sav.m:-i WYAi.m tot :? :u')Vmm m'pvn:u ... - . , . i -am 4 II. C. UICKIv, Editor, 0. N. WOK DEN, Tbixtei? TllC LCtt'lSbUFQ L'lirOIliCiC truly say that I never witnessed a more ,,.,,, ! attentive congregation. There are over Aj "p1"'1'1 V,n,!i7 at L'tc'ilurg)to thousand members belonging to the Issued on tn y . ' J- - chunh, which is tho largest in the city, Uinnij, ..., I r .i.t... I a-wpire. tLSOprr rear, fir rar. " " 1 7 Mi -a ir n.f iVithin three mintlx Je'ar: f i if nut paIJ la-l-re the rear i ni"H . ll". . r - I . . , . inn; ; a (ingle, nuiaber. "mJTtiM n i,l:.nalnt.TistoD all ""'' Jul'- omnirjiiontwliriti-lntnirsofi'ii. riiiint. r" ih. ,if narlr or l"1"n r.... i., .me riwi naM. arinwl-aiiM ? " i,.met..l addTT of th wriur. e-Tii.w. r'iTJw HnHfeVii'-i't ! .M'"iii" l.niii,fi mattir Th. 1 l!NF.TT(T TEl.KfiKAl'H I toratMl in lti .1.. j-j..u.vl. ml armliirrlilnl ',,a, ittp to ubuln VVw from thr Lst in aTnri: of lb.- SIjjIs. htn nd .ltrli d r.niM- I.Tni. .,oaion MrkrtS.ii.r,Dortli eidf.iccc.nd itnry,. J xrtretb I-oftOlllr. O. W. WOBDEN, Proprietor. lyraiBa m Dili m Nov. 24, 1S54. Isaac Kleckneb, formerly of Hartley, Union Co., IV, we notice is Sheriff elect of Stephenson county, Illinois. Lcwi.iburg yet polls a heavier vote than Freeport, (111.) The following are tLe returns for the two highest State Officers at the late election : ! lo-li Hi?'". 5M1 Moore Tnt !i Vij-. I.ewisburs aoii 132 4:is 171 Freeport 23 153 416 ICO (Miller is the Anti-Nebraska State Treas urer elect.) Stephenson gives 500 Anti Kcbraska majority., John A. Jameson Esq. of Freeport has received, by the award of a committee, a premium of $100 for the best Tract rela tive to "the Responsibility of the Christian Merchants of the United States for the speedy conversion of the World to Christ." 865-Wc know not the origin of the fol lowing poetical parody, but it is a picture hat will End many orignals among the Vallics of Pennsylvania. LticLl. Chron. The Old Farmer's Elegy. On pTen, (cnuuqr knoll, hj tli lnV of f br brook Tli it to loag and to often had wait-red bis fl:ck, Tim oU firmer rest in bis long at.d Urt lerp, W'hUe tbe water a low, r.le,irfnr luilnl.jr keep: tie bat plowed bw lat furrow. Uas reaped bis last grain, No Mora shall awake htm to labor again. The Woe bird ainiTF sweet on the pay maple bodih, lu warMinr. oft ehrered him abile holding the plow; And the robin abort him bof.s ip'bt on tbe mould, rot be It-d them with crumbs wh-n the scamn w cold. Yon tree, that with fragrance is filling the air, So rich with its blossoms so thrifty and fair, by bis own band was planted, and well did he say It would lire wb'n its planter had mowidt red away. There's the well that he dur, with its waters so cold, With its wrt, drlppin-- backt-t. so mo-gy and old, Ko more from its d-pth by the patrinr h drawn, tor the pitcher is broken, Uie old man is gone. And tbe seat whvrc be sat by tbe old eottap door. In the still summer's eee, wben his labors were o'er. With bis ey-- on tlie moon, and his pipe in Lis hand, tispening his truths like A save of the land. Twas a gloom-glTing day when the old farmer died, Tbe stout hearted mourned, the aHrti'.uate erii-d. And the blessiaei of all on his name did deseen-l. Fur they all tat a brother, a man, and a frieiid. For upright and honest the old farmer was, His God be revered, he reape-rfc-d tbe last's ; Though famelras he lived, he baa gone where his worth Will outshine, like pare gold, all the dross of tbe earth. lie has plowed his last furrow, has reaped his last grain, Mo mord shall awake him to labor aj-ain. For tbe Lewisburg Chronicle. African Singing. he many love songs, light airs, and mournful ditties which are caught from the semi-civilized African race in our country, is full proof that they arc a musical peo ple, in spite of their degradation and op pression. And well is it, that when there is so little of true comfort with him or in prospect on earth, the African has still a buoyant heart, and his mellow tongue and nimble heel and impromptu fiddle afford him pleasure wben nought else does. Ma ny of onr most popular airs and words have been borrowed from the negro quarters and appropriated by the whites with as little ceremony as any of the other products of slave labor. But my object in this article.is to notice the religious use made of their talent for singing, by those blacks who have been converted to Christianity. We trust they realize, with simple Li;h tho' somewhat obscurely, their condition as immortal beings, and have been brought to see themselves siuners, and to find reconcilia tion and pardon through the blood of the uivine redeemer. As a devotional exer cise, tineins is rrfOllliarU 1 .1 . t-uaracter ot the race j and as it j n M caught from tongue to tongue with- ! . , - .,.:c;.;;---'-; thirty wh . ...... c tiawnsoiui' i t m"-..-.- ... . , i -.-A t Srt einls T r town". ? . . ,f M ,.,h,e-H ' ne of the .;ci i7 .u;,",on ,na niay be prac- , fr about ?3,000, and enlarged it by the -Tint r,Lnt r kitChtn' U is 1 Jition of three wings, so that the build- -o wonder that "psalm, and hymns and ; ing now in tLe f, of a T. Beside paituai song, occupy , large share of 'tbe6e additions, the church have bought a and ! prliT08 "" Public ial, ! house near by which they nse as a vestry. extraordinaUXre?JtA ? " The' ,hcir St0T $G0 t!l' lut this inflaence, and it, I " T " f !Dr- Rj,,nd who !"- th. Mla.in. B?nr'e red Collcgiato Seminary,) devote, a tbird of (in Richmond tL"n'f"ne ec!,ureh. it to favorite benevolent objects. Hisabi whicb I collate' from 1 T 1 , pher is generally admitted, nce in a Boston correspond- land he is constantly invited to exchange . " paper. vil.1i In. 1iritlirpn vrlin nreneh in wrbitA wrieTadtbtl AV(-he 1 8tteBde1 n... .. ipiisi church in ! Broad street I hiM . . . I Hi.? wore no. less man If' ' ....!..... - .1 1 . 1 f : u compiauu uioauy ui Slaves, aituougu I. . 1 .1 . 1 1 ! . I snmcwuat. icss man onc-mira 01 incm are ; free, and tbey usually have from twenty to ites as worshipers, also. Their Rev. Robert Ry land, (white,) is most serious, simple aud effect - I !rc PrcacLcr3 t0 whoiu u uas b-,cn m3 god ! f,,rtiinn i liefnn Tim l.nnc f..ll - , irlinn T Tirw-Ar1 knt T va ftntifl.imtcli. " - """""""J, shown to a seat near the irencbcr. and i though many came afterwarJ, the greatest , . .............. ..u ... j.i.o- , ence of many small children The service I was commenced by the preacher's calling upon John Kinney, (colored,) the leader' of the choir, to make a prayer. He aroe 1 from his seat, and, with singular felicity, ! breathed a short and pertinent address to ' tho tbrune of .rracc. There was a sort of l i.t s .: 1'n.uiuui.u iu an . 'j ut-st, UU' pijui lull Ui IUI' I, art to the Almighty. Next followed the sermon. the test of which was taken from! the l.-t Epistle of Peter,2d ch. 11, 'Dearly j beloved, I beseech you as strangers andt pilgrims, abstain from fleshly lusts which " t..uou iiit iwui, i hi; ru-avuiT ft tul ; , , , . , , , back a few verses in the chapter to allude' ;,!. ..!,...:. . si.. , : i ...... ,.,i.i.u.i..ia iu luc 1'LtlliO UUU Ul'ltroilll- , . ,. , , , , ateuess of the terms which the apostle used .... ,. , . .... I in exhorting his followers to a Christ-like ... n.. , ... obedience. The words 'strancers and pil-! , , , . . . . fc ,. l (rrima. lin exnlmnpii avirli imn .r t.- r j j , ' " inn" imvc ially as ind- i j towards a1 id "towards i and directness, tho latter especi; icativc of progressive traveling 1'itiil if nmmiuo a lwiltr lin antiihonal chanting, text-the singing! it also inspires respect, esteem, love, and ' ' . l" - -I-"', tamg-oi nf. real wiue. ne na wg j otners and tillad Rnbrft Jonea, 5. being alternate between males and females, i pity in the bosom of the master. The - a V"3 wu. . n, . ot rc stance to u-re.gn ,Uauenc, uo.u .- randVi whon ne ougllt t0 Le tirtl,lK wa. j..Ln c fcn Q .i i ii i i ! r ., i : - . l very vouiu, at ine aiiar oi tue laiucrs ui.iernai au'j rxicrtiai, anti me upoiiiiuii t, ten turea hor"es when lie ctiIJ a1? we.l .rt ". n T,? - n Asain the Treacher called ur.on one Lewis 'pecuniary vaiue of the slave Js increased, I ... . . r ter - u.nu nor-ea wmu ne c i.i a-? : on rr two of them f.i?a!ly. JohnC in e 1 1 i r r i ii l- ti i the iU'nublic, swears allegiance to Amer;- bold tbe living ideas and tbe solid ruks of havi-trave'l'-d on Lot : an3 " nt innnm- . ... t.. v t.i. Allen, a free black, for uuothcr prayer: aud : ami he receives and is able to demand f . , . , 1 , i . , ,, . , train. u on i,ui , , hjuuiu , w a wealt jy clsbman and was assuredly, if prayer is what we understand additional enjoyments. Indeed, tbe grow- can pnncipii A par y scuooieu ,u n , u.e j uays ot ... j,rp.UM m craUe small sums m frivolous and nnPw-, unknown among hiscoiLtrymcn it to be a form of supplication, a petition ing intelligence of the black population- j lile P""cal IU""US lUB e " " , " i "u" "UIU luc - bta&lc amnscments. "It 1 ban a bunare j ont ,he C0QIJtry. , ir i - e 1 i i ... i ; .r,;,o nf ,K 'ton's Farewell Address, aud which have radicalism, are calculated to predispose a;l dollar." he will "rnetin-s sav. "I would I ' "r to Heaven, a submissive importunity for (for many do barn to read, in spite ot tbe , . . , , . . , , , uu"'i uii. raiun..s.jv, ,TO"! lias V H ,',m . .. ' J : . . ........ t:iL-n m.'n thpir mn.nst. lnart tli most ear. trulv ctiiiscrvativc men in thiir favur. aud .... v.... . :,u 1JfII"i '' lan. papers grace and salvation then was the prayer laws) is fast qualilying them lor tbose - " . . 7 ' .7 , ' . V " ..u.j , s. , , v .. ' " . . . r.f ,!,.w.,.,nn-iuii.t.,-..i.i i' I. :;..e..,.;..w-;i.,.l,;..l..tohtlr trill incst of h.s lessons that ' Lorcign influence ( will in the end tonso.idate a party made dol!:,rs, tr us many pennies, what can one' . a" J 's' . . heaven and happiness. Next, the 'fleshly ' up a political joke. It would grow musty : " ) lusts' had their rightful denunciation ; and ' and nnsuvorv. "No Popery" is a pretty , Cl'erisu. frw of unlawful ag finally, the welfare of the soul was dwelt' good political cry; we do not doubt that, grcssion-that neither seek to interfere upon with an almost Milionic eloquence, ; employed with discretion, a good deal may ,w,th tbc concerns of other nations, nor as the preacher entreated for be made out of it ; but there is a limit to . wl11 P"1' other na,,"n9 10 "fcre with nr.ron..irepen.,ne. efficiency of even the most taking bumbeg. i our concerns that look upon the Federal arS'"' hQIJJt l;g0l3 of course e many I Constitution as the bond of the Union, The preacher then requested the choir M ! tllill M tarncsf wbicb are only intcnac(i and will unwaveringly bold fast to its in ning, 'Vital spark of heavenly flame,' and for i.anconibe . at)J it is quite likely that ty<S tL:it recognize a sanctity in plight a well-taught band of thirty -six choristers' Catholics may for a season be exposed to ied fallU aDd amJe b P"l-''C compromises; gave that exquisite hymn with touching l nBjMt ob, nd dcnial of rights by I that upon the great subject of slavery pre uielody. When this was concluded, a slave ; reason of the now jumble of theology with ! lcuJ Uot to w,scr tLan ,l'eir tMm' owned by Mr. Taliaferro, of Gloucester; politic. however, the good jbut keeP c1uaUS clcar from tbo ul,rl'9m county, named Joshua Thompson, arose, gcnsc anJ .1)!crant ppir!t 0f our people will j 0,1 the one "Je that 80631,1 the institution near the pulpit, aud gave the fir.,t line of a rLjret3 M tbe tcu,rorary 0TiJs tbat may ,Le corner-stone of every political and so- j spiritual song,' as they term it, in which; tbus be itd ad B0 Catholics will c'ml bIefs!"g. and fron tbe fanaticism on the entire congregation joined. There was ! so much of pious reverence and hearty zeal , in this offering, that it drew tears from the ! .yes of the whites, while many of the aged; tii j i i .i. r i colored people proancd aloud in the fulness rii.. m , - of their hearts. The tune was one of their' ...... , i ..v.u.o. .uu iu uauviujau , chorus gave it a most stirring effect. I sp0le to one of the members after service , . . . and he introduced me to the man who had commenced the song I have alluded to. At my request, he repeated the words of the song, not printed, and I wrote them down. At the line, ' Come, friends and relations, let us join hand in hand,' they all grasped hands fervently, whilst continuing to sing. It Was a Scene of earnest devotion and I beart-fcit joy, such as is rarely witnessed; and for that reason, I have taken pains to transcribe it with accuracy, as follows : Onrtf mir I har rome to rilt you birr Th? rai so nf ciy mmm?. your souls Are so ilrar; Tin atrai I w,ui!. tie tit ai'liuut lialm to suppliH, . 'i'liere's balsam in Jru, tliat flows from his Mdel CuiiLLS lialleltrjah! halMujan! look up to the Lord! ' I'm painrd in tnr rw'!. mr hiirt it has grierrd Tu sin fi'llow-innrtats sn sui: drerirml : On barn n ian.t Ui.-r tal, Iiir nothittfr ran f -nl, , They arc rarelrssl'livio, though Je.-n dU bleed? ' I'm found to inl ita ynn to Jsua' kind arms, T 1 tH if bin beauty, and of his blent ih:iruis; I'll jioint yim di lu-nren. to the land of sweet rpst, Where saints In prrfecUfn are eternally blest. ' foroe friends ard relations, let ns ji.in hand in hand, The roire of Um turtle ia heard in iur laud ; Let ns all march together and fnlipw the sound. We'll march to the place whire RidetupLiuD ia fonnd. ' Satan I hnsr; he is watrhlnc you lnrd. To eateh all pour I'hris'.iaiis tlimwn f-lT.if their puard ; I am erten ufsronraed. mid tbiiik in rnin, Th'-ub (he -.10511 be aeflttered like showers of mln. Pnmi.rinTe t'm Initneed lo look orer the land, V ilh a solemn impression to see bow it stands, T'i use bow it is Uirne up I y Ibe U.ril elery dHy V ' Ii i let sinners stand tritihitf their time all awsyt llnl..mlii'n in Jesus is iiiib.'en suri sealed. To nuoe but belirers is Keilenit't.oo rereated ! CHvaoe llallelujah! hallelnjaU then kajkuptothoLlrd. iThe house of which I have been writing, ' l il. l l.. . I 1 77... I'l.....l ' . W1H occupied by their white brethren until I about 1810, when tbe blacks purchased it j SUUSU aiUUUi! IUC Ui.i.a9 as d . VUUIVU, eongrcgatiohs ; but be has devoted himself zealously to Lia flock, and is usual! to lb found iu bis own pn'pit. ' 1 LEWISBURG, UNION 1 'II,.,.-,. ...... .. 1 . ,.!,.. A frinnn I'll MTelllH of various persuasions.in KichnionJ.wliic'u illustrate the influence of chaate and sol- emu niusic, allied to sacred verse, over the wearied, sorrowing, yet plastic minds I ,f lt. Tl, r,nt ;ff,.r- i "c vuivn.1. iuvi. j ... ... I I . . (.,... .I...... I J,n. ... aMiai. t-ul, uuwcviti, num mui mnuna races with us all, plaintive melody and songs mspire tender feelings martial, m- flame sen.-uou?, sully and degrade 1 comical, amuse and serious, elevate and , e",u-' cach vho Lcarf- !I:inv f,f ihn members ff ' these churches : i eTltnrk irt auu preacu-ana irom incm una Uing out missionaries to Liberia, and rs to extend the kuowled-'e of himself is c:tl : others The moral and social ii.fluence of rcli - gious instruction upon the colored popula - tion, is much appreciated in the Suutb, and is of incalculable advantage to bo:h races. While it prevents sullenness, funa- tieism, and a despairing and remorseless spirit of revenue on the part of tho slave, : n ,.p. :... .l.ol, ,;rrt i emancipation, and equality of rights. ill uui a vnu uujt j k-jui. .. rr,,-rr , As to the 'Know Nothing' game, which mail i , j i, , , . , , have been plaviug, we shall not go into V .......1 sn.t .i..,,u Uh,n mwi...ii.gr - r r r ...i '. . .i.t,. .!.. . umaie has been uyiuniatd bv a ut.-ivni.a u-ju. ... v , . ... "o . .... , , . . . . r, 1 . 1 I u s'i v i, lions of relitrion, have an ancestral inhen- npon the next I'rcsidential election. A any such Quixotism as ice I resident , , . ... ip .. , T . w tt w. t n n is. ... . ,.,, f tauce to glory in as well as apresint bless-1 X. tamily Lvumr, (Jas. atson Yt ttb, Dallas is said to countenance that of.. ..... il T . . a- 1 m i. . ffctting up a great National Constitution - , f . ... , , . al tvirlv to r.rvnoso this new develonment , j i r i t J I r I - of Nativeism. Such a folly might protract the existence of the new bubble for tbrce or four years, which is too long to keep mcantimc be eaten. AVc have no doubt tbat at L.8st baif 0f lbo rreScnt "Know Nothings" and this by no means the less iulwnt;ai Lalf would vote for even f 1 i Tnlm Ilmrlioa fnr flirprnnr if li nrnnnv ; dljlm llug"s ,or governor, it tlie proper, .nilintm-ntQ r nrpsf.nfi-,1 TT .ln nnt inducements were presented. V.eiJonot, therefore, mean to racak harsbl? of tboae who, seeing that Know Nothingism was - 1 - o ..... . D0DUlar. and capable of beinir made to 6ub30rve iniportant use?, have preferred to riVe the new bobby rather than be run oter by it. AT. Y, Ti ilunt. The W?w Tork Election. In regard to tho Nebraska matter, tho testimony of the election is conclusive and irresistible. Under all the disadvantages of a multiplication of parties, the next Congressional delegation is almost unani mous in opposition to that measure. On the morning after the election wo were at a hotel tabic in Worcester, Mass., where we met a friend who is a member of tbe present Congress. "Is my friend John Wheeler, reelected?" said he. "It was un derstood that there was no hope for it," we replied. "It is too bad," he continued ; "he sacrificed everything to bis conscience and his duty, and he ought to be sustained." I Cast off by Hards and Softs, who had each 1 a candidate, and with a Whig candidate ! besides against him, John Wheeler was, j nevertheless, rechosen by a decisive vote an anti-Xebraska demonstration which may be set down as an indication of the real feeling of the State on that subject Judge Oliver's was a similar case. The Know-Nothing clement, proved it self a power in tbc State of unanticipated .. .b .eit Jlutiilina Tt i. ViolioWPil fn nilC-uiiiu auu uiuMjiiiuu. - ... . bo destined to play a Conspicuous part in coining polities, and is already bnckling on its armor for the next Presidential election. Politicians arc fearing and courting it by turns. It is the natural reaction from the abuse of the process of naturalization, and from the venal character of tbo organized and distinctive Catholic vote. Ita dangers are, the uSual corruptions of parties, and the carrying of defence against tbe Catho lic invasion; to tho opposite extreme of persecution. If it takes for its motto, Equalities for All and Specialities for None, it will perform a useful . mission, notwithstanding tbe equivocal propriety of secret orders in republican politics. The concentration and the insolence cf foreign- COUNTY,' PENN., FRIDAY, NOV. 21, 1854. irs in our potuics n au auusu usuinuing a check, for the safety of our institutions. There is Utile to be said for the election in this city, except that when the friends of virtue, peace, and public safety are foo. ish enough to divide their votes between three candidates for Mayor.they deserve to reap the consequences, whatever they may he. This is the moral lesson of thecityclec- tion. X. Y. Jlicorder (a religious paper.) The Knell Sounds. On every breeze, north, south, east and mine the death tunes. The old DO- litical Par are !ead dead beyond hope j Won(1 resurrection. A new party is springing into life. A ! P"J 8tiU in 5,3 "adIc aud " 8tronS !as an infant Hercules. A party born on American soil, glowing with American L1'J ttn strenuous with an Ame.i-an jP5rit- A party that a, it grows iu stat - j urc anJ tuits ilg eks is dt8,iDpd t0 1 hc dVcr f our coun,ry om s one oi uie most uaueiui iocs oi itcpuu - , i - til , iican government. A party mat feneve ,..wuur, F T." , tionaiity ; tnat love tneir " own, incir na- live laud"; that cherish her early renown; that think it not a vain thing to inherit the blood of noble sires. A party that have ancestral craves to lock uitou : that, . . . institutions of government aud institu- flue 10 uc euioveu ; tuai, uuvc su iiuucauisa 1 .J , 1 spirit to be inspired with, ancestral precepts ' i r . . . , i . , 1 t0 rc9Pec tu te" A party hat believe in popular enlighten- J and m national justice-in order and ! tbe 0,hcr tLat WoulJ uPucaTe ' ln T1'0 of cverT constitutional barrier, and in dis-, : reSard of M consequences. A party that j Me lcI". aod Put moral ,uflueuce fir k., i . ,!,. .1, i '.- f i i b- above material means ; that repose tneir . . , . .. -.,.,., r , ,ing belonging to I). Post, contaimug to hope for the duration of our system of! . , , . , , t j stores, the second st.Ty occupied as dwell - ' v. K..u 1 11 1 . .. Kuowxeuge ana goou ana virtuous eenii - mcnts ; that recognize undoubted right and the bounden duty of government to pro-1 vcrnment to pro- ofafryonth and uction isaneces - vide for tbe instruction hold that Christian instruction i aarv element in all rennbliean eduction: that the Bible is not a sectarian book and should not be proscribed in our public j schools ; that believe in the liberty of con- science, but none the less believe ia the ' . . .. rijlu of conscience ; that while tbey would admit every man to the freest enjoyment of whatever rpirilual allegiance he may see fit to adopt, would permit the exercise of no temporal dominion of a hierarchy, i makes but little difference where a man direct or indirect, by whatever name called, I lives now-a-days, as, through the eon vent- wU.I,ae.mnJa,i,l.;..;llafll,sA..,nt;e'eici! of railroad and telenranhs. hat is ot the other; that gladly welcome to oar shores the poor and the oppressed of every land,would faithfullysccurefor them the ex- ecrcise of all their natural rights,and would jone hundred and thirty miles long,is near- j I aradie Lost I Lopes de ega was the ; II. eil, Recorder, and every oao of tha receive them with the hospitality becoming ly completed, and will be laid across the most voluminoiis of writers. Uut it is net; Aldermen. a great and generous people, yet do not!Gulf of St. Lawrence; connecting St. the quantity so much a3 the quality of Ll';E:sK in New OkLXAXJ. Theeicc feel called upon tocoufcron them franch- j Johns, Newfoundland, with New York, asj literary matter that insures immortality ;' tion held on Tuesday resulted in amajori ises frhich they are not qualified to exer-1 soon as ice will permit. No doubt is cx-jf'T long after the millions of Lopez dc : y of five thonsaud in favor of a law to IU cise, and clothe them with a power they j pressed of the completion of the nndertak- j Vega' lires are Icrit d in oblivion, the corse the sale of spirituous liquor, know not how to use; a party in fine who ling early in June next. About 300 miles few simple verses of Gray's Elegy will live ,.cnry refers fq., formerly Cashier believe that human liberty is yet obliged I of the land telegraph between St. Johnsj to delight mankind. ! f.f i'rrisburir' P.'ink, and a very esli- to ipose its principal hopes on the intel- and Cape Ray, which is three quarters of . "Coxsistixu or." In a North Caruli- mib;c gnntlem.tiC d.-d a't Liverpool, Perrj ligence and the vigor of the Saxon race, the entire length contemplated, is already na paper which tan be ;:cn at this oilier ( corJnty, oa Wednesday last. ' ' whose spirit is the spirit of American In-, finished, and a month's labor is all tbat is! we fiud a notice of an admiui.-trator's , "' , r. dependence, whose cenius is the genius of required for the remainder. The work on ! sale, in which the property is described . hc mau "at was "tranprteJ Witi . ... r. I.i.-:.i 1 t.- i .s c. ti. . . .... i uliis has returned to his nattre land. ha the ever-living Washington. The old political parties have for years been carrying within themselves the seeds of their own dissolution. The opposing principles of conservatism and radicalism have been struggling in each for the mast ery, and have waged an internecine strife. Conservative Democracy could never effec tually unite with Conservative Wbiggery as such; nor Conservative Wbiggery tfitb Conservative Democracy ; and yet both might enter into a third organization and work together most barmonioisly and suc cessfully. Thna we have just seen in our own State, Hard Democrats and Silver Grey Whigs vieing in the support of a candidate which distinctively belongs to neither i The Know Nothing orgxniiatiro, itself, we do not look npoti as permanent. Its secret character has doubtless contributed greatly to its amazingly rapid devcVpe- ment, but, having served this purpose, it will hereafter prove an injury rather than a benefit. Publicity is the law of Amcri- can affairs, and every politic! agency which means to operate powerfully upon those allairs, must observe it. ltie organu;ition must rid itself of its accresy of operation. And if, as is said, it puts any srt of dis- ability upon men for the mew possession I of n i:irM -nlnr rt-Iicrinna lielief. it will have ; c to give np all such arbitrary proserii.tiou. No such intolerance is admitiod, as we un - derstand, in the order as it exists in seve- ! ral "f ,he Southern States, and it can not ( , long sustain the furca of intelligent dis-; icuss.on anywhere. We look upon these. , features, of nhat has been styled the j Know .Nothing party, as mere.y non-, , C6?cu,1,,1 ,ui1 Jui, tberef.0 j temporary. 1 be design of amending , up, mu iu , oi an mose now ex.s ing, wn.cu auau ex . . fc' . " f " aoiuing innucucc npoo tue ucb.iuic oi tuc couutry. There are agencies iu operation, not yet distinctly manifest to the public eye, which are fast producing this result. , . ..i . -11 t "It It is sutDcicnt that it will advauce rapidly , , . . enough to have a most important bcar.ng X. ') Fire at Mactrose. ' lie aeaiu UT a svfcu;! iiuiii .'Jim mini, ; tbat onr Village has been visited by & icsUnclixere s ; awa; - We learn by a letter from Montrose, nearly balf of the business port town. Tbe fire occurred on Friday, 10th iust., breaking out early in the morning, and originated from a stove-pipe. Thn folWir . a lit of tlm bildinrH, burned, as nearly as can be ascertained from what information we have. O'l iumnilce &tret M. a. Hilsons' r. - .t... . store; the large building known as the . . KMrhltrnhnnse: Alfred Baldwin', liar- ness shon : the store of Bentlev & Bead. 4kriT..rrti H R T otiirnr. .1- H.. . ti,. . f , - j , brick dwelliu- of I. L. Post, and the' dwell - ings of Isaac Post, D. Hinds and Alfred Baldwin. On Maui Street, Eit Si te Boot and sUoe store; Uwclliug and Harness siiop of Hcnrjr Turrcll ; aud dwelling of K. M. Hawluy. -O,. f-: .C..awi C'nrwl.fiti'ak vr...... a .t-i' j.Ar. l .r..! K..;i.l.i. . . -.. , s hf.i.!. .aln,1 1 , . . j M , ' rh?' .i . arn rnn 1 t - --7 ------- . y-,-.-, i 18 W P"8"'"6 ,P"'Iy IU4UraUf - !Searl!8lIoU'UDd,Le lu,.Ia'" on Je r - - "6 - - " , , " , , , some uisiauce 11 out iuu jjiuuira ana ten upon the tavern. During the Cre,a young man was precipitated from the roof cf 1 , , , ., , , j Searle S; falling upon the sidewalk, and severely injured. BrttilfurtJ Itrporter. Submarine Teleghapii. It is verily so, as somebody cutely remarks, that it j next door neighbor to everywhere, The submarine cable of tho "New York, 'Newfoundland & London Telegraph Co.,' uic I.-.UIIU iiao ui juu u. ui, uuiiiij, uuu progresses towards the west. Tho inter- est of this announcement is heightened . with the fact that this telcgrapWc junction j of St. Johns and New York alono will ', make a difference of four or five days in the transmission of European intelligence! A Peetty Idea. A sheaf of wheat was recently suspended from the altar of the church in tbe little village of Empingbam, England, on the occasion of the recent Thanksgiving for the bountiful harvest. Application to business is worth more in tnis country, isan to be Dora neir to a fortune, for be who straggles to achieve a competence, learns at tbe same timo bow to retain it. lius , ui iuu ucnu caiuLuo ; ; c j AdTic for the Titaes. In these tiroes of financial embarass mnt, a crest ninnv ie"plc are learninj that it is not what they eirVt'iat prevents adverotr. The mun who earn five dol- : jarj a jaJ.) anj .nj, evrrT e,.nt 0f i', j discover-), perhaps f r the fir-'t time is his jf8 ,jlat j,e j3 nnt g(, wci j g- a5 ti,0 p0f)r kburer, carn3 but'one dalhir a i iv, ( iut who iaJ3 ,y gvo Cl,nt3 tr ti,;rtT ccnta a wtt.tj fur futUre need. Almost every mechanic in onr city hs ! lcen uearJ to say, that if he had saved tb ' t. . ..1 j . ue r turu, ho would have enongh with J wl.ich to purchase a houe an lot, the fuinitur.i fir a mall tenement, an acre two of bw i tho country, a sh.re or half, a tl.z,n sWi of raIW or b;ici .t,cl, ; rr evt a suit ef bmadeloth. Instead of ,,;,, h, his not a cent with which to faf, ,, h,ril of the winr. , He has nrgleeted to Mr his small sums. ' He ,.. sp. nt them in the purcha.e of - ; A JlA;iNilIC,T f jBMj ANI) Faemes. , ir.uout paper says :"Among tbe c msf icuuus men in the Vermont Legisla ture is .Mr. fl. G. Brigham, of Fairlk-ld. He owns and cultivates acres nf laud Aui'tughis barnyard items are two hundred and twenty cows, twenty horses, pnd five y jke of oxen. In Lis dairy he makes but ter only. The average yield of buiter from the milk of each cow is one hundred and fifty pjunds. Two hug "dasher' churns are set in motion ly two "horse! . Pow"" u J lu" old fu.hiontd-paddle." His c,Jll3Uut! abut fivt. bulldrtJ ork-.'d with the isstoekef cattle1 jd tons of hay J annually, i.0,000 lis. tf pr.ik, 5U0 bush-! . . . ..r. . . , ,' els of nheat, from 400 to 500 bushels of, corn, I'.MiO bushels of oats, and from 1000; -000 buhe!s of potatoes, are among bis JcaHy pructs. "The .Man cf Uz," bis best estate, cctild not do better than ins. .wr. iir;irii itt. iiiineoir. s irrtL un ! this. Mr. t - i 7 . . . . c . n-irti t fr.i.,llli fir Ikitt. tin.t in n cli la ..r . j - m?"'U pr -poriionara , trie extent a? l - - t ? 1 y - a . 01 " P'w "", auu agricultural prouacia sianuuig u ieci i in nis D0013, ana 1 . 1 a-t J . J I- 1 ! weighing, by one of tho Fairbanks patent j Wwec, 300 '.s. precisely j pR. Graham The convictim of Pr. Graham, found guilty of manslaughter, f.r the killing of Col. Lorin;, at the St. Xiih- ; 0las ITott.1. is still freaL in the pullic miiiJ-1 j His sen'euco. frsorae time delayed, las' 1 1. 1 . m - T i L , , .... ...c, i auveiteu tu tue ci iueoce,wuicu nc uarratcj . . . n such a way as t, eve a clearer an : ' . . 6 ..ar.r am , bctter account of the transact bo than we 1 I.. i .1 .v .. .1 . i ' ' LishCr f mansa"?h - , iiuvt; v rtcu. auu uii.i U'cu lu ll ii i lit ler, lUB cwaeuce naje sustaiuea it. 1 IIe awarded tbe merest penalty named , J 1 it is.-imprinment for 1 seven years. ue sentence IS in accord- i a.nce wi.t!l puUic V,D',0a Uh r'i Ji.pusuion to pursue thus unfortunate vie-' tiui of bad temper and drunkenness, can not distinguish between crime committed in liroadway and crime c.unaiUoJ at the fivo poiuts. Tlie American aut!inr,Abott,h.iswrittPi; j j ne hundred volumes ; Weslev wrote thir- 7 ' I ty octavo volumes ; lxter wrote several j hundred volumes, and Lopei de Vega, the i Snanish poet.published twentv-one million three hundred thousand lines, which are! equal to more than twe thousand six bund- red and sixty volumes as krgeas Milton's rcrUIIina ((tfrrliim IS luiloWS . 13 Negroes. 10SITI.VG of Men. 1! .vs. Vom-n ana4 TMMiZ Kitchen Kurniti!r.',ant many other articles too tedious to mrntion. Kather an extensive combination fori t, . .. 13 poor negroes to "consist of 1 - ' ?. ! Hamshackles. No matter how ele-1 gant, appropriate and euphonious a name j apolitical party assume, some malicious j opponent rrgsrdless rif afe and bratitv, is , " . , . ? ... . .. placo of cicaa water and aoan. srire to caneafnre it with" a meknumc. . Even the vrctorimis Knaw Nothings ia A tunnel isteing eoastrnetcd ia Swite not escape : in North Carolina, awordia?: rtand, which will le, when eomplctod. I to the Concord Gaaette, they ate styled RamtkaeUtt I . .. VOLUME XI NO, Uy v 4. ' 'i Wimle NrvBF.H, 5f -1. - ! "kKJt B 'iit'intt, founder cf th A men' I can Biblti SixK'ty, in rc-fiirning homa ia chaise on a dark tight, Lad inadvertntly crowed a wide stream nprm the sfcepora of bridge after all it planks had baea wep freshet. ''The korse, 1-y insttnot, ( tmik the central sleeper, and. the parallel 1 !r9rH happening to be at the riekt inee, tbe wee!s eoi'd not run eff them hi!e the horse kept straight on. . Wa have heard ( at least three cases of Lor ses crossing bridges in the dark from which tL fionrin'r had been torn off br flood ar o wind. In one ease a d-ntor wa f on his horse ; io ai o'-hcr caw lii waa asleep the horso or! "ai urged to the dangeroua passage by a fVJ ; and the other ca tba riaef was a very old woman, but fce harse waa a pacing mare, as sore-fjoted aaa .!.. CwrntitAT., Nct. l?.-AtSe-W c, ( TC!.or!ja7 the toWer Qf tfce Bcw Congrega"tion.,l Church in course pf sttion, fell on the workmen and Jones, thers, '. Jones) genera through received great aturia on the 1-j'h and ll:h iuts., iu various parta t f the province. Ths riven and stream have ovciflj-aTudan l deluged the low brails, and for many miles all thti bridges have been swept away, an 1 great qaantirie of timber, bay, have been carried flf. , . Irib and S;o!sh laces, to the rMno of 250,000 sterling, or over a million of , dollars, are said to be sent every year t , the United States, whet's m-st of theni ; are sold as "French," "Valenciennes, "Marseilles," 'Hrussell,'-' &?., which it is j the fashion to believe are better than thosa made in Great 15i-i'aia. j - c r- V t . m lion I -1H4 in a rri.rr. ar:fi.!i fit nuM- . . - ,,, , ,., , go, said "the right to f-rbid Slavery, con ... ,, . , . . ... . ' suppose the right to forbid murder, robbe- , rr nrnn , a , . ; j o ntrbh bs autbaritJ' Fo'ir logic that far the Veteran, of ! .'lichijran ... .. , - : The Boston (Joi. llr. learns that F. Gleaa I msY fart Yifita srl isrw vainr? r.f Ii I a in tnn -r " - n, Esq., has disposed of h "Gleason'a Pictorial" and "Flas of onr ' !" B8papc nna M. Ballot Esq ,f it the round sum jf 5200,000. . Thia is the largest newspaper salo ever effoctei in this country. . . T'ae Catholic Areh-bi-hop of Gcnoaa, wliC?n tIie cliolera male its frightful ap pearance ia that city, published a pastoral' Intti.r i!.r nrnctnv t.in frwciT.n r.F (Tta nrnca ' a,l r..!i.,?., tW.t.,n .T, JT. -----' e . t.- u r i . t j .i r . fr which God punished those unfortunaW ' luhalitants. 1 . w : r . V . iu. i iuuiuu4 i-umjuuj, uuiuwnug ' 150 persons, left Conneautville, Crawford t,4 i.- tw : ... x t i county, ra., on the 1st fust, for Kansas. They were join.-J at Chester, by an tber tranch of the company from Cambria c3. The Trustees of the Associatisn knotttl as ' The Sbenczer-," haviDg visited Kan 3as with the view of uiakiug a settlement. ia that teritory, have returned, and repoi a location made there of IOCjOPO auret Samnel D. L:eomptej Kjfj-, of Haltii ... .1. ...:.i.. o . ..r.i. j. lUD "J-T wotot. tut, J J" " ' a?inme ,he da,iei of fT.. U hM' Ide was accompoied by bid family: The Know No-hings made a clean Ssfeefi in a rccont munieipn.l elecfi 'a in Sfeolby- viTle Tenu., clecti-!,; the Mayor; (Tamos ' ' j viag served out Lia time. BIis3 baa two years longer to serve. "ShW h f. ! weekly publi-fhsd at Pay ton, Ohio. ; Kv i'ia Slmnihai eoninanv. Great sheet .. , ., i . The ma who attempted to "run up a, ,.,.,,.. , j i .t. . i bill, ' "fell mto dtbl o deeply tbat ha fuunj lt impassible to extricate himse'.f. Perfumery An article that inJukat, .. ....... N.lioa tiimVa nsA riT t,-h aiinite lTna S'OO feet long. " " ' i TLe msn whr lc!d out an iclue. ' pn'.;"1 - s -Hitter