T3 1 BY 0. N. WOEDEN AND J. K. C0ENEL1US. At !.ro per Tent-, always In Advance. THE UXIOX-KSTALIJSlIfI,lSU-Vl"lH.LE No, 'l,Zio. LEWISBURG, UNION CO., PA., FRIDAY, NOV. 11, 1859. CirROXIGLl-RsTADUsiiKiN iSiS-TTiroi NoM 13. Ill II Ml AND 1ft iMffisiroiiL UnioaCounty Slar & Lcwisbnrg Chronkle a ixdcfcmhint r amilt sLwsrAPLR, Issued Friifoy, at Lrtcisbttry L'm'ou Co.Pa. riwvx si.fiAmrT:tr.T. 11 AT.rAfcr nn-1 rw will fur four month. 7 A ri fir i nvrnTtK, 1 1oK fir eifflit month. - . tor tiixtrfii month. dti.f..r t-ro Vt-.i, fi t'r ftiir cojiir fn' nr. hi for tm ropif.t one y.-r. Ac. Sin;H Nt'.'v 6 rt". r.ivim-ntf l.y mail (pui.t) riwiritl fn poM. iHt-Uff st tmpn. or hank nt'5 nt thi-fr Tl of hre. .Muft ktn is I'mJur tvcriY-! at (tilw. CuWtirn the tiute rxi.ivs, fr luli a r '8 I'iJ, (UiiiVm we havr & runniiijc iuiit it is M'uIM'KIi. AnRTl! !iT8 l amltttmi-lr ijMih-l, at lS -t r r fciuarr: one we-k, '-i rU nrt'T inrtin. " i.n! .t Ms Bioiitrtft, 9 rr jf.tr. Hall a iff J.', rts. If itf, 2 !, 3 J.tt. Two kjuaw 1 .M, 4.U", Jv'W. M-ivhaut.t( rt ort oncfuurth of acoluipn, ID ...... jw r ymr. other is Ac. a? may be nfTrfJ uisoi. A wiuart-t 1- Uw r malieft type, or 16 of nrxt lr-r. AUviTti-wnn-ntu mf 4f mrtrliin (rtxlcnrT. an-i iarp" rut-", nt K'ttniUM. Communications lfMrtil on tx-iiif- of ynvr-.. mtfivrt ftnd aeotniftanKtl hv the writff'n nttl name and Mldr. The MAiiNKTIC Tkl.l-iUAl'U is lurat.il in thlmre fthf Hard-ijhnmirU.Xij whiVh w- of'eo iutrurl iiur-oruut Av atrancf of th IM.tl.vi. VY. ConneHM with tht Offiw are amile matertuli" for mnt BindR of JOB FHIHTINS, wlih li will t-f s-ui,-U wiLh Katami and defpalrh aud no raonat'le terni. t.Canun1 A-lfr!i.Tn. iiU t r- kuwld Id. and Jub u wtit u .i livrt-i. All Biixa i i on riLraiTiii. aOFriCli on Markvt S-iuare. or h si.-.FOMol storey W(.B A lrnrim. MOMI4V, T. t, IS5. 'Ul ffcarlrjf" anuthrr "1 Klave In Fcnn'a." Under the Emancipation Act of 1780, slaves were to be freed at certain times Stated, but maDy choso to retain the nom inal relation of servant in families wLcre they were well ued. "Master has bad the marrow and ho shall take care of the drv bones," was an expression frequently used by them. The argument was, that those who had the bene tit of their labor in their strength, should now support thcui in their decrepitude. Often, this duision which, as a general rule, might be equi table was a serious burden upon individ uals who had never been responsible aud never CDjoyed the services of thoso thus entailed npon them for support. Almost every week, we see notices of the death of the "last slave in the State." Tet there may be maDy of this class scat tered over our counties bid in some cor ner, jet living, and cared for. Oa the 2d day of last month, one such died in Lewisburg, who was generally known as "Charley M'Cixae," having been in the family of the late Capt. Alexander M'Clure nearly eighty years. lie was pur chased at Middlclown, at the supposed age of 15, about 1781, and did not claim bis freedom. The elder Roan M'Clure, bis owner, brought him into liuffaloo Valley before 1790, when as several old gentle men inform us be was a grown up man. With hiin was brought a keen slave girl named Kate, who took it into her head to escape into freedom, and wa3 never heard from again. Charley also undertook the same thing, but in his ignorance rau South instead of North met much worse fare than at his old home and when found by one of the boys, was glad enough to return. On their way back through the Narrows, a thunder storm threatened, and Lis young master urged him forward. Charley was tired, and begged that be might ride, and thus both get along faster. Hut, once mounted,Charley tried the speed of the animal, reached the tavern as soon as possible, and left bis master to the ten der mercies of the storm and the fleetness of his own feet. That trip finished Char ley's aspirations for freedom. Never a very profitable servant, Char ley's glory was in the drum and fife, the cap and aword, and many who are now men, when young received their martial rudimcntal training under Charley's awk ward, semi-fantastic drills, in the times when military parades made the "greatest days" in our country. His mother is be lieved to have been a native African, but for half a century bo knew of no kindred in the wide world. He never learned to read talked imperfect German and Eng lish seemed to have no conception of Christianity and from his many singular customs, the strange words he used, and bis ludicrous observances, be was probably never freed from the influences of Pagan superstition. Daring bis last years be was helpless as child, but was well eared for, and died peacefully after a few hours' illness of no particular disease. He had been called "a hundred years old" for the last dozen years, but did not know his own age. From the best we can learn, be was proba bly from 90 to 95 years old. He was buried in the Lewisburg Cemetery, in the family ground in the center of which stands a monument to the oldest of the M'Clure's there laid a venerable matron, of whom we find the following Obituary in Kcnnetii't Sunlury and Northumberland Gazelle, for Nov. 1801 : "Departed thi life, Wednesday, Nov. i, I80J, after a short illness, in the 9iih year of her age, Mm. Ji M'Ulcbi, of BuBaloe township, an4 her remains were interred the next day ia ine Presbyterian burying ground in Lewisbargti. This venerable old lady, like the fruitful vine, has left a numerous progeny to lament her death, baring; bad 14 children, 110 grand-children, MS great-grand-chiMren, and 4 great-great-grand childrrn, amounting to 276. Thirty-six of her offspring attended hfr funeral. She was of an amiable, benevo lent and friendly dispostion, and might truly be called a real Christian, who, having gone through her pilgrimage here on earth, might y wuh. the Apostle, " For me to liv is Jurist and to die is gain.' " It would be interesting to state the ta Mease of ber descendants during tbe 58 jeari since ber decease. We send oopies ! of our paper to some of the family a. far wM.. n i-r n v , ii Mt as California, all of whom (as well as ! ay old neighbors and acquaintances) f 11 b interested will) this memorial of ' ! 000 of lbe M settlers whoso birth reaches I back to 1711, iul ...so with thia notice of the death of "Charley," the oldest bunjao 1 renc oi pas. ages ana ox past legal slavery in our region. FC Tilt STAR CIIROTirx. INDIAN SUMMER. Tlip Sl'ring hu poor with op'nio flowers, uinmr with itf glnry feil, Aiitutuu brown liu epreatl iu treafurrfl, I'UUiug W iutur hastens Unt. But err ttitt wnon. clone tbfir ronnit, Ere a New Year opna Kind, Renewed tike youth like joy once yanlebcd la robes of Spring time, Fall is clad. The Tarted tinted, myriad colored Lean autumnal rttew the ground, M'hile linjE'rin) sinnof jrathcrcd harvest finite rcrenely all around. Filled the granary and the cellar. The ncw-suwn fi'lda in i,Um, Rrle.ed from toil, aglow with kindness Indian Summer's most benign. long may her mild retrn enntlnnw Pweet and hripht and pure as now Fill d lie each board, complete each flrenide, tilad earb heart and smooth each brow I Bnnnteous! glorious! mystic! joyous! un-set radiauce of the year! Thy day all beauty, eres alt rapture Itut too short thy visits beret Nov. , 1. BERTHA. ALL THE DIFFERENCE. It is a fact notorious, undoubted, un disputed, incontrovertible that William Walker has time and again projected hos tile invasions of countries with whom the United States were at peace, and with whom we had sacred treaties of amity and friendship. We are bound by internation al laws to prevent or punish any infrac tion of the law, or hostile invasion of the soil of those countries. Yet Vm. Walker has openly gathered men, money, arms, and ships from the United States, attacked weak neighboring Nations, killed hundreds of innocent men who were defending their own homes, plundered, and abused their people just as as he and his crew were able. He has seduced thoughtless young men, all over the Union, to join his pirat- ical expeditions under large promises of rewards, riches', plunder, and pleasure, and has treated them with as much perfidy as those he has marauded upon. It is safe to say thousands of precious human lives have been sacrificed by this one man, who is in the prime of life, and has no iudivid- ual wrongs to redress, but whose remorse less ambition is to extend tub AKEA of HUMAN BONDAGE. How this human fiend has been encour aged and allowed to ravage and eurso Cen tral America, is matter of history. The coldness of the Government towards Capt. Paulding, for breaking up the frcebooting nest, was as evident as the reproaches heaped upon him by the Slaveocracy. Walker is in this country, in the power of the President, who has sworn to see our National Laws in particular faithfully ex ecuted. What honest effort is made to punish this land-pirate reeking red as he is with the blood of harmless thousands of his victims and of his dupes ? He comes and goes in peace a sham trial, in mock ery of justice,is perhaps made by his accom plices in crime he is acquitted, of course And is invited to uine witii the j Pkesident ! teS'llit offence it is FAVOR of Slatcri ! JuJm Drown, an old man, maddened by the murder of his sons and the harrassing of bis neighbors by the Border Kuffians, gathers a bandfull of monomaniacs like himself, and takes Harper's Ferry. More of his men are killed than of tbe other side, and he surrenders. He has shown no evil disposition except on the one point in which his reason is bewildered. But President, Governors, and all the Slave power (with their co-operators at the North) simultaneously require Aim to be tried, in hot baste, while bleeding from his wounds, and confused in mind with no time to select counsel or arrange for his defence his sentence is hurriedly pro nounced, and he (a crazy old man of sixty years) is to die tbe most ignominious of deaths ! t&mflls offence it AGAINST Slavery. Franklin's War. The contests between tbe Connecticut and tbe Pennsylvania claimants of the lands in Wyoming Valley, brought on open war, bloodshed, and regular offen sive and defensive campaigns, between 17G0 and 17S6. There was rank treason to both governments, as is detailed in Mi ner's History of Wyoming. The set tlers of Vermont having, in forcible resis tance to tbe authorities of New York and New Hampshire both claiming the terri tory been successful ("treason" again !) in setting ip an Independent State, another was projected in North-Eastern Pennsyl vania, in which enterprise Col. John Franklin, Gen. Ethan Allen, Joel Bar low the poet, the Wolcotts of Connecti cut, and other eminent men of the day, were concerned. Franklin was arrested, and imprisoned in Philad. as ringleader, and, with many others, eould bavo been convicted of treason, bad strict inquisition been made; but, as they bad suffered much and there were extenuating circum stances, leniency was exercised towards them. TbDse Yankees were probably the spiritual anocstors of Brown, Cook and their handful of er.ek-bra.ned adheren U ; but that is no good reason why any meroy ghaulj b(j gho Q olJ j.rown evcn if he hR(1 ,ufrercd every pang that can wring an p! J raau's heart ' gstrTbe following cases were ably con tested, and refer to principles of public con cern, liclicving that our readers, both at home aud abroad, would desire to read the reasons upon which the Judgo of the Su preme Court base their decisions, we copy them iu full. Caunty Buildings and Bond Cases. Decisions of the Supreme Court. " , Appeal fromUuionCo uu ii. vim. y Opinion of the Court Read, J. liy an act of the 221 March, 1813, part of Aortbuiubcrland county was erected into a separate county called Union, and the several courts of the new county, were to be held in the town of Mimiuburg, until a court house should be erected as therein directed, and should be there held at said court bouse ; three Commissioners, ap pointed by the Oovemor to hx upon proper aud convenient site for a court bouse, prison and county offices within said county, and, by a written report to the Governor were to certify, describe and limit the site or lot of land, which they shall have chosen for the purpose afore said, and the Commissioners of the county, to be elected at the next general election, were authorised to take assurance to them and their successors in office, of such lot or piece of ground, thus approved, for the purpose of erecting thereon a court house, jail, and offices fur the safe keeping of the records, and they were also authorised to assess, levy and collect, in the manner di rected for raising county rates and levies, a sufficient 'sum to defray tbo expenses thereof. Christopher Secbold was the owner of a five acre tract of land in New IScrlin, and the Commissioners appointed by the Governor, in their written report of the 20th June, 1813, fixed on two and a half acres, part of this tract, as a proper and convemcot site for a court bouse, prison, and county offices within tho coun ty of Union. The circumstances of the case clearly show that Mr.Secbold must have made an offer of this portion of .bis land ; - - 'i;pplin an,i Wrent r,arts of the a en aitn f.,m ciil.cncir.t inna Darn tfllrtn IIP county, to defray the expense of erecting a court house on tbe cround. The court house was built, principally by these sub scriptions, Mr. Seebold contributing one or two hundred dollars, and a larther ad vance of four hundred and sixty dollars, j abaTe (he 8m0Unt 8Ubscribed, was subse qucntly repaid by the county of Union. The court bouse being still unfinished, although built upon tho faith that the two aud a half acres were to be conveyed to the county Commissioners, the Legislature on tbe 8th March, 1815, passed a supple ment to the first act, cuactiog that from and after the first Monday of May next, the several courts for tbe county of Union shall be opened and held in tbe town of New Berlin, and it shall be tbe duty of the several officers who by law are obliged to hold their offices in tbe county town, to move their respective offices to the said town of New Berlin, on or before the said first Monday of May, "Provided that a full and sufficient deed, in fee simple, for tbe court house and lot wherein thesameshall have been erected, shall on or before the first Monday of April next, be tendered to the Commissioners of the said county, on the payment of sixty-seven cents by them. Accordingly, on the 2Sth March, 1815, Christopher Secbold and wife executed a Aecu to tue iroiuiuisaiuucia ui u utuu county for tbe said two and a half acres, for the consideration of sixty-seven cents, which was actually paid, as appears by the original order on tbe Treasurer of tbe county, and bis receipts thereof endorsed thereon. The graut in the premises is to the Commissioners by name and their suc cessors in office. Commissioners of the eounty of Union "in trust for use of the said county in fee simple" of the land described by metes and bounds, together with the brick court house thereon erected; and the habendum uscstbe same language; so that there is no other use or trust de clared than that for tbe county of Union in fee simple, making it in fact, tho abso lute equitable owner of the whole estate in tbe lands. It will be seen that tbe Deeds passed not only the marked lots which belonged to Mr. beebold, nut tne brick court bouse built by citizens of tbe countv of Union, upon tbe clear under standing that tbe lands and its valuable erections were to be conveyed to tne use of tbe county, without restriction, condi tion or limitation. It never eould have entered into their calculations, that in any event the court house and all the county improvements on the lot should become the property of Mr. Seebold or heirs, by any forced constructions of tbe terms em ployed by tbe grantor in conveying bis and their interests in the land and building. The second storey of the conrt house was not quite finished, and it was fitted up for the offices at the expense of tbe county. New Market street was laid out, tbrou"h-the county lot, and a part of the same was reconveyed to Seebold in ex change for another lot of his lying north of the lot, on which the jail was to be erec ted. Tbe exchange was mutually benefi cial, the strip conveyed to Seebold giving a front to his other lots on the street. Upon the court houso lot, the eounty erec ted valuable buildings for the accommoda tion of tbe county officers, and on tbe jail lot. composed of part of the original pur chase and the exchanged piece of land, the Commissioners built a county jail costing about four thousand dollars. The ex change was made under the authority of an act passed in February, 1817, which empowered the Commissioners of the coun ty of Union, to sell and convey to Christo pher Secbold a part of a lot of ground sit uate in the town of New Berlin in the county of Union lying north of Market street in said town, "for which the said Christopher Seebold gave a Deed in fee simple to the Commissioners of the county aforesaid for publio nso," reserving a suf ficient portioa thereof oa tfj? north-east corner of Market street of suffieicut front to erect a jail thereon, '-Provided that the said Christopher Secbold convey unto the said Commissioners or their successors in office, a sufficient quantity for a jail yard, bounded ou tbe north by where tbejtil is t) be erected in the said town." On the Ctb January, 1818, in pursuance of this act of Assembly, Christopher Secbold aud wife conveyed the jail yard lot to tbe Com missioners, by name and their successors iu office, in trust for the use of the county of Uuion, and the habendum is unto tbe said Commissioners of Union county and to their successors ia office ia trust for tbe use of tbe county ef Union for ever. Mr. Seebold took possession of the strip of land given him in exchange. Under an act of 22i March, 1S55, tbe county of Union was divided, by tbe erec tion of a new eounty called Snyder, and the seat of justice in Union county was removed from New Berlin to Lewisburg; and on the 8th April, !S57, tho Lcgiala- j ture passed an Act of Assembly appoint ing Trustees to sell the publio buildings in New Berlin belonging to the couuty, and, after deducting the. costs of sale, to divide the proceeds equally between the counties of Union aud Snyder. The Trustees advertised tho court house, jail, and other buildings and land belonging to tbe county, for sale, and the Plaintiff's heirs of Christopher Seebold, deceased, brought two Ejectments, one for the lot on which the court house and offices were erected, containing an acre and a quarter, and tbe other for the jail lot and jail erec ted on it, containing one fourth ot an acre ; alleging, that, inasmuch asthe courts were no longer held in New Berlin, nor the jail used for tbe confinement of prisoners, that both lots, with all the buildings upon them, reverted back to them as the heirs of the original grantor. Both cases were argued together, and as the same lcadius b . , b ' , , , principle governs each of them, they will be considered together. The provision in the act of 8th March, 1815, is that a full and sufficient Deed, in fee simple, shall be tendered to the Com- missioncrs, and no convcyanco for any less estate or for a limited fee, cloej;ed and c , ... .... ' .fc.? .. connned with conditions or oualihvations of any sort, would have fulfilled the re- quirements of tbo Legislature. Accord- ingly, the grantors use, in strict coufuruii - ty to the Legislative will, the very samo clear and expressive language in the Heed to the county Commissioners, which cave . ' v.i.i.biihi 1.U11.U fc.o to the county of Union, an absolute estate in fee simple. But it is said there was no valuable consideration for this convey ance. This is a mistake, for the Legisla ture fixed the price, which was accepted by Mr. Seebold, and received by hi in in full, having been paid to him, under an Order by tbe Commissioners of tbe coun ty on the county Treasurer, in the usual form. (Kerlin vsCampbell,3d IIarris,500.) Any other construction would make the Deed a fraud upon the citizens who erected the court bouse, and npon the county that erected afterwards the county offices and tbe county jail, by a large expenditure of the county funds. It would, indeed, be a strange result, that,-after forty years' uninterrupted pos session by the county of Union, under a conveyance from the ancestor in fee sim ple, it should be fouud, that when under the sanction of tbe Legislature, these lots and buildings are to be sold as tbe property of the county of Union for the benefit of all those residing within ber ancient limits, that they belong to tbo bcirs of Christo pher Seebold, a man who neither erected the court house, county offices, or jail. Could it have been contemplated by any one, that these individuals, by any virtue of any residuary or remaining interest of any kind left in tbeir ancestor, should be come the only, legitimate occupants of the jail and public buildings of the coun ty of Union f This can not bo tbe law, and wo are therefore of opinion, that, whether with or without the parol evidence introduced up on the trial, the Plaintiffs were not enti tled to recover in cither case. The case of tbe jail lot is perhaps stronger than the other, as part of it was conveyed in ex change for a portion of the first lot in pur suance of a special act of tbe Legislature and the transaction was especially benefi cial to their ancestor. Judgment affirmed in both eases. Stcrnerts.ralmer(. . lenny vt. ao r fromUnionCo. Opinion of the Court Lowrie,C. J. The Counsel for the Deft, below very properly concede that the causes were rightly decided, if the joint and several bond of 50,000 given by the Defts. and others, is a valid, legal obligation ; and it seems to ns clear that it is. Having a positive law to give it validity, we look not for a consideration to support it. Ev erything ia it points to tbe Act for the erection of tbe County Buildings, for its origin. It is a subscription for tbe pur pose of the Act Its form is of no conse quence, for tbe Act prescribes no furm, and its substantial effect is quite apparent and appropriate. Evidently, the princi pal subscription was suspected to be in adequate, and tbe Bond was given to cov er tbe deficiency that might arise. It is a subscription within tbe meaning of the Act. given and received as sucn, and usea to influence the votes of the people ; and tho obligors are severally liablo on it. Tbcy have arranged their respective shares, and given their notes, and are in law bound to pav them. Let the judgment in each ease be affirmed, and the records re mitted. The "Compass Flant:" Rev. Mr. Ilarbangb, in the Guardian, states that on tbe Western Prairies is to be found a plant (somewhat resembling the tbistle) whose leaves always point dne North and South, and thus afford to travelers a com pass of much utility. It biJ often guided bewildered travelers, savage aotj civilized, and is quite a curiosltjr- '""' From V Atlantic MmUl. "Cringing Pnr GlKiwrs tUillj Ho." The time for toit ha. passed, and nleht has evasa, Tin- last and sadd. .tVf the harvest-eve", Worn out wilh latorlong and wearisome, Grouping and faint, the reaper hasten borne, js:h laden with bis rbeivcs. Last of tbe laborrrs, thy feet I giin Lord of the harve.t ! and my spirit grieves That 1 am burdened not so much with grain As w ith a heaviness of heart and brain ; Jllaerl bihoM my sheaves! Few, !I-ht and worthless yet their triflin- w'iebt Through all my frame a weary achine: leavus, For long 1 struggled with my hapless fate, Aud stsyed and toiled tilllt was uaik and late ; Yet these are all my sheaves. Full well I know I have more Urn than wheat ; llraml.l. s and flowers, dry slocks and withered P ar. , Wherefore I blu.-b snd weep, as at Thy feet I kneel down reverently, and repeat, blaster, behold my sheaves I" I know those blossoms, doit. ring heavily With evening dew upon their folded leaves, Can claim no value nor utility Then furc shall Thy fragranre and Thy beauty b The glory of my sheaves. So do I gather strength and hope anew : For well I know Thy patient love perceives Not what I did, but what I strove to do Aud though the full, ripe ears be sadly sew. Thou wilt accept my sheaves. Correspondence of the Star A Chronicle. From a Student in Europe No. 2. Fbaskfort-os-Mais, Oct., 1859. IOMMI1 TO BtitLIN, via HAUIU'RU. On Wednesday morning, Sept. 28, I fonnd myself, with quite a number of other passengers, on board the steamer "John Bull," bound for Hamburg. At eleven o cioesr.wesianeaaowniue a names, ' in company with several steamers bound ! fur different ports, and soon bad left the ' busv piers of London behind, and the tow- , , . . . . ii -i-iM I ;,, iome of St. iaul'g with it8 gill)ed ... ... , , , cross, was lost in smoke and distance, , .. .. , , JNotwithstandmg the age and uuprepos- j scssing appearance of our vessel, she prov- , ed a good sailor, and, long before any of j the companions with which she started out, j she had pa33ed the Norc arj(i was stand. . , . , ., n mg out into the German Ocean. Here, ; , . ... , j as "e ,urned fr0ln lhe "btalcn trlck ,0" wards the northeast, we could learn sonic- 1 thing of the immense trade carried on be- twecn London and the rest of the world. A ieus9 yme 0f ships, bearing the flags of i . e . nations, and eztcndin? as far as the eye could reach, were making for or leaving the mouth of the Thames. A grander spectacle, or one better calculated to impress mankind with a true idea of the blessedness of peace, I believe I have never witnessed. ' Before night bad wholly closed upon us. tho low outline of the English shore had sunk below the horizon, and we were moving through the "waste of waters." i ,ue Iili'cs woar 4 Ilttle P'ner fabric.", pcr Early next morning, we came in view of k3V' nJ Pruaps 'u gentlemen have tho islands which line the Dutch coast, ' greater breadth of counteuauce, and more along which we ran all day, passing the j devclopcmcnt of moustache. Tb. ro arc mouth of the Huvder Zee about eleven o'- clock, and sometimes coming so near to j land that we could distinguish churches . lows aBa 101 wua' purpose tuey are mere, and villages without the aid of the glass. is t0 mc a ""jstery. They appeared to be An hour or two before midnight, pilot I mostly Prussians. came on board, and under his guidance we As 'here are no libraries or public in entered the mouth of the Elbe expecting , stitutions of any account in Hamburg, it to reach Hamburg early in the morning. required only a few hours to see all that But before we had proceeded far up tho ! is most interesting there; and, according- rivcr, it became so dark that the pilot judged it unsafe to advance further on ac count of the scarcity of light-ships, and, tbe captain coinciding in bis opinion, tbe ani-tmr nt.m drnr.r,riU A TirtTn Utpr. th- I sky became clearer, and we proceeded on station, which wo reached about live in thc our way. There was little of interest to morning, there is an examination of lug be seen in going up the Elbe, for the great-! gaSei but u is not required to show pass rrsirinf h rlUt.nn-rt th kant h-ino- ports : and the examination is a mere r 1 - e ; ", low and flat, and presenting a monotonous succession of awkward wind-mills, bay- stacks, and one-storey peasant houses. At the Stadc, our anchor was again dropped this time, only a few yards from the steamer "llammonia," of the Hamburg line, just arrived from New York. The St ado is a little village, on the Hanover bauk, where the lull for the use of the riv er are paid, and where there is a ridicu lous show of little cannon which could scarcely stop an oyster-scow. While here, the captain told a story of Gen. Cass and bis daughters, who, he said, made the trip with hiut from Hamburg to London, ma ny years ago, on their return from llussia, where the young ladies had bad tbe felic ity of seeing and kissing a live emperor. Tbe anchor being dropped for the purpose of settling the toll, the young ladies, pointing to the Stade, inquired, "What country is that?" "That," said tbe old Michigandcr, "is the place where tbcy make kings for England." About two o'clock, the tide became high enough to allow us to proceed, and we moved up towards the city, along the left shore, which was high, and covered with a wealth of beautiful country-seats, church es, and shrubbery that made it seem a perfect Paradise.. At half past three, we were amongst the shipping of Hamburg, and surrounded by a fleet of little boats, each propelled by a single rower, ready to take ourselves and luggage ashore. Here the passengers parted, having spent two or three days very pleasantly together, and enjoyed one of the finest passages that the "John Bull" had ever made. Contrary to what I have heard of ,it before, the North Sea was so calm 'that there was not a severe case of sea-sickness on board our vessel during the whole trip. Among the chief cabin passengers, was Carl Peterson, Who had just returned with Capt M'Clm- lock from the search for Sir John 1'rauk- lin, and who bad also been out with the Pcllavcn expedition, and afterwards with that of Dr. Kane. lie is a native of Co- penhagen, short, stoutly built, with a full round face, expressive of health and L n - esty, and very unassuming in his manners. He was going home to see his wife anl children, after an absence cf two or three years. His narrations oi Arctic 1110 ana adventure, wcro very interesting, especial ly as bis experience, amid the "irezen wastes' had been so long and varied. Hamburg being a free city, there was no examination of baggage, nor demand ing of passports ; and, merely reporting my trunk at the Custom House on the way to the wharf, I was allowed to enter the city. Immediately, a host of euriou, things claimed my attention. The streets are cut up by cauals running iu every di rection, fur the convenience of trade, so that to some extent the place corresponds with the descriptions of Venice : but. iu- stead of gay goudolas bearing ciehly dress - ed people, the waters here arc fLd with blackened barges laden with coal and ev ery variety of freight. The old part pf I the city consists mainly of antiiiuatel Dutch bouses, with the gable ends to the streets, running up to the height cf six and seven storeys, and so built that each storey, beginning with the bilbos', pro jects over the next, eight inches or a foot. The fronts are mostly taken up by win dows, giving tbcui a light and cheerful ap pearancc; and as many of the lower sto reys are used for shops, they of course have a large amount of show-room. The new part is built in much the same style as our American cities, tho hou-es being high and bright-locking, the side walks good, and the streets of a respecta ble width. There is much diversity in the dress of the inhabitants, and some of the costumes particularly those of the market women and maids of all work arc ridiculous. Everywhere, one hears the clatter of wooden fjfal shoes, but tbcc are worn only by the lowest classes. The j tcomln shoe appears to have gone entirely out of use. On the faces of many of tbe people, the veins are distinctly marked, giving them a repulsive aspect ; but whe tlur it is more an evidence ot health than of beer-driuking this redness of the face I can uot say. It is a peculiarity that I have not noticed in any other part of Germany, to anything like the same cx- ' tcDf- The higher class of people look and JrcS3 likc tho-e of Eagland and America; mlDJ ihuts scattered mrougti tne ciiy, but tLeJ Brc "lhcr shabby-looking fel-j 'ji 1 k1"' 'he same night, fur Berlin Of course, it was impossible to see any thing of tbe country between these places, on account of the darkness, but it is said t to be very uninteresting. At the l.crliu show, as I was permitted to pass on mere ly unlocking my trunk. Berlin is a beautiful city, containing nearly half a million inhabitants, many fine buildings, picture galleries, &c, and swarming with soldiery. Although I vis ited some of the principal objects of in terest there, such as the national collec tions of paintings, Xc, I will not attempt to give any account of them until after my return to that, city. While there, I saw the funeral procession of Carl Kilter, a prominent professor in the University of Berlin, and well known throughout the world by bis writings on physical Geogra phy. Tbe papers all spoke very highly of him, and, judging from what I real and saw, his loss is much deplored. But my letter is spinning out to unpar donable length, and although away be hindhand ia my writing, I will have to stop. 1 came to Frankfort by way of Leipzig, baiting there a couple day3 to see the great Fair.. .Of tbe Fair, and the jour ney hither, again. ..I have been spending several days with Drs. Coar and Bead, both Pennsylvanians, living together here in Bockenheim, which is separated from Frankfort, by an iron-gate open, of course. ..To-morrow, I expect to be in Heidelberg, ready to go to work. Yours, very truly, T. C. Whit a Vermont Jury Hid. N. Y. Tribune: "The G rand Jury of Chit tendon County hivo indicted the Vcrmunt Agricultural Society as a nuisance. The ground of the indiotmeut is, that said So ciety bas violated tne law against norse raoing." This is certainly a step iu the right direction, and if it be followed by knowledge fur future usefulness, and resit. . prompt and unfaltering action, may be j tbe temptations which idlers hold out to successful in obliterating one disgraceful you and your youthful hours will glide . feature of most agricultural societies for away pleasantly, you will become rupeo tbe past few years. Shall not this exam- ted aud happy, and will never regret ten pie be followed in other sections, and the ! ding these lines we have penned for jeuf viceoinorce-ueiogrceeivcitsjiist deserts: j "Sic Se.T.per Tyraanis," (-T!iu alwajs to Tvrantf,") is tt motto on the Virginia coat of aim, and at tho ; editorial head of nearly every newspaper f in tLo Commonwealth. This State Seal : represents a shockingly short skirted lady ' (the goddess of Liberty) with one of John iJrowu's pikes in one hand and a short ; sward in the other, one foot on the pros- trate form of a man, his crown off, and broken ceflL'S and chains by his side. The whole is held in the beak of an Eagle. Now, whether the sundered shackles are from the erect or prone form, is not clear, but tamrliotlj chains are gone, sure. Thera is a woful look of an F. F. V. about tbo fellow that's duwo ; and the woman so j scantily drc.-sed is as fair and decently clj'l as nriny female slaves) in the Old Do minion. Uf course, most of the slaves are illiter ate, and there arc 00,000 or 70,000 adult whites also, in Virginia, who can not read Friut or w'i'ing; but Mean read picture , Yeti tcre thrust every week into the facf v newspaper readers, blazincd on their A ig', ornamenting their most promi nent official papers, aud everywhere meet ing the eyes of blacks and whites is silent, ceaseless suggestor of the "irrepres sible cobflct," well calculated to excite more insurrections than allthcJoLnDrown", the Tribunes, and "the Chronicle cliques' ia tbe land. The stupidest negro eaa scan and comprehend a picture. There it is tomil&ty has overthrown some one else, with deadly weapons manacles aro broken asunder, and thrown off and s bappy, freed woman, is exulting with ber foot on the neck of a tyranuical man. If tbe slave learns that the proud figure rep resents Licki'.Ti", aud the prostrate one aa Ofi'REssoB if he knows that "Sic semper tyrennis" teaches to act "74iu usroyj fo Tyrant' the impression is deepened. "Old Virginia" will have to alter her coat of arms, and suppress such an "incen diary print" frown down such "inflam UiUtury d.c'iine'' or Siavcdom will soon be "down upon her." Tbe Abolitionists could not invent or dissemiuate a "fire brand publication" of more concentrated power to arouse and inflame a conquered and down-trodden race ! S3und Doctrine. Hallow l'rc, in Lock Haven, was cele brated by a party who pride themselves on being "some uf the b'hoys," by drunken, riotous conduct iu the streets, until a late hour of night. Tearing down fences, steps, ornamental trees, defacing and re moving sign, and otherwise wantonly and maliciously destroying the property of several of our citizjns, appeared to bo their chiif delight and employment Six or seven of these same froward lads wcro uuWeTcr .er properly called to art ae- count for their misconduct on tbe follow ing moruing, having been arraigned beforo J. B. Wagner, Esq , who held tbem in fuUO bonis for their appearance at tbe next Court, where we trust they will re ceive that punishment which their bad conduct so richly merits. While we profess to bo a sympathizing lover of boys, always pleased to sco them happy, cheerful and gladsome, always un happy to see them cheated out of tho rightful heritage of youth, or any of tho rights and customs to which they are en titled, yet we aro equally apprehensive, and have frequently been pained and greatly alarmed at the outrageous deport ment exhibited by some of this class. It is an alarming state of tLirjgs when people can not retire for tbe night without an as surance of being awakened in the morning to behold their buildings and fences laid in waste, and property destroyed, which, with their own bands and means they have labored long and diHgcntly to cultivate and rear. It is bigh time, when boys have thrown off all paternal restraint, that the stroug arm of the law should be brought to bear upon such conduct We were pleased to know that parents of some of the boys refused to bail them, but are dis posed to let them be properly punished, aud we trust they will be made examples vthich will be a warning to others. We would again entreat all boys that would be happy and respected, to refrain from spending their precious time in idle ness, and in the streets, especially after nightfall. It is ruiuous both to yonr health and morals. Under the cover of -night, in an unhealthy and excited state of mind, you are most certain to acquire profane, vulgar, and obscene practices, criminal sentiments, and a lawless and ri otous bearing that will certainly destroy all confidence or esteem for yon by the, wise and good, and render you suited to the society of the dissolute, and make of you at last criminal men. Bather seek the company of tbe virtuous and good, and tbe pleasures of your own fire-side, for t'uey will be far more enduriug, and the society of a sister or mother of more profit la you than the rude and profligate. ; K--ad somegiodboik, and thereby improve . your time by storing your niinu wiitt ocneiit J,(-:n faiti Vemuerut,