Wellsboro agitator. (Wellsboro, Tioga Co., Pa.) 1872-1962, July 24, 1872, Image 1

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V ().118 XIX. •
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'l l e Anitsitor.
tk„„,..„... 6'VEIII• \CF.DNEBD!,.II ISY
VAN GELDER' & 11AIINE'S;
is C. VAN (11:1.1)1.11. I A. V. L Illlit:E.4.
,
L ,
1 „)-TER24.9 :-f2,00 per annum in advance.'
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ItA.I'ES OF ADVERTISING t' )
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Tune. 11n , 2 in., r in,' tin. l in. 12 in 25, in.
....;-
- -- . ,
I N , ,..e1t. 11 00 $2 60153 00 $4OO $OOO $9 00 $l4 00
2 Weeks 150 300 400 600 700 11 110 10 00
3w,d. hs 200 300 500 600 80013 00 18 00
1 .11. , ,1th 250 400 GOO 700 90015 00 20 00
2 months 4 00 600 90010001200 20 00 911 00
,1 months 500 8. Ott 12 00 13 00 10 00 20 00 35 00
I; 310i11119 ROOl2 00 18,00 20 00 t 2 00 35 00 00 00
1 Year., 12 00 18 00 25 00 28 00 35 00 Gil 00 100 00
AA, ertisemcnts are calculated by the inc in length
et column, and any less space is rated as a Pullinch.
Foreign. advertisements must be paid - for before in.
Fection, except On yearly contracts, whop )half-yrarly
P.Vlrlellts In advance will be required. . 1 _ • .
Itt.; , •rtrgas NOTICES in the Editorial rolianne, on the
oi , ond page, 15 cents per line each insertion. Noth
e,v,• ingerted for ices than $l.
1..)e \L 110ners in Local column, 10 cents per line if
ansra than five linen ; and 50 cents for a notice afire
hoe. or less.
,ktts:otiScr2.lll-BTs of MAnidicirs and DENTiIs inserted
~ ~ but all obituary notices will be charged 10 cents
tole.
' ~., . - . - I .a. Norier.s CO per cent above rektularrates.
pi s i.,Eiqie..S.UPS 5 Hues or less, $6,00 per year.
AIIIaiIINIMIIIMIIIII
BitS772BSS Cards.
, „ , ,T, III:c6i It. F. A. JOITNACIN.
Batchelder & Johnson,
,„ ~,,,, of Alomunents, Tombstones, Table
,‘..,,,,1.,1A, ice. •Calband see: Shop, - Wain et.,
ii , „,, uoiantry, Wellsboro, l'a -July 3, 1872.
1L S. Bailey & Sp i n,
, r \HI \I. PRODUCE COMMISSION' NIERCEIAN'I'S.
b,-„c Baiter a specialty. Our 'hotel and family
1, . r.. 11 - ,-, us to obtain the highest market . prices
, ; r 'll.;'a aml Draciford Dairies. No, 35 South Water
-I r..,1.11.-Iploa -April 10, 1812-3 m..
A. Redfield,
, i , i s , :/ I AND COUNSELLOR AT LAW.-Collect- 1
i i. , (r .3.,1,t1 attended to. 011icit ON el-the Post-0114:c,
,„ ~ V. Merrick Esq.-Wellslioro, Pa, 'Apr. 1,
C. 11. Seymour,
~.,,..i , ~ t LAW, T+.-go La. All 131,1,.. , 111C , 6,. ell
-1 .-„ ,I I .1,.1r. ~ u, ' %NIB dleccive prompt attention.-
1.., I, 1.-- - ... - . .
-
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(; cit. W. Merrick,
~,„ ~,, ~, 1. k W Olden ILI 1.4.1We1l & Cone's
, „ it., 1,01 limn Agitator Office, 3d floor,
~,,,..,.., I , i All I 1332.
_....-e___—__..........,..___
Mitchell ...\:: Cameron, _
\ 1-1,1, , ,11 -I I I kilt , ,'lanai and . insursiice Agents.
~,,, ~, , ~ ,55-. • II attains brick blot k, over lii
~,, , ~ ... ..1 -- -tom, Wellttlioro, Pa.-Jan. 1,
iVilliani A. Stone,
• 1 , 6 ,..1 , 11 I \\\, s.‘ et' C. 1.1. Keno) 'a Di y flood
, o,ll',Att \. 1i 111.•y . -4 Mod; oil Alain strict.
Oh, .. 1 1k , , , , hl/, f, la: 2
~I . _
,).)mallESllerY 4.. V:” Co 1). Einery.y .
'll i s./ 1 ' \ I I.ll'l 4011, e oppoalte Coin t 11 , 505,e.
• , 1 5, ,, , t , 5., 1.1, , , k, WllltalliPpit 1, I , A. .111 lillmliksa
, . ' r
, I iii anilP)C - 4? ti. -.7stt. 1, 1.73 .
_ • . __,
~ , .1 .11 A f 1,,1m' ,N, , 1)1sT1110'r ATTOIINEY -
.. . ,:i, i i No. ~, 1'.4,1 , IV. Ilshoro, fa -Jan 1, 'V,
-
J. E. Niles,
;:',I I Il' 1..1W - W.,11 Atteud 1.:11011,113 pi hos
-- ..1,,,-1,,i to 10. C.o. 01 lie ~,notos o• Tioga
l' tt• I .111, e on the Ave,,,,, , .:- \V, 115,1‘5.15., Pa ,
kll / '
- • -
.Ino. \V. Adnios, _
~ .1 I ' ll 1, \ ' a , 0,1 -n. Cl. T.,,,,,, I 1.111,ty, 1..1
' , • ,i 1.1,11114,\ sit, ~515 d td -1,111. 1, 11 , 72.
_ .
C I_, L'ell.L) - -
I • r ‘,',,,,. All cl lii.lS I.romptiy o \ Ile& led '
mil ~,)I.h 111.. nth ... 't, :--.)1):1 .ot- . Co , Pa
- - - -
Jim. \V. (iiieriise),
• .--, . A I \t\•.u 1.,1.-11 - 1, ...1.1.61.-1...1 1.. 1,11,‘
~I , 1.1. I I, ,il.. A 1,-1 ~ ..I • 011
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Ariwdrolig - ..\1! Lino,
\IA ' AI '•‘\‘' ''''''''' . . 1 i '"'
, I it \1.., , 1...-. : •
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Win. I. ! , 4iiiitli,
I . A 11 , 0:' , 1 ', I • mdr ~ . : 1,..mk,,,, c 1t; 1,1
1 ~1,,,, aim. •-. kr I 5 tin, anov, a 1.11. -5 , 00, 1 - ,
i I - - •:., i 1 :01,5111,5n I. 51,,,.. r.,..,dr.de ---E,,,,,..
, , I ii, I i:•7!
\ all Gelder & Ilariles,
I. cc 11 - 11:-. - 111 lona:: ~f Joh 1 , 1-11,111 w How; on
•1 1 t. -- %.1.1 111 the lit ~.1 16 111114. r. 00,3.15 in pow
) ,' , - 10,,, I;, 2,111,-.5r -.dm. i, 18 - ,2
' W. 1). Terbell & Co.,
":-- II E. III:COGIST, and. dealers in Wall Paper,
• • I. damp.:, W.n,low (lass, Perfume; y, Paint's,
--,-. molt-, \ 'V .P,,,..), 1572.
4
1. litleoll, M. D.,
: A NI) StiltkiLiTh. lan. (ll,or cast of Laugh.
~ to --Mao, Sir,. t. Will attend promptly to all
- -',' . 3-10 r,., Jan. 1, 1873.
A. )1. 'lngham, .M. 1).,
,
• v.)1)1 VI 11151', Oilice at his residence on the Av
' . • -11 .1) , ..1,er0, Pal, Jan. 1, 1872. .
•
.
)V. W. Webb, 111. D.,
•,; (I) :-.0
~ , . Itu.,i-,o,s.—od.i,e—Opeitu 'mit Cil
: .... , I •4. -,', lAtig Starr - WC 11 .16..n., I ' t., .Jan.
' \
`;tulle}', (, ' Oats & Co.,
, , - I ~..- n In.', 'll wa Co , l'a.-1 - toct ire itmuey
~ - -I 5 5, 551,, , t !mica, amt sell Mattis on ' .l4i'vv
'1 5555 t 41‘ - - tton't proniptly made
• , • -, - 111, ~ ..5e50,1. 11NI. CRANDALL,
DAvro Co,crs, Knowville
- - —_
.1. Valli It 111'St, & Co.,
L 3 ft 11 ti_ c)i- lc;, I,lllalill, Tiogn Co., l'a.
__Ar..tho,. P &RI:RU.IIBT,
1 ,•-2Jolt:: PARKHURST,
C. 1.. I'ATVP.-ON.
titittse,
1. i‘ Props 1( tor. --
. . a..Yliraninal , the traN
11111==
_ .1-'etroli Li uk liotlse, , ,
' ll IEI I , l' k , geo, Clo , i.C, Propri , t - m—C- 10641 he i
'" ' l "n 1 . ' r
-r 1 ,,, th Min and belu , t. Chargeti f.Pa
,, d _, ~d „it, Iti,,:i ,1 , .0ti to fnli,:r.t9.
IBM
l' armer• , "remiterance
\i \
m .14 In litr Lust, bkletlY 01/
11: • I,l,lp:dn. Ltery accommodation for matt
rl , t , irimiatil,--Welltibm 0, Va..,
IMIII
Hotel.
il. , ltti. Pl.pri.4"r, WeMawr°. ra.—'rhi.
i litlNrd, auct has all the eonven
. • • r , r Charge:4 thi,,(Vent, __Jan.
•-• '
, .
IV el isboro Hotel,
kIN kIE AVENUE,
Wellsboro Pa.
SOL. RUNNEL, Prop'r.
;• • 11•4••1 lat. ly kohl by .)3.,11.
'eri• t•.r ,N ill .par, 119 p.im9 to twilit: at a first
:. ' l • , ' .kll tl, :Awe. dcrart from this
• h6 , ticr ut Mt( mlitice• pis-Livery
EOM
THE OLD
'PENNSYLVAIIiTA Ht ISE"
I CIA knows as the Townsend (Holies and
ov,•upied by D. D. Holiday, linm been
Jr.,.10,1y rrfete.l and rep:Hoed b 3
NI. R. 0 , 040 - NN OR,
to accommodate the old, friends of
, • • t ry reasObablel '
1 72 if. it. o•coswor,.. •
Mrs. C. •P, SMITH ,
I` rct(iNnlg new and elegant designs in
All.ll1 -13.,e1.37.7
1-1 .4.1\T CI 'Sir Goo3i=l
; the public to call and exstnino goods and
.o troublo to show goods.
Feb. 23,1572, Aire, O. Y. 81511T8.
II
Her hands are cold; Ler taco is white.;
Yo more twrlutlsou come and go;
Hor oyes are shut to We and light; •
Fold the white vestnrea, snow and snow,
And lay her where the violets blow.
Ent not beneath a graven stone,
To plead for tears with alien eyes;
A slender cross of wood alone
i hall ea' that liere a 'maiden lies
In peace beneath the peaceful !Place.
And gray old trees of hugest. t
Shalt wheel their circling shadOws rOund„;
To make the soarchingsdulialtaim,:'
That drinks the greenness from the ground,
And drop their dead leaeea on her mound.
When o'er their boughs the squirrels run,
And through their leaves the robins call,
Anti, ripening in the auttitun Ban.
The acorns and the che:stputs fall,
Doubt not that she will heed them all.
For her the morning choir shall sing
Its 'matins atom the branches high,
And every minstrel voice of spring,
That thrills beneath the April sky,
Shall greet her with ite earliest ci y.
When, turning round their dial track,.
Eastward the lengthening Shadows pees:
Her little mourners clad in black,
The eriikets, eliding through the es,
Shall pipe for her an evening mass
At lust, the rbotietii of the trees /
Shall ilnd the prison where she ilea,
Anti bear the buried dust they se' .e
In leavea and blossoms to the jiltries;
So may the son} that - wk. - Med t rise 1
If auy, bn:n of kindlier blood,/
i y
should ask, What maiden a below
Say only this: - A tender bu
That tried to blossom in ti v e snow,
Lies withered where the lolets blew.
i'RO3I TIOCIA TO MICHIGAN.
FLOODS AND DROUODPITAYERB AND POTA
TO BUGS-FEVER, ND AGUE-ORANT AND
GIiEELEY-HUNKFR:3 ON TILE EAU - PAGE. •
• ArzEo, , Mich., July i 6, 1672.
Deur Agitator: lam for the first time in
my life in the 79; st. My route thus farhas•
been along tint Erie Railway to Buffalo and
Niagara Fails, thence by the Great West:
ern, through Canada, to Port Huron, Flint,
Grand Rapids, Allegan, and many other of
the interior towns of this l '6state. I will give
you the result of my observations, according
to the preacher-style of first, secondly, (i..c.;
and my first I will call -•
Tioga•connty,'so long without rain, was
being, as I thought,_ nicely watered when I
left. But the rain. continued to descend,
and the floods came. The whole-Tioga
sectuell like ;'a
,sea of wader. My com
panion in travel thought surely such a flood
must reach to the Rocky Mountains. But
to our great surprise; twenty miles west of
Corning the maintain streams were all dry,
beenthe river,asundiqturbed as if there had
been no rain stnee4liejlays - of NOah. What
a r o ut to go so qUickly from farms and
villages through which one could pass only
in boats to a country Latrelied with an almost
1.1110) years' drouth.. And - so it contimies in
all our,
,jou licrilifls tar of over six hundred
° Througl 1 Canada. the paiAtires by. ninny
places 100 l cal like ploughed fields. I have
seen a te‘y good., pieces 't wheat. Corn,
litilf knee high, is rolled and parched.—
Tile' e have been occasional showers in some
plaos, 4t they have been few and far be
twwc•en lipo❑ every road and in every di•
rectinn it is dry, dry, dry---:sand, sulfa ) , 'loth
inn but , a nd ~ 1
If all inift:4 of the country were like Can•
ada and Central Michigan, them would be a
unit . ersal famine. Even the potatoes which
ale :-.ltated by the drouth are swept away by
.familienlitiv(ca little patch
which they sire trying, to 'Nat'l) They sweep
the lap, fdl . with a little broom-brush into a
:Ina then lairs them The lathers will
say to the cloldit a after breakfast, "(`once
in In lira) or, nrm- and then gu sweep the
1,11 " »d after dinner "(40 cadcep
the„bligs.k and the ..ante al ler iltim•ci. Poor
children, I , Itould thin': they would see
bugs all night.
The roar's here are keel, no hills, and yet
it la steep up hill on the loci The w 4 - 'ens
havp to he foilled down even, a - sharp de
scent Down hill up, and up 'bill is up•
per. The reason of this is sand—sand like
:1 foot deep of dry, hard, crumbling snow.
Wheeling here in the summer is what it
would be with us in V% inter With deep, heavy
snot‘ s. I have ceen no county, no farms,
no villages, thus far, that look half .so good
to me as those of old Tioga. Mils are noth
imr in my sight. I had rather draw a load
up 11111 there than down hill here. And then
the water! At a station I saw men bringing
pails of \vater l l What are they going to do
with that muddy-wker? Put out a fire
somewhere, I guess. No,tThe.--ke there, they are
pouring that" water into the tanks for us: to
drink. Z Call see the ague in every drop of
it. "No better in the eoutitry,', the. man
Well, 1 guess not, - for every stream and
pond is black, and green, and slimy. 0, for
a drink from some cool, pure spring gush
ing from the hillsides of a land.l-krinw of!
, From Port Huron to Flint tic e passed thro'
a swamp some forty miles in extent. The
trees were all burned out and fallen in every
direction. The hollow places were all Mica
with black and green water. And 'I said,
" Sure we shall get the ague before we get
out of here "
I hati "lot been in Allegan two days be
fore I bad a strange sensation conic °v i er
There was a heavy blur before my ey'es, my
head NV a. 9 dizzy, I was , cold, chilly—sick.—
My 'head netted terribly. "I am about, to
have the brain fever. 0, how I wi t sili I NV:l;i
hornet end for a ~ d octor,
qUickl" :Doctor look:! me' Over.' "
says he, "to tell you plainly, you have a
well-marlied -turn of the ague," What, fe
ver and ague in two days I I must be a
smart man, or. eine this is a smart country.
Well, what is to be
,doge? quinine and
mercury, and mercury ail quinine, ad in
./in:7,mi.
mazzmg
E
I don't know nshaving theugue is exactly
agricultural, but I leliecetheaueerable dis
ease grows on every foot of this ground, and
as I feel now I wouldn't give a copper for
the whole country. The Methodist minis
ter here has two littld . ones who are suflering
wit Wilds plague. The older one says to the
fgr-year " I wonder if we shall ever
wove where they don't have the ague.' The
latter one sags, in a despairing One s ' i ,4llet's
not, Tede, 'less we goeS to fleaben."
My secondly is
and political matters arc about as muddy as
the water. I said to a man in the stage with
me that I thought the Baltimore Convention
would indorse Cincinnati. He wanted to
bet me alien dollars instanter. I found 1 had
waked tip an old Hunker. " Vote for Gree
ley!" he says; "I would sooner vote for
Grant, tar any other man in the Republican
party. 'No \man in the world has so belied
the Democratic party as Greeley." So the
Democrath nearly all talk here. Nearly ev
ery county ihstrueted their delegates for a
straight ticket, yet the Convention was si
lenced, and men favoring Greeley elected to
go to Baltimore. I was never in a -- eountry
where any public tan seemed to ,have so
few friends as Greeley has here. "'have not
*This 'country of 61trou ban its good side, and I
have only gtvkny the had to pay it — for giving me the
ague 11. re are many line and thrifty towns. Grand,
Itapids is a grand young city, twice the size of
Idmi
ra; Allegan is as large again as NI/climber°, and gives
evidence of enterprise oq the part of its cithcene."
There arc many very fide farms, and nnalberle9B
roads, but drouth and fire and ague bare-prevented
nie from getting the Weeteru fever thtui far.
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HOER THE VIOLETS.
DY,ODIVVIL WENDELL tiot,aulfi
AGRICULTURAL
31 - FDIC
POLITICAL,
VA
. . , ..
tnet a single ' eptihlitian'thrit"WaS :going to
Vote for bin . There is very 1i4.1e enthusi
asm, forti ere is no `oppt!sitio,n. , The Ue
publictinsjire`fai Grant; attd . the tleMocrats
are for a ybody rather than Greeley. iAc
cording to present appearances this will be
the mildest campaign ever known in Michi
gan. /But I must close, or perhaps some of
my o)6d Greeley friends will wish I had the
a . , e every day: 'i-Prk
EMERSON ON GREATNESS
Self-Respect its true. Basis.„ ,
Ratpit t afdo EMerson deiiVered nu ora
tion on " Greatness" at the annual com
mencement of Amherst College on the 11th
instant. It was short, suggestive, and thor
oughly Emersonian in thought and turn of
expression. We quote the N. Y. Here:l(l'B
!report:
There is a prize which we are all alining
for.o The more power and goodness we
have, so much the more energy. Everyhu-
Men beiaMbaS II right tai it; antlaii the , pur
suit no nTan stands in miothees way. There
are as many degrees of skill as there are in
dividuals, and every one, by suck.Jesi in - his
pursuit, not hinders, but helps. Success is
variously termed. I might call it complete
ness—might call it character. I prefer to
call it greatness—the fulfillment of a natural
tendency in • each slimier. It is a fruitful
study—that of the humanities. Gifts of the
intellect and" sentiments of the moral nature
have the preference. This is the worthiest
history of the world.- ' Not the not
the governor, not strong hands, represent
.the higheSt force of mankind; but wisdom,
cif itlty, hew. 4, letters 'told art. We call these
the'humanities. No man stands unrelated,
and we admire eminent men, not for them
selves,- but for their relation. The Intellect
and the moral sentiment which are in the
last analysis cannot be separabid. There
are many men that say thought rules the
world. Who can doubt the potency of an
individual mind? It is this that tires the
ambition of every man. It gives them mor
al character. We count as the world's great
masters Marie, Mohammed, ISiirabeau, Na
poleon; even Henry VIII. But lam to say
that no way has been found to make hero
ism easy. The key note of the true man is
greatness—that which belongs to us all, to
which we are sometimes faithless, but of
which we never quite despair, but hope to
Make our Monitor through the eternities.—
It is only. the hest anecdotes of mind that
we NVitill ti) hear. I know that men of char
acter think they must go to Africa, to Chi=
na, to Rome. We have learned that the col
lege, parlor and counting room demand as
much courage as the sea or the camp. It is
very certain that we tire not, nor should be,
contented by any glory we have reached.—
Every matt comes one day to be superfluous,
How soon we become sick of the playthings
of the nursery, and the time will come when
Homer's Poetry will sound like, tin palm_
The praise we give to the true hero we shall
unsay. The very word " greatness'-' pro
vokes a feeling of hostility. Greatness! is
there not, somethiog unfeeling in the word?
There Al* points alike bell‘cen the old way
and the new wax of the road to the stars.—
Self-respect iy (me. •
'Co use a homely illustration, we are at
once drawn to that man in a tavern who
maintains his own opinions in the face of all
the bystanders., We know his self-respect.
The coalition laboreOrefuses money for say
ing yoor life, and mates himself your equal
11 . 1 the Let, and asserts his self-respect. What
a hitter sweet seteattion we have after pour
ing, out nut praises ou one to find him quite
inditlezent t.. (air paid opinion! one some..
timeA meets a gt ntleman who, if good man
ners had not existed, would have invented
them, showing what man originally was to
man. tielf-respect, then, is the following of
an inward leader, anti is one of the main el
ements of gri,!titrie.,§3.
• - mere are: functions of Ule supplemen
tary to the bent of individuals Thus for ge
ology,' thew «ill he men born for an eye to
u wing mountain. 3 and !arking the differ
ences (ft
_strata., 'Such have -8
for klierni4ry; for' natural'
LH fishes, and for plants. , Men of the pres
ent find a
_stimulus through the wond e r s laitl
ipen by ineatei of the solar Spectroscope,
tindiug- the same or similar elements in the
Sun and distant planets as in the earth.
Again, Mie boy longs for the sea, another•
for foreign hinds, another to he an architect.
Thus there is not at man born but, as his e,tre
nitif• opens,, ; turns in thatline to.his pursuit:,
Them is the poet, the orator, the schoolmas
it,4„. ropege man, the physician and the
mrist, It is singular to see the adaptations
„f m e n t o the Avorl,l and every part of it.—
I remember that Sir Humphrey Davy said,
hest discovery was Michael Faraday.”
In 18 , 18 I had the pleasure of, listening to
Faraday lecturing on dia-magnetism, or
eross-magnetism. He showed the fact, by
el:periment with several, ,gasea, - that. ; when
ordinary - mag,netioin is.',fromAnorth-to south,
in gases it may be from east to west. Fur
ther expdritnents led him to say that every
chemical substance had its own polarity.—
Is there not similar uttlibtato in the soul?
The mind of a•man differs from every other
mind as it opens. There is a teaching from
_within leading him in a now path, which
;signalizes hint and makes him more impor
tant to society. We call this his bias.
,11 - o
,?one' will.;' . .`ever.-accomplish, anything coni
ntanding unless he listens to this so-called
bias in his mind.
Every individual has a proprium—Swe
denborg calls it a passion. ' The individual
trust obey this as it becomes developed, and
only as he develops this does he gain true
pimer in the world.' It;is his magnetic nee
die:lin-it leads him through. the iworid• In
metals this is called conscience; in the in
tellect it is called genius; in practice it is
called talent 1 remember a critic at a col
lege commencement cared more for bow
much of the boy was left in each speaker
than how much improvement they had
made. ' lie lOokoil for the propriuni of each.
This self is often overlooked. Let ten men
be set to keeping a journal, and nine forget
their own experiences in describing the ex
periences of others. Others fail to mark
the " self" in others. Young petiple should
not leave out the one thing a discourse wo'd
say.- I have observed that in all the public
..ipealieis tin re is a desire it; please rather
;than to speak their deep convictions; when
The thought that he stands for gives hint
falter greatness in the intellectual powers,
so that mankind seems to speak through his
lips. There is,a certain transfiguration to a
man thus speaking. IV heir the true speaker
has appeared he is the true orator, and all
who wish. 4) he'similate
soShalt ask, What is this =Self:respeet?-
11,13 would involve a search into the high
est problems, A maw needs - all the armory
of thought, and must wait sedulously every
morning for the thought the spirit will give
him. And in this seff-respect, or hearken
ing to the perfect oracle, the man ought ne
ver to be at o lesS in respect to his deep re
ligiims convictions. ( This is our practical
perception of the deity in man. " We do
not' 'pretend lei any revelatiOtt, ? ? says the'
gnaker, " but if at any time I wish to per
form a journey something interposes, in-the
mind, I let it lie. If it don't pass away, I
yield to this deep convjction ill my religiOnS
nature.!'. If . yon , ask the nature 'cif this I
catinot describe it; it is too simple to be de-
Scribed; it is like a grain of mustard seed.
Yet the opposition of alt mankindeotild not
sWerve me from its leadings, , nor the con
sent of all mankind confirm it. Respect the
bias of the individual mind. The world is
created as an audience. for, the scholar, and
the atoms of which his world is made`are
opportunities. Let the scholar use geniuls
to'copc with giants. Another would show
what. Stick to your own.. Do not engage
in a local, social, or national crime. Thus
will sou develop it eharucter,somewhat more
ch..ar and incorruptible, than the midnight
star. The moan with catholic genius draws
the e.xtreines of society so plat the very
dogs believe We hate had inch ex
amples in ibis country. In politics, Clay,
Webster, Lincoln—a man who. commanded
the admiration of all. There was 'not room
in his heart to hold a wrong.. In the pulpit
we have Father Taylor; in England, Fox;
in Scotland, Robert Bum; andThave some
conviction that thiS can`be justified 'even
wheie there is `great IMperfection in-charac
ter, Perhaps - the old Trovere poet. was rights:
-lon have 'Ward; tnd deeined the witnevitritei".
Whiiicusfp dsigtal its God delights; in toe." '
Syertsensible man drops omit of his : rule
rative 'all allusion to himself. He is content
with putting his theme on its OWA. ground.
WELIABORO, TIOGACO PA
4, ' •1
You Shall not tell tfie that vou'havelearneA
to know most men; your say ing ad d isproV'es
It:. , YoU'Shall • not -ten nte, by their lines
What books. you have read; you shall of WI
me your•house,ls the ,hest and your petuitis
the finest; you shall Make nie‘feel it: Ihm
to infer it from your 'conVersation.-- '-cele
brated Marshal of France - said of ' Albert ,
Durer, f 4 It -seems as if the sea titood'in' awe
of that man; so stroag was his perseiialley."
'What a difference Mete - is between. Man and'
men in itistorY:: The inventor's 'skill never
dies. , One man tend 3 a stocking lotan;i in
other makes shoe pegs.' Newton, Laplace
and Leibnitz are ready to construct a' world
if this one'does not suit them - . '..Biographles
of Raphael show what he •aecomplishedil----•
Of Napoloonceven in his downfall; What a
power•remainN , and, what an inlbtencele
handed down to his decaying dynasty I' 'lle
Pierced through the motive to the heartqot
a matter by the speed of his actien,'and his
letters of instruction to his brother .Joseph,
in:ltaly were, "Birtrixster," ' When an eati,
of Ireland was broughttit Lonikintionkfoilet'
said that altlreland could'lnot gOvern"thik
king: 'I Then_ ler hint govern' Irelimd;'?: wits'
the reply.. Gibbon pretended to vices' he ,
did not possess that lie, -Might escape ttio'
censure of hypocrisy. l. • ' ;
Men of 'great perception ' appear to hare ,
an enthusiasm' approahhing insanity... PPM
favorite of wealth mere lhatithe educated
Man is - preferod. ' - '•• f• nei-er -.knew u' tqui
than without sot goodin liiiwp' The VW a
Points in New York:are even iiiia To riioe
their ottra virtues: Dederanx - Was the heat
man in Prance!. t His IlliAvmhy 'knew ho
hounds. .A certain than Wilde soitie!la-M
-poonery about him, and afterwarda. Wri
obliged, to rime to him to Write aniott'Acit e.-•
tion,_ which ho did, and thus -'seetireii•tWiii ,
ty.five guineas to save his .poor bonfaloner
alive. I. (the great man iii liewho tills the re
lation to all humanity which he, possessis.
Be exists for the widest' use. - Ile is 'the
fiend of,schools, churches, &v. - k All great
ness is int degree—there. , h4 more- atiov e thitn
Wow. We havnseen n intellecinal Wide,
without hands or feet, and only working. by.
presence and superior•itirelligeneS. Such, I
cell not men, bat rather. influences. , Tb'ete.
is a class of men who, without address, Pos
sess talent—in Whose persona -genius is ad:
Monished for itself. , We admire the intel
lectual gods of the world—Romer, Plato,.
Shakespeare—but-who were the gods Aliese
gods delighted...in? ' They are' . the siint,
poised leverswho make' the sense and don
seience of the mind—only working in ithe
intelligence,as a living force. Such ere our:
influences. Miners in California tell us that"
there is an ore from which the golderfanOt
be separated without loss. There - are Men'
'from whose mind nothingfeanThe detached
without the disintegratiob of the whele.t-
How often, then, we laMent when wel see
talent suck the substance. • . I I'l
How often We are unable to separate gen
eral from specific ability:, Siiine one has
said,
," Blessed are they who, have no{ till
ent," for they liye. -It is impossible td in
ventory the minds 011ie gods.' We Meet
people who read us, bat du not tell us 5141.1 i,
they read. The only rettl benetit , of w hieli
we aro susceptible is what ha's beet;' iligni"llo
for us. We must ask, with Monsieur 'AMU
nius' if- a picture is good what ,matter Wiiii
painted It What matter aa ho does good g
the good is only' accomplished F it is ulititys
clesitalan to collet - 4 examples in which gralt•
ness is dwarfed by greatness of a higher
strain. you must hot wait until the sub 's
entirely down, for this is a subject w hit h
ends only in eternity. ;
1 must read you a story of humility: Bra
zier,- a Jesuit, was once in MS, cell when the
devil appeared to him. In-his humility! iie
muse and•utiked hIM to sit •in his own Min
t;hair, deeming hint the more worthy. Tlie
secret of the true scholar is humility; 1•; %
ery man is my master in 'sonic point, and f
bun I learn. Young tuen;lott may perils s
think these questions belong to, the Churili.
,
I must say that they belong - 10 the daily, f4Lr-,
vice of 'the college, the profitne serviee.,,
-YOU 60 terlrLit: .-_ ..:__;,. . ---0 •-- ".--'-'- '-. t , ..
. . . .. . „
1 ' lanklns_Potia Ito . Et . Pie 4: '' 1 :
s;
•Staria,A.unAteently determined, to go,to a
picnic. • ; - !,, -,, ,- - : : r. , . '.
,Maria Ann is my wifC— unfortunatelY,i—
Shelled planned it to go alone, 6o far as I
ryas concerned, on that: picnic excursion;
but When I heard of it, I determined to 4;5 7
sist. , ktbe pretended bhe was rery glad, bit
I don't believe she was. .
It will do you-good to get away frtr
wbrk a day," she said, " and we shall o
muclicnjey. a cool, morning ride, on the ears,
and dinner in the woods." JI
On the morning of, that memorable. day,
Maria Ann get up at five o'clock. About
three minutes later she disturbed triy,leposO,
mid told me to come out to direakfard. Al..
told her I wasn't hungry, but it didn't Mahe,
a 'bit of difference, I had to -- get:" The
slip' was up. I had no idea the Sun coin
inenced business so early in, the inorning', ,
but there he was..
'" Now," said Maria Ann; ". we must y
niourai, for the cars start at, half-past six.;
T
Eat all the breakfast you can„fer.yeo won!t.
get anything more before men , " :1
I I could not cat anything at
,that time n
the, morning, and it was iust as well that I
could not, for I had all that I could doi--
There wris ice to be pounded to go 'arou d
the pail of ice cream, and the sand‘rieb ) F3
to,' he cut, and I thouihfl never should ' fix
the legs of the chicken so that I could ft i et
the ; cover on the bi,,,,fr basket. Maria 4n
lieNt around and piled up groceries for' le
to i pack, and, gave direettons to the girl h Iv
to" take care of the hqus4, and wks,.lllitti
. g',
on her dreis - all at once: Thera' s a gr at
deal of energy in that woman—perhaps a
trifle terqltnelt. -= ' . ''' ', ' - ''' ' .::".1
. . .
At twenty minutes past Six f stood on t is
sib' steps, with tilonsket tin one.sum ,alitl i M i's
Ann's 'Winer proof on the' oilier,' ii iNin
each hand, mid a bottle of vinegar in
coat sLirt poc4et, Tl k cre was d ciimp,Oiair
littifg tiit rite '-somewhere, too - , Wit liforiet
just where. , .
"Now," said Maria Ann, " we must rtln,
k
or we shall not catch the cars."
"‘ Maria," said I, " that, is a reasonable
idea. How do you expect I can run with
all this freight?'
'1" You must youbrute. You iti'N',tlY3 cry ‘
totease me. If you don't Want a scene on
the street you will start, too."
po T ran.
• I had one comfort, at, least: Melia Ain
fell dOwn - and broke her parasol' , She call.
cd me a brute again
_for_ laughing at hey--
Maria Ann drove tue all'the way to the
pot on a brisk trot, and we got on the caps;
biit neither of us, could ,get seat, ant 1
could not find a place Where I could 'set(lie
things down, so I stood there and held them._
• "Xaria," I said, " how' is this for a cool
Morning ride?" " „
Said she, " You are a brute, Jenkins.".
Said T, "My love, you have made that t
serve tion' before:". - ~; n „
I kept my courage up, yet
,I know tlicKe
would be Itta . hourOf warmth; when we'ght
hotne. 'While we were 'getting' old •of ithe
cars the bottle in my pocket got broke, and
consequently I had my boot of vinegai
alfday., That kept me -pretty quick.
..And
Maria ran eff ,with a ,big-whiSkered music
teacher; and lost her fan; And 'get' her feel
wet, and -tore her dress, , ' and enfoyed 'herself
so' uch, after the fashion of picnic goers.
And Maria called nie a pig because wantbd
to open ' oar - basket before the 'rest' (4'l. le
baskets were opened.
At last dinner timecame—the " nice d n
net' in the woods ;" yelioknow: r Over 'thi'ee
thousand little red ants bad got into our din
ner, and they were Worse to- pick out thnu
fish bones. The ice cream had melted, and
there was neyinegarfor the cold
,umat,,Mc
cePt what was-in 'My beot, and -'of Votirse
that was of no immediate Use. The muSie
teacher spilled a cup of coffee on - Marl a's
head, and pulled all the'frizzles' out trying
to Wipe off .the coif& withlds bandirereider:
,Thn I sat on-a laspherry ; pie : , intd - spod l ed
my White pants, and - concluded 1 didn't
want' anything more.-' t had to: stand in:
against a tree thesestof Allot:thermion. The
day afforded Onside/Mkt variety' &mixt] ik
with ekerrdarlifer, - brirthere were so•uia
tittle drawbacks that I, did ; not,,enjoy it sl
noel] as I might hOe' done." —'
'
`they#l ll te 4
a dna nances.'-- •
The total amount of public debt paid nf
since the inauguration of - President Gram
tir very nearly three hundred and thirty-Iqm
millions of dollers.- e -This is a monthly av
&age of - - Over- eight Al:anions,- and [be milli
redaction equals more than thirteen per cSn
turn of the entire debt: The saving of in
teidst of course amounts to a very iiiirgt
ium. All this has been effected under;
WipNESI)A.:Y,.. J`LY---.„ 1872..
eoostarkt removal of ,tazation, lul.: 0131 t/txes
to the anumnt, of, one inn nlie.t Ji forty ,
florin:: been -abolished Aitfre den.
grllkit beenme Pretihlent. 'cite svulstitt ereqit.
'boa stood uneliallengeti . , and our government
4eeia.rities bear a prieo so high that they canscA
y be purchased for redemption. Such
results show the . firliill49 of the'-
try are lionestly - and 'safely. manal ed! and
that our, ,I;Eleverittnent posseases the - vend
deuce of Iphemoneyed interests of, the world.
Nobodi . ean cipect IL change for the h •ttor
by turning out the. present' Adminiiitr.iti4o
and placing the responsibility , in new and
Untried hands, . This consideration
prove to be "one of the strongest points in
favor of Grant - and Wi!seri in ' the present
campaign. • „Business Into and capitalists
know „that the financial • interests of the
country will suffer no damage while the Re
litibllcett in power, and they
hilly recognize the uncertainty that must at
tend a political revolution,, , They will not
fail to support the Goveraumnt , which pays,
debflind - maintains the public credit. --
.4)4 1 e-dbio - n " -
THE BARGAIN 4110 .SALE.
itiiparint,lbut not Heal tiacOalitenap .
• tE:2CTRAeT rutv . kro. i t uATF.4I . .)
NEW' Yoint,•June .111, 187:? 1
!*- no - possibbyeldliti to Dem
meratio support, encl./lever made any. The
Democ i rals.will of course he goyerned by
,donslderattoii 'of their own interest. It is
nowise proper or probable' that they should'
lie influenced in making their decision by any
icionaideration personal to myself, and if
:they could lie I do not desire it. , Ilencu 1
hacc•saidmitliiiig "to' any Democrat unless
10 drat addressed we. - - And even , then I
I ave gone no fartherthan to say if , l should
lie elected I would treat all those who sup
liorted'me nliku , nilt askin* . whether they
lied been in the past. Itkpuhiteans Or Demo
okiits,„* • * Yours, -
11011A,CE GREF.I.IIV.
1 .14.:‘
.!.Iq.on.tra: Mr p1..,1'01,1110,1. IlltiTO111".
I We have come in.possession of some facts
Which account in part, if not wholly, for
1 the remarkable' and hitherto inexplicatle
action of the Democratic leaders in endeav
oring to farce Greeley upon their party as
its.eandidute for the Presidency. In Octo
ber of last Year, months before the "Libe
ral" Republican Convention of Missouri be.
gun the Cincinnati movement, Mr. Greeley
,Waft-in conference with a Democrat in this
-t3 ate whore we - koow on the subject of the
Prekideney; that Democrat was hunting for
iro compromise - or 'dissatisfied" Republican
candidate whom the• leaders, of his party
would indorse; and Mr. Greeley agreed to
accept, If 'nominated. Mr. Greeley wrote a
letter to this Democrat, in reply to one; and'
these lectto the conference, at. Afr. Greeley's
itivita&n; at which Meeting Mr. Greeley
consented to become the candidate if the
nomination - was tendered him. We have
seen Mr. Greeley's letterlo which wo have
referred in his own well-khown hand-wri
tieg.
The Cincinnati' Convention of so-called
Republicans was hardly then thought of;
but we have proof that we deem conclusive
of the fact that Democratic collusion with
some of the delegates of that Convention,.
particularly from this State, led directly to
Sir- - Greeiey's nomination. Al prominent
'Democrat of central New York wrote to a
prominent nuin, hitherto a Republican, one
of Mr. C4reeley's chief friends and advisers
in New,York city, only a few days before
the Cincinnati Convention met, on the sub
ject t f the proposed candidacy . That Dem
ocrat was in favor of Greeley 's nomination,
arid I elieved that the Detnneratic .party of
the puntry could be brought to 'his sup
port, in certain contingencies. The reply,
to Ha letter was a 'Leidy which pleased and
e. iiati ed hint; it crowned the negotiation;
,
anti, he result, an understanding of what
t he - I entherats we w - . • ~. , an ........-.- -
Id, ade emia to the
ir,!..,- ........_.L..--;--- ~ m
vim tent min in the New York delegation'
at Ci rcinnati. The name of. the leading
Dem( erat we hat e mentioned IA Horatio
44%01! nu'; and of the Republican friend. of
Rota( . Greeley', - Waldo Hutchins. • That
1 (.,
11W ri.antintion Wll9 eliilieil ott, we have
,seett it c stalk-lent and undeniable proof.—
We ha 'e been shown a letter from inn; of
the wt , I known wtiters of the last named
earrest ondence. Horace Greeley, Waldo
Hotelii a and Horatio Seymour are the
' " high - oritracting , parries" to the greatest
scaeda of American politics. We state the
fact of the correspondenee on our proper
responspinlity; and if any one of the persona
vt hav named denies, we will give dates
and det its, and procure testimony that they
will not be in a position to dispute. The
Stateme is not contained in the two letters,
ode of. ft . .. Greeley—which, by the way, set
aside CI ase for Democratic use as "broken,
d.mn" . and the other, signed by one of the
'three m ntioned; are given upon perfectly
good on d imity. ,
There' is no longer any rettacia to doubt
..o,
that the , has been a perfect understanding
tetween C4reeley and the DeMocrats for at
least eig t months past.. It was after Octo
ber last that the tone of the '`/•ibune became
decided! hostile to the Republican party.
It was b fare the beginning of this year that
the corm a was generally conceded. • Read
ere of ,thrt,paper who have preserved, flies
of it,Aill see that between October, 1871,
and May 1872, the Tribune Was practically
a Demotitle journal, as it is today. New 1 t Mr. Greeley i or anybody for him,
(4.1
(Jr Aft H tchins, or Mr., Seymour, come for
ward: eople'generally have believed Mr:
Greeley' notninatien the result of a sec•rct
bergEtia. The Democrats believe it; firr they
nest .th it 1,-,01,- 4 . - s; ; nut ttepahlicatts who
Wee r. , ir,lo
,41. • , ;f% el.:y 31,1 ILlifildi.; in,
arpi ',Via, i,:i . ri• giV4.l) any ..thridehrel r:, CM.
uthfildi iliai4: 'ai•iiii,iii.ivil Pi kill ii Ili it he
i,
wiuf in l 111'. I 5..1,1 o. il.k. .1...e..i,,. Eats' iii.ifiire
Cfnk ;at
been ni
Demur:
no Cip
of, a t
!M., ;,c R nl;f.llllltl+Hit7l, flit h+, I'C
..k.1 . 4f 1.01 . .11‘' leB.ll tr,
attic Couveetion if there heti been
ipa.ti, had that they are the vicl
tun cateied wit by triekuv.—lf tag-
Rej:ol, ert /I:
What is sure to Foiiow.
~ .
Dett °crane Liberalites grow eloquent
over ti e results which will follow the defeat
a. Get . Grant. "The Souta will °Mimic°
the Nrth, and petite and good-will reign
every liere." bmoans whatmoans this' "peace
$
And g 1 odAtfiir iwe to 'he brought about in
the 8( tali ;nay be judged by the means Cm
-1.1
ploye iri the past. , lite Presidential elec
tion 118{16 in th© State of Louisiana af
fords a gleam of light on this subject. . The
Dent craw wanted`to carry the election.--
-As CI y could not Outvote the Republicans,
they, letermlned to kill them off flow well
they - :ucceeded, may t tte learned •froln the re
port if the eniiielitt e appointed to investi
gate he atiair. We quote:
" 'he testimony Shows that over two
. .
: nal persons were killed,• wounded and
wise injured in hat State within a few
s prior to the Presidential 'election;
half of the State was overrun by vie
;,that midnight\ raids, secret Murders
ipen riots kept the people in constant
r until-the Republicans surrendered all
is v and then the elective was carried by
emocritey. , " ,
caps of the riot at the parish - of Saint
' ry. •
ere occurred one of the bloodiest riots
.cord, in.a Melt the Kukhak killed and
ided over two hundred itepublican's in
lays. A pile of twenty-live bodies of
victims was bound half-buried in the
,
s. `The Kuklus captured the masses, ,
1 cal them with badges' of red- flannel,
led Mein in'ettibi, uturched them to the
1 and
,made them +vote the Democratic
- -
thou
(Alm
vecl,•
WO
!I lakes
and
terrc
club
the 1
It
Lim
is iletiop, but words of truth
an impartial report. This is the "peace
tOod-Mill": Which wont(' follow the tie-
President Grant; these. are the 'l,it)-
rights vibi s eb would be:allowed the toy
izen. The' instigators and the aetors of
terrible crimes are favor of Ifora6e
eyi, This „ one fact
_should open, thei
of the people
,rs)- the full. meaning ut
esperate (140;Wethan o *. anything to
;rant." Defeat Graitit, - aud the loyal
u of ille'SOuttieuEo I imeWictiore ~ 'at "the
of the rebel bloodhounds, who only
defeat to finish their work 'of blood.
t Grant, and liniversal gloom 'set=
r the boutt),'\ Deteati3Oritnt, and' eiv-
Ot is letaided, at teast'' centrirf.H
,n,qt97l - (...lr'tonfele: • • ; • • •
fri
UM! ;4
teat ,t
tilt!"
tl~cBo
Glee
0,y5.s
ilab
beat II
tare!
need
Defel
tle us
ilizat
11";707,
!itaine tinittaiitees fur. the eimileation
inning-rod men are being formed in
.u.
In 41
of lig
India
RAILWAY TIME Tann
lEEE
,-.. ~ ~. :.3.
INAN,
Wellmbora it, 'Lawrenceville L - R.
:flute Nu; 4.
EB'ext Stun4a) , Juno .Rut, 1879.
• oolinVuoniu.. • oorin: &turn.
$d 9 4 ' Motions, 3 /
Lu ta./Li. 14.114. • 0.111. 11,111. 11. M.
140 34 H ,Curning, Wit. '1 HU & Oil
12 18 40 121 L•ville 8:46, 840 618
1 . 141 433 i la bey - ilticuttug t 31 8 14 628
11 Au 4 10
4144 418
11:44 41h
11 1.3 404
11 0.1, :1
lU 37 '3 GO
Ito 47 3 42
6'3 11
In e - 21
to hi •
1 'lO Lathrop 835 850 839
659 - Bear Creek ii 46 981 647
666 Tioga Villago 819 901 666
041 11401106113 90:1 918 7 16
6 3.1 krill'a Creak, 919 927 727
630 - Holliday 916 930 732
912 11.9441lubilry 928 988 7-41
II 17 1411E43Vulley 92+ 913 750
0 f.ki Stolousildo 936 961 li 03
6:0 IN. Wullhboro, Arr. 945 10 90 dl3
A, ill. 11 1 /liTtEli. 8111.1.
1114•ssburg & 414.traing & Titoga it. It,
. . ;Tim() P, able, Nki. ti?..:
. , • 1404 Ntlfti4, Uoudisji Juau 3.1, 1874 .
1:444.3x, Fp* Colltalio. AllaliVll AT ISLOSIIBUIVa. ,
No. 1...,. .. ..... 7 81i'n at. No. I -
10 00 A. in.
4 , -'a ... .'..'.:• :. 7 US p. Iri " IS 10 101 V. in.
zw.i.ktrx i•trei..l6l.44 , linuttlin: .6l:av .c...r counulu. -;
Mo. i * ' • 3 tl5 P.liu: No. 41...% .. 536 p: in,
6 tIE , 1 , , la " it... - •1i ..a) a. to.
- A. U. OOUTON, llup i D. h" a B. B. 1
L. U. bit.% Ivi:UCK, 1 til Tiogat U. It.
..
• , %
Valawissa 1,41 ad.
,
, Depot, Foot of Him tilreot, Williamsport, Pa.
• EAATWATLD. •
'ail dep. Willtaniaport, ...... ..... 9,00 a. M.
Accommodation dep. Willialooptut 5 OD p. m.
Jjail bravo at Wilhamapmt .....0.10 p. m.
accommodatien arrive at WIIII4III4IJUIt, ..... 9.25 a m.
Att additioual tralu Wires Depot at }lei die Donee,
Viriustiort, at 405 a. fn.—Cur hLtLt u, Philadelphia. N.
York, Boston 'mid iuharmutitatC points. iloturalim,
direct connection le made at Wli/larrisport with trains
for the west.
No change of ears between Philadelphia, New Stork
and Williamsport. GEO. WI:WU, sl,2.'t.
ErIG ltall
TIME TABLII ADOPT= JUNO 3D 1872
New and improved Drawing Room Ewa Sleeping
Coaeheil,' combining tn modern Improvements, aro
run through on all trains between :New York, Roches-
Mr, Buffalo, Niagara Falls, Suspension Bridge, Cleve
land and Cincinnati.
iVestward.
/id. I. No. 7.t No. 3.*
1100 am 680 pm 100 pm
9 15pin 2 52,am 3 25am
11 50 " 605 " 1625 ",
12 35am 642 " I .101
1100" ._4 ....
6168np 2 05 , "
1150 pm 610 am
12 453m7 05
148 " I 7
2• " I
EITAT/ONS.
N. York, Lye
•'
Mara, ••
Corning,
Pt'd Poet.
Rochearr, Arr
Buffalo, "
Nlag. Falls "
,
No. 1.
960 m
434 pm
6 25 "
402'
ADDITIONAL LOCAL TAW:IId Wr.HTV7ARD
6a. nt., excel - It Sundaya, from Owego for Hornena
vine and way. r ,
6 16 a. in.. except Rondo's, 'from Buaquebanua for
11"rnellavflie and Way. :
6 00 a. in., daily from Su9uolianna for nornallacille
and Way. „ . - I
.
't 15 p. in., cicopt Sundays, trom Elmira for Avon,
to Emirate and Way. - ,
,
i':.l 30 p. m. exceld fiuudaya, from Binghamton for
Ifornollsvtlio and Way. I 1
i - ;Ewa) i 'lard.
No. 12 • No. 4.
1 10 p m
1 46'
2 3O
6 Sup.
315 pm I
803 4.
10 10
7 0) um I
No. B.t N.,.2.
10001.01
Llsptn 10 12 vm 73011 m
2 4 ) " 1125 " 8 of)
1010 aO5 all 111 1)0 "
505 " I ....... ,8 10
1 11 38 •, 432 12 13 pia/
1213 am 1513 " 12 47 "
I ‘2 l 3 15" 7 1 1 1pCul 9 1 4 5 1 `"'
ADDITIONAL LOCAL TWA/NH EAIITW. tO.
,ITATIONH.
litiukirk.L•.
N Faild,"
Butialo. • •
Iturit'bwa, • • 1
Ruchostur,
Corniug. "
Elintm, • •
Inng'in into. "
Now York, "
5 Oan. ' toce.mt Snottys, from llovu'llisvillo for
Owe-tgo aua Way.
LL a. m., daily from if(
and Way.
7 00 a. m., .eitiopt Huudi
Binghamton and Way.
im /i. 11/1/11:11,/ gaintda
Mafia and 'Way. 1
1 Eat. p. ru.. except dumb
Elmira auk! Way.
-oxtfri etta'u'aa itraftfa s k!'
*Daily. •
• Ofoudays excepted. bat
Jervis.
Through Tickets to all duty West at the very Lew
eat antes, ter mule tu, the Chuipuily's Alleu at the Corn
/Aft Depot
• Titbits -the only authorized Agency of the Etl Rail
way eintipani Yin the sale of Western Tii.k.ts in Corn
ing.
.1341kma will ha ohuukud %)11 Tiukuta puruhaata
at thu Company'a °flick:
L. D. BUOKER,
• Oeu'l Bup't
Northern Central Railway.
Trains arrive aid depart at Troy, since. Jaw) 9th, 1872,
83 10116 We
liJII.TilWeltD. bOUTHAVIIID.
'.6.llagara Express, 497 p ni, 13alto. Express, 315 p m
Mall, 0 16 p m I 'khllatla Express, 9 15 p m
Cal/Matt Exp. 10 20 aln jetail, 652 a m
A. h. FISKE, dela% Sup't.
()writs 1!. Sll.l,
WHOLESALE DEALER
loreign and Domestic Liquors
etC., OM.
Agent for Fine Old Whiskies,
Jim. I. 18;2. (10B,VI110.
Houghton, Orr &
STONY FORK, PA :
ilanufactnrers of
•
Buggies, :Sulkies, .
PLATFORM SPRING, TRUCK AND
!4 IBEI WAGONS,
C.OTTEits,
' SLEIGHS A.N:II)3OBStEDS.
We
are prepared to do anything in onr lino on short
notice and iu the best manner. Satisfaction guaran
teed, - . HOUGHTON, ORR & CO.
HASTINGS A: COLES, Agents Wcllsboro.
Stony Fork, July 2, 1872.
jar 1
/ /
El
lIASnow In stock, and will keep constantly on
Lard,' at the toweat market quotations.
ltiool Twine, 2& 4 ply cotton it pitotwine. Marlin 2.
e:: t strand. Fi.nowl'a patent litep Ladder. from 8 to Bft.
.1 .WE SCREWS,. TiKKLE BI t OCE.S, WIRE
CLOTH AND WIRE GOOD 3 OEN.
EItALLY. EMERY NYREEIS
'OR 01.111S1INQ fi,k WS.
A full itHeUrtmeht.of Latta Huron Awl litisTA
ORINCSTONES, CANAL WUREL BAR,
ROWS. P.+l ANY QUANTITY, MA-
Ni LLA ROPE PROM ONE
LNOU DOWN.
Nu. lAt 2, extra eugiuo on. A colovle to anourimeut of
Mechanics' Tools,
HOUSE twrrivits AND HOUSE
HOLD HARDWARE CONSTAN
TLY ON HAND, BOTTOM
PRICES ON AORTOULTU
, HAL IMPLEMENTS,
Come in and take a look, get the figures and fide how
Me yourself, and obligee , BREIVVELIN k Jr.
. lan. 1, 102
TO BOOK aAOli)t-Tti.!4
•
Moak TWatifftsaw-Book
, 44 110117GH/1114141VIS:r!
is ready fCrCalivas sers! -.. itiS a epmpauthuoluineto
"Immoral's Atirmai," of 'which 10000 eopleii have
been said, Doe•t waiito time oti books no one Want..
Uut take one people will atop you in the streets to
subscribe for. - 4 • There is , a time to , laugb," and all
who read thia book the clearly that time bias come—
Apply tit mice for territory or eircialare. Address
I) I IJETLELD ASEIMAD, Publisher.
m Samara Street. rldisdeaphla.
June 28. 18724114.
- 7 2i) Bft
1 119.0 11111
1110 pill
12 so
10 20 "
7 05 Bft.
11 20am
12 lOpm 1
12 60 " I
:priiellsville fur OusquaLumua
Iva. Prow lioruellaytile fur
Yl , truu Owego for Bus•pu
ya, frow Paintod Pout for
•Lvs._.CrOm . 11(01%01.N /flu for
, e.eu thisquebanua and Yoit
JNO N. ABBOTT,
'Jowl PasterAg't
Piano Fortes and # Organs !
DtlifiG4l3 WANTING PIANOS Olt ORGANS wh:
it greatly to their Interest to buy of
I. G. HOYT & Co.
Wo aro sollbie, the best Instruments at lowest pre,
and on the most favorable terms.
A Urat-elass VIANO possesses all the following assets
tide, viz the tone is divested Of all impurities. a per•
feet equality of power throughout the otitiro seals, with
reeonanessint Ours Von of too&
The touch Is elastic, equal, easy and responsive to
every demand of the fingers.
A defect lu auy ono of these points, will cause a cow
plate failure of the instrument.
We warrant every Piano for the terra of live years.
ea-Tuning promptly attended to by the most expe
rimmed Tuners. I
Instruction Books of the most apfrovedmetbods for
the Piano and Organ constantly ou hand.
D. DUNDAH, I. H. HOYT,
Elkland, Pa. , Osceola. Pa.
~. Deo. la, le,m-te
. . VIVELLSBORO
floor, Sash & Blitid Factory,
1 .
8.11
ilkilit ALIBTIN, to prepared to furnish Ant
(l -it work from the best lumber, at his new iao
tor7 Which is now in full operation.
Stash, DOors )
'
3 1 1
ILI/1141Pg 0 ZICIES,III324 D
AND MOULDINGS,
1
. ..t.inny on Lend, or wuntductured to order.
Inning and . Matching
done romptly, and in tho best ilnanner. Thu best
WOr en employed, and none but the best seasoned
fundr used Encourage borne it+stry. r
, i
Val ory near the foot of Main Street.
aa .1, 1872,414 .
________l_
....KRETEL
l d ,,i s ,
Oeerfield
Woolen IVlills
- .1), PA.
llla
GRAM DROTHEIRS, Proprietors of the above
111 manufacture is usual to order, to suit customers.
OUR CASSURERES
are warranted. Particular attention given to
I I: all Carding & Cloth Dressing
'We manufacture to order, and do all .kiuds of Roll
, rding and Cloth Dressing, and defy competition.
We have as good an assortment of •,
Cloths, Cass'i,nteMS,
1., el give wore for Wool In exchange ,khans any other
ntabhatunent. Try thorn and satisfy yimrselves.
Wo wholesale and retail at tha Cowaueaglie wills, 2
4 gcs below llilioxsaile. i
Jan. 1, 1812. INCVEL'aI BROTHERS.
I. H. Griswold's Water Wheel.
I ,IIE undersigned , o age4Lyta for the above Water
J
Wheel, and can ehehi•ittilV recommend Jt ae oupe
dor to all °theta In q . t... 1 1 (.1Hous washing to pur
itame ahogld see this w 1... I to (pc; tttion butore buy
lig other wheels. • INGHAM IIROS.
Deortleld, May 15. 15/72.
ltoad the tollowing,
WEsTriEnn. Aram 2L 142.
• Wu the untleraigned, purchased one ut IL tiros
wo/d's 30 inch Water Wheels using riteinclwa of water
to run three run of stouu under a 20 foot head, and are
arelfpleased with the wheel. Wu i have ground silty
bushels per hour with the three run and can average
that 'amount per hour all day.
.E. b. mnr..a.ips.
cuAlturoN PHILLIPH.
Now S tor
AT TIOQA, : _ _
and an waft., UcAs , Lifuek. of
BOOTS AND SHOES.
HE. SMITH Si-SON, having just completed their
4 new 13ria :Store ou Mum street, which is ono of
tho best arranged end most iuviting stores iu the coun
ty, aro now olferiug to their old customers cud the rub
ite geneialiy a better Selected steel: of
BOOTS AND SHOES,
than ever before preiented in the borough of Tio,ga.—
Ladies' ware Of Burt's make, conatautly on baud. Al.
so, Mason A: ilaroun's Organs, and a vtudety 01 styles
to select from. All aro invited to rail and extudiine
prices and quality. • H. E. SMITH a: SON.
Toga, Jau. 1,1873.-1 y: I •
WALKER 1 & LATHROP,
DEAL US Ri
HARDWARE, IRON, STEEL NAILS.
STOVES, TIN-WARE,I3EL 4 YING,
SAWB. CUTLERY, WATER
LIME, AGRICULTURAL
IMPLEMENTS,
Carriage and Harness Trimmings,
11.1.RNESSES, SADDLES, 4:c
Corning, N. Y.. Jan. 1, 1872
LIVERY STABLE.
r
•; 1.4 RESPECT.
W A tlfily ig i fo 'k rm lC the publicthat they
have established a
Livery for
'1
, .
At their Stable on Peal St. ,opposite 'Wheeler's Wagon
shop. :Jingle or double Age turnisbad to order.' They
alto to ket , p good horses and wagobo, and int3nd to
pleage. Pr,ct,s r 4 asunable. WAllifliS &.I.{.E.TOLIAhI.
Jan. 1. 1.72 ,
TO THE FARMERS OF
TiOG.I. COVNTY
I
AM now building at my manufactory, in Lawrence
vile, a superior
FANNING MILL,
possesses the following at/vantages over all other
wills
1. It ieparates rye, cats, rat litter, and foul seed, and
chess, and cockle, from «•heat.
2. It cleans flat seed, takes out yellow seed, and all
other seeds, perfectly.
3. It Elena timothy seed.
1. It dOce all Other separating required of a ruin.
This mill is built of the best and most durable tim•
ber, in !good style, and is sold cheap for cash, or pro
duce.
I will fit a patent sieve„ for separating oats froth
wheat, to other mills, on reasonable terms.
Lawrenceville, Jan. 1, 1872. J. H. 31,111.1 ER.
New Jewelry Store.
THE Viruaeraliguol would rettpectiully may to the ctt
izens of Well,tl.oro itna il. Jetty, that he hav opened a
Jewe!.ry• Store
in the building revently poi:opted by C. L. Willcox
Tlis stock comprises o fall Assortment ui
Clocks, IPitiches,
Silver and Plated-Tram
(
N. I), WARRINER. blue of the beet wort :11 1 ' 0 u in North.
etn.Ponnßylvazilit. will attend to the
Repairtits.3,' Watc l hes;
C10C16.".9 (5-c.
.For the skilful) doing of which We s i 3ventson Yawn
practical experience is sufficient guarn co,
WAItitINEIt
Wallabere, Aug. 23. 1871':
4 • •
• ToWn Lots for S
subscriber offers the village front of his farm
for sale In quantities to suit purchaiere, and at
prit:ce to make it an object for investment. Thean
lands Ile dimly for vWagr Ude, and a I)ortion of them
cannot be excelled for manufacturing, purposes.
They lie immediately on the exteuniou • of% Grant,
Pearl and Walnut street:land south of Second Avenue.
They will be sold in lota or larger quantities to Hutt
the wants of purcbaeorß.
IlditY,2 2 ; 2874.-Gm. - B: FJ FRIARY.
'-
aopartneri p heretofore existing milder the
firm - name of Pierce and iirees in the Drug WO
wad dissolved by mutual. consent, on the 6th
inst. The business will hereafter bo conducted by
John Pierce. JoHlt PIFIKTE.
July 1 11172011 w. . W. C. BUBB.
i
Furniture and Undertaking.
Van Horn & Chandler,
(Socceasora to D. T. Van Sorb)
ry AVP now on exhibition and sale at the old place,
the largest and niostoinpleto stock of
FINE AND COMMON FURNITURE
to be found in Northam* Pennsylvania, consisting of
FINE PARLOR AND OHAMDEE SUITS.
SOFA% COUCHES, 'ESTE.A.TETES, -
MARBLE AND WOOD TOP OENTEB TABLE&
NAT RACKS, FANCY MAW, 1.11&ROR8,
OVAL AND SQUARE PRAIRE.% BRACK
ETS, PURE No, 1 HAIR MATTRASS-
ES. HUSK Ar. EXCELSIOR MAT
TRUISM •
and a full stock of the common goods usually toured to
flrat-clasa establishment. The above goods are large- '- l) , of their own manufacture, and, satisfaotlan la guar
anteed both as to quality and price. They sell the
Woven, Wire Mattrass
the tuck popular spring bed sold; also the Tucker
Spn
universal ring Be4l tbat satisfac has bee on trial for 17 years and giv
eon. Our
'COP?, ROOl2
is supplied with all sizes of tho Kresinizr Casket. a new
and beautiful style of burial case, together with other
kinds of foreign anti home manufacture, with trim
mings to match. They will make undertaking a spec
iality in their business, and any needing their services
will be attended to promptly, and at satisfactory char-
Odoiliteees of Furniture made, and Turning
all hinds done with neatness and - dispatch.
Jan. 10, 1872. • VAN noRN sr otairp.r.En
To WHOM IT ALt CONCEIIII.—Having conclUded that
lam entitled to a little rest after nearly 40 years cdono
application to business. I have passed over the furni
ture business to "the Boys" as per above advertise
ment, and take this method of asking for them the
same liberal patronage as bas been extended to me.—
illy books may be found at the old place for settlement
Jan. 10,18¢2. B. T. VAI ROBB.
WHOLESALE DRUG STORE.
CORNING N. Y.
DUMPS AND P. tilqf S AND 01 T.B.
DE(SI3 D10.11313' I liri, K1:11111f1 CO: s .;CHNTRATIO, I
I.IIMICINni, ItEDELT:',I FLIIIII, 1 , :): A ( - 1
413E.YRNE1'I"fi CCW(I. 3 , I'LAVOIZIN(/ IX-
KEROSENE LUV PS,
PATENT MEDIC/NES, ROCHESTER PERFU
MERY AND FLAVORING EX
TRAcTs, WALL PAPER, WIN
DOW GLASS, WHITEWASH
LIME 8: DRY COLORS,
AGENTS FOR MARVIN
& CO'S REFINED OIL.
Bold at wholesale Prices, Buyers are requested
call and get quotations before going further East.
Jail. 1. 1872,
R. G. Bailey.
(Successor to D. P. ROBERTS) DEALER. IN
,
Stoves, Tin, and Hctrdware
LRON, NAILS, CAnltuiliE BOLTS, HORSE SHOES,
AND HORSE NAILS,
'
CARPENTERS' 'TOOLS,
A general stock of Builders Materials. LOGES,
RUTS, LAcrour.s, HECTORS, Aro.; Also. MAPPING
PAPER at manufacturers prices.
JOBBING PROEPTLY ATTENDED TO
,WTerme Ctsi, and prkes reasonable. First door
above Cone House. tt. 0. EtAILFY.
Joz. 1, 1812
HARDWARE !
IIrAVINU opened a first-class Hardware Store :11 r t
21(1144301(.1, Crpposito Pitts Bros., on Main Street,
respectfully invite their friends and the public in gmu
aria to gi-:n them a call. They guarantee sattsfactinn
in all cases. Their stock consists of
--
t _
llE'rTilfi, STOVES. TIN-WARE, lIAII fi
IRON, BENT VOICE. SPOKES. 111.)W ,
A (3111 C ULT.) It AL I1111.1.1.'1fl;NTS,
a.llll 11 p!.1,1;i111st. t , t1.1 fla 0.0
count y, at tilt• iti‘t est eull
They are a:8 0 agclito for 1.1: KIIII4I. - 'Mt
ACA WILEM RAKE. ARNOLD DORSI' I (•,t; , 1
HAY BAIOAER •
w. G. Kwrz, LUTZ .t ICOULLIt.
FIUME Houttrt.
Iramsfluld, JAIL 1, 1872.
GENERAL INSURANCE AGENCY
KNOXVILLE, TIOJA CO., PA. -
i
1 ,
Life,
,Fire, and Accidental.
-
ASSETS OYER $.9.4,000,000.
,
,
I Assms or Courature.
d
i .
Ins. Co., of North America, Pa $3,050,538 CO
Franklin Vire Ina, Co- of Phil*, Pa .2,481,452 ;5
Republic Ins. Co. of N. l'., Capital,— $750,01.0
Andes Ins. Co. of Cincinnati, i. .. $ . 1,000,009
Niaipira Fire Ins. CO. of N. Y, 1 000:00e
Farmer* Mot, Fire Ica. Co. York Pa . . . ... .'.: ..ao9,sact 13
Phcbuir. x1ut. , 1,163 Ica. Co. of Ilarfford Ct.. 5,031,970 50
Peria'a Cattle Ins. CO- of Potteville 500,000 CO
Jewelry,
'I (An!
Insuranco promptly effected by Juan or otherwise,
on sll kinds ht Property. All losses promptly adjusted
and laid. T.ive NU.ek Insured aciitost death, fire or
Ulan.
I are also akept for the Andea Ilre Insurance Co, of
Cincinnati. citpital, $ 1 , 60 d.0 00 .
Mt communications promptly attended to--Oftloa ou
Mill Fitrkfit 2 t doer from Main at , Knoxville
Jan. 1, 1872- ff.
lq.
IVIRS. A. J, .SOFIELD
I S n f ow receiving from New York, a fine assorizoont
which she ottertf to the publics lit low rates. Evers.
gang usually found fit a
Fancy Store;
011 be kept on band and sold low for 'capti. The Wll
cox askd Glbbs sawing tam/tines for solo, and to rest.
Jo. 1, 1842. 11118. A. J. 8011140.
N 0..; 30.
. ,
W. B. TETWELL 3 00
LUTZ & KOHLER,,
HARDWARE
=I
.......$•/1,220,647 64
Wei. D. SMITH
Agent
MEM
TlAElllliiel•3r
FANCY• 000DS,