> I for tho -return of that ; little to'their own hands ai very short intervalg,-|— While tho their virtue and, vigi lance, no adminij tratitm, by any extreme edness or folly, f an ijery 'seriously inji government in tf t short space of four yt My count rymti, ope ond all, .think i and well upon I iis whole subject. - N l . valuable can be t Ist hiy taking time. . If there be at i object to harry any of yop, in hot baste, to s .'step 1 which you would never take deliberately-|that object will be frustrated by taking; time | but no good object can fee frustrated' by it,! Sup of you as are now dis satisfied .still bare the old constitution unim paired, and; on'the sensitive point, the laws of youtuown framing under :it, while the new al-, ministration wstll havd no immediate power, if it would, to ohftngo either. If it were adm: t ted fliat yom Who 1 are dissatisfied hold the rigit side in tho dispute, there still is no'single rea son for preeijnthte action. Intelligence, pi.t pstriotisin, Cbiistianfty and a,firm reliance oh Him who has never yet forsaken this favor id land, are still competent to adjust in the best way all our present difficulty. ; . ! In your bauds, my ; dissatisfied feilow coun-. trymen, and not in| mine, is the • momentous issue of civil war. The government will riot assail you. You can [have no conflict without being yourselves tbo aggressor*. ' You have so eatb registered in Hpvsn to destroy the gov ernment, while I shall have the most solemn one to “ preserve, protect and defend” it. Ir m loth to close. We are not enemies, but friends. We must not be eneihies. Though passion may have strained,, it not break.-our bonds of affection. The mystic chords of memory, stretching from every battle field and patr ot grave to 1 every living heart apd hearthstone ill over this broad land," will yejt swell'the chorus of the Union, when j’again touched, as surdy, they will be, by. the* 1 , bettor [angels of our ta lon. !; THE BIGHT ■ SENTIMENT, i Last Saturdayweeki in the' Senate, Mr. Jot n son, of Tennessee, made the following remari a; -He said be thought he might talk about treasc n. Our fathers talked a|)ont it. The Constjtutijn defines treason as levying war against the 7 Gov ernment, and aiding those who do so ; aid show him those w'lio'inake war on the Govern ment and .fire on its vessels, and be would show who .were traitors. And if he was Presidentjof the United States, w|uld have them arrestid, aild if tried and convicted, by the Eternal God, ha would have them (hung !• He referred to the, action of’Tennessee ;|n regard to secession, jit seamed as if the Senator from Oregon had pot beard the news, 'if j . He referred to the tjptes on certain resolutiojns at Jthe last session, when the Senator from Ore gon voted against a resolution that was neeis •ary to protect slavery. But that -was before the Presidential election ; but’ now it is after such an election; ant| the people have decided; and, perhaps, he thifeks if he cannot he Presi dent of the whole Uaion, then the time has ar rived foridivision anj separation; and his chan ces improved]. Six States have gone out of, the Union-;' put the people of thdse States have not pasSgd an ordinance of sec|s .•ion ; their conservative men have been em powered; and bad triumphed ; the •tars and stripes ha|d been hauled down,*ahd thepahnetto and thejbelican and the rattlesnake run up, i-He an eloquent appeal for the flag of the ifyjion, and expressed a trust that the flag would ever wave “O’er the land] of , the freehand home of the brave.” ’He declared that Tennessee woufl ever remain in the Uniin. Hearty applause tjhme from the galleries'as Mr. Johnson closed,j|vhen the Chair immediojte ly qfdered them to (joe cleared, and this order wns-reoeived with aSfew hisses, when the whole crowd rose and burit forth in most tumul tubus applause, accompanied with yelling and shojtrt-, ing, thonoiae culminating in three rousing ■ ehsers for the Unipni The greatest kind of fex eitement was produced by these extraordinary proceeding!. . j ’ a ' ■' ' -. , BAISINb THE FLAG. J Thecercmohy of Raising the flag by Mr. Lin eoln, onlndependebjoe Hall, was one of thrill ing interest. The| Rev. Henry Steele Clark closed his prayer as;]followa: j And .now, agß|n,fjp Most’ High! we confess Thee ]Lo|rd of angelsjand of men. In the name -of our God we Tpil||set up our banner! Do -thou protcctit! Mffo it endure forever! Pram its ample folds majfno star fall, dimmed tnd darkened, Irrecoverably! Symbol of protec tion and bond of amity, honored abroad tnd loved at honis, unfurled to every breeze, from sia to sea, over ulithis wide domain, let it be thorn of its fair proportions and ignominiously trailed and rent {'seditious hands, and' care lessly wet with bloqd, nevermore I This is oar United and earnest prayer 1 Amen! And may all the people say, Amen! i ■ The Press thus describes the final evejnt: 1 MR. tltrCOLsi RAISES THS F,tAO. I : The- ejeitetnont 'was of a fearful character when the. President elect raised the ropei to hoist the flag of to the crest of khe staff, over the StatK House. The souls of] all seemed 'Starting frobi their eyes, and evfery throat was wide. iThe shouts of the people were like the roar of waves, which do not cease to break! Foi fall j three minutes the cheers continued. The expression of the President elect was that of silfent solemnity. His long Ktan were extended. • Each hand pulled alter nately at the and a bundle of banting, tri-eblorod, which bstfl never been kissed by the wind before, slowlyjj rose into the sky. If the shouting hud been fWfal and tumultuous be fore, it became absolutely maniacal now. From the smallest urchin! .to the tall form which ri valled the President's in compass of chest and length of Umb,thsfe rose a ’wild cry. It re minded as of some of the storied shouts which rang among the. Scottish hills, in the days of clans end clansmen. Suddenly when the broad bunting had -reached the summit of the mast it unrolled attipce, and blazed in the sun light. At the samsltlme the band struck, up the Star, Spangiemlßanner, and the eannon ranged in the!square sent np peal after peal. Mr. Lincoln was then eaeorted to hi? (hotel, and .in a short time the*, crowd had melted away, many going back to Ihetr yet untasted break fast, and the rest |moving off as business or pleasure prompted!' • Great exoitnmeniwas created in Washington city yesterday by a! Report generally circulated that at a Cabinet e|)tinoU on Saturday night it had been determined to remove troops from the Southern forts, a* te reinforce them would cause an immense loss ofilife, ahd greatly aggravate the exitting'diffioollics. It is now certain the stock of provisions at J?ort Sumter is almost en» tirely- exhausted, and that fort must be quickly ! »../• . >< . . .1 «.» n r THE AGITATOR. HUGH YOUNG, EDITOR & PROPBIET' WELLSBOHOUGS, PA., WEDNESDAY MORNING, MAR. 13. Ifol. '•eh ' To* Lvaugucai.. —We publish Ihia week! the Inaugural Address of President Lincoln. It cannot fail of haying an excellent effect pc the whole country. The views he puts forth on the Slavery question .are ,the| same which wojdnd in his published speeches; but they are not such views as have been imputed to the Re mb lican party by traitors and workers of sedition who have had the. ear ofj the South. It was wise to speak frankly and make himself ui der stood.. What he sayjs of the Government and of his duty to maintain it and execute the 1 vws, must get the approval iof every man it the Country, who is moved by the impulse ol pa triotism ; and his confidence that the auth irity of the Government can be maintained, wit lout bloodshed will contribute much to seen 'e a peaceful solution of the existing difficu ties. 1 1 pe lt it lan’s TVe commend the Inaugural to the carefu rusal -of every reader, resting assured th will find a kindly response in • every frcen heart. HOW. DAVID -WILMOT. We clip the following paragraph from Washington correspondence of the Harris Daily Telegraph. It was written by ag( man who has boon connected with the pres a quarter of a century. life have si hopes that Judge Wilmot will jbe elected t United States’ Senate to the place i vacant by the, resignation of Gen. Cam who takes, a place in Mr. Lincoln’s Cabin Secretary of War. Mr. W. may not accsp offer if made to him, but his friends jn thii tion of the State have long desired .to see occupy this position; “ Among the many distinguished men from Pennsylvania,-therb is none who has ed forth kinder expressions of regard or wa sentiments of approval than Hon. David mot of Bradford county. He is justly estin as one of the ablest men in V all who know anything concerning the hii of politics in the middle States, must acco Judge Wilmot the most {indomitable qua of fortitude -and preseverance., In bis imj nable Northern home, bo is a tower of strei uncompromising in his devotion to who esteems its a principle, and unyielding it attachment to his friends. For sixteen ' Judge Wilmot has represented that grand which has since passed into t}ie judgmet this nation, in deciding the true interests destiny of the Others may have seated this idea clothed in a disguise 01 dueed for a selfish motive, yet the “ Pro' was there in all its glorious light and inllui to guide and direct the people to the end o and impartial decisions. Such a man, father of such principles, will surely be re bered by the people of the free North, and j that the people of Pennsylvania" will, whet opportunity is presented, recognize in .] Wilmot one of the ablest men in their mi' represent them in the councils of the natio DOUGLAS AND THE NEW AD: ’ TBATXON. [Prom The Xevr Turk .Tribune.] Mr. Douglas has taken the nevr Admir tion in hand at the outset, add it is bis purpose, by the most unscrupulous efforts of ingenuity to get it within his grasp and crush it. Doug las is no common man. With an unbounded stomach for political preferment, he pursues bis end without the slightest regard to the'faijrness of his means, and from each disaster risen with renewed strength, insolence, and reokiosf Wholly unfettered by fhese moral rest] which compel some statesmen to pay resp .the claims of decency, Douglas dashes oi awed by exposure, unabashed by defectior truth stand in his way, it is ruthlessly ( aside, and shamelessly evaded. If hono bid the use of. a political weapon, an exo ise is not wanting far its violation. Thug Douglas induced Republican Senators to vote apparent ly in favor of Squatter Savereignty upoa his pledge that the vote should not be used a; them poetically ; yet upon the plea thal coin pressed him hard in the Illinois ca he did not hesitate to cite this vote again! men. who cast it in consequence of bis p Throughout his whole political career, Dt has been esteemed (dicky and untrustwor his personal character, i He began Kfe a gogue, and he has pursued bis political keeping the same character, and display! aptitude fur political intrigue which h parallel. 1 ! Although nominally a*lawyer, Douglas had any legal training tb speak of, and hii era! education was extremely limited. I the ago of 22 be was Attorney General c nois, which at that time wad an office qi importances that of DistrictjAttorney i of the counties in thisj State,j and therefi quired some knopdedgeof latk But thi nothing in? to his leap upi bench of the Supreme {Court of Illinois I age of 23. This judicial feat was,ln i political maneuver, got up by Douglas an 1 oth ers to overslaugh the old Supreme Court by adding more Judges, and incidentally to pro vide places for briefless politicians. Frji i this little operation has dpubtless 5 arisen .lodge. Douglas's reverence for Courts in general espe cially the Supreme Court of the United £ tales. So entirely devoted whs, he tq politics, thit be fore being made a Jfldgio be bad twice nin for Congress in Congressional D strict which at the time held within its limits Chisa go, Galena, and Springfield. - His first canvass was made in 1838,. against William X.iMay, and tbs modest youth did not scruple to jadvo- mrg itla i for seo bira hero call- rmer Wil ated r hile IDCOB just the lem- tust the •arid Ist to r. " srs- istra- ness, aints set to I, US' , If trust for- ;ainst ; Lin- nvass it tbe edge, uglas by in ietra- way, ig an IS DO lever i gen et at f Illi- ite as re re- i was n tbe t fhe act, a TIOGA COUNTY AGITATOR. THE Clay required some one to demolish him, and Douglas was the man to do it; In 1840 he ran against John T. Stuart, and displayed consid erable ability m conducting the canvass. At "both of elections the Illinois Canal was in progresi, and as every man could legally yofe once who jhad lived six months in the State, Douglas devoted himself to the personal culti vation of tlie canal-diggers, every man of whom voted for llim as often as the law allowed, and some a good deal oftener. By extensive pipe laying he was got into Congress, but the extension of 'suffrage was not so successful as in 1858, when he beat Lincoln for the Sen ate by oarrying-a couple of doubtful counties. When be first sought to get into the Senate his very es gerness to drive the Legislature to support hi n caused his defeat. But he was; not a man io.be, put down by bis party, and be soon became Senator, after serving two or three terms in die House of Representatives with' no great disti iction. Once in the Senate, the road to the White House .seemed nearly traveled; — Willing tc conc’sda everything to the South,; having, in right of his wife, a plantation in Mis sissippi well stocked with negroes,, he;still re membered that Illinois was a 'Free State, and that he hal a position to maintain at home.— Hence it came to pass that his coarse on the Slavery qt cation was vacillating and temporiz ing. - One day the Missouri Compromise was pronounced “canopizad in the hearts of the American people,” and as sacred a&tbe Consti tution itself, and a little while afterward a bill was introduced by him to repeal that canonized measure. : Not caring whether Slavery was “ voted upi or voted down," he still did care for the support of his own State, and, therefore, gave a half-vigorous, half-hesitaing. opposition to the Leeompton policy, failing to sustain the English villainy only because some leading friends restrained him almost] by force. His scheme of] Squatter Sovereignty, designed for' the spread of Slavery, while it seemed to threat en its restriction, wasi nullified by accepting the dicta pf.tllo Supreme! Court' in the Dred Scott case, and declaring the question a judicial one ; and when finally a more decided policy than Squatter Sovereignty prevailed at the polls, he rushed hack; to the support of that canonized Compromise which his ruthless hand bad struck down. At he broke up the Dsmo-- cratio party upon a pretended principle which he now abandons, conceding eagerly more than the Convention demanded. At Norfolk, be made a valiant speech in favor of enforcing the laws, promising to aid Lincoln to enforce them ; yet after Lincoln’s election,' he discovered that there was mo way of enforcing the law against revolted States except by the aid ;of |ipstavos. Thus, after twisting and turning, and ride both sides of the sapling at one§, We‘ have Stephen A. Douglas brought faco to face with the Administration of President Lincoln, and Resolved to dp all in his power to .cripple that Administration and destroy the party which called it into' being. The evidence of this will he found in the insidious speeches he has made on.the Inaugural, professing the utmost candor in criticising it, giving it credit for sentiments, not expressed, and holding the Administration responsible for any departure from those senti ments, as expounded by Douglas. Mark how kindly ho; dissents from the views of Clingman, at the same time shaking hands' with by way of a hint of what he is driving at. All bis notions of enforcing the laws are discarded now. Hs thinks it will take 10,000 men to re enforce Summer, and 200,000 men to enforce the laws. His endeavor is to assume the part of a candid observer, and commit the Administra tion to the passive policy of Buchanan, delu ding it all the while with the fiction of Demo cratic support, while he himself goes on his knees to Cottondom, and cornea out at last the champion of Southern rights; and the preserver of the Union. If the pleasure be as great in being cheated os to cheat, the Administration will suffer itself to be led along by its candid friend, Mr. Douglas, until he gets it on the ‘brink of that political precipice over which he can dash it into fains. The old Douglas legend we believe, is "Beware the hear,” It is a very good legend for presidents and Cabinets to learn by heart about!these times, when Mr. Douglas is around and begins to hug them in a delicate way. - 1 LET ITS COMPROMISE. ' We certainly do not feel like joking on the subject of the present national troubles, but are not fully convinced whether the following proposed basis for a compromise is not intended to be serious. Little less, we fear, would be satisfactory to; the south. It js proposed by Ethan Spike, Esquire, a relative of Jack Dow- nmg The removal of the: Missouri line as far north as the S>. Lawrence river, nil south of that to be devoted to slavery; a declaration by the Re publicans that they are sorry they elected Lin coln and are willing to be forgiven: the public burning of the Chicago platform, and such por tions of the Bibio as seem to conflict with slave ry ; the removal of Bunker Hill Monumunt. to South Carolina jthejimmediate'massacre of all free negroes in; the Northern States; the per petual banishment of Garrison, Phillips, Abby, Folsom, Daniel Pratt, Mrs. Bloomer and Caleb Cushion, to Liberia; E Pluribus tJnum to be amended so as ,to read B. Pluribus Carolina; the tnrkey buzzard to be substituted for the American eagle; Major Anderson to be hong ; the stares to be’, obliterated from the national ensign and a bale of gotten substituted ; Howell' Cobb to be proclaimed President and Gov. Floyd Secretary of the Treasury; only tw'o newspapers to be allowed in the free States— the New York Day Book and the Eastern Ar-' gus ; the New England pulpit to'he controled by Censors, appointed-by Senator 'W'igfail; the old hats of Iverson, Jeff. Davis and Yancey,- shall be set up in the market places of the more rebellious northern cities, apd every person re fusing obeisance shall have his nose flattened, be painted blaclf and sold into slavery. If af ter this liberal offer oar Southern brethren shall continue contumacious and insist upon catting our throats then, in the spirit of’76, let ns mas ■tronnSh and—mn awasr. , from the people. ■To the Editor of The Agitator: y Sekatob Douglas ts. Tne N. Y. Herald.- The New York Herdldnn commenting on Presi dent Lincolu's-Inaugural It would have boon almost as instructive if Presi dent Lincoln had contented himself with telling bia audience a funny story, and let them go; Bis loan gunil is hut a paraphrase of the vague generalities contained in his pilgrimage speeches. , Senator Douglas, in the Senate, on "Wednes day following the Inauguration, .said. It [the Inaugural] is characterised by great ability. ». » * a If he understood him, Mr.'Lincoln has sunk the partisan in the patriot, and for this was en titled to the thanks ef all conservative men. From the peculiar relations that have.existed between these distinguished gentlemen, Mr. Douglas,has hnd a pretty good opportunity to fathom the depth of Mr.. Lincoln's ability; and such is his estimate of the Inaugural,, while the Herald thinks it but a “ funny story.” Had the Herald not been repelle'd from the Kepubli can xanks, no doubt it would have been elam 'orous in 'President Lincoln’s praise. ] ; TBACSEBS' INSTITUTE. fThanext session of the-Tioga County-Teach ers’ Institute’, Trill be held in Tioga, the 9th, 10th, 11th and 12th of April next. Prof. Chas. W, Sanders, of New York City and Sariinel P. Bates, Deputy State Superin tendent of Common Schools, will be - in atten dance at the Institute. Prof. Sanders and Mr. Bates are gentlemen of much experience and eminently successful in conducting Institutes. lnstitutes are emphatically for the benefit of the Teachers. And inasmuch as this session bids fair to he one of the most beneficial y6t held, it is desirable that the Teachers should turn out en masse. Heretofore, only the more advanced and experienced Teachers have gen erally attended the Institutes, while the youn ger and more inexperienced, who* needed the aid and advice of the Institute, have, through an ill founded timidity, absented themselves. It is especially the duty of this class of Teach ers to attend the Institutes and “ post” them selves in the improved methods of teaching. HIRAM a. JOHNS, Co. Sup't. For the Agitator. COTTON AND COTTONDOMr—NOi 1. Coal, Cotton'and Christianity are great civili zers. They light, clothe and warm both the outer and inner man and seem destined to be come the woof ,and warp of the human web. Polities and political economy haye'a good deal to do with the two former, and, it is Said, bnt lit tle to do : with the latter, though it may be that without the adjuvancy of Christianity, politics and political economy would find but little true development, sod coal and cotton might not be wanted. A writer on politics would be consid ered green to admit Christianity as 1 an element —and if not green, yet in the present age, he would be practically unsuccessful. Christiani ty will intrude itself, however, and an observ ing man will sometimes be very aptjto conclude that it is the foundation of all civilization.' I mean true Christianity and true civilization. Each has its spurious counterpart. But cotton, and not Christianity or coal, is the object of these articles as well, just now, as of the civilized world. Cotton,, and not’slavery, only ns it helps raise cotton, is at the bottom of our present American complications, as well as at the bottom of dawning African civilization. Cotton is about to do for Africa, in half a cen tury, what apparently, not really, Christianity has failed to do in eighteen centuries— not real ly, for Christian civilization is ns much the foundation of present ootton-nsing as the cotton gin is the foundation of cotton cleaning. COTTON, THEREFORE, IS KING, that is, the cotton raisers say so; and if your readers will patiently listen to mo for threej or four weeks, I will endeavor to write some of its history and give some of the elements of its power. The word cotton, is said to be derived from the Arable, and a similar word is found in the Syriac and Ethiope languages, all having the same meaning— light, fine, glossy, downy. We should, therefore, conclude etymologically, that cotton early existed in Syria and the adjacent countries, and in Arabia and the eastern parts of Africa at the head waters of the Nile, though writers argue that in time of Egypt’s ancient glory, it was not cultivated in Egypt, or at least not woven, into cloth, as none has ever been found enclosing the dead bodies found in the ancient catacombs. To the east iof Syria,, in Persia, and India, there is abundant evidence of its very early cultivation and mauufacture into Cloth. 1 1 Herodotus, more than twenty-three hundred years ago, wrote of “the cotton trees of India and of the cloth manufactured therefrom ; and before the beginning of the Christian .Era cot ton cloth was introduced into Greece and Italy from the east. There can be but;little doubt that the manufacture of cotton cloth' was in operation in India, and, perhaps, in Africa, at a time anterior to the period of which written history gives any account. How long it bad been cultivated in this country anterior to the discoveries of Columbue it is impossible to tell. Cotton cloth was in existence here when this continent was first visited by Europeans. There are three principal species of cot ton— Gossypium (cotton) hcrbaceum, gos sypium birsutam 'and gossipium arbo raceum; the herbaceous, the shrub and the tree cotton. That which is princi pally cultivated in the United States is the herbaceous cotton. This is an annual plant, is planted in March and April and. cultivated, grows generally from one and ahalf to two feet high and bears a large seed pod something like the pod of . our northern milkweed. The seed is contained in capsules to which the down or cotton adheres and when the seed is ripe the capsules burst and the seeds with the cotton adhering gradually escape unless gathered, and are carried by the winds in every direction to form the basis of another crop. When the capsules begin to bdrst open which in the • Southern States, is in the latter part of summer; then commences the' process of gathering, which is done by band and is con tinued till the frosts stop the ripening , of the more laggard plants. The gathering is thus carried through quite a a long period of time, affording ample opportunity for securing the whole crop. It is said that one hand will gather about fifty pounds of seed cotton per day, which makes, when clean, about twenty pounds, fit for market. I estimate the cotton crop of 1858 at 1,733,000,000 lbs ; now allowing that one hand made only twenty pounds of clean cotton a day, it would take 86,050,000 days work to gather the crop. On this supposition or rather estimate, it would take the whole slave popula tion of the ten cotton growing States, as found by the last census, including Tennessee and North Carolina, twenty-nine days to gather the crop, working the whole force, old and young, male and female, babies and all, : Considering that hot more than-one third of the total popu lation of these..ten State* ■work in the cotton, field, and that these cannot work every day, it .asema to though 'this gradual ripening was contrived }by the wjse Being who fixed the orderof nature; to • facilitate, or rather insure the.gatbering of the whole crop; and,that the attachiftgiof the seeds to this light fiber of the cotton, so that they could thereby easily float in the atmosphere was another admirable con trivance for -spreading broadcast the seed and thus preserving.-the plant, till man got old enough in civilization to need thoicotton and to plant the seed by hand. Georgia, Alabama and Louisiana produce from 500 to 550 lbs; of seed cotton to the.acre; Mississippi, Arkansas'and Texas from 650 to 750; Tennessee, South Carolina and Florida from 250 to 32(j), and North Carolina still less. South Carolina does not now_ produce half as much per acre as either Mississippi, Arkansas or Texas, her land having been gradually dete riorating by continual cotton cropping. In 1800 however, i South Carolina exported one fifth more cottojn than all, the rest of the-United States. Thoodtton raised in the South is prin cipally the herbaceous or annual. There is another kind of .cotton raised in the United Slates Itnown by the name of Sea Island 1 eotton. It is raised principally on the coast of South Carolina] Georgia and Florida. This has a very long fiber and is much finer than the herbaceous or short staple. It is said by some 1 to be a species of the tree cotton and was first brought to the United States from the Bahama. Isles, in 1786, and is supposed to have come originally from Persia. It is undoubted ly that kind of cotton spoken of by Herodotus 450 years before Christ, as “ trees of India, bearing fleeces more delicate and beautiful than those of sheep.? The tree oottejn sometimes grows to tbo height of fifteen or twenty feet. In 1834 there was raisedln the United States about 11,000,000 pounds of sea Island cotton, of which about 8,000,000 pounds were exported to Europe. In 1858 there was raised, about 18,000,000 pounds, of which about 14,000,000 were exported. The hirsute, hairy or shrub cotton, it is said, will grow wherever the herbaceous grows. In the West Indies it is bicnniel- or .triennial; in the East Indies and Egypt it Igsta from six to ten years; and in some countries it is annual. According to. Professor Hodge, *of New York, the cotton of Surinam, Peru,- Guiana and Bra il! is of this species. The’ plant!is said to re semble in size and appearance the currant; bush. ’ Cotton is cultivated in India and in most parts of Southern Asia, in the islands of the’ Indian Archepelago, in Japan, in some parts of-Polynesia, in Australia, in many parts of Africa, in North and South America and in the West India islands.. Its habitat Is very exten sive and it may be successfully cultivated al most any where between thirty-seven degrees North and thirty-seven of South latitude. It is however, at present meat ’successfully culti vated’in the United States. ; r In my next I will speak'of the beginning, rise, and progress of cotton growing ia the United States. 7 ■ ' Wethboro, Pa. *J. EMERY. Pennsylvania Hospital' for the Insane. —The report of this noble institution for the past year has been sent us. We learn that the usefulness of the Hospital has been increased, that repairs and improvements have been made, so that the new building will shortly be realty for occupation. At the date of the last report, there were 254 patients in the institution, since which 211 have been admitted and Ml have been discharged; or died, leaving 274 under care at the close (if the'year. The total number of patients in thq Hospital during the year was 465. The highest number at any one time was 288; the lowost|iwas 250; and the average .number Under treatment, during the whole pe riod, was 273.; |jj. The number ot malea in"the Hospital during the year 263; and the number of females was 202. The highest number of males at any one time was 157, and the highest number of females was 131. At thebeginningof the year, there were 132 males and 123 females. The number of males admitted during the year was 131, and the non her of females 80. Since the Hospital was opened in 1841, 3,571 persons have been admitted, of these 274 still remain. Among them' were j 1 ,86,6 males, and of these the largest number of any profession were farmers—27fe. Therowere 173 merchants, 142 clerks, 56 stildents,.23 clergymen, 38 phy sicians, 69 carpenters, 146 laborers, 4 police of ficers, 25 blacksmiths, 1 author, 17 artists, 35 tailors, 59 shoemakers, 244 of no.occupation, &c,- _ Of tbo total number of femgJe patients (1,675) since 1841, the largest number were domestics, that class furnishing 195. The neJl largest, number were seamstresses —170. The nest largest number Were 157, wives of farmers.— Philadelphia Bulletin. For the Ladles —There was a reception at the Astor House by Mrs. Lincoln and Mrs. Hamlin —Gen. Janies Waston Webb being in charge. There were over 400 presentations, and for the benefit of the ladies, we give the fol lowing discription as reported : “ Mrs. Lincoln is about forty years of age, below medium height, of - full form and face, dark hair and blue eyes. Her nose is rather retrousse, her lips thin and compressed, her manner and carriage graceful and* pleasing.— She is a lady who would be pronounced to he fine looking, but not beautiful. She was pressed in a steel Brocade robe, trimmed with box quilling, of ribl)on, edged with lace, exten ding from the waisf to the lower, part of the skirt, where it ended in a neatly gathered bow. Flowing sleeves, with point laee under sleeve's, added to the pleasing, arrangment of her dpess. A neat point collar encircled her nock, whijh was secured by a fine'diamond,brooch.- ,She wore ear-rings to correspond. Her head dress was of chepille and! gold., Mrs. Lincoln whs accompanied by her sister,, Mrs. Edwards, of Illinois. I ' ; Mi;s. Hamlin is about twenty-fiye years of age, 1 tailor, and not so full in form as Mrs. Lin coln. She has a mjild blue eye, rather sharp features, but ( agent)e expression efface.. Hav ing but just arrived; from the bars, she was still in her black traveling dress." No movement has yet been made by tbe Com missioners in Washington from the Confeder ate States toward the negotiations with which they are charged, i Mr, Roman, one of the members of the commission, who was erro neously stated yesterday to have arrived, was still wanting, at a late hour lost night, to cojn plete the delegation, land his colleagues'will do nothing till he joins! them.— K Y. Berald of Saturday- last: ' .i . " - ■ ! Twenty patriots of the Revolution died du ring the past year. Eighty-two are all that are now left. j - . _j ...rOBT STTMTEB, -Jfras is predicted with some confident,, cUr Washington correspondents, Fort SuatL? to be evacuated, no doubt the humiliatin' .be great, and'lhe order for such a move willjhe given by tho Government with a quite equal {to that with which the receivethe tidings. But let it be borne bJS .that jthis humiliation comes, if it mast J* not from any- negligence or feebleness ofS present Administration; that it ia not an ■ dence of a retreat from a wsll-defin«d u position; that it is a Concession ania. to the Rpbal power of the South nor to a timid expos Halations of tbs few in the whoseconns els are weakness; but that it a of thp, last'bitter drops in the onp left hands by, ttye Government which haa !o j?| weighed us jiown, nDd which has nowt a J| passld out ojf our sight. The evil which m ministrations, as . well as men, do, lives |L| thenji and we must expect to feel thecnjii The duplicitV, the mean scheming, tbs i t ,„| ceivahle baseness which have brought og totJ| presept complication' of our national -afei cannot lose tpeir poison at once. _ = || ■ Thp, people, will he,..prepared, if this viJi draws! Of tr< dps. takes place, for a yell ,of *1 nltatipn fro to every traitor in the land, fJ taunts and serening' solf-congratulations-ftal the men who have labored more earnestly (3 any others for the destruction of the Onioo ll crying out fojr concessions and compromise I but let dll ret sember that the strength haa cl jet departed pom our flag, and that this mop mentmay be only as the crouch which isi ■ precede the c episiye leap. No matter if treason whic t has woven around ua itafa* compete a ste > which no one wlihea to tahi no matter if 1 Rebellion seems to have adviccjJ its banners, c r if Treason turns more ccafl dently toward us its brazen front. The poilnl of the Government remains uncbanged.aiiiM (firm foit is junt as immovable as ever oa tjj j Constitution and the laws, 1 H ; In case the predicted event happens, the petpli will pldoe on the proper heads the responsial ty of tile act 1 They will follow the late Pr»9 dent to his retirement with a sharper indigul tion than they have before felt; they will* mosp over, aak,.withj an earnestness which calls reply, ihy the repeated assurances wentfotfsi from ihje beleaguredforfr that the comnunbjiS officer needed Jo aid, no supplies; they willjj* mand’ from all who have borne a part hi a? transac dons of the past two months with ttivS tion to this important place a strict accoautfo their ’si ewardship. They will none the la| renew their confidence in the power they hn(i set ovier them it the National Capital, and vjb by that confidence strengthen the hands of Admipi itration for vigorous action in th«o tore and forward.— N. Y. Tribune, Monday. U [NG Occasioned bt the' Sks- The IOITJ .sign Movement. —Major Hawkins is non s' I .': hi* wayl to tfaejWestern States to buy com, i;i agent foe his friends rind neighbors. He sboiivl us a list of those who had-requestsd hintSj purchlasb for them, and also a list of those n/i were in a destitute condition and ask the jitizens of the Western States, throijf‘j him, to |give thfem com to keep them and tie 'i families from starving. The two lists ss | prised 2 T 9 nam ss, wanting from 20 to 500 H; | els, and amour ting in all to 24,730 braid;/; Most of those sending are responsible men.h'J they canpot raise money to pay for it, andiu' l the intention o 'Major Hawkins to laytheds l before those who have oorri for sale, and toT;q to induce them to sell corn'on credit untilic/| fall.—Abandon (Miss.) Sep* "Wesfcn, the walk from Bos* time, artive4 fi gurationj. after to get thereto pedestrian, ■who nndertook > - on to Washington in a pit-, 'a hoars too latft for the Its-V all. He took the proper t didn’t take them fast enooA’-.; Whereas, my wife MARIA, t*K. ing left my bed and board without just cawt provocatibn, this as to warn all persons not tolftrtC harbor bejr on mj] account, as I will pay no dsbut her contrAction unless compelled by law. : i CALEB BAS 3.;. Morris, March 13,.1861.-w3» UTOR& NOTlCE.—Letters testing fcary haringibeon granted to the j tho’esiste of Willwm Adams, late of Charleston ten, shss, 4 ec notice! is hereby given to those indebted* snid estate to make immediate'payment, scd^ s .‘- having claims to present'them properly for settledioiit to ihe subscribers?! f -! ; | HUBERT ADAMS, ) r RICHARD ENGLISH,]* V.] March 13, 1861. 32w6 $ EXECbTOR’B NOTlCF. —Letters tary hiring been granted to the ■ the estate of Zonad Roberts, late of Jackson dec’d, notice is hereby given to those indtbtid to immediate payment, and those having claims tojo> £, sent them properly authenticated for eettlcmesi, t-| the undersigned, dt Daggett’s Mills, ”, A. B. BRYAN, 32w6* 3, IS6I. March NOTICE. WE have Ingham-s Combined Separator: n our Mill, and con now e!o®*- wheat perfectly, all foul grain and particklarlytho oats. Farmers-con bare all ■ oats taken lout of their seed wheat at our per bushel! Call and examine the *'* mersbccn- \ I- WRIGHT 4 iUttW'f. WcUsboro, March 13,1861. S WATCH, CLOCK, [ stobb| T'HE undersigned, having purchased WE' Foley bis interest in the Clock,