THE PEOPLE'S JOURNAL. --- _ J NO. S. MANN,. EDITOR! ADDISON A% , 5 FILIV.LITY TO THE PEOPLE COUDERSPORT, THURSDAY -",..IIOIiNiNG, NOV. 9, IES -nir IIT6 ask'attention to the extract on - the first page from the Hun. Gerrit Smith's Kansas speech: Since this gentleman has become a favorite old hunkers, we hope they will all read this extract. I There is a communication from Bev. It: L. Stillwell of Bradford coun ty in another column, which we hope no reader will overlook. We hope all t e mperance men will agree with its main point--That the next Legis lature ought to pass the Maine law for the whole ,State. - The Rev, L. F. Porter will bold r e ligions services et the old Court House on Sabbath niorning next. He will also preach at Lymans tine at 2 o'clock, P. 10,, and at the Court House again at early candle light. We hope there will be a: gen eral attendance. Services at the Pres byterian church morning and after noon by the Rev. John B Pradt. 'Ur The thirty-five counties in this State that voted for Prohibition, at the late Election, choose 19 Senat - ors and 59 Repreentatives; the 21 counties_ that voted adversely elect 14 Senators and 41 Representatives. In spite of the great majorities against . Prohibition in Berks, York, Schuyl kill, Northampton and a few, other Counties, it is manifest thatthe Maine law will be passed soon; probably at the next session—at least fur the 35 Counties that gave majorities for it. Er We have received a letter from the Secretary of the American Artist's Union. (for which we paid five cents) enclosing a long advertisement,. which We ate asked to publish six mouths, and receive fifteen dollars in "Cata logues, Prospectus and Specimens." We have to inform the Secretary of this pretended Artist's Union, that he is no gentleman or be would• have prepaid the postage on his letter, and that we think his whole concern is a bumbng or he would have forwarded something substantial as an, induce ment to insert his advertisement.. We have adOpted the advance-pay system, Arid hereafter no advertisement will be, inserted without we are secured for its insertion at the time of its pub lication. We are glad to see the county press generally adopting this rule. They have worked for nothing long enough. if Mr. J. W.Holbrooke, No.- 505 Broadway, N. YY. will forward us the five cents wrongfully taken front us by his humbug letter, the account between us will be settled, otherwise we shall seek some other means of redress: Good Advice , Thoroughly Carried Ont. _ When the Hon. DAVID WILMOT his bold appeals to the of, Ills State io rebuke the authors of the ' Douglas outrage at the ballot-box, we had no doubt - of the result. Judge WILMOT is decidedly the best stump speaker in the State, and he never does anything by halves. His letter to Mr . . RICHARDSON, in which the ag--. gressions of Slavery were so vividly painted, was published in every lib eta] paper in the State, and -pro duced a great sensation; and then his speeches in the glorious WilmotDis trict were irresistible. He adVised the people to strike down the allies,of slavery, and most effectually have they taken his advice—notwitligtand ing Frank Smith, Esq., of Troy,_ made such herculean efforts to enlighten the people on the danger of listening to the great Champion of Freedom.— Poor Frank. The next time he at tacks a public man, he had better take one of his size. The following majorities in Wil-. tnot's District show what has been done for Liberty by a bold appeal to the people. ye ask the Anti-se braska Democrats of this county to look at this record, and say whether they think they deserve to stand by the side of their associates in Tioga, Bradford, and• Susquehanna: IMEMIBM 1851. 1852. ISt. Counties. Bigler. Pierce. Pollock 'Bradford, 33 404 2442 Susquehanna,.. 691 1011 693 Tinga,.... 573 1050 954 Total, ,jgso 3465 4039 POLLOeX AHD 11:BEMt We do not know a man in The nil: tion that occupieS a-prodder positiOn at this time' than Judge Pottcic, Governor elect of the Commonwealth 'of Pennsylvania. Nominated I).y:the conservative portion of -the Whig party, who undertook to confine him to old party issues, we felt and said . that Free Democrats could not sup port him. But his letter to the• Sull ivan County Committee showed that he had shook off the influence of cot ton Whigs, and-was the man for the hour. As soon as his health would permit him to take.-the stump, •his speeches gave additional evidence of his fitness and ability to be the cham pion of the new Republican party. His speech in Pittsburg on the sth of September was reported in fill in the daily Gazette - of the 6th, • and in the weekly of the 7th.. It was a tho rough-going Anti-Nebraska, Maine Law speech, printed copies of zhich . reached this county before be did; and - yet our sore-head hunkers say the Journal did not report the. speech here because it was too Anti-Slavery to be read in other parts. Ir this was the only falsehood told by leading hunkers of this village during the campaign, we should perhaps think they did not know any better; but men who will stoop so low as to defeat an efficient and capable officer, who 'has but one arm, with .the basest -kinds - of false -1 hoods, will do anything that promises siicces But Judge POLLOCK'S consistency during the campaign should be well understood by all, -for therein he has ) set a noble example, Which We hope I will have a lasting effect in this State.l Unlike his dodging competitor, he boldly and fearlessly avowed his sen timents. He talked against Slavery, and in favor of the Maine Law, wherever he went, as well in Phila delphia as in the. North. Upon this point, the Mercer Freeman, one of the most ultra Free Democratic papers of the State, has the following, which we commend to our hunker friends who are solicitous about Judge POLLOCK'S position : Right glad are we to believe that Governor 13 1 , ;LEr e s successor will -stand up manfully in defense of the groat principle of freedom, which entered-so largely into the canvass just closed. While on his tour through this sec tion of the State, in his intercourse with the people, in his public addresses as well as in private conversation, he preached the most radical anti-slavery doctrine. We are told, however, by pro slavery sorviles, that in the eastern portion of the State, and especially where the commercial influence of Philadel phia was more immediately felt, his tone would be changed; that he Would be "con servative," Winn actually pro-slavery. There I was an honest earnestness about the mein , which forbid us giving credence to these sag -1 gestions; still; we have been , so often -de-- -ceived, that we were not altogether sure that we night not be again. A friend from this place, -however, whose radical anti-slaiery I sentiments are long standing, has scattered any misgiving that we may have had on this point. Ile was in Philadelphia the week preceding. the eleCtion, and learning that Judge Poti.ocx was to address a public meeting in the city on. Saturday evening, he determined to hear for `himself the principles• he would advocate there. lie accordingly went to the meeting, which was attended by a . vast concourse; and he tells us that the same great truths which I Judge P. advocated at New Castle and Mer cer, he proctaimed in the ears of the cotton merch.in-s, shippers, and others of Philadel phia. Ile procatoned boldly that the contest in this country was between Liberty and Slavery—that this was the question of the times—that the aggressions. of the slave power must be met, and this power van quished, or it would destroy the liberties of the country. We doubly rejoice,, ben, in the result of the recent gubernatorial contest,—not only the servile who pardoned Alberti, and recom mended that our jailshe thrown open as re- - cep:cies for fugi.ive slaves, and that Penn sylvania be made virtually a save State, has been repudiated, but that the chair of State is to be occupied by a man who has a beck bone stiff enough to keep him in an upright po sition. VOTE FOR PRINCIPLE The N. Y. Evening Post, the ablest democratic paper in the nation, re fused to support Governor Seymour, because the Convention which nomi nated him endorsed the Douglas bill. Several papers tried to . convince the Post that it was pursuing a bad polio - y, and among others the Utica Observer took it in hand. The reply of the Post is quite refreshing com pared with the subserviency of its associates. Its closing paragraph . is as follows: Tho principle of the Observer is bad for another reason. What• check have the mass of the party upon the corrupt proceedings of packed con ventions, if they are to be deterred from denouncing them by the. fear of giving a•triumph to an opposing par ty If it were understood that dent ocrais would not support . a ticket, by whatever name it was called, that did not represent democratic Trinciples, democratic principles would make a much more conspicuous figure in democratic conventions than they have done of late years in this country. TILE PRO-SLAVROY AND LIQUOR /NPLU , - RACES. \ Wh en . .0e referred to . (Gov)) Se Eaour'S veto of the Maine Law as an evidence of the alliance bpiweetl ruts and . hunkerisin; we were .replied to by some green and sensitive tem perance, democrat, with- the -deelara tion that Seymour was a frees:ode,' 1 We do not suppose any one believed the assertion at the time, but we al- lude to it just noir, that all may see the position which Seymour occupies ai.the champion of the Nebraska.out- rage, and the candidate of the liquor men in the State of New York. What is true of New York is true of all the States aS it is of this county, as any.- body with half an eye open can see; and we thank our hunker friends for agitating the subject; so the Harrison scribble•, who would like to have the people believe, but dare not say, that the votes in that township against the Maine Law were polled by freesoil men, will please to fire away till his ammunition is exhausted. We think it is perfectly plain, that here as elsewhere, the great body . of the opponents of slavery extension are hi favor of temperance and the Blaine law, and the great body of the opponents of the temperance cause and of the 1114iiklaw, are pro-slavery democrats. In proof of this we ask who pro cured and circulated the Maine law tickets in this County?' Who stood at the polls even in , Harrison town ship, nrging each voter to':remember and vote for the suppression of the liquor traffic ? WaS any of this work done by. Bigler men? If it. was, we shall be 'happy to learn the fact. We can answer for the Republicans, that they printed and circulated in this county tw..):thousand Maine law tickets ; and • cannot learrr that the Bigler men printed or distributed a single ticket. On- the other hand, a leading old hunker flooded the comity with tickets against the law, and old hunkers were active at nearly every poll inducing men to put these tickets into the ballot box. In sev eral townships, they succeeded in making it a party question, so that the liquor vote and the Bigler vote are nearly alike, and in one township preciely alike; and the Maine law and-Pollock vote is in the same town- ships just as near even. Even in Harrison township, the vote for the Maine law is two less than for Pollock, so there is no evidence that any of the Bigler men voted for Prohibition. Take another fact. Every township that gave a majority fur Bigler, gave a majority for the liquor influence, and every township that gave a good large ' majority for Pollock did the same fur Prohibition. When the greeny over in Harrison gets these facts digested, we will -fur nish him some more l for we are happy to keep this subject before the people. We know full well that a large num ber of those who voted with the sham democracy at the last* election, are good and reliable temperance -men; and are honestly opposed to the 'whOle scheme of slavery aggression. What we say is, that these have been led by old party prejudices to vote against their principles, and we have no doubt that. the facts which are every day coming to light, will soon open their eyes to their false position, when they will unite with those who agree with them, instead of acting with _those who disagree with' them - in every important particular. • A good example for all ,places to follow was set in Teire-Haute, Ind., at the recent election. While the polls were open all the groceries where liquor was sold, were• closed, the Mayor having made a Special rec ommendation to that effect on the ground that groggeries and the ballOt boxes were not good friends:— War ren Ledger. There are quite a number of old fogy democrats in this - county who might profit by the above example. We think all good citizens will say keep "groggeries and the ballot-box" as far apart as possible. rirAn important question will come up for decision at the next session of the Eulalia Division S. of T. We hope every member will attend and vote on the proposition. ri'"Dien resemble the god , in nothing so much as doing gookto their fellow creatures" HON. DAVID WILMOT. We arc ritnue gratt e %at he una nimity with vhicli tlteiprels or North ei-ri Pennsylvania - - it'd aopeatitig the electiOn of the Hon. 1. Wilmot:to',the Seilates'-01-the United State's. The, Susquehanna' Registerao old and steadfastsvbig • paper, but since tfie" pis - sige of the Nebreska:bill,an able advocate of the union of all parties opposed to that Swindle, .thus.'happiiy gives . its 'reasons for desiring the election, of Mr. Wilino these reasons ought. tor induce-all the anti-Nebraska' men to: unite on the most efficient enemy of hunkerism for that post. Says the Register: It, being now ascertained that a majority of the Pennsylvania Legis- lature .on joint ballot, will be .Anti- Nebraska, the selection of • United States Senator in place Of Hori.James Cooper, whose term empires on ,the 4th of March next, is beginning to be discussed. Among the Whigs, Judge Conrad, of Philadelphia, Gen. William Latimer, of Pittsburg, Ex-Governor Johnston, and lion. Thaddeus StevenS are ,talked . of. There are many re sons .why, in our Opinion, -the Free- Soil men, without distinction of party, should unite on David Wilmot for that office, provided he will accept it. No 1 man in the State has iabored more faithfully or efficiently for the-cause of freedom than Judge or-his straight-forward course, and manly adherence to principle; ,he has been denounced by the hireling presses of Admh&tratiun, and threatened with political annihilation.: When :it' was found that be chose : to follow the guidance of principle 'rather than the behests of party, as if at a precon- certed signal,•the pack opened upon him, in full cry, and evinced a fixed determination to hunt him to death. It was even said that by.deserting his party, he had already sealed his own doom. But_ in truth, instead of his having . deserted his party, he has only maintained the principles that made him what he is, and the party—or rather the party leaders—have de serted him. His course has been' approved and ratified by the . 'people of I ) .ennsylvania,, and- most emphatic ally by the people of his' own district. Pollock's majority in this Congres lional district is 4,094! or a gain ovor Pierce's vote of 6,550. D oes. that look like Wilmot's being deserted by the people ? He was never so popu lar—never so strong. ay now!- and fortified as be is in his own integrity and the confidence of, the people; those pigmy foes who have attacked him with so much vehenience, cannot injure him, but will be themselves slain by the recoil. • It is not for our own sake -that we advocate Judge Wilmot's election to the Senate, but because of the effect of his taking a seat there at this crisis, and of the influence he would exert in the National councils: .1 The strug gle between Freedom and Slavery is not at an end. The Slavocracy are playing a desperate game for suprem acy, and they will fight it out to the last. Eyery avenue through which they may seek to make further en croachments, must bo . guarded, and for • that purpose we must have. vigi lant sentinels on the bulwarks of free dom. We know of. no man who would be more keen-eyed' to per ceive the danger, or •mere prompt to sound the alarm, than David Wilmot. The friends of freedom throughout the North must look - to it, that they send . such men—men trite and fear- - less in their antagonism .to slavery— and none others to Congress. We should glory more in the elec tion of Judge. Wilmot. te the Senate now, than ih that of, any Whig in the State. It would demonstrate that the maintenance of principles, and not the resurrection of a party, is our object; -and it would tend to ceirient together the Free-soil men into great and invincible - Freedom party, with the power and the will to.place Pennsyl vania in such a position that hereafter it can *never% be a question with the sleVery conspirators -whether they may count on our, aiclor our opposi tion. With Pollock for'-our Governor and Wilmot in the Seriate, they would know where to find us; and should another occasion. arise like that of the' passage of the Nebraska'bill, 'it would then be demonstrated whether or not Pennsylvania's voice cad be heard and her influence felt as far as Washlngton. or Dr. H. S. Heath left this place last Monday for . Kansas. We part with him with regret, fOr be has been one of the most useful of our citizens; but we bid him God speed- in his glorious 'purpose to assist in excluding Slavery from the Territory which 'Douglas and his associates undertook to throw open to the "sum of all villanies," We hope the , Doctor and his interesting family will be abun, dantly blessed for all the sacrifices they have made. Duties in general, like that trouble some class .of things called debts, give more trouble the longer they remain undischarged. The Itelmbljeatt Party—lts Object and Prospects. There is• to be a new cirgani4lloloe, of Patties+that is a fixedfact. When, , • - 17t e two old parties rrierte'crethei - a - t4 • ts • P Baltimoretri .I.Sti2 on • the .tiameVlat . -form, it -was.. evident that "the people could not be.cngaged again underlthat banner,' Henee we find the progress . ive men of all parties uniting together . • to•restst the agaressions of Slavery, auuto restore the Government to. its originalpolicy. The new party has already; assumed the name •of Repub lican, and we think it a very appro priate name ;• and we think nine-tenths • of tGe Northern people approve of its Principles. •We gave au article from the • National Era week . before last, giving the object of the Republican party as understood by the Era: Be loW we give an extract from a leading articlein the Boston Telegraph on the same subject. We commend it to the attention: of all men who think the Fathers of the Republic were honest men, and deserving the gratitude of •their descendants. The Telegraph is 1 replying to. the. Virginia Intelligence,: . In truth,the temperance reform'has made and is making such rapid progress, that we begin to have great hopes of a political reform arso,. resitting iu 'the total emancipation of the white slaves of ;he North front the cruel lash of the siavehoiding overseers 'and whippers in, or, what is stilt worse, of northern dough face drivers like Fierce antreushing: , We make no secret of ;he object at which we aim, and not we only, but the great and ' growing multitude of which the Tclrgrapii endeaVors to serve as one of the trumpeters aad s.andard-bearers, and we hops-the grocer will republish this paragraph, by wav of information to its readers. That ° Ve r t i s t o put siaveho.ders and their a:ders and abettors under ;he sante- poiitic ii bane of rigid exelti siou from all lin.leral ollices tinder which the New•lngiand Federalists cf :he school of i Washington and John Adams were pot and kep. by the Virginia slaveholders and their nor:hern adherems for more than the third of a century, in tact, till nobody could be found bold enough ;o at ow the heresies which had ' given occasion to this rigorous and rigorously executed prOscription. The slaveholders can make no objection to being put into the same category and being subjected to the same fate with the Northern Federalists of the- last generation. In point of property, education, intelligence, religion, .and good morals, the Federalists undeniably stood in the front rink of society, and more , cannot be pretended in .t ca--e .of the slave holders. Vet they is ere remorselessly tram pled under foot, politically speaking—fairly squeezed to death, or at least kept tinder till their heresies were' crushed out of such of them as survived the operation. And what 'were those heresies What in ;be ease of the Federalists was the unpardonable polltlutSl sin that could not be forgiven, What was it , but preciseh' the very same heresy is hieh the , Southern Slat ehoMers have of late united to sustain—the heresy of denying the doctrine of the Declaration of Independene,r. that all nien ar3 twrn free and equal; the heresy of scorning and deriding the great democratic doetritfie of the brotherhood and equality' of man. pith this profime denial in their months It is in vain for the slaveholders to expebt to escape [ha political flte which befell their predecessors, the Federalists—a body of men who, like the slaveholders, considered them selves born to gown, _and who had quite as good ground, to 'say the least, as the slave. holders can leave for that presumptuous, and as the event showed, and will show, futile idea. The very same causes which half a century and more ago placed power in the hands of JetlerSon, nest and and that speedily, destroy forever",the political weight of the slaveholders considered as a separate interest end- party. The feteffigencee, if it survives a few years longer, may expect to seethe famous overturn—the great denicieratic revolution of ltilltirepeated ou a larger scale, and with this difference, that the Virginia slaveholders, stripped of their false democratic visors, will be undermost, and on the top the real democracy of the North. We think far The meeting at the Court House on Tuesday evening last, called fur the purpose of starting a literary associa tion, was well attended, and the object of-the meeting obtained. A Constitu tion and--.Bye-Lows were adopted, which, though cumbersome, as it seems to us, 'will doubtless prove sat isfactory. But we will take the lib erty of suggesting to those concerned in this movement, that we think it better fir them to become members of the Coudersport Library Association, and so. change the Constitution and Bye-Laws' of this latter society as to make it sufficient for all the literary purposes of the village. The Library is small, it is true, but its volumes have been well sele6ted, and a lithe effort now on the part of each friend of literature in Coudersport, would soon make the Library a credit to the village, and a profitable place for all to resort. We make these remarks not to throw obStaeles in the way, of the new movement, but to suggest a better way of carrying it on. There will be another meeting next Tuesday evening at half past six. Question for discussion :-- 7 " Is man a progressive being?" Affirmative. Negative. Rev, S. E. SMITIL Rev. Joni B. PRLDT L. F. Poxvr.n. C. W. ELms, Esq. oNAND DIVI6ION.—The Grand Division of the Sons of Temperance of this State, at its session heal in this city on Wednesday, Thurs day and 'Friday last, ejec ed the following ofncers for the ensuing year: John M. Kirkpatrick, Esq., of Pittsburgh, Grand Worthy Patriarch. P. Pearon, ofPhiladelphia, Grand Worthy Associate. - Wm. Nicholson, Philadelphia, G, W. S. .1. 31. Kincaid, Pittsburg, G. W. C. Wrn. Tracy, Philadelphia, G. W. T. Rev. W. Boyd, Pittsburgh, G.W. Chaplain, Dr. 0. Cunningham, Beaver Co. ' G. W. S. " • [ Pittsburg Gazette, Oct: 39, What the Nebraska Bill is Piixet•A t o t.. -,. Thetlaveholders are exult' • /li g t l .- prospeet of making a - slave State lof thiii Southern. half of • iTbey,:4ly the passage of the Neln:a..4. , bill "smoothes the way" for m a ki,, z , I. slave State of California, and We 1 44 no doubt but it would have sueceeded the people of the free Sjates had struck • down the allies of Sl av , ; : r. _ . - Says the, Richmond Enquirer: 1 "Tht Nebraska priticiple Or pop l i n . , ` reignty and nen.intereentionsmood we th .„ t ,; for the establishment of a slave .Stairt Southern Califcirrtia ; for, if the pe0p,..., - ; - California-'choose to divide their public; ; lain and set up another Stafe; Booths.., 4 . institritions, - of course Congress will not pt . ': r some . to interpose any objection. The N.. braska bill forbids any m'erference • leaves it tto the people of any :State or 'lc,. ritory to determine their own institutiiii..' ?Southern California is peculiarly prepi,,, - ,, no negro labor, and its inhabitants are anxious thats Slavery bhuuld be itun.Lji •' among.: them." . Those Anti-Nebraska Denincrats is this county who talked against that measure, - but quek to the party that forced it through, and thereby rote for it, are asked to took - at the and Pay ivhat the prospect for restrai t . ire the slave power would be; if th , . , Anti-Nebraska Democrats threugho'rc the State had not taken a Morc tangs course than their associates in this county took. In Tioga, Susquehanna, and in fact in-near;; every other county in the State, they said the .passage of the Nebraska was an outrage, and they voted so at to tebuke its authors, and prevent like occurrence. ' The above, and sira ilar language, in a large number of th e Soutle:11 journals, show the wi-d•ra and neces:•ii v "of such action. hope soon to see the honest portion - the anti Nebraska Democrats of ti.;; county taking the s / ame fearless consistent course which their a.,..- c:atos all over the free States havo taken. We hope, for the honor of the . county, that a goodly number already . tau h at their failure to rebuke tie fillies of Slavery at. the late electiA as they deserved. The National Era, connnenting oa this language of the Enquirer, say,: Not fast. Mr. Enquirer. Even " Sas I`Tt`igllty • ' 111114 give- Way- to a plain yi,iarni , t the rederat Constitution. tit stittition-revering cotemporary ha+ forgoriea little eath , e in sect;on it, article 4, fif instrument, which declares that— "No new State shall be formed or erertri within the juri.diction of any oilier St..:e, without the consent of the I.e:ids:attire of th. ,State concerned, as well us of Congress." Whines er rights " squatter So', ereigtey" may have, it is plain it Ca 11110( set up a State within the jitri;dictiun of another, vd . h. out the consent of Congress, and this must Is. given by a formal act. Now, as it is curls:: that a large m ijority of members of the nett Congress -tt ill he anti-Nehr,iska should like to know why the Fier/sirens. , confident of its'seitemel Does .senotor firm 'propose to iittrodurc - a bill ut flit 'left s. - ,siun, „orantitt , Ow consent of Con , ffSS to adranc , ta the org,oni:otion of ii lute State in Cultfornia, in the expertatibn that-the unt:ority the Missouri Compromise trill -pass a Gill to oprn to Warw . !' on outlet on the Purijit Let the people of the free States look mit. There is-tin safety for Freedom, so lea.; at the present Congress or the present tdnunio tration has life. :They are exposed every moment to•surprise and treachery. - DISPUTANTS TEE NEW-YOBIC . TRECIINE We ask the affection of every reader to the prospectus of theAtneri can newspaper, which we publish in another column. We do not recom mend this paper because we agree with all the measures it advocato, fjr we have .always thought it wrong in many important particulars.. 13 advi: ,, c oar friends to look at prospectus and to subscribe for the Tribune without delay, because iris the most perfect_ in its news depart ment or any. paper that we have ever seen ; that is, it reports public meet ings, lectures, movements, sayings, pad doings of. everybody worth repeating, as they are, and not like the New-York Herald, Journal of commerce, and old fogy papers generally, to suit the taste of a certain class of readers. There is another and most impor tant'reaSon why all true men should take and read the Tribune. Its whole influence is on the side of Humanity : . Wherever there is weakness' and sut: fering„ there the sympathies, of the Tribune go, to strengthen and relieve. It endeavors to increase the intellt- Bence of the ianoratit by improving and perfecting our system of common schools, by building. up manual labor. colleges, free lyceums, lecturei, and readino• ° rooms; and in • every other way. It bps labored incessantly, and: with unfaltering' zeal, to thy up the fountain of misery•and crime which is supplied by the sale of intoxicating drinks. It is - also an. excellent - agri cultural paper, for it keeps the farmer thoroughly booked up in all the im provements of stock, farming imple ments, and the best method of tilling the soil. Thus all classes will be bcne fitted by reading the Tribune, and we hope its already largo list in the county will be doubled by the first of January next.