m=z Aeitator. 330 . n,c), \ 1,1%.\\ YADITOR TUESDAY, AUGUST 26, 1873 REPUBLICAN STATE. TICKET. FOIL ZIIDGE or• stIPILEME COUIIT, ISAAC (1. GORI/Olg, or Jefferson County Ton STATE TILEASEMEtt, r'IIO)3PUT W, MAOILER, of. Aposlrlay County itimpupLicAN tvimasr.TlCKET. " • _ lI.E.PIiEgENTATIVE, Z 011.14 IIiTCIIELL. of Wellsboro. son arinTimir, STMEN BOWEN. of Mori is Eon , - "!' , VOit coirsitrsiosEn, It , LEVI B. SfigtVt, of .4ckson l'oll AUDITOP, CIIMALE S Ll. VERItILL, of Mansfield , . pte publiBhePs will tho 'Adage on all copies of AGITATORf«ken within the'cott 11/ Toga, inhere the subscription is paid wp to Out first drily of An wiry, 1874 or beyond tluit :date. The priiiftd 'pddre,gs-label on the paper, toill show cackeubscriber the emet date Waddell, his subscription i 8 pafil. , In our local columns will_belfound a very full report of the County Convention held at 13lossburg last Tuesday. rr • Capt: ;Tack and five of hi§ copper-folored chums have been found guilty of muder by the Military Commission, and are tb swing for it on'the 3d- of next October. There was a large fire in Belfast, Maine, last Stithyday, destroying about half a mill ion dollars' worth of property and turning one „hundred and thirty familiesput of housp. and 'hoine. There Was another terrible steamboat dis ster last week. On Friday the steamer - George Wolfe blew up on the Mississippi rivey.i Fourteen person's .were killed and about a dozen wounded. As usnal, nobody was to, blame: A. writer who signs himself " i J. R. A." hag= article on "Morals of Onkel') last week's Democrai iu4 wilich lie remarks, "It A an error to lnive considered our own ca lamitous nestling in streams of legislational iniquity exceptional." This is understood to - refer to the late Member of Congress from this district, and it is a very neat way of putting it. While we can't quite agree with "J. R. A.'," we must congratulate him on the : felicity of his " epitaphs," as Mrs. ParCington would say. The silly " patent outside" that is partly (inis)priated in this village is trying to wrig gle out _ofits own record on the salary-grab question, The effort is not to be wondered at, though of course it can't succeed. It is entirely fitting that a - sheet which lies, with in a few' Weeks, Made itself a,general laugh ing stock as a self-proclaimed standard of " correct and fairly printed English" should hasten to publicly stultify itself byidisown ing its own opinions. Having shown a plen tiful lack of brains, it now seems desirous of proving itself as deficient in principle as inability. The task cannot lie a difficult one; and it would seem to hardly justify the outlandish grimaces and idiotic gibber ish in which the patent outside indulges. = But ppabably the poor thing can't help it, and so I.obody need complain. 'Hort:7llllam M. Me4dith, President of fife Constitutional ConventiOn, died in Phil adelphia on the 17th instant. Ile was born in that city , Jnne 8, 1799, and after gradu ating at the University of Pennsylvania studied law. Zle entered_ political life ear ly, holding a seat in the Cominon and Se lect Councils of the old city,and also in the State Legislature. He was a member of the Constitutional Convention of 1837-8, and there spoke and voted in favor of grant ing the electiVe franchise to the colored race. Ile soon became well known as a sound lawyer and able advocate, his efforts having great effect upon both Judge and jury. lie was' Secretary of the Treasury under Taylor, serving from March, 1849, to July, 1850. -In 1851 he was a candidate for Judge of the Supreme Court on the \ Whig ticket, but Was defeated. He was Attbrncy General of the State under Gov. Curtin, holding that position for two terms. Last year he was elected to the present Constitu tional Convention, and on the meeting of that body was unanimousl3xelected its Pres ident. In spite of his advanced age, lie dis , charged the duties\ of that office with great ability and vigor. By many of his cotem poraries he was held to be; in talents, at tainments, and personal force of character, the first man of his native State. The County Ticket The names of the several candidates put in nomination at the recent primary election will be found in the usual place at the head of our editorial columns. To say that the ticket is a good one is but to echo the gene ral opinion. That it will be elected there is not a shadow of doubt,—even our political opponents admit that,—and that it deserves to succeed is equally certain 4 Of thOrst ignite on the list it is hardly necessary to say anything to the people, of Tioga county. Mr. Mitchell has already held during two terms the office for which he is again nominated, and the fact that be found no competitor for that nomination sufficiently indicates the high o estimationin which, he is held by the Republicans ot the county. During his first term be took a high position among the members ot the flouse—a position which led to his present ation as a candidate for ilSe Speakersbip at the beginning' of his second term. The support which lie '..received for that office was highly ecbmpT i imentary to so young at reikutber, find it poved insufficient mainly becauslioll the "shrieks of locality'." But his position and influence in the If4fse were affected very little by the result of that con test. Re was made Chairman of the Com mittee of Ways and Means, and so became the acknowledged leader of the majority.— By his action on this committee he was ena bled to be of great service to the State in shaping the financial legislation of the ses 'sion. He was also at the head of a com mittee engaged - in the trial of the Luzerne county election frauds—a position for which his legal training peculiarly qualified him. But while 'thus actively engaged in the general duties of a legislator, he was - not neglectful of his obligations to his more im mediate constituents_ The local legislation called for by 1.1,te people of the county was attended to promptly, efficiently, and judi- ciously. This is a fact well known to all his constitaenti s who had occasion to call upon him for anything in that line. But we did not set but to detail Mr. 311tcheil's ser vices to the people ofi the State and of the county during the last busy session of the Legislature. The people he represented are well aware of them, and we 'are willing— as we know he is—to abide their judgnient of .his deserts. We have •an abiding faith that he will be returned to the liouser to adorn even 'a higher position than he lus . yet filled. ' ' ),, With the candidate for Sheriff—S ( lcl lien Bowen, of Morris Run—the peopleof Abe county at large are not so well acquainted; for he has never_ held - public office. - But that he is well known and thoroughly liked_ by the people of his. own neighborhood is , shown by the unanimity of their support, at the primary election. ° That a man is popu lar among his neighbors is said to lie One of the best of recommendationS, and certainly Mr. Bowen can claim that indorseinent in the fullest degree.. It isi conceded on all hands that ho will make a faithful . and , li- Cient Sheriff, Ho will undoubtedly receive the full party support at the polls and some thing over; and of course his election is as certain as anything future .can be. ' Levi B. Shelve, who is nominated for Commissioner, is a farmer of Jackson; He is universally regarded by all who know him as an' unswerving and' straight-haired Republican, and man of excellent judg ment, good btisinesa 'qualifications, and in corruptible integrity. The office for !which he is named is really one of the most re sponsible ones within the gift of the people - of the county, and we believe it will be well filled by Mr. Shelve. - The candidate for Auditor is well known, as the late Principal of the State Normal School at Mansfield. Of his ability and in tegrity there is no question. The ticket as a whole is' a good one. It has been selected by the people themselves; and will be heartily indorsed by them on the 14th clay of next October. OUR WASHINGTON LETTER. TILE GREAT RAMS AT TUE CAPITAL—VIZ WANASET iIiVESTIOATION—STAVING OFF TILE CROLRRA—STATISTICAL CONO THE GRANGERS—TiIt [ , NATIONAL DI4A-1 0 MUTE COLLEGE—TIIE POLITICAL 013TLOON —VIRGINIA AND 01110 POLITICS. WAsiuxoTou - , Aug. 19, IK3. After a month's recreation, relieved from labor and care, I now resume my Washing ton eiirrespondence for your most valuable pape/r, hoping that my communications in the ftitve will be made more interesting to your re dors than they have been in the past. I shall at least endeavor to have them so. it Never before in the recollection of the oldest inhabitants here has there beee so long a - rain storm at this season of i 1... year as has been experienced the past eiglitdays; and, strange to say, with all the rain that has fallen, the 'atmosphere has mO. been cooled. The Board of Public Works here is suffering fearfully. Several streets in dif ferent parts of the eity.are dug up and are impassable, the recent rains nuking quag mires of them. On F and Seventh streets, near the Post and Patent Offige buildings, they arc lowered from six to eight feet, and several buildings arc being undermined and their occupants are compelled . to move to safer quarters. - The late Wawaset disaster has cast a gloom over the whole city. 'But few, both whites and colored, who have not lost a friend in, it. The investigation nOw : going on at the Treasury in reference to id is looked upon with great interest, rind it IS sincerely hoped that with the full development of the facts connected with the 'fiffairsomething will be done to avert it repetition of this sadsoccur- • rence. During the heated season excursions down the Potomac are 17ry numerous, and they, have afforded a great relief to the peo ple here who,cannot, go to watering places, especially to . lthe Door; who are compelled to work through the week, and whose only opportunity to recreate is to take a trip down the Potomac Satirday night and return on Monday mornin So great was the fear of the cholera here in the early part of the summer that the Board of Health caused every street, alley; and - by-way to be thorougily cleaned, and waited the people against eating .unbealth ful fruits, and the result is, that there has been , but very little sickness this year. Mr. Edward Young, Chief of the Bureau of Statistics, and official delegate from the United States to the last session of the Con gress of Statistics, held at St. Petersburg, has just received a letter from Monsieur Somenow, Proolacat of tac 0. 6 .11112.01 g Coni mittee of the last Congress, in reference to the place for holding the next meeting.— Acknowledging the invitation "tendering the hospitality of the Great Republic of the New World for its ninth session," M. Sem enow writes: " While fully apfireciating the sentiment of sympathy which dictated this invitation, the Committee on Organiza tion could not accept it without pievioUsly consulting the members of the Permanent Commission as to the difficulties which the organization of the ninth session in Ameri ca would present to the delegates from Eu-. ropean countries." The Permanent Com mission (of which Mr. Young is a member, but which he was unable to attend) being now iu session in Vienna, the place for holding the next session will soon be known. There are 5,176 subordinate Granges al ready organized in the United States. In lowa there are 1,770; Illinois, '565; Missou ri, 523; Kansas, 412; Minnesota, 833; Ne braska, 305; Indiana, 279; Mississippi, 202; South Carolina, 133; Georgia, 86. There are none reported from Connecticut, Dela ware, Florida, Maine, Maryland, Nevada, and New Hampshire. The balance of the 5,176 are distributed among the remaining twenty States, the Empire State having but four.' It is estimated by thOSecretary of the NatiOnal Grange, 0. 11. Kelly, residing in Washington, that the membership in the United States will aggregate nearly half a million, and that about one-third are ladies. The National Deaf Mute College is one of the interesting institutions of Washington. The President, E. M. Gallaudet, LL. D. is son of the founder of deaf mute education in this country. On account of impaired health he has been traveling in Europe for th past year. he college a short time ago celebrated its ninth anniversary, ,at which three deaf mites • graddated with the degree of A. B. Tigre are about 20,000 deaf mutes in the eolhoiy, 3 200 of whom are under instruc tion, the National College having about 160 i,f ahem. This institution is supported by irivate benefactions and by Congress, at an expense of about fil30;000 annually. The grounds, which are pleasantly located and adorned, were given by Amos Kendall, but the buildings were erected by Congress.— Youth of both sexes, colored and white, are admitted, though no females as - yet (with one exception, 'and she did not graduate) have advanced farther than the preparatory depai-tmcnt. The medium of instruction is of course the sign lan g uage, but articulation is taught, and two of thegraduates deliV ered their addresses orally—imperfectly, but, distinctly enough to be understood. When the graduates had performed their parts, they were addressed by Gen. Eaton, Com missioner of Education, 'the acting Presi dent, Mr. Fay, standing by his side and in terpreting his remarli 's in the silent language.. In such a case spelli g by the fingers is only t used where the wor or idea cannot be ex pressed by a motion of the hands. The lat ter involves much graceful gesticulation or pantomime, and is as rapid as oral speech.. Deaf mute education is not a century old, the projector being De l'Epee, a Catholic priest, livho conceived the seheme while ac cidentally seeing two little deaf mute sisters playing. Gen. Eaton took the ground that deaf mutes should• be educated at public ex pense, not as a charity, but as a ' political and moral obligation.. For a time in the history of civilization deaf mutes were classed as outcasts, and by the law of Jus tinian they were placed under disabilities, both political and social. But there came one who gave speech to the spec bless, and out of tins coming has conic all t its change. But the idea still exists that the education of the deaf mute is ti charity and not a ' bounden duty of - the State to it children. The first institution in this count y, erected in Connecticut in 1810-17, was called an asylum, a place orrefuge, when in fact it was a training school of a high order. The State must educate all its, children, and the idea that this is a charity to any of them must be banished from the theory of our civilization. It is simply justice, and in the sense that all lives are arguments, he bade the graduates go forth and illustrate and enforce this doctrine, for it was the doc trine of Christianity. He gloried in the ad vance America had made in this direction, for no other country could boast' of an in stitution which gives the deaf mute a full collegiate course of instruction. There are thirty-eight institutionsPr deaf mutes in this country. In their coriversa t!oro or eeeneils the Indiana emphasize their 4) ti- t MS utterances by a , constant motion of--thetr hands, particularly when in 'eainest t and it has - been noticed during their visits here that intelligent deaf mutes cap: understand these Mem; tort remarkable 'degree.", -Dark ness is the, chief dilliOulteoccurring in their ' inter-perninunication, and this is overcome by joining hands,. (not so bad for courtship!) and thtis feeling the spellingof words. For this purpose the Morse telegraph - alphabet Is - being adopted, the patties joining right hands and tapping the thumb on Alia back of the companion's hand.: There are seve ral deaf mutes, male and 'female, employed in the Departments, one among- the former holding the responsible position of - extunin-, er of patents: ' The political outlook, from a Washington standpoint is highly encouraging, And pre• sages another universal and easy victory for the Republican party in the different States at the coming elections. - In- Virginia -the campaign has been fairly inaugurated, both parties having held their conventions, enun ciated their platforms, ,and put their Candi dates-in the field. The nomination of Col. Hughes by the' Republicans for Governor has giv,en universal satisfaction, and has called forth, acclamations of enthusiastic pralso from both the press and the people of thetakt-Doininion, who think they sec in his elcctftin kipanacea fot the many ifisivith whieli•they - rire now afflicted. The eonsery ative administration of Gov. Walker has satisfied theni that Democracy, even though disguised by another name, is utterly une qual to the task of bringing about much needed. reforms and inspiring the necessary confidence in the people to enter into the various industrial and buSiness pursuits that will develope the varied resources of the State. _ Col. Hughes' is a native Virginian, and no man in the State know 4 or appreci ates the wants of the people better than lie, and he possesses the indomitable courage and irrepressible determinatitin of character required to make a vigorous ;campaign and shake up the dry bones of, the fossil De mocracy after the most approved =lima., It has been alleged by Democratic jour nals that. the President was opposed to a straightßepublican Convention in Virginia, and advised a' fusion - of Republicans with certain disaffected Democratic ele nents.— This at the time was stamped by tli Repub lican press as false, and it has so .oved.— Col. Hughes, accompanied by set; .al prom inent gentlemen, visited tee Prei ident re cently, and was receiv.si in the most cordial and friendly manner. Pre,sident Grant took occasion to assure Col. Hughes that the Ad ministration entertained the most hearty Sympathy for the Republican ticket in Vir ginia, and that he had never expressed a de sire that the party should depart from its ordinary usages in making a straight Re publican nomination- lie further expressed himself as being pleased with .the ticket, a and hoped all good Republicans would unite and elect it. , There seems to be but little doubt in well informed circles here that if, the canvass is properly managed Virginia will give a larger majority for Hughes than it did for Grant last year. Reports from parts of Ohio indicate that a Republican victory is a foregone concltt sion. Tho dissolution of the Democratic and Liberal co-partnership, 'and the nomi nation of a candidate for Governor and oth er State officers by each party, leave no rea sonable chance for doubt that Gov. Noyes will be - triumphantly re-elected. The an nouncement by Congressmen Groesbeck, who has heretofore been a shining light in the ranks of the Democracy, that unless the - Democratic party repudiates its name and present organization it must remain in the minority for the balance of the century, au gurs wellufor the Republicans. LETTER FROM NEW YORK. THE TRANSPORTATION QUESTION --.THE LOSS OF TRADE TO NEW YORE - RAILROAD SLAUGHTERS AND THEIR I REMEDY-A SPI CY lar t EL SUIT COMING ON-GOSSIP OF THE TOWN, JOURNALISTIC AND SOCIAL. NEW YORK, Aug. 23, 1873. Some few facts and figures in regard to the trade of the canals and railroads of this State will indicate picisely why the com merce of the West likts moved in new chan nels, and why certain marked changes have taken place in the lisiness of this city.— They will also sugge t a remedy for the evil, and the means of -restoring a traffic which has been diverted. In 1853 the tonnage of th 4 canals was 4,247,853 tons. Of the Effie and Central roads it was 931,039 tons. Shipp then the increase has been steady on the ca nals, while on the railroads it has not only been steady but very rapid. The returns for 1872 are—for the canals, 6,673,371 tons; tuo railroads, 0,958;230. The canal bu siness Has advanced fifty per cent., and tnat of the railroads more than 1 2 000 per cent. In 1856 the Central road carried 283,027 tons of vegetable food; in 1872 the amount was 1,158,894 tons. In the same time and in the same products the Erie road advanced from 143,193 tons to 711,720. In 1856 the Erie Canal floated to Albany 984,311 tons of ag ricultural products, and in 1872 1,480,580 tons. This is . a large decrease from 1862, when the tonnage of these products was 2,- 087,347. There has been a steady increase for several years in transportation by canal of coal, ores, lumber, and certain other like freights, while, as shown before, the rail roads have gradually absorbed - a large share of the transportation of cereals. This pro portion is just about reversed. The way out of the wilderness is tolerably clear, and business men ought to find it .and walk therein. It is better to supply the facilities ottr commerce needs than to make inkrea sonable complaints. ' We will warrant that there will be no more " accidents" for a considerable time on the Philadelphia and Reading Railroad. In the collision on that road on Friday the special train, which ran into the regular passenger train, smashing, things so dreadfully, con tained Nichols, Vice President of the road. He will see that hereafter the officers of the road attend to their business, or else we may be very , sure that he will not ride over his own line. If a few more of the leading officers of our railroads were only involved in these terrible smash-ups, there would soon be fewer " accidents. ' The proposition made not long ago to tie the President or one of the Directors of a rail road on the cow-catcher of each train is worthy of consideration. A spicy libel suit will soon be before the courts here, in which F. S. Winston is plaintiff and Stephen English is defendant. Few men have been subjected to a closer es pionage officially and personally than Mr. Winston—an espionage that soared into the most intimate relations of his private and bubiness life, ready and eager to cast a false and injurious coloring upon every incident; yet few men have calmly endured the orde al and come from it so unscathed and invul nerable. The Frenchmen in New Yprk are getting up a $4,000 _ testimonial fot ex-President Wouldn't It be better to get up a $4,000 subscription for their poor country men in this city? At, the Vienna Exhibition our products, manufactures, and fancy " fixins" aro car rying off all the big prizes. Forty-five more medals awarded to Americans, according to this morning's cable dispatches. On these occasions the American element comes out strong indeed at the last end of the show— n striking illustration of the truth of the saying, " the last shall be first." The Scythe is the newest newspaper now. It is devoted to the interests of -the Patrons of Husbandry throughout the United States, and comes down like a thunderbolt upon monopolies, rings, and all sorts of extor tion inimical to the Grangers. The editorial office is located"at the corner of Fulton and Nassau'streets, in Jim Bennett's magnificent " Build i ngs"—tb e best-paying investment of the Herald. PEARL. Democratic Purity. , The assumption of the Democratic news papers that corruption, in pblities was al most unknown in this country befdre the Republican party came into power is amus ingly contradicted by the. following little story told by W. J. Stillman, the Vienna correspondent of the New ; York Yribune: "In the Scott and Pierce campaign Kos suth was, as we all know, in the United States, and the politicians of both parties were anxious to secure his influence, for which,of course, he exacted his terms. I was almost daily at his house and in his confi .dence, preparing for a mission charged with which I went-to Hungary that autumn, and I was awe or less acquainted with the ne gotiations as they advanced. The Demo crats finally ottered him a specified sum of money—how much I have forgotten—and two men-of-war if he would give his influ ence to Mr. Pierce; but they repudiated their promises after election. During thes e negotiations, which were long, Kossuth said to me: ' Mr. Stillman, if you do not get rid of these politicians your country will he lost within fifty years. "Within a single decade those very Dem ocratic politicians who made this corrupt bargain with Kossuth had succeeded in plunging the country into a civil war which proved almost'fatal to the 'Union:. integrity was maintained ,only by_ driving them into obscurity and keeping them .there. Their impudence In demanding a restoration to public confidence is so extraordinary as to be ‘ nlmost phenomenal. 7, • Insanity in its Relations to Milne. - We have read with same , care the Workof Dr. Hammond, of.-NeW '..Tork city,' 'on. the topic which we have placed itt-the 'head of this article, and are'gßUl to .11rid a- - distinet assertion - of the impossibility that a person "perfectly sane just before - the - commission of a crime, and perfectly sane immediately - after could be insane during 'ICS perpetra tion." Insanity is. claimed .hy. Dr, yfam _mond to be physical io - ifs causes, and can no more exist "without other evidences. of disease than mental. derangement, than pneumonia with no other symptoms' than disturbed respiration," or '"valvular disease of the heart he restricted in .iti manifesta tions ;to irregularity .of the circulatioe:,9f the blood." in other words, where a ctSitA the nets of Mt insane person, the inSatilly must' have previously existed, " and have been capable of detection. 'Phis- was me eiselY ' our: 'ground in Welting the plea of emotional insanity as one of , mere subter fuge.. „ But Dr. Hanunond goes farther still, and points out thin insanity. may'exist to the de gree of creating delusions without destroy ing the moral responsibility 'of the insane; that they still possess the power to resist and control the morbid impressions.:There fore it is not sufficient, id setting up the de fense of insanity, simply tolthow unsound ness of mind. To constitide a valid de fense, the insanity must lie such as to:de prive its subject of consciousness of right mid wrong and of freedom of agency. It will not do for all who are more or less aware of mental aberration to consider that thereby they are released from accountabil ity. Itlany instances show that it is not in frequent for mania to coexist with strong sense of right and wrong. The case is quite analogous to that of drunkenness, in which a man of decided and clear•moral percep tions, and otherwise subject to moral re straint; is much less apt to fall into violence and wrong-doing than an ungoverned and brutal rough. A certain degree of self-con trol reindlia;' though impaired, it is pot de stroyed; and the effort of the will is often marvelous in' counteracting ,the tendencies of disease. Therefore the questions to be asked in regard to crime committed by the insane 8110141 d not be merely as to the fact of - mania, but 'also as to the degree. Was the knowledge of right and wrong destroy ' cd? Wits the sense of personal responsibil ity extinguished? In other words, did the insarlb cease to know that it was crime which was being - committed? ' This may be held a very hard measure, if punishment 'is to be meted out with the same severity as to the wholly rational. But ' we hold it essentially wrong to undertake to judge according to the degrees of ac countability when the culprit has been judged accountable. The same principle would say that in proportion as a man knew better what was right he should stiffer more severely. Previous good character would be not a mitigation of sentence, but an en hancement of it. - Where ignorance and degradation Were very great, crime would. I then become almost excusable. The, State, in undertaking the punishment ,of crime, has nothing - whatever to do with the refor mation of the offender. The first point to I be examined, then, is whether the insanity Lremoves the criminality. if it &Strop con scious volition it does. When, in the-well known case of Charles Lamb's sister .15iar3r, the daughter stabbed her mother to the heart, there was no question of absolute in nocence. But where there are present the usual accompaniments of crime, secrecy be fore and after the deed, contrivance in ac complishing, motive in attempting, and ef fort to evade the consequences of the act,— these are evidences of partial rationality.— It is no defense in such a case that the per petrator believes he has squared"the circle, or that ho is the Emperor Napoleon come to life again. The insanity, then, as it im pairs the rationality, must be shown to im pair it in the direction in which the crime is committed. It mut, bear directly on the crime. For if the inane is still capable of being controlled by the power of the law, it is for the good of society that law should control him. . We meet here the question whether- lm plea of insanity is ever to be allowed. We reply, only where it distinctly differentiates the case from that of the - sane. Otherwise it has no more true bearing upon the fact of crime than would be the plea of gout, or rheumatism, or acute neuralgia. Either of these may make their victim liable .to great access of passion, and diminish the power of self-control. But since theyrare never aunwee to disturb the balance nrttto 311(11; cial scales, 'men generally manage to keep them under, and to refrain from the impulse of murder, however great the desire to take instant vengeance upon the offender who treads upon a gouty toe, or the wretch who ' files a saw immediately under one's nose.— The keepers of insane asylums do riot dread their patients, because they have established a certain control over them, and they know that mad people in general yield to control, and are not So crazy but that they know the meaning of obedience. Of course there arc cases which transcend this limit, and there are the irresponsible cases. We mere ly say that we hold Dr. litimmond right in seeking, as he does, to limit judicial abso lution principally to such cases. But is the plea to be.admitted in mitiga tion? There will always remain the occa sional doubtful instance, where there is great difficulty in determining whether the reason and conscience have so far ceased to operate as to bike away responsibility. 'We so far depart from the position - taken above —that moral influences must not be let in to interfere with questions of criminality— as to bar the death penalty where a reason able doubt of entire sanity is established.— We should pot admit it other than in com mutation of sentence to imprisonment for life. We speak of the doubtful, cases, not , of pronounced mania, where, of course, the one way open is to send the offender to an asylum, to remain till cured. Dr. Ham mond thinks that for offenders like those we speak of there should be special asylums.— IThey ought not to be put with the ordinary 'Victims of dementia. It seems to us that this -is eminently, just. That would leave open three Colima: first, a verdict of ac quittal, if the plea of madness is fully. sus tained, and immediate transfer to the ordi nary asylum; sondly, a verdict of l con demnation, if t e plea fails, and the proper sentence of the law; thirdly, the case of doubt, where the insanity is proven, but its connection with the criminal act not clear, and for that the criminal asylum. This would protect society, not only from dan gerous, members of it, but also from the many mischievous and fallacious theories concerning special hallucinations, emotional insanity, and the rest of the " clever de fenses" set up by unscrupulous lawyers.— The Churchman. , ~ Plain Speech The Chicago Times has for some time been in a very independent frame of mind. Hav ing acuteness enough to see that the Demo cratic party was ruined by the disgraceful trade of last year it does not hesitate to say so, and to point out very plainly sonic of the facts which make it impossible for that party ever again to win power. It is espe cially hard on the Democratic morning pa per in this city, which it describes, bitterly, as the " New York Tammany organ." The latter journal recently undertook to define the first principles of Democracy. Prowl nea ainong them was that "individualism whose chief aim (in the choice language of the lirmlel)is to curtail and circumscribe the sphere of governmental action." But this, says the Chicago paper, is "of all political ideas the one with which the professional ' Democratic' leaders and statestnen' have the least sympathy." - It goes on: " More arbitrary asserters of ' authority' over private judgment and individual lib erty of action the world does not contain.— Outside the Latin Church, a more pater nal' organization than the late Democratic party has rarely ever existed. Whatever doctrine they have professed to hold, there. have scarce ever been•more vigorous pritet tioners of paternalism than the class of self constituted 'statesmen' who do not blush in shame for the palpable lie when they tell us that the party they have controlled liar always opposed the exercise by government of its powers in such a manner as to inter fere witn the freedom and self-direction o f private business and industry.' The state ment is absolutely false. Hardly a Demo cratic party 'leader' can be named who has not favored all manner of special legisla tioril all manner of protegtion to special in leretlts; all manner of monopolies, and rims and swindles and steals from slave-owning to salary-grabbing." It is not necessary to cite proofs of the accuracy of this statement. They will oc cur to any one familiar with the political history of the United States even for the paSt score of years. The crowning evidence of the rottenness of the Democracy was the. existence and success of the' Tammany on This organization substantially ruled the party. We dd - not mean that its crimes were known to all, or even, to most Democrats, and condoned by theta for the 'sake - of to political power. But they were known to most of the Democratic leaders, who tacitly or openly connivedat them. party which could produce suelileadoratind: tolerate themiwas necessarily useless for all good ends. - _ Our readers cannot have for gotten ,how dumb "the Demoaratie leaders Were when the outrageous robberies at Tam- Many were exposed: They, did not dare eVen then to kick Tweed out of their con- vention in this State. They did not dare to condemnithe four - powerful leaders in this city. Of course no party, could survive, such a disgrace. When :anl animal ()igen-, ism is - unable to cast out corruption and dis ease it dies, and this was what happened to the Democratic party.. It not only could ; -not rid itself. of Tammany—it could not even escape its rule. -It was Tatham) , that got up the coalition with the followers of John Cochrane and the Tribune in this city; and furnished a • candidate for Cincinnati and Baltimore. Tammany hoped by that trick to again get control, of the State. and, especially of the city. It failed" absolutely; and in its defeat it dragged down'the De mocracy of the whole country with it. It is the merest folly for the Democratic jour' nals to'be now prating- about the " prinet pies" of the Democracy. It has no princi ples. What remnants were left to it after the war have been thrown overboard. No one will ever vote the Democratip ticket again in any' clectidn of moment excepti from the force of habit. All motives for' voting it have disappeared, and if the party has not itself gone by the board—if there is still some sign of life in its lingering re mains—it is of little importance. The end is only a matter of time, and of a very short - me.-11 7 : Y. Times. , ITEMS Or GENERAL INTEREST President Grant celebrated his silver wed ding last Friday at Long Branch. The crop reports from Arkansas and Mis .sissippi are flattering. Perry Haas, a convicted intirderer, cut his throat in the Sunbury jail on Sunday week. Gen. Warford, formerly a President of the Northern Central Railroad, died at Har risburg, Pa., on Sunday week. The Republican State Committee of New York have decided to hold the State Con vention at Utica on the 24th of September. Some Nevada miners, who were drilling at a depth of 1,400 feet, recently tapped •a vein of_water so hot that they boiled 'eggs in it. The Os bills of New York city for the last year were nearly $200,000 less than un, der the ring rule. The Cambria Iron Company use 5,000 lbs. of blasting powder . per , mouth in their mines. ' Chicago has had another count; and now tallies 132,043 inhabitants. This is an in crease of 32,488 since 1870. Generals Howard and Burnside were both thrown from a. carriage at Martha's Vine yard last Tuesday evening and 'considera bly bruised. The twenty first meeting of the American Association for the Advancement of Sci ence opened•at the City Hall in Portland, Me., last Wednesday morning, 'Prof. J. S. Lovering presiding. The United States Senate CoMmittee on Privileges and Elections will meet in New York on the Brat of October to discuss the present mode of electing the President and Vice President. A quarrel between James C. King and Bruce McLeod, of Swanaboro, Ga., resulted in their killing each other with revolvers.— Both were respectably connected. Bombay dispatches report that destruc tive floods have recently afflicted the Prov ince of Agra. Thirty-five hundred native houses were swept. away by the waters, and there was some loss of life. James Baird, a Scotch iron master, has paid over to a board of trustees, to be called the Baird Trust, half a million pounds, to be applied for religious purposes in connec tion with-the Church of Scotland. The members of the Iron and Steel Insti tute of Liegej Belgium, have accepted the invitation to meet in the United States in 1874, and have designated Philadelphia as the city in which they will assemble. Judah P. Benjamin has notified two la dies, named Campbell and Chambers, of Madison, Ga., that they are joint heirs to $12,000,000 from a French estate. The la dies leave immediately to secure the inheri tance. At Kingston, New York, a few days since, a druggist named Elti compounded a prescript' Ivtiii. nge cranDhor instead of camphor water, causing the death of a child of William Holmes. There is much feeling in Kingston over the fatal blunder. Mr. Vanderbilt controls • 2,150 miles of railroad, representing $215,000,000 of secu rities, with a gross income of $45,000,000. This involves the mastery of the trade of the four great Statei of New York, Illinois," Minna, and Ohio. A quorum of the Senate Conimittee on Transportation has been secured to meet at New York on the Gth of September. A large amount of valuable iurformatiori on the subject has been received,including sta tistics from American Consuls abroad. The Attorney General has decided that no spirituous liquors can he introduced into the Indian country without the order of the War Department, and that the jurisdiction of that department is exclusive of all other authorities. Information is wanted of a girl eleven years of age, named Rosanna Hughes, who left Iker home in Lower Prospect, Indianacounty, on Monday, July 21, and has not since been heard from. She has light curly hair and dark eyes, and is rather stoutly built. , Address Terrence Hughes, Johns town, Pa. The New York World characterizes its Washington dispatches of last Tuesday an nouncing a deficit of ten millions in the Treasury a piece of groundless news, tele graphed through misapprehension and pub lished through a midnight inadvertence. The price of coffee in New York has ad vanced from twelve to fifteen cents within the last forty days, and the present supply is so remarkably light that a further increase in price is at least highly probable. Good judges, however, say that as the new Brazil crop, although small, is on the eve of com ing to market, no real scarcity ought to be felt before next year. The Alabama indemnity money; due from Orcat Britain to the United States on 'Sep tember oth, has already been paid into the Treasury, with the exception of about $5,- 000,000 which is deposited in a number of New York banks. The payments thus far to the Treasury have been in called bonds, over•due coupons, and gold. The balance due will be gradually paid ; in during the next three weeks, and during that time the managers of this fund expect to purchase an additional amount of called bonds. At a meeting of the Sunday School Un ion of London last Tuesday night Rev. Mr. Hartley, who had just returned from an in spection of the school system of the United States, spoke in terms of high praise of the efficiency of the American educational fa cilities; as to both sacred • and secular in struction. A report from the vessel in which Henri Rochefort was shipped for New Caledonia says that his fellow convicts, considering his course as treasonable to the 'cause of the ComMune, made an attempt to lynch him. The officers of the ship were obliged to as sign him quarters apart from and protected against the Communist exiles. Party re-organization draws a word flow, the Hartford Post : "Eternal- re-organiza tion is eternal disorganization. Good; hon est, square, hearty work of all the best ele ments is what is most wanted. To destroy the Republican party now would bet° throw away the `good will' and honorable tradi tions ofLa party that has done a glorioui and an ham rtal work, and whose great mass is still animated by a generous, self-sacrificing, patriotic spirit.' The Reading Eagle says: Three or four &reeks ! ago two men traveled, through a neighboring county pretending that they wanted to establish township libraries, which were to be kept r t the farmers' hous es, and the books loaned but free of cost.— calling upon a wealthy farmer, they would_ ask if be would take charge of the library. If he would, they asked him to write his name on a piece of paper, which was `to tia sent to the County Auditors.' The men then cut the sheet into slips, turned them over and wrote a note of hand on the other s id e , leaving the farmer's name to back it. They served half a dozen or more farmers Ohl Npy, writing notes of pa or $6O, to run thirty days, and signing any name they pleased, so long as the note had a• good in dorsement. The notes were afterward dis counted at the bank, and the; thieves fled, leaving the farmers severely stuck." The North German Gazette; stigmatizes as a disgusting invention the report in an American paper e.c an interview with Prince Bistnarek, in vobieli the PiineelS swede to say thathe would extirpate theldea' of God *and substitute thet, - of the State: "'it declares. that Bismarck :naves used' stick lariguago! or Adyocated .auch ' sentiments, ' addheitexes that the, falkehood ''origirtritcd'iti 'the Mead pollen's of the :remits, '-',.',,:,:',"%,',.' .' 7 !:,,:; :,;:, ' . Thelf*lidbilfietiS: Republican Btate r eon., l ventibn idtp iiii.,lielil'ilt:VV,OrcatktertAuPtem berAltli.-:,-; -- ". '''' '. : -. _ _,, ~ :;; - . A,' dis.patch from Louden' :states. , that. the town of :Christ latinple, on itialmar,-Sound,-. Sweden, has been entirely destrOyed by tire.' A. dispatch frmii LeXington, ,may., _says that the Witting Abillion t4ctninel was found (load - , ill his waffle nt. Ash CfroVe farm' re 'cOtly. , Ilis owner, 13(.1 Mal:horns, - of-New YorKa short time ago refused *30,000 for A most eccentric individual passed,away the death of George N. Sanders. Ho 'lived a life eventful, and exciting;- at one time United States Oopeulatlioladon, at an other Secretary of tlfalate"COnfederate Na ,vy, afterward figuring as a peace commis sioner to Canada—about his last public per formance. llis political career, lso ,of _story and episode, Will afford abundant 'ma terial for his memoir, He died In New York under the flag he had dishonored. Col. JainesF. - Meline, who served in the Mexican war, and was a well known jour nalist, andauthor, died recently in Brooklyn. The returns of the Agricultural Depart ment for the.first of August indicate a gen eral and somewhat marked improvement in, the condition and promise of the cotton crop since the first of July. Professorllusseil, the elobuiletiiit s , died at Lancaster; Mass., on the 10th instant, aged 70. The steamship Alabama, from - Glasgow, reports that op the 4th instant, at 11:50 p. m., she collided with the bark Abeona, from Montreal. The bark was so damaged that she sunk within five minutes of the time she struck. • Bat I, three of the crew were saved. Hon. S, S. Coxi has accepted the nomina tion:of the German Democrats as their can-- didate for successor in; Congress of 'the late James Brooks. In his' speech be promised unswerving fidelity td the New York De mocracy. I - `The Indian chiefs Santanta and Big Tree arrived at Houston, Texas, last Wednesday, under guard from, the penitentiary, , en route for Fort Sill, where a council is to,be held between Secretary Delano .and Governor Davis and the liiowa and Comanche tribes, with a view to a further peace. Ayer's qathartic Pills For all the purposes of a Family Physic, CURING lostivenesii, Janndioe, Dys 3psia, Indigestion, Dys dory, Foul Stomaeh ,and ,eath, Erysipelas, Read ;he, Pilos, Rheumatism, mptions and Skin Diseas , Biliousness, Liver Som mers and Ba 4; Rheum, ,Ls'a Dinner Pill, and Puri oat congenial 'purgative yet I f perfected. Their efi l cts abundantly show how much they excel all other ills, They are safe and pleasant to take, but powerf 1 to cure. They purge out the foul humors of the blood; they stimulate the slug ri, gish or disordered migan lutri action; and they impart health and tone toll 0 whole being. - They cure not soul) , the every day complaints of everybody, but formidable and da gerous diseases. Most skillful physicians, most c anent clergymen, and our best li citizens, send certi cake of cures performed and of great benefits they lave derived horn these Pills.— They aro the safest aid best physic for children, be. cause mild as well effectual. Being sugar coated, they are easy to take; and being purely vegetable, they aro entirely hartuless. . • FREPAIIED .13T :Dr...7. C. AVE I R. ,&:: CO., Lowell, Mass., Practical and Analytical Chemists. SQLD I3Y ALL DRUtIGISTS AND DEALERS IN Aug. 12, 11373-18 t. State Normal School MANSPIEI9,IIOOA COUNTY, PA. J. N. FRADENDURGII, A.M., Pb. D .s2olpEu. YEAR pays for tuition in all tho branches including book Keeping, Draw ing, Penmanship, and Vocal Music; and board, in cluding furnished roOm, fuel, oil, and washing. Tuition withotit hoard, $36 por year. Students pre paring to teach receive special encouragement. Fall Term opens September 3il, 1873. For further particulars address the principal. Aug. 19,-2t. State Normal Musical Academy MANSFIELD, TIDOS CO., PA Prof. D. C. ,TEWETT, Principal, Miss MHO ROOT, Preceptress This Institution, founded by its principal after a careful and thorough examination of the best methods of instruction that have yet been introduced, embraces all the excellencies and advantages that can be found in any Musical Institution, together with many im portant additions which are admirably adapted to the wants and requirements of students, and also in keep ing with the advanced ideas of the age. Music is taught here as other sciences are taught in our schools and colleges. There is a perfect arrangement of the respective departments, and the studies are classified in such a manner as to form four distinct courses of study, viz: 9AC115J3 ulnae, . ORCITEBIIIA MUSIC!, SECULAR MUSIC, ISRAS9 131. ND music. Each Course includes Two Degrees—Elementary and Classical. The combination of studies that form the different courses, is one of the most important features of the institution, as they are arranged with a view to a sym metrical development of the faculties, nothing short of which can produce the desired result In an educa tion of any kind, where, a correct Judgment, a cultivat ed taste and'a fluent executive ability are concerned. A course of study that will entitle a student to a di ploma, will consist of not less than five different branches, completed to the required standard, al though students may pursue any musical study separ ately if they desire it. The cost of beard is $55 per term, including, be light, room-rent, and lynching. RATES OP TUITION. Pull Course—one year, 3 terms, 14 weeks each, $90.00 40 IC two terms, - - - - 60.00 64 4 ono term, - • . • - 30.00 Two Studies—one year, - - 72.00 two terms, 49.00 SI 14 ono term, - - - - 24.00 Ono Study—ono year, 42.p0 46 two terms, 28.00 16 11 ono term, - - - - 14.00 FREE MWANTAGER Students taking a full course, aro entitled to the use of instruments four hours per day, and those taking a single study two hours, and others in proportion, with out extra charge. Full course students will also he entitled to an extra study tree, if their time and strength permit. A class held in the unisio hall foi the purpose of chorus and oratorio practice, is also free to full course students. `: Notation class free to all students. School year commences Wednesday, Septenther 3d. For further particulars address the principal, and procure a catalogue.' Blansfield, Pa., August 19, 1873. JEWELRY STORE I La_ Andrew Foley who has long been established in the Jewelry business in Wellsboro, has always for sale various kinds a nd prices of - flitrican IMatchts gold or silver, Cloeks,Jewelry,GoldChain,s, - Keys, Rings, Pins, Pen _ ells, Cases, Gold and; . Steel Pens, Thim bles, - Sfidons, . Razors, Plitied Ware, SEWING MACHINES, r With almost all other afticles usually kept In such establishments, which are sold low for iG" MB 3E-1". Repairing done neatly and promptly, and on ahoy nOtice • A. FOLEY. Aug 12, INSt 1 IGINE. [ ME Agrkiattl4!brik::„-4' ;th , t - • Qe v • ,„- flttattltli - . . „ . to be,o on Wednemtni Pri(iafr :and Saturdailigere— and 13, 1873. $135c0) Promiunise Ail eldrilla 81100111 be toudi: on the first day. Ample twertratioxis Mixt() Jrr tho •Ovotifenee of exhibitor•. ottiotete;not• no•ffii' rr.i ,u 1 1 10 Bat wid 1.0 wrorred to tliQtr propor t7;t41:11 ,, r, bo rewAlded. If Morey °I :31..nit:we. All oxlitbitors Oifed arnin 11 iiicinti'ur3NlP. o ,ll ' l,l E' 1.11,11 Y.) ------ • • Slagle ticket davit,; U. flair .. flingloadmission Carriages..,., Ot.eas I—BOItSES let. 2d. ' • , /3,cast atallioratour years old or over, t 5 $ 5 • II bred years old, , 5 3 ' ... ' Ivo years old, ' : i 3 2 Beet pair um lied geldings, ' - 10 6 i Mat.,lted mares, - 10 6 draft. horses, . ' 5 3 Best three year old gelding, . 4 2 i• three year old mare, , • 4 2 , i. single gelding, 4 2 i' , single mare, . 7 4 ' 2 ii. brood Tare and colt, 1, two year old, colt. - - , 2 1 , .. one year old Uolt, , 1 3 1 - ~ s ticking colt, 2 '1 Committee: John Dielitnaon, A. Runt, John M, Butler, Class II—JACKS and MULES . , Best jack, * 1 , $ 5 $2 Beet pair mules. , 6 2 Committee: Henry Batton', Richard Moore, Altmann Thompson. i' °Less 111—CATTLE., Best Alderney bull, '., i ' r i 7 ._ - 'ts $8 .. Ayreshire, i 5 3 n Durham, 1 5 3 o prenn, 5 3 • liat,ve, , 4 2 -4. Alderney cow,. , 5. S . .• Ayreehlre. . 5 3 0 Durham, 6 3 •• Devon, - • 5 2 , •• , Nisi iY1:: 4 2 •• 4 , yol:e a nrl:trig (.0(C11, 6 3 pair tld re eat old steers, - 4 2 •• pair t“tl }car old steers, -.. • 9 1 pair on,. .-ar old steers, . 2 1 .. two year old heifer, ~ 3 1 •• yearling heifer, 3 1: •• bull calf, 3 1 ~ Leiter calf. 3 1 ...yard of cattlo, not less than salami], 6 3 Committee: Charles Drinnell, George English, Jer , emiali Klock. Cr A.Fs IV—SHEEP. Beet lino wool brick, $4 $2 coarse wool buck, 4 2 " flue wool ewe, a 1. '• coarse wool ewe, 8 1 three lambs, 4 2 ) era of sheep, ten or more, t 5 3 • Committee: Robert Campbell. L. 8. Potter, Charles Close. CLAUS Y-HOGS. . , $5 . $3 De ' Ima , =2l sow mu] pigs, 6 3 Committee: L. lh, Edwards, 4 1 , ,V. W. Eugish, Pharez Houghton. . I CLASS VI-PO1)13R i' . . Best diSplay of - poultry, (elliel„ens,) $5 $3 variety of fowls ' not less than ten, 5 3 Comm: tee: U. W. Sears, M. B. Prince, A. hi. Hay, lett. C [Ars V II—DAIRY PRODUCTS Bert firkiu of butter, _ tub of butter, , I 4 1 •• ~ faPtory cheese, ! a I " cheader eheetio. , 2 1 hand-102ft cheese, i 3 2 Committee: Charles Toles, Hugh Stewart, Eplualm Frsaels.( ' CLAsaVIII—FIELD CROPS. Beat acre of wheat, ' $5 0 44 acre of corn, 3 0 " acre of oat; ``2 0 4 acre of barley. , • 2 0 acre of bucku heat, 2 0 44 potatoes, 3 0 , All cont.( etanta must make entry at thei Fair, and submit proof of weasuremeni, quality, in4.l quautlty to J. B. 'Potter, Chairman of Executive ommittee, prior to the Etna day of December next. • . CLAEsIX—GARDEN VEGETABLES Bost six beads of cabbage, 0 'six beets or more, - balf bushel of potatoes, bale bushel of rota bagas, half bushel of carrots, ~ Lair busbel of turnips, half bushel of 01310Et8, ~ variety of tomatoes, ~ winter aquaeli, " watermelon, I. 0%. " muskmelon, 1 04 " pumpkin, , ',.1. 03i' " display of garden vegetables, 6 3 Committee: E. J. Brown, B. F. Kelsey, John Pier son. CLASS X-GRAIN. Best bushel of winter wheat, bushel of spring wheat, bushel of barley, ' bushel of rye, bushel of oats, bushel of corn In the.ear, '• bushel of buckwheat, halt bushel of clover seed, " half bushel of timothy seed, 2 1 half bbahel of peas, 2 1 half Iniehel of, beans, 2 1 Committee: Calvin Hammond, L. U. Gillett, Robert Roland, ' OLAes XI—FRUIT. Best variety o f apples, ....ri , ty of wawa, 4 2 '' VEtrit'ty Of peaches,2 1 1 .4 variety of plums. 2 1 4 . vsriety_of grapes, 2 1 .. general display of fruit, 5 2 Committee: John F DonalJson, L. J. Prettier, John Karr. C.C.tFs XL—AGRICULTURAL IMPLEMENTS. Best plough, $2 $1 " side-hill plougl4 - 2 1 " cultivator, 2 • 1 field roller, ' 1 -- o a harrow, 2 o '• mower and reaper, 3 0 " mower, ; ),2 0 " thresher and cleaner, ' 5 0 " straw cutter, 2 , 1 horse rake, 1 0 " hay tedder, 1 0 horse hay fork, ,r 2 1 " portable fence, ,1 2 0 " fanning mill, 3 '0 " fartn gate, 2 0 " washing machine, 1 ' 0 ' " churn power. 2 ‘, 0 , Committee: Darwin Thompson, Job Donne, D. 0 Stevens. ,I CLASS SIII—AIECIIANICAI DEPARTMENT. Best farm wagon, $5 $3 " single buggy, 5 3 " family carriage, 5 3 platform spring democrat, 5 3 • double heavy harness, 4 2 double carriage harness, 4 2 " single harness. specimen of blacksmithing, . diap'ay of cabinet furniture, . specimen of carpenter work, pump, " sample of pine lumber, sample of sawed shingles, shaved shingles, " sample of clay brick, display of finished sole leather; display of finished upper leather, " corn b isket, half-dozen home-made brooms, 2 1 Committee: A. Crowl, A. G. Sturrock, William 11 Jones. Crass Xl - 0-4•HOUSEHOLD AND DatESTIC. Best ten yards of flannel, $ 2 $ 1 ten yards of full cloth, 2 1 ten yards of rag carpet, 2 1 ten yards of tow cloth, 2 1 five yards of linen cloth, 2 1 • specinien of wheat bread. 2 1 specimen of graham bread, specimen of corn bread, specimen of apple butter, gallon of soap, jar Of pickles, specimen of catsup, " specimen of woolen yarn, ,• specimen of dried beef, " bed quilt, " home-made counterpane, pair knit woolen stockings, pair knit woolen mittens, " plain sewing, " handmade shirt bosom and collar, 2 1 " mrithine-made shirt bosom and collar, 2 1 ten kiounds of maple sugar, 2 1 " gallon syrup, _ 2 1 • box of honey, 2 1 Committee: Mrs. Lucy, iiOtChUIFIS, 11111. John fif, Butler and Mrs. Jno &ars: CLAss XV—FLOWERS, PAINTING, FANCY {YORK. Best parlor boquet, 2 - 1 " band boquet, r . 2 .1 " dozen dahlias,- 1 . 0 display of flowers; 2 1 embroidery, (work of exhibitor,) 2 1 " pair of slippers, ~2 1 " oil painting, 2 1 specimen of penciling, 2 1 ' " crayon drawing, 2 1 pin cushion,l 0% 0 display of hair work, 2 1 , " specimen of wax flowers, 2 1 " specimen of feather flowers, 2 1 " ottoman cover, 1 ' 032 , " suit under clothing, - 1 ", Butt night:clothing, - 2 1 ' " display of bead work, 2 1 0 card basket, - 1 034 knit worsted tidy, 1 0 34 0 knit cotton tidy„l , 03. s " sofa pillow, 1 I. 0;i, "‘ afghan, 1 0 v . .. ", ottoman,- 1 , 034. " lamp mat, 1 Oy fancy wall basket, 1 04 0 display millinery, 5 .8 CoMmittee: Mrs. Jas. C. Bryden, Miss H. W. Todd and Mrs. If. M. &field. - - CLASS XVI-LADIES' DISCRETIONARY. Bins. I. M. Bodine, Mrs. J. IL Shearer, Mrs. J. 13 Potter, 7Ars. Abram Walker, and Mrs.W. P. Sbumway CL es XVII—GENTS' DISCERTIONARY. John W. "Laney, H. W. Williturm,"and W. A. stone CLASS xvm-MUSICAL INSTRUJIRNTS. Best Mann (7 octave or more) $lO $5 ~ organ, 6 3 ~ Melodeon, 6 3 CoMmittee: W. W. Webb, Mrs. A. B. Eastman, and Mia. C. G. Osgood. • Cuss NIX—BRASS BANS. Best Mass Band, / - $35 $l6 EXECUTIVI 6 : COMMITTEE I. D. Potter, Chairman, Walter Sherwood, W. P. Shumway, W. P. Campbell, J. B. Bowen, D. A. Stow ell, and Nelson Claus. I. M. BODINE, - Secretary, =3:=l Wellsboro Driving Park. There will be trotting as follows on the 2d. 3d and 4th days of the County Fair, under the direction of the Wellsboro Driving, Park Association. Tickets to the F ir, whether for persons or carriages, will admit the holders to the Driving Park without additional obarr. • PrenitilMS. $2,500, . September, 11th, 12th and 13th,1873 , Film m or ,—iito. 1, puns of $9OO. For liorse, never trotted better than throe minutes. First prominto..... _ .. Second premium -, .... Third-premium _ , Fourth premium Iv o . 2, - purse of tiiio„,,, For horses that never First Than - Second Pnn.su , Third premium • ~. Fourth premium ......• •• • • ,-- ' ... ...... Simon) DAY.--NO. 3, purist u, $2OO. Rennin ] First premium... Second premiutri -i. , ~ . ~.........„ Third premium . Nn. , 4, - purskof $BOO. For licruirs Uokt never bettor than 2:32. - First premium . . Second premium... ......... Third premium - . - Fourth premium •• • • .. Tamp DAY.--No. 6, purse a poo.• For ho never trotted better than 2:50, - First premium.... Second premium ~ Third premium Fourth premium . ...... :.. No. 0, purse of $5OO. Free to all: .-- First premium... Second premium. Third premium. Funrth prerutuvu . 1 $2OO 1 50 ao NSTITUTE FOR B At West Chester. Pa. A beautiful and elevai tion, 22 miles west of Philapeinbia.vll spa c i, grounds, with Gymnasium. Students prel College, Polytechnic Schools or Businezd. provision made for very young bo' a. m an y remain, as boardeis, during the summer vt Session begins Sept. 10. Address RORER:: CLELLAN, dui AYER'S HAIR VIGOR , For Restoring Gray [fair To Its Natural Vitality and Co/or, A.. l ? i v c ni rt i yi t a z ereith a AhlPoattion, tu r f hair EtillY. and ea rn them GLcliuo it ti;111,'" znaturely. AYEleki lints ~ 10001 ig and ertenene gat La Proven that it ski to falling of the },;i inthdlately; often Res the growth, and y. Lye enrely restores Ih ler, wh en faded or rrty . stimulates the unth: rive organs to;healthy activity, Ind preserves both tt, hair and its beauty.' Thus brashy,weak, or sickly L ux becomes glossy, pliable and strengthened; lost ht regrows with lively expression; ;hair is shed. ed and stablished; thin hair thickens; laud flew t , gray hairs resume their original color. Its °rental Is sure' and harmless, It cures dandruff, h ee l s humors, and keeps the scalp cool, clean and aoft—an• der which contitions, diseases- of th e Scalp a rt possible. • MI a dressing for ladles' hair, the yICOR is pre,s6 for its grateful and agreeable perfume, and rained fer the soft lustre and richnin.a of tone it initattA. tri Dr. J. C. AVER 4g.; CO., Lowell, M. S OLD BY ALL DRUGGISI S AZvD DEALIRS IN 3IED. Aug. 12, 1873-Iy-eow. Rot Groceries thid PION IS.IOIII $2 $ 1 2 1 2 1 2 1 2 1 2 1 2 1 A 1 1 0. HAVING purchased the stock of dretli, would say to his frieuds and the public generally that he will endeavor to merit their patron. age by keeping constantly on hand large and nil selected stock of $ 2 $ 1 2 1 Llth-IT AND HE AVVGROCERIES, 2 1 2 1 2 1 2 1 2 1 YANKEE NOTIONS, TOBACCO, $6 $3 which a ill be sold at fair priccs Tternentber the place, Wellsbora, July 22, 1873 -tf. W. I'. BIGONY FITIGII YOUNG'S insurance,B►ai Esiate3Sleamship .421.(m-mivcr3r. No 1. Volum' s Block. WrDrafts sold payable In any city or town in Furve. Cabin,'Seeond Cabin, or Steerage Passage now" to or from any town in Europe from or to Wellsbnro. by the Anchor Line, or the White Star Line of Ocean Steamers. • 4 2 5 3 3 1 2 1 2 1 2 1 2 1 2 1 ,Wheal Estate bought and sold on Commission. 04-I desire to call particular attention to the 'nor ance facilities afforded by the old and well known Weilsboro Insurance Agency. 6 3 6 3 2 1 -ESTADLTBtICP IN 18G0:- FIRE, LIFE & A Cel D ENT. Capital nepresente,l ,? fIi,OIPJ,INIII. ATNA, of Hartford, HOME, of New York. FRANKLIN, of Philadelphia INS. CO OF NORTH AMERICA. of Mira PENNSYLVANIA, of Philadelphia WIE lAMS . .=ORT FIRE. ALEIVIANNIA. of. Cleveland, Ohio. PHENIX, of Brooklyn, N Y. LYCOMING IttlS. CO.. Muncy. Pa. TRAVELERS LIFE & ACCIDENT, Hartford. 2 1 2' 1 2 1 • 2 1 • - i • 2 .1 1 2 • 1 1 ' O) 1 ilyi 2 1 2 1 1 03i 1 0,4' 2 1 Follett.. written tu au),of the above hauling coni paniva at standard rates. lopeee promptly pea st my (ace, No, 1 Bowen's Block. 111Cl411 YOUNG. Noe, 1.9. 1872. 1 1 9 - 4 4 9 Stoires, Tin and Hardware! SF"Cio to D. H. BELCHER & Co's for your Stem Tio and Sheet Iron. .IQ-Go to D, Et. Belcher h Co's for your Nails and General Hardware. • s,n Go to D. H. Belcher a Co's for your'llaying and Harvesting ..tQ'Go to D. H. Belcher & Co'B for your Table and Peel et Cutlery. ri9 - 00 to D. 11. Belcher 9: Co'e (of gout Rove and Hdrse, Forks. .0-Z - 00 to D. H. Belcher k Co's for the beet Metallic Linea Wood Pumps. ,O Go to D, 11. DeleheA Co's for the Lest Plow in his country. in - "Co to P. H. Belotwr & Co's for your Tin Root ug iud Spouting. .O Go to D. R. Belcher & Co's for your IlePairing of ell kinds. which we do on short nothe sea guarantee satisfaction. We arc agents for the D. RaWl4Oll Mowing Nfachines, to Which We rail your special attention. iki - Eve'rY Machine warranted for tWo years. Extras of all Itadi for this Machine kept on hand or furnished to older. Any person wishing to buy the best Machine in this market will do well to givo us a call. 8. F. WILSON, Preztdent D. 11. BELCHER & CO., First door below the Postontee, WeMbar°, Ps Juno 21. 1873'-.3m. Eihhhb,bbbi9b NEWLY MARRIED PEOPLE (end old ones too) can get a eornPlete outfit for housekeeping at Kelly's,Chlua Bah. H. S. TfASTINGB MCLELLAN'S PANPAUrp DY Practical acid Ataaltittcal INCE! AVFLISBORO, VA NV. P. 'l3 I Gg-CoN PROVISIONS, CIGARS, &c , Como and buy ONCE and you will agate Second door below the Welleboro Hotel