HE OLUR PtR ANNUM INVARIABLY IN ADVANCE. TOWANDA : Thursday Morning, March 28, 1861. jMtttti Poctrn. 'TIS SWEET TO BE REMEMBERED. BY JAMES G. CLAKS. IWe Sail the following song going the rounds j „ f our Western EXCHANGE Us author. JAMES G-CLAHE, wei; known throughout New England, by h.s Old lloun- U'a Tree," -Rock of Liberty." "Mountains or Life. ■ other beautiful lyric poems, ,s m our opinion. , ,'neqoalW by any other song writer in the New ; &jtton Journal.] 0 ! 'tis sweet to >e remembered In the merry days of youth. While the world seems full ot brightness. And the soul retains its truth. When our hopes are like the morning beams That flash along the eea. And erery dream we know of life It one ot purity.— •Tis sweet to be remembered As the Spring remembers earth. Spreading roses in our pathway. Filling all our hearts with niii.h. 0 1 lis sweet to be remembered In the summer time of life. Ere we reach the burning summit With our weight of woe and strife.— To look backward through the ahadowe Where our journey first begun. And ih' z*dtn flotccrt cf mrm'ry Turn htir fu-tt •'<> tht Su.n,— Tis sweet to be rememi>ered As the breeie remembers day, i", j; , ; j a - ward f*om the valley. O'er the pilgrim's weary way. 0 'tis sweet to be remembered Won o„r life has lost its bloom, AaJ erery morning sun we meet Vfav ,eae us at tke tsiab.— When our youth is half forgotten. And we gaxe with yearnings loud. From a world where all are dying To a deathless world beyond. "Tis sweet to be remembered As tke stars remember night. Bhining downward thro' the darkness. With a pure and ho.y light. gtlttlG tali. A Fleet M-drriaje. RY AS IRISHMAN. LaJv C was a beautiful woman, bet Lady C sis an extravagant woman She was still tingle, though rather passed extreme youth. l Lie most pretty females, she hail looked too It; aid estimated her u*u loveliness too ivr. and now she refused to believe liiat sn tas not as charming as ever. So, no sou- Icr bt; so w itli all her wit and beauty, she ic. it* the Fleet, and was lkeiy to renain t'.fTf. X iv in the time 1 speak of every lady had ' her heal dressed by a barber; and the barber " the Feet was the handsomest barbarof the city ot London. Pat Philan was a pre at ad tr. rer of the fair sex; and where's the wonder? here, l'at WAS an Irishman. It was one very C:.s morning, when Philan was dressing her captivating head, tiiav her ladyship took it in -10 her rninrt to talk to him. and Pat was tll { tor Lady C's teeth were the whitest, and her smile the brightest in the world. "So you are uot married. Pat." said uhe " XiTer an inch your honor's ladyship," fays he. " And wouldn't TOO like to be married ?** ijain asked she. " Would a duck swim V I "Is then- any one you'd prefer?" I ' Maybe," madam.'' said he. ' Von r*ver k'.ttrdof Kathleen O'Reily,down beyond Don ex"? Her father's cousin to O'Donagliow, H 1 s own 'toward to Mr. Marj iv, the uuder ■ xrt to my Lord Kingston, aud ■ Uush 1" says she; "sure I don't want to I t:: who she is. But would she bave you if I pe i'sed her ?"' Ah. thin, I'd on'y wish I'd be after trying I £'. same." * And *liv don't yon ?" Sire I'm too poor. And r'uilon heaved a I furious sigh. " Would you like to be rich ?" " Does a do? bark ?" If I make vou rich will TOO do as I tell I T en M le-oarthes ! your honor, don't be tan- I t .rrg a p r boy" I ludee j,|l am not," said Lady C. So listen. I bow would TOQ marry rae V I " Ah. thin, my lady, 1 believe the King of I fovea himselt would be proad to do that same I 'i*; alone a poor divil like Pat Philan." " Well, Phi! an, if yon"! marry me to mor- I p.; one pounds " "0, whilabaloo 1 wtilabaloo ! snre I'm mad I <* enchanted by the good people," roared Pat, I Cia- - j round the room Bat there are conditions," says Lady C. After the srst dav of onr nipuals you must It'ver see me again, nor claim me for vour I I don't l.ke that." said Pat, for he had I Ctf - °gkng her lady ship roost desperatelv I , Bat remember Kathleen O'Reiiey. With w oooey I'll pj ve TOO TOU maT go and mar- I her." I Tnat's tiirne," savs he. " But, thin, the I n=T * I . • a "cr appear against yon," says her I *J?sa p "Only remember yon must take an I i?" - sme time. Pat thought he was in a dream,-and the creditors thought they were still worse. The following day they had a meeting, and finding how they had beeu tricked, swore they'd detain poor Pat forever. But as they well knew that he had nothing, and wouldn't feel much shame in going through the Insolvent Court, they made the best ola bad bargain, and let him go. Well, vou niiist know, about a week after this, Paddy Philan was sitting by his lutie fire, and thinking over the wonderful things he had seen, when as sure as death, the p >-t -man brought liirn a letter, the first iie ha lever received, which lie took to a Irieud of his, one Ryan, a fruit seller, because, you see. he was no great hand at reading writing, to decipher for tcra. It ran thus : "Go to Ih-merde and marry Kathleen 0 - Ricliv. Tne instant the knot is tied I fulfil my promise of making V-JU comfortable for jile.— But as you value your life and liberty, never breathe u syllable of what is jva-sed. ll.mem ber vou are in my power if TOU teil your story. The money ;il ae paid to yuu directly, you inclose me your marriage certificate. I -end yon fifty pounds for ; resent expenses. C O. happy paddy ! D.dn't he s-art next day for Cork, and didu't he marry Kathleen, and touch a thousand pwnnds! By the powers he did And what is more, he took a cottage, which perhaps you know, uot a hundred m.ies from Bruffin. iu the county of Limerick; and, i'taix, he forgot his first wife entirely, and never told uny one but under the prom ise of secre>y, the story of ios Fleet Mairiage. PUK.N-OMF.NAOF G1.1 5 .—In a very interesting scient tic article on glass the J fair antic Press sav? ; 'fnat gia>s resists the act on oi mo-t ac:ds, science ha< proved; its weight is not di minished ov use or age. It is more capable than other substances of receiving the highest degree of polish ; if melted :-evera! times over, and properly cooled down iu the furnace, pre senting a polish which almost rivals the diam ond in brilhauey It it be made into * phial, with the bottom much thicker than the sides, and suddenly cooled in the open air. instead of being tem pered in the usual manner, the result on its susceptibility to fracture is the most extraor dinary. It will bear a heavy blow, or severe prcs-ure. from any blunt instrument, uninjur ed; but if anv hard and iduuhir sub-tance, even so sn: ill as a grain of flint, or sharp sand be dropped into the phial, the bottom wii, crack all aroood, and fall off. A sua;, frag ment of iron has been passed through the thick bottom with apparently as litt.e resis at.ee as if dropped through the web o: a spid er. Instances have occurred in whicn oue o; these phial* has been struck by a mallet, w ;ih a force sufficient to drive a nail into some de scriptions of wood, without causing fracture, while a small fragment of fl.nt,dropped gent y into the phial has cracked the glass to pieces A piece of white Lot metal being dropped gently into cold water, and taking the form of a round lamp elongated to a tail, is termiu ated a cracker. The round part will bear a heavv blow without fracture: but if the least part*of the tail be broken off. the whole Ces into innumerable fragments as Sne as i owder. If this glass be placed in a wira bottle fill ed with water, and a small portion of the tad broken off, by the aid of a long pair of nippers the concussion by the explosion for it is almost s ; m ; ar to en explosion) is so violent as to break the bottle and scatter the water in every direct.on. PUNCH says; " Women are said to bave stronger attachments then men. It is. not so. Strength of attachment i evinced in little things. A man is oftain attached to an old hat ; but did you ever kaow of women having an attachment for aa old bonnet?"— Echo an swer—" Meter!" PUBLISHED EVERY THURSDAY AT TOWANDA, BRADFORD COUNTY, PA., BY R. W. STURROCK. The Old Garret. Sarcastic people say that the poets dwell in garrets, and simple peopie believe it. And others neither sarcastic or simple, scud them aloft, among the rubbish, just because they do not know what to do with them down stairs and "among folks," and so they class them un der the head of rubbish, and consign them to that grand reception of "has beeus," and de spised "used to be's," the old garret. The garret is to the other apartments of the homestead what the adverb is te the pedago gue iu parsing. Everything they do uot know how to dispose of, is consigned to the list of abvtrbs. And it is for this precise reason we love garrets because they do contaiu the relics of the old and of the past—souvenirs of other and happier and simpler hours. Tuey have come to build houses now a days without garrets. Impious innovation. You men of broase, and "bearded like the bards," who would like to make people believe if you could, that you were never a "toddling wee thing," that you never wore a "riffled dress," or jingled a rattle box with infinite de light ; that you never had a. mother, and that she neve r became an old woman, aud wore caps and spectucles, and may be took snuff; go home once more after all these years of absence, ail booted and whiskered, aud six feet high as you are, aud let us go up together into the old fashioned garret that extends from gable to gable, with its Darrow, oval windows with a spider web as a sash, through which steals a "dim, relgious light" upon a museum of things unnameable, that once figured below stairs, but were long since crowded out by the Vandal haud of modern limes. Tae loose boards of tlie floor rattle some what as tuey to do—don't they ? wueu beneath your prattling feet they clattered afore time, when of a rainy afternoon, "Mother," wearied w'th many-tongiK-d importunity .grant ed the "Let ns go up in tiia garret and play." And play ? Precious little of play you bave bad since, we dure warrant,with your looks of dignity and dreams of ambition. Here we are now in the midst of the garret. The old barrel—shall we ruuiage it ? Old newspapers, dusty, yellow, a little tattered ! 'Tis the Columbian Star. How familiar the type looks I llow it reminds you of old time when you looked over the edge of the counter with the letters or papers for father! And these same stars just damp from the press w ere carried one by oue to the fire-side, aud {>erus ed and preserved as they ought to be. hilars? Damp. Ah, many a star Las set since then, and many a new turfed heap grown damp with rain that feli not from clouds. D.ve deeper iu tue barrel. There ! A bun dle, up it comes, iu a cloud of dust. Old al manacs, by all that is memorable, thin leaved ledgers of time, going back to —let us see how fur : lil—, 1 S3—, 182—. before our time— —, when our mothers werechildreu And the day book—how blotted aud bleared w.lh many records aud tears. Taere you bave hit your head [against that beam Time was w iicu you ran to and fro be tieath it. but vou are uearer to it uow.bv more than the "altitude of a chopping." That beam is strewn with forgottcu papers of seeds for the next year's sowing; a distaff, with some new shreds of fl x rem lining is thrust luto a crevice of the rafters over head, and tucked by aarav close under the caves is the little w heel that used tostand by the tire in times long gone. Its sweet long song lias ceased, and perliaps — perhaps she drew those flaxen threads but never mind—you remember the line don't you ? • Her wheel at reit. Vhe matron charms no more." Wei!, Ist that pass. Do you see that little craft iu that dark corner ! It was red once, it was the < -'y casket in the house once, and contained a motlier's jewels. Ttie o;d red cra dle for ail the world ! Aud you occupied that once, ave, ureat as you are, it was your worid once, and over it the only horizon you beheld bent the heaven of a mother's eyes as you rocked in that little barque of love, on the hither shore of time —fast by a mother's lov*e to a mother's heart. And there attached by two rafters are the fragments of an untwisted rop?. Do you re memher it, and what it was for, aud who fas tened it there ? Tw as the childten's swing You are here indeed, but where arc Nelly and Charley ? There hangs bis little cap by that w iudow.and there the little red frock she used to wear.— A crown is resting upon her cherub brow, and his robes are spotless in the better laud. Defl. E lived out West. He had a son, John. The sovereigns of that section met in caucus to appoint delegates to a bounty con vention. Now the Convention would meet many miles from that, and bow to get carried there without expense, was a subject of the graves* importance to the aforesaid sovereigns in conclave. Finally it was agreed to appoiut J An, the Deacon's sou, a delegate, thus giv ing him an opportunity to dbpiay bis patriot ism by taking his father's horses and wagon to transport the whole de.egatioa to the county seat. The thing was done. It so happened that the Deacon had chang ed works with a neighbor in thresbicg, only the Deacou had got the neighbor's help and hadu't paid it back. Tne day before the Convention, the neighbor notified him that he should want hira next day. " But we can't come." •• Wbyaotr "Why, you see, John, be's pinted." "*Pinied ? how ? what do you mean?" " You see John he's jiutcd a—a—a—re r.egude to the County Conception , r PovrTrrv breeds wealth ; aDd wealth, in its torn, breeds poverty. The earth, to form the mour.d, is taken out of the ditch ; and the higbt of the one is near about the depth of I theot-.er. Lad es, prepare for an extreme change in hab it, f r a Paris correspondent of the New \ ork Co'* 'ier says the ladies are coming oct with out l oop?,' bcstles, wadding, "or anything elee "* " REGARDLESS OF DENUNCIATION FROM ANY QUARTER." A Sad Picture. The following is an extract from the Vale dictory address of Prof. Mitchell to the recently graduating class at Jefferson College, Phila delphia. Go with me, in imagination, to the grave yard of a country poorliouse, in a sister com monwealth, and the spot allotted to the mor tal remains of a victim of inebriation, once a star iu the professional galaxy cf his native State, will meet your eye. The rank weed and the rugged brier have well nigh oblite rated the hillock from the gaze of men, and these are the only monuments that mark the spot. Who sleeps there ? Ala 3 ! I tremble at the reminiscences that cluster around the shape less heap of earth. Often, during iny residence in the West, bad I heard the glittering pros pects that environed the pathway of the young professor. His eloquence and teaching powers won for him goldeu opinions. In the walks ol professional life, too, he met on every side the approving smile and the salutations of frieuds who esteemed him a ministering angel iu the chamber of sickness, and who felt that his skill had saved their loved ones from the grasp of death. The gourd seemed to be of vigor ous growth, aud for a time uoue had a misgiv ing in respect of the future. But a poisonous worm was at the root, and it infused desola tion into every fibre of the plant. This man had failed in the very outset of life ; he began wrong. Too soon, alas, was the genteel giass of wine exchanged for the fiercer stimulus o: the brandy goblet. The victim was tottering on a fearful declivity, uncousiconsof the abyss that might soon eneulf him forever. The stone rolling from the bill-top, could not be checked in its rush to ruin by a force less potent than Almightiness. The warning of dearest friends was unheeded. Cast, beyond retrieve, was the die, and the terrible is>ue not far in the dis tauee. Tue erratic prefessor lo.>t his piace iu the school ot oiadiciue,because of indiscretions pierpelrattJ under the sway of the tyrant whose chains led him in durance vile. The patrons who once idolized him as their family visitant in the sick chamber, abandoned him,as a hopeless outcast, and the tnurky tokens of poverty speedily fastened their death-gripe on soul aud body. Did he reform at theeleveutii hour? On the contrary, he felt that he was a doomed sot, and very soon all that had once been luminous and full of promise in intellect, went out in utter darkness 11$ gave up the ghost among kindred spirits, aud where is he? D d any of his early patrons or boon com panions take the cold clay and honor it with a spot in some lovely cemetery ? Not at all Unwept aud a'oue he found a hiding-place iu a dishohored grave. And iu a weekly sheet the melancholy record of his doom ran thus : 'Died on the day of in the vear IS, Dr well known a few years ago, as the eloquent professor of in Medical college. He was ruiced Ly intemper ance, aud his remains repose in a corner of a graveyard of the county poorhouse." BARNCM SOLD. —A public j-Ae at P. T. B tr nuni's expense .3 not an every-day luxury, I*. T. B for many vears having had the laugh on the other side." But at length the Prince of Showmen has been shown a trick that he did not know before, and the hero of the occasion has beeu, is very usn il on such occasion", a son of the Emerald Isle. It seems that B-r -num, a few day ago, was in a great hurry to be shaved, and euttred his ordinary place of tonsoriai reso-t, under the Park Hotel, in New York; bet all the operatives were engag ed, and one o'her customer—a great, brawny Irishman, just landed, and with a beard and head requiring very extensive attention—stood between the exhibitor of the "What is-it" aud his turn as next. " I am in a hurry, my good man," said I'hineas T , addressing Pat; "and if you will give tne your turn I will pay for what vou want done here." " All right 1" replied the delighted Irishman and the showman was soon shaved, and on his way to keep his engagement —merely saying, as he left the door, to the proprietor of the saloon, " Do what this man wants," pointing to the exile of Erin, "and I will settle it with vou" No sooner was he gone than Pat took off his trusty, and a thick cotton neck tie, at the same time asking the barber, " Now tell me a!! you do." Why, sir," responded the tonsoriai opera tive, '■ we shave, cut and curl Lair, shampoo, and bathe." " All right, the-," said Pat; "do all them tliicus to tne. Sorra wan of me knows what thev ma: e, but as he said he'd pay for them, just do them all, an' God bless yon ! Tile barber saw the joke, and did as re quested. putting the big Irishman through all the processes, and bringing him out so p'eas antlv altered that Pat scarcely knew himself. We leave our readers to imagine Barnum s face text morning, when the proprietor of the saloon handed him a bill— " F or bathing Irishman, 25 cents ; shaving, 10 cents ; cutting hair, 25 cents ; shampoon ing, 25 cents ; curling Lair, 25 cents —total for Irishman, $1.00." Barnum at once acknowledged the corn— gave a receipt for the maize : but he is after the Irish exile, acd swears if he catches him, that he will place him cneek-by jnw: between the " what-is it ?" and the Aztec children. BRIGHT AND GI.OOMT HOURS —Ah ! this beautiful world. ludeed. I koow not what to think of it. Sometimes it is all gladness and sunshine, and heaven itself is not far off Acd then it changes suddenly acd is dark and sorrowful, and the cloads shot out the sky. Iu the lives of the saddest of us there are bright days like this, when we feel as if we could take the great world in onr arms. Tbeu come the gloomv boors, when the fire will neiiher burn in our hearts nor on our hearths ; and all withoQt and withio is dismal, cold and dark. Believe me. erery bean baa its secret sorrows, which the world knows not; and oftentimes we call a man cold when be is only sad.— I lemgftUcw. Department. Sending Scholars to Adjoining Districts. [The following case, lately decided by the Supreme Court of this State, will be found to be especially interesting aud iustructive to School Directors.] Frcevuin and others against the Directors of Franklin District. 1. The School Law confers express discre tionary power on each School Board, in rela tion to the school, within the- District, which each pupil shall attend ; and it would be quite absurd to leave them without such discretion, when there is a nearer school iu au adjoining District, to which the pupil wishes to go. 1. Whether distance or difficulty of access to the uearest school of the pupil's proper dis trict is great or not, must be left to the sound discretion of the directors of such district. 3. The Courts will be liberal aud generous towards directors iu the exercise of this dis cretion ; and w.ll not remove them for official misconduct iu regard to it, unless their abuse of it he very clear. HISTORY OF TOE CASE. John Freeman, John li. Rogers, Benjamin Courson, Andrew Keapper, Joseph McK night and Jno Robertson, taxable citizens of Frank lin School District, reside on the border of the town of Washington, the line of said borough runiiiDg through the property of some of them. Previous to the year beginning June, 1559, the said citizens were permitted to send their children to the L'nion School iu Wash ington, as more accessible and otherwise con venient to them, than the school house in the Franklin District, in pursuance of an arrange ment made by the Directors of the Washing ton and Franklin Districts according to the 9th article of the 23d section of the Act of May Bth, 1854, which is as follows : " The Directors aud Controllers of the re spective Districts, shall have power to estab lish schools of different grades, and to deter mine into which school each pupil shall be ad mitted ; and if it shall be found, that on ac count of great dbtauce from, or difficulty of access to the proper school house in any Dis trict, some of the pupils thereof coulu be more conveniently accommodated in the schools of an adjoining District, it shall bo the duty of the Directors of Controllers of such adjoiniug Districts, to make an arrangement, by which such pupils may be instructed in the most con venient school of the adjoining District ; and the expense of such instruction shall be paiJ, as may be agreed upon by the Directors and Controllers of such adjoiniug districts, by res olution or agreement entered upon the minutes of the respective Boards." At the eud of the school year, 1858, this permission was revoked, and the Directors of Frank.in District refused to make any arrange ment, such as had before existed. After re peated efforts on the part cf said citizens, to procure the concurrence of the Franklin with the Washington Directors, iu some equitable arrangement for their accommodation, aou the refusal of said Erunkiiu Directors to make any, they applied to the Court of Quarter ses sions to remove said Directors froui office, for a violation of duty iu this regard, under the 9th section of the Act of May S:h, 1854, w h oh is as hollows : "If all the members of any Board of Di rectors or controllers, shall refuse or neglect to perform their duties bv levying the tax re quired by law, and to put or keep the schools iu operation, so far as the means of the Dis trict will admit, or shali uegieet or refuse to perform any other duty enjoined by law, the Court of Quarter Sessions of the proper coun ty may. upou complaint in writing by any s x taxable citizens of t:.e District, and on due proof thereof, declare their seats vacant, and appoint others in their stead, ualil the aeit annual election for Directors." In support of this applicatiou, they exhib ited to the court abundant proof, that the school house in Washingtou was nearer to the most distant of them Ly more tbaa one Lalf mile, than the Franklin school house, and that in point of safety and facility of access, the former was decidediy mi-re convenient to them than the latter. Indeed, these facts are dis tinctly alledged in the petition, and are not deuied in the answer They are therefore to be taken as fully established by the proof and by the admission cf the respondents. The Lonrt, however, refused the relief pray ed for. for the reasons assigned ia the fo.low ing opiuioa : OPINION OF THE COURT OF QUARTER SESSIONS. GIIAIOP.E, P J.—This application is made under the Bth section of the Act of Sth May. authorizing this Court "to declare the seats ot School Directors i vacant, and to appoint others in their stead tint;! the next sninna! election," where they " shall neglect or refuse to perform any duty enjoined by law."* The duty, which it is übeged that the D.rectors re fused to perform, was a refu-al, on the appli cation of the petitioners, to make arrooge meats, under the 9th article of the 25d sec tion of the Act of 1854, by which the chil dren and wards of the petitioners might be instructed iu the Union School of the borough of Washington, that being the most conve nient school of any adjoining District. Tuis article ia the 23d section provides, that "the Directors and Control.ers of the re-pective Districts, shall bare power loe?tabhih schools of different grades, and to determine into which school each pupil shall be admitted : and if it shad be found, that on account cf great distance from, or d fficolty cf access to the proper school house in any District, some of the popiU thereof could be more •ccuve ntently accommodated la the schools cf on adjoining District, it shali be the duty of Di rectors or Controllers of such adjoining Dis tricts to make arrangement, by which such pupils may be instructed ia the most convt- Tient school of the adjoining District, Ac. The directors and respondents have assign ed, in their answer to the petition of the ap- I plicants, various reasons for their refuse* to VOL. XXI. —2s O. 43 i comply with the request of the petitioners.— We shall not consider the reasons in detail ; but, taking the answer in whole, it more than covers the ground upon which we feel con strained to disinis3 the petition. The law is not obscure ; its meaning and iuteut arc manifest. It requires the school directors, uuder a certain state of circumstan ces, which arc specified, to send pupils out of their proper District to the most convenient school of an adjoining District. Whet are the causes specified ? " Great distance from, or difficulty of access to the proper school house of the District" These cau>es are dis tinct ; the existence of either would be suffi cient, and combined, it would be doubly so.— The proper school house might be uear, very near, and yet, owing to natural or artificial obstructions, its approach might be both dan gerous and difficult of access, and, if either, it would be the clear duty of the Directors, to make arrangements to send to the adjoining District. Are there any such obstructions in this case ? The Directors have decided, that none such exist, and the evidence satisfies us iof the correctness of their judgment. But the distance, say the petitioners, is greater . than to the Uu on school in the borough of : Washington. Granted ; this is proved.—■ Without referring in particular to the admeas urement, it may be said to be a mile and a half to the proper school house ; it is some thing thai: a mile to the Union school bouse In the District. It is also proved, that the way to the Union school Louse, being principally on the pavement, is superior as a walk to the road leading to the proper school house. But what is implied from the expressions— " great distance from the proper school house." These, it is needless to say, are relative terms; it ib a great distance, or otherwise, as compar ed with some other distance. Do they mean, that because it is one-third nearer to tbs Union school than the proper school house of the district, it therefore may be called a great distance to the latter ? If so, the Legislature have beeu very unfortunate ia expressing themselves ; for ad this difficulty might have been avoided, by simply declaring, that pupils shall l> sent to the neare-t school, without regard to District ; that they might be set; to whichever ;t was most convenient to go.— We apprehend that such a construction would violate both the words and the intention cf the law. In effect, it would be destroying the system of districting altogether. If this might be said to be predicating too mcch, it would surely be safe to aver, that the sub-districts contiguous to, and lying around a borough like Washington (having a school house and appointments, equal at least to the present necessities of the borough district) would be deprived of many pupils, thereby diminishing the resources of the proppr District, and im pairing to some extent, the spirit and useful ness of the school. But we cannot admit of any such construction Jof the law. It could no: I e allowed, without iu a serious manner affecting the entire school system. Here is a District which has recently been sub divided, after consultation aud consideration, and the school houses located, so as to accommodate most conveniently the entire District. This school house. No. I, we have it in proof, was located with that intention, aud by and with the consent of those interested and acquainted with the wants of the whole territory to ba served ; a house built cf sufficient capacity, an-d more than sufficient, to receive all tha pupils in the subdivision, and with all the improved appointments. Bat what is more, this location of No. 1, was not an independent action, but the situations of the other five booses iu the Distiict were made, more or less, to depeud upon the loca tion of this cue. That is, we are given to nc derstaud from the evidence, that the location of one was made dependent upon the other. Now, is it u : a reasonable inference, that if i: had been known to the Directors, that these families residing on the northern boundry of No. 1, would not have used their school, that the location of this house would have been d.fferent, and that this would hare caus ed a change in the location of the ethers?— It would certainly either Lave permitted a re duction of the number, or a clo-er proximity of the sab-divisions. It will hardly be con tended that, under these circumstances, an ar rangement, such as asked for, should be allow ed for the caere convenience of the applicants. We agree, that it is not put on this ground alon*\ tut, in our opinion, the evidence only goes to this extent. Bat what is the true meaning of the ex pressions, "great distance from ' as u*ed in the Act ? They are relative, ar.d we hold that their meaning mu-t be measured and defined from the distinct? which ether families reside from their respective school boasts, ia the District. Now, the answer of the respond ents alleges, that " the petitioners are as well, if not better accommodated, than a large ma jority of said No. 1 district, both as to dis tance and accessibility." Ties is no r denied ia the replication of the petitioners, bat is said not to be to the pur pose. Th* evidence g~es far to sastain the answer. This i*, we think, the true mode of ascertaining the meaning of the exgre-siocs, and was the ground open which the D.rectors based their action. The interpretation con tended for by the petitioners, would make it mere IT an erquiry of convenience, but, mom than this is required by the iaw. Again, the Directors are made judges of the appl cab.ilty of the circumstances to the requirements of the law. Their dcty is not bv any means merely ministerial. Now, with out intending to call in question the appellate jurisdiction of this court, we think, where the D.rectors have acted without impeachment of rootAe,—where the penalty is removal from office, implying dereliction of du'v. —and where the power to inflict the penalty is at best, but inferently conferred, —that belore giving judgment against the Board, we shonld be fully sau-fied they have acted, either nader an trroueoos conception of tha law and the [tCSCLTZZZ OS TOCKTE FASS-)