41ive-Medals wertratrucic in his-honor, three of which were produced in 'Germany, and a statue was erected to him in his native coun try. The House of Commooe also voted him AZ 1 0,000,in1802, and -.220,000 in 1507., Nothing hoskster, cold!' induce him to leave. his nattve-villniet binivoleiice and an earn est desire to beneWthe hu man stead of ambition, had been ' kik, motitte.-- AiShall I," he sity,titi a letter to a frielid, 4 , who even itc.i.he-tnnuting ofcray the lonely and sequestered path of life the valley and not the mountain, now my even log is fast approaching, hold himself up as %tin object_of fortune and favor? -My fortune with what flows from my possession, is amp ly sufficient to gratify my wishes." Till• the last, days othis life, which terminated suddenly in 1828, he was occupied in dif fusing theitdvaittagei of his disoovery, both -etitome and abroad, and he had the satis fdttion•f knowing that vaccination had ex tented - its- blessings in every civilized na tion, mthe world. • - _ fllt is the opinion of,phyaicians generally it rmall pox is communicated only by con tagion. • While almost all ment,are prone io take this -disorder, large ,Portions of the world have remained for centuries, entirely exempt from, until at length it was import ed, and then it•rapidly diflused and extend ed itself in 'those parts. It is however, an . interesting fact, that in seasons when the dis ease appears to be epidemic, many cases Occur which can be by no means traced to contagion. Probably not one in twenty ca -sea is , capable of being referred to any :known source of infection, the disease be ing am:iribed by the patient to cold, fatigue, change of air, &c. It is undoubtedly more or less influenced by certain conditions of .The atmosphere; and it has alternate periods 'of slumber 'arid. activity. This city is nev er entirely free from it, but there are sea ions in which it sprerds rapidly and ex tensively, amusing the form of an epidemic. ''''Although vaccination has been of the ( greatest.value of mankind, it is' generally admitte'd thatit sometimes fails, and people often kiok upon it as an equal chance wheth er those who have been vaccinated shall be 'filileto resist an attack of the small pox or not,' while others go. so far as tosurmise that vaccination is di but useless. • The broad and undisputable fact oldie actual diminu 'tiori‘of small pox, since vaccination has been introduced is alone sufficient to refute' the i , ulgar prejudice afloat upon this subject,— Fer even during an eccasional outbreak the disease is nothing.to what it was formerly. At that time it was a real plague, of terrible 'malignity ; it is now comparatively a mild and transient epidemic. The chief causes of the failure of vaccination are the transfu sion Of lymph from an imperfect pock, and 'carelessness in the act of vaccination. The most popular notion concerning the failure of vaccine, is that derived from its suppos ed contamination by passing through so many successive generations of mankind.— This is not correct, for genuine lymph, dat ing from the time of the first introduction, . continues to produce a genuine vesicle from a genuine vaccination, performed on a sub ject in a genuine state of health, exactly now as it at first produced it, under the hands of Jenner himself.. To_complf•kly prottut the system from the contagion of smallpox, vaccination shoula t he repeated until nothing like pustule can be obtained ; for we are to bear in mind that one, two, or three successive pustules may still leave the system unprotected, at least in . part,.and we, may safely conclude that vaccination, properly performed, re peated Cita the susceptibility to the vaccine disease is c xhausted from the system, af forde entire immunity from the variolous disease.—frall,Street Journal. tel)igt) Register. Allentown, Pa. WEDNESDAY, JUNE 28, 1854. FOR GOVERNOR: • JAMES POLLOCK, • • :Of Northombetland County. vlt CANAL commisslnNEß GEORGE DARSIE,. OtAllegheny. County. FOR JUDGE br TUE SUPREME CURT. DANIEL M. SMYSER, 01.141ontgomery County. Frightful Accident Olt' Wednesday last, the 22d of June, a fright ful uccidenif haPpened to Reuben lichtentmlner, son - of. Mr. John Llchtenwalner, in Upper 111adangy township, Lehigh county, which shortly , ` after _ cost ids life. It appears a party of . yOurigmin were engaged,in mowing grass on thoMren of this uncle Jacob Lichtenwelner, antlin the last round mowed for a wager,; , Lich' tenwaluer, who was only about 19 years of age, but hill grown, and very vigorous man, come out ahead, and *Vibe end was trying to mow around the others, when Witham Modring, who was next to him in the party, cut, Lich. teftwainev in the right leg, and severed it to bone. so profusely that he died bejOre'inedictil could be rendered. • To Capitalists. • Ify a' Woke 'published in to•days Regieter, it vein be seen, Ibat the Burgess and ToWn Council of intend,to nontract a Lein of "Five Thousand Dollars," ift sums of from Five Hundred and upwards; to suit eapi. talists, at siirper cent interest.Fersons wishing any other information, respecting the Emmen, tee al .principle and interest, will 'please call at our office. Sunday Sotkpol Pic Nicu OrliTe'ilresdriyafteinikin _ therProshiterian Suk. ' day: clAtty, t lettendad a re "pglesemer woos'{ o.l6.B Borough.tialle a large equi p ber i wge present.. eebolang bad . provided themselves with all that was needful, and en- Dyed a day , el , plessurman d recreation.. `'''''±iifin t rot a CorneiStoie; • On Sunday last, the Corner Stone ol the New English Lutheran Church was laid. The dAy, , although in„the morning it had, (hoapPenrAti ot„,riin kvaslelighti 'and a lame nomViof people,weriP) kElg ).10firn in g,A. :afternoon.Weißr Sainickker4ogeh, . took par} , •• Chet' . Of ‘ MiAfedingii; iiellietedliiiipe' _vehliritim bers9s,the Brass ifind,l4llly volunteered their ; services. '• • Papers contained in the following remoran- da were depositedin a tin_ box and e laceci in the . COrnectSeititei:; In f the name - of the -Goo, the F ather, the Son , and !Ito .Holy ghost. In alt plades:wheitellicoril iriy Mime; aiith the Lora, I will coma :onto lhee and I will bless thee. This 25th day of June, in the year of our• Lord.antLSatiourJesne.Christ 1834, and of the. Independence of the United Stakes the seventy eight.Ohe officers of the General,Government being. .• t•-•! . ,; . ••• • t • 1 . Franklin Pierhet, President,Wm. Alarcyl•Sec rater)? of State; James Guthrie; Seorehary'olthe Treasury, JefTerinfif •Daitis; Secretary ':of: War, Janie!, C. Dobbin', §acr&fit,Y of the Isirqty, 'Rub. McClelland, Seieretar3i'd the Interior": The officere of the State of Pennsylvania be. ins, Wm. Iligler,GovernOr, c A Blahk,,Secrft fury of Commonwealth. 1' he English portion of the members. of the German E.racgelical 'Lutheran Church in,Allentown e Lehighcounly, in the State. of Pennsylvania.- • .•t ' In the name of Goil , the Father, Son and 1Io• ly Ghost, and in humble dependance on hie aid, do lay the corner.stonfi`of s i n English Evan gelical Lutheran Church, to be-known by the name of St. Johni Church; to lie dons'eOit l id solely to the . service of Almighty God,; in which the pure doctrines of qoa , f, word veto be preached accortiing to the ScriPtele of the Old and New Testaments, and as, set. forth in the unaltered Augsburg Confession ; the Sac raments administered by clergymen in regu lar connection 40111 a Synod of, the Evangeli cal Lutheran Church. • r, The "officere 'of tlieGfrrtnini Er: T.trtbern4 Church to witichtnost of those Nang who alit in the erection ofthis - churelt, are, Rev. Jacob Vogelbach, 'Pastor. . Rey. Beale M. Schmucker, Eng. Preacher, Jonathan 'Reicharti,•Pres.:Berijamin F. Dexter, Sec. John J. Krause ttnd Solomon Keck, TrUs; tees. Benjamin 'Ludwig, Geo. liaveracker,Ja cob H. Ritter, Jonas Wenger, Wm. Saeger, Ja cob Scholl and David Gold; Elders: Ephraim Harlacher, JadobEhrig, James F. Kline, Reu ben Helfrichdonathan Sterner, Solomon Lud wig,—Deacons. The building Committee under whose super vision the plan was seleCted and the church is to be erected, are; Christian l'retz, Pxes. Solo mon L. Keck, Chas. Keok, Ephraim Grim, Eli J. Sieger and Augustus L. Rube, Sep. and Dr. C. H. Malta; Tretteurer. • • The plan was drawn after the directions of the Committee by Eisenhonerst r ink, of Read rho stone foundation Was laid by Klase & . , Hallman, the carpenter work is done under the direction of Ed. J. Balliet,, the cut stone is fur nished.by Tilghman SchmOyer and the Brick work to be done by Joseph Sip. • List of articles placed in dornerstone : I.State. ment of the time of corner stone laying. Isiamis of National and State Officers. Officers of con• gregation, Building Committee,Builders, Sm. 2: Statomentmf the. .circumstances attending the building of tho church, with list of subscribers. 3. Order of exercises atthe Corner• Stone laying. 4. Luther's smaller Catechisim and Augsburg Confession. 5. A copy of Luthdran Observer, Lutheran Standard, Evangelical Lutheran and. Missionary 6. A copy of the . Allentown bism. ocrat, Lehigh Register, Allentown Friedene. bote, Lecha Potriot,'Unabliengiger Republi caner, Jugend. Fkeund and Missions Blatt. The style . of the building about to : be erected is .Norman Gothic. It will be 75 feet long and 50 wide, with buttresses on the front and sides, and a pulpit projection an the rear, and a.base. ment 10 ft. high entirely aboveground. Steps lead up to the church room in a vestibule 10 ft. wide extending as high as the gallery. .The church room has a gallery at the end for the oy. gan and choir which is but 0 ft..from• floor, so that looking-back from the pulpit the room is of the full size of the building ex,cept only as high as the base of the gallery. The ceiling runs up to a point in•the center being 25 ft. high at side and 34 in the centre. It is divided into 5 compartments by carved woodwork projeCting from it. The room' is lighted by 4 large Gothic windows at each side, dud a great central and two narrow side windows over the gallery. • The side walls will be frescoed in blocks of sandstone, and the ceiling. in panelled oak 'graining. All the woodwork. will -be grained. inmak: ""The building outside will be 37 feet from the ground .at the siaos, 66 feet to the ridge of the roof, and will be surmounted tikii taper-' ing ociagonal,sfifre, which will make the on tire height of 112 Wet "Explosion of a Lamp. ', On Saturdei Evening, a fluid lamp, used in, the tamily of. Mr. Eitp4& Smith, in this Boroughfex plotted, and severely burned two of his child ren.. It appears An() •of .the family..lit thek lamp and found that the fluid was neatly alleort• mimed, carelessly filled the same while burn ing, which caused the exploslani Toto`of the children near by', were severely `tiliat,' end lirs,„ Smith, in tho effort of .extinguishing the flrelileb:biltnt her halide. ° It is iAtiaode strange thing that people handle,.fluid, !wipe so.care- 1 lessly, whore it la/t . no,wq,almoet io,every oae,, the many . aocidenk l ih s al vaunt by thew of . Ita. • 1•7,' • KwiPm!Co (4o 4Relv.ireobqiclga;.cigied Shcenereviiie v in jilippyerooereehip, Colin%y, hneinet beep Jsebiblishletiood . §amuel • ,paylor ) .l3: q . i .ip-appointe c i ! le Vinit Meter.- • . ; "''l laii ante itainme nt. • On the 7th of July, the ci4ene of. this Bor. ont.e), Ifing and vicinity will beve,an'-ppporttinity of w a new and noirot entertainment-in isfittOtt eparty of some twenty- ortbitty Indians w .7 1 -e part. The performance will consist ii4JßeTkresentation . of the manners and cps. :toOlt . Nof c ithe uncivillied Indian's,. of the Far ,Yeal, under a canvass, capable of accomoda at'least 2500 periods Thiticannotbu , t be one of the most interesting exhibitions that foie: traveled the country, it is original in , ',its'Ahar• acter, and well worth a dozen "cirene The chiefs, and their attendants will ,nfake a grand entree in town", at between 'lO and If o'clock, on their Indian ponies, fully dressed and - equiped for war; twenty or thirty in ram. Per, ; , hetylid ( by '!lCiMuneWeart'is, Celebrated Brass Band," composed entirely of Native In. .dians,, the whole .forming one of the greatest •abd i nfostinteresting. exhibitions ever- passed Ft ( qc! Oh. . . 1 :I - . -i"A Mit of a Row:" - • , oii Saturday Evening . leal, a regular "country hto-deliiO," took phice at the California Hotel, , • • 6 • near -this' Berongh; ,whicli ended as umiak' a lit between the parties, in which two , men were stabbed. T e one had a stab through the •,, • . • fleshly, part of -his arm, sever ing one of the ,main arteries, and . causing great loan of blood. I.le other a,•cut in i lbe right hand. Such fights •ato;disaraceful,‘and,the participants should be severely punished. • „Excitement. We notice, that great preparations artlf - Oy on among our Military friends, to reoeii*clbr "Union' Rifleant-.4 Military Company - 91 kftitp New Jerseyi• who intend to pa _a visitlts OW Borough on the sth : July next. hey `w I spend The 4th at:Easton, and rem. • .3 .•.. • on the 6,h, an d give a general pared • d compli9etary Ball will be given in t yr .n. ; Ting, at tbe,9,ld Fellows' Hall, where our vim mg .noldiersjand amumber of our private friends Will, participate, We,pitn., assure our Newark friends that they will find the "latchistring at the right place.” . • • ~ The St. Louis totelligencer in an article od the Boston riots, gives the people of the Notth the following piece of advice: oln - siearlof killingv. S. officers, who are discharging a sworn duty in trying to execute the taws that you hate, you would show more sense juke in banging a few of those dough faced knaves that you habitually send to Con. grass to make such laws. Whojs responsible for the so• Called 'Nebraska perfidy?' Who but men of the North , sent to Congress by the vote ofNerthern people? They have the numercial majority—they could easily have defeated the "Nebraska perfidy." Bat they did not do it. They bartered your votes and their souls, ac cording to your account, to Frank Pierce, Ste. phen A. Douglas and the devil." • • Tbe suggestion, earning, as it does, from a Southern paper, may Kr worthy of attention.— One thing is,certaha—that these traitors should be politically gibbeted, and we hope to see it done, very effectually, next fall. The liublication at St. Louis of this .weekly paper has beeniuspended. The publisher, in his•valediotery, says it did not pay. He was losing money, and heuce was compelled to suspend its publication. The Intelligencer of yesterday says : The Shepherd . was an. organ of the Catholic faitb„and we notice itadiscon tinuance because it I:Ftd obtained some notori ety through the congression:3 l debates fur the boldness with which it enunciates its views in regard to religious tolerance. The New York Journal of Commerce says: "The paper alluded to was, by fa; the most rabid Roman Catholic print in the United States; but it is difficult to,deulde whether or no its decease is a'rnititei' ter regret. Unlike some of its Je suit contemporaries, it made no conceatmenta but openly, advocated the established of the in. quisition.in this country, at the earliest practi cable moment, and the adoption of any other measures that might compel conformity to the doctrines of holy mother church. Religious liberty, in the opinion of the editor,* was the prolific source of evil and the Bible was little better." DissolutionoftheDemooratto Party. All' the signs 01 - the times bode the speedy dissolution of the great unwiedly and incongru ous mass that has long rejoiced in the potent name Democracy. ,Indeed, it may now be considered as virtually disorganized. The pub lic plunder—the cohesive .power—having come exhausted, the heterogeneous throng that it attracted anal . temporarily attached to the democratic fold, either sated or disappointed, are.gradually dispersing and associating with the open' and avowed enemies of the Admin istration in waging guerilla warfare in the ve ry centre of the political household ; . insomuch that'the President may truly exclaim,-'the worst - of mine enemies' are .they of my own household." • ; . a ; alike upon the domestic and foreign policy of , the countrY—cherishing In common no,lundruperitel principle of government, it is not reinarkable that such a party has held to. gather so long? In the popular house ol Con. gresamvith All the appliances and patronage of Government—witb the trtost assiduoos and un titiug party dtill—only a bare majority could he brought to Support the'Nebraslia Bill. The popular eleotiona in Need York, New Hemp. shiMpConnecticiu t and otheftlontopratte Btates , dm* that the deinecfaih;constitneney are still ivots t o i t vii ed an4 t disdrganized, the great her. mollies are everYwhere in a Siete ol Most ex ,quisiteeonfastari 9nd distintegra,tion : some of I _ l , B 4f i gTii4 B 14 0 g 13 4a 10 , mile .on. the Baltimore,pletkortnfandt others,,rith 'the •Ad.. ministration on•indiunder both.. Thus goes it with/modern dettitiotticY:., , llfiliedgoOe (Oa.) Rreerdtr..!: d CO • • • 'IA Good Advioe "Shepherd of the Valley." WhatDoei it Mean ? The administration organ-of New York City, the Thle National Democrat, recommends the folloling as the of - Democratic art _ . tree plicy the py.• • . • -• -," Honestly speaking, vitt belteve that the ,democratic party will never beeothe.worthy of .ye noble principles, until it. thoroughly Ameri- Ortnizes all its vievri, -and; wkolly alienates it, self kom- all foreign influences. .Thate are, of course; exceptions to, all. , general roles, , and we ire- herb and there acquainted With foreigners .whose hearts are sound, and Whate judgments hOnorable., but asa body, the ir'ish and Ger . Mans are always insincere, always-corrupt, an grateful,-ignorant, big,mettand despotic. They are unfit for freedom and -cannot properly art preciate it. Their sense of equality is nothing but an intense selfishness, and their sense of justice, that which pays most perPtly. l From such elements of mischief, ,VCCI, say, with the Ritual, Good Lord, deliver us_! as well as the 1 democratic party." This iii a naked proposition to swap ofi the Irish and Getman vote for the Know Nothings. The paper; dvancing this proposition in an Or: 1 gan of the administration. It is in the pay and confidence of Gen. Pierce and bits Cabinet. Now then :we desire an answer 'by authority." to thia-question: Is the The National Democrat authorized by the President or Cabinet, or any of them, to throw out this proposi:ion for cast ing of the foreigners and adopting the Know Nothings as the basis of the re-organization Of the administration demogratic party? Can the Washington Union answer?—N. Y. herald. Item of News ! On Sunday last, two - German laborers on the Lehigh Valley Railroad, named Jacob Fuchs and Charles Bolah, overloaded their stomachs with eating cherries, about a mile below thls place, after which they drank too much cold water which caused their death the same night. On Thursday morning a dog supposed to have been mad, arid was followed by the boys took refuge to the cellar of 0. 6z J. Saeger, where he was killed. Oa' Saturday morning, .a German by the name Gmyrted 'Grossman, engaged on a boat, was Ittro,ln out by the towline into the Lehigh dam, and before assistance cottld be rendered be was drowned. • Applications for Banks. The, following charters will be. applied for at the next session of the Legislature r—Allentown Bank, capital $lOO,OOO. Bank of Catasauqua, capital $200,000, both in Lehigh co.; Farmers' and Mechanics' Bank, of York, capital $300,. 000 ; Anthracite Bank, of Tamaoqua, capital $200,000 ; Farmers' Bank, of Pittsburgh, oapi* tal $500,000; Commonwealth Saving! and De. posh tank, of Harrisburg, capital $50;000; Com mercial Bank, of Harrisburg; capital $300,000; Moritottr Bank of Danville, capital $200,000; B.inlc of NOW Coml., Lawrence county, capital $300 3 006; also fur an indrease of the capital stook of the West pranoh Bank. Hokendatt§tta-z:-Is the name given to the 10. culity selected for the new Thomas Iron %Yorke, above Catusauqua. it is a very preuy leditrp name now• borne by a small stream of Water in the vicinity. We itaveno doubt a very re spectable town will soon spting up ; the Com. pany in this week's Rceistet, invite proposals for the erection of a dozen houses. Living.—The pried of Buelhas fallen about .$2 a hundred, the reduction has not yet retfUlt cd the retail operations in our markets. Lugo .Droves of beef ore on the way to market, and a further decline of the needful is anticipated. Provisions generally are also falling, and flour is lower. Large quantities of breadstufls are coming into market, and the prospect of a bet tur Cl3an.ce of living, at least temporarily, is much iniproc'd. Sale. of Real E.state—We learn that Mr. Ja cob Geissinger, of Lower Saucon township has sold 68 acres of land, immediately adjoining the village of Hellertown, to the North Penn sylvania Railroad company, at $3OO an acre— making the snug sum of $20,400. The corn, pang intend using a portion of the tract for De pot purposes and cutting up the remainder in-. to town lots. &leapt Runaway —On Sunday evening last, about 8 o'clock, a lad abuut 12 years old, of Mr. George Wenner, mounted a horse, with only a halter on and undertook to manage him. In the vicinity of New and Market streets, the horse commenced running at fall speed down Market, the boy screaming desperately. In front of the residence of Dr. Jones, where new building materials are deposited, the horse made a leap over a stone heap and the boy fell violently, bat fortnnlttely escaped with a mere Immure of thercollar•bone.—llincy Times. Decline in flic Price of Berf.—lt will be good' news to housekeppers to learn that the price of beef, which has lately been so extortionate , is on the decline. alt the Baltimore cattle sales on the 10th Instant, prices gave way full 50 eta. on the 100 lbs., while in New York on the same day, there was a decline of from 61,50 t o 62 per . hundred. In the latter market there was a marked irierease in the supply of heel cattle. ' flow they Flourish.—The s . Know Nuthings" flourish finely in.Bcltylkill county, towns. In fichuylklll Haven they polled 8 votes to one against them in Palo, ditto. 'ln the latter place, Mr. LarhOrn, elected one of the Justices of the Peace, lid not know he was a candidates - until afterthe election. -To shtivr how unespectenhe result was, one of the leaders de the old parties; declared, on the morning of the 'election, that t hey could beat the opposition 3to I. The result of the Vote Int 'directly We Short Hay `Crop.-1 crop of hay this'seneOn In New Jille . r•WiPl'il is' sold, be it very sh6ft• one, °Wing Rothe dedsei fioh made od the Ones by the myrintle'-of gin'siio6ers tibbnnit to an nousull extinf.• - The . Knew Nothingii. This organization is an almost universal theme of remark. In the cars, the steamboats, the work.ihnp, the parlor—everftshme —we 'May hear scuriething said about this mysterious iiinei ol;?. Ih:Oreales : l94dur, noldttrm, hottnieri causejtb¢¢ community knonktbe main, oblects for w j is' flirmed, , namely,;%to pl4ce Aroeni , 'oikns -In onlcl; , :nlyt. In kerP. , politusu!l power . out of the hands-orthe Catholics. `,, There are causes for thus bantling:. together, reasons Whicif.go 4 , to form an opinitin - 10 the minds of a large portion of the American citizens that evil may arise to the country and the world by placing office in the bands of men not truly Americanized—men who may bee power and in fluence of place to strengthen an intolorant re ligion. We do pot partake of these fears to any great exteA.but: at thb same time honest . Opine ions to the contrary of our own may be worthy of respect and consideration. ' Sectarianism is a feeling which may easily lead the people into error.' Every man will find it to his.advantage to keep wedlock upon those Imptillsba'which lead him to deny priiileges to ' any one class of citizens on account of their re ligion. But we arc nut at all surprised at the present state of. feeling, when we find hews . paperp in our country such as the Shepherd of the Valley, the Boston Pilot, the Freeman's Jour nal, and some cf.tlfepriests and bishops, titteriny, sentiments•totha effect thitt when Catholic ob tain the political power; Protestants wilt have to'bow in humble submission In its dictates.— These paPers . and men may be honored for their honesty, for so bold an avowal of character, if this still be the spirit of the Rotnish Church in this couhtry. In the face of such doctrine, it is natural for the Protestants to resort to the ballot.box to ward off, by the best practical means, the attainment of such power, which it is asserted is to be thus used to their disadvantage. If the Burnish Church of this country, surrounded by the light, knowledge and universal tolerance of all other Christian sects, continue to preach sUoh,doctine, andlook upon Protestants as heretics, deserving of oppression, martyrdom and death—if it Would efface our fair land with the same bloody, inn 1-* erant history as is being even now enacted in dominions where the Pope holds religious as well as political sway, it cannot complain if the Protestant or American people at once, we will simply drive you out 4,114 e power to do 11111 this great wrong." While rraes . tants are willing to concede to every sect tolerance in.the enjoyment of-religious opinions, and peaceful exercise of public worship, all they ask in return is W he met in the same spirit. While they are sails• fled to rely upon reason to eradicate what they conceive to be.evil, on the part of others, without resorting to arbitrary laws to fotce the coiisci• cnces of men into The adoption of Their creed, all they ask is that others shall be content to use the same weapons, leaving it to a common Prov idence to (kettle the issue. This, unfortunately has not been tlre case : hence has arisen Nativ ism, Know Plothingism, as counteracting agen. cies. These agencies necessatily partake of in. tolerant ideas to some extent. It excludes all foreigners from, certain political preferment; al thodgh there are many very worthy men amongst them, whom, as individuals, true, patriots and liberal men, none would hesitate to trust and honor. Whether this is all inseparable circumi stance, which cannot'be avoided in attaining the grand idea aimed at, we will not here stop to discuss. A practical question arises awhis point as to what is the remedy for the feeling which supports Native and• Know Nothing Doctrine T. The, ve. riest school boy wilt answer, .lake away the c t iz;te tdich' l prochttes the Oral." At long as the cause continues the .tlisCae rill fester and in. crease in virulence. Should the Pope of Rome and hicl..rfie 6 ls O nd followers at once avow the same spirit-;,f toler ance as emulates Protestants, and show sine . ,ni• ty therein, bpacts; all Poliiinal opposition to them would die away in one abort . year.—Shoull the prison doors he opened to those now incarcerated fur nothing more than worshiping God accoreimg to the dictates of ibeirown consclence,und teach. the same liberal sentiment to others-should the laws made to prevent such free exercise of thought and action be repealed—should an edict go forth that all may and should read the Bible and practice it's , precepts ;About interference of Priests, ip the contrary-=should universal ed• ucation be advised, withbut being under the con' trot of priest or sectarians, the clouds which now lower around the horizon, portending strife • and ill feeling between Catholics and Protestants, Foreigners and Natives, would quitely .dissipate like the morning mist before the rising sun. It remains, then for those who first originate. and practice principles, ideas and religion.. opposed to the liberality• and genius of our people And in. stltutions, which attracts towards our land the hundreds of thousands from ill.governed and op. pressed Eurore, to abanddn the false position and meet their neighbors and friends upon that liberal platform which Prdtestanism offers, upon j which all can stand, and work together-for good withotit stopping to quarrel With each other by 1 the way. If this cannot be effected in any_other way, let the American Catholics—all those Who look With displeasure upon the acts of tyranny and oppression whiolt blots - the history of (lath., olio countries In Europe—who are in favor of universal education and pppos.l to the enact. meat of laws interfering with the religious opine ion of the people, cut loose from the old world— apply the.pruning knife . to,the ofungs.exdresen.. ces".now clogging their progress and build tbe Church upon a foundation in harrnoity with' the; spirit of intelligeoce and tolerance 'dominant among AllletieliDS, and according with • thk genii ius and destiny of thelree insiitatiods•dt this 'country. By taking away the.ctinite • alone; Can the antagonism now el:4W*. tie' erallicated:—: This. is Juiticethit it reason. ,N'a. lives or Know Nothings will never remedy, and. While they elect good Men gorid'citizens'willte.irone • Co lonic' upon services rather favorably thin . MiteVarit s e:, ',Let; p o litielans note' the'se,tilitigiCiiiid - Since the' vole of the Kb ii I oih( og i s has beep egarnSt thO,DeMO'Crititelparly''lllrntisttilp.hin t ' 'We * 00 1 , 1 1,elli: the ezglgmat i oti . deeper,inti). . . -. • , , the matter. In doing so, we fi nd that of half million emigrants coming to the country othia year, tiiewir-40 . ):Q00,4110 . voters. Of these voi tee, at leearTS,Ao the Democratic par ty, at the endMibAstrtil Hence the Demo craticlpariy ti t ati44laclines in sympathy to- . 4ardiuthem—iloakli":ifieldies and dispenses of. aces nmong thltsi,eo attach them more firmly to the y party . ; Tllialit'irto':aecret why the American vats~ is generally cast itgclost the Dentoctatin party. Is it ant-I—Mont. GLEANINGS. tar Population of New York city and aburba with a radius of twelve miles, in 1840, 399,091 ih 1850..780.07,1 ; in 1854, 1,020,089. la' Old Bullion once remarked "that thi White House fever once in the ayrem; like Mei asthma, never leaives it but With 1it6.11 ©"The wheat crop throughout Indianifs sgt,r fcring severely froaltm ravages' of the tly. ,- CiTThree or fodeVavei.n Keepers of Norris. town-wire-floe-for•lteeping 'open their taVates last Sunday.. , nrYhe New i'oric Herald estimates that the ..Know Nothingsk!;ean `control 140 of the '2OO electoral votes iu the next p'residential election,' if they are prudent in their itrovernents. 17 — The 11on: Judge Miles intends to proffer to the Pennsylvania Stile Agricultural Society twb hitndred acres of land in Erie county .as a con dition of their locating, the proposed partners' High School . upon it. tarTht. shiie trade in Boston 'anionnti to be tween thirty and forty millions of dollars' anon, ally. EirThe Wring of the Artesian well at Charles ton, S. it, has reached 1150 feet, and solar with very doubtful success.. CrOne hundred and nine dogs were killed in Cleveland in four days, under the direction of the City Marshal. M^ George Kern has been removed from the Philadelphia Mint, on accont4 of .votleg the "Native" tidkei, and Mr. Barr, a Nabraski co, appointed in his plate. • ' Crasshoppi.rs•harie appearad in Lllleka co., and are destroying vegetation; A VlEtrinnoth rarmer. . . ..fa'cob ktrawn'shomemead.in contists of ten thousand.acres. The : number of acres, of corn bc : hastis year, Is twenty-three hundred. Thisrat forty bushels per acre, it ,load average yield ror the last season, give, nlnety.two thou sand bushels . . The corn fed to cattle is not husked, but is cut up 'and fed In them on the stalks.. Another farm Is owned by- the same man, whichis six miles long and tour broad.— Last year he paid _out ten -thousand dollars for fencing materials,' Hs has also large tracts of unimproved lands. Strasvn is - an immense deal er in cattle. The above says the Bucks County Inteiligen c‘...r, we,clip from one of our exchanges. , :, Jacob Strewn Is decended from the same ancestry as the numerous and much respected family of . STRAWNS now residing in •Haycnck and Rich land•townships, in this county. His father ra• moved from Bucks county, and•setticd irrtheTer ritory (now the Stale)of Ohio.. lle Was a dro ver and farmer ; stir managittg - his affair* with industry and econoriy,' acquired ehandsome unincombered landed- e 3 tate. • His . son 'limns re, moved to and settled in : the State - of Illinois, at hii present residence,. near 4'acksenville, and about one handled, miles from St. Louis.. lie engaged in droving on a large scale ;,'and by his unbounded• enterprise, united withinduory ,and skilful management; he beeinmerkne of ihirlargest and most .prosperous dealers in slock•in thellni. ted States, and laid the fon ndation,:likamthealth spared, for being one of the wealthiest citizens of the country. With all 'his good fortune, he new, at the age of about•fifiyi Cone Years, contiri ues Iris personal attention to his':extended buil ziess; and his house ii4ell-Rndwn '4ith'i.this latch stil,,Di riut,"'and plain , but comftirtatile en tertainment, free' 'or charge', to' all who Call with 1 the Single condTen that they shall wail upon . tht ,...nslvea and:cotinterfere with his idaRY 'rkiutr ine of t';!is.. ° s."• •,• . ,',. -' • ' , : „,.. Among 1 ..- . tij recent yis ersw ere (Mr piton ing friend Thort..l" of .this fl t rough, and /111R1:77.14 Everiax of Bucking:2.'7:i' fro,M"wh gathered some interesting . rot Ls conce piing has . qcn,e. have operations. His landed estate ...i Illinoisan:moats to about 40,1100 acres,All easceptic.' ' ' ! 114. e*titiv,:d lion, and with a cteei, - riCh soil. His hi. mn- n - r - no - Farm contains about' 2 e,000-acres with a ii! --'-- !pension house, and about forty tenant_houses.:. with ether extended improvements. it is &at.' ly enclosed with worm fencing, inn ,oe eleven rails IC' Weight. i Daring the last jl l , 'lliettetri. ,upwards of live miles of post and rail fencing. •was put upp , at t a cost. 9111.00' per rotC - Oa this. tract he has about 1500 a cres , of "wit'sit . he II ~ , walittitbiush,"iwhieliour.infrircianis describe as the .. 140 st .beatitiful tiatber they have eyes seen—.*. 1.,. ' ' . • •,' ', •--• ',. His last season's corn crop of.-4880 acreslise• estimated to yield frini4nmertiy"6f,e ))wiels per acre. This we cut mail shocked, on.ilie.giout4 and fed to his Stick during the .Tvinin hulking. He raised $7OO worth °fp:molly seed; and used the whole of it on his imp litridS getheiwith $750 worth more which he pkrchaseo His s tock cOnsits,of ihquil,ooo head of caitjew 10,000 hdlitt, - 50 broed mires, anti the . necel4,l3r: number of working itnitnikla. The whole concern managed` under tht site' perintendenca'ot.;Mr, ittrivin, who% is •thain.' ly occupied in riding•isii:lioriebiek-P'rer hii•linv - menses plantationdirections 'te;& l ll;„,Ai 7. his employ; Whibh.,he 're'rjuken.iti be obe'tid;'stid Masi. 'de.itie'dl!iipon!: . thlif eilniti litaieritite'live ilresi , gelfi: tee die 4iipAleot their isY% he dtilikenitheth mote than e swarms of wild geese; tuanto 4 prairie h en s, 70 . 01% appu,"L depi9y*Glis two ,s thauband,,imAljnO,PA , his porn. • . ./7 V Y:C .91 1 09) 11 4 ' ! t iPh. root* of ./Ohrcit , 40.4 r, ,oein ing Mr. Straw pgditkia - faritail ,o 4,9 4 llP* l 4 , 70,5,9PitriPb•soFic.491ffts.iffil AblitimPppati, pet bn, Ft*td, AIWA! t 6 1 3 ,1t bountifulxc omy, and integrity in his business relationkit4 ',CiClTinCPu.Ogitsiete.Pllo 51149110,9111 Pura tieje• , like course. treat in the vomit llegree,.*tileiketsissi... ;all aintft4OleAtlie4/1.;;:71.1.,:qi , ..,1.
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