I the TIOGA COUNTS' AGITATOR is pub- K'M 1 ’ \ :T H i A OT£F iT AD Xn Hi /JL tj X r JL ‘..OL Xv/ jLlbl mittance be received. By this arrangement no man w can be brought in debt to the printer. ' ' — : —■■; ~~ — L —— - ■■■ —~ ~- ■■— ■ e_e. ~j - . ■ ty ( T wi E lh A tt G ilr A go°and readily increaehig circulation QfcOOtfcO tO tf)t iSfcftttOlOtt Of ($0 MVtX Of iFVCCOOItt JltlO t||( Of fbt&ttflP ItCfO reaching into nearly every neighborhood in the - • * W ****** County. It i» seal free »f postage toany Poet-office ' '' ' ' ~ ' -■ WHItIi TH * BE SBALL ” A WHO * 6 rnffump, anp until “ maw’s inhumanity to man” sbau cease, agitation most continue. Bmincss'Carda, not exceeding 5 lines, paper in eluded, *4 per year. fox ttw Agitator. PSALM XXIII. Amidst the dark scenes of this world's weary strife, THion the heart grows weary of earth ahd of life; How sweet is the thought— when for rest our aoula pant, “Tho Lord is my Shepherd 1 shall not want.” His hand gently leads me where green pastures ware, My o’er burdened soul in still waters he lares*, And leads mo, when from hia safe fold I would break, Into righteousness'paths, for his ovm names'soke. Yea, tho’ I should walk thro’ death’s ralloyof gloom, Without e’en one ray the dark, path to illume; Vot will I not foar for tho rod of his lore. And his staff to support toe, are stretch® 3 from above, From His hand, shall my table 'with plenty abound, Although the fierce toe should taf pathway surround* On my brow, tbo oil of peace crer glows. My full cup of bliss with His goodness o’erfloWß. Ills mercy shall follow nxo surely through life, My heart in His goodness shall ever delight; Oh / surely my soul shall findjoy in HU lore, My feet press the courts of His house evermore, Northumberland, Pa. The Spider and the Snake. Asiomsusa teas of a socbe bph>eb. It would seem that there is no living thing so obnoxious as not to find some admirers, tt’hat creatures so repulsive as rats and spi tiers ? Yet the London Quarterly finds something beautiful and even loveable in the former, and Dr. Asa Fitch, in Harpers’ Monthly, labors to show that the latter “de|i cate little objects” are worthy of our esteem and admiration ! He denies that their bite is fatal to any sane insects, and extols their agility, adroitness, sagacity and heroism as worthy of all praise. In support of these views he tells the following curious story con cerning a heroic spider who captured a snake. The affair came' off last summer, in the store of Chas. Cook, in the village of Havana, Chemung County N. Y„ and is attested fay the Hon. A. B. Dickinson, of Corning, who himself - witnessed the phenomena, as did more than a hundred others. An ordinary looking spider of a dark color, its body not larger than that of a common house fly, had taken up its residence, it ap pears, on the under side of a shelf beneath the counter of Mr. Cook’s store. What may wsuppose was the surprise and consterna tion of this little animal on discovering a snake abobt a loot long selecting for ils abode the floor underneath, only two or three spans from ils neat. It was a common silk snake, which, perhaps, had been brought into the store unseen in a quantity of sawdust’ with which the floor had been recently "carpeted.” The spider was well aware, no doubt, that it would inevitably fall a prey to this horrid monster the first time it should incautiously venture within its reach. We should expect that to avoid such a frightful doom, it would forsake ils present abode, and seek a more secure retreat elsewhere. But it is not improbable that a brood of ils eggs or young was secreted near the spot, which the parent foresaw would fall a prey to this monster if (hey were abandoned by (heir natural guardian and protector. We can conceive of no other motive which cWno have induced tho optdo*- » pc*ti**°ctously to remain and defend that particular spot at the imminent risk of her life, when she could so easily have fled and herself in tome secure corner elsewhere. But how, we may well ask, was it possible [or such a weak, leader little creatlire to tombat such a powerful mail-clad giant? What power had she to do anything which :ould subject the monster to even the slightest ncoavenience or molestation ? Her ordinary resort, that of fettering and binding her vic tim by throwing her threads of cobweb [round it, it is plain, would be of no more Ivatl here than the cords upon the limbs of Ehe unshorn Samson. Aware that her ac- ] uslomed mode was useless, bow did she' cqoire (he knowledge and sagacity requisite for devising another, adapted so exactly to Ihe case in hand—onq depending upon the structure and habits of the serpent to aid in rendering it successful ? How was she able [to perceive that it was in her power to wind a loop of her threads around this creature’s [throat, despite all his endeavors to foil her in [this work—a loop of sufficient strength to hold him securely, notwithstanding his strug gles and writhings, until by her taekle-like power she could gradually hoist him up from the floor, thus literally hanging him by the neck until be was dead ? for this was the feat which this adroit little heroine actually performed—a feat beside which all the fabled exploits of Hercules in overpowering lions and serpents and dragons'sink into utter in significance I And who can say that in the planning and execution of this stupendous achievement, there was not forethought, : reasoning a careful weighing of all the diffi -1 culties and dangers, and a clear perception [in the mind of this little creature that she 1 possessed the abiliiy to accomplish what she undertook ; in short, an exercise of faculties pf a much higher order than the mere instinct »htch is commonly supposed to garde and govern these lower animals in their move ments 1 .... By what artifice the spider was able in the ■first of the attack to accomplish what, if did, we can only conjecture, as its work was not discovered nnfit the most difficult and daring part of its feat had been performed. When first seen, it had placed a loop around the neck; of the serpent, from the top of which a •Single thread was carried,upward and attach ed to the under side of the shelf, whereby toe head of the serpent was drawn up about vro inches from the floor. The snake was j in n mov , ,o e at >d around, incessantly, «rJin»' rC 888 ' ar S e as its tether would allow, floor y Un *' ) 'e 10 gel its head down to the r . w "hdraw it from the noose | while 0)0 l!! ' 8 spider, exuiiingly no doubt in sure which tIOW b yond a petadyenlure, was ever and P as smg down to the loop and nn to the tbp ,l aJd ! nfi hereby an additional , strand to (tread, eqefi of which new strands being VOL. IV. tightly drawn, elevated the head of the make gradually more and more. But the most curious aud skillful parts of its performance is yet to be told. When it was in the act of running down the thread to the loop, the reader will perceive it was possible for the snake, by turning its bead vertically, ,to snap at and seize the spider in his mouth. This bad ■no doubt been re peatedly attempted T&ithe earlier part of the conflict; but instead of catching the spider, his snakesfaip caught himself thereby in bn additional trap. The spider, probably by watchiog each opportunity when the mouth of the snake had thus been turned towards her, adroitly, with her hind legs, as when throwing a thread around a fly, had thrown one (bread after another over the mouth of the snake, so that he was now perfectly muz zled, by a series of threads placed over it vertically, and these were held from being pushed asunder by another series of threads placed horizontally as my informant slates he particularly observed. No muzzle of wire or wicker work for the mouth of the animal could be woven with more artistic regularity and perfection ; and the snake occasionally making a desperate attempt to open his month, would merely put these threads upon a stretch. AMIE. The snake continued his gyrations, his gait becoming more slow, however, from weakness and fatigue, and the spider con tinued to move down and up on the cord, gradually shortening it, until, at last, when drawn upward so far that only two or three inches of the tail touched the floor, the snake expired, about six days after he was first dis covered. A more heroic feat than that which this little spider performed is probably nowhere upon record—a snake a foot in length hung by a common house spider! Truly, the race is not to the swifl, nor is the battlealo the strong! And this phenomenon mayHserve to indicate to us that the intelligence with which the Creator has endowed the humblest, feeblest of his creatures, is ample for ena bling them to to triumph in any emergency in which He places them, if they but exer cise the faculties He has given them. It is only the slothful, cowardly, timorous, that fail, and they fail not so much before their enemies as before their own supineness. Shooting Pigeons Without Shot. A correspondent at Chillicoihe, Ohio, under dale of August 25, records the following an ecdote as a veritable /act: A week or two since the woods and feeding lots around this city were “perfectly alive” with pigeons—as indeed, they are every fail and spring. Among the many who seized (heir double barreled guns and rushed to the sl^il^ erwa 4 n -- y fegertp-iis {Yns occasion, indeed, that after driving at 2.40 speed some five or six miles out from , the town, and seeing his horse properly put away, he discovered with dismay that he had left his shot bag at home! Here was a di lemma for you ! And to make the incident intolerable, the morning was simply perfect, and the birds setting and rising in clouds! — What was to be done ? That was a question upon which Sam exhausted his ingenuity, without arriving at any satisfactory conclu sion. Having gyrated two or three limes taround the eighty acre lot, to the music of some profane exclamations, he became calm enough to make up his mind /or the return trip pigeonless. Jnst at that moment he saw another sportsman drive up to the fence near by, and soon recognized Capt, R ■ “Ah, how lucky’."—thought Sam; “I can beg, buy or borrow some shot of him. But—-but —what il he has a short supply, and declines 1 a divide in view of the multitude of birds'? Ah ! 1 have an idea 1" “Good morningj Capt A beautiful morning this, for shooting ; and the pigeons are as thick as blackberries,” “Cooi’n morgen, Herr K k,” respond ed (he new comer, who is one of the most gentlemanly, but not one of the sharpest of kraut and sausage consumers; “me think we have plenty of sbooten dis day.” “Yes, plenty sport, Captain. But Isay, 1 do you see yon coffee nut tree at the edge of the limber? its big leaves hanging down, look like pigeons. Now that lrse will attract the birds to light upon it. S’pose we build a blind there, and shoot together to-day ? We can lake in a thousand or tiro I guess !” ■ “Very coot, Herr K— k,” responded the German, and in a few minutes lha cornstalk blind was erected, and the sportsmen enscon ced behind it, ready for business. On came the long line of birds, circling around the feeding ground for a,moment, and .then settling upon the coffee nut tree in tens, .fifties, hundreds. “All ready now, Captain?’’ asked Sara. “Yah !” exclaimed the excited captain. “Fire together, then s’—bang! 5 ’ —bang! bang ! went both guns and a dozen birds were fluttering on the ground beneath the tree, .besides two or .three that sailed,off wounded and were lost. • . , ' . V •' “Pretty well done>J” exclajrhcd Sam. .Buklet them lie,. Captainijwe will gather up Ihe spoils when nc get tired of killing. ; . And so they shot nil day long, .Sara tab'"® especial pains lb fire simultaneously,with Hi and when on one or two occasions, he acci dentally fired alone, the “d—d gun hung fire,”, or “something got'>“ his eye just as he putted the ttiggori" and resuUed m a clear miss. In the evening they divided some one hundred and folly birds, between the®,, and drove home in high-, glee, ov,er their,fio°u sport,and- heavy game .begs. To this hour, the Captain has,not. learned the feet that Sam did not fire a single charge pf shot all that 1 dag. . . - -•-■ - WELLSBORQ, TIOGA COUNTY, PA., THURSDAY MORNING. SEPTEMBER 17, 1857. How much excellent material baa been wasted,, and utterly spoiled, by unskilful fin gers ! This ejaculation is not less applicable to inanimate matter, than to mind and heart. How many a boy, of fine pans and excellent natural disposition, whom accident has thrown upon the wrong track ; and given a false di rection, has been ruined forever, by absurd mismanagement, and lor the want of a judi cious and friendly hand to turn the switch 1 This is a short preface to a short story, which interested me when I heard it, many years ago, and which a recent event has freshened in my memory, I cannot remem- her the year—it was'long ago—that I passed the night, Under the hospitable roof of the Hon. Salem Tpwne, of Charlton, r in the coun ty of Worcester. As we sat together in the evening, and were speaking of education and of schools, Mr. Towne informed me, that about the year 1800, he taught a school in the south-western district, of Charlton. An inhabitant of Sturbridge, the adjoining town, had a son, of whose abilities and general character he appeared to entertain a low es- umate, and of whom he spoke.to Mr. Towne ‘•disparagingly, as a boy, who gave him trou ble.” Mr, Towne, notwithstanding this pa ternal forewarning, consented to receive the lad, on probation. On the evening of the very first day, the school agent camo to the teacher, and told him, that the boy was a bad boy, and he would disturb the whole school, and must be turned out. The agent, very probably, received his impressions, from the judicious parent, who seems to have made no secret of bis opinions. Mr. Towne rejected this hasty counsel, and informed the agent that he should keep a watchful eye upon the lad, and that he thought it would be lime enough to turn him out of school, when ho made any disturbance,.and that he was enti tled to a fair trial, When the boy came for the first time to recite his lesson, and had goi ter; through, Mr. Towne told him to shut up his book. Ha did so, but instantly recoiled, and dodged his dread, as if bo expected a blow. The teacher enquired what was the matter ; —the'boy replied that he supposed ho should be beaten ; and, being asked if he had been accustomed to such usage, he replied in the affirmative. Mr. Towne then quieted his alarm, and assured him, that he had nothing to fear, if he conducted himself well; and encouraged him, by commending his recita tion ; and was so impressed, fay "the lad’s manner of receiving this approbation, that he ventured to say to him—'•/ believe you are a good bay /” These words not only enter ed the ear—they reached the heart. I will not adopt the strong expression, which I once heard, from the lips of a very intelligent Jes uit, and say that the teacher had found a mn* , (hat* hour, he had effectually “turned the | switch. That beautiful appeal—“my son give me thy heart,” had not beeu thus silently made, in vain. The lad told his associates, that, though others had said he was a bad boy, Me. Towne had told him he believed he was a good boy, and he was sure he wished to be a good boy. Not long after, the school agent came again, and earnestly required, that this boy be dis missed from the school. With this request Mr. Towne refused to comply ; and said that ha “liked the appearance and conduct of the boy, and thought that, with some little illus tration of the law of kindness, be would make fcimself known in the world, as a useful citizen,” i , . . , '(tend the school. This youth continued to a- . daily, and steadily, and profitably, Ibr two winters. At the close of the second winter, the father came to Mr. Towne, and said— “ Bill says, that you say I must send him to College, and have him fitted, with some pri vate family, not at an academy.” ■ The fath er inquired of Mr. Towne what he had seen in Bill, to justify the idea of sending him to College. “I see,” said Mr. Towne, “a boy that you will hear of in after life.” Mr. Towne recommended the Rev. Mr. Lyman, of Connecticut, as an instructor. This course was followed } and the boy went to College, and the predictions of his kind nnd judicious primary teacher have been verified—the boy was heard-from in after life! After having filled many stations of the very first import ance in our country and passed the seventieth mile-stone, in the path of man from the cra dle to the grave, he is now numbered with the dead—that Slurbridge boy, William L. Makov, is oo more! ... Upon the tidings of Mr. Marcy s decease, I had a wish to tell this interesting story to the world. Unwilling to trust entirely to my memory, I addressed a letter to my friend. General Towne, and communicated that wish (b him. His reply is now before me, in which he' says—“ Please say as little of me as you can. It can only be said, that a boy, who had been unfortunately dealt with,-happened to become a pupil of mine, and I happened to discover that ho was a lad of noble mind; and that proper direction and change of poli cy only were necessary to tjittke him a man, whoso influence might in after life, be widely extended.” Firmly believing as I do that, under God, Mr. Marcy was deeply indebted to this kind, considerate friend, for thus turn ing the switch so opportunely, I. think the public will not agree with General Towne, in ascribing to chance what has evidently re sulted from an .excellent discretion. Among the accomplishments and virtues of Mr. Marcy, be possessed and cultivated a oenisl and grateful temper. He never forgot his obligations to tho teacher of the village school.in Charlton ; and on : numerous occa along, private and public, evidently took a particular please in proclaiming them openly. Upon tho occasion of a military review, and, at. the dinner table, that- gallant soldjpt Turning the Switch. and perfect gentleman, Governor Brooks, ob serving the very familiar "and friendly rela tion between Mr. Marcy and Gen. Towne, who were present, inquired of Mr. Marcy how he and Towne had become so intimate; upon which Mr. Marcy replied pointing tow ards Gen. Towne —“be made me—-whatever I have attained I owe to him.”— “That,” replied the Governor, “requires tome explanation.” Mr. Marcy then pro ceeded in his happy manner, and in the pres ence of the company who had become much interested in (he recital, to narrate the days of small things—his eariy discouragements —his first recitation before the teacher of the village school, in Charlton—how expecting to be coiled as usual, he had dodged from the anticipated blow—the teacher’s surprise—the effect upon his young heart of the first words of commendation he had,-ever received—the stirring of all his good purposes, upon hear ing for the first time in his life, that he was believed to be “a good boy,” “Yes,” said Mr. Marcy, “Towne made me.” Simon Sugg’s Land Speculations Before Suggs opened his saddle bags to pay the Indian woman for the land. General Law son, who wanted a slice, came to Suggs and said : “Mr. Suggs,” said he, “I’d like to have an interest in your contract, and Pm willing to pay for it; “I’ll find Ihe money to pay the Indian, and give you an. interest of one.”— “Not ’thout 1 was willing;would ye ?" asked Suggs jeeringly. “I’tUki better than that,” said Taylor, “I’ll furnish the money and give you half the land sells for, when we part with it 1” “Very proverbly,” remarked Si mon, “but onless some on ye counts me out five hundred, and furnishes your own money to buy the land with, I shall have to onlock these here,” patting the saddle bags, “and buy it for myself.” “I’ll do it!” said Col. Bryan, who had been making a calculation on the inside crown of his hat—“l’ll do it!” “Ah !” said Suggs, “ that's what made the chicken squall—Your the man I’m a huntin’, draw your weopins !” The land was forth with ‘certified’ to Suggs, who immediately transferred it to Bryan. “Now gentlemen,” said the captain, “everybody’s satisfied ain’t (hdy ?” “If they ain't they ought to be,” replied Col. Bryan, who was delighted with his bargain. “I think so, too,” remarked Suggs, “and bein’ as that’s the case,” he con tinued, opening his saddlebags, “as I had to act before you all, as if my saddle bags were full of gold and silver, or else loose my chance of profit here; I’ll now throw out these here rocks and old iron, for its mighty tiresome to a horse!” and the captain did throw out the rocks and the old iron, for he bad, not a dollar in the world !—The specula tor’s vnnioKft/l , -, , - - - . t • ... mured ibe captain to himself, musingly, * to get along in.” Ef a feller don’t make every aidge cut he’s in the back ground direcdy.— It’s tile and strive and tussle every way to make an honest livin.” “Well 1” he contin ued, in a strain of unusual piety, as he threw up and caught a toleau of dollars; “well, there is a Providence that provides ; and ef a man will only stand squar’ up to what’s right, it will prosper his endeavors to make some thin’ to feed his children on ! Yes, there is a Providence! I should like to see the man who would say there ain’t,- I don’t hold with no sich, Ef a man says there ain’t no Prov ideoce, you may bo sure there’s something wrong here,” striking in the region of his breast pocket—“and that man will swindle you ef he can—certain 1” Mbs 'who Never Die. —Men who are truly great, we dismiss not to the chambers of forgetfulness and death. What we ad mired, and prized and venerated in them, can never be forgotten. I had almost said that they are now beginning to live; to live that life of‘ unimpaired influence, of unclouded fame, of unmingled happiness, for which their talents and services were destined. Such men can not die. To be cold and breathless ; to feel not and speak not; this is not the end of existence to the men who have breathed theft spirits in to the institutions of their country, who have stamped their characters on the pillars of the age, who have poured their hearts’ blood into the channels of the public posterity. Tell me, ye who tread the sod of yon sa cred height, is Warren dead ? Can you not still see him,- not pate and prostrate, the blood of his gallant heart pouring out of his ghast ly wound, but moving resplendent over the field of honor, with the rose of heaven upon his cheek, and the fire of liberty in bis eye? Tell me, ye who make pious pilgrimages to the shades of Vernon, is Washington In deed, shut up in that cold arid narrow house? 'The hand that traced the charter of inde pendence is, indeed, motionless; ihe eloquent lips that sustained it, are hushed; but the lofty spirits “that conceived,' resolved and maintained it, and which alone, to such men, “make it life to live,” these cannot expire : “Those shall resist the empire of decay. When time is o'er, and sv.irlds have passed array; Cold In the dust the perished heart may lie. Bat that Which warmed it once, can never die.” Years ago, when as vet the pomps and vanities of the world had not invaded the churches, Father Ostrander was presiding elder among the Methodists in this region.— To his horror, one Sabbath, as he was read ing the hymn, he heard the twang of a rousf cal instrument in the Choir, and pausing, he demanded; ’ ‘‘ . ■ “What’s that you’ve got up’ there in the choir 7". i - ' “A bass viol, sir,” meekly replied the loader. ' ' \ . 7' pi say it is’nt 1” said the indignant elder! a great, Ungodly fiddle I Take il away !* 1 . They took it away;- • Agitation. Fbiend Cobb : Since ihe fossilized democ racy make a great cry about “agitation" and are quite vehement in their denunciations of “agitators,’’. permit me to say a word con cerning this dangerous class of persons. The true principles of a body of men are sometimes the antipodes of the common ac ceptation of the terms by which they are known, and quite frequently parties seize hold of names that are dear to the people; merely to advance their own selfish purposes. Might not this apply to our onion saving, liberty loving politicians who tenaciously cling bold of the magic word democracy, while not a vestige of its principles remain with them. I hold, that to the religious end political agitators of past ages we are indebted for the greater part of oar real liberties. Had it not. been for this despised class lhe world would have presented a very'different aspect. The agitators have been the iru'e benefactors £>f mankind. In their warm hearts the cause 'of human brotherhood has ever! beaten high. They have proved to be menl of sufficient nerve lo place themselves against public opin ion and labor for the principles of eternal jus tice, long since crushed to the earth by legal ized wrong. ' i . Where would true religion. have been to day if Luther, Melancthon and their co workers had tamely submitted lb the growing arrogance of the Papal power—--never daring to lift their voices against its manifold assump tions ? Even our most orthodox democrats will admit that their veiws werb correct, and that they acted the part of noble reformers in the struggle against the strong arm of Ca tholicism. But I submit were! they not the princes of Agitators ? Was noijLuther great ly in the wrong for gelling up an excitement against Tetzel, for selling indulgences to sup ply the empty coffers of his Papal Highness? What will our modern wiseacres say of those renowned English Barons,jwho in 1215, forced from John the Magna Charts, which to this day is regarded as the great palladium of political liberty !■- And did not a mighty agitation follow their denial of the great powers assumed by him? j Again, was not Hampden and his fellow laborers the groat agitators Ibalj distinguished the 17lh century? Every one gives those great champions of the people much credit for resisting the constant innovations of Charles; even Democrats applaud,them for opposing hisilgrievous taxes in'the name of “ship money),” but did not a civil war follow as the result lung to be remembered ? But these ‘‘fanatical agitators” succeeded in wrest ing from the crown manv of tie •’ Bui we need not leave our owjn land to find a parly of crazy theorists, who even our Mulatto Democrats will condescend to praise a little, now and ihen, in their cut and dried speeches, j, I mean that crazy set of fanatics who met in Phila., July 4, 1776, and after a very solemn deliberation came to the startling conclusion that Man has a fdw inalienable rights, and that rulers may eyen transcend their constitutional powers 1 They, by some means, conceived the idea that the Stamp Act was not just the thing and were rather against George HI. taxing them so heavily without letting them have a little voice in the councils of the nation. Accordingly they concluded that they would “agitate” these matters a trifle, and almost every body has heard of the petty struggle which ensued.— Mr. Democrat dont you Think Franklin, Hen ry & Co., a visionary set of! “moon struck theorists " for daring to oppose the Royal pre rogative? \Who before ever heard of conservative tddraocracy ? What would Jefferson say if he were on earth, at the conservative doc trines inserted into their platforms ? I once thought that progress was a cherished princi ple of our nation—that action was a distin guishing characteristic of this people, but by the new dogmas forth by the self-styled J democratic party, it is v from now, henceforth, to be treason for a manTb think in opposition to the administralionists. what if they chpose to injure the cause! bf Humanity by calling the Republicans, ls not agitation the moving element of “man’s na ture? Does not the still water become pu trid ? Suppose our revolutionary fathers had settled down in “conservatism” where would have been our “Union” that our democratic friends are so blatant about? fn short has no.l every new discovery in the sciences been brought about by agitation-and discussion? When has any great, principle been demon strated wilhoul causing an agitation through out the scientific world? What shall we say of the “agiiation’’ gotten upjby Andrew Jack son on the Bank question ? j But cannot Republicans afford (o he called hard names as long as every movement for reform in Church or Slalej—erery endeavor tor -Human Liberty or Human Right .has been thus assailed ? Was not even our own Washington censured and Iris motives called m question? And his gredt precursor, Wil liam Prince of Orange wad publicly branded as “a perjurer and pest cif society.”- Wi|- berfbree and his followers were set down as a “junto of sectaries, sophists, enthusiasts and fanatics.” Socrates suffered martyrdom on the accusation of corrupting the Athenian youth, and the Saviour expired upon Calvary fori his alleged' false' teaching?. But such things should not dishearten the true Republi cab. He labors Tor something beyond pre sent rewards. His mission is highej than dqUars and cents. As .icing as tyranny out rages and wrong is uphold by the powers that be, so long will the true worker be called Up op to qopuibyle ]ii§ efforts fur.the mdwia i- ' Rales of Advertlsius. Advertisements will be charged 81 per aqqare of fourteen lines, for, one v or three insertions, and 25 cents for every subsequent insertion. All advertise •njents*of lees than fourteen lines considered as a square. The folforving rates will be charged for Quarterly, Half-Yearly and yearly advertising:— • 3 months. 6 months, 12 mo’s 1 Square, (14 lines,) . $2 50 84 50 86 00 2 Squares,- - ... 400 600 . _ 800 4 column, .... 10 00 15 00 ' '2O 00 Icolnmn,- - . . -18 00 30 00 40 00 Aii adverliaements Hot haying the number of ia> sertiona marked open them, will be kepi In oalil or. dered out.and charged accordingly. Posters, Handbills, Bill,and Letter Heads,and all kinds of Jobbing done in country establishments, executed neatly and promptly. Justices’, Consta bles’ and other BLANKS, constantly on band and printed to order. tin. no. vm. tion of his brother man who ia reduced to bondage—crashed to earth by those that cry freedom when they only mean slavery. “Truth crushed to datlh, will rise again, The eternal years of God are hers; But writhes in pain. And diet amid her worshipers.” Ma. Editor j Allow me through your pa. per to say a lew words in reply to Philo’s “suggestions to the ladies of Wellsboro’. ‘ That our “faces are pale and sallow” is painfully true, hut that it is owing to “Sla. very to the needle” we hesitate to believe, for close observation lead* us to conclude that few communities of ladies are more freely blessed with leisure than our own, Certainly there are exceptions but we aro speaking of ourselves as a community. “Confinement” probably in some cases has something to do with our poor health, but are there not more apparent causes than either of these ? la not slavery to fashion killing hundreds where “slavery to the nee. die” kills one. Occasionally we find one suf. fenng from long continued use of the needle and confinement to close rooms, but each day Shows us hundreds going down to the tomb the slaves of fashion. Can we with any de~ gree of reason expect to live out half our days when in the constant habit of compress ing.the lungs, exposing the feet in a way which would soon destroy the lives of our healthiest men, and burdening the person with a weight of clothing at once unnecessary and health destroying? Promenade our streets in summer evenings, then tell me if you can why ws see so many with heads uncovered, exposed to the heavy dews and fogs some what peculiar to this region. . Riding and walking are each a good exer cise, but many of us do not keep a carriage, and others might feel it quite impossible lo lake “Jong walks.” In such cases what do you think friend “Philo” would not reason able exorcise in the kitchen be advantageous? Is it not a wrong idea to be ashamed of this sort of exercise ? We are nor a stranger to one who was told by one of the “mushroom aristocracy” when about settling here, that if she would move in the Jest society j she would be expected to keep "a girl.” Is it not wrong for our elder matrons to advance such false ideas to the minds of the young? Should not woman be taught that one of her greatest virtues is an ability and a will to make her own home comfortable, and! to do this with her own hands is much io her credit ? And should she riot be taught that the “best society 1 ’ is found among those who best know how to Aaaf ,! men- Uoned, and. as there are many other evils .among os will she not be willing to speak of them plainly t A Mother. Moral Suasion. — A wayward son of iho Emerald Isle left bis bed; and board, which he and Margaret had occupied for a long while, and spent bis lime,around rum shops, where he always managed to cmmt himself on hand, when anybody shouldfsland treat. Margaret was dissatisfied with this state of things, and endeavored to get her husband home again. We shall see how she succeed ed in the matter: “Now, Patrick, my honey, will ye come back 7” “No, I’ll not come back.” “And won’t ye come back for the love of the childer 1” “Not for the love of the childer.” “Will ye come for the love of mccself Patrick V’~ ' --—, . ' “Niver at all. Way~wid-yg^’ “An Patrick, won’t the love oftheEharch bring you back ?” “The Church to the divil, and then I won’t come back.” Margaret thought she would try one other inducement. Taking a pint bottle of whiskey from her pocket, and holding it up to her tru ant husband, she said; “Will ye copae back for the likes ’o that ?” “Ah, my darlin,” answered Pat, unable to ~ stand such an invitation, “it’s ycrself that al ways brings me home again—ye’ve got such a winuin’ way wid ye.” Heaven Brought Down to Us.—At tho Yale commencement, Mr. Perkins of Ver mont, ridiculed ibe aristocratic idea of those who anticipate heaven only os a glorified -Fifth Avenue. And this reminds ,us of a lender mother, who was endeavoring to con. vey to.the inquiring mind of her little child an idea of heaven, and-the necessity of be ing a good boy, in order to obtain admission there hereafter. She pictured to his iraagU nalfon-lhe happiness of the blest, and as ati additional inducement for him to lead a cor rect life, said lhat he would be “like the an gels, who have golden-harps in their hands.” “Mamma,” responded the urchin, wistfully gazing into his mother’s eyes, “mamma, if it makes no difference to God> I'd rather have a jews-harp." There is a girl in Troy whose lips are so sweat that they slick together, every morning, by the honey they distil, and she cannot open her mouth until she has parted her lips «hh a silver knife. She will a treasure to her husband —not only on accouot of her sweet ness, but because she can occasionally keep her mouth shot. A few Sundays ago, a divine preached a furious political sermon at Leinster, N. H., when finding bis audience gradually deserting the church, he thanked God, in a fer*ant .manner, that among -other things granted him, he possessed the power of “casting ouj- JcvtL.'’ ■. . • •• FRANK.