LEWIS 0. N. WORDEN, J. K. CORNELIUS & E. SMITH. An Independent Family and News Journal, THE CHRONICLE.1 Lcsvisblirg Hank. We noticed luatwcek that after the bill to alter the name and enlarge the -i f .1, . T au i l,r.r :ivili" ,.nviloges of the Lewis buij, -iu'r Intitutiou had passed the Senate, its -rn-ro! u-ns impeded until answers should bo received to certain intciro-; i.... t... it.n s.nntp - patones pro.. .u. - - . Committee ou Bank., and .nailed to that Institution (with others applying far similar privileges) on the day ot the t.as-;.-'C of the bill. An answer to '. nmnititlv the interrogatories wa piomptl) , returned, which we pre-miiL 1"" blocked up seveial time, (which is some satisfactory, as the House Committee ,,jng verv unuual for us,) and the ther on B inks have reported for passage urometer has been 2G dcg. below zero here, the Lcwisburff aud other Banks. j J some degrees lower on the prairies. It is agreed on all hands that some ! 1I'- 1 . :J , ......, , ...... V...1. i We have had very en Id weather aud addition Elioui.1 i.e maue io i . ; intr capital of the State, and almost , every county is afking tor a cnariei. There is not a bank of issue betweeu the Juniata and the West Branch a , ,. .;,,,: country demanding accommodation. . of that nature to a lare extent. 1 he . Lock Haven and Williams-port banks j are hardly sufficient to satisfy the ! Lumbering interest alone. Danville ; can not satisfy the Iron work?, nor ' Northumberland the Coal region. A ' shaking the f mtastic toe, and not being bank for the Farming and ordinary so employed is itself a sin. wants of the community, is therefore ! 1 believe that a man, conuected with a imperatively demauded.hcre, and from family, either as a father or a son, who the known and tried character of the ! goes to a restauraut and gluts his stomach men at the head of the Institution ! with pig.' feet and oysters, and " , and from the stable and unfluctuating . to wash ?or the .uLuUuh," com nature of the business interests it is : I Mi be "ha f ecP designed to facilitate-it may safely !. temptation to humanity, or lease. . , , i a hoase for such purpose, is a creat sinner, be urged that nowhere can such an " r l . l k n , institution be more safely or wortu.ly ; located Ci'rrelolleDOr of the Lewiiburg Chronicle. From a friend io a neighboring county "I'lease send me petition. I.ir .au.itting Kansas as a Free State. My Democratic neighbor, all express a dcMie to see tins Dellinnors ail rjrrcr-a a ut--uo .l I t..s. ihir siuceritv. I UUUC( Mi a. -rf. am going to keep a memorandum of all who sio such a petition, aud if tha Ltm- ocraticL'ongrrsuicD Toie gaiut tbeir pro-1 fesstd principle., I mean to put the matter right before them. Such a course I think , ught be productive of much good and should bo pursued by tnc friends of lice- dom evcrjwhere. Your Chronicle Las done some good here. When 1 wa. ia j Lcwisburg ou Commencement day, there ; was not a Fremonter in the valley, but : we gave six votes for Fremont in our ueigh-, borhood, one of them a preacher, wlioe Wthren did u't like it, but bud to .ubn.it. Fillmore stock "have fell" since Election, ! and the leaders have learned not to judgo the whole Union by their own little circle of acquaintance." j From North Western Illinois, Dec 15, i 'There is no telling when this letter shall come to hand e have snow to any amount and any depth mora than I ever saw at one time or want to see. The old- , est settlers, say they nJver saw so much here. I am perfectly blockaded, aud cau hardly get from the house to the stable. ; Thi. living on the prairie is not exactly , what it is cracked up to be. hvery snow that fall, drifts terrihlv. The weather has Dot been so very cold yet, although the "diameter" (as a chap once said) has been 23 below rero. Thismorniug I went from ; the house to the shop or the top of a worm ; or split rail feoce.but the snow drifts make : ii a very urnicuu w 6. , stores, ic A citiien of Virginia writes 'If Freuticc "kicks South Carolina out of the Union into the middle of the Allan tic " Virginia might share the same fate, but I have no wish to go. I inclose 51 to renew my subscription, as I wisli to have the Chronicle as long as I live wherever I ' J ' . i Another man who went South an Qj j "married some niggers," wrote soon after T-1 t.a l,,l nnt "firofl fkf ttlA .,., , , , i i i n ! VVIVUIVIV. - w " 1'- "J inch : cold'lO below ze'ro"" j , . . . , . ,. -, f From an undoubted Republican :J .. . . i j .i . j "W hy have you taken down the stand-1 ard of Fremont k Dayton? I am for them first, last and all the time, while living; I and after that, fur their heirs aud execu tors. Having indicated our preference, we re- moved the names to make room f"r read- ing matter just as many of the Fremont Couie more numerous than are necessary to Clubs adjourned : for "three years aud a ; ja tbe woik of the farm. The supernu day," when we hope to hoist them or some merary children are disposed of to the oiuer names just as good. hire we j "warm up" to Frcmout, we co for "mea cares, not men". From a distinguished citiien 0f an ad joining county : ... , .. , . , i " 1 am 9tt mnh nicnnanrl in L... . t . -.- ... . lue war .gainst the teD" of fclaver, as any man can be I think our par excel- j J rfT"?." fec?i"aadal delightful exhibition of their wisdom at the last election, are generally disposed to join j IBM -t . or',m"t,CD- 1 c,n !ribe Tl v MU'J t0 the constitution of the I .-w AHon, and I think all ought to. From a citizen of Ohio : "1 like the Chronicle, became it is tbe on,7 wjntry p.per which I ever knew of Which I could ,tnp, Ha,ig .topped it twice I find I ., do without it and in. lend to be a lif tuUcriber. Eneloaed I'lcne fiad 52 tot sixteen months," e. A Member of Congress froin it Yankee District writes us "Tbe war has just begun Freedom or : Slavery must triumph." j From Northern Illinois, Fob. 2,1857. : "We Lave hud Quiet times here sinee I election. In this town we were all lor Fremont exeeptiug 0, aud oue of that num- fcer tbrow!Q ou, 0I1 act.ount of Lii vote ! Ujug niaikiJ freiucmt club are kept i nr, ;.. ...miiv rdaces. We nive up beat for ' this time, but uot "subdued. fitrtll but wealthy and quiet 1 live in a iwn, made M u lU worM J y of a j j . can cstif tlitr. baj ont been a l-.w-suit ltre t;uce became a resident. We are having the hardest winter ever known in this country the snow is nearly two feet 0B levnl-tbe road, have beea h;ng gjuL.e u Crst Wt,,k in j.,,. j CCIIlber U(ltil U0Wj it ruiucd f.r three j and 1 think the snow will soon ue goue." rorti L.ifturethroi.i.-ie. Ye blind guides. lneh strain at a gnat. and wluw ean,el j believe that dancing is a sin at least, B vouog man or woniau (or old one either) be cmp'oy.d more usefully in the j melioration of the couditiou .f mankind j and the glorifieatiou of God, than iu j b such purpose, and be who lease, a house for such a business, are all sinner.. 1 be licve tlut Le who ,he Af,iCin acc0r- Jin,r ,0 (be hyfi of the jjoutbera States, in involuntary boudagc, eius. I believo , -fill that polygamy and bigamy ara sinful. I : -11 f.l i believe also, in the language ot the pro- , fession of fuith of the church in which I wa3 rCftrcil that " Some sius iu t!icmsclr j are mw beinous, ia the sight of God, auJ xwW j ejB.mand. of the deca- 'u " ligue is a violation of the whole. 1 be-1 liL.Ve that the dogma that we arc to choose j ,be least of two evils, is a figment of the Vreuch iufijci philosophy ; and that the! e requireg U3 ta choose: r r J . -either. I might have added above, that : I believe that he who gives the right hand of fellowship to him from whose finger ends ure dripping the blood of murdered souls ; j tie 6bape of African slaves, is a great ' iniismuch a, tLereby th9 word of God is violated iu strenglhtuiug the hands or Witu tUe li,!lt 0f the ' , y . science, I have never had auy trouble iu , detcrmiuiDg what is and what is not a sin ; j but I have had trouble iu ascertaining the ! tlact ,jei,rce 0f beinousness of different j tv imt r couM I1CTer dutcr. . "" df ln de6ree b,e" ! tween polygamy aud slavery, viewing the couseriucuces that flow from them, as well j as tbe sins themselves; but between biga- ! Uly ariJ slavery I could always see a marked : dljfcreBCfc Take tw0 ill9UIlce3 . Tlie one ! !,:,, .bh the A. 15. C. ! For. Missions directed their missionaries I not to discipline. A man had a wife who j bad become old. Ha took to himself a young wife, during the life of the first. na became a convert to Christianity ap- pCare(j si0Cc-rcIv pious, and .J(j we w- coutiuued to provide well for both wives, livcu agreea .jf an1 i. nrnf Ail nnd r.rnrifird Iir thpir bly, am -vi --- --- offspring. The Board of Missions directed j i that he bhould not be disturbed, nor re I quired to discard his second wife. Take quired to discard bis second wife. Take ! an instanco of slavery, which I have from a "SS" o has been a pastor in the slave States and in the free States, who . . ' says it may be taken as a sample of com- . J . , . on las,aDce n Southern life : A man marries a wite and takes charge ot a plan tation. lie purchases a negro man and woman, puts them iuto a but, on the farm, to do the work thereof; their offspring are userl fr the game purpose, until they be. bighest bidder, and the proceeds appropn- atcd to the purchase of the necessaries of life The master implicitly oueys tue law of the land, which forbids to permit bis slaves to learn to read the Word of God i .i;VAn,l n tliA fnnfh rf thr law of tk jaw uiictiii " - - - J God a practice, my mlorniant says, wyiivj aMt J.,, ig a ,Cry comfortable way of ; lh h li(e. Now tbere is no d,ffieult, To my mind to decide that the iB'he fin lostiUC9 havc , mUch fa,ier task bisaccoont at the Judgment bar, than tbe man will in the last instance; but slill i bclieve tbat they are both sin- nerg in the ht of Godt and that the lat- ter is much the greatest. I believe, finallv. tbat tbe man (minister or cider) who can spend his time in rack ing his brain, to put forth reasons for bis faith, that danoing is a tin, while be never open, bis mouth, or employs bis pea to rebuke any of tbe sins that I have enume rated, while they are epread all around BURG LEWISBCRG, UNION him iu ihc world, aud some of them prac tised iu own congregation, aud tuwn, and annually goes to synods, and there gives the right hand of fellowship, to meu who practice some of the sins I have enumera ted, and not living in his own congregntion and town, is slruiuonj at a juU and ftcat lutcin a iinnel. A qutstii.n for you, Messrs. LMitors : Would my forepoing ci'iifcsioii f faith be a oufiicieiit platform upou which to erect a new si ct ? or is it only a part of the faith of the primitive church ? J. F. L. Remarks by the Eihtob. Wo do not think any more sects would be of more than temporary utility : belter briug them j all back ti the only Standard. The variety in the dispositions cf good I men, has a positive adautagc in that it j furnishes peculiar advocates for every i particular branch of moral reform. The ! different character of the Apostles aud the wri'ers of the various Books of the IJiblo, is clearly indicated iu the luiidy of doctrinal and practical pointa urged by j them. It is au interesting study to note how wide the scope of discussion, in the New Testament particularly, and jat how perfectly barmonbus. As the human body is corr.posed of many in embers, ail useful iu their place as so ciety is composed of men of different occu pations, most of them of geiieral benefit so this peculiar disposition or extreme de votion to one science, or branch of human j welfare, tends to the goud of tho race in : the long run. While tho Christian church tliou'J be prmutive of all reforms iu the moral; world, it it not so ; aud societies devoted j to particular reforms are of great utility, j We can not therefore look upou extreme ' devotion to any one reform, as at all inju- rious, but rather beneficial. Study and j euthusiastic love of one, may be indeed essential to make an impression upou the public miud aud heart. Thus we fiud one man almost wholly consecrated to the cause of Temperance ; auother,to the cause of Freedom ; another, to 1'iison Reform; anoiher, to preaching the Gospel ; another, to Ministerial Edu cation ; another to Missions aud each while having his particular attention direc ted to one thing, doing something for the ueucial good. livery oue should of course endeavor to so act as to accomplish the greatest possi- j ble amount of good. But each must act i and judge for himself. And thuro are j minor mauners of vastly iigurious evil in j their results, worth the attention of some i one not only wolves iu tho garden of public morals, but als "little foxes that spoil tho grapes." One man deems Intcmperanco to be the greatest evil that afflicts humanity; while his neighbor regards Licentiousness, or War, or Gluttony, as that evil ; aud each throws all the light he can upon the sub ject. Across the way, a neighbor holds Calvinism as productive of fatalism, while , his neighbor charge. Arininianisin with a j similar baleful tendency. One gentleman j thinks Lawyers d j a great deal of harm in ; the community ; and perhaps one or twe ! ically thiuk heaven forgive them ! that j Printers lie ! One of the evil effects of depreciating j efforts for tho publio good, is the encaur- ! a 'kment it affords oavilers. If one sin is opposed, those guilty of it will ward off all attacks by pointing out greater sins. If personally urged to repentance, they excuse themselves because the preacher of righteousness is him.elf a sinner. Every act having some moral quality, mu.t be judged as every man must be judged separately and independently. Thus the advocates of human bondage retort, when remiuded of the. golden rule, tbat there are white serfs in Russia, aud overworked paupers in England ; that that (as well as other) crimes were ouce t.jleratod in Judea and iu New England ; aud wind up their apologies for Border Ruffianism by the all-sweeping tauut, "Would you marry a nigger ?" (just as though you could not advocate the rights of every man, woman and child ou earth, without marrying them !) The ridiculousness of endeavoring to square all others by our own standard, is well illustrated by the case of a farmer who wished to disehargo from service his old pastor. lie confessed that be was a g.jod man, a faithful pastor, an eloquent preacher, an orthodox divine, a popular citizen but but but "But what?" " Why," said he, "if I must tell it, he feh his denied old horse on jiunkini !" To make a practical application of these general remarks, we thiuk it no objection to au argument against Daucing, that Sla very is au immeasurably greater sin. If a man deems himself called upon aud capable of correcting a particular lesser evil, be should not be deterred by the fact tbat some one else deems some other a much greater evil. "Let each be fully persuaded in his own mind," and hinder no one engaged in a good work for jhe reason that "he followeth not with us." vr. .K.rf..ra ahould bear with those consciencious persons ibose minds do not incline to run io the channel of mental or Christian duty with our own. Rather bid tbem God speed in every well ordered effort for the good of our race.. C CO., PA., FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 20, 1857. Panther Hunt in Snyder Countv. ....... O .1..' ,. - ooi Dt;0Dle of .u. l...r .,f Hnvder county were startbd b"i " - n r r by an unusual noise-bellowing, screech- iu ana tukiui on m a woBddr.ui luiinncr .. r-n... .....ninolv different directions as C " . A creat deal of terror (be wiud varied. ot,-;i,-.I (v this invasion of that oeace- "w J ful regiou. fi,n.i,.iif frnm t!. of the noise, it must be a Gyascutus, au j Ichthyosaurus, a Mastadou, an Eh pliant, i Reheinoth, or some other outlandish, bun- gry iutrudiug manunoih of Brobdignagian : proportions. Some of the wise old huuters ' however somewhat calmed their fears by ' assuring them from their own knowledge j that it was probably a monstrous Faultier, which had been driven from its home (as iu other places this season) by the severity of the weather ; that it was dangerously hungry ; a nd that its voice was uncom monly harsh from having caught a cold hy slcepiug away from homo o' night. This would not do the monster must be extir pated, and the Union saved aguin. And so the lumberman left his logs, and the pioneer his cltariugs the Lrael l'utnams and the Daniel Boones fixed up thcii guns, made their wills, kissed their wives and children with a tear iu each eye and all rallied towards tbe quarter from which the roaring proceeded. With undaunted step, eyes iuteut, ears pricked in every direction, aud observant of every crackling twig, tbe march was kept up, and every I mile was evidently nearing tho enemy. Iu due course of time, he was surrounded, driven into the premises of the Reaver j Furnace and In ! the "animal" wis Mid- di'esaarth Ktrn. & Co't new Steam Ejint'. The "roar" of laughter that followed this discovery, was about as loud as the engine 1 Long may it work I and many othurs be put up in this region. Cum. Down on Forney. Notwithstanding John W. Forney has for a dozen years prostrated himself at the foot of Slavery in obsequious slavish ncss, the South having used him to their purposes now "cast him like a worthless weed away." Witness the following from a late Richmond Enquirer: Fhiladelphia and other places, to increase Mr. Forney's claims upon Mr. Buchanan's gratitude. The President elect has done all in his power for Mr. Forney more, in deed, than we think Mr. Forney or his friends should have asked of him ; and to request him to go farther, and embarrass his administration at the outset, by mak ing a personal matter a national affair, is as 'ungenerous as it is unwiso. To make Mr. Forney's difficulties his own, to make his quarrels those of the democratic party, private concerns a mutter of State, is not to be thought of. It has already been sta ted with great authority that Mr. Forney will be placed iu tbe cabinet or in some other position "higher'' than a scat in the United States Senate by Mr. Ruchanan ! We do not believe it." Mr. Buchanan's letter urging the elec tion of Mr. Forney to the Senate, has made no little sensation among bis political friends in Washington. It is not disgui- sed that be yielded to impolitic persuasion for such is the extenuation pleaded and for this yery reason apprehension is entertained that like influences may bo brou"ht to bear hereafter upon matters of i greater magnitude. Douglas chuckles with .... t ii- J great delight over tho publication, and is inclined to pity tbe sorrows of the poor old man. There are others who wj..y it quite as much, but whe check the vent of any candid expression. Behold the Figures." The New England States are against Ruchanan, by a majority of ,-,! ; The Middle States are against Lira by a majority of The North Western States (California excepted) are against him by a majority of 207,313 121,746 Behold these figures, il ...... .- .- Ft.. S'ate$. Verily, verily, and of truth, Dough faces, "THERE IS A NORTH" and there will De a greater .onn u Kansas u .... - .1 :r tr admitted into the Union a Slave State; if slavery bo extended over territory now free; or if a serious attempt be made to revive the Slave Trade. This, our Demo cratic friends may write in a book, if they please, says the Hollidsysburg Retjifpr. It is "manifest dostiny," and no number of Naturalizations practible, nor frauds, nor party drill, nor aught in Democratic power, can prevent it. But for the pres ent, let the figures we have given, thunder in the ears of the 81avery Extcnsionists "THERE 18 A NORTH." It is stated that the lata Preston S. Brooks more than onco deplored his con duet on the occasion of the Sumner asssalt as tho blot and the misfortune of his life that he declared bit only purpose at the outset was to inflict the disgrace of a blow and not any severe bodily injury that he was excited by wine, of which be had been drinking freely, and that tbe first blow .truck roused all tbe d.mon within him, and left him no longer in possession of bis judgment or lelf-oontrol. HRONI Taxa&les In the State. the NEW SEPTENNIAL APPORTIONMENT. ! part of the business of our State Legi- . ;, ,., ...; :i t. i, l,ur(! at ,t! Pre,ent ,C!,9,0D reconstruction of the senatorial and repre-1 au"",w , h ,.f sllA t-..M.. ,..1.1 ...r'.f.tj f.F arh nieration ot tno taxawo innaoitanu oi eacu cu"ty- Wo have the following as the statement oi laxauics in ma ciaui lor me l or.-T vear 10JI Counties. Tjrnllt. 5,715 33.378 6,871 b.lUl 5,1U7 10,81 5,05 y,7!4 15,200 8,500 5,702 6.0SS 4.538 lG.s'J.i 6.26:J 4,158 3,600 5,479 9,674 7,004 9.024 6,152 1,239 9,953 7,825 212 8,3Cl l,c9S 5,3U0 5,728 6.232 3,401 3,267 28,108 5.026 6,902 10,592 18,217 7,374 3,162 1,631 7,328 3,450 3,357 16,799 11,235 6,038 4,717 104.000 1,520 a, us 19.380 3,145 6,254 1,110 7,139 0,6 IS 3,215 4,814 3,769 10.007 5,775 11,432 2,501 14,967 Adams Allegheuy Armstrong Reaver R.dford Reiks RUir Bradford Rucks Butler Cambria t'euiro Carbon Chester Clariun Clearfield Clinton Columbia Craw ford Cumberland Dauphin Delaware Elk Erie Fayette Forest Franklin Fulton Greene Huntingdon Indiana Jefferson Juniata Lanca.i.r Lawrence Lehauon Lehigh Luzerne Lycoming Montour McKean Mercer Mifflin Monroe Mongomcry Northampton Northumberland Perry Philadelphia Piko Potter Schuylkill Suyder Somerset Sullivan Susquehanna Tinga Union Venango Warren Washington Wayne Westmoreland Wyoming York Total 500,13 One hundred members of the Legisla ture distributed among this number of tax able inhabitants makes the ratio of repre sentation 5961. Philadelphia will lose a Snatnr but iain 1 Recrcceutatives. A mmW will be trained bv Schuylkill, rnd anotber by Luzerne. Probably Brks will o,e if uc1j9 1, York 1, and Fayette and , Westmoreland 1. The ratio for Senators j, 18,000, which will give another to the 1 counties outside of Philadelphia. There ueed be few other changes. 9WA r..1t A,wl..a tliA apntimfint COn- ; nJ . laiuci iu fcuc tui4w-t . rf LewUbu ; u .f , ' 11 read it and en from an old Almanac, and has been repeatedly publish ed I. nr Ucflilnm nut nf nlace. The Alma- nacmaker, speaking of boys who are out after night, says : "They acquire, under the cover of night an unhealthy state of mind bad, vulgar, immoral aud profane language, obscene practises, criminal sentimouts, a riotous sud Swaggering bearing, indeed, it is in tbe street, after niguttall, tnai mo ooys principally acquire the education of the bad. and a canacity for becomina rowdy, .,,u..e ... - - dissolute, criminal men. Parents, in this particular, should nave a rigid ana muex - j ible rule that will not permit a son to go : into the street alter niatiltail. Moses Sheppard who died recently in Baltimore has left a fortune of nearly one I .... .... . .,-!. j million of dollars tbe greater part oi wuico be devotes to benevolent purposes. He began life a poor boy, having been born j somewhere ia the neighborhood of Phila- delphia. He went to Baltimore about tbe year 1S00 and commenced life as a poor errand boy ioa grocery establishment, in which be ultimately became a clerk, tbeu a partner and afterwards conducted the business for many years on his own account retiring from business with a priucely for tune, at an early period of life. He bad but few educatioual advantages but strong natural good sense. He belonged to the society of friends and baa dedicated a large portion of his splendid fortune to the es tablishment of an Insane Asylam near Baltimore. Honored bo his nam and memory. In the Philhdelphia District Attorney contested election ease, much testimony has been adduced showing the great ex tent and recklessness of tbe naturalizatien frauds, which appear to have been carried on nader the auspices of tho Democratic committee. ESTABLISHED At $1,50 Teh The Lancaster Bank. Last evening we noticed briefly the ar- st of IS. L. Laciiman, uto i resi.ieui oi I'rcsideut of : tbe I.ancater Uaok. on a cljarze ot em - bezzli ment preferred by stock hol lers of th Lancaster Bank, and Lis being held in -. Mr- Long.neeker appeared at h oinca oi ... - . - - entered bail m g4,j0i to answ.r at mart, Ileruy Longei.eck. r and Thomas U.iuin- o-ir.lurr brcnuiiii" bis sureties in 12. oW r. o ' g each, besides recognizing personally iu the same amount. The enmplaiut charges that- some time io the mouth of Mirch, lio, Pavil Long euecker, then President of the Lanc-ister Rank, aud B. C. Buohmtn, Cashier of said Hauk, paid fifty thou v. 1 dollars of the uioucy of the Bank to the Lancaster Sav ings Institution, on the notes of W. L. Uelfeosteia, which notes were endorsed by either the President or Cashier of said Batk, in their individual name or names, aud other Directors of sail Rni ; that at , aru)y which destroyed Ossawattomie, ds the maturity of these notes they Were pro- libemttly WaVu up to a member who wa seated at the Bank f r payment, and were .pei,tiDg, aud knocked him down. He af directed by the Coehier to te paid, although terwards attempted to draw Lis bowis at the time, Mr. llelfustein Lad uo funds j kulta on the same number, bat was pro in that Bank to bis credit t. meet them vcated. . thus appropriating the funds of the Babk to their owu private indebtedness tj an amount exceeding .)0, O'JO. The complaint further charges that the said David Ljr.geuecker, as President of the Lancastor Bauk, did at various times appropriate the funds of said Bank to hi owu individual use aui benefit, aui also that he loaned out sumsf tu ju-y, the property of sail Hank, without the knowl edge or Consent of the Directors, t j iudi- New York Crystal Palace, died at Copeo viduals without security, and which have hagen, Denmark, on the 4th of January, been since lost to the Bauk. I Ha commenced the publication cf a Sul- Wo undnrstand that the prosecutors in day newspaper in that city, and died or these cases, have retained Messrs. Kline i the day the first number wis issaJ. and Brown, as special Counsel ; Mr. Dick-' TU fcf wi:;;amiport are eogmg. ey prosecuting the case iu bis official ca-! ed .q raiaing g..5)000 cf st0k for ,t pacity, as District Attorney. Dm' Ec wiUiltm!iDurt k E:mir4 K. U. Company.ia prea of Friday. order t0 rtuiu Machine Shop for that How to Make Oni Faum Equal to ' road in their town. Owcx half the sum ia Turee. In a recent address before the already secured. Ohio State Agricultural Society, F. T. Tbe jfewbera (X. C ) Journal states Steward, Esq., thus spake on this subject : ,tat witliia ten or tweive mei 0f that "Many raiu.eis arc destroying th jiro. ! piBee, ou the Nortb side of Neuse, beare duetiveness of tbeir farms by shallow work. . catamounts and wild cats exist to su.-h an As they fiud their crops are dimiuishing, extent that it is with great difficulty that they think only of extending their acres of ; surface, as they suppose their title deeds .i L. .i. ' - .;i i,i, ,.f earui. If these will take their deed.,s:uiy tbeir meaning, aud arply the less iu to their fields, they will soou realizi three foil crops, that the law has given th iu three farms where they supposed they had only one; in other words that the sabsjil i brought up and combined with top sl, and enriched with the atmospheric iuila ences, and those other elcmeuts which ag ricultural science teaches them to apply to their grouud,will increase three tola tue measure of its productiveness." FOREIGN KEWS. ! Halifax, Feb. 14 The steamship Europa, from Liverpool, arrived this tore ( noon with dates to tha 31st ult. j The papers furnish a confirmation of the ; last news from Canton. It is lumored that the American difficulty has been settled ; by au apology Iroui tus cu.uise aa.uun- The reported peace with Persia has not been confirmed. A despatch from Constantiueplc, dated January 10th, announce, that the British steamers had evacuated the Lie of fc.r- j Lord Stratford de Redcliffe telegraph, tLat ; 1 -,!" ,u fc ', ! not because ot tin capture uu.n ! The details nf the capture of tou latter i phec Lad been received at Uuuiuay. A Warmnq to Calitu I'M Mass. A ... , ! number of young men wuo tul aunoyeua j wt.Jdi,ig party, iu Chester county, with the . oul!aujlsb noise of a cahihumpiau baud, j o ..horse r ie.f w,re tri- j cd iu the Chester county courts, wee ne- j fjre Iaati for ,iot were convicted and fin- ,j escb 25 and costs, aud received a very . - . , ... i wholesome lecture troiu J u ige uaiucs. ; il- ...,. ..... it ,.-rv.,i them ri"ht ' k1'"'1 u,i:onlPS heavy, it is cradled ; and it I . I i generally W0U thraald to reuder it fit Slavery wab on Eiac.vrio.s. It is f r U5(1 stated that the election of Prof. W. Ii. ; Powell, the Republican nominee for Slate i J"'1" K.llecn and James McGovern, Suoerintendcnt of Public Instruction iu ! " nlTS of JiUiM L ' Illinois, will probably be avenged by the j der,Jcwlli of l'uiwt.lio, are unl-r arrest, destruction of the Free School system of j Q Ui fM ti , arprt,pr;,tiDi Illinois. The Democrats have sworn to g300 0"l(0 fl,r, wagall rolJ frm Forl Kear abolish bis offi.-c,and the Egyptians in the f NtUllsk tB California. Good. State (all Ruchanan men, and 40,000 of: whom can't read or write) demand that Your word is jour s.rraut so long as the two-mill school tax shall bo taken off! yoa retain it ; but it becomes ycur master tbeir lands. Washington, Fob. 14. Messrs. Stod well and Lee, of Virginia, bad a hostil. meeting near Mr. Blair's residence, this afternoon. Three bloodless shots were bad. The hostilities were then adjourned, and a board of honor appointed to effect au ad justment of the difficulties. Meser. Ro eock, Keitt and Goode, members cf th House, and CapL Corrie, were on the gtound. C 1 JjJDJo IN 1813....WHOLE NO., 671. Tear, always in Advaxob. All Sorts of Items. . tea1 Shot. Mr. Thomas M.t! ne, rj , i.i ...k,,,.. I, .,..,; ;,, ,K . ub()Ut five N.,rth KCJt of Lou Ion hi F iA wttt disCl)rerj , ,b, bear with s eua. lioiu annuals were grea.iy ingmea- eJ auJ S0U,Ijt flc,p( tbe cuk however, not j ruce- iu.; i:ir ot; -re u u n a ncum ii utl0rr;nj. alm 0f tiu banter. CAunt- jjur.j Wf.ij. - . . .. . .... Oa Sat'inJay evening -lit ult., wni: a number ot children were p'v'ng at tua Louie of Willitm Cbc'nut, iu Lewistuwn, one of them, a s m of Mr. C, aped nearly two yearn, ac.-idetitally f.-ll iut-i a pan fil led with boiling water, and w.s o terribly scaidfd that he died on Sunday night at 2 o'clock. The suffcriogj of the anfurluo ate child Were txcruciutiug. In the Missouri House of Representa tives, during a recent political debate. Gen. jejj commanded the Border Ruffian Some chickens of -'Ir. Caleb Cox, la Westtown towaship, Chester euuaty, wert found on Saturday buried under the snow bank, where they had been ever since tbe snow fell, which was seventeen days ago. There were five of them, and lour wtra still living. As soon as they were reltaa ed, two of i hem flow to the Lara. George Can'entscn, the architect of ths l h0gg BBJ sheep are raised. . i !' Jaetson, with whom Mr. Samner "J"-- -, ! , " , laiue, uus occu icuijicu liuiu iug uiui.v b Postmaster. This is a slight punishment, but all that the Administration are abbs to itflict. The B et Pilet, aa intense blood and fire Roman Catholic paper, has the annual advertisement of the Post Office proposals fjr carrying the mails throughout the coud try. Hon. Millard Fillmore has declined an i invitation to deliver an address at the pro- i posed celebration of the Annnrsary of Washington's Birth, by the UniudAmeri- caus ot ju2alo. j If s!averv is to teestablisbed ia Kansas iute"rfereuC9 t,f tbi eral Goveru- thcn fretdom m.iy be estabiilih.d iu fc auburjtv J I C I . 1 . Iw.L . . ' . .mVM ftf ' 'he soldiers of Qjebec, while on their way ,0 church, had tbeir faces fiost-bitten. Th thermometer was 3d degrees below zero. , . , . tL- Shylocks to repeal the usury laws of Penn sylvania. Better raise the legal rate fions fume day named, to 7 per cent. When a man dies, people generally in quire what pr-perty ha has left bchindl him? Angeis will ask what good deed has he scut tforo him ? A mare valued at 810,005 has just r. reacoeu .v. ion. i.oU1 purchased for a s'cek imparling company in Kentucky. The negro salos by auction ia the eify , ,..,, . ,,, t, .-, exc(.,j fur m;;,-,lli f dolilti ia Talue aaJ aro " .. . ,,, " a- . Uriin is treated use iniaum. . uin mo wimn jou soSYr it to escape. The first man-iage of a Hindoo widow that ever occurred in Calcutta, took plaM on tho 7ih of December. The i hock of an earthquake was felt at Trenton N. J., and through Philadel phia CJunty on Tuesday night. More property is dssToyed Ij aroorerT year in tb United Staus than in i'l U.S) rest of th world.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers