iriertoif laTor»l)l. &p«i m [ijbltft OOP* OKB TEAR. IN ADVANCE. «1 00| PAID W.ITDIN THREE MONTH. IJW | '■JP-NOT PAID WITHIN. SIX MONTHS. 1 W - ilpiN ot Paid within nine monthb, iji HOT PAID WITHIN TWELVE MONTHS. I aOl *AAU.Th» abovetorino ara M liberal aithoio of anr o*h‘ OCT ooantiy paper in the Btato, and will bo oiactod. odloooailnoanaowlll bealloweil untllallniroarageibaTf DUTV AND UABILITV OF FOBTMABTERB. loitißeitere ne.leotiß.to *J , R<f i a*brtboio'owhoo r ” ibt lame inbiorlbeti. and are liable for uie in R,Vo W «I. BO w euri.lV melltbtoeal.o»t th. ecnni, eof poiteie . •***"* ■ ‘X ■ 1 ' front the Washington Union. >'• ' , CONGRESSIONAL. $ Friday, February 25, 1853. ’ The bill for the relief of Hi ji'm Moore and John Hascalt was taken 1 and debated ; after which, it was re f rnmitted to the Commute on 1 atents and a PatentOftice. The Senate proceeded to consider the] m y appropriation bill. Among other lendments, one appropriating one hun ihe discoverer ol 6eh, Sg, bn* iila. led thousand dollars to i. o use of anesthetic agents was adopted— •as 26, nays 25. An amendment was so adopted providing for ;m a PP^F la ' ion of lands for an emigrant route to Cal. jrnia. After debating the bill until five '’clock, the Senate adjourned. Kite, JkXxii ■trio- Pan >—ll9 F*Y\ buoS ■ml: rdit- fS House.—Tho Speaker la.dJ.efo* toe offered by Mr. Gwrn, providing for .» sem • a letter from the Horn Edward roonthly ma d from ban Franc sco to Chi- gtra ;' s cvcry musc le to 1 as dcad . In St. Louis he learned I> J othu *“ mCA - ’ 1 j A , length it was proposed that she should Stanly, in reply to one from, Gommod nn< on whlcb m,, Houston addres tb f )hu f ldd) s 0 does the business man, illmt J lO had left that place some time pro- ; Uo duclin , hinisol p with partiality :be asked'’to step over a broomstick, as it latesby Jones, IJnitQd States Na y, J[ Senate ,n relation to the P° y in the pursuit of wealth, labor on in untir-; vious | y , and wa9 behoved to be m Lew , g B „ ilors o cighl Bpec ilkations. j had been said that a witch could not do to the House Commi d the United States Tnc J "\ e ing energy. Although the final cuuse is! Albany . Ho came hither, and upon in- ; pj • hia official station to induce so; hut the accused got over it without wh.cb ms or dered to be pn ntod. subsequently withdrawn, and the oiU poss B e Lon of property, the efficient; • Lrned that she was earning a livl, :* U * sM thcmse | VCB ,9. be de- apparent difficulty. After a consultation i|fho House next refusal to> P passed. territory or one is the effort itself put forth for its ac-. |' ol)d by sewing. lln learned that she al-, } iod . hi four specifications. lit was then agreed that she should he tried the consideratio _ Wi The bill establish'• s passed, quisilion. How frequently do we seo men so be fi cve d her brother to be dcad, not y A J ran |. us j„g his office to the !in a pair of weigh-scaies with a bible to tfhe relief of . OJO Committee Washin S on ' vli ® c who huvo spent many years of life in ac- , |, av i o g heard from him for many years. , bun eft of particular parties, six specifics-I [balance, her, and if she was a witc tie iV* ad then going ® to r C ° ,• n . /m, The report 0 r the commi tee ol confer ' 1 t ive pursuits, retire upon u competence, ; j jr j d went to the house where ho un-j 0 1’ L 1 ’ i bible would be too heavy for her. Accord “ Whole on the state o e encc upon the army bill, which the fsenute j th lbr want of the stimulus to uc- dcr ' s[ood his wife was living, but found , 1 ' A)] • himself .to be approached ! ingly she was taken to a mill, and the ex .fcing, of New York n the clta.r,)Jhc na reccded from lts amendments in l relation to h PCOUUS porfeclly wretched. They i that shc lmd le ft there a few days belore, j J° Q as to suits before him, i periment tried, but she proved too heavy ,*al appropriation bill' as de ,ft ered the emigrant route to the 1 acific, among , clieerfully through a succession ol ; hc enquired about Ivor general charetcr . q , flcaUolls . 1 lor the bible. it was (hen intimated that 'Speeches at length upon , other amendments, was concurred m. with the idea of retiring some day ! d dumean or, and found that it had also : > Interfering in matters in suits bo-. probably her doming prevented a fair tri & .Messrs Stanton 01. T he na val appropriation bill was taken lor the purpose of enjoying the lruit of I bt , ell un cxcepti on ablc. She spoke but lit- j q b j m rifincen specifications. jul, and a halt bushel of corn was put on Bowio ; and then the , , , on •"P and numerous amendments were adopt- (bc - r i abors; yc t, when the wished-for | ( | c 0 p bcr husUanJ, but told cvcry one | ’ - ! the scules with tho bible, to balance the Upssion was devoted to lur t hl ii : n f. ve . I ed’ Pending amendments for the rcor- d at | eng th arrives, they are, al \ cr “ i t |, a t s ho considerctl him dead. The lady | Daniel remarked the other day,: c | ol hj ng) but still the woman was too hea proposed amendments to its ganization of the navy, and for the estab- m j sera ffi c interval of inactivity, driven , o( - w j lolll ]) r . U- was making inquiries lbat the next time he put up at a hotel, he; vv< and Uiochnrgc was formally dismissed minutes speeches. lisbment of a board of accounts, the Sen- bac u aßa in to business by the uncouquera-; dlscovcrL . d that ho was the long lost hus-, shou i d enter his name ns “Daniel Sharp— j ■« r F „v U „ a D deforce of habit. ' ,! band , and offered 10 accompany him to JudRC ;. Senate,—l he army pp P House—The House ordered commit- Contemptible as is the disposition of the j [be bouse where his vvifo was sewing.— | vt'e asked him if ho ever tried it, and, mas further am ® n “™ “. ‘ nDDr on r i a u on tees of conference on the disagreeing votes m i ser , aDd foolish as it may appenr in the ; y arr iving there sho said to her “Mrs.; , )e ruplicd : ... ,„ ~ . The civil and dtp omat pp P mend _ f lhe lwo houses upon the deficiency bill, abs tract for an individual to labor lor an, ; herc is n gentleman who saw | » Y es, I tried it once, and it worked | was considered, an. n f ql> d the biil „ ran ting pre-emption rights to increase of wealth when lie already posses- ! uf brotber California.” She appear- 1 | i]<e a cbarnl . I had the best accornmoda-, *«ients were agreed to. settlors on tho reserved alternate ses more than he knows what to do with, aslonisb e di looked at the visitor, but , ions in lho house for about a week, with-, S lock the further co ,* / nd some se c,i ons of the public domain traversed by ye t the desire for gain, by stimulating ex- ntly did . no t recognize him. Ho out any expense—till tho landlord one Was postponed unti Mond y, ra i| ro ads. They next passed the Senate’s ertion, developes all the resources ol “ | brushed back his hair, and said quickly day touched me on my arm, and says . private bills vvere acte up , * i o i nl resolution authorizing the oath of of- people, and is really beneficial to man-; llK | i/a don > t vou know me V' Mrs. H- h Q ' : ” ■Ute, Senate d; f a person . | ice t 0 be administered to the Vice Presi- kind . If a man has merely to pul loril.. nlimcdiate l y 'swooned away, and fell on .at House.—-Alter tb lllp g iT 0 n ? A H dent elect in Cuba ; and a resolution pro- b j s han'd to pluck all tho necessaries ol' lh(j floor In the same moment a husband communication fiot • • fbr lhe seltle m o nt of a certain per fife, his activities will scarcely exceed thci: and bro[her) bo tb supposed to be dead, .Jtnart, Secretary of I the t^ e P. m , of members of Congress.- rcquired exertion; whereas tf he must. restored t 0 her . D r. H us we _. e |nent, relotiyo to certain allu After which they proceeded to tho further r i ng out his subsislunce from a barren and L gaid ha 3 ri;turn c d with a compe -OCCUrrg„Kf„CCnI y consideration ofVe report of the Commit- unyielding soil, or gain support irom u | loncC) and the supposed widow, it is pre qlaid upon the table. tee of the Whole on the State of tho Union bus iness requiring strenuous exertion, he j viU no longer sew fora hveli '7 The HoUS . e neXt r inference on the d"s !ontl e Senate’s amendment to thc army wiU bcco me an energetic and beneficent' W the committee o “ roprin tion bill; which being disposed a g cnt in developing to the utmost every, Tho [IW BtatemC nt, we are assured, Agreeing votes of p 0 i nl v an n r o pri- House went into committee, (Mr. rL . so urce of profit and success , but in do-,. g strict | y correct. Here is a scene in ililitary Academy {West I oint; appropn wher e -m , he lighl . - ng thjg it wi n, as a natural consequence, rea , lifc cqual in strangeness to any to A'lionbill. f Unnstnn the House houso appropriation bill was considered stimulate his innate desiro of gain, until it; which romance ever gave birth, ’On motion of Mr. Houston, the Hons ho WP f u WBB next passed in tOO frequently becomes an all absorbing , , New Albany {lnd .) Ledger. ften wentjnto a committee of the Whoto Thp report of lhc committee passion . If necessity ,s the mother of in- ... lh vT e in°[hl h chSr Vwherein amend- of conference on thc bill for the relief of vcn tion, acquistiveness is the handmaiden! World owes m e a Living. |few York, in 1,10 ch ®‘ r r ’ ) - • blll were Lieutenant Colonel John Charles bremont 0 f activity. ! No suc fi thing, Mr. Fold-up-your-hands , *cnts to the nav “} “JJLf s‘o 5 ‘ 0 five minutes was then concurred in, and also that in | ln a community like ours, there can re- 1 wofld owo9 you not a single cent ! lonsidercd and dlscu ® sed f h - h lhe case 0 f the bill granting pre-emption sult no permanent evils from the success- you have dolw nothing these twenty years until a laic> hour. . A ■ ' hts t 0 Bet ilers on alternate reserved sec- j ful aC quisilion or great wealth If for- consumc tho products earned by the ihe said bill was duly passed. “ of lhe pub fi c domain traversed by j lunes CQU Id be rendered inalienable, if tho I of olher men ’ s brows. '* Mr- Fa >'' oa leave, , int , rod , U ' ““‘I .hi railroads. Mr. M’Corkle then reported, | luw 0 f primogeniture and eniailraent could , „ Vul| h „ voeal ,„ m i drunk. urui«lepHt t forizing « street to be laid out over me Cofnmi[tee on Public Lands, the I devo lve upon the son the miserly accumu- j w eal nm) (lrallk un j a | epl again." tends connected wiihtho government nos- pro vide for a survey of the public i al j on 0 f the farlhor, and restrain its dis-, lh ; g is , bc sum total of your life. — pita.l at Chelsea, Massachusetts ;nn | and3 j n California, granting pre-emption | s i pa tion by spendthrift heirs, very * e "': iAnd tbe world “owes you a living V' For •fbe House adjourned. privileges thereon, &c.; which was pass- j generations would pass belore a moneyed , wba{ , j.j ow com es it indebted to you for Monday, February 28, 1603- Uj The House next wont into a Com- 1 nr i s tocracy would arise which would (lark- , jhat Ulflinir amo unt ? What have you The Senate were engaged in | m : tteuof (he VVhO , O on lbe state of the j cn tbe heavens, and overshadow the land ; p ? Wha , family in distress alscussin" the civil and diplomatic bill un- I Unioni wherein lho Senate’s amendments , but> as it is under our wise statutes ot ills-, havc bcfrionde.i 1 What products f.i about five o’clock, when they adjourn- I , ho civjl and diplomatic appropriation « tr ib u ti o n, thc wealthy son not unlrequcnt-, cre atc-d What misery have it'd . b iU was considered untii a very late hour; ly f, nd s himself in the end where Illc ; VO[J a |i ev iated ? What acts have you f House.— The House passed bills to au- when tba committoo rose, and afterwards wea uhv farthor found himseirin Uic be- - or f cc ted ? The world owes you a living ! torize registers to be issued to the barque Housq ad j ourned- ginning, at the very bottom of fortune s , j d[c iniin , N( . ver was there a more ab ay, of Baltimore, and the brig boundary, {e Thursday , March 3.—Mr. Mil- wheel. The profits of trade occasionally ■ surd i(ka , Y ou have been a tax—a id^to change tho name of the steamboat ’ d h credentials of Hon. Wm. flow like a spring tide into the possess on lhe world ever since you came . tiogor Williams and the propeller Onta- a senator from New J«- of the sire, only to disappear again in he b. 1 u ig your crcdi tor to a vast nof On motion of Mr. Dockery, a reso- J g 1 * . s from March 4th, 1853. hands of the son, like the morning mist. . Your , iabil - llies aro immense, fiii on was next agreed to, calling on he scy tor s y „,„ nr ; llt ; nn , r„r tho Restless exertion—men climbing U P 1 vour asse ts are nothing, and yet you say for the correspondence of tins A bill makin g U PP P ; Minneso- the lndder of fortane nnd lumbll "S down ; j be wor | d j 3 owing you. Go to work ! ‘Government with that of Spain relative to completion of publ cbu I again—successful operators jostling un- , am(junt in w hich you stand indebted nrisonors taken by the latter in hostilo at- ta was tuken up a p • guccessful ones out of the way—great for- worlJ is greale r than you will ever KmDtß from the shores oftho United States The naval appropriation bill was taken tunes heuped up an d then scuitered in a • thc rto liquidate! You owe .. ’ftinn the island of Cuba, „ up. Among amendments ottered to it, dav __ drun i ten and spendthrift heirs sue-. world \i lG labor of your two strong ’•“The bill for the relief of Frances E. Ba- which wefe debated and rejected, was one ce g ding m isorly and wealth-acquiring futh- and a || tbo skill in the work they to-Jwas next passed, and also the bill to abolish a board for the investigation of Qrs __ sons becoming rich who inherited, - huvo ined ; V ou owe the world 'fentin'T pre-emption rights to settlers on claims against the United States ; and as from the i r parents nothing but poverty—! lh ° labor of tbal br a in of yours.thesym •ffin reserved alternate sections of the pub- one appropriating 8000,000 for a propell r noise> bust i e) and conlusion in strife for i „ ath i es 0 f that heart, tbe energies of your Sr dbmbiri tra,versed by railroads; , frigate with Ericsson caloric engine iI e in> ia j u3l at the present day, and especi-: owe tbc . wor id the whole inor % Thn House'then went Into ,a Committee amendment \yhich was undor conside - n(l jn our countr y thc panorama ol bu- j f ntc n eclua i capabilities of a man . If tho Whole on the State or the Union, ,j on yesterday, lor tho re-organization of )ifc> Tho exer tions of the trades- k(j , hen) from that dreaming, do- Sllr 'Hall in tho chair ;) wherein the deft- the United States navy, was agreed to - marl) thc aki fi 0 f the banker, the activity nothin „ statc 0 r slothful ness in which you bill as amended by the Senate, A fter a long debate, the bill was q( . lbo bl . o i ie r, tho acumen ol the jirofes- ]ivG Q « d ]pt us nQ | onger hear that false 2m. considered. At a' lato hour this bill Thc fi g ht-house bill and thc Indian ap- sional maUi tbe labor of the artizun, arc assarlion tbat t h o world is ow-ing you, un ' rcnoVtcdhaek to tho House.tho amend- propr i a tion bill were considered and pass- exc fi e d to the intense action of the pres- have done something, thereto being disposed of,; . £ d .‘ l ent time, less by the pressure of necessity I 3 , Mr' Venable reported from the Commit- MiJler presentod the credentials of than by tbo universal aspiration to amass on the Judjciary on the charges against [he Hon . John R. Thompson, senator from a lo'rtune; but what precise amount of Wbhfi C 'Watrous, United States district 1 o rsey, as successor to Mr. Stockton, property a fortune is has never jetbeen l, lX V for the district of Texas; which . f nd Mr. Desaussuro presented ‘determined. The man who rises in lie 'teidWort was laid on tho table, and. or--■ 8 of Hon. Josiah j. Evans, morning without knowing wlhero he is t Wd to be printed. ~■ , his successor as senator from South Car- get a d.nner,fixes .tat a full supply cf oed T he ' tu |es wero again suspended, and The nrtizan who gams un ample live ihood ' o “" was taken up, and was under consulora with & rcasotiab i o expectancy of half tion at the time of going to press. a million The House had not adjourned at the hour of going to press—l 2 o’clock, _ On Thursday the House met at H, a m, and continued in session until l* m., of yesterday, (Friday,) taking a ro cess from S o’clock 35 mmutes, a. m., yesterdoy, until 10, aim. .'Fhis longs • -ting was devoted to. closing up the busi ness, of the session ;ulli the important .gen eral. appropriation bills and many private bills being finally disposed of. L “ ' ■ ' ; .in iv -i.. ■biplo p tb» Rlrao • tlie- I lti» ktiMt; hz It will lilk.H | ftixtr Id PUO&t' fcy i»i Ichof pcc«. uau* rort. t tin lev l*l« led i per. SV. h Ka ssi pEtj ism, iP*,' tottU o, *MU, :; k a iw»r 9liOo. •neb DNB. ttil. »U» tklllb' 02 '1 MW 1 J £lljl Tuesday, March 1, 1852. itifjs. — ; Tho Chair laid before the e> the seventh annual report of jp ,of ; the Smithsonian Institution'; thfi TPP ott of the coast survey, g.-ehnual po9t-routo bill was consid* iiid passed. 0 . oi .Senate resumed the consideration a civil and diplomatic appropriation '■An. amendment proposed by Mr. n t 0 repeal all duties on railroad .was tejected-i-yeas 10, nays 30 other amendments wero deba- SU the teat, one .in'relation-to P« n ‘? f . the:CteditorS 'l'-l \ I ’‘ *■ " ' " /V W* j»l ufi j m "fcr tk lIS s «»■ ' s . ' " 4’V -.Clearficlft - Eeimblicatt A WEEKLY PAPER: DEVOTED TO LITERATURE, AGRICULTURE, MORALITY, AND FOREICNJVND DOMES Hi INTLLL IC EN ( L Volume: 4, which .was still under discussion at eleven o’clock. - . flousE. —The House went into n Com mittee of the Whole on the state of the Union, (Mr. Harris, of Tennessee, tn the chair ;) wherein the Senate’s amendments to the army appropriation were considerd and debated until "a late hour ; when the committee rose, and the House adjourned. Sf.na.te, Wednesday March 2d. — Iho fsonnto resumed the consideration of the Idivil diplomatic appropriation bill; which, jjjf • • - her amended, was ifter having been lurl.._ The joint resolution in relation to the printing of the census was taken up, con- sidered, and passed. The annual Post Office appropriation bill was taken up. An amendment was Clearfield, Pa., March 18, 1853. From tho Horton Jonrnnl. THE ACQUISITION OF WEALTH. “I wish I wero rich !” is an almost uni versal aspiration of mankind, and let the worldly position of the individual be what it may, an additional amount of property is generally desired. True, thero are now and then glorious exceptions to the rule, and wo see among us men who expend, upon benevolent objects the full amount ol their surplus income; but as a general thing, the desire of acquisition grows at least in an equal ratio to success; and knew his wife, whom ho described, with- ecifica ii n ns. uut, however, lolling him ihe relation no , Presiding in cases in which he had i bore to her. The young man replied t lat so |j c i lur an j counsel, six speciti active competition in all dcpnrt- j \i,. H y. was his sister, and the last lie what is equally true, the disposition to he. liberal too frequently contract in the same 1 proportion. Tlr itc monts of trade, and the strenuous oxer-; lions necessary to be put forth in order to j ■rain the precedence, engenders a morbid is folly for mep of merit to think of escaping censure, and a weakness to be affected with it. Maximus said ho was a greater coward tha,t wag ufraid of reprgach Stan he that fled from his enemies. triumphs of truth are the most glorious, chiefly because they are the most bloodless of all victories, deriving their highest lustre fronrfllhe nhrtiher saved, not ofth&fetein.' ’ 1 '' u ‘! A BIT OP ROMANCE. About six years ago, n Dr. II ——, bav in" become involved in debt, left his homo uiid wife in another State for Texas, for j the purpose of improving his fortunes in; a place where he would be free from the j demands of clamorous creditors. In the i course of lime lie went with the army to; [Mexico, and finally wended his way to | California. After residing there some- I lime, he met a young man from the place j of his former residence, who, however, he ; did not know, and enquired ol him il he heard of her she was in St. Louis. Alter ' f or pi* our , U se moneys paid accumulating it competence, Dr. II ! ! into court, llirso specifications. left fur St. Louis, for the purpose of seek- ( . llJvicc in cascs before him Gkn. Pierck’s Carriage and Morses. On Thursday, the splendid carriage and horses presented by the Boston people to Gen. Pierce, arrived in N. York, en route for Washington. The horses, which cost $1,400, are of a light bay color, with switch tails. The carriage' is a costly one, the materials used in its construction being all manufactured in Now England. It weighs about I,‘JOO pounds, and cost about $1 500. It is made in the French caleehe style. The whole equipage, including harness, &c., cost $3,500. This hand some present will be presented-to General Pierce at Washington, by Messrs. Dun bar, Riddle and Fetridge, who are the committee on behalf of the Boston people. (£rA bill in relation to freo porsonsof color has been passed by both branches of tlic Illinois Legislature. It prohibits the entrance of free persons of color into the State, under 'the penalty of being sold into slavery, and authorizes the admission of slaves if brought in, or sent jn by ; lheir piasters. ' to l ■ »< •! 2- l- A Judge Impeached. —A select com mittee of the Wisconsin Legislature have recommended the removal from office of Judge Levi Hubbell for high crimes and misdemeanors. The charges against him, involving a most extraordinary amount of moral turpitudo, arc as follows : ' 1. Of receiving a bribe in the case of t S uit against Comstoclc and Sunderson. ! 2. Adjudicating cases where he was ; pecuniarily interested, with three specifica tions. ! Wilfully and partially passing illegal sentences upon persons convicted, with “You nre judge of the Probate, aro you not?” .. , “No,” replied I, looking careless-like.^ “Not of the Supremo Court, certainly ?” savs he. „ “No, rejoined I, “not of any court. I “Of what are you judge, llion ? contin ued he, thinking of the many fixinshehkd sent up to my room. “I am judge,” pompously returned 1, “of good living.” “He said he would be happy to have mo remain with him another week, but he expected a great deal of company the next ' day, and I had to leave. ' Literary Museum. The Massachusetts Truant Law. — By a law of Massachusetts, the authorities of towns and cities are empowered to ar rest and punish all boys who absent them selves from school, and spend their time in idleness about the stroets or elsewhere. ___ The law works well, and wherever it has Ta w v eks!—-La wyers"u7e the only men been executed, the results are beneficial to who believe that wring!- lldidintoVree duS/undor this. law rLet Judges tftluTlust nnd on officer is appointed in each to look Judges ol '“ -th to after vagrant children. In SeptemberOc rho n se of thd century before. Almost all 'r'ritrT'll”; . r nrrt rhipf'Justice Uustvsaw, who .or to the Alms House. u » J \ , fill of new ideas as lawyers are, asses t this s\stem I m ilk would still be considered the antidote | fur insanity Obseuve THE R-LE3 Judge Marshall, of the Court of Common i’lea.s, Baltimore ffrVVo find the following “wet blank- . county, decided a few Java ago, that Kfttl et’Wloa'ing about in our exchanges ’ Road Companies are not ioyersu..- Youn<> Mother— (who is extremely i u l injuries, where the samo occur p sentimental, on noticing that her first born, se.tgers whdo standmg on tho pin form ot n the cradle, is excessively restive)-The the cars, against the of thQ Con fFz-**** ,o ■* matter of, L re Railroad Company. The decision .a f acl ) It’s no such thing, Laura ; the child common good sense ns well as law te^ i has only got wind in its stomach. railroad companies establish rules fo the ma °" y L ! protection of passengers from personal m (TrShould misfortune overtake you, re- • , ry> t ho latter should obey them, or take trench —work hurder —but never fly tho: reS p o nsibility of the consequences. track confront difficulties withunflinching One o fthe rules on all rail road lines, is nerseverance. Should you then fail, you for passengers to take seats, and not stanu will bo honored ; but shrink, nnd you’ll he , U p un || l(3 platform despised ; African Colonization. —A bill is be own desires —wliom neithci jiovcrlj, no ■ ~, 0 f ij,;,' m:iK* above ten death, «,<**• **»-**' if «>»* courago to restrain his appetites coil cin - * volunuirilv emigrate to Li honors; end who is in himself polished VoJeTcor, 'Lieutenant Gov and round, pursuing, ns does a globe, IW _ ro „ ip , ro ||er, and Attorney Gener smooth and even course. , im> ’ c(ln6tiune( i n i )otu -d to draw the mu nov untl to superintend the emigration, employing for the latter purpose, iftliey see fit'the New York Colonization Socto tv. Mew Jersey, Maryland, and’Virginia have each mad©-/ tijtprbpriutioite' for i »o same object. \'■*£' Q^T*A Cuban coi're'spoddeht of-th® Rnl leigh Standard say 3, that Dr. Finley, an English practitioner oMong experience m Cuba, and « graduate of Paris, had covored in the course of his practice m Ca ses of small pok, that yacCinp .virus, aft* having once passetj. through. a system becotpes ds^es^ us a pfojibyflacyc to the whltßtfeeej. ; OjrA, Iti dis?i' l u Vy ■ Vfnj? fft I* 10 grj»un«,'»iV^i , !i'T iB,o - WD A.-*.? o^^r * ' it is not generally known, as it should be, that salt put in the mouth will, instantlv relievo the convulsive move ments in fits, either of children or ani mals. OCrA “dead letter,” containing 8'2500, was discovered in die deud letter office at Washington}, last wec^. C£rOpinion is the guide of fools, but reason and prudence conduct wise men. 03” It is wise not-to a secret, and honest not to rcveal it. , the Arl;qnsns_ Legislature there, ayq but tht'ee natives of tna.t ' hpflpy°M H n ve. }veH‘considered the end, L ,. • i.nc-tn-vi * ititinrd, l itintllon. •«« W, ssift; 8 ' lladhul,™ do.. „SS 3 ..Xcl'amTs'^h.^lS, I .qu»,e< * md»ttu, j6O I "ill » in' ; t nWA s? 10 a“'‘' K' J no 3 inonrhi. ,1 OH 1 column 3 uioMM. w , Hu ■ H mouth,. 060 l do o 1 .. yy yy do 13 mouth,. 000 1 do Id do , A libarel roiluotlon willbe made tuMoiChaut* ** whouuvenuo by thoyenr. . . . ..,ii Jf .iii h» Our tiaperehoiiltitM (never? lelnhborhooo.and every Iftmtly In ihe conniy—amt thereture ultotn C(»uvBuietttami oho»i> mtan* lai the bn»int*<» into or «' oouniy—thfl moiohanl. meut*«nic,ao<l all oUiflri--!o ** ,B, *\ ih« o! their Iroilu.n Mid bn«ine»> VVo t ' ,oQ J*f hho tu huerl **A Occrt” lor evory Mpchouiu. M®fCh«ai| aoa Pro'f6»ional tiiiu 10 'he outlay. We bare i-itotyil wjiboutenofnacMnaupoa nurrrndlne oohmioi. oud iom»l \n .i!iKitimni.»hnnQi;M willlu»ut*y arivertUio* ealoruitely— » f.»r. run erm*rnln»lo. the tnoreesUmiWcly"* man ailvmm*« the yrtßicr w 0! be hie protil*. . ?• Cooks, Jobs and Blanks, EVERY mWOKIPriON. I’UIMTEII.INI IIR VIIBY lil'.sr HTYI.I-. AND ON THE SHORTEST NOTICE AT TIIH OFFICE OF THE ••(.•I.KAIIKIEIjD HEPUIIMOAN.” W itch cut a ft IN PeSnsvia-ania.—i'he, Chambcrsbmp(?A.) Whig, relates the fob. lowing singular instance ol superstition, which proves that tho belief in witchcraft is not yet done away wit It: A correspondent, writing from Fulton county, informs us of a singular case of supposed ?witchcraft that ■ occurred near Sideling Hill. There is a certain'religious sect in that neighborhood, calling Ihcm solves the Christian Church. A ludy, one of the members, was taken sick and lay for some time, until sbe finally imagined i herself to be bewitched, and a sister in the church was settled upon as the witch. A meeting ot" the session was culled in due season, at which the minister presided, und the charce of witchcraft was turmally pie lerred ngainst tiio lady. Being a new cusp, and wo presume, not provided lor in the discipline, tho session was puzzled us to Cheaper than Matches. —The Alba ny Express, in the course of an article oil “Freaks and Wonders of Electricity," writes out the following “spiritual manifes tations.’’ “Happening to be in the parlor ol a friend a few evenings since, ho favored us with the exhibition or a very pretty electri cal experiment. His daughter walked briskly across the floor once or twice. and then rapidly approached an extinguished gas burner, touched it with her fingers, and instantly the escaping fluid burst inlp a flame, it was an entirely new way ol lighting the gas, and involved a great sav- I ing of matches. Any person in the room, if their shoes and boots were not wet, could produce the same effect.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers