Wellsboro agitator. (Wellsboro, Tioga Co., Pa.) 1872-1962, January 10, 1872, Image 3

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    II
LOCAL NOTICES.
D&TATtitk . . 2 -The friends of Retv: G. W,
Ifemmington will give him a Donation iitt
the howe of Robert Steel, in Delmar, on
the 18th inat., afternoon and evening,-•
The Third Xt. E. Church, of Rtitiand,• lo
cutea at Ro;eville, will be dedicated
1; 1879. The Revs. E. C. 'Curtis of gstrik,-
raid , N. Y., and D. W. C. -Ttintin g ton: OIL
R o che ,. .ter..N. Y. will entultiet the .ei•vieei...l
NTERVITINo TO FARMERS. .T.
Newball cltieri for :;alt at the Depot, W-eils
bore fresh ground Cayuga Plaster.- - 31*.
N eß b a ll proposes to filrpisti
deaireit quantity, fir a Yetis l otirdliti;prieer for
„A i The piaster is fresh 04e, Veit
quality.
1 - I
REAL HAIR (49431p,—The opportunity to
:elect front stock of flrst-cla9s Hair
oOt - •
1,14 not often atiorded to the ladies in
g
thii, vicinity. It will undoubtedly be grati
fying to them to know that Mrs. Schissler
from Coining, Ladies' Hair - dresser, and
uninnfactuier of real Hnir goods, will stop at
t h e ( Hous.ze Filiday, Jan. 12, 1872, to en
able tho 4 c who wh 4l to buy Switches, Curl 9,
nt low prices. Those who wish tlittir
m y, °Mail combing:3' made into some Ar
ticle \NIB plefew call. 'Was. J. SCAESSIER.
I 'yoti Wald illipie trees of all the best va
n t ie., aetel your name to IM. - B. Prince,
1 .e 11.1,010, Pa.
To destroy the 'oyster shell bark louse on
apple tr 64, wl5ll the trees with Iye early in
spring 'Afore the leaves start. ,
Ai B. Prince can furnish trees at lower
price- than any travelling agents. Try hint'
and see . .
Wood :Trend around fruit trees are
very beneficial to . .
The country, especially Tiogn county is
blooded with apple tree agents at this time
of the year, but don't give your orders until
you have•compared prices with M. B. Prince,
Wellsbovoi•Ji.- • •
spring i, the he-t time to plant evergreens,
fi nd in ns other ornamental trees and shrub
bery If received in good , condition, and .
proper care exercised in planting, hardly a
failure need occur; mulching is important
the first servon.
Evergreens of all t kin& supplied by M. B
Prince.
"Shall 1 plant standard or tlw•arf pears?"
is a question we often hear and almost inva
riably answer standard, notwithstanding a
great many eminent Horticulturists to the
contrary. Our reason , : The first cost is the
same The greatest capacity in one crop on
any dwarf we ever saw Was about one half
bushel, whereas a, struidard i , but one or two
years later in coming nto hearing, and in
time produee , more barrels of Pruit than
your dwarf does peek , : True the standard
occupies more space, but is not that an ?trgu
ment in it , favor, the cost of trees for an acre
being proportionately le , s.
Standard pears, (and dwarf if you want
them,) at 25 per cent. less than offered by
travelling agents, can be had of M. B. Miner.
Tioga county will probably never rival
France or Intly.ln protlurtion of grapes,
yet we rai.ea ()Mlle L4gaYl awl Delaware
rieties last c , en=on, thnt «•ere better than the
Concords and Hartford Prolilies sold in - our
markets from more favored localities. No
extra enro is required except to laj ,them
dovin , at the beginning of winter, and cover
with hay straw or any old litter.
31 B Prince can furnish grape vines for
ail Tioga and part of Potter, at low-
QT rates than any roan who don't live at
brae • •
The . - ult,-,t,on ~1 strawberries is eadly
neglected in :";rt the plants in
rocs lr, o fret apart and on foot apart in the
rows, either catty in , •pring, or' Foon after the
trait 13 grrne in or August Keep the
ground clean and the runners cut, and mulch
before the ground {•reezel much with clean
straw, and a good crop is almost certain.
L. B. Prince sells ctray. - berry plants •by
th 4 dozeriliimared or thousand
cli c _ Agitator.
WEDNESDAY, JANCIAItY 10, 187%,
Vilellsboro Post Office
Ou and after January 1, 1872, mails will open and
close at this office at the following hours •
=
\
Ttogn, (Daily) 12,8 11
0 M. 1 Cowllipt, Mon. 'll. 12 M
Troy, ~ 6 ,00 i Cedar Rim, To., Er., 2 P. M
Stony Fork, Tuesdays id Fridays. . .... 13 M
. • Ma La Cult.
'Dogs, (Daily) '1;30 P. NII - Cond'Apt, Alo. Th. 1,45 P:M
Troy, " 7,45 A M 1 Cdr Run, Mu Th. 8,30 A. M.
Stony Fork, Tueddays and Fridays . .. . 2,45 P. M
' 0, W. MERRICK, P. M.
Wellsboro, Jau 1,1.4172-1 y
Horne Affairs.
Local Briefs.
—School began last Mondly.
—Wanted, a few inchr of snow.
—Laws„ Saturday, Sunday and Monday
were particularly cold days.
—"When the day; begin to lengthen' the
cold begin; to strengthen"—over the left.
—We are indebted to Hon. John I. Mitch
-01 for a copy of the Governor's Message.
—George Vandenindl gives n reading at
Bowen & Cone's Hall next Tuesday eveninii
the 16th inst.
—Rev. Mr. Bake, of Rochester, N. Y., is
,preaching hi the Pregbyterian church at
--A little snow, a little freeze., considerable
thaw and a great deal of Flush ~Was the order
of the day Ow first part last week.
•
—This is "the week of prayer," but it Isn't
absolutely necessary to refrain from praying
all the other . weeks on that account.
—A notice highly interesting to sub4(llbers
to the right-of-way appears - in another
ulna col-
IN krii....
1 ua under the h m ]toad "Ra)l Ro "
—Mr RO. Higgins, rdcently of ibOrtY,
Cal become Conductor of the Aecom oda
ton Train on the Corning. Tioga and Bloss
burg Railroad.
—Mr Charles! E. HaVey the keeper of the
Fall Brook Coal Corn Pan's Store' nt Fnil
Brtiek was recently presented with ft behuti
(4l Kuight Ttui.hir Charm by hiA assistants
in the store. •
suppose our readers unaertand that
we do not i n d or „ . .i„.erything our correspond
ents may say We print their communica
tions for what they are worth, and frequent
ly diisent float them totally.•
prr i dford Reporter ? wants to know
Where n o thy 1 - )ilile is the jpaßsage "God
tempers the wind to the shi;rn lamb : " Real
ly, we dAn - t know, suppose Z:<"1 read
Sterne'i Works and see
—Horr,:ll ills opor.rs to bond 'for
100.000 to build a railrohd to thc Pine Creel:
goal region The highest grade from the
anister" to the mines i^ seventy feet for
tradls com)n - g south. and but sixty -feet for
aorthwar4 1)61414 tAaiiis•
— The ehamberzburg Repository comes to
US in an er.larged firm, a new 1 ,6 1 4 ) and an
entire new dress. It is a rmodel country
news paper and although , near n century old
1 4 as bright, lively and vigorous at possible.
We notice it puts at the head of its columns
the name of Gen. John F. Hartranft as clan
didate for Goiret4ior, and supports , its 'nomi
nation in an able editorial. We wish the
iiepoeitory another century of usefulness and
prosperity.
n'TIVA'X 4 4444O-..We last 'week. mislaid. the.
marriage ott¢e ~~"t`11Y old - :Nlattsfieid friend
P• X. :petteer. It appears this week in the
proper ylttce. The blunder was the mqrgi2 - 1-
fmeurable becausethe annouiceMent, Vitll,e
.With a generous supp)y, of excellent wedaing
pie, siihieh wag not oV i erlookeil nor mislaid.
But Wig trii4 our, carelessness liar µix rctoi
e4 the luipthaess of, the pew par4ie e ris4iy.
May favoring gP.les oft their btrk over
summer seas tc.i its tie tined harbor, I c vial
~,Beauty at the prow anci. Lev; et the holip!
I
OPEN
LIVEIMORWS LUTVItk.
" Whitt' tikieiVil); 4411;iiiW-Daugi
, terta PI
ile_Well.&taniVialiaintir&osiidiillaat Sat-
Urdiv 6ieningthy inte ll ient and very at
lenitive nudielfeelii 'het% 14 ri Sfriry A. Lii
.cirnifqe-an.syer,th.;:tibOve question.. Mint the ,
sp&iker earried.,Tith .- 4et,tt!l slriti4eg bt
Lev ; lie .
,ovld6it.-a3„Wr! rotitith e
.Aldan attention , dt . i.eh wag paid -tO ht , ertkale
leetufe fir about tiro hours: as trO*;:,ilie!tr' e- -
quent applimge j with,y44ol gonio'good point
wag greeted.
She hogatt by remarking that aboutt_twen
ty-five years ago Margaret Fuller put forth
a.little hook entitiedr"Woiriiiiihl tacNrui:
teenth".leenthrY,"
had_b'een said %eV); thattimeo:on:ll,M*tiiiiati'
question that was worth preserving, and hint
ed at all that had since been
_lsaid of value
upon the same subject. 'That book had tWo
mottoes, one from Shakespeare, "Frailty,
thy Name is Woman," and another directly
contradictory, "The Earth awaits her Queen."
And these indicated the way Woman had
been treated since the beginning of history
until within the last hundred years. 'Up to
that time she had been regarded as either the
slave or idol of mien—now ti drudge and then
a doll. And man was not entirely to 'blame
for this. Ho had a hard time alit himself.
lie was placed here in a wilderness, and had
the earth to subdue. He had been busy tun
neling mountains, building, roads and ships,
and weaving a network of wire' over the
whole earth under the ',"; e_had
been forced to struggle up from slavery him
self, from tt condition where' might made
right, and it was but natural that iivornan had
shared his hard lot. But within the last hun
drea.years woman had begun to feel a "di
vine" discontent" presaging a loftier, nobler,
'better ideal of womanhood. This movement
was felt over the whole earth. Not only in
America, before Cobgress and the. State -Leg
islatures, but in Bugland.before ParliaMent,
on the continent of Ettrope Jtidia is
this woman question aated. But when the
subjeefis "simmered down"
What shall we do with woman? but,
shall we do with our daughters?" For adult
women are so tethered and hampered, so'
bound down by impalpable but strongest ties
of love and duty, that she eannotbreak away
from her present post, and should not; for
the highest aim of life is 'riot the purstnt . of
happiness, but the discharge of duty, whether
it brings present happiness or not..
But ante;lating_the question, What, shall
we do withcour daughters? is the question,
What shall we do that our children may be
well born? We have societies for improving
the qualities of our horses, of cattle, of sheep,
of swine, even societies to improve- the po
tato and make it ripen earlier ; to improve
the flavor of apples, to put more sunshine
into our grapes, to enlarge the petals of. our
roses and make our tulips more beautiful;
but we have none for the improvement of the
breed of men and women. :So 'children are
born into the world blind; crippled, idiotic,
or with heavenly spirits in frail, weak, de
formed bodies—the miserable victims of the
sin, the vices, or the follies of
_their parents
or ancestors., Thesubject is one of vital im
portance, atuLit is note in. Indelicate one.—
That is only mock mode-ty that shrinks from
it. But it is too large an . eto be diseusse •
now. So let us suppose ou daughters wel
born, with bright, sound ini .4,4 in beautiful'
strong bodies; what shall we o with them
First, we should make a radi • =1 change i
their dress.. Bops are dressed moieSensibly ;
they are allowed room, to grow ; they have
the free use of their limbs, and art sufferes,
to run and shout and roMp:•• But girls -aA
pinched and loaded with heaVy skirts, an
panniers and over-skirts, or whatevA may be
the fashion of the day. They are continuall3
cautioned to be " ladylike," to walk properly
not to run, not to speak loud. Their feetrar
pinched, and they are tilted forward bY ridi
culous pegs on their shoes called heels, tha
are not heels. They are pinched.at tbe waist
their hands are pinched by tight gloves that
utterly deform that most beautiful work of
nature, the human hand., In fact, there seems
to be a .grand conspiracy of all who make wo4
man's cloths to pinch and squeeze her. The
loosest dressed woman is dressed tighter than
the tightest dressed than. Dress it-healthy
man as' a woman is dressed and send. him
about his 'lisiness,_sna_at ths, .end
mohlis see Ole Snot an invalid: . ;When a
young couple in good circumstances get mar
ried, the young man goes to his tailor and or
ders four or five suits of clothes, while the
.yoUng woman wants a year to spend in sew
ing. She sews herself to death, and she sews
all her available friends to death, and at last
comes to her husband a Svral-out, jaded,
spiritless bride; but then she has got trunks
and true/is and TRUNKS full of clothes—inn
ny things that you have all heard of, and
some things that none of you ever have
heard of. The speaker said she was satisfied
that if it were decided that the fashion could,
remain unchanged for the next hundred
years, every woiimu_Nvould give a great sigh
of relief. She woulhibtfollow tho Bloomer
nor the Shaker costtune. Vomen shOufd
make themselves beautiful and aitrietiVe. l —
that was everybody's duty. And
the highest, 'beauty is the beauty of health
and of a pure spirit. But now it was not
thought- " ladylike" to be healthy, and many
women really seemed to-enjoy poor health.
Ne'xf, woman should have better intellec
teal and industrial' training. The colleges
and law and medical schools should be open
ed to her. She should be educated equally
with man: There no danger of her eclips
ing him. The few Women who had forced
their way into our Western colleges were"
much above the average—they were heroic
women. When young . women applied •for
admission to our Eastern colleges they were
told that they were getting out of their
sphere. And what is woman's sphere" ?
To be a wife and mother, we are told. But
we don't fit her for that, To cook, and wash,.
and do housework, and — fiew--2._The speaker
had 'dined in 'Boston - for years iit-alLAns-,-fit
mous hotels and eating houses, and at many;
not a? famous, and she always found-On'iti-L
(illiTY that the'cooks at all of flit= were men.
And they wain good cooks, too; she knew,
for she had cooked for years herself,.and she
liked good food, well cooked and plenty of
it. The cook at the Parker House in Boston
got $4,600 per year, while the President of
Harvard got but $4,000. • The laundries where
she got her washing done, and well done, in
that city were all run by men aided by ma
chinery. She went to get a bonnet, and it
was fitted by a man ; to get a water-proof
cloak made, and a man Bid it all. • Coming
from Washington in a sleeping coach recent
ly, her bed was made by a man, and six la
dies, all over fifty, were tucked into bed by a
man, young enough to be the son of any of
theiti.• In,Chieagct there thriving ma n
dresOttker hurriedt3put by ItlitOlfe'?. , , And so
it is that- Tana is called,woniailii.Nyorkis.vv e
ryw,liere encroachetl on by men, and itv.S`olf
defense she must do mait's
Women should all be taught trades. The
'daughters the Queen of England alllearn,
ed 'a trade, and te.Crown Princess of Priis
sin %) as r vol. foinpospor ; In this country,
where fortunel did not rernain in the Same
family al a rule for more than three genera
tiohl, it i 3 of the highest importance that c.v
ery child l'hould be taught a trade,
She would have women do whatever work
they were able to do. Years ago Margin et
Fuller told Horace Greeley that she would
let women •' he sea captains if they would,"
And Horaca wrote half a column, of 'brilliant
ridicule on that text. Tke speaker had that
article cut out, and sli6 hoped jr. Ofeelei
would live lone enough to be_tishatued,of. it.
BO at the:Tit:ifs - all' the; wOrld 'laughed' and
sneered until tittle Mary Fhtfoll — buried her
dead husband in the Atlantic: dueled it I'lm
tiny of his crew, and navigatedhis ship
around Cape Horn safely to- Sanranciscii.,
Then all, the world applauded.: • '.. _ :
There are women who,arp lawyers. 31rs.
Blackwell, of ChieagO, edits the only law
journal in the ~ , iysti Ins, ips authority in the
( (ittpl,t 9f Illinois to-day. But the Supreme
'Court will not adinit l t i, - F til practice there.—
Mary Stevenswanted to bil tippoir ? tpd o t I di.14 , ,
tice of the Peace In Maisachusette. tthe had
i f eea a conveyancei for yearn in,liostonL-
Governor Claflin referred the question to his
Council; ate ,Council referred it to\the Su
preme Court, and the Court decided \a wo-
inan could not ben Justice because none eVt
had bee)., Butthtt . fact tra r s'wonbliad bee i
;li tstijaillitial'Aei•s in'England". ' i
Finall y , )Kotnitnwanttlthe,4lll. 7 .ll 3 6 9.
ly , Saitiei,S3nquitiftSt4in'Aik catintry.? Sly
wanted equal, property tights—the power to
1
dispn_ue of her owikproperty:withitut t • , i •
.rfere, il (le . 4,tio 44:4204,-, -, ;,ffivi,l,wa, i'‘ ,
eqn4l - -right. to her children -witlAter 'll .
She had nn doubt that 919,11..woulti4rtiti it .
She kf?eit'• ill - 4' Weie 4ifteti til l attf and' th t
their, laws (diaagartalosidy, but , skti3 had-:-`n
bitterlitslt.bAirt4thertr.--" ..' '''''' ' ' ''' : -i
libl-iiti4e4 it? - -4 1 C , V;;Ti 45L;i14,144 1 1:,..if
Tiolii fin:ales' us with the follottritikcint4 4-
ening review of observations tly)ittfi t
the past : year : -" ' vc .'''
.'.":; ' .
...._,.
,4,
~,,,,
- Observalioni•for 3874 taken 'f tbree - tmes ft
'day: The . average temperature fot4.hti,y,pix
ilt.foitY-fatti. and eigiiii ,- ....4t::tine-li c utiAriittip
degiee.4. . -
It was, the coldest year •
The wittinest month in 'the 'year was Aug
tt.i, the average temperature being (18.71 de-
ME
-The' Watineat :day:in the year -.Was,=, August
llith, average temperature - SOi'degroes.
December WAS the coldest monthiri the
year; temperature 4.2 dtgrees.
The coldest dtiy in the year Was DecotOer
21st, average temperature , slit: deioe4;belew
zero.
There fell during lic"Year ; (nkly
.lachei
of snow, mid of raiOind melted snow 81.75
inches, which is five: linches beloW. - the "aver
age, ,
for the last thirty years,
There were only Oily entirely clear days.
The wind for, the year was south
and south-west.
•)
FOTTND.—On the 2fid of Jatiuttiy; 1872, in
the road between the depot bridge and, Tioga
village, a gray coat, containing in tho pock
ets one tax hook, two litindkerchiefs, and a
j)istol with a cork in the,nauzzle.—
ShOuld judge the collector was !4110t . ,intlle
neek;.'as the pißtol was about empty. Said
coat and contents can be, c.ibtaitied by calling
on A. S. Idhloliffs:24 , miles above • Tioga;
(Troy paper please copy.)
Mrs. Lirennore's Sermon.
EDITOR' AGITATOR:—The lecture by this
lady on Saturday evening was a plea - for
many much needed, reforms: It -was perynd
edllY akeithdercurrht oft lnit'Pectiliat phi
losophy' which teaches that !sin is not guilt or
crime, but only a fault—a cilheae=sCreaultuf
being badly born ; that a Wrong\t' er is A
sponsible only in the same sense in which the
Sick and. insane arey r esponaible, and is to be
created in thkeanie-Way. - '
But it was in the sermon upon the next day
that the lady : lecturer exPlai6d2 her, 'cried
more fully. Shesays if you are good, death
will 'e'nd the warfare of life; but if ryOu are
bad, the good - Lord iVilf in another world
give you a better and fairer,. trial. No mat
ter what you'd+) here, or whatour chaVaci,er
may be when you die, all wilteornepat'well,
in tbp, "some time, sonic how, 'Seine
where."
I do not wish to argue this tteint. , It is an
old, cant phrase Further, I do not think
your paper theoper placeln i t *hich to dig
puss the creedof the clipfelies. But, i
would,bp just' i a4 proper as fora lecturer who
comes into a community by s :itivltatiori of a
whole peepli3 arid .by the pitYseff*WhOle peo
' . e, to use the'iipPortunitY,tlt*ltirnished, to
a %nee the interests` effliiii*Oialgi'peculihr
sect ecreed. Is`,this toii,tliePour,e,of all
our le turers?\ When an:Bpiipiiadirtucomes
\ re , we have\n great -pleajor :ApoStolic
. uccessiei ?. s Arothers..,to InipOiria'llte ad
vocate 4 - o Arme kanisna;' , Or-:Piilisinism, of
infant l)aptis ;or ittnersion?._ if iitteh were,
to\ b e the emir e pursued, the lePtUre\ - s syitem
would gn d6wn,'n aslagle„seaso.n. .... ,
21cli , howel,er will not be the plan. of
, ~
ever - Y,pne.:, - ,'-
\
I dO \ not believe .here is one evangelical
ministein ten thousand who would' so .far
forget c ristiari courtesy, and - the prosperity
of the st cieties which might invite - him to
lecture I o take advantage of that opportu
nity_tO is
final.e a special plea for his peculiar
sect or creed If he did, I wouldjoin„: - .lik.#,
condenination \ of-him as dilf 4
honorga4‘cir,:r
ever unworthy of a second invitation.-
It has been rumored that the Boston .I.Taif
tariana, unwilling to pay the . expe s es - pf,
dirg, Pagatinirtblir view •aw ahem do - haver
jselifitd..thia leCture aysteur and are. p aliii:
their own sect into it to the "exclusio a f' the
orthodox, in order to disseminate' thev i 'views
with other people's money. This lady; lectur
er went far to confirm this rumor. One or
two more .AlOl visits and we shall
HEARER.
adieu
1
to the Boston programme': HERgli.
NEIGHBORING COUNTIES.
The Courier celebrates the new year with
a pew make-up, and is materially. improved
in looks and spirit.
The Presbyterians of Bath cleared $l3O on
an oyster supper recently.
They have "a new • liotel Bath on the
European plan, called the "Arbor."
MN. Patrick :Howley ofikith slipped down
on an icy sidewalk the other day, frackuring
-
her hip badly. -
An attempt was made a few nights since to
burn-Zinimcrman , s Hotel - in Wayland.
clapboard was removed, and a quantity of
pitch pine and kerosene dropped in and apt'
on fire. Forutunately, the fire was-304'4,
covered and the building saved. Wayland
is f} verY lively,town, to say the leant. -
The Courier says the narrow-gunge Jail-.
road between Bath and Hammondsport is a
fixed fact. „.
„ .
nail. ClDENT.—Andrew Heckman,
residing n r Rlsineville'zin the Town of
te ,
Thurston, vas almost instantly killed on,
Thursday last while drawing .logs. .#ume
part of the harness gave way;" - irendiri4;the.
horseit Unmanageable, when' they plunged
down a bank, titiniiing_ yOung - lieckman
against a stump, the load of logs coming,
uperi him and - crushing - him” fearfilify. r tlier
lived only about fifteen minutes aftef ,the,
accident. He was a son nf-Roh,ert . fl. _lsteQk:,
man of that town, aged about 21 years, and
a young man otexerriplary habits, highly es; 7 .
teemed by all who knew him.—C'ourio-
Jari, 8. „ .
The Ciiriiing Journatst.yS,Al4llPMANW
ri ll o f Icnoxville, in that toWn lost 41 leg at_
South Livonia-regehtly:. lie 'WA * it, .163 - iteit4li
on the Viii Freight, and while rpsticiPB,,,,
"flying,...iviitch,!'' ae. the cant- leplirateikli.'ii, , - -
fell between the cars on the, track, •,and 4 -iva ,
pi.bhed by the brake-beam for sevt:fal - l'eds;'
striving-to, extricate hipiself, as he lay,owther.
track, the car went over him and the 'brake
beam on,the . hind wheela.threrkiikkieeltiti'an
the rakisond it was eruslied,i4elow.theAm
so that:_i"itation-wr; ti . cel44l;; 1 f . , - 7 - i "..f . - - 44,f,.
A t.97-44dirtilvi-:6eftkititin'tz"-eit it tenniiii
to menu fiegur e glass blinds, or.tosekl territory;
of the pittent The capital atocli.lii' td -14 ,
$500,000.. It is,expectedjke blinds,. will .be
manufaciiiied at the Corning Glass Works,
-and,tiamtiel Ei,llaskin of Witligees is..tci:d,o,
the selling. - He can make it go, if there is
any '-'go" in it. -
Joh!) 40r1 of Joseph : Benson . z , elf
Cooper's Plaill4; kipliad tlitaei,Tlie,
a hone a tear . ..clays since, and died, next.:4lay.
without recovering .coneiousnos. -- He was
hitching a tract when kicked. •
Ida Rowley,' aged seventeen,, 6 . K . Trchips;.,
burg, went to . Col parka, there had childa
and returned home when it was three areek4"‘
old. :We started from
,ite' -
child_in her arms. She reached home alone. 1
sedrai, when t,h;ickitcyls l
body Vita' found . in her 'll-Klik.
deatti; anti: sw.es,thAt
,sk;t„fgli,
with it, at ths shock Was &tall' that' the that;
sought to•bidetti stiaglOittdii.eetiVhif•alime.
Apinquest was held;end "pris:Hiloirrey Osiop r
e.rated from all blame for the child's death.
•'.
is k(') he jtiurnal.Olerl:s of tlicy,4,#7,York:,*fir,t.
Ifoiid week brought tit;
the Police Justice at Corning,
• - Li ° l4 l Pg : POPOr
A son of ihiniolintitininell, of Manlq2) l od:
abotid4lfteen yesti!s; wtis nbefidentl§liihi in, the
side ecently, by a 'companion, 'while hun
ting rebbiti. is reen:4;:eThlg : . .
A \
, ~
\
\
Steuben County.
- •
' Ralston is ge ting notorious. N4t , long
since Mr. Myers, of the Rabb) , House,
was
set upon hy two : , f 4
. 111. O,Xt 41 %
him; anti no " 1 11/0 I
endeavored last Monday evening to destroy
his father-in-law's barn .by fire. Ho Was
drunk, and in that , senti-respaisibie state
vented his gate towards Mr. Hunter by aO
- the match to-the barn. The fire was,
however, &rove-red before it berante
datl
gerous and was pnt qut. t egiwft
bind the iron bars.—.
The Standard reports that a few days shulo
the blacksmith- Shop lof :ltr. John Hart if
Liberty, was destroyed by the with ail I *
contents. No insurance.' I ,
W A iiistorleal Society . ii;i; ab 4t out argamzibg
atita4orromfeibal4-4t4# 1 44=1 4 4 1
Mr. H. L. Diettenbaeh has taken charge fx
the Standard, and announces that there will
be no future editorial cling.- in that papta.,
for a very long period at least, "tiniest', ifir
causes beyond human control:" So [ the ed
itor bows to celestiallintinences— t'other,
kind. • k
'5 %
The Standor c t a vhieliils Dennieratic,
prints lon‘l
down on the' s atiniviirdly'. Wig•i; 'pbliey, or
the project of supporting a nominal j Repub
lican for President by the Deinocrncy." ilt
wants Gen. HancockAniuninatea. - SOlwe 0,0;
the Democrats of Bradthrd want Trumbull;
the Democrats of Lycoming Want Hancock;
and'whom the Democrats of Tiogu want ive
don't suppose they know themselvosl
Clinton Count
PA
P$ ( hst ti nA o Recor4
S la
Rena'X Mt n ' eef
4U. sat
Mrs. Liveitnore, lectured' at Vock Haven
on the evening of,9te 4th. • 1
1 -
At a colored people's ball at Lock Haven
recently Mr. Washington—Robert, not
- 1
George—broke his arm. ' 1
1 • 1 ,
. The Republican reports 23 caGcs Of snuili-'
pox in Lock Haven up to the morning of
Jantiary Bd. • 1
. i
A nice young man passnd:flvgil ,c.liE •
for $BO on aOnqin
'''
CA%
nays since, but wAss-fottunately caught and
caged in default of $l,OOO bail.
__ 1
Bradford County.
Scarlet fever is prevalent in the (.(unty.
Towanda is troubled with the small-pox.
A lodge of- colored Good Templers has
been organized in ITowanda, called the Grant
Lodge.
Isaac Marsh, of this county, was elected
Assistant - Superintendent of the Folding De
partment of—the- House of Representativel at
Harrisburg on the 2d instant.
Towanda proposes to have a street' rail
way.
The First Nationill Van N:,41 Ti 4 . 11 a det
dared a dividend 16 Per cent. for last
year, besides adding $5,000 to the surplus
fund.
There is a revival in progress in the M. E.
,
Church in Towanda. r
I
Towanda had a hard time getting urnfd,
biAikeillieih tiaiiti:Wietiren lteinsville,
Overton, and finally Towanda ; commonly
pronounced Toim-day. The ledian name
of the creek there was To-wan-daugb, and
the present name finally stuck. 1 ~,„....
Miss Belle Chaap6l skated 'irit , Oiliiiiiiiii'•
the ice a few night's since,Vildiibs' itifeTifirti
by C. C. Gladdini just in time to save her
life. Romantic, bfit very cold. .
• '
The Argus states that after : consultation
with -varylus pron4nent
ford county,lhe edlietrenneltiderte'
a long editorial from the, stew York Sun,
"as expressing in the main their views of the
propriety of taking from the ranks of those
independent, con seryafisreAtAteimpiALikertY
acting with the liefiublieuti party, such.
man as Lyman Trumbull" for a Presidential
candidate. This shows that the Detuocra T ta
of that county only share the general party
demopt i lizativ i .jtpt they mast be jolly
green to put faith *anything the San says.
EP 43 PAAAki4r*Ml4 , l4,64otiearK
ante, and in leas than a month will probably
be pitching into Mr. Trumbull in /I - rely_
fiMPard'ili - 41§AtiitZein Wiaturir
:county about_the' holidays. The Ar pus of
the 4th comes' twenty z one mar
riage notices.
They are agitating the subject of a free
bridge over the Susquehanna, at Towanda.
A mowing machine factory » to be Aarted
at TrPy•-•"':-,:','---1
A eorrespsmdent of Og . ..Elmira Adt.erti'dr
writing from Coudesport, under date of Jan
uary
44t,'„`sityg::?:
on Saturday "night at :Osivago.villegv,:aoltuall,
pface about fourteen mite moth of Couder
sport. 'Three young men who had been
spending tire afternoon and evening at OAWa- .
go, went to the hotel of John V. Brown some
time' after he •litia-.ol,oied4is Wiise forithe
night and retirecl.vt:l 4 haYtittitiaed enirkice
of Mrs. Brown but were refused. As they
Still remained upon the platform, Mr. Brown
went into the hall and asked what was want
ed. 'they replied, "some beer." He told
them they!ectuld..xtoPhailtiNitiy Ainit.itak4a
any of them wanted to remain all night.
They Said, " no" when he told' them he
should not open his house, and again advised
them to go away. TheYl:oo
()NOW
that if he did not , 5131,1 4 64.1 t
kick it down. He ttihttlieni not to attempt
it, but they: paid no attention and commenc
ed kicking at the door, Mr, Brown bad his
rblttiver-in hit. hand, with the inte,ntion,he
says, that if ilfey ` eiiitera
gne of the party put his face to the side
.llght of the door. Mr. Brown 'truck at him
With the revolver, the bantm l er:causht upo4(
the window soh, the liviligtoiifilaitchagiid ,
.and the ball'ntered the eye of thi - man out
side, Francis Allen by name, and he fell
: dead virithoulA qicett,„,l4 iO ~.Pm9AdiluediT
'.attely delfVeied Ulrike uPlliiVolier au
thorities and is in their charge. Allen for
:merly lived in Allegany county.
!, , 51r.,:ikclimmOrubsequently discharged
. bytheq p roner's jury, the ftwts it the 4.1P70
lietWV9-.Y45111410,409-rf
I Other I.ocalitlee.
it-, • 3:- ;
. 1 40 - 1 1 "iii,WMPALY
There were Ga arrests, and 21 deaths in El-
Adira last month.
,Scarl'etasver and diphtheria lave put in an
.appearance at Scranton:-
—Tke Itotektir 19Aire
was biitne
Maeready ap ears as "Shylock to
night in "The Merchant4-4—ve'clit46,
Gen. Craig W. Wadsworth, the sin) of the
late Gen. JaMes S. Wadsworth, of Geneseo,
.died recently at'the age of thirty, year 4.
During a Sunda'y 1,06 , 0i - Cknc'efitt'ai
hittnton, a boy tiamillGeeige 41"144 , fe1t
boor the banisters, and broke hi ,j l.4hl•lll
A eonvention!was lately held tu Owego to
give the pews an equal etanee with the pul
pit itl
Cool Cdok-E6f-litiViiintrN. J Y.' h de
Coo
old People's College Building at that
" f i),lace to the Baptist denomination for an
!-• '.ft"
- -•
k , soh of few dit is"e7:" 0 C-7-Mribrege
4i of Ridgway, fell into a tub of boiling
;.rifer, and was :scalded . to dealt)
Imator
Poughkeepsie. Poor Poughkeepsie 1
, .
. 'ft is reported that the Northers} Clpitral
rltliilivlt.„,,t/Melall, .0 - 01411 be;l,
.I,WeeeNVittlints and 'Utittataffieuit fur the
Mina of ninety-nine years. I
IITr; There were two' , hlttult9d ,s.tnheixy , r4n
letiths arid thirty still births inl i ltlinlia diir
,ing the year 1871. Of the deaths one hun
dred and thirtyl-six were males) and one lion
, 411.4 gr i d thirtY-one females. .'l.- - ,-ii.':... - 4:-:.:1 1 ta:"....
' The oilFe of a villttge &cite at Vitintit„
I bolumbill coutit , Y; is not tilt inviable one:
:The Bnitill of iultees at 014 ciTtipufilfqxtyus..
of the season coviststed s oftwe - gitice then .
• • ,
• :
lin
Potter County.
.
one has died , atmtlier ri , kigncil, a third ling
.ii.
-, tVo fingere iy erT or illir ruw, a rump' it
~..'r'', , f.ted tO iitt_
' i' by a oeve 'Wiley,
the romaii ug , nu' . litlioriiig tiiitier - e:
severe attack or ,rti ce Ca at 'sin.
liTe* are informed that a eitizun or Big-
Plats7b,the nauic or 11...ninvtin Ittid.i, witS:
hilitt4l,4 accident widh... ";kiddie, • ' log-t,.,
at! Suitirday, three yolks : at-t from 'fin , N it i
4 ning, He.t.e.nigitt by tin. tnot,, ,
- -,-14111 - 4
V
ni t ins v. 7
ay, wt a saw-1..g wa.l, , Pittg moveti;
' when the lug roiled entirel, oc:r t,i4 iiody.'
lie itt*ver f•p9ki i Although he 4nt v!vt , d a hale
ianpr: : iiiii Wa,4 about forty p-ar- ..1' age, and'
letwes a 'wife !and three eliii,i , n.-----ide:';-
: ictio.".. , ,
(-,
.a..ThiLitriqarsetatntlatcrittivi.li i ,
- iiiill zntet 7
lnfand reintiied - agettitt - ther lievistal Cod&
Otte iY49lption'adopted is as follows : - - - That
the - work' uponithe whole hal been done in a
carelei--s, 1144?ra e and bungling manner, and
it 4 adoption by 'he Legislature would bring
merited roProlic i and ridicule upon the Ingal
iin.44olo4.:ttAtlin Stale;44kutoreover wtittld
libltii•ttiegit4ble .ealabilfy%,to the po,•plc. of
~ thekl, ''Qrit'lliiini , ,rt - taltit:; bY nitsettling the laW
a*n lit.adtrigi t4C great 'uncertainty, oldies:
strife and litigaiion. . ~
MARRIAGES.
SPYNCEB—BROWN—At the residence of the
father 1a Carping. /1. Y., Dee. 21, 1871, by the Rev. S
IL Aldrich, Mr. P. M. %Spencer and Mrs. Maggie AI
Brown all of Minefield, Pa.
SAVEETE—PETP,RBON.—On the 30th of Dec. 187
by Rev. W. Beach, !Mr. David D. Sweet° and Mies AL •
Poterevu, both of Afausliskl.
SMITVDRICH.--At Manefieldlan. let, 1872, •
Bev. AMP,. Alr. ISiaga:ltr*ith Ripe
arid sakipirich
DRODBIOR-4RAW.—Afthe hope of the bride . 1
Sittlitabfightst. /IR
2. by Rov. Isaac Everitt, Mr. Br
ilrodziekSrardifie Mettle A. Shaw.
.
ItliMiEr.BThitriEy.—At the residence of the !?ride" '
fatherla Middlebury, Dec. Slat. 1871, by Rev. Q. E
llunnoll,Mr N. Reese of Charleston and AtilU
Ellen E. Starkey.
. ,
- jurors for January Term, 11172.
(),- I OILAND msoas. It'.
"•• r itloar` .. •
..;...id Ltwis, D , ildsztv4i
-. , ' .. k ,7 ' 3111.111Mtio;l1V Q Jones.. Wit is
i. - sA • .. 4 . ustiiiltiee, Timothy Spaulding. etrln vezu 4
L Arm . Amoa Trowbridge. Deerfield: Levi Ste
' Idkiand..plum Ryon. Farmington : J Bottom, Carlos
Houser, Haines: Octavius Smith. Fall Brook; iilet;
under Pollock. Jackson: Warren We ll s. Liberty'
William Kimball. Middlebury: Dan White, John •
Dimon. Mainsburg: Bald Win Parkhurst. Morri e•
Robert Wilson. Sullivan: I4man Reynolds. ' Union :
James Decoursey.; .
PE^ TUROIIB /ST WEVIj
:J.
rrr
• i
1 Rivas:" John Murray, Alex Monroe, Chas Nile,
Brookfiekir John Dougherty, M P Metcalf. Coal
bort): Chile How di Covington: David Hu
Clyzaf•prEil Skott, John White. Charleston: D 0 Ed
;
trines, Alonzo ball, Jai Mclnroy. Delmar: Chap
Allen; J M Butie . Deerfield: IS Ingham, Alonzo Leer.
Saullifid: E Cody, D Dunbar. Elk: P Schanalsoc.her. -
Fesmingttin: .0 lancbard; • Jas Gee, Caleb Starr.
ii,
Gairils: Levi Fur n, Charles Watrous, David Rex
ford. Fall Brook: Phillip Betts, George Watson.
Jackson; Wm French, A 0 Zewell, P E Fish. Llber •V;
dial Wilson. Lafirencville; Lana' Ryon. Lawrence:
A ICI Exiapp. Middlebury: Arnariah Hazlett. Mama
field: Daniel Pit V. John Holden. Shipper': Hoot&
proughtof7 I:Scranton. Sullivan: Darwin Mill.
far, RiShAti t mer: ',Richmond: Asa Bullock, A ]Mt SnenCo*.'“, oga bikof 0 B Lowell, B P McAlliste. - '..
Union: . Wm Curley. Wellsboro: John Alexander, H ill
Hastings, L B Reynolds. •
1 2v wirss.
Blocs . ; tOF Butler, H W Holden. Covington: Janie;
Pi
T FrOst, A Goodapeed, L Palmer. Charleston: , .
Bliss,ltufus Farr, i t Potter. Chatham: R Cloolie ,
Philip Cloose, Geo Burro's. Delmar: Thos Allen, We
Dale,./..eiri P Heath, Robert oland, Russet Langhtcin.
Deestieldi.. 4.430,,E1erett::.011 - 11roelif 'aitzielf-Ivenii,
EeWirlDitak. iacirson: J Shieves. Liberty: Jar Blisaki,
ileop,, 43 Slieffe. Middlebury: E Keeler, D 0 Ste:.
ens: Weiner': Di Merritt. Osleola: George Barker.
8114, I) Dewey. LI W Calking.. Tioga
Oro: ware De ey. Richmo d: J Cole. 'Union: , lA.
?Iwo • rWestil ld: Justus Green. WeUsboro: Jacob
odhe Andre Eiturrock; I
j owl:m*lu
tr i v
0, t- • ••• ' ' ~.- ' - '••42D vis. Es.
1 ,' fz• .-7- 's
BloSin , liilt In, jka Smith'. Brookfield: J R Coffin,
Chas Melfolltd: liximons, F T Seely. Charleston:
Hart, Win - Webst r, Warren Miller. Covhsgton. bo :.
S L Parlidird, Thoa Graves. Chatham: B Bowen,
voy Daniels. (filbert Owlett. 'Clymer: Jas Metcalf, E 8
Smith: "7: DeerSel : G 8 Bonham. Delmar: Daniel Fish
ler, T IrArt, (leo Green. Knoxville; Giles Roberta:
lAwrzus: Dyer echo, Julius Tremalue., 4ltttOteld:
W - 0 Utt.'i, - dlahurY: laced Mavis.Aitilson,;, It
Campbell,•W R'• p, 'o' /I 00odriele. ' Riclunond: A
J Knowlton, R iiVateon. Sullivan: 'W Hooley, ,It I)
Webster, Samuel Longwell. Tioga bozo. T L Baldwin.
Wellabare: L IC Hoz Olt, Jos Williams.
" .
. .
•T ik OF ' LErrEne retoatuing. La the Post Lidice at
W:tillaborti;PP,ianAl t ll472.
liuiraiii4 - 4-itiiiftin Si,l'Lititlacit Austin, Jennie S. Brown,
G. Coff,,Corneliii A. Eaton, Truman..Guernifey, A. Gee,
Elids ITcppaa, 41.. F. Lamcraux , 'Harriet Marley, John
Marten, Vim: R. *sorry, I. Trout, Dell Vandusen, Elis
abeth Williams, Joseph Willey, foreign, David Wad
auskyrjicher Whiner, Christopher Whittemore.
In calling for un i r, of ttlo - 41,cvg please sorttlez are
&iver - Wen, and give the data of the' Adlfertfaiment.
'Unless called for in thirty days, they will be sent to
An Peadietter,o4l . , ea, , „.___, . -... _____ ,-:. ' -,' -:,,,_,- ~1- .., •
,-..- , •-;%, A=•;..-;%t!_ ,,, i , k, , • 1 -s- •"- - GE&•Wk:' '- „R ‘ i ' illtilt E" za.
Jan. iii. 1872-4. •1
. ,
„Spie6al- .
).-..-.,-„ rt -,,, , ,, ...... vivlcc ,_ 41 .,
AVO i ID QUACKS.
1 ,
A victim of cads , imitscretion, causing nervous 'err'
bibtY, premature eeay, AT., having. tried in vaist evoiFY
advertised reuse , has discovered a simple mea n s' of
self-cisie, Which a will send free to his fellow - buffer.
ers. J . It. Y.,S, l'il Nassau st , New York. I ..
4
Jan. 1.18: .
- - 1 - -
# ::`,:',, IV ii.PI,'DQVIVRS lilBAlilikE 1°
wiiei's ciiii pat-elite look for relief? 'The ex,pitrianoo of
every byspuptic tends to prove that the'proper method
of treatment of that wide aprcad disease, Dyspepsia, is
nut to be hoarid in any of the regtliar soiliooLo "of , media
due. N'Aio canuOt hid any thief Ai) siaatis who'nrill
agree upon this PelLt; and each patient is but in truth
a sottisct of -experiment. The only, "effeduid., risaiedy
for thin tumble S courge is.
... T
'Hishlerls - Herb ' •
It alone Is cektaio and unifvriu iu AS effects. It lipa
cured Uurrasauds l aud will cure you. TRY IT! ;
J. 3, /371,-..bn.
ThareA'probably‘fao way 1q we can benefit
"snAideraln , t4ait by rtteo °lading to them, for
's. , 44nodyker',E siimenf. It la adapted
~d eb almost satire mirposes oft Family Medicine; and
as a spbade Itir coughs; colds, whooping cough, sore
fleas of the Chest, lame stomach, rheumatism, spitting
of bluod;•and all ;lung diffilculties,At has no equal that
ever wasaw or heard of.
Thg;a442lt erg c°o l4l 4 3 =44o4Wiahames ,
d wasdiscussed and admitted by many
of the Aga glultu Societies throughout the State last
Fall. and wa.bel eve that in every case but one they
decided inlavor of Sheridan's Carairy Condition Paw
-1
dens. Orb* ju ment.
. , .
• EB4 -All j)ersons who contemplate
IteirspaPera for the insertion of
'should seud to
:1 A g DVE:T!
*takin
Advertitiewents
Gee. !P. Rowell & Co.
for a circular, or inclose •.25 cents fur their ONE Hon-
PAIR:RARF.Vid4t/ictitrhOlitetliiitint,ll,ooo News
rapers $121.1 estimates, showing the coat of advcrtiatrig.
also twiny, aseful hints to advez Users, and some au
could of the exPerientes of men who are known as Cue
cesSfol Adel-ft/sem This tin are proprieto:s of the
,Arney , „cali Newspaper ff.iyortising Agency, r
v- '-'i'l-atil...:-P4ili''Rew, N. -Li
and are possessed of unequaled facilities for , ,seetring
the Inseitiou of
low
in all newspapers' and
- Periodicals at loWest rates. Jan. 10,18725 m.
!.ce':,•-• :'''':. { 'e
-j: 11.::_" - 4....... 1 V: 5 .2.".'-' , 0 'Le.' '":
The advertising house of Ge - q...P.iitinell & Co., has
already gamedMooild-wide feplitatitin. Its bottom
is being extend d every? mouth , and it now has con
tracts tor apace l n zicAriy every newer pub - eit}n
the United States and Canadna. lifesarg. Cleo, P. -
ai, Co. have eVirived p fernarkable business tact, and
have reduced ttie adveitiaing riPitew down t, a very
p t coAPIfACSi 4 4 4 44• O 4I,44P;POK liNtA - 4 4 4A 4 =
1 I !
‘RAIL , ROAD.
~.
~ , rvw..„ToPnuoi . 4the Vot..4lftyk.4 instructed
44.-vrAtßoz. .poimistsykyupokN,t9csod utt:tlia 50
per coif' of tileik iinhictiptiona Wlll be sued for the
whole fAmuut. fAtLhanth: • ;
, —.-- " JNO. N. BACHE,
024 - 7113:7-It. .1i 1 Attorney tor Commonwealth.,
1. , - .. • •4* • -..-•-'
-104v-40(481
Ps*.i
• *;
_ :
.0_ift5.444,'4 , -' , .`,T2., • :• AT .
- S-PE CE:iB . .*ART GALLE'
•.
RANR 13PiC 4 10Elt has st,returuy.d from the
line.ass,OrfutentAaWocis lu his
, litreralver htt4htlutolTiNpricouriy: -- atuon!
livittchAzeslioioe • 4 ' • •
Choice -Frames of New Sty
.Carv.o4 -WcfrP/0.t.-o,ooda
and a great variety of
, „,„
aF -eery lqwest pries.
• FIZEInITLAke,
4An styl2, a
-,.!
E2l
-W1:,,,,_ 4 44/,,e &n tozal 2 ,
a pleasure -Wallow goods ; •
1414. Ina call early alai ufteil•
fa ell the , best.l
It is
bacjawaritin
EWEN
"141: iu irc2 -3m
;.4 ., .7_ • ' f. t , - -"*,;. S . A
Nlaustild, - •
IDIJIORCE NOTICE.
re„o4wt r ig,..s , „T: You yro tvt l y, ogled
c Atirtk C iT l
the bolds of vatiloh;, j imicl t. ll eity.loutt l ap-
Doit}t3tl Moulity the, clay of Jaatio.r 1474 t Alto
sai4 urposes whi°l
lot can n you propeT.
4art. 10, 187 F.. A. FM.
• , .. .. .
, liiirlittpro and: find4r(gki6g.
;:...,..1.... , .g, k.e.t,.. ~,., a t.,, -, ---... • ~ 1 „. , ..- N ,4,-.,.. -
,
~
..„ , r.ifari .Horn 11-„th#ndler,
, - .. - " ( fitu.,-,...44 to E. TAtteilfortn
qui AVE how ou exhib.tiuti sua-osionteitle,ol platy,
alf7 the thrum Loci th.et voutAtOothsk nf s A,
YiNk , OM -00.1111110#4 It ~ 'TUBE
- - --- - . - .. , ....,-A •i..,,,, , :-! ,,,, ,w,,
- -,1:1184noll, /1a.,. 4 t coif dulls., Mia Of
' ' ' A i ii ;le . " . Vll4o,olbbittaig
-4 4 , riFf, 1 1+ '
:ihilii VABLOH4ND CHAMBER. alie, :
-- ,
.••,..„, ,•••;04:),9,1 COUCHES. TETE-A-Tgt :-
1 V . .iiiti:VANl.rwpoDlol , batintatiF4,
/..'4.4.i . , Host 'sAN'i t i:cailue... Fes,
-,-,;--;_.() 0.;.401 Bw,tt sliaoae.; 44& _ - •
mmAss.. •
14. I' M: et:Orgiiiit-7 4 0.::::
I 4140§." ~,:::,
41411 sioi•k i? ~
,e:{4z!,.2'ipoil ithii.iiii liettp.Ei4u' La.
rff
V own theintge _.
- Aljait I „ ' .:. 411 in!A „C8 ,4 a,. 1 41 ge*
t i st
• Uleir ttl
,taktellA heUri .
I ae.4 ta titiality nUP price.. 1/oeXte.ll 0,
, - ' , . • ,-...
.. ~ . ~
- ' ' Wp - peir, Wire ihg,ttrcf#B,
the ludet popubir spring bed . 'sold; also • the ,Tucker
Spring Bed, that ham been ou trial fur V years aka 'gis
ten universal satisfaction. • Our " •
. _
is supplied with all sizes of the ,Exceisior Cheeketi anew
scud beautiful style of burial vase, together with other,
lripds of ,foreign atid. , home manufacture, with trim-
Mt/we tuniwish. , They: will into rudeitekiug, a spec
iality le their business, and any needing their-services
will be attaided to promptly, and at satisfactciryi char.
gee. Odd pieoee of Furniture wade and Furnishing o
all_ kinds .dOne with neatueik and dispatch. -
- atta.-10. ' • 1/All whale& CHAIibLUR.
..'ro.avuon rr sus cOscame.—having concluded the
I am entitled to a halo rest after nearly 40 years close
.applleallemtolushoesS! I have - passed over the furni
ture Madness to -Pith° as • per above 'aileartlae•
meat. and: take thleetnethed ofniking ,for them the
same patronage as has been extended to: ma.
lhiy..l..cmki may be found at the out place tbr slittkumnit.
Jail. 'lBO2. 'll. . T - VAX . tio
T.
FilOtfita OF •
•
• ,
- Twoh; com
fABd< now building at my manufactory, AA: • •
vilYt, a apporiot
•
RANEINO
*Nei ratesseiths followitateltvantagsm iner
. 2 -it; s /s l leParatell oats, 'rat litter, kind Out aged. an
Guess, and cockle, tram wheat.
2. It clean fiaa Need, takes out yellow seed, - and
444'. ,1 1 . 4 1 1 ) , kg#A l 4 l 3'. . • • • •
8. It clean" timothy !tee&
It illoes ali Mbar separating of a mil/ .
built of the+ beat and moat durable tint
bet, in goo./ style, and is sold cheap for ceab, or pr.
(Wee. . •
•
I will a patent sieve, for separating oats fr.
wheat, to other mills, on reasonable terms.
LawroacovUl6; Jan. 1;1872. •
4 . J. H. MATH/21
HiLRDWARE I
LUTZ • & KOHLER,
T_T AVINCI opened a drat-chugs Hardware Store
/4444111414. oppaalto Pitts Eros., Strec ,
respectfully invite their friends and thepublic in g •
%al to gigs *cm o =WY ,-•Eillaraßfek satigiartto
fit all condo. Ttiels ttock'okudito of
HARDWARE
KETTLES, STOVES, TINWARE, NAILS,
• -7, • IRON. BENT_ ,SPOILES"-BITBB,
SORICI=IIRAL /INIMPIINNTII! ,
ci f traN POWERS, &c.
_ 11 • ' ' ' ' • •
and a general line of tioodd, second to none in e
country, at the loWest cash prides. ,
• -
.•
• • '
?Piol are also agents for the KIBBY MOWER,: "" •
ACA WKaa RAZE, ARNOLD HORSE FORM . 1 .
CAIIBLEB.
. .
W . Kurz, LUTE do KOHLER.
pte.,Nus Kogr.-ta. I • .;
'hienideld, - /an. : 1, 1872. '
Stoves, Tih and Hardwd •
o*_
,
Laos, ittu,s; cABELko
M z Bolas
F , xfbliss,
BU, XAMS,
ei
- •
:, I, * ~-I ) , Etittt -
• .r .1!
; togbiAt.., Autexbd.... Loa
13 t
_lllVA,l4T4itlati-11440711, ke.; 11.40.
Paniaittswitiketurgre
IBM
ArZ`TSrlns C. and prices reasonable. First
aburs Cuss Bosse. it: L: BelT.r
Jon... /872
GENERAL INSURANCE AGENCY
ELNOiVILLX 'now. cd, P. 0.. I
Life, Firp, and Accidental.
ASSETILOVEIt $24 t 00 , 0,000. • •
Ins. Co.. of North America, Pa . $8.060,• • 60
treukilia Fire Ira. Co. of Pbile,•Pa 2.087, • 2 3
`lutligStii• Co • 00.1.. T • I
. CliVia.... ' WV ~ 000
• ' Ira. Co. of CluelAJIMIv -., . , ...$4000.000
NiikffilaliAl.Fe -,%." ......."...... 5 .1.000.000
'Veneers Nut. Pin Ins. ao; brit Pa ...1109,580 15
Plikeeli blot. Life Ins: Co. of Redford Ct. :6.081.070 50
,Ve.P l Ve 0410 los. Co o£ Pottsville 500,0iX1 00
$24 4 229.84 1 GA
Insursoceppriiiritly-eff by- than - or ()theta , Jae,
on all kinds Of Property. • All losses promptly usted
and
n. paid. live_stoe . k Ansitred - agginit. doatli, or
the
I am also agent fur the, Andes Fire Insuranoe C . of
$1:609,1101,
all stitilOdianfostians pronkpiliattended MI on
Mill Stieet 201 door frous Main at.. Knoxville Pa.
vf** AKITL
, •
Total
JaiL 1, 187*2-ft,'
Valuable Douse and lot on the corner of W
•
I, and Wain Streets: - .flakb-properly will be
cheap. For terms, dc.,„apply to the subscribe • •
premise!. • - ' ' F. K. WHO
Jan: 1, 1872.4., .•
„ .
,DRIMAIRMEDICINIO3, PAINTS AND OILS,
DEIBB•DANIDA' TN13.8. KEITH'S CONCENTRA 3.
MEDICINES; IREDELL'B FLOW, EXTRA '8
• BURNETT'S - COCOAINE, FLAVORING -
TRACTS
KM I 4 LAMP
-•
r •
PATS MEDICINES, ROCHESTER • •
Y AND FLAVORING EX-
TRACTS, WALL PAPER, WIN
DOW GLASS, WHITEWASH
AMY. oassas, , -
AGENTS FOR HARITLY
I & CO*4l REFINLTI OIL,
' i 7
Sold et wholesale Prices. Buyers are reveal
Gall mail get quotatlims before .&..ing fazther Dig
1 41 7 . i,
CM
rfaa — A J. SOFIELD
rio recut orik .NeW.York,,- a Ate a 2lO
w of ving , ir
: •
L •
..t bo
LL on alto offers to the public at low rates. g;
thing Atonally fotital in a
r.
rist: ke W
,E 1
lattite
• 1,1:
I. a •
Coffin Room
I, - 1 , - ~.
a a '.„ ,O:i it aiLitlitt..
II
to D. P. 11411 DEALP4 ZN
JOBBING* PROEPTLIC AT/ii.NBED TO
SIM
AIitiSTIII or CO4PABJX-
"R s4cat
WHOLESAL. -DRUG STORE
CORNING N. Y.
OEM
MERE
.' :- .
Iv. 4. TN,ABAR• ig
AMID
FANcy,. 09,14144
Vole* **(lrv,
• mits.x.#,Fo9
Sill
1 14 , 4 - 4.1 0 7, 6 41,4 it
. f :-;ç. _
J. A.. Par
Drir -Goode,
AT THE LOWE'---
Ili 1
=ME
Great Reductions in
,
Handsome Cold Alpacas, Slats. worth 50.
" Empress Cloths, 50 " 75.
" licotch Plaids, 25 . " 57;i.
" " Extra wide 37)4 worth 50
1
=MEW=
New Goods received dail
Heavy Sheeting', 11, 12X, and 100.
Bleached Muslim, fine, 12%, 10, 18, 204;
Cloths and t'assimeres, leas than value.
New &Mem', extra quality, 76c.
Hoop Skirts and Corsets, cheaper than ever
Shawls in Great Vari
at the L
/...--
t -
11/aCk all wool Beavers, In great ark
Dyck velvffitte) , s. Mill /3
thSIISI/1 1 1 •
the bias, or straight, at the lowest pric-
MOWS 2-Sole and Tap Fine Kip Be
Men's Tap Sole, A. H. Calf Boota,
Man's Tap Sole French Calf Boots
Boys' half Double Solo Hip.Boota,! '
Boys' 2-Sole & tap fine Kip Boots,
:Youth's Kip Boots, - $
Women's Calf Vamp Balmoral SW
Women's Calf Vamp Ponta/ Shoes
Ladies' Serge Polish Gaiters, eat,
'Wiz entire line of Ladles' Sewed
We carry an amanita stock of o regular
do not intend to take the back track at We late day,
making no claims that 'we cannot cat - 0 out.
Corning, Jan, 1, 1872
Gwreating
1 amil 4
for
and,
elliti
Western builteii4if the belt quality.
Jan. 1, 1872-Iy.
CUTTERS. CUTTERS.
4.largeAtauber.of Cutters, sad Platform Spring
other WagOnefOr sale. H. i.I Borden of Tioga, ~
H. Wheeler of Lawrenceville, agents. Call a
MAWS places, or my shop In Wellsboro,- and ex sfti .
work before purchasing eliewhere. i
Jitn.l, 1872. •
~ 1 , ~- C .. J. NNILELLE :
WONDERS WILL NEVER CEAS
•irj AVE you triedithe latest and greatest medical d
covery-of Dicing
DR. M. L. `BACON'S MAGIC PAIN ItrbrizDy.,
It cures colds, diphtheria, cramps anA pains in
stomach, indigestion, diarr4ea, dysentery. sum• e
complaints. cholera plortiva, cholera de.. as by n e.
As an external application for frost bites, chilblai .s,
bruises, telous, rheumatism, sick headac ;e,
toothache? neuralgia, paina'tn , thet sittii. back add - loi .
in a practice of six years, it has been found to be a"C
and to no incpatatiou ever offered to the public.
Tee proprietor of this medicine feels warranted
guaranteeing it to be the best remedy for the ab v
diseases in the market. ,
Manufactured M141)1414) way hs , tit) M. L. Bac
.Blosaburg,
Wholesale agents—lalle4,_ Bearer .c Burbank, 49
Chambe'r street. New Yrk;W. D. Torben k Co., or
ulna, N. Y. Jam 1, 187' .
_• ; t
Houghton, Orr
.i .(!z r ,' 00. 1
Erroi FORK ,
uSaAtMrFxs..P.i • •
Buggies, Sulides,
PIATFO'RM:Finitia, Tlttrdk,reill)
Liulietit
SOH AND 808 SLEDS
.
prepared to do anything in QUI line on
tictica'ana In the best Warmer. RatiataUlon g •
4ovaiszoN. , 013,. s;
.k•
storky Pork, Janl, 104.
12M
tairlIEST 4(o4.:Uki-I,ilui. 000 •
_ : T,XII ~C,ONE, ,littu.st
NEW. Rooms large tad yell ventilated,
congnedations unt balloon/414 any Anti
AA in the
_" tioxtheza WitiT v 'j •VAIM 99 '•
On% at. second and thirdtattiljotele, Epc44,ln,
ITMain and Wain streeti, Wiabom
Ztattrt4matliuore.aviViritid
Or COBRIVO,
EN
IN TEM
See The
I :ty, and
west P
y, at much
iu choica 8 , 1
• '1144 , 10.
to the coon
OOTS
eta, $4,00.
4,0).
5,00,
42,75 to $3.
$3,25 to $3,50
42,25 to $2,50.
_tildes; $2,00 •
oei, $2,25.
, at $2,60, wo
' ark at equall
i
niir
BLI
t;tlKggii,
i
t Low Prices!
OD_S & Co*l,
' ABE SELLING
°oft 41 Shoes,
T CASH PRICES !
I
, OUNTRY.
El
o Prices of Dress Goode.
sce List :
All wool French Satteens 62); ••
Elirs . 75, '•
wldo CO
Worsted Poplfni,
&standar '
Bleb striped Dress Goods
, and sold Cheaper than by.
New Prints, 63(, 10, 12;0.
Flaw:tele, all kinds, at less than pans
Handsome Dress Goods, 25 and Sic.
Black A.lpecas,. , 5734, 44, 50e.
Cassimeres, all-wool and Union,
cos in the cuntry.
sa than regular inarkat rates. Black VelvetssFut o ,'Nat .. .
es very cheap.
• Velveteens, all iolors. All the abova styliS aitrn
I t
SHOES:
Ei-This entire line or soots j' s
is manufactured for us st.T.
and warranted
byus in every respect :ail in
iormer years.
Ladies' Serge Polish Getters, at $2 worth $2,60
$9. Misseil and Children's Work equally eheap. •
low prices. •
•
- •
se, and exert ouradves to keep our trade growing. We
I•utvve pledge ourselves to do as we advertise in all asses;
& Machlnc Shops
HED 1840.
CORNING, lITEUBEN 001524211. 1 N, t.
. -. ..01,--.4y _ETA, LVSI'
t. .. 1
't . to. Ni i3 VEGETABE SICILIM '
\ A °
. tirttu..' l 4Nr.",-,5,1133.
..„-, =:_.,..,....,\,.. .-,--- - ~,,
gm': : k ':: 4 - - k
\ , • s‹.--•—.l-041 1
RE , 1 • . .
cr: o :t .
..- :::''''. .
.. _ - NEVIT4
EYery , ear increases the popularitY
of this :linable Hair Preparation;
which isl f
due to merit alone. 1 We'-eau •
assure our old patrons that:. it.IS kept - '
fully up to its high
i istandard; . land-it - '',
is the on y reliable and,perfected prep- .
aration or restoring - GRAY On FA.tiaxt
HAIR. to its youthful color, imakingit ,
'loft, lutyous, and silken. i The scialp,'
by its se, becomes white itrod elitist.:
Ivrem res all twapticals and dandittit_
and, b its tonic properties; preveutti '
the hat from tiling out, as it stimti.= -
1
latest and nourishes the hair-glands.
ity its use, the hair grows thioker and...
stronger. In baldness, it restores the',
capillary glands• to':-t heir normal vigor,, .
and will create a new growth, except'
i* extreme chi age. It is the 'boa
.cono,Tuieai ILus.I?RESEIING ever used,'
as it requires fewer applications, and
gives the hair a s_plendid i g:lossy apl : '
pearance.., -• A. A. Ha i yo : , M.D., State .
Assayer k)f Massachusetts; says, " Tho
constituents are pure, and carefidly
scleoted- for excellenr, vality; anti t. :
consider" it the BEST YKEPARiT/Obt
for its Intended purposes." , .
Bold 6,y all Druggists, and Dealers In 2111klicince.
Prioe One Dollar.
Buckingham's Dye
FOR TM WIT/SKERS.
As . our %newer-in many cases ze.•
jetreS too long a tithe,- and too nand/
care, to restore gray or faded Whiff.
ers, we have prepared this dye, in.ons
preparation; - Which will qtuckly
eZeutually accomplish thi* result.-
is easily applied, KApvaduces °clop
which will neither ru t oar wash .off.
Sold "by all. Druggists, Price Piny
c4 11 .t0. '
lianutAqtUrcd by R. P. HALL & 004
ICCO3HTLI,
011, 1., lkilt
Sill & Squire%
WHoI.WEIttUZ 1)U•61,11:1Z44' Rt.
Farelsl and po*stic
WINES. &c., tto
ci‘a
Ag l
is for Fine .Old Whiskies,
cystvil eux, I
O. N. Srum% t
1
Jan. 1, 872.
II
II
ES
i~ f
41731
lff
tT3f,
75
IR
=I
J. A. PARSONS &
CORNN4O. N: V.