U , Bala •, to all cases of admiralty and maritime jurisdiction ; !to controversies to which the ITattited States shall be a party ; to contra- Tersieb betWe'en two or more states; between state and of another state ; between citizens of different states ; between citizens of the same state claiming land under grants of different states, and betwen a state or the citizens thereof and foreign states, citizens or subjects." 'Mere the judicial power of the United states i de expressly set forth and defined aid the act'of September 24th, 1789, estab lislang the ju!dicial courts of the United states in conferring upon the federal courts juris diction over cases originating in state tribu nals, is careful to confine them to the classes enumerated in the above recited clause of the Constitution: This section of the bill un doubtedly comprehends cases and authorizes the exercise Of powers that are not by the con stitution within the jurisdiction of the courts of the United States. To transfer them to those courts wouid.ba an exercise of authority well calculated to excite distrust and alarm on the part of all the states, for the bill applies alike to all of them, as well to those that have not been engaged in rebellion. It may be assumed that this authority is incident to the power granted to' Congress by the Constitution, as recently ananded, to enforce by appropriate legislation the prticlo declaring that neither slavery nor involuntary servitude, except as a punishment far crime, whereof the party shall 'Lave heen duly convicted, shall exist within the United States, or any place subject to their . jurisdiction.iT It cannot, however, be justly Maimed that, with a view to the enforcement of this article of the Constitution, there' is at present any necessity for thr - exercise of ill the powers wiliCh this bill cotters. Slavery has been abolished. and at preient nowhere exists within thejtivisdiction of the United States,nor has there lieeu,' nor is it „likely there will be any attempt; to revive it by the people of any state. If, Liewever, any such attempt shall' be made, it will then become ,the duty of the general government to exercise any and all incidental powers necessary and proper to maintain inviolate this great law of freedom. The fOurth section of the bill provides that officers andgents of the Freedmen's Bureau shall be em powered to make arrests, and also that other officers may be specially commis sioned for that purpose by the President of the United States, It also authorizes Circhit Courts of the United States and the. Superior Courts of the territories to appoint without limitation commissioners, who- are to be charged with the performance of guasijudicial duties. 1 The fifth section empowers the commissioners! so to be selected by the court to appoint, in writing one or more suitable persons, from time to tinte, to execute warrants , and other ,processes desirable by the bill. These numer 'uus official! agents are made to constitute is sort of police in addition to the military, and , are authorized to summon a posse comicatus,; and even to call to their aid such portions oil the land and naval forces of the United States or of the Militia "as may be necessary to the performanCe of the duty with which they are charged." ',This extraordinary power is to be conferred ' upon agents irresponsible to the government and to the people, to whose num ber the disdretiou (of the commissioners is the only limitand in whose hands such authority' might bp made a terrible engine' of wrong, Oppression) and fraud. The general statutes 1 regulating the land and naval forces of the ) United States, the militia, and the execution of the laws,are believed to be adequate for any imergencY which can occur Irk time of peace. If it should prove otherwise, Congress can at any time amend those laws in such a manner as, while subserving the public welfaremot to jeopard the rights, interests and liberties of the people. The seventh election provides that a fee of tan dollars shall he paid to each commissioner in every ease brought beforehim and a fee of il t five dollareeto his deputy or epaties for each person he or they may arrest and take before any such'eommissioner, Wit such other fees' as-may be ; deemed reasormb e by such corn- missioner 'in general for performingsuch other duties as may be required in the premises. All these fees' are to be paid out of the Treasarj , of the United States, whed+ there is a con viction permit, but in case of conviction they ) are to be recovered from the defendant. It seems to me that under the I:lfluence of such temptations bad men might con7eit any law, however beneficial, into an :nstrument of per , secntion end fraud. By the !eighth section of the bill the United States conrts, whieh sit only' in one place for white citizens, must migrate with the Mar shal and !District Attorney' and necessarily with the c l lerk , (alttiough he is not mentioned) to any prOt of the district, iron the order - of the President; and there hold a court for the. purpose cif the more speedy arrest and trial of persons charged with a, violation of this act ; and ther4 the judge and the officers of the court must remain upon the order of the President for the time therein designated. - The ninth section authorizes the President, or such persons as he may empower for that purpose, to employ such park of the mitiria,as shall be necessary to prevent the violation and ' enforce the due execution of this act. ) This - language seems to imply a permanent military force, that is to be always on hand, whose only business is to be the enforcement of this measure over the vast region where it is in tended to operate. , I do not propose to consider the policy of this bill.] to me, the details of the bill are fraught with evil. The white race and black . race of the South have hitherto lived together under. the relation of master and slave—cap- ital owning' abor. Now that relation is changed 1 and as teownership,' capital and labor are divorcedl .l They stand now each ruastrT of, its Li, this new relation ; one being necei. nary to tine other, there will be a new adjust= meat., wkielt both are deeply interested in making liitemonius. each has equal power in settling the terms, and, if left to the laws that regidate capital and labor, it is confi dently believed that they will 'satisfactorily work out the problem. 'Capital, it is true,has more intelligence ;' but labor is never so ig norant as not to understand its own interests mot to know its own value,and,not to see that capital Must pay that value. This bill frus- ' trates this adjustment. It intervenes between "capital and labor, and attempts to settle cpiestioris of political economy, through the agency Of numerous officials, whose interest it will be - Ito ferment discord between , -the two races ; for ars the breach widens their employ ment will continue, and when it is is closed their occupation will terminate. In all our bistorPin all our experience as' people living under federal and state law, no such system as that contemplated by the details of this bill has ever before been ,pro Posed or adopted.— They establish for the security of the colored race safeguards which go infinitely beyond . sly thitt the general government has ever provideid for the white race. In fact, the distinction -of race and color is by the bill made to'operate in favor of the colored and . nail:estithe white race. They interfere with ) the muiaicipal legislation of the states; with relations existing exclusively between a state and itarcitizens, or between inhabitants of the some state; an absorption and assumption of sower by the general government, which, if arqedeaced in, must sap and destroy our fed erative system of limited , powers, and. break down the barriers which preserve the rights of! the states. It is another step or rather stride toward, centralization, and the Consentration of all legislative powers in the national gov ernment. The tendency of the hill must be to resuscitate the spirit ofrebellio&and to arrest the progress of those int3uences' which are more closOy drawing around the states the bond of union and peace. lamdated predecessor,in hishreelaination on the Ise of January', 3863, ordered' and de clared that all persons held as slaves within certain states and 'parts of states therein des • ignated, were thenceforward should be free'; and further, that the executive government of the United States, including thrirailitary and l naval authorities thereof,would recognise and maintain the freedom of such persons. This guaranty has been rendered especiillY obli gatory and sacred by the ammadmeht of the Constitution abolishing slavery through Out the United States. I therefore fullytecogriise the obligation to pretect and defend'Oat class' of our people whenever and wherever it shall become necesSsry, and toithe full extent com patible with the ConstitUtiort of the United States. Entertaining these sentimeats,it only 'remains for'me to say that I Will cheerfully co-operate with Congress in any measure that may ; be necessary for, the preservation of the civil rights of the freedmen, aswell'as those of all otner classes of persons throughout the tErniied States,by judicial process,under equal and impartial laws,. or conformably 'with the provisions of the federal Constitution. I nowireturn the bill to. the Senate, and re gret that in considering the bills and joint resolutions, forty-two in number, which have been thus far submitted for myapproval,l am compelld to withheld my assent from a second measure that has receivedthe sanctitm of both Houses of Congress. Asortair Jousisos. 'Washington, D. C., March 27 1866. - ! Possage of the Wit. The Civil Rights Bill passe'd the United States Senate on April 61 over the President's veto, by tke decisive to of 33 Ito 15, as follows : t , 1 1 . YEAS—Messrs. Anthony, Brown, Chandler, C'ark, Conrieis, Cl'agin,, - Creswell, Edmunds, Fessenden, Foster, Grimes, Harris, Henderson, Howard, Howe Kilkwood, Lade, (lad.) Mor gan, MUrrill, Nye, Poland, Potheroy, Ramsay, Sherman, Sprague, Stewart, Sumner, Trim bu;l, Wade, Willey, WilHams, 'Wilson, Yates —33 NATS—Messr.§. Buck Doolittle, Guthrie; He! Lane (Kan.), McDeng: Riddle, Saulsbury, Vu The names of Republ in Italic. On Monday,April 9th in the House with thl Nays 41 I—and the Spe bill had becoMe long continued deafeni. with some hisses, amid journed. . the vote was taken, result of Yeas 122, aker declared that the when tremendous and g applause futlolved, which' the House ad- An Old Minister Sold. We have pii i ilished a good many sad sto ries of the sufferings of poor old mini Cm lately. But here is one that puts out of .ight all others tha t we ever heard. cf. A sub scriber ofl moo than forty years standing, brings to us a letter from a friend detailing the extraordinary facts, and vouches for their literal truth, in every particular : I "There is an eld initister in Charleston, Penn., near W i ellshoro', who has ain't:ye borne an excellent character, aryl has beien a hard working, goo i Baptist preacher. Two years since, be Was fod in his room, sick and des titute. The friends for whom her had spent his strength kindly put him in the Poor-house, or rather whattakes the place ofdPoor house. The town pays his boarding to who ever will hoard him the cheapest 1 Ile is con sequently put up at auction, 'and struck off to the Idwestlbidder !I This spring the Charles ton people thought they bad done enough for him, and that he should be put upon an adjoining township where be had sometimes preached in fornier years. So they brought the matter to Wdllsboro', and had a law-suit over the Poor, out mad, but were obliged to keep him after all. I was very much shocked to find that there was such an instance as this in the world, but it is all true. Ur. attended the law-suit." i Theie4we hope ever to hear anything worse ,than thiS,' of the treatment of poor old ministers. Probably, we shall have an ex planation to the effect that the old man was not a regularly ordained minister: perhaps he '.‘took up" preaching and had a trade that he worked at:besides. But he seems to have been regarded as the minister, not of one parish only, but of another where he had labored two years. And now in. his old age and poverty be is sold out to the man who will board hiM the; cheapest ! ' And this is our Christianity !!—:.2V - . Y. 'ObserLyr. lUnparallled Cruelty A Republican in. the New York Senate . • caught the entire I:MISS of uemocratic Senat ors in a very nice trap a few de.Ys, ago. They 'were extremely anxious to: endorse the Pres ident, but wanted to do it in 'a: Democratic way. Finally Mr. Folget, representing the conserratiye wing of the' Republican side, offered the, following resolution, viz: "No State, 'Within which there has been insubordination or rebellion, should be ad mitted io share in the National legislation until it presents itself, not onlyl in the atti tude of loyalty andbarmony, but in the per sons of reprerntetives whose,loyalty cannot be questionhd." WhereupOh there titts a Demoeratie storm. One after aiiiother they denourieed it, some stigradtizing,it as "ah attack uPbn the Pres ident." A 'Vote was ;finally takeh, the Dem ocrats voting no. Nr. Foiger J then coolly arose and said that the Pre.sidei3t i had recently made a speech embFirlying the vrords of the resolution! which the Democratic Senators of New York had so vehemently derounced. Not a word or syllable had been chan'ged or omit ted by him. He had merely offered the reso luticay to illustrate the hypocrisy of the Dem ocratic SenAors. That was ThoSe who 'anticipated that Johnson would oust all the Republican office -holders have been seriously angered by a circular which he has lately issued in irhich he re commends the.appointmeat of soldiers in all cases of vacancies or prothotions. We are hi#rtily satisfied with that 'Toliey,"—are they 4 .1 THE IJOIJRNA.L. Tuesday; April 17, 186 6. FOR GOVERNOR: I GEN'L J. W. GEAY, Of Cumberland county. ler In Latirrenne:county there is a strong effort being made by Temperance men to get control of the "moral business." XpEi.The Niue York Tribune has lived its quarter'of a eenOry and enters upon.: its 'sec . - ond quarter with widened and lengthened columns. xter A movement is on foot for the speedy trial of Jeff. llavis. Some of the Southern papers are deManding his releasti on n writ of habeas corpus, f Iger The panic among the oil Mon has not abated—many of the operators having to sell out and leave for parts unknown to avoid the tax collector, as they are not able to pay the taxes. WY' Sanlsbury—he with the whiskey head —is highly indignant becausO Jolinson did not carry the Connecticut election, 'add does not appoint his fellow rebels to the "fat" positions. 1 The Bill disfranchising delerters has passed both Houses, and will, no doubt, be signed by, the Governor. All the' Copper heads voted against the Bill. We Will pub lish it if it becomes a law. ,i' The New York Herald advises the Democratic party to withdraw Mr. •Clymer and put in his place the renegade 'Senator Cowan. We have no objections. We believe in "killing tiv4 birds with one stone." rptran, Davis, drinks, it Johnson, 11. Nesmith, Norton,. Winkle, Wright—ls. cans ri,oting "No" are ze- Read the Civil Rights Bill first, then the Veto 34ssage, then Mr. Trumball's Speech, after Which the result of the second vote in the Senate and House, when you will be prepared to ,congratulate yourself that the Bill is a Law. i • "Dead-Duck" societies are'forming in Philadelphia to advance the claims of Hon. Jno. IV. Forney for the United States Sen atorship. The same caught up in derision by the Democrats may become the symbol of power. tge. The hardest blow given the Democ racy in the sate -mixture is the issuing of a Circular Letter by the President to the heads of Departments inidructiog them to appoint Soldiers to theotices in their control, Since the issuing of this letter Democracy has gone down 14,000 degrees'below zero I —For con solation, read Nasby on Post Offices, •01. 10, page 5991 M. O, Charlie, Charlie! you of the Ly coming Gazeti! WO have heard of green horns derivin'g consolation from a hemlock sapling, but you surpass even them ! If the result of thC Connecticut election satisfies your seul and fills you with pious feelings, then yOu will no 'doubt be a happy man for many years to come. We do not wish to throw cold mater on your joy—Unt won't you please read 'the New .York World on the "nutmeg election." Mr. SHARPLESS, of Chester County, intro duced the following bill, which, if it should pass, would be worth more to the State than !any act of 01 Session. It is a credit to the I mover and tVe county that sent him : "That from and! after the passage of this act, every civil an `military officer required by law to be;sword or affirmed shall, in ad dition to th 4 present oath, swear or affirm that he will not use intoxicating liquors as a beverage during the term of his office." Death of lion. Dan'i S. Dickinson. We regret, to be compelled to announce the decease of the. Hon. •Daniel S. Dickenson, U. S. District Attorney for this District, which occurred last evening, at the residence of his Samuel J. Courtney, esq., of this city. Mr. Dickinson was taken sick on Monday afternoon, having been engaged during the day in the trial of the case of the steamship Meteor. Nothing alarming in his symptoms appeared TAU yesterday morning about 11 o'clock when they became serious. When his sort-inrlaW, Mr. Courtney left his house yes terday morning at 9 &clock, Mr. Dickinson was up shaving. He told him that he had ordered bin breakfait and felt much better, saying, in his jocular way, to Mr. Courtney, "You can run the office to-day J shall he all right to morrow." But he gradually grew worse until 8:30 o'clock in the l evening, when died. His disease was strangulated hernia. He leaves a widow and two daughters. He had always enjoyed excellent health,and was hardly ever sick in his life except last Summer when he was attacked with typhoid fever.— Mr. D. was born in Goshen,Uonnecticut,Sept. 11, 1800, , andj was consequently nearly 66 years of age. When hi was six years of age, the famili removed tojNew York, and settled in the valley of the Chenango. He was ad mitted to the bar in ChenangoCounty in 1826, and ten years later was chosen a member of the State Senate from the Sixth District. He was then tin ardent member of the Democratic party, and continued in the service of the state four;years. He was elected LieutenantL Governor;in 1842, and in December 1844 was appointed United States Senator, which seat he continued to hold until March, pB5l. He shortly afterward retired to his rural home at Binghamton,and devoted himself to the prac tice of his profession until called noon to fill the United States District-Attorneisbip —/ir. T. Tribune. April 13, 2.866. Coudersport. pa. M. W. ISI!cALARNEY, EDiroit.i National Bank CarreacY• 1 The mode of procedure when a National bank fails in thus pointed oat by.the National 1 bank law. The government redeems the 1 notes of all nu h banks : "On receiving notice 1 that any such association has faiied- to rej t deem any of i circulating notes - , As specific in the precedi f g section, the Comptroller of the Currency * * * * shall,; within thirty clays after he shall have received notice of such' failure, I declare the United ' States bonds ncl securities pledged by snob association forfeited to the United States,and the same shal l thereupon be forfeited accord ingly ; and t hereupon the Comptroller shall immediately give notice, in such manner as . the Secretary of the Treasury shall, by gen eral rules or otherwise, direct, to the holdrit of the circulating notes of such associatiotis to pre sent them for ,arnent at the Treasury of the United States; and the same shall be paid as presented." , Nuts for Whiskey Men to Crack. —Frank Leslie's newspaper says that tone fifths of all the clime committed in New York is the result of Whiskey. —The Clerk of the Court of Quarter, See along, of Lycoming counts, advertises 77 ap plications for license to sell liquor in that county. There are not, perhaps, half this Timber of school bonies, or churches in the same county, and the probability is tbiht if these licenses are all granted, the disposition, to support religious and educational institu tions there will be progressively diminished in the future. —At a second class hotel in Frankfort, Ky., a few days since, a little girl entered the bar room, and in pitiful tones, toad the bar keeper that' ber mother had sent her there to get eight cents. "Eight cents 7" said the bar keeper. `"Yes sir.". "What does your mother want of eight cents? J don't owe her any thing." "Well,"1 said the child, "father spends all i.i;3 money here for rum,' and we 'have had nothing to eat to-day. Mother *ants to buy a loaf of bread." A loafer sug gested to the bar keeper to kick the brat out. "No," said the bar keeper, "I'll give her mother the money; and if her father comes back again, I'll kick him out." Such}a cir cumstance never happened before, and may never happen again. Humanity owes that bar keeper a vote of thanks. No Licenses In Potter t We congratulate the people upon the pas sage of the following Bill, it has been ap proved by the Governor and is now the law. It takes, the whiskey interest out of the can vas for Judges this fall, as it takes thegrant ing of licenses out of their power. It is only reasonable to expect that this'will meet with the hearty. !approval of the great Majority from the fact that they have for many years back refused to allow of licenses being granted in this county. Mr. Mann deserves and will receive the lasting gratitude of all good peo ple for thus setting at rest one "bone of con tention." Sccrios 1. Be it enacted by the Senate and' House of Representatives of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania in General :Assembly met and it is hereby enacted by theauthority of the same, That from and alser the passage of this net no li cense shall be granted to any person to sell vinous, spiritous, malt, or brewed ,liquors' within the, limits of the county of Potter. Sec. 2. That if any person or persons within the said limits shall sell, trade or bar- ter away any vinous, spiritous or any hind I of intoxicating liquors or intoxicating tonic or other bitters to be used as a beverage, be or she upon conviction thereof in the ourtof quarter sessions of said county shall be fined in a sum of not less than fifty dollars nor more than two hundred for the first offence, and upon a second conviction the fine shall not be less than one hundred dollars nor more than three hundred, and in addition to the fine the. pgrson so convicted a second time shall undergo imprisonment in the county' jail for a period not less than thirty days nor more than six months, Provided, however;: Thqt manufacturers of domestic wines and of malt and brewed liquors shall not be pro.: hibited from selling their own products in qttrintitieslof not less than one qunrt, And propided further That this act shall not apply to druggists who'sell unmixedalcoholor wine or Ibrandi on the written prescription of a regular practicing physician. 1 I SenMor Trumbull's Speech, 1 We pribt elsewhere the able and conclusive speech in defence of-the Civil Rights bill, and in opposition to the President's, veto deliv ered in the Senate. The President's objection that some of the features of this bill were unconstitnticnal and without precedent in our legislation; caused many per Sons to hesitate in giving their con, sent to it', because it was supposed, and in. deed hinted in the despatches from Wiishing ton, that! the 'President: had availed himself of the advicti of eminent lawyers-Uvrhose I , names rumor did not give,howeve—npon this point. But Senator. Trumbull, who is himself an eminent jusist, for five years Justice of the Supreme Court of Illinois, and in the Senate of the United States chairman of the Judici ary Committee, has, it seems to us, completely answered this as well as other points of the President's bjections. He showed by a decision of Chief-Justice Marshall that a citizen of the United States is a citizen of hny individual state. He showed by precedents in our history that naturaliza tion need net be by individuals,' but may he "collective" as when allthe Whites of Texas or Floriday,. or Louisiana,were made citizens. He argued that states are represented in either house of Congress and through their legislatures; and that Congress must therefore asJertain whether these legislatures are loyal. He quoted the President against himself : contrastinglpassages itt his best considered 4eeches while senator, with big present po sition. He showed further that the President had done, without authority, in the South, precisely what this bill proposes to do bylaw; and demonstrated that his course in the South was a proof of the necessity and wisdom of the bill. Winter ' AT( OLMSTED'S I ' Y • OUR atttention'is invited • to the lair ,nd , attractive stock juet received, and for sale as low as the same qualities can be bought anywhere in the county. • ' We have on hand a large and - varied as sortment of Domestic Cottons, co-n Prising BROWN SHERTINGS, and SHIRTINGS, BLEACHED MIISLINS, DENIMS, STRIPE§ I • CHECKS, TICKINGS, aod - • • I COTTON FLANNELS, OA vrhich we cannot be undersold:l We purchase onr goods for Cash and offer them at a very small advance From Cost. FLANNELS. IF you want to purchase I RED, GRAY, BLUE, or PLAID FRENCH SHIRTING FLANNEL,, call At Olmsted's. FROCHEo and WO9LEN SHAWS, DRESS GOODS; DELAINES, PRINTS, HOODS, - , SOTAG% 1 i 14UBIA I S, , 1 • SALSIORAL SKIRTS, c l issimEßEB - ,i. CLOTHS, and 1 I a foil supply • r Al Olinstedls. CLOTHING. fl ; ON'T fail to call _before purchasing , and Dee the assortment I At Olmsted's • BOOT S ksiioFAs I .1 ! Women & liildren, in great 'ik d chegtiv I 1: At 01111119t,d's VOR Men, riety.an For Molasses, Syrup, Sugar, Tea and Coif, in fact everything in the Grocery line, call AT OLMSTED'S 1 , 1 A full nscortment of almosteTerything thal is 1 I , kept in a count . store on hand. We intend to keep Goode t At will,gve satisfaction I l nd 1 ' sell good articles at the lowest living profit. , 1 AT OLMSTED'S, 113auff. Grain of al) kinds, I Butter, Wool, I Siseep Pelts, Furs Deer Skins- Also, County, Township and School Orders, for al of which the bighebtlprices will be paid At Olitipsted'a ort, Pa,Ncrer lb, Eggi • Coudera kiild BUCKEYE STRAW-CUTTER PATENTED,, d'ULY, 1864, BY PORTER & SMITH rrIIOUSANDS of these Machines are being sad. and sold, and give more ' Universal Satisfaction - than any other I I Straw or . Stalk-Cutter in market. It has no castings about and sari be made or repaired in any country town. . - The ft nifn is stationary—Box, vibrates — feeds Resit —outs on top of the knifel—cuts everything squar•orl any length you wish, andyoulcannot make , ragged work of It even with a dull lairs. I • Price,' 12. i . Samples of Machines cant be seen at shop of the undersigned. Mantlfactured and for Sale by 1- N. H. GOODSELL. Coudersport, )'a., Oct. 2;158 5. - , , FELLOW 4CITIZENS! - , I Lake thin method to inform you that I am Clow located at Osway6, better known as Brindle Tale, with:a Large Assortment of DRY GOODS, GROCERIES, READY MADE CLOTHING, HATS, 800T5,,• SHOES, CC., WHICH MUST BE SOLD Regardless ok COST. My Store you will ftnd in the Old Simmons, •Bloek where Mr. YALE and myself will eTer I , • try to give yon Good Bargains, and hope by so doing to merit a glare of your patronage An early call is solicited J. P. SIMMONS. Oswayo, Sept. 18, 1865. Latest from, Shk ROSIN k TAR, -from Non sale by , oodi! ATLANTIC AND GREAT WESTERN ~ R allroad through Potter county. GENERAL News Depot, BOOKSTORE- /TIME nnderaltrne l d would announce to tile reo p l , if :rOtter county that they have bonhtleut the tire stock of M. W. Mann of this place and wi4 he% after keep on Pand a full aaaortrnent of 1 BOOKS ANII. -- .STATIONERY Includini Writing, Tisstw, pe n prated nd Blotting l'ap?,r, elopei; inks, Slates; Pencils, tray. Ons,lakStands, Blank-Books oral! Writing BOOKS; Pocket DIARYSr Drawings Materials, - MISCELAIVEOtiSIBOOES Including the latesi Standard NOVELSMAGAZINE,PICTORIAL AND STORY PAPERS, ALSO all of the Standard A fine lot of. PHOTOGRAPHIC ALBUMS r Special attention given to orders for rinsing made the accessary• arrangemonts in Drry York weare enabled 10 , 611 all such orders on short notice, By prompt and courteous attention to cur patrons, with. fair and hnnorriblo dealing, we hope merit and receive a large eharo of the pairodlige atom wishing artielen in our hue. D. C. FA DIL YL!LARRABEE Jan 15 66 Li SACRIFICE 1 I /111:1E undersigned wishing to change their business I now offer to the people of *Potter sad adjoining . counties. their large and well selected stock of IR 7 454300D811 HATS AND CAPS Boots&Shoes! READY-MADE CLOTHINE °' ADIONG OTHER TfILNGS ARE Overcoats at $9, Ten Dollar Shawls for Severn Dollars The ■ete to commence MONDAY, the 40th day of January, and end the first of .11arch. Como early if you want the first :hake 'The BOOR of the firm will be closed on the 47th January, and no credit given thereafter. Those wit* have accounts with the thin will please Call and settlt without delay, as the Books mu.t be settled at ones. C. S. & E. A. JONES. HOWARD ASSOCIATION, PIIILADELPIUA, Pk. DISEASES of the Nervous, Seminal, Vera: ry and sexual stems—new and reliabli treatment—in reports of the HOWARD AS. SOCIATION—sent by mail in sealed letter envelopes, free of charge. Address, Dr. J SKILLIN HOUGHTON, Howard Association No 2 South Ninth Street, Philadelphia, Ps.. Itjy 1864. ' 1 : CAPS. GERMANti, Potter' Co., Pa., Aug. 1, 1883. NOTICE is hereby given that Charles Bu shor, now or late of this county, holding the following described property. has not yet paid any consideration whatever fcr the game, and all persons arelhereby warned not to pur chase any of said propertSr of the said Buehor before the decision of the Court is given in this case and C. Bhshor has paid to me the consideration money therefor. The following is !the property: Ist. A certain tract of land near the Ger -mania Mill, in warrant 5075. Abbott township, Potter county, Pa, containing 100 scree.— Also 25 acres in warrant 5078 and adjoining the above. • 2nd.' A certrin tract of land, with Mill and improvements thereon, near Kettle Creek, is warrant 5819, in Stewartson township, Potter county, Pa., containing about 204 acres. C. Bushor holds also in trust warrant IA 2501, in Gaines township, Tioga conntZt 1 .!lq on the road leading from Germania to (Oa" , containing 850 acres. `WM. RAM% erns= I. •th Caroline, for STEBBINS AND Rinds. TEXT-BOOKS FOR vOL§ , MISOELWEOIIB,I3OOO., IMMENSE COST for &C. &C. &C Notice.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers