tel)ii2l) tlesister. -- - Allentown, Ppi. THURSDAY, MAY 20.1862. The Lehigh Valley The rivalry ha* in some measure common ced, between New York and Philadelphia, for the groat trade of the Lehigh Valley. New -York is extending her iron rails to our borders, through the Now Jersey Central road, which .will be finished to Easton by the first of July next, to connect with the Lehigh Valley road, via Allentown to tho Lehigh Coal. fields, and finally connect with the great Cattawissa and Erie road. If Philadelphia wishes further to se cure the trade of the fertile . Valley of the Le high, and the North western section of Penn - Sylvania, it must be carried on with more Spirit by her citizens than has been done thus far. A correspondent of the Philadelphia Ledger, calls Attention to theSe facts, and says the pro jected Trenton and Belvidere road will never serve the purposes of Philadelphia, as . a lir val to the New Jersey Central road, for the trade of Easton and the Lehigh Valley, as the distance is greater and the guage of track dif ferent which would require transhipment.— But to evade this difficulty recommends the .4Treernansburg and Norristown" route. 'The writer in the Ledger is perhaps not aware, that our last Legislature passed an act to incorpo rate the Allentown and Pottstoviii Railroad . company, which authorizes the construction of a road from Allentown through the- rich- Agri cultural district of Lehigh , county, to Pottstown, a distance of only 28 miles, to connect with the Reading road. This route requires only 28 miles of road to be built to connect the Cat tawissa road at the mouth of the Quakake on the Lehigh, also at the same place the "Phil _adelphia and Wilkesbarre" road, chartered at the last session. The former road connects with the Sunbury and Erie, and secures the whole western, and the latter secure the north ern Pennsylvania trade, and all this can be done by. constructing a road the short distance of 28 miles, between Allentown and Pottstown. Why talk of extending the Norristown road to Freemansburg, which is 46 miles in length, when the same trade can be secured by the Pottstown route in 28 miles little more than half the above distance. Will not Philadel phians-see into this matter? The distance from Mauch Chunk via Allen• town and Pottstown to Philadelphia is only ninety eight miles ; whereas, the road from Mauch Chunk via Freomansburg and Norris town to Philadelphia is one handier{ and four miles. The route would pass through a country that would furnish much local travel and trade, while the through business would be of such variety and magnitude, that the stock could not tail to be made a most profitable investment. The Lehigh Valley Railroad will be commenced this year, and as it will be buih oldie Pennsyl vania gunge of track, coal cars from the Mauch Chunk and Upper Lehigh mines, eat, pass di rectly to Philadelphia without transhipment or any hindrance whatsoever. The distance from Mauch Chunk to Philadelphia, by canal, is one hundred and twenty-tour miles. By Railroad it will not exceed ninety-four miles. AU com munication between Philadelphia and the coun ties of Lehigh, Northampton, Carbon, Luzerne, Monroe, Susquehanna and Wyoming, would by over the Allentown and Pottstown route.— These seven counties, by the last census, con tained 214,856 inhabitants and 1624 manufac turing establislurients, an aggregate of souls and property exceeding some of the States of the Union. We believe responsible contractors can be found' ho would take fifty per centum of the amount of their contracts in the stock of the company. When built and equipped, the road would at once earn revenue to divide more than six per contain on the whole cost. It could never have a rival that would rise to the dignity of a competitor for the travel and ton nage that would pass over it. %Vitt Philadel phia awake to the importance of the move ment, and act before New York snatches the rich prize from our grasp? The Railroad The corpse of Engineers, eight in number have commenced finally locating the Dula. ware, Lehigh,. Schuylkill and Susquehanna Railroad from Easton to Manch Chunk and Tamaqua, along the valley of the Lehigh.— The Engineers started out from Mauch Chunk and have pome down as far as Perryville, Rob ert Sayer, Esq., officiates as principal engineer. We learn that the Company have purchased the track of the Beaver Meadow road as far down as Perryville. If the weather continues favorable, a short time will be required to 'en able them to reach the banks of the Delaware, after which we presume the road will be rea dy to be pet under contract. The Tariff There is still some hopes of a change in the Tariff laws. We learn that ea• Governor Da. Lid R. Porter, of Pennsylvania, is now on a visit in Washington city, as the authorized rep resentative of the Iron interests of this State, to confer with the Democratic members pl Congress, on the subject ol further protection for those interests, by the, restoration of the home valuation. Some movement is to be made on the subject vety soon. We hope the suc cess may prove true ; we have however very little confidenCe in any. modification of the Tariff at the present time. Bible Sooiety A public meeting of the Lehigh county Bi ble Society, will be held in the Salisburg church near Emaus, on Asdension - day, May 20th, at o'clock P.M. There Will be several address es'.delivered on tho occasion. We trust the managers will all be present, and also, all the fcioncis of tim pible cause. E. MOWS, Seo'y. Advice to Businese Men. In your converse with the world avoid any- thing liko a juggling dexterity. The proper use of dexterity is to prevent your being cir curnvented by the cunning of others. It should not be aggressive Concessione and compromises form a large ry, . prepare., and a very important part of our dealings with tore ut compliance with the eighteenth section others. Concessions must generally be look- of the act of the 16th of April, 18-15, embraces ed upon as distinct defeats; and you must ex• the names of three hundred and fifty pub peel no gratitude for them. I ant far from lie officers, the aggregate of whose indebt saying that it may not be wise to make con , edness to the State amounts to three millions . cessions, but this will be done more wisely of dollars ! That is, if the plunderers were for when you understand the nature of them. ced to disgorge, a sufficient sum could be re- In making compromises, do not think to afized to liquidate the one thirteenth part of our gain much by concealing your views and wish. entire State eb t . es. You are as likely to su ff er from its not fTlie people of Permsylvania,' says the I.y. being known how to please or satisfy you, as coming Democrat, "have to raise for the tax from any attempt to overreach you, grounded gatherers about six millions of dollars' every on a knowledge of your wishes. year. About one-third sf this enormous sum Delay is in some instances' to be adopted is either stolen outright by State and county advisedly. It sometimes brings a person to officers, or it is fraudulently obtained by the reason when nothing else could ; when his i swarm of contractors and rip rappers who are mind is so occupied with ono idea, that he eating up the substance of our citizens. completely over mstimates its relative impor- j Pharaoh's locusts had the delicate appetite of Lance, he can hardly be brought to look at the love-sick boarding school misses compared to subject calmly by any force of reasoning. For the cormorantic powers of Pennsylvania's rip this disease time is the only doctor. rappers. They (the rip rappers) swallow the A good' man of business is very watchful, green tax payers of our State with an appetite both over himself and others,•to prevent things that can never be satisfied, and with a digea• from being carried against his sense of right lion that can never be overtaxed. In the case in moments of lassitude. After a Matter has lof Egypt's ruler, there was a softening of the been much discussed, whether to the purpose heart with each new plague ; but the plagues or not, there comes a time when all parties aro of Pennsylvania, thus far, have only had the anxious that it should be settled; and there is tendency to make the people indifferent to the then some danger of the handiest way of geb corrupt workings of a system which has coy ling rid of the matter being taken for the best. j bred thiseSate - with anarmy -of -tax •gathers; It is often worth while to bestow much which encourages public officers to steal ; and pains in gaining over foolish people to your which has rendered a government, purporting way of thinking; and you should do it soon, to be pure and paternal, the hullowest kind of Your reasons will always have some weight i mockery, and this indifference to public mon with the wise. Bet, if at first you omit to put als, are not confined to any one portion of the your arguments before the foolish, they will I Stole, in particular. form their prejudices; and a fool is often very A reform never will be effected until the pub consistent, and very found of repetition. Ile lie mind is aroused to the absolute necessity will be repeating his folly in reason and out of of an organic change in party machinery and season, until at last it has a hearing; and it is governmental machinery; until the people are hard if it does not sometimes chime in with fully aware or the extent of their burdens and external circumstances. the extent of official corruption. Every man A man of business should take care to con- who pays taxes, is simply paying the interest suit occasionally with persons of a nature quite of a debt which•has been imposed upon different from his own. To very few are giv- -in a great measure, by the fraud, coo - el:lion, en all the qualities requisite to fOrm a gond and oxliavaganeo of his rulers ; and it is a man of business. 'Files a man may have the I debt, too, which he cannot avoid, evade, or sternness and the fixedness of purpose so ne- escape (corn. • cessary in the conduct of affairs, yet these confines prevent him, perhaps, from entering Public Lands. into the characters of those about him. Ile is Th 2 "°w La n ds-, to give away likely to want tact. He will be unprepared for the public holds, in tracts of one hundred aoil the extent of versatility and vacillation in oth- sixty acres, to persocs who will go ar,d settle on them for five years, might be indifferently er men. But these defects and oversiAles might be remedied by consulting with persons regarded as a wild scheme that would die of whom he knows to be possessed of the quali• itself, but that the discussion which has taken ties supplementary to hisow n. Men o f muc h place on it, and the earliest support which has depth'of mind can bear a great deal of coup- been given to it by some , members, authori sel; for it does not easily deface their own zes a fear that it might pass, if the opition character, nor render their purposes indistinct. to it be not decided ! It is to be noted says the Baltimore Patriot with eolllmendation thou, Business Notices. , that the oppositiou has been decided, aud the Coaehmaking Business.— To feel rich, is to oonclusive arguments against any stall a dis -Bplead out in a beautifully finished vehicle, at. . position of the VOllllllOll property of this whole limbed to (Arm minute horse, and its Robert Kra- I p ion, brought home to the attention of Con. mer, whose curd is found in another column of g;tISEI and the people. to-days paper, that manufactures the handsom - • There is, in the manner in which public est article of the kind we ever saw. Ile is ad- lands have been, from time to time, disposed mitted to booneofthe moil tasty workman in the of by Congress, by the partial rippropriation of county, and it requires only a visit to his ostab- them to the new States, much that the old lishment to satisfy yourselves of this fact. Bub ' 1 States of the Union might complain of; but is great on a barter, and we know will as lief the great object for which these appropriations accept of a horse, watch, or any thing else, In were made, were held to be a satisfactory rea exchange for a new vehicle, us be would of the son, if not justification, for this discrimination rhino. Go see hint and cut his eye teeth ! •in favor of the new States. But the proposi• non to give the lands away—to vote them as ice! /cc !! Our old 1 fiends Messrs. Schimpf : a donation to private persons—and thus de and Kfcr. - kricr, have made arrangetnents to sup• prive the great body of the people, and the ply the citizens of Allentown and vicinity • • • Mates of the Union; of any right to them, is a morning with the refreshing article of ice.— proposition so startling that it may well excite These 'gentlemen are deserving a liberal sup. the wonder of every one, why, if the public port in their undertaking; there has always lands are thus to be parted with, the money been a scarcity of ice during the summer season itt the treasury should not be similarly dispos which we think is now remidied. ed of? It would he difficult to reconcile oppo sition to givi..g away the public money, or any other public propeoy, with the support of a measure that gives away the public lands.— And yet there are members of Congress who have allowed themselves to be betrayed into a course involving this gross inconsistency Of coutse, no one would now—we cannot say if certain progressives have their way, how it will be next year—but now, certainly, no one in Congress would vote for a proposition to divide the money in the treasury among a selected class of the people—though the rea sons which forbid that are not less conclusive than those which preclude the giving away of the public lauds. The latter are the common property of the whole Union. They were pur chased by the blood and treasure of the people of the Union. They are the heritage bequeath ed to us by the men of the Revolution. No Ulan may claim ono inch of them as his cho sen property—they belong to all alike. 'Con• greys, therefotc, in disposing of them cannot, in justice, forget this common right, without doing wrong to the great body of the people. The Cireus.—The great Southern Circus of Rubinson & Eldred, will exhibit in Allentown, on Monday next. If offers a very attractive bill of entertainment, and the Agent assures us, that the public will find it all, and more than it is represented. The same Circus was here, two years ago, and was pronounced the best that travelled the State.—See advertisement in an other column. Gen• Scott and the Compromise The Richmond Whig of May 11, contains a letter from the Hon. John 11.1. Botts, in which he states that he has recently had an inter viewf with Gen. Scott, and that the General had at one time decided to pubash his views and opinions in favor of the Compromise Measures; but ninny friends North and South, have urged silence, he determined not to do so until after the nomination. Mr. Bons considered this a wise course. He says Gen. Scott freely ex presses himself in favor of the Compromise measures, to all who approach him. Another Whig State Convention. The delegates to the late Whig State Con vention have — been requested by the Whig State Central Committee to assemble in Phil adelphia on SATURDAY, the NINE TEENTH DAY OF JUNE, at it o'clock A. M., to nominate a candidate for Judge of the So prourie Court to fill the vacancy caused by . Judge Coulter's death. The only name we have suggested in this connection has been that of Hon. George Chem. hers. Ho ran next highest to Judge Coulter, and is a pure man. He made an excellent Judge and would make an unexceptionable candidate. Alleghany county. Gov. Johnston has been urged by the Whigs of Allegheny county, to ac cept the Congressional nomination; but the American says all offers of the kind have been peremtorily declined by•him ; probably as inter fering with his duties as President of the Alle ghany Valley Railroad. Public Defaulters. A document of eight pages, from John B. Bickel, State Treasurer, showing the balance due to the Commonwealth from various pub lic officers, as appears from the books in the State Treasury office, on the Ist day of Janua• 1852, prepared and reported to the Legisla- The New Yark.Canal Law tiaeonstiltdional.— The New York Court of Appeals at Albany, on Tuesday decided the Law for the completion of the State Canals to be unconstitutional. The Supreme Court had previously granted a manda mus commanding the State Auditors to issue a warrant (or the payment of a claim arising out of the recent Canal act, but the Court of Appeals reversed the decision and denied the mandamus —thus deciding against the constitutionality of the act, and the validity of.the claims arising un der it, including certificates for upwards 0f.P.,- 000,000 already sold at par. and part of it depos. iced as a basis of bank circulation. It is one of the most important decisions ever made there, and will result in a heavy cost to the State, in paying damages for work begun, and contracts broken. A meeting has been called at Roches. ter to ask the Governor to call an extra session of the Legislature to consider the subject.—Dai. 11 1 Sun. Agricultural Meeting. Meeting of the Lehigh county Agricultural Society, held April 24, 1852, at the house of Eli Steckel, in Allentown. Present. Edward Kohler, President—Vice Presidents—Jno. Lichtenvilner, Charles Witt man, George Beisel, Daniel 13eisel, Henry Die. fentlerfer, Joel Klotz, Paul Balliet and Puler Troxell, jr. Recording Secretary—Jesse M. Line. Treasurer—Owen Schreiber. Librarian —E. D. Leisenring. Whereas divers and several sums of money, goods and (battles, of and belonging to the So- Moly, will from time to time come into the hands of the Treasurer of the Society. Therefore Resolved That the .'Treasurer eleCt is hereby required to give a Bond with sufficient security to the amount of 8500, for the faithful performance of the duties en joined upon him, by the constitution of this Society. Resolved—That an Agricultural Fair and Plotighing match, be held during the first week of October next, The place and date to be de• signated at - our next meeting. E. D. Leisenring, was appointed a coin mit tee to receive sealed proposals for a suitable field, in which to hold an agricultural Fair; and also a field to hold a Ploughing match therein. The fair ground to be of the size of about 2 acres, closely fenced 8 feet high. George Beisel, E. D. Lei .ritiring, and J. Al. Line, were appointed a committee to wait up on the Commissioners of Lehigh county, to ask permission for the use of the middle up stairs room itt the Court House, for the purpose oLestablishina therein an Agricultural Muse um, for the use of this Society. Oa motion, the meeting was adjourned to meet again on Saturday, the 5111 day of June next, at the house of Aaron Guth, in South 11'hitehall J. ill. Line, Recording Sec'y Congressional Apportionment. The following table exhibits the population of the several Congressional Districts into which Pennsylvania has recently been divided. The unequally of the apportionment, must strike ev ery one. The difference betwcen the largest dis• trim (the !GO) and the smallest (the 250) is 35,274! Districts. Population. 1. Southwark•, Moyamensing, and Passyunk, Philadelphia 'county, and Cedar, Lombard. Spruce, arid New Market NVards, in the city of Philad. 2. The remainder of Philad. city - Incorporated Northern Liberties and Kensington, Philad. co , • 4. Spring Garden, Kingse,sing, • Blockley, West Philadelphia, Penn District, North Penn, Unincorp. N. Libcrties„Bridesburg and Ar amingo,•Philad. co. 5. Mannyunk, Roxborough, German town, Br istol, Oxford, Frankford, White Hall, Limp . Dublin, By berry and Moreland. Philad. and Montgomery counties n. Delawate and Chester 7. Bucks and Lehigh 8. Berlin 9. Lancaster, 10. Lebanon, Dauphin, Union and one township in Northumberland ii. Schuylkill and the remainder of Northumberland. 12. Wyoming, Lucerne, Columbia and Montour. 13. Northampton, Monroe, Carbon, Pike and Wayne. 14. Susquehanna, Bradford and Tioga 15. Lycoming, Sullivan, Centre, Clin ton, Potter and NTifllin. 16. York, Cumberland and Perry. 17. Adams, Franklin, Fulton, Bedford and Juniatta. IS. Huntingdon, 13Iair, Cambria and Somerset 19. Westmoreland, Armstrong and Indiana. 108,456 20. Fayette, Green and Washington. 106,157 t. Allegheny and Butler-168,656 ? 84,318 22. ?. averaging. S 64,318 23: Beaver, Lawrence and Mercer. 80,010 24. Warren, Venango, Clarion, defier , son, Elk, Forest, McKean, and Clearfield. :15. Eric and Crawford Death.--.ln Baltimore on Tuesday morn• ing, John 11. Burns, grocer, residing at. No. 55 Ross street, died from poison communicated to his system by a deceased horse. About two weeks since, the deceased had a horse afflicted with glanders, and during an administration of medicine, thrust in the animal's mouth his hand, the middle finger of which had been previously , cut and flesh laid open. Through this wound the poisonous virus was absorbed and mortifica- . lion having supervented. Prof. Smith was call ed upon to ampudiate the deceased member.— Perceiving, however, that the poison had pene, traced to every portion of the unfortunate man's system, the Professor declined performing the operation, and stated that no' earthly skill could save his life. After lingering in great agony, death closed the scene. The corpse presented a blackened, hefflous appearance.—P/mi/. Sun. How Canada Obtained its Nantc.—The origin of the word Canada is curious enough. The Spaniards visited • the country previous to the French, and made particular searches for gold and silver, and finding none, they said among Themselves ~A canada," (there is nothing there.) The Indians, who watched closely, learned this sentence, and its meaning. After the departure of the Spaniards, the French arrived ; and the Indians who wanted none of their company, and supposed they were also Spaniards come on the same errand were anxious to inform them that their errand was fruitless, anti incessantly re peated to them the Spanish sentence, o.Acanada." The French,•who knew as little of• the Spanish as the Indians, supposed this incessantly recur ring sound was the name of the country, and gave it the name Canada, which it has borne ev er since. GLEANINGS rirA printer is the only man who can act while he stands. r4"in Alabama, marriage between blacks and whites is lawful. • (;:yrltirty cases of divorce were granted,, on the 6th inst., by the Court of Common Pleas of Cincinnati 1.7 - The journeymen bricklayers of Memphis, Tenn., are on a strike—refusing to work, while negroes nre employed with them. 17 - The Whigs of North Carolina 'nominated John Kerr, for Governor. EV" There are now twelve daily newspapers published in Cineinnaii—eight in the English language, and four in the German. EV - The Court of appeals have declared the Canal Law Of New York unconstitutional. EV - Millard Filhnores motto is, "The Union of the States, now and for ever, one and insep arable." Er Why is a husband in these (lays like a western steamboat! Because he is at all times liable to be blown up. CV - Kossuth it is said, has received two hun• ered thousand dollars since his visit to this coup• try. 1 7 7 - According to the military almanac just published, the French army comprises 16,304 officers. pnrulation of New Orleans is 125, 468; of which 17,000 are slaves. What Pleasure is Worth We observe, in one of our English journals, an account of a Sale of the estate of Richael and Glaschnrrie, iu the Highlands of Scotland, which, though entirely unproductive, brought forty` thousand dollats. The secret of this large price was that the estate all sided 'excellenu.grou.se• shooting. The man who in this country, should pay shod; a sum, solely to obtain the chance of knocking over a few hirdg, would be considered a fool; but in England amusements o f all hinds I have become reduced to a science, and none I more so than shooting. A century ago, this bit I of wild, bill. side land would not have brought a I thousand dollars. There are thousands of just I such properties in the mountainous regions of Pennsylvania, which can be had for the taxes; and in 1750, this little Highland estate could have been obtained on terms scarcely worse. I The English sporting gentry, however, are not i I so wasteful in their grouse shooting as the pay_ ment of this large sum would seem to involve ; for instead 'of giving away the dead game, they generally forward it, packed in ice, t o the Lou don Market, where it fetches a high price. In fact, some of the grouse proprietors actually pay, in this war, the interest on their capi , al. Many a noble bud, whd toolts contemptimsly on a Manchester manufacturer, :,inort, to peddle bads. What strange IneonstArucies human 'taw' e displays! EIEM BM Mia Bursting, out 1111 Lake.—The bursting out of Stephen's Lake in the township of Brighton.. (Canada,) which occurred some days ago, and by which Iwo men lost their lives, is thus des cribed by a correspondent of a Coburg paper:— "The hank through which it broke was- about Burry feet in height, drawing into a hollow be low about eighty act es of water, averaging in depth from four to five feet, draining, the lake entite as regards any standing pool. The water in its onward course, tore up the forest, leaving mangled woods in the curves and turns of its onward way, and dragging a.ravine, averaging twenty.five feet in depth, and over title hundred feet in width, the distance of two miles, leaving the contents two feet in depth nearly all over the surface. In its course, it swept away the mill. dam of Lewis Sheater, and tore away part of his mill ; and with it the person of the proprietor and a laboring man." EMU s; ,J 33 MEE EIMMEI 77,239 98,911 89,308 82,555 07,676 96,862 05,:306 A Frenchman's linthcc.—:A French traveller.l in the United States, sends the following untlat. tering sketch to a Parisian journal : "Picture to yourself, if you please, a lean fig. ore with bony wrists; feet with d tmensions that would forever tarnish the escutcheon of a gentle. man ; a hat stuck upon the back of the head ; straight hair; from morning till night, by klump of tobacco; lips stained yellow by the juice of the same weed ; a black coat with narrow skirts, 'a tumbled shirt; the gloves of a gendarme; trousers in harmony with the rest of the equip ment, and you will have before you the exact portrait of a thorough - bred Yankee." Nevertheless, it takes those ill proportioned figures to cross the Atlantic in nine days ; semi a yatcht, the end of whose main - boom can be touched by nothing which floats in European water; furnish agricultural implements which open Jonny's peepers; and do other things "to 1 numerous to mention." Mal 111,866 109,533 88,752 90,435 7(1591 The Influx and h.:Am—lt:is hard to say which way the tide of immigration flows the faster, from Europe to America or from here to the shores of the Pacific. Think of the Illinois ink. big out nearly eight hundred passengers to Cal. ifornia, all at one load, the other day I Yet this is but a solitary instance of may be said to be. now an every day fact. Our exchanges from all parts of the country, the east and west partic ularly, have all some reference to parties going from their respective neighborhoods, to New York, there to embark for the land of Gold.— Here they are met by a counter currant of hu. manity from the old world, both keeping in con stant whirl those mighty business interests em braced in our noble packet steamers. The New York papers chronicle the arrival at that port, one day last week, of two thousand three hundred and eighty eight immigrants from various ports ' of Europe.—Sfute Journal. Longevity.—The New Bedford Mercury says, that there is a strip of land bordering on the sea in South Dartmouth, known as ..Smith's Neck," which is about one mile in width by one and a half miles in length. The inhabitants on this strip of land are mostly Quakers, who number 145, the ages of twenty of•whom average 86 yrs., and making an aggregate of 1729 ycars. Twelve of this number have attained To from 80 to 95 years, making an aggregate of 1134 years, and eight others (the comparatively middle aged,) are now from 70, to 78 years of age. This is an amount of lorleviiy not often paralleled. . Offioisl Corruptions. The Berks and Schuylkill Journal publishes. from a report of the State Treasurer, a long list of defaulters to the State,the aggregate of which as reported by the Treasurer; the Journal says, amounts to about three millions of dollars. The editor, commending upon this state of things; very properly observes that tta reform never will be effected until the public Mind is aroused to the absolute necessity of an organic change in party machinery and governmental machine.; ry ; until the people are fully aware of the ex: tent of their burthens and the extent of official corruption. Every man who is paying taxes is simply paying the interest of a debt which has' been imposed upon him, in a great measure, by the fraud, corruption, and extravigance of his rulers.; and it is a debt, ton, which he cannot avoid, evade, or escape from. Take the case of a farmer whose taxes, say, amount to sixty dol. Mrs a year. Sixty dollars a year is the annual interest, at six per cent., of a principal of one thousand dollars.; anti every farmer whose tax. es amount to sixty dollars a year is in debt one thousand dollars—the interest of which he must meet promptly, nor in trade or traffic, as in the case of ordinary debts, but in good bankable funds. His farm is literally mortaged for this sum of one thousand dollars ; es much so, as if he had burrowed the money from a neighbor and had the whole transaction placed on record in the Register's office. But, says the farmer, can sell my farm to-morrow fur ten thousand dollars, and that, too, without let or hindrance from the Commonwealth.' Most true, fellow sufferer; but please bear in mind, that if you could get rid of your sixty dollars a year taxes your farm would sell for, not ten, but eleven thousand dollars; and that when you sell your - Win; disguise it in any way you please, you sell it subject to a mortgage of one thousand dollars, which is held by the State. But the evil is much greater 'than what appears on the surface. Encumbered properly always sells at a disad vantage, and can never command a price cor. responding with its intrinsic value, after deduct ing an amount equivalent to the encumberance. No man likes to buy a town property nr a coon. try property subject to a perpetual mortgage. No man likes to build upon a lot, plastered over with an irredeeniable ground rent. The State of Pennsylvania holds a mortgage on every farm within her broad boundaries ; and to make mat. tens worse, the mortgage is on the sliding scale, increasing in amount as the firm increases - in value; Thus if a man owns it farm which is' worth ten thousand dollars, the Slate hold a mortgage on the same for one thousand dollars. If by years of industry and enterprise he suce ereas in making his farm so valuable as to cam• maul twenty thousand d•tllars a year, which means that his property has been mortgaged to the tune of two thousand dollars. In the Slate of New Jersey the taxes are so light as to be merely nominal in amount• Now we would ask what same Man would hesitate—everything else being equal- , -between buying a farm in one State tree from encumbrance and buyieg a farm in another State subject to a heavy mortgage I No hottest man would seek to avoid the pay ment of a just debt; but to be compelled to pay the debts fasted upon us by public defaulters, corrupt canal commissioner:, .swindling Con. tractors, and shamefully faithless senators and members, is indeed applying the screws with a vengeance to the overscrewed tax payers of his plundered commonwealth." Law.—A suit was tried fur the fifth time at the late term of the Lancaster county Com, mon Pleas. It was brought upon a promissory note—tried in 1842, with a vet diet for defendant —taken to the Supreme Court, judgement re_ versed, and a new trial ordered—tried again in 1814, with verdict for defendant—judgement re versed by the Supreme Court in 1846—a new trial had in 1848, with verdict for defendant—a motion for a new trial gyanted and in 1860 a new trial had, with verdict for plaintiff—this judgement reversed by Supreme Court, •and a new trial ordered=and has now been tried again and a verdict rendered for the defendant. The amount of the note wag $lBB 12. It will be ob served that four out of the five verdicts were fut the defendant, and that the Supreme Court have been on both sides: Core of Lock Jaw.—We learn from the tiara , den Danner, that Mr. Thomas Githens, in conse , ( - pence of running a nail in his foot, was ed with tetanus or lock jay, to so terrible an ex" ent that not a hope was fur days entertained that he could be saved.. The Banner says: "The condition of Mr. G. became so alarming that the family were induced to send for Dr. Dingell; who soon discovered symptoms of lockjaw; which was finally confirmed, beyond all doubt; by the closely set jaws and other unfailing etti.: dences of that fatal malady. Dr. B. treated the patient mainly with chloroform, tinct. aconite, and landanum, with brandy, &c. Dr. Dingell called in Dr. Mulford, one of our oldest and most experienced physicians, who coincided with the' above treatment, and 'pronounced it the best de• veloped case of lock-jaw, from the beginning, he ever met with. Mr. Githens is now sitting up, free from all the sympions, which lasted abou t four weeks. A cure of this disease may be con sidered one of the wonders of the age; and the fact that it was successfully treated reflects the highest credit upon the professional attainments ot Drs. Birdsell and Mulford. Most Astounding Freak qlValure.—On Friday, the 7111 inst., a post mortem examination was held by Dr. Parkhurst on the body of the widow of Amos Eddy, in the town of Frankford, Herki• mer county, aged 77 years, and to the utter as-• tonishment of all present a lull grown child was found, which she had carried for the term of for. ty-six years. It was eased in a sort of bony or cartilaginous structure, except one leg and foot and one elbow, which were almost entirely os sified. The facts and circumstance of the above case will be published at full length in the differ ent medical journals as soon as Dr. P. finds lei sure to put together the history—of which he has extensive notes—that he has kept for the last twelve years, as well as of her life before and after marriage, which took place filty-twsi years ago.— Ulla Obierrer, SEN!=EMM=II