V X ftMMmapatkf , alloemifcr Trrle. Fifty year age t. word komanpathy m the firtt time lisped in an obsenre towa in Germtny, and, from that tlmt to thii, th science designa ted by that word has spread with lightning speed to the remotest corner of F.nrope, and has pene trated the forests of America, even to the Rocky monntatnf, - -. i .1 , 1 .' 1 Fifty yean ago, and to express a belief of the truth of this derided science, was to bring on the rash believer' head th anathemas of In schools, and the propositions of legal enactments, and to the charge of German mysticism, at that time, synonymous almost with being leagued with the foul linff. At first, Contempt, silent and dignified ; next, Ridicule, noisy and confident ; at length, Envy and her offspring Falsehood, have sought, each in its turn, to crash the infant rebel against hoary headed usage. Fifty years have passed, and to! the change ! The houseless wanderer thrown upon the tender mercies of a selfish world, to battle with the pampered minion o( twenty centuries, in the words of our author, "comes before us now, not in the garb of a suppliant, unknown and helpless, but as a conquerer, powerful, famous and trium phant. The disciples of Hahnemann are spread over the whole civilized world. There is not a town of any considerable size in Germany, France, Italy, England or America, that does not beast of possessing one or more homeopathic phy sieians, not a few of whom are men of high res pectability and learning; many of them in large practice and patronized especially by persons of rank. New books on homatopathy issue in abun dance from the press ; and journals exclusively devoted to its cause and printed and widely cir culated in Europe and America. Numerous hos pitals and dispensaries for the treatment of the poor on the new system have been established, many of which publish reports blazoning it sue cess, not merely in warm phrases, but in the hard words and harder figures of statistical tables. The very fact of the publication of a third edi tion of such a large and expensive work as Dr. Laurie's (S vo., pp 578, London, 1846) proves how widely the practice is spread among the public generally. The last triumph which ho- mcBopathy has achieved, is the converson of Doc tor Henderson, the Professor of Pathology in the University of Edinburg from the old faith." In our own city, where ten years ago there were not as many homoeopathic physicians, the Homoeopatic Society now numbers between 40 and SO members, while the number throughout the United States cannot be less than 700; and within the last year, several important works have issued from the press ; among them, trans actions of Hahnemann's Chronic Diseases, and Materia Medica ; Boshning -Daosen's Treatise on Intermittent Fever; Ruckert's Therapeutics and Hartmann's remedies. We have also a monthly journal, the Examiner, and one published in toe western part of this state. . The ablest periodi cat, however, in English, is decidedly the Brt- tfh Journal of Homeopathy, edited by Drs. Dry- dale of Liverpool, and Russell of Edinburg. In French there have been published since the year 1833, seven different journals, which have con tributed during that period nearly 40 volumes In German we have the Higea, now in its 20th volume ; the Allegemeine HumapuVtcht Zeiiung, now in i's 28th volume ; the Arehlr. in its Slst volume, and the Auttrian Journal of Ihmitopath, recently established at Vienna by Fleisehmann, of which three numbers have been published, containing about 630 pages. Among the diatineuished men in various parts of the world who have engaged in the inre tigatioii of the truth of Homeopathic law, we may mention Professor d' Amador, of the Univer sity of Monteelier; Professor J. W. Arnold, late of the University of Zurich : Professor Hen denson, of the University of Edinburg, and Pre fessor Andral, of the Parisian School of Medi cine, all of whom, excepting the last, bave decla red in favor of Homoeopathy. The opponents of Homoeopathy refer with great satisfaction to the experiments of Andral, undertaken as they were, by authority of the A tat! mi de Medicine of Pa ris. The unfairness and incorrectuess of these experiments bave been so often proved, that we will not here repeat them, but merely show from Professor Andrei's own testimony, his unfitness for the task he undertook. Dr. Curie, in his VrinvpU of Hanutopathy, says : "A short time indeed previous to the discussion of the question of Homoeopathy by the Academie de Medicine, Dr. Andral mentioned in course of conversation with the author of this work, that although ha bad di rected bis attention to the subject, his mind was not made upas to its merits, and frankly avowed that he knew very little about the practice in vol ved in the new doctrines. How then could Mr Andral, who acknowledged that he bad scarcely acquired the elements of Homoeopathic practice, venture to pronounce sentence on these doctrines? What opinion would be formed of a jury, which should condemn before it made itself acquainted with the facts of a ease ! Yet each precisely was Mr. Andxal's position. "But there is a fact to be stated here which is perfectly decisive as to Mr. Andral : be bad ab solutely no guida in the prescription ol Homoeo pathic medicines, and be made a wrong applica tion of every one thtt he employed, as has been clearly abowb in the Archive de la Medicine Mo. wutvpaikiuue, Tome premier. No. 1 , for July 1834. No comments or details can add force to this decisive fact." Our present put pose is to show the opinions of an Allopathic physieian, one oi the most eminent of hie school, on the subject of Homoeopathy. Pr .Forbes' article, from which the following ex tracts are taken, is contained in the XLI. nam bar of the British and Foreign Medical Review, nader the caption "Homoeopathy, Allopathy and Young Physic," and professes te be a review of several works, and among them of Professor Hen derson's "Inquiry into the Hesntaopaiai Pre tics of Medicine." The reviewer atatee his i Untiea to be "to lay before our readers om hasty sketches, and some tag1rie-Ary views re lating to the general subject wWehheve long oc cupied our thoughts, and which, ar now, as it were, forced from us Bomewliet suddenly- and prematurely by the perusal of Dr. Henderson's book " we have not been unaware of its claims to attention, nor regardless of its remarkable pro gress in every country of Europe, both as a sys tem of medical doctrine, and a tystem of medical practice." Of Hahnemann, the reviewer says; ,. v ft, , 'No careful observer of his actions, or candid reader of his writings, can hestitate lor a mo ment to admit", that ha wss a very extraordinary man, one wboae name will descend to posteri ty as the exclusive exeogitatnr ' and founder of an original system of medicine, .a ingenious at miiny that preceeded it, and destined, proba bly, to be the remote, if not the immediate cause of more important fundamental chances in the practice of the healing art, than have resulted Irnm any promulgated since the dsys nt Galen himself. ' Hahnemann w undoubtedly a man of genius and a scholar; a man of indefatigable industry, af undaunted energy. ' In the history of medicine his name will appear in the same list with those of the greatest systematief and theorists; unsurpassed by few in the originality and ingenuity of his views, superior to moat in I having substantiated and carried out his doc trines into actual and most extensive prac tice.1 One of the greatest mumbling-blocks in the way of the Allopathic non-believers ia the doc trine of the infinitesimal doses. In the ennsi- duration of this part ol his subject, Dr. Forbes descends from the elevated and dignified posi tion of a reviewer, and haa recourse to the re- ductio hi abrurdum argument, by entering in to an arithmetical calculation of the quantity of matter in the thirtieth dilution. From a very clever work on the subject of Homoeopathy, recently published in London, written by M. B. Sampmn, under the superin tendence of the English Homoeopathic Associa tion, Lord Groevenor President, we make the following extract. The effects of malaria, in penetrating the system, and giving rise, in some instances, to rapidly fatal symptoms, are aleo well known ; yet no one has ever been able to detect any specific matter of contagion, although many at tempts have been made. It ia said that an in veterate ague waa produced by the canal at Versailles, though it was little larger than a fish pond. It is the opinion of Dr. McCulloch and that of several Italian physicians, that a aingle inspiration of malaria may be quite sufficient to cause disease. Lane is i says, that as thirty ladies and gentlemen were making an excur- sion of pleasure op the Tiber, the wind sudden ly shiAed to the south, coming over the Pontine marshes, and twenty-nine were instantly taken ill, only one escaping. Indeed, an subtle is its influence, that in the case ofveseela lying ofl an unhealthy shore, the difference of half a cable's length from the coast has caused vessels to suffer or escape." How much matter is there in the atmosphere that thus deals disease and death on every hand! Again! a single grain of mnsk will diffuse its perfume for years in a room, the air of whieh may be renewed daily, and yet at the expire tion of the time the perfume will bessstronsr as at first, and the grain of musk will still weigh a grain; now, aa smelling i produced by the particles of the aromatic substance flying off and coming in contact with the olfactory nerve, what must be the size and number of de- cilliona of decillione of particles, whose aggre gate weight amounts (appreciably) to nothing at all ? Why, compared with them, the atoms of the highest Homoeopathic attenuation are as mountains to the sands nti the seashore. We think Dr. Forbes haa here a fine field for the exercise of his arithmetical power. Nsy, still further, the very opperations of the mind hope, fear, joy and grief, have severally produced trodden effects, altogether beyond the power of the moat 'h'Sro'ie' allopathic drug. Instances are not rare, of persons being struck dumb by terror, and of others restored from that state by the name eaoee. ' Many persons have hid their hair turned gray, in one nipht, nay, on thein stant, from sudden fright. W here has been the maimer tnorbi in all these instance? Away then with the childishness v. hich seeks material causes for appreciable eflects I &now ADBIFT- As two ladies were passing throughona of the streets of Boston, a few daya since, a large quantity of snow became detached from the roof of a bouse, and deecended upoo their "devoted heads," completely burying them be neath it. Some gentlemen who witnessed the accident, gallantly dug them out, and ia a piti less plight they were hurried tea carriage and conveyed home.' Tac Faibo Ava, who died last week, left 13000 ia gold; but owned, we are informed, about $20,000 worth of property, all of which will go to his wife in Cincinnati, whom he bad abandon ed, and not lived with for twenty years. Success 10 Hai. The Hickman (Ky.) Stand ard says :' A lady residing within fifty miles of this plae has recently given birth to four aoas within aa hour.' ' They have been named Polk. Delia,' Texaa and Oregon, and all ia a thriving condition. The err is still, "thev come," not "still they eoma." Ban Pat- It ia said that ia Illinois the Cir cuit Judge are aa poorly paid they are compelled, whea on the cirrnit, to awap boraaa and gamble in order to support their families. An It alum Mosk wrote a life of St. Francis Xavier where ha asserted that, by ana sermon he 1 converted ten (keutand perten in m itfrt Uhmd. THE ATJX3RICAN. Sat-rdap, Jlartk II, 1846. 1. B. fJIIMKU, Sof., mt kU JlMlJfr. teste )imI (W Otr.ee, earner of 3d and Cmeenvt Street VMUtdelpkim, U emthmtted to met m Jlgent, mud receipt (or eUt mtemtee due Into Bre, for oumoeriiHiem err eutvertiolngt . Alto, mt Ms tUTlc .Vo. ISO Afcseom Wrert, Jlnd a. K. Corner of Baltimore mnd Calvert fa., Baltimore. , 7 in another column will be found an ac count of the ravages of the flood at Harrisburg and the adjoining places. The loss of the Clark' Ferry bridge will be much felt by tboae employ ed on the public works. This bridge, which waa rebuilt by the State in 1830, coat, if we re collect right, $80,000. ' The amount of damages done to the canala cannot yet be estimated or known. We have had various contradictory ru mors. One thing, however, is certain, that the damages are immenie, though not as great as was expected. . It will be seen by the accounts of the flood along the Susquehanna, that we have suffered less than a number of other places. At Harris burg the flood was higher then the pumpkin flood, in 1787. Here it was about a foot lower. QC?- A few thousand dollars expended in the erection of embankmenta, would hereafter permanently secure u from the invasion of the 'most destructive flood. These things should be attended to. Had proper embankments been made a few years since, the county alone would have saved aeveral thousand dollars. 07" The mailt have been delayed in every direction by the flood. The Philadelphia and Harrisburg mails of Friday, due here on Saturday, did not reach us until Wednesday. 07" Our Washington letter did not come to hand aa usual. The mails have been very irre gular. Between Harriabnrg and this place and Northumberland, they are carried on horse-back Between this and Pottsville, by two horse wa gons. 07 The rise of the river above low water level was just twenty one feet, as ascertained by Mr. Jacob Seasholts.at his lime kilns, a few miles below town. He built his kilns twenty feet above low water mark, in order to be perfectly secure from high water, which, however, covered them about one foot. : Cir Thi WaTM-Crmr Joraiui, published by Dr. Joel Shew, of New York, ia highly in teresting and Valuable publication. It is pub lished semi-monthly at ($1 per annnm. We have extracted several interesting articles from the Journal, which will be found on our first page, and shall continue to make extracts here after. ' "... A Steam Ferry. Since the destruction ol the Northumberland bridges, there has been some talk of establudiing a steam Ferry between this place and North urn berland, to touch aleo on the Union county aide, opposite this place. .That thia would prove a profitable investment, we have never entertain ed a doubt, even before the bridges were dea troyed. . For running a steam boat, there is probably no finer basin in the Union, and as travelling ia always increaaed in proportion to the facilitiea afforded, we have no doubt that it would be rreallv increased in this instaoce. So far aa foot passengers are concerned, they would be five fold greater than heretofore. Thj re ceipta of the ferry between Sunbury and the Union county aide would be, we are confident. increaaed fourfold; and so far aa profits are con cerned, we would not give one share of ferry stock for three times the amount of bridge stock. We feel confident that auch an in veal ment would yield a dividend of from 15 to 20 per cent, a result which can readily be made sops rent from facts snd figures. When once persons could step on board of a boat and for sixpence be landed either at Sunbu rv or Northumberland in a few minutes, how many hundreds would embrace the opportunity who would otherwise never think of it. The tolls of the Northumberland bridge, aver aged of late years, we believe, about two thou sand dollara per annum. Thia, together with the tolls of the Sunbury Ferry the towiug of be tween 300 and 400 boats for the coal trad the towing of lumber, minerals, lie, would, no doubt, amount ia all to about (3000. . Bat let us take the receipts that hav actually been realized, and say $2,500. From this amount, we muit de duct tbe expenses, wear and tear, &c. Two hands, one an engineer, would be sufficient, and could be had at an expenae of about 12 per day. The con sumption of coal would be about J of a ton per day, of fine coal at ft 23, or about II per day, for fuel. This, for 273 days in the year, would amount to $833. Add to this 10 per cent, for wear and tear and other contingencies, say on $4,000 to be expended for a boat and wharfs, ma king $400 mare, or ia all, $1,333. Bat ia order to cover all possible contingencies, we may ab low $373 aaora, making the whole of the expen diture $:300, there woulojbe still a aett i acorn of $1000 per aaaem, or a dividend of 33 percent. per annum. Even tb inoet skeptical cannot doubt but that tba enterprize would b highly beneficial, aa well as profitable. A friend of soma experience, makea the fol lowing bill af expenses, via t Engineers, $370 Captain, 370 ; Boy, $34; Coal, Oil, ke , $403; Landings. $300 ; wear and tear, $300 ; making in all, $1,39 Grrat Flood nd Lou of life and Property Tne NosTnnnsLifr, Dasvim.e? Cattawissa Apt Ma' o Btawtct BaibGM'DcmoYto At.so thi liAaaimitao, Clark's Fcrrv and otmks Bbido- sweet orr. We hive been visited with the most extraordi nary freshet thet ha ever occurred in this sec tion of country since the grrat pumpkin flood, a- bout sixty years ago. . The immenie body of snow that bad been accumulating during the win ter, had been going off gradually for a week past, until Thursday and Friday nights of tbe 19th and 13th Inst., when the whole mats went off very suddenly with a heavy rain. , The small streams were soon bank full. t The Susquehanna rose ve ry rapidly, and, on Friday night, the ice started On Saturday morning, it was evident that the water, rialng at such a rapid rate,' must soon be swollen beyond the limits ol the" banks of the ri ver. The embankments, which have hitherto kept out ordinary freshets;' were too low for the sudden and impetuous rush of the vat bodies of water, accumulating from every atream and rivu let. The river continued rising rapidly until a bout midnight, when a considerable portion- of the town was inundated, many of the houses ic low situation having water on the first floor The old Northumberland bridge, east of the la- land being previously in a tottering condition, was hourly expected to fall. About 4 o'clock P. M-, several heavy masses of a bridge hove in sight which, however, proved to be the .Danville bridge, which wss swept sway a few hours pre' vious, raking the old Northumberland bridge con aiderably in passing through. A I entleman from thia place, anxious to reach home, passed through but a few minutes previous to its fall. About 9 o'clock in the evening, several spans of the old Northumberland bridge fell with a tremenduous crash and were swept down the stream. On Sun day morning, about 10 o'clock, one of the centre spans of the new Northumberland bridge, west of tbe Island, rebuilt about six years since, was carried away, reating on what appeared to ns a portion of another bridge; probably part of the Cattawisa bridge, which was also swept away. On Monday morning another span of the new Northumberland bride was carried away. The loas ol thia bridge was most probably caused by a portion of some other bridge which came in contact with it. The fact ia, that this has been the highest, as well as the most destructive flood which has been witnessed in the valley of the Susquehanna. Every bridge from Harrisburg to Berwick, on the North Branch, has been carried away, the fall of the first bridge, in most cases, causing tbe destruction of those below it. Thit noble structure, the West Branch bridge, built by tbe State, which spans tbe river from Northum berlaad to the Blue-hill, standa as firm as ever. The Lewisburg and Milton bridges, on the West Branch, are also uninjured. The turnpike bridge at this place, the county bridge on the lower road, aa well as the county bridge' at 'the month af the Shamokin creek, have all been swept off by the torrent. ' ' 1 ' - ' k Near tbe month of Turtle creek, a few miles below Lewisburg, at the Union trading store, a most distressing accident occurred. Mr. Foil- tner, bis son, and Mr. Gundy, who had charge of the store, were standing on a small bridge near the mill dam, looking at the ice dam that had formed, when it suddenly gave away, almost in stantaneoualy burying the bridge and all on it beneath a masa of floating ice The extent of the damages of the canals are not yet known. They are, however, very great, and will, no doubt, delay the opening of the navi gation for several months ' Several new acqneducts passed down the ri ver, a part of one havipg been caught at this place Several spans of the Danville bridge ate lodged on McCarty's Island, about a mil below this place. Two spans of the same bridge are also high and dry above Grant's farm. ' The damages on the Schuylkill have also been considerable. The new works of the Schuylkill Navigation Company have not, however, suffered as much as waa ex pected. At Danville, the flood has been very destroc live. A great number of houses around the iron works, were inundated. The Danville Furnace waa near being drowned out, and the Rolling Mill waa obliged to stop work. The new arqueduct haa been swept off, as well as the bridge at the mouth of the Mahoning creek. Soch an entire destruction of bridges haa never before occurred and most probably would never happen again, ae most if not all, without an exception, have been constructed too low. ' The bridges swept off be tween Hsrrisbarg and Berwick cannot be repla red at a cost lesa than $200,000. Some of theae will no doubt soon be rebuilt, others must bills their time There were rumors that the middle creek acque duct below Selinsgrove had been carried away We are gratified to learn, that the report is not true. The acqneduct ever the Mahantango, near McKee's Half Falls, haa been awept off. Tbe ca nal, it ia said, has sustained pretty serious inju ry about tbe Junction. From thence to Harria- bora; the damages are but trifling. The canal be tween thi place and Selinsgrove has been wash ed and filled up considerably in several plaees, but the injury is nowhere as serious aa was aoti cipated. Tb bridge at Clark's Ferry, has lost but one spaa, (we think there are eight or nine ia all,) which caa We repaired without any very heavy expense. 1 : .. m : - . t The Caaal Commissioners bave reports of the main lino aa far as Newport, and thus far there is no breach that will coat $30Q to repair. We trust the damages are nowhere ao great as waa supposed. We have heard it said, that a handsome frame bouse passed Cattawissa, painted white, with the window curtains at the windows up staira. Wa have, ainea writing the above, ba inform ed, that but ana span of the Cattawissa bridge was destroyed, and that the Berwick bridge was yet standing, bnt ia tottering condition About 800 feet af rail read between thia place and Shamokin, haa been washed away. This, however, will cause bat little delay in it operations. CttHoMoeoPATHT. 4n another column, we , have placed, an 'interesting article on Ilomce- p thy, from the Sew York Mirror. This sys tem Of practise ia rapidly extending itself, and is now being discumed on both aides by some of the moat learned and distinguished men of the profession. The late conversion of Professor Henderson, of the University of Edinburg, one of the moat distinguished medical schools in the world, to the principles of Homoeopathy, haa brought out Dr. Forbes in a review against it, which forma the aubject ol the article in the Mirror. Tb New York Tribune also contains an able police of the review, in tavor of Homoeopath.. Dr. Forbes, it will be seen, makea ao many admis sion in favor of the tew aystom, and so many against tbe old, that it ia difficult somotimes to tell which side he intends to condemn. , We shall publish the conclusion and best portion of the article next week.- 1 1 ,r 1. OT Mr. Sawyer, a member of Congress from Ohio, baa acquired no little notoriety in consequence of the expulsion of the Reporters of the Kew York Tribune from their pieces, be- ciuseone of the Reporters who signs himself 'Persimmon," gave a sketch of the peraonal ha- bits of Mr. Sawyer. We do not approve of personalities, but if members of Congress ao far lorget what is due to the dignity of their sta tion, as to take their meals in the Halls of Con gress, when receiving eight dollars per day, it ia no more than jdt that the world should know it. The press in such a case act as a public censor, for the good of the public. , The tatement of Persimmon was, "Mr. Sawyer, of Ohio, feeds about 2 o'clock every day that he has his food rolled up in a piece of paper that after eating he throws the paper from the win dow that he wipes his hands upon his coat sleeves, his heed, &c." . Mr. Sawyer admitted that :n substance the remarks were correct Persimmon further re marks: "I am informed by a gentleman who was in the ladies' gallery a tew days since that he saw a Member 'toiher day walking up and down the floor, washing his mouth with a tooth brush and squirting the rinsings over the car pet." 07 The Washington Times, which charged Mr. Colquitt and other Senatora with plotting with the Britiah Miniater for the surrender of Oregon, has been convicted of falsehood by the Committee. , . Mr. Benton, from the Select Committee, read the report relative to the charges in the Wash iogton Times. The report shows thst every specification made in that paper, about collusion between Senators and the United States, waa ut terly false. The report says that "the charge, in all ita bearings, is a contemptible falsehood," and recommends that the publisher, editor and reporters of tba Time be excluded from the Re porters' gallery. ' 1 07" Several important bills have been report ed in tbe Legislature, by the committee of Ways and Means. One is to consolidate the public debt. Tho other bill is yet more important ; it is en tilled 'an act to provide fur the reduction of public debt,' and fixes new objects of taxation , by it, 'shins, brigs, schooners, and all other sail in? vessels, all steamboats, stages, hacks, cabs, and other passenger vihicles, canal boats, locomotive engines snd railroad ciirs, owned, uad, or poe tested by this Commonwealth,' shall pay a tax of three milla upon every dollar of their value, anthracite coal shall pay ten cents per ton. Every person, corporation, or firm, ia requir ed to answer upon oath, the aateaaor'e inquiries of his money at intereet, &c and if he doea not furnish such a statement, the assessor slisll aaseaa mm at Die nigneat amount, ana to inai the commissioner add one third more, or 33 per cent Moneya, &c, owned by any person out of the State, are to be in like manner taxed, and the debtor or other person having tbe cus tody shall pay the tax, and be allowed for it ; all loans and stocks, guarantied by the Common wealth, ehall pay a half mill for each dollar, on which one per cent is payable and ao on in pro portion t one per cent is to be paid on all tsxes, professions, die, taking off the limit of $200, making all taxable; alt dealer in goods, warea and merchandize, the growth, product, and manufacture of the United States, and every atore, warehouse for selling them, where such persona manufacture them, shall be taxed as the foreign merchandize ia taxed, and there ahall be in every county appraiser of mercan tile taxes, a now exists here. AaaxsTor tub Mcbdbbbk or tub Var Nbs Family. The murderer of the Van Nee faoii ly, in Ceyuge, New York, haa been arrested He i a black man, named William Freeman, a- bout 23 years old. The negro ha made no for mat confession, but doe not deny that be did the deed. H carrie hi arm in a sling on ac count of a deep gash hi hi right hsnd, which he acknowledge waa made by the knife break ing against the breast-bone of Van Anadale. The piece of the blade, about three nche in length, wa fonnd in the boons, and tba reat of the dirk outside of the door. Freeman hsa ser ved five yesrs' imprisonment in tbe Stste Prf son at Auburn, and waa aent there by Mr. Van Nesa for dealing a horae. He now says that "he wss imprisoned wrongfully, and be ought to have pay for hi time. There waa no redress. and he waa determined to have vengeance. Mr. Wyckoff, the only victim ol thia denton murderer who waa not instantly killed, ia dead, It appears that George W. Hyatt mad a kaife year or bo aioce, which was id en ti fed as the one saed bv Fretmaa ia tho murders. It obtained by FrteBian last Monday at Hyatt J . f i,- From the Harrieuarg nreat Flood In the Bnsqr . Dentruction of the Harriiburg tiriigt--The Bridge at Clark' Ferry ver the 8que hanna,and the Bridge over the mouther the Juniata The Duncannon Iron Woritr, nf f Ae Britigc over Sher men' Creek, te ' iW Duneannan Stoppage oj the nthra- , rite Fur noce Probable Dettrvclion 0 the .1 Pwftic iVorA, J-c. -c. ' ' The rise of tbe water in the Susquehanna, which , commenced on Friday last, has been the most J - A I -1 . 1 1 hfm rnpii vm winnn mar nil .v.r nan vmMMn - since the first settlement of the country on its borders. Harrisburg, at the time of writing, ia approachable on tfie East, South and West only by water communication, and, standing on an el evated place, it presents the appearance of a town sinking' into the sea the houses ia the lower part of it being submerged in water, in Mime instances, nearly np to the second stary. The grounds above it, lower than the main part of the town, are covered with water, generally so deep as to obliterate alt traces offences, bridges Paxton creek it entirely lost in the mighty congregation of waters, and the Susquehanna from shore to shore, covering entirely the large ' Island which lay in its centre, wbith connected the two divisions of the old Harrisburg bridge, presents a current of fierce turbulent waters, bearing on its botom an indescribable and innu merable mass of flood wood, timber, &c, that has been torn from its resting places, as trophies of its irresintible power, , Between 10 and II o'clock on Saturday even ing, the piers of the old Harrisbure bridge, (that celebrated atructure, the first built over the os- quehanna built by Burr, on the arch principle, at a cost of $195,000, commenced in 1813 and completed in IS 17,) which have buffeted many a raging flood, began to give way on this side of the island and to yield to the mighty current and its battering ram of ice, and. on Sunday morning. between three and four o'clock, two of the mid die span of arches fell and were swept down the stream; these were soon followed by two others, leaving; hut a single pan, next to Harrisburg, which also fell about Ivto o'clock and floated ma jestically away. The Wert part of the Harrisburg Bridge, ex tending from the Island to the Cumberland shore is still standing but whether it has sustained injury is yet unknown. Of the new Railroad Bridge, which was being constructed by Mr. Kirkbridge, all the piers were finished and four spans of the frame work was e rected on them: Two spans of this went just be fore the Harrisburg Bridge, and the two other spans were swept off by the Duncan's Island Bridge floating against it in its descent. Thus the Harrisburg side of the river is entirely strip ped of all bridges, or vestige of them, the piers being mostly washed away, and their places be ing only discernable by the whirl of the water as it passes over where they were. Two spans of the eastern end of the bridge at Duncan's Island, erected in 1S37 one of the fi nest structures in our country have also been carried away. Also, the bridge over the mouth of the Juniata, from Duncan'a Island to the Perry County ahore ; and the bridge over Sherman's creek in the village of Duncannon. The dam a- cross the same stream with the extensive nail factory and rolling mill, at the same place, has al ao been carried away, and the works of Fishe & Co. are reported as having suffered greatly in the destruction of buildings, machinery, &c The nail factory is said to be entirely destroyed The loss at this place can acarcely be estimate) From tbe high water of the Juniataas well a the Susquehsnna, and a knowledge of its effect in former floods, it is feared that tbe entire Mai Line of the Canal will be rendered unnavigabl for a great part, if not the whole of the openii season ; and if the deatruetion by the flood has e: tended up the North and West Branches of tl Susquehanna, the Canal may be so damaged as be irreparable the preaent year. It is a sad d for the hopes of Pennsylvania, and on that v fear may be felt by those who have placed d pendeace on her ability to do justice to all. All communication between Harrisburg a the West side of the Susquehanna is entirely off, and mutt remain so until the wsters subsi and a ferry is opened. The train of the Cu berland Valley Railroad arrived yesterday mo ing and afternoon, on the Weal side, and bl their whiatlea, but after finding that all cemn nicatioo was cut off, they moved West ag with tbeir load of passengers. The easting house of the Aatbracite furnae Ex Gov Poiter, was covered with water, wh rose as high a the hearth, and into the funis of the boilers. The furnace was stopped ; it is supposed that the blast will be resumed morrow. Parts of buildings, water wheels, caaal b rafts, lumber, logs, Sec, have possed down on bosom of tbe flood. One canal boat waa broi to sbor a short distant below town, in wl were upwards of one hundred barrels of fl The loss to individuals at well as to tbe St and to companies, will in many instances severe ; and it is not unlikely that hundreds bave been toiling for months in preparing tun for market, have been stripped and left desti' At present tbe losses can only be copjecti and we hope that they will not equal the pre expectations of our community. It is feared that great damage has alto ' done t the Wicouisco Caaal bnt nothing tain known. A great portion of the town of Port mouth, miles below Harrisburg, on the Susquehani the junction eft he Swatara ia aaid to be 1 water, and the houses secured freia floati way by cable.' The following is a statement of the rise of Susquehanna at Harrisburg which contained mot water than the terrible ke flood in the winter t 1785, or the memorable pumpkin flood of 1787 At 3 o'clock, P. M , oa Friary, the 13th instant