Growth ia the Midst of tjPa v. Some of tie results of the Ha election, ■would' go far to confirm the truth Mr. Mad ison’s observation to Harriet Mar-meau that the United States was destined many things before thought impossible,'! It would eeenito be impossible that a'nation should grow in. number during the deeo' atfocs and ravages of a fierce civil war, a'nd yet if ws take -the total popular vote of 1864, in eocb states as we have beard from’ officially, and the total popular vote in the same states in ISOO, wo shall find reason to believe that in spite of the calamities of three fears of mor tal strife, they have actually grown Jp popula tion' Here is a short table of compara tive votes of iB6O and 1864,that we have had prepared from the official source r , 1864. > x 1860. 106,014- '- r 98.919 .66,850- ; 1 65,943 .55,741 - ’ 44,644 Maine New Hampshire. Vermont ..175,487 -b 109,175 ...’.22.085 »20,141 ....€6,076 . 76.C00 .“51.7 12 ' 675,150 !. 128,630 ' 121,125 ...498,103 ' 470,445 ..'...1C,924 •' ' 1C 239 .....72,0*0 - 92,502 ...347,750 V ,330.093 ....42,534 34,737 ...460,532-,' 442 447 ■ 276,143 Massachusetts Rhode Island Connecticut NewTork... New Jersey.'.. Pennsylvania ... De1aware..’......... Maryland.... A..... 111in0i5...... Minnesota .... Ohio Indiana ■We have heard bo .mu elf of t, e hundreds of thousands of lives that have born sacrificed in the prr-sontywr.r, so much" of th;> new-distrihuj tic-ns of its troubles, that it must strike us ns strange, ot least, that in ev ery State thus far reported, with'tile single ex ception of Maryland, there hart beep a very considerable increase m.llVt su.,Voge. 'A part of this increase is undoubtedly p wing to the greater excitement of the latar^political can vass, which drew out many voKre who did not before attend tiro polls. .It is’estimated by Flatisticaiis, that in ordinary titles about twen ty-five per cent of those entitled;,to vote in any community, refuse to use the phivetege. This percentage would suffice to account fur the increase to which wo refer,‘.l? wo had rea son ito suppose that it bad,all behn called out. but such'was not the rase ; a latge'number .of voters have refrained fr< m voting this year, ns in times past; a largej.nmbei'bejng engaged at remote points in the armyjLhave been unable to vote ; in some fetates soldiers in the field are not permitted to vote; and *thcre-has been more than the usual- proportion of sailors and marines in.our fleets whe-haVi ,no oportn nity of giving in their halfbtsgb-Cm'idering all these circumstances, then.lwcTliink we have n right to infer that the iticritis| noted in the popular vote is a proof of ’’Miosgrowth of cur population in the face of tho'ditfjputinn caused by the terrible hostilities in k-bjeh we are en gaged.-;!. _ . ,-t Petrolcunu. Seven years ago; Tenangfff county, Pennsyl vania, was regarded as one’Slf,-thepoorest,, as it is one of the smallest cooutitfs lu the Stale of Pennsylvania- More thijri one third of its entire surface could have beeb purchased for three dollars per acre, 'll? best improved farms would bring little if anything over thir ty dollars per acre, and its’entire industrial products did not exceed thrle hundred thou sand dollars. Choice nil binds sell now readi ly at from three*to. five thousand* dollars per acre, and they have been as high as forty five, thousand doHars per a, reach. Although under the same name, it is a very different medicine from any Other winch has been before the people, and is fan more effectual than any other which has ever been available :i them. -A.'STBH.’S CHERRY PECTORAL. The World’s Great Remedy for CotigQm Colds, Incipient Consumption, and for the relief of Consumptive patients in advanced sta ges of the disease. This has been so long nsethand so unirert.ill; known, that wo need do no more than ns tare <■- public that its quality is kept up to die he-t it c ' ‘ lias been, and that it may lo relied on to it' rJ “ has ever done. Prepared by Dr: .1 i’. Aver d ( l} • P.acticvl mid Axthd.-nt rh-~ •' I.ovrdl. 31 Sold by all Jfruggists every where, and 1 >' Sold by J. A. Roy and P. R. Williams, Wc!lil»« Dr. H. H. Borden, Tioga ; S. S. Packard. Ccrmgt" C. V. Elliott. Mansfield,; S. X. Billings, Gaines; »" by Dealers everywhere. [Nor. 23, ISdi-ly-l BAUOAISS FOP. CASH /—Eiamino and F 1 *-* the Stock of Goods now offered for sale ty AMBROSE CLOSE, beforo making yonr purchases. His stock comF n * LADIES’ DRESS GOODS! Shawls, Balmorals, Hoop Skirts, Cloth), Ca?d“S rii ' Flannels and DRY GOODS, generally. Also, Groceries, Crockery, Jf»rda»r s Boots and Shoes. . , s - X am also prepared to cut and make all kiaili men and boys’ CLOTHING TO ORDER. Westfield, Nor. 16, ’fi-t-Ct® AMBROSE CLOSE.