/r- . ' Terms of Publication.. the TIOGA is published *T Wednesday Morning, add mailed toeubaoriberr reasoßttßte'-pric® d^, ‘ DdliLAB, PBIR urinUy <» it is to notify every * k fiber when the term for Which he has paid shall '““f.Voirtd, by thefigures b'ntjhepfinted label on the j k,T •„ e aoh paper. The p&ppr will then be stopped ! a farther, remittance b%iireceived. By Ibis ar-' - ~ no man, can, be Wpught in debt .to the ls the o£Sein|, Paper of the'Conntjr, law and steadily increisliig circulation.reach'- ’; r» into every neighborhood irfilbe Comity. It ie sent ' he of ]vtttaAIiTT,IPEXXIST, > /TkFFICE ... * [Apxil 23. 1858.]. jTTciiINSONrHOCSE • COEN-INfi,l : N- T. , .... yi w A. Field - t-i Proprietor. Guests taken to and from th^'pepot.Tree of-charge. ' "jTc. 'WH ITIPAKEB* Hydropathic Physietaf .apd gurgem- . ~ EL kland, t ; iog.a|oo.,’PEnna; Will rieit patients in all papsi : of; the Cpunty, orxte tiM them for treatment at giljafrouse. [Jane 14,] J. EMERY,- ATTORNEY AND COP3f|>ELLOR AT LAW Wellsboro, Tioga Co.,|;Pa. Will devote his exclusively to the pnrtitfe of Taw. Collections mde in any of the N. ' ' ; es of Pennsjrl rsnia. - n0v21,60 PESSSYLV tV SE. igsrncr of Slain Street oiu. , . . WelUbora, Pa. J. W. 81G0J.% PROPRIETOR. This popular Hotel, bavißg'lliien re-fitted and re firnishcd throughout, is noW &on to the public os a drst-class house. ■ |{ ■ W~- JZAARf HOUSE, E C. VEIIIIILYEA, fROPRIEI'OR. - Gaines, Tioga Cptinty, Pi rHIS is anew hotel locate* Within easy access of the best fishing and hußtibgi in Northern 'a. No pains Bill be spared-Jiff the accommodation if pleasing seekers and the trailing public, April 12. 1860. j.. ' ‘ : ,H. O. C OIEE, , H BARBER -AND-BA\fR-DRESSER ; . ■ SHOP in the rear of the Poki'6ffiqe f .Everything in his line will be done ns well and promptly us it sn be done in the city salootj&L Preparations for Te nuring dandruff, and beautifying the hair, for sale heap. Hair and whiskers dyid any color. Call and te. ■ffeHsboro, Sept. 22, - THE COBJflltcSbtRlSAI/. ■George ;w. Pratt, Editor and proprietor. FS published at Corning,’Steuben Co., N. Y., at One; Dollar and Fifty Cents'Po? year, in advance. The’ journal is Republican in ■politic*, and has a circula-j inn reaching -into fvery parl|bf Steuben County.— [hose desirous of e.ttendiife ttjeir business into that nd the adjoining counties Villmnd n an oxcellent'ad rertising niediuin. Address aijahovc. FURS I FUR§il PURS! • URB. —The subscribers ha!| just received a large 1 assortment of Furs foK-liujies wear, consisting of ITCH CAPES d- VICTORIES, FI! EACH SAIIIiE CARES & VIOTOBINES, PAVEU MINK CARES & AIfFFS, . iiOCK MARTIN CAPfS «*■'i Ti ilff I,j> |i ~ m '(ijin .i.m ... in ' t uni Mil I I . , ‘ 1 - 1 -- J J - ,, -'4 1 ’ ' - • ~ " — r ' ' Rates oi Till'] AGITATOR^ -t I ' s ■ ; ; j r , ■ . , ■ - 2 do. , ~ - . [• DrhotcO to t&e J2jc|rn«ion of tsri£vcA of JFrtrhom aitO tfjc Spread of 2ftattt)g ; Reform. WHILE THERE SHALL HE i WRONG UNEIQHXED, AND UNTIL “HAN’S INHUMANITY TO MAN" SHALL CEASE, AGITATION MUST CONTINUE. V O 1,. VII. *AN OLD MAN’S DBEAM, S' Oh fur aif boar of yotrtbful joy ! I Give back inytwentietb spring l ! < | | Pd rather laugh a. bright-haired boy' - 4 Tbanreign a gray-haired king! . \ • , - 1 . ! i : f.- Off with the wrinkled spoils of ago! | . Away with learning's crowol I « Tear out.life's wisdom-written page*.; \ ' Aod dash its trophies down! 1 I 1 ' One moment let my life blood stream , j From boyhood’s fount of fl^me! | Give me one giddy, reeling dream ; I Of life all love and fame ! I • i■* 1 | j : —My listening angel beard my prayer^ 1 I And calmly smiling, said, ; , . uif :j b a t toach thy silvered hair, 1 ’ ; „ | , Thy hasty wish bud sped, i I 1 “Bnt is there nothing in thy Crack ' fondly stay, i While the swift seasons hurry hack; To find the wished-for day : ' • —Ah, truest soul of womankind’! |li| Without thee, what were life ? h 1 * One bliss I cannot leave behind; I'll take-f-my—precious wife! —The angel took*a saphire pen > .. i And wrote in. rainbow dcw;[ 1 i( The man would be a boy again, t And be a husband too !’* ' * < I , * l\ . s And is there nothing yet nnsaid [■ 'Before the change appears? 1 [• Remember, all those gifts have fle<^ \ With those dissolving years-!” , ; t Why, yes ? for memory would Recall [ My fond paternal Joys; l I could not bear to leave them all:T i { j I'll take^-my —girl—apfi—boys I, ; . p I The smiling angel dropped bis pen,H j ” Why will do; . l [ The man would be af boy again, r I And be a father.tqo I" /j f - • M ; , » And so I-laughed—my laughter woke f The household with its noise— -* { 'And wrote my dream,' when morning-broke, ! - please the gray-haired boys. > i Oliver Wenhell (Holmes. { DBAb DHEBS. j ~BT HARRIET HATHAWAY. ; \ Brother Frod, live 4 favor to ask;of yon and Lita lifted: her pretty face With a be seeching expression frcjm a bouquet' of choice flowers she held in hfn slmall, jewelled hand. _ to ask of me, sis ?” was the youpg mah’s reply;' think fnim your ' Serjoub, puzzled countenance, it was- the first ontjyou had ever preferred, and you Were about trying, an experiment.” j ; _ MWell, it is a soH of experiment, Fr4d ; and befpre.you give me an answer, I vj-ant you to think, and not say, “0, yes, yes,” as you ai rways do, and then not give it a second thought.” ‘jWell, here goes, then,” replied the gay, handsome young miin, drawing an ottoman to his Ulster’s feet, seating himself upon, it with an elongated fcour.tenance, saying, with modk gravity, “Your bumble'servant. And now proceed to business, madam.’” litie young girl’s face assumed an earnest ex pression as , she clasped l, one of her brother’s hatlds in both her own, apd paid, while the color burped up in her cheeks: “{Fred, it is this—that you will drink no more winle.; !l tremble when ever I see you with the glaij* itf your lips.-” ■ “(Well, now, beta, child, can you not trust me,[knowing my entire self-command, that I fiavp no natural tendency that way arid that I only occasionally take a social glass when in the (society of my friends?” •if know it, Fred—l know nil ihat, hut your influence is what I fear. There id Charles Chejster thinks you a perfect pattern of gond nesi; and he touched glasses with you last eveningat Mrs. Readon’s and you stood up and dratjik together, my heart ached, 1 not. so much for you as for him, knowing that he has not the self-jcomratnand which you havej and! that he loveb to look upon the wine when it sparkles in -the cup.” ‘ “{Well, well, Lita, perhaps ydu are right. I neper looked at it in that' way before/* replied Frea, while his countenance word a thbughtful expression. “But who, in the name of com- sense, (and now the young inan; smiled), would have expected that my little fashionable, -butterfly sister even found a moment (fur such thoughts as these, with her ribbdns, fuses and lace£? ■ Serioasly, Lita, I did not gave yeti credit for being so much of a-worhan/’ “ thank you for the compliment, Fred; but now!promise me; I shall not be happy until .you Ido. I have no fears for your personal safe ty iit this matter —though I doubt your moral righ’t to indulge in a social glass, merely be cause Mrs. Grundy smiles upon the custom — but !I have fears- for Charlie Chester, seeing with what a relish be drains his ‘glass to= the veryj-dregs. Projnise me, Fred; come; do this, if yqu love me;” and Lita Boss laid her hand beseechingly upon her brother’s head., . “Well, Lita, this is snmftlhing of a. sacrifice io ask of me. Why, I shall make! myielf very conspicuous by refusing a social glass! But I don’t know but I’ll do it, if you’ll make a cor responding sacrifice. 1 don’t care to be immo lateci upon the, altar alone.” | “Name it, Fred, and if it is in my power I'll ,do it willingly, gladly;" and Lita’s toft brown ■ayes danced with delight. . ■ “{Well, then, eis, I’M promise this‘thing if you will do what lam about to asfe you. I de- ■ clara, I have scarcely the heart tit, you look so pretiy jn that blue silk dress,.with (Its lace trim mings j and your ear-rings, pin and bracelets, ofthose tiny pearls; but you must give them up if, I comply with your request.’? P “I will, Fred —I will.” - ;.V “ Jlihl wear a drab dress without orna ments ?” ' ‘ I “Tea, Fred.” . - | 1 “-Next Thursday-night mate your first -ap pearance, at Mrs.. Thurston's. Hehieiftber, you will be subjected to many remarks, and! besides wilMook very plain by the aide of your ahpwiiy. dresied companions.", , ■ # * 1 promise. Fred, and a&jk-in Tethm l&at you will-then and there comply With my request." “Ifour hand, ais. And now remember* as lontijas too wear drab, and that without orna menis, I willreftise * fashionable! glass., t But you tio not know what sacrifice you tiro ma king; I should not be surprised were you to retract anv-day." ! “ Well, Fred, we shall see. And now a kiss, Of A fif W }” a 0.4 iti?? HPT WELLSBOpO, TIOGA COUNTY, PA., WEDNESDAY MORNING. FEBRUARY 6, 1861; qrms arotmd her brother’s heck, and covered. E)is’ forehead, brow and and lips with a'shower pf kisses, and glided away through the hail, up long -polished oaten stairway to her own ■chamber, and seating herself, she bowed her lad upon' the table, and ejaculated: •‘Thank Ghd, Charlie Chester may yet be ved!” And the tears rained down over her ir face, and when she looked up there was a bdued, tender light in her' eye never there ifore. ' j ’ . And this was Lita Ross, the pet plaything of e family—the sparkling, fashionable belle of e season—the coquette; sh accounted. But ere was in her heart a leaf as yet unread by ly eye save that of her Maker, and on it was scribed her love for her childhood’s playmate, larlie Chester. i ■ “Well, now, who’d have dreamed it!” Fred claimed, as soon as be found himself alone, thought I-had touched her dearest idol, and at she could no more deny herself than "she Iquld give up her right ljat flje-ll do if; -saw it in her eye. Faith,* I never rwas so fond of her in my life I I’vfe looked upon her s a mere chit of a girl; hut all at Once she tends before me a noble, self-sacrificing to lan ! And slip’s right' about Charlie Chester, or, now I think about it, he is in danger of eing drawn into the whirlpool of dissipation ! fcrange, I’ve npt thought of it before. I used )■ fancy they had quite a jpartiality for each i!thpr; but they -have out-grown it, I reckon.” How wn pride ourselves upon our discern ient, and yet how widely do our conclusions hen-times wander, from the truth ? Thursday evening came, and Frederick Ross t in the drawing room, whiting the appear «e of Lita. There was a light, rustling step, d she stood before him, with her soft, biawn fiair drawn smoothly from her brow, and onn-. fined plainly'at the back of her pretty head, and amid its glossy abundance were a few sprays of heliotrnp; her dress was of drab silk, with a low corsage and short sleeves, relieved fiy a full of plain, but rich white blonde, while J|er tiny foot, with its daiqty satin slippers of the same shade of the dress, lay coquettishly half hidden in the thick, rich carpet. | “ Come, Fred, I am ready/’ she exclaimed.' ‘^A |n I presentable?’’ |, i I “ Why, Lita, love!” . Here he paused. Ad miration was written on every feature of bis speaking face ; but he adroitly changed the ex pression, and concluded t^ith —“Yes, Lita, presentable perhaps ; but op* would take you td be at least t.wonty-five instead of nineteen. Fpitb, I’d no idea it could alter you so.moch ! Cpme, there’s an hour yet, Irtin and put on that rtSse-colored crape, and ' take the fastenings fim your hair, and Jot it full in curia about y|ur shoulders. I hate to see you, my little sis, ■ bilking su prim. There’s an hour yet, and Sell will assist you. Do it, now, to please mo; there's a good girl.” - j ;Lita’s cheek burned crimson, and Tier eyes filled'with tears.. To’think that Fred, her own brother, should tell her she; looked “twenty file,” and “prim” at thai! What would Cjbarlie Chester think of her,? Fo-a moment temptation was strong upon her. But she d|i not yield, for she saw in her mind's eye CJiarlie Chester with the wine-cop at his lips ; sHeiheard his mother’s voice saying, “Charlie, Charlie, enter not into temptation!’’ as plainly as when She heard her whisper it in his earns ha turned from his .collage homo a few weeks previous. It was those words and the look of gqntle sorroy that filled the mother’s eyes with tears, that first aroused Lita’s fears in regard to> Charlie, and ever since tfaiat time she. bad witched him closely; she had learned to-know tbit his feet had taken Ijold ijn “slippery pla ce i,” and in her solicUudp she had long been d< vising some way in which {die might benefit bi n without her agency being *u-d. She di 1-not care to betray her interest in him, ns ht had studiously avoided her tor more than a year ; and. besides, she feaied to wound him by fo cing upon him the thought hat she imagined hi n incapable’of self-control. But now she bud devised a way in which either of these con tingencies could he avoided, i And having ob tained her brother’s consent,: should she yield it up simply to gratify her Ijive of dress and admiration ? No, no, she wotild not—she could not. More than that, she dared not do it.— Laying her handSn its tiny kid glove; upon bet brother’s sbo.uider, she said : l‘Brother Fred, i shall go is I am, though I would gladly consult your taste and my own by exchanging this sombre dressl fur (he rose col ored crape but it wituld not be right; I shoujd despise myeelf. lam sorry!yon are going to bej mortified at ray appearance. I did not think before I came below, that] IJooked so old and pr'm; but of coarse I do,jne you say so." ‘ Never mind, sis ; I’m prttud of you let you lock as you will. I should not have loved you.. half .as well had-, you'weakly fielded to my re quest. jjpw rqn and get your hat and cloak, for. th{B carriage waits at the door.” Had my readers looked clqscly into the eye of {Frederick Roes, they would have eet'n some thing olooely resembling a tear glittering upon hiidark lashes, which be hurriedly wiped away ' jjpbn his delicately perfumed’ handkerchief as Lila turned from him. And Lita, thought be haa never looked so lovingly upon her as he did: when he banded her so jteoderiy into the carriage; -and she was quite aarathat hie bean ini was uver'e ihan usually proud as be led her lulthe farther end ,of the, crpwded reception roam, to present her to Mrs. Thurston, the lady of {the house. .. . : | . . . |*L'ta Boss, as I live I’’ cried an imperious beauty, as she tossed her-stately hea