EWALD Abill 'EXPOSITp. CBRLISL 7] . I'.A• V.EDNESDAY, NOVOAtiCtfAI W„o, IHE LARGL: ANO MAN'VF Tkit 'OO Oft Vs.:?o,\V;),,Yee.kY\ nflhr Term? , npt,itnil Asty, Om" ; ~ , I•kqiiipettrol?..4 / 1 4 1 in ~‘l,lorrYti'e. rplq"l ti • ' Itet,Vp '44 . 4•1r1 4 1 .I' l l4ilitillrCltOr c,i,•o rAtolo4iomthliiit vrti; EMI I.„,)t.ttitt;hklittt,,,,lol,,,,i t„w/or, Sn'tiir- Ehav, e i ror - i'lt. tti , 4 1 .!4 , 4.+41!h.z.. 'tnt ' , lc 'relbrtri 1 0P-i! 't`!4`.. ( i‘rt,\‘rtith, ~ R..thilh.l l lh, v st4l,.l4 r , k l.')!:o t ft4i , % 4 1;4,1"" - ek t iq (;i4.1. WKAYI`r ,fr4f•743i4 lloiegates VY,R. 4' , .r4. rtsatag au, Jos. L. Price W.t.A.14.4 , K. 'l:;:esott, ge^The New York "Home Journal" com mences a new volume in January, 1854 : , The Journal is a literary paper of high tone. It is edited with industry, good taste and ability. We know of noMore pleasant home companion, to people of 'education and refinement. Terms $2 a copy per year ; three copies, $6 or ono copy three years ss—payable in advance. — Morris 8 Willis, 107 Fulton Street N, Y. See prospectus in our advertising column. NEW YORK STATE ELECTION.—In forty-six counties, heard from in full, the vote for Sec retary of State stands thus: IShigs 124,391. Hard Democratic 76,194; Soft Democratic 74,778. Thirteen counties remain to be hoard from rexThis New York Legislature will stand thus : Senate-22 Whigs, 8 Hard Democrats, 2 Soft Democrats; House-80 Whigs, 24 Hard Democrats, 22 Soft DemoCrats, 2 Free Soilers. TUE SUNDAY LAW Ad there is considerable interest at this time upon the question of the" Sunday Law, and from appearances, likely to be oonsidera bly more, wo publish the act, that-alt of our readers may become acquainted with its pro- I=3 -Sec. 1. If any person shall do or perform any worldly employment or business whatso ever oathe Lord's day, commonly called Stn day, works of necessity and oharity_only ex cepted, hr shall use or practice any unlawful game, hunting, shooting, sport or diversion whatsoever on the same day, and be convict ed thereof, every such person so offending, shall for every such offence, forfeit and pay four dollars, to be levied by distress; or in case he or she shall refuse'.or.negieot to pay the said sum, or goods and chattles cannot be found, 'where to levy the same by distress, he or she shall suffer six days' imprisonment in the house of correction of the proper county: ProVided always, That nothing herein con tained shall be construed to prohibit the dress ing of victuals in private families, bake houses, lodging houses, inns, and other houses of en— tertainment, for the use of sojourners, - travel lers or strangers, or - totirider watormen from landing their passengers or ferrymen from carrying over the water travellers or persons removing with their families on the Lord's day, commonly called Sunday, nor to the delivery of milk or the necessaries of life before nine of the clock in the forenoon nor after five of the ()look in the afternoon, of the same day. EarA Now PAnTr of the Native American stripe figured in the late Now York city elec tion,. though without any open organization, distinctive name, or nominations. It is pop ularly called KnoW Nothing," and is in the nature of a secret order, the Societies being called wigwams. It selects its candidates from among those nominated by Ober parties, and seeks to put down the influence of foreigners in elections. The name above given seems to be derived - from the answers given by its mem bers, when questioned in reference to it. This party polled several thousand in New York city, at the last election: It has also been or ganized in Newark, N. J., where it has 2500 members. M.A.:in. Charles G. Atherton, U. S. Sen ator from New Hampshire, who had been lying dangerously ill for several days, from paraly sis, died at Boston on Thursday last. He was the warm personal and political friend of President Pianos, and his death, is said to have plunged the President in deep sorrow. Itta,,Tho Daily Papers published at Lancas ter Bra Harrisburg appear to be Banishing bravely. ' The Lancaster Daily has a total cir oulation of 1392 copies. The ; Harrisburg "Borough Item," , begun during the last session of the Legislature, has now reached its26oth reg ular, number, and its:daily issues• carry all as surance of undouped success. Another small daily paper has lately been started in the same town. These are decided' evidences of the prosperity of these places, and the publication of local daily piers will add materially to their importance. Reading, a mach larger town than either of the of the above, has, as yet, no daily paper. At the date of the last census Reading had about 16,000 inhabitants, Lancaster about 13,000;and Harrisburg about 9000. ugl„Tho Marshal's Police iu Philadelphia will appear in uniform on and after the first of .tanuary. Theiriliress'aill consist of' a frook coat .of nayy:blne c cloth, (slnglObieasted,)stan ..., dial; collar, nine gilt buttons on the breast, two an the hips, and two on thebottom of the skirts; dark grey pantaloons; a bluo cloth cop, with the name of , tho police division to which tho wearer,itrattadited placed thorson in metal let ters; THE MARTHA WASHINGTON CONSPIRACY CA SE- This celebrated oase,which has been so often al luded to in the telegraphic despatches from the west, was finished last week in Columbus, Ohio, by a verdict of acquittal against all the accused The defendants, (Lyman Cole, John M, Cutu p:dogs, Win. H. °Holland, _Benj. W. Kimble, Adams Chapin, Amaze Chapin, Rufus Chopin, aud Lorenzo CliapinOwere.oharged with hay „ing wilfully and corruptly conspired to burn and destroy° tho steamboat Martha Washington, and her eargo,:with the intention to injure cer tain underwriters who had insured the same. FEMALE TIIA:ITELLEIt.--Modam Pfeiffer; A lady of "exinaerdinary nhevgy and daring who Lae made a tour orthii world. arrived at San .Franolaeo in the bark Eiedeoa-from Betavin. She le, perhaps the greatest traveller li tog, baying traversed . slant) AeM Minor, ;Peraia, ..-Taitary, India, and penetrated into the Mica.' I:dared' depthsot,,,blalas, .Borneo Mile r East.lndla Islands.: bus =Weller way through - 10101ns 'wildeamessee, inhabited hy istiago ,benste and men equidly savage, Without fear orhMitation, and has al- WaYssmanagad to (miriade ,bereelf froin the perils that beset her by,bef addiess and oour , age.- PENDISiLYAKIA tinAttnationtam. The eignejmtuteattlakattOte thht h tem portteu of the dituwetNtopatev‘4ltitelft Theo. omeltr 7s%\xivttWbt , xath ttYA °M444111/4thle` lots a the twitez.,Nt Ntoto Vat( ht trl)etkllmt tv tWN vet& Hint tm4t:ike idwitivAttvnitmk of kSoi.k\b klit% MVAth vrtwoott, k, , tw's*OhP., 4'64 WAN w sYt f tatt k.e tebt t•rt.A(km4.4 \ itsis , 4" , N. Yt.i • , eitit ittiftql XViA •;ro'htt ttl eNtwtoriwAY*b vt , * t`ltqitlckyt4 Ohoo k , tt X vhi4.mititi t h„,firt tii,F'f,4+ttt 0-rht Yta. Wiedto, • Lk in ')Ohoh htt`e. 4).tt4r) with the • tif v,tkvinplitutto tlie:thte talibh 4iNtftit,h'l4WhhtioNk4, Volt, 'h leitiVhf):YMOln to prove Y;'n'A'l4,ehh,t. Y4ih,t) dotiploV bin eon .ll)in );))ht-t-,-,ol),)ntlotteo." The YiYAiu new paper will bo 'fitheted q'hilarkelpht,t, and that it will most thC utttl -111gler and will, handle rl, stYvoivlivltwttett without gloves. Ho con • \‘‘) *Nang), " 1< it not high time, then, when we seelhe tom Union men stricken down in New York by the hand of federal power--those friends of Lewis_Cass who stood by him in the trying times of '4B—l say, is it not time, when we witness the same proscription in Pennsylvania to unite in driving the men from power who are capable of snob tyranny and.wrong? Mar cy, Guthrie'and Campbell are said hero to be the culprits. To Marcy we cannot show mer cy. Guthrimmust bo gutted out of office; and Campbell must be belled out of camp. 9 There will be oil sorts of buying and del. ling, of bargaining, of promising, &e., until after our next gubernatorial nomination. We are, in,all probability, on the eve of division, - as deep, no wide, and as bitter, as that in your State. There is only way by which it can be averted; and that is by the President dismis• sing his evil advisers, and reorganizing his Cabinet." LOCOFOCO TESTIMONY In noticing a statement made by the Pitts berg Union, that the funds appropriated for the completion of the Portage ltnilwny had been exhausted and the debt not yet paid, the Westmoreland Argos, the Looofoco organ of that county, remarks that the lust Legislature made appropriations exceeding five millions of dollars, and that yet in advance of the meet ing of the'next Legislature, a new, loan of for ty Mousand dollars is about to be mode for the Portage Router:, y. This it strongly condemns, and says t If the people do not soon open their eyes to the alarming condition of our finances. it will be too late. When' will these bans cease? Aro the Democracy of the State unequal to the task of placing honest and able men in power, who will guard and protect their rights and interests Must the people forever remain silent and inactive while the Portage road, and the Cormorants who grow rich on its spoils, devour their toils and substance ? This •is a question that belongs to the people and it is for them to make the reform. If they aro un able dr unwititig to guard their interests, they cannot expect that others will do it. INTERESTING FROM E1.1.4011E The steamship Arabia; with Liverpool dates to the'sth, arrived at New York on Thursday last. In Liverpool flour had declined IL sixpence to a Shilling per bbl. The news film the East is of a conflicting and contradictory character. The rumor, however, is col:dirtied, that a Turk ish force of 80,000 had crossed the Danube, and it was announced that they had occupied Ralafat. It was also reported that they had been attacked there and defeated by the Rus sians in a pitched, battle. - • - Omar Pasha, before crossing, the Danube, addresod a spirited proclamation to the army, stirring up their patriotism, and declaring be would " sacrifice his body and soul, to be re venged on the fnvaders of his country. Ile kept hie word as to the Russian evacuation Of the Principalities, and at the expiration of the fifteen days, the Turks were actively em ployed in transporting troops to certain por tions of the Danube, from which they could cross with little further obstacle, to the oppo site banks held by the Russians. The passage of the Danube by the Turks under command of Omar Pasha was effected without opposi tion. The reason assigned for the evacuation of Kalafat by the Russians, was the great mor tality which prevailed among the troops in the different camps. it was rumored, however, that the Russians afterwards returned to Kai slat, and in II pitched battle, had defeated the Turks. Prince Paskiewitoh bad left St. Petersburg for Bucharest, to take charge of the Russian army in the Principalities. She main force of the Russians were in position near Bucharest, where several hundred pieces of artilery were posted, and every preparation made for de fence. The latest accounts from Bucharest report that 2000 'finial had "appeared off Guirieers, and fired into the town. In the conflict, which is stated to have been very dospyrate, many Russians and Turks were killed. The Turks recelyeil the worst of the fight, and retreated up the river, closely followed by the Rus sians. • At Kalafat it was reported that there were daily" skirmishes between the Turks and Rus sians, though they amounted to nothing seri- Another dispatch from Vienne; by way of Paris, under date of Nov. fid, announced that a battle had taken place near Kalafat between the Turks and Russians. The Turks number• • ed 8000, and the Russian force was only 2600. Tho engagement was a desperate ono, and lasted about two hours, when the Russians re treated with a kcavy loss. Prince Gortchakoff had left Bucharest for Karaiova. Ilia departure produced a pro ' found sensation. " A battle was expected to take place in that direction, ' Karaiova was full of Russian troops. It was supposed that the Russians would purposely allow n cOnsiderable - porthin ef - the Turks to establish themselves In Lesser Wel. • laohia, in order to bring ihem to battle as soon as possible; and as the Russians felt confident of victory, they would, after driving, backthe Turks, quietly await a settlement of the affair 'on much- terms as the groat •Euroopan powers thought reasonable. p The latest reports state that martial low had been proclaimed .by theßussians in But cheroot, and in all the other.towns of the Dan ubian Principalities. All intercourse with the Turks was prohibited under pain of death, and any person , found corresponding with a Turk summarily executed. The endeavors of Austria were still directed towards inducing the Czar and the Huhu' to adopt the Vienna note, and there were some hopes of success attending the effort. The latest telegraphic accounts report that there had been battles :Circassia and Dha- Igietnn, and that the Russians were defeated by, the mountaineers. . Pronoli and Euglish officers were arriving in ,Turkeihri oonaiderable ntteabere. The great • .:Etiropeart,Powerit were actively at work to en •tietivor to cheek hostilltiee. As, . -;-- -- .. OLD ptnito—A uemati"Biblo,,prlate4 In 1589 and oonsequOntly 48. yearii old,•,wns 'Usk, at last sold, the sale ot Henry Shook's 'property,ln Manor township, X..ansaster 00., Pa NOTINOS 'W Inter. Whir, raritimit'a Preparation fur daalitt whether ,a more beautiful arid tentbdd pletnere'of orunfort. and happiness MIA be presented thin the following, Which We find in eta eiehmige paper, end in which' Vve oHi Veßtire tiiTutiiito—nn—alteration-of- a t@VtWerh t stern and cold, is near at'hand ; but Ntdiat ttot'att the thriving farmer for the shrill niiitit Want, the driving storm, er the biting tVeet, When with nu approving eonscienctrand a m 0.4110 heart, his out door duties for the doe , till performed, he takes birt seat at a alicafful Tiro, p . ropared to spend along evening en a H 0131,111, intellectual, and, Moral being should. Ile feelti that everything in and about bin building, so ffir as human prudence and •forethought nro concerned, is safe und' in or 'dor. Winter may come—he expects it and is ready for it. Every domestio animal he owns is comfortably. sheltered and provided with suitable food, His potidoes, apples, &0., are secure from frost. He has an ample supply of fuel, fitted for the firo, and put in his wood licuise. His industry and skill have been rewarded by remunerating harvests, so that he has broad enough and to spare. His buildings nro insured. His children are com fortably clad,-and ho has procured for them the necessary school books. ; His taxes are paid, end he has subscribed and paid for the Herald. We doubt whether there is any situ ation or station in life more favorable forquiet substantial happiness end contentment than that possessed by the fahner, one such as we have endeavored to desoribe. • , The Buckwheat Cake Season flow many pleasant reminiseenles, remarks a contemporary, are called up by the appear awe at our grocery store doors of nice little white sacks, handsomely lettered "now buck wheat flour." But by-pones are by-gones. as the politicians say, and the large kitchen fire, with a groat round griddle hanging from the crane, have passed away with the progressive spitit of the age. )Vo now, have good block diamonds end coal fires, and yeast powders and buckwheat cakes come smoking on the table, stirreu up and baked in no time. Their appearance is a sure harbinger of winter, and they are very generally welcomed as one of the luxuries of the season. rase them along. Forgotfnlnesß of Man The most terrible lessons written on the memory of man fade like letters male on wa ter. NeW Orleans which so recently was a charnel house—the mourners going about the streets, is now the seat of gaiety, mirth find folly.. A gentleman writes from there Octo 'bar 28th : . , " The city is growing much more lively and crowded. 5 Tho hotels are in full blast. The epidemic is nearly forgotten, and large prepa rations are making for nn unusually brilliant season of amusement, jolity and dissipation. Balls have already commenced. In ono of these, where a few weeks ago nothing could be heard but the groans of aick.and the cries of delirious persons, brought there ns a tem porary hospital, music's voluptuous siVell may now be heard, and gay couples be seen twirl ing in the giddy mazes of the Mazurka, The atricals, too, have not been forgotten. The Sabbath to the Working Nan The following extract from a prize Essay on the Sabbath, written by a Scotch journeyman printer, is, one of the most truthful and elo quent appeals ever put forth for tho Sabblith as Colvil blessing. If there was no divine or human law on the subject, there are a thou sand reasons to be drawn from the laws of na ture why man should _observe it .strictly as a day of rest : - ... ' ' Yokefellow ! think how the abstractiori-oc . the Sabbath would hopelessly enslave the working einem, with whom we are identified. Think of labor thus going on in one monoto none and continuous and eternal cycle—limbs forever on the rack,. the fingers forever plying, the eye-balls forever straining, the brow for ever sweating, the feet forever plodding, the brain forever throbbing, the shoulders forever drooping, the loins forever noising, and the restless mind forever scheming. , Think of the beauty it would efface; of the merry heartedness it would extinguish; of the giant strength that it would tame ; of the resources of nature that it would exhaust: of the aspirations that it would crush ; of tile sickness that it would breed ; of the projects that it would wreck ; of the groans that it would extort; of the lives that it would immo late ; and of the cheerless graves that it would prematurely dig! See them toiling and moil ink, sweating and fretting, grinding and hew ing, weaving and spinning, strewing and gath ering, sowing and reaping, razing and bedl,l, ingr digging and planting unloading and stor ing, striving and struggling; in the garden and in the field, in the granary and In the barn, in the factory and in the mill, in the warehouse nod in the shop, on the mountain andin the ditch, on the roadside and in the I wood, in the city and in the country, on the sea and on the shore, on the earth, in days of brightness and days of gloom.. What a sad 1 picture would the world present if wo had no I Sabbath' . Compromises. This is the ago of compromises. Groat po litical questions are compromised; personal difficulties ore compromised ; juries arrive at verdicts by compromise. The subjoined mil }Anal compromise was perpetrated by R tender hearted man who stood listening,,and shiver ing as he listened, to the notes of a hand-or gan beneath his window: Enrautured here, On by the window standing, Listening the heavenly music in lie chime, With ecstasy my pouch I thrust my hand in, And take therefrom a jolly silver dime. Mt stop a moment, ere I let it went— I guess 1 , 11 compromise, and throw n cent." A HUNDRED MILE TROTl—About the , Most brutal amusement, next to prize fighting and bull fighting, is the practice of running horses groat distances against time, which seems to be getting into favor among sporting men., We see it stated that Hero, one of the horses that was inhumanly forced over a ten mile race on Long Island. on Friday, is in a dying condition; but on Saturday last, us we have alrelp briefly mentioned, a horse was driven ovar the Union track, L. 1., one hundred miles in eight house fifty five minutes and fifty-three seconds—an un paralleled fiat —for it purse of $4,000 At the conclusion of the hundred miles, the horse was very feeble; and was led off the troth by the hostler, who tdok him ton stable in the imme diate 'vicinity, where, the report says; every thing Was done to relieve bis prostrate condi ition. lie was ten minutes going the 52d mile, and the lastAfty mile heatzi around the 'course varied from five to nearly seven minutes—during which the poor beast was nursed, and petted, and his mouth sponged, at intervals, when stop ping for a few ascends, The Poollio railronil project seems to bo pretty well understood. Tho Now'York Times, speaking of this grand scheme of plunder, says it will deceive no ono , whoso real capital is worth oaring for. It will not deoelvo Congress, nor bribe It. 'lt will not,' to any respectable extent., deceive the probe, or bu'y it up. The whoic thing is too unblushitig for sucoeee, oven if the Old Mastitt.of Missouri were not pros— ent at Washington to watch its 'ivielted and impudent movements. Tide is becoming the general sentiment: POLITIO fl OALirorirA.—Thoy appear to have a verifiee and easy stile ofdoing business In tho Ooldou Slate. A gontloarn writing homo to hls.friends an Ilerkimer county, Now York, from Yolo county, California, says: "I attended the polls, 'which we . hold under some shade troes, throe miles below our rancho. Ohe man being obliged to go hour Wok, ',the pcills openad,left.hia vote sticking, inside of the aliantinttarty. 4 The' , .Tudgci' 'doOlclail 'that - It should be ttiken;:aud it'weiti sent for and dOposi- THE POLYTECHNIC COLLEGE of PA. - From the Phina. Corn. itegistor. • The establishment of a College, devoted to those sciences Which develops and perfect.the arts, we. regard as ono of the mOtit important educational movements , it> l thiticountry. There have-been—establishoditledialtolleges, Den tal Colleges; nfidA i rOlicges of Pbarmticy, and the artier the physician, the surgeon and the apothecary have felt the impulse, and become more elevated and respected. Public confi dence in the praCtitioner -has kept 'pace with bib , improventent, and the• whole' community -daily experience, in increased health and com fort, the blessings of A thorough, widely dif fused professional edi4ation- Secand only to those arts and institutions, which guard life, liberty and happiness, arc the arts of individual and notional progress, and these, aided by all the light of modern science, it is the peculiar and happy purpose of the, Polytechnic College to leach. 48 a school of EMI:I ' I.MM NO alone, it claims and we believe will receive, en extensive pat ronage. The business of the Civil Engineer, as now followed, calls into constant requisition an amount ofeolenne and skill which renders his ono of tbo most difficult, responsible and honourable of human pursuits. From the first survey to theituccessful Completion of n rail road, questions not only in mathematics and topography, but in geology, chethistry, hy draulics and kindred natural Sciences constant ly recur, and on their: true solution does the fortunate termination of the work depend,— Millions have been squandered through the ig norance of miscalled engineers. how much property has been destroyed, and how many human lives jeopardized and sacrificed through faulty construction of roads, tho statistics of companies in this country may hint, but ales! never reveal. In the skilful construction of our great lines of intercommunication, very traveller is- vitally interested ; and no that every body travels, we hold that every body has reason for congratulation, on the occasion OS, the establishment 'of nn Institution where a Thorongh education in all which relates to en— gineering may be economically and successful ly obtained. Equally importpnt is the department of MI NING. ,So extensively distributed throughout the Union is our mineral treasure, that there are feW States in which its development must not become a most important sCienentd indus• try and wealth. " Schools of mines" are indispensable to the preparation of en educated corps. of profess ional miners, without which, mining operations must be rather games of 'chance than tlidsure results Of scientific foresight and direction.— We think it may be assumed that more than twenty-five per cent, of the whole amount on nualfy expended in opening mines and buil ding smelting furnaces, might be saved to the country. if properly educated men in all cases directed the enterprises. Nay more, we do not' doubt that were the money squandered in one year in ignorant experiments among the min eral lands of Pennsylvania !done, saved to the companies, the amount would be] sufficient to endow the new College more liberally. than any of wtilalt our Commonwealth can boast. These, among other, .considerations, induce to hail with satisfaction the establishment of this long needed institution. We have reason to believe that it has not been undertaken witNout a full knowledge of the.diflieultic4 Iyhioll stand in the way of eve— ry new' meFge. We say new measure, he. cause Polyteeloto schools aro common in Eu rope, and that of which wo speak is the only one new existing in this land of industry and use ful art ! ' The gentlemen enlisted in this movement arc among the most wealthy, enterprish3g and in fluential in the State. Each section is repre sented in the Board of Trustees, the Governor himself being ex-officio President, nor have the Board proceeded unadvisedly. 00 of their number visited Europe, made the tour of in• pection of the Polytechnic Colleges and seho3ls of mines there, and returning, has embodied in the plan of our American College, all'the -improvements whi:h long t33lper'tence had 'sug gested abroad., - The premises occupied by the now College, Market Street, west of Ponn Square, lately the passenger depot of the Central Railrood, have therefore the atmosphere of engineering about them. "Ticket office" and "bar-room," "ladies' saloon" and "gentlemen's parlors" have been converted into lecture and class rooms, analytical laboratory, cabinets of min erals, and rooms for draughting. Tho accom modations are spacious and convenient. The institution is in able hands, and we feel confi dent wiltiteceire a patronage which will place it avow:10110 foremost Celle - ice of the Union. , PHOTOGRAPHS or THE MOON.—At a recent meeting of the British Association for the Ad vancement of Science, in communication was read by Professor PhiWO, on Photographs of the Moon. The Profeseor thought it not im probab'o that' we should soon be acquainted with the geology of tho moon on a much gran der and more extensive scale than wo were yet ofrthe earth. Mr. Whipple, of Boston, has recently made einno pictures of the moon, on a larger scale than any, attempted before.— The Scientific , American, whose editor has seen them, says they confirm all that has been said of great voloanio activities in our satellite.— Indepeudent of deep fissures and yawning cra ters, the fissures themselves nipear to be cov ered witli cairns and banks composed of huge blocks like boulders, which appear to have ;boon vomited up in lava, then fallen down in showers, like those of hailstones or shot, PRINTER'S rrOrEIIDS. -NOV9I' inquire thou of the editor the news;' for behold it is his duty lathe appointed limo to give it unto thee wilhout'asking. • . When thou dost write for We paper, never say unto him "what thinkeet thou of my , pieoo?" forit may bo last the truth iroultlof lend thee. It is not &Ant thou shouldst ask him who is the author qua article, for his duty requi res bird to' keep such things.to - himsolf.. When thou; (lost enter ineci his aloe take heed unto thyself That thou dost net at' what may bo lying open; for that is not,ineet in the eight of good breditig. Neithereznat ins thou the proof sheet, for itis not ready to, meet thino eye, that thou twat understand' . . SEVERE . PumeirmENT.—A follow down East having been .found guilty of yiolpting:Abe Maine Liquor Law in disposing of ardent, and, rascally pia at tbat, - rocel!ed the following sentences,!!,You, old reprobate! The Court sentences you " to drink three gleans of your rascally liquor, and may the "Lord have , mar. oy on your belly.", ' Manufactures, commerce --ittese'aro three greatintrests of this coon.: try; l inking precedence' in the order etated.:— :?roduotion; the labor which cotiviirteiesour— ; ee into ive!iith; lies at the foundittion 'of our rrispority.''Conintereoulone could' not enrieh, rid' would itepecerish us: noter ,yet built lip a'pertiiinont Stott?. ' ' (11,' , otimanb entintli Riattero. Lutheran Church Rxv. Mr. Um.Emig expeete.ll4l ilrench in the Evan. Lutheran Chun h, c n next Satbath -inerningfan - d - reVeninegT 7 tlie_puldto le invite-d -to attend. , Thanksgiving Discourse Prim TIFFANY will deliver a discourse on the „ Relation of Christianity 'to American Liberty, on Thursday, Tltoolcsgiving day, at . 11 o'clock. Stnglui School We aro .requested to state that a Singing school is proposed to be opened by Mr. WM SICILES, Mr. Sidles is well known no an ac complished instructor in Vocal Music, and wo would advise our young readers of b)th semi s to avail themselves of the opportunity by be coming scholars. , Those who wish to do so are requested to scud in their names immediately. Thanlcagivlag Day To-morrow will be observed, in accordance with the proclamation of the Governor, as a day of Thanksgiving. In addition to Penn sylvania twenty-two of the other States will tiiitte in the observance of the same day. It has been heretofore kept with grulit propriety in our borough by the suspension of business and attendance upon .. public worship, and we presume will be so observed to-morrow. We learn that the two Presbyterian congregations and the Lutheran will unite on the occasion awl that an appropriate sermon will be preached by the Rev. ill. E. JofixsoN, at 11 &clock, A. M., in the First Presbyterian Church. There will also be service in the Episcopal and German Reformed Churches, by their re spective 'Pesters. at the same hour, and at the Methodist Church an addrepis by Prof. TIFFANY, on a subject announced in another paragraph. November Cimrt, The oases tri ed at tho November Sessions being mostly of nn unimportant character, we have not prepared a full report of them. The case which elicited greatest interest was that of the Commonwealth vs. Dr. Jacob Zitzer, who was Indicted, first for the seduction of Lucinda Marble—second for fornication. The ,trial occupied a day and n half, and great ability and skill Was exhibited by counsel on both sides. The jury found the defendant not guilty, on the first count of the indictment, but guilty on the second. Sentenced to ply $l5 and the costs of prosecution. Bonham, Mil ler and Penrose for the prosecution—Watts and Hepburn for the defenoo. ADDRESS of Prof. 0. U. TIFFANY Deliuersd at (he Opening of the Pennsylvania l'emale College; Harrisburg, ,Sep(. 5111., 1853. We are indebted to the author for a copy of this address, which'we have read with great pleasure and interest. It is an able and pol ished production, replete with sound thought and eloquent passages, and the entire address is no less practical than ele_gant. A corres pondent who was present upon the occasion of its delivery, scuds us the subjoined communi cation, which speaks at 'greater length and in warm terms of the merits of the address. We publish it with pleasure. For the " herald 3' Happening to be, in Harrisburg on the sth of September lest, wo had the pleasure of hearing the above address in actual delivery. The occasion, orWhich it formed the principal feature, was the opening of a Female College at the capital of our State. During the excitement attendant upon the presence of a large audience, and the rhetori cal effects of a good elocution, one has neither the inclination nor the ability to pass a critical-, judgment upon the matter, the method, or the style of a literary composition. We surrender ourselves to the influences of the moment. We aro willing to be delighted, without inquir ing into the rationale of the process. We postpone the dry labor of "parsing our plea sure" for another and less happy mood. We hold in reserve, for some "blue iiletulSy," the grim joy, of handling the analytical dissecting knife. The address lies before us, neatly done up in a pamphlet of twenty pages. It is well 'Printed on good paper, and, bating a few ty pographical errors, now speaks as perftctly to the eye, as it formerly did to the ear. We Clod, after having given it a careful perusal, that it has lost but little by the abstraction of the charm which a graceful and earnest deli very lent to its contents. It reads almost as well in the olosei as it road from the rostrum. The selection of the tepid was in good taste, and suited well the inaugural ceremonies of a Female College. Tho subject-matter consists of a wholesome body of doctrine, in reference to the question of Female Education," enli vened by some timely home,,thrusts at those peripatetic philosophers in petticoats, who go about the country holding 44 Women'titights Conventions," and preaching themselves ; into masoulino hoarieness upon the subject of 44 Woman's Wrongs." This part of the address called forth, in tho Ilarrieburg *graph of that following tveek, an article, of which the main characteristic was a wiry . length. It was found, upon being subjected to a careful measurement, to have elongfited itself over ffvo feet ono and three-filurths inches of the columnar space of, an ordinary newspaper. It counted about ono hundred lines to the foot, and averaged a fraction over eight words to the lino. As it lacked both goal and method it possessed no inherent tendency towards coming to an end. It reached n terminus by breaking off for want of room,-,or out of sheer exhanstion. By n proper economy, t,f material, one might possibly have cat out of the paper thus covered with printer's ,ink a full sized • pattern of a Bleeder skirt. Tito method of tho Addross_shotes_thot_tho Professor has been trained by the .rigitidisci. pliue of mathematics; andits style disolettes the fact that ho has travelled out of the rou tine of the regular text-,books, and fleshed an 4 animated the dry bones of matimmationl and logical formulm by a catholic course of Belles Lottras study., In fine, the addroskio creditable to the author, does honor to the occasion upon whioh itovaa delivered, and will 'amply kepay those . who may peruse it, • S. _ - . „„, 2 , Byname' . Sony Monnt.—inere._ are few if any more, troublesome and annoying complaints that Mothers aro subject to, than 'Nursing Sore Mouth, and none probably, that is thought so lightly of by physicians. The patient Is al lowed to 'suffer from day to, fifty, and week to week, without -any' remedy. Myers' Extraot. of Rook Rose in a speedy and certain cure, as the following certificate will abundantly prove: Rev, A. B. L, Myers—Dear Sir—You . have asked Criy opinion of the influences of your Rock Rose Syrup,' In any instance of Nursing Sere Mouth which may have come under my notice. lady in this city, .severely afflicted with this painful disease,' and much prostra tion, a few Weeks after confinement with twins, otancieneed using the'Rciok Rifse,under my ad vloo,-and received immndiatif , relief. • She had previously. ,Suffered much, from this disease with her other children, and was generally far along time, he a delicate state of heidth, and suffered greatly. frotn canker. The'Rock Roso'beeame an Invaluable blessing to her and her babes; who still live, and I trust may.b • reared by this remedy. ." cIILMESE FEMALE TIMILIIEOTIO2L—A female insuireition occurred recently' at. the city of Ningpo, In Chinn. It appears that large num bers of women and chil/yen went to the houses of the wealthy, dem(fitliisg food and money, ond, when refused , t icy broke open_ doors,. anti feir - eed_a_passage_through house walls. The anthorities were only, able to quell the first riot by a daily distribution of elms, which the wealthy were obliged to provide at various temples. Subsequently, a terfible scene occur red in consequence of thesiitlistrifiblions.— Through berme mismanagement on the pert of the officers or distributors, the crowd, at one temple became so great that not less than forty persons Were trampled under foot, of whom thirty five were either dead or dying N.hen re lief arrived. At another temple a similar scene took place at theta - me anie, but, fortunately, no lives ,were lost. Inflamed by these disas. tors, a Mob of excited men sacked the rest denco of ono of the officers, and destroyed everything it contained. Tun Moran SUPERSEDED.—The English papers speak of a new machine, the " Rotary Digger," which threatens to supercedo the plough as nn instrument of culture. Even with six or eight horses it is said to be infinite• ly cheaper and more effective than the plough. The machine is the invention of Mr. Samuel son, of the Britannia Works, -Banbury, and is very simple in its , construction, according to a wood cut representation which we have Seen. It consists of a simple frame, running on a couple of wheels, resembling an ordinary field roller. The weight and traction combined, as the apparatus is traversed over the land, caus es a series of digging-forks, or prongs, to dig into the earth, and thus, with five or six hor ses, according to the state of the soil ander operation, two men are enabled to work down to something like eight or ten inches over a width of three feet, thoroughly pulverizing the soil, to the extent of five or six inches s o dig. EmtanATtoN. 7 -The lowa Reporter says the emigration .into that• State, this year, is im mense. The prairies of Illinois are lined with cattle end wagons, pushing on fur this pros perous State. The addition to the pepuistion from September Ist to December Ist, from emigration alone, is computed at 50,000. A THOUSAND A. DAY.-TllO animal emigra tion of foreigners to New York, is at the rate of about a thousand a day. What country, beside this, could receive'snch a daily occess• ion of such a population, without its being followed by revolution and disorder ? Yet this is only what is received at one port. llons—The Indianopolis Sentinel of the sth inst., says that on Ft iday morning 1,5 car-luads of live hogs left-that city via Indianapolis and Bellefontalue, and New York and Erie rail-. 'roads, on their way to New- Yurk, where it is expected 25,000 more will go within the next sixty days. " DI WIDER OF A SLAVE—Thomas Motley hag been convicted at Walterborough,S. C., ofithe murder of a runaway slave,--L.Two eth. erg aro to ho tried for aiding in the murder, Tali* frotn the' eviience, exceeded in barba rity anything ever heard of, The Charleston Courier. says that the murdered slave was a runaway, whose owner was unknown; that the demons in human shape, who murdered him, first shot and whipped him--thou put him in a vice and tortured.and lacerated him with un exampled barbarities; next set him loose and ran him down with blood hounds, and finally, as was supposed, cut him up and fed the doge with his flesh. AMOUNT OF FOOD REQUIRED ox ANIMALS.— Of hey an ox 'requires two per cent. a day Of of his live weight. That is if the ox weighs 200 p lbs. he requireslolUß. of hay. if he is working, ho wit take two and a half per cent. A lunch. cow should have three per cent. as she is proportionally lighter than the ex, and port of the substance of her food goes to form milk:. A fatting ox may_be fed fire.per cent. at first four, and a half per cent. 'when half fat, and afterwards four per cent. This is indepen dent of other food. A grown sheep will -take four and a third per cent. of its weight in hay, to keep it in good store condition. Animals iu a growifig state require most food, and it is very poor economy to stint them. - HOTITIIBLEI MUILDER OF A SLAVE.-A fiend in human shape, named Thomas Motley, has been convicted at Walterborough, S. C., for the murder of a runaway•slave. It was proved on the trial that be first shot the slave, wound ing Lim severely, and then wyipped him; af ter which, he put him in a vice, and subjected him to the most excruciating torture. He then set him Rose, started blowliMunds after him, who ran hinqtrfi - wn, mangling him horri. bly, and finally cut him tip and fed the dogs with his flesh. ' : KILLED COFFlN.—Pleasant M. i! uff mpil, a cabinet maker of Ilarteville, Tenn , c 6 killed by lite partite' iff that Wee en the 2d ihst. The two were making a collie, and came to sonic misunderstanding about a plank --a scuffle ensued, in whi:h bull'atan was allot by the other, and died the'satue day. lln.tr. TUE SICK —Men of liberal education at the present day, devote all their talents to disoover the means whereby they may remove those painful maladies which assail the human frame. Thera is no nobler art than that of healing the sick, considering the numberless diseases to which man is liable, and which may Douse him to drag out a protracted life of dis tress, or suddenly cut him Off in the bloom of his existence and usefulness; We should gratefully seize upon every means of counter,. acting their dreadful effects, or ortusing . a re moval of those clogs to happiness. In those eases where the Liver or the Stomach is the eanse,,,we_weithlig h ly.recomm oucLD r. - oof,- land's Darman Bitters, prepared.by Dr. C. M, Jack Son. N 6 medicine at this titre stands higher than those Bitters, and to those who ere suffering front the horrors of Indigestion, le ay they are the antidote. THE GREATEST DISCOVERY Or THE *ClE.—Farmer( Families and others, coo purolio,o no Remedy • mio to Ur. TOBIAS' Venetian Liniment, for Dysentery, Colic, Croup, Monte Bloom:1%16m, CLulmey, Sore Throat, Toothache, Sea Sickness, Guts, Midis, 2 , wel lings,_olll Soros, Mosquito Moo, limed Slings, Pains In o, 6 l,i d es, chest, thick , &c. If it done not give reel, the money will be reftinded— nil that is mired, Is a troll, and 11•0 it according to directloos. The or ticle /Nun English remedy, nod was used by Wm. IV. I(II Of England, anti certified to by him, no o cure for Ithennintism; whoweverythlng else recommended by his physidans lied tailed. Over 10,000,000 of bottles have been sofa in the U. Without a" single tenure, and families have doted that it was worth' 810 per bottle, they never Would be wlilulnt it in vase of Group, os it io 00 ear tolume it le applied. It co res•Tooiliticlac Ir. three min titer ; Headache in half' nan Ch H olera, WIIC Arai take 1, in it few Imilre. • It is pettedly ininwent to take internally, and hoe the retnitituendotion 01 many of the most eminent Physiciana in the United Slates. Price, 25 and 50'a nts.• • •Dr. Tobias has else put up n Liniment for Home, . In pint bottles, tvhich l• warranted— cheaper and het. lot thottouy other, for tho cure of 'COW, Inge, old Sores, Cuts, Bruises, Scratches Cracked Heel, &c. Price; fin cants. , • • pr. Tobias could N 1 a dozen newspnpors with the cortilicalos and letters received, rebellog to (He von darlltl puree .aecomplished by his. Minium}, but con , sliders plukt warrantiug ao any person who tif,os not d'li,ln relief, need not pay for ii. There has begn so much wortitteos medicine sold to the pub lic., that Dr. Tobias ril3lice hie otticie to. Tell on '-411 own intwits, - and M hei gives the yalun of the' looney received, than he asks the patronage of the publirout Mi. TOBIAS' Onion, 240 dtt gNyvicki st.,.Novy York, . . • • For solo by A.'l3rnitit,'Boventh and Choonitt streeion„ Dyott & 122 N. Second etroot ; T. It. Callonderl N s. h'hird West, and by tho Druggisfe throughout tho United Stales. non 0, 'O3-1,,y. • . • ADVERTISING, Every of bueinoes should boar in mind be following foots, viz: ?tinny a small business bits been 'enlarged, Many a dull business ]ms been made net wed -Many-a-lost-business ims been recovered and Many a large business - 11ns been preserved .By advertising; and we niny odd, without disporagenient to other papers, thot the week. ly editions . of tho .Iterabr era excellent medit a umfor that purpose. Then come on, all ye who would thrive, and send in youterirds. FIND AND DEATH rnom FRIDIIT.—On Friday night of la'st week, n'stable attached to the tel of nenry Allentown, Pit., with its contents, consisting of severid carriages, a cow and a dog, was consumed. During the prog ress .4f the fire, the wife of Jacob Trek]]ler, re' siding opposite, died from the effects of fright. gey^Gen, Wm. Lorimer, of Pitshnrg, the Clarion Register says, has given his consent to linvehis claims pressed for the Whig nomination for Governor. There will he no lack of candi dates.. The trouble is to chose tho right one, Milwaukie Prec Democrat of the 15th instant,lins returns showing a ma jority for a Prohibitory Liquor Line in the state of 250 which Rene will kubtleas be increased to 2,000 or more. No law has been passed by the Legislature, and the question only was sub— mitted to the people. SHIPMENTS OF BRNAUSTUFFS.-7:110 supplies of flour and groin sent forward to Great Brit ain from 11)0 fire principal shipping ports of this country, New York, New Orleans, Phila delphia, taltimoro nod Boston, frorn Sept. 1 to the present date, nro equal to 503,114 quarters, (8 bushels each,) ofll'hent r and 13,- 010 quarters Indidn Corn. The flour reckoned as equal to firebushels wheat to the hi. Tli)e I= MONDAY EVENING, November 21 FLOUR.--We note more firmness in the Flour market. Sales to-day 01'1400 Ids nom.- ard street brands at $0 021 ; ; also 700 11v . ,10. choice-at.. $6 75 .7? bi. Sa'es also of 2310 his City Mills at 50 75 "iit ti. Some millers are not disposed to take this price, and are asking $7. nye flour is $5. . MEAL—Corn Meal is $3 8V 1 6%,5.1 Gil Al N.—There ES'll bette'r feeling in Wheat. About 18,000 busliels offered this morning, and mostly sold nt 1386 - 0143 c.. for red, to - 1 , 10 6 !; 154e. 't i l bushel for good to prime white. Nq white fur family flour sold. Inferior lots 3 to ten cents 71 bushel below the above figures... These prices_ show an advance ‘.l to 4 cents on Saturday's quotations. About 11,000 bushels Corn offered, and mostly sold at 706/2,72e, for"old yellow, new do. 620 - ,67c : old white 70R72 cents. and new do. G0(.65 cents bushel. We quote Pennsylvania lip) at 03 cents, Maryland and Virginia Bye 7563 78 'cents 71 bushel.. Sales of Pennsylvania onts nt.--46 cents, Maryllind 4,,?.61i,41 cents, and Virginia do. 40e42 " cents, and inferior 'Vie- Min onto 3Se4O cents '441,11.00. isrIAREtEED - On the Bth inst„ by the Rev. A. IL Kremer, 3rY:IIPAIIII3E Vey to Silas MARY ANN ALEXAZ,. DER, both of this county. On the litb inst., by the Rev. J Evens, Mr. SAMUEL KELLEY, to Mice SAEAIf ELLEN DUF FY, Rah' of Springfield, Cumberland county. DIED On the 19 inst., nt the residence of her mo ther in this borough, Mrs. Louis..., wife of Mr. George Cramer, in the 19th jeer of her age. [The marriage of the deceased, who has thus died in the flush of youth, was published in our last paper.] At the residence of Gen. Jnn. M. Woodburn, in the borough of Newville, cn the toll inst., Nlrs. JANE L: Ece, relict of Michael P. Ege„. tee'd., in the 40th year of her age. "Our sighs were numerous, and profuse our tears ; For she', we lost, was lovely as the gentle flower, With aching hearts we closed her eyes—those eyes which set, As sets the morning star which goes tif down Behind the damiened west, nor hides Obscure among the tempests of the But melts nwny into the light of heaven." IMMM=EMEI Nuu 2kbucrtit)LlnciitEi For Sale or Rent THE large two story plastered HOUSE, bock- builcliiigs end lot of ground, .corlier of Pomfret and South IlanOver streets; now oc cupied by John Grey, is offered at private sale. Also, for sale the two story Stono ,Ict: House and lot of ground on North lial V 4 Hanover street, now in the ocou it 's anoy of James Gallnher. If not sold betore the lot of Jonunry both properties will he for rent. Enquire of nov.lfi4t JACOB RHEEM. Young American's Library. A useful and attractive series of Books for young people. Embracing events connected witlt the early history of our country, and lisPe of.distinsigished Men, written with much care and in fill enterttlining and' instructive man ner, with illustrations of importent events, and beautifully illuminated title pages. Contain ing the life of DANIEL wEusTER, the great , Atnerioan Statesman;. with numerous anecdo tes, ilinstrolive of his character, and the lid lewing illustrations: Young Daniel in the saw mill, Webster Fishing ot Frysburg,' Webster declining the Clerkship, Webster ex . pounding.the Constitution, The Bthther Hill celebratiodn, Webster at Fauteuil Hall, Marshfield, the residence of Webster, Webster on his Forte, ' The Life of Homy Clay, the Mill Boy of the, Slashes, nine illustrations, The Life of Bettj Franklin, 0 illustrations. The Life of Geu. Washington, nine illustra thins, The Life of Marion, nine illustrations, The Life of Lafayette, nine illustrations, Tito Life of Wm. Penn, nine illustrations, The Life of Gen. Taylor, nine, ithastrationg, • The Life of And. Jackson, it illustrations, The Life•of Napoleon Ileunuporte, nine il— lustrations, • The ;Old Belt of Independence; or, Philndel- Oda in 1776, nine illustrations. The Yankee Tea Party, and octsr stories of the Revolution, nine illustrations, Containing in nll over 100 illustrations. Each volume - is well mitten, ~possesing a high moral tone, and can safely be placed in the hands of piling people; they contain nu merous anecdotes illustrative of the eorly Lus tory of our country, and are well - adapted for family or school libraries. • IL Price per sett, handsomely bound in- cloth, gilt backs mid neatly put up in Vexes, $6,75. Price pee volume, neatly bound, cloth, gilt, 6G 7. - " ColporteUrs, agents, or school libraries will be supplied nt a liberal discount... Copies will be sent by mail, postage free, upon the receipt of the price of the sot, or any volume. LINDSAY & BLAIUSTON, Publishers, 26 SoutirGiltst, Philadelphia. NOTICM. TM Beam of WM. M. PORTER assigned to John; Armstrong and Robert Noble .aro placed in the bands of Justice Ege, who is authorized to collect all neeounts duo cn said books. All persons indebted on said books are notified to pfiy immediately, otherwise suit Will be brought without respect to persons.' German and English jourual. , [LOSE persona erditled toreceirktbe Jour., T nolo of the Senate end Ileino of Repro. eantativen; are beroby notified that they bare been, received et this °Mao, end aro ready for .V,y order of tho,Coadaissionere. • WM. I.I,ILEY, Comnera. Office, eat 26, 1844-4. tr: - -