a VOL. lii. Business Cards. F. W. KNOB, IN-tto . rnek at 'Rata, • Coudersport, Pa., will regularly attend the Courts iu Potter county. ARTHUR G. OLMSTED, attortteg s;eottittitior at 'Lath, ,Condersport, Pa., will attend to all business .entrmsted to his care, with promptness and fidelity. Office—in the Temperance'Block, up stairs, Main•stieet. ISAAC BENSON attornt2 at iLato, COUDERSPORT is PA Office corner of We atid Third street. P. wa l tasToN, Xttortfeg at Rain, SY.llsbor.✓, Tioga Cu., Pa., will uttend the Courts zu Potter and _lPK.e.tu L ounties. A. P. CONE, 21“orneg at Eatu, W.llaborongh, Tina county, Pa, will regular 1y 'Lucid the Courts, of Potter county. June 3, 1843. JOHN S. MANN, attorney $.7 eounotior at Rain, .Coudersport, Pa., will attend the several Courts in Tout r mid M'Kenn counties. All business entrusted in his care, will receive prompt *Mention. Office on Ilain•street, opposite the Coutt Mouse, Coudersport. l'a. COUDERSPORT HOTEL, Dani:t Maw:mire PROPRIETOR. Corner of Main and Second streets, Cou dersport, Potter Co., Pa. 44. W. K. KING, Sittringor,-EiraftEiman, ant OonUojanctr, Sniet'iport, ilr Kcal: Co., Pa., - Will attend to business for non-res,dmit land hoiden, upon rt3dsonab:e terms. References given tf required. P. S. Maps of and• part of the County made to order. H. J. OLIYISTED, sSurbrgor anti Drafttiman, At the office of J. S. Matto, Coudersport. Pa ABRAM YOUNG, Matorimritrr - .@tiurtcr. All work ;vat - mired, A cock of Watche3 and Jewo‘ry ou h Lod and for 5t e. Call af..ho inure of Smith & Jones, Coudersport, l'a. - BENJAIIHN REINNELS, lIL•CESItITLI. All work in hiq line, done to order and with dapthch. On %Vest &reel, below Thad Coudersport, Pa. slum & JONES. Dealers in Dry Goods, Groceries, Statione .Iy. Drugs & (ins, Pane) anion's, &c. Couthrsport Pa. JONES, - MANN. & JONES. General Grocery and i revision Demem— Also in Dry Goods, liard xare, BUMS and Shoes, and whamver men want to buy. Main Street, Coudersport ra. D. E. OLMSTE D Deaier in Dry Goods, Ready-made Clothing Groceries, Crockery, &c. Coudersport, l'a. J. W. SMITH, Dealer in Stove!, and manufacture of Tin, Copper, and Sheet-Iron Ware. Alain street, Coudersport, l'a. DI. W. MA-AA, Dealer in Books & Scationery, Music. and Mai:adios. Mam•at., opposi.e N. W. corner ?lam public square, Coudersport, Pa• A31.0.i FRENCH, f>hysici,n & Surgeon. Las:. bide Main -ht., !iloove Louue,seur, Pa. DAVID B. BROWN, Foundry - man and Dee:er Plough. - pei'aua UI :31a,e sane., I...ouuerstinn. ra.r JACKSON st SeIIuOMAKER, Dealers in Dry Goods, Groceries, Crockery, and Reddy-made Cio.lndg s.rect, Cuu 'eferopurt, ea: ALLEti - AN Y HOV Samuel M. Mills, Proprie.ur. Ou the We lis -11/11.17 ru d, beVen uthes Au. ta lthuuerspurt. it• J• CHENEY, Merchant Tailor, and Lever in Ready- Flaw) L.Jo.n.og. Aorkh of diu public squuie, t;anctei.purt, ra. A. B. GOODSELL, ciUNS3llTH,Coudersport, Pa. .Fire Arms anuutactarvd and repatFed at his auop, ou Won notice. 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'One copy per annum, $l.OO Village subscribers, . - 1.25 TERMS OF ADVERTISING. square, 0f.12 lines or less, I insertion, $0,50 " " " " 3 insertions, . 1,50 " every subsequent insertion, 25 Rule and figure work, per sq., 3 insertions, 3,00 Every subsequent insertion, 5U I column, one year, 25,00 0 15.00 0 31.0 S 1 column, six months, 15,00 , 14 9.00 Administrators' or Executors' Notices, 2,00 Sheriff's Sales, per tract, 1,50 Marriage nOt:ces 1.00. Professional Cards not exceeding eight lines nserted for $3,00 per. annum. .E. -7 #' All letters on business, to secure at ention, should bo addressed (post paid) to tho Publisher: I've been out in the " grand old wood;" to-day, Where the earlier plant-B:0mi the damp earth part, As their long chilled pulso3 begin to play, And their le•tvo toward the genial eunlight • Spring's first birds chirped on each budding tree, . . Aud merrily swung on cult wind-stirred bough, Aud I never woo younger, it seems to me, Or more of it cilia' than I am just now. The frogs that we: piping so shrill in the flood, Told the stories so oft in my hearing erst told, And strangers were with me , the kind ones and good, Who sung me the songs I had loved of old. - These spells have been breaking the chain links of years, And sweeping, me back to life's gone : by day, Tin my soul hasswelled with its old time fears, Its loves and its joys that have passed. away. The fountains ()fiord in my heart have gushed o'er, In tears of warm tenderness, spite of my And I long for some dear one, familiar of yore, To catch its outpourings—its throbbing to still. The kindness ofstrangers is touchingand sweet, Aud gentle new friends for toy gratitude call; But I'Llgive all the world, ibis bright eve, but, to owe:, Soma old friend I love—'twould be worth more than aIL From The Evening Post SOUTH CAROLINA TO HER SONS. To arms my children, up and do! By nor,hern speakers shamed Your oravors are weak and few, . Your courage is untamed. . Too lung the brave Palmetto state - Has had its feelings wrung, Too long unanswered in debate: Das Sumner "switched hi, tongue." The land that brings forth.one Calhoun, Eallausls its crop of brains; But "on hare buoiie•linivei instead, And gutta-percha cane's. If I have made your skulls too thick, I've given you ready hands, And there is virtue in a stick— Your colliery understands. The p!amer, ignorant as a lord,- - The field hand, dull and low, All comprehend, with one accord, • The logic•-jof a blow. Then grasp your gutta-percha clubs, Approach with quiet tread. Dont argue with the caitiff wreteh, But—knock him on the head ! • JAMES BUCHANAN ON THE MISSOURI COM PROMISE IN 1847. When the freemur. of the North were neatly unanimous in demanding that the Jell'e;• ,,, r•i:lo•olan of excluding Slavery' froM the Not thern Territory, should be applied td California and New Mexico; Mr. Buchanan' threw the weight of his influence on the side of the South, and to make his influence the mote effectual, advocated the exi tension of the Missouri. Compromise line to the Pacific ocean in a letter -which we• herewith publish.—En. JOURINIA . L : WASHINGTON, August 25, 1547. GENTLEMEN : I have been honored by the receipt of your kind invitation to unite with the democracy of old Berks in their Harvest Home celebra tion, to be held at Reading, on Satur day, the 28E11 instant. I should esteem it both a pleasure and a privilege to be present on that interesting-occasion; but it is, therefore, with regret I. have to inform you that my public duties during the present week Will render it impossible. [We omit a portion of the letter ro pEvOTED TO TUE PRINMPLF,S OF l'ltNEOCatiCk,.'i:X.D. TiiE . Df33EIIiNATION OF::SIORALIT.i, Terms—ln Advance ."*elgtt• Votirg. For the Journal ONE APRIL EVE. .~a - +.:.:er: ^i-.-a.swura ~ rcz _:- -< ;:... ~_....- ...aw_._.v COVDEESPORT; POTT.ER:COUNTY, PA."; JULY-' 1856. (erring exclusively to local politics The queStion of slavery, in one of its. ancient aspects, has been recently re vived, and threatens to convulse- the country. The democratic party of the Union ought : to preparelhemselves in time for the approaching storm. Their best security, in the-hour of danger, is to cling fast to their time-honored prin ciples. A sacred regard for the fed eral constitution, and for the reserved rights of the States, is the immovable basis on which the party, can alone . safely rest.• This has saved- as froM the -inroads . .of abolition, Northern Democrats are not expected to approve of slavery in the abstract; but they owe it to themselves, as they value-the Union, and all political blessings which bountifully flow from it, to abide•by the compromises of the Constitution, and leave the question wherethat instrument has ltft it—To THE'.STATES WHEREIN SLAVERY EXISTS. Our fathers. hare made this agreement with their breth ren- of the south ; and it is not for the descendants of either party, in the pres ent generation; to cancel this solemn compact. The ABOLITIONISTS, by their efforts to annul it, have arrested the natural progress of emnacipation, and done great injury to the slaves them selves. . - After Louisiana was acquired from France by Mr. Jefferson, and when the State of Missouri, which constitu ted a part of it, was about to be admit ted-into the Union, the Missouri ques tion arose, and its progress threatened the dissolution of the Union:- This was settled by the men of the last gen et ation, as otherirriportant and dauger- Ls questions have been settled, in a spirit of mutual concession. Under the Missouri Compromise, Slavery was "forever prohibited" north of the parallel of 36 deg. 30Min.; and south of this parallel the question was lea to.bo dicided by the people. Con gress, in the admission of Texas, fol lowing in the footsteps of their pre decessors, adopted the same rule; and, in, my opinion, the' hat molly- Of the States, and even the security of the Union- itself, require that the line of the Missouri Compromise should be extended - to any new Territory which we may acquire from Mekico. I should entertain the same opinion, even if it were certain that this wourd become a serious practical question; but that it never can be thus consider ed, must bo evident to all who have attentively examined the subject. Neither the soil, the climate, nor the productions of that portion of Califur: nia south of 36 deg. 30—nor, indeed, of any portion of it, north or south—is adapted to slave labor; besides every facility would be there afforded to the . slave to escape from his master. Such property would-be utterly insecure in any part ofCalifornia. It is mmally impossible, therefore, that a majority of the emigrants to that portion of the territory g south of 36 deg. 30 min.— which will he chiefly composed of our fellow citizens front the eastern, middle and western States—will ever re-estab lish slavery within its limits. In re gard to Now Alexico; east of the Rio Grande, the question has been already settieu uy ti.e 4;1: - .213;:ion of Texas into the Union. .Should we acquiro territory beyond the Rio Grande, and east of the Rocky mountains, it is still More improbable that a majority of the people of that region would consent to re-establish slavery. They are themselves in a large proportion, a colored popula tion; and among theni, the negro does not, socially, belong to a degraded race. The question is, therefore, not one of practical importance. Its agitation. Whoever honestly intended, can pro dace uo effect but to alienate the, peo ple of different portions of the Union from each other; to excite sectional divisions and jealouSies; and to die tract and possibly destroy the . deem crude party; oti the ascendency of whose principles and measures depends, as I firmly "believe, the success of our grand experiment of selfgovernment. • Such have been my individual. Op, 'mons, openly an fieely 'expressed, ever since the - cornmrneenrenr of the present unfortnnate agitation ; and 'of . all places in 'the worhl, I - prefer to pin them inn ree6rd' befloe the incorrupti ble democracy of Old .Bork'S. I there fore beg leave . tq.offer you thp follow.; ing sentiment,: - .• *.; • The Missouri Compromise—l 6 adopt tion in MN saved • the Uni‘in . from threatened convulsion. ItS extension in 1848 to any new terriior'Ys - vhich we may acquire, will secure the like hap py results. Yours, very respectfully. JAMES BUCHANAN. Clias. Kessler, Esq., Pres't, aiidothors. ARE THE . EOWEL3 M)IAL A2ENT3 The Sprin.aeld fLepcblican, one of the ablest paperss - in New England, comments upon an idea adv.anced by a physiaogicat writer, in the following graphic style: But he advanced one doctrine which, with certain illustrations and rather es sential qualifications, the feel dispOSed to adopt. 'As nearly as we could get at his idea, it was.that nothing stands in the way of a man being guml\ but indigestion—that the hope of mankind lies in the stomach and bowels—that salvation. exists only in assimilation— that man's highest relations are those which be Sustains toward his dinner table, and that the toad to Heaven passes through the alimentary canal. Now we will go so *far With the gentle man as to admit that the bowels: really deserve a place among the great mural agents. We have nu 'doubt that many of the gloomiest passages of religious, experience originate iii the liver, that conscience is harassed by the passage 'of calculi through the biliary duct, that coolness between friends is be- - quently:not only coincident with, but dependent upon, constipation, that love wanes with a relaxed habit ut the mu cous membrane, that augur and irrita bility are the direct result of mince-pie and lobster salad, and-that couj ugal in fidelity may be produced by over-ieed ing, perhaps Inure readily than. by spiritualism. Wu believe that the care-worn and haggard condition of the American people result from dys-, pepsia, rather than from any 'other cause, and that the - natut al bowels need only- to • be kept Well and regularly opera to lighten the general load ulcare • fifty per cent. We have seen cases in this poor won Id that would suai'iclomfy idestrate the basis of our belief: We could lay our hand upon the arm of many a fi icud whe•would nut only - be startled, but offended, by the insinuation .it would convey. We know a calm and patient woman whose religious exer cises are one co./tinned trial. Her heMtis hard, her sensitive conscience is her persisteritaccuser,toe Leavens are brass above her, a cloud- rests upon her worldly circumstances, she looks out uprin the future with fearful fore bodings, friends are fickle or cold, death stands always knocking at her dour, and everything goes against here She thinks that all is meant to wean her from a world of sorrow, and yet she cannot perceive that she is becoming better fitted for that laud "Where the wicked cease from troubling, And the weary are at rest." Now, a little judicious , bydropathic eatinent would do this wGittait a world of good.. - It would lift a load from her conscience, open t'ie way for her heart's liitOest cininunion, fill )i - er future with rosy light, and make her mercurial, in a sense that would not calf for the corrective agency of the electro . -chemical bath.. This . woman is the type of, a large class; aud, - ifany of them read.this article, we hope that their:m:lkt periol of self-ekami nation may be devoted 'to a careful 'considera tign of-their digestive. organs... We know a man . who has the reputation of being; high-tempered and irritable, crabbed and cross.' The man's moth, her'oath that he, was the best.babY and, the. pleasantest cbild, she over had. But'ho eats too much ! His stomach is sour, titei,tid e s of 'life' floW Motif:3oly; his alimentary passa , `geS arblrritated by pepper and mus.. Paid; and the consequence, is that he acts as if he were possessed withtlie devil. This man cannot he peaceable aril 4001e:with his stnitiachln - U Per- Petualgrewl. hire, by accident, get into a .good physical condition; and he will, greet ..you as pleasantly'as a ,summer morning. :He wants'oxercie on a hard-trotting horse, a - farinaceous diet, coarse, bread,, and .a limited num bey of Carter potatoes, with mithing stronger for drink than cocoa and cold water No" , essential amelioration Of his moral condition ! can be achieved until these things are attended to. The preacher will preach, the: friend li:t -utor, and, the wife caress in vain. We remember once • seeing a very thick . - headed. little - urchin struggling to keep his eyes open before the -school' mis tt eSS, ,and tell tile name of the letter a. At last in the very abandon of despair; be exclaimed : " 1 can't read with thii darn great apple in my pocket." Com ment is unnecessary. It is utterly im possible, •it seems to us, for the •real millennium to come until a healthy di gestive apparatus beComes a univer.sal possession. We say this in no spirit of levity or irreverence. It is inpessi ble to feel good when one cannot help feeling cross, to be happy when one is' miserable, to be amiable with a - carmen .. ball in. ono's stomach. Therelbre let us all do i what we can to advatice•the. great : cause of human progress and Sound and healthy morality, by fie-' (pent bathing,: daily out-of•:door exer cise, simple and whelosoMe diet, and regularity of habits. Under this regi men, crime will become utifashionable, pauperism go out of date, and . the . great religious agencies the world have a fair chance and a clear field.... Water -Cure Journal. From the Angelica Reporter THE RADICAL DEMOCRACY.. In obedience to the dictate's of hon est convictions, after due deliberationi and calm reflection: we no loqer dis: guise the fact, if indeed it has at all been- disguised_ to our readers, that our preferences and feelings for Pres idential candidates are decidedly in favor of Freiriont and Dayton. Wo do not josire to occupy the unenviable position of sustaining a candidata and repudiating his principles, although we 'might quote high ;authority for ptirsuing such a course. enlisted under tho Free Soil banner of that campaign ; we then honestly entertained the princi ples inscribed un that banner,and sup ported them-to the best of our ability. Since. that time, onr opinions 'have undergone no_ change—we have not seen; heard or read any tint] tended in the least to shake convictions. We then beli, those principles were tle.m tht.t they were the princip! by the great apoStle of d! and handed down from him, through the demotratie party, to the degener ate sons of'the present day—and as such we :have loved, and cherished them as the apple of our eye. If t!:oy were good and right in the days of the father of democracy, and. reiterated and enunciated,in, and made the cor ner stone of the democratic creed at arions times 'since, and made the is . Sue ie the canvass of 164 S when they were 'needed, hew much . morofs it nec essary to sustain them - nod; when a more important crisis has arrived, for their application. , Duty .bids us, as well as every-other man who loves freedom; rather than slavery andits extension, to- reassert them, and sus., tain those'Only. who will endeavor to - . carry them' out. There is no man who honestly voted fez. Martin , Van.Buren. in 1843-and advocated the principles then put forth,who can now de other-, wise than support ,Fremont and Day ton, and bcr consistent. There is no sacrificing party irrpursuing such a course. If. party organiationS turn t.heir backs upon avowed. Principles, I • and yield them up.on the score of ex pediency-.—for 'the sake .of- securing a "Sectional vote—it loses its identity i and BRIE IMIE traltags.'slgn4Y.. nniiiingzs.'•StinrcHThracy codsists-in sustapingdgtyacratic ciples; when IL, ce j ases•to do - this .is no longersitititledtoAkifiip . mllitionsms it sail's-under false colors, and ,beccrspitti • a piratical craft. . I •Such noW is . thesTat:B Of tiie "On co , glorious : dern t ecratic party. 4,..has , .dissolv:ol.-itaelt by -.refusior tb . • plaCe 'bead i.he principles .of.its founder, :and become a', serf of ." Buchanier". craft, in the slave titithig; and aisuch.will be repudiated !silt& honest,intelligent•pertion: of those Who have always been proud of _the tibia of democrat..: We. propose. therefolip 'to know it only hereafter tlio '‘!Bacita way- party"- However mach . OA* ficians may seek scktli row fog nth:ludo/ around the true issue in the presea election, it •cannot be concealed or dial gaissd, I.4at that issue is the slavery goestion, reopened, by the.senth-rtisis south acting in.a s body- in forcing i the issue of slavery exteusion, peal of the Missouri compronaise,intcp the present canvass, Tilero is no sift mocracy, in sustaiuing slavery exten sion,. In supporting. Froniout Dayton, we do not relingoish.auy.daip ocratic doctrine, nor - fidelity to any democratic party. Mr. Freniont .bas never been considered anything . ,butiss democrat, and dell •one-hall of the:del..... egates which placed him in nonsiuse;. I Lieu. wore.. Juffersonian den:luau:A: LlZee platform upon which he is! placed,: is the'-platforni- of Jeffurson.- therefore yield to our convictions er. right antl.juAice,anti frankly avow our.? hearty support to -the caudidltas the people—believing that in: doing is.v. we' only render that 'service's to, our , . - country which its menanced liberty mg: freedom demanded at the hatlds of our: revolutionary fathers on - a similar oc-C. • casiou. . We cannot . do otherwise an-I: he consitent. This frank avowal is , duo as well to our readers, as hi justice to ourself. And now, in conclasionV there . be any .. among our readers wli.. take exceptions to the courlie we. have masked out - for ourself, we can only. say, that .we have not taken the ste;.. without duo consideration and refin Jl e tion, and that the act is promptel. , froni a high sense of himor. - and tilts i:::trlotism. We claim only .the-privi lege that. belongs to every Americas citizen, to act in- accordance with.tlus s honest dictates of his own conscieucs in regard to such matters : ,and the s Wile do not like our views and- ti): course I.ve have adopted, aro not obli ged to continue their support to our , I. paper, or even read it ; it can be di.- Continued •by complying with • our I terms. • Axecnotz.—Old Parson B—w).4 presided over alittle flock its core of LI., k towns in the State—, w.s .st any exception, the most Geer., Lvints we over 'knew. His es:- sitie's were carrietilas far in the as out of it. An instance we W.:: one who invariably mad a practice oi leaving the cifurch or the parsou w two-thirds through Ms sermon, Tni, was practiced so long; that'afbir a will it became a matter acourse, and II • one, save:the divine, seemed to tulta notice of it.. And he at length 'netlli :41 brother P. that such a thing twist, tle . felt assured, be needless ;' but P. said that at that hour his family needed services at homo, and he must 'do it; neverthelesS, on leaving the_c` hurch.ba: always, took a round-about: course r . which by some mysterious- maana ways brought hiM to cloie proximity t..) . the village tavern, which he would en tor, "and thereby. hangs a tale?! • Parson B, ascertained from, semi, source that P's object in leaving churco was to, obtain.a "drat," and he-deter mined:to stop his` leaVing' and disturb inn- the congregation in'futare, - if such a thing' were possible. -•- • -Tile next .Sab.batlii. brother - E, - left his seat at the usual time, s and" starte4 fur the doer,whoU'Parsori B:exclaitat 7 "Brother P!" .P. , on 'being thusaddresed,. stopped short, and gazeJ..toward,the .pulpit. "Brother P." continued T did pap3o4.. "there is no uSed of your leavh.g church . at this time, as k passed . 6 9 Tavern.this morning, l madetarrang,-. limas with the landlord to Itimp. your toddy hot till, church ye?: 9 . 4.7 The surprise and . .rnoru.fiFitinit 9( the brother, can hardly hgo -77 • 44, - __ • , ic ' ' Ij. OE : EMEMM 0. rim his &lurch members, wls 0 r:T~