r:. .~ _ plerte, in the spring of 1793;t0 send to the revolutionary tribunal theaccompliemof fettu cini Duinottrez, and the tombs/sot lb Orle ans family, tbaltarolOomagognet oltacked i , the Gh4mdinsOlt . an. atitolt . and ebtbotitely Prepar edt tipeirb, didOrting their iwts,, and, aziO.cipat; lag their explanations,witkeitraoeilnaty With a satanic sneer, he concluded by saying: a-Ni for the deputies, Gaudot, Gelisonne and Voids* it would - be a secrilege to mime such upright; such virtuous nien. Feeling my finpOtetwein regard to them, I leave them to the Wisdoni of the Ouiventlon l" I I trimuse Sothis inalicions, premeditated, and An itlr e , ted OP* Vex/Pined delivered neitettipore reply, worthy of the crisis which had !suddenly overtaken him and his party. He ralkibittho boar - was approaching when thei r rierietonquer or bal. _,Leaping to the tri iiirmilte demanded A hazing. After a Unruh, he My 'veicar. said he, "which has En o thin once carried terror into' that palace ' when I bails assisted to hurl tyranny, shall t,trike terror into the souls of the van :ins who deal to substitute their Owityrantii foi that; of yalli."' l - Oa' iepUed one' by one to the ' eig of his necuser,exposing his thisehoods cha i deli g his aoiVardice, stripping the Veil from his affected ' , virtue; and tracking hire( through the dirk aiel devious paths he had trode since he entered public( lifis. With ail the eloquence NvldrACconscieus iniceenek warm friendship tor MS Colleagues, end 4n:tingled detestation , of 141idversvy could inspire, he vindicated Ids own conduct, eulogised the policy 9f his partzr; and , contrasted therhunisnity and noble. ness of their alitswitis the factiouscnd bleody atones 'of their enemies; and conclUded by saying," You know whether I have endured in silence. the mortification heaped upon me du ring thclast six months, and whether I have sacrificed upon the altar of my country the ;Lost just resintureati. You "know whether, writhed Seim deemed cowardly, without con. fessing myself guilty, :without compromising the little good I'am still allowed to do, I could longer avoid plicing the impostures and malig. nitiescf Robespierre in their true light before 1-00:1 (Conehula ntrt Feel) • - ...qll.a day last week a- Frenchman from Louisville Went into a settlement of his cone trymeh is coorgetown township, in this colon • ty, and proposed that if they, ..would agree- to Prerure, him trutife, he would give them three of as fee ;tine as ever came from the vine Clad hats arida :La Belle France. The bargailt was attack , and the jolly Frenchmen setabentto linnt,op for, their bachelor coon trip a . . helpmeet In a few days :Johnny Crapovvasinformed that they had succeeded, andtolithim to come et once and have the nupthil knot tied. The expectant husband carai, : Wis introduced to his future bride, a delicate piing lady of:the most modest de mesner", with_wbont he was soon in ' raptures. The pinties were biought.before. the Squire (Martin Hanger ; the whole company looking very devout and solemn. At this crisis a fe male relative of the.bride was observed to go upha something in the bridegroom's ear. Thmider Fortes=d I the storm that was rained; Theo#4linat bride was a smooth heed lad of seventeen!—Nero Xiang Ledger. Azi , lorusztro OccultEIRCZ.—A few days I sindO.ialaughable scene occurred in Ford Frenchman passing a house where o red,flag was hung out to indicate that, ;rem° infectious disease existed within, inquuri . oione *horn be met why the flag was'suspended there: kent , small-pt xin - there,' replied ' the resl,4lrurrying an.• ,„ The Frenchmannansed and gazed at the fazacid the brnme,for a moment. and then oraUgup to the door plied the knocker vigeriu4. • • at doYesi want, sir? inquireda wo man 'rein) eautieridynpened the door. , *ant to seems grand show, Madame.' 'IV) have no show ' bere,'. said the 'To-. man andeuvering 'to keep the Frenchman from entering,' hind you had better go away, for we have got the smailloz here flat is it 2 de tootle fox,' elmekled Motouenr, iry you nay no show; aba?, 0,011 yea, sir, there is no show 'here ! COM got the small -por.-d'ye hear? s se ! :pa retied the Frenchman, getting out of poem:ice,"fall b vat you my two, tree, seventeen zeleetle fax--/a pe tite reinaid'; I oil/ sce-sa grand show? Be.then prooteded to trowd himself in at thapartistly . opened door, when lock* a gentleman passing at the time succeeded in making him comprehended that what he had taken for a 'small forr i ! was an infections disease. : . TheTrightend faieigner reached the eurb stonS at s anigle bound, and with pale face and trembling limbs burned off, muttering • Ah,liesta I sal ite Maynard Ah, sal die— l i t VIII be all over spotted—Ab. an pe tite vezolet Se petite 'yard° !I—Portland Sreick - Tifs Rona tN Paisow.—We mentioned last week in the .notine.of the 'Grand Di ,vision of western New York, that that hody visited the 'State Prison. The Watertown Reformer speaking of the scene, - nays, the members " weie eitorted through the va rious work shops and apartments of that! vastigieivoir of frail humanity, marching two abreast in regalia' The inmates .were allowed a cessation tolook at tb ezpectcle mbiib was presented to them, by the kind nesS . of their gentlemanly keeper. We STro manned thit out Of, 725--the whole number within those .probably--pobahly sec " hdirect enliglas Vent t ere t roug the *MO of ardent' ep:nitat': 'What a spec- .. tack for the rum-zelleis to contemplate ! Now-affecting tenet have ken the appear ance it 250 Bons of Temperantse. many of themsaved from the gutter, and -nowise saved fats tbeeritaiusd's sad fatu march. ing through tbekwork shops, and dreary passagelelothed ii#o3 regalia of tbe-Or der! .We. renogrn* any au unbidden tear inning itearey dirra luny cheeks nnneedfb ireepiiik—fiint gleams of other -daysiretellittitacrositheir minds by wit nessing contrast lisle rust ed ; atnivell they might forgot der steni t n ashood, and let fill the burning tear ' to ease su sehingiseart. , Tbs tssmtruu sub limely soleum—ii: OreinG TEM - DMEOttilial? 5 She Laegeit Cficulationja.Northerturhatell S. &E, B. CHASE; ir,Drroas. DIONTROSE, PA. ( . 91 1 hureday, May :1; 111131.: farDo bring =some wood, rood, WOOD 1 11111: CORRECTION. In thepro,edings of the Denidiiiitie'COilu: ty Convention, last week, R. It. Little, Esq,, should have been reported as lielegatii 'to the Harrisbtug Convention instead of Reading; and a motion vms carried to - concur in the nomination made, or to bo made in Sullivan County, for a Delegate to the Reading Con vention, instead ofnuitsburg 49 reported. A Pal) delegation consists of two persOns for thin Repre,sentative District,- and one for the Senatorial. There are two Conventions and two sets of Delegates. The Delegates stand thui": R. R. Little and E. - IL Chaae Rep resentative Delegates to the Harrisburg Con. vention, and F. Lusk, Esq., Senatorial, if rati fied by the Senatorial Confettees.. Gen. Jobil Blanding and some gentleman from &Minh County, Representative Delegates to the Read. ing Convention, and F. B. Streeter, Esq., Seri. atonal, subject to the ratification of the Co - ferees as above, making both delegations coM plete. . HON. Wn. MOILER. It is probaby Well known to our readers that the gentleman whose name heads this or. tide, stands before the Demomaey of Pennsyl vania, a candidate for the office of Governor. The Convention to which his name will be submitted will assemble in a fowl weeks; the nominations for the respective State offices, to be filled the coming fall, will be made and the Campaign fairly opened. Present appearance's indicate to a certainty that Mr. BIGLER will be the nominee o r the Reading - Convention, for Governor, and, for our own part, we have not now, nor have we ever had, in connection with the coming Cam paign, any other choice for the high and;hon orable position to which he has been n4med. He is emphatically a than from the ranks o f the people, his whole life. having been spent en ar duousindustrial pursuits and enterprise% and a man universally beloved for-his many amia ble qualities as a gentleman. The exalted pa-. trjotism of the min; his virtues; his purity o • purpose and character; his stern integrity; his unquestioned and unquestionable, Democracy. in heart, sympsthy and principle, all combine to make him the man of our choice,i, and the man whom the Democrats of Susquehanna will delight to honor with one of.their largest majorities. ' Aft; /31aLna' was six years a State i enator, in which position he distinguished himself as an able and EtithfelLegislator. As Chairman of the Committee of Finance, the most diffi cult and arduous position in the Senate, he displayed wonde rful skill and talent; and when he le ft the Senate, all agreed that it had lost one of its brightest ornaments. i ''. '. The position of the Democratic party of this State, in reference to the opening Campaign, is certainly.a proud one. Harmony apparent ly exists everywhere; and from all sectionslof the State comes a voice which seems a certain prelude to suecees. The unfortunate state of things that lost us the election three yetis ci zal ago will 'not a ff ect us now, t&all Pppeanut es, 1 and we really cannot conceive how defeat prostrate ns next fill; save it be by over co ft- dence in ourselves. In that there is danger; and the mistake is often made that we pre strong because united. The motto that "p -ion is strength" loses its truth, when the' , strength is not employed in active service:—' Give us union and-a power, an energy, to bring the.united elements into actite service rather than passive, and the Democracyof.Peniasylva nia cannot be beaten.. All put history author- , izes this conclusion. - I Every Democrat then, should feel it a duty to himself and his principles, to act, to work, to labor, diligently, faithfully. We have the same active, ever-ready foe to contend with, and.their every energy is now sharipated by previous success. We know of sloth= in the State around whOm the Dsmocrta can rally more enthusiastically now, than around him who promises to be the candidate 6f their choice; and, wafer such circumstances, do. feat would be humiliating in the extreme. and one from - which they would not recover for icing years to come. With our . opponents the struggle will be a desperate one, for, to them, the. verdict that' given will be , ansro 7 bative or otherwise. They have held the executive reins for the last thtce years, during which their 'policy has 'been, perhaps, more boldly declared than eves before, so the verdict will be more direct and explicit , For Canal Commissioner, seeeralgeptlemen ' have been named, good men and able. I ‘Vhen the Convention meets, a judicioisa selection will undoubtedly be made. We have in Con fidence that the Convention will give us candi. dates all around, such as Democrats, in all sections of the State will vie with each other' to support most ,heartily. This &Pe, and be: fore the ides of next Oetober shall have passed' away, we will send a glad greeting to our fel low Democrats in ether sections of the State, that an inert:eased old democratic majority has beep registered in‘Penfisylvaoix I U.S. SENATOR Er MASUCHUSETTs.—After rtreary.sir bellotings the - Legislature! of this state have fins* succeeded in rub* e choice of Boum, as U. S. Senator for six yews from the fourth of March hist We present below the vote on the final bal loting in both - branches of the fegialatuie for the lontand the short teach: Siutani.--Shorc 'Thei.--(.1an.28,) Rantoul, 21; Winthropl3; Battering, 2. Lev 'Dm. —gam 29,( Sumner, 23; Winthrop, 14. • Fronan.--Shire Tenn—(lan. 20,) UAW, 187; Winthrop, 173; Seattering,l2. L(3l§; Terrn.—(April 24,) Sumner, 193; Winthrop, 166; Scattering, 25; Blanks, 2, (not countS) "Prii tii Mahe." - 13 .4 1 tkle"Edlter qther Registete "wilt the Editers ofthe De4lersena put ma 'right before thOgiendersr certainly inked to do SO, in the bioadist sense *fa* ireekti since We Faked the simple qnestion,why the evidenceln the Rude page I did.not'sppearin'that paper, noticing the 'fact that; Mr: ChaMram appeared in the Evidence ad a stockholder. The next week in the face (lithe evidence., be denied ever having been a atfekhorderond said that the. briputatien was fitirsaom nuipint We theit*inted him to the record where his mune appehred for forty shares. Last-week, after having denied , ever having anything to do with the Bank, seeing that the evidence contradietid him,he excused the matter by saying that he did bid off some stock, in his own name, - for some one else,and aslu us to put him right 'll4 he s exPlaini.d the 'natter, in the first place, like a gentleman, he 'might be entitled to slime consideration at our hands. This he I I did not do , but attempted to get out of it, byl giving the lie to the testimony before the Com missioners. - - "Murder will out, 4 ! and it hasioine out this time just as Nye expected. Our readers will reeolleet that the evideriedisclosed, that near ly the whole stock of the Bank was taken by persons never intending nor expecting to pay OWfarthing of it; 'A small sum was taken and paid in to 'kink on; and then the very honest and business.filie men who had charge, of the swindling monstor,procUred such" toad ies" as the Editor of *he Register, to take the i remainder, finally miming the whole in the renowned" Surplus Stock Company."' . That Stock Company, citizens of Susque hanna, laid the foundation for one of the most stupendous swindles in the annals of Banking; and 'you were the innocent and unsuspecting victims. You have been robbed by the law less operations of, that concern; and you, we doubt not, will put, not only the Register man "right," but some others before the matter shall bo ended. A day of retribution is fast approaching, and, we say, let it come. If men trill evade law when the interests of whole commnnitiesnre at stake; let the consequen ces, however fearful, be visited Upon thom,and if those who have been their tools get caught, we shall not apologize for their stupidity, or shield them from the full force of indignation that an outraged people may pour upon them. pr,.Extzsct from the evidence before the Commissioners; appointed to investigate af fairs of the Bank of Susquehanna County,— " J. W. CHAPMAN, 40 Shares—NOT PAID." Harmonious Whiggerr•mnow In the Whitt Convention. The richest politipal demonstration we ever witnessed, came off at the Whig Convention, in this place, on Tuesday evening of last Week. We earnestly wish that every Whig in Sus quehanna County had been present, and we are certain the candid ones would Jtave Made up their minds firmly, never again to act with the Whig party of this county, so long as it should be led by the men who figared that Convention to their own purposes. It was evident at the organization of the Convention, that the "Clique" (to use a Whig phrase) had - the arrangements all completed, to send Delegates to the State Convention who would support Hon. Wat. lissue for the Supreme Bench. ' Contrary to all usages and befona the Con vention had half assembled, the Chairman of the Standing Committee, without even stating the object of the meeting, nominated ABEL CAsstor, Esq., for President. A' suitable number of Vice Presidents, Secretaries, &c., having been chosen, A, Chamberlin, Esq, "moved that a Comnattee of thirteen," not like Hr. Foote's Committee, to save the Union, but "to report Resolutions, and to nominate suitable persons as Delegates to the State Convention." This was agreed to,where upon a "suitable," person slyly passed to the President, a list of "suitable persons" for said Committee, made out for him to copy, thus giving the whole an appearance of fairness, as thoughiappointed by the President, instead o having been got up in alawyer's office in town. Dr. Patrick, one of the champions on the side otthe People, saw how the game, was working, and moved to add thirteen' more names to the Conimittee, and presented a list of Whigs of the county principally, instead of the Borough of Montrose. Uri flash of light ning had that moment darted through the room, it would not have startled the "leaders" more. They denounced the motion in the mast vociferous manner, and seemed deter mined to brow-beit'the Doctor down. But they-had "waked up- the wrong passenger," —the Doctor 'was " after them." The motion was seconded and a vote taken amidst a gea r eral uproar and confusion. The "Clique" made an the show of strength posidble, by aliontMg, No, No, NO, nt the top of their voi tea, and insisted that the motion was lost, whemin fact, it Was carried by more than a two-thirds Vote. The vote was taken again and again With.the same result. A division of the house time called for by A. Newton Esq., The "Clique" seeing themselves caught, blus tered and raved, and the President stool nal though stupefied. Finally the Doctor'arose; and expiated the whole game of the "Clique" , to the audience, plaeingi them in no very envia. ble light , They then 'offered to compromise by taking both - lists, tuao selecting nine names to compose the Committee, being careful . to secure the , oda one themselves. The Doctor and his friends were rather forcedlo accede' to lhis, for, somehow, the President could not undmitand how the Whig. delegation from the whole county could - awry a motion when the "Clique," composed of five or six persons, voted Noq The Committee was then formed by the President, and on the f irst reading of I theilials N. Newton Esq., was the first named, so of course be would, be the Chahman; but Mitt* second reading it appears that A.Charn. berlin, Esq., had taken - his place! A slight at hand peifoftoanett we presume.. The Committee retired, and soon returned With resolutions, dm., and among the red" one' nominating Urbane Bunrows mad OilberfWar- Or forDelvites to the State - Convention,— Hein the Doctor stepped on %aloes of tfie al Clique; by open and bold opposition to the kesolutke, an in' under -bunted game to send a couple of the " Ciiquo:merr to thO tion, who were known to be anxious to go,but dare not have tbeir'namas used lnihe Coven: tion, knOiring that they could not get five votes without votingfor themselves. sSo_they thought to . get Messrs. Burrows and Wainer elected, who,instend ofgoiug would substitute , them. • The Doctor kw tins, and 'offered an amendment to - the resolution, substituting G. W. Stephens, BK., in place of Mr. Burrows. Mr,Stephens 'would go. if elected, and:the "'Clique" opposed-him with _all their might, thus proving the troth of the' Doctor's - 11 tion. The Doctor insisted that a vote should be Utica on hisamendment; the'" Clique" bins tered, donned and scolded, but • the. DeCtor reas'nt scarf.", Her exposed the heartless cheat, and called tipin the. Whigs present to crush it, and show the "gentry" that they knew their. rights and meant to take care of them. The most sagacious of the "Clique" now diaeovered that,the Doctor's amendment was " out of oider because it changed the char acter of the whok Resolution," and intimated to the Prestdent that it w,as his business to do as they (the Clique) told him to? A re&lar row ensued for nearly , hour, when somebody said, "Stephens wont vote for Jessup," where upon the President rated the, amendment out of order, till the wig - hill Resolution should be passed! The "Clique" Were evidently sur prised at the sagacity of the . President,' for even they hid het thisught of 'objection.. How ever, it , was manifestly out of the "order" that the CliAue had laid down, and It was fully understood-ilia' his decision was foirued on that principle.' Such principles embodied in a Legislative ganualrwould, we presume, su percede Jefrerson'e, and enlighten the world ! The vote was finally taken on the original Resolution,' amid a general tumult. "You lie," "you are a liar," Mho President is a fool," &c. &e., followed the - decision that the Resolution was , carried. A division of the house wa h called for, but the "Clique" would not allow It. They dare:not have the vote counted, or a fair vote taken. ' Stillman Fuller, Esq., then offered the fol lowing Resolution:— "Resolved, That we hereby instruct our "delegates, to,supiiort no nian as a candidate "for the office of Supreme Court Judge, who "has, directly or indirectly, opposed the Amend ment to the Constitution, under the provisions " of which, they are to be chosen by the People. Here, was a "direct" hit at. the "Regency," and through. them, at His Honor, the Judge.— Mr. Fuller had charge of the Register office last fall, when these same gentlemen went there, and cut from the Whig Ticket, the votes or the Amendment, spoken of in the above Resolution. The "-Clique" were now fairly caught, and to prevent a vote being, taken on Mr. Fuller's Resolution, they moved to ad journ, which they carried with a row. - We have made these statements as correct ly as possible from memory. "The ono halt has not been told," nor can it be described on paper. It was certainly the boldest game we ever saw played to suppress the voice of the people, and we shall wonder much if the inde pendent Whigs of this county, do not teach the "Regency" a lesson . that they will long I remember. We trust we shall hear no more of " Fireproof Cliques," " Regency" &c., from those who originated the schemes and chica net"' so fully exposed in , that Convention. Injustice to Dr. Patrick and Mr. Newton, who took the side of the people, we would state, that they conducted matters on their side with perfect fainiess. The motions made by them were clearly in order, nor did they evince any disposition to iiolate the principles of honorable dealing and fair arrangement; and the Doctor assured them on the spot, that he should "take an appeal to the poor man's Court,—the ballot box." THE LIIZERSE AND COLVAIDIA. CONGRESSION. AL Dtsratcr.—A 'despatch from a distinguish ed Democrarin Danville, dated yesterday, re. marks as follovis upon the investigation into the election for Congress in the above district, now being condußed hi Danville. It will be remembered that Col. H. B. Wright:tbe De.m. ocratic candidate at the late election, contests the seat of Col. Henry 31. Fuller, who has the certificate : Danville, April 25, 1851 The evidence of the contested election case yesterday, and today, discloses astounding frauds, not less than one hundred urinaturaliz ed persons and boys,' cast their votes for the Federal candidate for Congress. We clip the above from the Pennsylvanian. It Will be recollected that Mr. Fuller's majori. ty ever Col. Wright was only about sixty. If the l above despatch bo correct, we judge that the CoL will succeed. TIIE BIBLE AT THE % OELD'S PAHL—For= eign papers state that the committee of the British and foreign Bible Society have secured for their society a place in the crystal palace ittiondon, where the labors in which they have been engaged for the last forty-six years nay be examined. The Scriptures may there be seen and read in one hundred and fifty fan. guag j es and dialects. In connexion with this the following brief remarks of an English wri ter are exceedingly appropriate, and will be read with interest : • -"To many (says Anderson) it might seem too bold, were we to affirm that the English Bible is at present in the act of being perused from the rising to the setting sun. The -as sertion mightappear little elselluna a figure of speech, or an event to be anticipated; and yet this is no more than the half of the truth. The English Bible, at this moment, is'the only ver sion in existence on which the sun never sets We know that 'it is actually in use tin the banks of - the Ottoway and St. Lawrence, as I well as at Sydney, Port Phillip, and Hobart Town; but before his evening rays have left the spires of Quebec and Montreal, his morn , ing beams have already shone for hours upon the shores of Australia and New Zealand.— And Wit be read by ao•nianiof our language in Canada while the sun in' sinking on the shores of Lake Ontario, in the Eastern world, where he has risen in his glory on the. Walks of the Ganges, to'the self-Came sacred voluine many who . are less our countrymen have al- readyturned. Yetare all these branches for the parent stoek;under whose shades this ver sion, corrected and,re-correeted, - hi been read by myriads for three Imndied years." --Judge Woodward has resumed the_.prao. in tiee of law at Wilkesharre connection with his'nephew Warren J. Woodward, Esq, —The Supreme Court has sustained the Writ of error in the esse,ofißbrtin Peifer, the, Commonwealth, and onfered anew WO for Peifer. The ground of this . decision is that_ the jury were allowed. to seperate far several days between the time they were sworn and the day of trial. " _ _ --Jenny Lind has sent $3,000 and Barnum $1,500, to Mayor Taylor; of Cincinnati, to be disposed of as he thinks most judicious for the relief of the unfortunate and diitressed in that city. In_ addition to this, Barnum ..had previously given s4oo` or $5OO. - - • —The citizens of Montour county am pro- Curing subscriptions to , purchase a handsome watch and chain, as , an appropriate present to the Hon Mr. Frailey, for his : defence of their rights in the re-annezation bill, lately defeated in the Senate. No one is allowed to contrib ute more than fifty cents. • —lt has been ascertained that the transmis sion of intelligencelly the Telegraph is at the rate of 13,000 miles per second. Rapid as this velocity seems, it is about fifteen times slower thanjlud of light, and more than fifteen times slower than that of electricity from the electri cal machine. —The Plurality Law ofillassachusetts has been signed by the governor, and is therefore ztiaw. Where there was no choice of Con gressmen on Monday, this - next trial will settle the matter, as then the candidates having the highest number of votes will be elected. —The last survivor of the Wyoming Mas sacre, Nis. Hannah Mills, died at Meriden, Coon., on the sth inst., aged 83. The massa cre, it will be recollected,-took place in 1788, by the Indians of the six nations. Legislature of Delaware have passed a bill providing 'that the ante on the Sabbath of any intoxicating drink shall be considered as a worldly-employment, and shall subject the offenders for the first offence to a fine of twen ty dollars, and for the second to a fine of fifty dollars, to be recovered by indictment. , —The whole number of deaths in the city of New Orleans during the year 1850, was 7819, of which number 1308 were by cholera, 338 by dysentery, 290 by diarrhoea, and 674 by consumption. —The Erie Railroad is now running over the entire length to Dunkirk. A great increase in their receipts is anticipated for the month of May. • _ —We learn from Washington, that the Ans trian government have refused the' application of the Sultan to release Kossuth, and his com panions in exile. Our government will make a strong appeal to Austria in their belief. —Why is an attorney like a minister? Be cause he studies the law and the profits. —A new and valuable invention in the man ufacture of type is chronicled in "Gleason's Drawing Room Companion," whiCh seems to be worthy the attention of printers. The ed itor says: "For the superior typography of our paper, so universally admired, wo are in. debted in a.great measure to the important improvement in the'manufacture of type, by the Newton, Company, New York." The face of the type is coveredby an ingen ious process, with copper, thus making it, for unpractical purposes, as if cast entirely from that metal. The durability of the I type is in creased in about three-fold proportion, by this invention. A GOOD this.—A Western critic records the following astonishing effects produced by Jen ny Lind's Echo song on one of the "milky .mothers of the herd." On the last occasion of the song's being sang in the town alluded to, a, venerable cow, -disturbed from a pensive reverie in the courthouse yard by the delicious melody of Jenny's call, " Come Kine," imme diately obeyed the summons by bellowing forth a responsive "I'm a coming." On inqui ry, (the writer says he'learns,) it appears that the maternal grandfather of this cow was im ported stock, and that in the early part of her ovin life, she was fed on Swedish turnips. N. Y. & ERIE RAILROAD. TRAINS LEAVE GREAT BEND DEPOT. ErEIEEM Mail pass. I Night ex pass I Way frt.l Catl ft. 1130 a.m. - 10 3p. ar. 620 P.M. IB}p. M. GOING WEST. Mail pass. Night ex pug I Way ft. I Call fat I 436 P. M. '3 49 A. M. 152 A.M. 620 A.M Pelmet Temperance of Surgehanna Co. Division. No. Location. Meet on Chatvansisgo. 444 liarford. Tuesday. North Star, 432 Brooklyn, Saturday. Montrose,4so - Montrose, Monday. Spring,vie, 464 Springville,.Saturday Lenox, 466 Lenox. Saturday POST•OFFICE, MONTROSEf PA. - Arrival and Departure of Mails. For Great Bend, leaves every day, except Sunday, '7 o'clock, A. M. Arrives at 10 o'clok P. M. • Mail closes at 9 o'clock P. M. For Wilkesbarre, leaves every day, except Sunday, at To'clock A. M. Arrives at 9.P. M. Mail cloies at 9P. M. For Binghamton, leaves evepr day, except Sunday, at 9 o'clUck p. 31: Arrives (every day except Monday) at 9 P. M. .Mail closes at 7 o'clock P. M. For Providence, leaves every day except Sun day at,B A. M. Arrives at 6P. M. Mail clo ses at 9 P. For Towanda, leaves. op Sundays, Wednes days and Fridays at 8 A. M. Arrives on Tues days, Thursdays 'and Saturdays' at' 8 P. M.— Closes at 9-P. M.- For Carbondale, on Mondays, Wednesdays, and Fridays, at 7 9.M. Arrives on Tues. days, Thursdays and Saturdays at 6 P. 31. Closes at 9P. M. • • For Owego, on Sundays, Wednesdays and Fridays at 8 A.M. Arrives on Tuesdaysahnrs. days, and Saturdays at 6P. M. Closes at 9 o'clock P. M. • - • For Silver Lake &e., on Fridays, at 5 A. M. Arrives int Saturday at .9 P. M. Closes at 9 P. M. Thursday. For Skinner's Eddy, on Mondays at 5 A. - 11L Arrives same day at 10 P.M. Closes at aP. M. Sundays. ..itar Court wijowrued Aforlay - afternoon, having done up a -whole week's huelnees in three or four hopra. sorry timo this , for Lai'. A RELIC or Tim OLDEN n execo a- ulty and a number of the students. • ting - a bank of earth in ;this Borongb,- on the i pears that he tinnier Class expressed d r , lands of Dr: Miner Kelley, on Thursday last, sur e attend thn funeral of a highly reap er i foithe purpose of constructing the N. 11.Carialltab e citizen of Borough, and requeuti i iro a large tusk of ivory, not unlike that of an et. a postponment of their recitations ler Oat ephant inneh large 4 was found embedded i purpose . This wasdenied them bt tf in the earth 'the ;depth of ten feet from the the. Professore. • The y, young men, b aits , ' ~l a ttended the funeral ; to the • h er 'surface. - Tha 'relic is Flew in the' "possessio n the s es of the Professors for .doing 1113 , - "; brought up before theieullethy the of them expelled. A ' gr a tt i of Samuel G. Brenton, Who had charge of the were work when' it was, discovered. Both ends have ; ga i t , a number excitement was the:consequence, and - se r i' the appearance . of having been broken off,leav ing it about 3 feet and 4 inches long. It meas. ous injury to the college was antieipst e i tires 15` inches in circumference at one enil, The whole initter,it appears, was finally re . and 14 at the other, and weighs 35 pounds.— ' ferred to the Eon. JAMES BUCHAiIAN, Th o From its appearance' we should judge it may happened at th e Limo to be in Carlisle, L A have een,in its natural state, some u l na or through bin isluence 'a:Sreconcifisti oo tai ten feet in length. I __on transpi going op is if nothing • l 'effected. The Students have nearly it got " there, is and probably i re tnrned. to their-d . uties, and , the busia ra ever will bo a mystery . ' " The bank' of earth °f npi s easent had °f the Institutionu - - from which A waetakert, has not been washed or altered by the freshets of the river during, the memory of the oldest inhabitants of tho country. The finding of tho remains of huge monsters, leads- to thei ; irresistible conclusion that at some remote pepod this country was the native place'of a race of animals now ex tinet. The Elephant i not, and probably net: er was, a native of North - America: d Indeed their present size forbids the _belief that this tusk was ever possessed by an animal of that species. Traditionary! accounts or the Maw. moth or Mastodon by the native Indians, are the only evidence, except the remains °tea: sionally exhumed, that!we have of the exist once of such animals. ; The question suggests itself to-the minds of the curious.- Ilas this country been the native place of such monsters, or are they of anti deluvian existence?---a ques tion to be pondered upon but never to be an swered.— Wyoming Item. BREACH ORYROMIS CASE:-We copy from the North American, thefolloiving report of a trial for breach of promise which took place before the District Court of Philadelphia on Tuesday last: S. F. Earl vs. Esther P. Packer. Aetion for breach of promise for l'n.srringe. The parties are residents stßending. The plaintiff alleg es that Mrs. Packer the defendant, entered in to • • a contract of marriage with him, and.subse . quently refused to carry out. her cObtract.— The council for plaintiff stated that the defen. dant was entitled to the interest for life of a large sum—he believed equal. to 834,000 per annum. The plaintiff is a very young man, obviously younger than 'the defendant. Ile 1 alleges that he has suffered serious damages, in consequence of the long, pending engage, meet; which induced him to.neglect, his pro: fession, and that its termination threw him in to a fit of sickness, The plaintiff's coun sel read a long correspondence between the parties, which served.:to relieve the tedium of a civil trial; The plaintiff was non-suited up on the strength of one of his letters produced by the defendant's counsel, in which he stated he would give her three days time to ' consider whether she would marry him or not, and that " he would abide by. the issue" of her deciiion, whatever it might .be.. Messrs. Watts and Meredith for plaintiff; Messrs. Shepherd, D. P. Strong, of Reading , and Mallery, for defen. I dant. - , - An act to authorize the county commiss ioners of the county of Susqueleantiah to erect new public buildings for the use of said county. SECT lON 1 Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives of the. Com monwealth of Pennsylvanza - in General Assembly met and it is hereby enacted by the authority of the same. That the coun ty commissioners of the county of Susque bannah' be and they are hereby- authorized whenever they deem, the interest of the coon ty require to build a new court house jail and public offices for the use of said county at the berough of Montrose, Provi ded The said county commissioners shall not enter into any Contract for the erection of said building or buildings until the grand jury summoned for next -April term, or any succeeding grand jury o. the Court of Quarter Sessions for the county of Susque hannah shall have reported in favor thereof SECTION 2 That whenever the said coon: I ty commissioners Shalt determine -upon', building and shall commence the savee;:the commissioners of the said county of Sus quehannah aro hereby autboized and re quired to add the sum of five handled dollars to the usual county 'Tates and levies of the borough of Metroselin said county for ten earisecutit , e years from the time of the coin mencement to erect said 'built:ling or buil edings for the purpose - of defraying the ex penses of erecting • the same. • SECTION 3 That the manner of levying and collecting said tax in each year shall be as follows. After; the, assessment shall have been completed and the day of appeal shall have passed the commissioners .shall add to the tax of each person assessed in said borough Or county purposes, such pro'portion of five hundred- dollars . , as the tax of such persons - ,shall bear to the aggre gate amount of taxes levied upon said hor-, ough for county purposes, when such addi tion Shall be made the duplicate shall be made out and the warrant issued, in man ner and from authorized and allowed by law and all laws applicable to the . _ colleCtion of county rates, in the said borough are here by made applicable to the collection of. the additional tax hereby imposed.. SECTION 4 That the county commission ere of the county •of Susquehannah .I)j , , and. they hereby are authorized to borrow for the purpose of building ris aforesaid any sum not exceeding six per cent,, and reim-; bursable at such times as they may deem proper-not exceeding fifteen years. THE OSWEGO EXPLOSIoN.--The Oszoe go Journal of Thursday_ has the follow- ing ; a steamer has arrived from Kingston -1 to aid in raising and removing the wreck ofJ the Comet. She lays in nine feet of water at the steamitotit landing at the - foot of Seneca-st. Tbc loose fragments of the wreck have been removed 'and it now op pears.that a portkin •of her bull, apparently down to her keel ; i&blown off, 'as well as all berupper works; above theloilers.-- Three men are yet missing. They wore. probably blown into the river , and instantly killed. The two who were- scalded and who Survive, I are fgradilally , recovering, and. probably will get well, They all belong . to Kingston. i . , A:COLLEGE STAIIPEDE.---ThCre quite a tlare-up Ifliokiaeou College in the begining of last rfear t as we learn from the Carlisle paperkgrovung out of ~ 0 ouity betweea ecrtam member/ of the Fag, From the Evening Poi!. , . The Erle Railroad _Completed, On• Monday morning, - the president, (li r . eaters, - engineers, and other principal rts. cers of this road, left the city, to pass ore --,; with the first train of cars, the Whole li ne --' - j of their road: - Beaching Littesboro, sly -4 took an extra engine, that they might e t r „I" -- ; interfere with_the regular trains, and stop. ping at, Elmira for tbe night, pursued thei r way the next morning still., o'clock, to the Western Division. . „ The road has been i o _ .1 effective operation as fir as timelier:l e --' since September last, end , in partial q tr . ; ation to Cuba, fifty miles further, since th e ,4 middle . ef, ?abruar,t. This, portion 'of the : road, however, having been finished during [ the winter, and portions of the track est thoroughly completed, his only been rued l' for freight, and fur passengers incident:eh. At Cuba, the convoy reachedsthe untried and entirely new portion of the road. The distance thence to-Duukirk, on Lake E. is 79 miles. As the train passed . vents, ' sections of the road,tleo resident and sup er . intending engineers and contractors joined the party. At Olean, the rushiog ma of the Allegheny met their . view, covered with rafts, floating to the great father of waters, , and on its banki, gathered is groups the wondering children of the feu. For several miles, tbe.road follows its basis through the Indian reservation, and lb Indians, whose attention was arrested by the shrill whistle of the locomotive,- as t thundered through ; their .herc4ofore 10 3 domain,-gazed - with a sort of, melancholy interest ; there was ,no expression of ra t . prise in -theii countenance—upon the rnie disturbances of their peace, the precursertt their fate, the extreminator of their race he genius of mechanism. At Albion. the train passed 'over an ea. bankment 1,2C0 feet high, which, in gars. .deur of conception' and •execution, rivals the Starneca ; it is called " Drew's Galt" The length of the culvert through elicit the water rushes, is 830 fier, - and is of sill id masonry, built for all - time. A shut distance further en, is another embankmat which strikes the tra - ve,ller. with ; t.legreerf wonder and awe only leis than that whirr ..__, he experiences on „ first looking upon tit r '' . : gulf. This portion' of the road exceeds, ii i, :; , ,i picturesque , beauty and effect, anything r,-.,','h even on the Delaware,or SusquebannahL r q Division. For some miles the road tnr. ~ -. . 1 erses the sides of the.mountaite at au ele• is-. 1 ration of 300 feet, and the iuceessios_d i, - ,Vi views are wonderfully grand and exciting Al Throughout the whole.. valley, called "Li. ill tle valley," the eye and are deep. ~1 ily interested, and the. exclamations, "Nil V4l look ! look !" were constan% , At Dayton, twenty miles or more heyerl, J - .. - it, they came-in view of Lake Erie, lying is f A I low them and-,.extending far as the q tO could reach. As the party caught the firs glimpse of the lake, three hearty ,cheerti-- I.i'` burst from the directors, engineers and at. -.A tractors, they felt, each one, as De Son - . 4 ~, felt when he diseovered the Mississippi- :'1 they had achieved ' their 'object, for yen they bad struggled cin, - -at one time. tut!! 4 great-anxiety. — The Board had said, is in - .I public addresslo their stockholders " tirr --, could almost see the Lake," they now et it not." as through a glass darkly," B ..::f clearly, distinctly—not by faith, bat li [ ',.. works. There were three hearty Awn.- -,- On sped the train ; the snpet intending eng• neer, himself, at the helm, and in an tm r„,. more, catching occasional glimpses of Se , I Lake—the shrieking steam horse, whoa advent for ninoteen,years, had deen hoped wished prayed and Waited for, rushed is t: , theivillage of Dunkirk. About the no I gratulations, firing of cannon, illumines &o, let some others write Ore have no et at present, but, there_ is a drought or twin we contemplate the subject, that seems 0 it'were, in an instant fill• us with amp& meat. In twenty hours, running time, a distace of four hundred and fifty miles was passe?, extending from the, Atlantic borders to tta Western Lakes, which in former times avi under favorable circumstances occupied to to twi•lve days. single day 'sources of the, rivers St. Lawrence. the- Delaware, the Susquebannah and the Idas• issippi. were traversed By following tii several courses voyagers could 'reach tlt Gulf of St. Lawrence, Chespeake Bay, 3 the Gulf of llexico. . The locomotive dished up. the - mountain, reaching an elf. vatien of seventeen hundred feet, atusird on the way, portions of the road, of oT twenty-ono miles the' hour. In "twee minutes, Sir," said the telegraph opersta your„ arrival will be known in New York STEAM I ELECWICITY I ENTESPIIISEI A Cue lostxv.- 2 •While Governor Bror: was in Key \Vest, says the Tallehassi (Floriada), Sentimth. ho was presented Il Hon. A, Patterson with a miniature of Gen. Washington; found ten years :g' in ,the neighborhood of Mr. Panama's premises imbedded in the limestone ebiri forms the island. The .bust is of pwrP , . and is evidently the Work of a, mister:- The - expression is said to be, identical Rid; that of the' thulium sstatue , te° Washing 4 at 'liana mid, allowed to be the best Ilk nessie exiStance.--The little bust is it' state ofperfect priservation ; all the d Cate chiselling in the' plains et a rufg shirt remaining as sharp and well-deftte l as ever and the marble without discolor' . -tion. ,'Across the shoulderti lis irsoribti the word .Washington"—a welling wil° seems to indicate an Rollin origim. In thi s , same spot two English geiniens were fop s and .the inscription " of which we did oct /eata.-: All were probably,depesiis by sostO tree-bootcr of the olden time, , , 2,2 '4