liegistgr. Circulation near 2000. Allentown, Pa. THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 19, 1860. • , .Y. B. PALMER, Esq., N. W. corner of Third - `,l • ' and. Chesnut streets, hiladelphia, and 169 Nas. sau street, (Tribune Buildings,) New York, i 3 • our authorized Agent for receiving advertise. 'meats and subscriptions to the Lehigh Regirter And collecting and receipting for the same. IgrWe were requested to state, that Caleb Taylor, Esq., the Congressional nominee, will be present at the Whig County Meeting on-Tuesday,the - 24th - of'Septembixt, to ad dress the citizens of Lehigh county in regard to the leading questions of the day. Mr U. Illacungy —Population 2,035, Dwel lini henna "343, Families 344, Value of Real Estate $1 : 151,000, Value of Live Stock 566,191. The increase of population in 10 years is 266. Marshall _College. annual commencement of Marshall Col• lig - e:took- . place at Mercersburg on the 11th in• . 1 ; stait. The honorary degree of M. A. was con. ferred on the Rev. Christian R. Kessler of Al• .•.lentown. The Dociorate of Divinity on Rev. WilliamM. Reynolds, of Columbus, Ohio, - and Prof. Augustus Ebrard, of Erlangen ; Ger . - Iron Houses iron houses ars being erected in Philadel phia. Jasper Harding, the proprietor of the - "ln9uirer, is building one on the old location of '"his publishing office, with an entire front of iron. The "Sun" office will also be removed to an iron house. Editors are growing rich or iron houses must be very cheap in the me tropolis.. A new counterfeit on the Bank of Middle town, has just appeared-ss, new plate, letter B. The clouds behind the eagle in the centre too dark. The double line around the two s's imperfect, and the short perpendicular line in the centre of each 5, wanting. The shading of the helmet of the female face too light. The whisker on the farmer very stiff, and the foli, age of the tree above him, imperfect. Signa tures good. In the engraver's name ft in nut ty, awkward. The California Senators The two U. S. Senators front California hav ing taken their seats in the U. S. Senate on Monday, and lots being resorted to, as usual in such cases, to determine their respective terms, Mr. Gwirm drew the long and Mr. Fre mont the short term. The term of the latter consequently expires on the fourth of March next, and that of the former on the 4th of March, 1856. The Mails to California and Oregon. -The importance of this mail route to the rev enue of the Post Office Department can scarce• ly be estimated, se great is the monthly in crease. It is indeed becoming a matter of great importance. In the month of A nest, the number of letters forwarded to California, was 45,000, the number received 10,000. Taking this as the average rate for the year, and the result will be ono million two hundred thou sand letters passing through the mails. Tho rate of postage is 40 cents for a single letter, the average is more than that of double letters, frequently the postage is from five to ten dol -1 ars. Taking the rate of double postage as the average, and the result is an income to the post office department, of eight hundred and sixteen thousand dollars—being an excess of two hun dred and twenty-seven thousand dollars annu ally, over the compensation paid the two lines of mail steamers which carry the contract mails. I This calculation is founded on the extent of l business at the present time. What will it be five years hence? There can scarcely be a doubt that within the period named, the Sur- plus income from these mail routes will relieve the public treasury from the entire cost of the post office establishment, unless the postage is materially reduced, which is not likely to bo the case for limbo time to conic. Bucks.—Samuel Atkinson, Thomas Brunner, Henry Button and Joseph Young. Lehigh —Joseph Wittman and Joseph Young, ; James S. Ree se, the other appointee being ab sent, the Conferees of Lehigh agreed upon Reu ben Guth, to fill the vacancy. On motion of Mr. Young, of Lehigh, Samuel Atkinson, Esq., of Bucks county, Was appoint ed President, and upon motion of Mr. Young, of Bucks, Col. Reuben Guth, of Lehigh, was ap pointed Secretary. The Conference being organized, it was on motion, Resavcd, That the same now proceed to the nomination of Candidates. Whereupon, 1 • Thomas Brunner,. Ep.q., rose and nominated The Navigation. Caleb N. Thylor, of Bucks county. No other The water was partially lot into the Dela- ; candidate being brought before the:Conference, ware Division of the Pennsylvania Canal, on I it teas on motion of Mr. Button, of Bud:scowl. the .10th instant, and they will, most probably, ty, seconded by Mr. Wittman, of Lehigh be able to'passboats on. it by the close of the county. • . • week. The State of fi cers have been diligent Resolved, That the meeting unanimously tann in repairing the broaches, on this line, and the I hunt) the Hoy. Caleb N. Taylor, of Bucks coun. whokinterruption from the late flood will not • ty, as a candidate for a seat in the 32t1 Con. exceed two weeks. The little damage done gross, of the '6ih Congressional District, of Penn to the Lehigh-Canal between this place and ! sylvania, andihat he is hereby recommended Allentown is in a rapid state of repair, so that . to the lice citizen's of the district, as a person, by -next week the navigation will be open be- qualified in every respect for the Station. iween that place and Philadelphia, ; Rel!olva, That the Conference serve as a Between Allentown and the Gap brit a few ! Committee to inform the lion. Caleß N. Tay due will be required to repair the game- tor, of his nomination.. • • gee, and,thenee .to Mauch Chunk it will re- Resoked, That the ot:cding.; e signed by quire, perhaps, a fortnight•longer to enable the the o ffi cers, and petlii p e led in th h e papers of Le _Lehigh Coal and Navigation Company .to re- ! high and Bucks county, na m e itsn full operations.--Easton &Wine!, 12th SAMUEL AIKINSON, President. Inst. c• R nben Guth ; Secretary Graham's Magazine. This valuable periodical,. for October, is al ready on our table. It contains five splendid Engravings. Tde "Slave of the Pacha," and the "Way. to Church" are beautiful and executed with the best Artistii?skill. Graham's reading matter is always well selected; it combines the two most essential requisites of a Periodical— to please and to instruct. .it is well stored with good solid infortnation for the sober and more practical reader, and at the same time nothing is deficient that the most romance-loving could , desire. Caution fivin Wishington The Washington correspondent of the Phila delphia 'Public Ledger' says; lia strong effort is making to amend the Tariff of 1946, making the duties specific instead of ad valorem. The in dications on Saturday last were that the. attempt will probably succeed in the House; and in that case it will probably also succeed in the Senate. If the question could be taken out of polities, tho country would certainly be a gainer by it: What the man of business wants is not so much a high or a low Tariff—a Revenue Tariff, or a Tariff for protection, as a steady and relia ble law which shall give him security for his labor and investments of capital, whatever they may be. An indifferent law, which is fixed, is better than one which is continually in dan ger of being upset. It is probable that every Tariff law requires amendments every ten • years to adapt itself to the altered condition 1f the country; but radical reforms are always - dangerous; - vThThlten coming ilrilie - slitrpo - o itnprovements.'? On Monday the oth instant, was taken in the House of Representatives of the United States, a vote on the following resolution 't . Resolved, That the Committee of Ways and Means be instructed to report a bill so modify. ing the Tariff of 1846 as to make the thitieson iron specifics, at the rates they would now be if the ad valorem duty of 1846 had been made a specific duty, equal to the ad valorem duty levied by that act at the time it became a law. Every member of the Pennsylvania delega•. lion present at the time, save Alessrs. Dim mirk nod Ross, voted in favor of the resole- lion Mr. Vinton moved an amendment, striking out nll Dfier the word resolved, and inserting a ' resolution instructing the committee to report a bill in the following words: Be it enacted, 1;4. , That the proviso of the sec ond section of the civil and diplomatic appro priation bill. approied 10th August, 1816, shall be construed to require the appraisers in ap praising all goods, wares and merchandize ported af.er thirty dayS from the passage of this act, into any port of the United States, to adopt the average market valne of similar ar ticles in the principal ports of the United States during the year ending the 30th .of June, 1846, under such general regulations to be pre scribed by the Secretary of the Treasury_ as shall prevent ft'auds and under valuations, and secure a miiform valuation throughout the Uni ted States. Provided, however, that in no case shall duties be assessed on a valuation less than the market value of the article in the prin cipal ports of the United States 'at the time of entry. The proviso proposed to be construed by this amendment is as follows: "fn appraising all goods at any port of the United States, hetetolure subjected Jo specific duties, but upon which ad valorem duties are imposed by the act of 30i11 July last, entitled "all act reducing the duty on imports and for other purposes, reference shall be had to orders and invoices of similar goods imported during the last fiscal year, under such general and uniform regulations for the prevention of fraud or under valuation asshall be pre,cribed by the Secretary of the Treasury." The amendment of Mr. Virton, however, was rejected by a vote of yeas 93, nays 96. The resohniun of the Committee was then also re jected by a vote of yeas 91, to nays 93. This vas the test vote. Among the lit of members who voted against the judgement or report of the Com mittee of ways and means, "that it is inexpe dient at this time to legislate upon the subject of ihe Tariff,' we find the vote of the whole delegation of Pennsylvania, with the exception of Messrs. Ross, NPLanahan and Mann. Messrs. Dimmick and Wilmot not present. Conferee Meeting. At a meeting of the Conferees of the Gill Congressional District, composed of the coun, ties of Lehigh and Bucks, held .at the Public House of Jacob Kern, in Quakertown, Becks county, on Saturday the 14th instant, for the purpose of bringing a candidate in nomination, to be voted for•by the free citizens at the ensu ing full election, to represent the district in the Congress of the United States. The following Conferees were present, to wit : Educational Meetitig According,- to-previous announcement, the Teachers' Association met at the Court Hciuse. The Preskdent being absent, the . meeting was Balled to order by the Vice President, Jonathan 'Reichard, and U. E. Brunner was appointed Secretary pro-tem. The minutes of the last meeting were read, but not adopted. On motion a committee for revising the min- utes of the last meeting were chosen ; consist, ing of Rev. S. K. Brobst, J. Slemmer and E. Moss. The committee appointed to ascertain the condition of the schools in Lehigh county, ask ed, :and obtained leave In be continued, and report at the meeting in December next. On motion, Rev. C. R. Kessler and J. Stem mer were appointed to fill the vacancies in the committee on Phonotypy and Phonography, and the committee to report at the next annual EU= On motion, E. Aloss was duly elected Secre tary of the Association, in place of Air. Foote rerignekl c o motion, an opportunity was given _for those to join who wished to become members of the Association, when the following gentle. men gave their names: F, J. Mohr, %V 'Wolf and J. Richards. On in , lie Se otion, the Secretary was requested to procure a blank book in which the proceedings of this Association shall he recorded. ht compliance with a call of the Association, Mr. Kessler gave a summary, though very in teresting account of the proceedings of the American Education Society, which met at Philadelphia on the 28th of August. On motion, a committee was, appointed con sisting of R. C. Chandler, C. R. Kessler and J. Richards; whose duty it shall be to bring be fore the association subjects for discussion, and appoint persons to discuss them ; also to pro cure persons to deliver lectures on the subject ; of education. On motion, the following gentle Men were appointed the above committee: S. K. Brobst, T. Sterner, and 11. Rhoads, (the Chairman of said committee having power to appoint oth ers) whose duty it shall be to solicit ladies and gentlemen to become members of this As sociation. On motion it was decided that the next meeting be held at the Court !louse, in Allen town. On motion, adjourned to meet again on Sat urday, October 26th, 1850. Military Meeting At a special meeting of the Lehigh Fend. blew, held at the Flonse of Major Steckel on the evening of Um 9th instant, the follmring pre amble and resolutions were unanimously adopted : Whereas, in Ilis supreme Wisdom it has pleased a benign Providence, to remove from our midst our beloved friend, companion and fellow•sohlier, Thomas A. Martin; and where as it is with an indescribabla agony of feeling., we hear that the angel of death has laid his icy fit,ger on his brow, and can scarcely realize the loot, ahltough we have gazed upon the cold and inanimate of him who but a few days ag , marched in our midst with all the buoyancy of spirit %%filch health and youth can give to man, therefore; Relayed. That by the death of Thomas A. Martin, society has been deprived of a useful member, and our corps has sustained an irre parable los:3 7 —that we bitted} , mourn the de cease of one so young and promising, and that his vacant place in our ranks will ever remind us of the warning received from on high, "That death spares not the young or old." Resolved, That whilst we bitterly deplore the decease of one so beloved by us all, we deeply sympathise with his afflicted relatives in their sad bereavment, and with their permission we will perform the last sad duties of sorrowing, to the friend and soldier at his grave. Resolved, That as a mark of our respect and esteem, the members of the Company will wear crape upon their left arm for thirty days. Resolved, That a copy of these Resolutions he handed to the family of deceased, and that theylta published in the different papers of the Borough. E. W. ECKERT, Secretary Allentown, Sept. 9th : 1850 The , Prize Sony. The ftillowing is a copy of the song for which Bayard Taylor has received the two hundred dollars as a price from the Barnum Committee: GREETING. TO AMERICA. worms DT DAYARD TATLOII:-MuMIC, J. BENEDICT I greet, With a full heart, the land of the West, Whose Danner of Stars o'er a world is unrol• led; Whose empire. o'ershadows Atlantic's wide breast, And apes to the sunset its gateway of gold ! The land of-the mountain, the land of the lake, And rivers that roll in magnificent tide— Where the souls of the mighty from Slumber awake And hallow the soil for whose freedom they died! Thou Oracle of Empire! though wide be -the foam • 7 ' That severs the land of my fathers and thee, I hear, from thy bosom, the welcome of hotrie, For Song has a .hyme in the hearts of the Free ! And long as thy4aters shall gleam in the sun, And long as thy heroes remember their scars, Be the hands of thy children united as one, And Peace shed her light en the Banner of Stars! • • Awful Death. Wo learn with regret, that on Sunday after- noon, Mr. Christian Hummel,of Lower N'ava ieth township, Northampton county, a highly respected homer, was gnted lo death by a bull. Mr. Hummel, it seems, was about visiting his daughter, when he went through a field in which the bull was kept, and there met his death.. When found, life was extinct-!:. .fries. Steatn between Philudelphia mu! Lirerpoul.— The project of establishing a monthly Steam packet line between Philadelphia and Liverpool is likely to be realized, through the enterprise and liberality of Richardson, Watson & Comp. They have headed a list of subscrtpiions to this undertaking with the sum of $100,900, one.third of the amount required to build two propeller steamships of 2,000 tons burthen, to run, once a month, to and from the places.na med, the pas , sage to be made in 12 days; the number of sten mers to be increased to four if found necessary. The merchants of this city have long been talk, ing of such a project, but this seems to be the first efficient step towards the enterprise. Its sun. cess will induce others to follow, and Philadel phia, through the agency of steam, may be again distinguished for her commercial prosperity.— Ledger. - E. MOSS ; Secretary- Claim Ar Properly taken during the ,Mexican War.—A case is on trial in the United States Circuit Court in the city of New York, involving a claim of $lOO,OOO, It seems that when ('ol. Doniphan was near Chihuahua, on the day pre : vimis to the battle, he took possession of a train of mules, wagons, and dry goods, on suspicion that the owner, Manuel P. Harmony, was trading with the enemy. It is said the 'train consisted of fifty mules, ten wagons, drivers, and muleteers which were taken, it is alleged, f.,r the use of the army. It is said, that subsequent to the bat tle, the mules, wagons, goods, &c., were tendered to Mr. Harmony, but were refused. He is a na tive of Old Spain, and a Santa Fe trader. We are not yet advised of the result of the trial. It is evident that in case the plaintiff succeeds in obtaining a verdict, the United States Govern. ment must foot the bill, as Col. Doniphan seized the property while in the exercise of his duties as an officer of the army. Phoenixville.—This borough contains a popu lation, 2,667. In 1948, the population was 3333 —which shows a decrease. in two years of 666. There are 116 vacant dwelling houses. The de cline of population and excess of dwellings is owing entirely to the disastrous effects of the Tariff. Phoenixville is a manufacturing town, and it. prosperity depends upon the amount of imporiations in iron and cotton. The quantity and value of the iron now made at this place, is 50 per cent. less than it was two years ago.— consequently hundreds of pet's,:'!?x have been obliged to fly from Phoenixville, and to seek employmeni elsewhere or In some other busi ness. Bridge Destroyed by Fire.—On Tuesday even ing the 10th Instant, Clark's Ferry Bridge, cross ing the Susquehanna river at the junction 'of the Juniata river, and about,oventeen miles above Ifarrisburgpwas totally destroyed•by fire. The bridge was a very fine one, half a mile long, containing the tow-path for the main line of the State Canal, and cost $120,000. Transportation, however,`'will not be affected by this catastrophe, as a steam tow-boat will be substituted. The fire was supposed to be the work of an incen diary. Ohio in Africa. --The proposition suggested in the Cincinnati papers in 1848 to purchase terri tory on the coast of Africa, and the settlement thereon of a colony. of colored people from Ohio, we understand is about ready to be carried out A purchase of territory has been made, and ar rangements are in progress to settle it, as far as Fruticable,with emigrants from Ohio. We have a copy of the circular of the agent of the Colo. nization, and shall notice the matter more at length on some future occasion.—Cineinnali Ca- The•Greatebi Aas.in Venice..-7 1 wo young prin ces, the sons of Archduke Charles, of Austria, had a warm debate in the presence of no less' a person than the Emperor himself. Greatly exci ted, one said to the cither t "Yon are the great est ass in Venice!" Highly offended at a quar rel in his presence, the Emperor interrupted them, saying with indignation—NC:me, come, young gentlemen, yon forget that I am present." I Ades or CITY . Commerce par North Arnerica par Pennsylvania • par Penn Township par United States 12 Commercial' par Farmers & Meehan. par Girard pat COUNTI: Chambersburg a .Chester county pal Danville pat Delaware county par Germantown 1)111 Gettysburg d Lewistown Middletown 3 Montgomery Co. par Northumberland par Pittsburgh al Carlisle • al Columbia Bridge.„_parl Aliooldfiy co. Scrip li: Doylestown part Easton par Erie li! Exchange Pittsburg a I Exchange Branch, al Farmers of Bucks par Farmers, Lancaster par t From Washington - ASFItNt/TON, The Hon. A. H. H. Stuart, from western Vir, ginia, was nominated to-day, to the Secretary ship of the Interior. He is a young man, was a member of the Twentyscventh dongress, a good speaker, and a noted friend of a protective tariff. A Whig caucus of some twenty or thirty mem. bers of Congress was held last night upon the tariff. It resolved to move the home valuation or specific duty clause as an amendment to the general appropriation bill, when it. comes from the Senate. The Collector of San Francisco is certain to be superceded, but not by General Wilson. The cause is frequent difficulties with foreign pow. ers, a great number of reclamations from the French and English t overnments on Collier's documents.—Spirit of the Timm fimo=t: =CI Kensington par Manufacturers & Me- ohanics par Mechanics par Moyamensing par Philadelphia par Southwark par Traclesmins . par Western par BANKS. °Below Bruni is a real Upas tree, it is spoken of in Keppel's work. .1 send you a twig. It is a magnificent tree, about two feet or more in diam• ater, and rising sixty feet without a branch ; there it spreads with a dense green foliage. The trunk is, smooth and of a dirty silvery color.— Upon wounding it, a milky secretion exudes ra. Willy. I collected some for our cabinet. This is mixed with other juices, and used is a poison for arrows. Except when taken internally, or thrown into the circulation of the blood through a wound, I believe it is perfectly harmless. If it were not so, I should suffer, for you know how susceptible lam to vegetate poisons. I tried to get enough for a cane. for you, hut could not.— The only way we obtained the leaves was by shooting our guns into the lofty branches.- -Thedeaves. - however, are some curiosity, for I greatly doubt if there are any others in the Uni ted States: Farmers, Reading par Farmers, Schuylkill par Farmers and Drovers, Waynesboro Franklin, Washing. I Harrisburg Honesdale Lancaster par Lancaster county par ,Lebanon par Merchants & Mann lac ' liners ti ers,_l!ot tsv Monongahela I Puitsburg City Scrip 5 Delaware Bridge Co. 15 West Briinch par Wyomirs . par York ii Relief Notes •1 Bank Failures in lingland.—lt is stated in "Brand's Encyclopedia," that no fewer than two hundred and forty of the country banks failed in England and Wales during the years of 1814, 1918 and 1810, occasioning nearly as much dis" tress, 'loss, hankrUptcy,_apil suffering, as the great Mississippi scheme of France in 1810.— During the years 1816 and 1817, a great number of banks failed in the United States ; many fail. ed in 1825 also; and the failures in the United States during the revuliion from 1937 10 . 1842, amounted to over one hundred and sixty, with a nominal and pretended capital clover 132,000,- 000 dollars, and circulation of over 42,000,000 dollars. 2, 1950 The "Small 11.11 Lutv."—At the Court of Com mon Pleas, now in Session at Honesdale, the brand Jury of Wayne county brought in a Bill of indictment against the small bill law of this Slate, as a nuisance, notwithstanding, the charge of Judge Eldred in favor of the law. Large Wheat Crop.—lt is believed that this year stands unrivalled for the average quantity of wheat raised to the acre; and this supera bundant growth is not confined to any particu lar locality or State. -Papers in different States me noticing unusual crops in their several lo calities. The Detroit Tribune says the Ohioans are boasting of a farmer •in Beaver county, that raised 55 bushels of wheat to an acre, and at _Fayette 50 bushels. That may be a great yield for the Buckeyes, but mere past time with a Wolvereen. The town of Armada, Macomb county, has turned out her 125 bushels on two acres. The same paper speaks of a farmer in Flint, Michigan, who raised this year one hun dred and seventy-two bushels of wheat on less than four acres of land. What say our Penn- sylvania farmers to this? Can they reach that mark? The Brazilian Coffee Trade.—Forty- h en years ago the coffee trade of Brazil did not exceed thir ty-thousand bags; and even in 1820 it only reached 100,000 hags. About that time the high price of coffee in England, superadded to the di minished production in Cuba, stimulated the Brazilian planter.: to extend its cultivation ; and in 1830 they sent to market four hundred thou sand bags, or sixty-four million pounds; and in 1947 the enormous quantity of nearly three hun dred millions of pounds. Affray at Harrisburg —We learn by a letter from Harrisburg, says the Evening Bulletin, the particulars of a recent affray near that place, he. tweed the son of cs• Governor Porter, and a son of Jacob Seiler, Esq., and Dr. Christian Seiler, Jr. It scents that the two former were driving out a few miles from Harrisburg, in a vehicle to which was attached a horse belonging to Ja- cob Seiler, and were met by the Doctor, who seized the horse and ordered them to get aut.— A scuffle then ensued, in which both young men were knocked down. Young Porter, on being struck, inflicted a wound in the Doctor's.abilom en with a pen knife. The wounds of the par. ties, are, so far, not considered dangerous. Twelfth Congressional Dialrirt .—There bids fair to be a triangular fight in this district.— Bradford voted for David Wilmot—Susquehan na for James Lowrey. Tioga county bad two sets of delegates at the Convention which met at Towanda, on the 4th, so that both candi. dales were nominated. • Extraordinary Reifer.Liir. James Le Compt, of St. George's, Delaware, has a heifer one year old laSt spring, which has given four quarts of nj ;;',; fla ly ever since the first of June last, and what seems the most surprising, has never had a calf. Something in a Thus .—A Mr. Thiey, a Demo- crat, was elected to the Arkansas LegislatUre, many Whigs voting fur him under the belief that they were voting for a very popular Whig of the same name. He was the only Demo. cratic candidate elected in the county. Minesda.—Hon. Henry H. Sibley has been re elected delegate to Congress from Minesota Ter ritory by a large majority. His only opponent was Col. A. M. Mitchell. The election took place on Monday of last week, and was on the neutral platform. . fortiori of Me Cal.—lt is stated that during the severity of the cholera at Harper's Ferry, the cats in large numbers migrated. The night watch on the railroad bridge saw as high as five or six cross the bridge of a night. They became very scarce, and if one was observed at the place, it would be found on a hill with an air of great alarm. Califunda Gold.---the gold shipped from Col. ifttrnia, since the discovery of the mines, is esti mated at about 50,000,000 ; mote than one half of which haS come to the United States. The last sews report that there is a good deal more of ~ .the same ion." Gen. Houelon.—Gen. Somme! 41onston, of Tex. as, was taken seriously 111 on the 14th with Cholera Morbut. There is but a slight change in his symr(Gns, and his friends arc ye. ry anxious about him. • '- — The Urfa An East India correspondent of the New York Evening Post, writing from Sabuan, Sorneo, says: .• • - mal4moms. re-The reault of the election of 'delegates to the Constitution al Convention inMaryland is that 56 Whigs and 49 Democrats have .been chosen. . cKincinnati, it is,thotght, contains 150,000 inhabitants. la Look out for Counterfeit two dollar notes, State issues, of the Farmers' Dank of Lancaster. They are in circulatiOn. C'Governor Johnston has offered a reward of one thousand dollars for the apprehension and conviction of the murderer or murders of Charles Burd. M - From the partial returns of the Marshals.. it is estimated that the present population on Broolclyn is about 100,00, having doubled in fire- EIMEI I" . "*The census of the city of Utica IS comple— ted. The population is 17,544, being an increase:. of 5,354 since 1845. EFThe number or cigars consumed in Aus-• Iris, in 1841, was 9,700,000; and in 1849, no less: than 59,100,000. ' .. .Sixty-three thousand baskets of ;,.aches sr-- rived in New York on Friday of last week, ands on the day following, fifty-one thousand. Not , less than eight hundred thousand baskets were- sold in New York during the season.- 10" The population_of_ Harrisburg is about` 8,000. Igr The Detroit Free Press states' that Mrs. Miller is now with her mother in Harroramch, having returned last Sabbath a week. with a. warm friend of her father, who sought and. brought her back. lgrAir. %V. 1. Cutler, late of W ittenburz Sem. i nary, ghio, has been appointed by the Executive Committee of the Luthereati Foreign Missionary to India. . E.,V*No less than ;:26,000,000 are paid in duty eve,y year, in Britain and Ireland, for hooter:lade whiskey; the wholesale cost is $40,000,000. For beer, rum, wine and whiskey, more money is spent every year than the whole income of the: v,nvernment—that which keeps up the immense fleet and army of the land. ctr Several .)1* the aristocratic churches inNew York, which have been closed during the sum mer in consequence of the upper ten being ab sent at the watering plates, were _ reopened on Sunday last. The newspaper announces the fact and shoW bills after the in:lnner of theatres. proclaimed it to the public. Great country this. is getting to be. or"' an; going to draw this beau into a knot,' as the young lady said when she stood at the hymenial altar. la 6- Sotne of the growers of strawberries for the London market have as many as twenty. five acres of the land planted with this delicious fruit. Centre, Ohio, n hay was stung in the mouth by "yellow jacket," and died in twenty minutes, his windpipe being closed by the swel• ling. EV'Two free negroes (blight a duel in New Orleans on the 27th tilt., with deadly weapons. Both parties were cowhided and cast in the cala boose. reTwn gallons of fine charcoal will purify a doien hogshentls of water, when the water ha.i hi, unplensani smeil (ILower Nazareth, Northampton county, po pulation, 1297, Upper Nazareth, 1116. Valuable Lump if Gold.—Nfessrs. Willis & Co. of Boston. the Post of that city says, have receiv ed by the Cherokee, from their California house, a large box of specimens of gold ore and cinna bar ; also, a single lump of •gold quartz," weigh ing twenty 7 four pounds, worth about five thou sand dollars. This extraordinary lump has been purchased by a returned Californian, who in tends to exhibit in this country. It is said to he the richest mass of its size that has yet been dis covered. Projected Railroad in e have receiv ed a report of the proceedings of a public meet. ing held at Davenport, lowa, for the purpose of taking measures rot-the establishment of a rail road in the town which is situated on the west ern bank of the Mississippi river, to lowa city. It is designed to be an.extension westerly to the Mississippi of the line of-railroad two thousand miles in length, which is expected at no remote period .to reach that point, beginning at Portland,. in Maine, and passing through all the inter. mediate States between it and the Mississippi river. A Girl In Boy's Dress. A gentleman doing business in this city. in returning to his home in Charlestown, yesterday, fell in with a fair.looking boy on the bridge, whom he suspected might not he what his dress i:::!!`"!!ted. The seeming boy was accosted to know if be wished em ployment ; he replied that he did, ar.d ac companied the gentleman home at his re. quest. Communicating his suspicions to his wife, the lady succeeded in getting the confession that the apparent boy was really a girl in boy's clothes. The story she gavo fa her appearance was nearly to this effect.. Her name she gave as Josephine Caroline. Bryant, 15 years of age, from Bangor, Me.. Iler parents died by cholera lest year, nmb having no relatives alive except a brother residing in France, she resolved to obtain. means to reach him. She came.to this city about three weeks ago, and subsequently went to LoWell, where she remained two. Weeks at different places. Having received a letter from her brother, she came ,from, Lowell yesterday, exchanged three Calico dresses, and one light silk dress, an open work.straw bonnet and under clothes, for-a suit of boy's clothes, of little value, at a shop in Blackstone street, and determined to work her passage to France. In this dress she was habited when the gentlemen in 'guns. tion accosted her. Her brother, She said, wrote her to meet him at the ~E astern depot. in France." She was placi , d• in the 'hands of Constable Greenleaf of Charlestown, and was provided for at the , Almsqouse. 'Her appearance is described as being of small stature, good looking, full face, scar on caeN cheek, dark auburn hair. She is supposed to have run away front her horne, and in- • vented the above story to avoid being known.--nos/on Pravdter. _ . :.;