CURRENT NEWS. New York horsr cars run o*er five boys a Week, on an ITS rage. Lock al eg in Swssaiao represents the Old town Indians in ibe next Maine legislature. The police telegraph in New York and Brooklyn uses 75 miles of wire. Gov. Jack Hamilton is hiding from the yellow fever in the piny woods. Out of five hundred American contribu tions to the Paris Expoaition, 300 received premiums. Farmers Bnd pigs in Ohio lament a failure , In the corn crop. 1 The St. Francis Indians have given a birch j canoe to Central Park. Corn sella in CGkuloosha, lowa, at cents a bushel. Gold has been discovered at fc ßahwav, New Jersey. A machine is in use in New York hoteU which announces if anything takos fire. It it 6tated that a negro died in Plaque* mine, Louisiana, last wee.k, aged one hundred •nd thirty years. A fast youth in I llinois stole a locomotive while the fireman and engineer weie at lunch and carried it off about ten miles. Chicago lawyers talk of making a discount on divorce fees when a large number of bills are wanted in one family. A citizen of Sheffield, Mass., sold his wife and children to another chap, receiving a specified sum for the lot, aud cheerfully gave a quit laim. Forney'6 stationery bill shows that the in* crease of salary necessitated the providing of each Senator with eight pocket bocks. A Chicago man refused to pay for a pair of horses because they did not 6uil him, but afterward paid 83,000 for them at a horse fair, not knowing they were the same. A Norfolk paper does not ace why ao much applause should be bestowed on Sheridan the hero of only Five Funis, whereas Butler ia notoriously the hero of Five Thousand Spoons. THE WEATHER. —During the past month the lowest point reached by the thermometer between the hours of six A. M. and three e. M was fortyseven degrees on the 27th at 6A. M. The highest point was eighty*seven ' de grees at three P. M. of the 19th. The lowest point ol the same month of last year was fifty degrees at six A. M. on the 23d,and the high* est poinl was uiueiy degrees at three P. M. O* the 3d. Many of the dwelling houses in Fifth ave nue have mirrors so placed as to reflect in the boudoir the figure of any person standing at the front door, by which "at homo or not at home," is determined. A man in Connecticut has cleared his bonse of rats by catching one and dipping him in red paint. He then let hi in go, and the otb* er rats left, disgusted by his appearance. The fastest time in American Railroading was that of a directors' train on the New York Central Railroad, the other day, from Hamburg to Buffalo —ten miles in eight min* utes, or at the rate of seventy five miles an hour. There are 400 Protestant ministers in Cal ifornia, 20.000 church membtrs, and over 50.000 Sunday scfiool scholars. The Con gregational and Presbyterian ministry is about 100 ; the Methodists and Baptists each have 100 ministers aud all other denomina tions 100 more. NEGRO LEAGUES. —The Richmond Enquir er says that the State of Virginia is com - pletely enmeshed with secret political leagues of black men, engineered by the worst kind of white Radicals. Tbe Elmira Advertiser learns that lead ore has been discovered in the hills back of Wells burg, Pa. Excavations give promise of rieh ore. Tbe Pneumatic Ra'lway Company propos es to blow peopls from New York to Wash* ington at a speed which wijl leave railroad tiains far behind. Mr. Elias Howe, Jr., the inventor of the sewing machine, died at his residence in Washington avenue, Brooklyn, 4th inst. after a severe and protracted illnesa. The President has signed the pardon of R. M. T. Hunter, and it was delivered in person to hiin by Secretary Seward. A volume of Mr. Robert C. Winthrop'a speeches will soon be published in Boston. Blitz is going to retire to private life, and has taken Philadelphia as a halfway bouse. There is a weekly newspaper just started at Cairo as a government organ, and the salu tatory of it is a prayer. Mrr Mumford,the widow of the man who was hung by Butler in Nw Orleana, is living in Abingdon Vs.. in great destitution. Gen. Breckinridge's last official act as Con federate Secretary of War wa* to make a ma* jo; out of a private who borrowed a boat for the Secretary to escape in. The editor of a western paper wants to know if Western whisky was ever seen "com ing thro' the rye." The events of to-day have more interest than those of yesterday. So inen are fast giving up books for newspaper. A printer in Texas, whose first son hap pened to be a very ahort little fellow, named him Brevier Fullface Jonea. Greeley says, the man who pays more for his shop rent than for adveitising, don't know his business. %\t democrat HARVEY SICKLEP., EDITOR. TVNKH4.TWOCK, PA. Wednesday, Oct. 9, 186T. 1 ! — —————1 1 Cy ADVERTISING AGENTS, EX* i CHANGES, and all others interested, wil| i please note the CHANGE of TITLE, ofthisU t per, from THE NORTH BRANCH DEM-! OCRAT to WYOMING DEMOCRAT. j Business Men and Advertisers will make a note of the fact that the DEMO CRAT has a Circulation much larger than any other Paper in the County. THE RESULT. We have delayed this issue of our paper' for a day that we mitjht he able to furnish our friends not only the result in the coun ty but in the state also. IN THE COCNTT. With the returns of about three fourths of the Districts in, we are enabled to an- i nouncea majority for Shaiswood of from j 75 to 100 —and the election of the whole j Democratic County ticket, Wyoming is ! always right! LCZERNE COUNTY". We have it from trustworthy sources, ; that the whole Democratic has been ! elected in Luzerne County. lion. Geo.W. Woodward though opposed bv a *50,000 corruption fund from the Loyal League, is confidently believed to be elected. Good for Luzerne! PHILADELPHIA, Sharswood has carried the city of Phila delphia by 2881. This is a gain of up wards of 7000 in that city alone, over the, vote of last year. The entire city ticket is ■ elected by majorities ol from 2 to 5000. That nest of corrupt and secretly work ing traitors, called the Loyal League, has been stoned down and the nest egg crush ed. All hail Philadelphia—the home of white men'. THE STATE. The latest accounts from all sources con firm the glad tidings that the State has been ; carried by the Democrats, by a small ma- j | jority. Geary's majority of 1700 has been completely wiped out. Radicalism is played out. Let white men everywhere, take courage. The country will yet be re leased from the curse of momrrelism. onio, INDIANA, IOWA. From the great west, the news is cheer ing. Ohio has declared for the white man. j The negro equality both "social ana polit ical" has been spnrned by the Buckeyes- Indiana and lowa are rolling on the ball.| The death knell of radicalism everywhere was sounded on Tuesday last ! LET PATRIOTS, EVERYWHERE, i REJOICE AND THANK GOD, THAT THE CONSTITUTION AND THE UNION, MADE BY THEIR FATHERS WILL YET BE RESTORED! ~ The Negro's Idea on "Suffrage. An old army friend, now a Register in . South Carolina, by appointment of Gen. Sickles, in a private letter to the editor of the Doylestown Democrat , under the date of September 11th, relates some amusing incidents connected with his office. The following is too goad to be lost, and we select it as a specimen brick ; I really wish yon could have been here and gone the rounds with me on my route to have seen the fun. Our new formed citizens had no more idea of what the elective franchise is, than the man in the moon. Many of them brought bags and baskets to put it in, thinking it was some thing to eat, others thought it might possi bly something to wear, while the" most in telligent, wno know more than any one else, knew positively that it was the dis tribution of the long wished for confiscated lands under a new name-, as a natural con sequence, nearly all were severely disap- j pointed on making their appearance be fore the board to find that they were mere ly to be sworn and to have their names , put in a book, particularly those who thought that there might not be enough ' franchise to go around, and had started from home long before daylight in order to ! gel the first given out. Among a few of the distinguished individuals who were ' registered (on the colored side of the book) j were Jefferson Davis, Commodore Perry, Geneial Puiaski, General Grant, General Sherman, Prince Napoleon, King of Bos ton Horace Greeley. John Brown, John Smith, and many more equally noted per- j sonages. Tbey were all sworn that they had never been members of Congress or of 1 any Slate Legislature, ot an officer of the United States and afterwards engaged in rebellion, Sc. Arc. One individual in par- J ticular on being questioned as to what was dote when he Registered, said that u de gemblin wid de big whisker make me swar ' to sport de law of United Souf Carolina." ! This is about as much as they all knew when they were finished as "citiiens of the United States ." Three cheers for tbia great country.' Whoop! Republican Legislation. The Bedford Gazette thus illustrates the working of the Radical law, forcing negroes into the cars with white men and woman : "A friend of onrs relates that as he was travelling from Philadelphia to Hunting •jon, a few nights ago he took a berth in a sleeping car, and when about retiring his attention was attracted by loud talking and scuffing on the platform ot the car. Pro i ceeding to the scene ot the disturbance, I he perceived a huge male negro in a con ; troversv with one of the railroad officials ; about obtaining a berth in the sleeping ! car. The ticket agent had refused to sell \ the darkey a ticket, and the colored gen j tleman was trying to force his way into the car without the requisite piece of stamped pasteboard. A policeman came up, however, and settled the business, by , telling the ticket agent that, under the law, if he refused to sell the aegro a berth ticket, on account of color, he would be amenable to a fine of SSOO, aud subject to pay a like sum to the negro upon an ac- | tion for debt! This had the desired effect, and the African was banded the coveted j ticket. It so happened, however, that but one berth was vacant, and that was half a ( double berth partly occupied by a white man. The negro divested himself of hat, j coat, boots and vest, and proceeded to ap propriate his half of the double berth.— ' White man, who had been dozing, turned j : around, looked again, and then came such j | a kicking, tumbling, sprawling, such a mix ture of white and black generally as would | have done any amalgamationist's heart , ! good. About this time the conductor ap ! peared upon the scene, and the result was ; that the negro, with the tciket in hand, j tumbled into bed, whilst the white man, 1 growling anathemas at the party he himself { had helped to place into power, doggedly ; put on his clothes and went forward to sit j with wrenched back and cramped legs, in ' the passenger car, ruminating over the j ' beauties of Radical legislation." When this negro bill was under consid eration, Mr. Boyle, Democrat, of Fayette i county, offered the following amendment j as a new section : SECTION 3. Provided, That nothing herein contained shall he held to compel 1 the admission of negroes into cars set apart for ladies, or into berths for sleeping cars. apart for ladies, or into sleeping cars. Thirty-six Democrats voted for this sec tion, and fifty-one Radicals against it.— , Thus the section WHS defeated, and negroes ! cau now force themselves into cars set apart for ladies, or into sleeping car*. — Will white men support a party which i thus insults their wives ami children ? Peace Congress. Three international peace congresses have lately been sitting in Switzerland.— The London Daily News of September j ]7, gives the following as the proposition gresented by a lady—Madam Stavr. They will be particularly interesting to war ; preachers and the "God and morality" party generally : 1. To decide a difference by fisticuff s lor the stick is by common consent as uu worthy and ignoble proceeding. 2. That which is unworthy and ignolle | for one man must be unworthy and igno ble for a hundred, a thousand, ten thou sand, or a hundred thousand. 3 If it be admitted that it is unworthy and ignoble to decide one's cwn quarrels ' by pugilism, it must be worse to fight un- i der the orders of a third party, and for his j benefit, and to kill men who never did j you any harm. 4. Two men who fight in the street are j blamed by all reasonable and civilized ! people, and it never occurs to anybody to gratify the conqueror. j 5. Why should we glorify the conquer or in a combat fought by hundreds of th ou sands of men for an object which, if at tained, is scarcely ever of any advantage to them ? | 0. When f,vo men eoinQ to blows in the i street, it E eV er comes into their head to invoke the aid of the Deity, or to suppose that God tikes a special interest in he issue of iheir fight. The same mav be 1 said of a fight of ten men on a side. '• 7lf two men who tight dared to talk of . j the God of pugilists, and called on Him to , help them in their unreasonable and dis i graceful scuffle, they would justly be set down as fools and blasphemers. I 8. Ar.d in like manner ten or twenty men who should fight in the streets and appear to the God of pugilism, would be called fools and blasphemers. J 9. What then is the exact number of I combatants requisite to justify the invoca- I lion to take a side in the fight of that God whom you eall the God of love ? 10. Do you really believe that the num ber and quantity can make anv impression upon God—upon a being whose essence is infinite ? Do you not therefore think , that to talk of a God of battles ii just as blasphemous as to talk of a God of pugil ists ?" I The Democratic State Convention met at Worcester on Tuesday and nomi nated a ticket headed by the name of John j Quincy Adams for Governor. The son lof Charles Francis Adams, our present representative at the Court of St, James. ,l the grandson of John Quincy Adams, and the great-grand-son of old John Adams, of Revolutionary memory. In John Quincy Adams, the Conservatives of the old Bay State have a candidate of whom they may well be proud. It will be ■ curious to note w hen the votes are counted, how many of the ninety-two thousand men i who voted for the Republican caudidate I for Governor last year, or of the one hun ' drcd twenty-seven thousand who voted | for Mr. Lincoln in 1864, will break loose from their party bonds and at the coining ' election record their preference for Mr. Adams over his Radical competitor. Aud i if it be found that they refuse to honor the i representatives of one of the most honored names in their State history, can they blame those who may find in their con duct a fresh proof of tbo degeneracy which maiks the p. ofle of Massachusetts of the present day.— An Editor's Dream. Saturday last, while reading our ex changes, a sudden and unaccountable de— t sire to "nap it" took possession of our in- t dividual brain. We read and nodded,and I nodded, and nodded, and slipped away in to dreamland, without intending it; for be j *t remembered our "devil" stood waiting ! for copy. Seeing we were inclined to take things easy, he concluded to do like- ! wise. We slepJ undisturbed. We dream ed, and thus the dream : We beheld a lovely feminine sailing to wards us through the air. We wondered, but were silent and moved not. We no ticed she was making for the spot where; !we stood, and we were pleased. She ap- ! I proached nigh unto us, and exclaimed, , I "Mortal!" "That's us," we replied.— j j She continued : "You are in a strange ; land " By this time she had folded her ' elevators, and was standing at a respect ful distance. We surveyed our angelic companion, aud were pleased. Our eyes gave her credit for being a magnificent looking woman, stately as a Queen, digni : fied, lovely We noticed she had been weeping, but a smile of joy aud gladness 1 now sat enthroned on her countenance. — ; I She wore no waterfall. A curiously \ I wrought cap of blue aud gold rested on ; I her glossy ringlets, upon the broad band I of which we noticed in letters of silver, i | the word "Liberty." We bowed low and ! involuntarily exclaimed, "the Goddess of j ; Liberty." "True," she replied. "Where have you beou these many days ?" we ' asked politely. "In this land of peace, . yet not of Liberty, into which you have wandered. I have been waiting, weeping, sorrowing for the misdeeds of ray sons,— I have watched with tear dimmed eyes, J their puny efforts to destroy me. They ; have failed, aud I am now about to return to my native land—the home of the brave I and tree —and you shall accompany me." I She grasped mv hand and we started, — Right merrily we scud through space, ami pleasant was the journey. "There!"' said ; she, pointing to a towering pile of marble, j glittering in the morning son. "There |is my home —my once happy home, from i which designing bad men would drive me, | and cast gloom and desolation o'er our country. l>ul it shall not be ! God pro tects the right! My conntry, I come to ! save !" With this we alighted at the foot of the pile, and were greeted by an elder ly gentleman in blacK, with the sword of i justice in one baud, the constitution under I ! his arm, and "A.J." pinned to his coat. ' He extended his hand to the Goddess and ' said : "Welcome, Liberty ! Treason is 1 no more! lUeicome, home! I Lave caged the ranting beasts. Come, view the collection." We followed into the ! Senate chamber, where rows of cages, ti ter the sty le of a menagerie, were ranged ; l in order, First we came to the black ti ' ger, Stevens, who "A. J." informed us, was at one time a very vicious animal, but i bis age, misdeeds and rcc instruction reso ■ lotions chain liiiu to the earth and render him harmless t Next was the Royal Bengal Tiger, Sum- ' 1 ner, grandiloquent and fiery at times, but I a flash from the sword of justice and the i j sight of a small black cane carried by ins I keeper, drove t ie fire out from his eye. Next, an African Lion, Stanton, treaeh ! eaous and cannot be trusted' Round by a chain of iniquity of huge proportions, from j which he will never he freed. No danger from this quarer Next came the hyenas, Ashley and Wade— small animals in their way, but might do a great deal of harm. Safely bound now by a chain of impeachment and reconstruction resolutions. Next, the bottled bea-t, Butler, a envios ity indeed, wi;j a v.atural fondnessp pr 0 r spoons, watch"'*, plate, coffiu decorations, and other trinkets of siluer. C'.osely al lied to the lLena, the depoiler of the Bott id by Gen. Grant, and now very docile. Next, a pair of Leopards—Sherman and Shellbarger, unworthy of note, but inclined to le fussy, and had to be caged. Next, the Hippopotamus, Boutwell.— Would be very ferocious if he could.— Lives princ pally on wind and Congsession al pap. Next, tb Zebra, I lunnicutt, or South ern Loyali-', with broad black bands and scent d'Arique. Worthless and short lived. Next aliped or colored cuss from Afri ca, generally known as the "coming man," or Pompous Odoriferous Swellsky high, re cently freed from bondage by citizens of Ema'ncichusetts, but now caged on ac count getting too large for his breeches.— Next, the comic trick mules, Seward and Chase, the former known by a small bell suspended from bis neck. Quiet an imals but very tricky. Next, the performing elephant, Grant, the largest of his kind in the United States. Is of great value to his keeper in straight ening the other animals. Docile and tract able. Performs numerous amusing and useful tricks, such as walking over his keeper without hurting bim, Ac. A trusty animal, aud has the freedom of the ring. A collection of Apes, Baboons, and Monkeys, noisy and mischievous, but be ing sir all animals, easily kept in their places. "This complete the collection," said our conductor. You will perceive that all is now quiet, and peace has been proclaimed throughout the land. Swinging his sword of justice around the circle, the animals cowered low, and set np such unearthly howls and shrieks that wc awoke, and found—'twas but a dream.— Old Com. monwealth. The Bodies of the Assassination Con spirators. On Tuesday, in accordance with orders received at the Washington Arsenal by General Ramsey, commandment of the post, from General Grant, Secretary of War, the bodies of the assassination con spirators, and also the body of lfenry Wirtz, the Andersonvillc jailor, were re moved from their graves and reinterrcd in another portion of the grounds. This removal was rendered necessary in conse quence of the projected improvement of the arsenal grounds, the contractor for the removal of the old penitentiary building beiDg about to communes work. The body of J, Wilkes Booth was butted tu what wa- known a* thejware room of the penitentiary building, It was enclosed in an ammunition box. Alter the grave was filled np with dirt, the brick flooring was replaced. The bin ial having been ae complished, the windows were boarded up, and the door ma le secure, Secrettrv Stanton taking the key with biin, and it was kept at the War Department until a few weeks ago, when it was returned to j the arsenal officers. On the receipt of the order for the removal of the bodies, j including Booth's on Thursday, laborers weie at once set to work. The bodies | were taken from the graves before men- j tioned and oatrred to No. 1 warehouse, where a trench was dug a few feet from! the north wall. In this trench the bodies I were placed, and as secrecy bad been en joined, but few persous were aware that the removals had been mado. It would I seem from this t hat the government does j not intend to give up the Indies to the ' relatives. The bodies of Booth, Payne, | Harold, Atzerdodt, Wirz, and Mrs. Sur- • ratt were placed in a common grave. The Crops Reports of the Departments of Agriculture. The Department of Agriculture has just j issued its report tor August and September which contains the following statement of : the condition of the crops. The crot> ta bles for August give the general averages for the States, made up from approximate : estimate of our correspondents of the quantity of the crop then harvested as com i pared with those of 1856, together with the current conditions of growing crops at the date of return, while (he tables for ' September perish cbielly to the state of the fall crop*, in the relation to which I more definite information will be given in succeeding reports. WHEAT.— From August returns there is a uniform reduction in the general av erage of wheat as compared with the July figures ; and the September estimates of wheat harvested, as compared with the crops of 18C6, drop the figures somewhat lower in a number of the States, which i.-> attributable, to a considerable extent, to the bad weather while harvesting, as well as to the fact that iu some sections the grain was found to be shrivelled and threshed out less to the acre than anticipa ted. The leading wheat-growing States report the following per centage of in crease at the close of the harvest; Ohio 130 percent.; Indiana, 50; Michigan. 3d; Wisconsin, 17; Minnesota, 27 ; Illinois, 11; lowa, 20- Missouri, 40; Kentucky, 34 ; West Virginia 50; Virginia 50 ; Tennessee, 40; Georgia 80; Arkansas, 4.5 ; New \ "rk, 14, and Pennsylvania, 40, 1 while only Kan-as-and Texas show a fail ing off tiorn last year, when these crops !in those States were very large. The re turns due October 1 will enable us to es tirnate with a greater degree of accuracy the amount of this great erop for the cur- j rent year. CORN.— The prospect for a corn crop coiitii ue to improve* and if the frost hold;- j off the general crop may be a fair one W, bile a number of States return low esti mates, others, particularly the Southern States, show a marked improvement over i the yield ot last year. Deoigia promises t;> double her crop of 1806; Alabama Ye ports an increase of 75 per cent. ; ?Yissis sipi, 80 ; Tennsssce, 21; Louisis lia 4(j. South Carolina, 54; and Aik i l)sas j,,,/ ! Ohio falls 30 per cent, behin-j j ast vtar estimating from the conJ . llon on t he* first o! Septcmb r; Indian 17 . lUj no j af 14 . Kentucky, ?o; H <'. at Virginia, 15 and Virginia. 10. U'ecot'.jn cr p promised well up to til'.- firs; instant, when the worms were ma'r .ng their appearance, and much ap prehension was tben felt in various sec | tions for the safety of the crop. Under the head of "Extracts from Cor rcsponden • ," we give notes fiotn the sev eral cotton growing States; Georgia prom ifed to yield 53 per cent, beyond her srop jof 1866; South Carolina, 50; Alabama, j42 ; Mississippi, 24 ; Arkansas, 18, and Tennessee.-8 ; while Kotrtsiarm and Texas show considerable failing off from last year. I liYE, barley, and oats exhibit no materi al change from previous reports, though oats were seriously injured in some sec tions by the extreme wet weather during the harvest but generally the crop appears superior to tiiat of last year. DucKWHfcAT shows an average acreage, with prospects ot a fair crop. I'OTATOES are rotting badly in many of i the large potato-growing States, and the crop will probably fall below the yield of last year. SUUAU CANE AND SOHGIH M.— The lead ing sugar producing Show a fair increase over the crops of last year. Sorghum is on Vhe decline in most of the States, with j out snffieien* reason. '1 he crop now grow ing is in good connition, Apples and peaches. In a few of the States the apple crop promises well, but in a majority the crop will be from 10 to 40 per cent, below the crop of 1860. Peaches were much in jured by the rains in July and August, and orchards which promised well early in the season have proved entire failures. With the exceptiou of a few States, the crop is grown for home consumption or lo cal markets, which, together with the ir regularity of the yield in different seasons, readers it difficult to reduce the various estimates to the average for States, though we include the figures. ' HAY shows an increase in almost every State, and quite large in many of them, Pennsylvania's returning an increase of ' 50 per cent. ; New York, 24; Michigan, Wisconsin, and Illinois, 28 ; Indiana, 20. ; The average will reach from 25 to 30 per cent., and above the crop of iB6O. The wool clip for 1867 will probr.blv : fall from fire to ten per cent, short of the crop of last year—attributable to the se vere weather of last winter, and the coosci qucnt exposure and destruction of a number of sheep. &3T General Schuiie'd Las issued an order requiring the whites and blacks in Virginia to vote at separate polls. This is not exactly the thing according to the doctrine of equality. We presume the Radical press will object to this distinc tion between the rapes. The order of General Schofield looks as though he does not think a negro "good enough" to vote at the same poll with a white man. This doctrine will not do for these times of ad vanced and advancing idea.. UUAKTEKI.Y statement, Of the Wyoming National Bank of Tunkkaunock, oil Monday morning Oct. 7th, 1667. KKBotßi.es. Bonds deposited with the U S. Premiums,*loo,COO.OO ! l\ S. Seeur'ies on band, 21,990,06 Loans and Discounts. 99.904,74 Legal Tender, Cotoi onad Interest notes and Fractional Currency, 20,778,08 | National Bank Notes. ] 434.00 Cash Items. 937.50 Premiums, 3,000,00 i Furniture and Fixtures, 1,500,00 Current Expenses. L 628.60 Taxes, 1,077,04 Due trom National Banks 23,977 92 •276.137 88 LIABILITIES Capital Stock 100,000.00 Circulation, 89,955 00 J Deposits, 70,148|80 .Surplus fund 4 000,00 Profits and Low. 380|b6 ; Discounts and Exchange 5,761/25 Duo .National Banks. 5.872,11 j *276,137,88 WYOMING COUNTY SS I. Samuel Stark, Cash- I icr of the Wyoming Nations I Bank of Tunkhannock do swear that the above is a true and correct statement from the books of said Bank, Sworn and subscribed before mo this Bth day of I October' A D. 1867. SAMUEL STARK. F C. ROSS, Notary Public : TEACHERS' EXAMINATION. | Teachers' Examinations will be held as follows. 1 vis : For Braintrim and Meshoppen, Oct 2lst at Brick i Chapel. | For Windham and Mehoopany, Oct. 22d at Me- 1 boopnny. For Furkston and North Branch, Oct, 23d at Forkaton. For Tunkbar.nock Borough and Lemon, Oct. 24th • at Tunkbannock. For Nicholson and Clinton, Oct. 25th, at Niched" ' son. Falls, Oct. 26th at School house, near Smith's Ferry. Exter. Northmoreland, Eaton and Monroe, Oct, 27th at Northinoreland. School Directors are requested to be present at ! the Examinations. Exercises to commence at 10 o'clock A. M Come , with writing materials No private examination: Tunk. Oct. 6, '67.-i7nlo. J. B. RHODES. Co. Sup't. , MEAT 'JS/L a r k. e t !; • The Subscriber announces to the citizens of Tunkhannock B<>ro. and vicinity, that he now has exclusive charge ol the SI E A X MARKET AT THE OLD STAND. And designs, hereafter to keep on hand at all t limes MEATS of ALL KINDS. The best that can be procured, which tt ill positively be ; sold at much LOWER PRICES. than heretofore. In order to do so he has been obliged to ! adopt the READY PAY SYSTEM. and feels confident t'.iai by so doing lie will not only secure the patronage, but will be treating his custodiers more fairly, thau by charging the in prices to compensate him for ( i OSes b) uon paving ciwomers. „ , CHARLES HARDING. Tunk., P -vTnlO-tf- MANHOOD Lost Ilow Restored. •Tust published, anew edition of Dr. Culverwell's ' eb'broteEssay on the radical cure (without med- \ i me) e, Spormatorrhie, or Seminal Weakness, Invol- 1 unt*y Seminal fmpotencv,Mental .ID! Pt.y s'.:il Incapacity, ImM-diments to Marriage etc also Consumption Epilepsv. and Fits ; induced by sell indulgence or sexual extra . agar •. Price, in sealed envelope, one 6 cents. The celebrated author, in this admirable e osai-, clearly demonstrates from a thirty years successful practice, that the alarming consequences of selt abuse may be radically cured without the danger ous use ot internal medicine or the applicatii n of the knite —pointing out a mode of cu.c at once simple, certain, and effectual, by means of which e.-erv suf ferer, no matter wh it his condition may be, may cure himself cheap!" priyately, and radically This lecture should be in the ban is of every youth and every man in the land .Sent under seal, to any address, in a plain sealed envelope, on die receipt of six cents, or two postage stamps Also Dr. Culverwell's ' Marriage Guide.'' price 25 cents. Address the publishers CUAS. J. C. KLINE A CO. 127 Rowei y. New A ork,Post Office Box 4.566 piRE, LIFE 2k ACCIDENTAL 1 GENERAL INSURANCE AGENCY! MONTROSE, PA. CAPITAL REPRESENTED OVER *30,00°,C00! i I• 1 Home 1n5..C0., N Y.,Capitol and Surplus,*3,7oo,ooo : Ins. Co. of N. America. Phiia. " '• 1,800,000 , International Ins. Co-, N. Y, " ' 1 500,000 Lycoming Co. Mutual, Muncy, Pa, 3,000,000 Farmers' Mutual, York, " 560.000 Ins. Co.. S'oie of Pa., Phila., Pa. " 700,000 ' Hartford Eire Ins. Co, Hartford Ct. " 1,900,000 Putnam " " *' " 600,000 Travelers' Ins. Co., of Hartford Ct, insur ing against all kinds of accidents. 500,000 CONNECTICUT MUTUAL LIFE INSURANCE CORPANT. ; of Hartford, Ct., paying 60 per cent, divi dends to the insured. Capital *10,000,000 Notes reeeivod in payment of one-half the premium, on which six per cent, interest only is to be paid, and only four notes re- I quired. The notes are never to he paid nn , der any circumstances—Policy will be paid in full and notes given up. Assets over *3,000,000 ; AMERICAN LIFE INSURANCE CO., of Philadelphia, Pa., Capital, *1,000,000 C. 11. SMITH, Solicitor, Montrose, Pa. HAKTFuRD LIVE STOCK INS. CO, ; Capitol *5000,000 Insrvnre on all kinds of Lire Sloefc against Theft and. Deal fiom any cause. All Business eutrustel to our care will bo attended to on fair teruies, and all Losses promptly adjusted I ?HAS.T BR R U°WN: \ STOI " D 4 BR °WN. Agents, ML C SUTTON, Esq., Frieodsville, Pa, Solicitoi I Office first door east of "Brick Block," montrose. Pa v7-n3-tf. ' Insurance Agency. , D AX I EL WRIGHT 7u7 tl. SELECT MHOOL. i ■ l be J I pper!"^ er! "R Q ed proposes to open a Select School ID iurtkhinnock Boro. on Monday Oct. 21st '67 £3^"Booms, over National Bank Terms - *3.00 per Term FANNIE BACON. Tunkbannoek, Pa. Get,9th '67 Farm for Sale, The Subscriber offers for sale, the farm on which he now lives, situate In Tunk ha n nock, Pa, abn„t ONE MILE FROM THE LINE OF THE NEW RAILROAD, containing TWO HUNDRED AND SIXTY THREE ACRES with about 7 5 ACRES CLEARED, with a large New Frame House and Barn- Lot well watered. Balance ol Lot WELL TIMBERED and available for fanning purposes. For particulars, Call at this office, or at the premises. WM. CASKEY. ' Tunkbannock, 0ct.. 9, : 67-v7ulo-3w. Th£Las^^^uCC<£f - IS THE IMPROVED l ! HAIRDRESSINfi PR7&ONEML/IR CONSUMPTION CIRRAISLB BY SC HEMK'4 MEDICIN ES. ' TO Cl'B.E CONSUMPTION the system must be prepared so that the luugs will heal. To accom plish this, the liver and stomach must first be cleans ed and an appetite created for good wholesome food, which, by these medicines will be di-jested properly r.nd good healthy blood made ; thus building up the I constitution. SCHENCK'S MANDRAKE PILLS ; cleanse the stomaehe of all bilious or mucous accu mulation? ; and, by using the Sea Weed Tonic in | connection, the appetite is restored. SCHENCK'S PULMONIC SYRUP is nutriciona as well as medicinal, and, by using the three reme- dies, all impurities are exj>elle 1 from the system,and ■ good, wholesome blood made, which will repel al, disease. If patients will tak" these medicines ac cording to directions Consumption very frequently in its last stage yields readily to their aation. Take i the pills frequently, to cleanse the liver and stum aeh. It does not follow that because the bowels are not costive they are not required, for sometimes In liarrhcea rfcey are necessary. The stomach must be kept healthy, and an appetite created to allow the Pulmonic Syrup to act on the respiratory organs projierly and allay any iiritation. l'hen all that is required to perform a permanent cure is, to prevent taking cold. Exercise about the rooms as much as possible, eat all the.richest food—fat mead, game and, in fact, anything the appetite craves j but be atpricular and masticate well. vsal2-2n.lw ea-op, ALLCOCK'S POROUS PLASTERS. Hartford, Conn., Nov, 11. 18t>t. Messrs. IHOS. ALLCOCI: A Co- —Please send, with iispatch, twelve doxen All coed's Porous Plasters.- - Our daily experience confirms their very superior excellence. At this moment of writing a man ap , plies for one, who, by, entanglement in the shfat of machinery, had both his legs broken, spine severely injured, and was for nearly a year entirely helplesa. , This man found relief very soon by the application | of a plastet to his spine. He was soon enabled te work, and now he labors as well as ever. I/e would cheerfully pay S3 for a single Plaster if they could not be had at a lower rate: lam surprised that surgeons do not make use of the perforated plaster* to the exclusions of all othe s, as their flexibility and and adhesiveness are greatlj in advance of all other plasters with which lam acquainted ; while the perforations peculiar to them rendered them greatly superior to all others for ordinary surgical uses.— Knowing the plasteis,to be so useful, I have no scruples that my sentiments should be known. J. W JOHNSON, M. D. Agency, Brandreth House, New Y'ork Sold by all Druggists in the United States and ' Canada: BRANDRETII'S PILLS. —Our theory ; Local dis ease whetfier of the stomach ani bowels, en largement of the joints, rheumatic pains, .cutaneous eruptions even dyspeptic complaints, boils of what ever torui such l.ci disease puts on, are so many i "PROOFS" of a disordered state of the blood and bowels, which BRANDRETII'S PILLS correct and cure. Experience and 40,000 certificates say this is so. B, BRANDRETH. vGnlO lino TnE PUZZLE OF THE AGE !-The sharpest observers give it up. People who are proverbial for their critical perceptions, are utterly at fault. NO LIVING EYE can detect any difference between the richest blseks and browns that nature has bestowed upon the heir, ; and the superb artificial tints conferred upon grey red or sandy hair, by the incomparable vegetable i agent. CRISTADORO'S HAIR DYE. With the color it imparts lustre, and does Dot dimin ; inish the flexibility of the fibres. Manufactured by J. CRISTADORO 6 Aster House, New York. Ap plied by all Hair Dressers. | v7nlo-lm. NOTICE IN BANKRUPTCY, THI9 IS TO fitvF NOTICE ; That on the 31st day of August. A. D, 1567, a Warrant in Bankruptcy wu issued against the Estate of William Cortright of Meshoppen, in the County of Wyoming and State of Pennsylvania, who has been adjudged a Bankrupt on his own petition : that the payment of any debt* and delivery of any properj.V belonging to such Bank i rupt, to hiiu, or for his use, and the transfor of aof property by biui are forbidden by Law that a m l 1 ing of the Creditors ot the said Bankrupt, to pro" j their debts, to choose one or more Assignees of h" I Estate, will be held at a Court of Bankruptcy, to I* iho Men at the office of the Register in the Court House at Towanda, l'a., before Edward Overton. Jf- Register, on the 24th day of October, A. D. 1667, ' i 9 o'clock, A. M. THOU AS A. ROWLEY, v"n7-4times. U. S. H" NOTICE. H All psrsensare cautioned against purchasing " ! negotiating two notes ot *ll/0, each given by me * i | F. D. Carpenter—dated about the Ist of April l*" I —the said notes having bqen paid by me, the P r ' chaser will obtain nothing by them. JOHN PHBNtf Tuuk, Ilth I61.-v6n6 3w.