Catholicism ta Bnref-eKBglenel. Ve 53 The following If an extract of letter from President Dcraiv, of Dickenson College, to Dr. ?f wtn, of Washington, published in the Nations! Intelligencer. President Ddrbin i now travelling in Europe. Ite bii written to hi friands t num ber of interesting letters upon various topics, full of ileep research. end philosophic observation. His lri of the Catholic religion, at an institution conformable to monarchical governments, are fully illustrated by the facts staled in thi teller r "I have carefully rtudied the Catholic religion, both as system of faith considered in iuelf, and as an external institution acting upon society as such, snJ forming an integral and necessary purl of the Government in Catholic countries. I have no doubt no intelligent Protestant in Europe can Jitubt but that Catholicism is gradually regaining its ground in Europe, under the direct or indirect patronage of most of the monarchies, because they fin J it s very convenient and powerful means of c int'ol ing the mass of the people through the priesthood. In Italy and Austria the elegy are in correspondence with the Bishops, and the Bishops with the Minster of Police. Louis Philippe and the Church had no friendship for each other seven yesrs since; now they are in cto e alliance, ami, w ith a reluming sense of religion among the pro. pie of France, there is a corresponding return of the Church to power. The ceremonies snd decora- lions of the churches are arranged to suit the statu of society, so as lo strike snd captivate the mass of the people. Thence she is acquiring her influence egain over two divisions of the community ; over kings und rulers, because they neej her as a means df government ; and over the m iss of the lower orders, because she is so arranged in her external ceremonies as to strike and gratify the senses, and so adapted by her sacraments, particularly of penance, and her doctiine of purg.iiory, as to as sure to the ear, after auricular confession, the pai dou of i n, and the hope of escape h the next world, if nut quite successful in this. While in England she is acquiring great influence, by great ly mult plying and expanding her external machin ery, ftich ai fine churches and cathedrals, school and colleges, and tho residence of in my mi sen ary priests ; secondly, by the strange approxima tion of many of the clergy of the establishments to which is essential to Catholicism ; but, most of all, by the too equ jI divisions of Whigs and Tories, so as to give the balance of power, during the last Administration, very much to the Catholic puity re presented by Mr. O'Connel ; and when we remem ler that the religious fsith of a Catholic is superior to his political opinions, while, on the contrary, the liberal faith of a Protestant is subordina'e to his political opinions, we shall fee the true power and position of the Catholic Church in affairs of govern ment where there are popular elections. I must in justice add another element of power ir. which, ss a Christian, I rejoice. I refer to the increased morali'y and respectability of the clergy. While the Church is srquiring power and influ ence with sovereigns and kings, and with the ma s. es of people, the educated and intelligent portion of the community are much better affected towards her than they were lifty or hundred years ag , considering her purely as a religions institution involviig f . i i h and morals simply ; but they have an invincible aversion towards ber as an external institution acting on society as such, because she effectually destroys the hope of liberty, or the apretd of liberal principles, which this middle intelligent class in Europe cherish almost exclusively. 'I he result is, this class is neutralized in decidedly Calb otic countries, and the nobility are declining in in fluence snd also in numbers, because the aover. eign fears them and approximates the people by the intervention of the Church, which sympatiz'-s with the highest and the lowest portions of the community on the continent, but not with the middle intelligent class. This is the true position of the Catholic Church at this lime in decidedly Catholic countries, as iu Italy and Austria; and imperceptibly increasing in semi-Cathulic countries, even where the Governments are Protestant. My remarks do not apply to Russia, Norway, or Swe- den, as I have not visited them, and scarcely to fp.iin, in ber present agitated condition. With respect to England, I have aatisfied my. self that she is the richest, wisest, snd greatest na. tion in the woilJ ; but that she exhibits the extremes of poverty and wealth, destitution and comfort, de pravity and virtue, more strikingly than any other people on earth. She has acquired hei maximum of dominion and power, but, having a strong and well-ekldblUned Government, she will I ng main tain her ascendancy. Much of ber success is tu be ascribed to the character of her peoplci ; the Anglo Saxons have always I wen eminent for enterprise and utility : hence, while Fiance is speculative, and discovers great principles, snd is content sim ply with their discovery, England spplies them in practice, which renders them productive ; and while Germaiy is metaphysical, and suggests splendid thoughts and theories, England bol ls fast what ages if good sense have seitltd in morals and the ology. But I have said England, bas attained her max imum of wtalin and power, l bis will app a', when we conaider her external and internal history einco the commencement of this country. Fifiy yeara ago machinery was scarcely used at all to produce manufactures, and England was the only nation that poseeeJ It and the skill to u-e it. Upon the pacification of Europe in ISIS, the eon tlnental nations were exhausted by the long snd dent uctod wars of Napoleon, while EngUnd'e toil had nut lasted one drop of blood. The consequence was, she immediately htcame the manufacturer for the world; and the distribution of her goods, easily augmeutsd her meresoiile marine and ex tendtd her commerce. Of course, all nations sent their coin to ber to buy her manufactures, which they could not produce for want of machinery, skill, and hands ; the first two of which England prohibited from leaving her soil, and the latter re mained with ber because it was for thi ir interest When the continental nations arid the Uni ed States alto were nearly ejhausted of their coiu sud bullion, and sought te pay England in grain and raw mate r at, she instituted ihe eor moa.and oher cuatoms to prelect her own agricultural Interests, and compel money still to flow to hor in return for manufactures. This policy continued, compelled other nations to inatiiure manufactories also, anil, In order to su-tain them, to ensct tariff I iws after the example ol'England, and the free communica tion with different nations diffused machinery and mechanical skill, until nther nation now have in th Fe resp eta sn eqou'ity with England, and in point of cheapness of living and of customs teversl have ihe advantage of her. These causes operating hi Erglahd and abroad hae produced the two following results, which now agitate England and the Continent. In Eng land the manufacturing interest created anew and 'arge population peculiar to itself, to suddenly col lected, and so densely and promiscuously crowded and lodged, at to be destructive of health, but more particularly of morals decency, snd frugality. This population required to be fed ; and hence ihe In creased consumption of food augmented the de mand and raised the rents of land from 25 to 500 per cei t. The result is, when trade has failed th m, snd they are lid rally starving, they cannot melt sway into the egriculurul and Irading masses, and thus be absorbed and restored, but they must g'a lua'ly perish until their number shall be redu ced lo ihe present demand uf trade, and then they m .y bar ly live again. But while trade was active the manufrfCtU'ing population prospered again ; but as tbe nations around improved in their productions, less vaa wanted from England ; and their success, exceeded their own expectations, they very natu rally conceived tbe idea of reducing her wealth, dis tressing her pei'ple, sud humbling her power, by excluding her manuf ictures. The consequence is, France is increasing her laiiff, Germany has entered ix'ensively into a national ru-loms union with Prus-ia al its head ; snd the United Stiles, by ne cessity, hss been obliged to increise the tariff, and mukt continue it, even if agsin-t her will ; and the consequence is an unprecedented falling off in Engli-h exportation f manufactured good, and a distress among her laboring population that has no parallel on earth. All and more than I have aaid may he fully proved by the "Report on the Condi linn of the Laboring Poor,' published by authority of the House of Commons, July, 1842," The Comet. We find the following communication, pre sumed to bo Irom ihe pen of the venerable No ah Webster, in the columns of tho New Haven Herald: Messrs. Editors The present comet is Con sidered as a very brilliant phenomenon, but it is far inferior to that which I saw when young, oitlmr in 176 ) or 1770. That rose in the morn ing before the sun, and its stream of light ex tended nearly from the horizon to the meridian, !?0 or 90 degrees. It proceeded from a point and became wider at the extremity, like a dove's tail. It covered five times the space in the heavens which the stream of light from the present comet covers This licht always ap pears opposite to the sun, and is probably the light of the pun modified by the nucleus or at mosphere of the comet, in some measure like the t-treaknof liolit w hich we often see in rum mer occasioned by the rays of the sun pstwinp through vapor in different degrees of density. The vulgar notion is that when these streaks appear, the sun draws water, when the appear ance is made solely by the light passing through vapor, or between portions of it. The tail of the comet is not fire, and it might sweep over its without our perceiving it. Indeed thi.' is probably Ihe case sometimes, when a comet comes directly between the sun and the earth. W. The following note, published in the George town Advocate, testifies directly to the point that the peculiar luminous appearance in the western section of the heavens is a comet; Gkoroetows Coi.lfge, 1). C. I March i:hh, ltH. Dear Sih : Be to kind as to announce in your paper that the luminous phenomenon seen in the west after sunset duriug latt week, proves to be the tail of a cointt, as a. 7 o'clock on Saturday last, wo paw the nucleus or body. It was to bo seen from 7 lo three quarters pai-t 7, and requires a tcletcope if low degree ; a com mon spy glass is siillicicnt. The eaaiest way to fix the ghis on the object, is to run thegluss down along the tail, till il comes on the nucle us, which will he easily distinguished. Very respectfully, yours, J . Slavs Thahk. The first attempt, from Lngluiid, to eateblibh the wicked traffic in Ne groes was in the reign of Queen Elizabeth, in the year lO-'j-i, when John Hawkins, an adven turer, atterwarefs Sir John Hawkins, fitted out three ships, and made a voyage to the coast of Uuinea tor slaves. Aoout the year 1701), a meeting of merchants waa held in Belfast in Ireland, to form a Company for this traffic, and some progress was made in preliminaries, and certain documents in the case prepared for signature ; when one of the number, who had hitherto been silent spectator of the proceed ings, stood up, and in a tone ofsolernti decision, and with the strongeat emphasis, said "May the hand that first signs pa dims for this infernal traffic be blasted by the God of Justice the God of the black as well as of the white man !" The meeting dispersed without a signature, and never asstxubled aain. The Law nf Evidence. Lord Denman Chief Jus ice of the Couri of Queen's Bench, lately in Iroduca-d inlo Ike House of Lords, a bill for impr.w ving the Law of evidence. One clause of it provide that witnesses are out to be excluded from giving evidence by Incapacity from crime and interest. K I THE AMERICAN. Saturday t March 18, 1843. REHIO TAL. HjF The Office of the "SUNBURY AMERICAN" has heen removed to the white frame building, in Centre Al I... -J- .t. c- r tr n Bujumins me uuw oturcui u. I), II asset". Uusiness or orders lett at the Store, will be promptly attended to. (TJj We have just received sixty teams nf print ing paper, eimilar in sire and qualitv to Ihe aheel upon which this is printed. Also 36 reams nf su per Royal 21 by 23 inches, which will be sold si cost and carriage, for cash. fXj" We are Indebted to Jesse C. Iforton, H. C. Ever and C. W. Hcgin', Esq., of the Senate, for legislative documents. (Q" The continued cold weather at this season is remarkable. Sleighing is excellent, and many per sons are taking advanlnge of it in "moving," ere it is loo late. 1'he snow, we stated in our lat, mea sured 18 or 20 inches. In many places, we under stand, the average depth is shout 30 inches. There is. however, less of it further north. Al William port the papera say it waa but 12 or 14 inches in depth, When spring once fairly bleaks in, we have reason to hope for continued pleasant weather, and consequently a fruitful season. ir Our comoositor last week, was the eaue nf an amusing blunder, in an article in which he makes us say thai a poor deluded Millerite m ide a 'grab for the second advent," instead of a garb. We can't say, however, that it much impaired Ihe sense of the article, as the propriety of Ihe oue is about equal to the oth' r. (Xj- The Philad. Iphia Evening J. urnal has 1 een united with the Evening Mercuty, which paper w.ll be hereafter published under, the title of Even ing Mercury and Journal. E. W. Morgan, Esq., ihe talented editor of the Journal, has retired from the chair editorial, in confequrnce of other engage. ments. ( The last Miners' Journal contains an able article, showing ihe propriely of sub-tituting cast iron rails, in plneeof the impnrtfd rolled rails now used on our rail roads. The writer contends tt'at resi iron rails can and will be made for from J:t0 f3S per ton. while the imported rails cost $00, and cannot be imported for lee than $50. This is a question of the deepest imorl ince to the U. n'nedSMes, and esp-ci ill V to Pennsy lvania, with her vsl leda of coal ami iron ls may be brought into requisition, if the plan should succeed, and m.my of our most scientific men are sanguine of 1 siicc ss, and the u'liina e triumph of the cat iron rail. A great improvement in the "team Engine haa heen recentlv discovered in Philadelphia, by an ingenioua mechanic. The improvement eonaisls n tbe direct application of the steam, lo the periphery of the power wheel, without waale. Two third of the machinery, and eonaequently, two- thirds of ihe expense of construction, is done away with by ibis improvement. Qy The Mormons do not seem lo stand very fmrlv with the government cf Illinois. A bill to re peal ihe charier of Nauvoo and dish .ml the Legion, has parsed the Senate of lhat Slate, by a vote of two lo one. (7 Ths Soviraa Cia. The Circuit Court at New York decided thai a civil liil unal in the cms uf Mackenzie, either for murder or man-laughter. has no juiiadiclion. The charge to the grand jury waa full and explicit, on this (mint. Qy" The Congressional Apportionment Bill baa pai.-ej both Houses, s- h s also Mr. Lowiy's re funn bill, which reduce nil salaries one third. Mr, Horton, f om the cnniiitiee to which was reVrr d ihe 4tilions of citizens of Deiks county, pnying for the abolition of iho office of B igade Inxeclir, reported adverae to Ihe prayers of the petitioners. In the Represtnt alive Apportionment Hill, the counties of Noilhunilreiland, Union and Juui it i are linked together, to elect 3 representatives. Ws think Northumberland snd Oolurnhis should be joined lo elect 3 members. Mr. Trego presented a petition for a law to autluH ize the tails on the Slate rail roads, when they need rem wal lo l replaced with Pennsylvania Csal Iron. Tbe bill erecting the new county of Madison, out of parts ol l.nxerne snd Columbia, passed third reading, in the Senate, (yj" A poel, who had been disturbed in h'S slum bers by frightful dresms, thus soliloquizes upon the imaginary effects of the present comet, which is now proved lo te genuine: I saw nine geese upon the wing Toward the frozen pole. And every mother's cnhng fell Cri ed lo a crackling coal. I raw an ox thai cropped thegrasa Writhe in the blistering ravs ; 1'he herbage in his shrinking jaws Waa all a fir ry blaze. I saw huge firdies, boil d In rags Bob llrnugh the bubbling waves ; I listened, snd I hesrj ihe dead All simmering in their gravea ! Strange sights ! strange sounds ! () ghastly dream ! Its memory haunts me still. The streaming sea the crimson glare, That wrra h d each wwded hill ; Stranger ! if ..'er tl . y slumbering couch ftuch fearful visions seep, .(Spare, ap.ire, O spare thine evening meal, A lid swart shall be thy sleep." f t1-it- r iirgmauvc opinTing. The reports of the proceeding of the legislature, by the Keystone , which, by the way, era more fully and ably reported than eny that we recollect of at Harrlsburg, gives Ihe following sharp shooting between Messrs. I.owry and Di ford, on the Reform Bill. Mr. Lowry proceeded by saying t fcWe had become weary of the bill, which the gentleman clung lo his bosom, with all the tenacity of a mo. ther to her first horn. His child was sent an the Penate ; a piece which better filled the infant, than would its fsiher t for after calling it all manner nf hard names, they referred it to a committee. Had the father went, he would, s my friend from ihe county remarked, have been referred as an item of nn fin shed business. I can show by figures thai iK;. Kill Um . .nn.l .1.. a,.,. r - ...,8 ... . . three hundred thmtinnd dollars. And vet tlrs bill. that man " Mr. HECKMAN interrupted. He said the gentleman from Crawford was out of order. The SPEAKER said i was unparliamentary, snd out of order, lo allude lo a gentleman by term ing him "that man." Mr. LOWRV. F ask pardon, not only of this House, but of mankind for the disrespect. The SPE AKER said the gentleman from Craw ford was exeeedine'v personal and severe. Mr. T.OWRY. I admit, sir, I am. I intend so lobe. When he was addressing this House, he said thai I had not only said, hut written language which wnnl.1 "diitgraee a scavenger." Mr. DEFORD aaid he bad uaed no such Isn oae. The SPEAKER said he was not in the cha'r a the time, or he would nt have permitted tbe gen tteman from Fayelte to have used such language If be did not nse thai languag, however, he cer tainty used something; very milch like il. Mr. I.OWRY Mr. Speaker, the gentleman, from Favette says he did not use th languge have attributed In him. He did aay so ; a hundr men in this House, and as many in the gat'ery heard him make use of ihe laneuae. Ant yet, in the face of the same House, and of ihe eme spec t ..r, within one hour, he eats words st which the stomach of the cannibal would loathe. fXj Lieut. Maury, of the I?. P. Navy, has heen making some observations on the f 'ome, st Wssh- inglon. The following is sn extract of his report : Comparing my own observations with the. sc. counts which have already reached ua from differ ent parts of the country, there appeara now to be but little doubt but that this is the tail of a Cornel, and that ihe head itself has been seen al mid-day in the East with the nuked eye. If so, for length of tail and magnitude of nebula, it may be classed among the most remarkable lhat have ever appear ed. In the year 41, B. C, liir.loii.ms tell us of a hairy star that was seen by day-light. In the year A. D. 1402, two Comets were seen in broad day, and the tail of one of them at noon. Ttcuo Bbamc discovered a Comet by daylight in 1577. The Comet of 171 1 could be seen in the day time with- I out ihe aid of glasses. Its tail though not so long a this, w is curved, and formed an arc of 90 deg.; though for a p rt of ihe lime, it had several tails, tbe length nf which varied from 30 deg. to 40 deg. The Comet of 1680 the most celebrated of nnde n times hsil a tail computed at from 70 to 90 deg. Thsl of 161 R had the larked tail on record 101 d g ; and ibis vies with lhat in length. The lail, says Vises, in his Astronomy, 'in creases ss ihe Comet spproachea its erihelion ; immediately after which, il is longest and most lu minous, snd then it is a little bent and convex to wards those parts to which Ihe Comet is moving ; (he tail then decreases." If this Cotnet bat obryed this rute, it has alrea dy doubled ihe sun, anl ia now on its wsy back, lo be sgain lat in the eginna of space. M. F. MAURY, Lieu-. U.S. Navy." A correspondent of ihe New Bedford Mercury, says thsl the comet now visible, cannot be nearer to Ihe earth than 90,000,000 of miles. He also st jlea that the comet of 1770, passed within 2,000,. 000 indes of the earth; and yet product d no ef fect ven on (he tides. APPOINTMENT BY THE GOVERNOR Naruiaiti B. ELnaro, Eo. , to le President Judeof the ISlh judicial dirtrict of I'enii-yUan a, continued nfihe counties uf L)au hm, l.elinioii. S, buylkill and Carbon, in the room of the Hon Calvin lily i he, resigned. FOR THE aVlKSIClS, Friendship. How sweet to the stranger, in a strange land, are ihe smiles of Friendship ! They sre as balm lo bis lonely spirit. They sre as checking as the refie-hing bowers ol spring, which csuse tbe plants to put lorth their beautiful blossoms. They prove to him, that, however e 'I I and frowning muikind may, in general. epir, there ate benevo lent individuals who iske delight in alleviating the earee and sot rows of those around them ; who live, not for themselves alone, but are pleased lo shsre, wih others, some of ihe blessings the Gal ol Nslure has bestowed upon them. Though such di-iuteiealed friends ss these may seem "to csst their bread upon the waters," without Ihe prospect of a return, yet ihey rosy hsve their rewards in the humane reflection, lhat Ihey are smoothing for others the tuirged path of life, and implanting, in their hearts, feelings of laating gratitude and esteem Sunbury, March 21. IMS. A. C Aa Exrmsivs Won. There is now due for engraving, printing and binding the six vnlurnes of ihe (iiolog ral Survey of the Slate uf New York, already published, including the two volumes in press, about 1 70,000. The engraving alone for ihe rhole work, has coal f 50 000. To complete th pub'ication on the moat economical plan, it ia est mtted will cost 121.000. The total expense of th soivev snd nuhlicstion is (321.500. The finance Committee do not anticipate lhat any very const derable amount can be realized from ihe sale of the work, and recommend lhat the copies be liberally disiributed among literary institutions. MISCELUST. Editorial, Cendcnsed and llelected. Msdder i now cultivated in Obio, and ia said lo be a profitable crop. Coffee has been cultivated with great success in Florida. Messrs. Cushing and Wise are both out as candidates for re-election, since their rejection by the United 8tatee Senate. Johnson wss executed at St. I.ouia on Friday for Ihe murder of Major Floyd. He wept at the gallows, and in a speech of fifteen minutes, proles ted his innocence. Tbete will be an immense emigration from Eng land and Scotland to the Untied Slates this year, Tha late gates produced a loss of property, in shi ps snd esrgies, belonging lo England, of about $1,000,000, and about 500 human lives. In an attie'e in a late London Timet, the United Stales are callid a "known swindler." Chancellor Kent'i Opionion The Boston Dai ly Advertiser, in copying this opinion, denying the juri-diction of the Civil Courts In the esse ol Somrrs rays : Il eiprea e, we doubt not, the u nivcrsd opinion cf the well-infoimid portion of ihe American Bar." 'The "Great Western" il is aaid, brought over $2,500,000 in specie. The New York American says thai the amount of specie brought over by her is $70,000. Mr. Tho. as R a a, of Bedford, Pa, wis killed on Wetlne-day Isat. by falling from a wagon loaded with hay. Tbe fall broke bis neck, and he eipi red immediately. The Great Western The Western has now been running five seasons crossed the Atlantic fifty-four timee, (ami as per log.) made one hun dred sixty. six thousand six hundred and eighty seven mites, without requiring any material repair. Sarcophagus. The ancient Sircnphagua, said lo he over eighteen hundred yeara old. brought I some t;me ago by Com more Elliot from the Medi termncan, arrived at 8pruce street wharf. Philadel phia, in a schooner from Norfolk, and haa since at traded the attention of our cit'zens. "The Dismal Howl." is Ihe very appropriate title of a new paper which sdvocatea the Miller hum- liug. 1'he Senate of Ohio, have passed a bill, fixing he legal rate of interest at 7 per cent. The Engliah papers mike mention of the death f Richard Carlisle, the infidel publisher; and they d.l lhat he, some time since, made an open profes sion of Christianity. The Iwo Flanigans who were to have !een exe cuted on Frday la"t, for the mnr.ler nf Mrs. Hol ler, have been respited until the 21st prog. 77ie Opal Dullon. A new button by thi name. for gentlemen's rn vt, hs been invented in Boston. Itiscostly and brilliant resembling in its hues, II the colors of the rainbow. Humility before llenren. Tbe new Tiinily Chu-ch, on Brosdway, New York, will e vat hulf a million. Nothing like lowliness, humility and simplicity in one's devotion ! They hsve one J.is ph King in pris-wt in Virgi nia. Jo-King is ssni to ne out oi place in prism. 8..m' holv the other dav ran off w'nh the wife of an editor al Lowi l, Mass. ' Poor fellow, wss Ihe cool reply of the editor when some one tuld bitn the news. rmjits m Crime. The State prison lalror of Il linois snd Missouri hss been sold out for ten years. In the latter Slate, Ihe contractor pays f 50,000 for the whole "lot. This u really speculating in hu man wickedness. It is said that two highly e-lecmcd physicians nrsr Boton, ba'O recently died from the poison nbihed duiing direction, and that Dr. liaywaid is now dangerously ill Irom me same cauae. Metmerism. The Boston Post says, Dr. Collyer will magnetise the zodiacal comet, this evening. Admittance to the common nine-pence. Il is estimated lhat more than three millions of people in England, Ireland and Scotland, are anx ious lo migrate lo Australia or America, during the approiching summer. The New York Express siys thai Ihe flee, of wool from about five thousmd sheep, raised by one man, in the Slate of Michigan, was sold in this city on Friday. Th" arrival of specie at New Orleana from Sep tember lat lo Febuary 25, amounts to f5.740.176. A Dr. Breevoort was recently srrested at Goshen, N Y., charged with having stolen a wsteh from a window. He pretended to be a lecturer on phre nology. A splendid edition of Ihe Waverly Novels hss just been published in Montreal. The engravings coal $150,000. A manufactory of gun barrels ia about to be es tablished al Cincinnsti. Dr. Alcott, the Grshsmite, ssys that be drank no thing, during ihe year 1842. During three months recently, the London Times paid the Government20,000 for advertising duties. Aulubon, the nsturulist, left Bsltimoreon Tues dsy week, for the Rocky Mounls ns. The Fnglii-h are reported lo be purchasing targe cargoes rf Swiaa clocks for Ihe China Market Some of our Yankee friends ahould compete in thia matter. A hunter in Canada, who aimed at a noble deer, accidentally shot a valuable horse, and was obliged lo piy f 200. According lo the Texas aceount nf the halite of Mier, the Mexicans hwl from 400 lo 700 men The Meiiesn account nn the other band, states the loss in killed st only 20 Somewhat of a difference. Lieut. Gansevoort, of the brig Somers, has ob tained leave of ah.ce.nea fur ibree months, on ac count of ill-healih. O. A. Brownson ia a self-made mm, and at th age nl 17, was scarcely able lo f aJ or write the English language. The firm of RoihschltJ had completed a eon- tract with the Belgian Government for the loan of fifty millions of florins. A gentleman at Point Petre, (Guadeloupe,) giv ing an account of the earthquake which recently destroyed that city, mentions that while he was at tempting to escape, his foot and leg were caught in one of the deep fissures of the earth, and he thought lhat ba was fst. But another shock came, and the crack opened again, and he escaped. Michakl Haas, a soldier of the Revolution, and the oldest man on the Pension Roll, died at Union township, Erie County, on the 4th ult. at the very advanced age of 118 years. He waa honest. Wave and patriotic. Good Fees. Tbe Ju tge Advocate's fees in ihe trial of Commander Mackenzie, are as follows : Ten dollars per diem, and ten dollar for every fif teen pges nf record, one hundred and fifty words making a page. Ao Hummi?. ft has recently been decided by one of ihe Courts in England that a house is not tenantaMe lhat is infested with bed bugs, snd that a lease upon the premises can be broken in conse quence. Great Revival. Upwarda of 9000 persous have become professors of religion within the laat few weeks in the city of Atb.iny. The churches are open every night, and are literally thronged. Compliment. Messrs. Brown, Brother &. Co., in beli rlf nf themsilves and others interested, hsve presented to the wife of Mr. Recorder Vsux, of Philadelphia, a massive silver pitcher, in acknowl edgement of the efficient curse pursued by the Reco-der, in securing $44,000 of their property from the possession of Monroe Edwards. rainter'i Cholie. It i a fact generally known, that lemon nyrup, made from sulphuric acid, ia an affective preventive uf tbe disease known as tha "paintera' cholic," Foreign Money The following Act waa p issed at the recent ses sion of Congress : AN ACT to fix the value of certain fore'gn mo neys of a count, in corupu a'.ion at t ie custom houses. Be it enacted Ay the Senate and Home of 77e preentativetof the Vuited States of America, in Cungress annulled. That in all computations of ihe v.due of foreign moneys of account st the cus tom l ouses of the Unit d Slates, the thuler of Pru sia shall be deermd on I taken to be ol" the value of one hundred and twelve cents ; the rix dollar of Bremen shall be deemed snd laken lo las of ths v.due of severity .iijhl snd three-quarter cents ; the thalei of Bremen, uf .cventy-two groats, shall be deemed and taken to be of the vtlue of seventy one cents-; that the mil-reia of Made ia ehall ba deemed and taken to be of the value of one hun dred cents ; the mil r is of the Azorea shall be dee med and taken lo be the value of eighty-three and one-third cents ; the marc banco of If umhurg ahall be deemed l.k-n to be the vslue of thirty five cent; ihe roub'e of Rossi i shall ta deemed and taken to le of iho v due of seventy-five cents ; the rupee of lir.lish India shall I deemed an.l taken to be of the value of f riy-four and one ha'f cents ; and all firmer laws inconisUnt herewith, are hereby re pealed. Approved March 3, 184:1. The Bunker II II Monument, although 220 feet high, is 320 feet below the level of the cross on St, Peter's at Rome ; 140 lower then the cross on St Paul's at Lond.m ; and 135 less thsn the P,rnihcon at lris. It is 18 feel higher than ihe Monument in Loudon ; SO feet higher ih in the Column of the Place Vendnme al Paris ; 55 feet higher than the Washington Monument at Balti more ; 100 feet highei iban Pompey's Pillar at A'exandria. In the Saturday Cuuriet of to-day, our brother Morris, of the Inquirer, apears with ihe following real epigiam. We are ao pleaaed with it, lhat al though not given to the m Iting mood, it haa thaw ed us out, and we have perpe rated a sort of reply, whiih, if it will serve no other urpose, will per form tie sup rogatory work of a foil to set off our m ight m's pl asanl piece ; U. S. Gaztttn. Nature and Art. AS triUBiO. When Eve, the first of woman kind, As (jueen of bden roved, Her thoughts weie free as mountain wind, And all who ssw her loved, 1'he Eagle screamed a lofty note, The Lion loaned hia mane. And e'en the Linnett's little throat Eaaay'd a Aali'ring strain. The eye the lip the soul fraught face, 'these won the first of men. Each movement gave to life a grace. To deck the mother of our race,- Tbeie were no bullee iben, oca Aiswza. Civilisation sad Art. When Eve through early Eden movsd. Ami turned her maiden voice, It ws n.4 xirange lhat Adam loved. He'd only HolM.-n's choice. Bui -then ten girls are found al home, With chance for scarce two men. Not idlt grace, nor LinnelV hum. Wilt ce' eh the beau ie make him come Each girl must buslk then." FaiTHriLNKsa. Several ihoiauind pr-rsons within the past four days have been attracted to tha Murray street wharf, to witness the faithfulness of a small dog, first discovered sit ting there on Monday last. The poor thing is a passive, harmless sufferer, and sits in one po sition, looking steadfustly at one spot of the water, aa if expecting' ita friend and companion to rise from the rirer. It refuses food, and is inattentive to all efforts to entice it away. If carried of! by force it immediately returns, and I resumes ita wonted position. .V. Y. Taper.