F AM ®% f •=!% J : 9 ifte iiorlh Branch Bcmocraf. An y JFCL V SICEIiBR. Proprietor, NEW SERIES, BYHARV SICKLER Terms—l copy 1 year, (in advance) t 2,00 if •et paid within six months, 82.50 will be chaged Nff paper will be DISCONTINUFD, until all r --earages are paid; unless at the option of publisher. ▲OVE niS I G-e 10 lines or . i i ? . | less, make three f our , tvo ilhret si one square weeks ek!\mo'th\ mo ' th \ ino ' ih l y< ar 1 Square 1t00|7,25;l t 00|7,25; 2.25; 2 >BJi 3,0 | 5,00 1 1: m&li Si 1:8 | Column. 4,00 4,5Cj 6>o; 8,00 10,00;15,00 i do. 6,00 6,50 10.00, J2.JO 1J '00 25,00 i do. 8,00! 7,00 14,00, 18,00 25.00 35,00 1 do. 10,00' 12,00! 17,00' 22 00 28,00 40 . 00 EXECUTORS, ADMINISTRATORS and AUDI TOR'S NOTICES, of the usual length, 82,50 OBITUARIES,- exceeding ten lines, each ; RE LI OIOUS and LITERARY NOTICES, not of genera nterest, one half the regular rates. Business Cards of ono square, with paper, #5. JOB WORK of all kinds neatly executed, and at prices to suit he times. All TRANSIENT ADVERTISEMENTS and JOB •WORK must be raid for, when ordered BUSINESS JFLFE. OTR. & W E LITTLE, ATTORNEYS AT tv LAW Office on Tioga Street Tunkhannecx ra TT TM. M PIATT, ATTORNEY AT LAW ;0f V\ fice in Stark's Brick Block Tioga St., Tunk hannock, Pa. HS. COOPER, PHYSICIAN A SURGEON • Newton Centre, Luzerne County Pa. r\ uTPARHISn, ATTORNEY AT LAW- V/• Oflre at the Court House, in Tunkhannock, Wyoming Co. Pa. . W, RIIOADS, PHYSICIAN & SURGEON . will attend promptly to all calls in his pro fession. May be found at his Office at the Drug Store, or at his residence on Putmaa Srcet, formerly occupied by A. K. Peekham Esq. OENTISTRR. DR. L. T. BURNS has permanently located in Tunkhannock Borough, and respectfully tenders his professional services to its citizens. Ofice on gecond floor, formerly occupied by Dr. Miltaan. vfln3otf. SUFLJLFC IFLUSF, HARRISTTURG, PENNA. • The undersigned having lately purchased the " BUEHLER HOUSE " property, has already com menced such alterations and improvements as will render this old and popular House equal, if not supe rier, to any Hotel in the City of Harrisburg. A continuance of the public patronage is refpect fVally solicited. GEO. J. BOLTON* "WALL S HOTEL? LATE AMERICAN HOUSE/ TUNKHANNOCK, WYOMING CO., PA. THIS establishment has recently been refitted an furnished in the latest style. Every attention wii! be given to the oomfort and convenience of those whe patronise the House. T. B. WALL, Owner and Proprietor: Tunkhannock, September 11, 1861. NORTH BRANCH HOTEL, MESHOPPEN, WYOMING COUNTY, PA. Wm. H. CORTRIGHT, Prop'r HAVING resumed the proprietorship of the above Hotel, the undersigned will spare no efforts reader the house an agreeable place of sojourn to all who may favor it with their custom. Wm. 1L CORTRIGHT. fane, 3rd, 1963 gftos flutel, TOWANDA, PA. D- B. BARTLET, (Late of TU. BBRAIHARD HOCSB, ELMIRA, N. T. PROPRIETOR. The MEANS HOTEL, is one of the LARGEST and BEST ARRANGED Houses in the country—lt is fitted up in the most modern and improved style, and no pains are spared to make it a pleasant and agreeable stopping-place for all, v 3, n2l, ly. NEW TAILORING SHOP Tbo Subscriber having had a sixteen years prac .tical experience in cutting and making clothing now offers his services in this line to the citizens of HICHOLSON And vicinity. Those wishing to get Fits will find his shop the to get them. JOEL, R, SMITH -nSO-Gmos fir wrm CITTII Manufactured ly WM. FLICKNER, At TUJYA'HANJVOCH:, Ta. ™ Vr. the exclus,ve ri f? ht for Wyoming County, is Straw **ry few Machines that will cut CuttlnJ I ' e '' better than th Old fashioned Th i Jf 5 ' Used uur fathers, n ne^iUcT^ 0 lime and labor ; and wonld avoid IKSS ** ITOTK < ,HMU AWPPLY CONSTANTLY ON HAND, Vflu39tf WM ' FLICKNIE. mm & b&iiattie's mi A LARGE STOCK. OF SPRING GOODS, JUST RECEIVED AND FOP Sale * CHE+IP, c ALL KINDS OF Produce TAKEN IN EXCHANGE % FOR GOODS, AT BUNNELL A BANNATYNE'S TunhhannocJt, Pa, ▼sd4l. "TO SPEAK HIS THOUGHTS IS EVERY FREEMAN'S RlGHT."—Thomas Jefftrson, TUNKHANNOCK, PA., WEDNESDAY, JULY 10, 1867- DECLARATION OF INDEPENDENCE A DECLARATION BT THE REPRKSBNTA TIVEB OF THE UNITBD STATES OF AMER ICA, IV GENERAL CONGRESS ASSEMBLED AS,'FIRST WRITTEN AND AFTERWARD AMENDED. WHEN, in the course of human events, it becomes necessary for one people to dis solve the political bands which have con nected them with another, and to assume among the powers of the earth the separate and equal station to which the laws of na ture's God entitle them, a decent respect to the opinions of mankind requires that they should declare the causes which impel them to the separation. We hold these truths to be self-evident: that all men are created equal; that they arc endowed by their Creator with inalien able rights ; that among these are life, lib erty, and the pursuit of happiness ; that to secure these rights, governments are insti tuted among men, deriving their just powers from the consent *of the governed;! that whenever any form of government becomes destructive of these ends, it is the right of the people to alter or abolish it, and to institute new government, laying its foundation on such principles, and organizing its powers in such form, as to them shall seem most likely to effect their safety and happiness. Pru dence, indeed, will dictate that govern ments long established should not bo chang ed for light and transient, causes; and ac cordingly all experience hath shown that mankind are more disposed to suffer while evils are sufferable, than to right themselves by abolishing the forms to which they are accustomed. But when a long train of abuses and usurpations [begun at a distin guished period and] pursuing invariably the same object, evinces a design to reduce them under absolute despotism, it is their right, it is their duty to throw off such gov ernment, and to provide new guards for their future security. Such has been the patient sufferance of these colonies ; and such is now the necessity which coustrains them to their former systems of govern ment, The history of the present king of Great Britain is a history of injuries and usurpations, in direct object the establish ment of an obsolute tyranny over these states. To prove this, let facts be submit ted to a candid world [for the truth of which we pledge a faith yet unsullied by falsehood.] He has refused his assent to laws the most wholesome and necessary for the public good. He has forbidden his Governors to pass laws of immediate and pressing importance, unless suspended in their operation till his assent should be obtained ; and, when so suspended, he has utterly neglected to at tend them. He has refused to pas* other laws for the accommodation of large districts of peo ple, unless those people would relinquish right of representation in the legislature ; a right inestimable to them, and formida ble to tyrants only. lie has called together legislative bod ies at places unnsual, uncomfortable, and distaotjrom tho depository of their public records, foi the sole purpose of fatiguiug them into complience with his measures. He has resolved representative houses repeatedly, for opposing, with manly firm ness, his invasion on the rights ot the peo ple. He has refused, for a long time after such dissolutions, to cause others to be elected; whereby the legislative powers, incapable of annihilation, have returned to the people at large for their exercise ; the State remaining, in the mean time, expos ed to all the danger of invasion from with out, and convulsions within. He has endeavored to prevent the pop ulation of these States; for that purpose, obstruciing the laws for naturalization of foreigners ; refusing to pass others to en courage their migration hither, and rais ing the conditions of new appropriations of lands. He has obstructed the administration of justice, by refusing his assent to laws for establishing judiciary*powers, He has made judges dependent on bis will alone, tor the tenure of their offices, and payment of their salaries. He has erected a multitude of new of fices, and sent hither swarms of officers to harass our people, and eat out their sab stance. lie has kept among us, i 0 tirs,e ß of peace, standing armies, without 'the con sent of our legislature, . , Ue has affected to vender the military independent of, aur a s; u p er i o r to, the civil power. He has with others, to sub ject us to ' A jurisdiction foreign to our con. stitu.tio anc ] unacknowledged by our laws giving his assent to their acts of pretended legislation: For quartering large bodies of armed troops among us ; For protecting them, by a mock trial, from puhishnicnt, for any muruers which they should commit on tho inhabitants of these States, For cutting off our trade with all parts of the world: For imposing taxes on as without our consent: For depriving us, in maD.y cases, of the benefits of trial by jury : For transporting us beyond seas to bo ried for pretended offences : For abolishing the free system of Eng lish laws in a neighboring province, estab lishing therein an arbitrary government, and enlarging its bouodaJ.ies, 60 as to ren- der it at once an example and fit instru ment for introducing the same absolute rnle into these colonies : For taking away our charters, abolish ing our most valuable laws, aud altering, fundamentally, the powers of our govern ments : For suspending our own legislatures, and declaring themselves invested with power to legislate for us in all cases what soever. He has abdicted government here, by declaring us out of his protection,! aud waging war against us. He Las plundered our seas, ravaged our coasts, burnt our towns, and destroyed the lives of our people. He is, at this time, transporting large armies of foreign mercenaries to complete the works of death, desolation, and tyran ny, already begun, with circumstances of cruelty and perfidy scarcely paralleled in the most barbarous ages, and totally un worthy the head of a civilized nation. He has constrained our fellow-citizens, taken captive on the high sens, to bear arms against their country, to become the executioners of their friends and brethren or to fall themselves by their hands. He has excited domestic insurrections amongst us, and has endeavored to bring on the inhabitants of our frontiers, the, merciless Indian savages, whose known rnle of warfare is an undistinguished de struction, of all ages, sexes, and conditions. In every stage of these oppressions, we have petitioned for redress, in the most humble terms; our repeated petitions havefbeen answered only by seated injury. A prince, whose character is thus marked by every act which may dc-fine a tyrant, i 3 unfit to be the ruler of a free people. Nor have wo been wanting in attention to our British brethren. Wc have warned them, from rime to time, of attempts made by their legislature to extend an unwar rantable jurisdiction over us. We have reminded them of the circumstances of our emigration and settlement here. We have appealed to their native justice and magnanimity, and we have conjured them, by the ties of our common kindred, to dis cover these usurpation which would inter rupt our connections and correspondence. They, too, have bean deaf to the voice of justice and consanguinity, We must, therefore, acquiesce in the necessity, which denounces our separation, and hold them, as we hold the rest of mankind, enemies in war, in peace, friends. We. therefore, the representatives of the United States of America in General Con gress assembled, do in the name, and by the authority of the good people of these [states, reject and renounce all allegiance and subjection to the kings of Great Bri tain a and all others who may hereafter, claim by, through, or under them ; we utterly dis solve all political connection whirh may heretofore have subsisted between as and the people or parliament of Great Britain; and finally we do assert and declare these colonies to be free and independent states] and that as free and independent States, they have full power to levy war, con clude peace, contract alliances, establish commerce, and to do all other acts and things which independent states may of right do, And for the support of this declaration, we mutually pledge to each other our lives, our fortunes, and our sa cred honor. The foregoing declaration * was, by or der of Congrcs, engrossed, and signed by the following members : JOHN HANCOCK. New Hampshire, Mazsachusett Bay, Josiah Bartlett, Samuel Adams, William Whipple, John Adams, Mathew Thornton, Robert Treat Paine Elbridge Gerry. Rhode Island. Delaware. Stephen Hopkins, Csar Rodndy, William Ellery, George Read, Connecticut. Thomas M'Kean. Roger Sherman, Maryland. Samuel Huntington, Samuel Chase, William Williams, William* Paca, Oliver Wolcott Thomas Stone, New York. Charles Carroll. William Floyd, Virginia Philip Livingston, George Wythe, Francis Lewis, Richard Henry Lee Lewis Morris, _ ' Thomas Jefferson, New Jersey Benjamin Harrison Richard Stockton, Thomas Nelson, jr. John Witherspoon F. Lightfoot Lee, Francis Hopkinson, Carter Braxton. John Hart, North Carolina. Abraham Clark. William Hooper, . Pennsylvania. Joseph Hewes, Robert Morris, John Fenn. Benjamin Rush, South Carolina. Benjamin Franklin, Edward Rutledgc, John Morton, Thomas Hey ward, George Clymer, Thomas Lynch jr. James Smith, Arthur Middleton. George Taylor, Georgia. James Wilson, Button Gwinnett, George Ross, Lyman Hall, George Walton. MAM'S GOT HOLD ON MT " TILTERS."— Tha Smithfield Times tells another story illustrative of the old saw that "the courso of true love never did run smooth." A young couple in Smith had laid a plan to outwit the vigilance of cruel parents and elope. The Times tolls the sequel thus; The youth stood .beneath the window—the lady attempted to climb out—when, oh ! horror, some Bne detained her from the rear! "Why dost thou not come, gentle Amelia !" She answered in an agitated, voice "I can't Bill, mam's got hold or. my tilters^" A RAIL-ROAD ACQUAINTANCE.—A West ern rail-road conductor tells the following capital hit, of which The Times, of Cincin nati, "makes a note "One day last week," aaid he, "there came on board of the cars, from one of the up-country stations, a very pretty, genteel young lady, on her way to this city. She was alone ; so I waited upon her to a good seat, and made her as comfortable as possi ble. It was a few minutes before the starting honr,and she was so agreeable and so talkative, that I lingered, and we had a pleasant chat. "Afterward, when collecting the tickets, she detained me again an instant, and gave me some fine peaches, which she said came from her friends orchard in the country ; and really, I began to think that I had not had so charming a passenger for many a day." "Well, we arrived] at the depot; and I attended her to the carriage, handed up her carpet-bag ; and, afterjall what do you think she said ?" Now we thought, of course, that the young lady would say very politely, "Thank you, sir"—smile like a gleam of sunshine the carriage off—and our friend John Van Dusen, the gentlemanly conductor, would bow an adieu, and with a sigh turn away, and forget the matter, and we stated that as our natural supposition, "No," said the conductor, "she did no such thing ; but, just as her foot was on the stop, she turned, and with a sort]oflook I can't describe, observed ; "You must consider this,, sir, merely a car acquaintance. You mnst not expect to be recognized if we meet any where else!" John drew a long breath. "What did you say ?" we asked. "Why I thought this rather uncivil to say the least, so I replied very quickly ; "Certainly not, Madam. I was just go ing to remark that you must not feel sligh ted if unnoticed by me anywhere, except on the cars ; for really, we conductors have to be careful about our acquaintance !" J "And the lady ?" "She looked quite silly,as she drove off," replied John. A keener response to an example of fe male ' snobisnC could not have been made, nor better deserved. A GOOD JOKE.—Many years ago, when church organs first came in use, a worthy old clergyman was pastor of a church where they had just purchased an organ.— Not fat from the church was a large town pastwe, where a great many cattle grazed, and among them a large bulL One hot Sabbath, Mr. Dull came up near the church grazing, and ju6t as the Rev. Mr. B was iu the midst of his sermon—"boo-woo- \ woo" went the bull. The parson paused, looked up at the singing seats, and with a grave face, said: "I would thank the musicians not to tune their instruments during service, it annoys me very much." The people stared, and the minister went on. "800-woo-woo," went the bull again, as he drew a little nearer the church. The parson paused again and adressed the choir. * "I really wish the singers would not tune their instruments while I am preach ing.' The congregation tittered, for they knew what the real cause of this disturbance was. The old parson went on again, and he had just about started good, when "Boo woo-woo" came from Mr. Bull. The minister paused once more and ex claimed : "I have requested the musicians in the gallery not to tune their instruments during the sermon. I now particularly request Mr. L that he will not tune his double base organ while I am preaching." This was too much. L—got up, too much agitated idea of speaking out Cuurch, and stammered out: "It is—isn't me, Farson —; it —it is that d—d town bull." . A SAD Love STORY.—A St. Louis paper records an elopement with very sad conse quences. The daughter of a rich merchant ran away with and married a clerk contrary to the wishes of her parents, who refused her admission to their house. In the midst of the honeymoon, however, the mother clandestinely visited her di.nght%r and as snred her if she would leave her husband she could return home and be received as of voro \—The girl fiftally consented, but in doing so roused her husband's anger. — Upon going bome the father would not re lent, but drove his daughter from the door with curses. Estranged from her husband and denounced by her father, the fair young bride rushed madly iuto dissipation and sin, and is now an inmate gf the lowest haunts iu St. Louis. A "iankce genius out West, conceiving that a little powde>< thrown upon green wood would facilitate its burning, directed a small stream. U p on the smoking pile, and not possessing a hand sufficiently quick to ' cut this off at a desireVig moment, was blown to pi eccs . corroner thus rca ; ° ' nt ve^dict : "It can't be call* ®. su iCide, because he didn't mean to kill irr jself; it wasn't a visitation of God, be , 'jause he struck by lightning ; ho I J*"* o '' die for th'c want of breath, for he I anything left to breathe with. It's i - TERMS, 98.00 X>BZI tk Iff ICf } WM NEW WAT OF —The following n an amnsing account df the way a farmer was taught how oheapfr he could take the paper. The lea son is worth pondering by a good many men "we wot of." "You have hens at hofiie. of course.— Well, I will send you my paper for one year, for the proceeds of a single hee for one season, and the products. It seems trifling, preposterous, to imagine the pro* ducts of a single hen would pay a subscrip tion ; perhaps it won't but I make the of fer." "Done," exclaimed farmer B; "I agree to it," and he appealed to me as a witness of the whole affair. The farmer went off apparently muoh elated with his conquest. The editor went on his way rejoicing. Time rolled around, the worldjrevolred, on its axis, and the aun on its orbit as i formerly did; the farmer received his pa per regularly, and regaled himself with the information from it, and said he was surprised at the progress of himself and family in information. Some time in the month of September I happened to be up again in the office, when who should enter but our friend farmer B. • '•How do you do, Mr. B?"said the edit or and extending his hand, ins counte nance lit up with a bland smile; "take a chair and be seated ; fine weather we have "Yes, sir, quite fine, indeed." he answer ed, and then a short silence ensued, during which our friend B. hitched his chair back ward and forward, twirled his thumbs ab stractedly, and spit profusely ; starting up quickly,, he said, addressing the editor, 1 have brought vou tho proceeds of that hen." It was amusing to see the peculiar ex pression of the editor, as he followed the farmer down to the wagon. I could hard ly keep my risibles down. When at the wagon, tho farmer oon menced handing over to the editor left products amounting to eighteen pullet8 r worth twelve and a half cents each, and a number of dozen of eggs, making, in the aggregate, at the least calculation, one dollar and fifty cents more than the pice ot tho paper. "No need," said he, "of men not taking a family newspaper, and payiog for it, too* I don't miss this from my roost, yet I hate paid for a year's subscription and over.— All folly, sir, there's no man but what can take a newspaper—its charity, you know, commenced at home." "But," said the editor, "I will pay you for what is over the subscription. I did not intend this as a means of profit, but rather to convince yon. I will pay— "Not a bit of it, sir; a bargain is a bar gain, and lam already paid, donbly paid, sir. And whenever a neighbor makes the complaint I did, I will relate to bin* the hen story. Good day, gentlemee."—- Agricultural Review. EFFECTS OF A BAD DREAM. —The five leading journals of l'aris contain long and circumstantial accounts of a distinguished engineer whose head was turned perfect ly white by a most frightful dream. Tho engineer had visited a rough and unfre quented mineral region for tho pnrpose of exploring and reporting to a company of capitalists npon the richness of a certain mine. The night of his arrival, and be fore he descended into the mine, he lodged at a small inn, and after devouring a pound or two of pork chops, went to bsd He dreamed that he had visited the mine, and was being hauled up, when he discov ered tbo rope was almost severed, and there was only a single strand to support his weight and that of the bucket in whiek he was being drawn up. Suddenly, when he had ascended to hundred feet, the rope, he dreamed, gave way, and he ottered a fearful shriek, which arousedjthe inmMea of the house, and when thoy burst open the door of the dreamer's room they found a white headed man, in the place of a black haired young gentleman who had retired a few hours before. The story is well authenticated, and this is the first ln stance on record of a man's hair having beeu turned white from the effects of a dream. * GIVING JOY TO A CHlLD.—Blessed bo the hand, says Douglas Jerrold that pro pares a pleasure for a child, for there is no saying when and where it may again bloom forth. Does not|almost everybody remem ber some kind-hearted man who showed him a kindness in the dullest daya of his childhood ? The writer of this recolects himself at this moment as a barefooted lad standing at the wooden fence of a poor V • tie garden in his native village, while longing eyes he gazed on the flowers which were bloomiug there quietly in th r ness of a Sunday morning. Tb came forth from his little cot* ' by trade ™ whole week at woik m lhe wl ? oj3 . n , bad come into the gard- jn (() hcr flo „. ers to stick into DIS CO when he went to church, lie saw tr e BOY F anf j breaking oil the most beau* u | 0 f his carnations—it i was streaked w roc | aa( ) white—he gave > it to him. £eithar the giver nor the *e -3 cciver spok< word and with bounding . Bteps they ran home. And now here, al . avast distance from that home, after so ma \ ny events of so many years, the feeling cf _ gratitude which agitated the breast of that c hoy expresses itself on paper. The caroa e Lion has long since withered, but now ifc, e blooms afresh * VOL. 6 NO. 47.