rko 4329 ter 4523 Guilford 3317 Iler 4342 Tweed Beaver 3ter 2815 Mercer arko 1307 Guilford 1959 1837 Twccd 1851 Wearer 198 f Philadelphia City 3943 Weaver 6620 3941 Guilford 6617 Philadelphia County 10479 Tweed oster 10431 Weaver 7507 Tiller 10474 Guilford 7497 Indiana larko 928 Tweed . . filler 955 Weaver 1207 OSter 843 Guilford 1213 Itlaaiingion Bedford larks 1892 1892 Twooil eater 1893 Wearer 1969 Montgomery larko 3538 litter 3515 Tweed aster 3543 Weaver 2559 Crawford larko 1951 1958 Tweed Miller 1954 Guilford 756 lark° 1522 IVeaver 1353 1559 Tweed Miller 1554 Guilford 1339 Vexango Clarke 790 Weaver 364 800 Guilford 3GI Foster 802 Tweed Clarke 1255 Weaver 1700 1254 Twoed Foster 1254 Guilford 1697 Da uphin CI trke 1330 91i1ler 1662 Tweed Foster 1601 Guilford "2015 Clarke 4090 Weaver 1630 Miller 4109 Tweed Foater 4101 Guilford 1658 Chester Clarke 4113 Tweed Miller 4109 Weaver 4498 Foster 4118 Guilford 4495 Weaver Guilford 1973 Guilford 2565 IVcavor 758 WeaTer 1956 rs are forbidden to touch ,acre, +Are have a perfect liberty to chronicle John nci' visits to th e Crows Nest, or get up an excite- nt against the Overseers of the Poor, or any other eject tthat is open to our neighbors. If it was not for s view of the matter, we would certainly compluin of r fate; it is indeed a hard and vexatious one, but ,en we look around us, we find it is not as bard as at of some of our brethren of the pre; , , and fur this e feel duly grateful Ttir. - Corl: AND THE COON.—Chapman,,:of the In- ana Sentinel, the first chicken of the democratic par- , draws the following - comparison between the popu- r political emblems of the day "The democratic papers announce• almost every sic ry under the figure of a crowing rooster. We had, to ns up the world, and scatters the darkness o mg it,t ock salutes us with his well known cry of loco fo CO. e is faithful and constant in his attachments, and oaths traitors or those who forsake their friends.— Veen St. Peter like a whip:, failed to redeem the pro- mise a he made, the cock reprimanded hire three times. And throughout the LIMN,' the democratic cock is re primanding the whiga tor failing to redeem the promi ses of good times—of "two dollars a day, and roast The Coon or wbig ensign is a knavish animal. He rowls about in the dark and dreads the light. The laze of a loco foco match starts him off in alarm. He neaks from a hen-roost like a Whig from hank to bank section expected to take a sail up Salt River, and started off, on Thursday, with a fair wind. Before night they brought ul on that huge sand bank 'twixt this State and the Atlantic, (New Jersey).and we reckon they'll not get much further, unless a fresh breeze from Ohio should carry them off. We'll see The accommodations arc much improved on Salt River, we are told, since the place has been so well settled by the federal whips.—Philadelphia Sp. Times. Please ask them to stop at Pittsburgh and take a small consignment of blue nests ori board. They leave the county for good, and as they intend to take up their permanent residence on Salt River, they will have con siderable plunder to take along with them for die shipment of which arrangements will be made by their successors, die Whigs. Mouton of Mwooxellta sett-A, has appointed Thursday, the 30th day of Norern ber, a day of thankegiviA; and prai 4C. " Why i$ that w•e never tiara a thankhgiving day in Penii2,lvaniat We are as much a "mural and religiuus people of our yankee neighbors, and in ull the other regiiiidtei to observe tlio day in a pious manner, such as 'mini.... kins, apple sauce, fat turkey,t, &c., we are as +•e1l pro • t •of them. Why then, should'ia we have a thanksgiving as well as Massachuiotts, or any of the other burn flint and wocid..ni nutmeg stater • ny, and as her horse became rather unmanageable, ho requested him to jump in and drive for her. As .e was getting into tho wagon, "My!" said she, "you are been drinking rum!" and pushing him, she put hip to the horse, and dashed off as though "Old 'ick" was after her. The young man afterwards de- ared that sho must be one of the "smelling commit ," for it had been an hour eince he Ind drank any PROFITABLE 14'ettmtsc•---Governor Shelby, orKert- tacky, has a hundred acre tield which will average a hundred bushels of corn to to th". acre. It is planted four feet each tip' iv, with lour etas to the hill THAT PLAN ETAHIUM.—Pr4•,,r(i-rsratid and Dr LArdner ttre still at logtzothowl. , to the proprietor ship of Russell's Planetarium. Tire Vice Chance Eel ma sustained illjlElC . ,loll, but require: sureties of him in $12,000 EXTRACTS FROM ENGLISH PAPERS. New Puseyite College, near Orford.—lt is in tended to establish at Littleniore, near Oxford, a co' lege in which young men holding the high and die tinctive principles of the Church of England, may b trained for missionary labor. Tho Right Rev. Di Coleridge, formerly Bishop of Barbadoes, will I] . . principal of the institution. The Cheltenham Journal, in an article on Irish a - - _ fairs, after speaking of O'Connell and his followers a the "hoary old traitor and his ruffianly and rebel pealers," thus concludes:—"We thirst for no man blood, yet we conceive that it would be a blessed d for Ireland to witness the hangman's office performe upon the artful agitator." Political incacerations have taken place in 'eve' provinces of Austria, Italian as well as Germany. T persons imprisoned are belonging, or suspected ofb longing, to the sect of the communists. The me hers of this utopian and most anarchial sect, are d ly increasing, throughout Germany, Switzerland, Tyr and the different states of Italy. A letter from Athens states that a gang of twentv-s coiner!, Greeks, Turks, Italians, and French, had be discovered and arrested in that city, and handed ov to justice. They had been occupied in the ftbricati of Greek crowns, and French two-franc pieces. Otl parties connected with this gang, to the number of u wards of 200, have been since arrested, many of wh by birth and fortune, belong to the higher ranks of - clay. Repeal in the University of Dublin.—The p vost and fellows of Trinity College have received defeat in an attempt to getup an anti-Repeal decla tioct. One of the bribes offered to the scholars, w the re-construction of the celebrated Historical Soc ty within the walls of the college, but the offer w clogged with the condition, that all allusion to Repe and the politics of the day were to be excluded fr the discussions. Colonel William Nicol Burns., the second son of The salutes fired last wee • at " ymout 1, In iono her Majesty's visit to that port, were heard at a tance of 46 miles from Plymouth, by the mail line ro At Baden, a duel took place between M. de Go an officer in the Baden service, and M. Verifkin, officer in the Russian service. They fought at six ces, with pistols. M. Verifkin was shot dead, M. de Goler received a ball in his chest. The Boston Post says well:—What is the of talking about Georgia and Maryland, and st ERSLY 15 What WO 100 And besides political ne, a - . red by the numei OLlc confluents of Columbia river . . .." . • 'm ortance chiefly t. Total organized, 1,034,466 In order, says Mr. P., to show the real extent of the -ntral section, we have above stated the a;gregate )ace already organized—to which we now add: Square Miles. orthward of the Red Ricer, westward of the states of Arkansas and Missouri, and as far nwfhward as where the western boundary of the United States comes to Arkansas river, 105,000 orthward of a line drawn from file mouth of Peters river of the Mississippi, to that of Sioux river of Missouri. and including the intermediate space between the Mississip pi and Missouri rivers. 90,000 orthward of Arkansas river, westward of the Missouri river, eastward of the Rocky Mountains, and southward of N. lat. 49 degrees, 365,000 utal of unarg.anized territory westward of Arkansas, Missouri, lowa, and Wisconsin, - dof the Rocky or Chi cway gictes, and on that (Atha north by N. lat. 54, and including all between those lati- tuck_; and ba tweZt the Chippewcyan 3loun tain3 and l'acitie 560,000 Total united States turritory exclu , ivo uf I 1,854,466 SUMMARY. Square. miles. lantic slope !eotral valley Total territory of the United States of North America '2,151,466 The reader will note a discrepancy in these tabular views between the aggregate assumed at the com mencement and that deduced from the dill:rent parts; • • excuse must be valid from the extreme ditlicul- preparatory • organization of the department over which he prsidt Whatever can b. - 2 done, the energy of the Postmast General will accomplish. His capacious mind, taki a comprehens . ve view of the whole question, will dot less devise a reform which shall meet the views wishes of the people, and preserve the efficiency of mail service in all its ramifications. The laws as tl now are, will be evaded. It is impossible fur most untiring vigilance to prevent it. Public opir bears,the offenders out in their violations and evasic as they are considered as having performed merino ri acts. Gov. Wickliffe knows this, and thedifficult•- his station are increased by the peculiar state of popular feeling. But to shrink from the dischar; duty he will 110t,50 long as the laws demand from '1 the course of action IN bleb he has been and is now suing, The remedy for the evils: complained of, is in hand 3 of the people. Not by nullification—not fractions of existing laws—but jet them go up in t dy, and with a united voice demand of their repre tires a repeal or modification of those obnoxious I for enforcing which, so much injustice has been to a faithful and efficient public officer. The re must come from congress. That branch of the eminent, is the only one which has any control ove matter. There must we look for relief. They • can legally and rightfully give it. The public press which assails the Postmaster 731,466 300.009 1,294,466