dcd that they Lave an atmosphere, iu which tbe nebulous matter of them floats as clouds do in curs; .that the aggregate amount of matter they coutain, compared with the least of tbe heavenly bodies known to us, is exceedingly small; that the tail id constituted of the subtlest por tions of tho comctic matter, diffused by . solar agency; that their orbits arc para colic, or ollip-es of great ecceutricity; that (hey are liable to great changes iu their periods of revolution, being sometimes male to revolve in new orbits, with a quickened or, retarded motion, by tbe at- traction of foreign bodicsinto whose neigh borhood they may pass in the course of their eccentric career; and, thus, that of! the thousand? of comets which are sup- k r0'cd to have our sun for u focus, all, ex-, cept tho half dozen of short period.", must ever elude the grasp of bumau calculations? and, finally, that some havJ appeared which will not probably ever revisit our earth) Well may wc say with the sweet Psahuit of L-racl: Whither shall I go from Thy spirit? or, whither snail 1 floe from Thy presence! Ifl ascend upinto heaven, Thou art there: if I make my bed in bell, behold Thou art there. If I take tho wings of the morning, and dwell m the uttermost parts of the sea, oven there fdiall Thy band had me, and Thy right hand shall hold me." 8 lit I)e iJcffcrsoman. THUK3BAY, OCTOBER, 21,i:i858. Churcli Dedication. Providence permitting the new Meth odi't, Episcopal Church, in Middle Smith field, will be dedicated to the worsl.ip of Almighty GoJ, on Saturday next, the 23d ifl.t. Preaching in the morning at 10 o'clock by thoUcv. J. R. Burr, of Newark, and in tbe evening at 7 o'clock, by tho Bov. Geo. W. Maclaughliu, of Siroudsburg. A cordial invitation is extended to all. Also, on Sabboih morning.at 10 o'clock, preaching by the Rev. Geo. W. Maclaugh lin, and in the evening at 7 o'clock, by the Rev. J. II. Baoyen. "Gome, for the Lord hath spoken good concerning Israel." folly of his Kansas policy, and wo hope will by it become a wiser man and more faithfully represent the peopla whom it is his duty to a degree to govern. That tbe tariff question bad something to do with tbe result it is not denied; and wo are to be taught by it that tho people of this State arc decidedly in favor of protective tariff. Out of twenty-five Congressmen elected at the last election, there arc but two ad ministration men, and one of them, Col. Florence, will most probably bo ousted, in consequence of the great number of fraudulent votes cast for him. If such should be the case, then Mr. Dimmick will be the only rclio of the LeCompton folly, who. should be placed among, th ouriositici in tho Patent-Office, at Wash ington, to teach weak and dishonest men tho danger and folly of misrepresenting their constituencies. Siuce tho freemen of this State have declared fn such an unmistakeable manner that they would not support a candidate for Supreme Judge who entor (ained a belief in the damnable Lecomp ton doctrine, Judge Porter has arrived at the conclunion that it is best for him, and due to the people whom ho has been serving, that ho should not servo them -in the capacity of Judge,and accordingly re turned his commission to Gov. Packer on tho IGth instant. Judge Porter seems to think it rather hard that a man should be rejected on account of his political opin ions. But it would bo well for him to remember that we live in a free llepublic, and that it is therefore exceedingly un reasonable to ask freemen to endorse that despotic Lecompton doctrine, by voting for him who supported it. The anti-Leconipton part of this coun ty have elected the County Auditor. We see that the Monroe Democrat exultingly claims the County Auditor. Mr. A. J. Coolbaugb was and is strongly anti-Le-compton, and labored faithfully to elect Doctor Shoemaker. He, of course, is a Democrat, but ono of tbe conscientious kjnd, and therefore scorns to sanction a dihonorable act even when it is done by - JGST We bavo full official returns from twenty-nine counties, in which tho vote for the Supreme Judge foots up as fol lows: For John M. Read, Opposition 129,750 For Wm. A. Porter. Democrat. 107.999 ' Majority for Road, v 20,7(i The remaining thirty-six counties, from many of which wo have reliable reported majorities, will increase tbe majority o Read to from 30,001) to 40,000. Indiana Election. Indianapolis, Tuesday, Oct, 19, 1858 The returns for members of the Legis lature thus far received, show tho election of 12 Republican, 3 anti-Lccompton Dem ocrats, and 12 Administration Scuator.- while there are 13 Republicans and .10 Democrats holding over from last session To the House 52 Republicans, 3 anti-Lc compton and 45 Administration Demo crats are elected. The official returns o a few counties are not yet received, but will not change this result. The Demo cratic State ticket has about 2,500 ma jonty. Minnesota Election. .-, Chicago,. Tuesday, Oct. 19, 1858. Tho St. Paul (Minnesota) Times of the 17th inst., says that tbe Republicans have elected 33 members of the House, and the Democrats 28, and that there are nine teen Districts yet to hear from. The Senate stands, with four Districts still to hear from, 10 Republicans to 0 Demo crats. Newspaper Change. Our old friend Gordon who for five or six years past has conducted tbe Bulvi- dere lnielUgcnccr with much taste and a bility, has sold his establishment to Mr, F. P. Sellers, late editor of the Lambert- villo Beacon. The latter is a man of tal ent, industry and experience, and wil prove an effective worker in the cause of correct Republican principles. Sussex Register. Result. From the result whleh the freemen of this State brought to so happy a conclusion on the 12th in-tant, we are to be taught many important lessons. When Mr. Bu chauan .first came iDto office be had it in bis power to have made the Democratic party impregnable; and when wo reflect that that result could have been attained so eaily, we are most assuredly much t'urpised at the remarkable and extraor dinary dilemma in which be has placed the party, and by which he ha been so fcigaally rebuked within so short a time after assuming the executive duties. We arc taught first, tbatthe pcoploof this State are insepcrately wedded to the true prin ciples of Democracy that a party may- have the name of Democratic, aud etill not have the essentia! principles of that party, and that in such cases there are enough c patriots who are willing to break alle giance to tbe dangerous tyranny of par ty rule, when it becomes necessary that that party should be rebuked for its de sertion of its true and vital priuciples. c If such were not tbe case, it would be "but a trifling matter, by at first sapping one Republican principle and. then au other, until we would become so far ad vanced in tyranny and so tightly boand by partiy tie, that before we were aware of that state to which the logic of event Ihe results of the recent elections in Pennsylvania, Ohio and Indiana to b followed up, no doubt, by similar results next month in other Northern Stated tbe party with which tic is connected. maybe takeu as conclusive proof that He was voted for and elected by the anti- the couutry is now about to cuter on a Lecompton party. Mr. Democrat, wo are new era" ii .i .. .u i 4 i i From the commencement of tho nres ent century down even to the present mo- uubgite juu uiu.u w uu- v,., mentithc Free-Labor States have nlavcd shall not agree to let you claim the honor an inferior, secondary, aud, -a large part of electing our anti-Lccompton Auditor, or tho timo, very incoueiderablo part. otrange as it may seem, just in proportion Monroe and Pike. The Official vote for Representative in this District is as follow?: Shoemaker, 451 182 Brodhoad, Monroo Pike,'. G33 Brodheads majority, Thirteenth Congressional District The official result of tLis Congressional as in population, wealth, civilation and culture, in agriculture, commerce, manu ractures, letters, science and art, they have left the slaveholding States further and further in the rear. till, indeed, rlmv f-rwkl J J r inuu have almost fallen out of tight just iu the same proportion have these great and growing communities fallen more and Udl I InllintlTKr oh'irrinfnr till flin w t ...... t : of our natioual affairs mav serve almost 1334 to remind one of the coudition of the fal len and prostrate Roman Empire, over run and governed by small hordes of con District is a follows: Shoemaker Dimmick Carbon, 1538 1126 Monroe, 783 J 201 Northampton, 2275 2992 Pike, 179 491 Wayne, 1791 2139 6560 8009 6566 Dimmicks majority. 1443 quering barbarian.", who lorded it with haughty pride over the wealth, tho intel ligence, the civilization and the number. of the conquered Romans. There is ibis difference, however, between the two ca- sas, that the predominance which the been not so much by force as by stealth nnd by fraud. They have, in fact, real- 80ug ized, against the people of tbe North, that 6566 of -S0P iQ which the wolves prevail- ed by tair words and a deceptive show of tatters. The best thov have now to of the Declaration of Independence 13 to speak of it as a political will-o'-the-wisp a generality, sure to lead those who at tempt to follow it into sloughs and quag mires They have been driven to confess and to proclaim that, in their own opinion the men who labor with their own hand are not fit to be trusted with political pow er, unless it may be the right of suffrage, to be always exercised in elevating to of fice some slaveholding patron, never in promoting the-interests of Free Labor. They now only parade tbe institution of Slavery as the only safe foundation of re publican government. They speak of the expectation of the abolition of Slavery, entertained by Washington Jefferson and the other fathers of the Rovolution, as an error, pardonable, perhaps, in them, but which to-day is no longer to be tolerated, so that even any suspected inclination toward it, in tho slightest 'degree, ought 4.0 be set down as an absolute disqualifi cation to hold any Federal office. Thus driven to abandon the fetch of domocracy, the slave-holders gave over all their popular professions, or no longer addressed them except to tbe mo.-t igno rant of the back-woods population, to the hangers on about the City grog-shops, or to that uneducated portion of our immi grant population unable to read the news- Daners. and who therefore continued to lag some ten or twenty years behind the times. Turning away from the democra cy they addressed themselves'tb the aris tocracy of the Free Labor ' States to thoso very merchants, manufacturer, ban kers aud capitalists, whom for forty years they had overwhelmed and discredited by the most malignant charges of designs to enslave their fellow citizens or to te tray and sell their country. They ap pealed to the conservative spirit and still more emphatically to the money-loving and money-making spirit of this part of tbe northern community, setting themselves forth as the real conservative, conservatives from interest as well as from principle to whom alone the upper crust of northern sooiety could look to save themselves from being drowned and swallowed up by the scathing democracy underneath. As in their former appeals to the laborers of the Noith, ho in their present appeal to northern capitalists and employers, theirgreat reliance has been in so frightening those to whom they ad dress themselves as to make them inca pablc of any sound and sober judgment. Tho working men were told and even in duced to belieVe so artfully was the play kept up on their suspicions arid prejudi ces that only by keeping the national government in the hands of slave holders could they save the country from being betrayed or sold by tho British, plunder ed by banks, impoverished by tariffs, and troaden under the foot of the moneyed aristocracy. For the last ten or fifteen years, tho slaveholders' cry has been that only by kerping the national governmet in the bauds of slaveholders can the U nion be preserved, or tho North itself be eaved from all the disorders, confusion, violence and vulgarity of an unbridled democracy. In former tiacs, the appeal of the slaveholders was to the goodhon est country farmers. Their appeal now is to the great capitalists, rich merchauts, and lordly bankers. Then they- looked Bavh ' 9P o-S -. Ht. K ?ro-i J2 -T2 S 5 2 2 " ra JL'.iM' rj H5 - L3SB.BB S i S S 3 Wm cm- W Sii.--' its S-S-s-g-J. .-" s.--n v y-x o I o i i n ST - , 'qSncqjooQ o in tow da ; Vl 3-. S - -P&iiia, td co o'rfk oito -jo w m ii . bh a' ' ' ' ' ' ' i A-& ' ' : ' .co' oo Jo o S . A ' . '.'oubooj J: if. ; , !' ,;Pt Ol.j klt0:O O CO CO I ' 53 a l, Moa. as v" -"os w es osipnJBj ... ,CT). -&.' C3"0 - M f vIOl cua MO J .i - ,:i , .-.I i' - V 4 - o - ? JW u- as -o 03 tow icen,. j r W ?f , i,H : .j; osj!U j.rj.o; to . fo . Pl'gqjimg a 2 ? 03 -'- .00" C103, K. I jL --s-''S' 'o'" o-5 - J6i to 'inoug i i tc olf;.. . i -jt03; -,-..o to oo A - a , art 5 I "' s i -J , -J . -i -j . f s;o)T, i? ,. ad c,' i cn -a ha mm wi. ' n fTj s- i: - - H i h 9 - t tO ' o . i cs co ; ; ' r -4 P oo I r C3?l ; ' 1 i- i.i sXw.-r i c-'l - co 0313 'eunnnfqoT . tea ' -l QD A tO to -J y H Wgj ' ' ' ' ' I -.-4-- 3 j to -03' to os . os as 'Jpouncfana;.. j , I cd c -i oo to - j . , 0s o cn cn oi cd to , Picking up the "WoundedGlancy goes Abroad. The Reading Gazelle of yesterday says: "The Hon. J. Glaucy Joues received on Saturday evening last a letter from the President of tbe United States, ten dering him the appointment, of Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipoten tiary to Austria. "We have not loarned whether Mr. Jones will accept the distinguished com pliment offered or not.'; Of course he will accept? Why not? Has he not earnod this distinction? las he not eaten dinners with Mr. Bu chanan when every one else was shut out? Has he not misrepresented the old coun ty of Berks, and, closed up the eye of the President? and s-hould .he cot, there fore be rewarded? Who is fo well fitted to represent Locofocoism (not the country) at tho Austrian Court as he who was its victim in Berks? But seri ously, it would seem that Mr. Bupbanan is determined to show the people of Berks that if they dare to rebuke his favorito he will exalt him: Is not this prompt offer of so high an office to the defeated Jones a direct in- to the country for their main support,now !ult t0 ltb.c Pe.Ple ! UC C0Utjt.r?, And to the cities ,s not tuIS ,U,SS100 being as it is the man- This last fetch served them very well in T .ullsreP"sentallonv0f r,n.. v.n ..a - : .i the sentiments of his constituency, a dis- nnttini Viorni nH Kit It on on Presidential chair. But it is alreadv a- lUS- Ul 'lU uu.UUil i I horn 13 n ti nnnrnnrifitni uoctantly manliest that tho conservative dodge can never serve their turn at all to the extent of the Democratic dod'c Tho Free Labor States are essential!? Democratic, and the time has long gone by when the class or men who compose. or did compose, our Siher-Gra? Whis have it in their power to give a political There is au appropriateness in this ap pointment. Austria is .the proper place for tho rer-ideuce of the toady of a tyrant. Daily Neics. Buchanan Resign? Ev. Bui- Will Mr lelt a. Not quite. Nr. Buchanan prefers to complexion to any Free-Labor State in remain in his present position for a few The Next Legislature. The House of Representatives strongly in opposition to tho Buchanan Administration. Tbe Senate will r their trusty and faithful shepherd dojis as in fact their enemies: who only allowed i will be Set r ne prospect of after- nuiu uuvuujiug mem, ana ro receive these eaid Fpcaking wolves in the capacity un- guardians of the fold. Lor a large part doubtedly stand, at the next session, as f tue current century, the slaveholder? follows, which places tho Democratic w oceatea tdo jNortfiern people, or enough r .1 i . " " D..,:.. mt , .uvu iu accompiisu tueir DUrDOSC. teen ;r,i!r fo,in rr. .... u . i A ai l u a "'"j"fc oi one. x doso marjx- , 4, , ... . r. r aj uivcv vwuuiui j k us iu wi 11 hi v a led () are new members Chat of Russia. That the direct tendency of Mr. Bu chanan's Kansas policy was to a despo tism either intentionally or bj accident onhis part, cannot, we trust, be success fully contradicted, for it is a fact self ev ident to every one who is capable of dis tinguishing between Republican and des potic governments. In despotism the will of the people w not consulted the will of the despot reigns supreme. That the policy of Mr. Buchanan was to totally disregard the will of i very large major-c- r u i f -r -ii i xi j ui Luc licujjic ui ii.iiusas, win not ue denied by any person familliar with the history of that extraordinary affair. The end of the last canvass shows con clusively that the freemen of this State are worthy of the glorious institutions of the northern portion of this moddle Republic, by setting at defiance the bidding of him who sits at the head of the Natioo, and who was presumed to embody tbe will of the Democracy, when they became con vinced that that bidding was repugnant to and subversive of our form of govern ment. Well will it be- for tlie old Key Stone State, if she should continue to be a free and uotrammeled from party alliances and willing to follow tbe principles of Democracy to their logical conclu.-ion. We trust she will. We trut .also that Hr. .Buchanan, has nearly realised the ing themselves at tho head of affairtrand of subjecting tbe Administration T. rr T- ... l ' i. John Lj. barter, Upp., Richardson Federal Government to their exclusive Jj. Uriiht, Lfem., Isaac N. Marsclis, control, into the belief that thov. th Dem., Samuel J. Randall, Dem. a. Thomas S. Bell, Dem. 3. John Thompson, Opp. 4. Mahlon Yardlcy, Opp. 5. Jeremiah Shindle, Dem. 6. Beuj Nunnemacher, Dem. 7. Robert M. Palmer, Opp 8. Thomas Oraig, Jr., Dem. 9. E Reed Myer, Opp. 10. George P. Steele, Dem. 11. Glenni W. Scofield, Opp. 12. Andrew Gregg, Opp. 13. Reuben Keller, Dem. 14. Henry Fetter, Dem. IS. John B. Rutherford, Opp slaveholders, were the only true demo crats, thoroughly imbued with the Jeffor- sonian doctrine of the equality of all men ana whom it was necessary for the work ingmen of the North to aid in keeping in power, in oraer to savo themselves from becoming the slaves of Northern merch ants, bankers, manufacturers and capital ists. This dodge has long served the slaveholders exceedingly well. Possess ing by law a despotic power, practically without any limits at all, over their own households and their own plantations, the slaveholders figured away with great unc- tion in congress as tho advocates of lib- 16. R. Baldwin, Bart. A. Shaeffcr, Opp. erty and equality, disciples who had t-tu- 17. William A Welsh, Dem ( died democracy at the feet of Jefferson ana upon wnom uis cioaK had tallen, hav ing undergone as it fell a miraculous mul tiplication, furnishing to each of our bun dred or two thousand of slasebolders a mantle quite broad enough to conceal the overseer's whin which hn .1 O HT-T7- i ll 1 1 . I . . t U'O oami. hi ivee, ia. u. Uazzam, Opp. hand. 25. John R. Harris, Opp. . This i 18. George W. Brewer, Dem 19. William P. Schell, Dem. 20. John Cresswell, Jr Dem. 21. T. J. Coffey, Opp. 22. Jacob Turney, Dem. 23. Georee W. Miller. Dem. the Union. The immense vote cast for years longer, and to try his chances for ?or Fremont, followed up as it has beferf a sec0Qd term. I ho people have recent at the recent elections, affords conclusivnMj silown luat they are uotf pleased with evidence that thi new slavnhnlfUntr ,n,na Mr. Buchanan; aud ho is juit even with of conservatism and the safetv of the U- tUc,ni tor he di?appiovcs their conduct as nion has seen its hst tlnv r,A n l.-r. ey uo uis. xv - - UI U II 11 U ' ly avail for another Presidential election. ITriumph (f the Steam Plow.' The State Bo;fd of Agriculture of Ill inois offered a lemium of SoOOO ' for steam plows. Itjvas expected that three different inventitp would be exhibited and tested at theafo Fair, but onl'one was on thegrounl. That was Fake!d Locomotive s-teau, plow, Lanca.-ter, -Pa., which excited gnat interest among tlie prairie farmers, aitl performed well.- The machine and sparatu, with fuel and water, weighs only about seven tuns. Vnd by the use of a drfm or barrel tlaped driver, for propelling the locomotive life difficulty of miring D soft soil, and slip ping on hard smootlground, is overcome. The steam plow is eiwily managed, and is described as a eras between a locomo tive and a tender, combining the essen tial elements of boti, mounted on two fuidin. wheels nml s . -i. -mm. Ouicago lJress corre.pon-icnt thus de' scribes the steam performances: - ? 'It draws ix plows, cutting a foot each1, attached in a frame, and so regulated by spiral 5-prings that thej. yield to any ex traordinary ob.-truetioJ. As there was no stubble field near, itiwas concluded to make trial on the unbnken prairie: this was now baked so liari by drouth tL'afc the prairie-breaking plcvs would not run in it, and the trial of so plows was aban doned iu consequence. Notwithstanding this fact, the inventor ra3 so confident of success that ho gave ho order to put the plows to work in thisalniost impefvi3 ous soil. After a little ri-lay in refilai ting to this brick-like urace, the engine moved forward, whensixfurowaer turn ed side by side, in the motVorkman'likc manner. Tho excitemen of tho crowtf was beyond control, and t.e'ir shouts and wild huzzas echoed far ovrthe prairie as there beneath the smiliiAutumif stxn lay the first furrow lurned Uy- steai'n Vi the broad prairies of tho lighty Wet. The consumption of fuel jfd water;'was very moderate. That th Engine H a complete success there can o no douhP iiuu mi mot is now wanting ato dembn- JCST Below we. give the names of Con gressmen elected, in this State. Dist. 1 . Thomas B. Florence, 2. Ed ward Joy Morris, 3. William Milward, 4. John P. Verreo, I Phila. J 26. William M. Francis, Opp. 27. Darwin A. Finny Opp. 28. Kennedy L. JJIood, Dem. Dem. Holding over, 12 New members, 5 17 n n O n it a cn 7 n a 1 1 i ii uuoncivu wen iar more man one entire generation. Tho Anti-Slavery atr. itation, commenced some twonty years ago, resulted, however, before long, in compelling the slaveholders to throw off this, till then, most convenient dismiisn 7 16, Their cloak of Democracy bogno all at once, under tho operation of Anti-Slavery tracts, to acortcb, burn, blister and tor- Ppp- 9 Cleveland, Oct. 16. The Republican meDt tb?4mLIik0 abirfc of Nessus. All norii, f. i. o... , B at once lt becama bighlv incendiarv. and. nrof., m.n . m, A. ' n tneir rage larj and passion, they not u votes. I be Conaressional delegation on v strinnnd f. nfF; j J will be composed of iff.Wn P.ni3: ' .l.:s5 'IZ" "IIV"""' EUa lorewu 4 " "vuuuiubuo iuoiuu mm cc Ui ur K Or hnrrnr nnA .1 and six Democrats a republican, irain of hflstation. hnf. in O I 1. 1 w.Ulf "f"Tl"V. i every mark of horror and de- nantly so, toro it up into ten thousand ribbons and ty liepublicau not, merely in name, but world iust fools cnoUiih to bo Dleascd in fact a party based on the advocacy when you step on other people's corns. of the rights and interests of Freo Lnhnr but when vou sten on their's rmnd T.nrA . .. . . . . ' . . - r - o ) as against tho pretensions ana usurna- what a howl tions of slave holders. There is every reason to -xpect that, with a moderate exercise of good sense, this partv orovi ded it can keep it.elf tolerably free from tm: iuiri"ucs and intiucnce ot trad hi demagogues and self-seekin; politicians itt or win be able to triumph at the next Pres- laeniiai election, and, m so doing, to car ry back the administration of the Gov ernment to those principles of iustico 5 John Wood, from Montgomery. equity and equal rights with which thP 6- Jobn Hickman, from Chester. Administration of Washington sot nut Henrv C. Loncnecker. from Lehiirh. and to those principles of Democranv nf 8- Mai. John Schwartz. which Jefferson was the crcat cxnositnr 9 Thaddeus Stephens, from Lancaster -Tribune. 10. John V. Killinger. from Lebanon. 11. James II. Campbell, from Schuvlkill. xae irct congressional District Contest l4i crgo . bcranton, from Luzerne, of lTlorence's Seat. 13. Wm. 11: Dimmick from Wavne ehave received the followinir anrA 14. Galusha A. Grow, from Bradford. ' n.i t . . 1 . o . I , - -r ... . ' ruui uoi. ivyan to the peon c of thn irirn io. James T. lla o. Congressional district. It will hn SP,Jlfi. Beni. T. Junkin. that be intends to contet the rmht. nf lTr 17. Edward. McPherson. Florence to a seat in Congress from t1,n 1. Samuel S.Blair, from rTiininnn Jy,l i,uuu u me irenusoithe tip ltair.iirmt a y. Jouu uovoae. tho-ivronc will render to Col. Rvan siik 20. Wm. Montaomerv. information as wa know to bo at hand, he 2l- James K. Moorhead. from Pittsburg .ii v nr . -r-v - wm uavo no aimouity m mak hp rroo.l J,i- Robert McKnwht. from All,l,pnv claims; Nru-s D M r;n: ' ' , . . . T h J ' - - - i iiiihiii i 1 1 i. iu ii pr T wn m . n in r r i.r , I . . u.wnun, iiuui jjunicuuvi xuute trcoiwor uic nrsl Uojrresxim,nn i. Ubanin lla . . District.- As it is my intention'to contest 25- Elijah Babbitt, from Erie. tne right of Uol Thomas B. Florence to a Merabers of the present House. At last, there exists in this country a par- There are some people in this selfi-li 8 .e tak,.Dg l"c wholecpense' in'tq ty Kepublicau not- merelv in nnii. hnt world iut fnols nnmih fo nlon.nrl COU3,utr',noni 11 " etieapcrthan horse power. If this is answered 1 the afrir mativc, it will produce the grated revo lution in agricultural progresj that wo have yct-seeu; it will take anfher wmi klo from the brow of labor, ad give1 to the toilimr millinn the toiling million form.'1 e 101- ma- seat in tho Congress of the United States, I wouldrespectfully urge upon all those who have any knoweledgo in relation to the frauds perpntrafod at the reoent election in tho First Congressional District, to transmit all tho information in their pos session to John W. Ryan, 944 South Front Stroet. Administration Members in italics. A Tough Story. Tho Mobilo Advertiser of the 31st ult publishes a queer story about a tree in that city, the bark of which was gnawed by a mad dog in pne of his paroxysms. Tt. irno tn 1 ... The United Si.i TPn,c.., B v.j " V s i"mpuiy Mocted until the - .uuou y ,n iu a UUU UTSI. ram QAmn. rahon ir K i .1 way. It has'fllmllprl nt't ;n n.: :J . ' ' ' uu,"'oa ttiou- 1 ... . " ww PDUU ieit out a "Uobb." OCT See pieces. Thirteen bona standi near were wounded by the fragments, and together with a fool?K It.. ' , OCT See advertisement of Dr., ganford toothpick out of oni f 'Z ' i- . 1 by U,ark n'9D0f to0PP,ed to T.UTi'I? lVvrr.fin-i i.iAn-. 1 . . -u h luuli'lL,K OUC ot one Of the srjlintnr Kaita rpi.. j. V Mir oTOfln i , x.xu,v.iijivuaiioiiier culwnn.Ja nee died, of hydrophobia ' ' ' 7 ,or.VIfn: V 10 uxea 8P0 A Sine-ular Casf?. The Philadelphia Press, in fn article I lowing case of infatuated Bdeliy: It may be within the kuowlei4 of ny of our readers that a clcnyman c? this city was among thoso wbiHeft" ffrA Europe in 1840 on the ill fatct Itcamtr President, and was never again blard'of His wife, who remained iu Phi iSclph'ia. and was deeply- attaohed to hi never' did, because ?be never could, bcltfve thvatS he was lost to her. Eighteen ij&s tfavo passed away, and yet that truBtil lady wc caunot speak of her a3 and sho repudiates the name of wUlotoAnti'mtc to expect his ret.tr n Every day S&vct is -phicedfor In at the table itliere sthstahVZ his accustoried chair Eve boll wo informed, awakfcna' the chcV-8 ished conviction of her icart that loved-one will return, 1 h Mrs. Mary Twiggs , con6nedn the jS of Montour county under the seVtcelof death for the murder of Catharine w uiurh . attempted to make her e3epBl on as Tuesday night. She had Wade a hole in tho wall behind her bed, aqd sue-, ooeded so far as to be able to see throriclu it, when the attention of Mrs. Sheriff xoung, on sweeping tho room the aexfr morning, was called to it by thonuaual quantity of dust on tho floor. Theifct struments she u-jat (T tQo purpose wero? a spike and a K80, Sho haa sinca bqB transferred to JQ room lately oaeu"nipd j by Clark, aQtDow hoppled to the iberl - me uaj M M,a uu"iu "TC3Ht ymr tsmmmmz" sszz
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers