THE BRADFORD REPORTER. ONE DOLLAR PER ANNUM INVARIABLY IN ADVANCE. TO WAND A.: Thursday Morning, April 12, 1860. Original |}ottrg. [For the Reporter.] MUMMIES FOR FUEL! [Tbi is n asre of improvement. Mummies are used Tor fueVon the Rai! Roads in Egypt, of which there are now three hundred miles. They are said to make a very hot fire, and burn rapidly, owing to the resinous sub stances in which they are enclosed.] Shades of the ancients ! Where are ye now ! Ghosts of old Egypt, appear ! From the pyramids, gazing below. Witness what horrors are there ! Yon iron ribbed steed, with a driver more cruel, Goes thundering by, with your bodies for fuel. Glorious destiny 1 thus to be jammed In catacombs dark to be dried, Then in a furnace, hot. to be crammed, And frizzled, and toasted and fried ! May be the hulk of some haughty Pharoah U smoking along to the city of Cairo. Fire wood is costly and mummies are cheap. And plenty euough to be had, Pown to the sepulchres dreary and deep, Out with the slumbering dead ! Never ye mind, though they once were a nation, Pile them along by the railway station. Pile up your ancestors ! sei! by the cord. Thoroughly cured for use ; Ileal up the engine, with prophet and bard, Nor linger to talk of abuse, Who cares for dead people, all turned to leather ? Pitch them all into the furnace together. The good ..hi rule naust never be broke, Lo " ashes to ashes, and dust to dust." Sp'ey the odors that float in their smoke Though the savor of virtue is lost. Back to the dust 1 long euough you've delayed it. The rule must be kept, tho' you sought to evade it. Foolish Egyptians ; you did not discern That the longer you've dried the better yon burn. Now halt at the stop ping-place, just to take on A cord or so of the dead- Old human rigging of muAle and bone— X<>;hing like that for speed. Hark 1 huw the dry bones rattle and grate. Swung by the spirits at dead of night. Breaking the stillness with sounds of fright. Oncc-it tuay eliance-these were fair foratsand faces Now bereft of their beauty and graces ; features >o rigid and callous, Moved long ago in the air of a palace ; Lived, and were worshipped, aud went to the dead, To sleep their !a-t slceo in a cassia bed. I Lhried forever is the fountain of tears From the eves thai wept iu the long gone years ; The cheeks dried away, cling fast to the bone ; The lips "clasp the teeth, and their color i* gone. Mcthinks the w indering soul would thsdaiu To dwei! in its old habitation again. No longer lie useless, go in with the rest Aud soon a new ardor will fire your breast. No matter what trade you were wont to pursue ' We'll now make an engine-driver of ydu ! And if you're a king, and the station is humble. Why then you must grumlde. mumble, and jumble. And rumble and tumble, with the speed of the gale ; Over the land of the Nile we sai! 1 Shades of the ancients and ghosts ot the dead ! Gainer for icugeance around 1 Lend the huge blocks from your pyramid's head. Hurling them down to the ground. Crash yonder black fiery Ghoul, that in thunder Rushes away o'er the plain with hu plunder. Seize on the nerve, howling demon of spoil, And drag him away to his doom ; Quench his fiery breath in the Nile. Ere he desolates even the tomb, That never the sonnd of a f- si robbers tread. May echo agaiu iu the haiis of the dead. C.C. T. I Report from the Committee on Vice and Immorality. Mr. LAN DON, chairman of tho Committee on Vice aud Immorality, made a report on the subject of the Sunday law?, which was ordered to be printed in the Legislative Record, as fol lows : i The Committee on Vice nnd Immorality, to which were referred certain petitionsaskiug for "such a modification of the Sunday laws as will allow passenger railway cars nod other con veyances to run on Sunday, beg leave t© re port : That they have given to this subject the careful attention due to its recoguised impor tance. The first consideration suggested by the papers iu the bauds of the Commit'ee, is that they propose a radical change in the nut form ami settled policy of this Commonwealth. From a period long autertor to the Declaration of Independenc© nntif now,our " Sunday Laws" have received toe sanction, express or implied, of the legislative authorities of the State. Re pated attempts to abrogate or seriously to modify them, have met with a stern repulse at the bar of nwwwire Legiclatures. Numerous decisions of our Supreme and local Courts, in ( affirming the constitutionality of these statutes have incidentally but cordially commended their wisdom. And the people of our Com monwealth have, as a body, acquiesced ia the poticy thus established, without complaint : they have, in lact. left us no room to doubt ; thai it ha* their hearty approval. With these familiar facts before us, we feel warranted in making a somewhat imperative demand of any party or parties who seek through our agency, to annul or emasculate these ancient and honored laws. We are con strained to say to them :—" The presumption is against you. Von must be able, in first place, to produce cooviuciog reasons in sup port of the change you would effect iu the hereditary policy of the State. And, ia the second place, yon most show that this change is demanded by tho public voice. 1 " With the ; ■ highest resptrt for the petitioners who present {i these memorial*, we are obliged to say that tbey have met neither of these requisitions. ! i The Legislature is asked to lefrtllretherum- \ i ning of paasentrer railtrar cars aud other pot* c conveyances oo Sunday. The popular 1 teguments relied opoe for enforcing the I application, are these two, riz .-—that the el- j tsfwqj ttaodav tw? ar a B-oepatbu apoo the PUBLISHED EVERY THURSDAY AT TOWANDA, BRADFORD COUNTY, PA., BY E. O'MEARA GOODRICH. personal rights of the citizeu ; and that it is especially oppressive to the working classes, to deprive them of the use of these conveyances on their only day of leisure. These objections, it will he observed, take a wide range. They make it necessary that the Committee should re-state certain elementary principles which underlie our political fabric aud pervade our whole body of jurisprudence. The fouuders of our government wisely ex cluded from their plaus an ecclesiastical estab ishmeut. But in doiug this, they were not so obtuse as to imagine that a State could flour ish without the aid of religion and morality.— They not ouly secured to every citizen aud every sect, liberty of opiniou and of worship, but they recognized Christianity as the religion of the country. In our laws relating to oaths, to blasphemy, and to the Lord's day ; in the appointment of chaplains, and in these obser vance of days of fasting and thanksgiving ; we have paid National homage to the God of the Bible. It is the recorded opinion of the Sup reme Couit of this State, that " Christianity, general Christianity, has always been a part of the common low of PemsyclaniaC This iui ports that we are a christian people, and nut u Mohammedan, a Pagan, or Atheistic people. It ueilber supposes nor involves anorgauio uu iou be'.weeu the civil and ecclesiastical powers much less the coucession of special privileges to j any religious sect. But it proceeds upon the acknowledged fact, that Christianity, lias,from j the beginning been the religiou of the great 1 mass of our people ; that as such they claim the protection of the laws iu the exercise of , their religious rights ; aud that to deny them ; this protection, would be of the essence of i tyranny on the part the government—ospcci j ally of a government which, like our own, re j i cognizes the w ill of the majority as its funda mental law. This is one of the grounds upon which our : legislation on this subject rests. Another is that the State needs the sustaining influence of that morality which derives its code, its sanc tion® and its efficiency from the Bible. Repub lican institutions have never survived the gen eral decay of public virtue. It is as essential to their healthful action as the atmosphere is . |to animal and vegetable life. The instinct of i I self-preservation, therefore, admonishes the | State toabstaiu from all acts which may weak en the restraints of mortality. And such is the obvious tendency of enactments designed to secularize the first day of the week. For, in respect, certainly, to communities and nations, true mortality is the offspring of Christianity: and Christianity cannot reach the masses of the j people without its Sunday. Whatever conse quences might ensue to religion by obliterating 1 from our statue book the modera e ani rea i sonable laws pointed at in the petitions, the State cannot afford to reptalj them* If these ' laws are repealed or e-seut.ally modified, uo j reflecting person can suppose the so called re ! form will stop until the other laws which re cognize Cnristiauity and its institutions have been abrogated. And this accomplished, the flood gates of vice and immorality will he thrown wide open in every part of the Com monwealth It would be suicidal iu the State j to sanction this policy. The allegation that the "Sunday L iws " are a usurpation upon the persona! rights of the citizen, is a sheer assumptiou. That they may le regarded as burthensome by individuals or sects which do not accept the Christian sys tem, in very true. But this is an incident which pertains to all legislation. Ia our country I at least, laws must reflect ihe will of the ma I jority of the people. If the working of a la* is attended with inconvenience, it is better that the few should snffer than the many.— But ia the present case there is very little, if any, room even for this plea. For the laws in question are merely negative. They establish j no church, they impose no creed, they exact no service, they leave every man free to adopt what religious dogmas he chooses, or to dis card all faith?. They require no one to attend a place of worship, or to contribute to the sup port of religious ordinances. They institute no | inquiry iuto the mode iu which people speni the Sabbath They simply ordaiu that Sun day shail be a day of rest ; that those who i choose shall have the opportunity of worship ing God without molestation, and that ait se- j culiar avocations which would conflict with these ends shall be suspended. Is there any j real hardship in this ? The hardship would be all on the other side. Let the" Sunday Laws'' be repealed at the bidding of a small minority of our population, and the residue, comprising the great mass of the people in every part of the Commonwealth, might with reason com plain that the' State, in depriving theui of their peaceful Sabbath, had virtually robbed them j of their right to worship God. lie would be a positive iuvasioo of the righu conscience.— We are not able to perceive that these rights are infringed by enactments which simply inhibit certain wordly employments oo Sunday This genera! view of the subject comprehends j numerous subordinate questions ; and among ' the rest, the particular question presented in j the petitions. The Legislature is asked so to : modify the " Sunday Laws " as to " allow pass enger railway cars and other public conreyau * ees to rua on Sunday." And the application j comes before ns in the guise of an appeal for the rights and the comfort of the working classes. The " working classes" constitute, in every land, the mass of the population. The wise and faithful care of their interests, is one of j the population. The wise aud faithful care of their interest?, in one of the most sacred and responsible functions of civil govemmeut. It must be said, lo the honor of our National and State governments, that they have not been i unmindful of this trust. Nowhere oa the face of the globe are the relations of capital aud I labor adjusted with so generous an aspect to f wards the latter, as they are here. In oo other feature are the multitudes of all sexes, ages i aud conditions, who five by the sweat of the j brow, so well paid, so wellclotbed and fed.amd 1§ certain; t>y r ouest industry, to improve their t cticuaacauces. No other naUoa devotes to t&e workiug aim sc much legislation, allow? j bm to much political power,nor male? tFe same ? I V VS*, v-vftgpf I " REGARDLESS OF DENUNCIATION FROM ANY QUARTER." ample provision for him when overtaken by age or misfortune.—This policy is equally en lightened as regards the prosperity of the State and as beneficent towards its objects.— We may refer with confidence to the Legisla tive records of this Commonwealth to show that Pennsylvania has always regarded and treated the sons of toil within her borders, comprising in this designation mechanics, oper atives and laborers of every kind, as a mother treats her children. And it is because this sentiment throbs with such power in her breast she has refused to do anything which might derogate from the just authority of the Chris tian Sabbath. For this day of rest, important as it is to all classes of society, is indispensable to the working men. It is tho only day of the seven he can spend with his family. It recruits his exhausted frame ; it places within his reach in valuable opportunities for self culture and im- ; provement ; it supplies him with means and in centives to frugality, industry and integrity ; it opens to him the only sources of comfort and ' hope which are really adequate and permanent. These are uo trivial advantages, but there are others which must not be overlooked iu i this connection. Sunday is the great barrier which protects the laboring classes agaiustt.be I wiles of ambition and the encroachments of , . merciless cupidity. Neither king-craft nor j 1 priest-craft can long delude a people w ho make | | a true use of their Sundays. And no intelli- i 1 gent operative can be so blind as not to see • that if the apacious money-making spirit of the j age could have its way it would compel him to ; work seven days iustead ia six. What, in fact, j is the very proposal now before us j Should the j i prayer of these petitioners be granted.it would bear with cruel severity upon the persons em ' ployed by the passenger railway and omnibus j companies. In the capacity of conductors, : drivers, hostlers, ticket agents, switch tenders | and the like, they and their families must ; already Dumber several thousand individuals iu this Commonwealth, and this aggregate is con stantly increasing. Those who are familiar with the service these men perform, are accus tomed to think that it is already sufficiently rigorous. What would it become if they were i compelled to -pond Sunday also in the same way? Is it for the State, instead of throw ing her parental aeris over this great company of her children, to break down the last dvke which protects them ag?in?t the pitiless surges of avarice, and surrender them to its fatal em brace ? It is acting the part of a parent for j her to say to them, you must relinquish to your } employers even that day of rest, which the slaves oa every southern plantation are allow ed to call their own ? We cannot think so.— We believe the State has uo moral right to become the oppressor of her own citizens. She certainly may not connive at the oppression of the weak by the strong; least of all, may she use, for these illegitimate ends, a day which I is not hers to give away. These considerations are too weighty to be disregarded, except upon grounds more conclu ! sive than any thus far presented to the Com- : uiittee. We can easily undertaud, that num- ; ; erous instances might occur iu which the runn ing of these public vehicles on Sunday would be a conveocieuce to individuals aud families. We can imagine circumstances iu which the want of tiiese would be felt r.s a hardship.— But the wisdom and equity of a law mn?t be tested, not by isolated cases, but by its general j tendencies and fruit?. Aud looking at the proposed enactment in this view—estimating i the consequences which would be likely to fol low, should a broad license bs given to all tho j existing and future railway and omnibus corn pauses of the State, to prosecute their cuatom : mary busuies.- ou Sunday—we eauuot doubt that the effect would be most injurious to the public morals. It would entice many from their homes into the haunts o: dissipation. It would do much to assimilate our Sunday law to that j jof continental Europe—a change which no ! 1 patriotic citizen could fail to regard as a great ! : calamity. It would contribute to destroy that I rcvereuce for the Lord's Day, which is not f ouly oue of the strong buttresses of the public ' morals, but as already intimated one of the chief defences the poor man's health and free dom against the insatiate creed of avarice. We have r.o idea that all these results would follow immediately. Enough that the ten dency wou'd be in this direction. The present ' is no time for capping the foundations of mo- j rahty amongst ns. The decay of public vir tue and the increase of the spirit of faction are the two great plague-spots upou the fair visage of the Republic, which fili every loyal heart with anxiety. To counter work these evils, is an object towards which education, re ligion and legislation may weil dtreet their most vigorous efforts. It may at least be re quired at car hands, that if we do nothiug to strengthen the cause of truth and virtue, we shall abstain from removing a single one of the pillars upon which it rest?, and this we are virtually asked to do by the petitions before us. Ia concluding their report, the Committee beg to repeat, that the views herein presented are in accordance with the ancient and heredi tary legislation of Pennsylvania. If there be any innovators among-t,ih?y are not the friends o f oar " Sunday Law? " We stand where the • immortal founder of oar Commonwealth stood j and we may be excused for re?:>:ingauy change j j in a policy which has borae the test of uearly two hundred years. Ia the - GREAT LAW," passed in the Assent- . bly at Chester sooa*after his first landing.Dec. 12. 16&2, WiLUAX PENS has recorded his esti- j matioQ ot the Fabbalh as one of themaiu sale guards of civil aud religious liberty. In the , 6rst article of this code, the desieu of which is declared to be. " that God may have bis due, I , Caesar his doe. and the people their due, ?o j [that the be?t and firmest foundat'ou icay be j ' laid for the present and future happiness of both the government and people of ihis Province." i | he thus or Jams the end that looseness, imiigwa, acd atheism maj act creep In under yihe preteuewpf gon *coce iu U Province, he Ertber wrioi by the authority aforesaid, accochnwr to the good eiiflot the pr i at - el.ietwr • limH tik we? o t tbcMhtk*a sUm ohb to* every first day of the week, called the LORD'S DAY, people shall abstain from their common toil and labor, that whether masters, parents, children, or servants, they may the better dis pose themselves to read the scriptures of truth at home, or to frequent snch meetings of reli gious worship abroad, as may best suit their respective persuasious." (Hazard's Annals, 1609, 1682.) Since the abrogation of the Sunday laws would be absolutely oppressive to & large mass of laboring people, who tend directly to the Increase of vice, would be contrary to the known convictions of the patriot worthies of the past and in contravention of all previon? legislation, would be repugnant to the moral sensibilities of the great mass of the best citi zens throughout the State, and directly in con flict with the statutes of Revelation, therefore we snbmit that the prayer of the petitioners should not be granted, and accordingly be it Resolved, That the abrogation of t'e exist ing Sunday laws would be uuwise in itself.aud ) vicious ia its results, and the Committee are hereby discharged from the further considera tion of the subject. GEO LANDON, JEREMIAH SCUINDEL, KENNEDY L. BLOOD. Report of Select Committee. The Committee to whom was referred son dry petitions, asking a law to prohibit the im migration of free negroes into this Commoa wealth, or in lieu thereof a slave code, make the following report : The petitioners ask that laws be enacted by this Legislature prohibiting forever the imigra i tion of free negroes into this State ; but if that request cannot be granted, that they : pray for a law by which they may be reduced to a condition of slaves. Believing that the requests are necessarily commingled, and that the former is bat auxiliary to the latter, your Committee propose to examine them connect edly, at this lime. The history of Pennsylvania shows her to j have early adopted a policy of the widest lib- ! erty and philanthropy to all classes of persons. : Her treatment cf the Indians and Negroes | lias given h< r a name which has become a household word among the lovers of liberty and humanity Aud to graut the request of the petitioners would illy comport with ail we liave ever known of her history, aud would be | a foul blot on her fair fame arid character. In the year 1780, finding herself iu common with most of the states of the confederacy, cursed with slavery, aud forseeing that the in stitution would work almost irreparable injury to the black race, that it was degrading and demoralizing the whites, and corrupting aud blighting all the moral, social and industrial intere?ts of the Commonwealth, set the exam ple to the world of extinguishing every vestige of slavery withia her borders. Iu settiug forth the reasons which governed them,aud the feelings which prompted so humane an act • tbey used the following language : "Impressed with these ideas we conceive ; that it is our duty, aud we rejoice that it is iu our power to extend a portiou of that freedom to others which hath been extended to us, and release from that state of thra'dom to which we were tyranieally doomed, and from which we Lave uow every prospect of being deliver ■ ed. * * * * We esteem it a peculiar blessing granted to us, that we are I enabled this day to add one more step to noi | versal civilization, by removing as much as i possible the sorrows of those who have lived !□ undeserved boudige.*' Iu lsl9, when the people of the State were unanimously protesting against a proposed wrong on ttie part of the general government, their representatives again said— " Nor can such a protest be entered by any , State with greater propriety than by Pennsyl vania. This Commonwealth has as sacredly respected the rights of other States as has been careful of its own ; it has been the uni versal aim of the people cf Pennsylvania to ' extend to the nuiverse by her example, the unadulterated blessiucs of civil aud rehuious ; freedom, and it is their pride that they have j been a: ali times the practical advocates ot those improvements and charities among men which are o well calculated to enable them to (answer the purpose of their Creator; aud j above all they may boast that they were fore most iu removing the pollution of slavery from among them." Again, in 1x47,l x 47, the people of Pennsylvania, through their Legislature, protested against the purchase of any territory by the general government unlets? those principles of uuiver-al freedom were guaranteed as a condition prece dent to such purchase. Thus through a period of more than three quarters of a century did the people of this Commonwealth in the most solemn aud signifi cant manner, reiterate their hostility to every thing tending to degrade, brutalize and enslave any portioD of the human race : and during that Ume'Bo man dare raise his Toiee in oppo sition to them and the doctrines so significant ly expressed But in these latter days ot po lotical degeieracy, when a great roonied aris tocracy has taken possession of the National | Govemmeut and many of the State Govern : ments, and when that power prescribe* the J condition on which its political patrimony is to be distributed and enjoyed, men can be found even in Pennsylvania to repudiate the doctrines of their fathers aud pay the price of i its political favors. This Southern aristocracy ha? for year? been preparing the W3y for reducing to slavery the few free black? among them. They find every thing which is t'rrr dangerous to the tenure by which they hold their slave property ; and, besides, tfcey have long coveted the great | amount of money they see in those men. which, atrciMmg to their own moderate estimate, . amounts to oue hundred million? of dollars.— Public sentiment ba? heretofore to a great ex tent restrained them, and the process of en slavement has been Sow hat sure, and steady hi the accomplish meat of Hs w©k They hare repeatedly aatf publicly declared that i ?l3Tery i? tLd ea tare! ;o©d;t*oc of black s race— that they have no rights which a whiti i man is bound to respect, and that at the prop , er coincidence of circumstances their enslave - cueut will be accomplished. Tbey want but a i pretext to disregard the public sentiment and - carry out their theories to their logical con r elusions. Granting the prayers of the peti , tioners before us we would give them that pre text. They, no doubt, are driving their fret 3 blacks upon us by their slew process of en s slavement, hoping thereby to provoke us to e imitate them, and not only refnse them admis ? siou into our State, but also to drive oat those ' already here. Such ac act ou our part would, : in their opinion, justify their contemplated ac -1 tion, on the plea of protecting their peculiar . institution from the dangerous surroundings ol . the free blacks. - It thus becomes a serious question with us. i Shall we stultify ourselves, and give the lie to i those doctrines of our fathers, by becoming . 1 instrumental, to any extent whatever, in driv -1 iug into slavery these unfortunate beings ? : It cannot be disguised, that refusing them freedom iu the free States is to drive them in to hopeless servitude iu the slave States. For bidding them egress within our borders, is a step in carrying out the great slavery pro gramme long since laid down for us by the Calhoua politicians of the country. A careful aud patieut examination of that programme and the necessary steps of its pro gress, commencing, as Mr. Calhoun himself in dicated, many years back of the annexation ; of Texas, down through all its movements to the present day, eveu including the subject be fore us ; cannot fail to show that it has all tended to these definite ends, viz : The en slavement of the entire black race, and the subjugation of the Federal Government to the absolute dominion and control of the slave power. We will new briefly examine some of the ! details of the petitions before ns. We are in formed by them that " fugitive slave? are many times retaken at the expense of mobs and the peace and diguity of the Commonwealth."'— ' We canoot see how the prohibition of free I blacks from the State, can remedy that evil. Nothing but the slave code asked for, which would obviate the-necessity of returning them, or a Personal Liberty Law, which shall pro hibit huutiug and taking them upon our soil, would accomplish the object. The excitement and sometimes mobs attendant the rendi tion of fugitive slaves, but proves that Penn sylvanians to-day are not unlike the Pennsyl vania! s of 1780, when they rejoiced that they were foremost iu removing the pollution of slavery from among them. Hence they recoil at returning a human being to slavcrv. They further say that " old broken down negroes, set free by their masters on account of their worthlessoess, seek our shores only to become a public charge, or prey upon individ ual charity." If the institution of slavery has so degraded and unchristianized her white peo ple, that after wringing toil from their slave? until they become worthless, they will drive them abroad in a state of helplessness and destitution, shail we, the descendants of those men who said they rejoiced that thev were enabled "to remove as much as possible the sorrows of those who had suffered in undeserved bondage," spurn them from onr doors and thereby do tbem as great a wrong as those of whom we complain ? Again, they say that " others still more ob jecliouable commit crimes, occupy the time of our courts aud fill up our jails aud penitentia ries, and thus in various ways increase the al ready uumerous burthens of our tax payers." Statistics do not show that blacks who have been born and reared under the inluences of our own institutions, with ordinary education al advantages, are criminal beyond many other classes of men. If their condition of servi tude has driven them to vice, theu are we not doing a great wrong to drive them back into such unfavorable and vice-fostering condition. Shall ail that is regarded as valuable iu hu manity be sacrificed upon the altar of dollars aud cents? While we would be glad to re lieve them from the bnrthens of taxation, and of a vicious population, we are not willing to absolve them from the Christian duty of being just and eveu merciful to the poorest of human ity Neither are we willing to disregard the obligation we are under, of treatiug the peo ple of each State in the Confederacy as having rights and privileges iD a!!. To commence the 1 work of isolation proposed, is to begiu freit : Hg \ asunder the threads which bind the State's to ! gethcr. Las;ly f tbey say, if these beings cannot be i forbidden oar soil, they ask for a slave code. In replying to this request we call attention to the effect of granting it, by a brief compari son of two contiguous States. When Pennsylvania abolished slavery she was inferior to the State of Virginia ia every thing which constitutes a great, pro?pereus 1 and happy people. The territory of Virginia was one third larger than that of Pennsylva nia. and she more than doubled ber in popula tion and wealth. Now their conditions are i more than reversed in everything which is re | garded as valuable ia a State. In 18b0, the city of Philadelphia alone almost equaled in wealth the entire State of Virginia, slave property included. At this day she no doubt fully equals her This remarkable change has not grown out of any natural' advantages we possess over her--on the contrary, Virginia, ia her climate and the nataral productiveness of her soil, is superior to Pennsylvania : and ; she boasts of coal and iron enough beneath ber surface to supply the whole world. Vet, with that boast, in lsso the total products of her mauofaotures, mining and mechanic arts were bat $29.000.000, while that of Pennsyb van; a was $155,01)0.000. This remarkable cuaoge is aUribstaUe only to the institutions of the respective States. The system of slave ry in Virginia is calculated only to impoverish her soil, dry up every fountain of industry and rrterprise. aud degrade and bruta' ; ze heT peo ple : while the system of free labor ia Penn i sjiraoi* tesds to elevate, dignify and enlighten the laboring classes, stimulate industry aud t enterprise, and develope all her aStora! re t' fcurcrs to their fullsy extent VOL. XX. —KO. 45. With these facts before them, can any con siderable number of our citizens ask for any thing calculated to bring their own State down to the deplorable condition of slave* ridaen Virginia, or to even augment those evils in that State ? That the influx of blacks into Pennsylvania may be to a certain extent an evil to ourselves we are not prepared to deny ; but that to ap ply the remedy proposed would be just or hu mane to those unfortunate people, that it would be honorable or creditable to ourselves and in keeping with the precepts of our fath ers, or that it would eventuate in anything but evil, we cannot be'ieve. Away may be open ed in time to render a system of colonization available. The great wilderness regions of Ceutral America may at some day not far dis tant become the homes of the blacks of this nation. The climate and soil are peculiarly i adapted to such a people, and they woujd un doubtedly be willing to emigrate thither when the propitious time arrives. But that day will be when those who hold them iu bondage shall 'do them justice, and assist in preparing the way for their exodus. The great work must j necessarily devolve on the South, and upon j the general government. It is impossible for ; the North to act, except by a moral influence •to that end. Had the slave States spent one : half the life and treasure in preparing such a | home for that people that they have spent in enslaving and brutalizing them, the work would ; long since hate been accomplished, and every i State in the South would to day have been far | richer in all the elements of greatness, happi ' ness and power. Thus believing, your Committee respectfully ' offer the following resolution : Resolctd, That to grant the prayers of your petitioners would be inexpedient, impolitic aud j unjust. 0. H. P. KINNEY, LEWIS MANN, March 26, 1860. L.P. WILLISTOX. I On motion, Said resolution was twice read, considered and adopted. INGENTITY OF BlßDS. —Tnrushes feed very much on snails, looking for them iu mossy banks. Hating frequently observed some broken snail-shells near two projecting pebbles on a gravel walk, which had a hollcw between them, I endeavored to discover the occasion of their being brought to that situation. At least I saw a thrush fly to the spot with a snail-shell iu his mouth, which he placed between the two stones and hammered at it with his beak till he had broken it, and was then able to feed on its contents. The bird must Lave discovered that he could not apply bis beak sufficient force to break the shell when it was , rolling about, and he, therefore, found out and made use of a spot which would keep the shell iu one position. Whe the lapwing wants to procure food, it seeks for a worm's nest, and stamps the ground by the side of it with its feet somewhat in the same manner as I hare often done when a boy, in order to procure worms for fishing After doing this for a short time, the bird waits for this issue of the worm from its hole, who alarmed at the shaking of 1 the ground, enceavors to make his escape, when it is immediately seized, and becomes the prey of the ingenious bird. The lapwing also fre quents the hauDts of moles. These animals, when iu pursuit of worms on which the feed, frighten them, and the worm, in attempting to escape, comes to the surface of -the ground, where it is seized by the lapwing. The sam 6 mode of alarming his prey has been related of the gull. DR. CR VYING ON THE " SIGNS OF THE TIMES ** —Dr. Camming has been stating his opinion at Leeds respecting the great events which ac cording to his interpretation of the Book of Daniel and the Apocalypse, are looming in : latere. He said the year 1867 seemed to end C 000 years cf the world's history, and , from the ea:.:ast periods onward it had been ' the almost universal belief thai the six days of creat'oi were typical of those 6,000 years, and that the seventh day of creation, or the Sabbath, was typ : cal of the millennial rest of 1.000 year-. But they would say that, sup posing this were so, they were at this momeul over 140 years short of the 6,000 years. It was a remarkable fact however, that the ablest ehronologist, irrespective of all prophetic the ories, had shown that a mistake of upwards of 100 years had been made in calculating the chronology of the world, and that the year IS6O of the Christian era began not from the year 4004 of the world's history, but in the year 4138, and that the year of Christ's birth was five years before that, or in 5132. If his premises were jast. then they were at that moment within seven years of the exhaustion ! of the 6,000 years ; so that if IS6T was to b3 I the termination of this economy, they had arrived at tne Saturday evening of the world's I long and dreary week. If this were so, it was a magnificent thought that there were some in that assembly who would never die. They were just plunging into days such as they had never before seen ; aa European war was loom ' ing more dreadful than that through which they had recently passed, and when these i things happened it would be seen that the sentiments he had uttered were not the dream* ; of fanaticism, bat the words of soberness and j truth. A Goon LAW.—The bill,requiring Overseer* of the Poor and Supervisors of Roads to give security, passed both branches of the Legisla ture, received the •auction of the Governor, and is cow a law. It was introduced by Mr \Yagcoscller, to. whose earnest and persevering efforts the people are mainly indebted fof fts passage. Under the old syatetn thousand! of dollars were auaaaliy lost to the public, by the election of it: competent,irresponsible nd dishon est men for Supervisors and Overseers of the poor. Under the new law, these officers are re quired to give security in a mm not less tbnn doable the probable amount of tax which may come into tbeir hands. ' " lA* / • • '1