* X - * Tbv »« JOUitia t»w—e ii'flr H wffl he ■■■t •; HnfcreeAi■ " The appointment jqf ptorojt-tearshals thro’- onttbe tfpited States to ctfrryout the enroll ment billVill bo made as rapMJJ as .possible. Thera will be one fer every UMigresslonal dis trict, and Vhen the,district is .Very large two or - three will be appointed, as. (fee-ease may re < quire. In addition for each <3 Utrioi, there will be one civilian and one a'nrge<>u,{ to be paid as , assistant surgeon of the rations 1 etc,’leaving about $ll3 per o noth. This will constitute the enrolling board,Vwhose dnty it is to divide' each- (jdstriot into two,; subdivisions, ■ and to appoint Or each an Enrolling officer, wbose-speoial duty, it will be t'r>| make the en rollment- j.-, ■ 1 Immediately after this'appointment,(the en rolling officer of each sub-distrust js to proceed to make the enrollment in'snolj manner that each eball be enrolled separately,-Widjthe age pf the person enrolled is to be set dcHvn, on the list as it will be on the first day o£ |oly succeeding the date of the enrollment., ■ E iuiat is, jf any person ie not now twenty, hirt tyill he on the first of July next, he is to be, J)|a«edon the list; or if any married man is nHsthlrty-five now, but,will be on the first day- next, be is not to go in the first class, ftiitj in the second class ; or if any person liabld tojdo duty is not now forty-fire year* of age, hjatiwUl be oij the first,day of July next, he is.hat jto be placed on the list at all. ~ si All persons thus enrolled atj to be subject to military duty for two years ftpm the first day of July after the enroliment/iind if called into the service shall continue dung the rebellion, but not to exceed three yeas-. Bnt the per sons of tha second class shall ;nOt, in any dis trict, be called into the service of the United States until those qf the first; class shall have been called. Whenever tbrj President shall make the requisition, he is authorized to assign to each district the number oilmen to be fur nished, and then the enrophg board shall make n draft of Ihe required sqtober, and fifty per cent additional; atfd shall|make a complete list in order in which the drawn- The drafted men are to stand on:|-hO same footing - with the three years in respect to advance pay and bonnties’ajsijipw provided by law ; and the President, injlMisigning the re quired number to each dis&ifit, is authorized to make allowance in respectthe mjmbejra al ready furnished by such distrr&during the war. After the draft is made, eet(k person whose name is is to-be writing with in ten days, and he is to repeat to a designated place of rendezvous; but bwQfe the day of as sembling he may furnish .Sjtnbslitute, or he may pay to such person as; the Secretary of War shall select, a sum of Jt/’vqy in Heu of a ■ substitute, which sum is tobfl l lSpadeuniform by, a general " order, and is not to exceed three hundred dollars. Every person failing to re* port in person, or by procuring a substitute, or by paying the stipulated aum. is to be deemed a deserter. Many persons are still of 'be opinion that the militia law, as passed -by dhe last Congress, is the same as that enforced; ay tho rebels.— This is not so, as there* Hs flu wide difference. The rebel act takes oft certain ages, leaving none behindrwhile qur bill" merely takes the required quota.£|nto^.tbe'whole num ber enrolled. Thus might Ibe .in one dis trict 10,000 persons hetwpen the ages of 20 and 45 years enrolled no liable ’So military duty, and the quota required .i| ligb.t be only two or three thousand, which wc aid Stall leave the ma ' jority af homo. The ret els jonj fbe contrary, take all they can lay hat da upon, whether old or young. ‘As Pennsyli snia;h*» already fur nished for the war more droop's, than any other State, and as some atf pbpB 1 j( new being di rected to colored enlis necfii, for which it is stated the Governor wilt glveTiue credit, there is yet hope .that, .With Proper, exertions, our State may escape the ifila call for more men ie issued. —PAitofoJiAmrjfVsis. The Finances >'pi4 the War. the newspapers of ; pp 1 Conptry are daily printing the best evidecje that can possibly be given of the devotion', of the'j people to the Union, and their belief,, fiat oittfar is necessary for its preservation. * £e‘ B]|eak of the' little paragraph that ■ announces the daily subscription to the nati ari'loan at the office of Mr. Jay Cooke, the agf it ;o£ itbe Treasury De partment. This is a p Idan of the peo ple to the Governmentj/pf be period of twen ty years, the interest six ; ir cent. The pro viesion allowing the holders jof legal-tender notes to transfer them into tiiisi loan—in other words, ; to invest the outrenc? jof the Govern -1 ment in its faith, and maketSp imtiotr the great |onrce of personal revenue 1 and deposit—is P showing its Sappy effects in thjs manher. He iafiy believe in a causa, prite.for it, and snstain 4 ft, as a matter of tbeoty or principle; bat it is only when he gives it bis ridney, the result of his time, and energy, and biaHl, that he exhib its th»'frankest devoticjn. st, therefore, look upon this brief table of .figures; and statements every morning with as'.muoh interest as we look upon tbe news from tbs seatiaf: war. The sol dier who gives his life, snd tbs citizen who gives the results of his life's irin i and successes, are the-true patriots. Each Sustains tbe other, and .is a true friend of the fGovdrsiyent. Both are necessary. Without, the means to arm and clothe, and feed him, the ecfftlier would-be use less ; without the soldier to' protect ms home and' property, the citizen Would be helpless. So long as the Adminijjtiatipti continues to ob tain these substantia! pvideepes of tbe people’s devotion.it may well in the Republic, and labor for the overferaw ofAhe nation’s en emies.—Philadelphia JPress. Disproportion or S*s|s.—The great ex cess of females in neqjisrritories illustrate the influence of emigration in ejecting a disparity in the sexes; Tbs fethalesi of- California out numbered the males sixty-seven thousand, or about one fifth of tjge population. In Mas sachusetts the females outnumber - the males some thirty-seven thousand sis hundred. Con 'ajeotiout, seven thousaad. ' Miohigan shows ''iaealy forty-thousand pxoesf-of males; Texas, thirty-sis thousand; Wisconsin thou sand. In Colorado the nf\l»i are asntwenty to one female. In Utah; tb numbers are nearly equal; while in New ifork; there is a small .pre ponderance ol the females - ; the males are most numerous in t A. Slaysholdiho Npßti Iry.—The Lonisville Journal publishes a letterfrom Paris, from a person intimately contested with the French Court, who says that KaidgSiar letter had been received.at the court ftim teff Davis and seven ty-two other leading rop ,-f .the South,' They vrgs Napoleon' to’recogmie the-confederacy, :feecau»B it is their inWatiofcto establish a Mo bility in the §mjth wStojtKe war is over, and that France ohgat to eWprage democracy. M- f*V .'MI THE AGITATOR. M. H.-COBB, EDITOR AND PROPRIETOR. WELDSBOKODGH, PBNTTA; "WEDNESDAY, i ; : : Notice is hereby given that a Hass Conven tion for the election of Delegates to the Uniori State Convention to be held at Pittsburg on the Ist of July next, will be held in the Court House, Wellsboro, on Tuesday evening 26th ifist. ’Speakers will be present to address the Convention. C. H. Sevuoua, Chairman Bep. Co. Coro. Tioga, May 13, 1863. • The Government is more than any mao; its interests are higher than the interests of any man, or of- any set of men; for the Govern ment is the decree of the people, and its inter ests are the aggregated'interests of the people. Bat there are men who publicly and private ly seek to create discontent among the ignorant and penurious, by exhibiting the bugbear of taxation ih its most distorted form ; who throw discredit upon government securities; who cite the high prices of articles of commerce to show that the Government is not well adminis tered ; and whose daily walk and conversation is wor.ked up to the very line of treason. These men are demagogues. They very well know that direct taxation is not a new thing in the history of this that this war was hot inaugurated by the Government, but by prominent leaders of the Democratic party ; that there is no ■ honorable way out of it save that whioh must be plowed by cannon-shot and hewed by the sword ; that to do this calls for a great expenditure of treasure ; that the nec essaries of life t&sfleas to day, in the average, than they did during the last eighteen months of Pierce’s, and the first eighteen months of Buchanan's administrations ; that the finances of the country 1 are jn a much healthier condi tion to-day than they were 'daring the terms of either Pierce or Buchanan ; that under tha mismanagement of the latter, capitalists would not lend the Goverment money except at a ru inous shave ; anti they ought to knbw that he who seeks to throw discredit upon Government securities, strikes at public credit; and the day that sees the fall of U. S. Bonds tea cents be low par, will also see a corresponding decrease in the value of teal estate everywhere in the North. It is a law of finance that property is mutually dependent. Of course reference is had to real property. The bonds! of a State are a mortgage upon every farm and its im provements ; and you cannot depreciate one Without depreciating the other. Now the bonds of the United States are a first lien upon the farms, the mines of iron and coal, of gold and copper, as well as upon all railroads- and canals — banlts ana auue stoetts. lu, ....... T. Cw to bring them into discredit is either a knave or a fool. Do you know what else these demagogues do ? They have credit with State politicians as leaders and controllers of the Democratic * masses In their several localities. They get this credit bn their own representations, and enjoy a kind of notoriety as local overseers of a flock that would'repudiate them were their baseness known. These demagogues talkmuch about the Con stitute. They are fearful the rulers will vio late it. They cannot find hard words enough with which to belabor the President for alleged infractions of the organic law. But for that armed boat of their partisan brethren in the South, who have formally abolished the Consti tution, they have few words of reproach. In fact, their sympathies are with their old lead ers—Davis, Benjamin, Toombs, and Floyd—so strong and overruling above love of country bad love of party become with these dema gogues. We sincerely hope that no party of the present or future will, through undisputed rule, become so utterly debased and soulless. These men talk about the inefficiency of the Administration ; that it has bad more than two years in which to put down the rebellion, and has not succeeded. Tbe Democratic party had control of the Government for near fifty years, and could not prevent this great rebell ion from culminating ; is there any decency in grumbling at Mr. Lincoln because be has not in barely two years, corrected the accumulated disorder of h»lf-a-century of Democratic rule ? Is it such a party that cornea forward to blab about inefficiency f or about frauds, with the robberies of Floyd and Thompson, the Willet’s Point ond the Fort Scott swindles blackening the record? or extravagance, with the Utah Expedition, costing $10,000,000 without cause, and a Mr. Buchanan expending $80,000,000 and upward, per annum, in jv time of profound peace ? Is this a party privileged to set op in the business of criticism i Is it a return to power and plunder by this party that is to tare all the evils that crflUct the State f That is the prescription of these demagogues. What can be greater and mors entire than the love of a' mother for her children ! There is the bright, fair-haired girl of a Iqp trum, htfloved of the house : how fondly the mother's eye marks her outgoing and incoming, and bow ehe makes haste to satisfy her grow ing desire for knowledge. There is the curly-headed, boisterous hoy— second jewel in the family crown: how the fond 'mother watches him in his mischievous carryings-on, laughs at bis boy drolleries, sym pathises with his hoy-troubles, and provides for his comfort with a never-abating solicitude I Now, can there be a higher exhibition of the sublimity of maternal truth and devotion than thie ? It would seem not. But there is another jewel in that crown; a jewel dearer than its peers by birth; and the mother’s heart grows muni about it like a set ting of puce gold. She loves no child of her MAY ,20,1863, MASS COSTESTIOK! -TO DEMAGOGUES. THE It IQG A- COXJETY A GIT ATOR^ brood as sbo fovfo that: and for no other will she sacrifice as for that. Look into the cradle and read the solution -of the mystery. This best-beloved i« a'child of misfortune—crippled for life! , This is a picture ot ; a tecs mother. There ere mothers who* love only their strong, sturdy children, and who abandon their unfortunates to the care of strangers. And there are men and women who love their friends ani) neigh bors in health and prosperity, when all neigh borly offices majJ be observed without sacrifice of personal comfort and.convenience; but the sublimity of true friendship, as of love, in creases with the'sorrows and misfortunes of its object. Now, what is true of the parent, and neigh bor and friend, is not less true of the citizen. If he be worthy of the title, Citizen, his devo tion bo the conn try of his birth or adoption will increase and intensify as the nightfall of trial and misfortune creeps along the horizon. Not so with the “ Summer Soldier and Sunshine Patriot.” When the storm threatens to over whelm, you will find him adding volume to the mutterings of discontent. He loves his conn-, try when truth and devotion require no sacri fice on his parti lie feels no affection for a country whose misfortunes cripple it so that a demand is made, upon his hoarded wealth — wealth poured into his till in prosperous times. He is a professor qf cheap patriotism. He be lieves in no government that requires any re turn for protection, and'the blessing of extend ed privilege. Ton will hear him grumbling about taxation; yet he probably does not pay ten dollars a year for the use of the Govern ment. When the crowning victory copes, and teea son hurries down to hell, its Some, these sun shine patriots will shout loudest and fling their hats highest of all the crowd. But no man can escape bis record. BHOOKS! Home has its Tiber, Paris its Seine, London its Thames ; but New York, with its babbling Brooks, is more favored than they. Tiber floats the garbage and offal of the imperial city ; the Seine has become the sewer-maiu of the second city on the globe ; the Thames holds in solution the filth generated by three millions of people ; but neither of these turbid arteries has the sewerage capacity that must be conce ded to the babbling Brooks, of New York. The Tiber, tbe Seine, and the Thames hasten to empty their filth in tbe all-devouring sea. Rut the babbling Brooks spouts bis disgusting freight in the balls and public squares of a city —places sacred to tbe people—and throws bis offal into the Highways, in tbe-form of newspa pers ; both indecent, and insulting to the clean ly tendencies of . the American people. A great poet has said that there are- “ books in the running brooks.” Had be lived in these times be might have sang of babbling Rrooxs gargling with nncleanness; and flowing thro’, and watering desert places, home of the hissing and malignant, and slimy copperhead. An Elmira cotemporary suggests that Brooke is ‘dammed.’ That seems’likely, in every sense of the word ; the arrested current flows back on itself, forming little stagnant coves and pud dles, covered with that unhealthful green slime which may be seen in tbe ditches and sloughs. Brooks has-been erupting again ; the occa sion being the arrest of Vallandigham. He is down on Burnside, down on Mr. Lincoln, down on all men and things clean and reputable. He s ays there is no liberty west of the Alle ghenies, no liberty anywhere save in New York and New Jersey. Forgetful Brooks ! There is liberty in Jeffdom ; and, 0 Brooks ! is there not liberty in Coney Island ? There is liberty on Sandy,Hook, 0 Brooks ! and he who steals and lies, and preaches treason, may roam (heir classic shores in security; and mingle, his com plaints .against law* and decency with tbe mur mur of the sounding sea. Tbe thimble-riggers and sneak-thieves, martyrs to the tyranny of tbe law which afflicts Brooks, go there to es cape tbe hateful surveillance of tbe police; and why not join that congenial company, 0 Brooks the sorely afflicted 1 May New York long retain her monopoly of ber babbling-Brooks. He might overflow New Jersey a trifle, without risk ; it might not be wise to slop over into the rural districts ; he will be dried, np if he does that." He made a fair Know-Nothing; .he makes a better modern democrat; he would make a still, better mar tyr ; he is addicted to ‘‘slopping over,’’’'and can lie beautifully. Next winter be will be in Congress. he takes bis seat the absence of Keitt, and'oth er gentlemen of erudition, will not be noticed. V'allandigham haa bad hi* trial, and it is said that the court martial sentenced him to two years on the Dry Tortogas. We hope not. A better punishment would be to deliyetjiim up to the Ohio troops in the field, whom'he has traduced and villificd. They would do him jus tice, and hta followers would not dare to yelp or hiss about his persecution. We object to de-' grading labor by putting such fellows at it. Don't send that inearnate devil to work on the Dry Tortagos, Mr. Lincoln. Can some accommodatinggentleman famish os with the name of some county not under so called democratic rale 1 , where K. G. C. Lodges can be made self-sustaining f Col R jus, Provost Marshal of the War Department, has evidence in his possession im plicating several persons, some of whom are bolding offices under the government, in « plot to effect the release of certain of the inmates of the did Capitol prison. One of the suspect ed had the effrontery to attempt to bribe Col. Baker to silence, with an offer of $lO,OOO. Af ter a portion of the money had been paid to Baker, wholymded it to the Sanitary Commis sion, the donbr, with his accomplices was ar rested. Timtoof the-alleged eanspisatori bare been indicted by die Grand Jury now inieieion. VAKxraws. [JL Cairo iKspatoheejs that Adjntant-Gen. Thomas baaorgamssd ten regiments of negroea, and expects to organize ten’ - more. Ourtroopa all the way from Memphis to. Young's Point are moving to re-enforce Gen. Grant. Gen. Grant will endeavor toent the railroad between Vicks burg and Jackson, and a battle is expected in the vicinity,of the Black River bridge. ' Richmond papers of the 14th are received at Fortress Monroe. They contain a Charleston telegram of the 12th reporting that the Union ists are nnnsnaily active, and have built for fnidahle batteries on Folly Island, bearing on the Southern extremity of Morris Island. Advices from Gen. Grant to the Bth inst. have been received in ’Washington, He expresses satisfaction with the appearance of affairs in his vicinity, -and states that Port Hudson is undoubtedly evacuated except by- a small gar rison and their heavy artillery. All our wounded left on the other side of the Rappahannock have been brought over. While in Rebel bands they were treated as well as they had reason to expect. ■ Gen. Thomas J. Jackson, (Stonewall) died recently in Richmond from the effect of wounds received at the battle near Fredericksburg. His death is a great loss to the rebels. Gen. McClellan says that the news that he has tendered his resignation to the Government has not the slightest foundation in fact. The remoteness of Gen Banks' Department, and infrequency of communications'with him, render it difficult to keep the public supplied with accurate and connected details of his op erations, or to accompany the accounts we do publish with the requisite explanations of his plans and purposes- His late campaign from Berwick’s Bay to the Red River was, in many respects, a complete surprise to the country. ' The first movement of Gen. Banka in field operations was*bis advance from Baton Rouge to co-operate with Admiral Farragutj, as it ap peared, in an attack upon Port Hudson. But he speedily withdrew to Baton Rouge and to New-Orleans, foiled, as it seemed to the public, and without military glory. His return to New-Orleans was an occasion not unimproved by rebels for rejoicing over bis supposed dis comfiture. But Gen. Banks bad not withdrawn to New-Orleans to fortify and-defend himself,-, as the secessionists bad begun to imagine. On the contrary, be returned to break the coil that’ the emboldened enemy w as-attempting to forin around bis depaetroent. 'Leaving the Miss issippi river, and leaving the gunboats to defend New-Orleans from the fabulous thousands that were to descend upon it from Mobile, Jackson and other strongholds on the east, Gen. Banks set out to attend in person to the increasing bands that had begun to threaten his outposts at Berwick’s Bay, on the west. The bulk of the rebel forces in Louisiana bad gathered about Pattersonville, Centreville and Franklin —the former a town almost in sight of the Un ion picket, at Berwick, and the two latter on Bayou Teche, a few miles further west. They bad become so bald as to meditate an advance in force upon New-Orleans from this direction, and by a gunboat fleet from the bayous into the Mississippi, and believed that Gen. Banks had burned back to New-Orleans to defend that city. - Bat without waiting for their advance, Gen. Banks suddenly appeared at Berwick’s Bay with neadv bis whole army. , And, not pausing there to fortify or defend himself, he immedi ately sought the camps where the rebels were in force and organised. A day or two of rapid advance and skirmishing brought him to Camp Beaaland, near Centreville, where the rebels in force were encountered, under Generals Sibley, Taylor and Morton. After a severe fight, on the 12th and 13th of April, the rebels evacuated their position at night, leaving two cannon and considerable small arms and ammunition, with , all their sick and wounded, behind. This bat-1 tie, called the battle of Bethel Place, was one : of the most creditable engagements of the war. j It was skilfully manoeuvred on the Union side . by Gen. Banks in person. Every arm in the , service except cavalry was, engaged, six batte- j ries of artillery having been in full play within | rifle range of each other. The gunboat Clifton, { closely beset by rebel torpedoes, did gallant■ w6rk in the fight. The rebel defeat and de moralization was great, as exhibited by eviden ces of panic in their flight. On tbs 14th of April the enemy was again struck two miles west of Franklin, and after a brief but severe contest compelled to retreat. By the time Gen. Banks had reached New. Iberia, twenty miles west of Eranklin, he had captured about 1500 prisoners ; a rebel steam boat, the Cornie ; about 500 horses, mules, ,&o.; bad caused the destruction by the rebels of their gunboats Hart and Diana, and the steamers Newsboy, Gossamer, Era No. 2, Louisa, Derby, Uncle Tommy, Blue Hammock and Cricket, all of whicn were burned on the Teche to prevent them from falling into our hands. Seven miles from New Iberia Gen. Banks took possession of the celebrated island of rock salt, in the mid dle of a mud lake, from which the rebels have been supplied by way of the bayous connecting with the Rod river at Alexandria, and thence by Red river to Yicksbnrg. The rebel works at this salt mine Gen. Banks destroyed. i Even at bis victorious march the jpublio in New-Orleans did not understand the j intentions of Gen. Banks, and the papers were j discussing the probability of his return. But 1 he still moved on, fighting a detachment of the enemy again near Vermillionville, twenty miles above New Iberia, the gnnbeat fleet in the mean time reducing a strongly fortified place on his right flank, called Bnte la Bose. The next place we hear of Gen. Banks, he is at Opelousas, still thirty'-milea farther on, the chief town of the Attakappas country, the great sugar dis trict, and one of the richest in all the south. This seemed a fit stopping place for the victori ous general. Bat no, he pushed on, and does not stop until be reaches and .occupies Alexan dria, on the Red river, near seventy miles north of Opelousas. Hers he gods a foundry and extensive machine shops of the rebels, one of the chief depots for the gathering of Texas and western Louisiana supplies for the rebel armies at Port Hudson and Vicksburg and- the head quarters, for the time being, of the rebel gov-! eminent of the State of Louisiana. Gen. Banka is now master.of all or nearly all, the bayous ef Louisiana. Ho is above Port Hudson, and ready to eo-operate with Farragut in clearing Red river and the Mississippi banka of rebels, and reducing Port Hudson. The rebel forces at Pattersonville, Franklin, Iberia, Opelousas and Alexandria, numbered fully 20,- 000 men. These have been beaten in detail and dispersed by the rop|d marching of Sen. Banks,, who moved bis army about one hundred and eixty miles in two weeks time, fighting battles on the way, and in all his fights not losing a tetalof two hundred men. His achieve ment is extraordinary, and his laurels may be proudly worn. Cfan. ‘ffitoseniMt’s ®xp*dltlon—CoL Kilpat rick’s Official Report. ;.v v YoßKTOwlir. Va., May 8; 1863. MajortQeneral '2E W. Eaileck, Commander-in- Chief United Slates Amny; : _ OtSABAL: I have the pleasure to report that by direction from ..Major-General Stoneman I left Louisa C. H. on the morning of the 3d in stant, with one regiment—the’ Harris Eight Cavalry of my brigade—and reached Hungary, on the Fredericksburg Railroad, at daylight on the morning of tbe 4th, destroyed the depot, telegraph wires, and railroad for several miles; passed over to the Broad tnrnpike and drove in tbe rebel pickets down tbe tnrnpike across the Break, charged a battery and forced it to re tire to within two miles of the city of Rich mond ; captured Lieut. Brown, aid-de-camp to Gen. Winder, and eleven men, within the forti fications-- I then passed down to tbe left to tbe Meadow bridge, on the Cbickahominy, wbich l (horned, and ran a train’of cars into the-river; I retired to .Hanover town on tbe Peninsula; crossed and destroyed the ferry just in time to check the advance of a pursuing cavalry force. Burned a train of thirty wagons loaded with bacon, captured 13 prisoners, and encamped for the night five miles from the river. I resumed my march at 1 a. k. of tbe sth, surprised a force of 300 cavalry at Aylett’s, captured 2 officers and 33 men, horned 56 wa gons, the depot containing upwards of 20,000 barrels of com and| wheat, quantity of cloth ing and commissary stores, and safely crossed the Mattapony, and( destroyed the ferry again, just in time to escape the advance of the rebei cavalry pursuing. Late in the evening stroyed a third wagon train and depot a few miles above and west of Tappabannoek, on the Rappahannock, and from that point made a forced march of 20 miles, being closely follow ed by a superior force of cavalry; supposed to be s portion of ‘''Stuart’s,” from the foot that we captured prisoners from the Ist, stb and 10th Virginia Cavalry. At Rundown we dis covered a force of cavalry drawn bp in line of battle above King and Queen 0. H. Tbeir strength was unknown, but I advanced at once to the attack, only however to discover that they were friends, being a portion of the 12th Illinois Cavalry, who had become separated from the command of Lieut.-Col. Davis, of the same regiment. At 10 a. m., op the 7th, I found safety and rest under our oWn brave old flag within our Ijnes at Gloucester Point. This raid and march about the entire rebel army— a march of nearly two hundred miles —has been made in less than five days, with a loss of one officer and thirty-seven men, while we captured and paroled upwards of three hundred men. I take pleasure in bringing to your notice tbe officers of my staff, Cspt. P. Owen Jones, Capt. Armstrong, Capt. Mdlrvin, Dr. Hackley, Lieut. Estis, especially the latte?, who volun teered to carry a despatch to Mnj.-IGen. Hooker. He failed’in the attempt; but, with his escort of ten men, he captured and paroled one major, two captains, a lieutenant, and fifteen'men ; but was afterwards captured Tiimself, with his escort, and was subsequently recaptured by our own forces, and arrived here this morning. I cannot' praise too highly the bravery, forti tude, and (untiring energy displayed through out the march by Lieut.-Col. Davies, and the officers and men of the Harris Light Cavblry, not one of whom but was willing ft> lose his liberty or his life, if he could but aid in the B f.-ing on. and win for himself tbe approbation of his chief. Respectfully submitted, J. KILPATRICK, Cohnti Cowmaud’g Ist Briy. 3 d jDtr f Covalry C'ofpt, BUCKEYE mower‘and reaper. THIS Movrer and Reaper took the FIRST PREMIUM, a grand GOLD MISPAL and DI PLOMA, at the greatest practical Field Trial ever held in this country, at Syracuse, July 1&57. It bns also been awarded the first premium at fifty Stale and County Fairs* ' IT DEFIES COMPETITION. - The undersigned has been appointed an agent for the sale of this Mower and Reaper in Tioga county. -Re will also soon be prepared to furnish formers with every description of Agricultural implements •suited to th© wants of this region. | - Wallsboro, May 20,1863. Oj V.* CRANS. LIST OF LETTERS remaining in the'Post Office at Tioga, May ( 18, 1853 , Boner, Mr. William iMacnmber,{David 2 Duell, L. Rachel Strock, MrS. C. E. Gordcu, Warren Stewart, L.> William Henry, .Miss Chloe Stone, D. Warren Hayes, Mrs. Tremaln, Dow Hill, Mrs. Montana Teriel, Mrs. Peley Reuse. Mr. Isaac Wobb, Miss A. C. Moore, Mrs. EvaHno White, Mr. Eugcan Marvin, Miss Mary Persona calling for any of the above letters, will please say they are advertised. ~ LEWIS DAGGETT, P. M. LIST OF LETTERS remaininaJn *he Post Office at Wellsboro, May 16, ISt^: Bailey, Henry Jackson, Mayy E, Bailey, Maryatt Mnmleville, Wooster 2 Borken, Palmer Matter, Amanda Jana Barnes, James 2 NowherrjJSpenccr Butler, L. B. Patton, John D. Cole, Mary Jane Pellett, Charles Cranco, Mdme Prudent (For’n) Reynolds, Wm. Clark. Wm, D. Redfteld. Wm. Carpenter, Letta Smith, Ellis Doe, John Sheldon, Clias. Dailey, Orlando Woodward, E. E. ’ Hunt, T. Cj - * v [ Persons calling for any of the above letters, will please say they are advertised. HUGH YOUNG, P. M. Register’s Ifollcc. NOTICE is hereby given that the following Administrators, Executors, and Guardians, have filed their accounts in lb© Register's] Office of Tioga county, and that the some will be (presented to the Orphan’s Court of Tioga county, obithe first Monday of June, 1863, for confirmation and kllowan.ee: Account of Roswell Ackley, Administrator of H. A. Reynolds deceased. I Account of O. B. Wells, Administrator- of Theodo ras Larrison, dec'd. \ Account of E. S. Seeley, Administrator of Caroline Seeley dec'd. Account of J. P. & Thomas Keeney, Administrators of Thomas Keeney dec’d. Account of John Newbery, Executor of Nathan Newbery dec'd. Account of Peter Vaanesa, Guardian of James M. 3t Orren M. Dodd. H. S. ARCHER, Register. Wellsboro, May 13, 1863.-3 w. ! MRS. IS. C. STRIKER, BOARDING & DAY | SCHOOL, LAWRENCEVILLE, TIOGA CO., PA. school will be open for the reception of A pupils on Monday, May 4,1863*. A limited num ber of girls taken as boarders, anU ; every attention paid to. their minds and morals. The coutse of in struction will be most thorough, and no pains spared to render the school deserving of public patronage. Fob tern® &e., apply to April 22,. 1863. Mrs. M. C. STRYKER. * DESTISTBV. PRICE & FIRMAN, MECHANICAL & SURGICAL DENTISTS, WOULD respectfully Inform theeitiießS of Wells boro and surrounding country,, that they are now stopping at J-. W. Bigoaey's Hotel, knows as the Pennsylvania Hoase, for a few weeks, and would be pleased to wait on all who may need the services of thiii profession. All operations 'Pertaining to the profession-perfbrmed in the most caretbl and scien tific manner. We would call particular attention to soar hard Rubber or Coralite work, wjhioh is unprece dented. PRICE 4 FIRMAN. * ■’ Wellsboro) March 18. 1863. ' j .•vr-u.•"!> U'-a.'rrsiK*.'' >r^.T. WOOtfeU FACTORY. THE undersigned takes ibis forming the inhabitant* of Steuben and Tioga counties and vicinity, that her baa rented for a term of years, with the intention of purchasing the well knows Woolen Factory at South Addison, (known os the Wombongh Factory) where ho wHI manufacture Wool by the yard, or on shares into Btocking-Yarn, Plan, nels, Casslmeres, Doe*Skios, and Foil Cloths of *u kinds. The Machinery is undergoing a thorough sad complete repair, and new Machinery is being added to the Mill, which will enable it to turn off a style tf work far superior to anything of the kind ever done in this section of the country. Also particular atten tion will be paid to Roll Carding and Cloth-Dressing* which will be done in the neatest possible manner* Tbe Roll Machine is also being fitted entirely new,, and can be depended upon doing work satisfactorily. The subscriber would here say, that be has been en gaged in tbe business of manufacturing Wool for Farmers for tbe past fifteen years in the east, and i*\ thoroughly acquainted with the business ; that all who want work of this kind may rely with confidence on its being done to their entire satisfaction. First class references given as to ability and respon sibility. W, F. KEEFES. South Addison, N. Y., April 15, 1863.-4tn* TO NERVOUS SUFFERERS OF BOTH SEXES.—A Reverend Qejitleman baring been restored to health in a few days, after undergoing all tbe usual routine and irregular modes of treatment without success, considers it bis sacred duty to com* municate to bis afflicted fellow creatures tbe means of cure. Hence, on tbe receipt of an addressed en velope, be will send (free) a copy of the prescription .used. Direct to John M. Dangall, 186 Fulton street, Brooklyn, New York. Jan. 28, 1863-ly, ON and after JULY let, 1863, the privilege of converting the present issue of LEGAL TENDER NOTES INTO THE NATIONAL SIX PER CENT. LOAN (commonly called ‘-‘Five-Iwen* ties”) will cease. All who wish to invest In the Five. Twenty Loan must, therefore, apply before tbe Ist of JULY next. JAY COOKE, Subscription Agent, Ho. 11l S. Third St., Philadelphia. April 8,1863-3 m. ; Editor of The Agitator ? Pear Sir: With year permission I wish to iay to the readers of your paper that I will send by return fa ail to all who wish it, (free) a Recipe, with full di rections for making and using a simple Vegetable- Balm, that will effectually remove, in 10 days, Pim ples, Blotches, Tan, Freckles, and all Impurities of the Skin, leaving ths same soft, clear, smooth and beautiful. I will also mail free to those having Bald Heads or Bare Pages, simple directions and information tbac will enable them to start a full growth of Luxuriant Hair, Whiskers, or a Moustache, in less than 30 days. All opplications answered by return mail without charge. Respectfully yours, THOS. P. CHAI*SjAN, Chemist, Feb. 25,1863-3 m. No. S3l Broadly, New York, 111 LDRE N OWE OF THEIR SICKNESS TO COLDST-J-No matter where tbe disease may appear to be sealed, its origin may be traced to suppressed perspiration, on a Cold. Cramps and Lung Complaints are direct products of Colds. In short Colds are the harbingers of half the diseases that afflict humanity, for as they are caused by check ed .perspiration, and as five-eighths of the waste mat ter of the body escapes through the pores, if these pores are closed, that proportion of diseases necessa rily follows. Keep dear, therefore, of Colds and Coughs, the great precursors of disease, or if con tracted, break them up immediately, by a timely use of Madame Porter '« Curative Buham. Sold by all Druggists, at 13 cents and 25 cents per bottle: March 11, 1863-ly. A ? folSey, Watches, Clocks, Jewelry, &c., &c., repaired'\t old prices. POST OFFICE SUILDING, NO. 5, :UNION BLOCK. Wellsboro, May 2rf, 1863, WOOL CARDmO AND CDOTFT DRESSING. Wellsborough, Tioga County, Pa. THE undersigned, thankful for past favcr-, would inform his friends and the public general ly. that he is located permanently in Wcllsboro, and refitted up the old Foundry Building with entire new machinery foi toe purpose of WOOL CARDING CLOTH DRESSING, He will manufacture wool by the yard, or on share?, to suit customers, into CASSIMER.ES, FLANNELS,'and FULL CLOTHS, OF ‘ALL KINDS. As his works run by steam power, he can card Wool at any time fur customers coming from a distance. Being a practical Cloth Dresser, and having follow ed it for a number of years, ho can therefore warrant "ill work to give full satisfaction, or the money re turned. Carded for four cents pep pound, and Cloth Dressed at from eight to eighteen cents per yard; as per color and finish. Wool taken in pay for work. Wellsboro, May 20, 1863. , CHARLES-LEE. DEERFIELD WOOLEN FACTOR?. fTUIE undersigned having purchased the weli JL known Woolen Factory of Messrs. E. A B. S-. Bowen on the Cowanesque River, two miles east of Knoxville, takes this method of informing the inhabit ,fants of Tioga and adjoining counties that be will ‘‘manufacture wool by tho yard cr on scares to suit customers, into FLANNELS, cassimere?, DOE-SKINS, FULL CLOTHS, of all 1 kind'/ Tb© machinery has been thoroughly repafred and new machinery added thereto, also an improved tew wheel which will enable him to wqrk tho entire sea son. He will pay particular attention (o Roll Carding Sc ClolH Dressing which will be dona in the neatest possible manner, having added one new Roll Machine, will enable him to dispatch and accommodate people from a distance. He would farther say that he has carried on the busL ness in manufacturing wool /or fanner® in -Bradford and adjoining counties for the pqgt twenty years; b» therefore esn warrant all work and satisfy bis custo mers, using nothing in manufacturing but genuine wool. JOSEPH INGHAM- Deerfield, May 5, 1863-ly. i Ulaasficld Classical Seminar}' and Stale Normal School. A CALL is hereby made upon the stockhold ers of the Mansfield 0. Seminary and State Normal School for the 6th District, Pa,, to meet oa Friday, May 22d, 1863, at S P. M.“ ,Jd seminary, preparatory to the reception of $5OOO, ap propriated to said institution by the neit Legislature c as required by the following proviso, appended to the appropriation bill; ■ , “ And provided further, that the Sams -hercinbefoW given to the Stale Normal Schools shall only ha pay able on the production to the Soperintendentof Com mon Schools of a dulyscertified copy of the proceeds mgs of a general meeting of the stockholders thereof respectively held, after thirty days public notice, for the purpose of agreeing by a majority of said con .tribuiors or stockholders, that the capital stock there of-shall be reduced by an amount equal to that hero by appropriated by the Stale-; (to effecVwhioti reduc tion when thus agreed to, authority is hereby given to the Trustees of said schools- respectively, to call in the present certificates of stock and issue others i& iiea thereof, of each, amounts as shall effect said ro» duction ;) and that should dividends be hereafter de clared by either of said schools, such dividends shall in no caseexceed six per cent on snch reduced capi tal Btock.£? * W. COCHRAN, * President of the Board of Trustees. Wjt. C. Ripley, Secretary of the Board. Mansfield, April 22, 1863." FLOUR, best and middling gradfes, at lowest market prices, at [April 22] A' NY QUANTITY of CLOVER and GRASS SEED at - rApril 13, *863.] HARDEN’S. TEAS, COFFEE, and SPICES, best qualities and fair prices always on hand at Wellaboro, April 22, 1863. - MATHERS’. 'W'HITE WASH LIME & WHITE WASH it BRUSHES for sale at Roy<’s Drag Store. Welfsboro, April 22 r 1853. NEW SPRING DELAINES at 2s. 6d. per yard at [April 16, 1863. J HARDEN’S. IEB,