, Broderick's Reply to Bajanaona. ■TUB- LABORING 'MAN TO THE SLATE OWNER. When, last .winter. Senator Hammond, of South. Carolina,"alluded to the white laborers of the North as white slaves, Mr. Broderick responded: j .“I, sir, am glad that the senator has spoken thus, it may have the effect of arousing- in the .workingmen that Spirit which has been lying dormant for centuries. It may also have the -effect of arousing the two hundred thousand men with-pure skins in South Carolina, who are now degraded and despised by the thirty thousand aristocratic slaveholders. It may teaclTthem to demand what is the power — ‘Linked’ assumed and kept with skill, • : Tbstt mould; mother's weakness to its will; with their hands, but, still to them unknown, ."Slakes even their mightiest deeds appear its own/ •;.-i;.Buppo S e, e j r> the senator from South Caro lina did .not intend to be personal in bis re marks to any of ins peers upon .this floor. If i.bad thought so I would have noticed them at tjib I anv.sir, with one exception, the xbungeat in j'ears of the senators upon this liaor.. It is not long since I served an appren ticeship olf five years at one of the most labo rious mechanical trades pursued by man—a’ trade that, from its nature, devotes its follower to thought, but debars him from conversation. X/vould not have itlluded to this if it were not idr : lbe remarks of the senator from South Caro lina; and the thousands who know that I am th,e son of an artisan, and have been & mechanic, Would feel disappointed in me if I did not reply to hint lam not proud of this. lam sorry it is true. -I would that I could have enjoyed tbe pleasures of life in my boyhood days ; but they were denied to me. I say this with pain, 1 have not the admiration for the men of the class from whence I sprang that might be ex pected-; they submit too tamely to oppression, and are prone to neglect their rights and duties as citizens. But, sir, the class of society to whose toil I was born, under our form of gov. ernmeut, will control the destinies of this na tion. If I wore inclined to forget my connec tions with them, or to deny that I sprang from Ihem, this chamber would not be the place in which I could do either. 'While I hold a seat here 1 have but too look at the beautiful capi tals adorning the pilasters that support this roof to be reminded of my father’s talent, and to see His handiwork. “I left the wenes of my youth and manhood for the ‘-Far "West,’ because I was tired of the struggles and jealousies of men of my class, who isonld not understand why one of their fellowsi should seek to elevate his condition above the common level. I made my new abode among strangers, where labor is honored. I had left without regret; there remained no tie of blood to bind me to any being iff existence. Jf I fell in the struggle for reputation and for tune, there was no relative on earth to mourn my fall-. The people of California elevated me to the highest office within their gift. My elec tion .was not the result of an accident. For years I had to struggle, often seeing the gaol of ambition within my reach ; it was again arid aga : ,1 taken from me by the aid of men of my orn class. I had not only them to contend will), but almost the entire partisan press of my state wasj*ubsidized by government money ami patronage to oppose my-’ election. I sin cerely hope, sir, the time will come when such speeches as that from the Senator from South Corolirm will bo considered a lesson to the la borers of the nation.” The Kansas Question Revived, Tho 2\'ationul JntclUgencersTeser\bi the dilem ma in which the Administration will find itself at the meeting of Congress, as follows: “The telegraphic reports of tho election re cently held in Kansas, on the adoption of the Constitution framed at Wyandotte, announce that chat instrument has been ratified by a ma jority of the inhabitants of the Territory. We may therefore expect that the admission of Kan sas into ohe Union, under that Constitution, will bo asked at the hands of Congress, on the opening of that body at its approaching session. “It will he remembered, that by the terms of tho “EnglKh Conference bill,” providing for the contingent admission of Kansas into the Union under the Constitution framed at Lecompton, it was ordained that, in case the people of that Territory should refuse to accept the arrange ment then proffered by Congress, they should not proceed to the formation of a new Constitu- tion and State Government, preparatory to their admission into the Union, until after it should fiave been asceitainod, by a census taken under the auspices of the Federal Government, that the Territory contained a population equal to or greater than the existing ratio of Federal repre sentation in the House of Representatives. - -“The propriety of this rule is admitted by all as a general proposition, but its application to the case ol Kansas alone, when it was ex pressly repudiated in the admission of Oregon at the last session, does not admit of such easy explanation or justification on tho part of the Democracy. ‘Tt remains to be seen whether they will ig nore the “compromises" of the English bill, as framed by themselves less than two years ago, or whether they will insist upon a rigid adhere nce to the terms of the arrangement then con certed to serve as a graceful retreat from the L?compton controversy. The question undoubt edly presents a dilemma which leaves but little choice between its two horns, and adds another illustration to tho accumulated teachings by which history inculcates the advantages of nev er departing from the straight line of political justice, to fujlow the tortuous paths of a shift ing and temporary policy." Fate of Six John Franklin Determined, We have-only room for the following extract from a letter addressed to the English Admir alty Board by Capt. T. L. McClintock of the K-iyal Navy, who had command of the yatch “i ox,” sent out a year or two since by Lady franklin in search of intelligence of the fate of her husband, Sir John Franklin. The intel ligence is gratifying, though it is mournful to contemplate the fate of that brave party. And how great is the sorrow of the persevering but widowed heart of Lady Franklin, “Their Lordships will rejoice that our endeav ors to ascertain the fate of the “Franklin Ex pedition” have met with complete success. “At Point Victory, upon the north west coast of King William’s Island, a record has been found, dated the 25th of April, 1849, and sign ed by Captains Crozier and Pitzjamos. By it we were informed that Her Majesty’s ships Ere huf.nnd Terror were abandoned on the 23d of April, IklK, in the ice, five leagues to the N. N, " “ the survivors,—in all amounting io I#4 totii (s, o<>d»r the command of Captain u> tiie Great Fish I**l died on the f U*t*f f.-vA* n*f THE AGITATOR. HUGH yOtJNQ. Bffitor & Proprietor. WELLSBOROHGH, FA. Thursday Morning, Oct., 20,’59. Republican ‘Victories. TIOGA EIGHT SIDE UP- The Whole County Ticket Elected ! ( * PENNSYLVANIA ALL RIGHT FO R 186 0. 30,000 Republican majority! 4000 Majority against “J. B.” the “Favorite Son" tit 7tis own County. Indlanap-Gonnectlcnt, Ohio, Kansas, lowa, Pennsylvania and Minnesota REBUKE LECOMPTONISM! We give below a summary of the news from the late elections as far as received. CONNECTICUT. The town elections in Connecticut on last Monday a week, resulted mote favorably for the Republicans than ever before. Out of 105 towns beard from, the Republicans were suc cessful in 63, tke Administration in 85, and in the balance the result was either divided or did not depend upon politics. The Republicans made a net gain of seven towns. MAINE which gave a majority to the Democrats in 1855 of some 3,000, has ever since that time given a Republican majority; and a month ago at the Fall election gave 11,000 Republican majority. OHIO, Ohio has elected a Republican Governor by about 17,000 majority, and both houses of the Legislature are decidedly Republican. This is cheering intelligence because the election of 1857 gave a majority of Democratic members in both houses, and because the Legislature just chosen will have a United States Senator to elect. Gov. Chase ‘ who now retires will probably be the man. Mr. Pugh who played the toady to “J. B.” in the effort to cram Le compton down the throats of unwilling people, will have to stand back. Buchanan may give jrim the French 'Ministry, just vacated by the death of Judge Mason. No doubt be will pro vide for him as he did for Glancy Jones. INDIANA. . This State elected only County Officers ibis year, but the result is a large Republican gain. The Popular Sovereignty literature of Douglas not appreciated so much as some supposed it jwould be. MINNESOTA is this year fairly and squarely on the side of Free Labor. The latest returns show that the whole Republican State Ticket is elected by several'thousand majority. It will be remem bered that in 1857 the Republicans carried this State by a small majority, but the Democracy brought in sufficient returns from the Pembina Indian District to defeat that vote. The result then was the election of Rice and Shields as United States' Senators. The Legislature just chosen will elect a Republican Senator to take the place of Shields,. All honor to Minnesota. : lOWA. Tho State of lowa has elected her Governor and other State officers by large majorities for the Republicans. Both branches of the Legis lature are also Republican. KANSAS. The Republicans of Kansas have triumphed in the adoption of a Free State Constitution by 4000 majority. We have a letter from a cor respondent in that territory giving some details of the Battle fought for and against that instru ment, which came too late for insertion this week. Last bat not least in this list of victories is that just gained in PENNSYLVANIA. In the whole State the vote was exceedingly light, not more than two-thirds of the vote of 1850. In this county than half the vote was out, as, in 1856, Fremont’s majority was 200 more than the aggregate vote of the county this Fall. Twenty Thousand Bepubli can majority in the State is therefore enough to rejoice over. We have nearly two to one in both branches of the Legislature, while last year the Senate was Democratic. We have ten of the eleven Senators chosen this year. Ben son’s majority in this District, cannot fall short of 2500. It must be very gratifying to the friends of Buchanan that though that gentleman was present in the Democratic city of Lancaster all day, that city repudiated him by a large major ity for Cochran and Keim, and and the County honored his presence in it by a majority of 4000 against the nominees of his office holder’s Convention held in March last. Although Tioga County showed once more her unwavering fidelity to Freedom and .free labor, by the election of her entire ticket, yet THE TIOGA CLOUNTY AGITATOR. it was not as good as ittbughtto be, as it might have been with scarcely any .-effort. We shall refer hereafter"to the vote of this County and help our readers to gather from it a lesson for future remembrance. ) ~ Dr. Chase, editor of thej Towanda Her ald, and Post Master of that place; sets up a lugubrious whine oyer the fact that only ten cents—ten solitary pennies, some of them an cient copper coins, perhaps.— found their way into the “Contribution Box for the Wosbington Monument,” hanging up in said Dr. Chase’s post office, during the entire thirty days which composed the late departed month of Septem ber!' "Is not this a burning shame?” Hosts the Doctor with patriotic emotion. We think it is. Only ten cents. Just think of itl Ten cents—the same sum which D|. Chase’s Master “J. B." proposed as an equivalent for a labor ing man’s work for one day| This "lack of genuine' patriotism” on the part of the.people of Towanda, must be very disastrous to tho patriotic enterprise in question. We would not be sft all surprised if tho news of this “lack of genuine” etcetera, on the part of tho Towandi ans would cause the abandonment of the idea of building tbe proposed monument. In such an exigency what would become of your “mag nanimous offering,” or “miserable pittance,” (for Dr. Chase calls it by botn of these names) oh, Towandians ? What, we ask, would become of the Ten Cents ? . . | But we can see Goon in everything. If we are to believe what the doctor says, oh, Towan dians your lack of patriotism fcansed his “cheeks to tingle.” Wo are glad the Doctor is able to blush for you, if not for himself. “Let every one,” says Dr, Chase, “contribute something each month.” Exactly so; and in view of this suggestion, allow us to aski Was it you, Dr. Chase, who put in than Try Cents ? In con clusion, we advise the contribution man to hang up the box somewhere else, and try it for Oc tober. - SSyThe indications that 1 failing to coerce the Charlestc giving him a regular nominal) independent Democratic caj firmed by the following coni Cincinnati Commercial. Th( Young referred to recommei on his own hook “Cape Girardeau, Si “Eds. Com.: Since enclosing you the letter of General Young, of this place, to Senator Douglas, relevant to the Charleston Convention, I have seen enough of his a nswer to said letter to learn that the Judge has intimated to his el oquent friends in these parts, that if the Con vention should select another than himself, he will be an Independent Candidate. This will ,001 surprise you much, I presume. His recent letters and conversations have exhibited strong premonitary symptoms of t lis development.— Such is the determined and inexorable devotion of his frjends thnt a stormy time may be antic ipated in the Convention. You are at liberty to make whatever use of th is you may see fit.' Yours, reaper tfully, £o. ; A. P. Johnsox.” flQfThe following named gentlemen will fate their seats for the first time in the U. S. Senate, on the first Monday of December next, on which day the first Session of the thirty-sixth Congress will commence: Hon. Willard Saulsbury, of Delaware; Hon. Janies IV. Grimes, of Iowa; Hon. Lazarus IV, Powell, if Kentucky; Hon. Kingsley S. Bingham, of Michigan ; Hon. John C, Ten 1 Eyck, of New Jcsey; Hon. Thomas Bragg, of North Carolina; lion. Henry B. An thony, of Rhode Island ; E on. A. 0. P. Nich olson, of Tennosee; lion. T, IV. Hemphill, of Texas. FROM THE PEOPLE. IFor the Agitator, nize? Republicans of Tioga; A few short weeks will find us in the midst of mother Presidential campaign. Our friends in most sections of the [country are fast making ready for the coming jcontest, and shall we here put off all prepara tion until the eleventh hour ? The moral grand eur of the battle of 1800 ha i not been surpassed since the dark hours of the Revolution. The issue then to ho decided by the votes of this country will not only affect this but generations to come. By chance I overheard a conversation be tween two leading Demounts, but a few days since. They were referingto the unprecedented vote given for Fremont in 1856, and confident they were that wa never t gain poll a vote like that. In their opinion, our love for the cause we then professed had waxed cold, when the excitement attending the election bad passed away; that our party of necessity would be short lived because we "had no distinctive prin ciples”—that already many of the Republicans of ’56 had become lukewarm, and felt sure that they would follow the nominee of the Charles ton Convention. Republicans, are the above assertions true ? Have w; forgotten the great truths enunciated in the Philadelphia Platform ? Have we become dead to 1 10 noble principles of the Declaration of Indepmdenee ? Have'we lost our love of Freedom ? Have we made up our minds to let our Sou them friends control every department of government in their own way ? Have we become convinced that Chattel Slavery is right,—that ou - fellow beings who are only guilty of having a complexion differing from our own have no rig its which white men are hound to respect f In diort that during the hard fight of 1856, we were laboring for an ephemeral principle ? On the reverse, is there a Republican in Tioga cc unty who loves free dom less than he did ? Is not the cause of hu man right as dear to every one of us ? Have we seen anything to convince us that it is eith er right or expedient to extend human slavery throughout the entire length and breadth of our country ? Does not the interest of the free laboring men of our country demand its restric tion? Shall our National Territories be conse crated to freedom or slavery 1 Shall that vast domain lying between the Mississippi and the Pacific be converted into a mighty slave-pen, or shall it be kept open for the free laborer ? Shall slavery become National, and consequent ly go wherever our flag may go .throughout all future time? Shall the government, founded by the trials and blood of the revolution bo rec ognized among other nations as one, whose people believed in the justice of human slavery ? Shall we have a national slave code for the pro tection of this accursed traffic in onr Territo ries? Shall the slave oligarch be allowed to travel, throughout the free North with bis hu man property without molestation? Shall tho African slave trade-be re-opened with its attend ant train of horrors 1 Fellow citizens of. Tioga, I press these questions upon you in sincerity? Once more we must make our record against this moss,damning wrong. Once more we shall be called upon to help stay tbe march of this system which lives only by tyranny, outrage and wrong. . And where shall we be found in the coming struggle ?' In 1856' we nobly did onr duty. Our record is before the world.— Then we proudly bore the banner from the field. But, you.,will remember that our noble victory was gained only by incessant labor. Then we labored ,as one man for tbe final triumph of onr cause. If we would give the great vote we then gave, we must once more take off our coats, roll our sleeves up, and go to work in earnest. • la bor will only accomplish it. Nothing worthy of men has. ever been done without labor. Now is tbe time to commence. Let every Republican feel and act as though the success of onr cause depended upon their individual efforts. Reposing upon past victor ies will only insure defeat in the future. Let 6u.' clubs be set in motion. Let us not put.off until to-morrow what can far better he done to day. -Let us ‘ once more to tho breach. Let meetings be held and documents circulated among tho people exposing the wickedness and double dealing of the present, so called, Demo cratic party. Where shall the ball commence rolling? In what township shall the first Re publican club be organized 1 Who will begin the work?' Frank. Middlebury, Oct. 17, 1859. i Are they recorded in the archives of this Boro ? Then what are they ? Where are they ? Who made them ? What guided the surveyors ? Did they stick stakes, mark trees, set stones ; or pray, how shall a man tell when he is in or out of this city of refuge ? We suppose there are means | of discovering the true answers to all these questions. But the writer of this ar ticle has never sounded the depths of that phi losophy which guided our fathers in bounding this village as they did. We presume it was all right at the time. But New York City has been obliged from time to time to enlarge the bounds of its corporation ; so has Philadelphia; Brooklyn and Germantown are no longer sub urbs ; and we think there are some very import ant reasons why the borders of Wellsboro should be enlarged also. All these things are governed by public opinion. The writer would not be a true American not to be willing in all such mat ters to be governed by the majority. But if this general sentiment fairly expressed would require these boundaries to remain where they are, which we doubt, then should we claim the right of the private citizen at any time when aggrieved to appeal from the king mal-informed to the king well informed. The boundary we now propose for the sake of convenience and utility, is a perfect circle, extending one mile in every direction from the ccntre-stono, For convenience of finding the lino we may as well have it thus as in any quadrangular, figure. For convenience of ad joining farms, or taxation of property also, it may as well bo in a circular shape, for any ju dicious surveyor would find it very difficult to run the line of the Boro according to the lines of adjoining farms. They do not so run now. Farm lines are constantly changing by changing proprietors, and the taxation list can as well he adjusted to the line of a perfect circle two miles in diameter as by any other arbitrary line. Now for the reasons requiring some such en largement of the Boro. 1. Tor school purposes. Ever since the in corporation of the Bdro, families living within about this distance of the Boro, but outside the present contracted limits have paid their school taxes to Dclmar and Charleston—taxes nearly double the school taxes of Wellsboro, but have had no benefit therefrom in the education of their children. Until within a few months no compromise has been made between the Direct ors of ad joining districts and the Boro, to school their children in the village. The present ar rangement is liable to be disturbed by every succeeding board of Directors. Parents are therefore obliged to pay school tax and then seek a school for their children where none of that tax is applied in payment for their educa tion, but instead thereof pay tuition bills, as no adjoining district, select sohool'or academy can afford to teach them for nothing. This is, of course, a double taxation, How so many citi zens residing in the vicinity of Wellsboro have been so long content with this double taxation is a question deserving some consideration.— Give them credit for being pretty good natured also. Consider also what a good school, the year round, could be maintained if all the scholars within one mile were turned into it.— Not far from two hundred scholars' would thus be congregated under one roof. Four grades, or-departments could be kept upfwith teachers adapted to each. And if the school-house was built as it should be, all these scholars would be seated on one floor, and that floor though di vided into four rooms, capable of being thrown into one room by the adjustment of folding doors, thus adapting it for chapel, or other pub lic and common exercises, without a single scholar leaving his seat. But this article has' already grown larger than we intended for all we had to say on this subject of the enlarge ment of our Boro. The importance of the sub ject always grows in our estimation, the more we think of it, and with your permission, Mr. Editor, we will try to develop our views to any who will take the trouble to read them. J. F. C. Douglas, in case of m Convention into tion, will run as an ndidate, are con. nmunication in tho 10 letter of General Ided Douglas to run ptemher 3,1850. For the Agitator. How Wcrlinc succeeded in Liberty. A NEW DEMOCRATIC GAME. linen Young, Esc. Dear Sir; Please per mit me to give yon-a synopsis of the doings of the Mulatto-Democrats and how they tried to bamboozle and hutnbng voters at the late elec tion. Well sir, the leaders, (or those who would like to be considered leaders, just as they like to be thought the brains) of the party in Lib erty assembled at the polls quite early, armed with all kinds of tickets in order to deceive Re publican voters into voting for men they de spise. Their plan was this: A few days before election, they received a package of tickets from Wellsboro having the names of L. P. Williston and J. J. Werline printed on them aa the reg ular nominees of the Republican Party. When these would-be leaders would meet with a Ger man Republican they would ask him “Don’t you want a ticket with Williston’s nameonit?" If he said “yes,” then they would hand him one of the Williston and Wcrlinc tickets, and For tba Agitates Wcllsboro—rlts Boundaries. Liberty, Pa. Oct. 15, 1859. f??Bs*2£ffS a:Sosp2?Psf§ff» S :| ? g o ?5 s=: S S'oq *o sss.B o*w2 -• 3 S*3 3© o 2.5 2 ~ 2h02.£ ± < © © 6ST sl 2 as rs 5c ” , 2*<Hmo®P to S B ji **, 53* S* o 2 f|° B || s.srl - »|||| I.3||f £S, |* 3 I “111 2Su £, -t p- ao o ,S' >!• w *■* p ©2 2 . ° 04 a-3 .* gw . DBBp, s- 3 w ° . 9 o 5® L*l kU‘«Oi^to“^CCtoCOCOCO)-ltO^JJ*to«tOtoi*»,^,( 5 rtSSt3QOPMW^WMWQCC».-400MHg>NmWtfi«'(OOif.OMaottl S kjwwMO- wto>-»o«oc»K5to v ®*a» to S*s *o <■* go to -» H»«asoM»tsi S g o5^(BCOOCO*-‘MMWg><geaa-T^w»M»Ca»gtsOOt»M^Ott; eo tA CO l-t ■-> to 4i3CO‘-‘C7*KS Mtn i- 1 M W C> tO tO _ 0909 -O tO CO to to >—^ “ K r w W >-• W < r? u.tf'>£ k -JK3-'o©KsN>COi«*MJkt©)^t" ,^We"WWti»MW*9P*o*WMO«Jka( M‘JSeoo«w<-«M>-o'«i'eoio''fSsosoi«>e>ooi»-MO»-M*-ee5«| to to I-* »-• to ** to *-* to tO- ' MCKWM* O>MU to W *tUM6<U J a t_, |_l H-> l-» t-* ( iSLiwio tooootoo«DCotototo»-‘'^to>*to“feoto£coiowtocoto.uto»otorfkto< ,»$ CgjS o tc O ,MHOCMO»MO a w m w w o O S O to QC' | WMNOit'B&iM<eoO*tO<»M CC( I »-o ] co to ** to •-- to tfc.®»-«o*»oto_i--2!'r , S*Sf._t;2»fc»tototo< i—i oa»u<mhcom Aa»-^oo^to«9ct< 2>oto w eyt OMO* K 9 M& M KMO to tO tO Co CO OMCeC> (O O Cfi6'o»“**WOb'O l ,9 ■^t^ a »9tfbtooto“o to* I"**' l_l k—< N*i , !_I I—i to to CO tO tO CO tO CO itw >-* CB it>» to «T CO to CO CO tO CO to to to tO to i£k o «o to c»^e>oo>a:‘‘«too»rf»MCocp > J*^ MM <g >M^H| ** |fc>,<,M moe*9Mai O I k—i / o >u •->• wto m m n rf. cj e» ki m co to *0 to to to *-/ to N^aA^OMMO 1 to MOrf-cciotsooMw oxt-‘c»«oo^to*otototototoi—»tototototot>toi&.*b. ( o I ( to tO CO to !-• «•» to OO K 3 Ok. to to tO t>3 Coco to to to to >£. oooc QMcoeooq»ttQ-JC>>-«'^c>o M o«* O Mi^ikCBCOHeoCOMeU 09 O’ to 05 ■— V> rf* C*< wI, • 1 1 t—< W t—> ( W NOMWQ it O N-»C> «S«»M m t~> m m co i-s cd CO I M H M *-* ) CD HCi9>COt9HttCt9tOU «»<®WWC O Q T- {X Wl9 g^CD^J— hJSC^~rf»,Cp->j< O i ►-* / H W u t 9 I- 1 U< W C M C.l M •-» itw w fcs OkOM 09CO M»3 tC ti M 09 'os »r>"ok3oMV<*-ic) cd t-j cr cp i— l - o y< i>* -? <Bea>aic,io*.-it OO ft I H M M w M ) 0« JV'0»V«0“0’09 09*<rC?»<00000» tt o*» « OC( t“* M ip* »9 •—• C’ HfM M W 9> C*s M Co O' *J4i W OK— l >■9 e-‘-«oto , -s-‘0>^ww’"‘^tJW | MM^^NOifcccN< MX A. few V *-C oS~iCC-“M»-WOt9»»ttO-»«t9 0M > 4«'eit.<gO»pt9tCOa 9 fc. to U U lU i*-S>JO*VS 9* V» V* CJfcS «*-*o VO lo ’ thus surreptitiously smuggle a vote into the balk t box for Jack Werline! Talk about ballot box stuffing in New York and San Francisco! Ballot-stuffing is getting to be an established democratic principle, and in the country it only lacks the means and the muscle to be quite as popular as in the cities above named. But to proceed. It: was well understood, of course, that every snehl vote smuggled into the ballot-box forWer line under cover of WilHston’s name, was one less for Lewis Mann. A few Republicans were deceived in this way. I think not over twenty four. How proud Mr. Jack Werline must be of his majority over Lewis Mann more than his majority oyer Williston in this township! But besides tlie Willisfcon and Werline ticket dodge,.they had several other dodges. They had tickets with Werline and Smith on them; and another ticket with Werline's name alone, as perhaps, they were ashamed of the übiqui-l tous John Smith. At any rate the mulatto democrats qf this town did not care much whether John Smith (whose name they thought to lie very suspicious,) was defeated or not, so they could only elect Wcrline. That was their great drive, and I shall be greatly surprised if Wcrline has any more votes in this county whcjre he is known than the Sfaamocratic State Ticket. -M-A-H-R-I-E-D- | Or the 2d inst.. bv Ira Patchcn Esq., of Covington Boro, Mr. HARVEY WM. SMITH of Charleston, Pa. and Miss SARAH ANN HAVENS of Covington. 0 o the 9th hist., by the same THOMAS CLEMONS and Mrs. ALICE JANE HATES, both of Covington. On the I2th inst, by Rev. S. J. M’Cullough, Mr* JACOB U. WESTBROOK of Middlebury and Miss MARY A. DUTTON, of Tioga. At Tioga Pa., by Kev. N, L. Reynolds, Mr. ROB- r ERT BROWN of Canisteo, N. Y., to Miss MARTHA J. FjRUTSMAN of Tioga. TVISSOLUTION.—The firm of Robinson & Co. is I / this day dissolved, the subscriber haring par chased the interest of Mr. B. N. Payne, in the said firm. The undersigned will continue the business at the same stand. All persons indebted to the late firm wilt please make payment as soon as convenient. Corning, Oct. Ist. E. E. ROBINSON- Stolen. ON the night of Sept. 30, at the Hotel of David Hart, a BLACK HON SKIN OVERCOAT— stamped '‘First Quality.” Lining blue, with a very little black and white; velvet cuffs lined with red.— Any person giving me any information, or returning said coat to me wUI bo liberally rewarded. HIRAM H. NICKERSON. Eaet Charleston, Oct. 20. WEUSBORO’ ACADEMY. Wcllsboro’, Tioga County, Pcnna* Luther R. Burlingame, A. B.; - - Principal jUiss ELIZA J- BEACH, - - - - Aa*i*tunt. The Winter Term will commence on Wednesday. Bee. 7tb, and will close on Friday, Feb. 17th, 1860, Tuition. Juvenile Department. - Common Englioh Bmncbea, Higher English Crunchen Language*, Drawing, (extra) $2,50 - 3.50 4.50 - &.00 3,00 By order of Trustees, J. F DOKALDSON, Prct’t. IFollsboro, Oct, 20, 1559. J’ > ' jNEW MILLINERY SHOP. MISS PAULINA SMITH has added to her large Stock lately purchased from Mrs. GRIERSON, a freab assortment, direct from the City, of Bonnets, Ribbons and Flowers, Silks, Laces, Velvets &c. Plain and Colored Straw and Clack Bonnots, Head - i Cresses, Fancy Goods, Etc. From her knowledge of, and experience in the busi ness she believes herself able to give satisfaction to all who may favor hor with their custom. The patronage of the Ladies of Wellsboro and vicinity respectfully solicited. jS£f BLEACHING AND PRESSING done in a superior manner. [Juno 30. OcL 20th. SPECIAL AraODNCEffIEIIT, moil tin: Quaker City Publishing House. 100,000 Catalogues. NEW, ENLARGED AND REVISED, NOW READY ; FOR DISTRIBUTION. Superior Inducement* to the Public. JJ££f*A new and sure plan for obtaining GOLD and SILVER WATCHES, and other valuable Prizes.— Full particulars given in Catalogues, -which will bo sent free to all upon application. Valuable Gifts, worth from fifty cts. tosloo, GUAR ANTEED to each purchaser. $lOO,OOO in Gifts have been distributed to my patrons within tbo past six months—slso,ooo to be distributed during the next six months. The inducements offered Agents are more liberal than those of any other house in the business. > Having been in the publishing and Bookselling bu siness for the last eight years, my experience enables me to conduct tho Gift Enterprise 'with the greatest satisfaction to all. JSf* AGENTS WANTED in every Town and Co. fpr particulars address DUANE R ULISON, i Quaker City Publishing House, < 33 South Third Street, Pctober 20. 2m. Philadelphia, Pa. 'tnmjooQ ‘I’ISPA ‘nogaag *w>inmii ‘ 3a u«n. ‘>110.1)11^ ROBINSONS BOOK STOW NEWS BOOK AND BOOK BINDER Corning, N. Y. SCHOOL AND MfsCBLMHOM ii i BLANK BOOKS 1 AND- S T ATIONEE PAPER HANGING ASB MAGAZINES, NEWSPATB CHEAP PUBLICATIONS, MUSIC, GOLD PENS, PICTURES, MAPS, &c., BOOKS BOVXB IK JAT STYLE ffi MAT BE DESIRED. Orders by Mail promptly attended to* E. E. BOBINSON. Corning, Oct. 20. . A<tnilniBtr&<9i’i Sale* 117 pursuance of an order of the Orphan f Tioga County, the undersigned tue estate of Philemon Culver d«d., ri public sale »t tbo Court House in WeuiwW'* day the 12lh day of November ? ei u m. of same day, the following situate in Charleston township hi * J". One lot? bounded on the north hy ' i rt iJ Alanson Thomson, on the cast by P u j •!. i»j south by land of Francis Wingate, sad ' eJj . of Joel Culver and others— -containing® , p five acres with about forty-five acres } y B frame houses, three frame barns, ® *' lea g and water privilege and ao orchard there • Also—A lot bounded on the non J road, on the east by Nelson Austin, on west by public highway— containing tw improved, witji a frame bouse and ore Also—A lot bounded north by lh« t, ree k,jo3 the east by the old creek road andasms by last named creek and new road «» .j,g grist mill to tb© State road, and w«* named new road—containing about *e -with a frame house and 80 thereon. . v.i.nee fc 51 TERMS.—One third down; the w»* equal annual payments thereafter, wit time of sale. A. E. NILES A-' Sept. 13, *59. PRUDENCE CLLYEtLJ—- Notice of Partition-^ To thf hfirt in law of John Oorsail djf d. widow, and Benjamin Corzatt, John Co&* ’ j & Amos Corzatt, George Corzatt. Sin*; 1 * 11 Barbara Holms, and ffm. Holms, Ellen *!*',]{<« Raymond,Catharine Hyde,and John «, of John Corzatt dec'd, or their legal notice that by virtue of the order of tne » and for Tioga County Penua. I shall £#i tioa and make partition of the R eai _r 3tA s »,. o^' tf Corzatt dec’d. situated in Jack«oa Town- *h f c bounded north by Waterman Mclntyre, - the east by Warren WelK on the south pj ij end west by Natbhn k Morris’ Seeley, co entrant! two tenths acres, with abjmt *** *. lB jt a log houso, frapie bam, and an nppleorc ‘ rof • building* thereon, on Thursday l “V,‘■-,-jock, # ' next, on the premises aforosrid, at *- 0 fc D oti« where all persons interested will pleas* era themselre accordingly. S. I. -PO 1 Sheriff’s Office Wellsboro* Oct W 1* 53 - Oct 6. tf. HILDRETH Sf W® I*’ 1 *’ CASH DEALERS IS GROCERIES, PROVISIONS,^ Hats, Caps, Boots and SM*J One door below Holiday’s Hotel* Cosh paid for Hides and all kind* 0 pji/Tfli pH.# Welhboro, Oct. 6th* ‘mw 3 'fl'Og <33o u ‘^VSH ‘dco'j 'now 'aowg ‘streag ‘3SJOJJ f asoy
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers