Wellsboro agitator. (Wellsboro, Tioga Co., Pa.) 1872-1962, June 26, 1872, Image 1

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VOL. XIX.
25121
ely ,Ao4a4)r.
I'UBLI6III4, EVERK , IVEBNEIBDAY lIY
•
V.A . K 4.4ITUDEW BARNES,
r. C. TINOELD/112. I Al. Y. BARNES
:—V2,00 per annum in advance , . wig
ATES grADYETrustNp :„
_--- ~
I
'flaw. 1 i n - 2 in. 31n. '4ln. , 7 in,; 121 n 23 in.
-- ---- --:-.- -- - ---- --- ------
t y;col,-. ill 00 42 00 $3OO $4OO $6OO $9OO $1400•
• Nree'ss 150 300 403 600 7. 00 nOO 16 00
i ',y e as , 2 00 3 00 5 00 6 00 8 00,13 60 'l9 00
1 Month 250 4 00' 600 7,00 00025 00 20 00
?Months 400 600 90010001200 20 00 28 00
3 Months 500 800 1200 13 00 15 00 25 00 85 00
,; months 80012001800 20 00 22'00 35 00 30 00
IYI a. 12 00 18 00 23 00 28 09 33 00 60 00 100 00
`ly
AAvertisements aro calculated by the inch in length
ct (Await, awl any ics`s space is zated as a full inch. '
Tortign advei tivements must be paid for before. in
.:A boa,b except en yeatly contracts, when half-yearly
p;y:nik ittq 10 advance will be reauir;tfi.
"NOTILE4 in the Ethturial columns, on the
, c oud page, 15 scuts per lino 'each insertion. Noth•
fa, la:tote(' for less than 1.
JTICES 111 Local column, 10 cents per line if
ry,, l c than Beelines; and 50 cents for °notice of five,
lczs
u.,,NouNcruElll3 of MARRIAGES and Dmerus Inserted
fr. e • tot all obituary notices will be charged 10 cents
p,t ltue
t;cr. LIT 'NOTICES 50 per cent above regular rates.
10. -litrst, C.,ittt S lines or less, t 5,00 per year„-
BusineSs Cards.
R. S. Bailey & Son,
orNEII PRODUCE COMMISSION AIETICHANTS.
Butter a specialty. Our hotel and family
-cables us to obtain tho,Mkbest market price!!
; and Bradford Dairies. No. 36 Smith Water
Phdadelphis..—April 10, 1.b.72-3m.*
A. Redfield,
aI„rNEV AND COUNSELLOR AT LAW.—Colleet
d: promptly attended to. Office Over the Postothee,
6,0. W. Merrick. Esq.—Wellsboro, Pa., Apr. 1,
C. 11. Seymour,
A , )IINLY AT LAW, 'Fiona ka. All bunineaa en
to Ltaa n_ceivi, prompt attention.—
; P 172.
Gco. W. liferilek,
Al 1-11 , 1 —ollles iu Bowan cz Cone's
.1., ;ICJ , ra 1. 11 11 . 0741 Agitator 0111 cc, 2(1 fluor,
la —Jan. 1. 1672.
Mitt.lkell Cameron,
AI ;it :L; i;V:i Al' LAW, Claim mut luauraueo Agents.
over Yau Or.ler's liquor store,
a --Jan. 1, 1872.
William► A. Stone,
A 1 )11:.1,1 . I. W, over C. D. Kelley's Dry Oood
N,,re, \it tgOt L, Liao 's Bloat on Maw street.
1:01.1o.ro, Jul, 1, PI J.
17,niery 4SI - , C. D. Emery,
A T LAW.—Oftice upl ostto Coac_t
Ptird) ",3 Block. Williamsport, Pa. An billAiluelsa
1,011, att. - . mica to.--Jan. 1,
J. C. Strang,
AI:IP:L.I\ AT LAW A: DISTRICT ATTORNEY.—
‘,,11.(:.?;ills, E 241., %Vells.boru, Pa.-Jta). 1,'72,
J. B. Niles,
AI I. lir;t:V attend tumult!y to but.
t.. 10 the Louuttea of 'flags'
Office ou the venue.—Wellaboto, Pa ,
I,tl l 1;•;2.
J no. W. Adams,
L NE': AT LAW, •Manstield, Ttop,t owthty,
t.. 1.9 prompty attended to.—Jau. 1, 1872.
C. L. Peck,
Allii:\LVAl' TAW. )11olaims promptly collect, , a•
-, f t:l„ ',vitt' Campbell Dr, thcis, Nelson. Toga t20.,-Ta
Mtn. W. Guernsey,
butirte93 entrn6ted to him
• vill.,ptly attendad to.—Oltioe Ist door 5017th
',,dron l'arr's store, TtogarTioi.r.l courtly, Yu.
3,, 1,
Armstrong, ...V, Linn,
Al I( , ItNITS AT LAW, Willvamsprni, Pa
Ann,a - noNa. t
I:1 L
Wm. B. Smith,
PI NStc)N AI."IOItIsZEY, Bounty and lnsnrauce Agent.
(etnninnieufous Slit to the iLbove_athlctssLi re.
•I INC 'prompt attenti.oi. '1 erteso nehlatate..-I:nox
% tile, Pa. Jai,. 1, 1812.
Van Gelder Barne!;,
JOIS Lands of Job Prilding done on
with r, nut in the host in inner Ciiirc in Dow
-111. flour.—Jan. I, 1,72.
W. D. Terllpll Co,,
‘v LE DRUGGIST, stol dealers in• Fall
I.o:. , qene Latnl.y. Wintlw.v Glass, Pet Int4ry, Paints,
nin4.3i. V. Jan. 1, 1E42.
D. BBcon, .111. D.,
VII V , ICIAN AND SURGEON, Ist. door cast of Laugh
, , is idie—Maiu Streit. Will attend promptly to all
—Wellnbora. Jan. 1. 1872.
A. M. Ingham, M. D
un.bropAlinsT, Other, at his re4iCionce on the Av
,,,i,v,-eihiboro, I'a. „lam 1, 1t172.
W. W. Webb, 'M. D.,
1 tN AND SliftGEON.—Offh-c—Opeuing out of
Cole.i's Drug Store.L-Wcll.3lforu, Pa., Jar'.
I.
Secley, Coats & Co.,
Tinga Co , Pa -
rl. tbs. LIDA tmtea, and sell dtatts on New
tt: it, o.llcctiorta promptly made.
01 , 0e013. VINE CRANDALL,
I 1-72 DAvin Co. Knoxville
J. Parllittrst 4K-, Co.,
It.3.tx 4:.7 :2: - /5; Elklurs, Tioga Co., Pa.
JuEIL. PARKHURST,
11,, I 1!..7.! Jumi PAliKuuntr,
C. L. PAUL ON.
Yale House,
N . l i PA A. Yale, Proprietor. ---This
1 , if, .•ondition to ar, otomodate the travel
ahh. In a Eulwa tor mamier.— Jan. 1, 1572.
• f'etroliurn rot House,
4L 11 tico. Cioao , Proprietor.—Good ac
fc•i both inan and ',Last. Cbargea rea
+ acid a. 0..1 attention g+% (.11 guests.
1. , 1 1 1-;
Fariiivrt,"reniperaitee
"- pilidia. - m this house
•.i pt. t tit ut, in thu bast. Mt it tly int tt:111-
i" raw. fittictpali. Ev' te twe,,titmodatimi for wan
a' 'I 1., t't rlffil rn riNt.-1011rible.--11'014boro, Pa.,
I, 1 ..'
1.1 . ii itin Hotel.
C'''
11 ` , E 3 P1414114A. - n, Wdlaboro, Pa.—Tina
1..4 toed, awl ha Ma couv,.li•
wan and bcaat Chargea incalotate —Jan.
ME
isitipro
wrz. ttAi\.s,7. .k 'ME AVENUE,.
.„
WellBlkoro' Pa.
SOL. BUNNELop'r.
Pi. •-• 1 , pular Ili 4.1 latcly kept y 11. B. Holiday.
- 1 141.4 I 1%111 f . r.tlo lio 1,:i1f1.9 to 1/I#lke it a tit,t
-'l.."` " -111 th,- .*tarns orris and iliatt trona this
attendance. 04•1.1 very at
!, ki d
J 1,72.
THE - OLD
"PENNSYLVANIA HOUSE"
f'..11 VI PLY Irtinvat Y* the TOM:Sella 11611R0 and
•i 1 r htite Oi'Zllirled by I): D. Ilnittlty, has been
tt. rditted alto repaiord by
Al. R. O'CONN Oft ~
II le to arTommodate the oil friends of
'2ll • •.t very rL.lsonabla ratett.
~11 M. It. O'CONNOR._
,
Farm for Sale.
r offtra for sale his farm of Da acres,
sttuatc.l. tu Catlin Hollow, Charleston,
"" 7 , El. , within about four 'rules of Wells
,• ' al-I two iiidt scf Nils Valley ilepot. School
'l,arrh, mills. shops. &c.. 'within a mile. TCrras
Irphre t , n the promises, of
. 11 717. is.",i_tr.
Farm for Sale.
"1,, yam is quite aged and desires to
/ th,s comay for the South, oiThrs for sale his
• 3 el in Piehmencl township, pleasantly 'situated on
Orr P., (I coact l i ve miles from Manstield and two
n l charkston, containing °ter ISO acres.—
`nit a gool frame house and barn, a splendid
u . O -it,t and a lirge alumna of small fruits, and a
elal"led to \.60.1 lot. Saul farm is well watered, and .well
train itusing or dairying. Cheese Factor:,
Chops and church within , a short' die
;l•:<l'. lklay be bought with, or without stock and
}2 r t i ng. "nPlements. Terins easy. Inquire V.
ey Eut Charleston, or on the premises of
Jart3 1872-2 w. JABIES LIOAO.
, 4 • ~. ~i
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THE . VESUIHAN 11AY.
soul la far away
f!ailitm the
_Vieitvisii Bay; , -
'My 'wigged boat;,llk a'bitdill gat, •
isrtnis rcrlttitlthiparple iealfaidaote;
Round purple peaks it salts and sleeks ' ,
Blue inlets and their crystal creeks.;
Where high rocks thrckv;Ahrough deeps below,
A duplicated golden glow. .
Tar, vagne, and dim iho roomahlino }mina;
Ni7dle vti Vesutiate
,with braittleteiled,iidilds;;tho*ray 13,1,12100 stands
O'erl9;3l4ng tlig,voloaralajlgt.
Here Ischia smiles o'er liquid miles;
And yonder, bluest cf the isles,
Calm Capri waits, her sapphire gates
Beguiling to her bright estates.
I heed not iiriay ifripling skiff
Float swift or slow fron► cliff to cliff;
Withfirearnfal eyes nay spirit lies
tinder the walls of Paradise.
Undesthe walls where swells and falls ,
The Bay's deep breast at intervals t
At-peace I lie, blown softly by, - t
A floud upon this liquid sky. .
'
.•
Tie day, so mild, is Heaven's ONVII child,
With Earth, and Qatan reconciled;—
The stra I feel ariund me steal
Are murmuring to the murmuring keel. r
Over the rail my hand I trail
Within the shadow of the sail,
A joy inteus,!, the cooling sense
Glides dolvalny.(yoliay indolence
4. -
Her children, hid the chirp amid. '
Are gambolling with the gambolling kid;
Or down the walls, with tipsy cars,
Laugh ou the rockalike waterfalls.
The tlslier l 4 child:loth tresses wild,' '
Unto the smooth, bright sandbeguiled,
With glowing lips sings as she skips,
Or gazes at the far-off "ships.
Yon deep bask goes where Trait: blows,
From hinds of sun to lands of snows:—
This happier one, its course is run
From lands of snows to lauds of sun. •
luappy ship to rise and dip,
With the blue crystal at your iii 1
q happy crew my heart nitb you
)3aila.and saila anti sings anew I
No more, uo morelli4 worldly shore
13nbrtilds me with its loud uproar!
With dreamful eyes toy spirit lies
tinder the Walls of Paradise I
Music and Dancing.
In a recent review of a new work by
Francis Jacox, B. A. - entitled "Bible Mu
'sic," the Tribune quotes the following racy
anecdotes from its pages:
" Among the old Scottish noteworthies
commemorated in Defl)l Ramsay's Remin
iscences' is Dr. Scott, minister of Carlisle,
de.serthed as a fine, - grac - eful, kindly man,
bag-wigged, and cane in hand, with a kind
word I t o every one, who upon one occasion,
after tifficiating at a bridal in his parish,
waited awhile till the young people were
fairly. warmed in the dance.' rhe leader
of a ' dissenting body that had sprung up
in the parish' was present, and questioned
Dr. Scott on the propriety of thus sanction
ing by his presence 'so sinful an enjoy
ment.'Weel, minister, hat think ye o'
this dancingl'" Why, John,' said the min
ister,,blithay; ' 1 think it an excellent exer
cise for young people, and, I dare say, so do
you.' ' Ah, Sir, I'm no sure about it; I see
no authority for it in the Scriptures.' In
deed, John, you cannot forget David:" Ah,
Sir, Dauvid; gif they were a' to dance as
Dauvid did, it would be a different thin a
che-hither.'Hoot o tie, hoot o fie, John;
would ye have the young folk ship td the
serk
" Among recent authorities De Quincy is
a strenuous asserter of_lbemoral dignity of
dancing. When adapted.tp music not of a
light, trivial character, but 'charged with
the spirit of festal pleasure,' it presents 'The
very grandest form of passionate sadness
which can belong-tonny spectacle whatev... !
e
,lan 1, ISi2.
' 'the reason is Iliat,sut•li a scene exhib
s a scut of mask 01 hu - inan life, with' its
whole etpiii,• , Ye of ponips and glories, its
luxury of sight d sound, its hours of gol
den youth, :ind the mterminable revolution
of ages hurrying l after Ires, and one gene
ration treading upon the flying footsteps of
another—.l%hile 'the overruling music is
throughout attempeting the mind to the
spectacle, the subject to the object, the be
holder to the vision.'
" Charles Reade is also quoted in defense
of the gracious pastime: ' Things arc right'
in season, and wrong our of season; to dance'
in harvest is as becoming as to be grave in
church. Almighty, has put it into the
hearts of - insects to dance in the afternoon
sun, and of men and women in every age
and every land to dance around the gathered
crop, whether it be corn, or oil, or wine, or
any other familiar miracle that springs :up
sixty fold, and nurtures and multiplies the
life of man.' In another of his books Mr.
Reticle describes a dance got up among the
starving children of a penniless penman by
a visitor radiant with beneficence, who has
first fed them well, and now stirs them all
up to . foot it blithely, herself showing them
how; till the careworn, parents themselves
catch ,thd excitenrene, and join lit]. There
was no swimming, spraiyling ; or irreldvant
frisking; tlreio feet struck; tlM,Tround for
eVery note of the fiddle, pat as its echo;
theif faces shone, their hearts leaped, and
their poor frozen natures came out and
warmed themselves at the glowing melody;
,a great sunbeam had come into their abode,
and thesOunnan motes danced in it.'
"Another ally in the cause is:found in a
Scotch Presbyterian of rare geniality and
good humor. "fhat very lovable and with
ahlevout pastor, Mr. Uheriton, in the story
of' The Gordian Knot, is condemned by
sotne of his mote rigid brethren for permit
ting his children to learn music and danc
ing; but he smiles at some of his more rigid
brethren, and the lessons go on. To his
wife, however, he says, look to you,
Nellie, to make. Allan understand that a
deep love even of Mendelssohn does not
comptise all the virtues. And though you
need not set the case of Herodias before
Bertha and Maggie, as poor, shallow, good
old Rigby did before me the other day, as
an argument for stopping the poor children's
dance, I know that you; love;
them see why a carpet quadrillel tO , night
does not mean an assembly-room ball to
morrow."
ecc ivo in on ey
' Mr. Jac( ix has a somewhat curious (Alai)
ter in re *std to the effect of musical sounds
on the brute creation. Dr. John Bro it
tells a story of a certain Wandering Willie,,
a second Ot pheus, to whose strains the beasts
of the fields *ere eager istenZn-s. ' A. Gal
loway farmer was awakethed by music one
June morning before sunrise; looking out,
lie saw'no due, but at the corner of a glass
field he saw his cattle, and young colts, and
fillies, huddled together and looking intentz
ly down into what he knew was an old
quarry. • So, putting on his clothes, he went
across the field—everything but that strange,
wild melody still and silent in this the sweet
hour of prime. As be got nearer the beasts
the sound glow louder; the colts with their
long undies, and the cows,with, their won
dering Stlire, took no notice of him, strain
ing their necks forward entranced. Then',
in the old quarry, the young sun' ' &min'
on his face, and resting on his pack, which'
nut been his pillow, was Wandering Willie
liking and singing like an angel. V htii
repriqed by the prosaic, filmier for wastii4 O l
his lie)Vi and tune, the poor fellow said,
' Me mikado quarry are tang acquent, and
I've mairldeasure in pipin' to the daft courts
Than if the best leddies in the land were lig
;
ut in' away afdre,me." .•
" Another inStanec is taken from nearer
home. ' On the illg,ht of Mr. Lowell's stay
at the albergo just 'below the village of eio
'Mina, at his first visito Rome, a nightin
gale sang exquisitely from a lull-blossomlal
elder bush o- the edge bf a• brook acrciss
the road. And as Nature, 'according totlie
racy penman of the Biglow ‘`apers, ' thr
ti
oughly understands the value df contrast ,'
so it chanced that a,donkey frOnt 'a sh A
hard by, hitched and hesitated and'agonized
through his bray, so that his listenei'S.might
be conscious at once of the positive" stOd
negative poles of song. 'it was pleasantlo
see with what Undoubting enthutliasm. he
went through his solo, and vindicated Pioiv.-
lance from the imputation of weakness in
making such trifles as the nightingale yob.
der. 'Give ear,. 0 heaVen.and.:eurihr he
i seemed to say, ' nor dream that good, sound
common sense is extinct or out of fashion
'C. 0. CATLIN
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0 - tebg.tkx liVe I' ', j ,lilr„. ' , l46well',4nPittlseti
Nature- Made the ilOnliey.iiiiitaiistractedlyy
7 vhile , she-was feeling .lier.:4a lip !tell lier
itleal in Alip - „lioret, 'and 'that! lia liiitY ii in
ir
likiti'itittritier-iim experimefittil :ti . e.telijor,the:
ne . igli'A the tinisbe,tlLlPlUta)-- - 1-- i ~,
9 - 11peilidifti is no ind 'ii.& ihti eptiode.4 of
the author, in which a casual . hint germi
nates. into some fantastic surprise. In Ott'
his book is _all episode, like the ,garkent
which was all frin g e." It Will be regarded
as trivial by . the studiousreader who dis.
chaos unstrungTearis, but the,amateur rho
delights iii life tfue.st or scattered gems wIY
rejoice in the unexpected treasures whiel:
often drop from between its leaves."
MI
, ,
. , Fashion and ker Whims. „
=-''''a - siiidnikilikni 6*th - rein:ilea-le iipoint in
dictation at which we rejoice, lor', its la WS
are not
-}low simply for the mere apparelH-
A foreign magazine has a description Of a
dress or which it says, " With this costume
the mouth is to be - worn slightly open.P. 7 --,
This is happy, for there , are so many women
who do not know what to do with their ,
mouth, any more than timid young Men
know what to do with their hands,"that nil--
nute directions of this sort, studied, With
cYCry style„of, diess i will be. very cotivertr t
ient:r M AS
.t.b.. bd)l4ed )j.bitt epititcostuules
will require the mouth to tie worn shut, or
the effect in the street would:be anything.
hut agreeable if every-lady went about Nsjtili
her mouth open. •So much : depends upon
expression, in combination with costume,
that the subject is worthy of study. The:,
effect of the prettiest dress is often spotio,
by a sour expression, of the face,' and afl ax-,-
pression is simply an affair of the muscles ) ;
it can be prevented-by the artistic dress a-.
kers. We are very anxious to See, by he
way, islintyrouton will - be like' when he
T
INurtit's and oiler-artists have tihished wWI
liq.„ tiiie..is Already,. vilth:her. _three stery,
hat, pannier built up like a dome, high . heels,
and fascinating, wiggle walk, a creation, of •
great interest, and if she "wears her month
slightly open" there will be no resisting her. '
It, now, she were to nearly close her ,eYea;
and, if it is not inteverent, "go it blind,"
we could suggest nothing more. We should
say, however, that these fashions arc hot
universal. The women in Lancashire, g.ri
gland, Int driven into still stranger apparel.
They often put on the coarse clothes of the
miner, and work at tilt mouth of the pit
with pick and shovel. They'also engage in
the henvy'worli of the farm, and are - Cm-,
ployed on the canal barges; harness rind .
lead the horses and take their turn at ile'
helm, and help to load the vessel. These
girls arc rough in manner and coarse in lan
guage, but honest and industrious. They
take their pint of beer, and enjoy their pipps,
and never grumble. The question of hew,
to wear the mouth has not yet got down to
them.—HaiVord Courant. •
1:1C1
—T. R. X'ad
Beneath a very humble roof, among the
pleasaut valleys of Farmington, New Hamp
shire, not far from the clear Winnipisingee
Lake, beneath the shadows of the White
Mountains, in the year 1812, a boy was boil),
destined to lead a distinguished life. His
tattier was Poor, but lie hail noble trait s of
character, and his incither must have - hCen a
good woman, if the law holds true that
",teat men always have great mothers."—
Henry Wilson to labor, and ho has
always labored at the work in hand 11:1 tho'
born only •for that one thing; and whatever
the character of his work, whether driving
home a hoc peg or &tilting a statute for
the salvation or government of a great na ; ,
tion, he has added to it 'dignity and luster.
The disadvantages surrounding his outliful
work are hest told in a speech of his made
at Great Falls, N 11., Feb. 22, 1872. Ile
said:
"I left my home at ten years of age, and
served an , apprenticeship of eleven yeafs,
receiving a montles schooling each
and at the end of efefen years of hard work,
a yoke of oxen and six sheep, which brO't
me eighty-four dollars. Eighty-four dollars
for eleven years. of bald tour I never sDent
the amount of one dollar in money, count
ing eery penny, front the time I was horn
until I was twenly-one years of age: I know
what it is to traN'el weary miles and ask my
it how men to give me leave to toil.
." 1 ronember that in (tt ober, 1833,,
walked into your village frOtu my native
town, and went through your mills seeking
employment. If an had offered the
nine dollars a month I should have oecepto
it gladly I went to Salmon Falls, I wetit
to Dover, 1 %% cot. to •q , :ewmarket,' and tried
to get work, without success, and I returned
home footsore and weary, but not diseotir- -
aged. I put my pack on my back and
walked to whoa now live in Massaclna,
setts, and learned mechanic's I
knOw the hard lot that o toiling men have to
enduiein this world, and every pulsation of
my heart, every conviction of my judgment,
every. aspiration of my soul, puts me on the
side of the toiling men of my country—aye,
of all countries."
From the age of ten until he had attained
'his majority he worked on a farm simply
for his board and clothes. He then, in Na- -
tick, Massachusetts, learned the trade of`a
shoe Maker. By industry and economy be
earned money enough in three years to ena
ble him to secure au education. Then, nt
the age of twenty-four,
,he visited the city Of
Washington, lie - attended - the debates in
the Sente. Andrew Jackson was then
President. William C. Rives was then hi
the Senate, and John C. Calhoun, Daniel
Webster, Henry Clay and Thomas 11. Ben-•
ton were there. Stephen A. Douglas was
Attorney General of the :State of Illinois;
'Abraham ' Lincoln Was - 'a captain in - the
'Black Hawk war; Charles Sumner was ed
iting " Dunlap's Treatise on Admiralty
Practice;" lichuyler Colfax was the editor of
the South Bend Register; and it was only
twenty-eight years before Grant crossed the
,Rapidan and encamped In the Wilderness.
Dosing that visit lifr. Wilson witnessed the
passage of Pinckney's resolutions against the
reception of anti-slavery petitions in the
House. Ile beheld the horrors of "
slave•pen:" This was. enough; from
that moment to this the three. grand central
i&lvaa of his life—manhood, anti-slavery,
and the glory of America—have held pus-
SessiomoU his thoughts, energized hiArtiin,
and °yowl olled the action of his priVate and
public hte.
Ile vi: iced his native State, and made at
taxa( hint, in !KW, his first anti-slavery
speech, and in reealling the bright historic
mummies which (Aster like pearls around
his lulteu et I name, it is intelesting to men
twn the tact that this speech' was ‘ rnade: ten
3 . t.:113 berme Charles :iumner made his in
Hull against the annexation of Tex
as, und from which dates his open opposi
tion to slavery, and fourteen years befote
the fugitive shtx e act was passed, and tweh
ty:three fears before John Brown's raid,'
and twenty-six years before he introduced
the bill which abolished slavery r in tie Dis•
;pia Of •CO u b i tt; • and tW sev ,p 4
a fears
Lefote the emanciPalion proclamation of
President Lincoln struck the shackles froM
ery slave in the rebel States. The cloud
which in 18:IU WaS "no larger than a propb
et's hand," rn less than a generation inclosed
within its sliver rim free. America.
'f his chalnipian of freedom and of justice
recognO.ed the "causei•of anti-slavery ns -the
cause of G'od, and,all the strength and pow
er at his manhood Was_ consecrated - ,to its
:4:rein:icy. The love and, hope and deve
tiair of the oppressed turned to' Mr.. Wilson
through all that dark and - Ayeary generation
at night as the north star' of liberty. To
them,
~10:3.denuneiation of their wrong, his
ringingwbrds 'cheer, his prOthiSeS of re
demption, were like the flaming aurora bo
realis lighting up a pathway •
io their enfranchisement. And all this tithe
it must be remembered Mr. Wilson was the
object of , the bitter hatred tit
,the(Southern
lead 4s. Their corapliments reseinbled the
Alexandrian one: "There is one Satan and
there are many Sutans, but there is no Sata6
like a Frank in a tonna hat." There was
no Satnnj in their eyes like the " Natick
cobbler." -
. .
* 1 -x- • it. -:., "
We ndtv pass , rapidly over the leading
points itilfr. Wikon's life. At the age of
twenty-eight he was elected a member of
theltiasSachusetts House of 12Ppresentatives;
and iri 1844-5 a member ofthc State Senate!
.A.ethat early day he made himself e:onspic=
lions • 'favor of the admission - of colored
childre to the public schools, for protect
ing the c lored seamen in South Carolina,
Henry Wilson
whose bet Stine golf),
'And ravenfent Mara"
'aria in I t eAliio,ll, 1 id ile:tidfipA)itAdWpeyo:4-:
ttia..k..; Ili iikiCite yeas agailt :ti . , Me' in rieCrtif it liti-
Stittetlietislatilrei;!iiiid-w ili - itedire. ini - kifeailtng
- the"4'antheritative'' veit - e"til- ; Mitsiiiielittsetba.
arihst,lbe 6 :o,ooroillitr 4 "itirt fittlii &Ailed ' of
S arety: • Witmer lie Whig thilittrialtriio,t4;',
t fen '4'1848- rejeete; V tite' Ceielti`ated ' WO Mot'
'Proviso he retired frOin'it.'' „VW' thaf, I .fur::
:intire than tiVityeai's,ihe'ellittittLiiie r • linitt,
Repithlietrri; arid: refitv:‘, tii,'titien e frothilead--!,
ley% ' M itisachuset ts'i ri ilte'lieh ell f on,l "lii' ,
18430 lir. Wilien:Wits" attain n'lnctunet• of `the -
MtissaclutsettsilonSe et Representatives kink
the candidate , of 1116'.F's:eeSeil-,Meinbera ;foe
Sten-ker. lletWaallie ChiltjnianWthe fee; .
soil State Central Con traltite;' wirs' the 'el.l,g-,.
inator and organize'r of the eeleWteit 4.l7a
lltion between the Frei:soil itlwneir.r,lo4ti'e
parties.Whieh Made Mr. lhaltwell'GoViirrier
In 1851-2; 'and ' sent 'lir: - liiititoill and 11 . ..
, Sturtner - to 'the - Senate - of ' t lte" United' Stitt es. ,
He was a nieniber - of 'the State Senate' iklli:',
51tattill.852;• and Presider:C Of ihrit 'he* hi_
those'years:-"1n1852' ifnwits' 'a 'Atiegrittt tO
the.-Freesoif - Natitimila CoilVeinteir - tic - Pitts:-
-burg; was made 'Pli..Sitient' of theCtiliven:.
lion , imd , Chairman_::er the' lititiOnal Citit---
mittee. Mr. Vilson,was' the 'Preeseff ` ottn-,
ilidathfor_Cengreis I'l'l B . s2l l 'artil fluiughlilW
.party wasin a- nil/ferny- 110114' diatt4d.. of
neatireight thousand tkWas heateit by oily
ninetyAltreikvotea: 3 Mit Witionwas . a Mee -
her of 'the Itissaiitinteita:''einsiltuil4itet
'Convention in 1853iT . 1;1.18'334 he ,A!‘ ) .h.4,1 ate.,
Candidate•of the FreeNl Party liir,,,oOler
inch' Of Ma'saachuiettri, anti-ii'lBss 4 w,aslicer- -
ed to the United States Senate to filEthe va
daticy occaskihed by_the_reSignatioir Of ; ir.
'Everett.";-, =1 - ; • ,3 ~,. .
- From that -time to` this Mr. Wilson! es.
been eentintionsly 'iti :the:Senate. ',ln- the
'Very fiistsPeeett ha. mode-in that body tile'
said: "WeMean, sir; to place in the'etauf 7 :
oils of the intliOn inett•Vllil," itt.the, wiiitl4 Of
Jefferson,: '`"ltitYe SWortruit t fie ititar'ttf god,
eternal hostility' t4jelverY kind,,Of oppreigon;.,
over the bind' and 'betty Of Mani.' i , ' -! 1.,..'
In 1850` he' alluded in the,,
,errate. to the At:.
jack of 'PreitOn 8: BrOOka‘bit 'Mr. Stunner,
ani. " brutal, murderous;'arid coVardll." I IY.,
challenge from Bitioltit'weSllie result. , Mr.;
Wilson replied, "1 laird ,' alivayS regarded'
dueling:as a lingering - retie of a barbardeS
civilization, winch the law of the country
has branded as a ,crime. ' While,. therefore,
I religiouslylbelieve in the right Of self-de
lease in its broadest sense, the late—tile law.
of, my country and the matured coitYietkinS
of
,my-whole life alike forbid me to: Meet,
'yon.for the • purpose indicated in. your let
:ter.." it required more irtle courage toile
such a letter than to fightlit hundred , dtie .4.
On, another grarid . oceasion he Aid& t ti ii Stlii... 7-
therner who meniteetilini:witit !it - reir r olqi,
" Threats have no terrors•-for •freehien. I I,
am ready to meet argument 'With hrgunititif,
ecorn.:xvith cobra, ;and, :it need '',lle',.i bIOW
with blow' It is time the c hampions ikayt. , '
very in the South should' realize the 'fact
that the past is theirs, the future ours." All
this is proof that 'when . oeeasion &mended
he could be as kifty',, as grand, as defiantkaa
the stoutest.of the defendels of the now ex.
tinct barbarism, and when lielmwer of the
Republican party splendil - Celtniiiitted t in
the election of M. Lineoli , he said: "The
slave power is under the MA '<if (hp nation;
and will be ground to .anatis." .
.Mr. Wilson was made Chairtintit *- Of the
Senate Military Committee. Previous !to
that time he had served on that committee
for- four yeinS, and, when Juileipoit Datis
was chairman.. , The tnost important legis-.
laden of the country was Shaped by this
committee. There-were all the tiontinatiiins ;
of officers to be considered--•-more titan elev
en thousand during the war. He wits known
as the " Soldien'Yriend," WO 1 iitglSilli,(l6
on thousands did not liesunte to %true Mni_
arid up to the meeting of ('ongress on the
4th of Jtily, 1801, he was cOnstantly.o,Wthe
alert in the-interests of the Govei; 1
dm et 1 e--
itch/Lew 110 fatigue, mul -on the 'day 'CO
gress assembled he had-fit-chills and ;tjoy - it •.
result - hien lull ready to offer. - Tlite , first , all-1
thoriZed the employment of '500,000 :volitit , '
teers for three years; the' seContt l iticteabial
the regular army to 25,000 ant , :; the third
- was - iefireitriurelor the het ter ovioolzialorqii
the military establishment. At the called
session $lO introduced a bill a. ,nii hie ret the
President to accept fioo,ooo itt;.re %ruin:deck
and to appoint oflicers, &c. ' lie also intro
duced a bill, which passed, to increicie 'the
soldiers' pay front eleven to 11111 teen doll: l'fi
per month. But it would take a long unite
to catalogue all the important hills in ouybi
forward by this eminent shit ussaiiii. 31e , t‘'ss
industrious, untiring. . >
• lie introduced a provision -a Mull I;naa,e.,
a let ou the 21st of - May, - 180? J providing.-
that persons of 'color iii the-Mirk - I.'6f t't,-
hi/atilt: should be subject to the same laN - s
to which, white'personS wet e i3ribieVi-L-11
they should be'tried for entices against 't .c
laws in the same manner in which ell to
persons are tried, and, if cOnvicted, he I a
ble to the same penalty - , " and no other, 0,
which white persons would be, liable for t to
same offense. This.act nullified the brut :1-
izing, degraling,_ and inhuman black co e
of the District:
On the 12th : of July, 1802, he
_introdue d
the bill, which beeamea lacy on the 17th, o
amend the act of 1795 to call out the mill 'a
to execute the laws. This act matle color • ti
men a part of the military force, autlawizd
the President to receive into the milita .3 ,
and , naval. service persons of African : e
scent, and make free, such Persons,. th ir
mothers, wives .and• children, if .they we e•
slaves of ,persons giving aid to the rebellio i.'
When the amendment In the enrollment
act was pending in' the -House', It; Was 6
amended an to make colored men, ivlieth .r
free or slave, a partof the nationsl forZ• ,
and their-masters were to receive a bowl y ;
.when they- should - give free:dunk-to slay 's:
who might:be draftedinto the 'service. . tri
the committee of conference ,;111 1 .3 Wits n
moved that 'lie slaves • draft ctl -int.; t lie f s 1. 5 •
vice should be made free by the uuthori y,'
of the (4overument the moment titeyent ..._
ed the service. His tnotion Was agreedl ;,
it became, the law of •the.land, and Getter I:
Palmer eported that in" Kentucky. !ale e,
More than „twenty, :thousand , chives tie e;
made freehy it. :': ,' -.,. , , - '
Mr._ Wilson introduced a hill
_Which b
1
canie,a law,,making.theiwives and chit& n
of colored soldiers *free,'. and Gen, Palette •,'
then Commanding the Unitett.Statea furls
in, Itetitucky, in an .official report'
,made s x
mouths after the passage , of that act, esti
mated that seventy-five tho'utiand wiiiihiii
and children were made free by it. 'FeitS a
thousands of the - wives and children of . sioill
soldiers in the States of Deiam are, Mii.4-'
land, West Alrginiti,, Kentucky, TennesSee
und,Missouri were thus Made free under Mr.
,1
W ilson's
.ftm I- measures: 3 •33,17. : . • : ; • . . . i ,
- The act abolishing:slavery in the : District
of Columbia; the net, - niakufg colored:per-
Sons received into the:military service;theli
mothers, - wiven,iand:children, !iti owed tty'
rebels,n 4
free; the act makill, slaves' ti t le ,
When blustered into the military service; a d
the ,act.,•enakieg their Wives airdfchiltiren
free, emaneip.ated not less' than n: - quarter of
a million.of, soaves in the border' Statesg• : 1, -
Mr. Wilson introduced into the' appropii
talon bill of 004 - ai.section providing thin
all persons of. color Who had been, Or At ho
Alight be mustered intnthe' Military servi e
should receive the same uniferm, 'clothin 4 . ,
arms, equipments, rations, suedical 'Litton -
.ance and pay as white soldiers,- : , ;, .• ,
' Ile reported from:the conunittee .of Con
ference to which had been referred the Mil
in relation to the Freedmen's Bowen an en
tirely new bill, to establish in the AN'ar De
.pertinent atbureau for the relief of freed
men A4d ,Tefugees,- which became a law,-un
der which that- beneficent instrumentaliV,.:
: the Freedeuen's . ,Burean; was , orgenized. • I
On , : litr„Wilsonls _Motion, :tilt provisir
,
was adopted. that the lands sold for 'taxes n'
South Carolina should tifildivided into leis
of forty acres each and sold at low rtitCs.,,
under, which , act .I:tinny freedmen obtained'
homesteads...„, . . ,'• , '. ..i
, Mr., Wilson introduced the bill that ehl
(
.ished peonage in New Mexico, the previshl
it
.striking the word ',` white" from the milit it
m
laws, and also the easure:that prollibitt (1
the-punishment of , Whipping- in-the rem 1-
structed States.' A ' "
' Mr. NVilson introduced in 1803 a 'hill,
which-became a law, incorporating " nit i 1-
etitution for the education of colored youth
in the District of Columbia;"' tin a 11.," in
corporatinre- the lioward University;"
1. ittitil
also the 'act " to incorporate the .ation 1
Freedmen's SavingS _ Bank."' Mr. 'tails in
also introduced Many other meristu es in.. 41-
ration to Slavers . and the rights Of" PersotiSq
coler; either as Independent Ineasukes: 'or .rit
'ameedments to measures introduced bYoti
CTS. , •
Eve 7 act of his in those days of the earl
Mil
_ -
in c 'd.4.-.l:Atttli tins •
illitiritycltbiticalike go l d:, ,ispart, of
the illuminated IbistaryoOf iOnr;
,r insl .4 4t
- intonate rieut aiui ilitelof thejno,l' tritstpt
Or ',del Ahrahauf Line hl PPIT.
Salted. - ire !urea 'the' abliliers; for he
ell the-nature oi'ale's trjuls anti su ire ri figs,
nrul rejoiced.in their, brave deeds:T 4 'tenpin.
patitized!with thesectvliont the, ,f.trttt i tes',
war relied in moaning', and liner, in 1;414,
'ie death Of. his Only Colonel Wil,gm •
intensified this' feelitt • . ' •
..The tire I,of, n runselilzth
4mbit,ittu, the patient:enduranc,ei the
determination, The unfailing cOnliilence, In
slow' edittiiit ettelirwilich inar,kel the tOilitn.r`
-youth of henry iVilaoh, Itive'agthoreighly
11141'ked the Senator's entire recork as they
have left-their unmistakable traces upon has
pliy:stngnenl3 .>, Thg ; relarity, of judgmitnt
Ouch is the restilt Of:Obiervant association's.
Sl:it It' all classes men ill all sititatbins;', the,
ooniprehensive knoWleclge poritidar
'tory and public -1116U' no More pnefonitd than
the sense, of: deniands and, tendanciga, of
public,aff,airs; tst, mental Rev - oer of just,tind
quack • resource' in Ottreme 'sittiationS; the
caddtibting raspg upon' thet " deep' lesichis
which underitelitelnotal surface of natiOtt- ,
altpdlitics; the unselitilvappregiatioiudf the I
4.e_kt.i - ,io‘olVl4 - oVtke lOW
cblii)try,, Al k j tied, kir. „triAe, 4441044 a-,
'rilti'Clittriey'W Melt Atilt) to the Charade - 11dt'
n4;lti•istinn• statesiutin h Widely:fraternal:red=
minnendation, all, in fullest sensekureitittrt-.
butes of the man w4.0t0
ripeness
attdtpVerfildoo„redi t y ghoeri,ht,cte ge
paty feirthesetntgl t t
PL
in the' PoWer, of a'
erasiArts $40:01t10, go,Cal' i or
14441 . '01ga, , components, oY. Ordhiary, char
, "ettAttf. - LThb Contrtillint.disire - nn& n t it.ityea=
411Ort to'atteln. to the" kno,)ittedge, and
tie - it / Ca 'of Itigkest, ltdstill3W,gett:id; -
W the early Taber smog
litilt`gtilittishire's'keekY
,atid "brought
glitctp,Seit,Of' doming' 'success" to, _the - homely
dayti'cif 'Manual work over 'which the :larger
kfirtline,,,..Which generous Fates ,ele iveav
ing; tulisthave, castlt grateful "shade of pro-
Mise, - dlrect to-day, undintinished, the cul
minating 'efforts ot rittniy, Wilson's remark
nide' public, life. A : n'.at/tarnished record be
fere his .`owri Prouil: State lienesty .unim
peachable; a noble Public policy 'looking!to
the Weal of all, and ,a capacity of friendship
such '0 onlythe most truthful and general's
,tneit'pCitisess," alt Urge his 'name to the "pref
ereneOf the yoters of his country.-- 7 1iraill
Otti)it.„ - • - "
,
-A' Candid 'Opinion:
„,.
" Ma artint; 'we "care:, far
'br •”" 4.
[ Lugo 9 p,u !qut as !,ncy than" for
iietfaini , ,d,fattaa6a: is in our
,firiportanoi that tire, oppast
-0606411 halept out .of r:Swer, whit() 'tits
pf Vsojp;ttiatielY otitili amount that,
tenant the Wtiite''.ll . onsa.. For a
iia(lonar ti-iutaph means u -
}ibii
PPoseer rf Utose ?rho deserted ther'
Cane'ehe and ilia!!! plaee under the 14.+t.D:who
oivtiePr.e. Arent to the country Idathe
Red of Secession and ReWion. Though
sqa 4ipitzt an iiich (hick, to this
.complellari
Olt yti;let ;fame
,at ?amt. The brizil4, cheaH,
1)e edill if the present Democratic p the
r-Oet dement of the ~South, teith, Arvratern
4718.4:and' eympathfiers , It r.:bel at the
ei)rio-day, hardly 'able to. tezoneile the de
fe.lits'of Lee, Johnston, 'bragg, }Too& itha
?iick . ,:and the consequent downfal of{ its
I,hoo - voil'.ctinfederdey .With ifs .tradithinal
f Providence. It would *Will'
016 616ctipa, :of 'a . I)cuocriitic PreAdent
typ,,Vt3 a" vii•tutij j reversal of the Appolutn
t'Ox?:iiiri•etider. WOulti come' into power
,witlitin-liatth the chagrin, the wrattl,,the
-- indriitication ()Uteri. hitter years,- to untlel
and guide its steps,N.-It would devote itself<
to taking off or reducing tax . after tax until
the Tiensury deiiiived'of the Means
paying interest on , ,the national debt, anit
} y (1414 tail•thetidingscif national banit ru Pt
, unalloyed gladness and unconceallA.
NAtthalion. ,- NV hato,yer eltasliseinent may be
Itle.qt_ed try our na(iOnal Sind We WillSt
114 / b - Ativ - griwg,_And ho
spareifii - s:" -
The ahove is from the TrEm , iie—obviously
from the pen of, ,Ml. Greeley—of February,
• We commend it, to the careful tatthv
titni of, our readers.' Is it, less arue in,1872,
than it Was a year.,ago? How, do the Dem
ocrats Uhl the ;lest.:4tion of them given by
the priato, cahtlitlitte for their votes?- 7 -New
' l •7 Tilr!6s.
,
' In 1.803 116'raee C-;teeldy, at a banquet in
)4mireali nni!lejlie . folloWing,acute_and sug
ge4ive retMrks=as suggestive as'lliimlees
sordi/4uy ".Mr. %lrebster was net only a
gentleman, but he, had the eleineiits nnir:
al
. Q.l'eatneSs;, 'and he had faults as wall. He
fatted oielym one resPect; and in thiS respect
I d;ifer from hlin-4he' wanted to be Presi
dent, and [Cheers and latighterd—
But for that one misfortune ho would have
teen' the greatest ;Man ;America ever pro
duced. We - have seen our greatest man,
Mr. Chase, making . the same blunder. I
have seen men who had the disease eaPly,
and• died of it at, a very old age. [Laugh
ter.)' Gen: Lewis' Cass died at about eighty
two, and up to the day (if hiideath he want
ed to beyresitient.,
.3.t0 ono ever entities
Who once catalpa the,disease—lie lives arid
'dies in the delusion., lieingri reader and en
observer at an early age,:l saw ;how it, poi
soned and paralyzed the very. boa of'obr
public men, and, I have
,carefully avoided
;; f
In ansWer to • Mr:Sunnier. the Pitbibnrg
Gazefte says: " In .1868,'iliany, of
our citizens will '„remetilber;:lifr. - Stanton; pn
the City•liall, :Of uen. Grant as the
great , ' Oro'iir the (14, an a' 711414,‘ lcsirthy of
IsimpOrt, bait- that he should' he the: next
President if the • itflairs of this 'Conn - try, were
,
to be goy "a capable man' of large
'executive -ability; tuftViti fact, Was as enthu
.siallic In advocating •the election of Grant
as any titan 'who- itpoke •in this city daring
the'climpitigit: in the Philadelphia Bulletin
5."6 find Mr. Stallion's Of Gen•Gritat,.
ex• - pres Sad in that 'city 'oh his way West at
the' thee we speak Of, which - is its' "folloWs :
LadiCs and• gentlemen, this infghty colt-
Cotirsc?,' the largest that my.eyea ever beheld,
is significant of two things•:, first, it is a jiidg
-Meet hilavor 'of • Ulysses B. erant.• *
Upon * the election 'next PuesdaY; ' the' ,
ad of
Nov'etither: I behold the rock of otirlattion
al safety; - and upon the triumph of- it - 101)141-
'l4 - *filch is held in, the hands of Ulysses 8.
otimt I behold the victory of the principles
of fief:4l6m and 'of just; trniertnoont; now,
and•in all thee.' " •
• :thane tithe since the Trib . ane said: "Yes,
Gen: tif;iitit has failed ,to gratify some eager
aspiiiitions,;a4litis thereby , incnrrkd some
intense liatreile. , .Tliesedo not, and will not
fiiil;7lind hikAtitn)piatration, will prove at
letiet'e4tially . vital. ,X4l shall,hear lemente
tion-iitter)ainentation by! rln failures from
those-s hoso Wialt is ftkther to the thought;
but tine American e people let hem pass un
heeded. Their strong arm b re him trim
pliantly.throngh,thOivat anct Me the White
h,lonse, and they still .uphul and sustain
Mailthe.rneVer failed; and ever
,will.','
li
The New Haven -Palladium says: " Benit
thr Wilson has earned,' by years of faithful
service:in the party, the TecOgnitiOn ho• lies
received. 'lie was on Of the , earliest pio
neers of :the anti;slavety moverdefif;and has
always manifested a large miiount of corn
-111011 sensuas well' its political 'shrow'clifet4:
His integrity has never been qiiestioned:
There is nit man the Senate whose• per
-swat rt.cord is purer. As it. was Ahouglit
best' to make a change in the ticket; perlfalis
no- mart cohld have'beeti selected N1:1164e
,nonfinittioh would add oho e stitigth to it.
is . popultfr thrOughotWtho'conntry; espe ,
chilly at the:East tihd 'South: 4- 7n Connecti
cut there Is no-speaker who'givesinore sat
isfactioit to. an atidienee.t There are• men
I More eloquent, but he always inspires Mali
dance: 'The public believe mills integrity,
and respect the purity of his character. lie
is a oyd:specimen cif if. New England man."
lioraCe.Greeley, in bit Trumbull cowity
(Ohio) .. speech last fall; Mimed the hunt
when he ' said; •if the Detneeratic 'party
_were,' edileilupon to dkide between Grant
and myself, 1 know that their regard for
what they I.ll,Ust call principle would induce
nine-tenths yf them to vote against me.—
NV ?•F am led:Med enemy t tat party,
'even itt its mist•resperiehle `aspects." lie
was not nominated then, no - had neither
'Vniltelaii'•Heitl:.ndr.Jiii.a.COeliratie lit hand
'to`teaelt Win pirtident .speech.
'The worst thing ,we have. heard said
Urantkhitely, was when an indig
mtt Democrat, whol had read Sumner's
y speech, called him "a damned old Nepoi,"
•
s
1.%0 I
,
'26
'rag k TM:MRS.
n~s:~x:ws'~rl
~iF_..r,c) i ,
:...~,~ t
_.
~~i,+hilil/ ~;.
a WiskiltOgle k ll .
'fn bl 170. 4
ME
MaArlay,47,lu, al, 1872
Tdkcz
=I
14j ci 11.0 Air
13 m 4'44,711 , •
isld /Aye.
'
SLAWLe
- 41./12. 11, W. 4.m.
Car Mug, Dep. Tl 4 785 ;0 00
L'tiila;'<<--8/5 840%G is
/),mamg - „ 881 BiB 025
Lasbsop , , • • 94 866 • 683,
Brat: Creek Q 46 901 647
22pim 849 acv .6 66
Ham:nand . 903 9.4 k /0
airtiCrerk, .912 • 9 47 ,7 27
: f , 91) ti
Nitti,liebury .0 23 939 742
nide Galley << - 9 2' 4 943 760
fin'tkesiale; " U 98901 8 93
i) , Vellsbe.6,"•Arr. 945 10 01 813
I • A. il. GORTON; Sup
.Id, .4:20 7 Ilk
4/. 44 418 ti 53
11:4- 4 .33
1/ i 1 4UI /1 Li
il 31' •i•S "3 33
37,- ou i :la
la 41 344
r.O 83 8 , 87 -311 -
10 -,327 IS OS
in 13 - ‘ .2a 6 61').
Billo9burg4
' l O Fill ag & 'Boo $.
- • ,
.AgoriOkky Jane u.l , 18;2.
Time
Takps plot:
ruoucouli
No! I" • 7
• •at 7 '. 35
DEPAD; VARIC LILLP*4II
Nb'• " '
..,.•0;.,••,••!,4.41
• . • , ~
1,. ;.. Aktlin - r. Ai LLOSI3IIO/16._
la tn. No. 1 :. - .... L."... le 00 a 4 nct.
V. Ph ,: . 3 t , , , f." , .. P ) 20 9?; /11,
'11(314. AttitlVrt, 4r roammi. ,
ii. nn , 24 OA. ..': i. , :,:,'.. 4 85p'. m.
V.. , z,k, • ' • 4 , 7, ,- '^ •--•- 1 , 0 '-'0, 11 ; 3 : 11 ,
ittißTo24: filip't B. 4: O. 11:11.
'StiVIIIOK, dup't Ticiga IL it.
MB
ssa Lailyoad.
•
, tosw-t-44 , 9 , k4-44 , 9 , k4 x!T? •
kS:r9I . .p:LD. 4 •I"
.•
P0.14) 11
!PeSA**tileik.
• ' • 9 ill 21.1n3,
, . .
sport 0 l 0 p. m.
vent W2lllamigort, . ... 9.2 S a 333.
`leaves ballet nt Nei die liaise,
aliltort. Phila ~c i delphia; N.
ituallate: ithlut24, Rattraltia,
de at Williamsport with trawl
itsit ; aep.'Mates •
Azadirdandatiod de
Ala arrive at W •
Aocotrunodatton
Att attattional
Wltuiport, nt %la a
leorktilostott
direct ponnoction is
for the west.
eV:nen Philadelphia. New YOrk
GEO. WEB, Supt.
• - Nu ohattgo of cam
and Williamsport. ','
e Railway.
A.DcarrEco 3D, 1if.22
Tilts Tents
New and truprot ,
Coaches, oontbinin!
run through on all t
tor, Buffalo, Niagara
Land and Cincinnati.
;d Drawing Room and Bleeping
all modern 3toproVemente, are
, sins between, New York, Rocrbee
ialle, 811BpellSitni Bridge, Clove.
Westward.
1. No. 6.
am 1100 am
m 916 pm
1160'
12 85am
No
9 00
4 34.
as
7 02
• STATIONS.
N. ,York, i.vtV
Bing'tn, ••
Elmtra,
Corning. "
Ped Post,
Rocheat'r, Art
lioru'vllo, "
Rtiffalo, "
:up 205
p
im 620
am I 705 am
1
17 82 " 1
11
816
11.1
124
I'4B
Mag. Falls
Dunkirk,
*CAL TRAINS WESTWARD. '
diva, from Owogo for florstells
ADDITIONAL
5 a. M., except Sn
ville and Way. .
.undays, faun' Susquehanna for
5 15 a. In., except
11-rnelleville and W,
, rn Einsprebauna for nornollsTillo
6 00 a. ni., daily fr
and Way. • •
Elm/days, from Elmlra for Avon,
1 15 p. in., except
to Buffalo and Way.
anudays, from Bingbunion for
-
Fit*
9 80 p. ni., o:cepr.
Horueliacille anti W
No.
1 10
1 45
2 30
6 05 '
3 45
7 23
8 (J
10 10
STATIONS.
Dun k. Lvo
Buffalo, '
"
Rochester, "
earning, •
Elmira. •
513 "112477"
(17 11 " - 1 238 ;••
la Ea - I 3 30pin 1940 ;"
Loc,ll. TLLA/N3 /Ikif:WARD.
Brind.vya, - from ila,uulldrille
Ein4'ratn
Itiz: X York, ‘ , l
A nvi
700
5 CO a. in
Owego and Way
-6 55n. m., axilY fri
,
Wak. • ' •
MEI
m Hornell,s7 We for Susquehanna
iiiiinaays, from Hornellsville for
00 a., In., exoapt
..Blnghaniton and Wi
I,ot a. zn.,•excapt •
haaul mid Way.,
p. in., ex..ept
jihnira and Way.
1 5 p. in.. except
Suagneitttuna and Vi
f Id y 3 exef..pte
Jeryis.
Through]. Ticliata t
IkAaLata.
ing Depot
This is tile only Fli
way Vt•zzlphlty tur
ing.
nudays, from Owego for Sueque-
nudays, from PaMted Post for
Sundays, - from Ifornellsville 'for
:y.
between Snqrinebanna and Pert
all plititi West at too very Low
the Colliyauao4.4fico at the
thorized Agency of the Erie 'Rail
, sale of Western Tickets lu Corn-
•eked only on Tickets pnrehr.scd
Enggaga tvill be ch
at the Conly,aoy*s
L. D. lICTORIER,
blip
7 Sill,
Cyr4
IS.I-E Dr-ALERT rq.
wnott
Domestip Liquors
Foreign an
N.EB,
Fine Old Whiskies,
CORNLNG. N. Y
Agent , for.
Jan. 1.1872
th, Lath
La
hand •at all ttnies the present
Ils of 0. HAMILTON,
2-tf. near Jackson Centre. •
WILL be found o'
se on at the ,1
Jackson, April 1, 1
Houglt
, Orr & Co.,
NY YORK, PA.
IriEl
ufaaturers of
,
: • ggies, , Sulkies,
SPRING. TROOR AND
P.I.ILTFOR
R WAGONS,
LIMB
CUTTERS,
SLEIGHS
AND 808 SLEDS.
do auyibisig in our ILue au 'bora
b Illiumer., datiefactiou guarau-
IFICAIGHTOS, 0101, St CM
: , Agouti Wellsburo.
,
1872, ..
' ,
We are prepared
notice and pa the bQ
teed. k •
,HASTINOff & CO
Etciny Fork, Jan. 1
KAS now in Fite
he k tki, at the
Wool Twine, 2 6z 4
8 & 4 strand. Knowl
.k, and will keep constantly on
owest market quotations.
Iply cotton 0. jutptwine. , Merlin 2,
a patent Step Ladder, from 3 to Bft.
JACK 80nr:
CLOTH •
•
EIIALL
Von
, TACKLE BLOCKS, WIRE
D WIRE HOON GEH-
L . EMERY WHEELS
It OllMEtila SAWS.'
A full &se ortm
nt oS Late Huron and Baca
I : BANAL WHEEL BAR.'
ANY QUANTITIL MA
[N(E FROM ONE
DOWN. •
•
ORINDI3TON
.ROWS
NILI
No. 1 & Y. extra eug:
ue oil. A conwlute aeaortmeut of
riufcs' - Tool*;
Mee,
' 1 DERS AND BOLTS& -;
A IDNyva: coNsraN
HAND. BOTTOM
..• -ON AORICITLTIT
e IMPLENOrNTS.. „
HOUSE
HOLD
TLIr
PHIO
It ,
I• look. get the thotrei diid see how
r iftge . I. BKEIFFIIj..I2;. Jr.'
Come in anti lake
Ala yotirsielf, and n
lan. 1. 1874
WANT
Busing
'from $4 td Vi per (, 1
boron, wain Birk
thscwtii onablo yo I
Address
7 - 1 We will give energetic men
and women
.L/ .
S -that 'will Pay , •
can be pursued of your own
• 'y•hutiolable.' San.l for tsainviell
to u, to work at num.
S. LA,TilAbi & CO.,
3,wasbiugtou Boatou, Mode.
June 12. 187
or Sale. `
I CHOICE WONG COWS. Inquire
i re in Cliarieetou.
EIX/ENN /Zan,
A COUPLE OF
II at my reside
DIV 29.18T2-6
BM
GOIND 139V711.:
1T
No' 7.1
530 60 pm
262 a hi 325 am
5.05!' 5 25 "
5,42 •' "01
12 88 "
10 `3.1 -
7 20 1311
1120 inn
1210 pm
12 50"`
10,40 ,
7 05 13ft.
1120 a m
12 10pla I
1260 ..
ward
No. 4. No. 8.1 I No. 2.
' 1000 pm ..
6 45-pmlo 12pm I 7 30 am
620 "- I
125 " I 8 00 1 "
10 10 " 3 05am 00,"
603 " 8 /0 , " '
11 98 - 432 1,1
11 12 13 pm
12 15 ani
2 Id
11 00 "
TrAi. PARR. •
Gaul russ'r
Mr
MIMI
; f;6l - t; ;
' Piano Fortesr anti" Organa I
D wol f is w Tim IRA
OR ortchuis,
Stitt it gitilActoitikair interest to bur of •
• 'Jr.' '11017T)
We are gelling tee liest,lnetrumente at lqwest
dud terthe'reost faoiable Jenne. f '
- A flist-olass P/All - 0 tiosiosses all tho following easen
tiabs, viz the .tone is divested of all impurities, &per
fact equality Of - power throughout the entire scale, with
xesonazice and cluratiou of tone. '‘ -
Wile touch is °Witte equal, easy and resp4nsive to
-tviery deniantiuf the &agars. , • -
A,;defectln 4117 inlet:l' these points, wilfcause 4 com
plete failure of the.instrameut. , •
- Weintrranfeveiy Piano for the tern of livu'years.
• , Zfrituting promptly atteudel to by the moot' cape
riettced
tostrtMtlon Dooke of Lim moat aiprovod methods for
the Plano and Organ constantly on band.
D. pIINBAR, aorr,
' • • Zlldand, Pa. - • Odoook,
Deo. 1871:-ti „
WELLSBORO
Boer, Bash &. Blind Faotoryi
la
B b.
AUSTIN, le prepared to furnish firsts ,
Vork from the best lumber, at life new fao
torym is now In full operation,,, _
‘--:' 4-1 • Stligh, Doors, -
. '
1131141117Dg
I - AND' MOULDINGS .
"constantly on Land, or nausufactureditforder
'Pia' Wag and. lliatchin
dein; promptly, and In the best manner. The best
workmen employed, and none but the best sea oned
lumber used. Encourage home industry. -
Factori near the foot of Main 8 eat.
Jan. 1, 1872-th - ' BENT. AUSTIN.
Deerfield, Woolen 1 HllBl
DEERFIELD, PA.
THGLIAM BROTHERS, Proprletora of the above I,llEs,
J„ will manufacture as usual to orde , to suit customers.
OUR CASSIAIERES -
are warranted in every respect. 2atticular attention
given to
Roll Cardin' & Cloth Dressing
We have a large stock of Casalmeres, 5:c., 25 per
cant leas than any competitor, and warranted as retire.
suited.
We manufacture to order, and do all kinds of Roll-
Carding'aud Cloth Dressing, and defy competition.
m
'We have as good an asap ant of .
.
Full Cloths,. C ssinteres, 4-c.,
and give more for Wool in exchange than any ,other
establishment. ' Try them and satisfy yourselves. .
We wholesale anti retail at the Cowanesque mills, 2
miles below Knoxville.
Jan. 1,;1872„ DiCiflA-31 BROTHERS.
J.H. , Griswold's Water Wheel.
riIHE u .dersi
Wheel, ffn ed, are agenmfor the above Water
heel, an can cheerfully recommend it as sup°.
rive to all others in use. Perseus wishing to pur
ehaseahonhi see this wheel in opeiution befolo buy
ing other wheels, INGHAM BITS.
Deerfield, Billy 15, 1872.
; • •
Bead the fellott-tug
Apari, 24, 1872.
We the undersigned, purchased one of J. H, Gris
wold's 80 inch Waiter Wheels using 08 inches of water
to run three run orstone under a 20 foot head, endure
well pleased with the wheel. We have ground sixty
bushels per hour with the thrpe run and can average
that amount per hour all day:
I.Ve - viv store
AT TIOGA, PA.,
and an entire new Stoat of
•
BOOTS AND SHOES.
HE. SMITH & SON, liming must completed their
i new Briek store on Main street, which is one of
the best arranged anthmost inciting stores iu the coun
t', are now offering to their old customers and the pub
liegenerally a better *elected stock of
BOOTS AND SHOES,
than ever before presented In the borough .of Tioga.—
Ladies' ware of Burt's - ma:a, constantly on. baud. Al
so, Mason & Hamlin's Organs, and a . variety of stylca%,
to select from. All are invited to call and examine
prices and quality. H. E. t MITH & SON.
Tioga, Jan. 1, 187.2.'-ly.
WALKER & LATHROP.
DEALERS IN
timNVARE, I 1 ON, STEEL,
STC,A . ES, TTN-WARE; REELING,
SAWS, CUTLERY, WATER
LUSE. ACIRICULTURAL
I'ALPLEMENTS,
Carriage and Harnese trimniings,
HARNESSEB, SADDLES, Sc
Curiiiug, N. Y., - Jan. 1, 1872
•
LIVERY STABLE.
AITATEINS & KETCHAM RESPECT.
es
a l V V fully informllic public that they
- have eetabliehed a
. • Livery. for Hire,
At ttielr Stable on Pearl St. ,opposite 'Wheeler's wagon
shop. Single or double rigs Arrnished to order. That
aim to keep good horses and wagons, and intend to
pleaeo. Prices reasonable. wATKnis & EETCHAIif.
Jan. 1, 18;2.
` TO THE FARMERS OF
TIOOA COUNTY
AM now building at rug zaanufactory, iu Lawrence
ville, a superior
MILL,
wLlch pommegaes Ulu following advantages over all Oilier
1. It separates rye, oats, rat litter, and foul seed, and
chess, and cuticle, hum wheat.
4 1. It cleans flax seed, takes out yellow seed, and-•all
other seeds, portectly.
3. It cleans timothy seed.
4. It dots all other separating required of a mill.
This mill is built of the best and most durable, tim
•bor, in good style, and ie sold cheap for cash, or pro
duce.
I will tit a patent 81(WC, for separating nuts from
wheat, to other mills, ou reasonable terms.
Lawrenceville. Jan. 1. 1871. J. 11. MATHER.
N'.6Nv aeWelry Store
THE Undersigned would respectfully say to ;the LI
[netts of Wellsboro and vic.inity, thafthe has , cpenctlc a
Jewelry Store
the building recently occupied by 0. L. Willcox
,s stack coruprises a lull assortment of
locks, 1T caches. Jewelry,
er and Plated- TT' core
S. - D. WARRINTiIi, one of the best werkmen=iu North
n Pennsylvania, \via attentt to the
Repairin4 of IT'Citches,
,
For the skilful tieing of which his seventeen rents
practical experieute is sufficient gut:rut:a. .1
8. B. WARRINER.
Wcllsboro, Aug. 23.1871-tr. y
‘ll
Town 1 ots for Sate.
non E subscriber offers the village front of laa farm
tor sale in quant!ties.to sun pm clinscrs, and at
'prices to make it an object for inc. stlwilt. The.e
lando,lie finely for lets.; and a portion of them
cannot be ,excelled for manufacturing purposm
Tilley 'lto 1 - immediately on tho extension of Grant,
Pearl and Walnut street., and south of tic:.ondAverir.
They will be gold in lets or largor quantities to suit
tho want! of purchusers
May 42, 1872,431 a.
MEE
PANE
=I
t ".~, rte
~- , i
~` , .~~ ~ i
=ill
E. D. PHALIP4.
CHARLTON PELLLLIPS
B. P. &MAZY.
102fEl
Furniture and
Van Horn & Chandler,
(Baccesaisra to B. T. Van.llorn)
DAVE now on exhibition and aria - at the old place,
the largest 9d - most complete stock of
•
. .
FINE AND COMMON FURNITURE
to bc-found in Northern Pennsylvania, consisting of
ratg In) =aura Artam3,
1 Q6BdB, . pais k!.F.,e, TET - 11-Air,
•
WARDLE AND W TOP OENTEH TAPLES,I
HAT RACES, F OYMUM 1031101iS,
OVAL AND i 3 ABE Plum's, BRACK
ETS, PURR . 1 HAIR.BIATTRASS.
ES, RUSE EXCELSIOR MAT
'II AIRE%
, . .
and a hill 8194 at the conuncal goods usually Sound in
Srat-nlasi establishment. V The above goods aro large
ant of their own manufactur,
price. satit&otion is uar
eed both uto quahty an e ti They sell the g
Woven Wire Afattitcss I
thernost popular spring bed sold; also the Tucketr
en
Spring
unitersal , Bed that has b tio neen o Our u trial for 17 years and giv
sa. _
• Coffin Room •
is stippled with all sizes of the krcelsior Ceske& allow
and beautiful style of burial case, togethor with other
kinds of foreign and home manufaatr, with trim
mings to match., Iltey, will make and rtaking a spec
iality in their buelneie, and any needing their 'services
be attended to promptly, and at satisfactory char
ge*. Odd pieces of Furniture made, and Turning
ill kinds done with neatness and dispatch. ,
Jan. 10,1872. VAN HORN A- CHANDLEIt
To vvuolt IT MAY ConEnN.—Having concluded that '1
am entitled to a little rest after nearly 40 years close
application to buitiness. I have passed over the furni
ture business to "the Bays" as per above advertise
ment-and...take this method of asking for them the
same liberal pt — ieonag has been extended to me.—
E.fy books may be found at 1 for settlement
Jan. 10, 1862. B. T. VA., B. .
WHOLESALE DRUG STORE.
CORNING N. Y.
DRUGS
in
AND
Er *MEDICINES, PAINTS AND OILVD -
DEUS DAVIDS' , Ennuiii OONCENT D
MEDICINES, IREDELLII FLUID, EXTRA a,
BURNETT'S COCGAINE, FLAVORING EE-
I TRACTS,
1 1
HERIWNE LAMPS,
PATENT AIEDICWES, ROCHESTER PERFU
MERY AND FLAVORDIG EX—,
TRACTS, WALL PAPER, WIN-
DOW GI.A.SR, WHITEWASH
LIME & DRY COLORS,
AGENTS FOR ALARM -
dc CO'S REFINED OIL.
Sold at wholesale Prices, Buyers are re.
call and get quotations before going fUrther
Jan. 1, /85,
R. G. Bailey.
(Successor to D. PeMODERTS) DEA.LEit
Stoves, Tin, and HardwaTe
m0:1, NAILS, CARRIAGE BOLTS, HORSE SHOES,
ANIi HORSE NAILS,
CARPENTERS' TOOLS,
4 general stock. of Builders Materials. LOCKS;
BUTS, LAVGIES, ITLNGES, ko.; Also. °RAPPING
PAPER attlanufacturers prices.
JOI3I3LNO PROEPTLY ATTENDED TO
lye Terms Cash, and prices reasonable. First door
above Colic House. R. C. BAILEY.
1
Jan. 1, 1872
HARDWARE !
LUTZ & KOIILER,
AVING opened a first-class Hardware Store in
11, Mansfield, oppoette Mae Bros., on Main Street,
reepeetfully invite their friends and the publio in gen
eral to give them a call. They guarantee satisfaction
in all cases. Their stock consists of
HARDWARE
KETTLES, STOVES, TIN-WARE, AI LS,
IRON, BENT WORK, SPOKES, 8,
AGRICULTURAL ThIPLEMEN 8,
CHURN POWERB, &c.
and a general line of Goods, second to none in the
country. at the lowest cash prices.
They are [deo agents for:the KIRBY MOWER, ITH
ACA WHEEL RAKE, ARNOLD HORSE FORK, AND
HAY CARRIER.
W. G. Kurz,
FRANK KOFILER. I
bianstleld, Jun. 1, 1872
GENERAL INSURANCE .AGENCY
1: /
KNOXVILLE, TIOGA CO., P :
Life, Fire, and /keel ental
ASSETS OVER $20300,004.
ASSETS OP COMPANIES.
'llls. Co., of North America, Pa • $3,050,535 60
Franklin Fire /us. Co. of Nina, Pa 2,087,452 25
Republic Ins. Co. of N. Y., Capital,— $760,000 -
Alnico Ins. Co. of Cincinnati, .. $1,000,000
Niagara Fire Ins. Co. of N. I' 1 000,00 E
Fermis Mut. Fire Ins. Co. York Pa ..... . . 009,889 15
Phoinik Mut. Life Ins. Co. of Hartford Ct.. 5,081,070 60
Penn's Cattle Ins. Co. of Pottsville 600.000 00
Total
Insurance promptly effected by mail or otherwise,
on all kmda ut Pro Laity. All loAete-promptly sulJusted
and paid. Lice stuck insured nguiust death', tire or
theft.
I am also agent for the Andes Fire Insurance Co. of
Cincinnati. Capital. 51,660,000.
All communications promptly attended to—Oflice on
Mill Street 2i door fir). Main &t.,
WM. li. SIITTII
Agent
Zan. 1, 1652-if.
MRS, A. J. SOFTUD
Isnow receiving from New York, a fine assortnmta
of
3111E11.11xLiezr
FANCY 16MODS,
•
wide she offers to—the public at low rates. • Every
thin usually found in a
Fancy Stoire,
0 kept on nand and sold low for cash. ..Tho WI
d GlObi sowing machines for sale. and to rout.
.111872. UM. A.. J. 80,1TELDA
II
NO: 26.
'Undertaking.
eted
frt.
W. B. TERBELL
& CO
LUTZ & KOIILER
$24,2"29,847K