knees, for it U mytura to con few now, and He len all you t bat can bear,” said the bishop. •• This paper is no charm; 'lbut a foolish rhyme which,l wrote —to tny atiame be it epo ken—when a traveling deacon in the village, of Karlsoopen. I chanced to call at this good wo man’s house; she hospitably entertained me, told me her troubles concerning the death o( her calves and finding that she was ignorant enough to take me for one skilled in magic, because I had studied at Upsala, I took a pres ent of live dollars from her, because my purse Happened to be empty at the tiipe, advised her to give the calves good milk hv-n mysterious manner and wrote on this pape The calf may be white, the cal jay bo red. And if it’s not living, it mast be dead. This nonsense the poor woman hnd carried . hr her right-foot-shoc, believed herself to'be do ing wonders with it for twenty years, and might have been executed on her confess ion for the crime of witchcraft, through my fuoliehand inconsiderate frolic." ." It was said there was nobody in nil the coon-house more difficult to convince of her in nocence than the unlucky dam 4; but being nt length persuaded by the arguments nnd exhor ’ tations of the bishop, she wen*, home satisfied that she was no witch, and, together with the -daughter-in-law who bad brouj ht her trial, led a more jjeacnble life afterwaOs. As for the bishop, he discovered through that incident that the black and dreadful sib of witchcrafi • was not so reol a thing as in his clerical zeal he had imagined, and his exertions were hence forth combined with those of a noble lady, far jn advance of her time, the Com .less de la Gar dee, to put down the peraecutiu v; It has been already said that the tale ia authentic ; and En- - giiah readers may be intere-ted in knowing ‘that the bishop who played etch an important ‘ part-in it was the father of Swedenborg, the 1 aeer of so many visions, and the founder of n widely spread sect. SOUTHERN PRINCIPLE. , Lei the South talk until doomsday about the high principle involved in thes*ivil War that it has involved ns in, one factor (offices to over throw that bragging assertion; -that is the Tact that the South has a strong f? itipathy to pajy inghonest wages for honest % Ibor. • The plan 'ters repudiated hired laborers’.and merely gave their bondsmen hard work, Scanty clothing, r tnisernble-hats, and an inaufi eieney of coarse food. When tired of them, iy when wanting money, they sold the miaerab e slaves, just as •we sell cattle in the North. As to paying them wages, oat of which they could.main tain them selves, the South never did of the sort. 3ln the eye-of the Constitution, one man is 'declared the equal of every other, man, with •rights well defined—rights which the law de fends. Bh( if the man’s color be .not nf the standard white, he had no rights in the South. Here, a man exchanges his tabor, of hand or bend, for nn equivalent, the imount of which Is defined by custom, by codtpeti/ion, and by "tfie price of- the necessaries! of life which stich amounts will purchase. There, the em ployer always fixed the rates and mode of pay-' mint, making both as easy to himself as possi in’plain words, he kept bis slaves on the 'cheapest food, in miserable levels, with coarse clothing, subjecting them to ,sreat 'labor, and flogging them at will, in ori ir to get as much work out of them ns th< r heavily-tasted Strength could give.' All t ds, because these poor, over-tasked, under-fed,, iapriciously pun ished human creatures bad t dark colored cut icle. What a mercy to some folks, that having sandy colored hair was not e Jablished as a spe cial reason fur making the) j slaves, and per petuating slavery among thei 3, while the waters run to the sea, and the wave; dash against the shore 1 If a black skin mails'a man a slave, why not a dark eyet J . If the South bad originally been honest, pay ing fair wages for fair work, it might hare, had fewer acres under cultivation—it might have raised less cotton, rice, or tobacco, but it would .have had.a class of‘ prosperous laborers, what ever their.color. They weiU ?n not to pay wa ges, or any fair, equivalent. They battle now for only one principle—to coijtinue the system of Work without Wages. Ti Uis the principle fur which they commenced o'id are continuing this cruel war.—Press. I Dza»u bf a, Cestennarian.4-A few days ago, ■Mrs. Catharine Shepherd died at her residence in Hudson City, within half a mile of where she was born and bad lived all her life, at the unusual age of one hundred kearfi, sis months nnd fire days. She was it daughter of Jacob Van Winkle, who was a defendant of the or- iginal Dutch-set tiers, and was himself born at South Bergen. Her husband, George Shepherd, whom she survived twenty .years, was a sol dier of. the Revolution, and her family were pa triots of such a character as to have been , fre- quently visited with the wra'tii of the British soldiery. From the steeple (T the old chur-h - at South Bergen, Mrs. Shep »erd beheld the British fleet take the City of New York, nnd not long after, she saw King Geo.ge’s army march past- house on its way to Philadelphia, yfhout this time the British took possesion >f her father’s boose—converting it intu an arsenal, and they made an attempt to bang her father, because he. would not disclose the whereabouts of money which he was supposed to be possessed of. Af ter swinging him from a beam in the house, they left ,lflm for dead; but, fortunately, the last spark had cut.fled, and bis life wag saved by being cut down by the daughter who is the subject of this notice. While.'the British were operating in this vicinity, Mrs. Shepherd per formed'one of. those heroic acts for which the women of, those tryjng times were celebrated, in carrying a message, under perilous circum stances, to a section of the American army en camped at Bellville, informing the command ant of a designed attack upon his forces by the British, and thus giving him-time to frustrate their designs. Mrs. Shepherd’s remains were interred in the burial ground belonging to the Dutch-Reformed -Church, I: at Suuth Bergen, of which church she has beep a member fur fifty; three years. —Jersey Giiy Standard. ■ Sigh Peices. —Howevefnvuch men may com plain bf high prices, the, ’ hare by do means reached the height, after ■ three years of war, that they did in time of peace, in 1837. From our files of that year it appears that, in Feh nary, wheat at Rochester was §2 a bushel. It. New York city mutton and real were 17 to 1G cents a pound; turkey 25 cents; chickens §1 * piece. . A writer in New York city newspa jier at the time observes t-, “ It is easier to write about living in this city limn to find the means of doing it. Rents hare universally gone up, irjam, 30 to 50 per cent. Fit, or is ?15 per bur nt," THE AGITATOR. COBB, EDITOR AND 'PROPRIETOR. _. -SETSUtSBOHOITGH, PBEOM’A.I WEDNESDAY, :; ; JANUARY 0, J 864. "DE MOKTtriS,” &0. The.postmortem arraignment of Pope Bon iface YIU by Philip the Fair, was long be lieved to bo without parallel in history. It. earned for the Prankish monarch an unenviable reputation for malignancy nnd purposeless sacrilege. That extraordinary proceeding is’ho longer isolated in the annals of the world. We learn by the papers that this bit: of history in some sort repeated itself, not long ago, in the city of .Cincinnati, and still more recently in Phil adelphia. The occasion was marked by the resurrection of the political dead of the earlier days of the republic, and their asseinbling in Convention for lhe.purpose 6f preparing a way for transmigrating into the flesh nnd blood of political power. In other words, these fossils convened to devise ways and means to elect a President in'lB64. The historical parallel—we had ahnost writ ten “ parallax"—lies in the exhumation of Geo. B. McClellan, and arraying him once more in the robes of life as n sort of “ lay figure” candidate for the Presidency in 186-4. Gen. McClellan is generally believed to have departed this life on the 12th day of October, 1863, having first written bis own epitonh and dedicated the same ‘to Geo. W. Woodward, said to have been a candidate for gubernatorial hooors at that time. This fresh exhumation was unkind, not to say malignant From his birth into public notice down to bis dismissal from the public service for disobedience to his superior officer, his course was devious, hesitating, and painful. We shall do him the justice to say that he was more sinned against than sinning. Me was caught up by villains and sought to be deified. So jnuch was claimed for him that he dared do nothing to manifest his skill and ability lest be might fail, and thus destroy the delusion. Left to himsejf—nntrameled by the crooked counsels of politicians, Gen. McClellan might have won imperishable honors, .as Meade, Grant, and Butler have won them. But it is his weakness to become a catspaw in the bands of men. of more cunning and subtler intellects. Tliis was the' rock upon which he was dashed ■ to pieces. . . • After bringing' such deplorable ruin upon him, it might have been expected, and with reason, that bis slaughterers would leave him to the unobtrusive repose of his political grave. That he should be raised and “ put upon” a second and third time seems the refinement of crufelty. We can well believe what the vener able Lycoming Gazette says in its notice of the outrage, that " the nomination was without consultation with Gen, McClellan." That that j individual should have consented to the ar rangement beforehand is not to be believed. : That be should submit to it, is to be expected. | Young, ambitious, rather obtuse in all things | not connected with bis profession, no doubt he | feels complimented,-perhaps even assured of d nomination in the Peace-Convention of 1804. It was proper that the Philadelphia fossilifer ous Convention should have been engineered by Amos Kendall. Amos, in common with th» politicians of his era, had an eye to plunder. He scented the carcass afar off, with the olfac tories of a buzzard. His reappearance on the stage reminds one of the ghost in Hamlet. He will remain on the stage nntil elbowed off by the Woods and Seymours. Then be will reap pear in his character of patriot, and insert the Kendall dagger under the fifth rib of bis old comrades. So much for the Engineer of the Philadelphia fossils. It etrikcs .ua thpt patriots will not be found convening and nominating presidential candid ates, aud doing nothing else in this great emer gency. Taking all the facts into consideration, as far as human foresight can go, the great battles of this war will have been fought before the first days of summer. How much belter would it be now, and bow much more honor able will it appear in history, if these “ ancient and honorable conservatives" will consent to help accomplish the work in hand and leave the presidential campaign to come onjn its own good time ? Everybody knows what conserva tism means. It is only another name fur sym pathy with-the ■ slaveholders’ rebellion. Con servatism can never win battles, and no conser vative party will ever elect a president. No conservative party has ever succeeded here, or elsewhere. History ought to teach these gray haired men something. .The right may lie be tween the extremes of radicalism ; but theonlv way provided to attain it is by the immutable law of razing and building anew. That is— whatever is evil must be destroyed and re placed by its opposite good. Tbs Herald, World, and other mischievous papers, are beginning to talk of Gen. Grant as a candidate fur the Presidency. The object, uf course, is to slaughter that chief os Mc- Clellan was slaughtered. That they are not siacere is quite manifest—Gen, "Grantharing declared for the overthrow of slavery and re bellion at one and the same time. His manly letter which we publish elsewhere, puts him beyond the dirty woak of the northern rebels. .They do not want such a man elevated to the first position in the nation. He is ton much in earnest —too much a foe to everything under handed to suit the liking of such politicians. We repeat, the selection of tho to be suc cessful candidate for the Presidency in 1864 does not lie in the choice of politicians. They I may propose, but as for disposing, that is not ‘their prerogative. Present Indications may ~ THE TIPOI point to ’this,’that, or the! other man as'the coming mafl. Butin these extraordinary times the aspect of affairs, as well as the indication of events,'cannot be fixed and constant'. What nphearals may be experienced in ■ lhn~ months" intervening cannot be guessed at. They may be many, or few, or none at all. Butcircnm stances will inevitably vary, and whether they shall rule for this man or that, can be better told next summer than now. We; have no faith in.prophecy by politicians.. "We have faith to believethat this great struggle was predeter mined, and, that the Directing Power cannnot be deposed by Fernando Wood, and all the .powers’of darkness combined. ■ ; When Sampson awoke to find his flowing locks and his strength departed, liis astonish ment and discomfiture could not .have-exceeded that of the ohielf of the Peace faction at the result of the firss test vote in the lower House of Congress. The Pence journals had pro claimedto the country that tbp anti-Adminis tration strength in the House would be suffi cient, to pxpreise partial'control of the legisla tion of the session. The first test .vote scatter ed their'pretensions to the winds, and left the faction to subside into a helpless and wavering minority. The,depravity of the Border-State members was greatly overrated. - They proved by their votes that the. leading men.of Mary land, Virginia, Kentucky,"and Missouri, are more truly loyal than the Woodward-Vallandig hamites of the free States. This humiliating fact bad.tbe effect to lower the tone of the fac tious journals, and to break the pride and arro gance of the northern rebels in Congress. The defection of Fernando Wood on the proposition to limit the appropriation of twen ty millions for bounties to volunteers, to white persons, is significant, as showing the. tendency of popular feeling in his Congressional district. Fernando Wood ia a trimmer. He watches the tides and winds and trims his sails accordingly. In no sense is he a leader of tbe people. He simply follows the drift of public, sentiment. His negative vote on the proposition alluded to must"be taken in evidencC’of a radical change in sentiment among his constituents. Evident ly the employment of negro troops ia getting popular with the substratum of New York so ciety. Thus, slowly, but surely, the people are forc ing tbe cbiefsof faction into a support of the war policy of the President. Sampspn has submitted to tbe arbitrament of the scissor*, and sits in tbe Capitol subjugated and lamb like. In reality, the negative vote of Fernando Wood was a'vote for the extinction of slavery in every border State. So tbe world does move. Fbou all that wo can gather touching tbe amendment of tbp Conscription Law, it does not appear that much will be done save to con solidate the classes and to patch up the loop holes through which so many sons dependent upon their fathers for support bare evaded the operation of the law. The loose construction put upon that clause In the law did more to render the draft inefficient than any, or all other causes combined. The law will be so amended as to relieve • the parents of depend ent children, and save the Provost-Marshal General the trouble of construing it all. ■ WAR NEWS. The news is mostly unimportant. Our for ces took possession of the entrance to Lavacea Bay, Texas, on tbe 30th of November. There is no news from'the Army of tbe Potomac, It is rumored that tbe draft has been post poned to the 15th Inst., but we have no confir mation of it. The extreme cold experienced in this region last week was vel*jf general, throughout the country. Four persons were frozen to death in Philadelphia. Grant on Slavery.— Senator Wilson read a letter from Gen. Grant before a meeting in Philadelphia, last week. That great soldier says: “ I have never been an anti-slavery man, but I try to judge justly of what I see. I made up my mind, when this war opened, that the North and the South could only live together in peace as ono nation, and they could only bo one na tion by being a free nation. Slavery, which con stituted .the corner-stone of the so-called Con federacy, is knocked out; and it will take more men to hold the black race as slaves than it would to put down the rebellion: and, much as I desire to see peace, and 1 long for it, I am opposed .to any peace until this question.of Sla very is forever settled.” A funny Mistake.—OlJ negro, slumbering, with hia feet pointing to a glimmering fire. Opens one eye, and gets a glimpse of them, ns they stand up in the obscurity. Mistakes them for two little negroes, and cries; “Gif fum ’fore me 1” and relapse into sleep. After a while, opens the other eye, and still seeing the'intru ders, says: “Gif fum ’fore me, I say; I kick you in da fire if you don’t; I will, shu’ ” snd again he snores. His dreams not being pleas ant, he soon opens both eyes and still seeing' the little pests, he draws up his foot for the threatened kick, but is alarmed to see the en emy advanced upon him and exclaims: “ Wha," where you comin to, now? Humph 1 rov own foot by golly !” ‘ A company of colored Onion soldiers iaßonlh Carolina, were recently attacked by a cavalrv troop, but the latter were defeated', (a son of John C. Calhoun being reported among tho killed.) Bloodhounds were' sent after the col ored men, but the hounds were met by and im paled on bayonets—the soldiers bringing home tho bounds on top of their “ shoulder arms !”• A tou.vq lady in Chardon Wisconsin, has just received a largo helping plaster for her broken heart, in the shape of a verdict of §lO, 000 damages against the gay deceiver. It was proved that the “ courtin’’ began when she was *,* sweet seventeen,’’ it continued regular ly for fourteen years. He then went to New York and returned with a wife. CGTJSTY AGITATOR. Jtfror* Drawn Term, 1864. -. . GRAND JURORS. ' ■ Tiogo,twp.—niramjl.jidatps. Nelson—G. W. Baxter, S. G. Crandall. Covington Boro—Paxton L. Clark. ~ Union—James’E. Cleveland. h . .. . . , Charleston—Charles Cooledge, HenryiDocks tader, Lyman Kingsbury. . . / - Chatham—Oliver Chappele, Henry F- Dan iels. Covington—Eli Dartt, T. A. Bobbins. . Morris—Samuel Donne. ' V Bloss —Wm. Dunsmore. Knoxville—Charles Goldsmith, Moses D. Willholm. - , ; Clymer—Ruasoll Hackett. Liberty—Conrad Kohler, Nathan Ridge. V. Mudge. .: " « Rutland—Joel Bose,- John Wilson, Chas. Sherman. ■ * > ' Westfield—Eleazer Seagers. • !i traverse jurors. Mansfield—M. L. Bacon, Andrew J. Rose,* R; N. Holden. • j Clymer—; George G. Bristol, Lyman Pritch ard.* i . ", .Charleston,: Ebenezer Burly, James Kelley, Hiram Brooks,* A. Wilkinson. Bloss j Steven Bowen, Elkland Boro: S. B. Brooks. , ' Middlehary! '». A. Clark, Geo. Keeney, Ira A. Newbtill, Ezra Stevens, Abraham Ad ams,* George Dickinson,* Thns. Leet.*. Morris: Henry Crawford, John Wilson. Osceola: Steward Dailey, J. ,B. Payne.* Westfield: Chester Ellis, A. C. Bancroft.* Chatham: Hiram Freeborn, SamuelW..Mo sher,, E J. Chamberlain,* S. Spaulding,* Benjamin Yandasen.* Farroinptoni: A. J.- Fisk, Daniel Mowrey. . Tioga Boro: Henry R: Fish. j 1 Deerfield: John Howland, Wm.'B. Rich. Shippen: Anson Holmes, Geo. D. Leib. Wellsboro: P. G. Hoig, S. H. Landis. - Richmond : Dennis Hotchkiss, Madison Rose, Wm; W. Baynes,* M. Fralick.* Covington; Jacob Johnson. 1 • Gaines : Alanson Knowlton, Horrace 0. Ver milyen, H.. Crofut,* David Res ford.* • jCuvington Boro: Henry Kilbonrn, Samuel Kelsey. Knoxville.:, John , Miller, C. VWarden, Jared Davis, jr.* Tioga twp.: Isaac Mann, H. J. Miller.* Liberty: Wm. Miller, Wm. Narbor, Nathan. Root, John Leinhart,* R. C. Sebring,* Charles F. Veil*. Sullivan; Mark Palmer, R. B. Rose, G. B. Grnndy,* Cornish Madge,* D. Rose.* Union: Nathan Palmer, Ambrose Wm. Newhall,* Spencer Hubbard.* Lawrence Boro: Alford P. Radeker. Rutland : Erastus Rose, A, Mansfield.? Jackson: Clark Stilwell, Wm. Tillinghast, Merit Barnes.* Nelson r Perry Dailey.* Delmar: Lewis Dexter,* Daniel Kimball,* John Pearson.* LawrenceGnmbrine Kelts.* Brookfield R. Seeley.*-, Those marked with a star seongd week. Trial List for January Term, 1864. Julia Elliott vs. Vine DePui et al. A. K. Bosard vs, Julius Sherwood. Thomas Evans ' vs. B. B. Hall. A. G. Elliott vs. Devillo Stowell. George Douchey vs. Cooley & Maxwell."-. John Reddington vs. W. R. S"March. Moses W. Newton vs. B..nia Jackson. W. W. Hall vs. 11. P. Vaness et al. E. K. Blinton et al vs. Pliny Davis. Isaac Mitchell vs. Wm. D. Kelley. Ira Lounsbury vs.' Joseph Yonkin. Wesley Coolidge vs. Daniel Field. A. Wisson et. al. • vs. Silas Johnson. Eliza Wear vs. Harrison Mack 1 Martin Webber vs. John W. Guernsey. J. H. Dykins et. al. vs. Win. Trimble. Childs vs. James Merrill et, al, John Minto, jr. vs. Anson Dana. John Minto, sr. vs. Same. Fattison vs. Demarelt. J. N, Bache, J. S. Bush Chemung Canal Bk. vs. Douchey. Be Reasonable. —Consider that our good days are margin number than, our evil days, our days of prosperity; (such I mean as are suitable to our condition and circumstances) than our days of adversity. This is most cer tain, though most of us are apt to cast up dor accounts otherwise. How many days of (at least competent) health we have enjoyed for one day of grievous sickness ! For one danger that hath surprised us how many scores of dangers' have we escaped,.and soma of them very nar rowly! But alas, we write our. mercies in the dust,- hut our afflictions we engrave in marble; our memories serve us to well to remember the latter, but we are strangely forgetful of the former. Aud this is the greatest cause of our unthankfulluess discontent and muruniring., Hate I not offered you evary advantage?” aaid a doting father to his son. ‘'\oh yes,” re plied the youth, “ but I could not/tliink of ta king advantage of my own father.^ $3O REWARD! LOST, in the Borough of Wellsboro, on Thursday, Dec. SI, 18(53, a plain, Leather colored POGK EX BOOK, containing about $l6O or $l7O inV‘ Green back’s,” principally, of the following denominations : 1 for $106; and the balance in §2O notes, with a§2 note. Also—a promissory note drawn mmy favor by Dp. J- H. Shearer. The above reward will be paid on delivery of the pockctbook and contents ns above, at Ayifaror Office, or to the subscribordu Charleston. ( Jan. 6, ISG4-3L BERTRAND DTJM^UX. Applications for License. is hereby given that the folWwiirg per sons have filed their petitions for license to keep bouses of Entertainment and Eating House*, and that the same will be presented to the Court for a bearing, on Wednesday, the 3d day of February next, at 2 o’clock P,M, Houses op EsTEUTAnaiEST. Tioga—H. S. Johnston.® Wcllsboro—B. B. Holiday.® Knoxville—o. P. Beach.® Mainsburg—Albert F. Packard. Eatixo Houses. Wellsboro——Geo. Hastings & Co. Wellsboro—*L. M. Bullard. Tioga—S. C. Alford.® Jan, 6,1864. J. p. DONALDSON, Clerk. REGISTER’S NOTICE. NOTICE is hereby given that tho following Ad ministrator’s have filed their accounts in the Register's office of Tioga county, and that the same will bo presented to the Orphan’s Court of said county, on Wednesday, the 27th day of January, 1864, for confirmation and allowance: Account of Daniel S. Shore, Adm’r of the estate of Justus S. Burdick, dec’d. Account of Waldo May, Adm’r of tho estate of John May, dec’d. Account of Diana Eice, Adm’r of the estate of Solomon J. Eice, dec’d. Jan. 6, 1864. H. 5. ARCHER, Register* vs. A. 11. Landis, vs. Seth Daggoit. ; SHERIFFS SALES. Application in Tlf tlrtae sund p v v,f } tß of Fieri Facias, T.m, ife a Ji Uvari Facvu, aad> Kinidoni Expoaatf- issued Samuel' Dickinson, 5-126, Petition and LU»\ •' out of the Court of Common Pleas of Tioga county, I ts. E Divorce. 1 10 bo exposed to public sal* in j Charles Jackson. J the Court House, in Wellsboro, on MONDAY, the! ™ r < -25tb-day of Jan. 1864 at 1 o’clock in the afternoon, E /ackfon /oo'r neit fffl^ ths following described property, to wit: uc( Dickinson, has applied W the C64rt of cl *°' - A 1»‘ of laad la T ‘°S a township, bounded north by pi etts of Tioga County, for a Diverse from the w? the estate of A. E. Niles, east and south by Henry of matrimony, and that the said Court hare anoZr Miller; and west by Williamson road—containing one e d Monday, tho 25th day of January isgs aors improved, frame bouse, frame barn, and some Court House, in Wellsboro, for the hearimr’ of w fried trees thereon. To be sold as the property of JF. , sai a Lucy B. Jackson, in the premises, at which the H. vlark. [ and place you can attend if yon think proeer. * >i,ao—the undivided one-half of certain tracts and j aD . 8, 1864. H. SXOWELL. Jf 8W payolfe of.land owned by Farrington Barcalow oft V 9TIS ' Somerville, N. J., and Ann H. Foster, of Corning,’ “ “ ‘ ‘ SnSje of 'New York, situated in the townships of > Chatham and Middlehary, in the eounty of Tioga am'Statepf Pennsylvania, described as follows : one trarief land : contaihing 440 acres and 70 rods, Jonas WfiCTOtis, warrantee. * A^so —one parcel containing 449 acres and 120 , Isaac A. Crandall, warrantee. \ i tao-!-one parcel containing 288 acres, and 101 rod) tho west part of a warrant issued to John Lo£ fger. - ' ' one parcel containing 435 acres and 114 W ood„ 'irarran tee. Mo—one 432 acres and 30 rods, Abe&p.C. Crandall, and Josiab. Emery, warrantees. Ak^o —one other parcel of land containing 60 acres, Baltin and Helienstine, warrantees, on which is erect'd two dwelling houses and one frame barn, with ten improved. o—one other parcel of lind containing 449 acre Wand 71 rods, Joseph E. Lyon, warrantee, on wh&fcis erected six dwelling bouses, one 'store, one one saw mill, one blacksmith shop, and barn, with twelve acres improve#. All the lands and tenements were purchased an(£©oveyed by warrantee deeds from Win. Hutson und,slfhn L. Wisner, to Ann H. Foster and Farring- on the 25th day of June, 1855, and con tai if 'altogether 2550 acres, be the same more or less. To be sold os the property of .Farrington Barcalow and’ Amriada Barcalow. Atsd —O'lot of land in Jackson township, bounded north'by - Drake, east by : Harry Furman, south by jZebas L, Baker and west by “Brockway lot” containing about 26 acres, about 6 acres improved, 1 log bouse, thereon. Also —one other lot of land in Jackson township, bounded north by Harry Furman, south by Bingham lands, east and west by lands of H. H. Dent'—con- j tatning about 100 acres, about 12 acres improved, j log house, log barn, and a few fruit trees thereon. To ; be sold as the property of Zenas S, Baker. j Also— a lot of land in Sullivan township, bounded north by lots. Ho. 148, and 149, cast by lot No. 171, south and west by lines of warrant No. 3331 —con- taining 125.3 acres, more or less, being lot No. 147 on the map of lands of H. H. Dent in Sullivan town ship and part of warrant No. 3381, of which about 60 acres are improved, and on which are one frame ’ boose, one frame barn, out buildings and fruit trees. ; To be sold as the properly of Joseph Gregory. Also— a lot of land in Charleston township, bound ed north by Albert Woodruff and Bingham lands, east by lands of the estate of B. S. Sayre, dec'd, south by John H irt, and west by Nelson Austin and Nicholas Schimpff—containing about one hundred acres, about fifty acres Improved, one frame house, two frame barns, one frame shed, corn bouse, apple orchard and other fruit trees tfaerenn. To be sold as the 'property Lyman Wetmore, R. K. Brundage, Peter Green, and Win. P. Shumway. Also —a lot cf land in Brookfield township, bound ed and described as follows: beginning at the north east corner of lot No. 40 of the allotment of ‘ the Bingham lands in Brookfield township; thence north ISGperebes; thence east 27 perches; thence north 157 perches; thence north 60. degrees west, 90 per ches; thence south 85 degrees west, 81 perches; thence south 16‘ degrees west, 73.8 perches; thence south 30 perches; thence east 46 perches; thence south 94 perches; thence along the west line of lot No. 80 south 28 degrees west, 170 perches; thence along the north line of lot No. 58 east 130.4 perches and south 28 perches; thence along the north Una of lot No. 60 east 60.5 perches to the place of beginning —containing 330 acres, about 50 acres improved. To be sold as the property of John Pierce. Also —a lot of land ia Morris township, bounded nnd described as follows: beginning at a yellow birch corner 99 perches east of a stone heap in the. eastern boundary of Wm. Blackwell’s land on big Pine Creek; thence nerth 196 3 perches to a yellow pine corner; thence, east one hundred and two per ches to a white pine corner; thence south by land formerly of Nathan Broughton 196.8 perches to a post corner; thence west along the warrant line No. 4381, ono hundred arid eighty-two perches to a yel low birch corner the place of beginning—containing 2101 acres, with the usual allowance . Jackson, Jan. fl, ISC4. CHAS. BHEIVE, j Aamrs * ORPHAN'S COURT SALE.—In pursuance of an order of the Orphan's Court of Tioga county, the undersigned of the estate of furnelius Pierce, late of Farmington township, dec’d, ill expose to pnblio sale on the premises, on Thor?, day, the 28th day of January, 1864, the following de scribed real estate situate in the township of Farm ington, Tioga county, Pa., to wit: A lot of land in Farmington township, bounded north by land of Jacob Mowry, east by E. D. Fish, south by Price, and west by A. Herrington— containing 49.7 acres, part of No. 191 of the allot ment of tbo Bingham lands in said township. To be sold as tho property of Cornelias Pierce, dec’d. G. M. HALL, 1 ... NOAH CORWIN, J Adrar - Jan. 6,186-1, LIST OF LETTERS remaining in the Post Office at Tioga, Dec. 31, IS6S: Allen, A. Knapp, E. H. 2 ‘ Brewster, Geo. A. Lewis, Jan.es Bennett, Martha J« Miss Lovell, James Hr?, Daily, Charles Miller, Lucia D. Mrs* Dutton, Abel Mattlson, V. M. Graves, B. J. “• Palmer, Alio Mrs. Hole, Sarah Mrs* " Hanntin, John Ilubon, Sophia ■ ** • Robrein, C. Harris, Charles Scudder, X>. C. Hart, Mary Miss Simpiton, Elijah Harris, Mr. Music Teacher Vandyke, John Jones, J. D. Wiochell, B. C. Persons calling for any of the above letters, will’ please say they are advertised. LEWIS DAGGETT, P, M. LIST OF LETTERS remaining in the Post Office at Rjellaboro, Jan. 2, 1864: | Anderson, T. D- * Jackson, Miss Jano 1 Aknis, Mrs. Frank Judd, Madison Bigbee, Thomas KeUsy, IT. ■ Barnhart, Mrs. Maher, James i Banks, Charlie Mosier, Henry ' Bennotl, Charity A. Norton, Ed. Carr, S. H. Plumley, Laman i Dewey, C. Potter, E. H. j Deniston, Thos. Rigby, AddiJado i Ferman, Elsy Mrs. Reese, Catharine i | Furman, Miss Eleanor Reese, Mary J. I Gee, Eph F, Stage, Ester A. I Goodwin, Albert Sweet, Gustaves ' Hall, Miss S. A. ! Tower, E. M. I Harris, Adelia Tillman. Maria Henry, Mrs. .Charles 2 Wet more, Lester Ilelley, Mrs. Isabell Persons'calling for any of the above letters, will please say/they are advertised, HUGH YOUNG, P. M. DR. JACKSON, THE CELEBRATED . REFORM BOTANIC ■A-ISTID Indian Physician, ERIE CITY, PENN’A., Slay i* Consulted a» '/allow —Frte of Charge. Cameron, N. Y., Briggs House, Tuesday, Jan. 5,1554. Rathbonville, N. T., Ratbbon House, Wednesday, Jan. 6, 1354. Addison, N. T., Doolittle House, Thursday, Jan. 7, 1564- TTOGA, Fa., Johnston House, Friday, Jan. 8,1564. WELLSBORO, Pa., U. S. Hotel, Saturday and Sunday, Jon. 9 and 10,1364*. BLOSSBURG, Pa,, Hall’s Hotel, Monday, Jaa. 11, 186 k Corning, N. Y., Dickinson House, Tuesday, Jan. 12,1564 Bath, H. Y., Union Hotel, Wednesday, Jan. 13,1564. Elmira, N. Y., Brainard House, Wednesday, Jan. 20,1864. TROY, Pa,, Troy House, Thursday, Jun. 21, 1864- Havana, N. Y., Montour House, Friday, Jon. 22, 1861. Wat&lns, N. Y. f Jetferaon House, Saturday and Sunday, Jan. 23 and 24,1861. Dundee, N. House, Monday, Jan. 23,1864, Penn Yan, N. Y., Bonham House, Tuesday, Jan. 26, 1854, Canandaigua, IS. Y., Webster House, Wednesday, Jan. 27,13^' I Those Suffering from Chronic Disease, I of any description may be assured that their ca;e» will be treated fairly and candidly, and they will b° B bo encouraged to take my medicine without a corr«* ponding prospect of benefit, j Dr. Jackson can be consulted at his Booms, ia r5 * gard to all diseases, which he treats with nnprecs . dented success, on a new system. He cures Cbroatf cases of diseases, which have been pronounced ra6/« by the ilodicai Faculty generally, such as sr ‘ vous and Neu , *algic Affections, Diseases of Worn 63 * Paralysis, Epilepsy, Asthma, Salt Rheum, Beoid® nt and Intermittent Fevers, the diseases of Child. 2D»® tc » ; All cases of Seminal Emissions which is ctrrytfj • thousands to the grave annually, „ i Remember the Doctor does not promise to ! stages of diseases; While all diseases are curable** taken in season, all stages are not. Tour case m ’curable iht* week, not next — to-day, not i(hnor^ 9V> i hence the danger of delay. j Consxdtatxoae Free, # . { Dxttani Invalids. —Patients unable to visit D r * ’ by appointment, can communicate their symptom* letter, and have proper medicines sent to any P art ? the world by express, with certainty and disp at ** AU letters of inquiry must contain one stamp to P* pay reply. Address Dr. A« C» Jackson* Brie, Pen '* Box 30* Dec. 2,