| Corresponding Sec.—Mias ElujLmth Lice- TiKTHAiEB. ‘ "'Treasurer— lUrt E. Pitts. • Moved and carried that" the present board of Counsellors be elected for the next year. ' , 1 The President gave instruction to the Coun sellors. ■ - . - Mr. Reynolds offered the following resolution i Resolved. That each Counsellor be requested to pro went to the next Institute a written report of the edu cational interest in his other townships A motion to lay the resolution on the -table was lost. -The,resolution was then adopted. • A motion was then made to pay Mr. Beecher ($l5) fifteen dollars’, to defray his expenses, and to compensate him in part for his trouble In at tending. As the Session was about to close the Presi dent was called upon, who responded with a few appropriate and feeling remarks. The Institute then adjourned to meet at the Presbyterian Church to attend the second lec ture of the Rev. Thomas K.-Beeoher. Eceiiing Session. — About half past seven o'clock the Presbyterian Church was thronged with people to hear Mr. Beecher’s lecture. I regret that I cannot give your readers a sketch of it, without destroying entirely, or, at least, without giving a wrong impression of the rhet oric, quaintness of idea and expression, and beauty of language peculiar to this gentleman ; and 1 am not quite sure that his doctrine will bear putting -into my words—that it does not need his poetry to make it acceptable. How ever, your readers will have to be satisfied with ’the bird without the feathers. Mr. B. divided his subject thus: • , Taxes.- —Taxes paid for the support and ad ministration of Government, expended, for the most part, at a distance from the tax-payer, for objects, the utility of which is not always pal pable —liable to be wasted in prodigality and corruption. School taxes expended in the neighborhood of the contributor—for purposes which all may comprehend and appreciate—more obviously beneficial to society than those of any other tax. Village Schools. —Union, or Graded Schools —the best, because Ist. They do. the most good at the least cost. 2d. Because they serve as a bond of union between the people. Churches, politics, &o. tend to disunity and estrangement, more or less, and the distinctions of wealth and refinement separate communities into hostile classes. These divisions are una voidable—perhaps useful and necessary to the welfare of society; but they.always tend to excess and need to be antagonized by arrange ments which embrace the common interest and bring all classes together upon a level platform. A well organized Union School answers such a purpose admirably. ■ Whatever may be said in favor of social dis tinctions among the adult members of society it is good for the young to associate at school upon equal ground and have a fair trial for the prize of social distinction. The children of the ' wealthy and refined classes will not suffer by such trial. They cannot evade the competition of the less favored, but more enduring and ro ' bust children of the poor in the run of life. They need the strength and hardiness, to be "acquired only by such contact. Scuool Houses.!— The style and surroundings of the school house iave great influence over the pupil. Order and beauty in these twill be refleetd in the character of the school. Teacijehs —lt is best to have our principal teacher permanently engaged, that is, when yon find one who is excellent, let his engage ■ ment be such as to inspire him with the utmost possible interest in the permanent success of ' the school. At the conclusion of Hr. Beecher’s lecture, Mr, Garretaon offered some remarks in relation to the collection of a sum, to be added to the amount already voted by the Institute to pay ’ Mr. Beecher for his services. Ha was inter rupted by Mr. Beecher, who said that the peo ple of his church at Elmira paid him all the money ho wanted to live on, and that if his ‘ services in behalf of Education in Tioga County should bring forth good fruit, he should consider himself amply rewarded. lie therefore de clined to receive any compensation whatever, - but stated that if the people wanted to throw ' in some money, he would place the same in the hands of some gentleman to be expended in behalf of the Tioga School. Remarks were made by John W. Guernsey Esq., and others, and Mr. Young of Wellsboro, offered the fol lowing preamble and resolutions which were carried by acclamation. W/tereae, Tlu: services of Her. T. K. Beecher of Bltuirabave been of incalculable bench t to our Insti tute particularly, and to the cause of Common-School Education generally; and whereas, he has generously declined to receive any pecuniary compensation from us whatever. Therefore Resolved, That wo tender to Mr. Beecher our heart felt thanks for his kindness in our behalf, and that his unselfish devotion to the cause of Education for the sake of the good to the world resulting therefrom, challenges our admiration and esteem. Resolved, That this preamble and these resolutions bo entered on the minutes of the Institute. The President and others made some closing remarks, whereupon the Institute adjourned to 1 meet at Wellsboro, at the call of the County ! Superintendent. It may not be amiss, Mr. Editor, to offer a few extraremarksinthis connection. In justice to the effort* of the teachers, I must say, the In stitute was a perfect success, a triumph in the truest sense of Itho word. The teachers with whom I, talked, seemed perfectly satisfied that it had resulted in great benefit to the can so of education in this county. I must confess that th 3 prospect looked rather gloomy for the first two days; but by the indefatigable labors of the Superintendent together with the assistance of the teachers present, its reputation was not allowed to suffer; and its friends have no rea son to lose their faith in its efficiency. Its in fluence upon the community, was also, good. At first, it attracted but little notice from the inhabitants; hut before it closed, it was attend ed by; large crowds of spectators who were anxious to see what was “going onand I think, if H-werc to bc.held here again, it would bo still hetter.uttendcd. ' . In my opinion, the benefits of the Institute to teachers, can hardly be overrated. Teachers do not seeni to fully realize the truth of this; and: Ibis is. why they are compelled to teach for such low. prices. Other persons engaged in like occupations, from associations to advance their own interests. Why should not teachers do the same? Is not their profession as wor thy? They cannot expect their profession to bo respected, unless they .show themselves wil ling to uphold, and sustain it. If teachers would make teaching a more money making i.ii'.iness, they must become Us open advoeates. they will nerer get a high price for'teaching ' until they demand it. And until they do this, they most expect to “to teach for nothing,” and “board round.” THE AGITATOR. HUGH TODRO, Editor & Proprietor. WELLSBOROOGH, PA. - Thursday Morning, ITlay 10, ’59, i S°” 119I 19 st, Kv* Vork, „,a 10. stalest.. Bosjoh, are the Ap-.nta Cot the Agitatar/isi the' most influential and largest circulating Newspapers in the I'S Canadas. They are authorized to con tract for Us at our lowest rates. Republican State < Convention. Yhe citizens of Philadelphia and of the sev eral counties of this Commonwealth Attached to the People’s party, and all others who are op posed to the unwise and extravagant measures of the National Administration, are requested to send delegates# equal in number to their rep resentation in the General Assembly, to a Con vention, to be held at Habrisburc on Wednes day the Bth or Jtjne/XSoQ, to can didates for Auditor General and Surveyor Gen eral, to be voted fur at the General Election in next October. HENRY M, FULLER, Wjl B, Mann, Secy, Chairman . Third Parties. The Wellsboro Agi(ator f a few weeks since labored through a long column to show that our idea of build ing up a third political party with Democratic princi ples, was impracticable. Wo are' surprised that the Agitator should insist that it is impossible to keep up more than the two parties now in existence. It must recollect that the party to which the Agitator belongs only had a beginning a very few years since, and in that beginning it was merely "a third party/' but now bolds quite an Important position as regards strength. Hare we not seen the old Whig party superceded by the Americans, and both superceded by the Republi can party? This has all taken place since 1554, and yet our Tioga friend bos the audacity to seout at the idea of “third ; parties.” “The first shall be last# and the last shall be first’'—Warren Ledger, W© think the Agitator is fairly hit in this reply. Every Republican ought to have great faith in third parties, for if it bad not been fur the third partie* of 1841, '4B and ’s2j the Republican party of 1856 would have bad no existence. And if the scheme now on foot to convert the Republican into a mete oppetitian party succeeds, we are in favor of organising another Republican party, though it might bo a third or even a fourth party. —Potter Journal, It will be seen by the above, that the Ledger skulks the issue which we made with that paper, in our article of the 21st ult,, and hides itself behind another question which we never raised. We will state in a few words the arguments on both sides. | Immediately after the release of Daniel Web ster, the fugitive slave, the Ledger formerly an un unscrupulously partisan Buchanan sheet, hut now attached to the fortunes of the Forney Democracy of this State—came out with an article, deploring in “mournful numbers” the creation and existence of a public opinion which had quietly sneered down and made nail the Fillmore-Webster Slave Law. It accounted for the existence of this potent public opinion, if we remember rightly, by citing the fact, that all the good literature of the day has a decided anti-slavery tone, and that even the “nigger songs” of the street imperceptibly tend to destroy that fidelity to the interests of the South enjoined in that infamous law. “Poor Nelly Gray” who was “taken away,” was cited by the Ledger as an instance of the thousand and one inlets to the sympathies of the popular heart; and {he line where the song says “the white man bound her with -his chain,” was cited as an inlet, as it ■ truly is, to the popular disgust. These minor causes prepared the way for the statement of the grand cause of this de praved popular opinion, which was to be found, as the Ledger affirmed, in the action of the po litical parties of the day. With a degree of boldness and manly independence seldom seen now-a-days in a Democratic sheet, it said: “The “ Republican party which proclaims itself anti " slavery, arrays itself against a Democratic “ party which is decidedly pro-slavery. Northern “ men of extreme views control and lead the “ Republican party, while ultra Southern mtfn j “ control and direct the machinery of the Demo ■* erotic party." To remedy this (to the Ledger) sad state of things, that paper proposed a “third” party — a party which would be “eminently conserva tive in its motives and action”—“a great Dem ocratic party such ns it was in the days of Jef ferson”—a parly “within whose folds the con servative men of all parties may carry out their patriotic desires,” said “patriotic desires” be ing, we suppose, to send the niggers back qui etly, without any fuss, whenever called upon to do so. Thus far the Ledger. In reply, we tried to show the impossibility of erecting a party on| the bases proposed by it; that the Republican party which was the great third party of 1854- ’5O was the remit and not the cause of the con flict now going on in this Republic between Free Labor on the one hand, and Slave Labor on the other., We cited the doctrine first ad vanced by Jefferson, and lately reenunciated by Lincoln and Seward and by John Hickman at the Forney Convention, that there is an irre pressible struggle, an eternal antagonism be tween freedom and slavery; and we affirmed that the floating elements pf the Democratic party and all other parties, must swim into the vortex of one of these antagonisms. Those who love freedom—those who desire to see our nation grow great and strong under the health ful influence of Free Soil and Free Labor must become Republicans; and those who love slave ry, its' beauties and blessings (?) must become Shamocrats. We hope that the Ledger understands our position on “third” parties. We say how dis tinctly, os we sajd before in effect, that no third party can exist which ignores the Labor ques tion, for the reason that it so directly underlies our commercial, agricultural, intellectual and financial prosperity as a nation, that nil parties must endorse as a national measure one of the two systems, or die. “Have we not seen the “old Whig party superceded by the Ameri. “ cans, and both superceded by the Republican “ party ?” asks the Ledger in the article which we paste at the beginning of this. We answer, yes; you have. The reason why they were superceded, was because both these parties tried to ignore the slavery question. The Potter Journal will possibly have learned before it reads this far, that the “hit” of the Ledger, was just no hit at all. We made no THE TIOGA COUNTY AGITATOR. issue with it on the number of putties. If a man is abont to bnild a bouse, wo have a right to tell him that the timber is rotten if we be lief eit is so, It is nothing, to ua, if he forgets our remark about the timber, and retorts that 'he has a - right - to'build another houaelf he' pleases. ■ -AsTre know the Journal will see the' point, we beg to suggest, that hereafter the editor will read both sides before “mixing in.” One word to the Journal in regard to the “op position” movement which it so strenuously, and we think needlessly, deprecates. When any of the principles of the Republican party are on the point ot being sacrificed; when the “opposition” shall ask ns to lay aside the dis tinctive measures which have become so en deared to the people of the whole North, it will bq .time .for the Journal to talk of new parties and third parties. We confess that we cannot now see what good the Journal can possibly affect by its shying at imaginary fears. Depend upon it the masses will stand firm, and will watch with earnest eyes and discountenance any movement on tho part of political tricksters which threatens the integrity of their princi ples. Depend upon it too, that those who count themselves among the number opposed to gov ernmental corruption—those who desire to de feat the self-styled democracy in 1800 though they differ with the Republicans on the slavery question now, will, if oar party stand firm upon the Philadelphia platform, be glad to stand there with us f/icn. But anti! some concessions are seriously asked of us, we protest against the impracticable kicking up of the Journal. Two Cases Contrasted. The tendency of the government of this Re public was never more faithfully illustrated than in two recent trials—one at Charleston, the other at Cleveland—one the trial of a gang of desperadoes and cut-throats who were engaged in reducing a cargo of innocent men to slavery, and the other the trial of one of twenty or more Christians for assisting one .enslaved man to regain the freedom of which he had been robbed. "We have alluded to the cases before ; but we have not yet seen them contrasted. In the first, there is no doubt that the charge un willingly urged by the Government against the crew and officers of the schooner Echo, was fully sustained. The Captain of the U. S. Brig Dolphin, by whom the Echo was captured, was on the stand as a witness. He testified pointedly as to the arrest of the prisoners on the high seas; to the fact that they had a cargo i of half-starved Africans on board; that the marked chart on the vessel shewed their track from the coast where their slaves were snipped, to the spot where the capture was made; that the bla.cks were in irons and in the hold; and that the outfit of the vessel, the nature of her cargo, the admissions of her crew, and the story of the slaves, left no' doubt that the Echo was a slave-trader, and that the prisoners were willingly, knowingly and criminally engaged in the forbidden traffic. His testimony was supported by other witnesses of unimpeacbed veracity. The identity of the men, and the facts charged in the indictment, were clearly proved—so clearly that the defence offered no rebutting evidence The Attorney* for the accused knew what they were doing; and that they might depend upon the indispo sition of the government to convict. The case went to the jury, and that body, sworn to act according to the law and the testimony, hesita ted only to make a show of deliberation before they returned with a verdict of Not Guilty I There is not a boy in the streets of Charleston who does not know that the finding in the case was a lie; and that an outrage has been infiict ted upon law and justice. The other case is that of the Oherlin rescu ers, with which our readers are already famil iar. The “man John,” an escaped Kentucky chattel, was arrested in Ohio hy a slave catcher, who does his dirty business on shares. The arrest was on a warrant issued by an officer who had no jurisdiction in the district, and of course was without legality; but the Marshal refused to give the prisoner up. An excitement arose among the free men of the neighborhood that so shameless a thing should be ; and with out violence or intimidation, they terrified the cowardly officials so much that they suffered John to escape. The rescuers were lately in dicted. One of them has just been tried by a Democratic court and a Democratic jury; though the testimony was lame and inconclu sive, the Government had made such extraor dinary exertions that a speedy conviction was had, and he is sentenced to a fine of a thousand! dollars, or a year in the Penitentiary! Twenty others—not pirates, cut-throats, slave-traders, but men of character for integrity and virtue —are in prison awaiting a similar trial and a similar sentence! And yet we hear from no Democratic journal a word of condemnation for the proceedings in either case. Editors and orators are sending up jubilant shouts in consequence of the “vin dication of law” in Ohio, hut we have yet to know that they have uttered a murmer at the defiance of law in South Carolina. The same power that empaneled the jury by which a crew of pirates were turned loose and invited to re peat their crimes, held the key to the jury box in which sat the men who have punished the lover of freedom, in Oherlin, with the extre mest penalty of the law'! That power is the Federal Government wielded by James Buchan an.—He and the party' of which he is the head must he held responsible fur verdicts like these. Let the people note that in this era of the Re public the slave-trade is no crime ; bat those who laugh and shout in approbation of the act, when an escaped slave is recovered from the clutches of the hound by whom he is pursued for a price, shall feel that slavery reaches with a long arm and sharp talons into the heart of every Free State. . The trials of which wo speak will have widely different results. South Carolina will become more blindly and crimi nally devoted to Sham Democracy which yields to all her demands. ’But we shall be mistaken if Ohio and her freemen do not speak in trumpet tones in reprobation of that Democracy which does not hesitate in outraging all that thoy hold dear !—Detroit Tribune, Last Friday was excessively warm, the tber mometer standing ninety in the shade.. Cbarely Foirman of the Elmira Advertiser, mentions the fact that a corpulent citizen of that somewhat corpulent village took an after noon’s walk and returned home a mere skele ton. It continued warm until Monday. Mon day night and Tuesday it rained moderately hat incessantly, since then it has been quite cool. —Coming Journal. Laiett from Europe. WAS INEVITABLE. Tho arrival of the steamers Weser and Bor ussia from Southampton has put ns in possess ion-of intelligence from tho seat of war in Italy to the 2d inst. Dp to that time, no battle had taken place," though there ifl'a rumor of an un important engagement at-tbs bridge-head of Buffalors, which’tho Austrians are said to’ have carried by the bayonet. Their movements are certainly more dilatory than was to have been expected. It seems that they did not enter Sardina until the 29th nit., although the reply of the, Piedmontese Government' to their ulti matum was received by Count Gynlai on the evening of the 26th- Here was a loss of two days, and for what reason does not appear.— The delay in the attack upon the Piedmontese forces is attributed to the fact that the roads on the Austrian line of march have . been broken up and the bridges destroyed; but the first considerable hostilities must have taken place before the 7th inst., when the Canada sailed from .Liverpool for. Halifax and ’Boston; we may expect to receive her dispatches, with the result, by Wednesday at the furthest. With regard to the alleged alliance between France and Russia, the British Government have received assurances that nothing of the sort has been negotiated. All that has been done, says Mr. Disraeli, is that Russia baa agreed, in case of d war, to place an army of observation on the Prussian frontier; and this, is no more than England is going to do in sen ding a fleet into the Mediterranean. Meanwhile, all Italy is in a ferment. The Government of Tuscany is carried on by a Pied montese Commissioner, who will be aided by the subordinate local authorities. The Duchess of Parma has imitated the example of the Tus can Grand-Duke, and her dominions are also, for the present, similarly attached to Piedmont. The King of Naples is not dead yet, but when he departs .we shall no doubt see there a pop ular rising in behalf of Prince Murat. On the other hand, we bear that the Prussian army is to'be completely monopilized, which looks like anything but German neutrality. Tho ques tion is now not so much what Powers will be in the war, os what Powers will be able to keep out. ~ Thirty-five Thousand Dollars. The journals in the service of the Adminis tration are loud in their laudations of the man ner in which “the difficulty with Paraguay” has been settled. If the intelligence which has been received from Paraguay be correct, the Government of that little country has agreed to pay thirty-five thousand dollars in full of all demands. The circumstances of the case are briefly these: The authorities of Paraguay had insulted the American flag by firing upon a United States Tessel, and killing a seaman. They had also interfered with the business of an American company, which bad caused a pecuniary loss. To demand and receive re dress for these grievances, an expedition was fitted out, which, by the time it gets back, will have cost the United States millions of dollars, and sent to Paraguay, and the result has been, if our intelligence he reliable, that our woun ded national honor is to be healed, and the life of a man recompensed by the .payment of ten thousand dollars, while the interruption of the business of the company aggrieved, is to be re munerated by a payment of twenty-five thous and dallars; and for this manner of sustaining out national honor and protecting the Uvea and property of American citizens, Mr. Buchanan is bespattered with praises by the parasites who feed at bis crib. When Thomas Jefferson was President of the United States, when our naval power was small, and that terror of the civilized world, Algiers, outraged and insulted the American flag, re dress of a different kind was demanded, and a Decatur did not compromise our national hon or for ten thousand dollars; but now when our country has become one of the great powers of the world, the stars and stripes may be insul ted by a European nation with impunity, and by a South American petty State for ten thous and dollars. "We have become cheap under the reign of King James Buchanan, and our hon or is sold for a small consideration. Like the amiable Mr. Weller, senior, it is allowed to go “wery reasonable.” If under the Administra tion of Mr. Buchanan, expeditions are to be fitted out which coat perhaps hundreds for every dollar’s worth of redress received, it would be more economical to let the little nations kick us adh'bUum as well as the big ones, and save this large expense. ' We are now told that the Paraguay fleet will be sent to Central America, and the same vig orous means adopted to settle .matters in that quarter. There can be no question that Mr. Buchanan’s naval operations will greatly illus trate the history of onr country.— News. Ms. James Porter, reputed the tallest man in the world, died in Louisville on Monday.— He was seven feet nine inches in height, and when in perfect health, weighed near three hun dred pounds. At the age of seventeen, being then smaller than ordinary, he fairly began to grow. Measuring himself every Saturday night he found in one week that he had added an inch to his stature. A cooper by profession, he soon became too tall to work upon barrels, and was presently obliged to give up even hogsheads and become a hack-driver. In the years 1836-37 he came East and appeared on the stage in one or two pieces written especially for him. He returned to Louisville, and a few years later bought the coffee-house which he was keeping at the time of his death. The LouisvUte Cour rier, from which we glean these facts, recalls the following anecdote; “At the time that Charles Dickens came to this country, there was a perfect furore to seo ‘Boz.’ As he passed through the canal at Louisville, he sent a messenger to Mr. Porter, of whose remarkable proportions be had heard, intimating a wish to se him. Mr. Porter re plied to the messenger: ‘lf Mr. Dickens wishes to see me more than I to see him, he will come to me.’ Mr.- Dickens took the hint,-and it was during the conversation that Porter, told the novelist that while be was growing, his mother had to saw a foot on his pantaloons every night.” A medical writer of celebrity Illustrates his subject in the following manner i "A dovout singer, in a church choir, lifting up his voice in a hymn to the highest pitch, brought the condyloid process to the very edge of the glenoid cavity, and attempting to "shake” at this oritinal moment, actually disloeatedhis jaw!” The most extensive publicity should be given to the remarkably curious and very melancholy fact, that hereafter singers in our choirs may never attempt to “shake” when their condyloid processes are at the end of their glenoid cavi ties. —Elmira Adcertmr, ,—ln a manufacturing village sear Hart ford, a zealous Democratic schoolmaster devo ted his evenings, for some time before the late election, to the instruction of a company of Irishmen, in order to fit'them to Become Demo cratic, volers. After getting them educated up to the requirements of |the statute, which re quires them to ho able'to! read the Constitution, he took them to Hartford and had them natu ralized, and relied with great confidence on their voting “the right ticket.” When election day came, however, the schoolmaster was .puzzled and mortified to see nearly all his hopeful pu pils vote the Republican ticket.. “The cusses,” be said, “bad turned against him, after he had spent more than a hundred dollars on them.” The incident shows the perils of education to the Democratic party. A new way of raising money has been dis covered by a man who has visited several pla ces in Ohio and Indiana, where he would ap parently endeavor to commit suicide by taking opium. His farewell letters were got up in the moat affecting style and laid where they would be seen by the Landlord in time to send for a Physician to make all due efforts to save him. The recital of his misfortunes that “compelled him to rashly seek his life," ended in the ma king up of a purse of money by the citizens, when he would leave in a humble, grateful frame of mind for another field of operations. PORK A FLOUR always on hand at the New Gro cery of 0. BULLARD. Notice to Collectors. COLLECTORS of State and County taxes for years prior to 1350 who have not settled np their Du plicates, and have taxes that ongbt to be exonerated can have it done at any time (when the Commission ers are in session) up to the first of August next. D. G. STEVENS’,) JOHN JAMES, \Cam'n. May 19, 1859. L. D. SEELEY, j Register’s Ifoslce. . NOTICE is hereby given that the following Admin istrators and Guardians have filed their accounts in the Register's Office, and that the sameiwill be pre sented to the Orphan’s Court of Tioga County, on Monday, tbe 13th day of Juno, 1859, for confirmation and allowance, viz: Account of A M Administrator of the Es tate of Augustus Cass, dec’a., late of Richmond. Account of Henry B. Card, Administrator of the Estate of Benj. R. Chapman, dec’d., late of Sullivan. Account of 0 L Gibson, Guardian of Geerge, J/ar tba and Chlvin Putnam, minor children of Calvin Putnam, dec’d. IK. D. DAILEY f HcyUter. , J/ay 19, 1359. LIST of letters remaining in tho Post Office at IKcllsboro Pa. Slay 15, 1859. Butler Silss Alice Nelson D. B. Banner Overseers of tbe poor of Cuep George Delmar Township Carpenter Benjamin Pearson Mrs. Rebecca HUboldt Henry Robbins Miss Mary Higby E. S. m Jligbi© John Havens Daniel •S'tangae John Harding Wm. Shurtleff Walter S. Herald A’paulding J. S. Henry Desdamonia Stuart Miss Sarah Hoadley Charles IKells Mrs, Elizabeth Hardy Miss Ellen Weias Theodore Johnston John J. Williams Abram Moyer Miss Mariah Weston Timothy Murray Mbs Kate Persons calling for any of tho abovel etters will please say they are aduertised. I. D. RICHARDS., P. M. BLACK HAWK CHIEF t&jSU/Kjip* Was sired by Skiff Colt*, g. sire, Clack 6 Hawk : PE- sire. Sherman: ggg. sire, Jus- VV tin Morgan. Cam was of Messenger blood. BLACK HAWK CHIEF is jet black, 15>£ bauds high, and weigh* 1100 pounds. For beauty of form, grace of action and splendor of carriage, be cannot be equal led by any stock horse in Northern Pennsylvania. Black Hawk Chief was foaled In the Spring of lSo’3, tho property of Xowhall Faruham, E«q., I,ockport, Niagara Co.. N. Y. Tins Horse will stand during the season as f >llmvs : Mondays.—At John W. /ftiiley’s. East Charleston. Tuesdays.—At Holiday’s Hotel, Welisboro. Wednesdays.—At Covington. Thursdays and Fridays, at the stable of tho Subscriber, two miles east of the Lounsbeny Settlement, on the old County Itoad, llichniond township, Tioga Co., Pa. Saturdays.—At Mansfield. TERMS.—SIS to insure. Insurance money to bepaidby tho Ist of January next. All persona parting with marcs before foaling, or not returning them regularly to thehorso are held responsible for the service of the horse. Mansfield, May, 19, ’59. L B FAVLKSER- DICKINSON HOUSE CORNING, N. Y. D. C. Koe, Proprietor. Guests taken to and from the Depot free of charge. DR. W. \v. WEBB. OFFICE over Cone’s Law Office, first door below Farr’s Hotel. Nights ho will be found at his residence, first door above the bridge on Main Street towards Samuel Dickinson’s. ’ Applications for Licence. NOIICIi is hereby given that tl)e following named persons have filed their petitkjns to keep Inns or Taverns in the Court of QuarterjSessions of Tioga County, and that tho same will bo presented to the Judges of said Court on Wednesday the Bth day of Juno next, at 2 o’clock in the afternoon: L. D. Tuylor, Wcllsboro. Chas. G. Douglass, Clymer. B. B. Holliday, Wellsboro. Bcnj. R. Blossburg Daniel “ Royal Rose, Rutland, 11. C. Vermjlyca, Gaines. Joel H. Woodruff. Liberty. Charles E. Phipps, Brookfield. Henry Crawford, Morris. James K. Sales, Westfield. Henry 11. Potter, Middlebury. Samuel I. Holiday. do E. S, Furr, TTellsboro. The following named person has filed his petition for license to sell liquors as a store keeper, viz: Silas X, Billings, Gaines. May 12, 1850. J. F. DONALDSON, Clerk. „ BALDWIN, LOWELL & CO., Tioga Village, Pa,, Have just received a large and carefully selected assortment of SPRING GOODS, Consisting in part of STAPLE AND FANCY DRY GO CDS, GROCERIES & PROVISIONS, and are prepared to furnish them at as reasonable rates as they can be bought in any other market Customers can rc'y upon finding at all times any article they may wish, and all Goods warranted to bo as represented. SILKS, AND LADLES’ DRESS GOODS, Latest-Styles, and adapted to every variety of trim mings. Ladies will do well to call and examine be fore purchasing elsewhere, Baldwin, Lowell i Co„ have always on hand a sea sonablo and fashionable stock of READY-MADE CLOTHING, which will be sold at the lowest CASH PKICES. ' -Al5O - crockery, hardware glass, store, hollow& wooden ’ STEEL < SAILS, OILS, V PAINTS if DYE-STUFFS, &c. BOOTS AND SHOES for Everybody. ASS'AII kinds of Country Produce taken in ex- Change for Goods at thp Market prices 8 “ m * Tioga, May 12, 1859. P " CeS ’ WAT*!* pims’ Hi(t, Satin and Common, Wninnw Gilt > Satin “<> Common I S |AP|B, Plain, Gilt and Figured. WINDOW PAPER, Plain, QUt and Pilured. , JSS~ WITH BORDER TO MATCH, April 31, -op. 5, At gjuxH A RICHARDS’. the EMPIRE STO]h ' -07- JOHN R. BGWjv Hm jnat been. fiUed np with a cotnolet. . , I leeted stock of P “ 1 »D l SPRING GOODs which he i> prepared to «how to the pablk terms that cannot be beat in this lection Everything the people want cm be pwe, For Beautiful Dress Goods, For Beautiful Dress Goods, For Beautiful Dress Goods, For Beautiful Dress Goods, _ . JJ* 11 the SMPXSj . For an Assortment of White Goods For an Assortment of White Goods' For an Assortment of White Goods' For on Assortment of White-Goods' Chll at the BMPDa For Domestic Goode, For Domestic Goods, For Domestic Goods, For Domestic Goods, Call at tße EXPIRE a, For Ready Made Clothing as *s For Ready Made Clothing, For Ready Made Clothing, For Ready Made Clocking; c»u Mtiwramjsii For Hats and Cops, For Hats and Caps, For Hats and Caps, For Hats and Caps, • - Call at tbeEMPlai^ For First Quality of Groceries, ™ Fox’ First Quality of Groceries, For First Quality of Groceries, For First Quality of Groceries, Call »t tin EMPIHi;- n For Boots and Shoes, Gaiters, Ac., For Boots and Shoes, Gaiters, Ac., For Boots and Shoes, Gaiters, Ac., For Boots and Shoes, Gaiters, Ac., . Call at the EMPIRE jjm For all kinds of Famishing Goods, 1 For all kinds of Famishing Goods, For all kinds of Furnishing Goods, For all kinds of Famishing Goods, Call at the EMPIRE 6IM For Crockery, Glass and Woodenwarc, For Crockery, Glass and TToodenware, For Crockery, Glass and Woodenwarc, For Crockery, Gloss and Woodenware, Call at the EMPIRE Slff For Hardware and Cutlery, For Hardware and Cutlery, Tor Hardware and Cutlery, For Hardware and Cutlery, ' ’ .Call at tie EMPIRE ST(] For Pork, Flour and Fish, For Pork, Flour and Fish, For Pork, Flour and Fish, For Pork, Floor and Fish, Can at tbs EMPIRE ST® For anything you want, For anything you want, For anything you want, [ For anything you want. Can at THE EMPIRE STOEE Of JOHN it. lOffli April 28,1859. SPRING & SUMME 18 5 9. The Fashionable styles of For the above seasons, are now on exhibition ssj Store together with a well selected stock of TTtnii Gaiters. GENT’S FURNISHING GOODS Viubrellas, Satchels, Carpel Bugs, Glow, Hoisery , Yankee Rations, tie. Come and see them, at the Hat Siorswi side of Market Street, next to Dr. Terbelli te| Store. MM. WALKS. China, Glass and Earthen-Wan. I have now on. hand and intend to keep a lected stock of the above Goods, together with Looking Glasses, Lamps, Stone Ware , Knives and Fork, Bird Canes, Fancy Articles, Togs, WIL VALKa Next Store to Dr, Terbell’s Drug Store. May 12th, 1859. ly. . MARRIAGE GUIDE. A FEW BOOK BY WILLIAM YOTOJU • The secret clue to Coartsh!?? bn and Marriage; with the diseaw*33- dent to Youth, Maturity wdfflHr ; being lights and shades of Married!* its Joys and Sorrows,Hopej,?on* Disappointments. Let all mirnwp pic, or those contemplating si ' sa s! and having the least impediment to married Efe this book. Let every young man and vomsaa land read this book. It is full o? Px-ATia.* 2 *® closes-secrets that every one should kno»: * knowledge at first may save aworldoflrnubleis* life. Send for a copy ( enclosing 25 ccotii to DR. WM. YOUNG, No. 416 SPRUCE STRKiI, PHILADELPHIA. May 5,1559. 8. NEW inaLINEBI STOBft AT MANSFIELD, PA. MRS. ELLIOTT takes this opportunity"** the ladies of Covington, Mansfield M d n ' that she has just received from New York, siMS* fashionable assortment of MILLINERY GOODS, and designs increasing her stock at interni* the season so that she may suit ah that may g* their patronage. , Bleaching and repairing done on the shcr and in the neatest style. All orders for Goods strictly attended to. Store at the residence of Dr. Elliott osar y 0. H. Phelps* Store. [April 21, * Get a Stamp ittaebin® 1 THE undersigned respectfully beg the farmers of Tioga County that IWJ agents for this county for Washington Ball's Patent StumP*^ This machine can be easily worked by ’ so as to take oat from thirty to sixty stn . without the aid of a team. Farm or To will be sold to any person upon applie^ l^ 0 * s ther particulars apply to the undersign** - in pers.on. Farm Rights, with GEER A Tioga, April 21, 1859. 4t. 2* AdmlnUlrator’i THE Administrators of the Estate of ■ ans, dec'd, will offer for sale at™ at Blossbnrg, on Monday the 23d iost»i property of said John L. Evans, dec’d*. 6 a STOCK OF GOODS, such as Dry G Crockery, Hardware Ac. Also the House ture, and other articles too numerous to Terms mode known on day of sale. JOHN JAMES, _ May 12, 1353. JAMES H. GUEICA. Administrator’s LETTERS of Administration having to the undersigned- on the estate SMITH late of Sullivan, deceased, all P e ed to sard estate are requested to raake i® ment and those having claims against ta sent them for settlement to , ) . , m ,i i CALVIN HETXOLDS PUILETUS P. S.MI™ > April 28, 1859. Tioga Foundry §TSacES«|M ? THE undersigned beg to annfop ce ~ that they have leased the Machine Shop, and are engaged in tfl . • of Mill Irens, Plows and Plow Pointy llC * A*' any kind or desdriptioa made 011 L A C l * l dress or call upon BALDWIN, I*o “ h Tioga, May 13,1859. l.tV‘