P V . - jpsa c«> ith* th-tho btagt u.:.K in duvet coptMt il ■ rcalur matter. «aUy» rJiinx UTiilicn, luMda t£» ivfw.ij vitality W tb» i,.; in' rtr» ao indispcsa* . . V, titrate COD- ; ■ib!- bj InhalatiovL i* to It is nsi much,andor [■• other ibriuloabla ■ ; -virn can !*■ cured In f li. ■ SuVUli; IrDt'lhjdM :.1. r- tti.i: live fur, cent., , v ■ «!.v .i*- as t•• MdUtSaoM It.*’ 1:IM "tngfa, Inb*- ty Oi- suffering atfen> r.ni.sliv uioety- J.'tvfi .ilur.e; and ncot ut iKiimlaiionof tha i lill tliv Cuueumpttrcfr .:rn eafiiUl as Con /r- of cm itiv riflifp, ... ■,. ■'■;«• I s aiik* the ir.; if.- (lifted. Ey the , i r.m cun-th every good ; tii IUo afflicted «t|wr| i'i) nun.' The first cams tin* immediate -; me* Is to prevont tha i o ils, which causes* uyst-m. Thcnfurely u r rood from medicines ion fiuin those admlnis ii n; will al trays find the niter Inhaling remedies. . iicin IheleM it acta.oon* ec hiui certainty than w.’». V', prote taajpojw k ,i„ >,| a.lininiJtratldn, ti.-nsibiUty in r • ~'- \u’us iV.stctn, »o that ;,! tin •..tpi.u-st pain; Jn ; ai .a-stuiv Ufe in a fcjr , M - . . rous'- iba atrat ■ . Ibatprip- . I jiiiiiciuud!/ administer-' - the'- bappi.-et Kciijttf ’ i:.y -uttering". haw been umier ? c>y'’ , "’ri.-Vic .ciircOj uvcb nfr. i •••! in (lu- lfwt Jlagr*^ -a. p; ion , Is , ci/ longer, ai* .-oii.ptioir Is original, i h thorough inTestlga ■i tlm nature of tuber. . niuiiiy, Uic Various .ji.ptioar and apply the Vi;.-u -Ten in a t: 'vith certain patho- , '.rubles ma to relleyo 1 '• ,1 cliwta, to enlarge ■ m It renewed Tin^uiy, •VMeCI. , j to sot partoftns , : . ji’jn.unicatingtbrlr v, .nlil be more certain w );icki would give me -.'.J -nnbb! me to pro*’ . •. ami tVn the Care ti.-patient again. . GItAHAM. yi. D-, i'j'J.' below Twelfth, ' ;.laiy ah ’WT-fr.' M.VANIO 1;• T i chn bo hid at tba I ■ , „'- uid atarid. Korth -ite.i to tne JbUowtng i-isiiiiTf/'Chrm’ieU. •• s.eilicine biWbbbaii fuat time,atitbinthe ’ -.1 ptvparation wc out • ,n altoiijjer term* thin 1 pufdic. 'Jdap : urea IbaVe beau recorded ... It i> *aid to act by .—.miit of ftJep-tiicltyv— -.ic uhd paintei diseases -- Aurora. ■ -■■.lb Chronic Diarrhoea, Duvall * Galvanic OU ALEX. McKEC. inhip, Mifflin county. 0 Duvnli’*' ■!, f.r which it la r»cen ■t ton.jpoaly. 1 IS- ; lit). A. M. TXOKAHv -.‘hip, Mifflin chanty. U.L A CE,-r 1. A /o.vr, mill mum ■ !'S iV. Bl -uji-.hi i i.g Mill p-ncrauVcfa ,r JitiginctribadednUMn .iii ann Iwil-rs and I'r lrrs and tnqlHrli» W, WALUAqfc' J ■r.rt. r:(Ut*Ts£Fo', f KSHTplfe •• ■ ■ 'in I’liila- ' r,.vj ("’-'k-Jalttv -V klnc StorcflPHP' style •«. * ■gll-'-- ia nil r&pectt- flSI* Cats are fcoarrlffljf* ■ > lie poifrctiv and W“*' f this Stuve mnstaiw* ; .iversal favorite. | : , 'Tgooa* eaffeaj ■ up.and |«,a,Ui»r<>W|#lr :• uhl y bp recommended, ►tovra constantly .«>• -i ;>n n. bush.. : ■ ■ioni )h-.v*t,AUfxnvCU. '■ : r. :1 of Crime anrfCriml throogjK ■ ari at Trials, Criminal. n lie some, together wta? yt to be found in tm r ,. . ’*V -c** i ; #1 fur six monthvly, r nM viite tbdr nanie*- they reside plainly^ I A. SEYMOUR, i . ik I’iilfcp Gazette* y, i .~s vi r^r mftoflM jeaEagf ritoe. f I j r- \ ■' WcCRUxM & ALLISON, VOL. 8. j* SHE AI/i’OONA TIUBUNE. UsCBUM A ALLISON,’ Publishers and Proprietors. Per annum. {payable inrariably in advance,) ' $1,60 All paper* diecontinucd attbo expiration oftbu time paid £t*. tahuj of ADViaxwtxa. 1 insertion 2 do, 3 do. Cmi* line* or lew, t $ 31Hr $ 60 (S lines,) M 75'. 1 jW Two - « - he - ) 100 160 2 00 Thm “ -\U “ ) I SO 2 00 2 80 Over thtsowsoks mil low than Uiroe months, 25 cents j>sr Him tv wdiloKrtMU., i ■; I 3 months. Ojmootiis* I year. &U Una*or le*«, \"®'?'S2 5 0 00 Oo«Muars, 4 60 - \ . ’4 00 7 00 Two“ 4 00 ~,6 00 10 00 mM U < 6 00 18 00 12 00 Saar " ' 0 00 10 00. 14 00 BUfteoUnp, WOO UW 20 00 One column, - U 00 Administrators and Kxeciilors Notießa, ■ Merchants advertising by the year, three squares, with liberty'toebange, 10 00 Professional or Business Cords, not exceeding 8 lines, with paper, per year, 5 00 Corkmunloatlons of apolitical character or individual in terest will ho chained according to the above rates. Advertisements not marked with the numberof insertions desired, will bs continued till forbid and charged according to*tho above terms. Basinets notices flvo cents per line roc every insertion. Obttoary nbtlcos'exceodingf ton Uuia, fifty cents a) square. Select She Was Kotßcautllul. Bbs was nut beautiful; no large bluo eye, •• No coral Up, bad alto, , Noskin of dazzling fairness, ''' No bright curls floating free. Buvtbay who saw.the spirit .flub . When mind’s depths were at irrejd, K»>longer wondered, bequti/ul “ *H tooppor awrordl Bho washot beautiful! iioreg«l fojm. No ivmy limbs, had th% Fashioned, as by a sculptor'* art, j In faultless symmetry; • jfut when the w!-»ffs of Mm Was the theme upon her tongnei, They'saw into What majesty That slight, form bad sprung. Sh« was not beautiful! no 'small white baud’, No tiny foot, iiad she. That seeai“d to scorn the earth beneath. It trod so daintily; But pj'ji nud needy know her tread. And when they felt the thrill Of her cool hand on their hot throws, I'ht'j thought her leautijHlf- Ehewai nof Wahtiful! she wen no lore, ." None know her pr iceless worth,. Ap4 «o, |n lontdtneasof heart, Bho pasaed away irom earth; . But inUtelicarcu us, In » rohe of spotless white, * She stands, andO hate beautiful! BeforeUislord of Light. Hrlcct Illisfdlaui).: The farmer's High School. If there is any project above another in polut'of importance, which should arrest public attention and elicit hearty sympa thy and support, it is that of establishing upon a broad and permanent basis a High .School for the education of our/farthers — a school in which the chemistry of the soil, its adaptation to the varieties of grasses, cereals, vegetables and fruits, shall be thoroughly- taught; where Botany, Geolo gy, Meteorology, Eaudseape (laraening, Agricultural Economy, & what ctcr .relates to the treatment and breeding . of; Domestic Animals shall be embraced in the course of instraction • aschool in which, if please, Apiculture shall be raised to its proper nobuity as the "first of sciences. Imagine a man thus educated, applying himsalg.to the practical'business of agri- . . _ culture. He surveys His fields "wifh the A correspondent of the Cincinnati Ga Hc knpws the fonnAiouoftheir soil, the i n g wonderfulstaieicent: ! elementa ccmiposing it,- and its adaptation X have intended for some time to give to the varipus necessities of- He the readers of the Gazette a description of determines with the prescience of absolute the Walled Lake, which is situated in knowledge, winch field Will produce the Wright’s county, lowa. To me lt was one cat, which is most suitable for gra- of the greatest curiosities I haiicver seen zing, for corn, which for vegetables; -—enveloped as its history is with ai man -1 upon what upland can be g£own the finest tie that will probably never bo withdrawn, fruit, ip .what sunny slope the grape will Thja plain yiold tW fatteat ehister to purple 1 in the —the rich, gently undulating prairie ex -1 sun. If essential dements gre wanting in tending for many miles in every direction. the'soil, he will know upon what labora- Tlu> htke covers nn area of ahbnt' 1000 ~ iVa*ui« yo ui iiv>, a«d tiie ,acresi ' The Water is clear and cold) with rmUKsary toseecure the happiest results., a hard sandy .bottom, from two to twcuty- Hrf.khoWled.ge of landscape gardening will' five feet deepl There is a-slrip of timber determine where a vine is 'wanted, oyer aboat half wny pr6b;vbly ten rods th ® vil * e should clamber, by wide, being, the only timber in many Wiles, wbathrook the willow should droop, and There is a wall of heavy stone all around it. where the flowers will best , reveal their It is no acoidentid mitter. It has been H®. brings to his ayU- built Iwith jiuinan hands. In some phieea catidfi ,4ptcUeetual activity not loss than the-land is higher than the lake, in which maiiual toil. For him; every* blade pf grass case t)icyviall only amounts to something and every pebble has instruction, every like a Rip Rap protection. This, ‘ I be blcespioi and uses and beauty, and. hove,’is w.lxat mighieers call it. But in eveiry experiment of theory- the gratifica- other 1 places the; water is higher m .the .tion ot results, which, guided by a kfiowl- lake than the prairie outside the Wall —; organic laws, he could predictwith Tho wall in some places is ten feet:|high; i ther , e b no means : It is 13 foot Wide at the base, slopingup an xntelhgeut cud, no cause that both Sides to 5 feet Wide bp ; the |op.— •3 v T 5 a l e result. Ho is not The wall is. built entirely of boulders, from M j '%■ radi ions or superstitions, .three tons in size, doWn to pounds. W„|, ~ . £ .shqr are not, hotrevor, imtirM -to the . - larp with ‘manor horn,- Nor I hi tie been: model, tho traabiig atrav of IheWth: of lm communrng, with Nt tho roe&. TWo ia no aa- the hot excitements and pleas- tive rock in this, region. v lSides ibis is ur ® B fibrin theemascuiating [ a continuous vrall,-.&»»' wlatdi at occupations ofihe derfc, and the leastisr bighßrthan the of tSSSSunduia .>: ■ ** ■V ’ •■ - ■■' ; ' ■ f 00 40 00 I 70 BV S\>‘3 tWCCI Yet, sis agriculture' is‘-now esteemed, we regret to say the young men of the country desert [their farms for the city, iswam as very (animalcules in the profes sions, little uobftdies with extensive preten sionsUor worsejstill, usiirp the places!-of women at our Counters, and waste their best days in handling a yard fied to languish* effeminate and soft paluied, intheatmosphero of “quality," deeper- , atcly attached to the importance of fault less wuistebats and-irreproachable linen.— They affect to despise the hard hands, iron sinewy, jand;bronzed faces of theircoufttry cousins* and are the very Beau Brummels of ennuipnd nothingness. There is, therefore, a keen necessity for an institution which shall offer for the young man such attractions, and shall educate him into such, wholesome tastes, that no tink ling sound of professional reputation of the allurements of fashionable life in ourgreat cities, shall seduce him from his devotion j to Nature and her noblest work. Such an Institution has within two years been .es tablished at Ovid, N. Y., and they arc springing up all over the west. Ip our own State the organization of one is im perfectly effected. By the report qf the j Board of Trustees we learn that they have succeeded in purchasing two hundred acres adjoining a similar number donated by Gen. James Irvine for the establishment of a Farmer's High School in Centre,coun ty. For this they have incurred a debt j edi $ll,OOO, payable within five years. The citizens of Center county have contributed $40,00(1, the State Agricultural Society $lO,OOO, and the Legislature $45,000 for the erection of suitable buildings, laying qut the grounds, planting as extensively j is practicable, preparatory to the com- I mcpcement of a course of Instruction. Ip I their report the Trustees say ; j A convenient farm house, a largo hard, I coyn-cribs, wagon-sheds and other ucccs | aary out building’s have been completed ; |an edifice two hundred and thirty-three : feet in front, and five stories high, with s wi.ngs at either end, built of limestone, is in a state of forwardness and will be com i pleted during the ensuing summer, at a j cost of fifty-five thousand dollars. The building is adapted to the accommodation of at least professors, with their fami lies, and three hundred students. The Board had anticipated that such progress would have been made iu this building, as to have enabled them to receive a few stu dents in the ensuing spring, but in this they have been disappointed,, the season having so far advanced as to preclude the hope of getting any part of it under roof this season. It has been deemed better to proceed slowly and certainly, an of economy'apd prudence, rat hey than in volve the institution;ln an expensive em ployment of professors and teachers before their services could be made-efficient and useful. This Institution should receive the spe cial sympathy of farmers. It, should be richly endowed, the best teachers employ ed, and abundant means placed at the dis position of the Board of Managers fqr fit ting up the buildings, fprnisliingv jthem, and supplying extensive laboratories and a library. It is destined to be the most im portant institution in the State, results that shallmakcourhalf-iilled,farms and waste lands to blossom as the rose. Wailed lake in lowa—A Curl ' ostty. , ; and in others ten feet high. These rocks, many of them at least, must have been brought a |ong distance-^—probably five or ten miles. In IVright county, the lost rocks are 1 ; Scattered pretty freely, but as you approach this lake they disappear, showing that they have been gathered by some; agency, when, or by whom, history will never!unfold. Some of the largest •oaks in the ground are growing up through the wall, pushing the rocks in,- in some cases —outside in others,. accommodating their shapes to the rocka. The Jake abounds with, excellent fish. The kud.jnthat township yet belongs to the government. When I-was there, in the spring of 1856, the wind had blown a large piece of ice; against the southwest part of the wall and had knockjed it down, so that the water was running out and flooding the farms of some of the settlers, and they -were about to repair the wall to protect their crops. It is beautiful farm laud nearly all around this lovely lake. The readers of the Gazette should not imagine that the wall around this lake is as regular land as nice as ihe wall around the Fountain in front of the City Hall in New Xork, nor need any entertain the the ory that it; is a natural wall; but it has been built; hundred 1 ?, and probably thou sands of years. The antiquarian may speculate by whom this mighty as well as ornamental .work was done, but it will only i be speculation. 'Notwithstanding the water in' the lake is pure and cool, there is no visible feeder or outlet. : This l|ike is about twelve miles north of the located line of the Dubuque and Pacifib railroad, and about one hun dred and fifty mi!os east of the former place. The time is coming when the lake will be a great place of public resort. M *■ - vai ALTOONA, PA., TIIVKSDAY, M£ECH 4, 1858. Secoml Escape of < lie “ Adriatic.” The authority on which the telegram an nouncing :thc escape of the American bark Adriatic"was based, was on the following extracts from Paris letters to the Loudon papers, jbe question as to the lawfulness or unlawfulness of the seizure of Captain Durham’s; vessel by French authorities, is now giving rise to quite animated and eru dite discussion in Eastern journals. The Times condemns the escape. The Even ing Post, most excellent authority, upholds it on the ground that in the present case the Adriatic was captured in a bay, or gulf, on the Sardinian N coast, and wholly within Sardinian and not French jurisdic tion : : “ You have already heard how that mar itime Jack Sheppard, Captain Durham, of the Adriatic clipper, has broken loose, again, and is once more over the waters of the dark jbluc sea. Count Cavoar tele graphed to the authorities at Marseilles and Toulon his arrival in the Cult'of Spcz zia. whenjee the French war steamer drug ged him to Genoa, the. weather being too stormy to proceed further. “It appears that they relied pu the Ge noese Captain of the Port for safe, custody, and the Port Captain on the French; but between them, amid the squalls and dark ness, the ’clipper crept out at night, and dash'gd off in a {smart and clever style. Le ver tolls hs of a. Tipperary peasant, when asked to pay for prayers for his son, who had come to grief, saying £ My boy, when alive brolfic o\it of every jail in Munster, and he wbn’t stay long in purgatory.' ” Another letter says ; “ brother Jonathan has again, given the French cruisers the go-by. The clipper Adriatic, 1 which slip ped out of Marseilles in the clever way I mentioned at the time, though an embargo had becndaid ujmn her, was overhauled in Spezzia liny by a French steamer or two_ scat after her. But a tempest arose in the night, which the Frenchman spent in making all taut. \At daybreak next morn ing a speck in the horizon was all that could bo pccn of the Adriatic. Hard Times and Country Palpers. —The. Ifeston CJirsmidc, in an article on this subject, well remarks. - If people only knew the difficulties newspaper publishers have to contend with just noWj they would never want to be dunned half a dozen times for such small amounts-as two or three or four dollars. : — Labor, piper and ink have to be paid for in cash j yet we doubt very much whether there are an establishments which would be morethan self-sustaining, if custodiers would only pay what they owe, without taking from one to two years to do it in. If thdipress of the country gradually de clines Tioth in numbers, ability and respec tability, 4hoso who have abused .the leni ency of the proprietors in the matter of credits, twill be alone to blame for the,un-' fortunate, issue, v And that such will rbe the case We can Easily ;The storm in the ccunmeroi&l world will destroy the weakest,fand many of the best of our news papers. Meb eaUuot perform miracles, and Printers have as yet failed toudiscover any easier way of satisfying the demands of pa* .per-dcalers and the cravings of industrious workmen with anything but the pelf. And how they arc to get this, when the people will not pay the Printer, is_ a mystery, particularly as the banks don’t acdopmor dafe ccfflbffy newspaper proprietdrs. Pew t W fahopjpfcdttFdr safer-.*"*-. *•*?** - * : .-V [INDEPENDENT IN EVERTTjttINQ/} itbr, his trials and difficulties, at all times, hot particularly at periods of monetary em barrassments. He is compelled, particu larly in country offices, to be general factotum of Uis establishment. Not only has he to write for the benefit of the pub lic at all times and underall circumstances —-in. sickness of body, and distress of mind —to be at one meeting in the day time and another at night —to leave friends and family atthe bid of every passing circum stance in the public world W‘his own lo cality; not only has he to do-all this, and J h<»lth.anddomflBtie pleas ures, tut he is feompelled to 1 wbrk at the “case” in every sparer moment —‘to keep his own books—to do his own collecting;' iu short, from morning to night, from week to week, and fx;om year to year, to labor like a slave tp provide himself and family with bread. And if he makes a bare living after all, he may be well satisfied, for hun dreds do less. And few there are Luat do more ! Work their establishments as cheap ly as possible, live as frugally and econom ically as they can, yet few country publish ers secure as much property in a dozen years as an mechanic will do in half that time. The very nature of the newspaper business, with its long credits and small profits, and bad debts, forbids anything like the accumulation of wealth, and we have very little hesitation in saying that, had our country brethren generally tajeen their in can a and labor —their pa tience and energy —to any other market than the one they have found for them, they would have this? day been tenfold bet tor off in a pecuniary point of view, than they are or have been, since they became newspaper proprietors. tLet the public ponder these few simple truths well, and in alee up their minds to ease the laborious pcoupiition of the Print er, by paying; hixfi punctually what ho is honestly entitled to. , -M* Great Men Noting in Kansas. The Kansas correspondent of the Cin cinnati Times says that the investigation before the Board, of Commissioners at Leavenworth in reference to the Kickapoo ■election frauds brought to light some re in a rkabsle facts. One of the Kickapoo judges was before the Commission, and re fused to answer the question whether a majority of the names on the poll-book were fictitious or not, for fear of erivu me ting himself'.. The correspondent then says : ••The richc.-t tiling yet brought to light, was the production of the original poll-book of the vote on the Constitution. Doc. 21, 1857, which is on file in the County Re corder's Office. In looking over this poll book, I fotiud that the 270th voter was James Buchanan, of the iui ted Htatesl He voted early as the De mocracy generally do. Next on the list of distinguished men, appears, as the 27tith voter, Win. 11. Seward, of New -York ; next J2od, Thomas I'. Marshal!, of Kentucky; 714th, George W. Brown, editor *• ll< i ahl of Freedom then 859th, John C. Fremont; and immediately after, the cele brated John Herndon I Then comes in the 897th voter, J. W. Denver, Governor of Kansas, who had on ly taken his place as Governor the day bo-; fore, and was then in Lccompton, 50 miles distant! And the next phase presented is “ Thirty Years View.” Thus. 11. Ben ton appearing as the Ulsth voter. And now it was dark, the polls being kept open till hi o’clock, when, alas 1 for Trail human ity, for the compunctious visitmgs of con science, in slips Horace Greeley and steal thily deposits his ballot as the 980th voter. It is now t>£ o’clock, and the curtain rises on the last act of the drama and in steps, in all, his : majestic proportions, Edwin Forrest, as the ten hundred and twvnty sixth voter ! This is Mr. Forrest’s “ first” appearance-on a Kansas stage. The following summing up appears at the end of the names : Total vote ,• 1,020 Constitution with Slavery 1,017 Constitution without Slavery 12 Majority for Slaver}' Campkene Homicides roA 1857. — E. Meriarn, the curious man who lives at Brooklyn, Heights, and keeps a record of everything that bccurs, says that fifty-nine persons were killed, and seventy-nine per sons injured—-pix of whom were not ex pected to rwover—hy fire, resulting in the nsc of camphene and other burning fluids of a kindred preparation*, during the past year. As to the loss of property resul ting from fires‘caused by eamphc.no, Mr. MeriamiputstKe figures aisl2s,l7s,which are probably too low. '>v '* ' - > lndignant.---* Will fyou have a Daily-Sim?’ said a news-boy td , Mre.'Partington. / N - ‘ Will I have a daily son? Why you little scapegrace I How dare you insinu ate against’a lone woman home No, indeed, guess’ : |. won't’daily; son! ’> iffy pdorl djeadr ipan plain most .awfuis 1 him wi v; ■ 1,005 1 »# »■ < gefcitefr IdiclfS. IVeW Liquor taW. The Committee on Vice ami Immorality arc about reporting a bill to the Legislature relative to tho sals of liquor, the following synopsis of which wo take from the Harrisburg Telegraph ; The first Section provides tbftt all persons who desire to sell liquor by loss measure thdh aqftart, shall take out a license for that .piupose from the Treasurer of the (county inwnich tho appli cant desires to sell, on op he.fftro of 1»f ay in each year; whereupon the treasurer shall issue his certificate that the holder thereof has paid a certain amount (which is left blank), into the Treasury of tho State, which ■ shall en title.him to sell liquor. ’ Physicians, apotheca ries and chemists are, however*, not permitted to take out' such license. Persons may take out license after the first of May,- but only for the balance of the year.. ‘ ; Section second provides that persons so apply ing for license'shall file ft bond; in the. Court of Quarter Sessions of the couhtyin which he re sides, for the sum of five hundred dollars, with sufficient securities, to be approved by the Treasurer, conditioned that tho person or (per sons asking license, ns aforesaid, shall( not, permit gambling or disorderly conduct, or, knowingly, allow any minor to drink spir ituous liquors on the premises ; and on for feiture of the said obligation, suit may be brought; on tho cemplpint of any citizen of this Common wealth, one half of tho forfeiture to be awarded to the use of the school and the other half to the asc of tho Commonwealth. The olerk shall furnish blanks to be filled up, and fill the bonds for each applicaqtso licensed, for which service he may charge one dollar, and nojnoro. Section third provides for a- classification cf those who desire to sell liquors. Those who sell to the amount of $lO,OOO, and upwards, shall pay nn annual licence of s2oo;’thc second class to pay $100,; the third class to pay fifty dollars ; but no license to be issued for .less than - thirty dollars, except to those venders of spirituous j wines, malt and brewed liquors in that portion ! of the City of Philadelphia known as townships, | whoso sales do not exceed the sum of $2,000, who shall pay twenty-five dollars; and the > sec ond class, whose sales do not exceed $(,000, shallpny fifteen dollars; but ho license shall bo granted for less than ibis sum. Section fourth gives the County Commission ' era power to grant license, after they have as sumed obligations that they will perform their duties faithfully and,impartially; and they must give notice, before the first day of April in each year, in two-newspapers, of the time and place of their meetings; when and where, and from time to time, as may be necessary, they shall in quire into the moral character and sobriety of fhc applicant, and ascertain tKd ldcalUy of the house and property to be occupied. The Cleric of the Court shall produce thebond Of tho appli cant filed in his office, and t)jo commissioners shall decide upon the‘ sufficiency of the sureties, which must be approved by a majority of the commissioners. lu case of death, the commis sioners hare power to fill vacancies. The com missioners shall also prepare a list of dealers, with the place of their business, arranging, them in their several classes, and shall furnish each person so assessed with a notice of their several classifications, and also of the time and place at which appeals may be made. For this certifi cate they may charge fifty cents. They shall also have power to administer oaths and inter rogate applicants as to the amount of their sales for the previous year; and if they deem it pro per to increase or diminish tlie fees paid for U-' cense, they may do so, and nifty also reject tho application altogether. If an applicant feels him self aggrieved,.he may appeal to the Court of Quarter Sessions, and leave that tribunal to de cide tho question; but the .appeal must be taken within,five days after the decision of the county commissioners, in the city of-Philadelphia, and ten days within the differeaticonnties. Tho ap peal must be sworn to by the applicant, and certified to by twelve freeholders of tho ward or boro’ Where the house i| to bb licensed. If the Court should reject the application altogether, the decision of said Court shiill state upon which exceptions tho said lioSjißo may bo refused, and shall be endorsed on theaffidavit 6r cscepllon37 and retumed by the clerk of jQio said - Court to the board of .commissioners.; If any commissioner refuses Jo perform these duties, he shall he deemed guilty of misdemean or of office, and upon conviction thereof, be fin ed $5OO for each offence; arid if guilty of re ceiving bribes for the purpose 'of influencing their actions, shall be removed from office. - Persons selling without license, shall ho sub ject to a fine of fifty dollars for each day they shall soil contrary to law. i - New Pbistisq Press. —The Post, of yester day, bos the following, which limy bo interesting to printers and mechanics generally.— : A printing press upon a ; new principle has been invented by Samuel Ingles, of this city, s6u of Wilson Ingles, thb:Murnmgpo»(,r a.large and complete which may be seen in .the office, Vramhif [lpcSiif 8813 ofatonifif' by some ofourlargeKaBtero.proSsii»anufacturea might make tlieir fortunes.: We are bdt little gifted in mech’aniicsi aii J* cannot fuflyi' or even feebly. Describe its merits ; but pm dfits chief features is to work both aides of the* sheet at »ns.iiritbk unerring: reg-', istcr, without pointing, wlfioh nil printers wUI understand is a great: dcridsratjatn.' The press has two beds andtwocyliudeirs, constructedthat they can be detached and forked separately. —• It is not deemed advisable td the other novelties which fhis press aas ovei; all others; ever invented, os the whole; affair may be the subject of il is sufficient to know they aro many, nmpta mid valuable. The inventor is a young man, ffill of mechanical in genuity,and it is a pity he;is deprived of the means to manufacture yrhaihas cost so much ;t«uc’ and thought fb complete and perfect. Such heads and hands with Taylor or Hoo would not only. Increase their famo, but fill their pockets. We hope {some of these gentlemen w ill conde scend to examine into the merits of this' press, Which has been pronounced by o\tr first mechanics to be soperiorito anything cyerf invented in' tho line,; To deliver a sheet printcTon. both sides at one revolution requiring but one feed boy, to make perfect register without pointing, requir ing but little power, with the other Improvements, should ot'ract the attention it deserves—and wo oincorcly hope it will Vr rfxnSMy dollars baa bfeen defeated m ihs yirsui' r-‘iri; tl * ' •Hr r* EDITORS AND PROPRIETOR^ BxPiiOsiOM p* Namka at Ska —I>rn?AETCt.- ScvrtmSQ Aitn Loss o» Lira Amosost tm t CRBw.r'-On last (Aristaumday, the fiaglauil BAilod 1 from New York, bound forQlas*» gow. The crew, incTfislfu of officers, cotnp*iwd • eighteen men. A short time after the pilot u«t* a a terrible storm short time after being placed on board the Cora , Linn; the other men all arrived at LirorpooJou Sunday, and were Immediately token to the hospital. - GasAT.lMPßO.VEiissi ui PatXTixa.rrMr. >t >. M. Itolufer, of Inpcasicr,' toys ib»JExpr.t»* t bto just brought o.ut a now- process of Printing in, ■ Pry Colors, "which if e have-no doubt trill ,in j% ; short Urao entwly aupCTsodethe ol4to f y process of printing in colored inks. Mr. Hob* rer bus been experimenting in this new process ■ for some months past, and has brought it totbct < perfection which warrants’ us in recommending it to the attention and patronage of the Cruft, ■ the inventor having secured the right by caveat- ; in.the Patent office. This process of printiog.in Dry Colors Is Wlr • t tlrcly new, and enables the operator to produce.. a great variety of colors and beantifulshodw by a single impression, the materials usedbeinft r incomparably cheapen than any of the old. jura* > cesses, while the labor and time requiradjs. re-;* duccd iu exact proportion as the numberefcol ors and shades on one tuU is increaaod. thi» ; process, also, several colors can be producea pa ■■ a bill printed iu common black, blue, or red Ink, ■■ thus cuabljng the Jobber to print uqy dabbed' - -i number of copies plain, y hn3the balance in ijiifc ferent, colors, without once* changing the mb-or * a roli a _which epuot 1»W« ; tamed by any atiqjfelhtodnabld; the labor and expense. The colors thusproddcodftte brigUt aad.‘4d<* rable, and can bo varie&itod: at ihewiiloctfiin!’ cy of the printer; and if 6; h|TB n«i»»UKll«| - Mr. Jlobrer will Cad a reaqy aole pf ttio idgbtjt, •: to use this process m evoiy dofe : in the;country. . - -V Accuittai. op Ex^btiniKQa:-lht!^~3itB^^ < our readers will remember tbat ' William Bebb, of Ohio/who now '“ ' Rockford, Illinois, was last,’fait 'frtdiCded lbr shooting nt and mortally wounding one of a par- ‘ ty of reckless young monwho were infesting Ins ;; residence and annoying bis ftmily with chdrivß- " ri, .or horningi party, on the occasion of the mar* . i ri&ge of one of OovernoP B*s ‘sons. lie tras tried '' for murder, last week, at RocTcford, and dium phantly acquitted. Tom Corwin and Judge ‘ William Johnston, of Ohio, conducted the do- '* fence - The verdict is said to be in with public sentimout in Rdckcounty, and while the fatal result of Governor Bebb’s shot is deep ly deplored, it is hoped Wat the verdict will do ', much to put down those disgraceful exhibitions ' of brutality and ill-breeding knownna-cAomur/t.' * BlueOek d y ose the .W*nps : Aqaix—We learn,: says the Xjo uUyillo Jotlrual, that a great /; deal ofex’citeracnt exiats at'the present time-in Johnson county. It'appears that one of the OttS? is a very; large:* and extensive one, killed a men. One -or «n»- Wards was arrested and placed in ja\l, when, a short llihc nftenvards, a party of soventoen, com posed of the Wards and their friends, attacked, the jail; and attempted.to rescue the prisoner.' The people now gathered from all quarters apd drove back the, rescuers,; and in, the melee killed one of the Wards. The jail has siuce bben bar-; ricaded, apd, i« guarded day and night, as- an other assault was anticipated by a large force. Our information is up to Saturday, since thenv we haVo'hcard nothing. The news wo an ticipate to to hear of more bloo"w«rk. . ■ : : Remobeu Remgvatios or tub Pom.—Bylho Africa, wo learn ihat.a tumorhas boejijallqaff Id Paris of tth anticipated change in the tempp-', rial government of Rome, which will create Wr- Pfiso in-the mind of cveiy people in Europc.--- appTonchiu'g abdication of tha \ asm certain thing, and already has father Vqntura been spoken of as his" suceegsoij. Tlia. nomination of the latter to a cardiuhtutc in pre - paration for this event, hag frequently been aW.. Bounded. Upon an emergency such a m ensu re wquld be considered indispensable! As tenoral, of the powerful organ of Ignajitfs, Father Xihi dura’s position would enable hina to accept tbtf papal crown without probation. "j ..' Syonss Death is a Cfl'uncn —At of (lie Rev. Jesso Anthony, at thfc North’ Second St. Methodist Church; in Trey, New York, on Thursday lust, after the sermon, the Rer. Sam uel HoWe pronounced a ddlogtUiiion the deceaa-. td, concluding as follows: ‘‘l ainscventy-oighl years of age; my feet arc,near those of Brother Anthony, and I shall soon join him;” Mr.llbwe then wept into the-basement, seated himsolf la a rocking chair, and mstantly expired. ' '■ Gen. Jim Lane has written his aulobieg* raphy for tho Kansas Cnuader , in which ho stitps that hia fatherand two other Democrat* held the States Convention of Indiana at which An drew Jackson was nominated for the Presidency; dnd that this nomination was pfobably the means Of putting Jackson on.,the Presidential track. The impression at Washington ip epld tn btstb-rt tfe inXongtcss, and lte tUUmtW nA|ilj| 9 through the House grows daily less ; —***.^ ■r' *. r«i~*. < & V,... - -- 'V-O < ** ' A - r- - r -J i ■*u N w ' ! w.-i* >-■' y>