O.W. 11IJ8SELL, General Insurnce and Keal instate Agent, lowanda, Jtrsx Gen. Camoron on Social Ostracism In the South. '•Social ostracism has done almost as much to crush out Republican sentiment in the South as brute force. But you forget, sir that you will soon have to con tend with a native force in tlie South which is growing every day. The prac tical men who have sprung from the overseer or poor whites and got on in the world and made money, while most of your people lamented tlie loss of their slaves and spent valuable time in fruitless efforts to annul the results of the war, will upset your theories. It is already evident, that your society is changing as well as your customs and methods. Ladies naturally desire to marry a man with means, and you will timl that the thrifty man who gets along will marry into families whose kitchen he would not have been permitted to enter before the war. Women will soon Jose their senti ment when it comes to a choice between a man who has plenty of means to pro vide the comforts and even the luxuries of life for them and the idle, aristocratic man whose only legacy is his family record. This new element in Southern society which will spring from the thrift and energy of this and a new generstion will make its own society, and its very char acter will make it tolerant and liberal. It will not be many years before a man who comes South to settle in good faith can find society of this kind ready to receive him. Another generation will see it practic ally in the majority, for the thrifty make the good society, drones never do. Every generation will widen this circle. In ten years the division will be practically one of politics only, while now it is social as well. The practical class of the South are already beginning to recognize the fact that social ostracism against the im migrant, whether he be rich or px>r, is retarding the growth and prosperity of this country, and in many sections they are already getting liberal. The successes of thrift make everyone liberal. I grant that there is a class in the South that will undertake to keep up the caste distinct ion, but will very soon be in the minority. This thifty elenvmt can afford to be liberal, and a policy true to its iutrcsts in social and business affairs will be against the sentiment which ostracises any man on account of his politics.*' The following resolution has passed in the House of Representatives of this State: Resolved, By the House of Repre sentatives ot Pennsylvania, the Senate concurring, that we hereby express our sympathy for the people of Ireland, mis governed and oppressed, and our adniira tion for their bravery under great provca t ion in pursuing a peaceable and lawful course;and, as iu the past, the peopl6 of Pennsylvania have been the foremost in aiding suffering humanity, we now re quest them to assist by lawful and peaea able means, by counsel and by pecuniary assistance the people of Ireland, until the j evils of landlordism are abolshed and they secure themselves their natural and i political rights. The smallest man in the State is said to.be Major Daniel F. Davis, who to use his own words is hut forty-seven inches in height, weighs fifty-eight pounds, and j is perfectly proportioned. While dimin utive in size Major Davis has the mature judgement of a man. He will be twenty live years of age in April, and ascribes his diminutlvenesss to the excessive drugging he received when a child. He was born in Lanca.-t ;r county. G. W. Pacli Brothers have succeeded in making a picture of President Hayes and ! his Cabinet seated around the Cabiuet table iu an actual session. It is bclived to be the lirst time this has beeu done, and the photographer has succeeded in getting excellent portrates. TR J S GITEDR. PA. AMD M. T. R. R. % Trains on the Pa. .V N. T. R. li. pa*. this plate i as follows: Moving South. 1 No. 2, at 6 :02 a. m., for New York end way sta. i No, 7, at 10:10 a. m., mail train for New York, I'btl adelphia and intermediate points, j No. 9, at *2:41 p. m.—Express for Philadelphia. , No. 15, at 10:55, p. ra.—Fast express for Philadel phia and New York. No. 31, —Local Passenger Train, between Elnilsa ; and Wyalusing, 7:05 p. m. Moving Xurth. No. s, at 3:5S a. tn. —Fast express from New York and Philaaelphia No. 30, at 10:55 a. m., Wilkesßarre accommodation. No. 2. at 4 41 p. tn.—Mail train from Philadelphia and New York. No. ft, at 11:02, p, in.,, from New York. No. 32, at 6:53 a. ra.— Wyalusing and Elniira local. STATE LINE AXI) SILLIVAN It. R. . Leave. 3 :00 o'clock p.m. for Bernice and intermediate sta. Arrive. 9 :30 a. m., from Bernice. BARCLAY It. K. Leave. 7:30 a.m., for Barclay and all stations, and 3:00 p. m. Arrive. 10:15 a. m., from Barclay and intermediate stations. | and 6:20 p. m. CANTON STAGE. Leaves at 9 o'clock, a. ru. Arrives at 5 o'elock p. in. TROY STAGE, Leaves at 10:30 a. tn. Arrives at Ip. in. SHESHEQCIN STAGE, i Arrives at 11 o'clock a. ra. Departs at 12 to. I.KKA YHVILLK STAGE. I Arrives at 12 m. Leaves at 2 p. m. 1 TERItYTOWN STAGE. | Arrives Monday, Wednesday and Friday, at 12 m Departs same days at 1 p..111. NEW ERA BTAOK. Arrives Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday, at 12 tn. : Depart* same days at 1 p* m. —— SOCIET J' DIRECTOR Y. MASONIC. ! i ' Union Lodge, No. 10.8, meets First and Third j Wednesday of each month. i Union Chapter, No. 161, meets Second Wednesday i evenings of eae.lt month. j Northern Connnandery, Knights Templar, No. 16. Meets fourth Wednesday each month. KNIGHTS OK I'YTHIAS. ; Towanda Lodge, No. 290. Meets every Tuesday < evening. Endowment Rank, Section 101. Meets Third Fri day in each month. ODD FELLOWS. j Bradford Lodge, No. 167. Meets every Monday > iglit. J : I Bradford Encampment, No. 41. Meets Second and ' Fourth Wednesday night of each month. Lcoh Lodge Degree of Rebeku. Meets First and \ Third Fiday evenings of tacit month. KNIGHTS or HONOR. ! Crystal Lodge. Meets every Monday evening. ' | Mystic Lodge, K. and L. of 11. Meets Second and ! j Fourth Friday evenings of each month. U. A. R. I W atkins Post No. 68. Meets every Saturday evening ! KNIGHTS OF THE GOLDEN RULE. Towanda Castle No. 58. Meets at K. of P. Hall I every Wednesday evening. ROYAL ARCAJBCSI. Towanda Council, No. 532, meets first and third Friday of each month iu K. 1. Hall. cuincrr DIRECTORY. PRESBYTERIAN—Rev. ,T. 18. Stewart, D.D., Pas- Preaching tit 10:30 a. m. and 7 p. ui. eve ry Sunday. Prayer meeting Thursday evening at i :30. Sunday Sehool—D'A. Overton, Stiperin tendent—at 12 o'clock. CHRIST CHURCH—(Episcopal)—Rev. John S. Beers. Rector. Service and preaching at 10:30 a. ni. and 4 :30 p. m. Service and lecture Thursday evening at 7:30. Sunday Sehool—.Tas. T. Hale, j Assistant Supt.,—at 12 m. Teachers' meeting I Tuesday evening at 7:45. M, E. CHURCH.—Rev. O. H. Wright, Pastor. Preaching at 10:30 a.m. and 7 p.m. Prayer Meetings oh Sunday evening at 6:30, Thursday evening at 7:30. Young men's prayer meeting Friday evening at 8. Sunday School—B. M. Peek, Superintendent— at 12 ni. | 38. PETER AND PAUL.—(It. C.) Rev. Chan. F. Kelley, Priest Mass at 8 and 10 :30 a. nv. Ves- Pers at 7:30 p. in. Sunday School at 12 :30 and j CIIURCII OF THE MESSIAH. (Universalist) I Rev. William Taylor, Pastor. Preaching at 10:30 j a. ni. ahd 7pi in. Prayer and Conference ! Meeting Thursday evening at 7:30. Sunday | School—H.,. F. Gardner, Superintendent— at 12 ni. | BAPTISTCHURCir-liev. 0. T. Hallowed, Pastor ! Preaching at 10:3OA. M. and 7 p. M. Prayer Meeting, Thursday Evening, 7 p. M. Sunday I School at 12 in. j A M. K. ZION CHURCH—Rev. Charles Smith, 1 Pastor. Services at 10:30 a. m. and 7 ;30 p. ni. Prayer and Class meeting*, Thursday evening at 7:30 a. m. Sunday School at 2p. in. IIIL URLI lllthN.—Service at 10:30 a. in, every Lord's day. Reading Meeting every Wednesday evening. Sunday School at 3p. in. JOB PRINTING Jmmmo ■ ' -y " I * i i AT THE REVIEW OFFICE. 1 JQR. A. E. BURR'S IIOMCEOPATIIIC tt/.ve SYRUP. i This remedy is something new, both as to name I and composition. This is one of the wonders of the > world. This Syrup, L claim, is better and more effective than any other ever offered to the people of i America or any other country, and what I say of this I can prove. This Syrup, like the Pills, is harmless and safe. It contains no opium or other narcotic poison, like the most Syrup, and is not dis agreeable to take. Any child will take it. And it will cure any and all inflammations arising from ('old. It is superior to all others in every respect i and especially for the following reasons : I Ist. It will cure Croup every time. I 2d. It will cure Inflammation of the Lungs. 3d. It will cure Quinsy. 4th It will cure Whooping Cough. 6th It will cure Bronchitis. 6th It will cure Hoarseness. 7tli It will cure Sore Throat, j Bth It will cure any Cold. 9th It will cure Congestion of the Lunge. 10th It will cur any Cough. 11th It will cure Scarlet Fever, j Pith. It is the best reined** that any one can take i for Consumption, and if taken in the first stage I will guarantee a cure. 13th. It is perfectly safe for all ages as there is l nothing in its composition that can harm a child. A. E. BURR For sale by CLARK B. PORTER. BEST IN THE WORLD! * AND ' SALERATUS Which is tho same thing. Impure Bi-Ca-b Soil i cr 6nlrratas (vvli< li i..tho(,ameiliiacjl t< fu ulight- Iy dirty vvi.ife telot. li ins y appear white, naminol ly itself, but C UIPARISOi WITH CHURCH it CO'S " ARM Air>ll DIMER" CKAND will show the difference* Sec that yoar Siloratns and Bak> ISoda is wbito and PUIIK, as , r.V.afcrid lie AIT. £ I rZIZ.AU QUBSTAN* CLS vaid Lr vocal. I ' I ' jt +* r i IT *• ' . j j j. THE LEADING AMERICAN NEWS PAPER. The .TVR' IVH7I Tribune FOR 1881. i The Largest Circulation Among the Best People. j During the past year the New York Tribune [ reached the largest circulation it ever attained, with ihc single exception of a short period in the first Lfncoln administration. It is a larger circulation, and more widely distributed over the whole country than any ev r enjoyed by any other newspaper in the United States. This fact may be taken as the verdict of the American people on the Tribune's political force, its fidelity to sound principles, and its merits as a newspaper. For 1881, the Tribune will try to deserve equally well of the public. What and how much it did for the success of General Garfield it is content to let earnest Republicans tell. It now hopes to give to his Administration a discriminating support as ef fective as its efforts for his election. The Tribune will labor for, and it confidently ex pects the incoming Administration to promote, a free and fair suffrage, South and North, sound money, protection to Home Industry, judicious lib erality in Internal Improvements, andaUivil Service conducted on business principles, on the theory of elevating, not of ignoring or degrading politi . Every citizen who helped to bring In this Admin istration should watch its course. The events to be recorded in the Tribune for 1881 will therefore have a peculiar Interest. The year promises besides to show whether the South will still sacrifice every, tiling to solidity; and whether the Democratic party after twenty years of disloyalty ami defeat, will dissolve or reform. Abroad it will show whether England can compose Ireland; whether the Repub lic in France, without the support of the leaders who established it, can stand alone; whether the Turk ean longer pollute Europe. In Science it promises such practical triumphs as the use of elec- 1 tricity for gas, new modes of heating, and new forms of power in place of steam, in Literature 1 and Art it offers the very flower of our nineteenth ' century development; in Religion, a concentration of force, and union of organization on simpler creeds a id better work. j No intelligent man will be willing to live through 1 the year without reading of these things; and he > ; will be wise to look for them in the journal which I has long enjoyed the distinction of the largest cir culation among the best people. This position The I Tribune secured and means to retain by becoming the medium of the best thought and the voice of the best conscience of the time; by keeping abreast of I the highest progress, favoring the freest discussion, ! bearing all sides, appealing always to tr.e best intel ligence and the purest morality, and refusing to I cater to the tastes of the vile, or the prejudices of I the ignorant. The well-known special features of the Tribune I will be seduously maintained. Its Agricultural ]>e. partmcnt will remain the fullest and best The llousehotd and the Young Folks' Department, the I literary, scientific and religious features, the stand- t ard market reports, will all be kept up, and, as op portunity offers, extended. TERMS OF THE TRIBUNE. Postage fre, in the United Statet. DAILT TRIBUNB FIT M | IUILT TRIBUNE, without Sunday ediuon... 10 M ' SUNDAY TRIBUNE 2 00 THE SEMI-WKEKLY TRIBUNE. ; Slngls copy, one year F3 00 T I Five copies, one year 2 50 ach j Ten copies, one year 2 00 each [ I TIIE WEEKLY TRIBUNE. " Single copy, one year F2 00 Five copies, one year 1 50 EAC I, f Ten copies, one year 1 00 each * Any number of copies of either edition above ten R at the same rate. Additions to clubs may be made at any time at club rates. Remit by draft on New * York, post office, or in registered letter. ; THE TRIBUNE PREMIUMS. The Tribune has never been equalled in the sub stantial and permanent value of its premiums to agents and subscribers, and it adds to its list this year two of the most desirable IT has ever offered. I*ote the following: THE GREAT BIBLE CONCORDANCE. Analytical Concordance to the Bible, on an en tirely new plan, containing every word in alphabet ical order arranged under its Hebrew or Greek original, with the literal meaning of each and its pronunciation; exhibiting 311,000 refeiences, 118,000 R EV. WT U T EN: M ; LRKIN F 30 ' (, °0 various readings in I FL! ,I EF' with the latest information on Biblical Geography and Antiquities, etc., etc. Bv B Robert \ oung, LL. I)., author of a new Literal 1 ranslation of the Hebrew and Greek Scriptures* Concise Critical Comments on the some; a Gram* KIWI 1 ? Y J * MINOR Prophets in Hebrew * Biblical notes and queries; Hebrew GRAMMAR^! 1 looThrn . ai i ßomw qUarto T olume, containing over " ?,!?? three-column pages, very substantially bound n cloth The pages and type are the same size as those of \\ ebster s Unabridged Dictionarv U,. type having a beautiful, bold, clear face makintr it more easily read even than that of the Dictionary I he sterotype plates upon which it is printed haS been mads by th pl.oto-engraving process it i necessari y an exact facsimile of the I&K Work w hout he abridgment or variation of a wimd o,' letUr. His at once a Concordance, a Greek .nd Eng UH TALM of IMble word,, „ D OSTL KL *M*& R, t ND B0 "" valuable to .tudmS S the Holy \\ ord as art Unabridged Dictionarv is to the general reader. Every home that has A IN it ought also to have this great help to Bible READING and study. It is as well adapted CTHE use OF ? common reader as to that of the scholarly ckrgeyman England in OctobS 1870 ° R J GLRMLLY P"B"HED i D R.ugi.iuu in uctober, 18<9, and was sold at AIT W can now offer it in connection with the 2. I'? remarkably low rates • " D une at w Concordance and one copy of the For Ail r ~T ,lv< ' y r r > copßne yJar BEND w ti m C .°, nc ° rdance a,ul one copy of the ~,i/VV ® ekly 1 ribune five years, or the copies one ' m, " y c " pk " I he postage on the Concordance is 40 cents which the subscriber will remit if wishing it sent by m m SanTho EXP^. DIBTTTUCEB ** MAIL WIII BE CH ® A P®I" following J 0 " 41 " EW PREM,URA FOR THI is UW The Library of Universal Knowledge, Embracing Chambers's Encvclonedln . omitting only some of the cut's, with extensive ACT ditions by an able corps of American editors treat big about 15,000 additional topics. thoroughly Volume, of t by°9® M-RT O B^E T , H . 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