BURG CH'R CLE TiEWIS II. C. IIICKOK, Editor. 0. N. WORDEN, Pristes. L-ii'icm'l!C PflliOXICLE sjW on FKWA Y morning at Lewitburi Union county, renntyivama rnn..i .viper year. artnaHy in adranee 1.7i. if paid williiu three months; fiOli if pai.i within a jr: h nm p:ui """"-.t; mlr numbers. SulwriplioM fcir ax moothsor less, to ' r : . . .i - . . t t. t l in aaranee. iiwiiuinmnu ipi.iuiut wuu PuMi'tier, event when the year in paid up. IKBnnnn hnd.mely inerlJ at SO emta per e.ittsre, one week, $1 lour wei-ks, $o a vear: two squares, 1 iurau muoUi.,,7 t.r year. Ma'muiiie a4verU- DK'iit!. n4 eseeediut: one fourth or roluoin. $HJ a year. Job WOltK an ra....l adrerUmint. to be paid when hsnd.-d in or delivered. Coeucxli-snox milK-ltea on all MWyeel or penerai inte- rest n-rf within the rati?'' of wtrty or aertnrinn c.nl.-st. All letter tnurt mm eort-paid. acromi.anli4 by me p-nl e-ldres of the wriu-r, to receive attention. v-Tli,e tflattii? PXrluMTi'ly ti the KliUirial IVirtuient. to lie di rxted to HiTMtY O. HirK.nt. K. Hldtir ami Uiofie oa Jin t. . WoRbtjc. Vultintirr. OFFICE (for the present) in Beaver's block on X. 3d Su, firsl fl.ior, 4th door from comer. Correindvncr of the Lewicburg Chronicle. Faibvlat, Wis., May 17, 1S"3. In traveling through Iowa, Illinois and Wisconsin, I find everywhere evidences of a most backward and unfavorable spring. 0f tuose wh0 cater tne .ppctite of the The farmers are at least one month later Jruukard and the glutton, is surely visited with their wort than usual. This is owing Uj,on themselves or their children, to the almost iucessant rains with which jjt ngci-aLle in life, and most loath we have been visited for four weeks past, me and horrid in death, is the "wageV' But few have finished sowing their oats, 0f J.iccnciousness. The slave of sensuality w hile many have not a foot of corn ground suffers in every stolen enjoyment, and sac j loughed yet. rifiecs the purer pleasures of honorable The farmers of this region are turning ovc flir a iife of low intrigue and fears, their attention to raising grass, oaU anil Th(J Avar:c;ous mm ;s a cantor consu. corn, and to the feeding of stock, which m;ng j.jg own vitai8) anj himself to pay. them much better than raising wheat, ,jcatn to accumulate what generally proves t,r indeed auy other grain, for market. a source of evil hia neirA Stock coimiiaiids an extraordinary high , We might cnumerate a long catalogue price, and it) in great demand. This is 0f which bring their own punishment, partly owing to the California emigration, but ,.1 witn a ging,e iHustraUon. and partly to the immense emigration , Oppression is surely a sin, and of all coining to this part of the west. Good 0ppre8Sion the making of one being the horses and cattle are as high here as any- s'avc 0f another is the greatest, where east ' An(i it ig fuoiish as wicked. For Slavery I have observed within four weeks that cnta;is JuJolencc and extravagance, gives hundreds of waggons, with their loads of tlic rein to evcry jjrutai passion, and pro emigrants, etc., origiually intended for duccg povcrtyt effeminacy, and premature California, are stopping in Illinois and deMy Our Southern States are naturally Iowa. The recent accounts from the gold bwse(i witu better resources for creat- regious not being as flattering as formerly, many who were ready to start, who had and gcnial cilnate ;n niineral and manu 8 .Id off all their property here, bought fiic,ur;ng f:lcnitics, in early and vigorous their waggons, teams, Ac., Lave given it seUicmerjt) they had evcry advantage. But up, and have settled down again, satisfied Low wiJe iho contrast a8 to their prosper that the chances for bettering their condi- ;,y . The pree have far oulstrippcd the tions in California, would not compensate shxe in every eemcut 0f prosper- them for the sacrifices they make to get itJ anJ pnysicai. there. I am of opinion that there will be j Thb 8pcaJf of Tie 0y very little emigration to the gold regions jMne and ajs0 0f Jl Exceeding Si'-1 next spring from this region. : fuIneu fy tSU The reward of Holiness The appearance of the winter wheat, "u Life The wages of Sin is Death. O! north of llock lliver, does not indicate ya ;mmortal beings who serve your worst more than a half crop. Though the weather enemy, Strike! strike for better for a month has been very favorable, and W A0S ; The wages of Sin is Death it may yet " come out." ! jt the gift of God is eternal Life through Railroads in Illinois are all the lage. fbrist our Lord." Sigma. There is scarce a prominent point on the j . , . Illinois or Mississippi rivers, at which a "I would BOt Live alway." protected railroad does not terminate. And they will be built, too. Our experience in railroads in Illinois; is very limited ; so our country. It was written by a Protes far, however, money invested ia them pays tant Episcopal clergyman, Muhlenrero a much better interest than in any other by name, and first published in the Phila cRterprise. It would be a source of won- ' dclphia Episcopal Recorder, about the year ucruieu. w aa iier oiau to a.-u me T A A . a A . A U aI. arriral of Ute eastern emigrant trains of 4V 01 1 A il.. I . u vuicago, u co nee w .u.u.c . .. daily and lies, to lo- ; nsed that litmrly arriving with tbeir faiuilii rati; iu tut: fM. hcc ?u. ii im:u tua. a. aI. . a ir. . i ak..w ; . m ,i many are couwrntoty t-oui. worn taai, uu j iucii auaciMx.- ta awmij w ticcd. But we are vet more surprised to ' find them all arriving here among us, to .i . e . , . rri the amount of two thousand daily. They (itay hcrC one III trllt, Scatter in tllC Uiornill'', go their ways, and are never beard of O - ' agaiu. Vie knOW not whence they Come, and take no note of where they go. Yours, Oakland. ; Tor the Lewisburg, Chronicle. Strikes for much better Wages. Tfiat cvery one should receive a just reward for his works,whcther they be good or evil, is not less a Divine than a human law. To regulate payments for services rendered, is one of the most intricate pro blems of life one most difficult to settle. iut mere arc J'OIULS in IU1S question Ol , wages, which can be fully determined. It is asserted by the great Lawgiver that The tco'jes of Sin is Dradi. Look around you my readers, and see if you can not trace the operations of this law generally open but sometimes mysterious and apparently fontradictory in all the events of life. Look on the broad Map of the World, and tell me which are most happy the most Christ-likc, or the least Christ-like nations. Look again at communities, and you will find that as a general rule "The wages of sin is death," and that Christian families and individuals are in the long run most happy and most prospered. And yet, how prone is fallen Man to toil with ardor unquenchable and servitude hopcAcsi, for him whose "wages is death" eternal and degradation temporal I How few of ns resolutely and whole-heartedly labor for Him who promises "eternal life" through faith in lIiB Son ! We will take for cnniplcs those who from their hearts never love or m r..l 11 Jl r. mcir creator, j-cc to what f.,llics,to what VHif. to wiiat aim iK's; want cf ucveticii to ! our great and good Parent loads millions ( ui our tuiiuw men, wucrc ciu rciguo iu every heart. And in Christianised laud, the same want is expressed by the despcr- ate ajjQgsa 0f heart the overweening . l i 1 - r f i r . i . vanity anu exayaiiuu ui ecu iu iuu ruuiu ' , - , ,. , . , jrou tue icuucu BUUDuaiui nuivu civu . - . . . agoniZCS to SUpprCSS Conscience tUC tirC- , . . - . , . . less activity and tremulous energy which - ..k l,...! Seeks OUt nCW Ways to SHOW a hatred Of : in fli rasA nf norsnrm pvnn nf i 1 J J X -- cultivated minds. "Ah me, the laureled erert that MnrJer rears Illnotl nurwl. and watr-d by the v itlow'a tears, S ?m not TO foul, so tAinttsl. or ao dn-a.1. As waves the night-shade 'round the Sn-ptie head.' Idleness or Laziness is one of the most heinous of sin3. Its "wages" are cunui, discontent, lassitude, disease, want, and temptation to every evil. The "wages" of Intemperance are seen cvery ,ay among us. And the punishment 1 nc,g tban the ;ortbern in fertile soil rTI.Io rinis)iol nnotienl rnmnnsitinn mar I be found in most of the Hymn Books of : a w . 1 1 lal ij. it appearcu anonymously, nut nas wou ita way to the popular heart. The . t .Ml I . autDOr stm preacnes to a congregation in u.u.. v..S.t-S-UU sixth Avenue, New York, and also edits The Kcamjrlknl Catholic, in a late issue of which he publishes the following revised - i i i t 1 ni n-iiirii iin nuiiiisiips im? ioiiiwiiit rnvisi'ii copy oi me original imu, ron.s " I wcnld not Lire alway." Job ii. 16. . ,. . Iir. .,.T.,T ; , no, l ii not linger, when bidden to go. !Tbe4aysof onr pilgrimage granted us hers, Ak J b ,.,r fllI1 f iU rliw Would 1 ebrink from the path which the prophets of CoJ, I tKT'T ""iTl"""' k hue brethren and friends are all bat-nili home, Ui spirit uublesnd, o'er the earth woalil I roam? i f would not live alw.iT T ak nr.t to .Ltv where trtu aJVr storm Hm darjt oVr the wy; j V fcrrr, making fur i-ee, we but borer arouud, j Like tb ismtrisurh'n bini, aitd n tvitting to ttinl ; I W lit-re liupe, when site paiatu ber gay how In lb tur, Lear iu brill more to fede In the night of depir; ; A iid joy's flfetinK antrl ne'er f4iet glad ray, Save Hie gloom of the plumage LU&t bears hiin away. I woulJ not lire alway tiro IVtOred fcy rin, ' Temptation wilLeut, and corruption within; I In a moment of strength, if I rwTer the chain, j Sratre tlte victory a mine ere I'm captive again. E'en the rapture of pardon is mingled with fears, A ..4 msw ivt n than karri wirnr with rial nit-tlt t- ss.rW . The -stinl trump oalls for jubilant sonjrs, llut m spirit her own "aiiotu" prolongs. I would not lire alwajr no, wrlrorae the tosih; Sides Jesus has lain there, I dread not its (loom; Where lis deiiroed to sleep, I'll too bow my head, Oh, peaaful the .lumbers on that ballowwl bed. And then the glad dawn soon so follow that night, U hen tha sunrise of glory shall beam on my sight, U ben the full matin song, as Uie sleepers arise To shout in tbs Braining, shall peal through the skies. Who, who would lire alwuj? sway from his God, Awsr from jam Heaven, that blissful abode, When tha rirers of pleasure How o'er th bright plains, And the noontide of giorj eternally reigns; w bere the ssiots of ail ages in harmooy meet. Their Savior and brethren transported to grartj While the song of alraHan eiultingly roll, And the smile of U lard it Use feast of the anal. That heavenly mask! what b it I bear? The notes of the harpers ring sweet in the air; And see, soft unfolding, those portals of gold I The King all arrayed, hi Ills beauty behold! O give me, O giro me the wings of a dove! I-1 me hasten nry flight to those manshms ahore? Ay, lis now that my soul on swift pinions would soar, And in eodary bid earth adieu evermore. ".Hon. Robt G. Campbell, formerly a member of the Assembly, from New York city, and latterly private secretary to cx Presidcnt Fillmore, died at his residence ion Saturday evening He was Lut 23 years cfac. LEWISBURG, UXIOS To th. Editor of the Lewi.. Chronicle: The followins lines on the death of a child, were sent in by a young lady from the West, and are supposed to be original. If deemed worthy, please copy, and oblige A Buffalo! Patron. A TRIBUTE TO THE MEMORY OF EMMA. The fairest Hewers of earth niiud fade, Chilled by the witherlii); liresth AimI mantled hr the dnrknome phade Of the winged "Angel Unth." The lore!iel f-rms too ofl diwlnM His rHIIInjr. Matine powers: The hrieliteftt eyes tile WNinest closs On this raiu world of ours. Heath marked the flower yon railed your own, The prize he lored full well. Anil thought to fit it for that lmnw Where spittkys seraphs dwell. Ton pure to bloom beneath the Sales, 8iih innoreDce iu found, And Ihilj has gently snapped the ties l bich tiie young spirit bound. Mid Klnries br;ht, that lored one now Whrre. wrealidoe flowrets are Entwined rmnd the SVH)ars brow, Shines erer sweetly there; And, hsppy, tunes a golden lyre In her fhir. Miasful home. With tliat hriislit band, the ann?l choir. Around the dnxsliiig throue. Ifow dear the thought, and sweet th hops, That you may meet her. there. Where eares are o'er, and life is past, And in her triumph share! Lot ISA. Under all N. P. Willis' literary affec tation and dandyism, there lies a vein of strong common sense, that crops out oc casionally in quite refreshing style. The following paragraphs from a recent number of the Hume Journal is in point Ed. Curon.J Out-Doors at Idlewfld. In the making of a shelf-road around one of the precipices of Idlewild (some thing like the way to a hanging-bird's nest when we began, but, at present, the winding and easy access to the cottage from the Newburg side) we have had a larger amount of tcaU-lating than has en tered into my previous out-door experience; and I hare taken a lesson in it, of which perhaps, I can say an instructive word or so. My friend the builder will not take the alarm, I hope. I would not rashly invade his art and mystery. I refer, not to mason-work proper such as is done with trowel and hammer, plumb-line and pirit-level but to such laying up of loose stones by the hand as is done for common day-wages, though usually by the smarter class of laboring men. My study of the matter was by the way of understanding the preferences of two of my " hands" who seemed equally in dustriousone wishing to work by the day, however, and the other to be paid by the rood. As they were both old at the business, I thought it must be rather a difference of natural character than of skill or profit in either case, a difference worth understanding and, as the weather was of the kind that throws us upon ourselves for amusement, I put on my mittens, and, ias the fanners n " hoId" with mJ i men. Our way, that morning, lay through a group of large hemlocks ; and, by the in exorable level of carriage-road grading, the noblest tree was undermined on the ; ,, , T iha , , mAtr,.t, buid a wj, wouJ hwlJ tfl frcsh ! 1 I Kh mce More ,ronnd t, d fe :carth onc More aror,nd the ,T f),r first exper; Iaing ,t not dccpcn ! . , , . . ., mcnt at stonc- ' . . . I the old tree, pcruaps to nave uone tuis j lf but I shall enjoy it more from enjoy having made sure of my welcome to it One is a better judge of most work by having had some little apprentice-slap at it, and, by what I found difficult or easy in my own handling of the material, I soon began to see the difference between my friends By-tliCiday and By-the-job. By-thc-day worked much the hardest. He lifted two or three stones before he got bold of the right one, held this one between his knees while he decided where lie would lay it, and twisted it round two or three times after he had got it in place. By-the- job was a little longer looking at the fresh cart-load before making his selection, but the taking the stone up, and setting it in its place, was usually but one movement ; or, he gave it a turn in the air with his upward lift, brought the proper face of it to the front with one effort of mind and hand, and, once dropped into the line of the wall, (hat stone was done with. If it was not a fit, (though it generally was) he had given it its proportion of look and lift7 and the next one must remedy the defect prop or overlay it He built as good wall, on the whole, as the other man, seemed to be taking it very easy in com parison to the other's hard work, and got on a trifle faster. The difference, I saw, consisted in thoroughly deciding on evcry movement before it was made, making it promptly, and wasting no time in re con sidering. If I had been a casual observer, I should have thought By-thc-day was the more industrious and better' man. By-the- job would be my preference, after thus seeing them closer. Andtalking of working men I was amused, a few days since, with a contrast as to treatment vf vlztadrs, between two who were workin'' for the same wages ) worth dt:ciibin2. lecauso it illuitMtC6i COUNTY, PENN., FRIDAY, JUNE 3, 1853. with some truth the difference between the eommon American mind and the common European. We were preparing to throw our bridge across Idlewild brook. A quiet little narrow-shouldered American, with my horse hitched tor a drag, was drawing stone for the road-way beyond, and a broad shouldered fellow from the old country was di;o;inn earth to fill in. As I stood CO o looking on for a moment I saw a thrifty little cedar, whieh had been partly uproot ed ; and, requesting the digger to set it upright, and shovel some dirt around it, I walked on. Returning a few minutes af ter, I saw my cedar erect enough, but its roots exposed. " Why didn't you cover it with dirt?" I asked. "Sure, Sir," said sturdy Great Britain, with a look of most honest regret that he had not been able to oblige me, " you told me to diovct it, and I had no shovel." He was working with a tpath ! It was not ten minutes after this that I saw my little Yankee dollar-a-day unhitch ing the horse from the drag. " What are you going to do?" I asked. "Why, there is no more stone to be got on thb side," he said, " and that carpenter don't seem to be coming along to fix this bridge. I thought I'd step over and get What's-his-name's oxen and snake them timbers up, and then haul 'em across with a block and tackle, and timbers over, and put on the planks. I could draw stone from the other side, then." Here was a quiet pro posal to do what I looked forward to as quite a problem, even for a professed me chanic. I had bespoken a carpenter foi the job, three weeks before. There stood the two abutments six feet high and twenty-five feet apart, and a stream swollen by a freshet and hardly fordable on horseback rushing between ; and how those four im moveable timbers, thirty feet long, were to be got across, without machinery and scaffolding to span this chasm of twenty- &ve lect, 1 was not engineer enough to sec. 3 n,ong tDC " chores that a man with j common gumption could do, easy enough," however, as my little friend said, and it was done the next morning, with block and tackle, rollers and levers he going about it as naturally and handily as if he had been a bridge-builder by profession. There being no higher price, for day-labour with hit amount of " gumption" and day- labor such as the other man's, who could not conceive how a spade might be used row ahovel, shows hojr common a thing ingenuity is, in our country, and bow i characteristic of a Yankee it is to know no oostacic. thought It was worth recordi Some Interesting Statistics. There are in the appendix to a report of the Secretary of the Treasury, lately communicated to the Senate, on the Colo nial and Lake Trade of the United States, several important and useful tables of the general trade of the country. The sub stance of some of these we shall give in a condensed form : Our average imports from 1S21 to 1826, specie included, were 830,878,848; fromlWali 1848 to 1852, they were $18l,9GGJ79, 1 .1 . .1 I .1 1 . LI t snowing uiai tuey nave more man uouDieu in thirty years. Our average imports from ! 1821 to 1826 were 69,43'J,785, and from! 1848 to 1852. 175.9 18.3G0. In 1821 the: tonnage of the United States was only 1,298,958 tons, in 1852 it was 4,138,441 tons, showing that it has more than trebled in thirty years. Next to Great Britain we have a larger tonnage than any nation in the world, and in five years, at the present rate of increase, we shall surpass Groat Britain. The value of our animal products ex ceeds three thousand millions of dollars, of which only about $170,000,000 arc sent abroad, leaving $2,S30,000,000 to be con sumed at hone and interchanged among the S tates. A t leact $000,000,000 is thus interchanged in the glorious free-trade sys tem which prevails between the States of the Union. How small, after all, is our foreign trade, about which we legislate so much, and for the defence of which, and the collection of the duties upon it we spend so much, compared with the inland business I The total debt of the several States in 1851 was $201,541,024, which was less, by some millions, than it had been during the nrcvious ten Tears. The value of property assessed in the same States was $5,983,149,407, the real value being, how ever, $7,068,157,7798 pretty good secu rity, we think, for their debts, whether owing at home or abroad. The total population of the Tillages, towns, an! cities of the United States, is only 4,000,000, while the rural population, "the honest peasantry, their country's nride." is 19.263,000. The four cities of New York, Boston, Philadelphia and Bal timore contain a population of 1,214,000, the amount of whose real and personal property is $702,000,000, or S578 each. The property of the rural population is $2,311,000,000, cr about $12.0 win. From returns of the agricultural crops, it appears that we raise annually $143,- 000,000 in wheat, $391,200,000 in Indian corn, $190,275,000 in hay, $ 70,840,000 in oats, , 3,125,000 in Irish potatoes, and $129,000,000 in cotton ; the whole crop being $l,752,.ri83,042. No crop of ours makes more noise in the world than cotton, yet, when it is compared to other crops, such as wheat and Indian corn, and partic ularly with the whole annual crop, we see no reason why it should take on so many airs ; but we suppose the reason is, that it goes abroad a great deal, and, like traveled gentlemen, rather looks down upon the stay-at-homcitics. Why, the animals slaughtered are worth quite as much as the cotton, bringing some $1S3,000,000 per annum ! One of the most useful of our erops, wine, is yet in its infancy, the West having made only a little over I, 000,000 of gallons in 1851, worth about $500,000 ; but the cultivation is increas ing, and in a few years will be immense, especially when New Mexico and Califor nia, which are admirably adapted to it, shall go into the business. No portion of the trade of the Union has grown more rapidly, within a few years, than that connected with the steam marine. The total number of steam ves sels now'employed on our coast is G25, with a tonnage of 212,500, and employing II, 770 men as officers and crew. In the interior the number of steam vessels is 7C5, with a tonnage of 204,725, and em ploying 17,607 men. Our whole steam marine, therefore, amounts to 1,390 ves sels, with a tonnage of 417,226, manned by 29,377 men, and carrying, besides freight, about 40,000,000 of passeagera every year. In this vast travel only 750 lives were lost in 1852 ; far too many, bat not so many as some people, who fancy evcry steamboat a puwdcr-housc, are pre pared to expect The amount of money paid into the treasury of the United States, as duties on foreign goods, in the year 1852, was at New York $28,772,558, at Philadelphia $3,715,126, at Boston $6,250,588, and at Baltimore $1,063,530. It will be seen that New York more than trebles all the other cities. There are 12,808 miles of railroad in operation in the United States, and 12,612 in progress ; more than in all the rest of the world. Of those in operation, three fourths are in the free States, and almost ta xopurtion holds good in respect those which are projected. A". Y. Putt. The 3300 iATlcL The following very important opinion as the construction of the Act of 1849, known as the Three Hundred Dollar Law Act,' which completely reverses the prac tice upon it, was read a short time since by his Honor, Chief Justice Black, of the Supreme Court : Hammer vs. Frecse. In the Northern District Appeal from the Common Pleas of Northumberland. Freese's personal property was levied on ani 80,(1 The proceeds amounted to rrM i e i . . i .. The defendant in the execution present when the levy was made, but ! AA mil thjtn nlaim vif -nn rt sI.a r.j.A , -"j g-jvua wereexcmptedbytheActof 1849. About tlic commencement of the sale, however, n demanded the benefit of the statute. The Sheriff sold the property and paid the proceeds into Court, on Freese's petition, ordered $300 of the money to be paid to him. We are of opinion that the debtor can not, under any circumstances, entitle him self to three hundred dollars of the money for which personal property sells at Sheriff's sale. The Act speaks of property, not money. It requires him to select the goods he wishes to retain, and have them appraised, and property thus chosen and appraised, shall be exempt from levy and sale. This excludes the idea that he is to have his choice between retaining the property, and demanding the money out of the proceeds. There are sound reasons why he should take the goods or noth ing. The law was made for the benefit of the families of the debtors, rather than for the debtors themselves; and a family, stript of cv.ry comfort, might not be much the better of 8300 in the pocket of a thriftless father. Property which apprais crs would value at $300, might not sell for the half of it, and if debtors had this choice, it would deprive the creditors of twice as much property as the law intend ed to take from them. A convenient friend could be got to buy it in at a price far below its value, and a part of the money awarded by the Court would pay for it. The former laws on this subject rpceificd the particular articles which might be re tained. The act of 1849 sires the rkht of designating them to the debtor himself, fixes the qtflntiry of them by their value ; but if bp may be silent until after the sale, he can virtually take property which he has not selected, to an amount far greater than the law allows him, and without up- piyinsr me local standard ot its valup. Such a construction is against the spirit as well as the letter of the statute. The debtor not being entitled to money under any circumstances, would have no other remedy than an action against the officer, even if he had demanded his right, in a proper way, and been refused, but he did not make the demand here in a j manner i hich the Sheriff was bound to notice. He did not point out the property be elected to retain, nor ask for an ap praisement He said nothing on the sub ject until it was too late. Regularly, a debtor who wishes to avail himself of this act, should make his election at the time of the levy ; the Legislature could have meant nothing else by saying that proper ty so elected should be exempt from levy. But he mav be in time if he d,.mn,!, it after it is seized, provided he does not wait so long that a compliance with his request would nostnone the sale. Hi. ri.l.t Jti Mo.ete. ;r i.o ,.,;t, nn;i i. ...i. t . . wiwtj c J soiu auui iuu sate uaa begun. The decree of the Court of Common Pleas is reversed, and it is ordered that the fund in Court be paid to the executing creditors in the order of their liens. Thomas H'Creary and Gov. Lowe, j More than a year ago, a man named j Thomas M'Creary kidnapped a free negro j girl, named Rachel Parker, from her home in Chester county. She was carried to Bal timore, and there deposited in a Slave Jail preparatory to being shipped South and sold. A number of her Chester county friends, who knew her to be free-born went to Baltimore, interfered to prevent her ship ment, and to secure her a trial for her free dom. Their efforts were in part successful though at the sacrifice, under suspicious circumstances, of the life of the person from whose house she had been taken. A . . 1 A wiai Governor of Pennsylvania upon the Gov- ernor of Maryland, who consulted with his constitutional aJviscrs. andhasannmin.i i , , , , place mm out. ut tuc reacu ui wiouwuva. was had after many months' delay when L. . . r ,i , ,. . , ; , Thinking, perhaps, such an arrangement the testimony to prove the right of the al- . . . fc' 1 , ? K ii m i i . , ... 6 i might operate beneficially to him, Mr. leged slave to her liberty, was so over- ",t . . .. J1 . ,! Z t . ., , , , Budd granted his request, and he was whelmingand incontrovertible, that thede-L fc e . fence abandoned their ca and Rachel ofJ ,nd Parker and her sister, who had been kul- .gJL tf having -sen better -3TT-1 year. prev.ou.Jr, were de- d It b u, be hoped that his -elf in- ttelrVr ,n tntt,ph 40 camrationwill accomplish the reform- cir omes. j t;on of this young man, and induce him In the meanwhile, the men bawe.ough j futUfe of dare to commit the crime of selling a j ,nJbriety. it is a sad thing to set one free woman .ntoSlavery, went unpunished j M ;gi tndiBteUigent abandon him and steps were .mmed.atcly taken to bring M -immonhtiea ,od -ptise. them to a trial. A requuition was issued , m mmmon drMula.Ais fnr hoJy vt Thomas M Crcary, by the i t. OQ ccd his determination not to deliver him ments of his enterprise in Pennsylvania up for trial. M'Creary is thus shielded! are already familiar. At Chicago, last by the State of Maryland from punishment ! week, there was a gathering of his conn or even trial for his crimes I To comment! tryuicn, at which he made speech, and upon such an outrage could not make it ! wl rapturously received. The Norwegv more hideous than the plain statement of; aB Church was crowded with Norsemen, the facts. Lancaster Ind, If hia. j Ole Buil spoke of religious toleration, im- 7"; r . SlaTery In Kentucky. I A friend of mine who resides in one of 'the central counties of Kentucky, and i . whose property is estimated as worth at;., . ,i v ;,!, .k. , . . , . least $ la0,000, made up his mind last year to sell out, remove to Ohio, and invest the j - - - proceeds in real estate. He reasoned' Eff.Ttsare beiugmade in New York to thns: "I have a large property here; I j introduce foreign and rare birds into Green have great care and responsibility in super-! w00 cemetery. Cages of some of tho intending one hundred slaves. The mere; 6acft songsters, and birds of the richesl management of such an interest is arduous ! plumage, have already been taken there, and laborious. And yet after feeding and ; the hope that they will pair and domes clothing all, and providing necessary sup- i tate themselves. The result is uncertain plies, I find myself no better off at thend j ut the seclusion of the place, the grand, of the year, than at its commencement ' 0,J woods, and the impossibility of moles If the same capital were judiciously inves- j ta,ion DT the sportsman, renders the suc- ted in a free state, I could live upon the interest, and my children would reap the advantage of its increased value." This is the statement of an intelligent corrcs- ponaeni oi me 1 una. uegister.who names! a. I Wafj n . towns ana counties in the Lest portions of, Kentucky where population is decreasing, or stationary at best, and where migration i to the 1' ree States is increasing. v..U3 i.a. via, oiu.es iu iuu Editor of the N.Y.Tribunc, that his farm, 1:1 r .1. . vr r -i . , . e ' which was profitless when cultivated by slave labor, now yields him good returns. He employs some white hands and some of his former slaves; and although many obstacles are thrown in his way, he sees clearly the advantages of well paid labor to the employer as well as the laborer. Clebical Lonqkvitt. The Hamp shire (Mass.) Gazette gives the following instances of clerical and family longevity: Rev. Solomon Williams, of Northampton, preached bis half century sermon in Nor thampton ; Hon. Eliphalct Williamsroiiff- Uatlter preached his half century sermon in East Hartford, Conn.; and Rev. Solo mon Williams' great-grandfaArr,YtMkaA his half eentnry sermon ic Lebanon Tonn. and ReT. W. WiaaBgrro great grand- Ar Ticked is half eeaturj sermon ia HatSeW, Mass. The Chinese population in California amounts to about twenty-two tbousan 1, and their capital owned and ioteed h at Ic-it rue million cf ddlau. ! VOLUME X NO. 8. - Wjiole Xcmbfr, 470. Sentence of Reese Evans. G.W.Palincr, Sheriff of Luzerne county v has received the death warrant of thi unfortunate boy. Evans docs not seem t realize his situation fully, or he must have great nerve, and commanded of himself. He says: "Yon cannot always tell by a. man's looks what his feelings are." It it vcrJ e n his ease. Yesterday afternoon ; about 1 i Sheriff Palmer read the warrant to him in the presence of several respectable witnessess. On entering tha cell Evans sat by a small table containing his books and nodded pleasantly to hi visitors. He seems very little changed since his trial. His cell is neat rad clean with pictures from some of the Magazines fastened around the walls, and .Lis name is marked on the floor with the hot poker. m . . 1 1.1 . . r I ucriu announced uie purport u. u 'Wt and M he coramen!d J6 r" ceptible tremor passed over Evans features -nJ -rj aoon covering his face with bid hand he i uk sobbing upon the little table by his side, where he ' continued till his visitors had departed. The time fixed by the Executive, for his execution ia Friday Sept 9. between the hours of 10 A. M. and 3 o'clock P. 31. 1 llketliarre Rec ord, M iy 25. Effects of Rom. On Friday morning a young man, rep resenting himself as Henry Cox Cheestnaa son of an eminent physician in New York made application to Justice Budd, of Cam den, to be committed to the County Jail alleging as his reasons that he had become a common drunkard, and had been on a spree for three months past, until all hia substance was gone, and he was left per fectly destitute. He said he wished to re form, and believed that incarceration in the jail for awhile would materially assist him in carrying out his wish, as it would 1 . u a us j ' ...T. .' BV.01e Bull is doing a good work for the Norwegians in America. The state- pressed the utility of secular and moral eJucatk)rj ani aJvocated the Free School ..,m TIl AMrmlim!, f Earone cania u,,.,,, ,.i .ufE-iki in 'tuts mciuru m.su ui vuun. uv : , - -. , Stat of tne experiment quite proDatie. The idea Is beautiful and praiseworthy. A Dramatic Company from the Celestial Empire, are performing nt Niblo's in Nt York; they represent religious ceremonies, Ord marriage ceremony, and Japanese tumblinc Sic. The Trilmut says of the Thc sinzing aud vIzum were like a compound of distressed cats aud old pump hamtles, umrreased cart wheels, a. - - poker on a tin kitchen, and the spiritual rappers in communion with the infernal; regions." To give some idea of the value ft real estate in desirable locations in New York City, the times states that Messrs. .Duncan Sherman & Co. have purchased tha south" west corner of Nassau and Pine Sftrt ets, which tbey will erect a first class yanking House. The lot measures fifty feet so Nassau Street by eighty-three on- Fma Street, end the price paid far it wan ena hundred and fifty thousand dollars. The Great Card me. Case, lately tn trial in Washington city, is noally ori eS th hands cf the lawyers and bus been sV mitted to the jury hr dkit-ion. I'p to t& latest dates wa hart not heard fhe purport of the verdict rendered. In the State of Ohio there are thirty, three railroads completed and is fmrmm of completion. The number of mile -i!d is 1 2S. and those tufnialaed ia 17 19 mating an agvytc c 3,025 j