Discount and Deposit. ' Interact allowed on Tim Deposits. ( Colleetlens madeonall thePrlnoipal polnU 01 me v. , Collections solicited. 18-1 y. r-A. SALS, ISwC J. T. SALS. CUw. TIOUKSTA SAVINGS BANK, ' "Tionesta, Forest Co,, Jpa. 'This Bank transactn a General Ranklug, i.'olleotiiiir and Exchange liuainess. ' lrfls on the Principal Cities of tho United Stales and Europe bought and sold. Ciold and Silver Coin and Government Rcurilin bought and sold. 7-30 Bouds ronvcrUid on t!m most fuvorablo terms. inloi wut allowed on time deposits. Mar. 4, tf. . J. B. LONG, IJANUFACTURKK of and PiaU-r in HARNESS, 8AUlft.ES, WniPK, ROBES, CUKRY COMBS, BRUSHES, , , 1IORSECLOTH1NU, and cv(irv1liin hi the line. ' In lionupr it Aejiw s ttlock, adjoining Drug Store. T VOL. VI. NO. 13. , D. W. CLARK, (cOMMtRSIONKB'a CLERK, FOR VST CO., PA.) MEAL ESTATE AQET. HOUSES ami Ixta for Bale ami RENT Wild Ijtnds for Sale. 1 . I have superior facilltlns for ascertaining the condition of taxes and tax deeds, Ac, and am therefore qualified to act Intelli gently as agent of those living at dis tance, owning lands .in the County. OlUoe In Commissioners Room, Court ITouse, Tionesta, Pa. . -41-ly. D. W. CLARK. New Hoarding House. MRS. R. S. IIULINQ8 has built a large addition to her house, and is now pre pared to anommnodateanumber of perma nent boarders, and all transient ones who may favor her with their patronage. A good stable has recently been built to ac commodate tho horses of gnsts. Charges reasonable. Residence on Elm Ht., oppo site S. Haslet's store. ii-ly ohmktox IIOSEY, CENTRE STREET, OIL CITY, PA., ROOKS, STATIONERY, FANCY OOODS, TWINES, TOYS, INKS, M UOLLSALJC AND KITAII,. Book, Newspaper and Magazine MAILED TO ANY ADDRESS At publishers ratos. 89-1 y GROCERY AND PROVISION STORE IN TIONESTA. GE0.W.B0VARD&C0. II AVE just brought on a complete aud carefully selected stock, oi FLOUR, GROCERIES. PROVISIONS, and everything necessary to the comploto stock of a nrst-cittssUrocury House, which they have opened oik. at their establish ment on Kim St., first oor north of M. E. Church, TEAS, COFFEES. SUGARS, SYRUPS, FRUITS, SPICES, . HAMS, LARD, AND mo VISIONS OF A LL KINDS, at the lowest cosh prices. Goods warrant ed to be of the boat quality. Call and ex amine, aud we believe we can suit you. GEO. W. BOVARD &. CO. Jan. , 72. QONFECTIONARIEg 1-AONEW, at the Post Office, has . . oened out a choice lot of C R OCeRJEJ, C0NFECTJ0NA Ii IES, CANNED FRUITS, 10BACC0S, CIGARS, AND NOTIONS OF ALL KINDS. A portion of the patronage of the public is resspecuuuy souciteu. U-tt L. AGNEW. NEBRASKA GRIST IYHLL. THE GRIST MILL at Nebraska (Lacy tgwn,) Forest county, has been thor oughly overhauled and refitted in iirot-rlo.-ui order, aud is now running and doing all kinds of CUSTOM GRISfDIXO. FLOUR, FEED, AND OATS, Constantly on hand, and sold at tho very lowest Xfcure. iH-Cta T " H. W. LEDEBUR. JLQTS FOR SALE! IN THE BOROUG OF TIONESTA. Apply to GEQ. G. CKLES, 79, Nassau St., few York, City. Tl8 Kepublicarl Offloa KKKl-h ooiiKtantly oh hand a large as soi tment of Blank 'Poods, Mortugos, Kulipceusa, Warrants, Iiimm9ii, Ac. to be "old besp for easbi tf. TIONESTA, PA., HON. THOMAS CORWIN. A.t tlie timo I first naw Jlr. Ewing, Mr. Corwio was iu the fulness of his glory, ond raveling in the most ex traordinary popularity ever given to a publio servant in a free country. Wherever he went Crowe's followed at his heels, and whenever lie epoke there was a perfict carnival of i'un frolic, logic and triumphs. What a wonder ful and gifted man be was! Of large frame, broad, deep, heavy chest, a complexion swarthy as a savage, a well made, large significant head, brilliant eyes, aud a face so capable of expressing every varying emotion, that as a comic actor he would have rivalled Burton in hi palmiest day ; and as a preacher, would have looked more doleful than the children ef Is rael, when they tat down by the riv ers of Babylon, and "wept when they remembered Zion.' I have often heard our friends de scribe him as he appeared during the campaign of 1840, when the people roused to a pitch of enthusiasm rarely witnetfed, with thccryef "Tippecanoe antj Tyler too " followed Corwin wlh almost hungry eagerness, content if they could only Jjsfen. to hjs yoico and gaze into his m.igio countenance. Farmer and their wives would get up in the middle of the uight, fodder the cattle for the next day, feed the horses, put the household in order for a few days' absence, and then drive thirty miles over rough roads, and through sparsely settled neighbor hoods, considering the labor well be stowed os midnight once more futind them, worn and exhausted, at home, if they had heard the wonderful orator.J lotu Uorwin, the "Wagon Boy of Ohio." As a mere orator, Ijlr Corwin excelled any man it has been ray. fortune to hear, So full of wit, humor, puthes, learning, history, im agery; a manner so charming and magnetic as to be lusctnatiug beyond desuriptinu, and a face so variablo and wonderful in its power of express ing emotions that no man could look upon it without yieldiug at once to its bewitching influence. Ia private life, at the social board, he whs the centre and idol of the circle, aud wheij i Congress, in the latter years of his life, he was always surrounded by the members who loved and honor ed him, aud were only toe delighted to listen to his attractive conversation. I ouce went with him to Buffalo, where he was to speak during the campuigu of 1864. In the course ef his remarks he urged the great im portance of individual effort, and re lated the well known anecdote of his defeat while running as a candidate for Governor of Ohio, against Wilson Shannon, his Democratic competitor. He said the day after election, he met an old farmer aud friend of his, who condoled with him on his defeat, ex pressing at the same tirrfe bis aston ishment and dismay that such an ex traordinary and unexpected event could have occurred, and such dis grace-be fastened upon the people of Ohio, laking the old man aside he asked him if lie had gone to the polls on election day, for, said Mr. Corwin, "I noticed your township did not give it ordinary vote. "Well," said the old man, evidently grateiy embarrassed at the new turn things were taking, ''the not llr. Corwin, election d.ty was a very fine day iu these parts, and me and my neignuors an tnougiit you bad sartiu sure thing, and as it was a good day for cutting buckwheat, we thought we would not go and vote, as it wasn't necessary, aud that accounts for the light vqyj jou see." "'" "And so," said Mr. Corwin, "you sacrificed the best Governor that Ohio ever had for a paltry batch of buck wheat" "Bah r Said he, turning to the chairman of the'meeting with a merry twiukle of his eye,.'.'! wao so utterly disgusted with that comniuuicatiou, Mr. President, that I have iieve; been able to cat a buckwheat cake from that day to this one." Iu 1830 he was elected to Congress, and was re-elected for each successive term until 1840, when he was nomin ated for Governor of Ohio. It was during his last term that Mr, Isaac L Crary, a member of the House from Michigan, weui out of bis way to make a coarse and violent attack upon the military career of General Har rison, criticising it with great unfair ness1 and 'jiariisjji vigor. During ruoit it the time while he was 'speak ing, Mr. Corwin was engaged in writ ing letters, but as the speaker occas ionally bore haishly upon General Harrison, Mr. Corwin would leok at bim with his peculiar smile, shake his head; aud resume his work. Mr. John W. Allen, then representing Cleveland jn Congrets, sat next to him; and Mr. Corwiu privately jpoke to him aud said, "Somebody must answer that fellow. W cannot per mit this thing to go on so." Mr. Al ien's reply was, "There is nobod.-' to I JUNE 25. 1873. do it but yourself. You are the man." At the close of the speech no one arose a dead silence prevailed. Through the hall all eye were. fixed upon Corwin. He slowly rose to his feet, and, obtaining the recognition of the Speaker, was given the floor. At this mement, if being late in the- af ternoon, some one moved an adjourn ment, which was carried, and Mr. Corwin resumed the floor the next day. This was all the time he had for preparing one of the most famous and really wonderful and learned speeches ever delivered in the House of Representatives. For vigorous argument, pure irony, splendeS rea soning, and genuine wit, it has rarely been equaled. The defence of Har rison was overwhelming, aud the anuihilation of Crary complete. The House was convulsed with laughter at the richness and originality of the hu mor, and at times almost awed by the great dignity and profound arguments of the orator. The page of history were ransacked for illustrations to sustain tho speaker, and all were poured in rapid suppession upon the liead of poor Crary, who eat amazad and stupefied at the storm he had pro voked. A Corwin proceeded the members left their seats and clustered thickly about him, the reporters laid down their pens, the presiding officer his gavel, and everybody gave them selves up to tho enjoyment of the hour. As Mr. Corwin painted in mock lieroio style the knowledge of military affairs which the lawyer member from Michigan had acquired from reading "Tidd's Practice and Espinasses Nisi Piius," studies se hap- uy adapted to the art of war, the ouse Uirly roared with delight. "u uicir is mum provoiuujj picture of Crary in the capacity of k militia brigadier at the head of his legions' on parade day, with his "crop eared, bushy tailed mare and sickle hams the steed that laughs at the shaking of the spear, and whose neck was cloth ed with thunder," cemparing him with Alexander the Great and bis war horse Bucephalus, at the head of his Macedonian phalanx, and finally, after reciting liis deeds of valor aud labor during the day, left him and his exhausted troop at a corner grocery, assuaging the fires of their souls with copious draughts of whisky, drauk from theshellsof slsuirliLered watermel ons. When Mr. Corwin came to give tie history of General Harrison and defend his military record, he rose to the height of pure eloquence, and spoke with convincing force and un answerable logic. The fate of Crary was sealed. Probably no such per sonal discomfiture was ever known from the effect of a single speech. He never recovered from .the blow, aud was known ai florae and abroud as the late General Crary. Even at home the farmers and the i.ys, in watermolon season, would always offer him the fruit with sly jests and jeers, and joke nt his military career; but his public life and usefulness were at an end. R. C. Parsons, in Cleveland Leader. TUB 8TOHCS CASE. A brief history of tho proceedings in Stokes' cannot be uninteresting, iu view of the late decision granting him a new trial. He shot Fisk on January 6, 1872, After the Coroner' inquest an indictment was drawn against him. Motion to quash .the iudictmnt were wrangled over for some time. The indictment was sus tained, and Stokes was called upon to plead towards the latter end of ' June, 1872. No point had been gained but delay by the prisoner's counsel. The trial lasted from the 19th of June to the 15th of July, and resulted in a disagreement of the jury. This was, of course, a victory for the prisoner, and, until tho 1.9th of last December, he enjoyed his triumph." The ,began the second trial. On the 6th of Jan uary, 1873, one year exactly from the murder, Stokes was condemned to death ijj accordance with the unani mous verdict of the jury. Since that date there has been a scries of attempts to have a new trial granted, one point being suggested after another until the culuiuatiun favorable to the priso ner was reached on Tuesday. Some of the Western papers speak of Cyrus ileCorinic, the inventor of tho celebrated reaper, as the "farm ers' benefactor." We suppose ho is. Iu his renjorseless zeal to liefp the poor farmer ho really forgets himself. And this is the way he doe it. The original cost of oue of his best reapers, according to his own testimony, is less than (50. The retail price is 9200. The threshing ruacbiue of which he holds a niouopoly cost leas thau S100, and seils for 700. The benefactor of the agricultural race, in headlong zeal, to benefit his fellow creatures, should remember that be owe a. duty to his family as well, and that common prudence would dictate laying up something for a rainy day. $2 PER ANNUM. NOTE FROM THE DANBL'RY HEWfi HAN'S) TKAVELS-DB.MTEB AND ELSE WHERE. Before this letter is in type I will be wafting my way homeward like a gentle perfume. Just about. In Kansa City they speak of Den ver as a flourishing hamlet, and then they shrug their shoulders. In Den ver they ihjnk that Kansas City would be a passable place if it was on earth. The favorite expression here is "In time." Such a "man will in time make a fortune." And o on. "In time" is (he popular qualifier used in every connection. They tell me here that graveyards are not needed for residents, they are merely laid out as an act of courtesy to Eastern visitors. This intelligence affected me very much, and visibly shortened my stay in Denver. Kindness always did overcome me. We passed a number of settlements on the line of the Kansas Pacific. They were in flourishing condition and amply provided with printing office and churchpi, but I would have freely graded them all for one buffalo. St is an awful thing to want to see a uffalo, and not tee it. The market of Denver are super ior, the saloon are elegant, and in on of these places are billiard tables, which are pronounced by people who know to be equal to anything in New York. Ts see shirtsloeved miners and bull whackers punch balls over these tables, is next in impressivenessto the "eternal jnows." We found tho population of the cities at the depot. The men were generally whittling not slashing off cnipt as ycu see in tho .hast, but on ly tapering down the stick, lovingly fondling it like a man would do if he were whittling off the end of hi nose. Only the wealthy whittle anyway, be cause the timber is scarce. Gojng West from Kansa City, on the Kansas Pacific Railroad not even a tro was in sight, but from the track to the sky beyond wus a sea of living green, a vast unlimited field of bril liant sod. I don't know as "brilliant" is a proper qualifier for sod, but I heard a finely educated gentleman on the cars the other day speak of an "el egant sausage." And his shirt opened These are admirable grazing lands. I did not see cattle on a thousand hills, but I saw a thousand cattle on no hills. Herd after herd we passed as we whirled along, and attending them were rough looking men ou horses. Men who have been idolized in novels, only in novel they are known as rangers, but here they, are simply denominated "bull-whackers." If you come across any statements in this letter that appears to be rather figurative, so to speak, you' must re member that the letter is written on the cars while in motion, which are apt to make the soundest statements and the most awful truths annear vague like. The motion of a running iraiu is uncertain, i start to give soin facta that would make a river open it mouth, when a sudden move sends the pencil out of the golden realms of truth into the obscene at mosphere of levity. I wish now that I had written this pamphlet at lb Jbo tel, because Dsnver ia a very delicate subject to handle under the most fa vorable circumstances. P. S. I may .be mistaken, but I feel certain that a careftif survey of tne anove letter will not reveal the least reference to Pike' Peak and Long' Peak a being so far distant and so wonderfully disceruable from Denver. I am the only writer who i t j . i . .t , - - uas penurmeu mis ie&i, aud X feel proportionately proud of it, but I should hardly attempt it again. TUB FAMILY NETTING HEN. This is the season when every owner of hens is engaged' In 'endeavoring to suppress the materual instincts in que or in ore of them. The man comes home to supper and the wife observes: "That yaller pullet is on the nest again." Then the man goes out to the coep and say : "What in thun der is the matter with the beast, any way;" And crtwl in under the roost to the nest and reaches in and brings out a handful of feathers. Theu the heu scream and ruua Ut the door, and the other hen aet up a howl and Hkewise depart for that aperture; aud the man, nearly choked by feath ers and blinded by dust, falls over the wateriug trough, and skin hi 'ankle on the boxes, aud finally' b'ursl 'out into the yard, with a piece of brick iu each band, and goes after the yal lar pullet, with his face as red as a lobster. When ha catchaa tlm lien ha cuffs it over the head a few times, to show it now be feels, then jams it un der a barrel and psurs a pail of water through the cracks, and leave it there uutil morning , when it is released; aud the same operation is repeated iu the evenirg. Vanhury Next,. . Hates of Advertising. One Squars (1 inch,) one Inertlon - $1 SO One H. uare " rtno month . . S 00' One Square " three month (I 00' One Square one year - . 10 On' Two Squnros, ono year - . .104 Quarter Col. ' -. - . . to 00 Half .... o,, On . 100 00 Tta1 nrkiiiih. .1 Ml.f ,1!.Y..f hi 1 Marriage and death notices, gratis. All bills for yearly advertisement col lected quarterly. Temporary advertise ments must be paid for in advance. Job work, Cash on Delivery. THE IHMBRIBS OF TKAVKI. You receive an intimation that it will be necessary to leave town with out delay. Yeu and you family, are forthwith thrown into a state of tre mendous excitement; an express is immediately dispatched to the washer woman' ; everybody is in a buitl ; and you, yourself, with a feel in of dignity which you cannot altolrther, conceal, sally forth to the booking of- nco 10 secure your place. Here a painful consciousness of your own un importance first rushes on your mind,. The people are as cool and collect ed as if nobody were going out of town, or as if a journey of a hundrei odd mile were mere nothing. You enter a mouldy. looking room, orna mented with large posting bills: the greater part of the place enclosed be-' nind a huge, lumbering rough coun ter, and fitted up with recess that' look like the dens of smaller1 auimal in traveling menagerie, without tho bars. Seme half-dozen people are booking brown paper parcels, which one of the clerks flings into the aforesaid recess es with an air of reckleaspess which you, remembering the new carpet bag you bought in the morning, feel con eiderably annoyed at ; porters looking like so many Atlases, keep rushing in and out, with large packages on their shouldeRpd while you are waiting to make the necessary inquiries, you wonder what on earth the booking-cP fico clerks can have been before they were booking-office clerks, one of them, with his pen behind his ear, and his hand behind hiq, is standing in front of tlie fire, like a full-length portrait of Napoleon ; the other, with his hat half os hi head, enters the . . -L. I . I l l .... jjasocngeiB names iu me uooas Willi n coolness which is inexpressibly provok ing ; and the villian whistles actual ly whistle while a man ask him what the fare is outside all the way to Holyhead such frosty weather too l They are clearly an isolated race, evidently possessing no sympathies 'or feelings 'id common" with tlie rest of mankind, llefarepnil.you trembling ly inquire "What time will it be nec essary for ra to be here in the morn ing?" "Six o'clock," replies the whUt'er, carelessly pitching Hie cover ign you have just parted -with into a bowl rn the desk. "Kather before than after," adds the roan with the semi-roasted unmentionables, with just as mnch ease and complacency as if the whole world got out of bed at 5. You turn into the street, raminating a you bead your steps homeward, on tho extent to which men become hard ened in cruelty, by custom. Dickens. Those agricultural jouinals some times cause a great (leal oT trouble. Burns, of Chester County, read in'6n.o of them the other 'day : "It ha been discovered that, to make a balky horse travel, tie a string tightly around his ear, near the end, and let him atand until he begin to shake his head, when he ir'il.l forget about balking and go without further trouble. Jt never fails." So Burns tried it on one of hi horses. The faithful animal first nip ped Burns' shoulder and inoculated him with the epizootio ; then it planted a hoof or two iu the stomach of Burn's ; and then it suddenly remembered lorcetlung it wanted to do iu an6ai ter County, and left at a two-thirty. seveu gate for that region. It has not been heard of since ; while Burn has enough influenza to go around Brig ham Young's family, and have several pretty respectable colds in the bead over. " '" The Danbury New say that a very wicked boy camphened and igni ted the tail of a miserable dog, Mon day bit, and the animal' Jled -over Coilpit Hill at terrible speed, Tho down town people who were out doors (tared at the phenomenon till it disap peared, sum of them pronouncing it the most brilliant meteor ever witness ed, but the older and wiser just shook their heads, and "spoke in low lones about the inscrutable way of Provi dence. Two clerk in the postal car of a train ou the Louisvillo & Nashville Railroad were badly scared recently. On eneuing the bag containing the Florida mails, two lively young alli gators sprang out.' Bud" tho clerks quickly took- refuge in an adjoining car. The young reptiles were even tually captured, when it was found they had escaped from a cardboard box, in which they were being sejit as a f) resen I to a geutleman in Louisville. A very handsome young fellow from Baltimore assaulted a citizen ou the street at Staunton, Vt., a few days ago, and was sentenced to the chain gang iu default of payment of hi tine While the gang was working near a girls seminary the girls caught sigh of his handsome fane, which seappea! cd to the sympathies of the teuder hearted creatures that they "chippy ia" and paid his fine. IJo mauileste 1 his gratitude by getting beastly drunk