DAILY TO WANDA REVIEW. VOLUME I, NO. 146. The News Condensed. Governor Cornell has nominated the Hon, Thomas C. Piatt for Quarantine Commissioner. Annual encampments of the Grand Army of the Republic are in session at Reading and Auburn. A bill to secure lawyers their fees with out a special agreement was lost in the N e w-Jersey I legislature. Mrs H. L. West and Mrs G. S. Olmstead, aged respectively 80 and 84 years, died at their homes in Milford yesterday. Both had lived there since Milford was tlrst settled. The Executive Committee of the United States Agriculturrl Society and of the American Agricultural Association com menced business sessions in Washington yesterday. John Merryman, Esq., of Maryland, is the president of both organizations, which may at some future time be consolidated. Charles F. Freeman, the Pocasset child murderer, was arraigned before the Supreme Court. Medical experts unani mously testified to his insanity, and the Court ordered the prisoner to be removed to jail to await the May term of Court, when, il his condition remains the same, he will be sent to tlie lunatic hospital. The Secretary ofthe Treasury yesterday recieved in an envelope, postmarked New- York, two mutilated United States notes of S2O each, together with the following statement: "Mrs. Brown desires to cancel her obligation to the Government by returning to its Treasurer the enclosed cancelled securities." The notes will be redeemed by the Treasurer, and the amount of S4O deposited in the Treasury on account ofthe conscience fund. General Grant is the only man we have that answers all the Republican require ments of the time. The cunt about a third term's dangers is ridiculous, and proper only for Bedlam. No "unwritten law" could be violated in bringing him forward for no such law exists. The Constitution contains all the law that we are bound to observe- in electing a Presi dent; and the Constitution says nothing about one term, or a second term, or a third term of the Presidential office. A> to "dictatorial power" coining from making a third term President, it is nothing but bad fun, and w ill have no effect on the mind of any man who would not expect fo see ghosts on State street at high noon. Il is, if serious, the drivel ot second childishness, and will pass in to mere oblivion.— Boston Evening Trav eler. At the closing meeting of the State Board of Agriculture, resolutions were adopted instructing the Executive Com mittee to appoint a commission from the Board to inquire into and report on the unoccupied pine lands and other resources ol the S ate as applied to agriculture; de claring the fence laws of Pennsylvania a relic of colonial times, and urging upon the next Legislature the necessity of mak ing such changes in regard to fence laws as shall conform to the condition of agriculture in the State, and the present needs and common law rights of farmers; Commending Gov. lloyt for prompt and efficient measures he took for t he suppres sion of the eattle plague. After the appointment of a commilit-e of live to take care of the argicultural interests be fore the Legislature, the Board adjourted to meet at Gettysburg. TOWANDA, PA., FRIDAY AFTERNOON, JANUARY 30, 1880. COAL! Reduction Coal ! 4 Reduction In Blacksmith & Bituminous Lump at Mallory's $2.75 2.75 2.75 2.75 ! per ton at M*JL£OMT 9 S* Loyal Sock Stove, SB.OO per ton at Mallory's. Business Cards. ALVORD & SON, JOB PRINTERS, DAILY RKVIKW QFKIOK, Xlain street, Towanda Pa. Wool) & HALE, Attorneys at Law, Office corner Main and Pine Street* Towanda, Pa. •JAS. WOOD. | JAS. T. MALE. J 11. ANGLE, 1). 1). S. OPERATIVE AND MBCIIANICAL DENTIST. Office on State street, second floor of I)r. Pratt's office. 10jan8l) BENTLY MEEKER, CLOCK IT* WATCH-MAKER AND REPAIRER. All at the lowest prices. Monroeton, Pa. DR. T. B. JOHNSON, PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON, Office over 11. C Porter's Drug Store, Residence corner Maple and Second Streets, JOHN W. CODDING, A TTORNEY-A T-LA \V, j Office over Mason's old Rank. HENR Y STREETER, ATTORNEY & COUNSELOR AT LAW TOWANDA, PA. /"I w. in AX, 'U - O O UNT Y SUPERINTENDENT. j Office Patten's Block. OD. KINNEY, A TTORNE Y-A T-LA W, Office, corner Main ami Pine Streets, Towanda, Pa. ' \X/i UAMB & V V AT TORNE YS-A T-LA W, I Office formerly occupied by W. Watkins. ELSBREE & SON, A T TORNE YS-A T-LA W, South side Mcrcur Block, Towanda, Pa. N. C. KLSBUKE. | L. ELHBREU. F OR £ laxii- Cut and SlGive Uo to the WARD HOUSE SHAVING PARLOR STEDGE I there. U. jacr.nr—i. ——niiay.wi.n v*--. • m '.MV -tjhuw ~ ini AW—BPMKW THE PRESIDENTIAL YEAR. " TIIE LEADING AMERICAN NEWS PAPER." .... THE NEW YORK TRIBUNE FOR 1880. During the coming Presidential year The Tribune will be a more ert'ective agency than ever for telling Lite news best worth knowing, and for enforcing sound politics. From the day the war closed it lias been most anxious for ail 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 begun by demanding the abandonment of personal | dislikes, and set the example. It called for an end to attacks upon eacli 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 hack; every doubtful Htatc ha been won, and the omens for National victory wtt ■ vor more cheering. THE TRIBUNE'S POSITION. Of The Tribune's share in all this, those speak most enthusiastically who have seen most of the struggle. It will taithfully portray the varning phases of the campaign now beginning. It will earnestly strive that the party of Freedom, Union and Public Faith may select the man surest to win, and surest to make a good President. But in this crisis it can conceive of no nomination this party 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 labo and money than ever before to hold the distinction it has enjoyed of the largest circulation among the best people. It secured, and means to retain it, by he PRICE ONE CENT. coming the medium of the best thought and the voiee of the best conscience of the time, by keeping abreast of the highest progress, favoring the freees discussions, hearing all 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 oiiice and Washington. Its scientific, literary, artistic and re ligious intelligence is the fullest. Its book reviews are the best. Its commercial and financial no'vs is the most exact Its type is the largest; and lis ar rangement the most systematic. TIIE SEMI-WEEKLY Till HUN is by far the most successful Semi-Weekly in the country, having fonr times the circulation of any other in New York. It is especially adapted to the large ciuss of intelligent, professional or business readers too far from New York to depend on our papers for the daily news, who nevertheless want tlie editorials, correspondence, book reviews, scien- I tide matter, lectures, literary misceiiauey, etc,, for i which The Tribune is famous. Like The Weekly it contains sixteen pages, and is in convenient form j for binding, THE WEEKLY TRIBUNE | remains the great favorite of our substantial country population, and lias the largest circulation of any Weekly issued from the oiiice of a l)uily paper in New \ork, or, so far as we know, in the United States, it revises and condenses all the news of the week into more readable shape. 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To the 15,000 readers who procured from us the Webster Unabridged premium we need only r.uy that while this offer is even more liberal, we shall carry it out in a manner equally satisfactory. The following are the terms in detail: For sl2, Chamber's Encyclopaedia, A Library of Universal Knowledge, 14 vols., with editions on American subjects, 6 separate vols,, 20 vols, in all, substantially bound in cloth, and The Weekly Tri bune 6 years, to one s ?scriber. For $lB, Chamber's Encyclopaedia, 20 vols., above, and The Semi-Weekly Tribune 5 years. For $lB, Chamber's Encyclopaedia, 2o vols., above, and ten copies of The Weekly Tribune one year. For $27, Chamber's Encyclopaedia, 20 vols, as above, and twenty copies of The Weekly Tribune one year. For $26, Chamber's Encyclopaedia, 20 vols., as above, and the Daily Tribune two years. The books will in all cases be sent at the subscri ber's expense, but with no charge tor packing. 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Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers