.'T : E PEOPLE'S JOURNAL, JNO. S. MANN, A. AVERY, kelitrirs COUDERSPORT, PA.; THURSDAY MORNING, OCT. 11, 1855. THE 41=1d Little Potter is erect! The vile slanders of the hunker sheet are ,Curled back by the'people with acorn. r Are `4viite 'early on Wednesday morning, 'but' we have 86f : fir:lent . re '-tailor to show that the' Canty has : given - the entire Rep'ublie;:n 'ticket . ?.hand.soine majority: Whipple 'and itiraves will have ibiaut . 2:oo Majority, ',and Souther about 250. 'We are sat ' jsfied. TIM Men who here been in , ‘• _suiting ,our people 'fur the past year .and a half,.' are . rebuked. Freedom has triumphed; and our citizens have hurled froM them the pro-slavery leaders ',AO sought to lead them ' The following is a record of last news: Tuesday' 'evening, Oct. ',9th, the returns begih to come in ten minutes past seven. Eulalia gives 9 majority kor Souther. Well dune, Eulalia !. If the other towns come in aiwell'we shall have a handsome maz • joiity in the county. Twenty minutes past seven, Coudersport 33- majority :fur Nicholson for Canal . Commissions 'er. Hurra for Coudersport I Let a few more of out • best men be thorl ilatidered, - and hunkerism will be annihilated." Col Whipple has 36 'majority iri'the Boro' acid .4 Eulalia townslip; That will do: Quarter to 'fee, .acizner•comes in with 1.4 'major- ny for the 'entire ticket. That is poble. The Repbblicans of that town 'l3l-4 have done a good day's work. - 14 hailer past ten. Here comes Julius with the returns from Hebron, '5O Majority for Nicholson, arid about the r eam fcir . the rest of the ticket, Glo ri6iis Hebrori, ever true to freedom ! 'We honor thy hardy, intelligent, and ever reliable sons. 'Wednesday morn oth, half' pp; six: Here Comes a messenger from Ulysses ; 86 'majority for Whipple, tbe other part of the ticket about the same.' Nbbly ( dOne fOr Ulysses ; her vote settles the eotifity . al:et. Harrison is about oven, end Bingham gives a small majority for the Republican ticket. Throw op your hats. The county of Potter resumes her proud position. The following are the figures on County Cdinmisiione'r, so far as card: Whipple, Nelson • 18 4 -53 4 53 17 112 26 58 47 39 14 2d Eulalia, Homer, Hebron, Coudersport, Ulysses, Harrison, Bingbani; Sweden-, 378 _ 199 199 Whipple ahead, 179. Souther has in the 'same Townships 226 majority L Daniel Olmsted of Ulysses rais ed, the past season, fink-seven and s a flag bushels of buckwheat from one iicre evil 'a quarter of land. rir We publish on the outside an extract from ono of Horace Greeley's agricultuial 'addresses. It is an able di3ciiment,'and should be thoionghly read: 0 7 ' Society has been steadily im peoVing in this village for many year, and were it riot for a few industrious and tattlers, we know of ;to village of its size more attractive as a place of residence for the refined and virtuous. Fr Good fresh butter is selling for twhrity cents per pound in this village. AVM our fartnersuke a note of this, ‘rid increase' their 'dairy business ? 'There is 'no stiier . way to•coin money than 14 make butter and cheese, and give i . uOd'attention to the stock busi- far We publish in another column in article from the Progressive Fanner pf Philadelphia, in relation to 'educe . - ling faririirs'sons: We emforso this trtiele, every word of it. By the way, the ProgeOsSive Farmir is published for itien ty-five cents it 'year; and is 'North ten times that sum to every Farmer who thiiroughly rends it. I:I9PA - good inany thinishini , dollars paie been lost to the farmer-a-I:of-Platter County the' past team:in, for wads 'of sheep enough to eat 4 the briexijand grass that wasted• in old chgppings not yet brought under csii:viOon,, lar The bucloyheat crop of this county, is immense. We hope our friends in the different townships will furnish us *WI the amount raised' lie ;heir respective neighborhoods, and ofthe best yields per acre. " la' This is • a fayoz able time to in crease the circulation of 'the 47qunial; and the. continued sickness -. Mr. Avery justifies us.itz making an earnest appeal to our friends for aid. We have no time to canvass for subscri bers, and most -rely entirely on the kindness of friends to increase our list. A friend has furNshed us with a cispy of the Telegraph, publiShed at Newtown village, Tioga county, N: Y:, Nov.-28, 1815. It is a fout•column sheet containing about a fifth as much reading matter as the Journal; and published ,at two dollars per annual, one-half 'in advance. What was then Newtown village is now Elmira, large enough fur a ciiy. There is little of interest in the num ber Of the Telegraph betbre us, but the following in relation to " Caucus NoininatiouS," is worthy of repetition at this time: Many of 'the Republican editors express opinions thvorabie to nominations by mem hers of Congress: The measure is necessa ry, say they, to prevent division of Republi can votes; and n is open to examination by the people, before anu after it is made. ' Experience has removed doubts on this subject, by demonstrating that public opinion has Jess influence on caucus nominations than caucus nominations on public opinion. .The former (that is caucus nominations) has di rected tine latter ever since Mr. Jederson's retireuient, . In 1815 the party of Jeffer►on called itself Republican, but even then caucus nominations controlled public opinion. We hope the Republicans of ;his day will take %yarning from the errors of the past- r -take care that public, opin ion controls not only the nominations, but the elections. ?P 3 alfur , P. of Planting Where shall we fiqd sq pleasing aq qppre ciatiou of the pleasures that attest the lover ofof a garden. as in the following extract of a letter from the venerable Dr. Fothergill : " Punning and gardening supply a fund of entertainment the most lasting and reasonable of any occupation in this life, pleasures not to be purchased. The trees which we ourselves have planted, the fruits. we have raised, the plants. we have cultivated, seem to be like our ehildreh, a kind of new creation. Their shade, their taste, their fragrance, and their beauties, affect us with a' richer repast than any other. 'What a pleasing scene' lies open to a young man of fortune devoted to such amusements. Lath succeeding year produceS new shades, .other fruit's, fresh. beauties, and brings, besides, more profit. To behold the rising groves, barrenness made fertile, our country improved, ourselve.4 made useful and happy, and posterity mulched! 1 have seldom known a man possessed of a taste for such pleatinres, who was not at the same dine tem perate and virtuons,--_lforticithurist. - These are pleasures which the peer : . est and humblest may easily enjoy — . In this country where land is so cheap, every body may own a small lit en which trees may be planted, fruit grown, and a home beautified ; and ivhoeyer is the possessor of a few acres of land in this county, on Which he has planted trees, we think, will stay where he is if wise. The Stone Hill Potato. Last spring we mentioned having received a sample of the Stems Hifi potato froth Mr. D. A. Bulkley,. a professional gardener- of Williamstown, Massachusetts, who obtained this variety from the seed, and named it'after his place, the Stone Bill Farm. We have been very successful in its cultivatiOn. 'We planted it close beside the Mercer potato, and find it much superior to that both in sag, in productiveness, and the healthfultieis of the plant. The yield, so far as we were able .to estimate,-was at the rate of about two hundred bushels to the acre, which is a large one for Long Island. The Mercers contiguous to it are sughtlyiatlected with the potato disease, bin in the Stone llill potatoes are no signs of ill . ° disease whatever. Tha milers are large, of a roundish shape, white:Skinned and white within, and mealy when bailed. They have this peculiarity, that if -dug before they have attained their proper size, they are not, like Most new potatoes, of a Waxy consistence, but are farinaceous, and apt to break open in boiling as if quite mature. The Stone Hill potato we regard as a very important addition to the stock of good potatoes, superior in sev eral, respects to any commonly cultivated in this region.—Ere. Post. . We hope some of our enterprising farmers will act on the above informa tion. The Post is entirely reliable in its statements, and the above is valu ble information. HENRY WARD BEiCIILRISM.—This clergY man recently preached a sermon against old school Calvanssm, iiiwhich, he said he wished irl illy underitood . by" his `people, that he ',served them nbt as the tninistcr of a sect, but oftho truth. "I am not," he declared, "'a CaMinist, an Armenian, a Universalist, a 'Unitarian, a Pelagian, nor a Swedenborgian ; but I am simply Henry Ward Beecher, a Preacherefthe Gospel, ebeliever in the Lord Jest's Christ i and trying tq make other people believe htm—Lihst is all!" - • • • IMPEACHMENT or JUDGE BANE Seldom — has there .been a, judical . Outrage:equal to, that 'perpetrated' by Judge itane. By wantonly thrusting an innocent man into...prison, he has . invaded J.hojiberty of every .citi,zen. No manii . snfe where such . ab4ses are practiced. It may •be a matter of doubt whether the wrong in • this and other similar cases;'which• have given to his 'honor an unenviable notoriety, •is the result of sheer igtieranco, or of -moral obliquity, Chat ity inclines to the for Mer view, and thus leaves us in possession of whatever pomfore , can arise from the reflection that' imbeeil ty, rather than knavery, has caused • the :evil. But, in either case, the this chief is the•same--,people may as well die by malignity as by Polly. In either case, there is 'no remedy but removal from of4ce, We, therefore, heartily agree - with the?so journals which demandthe imp's:man - ent of a judge; Who has so repeatedly and shamelessly prostituted hishigh office to the slave power. 'l 7 he Independ: ent of last week has the following; "An act of tyranny, unprecedent ed in tlie•history of our country, has beer, perpetrated by a judge a the federal court, and remains unre dyessed. An unoffending citizen who stated the exact truth in his return to a writ' of the court, is imprisoned for contempt, and most lie in jail at the will of the Jeffreys who - has thrust him in. The attempt to deliver the prisoner by a writ of habeas corpus from the Supreme Court of the State, -hag failed, and there remains but one method of redress. 5 judge Kane has abused his ppe regative, and usurped the function:4 of an absolute sovereign. He deserves; therefore; to be impeached by the su preme power from'which he holds his office. Let petitions-be pored iitup: on the House of Representatives for the impeachment of Judge Kane.— This, if Carried, will lead to a trial by the Senate, and if that should not . re sult in conviction, the exposure and disgrace will he tnore thnn may man can endure, Like his great ancestor, this destroyer of the innocent, outlaw ed from society, will Wander up and down the earth, crying, " My punish ment is greater than I can bear.' Let every City, town, and village, move for the impeachment of the modern Jeff : reys." la? The folldwiqg is a good forat of petition ; To the House of Representatives of the United States of America. The Petition of the subscribers, in habitants of Pen.nsylvania, respectfully showed' : That in the ,case of the UNITED STATES, EX PARTE WHEELER vs. PASSMORE WIL LIAMSON, John K. Kane, Judie of the District Court of the United States for the Eastern District of Pennsylva nia, usurped a jurisdiction properly belonging to the Courts of this State, and committed to prison the said Passniore Williamson, a citizen of this State, without authority., and in violation of his rights as a citizen of 4:is State and the United States.. Ypqr Petitioners therefore respect fully pray- you to impeach the . said John K. • Kane for misconduct in office. • Ploughts from Banning Goverinnent resembles the wall which stir- . rounds one's land, a' needful *protection, but 'rearing no harvests, ripening uq fruits. .It is the individual who must choose whether the enclosure shall be paradise or a waste. flow little positive good can government confer! it does not till our fields, build our houses, weave the ties which bind us to our tontines, give disinterestedness to the heart, or energy to the intellect and will. All our great inter ests are left to ourselves, and governments, when they have obstructed them much more than advanced them. For example they have taken religion into their keeping only to dis figure it. So education in their hands, has beeome a propagator of servile maxims,. and an upholder of antiquated errors. In like manner, they have paralized trade by their pqrsiug care, and multiplied poverty by their expedients for its relief. Government has al most always been a barrier against which in tellect has had to struggle. end society has made its chiefprogress by the minds of private individuals, who have outstripped their rulers, and gradually shamed their( into truth and wisdom. When I compare the clamorous preaching - and passionate .declamation common in the Christian World, with thp composed dignity, the -deliberate wisdom, the freedom from all extravagence, __which characterized Jesus, I can imagine no greater contrast, and lam sure that the fiery zealot is no representative of Christianity. The moment man parts with moral indepen dence -the moment lie judges of duty, not from the interests and will of a par ty, the moment ho commits himself to a leader of a body, and winks at evil, because divisions would hurt.- the cause, the moment he shakes off his par ticular respensihilities, because he is but oue of a thousand or a million by whom the evil is done, that moment he parts with his mor al power. He is shorn of the energy of single hearted faith in the rightand true. He hopes from man's policy what nothing but loyalty to God canaccomplish. He substitutes weapons forged by man's wisdom for celestial power.. He who rears up one child in Christian vir tue, or recovers one fellow' creature to God, builds a temple more precious than Solomon's or St. Peter's more enduring than earth or heaven. IT has been proposed by several gentlemen who own slaves in Ken tucky,, that they (the slayebolders) hold a conyention at Frankfort to adopt sour plan for the abolition ala Very, and that Hon. W. H. Luke of Pendleton county, a slave holder, be appointed by the friends of the convention to draw up a propo s4ictu for its gradual abolition. Frpm the Chri;!imi Inquirer, Selit. 2? .IEANE,, 3/MERE IS THY 13)10TELER . . Yassmore is still in Moyam'ensing prison. lie has violat-• 'ed no lab , ; he has been -. convicted of po Crime; he is not even awing a lie . simply 'performed" ' au act Of humanity, in Lettin g a' poor black woman, who had beeliheld as a slave, know that, brought within. the limits of a free State, she was thenceforth a free Women, owner of herself and her children. Arid she, desiring above all ,things to be a free woman, and reasonably distrusting her former master's word that he would give her' her freedom if she would remain with him, preferred ; to make her liberty sure, by taking her rights and her children, and going her way: Her .former master, to get back his slaves, appeals to the Judge of the United States Conn, who grants a habeas porpus, perverting that write of liberty into an instrument of slavery, and requires Mr. Williamson to pro duce before him the bodies of dane Johnson and her children, Mr. Wil liamson returns an answer - that : they are not and never have been in his possession, and. that he knows not where they are. This was the simple truth. .The United States Attorney chcioses to declare it a falsehood, and. moves the court that Mr. Williamson tie committed for perjury and for con tempt. Judge Kane, after deliberation; con- strues the true statement to be a legal falsehood, and a defiance of the count, grants the motion, and c o mmits Mr. .Williamson, to prison for contempt, "without bail or mainprige." Had he committed him for perjury, he might have had a trial ; as it is he can have none; the judge is jury too, and despot—sentences and condemns to an imprisonment without limit and without relief. Without limit, save as he may choose to use his clemency; without relief, save by unmanly sub mission and dishonest retraction, on the part of the prisoner. . He cannot "purge himself from con tempt" so lung as he keeps an honest man's contempt fur perjury. And so, for the simple acts of humanity and truth-telling, Mr. Williamson' is im prisoned during the.:will and at the mercy of one man, for simply 'plead. , ing not guilty to a charge made by a slaVeholdur, But surely there , must be some remedy. Surely there must be some power in free, civilized Pennsylvania which can interfere to arrest such tyranny, and right such wren g. The State courts will 'protect 'the citizens of the State: yes, even against attor neys, and judges, and ministers of*the United . States, The appeal is made to them. From his prison Passmore Williamson, reaches out his hand and asks for justice, it is refused. . - The Supreme Bench (with a noble exception, that of Jtidge Knox,) de clares that it will not interfere. The question .of contempt is a delicate question; it is the duty of the court to discourage all such contests' with the legal tribunals of the country; Mr; Williamson 'carries the liey Of his prison iii his own pocket ; he car, come out when he will conform and make terms with the court that sent him there. So the State courts will not inter pose. There remains no remedy but impeachment. AfeanWhile William son het. in Mod amensing prison, and Kane is his brother's keeper. So, in this our day and land, is "judgment turned away backward." We "look for justice, and In, oppres sion; for righteousness, but behold, a cry!" And this is our slavery. What a spectacle before God, and a world looking to us for the noble instance of liberty ! In free and republican American, a minister of the govern nent proceeds to represent us abroad with slave's in his train, Oa the way, a countryman of Penn and Franklin accosts them, not to see them free, but simply to tell them that they are already legally so. For this, though a constructive charge, a govern ment judge imprisons hip. And there is no t emedy except through impeach ment of that judge before a republi can senate, half of whose members are slave-holders How .fast slavery is ultimating itself, and showing in unmistakable fruits what its genuine spirit of tyranny is! We hope we shall hear no more of "slavery's being wrong in the ab stract, so fast it embodies itself in ever new .and More hideous shapes. The cancer cannot be hidden. Will men begin to boast of its beauty 1 We hope we shall bear no more of slavery's being,_"a thing with which we hero at the North have .nothing to do." It has overleaped the borders. It stands in northern Boston, and with its gaunt hands puts chains around the Court House, and on the limbs of the black man, and hurries him through a hedge of bayonets, each red with the blood of Liberty, subsidi zing government shipi and government gold to accomplish its victory. In Northern Kansas, armed with re-. volver and bowie-knife, it invades tho polls and tramples upon the franchise; shakes its insulting fist with- oaths and threats, in the face of freemen ;. defies and ejects governors ; and, seated in the legislative hills; issues laws punish, in free speech with imprisonment, and humanity with death. 'And now, in Northern Pennsylvania; it mounts the bench, and binds the judged' hands, and seals their lips,while it turns the key of Passmore William son's:prison and stands guard at the door: And the North has - nothing to do with it ! Nothing, but to submit. "0 God, how long!" How long shall we be paralyied, acquiescent, timid and bOlind 1 How long shall we shield ourselves from our duty and the voice of God, ,by the evasive ques tion, "Am I my brother's keeper 1" FARMERS ERUCATE YOUR SONS, "Even I, the descendant of a poor line of cultivators, stretching back, very likely, to him who through his own .blindness and fatuity lost the sit uation of head-gardener in Eden— even I feel the all-prevailing, impulse towards improvement and reform. I can never be a scientific fanner—l am too old and to heavily, laden with duties and cares for that.---,but my sun, if he lives, shall be. The little I ean• teach him shall at least inspire him with a craving for more, and set him on the right track to learn it." • If any man in the community may be presumed to understand and . to be imbued thoroughly with the . progressive spirit of the age, that man is Horace Grecloy. With his peculiar political and social views and feelings, we have nothing to do ; but with the noble, energetic spirit he has ever displayed, and with the immense influence he has fbr years wielded with such- prodigious effect, every thing. The extract which we give above is strictly - characteristic of the man, and embodicrs--scntiments which we should like to believe perVade-the breast of every farmer in the land. It is useless to attempt a concealment of the great fact, that the spirit of progress has laid - her hand upon al most every tiller of the soil, and that slowly, ho. certainly, the slumbering spirit of the giant agriculturoist awak ing to a.cunsciousuess of its own im mense importance. One by one the old fashitmed _prejudices of by-gone days are thrown aside, and th o s e W h o a few years since indignantly discard .ed the idea of making a single step in advance of" daddy's plan of farming," are dither conforming ill full to the onward movements of the age, or oTadusilly adopting improved implo ments, seeds, and methods of tillage. But there aro very many, who like Horace Greeley, "feel the all-pet vatt ing- impulse towards ; improvement," but who are too old and too-heavily laden with cares and business duties to devote themselves to scientific farming. To such we say, educa e your sells, and educate th Len with special reference to tha profession which You" intend they shall .pursue in after life. DA not be afraid that in filling their minds with the great truths of science you unfit them for the physical duties of life. The man who tills the earth understandingly— who is acquainted with the character of the soil he cultivates-the manures he . applies—the seed he sows, and the harvest he gathers--,surely such a man's daily toil is materially lessen. 24 by. the fact that every department of it is conducted intelligently. Every plant and leaf and blossom is to him a subject of the deopest interest, be cause a thorough knowledge of each, so far from unfitting him fur his iv-irk, 'only enables him to prosecute it more easily and more economically. \\ 'here' farmer doggedly attributes his• want of success to the weather, or to. I.krovidenee, the educated man, know ing thatuature is rarely in the wrong, investigates the cause of the failure,-! and generally succeeds in tracing it to its proper source. " Forewarned, foreartned." is a trite but a truthful adage. The educated man provides afratust a recurrence of the failore, whilei the ignorant one, without either the ability or inclination to-search out the reasons why he failed in a particn lar direction . ; " trusts to luck," and succeeds- no .better than at first. Ye that ate -skeptical in regard to progressive farming, look around you for a single moment, and if the quows.of forty winters have fallen up on you, go back twenty years Only; and compare the farming of that day. with the farming of the present day. Loeit'at the farms which in the period of twenty years have been improved most, and our word for it, they were those, i the cultivators of which were, if not highly educated men, at least those who did not condemn book farm ing as -a humbug. Tl,ey were men, who if they.had not, as the farmers of the present day have, access to reli able agricultural information in the form of periodicals without number, and _newspapers - at mere nominal prices, were possessed of au indomi table spirit of.inquiry and energy— the Men, in fact, to whom we are most largely indebted for the facilities the present generation of fatl - 14ms enjoy for cultivating the soil intelligently, pleasantly and_ profitably. A hOod name is above rubies, but a good heart is worth infinitely more. gander may blight the former,- and vet 'may pass the latter unscathed,—not even the smell of fire being left on its garments. Paruntle.tx STATE COMMITTEE.-- The Hon. William Jessup, President of, the Republican State Convention, at - Pittsburg, has issued the following circular announcing the appointment of the Republican State Committee: By direction of the Republican State Convention, which assembled in Pittsburg, I have appointed the follow ing State Central ComMitte - e:—David Wilmot, of Bradford, Chairman; Eli K. Price, .of Philadelphia; William B. Thomas, dO.; Anson Rood, do.; Ben jamin Malonc, do.; Robert Iredell, of Montgomery ; A. R. l‘lcith-ajoo, of Chester ; John Banks, of Berke ;•Tinol dens. Stevens, of Lancaster ; Prof. McClintock, of Cumberland ; James M. Sellers, of Juniata; A. 0. Hei,iter, of Dauphin ; Daniel Bradegam, of - Northumberland ; Samuel F. Cai rn:lnk, of Stulnehanna ;• A. W. 'Bene dict, of Huntingdon ; John Covode, of Westmoreland ; J,ohn W. Howe./ rf Crawford ; George Darsie, Alle ghony ; Thomas Bighorn, of Alle gheny; Timinas Nicholson, of Beaver; 1 4 "; B. Penniman, of Wayne; Wm. FearOn, Jr., of Clinton ; Henry M. Fuller, of Ldzerne ; Holmes of Mifflin; .Nathaniel Ewing, of Fayette. The above Committee met -at Herr's hotel, Harrisburg, on Thurs day evening, the 27th, inst., at 7 o'clock. Tun lIAS Rrn FLA3tr..—Pre fessor Henry, befbre the American Association of Science, gave odd re sults touching the existence or I.ed flames on the edge of the sun, as ob served during solar eclipses. .Thes;-; projections of red - dame were ob served again in' May. A blackboant representation of them was given— a circle with cloven tongues of tire, During eclipse's, it appears, remark able appearances of these flames have been observed since the year when Alexander -.and Henry were astronomers together at Princeton. 0.,e used a yellow glass, the other a red. It was fbund that these flames. .cmuld only be observed through the red gia.s. To te.-t this, last spring 'when the big eclipse happened-, Jittery experimented at ‘Vashingt.et.' Ile tujek a Loge burning-lens, such are usually in-..the light-house seivire, and concentrated the rays of the sun upoe a piece, of shingle—the ‘vood began to burn, when presto! the . same sort of flames appeared; of a beautiful pink color. A range of 'different lA ored glasses was-brought to bear—but through none of them, yellow, green, nor anything else but red. could the flame- be seen. Mr. Henry called is. the architect of the Smithsonian 'lnsti tutien, and had him look. He was eb livioils of the existence of the flame; till the red glass came. A candle Wa 3 taken up, and it. was invisible through the red glass. The inference is, that this phenomenon is real. The pink, accorditt4 to Mr-. Henry, is a subject-. ive coltr—a_ color in the eye. This opens, it is said, a field for investi gation. Tatar Proverbs It is dishonor to ho bent,. hot to bond. Violets do not grow so high as net OE Per the first wish, a single eanwl. snfliceth ; Ihr the second; not tiro ‘vltolo hold-were enough. If the fiih-do t i nt snap at a. worm. Allah would nut let him bite the draw. net. It ig not always a lovely fearde face that is coymed with a veil. Though the drone stick the ja-nlice, it makes no honey. From the lovely maiden, net evrt the hurricane removes the veil ; it the, ugly old crone, the gentlest breezti takes the turban ofrthe head. There is-more fuss made about the shepla (bulrush mat) of the rich min, than about the kit (wooleu carpet) ot the poor, The blind nvoi once called the slays " h;lrepkii"--,a title or honor—to clay the : slave carries -his head tho THE greatest lumberman in America ii - Price, olQuebec. Ile has ereckd ~ vllarf at River La Loup. 120 miles below Qtiebec , at a.cost of $120,000, to accommodate his lumber business. Ile is the most extensive dealer in North America . ; Itas 30 saws pu lling near that place; 40 at St. John's Ray: in constant oporation at Ha-ha tay,'und at the Saguenay Rapids 10 more. Ile also purchases some millions of feet from the Ottawa. It is said he has furnished, forseveral yeirs employ ment for from 2000 to 3000 men, and frevtol over a hundred ships annually, With hoofs , : fur European markets. Eli Thayer, nf Worcester, IVassachmen': is about to go to Maine, to organize a cities! of lumbermen forliansas. lie sayA 'tthey the mromtest and bravest men en this Conti. aunt—the Ifighlanders'of America. When one shows a general want el co°': (fence in others, he deserves none in hinm ° This ii olivine:ins an axiom. At the instigation of the Russian Gael mont, Persia has suppressed all. her Prot schools. "