YOUNG *lO. NEW SERIES. NEW AGRKTLTFRYL SETTLEMENT, I TO ALL WANTING FARMS, A RAUF. OPPORTUNITY IN A DELIGHTFUL ; AND HEALTHY CLIMATE 25 MILES SOUTH EAST OF PHILADELPHIA, ON THE CAM DEN AND ATLANTIC RAILROAD, NEW JERSEY. \n old estate consisting of several' thocsand of acres of productive soil has been d.v.ded into Farms of various sizes to suit the purchaser. A popula tion of some Fifteen Hundred, irom various parts of the middle States and New England have settled there the past year, improved their places, and raiitd excellent rrope. The price ol the land is at the low sum of from sls to S2O per acre the soil of tbe best quality for the production ol II Ac,,/. Clover, Com, Peaches, Grapes and \ rsreta'des. 11 IS CONSIDERED THE BEST FRUIT SOIL IV THE UNION. The place is perfectly secure Irom frosts—the destructive pnemy of the farmer. Crops of grain, grass and Iruit are now growing and can be seen. By examining the place itself, a correct judgment can be formed of the productiveness of the land. The terms ate made easy to secure the rapid improvement of the land,, which is only sold for actual improvement. The result has been, that within the past year, eome three hundred houses have j been erected, two mills, one steam, lour stores, some [ forty vinyards and peach orchards, planted, and a i large number of other improvements, making it a oesirable and active place of business. THE MARKET, as the reader may perceive from its location, is the BEST IN THE UNION, Productsbringing double the price than in loca tions away from the city, and more than double the price in the West. It is known that the ehrliest and bpst fruits and vegetables in this latitude come i from New Jersey, and are annually exported rothe extent of millions. In locating here, the settler lias many advantages He is within a few hours rule "I the great cities n!' New England and .Middle country icitrre every im provement of comfort and civilization is at hind. He can buy eVery article he wants at the cheapest price, an I sell his produce for the highest, (in the West this is reversed,) he has schools for his chil dren, divine service, and will enjoy an open winter, and delightful climate, where levers are utterly un known. The result of the change upon those from the north, has generally been to restore them to an excellent state of health. In the way of building and improving, lumber can be obtained at the miffs at the rate of SlO to Si 15 per thousand. Bricks from the brick yard opened in the place, every article can be procured in the piace; good carpenters are at hand, and there as no place in the Union where buildings and im provements can be made cheaper. The reader will at once be struck with the ! advantages here presented, and ask himself why the property has not been taken tip before. The reason I is, it was never thrown in the market; and unless these statements were correct, no one would be in vited to examine the laud before purchasing. This all are expected to do. They will sell land under <-ulti vation, such is the extent of the settlement that they will no doubt, meet persons from their own neighborhood; they will witness the improvements and can judge the character of the population. If they come with a view to settle, they should come prepared to stay a day or two and be ready to pur chase, as locations cannot be held on refusal. There are two ,+aiFy trams to PBila-L-lplita, onl to all settlers who improve, THE RAILUOUICOMPANY ■OIVES A FREK TICKET FOR SIX MONTHS AND A HALF- j PKICif ICIUFr FOR THREE YEARS. THE TOWN OF HAMMONTOX. In connection with the agricultural settlement, I anew and thriving town has naturally arisen, which presents inducements for any kind ot business, particularly stores and mannlactories. The Shoe business could be carried on in this place and market to good advantage, al-o cotton business, and man ufactories of agricultural implements or Foundries foe casting small articles. The improvement las ibeen so rapid as to insure a constant and permanee net-ease ot business Town lots of a good size, we do not sell small ones, 'as it would affect the im oprovement ot theplace can be had at irom $I OR and upwards. The Hammonton Farmer, a monthly literary and agricultural sheet, containing lull information oi Hammonton, can be obtained at :■< cents per annum. Title indisputable—warrantee deeds given, clear of all incumbrance when money i paid. Route to the land : leave Vine street wharf, Philadelphia for Hammonton by Railroad, 7 A. M.. or I J P. A". Fa:e 90 cents. When there fnquire for Air. Byrnes. Boarding conveniences on hand. Parties had better stop with Mr. Byrnes, a principal until they have ■decided as to purchasing, as he will show them over the land in his carriage, free of expensp. Letters and applications can be addressed to Landis & Byrnes, Hammonton P. 0., Atlantic Co.. New Jersey, or S. B. Cottghlin, 202 South Fifth Street, Philadelphia. Maps and information cheerfully furnished. Aug. 19, 1859-6 m. i Allegheny Male and Female Seminary, KAIYSIIURfii, I'a. FACULTY. E. J. OSBORNE, A. 8., Principal, Prof, of Lan guages and Philosophy. Wm. S. Smith. Prof, of Mathematics. Jas. H. Miller, Adjunct Prof, of Mathematics. Rev. B. F. Stevens, Lecturer on Moral Philoso phy &c. Wm. A. Stephens, Prof, of English Grammar Kc. Dr. J. Hughes, Lecturer on Anatomy kc. Mrs. E. V. Osborne, Preceptress, Teacher of Draw ing French, Botauy ftc. B. F. J)rott, Prof, of Instrumental Music. Price of Tuition for term of 11 wpeks. Common English Branches $3 25 Higher Branches, including common, each SO Latin and Greek, each 2 00 German and French, each 2 50 Book-keeping and Commercial calculations 1 50 ORNAMENTAL. Drawing 2 5 00 Colored crayon, and water colors, Jeach 5 00 Oil painting 5 00 flair and wax flowers, each 3 00 Pellis work 3 ■ 0 1 bb Piano music, with use ofinstrnment 10 fuel, Board $ 1 75 per week including room rent,apest furniture Ac. This is one of the best, and cbe per institutions in the country. The whole expenses.— term need not be more than twenty-five dollar Second Quarter of summer session commences August 4, 1559. Teacher® will be instructed free ol charge in the Normal Department. For particulars, address the Principal. E.J. OSBORNE, A. B- Rainsburg, Bedford co., April 22, 1559. riIHE HAMMONTON FARMER—A new X paper devoted to Literature and Agricul ture. also setting foiL tnli accounts of the new sets tlement of Hammonton, in New Jersey, can be sub scribed for at only 25 cents per annum. Inclose postage stamps for the amount. Address to the F.ditor of the Farmer, Hammonton, P. O. At lantic Co., New Jersey. Those wishing cheap land of the best quality, in one of the healthiest and most delightful climates in the Union, and where crops are never cut down by frosts, the terrible scourge of the north, see advertisement of Ilaininonton Lands. THE BEDFORD GAZETTE !S PUBLISHER EVERY L-'R IP AY MORNING, BY IS. F. MEYERS, At the following terms, to wit: $1.50 per annum, CASH, in advance. $2.00 < if paid within the year. >2.50 " if n( ,t paid within the year. U ;_ No subscription taken lor less than six month*. 05 s= *No paper discontinued until all arrearages are paid, unless at the option of the publishers. It has been decided by the United States Courts, that the stoppage ot a newspaper without the payment of ar rearages, is prima facie evidence ot fraud and is a criminal offence. [Gu I he courts have decided that persons are ac countable for the subscription price of newspapers, if thev take them from the post office, whether they subscribe lor them, or riot. SELECT POETRY. | .. INDIAN SUMMER. There is a time just when the frost Prepares to pave old Winter's way, When Autumn, in a reverie Jost , 1 he mellow daytime dreams away ; When Summer comes, in musing mind. To gaze once more on hill and dell. To mark how many sheaves they hind, And see if all are ripened well. \V ith balmy breath she whispers low ; The dying flowers look up and give Their sweetest incense ere they go, For her who made their beauties live. She enters 'ir-ath the woodland's shade, Her zephyrs lift the lingering sheaf, And hear it gently where are laid 1 he loved and lost ones of its grief. At last o'd Autumn rising, takes Again Ins sceptre and his throne, With boitterous hand the tree he shakes Intent on gathering ail his own. Sweet Summer sighing, 11 ie s the plain, j And waiting Winter gaunt and grim, Sees miser Autumn hoard his grain, And smiles to think it's all for him. "SARATOGA SOCIETY'-" ; Saratoga society What endless variety ! What pinks of propriety ! What gems of—sobriety ! What garrulous oln folks, , And warm folks, and cold folks! Such curious dressing, And lender caressing, (Of course thfif is guessing H Such sharp Yankee Doodles, And dandified noodles, ; And other p-t poodles, i Such very loud patterns, (Worn often by slatterns,) Such hoops—big as Saturn's Such straight necks, and bow necks, Such nark necks, and snow necks, And high necks, and low necks ! Willi this sort, and that sort The lean sort and fat sort, The tnio-bt and the Hat sort ! Saratoga is crammed full, And rammed full and jammed full! [Boston J W.j A 2 asi Woman ;uttl hut- Yictims. The pnblic has heard ol the numerous chap ters no less star! ling than interesting, in the history ot fast young men. who, yielding to temptation in an evil and unguarded hour, have rushed headlong to ruin ; but here is a history which eclipses them all—an account of an ex traordinarily clever and brilliant "fast" wo i man, whose power of fascinating and beggar ing men has been wonderful. We copy from ! the Paris correspondent ol the Courier- des \ I etafs Unis : "Among the young spendthrifts noticed in the journals of the day, is the name of a Prus sian prince, count or Baron Ensbel, who has eaten up, in less than lour years, a fortune of more than six million francs, ail for the sweet i eyes of a woman well known in Paris as Ihe Marchioness of Pavia. The history of this woman is curions. She was observed in Rus sia, where she was born of Jewish parents, bv a great pianist who conceived for her a passion justified by her beauty, and above ail, bv her knowledge and intelligence. She spoke seven languages perfectly. The pianist brought her with him to Paris, where he had the weakness to present her as a legitimate wife in socie'.v, and even at a court ball. At this ball she made such an impression on one of the princes cl ihe Orleans family, that she attracted him to the home of the man whose name she bore. Borne down by his excessive expenses, the at list quitted France for a time to mend his fortunes abroad. His companion, left at home, during his absence, quitted it one fine morning, to follow Lord Ward, known in London by his conquests of this kind. This nobleman did not retain her long—he economized too much of the wealth ol which she was greedy. Returned to Parts in quest of a new position, which was the height of her ambition, she encountered the young Marqni* of Pavia, brother to the Portu guese Embassador, whom she so fascinated that lie e|>oiised her legally and religiously, prom ising her a million francs in case they should j separate oa incompatibility of temper. This I BEDFORD, PA, FRIDAY MORNING, OCTOBER 21,1859. I eventually was not long in coming. The new Marchioness could'not consent to live in the 1 heart of Portugal, whither her husband had l taken her. so after making useless efforts to re ! tain her, he counted out the million and let I her go. At the end ol the year til e million had j vanished, so that the Marchioness was obliged to pell furniture, horses and carriages, and to take refuge in furnished lodgings, where she spent her last cent. She had not the where withal to pay for a dinner, when she met a friend to whom she told her condition, and who offered her a m u al at jthe Restaurant Ledoyen, in the Champs Elysees. In the conversation at dinner she told him that here she would be a millionaire or drowned : that this was li§r un-. changeable resolution, and ihe vision of her slumber. VVhile saying this she held in her, hand a journal, and her eyes rested on an ex-I tract from a Prussian Gazette, relative to the I decease ola Prussian personage, who left a for tune of ten or twelve millions to his two young unmarried nephews. She read this several times, became thoughtful, and four davs after ward she left for Prussia, with a thousand francs 1 borrowed from her acquaintances. She was! presented afterwards, I know not how, to the eldest of the heirs j but he was a species of Nunrod huntsman who had no passion but tbe chase. She addressed herself to the cadet of j the family. He, just coming from school, was! Ola nature sweet and sensitive as that of his j brother was rude, fie was an easy prey, and ! hardly had the adroit huntress caught him in • her toils, than the death of his brother doubled j his fortune. He followed his tempter to Paris, ! and surrendered himself to her with sucb aban- i donment, that I have heard that man, -nduw- ! ed nobly in body and mind, who knew all the | antecedents of her who had seduced him. ey- j press his regret that she was not a widow, so ' that he could bestow up in her his name, as he ' had his fortune. He was hardly twentv-eight years old, while she was over lorty ! He cover ed her with the rarest diamonds and pearls that could be found. He bought her a country seat near Paris, which is a princely chateau. She gave every week splendid dinners, but she had I for guests only men, and this tormented her. | Her ambition, when all else was satisfied, was 1 [to attract to her, by her splendid style of Jile, , women who were not of the uemi rt.ff ' I impossible thins caused her to blush ainid her i opulence. Hoping to triumph over this obsta cle, by softening the conscience of the public, she commenced to build in the great avenue of the Champs Elysees, a mansion which would be a wonder. Ihe stair case is entirelv ot onyx, and the dining ot malachite. But the work ii.rs been suspended after an expense of two or three million ol francs. The poor rich man has come to the end of his millions after reach ing that of iu illusions ! Water SfMHtl o the Prairie / errible Destruction oj Life and properly. The N*w York Tribune , dated May the 25th, gives, the following particulars of a severe torna do at lowa City : Last evening, while yet it was light, there arose suddenly a violent wind, accompanied bv strong indications of rain. In a few moments the whole horizon became pitchy black, and the most vivid lightning darted athwart the sky. A terrible thunder storm burst upon us. While yet it was raging fearfully the skv sud denly appeared unclouded in the east f;r a space several inches in wjdth. Many of our citizens discovered, indistinctly at first, the ra pid approach of an immense water spoilt. The phenomenon was so unusual that the attention of hundreds was drawn, to it. The appear ance of the huge volume of water as it reached from earth to sky—waving to and fro like a rope hung in the wind—was exceedingly grand. The water—pout remained in sight nearly fif teen minutes, when the sky becoming obscured, it was lost sight of. Scarcely an hour elapsed before news was ' brought that Jesse Berry, a member ofour com- ! moil council, had been killed in a barn, which ! was thrown down by the violence of the wind and water. The next express from the country brought us information that a family by the name of Morgan, three in number, had been struck two ot its members killed instantly, and the mother so seriously injured that it is thought impossible for her to recover. Two men, w hose names we could not learn, were killed instantly. Many have had their legs or arms broken, and others have suffered from contusion and fractures, occasioned by the fall of houses which had been blown down upon them. The water-spont seems to have been from ! thirty to forty feet in diameter, and to have ' destroyed a larste amout of property. Its ex- j tent was from seven to ten miles, and it is said j to have traveled with great rapidity. In one instance a barn ot Mr. Berry's was taken iroin its foundation, carried some three hundred yards, thrown down and crushed into a thousand fragments. A child of Mr. Walsh was taken up and carried nearly five hundred i Freedom of Thought and Opinion. yards, thrown into a slough, but, strange to say, escaped with its life. The spout appeared like an immense funnel, and it seemed very near, for the whirl and sparkle of the water could he plainly seen. On the same day a similar tornado passed over a portion of Illinois. A dispatch from j Jacksonville, says : As far as heard from, it began in Calhoun 'county, carrying everything, men, houses, I barns, fences, trees and cattle with it, from j , Manchester to a distance of twelve miles, di j rectly north-east. We can count thirty-six dwelling houses, with ail the barns and out houses destroyed. The number of killed, as far as heard from, are Mrs. Route, a son of'Geo. Van Zanes, Samuel Brown, a Portuguese in the , employ of Mr. Route, Jonathan Carlisle, Jacob ' Sample and wife, and Mr. Thomas. Th ere are I ! about fifty seriously, if not mortally wounded. Most ot them, it is leared, must die. Io give an idea of the force of the storm, I ' have in my possession a stone weighing three pounds that was lifted up and carried sixty feet, passing through a window four feet from the floor. The floor and partition of a school room, twenty by thirty feet, was carried awav, with heavy timber, and all cannot be found within two miles of the place. A wind mill was car ried over four hundred yards, with pipes, pumps, ms probable that a very curious and interesting affair will soon be brought before the courts. Jt js known that the famous Car dinal Richelieu was buried in the chapel of the Sarbonne, where his tomb is still to be spen.— During the days of terror the infuriated mob tore oppn the Cardinal's grave, in common with thousands of others, dragged forth the remains, separated the head from the body, and carried j it through the streets stuck on a pike. This head subsequently fell into the possession of a deputy of those days, who bequeathed it to his son. TIIP latter, of course, attaches a high val ue to the prize, obstinately refusing to give it up to the State, which claims that the skull of j the illustrious minister of Louis XIII, should be placed among the public relics of the em pire. It was at first attempted to settle the contro- j versy without appealing to the tribunal*, but,, as the present possessor of the Cardinal's head is determined not to give it up without being absolutely forced to do so, it is said the authori- j ties are about bringing suit against him to compel its restoration ; and there seems very little doubt j that lie wi II lose his cherished bead, at last.l When Richelieu ruled France, and the weak i king, his nominal master, with a rod of iron,; holding the lives and fortunes of the erful in the hollow of his hand, little did he dream that the day would come wh en his skull would be carried through Paris on a pike, trea sured by a city deputy, and rec .aimed by Gov ernment to be placed under a glass case, per haps in the museum of the Louvre, or the Ho tel dp Clurry.— Correspondent of Penna. In yuirer. A Hfiv .Tiarseillaise. • In describing the great celebration in Par is, "Malakoff," of the New York Times, says: "As one of the regimental bands came to take its station ou the Place Vendome in lront ot us, while its regiment filed past, it played the new Italian Marseillaise, or lather Milanaise, \ which annoyed the Austrians so much, nndj which they prohibited in their Italian proyi crs_ It was the |jrs£ air I heard on arriving iftfl Italy, and the last one on leaving ; the Italians ate, drank, went to bed, got up, marched and begat their enemies, iu unison with its notes ; ; 1 did the same (all but the fighting) myself. It is one ol those glorious airs which raise a man's hair to the perpendicular and set his nerves in ; a tremor. It utters the plaintive cry of the; Italians struggling for liberty, it calls them from their firesides, and clusters them under the flag of independence ; it leads them to the midst of roaring cannon and flashing sieel hushes to sleep ttie dying wariiors on the field of battle, and then sounds aloud tiie note of victory. I was always atraid when I heard this piece of exciting music that some one might come aiont* | and banter me to join Garibaldi! The world I owes Italy her independence, if for nothing else than glorious music. I PAT AT THL: POST OFFICE.— The following ! colloquy actually took place at an eastern post 1 othce ; I >a t.—"j sa_v, Mr. Postofficp, is there a litter lor ine." P. M.—"Who are you, my good sir ?" Pat—"lt's mejelf, that's who I am." P. M.—"U -I!, what's your name?" Pat-—"An' what do ye want wid the name?' isn't it on the litter ?" M.—"So that I can find the letter if there is one." Pat.—"Well, Mary Burns, thin, if ve must have it." P.M.—"No sir—t here is none for Mary Burns." Pat.—"Ts there no way to git in there but i through this pane of glass ?" P. M—No Sir." Pat—"lt's well for ye there isn't—l'd (ache ye bitter manners than to insist on a giritlemin's ! name : but ye didn't git it alter all—so I'm aven wid ye, divil the bit is my name Burns !" [From the American Agriculturist} Greasing the nagoii tire. A good many years ago I hired a "green 1 hand" just "come over" to work on the farm,' and I had a good deal of fun that Summer, even if he did not turn out very profitable at first,! though he was a good faithful fellow, and after a long schooling became first-rate help. One morning I wanted to go to market before day light, and I told Patrick to be sure and grease the \va<*on wheels well over night. Morning ° . came and I slatted off, Patrick having assured me the wheels were well greased ; but when I had traveled about ten miles, I had for my a musement the hardest kind of music you ever heard, sque—e— e— k, sque—e—e —k it went, until I wished Pat had been there, so that I could hare taken grease enough out of him to stop the miserable noise. When I got home, of course T called him to a pretty sharp account, WHOLE XOIBER, 2873. "SUIP and T grazed 'cm all, round and round,' y ?aid he, "and ye can see for your own eyes, where I spilted some ot it on the woodens.* True enough, he had given all the tires thor ough oiling, a? the marks on the felloes, or w oodeng, as hp called them, plainly shoewd. I couldn t scold for laughing, and I've laughed a good many times since when I've been put irv mind of it by seeing a man waste his work by | putting it in the wrong place. There was my neighbor, who had the hardest looking lot of stock I ever saw, and they were just as hard as they looked, for they'd scale fences like so many cats. He used to'keep (wo dog S and spend half his time in chasing his crit ; ten out of the corn and grain fields, when they only wanted something to eal, and it would have puzzled a grasshopper to provide for a family in his pastures. Whenever I saw him j puffing, and sweating, and tearing around like mad after his cattle, instead of fixing his fdnces, I laughed and said, "His labor and expense are all in the wrong place, he's greasing the wag on tire." Another man! new who used to work night and day lo make money, but his farm kept run j ning down every year. He would go to "mar • ket at least three times a week, selling everv ! thing that grew on the place, from huckleberries ■ up to sawlogs, and I couldn't see as he spent anything, for he and his wife always looked like distress, but he just managed to keep up his in terest, and that was all. His land was onlv skinned, and his manure lay around loose in the ; only barn yard he had—the public road. And j when I saw him week after week goiDg to town ; with a load of some truck to peddle out, thinks j I, he's "greasing his Wagon tire." H hen I ve seen men walloping their bovs for swearing and cutting up, and then letting them run around nights to the village tavern, ot wherever they pleased, withou' calling them to account, although I telt sad, I had to laugh, for they put me so much in mind of "greasing the wagon tire." I've seen mechanics and merchants do the same thing when they took their capital out of a safe buisioess to go to speculating, and even , the wortfen have "greased the wagon tire" by j bringing' up their daughters to be ladies, by sit reading novels in the parlor v uifSjp themseives storedaway in the kitch ! en. yr T don't loYe to think about fnnny things in chqrcb, but when I've heard the parson preach ing just to please the people, oiling them down with good smooth pleasant talk, I've had hard work to keep from smiling out loud, thinking about "greasing the wagon tire." JoffATf?r. Transplanting; Fruit Trees. Planting fruit trees, like planting anything else in the ground, designed to grow well, must be done right ; and no labor can be more judi ciously spent, than in planitng a fruit tree well. Tn the first place, get good, sound trees, and if the top is full of branches, or large, and the roots are small, it is necessary to trim down the top to suit the size and buantity of roots. This j the person planting must be the judge of. AH roots that are bruised or injured in taking up, must be cijt off smooth. The longer and larger •he roots the better. In the next place, make , the holes for trees large, not less than from four to six feet in diameter, and at least two feet deep | —the more depth the better. Fill up the holes with any good soil to withrn fifteen inches of the top—set the tree in the hole the same way it first grew—fill up all the spaces around the roots with good fine earth, and cover over all ; the roots three or four inches thick with good j rich soil, which press down lightiy with the | toot, except around the trunk of the tree, where j a half bucket of water poured around will have the effect of causing all the vacancies around the trunk and roots under it to fill up. Place , a stake ot stick in the hole where there are no j roots near; or what would be much better, a l post of locust, of proper size and height to fas ten the tree to for four or five years, to keep it from swinging about by the wind, then fill up the whole to within four or five inches of thp top, and put a layer of any kind of manure, straw, wpeds, two or three inches thick, and then fill the hole fall of earth, and tramp it moderately tight. The trees ought to be plan ted from nine to fifteen inches in depth, accor ding to size and former depth of growth. Ma ny good trees are ruined by the storms, cattle,. &c., for want of good stakes or posts to prevent their bending down, and shaking loose at roots, X.c. These prescriptions are intended for apple trees, and all others can be planted m the same way, except as regards distance. Appjp trees, in a new orchard, should be planted from thir ty to forty teet apart, according to size or kinds of trees smaller size nearer in proportion. Fall planting is the surest season, affording more leisure to plant properly, fkc., and can be done from the middle ot October until the ground freezes.— Patriot & Union I won't take & slump,' as the girl isaid, when she was asked to marry a short man, VOL 3, NO. 12.