..1. ! •. 1. ineMILLV ILDITOII AND PROPILISTQA 6ETTINIREB4I, PA, monkAy MORNING, DEC. 5, 18:4 akirThe new Congress xiU meet at Wash inane to-day. It it apprehended that thers will same delay, and much diffieult,y. its organising the noose, neither party haring a majority. The session will be long. ' K. sAPaiscps will commence Lis terte at this session. Rip&lima .CAsacas.—lt is stated that a r.uother—about forty -t wo----of the Repot lican aaegal?,era of . gv Coness A a preliminary eau- COS it th e Astor Mouse, in New York,. on Monday sight, acid agreed to Tote for Mr. Sherman, of Ohio, for Speaker of the Rouse ; Colonel ?orney, of Penasykania, for clerk; a Mr. at . adarlis, also of Pennsylvania', for ser geant-atsfraps, and S. Bowles, of the Spring field (Mass.) Republican, for printer. " Was He a *litpublicon't"—So late as a year ago, on the 13th d October, 1858, tfie New York Tribune said— "Qld John Brown, of Ossaw3,stoplie, and nineteen - twentieths of hie co-defenders of free dom in Kansas; were and lye f'epublicans, and migrated there under the JtnpOe of Republi can ideas and convivtione." Mir Old jiirti,wp's wife ,listinctly repudiates the i dea insanity, and says that for twen ty years be had meditated his recent crimes. Old Frown himself also denied that he was actuated by reten,ge fur anything that occur r.4l tow in linnpna, and indignantly repelod the surpass of e tii,e N. Y. Pusi and Tribute. in hie faros. 4b9fition /nronsisteucy.—The Opposition mast have something to rail at, nor is con eisteney *tell necessary in their railings. Se cretary From has been censured fur not ac ting upon the anonymous warning he receiv ed of the Harper'e perry insurrection, and Gov. W,ts t e is even more severely denounced bees . se he'doesjest what the other is blamed for not doinr, • Modier's Grare.—An efchnnge contains the following :77-" John C. Fr/thong heeded the jie . t, of se...scribers in California, to the motteelent.te the late Senator Broderick. Ile The Charleston Courier aide the following statement, I•rief, but what a volume of Os rebuke does it contain : "The mother of John C. Fremont was in terred in tiair city, ar.d ber grave, we bolieve, la nut marked." "Th o editor {(the Compiler] surely knows that we resisted the establishment of what wee termed the Know Nothing party."— Sadism/. spellsAril e editor of the Colppiler kaors ro Territory. Of his rll).CCllUerlt Operation, p thing, but he doe KNOW—and so do the I there I Itnw ii Jtilinz,. That he, without pr,- - 7etders of the Sentinel and the pnbliagenenal- ! voAltakn, inhumanly murdered tnen.in their I know. 'That he committed robbery 1 14 ,7 1xish --rtha eci tA ,, fte ,the r d ec i i e uvr tyr o a f ti o nic: se il o rder teat placed the 1 ah b r sd s s : oiniefuts;.dofl,gisoodo,:natnlldenh ,, i:lasti I a heard i from t-i#C4 °f" what was termed (he Know Noth- ! own eN CA ; hut that too et e'r gave as v a w n l e t s i eu m se irgparty" ai his mast-Head, and urged their that he was attenintinz to run off slaves -li.attbas work" I never en at the polls!—thus contributing to , whil e d"ing . this i llf t r a d ,, f i rl i i r n e i u l, i n t : .or forty one i d else. There was t'asty UP a proscriptive political party, vt.t. the s coff of the just rights of Catholics ant, 4,.ie Creek, M 1 IC I I I a n he foxitpero.".: It is too lath in the day for l and not one of the inurdnred men hod etc; I raised' an arm Itgallibt him. the Ocor of that paper to endeavor to squirm oat of the reeposibility be incurred by giv-! Thus mach for the religious fanaticism and of Brown, "the martyr." Ilia 4141211ta1y countenance and "aid and corn- humani t y boldness, daring, and unsernpnlonsnevs point faxt "*a .the Know Nothing party--especial -17 14d. ed him out as a fit instrument for carrying lat, at this very time, he is an advocate i of t i o oi te i p i t , of the ~ p eop l e ' s p arty, " i out the designs of men too cowardly to ele toets,74l9; of which is composed of midnight ! cute their own base sc/icines. —r.« - Pa* PsnOrP i AP. !educated and Affected Sympathy Never since the ecutimental Sterne no Compiler is still exceedingly anxieuis to *Odle the respneibi ; lity of the recent Her per's Ferry altar u;ao tha Republeao par ty."—Star. MilleSter7 reasonable man who knows anything at all of Northern polities, cannot but place the responsibility of that murder ous affair jest "ere we plsoe it—upon the shoulders et the Republican party. The course of its orators and presses, ever eiuce she formation ef the party, (by the union of Abottinsiats and Know Nothings;) has had a dim* tecideacy to foment strife and discord bstwasis the clifferi.nt States of this heretofore fm)•;,ts and hAlippy JUpuLlio, and the Star itatigota4pagers hare had a full WWI la So e Now that the must/ is reaping the terrible fruits of their weetidital agitation. thou who have aroused thlopairtaapilerwqing at ita eoeilequetees, ast! !mks° shirk the responsibility of their watt la creating it. But their fear comes too III& They hare been " caught in the atui mast stand =damned bsfo re a rdo#9od 4w:l4ing people. liflit i ihe ()position journals in Pennsyl- Tielkapimra4 take the ground that the 11.4 r Memesparty.is in no wag responsible fur , enarderoas demonstration st Ear panaforry. The Star is of eourse among Ibis am. Bat in the face of the )tying rat. taliekaa admission like the following may brimaiMod as a "sooltdolver :" "Bemilininr,.of Mama usette, in his spit" S on the `2Bth alt s (Oct-) r Perry oidbreak was the a 11s flk Irrachaws of Republican- Sassiot Wilson is ona of the most proini xyliiptinilittestinl hiders of the Black Be riblejto irk! Mark that *IN cif* Compasr is famous for oo—aad hp makes it a &id to Tad* the •`!ioaatmaisei 'Wavers may ( 1 ,7,01,14 ;kr mmag.r, hemp lon AIM 41111141' aanoyatioa. 4•Xtmia. 100 4#1 1°P . aka, _ _ufih things jo vy4 of gtOlOppsh.laimikaa is do 14 &b" aditiatils atiltilfraHl*ioarso‘ - Aitit*.efirlpes&—a• nowataia lowa at Absdheefite, ho shoat hooks pa aaid water' La‘lipk,falAttlasett of tha ♦ -,4 ?eh le • it They ere Itorpennihis.. • The Reppleienti ihrese, as A 4lan i ersit t libtag, still deny that the leaders Ah a it *Ay are responsible for the insarteettow.nt leper's Perry, But this' denial will not stall them' before the people. Niritatnritthif s li e Setwasn, if his aprechesen the WasD, and elsewhere redact his (estimate, is in fay.w of negro snd Abe elfwts of himself and' his party have secured to the negro in New Rork, the right to vote and control the aloe thins ; and the same ri,gh is hare been secured hint by .therasa,GIDDING3 and Cultilin in Ohio; while in Massachusetts the same party with PANE! and Witsox at its head have secured, or are endeavoring to secure, to the negro, in addition to the right to You, the right to ow ry white women, and to hold office. Now these are rill TM-known and acknowledged leaders (lithe Republican party, and so long as they are endorsed by their party friendq, the party itself has to bear the odium that at taches to their ri,..ts and the sentitrenta they protnnlgate. Indeed, the freedom of the ne gro has become so grant anan object with the !seders of the itepnldiotn party, that neither the Constitution. or the country, nor the union , of the States ;s held paramount to It, fur Mr. Scwslo has raid that a " higher law" than the Constitution was needed, and Governor BeaNx has, in advocacy of the same cause, expressing a willingness to let the L'nion slide." /t, is in rain, therefore, for the Republican press to attempt to shake off the responsibility of the harper's Ferry outbreak which so justly attaches to their party. Their acknowledged leiulers hare sown the whirlwind, and the Re publican party must expect to reap the storm which an indignant people are preparing to heap upon its head. Nothing can save them from tbe fearful consequences of the seditious teachings of the great lights of their sectional party.—Lone. 1111110wn's Doings in Kansas. nrenst I). PEN\ VD tOCER, the member elect of the Virginia Senate from the Rockingham district, furnishes the Ilarrisunburg Reyiater with an account of his experience with Om watomie Brown in Kansas, which proves the Anolition martyr to be a robber iii the lowest acceptation of the term. Mr. Pennybacker was United States Survey Examiner in the Territory, mod was with Copt. Pate's party when it was captured by artifice at Black J/I. Ile says 'lbw n would nut have spar ed is prisoners' lives then, but that his own two sons were in prison at Lecompton. The statement continues : While in his hands, I heard Brown's son boast of the horse* they had stolen from Mis souri and elsewhere. I al'.o saw it party start out for the purpose of robliinc an Indian trad ing post (Joseph liernard'r,) and saw them return loaded with the goudr (some $S,tO) worth.) Old Brown exclaiming ns they came in, NN ell done, my IN !" kin wn told me himself that his hand was af4ainst every man, free State or pro-slavery, who vi :Ls not wil ling to join his band, and that lie would kill one as soon as the other. Ilia son Frederick was killed at Os.aa at. by Martin White, a free State Juan. who had rciuze I to jdin Brown's company, and was thereupon robbed, and ordered to le.ive. the Territory. John 0 *ma afterwards whipped at o.ostwatoime, and I believe he then left the out his pathos over a dead donkey, while he could allow his nearest relative, in her old s.ge, to suffer from poverty' and sickness and sorrow without offering the smallest assis tance or educe, have we had such a display of affected compassion :Is that made by the political parsons and Abolition essayists over the reliel and murderer Brown. Mr. 'toilet, of B 'sten, thus commented on the condukt of these pscudo-philanth rapists : " •The poor child-berth old man !' exclaims , the Her. Mr. Ward Beecher in his sermon on slave insurrections. And how came he child bereft.? In Kansas, La and his sons going tkere not - to settle but to fight, /tad ourdcrod four defenceless men in cold 6/God, dragged front their beds al midnight! Up to that time, says the Kansas Ilerald of Freedom, not n hair of ohl John Brown's head, or of any of his sons, bad been injured. Three months after that the man of blood was at tacked in his turn and cue of his eons killed. Three veers after this he is found conspiring with Northern Abolitionists to raise a servile war in Virginia, and he carries his eons there, who, after dragging tarn from their beds at midnight, and shooliay down the mayor and ciker citizens al Hutper's Ferry, are them selves shot in the act of robbery, invasion, and murder. And thereulon anti-slavery philanthropy in the pulpit cries out, 'poor skied-bereft old man!' Mr. 11. said it remind ed him of a recent trialolparrieide in France. The man had stratify Oarderid his father and mother, sad of wane' he was an orphan by his own crime, just as Joha Brown is 'child-bereft' by his crimes. The parricide was convicted; and, on being called up for sentence, was asked by the )edge if be bad anyddng to say. Nothing, said he, only I Pray you to have pity upon a poor orphan !" Mir Tha t "intelligent looking stranger," at one of oarwho. as re ported by the Stse:iroold have taken the annplierfor "s soothers journal el the most approved Civilian savior," was most proba bly s triiesWis Abolitionist. visitiog this to feel the pulse of the leaders of his is rnprd to the (urination of Wherry forward tip &sive aT if so, be fell is w‘h the right -party in es ootistmisir, the Ater maassers. They are the kind of patriots " after his own limn was ready is take the lead in On& mid night massivises, as ti my were whoa dark )anithqf Fuow tic4hih i ghwit ,prang into ex istence. 4 Mirrti Bar, tat ennounein . s the Fair and Festival fat. the . boteal , *WM ' rigida Band," promonnesselair band Into s' ere& itable to the. introte (a bins!) whilst the Bastinet has no belt thataitiaaaaof seri. sithentTsrpser topertit. will atiend.' ; 'Pay wet be ineestiad as dctutdabarrellesi ants. ,47. is Went , dinteticani., iirrixoPifftw th#.llll now ism tassel Alb - onewi - -dos senies of She 11. fltatew, fur Ow lasi Ural par, .boat •.;.* 1-..‘A;.;;;..X.,4414,01414a4= lizeistakni et Jobs Mown. John Brown, eeosidted of the IsliVerim, of treaseo, insurrection pad esstrder, welt by deem on thecaffold 4,Chariereewsa. Va. p Friday Out. Iran breathe opt of the r ipti. son at 11 o'aloelt, and in ballan hoer alter, everythie being ,in reediness, the Imp dropped, and be was hunched into eternity. He made no•speech, nor were religions_ ser vices hgtd, the prisono not &firing !I/71-T- Shortly after 12 o'clock the body was taken down and placed in it fine oak coffin. and in the evnaing sent to Harper's Ferry and .given to lais wife. who immediately Started with the remains for Albany. N. Y. His wife vis ited him on Thursday, but preferred being, at Harper's Ferry during the time of the exe cution. There was no disturbance of any kind, a strong force of military having been on the ground—probably 1400. Before being taken from priiwin.Brown took leave of the other prisoners, urging them to be Grm, and not ktray their friends. lie charged Cook with misleading him in regard to the disposition of the negroes to rise, but Cook denied it. Brown expressed thanks for the kind treatment be had received. se-It wculd almost seem that. Truth and the Sentinel have become strangers to each other. In the last issue of that paper it is coolly stated that in New York the Democrat+ lArgaii,ed with the Know Nothing leaders, who, fur certain considera i tions, agreed to support four of the Democratic candidates fio- State off2ces,"—" so as to get control of the State Canals." This is a most palpable falsehood. lis universally known that what ive termed the "Straight-out Americans." not fully approving of Seward's Abolition Republicanism, and unable to elect a ticket of their own, resolved to vote for five of the Republican and four of the Democratic State candidates, fur no other reason than to show that the . v hold the balance of power, ther;by to secure better terms in the future . from their natural allies, the Republicans. This is the only r'..ason for their course, and no One knows it better Ilan the editor of the Sentinel. That he does not give the real truth in regard to the matter, renders his motive fur assert ing a falsehood very plain. So also in regard to New. Jersey. There the Democrats Lave gained, as in nearly all the other States, and because of such gains, the Sentinel makes tho astute declaration that there was a bargain " between the Devito crats and Know Nothings. The Democratic party has boon too ;on npd too earnestly op.. posed to that bigoted and proscriptive faction, to seek to " bargain " with it in any way. "tarJosuca R. Gtnpisus is one of the members of the Itepublicxn State Central Committee of Ohio—sufficient evidence of his L'epublicani3b&—and he is the autlwr of this atsocious declaration : • . I look forward to the day wit there Mall be A 561V.11.6 INIURR/ICTION IN TUC SOUTH —when the torah of the ineen Nary up the towns awl cities of the South, and but out the loft nesttge ofslarery. And though I may not mock at their eaiamitv, nor laugh ' when their fear eometh, vet I WILL HAIL IT AS THE DAWN 0 . 1:' A POLITICAL MILLE:MUNI"! it And yet the Star managers will insist, when " brought to the scratch " on the har per's Ferry insurrection, that the Ilepublican like the pickpocket in the play, "did n't do nothin' 1." The Opposition aro retorting to every means to rid themselves of responsibility for the treasonable outbreak at Harper's Per -1110.0. The very nattaral alarm of the Virgii.ia people, the wise precniitions of Gov. Wise, are ridiculed in unmeasured terms, as though threatened outrage upon the pence and safety of a community *as a thin; to be laughed at. The Ray, always ready for any dlarepntable work, so it hat help to keep op Know Nothingism and Republicanism, is ab.o engaged in this. As a fitting commentary upon, and crushink rebuke of, such a course, we copy llitllowing paragra:di from an z:z.- change. a ows still a "green spot" in the desert of New England clerical seetitnalltui : The t St4premary th• L aws .—The L ee . ' Dr. Bacon, in his discourse to his pe,,nle on Thanksgiving day, took the onortunity sharply to rebuke whit ho denominated an tinutargy, unpatriotic, unchristia 11 spirit, man ifested at the North in togard to the tra , ical affairs at Harper's Fri ry. lie specified three particulars in which we were in the vrrolrg : let. In deriding the fear occasioned by the invasion. 2d. In flaming Virginia for m.lin tad:ling her law:, 3d. In symp.ith;cint; with the insurgents in their unlawful act. Ou each of these points the dockar spoke v, ith great plainness and solemnity ; and many, if not meat, of the large congregation present felt that the reproof was-jto•t, tiu n and impur tant.„—thirtford (Comm) Courier. The Star managers, had they been pres ent, have felt the reproof. but they would nut have acknovi hedged it... Ono of their leading principles of action is to "deny well." MITEI Isar-The New York 0/wryer, organ of the Old School Proebyterians, took strong ground against pardoning Old Brown. Assuming that he was guilty of murder and insurrection, it argued as follows "Punishment in the government of God and man dues not spring from a spirit of revenge. It is the fruit of lore. Love del monde that one who has made war upon eociety shaU die. Philanthropy, the love of man, the love of the human race, the 10TO of the greatest number, requires that murderers be panished, as God, who is love, ordained And we tremble less in view of Brown', mad freaks ! than we do in the face of the fact that there is abroad in the lair sentiment that wenid shield him and o f ere frgm the just oonsequeneel of their crimes. When those mu embarked in this war upon the State, when they prepared guns fur the white men and a thomiand spears fur the blacks to be used in barbarous slaughter, when they im brued their hands in blood by taking the first victim (an honest colored man who made no resistant*, bat was eeekieg to escape from their heads) and suirdariagbins in cold blood; hen duty ',fused to lay dews their arms al- V being ed, and continued their mardirmas we l t,they threw away all claim 6d emispessido, ma pat themselves on the bawd of the revolution they began. If others eau dad say ~n o fur pardoning such grimes, we cannot. " afirTire American-Republican and the pt.. polgioan State Conunittees of Mods prhuvj have farmed a union and joined in call for ott. Oonvestion. So says the irsisirapt. two factions tisve uniumf so often in Pennsylvania. that Nothiagists and Black Repaid' • en Deems one and the sause--beth p lovingly together, to defeat the national-, alrThmignigi anima= held matins se eii~• aid sosorof tb, won oafs sin* tiawij, * at fill open*. of &.wa atlfalra. Arno Vardaman at Newt Otford an takiug 111 !a rp. plane: dos of pa is. ;atter terat [Corthspondessei Wee Saltimorratin.l gliraetarieere. Va., Nor. 29. As die lay of Join Brown's eariestrioe se immobile:the sumbar °Utilisers drawn to this plane, either to see the prisoners or the mili tary. and its surrocmdiuga, is daily nn the in crease. Representations from the neighbor. ing Counties Sock in crowds, but the military. as well as the civil authorities, bare issued peremptory older' to ollor no one to 'slater the jam. # xi The timid and ansophitticated re hourly 11111770 0 1 about the approcich of la itv of armed rescuers, but Ido not app send that ten of our sober and staid citizens have ever been haunted in their dreams by any goblin Ppir 'u... in the shape of rescuers or Abolition: ists. The following is a copy of a rnuine letter received at our postoffice. The letter is au thentic beyond question, as the main f ac t s can be corroborated by a number of persons how here. I received it but a moment ago, and liable° to lay it berdll'e your readers. It will be read to John Brown this tm,rning. To John Brown, commander of the Army at Harper's Ferry. Charlestown, Jefrer. on co., Va. C.tre of JAilor, Charlestown. Chown:cga, Tennessee, Nov. 20, 1859. John Brown—Sir Althomzli enge.inee is not miss, I confess that I do feel gratified to hear that you were stopped in your fiendish career at harper's Ferry with the loss of your two sons. You can now appreciate my dis tress in Kansas, when you then and there en tered my house at midnight and arrested my husband anti two boys, and took them out of the yard, and in cold blood shot them dead in my hearing. You can't say you done it to free our slaves ; we had nOllO and never ex pected to own one, but hrisismly made me a poor, disconsolate widow, with helpless chil dren. While I feel for your folly, Ido hope and trust you tt ill nmet your Just reward.— Oh, how it pained my heart to hair the dying groans of my husband and Aildren. If this scrawl gives you any consolation you arc welcome to it. N. B.—My son, .Tolin Do% le, whose life I begged of you, is now grown up. and is very detdruus to be at Cluirlstown on the day of Tour execution; would certainly be there if ?de means would permit it, that lie might ad just the rope around your neck, if Guy. Wise would permit. M. D. A party of gentlemen at once subscribed the amount. but the letter being detained. it was ascertained y uung Dllle could nut turive in time. beirA despatch from Harper's Ferry nays: `! All applications fur passes fur civilians to attend within the military lines at the exe cution are refused b y the Governor on the ground that it Iv tild conflict with the military programme. lle snid that no chi linn could. under any- circumstances, be ad mitted within the military lines, the outer one of which would be nearly n mile from the roaffold. Not a word of what John 'Brown may utter, if he 041041 say anything, will, therefore, lie audible to the men forming even the line next the gallAws. Gov. Wise stated the cause of this exclusion of all persons tith er than'the military to be that, in the event of an attempted rescue, an order to fire upon the prisoner will Le given, and that those within the lines. especially ilium: sufficiently near the gallows to hear what Brown OR iy say. would inevitably share his fate. The imposing solemnity of the occasion will ifidi cate to the North the lechag hate un the matter." Gov. Wise's Military Precaution The Patriot Ural Union of We.lnosdny-says: —The newspapers tlbat seek to elevate Ohl Brown into n martyr, and display n spirit cakulated to incite others to engage in resett ing him, are the very 0110 A that ridicule the military prenarntions lif thiv. Wise to prevent a rescue. thece editors had the courage to act on their own teachings they themselbes would march into Virginia at Cie head of a p.bitty and snatch old Itroa n from the gallon s, or perish in the attempt. lot they have no mind to play the part or heroes or Martyr., firi4errinz, to keep their preciono per,ons out of darn4er while they t-ach others that it is noble and !audible to s•ir up in.orrtction in tl o t u eof negro liberty. (lot. Wise is pur suing the proper course in calling out a l a rge military force to proetit an attempt to re•roe Brown, fur we arc satistit 4 that it such pre cautions are not used the impressible con flict fanatics t ill make:mother attack on Vir ginia. 'racy hate 'wen repeatedly and opcn• ly encouraged to do so by the itepublican press, or el•e what weans this outpouring o f sympathy for Drown, the-o laments fur his impending fate, this e,;iistasit denunciation and ridicule of the autln,rittes of 'Virginia be cause thoy t\iii nut spare the "poor child-be reft old mon." The cry nevi-. Tapers that tit-nen:le Govern or Wise no st for his military precautions a;ainst an attempt at rescue aro the very - enc ,, that militate a state of fueling that males , ticli precautions nezossary. It is far better that a large military force shauld prevent the sli4htest effort to rescue Broirn than that the Virginians should abandon themselves to a false security. and thereby invite the inter ference of the Abolition fanatics. Imagina tion cannot foresee the direful consequences of a cotillict around the gnllom s of the prison er. It would be bt.t the I,eginnitog of a e.m- Aict truly irre;-ressible ; the 'precaution (*ken to preieut it is b e part of prodenee and patriotis;„a. When General \Vashington . opt twenty thousand soldiers to march to western Pennsyh aide, and qued the insur section crested by the refusal Of whiskey dis tillers to pa? their tn;c*, sorup of the military authorities of the day, who were much wiser than he was, ridiculed the extensive prepara tion. A large army to march against a few distilleries! But tl.e esti% proved the wis dom of eflciont measure.. The rebels saw the hopelessness of their cause and came to terms immediately. A small force *tight hare been resisted, the rebellion protracted and extended, many liras lost, and the majes ty of the law insulted. Gov. Wise has a pow er to guard against much more potent than whiskey, and no force that he can summon can be out of proportion to the stagtitude of the danger. A late number of the Richmond Enquirer contains an effevtive reply to the charge of cowardice and unnecessary alarm. It says: " We have the most satisfactory assurances from reliable sources that a rescuing party is organizing throughout some of the Northern States. The Executive of Virginia to whom was entrusted the protection of the State and the execution of the laws, oontidered the best security against such an effort was ample pre. partition to meet and repel it. Was there anything in this effort, to protect the how* of the State, meriting the abuse that has bees heaped upon Gov. Wise? And that the peo ple around Charlestown should have beep greatly excited and' highly indignant when they learned that they were sob to be as sailed by lawless desperatiCesi, this any jest cause for chat ging coward's n them ? Are the two sections really ie. that these charges are msdel and m not their continuative urge some act that wit' produce a collision, in order that these &large* of cowardice may 'do repelled in aotestouipbatf The people of South have been tamAbt to regard the confederation as a family of States, and the Northurn-eitietms as Asir brslhses. Are these the best assurances oi affection that our sportkere brethrea ma oitetsk to us 1 Their first rob ear towns and murder Mar tieOpio, andstbes their election Wades tbeeifte abase and falsify our °undue* in net lib...ming she 111111r4ssi &RA L Taoism; Teats,- lobo, al. ikonb barely knee-high to a grasebbpper, alado a kola fbriane fur P. T. Sata*n. awl et 0101 for binundf, la reported to bi about to mote hbnoelf in wedlock with a lady of yqpstli :beOty. The audio** 'Mar abll° 4l oo4lo l . owl it is ispieimilig.l dins elid alp awl iba AMA* tarldely, she lady = r .. Z a t for the emotion . ut lii at Charlestown. T: = •:---- -- ---_ saws! et audire ILie. 14161 L OHM 0* UNA* tt sepe4or Oawei et 161,1 t*sdsf bb residents,in that sky, hey. awning week from me snub of paralysis. swelehled several days previesefi. Nis ressias were interred in th•Onagrassitasal Burying-ground at Wash isg toe Judge Lee will be recollect .d by oar aids's. as a participant inie opening eeretsonies of the Gettysburg Rail road last winter, and as having made one of the happiest speech.. on the occasion of the visit of the Baltimoreans to the College. Ile wasp gentleman of fine cultivatiln and rare social qualities, and his death will cause a • void not easily filled in that community. We esteemed him living, and lament him dead. Judge Lee was born in Virginia in 1803, and was connected by birth with the Lees of the Revolution. lie graduated with honor at the University of Virginia, in company with his Intimate friend, Hon. R. M. T. Ilunter, U. S. Senator, acid other distinguiel ed Virginians. He leaves a widow, son and daughter, who have the condolence of many a sympathizing heart. Wears requested to call the attention of Teachers, Directors, and the public generally, to the meetingcf the Adams County Teachers' Institute, to take place at New Oxford, on Thursday, Friday and Saturday next. Mr. WICKERSHAM, the Principal of the Lancaster Cotlkity Normal School, will deliver an Ad dress on Friday evening, to which the public are invited, as well as to all the sessions of the Institute. An interesting time is expect ed throughout. Tickets over the Railroad from Octtyiburg to New Oxford and return, sill be issued during the three days mentioned, at GO cents each. M,ll tr.% DoTLE The slaughter-house of Mr. ritzyEr D. SWZINZr was entered on Friday night week. and about 50 pounds of beef and a quantity of puddings suko therefrom. About the same time a nunitcr of pieces of meat were taken from the slatvzhter.house of Mr. dont: Dowwts. A barrel and a quarter of flour was curried off from the premises of Rev. 1)r. BAlA:urn • few nights ago. Our citizens must endeavor to secure their premises. The Conniving persona were, nn Monday lust, re-efected officers of the Bank of Get tysburg fur the ensuing ynnr :—President, azoitus - Stropr.; Cashier, T. D. C.tasoN; and. Teller, JNo. H. We observe that quite a number of addi tional Shade Trees, (English Lindens and Silver Maplue,) have been placed along our street!, during the last week. Right. Let " the good work go bravely on." A half dozen more are required in the Diamond.— Those just set out were, we believe, procured at the Nursery of Mr. IVr. Waicur, near Peteral.nrg. 4 Mr. Samuel Herbst, of this borough, bas purchased the farm of Mr. George W. Shrivel.. iu Cumberland township, for $3,420, cold,. Mr. Cornelius !lough telin has sold Lis farm of 94 acres, in Monntpleasant township, to Mr. lludisill, of York comity, for $2,000, cash —and purchased the farm of Mr. C. MA`lenn Current+, in Cumberland township, for $3,- 000„, cash. Mr. Joseph Hill line sold his farm in Stem- Lon township-250 acres, to Mr. Jacob Wertz. of Lancaster county, for $12,500 cash—sso per acre. Stertkas arse•. On Saturday week },•ung mnn wns al rested At New Osford on the ebqrge of steql jug sixty dollars from a fellow workman.— lie was taken before Justice 314:Sh erry end iu default of security committed to jail to email his trial at the nest term of Court. This disease has prevailed w nn extent a 1• must alarming in different section* of our county. It seems to bo more fatal among children than with adults. In Fairfield and neighborhood quite a number hate died. Owe family (Mr. Turner's,) lust fire children from this fell destroyer,—their ages ranging /rout 15 years dawn. ire..y-IV gr. B. AIeCLaLLAN, EA., wag sw,,rn iu and re.entered upon his Julies ns DI-tries Attorney on lthntlity lust. His office is on Middle street, next to the Court air ° llEN Rl' W. WATSON', Eq., son of Rey. Dr. Watson, formerly P.mtor of rho Presby terian Cherub in this place, hus been admit ted to aka practice of Law in thalCourts of Northumberland county,- and has re/noted from his home in Milton, whero he read luw with ,cx. ; Gur. l'Lllock, to Williamsport, which will hereafter be his residence. 'By a recent fire in the immediate yr cinity of 13alti,more, Mr. Ozo. Ketw.s, krt.rlos to many of our citizens, lost twsalpeig7.l cows and two horses—all burnt. A horse belong ing to Mr. Joys Socs, of this county, (Mr. father-ill:low,) was also consumed. The loss by this devilish act of ineendiarism fills heavily upon' Mr. K., who is illy able to boar it. He is a very worthy man, and many here will sympathise with him in being thus suddenly deprived of the accumulations of years of labor. No punishment could be Me severe for the wretch who fired the build ing. Ib7" On Saturday evening week, a Railroad Meeting was held at Waynesboro', which was well attended and money enough sub scribed to make the necessari survey fur the contemplated Railroad from -Gettysburg to that place. More D4claintere.—Dr. 8. 0. 'lowa has published a letter disclaiming all knowledge of the Haipeee Ferry outbreak. 8o one afr ter another whom the Meads efslarery Iftith being connected with the movement, Ololoi t as it, till the whole are pretty neatly Oitissepto—Nantun 2liegreph. And While thus !' disclaiming all Itiowl. lap" of the matter, Dr. Bowe' was riaking thinks far Canada to avoid being called u a wigwam to disclose his knowledge of ill— :Which shall we believe in this ease, the Do e . tees Words or bla meat flossy* be karrip nothing about the withtew, yet he me sway avowedly to itvehetelUng 141.16 he hams And the dieohlasre at albite are entitled to little if soy more worst ? /trot/7 miattnal disdain's," but nelthei Premeeler. lodge *juror eanaiders that eallieinat M 111 , armige Win Misr trial mad peakeimmet. 44 1 ! 1 !P1i.w -116 " 1 "4 441 vid eslloako a te . Ms," on *At ring, . mono , Illraspiliss's (kin beceetbst 27th. iJooaks4h,.X'irelkl.rla Trochees , Institute. Tie/tr. Ite , .r I retell,. Ilbsde Trees. •ak. •f Prepertr. Putrid *ere Throw. M Z; alleettees. is Warned meeting of the eitiseste of the fasettable to toe organisation of a ass Company, was held at the Court-hotrod, on kbonday evening leis, the atteadince being lame and aneonraging. The several Com mittees appointed to ascertain the probable number of full Planters that would be used immediately upon the completion of the .works, reported that they had asoertained that about 171 burners could be relied on, independont of 1113 College and Seminary, where probably 00 additivesl burners would be WWI. Prof. Mu lIIINIZIRO made some interesting remits, based upon the statistics of a large nr of 43as Works in operation in this State and elsewhere, going to show that not only is Gas-light mere economical for the etmannflebat that the Stock pays a hand some per centage upon the investment--rang ing from 6 to 30 par tent. On motion of Prof. JAcona, a committee was appointed to draft a Charter for the proposed Company. Committee—Meesro. M. Jacobs, D. 111Xoe aughy, 11. J. Stable, D. Wills and R. G. McCreary. After adopting 's form of Sub bcriptions to be taken, Messrs. 11. Wentz, S. It. Russell, Jas. F. Fahnestock, J. B. Dan ner, C. Horner, D. McConaughy and 11. J. Stahle, were appointed a committee to solicit subscriptions of stock—the shares to be $5O each, payable in five equal instalments, two months apart—the first payment to be made on the Ist of May next. "The Gettysburg orCompany " was adopted ns the name for organization. On motion of 11. J. Fa usit melt, a committee was appointed to collect facts and information, and report throngh the public prints. Committee—Prof. Mulden• berg, 11. J. FahnestocV, Prof. Jacobs, A. D. Buehler, M. Eichelber;:er, D. Ziegler, T. D. Carson, (kn. Arnold, D. A. Bueltkr, John Houck, R. G. Harper, R. McCurdy, Joe. Gil- i ben and Cen. Little. On motion, /?esared, That the several committees be! requested to enter upon the discharge of ' their several duties immediately. Adjourned, to meet on Monday evening,, Dec. 12th, to hear Reports of Committees. J. B. DAXNER, Pres't PR. Ituasti.t., Seey. Communicated Isirresehig Wombs. The undersigned were appointed treornmii, tee, at a meeting of the citizens ofGettysburp, , held on Monday evening last, to collect and publish in the papers POMO facts on the suls• ject of gas-light. Wti desire therefore to pre sent some statistic 4, fur the information of our people, upon this subject with special ref erence to three particulars, the pr fils of gas companies, now existing in the United States, the econosny of the light, and the necessary rxpenses connected with Mc fis 31 introduction n 1 it ink public edifices, and private dictllinya. The present article is intended to chow, quite briefly, the pr (Jill of gas crnnpanies. A e have in our possessi‘m a Copysuf the American Gas-Light Journal, fur Oct. 1P4.19, in which are given statistical tables of ::97 gas companies, now incorporated in the Unit ed States. Three tables embrace full partic ulars of the amount of their chartered capital, the price of shares, the A-Illation of the gas 'Lenient, the number of private meters, price of gns for 1000 cubic feet, and the anneal divi dends. From these reliable tables, wo base compiled the following results, upon the last particular abut e mentioned, the annual Pro fits. Of the shore 207 companies, 135 returned to the editors of the above paper, the annual percentage of pr..6t•, and this is n sururnary of them : Eight of these companies declared dividends of let.:; tha n 6 per dot. Thirty-two of them 6 ir Nineteen ~ I lt Forty ,t 8 ts- Forty " 10 " Eleven e 12 " One II /3 -" Oun ri 15 " One " 30 " -- , The last e'f these was the entapany at East eenwich, it. 1.. with a capital of 411.20, .population of 3000, and on)) 100 pri►nte me ters. Thus much with reference to the United States in general. We hare also looked at the subject in a less extensi►e aspect, bow the matter ►toads with reference to our own State. Jr appears frutn these same table•, that there are 43 incorpor ated gas companies in Penns} kania, in the large cities and smaller towns. The moat pri minent of these places are Philadelphia. Pittsburg. Allegheny. Reading, Lancaster, Uarrisburg, York, Chstubeohurg, Carlisle, Letwoon. Pottsville, Lewistown, lluntingdon, Easton, 'Norristown, At. The following are some of the farts with reference to r Air of these, chiefly places of small population : lbeinatfe Price par anasial Ps% lietiira. ltxu• AL fir, mut. Pittsburg, 60,000 2624 411 50 10 Allegheny, 25,000 000 3 09 . 8 Ailento**, 5,000 300 - 950 y Bellefonte, 3,500 105 ' 400 4 Bethlehem, 2.000 207 380 1 Catastinqua, 1,000 105 400 10 Euston, 6,000 657 3CO 8 . . Erie, 10,000 300 300 7 Honesdale, 3,500 180 400 6 Iluntingdon, 2,000 lii7 356 6 Lewistown, 3,000 180 '3 10 6 Norrbtowu, 350 3IS IF Williamsport, - 237 380 8 Pottsville, 10,000 225 330 4 York, 630 TOO 6 Lancaster, 620 300 S • Reading, 6 It will be seen that but two of the above companies &eland • dividend of less than 6 per oses.;all the others have made 6,7, 8 and MO 10 per eem, and with reference to Lau- motet; the committee %as been informed shy aokonbrdmiere as annual 4vidend of 8 per Mat. lailr indeed their pipes out of the e We thit . .k therefore that these cannot be gab/rayed, and we bare no hesita tion In saying, that with, an soonomical oom struction of the works, th• stock owned oar own *isms and prudent management, the company which is to be organized in this Plaoe, can m 31411104 6, and may hare it in their power to &Ware annual divides& of oven 10 per eitot. The economy of the light, will be the inliest of another eanunnnicalion. the nest or • ing week : - P. A. lechlenburgi Geo. Arnold, 11. J. Tahnesteek, - A - . 11.14mi14w, Jae- Um*Nr..rseator. 0 . !Parr , D. A. Buehler, B. Ihasulty, IL itiebelboriPs. Jas. Geo. Limb, . T. D. flPou. ohs bid of Geary sad William (bat. son. ller the marder of J. B. Chrosiger. Sees lest week. The ems gimes to **jury AI leetimPettlieil " I " - etillte ok wia 'lfigMagaSY thah of • 4 . • i me very Mei the fetal Amalie,. '+~ .. .~;e tae 1=11: * ' tar. . ilhildlien - cionlaids losieltel'....- Tit" It'2wf *eit°,°4l.slb", much yois sarri - mtbew *pi deed a shuns that: e'ge 'Ai starai i . .. woman shoulti** gees scud by her 1111110 . Z ait band,—by $ ma, hi?. who ficallutislia . b• a . Christian. That's jest She watia40 4 ......., man's all love anti :devotion emit hi has hitched himself to some confiding wensm's apron string*, and then, lo ! is turns out, ten 13 one, that he's as eold-boarted as an iceberg and as ill-natured and selfish as a Hottentot. But what's.the use talking ;--one might as well speak to a statue as complain to is deaf and dumb husband. Bein' as I'm s peaceable woman I don't mean to fly into a passion ; but I'll just inform you in ties., Mr. Doodlo, that I can't nor won't suffer lark goings WI in this house any longer. It's only three year, come Christmas that you promised old Drake, the parson, that you would take me fur better or worse, and already it appears you bare taken me only fur worse. But if you think' you are going to make yourself master over Susannah Doodle so soon you'll find yourself greatly disappointed. If you had a spark of manliness about you* or had any.care f or pour wife's comfort or happiness, you would n't loaf about the kitchen, in tie way of the servants, when you might he doing so many chores about the house. Instead of going to your club meeting last night to debate Cho question "scolding wires ak ys. smoky chim neys," it would hare heertench more credi table to you to bow staid at home and strept your own chininey and saved your wifo the misery of a smoky kitchen. It's well for you. Mr. Doodle, that you have a pious woman to deal with. It isn't every woman that would suffer you' to carry on at your club about smoky chimneys and never once sweep your own flue for six months together to the con stant danger of sooty dinners. Bat you say you intend to sot fire to it and born it out the first rainy day that comes. We'll see about. that. If a man of 3 our age and siso.has no better manners titan all that comes to, I shall Le under the painful necessity of teaching you otherwise. You must not think, 0 Doo dle, that you are going to put me to a whole hour's scrubbing the fire-place Just because you are either too good or too lazy to play the sweep; and, besides, I want you distinct ly to understand that I consider myself sore- reign ruler of this house, and 4' My right there i• none to dispute." May be you are afraid of spoiling your clothes by creeping up the chimney ? I can assure you, howmer, that you need bare no fears on that sc..)re; for in all my born days I never yet saw another such an incorrigible sloven as you have been since you prevailed on tub to become Mrs, Doodle. Indeed, I should be altogether flu:grated if Mrs. Trim and her tidy husband ahnuLl c dl in this evening and find you in such a beggar-like plight. But yi.ti say you can't afford it; oh ! yes, I know very well. That's just what you always say. I'm a'most ready to dig with vexation at the thought tint I may yet one day be thrown upon the public fur support and end my days in a pour-house. But you needn't think, Mr. Doodle. that you are going to make, anything :ape by your stubborn milenee. I know very well that you would secretly rejoice at my death, and for no earthly reason but that you might make love to some saucy chit of a boarding school Miss. lint I'm determined to spoil all your nice plarm,(or you ;—if I die on this side of threescore and ten it chant be my fault.— It's really too bad jbattbe law does n't make a man provide for a decent wife in a dement way. Mr. Doodle—(laving asidethe paper he had been readspg,)--N% hat, was that you said, dear? WILL 'limper. Itir In liiezas, on the 3 tit inntant, remarka ble murder was oommittr , ll. Two boys killed a man fur testifying in CJurt against their mother, and Ain lrecaunr he was the principal witness relied on by their stepfather in a suit fur divorce from their ruother. They w la id the man, %vim war a seli,w,l teacher; and felled him to time ground, intlicring -mortal wounds. 7'h Cltakeel In Peofh..--A slave of Wm. Engin. Erg residing near Liekarille. Freder ick county, Md., was found dead on Tuesda7 morning of lust creek, in Jr. John F. Washe s mill, having Leen crushed to (tenth by a large %di( el. a eighing upwitrds of 800 pounds, fall ing upon him. It is ruppromd he entered the mill fur the purpose of stenling. • • .• - •'n relation to the failure of .11r. Wash ington; the proprietor of the Slonnt Vernon estate. it is stated that he allowed hie notes for large suansio go to protest in Chicago; but he claims that smite Chicago 40 opera tor tried to swindle him, and that he refused to pay certain noted which he had given in order to test the legal liability. Early in the Feld•—Col. Alfred M. Wilson, of Waukington county. Arkansas, has ciotn7 issinewl so sump the Northern district of that Sate fur the Congress of 1801. The Tenernblc Father Hersey preached. its WWII. E. Church at Purtsmuuth, Va., uq 7 1 , 1a.0 Niax3r..eto- GATTVESVIIG—SATORDA2 WM. Partin. Win! 4 DO to 6 OQ ti:l iio noigr...,.—...-... , ..--,.....3 50 to a Tii Wh0tt........ ..... ..—............1 10 to 1 20 Red Wboat—..--.....- —1 o 5 to 1 IQ C0r.........00,.. .. ...........•........... 70 or Bye.••••.***••iqUilime." " """ -- 70 (mu ...... ............ ...„,-.. . . • - - .." .. wn. 2 li , aokstrest........ „1.••••••••••••• Backwitest Nod. „„••••-•-•-••••••••*--1 00 f10011...„.....,•••••••••••.......4 5111 to '4 15 Thootky /141•11.0-4. ........ ..........—. - 176 Mx ellooti41......„•••••••••.«•••••••• 1 v:t ... - -- "- - --4.--si - r.i........ • 64 , of Parts.„ • .„.. • 4'20 how vokaill,per'beg....„.„-•••••• . _26. , • 4; ALAITI2IOBIr---4444morsam - Pi ear,.... • ..,.............•...• ............«. 6 :4.:.: trtilli:111" ST ..WlOBl 5l .".1 ~ ,f , ' ••••••••••ao ****** ••• • ••.,,;• 44 • Ti. 12 Ur 1 46 .••••••64,11•44b0rig., ',mutt, to: 56 to 45 (tf er.. at Seed ~...,.....«....„. 500 so 525 Trili"/ 1 500 4 ...mk.' * Z . t . t ,,, t , ! :.. ..... -195 to 2 - 24). Ulf 4195415 1 _- IPIPI MIA 14.4.:* .:. ... .......... .. :.. 6 0044 4is 1 away . 1 ..";., ...........,-- •-...-...•.. ...... ... ••••• ••41. 1 2 00 Witco whskey— ....... •".... - 2640" V; 010120 1 1 111119155, per:15511 , 1,”,—;• , ' 62 * _, - . NAMOVB3--TmoilllAB i!Acf. - flour, *C Thy: how } 1i 1811 , 221 Okorlir .4 76 . :2 00 6 60 FlOr r aillin• 1 h 1 4 4 . : 1 • . W.4 r • . -1 16/4 7 -7'..-.m.::‘...- • „. 1„.... , !;.•44,--;4:;:.! N yM , . .4•40 . spro . ai *6* . ws».».w OM. .0 SOO NNI•4I •O. ilet• OW *ego •••• • 00 For ti ii . Op tl: MB