LEWISB RG CHRONICLE BY 0. N. VORDEN & J. R. CORNELIUS. An In-dependent Family News Journal. ESTABLISHED IN 134 ;.... WHOLE NO., 68" LEWISBURG, UNION CO, PA., FRIDAY, MAY 29, 1857. 4 At 1,00 Yt.R. Ylai:. alw ays in Advance. SO NO. How eo'iJ are ihpy who say that l.nvc Must lirst be planted in ihe heart. And cultured by Ihe hand of Time, To make its leaves and blossoms start ! No '. 'tis a plant that springs at once I'p to its full and perfect form ; Unlike the willow or the oak, It beads not, breaks not in the storm. H ivr col I are they who say that Lore Must, like the diamond :n the mine, Be sought with care and polished well Ere we can sec iis beauties shine ! No! in the soul's blue heaven it springs. With beams that Ace can never mar Complete, eternal, brilliant, pure. As evening's first, rejoicing star! THE CHRONICLE. riiiutr, iiv , ism. Proskcutixo Attorneys. The new fee bill for all the counties in the State except Philadelphia and Alleheny,ullo(vs the following : Drawing indictment and prosecuting every offence iudictable only iu oyer and fprmimT. S 1 0 Tf hill hp rctunii'il 'iinor- 1 amus," 85. I r tllat J means ot artificial propagation, Drawing indictment and prosecuting j the number of shad taken in the river every offonce indictable only in the quarter ( might be iuoreased by one or more mil ecssions, 15. If bill be returned "iguor- j i;UIU ,nuually, the value of which in- buius, 83. I crease would be very great. It is also be- Case settled with leave of Court, fd. i , .... Every case if surety of the peace, S3. ; !ieved' the rePurt by mJ ,nte11'- It is stated that these rates aro nearly ' g"nt persons, that the river might be double tho sums formerly allowed. It : therefore behooves all men who do not like to pay big costs and taxes to behave peaceably and lawfully towards all men, and especially not to offend ug&iust "the peace and diguity of the Commonwealth." Propagation of Fish. It is a mistaken idea to suppose that the lakes, rivers, and small bodies of fresh water in our country, are not capable of produciog large quantities of fish as food for man. Civilization mav, it is true, de stroy some kinds of fish, as well as of ani Dials, but better kinds may supply their ! places. The fiili that will not thrive in cue j water, may thrive in another. It is true, J fi-hii.g must be prohibited at certain sea- I eons ; but let the habits if fib be accr I tained,aud let thim be protected properly, and they may be bad as loug as gras j grows and water runs furnishing excel- j lent, healthy food, atTirding manly out- door amusement, aud tuJin to purify : waters. I The subject .f introducing Snh into wa- ten which have "run out" as the common saying is, is one of importance, and is at-1 trading great attention among practical j men, especially in Europe. Fish, as well j as animals, birds, trees, plants, and grain, j may be propagated widely; there is no exclu , sivcly "natural" plane for them ; and des titute streams or ponds may be filled with choice specimens of the "finny tribe." This has already been done to come ex tent, but the "art" is still iu its infancy, j Froperly procecutf d, such results may yet ' be attained that Capt. Hummel may ogain catch bis Shad iu the Shamnkiu Dam The West and North Branches of the Susquehanna are capable of sustaining fi.-h, , either of the old or of some new kind ; and J Penns Creek, Uuffaloe Creek, the Cli 11- j lisquaque, ic, may yet be stocked with an j abundant supply of food for our tables. Water as well as earth can be made tribu-' tary to mau's wants and pleasurcs,but both ! riftrA tn rip fltiiflipn una pultivfttpil tn roinlpr them fully beneficial. I Tho Commissioners appointed, about one year ago, by the Massachusetts Legis lature, to ascertain and report to the noxt General Court such facts respecting the artificial propagation of fish as may tend to show the practicability and expediency of introducing the samo into the State, Lave presented their report. The experi ments made were limited to the trout, and were conducted by Mr. Atwood, an ac complished iohthyologist. lie says he want to Sandwich, in Barn stable county, and located for the purpose j of experimenting on tho artificial propaga- j tion of trout. On the 15tb of September, : he obtained four specimens two males j and two females and found tho eggs I were not mature. Carefully observing the condition of those that wore taken from that date, do mature eggs were noted un til the 3d of November, when some were obtained, and fecundated by artificial means. This was effected in the following manner : I took, says the report, a xine vessel and put into it about one pint of clear water; then taking the femalo fish, whose eggs were mature, holding her over the abdomen, the eggs freely passed from the fith into the water; I then took tho male L.h, whoso milt was mature, and, holding him over the vessel in tho samo manner, pressed the milt into tho water csnuining the eggs. The water was stirr ed gently with the hand, so that ever? fart of the egg came in contact with the milt. After the lapse of two or three min utes, the water was poured off and some treeh water added. The eggs by this were successfully fecundated. Mr. Atwood afterward collected from nont streams, 15,000 eggs which were feoundsted by artificial means, and after ward placed in tubs supplied by a contin ou8 stream. Tbey were also tried in vocnitwe w&tcrj 4B(J lbough fuf t limc the if., i i , ' V " -"" c-eb' "F'il'y. K afterward . m-.j nd :ir.iy ; lust. It is conjectured ibat the causa " must have beeu that the water did not possess the qualities thoir natures required." The principal report of the committee recommends tlio owners of lauds over which streams flow, to stock such streams with trout for the purpose sf raising them for the market, and to the cod of raising the pries of their real estate. The largo sltiggi.'.b streams of the State which are unsuitable for trout, might be made to I yield a large stock of various other species i of marketable fish, such as are adapted to j their waters. Large ponds and reservoirs ! might all be turned to a profitable use in j this way. It was suggested that some of the species of excellent fish of the Western Lakes would thrive in these waters ; and the variety might also be increased by the importation of eggs from Europe. Artifi cial propagation is also recommended, par ticularly of tlind in the Connecticut. It has bceu estimated by persons who are ac quainted with the shad fishery of this riv S"n stocked with salmon roft iu ixwiyirjmo chioixx. lion. Dai Id YVllmot, OH 11ABISO BU LKTTU ACCMTtKa TBI 50MI54TI0SI VOE Grttt Lender of freemen ! 8o truthful and bold, IIow Ilk In thy tpirit Our ngs of old ! John Uiticock, and AaUtru, And Jefferson too, Were junt aaoh ''fanatic, Dear Wllmot, as you. For man and hii birth rllit, To th law'i utmost Terge, Thy pen and thy luffrav The combat would urge. Tl Shjlock thou jielieat Of fl lb his full pound: But woe to th Moundrel If blood stain the wound! If States in thlr soTre!gnty Choose to miintaia At peflostitutlonn," The eeourge and the chain. Tb'-n seukvftt oo quarrwl TLou procinimeat no war A'J thir own, be tht nuuanre W'tiik mankind abhor ! -I.S.I- --Am. A nd our common domain. No blood -hound, no pIatc whip, Kg tenure, no cha.a : The deer of our fathers In the year eighty -een. Had the sanction of good men The blessing of Uearen. Without wrath or mallet, We sternly avow. That the act of our fitthtri Is law to us now 1 Vo Judpe'i dictation, No Present's frown. Shall shake our old fortress Of Liberty down! Where the fre lah'rer buildeth Ills wilderness home. No baleful miarma Of Slavery shall come. O'.-d bless the, brave Wllmot, for tliy word bold and trae I The rapt gaze of thousands Id now fixed on yon. In light and in beauty. Beneath the bright sky. Thy banner of Freedom In triumph shall fly! The old "Declaration With thee is at par ; Ant Mart-hall than Tacty Is dearer by far. Thou did't form thy opinions In Washington's school, - ... And thou boldest as valid The great Golden Rule. The right which thou claim est Thyself to eontrol, Thou aecordest to each brother From tropic to pole. And thousands jut like the Thy voice shall call forth. From the great Eastern cities From the South, West and North. Hurrah fi.r brave WILUOT, Our Leader to bold 1 He's like, In bis apirit, Our sages of old ! JUrilfy Tp, Imon Co., May, 157. 9amu All IP. Selected for the Lrewiatrar; Ohronicl. A ItIDrLE. God made Adam out of dust. But thought it best to make me first; So I was made before the man, According to God's holy plan. Mr body he has made complete. But without legs, or arms, or feet, Nor did he give to me a soul. Yet could my actions well control. A living creature I became, 'Twas Adam that gave me my name j When from his presence I withdrew, No more of Adam ever knew. I did my Maker's laws obey. From them I never went astray ; Thousands of miles I run in fear. But seldom on the earth appear; But God in me did something see, And put a living soul in me, A sin in me the Lord did claim. And took from me that soul again ; And when from me the soul was fled, I was the same as when first made, And without hands, or feet, or soul, I travel now from pole to pole. I suffer oft, by day and night, In giving fallen man delight. For thousand?, both of young and old, At my death great light behold. No fear of death doth trouble me, For happiness I can not see; To heaven above I ne'er shall go, Nor to the grave, nor hell below. The Scriptures I can not believe, Whether right or wrong, I can't conceive j Although my name thereia is found. They are to me an empty sound ; And when, my friends, these lines yon read, Go search the Bible with all speed; And if my name yon can't find there. It will be strange. I must declare. Qctmv What is the difference between a half dozen of dorens.and six dozen of dozens? Answer novated. R.C A shawl was lately sold in t f(?r fios. la the Eime ri B,k, thil f,r ,iX fKh. A shawl was lately sold in, Philadelphia tv, w?JE?3 o li i a i x a r, ess a y s Oommanicated for the Lewitbnrf Chronicle. SprliiRH of Enterprise. Human enterprise, as well as wooden clocks, requires springs and weights, to set I" and keen it in motion. From nee some of its createst and nob'est ilisnlavs i n ------- -i-j-j have resulted. The gold discovery in Cal- i ifomia is an example. The current of a mill-race unearthed a few shining particles, and in less than a twelve-month an almost wild territory, distant to many who sought I it eighteen hundred miles, swarmed with ! tens of thousands of adventurers from every quarter of the globe. As by magic, aj enterprise sprung to exiatenco, embra- fl . . . r i : - ' . l. .. . . r . 1 1 : ions of dollars of every conceivable product . ... ... , . .. I and mcrchanJize. while daring men of civ - ! ... , , . . " . f 1 ' in .i . . , . : cold a pruo tha moot ollunoc known to mac since tho beginning of time. What a tremeudous revolution in the direction piven tn enrcmnrea. n nnw ChM 10 bravo aspirates, a new path to empire ! t. v.. ..... .i.. .w. j n j the shores of the Atlantic first listened to the dazzling story of untold riches in the sands on the shores of the Pacific bnt yesterday, that feverish dreams and thirst for cold was kindled in millions of hearts : and to.day-de.pita distance, danger, and suffering ; despite the sacrifice of comfort, homo, and friends, a populous State, drain' ed from our bravest young men, is planted on those golden sands. And all this splen did enterprise, fringing the sea shores with ships, aud pouring in a living tide to fell forests, mine the earth, reclaim the wilder ness or transform it, and found hamlets and cities in waste places where would it be, but for that mill raco devclopemcnt, that accidental gold spring given to human enterprise It would exist as, undisturb ed, it ever existed latent as the ore a thousand feet below the earth's surface, which, when moulded, becomes the forge hammer, the axe, the plough, and the lire horse. Look at the half slumbering races of yttk Aneick,nog n l.uu., sliori OT 101110 giljeo spurs, enterprise is undreamed ot, and see how enterprise can be kindled by a spring by an accident in the most sluggish. And mark what the discovery ot gold in California has done for golden entcrpise in other regions. It has inspired scientific commissions to examine the Ural mountains; it has led a successful search ; pursuits and thoughts of thousands, has the ,nre PIc : " A-"nk alink a"Dt' j U,re 01 ' DOlB 0681 "a m revelation of that mill-race produced ! ' a-link. bob-aJink, a-no-sweet, a-no sweet I ( plenty, yet there ,s an upward tendency What stupendous results took birth and j 1 know U 1 koow U a link' a-liok don ' ! thing except labor Now continue from a simple incident-a new ttrow !t Jhrow il' throw h" ic-and be ' Wb' " 80 ' 10 "f 0PIQ,0B? for gold almost within bail of the decaying j the notes of our school-children in the capital of old gold gorged Spain ; it has j morning, breaking npon the silent atmos sharpened the miners, "picks" among the phere along the Atlantic coast in the hills of Virginia, in the plains of Georgia I East, shall reverberate along the Gulf of and Carolina, and along tho tributaries of tho Mississippi. Gold may bo termed curse. It has cursed individuals and cations. Spain lies writhing under its withering power, and the Indies and the African coasts have been desolated by it. Still, curse and ruin come only from its misuse from the worship of it. Turned to right account, it is a great agent for human good ; a facilitator of enterprise,commerce, arts, science, the comforts and luxuries of life, and the interchange and gratification of human thought. If the gold mines of California were to disappear to-day, and for ever, what vast good have they done mankind ! They ! bushel. Now in this city, corn may bo j the College. There aro already accomnio have aroused slumbering energy and gc- had at 75 cents and potatoes at 82 a bush-1 dations for eighty students. No charge is nius to activity, and given a new, con-1 el. What achango in fifty years! Pota-1 n0w made for tuition, but each student is quering direction to ambition, art and toes have generally been higher than corn j reqUired to work three hours per day, empire. The world, by comparison with for several years. Yet Mr. S. thinks it is i rot wtt;ci, he is paid. the past, is a century older in enterprise and aspiration, than on the day which first gave California gold to man. Commerce, adventures, and, above all, explorative en thusiasm, are expanded to a point which no pricking or Epuniug short of gold oould accomplish. A new era dates from Cali fornia discoveries the era of unparalleled peaceful enterprise. Thus does the won derful Providence of God turn what ap pear to be accidents of earth, into the mightiest springs of human enterprise and triumph. Law of Trees. In the New York " Farmers Club" tho other day the following proceedings were had : Mr. Lawton wished lo know if there was any law to prevent a person from plan iug trees on his own land, quite np to the line, where the roots and shade will both be injurious. Another member wished to know who owned the fruit of overhanging limbs. Solon Robinson answered that ques tion. It is now settled law, by several judicial decisions, that if a trco growing upon my land, overhangs the ground of my neighbor, tha fruit belongs to me, and I may enter upon his land for Ihe purpose of gathering it, provided I do not damage beyond what may be necessary in careful ly gathering the fruit At the same time, it is equally good law that my neighbor may cut off all overhanging limbs, and all roots that grow in his ground ; but while be permits them to grow, I atn to enjoy tho benefit. Judge Livtsostov, th6 Cfcairtc'D, "utiaifi this uew rf 'b ca?. " Couldn't, coz he Sang so !" Leaning idly over a fenco a few diys since, we noticed a little four-year old " lord of creation," amusing himself in thn irriM bv watching the frolicsome ! flight of birds", which were playing around 'him. At length a beautiful bobolink im- At 'cn8tn tierchcd on a bouirh of an annle tree. ! which extended within a few yards of the ' sum from his hard earning", perhaps with j was scarcely conscious of what was trans- j they think it would stop them from de ! place where the urchin sat, and maintain-! the hope of some day investing it ia a lit- piring. She was generally in delicate j nouncing its fraudulcnce, afterwards. The i ed his positionapparently unconscious of his 1 tlo property he might call his own. l'lour j health, and recent domestic troubles, no Census Lists have been so made op in ad I close proximity to one whom birds usual- is selling at $1 25 per hundred, meat at , doubt, Listened her death. The death- i vance as to secure a pro-slavery majority. ! ly consider a dangerous neighbor. 8al2J cts. per pound, molasses at 25a27 ' scene, which occurred under peculiarly Wherever there is a large preponderance The boy seemed astonished at his im - pudence, and, after regarding him stcadi - Iv for a minute or two, oboyiu" tho in- stinct of his baser part, he picked up a -. i. ft I. : - 1 - : ., .. , Btono 1) ,"M uls "uu "H to throw it. ateadvine h tnself for a eood i i;iii5 6 aim The little arm was drawn backward j without alarming tho bird, and " bob" . ' was "within an ace" of danger, when lo! his throat swelled, and forth came na - I 0,un 1 S"wiy r. 1 , j natural PMition and ,n. nOW despised charmed stona dropped, me minsirci me illlie arm lull lu lis , uuuciuiuv Biac vi auuioiv nu;u uiuak the murderer ! We beard the songster species of gambling worse than all the j which the family resided is subject to a through and watched his unharmed flight, ! card playing ever practiced, for by form- j lien of $7,000, with three years' interest, as did the boy, with a sorrowful couoto-; 'DS extensive combinations, they raise or ! which the Government holds as an iodem nance. Anxious to hear an expression of ! lower the prices of almost everything at nification of the forfeited bail, and the ! the liwI f,illw' feelings, we approached ' I v 111 IT 1 , him nd inquired, Why didn't you j Btone him J W ? Ju might have kill- The poor little fellow looked up doubt- of paying their just debts, make invest ingly, as tho' he suspected our meaning, i ments abroad by using the very money and with an expression, half shame and half sorrow, he replied "Couldn't, coz he tun j so"' Who will say that "music hath no charms to soothe the Avage breast," or aver that God had both made melody to move tho purer fountains of our nature, to awaken those aympathies that are kin- dred to Heaven, the Angels, and to bod himself? Let the sweet tones of music break npon the ears of the dull school boy, and he will awake with new lile and energy. Ponr the notes of melody into the ears of the wilful child, and you dis arm nim; the stone will fall from his ; beart, ana ne wiu iwoums ooeuwnt and, . . . . - , . , . attentive. Let music be the first to break the silence of the school-room in the mor- j ning, and the chorda of young hearts that are pnt in motion will continue to vibrate during the day. Happy will be the time, when not only the tones of our school-bells can be heard all over the land, but when Mexico, and the echo be heard in Cali fornia. Potatoes. If our farmers would raise more pota-' toes and less corn in proportioc, they j would benefit not only their own pockets j but the rest of the world. In a late acri- cultural meeting in Boston, Asa G. Shel don spoke of comparative prices of corn and potatoes. Sixty years ago, corn was as dear as now, say one dollar a bushel at retail, and potatoes were thirty to forty cents. About I forty years ago, there was a great rise in i these products ; corn sold for $1,50, and potatoes for the enormous sum of 50 cents a j as easy to raise three bushels ot potatoes as one of corn. If a farmer wishes to make the most money be can, let him cul tivate potatoes, beets, carrots, onions, par ships, &c, and ho will gel mora dollars than by raising corn. Weil SaidT A Western lady who was not long since a New-England girl, writes to the Tribune from Iowa with reference to the recent discussion of the subject of Cookery, a letter from whioh we make tha following pungent extract, commending it to the re flections of whomsoever it may concern : " Believe ma that we (women) aro not so much slaves to the tyranny of husbands, dinners, children, and servants, as to our selves, and false social customs. We are afraid of each other. We don't live in refcrenoe to comfort, or to our own means, but to what people say of us or think of us, and to overtop this one or the other. I have seen and know women fitted to adorn any society in this country or any other, that did their own work, took care of their own children, kept bright hearth stones, and had happy husbands, and still found time to keep up with the current literature, write memorandums, and copy poetry. It is not necessary, but artificial labor that makes our women, drudges eternal house-cleanings, beginning in March, and lasting till May again in September, and lasting till Thanksgiving. It is a pride of appearance of being thought good livers and crack housekeepers for, let women say what they will, tbey are as jealous of this as poets (or politi ticians) are of each other." New Bedford, Mass., has appropriated 8300O for thi rtlctrstiia cf '5so F?ir!h rf Ju'v I Evil Times. : The high prices cf the necessaries of life.sueh as we are now expcricncingjwhieh ! fall with peculiar hardship upon the poor : and middle classes, is a subject that must ' ultimately engage public attention,for it is already making deep inroads into the purse ' of manv a one who bad laid by a small , per quart, sugar at l lals per pound, and ! many other articles at one time luxuries, but now necessaries, in proportion, so that the question may well be asked whether t wtA iifivA nnl fnlltn nnnn ami limM 7 Worn " i".-, , .1- 77 , there any substantial rcasona for this state , j .... ... . of things, it could be borne without a mur - mur, but there are none. I ' There ia no fa - ( mine, creating a demand for breads-tuffs; : save in Louisiana, there has been no fail - ! some day bring about a fearful revulsion. Sjieculatort in fact rule everything by a ; pleasure one day thereby injuring tho ! it.AilMn.xi anrl Tia via-t tnn AvnniimAW Tn producer, and the next the consumer. In .dd.tton, this speculating fever is extend- "a' aght ' bo retained and paid out at home. These things bode no good, and we fear before three more years elapse, many who have aided in producing them will exclaim that we have fallen upon evil times. Leuist'jicn Gazette. The Work on Kansas. The Kan- 8ag Hcrald of Freedom says in reference to the report that Gov. Geary is preparing a book made up from his diary exposing ' the wrongs of Kansas and bringing to light new outrages : We believe it is true that Dr. Gihon, Governor Geary's private Secretary, is pre- Pg, iu'SiVteenjfl publication which has yet boen issued on w , M9 on our aifficulties here. The author has been conneoted for twenty years with the public press, is a writer of great ability, 1 always acted witn tue democratic party, and his book will have an extended circa- l.linn nnl niva tha 1 1 a f ftiAaa cahiI 1 ses wnicn are eoatinually proclaiming ; falsehoods published for partisan effect. ! The seven months of Gov. Geary's Admin- thai n.i K iiimi vrmihlpa am Kiinnh iflin istration have been the most quiet seven 1 months we have experienced since the first , tPttlpment of the Territory, and vet thev will be found abounding with startling in-, cidents that can never be appreciated out-1 side of Kansas. ! Agricultural College. The State 0f Michigan has established a College of Aorionltn nn a farm of seven hundred rprMiA nprpfl npnr the ritv r.f T.aniinir. whero the State Capitol is located. Jo- scph R. Williams, lato editor of the Tolo- do Blmle, is President. It has an eudow- ment of $ob,000, the procecus of the salt gpr;Dg ianj4 originally given to Michigan Territory bv the Federal Government. xuc Legislature has appropriated 20,000 dot annum for two years to the support of . rr . lLaiu seems iir biaiu ihsii iu doiuo i form near or remote to tho White House, at Washington. Jackson entered it a few weeks after the decease of a be- loved wife. Harrison and Taylor died in it. Polk left it only to return home and die. Fillmore buried his wife and daugh ter soon after his term expired. Pierce had his only son and child snatched from him a short time before entering upon his duties as Chief Magistrate and now Mr. Buchanan mourns a beloved nephew, who was called away in the prime of his early manhood. Verily, the grim monster is " no respecter of persons." Lancaster In telligencer. Melancholy Coincidence. The un fortunate young Chipman who is sentenc ed to death for the murder of Miss Penix, in North Carolina, was named Romulus Saunders, after Judge Romulus Saunders, and received the sentence from the Judge's lips, just as he was about twenty-one years of age. IIow different his fate from the anticipations of the fond parents, who wished their son to grow up to a life of honor and greatness co-equal with that of bU namesake! Now sentenced by that very namesake for a crime the most dread ful ever recorded in historyit A Suspected Slavib. Collector Hatoh, of New Orleans, has had the schooner Louis MoLana, from that port, taken in charge, on suspicion of being fit ted out for a slave trader. Tha Xtio Or. leant DtUa Modems the Collector fir "en forcing a narrow minded and naisphirf :ri li law cf ths Fecial C'Cgicis '' A Scene of Distress. Mrs. Vondersmith, wife of Judge Yon- dersinith, whooe re-arrest we noticed 6ome days ago, died yesterday afternoon, after a painful and protracted illness, fcbe had ! been very ill for some time previous to the arrest of her husband, and when on that occasion he bid her a final farewell, she ( distressing circumstances, was rendered ' still more painful by the dying wife and , mother giving premature birtn to a child a j tew minutes before her dissolution. Iter hrnthpr l)r -1 nil n I.pnnird- li .tit been com 7. 7" Vl" t mitted to prison for thirty days, the day I . , j j- i i , previous, for drunkenness aad disorderly ; oonduct, but was released through the in- tervention of friends, in time to see bis ; sister die. Her husband and the father of her three children, all old enough to realize their situation, lying in prisen in Philadelphia, charged with a high crime, and the crios of the children for parents both lost to them, altogether presented a scene of sorrow and distress rarely wit nessed by human eyes. The home in , children are therefore left not only or- ! w.Ln3 Vint It nmnlACS . T.. an eV V.mtirt phans, bat homeless. Lancaster Keening Espre, Mni 19. Advance. Mr. Park, of Parkville, Platte county, whose press was pitched into the Missouri 4L w j..cr. 11VC1 UJ IUC AJUIUIT ilUUlAUa DV1UV CIU ! teen months ago the same " abolitionist" Park, whose life was threatened in the event of his returning to Missouri was recently elected President of the Parkville j and Grand River Railroad Company, and j is now canvassing Platte county in the in terest of that road. The change in the popular sentiment in Western Missouri is really remarkable. : In towns in which, but one year ago, free j state emigrants were maltreated, the in- : habitants are now publicly discussing the j question of the eradual tbotition of slave- tHeriiy 't'l'mes change Missouri is pro gressing. St. Lou.it Anuijtr Jet Weiteni. Natcbe and Power of Comets. Although comets occupy an immense space in the heavens, surpassing millions of leagues, yet on account of the absence of atmosphere in those regions permitting floids to bo infinitely rarified, the matter r9 thAaa hnjidi ie tarf,iorl FA tha mfial fw. ble proportions. Sir John Herschel says .J nf a W ,nmnt fHT , . , , - i 1 t ' f . Kw pounus oi mauer, ana, pernap, urn, , a fcw ounces. And M. Eobinet, well j known in both hemispheres as one of the greatest authorities of the age, in physical astronomy, has gone so far, in respect to j this subject, as to say that the earth, in ' cominu into collision with a comet, would ' be no more affected in its stability than j would a railway train coming in contact with a fly. Old, tet Young. There is now liv- , ig in Coventry, Conn., James Douglas, wn0 one hundred and two yean and seven montJis old. Notwithstanding his great age he is as hearty, strong and ro bust as most men at fifty ; his eye-sight is good, never having been necessitated to wear glasses ; and his faculties in general socm unimpaired. During the past win ter, he walked two miles from home in the morning, cut bis cord of wood per day, and returned home in tho evening. His present health is good, and he labors daily. He was born in North Kingston, Rhode Island. Washington, May 19. A member of the Cabinet, to day, received a telegraph ic despatch from Major McCulloch, decli ning the Govornorshipof Utah. He, bow aver, expects to reach this city in the course of ten days. It is not true that Judge Drummond has been offered the appointment in ease of tho refusal of Ma jor McCulloch; but this afternoon a tele graphic despatch was sent to a Western man, whose name is officially concealed for the present, tendering it to him. The Oldest Citizen. The Montpc- liar TFaftAman says that Peter Nassau, of ', Pomfret, Vermont, sged 126 years, has been visiting that place, apparently as bale as most men of 75 or SO. Peter is a colored man tho oldcBt "citizen" of Vermont, and (probably) of the Union. I Had Judge Taney inquired of leter, he would probably nave learned that colored ! man were " oitixens, freemen, and voters, previous, at, and subsequently to the adop tion of the Constitution. Ono farmer in Otsago county, N.Y. this Spring, has made 121 pounds of Maple Sugar and two gallons of molasses, from only seven maple trees. Very good. But a single sugar-maple shade tree in Ver non, Ohio, yielded sap fiom which fifty one pounds of sugar was made the past icisca. A man iu Epringvillr, Susque hanna Co., Pa, this rrriPS mill Kansas Election. Some professedly conservative journal, iu New York, urge that the Frte S a! men of Kansas ought not to stand aloof from the coming fraudulent election, but ought to go in and vote. This is not le- cause they tunic Me iree state men would carry tue election, t,ut becauf a i o sw voiers, names are rareiuuj left off of the lists. In Lcavenworth,hun ureus oi legitimate voiers wuo voiea the Charter Klection in March, are left off si that they shall not vote in June. Tho Mayor of the town is left off, along with several other promineat eitizons who have lived in the Territory since '51. In other counties, names of Missourians are put on, to replace those of the actual residents left off. Whole neighborhoods are dropped, if they hajrpen to be " Tree State." By looking at the Kansas papers which eon tain the published lists, any one familiar with the localities can see at a glance that pains have been taken to tave each of them exhibit a majority of pro-slavery men. And those are the lists that, with out any chance for correction, are to de termine who shall or shall not vote at tha coming June election ! Hethodism and Slavery. The annual conference of the New York (East) Methodist Episcopal Church, lately ia session in Brooklyn, took strong ground on the slavery ques!:on. Tha committee on slavery submitted the fol lowing resolutions, which were almost unanimously adopted : RetolteJ, That we regard slavery as a great moral and social evil, a violation of the rights of man, and opposed to the spi rit and progress of the Christian religion. Rttoletd, That we will nse what influ ence we possess to prevent iu extension into regions aud communities in which it does not exist, and will nse all means that may with propriety be used by Christian ministers to effect its extirpation from tha world. Look to Voi r Homes. Try to mika them happy. Each home U a little Stata a family should hold bimeelf tho paternal monarch there, ruling and caring fur ail things with a gentle but firm hand. Look to jour homes, and keep them ever tho pure retreats for every member of thj household from tho temptations of the world. Look to your influence at yonr homes, to tho practices set be fire your odiT.tran lramAn.KA. .,!:! . 1 I J ,,ra l SCeiagf "f,". VbMtJ i utter M PP' gw f tDe practice comos not in to aid it. Look to your homes for the best means of doing: good and being happy. Tue IIoo Poisoni-no. It is concln- j sively shown that the " hog disease," ( which has proved so fatal in the west, is j caused by the animals eating the grain ! from which whiskey is made, after it had been used at the distilleries. A chemist who lately analysed a barrel of Ohio whis key, gave his opinion that there was strychnine enough to kill thirty men ia that one barrrel. The proposition to erect a monument at Boston to the memory of John Howard Payne, the author of the touching house hold song " Home, Sweet Home," seems to meet with much favor in that city, and several wealthy gentlemen, it is said, hava promised to contribute for the purpose. The Boston Traveler says a whole ship's crew, who have been converted during a three months' voyage, will bo baptized at the Bapti.-t Bethel, by the Rev. Pbineas Stowc, on Sunday morning. They sailed with Capt. Hardy, through whose infta ence their religious life was commenced. The New York Daily Times offers a Reward of Five Thousand Dollars for in formation that will lead to the conviction of the murderer of Dr. Harvey BurdelL Dr. Brandretb, of New York, also offers to be one of 20 to give One Thousand Dol lars each for such information. The New York Day Book, a prominent Democratic organ, propounds tLo inquiry: " Can an opponent of Slavery be a Demo crat?" It goes on to argue the question, and rightly arrives at the conclusion that " a Democrat must be, in the nature of thing?, iu favor of Slavery." Important Decision. Judge Haines, of Cbestcr county, in a case before bim, recently, decided that where roads are im passable by reason of snow or for other causc!1 the traveler has a right to enter ; Upun adjoining lauds and pursue bi jour noy. Cul. Qcorge P. Kane, of Baltimore, has declined a lucrative office under Buchanan. How does it happen that Bachanan never offers an appointment to any old-lino Whig except such as sura to decline J A FJP fr:)a J"9 City, called "Iha Benefactor," devoted to the Lottery busi ness, would mora appropriately ba ealltd " Iha Swindler." lbs net revenue cf the Niagara Suspea eioa Bridge Ccnrpiny last year was 37, 563. ToUl dividend, fifteen p-r e-at -?u