THE EIUNTI\GDON GLOBE, A DEMOCRATIC FAMILY JOURNAL, DEVOTED TO LOCAL AND GENERAL NEWS, &C. THE GLOBE. Circulation—the largest in the county. 1201,11.rUEDOZ E? 2, Wednesday, August 12, 1857 FOR GOVERNOR, Hon. Wilt. F. PACICEity of I.yconking. FOR CANAL COMMISSIONER, NIMROD srrnICIII.A.ND, of Chester. FOR SUPREME JUDGES, Hon. WILLIAM S`X'RONG, of Berks. lion. JAMES TELOMPSON, of Erie. Shipments of Coal. The Shipments of coal over the Hunting don & Broad. Top Railroad for the week end ing Thursday ,August Gth, amounted to 2,349 tons. Total this season 48,727. VBe.. The ceremony of laying the corner stone of the new German Reformed Church, was performed in this borough, on Saturday last. The congregation previously met in the Lutheran Church, where a lecture was deliv ered by the Rev. Mr. McClean, of the Pres byterian Church, after which the ceremony was performed by the Rev. Mr. Reed, under whose auspices the new Church is being erec ted. CAMP MEETING.—The Manor Hill Circuit Camp Meeting will he held on the old ground, near Manor Hill, commencing on Friday, 21st instant. Democratic County Convention. The Democratic County Convention - will meet at the Court House this evening, in pursuance of the call of the County Com mittee. We believe the county will be fully represented, and from the general interest manifested by Delegates and the party, it is expected that a good and strong ticket will be nominated—a ticket that will give the coalitionists a little trouble to defeat, if de feat it they can—their ability to do which we will at least contest. SINGULAR DECISION.—Judge Thompson, of Philadelphia, has made a decision in the con tested election case between Mr. Mann and Mr. Cassidy—that the election of Mr. Cassi dy was illegal, or rather that Mr. Mann was elected. This is rather singular when it is understood that Mr. Mann, who brought"the suit, abandoned it upon comparing the evi dence, and accepted an appointment under the recent act for the election of two &ttor neys for Philadelphia. A Goon PLACE FOR. LAWYERS.—Luzerne county is some on legal business. There are 753 cases at issue on the, trial list for August term. In these are not included the Cora tuonwealth cases. Over four hundred execu tions have been issued since May Term, re turnable to August. Democratic Nominations. FULTON COUNTY.—The Democratic Conven tion of Fulton county met on the 25th ult., and nominated the following ticket: For Assembly—James B. Sansom. Prothonotary—William C. McNulty. Commissioner--John.Wishart. Auditor—George It Sipes. James B. Sansom is the editor of the Ful ton Democrat, and a good man. Hope be will be successful. MIFFLIN ContiTr.--The Democracy of little Mifflin met in Convention on Saturday Ist in stant, and put in nomination the following ticket: Asscmbiy—Dr. Bower of Newton Hamil ton. Sheriff—Elliott Williams of Brown. Register & Recorder—Joseph Waream of Lewistown. Treasurer—John B. Selheimer of Lewis town. Commissioner—John Cupples of Granville. coroner—John McKee of Lewistown. Auditor—Joseph Kearns. Director of Poor—John Stoneroad. A Characteristic Trick. It is stated that WILMOT has resigned his Judgeship. We hope this is so—bht why didn't he resign sooner, so as to give the peo ple of his district an opportunity, at the en suing October election, of filling the office for the period of ten years ? The reason is ea sily given. Ile has very little, if any, hope of an election to the Gubernatorial chair— consequently next year, when the people are constitutionally authorized to act, (which can only he done when the resignation takes place three calender months before a general election,) WILMOT will again step forward and be elected to the Judicial office ! Ilad he re signed sooner, an election would have been held this year, and his successor commission ed for the full term. As it is, Governor Pol lock will now appoint, which appointment only holds good until after the election of 1858. A pretty shrewd trick on the part of the Black Republican candidate for Governor, and altogether characteristic of the foul party which he represents.—Lancasterlntelligencer• CURE FOR DYSENTERY.—The Middletown Republican copies the following, and certifies to its good effect, as proved by experiment : "An old friend handed us the following simple recipe for publication. It has been practiced in his family for many years with uniform success, even in the most alarming stages of the complaint : Take Indian corn, roasted and ground in the manner of coffee, (or coarse meal browned,) and boil in a suffi cient quantity of water to produce a strong liquid like coffee, and drink a teacupful (warm) two or three times a day. One day's practice, it is said, will ordinarily effect a cure. Who Agitates in Kansas. The Albany Atlas answers this question in a nut shell, and the truth of its assertion can not be denied. "It will be recollected," it says, "that last summer, when the Black Re publicans saw danger of peace in Kansas, and consequently an end. of their political hopes, they deliberately set about getting up a war, and raising money and men, sent Gen. Lane with an army to set the whole Territory in commotion and fill the whole country with excitement. The plan worked so well then, that there is now an attempt to repeat it. --Gov. Walker, under the instructions of the Administration, was pursuing a course so eminently just and fair, and so obviously affording to all the people of the territory their political rights, that it was becoming evident that popular opinion in and. out of Kansas must approve his policy, and that Mr. Buchanan's Administration must speed ily have the merit of having settled all the Kansas difficulties on the basis of the organic act. In this emergency something must be done by the agitators, or Kansas would be come quietly a Free State. Accordingly the telegraph informs us that a public meeting has been held in Kansas, doubtless at the in stigation of politicians outside, at which "it was determined to resist the U. S. troops if an attempt was made to collect the taxes."— It is also added that "General Lane had. been sent for." This attempt to practice over again the game of last year will prove afailuro. The people—even the free State men of Kansas— can understand. these matters now. Gover nor Walker will speedily crush out this at tempt at rebellion and every sane and rea sonable man in the country will.approve his action. None but fanatics will deem it ne cessary to apply violent remedies to the dis order of the Territory when they are in pro cess of cure by peaceful ones." Hazlelturst . versus Henry Clay. The candidate of the Know Nothings for Governor, Isaac IliznEnuasT, Esq., is a gen tleman of observation and reflection. IR is an old line HENRY CLAY Whig, so straight out an admirer of the Kentuckian, that he would vote for his bones, we presume, rather than any living candidate. But does it ever occur to him that in carrying out.the oath hound pledges of the American Lodges he does the greatest violence to the opinion of the man he professes to admire so much ? When he associates politically with those who denounce our citizens of Irish or German birth as the " miserable low rabble," and the " scum of society," does ho remember the nobly just tribute which HENRY CLAY paid to our naturalized citizens, in a speech deliv ered from his place in the United States Sen ate, when he then spoke: "The honest, patient and industrious Ger man readily unites with our people, estab lishes himself upon some of our fat lands, fills his capacious barn, and enjoys in tran quility the abundant fruits which his dili gence gathers around him, always ready to fly to the standard of his adopted country, or of its laws, when called by the duties of patriotism. The gay, the versatile, the phil osophical Frenchman, accommodating him self cheerfully to all the vicissitudes of life, incorporates himself without difficulty in our society. But of all foreigners, none amalga mate themselves so quickly with our people as the natives of the Emerald Isle. In some of the visions which have passed through my imagination, I have supposed that Ireland was originally part and parcel of this conti nent, and that by some extraordinary con vulsion of nature, it was torn from America, and, drifting across the ocean, it was placed in the unfortunate vicinity of Great Britain. The same open heartedness, the same gener ous hospitality, the same careless and uncal culating indifference about human life, char acterize the inhabitants of both countries.— Kentucky has been sometimes called the Ire land of America. And I have no doubt, that if the current of emigration were reversed, and sent from America upon the shores of Europe, instead of bearing from Europe to America, every American emigrant to Ire land would there find, as every Irish emi , grant here finds, a hearty welcome and a hap py home." The Pennsylvania Magazine As we stated last week, the first number of this monthly is on our table. Accompa nying the Magazine was a letter from the editor, in which he speaks as follows : "Send you Magazine. Am much annoyed by the fact that printer persisted in making too little margin, and hence the thing looks like the Family Christian Almanac' Will probably decide to have it re-printed and begin in September with illuminated title page." We agree with the editor that the margin is too small, and the title page too plain and common. The type are t beautiful and well arranged, but the print is nothing to brag of—it does not, at least, reflect much credit on the Harrisburg publishers, if this is the best they can do. As to the matter of the Magazine we may say it is excellent, and will do for the first, as we notice that the best articles on filo have been deferred for the second number. The establishing of a Magazine in Harrisburg must necessarily be attended with much trouble and. expense, and has doubtless required much energy and perseverance to get it under way, but from the well-known ability of the editor, and his apparent determination to make a severe trial to establish a Magazine that will repre sent the literary ability of our great State, we have strong hopes of his ultimate sue cess, and of the Magazine being just what it ought to be in every particular. And to this end, we recommend the undertaking to the favorable notice of our brethren of the press, and to the reading and literary public. Proceedings of Agricultural Society next week. The * Canvass in Pennsylvania. Never, in history of parties, have the De mocracy of Pennsylvania occupied a prouder position than is their's to-day; and never, in any previous State canvass have the incen tives to gallant action been greater than now. Throughout all the fierce storm of, bigotry. that recently swept over the country like a devastating storm, threatening even the dis ruption of the Union, the true-hearted De mocracy of the Old Keystone never for a mo ment wavered or lost sight of any of their duties, but stood like a bulwark to break and arrest the progress of the Union-destroying sentiment, that, in an evil hour, had seized upon and perverted the minds of the people. Nor were their efforts either unavailing or unappreciated. Planted upon the broad prin ciples of a true and genuine Democracy, the struggle was for the preservation of the glo rious COnstitution of our common country, and the rights of every section of the confed eracy under that instrument. The encoun ter was desperate ; the triumph complete.— The Democracy of the whole Union rejoiced with their brethren of Pennsylvania in their victory, and with true magnanimity and pa triotism, gave the post of honor to the old Keystone, in the national contest which fol lowed by selecting her own great statesman as their standard bearer, and the exponent of their principles. True to herself and to the Union, Pennsylvania reasserted, by an im mense majority, her attachment to Democratic principles, and by her intrepidity and gallan try placed her favorite son in the Executive Chair of the Nation. But the strife is not yet ended ; and while Abolitionism, Disunion ism and Know-Nothingism are combining to assail the administration, ere yet any one of its measures have been developed, it becomes the duty of the Pennsylvania Democracy to rally with gallantry and energy in its defence, and boldly to maintain those principles which in the past have secured the confidence and patriotic co-operation of the people. The sole aim, now, of the opposition, united or divided, is to embarrass the administration of Mr. Buchanan, with a view to prevent the realization of the hopes of the Democracy of the Union, in the peaceful settlement of all our domestic differences and the vigorous as sertion of all our rights abroad ; and against all these designs the Democracy should be on their guard, for the Administration can only fail in its patriotic purposes by the want of fealty on the part of those who called it into existence. The whole country is looking to the success of the Administration as an assur ance of the perpetuity of our republican in stitutions, and the preservation, inviolate, of the liberties purchased for us by the blood of our forefathers, and to secure this success, it is only necessary that the Democracy and those patriotic Whigs, who so nobly co-oper ated with them, shall prove true to them selves and to those principles of government which they have so nobly and manfully sus tained in opposition to every prevailing fanat icism and madness. The principles of the Democratic creed have been vindicated before the people, in the National Congress, and in the highestju dicial tribunals of the country-; and upon their maintenance depends the preservation of the liberty-loving sentiment among the people, and the continuance of a common brotherhood that has made us a free and pros perous confederacy. We appeal directly to the Democracy of Pennsylvania, upon`whem in the coming contest all the deceptions, mis representations, and trickery of Abolitionism and Know Nothingism will be brought to bear. You have rejoiced in the victory of many a bard fought battle. You have con tributed essentially to demonstrate the supe riority of a Republican Government and Re publican institutions over any other in the world. You have chosen your standard-bear ers in the coming contest. They aro all not only good and tried men, but able men, thor oughly versed in the important duties of their respective positions under the State Govern ment, experienced in the affairs of the State, men of enlarged patriotism and thorough De mocracy, and wholly worthy of the confidence reposed in them. They are from among the masses, and in the past, throughout all the strife with treason and fanaticism have lent their best efforts to exterminate the hydra that under various forms has made war upon the Democratic sentiment and sought to .pre scribe the rights and privileges of the people. It is a contest between the friends of the con stitution and those who would over-ride tho constitution and all law and order. The mad designs of Abolitionism are before the peo ple, as are also the outrages and. incendiarisms of Know Nothing intolerance, and it becomes the duty of every good and patriotic citizen to lend a hearty support and co-operation in crushing out all disunion sentiments and all species of bigotry that would impair our pros perity and check our growth. No measure of the Democratic policy is concealed. Everything is open to full and free discussion; and the maintenance of those principles which form the basis of our gov ernment must ever depend upon the intelli gence and patriotism of the masses. Herein lies the strength of the Democracy; but they must be wary and vigilant. The game of trickery and deception has been already be gun, and if their enemies are to be vanquish ed, it can only be by a united, earnest, zeal ous effort. The issue is with the people, and the cause is their cause.—Phila. ~4rgus. Henry Clay on Negro Citizenship On the 18th of December, 1851, Mr. CLAN . introduced a resolution in the United States Senate, in regard to the ANTHONY BURNS fu gitive case, in Boston, where a mob of negroes sought to prevent the execution of the law. Ho is thus reported in the Congressional Globe: "But, sir," said Mr. Clay, "this is not all. By whom was that mob impelled onward ? By our own race? No, sir, by negroes ;by African descendants; by people who possess no part, as I contend, in our political system; and the question which arises is, whether we shall have law; and whether the majesty of the Government shall be maintained or not ; whether we shall have a government of white men or black men in the cities of this coun try ?" Now, if "African descendants have no part in our political system," how can they be cit izens of the United States? Mr. CLAY was not attacked for expressing such opinions, for at the time they were uttered, nobody but a few ultras doubted their judicial and con stitutional correctness.—Pennsylvanian. EDITORIAL CONVENTION.--A. convention of newspaper editors met in Danville, on the 4th inst. We shall give a synopsis of the proceedings next week. INTERESTING CORRESPONDENCE MR. WILMOT TO GEN. PACZEII. TowANDA ' July 14, 1857. HON. War. F. PAcKra—Dear Sir: I pur pose to spend some time, during the summer and fall, in canvassing before the people Of involved inState the principles and issues in the pending State election. Party meetings biing out only . that portion of the people to whom the call is made, and the addresses are necessarily all on one side, whereas it is desirable that the whole people, so far as may be, should have both sides fairly presented before them at the same time. If it should meet your views, I propose that we canvass so much of the State as is practicable, in company, addressing alter nately the same meetings. Should this meet your assent, please to inform me at your ear liest convenience, so that we may arrange the time and places of meeting, order of speaking, &c., &c. Very respectfully, Your obedient servant, D. WimioT. GEN. PACKER. TO THE DEHOCRATIC CENTIL&L comMITTEE. WILLIA3fSPORT, July 18, 1857. Iloa•. C. R. BUCICALEW, Chairman of State Committee: Dear Sir: I have received the enclosed let ter from one of the opposing candidates for the Gubernatorial office, and inasmuch as it proposes a plan for the conduct of the cam paign which has never before been practised in Pennsylvania, and as the success of other candidates, besides myself, is involved in the election, I have thought it my duty to submit the communication to the judgment of the State Committee representing the Democratic party. If it is thought to be a proper mode of conducting the canvass, I shall cheerfully accede to the proposition. Respectfully yours, Wu. F. PACKER. REPLY OF THE CHAIRMAN OF THE CENTRAL COM- MITTEE. HON. W3l. F. PACKER: Dear Sir—l have laid before the State Committee the letter signed D. Wilmot, dated the 14th instant, and am authorized to say to you, that in the opinion of the Committee, you ought not to accede to the proposition it contains. The reasons for this opinion I will proceed to state: The slavery question, which it is possible your opponent proposes to discuss, has very recently been thoroughly considered and pas sed uponby the people of this Commonwealth. The late Presidential canvass involved the whole subject so far as it was proper for con sideration by our people, and we can preceive no utility in its re-discussion at this time ; nor any other good reason for re-opening de bate upon it. The position of our party is well understood, and requires no vindication, at least by any extraordinary proceeding like that proposed. A joint canvass by candidates for the Gu bernatorial office has never been conducted in this State, nor, I believe, in any other Northern one, and may well be questioned on grounds of public policy. If the prac tice be once adopted, it will doubtless contin ue, and party nominations be uniformly made with reference to it. No party will venture to select a candidate for this office who is not qualified for the stump ; and aptitude for de bate will hence become to be preferred to ad ministrative ability. In short, the result will be to confine nominations to thesclass of talk ers, and to exclude all others. A rule of party action which would prevent such men as Benjamin Franklin, Simon Snyder, and 1 Francis R. Shunk, from filling the Executive chair of this State, must be a bad one, and to be denounced rather than adopted. We believe there is a considerable public opinion against the propriety of executive candidates appearing at all before popular meetings to solicit votes. This was first prac ticed by Wm. F. Johnston, in 1848, and has been to some extent followed by candidates since. The good results of it are not obvious. It did not originate with the Democratic par ty, nor has it ever received any formal popu lar or party sanction. It may therefore be considered an cpen question in future prac tice, and at all events as forming no part of the duty of a candidate, imposed upon him by his nomination. While your opponent holds the office of President Judge, there is a special objection to the acceptance of his project. The pro priety of law judges taking part in political meetings is denied by our party, and is op posed by sound public opinion. By no act whatever ought we to sanction or become par ticipants in a prostitution of the judicial char acter. Nor will a resignation now made al together remove this objection. Your oppo nent has intentionally held his office until within three months of the election, (render ing it impossible to elect a successor the pres ent year,) and if a resignation should now take place, it would obviously be with the in tention of resuming the office after the defeat for the post to which he aspires. The proposed mode of conducting cam paigns may possibly be suited to some of the southern and south-western States, where it has been practiced, and whose population and political conditions differ from ours; but its introduction here would be against solid objections, and without any conceivable good. It is, therefore, a proposed "Southern aggres sion" upon the practice and policy of parties in Pennsylvania, which cannot be at all ac cepted or permitted. It is well that this question has arisen when we have a candidate capable and fit for any discussion before the people, and when the decision can be placed, without embar rassment, upon public grounds which control it. I am, very respectfully, Your obedient servant, C. It. BIICKALET, Chairman. GEN. PACKER TO JUDGE WILMOT. WILLIAMSPORT, July 27, 1857. Mx. D. WxLmoT: Dear Sir :—Your letter of the 24th inst., was duly received; and as it proposed a plan for conducting the Gubernatorial campaign which had never hitherto been adopted in Pennsylvania, and as the interests of other candidates were involved in the result, I did not feel at liberty to accede to your proposi tion without first consulting the State Com mittee to which the Democratic Convention has on its part specially confided the centrel and management of the canvass. You will receive herewith a copy of my letter to the Committee, as also their reply, by which you will perceive that your sugges tion does not meet their approval, and that, for reasons stated at length, I ought not to accede to your proposition. It is, therefore, respectfully declined. I am, yours, truly, Wm. F. PACKER. A Case of Party Malignity Not long since Judge DOUGLAS tendered a grant, of land near Chicago to a personal friend—a elergymanL--upon which was to be erected .a University. It was gratefully ac- . cepted ; but that friend failed in getting the necessary funds, to prosecute the enterprise, and finally abandoned it. A Baptist clergy man heard of the facts. He procured letters of introduction to JUdge DOUGLAS: He sought him ix another State, and in the generosity of his nature Judge D. gave to this denomi nation what he had intended as a gift to an esteemed personal friend. The only stipula tion he made in the gift was that the educa tional institution to be erected on it should be free from all sectarian rule; On the 4th of last July the corner stone of the Chicago University was laid upon the grant of land Judge DOUGLAS had donated. He was invi ted to be present—was there—and one would have thought that on such an occasion parti zan malice would have shrunk back at least for the hour—that the donor of the magnifi cent grant upon Which they stood, would not have been insulted in its very consecration: It was not so, however. Even there partizan Malignity would not down, and the chaplain of the day, a man who had repeatedly as sailed Judge DOUGLAS during the last canvass from his pulpit, in the mockery of his prayer on this occasion a Republican paper boast ingly reports him as saying " And, oh! Lord, we cannot help sending up a petition even here, standing on this free soil, on Independence day, for our poor col ored brethren in bondage, even though Judge Douglas is present umong us !" The orator of the occasion indulged in an abolition harangue, and in direct insults to Judge DOUGLAS, and the Republican press of Chicago have made it the pretext for the bit terest and most malignant attacks upon him. We think party malignity and mendacity can go no farther than this. Polities and Religion The New York Evangelist, a "religious" paper, publishes a letter dated Concord, N. IL, in which the writer says : "In New England it will soon become a question for the churches to decide, whether a Democrat shall be received into the church or be allowed to remain in it without discip line. According to the common interpreta tion of the late decision of the Supreme Court those who, endorse it by their votes or their influence are doing all in their power to rivet the chains of the slave, to make servitude— involuntary, oppressive servitude—the "cor ner stone of national government, and at the same time, to secure the moral assassination of a race. The Apostle Paul seemed to indi cate that those who "approve" of such things are more guilty than those who do them.— Our churches cannot tolerate fellowship with slaveholders; indeed some clergymen think their souls in peril by associating with or cor responding with those who consent to meet with them as equals. If Christians at the North cannot sit peacefully with a delegate from the South, now can they tolerate north ern brethern who approve of the principles of those delegates, and vote as they vote on the great and absorbing questions of the day?— This aspect of the question is rising in this State. The New York Commercial, in referring to this foolish and illiberal assumption of eccle siastical power, and to the further fact that a Free-Will Baptist deacon was expelled from a church in Michigan a few days ago, because he voted for Buchanan for President, and thereby aided the cause of slavery, very just ly remarks: Such preposterous assumptions of the right to dictate to a citizen to which political party he shall adhere, and to make his polit ical opinions the terms of his churchmanship every man with a spark 'of independence in his breast will treat with the contempt they deserve. But the effect of such assumptions will be to destroy respect equally for religion, its ministers and its ordinances. 'Whoever really loves religion and desires the perpetu ity of the church, exerts himself at once to crush such a proscriptive spirit, and will em :phati6ally denounce the assumptions which it Fidelity of a Slave At a meeting of the Palmetto Association of South Carolina, some weeks since, Mr. Keitt, in the course of a speech laudatory of the deeds of the South Carolina regiment in the Mexican war, related the following in stance of devotion in a slave who was attach ed to the person of a brother of Preston S. Brooks: "When another regiment fled, and all the horrors and scourges of war were pouring down upon the gallant Palmettoes, bathed in the blood of their comrades—when Shields said "who will follow me?" and Butler said "we will"—Brooks, yes, the stripling Brooks, cried out, "yes we will all follow you to the death"—and he did. The same ball which pierced. his body shivered his musket—and a shivered musket was to adorn the signet with the motto sans meruisse. When this brother left home, Brooks told him, his father said to his old body servant, " go with him and take care of him—l confide my son to you." How did the good old negro act? When the bap tism of blood was going on—when perils were lingering around—when hot ignition of strat agem was every where—with noneito watch the wounded boy but this old servant, he was at his labor of love, taking care of his charge. Crushed bones worked out from the wound— he gathered them up and preserved them.— The noble spirit passed out a - ad the corpse alone was left. What did the old faithful slave? The regiment gave him a mule and cart,--the soldiers helped him to make a rude coffin. With his own hands he placed the earthly remains of his beloved young master in this hearse—he conveyed it to Mexico—he carried it to Vera Cruz—ho bore it on ship board and by railroad to his old master's home, and delivered the body and the bones of her child to his widowed and bereaved mother, at the lintel of his birth place. This is literally true. In classic story—in legen dary annals—in ancient or modern time— where is the equal of this touching story?" STANDARD WEIGHTS PER BUSHEL.—Accord ing to the Statutes of the States, and the es tablished rules of Commerce. Wheat, 58 tbs.; Cloverseed, 60; Rye, 56; Indian Corn, 56 ; Oats, 32 ; Barley, 48 ; Buckwheat, 42; Dried Apples, 28 ; Dried Peaches, 28; Beans, 60; Timothy, 45; Flax seed, 56; Hemp Seed, 44; Blue Grass, 14; Orchard Grass, 14; Redtop, 14; Millet, 50; Lucern, 60; Malt,' 38 ; Corn Meal, 48; Bran, 20. The Rebellion in India The storm-clouds that rise on the distant horizon of the East high above the summits of the Himalaya; cast their shadows upon the shores of England. All is. doubt and, gloomy uncertainty; not relieved by the last mail from India, which omly confirms in pain; ful detail the ealarnitotie news preViously re; ceived. Yet it is a fair presitinption that the Worst has not been told: Discretion was ne ver More needed than at this critical juncture of affairs. What would become of the Hon. East India Company's credit—a mighty lever, most useful tit this moment—were the prompt ings of that taciturn virtue not heeded ?--t Company and Government, like Church and„ State are united by the adarnantine chain of interests,, and Lord Pahnefston is on mod friendly terms with his camp-trumpeter, tbe , Times and a few other leading journals;. irr whose wake the rest follow like sheep: But were this not, the feeling of humbled national pride would alone be potent enough to con.; trol the language of the press. When that institution lowers its tone in Great Britain from the cnstomary high key of braggadocia to the pianissimo of admitting bitter truths, involving great national losses, " hard facts," as the Times calls it ; when it endeavors to prepare the country for the worst, then one may be pretty sure' that the worst is most likely to come. The idea that India has to be conquered over ,again—a most colossal task—is either plainly or implieilly admitted its almost all lubrications of the press. It lies at the bottoth of every proposition and discussion. The loss of India to Great Brit ain would be one of the greatest events in history, whose ultimate consequences no hu man foresight is able to compass. The ques tion, therefore, what the chances are of suc cess in reference to the re-conquest of India; is momentous. The rebellion broke out in the Northern districts, and has already spread, over an area of a thousand miles in diameter, with Meerut, Agra, Oude, as its centre—Dude, but recent= ly annexed to the British Empire, to pay with the plunder, as the Times flippantly intimated, the Crimean debts—Oude, furiously chafing under the British manacles, all the more cut ting for their newness. This seat of the in surrection, protected in its rear by the Hima laya mountain chain, many hundred miles from the coast, compelling British reinforce- , meats to long exhausting marches, is too mirahly selected, not to Sustain the' supposi tion of a leading intelligence directing the whole movement. It must have been plan ned deliberately, and preconcerted: No sooner get the Sepoys sight of a corps of reb els, than they instantly abandon and sacrifice their British officers. After which they march to the next camp or garrison, where the drama is repeated, thus spreading in all direc tions rapidly, and sure like contagion; the: spirit of mutiny. Most significant and most discouraging to Great Britain, darkening considerably her prospects, is the fact that this terrible rebel lion did not break out, after all, among the people whom she most suspected of mutinous proclivities, and whom to keep in subjection she maintains a mighty host. The rebellion, after all, did not break out among the famish ed, hunger-bitten slaves of the soil, the riots who under the Anglo-Saxon lash cultivate the narcotic drug ; wherewith to civilize China; it did not break out among the tax payers, whose wives and children die of hunger-pest, while the British tax collectors carry away half the proceeds of a year's hard and wea risome toil; it did not break out among the despairing victims of as cunning, atrocious and dastardly a system of rapacity as the world ever saw in its worst phases of deprav ity. Strange to say, it broke out among 'the very pets and darlings of the British East In dia government, those who, had never suffer ed starvation, who had been reared in plenty, fed, clothed and pampered in every way. As a signal retribution, the very men who had been systematically educated in treason a gainst their native country, trained by British drill-sergeants in the use of steel and bullets to enslave their fathers, brothers and friends —the Sepoys, were the first to break loose from British authority. They are the fight ing men of the land, the most formidable ad versaries that England could have met with there—numbering over 150,000 men, while there are hardly 50,000 European troops in the whole East. Were a pitched battle to de cide the issue, England would most likely come off victorious • but things take a very different course. There bellious soldiery dis perse to the South, West and East, rousing the fanaticism of the land to the extermina tion of all Europeans. The British cannot pursue them, without breaking up in as many small detachments, which -would an be almost hazardous experiment. Then the rebels are backed by the sympathy of the country, and, no doubt, countenanced by the numerous, in fluential families of deposed sovereigns. The descendants from Europeans and Hin does or Moslems, form also a large and influ ential class. With the ardent spirit of the Oriental they combine a remarkable degree of intelligence. They are superior to- the aboriginal races and fully capable of heading the struggle for their country's independence. By ties of blood related to the Hindoos, they command their confidence and affections, while they are animated by the deepest ha tred of the British, who have always treated them, as a half-cast, with contumely. Their number, especially in the Southern portion of the Empire,' is very considerable. They have been increasing ever since the first con quests by the Portuguese, in the beginning of the Sixteenth century—for more than three hundred and fifty years. Should the insur rection be permitted to reach the South, the cause of England is irretrievably lost. Now, all depends upon whether she can promptly and effectually crush the North. Whatever course the struggle may take, the woild's sympathy is not with England. It is with• the worm that turns to sting the heel of the . tormentor ; with the patient Hindoo, whose agonies and sufferings were witnessed only by the silent stars above, whose cries of an guish and despair were so long prevented, by the ocean's vastness, from reaching the ear of civilized world and the heart of humanity_ —Phila. Pennsylvanian. TUE TONGUE.--A white fur on the tongue. attends simple fever and inflammation. Yel- , lowness of the tongue attends a derangement of the liver and is common to bilious and ty phus fevers. A tongue vividly. red on the tip and edge, or down the centre or over the whole surface, attends inflarnation of the mu cuous membrane° of the stomach or bowels. A white velvet tongue attends mental disea ses. A tongue red at the lips, becoming brown dry and glazed attends typhus state. The description of symptoms might be exten ded infinitely, taking in all the propensities and obliquities of mental and moral condi tion. The tongue is a most expressive as well as unruly member.—Scientific Am erican,