The IDaily Review. Towanda Pa., Wednesday, Dec'r 31, 1879. KDITOIIB : 8. W. ALVORD. NOBLE N. ALVORD. *' Daily Ilrriew" only 25 centi per month. Try it. TOWANDA, PA., Dec. 30, 1870. EDITORS REVlEW— Gentlemen: —As yon have favored in you paper the policy of the President as to the retiring of the present volume of greenbacks, will you, as a matter of justice to those ot'3'our readers who believe such a course would be suicidal to the best interests of the countjy, insert the following. The Chi cago Tribune from which it is taken, is without doubt one of the ablest journals of Republican politics in the whole Union. If this policy of wiping out one third of the whole currency, a currency which is as good as gold the world over, and costs the Government nothing for interest, is persisted in tin: contusion of party lines may be only equalled by the ruin and disaster thereby done to the business relations of the nation. C. M. 11. "The attitude of the entire New York press is sectional, provincial, servile, and insincere. It is sectional in that it is willing to prostitute the interests of the whole people to the greed of one section. It is provincial in that it takes a contrac ted ard obstinate view of a subject of Na tional concern. it is servile because it voluntairilv prostitutes itself to the ex actations of a certain clique whose opin ions are not even shared by the com munity which the New York press pur ports to represent. It is insincere be cause it attempts to deceive both parties into the belief that contraction of the currency will serve party ends, knowing all the while that such counsel is absurdly false. The New York newspapers, in their treatment of the currency question, arc little better than hired assassins' they would 'mortally slab the prosperity of the country at the command of Wall street bandits who seek to plunder the people. If it is a crime to organize and urge the robberyjof a bank or residence, t hen it is also a crime to or ganize and urge the robbery of a whole people. This is precisely what the New- York press is doing. It would steal from the many to further enrich the lew. It would rob the people of its abundance of currency for the transaction of business, in order to secure to the money-lenders a higher interest on their loans. It would rob the producers and the manufacturers of fair prices in order that the weal thy may buy more with their gold. It would increase the burdens of the debtors everywhere in order that the creditors may exact more than is their due. It would deprive the country of its prosperity, stille public contidence, check the new impetus business has acquired under the stimulant of expansion which resumption has provided, swell the public and private debts, force people to do bus iness on a falling market, and all at the behest of its masters and in order to grat ify their greed. Such transparent and despicable servility as this is not likely to influence anybody of intelligence and character." The St. Louis Globe. Democrat thus la ments the rise in the price of paper:— " Printing paper is sharing the fate of other manufactured articles at the pres ent time in experiencing a 'ery decided boom. A continuance of the rise in price which has been going on for a lew months past will seriously contract the profit of the publishers, unless invention shall come to their rescue in the mean while with cheaper methods of produc tion, and uew Held of capital." An Indianapolis paper thinks the dem ocratic plea that the Maine robbery is bad, but that the republicans are respon sible for the example, is something like the negro boy's excuse for having stolen a roll of butter from a store when the pro prietor had stepped out for a moment: " What did ye leave me Tone for? You know'd I'd steal!" NO REVIEW TO-MOIUiOW CHRISTMAS, lfift. NEW YEARS, 1880. EXTRAORDINARY INVOICE OF HOLIDAY AND 31 illiiiex\v Goods. Mrs. S. If. Sweet Offers at her Emporium of Fancy (foods MILLINERY AND YANKEE NOTIONS. A FRESH STOCK Recently purchased, at the LOWEST POSSIBLE PRICES. Consisting of Huts, Fancy Goods, Toweling, Collars, Comforters, Embroideries, Flowers, Ribbons, Handkerchiefs, silk, linen and embroidered, Feath ers and Tips, Slipper Patterns, Card-board, Zephyrs, Combs, Jet Ornaments. Reselling, Necklaces, Veil ing in all colors, Java Canvas Patterns, Lace Capes, Crape Pellisses, Rabies' Knit Stockings, Ladies' Hose in all colors and styles, Dolls, Children's, Sacks, Hoods and Mittens, Ladies' Nubias in all colors, Bracelets, Pocket Hooks, Mottoes, Birds and Feathers, Shawls, Jewelry, Ladies' and Gentle men's UND ERWEAR. Tn short, EVERYTHING pertaining to a complete assortment of seasonable FANCY GOODS - unci STYLISH MILLINERY. HATH TRIMM El>, in all styles and colors, and of every variety of material: Fur, Felt and Straw, at MRS. SWEET'S Fancy Goods Bazar, Dec. 17 Main Street, Towanda. lyl E rosenfield ' s Fall Opening CLOTHING HATS, CAPS, NECKWEAR, GLOVES, HOSIERY, and a full Hue of GENTS' FURNISHING GOODS, which are offered EXCEEDINGLY LOW. Call and see me.Jexumlne prices, &c M. E. ROSENFIELI). TOE JOHNSON, FASHIONABLE BAR BE R, Under Market, one door south of Ward House. Careful and experienced workmen always ready te wait upon customers. FIRM. 11. Davidow llr*o. CASH PAID FOR FUR, 4 HIDES, PELTS, WOOL, BEESWAX, No. 4, Beidlcman,s Block, Bridge St Townnda, October 2S. J FIGHT MIT SI GEL and all HONORABLY DISCHARGED SOLDIERS will consult their own interests ny calling at .1 A CO BS" ' long ostahlished and well known ONE PRICE I i ■ 0 LOTHING * HOUSE, 1 PATTON'S BLOCK, i and buj* their coats, pants, vests, overcoats, shirts, i overalls, Gloves, llose, Hats and Caps, and every ! thing in the line of fine and stylish GENTS' FURNISHING GOODS. Don t be deceived by persons falsely representing ! themselves to be JACOBS, but come directly to my store in Patton Block, Main street, near Bridge sC I 1 H. JACOBS. GREAT CROWDS Continually attend the Auction Sale OF FINK Dry Goods n the store formerly occupied by J. L KENT, Moore's Block. The stock comprises large i nes of DKESS GOODS, CALICOES, DOMESTICS, TABLE LINENS, TOWELSand TOWKLNG, FLANNELS, MARSEILLES ami CROTCHET QUILTS, BLANKETL. HOSIERY OF ALL KINDS, KMT UNDERWEAR, GLOVES in great variety, LADIES SKIRTS, and CORSETS, UMBRELLAS and PARASOLS, RIBBONS, and RUCIIES, 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. m., until stock is closed. Ladies Especially invited. No reserve. D. LYONS. 1331. THE CULTIVATOR 1880. AND Count i'y o*-ent leman. The Best of the AG RICUI /I' URAL WE KK LI PAL It is UNSURPASSED, if not U NEQUALED, for he Amount and Variety of the PRACTICAL 1 NFOIIMA TION it contains, and for tiie Ability and Extent of its CORRESPONDENCE.— in the Three Chief Directions of Farm Crops and Processes, Horticulture and Fruit-Frowin<f, Live Stock and Dairying— while it also includes all minor depatments of rural interest, such as the Poultry Yard, Entomology, Bee-Keep[ng, Green house ami Grapery, Veterinary Replies, Farm Questions and Answers, Fireside Reading, Domestic Economy, and a summary o the News of the Week. Its MARKET REPORTS are unusually complete, and more information can be gathered from its columns than from any other source with regard to the Prospects of the Crops, as throwing light upon one of the most important of all questions— When to Jluy and When to Sell. It is liberally illustrated, and constitutes to a greater degree than any of its contemporaries A LIVE AGRICUI.TURAL NEWHP A PK R Of never-failing Interest both to Producers and Con sumers of every class. The COUNTRY GENTLEMAN is published Weekly on the following terms, when paid strictly in ad vance: One Copy, one year, $,-2.f)0; Four Copies, ; $lO, and an additional copy for the year free to the sender of the C/ul•• Ten Copies, S2O, and an ' additional ropy for th year free to the sender of j the Club. I'or the year 1880, these prices include a copy of , the ANNUAL RKOISTEROF RURAL AFFAIRS, to each subscriber—a book of 144 pages and about I'2o ne ■ gravings—a gift by the Publishers. All NEW Subscribers for 18S0, paying in ad ranee note, will receive the paper WEEKLY, from receipt of remittance to January Ist, 1880, with out charge. &*>" Specimen copies of the paper free. Address LUTHER TUCKER & SON, Publishers, Albany, N. Y. V ertical i'eed. As usual, the Vertical Feed I Sewing Machine took First Pre i jmium, at the late countv Fair.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers