i . . , , . - . • . . , . . , --- --------------.-----r- 7 —. - - VOL. XIX - . ' ' • 1 (1,44, AVitilittkr. , , 11/11J.,/LED NVEllr WEDNIEBDAT DS ~ . VAN 1.41. , :141)ER & BARNES, . V 0. VAN GI:I.MM. I A. P. VANNES. ~.9- . Ti.irThi :-t2,00 per annum In advanco. --tAi -- . - - ---------------7-- fl, ,t.TES 01? Al/VERTISINI4 : lose L 11n 2 in. 3 in. 4 in. 71n. 12 in 26 in. _ 1 i ‘ "„k llOO .V.l CO $3 00 !Apo sil ou $9OO $l4OO 2 IV,. lis 150 300 4 (1(1 5;00 't 00 11 00 15 00 i w, ;Is, 2 110 300 5 CIO 0' 00 80013 00 18 00 I 3101011 350 '4 00 GOO 7 00 1 9 (10'15' 00 211 00 , (,,ittlis 400 t*, (10 00010001200 20 00 28 lid 1 ; Ib ,,, ths C. oti 8 (1000 l2 13 00 15 00 25 00 35 00 , 0 ,ii i ., fi 1143 12 00 13 on 20 00 '22 00 33 Oil CO 00 ; I , a I L! 00 18 (10,23 Oli 28 00 35 00 00,00 100 00 . - A I . tli- , , wculs'aro e alcntatea by. the : I nch 10 looBtl.l ...roan, ; l ',11.„ ‘ : less apace fa rated as wfullluel iny L,I. ~ I . ~ ,Li a•IN `I:4 lA. 11111 A S moat be pal for befeee. In , tom, .....ept , II yiLit ly contracts, oh , ri hall-yLarly ~-,111:go a.l ~* : in...' will be require_d: ; ,orris 11.. ti c, the I , 3littotal co titans, on ,ha ~41 lo,i ! 4is, 15 eenla per huo each insertion. Moth ,,, ~ tie erted for term thhhaan SI. - .. - 1, ~ .‘ L NOfICER IU .0•All COIIIIIIU, 10 CPU'S per tins Ix . c than five lines l ; and' SO ceuts for a notice of five ;,„ .... 1; is. \ • . ..; "kk 1...1aLit,, (.1 b rifsaarAEs and DEATIIBILI3erti:(I 1.1,1 , al obituary nottcesll be charged 10 cents 1 , 1• t, 1 .4.,TICI : fi :Al P. ecr.t ai)ore regularra4o. - C • nr. q 5 lines or less, $3,00 per year': • • Bzcsziless Cairds.' ...... , . .1 , lIELDLit• _ . F..f...4011N1:0N., .... so l, Batchelder ei Sohnn, l, N:. . 2 , 1 , ..„ is ~i '2llOl meets, Tombstoni s, Table: ~inhere, &c. Call and see. Shop, Vi'aln st , ~I, 1 oeioli y , NV' ,11s1w)f o, 'Pa -July 3, 1012. _ . 1•:. S. Bailey i 1,,& So , ... t „,r a, T. PI;ODUCE POM MISSION I,II 7 IIO)EfANT.4I! 1' .. L I'all l. l a specially. Cur hotel and family ~ .1. i..1,1ca us to obtain the highest market plan( a I. f , , .o,o.llladford Palma. No. 30 South ll'ittcr • , I t 0 1a,1,11.111a.-Apill 10,1812-3111.'r A. Redfield, , , _,, ,' , •,- AND COLINEI.LOiI ATI.A.W.-Colleet - , : , ~,sly att., tiled to Ctltt e over the Pcstralice, .; .; . 13' Meti teL Esti -‘l4.llshoio, Pa , Apr I, • C. H. Seymour, A i ~ ~ , ....11... , ,w, 1 nya Pa. .All bus.ineAs en ; ,t t • Lo, • a,.: i, ill I cony.. prompt. attention.- ;., , i :.• Geo. V. Merrielc, A. 1. •- •,,v : t LIW -Mike in Bowen & Coua'a , .‘,.. - 1,,,11 Mom Acttal?r 0111ce, ,2,1 doer, ..I.;i . o . re. - lan. 1. 1572 , iS 1 ° 1(4'1101 & Cameron, al 1 , 0z . ..1 'i 'A .V 1 LAN\ . Allion and InsutunAo Agents. ~ ~ ,,, i„,.. , LI.. 1., omer Van Ordet's licittor stole, '.'.. t's'.... , I.; - .1 1,11 I, 11.17 . 1. , __. %% illiam A. Stone, ,• , :5 . .!1" A 1 LAW, rivet C. 11. Relley:a Day Good , ~.1.1 ... KM, y's Noel: on Maiurntreol. o. I 1 1...., .1 ,i, 1, L'.', - .! _ 1, . . 1 0', iail Elllel'Y & C. D. - .l , mery, ~., : ',l 1., ~ i 1..,W.--tiflice opposite Court House, I i 111.1) s Mock, Wiiliamspoit, Pa. All LUValler39 1: , I1.14I) aln.nded to.- Jan. 1, 1871- . .1. C. Strang, . . • - 1 .. 1. I", I.V -11' LAW A. 13131111 CT ATTORNEY.- i , , 'lli I 0 tWi. a, Esq., Welloboro, 1-a -Jou 1, '72, J. B. Niles, iii Sli:ii 1 ; r LAW -Will A11..131 11:011101) to hut 5,......, ,......, otiiisted to his tale lie CLIO COULtIVii 01 TlOgi% I I ~I 1. 'inlet: tal the AV,UIIO.-Wellsboro, Pa , J lio. W. A.4lams, I A. 1 1 H.', I i . Si ' 1.. \W, MtillAill Id, r 11.6 . : - .L county, Pt. .;, 1, ..,5 I.r.a„ply ids, 0.1.,11 to -Jan. 1, 1:21'2. _ . , • C, L. Peck.. I A: , ~..,.., ..k.„, L 1.5 t MI ance.a prou.loo3 cu11..,1c./1. .• .. 1;, k .11111.1,11 Lilt Llit,is. :.el, - / - 11, 'I '11:11 I'll , Fl/ Jim. \N r . t.,,;nernsey, ' - .1 1...11 . 11,X A'l' 1,5 W -311 busimms (tut, iisbAl to liiUl ;II 1.. i. I.l.oopti> attciotco to.--Qillee tat aoto stitAtt , I 1., it halo V. ral Ct.; St Sic, Tioga, Tioja Ciallity, Pa. 3.0, I. P,',2 1 _ ____l_ Armstrong - & Linn, ___ , Si, AT I.iIiNE.V.3 AT 1...-AW, Ntittharnspott. Pa. i 1i..1.11A1,1120:Ke. 1 , ' 'X EL Llllll. Jen. 1, lts"; 2. Win. B. Smith, l ['ENS iu:: Al DA:NEV. 13.1itu2: Sill lt,sneal..e Agent. conio1o11i.“0.1111 Si Ih Iki 1.1111 .11/.1 1 ,- /1,11111 Sc WIII Ve ‘ IN t PICIIIPt ati,oll'.ll 'lto net nool, late. --li u...x. i al, Pa Jan 1, 1972 Vali Ge/tlCl' & Barnes, ;.,•.'. i I:l,NiEas -An 1:111:1 , ot Job Pr intine 11•41,1 WI .1 1,.. u, 11, 111.111 ii, the Is at mann, r Otlicciti Pow , t • 111 ';. l 1:11..q.., '..1.1 lil , llC. -.11,,1 I, IttT.! C 0.,. W. D. r l'erbell & , 1.11,,i I ILI.' ortly,las'r. and it :dem 01 11 - .,11 0.,1,(1, 1 , . ,;. I ami.s, Wiudow tiko.s, Pei mule, I', Palma, ' . • -t•oliwif. , , N V. Jim I, P.. 72 10. Bacon, ill. I)., III", Ti lAN AND :11.111.11E0N, Ist duet c.i.J. of I.uugli I ...1,. -- Man, arc, t Will atteud promptly to all ~. _ Ai., lisboio, Jan. 1, 18;3. . ; A. M. Ingham, M. D., fi , 'I., ..1' \'l RP,'!. Office at his reaulemll on (ho Ac-,, - ..V. 11-.1..4,, Pa., Jan. 1, 1672 ~.... Tr W. W. Welib, 111. D., ih . - Ll,l l.:: %ND fAUItiIEON -o , lllco-Opening out of 11, 1.11e , 1 ::. ( . 01,44%3 Drug Store.-Wellabolv, P.i., Jan. 1 , --- ;tiCCley, Coats & Co., 111\ .111 e, 'l' ; -a , Pa --Ilk ; ' 11. • "11111. 8 , 11 thalt4 011 Nev It% 1, 11... I,l'OlllOlY /11:1410. '1 ~,• 1 IA:, Cla,uola kN1.A1.1., rtli I, 1 . 7' • DA yin 1'05T.4,1,..1101‘i11e J. Parkhurst Co., 7 e. Z - 4.711. 1,1 - _ (31 - EJ,,, Ell lan.l, , Jr,IL ..111(11Uit,T,' JOHN PAUFMURST, L PA-nu-mg =I ale I Louse, h I , it tor. -- Tfas • • •,• • • •ntial•-.11 to a. oninit,datt• ft.(' trawl -0.I•• •,, •111 , 11.J1 In:11111cl' ---J . lll I, Ij. 1'411'44111111 JlOlll s', I II I. I t Prnpilf —l4old :ii• I 111 I I , 111 hcast. Charges rea. 1:t. T 12.011 Il \ I 1 to guests lIMII Temperanci_t Hotel. 'Y; M tor. iiv;tej purch.i.cd this house. 1., Imct w tature lig in the plot, tibial , : on tern ' ' •• • v. yr ry acrommr.tation for man I t rr a ..,;11.11.1.2.—'+‘ 11, 1 010, Fa Union Hotel. P,..p ) 1, tor. -, ,‘"01141r.r., ' :1,,t1 1.., :A..1, alikl hitl all lhe CO7.VPII - 4 .. , 1 I.• I , •t rhargcs nio.lerate —Jan I 1 . W411%1)011.0 11: MAI N. ST A; Iff F.! ANT :CUT:, 1 , t 6 1...-Jr, Wellsbpro, Pa, SOL. BUNNEL, Prop'r ,:• I • %tilt 111 .tel lately kept by B. B ~ti, uo paths to h , ':l;il tt a ft: st• ta 'ON 1 iv. , rind .loviot 11010 this rnt atts.ndauce. I,th - Lively at- =I THE OLD PENNSYLVANIA HOUSE" e:?:1 11.1. V Lone a in; tile Townsend ETa It a nine enpica by D. D. liohday, haa been LrJ-ti, •-My tt fitted and (pato( dby a At. R. O'CON N „. I .v t.t aoeounnotlato the ill friontls of. • at i , •aoonabla rah 9. EOM =I N f iri , ll I,li n Brwhiess that will Pay ig I (lay, (au hu puratie(l at your out( tly bouotable. ;:wrid for 27111003 4 ' t "0 , 11. yondro to work at 0ut , ... „, J. LATHAM & CO., Waelthic, , tora St., 150.4t011, )‘luss. It 1,72-4 w. WOOL CARDING! 1 77 A lIIL'tiOLD would inform Lis .filells 'La iii: his yarding nia,bitie to his Om, or residence, otui-baf wtet 7 : ei lionee near Brewster's. l All woek 1, f, , of carding will be done promptly and well. rh"n woul. 8. A. HILTBOLD, Prop'r. fle 12, 1872:2m ME . • ' , L , flava'go I \NUS sitting in my house, late, lone; Dreary, weary with the long day's 'work: Dead of roe, haul of me, - etupid ns a istoei— t ' Jouguoled now, now blaSplismiug like% Tiiii; 'When, in a moment, Just hillock. call, Cry. - Ilan a kaug and all a rapture, there agairtvere Wit I "Wii at, and is it iially you again?" goon. 1; .01 again, what else did you expect?" quutb she. '•Never ralud, hie away flow the old house-- Every el mobliug brit) einbt owned 10111 ,iiitituld shatue I ' cr.. ''-- t . f , '• e l . I Quit I:, to Its coTheis ale certain °Lai's° ousel L. 'jet thou-44A ery doll of the night—lay Make and mend, or zap and rend, formal (ioddbya I (hut be their guide from illeturbance at -their glee, Trll el ebb Cialles,down the estiadd In a heap I" quoth I; "Nay, but there'd a dectawy,spqmited," quoth aLe. "Ali, but If pin know how Uwe has (flagged, days, nights I All filo neighbor•talk with man Hint inald-such. men I All the friss and -trouLlo- of street-sounds, window eights: Alt tho uorry of ilaiiping door and echoing roof; and then, ' All tho fans ies Who were they had leave, dared by Parker az hallat alykomt. struck despair in ? . If you -knew but how I dwelt down hero!" quoth I; "And was I so better off up there?" quoth "Delp end get it over Etllilctqfo his wife x ; (3iaiv craw up,ll,l*,,paperlotilei)arieli people know ?) Lics if. or N. aoparted from This Day the this or that, month nod gear Ito eo,anci 50... i' the way of flat llAnCisii ? Prose,'veiqe 4 i'hy? S.C.I"C IGlty Cole he be., e, or what I 4 it to be? la/ God (1,,11 , :eaf; tog, 2,011.ini ease. Dn end I" quoth Tend with—Love le Poitlifitnouglit I" quoth MI THE GREAT SCARE AT SHIRKSHIRE. BY RALPH ICEF,LEE. , • - "fhe'cattle:men'of 13tighton have often to. wait a halt-hour for the horse cars which take them \out of Boston. They wait at what is InoWn as the " Cambridge Car Of fice." They lit ve a ruddy, bovine look, as a general thing; but you will be surest to know them by , a , yak they have of chewing their cud—a singl straw, with which they also pick their teet ,at inter/ills. Theirs is a species of Yankee\dialect cosmopolitan ;zed by travel on stokk trains, and refined by, emrplAt,stang. 'l,t;:was not 80,1 very long ago that one of theSe'fellpws caused me to miss the Cambridge car !Sy, getting me inter ested in a story he was tellmg to a friend, wi l l - ) likewise seemed ..to hen the cattle bu siness. "Ye had," said my,ittorY-teller, "at great scard tip` to fihirlEshire ilother night.; we seen a ghost!" Then the dr6e.r paused, thrust his broad-inhumed felt hat on the back of his head, shifted the stram4rom one corner of Ida mouth to the other, \gtroked his ling whiskers, and bent his tnerrf4iright eyes inquiringly-ufinn. the face- of his \com panion—just as if they-had begun a 'bar- , rain" over a half-dozen-steers: This was qff course only a bid for his friend's curiosity.. " Seen a ghost?" asked his friend. And thus the preliminary bargain being \ struck,, the drover shifted the straw back to ihe other side of his month cnco more, and continued: "Yee, sit'ee, a ghost, all in white, goite about on all fours like a night' lion, seein' who he could devour, withi a deuce of a noise. The hull of Shirkshire watt roused as one man, an' specially the women. 'The 'banal thing 'peered to take a pat ticlar spite agin eattle, for it chased cow I,ellerin' down the huU length the !age street. The cow raised its tail in the 14onlight, an' run tnore'n two mile. Wall, it kicked up at deal 01 a fuss round in them Did I ever tell yott , of tad Detteorritans it.)lll?' NV till, re:won Itattislientl ife about the meanest folks we've got up o Shirkshire. They're always got their no .es in eN elybody else's business, an' the all tiredest, pesky liars anywhere. Now - it x‘ as about their house this 'yete ghost was fast seen. Fact is, Jim Gilson and sonic other jokers got the hull thing up. Better`o two weekS ago, when the hull village was sound asleep, Jim and the boys takes the deacon's cult away from his cow, an' goes to MrS. Deacon's close line and Bits one of the Ilea cou's shirts and a pair of drawers from it. Then they drawed the shirt over the fore Iris and the drawees over the hind legit of the calf, cuttin' off its tail from sight for the time lappin' the two garments over cacti other, and tyin"cm round the call's middle with a piece of surcingle. Then they took and put the calf quiet-like, and not liurtin' of him, in the deacon's kitchen. cour:,e, the calf begin prontenadin' up l a down the kitchen, upsettin' of the milk pans and gettin contused with the grid ii ens and sich. This kinder stirred up Mrs. Deacon, and the deacon, too, and they was both powerful seal t. Mts. Deacon thought the deacon had better go down an' see what was in the kitchen. The deacon didn't They both listened awhile, an' the Maus an' gridirens rattled louder'n ever.— flie deacon., very narvous-like, said he did n't eale'late there was anything there, but it his wife felt anxious about her milk pans, ME she'd better go clown an' look niter 'em.— Then there came a ►uwbliu' an' a clatter that souihled like the :Aovo had started itp to visit 'gin; tut' g,ot lazy atf;rolled dowti the stairs !iglu.: Mr. 4. Deacon,' a tremblin' till over,said‘she ',posed the -noise Weren't in the hotise at all,-hut a shutter had got loose onto the front stoop, an' she guessed the &aeon ought to go down an' fix it. " the kind of folks these is," con tinued the drov . M . ; " that's the way they lie even to theirselves. You ought to see 'em -kin an average character. - Why, I wouldn't take a el anmon saint at the price of his hide and taller after he'd went through their daughter house! It's by siftin' their lies about one another, 3 c see, that we afterward got all the circumstances how scart they was " At this point the arrival of two cars 00 the heels of:-each oilier absoihed the atten tion of both drovers, unit they became sep arated in the crowd. - This evOt also had the eitCet of bringing my thoughts away t ant Shit [(shim just in time to see the cat I should have taken disappealing around a distant corner. There was, I am ashamed to*say, a good deal of curiosity mixed with my vexation; and I resolved now to have the rest of the story,, if I had to Wait, the .Nsholit'afternoon for it. I wtis fol— lowing the s'arnster NN ith my eye as he lounged in the thick of the hurrying passe gers, I was accosted by a gentleman in r,i ther shabby black alike, and in tot exceed ipgly• dishevelled beaver hat. 1 knew he Was a gentleman by his manner, and espe- Cially by his speech. ';' Excuse me, sir," he said, with altogether trio much beer in his voice; " excuse me, sir, I ant a rich man's son t o padf; but. could you_ letine have six cents to ride oft the East Cambridge cats? Who could resist the subtle flattery ut elate appeal? It was certainly worth the six wits, - and that just what it cost me. Rid of him, I looked about 'for my story-teller again He, having satisfied himself that the Brighton car would not be along for tt:n or fifteen minutes more, had loafed back «I the cut b stone Here be reversed the straw in his mouth, and had begun to make up tor the interruption his story had been to his chewing. He did not look about for hid companion; he seemed shrewdly sure tlwit his companion would look about for hint His apparent confidence in the. power of his absurd yarn was not-misplaced, forthe oth er cattle-man soon 'Made his way to the curb stone, and said: Wall, the deacon an' his wife was platy start, was they?" " You're right they was, an' they'd have lay there-an lied at each other all night if they dared, butoltcy didn't. Ye see, they t et a aft-cacti that their_s_Ulve would e4inie au' call on 'em anyhow, for it now made a • worse attempt than-ever. This time, t when it ' . peared to ('Range its Mind an' roll down stairs tight, it 'peered to be jived by the company of the gridireo an' the hull in te family of milk pans, big and little, carryin'. a thuiren apiece. So Mrs. Peacon got up and lit n taller candle, an' pulled' the deacon out of bed, an!:-pushed him toward ‘ .the. , head of the stairs. I.3ut they hadn't got over half way down before the deacon got a think movement <ln her, ant kept her in the van for the rest of the way to the dinin' room. There, while they both stopped for breath, an' their knees was rattlin"Monie Musk' together, they heard a yotillou of tt,t. Itioiel., M. IL O'CONNOR - -, .•. • . , , t . -.-•,- , .—•. , . , ..- • ( . . . • ' . . . . i •-' • 1 .- ~'" , . . . _ . , . , ._. •., .. - ', - - - -,'_ - ' - . . . . , . ' . . ~,,,, i.„ti , <., .--,- .. .;• i , , ,31 i t !, , , c_, .- , ~." ?If . 1 1 - , Ss•+ - " F , 4' '' • _ v. ,t ii ii",••• -9 - . : '-• '' • ' . , ~ :•' ~':. ' 7 .,7,. ./'; . j i: (Nr ...p' . -' 9l •; ; tiz: n r: . '-.._.• ...,,, . e.syc At'sql .. . ? k- ,..4. ' : '..',„ : 41 . ' A . -.' .•- . 'l'2: . .. , • ..,,...., # X:. •-•- - 44--- '.-- - ----•,__:, .• ,' ,;,.,, i • • -- ' 1 .: , ..•''...';, - : , :: l ':'''' ;,':.'.' :•._!,:-., I .I,',' .'..,.... ,_,- - ~'': : .• .. ..`.' - ..1 ,r., . , ~_ • ~ ,- ._ _I ~ :'..- - , . .i . 4fp(!zr t ~.. ... . • -..' - , ,r' . - . • . , t , -t , ..,- , ~. i ~ ~-,,,, i _ -„.: ; ~ e. . . ~ ...---, .._ ; .,- ; .,. t t,...,: ar ;,.. :: _7- 7 .--, • _: r ,..-.1 )1.il• lil 0,. , ." . , ;;_i . "' . - ' '“- ': - '' - ' --' • . - '-'-' - " `.. '' - (1 - '' — ' , -t"i4..i 1 1.1 . . ..tf , ~ .. . - ' ' - - ' '- -.:-•' • ' - I 1 c ; ; i II - 1 ' i' - , , I ' ' • . . ~„, , . , ..• /- • it% - - W t i t i,`l, ilits -1 -$1 : 1 I 1 - .1 i 5. L i THE HOUSEHOLDER, BY BODF.IIT Itnowlirso MN -" WEIALSBOR- TIOGA ?"'Co ales and chairs in the klielteW IThis; 4 ll-gutlii, is-whet fast give ";tin theoidtv - of spiritit.— \Yid!. by putihin' one another en' • battik' fast hi one another, they at last gcit. ; tp,the iteliett'ditortui? oPened it: NOw t attt calf's tees an' voica wasn't shut off-by hie under chnhett; on' he yaw_ what l'spose betook for e good °peal& for veal, an' ho_ went for it,• •ttrite in the 'general style of calves. , He qilvatitc4 tp•git optdoors,,ya,i aeq, MielDett n driipptgd Altrialkr (gaffe, hteulikan' he deacon tumbled over each other, an' they i,creeehed, an' at ' last got the street door open, hesxin' the ghost after them, with the reglar holler thump of. spirits. Mrs. Dee- Con got into the street an' raised the neigh bors; but the deacon, all-fired semi an' souk tip, fell sprawlin' in" the doorway, and the calf scrambled over him. Now the calf Paternity went toward Ids mother;" but the old cow, not recognizing her offspring in the deacon's white shirt an' drawers, why, i•lte wasn't partielerwhieh Way; she; Wetit,. jaoovitling she got as Car as possible Out of his way. So she Went straight through .the fence of the deacon's larding, among the i eaetables and grading sass, the calf holler in' an' whoopin'. 'rho old cow, having skirmished clean across the cabbages, an' breaking down Mrs. Deacon's euchmber frames, ate layin' waste her sago bed, made another lane through the garding fence, still follered by the calf, whoopin' louder than ever at the unnateral conduct of his mother. Then they "pout rushed matily,,dqtyn thesme itteet of the *illtige, in sighrof ' the hull town, especially the calf, 'eauSe it was white,. For we were all pretty well stirred up by this rme. They were found the nest morning ore than two mile from Shirkshire. The Bacon's shirt had been so near wore oft the ytlf that his mother •had,recognized him.— The drawers, Pm proud to 'say, was near hull yit, though a leetle soiled, as you may 'spose, and added to the modest 'peartmce ttf the calf when both critters was droved lucka through thewillage• next day.' • "-The deacowan' his wife," said the tiro c4,er in 4.'011C - 11194M, ',‘ wallet hurt in the least ;• but : they Was t e trifle 'S art, I 'realm. Wit" the best of the hull thing is, they haven't tirade hardly any trouble for anybody else since that night—they've been so busy lyin' ibout each other.—Appleto»s' Jorr, Mr Greeley nue!fill the - Wari ;:s Thiede4arrigi ase'e t 4Oe I ii 3 ,. r: Greeley of, Bea rigl4(4,eeeeasion, before the war Inekte out s encouraged th e tebela tyl enter ulien f i c bu, war e ' it wii ,may believe tilt! teetkuotty ot saute ,14:11Ao Most Upright anti . elems-iniedeil aMP lag them. NO 'tatener was .the first 11. pdgett alnd,hastY bjnw atruck pa tete side tit BO ifun-ti tloyy Aldejf )thtgyo,,/ mic.r4r% . 4 , I its , best' to precipott.---thoo ,4or. Greeley, tureed'upiplr.; . f incole,,to Mande, film! ; ter far, !lila% inthieiree went, , 41 , constrain Idle, to give - tit') the dOnteet thee_ eitit there. , He. Used every peron'al appeal 'he'couid urro, aturall the power,of the ;public, contitlea re he was supposed iii Ciettitutti s ktio }wale the President that that Was the only .bou 'se that was left hint.: Nati less fiaddie nor less pusillatlinious was the appeal 'he addresded to Mr. .Lincoln when he ' , weed his first pWie• hunatiou for three huntilVd 111(1u:emit volete• leers. That act he theliglit tinvilse and )Oi fortunate; but ate it Wiei l'iiilllitifitil end e.AI not be receded from, his advice to thi•ta :s -ident was to make, tt!.. lite Nell' lit tint k,.. only a single effort At ith that utiny, mid if- ' that effort was unsoecesitul, then to give IP the contest and make the best terms he col Id Ivith the South. ) '.. ) • , ~ t ' li: Mr. Lincoln:did not; We hardly need sayi' ' evert entertain such counsel- It Y. thi s , e hhi.i i , whatever may have been'ita mofivo,a Cias counsel for which mite hut reltela could be grateful. But private effort with the Presi dent having thus failed, Mr. Greeley' therei• after made his appeals to the public over the ' signature of his own inithihi hi 'S otin- pa. per..!-' He urged a settlement 'at :ciiik,:cost i lot ' honor, with 'untie zeal ell' , CotOrinl6•JeW ti.,i and' in' intimate, I 'ahremt. 'ft - Merritt', ,nlittiOrs 'With thatiretiiiirktibleAiatriet;. hetbile.'ect th Tolie at tfilhfiredinillitintlilptlidlit War lit he paid4o , thes shtielioider•PitS,:thelPriCe ISf ' theiradaVes; aritVits;:ert iMlueknii4Vteifii(le to give,Up thd War; 'find,' fliiling9telliaig•ef -1616, as be - Ilichtlint'riiliclis i , tiviettcl; Uri ;ti pOitee or destrey-confideepeinlir. LineOln's - ' AdMi»iitration, 'he : ehrivaVbredto itivelk,ie" the'Presidatlinto •':l conference. W , ltlilitieh ' creatures - es•George'S.anders and 'others. pie tending to4ePresentlhe rebels' - iii. liiiteil 4 it',i ' by which theyloPed to gain tinier idaf etn berrassile'Government. It did nfit-increaSe Nr..-Greeley!s complacency, which athOse times was ste•often and f.)) rudely'sliitken; nit check the deep hostility 'which he felt t ward Mr. q -Lincoln, thet these fannies - ( 1 ON NEPtiIiI.ICAN AtCEN N DECY-ON nommi f its at peaceduaking_only covered air- ' iTO 'BENEFIT nastoceacy-On MB OWN 11'1°r-with ridicule. Then '.at ancither Biller It.PITAPII-ON THE ENEMA LAW , ---ON GEN. /1 wati'actively interested hi the . elder Blair's I (WANT'S ADMINIWIRATION• a tempt to-patch up a ' peace on the Poto , Speaking of the Carl Schurz and Gratz- natter anal-at another Rut hiniself ire COO'Ca• Brown organization in Missouri in Septem- pbndende with the French Minister_ fie the • tier, 1870, Greeley characterized it as "li ; pity of' Washington, who hoped' to' Maned donspireey to destroy the Republican party." hp Mester, the Emperor N'epideon',-tieliirer,-' In February, 1871, Mr. Greeley said: cede 4 betWeini ;thd- 'United • State 'lda 1 liti' "We like Gen. Grant; but we care far Confedertidie 'Mich° bring ebOnt The •ree ig , more tor Republican ascendency than for nitien of the lattet, ostemiddyisne• the- p ea. airy man's personal fortunes. It is in our of loutianitY, but withodt regard to'the,f ite %Jew of great importance that the opposi- of four Millions 'of negrees,- wh'We spe ial ton shall be kept out of: power." :. ___-*,- * champion Me: G r eel e y i s now e i„ka . I „ h, via .In the Tiitioie of November. 80; 1870, been. ! • • 1i Mr. (1 reeky -said : : Through the whole of tb&War,"iit altert, i " The Missota bolt 1\ as arrangd last from the firing'Pon Sumter to the captur e Wilder ill Washington awl then proclaimed of Richmond, tle eilbrts and the iathielice t. .iit the free-trade organs. The game was to of Mr. Greeley were exercised virtually on ;0 a minority of tbe Republicans to unite behalf of the rebels, inasmuch af- they v.••re with till the Denioetats and revolutionize c,onstant and unwearied to Wirer the na to tle• State. Tc) this end ;M issue on enfran- ah end, no matter at what cost of home (a Chisemeet eas indispensable. The Demo- ib territory. This he was ready to do at \ c,tats \veto not all tree tradera, but they all any moment at the Instigation of the Nor -Iranted the rebels enfranchised, and would them friends of the rebels, - e bile he never lea)! any ticket to scenic that end. The Re- Went near Mr. Lincoln' to give him one w elf itailierins were divided OH eilfranclllBo.llent; of colla(111, or cheer, Reeder to ,1,1: tein.l int some ltelievieg that the time for it had come, before the people, or to hold - up the 21" ti., m yotherk that it had not. When therefore hunds Of the man on *llflbe 'ffilline64 Ind Curl Seburz, in a bully hag, it Mating speech, judgment depended such t eeirleildtniS 1104464 iiit-klCiPk that.' the, Republican ►Convention And, finally, when the-war was ovue, •when should make enfranchisteuent a plank of its differ - noes of •opinlon milting mine:keg -rit. 'Me twin. 'the answer was obvious: lewd, should have been forgotten aml for. • '• 'you ;elk us to asset t a falsolibod, name- given, in view of the magmficentresults'of ly: that wertf all in:favor of enfranchise- It Union preserved and' elevery- abolished ; mem, when scion) ef 'us ate not.' The B e _ th e vindictiveness of Mr. Greeley white It lawn; ateeadoetal a platform which left ev- President svihoJeul scorned his advice t tat et "tie five to vote for or agariesta..adran- he might save - his Country; was still el in.- clii•-cutout, as lice judged best: Hereupon ished as a vireue. In. the - .American Gen , the la edetel inined`bolt was made. We warn 'fliet'4 , -ea book which some of :our mai 'era , OW liciaddieans thabthe pretest was a sham; nifty 'rchnm ine Greek) : eber as written by •-)-- - t that (Ada atiehisement wear certain to be car- though consisting of two large veltuueiqmit I lied anyhow; that tbe\real object of the bolt meant to be an exhaustive Manny of the ea, to hared the State <h-er ti,ahlllll DCIDOC• war, the name of Abraham Linetila n hilt recy and free trade. Am that is the naked appears except &sit was absolutely mete se am h." _ - ry in its official relations. If. the Atrdete of._ • A late lqew York &pet: Puhlishes Abe fel- htsfory a hundreffsearamefiLie 'Sienna re s ort toeing suggestive paragraphk: to that work-if such a case is possib e " August Belmont, HomeekGreeley, Jas for information in regard to.the war, he i Thavvr and Benjamin Wood breakfasted would never ,gatar from it that the Piesi. together at the New York lintel yesterday dent had'anything . to do with its .'SNeetSkftll Incitnilig at 10 .. 6 °.. this TimimanY sold out termination; that the people then and 1 DS -Ito Giceley, or lots Greeley sold out,ta Tam- terity forever owed it to hint more, that to tremyl , %Vbieli?" Rid \ The old adage) '''Time makes atlange her face in sorrow, and Civilization:had not! tied fellows," receives a full verification in turned her footsteps backward in the r -es , thi:„ `'Was there ever in the history of \ po- teblishment; of perSonid sei‘itude tied the 'ideal parties so utter an abandonment of triumph of politicul despothen. all elfirrts at sell-preservation! HOIACCGIVO•_ ' 'Perhaps it is too much to expect' of • . Icy, the sYstelmdie reviler °I . Delnoerats'ulid. Greeley's advocates that they: shall be trl their principles; fur years the exponent of ful;•but at least we advise them net tom every _idea and doctrine formed in opposition 'themselves any more ridiculous than in to - Ahem mid their teachings, fraternizing' :nature of the case is absolutely neceas with the head-centers of Tammany, is a _.4ly. y, Bandea p a d, spectucle over vt hick the political student may well pause and comment. It is not lone since these men to whom he now cud dles, and for whose support he is sacrificing all the bright past of his life, were Chat-ite mized by hint in the following style: 1 '• Peint, whenever you please, to an elec don district' which you will pronounce mor ally rotten-, : given up in great, part to de bauchery and vice-and that clistriet, will ho found at mealy or every election to give a ltii'ue majority for that which styles itself • , . - the Democraticparty:" *,, # . ' "Take all the haunts of debauchery in the land; and you will iind nine-tenths of their master spirits active participants of that same Democracy." s' x• . : s '.' " May it be written on my grave_ that I never was its follower, and lived and died in nothing its debtor."' . -.. With such a record, what Meet'be the vi tality and how atrone tidily of the political the desire to heat Grant must be, when it is tilde to close its eyes and swallow so vile a dose! GREELEYISIVIS ' Upon the Kuklux law, for the passage of which the Tribune did such good service on ly one year ago, thelotal disregard of con sistency, common decency, is quite iy surprising. A lew days since the Tribune denounced the Kuklux law as a ** sword put in the Pt esidenel hand to gain a re-elec tion, an iniquitous attempt-to gag and fet ter a people just beginning to recover its freedom of speech and action—a bill for keeping the South ttider military rule for ficaitical purposes.' What has altered this,law in less than a year to so change its complexion? Here is what MI Greeley said of it then: '- I hold our Government bound by its du ty of protecting our citizens in their funda mental tights, io pass and enforce laws for the extirpation of the execrable Kuklux conspiiticy; ;mil if it has not the power to do it, then I say our Government is no Gov ernment, but a sham. I therefore oh every proper occasion litiVoeated and justified the Enklux act. 1 hold it especially desirable flit the South; and if it does not prove :,;tong enough to effect its purpose, 1 hope it will he made slionp...er anttstrouger," , -Greeley's convursion tile one-term ser vice is also of very recent date. On the sth JanUdry, 19T1, where mating some re titatks on taking - his seat as . chairinan of a Republican Convention, Mr (4reelcy said:; to the Administration of Gen. Grant, I tecognive no one 118 11 Republican who is not grateful for its judicious, energetic and suetessful cubits to procure the ratification of the fifteenth atuendment, - that keystone of, Our political iirch, whereby.the fruits of our great triumph Over rebellion and slavery Inc assured and perpetuated. While assert 7 in,r_ the right of every Republican:4olW un trammeled choice of a candidate for next I„%residen LIAM ika nomination is Made, yeti. tine to suggest that thin. Grant Will bd far better qualified• for that momentous trust in 1-:?7".', than , he was in 1868.". 'I he people will, he curious to know by what process of masoning Mr. Greeley has unit ea at his present frame of mind, when denouncing as cot rupt, inefficient, tending to centfatization, tyranny and usurpation the same man of .wltari the InACqUotation was spol,tql less than two years ago. II Colonel Keitt, of South Carolina, the man wilt) gave orders that the gallant Col. Shaw, of the trith Massachusetts colored regiment, Aiouikl he•• buried with his niggers" in the ditch of Fort Wagner,,is out with a card in flvor of Horace Greeley. The - -Tribune quotes him with applause. Yet this sums Greeley was once a friend of the colored race, and was once popularly supposed to be an advocate of liberty and equal 481101 MBE Sumner in Massachusetts The\following from the Salem (loccilf: is evidence that Charles - Sumner is fast Iciing the confidence of his own State as a' pylitt cul leaderY. He has long been a sort of su perstition to the Commonwealth, and some such shock as his last great speech gave to all fair-minded men was needed to dispel the illusion of his greatness: " It wouild he' greatly to the credit at 14as -4)z- —_. sachnsettAiif our''setar Senator could show ope-quarter part as good a record as Presi dent 'Grant in this one particular of know ing how to treat other men., The Milted States Senate for yearkcannot show a More cbnspicuous instance than is to be fiaMd in Charles Sumner cif &mince/ ing iii rogiMee, Mordinate selfebnceit, titid ii contenipttams Waiting toward his colleagaes tits 'Millie , life tic-Conies - Me.ra-: and li. that alipercilions'self-sufficienv width be hind an ititercon - rse - of impemial cout,esy, really viewamen froth the heitit as inferiors in mental capacity and political, tahn.s.— Many good Senators have felt this More kZenly and disagTeeably than they 6iuld possibly have fat a downright which sometimes, like a thunder storm, clears-the air and leaves it Purer than before —and it was this one characteristic which, more than any other, was at the butt.:in of the coldness - between our' Senator awl the late Mr. Fessenden—a man who was Sum ner's equal in every moral attribute, and his superior as a logical debater. ' "Mr. Sumner naturally loves to have oth ers defer to him; arnl his native desire has grown to the magniSide of ft demand which he virtually asserts as a right which belongs to twenty years of official service as a Sena tor. If a President will bow to his iniperi ouS will, he Intiy accept horses'and carriages without' fear of Public reprOach' titan hiip, as Lincoln did. -But if he retuses, as did Johnson had Grant, then look out for a storm from the -• great' Scautoiiia ' quarrel er.' Mr. Sunnier has now publicly quarrel ed with two Presidents elected by his own patty. His first (lost the country much; and,when passiona have passed away with the generation of men who took up this quarrel in his behalf, history mill estimate our Senator in the Johnson impeachment blunder at his true value. MS present quer: rel finds no response or favor except iu the opposition ranks; and even i hei C!, C are happy to say, there is too much honor for it to be universally accepted or indorsed. lle has, aided by personal vanity, so fur nursed his grievance at not being elected chairman of the Foreign Relations Committee, that he no doubt really believes that to this Or cumstanee is due a condition - of things which 'lentils desetibesr,.` In every direction is muddle—muddle with- Spain, muddle with Cuba,' muddle with Blapk Republic, Muddle with distant .Corea, muddto with Venezuela, muddle with -Russia, - muddle with England--=on all sides; one 'diversified muddle,' Solar as England is• concerned, the whole muddle grows out of that indirect damage claim- of which .Mr. Sumner was himself the author and advocitie With what force or consiliteney theretmu he can bring this up the public may well deter mine." Now for BaltiMorel 7' If our readei4 isli to know bur-most speret ; ,,4idgnient upori the likelihood of the future, we will say confi dentially that, froni.all the signs aunt tokens, we are persuaded that the Baltimore Cue vention will either nominate Mr. Greeley— or it will not; And; if 4 it does pot it ,Ailt nominate somebOdy else. And 1+ tit•tityr ii nominate Somebody Else or Mr. Cleeley, General Grant will be our next Pre:stilt-lit Cliriottaii ZFnioall - -tri_NESDAY JULY 3 ; .18 W Mil , • ! ThoDinimerata were at least inf. In I hail 0111-1111101 Plineilaili in tannin!ltille Chill liq . R. Eueltalew to Governor at their Stai , Convention. -Mr. Buclodew Plait . ,-4.$ two leafing chatueteristice of a first clam Dem- Octet:. be is a iffetinfe "onlee-boldet, tied Inn beetta downed follower of the prinuit ile.a of -I,(i)iii (;noun,-'llbAtita been in- Mice, with Me it interhihstiods; 'for a. it. ilk I tel of , it'eentory' s And tray: properlybe said, we think, to. be . a professional (ace hold..r --- ,Ife . started , olit 1 us a', hair-splitting; :if ate rigida Democrat ; :with john'o.•Calliotti, es t guide,. pltiloilophii, and friend," and •I.tgt eallv foil iwed those convictions, not w iiii standing , their• inevitable' tendency was. t. make this Union a rope of 'Mind, and toles ter_rebellion :and war. He Wilg with .: th, slavellohlers , from the beginning of his po lithvtillife, , nett, for anything that has-been ensue public:NAL his mpathies are ivith them , et. : When the Icnnsas isetrages were being perpetrated, and slavery, was being Unlawfully and brutally forced on that free i-Territory,....3lrJl3uckelew was ' in the' State' Senate, and we happened to listen to' a , de bate that took'place in that body on the sub ject. • Mr. Buckalew took the lead In the Aisetission: on the'Donioeratic side, . and he !shstnined and , justiffed those outrages with all the ability , and ,, sophistrythat he could ebminand's Ile' •was replied to by John 0. lunkel, , :and ; with , magnifieent eloquence KunkeLeiptised the anti-republican'and in 4iuman positions Of Buckalew. • `These outrages were really the beginning of -the awer ett the eebellion,- and_ as 'Backe iloizettstained thent,flio never went back •oli 1 eliiilogidal - tre:sulti tthrough , i Our snational ' on.bles. laiewas In public lifii through tliw t 1 lo ' ar,utkvi,'Ctini-leall:to , mind"jno - .word be' i tered,enot act , ho'did,-on' the aid - a:Of rt he 1 Pellledi.Uniors, ,---Ituiatel, !Via dremeniber , that in his district, where his influence has long been recognized ate Very great, what is ;balled the: t o talling 1 Crvekt t -Rebellion took ; p ace„end nice among life constituents were t°Wel' the . 3 few , In' ' the' 'Worth" Who - made 41 flied:resistance to the Union authorities. 1 , 'Wilier the spirits that incited these men to e -operation with. Southern. rebels -was the ti quit of Mr..Buckelew's. political teaching, et whether it grew out of their innate de , privity, we do not know; but we certainly never heard that Mr. Buckalew uttered a Word in - their condemnation. Ruckalow's friends have been trying td give • him, a reputation for exceptional lihnesty and fairness; but his conduct in the Lyndall-Declaert and the M'Clure-Gray con tested election cases proves him to be amen caenbluol.•resorting to the most monstrous upfaiross to serve his party- and to accom plish tLpelitical ,end. In those two, eases, AN I IIIO weressintilar in every respect, except that the Republicans were to gain .by con bisting the former ease, and the Democrats Oere mtgaiii, by contesting the latter, the positions-he took and the policy he sustain. .e 4 were directly opposite—in the former case refusing an investigation, in the latter case forcing one, and conducting it in a man nitr that appeared to'shoW that he was de. itirmilied ye make it terniinato in,a way that should give his party the'soutrol of the Sea - A,nd so hue air. Bildittlow u pow. tii.an , al his long oilice-hulding career. And ae to his utility, he is much overrate,l by his supporters In the United :Mates oenate - host.preely held a third-rate position. aint I,ilnyi4g , the abk: men of that body he Mot tannpletely dwat fed. Among township and . ..tututiv. politiciarts he had won 30/11i; I . yl' hut whet), brought in with the able minds of the ifiiit , .ll, na'almost entirely lhst sight of. Mr. lithe,halew is (Amply a Democratic poi iticians• with all the old Democratic prept .dit•eg, and with a still absorbing love for the billacies of the Calhoun school of State riots advocalcs— : a school that. prelim ed the way, "14 thia' ad vetacy Of their tlllna -14/ial principteA, tot the re..bellion and all its 4eutaphinyink evils. There is a shadow of ntaiiing in hint that can invite a Republican ghee tint suppoi t anti . . fudge. of the Sum? Sine eourt. iThu nomination of t lysses Mcrcur for Jildgri of The Supreme Court by the Iteputi 0011n State'• Convention of Pennsylvania, from beinst_pride_w_e_talse in having honor,bestoW4nron a citizen of air ori-n -county, seemed to us a very fitting and wor thy choice. Jiulge Merriur is one of those Who, c,oming out front private into public life tram a sphere of local action into tho 140 ad arena tit national political life, has not depended' on the force 01 circumstances entry him on to success His reputation for integiity and ability, which is national, husinot been attained by mean adirantage, hr by the lOW expedient ton often ad Opted tO further selfishness. His progreim has'been of a gradual but steady and permanent char acter, marked in alibis acts by stern Integ rity and real intellectual mid moral worth., It -was his ready comprehension of tho - national questions of the (lay that sent him to the first liepnblicatiNational Convention. It was his pre:eminent 'legal abilities that earned for him the nomination and election of Judge of this district when the bench bc came vacant by the election of Wilmot to the U. S. Senate. -Next to Grow, he was emphatically the man of the party for Con gress, and when the Congressional district was reformed so as to exclude Susquehanna county, it required no study to determine who was the strongest man for the patty of this district to put forward. In Congress, for term after term, he has Justified and strengthened the confidence his constituents reposed in him He has, by patient labor, by unobtrusive activity, and dowmight merit and ability, earned an oll• OHM ; uud it any one 1111111 0101, on leaving:lt the halls ut L'ongretis, lir& back to a fare, 1 , 11;!liti uubhlshiug rectos, that ' man n--L s-e., SlErctio 1111 . 4 i n . Id he contnithed the w,l 4 liul,ui tant. I I Mil,7 ; tt ildi lief legisla tive c i judn iitl Clio whole people of this Slate have il:ll')giiin d uu,l nppinu.led Min in Congie..s tor rho time, :30 %%ill they How delight to mid.e hint one tit out highesr . pdges Udell,, pi. h. lakt the try. Hartley, Bedford, the Demo cratic candidate for Auditor tiretieritt, we have been well acquainted' with all our life. We repeat we know him well, and must say that had the Democratic patty raked, the State of PennsyNania all over with a fine tooth comb, they would not have found a meaner man. • He was wasp rebel" of the worst descriptitm ,during the war, rejoiced over every rebel Success, and disparaged and be littled every' Union victory. He was the chief' fomenter of a strife In the',Afethedist Church in' that place, and finally succeeded 'in lending a' pet - lion of its members Away from that honored branch of Christians, for no other reason than that the church was loyal to the Union 'cause, and its ministers and memberaprayed for the success of the Union armies anti the heads of the Oovern l ; ment. Although his father left him a for tune, and he has improved it in business and , speculation in oil welts until he is reputed 'to he worth several hundred thousand dol lars, yet we venture the assertion, and defy successful` contradiction, that he never els tered into a contract with a mechanic for a job of work,, that fie did not dispute the con tract and refuse to pay the bill, unless the Workman Wont& take less money than he agreed to pay hiM: He cannot keep a hired hand or a tenant any length of time, on ac count of his tneauness, and because he tries to cheat them out of their wages. If the Democratic party nominated him because of his ealth; expecting him to give of his' funds to carry on - the, campaign, they will be mistaken, for wealthy as - he IS he wet.- 'ships•Meney as much 'us any goOd christian apea,his God, and a nickel penny appears as .big in his eyes as a cart wheel. In Bedford county he is property appreciated by the la boring men, who will remeMberius mean ness wherr,they come' to the election. , We havid against him Gen. -Harrison Allen- r a brave soldier. Patriotic and' honest PeOPle slaiuld not deliberate lung between them.— Hullidayibury Register._ The Augusta (Us.) Constitutionalist comes out strongly in favor , of the nomination of Mr. Greeley aflialtlmbre i upon' the princi ple that half, nloaf is better than no bread. 4," it says,' " we, were till select for tho `head of our columns the name that would come nearest being the exponent of our principles; we would place there Jefferson Oity is. ' Thi. being unadVisable, and under the circumstances impossible, it hoists the 'IIIAIICS Litkrallt e finblitan candidates the uext,best , Clitirla U. Iluetut;ow..., Hut tley LIMAN [ TABLIIB. WellBbiro it t. lwreneevi Ile *IL - IL Lila No. ;4. ' 'L' 4I 1:104::t .600440,71101 PAL.,, loco. ..T' 3rf, 41 i0Z.Vt 14QA_$.11 EZZEIIIII tt.M. (.111. 0.12. DEp . 7 115 785 tOO 119 , • .845 18 tiulup il 4,1' 828 4.) :40 tpis t4AA '44, I 'V 1)3 4 $3 IIL Voli D - 11 31 i - .e,21 " 111 1.1 4 Iri 651• 4-6' / 11 ha 4 1,1, It 'Si '16,1 11 11 4.61 6 l't tiat 11 6-1 .s 31 6 isl 111111 336,633 /101. 6 4 3 4-1 6 2..2 311 ,;I's I 611, N,) a 6 61 ,`llO 1:1 • 3 . .Itl W,:l cop BJ-) 866 693 0464/. • 840 JBl 641 o Y.llags 8 4-J 0016 00 irnmul 403 0.18 i Itt Oritelc, 614 It 37 7./7 laoy 816 0 :Pi 732 lotim y- OB3 /80 7'49 30 3 - 4110 y • 984. 11 4Y '"/ Ell 1111i11:11:: It 30 1.141 803 Arr. ' 6 4.1 10 0,1 ri IS 11. lit fON, 3181/3.. Tloga R. It. ble No. 32. ~ t iday JULIO 3.t. 1872. 1114)ssborg h Co Tinto Ti 111021 No. 1 .. 1111 1 " 9.... . 7, 45 1 Dg.P.L&T,I;J/C.l 11.C1:41 .... . . 45 p, R. IL tit L. a 3 ........10:Wp. in. 1. , Atnitvc AT I. optii - Sch. - .. 1 N.. -2, -.- •• • ... - .fir3sl). in, .. t . 8 20 u in, hVON, fi , liet, h ki ti It, Z. s • ty.12q,!21C., fiav:t Tic t'll. 4. , italiro4o. Calawiss pepot f Ful 'Straet, WiU►uweport t ?a. • 3f:ail: 6p. WifiainepoiEt. ;14colTapitatlou, W ai arriya at Willian'iz; ccinitnodation arri{,O. .••• • • 'OOO a. tn. , 1 itirt/PPO:Vi • • • -• PtAa• t, 8,10 lb tit. t Vltiliatoaport: . 9'15 VtA 1144 int ildftttc tgr a • 01:14: - • ft., C: Mrilli4tualial tAvfintrittbs 4nYactditionttl train . '1 t i nt i on L ria l kree direct connection is ILI , foi• the west. Isln'Clinnila cers bet aipt Wtitlarnepin t. ee.ll' PLitidulphlit; NeAv York OW. WEDB, Sorp'l. Erie RitiWhy. TIME TABLE AD PIED Jt:;,; 3D, 1872 Slaw and improved 1 Coaches, combining all min through on all train ter, lluffalo,,Nlagara Val 1110 and cincinuati. rawlug Room and Ste Lining modera linprovAnnents. are between Now Yolk, Roches s, Sitspeust,lii Bridge, Cleve- DE IZEMI No. 1. - No. 6. No. 7.1 No. 3.* 900 am 1100 am 630 pro 700 pm 4 31pm 916 pm 262 am 325 aM 024 " 11 40 " 605 .I 5 5 " 701 •• 1266am 542 •' ) 01 " 12 38 " 2 05 0 ' I :billy' , 32 I " I 7 STATIONS.: N. York, Lye SlneSit, " Corning PCAToge, " Itoohost'r, Art Hont'vllo; 11 00 616 Su 1150 p, 12 45a , 148 •t Dunkirk, AiwzTIOSAL La L TRAIL/lel ViiiihTWMlLl. 11, from Owego for 'EfOruella R a.7u , oxoopt Sunda! villa and Wiiy. 1 5 15 a. tu., except Sa 11^rnellovillo and Way. .dayii. from ji uoqu oh anu a for n 00 a. tn.. daily frau and, Way. utiqueliamiii for llornollovill ndisyai from Elmira for Avrm Mays,l from !iimilmmt l on for ' 116 pp m., nioupt 8 to Butt/lu and Way. - `..!30 p`. in.. ux.•upt St lloruellodnu and Way. !=rl No. 12 1 10 p 1 .15 2 30 C 0.3 n 31.,pi 21 t• 1411 STATIO:ll plugg Fails," s •• I ilok 11 . 1141 a, •• Go Lang, •• Elsou.n, 13hip'frittt, N A York. •• A MA 70)a L, TkAIN3 RAWL-WAHL r) (141 d. ui ., 0 Negt) etild W =I .6 CZ a. nn., 1.,u7 icon and Way. 7 00 at in., axdapt Bianalmmtun and Way. 7(Aa. m , xerpt an , Liuua awl Way 1 D't p. nz., t,xuapt an.i. Way. 1 55 p. m., al. apt S Stisquallanna and Way :*Daily. 11lowlays Jorvia. udays, flom Ilurnellsvillefor lays, front Cntego for flusque l'atiitod Yost for U(lityl4, fralll iforu .: Ilav1110 for SasT.t.h.lizaa ttud Port Through 'EcK.ts to est Itat:.•s, far salc h, log Perot II points W 634 thd Low o 12011.1IlatIy . ti iiihco at tila (lona Tuts is the only an wev Company for the a l tug. ceized Agency of the Brie le et We,eteru This - els in corn Baggage will ha attet;' at the COI - Wan odic I *erin n tup . , ed ouly .31.1 Vettis pimhased Northern, 1 'entral Railway. t at Troy,' since June Rh, 18:2 toll Owe : ' Tralas arrive aUtidepa' liOIITITWAItD. Niagara Express, 4 (•7 ' .... . 4 15 CLual44.,a4( Exp. 44 40 I • ' FOUTHAVAIID. I pill Balto. Expnms, 313 p m mPhilacla Exprtaa, 9 15 p in I ,m Merl - 6G2fam I A. RI IISAE, Ounl Supt. Cy I% WHOLES p Foreign - and • • WIN Domestic Liottors &Q., &Q. One Old W COIL Agent for Ml= E WILL be round on season at the Mi Jackson, April 1,181 nd at all times the present : Of 0. MAMMON, . tf. noar 3acklion Centre. Houghto rr & Co., „ FOILIC, PA. rill Man tfacturara of i ggies, Sulkies, PLITFOII3I PRING, 'TIIIJOK AND MIMIC WAGONS, MEE SLEIGHS ND 808 SLEDS We ere prepared to uotieu aud hi the Mee teed. '0 anything in our line on abort manner. Batik&lotion guarau • HOUGHTON, ORR 4: CO. 18, Agents Weßebore. ,872. „ • 11A8T11408 k COI. Btony Fork, Jan. 1, El itAß' nJw etej hand, at the 1 eel Twine, 11 8: 9 A. 4 ettaud. and will keep uaiatunUy uu IWest inarlent quantitate. ly euttou S j at:twine. Martial patent Step La:l4er, front 8 to 8 ft JACE. SC:IKF\C• t.:LOTti EIiALT,Y FOR ( TACKLE ESLOCES, WIRE ; MILE 000bs AN ENIERY WHEELS UMMINO 8 WB. A lull •osot Lute t of I..ke Rsr u and Itorms URI'S I3STO ROWS IN LLA. !s. VANAL WHEEL RAE. INY QUANTITY, 5i \- lIOPP. VE05,1 ONE ,NEli DOWN. - ' •tt I A, 'U-' A , )ulA,tc2. as'..4,;:tiortit 0 1 ....._.. , • ,I 1 , , . . - NO. 1 & 9, extra eing titi(csi ;; Tools, (LEPERS AND HOUSE THAVARE OONSTAN, HAND. 'BOTTOM ON AORICULTU IMPLEMENTS. uoutin HOLD HI TLY ON PHICfi, HAL' Cows In and take It Is yourself, and o Jan. I 11472. took, get the tiguren end eeo how •e , .J. EiIIhIFFELTS. Jr. CARRIAO TV, h o t? . r i lf u lts e d Eatable terms. ,11 6 .1 Wheeler of Lapi above places, or ray I work before Ile prepired 4) funiall Oirriagel. &c., on abort notice, and on _roa n. Bordun of TI Na. and H. cavala, aininta. CaII at ,(lie 'shop In WellAbord; and examine lug elsewhere. • _ I 4. J..Wgii4/411.‘ . . EM22.1 ME =MI AIIIITyK -IT DLOll4llullO. NO. 1 ..... ... 10 iio A. in 10 20 ", 10 20 " 703 tit. 7 IAI 11 206 m 1120 am 12 lOpirt I 1214 put , 12 60 " I 12 60 " No. at Ito. 2 10 (JO . . FOE 015 pml 11112 pm 7 30am 020 " I H 25 900 " 10 10 " 303ara 1100'• 5 05 ,• .. Ala" 11 38 •• 432 13 Lan 12 13am 5 13 12 47 '215" 711" '4Bg " 11 G 0" $30109 940 " lays, fi .dil Hr.+ iiell.vfile. fur i.u• )11inaittelatuiiit - V C l i l e . IBwR ,A g-t 1:12 D. Si iskies, NING. N. y Lath EE S . & WAGONS ! r El . _ , , Piano' tortes and Organs l • P .• ieows WANTING PIANOS Ott ORGANS Will and it greatly to their lutereat to buy of . ' i. 0. .7/100.3.7 de Co. ' ,'.. , . We are selling the boat linatruments at lowest prim, 'and on the most favorahlts tArm4. '.--41...fistibe.lasa PISNO-p se all the ibllowing 6080111. Allal, lift !VW I mll4 ilk te.4 ettaßAtiv t at feet equality of pima- gtiout the entai l = a resonance and duration 01l tune.l ; The tench is elasitc, , equal, easy and responsive to eyary demand of the angora. 1 , • IA deteet in any one of these Khan, will ultimo a 4:.ota• plate talluto of the inatrument. 'l' ~ -. , ; IWe warrant ovt/ry Piano for the term of live years -410-Tuning promptly attended to by dee most expo riouced Tama's. inatructinu Books of the Mosi l aPProved metlioaa AO thu piano aud ß , R Ort;dll coustautiy au maid. 1 D. DUNA, I. G. IIOYT, Elknunl,, l'a„ , - Osceola, Pa. Dec. 13, 1871.-if • VifELLSl4llft. Door, Sash & Blind Factory* , • . , 13ENJ4111.1:1 AU8T1N...14 prepared to furnish Arai elaaa Rork from Um best luimber, at kV taw fac. tore MOO is now in full operation. Sash, Doors, mumme. lmvolltSiUblp AD, MOUPINGS ' 1 cottettuatlYlALl(l )1 . ,or mimiitip.fured to ordii cl , ''tiaitt - Mitt aLloproli v ity, and in the beat Manner. The 'heat workmen employed, and none but, the beet seaspz4ed 'timber used: 'Encourage Lome lu4utry. Factory near the foot of „Matti Street. :BENJ. Jan. 1 , 1872-ti Deerfield Woolen DEGBFIg[[ D, PA I"114112 - BROTHERS. Propriaters of the tibovd uiriU manufacture as usual to order, to suit customers. OUR CASSIMERES ; are warranted._ Patti,. oular attention given to Roll Carding & Cloth Dressing We manufacture to ordor, and do all kludsi of Roll- Oardlbg end Cloth Droselni: and defy ooMpetAtion. We havo as good an assortment of • ("Zoths,sCa4iineros, ,LAid givts - morn for, Wool 4.1 orchango than any other .etaldlehment. Try them and satisfy youraelve,!a. We ld/oh:at& and r:,3tall at the C - owaneequo mina, 2 rnlleq Lely,w,Alpoxville. Jau. i, 1874 J. H. Griswold.'s' Water Wheel, 111/IE undoratanud, 4:Ill(t far the ab,-..4v0 Water I Wheel, and can clieerit .Iki rouoninisnd it as Impe ller to all others to use. I'm sous 'wishing to par• 0h.,50 should see this whod in 4 , ,per.ation before buy ing other wheals. • itrotiwa .13110 A. Deortleld, May 13, 1871. Itaad thv t,lloe hcg : WEszsmt:), Arnit, 21, 1671 Wu tt:o undersigned, purchased one ot J. fl, Grls. uuld'ii :ID turn Wutar WhoaLs using Cfltneht , a of water to ion throo i on Of HUMII3 rtudeia fv) TLot head, and are well pleased with the wheel. We havo garouud sixty bushels per hour with the three ruu and ,oari average that amount per hoar all day. New - ...4toi-e AT 'I lOGA, ux.,l au eutiru utut Stock uf BOOTS 4.X.D SHOES 1\ 1 I - . U E. SMITH & 80,,, li rang just ,Qmpleted thleir lig new Brick Si re im MAID, street, which in ono of the trLst arranged a4n sl Most in filing stone in the coun ty, ate nowofterin to their old customers mi.i the imb lie generally a nett r selected stock of 1 I 8008 AND Y SHOES, 1 , than ever before presented In the borough of Tioga.—' Ladles' ware of Burt's mace, constantly on hand. Al so, Alsson & litunlin's Organs; and a vaitety of styles to select from. All are invited to call and (Asinine pricesard quelltv•l H. E. SMITH Az BON. 'V ega Jan. A, 1672.-Iy. ''' &' LATHROP. DEALERS IN E, IRON, STEEL .NAILS, TIN-WARE, 8, CUTLERY. WATER ME, AGRIOUIZIJRAL • ThIPLEMEWfit, HARDWA STOVE SAW. Ind Harness Trimmings, Carriage EMI EfIRES. FLX1)131.03, Jan. 1. 1872.1 Corutug, N. Y., LEV RY. 'STABLE. I & KRIVITAhI RESPECYZI fully infarm the obllo that they vo entahliohed et, • I -' 0111 ery fOr Hire, At their Stablo o shop. iiingle or atilt to le. p gnu: lacanco. I.,,iced it Jun. I, 11412: Pcioi fAt. ,oppoHito Whoa Jar's ,double 3lgn furitinlied to order. IV bonier; nod kyugooil, turd intisud to 1VAT13.11:.1 'HE FARMERS OF TIOtiA COtJb Y. ~~ Ir Ali how but 1 villa. a wipe Aug ut iuy titattutuctory, to Lawteuce %lot! Fi‘NNIN4I Vibleb 110813CHEICE1 tile tolluaing tchantages over aklothar tualls 1. It sew atea rye, oats, rut litter, and foul seed, :old elicss, and cockle, Item lvla,t. 2. It deans dax seed, takes out yellow seed, and all other seeds. 1.0110(11Y. • 3. It eleans timothy seed. 4. It does all other separatlag required of a4all/.. , This mill is built of the best and most durable Um. bar, to good style, and is sold cheap lux cash, or pro. duce_ • I will at a iitteut sieve, for buktuatilis oats fx•ora wheat, to other malls, on reasonable terms. Lawrenceville, Jan. 1. 1872. J. 11. MATIIEit. New .le - weivy i4tore HE Und,384.1u.d miula 1 espeetAilly guy to the t..lt- I. t . zetis of WelVabpro Awl ; vi, init y, that ho ltasn vomit* Jelin/el'. Store iu the ltilchuo, t es - outly cAfj,l4.i I.y el. Wil.Lox. Wei btoa. CO/11rriaea u lai:ElAt of Clocks,. IP ate,hes. Jewelry, Silver .and Plated-Ware. S. I).the best workmen in North ern Pennsylvania, trill aticit.l to ch.: Repaiz'iniy' ,of" TVat heB, Clocks, ,540., 6.0. For the ekilful ilideg at s.3:cateau yr.ira practical experienr,c is sufficient filiarnte. • ; Fr Li WARRLYER _ • WaltbOro:Alla 4.M. 1%71- tt • Town s_t_'t3,ts Tor Salo. subscaiber olieiH the villaBo trout of his farm I for Rate in gnant.tie'e to suit purrhasere, and at prices to make It an ofw4.t tor fuNLyte9mit. Th o , l e nd s lie finely for lots, and a Portion of thuu cannot he excelloct for ormaitak.tereig purposes.- Thry lie intinecit.tel) on the exionston of Grain' Pearl, and Walnut street's, a ud south of Second Aventh They will be sold to lots or larger quaniittta to su the wauta of, purchase's. ' ' May 22, 1872.-flat. • Farm. for Sale. . .). , . T gHE subscriber oilers for sole his farm of 4 Acres, pleasantly situated in Catlin Hollow, tharlekton, a county, Pa.; within about folir utiles of WNW boro and two miles of , Nties Valley depot. ' Schou/ house, h •C-11XC ' l, s tills, ... —ills, shops, Mi., within a Mae. Terms easy. Inquire on the prtmlies, of - Dia 17. 2,B7tett. , • 1 ' a. (.t, CA ' N ME BROTEIVad. E. D. PHILLIPS. cHAII.LTON B. F. KELSEY OE OE Futniture Undertaking. _ Van Horn eikandlor, (Successors to It: T. as !Torsi ' ilATUonoaf:anion and sala . .at tita ofd plsco I: the I at and moat ccaortato attaik of FINE . _ AND:( b3 - NON oloUßNlTifiti? 414 fOnud is Northern Ponnayteiittla, ceOnttlottng of SINN PAMXOR AND iDIANDOEft NUTS, BOVAD, WOODS% TELIVA-Tffaff. AIARBLE AND WOPD Tca , OIINTER TABLES, HAT RACKS. FANCY olunta, Won% OVAL ANlp SQUARE BgtabLES, ET,, PURE NA 1 HAIN MATTRASS EA lIUBE & EXONLBIOII MAT TRUSSED, and a Mil stook c the common goods timidly Pound in a first-olase eatatillabreetit..:; The above gotidtkare Dirge- I,y;of their own manufacture, and satiathetioqlg guar wateed both as to quality and prim. They sell the • Woven, Wire Jiiratira4 the most pop l itlar . opting bed sold; also the' Tucker I glißed that has on trial for 17 years and giv algversal satialaetlon„ Our C911:177; Room is supplied watt; all sir. of the Excelsior Casket, a new and beautift'd style of ;trial eamitogether with other' . Idnds of foreign and home manutinsture. with trim •!a to match. They will make undertaking a 'Teo-. ty in their business, and any needing their services be attended to promptly, and at satisfactory char- , Odd please of Furniture made, and Turning .14 iambi done with Iliatieknand dispatch: Jan. 10, 187 g. - YAi BORN do CHANDLER To wisolurs "ma CION t OFSIN.—Ii concluded that [ lain entitled to a little rest after natty y 40 years close aPplioation bYbuidnerar, -I IsaWipaseeo over the furni- Niro hastiness to "the Boys" as per above advertise- Ment, and take this method of asking for them the L same liberal patronage as hes been extended to me.— JO bucks may be found at the old pia sefor settlement Jan. 10,1862. 7 ° 1 7 let :171.NilIOBN. - WHOLESALE DUG • STORE. 090RNING NI Y. TM% I‘l:Mt *WNW 0/143, 11 , 10- MUDIAIsa, W immiL E- 1397auk Z1'11%7 BillibUTTl3 0000AINNI. FLAVOFtWG EX 211A8T/3, HEROSCNE LAMPS, PATENT ILED c ar, ROCIRESITER PER.PD DIERY FLAVORING EX TRA , WALL P VirEN DOW GLASS, DASHH . Lath & DRY 00/aOiRS, AGENTS FOR BiARVIN t , & (Xl's liErrN. ED ort, • Bold at whOleaalo Palma, Buyers are requested I call and get quotations batons go,ing Bit liter EaSt. Jan. 1, 187,2, R. O. Bailey. (Successor to 1). I'. ROBERTS) DEALER IN Stovs, Tin and 1171.rdzi,o.e • IRON,) NAILS, CARTHAGE BOLTS, HORSE SHOES, AND HORSE NAILS, _1 CARPENTERS' TOOLS, general stock or Midst* lratAllals. LOIS% ROTS LATCHES, 11111003,01ro.; Also. ORAPMG 1 1 .A74 at manufacturers prices. • • e • •oyo • t I tle 40'`TOLUI.B ash 0017ve Oono Ho A and prices rewiomble. First. door t • e. B. O. BAILEY. Jan. 1, /872 HARDWARE ! LUTE & KOHLER, LiAVM° opened a firat-C27616/1 Hardware Store In Mansfield, opposite Fitts Bros., on Alain Street, ix thall,y Invite their friends and the public in give them a call. They guarantee satisfaction eases. Their stock consists of HARDWARE IiETILE9, STOVES, Tui-wanE, IBON. BENT WORK, SPOKER, EMS, AGItIOULTURAL 111PLEUESTS; SHII7I.N POWERS, &o. Old a Somali ita.of Goode, Beecniti to ;love in the country, at the lovrpet cash 'lefties. • They I. Repo swots far the KIRBY mcywEg e „ ITII 40A. WHEEL RAKE, &RNOLD IfORSE FOBA AND nAY OttlifttEtt. W. G. Agra,LUTZ & KOHLEI FRANS Mamas. I , Man/3110A Jan. 1, /872 GENERAL INSURANCE AGENCY KNOXVILLE, 1 . 100.1 CO., P.A. Life, Fire, and Accidental. ASSTS OVER $24,000,0110 &ALMS (A' ("0311%f 17 Mt, 111E1. Co., or North America, Pa . $8,050,656 co Fnwkaar, Fire Ins. Go. of Philo, T:•u .2,087,452 23 Populate his. Co. or N. Y., - $750,000 Alines Trig. Co. of Ctne.lonhtl. . ...... $1,000,000 Niagara }lre lus. co. or N. Y 1,000,00 e Vsrtuera Mot. piro Ins. Co. York Pa ...900,889 16 Dunalx Glut. . Ws Ins . Co. of llarrford Gt..6,081,9‘0 60 Peon'a Cattle Ins. Co. of Potts , : ....00,000 00 $21.,229,847 64 Instudnre promptly eLfrvted t•y juai. or otherwise, on all Mudd of Po Telly. All Mrge,t promptly aNnsted and paid. Live stock insured agulnat death, firs t,r, theft. OM " I am also ;mad fu the Aneke Fire Insurance Co. ell Chtelosati. Capital, $1,500,000. all utAmoontmtir,t,s lnomptly att,mdcit to- Office on ; Street 24 door from MAW at., Enoiville WM. Lt. SMITH Agent. Jan. 1, 1812-tf. NRS.,A, 4.1 SOMLD . I B, utow nieching Prom No 1 Yolk, a flue assortment Ateilllziois`J7 k`NCY GOODS, Ukiah she offorq to the public at low rates. Every'. &tug untially found In a t. • Faney Store, Vl3 be kept on hand and sold low for caeb.. The WI ter, apliAlbba sawing reaclitues for pale. and to rent. '" Idlttf. 41. J..M.131M4. Il NO. 27. W. B. TEBBELL tic CO ILZID
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