doubtless. embodied:in this production a series-of salient eorementa on life and so ciety,. as it with passalriiiiclee - hii4uicie and re 1?, penetrating e *lipid: ::;-,--:, -,- ; 'T..; In October 184,sim' , commenced. the . Publictio . lit. "The.. Lit4iTilgrini."- a monthlijuvent limed' .-itt 'Philadelphia by . 'M :k ,_it, -Which_ hids - fair ',to • prove assreat viiiite oing reed-, era as the-col iithinf_stiiricaberetofore prepared fe their entertainment. ' ' • In - thei iiiiithigi of '_Grace `Greenwood. we discover the perpetual,iefluence °flier personal .character.; There are: scarcely enfeafilluirt-whose -priiductions . tire. an much the expression of. their _owl . indi eiduality, . free from, the trarmAls ,of artificial literary.taste, acknowled#ing. no allegiance, to the absuld „restricttous-tf the selMols, loyal to 'the:spontaneous i :-, apiratiens Of nature.ilie_dips her pen in her true women's btlrkand hlidies forth those fresh;. beaetiful; 'end . vigoroul crea "dons. which are never the fruit of cOn ventiOnal training, or of timid, crouching iiiiitation., Kir prose writings ~are per- w vaded by th4-genume spirit of poetry. 4-• , Her \ poetry is the inevitable utterance of al a highly imaginative nature:- The latter is usually More carefully elaborated, hat '0 both ire free; impulsive,- often -careering. j wildly in impetuous flights, • but always stamped with the impress Of,purity and a generous purpose. -In her • freest strains, . she Orly' -as the wild .bird sings. • The , bobotink-...iti ; aclover - field is not. ;More merry 'than she is in her, mood of frolic. gayety., At, other time, her.song gushes a • forth in plaintive melodies, like-the sweet, a sad warblings, of the nightingale. But:this is never her habitual•state... • Her teniper- y ilinr) ant is too genial, to vivacious, too full L of love for all created things, to find con, 11, ti -nt even in the ;daintiest . sweetness 'of • pt melancholy. Her healthy sPirit all .c ays rebounds under the'.excit'ement of. - precious human sympathiesonel of frust a ; in' the 4' dear God,P 'of _whom • mortal tongue can say Wile but that , he • Love: C , Her familiarity with.extern , nature .s p . revealed ,every where in he wtitings.— ei Shorejoices in all eater objects. tir ti -ery . flower, that blab 71;.. eve r y ,anim I that sportsin the op air, every fr h plant of 'spring , i ery sweet breeze, f ` heaven, torches t e challis of sympail y within her soul, , and inspires. -the flue t ; `melody ;of her - :sterse. But - her:Thiene t ' strength is in the warm glow of her' a factions. Herein ;ilea' exhibits thO tr e glory and joy of , a•aincere worrian. H r thought's ever cling to the old- dome.t c .fireside - as the heaven 'of her young ima - 'at' • ' in ion. The patereal hearthstone is t e weird Jacob's ..ladder ef ' her - memo ~ . peopled irithatigeti, and opening the pa sage to brighter warlda. -She loves h r 1 parents, - het ) hrothers - and her siste a with_a love that can find no . expressi n for its expberaut tenderness Wt. - in tll e impassion'ed language of poetry. . Her kindly spirit . is beautifully blend, d' `with tboientispeut of-reverencer in spi'v of occasional 4tidacimis sallies on the d..i jectiOn,of fatseness and perepous - pr?- tense. With the lively instinct of gen • ins, she worships its presence in others. Free' from literary, rivalry, she is ever ready to do justice to genuine claims, and has fctukd her chosen friends among those whom a leas generous - nature Wouhl : 'have shunned as. Competitors in the . raco for fame. • , • • . • . - It is uot to be .denied•! i pliat she, some tiin&s gives offense to excellent . - penple, .wbo mistake her-frankness of manner for awant of feminine reserve, and her stir testic pleasantries...on social and public humbugs tor a superfluOns wicicrilness temper that delights 'in the .wholeialer '.slaughter of the innocents. But all this is dun to the want of the early, training inculcatei hypocrasy as a virtue, and fritters away all robust, natural feel; ing.toi the mincing phrases of polished, apathy. Grace Greenvoixxl has been' :faithful to the dreams of her c.hildboOd.- and in Otis fidelity lies the secret of her neeess, - - In the maturitylpf noble womanhorid, I her genius doubtless destined to still higter triuinplia_than Ow has, yet Raley- ed. Inspired with the lofiy demncratic sentiment of the age; .lniihing upon the course of Humanity with the.,natural'pie 't.f offeeling which finds good everywhere . and always hopes•forthe beat, will yet:it'd the approach of the era which has rarely been better described than in her glowing words :,"While it is ours tti lja bcri and tciwait, it is a joy to know that; amid her degradation, her isorrow, and her criine;Sarth still ',cherishes' deep in her - hruisedheart, a sweet hope, Judy and indestructible, that the - day:of her re= diswethlnigh.' The day fore _ _ - De so II ille,thig; 1 .Puts s ian o 'no m:, the Democrats of Stiaquchtfin CO nt, met at the. - 'Court : Efouie in lb' boreugh. on Monday eve liii4:of last, week. TWilliamA J. Tiarrell . Was chosen ',yeti' ent. Ralph, 8., Little * a 11! A. .1 1- : 1 S ymo r,' Vice 'Presidents.— . 7 'alter 1 e or imitation of theineet r i i t a comm tteevrere ;hymen, instructed ., t ltisitl. Ho ! D vid Wilniot who . ‘ was then hotdin : C u rt ` here, land request lain to licld ~s the inceting.': The Com mit en aeon -'urged with indge Wilmot, wh •pr -- ed fir,. address !.'the meeting in his u- al , lear, ' succinct, i i . and .legical nia er,,: upon ' the great quektions of gov !fyi ental policy - - that '' now agitate ' the , 'nati n. iiie spoke of his own ; pilitical life in C ngi-ms , and of his devotio n . wh il e the . - t6 the "nciples'or !freedom; ..and I said bat 1 " spirit within was still unfet ter- by e dictation of. 'Southey* iris. , " t tr . : ,He spoke of Do glis!s Nebras ka VI aaa-repeal of the issouri Com prom ._and an opening iew- of these Er It. is now c le arly establi shed =t at petit dig, distracting, and nion-destriay; Mr. Gadmion was not only roiled in, he itig q estions settled - by - ell t compromise,. acquisition of a- larger aliceof - S'on ra laud certain to cause a rei evral likewise andlhe whole- -, of Lower Clairol -pit by n the dangerous Controy rsiess= claimed N theitiratical expedition - of - the falba er, t liar, beeirsettled by Cunipromise mea- ' !resident Walker ; !but_had to pa 'a . s . res Of -185 : ;He 'charged- Douglas' great - dear more for what-he did let; Ow- I Patton • ith intreiluc rig into the Councils ` f the It ing-tri, the rho d oniontada of another dis- tbe ,e citing subject or •slavery, - '. tinguisbed gentleman Of the same ?mine; aid all . ihe an rchy and disunion incident viz' : :;li theon.,Robert .I.;itni great W en- . t the renew lof the discussi O n'or slavery ey-chief of - the Moonshine :Railroad. tlt i i Coupe,. y this attempt .Ito repeal . seems that .Gen.-Alumite rep:tried he t. 6 Mi uri- outpromirts au theCom \ ereaficretary's 11w:tuner) to Saiit,a - Anus, " iroiniieof 1 . and to int r, , nce slavery who 'put up his•pricereceordingly.,. Thus i. to tenitorY • North' of; degrees 30• .3413 the Government is made 16 pay morelfor ! %eta. "i He • considered th 'Nebraska the Moonshine! route than it the . talkative ill aithebad man's-bid 'for tits !maiden- Mississippian bad held- Ina. tongue. t:-. .We -v . in. 1856:1 `And that - " Slavery., Little , suhmit, that - heought- tomake upthe 41r- t - aut." Douglas, was attempting mote femme:. to Uncle Sam, -e l itber my Moon, -t an Scythes* men ever - asked ,fdr,'. to shine stock pr., .Misswippi • bonds, as be - tithe uttOduction >of slavery on soil' may : . : prefer. We Alon't Aiii7k - - it se l uil4 . °adept* ,liy- an - act of Congress,' fin Make much ....jirer,:nce to. .. the Treasury, • .rietileralliciimi fulfilled to the utmost ent-' which lie yihouldp , pay-in .= , .:. . IMt by the Nerth. As: Well 'water free - -------- . " entisylvania with the letifirOU the bond , int as that the betistifur Nebraska:now s yeho l ld he:forevet ohaired 'film "the iie lel of 'the . Werth, the'. West: and i r e mid leStates, - • by - the introductiOn of atm:labor i or as wellattemft to convert= f ) Tre'Deniolzraq - it‘elfietU en "-ariatocre=' Whatever - course ether! 'base - taken; ri c iney ..iike,' David:lll4i ' 'is ,- a free 1 - la:illy-the fire-touched lips .of prophets', 1 Ibis day. whasi; 'cornitig waa hailed by the rigatrs in &Kaunas. that lent through ei their prisan-walls and. went up amid the ' &trim The day of be fulfillri , :gl;fj it h; a~sgel? song ; the day of -111! epa :ty tatight bi,Teaus . in - die- temple, on the Mount, and by, the way-aide,- the • day of - the peace, the re4,l and the freedom of Go" d!':--ThrealalogicalorilarnaL. Cnt.micnnoine—The : Hallow. s2TG_ say* ; Omit some ,cute Yankee 'has estimated thei4e menu contains 26.. 1114914 , of ,, ckomiles , lunn titl44 about equal to that which all tbe ear* would dingorge in 40.000, yeink:-,..-ThituimMut of heat received from the abn in ' scugle year :mould be Botha,- if4tZ wok ' - -.- -_-. . . 'l.4 "ealitli. lciir'l42 '?,:ilicor **- -L ° di wk.' to - g - :o i'lli sbe el4 .tec . ' - guilt ' ' : . lon a r - - tile d .s o tree f_ cm " .lll ; ti-rhl t h . nigtauselits "- - - w' :- an ai m, whale . '' ' - - • • - red-. 4 , 1 e onney,anii ...hi:L..,-.......; -. 64 . 44 .., hist which itunew o. ~ i no mown ,_ _ i ,esreasity - -----'rrt- -"' ---- - ~.. be - iif.ibelkitts eiiaperec .- . A s o. . Mal the - sei:intigr; -- 4 ` - i '• - and sale , 11V011, of, - .0 0 "*iii40... if PiifeT .". : directed, ' - th e - 10 - - ~- ; ,-;-:.:- ~-:- -: -:'-:•-•i •,` - ae - Winnic equal:WAS -'! ,-,4i . ‘iriut- - : . 1 ' Y':-4,-,4 f or he ''r -,1-.. '‘. Ads ' ' iii.,,,"""--- = of dry -- . i Thank i token;: do horse ,it*7*r*. ' " n r — A . 3- '- -- - ' '' 1- . One liti is Silt freep.'' ankirulunij',Ail*ad***ealY 11 ' 41li t t ;' 4 1 411 :-.., t - : ' .i. .bno' l ppirit:uabroicen, :: .-n, 414*the' . 010.'4. - jla-aPeh lg;''' '-' ':` 4 .,:-Unbenclect.une ,kien;:! rant I ar .. - soilage* joittrr Inilkimurigt.*nrsi PIT' ''.. - -', '- A p DrigoffeAs. .-_,• , ~ • PPITMT3I OIL.. SE; inutia; Mara •raiig Feb. 2, I I • TEIEUMS - • 9! 4od . pe . i.annutWessh extu iif paid , Om the year: l i r bc ars and fi ft cents if not paid nutil 4 Tatum oft Testr, - , i _ . . ... ,',. u r 'Adieu pl: a zwitutted to t:emwiti us siipti .' with the puklisher,. tin - repsid ' - 1: s4:B OP ADiEßTialiqe. ' week, . ''. - . $ 0,50 es& subsequent week,: .. . , .. .. 0,25 .t ainiutii; With paper, ....- 3,00 dint made toyesrly advertisers. toy early One Do ally, in two Two Don ter the expii rirNe ettled.lfin *won& *reek:lig Ea r ift priiimiiiiis. • . . - : , . 1 ai.corzolirsrat . aleb C. Iltiebardia . Is. 1., T. l. l'erige• .nd *%iralte, Gratin .` Treapass.:--Ver lie for Plaintiff for ) 11iteea dollars.' 1- enry l Chandler y cfr Jos. lover an , rown. • Appeal.? Ver. Let foy IN . E. Moore 'vs, Geo. H Giles an ri Hams. • In debt; Jury unable e,"aud discharged byithe Court, . B. Eldred Ye, jcihn, Young, H' 'a klin , add ' William 'Vaughn. a . This action was brought tog ' ov r mages for the 'ahle of goods b de ants; oil 'which in' execution ' ."the . •h rifts hands was allion. It appeanng by the eyiduce, tha . t. the Sherifrhad not ma c an' act levy ! Sp the goods in tines tint i,th Canrtlcharged.the Jury in effect tha :there ma 4 bave been a levY to ena ble the Sherlfrto maintain tresPnas, and t hit without: sli i ch levy - , thei . proper reme dy ityould Jiave i been an action l on ,the Case. Verdict for the defendanty. • - - •• Simeop Woudruif James 4Cirk jr: coptnictor, and E. A. Smith' owner, yeputefl owner.; Scire Me;: thanies Lien, Verdict for. the Plaintiff for $ . 205,50. Moitan Shut vs. Jamei .IF..irk jr., Scire facias our lqechanice -Lieh. Ap pearantg and ipl withdrawn, mid judg ment fiir far the amuunt dfaward of Arnitrators;Lit erest, Dianna Peoisun vs. William D. Deni son: Libel fir Divorce.. Diveice • - creed by cl ? urt.- "- - HuMpbf.y Marcy vs. Chas. Tiffany.-- T ; 'Sci. ; fa: ersiict filr plaintiff fol. $79,,(4- • - • .1 irited meeting. in opposition s Nebraska bill: was held in itY, pa the evening of .Jan: ', l Emmett, or the Supreme s. York and others addressed It is said to have caused ion - at. Waahtngton, where lked of now bit Nebraska. aid that the Pennsylvania Co4gresgi are unanirnoualk louglia's Nebraska - I. vn the R epresentative ' of the ri .ct come to•this 2• . tom'-A': to Douglas] "4, 1 ew 30th. • ' ludg• Coup of the taeetin;. some .seastit ;nothing is to Eir I Demi)c n favo 'Wilm anal - Or TH 10;1114;klirEtAltNA.COUNTT A4SIIIICFILTMAL soontrie. iiinday evening, January 186, - 185i , .tiesMosiety met, a . * was .calkii to order., by •ThOrrams Nicholson, Vice ,President.— Tbeßepert of the proceeAingli thalast an.=, nuallaie,was read and saopted . ports of - Committees and Officers being in order, the Committeeou Grain ?spirted as • follows,: : . • # • • The '..reidersigned; year "Judges di Grain, haviag attended to-ithe duties assigned as,: do make tbirkillowieg Report: *lt is with regret; hat We have to state that but. few specimens of W,licat and COrn(ind none other) were Presented . 'for oil? inspcc tion; oWl4,lorObalrii, to the 'fiici..tbat our ferment had lost that seise - ofintarest in their pectiie crops, which they enjoyed at the - of our annual •Fair, and it itoberefori men_reed + . mess as Will secure that 'amount ofinte; rest hireafteroh grain Crorti, which is so im portant state that u_entled yrith;_oad era. He n Win. Jess Jars for the bushels to. the bushel tied ton pre acre.of spnr qtiarts to ili is alsci - etit% for the beat and'five q ~ V. ...8, _ pounds per bushel; A report wee handed in Or our cimsideration, -by Mr. George At, kinspn of .Washington township, of .the'Oue stern winter - Wheat of 29,4,- 6111,144er acre; the weight not given. if his loc4tion and, the rules of the society permit, we Would- rec ommend that a discretionary or (honorary premium be - awarded to him. AIL of which is rlpeetfully:Subniitted. ; . Signed. . .. S. A. NEwrotv. .. ' . '. s - '' :- lirattax WELLS. 'i - Description by 'William Jinni, of Me mode If adtiratiox of Whent by him. -.- The land is a very dry and stony ridge of t common gray stones—in some plaCes rocky, and.a few stumps still remain in the field— abouyone halt of it had never before been ploughed. It, WO . so - full - of stones . and stumps that it eouhl not - be ploughed lentil they were dug. .-Tbe ether. half had severe!, times been cropped. and had lain in pasture for three years. The whole was ploughed in June. It was dragged in Ally; and upon - the part that had been previously croppi about twenty loads of barnyard Manure w s put .to the acre, and all was cross plough 'and thoroughly dragged. The last days f f August two bushels per acre of Soule's wile - t were sown and dragged' in. The simm r was very dry, and the sward thoroughly sub dued: Some of the grain fell before it, w 4 'entirely 'filled, and became blinted. Quanti ty of ground, 4 acres and 10 perches t . quail- - thy-of wheat 134& bushels, weight per bush i.l. 66 pounds. 1 haVii no doubt t-hat every maple ridge in . the counts, sloping to the south and Isontlteast, can do as well. . . Signed, . P' -Wm. Jcssur. Statemint of a piece of Wheat raised by • GcOrge Atkinson, of Wa - shington; TVii .omin-,, county. - - - . a The land has been under cultivation forty' years. When ploughed for this crop, had been seeded to clover two years: Ploughed but 9 . nec • in lands six paces wide--spreld barnyard, manure on a . part;—harrowed lengthivise: of furmws ; sowed about the 1 5th or September, and harrowed same as before. Sowed.about one-half bushel per sere; seed, . Blue-Stone ; washed ‘and rolled in plaster. In the spring, as soon as snow disappeared, sow - ed, one-half .bashel of plaster to the - acre.— Just as it mmenced heading, sowed a bush el of alas 'ed lime per acre. When the wheat was near! out.of blossom, about one-half of it was pr., trateil. by -violent storm of wind and ral r From one 'acre, including a fair, proportio t of `lo 'harvested 29fr bash; els ; and rem one-Half an acre of the poorest end of t one_ piece,,lad 14 buslidls and 12 , quarts,. land is a sandy loam,partially mixed wi . red shale. All which Is sub mitted. .6161md, GEw. AT smsow. The la denigned_ Chairinan of the,Execu;, tine Cu. puttee, having, examined the, an `counts o Grborge 'Fuller;•Treasurer,* reakes the folio l ing report: - • - To balan in hand idlest settletnent,3ll3,Bs Cash rea dat the ratr and State tip- •- • prop tion, 392,74 - , " 8511,59 By cash paid, for lumber, $.59;19. Cash for all other exikaasee, 49.10 Cash paid for premiums, '247,00 325,80 1 77 Palaace'on lind . !anuarj 17th, .$1.84,70 The above balance is eubject to_ clains due for. prentiuma-amountiag to •896,00, , which . wonld leave" a - clear aunt - of $09,70 the bands; of the Treainrer.• . . nEICRY _ ' . Clerl. Ex. Con 3. \ ' Carus'. t . • Upon motion,the Chairman appointed tommittee‘ to meininate officers for the ,runt- . . lag year. During the absence,of m- the,Co . . mittee, thesociety:was addiessed '.~y'Hgtr. William 'teacup. The committee to uorni nate basing rkpertedi the following persona ' were elected for the ensuing yeir I . -CainwCammetr; President. *. Rufus Smith , . } Vice Presiaenta. G. - Bailey. : , • , George fuller, Treasurer. 1 , William . I - I.4essnp,,R+rdingSec'y. Thomas Jounson,.Comopouding Sec'y. I}litagfrs.—A)3cl Closed)", RolA. Kent. ,Stenley Turret!, Amherst Carpenter, Ste ;Oen Breed,Sluntiel /I. Sayre, P, Wells. ,The resolution (1.,-Aleone Walker in to*. Bard to . enconrs‘nnt-the - art" of "P . :riming; `lv -o ,laid'os 4 i . !it,t!fe'*litist'ine* . sting• - was' taken 130 .)rod akieturied, andinierided, and. laid , over for forther.conaidera lion.: • 9n motion, the Society adjourned: • Bunn t.---Tbe *ratio is . -Join,../fal, (ny -san•lnf, 'Hu es, 'annoincopi; nib gieM,.lnnetnig;tliat t he"i'aal Nub= in; •Bedini k iliiiiiised and. accepted -":sitatinn-tit , Jinn' riith Tresidefit Melte; his - eidesiissfitd nant k apYttin h Nnw:TurieErlis c P* l = and WO names fifV,Y:ol3r='. `lonatortured siaitriefiutegfiiiid:iii the 'or der tor this Pieiate; of 11614rii;in 1848-9..'' 'of a= repnbliendiiiitipnAi'stiikiiiti; tka rkireninl'itAietiin'indilicliiiiin ara nin in tali' Aligninnetinii at bniiAtirliti."' •:1 - gage 4 in . *Phitea *bates tit* Wine 4:..** `'-`—Liter '.'siccounts fromldadri Cate a speedy tevolutiOn.. : .: 1 —There fire 1700 acres of in the Ohio valley. r,... e ..,-. - dal.. -There are now eleven . newspa pns in the City_ id. San f i ll*lC 9, ' The. Isthmus can now crossed f from ocean to oceanin twelve , rs.k ---41 ; 'voluntary coast' guard ru t 10,000 men is about to be formed is ugland. . . , —Heaven has been said-to ,be a place for these Who do not succeed. epos earth. —A little salt threvin on bard ice will i soon . soften it, so that it can be ' easily. re . —The ; London Times lid culett- the Maine. Law - agitation. noir: Oink., on in 'England..- . • . f• r t —The oyster trade-. of Balititnere ' a mounts to more than all the wheat and corn raised in Marilee}, ' ',„ I. . . -More than sixty criminala -Wei e . ex; ecuted during the year 1853; aild quite a number are now in prison under sentence, , of death. -' • . — We . have had fourteen Presidents in fifty-seven years._ The aver . age length of a: presidential -- tertii, therefore, )is fdur years and twenty-fire days. ; -.. . . --According to. instructions received at St. 'Petersburg, the -army of. invasion of the Danubian provinces is r • to tin in creased_ t0_240,000 men. • - -The Detroit papers acknowledge tho York id Buffet in:sleeping apartments. —lt is only the, artichoke . that will not grow except• iu .gardens; the-.acorn is cast carelessly abroad into the wil&rness, yet on the wild twilit nourishes itself, and rises to be an oak. —Nr. Taber, of South Carolina, says I 'The most striking 'lnstances in modern times of the essentiality of Slavery to re-' publics, are - 'France and the Northern States of the tinion !! • .' • . =Resolutions against -the Nebraska. with ala4ery above tbe,line. of - the , Missouri compromiie, passed both bran ches of the Rhode Island _ Legislature, on the 27t1h of Januari. - ... 2 • . " —Lucy Stone asserts that women- are • Well qualified as then for all 'kinds of ercantile sit nut iona. • It is possible then r a strong mina4d•woman' to nao a sd si/01€ partner.',. - —lt iv rumored. in Paris - that ,111. de Irthschild offered to act" ept the terms pk•oposed f ur the Turkish loan, or et en advance:lt larger aum, - provided it mort gage was given him do Palestine. fr • —ln France it is unhappily well known that . Protestants of .various denominations continue to luffer direct or indirect .per secutions at the hacdslof the, ruling au thorities: . • . old toper was.overbeard the otbk advising a-yOung man to get mar .-- cause - then, my boy, you - will el4y to pull your boots off-when e home drunk. —A er clay, have s you co _—T e enormous rise tn . the rice of England has ; caus e d senous ap ions of riots a mong the' laboring . Mobs of men, women and .chil ave'' already occurred' in several food. i prehen' classes , dren places.l —T . e Albany Atlas of. the 281 h inst., says:; A detachment-of. U. & Troops fron4l tat. ,Niagara end another from 1 SaCket 's Harbor, have ; been ordered to , Eris, and. were hourljr expected at Buffa lo, on (Ink!. Way-to the seat' of war.' . - - i —Austria hes. demanded if the 'Rus sian _Court would _object _ o a European: Protectorate- over Christians in ,Turkey. Russia replied that she ;would permit no i other - Power to meddle, .1 in matters' rela ting to the Greek Church; ' . .. `-A-late number of the San Francileo . Herald mentions that Within a month or , nix, weeks, fifty or sixty. murdera . bad been committed in California; and not i one of the assassins had been - punished by . the -Courts. . . ' i. s '•• • --Thackeray holds that men very easy change their- religion-4.a ivomaii never. -To cor.vert a Sister of Charity to Metb-r odistii; he says , would require a. greater amount of power than !you .would.. have 'to make:use of to overt Frn the pyriMids. —The Tribune 'says that by the Gad sden. treaty We shall certainly-be thopoor er'..by 820000,000. and: by-just as touch' - More as the aequisition 0f50,000 - square miles - of 4eser: will damage: us, that ill whole purchase will not suppott-li flork of prairie belie, andthialso far as is knotv or can be conjectured there are no mines of any desert ption upbait. . - , -The Shah of Persiaqs said , to hay changed hiemind in , favor of Turbey, i consequence of a threatened general ris - ing of the ileople 'Who declined .that ,if they were to'- be sold to Russia, they Would rather perish at home in - defense of .tbeir reel ititeresta,then - in an inglorious wir`iigainstt.Nnunimaits. - ' ' -, —The , S .' Mail Steamer Atlantic, which arr ired-in Islew.York on-Friday, ,the 25th i .. t.., did , not initr i g much - , news :that could give any. defiinite indication . or the fat re -. course - of events. ,- A de lachMent ft e ie - eets enter ' -li itir A - a bad -ed ... . _ ... • 'the Black a, with , a view to 0 eombino :their-inoile eats in: such ft maniter v air , to' !prevent th 4 territory t . iiqhe_ -flng. : of Tur- Iseyfrom ''ng the objeet,of any.frosh at tack pp the.pare•fßussis.! . reeintine °Atli 1. VoilsiertiOn ' Sat= , • .... . . • . . .erady-eloriimg tbellonse Of Re p re sents. Alvan; av iterruiberg; iefietele4::tbe! chili.' • ter of tbe•Eranklint Omni Cempany; by a vote •of 82 yevelo4 - neYnt - ... Theile voting in lbit Oegative, Were Messrs: DevicTry, elis end Smith, of Crawford , ) atellfitoclidale. ,Inutieaiitiel on the Inoisegel of the big IGO*. - ;Bigt liigneekit t ind piOceidad"-- et % mon 'to E .to -purl, ttl'it"-_prtivis , . . High Prieos of via . - -, • Only_., three timeswithin the,present . eelitury,...natiely.ln 1814;- 41.1.1Watia now lo 1854, -hriethe,:curreeit . .:iiice of wheat rieched, - ,t ero: dellitir-liiEitnltlet .. bl. that grettlA,grainprcoditeing 'iiiiiiii ":üb.s ..Penesee Vali t y.. .1* e., fi s / A - 11 . .me . 1t Wa s . occasioned by ' %lie : 4. : . ' the: celdek. end most.unpropitious':_ - na t w i t siiii 01 # rec . 'oltection. - , _The 'sec . ' -tint° -tieriiibse in: part-from the opera iiiii , or'. the' wildest. speculating' years Wo bar/ 7 04ste been af-, filmed with, when, m ti" paic,l'ctikirelitteii tion to buying' and elliug than I...isitig, grain. i3f the prose' t extravagant puce it is well to inquire -t e cause. .to , .1' . - : 'Within •.the past_ ear, owing_ :the ;heavy importations o gold front Califor nia; there has . been a very/large -increase. in, the price of land, and farM Pflidtlcto I have generallY felt ii influence.,',4lmost-' all, trades have adijanced 'theirtes of ' at wages, and it- is brit ,' reasonable. t at hu-,, ;man foed ahould follow the rise of very ',thing else,' Berk the present price is iint.. loceaisionecl altogether by this Cense, nor ! ~ - . ! b y the spirit of speculation, which IV. as Te now as it was in 1839. 'There is an- 'other liiihereause; it is indicated in the, meteorological tables OfEurope.' . Tilese, discloSe the fact, tha ' in baton°, ri emirs summer in, a centu . 'has the wither. ',been so unpropitiou as the. last Or the! -production of grain. This has - r esulte d, . in short - crops, and'' 'rendered' n4esiary, the importation of large quantities lof fund At the same time war !end prospects. of war, Pave - created a speculative ::demand .; there as well as here. -•- - .1_ :. It is a fact not geherally kniivenor suf-. fiCiently appreciated in this countily, that the summer. of England.is at best f i barely sufficient . to ripen • wheat, Whichd,Oes not reach maturity till autinn,and thenlarga ; quantities are frerpiently lost thimighim-, favorable weather for harvistin',while. Indian corn cannot be cultiVated..t ire to any advantage, and the potato c , p has been cut off year, a ft er' year by. _the pre. *ailing epideMic. Besides the nnusual cold summer, fle. weather during dbe last barvesttime i in . England, was inorie than' usually onpropitious, '-- . 1: By far the 'must important .if estion, both to producers aiid coniumers o bread stuffs iiifliis country, is this ; .Wb' t acc t . t will the 'crop . of;1854. have upon - e pri .Ces.to Which:these articles have nr w very unexpected - atirlined 1 - The cTop of wheat sown 'lasi . fall in the United i States i , s not an- unnsually large one,lnd so far, he winter has 'Oa been one o pr.dol ise fo an - abundant yield ; hilt all uldthe Crop pr ve moderate, we may ir ry rea .sonahly a'' icipate a continuation f high prices, thee li certainly not so high as_ at \\E!. present. In . . grope the harveit. s cl4 1854, though it shouldbe unusually abundant;: Can hardly make u` for-the deficiency of \ that of 1853 and prc i.ius-years.. I,n,this' country it cannot be \7ected that we should have another seas - .a . s fruitful as the last, or One of - sach wid -spread pros- Rerity.to all who are , engage , in the cul tivation orthe earth. - ' ' '' • - . - ir . We say; and we bear,it said a around tie, that moro . labor ought to:be d cited to the production :of .lituriant-,food, sr ce. those who produce it are so! uoirria iy well fed in America. But the. 'nog. singX ular thing in all this is 'the fact: that not- withstanding 9geicultural laborers ik re ! well fed, 'there are alvast Many ab le hod- ied men and. wornen in this City. sfKering fiir food in consequence of the grutilise in the price of d'cour,W -- hile in the °entry those who - prodUce thiiff:o staf ifir find f it eXtremely difficult to procure hands to conduct their farina- operationsi 0 'As a nation we a e blest with u bound-, odogrieultural resources, wit fil, hel largese, body of low;-priced lands ever.offeced :to' any people;. while' tens -of thousands of able bodied - laborers .ere barely' able to procure fOod . enough at present-` ices to sustaintfe, and. yet wheat is "two dollars. and it hlf a bushel. • 1 '..- , There is soniething , wrong in our po , litical economy,. or ilatvvithitatiding cold seasons, shin crops famine Or war in Eti- - rope, the 'poor, hard-working: Mechanic of this City Would 'not be wider -ihe-bec easity of - . paying twelve dollars , la barrel for flour, two dollani a bushel for potatoes and twelve to eighteen vents a peund . fer meat, as he ik e doin this day; .1 Awful - _Slaughter I I ' ~ A Fa - cipry Omen io atonwaixt ,lives lost .1.--Anot her appalling . catast+4lm . ia, added to : w the long - fiat e have, .within a, few weeks recorded : : On Saturday after noon a ball cartridge Manufactory io,..tta-, venswood, Long Island ; :, blew up; - the building was utterly annihilated, and sia ieen persons—tbirteen of whoin vrere, cbildren—were , instantly - . killed., ' The houses for miles around were shaken gas if by an earthquake ;..witulows were shiv ered,.fences torn:; down, trees swept of their limbs, and the groundor a quarter of . a mile around coveredwith human limbs, 'arms, ,legs, bands ? .feet,.. he'ads, brains and s eptrails.. We do pit recollect in all our experience of pestilence,expto-• slot* wrecks, fires and fallidg buildings, any • scene so intensely' sickening and frightfully horrible as the oda we nova at tempt, so far as wordi *can (1044, .1:• des cribe. ; --. ii . •-! - Racenswoed. is a , small '`village, coat- . posed mainly of cottaga residences of cit.. izens of ' New-York. It is ott the shore of the East River, opposite ; RleekWell's Island, between Greew.Po:iht and Asto ! rim . The houses' are scattered tlotte-the Astoria Turnpike: irregularly` for about ' two Miles. The , northern -, portion is , called Upper, and the . • Southern, (Where' the explosion . eccurred,) . Lewer ißavens wend. - • . ''. - ,7 1 The explosion - occurred at 2 ~ o t. in the ifiernoon. , . Some ; persons ~on a boat In the ricer who happened to belooking=. 1 in that direct fon . - say the Wilding disip-- ' peered. a slight _smoke insel'iron't he pbrce, and then came the -'dull stunfting. shtick of the-explosion: -....-- K , , I h - Of course , all Who!could . i ,get 7 ,there at once ran to t h 'spot,a nkng - ! emd e par - ents;"brothers and sisters ofthe killed,all uncertain of-their fate, but' frinti4with: fear; calling in the most piteentitcneii-fer 1 their children and relatives; - and;ttagerly, examining the , mutilated fragments of t :h t xliefi'which Were stiewn%arP9o(l.''''Fo:r, a ti rne;'• it me* dangerous to Coincineirtke i t place .; the . packages of bill" teridgest we're.easnallyeaplpdiag,-,latatx 'ils.4 - es, - traction -aver a field : ;wham= Dito \ mut, 0.; ready . triamplu,tave: ~, : ~. ii ;.::. i- : i ..-.- 11 , - 7 3 ' 7' sr '. The itathatinkap . al':theijßa ' 4sr,of he deaawas.ilaork4 2 '-iitreln , 'da nif e i j :iiidliabar.' ' Thiibmiies iverii,fit Atarlii; - , Istances-Juearit iiholii i but. thO'greitet'' tik'tyn*weie taiiiie`abredi4:.::?that were' :'tilpstill 11"Aaiend;'eveiii* ialoikirr Toraissiao ; orisolwa idr a nisiaccr , rady. , :Here int •1irni;,46;044:04•1 =ME blackened ;;there a fixit, rn - , . d Arm -4 elect Yogldei.aiiiii offi ..4 'I, '.eyed 411)-: inir ii 'picket '1,,0i ' one . , it'OiLii' , a4lp; tbe lo o n beautiful liiiracorclied* al bloOdy-; • iin&erfoet,',part* a - skult - el isliptiery . : ,ean.4xity hae.4aily tr i p' the liniti led. searcher ;-, there ii"tii . 4.? btkinkfro le.eolo the consistency, Of 441 ,:. - , : i 04 esp 7 7iy, band, under-eyery tili)ber,';'on every 'adjacent building, iy •all the abrubbery around;- Were these dreadfiil ''evidences of destruction. • - '.- • . '--- Bat we cannet:llll upon each painful horrors.;' We' mu leave ' the'scene to-. the tfnaginstian iagi —t tno mnes:ion can .; , portsay the actual . errors of the scene- 7; the tsality-is far more j.errible > than_ any: plcAnre that fancy s can create: . --Tribess(e. ~, ~A_ ,t-- 77 ---,.. ~,,•:—:_.,,.,.., Ike leforiskiri it. • , , ! The religii)‘ , nrel - , ii:ie L eti . lum - tal‘tn 'a position on Senator.DoNoidiels-Nisbrat ska 3ill - • • 'The ,Nesc ''it . ork 'lvidereiukat; (Congregationalist)eluracum*es the hill: as anew piece of poht!cal viltaiey , -a w l till* its 4 211 Y tlb.iSgt ts , to e ) q-elitlavti ry, overterritery now l .- free. I It gays , : .3 .. , Bublic men •ef varioSs - parttea and fee:, tionis are understood ts--be-ciuite , ready to ro ll themselves ifiAits dirt , once, more, by way of homage to cempronnse_s_kand to . "\ to s ve- the Union once .tore - 'We ad vert to the matter heriei• Chiefly- for the of pointing our the meanness of -the proieedityg—and that in only one point of clew. By the act of . arch "6 . ; ,1820, slavery is - prohibited in[the territory tiOW known by . the name ofi 4 Nebmka. • That law is in Iforee there at this momeni, and will; be WI it aledi b is repey competent authority: Does the_ bill inteitd to repeal the law 1 If So, why does it not - provid in t e usuallorm, that the act , if f - March 6, 120 so far as it prohibits slavery i t s certain-territories, be, and it is hereby le pealed L If the villainyis intendad, , vv,by not perpetrate the intended Villainy frank ly and openly I ~ Why this low trickery! whit e Neither . cheats the slave4holding in terest,with a fidsd show of legalizing sla very in. Nebraska, or cheats the friends ;of liberty and justice with a thiin pretene of not repealing the existirmptobibiiion Are the American peoelo prepared - I concede the name andf` honors o stak ‘ 1 manship to public knavery ,, such 'aa this .= l' , - I , - The Erangelat, (Preshytertanj is also dewn on Dilugles's Bill; and feels mic alarmed about the new movement. Th i , editor says. . : - ' . i. . 'lf the Missouri Compromise is a thing ofno authority or value, may not!the:com I promise of 1850 in, ts turn beedme ritigal tory, the slave law included? I alter,' an? abhndant reasons for excludlng sltsverit. from Nebraska, irrespective of the solemn :guarantees and ass u rances `of.he - Missoe4 ri Comp romise ; but if the f aith"pledged in thes enactments is only ' Punic faith; and the parties are at liberty ! to rePudi : , ate them as soon as the phjects fur 'which they - are made are- Secured, , hen :is the . North free to raise the 661111g:cry Of 710 „.,3i more slave territory: ,We ha : . no doubt that this cry. will be ! raised. • t 'here is _un quest ionably a spirit lying latent in--North ...4 b' - which if thou . .- thlyroused, none it seamsto is, OeuhLbe m"oriKreso lutelban the Soutb, - . sod. of ~ th .. f antl. nene ters a more resolute than its min . - 6 -• • ,re igrous men. , . ‘ , .i - --, - A -Great tonflagrationsin. , York. w. NE - YOius, Jan}' _29. -re bro'ki e f r out about half past'll - o'clock - - Ist': nigh miehtn in the Columbian' foundry.' and : ii. shop; situated'on .lotS.nurpherc - 4-k . . '4 a between - Elm :and 47 Duane street,, niii ..Centre. ; The biiiidingeo - cc - ti't,iafthei reif tire centre 'of the bloci. - - - ,The 'firel'-isociii communicated' to 'Nei.' 38. Oi:'4l. '43, and ; , 43 sM all wOoden shiiiiieie, on'Centrit stree , occupied` IiST ! - .' r;;', Getrit;:*ktOi" maker and jeweller ;111- - Lutin3r,, olotlung store; and u la.rge number ofpoOr families,` and the -brick buildine adjohii6g4s.lo." 47, occupied '_by ili T iordealerlitn,d .a' nittn ber nfPoorfninille At: half - Pas:twelve" there was nothing _left Pf.api'Of the biiii . dings.' Several adjoining took fire froir the -intensity'. of ; ; ! * heat;' bat 'through the eiiitiolei - orthelfireMeeilkei; . escaped With but little*itaiil:A - large= number of; . PoPi.ftiiitilietiiiiiirt 'ilitia _been -- rendeted Ibuietesi:: - ';'', .-•1'•: - T. -:,•ti . -- . '.f: * At a' quarter of two, anoth ' r li - tiiiin' was" rung Which' proved te•be tilivery atible: N0.;,14,. Pearl - street.- -°- '7fie l c,'Stlable- . viiii soon - burnt down; . -hut.(the.rflaniel :`hail spread 14 thandjoininitii:fr t.dweilinr house, No. iliovinedAril r 4 ":see)Y;:iiiia' h f occupled by fatuities.. `IT `' Lhoitsie Wei 'mostly destreyed .' , :It uteri' a:Spited '' tO o. 10, Atie - upper stories - of.fi r 4hieli'were consumed. ' •.. --.. I -.- ,-_,: The tast nanied 'honses'w - Oct' ocOgpied 1 4 about fifty faloili4 some flybiiM los t . their'all. :-- - • .'' '-,', -''.' i :- -,-• :-.<'-' - - • _ , . - ..1--___l. .1 >z rirThe strength of the combined EIV glish and . Freneb Oki,' now 4r'theVS4r, - phiprnsintanntatO '44-itiii; i Indlittliiis i bf battle ships; frigat its' `and' - titeeiriers:4: Ofthese the French . and"-• . iglii4;bitite each threethrie-40iers f :r: ::Iniie`tieiitt -I,;‘, two-deckers (inelladittithe' 4gnikottiO4 two five Preach' t Wo4Teciterf `....110 . FrWri4fts 90 guti scresi-shiVP,T4iOlO. " , :. - biartfieiiii: . " forAtinitily,,bieii set 4 'out A , - ..T.iiii!6ii - s,' tli)i repairs. EitehiliOali*e ---- JW•oiiii Eili - 3 , it - ptpaate‘whee!*earrijiiii;,;.' itiAiiiiirl' reil•P ~ (g litpoi) 'ifia . ..:-Ilii l k J,', iiji - qiiitigim: hi(Frendi) -4- tiiiiteicenv, ~ ! is. vi*iii Steam peiser: - 'ln'_addititiftliO l tilta'i'pg_ . ~.z 'orrililleet'; t *re - ' Oitu l ''. l -44;.PiTiffitil* ' l .: .;, least se:rettl urktsPiiigs ~ - aiiihiei 7: 'biittliii'illiAttiititieti:fileill4 siii:fkrAlil;' lialhitttheeatitineWtorce ii* , 7oo 7 •P' • it c tititit.'-'oo'iaii;-Fiiiiii l „iti*,:tgFjl*Mi ' 'UfSteart9tiiiiiicetlii*iiiit iLitrri i ' li t if ,iiiiii,iitth - ' - "41110 1 .:1'' '' '''''''''"".-7" ' Fitriteiiint he:Okrects4* . ' ' t ie - i v ; 1 1 '. ;iast'Abiiinviiiii , V 4 ''tiaft it rn 0 ' 4V O " 'fi 4:, - l'• i... ~.,..,,. • , 4"; ' bo'lligir '! n 't ii O h9l i i ttmet;llP '''' yetiordofil t ,,thp'fitiatt4tt - :** ' 4 .it -•o74l;:iiiiif *,,l'eti: thiliiiK*l iih r ibii . . T iiiiiitliiiiiiitimiti4littliir: 'chat! . - _.'f4 libtoriiia - Owti v ieNtitaP 'illi - e.kdigit' 1 'PaYrtiMiiiidim' 7s iisii** 7 so,i t f .k l'-' .. T4Olii - Tose a arefil'9*over. robiltatt`iiiiO4 ii`V Vgi.:::..,`' is tbe.incliusilf_t ft, ort f , ,., ~ in the spring.,- The bhat.:' , 44 - 7.'"'. - -_7 - wia.; rails be the ' is"; r''itatroai .• . nffieira. :: . 4nd thilaisfrniii7:. ;, - " v - .-,' ''''.:ibt! . .3.t.„Sis -,- 3 9 ua d:t i Os - ha* , -)naeli*kaiiiii - 4 ,- -r.:ithai • - - arrangement iliaiiiit'aitilie . "WOE:lilts t French aSeedtTh:Ta.iltriitni . :l ''':' , .;*iiiber i and thfr Engltiktjteltort ilia lassidos -‘, ,• i Daily Neigis-' - ---:,, 44- . ---= '''' ‘f•;"-:::i . -':: I- '1 ~:- . , .. :.. 2 , fin t i gir : Na iii ,„;..,, , ~.,,„,,2 . , ~..._ - , • : ...- -. :,-. . - ..,:,, , 4'-' '.: —. c '7'4 :' • The ItiPat,atikiiii feateiwin'athe-Prews - -- - I, from Europe, by the - Aiii4Sitticti - tirilsed: -- at :New : Yor k ` ou.Ttinitliyz - leetilit'neur: -• . s=later late - ::news,: ffelie - : - Eur9 ion r -,' ' -Oki:" ,' repOrtl,'Of .i. guidttli: l 4lo - eiiiiiitih . ;it = • -; - 1 ihti, nearKelfel; an theeplinUls',....tttcor' trig . 4 to t ta4rer „. Qtner- 14. , 4 1.11 .. , ,.. , 1 , - - li' " rt - :ilt .- ' "Ago men ,- .ficrineCiftA r Aown7 - nommen:: - ' tyligoAki- 'id - • - trencburnt.occupied-' . -. ~ , 11 also ..- repUtsed a' ..t,odp - ' or - -- ifimeint . ,t o -, - -_1 rpinforve ,the army ;Tout ~ t ,... 151 rstt attack , Thu report is ',receitred4biAli'.l:sy . ' way P.f Cara4 l 4inaPielfPa-Xlienia: and .[,,. must , ItberefOre • be.'-- stilsisSutiiilly, true, , - ;., , ~. , though possibly -:eiriggeia:lede . 1 ?-'/la.'r:iet ' . we have finthing but rejegrt_tiliiS,dissOS6:. . ej''''.the next "mail - wilt'Pkiifiaof. Eilrisites' - „ ,-, Mlle's!, details. - *batiagertatt.iiilbit . : the Turk isb troops and otegitisotklyaiitu- - : .. tain t!ie rputa!ionfi - ,eoieelioiiii - ±,yh4h • \ i l :the afelurred in the siSiiiir,*eiOlitile of, - i the.war. - - It - h'..ie iii.fii?iiio:'oliiii hilPer -nicious inierteliact , or Weiteril iiiPhtlea, - ay; may, not '°: nqs!aZain - _,p4eyentfOmer Pasha ftqm raili!: ZAha ... -fril it ;O his cesses, and - .. i.oftict ng - g. iipl,Sianttal ibis-. tisement upon the invidess. , --Traosae:- I WT. lie-Milli:4 . ~ VII has "Fqtsit . ttiO. ttirii, .and wants:On nature; .p ,become' Rev. A. (I. school hciuse; m rop„Ou the . eveni dlelight. '. The friends ot speetfttlly in vitei lonattonlutt at - his resideneelti " noon and evening.. iti-bOVe 4ft ds. , frit, m abroad ,*ho , need his , serifices' wi II val pitta :By, tirdei-of - stri.; ~ 7 ' • • ..- • ' pug The.uteinbeisot • cf. - :will meet fur e*erciieettliktettlar 4 4 'Alva, P. 31. •V:pt t'epteir.:::,' or the. two Greel4r:4l-; irom which it is derived.--T!iiiis the Plirlifiiit* and 14: :01Vpriate t true Migttive, trio Juice, prepared,byDr J S Hon ifo of rhil fttpca,the fottyth ettrach ;of tho;lth, for the cure Of `tuie's; own remedyfir an iiiiVealtlirStatiniUlt;:. No - attof Inaa,ean equal eUi'at lYe were, -dere Good Eating: perfectiy:ctinenk . witkhied , See the figure of the'o.t tittotherlptittefithieliNl-. '.der.: -` . • at es in what MEM t nbject in tecling • On the 31st ROy J B - .:l4te:rit9r L - on*ST P. Fum.r.it:ori:ils3( , l4.i'.44,;`;' its Carti ARISE A. CtsototNit.4:4 - ' At. Preston,Cono.: tr-' the 30!,11.; ;1- R ev '.-• Ir. M attiion, - .14r .- -W.l":ll*Lic of New - PS, to lidisttAistm WooosiA ies Ego: daughte_r uset - _Woodaantreo_of Preitpt!..7 - , - • • •\- • •-, • - ' _ - vri,l4 may g I i i , n- this borough ; ,Tramilt4;lan3litVA, S. ONES; daughter _of Elitibetlilliiii - ra; = *V. two- yeaniasti- otiir idol - Aix< ‘ . .7 , ' . :'' 1-- .•: - -. 17 : 1 - \ ' ;;Jan , - I • Fore est Lake.. 2'sth, ,36.:-:.'iloins SUE ,; agekBl -- years. - /;,-,-- ',"--- '-1 -, -, ,-,-- - '":' V nimble-of& irriiiiiespected in ' bl'e!hr•-' his pilikti - iiili"4attied..ellaiiie,ai4o4l4 L. ( 1 1:' r la i n ) 4 hi riesiAi AL XE Petrot. AFft Riqt. hereby. OW those harirlig sea them crigy Aiicintroie 1 bet i ii iai §tisigOanw partition to buni;"saimdi daober:lB44l Mpoime, A - frOolviui a - I:16 pout, -, Thevoige4o.rd a few-Stoini _ .1,bi0ntr05e,T4:.2718.511-',.- De) t 7 7 •ilir , i s ,la . WW!,•01 ' - "- ;: Wilia t AM InCinliAl N,,, 'A' -- , -e." -,. ,'' -- - , -1. ...:" ..w.:-. , - i. , -,,,, .._,..,:113._ T_TA*TNG - . pureksaed the .. mamma t , at ...: k. - P L. VMa ittifo; at , tha irafai '- i. iiinuldl - t,., 'respiattidly, infaim . tit , frieiclif th at- lie' '11100: 3 4 . , :e014 .. , tithtly Pa is;adt* 16 / 5 1 7 , 4tV r j ei , "Irea l ,Vt l ., deCtO Illsck; of ( Jowls: -, I' ..'-',,, j.,./ - . - - ;:; 4 2..,i; - • L. , ~-,11.4 i me, 84ind Pliiiter caiiiitijild *xi ,!aswitjk, ,- . - a* -Oieteties - Dfititiaillt. l lialWilkils% l .. . ' ; j * . 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Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers