I Great baiwoad disaster. Complete Usi of Snifcrers. " We here to record the most extensive and fa tal casualty ever known in tliisj country.— Yesterday Dooming at an early Hour a very large train left Orange, N. J., tm route for I). C. under the change of chief engineer George B. McClellan. I jvvas expect ed to make the trip through fh ti jelvc hours. The-train was very heavily-ladctwith mer chandise shipped by a Now—Ydri 1 Jew house, August Belmont, Agent. All the copperheads in the country were passengers, b,(sides a feV, innocent people who bad been dohlded into ta king an excursion trip by the iffer of dead head tickets. Horatio Seymour c< New York, was the conductor, assisted by Franklin Pierce, C. L. Vallandi’ghant arid Jodi Parker. Ben. Wood was appointed to hold ail.thf money re ceived for fares, and wore a hVilwnd marked, conspicuously 4-11, 44. ; For convenience and comfort he passengers were classified in cars; the fo^'i g: under the charge of Robert C. Wiptbrwl and Millard Fillmore, the short boys under J|htt Van Butch and. Captain Rynders, the mountebanks .and minstrel led by Jack Rogers, and 'Marble, bd itor of the World, and-the few clergymen mar shaled by the very Revs. C. Ghafinccy Burr and H. J. Vandyke. There w£ro- several cars that were intended to,be attached lo the trains that ,did not make the connection—one from Canada, with George N. Sam ers conductor, and a roomy one from New \ Irk, filled .with Gov. Seymour’s friends.”,wt eehoth detain ed by the remarkable interfei ‘ri ;e of a man named Benjamin F. Butler, yiio came to New York last week to “ stopja.lspeli.” , The cars were gorgeously decorated''tilth (such ele gant mottoes as the following i V Butter his riz,” "Abe Lincoln is a' iriilig” “Little Mike’s the b’y bejabers,” “ jjfgfSbs for slaves, Irishmen for, onr roasters,” tjfa are coming brother Jeff.” “Let us chsbge our‘base,” “ Hero’s.yont spaniels for yon. Mbssa Davis.” . They moved out of the Orange depot gaily, to the tune o£-Dixie, though the engineer hes itated, when the final moment of departure came, about stopping on the platforfli, and was at last only got on board by a little expe dient of Fernando Wood, who pulled him into the train backwards by bis coat fail. Engin eer McClellan was dressed* in fte full tig of a Major .General, for which his-. Uncle Sam paid.. He was.very nitrons, - and remarked that he should prefer a gun-boat to In ride on such a locomotive. The engine was": a new one, was bnilt at Chicago, last August! but on a plan designed by Benedict Arnol.i i, and subsequent ly improved by Aaron Buir, and John C. Calhoun. It was bnilt to ft a order of Jeff. Davis and bore the engaging name of “ Cessa tion,”-which was adojitedfas a right change from the original designation,- “ Secession.” It occasioned a great ’deal of remark tba.t hardly any soldiers took ptOsage'bn the train. wore some men nama3 Grant, .Sheridan, Sherman, Hooker, and Dix around, who very ungenerously expressed don it as'to the.safety of the track, and the ability £f the engineer, and it is supposed this prejudiced the “ bine coat” boys, besides this tbl Conductor of the train refused to have an Ah erlcari on - the en gine, and the soldiers have i i stubborn feeling I-of prejudice on that subject Notwithstanding I these slight draw-backs ttt ; train moved off, with the good .wishefl ancf; cheers of all the rebel soldiers in Lee’s An. y, qll the British aristocrats, and the pirati. Semmea and bis friends. From all that cat; be learned from the incoherent talk of the few* survivors of the sad catastrophe it appears tint'there was troub le from the very start. ■ The engineer and his Bremen Pendleton quarrelled, all, the trip, about the method of firing np, and the conductor, and the fare-taker were constantly giving contradictory orders to the breakmen, and nervous bonservalive old gentlemen pulled! frantically at the boll-rope, giving the engineer McClellan no end of troub- 1 le. Just hew tha accideijp-happened -no one can tell now, bnt certain > - is, that before the train got half way throng ‘ there Was a'shock ing smash-up. The local to'ive exploded, the the cars were all piled O p in fragments, the track torn up, and snch a-.tmltitude of' passen gers fatally injured that b is-doubtfiil if their names can ever bo ascert ained.' Some assert that an bid Illinois jok< ly fdmUliarby called Old Abe, caused the disat lerby putting a rail on the track; others tfiat the fireman Pendle ton let too much wafer out o? the peace tank opon the fire in McClellatffs boiler; others that Vallandigham ran the tjain off the track by dropping an “ 0. A. K; ’ stick, of timber under the wheels; still otjhe ’a that the engin eer was frightened by suddenly discovering “ a nigger in his wood the tender, and overturned the locomctit )■ 3y attempting to' “ change his base” too i jjfiJenly. Whatever be the cause, there is no -loftbt of a complete wreck of the trains, and t-ie,sad fate of excur sionists. There ore boFslight fragments of the more distinguished pefsfhs that are recog nizable. Ben. Wood is tr ies Ing altogether, ex; cept hia 4 11-44 badge. Fernando was recog nized by a copy of the statute of, limitations in his trousers pocket; -Horatio Seymour and Vallandigham were fonnd locked fast in each others arms and crushed under tbe-wyight of certain “ dry-goods boxes* that contained bo gus soldiers’ votes ;. Governor Parker was bad-, ly bruised and lost his eyesight, so that “he can’t see it” any more ; Pendleton was pitched headlong into a -nasty ditcW filled with seces sion mud, and which choked* him. As for the engineer, he was blown so. much higher than Gilroy’s kite and was so minutely pulverized that there is no ocular proof that any snch man ever existed. The funeral of these”croursionistB will very soon be attended in Bichmond, Va., by I'Jeff. Davis and all his cabinet, and ,it is currently reported that U. S. Grant may. attend, not, however, in the character of a mpnrner. There will bo no more drains run oh this Toad, as the company being' made bankrupt by thie calamity will immediately wind pp its affairs. (The Union line however is in <>ood ° Waltham watches and Ayer’s Pills are said to be the bigfaeet vspccimens of- American art, etch of their kind : one in mechanics" andthe •ether in medicine; With a Waltham watch in one pocket and a box of Ayer’s Pills in this other, you should bo at your work in season with the health to pursue it.—f Advertiser, Norway, Me. - Ths official statement shows that on the first Monday in October the resources of the Na tional Banking Association were over $197 : 000,00, including -ab0ut,593,250,000 in loan’s and discounts, and nearly $45,000,000 in spe cie and other Their profits arc slated at $6,600,000.'“' THE AGITATOR. M. H. COBB, EDITOR AND PROPRIETOR. WELI.SBOHODGH, PENN’A) WEDNESDAY, Gce opponents have much to - learn. They boar up bravely enough, in,, prosperity ; bnt there’s no virtue in that. They arc as happy as larks whilo the sun shines ; but there is no virtue in that. The courage, constancy,-and. manhood of men is proved, not in prosperity, not in sunshine, but in adversity and in storm. . Our opponents do not take defeat kindly. They get restive, sullen, and despondent. Not without’reason: They had no high and worthy object in view when they entered upon the can vass. The undertook a cause which will not bear defeat. They resorted to means which will not hear the light. Defeat; under the cir cumstances, was as much to be dreaded as death. They provoked their fate. They most abide by it. Their anlleh threats are heeded, recorded, but not feared. The people htpe de cided the matter in question. The people will rule.' There is no longer any concealment of their object in running Gen. McClellan. , The votes were hardly counted before the chiefs of fac tion began to comfort themselves in this wise: “ Well, you have elected Lincoln, but the.coun try is ruined, anyway.” And, positively, this asseveration was accompanied by a lighting np of the countenance we had not remarked since the burning of Ghambersburg.. This revealp the animus of that faction. It is humiliating, but true. It is to be regretted, because it fur nishes another ■ evidence of human depravity. Now'let us strip these seditious men of the robes' of unmitigated Shah, and stand them naked before the "communities they disgrace. They complained ef the abridgment of the lib erty of the individual; they know that the lib erty of tho well disposed citizen was never more sacredly respected by authority than now. They complain that freedom of speech and of the press is struck down; they know that au thority was never more tolerant of speech or press within the bonnds of legitimate criticism. They complain that authority has gone beyond the Constitution in the exercise of power; they know that tho will of the people gave the Con stitution existence, and they know that the peo ple have solemnly ratified every act of author ity, with an unanimity never before witnessed. Still these factious men. reitorata these old charges; and their persistence reveals the ob ject they have in view- 1 They are, simply and only, rebels against the source of all power in' the will. They object to the rule of the majority. That is the whole story. They tied are for the few against the many. Is that Democracy ? There is no De mocracy about it; it .is a’n aping of aristocracy by the substratum of society. That is what it is. The genuine Democracy voted for Lincoln £ Johnson, men taken from the ranks of the people; men who know what it is to earn their bread with their hands, and therefore are in sympathy with the people. The apers of aris tocracy voted for McClellan & Pendleton, men reared in laxary; men who despise the people, as only fit to do the world’s drudgery. Snob is the danger which the American people aver ted by their votes on the Bth of November. We shall not so insult the genuine Democra cy of the country as to call these fellows by the title they usurp and disgrace. Democrats they are not; apers of aristocracy they are. . OLD CLO'! OLD CLO! AUT OLD CLO‘! Simon Judas, as his name indicates, was a member of that tribe whose modern history is written in the- annals of pawnbrokerage, second-hand clothing shops, note-shaving, and pimping.- It is related of him that be contain ed, in his physical conformation, the measure of all men, big and little, strait and crooked. In fact, there was never a suit of ready-made clothing pat npon the market that Simon Ja dos did not swear woa made expressly for him. So, when the prices of clothing went np be yond bis means, be took to the street, and all day long cried—“ Old Clo’l old clo’l any old do’ I” It was a noticeable fact that the cast off clothes of| the pickpocket, the picklock, the genteel confidence man, 'or the prosperous tra der, became him equally well. But his wonderful adaptability did not end with the physical. Conscious of his vulnera bility in almost every point, he was quick to appropriate to himself observations intended to be general rather than particular. l lf ady one denounced the crimes of society, Simon Judas at once took fire, and blustered out: “Do you moan me, sir ?” If a clergyman in oorporated in a sermon some censure of licen tiousness, Simon Judas at once, declared Him self insulted, and took a pew in some«other synagogue.. If two men conversed, privately on the street, and, Simon Judas saw them, he edged near enough to catch an isolated word or two; and if one of those words happened to be he at once blustered—“ do you call me a scoundrel ?” So it became a recognized fact, that ho coat could be fashioned, even for'general trade, that the unhappy Simon Jadas would not, in some way, manage to put on. It was remarked, however, that the unhappy man never seemed to think that allusion was made to him when noble actions were the theme of praise. But when, acts criminal, mean, and contemptible wore denoonced, S. Judas raged like a’cook turkey, and blustered like a poodle • But this idiosyncracy of S. Judas was not wholly despicable. It showed that he had a conscience, and that it accused him, of every minor crime in the catalogue. And so, by indirection, the oommonity in which this old do’ man lived, became thor oughly acquainted with his true character. Bor the people reasoned in this wiself- Si-. THE TIO<*A COUNTY AGITATOR. won Judos hastens to put on the coat intended fur scoundrels, then Simon. Judas considers himself.a scoundrel. If Simon Judas takes fire when low trickery and dishonorable con duct is denounced, then Simon Judas acknowl edges himself a low trickster and dishonorable fellow.' If Simon Judas blusters when people attach a.teakettle to the -caudal extremity, of a stray dog, then Simon Jadns assumes to own the dog. Thus reasoned the people. And it was well reasoned. 'NOV. 23, 1864. 'And so this man of many coats lived unhap py, died miserable, and went to—bis* place. Beijng dead, we are the ancient injunction : “De mortuis,” et cetera. Let ns vail bis frailties with the old do 7 be hawked about the streets in bis brief day, and plant a -peacock’s feather at the head of his humble resting-place—at once bis history and his epi taph. ' , Now that the battle is far progressed and de cisively in favor of Union, we cannot forbear giving praise to the unflagging zeal and tire less energy of the Chairman of the Union State Central Committee, Gen. Cameron bad long ago established bis reputation for energy and superior executive ability. It anything could add luster to that reputation, his conduct of the campaign in Pennsylvania unquestion ably may. No man has, mors entirely given bis time and. energies to-the work. Day and night at the post of duty, he has at once been sentinel and Commander-in-chief. No duty has been neglected, none delayed. He occepted the position. with reluctance. He yvill retire from it with the proud conscious ness of doty performed.-’ He has borne htin self above the scurvy tricks of- politicians, tjnd led to victory through a vigorous prosecution of honorable warfare. Our Copperhead fellow-creatures are reduc ed to great straits. Previous, to the election they only smiled when disaster, or rumor of reverse to the national arms was current. In the pause after the battle, defeated and dis mayed, they fall back upon their haunches and cry, with kindling faces; “ Well, you’ve whipt ns, bnt the country is ruined, any way I”- That Is a mistake. You are defeated, and the country is saved. The leaders of your fac tion sought the election of McClellan as a first step to the overthrow of civil freedom on this continent. Too bad an agent and emissary of the worst despots of Europe for Chairman of your National Committee. He fiong Louis Na poleon’s gold broadeast'in every loyal State. Yet, with the gold and the sympathy of every European despot to back yon, you failed. And your failure is so ptter, so terrible, that you can never retrieve your fallen fortunes. That is the secret of your desperation. You staked everything—honor, decency, reputation—upon the result. Ton lost everything—honor, dccen cy, reputation—in losing the battle. As your leaders are despised to-day, so will they be ex ecrated by posterity. The abettors of treason in the North may as well learn that civil liberty will live to see them all buried and forgotten. The American peo ple will never reconsider and amend the verdict rendered on the Bth day of the present month. General George Brinton McClellan, late , candidate of'Leqis Napoleon for President of the United States, has resigned bis commission in the army. His resignation was immediately accepted by the President, and gallant Philip Sheridan, the hero of the Shdnandeab, appoin ted to fill the vacancy.* This late resignation of the Military Failure discloses the character of the man. He hung to the publie.crib until the people rose up and literally booted him off. Wo are heartily glad that McClellan is once more a private citizen. His timidity was ever an insuperable obstacle to his success as a mil itary leader. He lacks character; like a Iqmp of plastic clay, he is moulded and remoulded by the superior minds into whose grasp he falls. Had he been manipulated by Republioans he would have been a Republican. He submitted to the manipulations of Vallandigham and became a traitor. The overwhelming defeat of faction on the Bth instant has struck the despots of Europe with terror. They now see that their attempt to overthrow civil liberty in America has prov ed a failure.. They expended vast sums to subsidize the so called Democratic party, but succeeded only in corrupting the leaders. The latter feathered their nests beautifully. They are some- millions richer in the aggregate than before. What if they did emulate the fame of Benedict Arnold; they received their full val ue in cash. It is to be apprehended that the royal purchasers, may find themselves outrag eously cheated in the venture. Oor friend, J. B. Hall, sneers at the promo tion of Phil. Sheridan to be a Major General in the regular army, in place of McClellan, re signed. He sneers because Sheridan was but a Captain. Well, Joseph, McClellan was only a resigned Captain when he received bis Major General’s commission. Post np, old fellow, before yon attempt to enlighten the pnblic. General Grant congratulates the President on his double 1 victory; Ctxr Point, Nov. 10,1864 Hon. E. M. Stanton, Sec'y of War Enough now seems.to be known to say who is to hold the reins of government for the next four years. Congratulate the President for- me on the doable victory. The election having passed off quietly, no bloodshed or riot throughout the land, is a vic tory worth more to the country than a battle won., • ....... Eebeldom and Europe will construe it so. H.* S. Grant, Lieutenant General. Hon. Simon Cameron. Three hearty cheers for Old Tioga 1 With 'TXT ANTED. —soo bushels Oats, soa bushels Coro . , ~ onnn „ fV in 1 ear, 500 bu.Ws Flax S,od, for which the the army vote she rolls up more than 3000 ma- higb#lt market pri( . e ia c „ h * UI be pai[i . jority for Uncle Abraham. Tioga is as true as steel. We publish elsewhere the official re tnrn of the army vote for Congress. Next is sue' will contain the official return for Presi dent. WAR NEWS. There is none that is official. General Sherman is reported to be driving all before him, and destroying everything in his rear. There has been bo further fighting before Richmond. ADcsorvcd Compliment, - While everybody is rejoicing at the grand work accomplished in-this State, and returning thanks to a kind Providence, few perhaps give a thought as to the means that were necessary to neconiplish this glorious victory. While ad miring the workl they seem to forget the many hours of toil, the multitudinous cares, the un ceasing, never-ending,antiring energy required of the Union State Central Committee. Each and every member of {this Committee did well; but to the Chairman of the Committee—Hon. Simon Cameron, commander-in-chief, during the lale campaign, of the Onion voters of the Keystone State, belongs the chief hpnor. Day and night, with unflagging zeal was he alert for the interests of the Union party. Unearth ing here a fraud on part of the Democracy, and there detecting a weak point in the enemy’s linos and turning the same to our advantage, he pursued the vanquished foe with an inexor able steadfastness. Turning neither to the right or left, listening to the suggestion of firiends, but heeding not the calumnies of his enemies, he kept straight on until he grasped andi'Secured the victory we now celebrate. All honor then to Simon Cameron and * henceforth let it be said that be assisted, first, in inaugur ation the great policy to crush armed traitors, that he took the lead in organizing the people to repel unarmed traitors, and that he has nowplaced Pennsylvania, where,she is secure, politically and morally, for the national Union I What Hogs to Winter. — A. Hinsdale, of Ohio, gives the following advice : “ Get a good breed of medium-sized hogs that will fat at any age ; such as will weigh from 300 to 400 pounds when matured—it you have no cheap er feed than corn. Keep over winter none but breeding etock. Be sure and keep enough of that, for if yon have too many pigs you can always do something with them in the spring. Have your pigs come about the first of April. Keep no more than you can keep well growing. Bo sare and have good pasture forthero. Make all the pork yon can from cheaper feed, than corn—which must be the base of fatting. “ 1 presume that when com is over fifty cents per bnsbel, it will pay well to grind and cook it ; but I have not tried it fairly. ' Fat well, and kill your pigs about Christmas, and they will ordinarily weigh about 200 pounds as nice pork as was ever was pnt into a barrel. It will frequently out-sell heavy hogs in mar ket. I think that when com is fifty cents per bnsbel, to make pork-raising a good business it should bring §4 per hundred, and for every ten cents advance on com, pork should ad vance $l.” —An extraordinary affair lately oconred in the.town of Orel, in Russia. A.great local land owner had a large aura [forty-three thousand silver roubless] to receive through the police office of that town. On applying for the a roount be was told that the money could not be banded over to him unless be presented the office with five thousand silver roubles. He refused, and immediately reported the case to St -Petersburg, and the money was paid over to him. But on the evening of the same day, as he was quietly smoking in bis study, a load ring was beard at the bell. The servant, on opening the door, was instantly pinioned, and four men, their faces covered with blaok crape, rushed into theruom and told him he must hand over bis forty-three thousand roubles. With the greatest coolness he went over to his box, opened it; seized a revolver which was laid on the top shelf, and'shot two of the robbers dead, the other two immediately taking to their heels. On the crape being removed flora the faces of the dead men they were recognized as the police and bis secretary. Mr. Chase Windsor, paying teller of the of the Mercantile Bank of New York, disap peared on Saturday October 29cb. On exam ining bis cash accent, he was found to be a de faulter to" the amount of $207,000 in currency and $34,000 in gold. A reward of $5,000 for his arrest and $15,000 for the recovery of the money is offered. In the north of England a laborer recently rescued a drowning child from the water, and his boss charged him for the lost time. ML I LLIJERY, BRAIDING & EMBROIDERY, • MACHINE SEWING, DRESS & CLOAK-MAKING, I would inform my friends in and around Tioga borough, that I hare opened a shop in the dwelling formerly occupied by Miss Rachel Protsman. I wiS bare new FALL A WINTER STYLES of Millinery Goods constantly on band. Tioga, Nor. 23, '64-31* ‘ MBS. J. P. URELL, FALL AND WINTER GOODS— No, 2, Onion Block. JEBOME SMITH Has lately returned from New York with a splendid assortment of DRY GOODS, READY-MADE CLOTHING, BOOTS & SHOES. GLASSWARE, HATS & CAPS. HARDWARE, GROCERIES, DOMESTICS, WOODENWARE, ENGLISH CLOTHS, LADIES’ DRESS GOODS, SATINS, TWEEDS AND KENTUCKY JEANS, FRENCH CASSIMERES, FULL CLOTHS. Attention it called to hit itock of Black and Figured Dress Silks, Wort ted Goods, Merinoes, Black and Figured Delaines, Long and Square Shawls, Ladles’ Cloth, Open Flannels, Ac, Purchasers will find that No. 2, Union Block. Main Street, is the place to buy the best quality of Goods at the lowest prices. ' , JEROME SMITH. Wellsboro, Nov. «, 1804-tf. KEBOSINB LAMPS at BOY’S DRUG I D. P. ROBERTS 4 CO. Wcllshoro, Nov. 23, 1364-tf. - ASSESSOR'S NOTICE Concerning the Special Income Tax upon the Income of ISB3.—Pursu ant to the provisions of the Joint Resolutions of Con gress, approved July 4th, 1S n 4. Notice is hereby given that tho Lists of Assessment of the Special In come duly-fakon bytho Assistant "Assessors of the ISth Collection District of Peim’a, trill remain open at their offices respectively, for ten days after the publication of this notice, for tho examination of all persons interested. Any matters of error or inequality complained of will be hoard and adjusted at tho several Connty Seats in tho District, as follows: In Bollefontc, on Tuesday, Nov. 23. In Lock Haven, on Friday, Dec. 2. In Williamsport, on Saturday, Dec. 3. In Wcllsboro. cn Monday, Doo. 5. - In Condersport. on Wednesday, Deo. 7. • ~ Imraodiately thereafter, a complete List of said tax will bo placed in the hands of tho Collectors. GEORGE BOAL, Assessor ISth Dish Pa. Bodlshurg, Pa. Nov. 23,1564. ROB DEPURATIF A L’IODURE J| DE POTASSIUM. In the most populous part of the city of Paris, not far from the Stock Exchange, at No. ISI Mont natro street, yon will find a respectable Apothe cary Establishment, owned and kept by H. C leret This store has been occupied for the same kind of business for many years, and is consequently so well known that it has become the centre of quite a large Medical trade. Although the laws in, France do not allow the Druggist to prescribe remedies for diseased persons: yet many of the customers at this store are accustomed to consult the Druggist in regard to their different ailments; and the proper medicines to be used to cure them. Others come with a recipe or prescription for medicines ordered by their own Physician; and some indeed ask for such remedies as please their own fancy, on perhaps something which has been recommended! by a friend. Bob Depuratif a' L’- iodure de Potassium is a name which sounds fa miliar at thej counter of this store. It is a fa vorite among the customers, and a remedy of great value. It belongs to that class of medicines called alteratives; which silently and slowly produce a change in the diseased organs, and thus graduallly restore the healthful functions of the body. This Eob Depuratif is called for. and used with great Benefit by persons afflicted with chronic acre eyes, and various forms of scrofula, tumors, Ac. It is also successfully used for blotches, pimples, erysipelas, salt rheum, and eruptions of the skin; and all diseases which arise from an impure state of the blood. It ap pears to arouse the dormant powers of the sys tem, and gives new courage to the feeble invalid, who has long been drooping under the influence of some depressing malady, and if carefully and faithfully used for a reasonable time, it often restores the patient to comparative soundness and health. It has been prepared and sold at the same establishment for years. As the store is constantly visited by foreigners, its fame has extended to other countries, and from this labora tory thousands of bottles of it are sent every year to Spain, to Russia, to Brazil, and to the South American Republics. And it is not unknown to the French population in our. own country. To prepare this useful remedy at home then, seems most desirable. Dr. Robert Roy, of Wellsboro, Pa., is now in possession of the original recipe from which it is compounded; and has procured all the apparatus and materials necessary for its manufacture. By the kindness of a friend (M. Durif) who was himself in Dr. Cleret’s employ, and for nearly two years assisted in making it; he has been fully informed in regard to all the particulars of its manufacture ; and he is now making it precisely as it has been, made at the laboratory |)f Dr. Cleret’s Drug Store. This same Bob Depuratif can now be obtained at Roy’s Drug Store, in Wellsboro, by calling for Roy’s Separa tive Syrup of lodide of Potassium. FILL AND WINTER GOODS 1 T. li. BALDWIN IS now receiving a large and well selected STOCK OF f FALL AND WINTER GOODS, consisting in part of a General Stock of DRY GOODS, LADIES’ DRESS GOODS, READY-MADE CLOTHING, HATS AND CAPS, GROCERIES, HARDWARE, BOOTS ANO SHOES, WOODEN WAKE, &c., Ac. All of which will be sold VERT LOW for READY PAY OBEY. ALL KINDS OF COUNTRY PRODUCE i TAKEN IN EXCHANGE. All persons baying GOODS far BEADY PAT, Are respectfully invited to cull and examine THE STOCK, As they ate to be sold at VERT LOW PRICES. CASH PAID FOR WOOL. Tioga, Nov. 27, 1863. T. L. BALDWIN! CLEAR THE TRACKI That mah to o. bollard’s store means something! Of coarse it does. It means that BULLA R D’S NEW STOCK OF FILL & WINTER GOODS, are all the rage, and that about three square miles of people, in and around Wellsborongh and vicinity, KNOW WHERE TO GO TO BUT GOOD GOODS, AND BUY THEM CHEAP, BULLARD defies competition in style, variety, quantity, quality and cheapness, of , LADIES’ DRESS GOODS, TANCX GOODS, LACES, TRIMMINGS, SHAWLS, HOSIERY, LINENS. CAMBRICS. BUTTONS, LADIES’GAITERS, SLIPPERS, GLOVES, and—but why enumerate? He has everything in the lice of goods that will be asked for. Come and see. And then— I BUY TO SELL AGAIN, not “cheap as dirt,” becanso good goods can’t be told for a song new-a-days; bat ss cheap as any like quality of goods can be sold in the country. Also, BEAVER HATS, ALL STYLES AND MATERIAL. The Grocery Departm't, comprises everything in that line, all good and at teaaonable prices. Drop in with the crowd. One Door above Roy's Drug Store. O. BOLLABD. STOBB. Wellsboro, Bor. 11664. “TO BOWEN’S I” QEEING a big crowd on Main Street, hum ing toward a common center, somebody esksd Where Arc You Going? The answer was *1 “To 1 Bowen’s, Wo. 1, Union Block !» To look at that splendid stock of NEW FAU & WINTER GOODS I ust arriving from New York. “ VERY SENSIBLE PEOPLE,” I thought Ito myself; you know who hoys’., L gain, and sells so ns to give the purchaser a bar,"' too. r S a: « Therefore, if you want anything in the line of DRY GOODS, LADIES’ GOODS, READY MADE CLOTHING BOOTS, SHOES, fc’ GO TO BOWEN’S, ’ and if yon want HARDWARE, QDEENSWARB, WOODEN-WARE, and • GROCERIES, at prices you can afford to pay OO TO BOWEN’S. If yon have Cash, or Balter, or Cheese, or Gni. to exchange for this lD SPLENDID STOCTK OF GOODS bring them along, and yon will get ’ Satisfactory Bargains ; ! and if you come once, you will bo sure to cotca uio» —yea, thriee, or half-a-dozen times. Don’t forget the place: NO. 1, UNION BLOCK, TVellaboro, Nov. 1, 1864. JOHN K. BOWEN. The peculiar taint or im’ec ion which we call Scaos ■la. larks in the coustitu tons of multitudes of men. ,t either produces or u 1 troduced by an enfeebled, mated state of the blood,l wherein that fluid becomei incompetent to sustain the atul forces in their vigoruuj iction, ami leaves the sys- c i m to fall into disorder md decay. The scrofulous _ mused by mercurial dis ease, low . living, disordered digestion from un healthy food, impure air, filth and filthy hnl.ts, the depressing vices, and, above all, by the vene real infection. Whatever be its origin, itis hered itary in the constitution, descending “ from parents to children unto the third and fourth generation, 1 indeed, it seems to be the rod of Him who says, - I will visit the iniquities of the fathers upon their children.” The diseases it originates take various names, according to the organs it attacks. In Ilia lungs, Scrofula produces tubercles, and finally Consumption; in the glands, swellings which sup purate and become ulcerous sores; in the stomach and bowels, derangements which produce indi gestion, dyspepsia, and liver complaints; on the skin, eruptive and entnneons affections. These, all having the same origin, require the same rem edy, viz., purification and invigorarion of tho blood. Purify the blood, and these dangerous dis tempers leave yoh. With feeble, foul, or corrupted blood, you cannot have health; with that “life of the flesh” healthy, you cannot have scrofulous disease. Ayer’s Sarsaparilla is compounded from the most effectual antidotes that medical science has discovered for this afflict ing distemper, and for the cure of the disorders it entails. That it is far superior to any other ■remedy yet devised, is known by ail who have given it a trial. That it does combine virtues truly extraordinary in their effect upon this class of complaints, is indisputably proven by the great multitude of publicly known and remarkable cures it has made of the following diseases.- King's Evil, or Glandular Swellings, Tumors, Erup tions, Pimples, Blotches and Sores, Erysipelas, Rose or St Anthony’s Eire, Salt Rheum, Scald Head, Coughs from tuberculous deposits in the lungs, White Swellings, Debility, Dropsy, Neuralgia, Dyspepsia or Indigestion, Syphilis and Syphilitic Defections, Mercurial Diseases, Female Weaknesses, and, indeed, the whole senes of complaints that arise from impurity of the blond. Minute reports of individual cases may be fount in Ayf.k’s Americas- Almanac, which is furnished to! the druggists for gratuitous distribution. -Therein may he learned the directions for its use, and some of the remarkable cures which it lias made when dll other remedies had failed to afford relief. Thn-o cases arc purposely taken from all sections of the country, in order that every reader may have ac cess to some one who can speak to him of its bene fits from personal experience. Scrofula depresses the vital energies, and thus leaves its victims far more subject to disease and its fatal results than are healthy constitutions. Hence it tends to shorten, and does greatly shorten, the average duration of human lift. The vast importance of these con siderations has led us to spend years in perfecting a remedy which is adequate to its cure. This we now offer to the public under the name of Amu's although it is composed of ingre dients', some of which exceed the best of Sirv pariUa in alterative power. By its aid you may protect yourself from the suffering and danger of these disorders. Purge out the foul corruptions that rot and fester in the blood, purge out the Causes of disease, and vigorous health will follow. By its peculiar virtues this remedy stimulates the vital functions, and thus expels the distempers •which lurk within the system or burst out on any part of it. We know the public . have been deceived by many compounds of Sarsaparilla , that promised much and did nothing; but they will neither be deceived nor disappointed in this. Its virtues have been proven by abundant trial, and there remains no question of its surpassing excellence for the cure of the afflicting diseases it is intended io reach; Although under the same name, it is a very different medicine from any other which has been before the people, and is far more effectual than any other which has ever been available in them, i AYER’S CHERRY PECTORAL, The World’s Great Remedy for Cough 3, Colds, Incipient Consumption, and forthe relief of Consumptive patients in advane ed sta- ' ges of the disease. This has been so long used ami so itnivors.i!J>' known, that we need Jo no more than assure «■< public that its quality is kept up to the best U on t has been, and that it may be relied on to do 3ll ’ has ever done. Prepared by Da. J. C. Ateb 4 Co- Practical and Analytical Chemn-’< XiOWCil- Sold by all druggists every where, and by Sold by J. A. Roy nnd P. R. Williams, WelUkcnj Or. H. H. Borden, Tiogn ; S. S. Packard, Covington, C. V. Elliott, Mansfield ; S. X. Billings, Gaines: an* by Dealers everywhere. [Nov. 23, ISfit-ly*] | BARGAINS FOR CASS /—Examine and pHos the Stock of Goods now offered for sale ly AMBROSE CLOSE, before making your purchases. His stock comprise LADIES’ DRESS GOODS! Shawls, Balmorals, Hoop Skirts, Cloths, CRsaidetvii Flannels and DRV GOODS, generally. Also,- Groceries, Crockery, Hardafrt- Boots aad Shoes. . . I am alto prepared to ent ana make all kinds o men and boys' CLOTHING TO ORDER. Westfield, Nov. 18, 'BJU3t* AMBROSE CbOSB. contamination is varionsiv