Ii E ii HLLSBORO' ADVERTISER. PEREIttIiRE. -2 luirsdfty, : 5, )55.1. _ - '4'l'. ------"- 4y. The New Postage La*. ~ gr - lis . the time to Subscribe for the ".Ad. 1. 4 ; .. ; rixt .. • . _ - eertiser." . - - KS 1 • - ,v..:f. new . Postage Law will go into operation on t - -rst day-of July next, after which date the / '''' A • - • 1 I t - • ..r . :tp i Trutt wit wet ae in togs county FREE e t- . -1?4 , psTAGE. This will reduce the :price - of tftfc - ,: - Ilvertiscr , ---which is new the cheapest .paPer 4.44‘ :ti in the county—to Mail frabscriliZrs fifty ;'-.i-,e,,,; I, im k nts per year. - The inP„Ss of the . people will #EVatce no excuse for longer remaining ignorant f..'A things trsnspiring - weekly in their own . - f : , ' i litorhoed. As this law does big take effect' die Ist of July, we will give new stabscribefs :.:,-.5 .imedtatt• benefit of it—we will de - duct from k.f.,f : : :thseriptioit price (payable 'in adranee) file .', I. .4--;.wiit. of 'postage chargeable omit, from the time' ilt)scribingoill the-new law takes effect: So , 1 - 1- - i in -your . subscriptions at once, and get the. va: - ',- , lt.. os OT PREF: POSTAGE the BEST FAMILY,' #4-iSPARER In - the co un ty . Eadi of our Pre ':-4iFilbseribers-nifglit 'easily-procure Ws an addl. i 4 4 y l one, by talking the -matter up with their '-- a -4 . ;hors, and-thus double our subscription list., .e i liCr the Ist of July,-as an indUcement ilw our ,t i 's to interest 'themselves in the matter, we i,, iVend fi re copies of the Adreiliser, to one ad i-14, for - .Six DOLLARS, and- ten • copies . for, -Tax t •- 4..:i.ati,:provided that the money accompany the i AR this reform in the law has been brought ,i . .-4 1 ; mainly by . the determined e ff orts of' the fe.-$7 press, it is no more than fair that subseri :,-,Aliould use some slight efforts to, increase the I:Ation of the papers which have effected this -Ail!, the benefits of which is reaped almost en it , >'--iltby them, - , Pl . cc„ ;,. Tirana CENT PIECTS have made their ap- ONce in our town. • `p E 4 . f - -- 11k• asON's MsosziNE.—The June number of t4ega ntAn . ,}° dollar periodical is highly inte -1,10. l! Ghost Storiea" is a capital engraving, 6.7Aic original contributions reflect great credit V alle publisher, C. J. Peterson, Philadelphia. Ot•rtre Srutip.--A tremendous meeting of the Ol i 0t;, of the Third Congressional District, Phila, ,V,ti . ~ tii;lia county, was held on Friday evening a! t. , ',Al Gov. Johnston was present and addressed 1 i ngth. He was received with thunders of i Oise from the- people, and retired amidst the 4:liikt cheering. The Locos don't like this move 1 I t ir l Nd Bill," but if wo are, not mistaken, they i ',have to swallow many a pill of a bitter , Ntetcr from, him before the campaign closes: 1 as SPECIAL rd..acvloN,--.Our readers are 4 1 ? that twelve Loco members of the New lis • - • Senate resigned to prevent the passage of the a*lErE 1 l--,—n.argement bill . speci.. election •-•''Pield in those districts en Tuesday a wed., - `4l4lve learn that as far as heard from at Wifour or five of the recusant Senators, (who a re-election,) were defeated.' Mann, the Ateader in, the Oneida district, is beaten by ';ngdon, Whig, by about 2000. Halstead, W., .I . li Snyder in Columbia, &c. Hatch, Carial beats Stebbins in Madison, &c., besides t !Ili are probably several other csanges. ~: I;iGot.nr.s PAPER.—F. Gleason, of Boston, (in P;!ion to his " Drawing Room Companion," a ?..ii t ify paper, which we have heretofOrc noticed as ,- -i-ildel of typography, and rich repository ofhand , p .1p t il l engravings,) has issued a sheet entitled the t44ny Lind," printed with gold bronze, contain -1.54 portrait-Of the celebrated songstress, a sketch this history, some incidents of her tour in thi z: - ti...ry, and some of her favorite songs. Among . s;; - .D 1 embellishments, it has also a portrait of Bar dlthe enterprising showman who induced Jenny ii to visit this country. _...... . ._, :..11.011.E NEW Goons iv Trove —R. H. Marriott, vylogn, has received a large, beautiful, and cheap . ! Al of Summer Goods, Groceries, Ready-Made t - 'sing, &e., and it. is said that a very exten. h, - ) 4 ousiness is now doing at his establishment. s kY ,1 result does not astonish us when the fact is iii be . f .. .. t ,m thatis a regular advertiser in the " The L t'4'TiTsboro.ugh Advertiser," as in Tioga, and I ',4erhorit the surrounding. country, our paper i 4 . z it sus , ...al,. J171:711: 2rl. .scii.. 4. ~...cirrnitly-rnm;- ; ;3, and spares no pains to satisfy all-who . may li l ;- 1 .:i to purchase goods. Give his establishment a tIA See advertisement in another column. if P:! . _ _ if Mar AT HocosFx.--Some eight or ten thousand vans residing in New- York, went over to Ho. =, l fat on Monday of last week, to enjoy a May .11 l A . - Wl:ie. They consisted - of men, women, and chil l! 'AI, In .the afternoon, they were attacked by a i 1:,11 1 of rowdies from New York, assisted by Irish t f'-',. 17 era of Hoboken, and a dreadful riot ensued, i tilyled with low. of life. The accounts in the I l t VI York papers are so contradictory that we can f4lta nothing satisfactory as to the origin of the 1-. iPi!or who was most- to blame. The Sheriff or. r - .::, 1 ,11 out the military, and thus finally restored ' ‘if fit but the entire affair was most disgraceful.. tr.:, g4,Ber g en jail was crowded with prisoners, and - '.lf•i' . 41 i ' f .. j , of the wives and children of the Germans 4'2. , li r i t corapassidnately received into privatehouses. I, '„ • UTICA!. FALSI3IOOO CONTRADICTED.- Some . 'lf,partizan sheets have recently charged Gor. -`•!: ,! ton with having pardoned Gco. W. Homer, ~ - r' -;,. had been convicted of screial burglaries in it, ware' county, (mid sentenced in May lag, to 3:11. .n years in the Eastern Penitentiary. We in the Harrisburg American a full and em. . N 1 c contradiction of this, as fidlows : " This .11 1 i meat is entirely false. No such person as feit W. , Hoiner has been pardoned by Gor. John. 11,71„ nor do we know of any pardoned convict Merhom the above paragraph might possibly be ,l7,#-:lerled. It is merely a contemptible falsehood, 3 %.4cateti by an unscrupulous partizan sheet." ; MODEL Tows.—iVellsberough. has not at the 1 1 ?;ent . time a licensed tavern or giocery in it, Vi• •where anplace whee liquor is 'sold, ii r• ,exceptt P ~q titag store, where it is only sold for:.Medicinal it.;iposos. We bnpe it nay ever continue so.— , , . , p man who got .drutilt a few days ago, and ~?., : rmi6atel to, .kick I# Wife out. of deors. must - :fiiito feel as if times were getting hauler every --. .J., ;The times are progressing, and unless that .`.lett ndvan , will fall far behind the age. ~.. - - kazatt 81.1011 DICEEd ' /11017EMENT. ~ ,e find the ' lowing in the- Boston Traveler' : —4:New York house has recently. transinitted -an :',‘er,tti - Poiris for an Invoice of dreis goods, with ...,leep border on the side. 'These 'goods are in- . 4ded for ladies' short dres'ses, and the width of .* cloth will comprise the length of the skirt." :..... • - - - VTite ...outside of today& Advertise; conthips ,tUer.of interest, Examine it. , - ' ;,, „Keep, it..,Bef9re , The , hills',-attititinnke the yeas I and lava on the pasiage of the Matfirneth *Ppro; - priatiOn Bill tqtiugh the:golf:lse of Representatives,' tttitslast sesshm,in'which new-STATE LOANS were provided for—one of 8150,0fItt- for avoiding the Inclined Planes on the Allegheny Portage Railroad; (which will eventually cost over a Million !) and the other of $98,000 for 44i I:Wing c nurrea' o the Caltinibia: Railway. 'The lentire • amontit of appropriations: ma e by , the. bill. was On its passage: the yedizi arid nays were us follows4-the yam all: Locos, hut f our t , , • ress—p-Messrs, :Benedict, Blair, .Bon. 'ham, Brindle, Cowden, Demers, Dalian, DOwner, Dunn, Ply,.Evans,.(of, Ilerits„) . Feather, Fegely, Freeman, Gabe,-Clifllit, Hague, Depict, Jackson, Laury, Leech, Lilly, Linton,. McCune, Mc. • Kcan, McKee; Mcßeynolds, Morris, 'MoWry, • (of Wyoming,) Olwinc , Potten, Penni Man, Reekhow, ' Rhoads, .Ross, Shull, Simpson, Skinner, &lder, 'Steward, Thomas , Walker and Cessna,. Speoker-46. • NATE—Messrs: Arinstrong 4 Baldwin, i Bent, Blaine, Bowen, Beeman, Brower, A. E. .Brown, Jos, Brown, Cooper,:pubbins, Dungan,,Evuns, (of Pitfe, Freti, CrOsgler, auffy, Hart, 'Hemphill, Hunseclier; Killinger, McClay, McCloskey, McCurdy, 'McLean, Monroe, Mowry; (of Somerset,) Nissley, Packer, Reid, Rid. dle, Roberts, Robertson,jSeofield,Scouller, Shaeffer, Shugart, Slifer, Smith„ ; Sruthers, 'Prone and Van Horne-44. ' We want the peopl4 to remember,' that their money is to be used for the purpose of efecting Bigler Governor. The large appropriations made by the last Lcg,islature will he used by political &cc:wiles in the LeaCofoco party, and squandered recklessly, in order to carry his. election. The people, if they wisli to prevent this, will have to act as becomes sentinels ontho Watch tower, guarding their ownl rights, arid tally with, spirit and enthusiasm al the ballot boxes. it is your hard earned taxcsitascs that you have freely paid to keep Pennsylvania from repudiation and dis. honor that arc to be thus used. %Ye - appeal to you in, the namo of our common interests to arrest the mad designs of these political profligates, who cars nothing about your well being; but rejoice in squandering and corruptly using youi• monies for' the basest purposes. At the ballot boxes you have a remedy—see to. them. Point:Dar Aqministrgtion. That the present National Administration, says the Reading. Journal, is eminently pbpular with the masses of the people, is clearly shown by, the manifestagpns of esteem and regard that, have everywhere attended the progress of President Fillmore and Cabinet, in, their tour to, the north, Much of this is no derilt owing to! that broad spirit of patriotism that leads the citizen, at all dimes and upon all fitting occasions, to honor the constitutional authorities of his , country—a spirit at animates members of both 'parties, and has en exhibted, in a greater or: lens extent, ti war f every administration since the orglanization of the government. In the,present case, however; the demonstrations arc not confined to a mere for mai, show of respect. There is a heartiness in them dictated by feelings of genuine regard—an acknowledgement of the wise policy pursued, and a confidence, that should a crisis arise requiring , the exercise pf firm and decided measures on the part of the Executive departments—those who fill them will be found equal to the emergency. This it is that has rallied the people by hundreds and thousands at every point to unite in the ! expres. &ions of welcome. They,look upon the President and his Cabinet not so much as the exponents dt the Principles of a great party, as the rulers of a great nation=tas those to whom the destinies of 1 i the country have been committed at a most critical period in its history, and who have exercised the trust with becoming firmness, wisdom ar i l mode. ration. An administration devoted 'to tbb furthe. I ranee of mere partizan views, or bent upon carry. ing out ultra measures, could never haie elicited such general marks of approval. The platform of i the Constitution is one upon which .all .true pa. I triots stand, and those who administered the Go. vernment with an eye single tw its requirements, and a determination to uphold it ;it all hazards, may nliCays cotnrrupwi w....igjewanzen - wmartne - inted i of general approbation. I Col. Bigler and the r illet of '417., The opposition presses censure Governor John. ston for not signing the bill, to repeal a part of the Acts of '47 to prevent kidnapping. It is very strange, says the Harrisburg American, that , they should blame him for this, when their own candi date, so far' as the publie knows his .opinions, stands committed in favor of this very Act The act, of '47 passed in the folkuving manner, to wit: the bill came to the Senate, from the House of Re presentatives, on. February:Blh, 1847, and was re, (erred to the Judiciary Committee. This com mittee was composed ofJohn P. Sanderson, editor of the Philadelphia News, Williamson, ofiChester, Johnson, of Erie, Black and Dimmock. INIr. San derson, Chairman of, the Judiciary Committee, re ported the bill to the Senate withoht aniendment, on the 11th of February, On thelS3d of February the bill was considered in committee of the whole, passed through several readings, , abd ordered to be returned to the House, with the information that the Senate had passed it wrruotrr emiesths r. WILLIAM BIGLER, THEN A MEMBER OF THE SENATE, VOTED FOR THE, BILL. So did Cooper, Gibbons, of Philadelphia,:end John P. Sanderson. The bill received the sipature of Francis IL Shenk. - ' - . • • Let us ask a few plain quest - 16ns oflc opposi tion. Did not Cob Bigler help to place he act of '47 on out statute bboks 7 Why, then; )epresent that. he is hostile to it, in the aLsence of ;illy act or avowal of hostility from Bigler'himself, Do not all the facts now before the public prove. i ,bat - Big. ler is in faVor of the Act of 1847 'like people ought to judge hires by Ilia own acts mitt declara tions, and :not by the prosaion)k of" iri4sponsible newspo.pere f 112 • - Par/arms Of Earoast.—The Harristinig Tele graph says that the late ordevof the,!Court Of Dauphin county, requiring the entncement of, the lair for the better observancethe:!ißabbath, works well. We have never :known. so quiet a Sabbath in town, as , theltat. Not only: were all the bars closed, bx4',aisia the oyster cations; and the , g thirsty soul:mho the! Sunday kietcire went over into Cumberl udfor 4.hcir .rations;ifinind, an Order to the game effect there:from Judge Watts, and were consequently:headed off. Ticaest day evening was lquiet, but some: -oi''the boys threatened loudly of what they, will de at the election.'i • • • • THE WELLSBOROUGH ADVERTISER. A Touching IPoem. Until about six weeks :Since, thtcji ?triton:Re publican," a Whig papeY'publishcd at McConeels-' turo,,Pa., was under the editorial management of 101 J it* cCunny, Esq., formerly of Shippenshurg, Cumberland county. Ab r out that. time he was stricken with paralysis, which . resulted in sudden and total blindness. The following lines were composed by-lihn4fter this 'calamitous misfortune ,betel I - The - Melina:ell - cipumstapccs'of the case: larcst-'thena;With pecnliitr interest.-- What renders liis - afriletioriZthe more Severe,ls the fact that a wife and children, are dependent •on his labors for their maintenance. -Wesiecerely sympa. thire.With him and them in this terrible calamity. Fair, 104 y esOlt.! shall Ino more . Behold thee clad in robes'of green ! 'Slit& not these eyes traCe landscapes o'er ' • That they in boyhood's days have seen ? Thy fertile. plains, thy. woody vales, Thy rivers and thy mountains high, . Thy.ocearis with their myriad sails, All rioWlo inc in . darknes's " Shall yonder sun's resplendent light . Fall on the diamond dewb of morn ? And deck each flow'r with spangles bright, And cv'ry blade•of grass adorn?' • And shall it pour its golden ray, Deep into ev'ry gla ss y steam, IVltcre sports the trout the live-long day, And I not see its brilliant heath? When mem'ry turns to childhood's hour, And Fancy paints. its scenes anew,— When ev'ry brook, and ev'ry Rise up familiar'to the view; And where the' haunts 'where ott T stray'd, •In gleeful mood in days of yore, ' Appear with all their sun and shade, I think, shall I ne'er see them more ? 0, what is life? e'en when we're blest With sight, and health, and use of limb? 'Tis but a dreary day at best, Of sorrows deep and pleasures dim : A billow rude, on which must glide Hope's fair and oft fragile bark ; A tempest wild, where sorrows. ride Upon its breast, at midnight dark. 'Tis hard to stem the tide of life In darkne4s and in poi•erty— 'Gainst adverse waves when storms are rife, Upon life's rough uncertain sea, The stoutest often fail to steer Their bark right onward, but are lost: Then how shall mine in darkness drear, In safety reach life's distant coast. But, why despond I—Can He who took, sot render . back the sight anew ,Cag be not open out the book Qf nature's beauties to oar view? And should He not, 'tis His' to know Why he withholds the light ho gave; His'purpose may be but to throw A light to lead beyond the grave. ►Whig County Meeting. Pursuant to notice a meeting of th© Whigs of Ticiga county was held at the Court House on Thursday craning, thell9th ult. On motion, Jon: PARKIIIIIIST was appointed Chairman, and JNo. N. BACHE, Secretary. A. J. Monroe stated the object of the meeting to be to appoint a Delegate to the State Conven tion, to appoint- Senatorial Conferees, and to• ap paint a Standing Committee for the County. On motion of A.IJ. Monroe, Jun. N. BA6IE was appointed a Delegateito the State Convention, and John Mathew nominated 0. F. TAYLOR as a sub stitute, L. P. Wu.usron was appointed a Senatorial Conferee. On motion, the Chair appointed 0. F.,TAvr.on, LEATUEL DAI7ENFORT, 'B. B. SMITH, A. J. Itioxaoe, Criat}rir Ausrm, Jom. Cui.vEil and RODEItT CAS. BE&H;Standing Committee for the County. :Tom PAILEMIRST`, Chairman. JMo. N. BLCUE, Secretary. Massachusetts Election. At the angressional election in the 2d, 4th, and 7th Districts on Monday f a week, Robert Rantoul, Jr., Free Soil, was chosen in, the 2d by a large vote; in the 4th, Benjamin W. Thompson, Whig, is cho- sen ; in the 7th District, Col. John Z. Goodrich, Whig, is elected by not far from 400 majority. i The Delegation will now stand as follows: I=—William / Apulefoo_ whi n , 2—R o b ert R an . 'put, rree Sot ; 3—James H. Duncan, Whig ; 4—Benjamin Thompson, Whig; Alla I, Tree foil; 6-George T. Davis, Whig; 7—John Goodrich, Whig; B—Horace Mann, Free Soil ; o—Orrin Fowler, Whig; 40—Zeno Scudder, The 'Boston At/as, in speaking of the result of the.election, expresses the opinion that the Free Sail party in that State is now virtually dissolved. 'We regard, says the 4ilas,the result of these elec. Lions as fraught with important consequences. They show ; in the first place, that the Whig party, in order to sustain itself in Massachusetts, and to win back the State to the old Whig fold, must re. ly solely upon its own intrinsic strength, and the purity and excellence of its principles. We must not rely upon assistance of any. deicription from the leaders of either of theopposing parties, They have become corrupted by their taste for office, and are willing to make any coalition, however unprin. cipled, is order to beat the Whigs, and carry the election. Election. of , Judges. Now, that the 'Judges•of our Courts have been i made, elective by the People of this. State, an, ad ditional responsibility will rest upon rare—the 'People. The Governor has been:relieved of that duty. and the citizens of the State will be called upon to diselprge it. The office \is; l ont of the most important charac ter, and t.tnles it. be. properly filled, the most deleterious etycts will be found to follow. There fore, in inch ihg selections for the' Nit, the utmost cantien and prudence should be obserVed by the people. None but the most experienced, ablest and utoral legal gentlemen should be selected to preside over our judicial affairs. This done, and the new law will answer the purposes intended by these who framed it. Nothing worse can be iodic. ted ,upon 'a community than incompetent Judges; and the evil retinits, which must inevitably follow, fully considered, will induce the citizens of this Commonwealth to. act • wisely,' judiciously. and With an-eye single to their dearest.fights, inina king Judicial nominations.. irnat oldest wOman-in the world is supposed to be one Mary &atop. now residing at Elton, in the county ,of Durham. England. , ,,She was born on tho Uth of February, 1731, and is of course in her one hundred add ttoenlyOral year. She is in pos session of all her faculties, perfect tnernoryi hear. ing, and eye.sight. 4 She cooks, washes, andirons, in the usual _family avocatiens, threads her needle and sews without spec,t4les. , • TbOlifepublic . of . the.NeW York:'Commcrci#l -- Advelti4r - ,vie find many interesting :het*, cot:teen:di* J. , lbctia, and ;the interior of Africai. - . ..Wl3:inako - room'tor 'the following, which pinsea*.alntere4li„ While such indefatigable exertions, are; made to open an intercourse with the far thest interior, of the continent, the colony of Liberia is ftit growing bite a populous and well - governed Christian state, becoming bright example_of the :benefit& of religion: and civilization,' which - must' necessarily have an immense inflbence upon.the minds of the.surroimding natives. It is to be)regretted .that the free colored men of this country are not more generally informed of the advanta,.ffes which coloniza tion offers to them individually,and the great work. it. must ultimately achieve in the ele vation of their race. • Every settler in - Liberia receives a grant or ten acres of ,good• land. He and his family are supported daring the first six .months in Africa. - The whole .e.tpense of the family is defrayed by the society. A temporary home can always be obtained now, on landing,;and markets furnish 'every convenience ? • These ten acres may be improved so as to become an independent fortune to any family. One acre will produce $3OO worth of indigo ; half nn acre will raise a thou- sand pounds of arrow root, five acre's will plant 1250 coffee trees, which at five years old will, for thirty years, bear six pounds to the tree, which is 8400 a year; and half an acre of cotton trees will stand many years without replanting, and yield every year enough to clothe a whole family ; one. acre or cane will furnish sugar and pre serves abundantly; one acre of fruit trees will give more banamas, plantain, oranges, pawpaws, and pine apples, than any family can cat ; and one acre in a garden will' give fresh vegetables, two crops in a year, directly Out of the ground , ten months in a year, sufficient for twenty persons ; • hogs, poultry, may be raised at pleasure. Here, then, is a family provided for, in the amplest manner, with moderate labor, and enjoying over and above their support, from six to seven hundred dollars a year. Schools of the best kind are provided for the children. Messurado county alone has twenty places of worship, six of them exclusiTely ;for naiiiies of the county, 18 schools, and 875 scholars. When a settler gets a little forward, he may begin to work on the luxuriant re ductions of the forest, and find the fullest employment and reward. He may cut camwood, make indigo, palm oils or caster oils, or .establish a manufactory of sugar or arrow root, or raise rice, ginger, corn, ca sada, hogs, &c., for sale. Where can the colored man do so Well ? Where have - so much personal enjoyment? Where so easily support himself and his family ? to say nothing of the independence and the happiness which must arise from being among a nation of his own color, and in the full enjoyment of a liberty and an equality which are impossible here. Our State Administration. A correspondent of the Philadelphia Inquires thus sketch some of the .features of-our State Administration, which have rendered Goy. John ston so popular *ith the mass of the people : Governor Johnston will probably be the candidate ,of the Il'hig party at the next -gubernatorial election—from present evi deuces he will be nominated by acclamation —the Whig press is largely in his favor, while the rocoßico organs are ominously' sileht. In this event, a brief recapitulation of the policy, of the present Executive will be right and proper. As a fit prelude, it may be worth mentioning that the present Democratic State Treasurer, Gen..Biekel, admits that , the Sinking Fund, as it ex ists under, the auspices of Governor John ston, will gradually liquidate and cancel the enormous; Slate debt. This fact alone should command the support of every right thinking roan in the Commonwealth. - More than half a million of the actual State debt has been paid during the present Administration, which, with the liberal ap propriations towards completing the North Branch Canal, and the improvement of the Columbia ,Railway, and the Schuylkill In clined Plane; will show a saving to the cof fers of the Treasury of neatly a million of dollars. • Governor Johnston is unalterably opposed to the creation of any new loans, and will note under any circumstances, put his name to L a paper that will increase the State debt.-to this ,he has pledged himself repeatedlyand this fact of itself has bound him with cords of adamant to the refe rences of the people. Every holder of Pennsylvania State stock is interested in the continuance .or his adminiStration, because that stock has been appreciated at par and above par, and its interest paid in gold and silver. The in terests of the rural districts ,and the cities are alike fostered from this fact. The payments are' punctual—the demands of foreign creditors are regularly satisfied— 'the credit of the commonwealth is restored —and the iLondon Club HouSes can no longer laugh at the witticisms of Sydney Smith, at onr ex-pense And this magical change basheen effected under the adminis tration of- ;WlLLien F. Joutcszolv--wbat need of further comment! '" INTERESTING ASTRONOILICAL FACT.- Two persois were born' at the same place, at , t the same moment of time, After an age of filly .years, they.both died, also at the same spot, and at the.same instant,,yet one of them lived one hundred days more, than the other . - - How was this possible? Not to keep our friendsin suspettse, the ,so lution turns on a curious, but, with a very little reflection, a very obvious pciitit in cir. cumnavigation. , A person going round the world to the west loses a day, and towards the east. he -gains one. Supposing, then, two, persoas born at the Cape of Gciod Hope, whence a. voyage urctund , the,world may be performed in rt ( year.; if 'ohs per . , . form this constantly ;towardd . ' the west, in 6Fty•ope yeare: be . :ol!y:ilays behind the stationaryJnliahitinti,; if the other , sail equally east 1;4 will t ,gaitifilly days in advande of: . them'.: therefore, will have seen one hundred days more than the. other, though they were born and died at the same place, and at the same moment, and even lived continually in the same lati- Rides - Anil - reekono by I he' Sarlie calendar: An Inquisition it correspondent : of the New York Jour. nai.of Commerce, writing from Italy, gives the following thrilling description' asia few of the horrors of the inquisition. -u, In Turin ,I met the American Conant of Rome, who has passed , through, the entire revolution in the Eternal city, and who was • present when,the doors and dungeons,of the : inquisition were .opened . the decree of the ,TriumOrs l its prisoners, relerised, and the building converted into an ,asylun TOr, the, poor. It was interesting to•hearfrom the lips of an intelligent eye-witness the most ample confirmation of the published , statements relative to the condition and'ap; l pearance of this iniquitous establishment, The Holy Inquisition of, Rome is situated near Porto Cavalligeri, and under the very shadow of the sublime dome ol St., Peter's Cathedral, and capable in case of emer gency of accommodating three thousand prisoners. The Consul was particularly struck with the imposing dimensions of the Chamber of Archives, filled with volumi nous documents, records and papers. Here was piled all the proceedings and decision's of the holy office from the very birth, of the inquisition, including the correspondence with its collatteral branches in both hemi spheres., Upon the third floor, over a cer tain door, was an inscription to this effect— Speak to the first inquisitor. Over ano ther—Nobody enters this chamber except on pain of excommunication. They might as well. have placed over that door the well remembered inscription of Dante over the gates of Tartarus-=-oandon hope all you who enter here. That Chamber was the solemn hall of Judgment, or Dome room, where the fates of thousands have been sealed to death. Over the door opposite, another inscription read ,— Speak to the se cond Inquisitor. Upon the door of that department a trap door was exposed, from which the condemned, after they left the Hall of Judgment, stepped from time into eternity. " The well or pit beneath, had been built in the ordinary cylindrical form, and was lat least eighty feet deep, and so ingeniously provided -with projecting knives and cut lasses, that the bodies of the victims must have been dreadfully mangled in the de . scent. At the hotted) of this abyss qoatiti ties of hair and beds of mouldering hones remained. Not only at the bottom of the pit, but also in several of the lower charn •bers of the building were found human bones, In COMO places they appear to have been mortared into the walls. The usual instruments of torture in such establish ments were likewise manifest. The Consul presented me with a bone which he brought with him as a memorial of his visit. The Pope fled from Rome on the 24th of No vember, 1940, The Roman Republic was proclaimed on the 11th of February, 1849, • and immediately after its installation the -Assembly solemnly 'declared the abolish ment of the Holy Inquisition, and by a spe cial decree charged the Triumvirate with the duty of erecting a lofty column to commemorate the overthrow of one of the greatest evils that ever darkened the face of the, earth. But the scenes of this world change. On the Ist ofJuly,lB49, the Ro man Republic, after a brief existence of five months capitulated to the French, and in May, 1950, Pius IX, after and wile of one year and six months, returned to his capitol, proscribed the Triumvirate, and re: established the Inquisition in ail its former power." Mrs. Swisshelm on Slavecatching. Mrs. Swisshelm, who edits the Sciturday Visitor, says some very plain thing's on subjects she speaks upon. As a sample, we annex what she says of the slave catcher : • " We do not say one half that we feel we should say, if we were a man. If we were, and any fellow who has acted hound and aided in capturing a fugitive, should offer us any of _the courtesies _of life, pro , per between man and man, we would spit upon him. As it is, if one should enter the room we were in, it would require a strong muscular effort on our part to pre.. vent " Get out dog get out !" from esca ping from our lips. To us they ippear like' dogs, and nothing else. Their Nees and forms assume the outline end expres sion of a dog; Their whiskers look like smellers'i or feelers." " We wtild - not rank amongsCour list of friends, the man who needlessly' sets his foot upon a worm! and one who, for a ten or twy dollar fee, would aid to tear ti man tr m the bosom - of his family, and consign him ta'the condition of ,a brute, ought to be held without the range of all human sympathy. We would 'not let any such biped, sleep within our barn, or take a drink at our pump. We would not take, his name as a subscriber, and could not iviiteeditorials for a slave-eatcherto . read, and if. there werea hundred,pcoOle - 9f our Mind - . in Pittsburg, it would: be' hard - for a CommissionerCoinmissionerto live in it. We would hire little boys to .hall9O at hire in . the - street,. and chambermaidstcithrOw dirty weter . him out of the upstairs windows—.:erid like .the Yankee boy's companions, ,we would keep a ,:pitchiennd Obondin' all 'the' while, until 'he Woad be obliged tolle - ave or' repent: '" Get out,. dog I get Cut !!',should • meet him at any doer which,slielterifamily ties: Every husband and father who ValneS .his right to live,with his wife 4ndChildren,. ;should spit upon or thnikt animal . fri4n his path- 7 -every wife and 'mother who 'teelp the value of_a husband's love. should' spurn him from her, deer ; 'every child who frither,shouldlnunVand mock him wlien , he shows' his taei.f' Pia Collfeesiosi ott--7 the Cosden ittatilee+Pasifei an in Cifstody. We received 'last evenin g the following hasty letter from our correspondent at Chestertown, written, yesterday !Domingo half an hoar' oiler; the confession to,wh ic h_ it alludes was made. - . It will. be seen tha.A., full developement of thiihlooditransactiad, has been m4(le by,onepf ple partlea.to the deed,and'ihrti alto(' the accused istirtielpant s are in jail . - „ . CrinsTsiizotie` ; . , GEntemerv:: We have now tt confession . of'dneof the parties under arrest `for the Cnsden, muse re,: which is ,thought *to' be wOriby of, credit. AboUt 'the. lime r,itie; ; murder, a,man -hy.the name,of Hand, liv._ 'ing near Blackbird, suddenly, and without riSsigning.anr . reason, left his home-and ,went-to New Jersey. A' feW days afterhig ., wife The. movements' 'Of these' • people were of course regarded is suspi cious; and efforts have. for -sometime past been made to obtain a knowledge of their whereabouts, A few days - t since Mrs. Hand was brought , to chestertown,,•and:mado statements to the following, effect.: - That on the' morning after the murder,. at a very early hour, a man by the naine of. Stephen Slinw; ; who boarded iri the house with herself and husband, came running in to the house, with. a musket in his hand, and very much under the infltitbnce of li- . quor—that he told her the Cosden rattily” were' , murdered, and. that himself, Taylor, Shelton and Murphy werethe parties—that he had been.solicited by Taylor to join the conspiracy, which he 'supposed was only for. plunder, and not for murder—that lie and Taylor proceeded, on the evening of the murder, to the Swantowarnill, (about a half a mile from Cosden's,) and were there joined by Shelton and MUrphy ; that he had ' a double-barrelled gulf; Taylor a muskef; Shelton a double-barrelled gun and double barrelled pistol, rind Murphy a double-bar reled gun. He then proceeded to.state that upon arriving at the house, Taylor fired through the window and shot down Cosden, and then, - snatching Shaw's gun, shot Mrs. Cosderi ' as she ran out. He also stated that Shelton murdered Miss Cosden, and Miss Webster, and Taylor shot the black woman,-but that Murphy took no part in the murder. He asserts that he himself - was drunk, and took no part in the murder, and that he was - afterwards so'overcome by liquor, that he felt in the fende corner and lay there for several hours. , Shaw %vas arrested on Saturday, and this morning has made a full confession, cor roborating all the statements made. by Mrs. Hand, saying " that he knoWs that Mrs. Hand's testimony will convict him, and that he may as well make a clean breast of it." He has been confronted with the, parties charged, and adheres, in their preSence, to all the particulars, as detailed by Mrs: Hand. Murphy, he says, he had never seen be fore, but believes the man he sees in jail its Murphy, to have been at - the murder. There is little or no doubt entertained of the truth of this confession. The cause 'of Mrs. Hand's sudden flight, was fear, that as she possessed Shaw's se cret; he might do her soine 'bodily harm, to prevent her divulging it. • Since the above letter came to hand, we hide conversed with a gentleman direct from Chestertown, who was present at the jail yesterday morning, when Shaw was confronted with the prisoners, and made his confession. He says he hewer saw a more hardened' set . of men - colleeted together. The excitement in Chestertiiwn Was intense, and great joy - was manifested by the people at the certainty of all the murderers being . in custody. Webster, the uncle of . Mrs. Cosden, is now ncicnowledged to be free of all participation in the bloody deed, and will be discharged in a few days. The priso ners are heavily chained together, and pre sent a most revolting spectacle. Their trial will take place next week. 'Baltimore Sun, MaY, Population of California. It -has been generally estimated, on this side of the continent That.the population‘of California would not exceed two hundred thousand, but the. following article, which_ we extract from the Sacramento Times, it appears that the population amounts to 314,000, of whom 100,000 were engaged , in mining during the past year. This will entitle California, to three representatlves in the United States House of Representa. In the northern mines, or that scope of, country lying north of San Francisco and Feather river, we give a population of 20,. 000. Feather river, with all its mining tributaries, 25,000. The Yuba, - _40,0p0. Bear river, 4,000. The American fork, 50,000. The southern r mines, or all that portion of the mininff b country of California !yi n & south of ths American river, 80,000. ThjSan Joaquin valley, 10,000.. . The city of San Francisco,. with the population scat : . tered in its immediate neighborhood, 25,- 000. The Sacramento Valley, including all above San Francisco,., 40,090. The coast, or that portion of, the State which lies be low' San _ Francisco, bordering upon the ocean, 20,04007—making, in all, a population of $14,000, which,, we, believe, is nearly as correct as the means at Ita'nd wilt, allow us to opr 7 ;erne newspapersrrespondent asserts that there is ,, co a project on foot- nt.Naple"i'to extinguish the fires of Vesuvius by digging a canal from the' botterii':of . :the - crater, which is' several thOusand feet Helot the level of the sea, to drain oft the burning lava into the sea or the sea into the critter ,at an.expense of two millions. Mt excellent project - in either' event ; ' fbr if the sea does not put out Vesu,vius, Vesuvius will ivernt up the sea; and then bailed fish iiift be cheap'.