• , • from Se COWIN ssestswas Dred Scott in the Legislature. The Republicans of our State Senate got; up a string of bunkum resoluttonli in reference to this casa, which were referred to a committm. the majority of whom male a report at once demolish ing the Supreme Court, the Democratic; party,- the whole South, and waking! JEITERSON an abolitionist and the lk daration of Independence an abolition document. The Democratic portion of, the committee, however, made a minori ty report, exceedingly able and over- wheliningly conclusive against the abo- lition eg,itators. It is from the pen of Senator Virittsti, one se' the ablest young Democrats in the latute. We quote front the report : . 0 It is clear and conclusive that - ours was designed to be a government of white men.' It was not intended by its founders that any other class, or race, ..shoald ever be permitted to control its destinies." The report is eloquent while referring to the past history of the country, and the evils which a de r parture from the piinciple stated above, would entail upon our national fat , and says that " to protect ourselves oar posterity from such -alarming re salts, we must carefully guard against the causes which certainly would pro• doce them. This can only be done I),N placing a barrier, wide and impassable, between the two races now in conflict, and such we hold to be the true merit of the recent des on of the Court , which in its future nplication and develop ment will amply shield us from.the 414- gers to which we have adverted. How ever much we may regret the unfortu nate condition of the colored race, we cannot, in oar examination of a ques tion fraqgtit with so much interest, lose sight of the great truth that self preservation is the first law of nature.' To, admit the citizenship of the negro, is to plebe him, without limitation, upon the same equality with the white man. Its ultimate effect would be to see the African and his descendants blustering • around the polls in the exercise of the same laestimablepririleges now enjoyed by the great Caucasian race, and per haps a few years, would - exhibit .the startling spectacle of colored represen tives occupying the same seats now so respectably filled by a majority of yi r committee." Near the conclusion of the report,the author thus disposes of the attempt to drag Thome Tefferson in as authority for opposing the Dred Scott decision: 4 The majority of the Committee have insulted the memory of Thomas Jeffer soirby invoking his great name, and quoting his Commanding authority, in favor of the treasonable sentiments con tained in the resolutions as reported.— In this, they have only imitated the gross want of candor; which has so re. oentlTpermitted the opposition to justi fy 'their feeble attacks upon the Consti tution and the Union, under the sanc tion of the great men of the Revolution who labored so successfully to establish both. The majority have quoted the language but not the meaning of Jeffer son • for upon reference to the letters &nal which their garbled extracts hiive been taken, it appears that the illustri ous founder of Democracy was inveigh ing in eloquent and forcible terms against that growing spirit'of centralisathin, of Federal assumption of power, which, from the days of the Virginia and Ken tucky resolutions of 1798 to the present time, the Democratic party has strenn oasly resisted, and never so successful ly as in the recent Presidential contest., when the disregard of State rights and strict constitutional construction was carried by the Republican party to the most dangerous and treasonable ex tremes. The opinions of the Supregie Court which Thomas Jefferson then de precated, seemed to lend the sanction of that high tribunal to Federal interfer enee in purely State affairs. But el• Imp for the perpetuity of this Union, dooms forebodings have not been justified by the result. For not only the Supreme Court itself, controlled by wiser and more mature counsels, but the Federal Government, with aft its power and influence, has recognized and sustained to the fullest extent the doc trine of State rights, and placed upon safe and unassailable grounds the great principle of popular sovereignty in the Territories—in itself only an extension and ieceasary application of the former. And if the immortal sage of Monticello were now alive and in our midst—if he could witness and dwell upon the proud triumphs of the Democratic party, - so true, so constant, and so faithful to the COnatitution as it came from its framers —his dark presages as to Federal en croachments would give place to pro phetic visions of the permanency and grandeur of this Confederated Re public." The report concludes with the fol lowing eloquent paragraph : "The minority of your committee have no fears that the recent decision of the Supreme Court of the United States will not be sustained and upheld by the eaha good sense of the American people. In the outburst of defeated sectionalism, tones of denunciation may be hurled against it by the party whose hopes it destroys, and whose principles it overwhelms. But in the future, as in the past, the great mass of the peo esenewill be true to it, as they have ever to the Union and the Constitution. And if ever the broken fragments of Constitutional liberty strew our path way, it will be in that fatal hour when the strength and binding force of the judici ary shall be forever lost on the treason able resistance of degenerate factions." Riot at Bing Sing.—The details of an extensive conspiracy and attempted es cape of the convicts at Sing Sing prison are given in the New York papers. At breeMst time on Sunday morning, about sixty of the prisoners, having kaookod down the guard, formed in two parties, one of which made for the river and the other for the village. They were pursued, and after a shot chase every one of them was captured. No one was seriously hurt In the me lee.- The conspiracy, however, was not twined to the above mentioned gangs. The remaining prisoners, at the conclu- Akre of their breakfiust, and upon a pre eoseorted signal give n, rushed upon the keriser eirtwere beating him, when the avert of the prison came to the rescue diesdisim.od his pistols among the eswAte. This had the Effect . quell. lag the revolt. Quiet was • • and panidunent indicted. e of folvdere. . . 6.11. Son : nut the Know evindidate for' Governor of he Compirtr. Z H. J. STAIILE, EDITOR AND PROPRIETOR GETTYSBURG, PA Monday Morning, May 25, 1867. ffiltellTlC STITI 1111.11LNITIOU. FOR 00111123014 WILLIAM F. PACKER, of Lyeoming CANAL 0011.11111110 X 11, NIMROD STRICKLAND, of Cheater air President, BCrCHANAN . B health is entirely ratored, and he feels now quite confident that he lust completely over come the National Hotel disease, which caused him so muck physical pcpstrit tion. He has abundant endurance for the duties imposed on him by the peo ple, for his full term - of office. MiirAdviees from Lecompton, .Kan sas, inform us that a nolle prosequi has been entered In the case of Goy. Rain son, indicted for treason.- This looks as if the Kansas troubles were coming to an end. liirThe Legislature of this State ad journed on 'Friday last. Good —but an adjournment a month ago would have been much better. seN.lt is estimated that the amount if money expended about the Capitol at Harrisburg, to secure the passage of the Main Liuu hill;exceeticd half a mil lion of dollars 1 This furuishes the key to the passage of this measure of rubbery. -In the Senate, on Wednesday, Mr. WALtOY read in place a bill to re- Peal the act for the sale of the Main Line; but a motion to take it up was refused. The matter will now be taken to the Supreme Court, and the consummation of this gross wrong may still be prevented. The Legislature hai pitsexl a bill for the establishment of Normal Schools throughout the State. We have not seen theeet. .The Presitkint , contemplates a country reffidenee during the extreme best of the summer. Arrangements are nearly compleV, we learn, for his tem porary reside e, in the vicinity of "The Soldier's Home," four miles from the City of Washington. lie will go out each evening, and return in the morn ing to the White House, where he will attend to business through the day. iiirJORN W. BACOEIMAN, Esq., of thO Frederick Citizen, has been appointed Ap praiser General of Merchandise, at Bal timore, Md., vioe Wm. P. Ponder, re signed. Mr. Baughman i 9 a sterling, hard-working, Democrat, and deserves the appointment. lie is, besides, ad mirably fitted for the post. PORTIR, Esq., has become editor and publisher of the Carlisle Herald. He is a ready writer, and will doubtless print an interesting paper. Sudden Death.—Ms. Wm. Noble, an old citizen of Carlisle, whilst in conver sation with a friend, on Monday even ing last, was suddenly seized with ap oleXy and instanly expired. The Kansas Aid Fiend.—Vermont having utterly refused to pay over her $20,000 to the sufferers of bleeding Kansas, the New York Legislature fol lowed suit, turning the cold shoulder upon the recommendation of Governor King, to appropriate $lOO,OOO for the same object, and now the old Bay State pauses. Massachusetts, during the first days of the session of her august Leg islature, went zealously to work on an other 8100,000 appropriation, but her Solons have halted and higgled, adopt ed and re-considered, played possum during the whole Winter and Spring, and have at last fallen back on a 850,- 000 fund to be raised for the shriekers. But doubts and innendoes are interposed in reference to this sum, and the whole thing is likely to fizzle oat. Dred Scott.—This " cullud individual" was expected to raise considerable ex- citement in the political world. Mc- Gregor, of the Beaver Star, thinks, and 8o do we, that he " won't do to tie to." The Democracy have gained largely at every election that has been held since the Supreme Court decided his• case. Our opponents will Dread• Scott morn yet before the next elections are over. They misled a ljrge body of the people upon the Kansai - matter, bat the ques tion has become too plain for farther profitable use to the Know Nothings and Black Republicans. The masses know that the Democracy are right upon that issue. "There's no more work for poor old" Dun! IThe Democrats of Ifichigan have reduced the sham Republiasn majority more than ten thousand votes. Fre mont's majority in that State was 19,- 628. In Wisconsin, also, the Demo crats have made largo gains In the judi cial election. se-Now is the time to clean the gut ten and the Mimi. Otu, ofthelMiett Appealing alone to prejudice, and conducting its operation* in sworn so creoy, the /Know Nothing petty, as, it rose. t hree years ago, threatened to nu- • derma.. an,l crush out all c::.c.;.lng p.). litieal organizations, and , ilcutly worm its v.sy also into the c‘oci.ll body. for the pnrprKe of deranging even that. In nearly all the States, and counties, and cities, and towns, they succeeded by overwhelming majorities. They secret tynomtnated, and secretly elected their condi& tes,the opposition frequently not even knowing who the K. N. candidates were until after the close of the polls, and the counting of the ballota had com menced. Then they not only overbear ingly boasted of their triumph; bid even of tAe iSpiner in which it was tiecont plished,4i-tAtough that species of low canning was a comumnxiable trait in the order. This course, with their affected con tempt for all opposition, no doubt, had the desired effect upon the bigoted and unsuspecting. But there were exceptions—a not-to be-forpttel few—to the list of Know Nothing triumphs. The hand of jus tice was still, here and there, successful ly raised against the unholy pretensions of this midnight conclave—and to the eternal credit of Adams county be It said, she constituted one of the bright exceptions. Here, although contend ing with a foe in ambush, and that foe bound together by OATHS, and led on by most unprincipled , partisans, whose ardor was doubly kindled by the hope of obtaining office, the Democracy suc ceeded in electing a good share of their ticket, and would have carried the whole, bat for the vehement and plausi ble denials on the part of Know Noth ing candidates s that they had anything to do with, or were in any way connect ed with, or responsible for the doings of, di+ order. Having been looked upon as men of veracity before, many vo ters, themselves honest and unsuspect ing, gave them* their suffrages who would have scorned them with con tempt had they known the whole truth. This noble struggle against intolerance has been kept uv, by the right-thinking of the county ever since, with increased success. Know N?thingism, as a dis- tinot organization, and under tha, may not attempt a contest wl Democracy again—for the reasol UNTICZB cannot be secured to the of the order by such a course,--b may expect the self-same men to oppose us under some other name—now under that of "union of Americans and Re publicans," and when this shall be found to be utterly at fault, as was sworn Dark Lanternism, they will naturally as sume some other equally plausible, but equally; deceptive, disguise. That axy change in their costume will avail them in their purposes, is not probable. They are known, and will continue to be remembered. That these would-be "crushers-out" of civil and religious rights may most assn redly re ly upon--and they may as well take the fact into all their calculations when figuring out some new political dodge. Apportionment Bill. Both Houses of the Legislature pass ed the following Apportionment Bill, (as reported from the Committee of Con forence,) on Wednesday last., By it, Adams, Franklin and Faltoni make a Senatorial district. Adams elects one member of the House, as heretofore : SENATORIAL. DISTRICTS. The City of Philadelphia, 4 1 Dsophie sad Labium, I Cleertet sad Delaware, I! Leaoseese, S Illestgessery, PiAda ms ne*, 1 Sash.. I I , leashlle sad Pal. Lehigh sod litarthempiess, I, too, . 1 Berta. I Seseeneet,Badfned sad Rut Paheylkill. 1, tisedes. 1 Osehes. Meese*, Pike mid ,Illids. Cembeis sad Clear- • lkes .ll e=terebsooklat. V lerla sod enstereele. 1 Uses sod yeadeg, I lirestaierMaad lute Fayette I italleell, i,llllrelmeba sal Aims% 1 liege, Pellet, Magma sad lailegbeey, .. 2 Mae 1 ipeatee sal letior, I Ciletos.n i peilooke. Coale*tor...., Metope sod Tie. sad Colas, I sew. I st=orlleethosideeMsoil e Ms sod Crawford, 1 and Clessabia. I Clarion, James, lone Cosolseised. Pen 7, Jul- i end Elk,L ste old MW.. I Moho emembetat liewatore, - le RZFRESILIITATICE DISTRICTS. Plell~ladEety, 1 Torte. . I Delaware, Cs whetting sad Peery. 2 Cheeter. - Mato. I Meolgomeey, irrashea sod FOWL I leseetp, lloilierd aid Sairmart, 2 Iteettlasoptem. lisedisigisie, Lehigh slid Cases% Male. 1 Maros aid 11k.% Doubt* 3 Wayne. lotbas, 1 Lemma, Berton .ad Ireotmot•- •=B.ll leak Fayette, II I Weasling. belliess,Ceiloos tireem. 1 sad .{allots, Wasdelsigtopi, 2 Loomis, sod Clishee, allambeay. Costae, bearer sal Isetesee, 2 11111 Mis, Ilia Mer, I Voles, bleat ma Jul. Manor sod Fess. ~ 2 ata. Marino sail Fames. 1 Northes • I Jellil~e. Cleareetd, Ilk, Moly WM, sad Mar" 2 Osepeeis, VCra.fs.d sad Keene, II Latomem, Iltrie, 2 Deets, I Pother sad Tklwk, I Laaaudorr. 4 labels dembee et lepreepetethee, 10$ iairlmmediately preceding the final adjournment of the Leils!attire, D. A. Finney was elected Speaker of the Son ate. Mr. Finney 15, W. H. Welsh 13. ter The Chapberebtirg Spirit propos es Hon. JAMILB Niu., of that place, as a candidate for a seat on the Supreme Bench. Judge Nill is a sound lawyer, a sterling deux)crat, and every inch a gentleman. miiir-On the 14th inst., a terrible hail storm passed over Richmond, Indiana. About 8,000 panes of window glass were broken. Mir The Merchants a n d business men of Washington City are taking up a sub scription of $lO,OOO, which will be paid to any person or persons ascertaining the cause of the National Hotel disease. mi-The Delaware peach crop promi ses to be more abundant than it has been for many years. . or The .Problem of a " Conaway Farmer" will appear in our next. ea-Answer to last week's Enigma— ompiler." lriPti . 16i -fro The Harrisburg correspondent of the Pkiladelplda Ledger—whose comments apes the doings of our - State Lrgislatere are distitiguithed Ibr their strict impar tiahty--givcs us the following informa tion st- , to the meow, by which the pas %age of the bill for the sale of the Main Line of the Public Works, was secured. If all that is so strongly hinted at, be , true--and there is scarcely any reason to doubt it—this may be set down as the most disreputableact of legislation, in magnitude at least, which has ever disgraced our Commonwealth. Ihenussento, May l2th, 1857. The amendments made by the Senate to the bill fur the sale of the Main Line, were idopaed by the/ Mouse, this morning. so that 1$ only tssedt the steetlon ofthe Execttive to become a law. The most powerful lobby in testate win Weight to bier upon the Lets latare to leisure the passage of this bill, with the sweeping eressyniin of the Pennsylvania Railroad Company boils all manner of taxa tion, and it bail hem me weed with • The inquiry will naturally miss, what pecu liar interest eel the lobby have in the of a bill which seems to be adapted entirely to thirPenneylvania Railroad Company ? The precise nature of this interest, or upon what terms the contra* has been taken, is perhaps only a matter of eciajestare. h k confident 1y inserted that the Male Line will be sold first tr-em amoelatioe efiedirideals, who will transfer it to the Pennsylvania Railroad Coen panyiat a headmen advance, by erbielt means they are to be mespeemated fur their exer tions in procuring he passage through - the Legislature. This soma= las some sober of probability from the faci-tifill the third section of the bill provides that in ease an as seciadon of individuals parebase, they may transfer their right to any Relieved or Canal Company in the Commonwealth. If this is not the precise way in which the powerful lobby induenee is to receive a return for the anxious solicitude with which they have watched and guarded the passage of this measure, it is eertain that-they are to derive some compensation for their servioesJ No one will pretend that disinterested patriotism, and a regard for the financial prosperity of the State, was the motive that controlled this powerful lobby organisatiun. Outside influ ences are rarely used on that side. Sir •Gvv. Pollock, of course, signed the bill, and has already advertised the Line for sale, to take place at the Mer chant's Exehango, in Philadelphia, on the 25th of Juno next. Wo are glad to perceive, hoirever, that it is not likely this gross wrong upon the Commonwealth will'be allow ed as easy a consummation as its pro jectors supposed. The Harrisburx--Pa triot and Union, of Wednesday, says: -e can do nothing to ar will probably be made, Avania Railroad CoMpa ly be the purchaser—but ' right will undoubtedly _- .0- 4e next Legislature, and the question of legality may finally be decided by the Supreme Court." the Great Swindle. , Th 1. / Pennsylvania Railroad Company are o f only to get the Main Line of t Public Works, ibr $9,000,000, (which ,• not all to be paid for 40 years!) but, / by the provisions of the seventh section of the bill, they also get "all the reser voirs, machinery, Toconiotives, cars, trucks, stationary engines, workshops, tools, water-stations; OH-Itowee, offices, stocks and materials whatsoever and s - wheresoever belonging or held for the use of the same; together with all - the right, title, interest, claims and demands of the Commonwealth, to all 'property, real, personal and mixed, belonging to or used in connection with the same, by the Commonwealth," into the bar gain 1 In_addition to all this, they are to be exonerated forever, from the payment of tonnage tax, and their pro perty from all other taxes for State T 1 nr poses I finch wholesale robbery is with out a parallel in history. Frau tie didledelphis Breaks' Jour.id of Tuesday Case of Judge Vonderamith--DeatA of His Wife—A Seem of Great Distress.— It, was reported yesterday that Judge Vondersauth had been released on $7,000 bail, having been originally com mitted by Judge Kane, in default of $B4OOO. Upon inquiry we ibund the rumor untrue, that. there are efforts being mad* by his ends to have the bail reduced, with a prospect of success. The Judge is still a prisoner in the Debtor's Aiet Moyaniensing. In connectio n pr with the present condi tion of this alleged criminal, we might here state that Mrs. Vondersmith died at 'Lancaster, en Sunday afternoon, af ter a painful and protracted illness. She had been very ill for some time previous to the arrest of her husband, and when arrested he bade her a final farewell, she was scarcely conscious of I what was transpiring. She was gener ally in delicate health, and recent do medic troubles, no doubt, hastened her death. The death scene, which occur rod under peculiar circumstances, was rendered still more painful by the dying wife and mother giving premature birth to a child a few moments before her dissolution. Her brother, Dr. John Leonard, had been committed to prison for thirty days, the day previous, for drunkenness and disorderly conduct, but was released through the interven tion of friends, in time to see his sister die. Her husband and the father of her three children, all old enough to realise their situation , l y ing in prison in Philadelphia, ch argedwith a high crime, and the cries of the children for parents both lost to them, altogether presented a scone of sorrow and dis tress rarely witnessed by human eye. The house in which the family resid ed is subject to a lien of $7,000, with three years interest, which the govern ment holds as an indemnification of the forfeited bail, and the children are therefore left not only orphans but homeless. When the information of his wife's death was communicated to him yester day, by a gentleman from Lancaster, a Mr. Shrzeider, he appeared deeply af fected, and shed tears. During the whole of last night he constantly walk ed his oell, and was frequently heard to mesa. The decease of Ire. Vonder smith appears to have been a powerful blow upon his spirits. There are no less than fifteen bills of indictment pend ing against the Jude for hand and fbi gory upon the United States Govern ment, and if tried and oonvicted upon all, his term of imprisonment could be made to reach one hundred and fifty years! 0 . • When the House resolutions upon the death of Mr. B. M. Prreaelte, member front Liaoning county, ; , were received in the Senate, on Satairday' week,),lr. BREWER, the talented Senator from this district, prononneed Use fol lowing eloquent it`nd impressive eulogy upon the'deceas'ed. Mr. B. said :' • Ms. Sri cci bad not intended to opso my lips upon the sorrows of this nlO 6lO- • choly occurrence—and, therelbei, no temerity of urine can clothe with grime er ortnlineo the thronging emotions Inspired by theted events of this day. Bat yet, whatever 1 may say will be none the leas sincere, and shall oome in the simplicity of feeling from the re cesses of a stricken wart.—lndeed, I would that 11 1 , mouth oould speak at this moment from e fullness of the heart; but, sir, mine i too full for utterance.. But a few months ago this 'body was gilld . qpon to plate in the stir sad 'bustle of deaf duty, to mingle in the imposing rites which the sorrow and the citilisaticin of the whole world were perfonnitig at thetopening grave of the young hero cif tits Islooliern Seas! We were again in a aoll than summoned to honored tomb of him whose counsel was wisttiit-mul; whose 'voice wss eloquence— him, whose grnius Illumined debate, and whose smile inspired friendship—him whose shrouded chile renewl day atter day the un affected sentiments of sorrow and regret which mourned the death and the loss of a loved and distinguished ineMber of this brotherhood of Senators. And now once more the angel of deat6 - hrtstretelied the dark shadow of his unwearying Whig oveCthe hopes and aspira tions of these Halls. !loather of our breth ren, in the mohring of life,• in the spring time of 'nature as of hope, young, ardent and generous. has gone down to the tranquil rest of the narrow house of all earthly power and all .human nmbition.-=-But still the world lives on as if the earth contained no tomb ; and yet, what spot upon its broad bosom, beautiful ur barren, which is lot filled with there sad and touohing memorials of buried love and crushed affections? The chilly snows of winter are at one time shoveled away from some sterile place to make room fur the little coffin of the dead—and then 1 1 again the tenderest violets of Spring which decorate the sweetest- 'turf, and perfume the evening winds, are torn aside to admit into ' its cold and silent hotne all that was once gay. joyous and full of hope. The hour at death is, the hour of all seasons and of all clime.— "Leaves hare their Um* In fall. Mellower' to ',Ober at tie *orth what's breath ; Led sten to eat—bet 411.0, Theo haat all meow fur Odes ma, Oh ! death." But, sir, what a' Ow contrast does this mournful scene oC:bereavement and of anguish present to the livlngzloty and brightness, aye the gorgeous Edo of tin, sunny day of full and luxuriant Spr rig. Nature stands in perpetual loveliness , r ied in the trailing gar mentauf pereuial you and beauteous smiles —her cheek iadiant, and her eye all lustre —her fair brow encizteled with the opening blosounns and the soft tendert. of genial May, and from her 'rosy lips, murmuring in har monious music, the saver voice of gladdened brook and whispering , winds. But upon her go y , and iympathisingw, lean,in silence l oso and in sorrow, the de cate form of the lone ly widow and the hear broken mother. The weeds of deep mourni g are upon her. No smile illumines her wain cheek—nn hope kin dles her tearful eye—tides garland of springing flowers decorates her pale forehead—no ear ly row) blooms on her youthful breast. Her yoke is the unstrung harp, and her heart is thisilent ruins of desolated lore and bl.tated hope. But even in thie bitter hour of dark ness and of trial, the! young and bereaved widow has one entailing source of comlhrt in the children who withidr around her and nes tle in her bosom--thei bright and endeared images of her tarried husband, wok the fond pledges of his uudyingi affection. Time may, indeed, mellow the pangs of such a sore affliction, but the !opic of years will only brighten the cherished memory of his vir-, tuffs and _ hip worth. May she, in this sea 'on of gloom and catemity, lean upon the strung right arm of Him: who soothes the weary and gives the troubled rest. May she look to Him for consobition, in faith and in oonfideneP, who is the lather of the fatherless and the God of all the wiirld. Ido not come to pronounce a sou cling eulugium upon Joey B. M. Prrittxxx, but in the simplicity of unaffected grief, to ',ear my humble testi mony to his manly virtues, his high talents, and his stainless name. And I would in dulge the pleasing lu4pe that he has gone from this scene of cares and of trial—this pil grimage of tail and of sorrow -10 the calm rest of a brighter, a beer, and a haler world --a world of unfading beauty and perpetual joy. where loaves never fall, flowers never w+, and stars never 4 The, N. mons. aho state of . s , • - iti Utah is worthy o more than m , • passing thought, and we doubt not, &fit the President and Cabinet are giving it their most se rious consideration. 1 _ There seems to be but ono opinion en tertained in referenee to the disgraceful polygamy pnichied by that deluded peo ple under the guise, of professed obedi ence to piety_ and' religion. Against this debasement of human nature, it . is assumed the general government should s i t interfere its strong rub, and compel a surrender to the • I laws recognized' by all ehristendom. But how shall the object be accompliiihed r. We are not surprised when wel look at the diffi culties to be surmounted, that the gov merit his been cautious in the matter. We hear that the Mormons are strong and defiant ; that they have enlisted in their cause large and powerful bands of Indians, with the expectation of being confronted by the general government. We find them strongly entrenched hun- 1 dreds of miles away from their frontier settlements. That there exists a necessity for de cisive measures,we presume is not ques tioned. Brigham Young has doubtless been acting with a high hand. Bat it would not do, remarks the West Ches ter Jeffersonian, under the circumstan ces, for the government to move in the matter without being largely prepared. The approach to Utah, by an efficient army, would cover a period of months, and months again would intervene be fore supplies could roach them. And what, in the event of subjection ! Would the tide of emigration set, it suffi ciently stnong to overwhelm and secure by a preponderating influence an obedi ence to the civil and social arrangements we venerate? or would it be necessary to keep a large and powerful force in con stant active service, hundreds of miles distant, to compel the obedience of an in fatuated people to laws which they religiously defy? These are some of the points involved. However, the country may rest con fident in the wisdom and patriottsm of the great man who guides the helm of State. He will be seen to move at the right time, and in the right way. -The Democrats gai ne d a g l or i ous victory in Quincy, 111., on the 4th inst., by electing their mayor, and the whole of tho other ticket by two hundred and fifty majority. stir Dr. Hays, in his lecture, mention ed of having seen an iceberg which con tained 435,006,000 pond of lco--more than is used in ono year by the civilised world. IMEI2I ocal The Rd` lrosd. ;We;have the . oratification of inform rig our readeS that eare- Von of the pe r ttysburg the Railroadly com , (copin uertirtuthis pittee-witit Hanover, via New Oxford,) may now be looked for. Weikru assured that responsible capi have made propositions to the Board AT Directors' to tale all the Bonds of the Company at a stipulated price ; but / before definitely arranging with theee , igeemen, it is the wish of the Board our citizens an opportunity . to secure Bonds, and thus realize the ad vance which the Bonds will most &sour edly..comnuind upon the completion of the Toga, if not before. That the La , vestment will proinfs safe and profitable one, we do not, entertain a doubt; and, to try our faith, if anybody has a thou sand dollars to trust a Printer with the loan of, at six per centum, let it be for t warded to thitiestablishment, and it will I be risked in Gettysburg Railroad Bonds ' instanter. In the meantine, the Board of Di iectors have oali s N succeeded in their arrangements for the disposal of the Bonds, as to warrant them to contract for Iron, and they are accordingly ne gotiating fora sufficient quantity to lay the entire track. This is good newel An article from . the Philadelphia North American, given in another col umn, is just' now specially interesting, in this locality. Read it. Chinese Sugar Cane. We learn from the Valley Spirit that the Chinese Sugar Cane is likely to re: ceive a fair trial in. Franklin county.- A good many farmers have planted the seed, in. small quantities, with a vie* of testing itaj 'merits. 'Mr. piekey, near Mercersburg, who cultivated a patch last season, is putting in twenty-five acres. We suppose that there is a considera ble, quantkty of the seed in, our owp county, received from various sources, in small parcels, (don't. think D. F. Robison, M. C., should have much credit in the premises,) and we trust• a fair trial will lAs.mado of it. The present high prices of " sweetanin's" indicate a stern necessity for the cultivation of more cane,aud it is highly probable that the Chinese variety is the very thing dempndod by the times--suitable, as it seems to be, to a more northern soil and climate. A small patch of the Sugar Cane may be seen in the garden connected with the Cemetery grounds, during the sea• son, 111:1148 theseed should entirely &U. Now Cents for Old Ones, The Director of the Phikulelphia Mint is authorized to exchange new cents for old ones, and has arranged with the I Express Companies to forward the new coin of the cost of tho Mint, to all con venient points on or near the Atlantic coast. We hope our business men will rake up their old coppers and have a lot of "nickels" forwarded to Gettys burg in exchange. The editor of " Graham," speaking o the new cents, which are composed chiefly of nickel, says: That as the old soldiers wore called "coppers," the now recruits should be known as nickels, which in time would no doubt be Con tracted to " nicks." If a second batch were issued, we should then have old nicks and young nicks, and if a fellow had tb dive very deep into the corner of his pocket to get tie, he might say "Nix come arouse." r Fires in .11.41cdning Counties. The oisich-nuiker's shop of Wu.uus Snazzvs, in Westminster, Md., was de stroyed by 'Bre, about four o'clock on Sunday morning, the 17th inst., Ogee's.; er With several carriages,. and a lot of tools. Ilia dwelling was also damaged. toss 112,000—n0 insurance. Supposed incendiarism. On Monday night, about .midnight, the barn of Mr. JOHN AiLIWAT, near Rocky Spring, in Franklin county, was consumed. Nine homes and a colt per. ished in the flames, together with all his (*vs, wagons and whatever else the barn. oontain h. Origin of tiro not Stated. One of the stables at Carlisle B a rracks was burnt on last Monday evening, to gether with a quantity of hay and straw. Loss $5OO. A soldier has been arrest ed, suspected of setting the building on fire. '• Hog Cholera. The Chambersburg Spirit says tho hog cholera is prevailing in some sec tions of Franklin county. At all events, considerable loss has been experienced from a disease among tho swine in the sonth-western part of that county. Several ho o have died in this vicinity from a disease Veared to be something like the cholera; but it should be borne in mind that swine have from time iTn- Inemorial died from other diseases, and may die from oth r diseases still. - Ile .The York '•_ le says that the complimentary cotillion party, given by the "York Quadrille Association," to Mr. Lyn L. MILD, at Washington Hall, on Thursda, t everning week, came off in handsomcritYle- Notwithstand ing the incliniener of the weather, a goodly number of les and gentlemen were present, who • I lit on the light e wee small hoias themselves heurti- I • is doubtless de. fantastic toe until of morning, enjoyii i ly. The complitad stirred by Mr. Arn " • . • : . • DORM afters. It is mentioned as a noteworthy fact, (and we print it for the bene. itt. of 'sick, persons in this quarter as may still - be weak in Railroad fkith,) that the eight counties in Virginia im mediately penetrated and influenced by the ,Kiminia and Tennessee Railroad, viz: Bedford, Roanoke, Montgomery, Pulaski, Wythe, Smyth, Waahington and Scott, show . an increase in val , i• • - of $9,376,669, their aggregate land val ued in 1850 having been $14,446,059, and Wing $23,822,728. The adjoining, counties, which have been more remote ly influenced by the road, show a like in crease, and give with those named, a to tal increase of $30,000,000. The WM also is true with almost every other prominent line of railroad in the oven. try. h Prom the ?Madelphts Noe* Anodes. ROM from Philadelphia to Par k ersbur g. When, OD a \- floctent .occasion, we took the opportanitf to .peak of the progress made by the railroad connection through southern. Pennsylvania, our information was neesesari ly imperfect, as the existiug . maps af f ord IHN stifficient intelligence respecting the location, purposes, or developments of the variant mil -1 wa y lines. A communication from an intelli gent {puree, to which we have already given I p u blicity, adds something to our knowledge of the eubject, and we have no doubt that the artiotelwino read with interest by all concerns. ed in the 'settlement of the district referred to. That stio s wed the new through line to the Ohio river to be, sa we guessed, along the Itouling,Lebaapn Valley; Cumberland Val ley. and Pittsburg and Connell' T i Ile Railroad*, which !brings it much nearer to outuidetion than attybody has imagined. But we have received another ceremonies tion, Irom a friend in Gettysburg, Adam* olont , which places what we termed the 1 Eastern Division of the line through the southdrn counties in alt entirely . new light, and teed it to be of unexpected importance. We o we the connection from Philadelphia as fair (west as Hanover, and said that a-rail ' road WM projected from Hanover to fiettyri... I burg. I We now learn from the' letter referred to dui this latter road is nearly all graded, . and 11, during the summer now near at hand. are the track laid and he in running order. West of Gettysburg the connection exten , not to Chanibersburg, as we sup posed,' ut in a southwesterly direction to the Mary 41 Staieliae, the Gettysburg Railroad 1 Company having a charter to esteud their • road to that point, and tor that purpose to take, Use and occupy forever the unfinished ' State yailroad, which was projected and grad ed about the years 1536-7. This privilege wag oanted to the company, by an act pass el the Legislature at the session of 1556. All the engiueers who have traversed end ex amined this section of country, say chit this old railroad was really the most practicable route i mew the Smith Mountain to connect with the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad. So far fn deserving its reputation of being in ,toler4ly crooked snit impracticable, it is likely to come into gresit and important ser vice as part of the through route west from Philadelphia, to and over the Parkersburg line. Upon this abandoned road the, State expended about ' ,000 nits% of Gettysburg, and his Meat to the Maryland line, and ' r , graded for abou ten miles of the route. It posses' near tho town of Waynesboro'. By" the Stiite of Maryland a charter Was granted to continue the railway across the territory or that Commonwealth to the town of Hancock,` on reaching which point it will only tie impe nded from the Italtinlore and Ohio Railroad by the Potomac river. The connection here by a bridge will be easily mat's. This is the line by why of York and Hand over. But there is an objection to that, P. ing from the fact that a portion of is 4 the Northern Central Railroad, a Dila ire work lending northward, and which holdran awicoard position in an arrangement fors through business. But a much shorter, and indeed the shortest line fur a railway,eia Columbia. York and Getty sburg, to the moutlis west, would be furnished by a direct road. from York to GoUroburg. • From • York to Oxford, Aduma county, a distance of eighteen miles, la route for a railway has bees iins ley engineers, over a very favorablecountry, trod the osstilf grading estimated at 55,500 . per mile. At Oxford it would meet the Getty,- burg Railroad, which rutyth rough that place. So that the building of this, link of eightem miles i elope to be provided for. This could complete an air line road from Colombia to the Maryland line.' . A connection with the Baltimore and Ohio - Railroad, by this route, would give Philadel phia a large interest in the trade coming aver that, great avenue. It would afford me a'. thorough route to Wheeling, and thence along the Central Ohio roam many points not now reached by oar line. It would open the new . road to Pittsburg and the Connellsrille route, and give us access to the trade of the Youghio gen, valley. The Cumberland coal and iron region, now solely tributary to Baltimore, would then be accessible to us. The North western Virginia,"or Parkersburg Railroad, ' would then be ores much interest to as as to Baltimore, affording us an approach to the trade of Western Virginia, which we do not ' now enjoy. Tho progress of this undertaking will develope other advantages not now so ap parent; but these we have named are suflielent- ' ' ly important to direct attention to the enter prise, and secure fur it the good wishes and substantial aid of Philadelphia. riirßev. D. WILSON is about to return to Liberia, to continue his - missionary labors. Mrs. Wilson, who has accom panied him heretofore in his labqrs of f love, remains with her friends. Many kind Wishes attend him. W® -The new equipments of thcio • dependent Blum" are quite da iatscrve meni, adding greatly to the erppsaraneip of the turn-out. The Company- has 14 solved to spend the next 4th of July KT: Chninbersburg. Area PASTON will offer a SUM • of valuable Timber Lots at public sale • on Aittnrday next.. Positive sale. gbe advertisement. sel..T. P. Bridegam' , who recently created a sonatina in Beadings•Pt‘p . iff making arrangements to establish a daily paper there, and then vanish t' hs had run up some pretty i= sive bills, has been arrested in Model phis, and taken to the Berks eonntyjall. He has, it is said, been galltY rascally aeta of nearly a simflir khid;ln Erie and in Pottsville, as well as in' Lebanon and in Daiiphin enmities. itirThe census states, that , iirlinies, s one out of every, fburteen free coiseed persons VCRS insane. In Vlcginfo,thiS't wee at the time but one inianeshrilnift: of every thirteen hundred. i MO - Somebody says if “Winballiegoo in the lap of Spring," itrunatr 14ft AO! a wet seat daring the Tge Yes, and cold toes into the, aei.:The, editora 7 of #lO Pally Times announce feT 55,000 reward for 'Worm** will lead to the detection of the Barden Viordaili Off Fl/1