i t i i C b t a ti VI fci h P M tl r. EDITOR. VCD,r.SDAY IIIORNIJG, APR. 27, 1881. .tniiott is cement's. Our terms for announcements for Co. Supt. will bo $.3.(i0, Rtrictly in advance. County SvrEiUNTKNDKjtT. llr. PErt'nr,icAN : Plenho announce tho name of MISS J. 1C. COPKLAND, of Tionesta, as a candi date for Superintendent of .Schools of For- ct County, subject to the action of direc tors' con ventioii to bo hold on the first Tuesday in May. i; n. KF.runMc'AN Dcnr Sir : Please announce m v namo a a candidate for Suerintnmlent of Schools of Forest County. subject to thn action of the directors convention to be held in May n ex t. J. E. I1ILLARD. En. RF.rtTnLioAN : J)cnr Sir .-Please anno'ince my name as a candidate for Countv .Superintendent of Schools of Forest County, subject to the action of tho directors convention to bo hold in Mav. J. F. WILLIAMS. A nnouncements for the different county offices will bo charged for h follows: Pro thonotnry,$10; Sheriff, $8 j Commissioner. $5; Auditor, $.1. Those terms are strictly cA to everybody. PROTHONOTARY, Ac. Please announce my name as a candi date for re-election to the office of Pro thonotary, Ao., subject to rules and usages of the Republican oartv. April 10, 1881. JUSTI8 SIIAWKEY. School Directors' Convention. lo Ike School Directors of Forest Co : Gentlemen : In pursuance of the forty third section of the act of May, 1854, you are hereby notified to meet in convention, at the Court House in Tionesta, on the first Tuesday in May, i A. D., 1881, being the 3d,day of the month, at one o'clock in the afternoon, ; and select viva voce, by a majority of the whole number of directors present, one person of literary and scientific acquirements, and of skill and experi ence in the art of teaching, as County Superintendent, for three succeeding years ; aDd certify the result to the State Superintendent, at Harrisbnrg, as required by the thirty-ninth and fortieth socliona of said act. II. S. Brockway, Co. Supt. of Forest County. Ti-nesta, Pa., March 28, 1881. Republican County Committee. The members of the Republican County Committee of Forest County are requested to meet at the office of Hon. E. L. Davis, Tionesta, on Tues day evening of court week, May 17, 1881, and fix a time for holding the Republican L.inary Election, and transact such other business of import ance as may come before them. It is particularly desired that all be pres ent, as the meeting will be an import ant one. Quintain Jamieson, Chairman. Tionesta, Pa., April 19, 1881. The Republican State Committee met at Harrisburg, Thursday, April 11. About fifty members responded to the call of their names. Chairman Cessna presided. Erie, Philadelphia and Harrisburg were mentioned as the place of holding the next Convention. After some discussion Harrisburg was selected as the place and Sept. 8 as the time of holding the next State Conven tion. Col. Hooten suggested I hat the thanks of the Committee should be tendered to Chairman Cessna and the Secretaries for the efficieut work done in the lust campaign. This was adopted, and led to a neat little speech from the Bedford statesman, reviewing the work performed and its good re sults. Tho Committee then adjourned. 1 The spring floods in Wisconsin and Iowa are said to be unprecedented in extent and disastrous courequences. Tbu streams are swollen beyond their 1 hanks and vast tracts of country are ; inundated. Hundreds of bridges have been swept away and miles of road : ( auuxuergeu. nouses, cams, crops and r supplies have been destroyed, and great .. 1 I IT I .T. K. WEN1C, la "umiiuj cuiaueu lu lURUy piaCBS. ,. ' : j . i . ... . iici iuiujj is uciug uooe wnicu skill . suggests for the saving of property aod M the relief of distress. Great destruc n tiou and suffering have also been k caused in Southern Dakota and along lt the Upper Missouri river. Reliel'boats A dothitisr and other needed sunDlies to -j nig cuui.cio. j i l v juoa vi iiio una i ) ...l-.1. : e :i ncu icuunuu. which is ciiusu lur cou- c. ratulation. But great energy and in jiroruptness, as well as great liberality, . will be necessary to reach all the (le va s ted districts and afford the necessa ry assistance. In this emergency the i ovtrbial activity auJ geuerosit? of Ve-Uru people hi'11 bo tented lo ' i uaJ t:ll result ill irreut pood to the suflorers by the unprece dented overflow of the streamj, the result of the suddeu molting of the tremendous 6now fall of tho past most remarkable winter. The Meadville Hrpuolican says: Many newspapers, probably from pov erty of ideas or by force of lonjr nrac tice, can find no ktibject on which they so delight to tarry, as the constant abuse of Congress and the Legislature A young man whose attention is first called to public affairs, is inclined to believe that the legislative bodies ,uow in Bcssion are the worst that ever ex isted and are disgraceful mobs in their action. The writers of this stuff do not believe what they write, and men of mature years have learned long ago that abuse belougs to the present, and all tho glory to the past. The Phila delphia North American of a recent dale 8 ays on this subject : It is conceded, we believe, that the present General Assembly is composed of a better body of men than any that have preceded it for many years. There are some rowdies and very worthless members in it, but their number is not lares, and for nhuioni reasons we will not state the locality from which the majority of these mem bers come. The great hulk of the members are honest. intelhVant and capable men who are anxious to dis charge their duty faithfully and con scientiously. They are quite equal in every respect to those who daily criti cise them as far as our personal ac quaintance extends with both parties. Our individual testimony on this point should be of some value, as we served two years in the House at a time when neuner the integrity nor intelligence of the Legislature was called in oues- tion, and we have been a visitor at very nearly every session since. We were a member of the Citv Councils nf Philadelphia in the administration of Mayor Henry, since which ti.no it is said that body hns ereatlv deterioaterl. and we assert positively that the pres ent legislature is superior intellect ually and morallv to tho Citv Conn. cils of I860, and not much inferior to tne. Legislature of 1847. s THE STATE CAPITOL. Harrisbubg, Pa., Apr. 22, '81. The "hundred days" are up yet this subborn Legislature won't go V It be gins to gradually crop through the anx ious minds of the Standard Oil Com pany, Railroad Corporations, tele graph monopolies, gin elingers and anii-reforraers of Philadelphia, aod elsewhere, that the majority of these much abused lawmakers is not made of that kind of material to be driven away from the duty they owe to their State, and their constituents in partic ular, by the mere consideration of money. Although it is believed by a great majority of the members, that the Attorney General's opinion will be the "law of the land," and that every day over one hundred, spent here in making laws will he without compensation, yet I am glad to eee that their action partakes of something higher than of a mere mercenary char acter; and while their motives will be ridiculed by a corrupt and powerful ring, aided by the coutemptible daily slanders of their paid organs, yet the people will not be slow to see that their servants are doing their bounden duty, (pay or no pay,) in remaining in session long enough to finish up the important legislation now pending. The business before the Home is being pushed with rapidity, sessions being held two and often as three times per day. The free pipe bill has passed the House after a hard fight, and has aheady come up iu the Senate for discussion. The anti dis crimination bill has also passed third reading, and will be on final passage Wednesday. It will undoubtedly pass the House ; waat fate it will meet in the Senate is hard to determine. Mr. Davis' bill No. 176, requiring railroads to fence their tracks, &c., will come up on second reading AVed nesday the 27th, at 5 o'clock p. m. The House agreeing to take the bill up out of regular order and fixiDg the above time for special consideration of the same; a victory for the friends of L Utll il 1 . - the bill they scarcely hoped for. You may look for a red hot time, as the railroad men will fight it bitterly. Mr. Davii is deserving of i of credit, for a new member, ia push o " bv" c or a new member, ia push- ing thi important measure from a twice killed bill in Committee to position it bow occupies in advance of ucany a hundred bills on second read ing that formerly took precedence. JLe new County bill on which the litujlv.ll.ans built their fuudest hopes was 'yut ia in littlo Ltd," ou Wed- iu lat; us burial took place, ju i the Senate. Senator Roberts, of Craw ford County, feels much agrieved and claims that some of his brother Sena tors "went back" on their sacred promises. Senators like other men are only mortal. The date of final adjournment has not beeu agreed upon yet. Tho Senate has passed a resolution to adjourn May 19, but the House amended the resolution so as to read May 26. This will have to be concurred in by the So Date, and doubtless a conference will have to be had to fix a day. Republican. THE NATIONAL CAPITOL. Special to tho Republican. Washington, D. C, Apr. 20, '81. The dead-lock in the Senate from present indications is as likely to last all summer as not. Each side to the controversy is determined that the other must yield. Meanwhile th President refuses to make anysu-'sest- ions, as he does not consider it a sub ject in which the executive branch can take part. lhe struggle is gettiag to be better understood by the people. At first, it was thoughtlessly supposed to be an affair of offices. Here and there, per sons may still be found who fancy that it is nothing else. But iutellicrent people of both parties perceived some time ago, that the contest must have deeper meaning and larger import ance. The leading Republicans, men saw at length, were not foolish enough to expend much time and effort, for no better object than to put certain persons in office in April rather than in December. It was then perceived that the struggle and the revolutionary resistance of the Democrats were hav ing a marked effect upou public opin ion at the South, and that the better classes in that section, ripe for a cut ting loose from Bourbonism, by uiutu- al consent staked their all by this con test. If Democracy were defeated a rapid disintegration in the party in the South would follow. Hence the Democratic Senators cr.nlinne In ut mrr. gle. It is death to back down, and a rapidly growing public seotinient break away, and once started like the hole the mouse gnawed through the dam, the few drops would soon be a torrent that would wash away old Bourbonism. But the flood that poured upon Mr. Mahone did not move him, and the Democratic annihilators after spending all their euergies, fiud him stauding firm, with the old rock of Republicanism -ear euough to cl'.mb onto in case of emergency. But with the energy of desperatiau the Demo crats struggle with ruin behind and in front of them. They call Mahone a traitor but are powerless to punish him ; they can stop the proceedings of Congress by revolutionary tactics but they can do nothing to win public favor. They have made another seri ous blunder, and dare Jot look the enormity of it squarely in the face. Decent men of the South are slowly awakening to the couviclion that tbey can never hope to get any good thing done, for their States, or themselves, until they can cast off Bourbonism, and it's chains of slander and assassin ation, of fraud and force. The Solid South begins to be a stench in the nos trils of sensible Southern men, and in view of present facts, we may lock for an early dissolution from the doctriues and methods of the past twenty years. Mr. Frye made a telling speech in the Senate yesterday. Ha said, that being the youngest member of the Sen ate, perhaps a reasonable dogree of modesty should have kept him silent, nnd he had fully lntonded to keep si lence, and act as a looker on, but that he found it necessary to be away for some time he wanted to say a few things before he left. His speech was upon Southern methods, the action of the Democratic party iu this contest. I niL. Profit 81,'JOO. "To sum it up, Rix lonjr years of bed-ridden tlotnou costing $200 per year, total S 1,200 of this expense was stopped il l ...I n r by three bottles of Hop Bitters, taken by my wile, bhe has done her own house work for a year since, without the loss of a day aud I ------ j 'wuj kuow il 'or their benefit. JV. E. Far- mtr 2t. White Coo ki eh. Take 0f white two cups sugar, two-thirds of a cui butter, two-thirds of a cup sweet milk, ,M n,r ..p t....r s one and a half measures "Banner" Bafciug Powder ; roll OJt thin and cut in shape Teachers' Examinations. The Tenchris' examinations in the several school districts will tiike place as follows : Nebrakii, Wednesdrty, April 20. Whig Hill. Thursday, 21. Neilluvwn, Saturday, 23. Clarington, Tuesday, " 26. Maripnville, Wednesday, " 27. Brookston, Friday, ' 29. Hickory, Monday, May 2. Tionesta, Saturday, " 7. Applicants for certificates are ex; pected to come supplied with writing paper and pencil, as the examinations will be principally writcn. Directors and citizens are respectfully invited to be present. Examinations will commence at 9 o'clock a. m. II. S. Brockway, Co. Supt. Orange Cake. To tho yolks of six eggs, well beaten, add two cups sugar, three-fourths cup butter, one cup sweet milk ; beat this light, then add three cups flour, having iu it one measure "Banner" Baking Powder, whites of four eggs ; stir gently ; grate one-half of a large orange into this batter; bake in layers iu jelly cake pans. For the Icing. Beat the two remaining whites stiff, adding one pound pulverized sugar, and the other half orange grated ; when cold spread each layer with the icing. We sell the real South Bend Chilled Plow, made by the South Bend Chilled Flora Co., at South Bend, Indi ana. They are guaranteed to do better work with less draft than auy Plow in the market. 2t Robinson & Bosxkr. NEW REVISION auknt WANTED SKW TEWTASIEXT. As nmdo by tlio most eminent Hcholars of England and America. Half the price of Corrospondinir Foolish Kdition. Larjre type, linen Nupcr-cnlondcred paper, ole ffant bindhig. A neporate 'Oinprolicn Hivo History of tho liible and iU Transla tions," including a full account of tho Now ltavision. given to subscribers. Uost chanco for agents ever oflorod. Send stamp for particulars at once. The Henry Bill Publishing' Co., Norwich, Conn PROCLAMATION. Whebkah, Tho Hon. W. I). Brown, President Judge of the Court of Common Pleas and Quarter Sessions in and for tho county ol'Forest, has issued his pro cept for holding a Court of Common Pleas Quarter Sessions, &-e., at Tionestu, for tho County of Forest, to commence cn the Third Monday of Mav, being the HJlh day of May 1S81. Notice is therefore given to tho Corouor, Justices of the Peace and Constables nf nuwl rtmt- lint ti.n.r then and thero in their proper perrons at ttm fi'..!'jlr A f (' .... wl .I.... " v '-""i -I'., Ji ortlil UV, llli UlUir records, inquisitions examinations and other remombrances, to do those things which tothoir oilices appertain to be done, and to those who are bound. iu recognizance to prosecute aurainst tho prisoners that are or shall bo in tho jail of ForcM. Countv, that they be then and thero present to prosecuto airainst them as shall bo Hint, (iiven un der my hand and seal this 18th day of April, . u. mm. C. A. RANDALL, Sheriff. Formerly PilUburgh,TitusvilU & Buff&lo KyP SPUING TIMETABLE, April 18, 1881, A.M.il. M. (i 3.V 8 00 M. Valley lly.) ar Pittsburgh lv ar.... Parker ...lv ar... Fox burg ..1 v nr . Franklin ..lv P. M. A.M. 8 4fi l (.ii 2 32 ; 12 (IS 4 40 4 ;:i a (is Ji-10 10 0 J 4."! 12 3ii! r oo i 4 V. M.iP . M. a. M.ir. 03 M. lo '. M. 3 50 4 04 i 24 4 35 4 40 5 04 5 28 5 49 02 (I 45 7 15 S 40 k:;i! h Ufii 7 4!i! 7 ii 7 -Ml ar... Oil City....lv ....Itockwood.... Oleopolis ...Kagle Rock... President..... Tionesta Hickory .. Triwikeyville.. Tidio'uto ...Thompson s... 2 01 1 53 1 ill 1 31 K 10, 2 8 21 8 27 8 43 8 .r)S i ur, U 1! 11 38 i) 5 j A. M. 1 ill 1 12 7 VlYZiA IS 4 " 12 :!7 fi 30 i 20 1. MjP. M. r. m. no'n fi lli!2 00 v. m.a..m. 3 .".Oj 0 20 3 4 4 lv..livmeton..ar lb.A. V.iL-J'Jtyi lv... Warren ...ar "( Erie ttilwiy) lv.. Bradford ..hi- P. M.'P. M A.M. P.M. 8 53 1 4 45 ... A. M. 1 1 3.: P. M. ! (Ml. l-.M. (Ml .... 4 4(1 .... y.i'hilikEvietty) jlv... Warren ...ur lv..Stonehani..ar jP. M. 7 38 7 65 ADDITIONAL TRAINS Licavk Parker l:3()arn, Foxburg (5:40am, Franklin :0(iam. Oil City H:50am. Arrive Tionesta 11:22 am, Tidiouw 12:30pm, Irvineton 2:()0pni, Warren 2;35pm., Stoneham 2:48pm. IjKkvk Stoneham 7:30am, Warren 7:45am, Irvineton 8:45am. Arrive Tidioute 9:57am. Tionesta M:57am, Oil Citv 12:20pm CHAUTAUQUA LAKE DIVISION. Trains leave Oil City for Pet. Centre, Ti tusville, Spartansburg, Contrevillo, Corrv, Mayvillo, DrocU.ri at 0:50am, 10:45am, 2:40 pni. 5:00pm, 8:50pm. Arrive at 7;i"5am, 0:42am. 2;K)m, 3:50pm. 8:l15pm. Sunday Train loaves 7:30am; arrives 7:2opm. UNION ATITUSVILLK BRANCH. Train leaves Titusvillo 5:50pm; arrives Union City 8:00pm. Loaves Union City 7:00ain ; arrives Titusvillo U:15ain. Trains run daily except Sunday. Trains are run on Philadelphia time. Pullman Sleeping Cars run daily between Titusvlleand Pittsburgh on train's leaving tiirocton, 3:15pm and Pittsburgh 8:40pm. .r.t-Tickets sold and baggage checked to all principal point. Ut't tiiuo tableu giving full information from Company's Aireiit.-t. . WILSON, Gen. Supt. W. S. BALDWIN, oil City, Pa. Ucii'l Pass. Agent, 42 Exchange St., Buffalo, N. Y. J. L. CUAKi, Agent, Tionesta, Pa. S2 WU:a in- ul HtjLtlnr (' -ij.ii. ci.t.Mi.i,ut...t I .i r .. .no i.iiu...... .......... , TrVArrrrv f75y-v Liccno Notice Notice is hereby given that the Petition of William Smenrbniivrii, for Hotel License In tlio Lawrence Mouse. Tionesta, Born., has been liled in mv olllce md will bo resented at the next t.Vrin nf (nrt. Also, petition ot John Woodcock, Neills burg, Hotel Llceii.ie. AMest, JUsTIS SIIAWKEY, Tionesta, IX, April Pi. lM. Clerk. TRIAL LIST. PnoTnoNOTAHY'n Okkick, ) Fohkst (;o., Pa. j Causes Ret down for trial in the Court of Common Pleas of Forest County at May Term 1881 : No. Tr. Yr 1. A. A. Hopkins vs. Horace Wilklns. 20 May 80 a. F. H. Ellsworth vs. Frank arvoy 8 Dec. 79 3. E. P. Roso vs. Tho Road Comm'rs of HoweTwp. 10 May 80 4. A. Wollor et al use vs. S. II. Haslet et al 18 p0c. 80 5. I. R. Walter vs. Samuel Whitton 17 Deo 80 6. S. IL Haslet A Sons vs. Gil bert Jamieson et al 27 Feb. 81 7. Adm'rs Winans Estate vs. Nancy Dawson as May 80 8. J. E. Blaine, vs. Henry Swaggart. c Feb. "9 0. .1. A. Neill vs. Bvron Lan ders, jo Mav 70 J. SH AWK EY,.Prothonotary. Tionosta Pa., April ll, 1881. IP. JT. WIIITTKICIiV, CIVIL ENGINEER AND SURVEYOR. (Co. Surveyor of Forest County.) FIRST-CLASS INSTRUMENTS AND OOOD WORK. apr5 61 Tionesta, Forest Co., Pa. WM. SMEARBAUGH &CO., GEOCERIES! TOBACCO, CIGARS, HARD WA R E, Q U E E N S AV A R E. G L ASS vv'A RE, TOYS, STATIONARY', WALL PAPER, FOREIGN FRUITS, VEG ETABLES, BAKERS BREAD, OYS TERS, Ac. Goods Always First-Class, AUCTION SALE! Goorgo W. Dithrldgo would respectfully announce that having made arrange ments to go into other business, will sell his entiro stock or goods at auction, and at private sale, at auction prices, commenc ing on MARCH 2 3D, 1881, And continuo every evening until tho en tiro stock is disposed of. No iich opportunity lor bargains has been presented for years. Remember the pl'aco. GEORGE W. DITHRIDGE, PARTRIGE BUILDING, TIONKSTA, PISIVZVA. D. W. CLARK, i REAL ESTATE AGENT, AND i'ltAC'TIC.IX SUIIVKYOIS, TIONESTA, PA., Has now for sale the Following: 120 ACRES. Allegheny Townnli!p, Venangr, Co., Pa., Stewarts Run, 31 miles from Tionesta; 40 acres cleared ; good barn ; frame house ; small orchard; fences good; splendid water. Will be oU at a bargain lor cash. FORTY' ACRES, Near Trunkevvillo,-Forest county. Part ot the Dnii Jones place. Will sell cheap. Only- CJGO Ihr this .tjle nf IMIILA III l.PHU kKI.UKR. Equal toauytiiUKer In lb market. Kennrmhrr, u' irnd it to be Kuimlnrrf beore you )'"! for it. TUU la the mmt atvlv othrcompAniim retail for $30. Ail Machine warranted ior tlirfc yeara. 84Mid for our Illustrated t'tr ular aud Tuuiomai. AddrMia CllAKLKK A. WOOD 4 0., 17 H. Isnii St, iliuulilflua, ii TARTLIPJC DISCOVERY! LOST MANHOOD RESTORED. 4 vioUra of youthful Imprudence caufins Prema tura 1'e.ay, Nurroua Pebilitv. Iit Jlanuord, etc., LaTiiig tried iu vuin every Vnnwu reiiiedv, ha dia. covered a tmiple self cure, wtiicu lie will Btmil ITtK to bill fellow-aulSurera, adrlrtm J. II, KjiKVli. 4S lliulliaiu St., JV. . H'T?Ti P Yourself by making money mjlUl- when a golden chance is ot fored, thereby always keeping poverty from thl door. Those who always take advantao of tho good chaucos lor making moiiev tVat are ollered, generallv become wealthy Iwhilo those who do not imjirove such clijiices remain in j)overty. Wo want iiKfiy men, Women, boys and girls to workJ'or u rightin their own localities. Tho bilfiuess will pay more than ten times diuary wages. Wo furnish an expensive outlit and all that you need, free. NAone who engages luila to make money fry rapidly. You can devote your wliii time to t!ie work, oronlyyour sparo m.ltieiits. Full iulurmatioii and all that is inVlt d sent In o. Ad.lroM sl'l. N A ( i Portland. Maine. d.H-L".ilv. mm I take plenRore In tolllne the Sporting Fiateroily lhat I have re-purohaed tjii; uvs iiuixi:.ss FROM HORACE JON F,S, TO W ITOM I SOLD IT IN 1871, T ArVl NICELY' LOCATKD at my old J- nland, and I mn prepared to attend l all my friends, and tho publlo generally, who, need ANYTHING IN THE GUN LINE! I shall keep a perfect Block of all kind of AMMUNITION! And all kinds of FISHING TACKLE. I itball also oontlaue lo handle tb "While" Sewing naclxlue. A nd tho CHICAGO SINGER SEWING MACHINE Come and o me. Y'ou will find ma ALWAYS AT IIOMK. Muzxlo Ixader made to order avad war ranted. REPAIRI5 0 Ilf ALL ITS Tr3 BRANCHES PROMPTLY AHD FAITHIULLY DONE. K. A. HAlAiXVIli. Tltiiouto. Pa., Aujr. 12. TfOVEST COFFER AND Sheet Iron "Ware IWOl'LD respectfully inform th eiti rcm. of Tionesta and vicinity that I an ttropared to do all kinds or work in thft Tin, Copper and Sheet Irn,t Jin'. I also make a specialty in manufacturing and equipments suitable for rafting pores. AUo all kind of ptir- REPAIRING DORE ox SHORT KQTICE , Tho Highest Market Prlca Paid for RAGS AND JUNK AT ED.HEII3EL4S Opp. I iawr ry v&Tl o use" mfjStf TIONESTA, PA. A LECTURE TO YOUNGllEfl i-ecturo on Iho Nature. Treatment, and Radical oure ofSoniiearWeaknesH or SpoiniatorihtBa, induced bv nelf abuse Involuntary Emissions, Inpotency, Ner vous Debility, and Impediment to mar riage generally Consuniption. Kpilcpsr. and Fits ; Mental and Phvsical lncaoHcitv .(c.-Ry ROI1KRT J. tULVKRVVKLiJ M. D., author of the "Oreen Rook," Vc. The celebratod author, in this admira ble Fssay clearly demonstrates, from a thirty years successful practice, that tho alarming consequence of elf abuse may bu radically cured j pointing out a mod of cure at once aimplo, eertalu, and ellectual, by means of which every BUtlorer, no matter what his condition nnty be, may cure himself cheaply, privately, and radicullv. 1 J S-Si. This iocture w ilf provo a boon to thotisandM and thousands. hent under seal, in a plain envelope, to any ami ress, post paid, on receipt of at,, i in two poiar aiamps. wo liav ui a t.ura cure lor Tape Worm. Address the Publishers. i-iHi UU Xj ViiHWliiilj ULluDlvAL CO., 41 Ann St., N. Y'., N. Y' P. O. Rox 4.r.H(' r LFaraataud lieat Bttdicin er Jlada. nui. Huunu, ivflnn draklaud Dandelion, wltu all tuo beat and uoatel uratlva pru(j.rUva ot all other fcuvera, n.ika tbagreau.t Blood Purifier, Liver Regu lttor. vd Lite aud HvalUi tUtatuniitf AeolmMn.HnH Af LJAU. aa 1 u No dlseaae can poaallily lonir eriat whvra Hop Bittcra ara uhh1j varied aud irf act ara Uialr operational Thtj girt uiU'i ul Tljrer Is thi 1 tl Infirm. To all whoa mploTiuentaeaui!a lrrctrulari tof tUoboweloi uilnarj organ, or wno r qtUre an Appotlaerk Tonlo and mild Htlinulant, Hop Ilittera ar iUTalkUMM VTItMOUt Into- loating. HomauarwtiatyourleXeUnira or Tmrrtoma arawbattliadiaajworaillu"na lauaaUupBia tera. Don't wait until jonaWr alok but If to only (wl bad or Bilaerable.S ua them at onea. ltinajaava jourlifs.ltnaaE,STd hundraua. 900 ill be paid fora cal ther will not cura ur belp. bo not Butter K orlvt roar t rlentij uStsr.but uaa aud urita tbemX " Hop ft lierumbar, Hop Bitten la noL. Vila, drurfrnd drunken noatrum, but the Pureatb a d a.sa Ucuu lne ever made i tu "UTaJJDbI VKUIAO and Hurl" and no peraou or family anouiu ot wiluouv ueio. O.I.O.ta an abauluta and lrruuinibie mn. 1 fuibruukeuiieaa.Ubeof opiuiu, t.4jacoo anug naiotica. Ail bum ut urumt. bnd urtin-uw. a.f . i. va., RoohenttT NT nrirt Toronto Ont Ti mini iirr-rtlaTlliii Kf ir i fii" I'iiTTTTT On The I,os Of The Kramer Wagon Co. OF OIL CITY, PA., Is prepared to furnish the best wairon for all purponrs that can bo had in the coun try, at us low prices as can bo had any where. Ilavlnt? atlded a saw mill to our establishment we will buv saw lours of all kinds and pay cash lor "same. Wo will ulso buy stuinpatre. Address as above. JanlDSm Dissolution of Partnership. Tho partnership heretofore existing be tween Huruh A. Ford and Caroline M. Lacy, under the style of Ford A Lacy, bus this day been dissolved. The publio aro hereby cautioned against purclia.-injr any of the assets of said linn, as no person has authority to convey title to the interest of the undersigned iu anv of said ahet. SARAH A. FORD. lioncata, Ii., M;uihi;', IW v f