Terms of Publication. tie TIOGA COUNTY AGITATOR is pub- Jed every Thursday Morning, and mailed to anb •ibers at the very reasonable price of Obi Don a per annum, invariably in advance. It isintend to notify every subscriber when tba- terar for lich he haa paid shall have.expired, by tip staf ••Time Out," on the margin of the last paper. ,e paper will then be stopped until a. further re liance be received. By this arrangement no mu n be brought in debt to ‘il e . p ) rl l ” ler ' . ‘ The Agitator is lbs Official Paper ofthc-Cotm with a large and steadily increasing circulation idling into nearly every neighborhood in the mnlyf It is sent free of pottage to any. Post-office itfain the county limits, and lolhose living w hhih e limin', bat whose most convenient poatoffice may in nn adjoining County. Easiness Cards, not exceeding S lines, paper fo lded, $4 per year, ' V she THE NEW SCHOOLMASTER. BY B. P. SHILLABEH, There was a strange school; at Rocky alley—a perfect democracy—for the schol rs always had their own way, and settled se matter with' the utmost', promptness rfi arding their teachers. - If they liked him, ood; if oof, down wirhhim. The ooose uence wais that the teachers in the Rooky 'alley school had not succeeded very well m Idvancing the tninds of the youthful republic [ans entrusted •to their charge. The boys icled their own pleasure about study, end iever troubled themselves much whether they •arned any thing or not—at any' rate, the boolmastar didn’t care’-lo iick’em ■lure. At Iwt the -pmeiMd; as'they saw iill proficiency their boys were making, I into it a little, and being shrewd and ibla people, guessed at the difficulty. at once advertised for a new teachef, inctly specified that he must possess nerve spirit, understood by Ine very expressive i—backbone. iverat presented themselves for trial, ig students came with excellent reeom lations, but they stayed only a day or They could not withstand the ridicule opposition they had to encounter. There •large boys-in the school, and the teacher iured the muscular development of the' lars in his estimate, of his- chances of :ess in the event of a struggle. It was •er stale of things in Rocky Valley, le boys were not really malicious boys, were naturally bright and capable, but ■ leader a lad about sixteen years of age, a hard case—the master of them all by mest and held sway over them as the jest monarch in the world holds over subjects. They knew his power, and ieved him invincible. It was his word had decided the fate of ail the teachers. Tier a year’s bootless trying to secure a icrone made hii appearance passed ex tation creditably, and was . accepted by school committee. notice was placed on the door of the 101 house, and on the ddhr of the church, the school would begin on the Monday iwing, under the charge of Mr. Judson, the minister read the notice from the fit. Speculation was rife as to the new ier, and as lew had seen him, many mnns_were made in regard to him. The s held a special caucus, at which, of •se, Bill Brown was moderator, and it voted that the new master must be pul t, as it was the best fishing season, and rooks would interfere with the sports of trooks. Monday morning the boys were seen mg in Utile knots towards the achool te, busy with their plans of operation. ' wonder how big he is T” said Seth Jwin ; “f hope he isn’t one of them sav fellers.” I don’t care how big he is, nor how sav. he i«,” said Bill Brown, “if he don’t : Spanish in less than a week, then I shall j my guess” I don’t know how we are going to learn thing if we don’t have a teacher,” said lie voice of the number. You shut up,” said the leader, “I don’t to hear any thing like that again.” - hoy was silent, and they walked on, talking of the new teacher, unaware of woximity of a delicate looking stranger, rently about twenty years of age. They melted the school house, and when they there, they became conscious of the ice of the pate young man in their Good morning, my lads,” he said smi ly, “we are to begin a new careerto-day, f sincerely hope we shall like each other, til try every thing in my power to please that is consistent with my duly, and 1 II expect the same from you. I wiph you ■egard me as your friend at the cora cemeul, and I shall certainly act from idly feeling. I like your appearance, believe we shall find but little trouble in teing.” lie speech evidently made an impression, Bill Brown went round- whispering, it’s all bosh, for I see the shape of a hide in his pocket,” which awakened, as intended it should, a combative spirit in he spoke to. They went into (he school, boys took their places, and the master Jted his tripod. But little was done in morning. The restlessness of arrange, l the getting used to the school house oduced confusion, and tho commence t of business was deferred until the next •ie school was dismissed at noon, and master and scholars separated—the for under an impression that he had a vig. I bright sel of b °y» !0 manage— I 0 hard m the mouth, perhaps, but who m - ade ‘ractible,—and the latter that (e icher could be managed by the persua force of strong arms, but that it was best it and see how things would work iy came together with the same feeline ■xt morning j classes were formed and eiimmaries settled, and every thine meed as happ.ly ng could be desjred b : hearl happy in the thought * success When glancing down along a n n an improper ges though ® r ° wn . a nd saw it repeated, iiponii, ows° eW thB ey«iay : under* severe trial, said : -i k ** Mother, does Gbd ■ ever fret otiscoldi?” The qeery-was- so abrupt and-atanUng it arrested dhe mother’s attention "almost Avith ashock.’ “ Why, Lizzie, what makes you-ask-that question f” • “ Wbfe God i#. good—yqu JtUow.you used lo cal! him the Hood Man. yeHen. I-wa? little —and f shouldilike to know if he ever scold ed.” “ No, child, no.” “ Well, I am glad he don’t, for scolding always makes me feel so bad, even if it is not me that is in fault. I don’t think I could love God much if ha scolded.” .The mother felt rebuked 'before her simple child. Never bad she- heard so forcible a lecture on the evils of scolding. The words' of Lizzie sank deep in her heart, and she had turned away from the innocent face of her little one to hide the tears that, gathered in her eyes. Children are quick observers, and Lizzie, seeing the effect of her words,, hastened to inquile— “ Why do you cry, mother ? Was it naughty for me to ask so many questions 1” “ No, love, it was all right. 1 was only thinking how bad! had-beenm-scold-ao much when my girl could hear"and be troubled by. it.” “ Oh, no, mamma, you are not'bad, you are a good mamma"; only I wish there were not so many bad filings to make you fret and talk like you did just now. h makes me feel away from you so far, as ff I could not.cojme near you, as I esn when .you smile and are Kind ; and 0,1 fear sometimes I shall be pul off so far, I can never get back again.”. “ O, Lizzie, don’t say that,” said the mo.- ther, unable to, repress iho «oara mat had been struggling inher eyes. The child won dered what could so.affect its parent, but in stinctively feeling it was a case' requiring sympathy, she reached up and laid her little arms about her mother’s neck and whispered; “ Mamma, dear, do I make you cry ? Do you love me V’ “O, yes, I love you more than I can tell,” replied the parent, clasping Ihe child to her bosom. “And I will try never lo scold again before my little sensitive girl.” “O, lam so glad. I can get so near to ■you when you don’t scold ; and do you know mother, I want lo love you so much.” This was an effectual fesson, and the mother felt the force of that passage of Scripiure “Out of ihe mouths of babes have I ordained strength.” She never scolded again. Home Feelings and Associations. —The man who stands upon his own soil, who feels that by the laws of the land in which he lives —by the laws of civilized nations—he is the rightful and exclusive owner of the land he tills, is by the constitution of our nature un der a wholesome influence not easily imbibed from any other source. He feels, other things being equal, more strongly than another, the character of man as 'lord of an inanimate world. Of this great and wonderful sphere which, fashioned by the hand of God, and upheld by His power, is rolfing lhrough the heavens, a part is his—his from the centre to the sky. It is the apace on which the gene ration before moved in its round of duties, and he feels himself connected by alink with those who follow him, and to whom he is to transmit a home; Perhaps a farm has come down to him from his fathers. They have gone to their last home, bul-hecan trace their footsteps over the scenes of his daily labors. The roof which shelters him was reared by those to whom he owes his being. Some in teresting domestic tradition is connected with every enclosure. The favorite fruit tree was planted by his father’s hand. He sported in boyhood beside the brook which still winds through the meadow. Through the field lies the path to the village school of earlier days. He still hears from the window the voice of the Sabbath bell which called Jiis father to the house of God; and near at hand is the spot where his parents lay down to rest, and where, when his time he shall be laid by his children. Thpe are the feelings of the owner of the soil. Words cannot paint them ; they flow out of the deepest fountains of the heart; they are the life spring of a fresh, healthy and generous na tional character. —Edward Everett. The Hang op it. —Old Judge S a considerable farmer of F—V- county, Ver mont, bought a new scythe Ijbr his son Jim, and set him to work in the meadow, with the rest of the hay-makers. -“It don’t work right,” said Jim to the honored “parienl,” af-' ter culling a clip or two. “What is the mat ter with it?” inquired the Judge. “It don’t hang right on the snath,” said Jim, stopping to adjust the scythe anew. Scythes often plague the mowers in this way, at first; and Jim’s scythe was particularly obstinate. So the old gentleman tinkered it over and over again. “It don’t hang any belter,” said Jim plaintively. “Then hang it to suit yourself,” said the judge. “So I will,” said-Jim, and hanging the scythe on a tree, he' lazily -re tired from the field. The “.parienl” was as tonished, but he “let him went.” —Boston Post. Scott says that “every man that lives, has his light and shades.” We are not so etrtam about the shades, but presume there’ is' no liver-without lights; Which are the two smallest insects men tioned in the Scriptures ? 'f’he widow’s “mite” and-the wicked, “dee,” ■■' A Bit of Romance, i Ten years ago a, young Englishman ran away from London, .where he was highly connected, came down to .Liverpool, took a ship that was : op .for New. Orleans, and in due course of time landed in this city with s light.heart in his breast, end between ope and two hundred pounds’.in 'Bank of England notes in his pocket. He had been a suiuvais sujet at home, and, What between | wine and women, had managed to squander a large for tune, besides involvirg himself seriously, in debt. - He had taken the. precaution to pro vide himself with letters ol introduction to respectable parlies in this city, and by this means he soon formed the acquaintance of a yoting lady, who, by the death ofhet father, had just been left sole heiress to a 1 large es tate. A warm attachment' soon sprung up between the two, andour young Englishman, one fine day, made the lady a forrhal tender of his hand and heart. The answer he re ceived wgs the following: “I love you, and will marry you, blit only on these conditions, and these only : Ist, You must's!op drinking; 2d, You must pay your debts; have squandered one fortune; you most set to work and make another.” The lover j entreated, but the lady was inexorable. Just then the gold fever broke out, and our hero determined, without loss of time, to try his fortune on the shores of the Pacific ocean. He; sat down, wrote a letter to the lady, in which he an nounced his determination, assured her of his unalterable affection, and beggedther to be faithful to him, and without fanjier adieu, started for New York, and took ship for San Francisco via the cape. In California he led for some time a wandering, dissolute lit, and finally joined the unfortunateexpedition which Rausset de Boulbon fitted ont for the conquest of Sonora, ft was known that he was one of the few who escaped to tell the fate of their heroic leader, but nothing furtherjwas heard of him or his whereabouts until lasVSaturday, when a friend of his in this cityi received a telegraphic despatch from him, staging that he was among the fifty persons saved from the “Central America,” and brou'gtu rnlo port by the barque “Ellen. - ’ The dispatch further stalnd that the-writer had lost $150,000 in gold, which was in the hands of'the purser, but that it was luckily insured for its full val ue in a London office. We learn the lady to whom he was engaged is still;unmarried, and it would not be strange if, in the course of human events, we should he called upon to indite a paragraph wwh that fashionable head ing, "Marriage in High Life.”—iV. V. See. Courting in Right STYtE.-i-“Gii eout, you nasty puppy—let me aloner, or I’ll tell your ma !” cried out Sally to her lover, Jake, who sat about ten feel from her,[palling dirt from the chimney jamb. | “I arn’t tuchin’ on you Sail,}’ responded Jake. j “Well perhaps you don’t mean to nulher, do you ?” | •‘No I‘don’t.” “Cause you’re too darned longtlegged, lan tern-jawed, slab-sided, pigeon-toed, gangle kneed owl, you—you ’aim got al'tarnal bit o’ sense ; gel along home with ybuL” “Now Sal, I love you, and ybu can’t help it, and if you don’t let me slay aijij court you, my daddy will sue you’rn for jthai cow he sold him t’other day. By jingo, {he said he’d do it.” , [ , “Well, look here. Jake—if you want to court me, you’d belter do it as oi white man does that thing—not set off there, as if you thought I was | j “How on airth is that, Sal V’ \ “VVby, side right op here, pnd hug and kiss me, as if you had really [some of the bone and sinner of man about ,ypu. Do you ’spose a woman’s only made foil-look at, you stupid fool, you f—No, they’re,made for prac tical results, as Kossuth says,-4to hug and kiss, and such like.” ; 1; “Well,” said Jake, taking allong breath, “if I must, I must, for I love you Saland so Jake commenced sliding up fo her, like a maple poker going to battle.|j Laying his arm gently on Sal’s shoulder, we thought we heard Sal say : . : |i “Thai’s the way to do it, old|hoss ; that’s acting like a white man orter.”[j “Oh, Jerusalem and pancakes’,” exclaimed Jake, “if this arn’t better than ajny apple sass ever marm made, a darned sightl Crack-e-e ! buckwheat cakes, slap-jacks and ’lasses ’aint nowhere ’longside ’o you, Sal; 11 1 Oh! how I love you !” Here their lips came together, and the report that followed was like drawing a horse’s hoof out of the mire. | An eastern while conducting a suit before a\Justice of the leace ; seeing that his case was going against him, broke forth in (he following indignant Istrnin : “Go omwiffi your abuse, yerinfernal bull, heads, I s’pose likely you think you are go ing to get the case. Well, mebby yer will get it; my client can’t get bcj justice done him afore this Court. But, sirJwe’re enough for ye, the hull of ye.' Me 'dhd my client can’t never be intimidated nor tyrannized over, mark that! And, sir, jukt so sure as this court decides against us.w'e’li file a writ of progander, sir, and we—” J| ■ 1 Here he was interrupted bjr the opposite counsel, who wanted to know what he meant by a writ of progander. ii “i\Jean? why, sir, a writ oft progander is a-a-a-ii’s a-wal, I don’t just remember the exact word, but it’s a what’ll knock thunder out of your blasted one horse courts.” | “Say, Pomp, you nigger, Where you get that new hat?” “Why, at!the shop ob pourse.” j ’“.What is the price of such an article as dat 7” ' “I don't know,‘de shop keeper wasn’t dar." Advertisements will be charged SI per square of 'fourteen lines, for one, or three insertion?, and 3$ : cento for everysatjßequeQt iopertipp. AJlvirerUtitf r men to of less than considered as a ‘equaie. The following rales will be charged (be ‘Quarterly, Half-Yearly and Yearly advertising 2 month?. 6‘months. 12 mo*s 1 Square, (14 lines,) - 12 50 *4 30 $6 Ofr -400 .600 • BOQ Icolomn, - i • . 10 00 15 00 20 QQi I column,- -18 00 30 00 40 00k All advertisements not having the number of iru seHions marked ttpoirthcm/xriube kept in until or dered ont, anichargcd. accordingly. fosters; Handbills, Bill,and Letter Heads, and all kinds of. jobbing dene in countoy establishments, executed .neatly and promptly; Justices’, Cbnsta. bths 1 and other 6LAKKB, constantly on hand and printed-to.order, m. ixm. From the Cincinnati Gazette, Oct. 6. Not Exactly a £oye-Cfcase. We met yesterday at the fyliami Depot, a My who has. exhibited the most indefatiga ble perseverance in the pursuit of informa tion under embarrassing difficulties. Three years ago she resided in California, which State, ia 'fsovshe claims now as "her resi dence, and . i here became with a man named Munson—r.a -pleasing,.cool, affa ble gentleman, who>o adroitly worked his— way confidence that she introduced him iOiji'youngdady v ra near.and.deat friend, possessed 516,0&0 or 820,000, in cash. The result, as might have been an ticipated, was (he consummation of the lady's heartfelt wishes— of her friend la the polished and aSnbte gentleman. A few months rolled'round and everything passed off smoothly enough. The husband was affectionate and attentive, the lady all love and confidence. Finally, the husband expressing a wish to enter into business and settle down for life, the confiding wife drew from her' bankers almost the entire of her fortune and placed it in his hands. . A week after, the steamer sailed Cor the Atlantic'side, and the villain husband departed with Iha gold, leaving his confiding victim, to the ten. der mercies of a cold_world, that is far 100 busy to'look after individual wrongs in which they have no personal or pecuniary interest. The lady who had brought about tho match, fell and boldly,faced her responsibility in the premises, and on the sailing of the next homeward-bound steamer, she took passage < for New-Yock, determined to follow the hUlrayet of; her confidence, and the love of a wife to the bounds of civilization, and bring him to punishment. Arrived in New. York, she got traces of his footsteps, fol lowed him .over various routes, until she. tracked him to a village in Pennsylvania,- - where -she found him with another tcife, to whom he had been married before going to California! A warrant was issued for his arrest for bigamy, but having- no proofs of bis second marriage, after a short examina tion was discharged. Nothing daunted by this unlooked-for ter mination of affairs, the-lady immediately re turned to California, procured the necessary affidavits substantiating Munson's marriage .there, together with, evidence (of the fact of his haying absconded with.some $15,000 of his second wife's- funds, and once more re turned to the Atlantic, side in search of the betrayer of her friend. And that search she has prosecuted now for two or three months with the most determined and restless perse- but thus far without success. He had (eft the village where he resided when arrested for bigamy, and although the lady had obtained some subsequent It aces of his movements, when we met her yesterday she had not yet succeeded in ascertaining his present residence, although she is satisfied it is somewhere in the West. She had already expended a large amount of her own funds in the pursuit, and expressed the determina tion not to give up the chase until her ‘tsweet revenge” had been gratified, and the villain brought to justice. May her labors prove Successful, will be the wish of every honest heart. The lady pursuer left yesterday for Cleveland, 'where she has friends residing. If she may not be classed among tho “strong minded women,” she is certainly a very de termined one. The response which (riendly feeling meets, even in ihe breast of savages, is strikingly shown by incidents which happened to Capt. Koss and his party in their Arctic explora tions. They Had noticed traces of the Esqui maux on different parts of the coast; and at length they discovered a party of them.— On perceiving the Englishmen, they were seized with consternation, and immediately assumed a hostile attitude. Gut Ross made gestures of friendship, and gave salutations of peace, upon which the natives with shouts tossed their spears and knives into the air, and extended their hands to show that they retained no hostility. The English parly embraced and caressed them, and they mani fested their gratification by laughter and strange gestures. , full confidence was established. i Captain Back had simtlar experience; hts parlj mfet the Esquimaux, who, when they first the Europeans, exhibited their ter ror by yells and gesticulations: Apparently they thought their noise would frighten away their visitors. By approaching ihem unarmed and alone, at the same lime calling out emphatically, Tima —pence, and cordially shaking hands all around, the Captain effected a good under standing with them. These incidents need no comment; yet one cannot but think with regret of the aggres sions of the early discoverers of our country, of the outrages perpetrated by its first set tlers on the children of the soil, and the ter rible consequences of such vyickedness visi, ted, not only on the aggressdjrs, but on their childreh-and their children’s children. The spirit we manifest excites in others a like spirit. Love is, the only real conqueror. A French woman recently appeared before a tribunal to domplain of ill usage she re ceived from hef’husband. “What pretext had he for beating you,” inquired the president. “Please sir,” replied the woman, “ha did'nt have any pretext —it was a thick slick.”' Two persons contending very sharply on matters regarding a late election, got to rather high words, when one of them said, “Yon never catch a lie coming out of my mouth.” The other replied, “You may welt say that, for they ffy out so fast that nobody caq cafch 'em.’’ Kate* of Advertising- The Power of Kindness.