Terms of publicaflon* TUE TIOGA COUNTY AGITATOR ia puV b'abed every Thursday Morning, and mailed lo sub scribers at tbe very reasonable price of One Dol* lae perannmn, invariaßy in advance ' It»intend ed lo notify every subscriber when tbe term for which be has paid shall have expired, by tbe stamp —“Time Oat,* 1 on the margin of the last paper. The paper will then be stopped until a further re mittance be received. By this arrangement no man can be brought in debt to the printer. The Agitator is the Official Paper of the Coon ty, with a large and steadily increasing circulation reaching into nearly every neighborhood in the County. It ia sent free of pottage to any Post office within the county limits, and to those living within the limits, but whose mosteonvenient posloffice may be in an adjoining County. Business Cards, not exceeding 5 lines, paper in* eluded, $4 per year. . For the Agitator, the spirit bride. I neveraaw my darling, We never chanced to meet, One gentle word 1 ne’er have heard. Yet know her voice is sweet. I’ve dreamed of her so often. I’ve thought of her so iong. From her my heart-will never part. To* her I’ll breathe my song. I know not if my dear one Is of this lower earth; Or, if to brighter realms of light £be owes her name and birth; But oft when sad and weary, Inclose my eyes to rest. My spirit bride comes lo ray side' 7 And makes my slumbers blest. Sometimes in happy dreamland, 1 clasp her hand in -mine. And tell her bow, to win her now, All else I would resign. And then she smiles upon me The happiest of men. But dawning day calls her away. And I’m alone again. Yet still I hope to meet her Before my race U rQn; Tbe Vows of sleep I then will keep. And claim tbe cherished one. Thus in the crowd I mingle With heart preoccupied, Intent to trace in each fair face The features of my bride. But, if. to disappointment T atill am doomed till death, A happier fate shall me await When 1 resign my breath; For in some happy'region Beyond the azure sky. We then shall meet in union sweet, My spirit love and I. Virginia. Sntmstlna Stutctj. From the Lancaster Examiner and Herald. A Northern. Nan’s Impressions of the South, One who has never been South, and whose notions and opinions are formed entirely from books and hearsay, would have bis ideas con siderably changed by a tour, however brief, through the seaboard slave Stales. So much is said about the slaves and their masters, the sugar plantations, cotton fields and rice swamps, (hat a large majority forget all about the country itself. Having had occasion to pass through some of these States a few weeks ago, a few observations concerning them may not prove uninteres'ing to Lancas ter 1 county men, particularly as of late years considerable emigration has been going in that direction, chiefly, however, to Maryland 1 " and Virginia.' The reason why Pennsylva nia* have not /bund their way further down stiff, becomes as clear as daylight, when one has once had a glimpse of the country. Maryland and' Virginia arc two quite re spectable Stales in an agricatlurat point of view. True, much of the soil, through the mismanagement and carelessness of the na tive farmers, has become unproductive and is “worn out,” but by northern farming and northern energy, can again be made-product ive to an extent that will pay the farmer handsomely for his labor; but this is not the case with those States lying still further South. Such as have traveled through the above men tioned States, must have remarked the large amount,of rocky and sfvampy land, which it is very probable will never be rendered pro ductive, the soil being poor in the first place, and the expense of reclaiming it in the second being so great as to prevent all idea of its being attempted. Things became ten times worse as soon as you get out of Virginia into North Carolina, which is the poorest and mean est-State, agriculturally, in the Union, South Carolina excepted, which in this respect bears off the palm from every country in the world. , Virginia, from having been the mother of Presidents and Statesmen, has condescended to be the mother of negroes, and the result of ■her prosperity is only too apparent. The wretched dwellings of the white population, and the still more miserable cabins ol the slaves, speak even louder than Governor Wise himself, of her miserable condition. An al. most endless succession of stunted pines lines the railroad from one end of the State to the other.*. A few other species of deciduous trees are sometimes seen, but it is very rarely that the oak or the hickory is found. North Caro lina is better off in her pine forests, for ,here the trees grow very often to an immense size, and form one of the chiqf sources of wealth to the people. So far as other limber is con cerned, she is quite as badly off as-Virginia. The country, too, is more uneven, and the soil seems much inferior, and in fact, from this point down to. New Orleans, the soil has an appearance that would be very uninviting to a Lancaster county farmer, resembling very much the ted, sandy appearance of that portion of Lancaster known as Muddy Creek, but is still less productive. ' There is not so much cotton raised in North Carolina as I supposed. The pine forests which cover almost the entire country furnish quite as reliable a source of wealth, and with much Jess trouble. 1 here witnessed the man per of malong rosin, turpentine and tar. An incision is made in the tree with an axe, about a loot from the ground, and a strip of the bark about three leel long is then taken off above 100 cut and extending down to it. The cut is shallow andcatches the liquid as it oozes out of the tree.’"The rosin is secreted in that portion of the tree from, which the bark has been taken. Each year.the bark is taken ofl a loot or two higher tip than the previous year, and this practice is continued until the ree dies, which is in about six or eight years ; afterwards the tree is cut down, and then twrnt m a conical shaped kilo, from which the tar is product. The amount of rosin taade m North Carolina is astonishing. I saw thousands of barrels lying along the road, watting to be sent to market. Much ie also made in South Core|ina, ( THE BefcoteD to tt)t 32*tenaCon of ttjr&rea of JfmfcotK atUjr t&e Spceafc of mefotm COBB, STURROCK & CO., YOL. 3. One that has never seena southern swamp, cannot have the slightest idea of what it is. The season in which.l saw them, being win ter, there was of course no vegetation, and my chances of observing them, all the better. The ground is covered with water, from six inches to- two feet deep, and out of these marshes, rise enormous trees, mostly pines. A most singular feature in these trees is, that about two or three feet from the water, the trunk suddenly enlarges lo three or four limes its usual girth; this, I suppose, arises from the soft, yielding nature of the soil, which renders it necessary for tbe tree to have a wider and consequently firmer base for its roots. ' The aspects of these swamps is oftentimes very peculiar. Through the truuks of the trees you can see for hundreds of yards, nothing but the shining water, at ibis season of the year, unrelieved by animal lifeof any kind. During the summer months, however,, they are the abode of almost every species of vermin. They account also for the sickness which prevails in so many parts of the South, during the warm weather.— Sometimes these marshes extend almost with out interruption, for a bundled miles; a per son begins lo think the South is nothing more or less than one interminable bog, and he is not veiy wrong. To one who has been accustomed lo see Conestoga teams ail his life, southern horses and southern teams present a very strong contrast. The bone yard would be deemed the filledt place for nearly every horse I saw after I left Washington. A more wretched, abject lot of beasts can be found no where, unless it bfe in Italy, which they say beats the world for sorry horses and mules. Oxen are more used in the South than horses, for the reason, 1 presume, that they are kept at less expense. lam confident, six good horses would eat up the entire produce of many of the plantations I saw; oxen therefore are preferable, both as a matter of economy and policy. Nothing surprised me more, than the small number of horned cattle, and of live slock generally, kept qn southern farms. Two or three cows, as many hogs, a couple of goals, half a dozen of barn fowls, and a few yoke of oxen, constituted the planter’s properly—his negroes excepted. In the matter of barns they are entirely destitute. Ido not now remember of having seen a single barn after leaving Richmond. The extreme meagreness of southern crops, renders out.buildings entirely unnecessary lo the planter. He would not know what to do with it, if he possesed one. A ricketty shed, a dozen feet long, answers every purpose, and costs nothing, 1 saw immense corn-fields in ail the the Slates down to ( Louisiana, but not a grain of corn. ’ I can’t imagine what be comes of it, unless used for the support of their negroes. I judge from the appearance of the stalk, that such ears of corn as we see in Lancaster county are altogether unknown. They plant their corn as we do, except that they never put more than one grain in a hill, it being found To cut the siring of Cupid’s bow ; The gad house cat shall mew aroond, ' His lonely grave in grief profound. His bloodless lips to dnst; His old jack-knife shall waste with rust; He whom we hide from light of men, Will-never fright the babes again. For we have laid him from the light; Beneath the ground and out of sight; But this rude epitaph shall stand— “He who to no one gave his hand 1” SeUctJHisccllans. A New Continent The coral reefs of the Pacific Ocean have been, in part, measured, and are found to be of amazing extent, and a new continent is in process of formation. All the labor is ac complished by zoophytes—insects ; and if we wish to form some conception of the do ings, we have but to remember that the coral formations of the Pacific, occupy an area of four or five thousand miles, and to imagine what a picture the ocean would present were it suddenly drained. We should walk amid huge mounds which had been-cased and cap ped with (he stones these animals had secreted. Prodigious cones would the "ground, all towering to the same altitude, reflecting the light of the sun from (heii white with dazzling intensity. Here and there we should see a huge platform once a large island, whose peaks as they sank were clothed in coral, and then prolonged upwards until they rose before us like the columns of some huge temple which had been commenced by the Anakins of the antedeluvian world. Champollion has said of the Egyptian edi fices that they seem to have been designed by men fifty feet high. Here, wandering among these strange monuments,-we might" fancy that beings one hundred ya'rds in stature had been planting the pillars of a collossal city they had never lived to complete. The build ers were worms, and the quarry whence they dug their masonry, the crystal wave. In the event of this vast extent of coral reef being upheaved, where’ or -whence will the waters of the Pacific recede? Either the western shores of the American continent and away to the base of the Rocky Mountains will be submerged, or the shores of opposite Asia, for innumerable ages the cradle of man’s de'- velopmenl and civilization will sink into,the great abyss; and the ships of the inhabitants of’ this . globe—when it adds ten. thousand years to its age—will sail over .and find no soundings where millions to day’loil in unre sisting servitude, and where cities from gor geous cupolas and storied palaces fling back the rays of the rising and declining sun. Relics op Feudal Days. —The dustom of uncovering the head and/taking hat, or even simply touching it is a relih.of the old disarming—the removing of‘the helmet to indicate that the parly thus exposed’him self to the mercy of an enemy. To lake off the glove was in like manner to uugaumlet the hand, the mere removal constituting an offer of friendship. Even now it is considered uncivil to shake hands with the glove on.— Shaking hands was formerly a token of truce; in which each of the parlies took hold each of the other’s weapon hand, to malfe sure against treachery. It was also a token of good; will. A, Frenchman, a prisoner in England, once made a most ingenious use of this custom.— Having been “put up” against a negro boxer, and knowing nothing of boxing, fte availed himself of the shaking of hands encounter, to crush the negro's hand in his iron grip. It is said ihtjt a few years since, a brutal fellow in Connecticut crushed a friend’s hand in like manner, though he did it in sport. The bow at is said, which is now a mark ot politeness, is hut the offer of the neck to the stroke of an adversary, while the conrtesy peculiar- to the ladies is the form of going on the knees to sue for. thatmercy, which in earlier ages, was difficult to geti The hair pins wofn by ladies are reduced poignards. In some parts of Sicily they are still worn of such a size as to be converiihle into weapons. The ear rings were anciently badges of sla very, and were soldered so that they could not be removed from the ear. Their farm indicated the owner of the slave. May is contideted an unforlunate marrying momh. A down-east editor says that a git I was asked, not long since to unite herself by the silken lie to a young man, who named May in bis proposals. The lady tenderly hinied that May was an unlucky month r or marrying. “Well, make it June then,” hon estly replied the swain, anxious to accommo date. The damsel paused a moment, hesita ted, cast down her eyes, and said with a beau tiful blush, “Wouldn't April do as well ?” A Child’s Co.ui>bo3iise. —A clergyman who had been staying for some lime at the house, of a friend of ours, on going a>vay called to him-little Eddy, the five-year old son of the host, and asked what he should give him for a present- Eddy, who had great respect for the “doth,” thought it was his duty to suggest something of a religious na ture; so he answered hesitatingly: "I—I—I think I should like a Testament, and I knou> j should like a squirt gnu!’’ , 7 jftaies ~ Advertisements will bofcfi'irged $1 per square or fourteen for one, or three Insertions, and 25 cents for subsequent Insertion. All advertise ments of Jcsjb than fourteen lines considered as a squat e. The following rales will be charged fop Quarterly, HalAYesrl/ and Yearly advertising:*-* - 3 months. 6 months. 12 mo’s 1 Square, (14 lines,) - $2 50 $4 50 $6 00 2 Squ*res,- <• ~ . 4 OO £OO 8 0& i column, • • - - 10 00 15 00 20 00 1 column 18 00 30 00 40 00 All advertisements not having the number of in* sertiooa marked upon them, will be kept in until or dered out. aqd charged accordingly. ; Posters, Handbills, Bill,and Letter Heads,and all kinds dr Jobbing done in country establishments, executed neatly and promptly. Justices*, Coasts, bles* and other BLANKS, constantly on hand and printed to order. , NO. 37. * •• Prom the Richmond, (Vo.) Enquirer, The Intension of Slavery the pol- The ascendency of the anti-slavery senti ment in (he North, and the increasing pre ponderance of (he Tree-soil States in the con. federacy, are circumstances of very great moment to'the people of the South. In con templating our absoiutejnferiority in point of political power ; and especially in anticipa ting the widening gap between the two sec tions, which the more' rapid development of the North‘discloses to our vision, it-is quite natural that the friend of the South should ht first incline to a despondent view of the future. But this glbomy feeling will scan give place to a more rational and manly resolution—to a just appreciation of our resources, and a determination to maintain our equality of power at any nnu every hazard. .The basis of our power und prosperity is incomparably more stable than that of the North. -Gommerce and manufactures- con stitute the| wealth of the NoVih; but com merce and; manufactures are things of man’s creation, and like all the other works of hu nfan. contrivance, are of brief and uncertain deration, j There is not a more striking les son in history than that which attests the in stability of the factitious prosperity of empires built upon;a basis of human enterprise and They rest upon an accidental combination of circumstances, and are pecu liarly exposed to the vicissitudes of fortune. Any -deterioration in the character of the people, any change in the commercial .or po litical relations of the world, brings their un subs'anltaf power to the earth. From Tyre in the agefof Solomon, down to the Holland of but; own limes, history recounts innumer able instances of their fleeting grandeur.—. Like the century' plant they burst suddenly into bloom, for a momenf'enchant the world ! with their ;bbauty, and then vanish among lha things of a by-gone age. Very different is the fate of nations who build upon' (he impregnable basis of agricul tural prosperity. They draw support from the inexhaustable bosom .of nature; and though their political system, and the suprem acy of their power be not exempt from the of human affairs, yet they never suffer those sudden and total eclipses which extinguish!the glory of commercial empires. The anti-slavery States of the confederacy, (we mean,to exclude the conservative com munities of the Northwest) are preeminently skilful in the mechanical arts, and incompar ably successful in commercial enterprise, but their power is factitious and must perish with the circumstances which create it. The acci dents of peace and war, of rivalry, of an un projiitious government policy, of the corrup tion and decay which bloated wealth always engenders in a comrrmnity, may at any men! dethrone them from their supremacy and reduce them to destitute dependencies.— As they hav-e no monopoly of the balufal capabililjes and the human faculties essential to success I in manufactures, so they are equally liable to be cut off from this special source of their wealth. Their prosperity and their power' rest upon an unstable basis. TlieSouth is emphatically, if not exclusive, ly, a'n agricultural country, and its people exhibit the sterling virtues of their character istic pursuit. While they till he soil, the effeminate refinements of a corrupt civiliza tion will never expose them to the chance of subjugation! Neither w||| their wealth take wings and! fly away. The. “Wingless Viclo-- ry” of'the ancient Greek sculpture is an apt symbol of the stability ol their power. So far from being exposed to a ruinous rivalry in the supply of cotton, the danger is that their utmost capabilities of production will not be equal to the growing demand. BesiJes,,- the South produces tobacco and other tropical articles in sulficienl measure to make the commerce ot the world dependant upon its supply. It possesses an abundant territory. Its resources are; ofahe most various charad ter, and are susceptible at infinite develop ment. Its energies are now directed with unexampled earnestness of purpose to its \ wonderful.manufacturing facilities and its pe culiar advantages for the establishment of an immense commercial interest. Within iTs ' own grasp the South holds all the elements;’ of a solid and permanent prosperity. Noth ing is wanting to the completeness of its re sources—nothing tails peffeiffrrrdependence. The only dangler which ihe has rea son to apprehend, is, that in consequence of an accidental combination of, circumstances, it may lose its equality of (political power in tl|e confederacy, be reduced to a sort of cjc. pendence upon the North, and, by an iniqui tous policy, of legislation, be despoiled of its advantages and restricted in its development. It is, then; of the last consequence to the wel fare of the South, that it maintain its equality of power ip ihe Union, so ns to protect its. rigpls, and prevent any unjust discrimination against its interests in the action of the Feds, ral Government. But this result can be ac complished in only one way ; and, that is bg insisting on the legitimate expansion of the institutions of the Soutfff^W e must keep a self-protecting power in our own hands, and to that end must demand eqbalily of repre sentation in the Senate. Let the people of the South, as ihe last expedient for the preser. vation of the Union, rally upon Ihe principle of -an extension of the pro-slavery power pari jpassu with the aggrandizement of the power of the anti-slavery States. It is our r i„|,t .under the constitution, and our right outside of the constitmion'in virtue of the necessities,of self-protection. Liberaied from Ihe illegal restrictions and unjust operation of the Federal Government, and left free in the development of its splendid resources and the expansion; of i‘s vigorous institutions; the iDoUUeal, » icy of tile Sonth.