; BY S. B ROW VOL 3.-NO. 30. CLEARFIELD, PA WEDNESDAY; 3LARCH 11, 1857. ;CLEARFIELD, PA., MARCH 11, 1857. - r i . , PUBLIC MEETING. - ; A meeting of the citizens of Clearfield coun ty was held at the Court House, on "Wednes day crcning, March 4tb, 1807. lion. Alex akdkr Iavis was elected President, Hon. J. T. Leonard, Hon. Richard Shaw, John Patch In' James B. Graham, Hon. Win. L: Moore, Michael A. Frank and Ellis Irwin chosen as Tire Presidents, and Capt. George Walters, George W.Rhcems and Thos. J. McCuIlough, appointed Secretaries. The object of the meeting having been stated, on motion, Mr. Khccms was requested to read the proceedings of the meeting at Lock Haven of Feb. 21st. On motion, a committee of 13 were appointed to draft resolutions, &c. The President ap pointed L. J. Crans, John McPherson, John M. Cl.ase, Jos. Shaw, Col. H. D. Fatton, C. Z. McCuIlough, Samuel F. Arnold, Jas. For rest, Jas. II. Larrimer, Win. F. Irwin, John Barmoy, John F. Weaver and Samuel Mitch ell, as that committee. The committee, thro' its chairman, reported "the following, which were unanimously adopted : Whereas, a bill is now before the Legisla ture to regulate tho navigation of the West Branch of the Susquehanna river and its trib utaries, the passage of which is resisted by residents of Lock Haven, Williamsport and Sunberry, who are connected with and Inter ested in corporations favorable to floating loose saw logs, Be rr Resolved, That we are pleased with til o manly coarse pursued by the citizens of Lock Haven at their meeting held there on tho 21st February, 1857, in abandoning soph istry, and so stating what they believe to be the facts that we can join issue with them and so bring our case before the Legislature as to have it decided on its merits. Resolved, That we adopt their language "that upon tho justice of our cause we meet the is sue boldly and honestly, confident that a true and impartial statement of the facts in the case will rcmovo the erroneous impressions created in the minds of some of our legisla tors." Resolved, That the acts of tho Legislature through a serious of years, commencing in 1771, declaring the Susquehanna river and its tributaries public highways for the passage of rafts, boats and other vessels, has induced the former and present inhabitants of the lumber region to settle therein, clear and improvo the - land, and erect grist and saw mills, and build up a lumber business which now exceeds an nually two millions ol dollars, and is rapidly increasing. Resolved, That the floating of loose saw logs on our streams is destructive of our business, and that rafting, by means of which we send onr spars, square timber, boards, scantling, piling, staves and shingles to market, must cease unless those who are engaged in floating do as we do, make their logs into rafts. - Jittohed, That floating loose logs is contra ry to the spirit of the laws which caused us to develop the resources of this region, is not only in opposition to the interests of the lum ber region, but to that of a large portion of onr own Commonwealth, New Jersey, New York, and the whole seabord, and that it ope rates injuriously upon thousand, and benefits but few. , Resolved, That a fraud was perpetrated on the lumbering region when the laws permit ting booms to be erected were passed ; that those interested in their construction gave us to understand they were for the purpose of securing our lumbermen good landing pla ces, and to prevent the loss of such lumber as might bo staved during floods J that we were not made acquainted with tbe fact that a new system of lumbering was to be introduced, and that floating loose logs is not legal by express enactment, only by implication. Resolved, That we recognize the correctness of the legal principle "each man must so use bis rights as not to injuro those of another," that we do not desire to prevent any mill be ing slocked, nor to deprive any person of the use of cir streams ; that our only object is to compel all who use the stream as a means of conveying lumber, to use the same mode we do to prevent injury to others using the stream, i. c. to form their logs into rafts and send them to their point of destination well and sufficiently manned. - RtMolted, That we approve the position ta ken by onr Lock Haven bretbern that laws should be passed having for their object the greatest good to the greatest number, and that we believe the bill now before tbe legislature carries out that principle and should be pas; ei for the following reasons : 1st. Those interested in the floating of loose logs admit that there are directly interested in their business, the owners of abont 19 mills and at the most several hundred operatives, besides thoso indirectly interested. , We as sert, and our asseition is founded upon facts within our knowledge, that in the lumber re gion of tho West Branch there are three hun dred and eighty-five saw mills in operation, giving employment to tof heads of three fam ilies, each mill on an average, besides indirect ly employing in raising grain, &c, thousands of persons. , 2nd. That Clearfield and Elk counties, con taining 5397 taxables, and parts of Cambria, Indiana and Centre counties, comprise a scope of country wholly dependent on the timber, spar and manufactured lumber business for their subsistence, and have no outlet Tor their product except their navigable streams ; that the inhabitants of this section are not indirect ly, but directly interested in the continuance of their trade ; that should it be checked, they cannot, owing to difficulties to be surmounted and want of facilities to reach market, turn their attention to agriculture, manufactures or tho development of the other resources of this section. 3rd. That the business of tho inhabitants of tho lumber region enables them to purchase from Indiana, Cambria, Blair, Centre, Clinton, Jefferson, Crawford and Arrastiong counties, grain, meat and other necessaries of life, val ued at least at half a million of dollars, and from Philadelphia and Pittsburgh, merchan dise and manufactures exceeding in value one and a half millions of dollars each year. 4th. Its passage is intimatoly connected with the business and development of the lumber ing region and the prosperity of all its citi zens ; advances the interests of those counties on which the lumber region depends for its provisions ; benefits Philadelphia and Pitts burgh, with which they carry on such an ex tensive trade ; enables a trade to bo continued which pays more revenue to the State than is claimed (though exaggerated) to be paid by the business of log floating. Its defeat will de stroy over one hundred and fifty extensive steam mills situated out of the lumber region on the Susquehanna River from Muncy to Bal timore, and scattered along tho Delaware, Schuylkill, Hudson, Raritan and Connecticut rivers, throughout Pennsylvania, New Jersey and eastern New York, now supplied almost entirely with materials from this section; will cut ofT the supply of bridge, wharf, piling and building timber and shingles with which we might furnish near all the eastern section of our country ; compel the government and pri vate ship and boat yards from Bangor to Nor folk to obtain spars, decking, keels, whaling and ship plank at greatly increased prices from Canada; seriously affect the business of Lew isburg, Seiinsgrove, Millersburg, Coxestown, Harrisburg, Columbia, Portsmouth, Middle town, Reading, Lancaster, Marietta, York, West Philadelphia, Kensington, Southwark, and numerous other flourishing places in our Commonwealth which now- receive an impetus through our lumber trade, and will render all our valuable pine timber not growing on the banks of our streams, (for logs cannot be haul ed with profit any distance) and our much prized oak (which can only be exported by rafting with pine) not only valueless, but ac tually amuisance to those who must clear their lands. Resolved, That it would be impolitic, in view of these facts, not to pass a law affording our citizens protection, when its passage will ope rate beneficialry on thousands, and its defeat will only swell tho cofJers of a few soulless monied corporations and produce an incalcu lable amount of private and public injury and injustice. Resolved, That to compel thoso now engaged in log floating tp raft their logs, will not stop the mills of Lock Haven, Williamsport and along the West Branch Canal ; that material sufficient to stock one hundred and fifty mills has been sent along our streams in rafts annu ally ; that with an increased demand, as onr our streams have capacity, we could double our export, and that by the expenditure of a few thousand dollars between Clearfield Creek and Lock Haven, it could be more than quad rupled. Resolved, That tho Boom and Boom mill companies are asking for privileges which cannot be awarded to others that an increase of log floating owing to the few' and shortness ness of our floods must at last (as they will be unable to pass the logs to lower booms and mills) erect thoso who are highest up the stream into mammoth monopolies. Resolved, That should driving, not rafting, be pursued, it would bo impossible to pass over our streams logs of a greater length than 13 fect ; that at market the valuo of timber and spars is regulated by size and length, in creasing in value more rapidly than in size and length single sticks, manufactured and haul ed at great cost, sometimes bringing five hun dred dollars. Resolved, That should log floating supplant tho old system of lumbering, it would deprive the laborers of the lumber region of labor in making, hauling, rafting and running lumber, annually, a million and a half of dollars. Resolved, That experience has not shown that log floating Is cheaper or more profitable, but the reverse. It has been carried on sev eral years, and with a single exception, thoso who have engaged in it to any extent in the lumber region have hopelessly failed. Resolved, That we of the lumber region are better able to judge than thoso of any other parts, whether the business is a profitable or losing one, that the assertion or opponents "experience has demonstrated that square tim ber rafting is & losing business and a clear waste of the productions of tho country" is not correct as the following facts will show : " 1st The population and business of the lum bcrscction (laboring as she has done under disadvantages for want of thoroughfares, &c.) have been increasing as rapidly as other sec tions of the State. . . .. 2d. There is a larger proportion of freehol ders in tho lumbering region than any other part of the State. It is a rare thing to find a man who docs not ov i the land he tills or operates on. 3d. Clearfield County which is the most in terested in this business has only two paupers in her borders, one being idiotic and the other having been a charge for only a few months. 4th. Our citizens have been enabled throngh the business of manufacturing lumber, to pur chase and pay for their lands, to improvo them rendering land which was worth from $2 to $5, worth from $10 to $30 per acre. Many of those who have been engaged in the business arc now in good circumstances, and yc could name several score of our citizens who have amassed large fortunes by their thrift and in dustry. Resolved, That the calculation made in the Lock Haven resolutions, as to the amount of revenue paid the State, is not founded on cor rect data, and the opparent incorrectness of those w ho made the statements, show they on ly jumped at conclusions. Resolved, That we thank the log floaters of Lock Haven tor frankly admitting that tho tw o systems of lumbering are incompatible, and that their effort is to supplant the old system by tho new one log floating they the ro by show the whole object to bo the removal of the manufacture of lumber from the lumber region to other points, even at the expense of other interests. Resolvtd, That we call on our Representa tives in the Legislature to use all honorable means to pass tho bill now before them, as snch a one only will secure us our rights. On motion, it was resolved, that the proceed ings of this meeting be published in the coun ty pipers, and that a copy be furnished to the members of the Senate and House of Repre sentatives, and forwarded to mill owners and others interested in the continuance of the rafting business. On motion, Wm. L. Moore and L. R. Carter were appointed a committer on publication. ; On motion, Hon. J.T.Leonard, HJ. Wallace, and R. Slfaw of Clearfield, Geo. Stockham of Philadelphia, J. Eagle of Marietta, and Hen ry James of Baltimore, were appointed a com mittee to lay our grievances before the Legis lature, and furnish the members with statistics of the lumber business. On motion, L.J. Crans, J. L. Cuttle, S. Dundy, Ellis Irwin and Archibald 31. Shaw, were appointed a Committee on Correspond ence to co-operate with the last named com mittee. ' Adjourned. CF"Beauty, devoid of grace, is a mere hook without the bait. A crusty old Bach, says it is an 'artificial fly' by which many a speckled fellow is caught. T7Good Idea. A bill is before the Louisi ana Legislature allowing the head of each fam ily to- take a three dollar newspaper at the ex pense of tho State. - " ' E7"It is conceded on all hands that ladies are fair, and that chickens are fowl that the money market is tight, that the morals are loose, and morning gowns too. CC7"There is to be a fashion convention in New York in May next, to get up an American Costume. Foreign dictation in the cut of our coats and trowsers is no lonser to be borno ! C3"The best way to humble a proud man is to nominate him for some important office in a doubtful district. It takes the starch and po matum out of him in a short time. The ballot box is a great institution. ' C7Cash helps along courting amazingly. Jt is astonishing what oyster suppers, bracelets, bonnets, suburban rides and balls will do to wards expanding the feminine heart, and get ting into tbe parson's house. CJ"On the 3d March, tho U. S. Senate a greed to the Houso amendment to the Minne sota land bill, giving 200,000 acres to Alabama for railroad purposes. Tho bill avoids nearly altogether tho range of lands proposed in the bill heretofore repealed by Congress. Minne sota is to havo tho entire control of them. This is the Minnesota land bill perfected by tho House Committee on Public Lands, and in connection with which subject corruption was alleged. Mr. Sumner appeared in the Sen ate on last Friday. E7The Pittsburg Commercial of the 2d inst. gives an account of tho arrest of nineteen per sons employes of the company, lawyers, doc tors, constables and merchants some of them residents of Pittsburgh and Allegheny who were engaged in stealing goods on the Pitts burgh, Fort Wayne and Chicago Railroad. A lot of goods were purchased, a private mark put on them, packed in Pittsburgh and direct ed to various firms in the West. .This decoy took admirably. At a given place in Ohio, a portion of the goods were taken by some of the gang. The police were on the alert, and followed tho robbers to BuiTalo, N. Y., where the goods had been given to an auctioneer, al so one of the gang. Tbe police now made a descent upon the gangl and captured 19, onb a woman. Within a year, the railroad compa ny named had to pay between $40,000 and $50,000 lor good9 shipped which never reached their destination, having disappeared no one knew how until this discovery was made. 1 ' SLIGHTLY EMBARRASSING : OR TUX WAT MR. JiEWtfWlIf GOT IWTO TROIBLK : ; VJIY TKTINO TO GET INTO BREECHES. ' . Lewistowil Falls, Maine, is a place, it is ! You can't exactly find it on the map, for it has been located and incorporated since Mitch ell's last t bnt it's there, a manufacturing city, with banks, barber shops, and all . tho fixtures and appurtenances of a locomotive, going a head, Yankee settlement, ' .' Just abont the newest thing in the new city is a new clothing store, that riz up,' 'rained down,' lately, on the Jonah's gourd or Alad din's palace principle, and which, by tho same mysterious dispensation, became endowed with tho cutest Yankee salesman that the Dirge State ever turned out. The other day, an up riveryoung 'un, who is about to forsake father and mother, and cleave unto Nancy Ann, came down to get his suit and was, of course, 'baound' to find his way into the new; clothing store. Not that he swaggered in with the easy swagger ot the town-bred searcher of cheap clothing, for tho verdant was tolerably fresh on him yet, and he stopped to give a knock at the door. ' He had effected an entrance at the grist mill at the Journal office, where he had been doing business in thesamo unobtrusive manner, and the boys agreed that Mr. Nehemiah Ncwbcgin was from the 'Gulley,' and was paying his vir gin visit to Pekin. Nehemiah was let in 'itn mejitly,' and was delighted with the cordial reception he met with. '. ' , -' The proprietors were ready to forward his suit at once, if they saw 'fit' or they would take measure and furnish him to order. Nehemiah drew a handbill from the top of his bat, and spread it on his knees for easy reference. It was headed in Gothic letters, 'Winter Cloth ing at Cost,' and stated that, in consequence of the mildness of the season, over five thousand dollars worth of ready made clothing was to be closed up and sold at sin 'Enormous Sacrifice !' A list of prices followed, and Nehemiah run ning his short stumpy finger down tho column, lit on a particular item. , . : . 'Say ye got enney of these blew cotes left, at five dollars?' ; 'Smith, are there any of those cheap coats left V inquired the polite Mark of his partner. 'We sold the last one this morning, did we not?' Smith understood the cheap clothing bus iness, and answered promptly : 'All gone, sir.' 'Jest's as I expected, murmured the disap pointed candidate ; darnation seize't all 1 1 told dad they'd all be gone I' 'We have a very superior article for ten dol lars.' 'Ten dollars 7 that's an all fired price for a cote !' We can make you one to order.' Y-c-s! but I want it now want it right straight off the fact is, Squire, I must have it." 'You'd find these very cheap at ten dollars.' Dunno 'baut it 1 say v'ye got enny of those dcwrable doeskin trowsers left at tew dollars sold 'em all tew, I expect, hain't ye 7' Fortunately there were a few left, and Ne hemiah was open for a trade, but acting on the instinct of the New begins, it must be a dicker. Dew you ever take projuce for your cloth ing ? Take what?' 'Projuce garden sass and side, don't do it, dew you?' - Well, occasionally we do, what havo you to sell V . Oh, almost anything; little of everything, from marrowfat peas to rye straw ; got the all killincst dried pumpkins you ever sot your eyes on, 'xpect neow, you'd like some of that dded punkin, squire ?' Mark declined negotiating for the dried pun kin ; but inquired if he had any good butter. G-o-o-d butter ! now squire, I expect, I've got some of the nicest and yallerest you ever sot your eyes on ; got some eout here now got some in a shooger box, eout in dad's wa gon ; brought it down for Kernel Waldron, but yeou can have it; I'll bring it rite strate in here, darned ef I don't !' On the strength of the butter, a dicker was speedily contracted, for which Nehemiah was put in immediate and absolute possession of a coat, vest and pants, of a good material and fit. 'Now, then,' said Mark, 'what kicd of a coat will you have ?' I reckon I'll have a blue 'un. Yes, but what kind a dress coat ?' - 'Certainly, squire, certainly jest what I want a coat for to dress in.' Ah, exactly, just look at those plates,' point ing to the fashion plates in the window, and see what style you fancy.' 'O darn your plates don't want any crock cry ; 'spect Nancy has got the allkillencst lot of arthenware you ever sot eyes on.' , 'Yes, I see ; just step this way, then, and I think 1 can accomodate yon. Nehemiah soon selected a nice bluejcoat, and vest of green, but was more fastidious in his choice of the pants, those crowning glories of his new suit. He appeared to indulge a weakness for long pantaloons, and complained that his last pair had troubled him exceeding ly, or, as he expressed it, 'blamedly,' by bitch iug up over bis boots, and wrinkling about the knees. . r - -' . .' : - Nehemiah delved away impetuously amid a stock of two or three hundred pair ol lengthy ones, real blazers, with wide yellow stripes running each way. Nehemiah snaked tbcni out in a twinkling. He liked them they were long and yellow, just the thing, and he proceeded at once to put them on. The new clothing store had a corner curtained ofT for the purpose, and Nehemiah was speedily clo sed therein. The pants had straps, and the straps were buttoned. Now Nehemiah had seen straps be fore, but the art of managing them was a mys tery., Ou consideration, he decided that the boots must go on first. He then mounted a chair, elevated his pants at a propsf angle, and endeavored to coax bis legs iuto them. He had a time of it. . His bocts were none of the smallest, and the pants were none of tho widest; the chair, .too, was rickety, and bothered hinr; but bending his energy to tho task, he succeeded in inducing one leg into the 'pesky things.' He was straddled like the Colossus of Rhodes ; and just in tbe act of rai sing the other foot, when whispering and gig gling in bis immediate vicinity, made bim a livc to the appalling fact, that nothing but a chintz curtain separated him from twenty or thirty of tho prettiest and wickedest girls that were ever caged in one shop. Nehemiah was a bashful youth, and would have made a circumbendibus of a mile any day, rather than meet those girls, even if he had been in full dress ; as it was his mouth was much ajar at the bare possibility of making his appearance among them in his present dis liabille." What if theie was a hole in the cur tain ? What if he should fall? It wouldn't bear thinking of, and plunging the foot into tbe vacant leg with a sort of fran tic looseness, he brought on the very catastro phe be was ao anxious to avoid. The chair collapsed with a sudden scrouch, pitching Nehemiah heels over head through the curtain, and he made a grand entrance among the stitch ing divinities, on all fours like a fattened rhi Perhaps Collier himself never exhibited a more striking tableau viranl than was now dis played. Nehemiah was a "model," every inch ot him, and though not exactly revolving on a pedestal, he was going through that movement quite as Well on his back kicRing and piling ing, in short personifying in thirty seconds all the attitudes ever chiseled ! As for the gals, they screamed of course, jumping up on chairs and cutting boards, threw their hands over their faces, peeped through their fingers per fectly natural ! screamed again, and declar ed they should die they knew they should ! "O, Lord ! blubbered the distressed young man; don't, gals don't I I' didn't go tew, I swan to man I didn' it's all owing to these cussed trowsers ev'ry . mite on't, ask your boss; he'll tell you how it was. . O, Lord ! w on't nebody kivcr me up with old clothes, or torn the wood box over me ? O, Moses in the bulrushes, w hat will Nancy say ?" He managed to raise himself on his fect, and made a bold plunge towards the door; but the entangling alliances tripped him up again, and he fell kerslap upon the goose of the press man. This was tho unkindest cut of all. The goose had been heated expressly for thick cloth scams, and tho way it sizzed in the scat of the new pants was afflicting to (he wearer. Nehemiah riz in an instant, and seizing tbe source of all his trouble by the slack, he tore himself from all save the straps and some frag ments that hung about his ancles, as he dash ed through tho "Emporium" at a 2,49 rate, and "made tracks" for hum. MAKING KANSAS A SLAVE STATE. The work being done by the pro-slavery men to carry their favorite and peculiar institution into Kansas, is silently progressing, but is vig orous and adroit. The Legislature, instead of repealing the worst features of the "bloody code," have made It more barbarous, intoler ant and diabolical than ever. Tho measures taken by the Rnflians are almost certain to bring Kansas before the next Congress for ad mission as a State with a Slave Constitution. The following from the Lecompton correspon dence of tho Missonri Democrat will show the drift cf tho pro-slavery policy : "The bill for the census and providing for the election of delegates for a Constitutional Convention, has passed both Houses without amendment, just as it came from the joint committee. It has been sent to the Governor for his signature, so that it can be passed over his veto, in case he should veto it. The par ticulars of this bill I gave you before. It leaves the entire management of the census taking and the election in the hands of the county officers appointed by this body. It al so provides that the census shall be taken be fore the first of April ; none arriving after that time can bo listed as voters. Those listed are merely required to be "inhabitants" up to or on tho first of April. . All cases of election fraud are to bo determined by the Convention itself, when it assembles, and not by the Gov ernor, who has no power in the matter, by this bill. The whole thing is regarded as a part of a plan contempleting fraud, and giving no chance for justice. The Free State settlers declare that it would bo lolly to go into such an election, and that they will not. It is not intended to submit the constitution so framed, to the people." C7"The man who ia without an idea, gener ally has the greatest idea of himself From the Frankfort (Ky.) Yecman. MASBYING IS NOT WHAT IT CBACXKI UP TO BE. We received the following communication by mail from a neighboring village.witli a request to publish it. Wo know nothing about tho parties or tho facts, but as the names are giv en, prcscnMt in the shape we received itw- l alim ei liUratim, and have preserved tbe man uscript for tho benefit of any one concerned. From the intensity of woo manifested by tho fair author, we could almost wish it to prove hoax. Tho.e seriously meditating to commit matrimony, will take warning from the sad experience communicated below, and remem ber the doleful strain of unfortunate. Jane Wedlock lias been a woeful thing to me, . For marrying U not what it's cracked up to be. We don't understand the 5ubjcct,but presume it is nil right. Here is tbe communication ir full.aud we would not appear heartless by trea ting it in a light vein. We assure our readers of its genuineness, so far as wo are posted, and call down the thunders of female ven geance on the reprobate Bill. , . "This is designed to let all the world and the rest of mankind know that William Parker, my husband, has left my bed and board with out cause or provocation. Scarcely had the honeymoon passed before he sold my house and lot in Scott, near Stamping Ground, and took me into a wretched hut in a desolate place in the Franklin nills, where he com menced collecting all that was dne roe, and sell off all that I possessed; after selling my nigger w oman and child he left me, and loca ted in Lexington, where he is now ranting with the gals, rigged off from top to tM in broadcloth, bought with my nigge. money, and left me destitutuc, forlorn and wretched. "Said Old Bill Parker is about sixty-five years of age, low in stature, heavy built, round shouldered bald-headed, makes a wretched attempt to be polite and agreeable, and a coun tenance sufficiently base to convict him to the penitentiary or gallows. "Dear sir, you Will do justice to right by publishing the above, and requesting the edi tors throughout the Union to give it a place in their columns. "O that his bed bo made of briers And his path beset with thorns Ami tho balance of hiadays 15c haunted by the Beast with 7 hen J and 10 horns Wedlock has been a woful thing to me For marrjiDg is cot what ila cracked up to h I thought my pathway would be strewed with flowers and r.o ; Cut the way old Jiill has made me wretched Is a fin to mosc. I feel like a forert tree hy the north winds shaken Wretched forlorn, sad and forsaken. 'January, 12, 13i7. . JANE TARKER." TnE Enslavement of Kansas The Blce Lodge at Work. Delaware Ratios, K. T.,. Feb. 5, 1837. Messrs. Editors: I learn by a Trc-Slavery man just from Lecompton, that the last final effort to make Kansas a slave State will soon be made. The triggers are all set, and they are confident of success. The plan is, to be all law and order men have this Legislature allow none to vote who have not been in the Territory ninety-days, and fix the election ninety days from tho 15th or 20th of February, so as to prevent the Free State em igration next spring from voting. In the mean time every member of the Blue Lodge in Mis souri is to send over one citizen and to get his neighbor to send one, who are to go over before navigation epens, get claims, bold pre emptions away from the Free Slate settlers and have them erected by Southern compa nies, and then elect a Pro-Slavery convention and return. They threaten especially to keep the Yankees out of the Shawnee Reserve. They are building towns there, and numbers are daily coming over. Govern, r Geary tells them, if they trample ou justice, it must be over his dead body. They are devising some scheme to get him out. of tho way. Whether they will urge Buchanan to remove him, or get some worthless scamp to massacre him is not yet determined. Pistols are carried for him. The Ruffians threaten to open the ball again in the Spring. If they do, they will find, it an up-hill business. Correspondent of Dtm.Prtss. Tale Be.irino. Never repeat a story un less you are certain it is correct, and even not then unless somethiag is to be gained, ckLe-r of interest to yourself, or for the good of tho person concerned. Tattling is a meaz an.1 wicked practice, and be who indulges- in it grows more fond of it in proportion as be is successful. If you have no good to say of your neighbor, never reproach his character by tell ing that which is false. He who tells you the faults of others, intends to tell others of your faults, and so the dish of news is handed from one to another until the tale becomes enor. mous. "A story never loses anything," is wisely remarked ; but on the contrary gains in proportion as it Is repeated by those who have not a very rtrict regard for trutU. Truly, "the tongue is an unruly evil,. full of deadly poison." rTT-The 100th Psalm. The Iobc disputed question, whether Purcell or JIandell was tbo author of the grand music of the Old Hun dredth, has been set at rest by a discovery made a few days since in Lincoln C?tdral li brary. Purcell died in 1695, and Handel in, 1759. But in the Cathedral librarv. a Fronrh psalter, printed in 1526, contains the music of uie uui iiunureacn, exactly as it ts now sung,: so that it could cot be the production of either of tbe great musicUns to whom it had been attribute4. -