( A 'S4 . / 1 4 '' 1 - t• t o ) I ; 11 1/ s' j • , 'Y •,) ct, t • \s. (9 A u; , .• 'IIIIW WILLIAM BREWSTER,} EDITORS. SAM. G. WHITTAKER, MISCELLANEOUS ADVERTISEMENTS. UfiIIPCMV2IIIIf DIMCPTERW. CONSIT PTION And all Diseases of the Lungs and Throat, ARE POSITIVELY CURABLE BY INHALATION. Which conveys the remedies to the cavities in the lungs through the air passages, and canting in direct contact with the disease, neutralizes the tubercular matter, allays the cough, causes a free and easy expectoration, heals the lungs, purifies the blood, imparts renewed vitality to the nervous system, giving that tone and energy so indispensable tor the restoration of health. To be able to state confidently that Consumption is curable by inhalation. is to me a source of annl ]oted pleasure. It is as mach under the con teal of medical treatment an any other formid able disease ; ninety out of every hundred ca ses eats be cured in the first stages, and lilty per cent. in the second ; but in the third stage it is impossible to save more than five per cent.. lot the Longs are so cut up by the disease as to hid defiance to medical skill. Even, however, in the last stages, Inhalation affords extraordinary re lief to the suffering attending this fearful scourge which annually destroys ninety-five thousand persons in the United States alone ; and a cor rect calculation shows that of the present popu lation of the earth, eighty millions are destined to lilt the Consumptive's graves. Truly the quiver of death has no arrow so is tel as Consumption. In all ages it has been the groat enemy of life, for it spares neither age nor sex, but sweeps odalike the brave, the beauti ful, the graceful nod the gifted. By the help of that Supreme lining front whtm e meth every good and perfect gilt, I am enabled to offer to the afflicted a per annum and speedy care in Consumption. The first cause or tubercles is fnmi nnpure blood, and the immediate effect pro duced by their deposition in the lungs is to pre vent the free (Winks'oe of air into the air cells, which causes a weakened vitality through the entire system. Then surely it is more rational to expert greater good from medicines en wring the cavities of the lungs than those edminisit•red through the stonnielt ; the patient trill always B. the lungs free and the breathing easy, after labeling remedies. 'rhus, Inhalation is a local remedy, nevertheless it arts constitutionally end with more power and certainty than remedies administered by the stomach. To prove the pow eilui and direct influence of this mode oradmin istration, chloroform inhaled will entirely de stroy sensibility in a few minutes, pantlyr.ing the entire nervous system, so that a limb mots be amputated without the slightest pain; inhaling the ordinary burning gas will destroy life in a few hours. 'rite inhalation of ammonia will rouse the sys tem when tainting or eppartmlly death Thti der of many of the medicines is perceptible in the skin a teat minutes rater being 11111111011, and may be immediately detected iu the blood. A eunrincing proof or the voostitotioiod effects of inhalation, is the tact that sickness is !OWN, pro• muted by breathing timil air—is not this positive evidence that pioper remedies, carefully prepar ed and judiciously administered thro' the lungs should produce the happiest results'? During eighteen yeare practice, MOM thousands seller nnt fro th elsedses or the kings end mutat, nave been under my care, and 1 nave effected many remarkable mutes, even alter the mtherers had been pronounced in the last stages, which bully satisfies ma that consumption is nu longer a fa tal disease. Sly treatment or consumption is original, and founded on long methyle and a thorough investigation. My.perrect itetputintnnee with the nature of tubercles. Or., enables me to distinguish, readily, the various limns of disease that simulate consumption, and app4 the proper remedies, rarely being mistaken oven in a single case. This familiarity, in connection with cer tain pathological and microscopic discoveries en ables me to relieve the lungs fna the ettects . of euntrected chests, to enlarge the chest, purify the blued, impart to it renewed vitality, giving energy and tone to the entire system. MetlicineS with lull directions tunny pail of the United SULU, anti Canad a . by Wients communicating their st inptoms Inv y letter. But the cure would he more certain if tile Patient should pay me a visit, which would give Ole en opportunity to examine the lungs and enable me to pleserthe with intich greater certainty, and then the cure could be effected without toy see ing the (r ni rtt' . A u AM, M. D., Orates, 1131 Faun:nit Svutastr, (Ohl 1 , 10. 109,) Below Twelfth, PHILADELPHIA, PA. August 5, 'B:t7.-Iy. Of all diFenso ; the grad, first cause Springs from neglect or Nature's laws. SUFFER 1 O'l' When a cure is guaranteed in all stages of SECRET DISEASES. Self-Abuse, Nervous Strictures. (Beets, Gravel, Diabetes, Diseases of the Kidney and Bladder, Mercurial Rheumatism, Scrofula, Pains in the Bones and Ankles, Disease , or the Lungs,Throat, Nose and Eyes, Ulcers upon the ody or lambs, Cancers ' Dropsy, Epilep tic Fits, Vita's Dance, and all diseases ari sing from a derangement of the Sexual Organs. Such as Nervous Trembling, Loss of Memo ry, Loss of Power, General Weakness, Dimness of Vision, with peculiar spots appearing before the eyes, Loss of Sight, Wakefulness, Dyspen sin, Liver Disease, Eruptions upon the Face, Pain in the back and heed, Female irregulari ties, and all improper dischargesfrom both sexes. It matters not loom what cotton tho disease urigi- Esti a, however long standing or obstinate the e,, e, recoreu is certain, and in a shorter time then a permanent cure can be effected by any other treatment, even after the disease has bel lied tho skill of eminent physicians and resisted all their Walls of cur. The medicines are pleasant without odor, causing no sickness and free from mercury or balsam. During twenty years of practice, I have rescued from the jaws of Death many thousands, who, in the last sta ges of the above mentioted diseases had been given up by their physicians to die, which war rants me in promising to the afflicted, who may place themselves 'under my care, n perfect and most speedy cure. Secret creases are the greatest enemies to health, as they tire the fir.t cam'. of Consumption, Scrofula and many oth er diseases, and should boa terror to the lin man family. Asa immanent cure is scarcely over effected, a majority of the rates falling in to the hands of incompetent persons, who not only tail to cure the diseases but ruin the con stitution, ti 11.% the system with mercury, which with the disease, hastens the sufferer into a ra pid Consumption. But should the disease and the treatment not cause death speedily and the victim marries, the disease is entailed upon the children, who are born with feeble constitutions, and the current of lite corrupted by a virus which betrays itself in Scrofula, 'fetter, Ulcers, Eruptions. mid oth er affections of the skin. Eyes. Throat and Lungs, entailing upon them a brier existence of suffering and consigning them to an early grave. Selimbuse is another formidable enemy to health, tar nothing else in the dread catalogue of human diseases causes so destructive a ilnim upon the system, drawing its thousands of vie tuna through a few years of suffering down to au untimely grave. it destroys the Nervous sys tem, rapidly wastes away the energies otHite, eausee mental derangement, Rrevence the proper development of the system, &qualifies fbr mad - rims°, society, business, and all earthly happi ness, and leaves the sufferer wrecked in body and mind, predisposed to ronsumption and a train of evils more to he dreaded than death it self. With the fullest confidence I assure the unfortunate victims of Self-Abuse that a speedy and permanent cure can he effected, and with the abandonment of ruinous practices my pa tiemp can ho restored to robust. vionrons health. The afflicted are cautioned against the use of Potent Medicines, for there ore so many ingeoi. ass snares in the colonies of the public prints to catch and rob the unwary sufferers that mil lions have their constitutions ruined by the vile compounds of quack doctors. or the equally poi sonous ncstrunis vended as "Potent Medicines." I have carefully analyzed many of the so-called Patent Medicines and rind that nearly all of them contain Corrosive Sublimate. which is one of the itrongest preparations of mercury and a deadly poison, which instead of curing the dis ease disables the systen for Three-thumbs of the ladont medicines now in use are put up by unprincipled and ignorant per• sons, who do no t understand even the alphahet of mnteria medico, and are equally as destitute of any knowledge of the human system. having only one object in view, and that to make mon ey regardless of consequences. Irregularities nod all diseases of males and females towed on principles established by twenty years of practice, and sanctioned by thousands of the most remarkable cures. Medi cines with full directions sent to any part Uf.the United States and Colludes, by patients commu nicating their symptoms by letter. Business correspondence strictly confidential. Address J. SUMMER VILLE, M. D., OFFICE, No. 1131 FILBERT Sr., (Old No.I 09.) Below Twelfth, PHILADELPHIA. A itg.5,'57.- 1 y. :;. t 5 WITNESSES; 5 Ott THE feo1,1:11.0rn C ' ONV r Traa John S. Dye, Author, 0 Who has had 10 years experience es a Bank -011 ,er and Publisher, and author of "A series of .0 Lectures at the Brnatalway Tabernacle," when Altar la successive nights, over 50,000 People 0 greeted the with rounds of applause, while Qhe exhibited the manner in which Counter " Niters execute their fronds, and the surest and shortest means of detecting them ! • The !lank Note Engravers all say that to Ois the gie.de-t Judge of Paper Money living. (0 Greatest discovery of the present century tom' fur detecting Counterfeit B-mk Notes. De mi scribing every genuine hill in existence, and Nexhibiting at it glance every counterteit in circulation !! Arranged sosalmirubly, that relereoce is easy nod deteetion instantaneous. ' CilrNat index to examine ! No pages to hunt up ! Bait so simplified and awninged Mat the 111erchant, Banker tool Business than ..cau see all at a glance. English, Frcuela and • ▪ German. Thus cacti may read the stun iu :his own native tongue. Must perfect Bank ? Note List published. Also a list of all the L.: Private Bookers in America. A complete c.),iiiiiinitry of the Finance of Europe and A ineries will ho published in each edition, to ound in the East, it tarnishes tlie most cam 'p History of 'Oriental Lite." Itescrib ~iut; the ino4l perplexing positions in NV sit. eg the ladies anal gentlemen of that Country ,have been so often toned. These stories will ;: continue througlatint the whole your, anal will ▪ orove the must entertaining ever offered to .3 the public. Furnished Weekly to subscribers only at $1 a velar. All letters must be addressed to • JOIIN S. DY F., Publisher & 0 Proprietor, 70 Wall Street, New York. 01 April 22, 1857.—1 y. Cheapest “Job Printing" Office 11 Tux CiQUIVP.Y. Ire bare now made such row ugements in mu• Jab ojil, a., will enable an Co do all Owls of Job Printing at 20 per cent. cheaper rates Than at* Wince in the County. Give us ti .11. 11 a•c don't give entire satistAe. tion, no charge at all will be made. LA N 1 ..,., .. ~.. . ._. ........ ~ BLANKS 1 BLANKS 1' . ..I general assort will qf illankm of all ,le. eeriptions ft.! printed and fior tude at the "Journal (Vice." Appuintin't of Referees, Common Bond. Notice to Referees, Judgment. Notes Summons, Venable Notes Executions, Constabls's St:les, Seise Facias, Sublannas, Complaints, l)eedn, Warrants, Mortgages, Commitments, Bond to idemuily Constable, &e. . ....,—.... Death Bed Experiences. I have subdued the nations of the earth; is thero no other world for me to conquer ? —Alexander the Great. _ . I have fought a good fight, I have finish• ed my course, 1 have kept the faith; hence forth there is laid up for me a crown of righteousness.—St. Paul. yy Ise is in t h e sere and yellow lean Trio fruits and flowers of love are gone; The worm, the canker, and the goof, Are tninelalone, The fire that in my bosom burns Is lone as some volcanic isle, No torch is lighted at its blaze-- A funeral pile. —[Lord Byron, Although the fig tree AA not blossom, neither shall fruit be in the vine, the labor of the olive shall fail, and the fields shall yield no meat, and the flock shall be cut oil from the fold, and there shall be no herd in the stalls; yet will I rejoice in the Lord I will joy in the God of my salvation.— Ilttbalt uk. an, taking a leap into the dark -.Hobbs. Though I walk through the valley and shadow of death, I will fear no evil.—Da vid. 0 I God—if there be a God—hrtv met• cy on me.—Tom Paine, For I know that my Redeemer liveth, and that he shall stand at the latter day upon the earth, and though, after iny skin, worms destroy this body, yet in my flesh shall I see God.—Job. Mr Vice is a monster of such fright ful mein, that to be hated needs but to be " LIDIRTY A: HUNTINGDON, ed two hundred acres. The Board of, We have now °windings lege- Trustees took possession of the whole, cy of hve thousand dollars by Elli and have appropriated of it, to the apple ottCresenn, E q . rhe Stnte has given us 25,000 $25,000 and peach orchards, 211 acres: to smaller If any individuals or societies fruits, 51 Fierce; to garden and nursery, w i i c „ nin „,, t , t hi s 5 „,,, 1 - acres; and to the catmints 121 acres. It will entitle us to receive A system of record of all the doings o n from the State, the sum of the form has been arranged, from which , . we extract the following memorandum of what has already been done. In making this statement of the situ it irin of the Farmers' High School of Pennsyl. OF IMPEOVI:ENT M ! S ON THE FAR. i verde, it is the object of the Board of Trus - SO acres have M been grubbed and sprout.. tees to enlist the judgment, and feelings, ed ; 340 rods of fence rows cleared, erule end sympathies of the friends of A gricul bed, picked and burn: ; 67 noses of W twat tare throughout the Sutte ; and to call on sown September Isso, now goal, put thorn for their aid in raising this sum of do en in clover; 75 acres of corn planted twenty five thousand dollars, without it spring of 1857 ; 547 rods of hedge planted , 456 ; 360 rods of hedge in 1857; 325 nwe cannot complete our buildings, and cat, in 1 ot, therefore, go into operation. The rods of rail fence; 43,0011 nursery pants ' consideration that every dollar contributed set out, comprising a full assortment of by individuals or societies pays two to our the most desirable nursery stock; 250 Farm School, should enable us to raise the red s of seed beds of fruits, hedge plants, •&c ; 10,000 plants of over lOU different amount without delay. The Board of , rustees hove not yet sorts, received as,contributions. many of adept', d any system of reaching or s-cis them intended for the arboretum. and now to be taught, but that our friends may be set in reserve beds, until the ground can able to form some iden of our plan, it is be prepared ; GOO apple. trees set out in or sumsgested that the follm.wing will be s ib chard rows ; 400 peach do; 200 plums, milted ns the basis of their action. apricot and nectarines do ; 250 pear. stnn• , dard and dwarf do ; 200 cherry ; 1000 TILE SUOJECTS TO at: TAUGHT, Ann : vines in vineyard; 4lalheinwies—lncluding practical sur vives of nuts, berries, &c.; 15000 grape- , „ jog, loyeag , and the care end use of ii Cl)6° avenue maples; i instruments.4oo chestnut, larch, oak, pine and other Natural Philos,phy—The principles of seedling timber trees, collected and to be , all mechanism t the laws of motion and planted in lines, so ns to give at sight rho , force; steam ; electricity; magnetism, &c , measure and location of every part of the , illustrated by apparatus. farm ; 500 pine, spruce, fir, &c., to be ! ~ 7grilibural Engineering 4. Meehan plano.d for sheltering, hedge. Of these all ir,—The methods and materials used in are doing well beyond expectation, under construction; what is good material end the favoring influences of a good season, ' what is good workmanship. to] plants, which were injured by d e l e y excepting only a smell portion of cootribu.l Implonents and Alitehinery—The prin. tildes involved ; parts liable to wear or and exposure.i OF BUILDI*O9. , break ; adjustment; care; repair; spot ! One double-storied barn is finished and j tacos in the mascara; mills. I Thad Illithing—Nioterials ; methods; fitted up, and has been in use parts of two ie....1 ri.cnilitiiiiiii, . ; britiono ,. seasons; it is very capacious and much' ers' house is also finished and part of the ' Prices; architecturalinmate admired for im ottuvenience. The fermi,' Thrilding- - Specilicattons ; contracts ; and detail ; fl out-buildings. Fur the codex)) building. j nisi' . -- -- • , perch of superior stone are qirrrimel and I am, eytheing--Forins; titles ; peace. on the grounds; three gungs.ot brickma• din,,,. &e. ••• kers have Bern it work for some time, and l , ,,,,guage and Literature—Compri -1 the unisons are about to eummence the sons of styles of expression ; speaking to wade. The delay occasioned by antes-' en audience; writing fur the press; criti minty, up to the 20th of Slay, as to the cisins. ; amount of funds winch would be at the Principles of Gorirament —American . dispose' of the Trustees, affected all work , institutions; comparison with others ; au on the farm and nurseries ins well as the ties of towuship and county officers ; laws buildings, though to less extent. IVork of vicinage, 5 ,, 0. was done with hired tones and tools , ' . ,derOtlllik generally., and farm accounts THE FARMERS HIGH SCHOOL ' and temporary hands, and therefore, tin- specially ; formation of methodical habits OF der much disadvantage ; most of the ground by daily practice at the institution. PENNSYLVANIA. I bein g new and but i m p er f e ctly cleared, Penn Economy—Expeodithres; deter yet manywith . stumps " roots. \ minatien of the most economical mode This Institution, at this moment, claims a nd the special attention of its friends. s fr . , All this work has been done under the ' of nceiminplishing given jumbo of webs direction and manngentent of Wm. 0. Wam if ~,.a „ ,, , ,5 _ „m et h o d s ~f' so pplyin ! „! ejectors design that it shall be a school tic• I horticulturist and 'i ' , wanted , and of pr.- yen waier w h ere . P tyh j ere Agricultural knowledge and set - 1 " a ' 4 ' C A'. n P"` !" i n whose skill and science th e ibig once may be obtained at an expense so fernier ; Board of Trustees have the most entire iiii„ moderate as to be within the means of . injury by excess; machines ; ' confidence., I Droirmge—lts edicts on sods; methods those whose occu. moon is that of a farmerA con ra : , tct has been entered into, for t he i f ..tfrarig d it. —that whilst youths are being taught • erection of an edifice, caleulated for the re. . the business which is to be the occupy 'sciences of .I.lgKettitarat Chelnisrey—Proci ical an sidences uf Professors, lecture s, and iiit , , of ill „,„„ re „, soils, plums, &c.. lion of their after Ince, they will be con- ml ariniwries for students , to be built of • ail:tit l ing to their own education, by the deir elements; chemical agents and ap• stone, five stories high, 2:33 feet in front, . tr,itas. labor of their own bends. Under the j with wire's, and to cost fifty five thousand j P direction of Professors who will be skill- i 0. Arty—The crust of the earth ; soils demOres. 'rhis building is already in prig , ed in the art of farming, and in all those , . , of 111 binds; how funned; specimens in end it is hoped a part of it may be , the 'muse. natural sciences which pertnin to it, 411" it e :t s under root and so far completed this G. on•raphy—Features of the earth's the management, business and work of ! .. iil . , us to enable the Board to make I I la the farm, will be performed the pupils : urface;, position of places, maps, pro ! rangements, and receive a few students in whilst their minds are brio by g imbued with s ductions and peculiarities of different re ' the spring of 1858. the prinotples and sc i en c e o f pgrimillure. 1 The Legislature of Pennsylvania, at its gions. their daily occupation will be practically , last session, has fuly recognized the pub- 3atronomy—Motions and influences of testing the truth of what they learn. lie appreciatioe of this effort to produce a the heavenly bodies, revolutions, seasons, It is the desire of the Board of Trus- class of educated fanners whose practoce 1 J climates. 31eleorology—Atmo,phefc influences, tees to put the pub'ic in possession l and example may extend into every county electric and magoetic agencies ; bent I of all information res p e cting t h e design. of the State It has appropriated fifty j !cold • mo i s ture ; draught; winds ; storms; present con , ilium and future prospect: , of j thousand dollars to enable the Beard of i :. . shelter; counteraction, instruments, obser. the Farmer's High School. and to ask 1 Trustees to carry out their plan ; twenty vations ; deductions. of them to take such interest in the testi- ' five thousand of which is payable upon Mineralogy—ldentineahon of rare or tution, as its objects and merits demand. condition that a like sum shall be raised valuable minerals ; gypsum, lime, ph°, The Board of Trustees in 1855, after from seine other source. There is no other i I A bate of Hine, magnesia; coals; &c , spo of ek t reful and personal examination 'wide of raising this sum than by private l imens .0 t4inniseum. of several points, i n enr i oes .equarters of contribution or that of County Agricultural c _.,. a i ny t Arrangement of plants in fanl ike State, fixed the location in Uentre Societies throughout the State. This sum ..0 / . .i s .: names of individual species and County, on the Southern slope of Penn contributed, will place the Institution in a i .Ills of plants; plants of other countries and Nittuny Valleys, within, perhaps five prosperous condition, and encourage th e I miles of the Geographical Centre of the Board of Trustees to prosecute the wor k Ito museum. Vegemble Physiology— The structure of State, where the land is limestone fertile to speedy and active operation. 1 d the vegetable body, functions of roots, and beautiful. As a place fur practical Na such school, as is here contemillqte is 1 agriculture, nothing more favorable could has ever yet existed amongst us ; . and it ' leaves, stein, bark; sap, Sic ; growth of be desired : and it is sufficiently removed confidently anticipated, thin whilst we areP lents, diseases: animal Physiology—The structure of ' intrusionsd annoyances of a getting up a farm which tvill be a model from those and 1 body • town or public place, so prejudicial to the for fanners — whilst we will be testing and the anima y , composition, form. and alembic: seeds and functions of its parts ; nourishment; pursuit of study, or the security of a well disseminating the utmost v managed farm garden.. plants throughout the whole length and growth. ;nws of health exposure to Two hundred acres of this land was breadth of the Stifle, having the guarantee Health _..sl, generously donated to the Institution by of such an Institution for their character which farmers ore lialAe ; prevention of Gen. James Irvin, with the privilege of and quality ;we will be imparting to youth disease. Vebrincley Practice—Diseases of ani purchasing•one hundred acres upon each those principles of natural science, which, mall ; injuries. sixtyof it, at any time within five years, at when intermingled with the practical op sixty dollars tin acre ; and in the mean eratious of the farm, will give character to Entonole gy—[!obits of insects useful time, to have possession of the whale, of theat, and dignity to thew calling. There and, injurtoes, especially those injurious the farm, upon the payment of the inter- is no other such field for the spirit ofphi.-' •to vegetation; specimens in the muse wrest upon the value of the last mention- lanthropy. um. *elect Voctrii. "IF YOU'RE CORING, IVRY DON'T YOU COME A 1.01:114.” 'Twos inn li•-I , I—by ott old (HI i7ebool, Where the boys were romping wild, I noted one with a shining face, And be was but n child ; And as he romped upon the green, With mind and muscle strong, Anon he'd cry to the lagging boys— " Why don'tiyou come along?" • So said the boy, but when he spoke, The man was in that boy ; And now his voice round Christendom, Rings like s. bell of joy; For the world has taken up his cry, And joined him in a song, Now sung by nations in their march, "Why don't you come along ?" Come on 1 pause not 'tis death to stop, The tide is at its flood ; For men and things are on their march— Halt never, if you would. That cry is in the hearts of men, Their watch word right or wrong And nations cry in every tongue— " Why don't you come along ?" The engine and the telegraph Proclaimed a to the man— The man takes up the cheering cry, Which with the hay beg.. O'er wood and plain—o'er sea and earth, It rings :n startling song ; 'Tis written on the firmament, "Why don't you come along ?" But yesterday, it took six men To make a pin ; but now That little boy will do the work ; When done he'll scarce know how. Thought follows action—then we pause To think ; go longer strong ; But still keep up the schoolboy's cry— " Why don't you come along ?” But yesterday the reaper's hook Moved slowly through the erain ; M'Cortniek now with a storm of hooks Tht, harvest sweeps amain ; And us he cuts, and cleans, and bags, Ile joins the world wide song ; Old fogy reapers ! tarry not "Why don't you canto along ?" To the regiment of tnan, Say allot you have to say at onco— Ce do it if you out— Birds sing it—the engines shriek it ; It's sung the stars among-- All nature breathes the world's great cry ; Why don't you come along lgricultund. .ND UNION, NOW AND FOREVER, ONE AND INSEPARABLE. " PA., WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 26, 1857. Brreds of Sock Poultry, 4.c.—Their' was sl,ooo of the latter $750. When peculiarities ; points, &c., specimens. the claims were first presented, the Audi- Fmling—Amount, quality, and prepar- 1 tor-General—Jacob Fry—declined paying ation of food ; experiments. so ling. i l them, upon the ground that no appropria 2"raiiiiiv of anintals—Of horses, ox- I tint had been made for that purpose, and en, &c. i I that payment of them would be , a viol,- 25j300 25,001) Culture of the 8o;/—Varieties of soils Lion of 109 duty. He maintained this po and con'ii•i nt ; instrom-nts and process sition for some days. Subsequently ho opplical I. to various soils, crops, and sea-' was induced to abandon it, and allow the sons. claim. The State Treasurer, Henry S. 100(;( Jia,,ures—Preparntion and use of all Alaglaw, promptly paid it, on the 25th of !tome manures ; experiments with foreign July. The counsel referred to were not and artificial manures, employed by the Commonwealth at all.— Produce—Preservation and marketing, 'l'm! suits in question were not author of grain, meat, fruits, roots, &c. is 1 to ho brought by the Commonwealth. dgricultural Hisiory—Condition in Timy were the individual acts of the ,ter different nations, and at different periods, .nits eimaged in them, and the Common. causes of improvement. wealth was in no sense responsib:o for the Ifortieutture—The garden; the orchard money claimed. In addition, the act pass the nursery ; the yard ; pruning, training ed by the last Legislature relative to the grafting, Soc., best shrubs, trees, flowers, office of Attorney General, which became vegetables ; peculiarities ot varieties as to a law before these legal proceedings habits and culture; decoration and love were instituted, makes that officer the sole of home. legal officer of the State, and expressly Exper:ments—With =nuns. process, prohibits the retaining of other counsel seeds, &c., systematic trial ; record ; pub- I where the State is a party. Of course no lieut.) of results. I other authority than the Legislature hits :I/o/prec , lce—What to avoid doing ; power to nullify this provision tad entail exposure of proved errors; trial of sup. expenses upon the State, without the con posed errors. sent of the representatives of the poodle. Very Respectfully, I Ibis law referred to was enacted to abolish FIIED'K. WATTS. the system of pet counsel and immense Pres't. of Board of Trustees of Farmers fees, and was supported by honest men High School. belonging to both parties. We regret to CARLISLE, July 15, 1551. • see the Canal Board, the Auditor-General, and the state Treasurer not only mtempt ing, but actually setting at naught this valuable enactment. jii.ccilan. Laniel Morgan the Rifleman. I WHY/ The following appears in n letter of al Why should a single American oppose Virginia correspondent of the Now York David ? Can any substantial yea. Journal of Commerce. ! son b given ? We have in vain looked 'The name of Daniel Morgan, the col- for one in print—it vain have we sought ebrated commander of the Virginia Rifle-1 for one to be given verbally. In fact no men, is a household word in Virginia.--, good reason ran be given, for none exists. His remains repose at Winchester. Jer- Who can, what intelligent, honest nun seyinan by birth, hr early emigrated to , will, find fault with us for saying that those the Virginia wilds, and was a wagoner 1 who insist on it• that they will van. rn, 14. ' w•Alir,F,--tara,l-7,, R.h4Ltu ~,,,nig anu s weakness, which is a disgrace to any Am hair breadth escapes. He had been gross-, erican man. Mr. Wilmot was nominand ly insulted by one British officer, and se- I by true Americans, corning from every verely F un ished by another in the Caine , part of the State. of ling George. He vowed vengeance ; 1 Mr Wilmot was endorsed by the Altoo• and kept his voiv. . I on Convention, which represented 'lntense 'At the opening of the Revolution he, Americanism.' raise l a battalion of Riclemen and drilled 1 Mr. Wilmot, as a statesman, advocates them to perfec.ion. They spurned the bay- I piiblicly all that Mr. Ilazlehurst does or (met, and relied on the deadly aim of the can. and much more. , rifle. He used to say the business of Isis I Mr. liazlehurst s claims Wore ignored men was to he killed. At the battle of by the Altoona Convention. Saratoga., seeing .he du) , was going ag,ainst I Mr. Buzlehurs.t was put in the field by the Americans by reasons of the extra 'r• a few designing men, much against his dinary skill and energy of Gen. Frazer, i consent, to subserve their own selfish in• with his Scotch division, he . resolved to , terests, and now be stays in it because his resort to the only measure conceivable to 1 vanity has been fluttered. arrest the tide of b.ittle that threatened to I He does not nppeur to know that he is overwhelm twat Summoning, o his Fes- , calling down on his bead the maledictions voce the best mall:men in his command 1 of all the sincere foes of the Catholic Irish whose .aim was never known to fail, said 1 to loin, qlorphy, do you see that officer on the iron grey Horse I' •Ves sir,' was the reply of die uld soldier. Morgan re ' joined in un almost faltering voice. ,Then do your duty' Murphy ascended a tree, cut away the interlaced branches with his hatchet, (this was a part of their armor,) rested his rifle in a short place, ,atched his op. immunity. and as soon as Gen. Frazer had in his animated movement, come within a practical range. Murphy fired, and the gallant Frazer fell mortally wounded, be ing shot in the centre of the body, - That fall decided the day. The enemy soon gave way and Saratoga became immortal. But Morgan the rough soldier, was a man of tender feelings, and he almost wept at the deed, and always said it troubled hint because it looked so much like a 'kind of assassinaCon of a brace and noble offi cer; though gallant as that officer was, he had placed himself there to be shot at, and was engaged in shooting others. It wee in a shinier way that Nelson fell on Oa dick of the Victory.' The State Pays the Piper. The public remember the late famous "injunction" brought by Henry S. Mott, to prevent the sale of the .Main Line of the public works. One of the bills presented to the Court was from Mr. Mott us n stock holder in the Pennsylvania Railroad Com pany. Another was from him as a bond holder of the commonwealth. A third was from him and others as Commission ors. The attorneys in these oases were Wm. M. Meredith, Charles R. Bucknlew, Wm. L. Hirst and James H. Walton We learn, through the Philadelphia Morning Times, that within three weeks claims have been presente s d to the State Trensu ry from two on the counsel—Meredith and' Buckalew for services rendered in the suits referred to. The bill of the former VOL. XXII. NO. 34. pariy He 111 go to his own place. We have tried to save him, bat let him go—lot him go.—Phila The Race for the Goodwood Cup. HALIFAX, Aug, 12. The lines have been partially repaired, and we now transmit the concluding por tion of the pubic despatch, which hai been delayed by the heavy storm, and conse quent derangement of the wires. The following meagre particulars of the great race for the Goodwood Cup, we ga ther from the Liverpool papers. None of the accounts at hand give the time of any of the horses : The French horse Montague won the race. The English horse Rideber is lila. ced second, and Fisherman third Gun• boat slipped and fell, and Kestrel Genuna. di also fell heavily. Monarque won by a head, and Eiseber beat Fisherman by a bout three lengths. Anton was placed fourth, and three lengths behind Fisher man. The American hordes Pryor and Pryoress were placed fifth and sixth, and the English horse Melissa seventh. All others pulled up The finish is said to hare been tho most exciting ever witness ed. The English papers remark, but without assigning any reason. that the AinericAn horses would have figured snore prominently had they been ridden by English jockeys. A VERY CURIOUS WAY TO SEND A LET TER.-1t is related by a celebrated histori an 1-lerodotus. that llistaus, the Milesian, being detained a prisoner by Darius, and all correspondence interdicted, he shaved a man's head, wrote a despatch upon it, and kept the man out of sight till his hair was grown. ' The living letter was then sent, and the person to whom it was ad dressed, upon shaving the messenger's head, found the news there inscribes'.