13 s:-: , C~a+s:~,~s:g~ ~,` C' arliolH AL AliZ SLE, r iVEDNESDAY,. MAACII 12, tO? eargest attb tfienp IA a jj . 4111 itL A N., • •. • TERMS.—Two Dora,Axis A 'FRAU, on ONFiDon •• nAn. AND FIFTY CENTS.-IF 'PAID'IN ADVANCE. 4 . 1;1"15 ' iy PAID . WITHIN:THE . YEAD.. ; Antl-PIERCE . S TATE CONVENTION. Union for the Sake of the Union. The undersigned, Members of ,the I.:eosinture of 'i'onnsylvania - , having, boon selected by :their, follow citizens, In differont parte 'of the ICiiininoiwealth. to dey Ise- by.,which.idt.opix!eed to the-destructive policy anti _principles of till_ National Administration may co-operate in the support of a State Ticket, respectfully invite all w . heare in favor of sitar a -inovernent, to assemble i City and County Coatventionf , . oti' - aftlittli us 31 - Auctratuct.--to_elect delegates equal in numb - or-to their representation liße r ,titate Senate end Route of Representatives. ton CUnvention to be held nt oti-vit - s tirdli_orTllF..SA.!lg. * MONTI!. il7r tturpurpose of ninnivating candidates for Auditor:Gene. • cal, Canal Cononis.doner, and Surveyor tleneral, to be supported at the 01111111 g fall election. and to takoOeli other political action as may ixs necesunry to the crielS. J. W.:KILLINGER, , , c: L Bu:sßjc,cN...mt, • , JAMES J LEWIS,• . • JOAN M. OIDRONEY:i • JOHN iEncthioN, It. B moonniAn; • DAVID TAGGAIkT, -' DELORMA IMBRIE, - I* ,- .. - J: 14._:10.1CMAN,•., -:- -----JOIIWAYRIORT._ .._ -, L. Itif:Ep, - ' ‘ A. - W- CRAWFORD, , . . .1!. W. 110,UpEREEPElt; ' JNO. BB:oti . w.isTu(t)E, ... -JACOB STRURLE, -• JONAS AUGUSTINE. 711.. JORDAN,' . • , ' ~..)1 . JOY MORRIS, . -- • --- .. IHLIP cLili'illi. _---. W. E. FRAZER. _ANDREW GREGO FINNEY, . _ HENRY souTintn,, • SAKVETA_KEIqt, • WiLLiAld )1A314.702 , 1, , .BAM'L CALDWELL. "•T garrisburg. lob. 10, 1856- COUNTY CONVENTION. . . In accordanep with the ahoy° notice, all those opposed Ile the lintional Admlnistrntiou, in the Revere.] election districts In this county, will meet on Saturday. the 15th Inst., and select or appoint persons - to represent them —in-a County Meeting, to be held In Cailisle on Wednes day, the itith lost., to elect Delegates to red i reseul .berlAnd County in tho.Unlon Convention to be held al • trarrieburg;on Wednesday, the26th of the same nionth. DIANY; AUDITOR GENERAL.- - - 2 A. correspon dent of the Harrisburg Telegraph propo ses the nomination of Col. ELI SLIFER, of Union county; for Auditor ,General. bj , the Union State - Convention, . which meets on the 260 inst. Abetter nonii= nation could scarcely be made. Col. Sli fer has for a number of Ye,ars represented Union.county in the Legislature, and is now State. Treasurer. lie is distinguished . for talent's, energy and highriTitegrity, 'united 'with an obliging. disposition. The ':nomination of -sneh-men- aW Col. Slifer Would make a, ticket with which we could enter the canvass -with' every assurance of success.- SENATE VS. HOUSE: The billto-in 7:(*f9fsit-Ctho-nsonastie order - of - Francis ' ':,cahßrothers, which recently passed - tile House by the aid of the votes . of Messrs, , Anderson and Harper, .of" , Cumberland county, 'has been throttled to_ death by the Democrats of the Senate in commit-' tee, It was reported, with a' negative d .ecetumen a ton,,on the ground that' the 'courts have jurisdiction - in ,the matter. L We shall soon need a committee of inqui rfte%leterinine*hether the Democracy of the Senate or the Democracy of ,the " 'Tonsil is the real Sinkur pure-article. WHIG MOVEMENT.--,-7A re-organiza tion of the Whig •Party in Nes , York city .hat just ,been commenced. Dele gates from both of 'the late Whig general' "'.committees have held a meeting and ap pointed a sub-committee te report a pian for - the:organization:of the, party in Nov, York, and 4 was resolved tq adhere , :aAtitqut comprorpise . or de•!/ation to the old Vhigplatfo_im. The old,line Whigs et the' aryland Legislature, haveetiiled M ina State Conven- , tion to meet iialtimere, on the Slat , inst .r!..:: ,_ MEE e:=fib': . Oil 'st 'paper •0,17 • A Tr. lain T. DOCK 0. J. BELT., T. - Li - 11 - A LI) W. A. BARItYr„,: D• PII LVS, DANIEL,LOTT,., - DAVID MUDIMA,•JIt.„ JA311:8 X SELt.EItIfi, JOHN C. FIX.N:4IKEtt, - AV; p...huLiaNcr.n, • M 'GAYLORD, lir - , • • "igt-egol i v • ' 44 Wit • • ~• . • . • ~T14,E)C119M0(51t.&,*1(2,A. 0 o'INA,T .101116_, The' bemobratio 4 .!staia_, , Convontion .which met at ilarritl?itig on tin) 4th inpt. "rm . /limpid unanimous for 1311§4q itan. W4mi s the,,zolllvas called fo' ena7 hle the delegates to enress t eir pre er enee for the Presidene . ,.the•remilt stood , . 131.1onANAN. 126, DALLAS .5, - and one rote, for, the nominee of. the. National Convention. GEortoE SCOTT of bia, was nominated for 43atuil Commis slow, JACOI3 Fay of Montgomery,' for Auditor General, an , l'Trmorifv. IVES of Potter county, for. Surveyor Geperal.j.—A platform was adopted r6-ataming principles- of the, party, endorsing the Nebra i ska billrand applauding, the Na ional. AdMinistration.. The South could not ask. more.. The Con'vfntion, 'during its. sessions, was Addressed by Ex.::9over-, •rior. BHer Col.'' - Sal el - 1 - .llaelq - Janies 31: ..,. Porter, and Other,.dl. H i guished members. Of the party. , •• • '. , ~ -.• . _Tht) nominees .of . the Con:Vention, are. entirely unknown in - this; quarter, of the State. The claims of the .: favorites, :Of Fianklins and Adams Counties were alto- . . gether- overlooked by. the COnvention. The Harrisburg •Teley"r aph gives us some notionieWho and -- what the,,earididates are in the followitigurticle:'; - ' ," - =The tiontlnated is only of moderate strength, if even thrit. It is wqfully deficient 'in local sliiinietry—the.best Vivo - nomination, ' being' white Chc hi only °film-nomination goes„North. The West 'is entirely overlooked,.prohably owing to the . genet-id distrust felt in the Democracy of that• ,-,_sectinii,..:!OEMr,-Scorri-the7candidate=fori-Ca nnl Commissioner, we knoW nothing more, uin thrt.t . he ie Mr. 500 n... If he is unfit-for the office. it will take sometime to prove it on and if ho is well qualified he cannot . ' make him-self too useful in getting the people toktiom was the candidate of. the_ free end - .„easy,wing:pfthe.C...arivention in oppolition to' Jinfife . SrittatiaNti, of Chester, who is unfor. • tunntelyaWidely known . as.a_mam.of.the high eat :order of integrity —When we learn more `:A . we of. r. ouorre L , OM. JACOB Far, Jr., the nominee : for Auditor __Getieral,.is essentially a fogy the old school. He has been --in Congress;' - where. no served with.creditable silence;-and has-heetfa,legis-- later, where be demonstrated 'how easily a man might succeed in doing nothing. Ho en --Aoys--a-fair-repigation-as-a-man-and-as-a-con--- sisteot partisan; but the position for which • he is a ;candidate is the one of all-others that requires arclear - Qad. and a bravo . heart to protect the treasury from the ow:moraine which:habitually beset it. That be is Buell a man, we have little reason tehope., • - •, With Tittornr IvEs, the nominee for. Sur veyor General, the people- of . the . State are • pretty well acquainted by reputation. Toli •ties and public speculation are his trade, and be ia , quite master of it; •Ile has been Judge, Member, w 6 think, and Senator, and has pro. Med in all_ positions. lie wee 'one of the ring-lenders in Potter county who conceived and carried out4ho.villainy.that turned Jolts C. McGES out of the Legislature,' to put in a man whoin the people had twice refused •to have-as_a_Xtepresetitative r _and-th e-verd ict-of his own country and district will be , anything but flattering for . Mr. its,' next fall. Had the. Convention really .wanted.A. good. offiaq. instead of an unscrupulous politician, they would have taken Mr. Reuttun , of this county,. who. has been the Surveyor General for many years, while pensioned politicians .pocketed the honor and-payi.. • :Me but.refiect.the . ticntimepts ott all parties when we say that the, State tiaket-ii- not a atrong one, and if. the coming Union,'Gonven tion'unites cordially against the DonocracY, l and profits by the blunders of their Cov.entien, the success of the Union .ticket cannot •inatter of doubt. Penhsylvania is clearly, in the hands of the opponents of the Deinocracy, Alnd_they have but to wield the,power, they possess toogive victory to,ffeir ,effoftVWip they do so s , • • THE NOMINATIONS. Thekliarrisbu'rg Telegraph says. that out of the eighty-six Ainerican and RepubliCan nowepapers.puglialied-in Pennsylvania,-26 have hoisted the flag of FilluMie and Donaldson; 85 openly op pose the nominations, .and: -9 5;p . sume / neutral gfound. In the South the nominations are of course received. with - - high enibusiasm In New and £he north Westgen '—erally the reverse. is the case.. o The m An-, ti Nebraska embers — of Congiess it is said are considering the propriety of call ing a PeepWe National convention, to ,tneet in Philadelphia, to nominate a can- . didate for President and Vice President. Should snch a Convention be held, and agree with the Republicans and Norti ern Atnerioansnpon a common ticket, it Would result in the of a pow - - - erful third party. Ditretove,Af___Wisconsin, dressed a message tb.the Legisleitire or that State, denying the right of the Suprethe Donit to pass - upon his claims to thi-oilice he holds, ..The Democrats have resolved to sustainrhifii. ' 'TheTli(fliq, liill,-,1-ileyeri„ as "Itlivne'S bill, which passed the 'Senate some . • time 6inct 3 , Eqeopassed, the ' ribuse of. ,limpre i sentatiyes on Thursday lest. ',The - sfrill: sent-provisionsof-the-Benaia:-lill v ere towevei.very considerably modified .i.n It - ,hiill - duse, aiNi ill b — se cea - IY - the follear-, frig synopsis : , The prohibitiOn against restaurant licenses is reiddied, and the Courts of Quarter Sessions of tbe.several counties, and Board of Apprai sets, orPhiladlephia, are authorized to •grant Hensel* for the keeping otrestaurants, oyster 'house§ and eating,bouses,' the persons..:.to.Re .classified according to - sections three and Nur of'tbe Act of April 10;1849, and they shall be priyaged to soil domestic wines,. cider, ,por • ter,. ale, B'ea'r and other :malt 'and Arevved liquors;, the license fee not to be Tees than 's2o, and the pertein licensed to give Bond, 'with' full and sufficient sureties, in $5OO ln IthiladelphirctluarprTiltieraWTrty — grant — to to staurants: authority to sell 'spirituous liquors. The rates of-license for:breweries and...distilleries ate- reduceC frout treble to 'double the-present rates. , The ;applications for tavern licenses are' to be died with the Clerk - of the Court, and-ladvertised, by , him in, ti list. instead of by the uppliclints separately. The-classification of -tavern-litionses has- been reduced to $25 as , the, minimum. Ia rh In .delphin the-tavern .lieense appraisee 'are,to ho aPpointed by the Court of Common. Pleas, District Court, and the Supreme Court,insteed 'of, by the Court of Quarter Sessions.' . The ratio of tavern•lieenses granted is made one to every hundred tumbles in the cities and counties.of the,State, instead _of owe hundred in the cities and two hundred in the comities. The punishment of the violation of the provi sions of the law relative to the sale Of vinous, spirituous; malt or brewed' iirythirs, has been modified, to ri fine of not less than. $lO, nor imprisimuuntfer_a secondeonviation being struck. out. Brewers of malt *liquors and tiatt ufacturera of domestic wines finny btittle and sell the same, buttiot in less quantitietpthan one dozen bottles,. with- - The bill %Vris then sent to the . ! Senate but•returned by.thet .lody on -Saturday morning with the ieformation . that the Senate-could--not concur, but .had poirtted.:a committee of conferenceon.the subject. = On—Jeceiving r .the . the ihniseLtipribieted,---ti 7 s'imilar-. Comm ittee: The Senate COminittee iscompoied, of Messis. Browne, Jordan, and "Whe'riy: The house Committee are . Nessrs.. Wri - ghti, 'Getz; and -'They have net Yet reportettatind it is : rumored cannot agree. HoN. B. F. WADE; Republican, has been electdcl U. S. Senator by, the Ohio, Legislature- for the full term of till Years, commencing with the slogs - of - his pres ent term on, the 4th of March,- 1857. The-Vote stoodfor WArn 102 ;Tone 36; scattering 2. ~He :Was fo - imerly a Whig, but is now a, straight-out Republi can. - -YRom - SANrx-FE.--We received last week the Santo Fe (New Mexico) Weekly G&. zette. doted December 29; 'We find the fel. lowing notice of chtietnuufestivities;in,which eoveral of ourfriends partioipay: • THE frommys.—The holidays, thus far, bag been observed in - Santa Fe about all• usual.— On Christmas" eve there was a ball at the Fon -via, whitibi, we understand, passed off in-a blaze of glory, and that;"=.' "They danced all night, unti' broad day light, And vi ent homo,3rith the, girls In the nierning:" The dragoon hand was in attendance,• and diseoursed.swect music for the tnerrylnakors. On Christmas day our fair countrymen .kept open , hottse,andthere-was-ageneral.-time- o f culling - mid paying respects, to say nothing of the-many-good eatables-mad drinkables spread for the visitors. During the week .we haie had a,nurnber of strangers in town, among whom wo potice Lt. Col. St.,Vrain and Lieuts. Magruder, Mercer and MeCoolt, U. S. A froM Fort Union, Lt. Beall and the Surgeon - of the post from Fort. Massachusetts;,Capt. Gibefon from Alberquerque;atici Ageift Kit Carson of Don Fernandez de Taos. The two Houses of the 'Legislative Assembly _adjourned over Christmas from the previous_ Saturday, but resumed their labors again eniVerdnesday the 26 , inst. . • DUAIVINg OP-TIJE COSMOPOLITAN . AIM Asso. crierroN.—The second annual distribution -of paintings, Statuary, and. other -_works of art, among the members - of _the - cosmopolitan Art •Association; toorplace at SanduBl4, Ohio, on the evening cf the 28th ult., in . the presence of a large 'number, of ladies and gentlemen, who had assembled to witness the procbedings. The ballots were, draWu from the wheel folly little girls, and the rises 'were, announ cod by the malingers. he - exquisi:estatue of the'. Genoa Cinci r, costing originally -len thousand dollar!, was drawn by Francis Boise, of Mineraiille, Alan adcountof thepro ceedin'go, together with the address 'of Mt. Godwin, and the annual report of the Actuary, will he published and forwarded to thq mem bers of the Association i e April number of Ab.sit.reepstattLigee uhlre held er State . elealon yerter4y, and• will hie the et gun la the Presidential eampoign:' edam ante_ CARLISLE I)iikisii"tigit.—The tentlozi of fhb:public ie - direotecl fojkim fid!ec tioemtit of 'the Carlipto J3toposit' l 13onki -, by, -which it wi)l,l?o,t3l3:h„iiiitt flew and Obieodbiff:: -I Y - libOral - rates - o - fioterestiiternowAlffer - eti -I for ifepopito. . • .• 'HALL 'A.cADElttr.—Theltltteti tioti Of pitfalls and gunidinne le,itivited to the adveTtidenient"tof this Bourishir4 Academy,lo. oared fn' the eastern tfectioa of•the'couniy,. but fehr miles'distant from•llarriebiirg. ..3101tEISNow t --;-Anotber fall -sof . snoly . ' 'making a depth' of a couple of inches, took . .place'on Suaday !oat. " There have been over eiventy - naye oleontinuipue sleighing ibla ter. )ire suspect that even, Aim • "oldest , in-T habitant;" among 'all the•extraOrdinary eients ..f - the - paatiemiumfroutetph'er whit ti o: so much-al/ow and :sleighing ,POLEMIC.CONTEST.—The second con-, test between the Big Spring literary.lnstitute and the Ship' ensburg in - Literary Hall, Neyiiille, on Tuesday evening. the - 18th Inst. The - neeashiu promises to be highli.ezeitiug and interesting. MUSICAL ENTERTAINMENT,—_-WO had the pleasure of attending a few evenings since in Harrisburg, a musical and floral entertain• merit given by tbe pupils of Mrs . :' Le.6mite's Fernale'Seminary.- A large nm.l_,fashionahle audience was present to whom. it is •fleedless to say, the-beautiful spectacle-and exquisite sitiging;,gave the highest delight. Several of the-pupils-who-T . iirticipatmltwere - from - etnn. - berlaild county. The performances reflected the highest credit upon - the character of the school. . - • . LECTURE BY PROF. JOHNSON.—The lecture by Professor Johnson, delivered at the Court House, was 'unusually well.' attended, The celebrity of the, lecturer, the popubir theme, together with:thepromise of a - musical treat, drew crowds. • - * Upon the merits .o fhb: le:otpre Ire need, scarcely p'bnounce.• We presumes large por: ion ortko intelligence and good sense . of the town walpresent. The masterly manner in which" the lectuer analyzed his subject. showed him to benotyrcinthe art of criticism.' The, appearance orfairness and candpewas mani -rested throughout -bier diecourse,-and- - was only at the conclusion, that weknew whet . Judgment to impute - to the ltictet7, such were his efforts to set iii - a olearlight_boi and merits of the work. A fine vii pervadenia Introductory reparke., somabing of quaintness he dwelt I.l] 'of the .: consequence. attendant upon the ad vent of 6g/hauls/he • He considered Hie' age , to be exacting in its demands. and no longerwil lng to follow obsequiously the'freake of genius but requiring genius to. follow 'it. Homer, Dante, Clutuee'r, Tasao,:Shakspeare and others, each gave charaoter tol s ‘poetic• spirit of his age—poets now study what the tendencies of the age , require. He defined with. sue .cess true poetry, drawing a wide distinction , • between what is frequently denominated po etry, and that which is the genuine product of the true poet. - Short lines, abroad margin, capital letters, similarity. of sound in certain sillables,Are not poetry, nor do they contribz titeto the value of it, wh ere y other essentials are ' wanting. Aristotle had, said rightly,., that three things are necessary to a poem, a begin ing, a middle, and an end. The obseriance of certain metrical lima he deemed essential, and and int this: respect'‘Longtalio w had failed.— He had atteinpted a measure 'unsuited to our language. ---- ltiore - essentialatill-to - -a-pestals 'subject,':--1r !he-poem-is an-epic, -deeds;-and not men,' must form its subject. All attempts to substitute men for deeds have proved fail ures. in tide respect, he thought 'Longfellow fortunate.. His subject was a grand Opec The sate of,Hiairotho, wore befitting the, lolly co, .eption. \ * . illawatha, he considered the Indians Redemer, under the form of a mighty hero, working the good of his people. His exploit's form a theme. • lofty, enough for the most gifted epic bard, It bad manyfaulte, • among which were- 7 ,,a,,,,want of conformity to the laws of meaadiia, a monotony . consequent bpbn this want of•conformity to metrical•law,. and that peculiar* in its measure, which ex poses it to the most ridiculoue' sort of imita 'en. Notwithstanding all these objecitions,he ,had-ho doubt, but ',that when the neve* of _the measure has lost povreri_ and - .when'thO, Work began'to be read with a desire ainte Its real merits, it wonlci.take its place by the aide erfililton, lasso, Khmer, and Mb ar greatTepics.' • • ,• Weoffer but a single remark further.: - While the feature was a fair And candid' iliscussibn of the Merits and demerits, of tge , poem, and as such 'deserves. our highest approval, we cannot but, confesa otir - ifribensions, that in lite;* of all the objections enumerate d against "tftogother with some'ethers which will a; 7o t.. Ites.,bezfelt-and-r:appreoilited hereafter, L on g... ffeliow,ean hardly: with safety reckon • upon . - sharing much of that - immortality which Lao ME Counto- matters: ':`:',v , , - : ,, : ::5 , •,: - _,...i : H,::::.;,i,7,:•..,..:1 . -; : !,..., ororned.tbe,efforts Of some - of tbe 'epics of _ _others_an toenean,—we op he -- PPem - may taligl 3 igh tank nth *vary world and be to the tribes of -4tnericii, • 1010 tbd has' been' to 'the , ',Trojan heroes, ,or what die "jiiissalem al"' has - been - to - the Crusacters, • . •. eL.I3, G. from ' 1!11/- . c,liatriiit,, basi 3 OnOpped fr.obert MCCortney, 101 fif. MOcatritioyi of 'Cortialei-,11 , 4 a cede iktlie *O4 Rointi.Aop.dotoy f Mr. :Todd referpiut , t4ol!oice , to ; ino,:aohool Direotors„- of ee!eiteit yanni -McCartney 68 possessed of the necopsary;attoioroens. ... _ , . ... ~ ,PUBtio, SALEl3.—Bills for the .follow owing, ~ &lea. or Stock, ' Farming Uteosile„ ifouieho i ld Furniture; Sic., have been , printed . , ... at thie•nffice, vii - : - . - -43 ale at Ihu,resideoce of JOhn pipit), deo'd. -- irrifokeitto‘ri on iiiiiiitorou 25thi" ' I . . i Situ by Lowis - :Sponsler, in South •Middle . . top, toirnship, - on Fritiny, Mnrch 2lst. - - .., ' CoNatfaszoltst.-1114 Ilielmtx,--frora the Committee on Ejections, made a long report to-the Renee on' Wednesday' last; giiing Ake • reasons for - requesting pow to sendnfor tier eons and papers in Reeder's case.. The report occupiis three columns of closely printed mat- I ter, and is a very able 'document. .It embod, ies the allegations of the contestant—Gover., . nor Rooder c7 that the legislriture which passed the election law, under.the provisions of which General Whitfield . was ohoseri, was imposed . upon the Territory by a foreign invading force, who seized lition the governmotit, and -have exercised it ever since, and that • the - people I. there are in a subjugated state. The follow. " questions are then discussed at lencth_: let, - The neceirtyf having an invesiigation of. the facts in dispute. 2d• The effect of the am of Gov. Reeder, in issuing certificates of elec. tion to a portion of the Legislature. 3d, , • -Whether the evidence to eretblish_ the - facts can be had satisfactorily by depositions. The report is signed by-.sit members of the Com. -mittee. • Alr.,Stephens, from the same Conimittee, submitted the minority report. _lt insists the' Congress has no right, to look beyond the leg., 'militia - it of Kansas, but nnist - regard its laws as valid and of binding force. The Conimittee, it is said, stands si.x - to three. • l lI•IC„IZIrunLICAN ADIMESti.—The Republ ..... cans have issue 4 . pewerfatly-loitten addrestr,_ _ - . and of cousiderable .. hengthr-imitlressed. to the _whole country,'in which the Policy that has -brought-the-party into - existenceis - searphingly -- irtestigated. In speaking of the'priginal hoe tility of our government, supported,Joy all see.. tions of the country, to the extension' of lila. very,--ond of. the diffitrent policy that - hat: - characterized our.adminietration for the last - several yzers,, this address says - - - 4-Ihus for a period of twenty-five years has Slavery been contending, under various pre. - texts, but with constant success, against the tends cies of civilization and the spirit offal insti tions_for the extension and perpetuation .ot ' power. -The degree in ,which the Gen al Government has aidetrits efforts may br: traced in the successive steps it has In 1787, all the States in the Coefederacy united thet•Slavery. should be forever prohib- . iced from all the territory. belonging to the United States. In 1786; the first_ co_ngretir- --- of the United States passed adow re-affirming this ordinance and re-enacting., the prohibi. tion of Slavery which it contained. In 1.820,'• • the slaveholding interest secured the adraisSion of Missouri as a Slave State into the Union, 4)13 acceeding to a similar prohibition of Slave ry from the Lousiana territory lying north of 36 deg. 30.”, LI that prohibition wits " repealed, and the people of the territory Wert left free to admit or exclude Slavery, their own discretion- In 1356, the General Govern meut proolain,m Ica deterniination to use at the power of the United Ststesdo enforce up on the people obedience to laws imposed upon tlitn by nrnied invade'rs, establishing Slavery end visiting with.terrible penalties-their ex ercise offreedom of speech and of the press -Apqn that sul),ject. vsyo American people livein Sikes where Slavery is:forbidden - by - law; and rwhile - five - sixt'aw - of the capitill, enterprise and productive' Indust. ry of-Ihrt country, rest upon Freedom as their, basis, Slavery thus controls all departments of. their government, and wields their powers or - • its - own behalf.. - PIIPLOINING A Rivuu.—There is:a little con. - troversy springing up betwein New2York and . Pennsylvania; in relation, to the Chemung riv• - sr. That river rises in Northern Pennsylvania, flows northward into the State of New York, ~ and then turning southward,, flows backward into our State, and empties into - the north branch of the Smegmbanna river, Near Cor, ning N. thelfew Yerkers haVe built a dam aceoss the Cliethuitg river; in older-to turn its waters into Chenitung canal. That oanitl ex tends to'•the.fieneca lake, and discharges its waters there. The' outlet of the Seneca lake Is into Lake Ontario. So that.the wafer thus - - taken' out of the.Cheroung thief , ' is never re-, stored to It, so' that, when it returns into 'this State, its volume is,greatly reduced as ti feeder -of the Susquehanna river, and our public im-• provoments are injured. 'Our, State govern ment has taken this.-matter in 4 `bindl, .and quite a. difficulty laity arise out of it. • . ages. • ,144.arti - On the 6th inel.,Aly. the keit: q r . P. Ir_c_pg,SMOßOß„ 01LIIERT•ter - InriITAIrItEMBOOK ItXtit•E'rr. both or • T3Mtit)l • - . On th o Pnpertown, M. BLANCHE MOOBE';"wilii!of Matthew, Moot*, Instli? 80th yoAr of her - • El MI