Parsieri' High School of Li • Ale maiapll4. - Ihe Centre county 'lltAtatil trinity, holdialellutonta, op 'NIA. Atty ritaiui, Now. 25; . 0181, (Cad week,) * *object. of the attacks 'upon the Parrinki 4 „High School pr renniylvania, iatetyy pub. halted, in the Raiding Gazette and 111mo:rat ; oliirdie - slaiiatureVoHA Fanner" ppil . 4 H. Shuttart, l was iiiiroilueeti by lien. •Geo tin. the ointments were ejlen aharkila injure the , Institution, and that vas 'ha apparent ittieptiOn, quail no foundation' in raw, and being opplobt to us and inaulting, nut, wily to the to the !treaties, whore enteriniee;e i nergy Ina, pub he spirit are above all praise, bt> r i ifisojei the : .oitiateriar of..tentra county ers :tlitiffibt it utegiters mi. Swim/ inaal, as thiy •atere, person'ally, with. h lanJaesleated h„Aite nuseeef cite ' , tber , Farigiors' High Selma', their fertility entlejtitpcuivenes,a, in correct the 'titiAtteje• whether'undesignrilly ur :nte - iiii.niti4 made., , Vot.re ran Acaa.-Thu only farms sold lately tic the vichatty, were sold to R. 31. foster, late of 11101100% Uniiin County, and Wm. K. Foster; df Ventre county, at seventy dollars per itcre. R. 11: Fo renieed 10Q. hushelo of norn to the tine, the p_rest nt very,' dry and u W nfavorable season. m. R. Foe is i sold eight acres ofins hind lately at 125 dollars lite acre, no tenproveinenUi on it.- Piereel Lytle, referred , to above, after pay ing fey 100 seri,/ and expense of clearing, by the crops grown cim the land, bought and hat mostly paid• for over 200 acres More, in the %emitter aud semi Nail roads, mostly . at 40 dollars pee acts: • 1 may tuentiou here that Col. Young; tine' er the delegatesfaint Allegheny county, to the meeting mi the farm, for the ilection of tensicee. declared, jhat 1'0110;7r 'veiled the States from Arkansas. to Ittaninsota, and eastward, and `lle had nowhere seen so deb and handeotne an agricultural Section, as the one he had viewed that day, in the midst of **kale Behool Farm Is lorited, or one 54 nee ly improved, and at the sense tithe em. Ile II :Ai it % iLla so large and substantial build. Lugs. „ . - 1 Wooer., There it abaft t4O acne of wood- I land, so situated thittit thelters tritlarertri - 0 - 1 farms It consiateof an anucual variety of timber, iii young and vi,gorous•growth, being I now from ten to 30 i.et high, For adapted- I item to the special edlicatioesLeowie , ese o f , dio-fitrienit eoutit - nerd - Ni selected of better site, position, or character. The manage-I meta of it will afford ample illustration of I the whole art of forest culture, whereas, large. fully grown trees, could arford no ad. 1 vantages, but those of grander appearance. I and iinintiliate fitness for being chopped 11 dowu.-and-split up. As. lumber, rails, and coal, are conveniently obtainable from the I inntiWains, it is not considered wise here, to I hold a large Amount of, rich valley land oe. ! copied u ith limber. . One of the two pieces of-woods, lies just behind the college builditigsrand will reran I a lee:pitiful acad. mie grove. As to the • ominous" word " barren" .it u as a ppliul b y the va:liest settlers. who en tered >it:anyfront the valley of the West Brandi, to Ihe upland, of the east end of the eattey, - iithiob pas then covered with a low growth of oak sprouts-noir fine rail timber, where left undesired.' For a long [ Lime they conflned-their culture lo the nu-, I. - ~., MS* irms along tho streams, and did Mat die' , I corer the value of the upland, which' forms 'the great body of the territory. The name they applied was pturally extended to all laud in the valeyasternilarly situated, but of coarse becomes obsolete's.% thetandm dean. ed and occupied:- Wariest-The sup Ply of water less shim ditet, and its quality as good as could be desired. even by a professes' orator-varlet. True, there is no surface stream, nor are there any of the attendant disadvantages, no ravines, no bridges, no hilly or stony lanee, no washing away of stator manures, no inconeeniently situated buildings brought to the steeps of the water side, be cause the water cannot be taken to them, no exposure of man or beast to tlto ualscriee end prdcipi taus perils pi a winter-day's watering. k‘ ater, like lire, is a good servant, but a bad muter, and -requires to belept-nxidos itemrtent-mittitrelebtiel, to prevent tNe always injurious consequences of excess. either in the sod ,Air 04 ILO surface. Such control is attainable on the School Farm, an She fullest perfection. The entire natural and &Nutted firtility of the soil ciao be re tained within the boundary hues. and with in reach of, the roots of crops, An &Mph> suptily of soft Water is now at ctinvenient command, by turning a cock or using a To Me tdker ef the Raub. g Gamine sad Der a in r., t chain pileup, and aimed/ince of " clear Data Sia-Tbe fam e of }our--paper has healthy epring” water, of the best quality, become much - extended among atniculturisie, cam e asily be made to flow through all the of lase, by the articl e . om e n have ap, , a ,,,,d buillinga, iti the driest season, by a simple in it as Om alibied of the Farmers' High self-acting apparstus, either from the well, School of Pennsylvania. to which Jidge lieister refer*, which is 56 I bare been requested to furnish you wiji i rods from the site of the college editiCe, or names and data precisely exact, and (ruin , (ruin a will%ieh may be sunk near the t h e , am end its e lf, i n or d er to meet th e na il building, or in e lugherground north of it. esl of Mr. Shubert, as to the quality of the .aft . About 12,4 'from the farm line, it its mend yield, noder .presied tillage ; iis" esstre SPrtser ularir&ral Elt;l r Ctte maps ~,n ed r ef t win e • the supply of wood i ,„,1 „,„.; as one of the most remarkable springs in the (Cr ~ and the bellthfuliseas td the location - I country. The water is cattle:o.ly clear and 1 'Shia 1 ptbeeed to do. - , .d - , pure. and aufileient-io-volotne todrive a fur- Tat bon. is sw ing g,,,,,0t00e, tempered ~ mace and Mir tuned' millstones, immediatelyl Stith tonal, into a loam, which waits " like i below. the source , . At least three or four I 4",..1 yet d oes ' , AA " , v b i a s. p ,„, ‘ , l braneblitta of the Jute= flow from the I ,grandly, and a narrow strip is quite stony School Faro, iii „ underground channels. mi ... thg,,eutiece • all is wiry reminire ?H.., where it us most desirable Mat miter should tine danng dre' aid, b • one. iise underlmo. .1 4 ' . „" whill not in use. . - sume r isibictria east* oii the trip, entl II of /lilt if i ' l " Pe rso- na-a--th---iipt-iii i overarm hoed with sharp eand,/orming - istivitU -6 " r - l i i i7 I"? it would b. bold al b & Perlecialraitelge, ondeireevary equate font.-; objection here. Our practising physicians lo a few spots -poitatrut rocks appear at the : agree' that the use of eistero water, properly ~, ~f,,e, but t h o , e ,„, no , a mad , en win acre collectoll and kept, is conducive be health, in 'tie while 400 winch.,..k....ttiafit (or culliva-. and 4.14,..v.VrY much used fn this section. tiou, from Mid Or any 1;111/11f Guile!. A ''e esteellone• of 4 ils, o l4kiskstistactiicof thstemi - here, in tbs. ed mats the fig,t itaitamatar.4...., "e (arm, of wets" priiiid lately .bir. Mr. ,' , other, with a doable kliohigua Flow, I once- Mien. Who -shatight isquied ad not be horses, 'and although this .Milo ,dents and with.a whelk , siessoti'e growitai .411a-aasSer , _ 4r.opt, foteiNt7 . inselliem andel itlfui and bussed so et ' ily Met over J derlres Oren 114 iseßitin: as bled., of gi . it slt inielu the range of p a pogo not fixoolleil iiiinwhor ref attsi f nedoese to wheat cohort early, mud opera wall; clover amity ead• 4107 ii beatie oil. ____mlonaa_sissilltiss.4lm-routhmirsit sheltered leered itainry by le - toter Ylato,-"lohnlHantion anpil IlloalebOree,l). 0.) who chsited tt_______ie_gusger._etwt-or-abo4saal-trr; twtwn the jelliN,ll:l44 and 1863, a 5.... -_ Me a statememi of their crops. Mr. Mar mon's sedating Is a copy from his his, to swop , vacua isk,k4 a... of es „._ crn cult *77. r ell the &Verne-yield or wheat in fair seasons 20 to 21' bushels per , acre, and of ourn, iu.the ear, 1 , 1(1, bushels . In 1863 he gathered' P 490 bushels from 34 acres, al though ao rain fell dam planting-tines till August 14th, 'efficient her soak the furrows' • "I lime suaboeitetve mops *hi ono field, were respectively 4711 btisheld,iif wheat per acre ; .Vi bushels wheat (on stobblar) and 187 bushels of atrif of cote. ' Mr. Harmon says be is eonildeet tbet 180 bushel• of corn in the atper acre, can be raised from a twen ty sicarll464 On the firmtn its present con ditioia, itt,is fairmesson. . ' Mr. Sjair'i,sigmagen, are about' the same sa Mr. Ilarsootta,ot higher. John rend &mi nd Haute, Dos'.of kips Orate .Mills P. 0., • Ntifteittromis tliscussfutt, Hen. Lot. rtunwitle, :of Beihdontis Gen. Ge 9. nuchstiso, ut Gfefg township, John Bally of Pinguttio lwpt Jou f. H'bover, of &Botanic. alld Chris. iati Vale, of Herds twp , weiu 1110(111Mittee to typo* tentlutious Apressive of the "elide of (be tootely its refernnoe to t•te Schtbl'of Perintrilvaoia, sod tutu Woo tton made by the outgoes', *ha reported thn folio's - mg resilanom,: • Ist. ntsoleril. That our the prnintAlun of improved agneulture, speimil practical edo• lotion sti all 1118 suscnouvtried with farming) irthei great want of the age as yet' onset). plies]. • 44. Deselerri That then - smtl ! dtttfirrienl of Ihe Formers' /111;11 :school, 6f Pewit , ' I YAM', uss the plait seopt-Al by the mines. will meet Ihyi ttapl in a illalitifeecat once the most corn. . ``drop; the` Moist — ct etionoinical, and dbit most serviceable to the whole mate. 40:1: *cooked, That welave the most en / Lire. 600itiorove in s the abilit), energy, zeal apt disinterestedness of the 'fusions, and ifitil their iodize devotion to thP „e t tablialf, -inenfor - tbartnitidifilitt waft receivethe lasi. his sotatode of on oldoses in the coition]. kW - • , 4;4. &spiral, That a mote eligitla loca. flint for the site of the 'who. I lam mon not Aare been selected in Centro county, Mir, as webelleve, in any other cutlery to we State. elth. Reidenl, That we folly endorse the statements of lion. A. 0. Hirster, in tus re• ply to "A Farmer,'" dust of the iii ter pre palbd by It', t;. Waring, P*4l all his request in reply to Sir. Shubert : tt.e, f u ti it.o. d be ing well known to this citizens r f this ia undeniable truths. 6th. Resolecl, "Ohm as the elevatiat of the agricultural uturnmainly will benefit •li choi re..: socially and pecuiJiartiy, 811 apropri.i.- lion shook' - be granted by •he tutficiem is omen, the opening of the fusanudon at the etittied practicable period. 7101. Itmoiciel, Thu the improvements made and ite progress spots be wheel farm, mini. fellibe-Artenor-ansi -good- usestrof More to. wham tinicsion they bate beep committed. kabhmd, that W. G. Waring , who has been seperintending the planting and , pry Wit of 114 enshards &repay, nursery, gstdensielo. well itnow ri in ce.,tral Penn sylnuila for his Zedi, and knowledge in the /clone* of horticulture and intro:culture, is n ow of our best and -most 'respected citizens, a geotlemast whose integrity no man to this eoiemeelty hatisver doubted, and that John Harlem% sod _W, m, Blair, whose statements gitetg r are thee istelli,gence 101 l both. ?tie ireport-of the committee hating been read, est inotion of Hon. Samuel htrohecler, of Miles,•it was onardormilsly adopted, and, Mr. Stabast most respectfu,ly requested to visit she pile of the Institution,.and see fur Whereupon, on motion of That the proceedings of dux meet /nth signed by the President and Seoretary, be forwarded to flon• A. 0 Hirreterotosether witk*Ajisinu of- W. bin &ri Oen prosaWits request. UEO. SOAL, Pre. t. Attie : Qr.*. 1317CIIANAll, See . y. • • • , Nov. 24th, 356. rented a Auto 'adjoining klie Seho9l Farm in Um, year 1841. They wen) • young men, without means, • °Ott then annt# ..ittrip 40 , from ( dailAa labor, whirl OYIA tem to buy two old bursar, and some imp anti. Ai trr farming nix years tlfey r e ablim itmime If . themes. • . 70, aof 1 one iinte ialistiff tit 'filo 1 F .•—• 1 1 ey 'multiunit . 044. ft 4t .3iietra, dining.' I Whiett time 'they bought 50- kers* moreOured then sold. and o,4ll#4.4ei.l.guotber ruin OP :PO am a in thOtame'irange, on 'which they no,w lire, raising anitanual artrago erop of 1h.,10 biotheizt of or of the car, and propor tional crops of whtat, and are in indepelid ; eut c -a, ireutwatartees.------------ _-- - I : lieury_Pennington, Wm: Blair, derecinah . I Mayes, and Piersol Lytle, may he named lamong others, as men wbo have famed . or near the School farm, - And itualaw4attrs, bought farms tit - their - orricfrom the proceeds of their crocus, aid' who may •be required of ior about, titrnugli: '' th e, Lioalliburg 'Poet Of. I Ace. . . . I Tim:Sobotil'Fifrm has tho handioniest 10. 1 cation that oould be chosen: parts of fire ! different farms baying been cut off to favor it. .. - of the Allegheny, aid there -is not within 111.1)fe7, Uf wiles, either -A ant .. , • , ^i r ikr. -anyintarZeinre* . 01 deterioration to the air. Young men Irvin crowded towns, or miasma tic titer bottoms, may here acquire both sound heal and phyirinaldetelopulent, under the- ght and anod leborm in titit air, which ill be r uirod to illustrate Upon' studies. • Ilaring'now given plain and careful state ments o the points requested. I meat beg' kayo for a paragraph or tiro in addition. Judge litister in a private letter gives as surance. till Air, Shubert ie.yo, genilman,, who will cooduCt A dirduailon wait fairness. Were it not for this assurance. I s hould feel great reluctance to notice Aft.'„lihnbart'a communications at all. The sneering insite;.. ustiods iti rinat the noW!emeroll l 7 of U•n• Irvin ; 'against the lofty philantbirphy .„. Of the •trustees of , the Imitittition, have the f appevanoexo every one- ; knowing the real,' i f facts of the most II n I, I "lender oonceivabl al so a Vie heat med. 1 ,of.ol e , ent.oteri , f o i t ot ip_ • _1 -CAA` stolollo flea In . 3 'ThendOtif - ultilitid in MO pal of, , State, imelolliiig "Afa , mier-'n't - Letter, sink • ; hing iihdbratetiodifgarang t..,- , :;- tflsille , o !Vico '4l' About the LocatMo' of ' the lam school, syWik of Mr. Shiftiart'it articles in arms that he might wince to hear. Merl cannot attribute good motives to snob contra geouemaliditeMsnleeeMb-witilrettenlbilfnie- 13thers, who have not - seen the rocation, eqk in manifest alarid, whether _there coo be a , , , , , :of. troth in the aliegationCattelt otn 4 , declaring at the tame time, that italludit_it' impotreibt‘WiltMathetaubira, know/savor all the Slate, ,ficthei ilent, ammo Lai practical farmeri, an thorough business! men, should'end a laborious gganulnatldii of, so many oflbred sites, by choosing any other than the very beat, °Pithead joopard an in 4itution on which scrmitch hope contrea— one, With. hich their Marilee will ever be as- assisted, and which is to them: a charge in rotting much unreturned expense and ct'u, )2y-localing it Anywhetoi but in a Itituatlou comblicing all the essential adiruautgea. Who the " highly respectable gentleman, known throughout Pennsylvania., for.his zest to promote agricoltnie; who has mg/bre/sex. mined the loestion of the flirm sclusil," and has aided Air. Shubert - to - tie con-Outdone— is —I confess L int carious to know, and en brely It aloes to guess. Mr. Shubert will, it in to be hoped, visit the ground, and see for himself. I have been 'engaged in preps- I ring ground, and in planting on the &rim, and have - therefore examined it, as mintitcly, , as months of opportunity and different in str,tinients and icuplethents would allow, And have - not, in my capacity, been able to find any fault at all with tint loiation uniesi i it be, that it ban (softie Antis to al low sufficient opportunity of proving and exhibiting to students, on ththome grounds the master of human Weill over native! diffi culties, dl3-the objections. that have.been charged against it. inoinding its encluaion, from the idle crowds of any large town, seem to Inc to be, in the actual truth of the cane, amons_topta positive advantages- W. Cl. WARMS! Neat lioc►[isosa, Ps., Nov. 24, 1888 that tlicAL AID exact JOITICT TO LLL BISLLEFO.NTS, P ENNA'. WEDXI6IIIDAT, JAB/VAST 7, INflr7 STATISTJUS OP T,IIT Otib,r&Nß Fnuta.—During the yoir Just patesclil 221 fires. have occurred, where the amount of property destroyed is e‘timated at over 20,- 91[)0,000 dollars. 'the aggregate loom is set down' at 21,159,000 dollars. If the amount of property destroyed by tires, *-here the loss was under 20 4 000 dollars were added, the total would probably reach twenty:Bre or twentpsix millions of dotlirs. The of humin - lires lost bY_llres dtiring the year, is 183. Emigration—The cmiglstlon during the - pise;•ear esaweded, considerablmthat of the year baftiCe but It Is still touch less than•of any preilous yeor,'except 1840. The num• ber of emigrants fti 141,915; Were were 44480 Irma Ireland ; 55,;:56 from Gerrnapy, and 28,691 from Enghrud. Moister num• ber Of pastningera that arrived at Kew York during the yeah is 182,234. neallu if Old People.—Twerly• two men have died during the year orcr 100 years old, and the same number of females. A slave woman :in Virginia attained the age of 127 ; another iri I f oteisiana 124, and one 120. Steamboat Aceidents. 7 -The number of steamboat accidents in 6 • iflyrie le eve been attended with loss of life, or injury to persons, is 29. The muw bar killed, 358, and wounded 127. Death of Old Soldiers,—thuing the year lest cs - plita:thirty revolutionary soldiers have died. The number on the pension list in July last was 514. Gas Staltslica.—During the year 18SG. in Philadelphia, the quantity of gas menufac tured at tae gas works in Philadelphia under the Trustees, has amounted to feurfiuniii and thirty.four millions of cubic feet. To tal lights supplied by all the w0rk5,1332,. 344.. Poring the same period, there has been Issid.49, 991 feet of street mains. The untireJengtb of mina belonging to the Trait is 1,132,018 feet, or something. over 214 tulles. ' 'During the year 1856, there i'i - eie - 531 - 2 tons of,staser transported CIVET the Geor gia-Stssisitniheurd;--betng the produce of she Southern mine.. rose the ofilicial atatiaties of Ohio, for the y . 11856, vr e learn that jho State conteins 1 .. gm •3 horses, 1,680,710 cattle, 5,750 mut , 8 513,1383. alkali, '1,831,124 swine, 4..1 ‘ 8 and .695 rti n th s o r y arrl eir age lB s so . , the number of li censee issued in Baltimore City, w -2 1;31)0 ko trilittel, - 1921 for marriages, 392 thr the silo or-liquor, 1581. for ordinary -wail 83 lino'tt, -62 for' rotten Abd • Tarititm otbera,. leg aii aggregate with ilioabove of - 41,882. • , „ 'lli rtoirci4-ihnicligpilis for ilr pa st year ,I!llltr' — '77” "‘—' ' ... . During iheilist - yiesirin Phliadelphk, ite * I *amber of Ohs were 299. Patti 'Main - nit, * 55. Total lots, '51,488,404. Iliiill' Miu: ranoe, 11852,495. Nomber — of accidental Ores, 108. • Number of Iticeadiariee, 1139. 1 Numberof *talk= other eatMea, - 919 - , of and hos been davit la lk itartii., Becu.erogyo:the Cow Poler:7-At the deg tiostfor officer's of the 8e11e694 Oar Collar gaily tor EMI other toktler" o were elected* • Presideit,..4l4llllinoVirdi. Managerri-4. l 9..Thoteits,•lf. N. ilcillir tor,Alca. Icate,9usattel-irh2n, - P:B; TM - son_,. Ilebue. 4. r r Treasurer --M. AL 200,T, Secretory--.taco • Tbo ' Eirl Taws AM •1151) • t timely six trandtad. minibuses in blew ~ which ralaini, to keep thoMgeinii, thirty • ,hundred hersen, , and orer ono *Hamad in a, exelasive oC blacksmiths, bangss ma i7stap,-bultd ., I Oro and palatal attached to the various ee tahlishateats. •• • AN EDITOa itfhantx/ti.-- arried: on the 24th of Deember, R. J. b. 'lnnen trent, gal. aty• Ae er, publisheiof the Norriatpem. , l3, Fs/met..., Miss itsointal earhoti; haylklll minty." - •paTARY.RACT *A PQW.SR Dentocricyta prisciple end a faith so well etttablbshittand /q generally approved ra that I oppone ha*adep i l eve:low Mr '.cat44za ' polithiChail every d turn it f its ell et4ted-lintrela.„Theytate I fully awaie'th it is gin gt s 'es . 4. i . :_t‘Js iitt moves Ilk hes ° f altiopulor Govemniebts. Democtioy in the United • Statears portly a politicalpower Organcied originally upon a 1 purer , ire: 'it - his -ever - de - 861r 1 adhered 4 thp i t tnciPleaof its organizition, and in acilllnili ink 'campaign more rigid ly -than in_i&so - ON praotieol--definstirmitr, ian inbeite.swpdiesent -in the -minds of the masses . thatintliM6llvely ' claim the groat.. ! est good toP the vilest number. It is tbat elbiating powet In the hinds of the people dfit will not be'coltlned within the narrow tholtii of bigotry. hie a belief in the in-, hcrent right of the'people to protect .theint selves from the entroachments of centralized I Over, or from anarchy even at the einnon'a ' mouth. - In last it is the bold conserveter cif (manic law. It, prefers practical blessings to speculative, Democracy is emphatically ipolitica; power. The good to of 'nil- Rim} and-pbilainbroyhy anti,leato. /hair apH pmpriata.spherea, , subjeot to the control of an Almighty. Protidence.. Democracy de., nits 'the right ,a church legislation in „the' halls o f Government. The Bible, theAgneat boasutution. of Heaven, placep that power In the, hands of adother , tribunal. The legitl- 1 znag province of Democracy is to develbp the political and material advancement 'of' the trtiple. All history, ancient and modern, conotx.,, sively, demonstrates this great fact— that the' civil Nada and broils and final downfal of 1 moat spvernments • that have been blotted out of imistouce,..have been caused mainly 1 by an unnatural Wheaton between the uniti ses stoking their rights and what was de. nominated Divine sights and privileges. Big. gted religious Ind cbureidipmfAriets-liavei almost - itzvntrtftariefed themselves against,' the principles 'of Democracy and friends-of' freedom and snatchy and bloodshed too, often followed in the train of these clashing interests. The aenturtent we call "patriot ism" is the principle power that oontrols the people in all successful governmente. With out this foaling, predominant to the mecum, the best and purest cllbrts of government becomes paratiaed for good. f • 1 i A patriotic. man is proud of hisloveni. , ' merit, proud of ber national ensigns and at, blems, proud of her national anniverbaries, I and proud of ber progress and power. An' unpatriotic' non, bigoted, selfish and narrow' ' Minded, can ass nothing good in the govern-1 mint unless he can participate in its control., A good poliky.ors bad one aro alike the sub jects of bit nettlignant unsure. .The_ surest. canoe Oriturcoas of the Democracy ;kits un conquerable pride for a wide spread Natlon ality. The Democracy is unquestionably a gnat brotherhood of the Union. Its mem. bens required no signs or peas-words to in dicate their faith, and - WIWI. wore deman ded they would exultantly point to the ben tier of thirtromr.stare end stripes. Thus unanimity of smaitnent 4s founded on the fact that.the Democracy is puruly a widri, chi organization. It will, not cLeien kith or 410. wish ant panioular religious. east or .creed. It •rill hare nettling to anevith inns, religions, :Octal or domestic. IL o w e s no l aegiance to any power foreign or domestic. A tru: DM: o m+ is Proud of his right to , Apspz7s7W " • arissachusetts man •or as a Georgia man, but AS a Demount of the great -Lan:rice , / Confederacy. Demnoreity is liberal in all things. It proscribta nothing. believing With Jefferson that error may be tolerated Alf truth is left free to combat it. AU the vagaries and theories extant, midi as foni iariam, Spiritualism; Woman's Rights ispet. Mainetaw-ism, Anti-pope. Asitt-Slarery, An- Societies, and the like, may occupy the 'sheds of inglilidaribi at their option, bat they can find no place miaong the tents Of the Democratic faith, Democracy then is purely and etaphatimally a political power in the land, against which the whole crusade of sine mapeararichtrapunify.--N. Y. Dash] Newt. &wort Ftra Asa Lsvum.--Everybedy will be glad to see, by the Rouse proceed- I l o gs of Wednesday, that there hi a pros ' pest of the speedy demolition or abolish ment of depreciated foreign coin, and the 441bstitu Fin of our aubstantial and. over; war eonvinieit decimal coinage. M v . Phelps_ reported, with annattdineate. Senate bill, relative to foreign coinage and fie eottls~S of new tent 'piccet.' Mr. P. ezplaineLi.hat the object wan the with drawal from circulation of all daiareciated foreign coin, reeeiviijOlegtesk,and,apiam tet_tjtartetc:cilitfrinel sixteenth of s