1111 NAL GE N. JOHN. W. GEARY. flow, Whezil and Where be has Serv — ed his Country during the Blave-j ' • helders , Re[pion. T 1 ..,- TUN IPOSI'TIO'I Diri DISTORT. On Friday last , we did the Copperhead; ' candidate fo• Goveloor the honer of layingi before our ..readers a pertion of the his tory of ai's llegislative oa eer. Mr. Clymer &musk this much at, o r hands, because be has been an outspok n man in ail his aympathies for treason. - -It-is- now dne that we giielistoriii:lle i tirint stifar ai the 11 I nionlieinblioan candidate for Governor is _cioneerned... .. ~- vlti Reading "Sher Mat ittkBiiiiii,"7 We'hav'e i yttr ..., sl t . • ttukt o ! ,ii - fitti, the , !Old den. GearY. The wri Yerkertind•correspond: , etinkni wi3li be suspecte Piiin4iPa ‘ iiia'n and pi 6f-Dep. Gail's politi. iSpeakiag Of Gen: Loga :„Tbere } are men i (nspiration r Logan 13 - ,, ;w4. i Cilrilian General, 'Apiititioni Upon field of blTdy,orest,,tof, Loolthu rugged cliffe of Mill Ore action - that - ninny 'a trai iftitiirtin 'EI hbuld - feel pro! soldiers, lie and Loge ?oliikpst.'f .. ~ Again m one of tbe propgrly. bilitles7-at:ou • latoona f 06 rebels ma. divimici i;til;'ici'lltio!Afits'Poitio4 ne4oy exhaua;e yayerineiben - - -iolGreary,s,‘White Star'Divisiou' formed in three lines and advadeed•to the support. Geary ',reserved his flre. Until 'oloso upon the enemy, and then poured a deadly vol. ley.intO them which made: them waver:" At Keuesaw and 'Lest Mountain, du i'ir!et4FeVlaYBfig t.!°;) We cao ured a large , umber of prisoners is all. about' two; thousand. Geary; in his mann, captured about. one half of thee J.". C . ' _ In.tbel last battle stirmnder ' 6a,' :: "the first iof.Hood's de for whiehl he paid .4.lea Gparyi took a prominent and l active part.. .. "Whoa,. at 1 the oink of Sherman's riatehicea l " march to Ole sea," he had in vested Savannah, ,he ji. intimated to his Ceuinandor " a that' thefirst 'of themto enter 04 - say sbould be made its: military Goa ernl or. flr ee Wan summoned to surrender the city, bat:the braggart answered that telao'-Oreiity of 'En4lies and men and Liicflioid_ont,ite'ionali he, Ci;ose. Only, three"' iii!ris after, be sneakid-away.-- 6eirynli t iays wide awake , suspecting the rinitoment,orilered his division underarms pie c B. Pushing arieaditjaCeep44: on farther withent ,opposition,., orawling through Ithe abattis and floundering thro' dikes uald ditches, be se,nled , the first line Of Walcsind found it deserted. Here he I c was met,ny the Mayor and citizens, who (o7ually. ,surrenderedthe.city. As he had fairly .e.irned, he received, as promised by Sherman', the Governorship of Savannah. tbeeilter here tik i s occasion to speak of q outubernatOrial candidate's ability as an .. l4 • . • • 4.x.E.9JT.1.V. °ULCER,. , "Gen.. • , Gen. Geary.bas had great experience both,ati ...a soldier :id" at an- executive Officer. r i In. his for mer character hie name Erie beep :prominen, before the country. In the latter,' mean to treat him now. line) was .long the alcalde of San Fran cisco, and mayor. Hie firm administration as Gevernor of Kansas, in tvemblous times,helped much toltranquilze the disiaffeeted there. He. has firm ad ministrative ,abilities, _is a man of great force of c'haracter,and resolution, and of a kind, accessible disposition. He patiently lisferisinthe complaints and entreaties of iil);:bui administers justice with a firm, Imparttel hand. ' • ? , /.911i; Govern Meat of Savannah gave gre4:iatisiaptiori and when Gen. Sha mir' was 'afiont r Pomiriencink his campaign &milli Caralina,a `deputation of the most Teepee able "citizens waited. oti him,' re questing him toleave Gen. Geary in com mand of the city. - j Gen. Sherman could not well spare so active an officer from the field end, therefore declined: ...‘,.. 0 .. Geary and . the' officers of his tall;' , will belong and kindly remembered in Savantiah - for their upright adminis teat* and courteous behavior to ail par ties., ale did all in his .power to encourage ike citizens .to establish friendly relations towards the Federal - Government, arid to gaikeltheqt. feel that their interests were "PP: 3 l : 4 :' . I . ' -I- Such testimony from a source not only disinterested; bat rather more likely to be prejudiced against .a'Pennsylvania sol dier. 'r Appnblican proclivities, speaks stela es in-favor of General Geary. It i. tras"glien - after the close of the war,w'hen ! . 2ofarther &more could be bestowed upon i.L4 Sti‘jeCt,"and before General Geary wa s .I. . . spoken of for govoroor of Pennsylvania— Apositionito; Which the ,pe9ple will most i certanly elevate him.—Telegraph. . : THE ' 0R AL. ICoudersp'ort. Tup4a377' Aitig mt W. IdcrAL A • ty, ED" I . - I FOR GOVERNOR: . GEN'L JI Vrl GEARY, ot C umberlan d county. • le— C Pose (HE. gfirlngTessl is expected to; adjourn in May, if t, elnte'resi.s l ot thi nation will t.ermit. I, 'a' 'march thrbngb heught wing„eieions, to ertbeink- . New nt of the Hada, of partiality to a rtieularly ,to one al. connection.— ~be : /OP Tivo calilmns of Inew advertisements this Week---intaiisting•and a Tains to almost every,one. Do riotlail•to!I read them. Iv Mnmenn; the perforind at thb tlaea;t a storm Of hissiJ and 'disapprObiti . on. t TAKIN6 the billtit fro Knoxvi4e Whig iha' to the sting from a bee: -Jt less for mischiefit* 'are- soldiers .by %De. Geary, too, and won farad and er field—upon the t Mountain, upon i k--through every ned "West Point d'of. Of °laical stand amid ,the , . Vie - The bcia i F eskio Election l iave .eported is not entitled o a sea l that William E. Dodge i: Dar l'eansylrinia is far ; which has Actually the children .ofil;er de; thousand of thin are n i n, Commonwealth The c. $l5O per annu .j laiormiblaes-more !d Dallas . and Al ! e a fieraelattack on [,which was barely ainn3unitiOn. and the troops Naw oftlEANd is re b 4 worse condition than tured by the Federal I city is filled with the Zvi erly conn'ictedi 1 ' gamblers, thieves, ana 1 the law and treat the - 4n • • thorities with contempt are both unsafQ is the Burnside i r• Gen. ihas been nominated t, for Goyeroor by', the Republicans of Rhode Island. The Oenii:tct : a i s thought it best to surrender witliOnt a Sg t t and made no nomi nation. Sensible i men, the democrats of Rhode Island, andiwe commend their exam , pie to their brethren iniPennsylvanis. afore Atlanta was 1• I 1 Senator Sa , Ulsbury 4?f Delaware,! was on Wednesday Mit, removed from the Senate chamber in aLbeasily I state of intoxication. Drunkenness i high, places is becoming so offensive to :the moral sense of the nation, that it should he punished by dismissal or impeachment.-L-Ezcha4e. 1 , 1 ' ' ,propositionendorsethe Asian nbstralt i we above, tit in this. special, instance it is our impression' that the most sensible thing Sen ator Saulsbaryi can dJ i is to get drank and stay drunk until his master seeds for him.— ~... Art Shore ,Vidette. --Tile finan'cia l ' crisis, created i in the oil regions by the i failure of Cultic!, Penn' & Co., has i created . 1 deep feeling of indignation among the people in that quartet : . The anx iety of thousands of hard working men who held the ides of the ,banks.' affected, by this failure is intense, , and Igor a time serious ap- 1 prehensions of bloodshed were indulged. The brie Dispritchisays tha!t "in some cases it has I bee found nressary to protect the- banking institution of ir. Culfrfrom demolition. The First National Bank of Titusville; supposed at first to be dear of co' , plicitr,hap a nepande d. d fn , A ay or two more wll develop full partied. Jer i." ' •' • • IJ• -- --- .417 :peraie assaulta i and - • _,, 1 _ Tue./merino A 111) ILEAT WESTRRN K. it. —re learn irom the R ailroad and ; Merchant's Journal, 1 published at Chicago, that James 1 i I. , , VRenry, - Esq., is . givrg his attention to the, - , I work of establishing 'a bioad guage conne,c -1 tidn for the Atlantic and Great' estern road through Pennsylvania. To effe s h this; says th‘tt paper, over two hundred miles of new rod must be built, and the Allegheny moan teams surmounted ) tf,he road is built from Oil 1 City to Mon; and i then becomes necessary r to carry the 'wide gauge through to New York, 1 to secure the Lehigh Talley railroad, either 1 1 i by lease Drrrchase, which .stands between r , . the Catawis a anal Morris and Essex roads. The abrogat on of t 6 contract by Judge Read, ; a few days since,a will not prevent a fresh con tract, i or, if necessary,a purchase of the Cate t 1 1 wissa roaddthough it may be that the Atlan i 1 I tic and Great Western may-construct, upon a f line equally" eligible, a road to complete their connection,lindepenfly of 'all others, • .-- - ' ' 1 lThe following is 4 copy of an st regulat ing 1 the mode of voting at all elect lr ions in the several counties. of this Commonwealth,which ' d ' has been pii sse h the Senate and the I: ouse : i .1 , - • Sec. I. Be ii egaled, etc., That, the quali fied voters Of the seyeralcountiesot this Com= trionwealtl4 at all general, township, borough and special { electiorls,are hereby hereafter au thorized and requiro to vote by tickets print ed or written, or partly printed' and partly written, seVerally classified as follows:.One ticket shall embraeh the names of all judges of courts voted foci end to be libelled out side "judiCiary ;" ne ticket shall embrace the names`,` of all State officers voted for, and be labelled "State;" one ticket shall embrace the nameelof all connty'officers yeted for, in cluding office of i , Senator and member .or members of Assam ly ' ,l if voted for ' and mem bers . of Congress it voted for , and be labelled "county" one ticket shall embrade the names of all township o cers voted •for, and be la beled "toinship ;' one ticket shall embrace the names of all orough Officers voted for, and be labeled "borough ;" and each class shall be deposited in, Iseparate ballot boas. :Tb' Sze. 2. at it shall be the duty of the i) eherilfs inith sclera) , counties of 'this Com monwealth t bb, insert, pa tbeitelection procla- Melon heteafter ,Issupd, the first section of this act. . • f' " El Phothgraphs for 'eale at the e BookdtOre. 1 , nni: airy cannot be without provoking er"violent signs of a rebel, says the effect, of extracting readers him power ; cal.. Committee on ',that James Brooks in that body, and • ilia only State, thus lssunied the earerof i d soldiers,: and two ow in !schools in this ast per pupil is about ; esented as now in a dfure the city was cap frity and navy. The rorst diameters form 1g rebel at•my-with t, rpstitutes, who defyn rtional and State mu . Life and property lirescent city. OE rer "It is more blessed to give than to receive," especially ~, a dvice, but when we advise all persons , * desiring anything done in the Way of shaving, hair -cutting, shampoon lug, etc.. to patronize our handsome young barber "Joe," we know we are doing what every one who:followS our advice will heart ily thank us for. Joe Is a brick and thoroug hly understands his Try him. TEM National Union Men of Texas,although forced to contend with a powerful treasonable element, are nevertheless making great pro gress in organization. The German element in Texas is intensely loyal, and when the thrift and intelligence of these people are fairly considered, some idea can be formed of the influence which they wield on the politics of the State. . Ear There is a good joke on Potter eounty going the , rounds of the preas, in this isection —it is that the act regulating billiaid.focits has been 4tened to this county! - .4:s our people do not support those evidences of mod ern civillzation—billiard-rooms and grPg shops—it seems considerably like a practical joke. However, it will be a good thing to hare in case of increased immigration !iota some of our neighboring counties. BANI3FACTPHES IN RH BAY STATE.-.-l. 90 Fall River (Mass.) Neil's, says that work upcin twoo - Cotton 'mills has been commenced in the place, one to contain twenty thousarid spindlec,an4 the: other about twelve thonserid spiodles. 4 new iron foundry of granite, eighty feet square,is to be completed bylnly next.; and 9n the same lot it is proposed to erect soon u two-story stone building one hundred and sixty feet long by fifty wide as a machine shop for the manufacture of tur bine wheels; mill shafting, Gearing, ke. DEFEAT /OP THE IMPERIALIST TROOPS IN MExtco.—The news of the late disaster,to the imperialists troops at Perms, Mexico, is con firmed. The French General Dot:ay, with fifteen hundred men,coming up from &Will° to protect the imperial garrison at Parma, had his retviat but off, and the liberals attacked him. captaiing the whole force and some mu nitions of war. The liberal loss was trifling. In the interior of the states of Mexico tho liberals ha. , e, inflicted heaiy losses on the imperialists. ' THE MACRE. DEFENDED n THE CIRCUIT Collars or Mississirrt.4TheTicksbargEferaid says that the Probate Court of Carroll county Miss., apprenticed, a t+ro without summon ing his father to answer as to his right to the custody of his son. Whereupon the father stied out a:writ of /ia64ts corlius before Judge Cochran, who declared I the proceeAings of the 'Probate Court null and roid,l and ordered the boy to be returned to his father. ; Too Tatre.---A..city cotemporary gives. the following friithful description of 41 countrYed. itor, remarking at the same time that he would not be one "A country editor : is an individual Who reads news-papers, writes ar tides on any subject, sets'type, reads proof, works press, folds papers, prints jobs, runs errands, saws wood,works in the garden,talks to all who call, receives blame for a hundred things which are no one's business but his own, work's from 6 A. al. to L I N P. lc, and fre quently gets cheated out ofhalf his earnings." Will Defend Deserters. Mr. CrOsland, one of the leaders of the Copperhead party in the House of Represent= atives, and memher from Schuylkill county, proclaimed aloud that he would defend de serters in their attempt to vdte at electitins. We thanli Mr. Crosland for this candid ad mission. It is only reiterating the facts pro claimed for the,past four years, through the TELEGRAPU, We can now go into the next campaign pith the plain motto, "DESCUTERS FOR CLEMSII AND UNION SOLDIERS FOR GEN. GRUM !HTelegraph. The saddest commentary upon the social crime of intemperance. that ever came under our observation ' was the spectacle of a young father andj his little girl, promenading our streets one:day last week. The child seemed to be not more than seven years of age, bet was so overcome by whiskey, administered by the fattier, as to reel and stagger. The father was not so drunk as not to know bet ter. That!was ;a painful, but most effective temperance appeal.'!—Tioga Agitator: —That is what must be expected! This lather has a perfect right to make a brute of himself—you must not restrain him—you must not infringe upon hisl liberties nor cir cumscribe his privileies I Yet, you' should be a christian end God-fearing people l Put the World and the-Devil on one aide and Good on the other - -only keep the . scales . evenly balanced.' "whe t Old Trouble. ss A friend hands us the following item which may be of interest to some of our young readers. ilt.isiidue, however, to the young bachelors of the Botough to sal that the "cause is not their own." AI parting scene between a Gentlem'an and Lady wbo could not agree to marry: Gentleman Dearest Polly, can you leave me ? Dying with a broken heart? Ceti and dogs and Pole-cats tease, 'Till you act a lover's part! Cruel Polly, thus to treat me I See,' love and grief my bosom well] No such love as mine will greet Ye, When in distant lands you dwell. Lady : - My frierid, Peter, 2 must leave you, I must say, a last farewell ; 'Tis not in my heart to grieve you, As my every act will tell. Your proffered boon I cannot cherish, I cannot share your board and bed; I'd choose by far alone to perish, Or dwell beneath a humble shed. Therefore, Peter, do not tease me, Do net Cantle Mir ire t 014198111 ; I Depend upon it, I must leave, Fai l in distant lands to dwell. Farewell! • .Genttancus: go tolf-411 .--- THE OLD STARE MANstore—Last Friday night the old mansion of GeneraLi 3 tarkolta7l ated in Manchester, N, IL, was _fired by l i an ncendie'rx and. burot to the ground.lhe building has been recently occupied by he boys nf the State Itcform school. It was pnt 'up by Major-General Stark in I'lBs, and 'opts !Ina by him as a family 'mansion until Ibis death in. 1823. It was-built . upon the , eito of the place where Archibald Starh,,,father of hiajor-General John Stark,erected hie dwelling in 1836, and up to 1838 a part of the more lancient building was attached as an L. 1 Banis COUNTY UNIATICY.—The Pittsburg Gazette; says ihat the county of Barks hits - pre;i sented - ',eight candidates, at different times, Go4rnor, only :two of whom ever suc ceeded: • The _first Governor, Mifflin,. was sl native of Berks. • John Spayd was Presented by. that-county in 1808, and beaten. :Josehp ;Rester, of the same .county, rap in, 18i6 and was defeated, but was successful in 1820. Mnhlenberg ran in 1835, and,falle,d, and , i ran inlB44 l again,' but died b'efore the election. 1n' . 1841 the whigs nominated John Banks,'of Berks, and he too was beaten. Clymer Makes the eighth, and he likewise will fait Futsx Tunics.—The 'Boston Transcript, in referring to i the recent destruction of the Freedmen's Schools at Tullahoma, quotes the saying of Chauteaubriand, that the first thing a Spaniard does on landing in a new country is to build a ''elturch, the first thing a French man does to build a hall-room, and the first thing an*F e nglishman does is to build a tavern ; and then adds : "If we should extend this general idea to American tendencies, it might be said that a' Yankee no sooner lands in a country than he proceeds to erect a school house, and that the negro-hating Southerner no sooner sees the school-house than he proceeds; to diaineliet it. Heavy Failure in New York. • A telegraphic despatch from New York an! nounces the failure of Culver, Penn & Co., and states that the assetts of the house are ample to meet . alt liabilities.' We learn by private dispatches from Pittsburg, that the effect of this- failure has been to- induce the banks of that city- to 'refuse the notes of the Oil City Bank, Venango tank, Petroleum. Bank, Crawford Bank and Tioga Bank. . The house of Culver & Co. was closely connected with these banks, which fact ceased the notes thereof to be thrown but at Pittsburg. The banks and brokers of Harrisburg i are also re fusing the notes of; the same banks.—/larris burg Telegraph, March 28. Since the announcement made in our even ing edition of y sterday, in relation to the rejection, of theotes ofeertain Pennsylvania by the bro - ers of this and other cities, banksi.,,, we learrtat the Adjutant General's office that every dollar of th. circulating notes of the Te nango Bank and he Petroleum Bank is secured by the . S. Se' ven-Thirty Bonds with the' Auditor . G erol.—Harrisburg Telegraph, Narth 2.8. ' , • A if' THE OLDEST P-INTED BOOK . IN THE UNITED STATES.—Tihe C inden (1 , 1.1.) Scientific Asso ciation have in ehcir possession a book pub lished A. D. 163 p, which it ciaims to be the oldest book in America. The editors of the Scientific ztincriciin (N.Y.)' boasts of. a book printed in 1-6374-two Tears older. And Rev. Wro.White, of Tintler.Pit.. owns a book issned in London in 11131—the oldest yet discovered in the United Sla'es. Dr. Duttield, of Detroit has a blobs which was,writeen - on parchment and is flitted 13 1 90. i We find the ai3 ore in the old Pittsburg Ca iette. Mr. 0. NI WOrden, of Lewis`turg Pa., has a well-preseked German Testament printed in 1622—nine years older than Mr. Wli te's book—aged Zi t years in all. But book printing wits c initenced over 400 years ago —between 144 and 1450—and books dated in the last halfof 1400, and all along in 1500 I may be fciiind ir Franklin and Logan Library of Philadelphia, and also in other public and i p e r ie i f v . ate li bran? id Am erica:—Lactebur(C4rott -1 • •t • -.... 1110.....--41.-------..... • The Buffalo and Washington Railway. • • - • . The Board el Directers of the above impor, tant enterprise, says the Buffalo t'emmercial, made a contract on the 26111: of Feb.. • with Messrs. DeGralff,Smith & Co., the well known contractors. by which that enterprising firm undertook to 'hand the entire line - (1.10 miles) from this city . to Emporium, a , station on - the Philadelphia and Erie Railroad, within two years frote . date of contract The work work laic) be commenced - at once, and as an evidence that . it to be pushed vigorously to completion, we may. mention that the con, tractors agree to have trains running to the village of Aurora, in Eric cntinty, by the first of•OctOber nett. They agree to furnish, also within' two 'years, ten first - class locomotives; ten first class passenger 'cars, four mail cars, ' , twenty hand cars, and two hundred freight' cars; .and to build twelve station'depOts, ,and all the Wood honses, water tanks, &c:, -- neces , sary,:to put the road in complete running or der: • - • Mr. DcGraff is one of the most experienced contractors in the world, having probably built more miles of Railway than.any other man in this country: It may be regarded as an expression of high confidence in the value of the enterprise that he. should have agreed to accept the bonds and stock of,the company for the larger part of the contract pride,tvliicb we understand is at the'rate of 40,000 per Mile. This favorable contract will make the stock desirable investment, and we think' the•di; rectors ought to havebuthttle trouble in find ing.subscribers: in this .city, to tbh amount of $2,000,000, which we believe, is - all the • pledged themselves to do. Ne hat% dive t heretofore On the Vain(' and importance of this road to the, manufacturing and general busi ness interests of this city. Itwill givenswithin two years a . direCt and :short . route to the great coalfields .Pennaylvania,an object which is admitted on all hands to be a • prime neees sity to the growth and prosperity of our city. Now that there is no longer-'any doubt about the . fact that' the road is to be built, we hope that its prointiters will meet with the cordial and_prompt co-operation; or "all citizens' -to whom they may apply. • Independent of tlf indirect benefits which must - accrue to all property owners in this'city fromtbe building of this line, we have no doubt that the. stock itself, will prove:a ;emuneratlve investment. i TREASURER'S SALES ITArilltATEDUrn!'" Agreeably to the Oprovisions of an Act f Assembly, entitled-MAn Actdireattog the mode sfeelling unseated lands for taxes and other porposes," passed - on the 13th day of idarob,* . ; A., D. 1816, and supplement` thereto; the I Trasnrerof Potter Lbunty hereby givestiotice to all persons concerned therein,that the follOsitng tracts of Unseated Lands and otilested Lots returned , as no seatestsittiate in said ty, or, such parts of each tract as will pay the tam and oostichargable thereon. will be sold at the Court Howe, ID the Doron_gh of , Coudersport, CountyM of Potter,. on Month day o f Jane next, st one o'clock,'? . bL; beteg) the'second Monday of said month, and be tuatinned by adjourn! Edell - I - from day to day, for arrearages of taxes due acid county and the coats accrued , on each' respect ively, tailless the um/ be fully) paid before th e day ;aside. 45 U tovnuhip NO: P ATE; , OWNERS 4422..990 F ft Backus 4723 XB9O '5076 1117 John F Cowan 195 80 4720 - 999-- -_ James klarpei!.. . 168 51. 4721 . 998 do 168:51 5077 1117 ; Gilliam Ritdde: ' 195 so 5078 1352 . do • 61 70 5079 . ,629 •- do 10Y. 83 5080. , 1029 ' do • . • 180 40 5628 122 'rk ,• do 562 . 9 . . $36 !Oo 5531.. 4Ock 5632 . .4 • ' • •do 5633 065 - :do 151 64 . . do . 1 do 765 . ' 300 , 5634 5075 5811 990 Potter Co. For. Imp. Co. 163 51 990 ,do, do, 168 51 990 do ' do! . 168 51 790 • do do 134 54 890 do, , do; . • 151 52 990 do do 168:51 990 do do. 168' 51 990 do do 168 51 990 do de i 168 51 990• • do ' do 168 51 990 - do - do 168 51 371. do .1 do • , 61 87 990 do do , 168 51 p9O 'do do - 168 51 660 do do 102 18 , 690 do do 116 22 990 • . Chia Serdgen 153 66 990 • do • do .15366 990 Jaebb 0 Willa 173 46 9901 do do 173 46 `1067 • do • do ' 1 187 02 _5OO C S i nademacher 85 15 1133 , Heory; Connelly I 198 51 , 111.7 , ,do • do I . 195 82 990 . do do • 1 173 46 445 do do , 75 98 100 ^ T Bilbrotigh '17103 25'G Beats 2 62 25 , ,C Casher . 1865 425 125 , Chas Busher " 751 25 . Andrew Blon 163 55 • Ernst Breisneck 542 25 - John SoeChler . 425 25 William Boseleib , 262 25 " E Simon 437 75 Echrrind4 Hoffman 13 15 25 James Gkaff • 1865 163 25 G Besselring 44. 1 75 25 - F R'Mebbs ." 175 25 - Backman , 262 25 A 'Walter; ' 2_62 25 John Striegil ,4 37 50 R. W. SMith 5 87 • Allegany Otonship. 29 4. 4. Lyman 60 ' 49 David Sealing Bingham township 83 • -Wm. OA+. Clara towship. 265 A. M. Benton 50 u. 71 Isaac. Lyman 25. Barris Lyman , 50 Wm. Morey '56 A. P. Cone 50 Joseph Knowlton 85,' 0- 100 ; Otis Lyman . 113, • B. A. Couclrreport.l .32 prs Samuel Haven 32 " " 32 " 32 " 5075 5628 5075 5633 5078 1849 1874 2148 3923 EOM 20 21 22 h 37 ?Alia township.' 4694 .14814 Haven44Rounsvilie 4753 990 ' F. R. Backus 4754 270 • 41 • 4758 106 Ignace Kohler 5148 .990 Henry Drinker 5149 990 H. Merriman 5154 112. " I it 5909 :330 !doses Strong . 59121 i of .300 " • • 59L7 . 1097 5920 1084' , 5923 ." 5924 • " 1094 . ' ", 5433-`-'1100.: .1 " 4698 125 1 S. E. Darrow 4693,. ; 395 Win; 14.'Dougall 4768 312 " - - - 5908 150 ' et 8895 ;-850 cildeott Pott 2111 , 654 " 3896 412 . ' st 4768 313 A P Cone 5 :900 Tin:tot/I)o,es 6 899 " 1 " 7 900 4696 270 4697 , 990 . 4698 . 495 [. 4699 e 990 4701 270 4703 990 4704 270 4715 270 4766. 270 4766 270 4769 990 4770 270 21271 1 6 2128,J, 4767 , 244 ti Jana Humphrey _ It - El Mr EMI Ell Alfred; Bellamt Wm A EY4sin 89 Isaac Frin 19 30 2079 86 1 4. B CrOwel 16 78 2131 50 preenhold 975 2084. - 111 tarry Lyman estate '8 89 2131 60. 1 ' Malches ll 72 5432 845 1 Benham Fis h 123 74 3554 24 1 J Whittaker 428 5435 156' Seneca Freeman '26 55 Enkaafarmerk Portage, township. 620 1100 HnnalCker 118 49 4621 1100 "1 118 49 4622-1100 I "1 118 49 4623 1100 ", :118 49 4624 800 , • -246 39 4625 1100 " 338 77 4626'1100 " -286 44 4617 1100 4628:1100 ' • I 4620";,700.' 6431;,.450 I n • 3155 5553 200' ' gl 27 34 I 391° 100 .Wm 33 85 4013 4014 1 126 - : " ' 42'63 3910 4693 200 . A C Smith 24 30 3910, 10 Mereerean Moore k Co, " . 10 92 38 Wm Sotither ; 3/2 so. 9vT. owsss 50 Christian Shaun 4013_434 ' Washington Brooks nat Sanberg, Shear & Danielson 61 00 3898. 3910 50 Z C Cowley 310 T 3914 T F Bizet k 1) Burlia 1 4016 50• game lot Genesee (franuhtie. • 1874 203 H H Lyman 36 31 1384 10 A W Wiitinme 13 53 S S White 40 SI --- 80 • Tilos Sullivan 9 43 Harrison township. 1206 46 Hiram Calvin 1204 93 John M Harper! 1 1 3. 20 29 5 5 5 7 2 4 0 1641' 7 186 - ' 50 TAXES 168 51 151 52 Jem'es - Dodo Hediontenrii4sW. • 1212 350 Wm B Joltasson 152 II 1214 0 200 11 - r : : ,110 19 12115 .; 76_ : 38099 1295 60 Edward Seely ' 5214 1207..„ BurnhamApo 4205 1208 150 .1 . 4 " • '. 'O2 as 11 37 '9128 ;7096 i 7 72 12I1' 165 1212 225 213 1100 ( 4; 214 ' 572 130 26 .48.12 292. 400 168 40 296 SO 1857 64 " 1859 80 -" r 1866 .50 5864 -221- Sala Steseut hCo 5888 ,58 5898 .362 " 2213 1866 90 Warner &Beatzosn 3131 1293 102 I Joseph Stone - 14,31 1210 1211 } • 84 I Lrmsl:l & Taggart • 32 32 , 81 Dante Seyder 50 Fox & Rend . 193 ";I 136 " -190 - Marten ' k Co 220 50 82 94 5123 5124 11196 2988 201 18 37 38 97 13 26 4001} 60 Juyroan Colwell 33 SS 4011 77 ( Silas Toles „SO 3 Gould] 11 50 50 J Black 80 Rees k Read ' 23 01 50 u" • 1 14 40 160 John Brooks 80 34 80 Weston Bird .1612 4012 60 Leet k Moore 115 14 50 George. Moore - 12 1 11 .elOO P Farr, ; 721 50 . 3 34 Farr 111 3897 500 Sanberg, Shear k Dannielsd 42 01 Oswayo townsh ip . I ' 1054 515 Wm S Jotnison 151 IT 1055 384 ' - , 113 16 5866 464 A Weston J! Co 1362'41 5868 381 188 IT 5874 200 Westcnt & Bros 1 195 $O 5882 180 •-• •s 175 71 , 955.6 t 18 03 ' 18 85 I 4 50 9 00 850 9 02 1142 18 03 1 • M 23'11 193 34 52 74 20 69 386 68 386 68 43 15 152 33 ' 47 92 29 30 i 1117.10 105'85 107 12 106 83 214 83 16 06 INII 38 45 3442 'lB 16 145 80 127 14 55 42 45.49 175 77 274'34 176 77 52.75 193 33 96 67 19353 58684 52 75 193 34 52 75 5,2 75 52 75 52 75 193 33 52 75 19 55 5112 5123 5124 5125 5126 5127 3060• 47 66 1660 4029' 3789 5159 5169 154 408 5123 5125, 5127 tl , Samuel Catlin deed. Pleasant. Valle y Amos /tip. 400 . Joseph ,Colemen 411! 3442 50 Eliza Von' Valkenbers 71 6 2153 }so' • - Israel Reid 911 2157 ME 155 60 155 60 182 28 2178 -3125 3895 '250 3896 100 8921 -450- ME] ME Hector lownahip. 100 119nsiker & 1431ar:oet- 21 23 127 26 SS 15S H El Dent 33 12 - Horner township. 50 • James Tracy • John Schmelti 50 ft 16 15 Ezra Niles ,5 16 100 Jacob Fuller - 1 81 164 Sanberg, Shear .1k - Danielson 12 $0 100 Forrann Quiet 10 51 Jackson township. J Silsoi, 990 127 990 137 53 990 . ' 137 53 990 " 137'53 990 H " 137 53 990 . 137 53 990 137 Si 990 " 337 53 990 1 11cDongal A Hamilton 161 12 495 Frederick Ravine , 80 51 393 • Timothy Ives . = 63 9 200 • Wm McDougal 32 53 300 Dave 25 14 townaM). A Rounnill9, 1913 . 11 Li Lyman 63 11 - Warner *Beath:inn 44 41 Barnbarn, Weston * Co " 96311 578 17 53 IT 37 11 145 49 119 14 210 11 1341* 43 13 100 13 131 41 381 II dt 06 GI 47 111 51 4311 105 00 115 26 714 414 41 130 31 351 41 5 93 711 4313 19 71 114 39 SI • 55 Colwell & Weston Wm S Johnson k Co u so I H Id Rathbone W S 4 Henry Johnson Fox .1- 'Read "Pitch Robiaaon Joha A Poland H k L Harikari 7ce town:hip., Monicker k Garlock II it 1 g• 6S 61 84'13 118 131'00 16 29 " 101 51 Wifiam ifeDoigall 106 13 A P Canal 30.01 13 23 ,681 2696 10-21 140 84 113 04 45 07 45 13 lo E S Tracey Is IS Albert Washy 94 31 187 10 18 71 T5l $Ol4 It lg 395 512 712 1 790 520 612 700 160 1231 31 231 490 1000 802 320 325 352 _7O 502 1000 100 40 110 96 Timothybes B D Frost Roukt tefesehiy. Gide:on Pott 52 6133 11 • 6 1) 32 IS 200 $ II I I ICkulelnded on'fourth Tat a A4l SI gs lo es 214 e. 122 It Ina 43 os 800 101 63 230 36 112131 ass ti 11111 UM 39 41 49 3911 44 50 11 43 1$ 11 1010 40 41 107 51 , 44 59 142 10 38 80 24 43 32 26 . 9 18 1117 I 0 11 ' 3.10