Ptifllcatloai. 1 tio qa county Agitator u published TB Wednesday Morning, airmailed to subscriber! yetj reasonable price of;, -J , *g. O nE DQIiLAg RES' ANNUM, . ,; ( n advance. It is intended to notify every ,rl .. " when the term for which he has paid shall ’"tutted by the figures bn the printed label on the ’ f 1 paper. The paper will then be stopped ’ in ‘farther remittonee ’ be.jpeeeived. By this ar. * tB o .man can he bought in debt; to the ' AsrrA’ 0E > s Ae' Official Paper of the County, linp o- n d steadityinerehsing circulation reach-' 1 every neighborhood-in tjhnCoonty. Xtis sent V „„,tpye to any Post Offlaewithin the county tat whose most convenient post office-may be ’’adjoining County. • . , jiness Cards, not exceeding 5 lines, paper incln ss per year. ■ ■ ■ § j , business wrectoby. i LOW RET & JSij:E. WIESON, tTORSBYS i OftftfSK&OES AT LAW, will attend the Court.of Pottor and Mike an •ies. rWelbbero’.Peb. I,ip3.] ■ C. S.DARTT, dentist, OFFICE ftt Ills, residence near the Academy, ill' work pertaining to •- Hoe of business done promptly and i [April 22, 1858.} dTckissos house cansisftil'iN. T, . A. Field, '•) ■st« taken to and from the ' 7 jr. C. WHITVAKEB, Hydropathic PhysicianPpnd Surgeon. ELULANOI ill vi«U patients in all parte jof the County, or ra re them for treatment at hisfeouee. ' [June 14,], J. E9ERT, ttorket and- counsellor at law Wellsooro, Tioga Co., If a- Will demote faU ticlussvclj to the practice' of law. . Collections in aev of the Northern counties ofi Pennsjl * nov-21,60. PEfIfISYUYAIfIA HOUSE. ■of Main Street and the Avenue, WelUboro, Pa, J. W. BIGOSY, PROPRIETOR. J popular Hotel, having ieen ro-flttcd and ro jbed throughout, ia now ogeo; to the public as a :iosB bouse. _ ] IZAAK WAJiTOJT HOUSE, c. YEJiillE YEA, fiXOPfIfBTOS. Gaines, Tioga Ct§mty, Pa. IS is anew hotel locatedycUhin easy access of the best fishing andhuntitf| grounds in Northern So pains will be spired for the accommodation ■asure seekers and the traV-eling public, ril 12. iB6O. ' ft 1 0.0. C OL E, BARBER AND MA[^l-i> RESSER. HOP in the rear of the PosgOffice. Everything in his line will be done as well and promptly as it be done in the city Preparations forre ing dandruff, and beautifying the hair, for sale ap. Hair and whiskers any color. CaU and 1 Wellsboro, 'Sept. 22, 185» • THE COBKIRfi tfOIIRSAL. eorge W. Pratt, Edit# and proprietor. ) published nt Corning, Slettjen Cd-j-N. Y., at One Dollar and Fifty Cents per Lear, in advance. The malts Republican in politics, and has a oircula -1 reaching into every part ijf Steuben County.— >je desirous of extending thSJir business into that the adjoining counties will Alnd it an excellent ad- Using medium. Address as ' ibbve. FURS! PURS £ FURS! IDRS—The subscriber haspjust received ft large - assortment of Mura for ladiis-wear, consisting of TCB CAPES & VICTORIES, 1 FESSCH SABLE CAPtfSJt VICTORINES, i 'Eli 'JINK CA PES & J ifkES, ROCK MARTIN CAPifS & VICTORINES. Ihese comprise a small quantity of the assortment, ey have been bought nt low Qdces nhd will bo sold iitremelv low prices for cash}; at the New Hat Store Curnidg, N. Y. b S. P- QUICK. TOM US I Cgl A If S . CHOICE LOT of tho bespiihporled Italian anp i German - . * ] VIOLIN STRINGS. Is Viol strings, Giiftar strings, Toning Forks idges Ac.. lust received and for sale at • EQYS3 DRUG STORE. WELLSBORO pH OTEU, WELLSBOROUGS, -PA. 1 FARR, - - . - -;i - PROPRIETOR. -1 {Formerly of the UnitedtStutea Hotel,') aving iensedahis well knowh and popular House, ills tbe patronage of the pVlblic. With attentive llbbligmg waiters, together with the Proprietor's ivledge °I the business, he hopes, to make the stay those who stop with! hint; both pleasant and tcahle, \* fellsboro, May 31, 1860, PICTURE FRAMING. MXTIET GLASSES, Portraits; Pictures, Certificates , Eogravicgs, Needle' Work, A#*, Ac., framed in i ne;ie ; i manner, in-plain aad ornamented Gilt, a Wood; Blank Walnut, Oaki'Mahogahy, Ac. Per is leaving any article for framing, can feceive them it day frnmed in any style th|y wish and hung for So. Specimens at j; -SMITH'S BOOK STORE. ~~ E.' IS. BENEDICT, -M. D-, Vf OTj'LD inforin tbe public thjat he is permanently T located' in_Elkland Boris) Tioga Co.-'Pa., and 'repared by thirty year?* expedience to treat all dis mof the eyes and the|r appendagestfa scientific n clplcs, tLOsi that be can curse Without rail# that artful disease, called St. Vwis* Dane®, (Chorea I it!,) and will attend to other business io lino of Physic and Surgery-? Elkiand Boro, August 8, ‘lB6o^rjj mcoitoY a ilailey, \T O.ULD inform tbe public, laat-hdving purchased T the Mill property, kuoww as th'e ‘‘CULVER and having repaired supjffied it with ir bolts and machinery,* arc prepared to do CUSTOM RK entire satteftujtionnf its patrons. With tbe aid our experienced miller, Mr. £,jD« Mitchob-and tbe •paring efforts of tbe proprietors, they intern! to : P op an establishment second ip none in the county. paid for wheat and corn, ftinl the highest market Ce given. • . |DW. McINROy, >«chU, 1860. tf. TIOGA REGU3LATOR. 'EOKGE F. HUMPHREY* has opened a new " Jewely Store at :■ Ti<sa Village, Tioga? County, Pa. l cr = to is prepared to do all Bpd« of Vatoh, Clock' Jewelry repairing, id a workmanlike u.anner. All warranted to give entire BiU*fßotion. ■0 CO not pretend to do work se(ter than any other >.out ire can do as good woti as can be done in C 1““ or elsewhere. Also Welches Plated, „ ‘ HUMPHREY. ■!!&*■ ?a,, March 15, 1860, (if.) ' \ ItEW HAT CAP STORE. Subscriber haa just opened in this place a new is s*i* ®* ore > wherelfijintends to moßpfij.c - on hand a large doji'general assortment Silk and fienaimore Ssta, , own manufacture, nhich;t}ill be sold at hard "pneea , . T , . [ - SILK ■ fi-*on short notice. P' . idfo.ir. 6 - 13 at this Stoia at dotted with a French nd »o? ture ’ w * l ' c ? l ®«kes the Jl’soft and easy to the tit ii L. at thj of b’eakiog your bead to & S lo ™ Id the Hoi? Block opposite the r*|Ofon House. S. P. QUICK. AugT.l5, 185 ft.; . £ . *O,OOO bbls. Pork For Sale. . HEAVY M3BSPOBK at slo,f 6 >U4 «uTw" tta b y tb# pontfd at 10 eU., and war- WvSb*"*-" J ,j . Proprietor. >epot free of charge. I i From tbe 2iew York independent). i i THE BOLIT'ICAL PANIC. | Webster defines a panic to be “a uudden frightjwithout real cause, ft terror inspired by a; trifling cause or a misapprehension tjf dan ger.” j The panic which for a mOhth has stolen; away the common sense of tbe Atneri d|m people is, so far as its political rejations aye concerned, a fright of this sort, “ aj terror inspired bya trifljng cause land a misapprehen sion of danger.” What real foundation it has is strictly commercial. The fact of the inabili ty of (jhe South to pay itai debts would have been jpst as much a fact, land probably have been Blade manifest about this time, had we been ih tbe middle of a Presidential term in stead Of at the end of one. . ‘ 'Whfn the result of the State election in Penn sylvania in October made ilt plain to the coun try thit Lincoln would beieleeted, )he opposi tion w|sre persuaded that nothing but some des perate) measure would defeat him. The mens-" ure resorted to was one w nch never ‘ nefore failed bf its purpose—the ci|y of disunion. Ac- reckless and unscrupulous journa3s of this city scrap 'd together all the bdmbapt and fustian, all the sound and fury that ccjuld hb found in Sol them newspapers, atid paraded them from day to day, week in ■arid week out, before their readers, by the col urpnfuj, by the pagefnl, by the paperful, jn the hope that by thus playing upon the {fears of the North they might induce her voters to {with hold their votes from the Republican ticket in the apprehension that the Dnion would tie dis solved imd chaos come agnid should Linqplh be elected). Their immediate purpose was defeated, and thfe Republican ticket si Ccessful j; bulj they nevertheless had so far filled the public mind with anxiety, that when, afiet the election was' over, tile news came that the South, or a part of the |3oulh, meant what they said, and still the intention-of seceding, then panic and a nameless terror of pre dicted [disaster, confirmed by the discovery of the nctpal rottenness of Southern credit—which ought,land, under other eircumstanbes, would halve bfeen confined to that-i—made inen turn pale with fright. It was ‘‘d tferror inspir:d by a trifling cause,” and it became formidable from ‘fa misapprehension of danger.” The [danger apprehended was two-fold ; first, the daiiger of dissolution ; second, the disaster rihat would follow that event. But the danger was m|sapprehended, because it included the fear ofia secession of other states besides South Carolina, and gave to the secession of, that state ap importance that does not belong 'to it. There is and has been but liittlo ground for ap prehension that any other sltate, except South Cafoljifft, will go out of the tlnion; y[nd if is of very little consequence whether she gpea or not, if the behaves no belter. j , ; - Sontli Carolina fell into a state; of chronic i dip toy ion the subject of secession about thirty years ago, and has continued, ever since, in a condition of hopeless imbecility. Her cause is beyond any other treatment than Ithatj of a strait-jacket, and a rigid diet of bread and wa ter! She is perfectly in earnest timber ravings, anpl is determined to go ont| into the cold and starve, br to break things to; pieces ip a dread ful manner, if she is prevented, When her condition is thus rightfully apprehended, it will also be |seen that she is only dangerous so; long as she & kept inside, and net-permitted to have her own way. Let her go ; a large black man, bigger [ban herself, stands ready to jjeceite her with a strait-jacket the moment she crosses the threshold, and free-trade and (jtireot taxation are a diet that will bring the blood pway from her brajn and reduce her system to chat condi tion tbitt ‘she' may by-and-by, in God's good time, recover her reason. If she is determined to rid tne rest of the family of her j presence, they will be delivered from a very pestilent and. noisy nlerober, who, for more than a quarter of, a centuty. has done nothing but break the peace of the whole household. ’ ; . Now [if. this be'a true statement of bet case, —and it certainly is,—why should iany. threat of the Recession of such a State disturb the commence of tho whole country? SouthCftro lina contains about as, many white people as the city of Brooklyn, probably does not contain so much wealth, certainly has not so much Intelli gence, ind-iinot of more consequence to the Union-r-we to Brookljfg— ; ffip.'w.'bailey. THE j achotcO to the ZZyUnaion of ti)t grta of jFrcctrom aitg tf& Sprrah of l£ealt&g Reform. WHILE THERE SHALL BE A WRONG WfiIGHTBD, AND' UNTIL "MAN’S INHUMANITY -TO MAN” SHALL *CEASE, AGITATION MUST CONTINUE. rojL. m i THE, RTVEU PATp. | BY JOHN O, WjBXnjXEB. ! J No bird*song floated diwn jtbe bjjtl, I The tangled.grass b?lo|r was still; ■JNo rustle from the birchen stem, pfa'ripple from the watferia nem. 1 < Tbe dust, of twilight round ns grew, :We felt-the falling of tpe,dew; I Tor, from Us, ere the day was, dune, fThe Wooded hills shut the bub. ?Bat on the river's farther slilb -i :We saw tho hill 80 glorffied^— IA tender glow, exceeding fair, |A dream of day without its glare. ■ •: |With us tbe damp, tbe febill? the gloomj iWith them the sunsct’sfrosyrbloom; |Wbile dark, through willow vistas seep, jibe river rolled in shajle between. {From out the darkness where we trod, j |Wo gazed upon those hjlla of God, j fWhose light seemed not of moon or sun, 5We spake not, bat oar thought was one. 5•! • 1 [We paused, as if from that bright shore jßeckoned our dear gone before: i |And still our beating hfearts to hear The voices lost to mortal ear! I f our pathway turned from night; KTbe hills swung open to the light ; '■ flhro’ their green gates the sunshine shdw'd, • IA long, slant splendor downward flowed, (Down glade, and glen, And bank it rolljed; ■lt bridged the shaded stream with gold; (And, borne on piers of inist, allied The shadowy with the spoilt sldel i “So, M prayed we. “ when lour feet draw ijear •The river dark with moVtal fear, , >'r 1 i “!And the night cometh ohill with dew f |O, Father!—let thy break through! "jSo let the hills of light jdivide, j po bridge with faith thej sunless tide! “|So let the eyes that full ion esfth - j jOn thy eternal hills loot forth : i f i j “iAnd in thy beckoning angels know 1 |The dear ones whom wej loved below i i I WIELLSBORi i i th eig its; bae wh| eat naf ion of 40,000,000 of people. She may go, an(i the great West will produce not a bushel tbs less of corn and wbpat, not ft pound the less of >ork and beef, not ai wgsp the less of hay; an< our great East-and-Weat railroads will not hate a pound the less of produce to bring to ma'ket;—she may go, and not a spindle the lesi will whirl in Lowell or Lawrence; —she ma r go, and not a sail the less will dot the har bor) of the North; —she may'go, and not a whom ore unwilling pauper laborers, while the other section are dependent upon these for the few| necessaries and the not many luxuries of iifeltbey are permitted to enjoy.' Out of the Union she will da less, for all of the trade she now does, that comes to her from bordering states will find its way to Savannah and Mo bile! and tbe little cotton she rajisee she will be glad to send to market in tbe ships that will take it quickest and cheapest. So little reason have we to fear of disaster and loss to the com merce and trade of tbe countryjfrom the seces sion of South Carolina. It is marvelous that the (threat of such an event,! such 41 a mere misapprehension of danger,!’ should so blind men to tbe dictates of common iense. There is no chronic idiotoy ln| any Southern staff, as a whole, exceptin South Carolina, and therefore no other Southern state is goingbut of the Union, unless such an event be precipi tatea by an • unhappy attempt to coerce her to stay! in. In that ,event, Southern pride may rally other states to her aid, and the fu-mation of Southern confederacy be eonsequence. Butfeven this, the worst that cab be npprehen ■ ded,|is not likely to happen; for tbe -South Ynolrs, even better than we do, that this would gresiat only in a temporary disarrangement of affairs at the North, while at the 'Suutb it would produce disagreement and disunion among thertselves, the absolute compulsion of the border slave states torjofn the Northern confed eracy, and the speedy downfall of slavery in all those states. An emanoipatibn party exists already in Missouri and 1 Kentucky. Western Virginia with its free-labor, and Eastern Vir ginia with its slave-labor, is already a state di vides against itself. The question of slavery, as a| politico-economical question, is already agitating Maryland and Delaware, The Union party in all these states would insist upon an nexation to the Northern and would carry the point with the moral voice of the North to back them. Wjth; a confederacy* immediately Sputh of them—with free trade in Afridan negroes—what would become of the slave# of these border states? Like the horses o|f a )oor farmer, which he can neither sell nor they would soon “eat their heads off,” and would be the only remedy. IVou d not the acquisition of half a dozen free state , with all their wealth of undeveloped mine i and virgin soil, open to the free labor and 1 snergy of the North, with- their eight Og ten millions of emancipated people, who would want and earn more food than the three pounds of, bicon and the peck of corn a week, more than §lO worth of clothing a year,—be large cqmf ensation for the loss of the trade of the secec ing states, if should lose it? But we sbou J not lose it. Tpe cotton states are at the foot i f the world, notj the worlij at the foot of the c )tton states, as South Carolina fondly be lieve . They raise nothing else,, and can raise noth ng else but that pr seme other great rough stjapl: that can! be produced 1 by hands only, and not leads. Men are pot slaves When they have head!, and therefore ho other industry is possi ble to the slave statels. They must sell their cpttojK or starve, and they m.ust send it to mar ket in the ships that will take it most safely, and at, tbe smallest p ice, .and these, as any in surai ce office will tell them, are Northern ships. -They must buy their goods where they can get them cheapest, and th srefiire they will purchase shoes for their slaves in Lynn and New York, and not in Paris, their negro-cloths and cheap cotton goods in Lowell and not Manchester. Statejcoifventions cannot alter the laws of trade, apd commerce never dissolves tpe Union with the siiarlest men by preamble and resolution. In *be worst event, then, it is ihe South and not t|e North that is to be loser by Disunion', and the South is too wise to venture upon so desperate a measure to cure herj fancied ills. The iolitical panic is a " terror, inspired by a trifling cause,'or a misapprehension of danger.” The aountry was .never in .so good a condition to trrf this question as now; tbe only real canse of apprehension is tbat’a senseless fright will induce soma invertebrkted animals at Washing ton t| make' a compromise to quiet the clamor, and «>. put off the question, to a lime when we are lass able to meet it. j — . ‘ • if. ghoul agitator: TIOGA COUNTY, PA., WEDNESDAY MORNING. DECEMBER 26, 1860. .. 1 1■. 1 i ■ • in that city. Undoubtedly she has some for ja commerce and some domestic trade, but jper-centage upon the whole trade and com irce of the country is sa small, that ite loss iild hardly be felt, should she be cut loose in her sister states, towed out, into the Gulf learn, and anchored to a raft, to drift for ever ■e from.zone ;to zone. We are exaggerating thing, and setting down naught in malice. ip industry of a state containing only"about 5,000 white people, supported by 375,000 ik people, who are fed upon Ithree pounds of d bacon and a peck- of com a week, and ipse entire clothing does notcoßt $lO a year c h, cannot by any even if we had statistics to verify dbe fact, be of any great 3 meat to a great, flourishing, and energetic ith the less will be filled in all the wide on beside, not a dollar the less be paid tp all millions with their heads or tbeir ds. All this is capable of arithmetical (onstration. In the Union the does little, b her small population, more than half of AN ENGLISH VIEW OF SECESSION, From the London Times contrary to probability, Sivith Carolina p rebel—what then! ' she is bent opon trying tbs chances of be will, of course be immediately beaten the field. She has neither men or money h for war. Herj white population is al declining relatively to the; black. Even dlies.she could inot fight fbra day with mplete discomfiture and humiliation. If i allowed to secede without opposition, an she’ subsist ? I Poor in resources, help 'ainst enemies, at the; ineioy of her otVn , with a sm’4l aristocracy in'debt," and '' ‘ . ... 1 ' . i the rest of her white population ignorant and. degraded beyond precedent; with no money to buy a ship or coal or. steamer, her lands wear ing out, and n|o manufactures—what can she do to live f Some people say, “ Let her try. She is turbulent and troublesome. ,We shall be well' rid of her; so' give her her wish I" This is more easily said than done; but it will not become a practical question. Why should she resort to eitbch supposition when she can simply go on ajs she is ? She has, as we have said, no grievance and no “ cause.” She is in every way a gainer by the Union, and in fact could not exist without it. As everybody knows this who knows anything about her, the more quietly she acquiesces in her turn of po litical defeat, the better she will 'preserve her dignity. A PIOTUEB OP LIFE. “ Chtiries,''ootae here.” Slowly the biy approaches bis mother, when when the latter gives him a smart box at his ears, adding; “ There, take that; and now go to work," ; 11 Why, mother, what have I done ?" “Done, you llave not done abything, only eet poring over that old paper for an hour.” “But, mother, the chores are done, and it is storming.” “ Go under the shed, then, and saw wood." And he went, the boy of fourteen, dwarfed alike in body and mind, the former by hard la bor on the farm] the latter by hard’ words and !“ hard knocks." Poorboy! and this was the nephew that I had, so longed to see, for I re membered him as a sprightly boy of three years, all life ana animation ; and this was,the sister that I had coine so far to visit, and this was my first observation day in the family cir cle, for sickness Had 1 hitherto confined me to my room, where all hod been stniles and kind, at tention. My sister 1 was some years older than myself, bnt being only sisters, we were much together, and had few if any secrets that we concealed from each other, and for awhile after we married, the lone going toward the rising, the other the setting sun, we bad kept up a regular correspondence, but the cares of a growing family and poor health soon checked the letters andj at last they ceased entirely. Once she had visited her “ old home” and friends, and brought Charlie her first born with her, a bright la 1 of three summers. Eleven years had passed! when I decided to make Her a visit and see how she prospered in the far west. Success had crowned their labors, and to the casual observer, nothing was wanting to' roakp life,agreeableJ Thrt e lovely girls wandered from room to room. The eld 'st threw down her book, which instead of reaching the table as she had de-! signed, foil to the floor. Instead of saying, “ Pick it up my (laughter," the mother gave her a quick slap tin the head which sent her reeling : and picked it up herself. Quiet was scarcely restored dre another offender, for sonie light cause, received a box and an angry word, and thus the afternoon was spent I was in j hopes that such sdeqes were not common, and ! waited impatiently fhr the evening, hut alas! it came all too soori, fur as much as my feelings had been tried through the day, they were worse tried in thej-eyening. The candle was placed on the stand in the centre of the room ; the father, tired with his day’s work in the woods, had leaned! his chair against the wall' and was already snoring : the mother with her youngest in her lap, rocking by the fire ; I with my feet on the fender and nobody by the light, Charlie hunted up his paper (which had been tucked away) and timidly drew up his chair to the stand in hopes of finishing his story, buff h vt-k 1 “Come hoy, just move your chair back, and not make yourself quite so conspicuous.” lie moved back, and soon slipped out of the room and was soon forgotten by all but myself; but often in the course of the- evening did T wonder where the boy was. About nine he came in, find I expected a scene, but no ques tion was asked, ’and be passed on to his room. I could not refrain from asking ray sister where Charles spent his evenings. “Oh,” she said,. “he generally goes over to the other house;; they take a paper, and always read it aloud, eieningsr^This-thetrwasthe mystery; the boy could not flare the privilege of reading at home, 1 and went to the neighbors. I felt sick, heart-sick, homesick, and longed '< for the quiet of my own home. Butawholel winter was before me, and something most be 1 done. At last all had sought their pillow save; my sister and myself;"an .unpleasant silence! pervaded the room ; I was thinking how to be gin; I knew that my sister’s heart was in the right place if I could reach it; she asked .me what I was thinking about; I told her I was thinking of our mother; X asked her if she re membered how tenderly and lovingly she reared her family—how she sympathized with all our little imaginary wrongs and troubles—howshe taught u's tp pray and sing, as well as read and work; how pleasantly we spent our evenings, when motherwould tell us some pleasant story, or brother Charlie would read the newspapers ? It was enough, already she was weepjng on my bosom ; no promise was asked or given, but I heard her go softly to her boy’s room, and as (he returned I heard her murmur, “ God bless him,” and I knew the good work was began. It was some time before ajl the little outbreaks were dispensed with, but a Took was sufficient to still the tempest, and ere spring, the time, fop my departure had arrived,'a lovelier and' pleasanter family could not be found. Charles accompanied mo home to finish his education,' and he premises still to fulfil the hope of early years. i The Officer of the deck on board a man-of war, asked the man at the .wheel, one day, “ How does she head ?” It was blowing a gale of wind. “ South-ayst,” replied Pat, touching bis hat, but forgetting to add sir to his answer. “ You’d better put a few more s’s in your an-j swer when you speak to me/’ said the huffy lieutenant. “ Ay, ay,' sir-r-r,” returned the' witty Irishman. A day or two after, the officer called out again, “ How does she head now —“ South-ayst and be south, half, south, and a little southerly your honor, sir,” screamed ?4t, WEATH-BED OB DOUGLAS JEBBOXiD. In the life of Douglas Jerrold, by his son’, wi have the following touching nocount of the great satirist’s lost! moments in this life : , When the doctor presently suggested that be must not despond—that he might be well again—those blue eyes seemed to borrow d last flash, and to express almost scorn. He saw the falsity spoken in kindness, and repelled it, for he bad no fear.of death. Then a faintj ness came upon him again, and be gasped for air, motioning all from the window.. “ Let me pass—let me pass he almost whispered.—[ But not yet. He" was. oarrieJ to bed—thef? surj went down. Dr. Wright had determined to re| main With his patient throughout the night.—l He wi>s. easier now, but sinking beyond all doubt; You could hardly believe it, in thej night when his caljn voice sounded again to, speak of friends, to remember everybody, and to send kind messages to all. One child was, away in America; and he sent him his blessing;! Then in the depth of the night, daring the in-| terval of applying bags of hot salt to his feet.i he even talked of his news paper, and bade me carry on his name in it. Then he would lie back and murmur prayers, and then, as- the] kind physician hung over bis bed, .he would cry again and again. “ Hear doctor I dear doctor! but it’s no use I” ’ And then he would ask the hour—for he -had a belief that he should die at midnight. Midnight came, however, and the gray dawn crept coldly into the sick room, and still the sufferer lay begging for fresh air. We cast the window open, but,this was hot enough; we seised every fan that could be fojnnd, and waved them before him. “Why tease a dying wretch V he said presently to the doctor who was insisting upon giving '-.bint, medicine. : Then when the breath, got wprsc, and it appeared that in the next minute he must be suffocated, he cried, “ Christ l! Christ!” The sun mounted the heavens sldiwly oh some most unhappy people that Wife and daughters had passed the night, sitting sobbing in the dressing roam, the open door of which led to the sufferer’s bed. not bear their tears ; but at frequent intervals asked for one, then the other, and clasped them to his heart. In the morning his sister arrived from the country. He kissed her—then looked over his shoulder. He could scarcely speak above a whisper now; but he was seeking the second sister, to whom he had always been ten derly attached. She was not there. With a son on either side of him, and the kind doctor still leaning over him, he seemed at .perfect ease—, resigned. Still we waved the fans about him, giving him nir, and still, at intervals, he talked ; faintly, but most collectedly, ■ The dawn grew into a lovely summer morn ing. At ten o'clock, the patient was cupped. He could hardly move in the bed, and said again “Why torture a dying.creatore, doctor?” But the cupping took no effect, and the doctor went away, to yeturn in a few hours. We were left alone with a dying father. Friends were hushed in the room down stairs, listening.for a faint word of hope. Daughter, sister, wife, were sobbing in the dressing room. For a mo tpent, to fetch something for the patient, my brother left me gjone in the room. My arm wtts about the dear-sufferer, propping his pillow as he moved restlessly around. He looked with a terribly eager look at me, then at the oppo site side of the bed, for a moment without the face of that dear boy, who watched there day and night. His mouth moved, and I could read thp deep emotion that possessed him. He said again and again, “ Yea, yes,” still looking at me, and then at the opposite side of the bed. I bent down to listen, but he said no more; Then, as I raised a spoon filled with iced water to his lips, bis eyes for the first time wandered. My brother returned and held him with we. We saw a dreadful change. We called to the dear ones in the next room and in wild agony they gathered about the bed. For a moment again his eyes regained their light; he saw all about his death-bed; his head leaned against my breast; he looked up, and said, as one hand fell in mine, and my brother took the other, “ This is as it should be.” In a moment', without a struggle, peacefully as a child falls asleep in its nurse’s arms, ho fell into bis long rest, with a smile upon his face. A wag has made up the following summary of what he calls the “ Inalienable rights of Americans,” an 1 which are not enumerated in the Declaration of Independence; To know any trade of business without ap prenticeship or experience. To marry without regard to fortune, state of health, position,nr opinion of parents or friends.. To have wife and childffen dependent on con tingencies’ of business, and in case of sudden death, leave them wholly unprovided for. To put off upon hireling strangers the lite rary, moral and religious education*of chil dren. - , . To teach children no good trade, hoping they will have, when grown up, wit enough to live on- the industry of other people. ■ \ To enjoy the general symathy, when made bankrupt by reckless speculations. To cheat the Government-if possible. To hold office without being competent to,dis charge its duties. To build houses with nine and six inch wSlls, and go to the funeral of tenants, fireman, and others, killed by thehMfall, weeping over the mysterious dispensation , of Providence. To build up cities and towns without parks, public squares, broad streets, or ventilated blocks, and call pestilence a visitation of God. There is a railroad down South which runs one train a day, drawn hy a locomotive of about one coffee-pot power. The conductor is so po lite'that if a lady cries out, “Mr. Conductor, I should liken drink of water,”’he immedi ately jumps off,;blocks the train with a stick, and'attends to the lady’s wants. . ' “An honest man’s the noblest of the Lord !" enthusiastically exclaimed a Hardshell Baptist, and then after a panse, be added, “ but the Lord hasn’t had‘a job in tbe world fur fifty years!” . - Wo suppose bullets njen eomst njes be* causa tb«y know that aif flash, i« j Advertijemeatewil! be charged $1 pet square of 10 lines, one or three insertions, and 25 ecins for ever/ subsequent insertion. Advertisements of less than IQ lines considered as a square.' The subjoined rates will be charged far Quarterly, Half-Tearly.and Yearly ad vertisements) ! Square, '» 2 da. 8 do. J column, . i do. . Column, . . | 25,00 35,00 '50,0f I Advertisements net having thenumber of insertions. desired marked upon, them, will ha published until or-, dered out and charged accordingly. ' , , i Posters, Handbills, Bill-Heads, Letter-Heads and al 1 kinds of Jobbing doneiin country establishments, as sented neatly ant) promptly. Justices’, Constable's and other BLANKS constantly on band, | j; an iNTESBSTrcra bsetcn. i Apprentices areinvited to read a littlaway-- aide story, which is hut one of the thousands like it that margin the highway of life all along, to its close: ; . - ■I; On Friday last, we dropped in at a station house, to see ;ivhat 'items might be gathered from the criminal docket of the tell-tale slate of the attentive Chief, and having taken'jail that,was of interest to us,-about passing Oat, w« met in {he dopr-jvay-one of the most loath some human beings it has ever been onr lojt to encounter. We stepped aside, quite willing > to give the rag-muffled man—for he bad been lo man once—the latest privilege 4n .passing, and-was astonished indeed when’ entiling a glance at us he adlvanced; presented his hand/ and called us by name. We took hie trem bling band, though at first we oonld discover nothing in bis haggard features that at al} re minded us of any former acquaintance ; |but when he mentioned his name, and the nanrof the paper on. which we learned the beginning ,of the A* art prieepvative of all arts/’ the veri table- “ Bill Phillips,” an old fellow apprentice, ■ stood before us. "We had toiled side ‘by side in a newspaper office (the Lycoming Gazette) I bearing the name l of the county in which it 1 was located, in the northern part of Pennsyl- ■ 1 vania, and we had known him .then as an un commonly, bright! boy, a natural wit, a pet among his 1 fellows} and withal the quickest and most correct compositor in the office. Lear-' lag the office' and bnsiness on acconnt of ill health before we had completed pur profession, we heard.little of Bill, eicej t that, for some trivial cause, he had run away from his em ployer, (who was likewise his benefactor) and I but once heard of him as leading a rather dis sipated life in thje city of Philadelphia. Wo sat down on one of the station-house b( aches," atiif he recounted his adventures from the-un lucky day cn-which he threw his “ wardrobe” over his shoulder! and turned his back.uprn his employer, down to the tune of our acci dental meeting in the station-house doer, where ’ he had come to prdcure lodging for thenigbt. It was the old story, and here he (twenty years of wandering, a poor, miserable, friendless, dissipated creature, wbom to, de-o pri;ve of his glass was to remove the prop which now served .to sustain, life.'We.took tho-poor fellow to - better quarters, and turn ing homewards, began thoughtfully ‘to contrast tihft career of the i fellow apprentice we bad just left, with that of others, who, in the same - Office, served out , their full apprenticeship, and afterwards filled some of the highest po sitions in their native State. There was Ellis Lewis, until, lately; Chief Justice of the Su preme Court of Pennsylvania, who not only: served his time there, but afterwards owned’ and edited the Gazette , leaving it only to fiH still higher and mure respectable- positions.— Then there was another, a round faced, smart hpy; with nothing dike the mother wit-that. ( Bijll Phillips possessed, but he was steady in his ihabits, served faithfully, arid tf-day- Wil- ‘ lipin F. Packer, fie: Governor of Pennsylvania, rijcurs to that as the, period when he -was, by hpnestly and steadily serving out his time, | idying the foundation for that. which bps since so abundantly crowned his efforts.— Lpok at it, boys 1 There are bdt two methods; > Of accomplishing the journey of life among-, ttjo close, growing years that intervene: between, the beginning and Vhc end—the; one deads yon through a career of honor and 'usefulness, the other terminates where poor Bill Phillips will soon lay his weary bones—in Potter’s Field.— Newark Mercury. \ INSTINCT pp ANIMALS. In referring to what is called mind or instinct of dogs and other i animals, full justice, we think, has never been rendered to the S'mia, or .r monkey fribe. Their tricks and dexterity hare been! amusing; but their extraordinary talent, sagacity.and intuitiveaperception hare been, ;in| a measure, slighted by naturalists generally. A( monkey or half baboon, belonging to one of the national vessels, was a remarkable instance of) this'quickness of perception.' Being a fa vorite, a number was assigned to him to take , his grpg with the%enmen ; thus when the hands were called to receive 1 their liqnor they came up by number; the monkey had nnpiber four, but in following.in Indian file, the sailors fre quently shoVed him put of the ranks and the guttler would call number three and. then the number five. After all had drunk their I’qonr,’ and gome'four or five hundred bad d-par eV. )iejwouldsing out tliO missing number four,’ when down came the monkey from the rigging, ' the moment the number was called, to get bis share of the grog, Which be would drink dufof' a teacup,.take a piece of tobacco from any ■ onh offering, put it in ms mouth, and aseeud the; shrouds. j ‘ A isingular' circumstance ,ooct>rred ( which strbngly marked all |tiie characteristics of hit- : man sagacity and passion. The boys, as it was i the onstorii, were •' piped to mischief,” for piny ‘ and skylarking, and while amusing themselves _ -some twenty in aringj the monkey sprang from the] rattling in the nijdstbT them, lie passed roundthering, looking intently in the face of every: boyi; at length! Ko stoppedTjefore one, ' andspringing-atr him,’ bit him severely' in each' ! cheek, his line te.eth pnssing'Jhrongh the flesh, : * bringing with it a stream of blood, and then ran Up the shronds. The Doctor was immedi- ; nteiy fsent for, and applying prOps'r-rethfl- [ dlfib to the wounds, theCaptainaskcd'the V'y ' r what he had donefb the monkey. After shm's"' hesitation he,admitted that a few weeks hefeird, ' while swabbing the decks, be had thrown a pail of water over- the monkey, who; dtsoems, postponed his revenge until he could recognise 1 the boy distinctly among 1 nil his messmates; This clearly is mind-lcall it sagacity, or what 1 yon please, i - • :i ‘ 1 - - ' (A, tailor, while traveling on the lakes,'was aiiked by a Yankee Where he lived, and wbiit bis business was, 4c.; to which he replied, that’; he lived in Toledo, arid that his profession^wn* f ' sitting on the smooth side of poverty, and jerk l jng.out the cards of affliction. | Men will be always apt to think tho money ma-ket tight if th y arp in the unfortunnl? habit of jteiiiDC so rhemselrys. - Bate* of Advertising. 3 IfOSTRS. 5 UQSTHS. 12 SmSTHf.,, $3,00* $4,50 JU.OO • - I 5,00>. 6,50 8.0 II; ■ 1,00 8,50 10.0* • 9,50 12,50 20,00 30,00 8,00 15,00 \ i
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers