The Potter journal. (Coudersport, Pa.) 1857-1872, April 02, 1867, Image 2

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    THE JOURN
Coudersport. Pa.
Tuesday, 4 - pril 2,1
M. W. Sic AL
Lumam--The lunlbermen in ft
Lave been 'unusually busy this .‘_•eai.;il
gut out a larger quantity of valuab
than 'usual. We notice that our en
friend John Brooks has over eighty
most valuable timber waiting for t i j
freshet.—qamcron Press. •
PUTT OF SCHOOL; DIBECTORS.,--Ther
to belt general negligence on the part
_Directors tb ptiblish the aTaint of ti
and expenditures of their respeenve •
required by the Act Of Assembly.
Superintendent rif Cornimin Schools
this section of the law is as obligator
Duard of Directors aS is the Section
them to keep open ~chords, arid a
erform this duty according to th
tsubject Directors to removal by the
same as the neglect of any other du
by law.
Tun' BILL StuNun.LThe bill girn
cared people the right of humnn bei
in all public conVqauces, and pla
.eoropanies under severe penalties
to observe the which was me
Jl-the Legistatimm was signed b
IGEAny on.the :22d tilt., mid is now
Ills gone into operation so 'quietly
to be noticed, and Cwkrred
And depart from tho cars as thong
sdways possessed the right. lust(
brutally throWn or kicked off the
"P")1"1"Yncs Were ordered to serve th,
chiefs, the tare of the reconstructed
a. taken with the same . r;2adllies
AJCless.
FIELDS 01 , 2 DUCK: 7111 e r,t of the
Pn troublesitme to farmers, is au etl
ative and a most valuable niedici
Jleighborhood of Linvell,, Met: J.
Co. have planted fields of it, whet
tinitiy% tons at a crop. It grows lik
beet, in drills, and its quably or pet
tit Gem much improved by euitivatio
of the ingrediems in .AYLIOSSARSA
we are informed ; the extraOrdina
this preparation are largely - due ti
of tins root that it co l onies. The
root, used by this tin», is grown on
.of their own, iu llondurus, to sect
.of superior-and wholly
of the reasons for t.le utoveri-a
superiority of their mddicines, mr
the watchful care tfint is a;ed
them—l",verment Stittc.s?itan.
wet-tern editor titu
turn of Spring : j•
•
' , Spring is here with her sun,
odoriferous breezes. The thick
fast digsoling away like the
which dance on the vi:ion floor in
.dreams, and, the merry peals of.
quickly foigotten as the cherry-el
, leart of .California gold-hunt(
fingered goddess will soon scatte
around 11(r prairie : home ; and b
nn undulthing plain nod towel
-frog& country and i town We
iriendly greeting of nett sabscri
<idea acel'
poi.tDar respotds
Come, gentFcBFrirg 1 ethereal in.
Ohl Tthwniison, void of rhyi
reason;
How conic:lSt thou thUs poor puma
There'd no such season.
IV — t A local editor who has ji
Tied, tlusirejoicesover Lis changt
No more; arc we 'doomed to
attics, Ly the faint
tobacco, and ad4ned - by the pre
clot friends, ineWilled and !MSc
we are tio l w settled for life. We
,an intere st in the markets, are t!,t
price of I beef steak, are slrecte
soup-bimes and phtatoes. A
die foturt: dawns before its.
.ourselveg sixty or seventy 5 -car
IMaded and venerable, slowly
leading liv the hand an 1 Weft
six rascally white handed hoes—i
who look up to us and call . : us
.such a possible prospect who
anarried ? And then the joy t
six through the mev,les, whoopi,
ing, rash, diptheria, and eroul
shoes, pounding them when the
trotting -4.14 em on our knee wh
seeing .them‘come home drowse
mud having them lilOwn -up by
'the 4th «f guly, formed a pith
blies that we could tilt resist, an,
A. WONCAN'S ADVICE.— A co
Knoxqe, snysi the TOO Agi
stake toe .1, lady, sends the foul
EMI
We have been lectured lo
eloW it's our turn. Would n't
ito the gentlemen be
. particu'ail
lust, hink bow Moe it would sl
bit sensible in your fashion ;
Tire hat of yours' just it w
@Jeati and cover your ears ; wh
that miserable conebrn perches
'The head"? The riditiulous way 3
it fashion sanetittislid course.
chest unprotected, 'excel t by
starched litten, when th rest'
sengly- encased in Warm woadi
find words strung enough to d
ell unmanageable brutes a tn:
(especially a Sick one). We
chin* ot• a wild hyena, or F
ugly elephant.] Exercise, gentl
in the corner iwatehing every
finding fault.' 'lf you would
kindling wood, - or i;et out in
dig a few potatoes, you wot
agreeable in the eyes of your
as you sometimes call her. lit
will stay out at the gamblirW
Bard table until 2 or 3 in the
they must have their own le ,
quenoe is, the wife has an extr;
Yet she must wear pleasant
just what you must wear.
you 'll be a slave to some br
Judge of the Sopa
Our RepUAlicau conten
central and "southera_parts
are canvassing lle merits
candidates for the seat. oil
Bench soonl to be vacated
Woodwardj .kniong the
we notice'Judge PearK
Judge Williams, of Al'eghl
of Ueuter, and rJudge Wi
These are :d1 good men;
can be preferred at last, it
*y to declare a pre,ferenc
Of the three first num
liar our decided preTereill
is good, he is a wan of et
the law, sobei-zninded, d
rect. ill Judgement. Ile
moral stature, upright, a
man wbahl make a grand successor to the
icicular .and .nusterely agave Woodward,
whose love of justice is bounded by color-'
ed lilies, as States and counties are bound-'
ed on the maps.
HoWever, as WO have t candida in our ,
own county,L-a candithat'o not ; by Ins, or
our own training, but nain'eti by one of the
mast influential Southern Penn
sylvania.—we heartily endorse the nomina
tion and accept -the proffer; Judge Will
iams, is the peer of the other' gentlemen .
named, !save, perhaps, in yearsland exper
ience. We have often testified to his su
perior gifts; as a lawyer; and, as a Judge,
and to -his high standing as a citizen. We
reaffirm all former cohnnendfttion with
pleasure. We go - furth,er; still say that.
there are few clearer intellects In the whole
country, few disting,nisbed :l a broader
and firmer grasp of the interct i g principles
which .vivify law, nit, rid and; civil. His
talents,are solid rather
,than :shOwy, and be
wisely avoids elaboration when; direct State
ment embodies the pith of thelsubject mat
ter. A close student in eveiy direction,
his aequirementt givei him a 4reat advan
tage over the mere 14yer, howeyer effec
tive the latter may bei '
• ,1 .
As a Cornmon,,Pleits Judge he vet. the
largest measure - otsatiOletion.! Oh the Sa
t
tpreme Bench he would find still morecon
!genial labor, b - ecausd his superior analytieat
powers would collie into fuller and freer
play. -
Of his ability to secure the delffates from
this Judicial liiStrict. from Bradford and
Susquehanna, with it, fair prospect itrOhn
too and Lycoming, l we limk, no serious
i oloubt. We do noll, regard the merition of
his name as complimentary, but offer this
as an earnest.advocate .of his claims for the
nomination ilgteutor.
IBM
ERSE
Fection
land have
e timber
el pricing
fl,s of the
e spring
appears
of bchuol
rt,.e( ipts
I i.tricts as
rrhe state.'
talcs that
upmithe
requiring
neglect.
•
lu«• will
butts, the
required
: g the eol
i!gs to ridr
ri n g tra . nhtt
r refusing
ttly passel
(;averts(ir
foree. l I t
as scared v
flow etter
, 1 they bad
ad oflving
ea: . s as the
in by their
Wad: man
as that of
Oon• dock
, ettial alter
ie. In the
C. Ayer S:
they raise
a canirot or
- ierties have
. .
. ,
WOll6 MIiiI.7AL'LIFE INSI.7IIANE COM
?Mil' OF NEW YOrtK.—We have never
seen . ;.water indn:ements; held out by a
lifeiitmirance company than those off e red
1 --, . "
the: e,
publik I y the World :Maud of New
York. It presents all the features of any
other reliable company, as well as some not
found in others The policies are non-for
' feitinci and the pretniuips demanded are
.„,,, ,
i r
bower than those of the majority of organ.,
1 , •
izations of this kind, i 1
The company invites particular attention:
to its 71.9 n rarticiput i ing ratcsofpremiunt,'
which are lower titai thoSe of any other
owl/qv in the world. By this tnethoti
the insurer sectires at once the 4trgeSt. pos4
, 1
siLde amount of insurance for a tated so it,'
:
Which is never increased nor de teased dor'-'
ing t{he continuance' of the Tioicy. This!
plan Is comm.-tided to these pertions of fixe‘!
inconle who desire to pay an even sum, and I
to secure now the largest insurance thereof.
The scale, of premiums being on the aver;
age twenty-eight per cent,' lower than our ;
participating rates, will secure a policy ofl
thirty-so',en per cent. greater, which isl
equivalent tan annual Cash dividend 0 .1
thirty-seven pier cent. paid; in aduaure, Or I
to a cash di%idend of fifty per cent. at they
end of live years. I
t iR ”ne
AItILLA, and.
v virtues of
the extract
Sars.aparilla
plantai inns
i re an article
Itiality. One
'knowle/Ig«1
v be seen , in
II preparing
Bails the re-
st:les and
dsbed ice is
nto.in forms
our inidulglit
bells as
ee s weet-
T. The rosy
• her flowers
ye will frolic
g bill, while
1 seceive the
, ers, cad,. - in
duesacome
, e as well. as
nature hum?
st been mar
of state :
The diyiklends of the World Mutual Life i
Insurance company will be enlcult.t2dl on
the "Contribution Pfau.,, invented lhy
Shepliard Hoinans. . sq., ActUary, and en
dorsed. by such higltjiitithority as Prof. NV.
E.I. C.ll3artlett,LL. D, of I.l'st. Point.:
By this plan, the 'dividends of any com
pany preserving a fait . average of expense
will i4 t licreasa with every year of the Irol'cy
until they may exceed theannual premitim.
The insured may apply any Dividend
4ther: to increase the insurance by an ad
ditiOii to his Policy, or may use t T as cash
in payment of his annual premium.
By the furiner method, the polcy annu
ally increases l'in amount while the preni
nun it;inains - the same. TlaAe 'additions
to tli policy, are always available_as cash
ar Ahe pigment of any annual premium,
and.rnay 1 sufficient, aftet several pay
ments, to carry the policy fOr a number of
yoiirs. It will thus be seen that the "ad
ditions" form a reserve fund, which May '
be drawn Upin at any'time of need fur the
protection of-thk, policy. , : -
-own in dark
Idol of stale
of baell
able. Nu, ,ir,
begin to have
nuns over 'the
1 by a rise in
~tore of life in
begin to fancy
hence, while
icing to church,
lug fan'tily of
11 .ifitut iSnookses,-
"Dad." With
would n't gid
f leading those
g c'ough, teeth
, buying them
• are ugly, and
•ii they squall,
from skit ng
oy curl mins MI
re o f domestic
1 so we did n't.
respondent at
Whom we
wing advice to
g enough, and
i series of hi n ts
y appropriate
4111 d Do be a
ear. that stove
-11 protect your
. tS the use of
on the; top of
nu men all wear
Going with the
thin of
if your body is
.loth. We can't
_pounce it'. Ot
n is the worst
'd rather have
au Itke's great
tutee ! 110 lel sit
movement: and
chop your own
the garden and
dd be far 'more
'dear little wife;
t. men of failtion
aotme; or the
Bil
mtinrnitig ; them
llrs. The eonse,
. breakfast to get.
Hiles and dictate
beware, ora l
e of a niam ?"
"The distribution olosurplas accordina to
the contril ution of the policy to form
is not 'only just{ and equitable, but has the
grentladvantriee of ,:extin'oatishing entirely
all annual premiums I.4hett- old age 'or
chaug-il circumstances may re.trler it im i
inssible 'or-difficult to . pay them. ':The
burden of payment being thrown upori the
earlier years of the insurance, when tile in
sured is best able to meet it, frees the lat
ter years from all,etrqrt to sustain the k pol
icy; for though the diividen4s mav be =cl
imate at first, they will increase with the
age of the policy Until they inay equal the
annual premium, and even ;exceed it. !, :
This result can never be ,httained in those
Companies which divide ttie surplus by au
..niform percentage on tile annual prem.
mum; 'for the r•pn'yments 'cOntinne through
life; while the ability or . disposition to pay
is constantly decreasing.
Alr po ides are in4-forfeitable after two
years. The COinpan , will grant on sur
render a paid-tifpr policy, which will, in
many instanees,!excedd't he, amount of-pre-
Illinois paid on the, origi ial policy.
M. W. APicAlarney 'of CouderspOit; is
the Agent for Potier. County and 0 lioW
prep red to issue PQ/icieS.'
me Court.
poraries in the
tf the the State,
andllitus of
the 'Supreme
y Chief Jobtiee
lames presented
n, of Dauphin,
fly, Judge Linn,
haws, of Tioga.
,ut as only one
beeotnes nee:>s
The New York ileraid sng,o•ests Gen.
Grant for President and Gen: L:e for Vice
President. If that ticket should be'. elec
ted,:how long would Grant: be Presidia?
We‘vould not give hint Over sixty clays et
the outsidel - ,
- - • -
GONE !—The whole of the Fiend' troops
have sailed from Vera Cruz for pet!' own
countiv, the last leaving on' the 12th.
V.,ra Viez i"; now he: i i ege d t 4, the rt„,,b
and li.tir is at 'Quet j ef at o
wlwre . he is Less-iged by Gen. I....SCODEPO.
!Jew hr is to e - ; C'To to [be cur t:t. is licit very
aivront at this time. , •
ed Jud(?e Linn
e. wat
Iture, I. an,e 1 in
'ibernt- ' am! co:-
Hi a man of g o o ,j
1. jw.t.
Hemlock Bark and Lumber.
In the early times wide district of
country situate& north and no thPast of the
Blue Mountains, and dritined y the Dela
ware and its affiuents;Hwt timbered in
large part. with pine and he lock. • The
hitter had little or no 'market'-alue. Pine
f
was a resource fir getting .m trey, and was
first Seized upon. It was lit raliy exhaus
ted at prices seldom rising abckes6 a th6u
sat) for boards at Philadelphia,; which was
bar ly sufficie.nt_to keeiz the lumbermen in
a c edition bordering or sav i igery.
When there was no more pine, kemlock
been lowiy to appreCiate. lAt last hem
lock boards and omitting, rose in market
somewhat above the ,liates . l4 which the
pine had been sold; bUt for two or three
years before the Rebelliorybrhke out there
Was a relapse, and beinlock eUnk•to $4,50,
and even considerably less: I
There was one relief to the lumbermen
meanwhile. At first, there vas no market
or very little, in all that country, for hem
lock bark. The tanneries by which New
York was mainly supplied, were located in
Greene and Scholutrie counties, and had
pot yet exhausted the! tertapries by Which]
they were respectively fed Some twenty
years ago, bark began'te fail them, am-lA:tidy
one by one they were ;forced to emigrate.
They came over into the district tributary
to the,Erie Railway, some in New York
and others in Pennsylvania. Here they
establi,lred 'tanneries of altogetherunprece:-
dented magnitude, and have al ready.slaugh
tered most of the hemlock in their reach.
S . ( ) rile of these tannerieS have now nomore
than a two years supp)e of bark at com
mand; searcely . one of illiem a sup) ly reach
ing beyond 'peven or eight years of full busi
iaess Latterly in thdse counties the bark
has become of more value than the timber,
though 11(11116cl; saweil stuff has grown as
high as Sixteen dollars! a thousand at Pbil-
adelphia and New York. Hemlock lands,'
as a matter of course, have rapidly incre:is
ed in price, and many' extraordinary specu
lations have been made.
i. - 0
1 ', It becomes a question of importance. to
determine where thee tanneries will locate
[when forced again to emigrate. From
I Northumberlantr, along the line of the
Philadelphia and Erie Railroad, almost to
Erie county, in a region well supplied with
hemlock, and now conveniently accessible
Ito the seaboard by rail. This her luck dis
trict extends how the bort6rn bor er down
lint° the midland countiesj It is desiined
I • 1
i 0
soon to experience ti;'' friendly in itsion of
I sivarmimr tanners, and a !great 'Mance
,
• meat in the value of }Mild lands. Ten years
II
svilt suffice to produce astopishing results in
7his respect,. unless some I lifiventive genius
7 WI, in'the interim, effectually contrive a
i 1
process to supersede leather in commerce.
At various times experiments have been
Made to contenpate tannin, so as to lessen
the cost of transportation; the idea being
to carry 'the tannin to the. hales, rather than
the bides to the tannin. - A good deal of
concentrated tannin, brought from India, is
used in England; but in this country no
marked success has attended these efforts.
Unless further trials . Shall lead to improved ,
processes, the hides will continue to be sent
to the hemlock forestS, the cost. of transpor
tation both ways Leng added to the cost
of leather in the great markets. . 1
Same speculation , has been excited at,
different ptriods, in! ' iew of the use and de
si.ruction of timber,land the almost ' total
niectieg ,
, as yet,:_to plant fiu-esis, as to what
;will he done for leather when the primitive,.
Supply of bark shall be exhausted. Such
speculations are abOut as premature and
idle as serious conjectures about coal when
!the deposits Of that, material shall be used
I tip. So far, a comparatively fe,‘ counties
have furnished the ' ,hulk of the leather used
by the American pehple. Between the At
' lantic and Pacific +ans are immeasurable
tbrests of oak and bemiock, which untold
generations will be f required to consume:
True, a considerabhi pot lion of these forests
do not yield a barkf so 'rich in tanning as
to, make the inauullicture Of sole (either by
Means Af it •.elisy and rapid D I A, after
abating these deficieint forests,enough remain
to render it unnecessary to consider what
sources of supply nuty z ke available when
these shall he Gone. "Pt
. ___:_i____.......,.......... 4.- 1
The President %ietoed the supplemental
Reconstruction bill whereupon the Senate
passed the bill over the veto by the decis
ive vote'of 40 to 7, and the House passed
it. by 114 to 25. R. verily Johnson voted
to pass the bill over the veto. In view of
the fact that nobody . pretends eo pay any
sort of respect to president Johnson's ve
toes in beg: fof tr:Aitori, might he not as
well, one of these days, begin !to consider
the propriety of dining something on the
side of Right, just. for the •nove;ty of the
thing if for no better reason ? To persist
in treachery is bad enough at best, but to
persiit in it i without even the hope of
makimr it effect* is refinement of stu
pidity that 'none but a debauched apostate
could be gailty of.
.
HUNGARY is main practically free. Af
ter twenty years jf strife and obstinate re
sistance Austria . has granted all that gave
rise to the rebellibu in I 1848, she has her
independent ministry and Parliament, the
Constitution detnanded in 1848, and Fran
cis Joseph as King. In other respects he
has conciliated the people, and allowed
many esiles to return and has even given
them conspictiouS public positions in Aus
tria. Kossuth has not yet received per
mission to return,- but he soon will have.
He is now old.and infirm and living in
olscurity at Venice on the public charity.
Austria's new Ohne minister Von Beust is
the author of these reforms, and in grant.
ing, them he‘es:tablishes his reputation for .
w
The Pensr I van ia Jegisla I are has passed
one resolution that will generally ap•
pmved. It h::4 agreed to adjourn finally
of the I.Arril.
I Whishey and Schools.
'We have heard much said about the
disappearance of great men from the Stage
of public affairs, and doubtless it is true in
so far as it is a fact that great meta die in
well as little ones But no man can peruse
the debates in the Pennsylvania Legisla
ture and retain very serious forebodings of
the extinction of the race of great men.
Having a leirure hour the other day, we
took up the official orgy of' that - body and '1
read a speech delivered ty Mr. G. 0. Deise,
the member for Clititin, - Cameron, Elk.
and McKean counties. The debate was
upon a bill to, amend tl e School law, and
especially upon an mum dment prohibiting
the employment of teac tere of intemperate
habits. We Shall admi that Mr. Deise is
a man of good intellect el abilities, father
above the average of central Pennsylvania
politicians. Indeed after !eating nis speech
against sobriety, for that is what it amount
ed to, we wee very pearly ready to admit
that he is a s ecimen of budding greatness.
Mr. Deise eetns to have been called out
by some remarks of Mr. Mann, of Potter
County, wholadvocated sobriety as a prime
'requisite to n good teacher Mr: Deise
chose to discover in the amendment an at
tempt to legislate against the interests of
' the people,And he opposed it with much
zeal if not with discretion. Whether it be
true, as Mr. Deise with an originality re
' znarkably striking, declared, that the: more
you touch the whiskey question the more
people will drink,.or not, we leave the pub
lic to decide; but whoa Mr. D. declares in
a speech before the representatives of the
Commonwealth, that in Potter !county
"they have female teachers etnolOyed to
ferret out who: drinks 'whiskey, and are
sometimes obliged to kiss you to tell how
your breath siells,''—we opine that he
copies the unMitigated blackguardistn of
the journals of his party. Potter county
needs no defenee at our hands. Her peo
'ple areas faMous for their intelligence as
fbr their virtue. Her female teachers are
entitled to common respect, at least, and
Mr. .o.'s remarks are an insult to petem, if
they are DI any worth •or s'gnification
whatever.
We agree with Mr Mann, that a man,
or woman, who takes a glass of liquor ta: ,a
beverage. is not fit to teach school. To
•
this Mr. D. took exception, and propound
ed this' poser. "Where would the gentlt;--
man put Daniel We.hsteri" He not fit to
teach School'," Mr. Mann's reply to this
pia not recorded; but we reply that we put
Daniel Webster among the 'list of brilliant
men who fill drunkard's graves; and l
fur
thermore say, that our opinion, he was
no more' fit to teach school than he %•11,1 to
lecture oa temperance and the ble,sings of
a virtuous life He was a licentious, in
temperate man; and his example is one
*hie!' ought to be covered up away from
public g;; e. Great intellectual gifts, un
less coupled with a superior Moral nature,
are a curse to any man, :and a disgrace to'
the annals of a people. Mr.' Dose, like
many another public min, has much pride
of intellect. We can tell him of a better,
because. diviner pride, pride of character.
Without this pride, without moral impul
ses exceeding all other impulses, no man,
or woman, is fit to teach school. (heat
men do not .find congenial labor in the
school room. They fail to comprehend
the nature of human growth as it relates
to the development of the individual.. They
comprehend the nature of nationalgrowth,
or the growth of man in the aggregate.
We now refer to• the grwit men as they ex-
ist in popular estimation.
With that other and strikingly original
remark of Mr. Deise—that the first miracle
nerformed upon earth was the manufacture
of wine from water, we will deal briefly.
the first place it was not the first -miracle
done on earth. The Old Testament is full
of accounts of miracles performed by the
Judaic leaders, priests, and prophets. And
not only this, but Christ performed many
miracles prior to that ofthe Cana Marriage
least. However the 'citation is new for
this age . We recollect something Of the
sort having been used twenty yearga :go
to check the progress of temperance reform.
Mr. Deise'resides in Clinton county, where
a maim who can write his namepeadahly-is
suspected at once of designs up - tcn the sta
bles. as well as upon the integrity, of the
dominant party there. Much must be for
given the gentleman on that account. But
we doubt if there is a dealer in poor whis
key in Tioga county, so fat behind the age
as to advocate liquor sellingon the strength
of the example of Jesus Christ.
Mr. Mann is entitled to public gratitude
for his unwearied • efforts to Mitigate the
evil of the liquor traffic. Verily he bath
his eeward—Erioga Agitator.
The confiscation bill, which Mr. Stevens
will endeavor to force through Congress,
contains nine sections. We 'shall briefly
notice them.-- , -The first clause provides for
a general forfeitUre of all public lands in
the excluded States, the second clause for
the seizure of Property deemed forfeited
under the act ofJuly : 176;1862, the third
clause for the appointment of a commission
to condemn property, the fourth for the dis
tribution of lands to emancipated negraes,
the fifth for the "erection of buildings on
the said homesteads for the use of said
blacks,' ,the sixth providing whlse proper
ty sled 'be exempt from confiscation ,• the
several!, eight and ninth provide for the
redemption of property, and for little de
r
tails of execution.
SUNRAY Cens.—=The priding that
the votingpopuh.tion of POiladelphia may
decide at the general election whether they
will have Sunday cars or not, was defeated
in the Senate last week, l v a vote of'l4 to
12. In the Maryland Legislature, on . the
22d inst., a simdar bil for Baltimore-pas , -
.rd both branches anti the question of 81m
day. cats will rest with the voters.
"Live
New pirin with New Goods
INVBB & NELSON
Having opened a Dry Goode and General Country Store in the building formerly
occupied as a Post Office. on the cornm- of Main and Third Streets, in Coudersport,Pit.,
are now prepared to furnish purchasers with
Dry Goods, 'Dress Goods, Boots 4 Shoes
Clothing, Hats 45- Caps, Hardware,
Wooden-ware . !CutkrY, Notions
9
Tobacco & Se'crars, Teas, Fish, Pork,
Flour of cll kinds, &c.
tas-COUNTR,Y PRODUCE TAKEN IN EXCHANGE.
Give-us a Call and see if our prices are notlas low as those of any otherestablishrrient
in the countiy.—April 1, 1867.
ORRIN R. WEBB,
BISINF;SS CRINGE
General Me
Forxtierl,y . .kep 1?
Nan
e pleasure in announcing to the
We tal
•ons-of the house and the public in
former pat
t we hav,e taken possession of this
oeneral, th
having added a large assortment of
Store, and
• STYLE
NEw . wrouttuj AND
SUMMER r,043
Ds
From 'NeN:v. York and Philadelphia, selected
«Tith great care,, with a view to suiting the
wants of the community.
ed to give all
Pull Line of
Dry Goods,
IBeady made
Hats and
4tr., eke?
So that customers can be supplied at all times.
,
We extend a cordial invitation to all to call
and examine faux extensive , assortment as we
-
take pleasure in showing our Goods and of-.
fering them at such a low Price,that they can
and
defyfail but ;give. satisfaction to the buyer, and
defy all competition.----April 1, .1.867.
JOSEPH MANN, A. F. JONES, C. A, DOERNER.
and Le[ Liver'
t the
chandise Store
D. 4. Olmsted, now
nes & Co.,
J
Sole Proprieto•s.
our attention
Clothing,
caps,
Groceries,
Crockery,
MEI
HALL T. NELSON.
ir
We are deter in
to:keeping tp
,a
, .
I '
Salt,