DAILY TO WANDA REVIEW. VOLUME I, NO. 117. The News Condensed. A pugilist killed a Siberian bloodhound in a prize light at St. Louis Monday night. General Grant spent a few hours with his mother at Jersey City yesterday. St. Louis is icebound%'ith the Missis ippi river from there to Cairo unnavigable. The earth over a coal mine at Locust Gap, Schuylkill county, is caving in. Servere weather prevails in Minnesota and on the Pacific coast. The people in London spent Christmas ! in a fog. Mr. Whittier was seventy-two years old yesterday. Pins of large opal beads are a favorite i hair ornament. Secretary Sherman has returned to his post at Washington. North Carolint hogs are fattening on the best chestnut crop ever know. The United States Supreme Court has ■ adjourned till January sth. General Grant and family spent Christ- ! mas day and evening as the guests of George W. Chi Ids, in Philadelphia. Queen Victoria has subscribed £SOO to j the Duchess of Marlborough's Irish relief 1 fund. Henry M. Stanley is now ascending the ! Congo, bound once more for the heart of' Africa by a different route. Manhattan Gas Light Company shares j brought 1118 in New York yesterday against I 143 1-2 last sale. Prominent Republicans at Washington express hopes of carrying two or three Southern State in 1880. Henry Wilson, song-and-dancc man, ! was shot in New York yesterday by a cat-1 tie dealer. An agreement has been reached by Rail road Board of Arbitration on percentages of east-bound freights. An attempt to prevent organization of! the Maine House of Representatives will probably be the extent to which opposition to Democratic fraud will be carried. The restrictions placed on importations of neat cattle from Europe arc extended to similar importations from Australia and New Zealand. Ilanlan says he will wait two weeks longer to hear from Courtney. He seems disposed to row him in April, if a race cannot be arranged before that time. % President Nickerson, of the Atchison, : Topeka and Santa Joe railroad, denies that the road has passed into the hands of Jay Gould. > The President leaves Washington to-day for a short holiday visit to relatives in! Plainfield, N. J. He will stop one night in Philadelphia with cx-Minister Welch, where he will meet General Grant. Ah attempt to transfer arms and ainuni-; tion from Bangor to Augusta, Me., yester day was prevented by a crowd of excited citizens. The greatest excitement pre-! vails all over the State, and if the outrage j of the Governor and Council be carried out it is feared some serious consequences j will result. Senator Morrill has written a long letter to the Governor beseeeeiug him to submit the question of the election of members to the Supreme Court, pledg- j iug him that the disfranchised members! will peaceably abide such a decision. The ! Governor has not answered it. TOWANDA, PA., FRIDAY AFTERNOON. DECEMBER 26, 1879. -J* HE BEST, CHEAPEST AND CLEANEST CO A L IS THE j Loyal * I , Sock! LOYAL SOCK Stove, $3 00 Wilkes-Barre, " 4 25 Save ONE DOLLAR and TWENTY - F CENTS per ton by buy ing the hoy til Sock. W. M. MALLORY. Bus iness Cards. ALVORD & SON, J OR PJiINTERS, DAILY KKVIKW OFFICE, Main street, Towanda I'a. BENTLY MEEKER, CLOCK & WATCH-MAKER AND REPAlllEli. All at the lowest prices. Monroeton, Pa. DR. T. B. JOHNSON, PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON, Office over H.C Porter's Drug Store, Residence eorner Maple and Second Streets, JOHN W. CODDING, .1 T TORN E Y-A T-LA IE, Office over Mason's old Rank. 1863. 1875). I IHE if LIFE INSURANCE. Win. S. \ iiH'oiit, Maln-st, Towanda, Pa. Largest, Safest, Oldest and best companies repre sented. 17sept7D. HENR Y STJIEETER, ATTORNEY .V COUNSELOR AT LAW TOWANDA, PA. G\V. RYAN, ■ oO UNT Y SUPERINTENDENT. Office Patton's Block. OD. KINNEY, ATTO R NE) -A T-LA M r , Office, corner Main and Pine Streets, Towanda, Pa. TT7IUAMS & ANGLE, :V V A TTORNE YS-A 7- L AW, i Office formerly occupied by W. Watkins. ELSBREE & SON, A 7 TORNE YS-A T-LA IF, South side Mercur Block, Towanda, Pa. N. C. KLSBKKK. | L. ELSHIIKE. ! p"OR Flaii* ("lit ;ind SiGt ve Go to the WARD HOUSE SHAVING PARLOR STEDGE I v i [8 there. ! THE PRESIDENTIAL YEAR. ! " THE LEADING AMERICAN NEWS PAPER." . ♦ . THE NEW YORK TRIB U N E FOR 1880. During the coining Presidential year The Tribune will he a more effective agency than ever for telling the news best worth knowing, and for enforcing sound politics. From the day the war closed it has been most anxious for an end of sectional strife. But it saw two years ago, and was the first persist ently to Proclaim the new danger to the country from the revived alliance of the Solid South and Tammany Hall. Against that danger it sought to rally the old party of Freedom and the Union. It 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 lit candidates the majority should put up against the common foe. Since then the tide of disaster has been turned back; every doubtful state has been won, and the omens for National victory were never I more cheering. THE TRIBUNE'S POSITION. Of The Tribune's share In all this, those speak i most enthusiastically who have seen most of the I struggle. It will faithfully portray the varning j phases of the campaign now beginning. It will I earnestly strive that the party of Freedom, Union i and Public baith may nclcct the man surest to win, I and surest to make a good President. But in this I crisis it can conceive of no nomination this party could make that would not be preferable to the best I that could possibly be supported by the Solid South I and Tammany Hull. Ihe 1 ribune is now spending much labor and money than ever before to hold the distinction it has enjoyed of the largest circulation among the bent | peojßt. It secured, and means to retain it, by be- I'RICE ONE CENT. coming tln> medium of the best thought and the voice of the best conscience of the time, by keeping abreast of the highest progress, favoring the freeest discussions, hearing ail sides, appealing always to the best intelligence and the purest morality, and re fusing to carter to the tastes of the vile or the preju dices of the ignorant. SPECIAL FEATURES. The distinctive features of The Tribune are known to everybody. It gives all the news. It has the best correspondents, and retains them from year to year, It is the only paper that maintains a special telegraphic wire of its own between its office aud Washington. Its scientific, literary, artistic and re ligious intelligence is the fullest. Its book reviews I are the best. 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