-X" THE. AGITH M, H. COBB, EDITOR AND -Mlf] WS2&SBOROUGH, SHlfii WEDNESDAY, . SIGNS OF CHAsbii 4 Nothing can b® more signifies |t than the change of base going on in the stf |-rehcl fac tion, under the leadership of ; Brooks.— When be said, in s resent speech J Congress, that slavery was dead, and heShfb i shape his public action with reference to p\ lUfaot' ho only foreshadowed the policy td>! pursued by the faction of which be is a nbta -ry chief. In a" late number o£ his paper, the he | York Ex jrt-tts, he stated that not ten •“ (it joerats” in the House of Representatives be# .that there vrasany vitality in slavery asasy lt-m. 'lbis Jg controverted by such vicious o;c j ns Voor- Ues, Allen, Ancona, Mallory, and: i ifew others in the House; but noffrom aoy ljlicf in the vitality of the institution. They s jnply shad ,ow forth the. warpedness of their * glares, and their affection for vice in its most t incentrated form, by clinging to the grave-tlotji j of slavery. The tactics of this Peaoe-at-any>{ j-ice faction, are about to be changed. Ignortii/ j the irrofu-. table logic of bistory—which teayhis men that no peace party ever throve in %sa,faon of war, but only found a' sure and swift crjstructian— they have heretofore endeavored tf iso, magnify the woes of the land, its high tax! I, its heavy indebtedness, into good and aulii lent reasons for men to turn, traitors and abandon tho gov ernment. .They found love oi lountry too mighty in the hearts of the masify. The peo ple saw the rivers of blood, the ' Boatombs of •lain, the accumulating debt,; it they saw what these depraved politicians. ' -id“not sec— their country’s honor, flamingdill ,a sun above, and more worth than all c ‘psidcrations, addressed to the selfishness jif. <4 fl. ’ For a year, public opinion>liat iurned to the ■ support of the government, fike B i irresistible tide. One year ago New Eampjhire led the* way to victory, and all the loyal ir ates followed in her wake. Again, on the SSfa ■: J March, cur rent, that‘gallant Stale heads ihaVfiiumn which is to scatter the enemies of the go eminent like chaff next fall. The Copperheads of New Hampshire went into the esutent, nth "a peace platform. Upon that platform ‘J ey have been . more signally beaten than ever in that Slate. Last year the UnlunmM- - (ad to depend upon the Legislature for a r Gv -ernor. This year, in a straight fight, they r oll- their Gov ,;ernor by a majority of 5000, , \ • AThir is the handwriting on Let the enemies of the government mat’i" it well. As the campaign opened in a doubtful State—a State claimed by the Copperbas is—this over ■_ whelming defeat augurs annihlh don to the foes ■- "%f order. Friends, we have bu' to go to work. will soon join iisso. with tho ene b tny. Jnspired by the example f New Hemp* ’ thire. she cannot fail to" inflici;’, briber defeat * tjpon ihe vicious faction vrlifcb viltns at ruin if deprived of rule. ' r SSDITOHIAXi COEEEEl 3 * HDEUCE. 1, . , -V,' Washington, J!>fph*2,lB64. ; I trust to make the annouuT'Vient, with all - doosolcmnity— 11 the eternal n-I rv" has a rival. This rival differs in all essentials; from the ne gro. ; 'The. negro Is enslaved j'Jhis rival en " glares. The negro is an objenj: rjf democratic •corn and hatred; the rival) ."8 overwhelmed . with democratic patronage.-, - HI t negro is mild, • placable, usually mer.oi&H 5 the rival is hot, fiered, implacable and inurd*:.' js. The negro . slealay our old ehoee, or strips tour pantry of . its luxuries; the rival filches pm men their ;:good.namefr and characters ; T: jra ; husbands, from children tltvit: ,athers, from so • ijlety its brightest ornament);; it also steals - men’s brains. The negro Is f;T; s object of social - slid.civil proscription; the. i’ cl enters every ->cirei«,'jligh and low, and in,‘p ] •, and greater men have-used very neatly the? j me arguments to bolster up slavery. So iefcSV not be too hard fW_ upohSlr. Powell. He is making bis record.— Let os not interrupt him. Let all these men make history in their own way. But in the po litical day pf Judgment, Sir. Powell and his follow traitors will eal! upon the rocks to cover them from the lightnings of popular scorn. It is difficult to realize that any man of even mo derate pretension to character, can gel up and plead for tho restoration of a system generated in the spume and froth of. hell. OR. JEjTOB, MARCI? 10, 1864. - -■= Legislation is advancing rapidly, and the cer tainty of an early adjournment increases. Pro bably there must bo some President-making before tho close, some speeches, like that of Mr. Powell, for political effect. M. H. C. The publication of the “strictly private” cir-' cular signed by .Senator Pomeroy, has not been unproductive of good. Whether it be genuine pr not,"makes no difference with the result; It has had the effect to rally the loyal closer to the support of the government, at tho. same time 'placing Mr. Chase hors du combat. The latter strenuously denies any knowledge of the circu lar until its publication. Senator Pomeroy doel not, as I can learn, deny its origin, except as to one point—and it is a vital point—to wit: that he never assumed to act os chairman of, the National Executive Committee. This goes to relieve him of tho charge of originating the circular, though it does not appear that he dis avows its sentiments. The hostility of Mr. Pomeroy and a portion of the Missouri “radicals" to Mr. Lincoln, is. susceptible of explanation. Mr. Lincoln has, nil along, steadily refused to recognize the legit imacy of any such division among the Union men of the'West. The only difference I am able to discover between the radicals, under Gratz Brown, and the emancipationists, under Frank Blair, is that the former go in for the an nihilation of slavery immediately, and without after .action, leaving the freedmen to the .laws regulating the demands of labor,, while the lat ter go in for emancipation and colonization.— This is no new idea of Mr. Blair’s. As' long ,ago as 1860, I saw a letter, written by Mont gomery Blair, proposing this very mode foj. abolishing slavery. It is a pet scheme of the Blair family. And when they take bold of an idea, they never let go. I do not think Mont, gomery Blair is at all a friend of slavery by in tention. His Rockville speech, in which he charged the radical republicans with pro jecting amalgamation of the white and black races, was made to glorify his own scheme for destroying the institution., This charge of ad vocating, or desiring, an amalgamation of the races, is preferred with .a bad grace by men who have lived all their lives in the midst of slavery and witnessed its.workings. I say, and without fear of successful contradiction, that since I have known Washington, the women of this city, owning house servants, have openly rejoiced over tho appearance of mulatto chil dren in their households, as something very de sirable ; and this, too, knowingtbatthe increase ,of chattels was tho fruit of open and flagrant adultery. And it is a legitimate question to submit to any oaviler, or preferer of the charge of Amalgamation against the anti-slavery men of the country, as to which is the worse—co habiting with negresses in wedlock, or out of wedlock. And it is also propbr to inquire, who. thor any prominent anti-slavery champion has married a black wife, or whether anti-slavery men are commonly guilty of the licentiousness which reigns between tho races wheroverolavery is a fact. The truth is, men and women seek their so cial level, as water seeks its physical level.— Many people forget the laws which regulate hu man action. The sensual are not nice in their choice of companions, either male or female.— The refined and cultivated are ruled by the ne cessities of culture and refinement. The demo cratic demagogues,-who have bespattered the Irish race all over with adulation, for their votes, do not, as I have observed, take Irish girls to wife. Ido not suppose they ever held out any such inducement to gain votes; and if they did, it is not probable that they would fulfil the obligation.' Sympathy with a man does not involve taking him into one’s confidence. Hu man law cannot create equality in anything pertaining to soul or character. It cannot even make men frefe. God does that in the begin ning; and when a slave is emancipated, the person as only left where God placed him, and from which law kept, or restrained him. It is time these truths had passed into proverbs. But shallow minds have perverted everything that was.not originally lodged out of their reach. Law cannot make men honest. Lodge a thief in the prison, and ninety-nine in the hundred so lodged/ when turned out, are still thieves. Because the commandment of the law cannot af fect; the nature of any man. M. H. C. 'Washington, March 8, 18G4. ‘Washington, March 4,1864. Last night I went to hear the famous Colonel Streight, so long a prisoner of war in Rich mond, and one of the hundred lucky officers who tunneled Libby Prison and escaped into our lines. Col. Streight is to the rebels what Mor gan is to us. They both hate and fear him. They took every reasonable precaution to keep him securely ; but the Colonel is not a reason able man, in the sense implied in a tame yield ing to adverse circumstances. . Col. Streight is a fine looking person—tall, muscular, and the very impersonation of da ring. • He would stand for a hero anywhere. There is an air of determination in his face, the farthest removed from mere dogged obstinacy that can well bo imagined. Uis subject was the duty of the northern peo ple in this crisis of the Ration’s.fate. Ten months of captivity amorig barbarians—for they are barbarians —have let a good deal of light in upon him. He represented the rebels as most bitterly determined in their project of breaking up the government. In all hie inter- THE TIOGA COUNTY AGITATOR. course with rebels, he says he never heard the possibility of a settlement by compromise hinted at. Among the loyal—for there are some truly loyal men and women in Richmond—he says that ho never heard the word “compromise” mentioned. These Union people, with whom he was lodged for a week after his escape from prison, and who furnished him with provision and arms for his comfort and. defence, as ho set out for our lines, told him that there never could he peace until the chiefs of rebellion and the armies under their control were utterly swept from the, board. Said he—“ We must whip them when they are 250,000, when they are 50,000, when they are 10,000 ; whip them to atoms, and then whip the place where we saw them last,” lie said it was the only way to peace—through the destruction of the rebels themselves. The rebel" army he represented os most admirably disciplined and effective. lie said that suck was the force of discipline, that that army could and would be held together until completely destroyed ; and this, too, in spite of the well known fact in Richmond, that a large proportion of the rank and file are heartily sick' of fighting. Ho said that tho rebel armies could not be kept filled up; that the people who lodged and-secreted him in Richmond after his escape—persons of wealth and intelligence—told him that the last con scription only found 17,000 men liable in five rebel States. Tho country is impoverished in men and means. But this, he said, must not be taken ns meaning that tho rebellion was about to break down by its own weight. The army would only grow weaker by death and desertion, and what remained from time to time would be as determined as et;|r.- That army must be crushed, for it would never disband for lack of purpose or of grub, lie saw no white man on bis escape, and little to evidence that the country was inhabited. He brought away with him three deserters from the conscript camp. They were bunted with cav alry, infantry, and dogs. The latter, he said, was the most arousing of all. The dogs would come up on their track, aud' finding none but white men; would look foolish and pass on, baying. The Colonel’s remarks to the “ Constitutional Union” men, were most bitter. Men who have j tasted the; bitterness of a rebel prison, do not select.their words when they speak of these 1 knaves who stand bickering about the consti tutionality of this, and the usurpation of that. “You .who hope, or pretend to.hope, for com promise," said he, “may go and dwell with'the poor soldiers on Belle Isle, and be permanently cured. There;” said he, « you will see men without shoes, blankets, ’overcoats, - or tents, sleeping in ditches to escape the rigors of frost, and living on one half pound of corn bread and four ounces of beef per day.” These prisoners of war were robbed of their clothes' and left to freeze and starve, by the high minded, chiv alry of the South. More than twenty had to undergo amputation for frost bite, even- bofurs l December set in. Of his own command, the [ Colonel s.aid that he left his wounded seven miles froip any house in Alabama, willi tents, nurses, siirgeon, and ample provisions. The chivalry came upon them and stripped them of their tents, provisions, clothing, and nurses— taking the blankets from under men who had suffered the amputation of limbs—and leaving them to die. These arc* some of the refinements whiph spring from slavery, said the Colonel.— It was a bad school. It must he dismissed “ Let us hear no more from our constitution al-Uoinn friends,” said be, “ about the high toned chivalry of the South, or the atrocities of -Gen. Butler. Why,” said he, “do we never hear our constitutional-union friends lifting their voices against the barbarities practised by their erring southern brethren, when they de plore the atrocities of Union Generals?” I, for one, never saw a word of protest against or in condemnation of the atrocities practised by the rebels against our captured men, in the Copperhead papers. They are shocked at Gen. Butler, but not at the murder in cold blood of our captured men, or in the robbery of the sick an 4 wounded.. These things are. universally! practised by the rebels.- The fact is as well es tablished as any other. Col. Straight is a truly modest man— as mo dest as true courage is always. He blushed like a girl when the crowded audience deman ded some items of personal adventure, saying that they would find it all in the papers. Copperhead Change of Front.—A Harris burg correspondent of the Chamberaburg Re pository says that the Democratic editors,of the State had a covention there on Wednesday last " Tbe y Bat in the Surveyor General's office with loosed doors, and their deliberations were con fined principally to the best plan of carrying the next Presidential election.—They have nut allowed their proceedings to become public but it is known that they informally agreed to modify their pro-slavery views, and take ground gradually for the constitutional abolition of slavery, and be in position to take any avail able General who may be willing to drop into tboir arms and take their Presidential hand on ‘ he 4 ‘f rn u a ' y neXt ’ Tlle y are Papered to drop McClellan, and have pretty well agreed to do so, unless the cause appears hopeless” They don’t want Grant but will take him if they can get him and can’t do nearly as well with any body else. Look out for new tunes from the Democratic organs in a f ow days.—Presto change! is the command novr.*' The Copperhead press have had more to say about our recent ill success in Florida than they have had to say about all our successes f.r,months. They try to put all the blame on President Lincoln lor the reverse. What a set of fair dealing beauties they are! Whenever any movement fails, President, Lincoln is to blame fur it; and whenever a movement is successful he is entitled to no credit for it If they think such manifest unfairness is calcu lated to injure .President Lincoln among iuyal and honest men they are certainly mistaken. Lebanon 'Courier . ' - ■- - ' Education - the Cornerstone of the Union. —Wendell Phillips delivered a lecture a lew days ago, at the music Hall, Boston, before a large audience, itv, which lie advocated the planting of school houses among the negroes and poor whites of the South, with every step of tho army, and said that we have one desti ny and one future with the black man, and we’ve got to share our ideas with him. .lie said he did not despond of the future of the Republic, but believed, as if lie saw it, in a union of all the States, indissoluble as granite, and founded upon justice; in the words of another, you might as well attempt to put a sis weeks’ chicken back into its egg, as to re turn four millions of slaves into bondage. The South, he said, fights with the undying energy a baffled aristocracy, and an aristocracy is al ways hard to conquer. There is danger of our becoming Abolitionists; and-on abolition ist is behind the times, we must become Amer ican citizens. [Applause.] lie spoke also in regard to the nest Presidential election, and said wo must rise to the level of our mission; we must demand a policy in our candidate which is thoroughly, and'in the original sense of the word, democratic, and let our platform be that everything which God has furnished with brains must be provided with a school. Soldiers Toting. —The amendment proposed to our State Constitution insuring to soldiers in tho service of the Union the right to vote, passed the Senate lost week. Of the 17 Re publicans m that body every one voted for the amendment. Of the 10 “ Democrats” in tho Senate only one voted for it —Mr Kinsey being that one. No comments on this voting are nec essary. On the same day that the above vote against the soldiers voting was given, a resolution was introduced in the Senate requesting our repre sentatives in Congress to vote for a law in creasing the pay of private soldiers and non commissioned officers in tho army of the Uni ted States, when all the Republican Senators and Mr Kinsey voted for the resolution, and all ike “ Democratic” Senators voted against it. The Copperheads have written an article in favor of Gen. M’Clellan, and have hired a play actress, named try her luck going about the country to “spout" it. The design is to counteract tho influence of the 'original,, heart-apokeh addresses of that mostrespectable young lady, Miss. Anna E. Dickinson, (who, we rogret to say, is unable to respond to re quests to lecture, on account of ill health.) BILLIOUS ANTIDOTE. ANEW ARTICLE for tbneure of Billious Disor ders, Jaundice, Ac,, for sale at HOY'S DRUG STORE. TREES! TREES! FOR SALE. Apple, Price 20 cts. Extra, 25 cts. SUMMER VARIETY.— EarIy Harvest,' Bed As traebau, Burly Strawberry, Juncting, Early Sweet Bough, Early White, Jenkcns' Pippen, Golden Sweet. AUTUMN VARIETY, —Autumn Bough,Graven stein, Porter, Autumn Strawberry, Hawley or Dowse, Pcarj Henry, Prince, Canada Snow, Jersey Sweet, Stoddard, Pall Pippen, Mammoth Pippen, Rambo, Fall Juneting, Neutral, Thomas Wells. WINTER VARlETY. —Baldwin, Fay's Russott, Northern Spy, Boston Russett, Golden Russctt, Payne Sweeting. Bottle Green, Sweet Pcurmain, Peck’s Plea- Mnt . Bi*.utlr-y Tiliodc Island t-»fDf*ninxr. Hub bardston, None Such, Srfaar, Blade, Pullman's Sweet, Danver's Swcci, .Torapkin's Comity King, Esopus Spitzenbnrg, Wagoner. Lady's Sweet, Yellow Bell flower, Dutch Mignonne, Newtown Pippen, Ladies’ Sweet. Large yellow and red. Small, do, do. Dears, Price 50c. ex. Price. SUMMER VARlETY. —Bartlett, Brandywine, Bloodgood, Bcurre Gifford, Caipenter, Dearborn Seedling, Gungel’s Burgmnot, Golden Bcurre of Gil boa. Harvest, Julienne, Madclieno, Pvostlczer, Osborn Summer, Summer Frank Real, Tyson. AUTUMN VARIETY, —Beurro Bose, Bcurro Di ol, Beurro Oanhault, Bczi Do La Molt, Beurro De Amilis, Buffon, Cushing, Dix, Dutchess de Angou lemc, Flemish Beauty, Ton Dante dc Automne, Fat ten, Henry. Fourth, Louise Bonne do Jersey, Maria de .Louise, Napoleon, Onondago, Paradise de Autum no, Seckol, Sheldon, Sweet Pear, Stevens' Genesee, Urbnniste, Woodstock, Vcrgalieu, Washington. WINTER VARIETY.- GJout Morcean, Pnsso Colmar, Winter Waddcn, LnWrcncc, Vicar of Wink field, Winter Nelis. 'i Blocker's Gnge, Columbia, Coe’s Golden Drop, Egg Plum, Green Gage, Imperial Gage, Jefferson, Law rcnce FaVoritc, Lumbnrd, Magnum Bonum, Princes Gage, Red Gage, Smith's Orleans, Washington, Hu llng Superb. Peaches, Price IS cts. Deigen Yellow* Melocoton, Crawford’s Early. Early York, Red Rare Ripe, Sweet Water, Geo. the Fourth, Lemon Cling, Red Cheek Melocoton. Cherries, Price 38 ct». Black Heart, Black Eagle, Black Tartarian, Down op’s Late Red, Mayduko, Guignc, Elton, Late Black, Qroy’a Early White, Napoleon Bigcreau, Amber, Yel low SpanUh, Bcauraan'a Way, Holland Bigaroau, Golden Drop of Herrington. ' GRAPES.—lsabella, Diana, Hartford Prolific, Ca-‘ tawba, Rebecca, Delaware, Concord, White Sweet Water, Black Burgundy. GOOSEBERRIES.-—English—several varieties. CURRANTS.—White, Cherry, Dutch and Red. ORNAMENTAL. Norway Spruce, Balsam Kir, Scotch Fir, American Arborvilm, Siberian do.. Weeping Mountain. Ash, Mountain Ash, Horse Chestnut, European Larch, Green Forsythea, White Flowering Deutzia, Graceful Dqulzia, Chinese Wiegelia, Roses, Basket Willows, The above I offer fur gale at my Nursery. They are all of superior quality. In digging and packing, care will be taken.; and tho charge for packing wilL be the cost of materials used. Trees will be delivered at the Tioga depot free of charge. Call at the Nur sery, and look at the troesjor your own satisfaction. B. C. WICKHAM. Tioga, Tioga Co., Pa.—March 9, ’64-3m 3 ar. u. c. Portable Printing Offices. Bsaasegi For the use of Merchants, Druggists, nod all business i--!:!;| ; | ami professional men who 1 wish to do print •" Ifegfcw.l Ittß. neatly and cheaply.— M Adapted to tho printing of Handbills, Billheads. Circu- VScv lare. Labels. Curds and Small 1,1 ih jw* 1 * l l i iir ILssgsjs Newspapers full inatruc »■ Jjr.ni .tioua accompany each ofllre enabling « boy ten years old '^SSSMS^ b *'’* to work them surcesj-fully. ™ ‘ Circnlars sunt free. Speci men sheets of Typo, Cuts, ic-, G cents. Address ADAM** PIIESS CO. 31 Park Row, N. Y M and 35 Lincoln St. Boston, Mass. January 27,1864-ly. ArtiuitiUtratoF’s Notice. LETTERS of Administration dc bonii non having been granted to the subscribers on the estate of Ezra Davis,*Sr., late of Richmond, deceased, notice is hereby gixen to those indented to said estate to make immediate payment, ajpd those having claims to pro rent {bein' properly authenticated for settlement tor the subscribers. W&RREN S. DAVIS, ) . Itv> . JOHN A. HOLDEN, j AUmr *• Mansfield, March 2,1864-6 t, WELiSBORO’ ACADEMY. BEWJ. EGLIW, B. A., Principal. , - - - Assistant. THE SERINS TERM opens on MONDAY, March 2Sth, to continue fourteen weeks. =1 For particulars address the Principal or the Board of Xrusloes. J. L. ROBINSON, Pres’t. J. EMERY. Sec’j. Well.-hnro, March i). 1861. " TEAS, COFFEE, and SPICES, beat qualities and fair prices always on hand at- WcUvboro, April 22, 1563. r MATHERS’. Plums, Price 50 cts. SMITH’S xmwioveb green mountain Shingle and Heading Bl&ehlne. It was Awarded the First Fremium Silver Me dal; at the JVeta York Slate Agricultural • Fair, of Utica, in 1863, and at all .other Fairs where Exhibited. THIS important improvement in machines for man ufacturing shingles and heading, the inventor has tho pleasure of introducing to the public; a ma chine which hes proved itself, beyond a doubt, dec!* dcdly the most perfect, the best and cheapest machine, that has over yet been introduced. As shingles and beading ore articles of great demand and of much im portance, the aim and object of the inventor has been to get up a machine that would make them as near perfect to the best shaved, and with the greatest dis patch, possible. With much labor and expense he has succeeded in accomplishing his object; which fact is testified to by those who have the machines in use.— The superiority and many important advantages this machine has -over others, arc: It has no complicated parts liable to derangement; simple in its construc tion, yet strong and durable; perfectly safe and easy in operating; does the work in a very perfect man ner, equally as well on heading of different kinds— cutting obliquely or otherwise, as desired. Tho saw running horizontal, catting lengthwise of tho- holtj the carriage traveling only in proportion to the width of tho shingle or heading, and are made to cut from 10 to 24 inches in length, works up the timber-very close; will cut from 1000 to 1600 perhour of shingles, takes up but little room, occupying only about four feet square, not weighing over 255 lbs.; can be driven by any kind of ordinary power; a very compact ma chine to *hip, Tho cost of the machine is small com pared with its value. The following are a few of tho many testimonials which can be produced : Middlebuht, Vt, Aug. 25, 1863, j Mr. Emerson Smith, Dear Sir:—You wish to know our opinion of your improved shingle and beading machine. Wo bare had ono of them in use some lime; have cat about 800,000 from various kinds of timber. It has done the work in the most satisfactory manner. Have lost no time nor expense on account of the ma chine getting oat of order. It is a very perfect ma chine ; easy and safe to operate. We have used dif ferent kinds of shingle machines. Yours we most say excels all others in every respect. W© would not be willing to take four times the cost of tho machine, coaid we not procure another of the same. Yours truly, ABBY' ::i> ir it failj to give fat:sfactiox. For Diptheria, Colds, Conghs, Soro Throat, or Hoarseness, its equal is not to be found. ’When taken in time, or immediately after an exposure, the effects ara astonishing. Two or three doses will throw off the cold and perform a cure, and prevent tho setting in of tho fever and cough that usually follow a cold, which always racKs tho system, often leading to diptheria and consump tion. It is highly necessary, therefore, that the remedy he administered in time.' One or two' doses may prevent these destructive complaints, and save you from an untimely grave. Sold by Druggists generally. Prcntrcd and sold, wholesale and retail, bv B, CI-INI, No. 00 Gcnossco St, (Matbla Bldckl, Utica, If, y. For Sale by JOHN A. ROY, Wclisboro, Pa. January 13, 1361. TO NERVOUS SUFFERERS y OF BOTH SEXES. A Reverend gentleman having been restored to health in a few days, after undergoing all the usual routine and irregular expensive modes of treatment without success, considers it bis sacred duly to cotn municate,to his allicted fellow creatures the means of cure. Heneo-on the receipt of an addressed envelope, he will send (free) q. copy of the prescription used. Direct to Dr. Jobs JRDaoxann, 186 Fulton Street, Brooklyn, N. Y. Juno 1, 1863-fy. CASH STORE! JT is now past two years since the opening of onn sines which time the public hare awarded tens a we have been signally prospered. The has afforded os ample prosecute our bust, ness in such a manner ox to Perhaps no greater comment could be adduced tc show the value of this plan than the perfect security affords to the purchaser. He not only gets the value it of bis money, hat has the foil consciousness that he. is a free man. Sons to him are things talked of but not realized. We do business thereby saving a heavy tax which mast be 'imputed on the purchaser, where a We purchase most of our Goods for Cash, offence them at a very slight advance preferring as we always have done from the eo%, mencement of oar business to da a large trade for rather than ran the risks which the losses attending* involved. We therefore can and do offer to purths. 'sers of the best assortment of Goooda to be fonnd in sm&9 8 SSMSH' If you want to purchase BtACK, BROU% BLUE * GREES SILKS* BROCADE & PLAIN, Call at FERINE’S. LEWIS SHERRILL, CLOAKS. SACQUES, A MANTILLAS, of the newest designs.in Black or Color*, AT PEBINE’S. FIVErTHOBSASD YARDS^”, ‘ Pacific and Manchoater Delaina for 2 shillings per yard. TEN THOUSAND YARDS Madder Prints for 1 shilling per yard, A LARGE QUANTITY of Domestics at prices that defy competition, AT PEKING'S. Shop-made Kip and Stoga Boots, for $3,09 per pair, AT PERINE’S. HATS AS» GAPS of great variety in quality and price, AT PERINE’S. Ladies, Misses <£ Children’s Shoes in great variety and cheap, AT PERINE’S. Opera Flannels, plain, figured, striped and checked, heavy twilled and red, blue, green, white and Flannels, . AT PEBINE’S. PERINE’S UEAPT PAT STORE -AT TROY, BRADFORD COUNTY,-P£ r 6EHEROVS PATROKA6E} PAY AS YOU GO PLAN A REFT COMPETITION. Strictly for Cash, CREDIT BUSINESS IS DONE. FROM COST,' Small Profits, CREDIT SYSTEM DRY GOODS, NORTHERN PENNSYLVANIA. IDSiUSJa ©©©TO of all styles and quality. * Plain and figured French Morinoes, English Coburgs Colored and Black Alapaea*, Brocade Eeps and oriental lustres, Figured Grenadines, Brocade Mohairs, In fact everything in the Dress Goods line, AT PERINE'S. SEEAmSg mAWWt CAL L**AXD SEE Splendid Brocbes, and Square Shawls, Black Thibet, long Shawls, Black Thibet, square Shawls, Colored Thibcts* “-v Black Silk Shawls, and Shawl* of every kind and' variety, v “ AT PEEINE’S. FIFTY CASES Flour the Sack or Barrel, AT PERINE’S. Prices reduced on Hoop Skirts and Corsets, AT PERINE'S. A new and aheap stock of CLOTHING, at PERINE'S* TROY, Sept. 30, 1803. AT PEBINE’S. AT PERINE’S. I