u if I Tl ill 1 iMf Tafxrt if IB Hi MX 9 8 THE BLES3HTGS OF GOVEENHEIfT, LIKE TZH DEWS OF HEAVES", SHOULD BE DISTRIBUTED ALTKE UPOK THE HIGH AND THE LOW, THE HIGH AND THE TOOK iEW. SERIES. EBENSBURG, FEBRUARY 6, 1856. VOL. 3. 10. 16, T B R M 8 : TilS DEMOCIiAT & SENTINEL, is publish- 0 1 every Wednesday morning, in Kbenslmrg, CnJria C., I'a;, at $1 50 per annum, if taid iv ABi'iXfE, if not $2 will bo charged. ADVEii L'lSiMEN Ti will be conspicuously in serted at the following rate.?, viz: 1 square 3 insertions, $1 00 Kvory subsequent insertion, 2 1 square 3 months, 3 00 1 - G " 0 00 44 " 1 year, 12 00 "col'n 1 vear, SO 00 J 44 " 15 00 i:isiness CtnU, a 00 Twelve lines constitute a square. From the Pennsylvania!!. XLENOtTHCIXG BLACK HE PUBLICAN IS tl. We call the special attention of cur readers to the following able, eloquent and logical letter of Gfcuc.e A. Coitey, Esq., to the President cf the Republican Convention of Pennsylvania. Mr. Coffey is a young man office abilities, end has for several j'ears prist been considered the most eloquent Orator in the II publican party of Pennsylvania. Since the p tssage of the Nebraska act, Lis phllisoph ieal miud has been busily engaged iu determi ning bow far bis own views upen the suHeet of Government would square with the prin ciples of that wholesome law of Cotgress Gradually, be discovered that its provisions accorded with the theory which he had long entertained, aud like an honest man and a patriotic citizen, he openly avowed the fact. The late meeting of the Republican Conven tion in Philadelphia, found him on the floor, during a stormy debate, logically sustaining the principles cf the Nebraska bill, aud elo quently depicting the consequences of the wild schemes of the Abolitiouists. Mr. Cojtky has now severed all connection with the Re publicans, and in exposing their errors, also takes occasion to pour liquid fire upon the be: d e.f Know-lNolhingisin. To a mind likj lii.-s, action is necessary to its development, jiud wo feel satisfied that he will henceforth prove an able champion of the individual rights of the States, and of their equality un der the. Constitution. lie has always opposed the prescriptive tenets of the Secret Order, and will wage war against no man on account of his religious opinions. There is another -eloquent gentleman who was conspicuous in j the hist Republican Convention, who should publicly renounce his connection with that or ganization, as wc know that his views in rela tion to State rights arc in direct opposition to those entertained by the Abolitionists. Will be have the courage to come out from among them, now that Mr. Coffey has set the exam ple. Let every Democrat read the letter of Mr. Coffky. It will repay perusal. No. 50 South Sixth sr., Piiila , ") 2Gth January, 1856. j Otis K. A. Hutch litsnn, Esq., President cf the Ptpullican City Convention : My Dear Sir : I beg that I may be al lowed to assign my reasons for resigning my place as a delegate in the Convention, over which you preside. I do this with the kind est feelings towards every member of the Re publican party. My intercourse with all of them has been most pleasant to myself. They have all treated me with flattering courtesy. I bear cordial witness to their personal integ rity their honest patriotism, and their demo tion to Liberty. Put it is my humble opinion, that m oppo sing the admission into the Union of any more slave - holding States, they fly in the face of the Aational Constitution. Aud here arc my reasons for so thinking : Some cases may not be reached by the ex press b-tter cf a law. which are nevertheless governed by it, because they are, as the law yers say, "within its equity." Such cases, though not mentioned in terms, arc et with in the mischief to be remedied, or the good to bo effected, by the law, or within its intent and scope its reason and spirit. No one hesitates in applying the law to such cases. Now, the Constitution is not a " dead letter " It is more than a string of " shalls," 44 shall nots," aud "mays." It has intentions and purposes written upon its front a pervading spirit reasons for every clause and word ; it has 4 its equities." Let it be granted, then, that if Congress refuse an applying Territory admission into the Union, such refusal cannot be appealed from, reversed, or redressed under the Con stitution by any other power than Congress itself. Grant that such a Territory must stay .out till Congress does admit it. Grant that Congress has a certain discretion in the prem ises, for the Constitution svs 44 new States may be admitted." But itis just as true, ihai this discretion may be exercised in a spirit regardless of the Constitution, or hostile 4,0 it or parts of it. A refusal to admita new State is constitu tional or unconstitutional, according to the reasons on which it proceeds as it advances r obstructs the purposes and intent of the -Constitution, and harmonises or is discordant with its spirit and 14 equities." To refuse a jijonarchical State would bo an express duty. If a community situate far away from us, se parated by the seas, differing from us in color, race and species, heathen, barbarous, and un used, to practical republicanism, consisting of Africans, Chinese, Tartars, or Malays, should t-uangely apply tor admission, Congreea could eU refuse, vindicated by obvious Constitu tional proprieties. For such an admission might endanger 44 domestic tranquility," and would form a less 44 perfect Union." Put if Congress refuse to admit a 44 cew State" for the simple reason that she allows domestic Negro slavery, this is against the whole scope and spirit, and all the analogies and equities of that august Instrument which binds the Union, and gives 4' form and pres sure" to the nation. Congress has no power whatever to inter fere with slavery in the States. Slavery, in each State, is under its sole and exclusive con trol. Philanthropy may shed her tears over the sorrows of the slave Eloquence and Lit erature may expostulate with the master but slavery itself is entrenched and hidden behind State sovereignty. It is beyond the sphere and scope of national action and policy. This Union, although most benign, fruitful, and perpetual, is yet not o Unien to -all-inter ta aud purposes. It is a limited partnership. It relates to common interests, common dau- "cry. common institutions, and merely nation- ;d matters. It has no jurisdiction over and ! cognizance of what is mere local and pceu - j iaVm ! Now the General Government is prohibited from touching the subjects of slavery in the States, for obvious reasons. Every one of It may be suggested, mat congress uas thocc reasons apply cith equal force to in- power to 44 make all needful rules aud regu choate 11 new States.'' This prohibition, or ; bitions" respecting the Territory of the United rather disability, is a notable self-illustration ! States. Put this docs not refer to the au- aud example of that habitual self-government, and sclf-developcment, and centrifugal anti centializaticn, which amount to a characteris tic instinct in the Anglo-Saxon race, and make the political religion of our individual izing Americans. And if this idea of unre strained local self-government is the philoso phy aid rationale of the relations between the Union and the States, why not also of the relations between the Union and inchoate States? Slavery in the States is essentially a 44 pe culiar institution." That is, it exists, and cau exist there, not by virtue of the law of God, or cf Nature, or of Nations, or of Com mon Law, or of National Constitution, or of any law of the Union, or of any other State, but only by virtue of the local law of the particular State. Put slavery is just as pe culiar to any Territory, or inchoate State that permits it. God did not ordain there, nor does the National Constitution carry it there ; nor is it established there by any Natural, International, Nation 1 or Common Law; ia legal and political contemplation, it is the mere creature, and tenant at will of the local law. As Congress cannot interfere with sla very iu a State, because slavery is so peculiar to that State, so, therefore, by a parity of reasoning, Congress uwjld not to interfere with this same peculiarity in a " new State." Po slavery fair or foul, it is in fact best man aged, and disposed of by those who bear its responsibilities and its burdens, and who will have to undergo its obscure future. Any foreign, central, or external intermeddling with it, from even the best motives, is always delicate, impolite, dangerous, and cxaspcra tiug. Is not this equally so with regard to a new State ? She may be small and few in numbers, but her domestic institutions are also in embryo, and just a3 subject to her control as those of older and .more indurated States. She is just as keen-tyed to her own interests, and just as jealous of any interfe rence. The refusal to admit any new slave-holding J ites draws an invidious distinction between j St the sovereign and equal States of the Union. It implies or rather expresses a national judg ment of condemnation upon slavery, aud a ceusure upon the States that tolerate it. It pours contempt upon their opinions and insti tutions, segregates them amid their sisters, and brands a shame upon their sunny brows. ! It shapes and directs the policy and power of j tho nation, as such, in favor of the peculiar ities of some States, and against the peculiar itics of ethers, who are sovereign peers And this, although these peculiarities are allowed, implied, and recognised in the compact that constitutes the nation. Now, the alleged badncs3 of slavery docs not give the right to do all this. In the present regard, here is no question touching the moral character of slavery, or the evil of its extension. Our nation, for the purposes of this argument, exists only iu and by virtue cf its written Constitution Individuals, may, on their own responsibility, obey 44 high er law." Put our collective Nation, as such, cannot recognize a 44 higher" rule than its own organic law, without ijso facto lapng into revolution or anarchy. As a political entity, it cannot have any higher conscience than devotion to its own Constitution. Our nation, therefore, on no account, has any right to sectionalize itself. It has no right to pry into the States, inspect their di verse social systems, and pronounce that some should be copied and others avoided. Much less, can it enter the lists, and use its force and policy to extend or restrict these systems; especially such as are known to the Constitu tion and were taken, at the first, into the arms of the Union. In fact, to express the matter iu its elements, stronger States, even if they do forbid slavery themselves, have no right to bay hold on national agencies and appliauces, and make tkeui the means of confining and repress ing tho social systems of the weaker ones. The Nation should never reduce itself to a discordant assemblage of struggling States. All this would be a sharp and astute perver sion of the original partnership ; it would be unfair to the States whoso peculiarities were assailed and restricted. That Government which is the creature of all the States, forgets its place, when it frowns upon some of them, and says to them. 44 There shall be no more of such as you !" The slave-holding States, being by the con sent of all parties, integral, equal and sover eign partners in the Union, &re fully entitled as joint-owners to all its fair and natural chances and resources for promoting their own interests ; and by tne whole theory of the Constitution, they are the sole and su preme judges, saving. the rights of others, of what their own inteiests are. Now all those States believe, aud give their reasons for it, that to prevent them from emigrating West ward with their servants, and to confin sla very within their own limits, will be injurious to them, and, perhaps, ruinous. They con sider it not only an interest, but a necessity, to allow their peculiar institution to shift into some of the Territory of the Union. As that Territory belongs to, and is for the use and benefit of all the States, indiscriminately, the Southern States, in Constitutional fair ness, cannot be deprived of their unprejudi ced access to it. Congress cannot do indirectly, what it can not do directly. If an authority be not granted iu the Constitution, it cannot be com passed by any dodging methods. Abe tno mcut 3tttte is in the Uuioc,-tbcis expressly protected from Congressional intermeduling Congress, therefore, has no right, to dictate her institutions, by any officious anticipation ; j by throttling her, at the threshold of the j Union, and saying, 44 You may do as you please, an instant after thh, when you are in, but now that you are just going in, you j must do as ice please " thority of Congress ia relation to 44 new Stales," passing from the Territorial condi tion, into the Union. And only "needful" rules can be made. A rule not 44 needful" is not constitutional. The question is not what Congress can do, by stubborn force, or stubborn refusals, but what ought it to do. This slavery test is not 44 needful" in the sense of the Constitution ; therefore, it is not allowable. A refusal to admit a 44 new State," on ac count of Slavery, would effect nothing. Such a State allows that system of labor, either because it already exists there, or because she is fully determined to introduce it. Let her admission be refused in either case, and the characteristic habit of local self-government, would fix the applicant in her prefer ences, and drive her to resist such central dictation. She would be strengthened by the certain sympathy and aid of every other slave-holding Stato and Territory. Then the alternative Mould be, not Slave Labor or Free Labor, but only a sovereign slave-holding State, or an angry, threatening, slave holding Territory. The action of Congress would merely merge all other public topics into a fearful controversy respecting the status of an organized slave-holding commu nity. As might be inferred from all that is ad vanccd, the proposed test of admission is utterly unprecedented, and against precedent. The very origin of this Union teas an admis sion cf &ljec States'. The Free States form ed a national partnership with their slave labor-sisters, without a trace of objection ; nay, with heartiness aud affection. No State was catechised about her private affairs Nay, the very existence of this Union, as an actu al, historical fact, rendered the admission of Slave States necessary ; for it required the ratification of nine States to 44 establiah" the Constitution ; and at that time, there were not nine Free States. The Fatheis that framed and ratified the Constitution, with such wisdom and purity, did, in fact, under it, admit new slave-holding States, such as Kentucky and Tennessee. This novel test never occuncd to them Have their sons the right to invent it now ? Can any current circumstances re peal or alter the supreme law of the land, impair its authority, or soften the granite basis of the Union into the wind-swept sands of popular opinion ? Will any misconduct of the mariucr justify us in cutting " loose from the anchor that has steadied the ship for seven ty years ? Tl ere may be local exasperations; the North or the South may not have kept full faith ; our fervent sisters may sometimes for get their proverbial courtesy; their dauntless ncss may, now and then, lapse into 44 brus qerie," or swell into haughtiness ; 2Northern citizens and Southern citizens may have said aud done what is very censurable ; Poston "fanaticism," Porder "ruffianism," or Charles ton " Nullification," may have raised most disproportionate flurries ; but all this does not justify unconstitutional retaliations. Hate slavery, if you feel like it denounce it till you unpack your heart with words call it the foulest curse ?nd wrong, and its diffusion an evil and a peril, 3'et all this does not give Congress a power which the Constitution nev er granted, or allow the creature of that Constitution to slight its letter or its equity. That Constitution is the fairest offspring cf the gravest wisdom of all time ; it is the most concentrated aud expressed essence of patri otism, knowledge and judgement ; it is iu it self the maturest policy. No citizen can go far astray who keeps his eye on it, as his Polar Star Any party will in the ;vent be politic, and American, and Democratic, and victorious, that subordinates all prejudices and impulses to its calm restraints, and sub mits every sentiment and measure to the day light of its lucid provisions. I have said nothing of danger of tho Un ion. Heedlessness and excitement may ap parently imperil it fur a moment, but I have a faith that 44 the stars fight for it in their courses." It will be safe while the Alleghe- ! nies and ttie liocky Mountains stretch their summits along the Continent; while the Mi ami and the Arkansas, the Ohio and the Mis souri unite and fraternize in the mighty Mis sissippi ; while our vallies and prairies spread j their fertile and flowery expanse from Lake Superior to the Gulf, and are alike steeped, hero with northern showers, and there with southern suns; while common institutions, common laws, common civilization, common interests, common language, common reli gion, common ancestry and blood, and com mon! memories, concur to mould and blend us into one ; while iron rails and resonant en gines are annihilating distance, and putting the cotton fields of Carolina, and the cotton factories of-Massachusetts, within a few hours of each other. " This Union is protected by the common sense and eager patriotism of the American people. Millions of swords are ever ready to flash upwards iu its defence; millions of votes, to fall like snow-Sakes, into the ballot-box, for its peaceful support. As incident to popular institutions, there may be excitements, differences, heart-burnings, re criminations, threats, and fears ; but as before, so again, sectionalism will expand into na tionalism,, impulsive sentiment will chasten itself by serene lessons from the past ; disu nion will be whipped back into its Ckhy- re treat; Americana will join brotherly hands around the grave of Washington, and the majesti proportions of their national Coustl- j lotion Jdn9 hallow! tUokir'T!' frwv' to be, what patriotic foresight eagerly, con jectures, a parenaial source of peace, great ness and liberty to all. Put, sir, let me now advert to another fopic. I had hoped that the Convention would take position, plainly, and squarely, against what is commonly called Knoic-2othlngism. It is not so easy to define this thing, precisely, for it is a setret organization," bound by secret oblisiiions and oaths, and working in the dark; And this secresy itself is a fatal ob jection to any association for political purpo ses Such secrecy indicates a want of prin ciples, or very bad principles. Such secresy may have suited Pyzantine despotism, Vene tian Oligarchy, or the Jacobinism of the Reign of Terror. It is monstrous in our land of free speech, free presses, public meet ings, avowed principles, and universal suf frage Such secresy is the resort of knavish demagogues and defeated tricksters. It im plies a distrust of popular government. It degenerates our Democratic Institutions into the mere tools of cabal, elections into a cow ardly Guerrilla skirmish, and polities into conspiracy. It aspires to rule us by hidden powers; and they cf course will be irresponsi ble and therefore despotic. The Constitution of the Know-Nothing Order is, as far as is known, essentially oli garchic. Central Juntas, sitting with closed doors, and excluding the mass of their con federates, by secret signs and mysterious watch-words, concoct principles to be swal lowed, and set forth candidates to bo voted for, dupe the devoted with sonorous pronun ciamentos, and hector the rebellious with the terrors of excommuuication. This secrecy has amounted to deceit. - The faithful have heretofore been instructed to de ny the very existence of the Order, and in the guise of Whigs or Democrats, to sacrifice the parties with which they professed to act to the demands of their veiled mistress. Avow ing opposition to Jesuit j?m. they have orga nized icuter treacheries than were ever attri buted to the followers of Loyola. Tho Know-Nothing party let us know that thi y seek to alter the present Naturalization Laws. - They would either refuse Naturaliza tion entirely, or largely protract the period of probation for it. Kither proposal is most un wise. In no event will immigration cease. The currents of destiny, and the necessities of the raw, drive the old world myriads hither. No narrow or exclusive policy can stop the march cf historical events, or the multitudi nous tread of the human race. To refuse cit izenship to the strangers will not drive them back. It will simply create and increase, in our midst, a sullen, revolutionary, festering crowd of alien enemies. To adopt them as fellow-citizens, is obviously to attach them to us and our Institutions. For men will love aud defend what protects and exalts them. Nor is there any reason why naturalization should le long withheld. An accidentally born 44 Native" cannot vote till he is twenty cne years of age. During two-thirds of his minority he was a baby or a boy. To place an adult foreigner in the situation of a child, and give such talismanic virtue to arbitra ry number, is itself most childish. The Constitutution makes it a power of Congress to pass laws for naturalization ; that is, to settle a policy cf naturalization, and ob viously a policy of encouragemeut. Our fath ers, few in numbers, confined in territory, limited in resources, and justj entering upon the experiment of self-government, initiated a liberal and invijing policy towards immi grants. With that policy onr free institutions havo strengthened, expanded and improved ; the experiment is a realized fact ; and all his tory is outstripped by our progress, our pros perity,1 and our grandeur. Shall twenty mil lions of sturdy freemen now chafe or tremble at the poor pilgrims that seek homes with us ? The vast immigration may be attended, here or there, now and then, with turbulence, or pauperism, or crime; but in the main it is peaceful, industrious, honest and loyal. The stran grs are not royalists or oligarchs. They are not slaves or heathen?. They come, in deed, from the bogs and huts of Ireland the dark factories and mines of Pritain the crowded and smoky hamlets of Prussia or Pa varia; from the poverty, filth, injustice, op pression and despair of Europe ; but they are attracted hither by the light, the ideas, and the visions that pour from us to them ; they are lured over the waters by hopes of plenty, justice and freedom. Tbey are all worship ers of Washington ; they all teach his name to their children. They may be strange to our language, or our manners, or the detailed workings of our institutions ; but they are the devotees of liberty and cqualit3r. The poorest of them and the most ignorant arc possessed with that divine thought of Democ racy which once enshrined in the heart, 44 shines' to the perfect day." Why the Irish are generally semi-fanatical in their devotion to the American flag, and the Germans in their devotion to Democratic freedom. Let ragged Pat come, and ruby haired San dy, and square John Pull, and solid Hans, and tripping Monsieur. They will not crowd Of jostle us. There is room, and work, and plenty for all of them. There i3 a force jn our institutions, and our ideas, and our char acter, and our enlarged surroundings, that will illuminate their iguoran.ee, tone aud ex alt them to the level of our Democracy, sober and shape their dim and enthusiastic ideals into energetic, prudent and self-reliant Amer icanism. Our gigantic Union will fold them to her bosom, broad as tho Continent, feed them with the abundance of her forests, l.ouu tains, lakes, and plains, and share with them all her liberties and all her greatuess. A foreigner never can be President. In the active competition for place, but few of such, can ever resell the loftiest and most im portant offices. Therefore, to organize a great party for the purpose of keeping adopted citi zens out of all offices, even petty municipal ones, is tossing ocean into tempest to drown flies ; it is a giant giving gratuitous exhibitions of idrocj .- "-"' " - n . - - Put thcrcus another fatal objection to Know- rolhingism, andv that is, its. religious intoler ance. It would exclude from office every Ro man Catholic citizen . .This is grossly un constitutional. No law can be passed refu sing office to a citizen on account of his reli gion. And why? Pccause the mere estab lishment of the test is abhorrent to , enlighten ment and liberty. To render any- right or privilege dependent on religious opinion, is in itself an inequality, and a despotism. It is just as unconstitutional in spirit and effect, to set up such a test by inderection.-by parti zan organization and obligation If we can not proscribe by law,' can we proscribe with out law ? It is mournful that Americans should shut their eyes to the liberalism and historic science, and benign ideas of the nineteenth century. It is mouruful that they should gravely and eagerly revert to the fogy Toryism that oppo sed Catholic Emancipation in Great Pritain and Ireland, to the pitiful grannyism of the Titus Oates panic to the owlish bigotry of exploded ages. Suppose the lloman Catholic religion to I e ever so false let old Pius be the Scarlet Woman in proper person let Cath olics believe in his infallibility and his author ity ever so devoutly yet all this is no reason" or excuse for foul and paltry intolerance. Let Mrs. Partington insist that every 44 Pa pist" is an allegiant vassal of an Italian Bish op men cf sense know that Gaston, Taney, Meagher, Chandler and Carroll, are as good Republicans as ever tied a white cravat or sung a psalm. Irish ecclesiastics may have said and done a few absurd things so may over-zealous converts but should this fright en our big Nation from its propriety from its sense and justice ? We have not survived so many perils, and 44 grown so great" to be cap tured aud tied up by this terrible gentleman John Hughes. Put it i to be hoped that this insane fit of intolerance is rapidly subsiding into that broad aud liberal sense which is so 44 native" iu the American people. Meanwhile, it is the duty of all who comprehend our liberty and our Constitution, to bear explicit testimony against a rampant bigotry. For one, I cannot feel sat isfied to remain with any party that hesif-itos or fears to denounce it Py the blood of Montgomery, and the spotless heroism of La fayette, and the sacred memory of Carroll, I pretest against Kuow-Nothingism, or any al liance with it Repeating my assurances of regard I re main yours, respectfully, Geokge A. Coffey. A Sad Scene Motiiku and Child Frozen to Death A Bate Dying in its Dead Mo theu's Arms. We learn from John Brooks, Esq., a Deputy Sheriff of this county, living in the town of Broome, that on the Sth Jan uary, Mr. Joseph Thompson, of that town, having occasion to go to a mill about four miles distant from his house, leff home for that purpose. IIt3 wife informed him on lea ving that she was going to a quilting at a Mr. Reed's, about three quarters of a mile fioai their residence. Her husband told her to re main there until his return, and he would call for her. She went, taking with her three children one boy about seven years old, an infant about nine months eld and her sister's child, about twelve 3-ears old. About five o'clock, P. M., Reed came te his house intox icated, having a jug of liquor with him. He began to insult the women present, and laid bis hand on Mrs. Thompson, when she slap ped him In the face, at which he threw her on the fire. A son cf Reed, a young man, in terfered to protect the woman, when a scuffie ensued between them ia which the young man had his leg broken. Mrs. Thompson now left the house, it being about six o'clock, fear ing to remain longer, and directed her way cross iots for her home. The night was in tensely" cold, and when about half way from her house the little boy became so cold as to be unable to go farther, and lay down in the snow. The mother, with her babe, crouched down behind him, and told the little girl to lay down with her. The girl did so, and they all lay there till morning. Mr. Thomr son, on arriving home, took a lantern, and went in search of his wife and children. The girl, who survived, said she saw a light in tho night at some distance from them, but she dared not make a noise, for fc:ar Reed would come and kill them. At daylight this girl was still able to walk, and wandered off till she got within sight of Justus Ilagadom's house, when s!i3 was discovered, and was brought into the hou?.?. When able to sp?ak, she informed the family where and how .he had passed the night Mrs. Thompson and the little boy were fouud frozen to death The infant, when found, was not frozen, but dead. The little girl will survive, with the loss of two of her toes on each of her feet. Schoharie (A". 1'.) Patriot. JZT The tavern keepers of Amherst, Nova Scotia, having beeu refused, by the Court of Sessions, licenses to sell liquor, retaliated by refusing to 44 entertain" the Justices. Grand Jurors, and others whom business or pleasure, or ennui bad brougat about the Court of Ses sions. It is said that before the first day clo sed, there were a great many hungry, aud : some thirsty men in Amherst. Roger Sherman. One of the members of the American Con gress fur Connecticut, who sigued the Declar ation of Independence, bad originally been a shoemaker. When his livelihood ia Ibis hum ble occupation, he happened to have A lawsuit with one of bis neighbors; and on going to consult a lawyer cu the subject, he presented Lira with a written statement of tuo case, which he had drawn up himself. The lawyer was a tbrewd man, aud at once discovered, on reading ihe ttatt-mciit, tho shoemaker's fate which, he told him was not to make, shoes, but to deal with matters of law. - Mr. Sherman took the bint, and, having studied law, became in time not only one of the first lawyers, bat one of the niott eminent patriot -und statesmen of Lis country. During tho war of independence he happened to be the chairman of a committee of Congress, ap pointed to investigate certain charges of pec ulation in the commissariat department; and, in presenting the report of the committee, he stated that it would be observe, ia persuing, it, that lie had dwelt particularly ou the arti cle of shoes; the reason of this was Mm ply, that, having been bred .1 shoemaker himself, it was the subject" with which he might be supposed to be best acquainted. He had no idea of being ashamed of Hie gentle craft. A Remarkable Railroad Incident A correspondent of the Philadelphia led ger, under date of Hamburg, Perks co.. Pa., Nov. 20, gives an account of the death of Mr. Jeremiah Jacoby, who while walking upon the track of the Reading railroad, sud denly changed from track to avoid a train of cars, but was struck by the Philadelphia ex press train, upon the other, and instantly kil led.. A friend, named Philip D. Miller, helped to arrange the corpse and then pro ceeded to town, where he gave an account of the accident, charging the deceased with carelessness, and stating that no such accident could befal him as he exercised a proper pre caution. We give the remainder of the sto ry in the words of the correspondent : 44 Mr Miller having finished his business ia town, and proceeded homewards with his horse aud wagon, and w hen arriving at tho house of the unfortunate Jacoby, a number of individuals, (who were collected together on account of tho accident,) beckoned and hallowed to him not to cross the railroad track ; but he moved forward and gained thq other side, when his borse backed Lis wagon on the track, he was caught by the cow-catcher, and was so much mutilated that bo died shortly after." Casting ok iue House fo.ji tub Washing-, ton Monument. The Loadou Builder civea the following account of the casting of tho bronze horse at Munich, Pavaria, for tho Washington Monument : 44 Fifteen tons of bronze had to be kept in a state of fluidity. For several days and nights previously a large fire was "kept at these huge masses, which required to be stir red at times. When the bronze was liquified, au iutiniate assay was made in 'a suall trial cast, and to heighten the color some more cop per was added. Successively all the cham bers through which the metal had to flow in, the form were cleared of the coal with which they had been kept warm, and the master examined all the air spiracles and issues of .the metal; the props of the tubes were then placed, and every man bad his duty and place assigned to him. Finally, the master, av.iid the intense expectation of' the many art ama teurs present, pronounced the words, 44 In the name of God," and then three mighty strokes opened the fiery gulf, out of which the glowing metal flowed in a circuit to the large form. The sight was magnificent, and in tho littlo sea of fire stood themaster, and gave his con--mands about the successive cpeu:ng of tho pre ps. Hot vapor poured from the air spira cles ; in the canduits the metal boiled in waves ; still no decision yet, as tie influx of the bronze in the very veins of the figure could be but slow. At once flaming showers jumped out of the air conduits, and tho master proclaimed the cast to have succeeded. A loud cheer fol lowed, when tho master approached Mr. Craw ford, the artist of the Washington Monument, to congratulate him upon this success. Auolh cr cheer was given to M. de Miller, the chief of the Royal Foundry at Munich, who Lad personally conducted the work." Death for Cowardice. A subi rdinato Pritish officer was recently tried by a Court Martial, on a charge of cowardice, and sen tenced to death. The accusation arose out of circumstances at tLc reduction of Kinburn. Mr. Denuchy, the unfortunate man, was sick at the time, aud was not ou deck when Lis services were required In his defence, ho adduced numerous certificates of character, but he did not attempt to refute the allegation of absence at the ciitical moment. The Court, according to the rules, Lad no alternative, and a verdict of guilty was rendered. It is Loped, however, that the penalty, that of death, will not be enforced. A singular fact contained in tho abstract of births in Massachusetts in 1S54, is tho great increase cf children of foreign parents. Of the 32.00D torn, but JG.47U were of American pareuts, while 1-4,0110 were of pa rents, one o both foreigners and tho in crease from foreign parents was more than twice what it was from native parents. If this is a correct statement, the Know-Notb-ings of that Stato should take measures to remedy it at once ! Plectrotypinu. Tho National Intelligen cer states that some very important improve- mcnts and discoveries have recently been ma at the Coait Survey Office, in the art of cle do trotyping. The production or multiplication of charts, which was once the work of years, U now accomplished in a few days, while the impression upon paper i.s quite 33 good as by uie cm mciuou. Si ! in r 1