A - Bu> pLACE SStone . - Winona (Minn.) Republican ,relates that two men, one of whom was stnolt ing a pipe, started to leave that place a few days ago in a buggy in which there was a keg of powder. Suddenly the powder exploded, and the result was arsaarous The men, who were named respectively Train and Hanson. were thrown some distance up and forward. The horse, iu addition to losing all the hair on his tail, became considerably demor.s.dized, and :ran at the top of his speed. The -two men fell upon the whitaetrees, and Mr. - Hanson, to clear himself of the wreck, jumped _over the wheel and fell into a mud-hole in a half s4upefied condition. Mr. Train clung to the pieces, and wa..s carried forward about a mile at a pretty rapid pace. On coming to a stop he took an inventory of the con cern, and found that the buggy was completely shattered, the bottom and seat . gone ' and the axles bent -nearly double, so that the four wheels came al most together. Mr Train himself had been stripped of all his outer clothing, about one third of the hair on his head, and all his whiskiarss burned off, and his eyebrows and lasinesgone. Yet, strange to say, he was not hert in any other way, and after extinn-uislaing the fire in his remaining clothing; he started back to find his companion. Upon meeting bim be laughed heartily at the ridiculous figure which he presented, but Mr. Ha nson did dot laugh, for he was -badly in jured. A LADY FALLS INTO A CAVERN.- A subscriber living in the neighbor hood of Tayloreville has given- us the particulars of an accident which prom ised to be unfortunate in its results, but in which the victim was providentially saved. It seems that there was a mee ting in progress 'at a church near Tay lorisville, and the lady in question, to gether with a male friend, was ou her way to attend it. The couple were walking leisurely on the road, when to the horror and dismay of the gentlemen, the lady, Miss Ellen Sorey, sudeenly dissappeared in the earth. Recovering as quickly as possible from his surprise, the gentleman commenced a search for his missing companion, and hearing sounds which seemed to come from the bowels of the earth, he soon discovered she had fallen into a cavern, which after wards turned out to be about eighty feet deep. Assistance vas rendered by per sons living in the vicinity as quickly as possible by letting down bedeords into the hole, and after much labor the lady ws4hauled up, to tbegratification other friends, very4ittle injured. The carven in - Which Miss Sorel , fell is a fear place, being about three feet in eircailbli ference at is mouth, and eightyiii*t deep. Fortunately she got on a 164Sel before reachino• b the bott Te om, and was thereof saved.Lebanon fiesB6,3 Hre , ald. A SPECULA.TI7W FRENctorAN.—A most daring fraucilas been brought to light through the activity 'f the Lon dott police. It appears i:uat a French man, whose life [ ‘.vas insured for the sum of 100,000 fran,:s, wished to realize the amount, order to do so he as sumed a false name, went to London, concocted a medical certificate of his death, ordered a coffin, and, after caus ing a solemn funeral service to be cele brated in a Roman Catholic chapel, fol lowed it to the grave in the cemetery at Leytonstone, suspicion was afterward excited, and measures having been tak en to exhume the body, the coffin was found to be filled with shavings and stones. In thgmeanwbile the French man was in A.inerie:a, but, returning to Antwerp, was arrested by the Belgian authorities, and handed over to.his own government. Ile now awaits his trial on the twofold charge of fraudulent bankruptcy and of attempting to de fraud the Parignsuranqe-conapany. UNPROFIT Supreme Court 'fit'Faje county, New. York, has been oneopied at Buffalo fir , three days with a very ridiculoits case: For the third time a jury has been sum - -: maned for the trial of the case, which seems to be-interminable. The only question involved is the title of a little piece of 'land in the town of Newstead, the value•of which is not more than $5O at the utmost. Each party claims to have the fee simple, and the land has been surveyed and resurveyed by a doz en civil engineers, no two of them arri ving at the same conclusions.- Altoge ther it is said the costs of the litigation amount to over two thousand dollars, but both parties are determined to tight it out on this line, if it takes iorever.— The action was begun in 1859, and has thus already extended over seven years. STRANGE DEATH IN THE OHIO PEN TIENTIAEY.-A few nights since at the 011ie Penitentiary, after the prisoners were locked'in their cells, one of the convicts ** -d_„yery suddenly and in a strange ;' untt,,,,The guard saw him rise suddenly in'ilds cot, sit for a mo ment upright, and then, as blood gushed from his nose and mouth, saw him sink back again to the reclining posture. He died in a very few minutes, apparently strangling to death. Examination af terwards developed the presence of a tumor, which, by the destruction of blood vessels, had caused his death. Eccra , ..anie TRAVELER.-A man from Kansas, fifty-five years old, ar rived at Mobile, Alabama, in a small skiff last week, after a trip down the river of one thousand eight hundred miles. Soon after reaching there he fell into the river by accident, and was res cued by the police, who, finding that he was chilly, took him to the hospital.— The skiff contained ordinary cooking utensils, a rifle, shot gun, pistol, and also a little dog, a special favorite, who ,vas found innocently curled up at the 'fbottom of the boat, quietly awaiting the return of his master. IN.thirty-six years, the of rate taxa aVon in the city and county of New has increased from $2 50 to $4O per bitant. In 1830 the city was gou rd for half a million of dollars. In theentire govern [neat[neatof the island, 'riding assessments on private property P:: public improvements, cost more than forty millions of dollars. In 1839, the p4mlation of the city was a little more thliti 200,000. It is now about 1,000,000, 'nos, while the population of thecounty is five times greater than it was in 1830, the cost of governing is sixteen times greater. J NMI% CA.ROLINA.—The North Car olina election seems to have gone sweep ingly in favor ofthe rebel ticket. Worth is doubtless chosen Governor. The re turns from the Western counties will of course show a heavy poll for Dockery, but not sufficiently large to ballance the almost unanimous vote which Worth has received in. the center and along the seaboard. Vance who was not a candidate, obtained a few votes. The Legislature will be rebel, according to present indications. TILERE are three bills before the Ver mont Senate relating to marriage. The tendency of them is to reduce marriage to a limited partenership, each party . putting in as much capital as seems best at the partenership to be dissolved upon very small provocation. tht agitator. WELLSBORO, P.E.NN'A. WEDNESDAY, NOV. 7, 18613.• asmtccrs.,:&. , r - x.c>rs 3.,e so- With Malec toward none, with CIIAILI.TT for ALL, with firmness in the atone. let ne strive to finish the work we are in ; to hind op the nation's wound'. to care - for him who shall have borpe the battle. and for his widow and orphans. and to do all which may achieve and cherish ajust and lasting peace among ourselves and withal] nations.—A.. LtiscoLu—MAecti 4,1865. Gen. GEA.V.Y'S official, majority is 17,178. The Tribune put it. at 17,000 the nest morning after the election.— That is pretty good estimating. " It was not a hard matterto do one's duty as a voter this fall," said a man to us the other day. "We had only," con tinued he, " to see to it that we did not - vote as the rebels wanted us to vote, and the thing was did." Exactly so. The issues were never more clearly defined. TALKS WITH THE PEOPLE A man is nothing unless he be hon est, and a nation is nothing unless it be just: , • As no greater calamity could befall a man, than that he should awake each morning forgetful of the experience of the previous day, so no greater evil can befall a nation than that it should fail to be taught by experience. If there be a man in this republic who regards the great struggle of the re bellion as the result of a disagreement between political parties, he is to be pitied. The awful test of civil war is some-, thing more than that. It was God's ,method of teaching the race. It was His 'voice, heard in the thunder of bat tle, and in the lamentations of moth ers, widows, and orphans. It matters little whether we hold that punishment/a temporal and tem porary, or spiritual and eternal. It is the certainty, not the nature and severi ty, of _punishment, which appals the. .hearts og evil-doeb. Indisputably, nations are punished for their crimes. They are punished in 'this world, too ; for there will be no t'ational distinctions in the world to come. When nations ignore the plain est precepts of right, and fail to do jus , tiee to all their constituents, they are on the road to calamity as certainly • the thief is treading the path to t Penitenitiary. • "This nation was guilty of a great crime. It had ignored the rights of an entire race for three-quarters of a cen tury. It had enslaved, robbed, mal treated, and debased millions, and fi `Tinily through the greed of party, had declaretrAhat this enslaving, gibbing, maltreating, debasing,ia - Eid buying and selling, was favored of the Almighty. It is not necessary for us to :say that this ,ennduct, provoked the wrath of Dei'k4t is better to say that the Unfit 1,44 Vin.: pier knew it all from the ARlfirst ; - ; ,e and manner of the hap peni44thisgres.t, resultant war, were in perfe•i*Ucordance ;with immutable laws which He promulgited when cre ation ultimated in MAN: - But it is so ordefed in this remarks .t*y,well-regulated universe that not a Nrit .rd can be touched whose vibrations shall not be felt in every other chord ; that not a creature shall be wronged whose oppression shall not be shared by every other creature ; that not one man can be degraded without degrading And by these :alrnos ~ . :ptible reflex influences, the crime • •21s a na tion found it, out in the four years of war, which closed in one respect, yet did riot close in all respects, in April, 1865. That war was the legitimate fruit of wilful and persistent wrong-doing. The wound was deep and painful, and the scars will remain as warnings to us and to those who come after us. Happy will it be for us all if.we heed its war.... Injustice is a two-edged t sword; its most terrible wound . re by reaction. The victim of Nv is less to be pitied than its worker.' , ter be oppressed thai to be the opri sor. Better suffer injustice than do it. Better die with the mumerieally weak than live as the oppressor of the weak and helpless. There was a system, called Divine, which forbade men to read the Bible; which was shouldered upon the Al mighty, and still, by law, set aside the marriage relation, established coneu binage, and invited, nay, offered a large premium fpr adulte7. This was the system of African ShOry. Sodom amid Gomorrah, it is said, were plucked up, root and branch, for lesser excesses. We fostered this awful curse as a nation, and some of us said it Was ordained of God; more of us declared that the curse ought not to spread, but agreed that it might blister the South constitutionally ; while a few, we called them fanatics, and stoned them—de clared what we to-day declare, thatsuch a crime could not have a constitutional existence anywhere. . Because, crime cannot be whitewash ed by legislatures or conventions.- 7 Try it, if you please, but fail as often as you try. Then came the war, and the evil was swept away. This was divine logic. No sophistrY in the awful wording of that syllogism. ' No* if it could be proved that the blood spilled in this great war, was in gallons, just equal to that which had trickled from the colored race under the whip; and if it could be proved that the number of white orphans and wid ows in this land only equaled the num ber widowed and orphaned by Slavery; and if it could be proved that the bill ions of treason expended to carry. on this war on; equaled the aggregate sum robbed from the negro in the cen tury which closed with the Proclama tion of Emancipation—if this could be proved, what the!? ? What then! We leave this with you, reader, to think over. We have thought of it, long and seriously and shall not forget the lesson. During the war it class of politicians dissuaded people from investing their surplus moneys in United States securi ties, assuring them that real estate was preferable. In the late can ipaign these same politicians tried to make capital out of the fact that certain U. S. securi ties were exempt from taxation, and thus the rich were more favored than the poor. It was bad enough to embarass the Government in its struggle for life; but when men lacked forethought to discover the source of all values, wreak their spite upon men and women who came forward with their hard earnings to the support of the Government, the quality of their loyalty would seem to smell to the skies. We are not aware .that the name of "Brick Pomeroy," the editor of a Wis icousin Copperhead sheet, ever before soiled these columns. We mention it now, first and last; that, we may re proi,e some of our cotemporaries who quote him largely to show the animus of the Copperhead party. Bad as our opinion of the leaders of that party is it does not hold them all so vile as this man Pomeroy. He is too 'dirty to quote, too vile too mention in a decent sheet, too big a liar to have influence and too abandoned to be mentioned save in the annals of crime. We beg of Dr. PRAVT, of the corning Journal, to mention lAe-41.4rty scoundrel no more. If there i. a law to reach William A. Wallace, Chairman of the Copperhead State Committee, let its strong arm be extended at once. This fellow issued a private circular to the Chairmen of Cop perhead County Committees in this State, in which he urged the open and forcible corruption of the ballot-box by his mercenaries. He says: " Where we have the President Judge, the District Attorney, and reliable ju ries, the case is a very plain one. The votes (of deserters) must be polled, and you must threaten the Republican offi cers and fulfil your threats." Now we regret that this circular never came to our notice until the day after the election. Had we seen it, there should not have been a skedaddler's or deserter's vote polled in Tioga county, if we could have prevented it. Here is a direct order from William A. Wallace to his 'agents in the State, to threaten Republican election boards, which is a penal offence, and to fulfil their threats. We ask Col. Jordan, as Chairman of the üblican State Committee, to at once • -ectkte Mr. Wallace for inciting riot I election day. When a man or boy wantonly kicks or beats an unoffending dog, the verdict is—that man, or boy, is a sneaking cow ard. What is this but the protest of com mon htunanity against abuse of the de fenceless, or the weaker party? Now what is he who makes occasion to abuse the colored race, to detract from their true'worth as components of the race? Is it worse to kick a colored man ora dog? The abuse of the colored people is called " prejudice." We object to that as a serious misnomer. It proceeds from a I •: ', bad heart. No good, brave ek to deepen the degrade t„ I egro r , „ Some of our C, .mead;-' laptakers in this county :at stress upon the alleged sy of Gen. Grioat with "my policy. 'One of these emphatic Boffins spoke habitually of Grant as be ing fully in sympathy with the Presi dent. A Gen. nillyer, Johnson and Bread and Butter, stated in a speeeh that Gen. Grant endorsed " my policy," when Gen. Grant, under date of Sep tember 10, replied in words as sharp as his sword, as follows: " I see from the papers that you have been ma king a speech in which you pledge me to a politi cal party4m further in receipt of a letter from Gen. Or..*(taa of I Tana, in which he says that hie:oppOfdlit4v, ess has published an ex tract from a le aired from you, in which you pledged m "e support of President John son, and as oppi , to the election of any candi date who does not support his policy. You, nor no man living, is authorized to speak for me in political mutters, and I ask you to desist in the future. I want every man to vote according to his own judgment, without influence froth me. U. S. GRANT." " General Grant is with us, sir! There is not the slightest doubt about it! No question at all about it, sir!" Such was the burden ophe song of Copperjoknson-Clymer orators in this county during the late campaign. But the editor of the New "fork Eve nina .Page publishes the following wet blanket note editorially: "The country holds with General Grant, who said in our hearing not long ago : The rebels we whipped, as it was our duty to do. They fought us bravely, and for one I have no spite against them. If they behave themselves, I shall think well of them; hut, the Copperheads and pedce men in the North—the men who, during the war, reviled the soldiers, encouraged the enemy, and did their utmost to stop supplies and reinforce ments to our boys in the front—:such men I can't forgive. I will never forget them, or have any thing to do with them." If none of our fellow citizens of the Copperjohnson persuasion have received a letter from Grant since the conversa tion above alluded to, we submit that this is good authority. The Catholic Church has decided that there can be no distinction in race and color in the folds of the Mother Church. We may now conclude that the gates of Heaven are not closed against the Afri can race. We never doubted their "ti tle clear to mansions in the skies," but it is well enough to have the question taken up by a powerful church and pro nounced upon. We are not aware that any churches, as such, deny the title of the negro to immortal existence. But the members of „churches are not quick to show that they believe in equality of privilege beyond the grave. THE ATLANTlC.—"Griffith Gaunt," closes with the November number. We bare read it with care, and cannot discover the mare's nest over which the critics made such a hallaba loo. It is a powerful story, and tenches that the way of the transgressor is bard. The number is excellent in every particular. Ticknor .k Field, Boston, Mn.ss $4 per year, The Lady's .Friend for November is a gem number. Its fashions, patterns, and letter press are very superior. $2 50 per year. To be had at the Bookstore. W. R. SMITH'S Sows of Addison, N. Y., ars now prepared to show a splendid now stock of 13resa Geode, consisting:of Poplins, Merinos. Empress Cloth, De'nines, - Concoct' from is. to 20c., beautiful Pais ley Shows, long and Num. Erbohe Shawls, bright Weol Shawls from $3 upwards, Breakfast Shawls, Nubian, Hoods . The largest stock of Furs ever brought into this section, prom SI,GO per sett upwards,splendid Fitch, 'Martin setts, Mink and other good qualities of Furs en hand for the million. Our stock of Clothing is more extensive than ever, ,Rivf! at iourr , :price,9. The great rush that is now going on at ouil shore ig sure indi cation that the goods and prices watt the apereval or the people, SHERIFF'S SALES_ DIY virtue of sundry writs of Fieri Facial, Le. vari Fociae, and Veoditioni Expoims, is sued out of the Court of Common Pleas of Ti ega county, Pa., to-me directed, will be expo,cd to public bale in the Court llon•c. in Wellsboro, on MONDAY, the 26th of November, ItitSti. at cue o'clock in the afternoon, the following described property, to vitt A lot of land in Tiuga twp. bounded north by lands of Bingham entate, ettsiby lands of Julia Elliott, south by Tioga riiia.and went by bands or Abram Prntsman, and Bingham luntin-r-con tamping Ii 00 acres, more or lu.s, about 121Yarres improved, coven frame dwell nip, two frame barite, one eiivihutleo, frame griit tatil,'and gang eaw mill, and two English mills under une roof, and fruit trees thereon. To be sold aa the properly of Edward C. DePui nod Melvin C, Nieboln. ALSO—h lot of land in 'Union, beginniug at a post at the Ni! corner of Baker's lands; thence south gas west 21 7 10 perches to a post; thence south 8713. deeem,t 61 0 10 perches to a post ; tberieo Inn th 211 dug east, 21 1-10 perohes to a post; thence south paretic° to a post; thence north 2 deg e n st, it) perches toll: pest; (bowie 871 deg teat 21i perches to a post; thole° south 2i deg west, 10 porches to a post ; thence uorth 07 5-8 deg west, o 0 perobel to We° of hogil.- ning—cuntainir,g Ili acres inure or less, the piece id land described above surveyed dor J. Collins, May IS, 1800; 1 sawmill, frame house, Irani° shop and fruit trees thereon, about two acres im proved. To be sold as the property of liar rison Stratton. ALSO--a lot of land in Mainsburg, beginning at the NE corner of lot owned by IJ. M. Dow' on Main-et., thence along said street sleuth 601 deg east, ton puint 24 feet west of Dewey Jr. Stauffery blacksmith shop, thence south 20 deg wear; 17 rods, thence north 42/ deg west to a point inter setting the extension of the east line of 1.. M. Dood south, thence north 25/ deg east to SE cos. ner of lot of said [mud, and thence along the line of said lot to place of beginning—coutaining one acre morn ur less, frame house, frame barn and some fruit trees thereon. To be auld as the prop orty of A. F. Packard. ALSO—a lot of land in Tioga and Lawrence to I I: , bounded north by lands of 11. Saxton, dec., ea at by Julia Elliott, south by A. Sly and W. P. Wiley, west by D. H. Green--containing 43 acres more or lees, about 20 acres improved, dwelling. log barn, frame stable and fruit trees thereon ; ALSO—another lot bounded north by A. Sly A, If. Saxton, deed. east by D. IL Groom, south by Mrs. Dalton, west by Allen Dulloek and L. Wood —containing 02 acres more or less, about six acres improved. To be suld as the property of D. H. Green. ALSO—a lot of land in Mainsburg, bounded north by highway, east by J. B. Strong and schoolhouse lot, south by Cory creek and west by highway—containing one acre, more or less, im proved; ALso—one-half interest in another lot in Mans; field, bounded north by •D. C. Bolden, east by Williamson road, south by C. V. Elliott and L. Cummings, and west by Sassafras alley—contai ning 35 feet front and 168 feet deep, a frame /storehouse thereon ; • Anse—another lot in Mansfield, bounded north by Aaron Baldwin. east by Williamson road, south by Cherry Al'ey and west by Sassafras alley containing— one dwelling, outbuildings and a few fruit trees thereon. To be gold ar the prop erty of A. J. E. K. Webster. ALSO—a lot of land in Clymer, beginning at the NE corner of lot No. 185 of the allotments of Bingham lands in Clymer, Tioga county, Penn eylvania. conveyed to Alonzo King. thence along lines of lot No. 126 north 67 7 10 perches and north 89 deg west, 20 perches, thence along the south line of lot No. 95 and the south line of No. 94, conveyed to Thomas Eldredge, west 125 6-10 perches:, tsence along the lines of lot No. 186, conveyed this date to William Hancock, south 72 perches and east 45 perchea,thence.along the line of lot N0..185 aforesaid, east 76 5-10 perches, N. 4 perches and east 20 perches to place of begin ning ; this being intended to convey the Alvah Thompson lot. and being 418aores ; and this tract of land is to run far enough east on said lot to make 44 acres 'strict measure, and no further ; about 32 acres improved, frame house, log house, and frame barn thereon. To be sold es the prop erty of D. Churchill. ALSO—a lot of land in Union, bounded nortci by Thomas Ward and John 'Janet, east by Thos. Ward, south by John Newell and west by Josiah Newell—containing 88 acres, more or less, about 25 acres improved, frame house, and fruit trees thereon. To be sold as the property of Dewitt Traver. ALSO—a lot of land in Union, bounded north by lands of George Collins -and Andrew Bacon, east by Andrew Basalt, sonth by the Elmira Williamsport R. R. and west by L. L. Washburn —containing 68 acres more or less, about 20 acres improved, frame house, frame barn, and fruit *sees thereon. To be sold as the property of L. H. Claflin. ALSO—a lot of land in Delmar, bounded north by David Kingsley. and D. Simmons, south by Samuel Bowdon, east by Russell Lawton and west by John -Johnson—containing about 50 acres, about 16 acres improved, log arid frame how), log barn, young apple orchard and other fruit trees thereon. To bo sold as the property of S. D. Smead. ALSO—a lot of land in Gaines, bounded north by lands of Robert Austin, east by S. X. Billings, south by Octavius Smith, and west by Barnes-- containing 75 acres more or less, about sixteen acres improved, log house and barn, other out. buildings and fruit trees thereon. To be sold as the property of B.,(1. Vermilyea, ALSO—a lot of,land in Clymer, bounded north by lot No. 115 of the allotment of Bingham lands in Clymer, contracted to be sold to Francis Briggs, east by lot No. 137, conveyed to Squire Briggs, south by lots contracted_to_be sold to Levi Scott and Charles Scott, west by lot No. 114, conveyed to 0.11. Atwell—it being the north part of lot No. 140 of the allotment of Bingham lands in Clymer, aforesaid, and part of warrant No. 1225 —containing 66 1.10 acres with allowance of six per cent. for roads; de., be the same more or less. about 40 acres improved and some fruit trees thereon. To bo sold as the property of Charles Scott. ALSO—a lot of land bounded north by lands of J. G. Dartt and,John Neal, east by lands con veyed to Alonzo Whitn4 and Almon D. Pitts, south by lots conveyed, to John Calkins and to the heirs of Hiram Avety, west by land conveyed to IV: R. Knapp and laud contracted to be sold to Thomas Lester and S. P. Iqm:we—it being lot No. 13 of the allotment of Bingham lands in Charleston, Tioga county, and part of warrants Nos. 1792, 1794, and 1795--containing .144 8.10 acres, with usual allowance of six per coot. for roads, /cc., be the same more or less—about 40 sores improved, log house, frame barn and some fruit trees thereon. To be sold as the property of Robert G. White. ALSO—a lot of land bounded north by north line of warrant No. 1075, east by land conveyed to T. B. Tompkins, south by lot No. 6, Lawrence, contracted to b; sold to Lewis Darling, west by land conveyed to Enoch Blackwell, and land in possession of Joseph M. White—it being lot No. 4 of the allotment of Bingham lands in Law rence, Tinge county, and part of warrant No. 1075 —containing --t--fire and two-tenths acres, with usual allowance of six per cent. for roads, &c., be the same more or less. To be sold as the property of Andrew J. Daniels. ALSO. a lot of land in Ward, bounded north by Sena- Jab Oustin, cast by Tloga abd Bradford county lines, south by lands contracted to Philetua Vandyke by John W. Guernsey, west by J. B, Denmark--contairing 72 acres more or less, about two acres improved. To by sold as the property of E, P. Bishop. ALSO—a lot of land to Rutland township, bounded north by lands of John D. Longwell, east by highway leading from Mill Creek to Job's Corners and said Long well, south by Boswell Crippen and west by 0. W. Van Allen--containing'2oo acres or thereabouts, 140 acres improved, frame house, two frame barns and outbuild ings and fruit orchard thereon. To be sold as the prop arty of John Benson. ALSO—a lot of land in Bless, bounded north by lot of Pat Costello, east by Williamson road, south by lot of A. L. Bodine, west by vacant lot, 100 feet frosting en Williamson road and 150 feet deep, known and describ ed as lots Nos, 8 d 9. Block No. 2, on the map of the village of Blosstharg. To be sold as the property of Jno. Shields and D. B. Ray. ALSO--a lot of land in Elk, bounded north by lands of Anderson, vast by -- Bathrlck, south by Germania Land Company, west by Heber—con taining 90 acres more or lees, about 3 actes improved, log house thereon. To be sold as the property of James N. BickaL ALSO—e, lot of land in Delmar, beginning at a post in the public street or highway leading from Wel Lsboro past Levi I. Nichels's dwelling. to E. M. }Wines, the BE corner of lot contracted to Seth Wetmore and the NE corner lteriu4 thence westerly along the line of said Wetmore lot 250 feet, thence southerly parallel with mid street or highway 90 feet, thence eastittlY to said loghway, thence northerly along said highivay to place ut beginning—being 90 feet in width, and extending back 250 feet, containing tadf an acre, more or lees. a frame house, one-half of a frame .barn and a few fruit trees thereon. To be sold as the property of Seth IL Wetmore. ALSO-4 lor, of land in Delmar, bounded ,north by bovid Roberts, cad by If . Borst, south by Janice Low rty west by Diehard English—containing 01,4 acreo more or kite, about one acre improved, To be sold as the property of John Alexander, Sophia C. Alexander, and Caroline P. Austin. ALSO—a lot of laud in Union, bounded north by Lands of James Gorton, east by S. Thomas, south by Lewis Randall and John Cura,and west bg Gil dill Gray —containing 31 acrec.,more or less, about 20 acres im prusta and Inoue house thereon. To be sold a: the 19,1wPortY of Luther Dann. ALSO.—u lot of land in Tioga township. bounded Itorth by lands of T. J. Berry, It. 0. Wickham and lauds tnerly owned by Moses Middlebrook, east by lands of it. 0. Wicirham, south by lands formerly owned by Fox. Webster & Brunson, west by said Wickham and Tioga river—containing about 120 acres, lucre or less, about 00 acres Improved, frame barn, fruit trees and granary thyreon, To be told as the property of J. A. ilatb.tway and Silas B. Hathaway. ALSO , --a lot of laud lying in Farmington. bounded north by land of A C. Morgan, dec'd, east by Chas. H. eymonr, south by estate of Rodney Gee, and west by estate of A. C. Morgan--contalaing 25 acres snore or lees —about 4 acres Improved. To be cold as the property of JAin li. Mono. ALSO--a lot of land in Union, beginning at the SE corner of Sanford Withey, thence east along the line of William Creek's lands to tho sugar work Run, thence along Bald Eno northerly some tld rode to Joel Saxon's Northwest corner, thence east some 10 rode to the road surveyed leading from Lycom lug creek to Block Home rod and tam. EMU lands, thence northerly by said road some 54 rods to line of 6. Ditchburn or Sherman lands, thence west to Samuel Morgan, thence south by Mon g4u ¢ witbey lands to place of beginumg--containing 45 acres more or less, about 4. acres' imm eyed. To be sold as the property of Charles H. Defrance. Wellaboro, Nov. 7, ISC.O. LEROY TABOR, EhIL Administrator's Notice frIHR undersigned having been appointed an administrator de benis non of Caleb D. Gar rison, late of Jackson, dee'd. all persons indebted to said decendeet are requested to make immedi ate payment, and' all having claims against the same, will present them to 0. B. WELLS, Jackson, Nov. 7,1866.-6 w. Adm'r. Administrator's Notice. lETTBRS of Administration having been igranted to the undersigned on the estate of FL B. Garrison, late of Jackson, deo'd all persons 11Prin said estate, and all persons having claims against the same, will call and settle with L Jaekson,: - Nov. 7,1866-8 w LEVI B. SHRIVES Adger, Register's Notice NIS HEREBY GIVEN that ,the following Administrators, Executors and Guardians have fib ed their accts. in the Register's Office of Tioga county, and that the same will be presented to the Orphans' Court of said county on the 28th thy of November 1886, for confirmation and allowance ; Acct of H. E. Potter and G. W. Ingham, Adams. of estate of Preelove Warren dec'd. Acct of Daniel S. Shove. Admr. estate of Harrison Mack, deed. Acct of Margaret Dann, Admx., estate of Alpheus Dann. deed. Acet of Clarrissa Head, Ex,x. estate of Joseph Mead. Acct of 11. W. Williams, Guardian of Wm. 'Kress, Es ther A. Kress, Marry IV Kress and James C, !creel!, mi. bOt children of Eliza Kress. dee'd. Aces of DanleLE. shove, Guardian of Mary E. Miller, minor cbild of M.Miller, dec'd. Nov. 7, 1806. 11. S. ARCHER, Register. THE UNDERSIGNED an auditor appointed to make a distribution of the funds arising from administrator's sale of the estate of Kassa° Parkhurst esq. deceased will attend to the duties of his appointment at the office of R. T. Wood, esti. la Elkland, oil), Tuesday, Nov. 27th, at one o'clock P. M. B. B. STRANG. • For Sale. A FARM of one htindred and fifty acres near Blossburg, fifty acres cleared and the balance timber land; about SO acres river bottom, rail road running through it, house, barn and apple orchard thereon. Also, twenty-six acres near Cherry Flans, about eight acres-cleared and the balance cov ered with pine and other timber, a,lsouse and a few fruit trees theredn. Mao a holm and lot in We!labor°. For par ienlara address or Inquire of E. WETMORE, Nov. 7,1864-3 w. • Wellaboro, Pa. Trustee's Sale fIARE undersigned having been appointed true. tee of the estate of A. J. er, E. Webster, insol vent debtors, will expose to public sale the follow. ing described property at Mansfield, Tioga Co.,Pa., on Saturday the 24th day of November, 1886, at one o'clock p. m., to wit :—All that certain lot, tract, or parcel of land situate in the township of Riohmona, in the County of Tioga and State of Pennsylvania—beginning at a white ash, the north-west corner of tho Peter Boyington, war rant No. 221, thence south 881- degrees east 57 rods; thence south 2 degrees west 155 7.10 rods; thence north 88 degrees west 57 rods; thence north 2 degrees east 154 8-10 rods to the place of beginning, containing 53 3-10 acres be the same more or less, with improvements thereon. Also, all that certain piece of land, situate on Elmira street, in the borough of Mansfield, Pa., bounded as follows, to wit • —On the north by El mira Street; on the east by the Tioga Itail Road; on the sodth. and west by lands of Joseph P. Mor ris, containing one-third of an acre, be the same more or less, with dwelling-house and frame barn thereon. Terms :—One•half cash down; the balance may tun six months with approved security. JOHN I. MITCHELL, Trustee. Wellabor°, Pa, Nov 3, 1866. A Farm For Sale. niONTAIRING 236 acres situated on the Cowanesque Valley opposite the Village of Knoxville with good buildings and a large old orchard of good grafted fruit, and a good young sugar bush, thereon. There is about 180 acres improved and the balance is covered with good Hemlock and Pine and hard tia,ber together with 10 cows, span of horses and ono yoke of three year old steers, and young stock and 120 sheep, farming utensils, wagons &0., ,tc. Sand farm is well wathrod and well calculated for first class, dairy or stock -farm, and the un 'goad also offers for sale d acres of lan ing said -Tarp together with a good Saw on with of the best water privileges owanes quo river; and also a large new 'a ore and stock of goods in the VIMSte of Knoxville,besides a number of VillageLlotirall of which the subscri ber wishes to sell in bulk or in parcels to suit the purchaser. Prices moderate and teims easy. for further particulars enquire of Knoxville Nov. 7,1866—tf. TUB NEW YOUR TRIBUNE. TERAIS DAILY TRIBUNE. $lO per anommt $5 for fax mouths BEEI4IV2IILLY TILIDU ?lE. . _ . Mail subscribers, 1 copy, 1 year-104 nambers, $4OO Mall subscribers, 2 copies, 1 year-104 numbers, 700 iwtail subscribers, & copies, or over, for each copy, 300 Pavony remitting for 10 copies $3O, will receive an ex tra copy tor_six months. Persons remitting for 15 copies $45, will receive an ea• . . tra copy one year. wErktr Mail subscribers, single copy,l year-62 numbers, $2OO Mall subscribers, clubs of five 000 Ten copies, addressed to names of subscribers 17 50 Twenty copies, addressed to names of subscribers, 34 00 Ten copies, to one address US 00 Twenty copies, to one address $3O 00 An extra copy will be sent for each club of ten. Address, THE TRIBUNE, New York. TO ADVERTISERS Merchants, Blannfacturers, Inventors, Real Estate Owners, Schools, and all others who desire to reach customers in all parts of the country, will flod It to their Interest to advertise in Tim Raw Your. TRIBUNE. The circulation of Tar. TRIBUNE fa large] than that of any other newspaper, and It is road by the most en terprising, thrifty and industrious classes. MenLATION Or THE IndDUNI. Monday, Oct. 1 Daily 46,000 copies. Tuesday, Oct. 2 Daily 44,730 copies. Tuesday, Oct 2 SaintWeekly...4l,ooo copies. Wednesday, Oct. S Daily 44.700 -:. ties. Wednesday, Oct. 3 Weekly ....... .:..130,U4" :I kinpien. Thursday, Oct. 4 - Daily 44;110 eopies. Friday, Oct. 5 Daily 44.560 copies. Friday, Oct. 5 Setni.'Weekly......:47.ooo t ..plea. Saturday ; Oct. U. Daily 12,000 coulee. The above is the precise number of copies of THE NEW YORE TRIBUNE printed and circulated during the week.. MICE OP ADVERTISING IN TIM TELIGINE Deux nannatE, 20 cents per line. SElttlVarota TIIIBUNS, 2.5 cents per line. WEEzvr Tajutne; SI per line, each insertion. No ad Terttsetnent inserted In the %%arty for less than $5„ Address . , THE TRIBUNE, N 0.154 Nassau et, New York. W.M. 'RALPH'S patent cheese vats and dairy apparatus furnished at manufacturers' pri ces, transportation auded, at East Charleston, Tioga comity, by G. W. AVERY. East Charleston, Oct. 17, 1886-4ta LAMPS.—A now kind of lamp for Kerosene no breakage of chimneys—et FOLEY'S. KEROSINE LAMPS at ROY'S DRUG STORE DIWIXISTRATRIX. NOT' - 1. - .4:4V00,&,„0, ,ti administration halting been grentml i qi , e • undersigned Or_ the estate of Mathew Borst, felt° of Wellsbaro, deceased, all persons indebted to said estate arerequested to make immediate pay. 2 l meat, and,those having claims against the same will present them far settlement to WU. B e SMITH, Esq.. at his office in Welisimrn. ' 4 7l;r . Nov. 7. 18613-45". MARY BORST, Adm'x SEkLinlrElt, THE GREAT EXTERNAL REMEDY OF THE AGE! ...I Certain C11) - efor Neuralgia, Quincy, Croup, sore 'Throat, Rheurue- , mutism, Sprains, Swellibgs, Pleurisy, Crieh in the Beek. Spinal Irritation, Cramps, Spasms, Numbness of the Limbs, Chilblains, Ringworm, and the hest External ap plication for Diphtheria. Po sale by Dealer), in eiliciwa. Fifty Cents 0 'Bottle.. Inov 'WS.) ITHE Members of the Tioga Co. Agricultural 1. Society will meet at the Court House on Tuesday evening, during first week of court, for the election of !Accra tor the coming year. Nov. 7, 1346. W. A. NICHOLS, Sec'y. PRESERVE YOUR TEETH T . IL RA NDALL, Surgeon Dentist, would re • • spectfully inform the Citlo3ElB of Tioga. I etweville, and vicinities that he has located per manently at Tioga (otEce over Fuller's Drug Store) where he may be found the first three weeks of each month, and will be at Lawrenceville the last week in each month at the residence of Chas. Van gurder. Particular attention given to the treatment of of all diseases of the Teeth, Gums, and Alveolar process, Weaning,Filling & Extracting Teeth and to regulate irregular Teeth in young persons. Also, especial attention given to Fitting Artificial Teeth, Palates, and obdurators on any kind of plate desired. Anmathetica administered and Teeth Extracted without pain in overy case where it may be tun sidered advisable. All work will , be done with promptness, and warranted, and at prices consistent with the times. Let every one call who may need or wbilt for a good looking, sett of teeth.- Tioga, Pa., Nov. 7, 1888.—tf. Planing & Turning. di 1101AVING got his new Factory in operation. II I is now prepared to fill orders for Cabinet Ware promptly and in the best style of workman ship. Having procured a ha is ready to dress boards or plank with dispatch - SCROLLWORK & tRACKETS, furnished to order: If is machines are of the new est and most improved patterns. - Shop corner of Pearl and Wain Sts, WELLS BORO, PA., Oct. 31, 1866-tf. B, T. VAN HORN.X, to, rli - r• STICKLIN, C.IIAIRMAICER, / a Turner, and Paraitara Dealer, opposite Dam's Wagon Shop, MAIN STREET, iNELLSBORO, PA.. Orders promptly filled and satisfaction guaran teed. Fancy Turning done to order. Oct. 31, 1866.-4. J. STICKLIN. IDSTRAY.—Caine to the enclosure of the X/ subscriber on or about the 13th inst., a Dark Ited. Yearling Heifer. The owner will please prove property, pay charges and take her away. Stony Fork, Oct. 27, 1866: J. E. OATIAN. Executors' Noticed LiTTERS TESTAMENTARY having been 'granted upon the estate of Ulrich Ferrer, late of Liberty, deceased, this is to notify all persona indebted to make 'immediate payment, and all having claims against the said estate will present them for settlement to DANIEL FORRER, SAMUEL MILLER, Liberty, Oct. ill, 1866.-6 t Executors. ripTOGA CO. COURT PROCLAMATION. Whereas, the Ron. Robert G. White, Presi dent Judge for the 4th Judicial District of Penn sylvania, and Royal Wheeler and Victor Case, Esq.'s, Associate Judges in Tioga county, have issued their precept, bearing date the 10th day of Oct., 1366, and to me directed, for the hold ing of Orphan's Court, Court of Common Pleas, General Quarter Sessions and Oyer and Termin er, at Wellsboro, for the County of Tioga, ou the 4th Monday of November (being the 28th day,) 1866, and to continue two weeks. Notice is therefore hereby given, to the Coro ner,Jtrstices of the Peace, and Constables in and for the county of Tioga. to appear in their own proper persons, with their records, inquisition P, ex aminations and remembrances, to do those things which of their offices and in their behalf apper tain to be done, and all witnesses and other per. eons prosecuting in behalf of the Commonwealth against any person or persons, are required to he then and there attending, And not to depart at their peril. Jurars are requested to be punctual in their attendance at the appointed time, agree ably to notice. Given under my hand and seal at the Sheriffs Office. in Wellsbero, the 25th day of Oet., in the year or our Lnrd "ne thousand eight hundred and sisty-sia. LgROY 'TABOR, Sheriff. rp HE undersigned having been appointed an Auditor to distribute the money raised by Sheriff, rule in the case of Benjamin Winchell vs. Charles Lee, will attend to the duties of said ap pointment, at his office in Wellsboro, on Satur day, November 17, 1866, at two o'clock P. M. of i said day. M. F. ELLIOTT, Auditor. Wellsboro, October 31, 1866.-3 t THE SCHOOL DIRECTORS of Charleston township will meet at ten o'clock A. If., on Saturday the 10th of .November, at the Dartt Settlement school house, for the purpose of en gaging teachers for the winter schools. J. GOODSPEED C. W. BARLOW, Sec'y October 31,1566-2 w THE undersigned having been appointed an Auditor to distribute the funds in the hands of Jacob Biltbold, Administrator of the:estate of Fanny Greenleaf, deceased, will attend to the du ties of his appointment at his office in Wollsboro, on Thursday, Nov. 22, at ten o'clock A. M. JEROME B. NILES,. October 24 4 18a6-4w Auditor. W. D. LANG, DN.A.L6II. IN DRUGS, MEDICINES, BOOKS AND STATIONERY, PATENT MEDICINES, Perfumery, Musical Instrument's and Mubical Merchandise of all kinds, Fancy Goods of all kinds, itg. MANSFIELD, PA. Physician's Prescriptions carefully compounded October 31, 1863.-6 in. 1T HE School Directors a Delmar district will meet at the Itutier felon{ house in Stony Pork, on tho first day of November next, at teu o'clock A. M., to hire teachers for the ensuing winter term of common schools. Octal. ,r 17,1888. PAT UP!—All persons indebted to the sub j. scriber, will oblige by calling at my store and settling without delay. and thus SUI/0 cuts. WM. TOW NSEND, Agent. Wellsbore, October 17, Diti&—it PLATED WARE—Cake basket -9, card bask— eta, castors, sugar bowls, etc, at FOLEY'S. NOTICE.—An election for President, Direct ors, Treasurer and Secretary, of the Tiega Railroad Company, will be held at the 0114,* of the company, No. 18 Philadelphia Exchange, in the city of Philadelphia, on Monday. the SthAlay of November, 1886, between the boors of 12 M. and 2 P, M. GEO. A. COLXET, October 24, 1888-.3w Secretary. B. T. VAN HORN, WOODWORTH PLANER, Auditor's Notice. Auditor's Notice. ISRAEL STONE, Secretary eittEGULATOR 55 BIM • WILCO r BARKS -. 0 rY EMI: /4 induetcaunt a pop1:0 'Naga csoluity.. la 019. h a y, their afore litentyy crammed mut SE.V4•I: DRY G9ODS or every description. (hod Calico at Old per yard, a:A ID propvrtion. Carpets and Oil Clothe, Itradley'e Duplex Elione akin on vale. HATS AND CAPS, in endlets variety to tut t everybody it Biz% price. and quality. BOOTS AN]) SHOES, from a baby's giro to a tin footer—ail styles sod prices—ranging from a be gentleman's rouse bout to a coarse gentleman's Erne boot. GROCERIEa This department is filled with choice gram-tee, and at prices that will compare favorably with competitors. HARDWARE & CROCKERY, re are offering at "live and let live," pric es ._ Carriage trimming always on band. In short, we would say to the people of this community, that ire do not intend to be under. sold, as we shall endeavor to keep on hand at all times everything to clothe a man on-the outside, and lath and plaster him on the inside. Just drop hi and be convinced before pereb aj ing elsewhere. October 2. 18841. WILCOX h BARRE& Claim Agency. HENRY SHERWOOD 1 J. HARRISON, Atty's, will collect Butisms, Pnsisicss, and all other claims itgainet the Government, Under the provisions of late mate of Congreta $lOO &dm Bounty will he paid to every three years' man who servA ant his full time, or was wounded in service, or wasdiltharged by reason of the tentanation of tba war, and to the widows, minor children or pa rents of three years men, $5O extra Bounty will be paid to all two years' men and their heirs under like circumstances, and to three years' men who served two years of their enlistment. In no ease will any extra bounty be paid whett more than $lOO has been previously paid. No claim will he entertained unless presented under Ruuts AND liv.atiLlviosts issued by tha War Department Sept, 22, 1888. The Department will receive claims from Oat. I, 1866, until April 1, 1887. In case of claims by parents under late acts of Congress for bounty, the FATIIER and MoIRCIR must both join in the application. Increase of Pension. $l5 per month to every Invalid Pensioner tc tally disabled:- $2 per month for each child under 18 years of age of widow Pensioners. Fees for procuring Extra Bounty, • $,-) Increase Pension $5 " Original Pension, $lO collection the 4th of Sept. and 4th of March payments of Pensions $1 PEI . U. S. CLAIM AGENCY, For the Collection or Army and Navy Claims and Pension. Tl:1E NEW ItOrliTY LAW passed July :19.1fee,gires two and three years' soldiers extra bounty. Send in your dischirgas, OFFICERS' EXTRA PAY. Three months' extra pay proper to volunteer officers who were in service March 3,15t5. PENSIONS INCREASED To all who have ton a limb and who bass been perma nently and totally diaabled. All other Government claims propecnted. JEROME. B. NILEfi. Wellsboro, October 10, 18fit3.11 Orphans' Court Sale TN pursuance of an order of the Orphans' Court I, of Tioga county, bearing date the 16th any of October, 1886, the folloiiiing described real estate, late the property of James Leach, deceased, will be offered at public sale, on the premises, on Fn cay, the 23d day of November next, at 1 a'aicet P. M., to wit: A lot of land situated in the township of Rich. mond, in said county, known as the steam mill property, consisting of four hundred and thirty nine acres of warrant No. 4480, in the name of „Tames Wilson; and four hundred acres of the James Wilson warrant No. 4488; with a stem raw mill and other improvements thereon; and bounded north by a line run and marked on the ground, nearly east and west, through said war. cant No. 4488; on the west by lands of Rich icond Jones ; on the east by the Osborn tract. so called; and on the south by lands of Samos IR tlart3 ; containing eight hundred and thirty.r.ta , erer. Terms cash on confirmation of the tale. 0. C. GREEN, , . Guardian of James M. Leach and Hilda Leach. October 24, 1888-6 w Guardian's Sale 'RE nn rlersi ime d having been appointed Einar diau of the personal and real estate of 11•• run Vandosen. Ealeretta Vamlusen, Charles Via. dusen, Jane Vandusen, C. ettie Vandusen and Kale Vandusen, - minor children, will expi,,e to Bata, CO the premises, on Saturday. 24th day of November next, at two o'clock P. M ~ the following described real estate, situate in the township of Parmin4" ton : fleginning atjie public highway on line between John Vanden, deceased, and Simeon Cooley; thence in an easterly direction seventy six rods, to corner of Joseph Peters; thence iu 3 southerly direction, about thirty rods; thence x a westerly direction, parallel with the first course herein mentioned, about seventy-six rods, to post corner; thence northerly to place of begin ning. about thirty rods ; containing about mina acres, more or less. ANDREW VANDUSEN, Guardian of Rate ifandusettiet ' Administrator's Sale. THE undersigned !eying been appointed i d " ministrator, de henis non earn test,meato ne.ro, of Jacob Prutaman, late of Tioga,decea' 4 ' in pursuance of a power to sell real estate con tained in the last will of the testator, will usre to public sale, on the premises, on Thuriday. the 15th day of November next, at sue 0'61( 4 M., the following described property, of 350 Jacob Pruteman died seized, to wit: A certain piece of lend Mutate in the baroV ,4 of Tioga, county of Plugs, nud State of Pett.rl• vania, bounded and described as follows, to Ill" On the north by William Garretson,castby lia,a street, south by Raehaol Prutatuan, and not bf meeting house alloy, containing 28 soars rod,, more or leas, about 5S feet front and 132 feet , lo4l' , with a one story tenant house, a small frame boor, and other outbuildings and fruit trees Chown. Also, a piece of land situate in the •teld rough of Tioga, bounded and described 33 rel . ' lo4s, to wit On the north by Cowaileaque Btrtat, on the east by meeting house alley, on the 5.,11; by the Methodist Episcopal ohnrch lot, and 00 the west by lends of S. Meer and Polly , . • brook, containing two-fifi ha of en acre, at 'r less, with it two story frame tenant house, tutu" ble for three families, a barn andother utubuiiib hags thereon. The promises aro new occupied , but possession may be had on the drat of . 4 1'°' 1847, at the option of purchasers. Terms: $3OO on the first, and $5OO on thel o lot, cash on sale; balance, with interest, in fur equir`. annual payments, if desired, eeeer' d " bond and mortgage on the premises. JOHN I. MITCHELL , Wellsboro, Oct. 24, 'tid—;:it Adm'r, Orphans' Court Sale. IN pursuanceof an order of the Orphan? CO' of Tines county, bearing data ...August 27. 1 6 6 6 , the following described real e etete, late lba property of Isaac S. Ramsey, decoyed , will ba ,naj offered at public cal°, on the premises, on day of November next, at one o'clock P. wit : h A certain lot of land situate In the boroug lainsburg, county of Tioga, and Stale of PeD": 11 "I nl : d bounded on the north by the highway s4ld borough, on the east by lands of J. B. itreml tl , ie Rooth by lands in the pos.e+sion of E. A i .14/I _l , o: F. Richards, and on the west by land of 11 11. 0 “ "n‘s"'Y containing one acre and a hall of aL_ On which is situated a frame dwelling house and 3 fr 3,, f barn. Terms, cash on confirmation of sale- THANKFVL 13.13MSEY, If • It LAMENT. Oct .24,*66. Adm'rs of I. Itutatev,k