PENNSYLVANIA. LEGISLATURE. Tfte Liqnot Bill. Ho'use of Repkebestatives, > ■ March 24. 1838. $ ■ The House re-assembled at 2 o’clock, P. M. and proceeded to the consideration of H -use bill No 405, to regulate the sale of spirituous, vinous, malt and firewall liquors. The first section was read as follows : Section 1. Be it enacted, fyc., That applicants for brewery or distillery license shall hereafter pay therefor the several amounts fii(ed by the third section of an acl : 10 regulate the sale of intoxicating liquors, approved March 31,1856: Provided , That the -same, shall, on no case, be less than en(y-fivß dollars, except in the case of per siins . whose, annual sales are leas than one thousand dollars, who shall pay fifteen dol lars,; and the proviso in the section aforesaid, so fata* it fixes the minimum rale of license at fifiy dollars, is hereby repealed. Mr Chase moved to amend the section by striking out “twenty-five’’ dollars as the minimum price of licenses, and insert in lieu' thereof •“fifiy dollars.” The question recurring on the amendment ofiered by Mr. Chase, it was not agreed to, by n vole of 25 to 56. Mr. Chase said, The object of this law was lo increase the sale of liquor, and hence the consumplion, and was asked for by the liquor manufacturing interests; that those who advocated this bill would be cut by an axe with a double edge; the friends of tem perance would cut them, because they opened wide the flooding gates of intemperance ; and the hoiel interests would cut them, because they brought along side the hotels competi tors in (he traffic, that pay less for license, have invested no capital, and will sell more whiskey. That if this bill was passed, little, low, petty grog shops would spring up all over our Stute, until they would become ns nu merous and loathsome as the frogs of Egypt, lie deprecated such a result, and hoped the bill might not pass. Mr. Kincaid said his constituents were in terested in the repeal of the present law. He had listened lo the gentleman from Susque hanna (Mr. Chase) attentively, and thought there was much good reason and not a little nonsense in what he said. You cannot cor rect the morals of mankind by legislation ; 011 experience had shown that. The gentle man took three positions ; first, that it was wrong lombnufaclure strong drink; second, that wrong to sell it, and third, it was wrong to use it. The gentleman was not a good judge of this liquor question. He didn’t use the article, while he (Mr. Kincaid,) did, and was very fond of it, and therefore was a competent judge. He (Mr. Chase,) reminded him of the Jew who didn’t eat pork, and thought every body who did was acting damnably. From experience and observa tion in this as well as in other States, he was satisfied people would drink as long as liquor was manufactured Mr. Goepp said, The present law is a dead letter. For every one seller of liquor who pays for license there are twenty who pay nothing. It is not diminished sales, but simply diminished licensed sales, and substi tuted an illegal traffic. The Stale Treasurer calls upon us lo reform this evil. Under.the proposed law there will be comparatively few sellers without license, because under it all can obtain license, and men do not violate law from choice when they can enjoy the like privileges under the sanction of law. Mr. VVilltaton called upon the friends of this bill, if it had any, to explain its provis ions. This question was a very important one. The bill demands in the 6th sectioin, that a person to gel a license must be of gohd morals and temperate habits. Ho objected to this. He thought it bad enough that drnnken and immoral men were engaged in whiskey selling, but lo compel sober, moral citizens to engage in it was infinitely worse. Ho hoped when the House came lo consider the 6th section, it would amend that part of it. j Mr. Chase moved to strike out the words, “except persons whose annual sales shall ex ceed one thousand dollars,” on which the yeas and nays were taken, and it way lost. Yeas—3B ; Nays—49. Mr. Miller moved lo strike out fifteen dol lars and insert twenty dollars in the ninth line. Lost. The question was then taken on the first section, and it was adopted. Yeas—6o; Nays—2B. Mr. Imbrie moved lo amend, by striking out “fifty dollars” in the eighth line, and in sert “five dollars.” Not agreed to. The second section was then adopted. The third section beingunder consideration. It was moved by Mr. Calhoun to amend, so as to make (hose selling §lO,OOO worth, pay §5OO instead of §4OO. it was debated by Messrs. Calhoun, Yearsley and Rose. Mr. VVilliston moved to adjourn. The yeas and nays being called, it was defeated. Yeas—l 7; Nays—62. The question recurring on the amendment of Mr. Calhoun, which was discussed by Messrs. Nill, Ebur and Willislon, when the yeas and nays were taken, and the amend ment lost. Yeas—32 ; Nays—49. Pending the consideration of the secl’on, the subject was laid over on account of the hour for adjournment. Summakv or Conversions.— The Exam iner of last week says : < “Our revival summary for three weeks past, though imperfect, of necessity, shows a great advance. Over seventeen thousand conversions are therein specified, and the in gathering on probaiion and otherwise, report od in our Methodist exchanges during the same period, amounts, by our own count, to over twenty thousand more.” The summary specifies the following con versions ; Mains, 411; New Hampshire, S 3 ; Vermont, 304 ; Massachusetts, 2,574 ; Rhode Island, 387 ; Connecticut, 795; New York, 2,386 ; Pennsylvania, 1,746 ; New Jersey, 697 ; Delaware, 40 ; District of Co lumbia, 21; Maryland, 9; Ohio, 4,148; In diana, 737 ; Illinois, 1,146; Michigan, 604 ; Wisconsin, 465 ; lowa, 578 ; Minnesota, 3SB ; Missouri, 431; Kentucky, 498; Ten nessee, 711; Virginia, 205 ; other States, 177 ; British Provinces, 387. THE AGITATOR. 91. H. Cobb, Editor & Publisher. WELLSBOROUGHj FA. Thursday OTorninjr, Jtprlt 8; 1858. " •,* Alt Business,and oth e r Cora muni cation be addressed to the Editor to insure attention. We cannot publish anonymous communications. Hon. 6. A.. Grow will .please accept, thanks, for documents. Wood has a fine stock of Groceries just from the City. - Call andjudge for yourself. See bU adver tisement.' Wc are obliged lo leave out a column of adver* tisemenU this week, in order tdriuke room for im portant news. Patrons will please'excuse. * Monroe. 1 Judge Lonog was removed because he violated the law of Massachusetts in holding a commission under the General Government and one under the Commonwealth, at the same time. Messrs. Wilcox & Sears arc making a fine im provement in the building attached to their Store, for* merly occupied as a dwelling. When completed it will be occupied as a Grocery and Provision Store, by Bullard Brothers. Wc are pleased to learn from the Sycamore (111.) Republican , that our old friend, Mr. O. P. Bassett, hus become Publisher of that sterling journal. Our acquaintance with'Mr. B. was pleasant and profita. Me, and we wish him abundant success. We publish in another place certain proceedings touching a bill now before our Legislature, which bill proposes a free traffic in Rum. If our traffick ing friends will feel any belter for it, we will stale that it Is likely to pass. Wc are glad to see that Mr. WilUston puts fumselt right on the record. We learn that a son of Mr. Tiios. Martin, living a little distance from this borough, had an arm bro* ken in a wrestling match on Friday of last week* If this should serve lo leach boys the risk lo life and limb which all wrestlers incur, some good may come out of it though dearly purchased. Brother Jones, what in the name of stationary things do you mean by that leader in the the Ve. delie of last week ? Have you backslidden, or were you dreaming ? We really thought that the day of Fusion had gone by and that the mountain would nevermore go to Mahomet. We know ol one small boulder of that mountain which will never accom pany the mountain to Mahomet again. 41 Return ye, return ye,” &.c. The Great Revival seems to continue with unaba ted interest in the large cities. The New York re. ligious papers of lasi week estimate the coaver- Mons for the three preceding weeks at 37;000, Of these 4,553 were in New England; 4,869 in the Middle Stales; 2,135 in the Southern, an|3 7,76 G in the' Western Slates. Nine of these conversions oc earned in the District of Columbia! Only nine • Well, is anybody disappointed ? Grasshoppers. —Mr. Wm. A. Douglas, of Clymer township, informs us that grasshoppers, in quite for midable numbers, have made their appearance on the Westfield Flats. They are generally from half to three-fourths of an inch in length and quite vig orous. The query seems to be ; u Where from V % Is it a late brood, wintered over ? Or are they of the same family of those that ravaged Minnesota lust year—coming.from nobody-knew-wherc ? We hope they may prove harmless. Foul Play. —The body of a new-born infant was discovered in the mill-pond of Mr. Samuel Phillips. In Westfield township, on Wednesday of last week, A gentleman, present at the Ending of the body, in forms ns that there was a wound in the region of the heart having the appearance of a stab from the blade of a knife, or other pointed instrument A Jury of inquest was empaneled by Justices Phillips and Mallory, and a verdict rendered in accordance with the above facts. Our informant could not say that suspicion pointed to any party. Indeed ! the oldest inhabitant cannot remember such a delightful spring in his time! Such jolly, good-humored days; such quiet, delicious evenings; such a wide-spread inclination to succumb to the Spring Fever and get as lazy as one can be and yet breathe! Everybody and his dog may indulge this lazy inclination except the printer. He must sleep with one eye open, or the dragon of Want will sly up and throttle him. Never mind. When we get rich — when —mind that—we have planned a tre mendous time. We shall open the ball by burying our goose-quili pen and scissors with military honors. Then we shall kick politics down stairs into the street, lock the world out and take a good, ten-days* snooze. The Vandal that disturbs that nap shall rue it. P. S. Haven't been disturbed by a dog since last Wednesday night. Why not tell the Trnthahont It ? You —Congressmen, State legislators,Committees on Resolutions in mulatto Conventions and editors of pro-slavery newspapers—why do you never open your mouths, or wag your pens, but out rolls a mon strous lie about the Lecomplon rascality ? Were it* not so common it would be passing strange. As it is, wc do not wonder. The Kansas policy of the Administration is an outrageous fnud from begin ning to end, a solid lie from top to bottom ; it is ap propriate, therefore, that its props and supports are of tiie same mendacious order. We do not ask the authors of these petty falsehoods to do so unfilial a thing as to u tell the truth aud shame the devil!” but for the sake of their souls, if they have souls, they should begin to speak the truth erelong, lost they “ die with a Ho on the lips.” When Lceompton triumphed in the Senate two weeks since, the Lecompton press, big and little, as sured their readers that the Senate bad taken the curse off that bill by stipulating that the people of Kansas should be privileged to alter, amend, or abol ish their Constitution whenever they should sec fit. Now, the-Scnatc intended to do nothing of the kind, and therefore did no such a thing. We propose to show, from the record, what was the action of the Senate on that occasion, and to show what the Le complonitcs meant by the amendments to the bill as it passed the Senate ; but preliminarily and in order to a just understanding of the whole question, we affirm what the friends of Lecomplon are trying to conceal, that, the prime ground of opposition to the Lecompton Constitution by Douglas and the Repub licans, note, as ever, is, that that instrument teas not framed by the PEOPLE of Kansas ; but, that it is the work of a law defying and therefore a highhanded outrage upon the rights and immunities of the inhabitants of that Territory as well as a con travention of the plainest precepts of the common Constitution . Now be pleased to bear this in mind while we bring forward the first amendment to the bill as it passed the Senate: •• Whereas, the people of the Territory of Kan san, did by a Convention of delegates, called and as. sembled at Lccompton on tho 4Ui of September ’56 form for themselves a Constitution ami State Gov eminent, whicli said Convention having asked the THE TIOGA- admibsion of the Territory into the .Union, as a Slate, on equal looting with the original States,**:&c. It will be seen that the assumptions of thl*|am endraent are in the facfc of the disgraceful facl-lhat the Lecompton Convention waetiof,*in any-senar, a Gonyenlion of. the .people of-Kansas. -lu~ proof of this we need not summon Republican witnesses Gov. Walker denounces that CooatitutioP‘.#aA base fraud. Secretary Stanton so denounces iu Gov. Wise and Col. Forney so denounce it. AntTiheae men were never considered othOMhandrfhodojttfem.' ocrats until they had denounced that hldeoos-Xe* cqmplon farce as an unprecedented, outrage. Such,, are. the Initial' grounds of oj>po4ition to-the Lecomji ton bill, and such is the mendacity of thejiicn who studiously conceal the facts from the people.. This brings us to the amendment E>y stipulation of which, as some Lecomptonites .now say, the peo ple of Kansas are permitted to alter dr~aboliah.lheir Constitution at any time. Let ui see If there is not a canning cat' concealed under this sprinkling of (he Lecompton grist: 9 » •* Nothing in this act shall be construed to abridge or infringe any right of the people asserted in ike Constitution of Kansas, at all times, to alter, reform or abolish their form of government in such manner as they may think proper, Congress hereby disclaiming any authority to intervene or declare the construction of the Constitution ot any State, except to see that it is Republican ■in form*’ &c., “ and nothing in this act shall be construed as an assent to all -or to any of the propositions or claims contained in the ordinance annexed to the Constitu tion of the people of Kansas,** &c., &c. Now this amendment means Just nothing at all of what is claimed for it. In the Constitution of Kan sas, proper, roe can find no provision for amending or altering it. The right of the people to “to alter, reform or abolish of government** is sla ted in the BUI of Rights; but in these slippery limes it would have been safer to havas, nccoidmg to the Federal Constitution, and to that end may elect delegates to a Convention as hereinafter pro vided. The Defeat ol Lecomptsn, A correspondent of the Tribune gives the following graphic account of the defeat of Lecomplon in the House : “The Speaker’s nerves or his temper were evidently out of order. He rapped with un common vehemence, in his'efforts to subdue the buzz in the House. “Gentlemen will come to order ! Gentlemen will lake their seals ! Conversation is too loud in the Hall 1 The Chair will call gentlemen by their names if they do not take their seats!’’ Still the buzz continued. Groups gathered around Stephens, and around Montgomery, Grow, Gilmer and other leading men. Again the Speaker rapped and chided his unruly flock. Nothing could keep down the excitement. Some ordinary business was hurried over until the hour.of 1 arrived, the hour for ta king up the Lecomplon question. All eyes were turned to' the centre of the hall, to the seal of Stephens, who was already on his feel, looking at a distance like one of the pages a little taller than his fellows. He paused a moment as Col. Harris of Illinois, his deathly pale, corpse-like countenance looking still whiter and more ghastly from the blackness of his beard and hair, was brought into the hall and [ilaced reclining in his seat, a striking spectacle of energy and resolution triumphant over disease and suf fering. “Mr. Speaker!” The shrill, familiar tones penetrated at once the remotest corners of the hall, and felt upon thousands of expectant ears. “The gentleman from Georgia,” respond ed the Speaker. Mr. Stephens proceeded to move that the Senate Kansas bill be taken up. It was accordingly read a first lime. The second reading was proposed. Mr. Giddings, in a moment, was on his feet, say ing, “I object.” This fairly opened the ball. The vole was taken on the question. Shall the Senate bill be rejected I It was decided in the negative by a vote of 95 Yeas to 137 Nays. All the Republicans and three Doug las Democrats (Harris of Illinois, Hickman of Pennsylvania, and one other) voted in the affirmative. The bill was read a second time, Stephens, wh» had the floor, then said that he understood that the opponents of the bill had a substitute to offer. He had intended to speak, but would give way to allow the substitute to be offered. Mr. Montgomery of Pennsylvania offered the substitute—the Crit tenden amendment with some modifications which had been made at the suggestion of the Republicnns. Gen. Quitman of Missis sippi then offered as an amendment to the substitute, the original bill, divested of Pugh's amendment. Ths was voted down—Yeas 72, Nays 160. The question was then taken on Montgomery’s motion. It was carried—• Yeas 120, Nays 112. The crowded galleries burst into loud applause. Mr. Keilt rose, shaking his head with rage, and moved that the galleries be cleared, but was finally mol lified, and the offense was suffered to pass with a rebuke from the Speaker. The bill was .put upon its final passage, and passed by the same vole—-a majority of eight against Lecompton. The House immediately adjourned. The defeat of the Administration was enough for one day ; for the nerves of both friends and foes. Jail Delivery. —JOn the evening o( Fri day last four prisoners, named Thos. Alger, from Jasper, in for assault and battery, James Bowne, from Hornelsville, for attempt to commit a rape, Austin Quick, for forgery, Charles Miller, for horse stealing, made a rush upon tbe turnkey as he was descending into the prisoner’s department to look them in their cells for the night, knocked him down and effected their escape by passing through the family dining room, out of a side door into the yard east of the jail, and from thence into the street. The alarm was im mediately given, and a chase ensued which ended in the capture of Quick and Miller. The other two have not been caught.—Steu ben Far. A Jr. ©ommtmteatconsf. ■ \ forjTho Agitator. Common School*. - Examination* will take place as follows, Brookfield, Plank School..Hu|H3s>- April 13 Clymer, Sabinsvilie “j' j “14 JSIk, Caines & f ' _| • ' Shippeo, Furmanlown “ i I “ 15 Chatham, Treat' “ij “16 Osceola, “| ( • “ I 7 House 1 - ■""" Delmar, Deane “■ J, ■“ -20 Charleston, Dartt Settlement, t ■* “ 21 Mlddlebury, Potler . 22 Nelsop, Beecher’s Island f - “ 26 Jackson, Miller Town “ “ 27 Rutland, Roseville r , “J “ 28 Sullivan, Gray’* Valley “ 1 “■ ,29 Ward, Mclntosh . “ SO Union, . , Swamp “j j May 1 Liberty, filbckhouae “j , “ 3 Bloss, j 4 Covington, j -5 Mansfield, [ i , 6 Tioga, _ F j \ Lawrenceville, j) j 8 Examinations commence at 6 o'clock.— Teachers who are lardy will be obliged to meet at some other place for examination.— None admitted after 10 o’clock. The Suo’t has not yet failed to meet a single appoint ment during the year; but it; has often re quired a ride of twenty miles, in the worst traveling, before 9 o’clock in thej morning. Teachers who have only five or six miles to come, give up in despair. Such chicken hearted ones had better not assume the re sponsibility of managing twenty or thirty wild boys in the school room. | There will not be any private examinations; Teachers who refuse-to come forward atillie advertised time and place, must forego the. pleasure of teaching the coming summer. I There are some who, conscious of their inpompetency, wilfully slay away from examination, but still make application for schools, and I am sorry to say, find Directors foolish enough to employ them. Some townships [have miser able schools, and will continue jto have, till they abandon the miserable policy of hiring these out cast teachers. Several of these teachers have been obliged to) obtain their winter’s wages by rate bill, and [more will be in the same condition the coming season.— Read No. 356 of the new school law. Teach ers will please be prepared with [pen, ink and paper, as usual. All persons [interested in schools are invited to attend these examina tions. I I - Supt. Hickock will visit the [county some time in May. As soon as wej ajre advised of the exact date we will fix thej time for the County Institute. The report of the visita tion of the winter schools is idelayed on ac count of the pressure of other business. N. L. Revnoids, Co. Sup't. The annual meeting of the Tioga County Bible Society was held at the Ctiurl House on Thursday evening, March SO, pursuant to adjournment. The following report of the doings of the Society for the yeSr ending Dec. 24, 1857, was submitted: and ordered to be printed,: j Bibles on hand at last anniversary $lB3 13 Sold during the year at depository 36 6*2 44 44 by colporter i'J 20 94 Given away Remaining on hand Cash Collected. By sales at depository 44 by colporter By donations Cash Paid , Paid colporter $lO 44 Incidentals 7 11 Paid to Parent Society 56 82 $74 37 Number of families visited 4uring tho year, 239 “ “ destitute of Bible or Testament, and supplied by exporter 32 No. of families having no member able to read , [ 3 No. of families refusing the Bible at a gift . 1 Per cent of families destitute |of theißlble in every one hundred visited | | I3£ H. W. WILLIAMS, Ste’y, The following it the Board of Officers elected for the current year: 1 1 President, Wm. Bachc; Pice President, Jno. F. Donaldson; Secretary, H. W. Williams ; Treasurer , Robt Roy; Executive Com., Rev. !a. A. Marple, Rev. J. F. Calkins, John Gray. 1 ! Democracy in Pennsylvania—Du ty of Republicans, Whatever may have been the hopes’of the professed anii-Lecompton Democrats of this State, however much they may [have boasted of their determination to resist the most odious measure of the National Administra tion, and tenaciously as they liave clung to. an organization which is now directly oppo sed to every principle which its name would seem to indicate, they must now either desert their parly, its men and its measures, or aland convicted of a servility [which would put to-the blush the lowest menial that ever fawned to power or bared the back to the tyrant’s lash. Democracy is how defined to be Lecomplonism; Lecomptonism is Democ racy. »Those who support Lecomptonism are Democrats; those who refuse-to support Lecomptonism are no Democrats; This is in accordance with the manifesto of James IV, and in conformity to the avowed policy of the party as promulgated jby tho parly masters at the recent Harrisburg Convention. It is said that James IV, sufnamed Buchan an, has assured his southern keepers, that in the event of the dissolution of the Union, Pennsylvania would join a southern confed eracy. The spirit of the Hatiisburg Plat form would indicate that he has correctly cal culated on the slavishness, at,;least, of that portion of the citizens of the [old Keystone who cast their voles for him atfthe last Presi dential election. He knows wjiaf kind of an estimate to place upon his followers just as well as a cotton planter knbivs how far be can depend upon the obedience! of bis human chattels. 1 | The nominee for Supreme Bench, W m . A. Porter, previous to the Convention, was pro fessedly opposed to the Leconitplon swindle. He had to sign away his manhood and pledge his support to that measure ofiinfarpy before he could receive a nomination. Wesley Frost, the candidate for Canal Commissioner, did not have to make any sacrifices for pat- ly’s sake. He was an open, avowed >upp otu Br of Lecomplon —“sound on the goose ll j n Border Ruffian parlance. That Porter » a , made to' be ‘‘u?ed upland the Frost melted in the heal of the campaign, or we are no prophet. We admire the boldness with which Mr. porney has spoken against Lecomptonism' but while he supportacandidales who endorse that' wrong we can only regard him as a par. fy to the crime, '‘‘Principles, not men,” wag once the motto of the Democracy ; men with, put regard to principles,” is the motto of the Forney Democracy. The Harrisburg H tr , aid, the organ of Gov. Packer, is professedly anti-Lecompton, but also sustains the nomi. nees. The - Brownsville Time* repudiates the platform but hoists the ticket promising to take it down in the event tint as ami-Le. compton Democratic Slate Ticket be aemi. Dated. The Courage of these anti-Lecemp. ton Democrats is fast oozing out at their &q. ger’s ends. They profess to abhor the trea son while they embrace the traitors who la. bor fof its consummation. This is in perfect keeping with the convenient code of morals which obtains with modern sham Democracy, In the war of Independence such men would have professed hatred to the policy of the mother country,' but would have deemed ir loyal and proper to sustain George HI. A* least this is the moral of their position. It is hardly worth the effort to show up the ab surdity of the position occupied by the For ney Democracy. Col. Forney, and the op ponents of Lecomptonism, certainly are aware that every vote given for Porter and' Frost is a vote in favor of Lecomptonism,. and will be so considered by the Administra tion and by the entire country. No other construction is tenable. We have placed particular stress upon the course of lhe anii-Lecompton Democracy, (or the reason that an attempt is being made by certain high contracting parties to indues Republicans to abandon their organization during the campaign and join in forming an anti-Lecompton Ticket. The men who ask us to do this are not honest in their profes sions. They bate Republicanism more than they hate Lecomptonism, and for this reason, if no other, we should shun any affiliation or coalition with them. If they would rather endorse what they admit to be a swindling usurpation than act with us in the support of Republican Freedom let them do so, but it is the duty of Republicans to keep their organi zation pure and free from the contamination of men who hold their prejudices dearer than principles. We must go into the contest re lying solely on the integrity of the people, the purity of our principles, and the justice of our cause, and if we are successful there will be no mistake as to the nalnre of the tri umph, or the sentiment of the people, and if defeated we will not have the memory of any doubtful bargains to regret. The coming contest is to decide something more than the Lecompton question—it will, in all probabili ty, decide whether Pennsylvania is to be a Slave State or a Free State, in future. The Republican Parly is in its very nature oppo sed to Lecomptonism. No new party or con glomeration of parties can be more so.— Why then should we be asked to change front, or bargain with men who at the worst are only foes and at best will be secret ene mies or cool friends 1 The time for experi menting and bargaining has gone by. Those who are not for Freedom are against it, and should be forced to declare themselves. If Lecomptonism is too bad for them, let them oppose it manfully. If Republicanism is too good for them, then they must not undertake to dictate the policy of our party or the terms of opposition. —Erie Constitution. 'Fdr tho Agitator. : } 450 | 121 07 . ! $lB3 19 $36 63 1 ! 20 94 j 6 62 $74 37 In Congress yesterday, the Senate voted to non-concur in the house amendment to the Kansas bill. Mr. Green made the motion, which was advocated by Mr. Bigler, who had the effrontery to say that a provision by which a Constitution is submitted to the peo ple who aye to live under it, is a violation of the principles of popular sovereignty. He was followed by Mr. Douglas, who turned the tables'upon the Laeomptonites, urging them to vote for the bill as it came from the House, in order to “put a stop to the Kansaa agitation, and give peace to the country."— Mr. Pugh observed that he should vote with his Southern friends, inasmuch as his instruc tions did not cover this precise case. He ad ded that it was futile to submit the Constitu tion to the people, because the Free State men, being in the majority would vote it down. The question was then taken and de cided in the affirmative, by 32 Yeas to 23 Nays, there being several absentees. The Senate then adjourned to Monday.— N. Y. Tribune , April 3d. FRESH ARRIVAL OF GROCERIES & PROVISIONS, WOOD’S GROCERY. Opposite Hoy's Building. THE Subscriber has just received a new and well assorted stock of Groceries.& Provisions, Pork, Dried Beef, Salt Fish, Mackerel, Floor, Dried Fruits, Cut rants. Primes, Raisins, Dates, Figs, Oranges, Lemons, and Pickles. SUGARS of alt grades and prices to suit, Teas* Spices, Tobacco, Snuff, and NUTS of all kinds. Also, New Orleans Molasses and refined Syrups, and all articles usually kept in a country Grocery, as cheap (or cheaper) as can be found in Tioga Co. Those wishing to purchase will do well to call and examine bis slock before purchasing elsewhere* Wellsboro, April 8, 1858. H. 1 WOOD. Wellsboro Select School. WelUhoro, Tioga bounty, Pa. J. W ALDRIDGE Teachtr. The Term will commence Monday, April 13th, and will continue twelve weeks. Arrangements aco being made to have the school in the Academy building. RATES OF TUITION . Juvenile Department, Common English Branches, Philosophy, Chemistry. Mental and Moral Philosophy, 3 W Algebra, Geometry, Trigonometry, Survey ing, Latin and Greek 4 00 The design of the school is to furnish facilities for those desiring it, to continue their Academic course of study. No exertion will be spued to render the exercises interesting and instructive. The mathe matical classes will be subjected to a complete drill- A Surveying class will be formed, and field exerci ses will be laken-daily with the- compass, therefore those wishing to pursue a mathematical course c«n be accommodated, Board nan be procured at ph' Vale houses at reasonable rates. Wcllsboro, April 8,1858. ?1 30 a oo