- s__ i h !■ : - _ TTTFi '■ X TIvVTJ iJu ill jJ f jljl A. ’ JL r -Vi/. -L \j '? M “.lilast paper. . T*i»paper will then be stopped r i v • ! . i ' ‘ i : ; ' l “,J f s fi£r ther remittani < be,received. By this or- •• • \ . , ' ',= ■'. j =~--' 1 ■ — ; —' ■fat gin lonU l "«nl v no man can'; « brought in debt to the rnngf loB Aj ' i ' P r '°j' r ' Aa i T ATOJt is tbo icial Paper of tbe County, j.Xlaree and steadily' circulation reacft • iCin every neiebborb, y d in tbe County. It is sent ri if voitam to any Pest Office within the county litoil, but whose-most convenient post office may; be io^alness n cafds,°not y exoeeding 6 lines, paper indu ''' year.. ' . i '' , SINBSSi®BGTCgr. OWBEtffc S. F. WILSOK, NETS * 601 ireEWOKS AX LAW, will " d the Court <‘K Tioga, Pottor aadMoKean - j S. B. BBK S , fEY a np counsellor at law blkiand,|mooa CO. PA. nUUnJe ofCoufißOlora there 1» safety.”— Bible. _ 1858,.ff- j . re.*- DABtT, DENTIST. _L— /''vFFlCE: ! athi? residence near the MSSB&tXj Academy.' All, work pertaining to ltao ofi business done promptly and 1 . M ■ [Apri1.22,1858.] HOUSE COSSI-Nfl, N. T. - A. Field I Proprietor. ieta taken to and fijim tho Depot free of charge. Mai Gtf " ;J. C. WHITTAKER, 1 Hydropathic pigtieian and Surgeon * i EIK LAN D, Tl'OaA CO., PENNA. \ ■Will visit patients in &U parts of the County, orre e.Lrk tbem'for treqtmenVat his house- [Jnne 14,] IZA-lK iviijLTOW HOUSE, v C. YERMIiyVA,. PROPRIETOR. Gaines, jrfejjti County, Pa. BIS is anew hotel| seated within easy access of the best fisßing anX'bnnting grounds in Northern Nd pains will be spared for tho accommodation lessors seekers kntjtho traveling public, pnl 12. 1860. v ; Pa. of,p I ja. oUcoee, 'SAH'fES -iNlp. BAIBDRESStiR. ' I3P in the rear of the Post Office. Everything in Bis line will be dhnfj as well and promptly as it be dona in the saloons. Preparations for re ing dandruffi and .Ratifying the hair, for sale ,p. Hair and dyed any color. Call and tVellsboro, ‘Sept* dll, 1859. can mov che; ice. THE COHSj IpiG JOURRAI.. George Wi Pratt, Editor and Proprietor. 13 published at Cbrnf !g, Steuben Co., N. Y., at One, Dollar and Fifty C; rts per year, in The Jot real is Republican Ip politics, and has a circula tion peaching into ever:* part of Steuben County. Thiso desirous of estejilUng their business into thatj anc the adjoining Counties toill find it an excellent ftd rei bising medium. Address as above. DRES|^ TiTISS M. A. JOHNSON, respectfully announces to |\f the citizens of VSellaboro and vicinity, that she' rooms' & Elliott's Store, where abf is prepared, to egf euto all orders in the line of DSBSS MAKING, paving had experience in the business, she feels consent that she can give satisfac-' tie* to all who may. fas ?r her with-their patronage. ; Sept. 29, 1859. ' 4 JOHN B. SHAI^JSPEAB, i " tailor. , HAVING opened £lB Shop in the room over B. 8., Smith £ Son's gjtore, respectfully informs the citizens ©fWollsboro’ vicinity,ihot he is prepared: to Execute orders in his/Une of business with prompt-, net i and despatch Cutting derfe on ehort notice. Oct. 21/jJsB.—6m d. Bfcos, n. i).. Graduate of ifvffalo Medical College, HAS established itself in the* practice of Medi cine-and the village of Tioga, and wi 1 promptly attend unprofessional calls. -Office at Li H. Smith’s Hotel, will always be found except wlen absent on professional business. Particular aUiption paid to the diseases of wc men and children, S - - Cjaga, May 24, 186(3; *- > ■ - N, iJtJ BOIS, - Sp| /3JSORGB .F, HrUMPHEET has opened a new \X Jewely Store Tlosa VlUara, Tioga County, Pa. Wh«re he 1> pwtuuNjpto do all kinds of Watch, Clock and Jewelry repairU ip, in a workmanlike manner. All Wo 4i? w j lrroDt « a t 0 bJ* entire satisfaction. >r. do'flot nreteal.todo work belter (ban any atbw. .™* we dan dg ha good work aa can be done in tag cities otellewbfte. Also Watches Plated. _ I S. GEORGE F. HUMPHREY, Wega, Pa,, MarfVl*, 1880. (1 Saefratesr to tfc* of tftt &vta of iFmOom anit tfcc SprcaO of ?£caXtfjg mcform. WHILE THERE SHALE A WRONG UNSIGHTED, i AND ■ UNTIL “MAN’S INHUMANITY TO MAN" SHALL CEASE, AGITATION. MUST CONTINUE, foL. m IpO WE LL&WARNEB'S COMMERCIAL COLLEGE. ; LOCATES) OVEH THE SDBQCEHAKKA TABLET BASE, j BINGHAMTON, Iff. T, i Boontfopea for instruction from# A. M. to P. M. | FACULTY. D. Principal, Professor of the Science of Accounts, i ; Practical Accountant, author of Lowell's Treatise upon i Book Beeping, Diagrams illustrating the same* Ac. John Rankin, Commercial Accountant, Professor of Book* Keeping and Practical Mathematics. '7. J. Curtis, Assistant Teacher jn the Book-Keeping Be : partmeni. ' w ——^ A. J. Warner, Professor of Practical and Ornamental Pen j manship, Commercial Calculations and Correspondence. . LECTURERS. Son. DANamS. DiCDNgoN, Lecturer on Commercial Law an< Political Economy. !Hon. Ransom Balcom, Lecturer on Contracts, Pro minis sar; ' Notes and Bills of Exchange. -He?. Dr. K Andrews, Lecturer on Commercial Ethics. % EXAMINING COMMITTEE.' Box. Sa&ucAN D, Phelps, Wm. K, o£boen, Esq. f i ' t Tract R. Morgan, Esq. * i The object of -this College is to afford all an opportunity 0 a thorough Business Education. - ; The Books and Forms are carefully arranged by practice 'accountants expressly for this Institution, and embrace al the recent improvements. ’ : The course of instruction comprises every department o ibuslness. The learner will be-thoroughly taught the scienc : and practice of Double Entry Book-Keeping as applied to th •following kinds of business. Ranking, Commission, Steambcatlng, Kail ■reading, Forwarding, Freighting, foreign Shipping, Ac. ' Ladies Department entirely separate from that'of-the geo tlemen. ; Students can enter College'at any time and receive indl vldual instruction. By this arrangement every student i : permitted to progress as,rapidly os his enterprise and nbilit .will permit, and when thoroughly perfect and competent ‘ will receive a Diploma which will enable him to review a : pleasure. ' ; Time to complete the course from 6to 12 weeks. No vacs lions. Board $2 and $2,50 per week. Assistance renders ■ to graduates in procuring situations. TERTIS. For Book-Keeping, full accountant’s course, inclndin Practical Penmanship, Commercial Computations and Dlplt ma(Tim« unlimited,) - - - - - $35 0 Sam© course for ladles, (separate apartment - 20 0 Penmanship and Arithmetic, • - 10 0 Teacher’s course in Penmanship, practical and orma-. mental, - - . WO Twelve lessons in practical Penmanship • ■ • 2 £ Occasional classes will be formed in For farther particulars send for a circular. Biughmpton, Sept. 8,1569. IMPORTANT NATIONAL WORKS. , PUBLISHED BY D. APPLETON t CO.' 346 & 348 Brdadway, Now York. THE/ following works are sent to Subscribesa'in any paft of the country, (upon receipt of retail price,) by mail or express, prepaid: | The New American Cyelopedia. A popular - Dictionary of General Knowledge. Edited by George Ripley and Charles A. Dana, willed by anumerousselect corps of wfi ‘ ters in all branches of Science, Art, and Literature. Thp work is being published in abont 15 largo octavo volnm®, ■ each containing 750 two-column pages. Tots 1,11,112, Ir, ; V, VI, and IX, are now ■'ready, each containing : near original articles. An additional volume will fe . published once in about three months. * * I Price, in Cloth, $3; Sheep, $3,50; Half Morrocco, $4; Hilf • Russia, $4,50 each. j The-New American Cyclopedia is popular without beidg , superficial, learned, but not pedantic, compreheasive butstjjf ; ficiently detailed, free from personal pique and party prqjjb dice, fresh and yot accurate. It is a complete statement bf : ell that is known upon every Important topicwitbln the ' scope of human intelligence. Every Important article inut bos been specially written fqr its pages by men who are ak ; thoritios upon the topics of which they speak. They are ne . quired to bring the subject up to the present moment; to state Just how it stands nmo. AJI the statistical information is from the latest reports; the geographical accounts kelp pace with tho latest explorations; historical matters include the freshest just views; the biographical notices not only' sneak ol the dead but of tho living... It Is a library of Itself, ABRIDGMENT OF THE DEBATES OF CONQRESS.I— Being a Political History of the United States, from-the IXILI\ X ""‘rieUes of Althea, Cnlycanthus Dectzia. Lilacs, Spiraea, Syringias. Viburnums, WigiUaß&Lc. OF Paeontes, Dahlias, Phloxes, Tulips, X 1 W aLIVO** "Hyacinths, JVarcissis; Jonquils! LU lies, 4c. f GRAPES—AII varieties. - j Peabody’s New Uautrbols Strawberry. 4 doz. plants, 15. Orders respectfully solicited. | for Grafting, Budding, or Pruning will bo promptly attended to.' Address j Dec. 16, ’5B. H. D. DEMINA, W boro, la. Tioga county court proclamation.—whefeas, the Hun, Robert 0., White, President Judge for theHth Judicial District of Pennsylvania, and A. Humphrey aril J. C. Whittaker, Esq's. Associate Judges in Tioga county, lave issned their precept, bearing date the 10th day of June, A. D. 1860, and to me directed,“for tho holding of Orplfan’s Court, Court of Common Pleas, General Quarter Sessiomfand Oyer and Terminer, at Welishoro, .for tho County of Tjoga, on the first Monday of September (being 3d day,) 1860, |and to continue two weeks. . „ , _I, Notice is therefore hetehy given, to the Coroner, Joyces of the Peace and Constables in and tor tho county of Tjoga, to appear in their own proper persons, with their record*, in quisitions, examinations and remembrances, to do those things which of. their offices and in their behalf appertain to be dodo, and all witnesses and other persons pro seedling in behalf of the Commonwealth against any person, orfper sons, are required to be then and there attending, ami nil to depart at their peril. Jurors ore requested to be pmjctdal in their attendance at the appointed time, agreeably to nftlce. Given under my hand, sod, seal at the Sheriff’s Office, in Welishoro, the Ist dsy of Augustin tho year of .our lord one thousand eight hundred aad sixty. | SIMEON 1. POWER. Anew article of stove volish.-t-Foi Sale at Roy’s Drng Store. , ■ | PERRY DAVIE’S PAIN KILLER\in largejbot .tles. For sale at Key’s Drug Stojre. WHEAT FLOUR, tip top and cheap, all - f i WRIGHBS, T>ROXHER Jonathan's Furniture Polish, 1) 25 sent*. For sale at Ray’s Brag Sh HONEY OF LIVERWORT, for Coughs and fields, ' Price 25 cents. At Roy’s Drug St<|re. WELLSBORO, TIOGA COUNTY. PA., WEDNESDAY MORNING, AUGUST fe.ISCO. | REMKMBEANCE. The grass is on thy gra-ve, Mother, { And xnony a year has fled B!nce my heart grew sad and restless I At the thocht that ye wervdead: But oh I I never will forget , Thy last sad look at me— A look that only mother's lore To mother’s een could gie. This is my birth-nighty and nnsocht, .. Anld scones flit o’erjmy brain; Close round our Are, op creepie-s tools, Ken'd faces smile again; Ay, tearfn’ een, and joyfu’ looks, Around that fire I see— * . “Wee hearts a' thrill wl f mother’s "-tales’* 1 O’ soitow and o* glee. Oh! lowly was'my bairnhood’a tame, And poverty was there; But love abed brightness round the hearth. And soothed a mother’s core— j A 'mother mad© our hkme a spot u O’ sunshiny aye to me; And bright within the past it lies As moonlight on the sea. A widow’s hearth was thine, Mother, t Since first thy fees I mind; [ And ohi what a weary toil was thine, Oar bread and does to find: Ay, weary toil—and hjanger whiles, That it\t nod pinch might feel, _ yor thy-balrna were aj thy riches, An* ye lo’ed them—oh how weell Oh! my heart swells Jilgh within me, j Apd the tears rin frae my een, [ As thy trials rise befdre me, Now wi' clearer vision seen— Trials salre, bnt never spoken, Though they -pressed thy body doon— Trials ken’d by nane bnt pnir folk, And the God that dwells a boon. But time brings nnco changes ;' And that heart now. kens noo pain; And.the bairns wba shared its bleasins Now hae balruiea o’ their ain; Aniaie blessed wi' cozie dwellins, Where a meal they aye can spare: And the een that fain would see it,J Now are dimmed for evermair. The grogs is on thy grave. Mother, And roony a year has fled, Since my heart grew fcad and restless At the thocbt that ye were ds&d: Batch! I never will forget Th y last sad look at roe— / A look that only mother’s loro To mother's edfc could gie. t X. , — Chamber, f Journal . “The Keystone of the Federal Arch” was never overborne in a Presidential contest save in 1(824, when she went (with a plurality of the Electors throughout the Union) for Jackson, but was beaten by the election of Adams in the House. This hardly makes an exception to the rule that “As goes Pennsylvania, so goes “ the Union.” She went for “Polk, Dallas, and, the Tariff of ’42” in '44, and was rewarded for it by the passage of the Tariff of '46 by the party she thus elevated to power —Polk recom- I mending and signing, and Dallas giving his casting vote in the Senate to pass the bill. He now luxuriates therefore in the best office the country has to give, while Pennsylvania is to day poorer by Hundreds of Millions in property, and Malf a Million of Population, because of that fatal vote. She will probably lose two.if Babers of Congress by the new she might have held her own, if d that vote been reversed, and j 12 thus been allowed to stand, | er immense mineral resources,! t and healthful development.— 1 necessity for Protection tci Iron would by- this time have passed__away, through the gradual perfection and cheapening of our Iron-making processes under the stimulus of a secure and expanding market, had the Tariff of '42 but stood unchanged to this day. Pennsylvaniafe slow, but she feels and re members; She was only carried for Buchanan by concerted and gigantic frauds at her prece ding /State. Election—by trunks-full of forged Naturalization Certificates distributed along her Canals and Railroads, at the same time that her most conspicuous and noisy Know-Nothings were the bought and supple servitors of her Democratic Managers. Mo.ney taken indirectly j from the Federal Treasury paid for these tune ful. patriots, whose loud vociferations that “the “ American ■ party shpuld not be sold out,” thinly covered the sale they had already made of it to the head-brokets of Buchanan De mocracy. I i This game was tried again in ’5B, but it never does the second time. Thousands of dollars— as, were-testified, most reluctantly, before the Covode and other Investigating Committees last Winter—were spent by the Democratic wire workers in getting up and running “Straight American” tickets in Philadelphia and its vi cinity, which did not receive one vote for every ten dollars they invested. Mr, Jacob Broom— who had been an “American” Member of the XXXIVth Congress, and been beaten en the Fusion ticket in ’56, now ran as a “Straight “ American” in one of the Philadelphia Dis tricts, and received about one vote in every sixty or seventy cast. He is now going his length (ostensibly) for Bell and Everett. In spite of all the distraction that could be made or bought, the united Opposition or “Peo “ pie’s party” carried Pennsylvania by over Twenty-five Thousand majority, and carried it again last-year on aj diminished- vote—there being neither Governor nor Members of Con gress to choose—by" Seventeen Thousand.— Never before was Pennsylvania carried two years in succession against that which calls itself Democracy. And the “People’s party,” thus solidly triumphant, was invited by nanle to send Delegates to the Chicago Convention, and they were not only sent bat heeded. They did not obtain their first choice, but their second was conceded without hesitation. They named Abraham Lincoln as; a man for whom their State would vote; and their' choice did much to seorfre his nomination. And their constitu ents have heartily ratified their selection; If it were possible to concentrate the votes of the Breckinridge and Douglas factions on one Electoral Ticket, and I then add the five or six thousand votes of those who protend to be sup porting Bell, they might still make a respeota- ■ ble contest. But the Douglas men have re- ! solved that they will yotefor none other t(ian o clean Douglas ticket, which the Breckinridge men will minors support than they would one pledged totemte for John Brown’s ghost. They are sustain the Electoral Ticker set tled last Mareh—knowing that it is mainly for their man—rb«|t,this the Douglas men wilt not touch. The upshot will be that the tailors who have trustedthe Bell fuglemen in Philadelphia with new suits bn the strength of the sale of their stock and influence noxtjOctober, will have to wait for theirpay St least a year longer.— Prom the New York Tribune. PENNSYLVANIA. There can be-bo transactions this Fall, unless at ruinous]; low prices. If the Election were to take place nest week, nobod; doubts that Lincoln Penn sylvania by from Fifty to One Hundred Thou sand majority, and time isqaiteaa likely to in crease as reduce it. The,October State Election will prove little, as Foster for Governor is like ly to receive the votes of Breckinridge, Douglas, and Bell men together. He keeps mum as be tween Breckinridge and Douglas, though his sympathies are understood to be with the lat ter; and the Bell-ringers must go for him in order to prove that, like Sir Boyle Roche, they, have still “a country to sell.”' If Curtin car ries the State for Governor, who will want to buy them ? Wo anticipate, therefore, a heavy vote for Foster, yet not enough to elect him.— The People are for Lincoln; they think of the gallant fight be made for Clay and Protection in '44, when they wore swindled into voting for “Pollj, Dallas, and the Tariff of '42," and they will render him their substantial thanks this Fall. His.majority will be overwhelming. Meantime, we rejoice to hear that the proper -efforts are being made to call out the full Oppo sition vote in October. The State is being thoroughly canvassed; oar friends will have a better organization this Fall than ever before, fin'd will poll over Two Hundred Thousand Votes for Curtin in and at the least Two Hundred and Twenty-five Thousand for Lincoln iu November. The distractions of their triple-headed adversaries will probably give them the State; but they do not rely upon tfaat. Jt will not satisfy them to beat the strongest of the opposing tickets; they mean to beat the aggregate vote oast forlhem all, and we believe they will. THE, CONFESSION OF A DEMO CHAT, A clever correspondent of the Milwaukie i Sentinel writes of an incideht on the Hudson River Railroad in this wise. An old man sat by his side, and, finally addressing him the Milwankiean said: 1 “Sir, you seem to have travelled a great dis tance ?" “Yes, some two thousand fniles.” “Ah, indeed ; what part of the West?” nn bis p)ans until Italy is in deed free, “from the Alp jto the Adriatic,” is. . abundantly manifest by tjn'o c f his latest prec- -s lamatdons to his soldiers, published at Palermo, in which he reminds them that “many of their" brethren are still in slavery,|whom they haw sworn to release”—that “the! liberty of Ita v reposes on their bayonets”—that “the youth of Italy must bo led ter new combats and new vie-., tories before it .can return to the sweets of Tifa;: and the"embrace of wife and children.” . diers of GaUtifimi,” he eidaims, “prepares ' finish the glorious work Which you- haw BO ’ began." ■ Naomi, the daughten,rrnn ■53,00 $4,50 $6,00 6.00 6,50'8,00 -' 7,00. ■ . 8,50 , 10,00 [eraohet V. Johti lor in their na-