- 6111 1 :11 =0 TOIVANDA: iticbncsbaß Morning, .Scbruarp -7, 1849. NORTH BRANCH CANAL. LETTER 1. Its early proicrthm—immense chain of Inland Navi gation united and extruded by it. I make no apology for presenting to the public ta this:time, a series of facts and reasonings in re lation loathe North Branch Canal. Governor Johns ton, with a characteristic frankness and statesman like precision, has called the attention of the Legi.s }attire to the subject; and a bill, providing for the oompletiwn of the work, is now under discussion. At the same time, the citizens of Northern Penn sylvania, with great unanimity, are urging the mea sure by petitions. In what I now undertake ; I . do -riot propose to offer much that is new, either in fact or argument. All that I expect to accomplish in -these letters, is to collate, revise and combine in a convenient form, such data as I deem best calculated to aid and in form those who may be desirous of examining the subject at the present moment. If antiquity may be allowed weight, in consider... ing Projected public improvement, the friends of he North Branch Canal might urge, that the work was One 'of the earliest to which the attention of the people of s Pennsylvania and New-York was 'diree ted., The union of the valley of the Susquehanna iiiihtheiVreat IVestern Lakes—the opening acon venient' avenue for exchanging the rich mineral produdtions of the two States—entered into the ear liest plans of internal improvement ; which enlight ened enterprize conceived in this country. It was shadowed forth in the project of Dr. , Smith the scientific Rittenhouse, as early as 1762. The pub lic spirited' Duane, .gives it a prominent place in his pamphlet on "Roads and water Transportation," published in 1810; and points out the " practica bility of a canal between the head of Seneca Lake and the Tioga river." In 1811 and 'l2 ; the meas ure was discussed before the Legislature of Penn sylvania : and cont:nued to gain public favor, until 1817—when Messrs. Brooke and Treznyliny were sent by the authorities of the State to explore the mute. These gent!emen, at that time. adtually surveyed and . defined at the expense of Pennsyl vania, the very line upon which the State of New York subsequently constructed theChemung canal ! All this, was before the discovery that Anthracite coal was the cheapest and best fuel in the world; and when the trade in New York gypsum and sa't was comparatively, in its infancy. In 1828Ahat far-sighted Statesman, DeWitt Clinton, in his an nual message to the New York Legislature, la ments the failing forests of the fertile country bor dering on the Lakes; and urges in emphatic terms, the necessity of - securing some avenue throngh the v.illey of the Susquehanna, to the coal fields of Peniisylvania.• This project continued to grow in public esti• melon, until at length the State of New Yak commenced and completed the Chemung and Che n:lngo canals. avowedly for the purpose indicated I , y Gov.Clintoii ; at the outset. Our own Fate corn pleteil the North Branch canal as far as the mouth of the I.,askaranna. From this point to the Northern I oundary of Pennsylvania, a distance of ninety four miles. (known in our 'Cabal Reports as the " North:Branch Extension - )—the work progressed. tritd May. 1 8 11. when all the unfinished improve. TrlC[ll.l of the State. were abandoned by the Legisla ture. At this time there halt been expended oil the ‘• North Branch F,yterUott.•' the sum of tth en/honv par hatred and rizhly pie titans out nine kindred and thirty-nine (1011 , 11 . S II MI silty cents : De tacked sections of the work had teen completed. amounting to thirty tarn and a hilf miles : and noon the remaining portion of sixty-one and a half miles, more or less work had been done on every see, Lon ! Locks and. Lock-houses Were' erected : and a beautiful and exper.sive tow ing path Lodge across' tiro Susquehanna at Towanda. awaited the use of tae State. That such a work. requiring-a little more than a million of dolling to c o m pl ete have been abandoned by a wealthy and powerful Com Mon wealth, is a case s holly unparalleled in the history of public proceed now to consider the extended and un• broken chain of canal navigation, of which the North Branch will form a irntral and unitcng link ; and the immense extent of public improvements with which it will be connected. In doing this, 1 shall/avail myself of a sketch which 1 have before given to the public ; in another form and upon a different occasion. An-inspection of the Map of the United states. will aid in the illustrations w:dch lam about to pre sent. The Erie Canal or Nevv York lies itt the locg talky which extends from the Cubes Falls on the east, to the Irondequoit valley on the west. It Is bounded by the highlatgls that separate it from the Ontario valley on the north, and from the Sus goeliannk on the south. • Oswego river, the outlet of fifteen lakes. is the on ly stream which pene.rates the norhern mountain barrier; it breaks over this at an elevation of one hundred feet above Lake Ontario. The southerh i tan:ze is not intersected by a singlei I imponatit stream. These highlands are nearly allot' the same alulude y and have numerous depressions. The low e‘t and most remarkable one in the southern rage, is that in which Chemung, Canal is located, between Seneca lake and Chernung river. The summit here is 465 feet.above the lake. From the Cayuga Lake to Hudson river, the low e!t derression is the Oriskany valley -now occupi ed by the C`tenango Canal. This ridge, bounding, a 5 we have said, the long valley on the math, tro ve ses the country in an undulating line. Its sum mit is generally from twelve to fourteen miles (Ha unt from the Erie Canal : us tar west as Onandaga. At the Port Watson summit, the rise is almost en tirely within the (list wee of five miles. From this ;P-no, the range W 3 are rurality, sw.:e.s t ,s .. . . _ .. . . • • THE _ . . . RD R , , , , ~..„ .., ~,,..„,..,.,..,' ..,...,. r .... t ,. - ..,., southwesterly direction, and becomes the southern boundary of the Skeneatales, the Seneca, the Cay uga, and the Crooked lakes. The Susquehanna river, and nearly all the streams flowing into it, rise near the summit of the ridge we have traced. Geologists would term the whole country between This summit and the Susquehanna valley, table land—worn by the .action of water, through successive ages, into numerous large, and nearly parallel melties--having, generally, a course north east arid south-west. Through these ravines, or reifies, flow the rivers of thecountry with a gen• tie current on their way to the Atlantic, through the valley of the Susquehanna. No one viewing this part of the State of, New York, and tracing the nu• memos fertile rallies which branch northwardly from that of the Susquehanna. and terminate near long navigable rivers, or within a few miles of the i✓rie Canal—can avoid being strongly impressed with the simplicity and beauty of the geological structure of the country, and the name:oils filed ties for internal trade I waive, for the present, a particular considera tion of the character and extent of this trade—in order to follow out the view 1 have commenced.— Let the reader again -recur to the Map: Havre de ,Grace, on Chesapeake Bay. At this-point commen ces die' Susquehanna, or Tidewater- Canal, which extends to Columbia on the Susquehanna river—a distance of forty-five miles. Here it unites with the Central division of the Pennsylvania Canal, which continues up the river to Duncan's -Island.— At this place, it bri.nehes off; up the Juniata to the Ohio river, at Pittsburg in one direction, and as- cends the valley of the Susquehanna, in another.— The latter. is the route we are considering. A wide, well constructed Canal is compleied and in opera tion along the Susquehanna to Pittston, at the month of the Lackawanna. From Pittston to the North ern boundary line of Pennsylvania, as j have be fore stated, the canal is more than two-thirds fin ished. Thence to Elmira, seventeen miles--also un finished, which will unquestionably be provided for, either by the State of New York, or by indivi dual euterprize. as soon as the work on the North . Branch of the Susquehanna shail.be resumed. At Elmira we reach the Chemung Canal, constructed by the State of New York, to the head of SeneC'a Lake. Here this beautiful Lake, narrovc, deep and never frozen, is navigated by steamboat t s at all sea sons, d'own to the outlet at Geneva. Thence partly through the outlet of the Lake, and partly by a State 'improvement; we reach Montezuma, on the Erie Canal. Thus, it will be perceived—when the sec tion between Pittston and Elmira is completed (and the work is already more that half done)— there will be, through the heart of the two great State, of Pennsylvania and New York, an unbroken line of internal no-rico/um—uniting Chesapeake Boy, Lake Erie, Lake Ontario, Lake Champlain and (he Hudernt ricer ! Now, bef we t proceed to remark upon the cost of completing this work, let us trace again the line I have pointed out, and mark in detail its numerous connections and inlets, and the immense space over which they spread, like arteries in the human frame, itiffnsing life and energy thmughout a great and' prosperous country. From Ha , re de Grate up the valley of the Sitsipie‘ianna, 'to the Northern boundary line of Pennsylvania. is about three hundred- miles. From tai through the Sen ora lake dud by the Eri-t canal to Biiflaln. two hun (Led ati,d -ixty more—making, in round numbers, hue or rommuttietition between Chesapeake Bay .tiel Lake Erie. five hundred anti sixty miles. liiiersecing and lateral to this line, on our way Northward from the hay, we have, first, at rolum bia. the railway to Philadelphia. eighty min miles in length. Then, at Middlenic r. we find the l'n ion canal rotro.eted to ith he Stitto a,ifl ri‘Or at Reading. eighty two n ale-.. F win Readin 7, the Sthu)I1,11: I:art.:3llon. ex titilii.g some sixty miles further, males the luny complete from the Suitque liattna river to Philadelphia. To resume our mute: from Midillenown. up the valley of the Susquehan na. we next have, at Ilariisburg. the railway thro' a part of the fine old 'county of Lama, er, to the coy of Lancaster, thirty-five miles. CrosQing to the other side of the Sus ehanna from Harrisburg, is the Cumberland Valley rithsray (partly finished) to Chambersburg, fifty miles— :Still upward. at Duncan's Island, is the line extend ing op the Juniata. and across the Alleghany to Pittsburg, two hundred and fifty-eight. Here, the Pennsylvania rail road also takes the same direction. At Northumberland diverges the West Branch canal, running almost to the geographi cal centre of the State, seventy-three miles. At IVilkes-Barre, we meet with the works of the Le high Navigation Company, which, crossing the Delaware river at Easton, unite with the newly im proved Morris canal, and make the chain perfect from Wilkes-Barre, on the North Branch of the Susquehanna, to the city of New York, one hun dred and ninety four miles. At Towanda, Brad ford county, a railroad near twenty miles in length, penetrates a rich bituminous coal field, with exten sive beds of iron ore intermingled, like those at Pittsburg. At the State line, above Athens, MOW ing the line of navigation, we have been pursuing, is the New York and Erie railway, four hundred and forty-six Miles. This point is about eqei-dis tatt between the two extremities of that great work —Dunkirk, on Lake • Erie,' and Tappan bay, on Hudson river..' • At Elmira there is a connection by canal and railway, with the bitmninous coal fields of Tioga county, Pennsylvania, fifty miles. From Elmira, our route proceeds by the Chemin canal (which should be enlarged to accommodate the immense trade that will crowd through it wheu the remain der of the line is completed) to the Seneca Lake, twenty-three mile*. deep, narrow - lake stretcher some forty miles through a beautiful coun try, precisely in the requisite direction and boats are easily transported upon, it to its outlet at Gene va ; thence partly through this outlet, and partly through an artificial route, (which is also connect ed with Cayuga lake) to Montezuma, on the Erie canal. From Mont izuma to AlLany is two • him. PUBLIMED EVERY WEDNESDAY, AT TOWANDA, BRADFORD COUNTY, PA., BY E. O'MEARA 'GOODRICH, U REGARDLESS OP DiINVINCIATION FRO.II ANT QS:ANSEL." dred and five miles—to Buffalo; one hundred , and fifty-nine miles. Those two distances make up the entire line of the Erie canal s conneeting Lake Erie and the Hudson I and may also be embraced in the lateral and minute survey we are taking. Between Albany and Buffalo (not overlooking .the fact that Albany is united to Beaton by an excellent line of railways)we find meet, nine aides from Al bany, on our. way northward, the Champlain canal, extending to White ball, on Luke Champlain, sec etity-six miles- Then at Rome : the Black Ricerca nal unites with the Erie—running eighty-six miles Into the northern interior of New York. At Syra cuse, the Oswego canal diverges to Lake Ontario, thirty-six miles. Passing Montezuma, the point where the route to Chesapeake hay unit a with the Erie canal—we next, at Rochester, find the Gen esee valley canal, extending to Olean Point, on the Allegheny river, one hundred and twenty-two miles. When we arrive at Lake Erie, • the almost endless naviguion of the great northern lakes is before us. We can reach the ocean through the Gulf of St. Lawrence, or proceed inland to the Gulf ol Mexico! Where, in all the wide world beside, can such an exhibition be form(' •Nhere, a country so In terlaced with such an extent of artillcial internal navigation. The North Brandt canal is the only unfinished link, that too, near the centre of this great chain of improvement; which passes two of the finest an thracite and bituminous coal regions in the Union, and through, also, large deposites of gypsum and lime. The rich salt springs of New York are by its side, and its whole distance is through a thickly populated and fertile country. LETTER 11. . • Present condition, and probable cost of completion—. Connedion rrilh the New York Improoesnenis. Before entering upon any consideration of the revenue which the State would derive from the completion of this work, it is proper I should look at its present condition, and the probable Cost of such completion. The dimensions of the work, as far as construct ed above the mouth of the Lackawanna, correspond with those on the line extending down the river to Columbia. The width is twenty-eight feet on the bottom; forty feet at the surface,—providing for four feet depth of water. The locks are ninety feet long by seventeen feet wide in the chamber ; and the lockage, from the mouth of Lackawanna to the State line, averages but little overtire feet per mile ! Its capacity, when completed, would ,therefore, tk ample to pass a million of tons each way, every year. I have NUJ, that part of the North Branch line above the Lackawanna, is designated in our Canal Reports as the " North Branch Extension ;" in or der, probably, to distinguish the expenditures upon it, born those on the line below, which, down as far as Northumberland, was called originally, the " North Branch Division of the Pennsylvania Ca nal." This "North Branch Extension," is again divided into the u Tunkliannock - Line"—from Pitts ton to the mouth of Wyalusing Creek, fifty-four miles and nineteen chains: and the "Tioga Line' —extending from the Wyalusing Creek to the State bite, tinny-nine miles. The amount already ex pended on each of these divisions, is about the same ;—the gross sum on both, is :2,484,939 On. The amount necessary to complete the upper sec tion. or " Tioga Line," is estimated by the State engineer. at *215,656 08 ;—the lower, or "Tunk liantiock division," would te.quire upwards of a, million of dollars. To be precise: the amount te quire I, according to his estimate, to complete both hues, is *1,277,452 81. II is proper to sia . e, boa ever. in this place, that the experienced En gineer. (W. R. Foster,) who made this estimate, on the . f t.te State, made it in accordance with the on4itial. plaits of 'he work, which. were of the most beautilul and durable description. If comple tell under the specifications and contracts existing at the time of the suspension—(and more than two thirds of it has been already so completed)—it would be one of the best canals, in regard to the manner of construction, in the Cnion : and I may add in the same connection, one of the cheapest. The same able Engineer, at the instance of some public spinted individuals of Philadelphia and the Northern counties, made a resurvey of the work in 1847, with a view to report upon its pre. sent condition, and to ascertain the probable cost of a substantial, but economical completion; such as consisted with the more limited means of private enterprize. His gives the following as the resultof a careful examination:— 1 Dam across the Obemang, at Athena, $14.767'110 2 Dam across the Bnsquehann, 107,222 00 Total estimated cost of Dams, $122,019 00 9 Aqueducts, three of which are part )3+ built, 6109,710 00 27 Locks and 2 Guard-gates, three of the former being completed, Dottie ' work done at six others, 148,825 00 31 Culverts, tangang from 2 4o 24 feet span, 33,220 00 2 Towing-path bridge over the Chemoug, $11,028 08 I do do over small run at Towanda, " 500 00 84 Road and farm bridges over the canal, of which • 21 are either linishedor partly so, 27,500'00 Total estimated cost of bridges, 8,191211 00 27 Lock-houses. 0,500 00 19 Waste-weirs, five of which are partly finished, 10.000 00 18 water-ways around Locks, 5,400 00 Making roads where destroyed by canal, 11.600 00 Making fence, 15,000 rods, 11.700 00 Removing buildings from the' Ihte of canes, 2,400 00 sections, comprising Excavations of Ea nh . and rock, embankments, Ver tical and Slope Walls, Lining, Pad dling, &e.„ 599,727 .00 Total mid cost of completing line, .1,106,037 00 The foregoing estimate contemplates , a perms. neat and useful work, dispensing with all orna. meat, and only providing for what is necessary to wake it substantial.. The Darns are designed fe be made of round and square timbers, well framed and planed toeth er, and compactly filled with stone; the slopes to be covered with oak timber, not less than eight inches thick, and well secured to the Dams With iron bolts. The abutments are to be Piunded at such depths as to render them secure, and to be built of heavy durable stone. At each dam, pro vision has been made in the est:mate, fur the con. struction of a schute, suitable for the sate descent el arks and other river craft. The Aqueducts will all be upon gravel founda tions, and ate designed to have heavy stoue abut ments and piers, resting upon a platform of timber and plank, stink to such depths as to render them secure from the action of the floods in the several streams, and prevent their undermining. The ma wary to be rublie-work, of large durable stone, well bedded and jointed and laid dry. The MTN.- structures to be of wood. In cases where the spans do not exceed thirty-five feet, the trunk will be sup ported by string pieces lair! longitudinally Mule:. it and where the spans are to exceed thirty-five feet, the trunk will ce supported by arch and truss work of sufficient strength to bear any weight that may be re,quired. Th• Locks are designed to be built tfith good, heavy, durable stone, laid dry and faced with planks. The composite Lock is best adapted to the circumstances of this canal, as no stone suitable for cut stone locks are to be had, at reasonable cost; while those of a good quality for a composite lock, are easily obtained.. In regard to the present condition of the work, he states that he finds it in a remarkable state of preservation." The walls and embankments stand firmly, and the only injury t. e work has sustained by its sitspension,consists in the natural decay of those wooden portions of the locks,waste wiers and bridges which were whol,ly,or in part complete.l ; and at three points on the line, where land slides have broken from the mountain sides and partially filled the ca. nal. This latter source of difficulty, does not exist to near as great an extent, as he had amsrehentled; and makes but a small item in the estimateal amount of work required to complete the line. The points at which these slides are likely to occur, are all I now well developed, and by proper care in con struction, the line may be so . arranged as to avoid for the future, all interruption or difficulty from this cause The location of this canal is upon a high level ; and unlike moat other canals in Pennsylva nia, will not be liable to injury from the periodical floods in the river. On this point he examined par ticularly with reference to the flood of March last, which had proved so destructive upon the Dele ware, Susquehanna and North and West Branch Divisions of the State canals; and firma, with the • exception of the leeder levels, that this, the great est flood which has occurred for more than half a century, had not reached in general, abcrvethe plane of canal bottom ; and in no single instance had the water passed over the banks of the canal where they were raised to their full height. 1 feel entire confidence in the opinion, that if this canal had been finished and in use, it would not have sustained damage, by this extraordinary flood in the fiver. to the amount of e5OO, throughout its entire length., This is an important fact in reference . to the- value of this improvement. IVbile the Deleware Divis ion sixty miles long, was damaged to the amount of twenty-eight thousand dollars, the Susquehanna and Branches oue handfed and eighty-six miles, to near sixty thousand, and one hundred miles of the eastern portion of the Main line, to the amount of thirty thousand dollars, here we have a line of ninety-four miles, so located and t r . farconstruct z ed. as to be secure from the highek flood that has occurred within the past sixty years. Another important fact in reference to theiost of completing the North Branch Canal should not be omitted in the present view. The latirfs to Le oc cupied, have nearly all been released to the Com monwealth, for the use and occupncy of a canal, to be constructed by, or v ndix the aughorif yof the State of Pennsylvania." Th / iii item,, often a vexa tious and costly one in thst construction of public works, is nearly out of thi question so far as con cerns this work. Th,e few remaining cases, where releases were not obtained, present no serious ob stacle in the way of its progress; as the desire of the citizens and owners of lands along the line o 1 this improvement is so strong fur its completion, that I do z not apprehend the least embarrasmeut or difficulty from this source. A. connection of the North Branch line with the Chemung Canal at Elmira, is essential to make up the whole chain of inland navigation from Tide Water to the great Lakes; and without this, some of the advantages which would otherwise be de rived, might fail to be realized. There need be no hesitation, on this account, in urging forward the wotk on the North Branch. The distance of the connection is only seventeen miles along the val. ley of the Chemung ; and wilt be easily and expe ditiously made. Prom information recently de rived through a member of the Canal Board of New York, I have no doubt that State will carry oat its original plan of uniting the Chemung line with the Pennsylvania improvements.. Be this as it may—a law containing very liberal provisions, was obtain ed from the New York Legislature, in the winter , of 1846, incorporating the " Junction Canal Compa ny" for this route. I speak advisedly, when I say, within one month from the time Pennsylvania re sumes her work on the North Branch, a company will be organized and measures taken to complete this seventeen Mike, from the State line to Elmira. Besides, the New York and Erie rail road will be finished to Elmira next summer. At the State line, this road is located within a few rods of the termi nus of the Canal; and provision has been made by law, for connecting with it, if necessary. True policy would dictate the commencement of the work On the North Branch at both ends of the unfinished line, Less than 6100,000 would com plete and open it for navigation, above Towanda— a distaneeof seventeen miles. The whole " Tioga line" from the mouth of Wyalusing creek erterd; thirty-nine miles, could be opened foss Me mote 'than :200,000, octording to Nti. Fester's estimate. I A company is now oiganized, and only wait the commencement of the work on this upper piutton 1. of the Canal, to construct a rail Way or a plank road, to the Towanda Coal mines. So that this uppe r division would !ilea be in profitable operation. It wou'd be an illiberal and unwise policy to retard all enterprize on this divi,ion, unul all eltz.ttid be complete below ; and nothing would be gained by Puck a manse, to the people of the Wyoming coal *region. Hrving, thus adverted to ei.ltters naturally pre liminary to a discussion of the probable trade :Ind revenue of the North Branch Canal—l shall•proceed in any nest to consider those E. übjects. jFrum the Model American Coat erj PENNSYLVANIA. A song of home, a song of modern days, A tribute to my glorious native land! 0 would the muse but aid my feeble - praise, And nerve with honest pride my faltering hand! The KeystoLe of this mighty arch. Which holds A continent within its vast embrace; Which to the waiting eye of hope unfolds Of Freedom and of reties the resting place. - Far in her quiet valleys many a gem Of rarest beauty greets the asking eye, As emerald. on Nature's diadem, Lie shining green beneath the bending sly Fairest of these, and fairer far than ill, . Brightest of scenes, whose beauties never pall ; The western Tempe," where the muse might dwell, With transatlantic song to 1111 ber shell Queen of the Keystone, on thy mountain throne 1 bon reign'.t, Wroitisc, by thy grace alone'! ' The stranger, pausing or the roeky brow, That far above absorbs the ling ering glow Of the fast setting sun, wid Get the power That oft in such a scene, and such an hour; Can lend imagination all it needs, Filling the heart with Poesy's brialt seeds, And but for Holy Writ might locate there The garden of the lost, primeval pair) As if creating nature sank to rest, Had laid her fairest ottspring on her breast. Touched with each pace, her power could du no more The first born beauty of her lavish store. Well might his truthful pencil touch the scene; Whbse strong desire to breathe his tale aright, Led him where poet's eye bath se'dom been, A calm spectator of the deadly fight, When rang the shout on Hoenli oden's field, And thousands to the sword and tempest yield. Well might the bard's poetic fancy soar. And give to Gertrude time-enduring fame. Her forest Eden by the winding shore, " A local habitation and a name." Thus, when he formed her for all hearts to lover And gave her beauty a poetic.l.fe The eagle's courage blendett with the dove, And cast her lot amid the savage strife— Too strong of heart for all but hive's sad pain, The sweetest image of the poet's brain. Full well he laid the scene, where after years The fairest of their sex in pease should dwell, And give to her the tribune of their tears, Who lov'd, alas! too fondly and too well. Oh ! Susquehanna! on the earth's green breaSt, No br:ghter river greets the morning ray"— No sweeter water, flowing to its rest. / Add. its fiesh'inbute to the Oceari f s / iprayi I see in many a sorrow-fostered dreant, - The mountain-guarded home of her years; Thy shelving beach, and rock-reftecting stream, They stir once more the fountain of my tears. Green are the graves o'er moray an early frieud. And happier far in th;seiince all must die; . They sleep in that old cheirch yard, and their end Is hallowed where I,May not hopevo lie. On, Pennsylvania! trbuld the muse impart To my weak pen uipraise thee as thou an! Great in thy ',wire wealth as thought could crave, Great in thy wi*th, thou never hadst a slave! True to 111;1j/under's law, the proud increase Exemplihe the noble arts of peace. Thy playis are whitened with the waving grain, Thy mountains teem with many a winding Veill Of that rich ebon gem which sends afar Thlrgiant ship, and whirls the giddy car. The rough munitions of embattled fields. /And ocean war, thy pregnant bosom yields. Shall we not be as hope would fon . dly ask, The bright example to pregressive'manl Oars be the glory, ours the noble task, To teach all nstiens liberty, and span The rolling earth with mane a mighty chain Of firm-wrought links, and draw'mankind again In that love-hated circle, where the lxiiist should be—who acts the wisest, does the most. 1% here the ehim light neon each peacefip land Sheds the colt radtance of commencing heaven When f .es extend the land-he'd hostile hand. And mutual wrath and wrong are all forgiven; While in that time the conqueror's cruulbling car Lies rotting in a love-pr deeted worldi And -rapine, avarice, revenge, and war, To the dark region whence they came are htirl'd The n Don day sun no more shall hide his ray Behind the veil of battle-wreathing dna. And moss-grown bastions mouldering to decay. Shall signal forth the reign of peace begim. This is the promise, are we not the means To bring the end—the -taffwhere Witte still leans Her tired form, and wt is the uttered word That twinged' rest—the mandate of the Lord? Philadelph:s. January 114.9. J. R. BARSTOW. A Goon Wirr.—A friend of ours, who has been spending a lew weeks in the "country," and who has visited some of the private dwellings of the rus tic inhabitants, tells of a singular old man who lives near Brookfield. lie is somewhat noted for his oild expressions. He was one day visited by a small party of ladies and gentlemen ; who went to hear his "talk." " Now, young gentlemen," said he, "I will give you some - thrections how to tell a good wife. A good wife will be like three things, and she will not be like them. She will be like the snail who stays at home, and she not be like the snail who carries all it has on its back. She will be Bice the echo, that speak# when Spo ken to, and she will not be like the echo, always to have the last word. See will be Me the town clock, that speaks at theright time, and she will not be likd the town-clock. heard all over the town !" A Pooa Esnottsea.—A worthy, but poot miniA ter, writing to a friend from the country, requested, a few days since, the loan of filly dollars from the cashier of one banks; and kr the ma requesting the favor, he said that if the cashier would oblige him, he would pay him in ten days, on the faith o Abraharti." The cashier reamed word "chat by the rules of the bank, the endorser must remade in the Stato.---Kaickerbocter . GOOD natere is one erf the sweetest gifts of Pro vitlenv. Like the pure sonsnine, it gladdens, enlivens and cheers. Ili the 'midst othate, re venge, sorrow and drepair, how glorious:ere its efforts! . , • . it* follhwLig letter in releteime tn * this place, sud'the Tatey o(the . ;ineeptehatnnawa:toi'er ettrir fie,* the LAger, and war; alitten in Nove - Mteriast. Ik's suspect it is (rOmilie. pen ore gentleinan of tietphia r focally a member of the Penns) krauts Eieg,tela-ure. (full rhll 4 tielphimo, had as mu c h telligenee, tAul liberal 4 as our friend F., the North Branch-Canal would hake been tir.i."4hed years ago. The town ofTuwarhia is built on the west side 4.. f the &1St: 2 1101;1.1111a ;Ma is appoael.e.l from the snich east by a ma.! a !orb wifuLs round a steep hill And suddenly exposes to flit stranger's sight a bill viiew of the place. The main rdrerf runs :Ons a bet - of table land near the edge of the river. but the most picturesyie p"rtion of the town is located on the slope of a hill which rises to a cowiderable eleva tion, and is dotted upon the brow wi•hrotiazes aw l puttees. ,erne of the•-e'cortr, , es are of beautiful. denim, hnitarl finished and furnished wish elegance and good taste. The one planned and occupiedby C. L. Ward Ls' a hospitable citizen and acrovit plisttect ty.entleman, who bas done and is doing more to improve Towanda Oran any oth.,r man in it, wilt eompare to advantage with any reeidence of the kind to be bound to the &ate. C. L. WARD. his impossible to traverse the valley of the Snit. quehanna and not be impressed with - the COI/ vitlion` that Philadelphia, in . her long neglect of this region has been blind to her own interest and the interest of the conitnoncrealth. The whole trade of that country, which might easily be drawn to Philadel phia is eing rapidly directed to tile city of New York by means of hey finished and prijeeled rail roads and canals. The New 'Fmk and Erie Rail road already emmet:ts tror:fiern Peniist 'tarifa tridi the city of New Yolk, and -another reamed is being constructed down the valley of .the Litykawanna through the heitiii of the Wyoming coal field. In addition to these tiro works,. - which, unless coon. • tervailing measures be soon adopted will ineviwbly result triiiriously to Philadelphia and to the Penez / Sylvania -improvements, a third railroad is talke • of and strring.ly urged. to eitend frr•tn Pittston the north Branch t],l" the Susquehanna to th hannock Creek. and thence by the best ward to the Great Bend near the State ir tersect wilt the NeW York and Erie -1.;• latter scheme if carried into eller two, will in a measure superse North Branch Division of the upon the tnifinishril portion' f expended two and a-half iv Atork - - q /Tun nt nor li me, 10 lip .railroad. This . like 'he other ... the use of the enroylvania Canal, 1 - which the State has , Mons of dollars.' This phians hate heard much •essful - opetation for a &Tr ies, from the junction of rams of the Susquehanna moutli of the Lackawan ihe State lii:e it is unfinish tole length of ninety miles, been done The stage in I tbe bed of the canal for to base of mountains and 7 . In many places the :lark is out through the solid tuck, and hundreds of leet overhead the mountain turrets look down with frowninT. aspect. On the river. side.it is pro tector" by a sCope wall. rip rap and solid embank ment, against the fierce , l floods and freshets wtili out iojary or longer, which is more than earl be said of the main line of canal running up the Juniata. Utile North Branch eztension.rvere completed; it would connect wlh tne Cliemung canal in New York. and give a northern and western mar ket to Pennsylvania coal and iron, whilst the gypsum anti salt of New York' would be received in•retnrit. The immense lumber trade of the river would then her eondarted b* canal narigatrion the productsof agri rnkure would find a market in Philadelphia:. the business ericirgies of the North would beenrourag ed, and the resources of the State wrath , increased, It any doubt this, let them visit alai iew for thenr. gelves,• and then act ns yball become - the sober J ude meat of good citizens. THF: ISF.IITABLE DOWT.—Human It I> like a road which terminates in a frightful : we are.-Arneil of it from the first step; hut the law is gone birth , : we must constantly advance. I would wish to retrace my steps. on, on, forward ; we must unceasingly advance towirds the preCipice. A tlittusand vexatious ; a thousand troubles; fatigno and distress us en the road ; but if I could .only avoid that frightful precipice ! No, no, .we roust advance,awe must even run. such is the rapidity of years. We console ourselves, however, becausil _ from time to time we meet with objects write amuse us; running waters, passing flowers. We would wish to pause: on, on And yet we sees!l that no have passed falling into ruins oettind us, frightful erach, inevitable destruction ! W'econ.sole ourselves because we have carried off some Haw, ens. gathered by the wayside, which fade in our hands ere the evening approaches; some fruits, * which we lose in testing; enchtuirment, illusion I Still hurried on, thou approachest the. gulf: already everything begins to pass away: the gardens are flowery, the meadows less brilliant, the streams less pure; all fade, all pass away; the shadow of . ; death appears; we begin. fo feel - .the ap . woaeh the fiat gulf Bet we must advance to tins brink, another step. Already horror hint seizedzupon the scene; the head grows die 2y, the efes wander.... on, on, on. I would retrace my-step; impossible; all has vanished,. all is lost. . • :1 need not tell you this toad is Life; this gulf is Death.' MILKING COM.--It is important that all the milk' should be drawn from the adder; if it be not, the quantity secreted will diminish in proportion to the quantity left at each milking. That 1% bleb is left in the udder is re-absorbed into the system, and the next milking - Will be so much less in quantity. Cows will sot yield their milk to a person therdis like; bat will show by their. quiet attittkli mid chewing the ettd that the operation, when per' formed by a gentle and expert milker, is prodned tire of pleasure. The udder and tea's should al+ ways be Washed clean with water,- which in OM 'winter should be trained, This will. not onlY ind sure the cleenliness of the milk, but Will tame` it to } How more freely. • • • Mrs. Partington saysffie Neter rereeiteet bet synonimotel pester in hllife, and that spoke 1 • gorically of all her ne*Vntan' oink, Goon gaszbiscc.--Greitt talent renders a man &- mom; goat merit procures/ennui era learning gains esteem ;.abut. good breeding. Mane. ensures love and affeetkit., Ts Batags over ther . Ohio #ll Wheelint olicu *ititxiviii brit/0d fejill deg, . _.. r.. • MN =ME I swo talky of the Susquehanna I=l '~_~•~ . 4~ _~~