DAILY TOWANDA REVIEW. VOLUME I, NO. 113. Business Cards. \LV()RI> & SON, JOB Pit INTERS, DAILY REVIEW OFFICE, Main street, Towanda PU. BENTLY MEEKER, CLOCK & WATCH-MAKER AND REPAIRER. All at the lowest prices. Monroeton, Pa. 7"™>R. T. 15. JOHNSON, PH YSICI.t V .IXD SUR(rEON. Otlice over 11. t' Porter's Drug Store, Residence • ornor Maple and Second Streets, JOHN W. CODDING, A TTORNE P-.l 7-LA IP. Office over Ma.-nn's old Bunk. 1803. 1870. ITIRE V LIFE LM'SURAXFE. A Wm. *•*. \ im-efit. Main-st, Towanda, Pa. Largest. Safest, Oldest and best companies repre sented. 17sept79. HENR Y STREETER, ATTORNEY & COUNSELOR AT LAW TOWANDA, PA. '—H W. RYAN, Or. COUNTY SUPERINTENDENT. Office Button's Block. Ol). KINNEY, A TTORNE Y-A T-L. I IP. Office, corner Main and Pine Streets, Towanda, Pa. XT/ILIAMS & ANGLE, * Y ATTO R NE) 'S- A T-L All Office formerly occupied by \V. Wntkins. ELS BR EE & SON, .1 7 TORNE YS-A T-L A IP. South side Mercur llloek, Towanda, Pa. N. O. ELSBTSKE. | L. ELSBUKK. GREAT CROWDS Continually attend the Auction Sale OF FINE Dry Goods n the store formerly occupied by J. L KENT, Moore's Block. The stock comprises large lines of DRESS GOODS, CALICOES, DOMES TICS, TABLE LINENS, TOWELS and TOWELXO, FLANNELS, MARSEILLES and CROTCHET VJUILTS, BLANKKTL, HOSIERY OF ALL KINDS, KNIT UNDERWEAR, GLOVES in great variety, LADIES SKIRTS, and CORSETS, UMBRELLd® and PARASOLS, RIBBONS, and RUCHES, COLLARS, and CUFFS, LACES, and VEILINGS, and FANCY GOODS and NOTIONS, FINE TABLE and POCKET CUT LERY. In fact everything found in a first class store. No old styles as in most Bankrupt stocks, th goods having been purchased within the year. Sales at 1 and 7 p. in., until stock is closed. Ladies Especially invited. No reserve. I). LYONS. TOWANDA, PA., SATURDAY AFTERNOON, DECEMBER 20, 1879. The News Condensed. One Heading firm manufacture over 200,- 000 brooms annually. The City Controller of Rending has mysteriously diisappeared. Second Assistant Postmaster General Brady has no intention of resigning. The President will visit (Jen. Grant in Philadelphia next week. Six car loads of silk-worm eggs arrived in New York yesterday front California. The House Rules have been much abre viated and simplified by the Committee. A silver mine has been discovered in Woodward township, Lycoming county. The exports from the United States to Great Britain this year are sr>~>,()00.000 in excess of 1878. The Synod of Long Island sustained the Presbytery and Dr. Talmage by t: two thirds vote. Stealing dogs is a business in the Western part of the State, the canines being shipped Rust to be sold. Out of the six students who were ex amined for admission to the bar last week at Pittsburg five were rejected. .... I lie city of Chester contributed ">.000; citizens to the populaiion of Philadelphia on Tuesday. It is possiple Gen. Phil Sheridan will accompany Gelt. Grant, on his visit to | Mexico and Cuba. The Knights of Labor in the Luzerne district, deny that they are organizing a strike. The peanut crop of Virginia, Tennessee and North Carolina i> estimated At 1,8"0,- 000 bushels. Secretary Taylor of the Bonanza mines has paid out during the past six years over #<>o,ooo,ooo. On Saturday at the Troy, N. Y., Iron Works $130,000 were paid to operatives, the largest payment in six years. A single tract of loo,uoo acres of land in Pulaski county, Ky., is advertised at fax sale. George Savage, the well knowh tem perance advocate died at his residence in Washington on Wednesday night, in the 70th year of his age. The Comptroller of the Currency has i called upon the national banks for a re port showing their condition at the close i o 4 * business on the 12th of December. It i> understood in Washington that the New York Times is coming out square ly for Grant as the republican presiden tial candidate. English Millers usually employ three parts English and one part foreign wheat, i but the last few months these proportions ) have been reversed, owing both to the shortness of the crop and the inferiority I of their grain the present year. When Rev. Air. Whitehead returned to, his past urate at Bethlehem, Pa., after his trip to Europe, he found that the congre gation during his absence had paid olf the ; church debt. Doctor Gilbert of Chestnut Hill recent ly relieved a lady of a snake which she swallowed fifteen years ago. For several' years she has suffered intensly, the rep tile frequently crawling into her mouth | in search of food. It has grown to very large proportions, greatly to the disfig urement of the lady, who has spent large sums of money in iier efforts to get rid of her unwelcome gvest. -pOK THE PRESIDENTIAL YEAK. ! r ~ " THE LEADING AMERICAN NEWS PAPER." THK NKW YORK ITRI BUNE FOR IHBO. During tin; coming Presidential yr:r Tito Tribune will bo a more effective agency than ever lor tolling I the IH'wn host worth knowing, and for enforcing sound politics. From tlie day the war closed it has j j boon inost anxious for an end of sectional strife. j Hut it saw two years ago, and was the first persist- j i ently to Proclaim the new danger to the country ! ; from the revived alliance or the Solid Bouth and j ' Tamtnanj Hall. Against that uanger it sought to I rally the old party of Freedom :nd the Union. It j j began by demanding the abandonment of personal ; dislikes, and set the example. It called for an end \ to attacks upon each other instead of the enemy; ! and for the heartiest agreement upon whatever tit j : candidates the majority should put up against the I common foe. Binco then the tide of disaster has , been turned back; every doubtful state lias been ' won, and the omens for National victory were never j more cheering. THK TRIBUNE'S POSITION. Of The Tribujie's share in all this, those speak j most enthusiastically who have seen most of the I struggle. It will faithfully portray the varniug phases of the campaign now beginning. It will , earnestly strive that the party of Freedom, Union 1 and Public Faith may select the man surest to win, j ; and surest to make a good President. Hut in this i ! crisis it can conceive of no nomination tins party I I could make that would not be preferable to the best : that could possibly be supported by the Solid South and Tammany Hall. The Tribune is now spending much labor and I money than ever before to hold the distinction it has enjoyed of the largest circulation among the best \ ■profile, it secured, and means to retain it, by be- ! coming the medium of the best thought and the! : voice of the best conscience of the time, by keeping j I abreast of the highest progress, favoring the freeest j : discussions, hearing all sides, appealing always to j | the best intelligence and the purest morality, and re- ! | fusing to carter to the tastes of the vile or the prcju -1 dices of the ignorant. si'KCl \l, FEATURES. The distinctive features of The Tribune are known Ito everybody. It gives all the news. It has the 1 best correspondents, and retains them from year to 1 | year, It is the only paper that maintains a special I , telegraphic wire of its own between its olljee and 1 Washington Its scientific, literary, artistic and re -1 ligioii* intelligence is the fullest. Its book reviews are the la st. 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Ihe New \ 'irk I'ribune will semi at subscriber's j expense for freight, or deliver in New York City FREE, Worcester's Croat Unabridged Quarto Illus trated Dictionary, edition of 1879, the very latest and I very best edition ot the great work, to any one re j mitting #lo tor a single five years' subscription in advance, or live one year subscriptions to The Weekly, or, #b> tor a single live years' subscription in advance' | or tive one year subscriptions to The Semi \\ eekly, or, one year's subscription to The Daily, or, s3ll tor a single three year's subscription in advance to Tin; Daily Tribune, For one dollar extra the Dictionary can be sent by mail to any part of the United States, while for short distances the expense is much cheaper. Address THE TRIBUNE, New York. 1831. THE CULTIVATOR 1880. AND Counti'j O-entleman. The Best of the AGRICUI /ITT HAL W E EKLI Ew. I Itis UNSURPASSED, if not UNEQUALED, for the Amount and Variety of the PIIACTICAI. 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The COUNTRY GENTLEMAN published Weekly on the following terms, when paid strictly in ud vance: One Cepy, one year, $2.50; Four Copies, the Header of the Club Ten Copies, #2O, and an J additional copy for th year free to the tender of the Club. hor the year 1880, these prices include a copy of the ANNUAL REGISTER OF RURAL AFFAIRS, to each subscriber—a book of 144 pages and about 120 ne gravings—a gift by the Publishers. All NEW N idmcribern fur ISSO, payiny in ad , cance. note, will receive the paper WEEKLY, from receipt of remittance to January let, 1880, with I out charge. Specimen copies of the paper free. Address LI lIIER TUCKER & B<)N, Publishers, Albany, N. Y. | p m OR j Hair Cut smcl J^liave Go to tbe WARD HOUSE SHAVING PARLOR STEDGE Is there.