Register. Allentown, Pa. WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 26. 1863. Law of Newspapers 1. Subscribers who do not give express no tice to the contrary, are considered as wishing to continuo their subscription. 2. If subscribers order the discontinuance of their papers, the publisher may continue to liptid them till all that is due be paid. 3. If subscribers neglect or refuse to take their papers from the office to which they are eireoted, they are held responsible till they have settled their bills and ordered their pa. pars diseontinued. /Al Subscribers move to other places, with out informing the publisher, and the paper is Font to the former direction, they are held re sponsible. 6. The courts have decided that refusing to take a paper from the office, or removing and leaving it uncalled for f ii prima facie evidence of intentional fraud. • 6.. 'A postmaster neglecting to inform a pub lisher when his paper is not taken from, the of. makes himsejf liable for his subscription price Railroad Meeting A call for a general county meeting, signed by several hundred citizens, appears in our columns to-duk. The object of the meeting is 16 discuss the propriety, of subscribing a portion of the stock of the 4Plinkakhia, Easton and Water Gap Railroad CairiiiartM.provided the terminus and depot of the road be inide kri Al i lentown. We hope the citizens will be laiW. ly in attendance, as it is a matter of the great" est interest to them. Allentown with the pros pects ahead of a Railroad communication North, South, East and West, is destined to become one of the largest manufacturing places in the State. New County Movement. A town meeting was held in the Lyceum Hall, in Tamaqua, Schuylkill Co., on Saturday evening last,.for the purpose of adopting mea sures to procure, at an early period, the passage of a Bill, by our Stale Legislature, creating ,a new county out of parts of Schuylkill, Luzern° and Lehigh, to be called Jackson,—Tarnaqua to be the county seat. We hope the meeting will be large and enthusiastic, and steps taken to petition the -Legislatute from every section of the contemplated new county. IllrThe above notice we find in the "Tamaqua Gazelle," of January 15. We have no objecr lions to make against our Tamaqua neighbors, to their new county project, if they tentain west Of the "Blue Ridge," but so , soon as they un dertake to step in our territory, We will de clare war. Besides the citizens of Lynn to a man we believe are willing to let"well enough alone." Decision in the Supreme Court. The following opinion. given by Chief Jus tice Black, in the case of Frantz against Knauss. in the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, we glean from the l'hiladelphia Sun, of Friday lest and maybe of interest to many of ppr readers: "It appears that Godfrey Peter, of North White. hall township, Lehigh county, owed Christian Knauss five hundred and thirty-eight dollars on a judgment bond, due the Ist of April, 1850. On the second day of May, 1850, the plaintiff agreed to lake an assignment of it, provided the defendant would guarantee the payment of ; whereupon tho assignment by Knauss, and the guarantee by Frantz, were enthirsed. The as signee made nu effort to recover the debt, but on the contrary, took twenty dollars, and fur that ' consideration agreed to wait a certain time.— Godfrey liecame insolvent, and this suit is on the guarantee. The Court instructed the jury, in substance, ; that theilefendant could only be discharged by proof; that the plaintiff had refused to bring suit against the principal, after a positive request by the defendant, and that the agreement of the plaintiff to forbear was no defence, because the consideration of that agreement being usurious, it was not binding. If the defendant had been the surety of Peter— if he had been one of the original parties to the bond---if his liability fur the debt had been the consideration of the credit, given to the princi pal when the debt was created, then the rule laid down by the Court, that he could not be discharg ed, except by refusal to proceed on request, or by a binding contract to forbear, would have been precisely correct. But the instrument on which . the suit rests, is not the obligation of a surety,— It was a collateral contract, made in considers• • lion that the plaintiff would accept an assign ment of a debt, which had been made long 'be fore. It purports on its face to be a guarantee ; and it is one to all intents and purposes. Now, it is well seitled in Pennsylvania, that the contract of one who guarantees the existing debt of another, is a mere warranty of the debt or's solvency. The creditor takes upon himself the duty of recovering it from' the principal, if that can be done, and the guarantee is not bound to give him notice to proceed. The present plaintiff could not recover without showing to the satisfaction of the jury, that he had used all due . and proper dilligence to collect the money limn Peter, or that Peter was so hopelessly in solvent at the date of the guarantee, that no rea' ennoble diligence would have been sufficient to save it. It must be manifest that it makes no difference in thins case, whether the egteement to give time was usurious or not. The defendant was dis, charged by the fact of delay, and it is all alike whether' the delay was in pursuance of a legal or an illegal contract. The same consequence would have resulted from mere negligence, with. out any contract at all. The, evidence objected to was admissible as a part, though perhaps not a very important part of .the whole transaction. • JUdgn3.enf ,reVersed, and ben. fa de nov, ewer ded. Schools in Lehigh We are indebted to Messrs. Laury and Barr, of the House, at Harrisburg, for copies of the re port of the Superintendent of Common Schools. An abstract of the general operations oNke sys" tern we gale in our last week's paper. We give here a view of its operations in this county : Number of School Districts, 15 " Schools, 147 " yet required, 11 Average number of months taught, 6 Number of male teachers, 136 female " 12 Average salary of males per month, $l9 69 " females 44 18 06 Number of male Scholars, 499! female " 3880 " learning German, 1909 Average No. of scholars in each school, 09 Cost of teaching each scholar per month, 39 Amount-of tax levied; Received from State appropriation, $2,877 97 U 44 collectors of school tax, $10,013 18 Cost of iristruction, • $ll,BlB 23 Fuel and contingencies, $2,251 41 Cost of school houses, purchasing, building, renting, repairs, &c., $3,063 14 In Northampton, the average number of months taught is 6, Bucks 7, 'Jerks 4, Carbon 7, Mont gomery 7, Schuylkill 7, Monroe 7. &c. Lehigh is slightly above the average in the entire Slate, which is 41, as near as ordinary fractions will express it. Large Sale of Negroes To give our readers an idea of how they dis pose of human flesh as personal properly, we glean the following notice of a sale of negroes, from the Fincastlo . (Vu) Whig, being the prop erty of a deceased citizen of that place : .t' s , l "The largest sale of negroes that perhaps curer occurred in this county, came off at the Newell Pltibe, about 7 miles below Buchanan; on the 27th :; iltimo.—There were 89 negroes sold. The sale amounted to 846,523, or about 8534 each. The negroes were made up of all ages and sexes, from the old man and woman of more than four•score down to the suckling infant less than a month old.' Taken as a whole, we have no doubt they brought as high a price as any lot of negroes, of the same quality, that were ever sold in the State. .• out of those Momentous subjects connected with ihe . present state of the relations of this country with the oth er powers of the earth, so liable, on .account of their character and complexity, to present Ilienir selves from hour to hour for practical and am^ mediate consideration. The Bible Flow comes it that this little volume, corn. posed by humble men in a rude age, when art and science were but in their childhood, has exerted more influence on the human mind and on the social system than all the other books put together? Whence comes it that this book has achieved such marvellous chan ges in the opinion of mankind—has banished idol worship—has abolished infanticide—has put down polygamy and divorce—exalted the condition of woman—raised the standard of public morality—created for families that bless.. ed thing, a christian home—and caused its oth er triumphs by causing benevolent institutions, open and expansive, to spring up as with the wand of enchantment? What sort of a book is this, that even the winds and waves of hu man passion obey it? What' other engine of social improvement has operated so long, and, yet lost none of its virtue? Since it appeared' many boasted plans of amelioration have been tried and failed, rnany codes of jurisprudence have arisen and run their course, and expired. Empire after empire has been launched on the tide of time, and gone down, leaving no trace on the waters. But this book is still going about doing good, leaving society with its holy prin ciples, cheering the sorrowful with its consola tion, strengthening the ternped, encouraging the penitent, calming the troubled spirit, and. smoothing the pillow of death. Can such a book be the ollspritig of human genius? Does not the vasittes, , et its efleets demonstrate the excellency of the power of God ? GLEANINGS r.P'llon. James Cooper, who has been detain ed at home by indisposition, we are glad to no• lice, has returned to Washington, and resumed his seat in the Senate, in an improved state of health. L'.l . lon. William B. Campbell, deeline a re nomination for Governor of Tennessee. E./ . Y'l'he tobacco crop of the United States, for the year 1850, amounted to about 200,000.000 pounds. 01 this, 81,000,000 were consumed at home. In 1840, the consumption per head in the U. S. amounted to 2 lbs. 10 oz. In 1950, 3 lbs. 8 oz, increase of 70 per cent in 10 years. CrOne hundred thousand acres of lands. in the southwestern part of Georgia are advertised in a New York paper at one dollar an acre. E.T"Old Folks.—There arc 147 persons in the town of Litchfield, on the Ist of Lottery, 1853, that were 70 years old and upward. Seven of these were 90 and upwards. The oldest are 91 years old. I . ""rhe Whigs of Rhode Island, in calicos, nominated Hon. Samuel B. At told, for 11 . S. Senator, who will undoutoedly be chosen as the Whigs have a majority itelioth branches of the Legislature. LV'Stephen Spaulding, one of the veterans who composed Wa.,ltington's life guard, died ou the 30th ult., at M., ,rue, \l'., aged ninety-seven years. FP' It is said the lair Amos T,awrf nee s. , ave away in charily upwards of live hundred thou sand dollars. Ti The printer , of Chicane eelehratrd Frank lin's birth day in greet style, end throu v eh the medium of the telegraph, invited the Presidents of the different Printers' Unions throughout the country. L," Hon. two; Choate, his been appointed At.orney Geoeral of Ma , sachusetts. • Thou me —The expenditures of the city' of New York for the next fiscal year is estima ted tit four millions of dollars. That is exclusive of the lax for the support of the State and Fede ral Governments, The population of the city is five hundred thousand, and the ratio of increase twenty per cent per annum. Killed by a Cow.—An elderly lady, named Keever, residing on Light Street, Baltimore, was so severely gored by a cow, on Saturday week, that she died from the elects of the injuries re— ceived. She was engaged in milking at the time when the animal suddenly turned round and made the attack upon her which had so fatal a result. Miraculous Escape.—On Wednesday morning of last week, as a stone team was coming dawn;. Lehigh Hill, in consequence of the toad being so very slippery, the horses could riot hold the wag on, but were forced down the hill at so rapid a. rate that they were unable to make the angle of the road, in consequence thereof they were pre, cipitated over a steep bank, against a row of houses, turning the wagon and horses complete ly upside down. The carter was on the wagon at the time, but most miraculously he and the horses escaped with but very slight injury.—Eas son Sentinel. Worthy of buttution.—The borough of Wesc Chester, in Chester county, is possessed of a Public Square, containing G acres, handsomely laid out and planted with trees. There are 23S trees in the squate, comprising about I GO distinct species, all of which are flourishing finely, and• some of them have attained considerable . siae.—• The Farm Journal challenges a comparison with any other town in the State of twice the size. ft is quite probble that that borough cannot be equalled, but it ought, to be imitated as speedily as possible by every town in the State. High broded.— In his speech delivered i e the Railroad celebration at Wheeling, the presidenr of the Baltimore and Ohio-Road said : "As to the power of overcoming high grades, Mr: Mayor, we claim. to have taught a lesson to' the wet ht. During the whole of the past sum, mer, this company carried the United States Mail over a grade 01)530 feet to the mile, without the aid of assistant power, and every bar of Iron which was laid upOn the track, between the Kingwood tunnel and Fairmount, was passed over the same summit." Rc•annexcd.—Senator Buckalew, immediately after the meeting o f the Legislature, carried a bill through the Senate to . reeannex Reatinz Creek township and parts of Franklin and Mad ison townships to Columbia county, and on Sat. mile) , Mr. Scott called. up this till in the House and had it passed by a vote of more than • two+ thirds. •