THE PEOPLE'S JOURNAL, . JNO. S. MANN, A. AVERY, Editors. bouioE SPORT, PA.: TIiURSDAY MORNING, JAN.! 11, DEW 13? - ' Lams than is an agent for this piper, and is authorized to receive and receipt sub- icription9 EirJohn S...lsLnn will lecture be fore the Litetary Association en Tues; day evening next. The Life of Horace Greeley and other new books just received at the Journal Book Store. [''Governor dlark of N. Y., has hent to tile Legislature of that State, ime of the best messages we hare had the pleasure_ of reading in many a flay: . Don't fail to read the article on the iirst page about "Preaching Politics." There is more wholesome truth in it than some minisfers often get 'into a ierhtidn. 110' We call attention to the pro feedings of the Educational Meeting in Ulysses on the 3d inst. We hope io have the pleasure of publishing the frioceedings of similar meetings in every township in the county. Keep the ball in motion, friends; and you will soon reap a rich reward. Sharon ioWnship has manifested a spirit of progress on this question, and we (rust her enterprising 'citizens will take hold of this movement-in earnest: Call Yonr meetings - and- invite,the- R 6+. 3: B: Pradt, County Superinten dent, to VII present, and we will War: tint a good meeting,. THE RIGHTS OF MUMS The glory of the common law is its ilniversal Trial by Jury. In fact, no man's liberty is worth a fig, when the writ of habeas corpus and the right of trial by jury are not within the reach bf every person. Hence all oppress , .ors, and all apologists for oppresion ate constantly making efforts to de- stroy.or fritter away the influence of Julies. Hence the denial of this great• safeguard of liberty in the Fugitive blave The slaveholder knew perfectly well that he could always Purchase a ten dollar- COmmissioner whb ivould do his bidding. gut to Lis.claim to the bones and sin- ews of a man, to the decision Of twelve independent citizens of a free State, ivas not to be thought of, because these wc . iild scrutinize the evidence, and if there,' were any douhts in the ease; *ould decide in favor of liberty. Yes, the trial by Jury is the only barrier between the oppressor and the oppressed: Destroy that, .and the people of the United States would soon be no better ofl than the people bf Russia. Whoever ridicules or endeavors to hold up to public contempt an honest. juryman, who feels compelled by the aw• as raid down by the Judge, and the evidence as detailed *by the wit nesses; to dissent• from the other. Jurthrs; does what he can to destroy the trial by Jury. Such a man is not wolthy of the rights of an AmeriCan - It is the duty of every Juryman to ideeide the issue in question, accord; ing to his own best judgment, and Wlioeter goes over tot the side of the tr4otity without being first convinced that die majority are right, is a per jured man! • And a JurYnian who does consci Eirtiouslf aiscbargo his duty, in an independent, unbiased manner, has is ilkhit to , be exempt from a public IltsCussioii of his conduct, even though jie should, on his bended knees in the Jury btS:l, address 'the Judge of all 'causes, asking for. light to come to a 'ccrtre'ct understanding of the duty before him. To attack such a Jury bawl in a public print, we call an out iage, no greater it is true than to httack one of the Judges some time before for bailing the Defendant in the same case, but having more at stake iri ih independence of the Jury, wO cannot let this late attack pass Without rebuking the impudent author bf it, Who does not deserve so much ktientiori; except that his weekly false hoods may, by and by, be believed by a few innocents. car" Every man is responsible for isvils which result from his own self iahness or indifference to the lives of THE ADVANTAGES OP PARXI!O. Now that the comnfercial world is all confusion and dismay at the pew cuniary difficulties under which it is laboring, and the manufacturing busi ness of the Nation is almost stopped, we trust our fanners realize the inde pendence of their position. We do not knoW a single . man who - Las kept steadily at work on his farm, be it ever so small, and no matter of what qtiality, but that has made money. We no - doubt but there are sev eral men in this county, who; if they had kept an exact account of receipts and expenses, could report quite as favorably as the New Hampsiiire farmer alluded to in the extract.beiow from the Pittsburg Journal 4. ViMer. We trust quite a number will begin now, and at the clime - of the year give the public the result of their labors for the year 1855. We publish the folloiVing account of small.farming for the encouragement of ' all• who have land to till; and we are very confident, that farming is, after all, the surest and best business which any itritcan Many seem so think that unless they can purchase some large tract of land, it is useleSs to get any. Now, in this we think there is a grand - mis take. A. man can iet rich from the product of half a dozen acres, prop erly cultivated. Take an extreme instance. There is before us at this moment, the statement of a farmer of a bleak and sterile region of the State of New Hampshire, showing what was effected on seven acres of poor swamp land,. in the course of a few years. He paid for seven acres of this swamp $639, in payments such as he could meet by thrift and industry, - as they fell due. The price .was: thought to be exorbitant, and prob ably the looker Ott called -it wasted money. The land, in fact, had been counted a useless spot, neither fit fir pasture nor tillage. In Tess than nine years from the time of purehase, he had cut 31- tons of hay-from an acre of it, at one cutting. This farmer was not only a practical' but a benevolent man, for he kept an exact account' of all his expenditures upon this strip of swamp land, for nine years, in the doubtless, that farmers may be indUced to keep such accounts, and that their faith in the gratitude of, mother earth to her sons for their attention to her, may he increased. The balance shows, that his exdendi tures and the interest on the cost,. exceeded eight hundred - dollars in the nine years, and yet, at the lowest price for hay, the lot has repaid it all,- and much more. This - rejected lot of land paid all the expenses of labor, fencing and manure, 6 per cent inter est annually, and $134, 46, more. But if one stops here, the account is but half complete. Most of the lot when purchased, as we have said, was a swamp, filled with decaying logs, grown aver.with bushes in part, and in part bristling with stumps. Six yokes of oxen were required to plow it at first. "Now," says the statement, "the whale is a clean, level mowing - field, free from all obstruc tions, except a few open ditches." The land which a looker on, with hands in. pockets, called a bad bargain at a gift, is now' valued by the owner at $2OO. per acre. He sold enough of the lot last year at $166,75 per acre, to bring him $565. In 1851 'he sold one acre for $340, This land abuts upon no village nor popular street. It was bought and sold entirely for agricultural purposes. Thousands of acres, answejing to the description given - of this, can be bought in Penn sylvania or in almost any State in the Union, for $lO per acre to-day ;in the fertile plains of the west for a mere' song, with a clean title from the Gov ernment. Our New Hampshire far mer goes on to say that he put forth no special effort on this land. He attended to clearing up and .draining it at leisure times when the weather was not favorable for other work, or when he had nothing better to do.. For every day's work of a man, Jor yoke of oxen, he paid one dollar. His account shows that the hay, which is put down as first quality herds grass, sold at only from six to eight dollars per ton, until 1852 when it settled down steadily at about nine dollars. The matter then stands thus,; these seven acres, the number first purchased, have paid all the expenses of tillage, fencing, etc., paid their own original cost, and left. a balance in favor of the farmer of $134,46. Four acres and a half which have been sold, yielded 8905, and the two and' a half still retained are valued at $2OO per acre. Any one that understands addition can see how much that man cleared. ' Now the above is an extreme case. There is no need that a 'man should purchase the worst piece of land he can find, nor is that the point of the argument, of course. We have shown from the facts ) .what a man can do even with the worst 'land under an unhospitable sky, with enterprise, thrift and industry; • The same can be 4ene elsewhere, and with much-.less labor than was required in the aboie case. With what pride may thasman kr& Upon the fruits of his labor. No:Mat- ter what the state of the stockmarket may he, or Whether somebody fails, or struggle's-th?ough sleepless nights and wearisome days to keep.above water. There is my land, I have made it what it is. Its products, are in the cellar, the granary and the barn A little , strip of land; -my friend, carefully watched and tended, even if you have no time to tend it but in the twilight of a summer day, 'a strip of lami. out of the smoke and noise of the city, a little garden to watch, and a little home to love, these are what we all need; these will.raise us above the sweeping blows of ill 'fortune, and the blasts of chance and change WHAT WAB SETTLED ..We *ere never more surprised than when we saw, in a Temperance paper a long article endeavoring to show . that : nothing was - settled by the fall elections. We thought more bad been settled than at any election since our. time. We still think so, and we find• all of our reform papers enter- tain the same opinion. We think it quite important that our triumph should be well understood by, al classes, and for this reason again al lude to the. subject. The Prohibitionist, one of the ables Temperance papers published, speak of .the New-York election, says : . This election has. settled one thing; at least—that the people of New-York, by'a majority of nearly two, to one; t ? demand a Prohibitory L'quor Law. The election of member of the Leg islature shows this. - Th guberuato- rial vote also allows it. Mr. Seymour went before the people on this single Issue : the effect was, to a great-extent, the obliteration of old . party , lines. Some temperance democrats doubt less voted for Mr. Seymour, and some anti-temperance whigs for Mr. Clark, under the influence of old party asso ciations • but, as a general thing, the Liquor Interest was concentrated upon Mr. Seymour, and his vote probably represents its utmost strength in the State. The triumph of the temperance prin ciple would have been even more marked and significant, bad not the strength of its adherents been divided on two gubernatorial candidates. But; kor this, we believe Mr. Clark would have been elected •by a plurality of -from 50,000 to 75,000 over Mr. Sey mour.. This division, which nearly resulted in the defeat of our Maine Law Governor, was, we doubt not, most adroitly planned by our enemies ; but this would have availed little, had it not been ultimately aggravated by an absurd panic among our friends, before which the most solemn • and reiterated pledges, the commitments of interest, and of principle, and every maxim of Tolicy and sentiment of chivalry,-were swept. away as the chaff of the summer threshing-floor before the wind. • Thank God, the right has triumphed. Mvnoiv H. CLARK, who hesitated not to commit himself to the Maine Law in the days of its unpopularity, when politicians shrank from it as they would shrink from contagion—who, through a three years' senatorial ca reer, gave it an unswerving and vigo rous chatispionship, that indicated the Christian statesman rather than the self-seeking politician —.MYRON H. CLARK, the faithful friend of temper ance—the honest. independent, clear headed Senator, who never shrank froth the . performance of a duty, and never ,betrayed a public trust, and whose intelligence and integrity have I l always proved an overmatch for the cunning and ambition, though backed by position and ._talent, which 'hare. been pitted against him--MYRON H. CLARK, the man of the people and the man for the times, is Governor elect of the State of New-York !-and upon him, we doubt not, Will - devolve the signal honor, so insanely rejected by Horatio Seymour, of signing a Pro hibitory Liquor Law for New York, and thus identifying his name with an act of legislation, alike wise and be neficent, and freighted with blessings to the State at large, to the age in which we live, and to generations yet unborn. . rif Hallo ! there, Messrs. of the Wellsboro Agitator, would it be any more wrong for the Associate Judges of your county to grant the petition for Tavern Licenses, than it is for you to publish their petitions? "I belong to no party in politics or religion. I fellowship all who are ardent in their efforts to relieve human misery, and make mankind better and happier.—H. W. Beecher." • . That is a glorious position to..beu py, and every man should fa eto reach it, We Cannot undprstand the humility "woman t makes a woman - t ink so little of herself that the ch ap or material of her bonnet or dress a ds to or dimin ishes from her r.: ectability. , A*, ia RA, scu:im 3. L141 00A. II ...Hesiussii.np,lap: 2, 1855;" orgenitation'of the house. took:phice: herw' this morning...on: the fink ballot for Speaker, Henry K. Strong, tile, Whig and Native American candidate; was - -elected, re- Ceiving76 votei—scattering, 21. The Senate will meet , at 3 .o'clock. Mr.. Hendricks is the - Whig caucus candidate for Speaker, and: Mr.- Hamlin the Democratic candidate. „ • SECOND D/SPATCB The Senate met at. 3 o'clock this afternoon, and : Made three unsuccesedl ballots , for Speak er' with ther,following result:: B. D. Hamlin, (Dem.) 3'ohn Hondricks, (Whig.) Scattering, Adjourned till to-morrow, We have an account of nineteen more ballots for Speaker of the Seriere, with' the same result as the above, which shows . that no party has a Ma: jority in that body.. ; We•are, glad of it ; for we have had quite enough' of mere partylegislation. We hope some 'better man than B. D. Harrilip : will be selected to preside over our, Senate. f r il. man who will misrepresent. his Con stituents as Mr;11. 'did on. the Anti- Nebraska resolutions of lust' Session, deserves retirement instead . 9f promo tion. We want men to preside . over our legislative bodies - and not mere party tools. • ' Since the above was in type, we have received the following, show ing that B. D. Hamlin was dropped by the Democrats, and Heisterelected. All right. If we must, haVe a pro slavery man to preside in the Senate, let it be one who does not come from the free North.. HARRISBURG, Jan. 5, 1855 Wm. D. Heister, (Dem.) of Berks, was elected Speaker of Senate; on the twenty seventh ballot—havingHteen votes.. 'Skinner (Whig) had eleven votes; Frazer (Whig) two. Darsie (Whig) voted for Heister. Price (Whig) did not vote. "Fear none of those things which thou shalt suffer." "They are • all rotten; every one," said little- Emily, mourning over her basket dapples. But when she care fully examined, them, she found a number. .that were sound and fair and sweet, though sadly begrimed with . the decay of others; se badly that they, looked nearly all alike., TSo do we often, when we see evil around us,. one and. another doing things against which our moral sense rises in indig-. nation—when 'sometimes -th'ose near and dear to us disappoint our expect ations and dish to earth Apr high faith in them-7wheti perhaps, - our own in tegrity fails to meet the demands upon it..--and we bow our heads in deep humiliation over some hitherto unsus pected selfishness,, conclude, as did little Emily,' that all are bad. Thus in our hearts we commit another wrong; we do injustice to the' good and pure who . though subject to fail- . ings and errors; live in the earnest effort to be feithful to the highest good known to . them, and. may . thus be counted by Que who measures justly, with Zachariah and Elizabeth, . who "walked in all the commandments of the Lord blameless." In all the trials of life, in all our intercourse. With one another, it is a great comfort to feel, that there will come a time!when our vision shall be clear, when the thick, clumsy veil of mortality will be put off, w h en we shall see each other eye .to eye, and • ! heart to . heart—when many a sus pected integrity shall be revealed unstained, gladly some of whom we would gladly think better - than we do, shall stand revealed to us in the snowy purity of the chosen. Who of us shall not rejoice then in seeing and being seeu Clearly. How many harsh judgments and sweeping' condemna tions will then be cast aside. • G. An exchange has the following good hit aria class of wen to be found in *lost 'every town: • HOsrE POLICY.—If you wish to keep your. town 'from thriving, turn the cold shoulder • to every: young me chanic or beginner in business, look upon every new corner with a - jealous scowl. . Discourage all you- can.; if that won't do, decry his work, and rather go abroad for wares of his kind than give , him , your money..: Last, though not least, refuse •to patronize your Vill'age japer. Then "go to seed." . . MORE EMANCIPATION,---Five little negroes belonging to the :editor 'of the North Carolina Standard,were burned to death in the the kitchen on his plan tation in Richmond county, -on the evening of the 7th inst. It seems . the: little " chattels" were left • in, charge of a.\ purse, who went off and left ; them, ici when` t he building was consumed, for gether *th the children. The. editbr appears o feel his' loss very sensibly. It probab . , amounts to 3500 t . - : , THE MIMI 'INDIANS AND THEIR PROTECTORS. Our readers may remember that, dtirineiheittringnf the preient year COlonel Mituypenny, the Commission-1 et of IndiarrAffairs, went to the ten i tories of Nebraska Intl Kansas, with - a view to open their' for -settlement byl • extinguishing a number of the Indian titles -which interfered- with this -ob ject. Nearly fifteen millions of acres were ie. this_ way ,opened for the accu pation of white emigrants. Most of the cessions thus made vest 'the title unconditionally in the United States government; but in the case of the lowas, the confederate band of the Kaskaskids and 'Peones. \Areas and Prankeshaws, and the Delawares,' a different arrangement was 'made, and one which,in view of 'the forced . re moval of these ,tribes from their for mer hunting-grounds since 1 8 30, our government is under the strictest and most solemn responsibility to observe. This' agreement is, that the land ceded by the tribes just mentiimed„ with the exception of a strip called the "Delastare outlet," shall be offerecll at public sale and sold to the highest bidder, after which the - portions re maining unsold, shall be - subject to• entry at a dollar -and' a quarter art; acre, the Indians having the proceeds of the sales, after deducting necessary expenses. The Delaware reservation in Kansas; to which this stipulation applies„ comprises 538,600 acres of one of the richest agricultural regions in the, world, bounded on the east by the Missouri river; and watered by the streams of the Stranger and Sau telle. Our government knows the value of these lands ! , which would now sell for more, perhaps, than all the rest of the territory - , and we under stand it would willingly give for them, in their present uncultivated state, one hundred' dollars an acre. So, also, do the Indian proprietors, and hence their anxiety to dispose of them at, auction. El But, unfortunately, the wishes of the Indian owners and the treaties of the'government are likely to be frus trated by the unscrupulous avarice of speculating. adventurers, who are paid from the national treasury to guard ,the rights so solemnly guaranteed to the red man. COmmissioner Many penny; in his last annual report, (which for some reason or other has not had the publicity which is usually given - to publid. documents of this. kind,) says "An association of persons has undertaken to appropriate to their own use a portion of the land ceded.by the Delawares, fronting on the Missouri river, and south of Fort Leaven-. worth; have laid out a city thereon, and. actually had a public sale of the lots of tho same, on the 9th and 10th of October last. These unlawful proceedings have not only taken place under. the eyes of the military officers stationed at the fort, but two of them are said to be members of the association, and have been active agents in this discreditable business. 'Encouraged by these proceedings, and prompted, by those engaged in them, other persons have gone ou other portions• of the tract ceded by the Delawares in trust to the United States, and pretend to have made . and are now making, such 'claims' as they assert will .vest in them the lawful right to enter the land at the minimum price usider the law of July 22, 1834." In Order to obtain the sanction of Congressto these lawleis invasions, we understand that petitions are cir culating in different parts of the coun try for an alteration of the treaty with the Delawares, 'malting the lands so encroached upon subject to entry at the minimum - price under The late preetriptien law. The administration has been apprised of these facts for at least two months; it knows that on this forbidden reservation of the Del a Wares four cities are :ab eady started, in which, 'as .was stated some days since by a Washington correspondent of this paper, five hundred votes were illegally polled . in the late elction of a delegate from Kansas. Why is not something done to restrain the mili tary speculators of Fort Leavenworth 1 Our army officers, with all their enor mous mileage. and transportation fees, are now clamorous for an increase of salaries, and . the administration is 'ex tremely urgent to gratify them. Will it not show an equal zeal to restrain their violations. of the faith plighted by the nation to an. ignorant and de fenceless people?—Eve. Post. About two years - ago eight Ameri-• can Christians conceived and carried out the novel idea of planting an American 'colony in' the Holy Land. They first located near Jerusalem, but subsequently removed to a-place near Joppa in the plains of Sharon.-- Mere they devoted themselves to the arts of agriculture 'and' to the cultivation of friendly relations with the Arabs ; procured agricultural implements, and now •in their letters home give the most glowing and attractive descrip tions of the TertilitY of the soil.• They are able to' raise -three crops in the year—two in Aiummer, by means of irrigation, and' one in winter, when they have the aid of the winter rains. ' The crops grow luxuriantly; and yield more abundantly than ;in the United States;• and nearly every kind of veg etables, fruits-or- raised in this • country' can be procured in Palestine. Americana in the Holy Land. From the We? Moro Agitator. - •-• EIOOD TEICPLA.I3., The - Annual 'Session of the Mae . pendent. Order Hof Good Templars of Pa., was held at Troy, Bradford C 0.,. On thert9tb and 20th.ult., and was very laigety• attended: About three hen. dre&delegates and P. W. C. T. 5 from van us parts of the State, befog pres: . ent., : Two - . hundred and forty-nine. Lodges were reported with. a latge• membership, and the Order appears to *be in a floanshin i g condition. Resolu tions were unanimously passed in fa. vor of. asking a Prohibitory. Liquor Law for those counties which voted in . favor of Prohibition, and strongly 'ex; pressing the opinion that on a vote•of the whole State. being. taken, at a time when there were no political issues, the people would, by a decided -vote, sanction theineasine. As, to a pro hibitory law for prohibitory counties, can any one doubt its propriety ? Bradford county,-for instance, gav e a majority of twenty-six hundred in fa- vor of prohibition—and shall the wish: es of her citizens be• disregarded, because perks, Schuylkill, and a few other counties, choose still to be vatted with the traffic in intoxicating. liquors. • The officers for the ensuing year, are :: Joel Jewell,Bradford Co., G. W.C.T Charles Perkins, Luzerne Co., G. W. Counselor:, Warren Skeels, G-.AV. V. T. Mary e: Emery, Tioga, G. W. S. J. S. Hoard,. Tiogq, G. W. T. 0. A. Warren, Susquelianna,G.W.C. Reuben McLellan, Erie, G. W. M ; ' Josephine Willard, Lycoming, G. W: D. M. L . Lucy Snytier,Lycoming, G.W. I. G. C. W. Stevens, Bradford, G. W.O. G. . The next annual session will be held at the city of Erie, on the third Tues day of December, 1855. The Quar terly Sessions Bare at Harrisburg the third Tuesday of March, at Smethport the second Tuesday in June, and at Scranton the third Tuesday. in Sep tember. . • Financially the Grand Lodge is in a flourishing condition--there being at the end of this year about three hun dred and fifty . dollars in the Treasury, and no outstandin g liabilities. Much of its prosperity is due to the efficient Secretary, who, we are happy to say; is reelected. The Grand Lodge also in view of the increased labor, and the efficient manner in which she had per formed her 'duties, presented her, by a unanimous vote, the sum of one hundred. dollars, in addition to the salary Votediser at the commencement of the year. The Order has extended into twenty-four counties in this State, an& if it increases as it apparently promises, it will, at the end of another year, have extended into every corner of the State, Two years ago the Or, der was not known ; there are now Grand Lodges iii New York, Penn-, sylvania, lowa, Ohio, and Canada, and Charters issued for Grand Lodges kt Missouri, Kentucky, Illinois, Indiana, and Michigan,' each of those States having within their .borders a large number of Lodges. No Order of the kind has ever increased with such un parallelled. rapidity ; and therecan be no doubt but It' is destined to exert a favorable and wide-spread influence in . favor of Temperance .and sound morality. PiNNSALVANIA. Dec. 30, 1.854. • . From the Portland Inquirer. The Author of "Ida Nay" at Last Ascertained IDA MAY—TO4T. AtITHORISS,--It gives us pleasure to be first to announce, upon reliable authority, who' f all the women of this coun try is henceforth to be recognized, honeyed, and celebrated the world over as the authoress . of Ida May. In making the announcement, we violate no. vow of secresy. and we are un willing_ longer, that our readers curiosity should be unsatisfied, especially that •they should be unnecessarily delayed in sharing with us the gratification of knowing that to the widow of the lamented Torrey are they indebted for this beautiful and powerful pro duction. To us there -is more \ than a poetic fitness and justness in this fact—it is a most fitting and striking retributive providchce. The heroic TOrrey died in prison, the victim of slavery—a noble martyr in the cause of human freedom. Most nobly does his widow avenge him by this work of genius and love. Mrs. Torrey's 7 maiden name , was Mary-Ide, daughter of Dr-Ide, of Medway, Mass. She felicitously names her literary offspring his May, after herkelf, with slight variation. To WOM3D'S genius i do we owe the tweimost me cessful and splendid productions of the day. Let the Women of. Maine be proud of-the fact, and by the reading and circulation of suds anti-slavery works, and the wholedle agita tion thence resulting, do their part in establish' ing freedom in this and every land. , • JOIN MITCHIELL.—The most hopeful sire pf the times which we' have lately noticed, is the retirement of John Miteizell.to private life, and the effect that followed - his longings for that Alabama plantation. The boys were wont to say that the Citizen was Besherio d ' which turns out to be nearer the truth thin . was at first supposed. 12F' In the organization of the Illi nois Legislature, yesterday, the Doug laa Nebraska candidate for Speaker was beaten out of sight by a decided opponent of the. Missouri Compromise Repeal. Another of Mr. Richard son's populaz,ao.vereignty. victories. — Tribune, Jim 3. •