~ ‘ , -- __ ' is that gloominess about tbbcf; countenance* Which' betrays their tnifortiCnste. condition.—* the general good oijfer «f thinga testi fy welHo the industry andigqod habits of the Kentuckians, yet tbtf awkward and obsolete construction of buildings and Arming otensils show a glaring want efTfankeeingenoity. In the country ftll taste and beauty, in artificial works, are apparently neglected., The-honees are well pat together, but nona bf .that Scanty and neatness of construction,for anrroapdfng ■ accommodations, which characterises the hpnie of the well-to-do Yankee., fanner. As ’ for the eoll it is in all parts, so for as I bare seen or ■ can letnvamvertally fertile, f The surface is more er lees broken—subterraSean cares, can*, ties, knolls'bndralleys, are The cen tral part of the State is byfar tiie best adapted to agriculture! pursuits. As wh proceed south ward the .surface becomes ngere broken, and consequently more; difficult ofcjiitivation. Oar regiment is now encamped near a small :town celled Hnatonville.. OBr;farigade(the 3d) left camp Dick Robinson,on thi3oth of April. The westherj whichwhan I wrote last was' nn -1 Comfortably cool, bad becom 1 fyery warm, wbieh greatly increased the fatigue' jof pur march. After marching qbont 35 mile* we arrived in the vicinity of Green we remained nhtirthe Ilth, where we are' temporarily posted. We are shoot 27 miles from camp Dick Rob«i son j the remainder of our brigade dp still in the vicinity 1 of Green 'river. General Welsh * headquarters ars here with ns., Gen. Wilcox is ntLexington. Gen. Burnsides makes ft-ms headquarters at Cincinnati; ♦ The 9lh Corps is ; scattered from that place to the’Te'nnesaee line, guarding or engaged ifl varipua active expe ditions. ... Refugees from Tennessee came within our lines from time & time, They tell thrilling stories of Rebel outrages committed on Union 7 pjtisens. Two 'Tennessee regiments are/ form ■ Ting at canip Dick Robinson, .rimsisting princi pally of refugees from tbit State, who are anx ious for an opportunity to be led against those from whom they have Snfferad So much. The climate of Kentucky agrees with ns much better than any other we'fhave yet been in. The health of the regiment is good—unu sually so. The boys are id, good spirits, and will give good account of themselves should .opportunity offer/ The weather is becoming ! warmer every day. No rains - have yet visited* ris. The roads being mostly pikes are in excellent condition having a good foundation, that never accnmftlate any great depth ofmnd.. Toll-gates are .-established ,at suitable distances, at which ieitiien-travelers are made to pay their feeifor the keeping up of -the roads. >' 1 , ■ - Rumors of victories and defeats of the army in yirginift na dolly. .It ia plain that nothing derisive has hern accomplished. We can tun nope rur gutro (Vnm that quarter. Yburs, respectfully,;' Yowa America. Qnestlo'a Ftwperjy Stated. At ajmeeting of the Union League of Phila delphia,' op Monday .evening/March 23, the members were addressed by . a speaker from the. Border whoB*wdrds had no uncer tain sound. Adjutant-General Harrington, of Delaware,, saidi -I j “ The’ line bettreen' loyalty .and -disloyalty had been distinctly drawn. ,We demand of our oitisehs that they shsll .give ’up everything which stands in the way ofthe Government We. would rather be called, an-Abolitionist than submit to treason and i treachery against the Government.'' We have conleto regard slavery os the cause of the. rebellion,, and it has never been a blessing to ns nor to Anybody else. We havf found that where slavery is strong, rebel lion is strong." . j . “ He was happy, be went on to say, to live in such a crisis. He thought; that the nation would come out of the trial 'purer, brighter, holier and without the stain of slavery upon the flag of the oohntry.” [Loud applause.] Col. Wilmer, of, Kent county, ,was the next speaker. He annoupceibimsself a slaveholder, t but he expressed it as his opinion that the political condition of bis. State was caused by' slavery. If the Union ctmld not be restored with slavery ,-dben he would let his own negroes go, and those of others. Hetwas willing that the Legislature of-Delaware should pass a mea sure for the abolition of slavery without cote peneation. He would ratter' have the uncon ditional aboUtion.of slavery in Delaware than . that another person ehpnld pay for hie staves. ~ A Copperhead La Exposed.—"We have no ticed,for some time past,- the Mowing para graph going the rounds of the copperhead . prees of the country. It pUrporU to be an ex ’ tract from a diplomatic letter, addressed by Se cretary Seward to one of. thp Secretaries of a governmenlin Europe : (, ••My lord, I can touch aibell on my right hand and order,the arrest. of; a citizen in Ohio.' lean touch the bell again, and order the im prisonment of a citizen York; and no power on earth but that-of the president can release them. Can the Q,Oetn of y England, in herdominiona, do as much ?’’ In order to prove that the. paragraph was a forgery, the, editor of the Lancaster Evening Express jrrote to the State Department, and to hie inquiries as 0 its sbthenlioity, received the followifignnequivooal reply. DepaEt xek.t of State, > • Washwgios, April 24, 1863'.) , 3. M. W. Geibt, Esq.— pear Sir : Yours of 32d, enclosing,extract from the " Intelligencer," -has been placed in my hands’. \Np inch .pos ing* it to befonni i» Er.. Seward's correspond usee: , , ’ ;L'i Thai yon may satisfy I have sent yon the volumes by this day’s mail. Your ob’t servV .: GEO. E. BAKER. Tns Cincisnxti Catholic Telegraph, in an kbit article on the enbjeot of “Frea White La bor,” remarksl'- V Slavery ii nearly extinct, without an effort oh oar part to. destroy it. We, Catholics, bare kept out oath molt aotupuously; we bare let .the Sooth alone, _and only s when effort failed and the whole npßo of the government was - aboutto fall into nun, and anarchy over spread the land, did we otter a Word, in self-defense, ' against that pemicvnusyeteik which has brought abb this goffering on. opt country. We may here observe that it is painful to ns to write on this subject, knowing the violent prejudices or convictions which prevail; and particularly amongst our fallow Catholic citizens. Bnt when prejudice becomes dangerous as well as ridioa - loos, it is time for some one to expose its folly. It will soon be pbsolete.” The Copperhead .Democfisoy obatge the ab olitionists whb bringtng tJI this suffering on t^ecountry; bpt this editor, who looks at the ..question with r the naked e|e, and hot through pavftien ep«teel«s,'retiieHi a verdict more in aSjdfUinee with faet»and;eoand reason. ' ’ ... TflE AGITATOR. M. IL COBBj KDIXOR AND T^tOPMBTOS. wsusßOßonoß, PBinrAt WEDNESDAY,; it:;: s ; MAY 27,1863. In ■ old times, before science and invention bad modernized labor, the farmer separated hia grain from chaff and other , impurities by a very primitive process.. Possibly there may be in existence, and onr readers may bare" seen, the old-fashioned groin fan—made of willow. It is possible that some ofthe rising .genera tion have seen grain cleaned with this, awkward ■contrivance; and nearly all in the prime of life mast have seen tjie process in their youth. Now all such will have noticed that the ope rator, after heaving the grain up and down in the fan for a few minutes, stopped, shook the grain into the basket-shaped part of the fan, , and by rocking to and fro on his feet sidewise, imparted an orillating motion to the implement. And they will have noticed also, that by this change .in motion, 'all the straws, slicks, and coarse chaff, came to the surface, leaying the grain st Ihe.bbttom. 1 - The chaff thus thrown to the surface by agitation-was tbehremoved by the band, thrown oside.iind the, qleaping process resumed. Now the present posture of affairs in the North often reminds Us of this, old-fashioned mode of cleaning grain. All organizations are being shaken up, stirred to their very deeps, and so thoroughly, that the ehatf, the sticks, s«d all effete matter; are brought to the surface, while sterling.men and women, like the grain, remain fast anchored to principle. Very many of onr readers have observed the process of sugar-making, from the time when the sap is pnt into the kettles until the luscious syrup is strained and made ready to "sugar off.” They will not have failed to notice how, during the boiling process, a dirty white scum appears on the surface of the liquor, and is carefully skimmed away. As the process ad vances ther senm gets thioker and darker; and finally, the filth is never fully separated from the syrup until it is said to “ grain." Now the state of affairs in the North often reminds ns of the sugar-making process. Tbs various organizations are being objected to simitar influences, and the filth is being ejected from the boiling mass, so that the latter may be pntified and made subservient fo nse. ’Wherever we see a man devoted to the work of fault-finding, and abuse of the' Administra tion ; who is constantly berating-Mr* Lincoln, the Secretary of War, and'other civil and mili tary functionaries who chance to be in earnest in the effort to suppress the rebellion; 'who make* no secret of his sympathy with Yollan digham and men of that stripe; who denounces the new militia law as despotic and destructive of liberty; who endeavors to bring the national currency into disrepute; who claims the full and free privilege of grumbling, yet never gives a dime of aid to a struggling government; who talks loudly of dying in bis own door yard rather than shoulder a musket or pay an equivalent for service; who adds volume to the now senselessly .perverted cry of “ t(ie Union as it was, and the Constitution as it is !” I Whenever we see a man devoted to that sort of ' thing, we at once recognize in him the chaff that seeks the surface in the old-fashioned fan, and the scorn that gathers on the surface of the boiling sap;.and then we thank heaven that the chaff aqd the scum is foredoomed to destruction, as well by nature as by Holy Writ. Such a man, (and all who. follow the like practices), is a demagogue. This class makes a great noise, is insolent and lawless. Its mem bets make so much noise that, quiet people get exaggerated notions of their numbers and im portance. In like manner we have seen the chaff overspread and hide the wheat in the fan, . and the scum foaming and tossing, and cover ing the entire surface of the gq that the uninitiated observer in one case would conolode that, the fan held nothing bnt chaff, and in the other that the kettle held nothing hot filthy scum. Hot so. 1 It is the privilege of-surface men to make a great fuse and parade. They bleat and babble on the street corners, and month their words as if they were the vehicles of tense.' We admit : that such men do much abound, even here, where loyalty and devotion to the union is overwhelmingly the rule. But tea Copperheads make more noise than ten times os many earn est patriots, and therefore the reptilia seem ten times as numerous as they are. They talk loudiabout the Constitution, yet are incapable of comprehending the scope and bearing of that instrument. We read their speeches in the journals, and arise.from the. reading sur feited with words—words—words. They live on the surface, think on .the surface, and Soun der in the miry shallows,-like school-boys.— Into the hands of such leaden the masses of the Democratic Party that was, arc to commit themselves, or not, as they choose. Tbs following notice appeared in a Philadel phia daily paper lasi week: ,1 “ Owing to the Prhe fight in'Msrylantl, there win be no moeting ofHho Democratic Crab this evening," Withont doubt, the prise fights in the neigh borhood of. New’ York daring the -past two weeks made the adjournment of the. Copper head Club meetings in that pity absolutely ne cessary. It might 1 be wellentmgh for snob -organisations to keep a standing notice in the’ papers: "The regular pieetihgs of the Club will only be.postponed biT account of prize fights, dogfights, and cock-fights.” ' ' Mb. Crittxjtdxn, of Kenthcky r long conser vative and hesitating,'has declared for the most rigorous promotion pNhe war until the Sooth le subjugated. He says no loyal man, will stand to Question tbs President's emancipationpoliey FAMXLIAK FAHALLEDS, JEHII * TIGGA-gGGUI in-thisempeiscy. be neoegjliry-'! : Tt' Si ‘ ' L -. -.'.Jab. ' ...Aft. Rxadxb, among yonr neighbors da you find any difficulty in recogniling'ywir friends T Or do: you j • poof' a ,-ryear, apart a dajr for viailhig, each, putting the question direct—" Are you a friend of mine r” , Probably yba do not'do this fatter thing. . Probably ypo recogniie yo.qr , friends without the formolity bf a : personal visit and a direct question. Probably yonAanot trust the man who is loudest ii asserting hie fdendship for yon, but who fail* in neigbborly offices/ Probably yon do hot nerf a tekolier to teach you bow to recognise either your friends or en emies. The instincts Of hitmen nature are' tol erable scats an t certain. Probably you will not mistake any roan - for a friend who abnses yonr friends, or ignores 1 them, and lands your enemies, j...' ..... . Now this is as tree patriotism as, it is of friendship.' You know who is for his country and who Sgrinsf,-without the t«malityof an examination.,. Every man' is either“£br or Sgainst his country. There are no nentials in this fighti The man who . qualifies hir'kpeeoh with “ tfs," “ ands," and “ bats,” is not so decent as ha who'damns the-' goSernment without condition. /-■ Here is a paragraph from wbai claims to be a Democratic paper. Read it: “ Geo. Taos. jErrSESOX Jj.cs.bok, wko.h'M sehlsv ed.mora celebrity than aay' man. North or.Sbnth, for hia modealy, bravary, chivalry; and piety, died lost Smrfay.” - •. That pSper has never ' pronounced so good an eulogy upon any. Union General- who' has perished in this war, la fact it has never eu logised any Union General cave McClellan and Pits John Porter. The editor faae a very great admiration for Stonewall Jackson, Gen. Lee, .Gen. McClellan, and Tits John har monious quartette, in, hi* estimation, evidently. Probably nj> man of Common sense will mis take the aotiiOr of that paragraph for A-teyal man: We have certain ideas as to wbatltns piety consists, in; and we cannot Bee how any man or woman can and a Christian at one and the same time., [Can yon 1 At the great Democratic meeting held in In dianapolis on the:2otb inst., forty or fifty aryesta were mods for carrying concealed weapons.— The crowd listened to the democratic speeches and cheeped for Jeff! Davis. On their return home they fired into the Soldiers’Home, and booses on the line of the road. The trains, were stopped; by the military, authorities and 500 revolvers; taken from the passengers. Now, this is the strait into which copperhead democracy is|driven. They go to public.meet ings with revolvers in their pockets, and give substantial token of their patriotism by firing upon the hooss provided- for soldiers in transit. This is democracy stewed down. In other worae, the nregs pt mac party, xo arrest such ruffians is tyranny; to pnnish them, murder. Very geiod t let ns have some of that tyranny enforced everywhere where' the occasion re quires it; skid sufficient "murders” of that sort to protect society. Liberty, with these fellows, mean*'license to do what they please, without reference to the security of the peace able and orderly. These men are cowards of the worst stamp. And every man who encour ages a mob Spirit is an arrant coward. We give tbs latest news from Vicksburg op to the time of going to press. The announce ment that Vicksburg has fallen, with all its armament, men, and monitions, takes’ the hoe of probability. It is certain that Gen. Grant has .defeatsd| the rebels in fire pitched battles, that he has their artillery, and bad closely in vested Vicksburg. : Gan, Grant’s celerity of movement gives ns great hope that the blow so ranch dreaded by Jeff. Davis k Co,, has-fallen. If irue, and! it is nearly certain, the' heart of every patriot will leap with joy. VaLLANpIOBAK, that precious martyr, is'.riot to be sent, either to ,the Tortuga* or to Fort Warren. Mr. Lincoln bae proved wiser than the public, and baa ssnt the fellow to bis broth* er rebels, beyond the Union lines. We are glad’ of this change of destination. It no w remains for the President to go on with tbs work, and to: send afler tha verbose and windy Clement the entire batch of such, as . sympathize with faint. If the South arid her institutioris are so superior, o»; they are never weary of asserting, why not move them down at public expense 7 Why not, certainly I Tn official return* of the late election* in Wisconsin end Michigan show that those States have given larger Bepoblnsan-Umon majorities than was claimed. ' There was never a-better thing for ihe country than these out and-ont Copperhead demonstration*. Draw-tb* lines, by qlFmesini.- Lat them be as distinct as day and night | Tnu* Evocgh.— A soldier, “bom,and bred a Democrat,” in Sullivan Co., Pa., write* home a letter (which the Laporto Democrat refuted to publish) containing the following pregnant 'thoughts: , I firmly believe, that, had it not been far (he clamor of Northern' sympaikaert, i/tis ear mould have' been over long before now, arid with half the blood .and treasure which, it lias cost, “I *ay, air, that Northern traitors bare vir tually shed, more innocent blood than ever ba* been- spilled by the Army of the Potomac, (and that has v been no small .amount) and the natural conotusiqjyis, hanging is too good for them, . I. admrMWlohn Brown gotbis dues as a traitor, nndwsfcy.iot deal the same with traitors at the present osy , '' g. g_ g_ The war Ctop?*«aEib* Cian? EucVioks.— The committee appointed iavrifigato the question of frauds alleged to have been perpe trated at the recentcharter elections in Chioa go, have on tSeir boobs the h*me*of.ovisV.l,pOO persons whe are not .voter*, bot who novettoe lese deposited ballot* lor the Copperhead :oan didates. The ieveettgation ie not yet eedsd. TY AGjTATORy OjP VICKSBURG. mt SstUwi and *^^lctorie»^ljtr-S , oM Iffea* TIJc y~ K 1^ e Thouaaad ' The Tribune of Monday say* s, - " A'diapfttchtsPftridOnrLincolnannonDcea • >*he*i?T«i4er.<^VkbbarK.,- < It*d»t»>*CJeve. kni. Mrf 24* andft 1e based' on hnother ’flour the telegraph superintendent at Memphis, who declare*, that the. stars and stripes float over ■Vicksburg, and that the victory is complete. That tbs President received this message yee , terday la -certain; wo only wishit had been signed by Gen. Grant, in order that all doubt asiiTthe fact might have been dispelled. There isi'however, a'second dispatch which has not been sent to the press, which stated, with rath er more precision' than the first, that the whole Rebel ' army has been captured; and it third, also private, confirming "the accounts of the other two; We' consider both these at nearly trustworthy as anything but official or direct information dan be;-and reading them in the light of the; previous news it is barely passible to doubt that the crowningyictory of the long struggle for"(he great river has at last been won, and that Vicksburg is ours." The following dispatch was recdived at Cairo May, 24th‘: _ It is said that Gen,; Sherman has taken Haioeaand, Chickasaw; Bluffs, with .$,OOO pris oners, 100 guns, and ammunition and commis sary stores. The prisoners went parolled and sent across the Yazoo. Another, report says those points were evacuated and Sher.man took quiet possession. ; Gen,.Grant attacked tbe npper batteries of Vioksburgon.Sunday, while the gunboats at tacked the water batteries on Tuesday. The upper batteries were captured end turned on the water batteries. The paroled prisoners who were brought , across.from Vicksburg say our.forces have pos session of. the entire line of outer fortifications, and Rebel officers told their men since the cap ture of Haines’s Bluff, that there wavno chance of escape. The rebel force is estimated at from 20,000 1530,000. The wildest confusion existed among them.. Officen’wne unable to keep the line of Rattle. ir The Empress/; the last boat up, says> when she left on Wednesday evening the firing had ceased. There is no doubt bat that the rebels surrendered, Gen. Blair reached Chickassam Bluffs on Tuesday and was sent down formations. The, Bjnion loss, rkifiported heavy. The following official details of the battle of Block River have been received at the War De partment May 23d ' <• Gen. Grdnt won a great and momentous victory over tbs Rebels under Pemberton pn the Jackson and Vicksburg road, at Baker’s Creek, on the 16tb inst, Pemberton hod a most formi dable position on tbs crest of a wooded bill, over which'tie road passes longitudinally. -He had about ffS.OOO men. The- battle began at 11 a. v., and woa gained at 4p. h. Its brant was borne by Hovey’s division of MeClernard’a corps, and by Logan’s and Crocker’s divisions of McPherson’s corps. ‘ Hovey attacked 'the hill, and hol’d the greater part of it till 2 o’clock p. ■., when, having lost 1,600 men, be was suc ceeded by Boomer's and. Holmes's brigades of Aivioinn. by wb!«K fl]Q conflict was ended in that part of the field. Boomer Tost 500 men. Logan operated on the right, and cot off the .enemy’s direct retreat so that be was compelled to escape by his right flank through the woods. Logan lost 400 killed and wound ed, W? took about 2,000 prisoners. On the, 17th, advancing to the Big Block, we fought Pemberton again on the bridge there, and captured 3,ooomore prisoners. He fought in rifle-pits, protected by a difficult bayou full of abattia. Xawlo’a Brigade of McClernord’a corps charged the rifle-pita magnificently and took more prisoners than their own ndmhers. Pemberton burned his bridge, and returned to Vicksburg with’only three cannon out of sixty that he had taken oat. Building four bridges over the Big Black, Qen. Grant arrived beforr the town on tjie ■ evening of the 18tb, and now holds it closely I invested. He had opened a line of supplies, j via Chickasaw Bayou, baying cut the town off from Haines’s Bluff, which is abandoned by the enemy; and which Gen. Grant will occupy. There was sharp fighting through .the day yesterday, “ , . : • . Steel worrand holds the upper bluffs and the enemy’s upper water batteries, and gets water from tbe Misaissippi. Sherman’s oorps lost yesterday .500 killed and wotraded. ' McPherson, who holds the center, lost little, as did MeCleatnand; who holds the left. . The gnhbdats kept the enemy alert daring the night, and probably the town will be car ried to-day. There are from 15,000 to 20,000 men in it. The latest published Rebel intelligence from Vicksburg is in effect that Grant had crossed the Big Black-above the burnt bridge, pud bad circumvented' Vicksburg, talking thirty Rebel sans. The papers speak mournfully of their -prospects in - the Southwest, and hope that af fain then may prove less disastrous than re ported.. • - v Wasbukhoh, May 23,1863.—Advices from Qen, Grant, received by the President (o-nigbt, detail his proceedings and progresa op to the 20thinst; ; Up to that date he had fought five battles, capture*!£4’guns, taken 9,400 prisoners, and, as the dispatch-boat left, the attack on Vicks burg hadjnst commenced. . Washington, May 2S, 1863. '.Gen. Bonks expresses the. expectation, in a private letter recently received here, that Lonis aha will aoon’be ready to enter the Union again, and’., this time as.a Tree State. He does not think that, the difficulties of reorganizing civil institutions will be great afteh the’ military strength of the Rebels shall hays been broken, as it has been effectually in the Opelousas re gion. • . Since Stanton’s unofficial declara tions,-that he should construe-the National Enrollment Act as if it did not contain theJSOO exemption - clause,- have found their way into print and evoked so much discussion, the Sec retary has grown cautions. He has recently said that he should decide the question when a . esse arose; an additional proof that nothing is yet determined, ■ - - An Democrats an not Copperhead*, but all Copperheads pro Democrats, and somehow the Copperheads seem to control their Presses, their Conventions, and the party generally. There are loyal, true, War Democrats, men who love tbo Union better than they do rebels or any thing that rebels love, but they are unfortunate in their- associations, lot tbeCoppephtade lead Ihexrparty. “That’s what’s the mattes.” V GovxENinrat iUtrBBiNCT at th*; W*st.— Great Bffortß h§tii"Been - made in parts of the >western states tq depreoiate the government cur rency,Xnt *ff»ot;i. The Cincinnati Go- Arifysajfsi i “Tbe.popnlarity.jof Aba national currency a mong the people was forcibly illustrated recent ly’in' the neighborhood of this city, where a large nnmber of] Irish laborer* are employed. Their pay wa» offered in bank notes,. bnt it Was’ indignantly refused. The laborers would reoeieve nothing butgreenbaoke. In ordinary trade eastern bank notes are received st par, bnt they gb hard, and in a smaller retail store when a bill is- offered tbs Detector is carefully examined, and ibe note,, if not described ae a counterfeit, is finally taken with reluctance. Altogether it is very evident that greenbacks are regarded as the people’s currency, and if a vote was taken to-day, bank ujotes would be declared a nuisance by three to one. However politicans may ; theorise about a national cur rency, it is very evident .Ah at itisnits tbe pub lic, and it is very doobtfal whether tbs people will ever be satisfied /o return again to the issues of-the swarms of banks! by which the country has. heretofore been supplied with a paper currency.” ; . Horrible I—Rev. J. B. Rogers, chaplain of the 14tb Wisconsin regiment, who has been in charge of the freed blacks at Qairo for some months, confirms a statement which appeared in tbe papers last fall, of tbe fiendish barbar ity of the rebels in Northern Alabama/which was so monstrous as to be received with incre dulity. - He saye that tbe rebels actually butch ered about a thousand; blacks to prevent them falling into tbe hands of- thoirUnion army. Two hundred were confined in a teftgo building, the building fired; and every to death 1 Such things seem beyond belief, bat the evidence is said to.be indisputable.. CLEAR THE'TRACK! THAT- rush to BULLARD A GO’S STORE means something! ' Of coune-it does: It means that BULLARD Ac CO’S Hljw, STOCK Off SPRING & SIMMER GOODS, that about three square miles of d V? ellsborongh and vicinity, 0 GO TO BDYi GOOD GOODS, IT THEM CHEAP. i . are all the rage, anc people, in and aroun< KNOW WHERE H AND B : M o@9 2P W E-iILi style;' variety, quantity, quality defy! competion in ancTchcapncsa, of LADIES’ DRESS GOODS, , FANCY GOODS, LACES, TRIMMINGS, SHAWLS, HOSIERY, . ' LINENS, CAMBRICS/BUXTONS, LADIES’ GAITERS, SLIPPERS, GLOVES, and—but why enumerate They bare everything in the line of goods thet nil) be asked for. Come aod see. And then-- Those elegant Traveling Baskets ! go cheap and bo neat! Have you Been .them? and those EXQUISITE SHAKERS! enough to convert We llsboro and adjoining townships Into Shaker settlement. Every body wants one, and we mean,to sell them |at a price that will enable every one to hoy. I NOW GENTLEMEN,. you hare been asking for bmaiasn| c&ssintßßS; we have the neatest styles and the largest variety of patterns ever bronghejinto Wellsboro. ' TIP-TOP MENCII GOODS, not “ cheap as dirt," because good goods can't be sold for a song now-a-dayaj bat as cheap as any like quality of goods can tje sold in the country. Also, SUMMER HATS, ALL STYLES AND MATERIAL. The Grocery Departm’t, comprises everything in that line, all good and at Reasonable prices. Drop in with tbe crowd. - One Door abovje Roy's Drag Store. J . BULLARD & CO. May 2t, 1863. 1 SPRING & SUMMER COODS! T. 1,. BALDWIN IS. now receiving a large and well selected STOCK OF SUMMER GOODS, lenerol Stuck of SPUING AND consisting in part of a GOODS, DRY RESS GOODS, DE CLOTHING, - AND CAPS, LADIES’ B READY-MA BA|B GROCERIES, BOOTS A HARDWARE, ND SHOES, WARE, Ac., Ac. • Id VERT LOW for I PAY ONLY. - WOODEN AU of which will h« sol READY COUNTRY PRODUCE 3N EXCHANGE. OODS for D r p a r. Tiled to call and examine ALL‘KINDS’ Off ■' TAKEN I AU persons baying G< . REA J ArqAespeotfnlly iny the! stock, As th.y are to be sola at rEnt low prices. CASH PAID FOR WOOL. .Tioga, May 27,1863 i T. L. BALDWIN. .jjBBaTHE ORE AT CAUSE OF HUMAN MISERY, Jutf Published, in a Sealed Envelope. Priee Six Cent*. Alecturelby Db. cdlverwell on THE CAUSE AND CORK of Spermatorrhoea, Consumption, Mental and Physical Debility, Nervous ness, Epilepsy; Impaired Nutrition of the Body; Las. situde; Weakness! of the Limbs and the Back; In disposition, and Incapacity for Study and Labor;. Dullness of Apprehension; Loss of Memory; Aver sion to Society; Love of Solitude; Timidity; Self- Distrust; Dissiness; Headache; Affections of the Eyes; Pimples on the Face; Involuntary Emissions, and Seznal Incapacity; the Consequences of Tooth ful Indiscretion, Ac., Ac. ■ - J&r This admirable Lecture clearly proves that the above enumerated,, often self-afflicted evils, may be removed .without medicine, and without dangerous surgical , operations, and should ba read by every youth and every mao in the land., Sent nnder seal, to any. in a plain, sealed envelope, on the receipt’of six cents, or two postage stamps, by addressing, ~ CHAS. J. C. KLINE A CO., •. 12? Bowery, New York, Post Office 80i.4586, May 20, 1863-20. . . - ; QTOP that cough by using Cline’s Vegetable Embrocation. Sea advertisement la another col oma. Sold by Druggists. [Feb. 18, 1863.] TEAS, COFFEE, and SPICES, beet qualities and fair prices always on hand at . Wellaboro, April 22, [1863. MATHERS’.- WHITE WASH (LIME & WHITE WASH BROSHES for Sale at Roy’s Drug Store. Wellsboro, April 22,1803. WOOIiEIf FACTOR*, THE undersigned takes this method of forming tha'inhabitants of Steuben and l; on counties end vicinity, thst he has rented for s term years, with the intention of purchasing the well known Woolen Factory at Sonth Addison, (known as tie Wombongh Factory) whore hewrill mannfactnre Wool by the yard, or on shares .into Stocking-Ysrn, Flu. nets, Ossslmeres, Doe-Skins, and Foil Cloths of slj kinds. The Machinery U-nndergoing a thorongh mi complete repair, and ne# Machinery is being add*} to the Mill, which will enable it to torn off a style c [ work fat superior to anything of the kind, ever done itt this section ofrihe country. Also particular stlen. tion will be paid to 801 l Carding and Clot& Dressing" which will be done in tie neatest poasiKjr-ffiannet The 801 l Machine Is also being fitted entirely new, and can be depended upon doing work satisfactorily „ The subscriber would here say, that ha has bsen es. gaged in the business of manufacturing Wool («r Farmers for the past fifteen years in the east, and is thoroughly acquainted with the business; that sll who want work of this kind msy rely with confidencs on its being done to their entire satisfaction. First class references given as to ability sndresboj. sibility. ■’ W, P. KEEFER. Sonth Addison, N. Y., April 15, X8(!3.-4m* TO NERVOUS SUFFERERS OP BOTBt SEXES.—A Reverend Gentleman haying been restored to health in a few days, after undergoing all the usual routine and irregular modes of trealaest without success, considers it bis sacred duty to eon municata to his afflicted fellow creatures the mtsei of core. Hence, on the receipt of sn addressed en velope, be will send (free) a copy of the preseriptisa need. Direct to Johu M, Dangsll, 18* Fulton strut, Brooklyn, New York, i , . ■ ■ Jan. 28, ISiS-ly , ON and after-JULY Ist, 1863, tbe privilege of converting the present- issue of LEGAL TENDEB NOTES INTO THE NATIONAL SIX PEE CENT. LOAN (commonly called " Five-Twen ties”) will cease. All who wish to invest In tbs Five-Twsnty loan must, therefore, apply before the .Ist of JULY next, JAY COOKE, Subscription aoest, No, Hi S. Tbied St, Philadelphia. April 8, Iggs-3m. \ CHILDREN OWE MUCH OF THHR SICKNESS TO COLDS.—No mailer when the disease ma; appear to be seated, its origin rat; be traced to suppressed perspiration, or a Cold. Crtttpi and Long Complaints are direct products of Coldi. In short Colds are the harbingers of half the diieuei that afflict humanity, for-as the; are caused b; sheet ed perspiration, and as fire-eighths of the waste ratt ler of the bod; escapes through tbs pores,.if these poreaaro closed, that proportion of diseases neeessar ril; follows. Keep clear, therefore, of Colds tad Coughs, the great precursors of disease,' or if eon. traded, break them up immediate!;, b; a time); a» of Madams Portent Curative JhUvtn. Sold b; tli Druggists, at 13 cents and 25 cents per bottle. March 11, 1863-I;. . JEROME SMITH 153 now receiving, fresh from New York, oni of the largest, if not the largest, and best stocks of SPRING & SUMER ROODS, ever brought into the Borough of Wellsboro, com prising, a splendid assortment of DRY GOODS, READY-MADE CLOTHING, MENS’ & BOY’S SUMMER HATS, iambs* mhess FRENCH CASSIMERS, for summer wear,an assortment of beantlfol pattens; Tweeds and Kentucky Jeans, besides a variety of COCHEOO AND MERRIMAC PRINTS, LAWNS, BEREGES AND LINEN GOODS, SHEETINGS AND SHIRTINGS, all to be sold as cheap as they can be bought at an; other store In this region. L ILAMIISS—ILABHES—OIMIES, Don't forget to call at No. 2, Union Block, ISain Street, and look at the SPLENDID ASSORTMENT of SHAWLS! SHAWLS!! 'with DRESS GOODS to match, and so exactly to 'your taste that yen cannot resist the temptation to hoy, if you will only take the trouble to look at theta. HOUSEKEEPERS! You can find the best of I Glass-ware, wooden- ware, HARDWARE, Ac., Ac., 4c., ' at SMITHS, where yon always get ypur moneys worth, and a little more. - ] If you want to find SMITHS', FOLLOW THE CROWD. Wellsboro, May 27y1563| WOOL CARDIM I AND CLOTH DRESSING., Welhborough, Tioga County, Pa, THE uodersigned, thankful for past favors, would inform his friends and the public general- ’ ly, thatho is located permanently In Wellsboro, tad refitted'np the old Foundry Building n*w machinery for toe purpose of I WOOL CARDING A' CLOTH DRESSING, He will manufacture wool by the yard, or on sham, to suit customers, into ~ - ' | CASSIMERES, FLANNELS, and FULL CLOTHS, OF ALL KINDS'. ,T As his works run by steam power, be«an. card Wool at any time for customers coming-from a distance. ? Being a practical Cloth Dresser, end having follow, ed it for a number of years, be can therefore wamot all .work to give full satisfaction, or the money ta tnrned. , Wool Carded for'-four cents per pound, mil Cloth Dressed at from eight to eighteen cents per yard, as per color and finish. . | S&* Wool taken in pay for work. ] Wellsboro, May 20,1863. CHARLES LEE/. DEERFIELD WOOLEN FACTORY. THE undersigned bavingpurcbased the well known Woolen Factory of Messrs. B. i B. E. Bowen on the Cowanesquw Biter , two milee cast of Knotville, takes tbis method of Informing the inhibi tants of Tioga and adjoining eennties that he wiit mnnnfeeture wool by the yard or on' shares to knit customers, into I FLANNELS, CASSIMBRBS, , BOE-SKINSi FULL CLOTHS, of all kind* The machinery has been thoroughly repaired sod new machinery added thereto, also an improved new wheel which will enable him to work the entire Wes son. Ho will pay particular attention to I Roll Cardin? A Clotb Brewing which will be done in the neatest possible manner, baring added one new Roll Machine, wHI enable him to dispatch and accommodate people thorn a distance. Ho.would farther say that he has carried on the tmsi ness in manufacturing wool for farmers in Btidftird and adjoining counties for the past twenty years; be therefore can warrant all work and satisfy his ‘custo mers, using nothing in manufacturing hat genuine wool. JOSEPH INGHAM. Deerfield, May 5,1863-ly.| . j New Arrival at l(ie Book Stole, A GENERAL ASSORTMENT of Isfiet’ ' Fancy Goods, Embroidery Braids, Dress Braid* Gloves, Thread, Needles, Buttons, Zephyr, Worsted, Shetland Yarn, Ac., io., may be found at the Elect of J. F. Robinson. He would also beg leave to call s<- tontion to’his large assortment-of Photograph kl" bums. [April 22, 1863] J. F. ROBINSON-. THE. CELEBRATED I Rochester .Trout Plies. rpHE Subscriber bogs leave to in forth t|» •A. fishermen of Wsllsboro and vicinity, th»ilb* is agent for the sals of the -Rochester Trout fuss. A fine assortment just received. . Shop opposite tt* Barber Shop. LOREN A. SEARS- Welltboro, March t, 1883-tf. '' . ■ U . ■ •' .. ‘ tej IS,
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers