Ohio State journal (Columbus, Ohio : 1849 : Weekly), 1854-09-06 page 1 |
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s hVia State gammal. n rriumii DAILY, TRl-WKKKLY AND WEEKLY nr im OHIO STATE JOURNAL COMPANY. Incorporated under the General Law. TERMS, INVARIABLY IN ADVANCE. Dmr-nt .uWtibcn W 00 p-r.rsf. Mh11 6 00 " Hv the Carrlfr, ji wet 2H eta, Tm Wuxu w l" r. - Weekly 2 DO ' Cluba often and uer 160 " TKKIM 0 ATiVEBTISISU BY THE 80.1' ARE. (TO IIXU Ok l-fc MAKR A BUl'iHI ) Ow wtiar- 1 rrr ..$. 00 ; one aquar 3 wi k, . .W M (me " 9 month 16 DO; one " Iwwhi... 2 M One " monllu Yi 00 ; na " 1 wt-k.... 1 60 (In " Smunttu 8 00 ; one " 6 days 13 On " 'jmontlii 0 00 ; mm " a.iayi 1 "JA nua " 6 wos-aa 6 00; on " S-lnyrt 1 10 Ona " 1 m..nth 4 60 one " I Itut rtlnn 50 ttplyl .l-fertiwroi'iiU Iwlf mora thao the abuta Artftrtlmnt, leaden" and pUred In the column of "Special Nnlieaa," W ( ordinary raUt. All notiwii rf'iilifd to be puMUhrd or Uw, lefal ratea. If orderwt on lli lunide txrlunlveljr aller the tlnt wek, 60 per cent, more thnn the above ratei ; but all eucli will aptirnr in the Tr I Weekly without charge. HiiilnfM Curd, not exceeding 6vc Hun, per jrar, In-aide, tt.W per line ; oulaldn t'J. Nullct-a of mw ttnga, charitable aoelettea, Are companies. c., half price. A liertirwim-iiU not arm m panto) with wrltlan dlrec-tlwii will bo in Med till lor bid, and charged accord-tnirlr.All transient adortliemrnta miut be paid In advance. Wmklt One iquire one week, 60 cent ; twn weeaa, 16c ; tliree wreki, II ; one month. Il,'i6 ; three muntua, 3,50 : lit month, ) ; one year, 110. Under the present lyitem, the advert lar pays ae much for the ipare ha ocruplea, the changva being ehargeabte with tb coin pcisl tion only. It ia now generally adopted. Site h (lone. Just opposite our house stop a minute, there li music In those two lout word lot us say them again. How sweet they sound once more there in a great hill opposite where we are sit-ting, repeating those two words, and here tbey cotuo back again. Echo is over there in the deep shade of the trees, in that valley, and he ays, our house. Well, just opposite our house there is an alley or court, leading away tip somewhere behind the houses, where there are other houses, tenant houses, holes for human beings to suffocate in. We have never been up there, but we know that those who live by labor and havo to labor to lire, are up there; lor otten of an evening we see one of the tenants come home with his dray, and ho unhitches his horse by the pump outside, and then he turns round and says come, and walks up the little court, with bis faithful servant at his heels, and for a long timo wo wondered if they both lodged in the same house, or if not, where did ho lodge the horse t So wo went over one day as he wus go-ing up, and peered into the fourl, and there we saw the man open a little side door Into which, after shedding "If his harness lor there was not room enough for any thing but his body the horse crowded himself, and then the man opened another little door over his bead; no, the oilier extremeand there, in a little cuddy hole, was some hay. for which he whinnied his gratitude. Then the man went up to his own cuddy hole, where, under the bed, he had a lug nf ouU; we know it was under the bed, for we saw the dust nn hi knees where he had knelt down to (111 Ihe little measure, for which be got more whinnied thanks from a good servant, a' faithful friend, and grateful animal, though It was a dumb beast. Ho dnv after dnv. for months and years we have seen the Mime uinn anil same horse Utterly the horse wulks a though getting to feel his age and hard work, and the man looks care-worn and tired of long toil that brings him nothing but a lodging in that same hot oven, near where he boxes up his horn to sweat and stew all night brings him only a smull loaf of bread they are very small now a days, for his whole family. lane 1110 Journal. JttTltS Of licit)! VOLUME XLV. COLUMBUS, OHIO, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 6, 1854. NUMBEK 4 He turned to wi)ie away manly, honest tears. Putting tbe QuestlMi and wo well, nu matter. We went and sat i v t i... , ..i- u..i. down at our desk, took up a sheet, and wrote Allhouuh the old rule of turning; slrauevrs out iiinw uireo wonts uini were ringmg in our Dram of tbo (luri Ue tic pr0CC(i8 ut djvi. and hum ng in our heart-" 8 '-and : 8ioUi hfta bve roioi awlt it Jia with a exception only held Ihe pen, while we were only conscious of one thing--had but one thought all elm; was alorled in these words : ".She is gone." A. Y. Tribune. The Kivcr Amazon In 1701 Mr. Stanton Sholes writes as follows to the fiatiomit littritigtnttr of Aug. Ti '. In KeptemlKT, 171)1, vto entered the mighty waters ol the gi't-ot river Ainuon, of Booth America, tnd moored our Khip fur up the river, m ar itn left bunk, and abreast of u plantation. My object in reeuriitig to this pnrt of my journal ih to fliow my viewrt of the connexion of (he waters of the great Amazon of .South America with tliosc ot the Gulf Stream of the North Atlantic Ocean. Aftvr tlmt voyugt- to the Amazon I made severul voyages to the Cuyenne,the Surinam, auu tne Lfemernra rivers, ho mat l oe as retards those who sit in the Sneaker's gallery. and who might cause inconvenience by gettiug among the Members. So, that declaration, "ritransers must withdraw," through a brut urn fulmett for the strangers above, turns Ingeuuus out. He muHt, tiiereiore, nnHten up stairi, ana watch the proceedings from tho privileged gallery.Thero is a sand-glass on the Sneaker's table, and this is turned over when the debute concludes, and during the two minutes that the sand is running, members, duly wurued, hurry up from the library, smoking-rooms, diuing-rooms, and the Thames promenade, where, at high-water, and when tho wind does not bring over the reek of those foul mauutnctoricB, a Senator's lounge is not unpleasant the accessories of tbe Hconu being the sparkling lights, plashing river andnoodcigur. The time. U up. everybody has been whipped in, and see how Iho bur is crammed, and how tbe loremost rank pret forward toward the centre of the Houm. The Speaker order the doors to be closed. He then came well acquainted with the count as well as tne interior ol mo country. I will now oivo my views to prove that the : . ' , ....uii.. r.... i ...uii waU-rs of the Oulf Stream are nothing more, nor umiiy iWmi,H hvrQ but liKrt u wt dflnK,.r less than the waters of the river Amazon. This of B mukc wi,ippers-iii being alert, and Mem-groat rather of waters Is bedded more than one , k(I0willg iUe advantage of following their thousand miles immediately under the equator, I t-uilort. Tho proposal was, that tho Criminals' Knfrauchisemcnt hill should be read a second Ho my we escape broHtk t To the Editor of the A. Y. Tribune : Slit Tho calamitous effects of our present drouth arc so evident as to occupy the' attention of all classes. Retarded in our spring work, we foretold a scanty harvest; but the latter part of May and the early summer were so favorable 0i0 Slate Imtrol. WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER , 1K'.4. Louicii. Tho Richmond Enquirer copies that our hoiws of plenty were juclly incited, and 1 n, -vi,-n fP..t .,.i.iin n.i.imM r u,.n - so far as the hay crop Is concerned, our expec- w' , , , ,, . . ,. '. talious have been fully realized. Indian coin, w-w rcunlvania, which follows, and however, our main dependence, as well as pota- ankn " hat will Southern Whigs, who have toes, roots, pastures, Ac, are sull'eriug imnient!- been led by their organs to view with suspicion ly for want of moisture. If the drouth contin-, tilc cnd,lct r President Pierce, say to the fol- d,3LroS ; t'8 f t - yl,.j, ; nous anli-Nubraska and Abolition letter? These aro the fnctx as they present themselves I Should not the South stand by an adniiniBtra-to every examiner. Ourcouutry depends almost ; tion whose great otl'enee, In abolition eyes, is entirely mi her agriculture ,u..l hence must sur-1 lhat u biw tw mmtMy Malned the constitu-fer lorgely from the casualties of elnuate. Were , . . . this unavoidaolc. we mmlit convince uurtelves 'iu that we ought to bear it liliilocooliicully. But. when it is Ihe tiled of gros-n Ignorance on thu part of the cultivator, it merits the severest rep- renenwon. We will pass by tho nunipllou, for the prc- neiit, that the South in this struggle to put slave-ry In the place of freedom is only enforcing a Tin. n.,'i,.tB uht..l, il.n f .r,,,,,, ,. n.i ! constitutional right we will also pass that oth- uwv easily obtain, iustrutlion are verv mimer-! er "nomalous assertion that President Pierce ous, and we propose to notice only the point in i could be " too manfully " in anytkini; nnd and all its tributary streams for many thousand mites are constantly pouring tneir not water into this mighty reservoir of water. As these waters are gathered in under the burning sun or the equator, it Is extremely warm t far more so than the Atlantic Ocean waters under the equator. This great body of heated water shoots out . into the Atlantic more than a hundred miles, in the face of the eternal trade winds. Tho Amazon Is sixty miles wide, and, attor being belted In its irresistible course, It curves olf to the left and scuds off before tbe strong trade winds till nut of their reach. Driven along with great force, it takes its course around the (rreat bay formed between the two continents or North and South America. Dashing along the northern coast of South America, and passing to the leeward of tho West India It-lands, it leaves tho shore of Culm, and proceeds along tbe shores of Horlda, tne capes or Virginia, anu mo souiu coast of North America, and, passing the shores of Newfoundland, ends its mission among tho Icebergs which lloat out of the Northern ocean. Cut utl the Gulf Stream, and It would not Im many years before the North Atlantic would be (11 led with icelicrgtt lhat would w very destruc- !..n lA nnlmil..i, lint wisA 'rnviil-nfr I ma time. Sir F. Thenigcr s amendment was, that instead of the words " a second time," there should he inserted "this day six mouths." The Jmestitm Is, whether the words proposed to Iks eft out, namely, " a second time,' shall stand. " Those who aro of that opinion, say Aye." " Aye," say a great many voIccb on the government side. " Thoso who are cf a contrary opinion, say ' No.' " " No t" comes In thunder from the Opposition, who have better lungs than the Ministerialists. The Speaker then casually rcmurks; " I think the Ayes have it." IIo is, however, instantly nnd flatly contradicted by various Noes, and without contesting the point exclaims: " tic Ayes to the right the Nocrf to the left." All the members come down from their scats, and the lloor Is crowded. They are making their way slowly to the lobbies appropriated for them. The Speaker nominates two tellers on each side, whose business it Is to ascertain Iho number, a couple of government men, and tbe mover and question, It is not too wkl an ussertiou to say that no good, practical Jtti mir wilt itfloie tits crops to sujf't r largtly from drouth. The remedy is simple and natural. fciuloil plowing, ac companied by under-draining on wet lands, and even without tt on those wlncn arc sumeiently dry, Is a sure protection against thisruiuluc-pro-ducing aconr(H. A lew moments relleeliou will convince any man that this must prove an infallible remedy, because we know that there Is always the .-nine amount ol wnter in and about the surface of the earth. In winter there is more In the soil than in summer, while in summer (hut which has been dried out of the soil exists in the atmosphere. Iwing maintained hi a vapory condition by the heat resident among it particles. Without this crammed down their throats by the cry of "abo- tivo to navigation. Hut a wise Providence has geconder of the amendment. While tho House provided an eternal reservoir of hot water con- stunt ly rushing around over the back of the cold Atlantic to its destination, where, after spending its vital warmth among thu iceliergs, It Is hurried away by a new supply of native warm water from tho great Amazon. Seamen can always Icll when in or out of the Gulf Stream by dipping the hand in the water alongside. Surely the wisdom of an allwisc Being Is wonderfully displayed in these trade winds, which hurry this great IsHly of water on its destined course so soon as it is free from the confines of its great reservoir. I'lidoubtedly this view will 1m new to some renders, but what 1 have written is from experience, and was seen while 1 was roving upon the mighty deep. Ihe luill mrcam, I repeat, is him something else-over night l.e.i he came i nothing more nor less than the waters of the home, it brought a little girl about leu years old. I fH Amazon of aouth Amenea. I have crossed with the prettiest soft red l.nir-we have no great , " l lr many years have gli- Innd.icss lor red hair generally, but Ibis a 'led through its warm wa er, u ways pleased to n.ti i.,.ii,. uitn . r..nu dr.n ih nmrt hitve it astern. The most violent storms Irom and un mi the dray iust before It got to the ; whatever quarter they may come, never change pump, where it huu to stop; u coum uoi go ov, lor the old borne had stopt there so long he could not go beyond that certain fixed stopping place. It was a short ride, but a merry one; 'twas childhood's happy hour. Our man wiw an early riser, up and away often before we hail dressed, but early as it was, the red curls were there, and she would Imund up on the dray and cling to one she loved for one more kiss, and perchance s ride to the next corner, and then back st a double quick step to the door step of the limine next to "our alley," to catch a last look, and scud a last kiw usn the magnetic telegraph or a waving hand, with a "giMsl bye, papa," as bo went round the corner and away to his work down town. Often for two hours In-fore sun down she would sit upon that door stone, watching that same corner for the expected one, for nomctimu he came at an early hour; and then she ran to meet him with more joy in her eye, and more in bis than all that ever was felt by one who never heard the sweet sound of "Oh! tfiore comes papa." Sometimes she hnd company; a (all, graceful, neat woman, with a pale face and a frail person, who stood by her, looking In Ihe same direction. It wu n-ood nlaee. loo. In tbe shade of mine dark green trees, whither she could come out of tfiat CUl 00 MO Ol a conn, worm ime im-mm-u hot air all day. and carKmio acid gas all night, to get a little mi utf of Ihe evening breeze corn-Ins nn from thf lower lv. That breeze Is a blessed Inheritance of the New Vork poor, whirh they should enjoy, liut are cheated out oi ny ML-nrv nn alio Imihlft their hollSCS. One evening we noticed Hint our Utile girl of the alley over the way was nntaiono in uer usual aoat umm the daor nte n. In her Inn lay a lit tle sister, very young, small, and pale as her mother, with her mother's own sweet face. Erery pleasant evening for nionthn. that little girl brought "the liaby" down the court, out into the open stroet to leel the soft air or tho aea breeze, he could not run to meet papa, but her eves weut round Ihe comer In sharp glances, aud she tried to direct baby's the same way as she said "there nomen pnpeO' So. as she could not run to meet him, as soon as ho turned old Dobbin alHiut loaurd the pump, before he slopped to unhitch, he jumped oil and enme and stooped down and kissed twlb. Of their life in noont, we anew noiuing. nu one m mn-i nuuin-to bis children, must have been equally so to Iho mother who bore them. We could have sworn it often, that he wan a kind, good hulutid, when we saw the market Istskel upon bin arm, nr the slop Imeket in hit hand, and ihe little hits or kindling wood on his cart all kindling the (Ires of all eel ion In the heart, as well as the household Are In that one room, where all lived and cooked and ale ami slept. Ob what a pity, nr olten thought, lhat such industry could not bring a better reward. I Mil In the country, in some snug farm-house, how the color would come lck to thai mother's rhwk lor It was there thai she watt horn and those two children would grow up to healthly womanhood.A Tew days ago we went out of Ihe city -it was one of those burning dayn of that hot month ol Jul ll was thai crv day thai all Ihe world ol Aiuerira turn into all look' day. and burn tuns ot nowder. while Ihev gel gloriously drunk, shouting ' what a glorious Independence." ( ut in the country- In ahady groves and in deep nooks, by cod spring gu-luug out of the roeks, we saw score" o city children, thai live in just such courts as the carman ami his little red headed daughter, and they were so happy, and it gave life such a healthy joy, that we wished she too Its course or its current, but it continues to move on In that irresistible power which was given to it in the Power uhnve. It would lie very pleasing lo nif I perhaps one of the oldest seafaring men now living) II some one of our unva! gentlemen would silt these. niiL'irest ions, ami cast uvcriionnl whatever is chuu"; remembering, however, that they enmo ; tu, ,.rt 231. from the hum I ol one wuo lias mono ai me wneei through many a rnging storm, aud one who takes great pride in our young nnvni officers, who will lie the pride and bulwark of our national defence. God grant it! Hayjor-Ueneral Stark Extract from the Spierh of Hon. Hiand Hall at Hen million, .tug. ItifA. Is clearing, the four tellers linger nnd exchange jokes. A member Is taking tho opposite side to that of his party, and a teller culls after him that he is going tho wrong way. A young gen tleman with a large paletot, bos arrived Inn Highland urcss, iroiu some masked oali, and one of Ihe four, as he passes, invites him to take oil' his paletot, in orucr to dcllgut tho hpenker a eyes with a view of his costume. As soon us mo House is reported clear, Hie tellers follow to do their work. Now the memlwrs, having voted, begin to reenter in single file, nnd return to their seats. A clerk in wig and gown goes to tho Opposition grecn-lmx to be ready to take the uuinliers. Sir Frederick Thesiger comes in. looking quite triumphant, walks un to the clerk and speaks a sensation round tho House, and then n tremen dous Opposition cheer. Enter Mr. lluytcr, the Secretary lo the Treasury, not looking quite se well pk'UM'd, and he alfo approaches the clerk, 'flie four tellers then lorm in lino, aud retire, bncklng. As they do so their position Indicates the victory. The right hand man of Ihe four Motigs to the winning side, and in that station in tho tall form of Sir Frederick Thesiger. Another tremendous. Opposition cheer, utid the four go bowing up to the table, and Sir Frederick reads from a miner: 1 lie Ayes to the right were Tin, the och to lerritic cheering, tiovernment iieaten iiy I I, aud the triminuh hPlrancliisc-ment bill lost. For a few minutes business is suspended, mcne hers luugh over tho victory and defeat, uud Ministers are seen in converse. Ingeniius may suppose Unit they arc consoling one another under tho liainmi catastrophe ; nut ll Is more nroouhle that they are arranging what other business snap Ik; taken tliat night. 1 he door having oeen re-op'-ned, meniliers depart, though so large a MuvioM.enerul John Mark was a mail Ol Hoiisu usuu lv leaves a mellv lui-tre Friiirmeiit considerable note in Ihe Revolution. I. pon au- up to Iho lime of adjournment. lliority we learn inai no was uorn in uie uiw u ui Londonderry, New-Hampshire, Aug. 2Mb, KliH. In 17:t7 the 'family removed to Derrylleld, now Manchester, where he resided till Ihe close of his life, lie served in the French war ; and on bearing of the Iwttle of l.einglon, he repaired to Cambridge, and. receiving a colonel" commission, be t-ulisu-d thw nunc day eight hundred men. He fought in the battle of Breed s Hill, wan engaged in the nttuck on Trenton, and was in the butllo of Princeton. On the invasion of Dtirgoyne, in 1777, he received the command of the New-H amp-hire Militia, lo oppose him, and hud tho honor, by his nkill and intrepidity, of achieving the lirst step towards the capture of that General, by the defeat of Col. Baum in the battle of lieuiiitiglon. In September he enlisted anew and larger force, and joined Gntes. In 177 ! he nerved in Khode Island, and in I7H) in New-Jersey. In 17hI he had Ihe command of the Northern department of Saratoga. AI Ihe close of Ihe war be bid adieu to public employment. In lfl Congress voted him n iM-nsion of sixly dollumn month. Iledicd Muy h, y-, aged !U years. The late Justice Woodbury, ol the Supreme Court of the 1'nited State, in reply lo UtRSl IP! liniM'-tinr, rgn.nv "i on General as follows: -Stark hud enjoyed more experience than any oilier oiliccr from New- II snip-hire, having been engaged in the previous French Wur, and in many Indian encounters. He was looked up to niot Tor advice and skill, but not forcournu'e alntve the rest, where all were brave, aud all true to the spirit of ihe times winch 'tried men s souls. General Stark hail been a hunter and un In dian liuhter: a prisoner among the French at Montreal, and ranom.il ny .ew nampsnires sending a public agent lor that purprse, whone journal, many yearn ago, I rend with great in terest in manuscript. I ne giory ue niierwarns acquired in winning the battle of Bennington. iiiMilli d Ihe hi if li eMwctalions formed it I rout him at Bunker Idll. Only a few years More his death, 1 lraelrd several miles lo sec aud con-vrraewllh him. and klloW lloW a hero looked. Picture to yourself a man under the middle size, with whitened locks, lient shoulders, on the verge of ninety, with a voice, however, still Ann, and w iib opinion very decisive and conversation terse, and you can see all that wan lefl of one of tbe niol daring chieflains of the day. The heart and -oul. rather than the stature, constitute llie essence ol such men. A controversy was then going on as to who was leader or commander in the buttle here. His memory was considered by bis family a not perfect, especially about" recent events. But he replied, without hesitation, when aked, that there was A TorcuiNfi ItKt.ic or I'ovi'Ktt.--In digging out the ruins of pnmeii. every turn of tbe spado brings up some relic of the nneient life, some witness ol imperial luxury. For fur the greater niirl or Un; rullcs have a merely curloo Interest: conunis-1 jjn.y tjflonje to arcliH-ology.and Hud appropriate resting places in Historical museums. Hut there are some exceptions. Here for In stance, the excavator drops, an uninvited guest, upon a banquet ; there be unexpedly obtrudes himself into a lomb. In one place be llnds a miser cowering on his heap ; another shows him Ikjiic of duueiug girls and broken Instruments ol music lying on the marble floor, in the midst ot Ihe painted chain l Kirs, Ituum, halls, columns, touutaiiiK umoug tne splendid evidences ol material wealth, he sometimes stumbles on a simple incident, a touching human story, such as strikes the imagination nnd suggests the mournful hi tercet of the great disaster, as the sudden sight of a wounded soldier conjures up the horrors of a Held of battle. Such, to our mind, is the Intent discovery of uie excavators in huh melancholy tieiu. it is a group of skeletons In Ihe act ol Might, nccompa-nied by a dog. There arc three human beings, one of them a vouug girl, will) gold rings and jewels stilt on her lingers. The fugitives hud a bug ot gold and silver with (hem, snatched up, no doubt, in haste and darkness. But the fivry llood was on their trocK, and vain their wealth, their flight the age of one, the youth of the oilier. The burning lava rolled above them and beyond, and the faithful dog turned back to share the fortunes of his mistress, dying at her feet. Keen by the light of such an incident, how vividly that night of horrors looms upon the senses 1 Does not the imagination picture the little group in their own bouse, by the side of their evening fountain languidly chattering over the duy's events and Ihe unusual heal? Does It not bear with them tho troubled swell of the waters in the bay ? see, as they do. how the night comes down in sudden strangeness, how the sky opens overhead and Haines break out, while cone, sand, and molten rocks coine pouring down? What movements, what emotions, wlml surprise I The scene grows darker every instant; the hollow monotonyof the hay is lifted Into yeBs, shrieks; the air grows thick and hot with Humes, and at the mountain's foot is heard the roll of (he liquid lava. Jewels, household goda, gold and silver coins, are snatched upon (lie instant. No time losuy farewell; darkness in front and lire lchind. they rush Into the streets; streets choked with falling houses and Hying citizens. How Hnd the way through passages w hich have no longer outlets T Conlusion.dnnger, darkness, uproar, everywhere; inn snouts oi parted irieuas. uie agony oi men proceed to usk, on what ground tho Emuirer expect Southern Whigs to Huslaln the present administration ? Ccrtniuly not for its support of river and barboriinprovcmenls anil other great commercial nnd fin tibial Interests, which Whigs North tiffd Soejh have held prominent in their creed ! Nay, is there one pi iuciplo which the Whigs of tho South hnve ever held In com- mou with the DiRiiuiouisls nnd Nullifies who now control the administration r,f the govern inont? Even on the subject of Shivery there hub strictly never been uny feeling of agreement, Tho repeal of the Missouri Compromise was 1 S) nipt ess In Cincinnati. j A special election for Councilman look place i in tho 9th Ward, in Cincinnati, on Monday,! which excited some Interest. A largo vote was cast, and tho result was, notwithstanding the Germans have a largo majority iu tho Ward, the election of Col. Joux Uouinsox, an old aud respectable citizen, by a very largo plurality. Tho vote Btootl Robinson, 214; Dr. Boyd, l it); L. hwartz, 115. There were one or two features about tbe election which are worthy of notice. Tho Times, from which wo glean these facts, remarks: "Though tho Germans hare a largo majority in the Ward, they determined to elect an American John nitcbcll and Archbishop Hughes John Mitch kix is an Irishman, aud may therefore speak of bis countrymen and the Jesuit Clergy without fear of being called a "Know Nothing' by the Northern press of the Slave Democracy. Hod a native uttered the hard things which will be found below against our Irish population who, in tho patriotic language of the pious editor of the Statesman, "dare to die of cholera," he would have been considered as no Democrat! Wo call the attention of the editor of the Statesman specially to that portion of tho following extract which declares the Cutholic Clergy to he the enemies of popular liberty. And why t-bould they not and nothing else. Dr. Boyd, who, we believe, is bo! They owe allegiance lo the worst foreign a Pennsylvania German, uud who, wilh other i despotism ou the face of the earth, the desnot- demagogues, attempted some time since to array t Um that tyranizes over conscience. Mr. Cox's tno uermans against our common schools lor me j own testimony, before ho beenmu a party hack, most seltlsh purposes, and who stood at the polls, b,rc evidence to the sumo ctfect. But to the the best part of the day, tlcchoiutrmg Jor him-1 extract from John Mitciikus letter, which wo selj, was budiy acfculed. this contirins, lo a j hope the pious prejudices of the Statetman cdi considerable extent, what we have heretofore j tor will allow him to read: asserted, that the mass or the Germans ol this I oi course, when any man has abuse to dis-clty, arc thoroughly imbued with the spirit oi l charge upon me. he takes euro (copying the Republicanism, and that once free from the des-! Kuglisb Press) to throw vitriol upon me ; and potism of party, and the influence of doma-1 lPyJ' "l" Abolition Press) to cast an 1 ,. 1 .;, . . , Alabama plantation In my teeth, lour Grace gogues, they will support American im-titutions u mtt oriKiim; aiia u-ing able to llnd nothing cn masse. The German demagogues, who have ; wwrao, you come out with old stories us fresh been endeavoring to Isnlute the Germans, of this as ever. Now does your Ginco seo unvthing so city from the American portion of the commu-1 horrible m a plantation or negroes? Are you nut anuiu unit iri ivnin, in-iniiin, moilllMUl ICS, yea, Popes, have held slaves? Vet it is not wonderful that yon should not covet a plantation in the South, mo long as you isissess that cnviuble piece of properly, tho Calvary Ceme tery, where, I we by the newspapers, -lis of Ita Bktoe, by .naki,,,! m.jut Mlwkt ..,.. Ibe j J jMar, l0 , wi(h " nily, aro now fust lot-in g their power and they know It, The Germans are beginning to think for llieiii selves, and act for themselves, uud we predict that thoso demagogues, who have been endeavoring to make themselves popular, over heut, it must immediately contract nud Is'cume liquid water; ami iur tuis reason a com pm-her robs heat from Iho vapor of u siiminer aiinos-phere nud causes It to bo deposited in a liquid form. Tho cold cnrlh, at night. Is thus supplied with dew. On the snme principle Subwullug prevents itroutu. ll opens tho suaxoit lor a circulation or 1 i.,ii r iii.,ri,n ii,i.,t..c i- r,. ,tr Thin y..l,.n from ilu eliinl,.!! n.i.iliin In i imv, u 'i.nao u- vm always cool, and hence it takes heat from the moisture of the air permeating it. It acts the part of the cold pitcher. This is the simple, natural reasons for tho whole action, and nny farmer in Ihe world may undemnnd it. But tins may tie called booh-tiirmnte, so I w ill give au example of its practical chui iicter. 1 yesterday visited the farm of Prof. Mupes.. The whole country about Newark wears a pecu liarly Diirnt-up appearance, nud the dust ou the roads was deep, even for New-Jersey. 1 had previously asserted lhat 1 knew Mnpc' farm lo ue exempt irom llie ravages ol drouth, nud truly I found my prediction fully realized. Not a single plant seemed suffering for want or moisture; and, with their roots deeply located iu the subsoil, they seemed fairly to snap their fingers at the cloudless sky, and rather lo rail at old Sol for trying lo interfere with their private al lium. One crop of com deserves csnecinl notice, from its nlu-olutc iiingiiiliceiicu. Notwithstanding the fact that it is growing on the north western slope ol a hill, uud bus not been visited Throiiuli the corrupt imr Inll'H-nec of its patron- uj nun un livens, juv u ninims, u)Ti imj r- UKin the people s KcprcHoutaiivus, trccdom gardlcsB of all untoward eireunitaiices ; iunl, ul- lllH tat.n Grayed. It must Ih- overwhelmed at though, from its location and unluvorablu sea-1 ,,vm. ,,;! ignominious defeat. We can-sou, one would think forty bushels per acre a ! llol ;u,iru. h constitutional term oi office, but large yield, it will, without doubt, bo nearer) Wl, ,, Htrlktt down its allies in every State, one hundred bushels per acre. Here is an in- district nud county. It must have no props iu stance where truly scientific knowledge has reu- tIL. states upon which lo lean for the support of dered its possessor entirely independent of 1h . its iuiquitiius policy. No man should lie elected greatest drawback to ordinary success, and eiia-1 1 responsible uAlce Governor. Memlwr of t,Vn- imil nun kj mini, ginm .lin id a nail w muii, greSS, KCprcSCIllatlVC W llOM' rellltlOHS Ol IrlelUl- II this Is not practical jarmmg. I would nk ,jn nml uii,uloe with Ihe National A dm mist ru-r..n . r n. l c.iiw.- i,.n i . . ... . . . liliunisin" which the Dkihiotiists raiecd ugainst the men North who resisted tho outrage. And it would seem from the dally language of the Nullification press, that that is now their main reliance for forcing the Southern Whigs Into harinoniotiK action wilh the patriotic udiuiiiis- Will it suc ceed ' If the Whigs South are tillable to act with Northern Whigs, neither enn they net wilh Nulliiiers nnd Dir-unionlsts. They are bound lo maintain their distinctive organisation, or make the support and bprend of slavery the sole article of their creed. We of the Free Slates will ebvc the Union and the Constitution from Ihe destruction which awaits tho triumph of the Nullillers; the Whigs of the South inu4 save themselves as liest they may. Their nominal leaders in Congress have betrayed them ; let them I e careful how tliey follow such destructive lead. Here follows the extract from Mr. Wllmot's address, which the Einuirrr think ntlordt good reasons for Southern Whigs lo support the present corrupt administration. Logical, very 1 " The first blow mti'd lie alined for the overthrow of the present National Administration the mere tool mid puppet of llie slave power. German English schools will soon meet with the fate of Dr. Boyd. The Lies of a Demagogue Dr. Omm feels himself cornered, and is trying Grace joy. I thai) lie almost tempted, instead of n well-stocked plantation in Alabama, to wish lor a wcii-pepicu gravc-yard on bong iNluud. "Mr. Mitchell turns up,' you say'uslhe apol ogist of the scurvy tricks which bis associates played, whether in Conciliation Hall, or at to escape the dilemma which bis course on the Slicvegamon, after his taking leave of thecoun repeal of tho Missouri Compromise has involved him in. On the 3d of April Inst, our German fellow-citizens of this city held a meeting to denounce Ihe Nebraska swindle, when the following resolutions among others were passed : " Hesotval, That wo regard the Nebraska bill as a direct uttack upon the Missouri Compromise, and as a gross violation of the sacred rights of the free States. " Jlmohid. That we demand of our Representative in the popular branch of Congress, to vote aguitist the passage of tiie bill in the House ; and that In case he should side with its friends, bo will low our vote and support in the future," Iu the latter part of April, Olds was at homo, nnd iu a speech at Circleviile denied having re. ecieed the resolution, although tw o copies had Ir-cu mailed to him. Bill he was then advised of their character, to say the least, and, notwithstanding, he returned to Washington and voted for Ihe swindle. The tUrmans do not now at-tind the Doctor's meetings .' We shall try and republish the proceedings in full ol Ihe meeting of the 3d or April. some follower of Iho gniud-falhcr system to Icll . what is. Let Ihe devotee of national growth usk him self which will produce tho greatest lteuetlt to tho country, doubling our commerce, or Inducing every farmer lo use the suluoil plow and drnining tile. Gkouok E. W.utui.sn, Jit. New lnrk, Aug. 41h, IK(. Protecting the 1 eachi yct l0d himself in pariv nlliatico with the pres- The following communication, which uppeured ; cut Administration, lie en mud be trmttd ; In a late number of the New England Fanner, 1 ,nl no mm- a he in trmtid so nurr will the conlirm the opinion which we have repeutcdly p,ople and tlnir rinhls again be bctrayid.-ex pressed, that iu nearly every country in the iiK. tiiun who will not face in open and munly Northern States, crops of cacliCK may be sue-1 resistance the aggressions of the slave power f-cessfully raised, by selecting a proper site, and ennuot Ih- relied upon lo do so on the oc-giving proper treatment. Shortening in the j easjon of n future provocation, lie is hopelessly trees, so as to keep the h'-uds iu n small, com-1 rottenunsound to Ihe core, and will sucrlllce pact, but not crowded head, would greatly fiieil- ),; nmiiti 's highest hi!i re-t and glory for some uuie itnuer hiucimiiii, ihjsmh-h nopiutiOK toe paltry party CollMUerutlons. ff" We see by lute foreign items thai Mr. Guk'ioky M. WoitTAiiKT, a unlive of Beyrool, In Syria, bun ln-eu addressing a lurge meeting in Glasgow, Scotland, on his favorite project of evangelizing Syria. Wortnlet visited this country In 1kV', und tiaveied widely lecturing on (he habits and character of his people. We tion are open to suspicion. We mut accept of j h''rd Win In November of that year on several nothing in ihe candidates presented lor our suf-, occasions, and from some intercourse with the frages short of undisguised hostility lo the ultra young limn was (.truck wilh his earnest zeal on Pro-Slavery power ut Washington iything tll0 (J t ( thrlstiani7.ing his native land, short ot this is lolly. Idle, trilling, shilly-shally ' , . 8 . . nonsense ; nud designed in the end to lean uie --n - - people step by slep into acquiescence In the pol- favor, as a vote of Ihanks was tendered him, and icy of slavery. Let no candidate pretend to : a committee appointed to consider in what way the work of evangelization in Syria could be best promoted. ges of evergreen boughs, and these would doubt less prove very eltieient. uud would Iri easily applied in such dislriels us uro largely supplied wilh pine, hemlock, or cedar forest trees. Coun try t. vntl, man Thf. Cnnn:.. The news from the scut of war leaves no doubt about the determination of tho allied (towers lo luvudi-tbc Crimea. This U Iho first olleii-ive mcusure of any real InilKtrliuice Mknsim. Eiitoiw: In answer to au inquiry in thai has Itcen undertaken by the allies since the your last week's paper, whether trial has been i commencement of hostilities. The only point made by any one iu protecting the peach. I am j l)U ,, peninsula whose defences will ofler any happy to say 1 have tried it with comp ete sue-, . . . Scmst(im, .,,.. h Kiiiks. This seems lo bo llie season of destructive tires. In uddition to the lire In Troy, N. V., we have now to mention a terrible fire at Milwnukic, on the UMb Inst., by which, twenty- live to thirty buildings were destroyed, many of them among the most suMnntial brick buildings in the city. Loss estimated at .'iPil.Ddtl dollars. The Insurance companies suffer largely as usual. The office of the Daily Wisconsin was destroyed, with loss of a large portion of Us type and ull its presses, steam-engine, Ac. A tire at Waldohoro', Maine, destroyed about hull the town, on the Will iust. The loss Is estimated at ?.'i(),0(io dollars. While the tiro was ruglug at Milwaukle, a de spatch was received from Kenosha, asking for try. ' Yes, Bishop, I shall never cease to le proud that I had such associates. They failed; and therefore have forfeited all claim to your (i race's sympathy: but for the sako of arousing uie oor uowu-iroodcii starving people to one munly clfort for Hie, and land and the liberty lo live on their own soil, those associates of mine, risked their lives, and during many duys sought au opportunity of throwing them away. In vain: they were met at nil points by thu Catholic priests, who drew oil" the jieople as they were assembling round O'Brien, nnd denounced ugainst them the vengeance of Heaven. Mr. O'Brien himself has told me tlmt men came to him while he was out on his noble but vninmission- came to him shedding tears of bitter rage nnd disappointment, declaring that they wished lo fight with him for their country: "and God knew they little valued their lives' but there was his reverence standing by, and eternal damnation was the mildest threat ho made them "Aud what were they to do, God help them!" Ves, Bishop, if that insurrection failed, and without so much as a blow struck, the failure Is due, 'not lo cowardice or faithlessness on the part of those you call "Young Irelnnders," but to the treachery and iiieuuuess of the Irish Catholic priests. But desire tho fact to Ih noted, that In all the short popular sovereignties of '4K, the people everywhere. Cutholic and Protestant, before all things, almlished every disability and penally for religion. Other forms of tyranny, tho tyranny of money, tbe tyranny of mobs, muy arise in these latter days; but of that peculiar oppression, religious persecution, l be whole world is sick, except the clergy. Hereby it may lie seen how averse from the Idea of religious persecution the Irish Cutholic laity must lie like all other liuty. .Maxims of religious freedom have been familiar In their mouths for ages; nud, although I do not ut-bold O'Coimell in ull things. 1 take him in Ibis matter as a tyjic nnd representative of the Irish nation. Did you ever sec, In any sH-cch or writing of Daniel O'Connell, any allusion, nd-umbrntion, or hint of possible future, or puulo- Hsl in lure penalties lor conscience sake: Are not his sH.-echcs, for forty years, full of the pluinest, broadest, lxddest assertion of the perfect right ol all men to worship as they please! Therefore, 1 tell you. Bishop, that nothing can so grossly outrago Iho feelings, or tend to damage thu civil position of your countrymen (but I beg pardon your Grace, I lielicve. Is a Welshman) of the froth In America, as the teachings of Iho Catholic press, especially your Grace's organ and Dr. Brownsou's Review, in favor or Iho intolerant despotisms of Euroe. If half the nations of the earth must lie held iu civil bondage forever; If Democratic freedom itself Is lo tie oM'iily denounced in Ihe old world, and undermined and sneered at in Ihe new; if Amerieun Repaid! Main In Washbiglon, Cormpomlence uf thf S, Y. Courier ft Knuuircr. Wasiiinoton, Aug. 21. 1 learn from an authentic and authoritative source, that an important correspondence has taken place between Mr. Buchanan and Lord Clarendon, relative to the port of Sun Juan and the Mosquito protectorate. Mr. Buchanan took early occasion, after ontering on his mission, to l li tor m thu Secretary tor Foreign Atluirs that this government desired to resume nud bring to a conclusion all questions respecting Central America which were pending when Mr. Everett retired from Ihe Stato Dcpurtmcnl on the tth oi .Murcn, lNi.t. lie stated llie views aim ex-pectutious of his government at sumo length. Lord Clarendon replied iu n statement embody ing the claims of (treat Britain, and advancing on her part pretensions which were supposed lo havo lsjcn yielded by the Clayton and Bulwcr convention oi inoo. ir. uuciianun rejoined with a counter statement. In which be reviewed the controversy from its commencement, and stated with convincing strength and argument, the position and rights of the United Mates. He declared In explicit term, that tne Ameri can government coukl not recognise any Indian clnim to territorial jurisdiction over any part of this continent, and, therefore, could not admit the validity of uny protectorate or guarantee oi sucn claims, mis communication is understood to comprise the ultimatum of our govern ment on the Central American question, ami is iH'lieved to require, not only the abandonment of the protectorate over the Mosquito coasts, but in rL'iuiijiiiiiiiiM'ii! in Kciueuieui ut ui m-i-1 ize, and the discontinuance of Iho colony or the Bay of Islands, on tho coast of Honduras, as formed in in:i. The rejoinder to this significant Stale paper has not been received, and probably none will bo given. Though on the side of the British Cabinet tho correspondence aiqwars to be conducted by Lord Clarendon, it Is undoubtedly managed ny ioru ruimerstou, llie Home sec retary. ineucspaich which elicited Mr. U. s second communication was, it now appears, the proxi- innie cause oi tne ooinimrdtneni nud miming oi Grey tow n. Tbe Indisposition of the British gov ernment to meet the question determined ours to act, aim a resolution was formed to smoke and burn all foreign protecting powers out of Central America. Thedestruction of Grey town was but tbo beginning, and It is expected that Iho same extreme policy will, within the ensuing six mouths, secure the evacuation of lilew-llelds and Belize. England in now engaged In a conflict with Russia which ubsorlis most of her available power and resources, but were she disengaged from that struggle there can bo no doubt that the acts and intentions of this Government would be held good cause of war. Tho mere professions or belligerency indulged in by President Polk pending tho Oregon dispute, produced preparations for wnr on a ciirautic scale. The positive acts of hostility committed by the present administration, und so unmistakc-ably avowed by the present olllcial organ, must lead lo important consequences. A few days since I questioned the correctness of (he rumor regarding the correspondence described above, hut the in forma tion received today leaves me no doubt of its accuracy. INSPECTOR. -.k - ; .1, . 1 ..I , , i. :. Ilcutlous for land defence may now he. does not I Mp agnii.st the ravages of a destructive fire coldest weather. This place is situated one de- sena to ! well uudersbssl. Two years ago j tbfn raging at that plncc. Tho Ins at Kenosha grec north of Portland, in the n lute Mountain ibey were descrilwd by au English traveler as "u stuieu, mil is said lo no large. r gioo, nimio m i. .ou ..... . )ut , l; i,t U WW uvidcilt tllllt lie hud Hot Tim prevalent idea that extreme cold alone w il kill the pcitch, I Isdievc must ls abandoned: nr rather, the Idea that when Ihe thermometer Is 'Tl 1 '" i ... , , ,,., ,.. I- .,,, strained in his movements from a wuut of leave , .'! After all tho ellbrt made by Dr. Omm Cadet Life. From an article on " West Point aud Cadet Life," in tho August number of Putnam's Magazine, we extract a passage relative to appointments, which may be useful to young aspiring genius. We hare known more than ono smart young gentleman give way More tbe ordeal of initiation and the first year's drill : " How can I Income a Cadet!" Is a question very prone lo rise in a "young American's mind when stirred by life and feathers. Briefly thus. For earh Congressional District one Cadet is ul lowed, whose appointment is pratically in the gift of the Representative iu Congress from that District. Contingeuces considered, a vacancy oceurslsuit once in three years for each district. So, querist, your apjHiinlmonl depends lirsl, on there being a vacancy for your District, and secondly, on your worthy or unworthy M. C, The President makes twelve appointments at large each yenr, but as you value your cacc of mind, do not hope lo lie one of his elect. And lie not over-sanguine on any score, for it Is said that during the Mexican war, nearly ten thousand applications were made during a single year, if 1 rememlwr correctly. ApHiinlmeiits all come from the Sccrelury of War, to whom a formal application should be made ; but your M. C. really selects for appointment. Now a far more vita) queMion for you lo consider is whether you areyir to be appointed. Of ninety-six Cadets appointed In the class of 1MIM, only twenty-live graduated, anil generally only from a hull to a third of those first appointed, " ddf the Cadet to don the Brevet. The surgeon n examination Italian Opkiu is Evulanp. The first Italian Opera ever performed in Eugluud, was produced January .'ih, Di7l, under the auspices of Catherine of Braguti.a, (tjuceii of Charles II.,) whose devotion lo that style of music and exclusive patronuge of foreign mu-iciunx. did not increase her popularity iu Englund. The divine compo-sitidiisof I'urcell were then considered tbe per- lecliou ot melody, and were more in unison with uuliuiml taste than the arlilk ial uud elnliorato stylo which has since been permitted to supersede the Inspirations of nutivo latent. It was, however, long ere an English audience learned 10 reli-li the Italian Opera, much less to give it the preference over llie masques of lieu. Jouson and Milton, and the operas of Dryden. combining, as they did, tho simple sublimity of the GreeK tragedy with the enchantment of vocal poetry nnd instrumental music. It win; not easy to persuade the publie in tho.-c days tlmt a combination of incomprehensible sounds how ever harmonious they might bo, were capable of exciting feelings of admiration and delimit, like those with which they listened to the national opera of .Irthur, where Dryden'i-numbers are wedded to Purecll's melodies, compelling British hearts to thrill impulsively when the stormy deliunce of tho battlf-chorus oi the Saxons is uiiMvercd by the spirit-stirring air of Hi Hon, Strike Home. Mrs. Strickland's tuetim of England. Tuv: Mixsksota Lami Fhaup. A Minnesota paper thus pluinly speaks of the late fraud perpetrated by the Clerk of the House of Itepi esen-tut i ves in altering un important w ord iu the Alin-ucHdu laud bill. ' Since the passage of the bill, wo have heard 11 whisncml mining knowing ones, (lint It wok 'ull right' that the Iriciidi of tho lute bill had been 'sold,' and the Hist operators would lake the luuds under last winter's uct of our Legislature. I'ntil this recent exposure, however, we little understood the nature of the garni that had been played. Wc little dreamed that the rapacious harpies and speculators who lulorcdso strenuously lust winter lor ihe pussugo of un act by which they should make their fortune at the expense of the territory, would descend to such despicably low cunning and meanness such treacherous, Indian warlare us lo sneak into the Clerk's room ui.d niter au engrossed bill, giving the charter lo parlies for whom it was uever intended. If we ever entertained uny double altout tho corrupt menus used to puss the charter thro' our Legislature, this Huishing stroke bus removed them ull.'1 The first gold mine discovered and worked iu the United States was the " Rcid mine," in Ca-liarras county, North Carolina. It was brought lo light by the discovery, iu a brook, of a seventeen pound lump uf pure gold, by a little son of John Reid (tho proprietor of the tract), while engaged one Sunday in shooling tl-li with a bow uud arrow. This was In the year 17!''J. It was not, however, until several years afterwards that the lump was known to be gold, tho boy's father having kept it meanwhile, on account ol its weight, ns a good nud curious looking Mono which would keep his cabin door open. Wheu informed ut length that it was gold, und asked tils price lor It, lie coiu'luoi U lo sell il lor tte.oo. He was ono of the Hessian soldiers who were sold by their " noble prince" to England, lo light the American!' in the Revolutionary war, and one would naturally suppose lhat he ought to have known the value of gold, if uny ono did. Hartford Tunes, That's tiik Tai.k.A ' Nebraska Democrat '' writes a moving appeal to Father Sax ton, of thu Canton Hepositary, the oldest editor in the State, urging him to keep up tho Whig organization ol Stark county. The old veteran replies thus: Our correspondent ennnot expect from us any I UKsisuuice. iu uie prnjeei ue suggeis we repudi ate it entirely, tie nave piiiuii uie nun started ut Columbus on the Lllh of July, und shall strain every nerve to perfect and carry out thu plan there devised, to reform the corruption ami ex-Iruvngniicc of our National, Slulo aud County Governments, and to stop Slave aggressions. Wu unite wilh nil good men, whether Whig, Democrat, Freesoil, or Know Nothing, to t licet these great and desirable reforms. When we reflect that during tho administration of John Q. Adnms tho expenditures were l2,(HKi.ti00 now$f-il,l)U0,-ooi) w hull tin; expenses of the Stale of Ohio have lieen trebled within a few years and wheu Iho taxes coil-clod in Stark county havo risen from nlsuit S.ono lo over SliiO.oitfi, tve think every honest man must think reform Is much needed ; indeed ulmidutely essential totin-Interests of every citizen. Come join us iu effecting these reforms. 12 deirrees In-low zero il is fatal; I havecoulen- ' lo make exploration. Time enough has elutwed ded for several years, thai It is not so much the since the commencement of Ihe war to make the extreme colds us the strong winds, pellingsleel I imurd delenees correspond iu some degree and snow, nud sudden changes of temperature ... ,. .. . , . , ,, . that ailed the iM-ueh. We hud the thermometer I w,,u ,1U Vi&m Aw ' "Irengll. seaward, once last winter at :U degrees, aud at severul I The following brief dcNrnplion ol the Crimea times from i down to that extreme degree of lb taken from un article iu the Jniirnal of Coin-cold, and yet our peach trees that were protected merer, mw jui l at this time will Ik-read with ny matting or nr nougnswere not injured at an. inturcist : Mv practice is this: Lato in the full I draw ,,.'., , . , , , , ., the limbs of the tree together, ami put round L '"' nn,i'a if,,l" I'""""'' K1'1 some mailing, a single fold will answer, drive a wfll ling a greater va- ntake down by the side of the tree und fasten r!p ,,llU,,r'11 "' niiy tbe tree to it. I Ino mm. can protect from one to ol ".'l- Y" " i... i !.. ...... ' t) i.i i. . of it are wa-hed by the Black r-cn.nnd the North- ken not lo unwrap too early iu the spring, so us l V? UK " " ' , "l ! with (he aid of all Ihosc, there were not enough expose the trnit huds lo the lulu Host. , ", '...nil,, , n ......mrv t ,...d de-1 drummed up lo half fill the City Hall I 1 also protected a locust Iree in the wunewnv, l,rmill c,,n m," "T ' l!,,lin.,r.v Ll V' Ul ! 1 1 simply by lashing a few fir houghs to the north-' P1' ,. " 1 " '"" ""ni-my west side ol the tree, it now iooks as origin as though it w ere growing in the latitude or Phila- H 'tasrl, to get up a demonstration In favor of the Nebraska iniquity on Saturday night last, it resulted in a failure. It is true, the Penitentia ry was represented by all who were "lying around loose ' ubuul that institution. The new State House Managers showed bow deeply they were interested by sending their contractors, sujifrinleiuleiits, foremen, ic. The long, low range of State buildings, tumid out well for mi ml tors, and the bangers on about Ihe charitable Institutions of the Stale, were not behind iu shewing (heir adherence to the party that fur nishes them with breud and butler. And yet, MAi.uuiAN'ri ToMti. Poor Mallbran, ono of the few theatrical women one takes an interest in sleeps at Lacken. cbue to Brussels, In (lie prettl est ciiurcn-vnrii in iteicium ; jihi uie green. ou nr. tranquil place that a church-yard shonM Iter grave ts covered hv un anomalous sort building, that would look like a h'.i tinner house If it had open windows. Excepting nothing from the in i graceful iiess of the exterior, you are startled when you look through a small aperture in the iron door and lind Iho inner gloom lighted up by a white marble Maine the figure, as of un ascending angel, so spiritually lair you might take it for a ision. The bare foot is just parting from tho earth : the rlx- seem nlrniuy to have liegun lo lloat, and the head nnd fn now in tbe full light under (lie glazed roof, are steeped iu golden glow troui the loyt level rays of (ho selling sun. Seen thus, the Usly mouldering in the dust, the spiritual part ulready in the light, and almost iu the presence of God, then- seems no long transition , no floating upward and on- irar.1 i.uyl nl !- tlm lu-t tm.,-1, ..C h ofU'nsiguiliesfXfM-ifforadozenneopfiyten,an.l!thL, ,wt ,,linM,w ,tf hlltM r Mw ni-oeauiing asmuny mora exhibit such idosyiicracies in read- r..n i,,, .,i fc.,ti-!,. ,i i.,.,-,-, ,.r i- n.i it... r,iimii ins, writing, orthography and arithmetic, that i .,.. tt.,.1 ,n. ,,u i..,-.i i; Irish are to lie set against each other in deadly ,ht' unsyuipalhiziiig Aciwlemic Board quietly i ' 1 ... , strife ; and all because Iho PoM- rules, and rules I mimd Ihe.n back to citizenship. Then comes Amxs I ..iH:i:uin.--About a year and a l,llv twit nrineitinlitv In Ititlv Iip .orr(l ! Iho Januury examination, when the algebraic I ''"ce, some jhtsoim hi searching at West lhat the Irish here will liegin to cum the Pope-, I wwks are consigned in rearful nunilwr, to the ; M. fonl. Passaic county f-r Iron, rame achsi a ...i i,i- .ir- i,;. i,. ..,,..,! Parental underwriters. So too in June and Jan- '"-U or clay, wilh the nature ol which they were j.v.i.i ,v .... mv iiriwnmni, iuu uinn- helmed, the mul-oilapted, are singled out from among their stouter fellows, and with stern justice are hunMied from sens loo rough lor them. The martial aspirant should consider these things Ik-fore becoming a Cadet, and remembering well lhat Cadet-hip is no mere holiday training, no refined peacock ism, but a fouryeurs of discipline lo isMiy, mind nnd Heart, severer hv fur than lions, conclaves, colleges, and Ihe rest of the clerical upparatnn." (It'll F'oukiuj' Hklations. It would seem by a communication from Iho Washington correspondent of Ihe N. York Courier and Enquirer, which wc give in another column, that tho administration Is seeking to complicate our foreign , ., r ... . ,i, ,. f Riiroiiicrcoocu- oiiuicourBCinuuriawiinvoivcH. relations as a means or gett ng out of the very , J(iJ .f MM(jnent rf v manliyi C)H1I. discml.ta.de imsitlon In which it has placed it- n(tc lrttlntly to endure present trial for future elf by the destruction of Greytown. There g1Ml. and alsnve all. If an onlerly zeal fur intel- really was no justitluble causa for the wanton ' lectiml culture aud hanlihotnl are living facts In attack on now to hung this petty pic assumed Insult to Ihe apology for a public rep resentative. Borland, ou Ihe non-intervention I Bill dis'triiic of Mr. Monroe, in a (etiiful attempt to j The smuggler and patriot, whose exploits on convert the ridiculous Into tbo sublime. In 1 i ihe m. Lawrence and in um intra- s no justifiable cause Tor the wanton ' lectiml cullure ana hanliliotnl are living lacls in ? riwiue, i-nKt.voo.vin this neutral town, and tho attempt ! nalnro, tlwri I know not how else a youth j M' Ihe geological survey, , ,., . 1M , - ,. fl ,rt can Ikcoiuc so iiiurh a man, as by a nest Point kiml near l tniadeipuia. ing this petty piece of revenge for the 1)iucUlol 1 th- clay is alumina mIIci no rominnuder of all Ihe Amvrican troops on i ,(.. Mir..,.,n il.,.,i,.h if. hiul i this liuni rouiihl day. and that most of the otli- L.n i i,t. ,ii., l.il.l Mint ft rnrd eers who conducted men there, all Mng moveil ' ,iri,,-U ,l,,un l.v r 1 1 ; onlnn.i..- r.n- tnidnes. went from our heart t ners. i "j " r"- - - ami uespuir uncnaiued; nere, penury ciuitumg Wo came back Ihe next day. hut we did nol ; end. fought Iho common enemy much as they u ctLnmi .p. tncre K,ittrtiy leeding on see her. Morning aud evening passed, and she deemcnl best, each acting pretty much on I Us llital meal, ami phrcniy HtrikinR In (he dark wu not there ; and then wc ihoughl, yes wc felt, own book. Tbe ashe ol the noble veteran now t0 rorC8tull death. Through all fancy hears the that she had gone to the country ; perhaps, jusi j weep uimer "j young gin s screams; iuu lire is on iter jewel leu del oh ia. lean seo iid reason why peaches cannot he raised in nny part of Maine, simply Iiy protecting them iu ibis way. It may not lie known lo all of your readers l lint although wc live so far to the North, Ihe ground is rarely frozen to any extent in winter, I he early snows prevent this, j so mat It is only uie top oi siieii trees uiut need special protection. It is iiwle-w to attempt the cultivation of thu peach in this State without some kind ol protect ion; Ihey muy survive one, two or even three winters, should they 13 mild, but the fourth may kill (hem ull down. 1 can see no reason why tho tender varieties of dwarf penrs nud pimmt may not bo protected iu the same way, and ihus largely increase our to Ihe evil liilluenee of Hussiau rule. So far I 1 "regnu Statomtm gives encouraging from keeping puce wilh the progress til the age, 'prospects for the farmer. The new mountain thoCriiueuhussadlyreirogrnded. Ib-r products rilad will soon lie completed, und no doubt n grenl tide of emigration follow-. It In remarkable how even is the range of the are shinned otf in considerable oitantilics lo Ilu: sia, much of them extorted from her In return h,r lln. Ciir'a nri,frrtt,t, The fertililv uf winie parts or Ihe Crimea Is so great, that hcirrul ul i thermometer. In the first fortnight or July, at the most valuable of tbo fruits of Ihe earth ran o o'clock, it vuried only a degree or twin-about tie cultivated, Willi nut sligm uusir, pi uie great- t 1 nt noon there wa more varintioii-7 1 tort I est perfection, aud loan astonishing extent of Increase. This was known to the ancient Greeks, and was taken advantage of by Greece under her system of colonization. Six centuries Itefore tho Christian ru. ihey hnd begun lo form colonies on Ihe Northern shores of Asia Minor; and we learn from Mralsi, and other writers of antiquity, that Ihey pre- erreu nils HHliHfnin, noiil iistuminiinin niuiij then, wan sitting wilh lather and mother under ! ial gratitude, on bis farm, on l ho bnuks of the the shade ol just such a group of fragment cc- j Merrimack, in sight or the hill of Amoskeag. darn, on jnnt such a rock, near just such a spring where he scared salmon in bis youth, and near i had sal by two days rj. lore.with one ot " wauuim waiinum-a ... .-earest Utile girls in ihe world, wbib- other , be trped beaver in malurer life. ', were enjoying an we I the dearest I little irirls. more inclined to play, life with high glee all around. Tim Lit rus Out Max. There bo goes trit- We were almost sure our surmise was Iruo. ping along through tho rain, as If be were ry-brcausr the cart stood Idle In Ihe slreel ; 1ml it (n(r ,IMK,. tin- drops, as spry as a cricket. A only stood so two days, and then we saw old lit :!, sin -it, crablied old man. dressed in an old-Dobbin backing out of bis oven ami coining , ta,,iii, . suit, wilh abroad-brimmed hat cot-down Ihe alkv. and walking In between the l iwil wiili shinlntr-ular.rd or India-rublier cloth : shafts or Hit carl by the pump. It was an old, I (inl (;rRt Tlrliuni 1 He la over eighty. familiar sight, and we really tell comfortable lo ; ,i y,q troubles Ihe young woman by his see il airain. We hod iust taken a cold bath, as : .i.iP ' heallbv. stool, blooming -It troubles her we always do at six o'clock every morning, aud lt keep up with him. Now Ihey start to crow that mode us In a mood t be comftu table with tno street the sea of mud crowded with all outside Inlluencen. There was one thing, j h,)m., carts and carriages. The lady is timid though, that detracted a Utile from our comlort. I the old man rushes ahead then he turns back. We Ihouirht the carman's eyes looked a little nU forward, and stretches out bin long arms unusually red, and there was less vigor In his riuxingly towards bin young wife -for the lady slop than ought lo follow two days' recreation hid m.w bride and of course she scir.es hold In ihe country ; and we emild not help thinking 0f tl(.m Rm comes on. Now they are safe oh that he had done nhnt a million others of his i tho other side, burning along the sidewalk co-countmnen had done upon Ike same occasion, j ty ingetherlhe old man cheerful and bright, Just " in honor of Iho day "got drunk. How : t', young wife robust and fresh as a rosebud we did wrong that man. After he was all ready tnr.y trip along lovingly together. Hastily they to start, he got down and went back and looked inril n . rig,t HtH enter a More of Sunday-up tbe court, as though be bad forgotten some- ( -hod IsM'ks. or somelhing of that kind, thing, or expected lo see somebody running Yes, that In old Grant Thorburu--onco Ihe dow n. Why did not somebody come 1 Hal nho i rimiiiiiliince and friend of Thomas Paine, tho did not, and he started away, looking back as he Celeliratil inlidel, but always the very antipodes went around the corner 1 out no loving giance ( nf 'Hn(. (,u the wiliirct ol religion. net his : no kins flew from a waving hand, like I iiP landed in this country, we Mlcvo, with an electric Hh to hi heart. W hat could It , onT u,m( CcnU In his pocket. Me bus been no-tnesn ! Ah, thought ws, he lias Wt them iu the 1 ted and succrhsful as a seedsman ; has written country. Gmmlps fell so In love wilh ihe litllt ,u ,iw n autobiography ; has published much un-city girl thai be must have her stay a while j ,ier the signature of' Laura T-sId ; bos lately with him ; and grandma thinks it must Im loo . nt.( a MT, (n dm Custom House, from which hot for the TMhy In Ihe ctiy, ami mamma a nraim ( h w as dischargtl lor carrying a lamp in a tor- Will be all the belter lor a wee mere. luxuries. A little pain- must 1-c taken even with 1 ytccmcnis to n.u is r.ai enierpnse, w m-ma the apple ireo to inuKc it uiirisn. I navn known 1 """' ''.,, , ' ; persons object to eullivaie the IssMia grnp All true, vet all false. It was so true It ser- fed for a lull of any anxiety In our mind until Saturday, and then nnmetsnly at our house wanted a cart, and called hiin of tho opposite alley. While be was waiting, we said we supposed ho went to the country to enjoy Ihe Eourlh ofJuly.'' " No ; It was a day of little enjoyment to me." " Were you sick ! ' " No," There was a strange suspicion coming over us. We dreaded to ask, lor fear It was true, hut could not turn away, and so wa said : " And your linle girl!" "She Is gone. Sir. ' "To Ihe country V " Yea." We breathed freer, until he addsd : " Yes ; kIm baa gone to the country to Greenwood t" "And lira little oneT" " It went with her. We could not part Ihem. Her last words wre. 'Oh, lake good care of Ihe baby till 1 come for (t. It won't be long. Good hytl' Hh dia at evening , she came for ber ' pt at dawn, and wt laid It upon her breast, and carried them both away to-relher. You iTe missed her. too, 1 have often noticed you looking at us. But she la gone now." " And the mother T" . , JW 00 hUow, I fear, and then I shall bidden place ; and. withal. has recently taken to himself a lliint. or a louriti wile hand. No time lor thought, no pause; Ihe Itood rolls on, and wisdom, beauty, ago and youth, with all Ihe stories of their love, their noen, their rank, wealth and greatness, all the once allluent life, are gone forever. When unearthed alter many years, the liaiue- Icks group has no other InijMirtance to mankind thnn as it may "serve to point a moral or adorn a laic.'' A French Kenan nt Heme She helps lo cook Ihe dinner she hasItought--for servants uro w asteful w ith charcoal, and she knows to an Inch how little she can use. In thai marvellous place, a Kronen kitchen where two or three little holes in a stove, cook such delicate tliabes aud perform such culinary feats as our great roaring giants of coal fires have no conception of sho Hits about like a fairy, crea ting magical messes nut oi raw muieriui oi tne most ordinary description. She mixes up the milk and eggs thai make Iho foundation ol the soupe a IWilo, if It he meagre duy. This sor rel soup In a great favorite in economical households, and is vaunted as being highly ratraii h-ihsant for Ihe blots! indeed, ono ol tbe most refreshing things you can take next to a tissane of rime flowers. She mixes the salad oil, suit and M'pper are all nbe puts Into it ; she fries the poialoe cnips, or peeps inio uie pot ot nancou, or sees that thu spinuch is cleun and Ihe asparagus properly liollcd. Aud then she turns lo Ihe plal sue re or sweet dish. If she have one for dinnerthe rhiz and rliuin, or Ihe oeufs a la neige or the crcme a la van i He all simple enough or cheap, and not uuwiltingly rejected if procrly made. In fact, our friend does tho work ol a bead cook, the servant doing the dirty work. Yes, though o lady born and bred, rellued, elegant and agreeable In society, a belle In her way, yet she does not think It beneath her dig nity lo lighten the household cxitcusc by iirac- llow few ol us will lite to see Ihe years which I tlcal economy and activity. Tno dinner of a he ban seen I All, perhsits, expect to do so. Kreneh family Is cheap and simple. There is nl-llut. one bv one we shall le summoned to Ihe i ways soup, the meat ol the stew pan sometimes. 11 not striei in cxK!iiuiiure, auotiier piniv oi meat generally two vegetables dressed and si in pi v lecuu:o Ihey must lie protected thr person ought not lo pos told that tho vino gli tho winter; such a ss many comforts. M. T. TRUK, Bktiiki., Maine, May 27, 10 1. O.VK OK TIIK l;XlKllTAKt;i: respouileiit comiuunicute A New Vork cor- the following hard was found lo yield a return of lilt v times ilu seed. At one time, Indeed, it was cmr uli nil tho granary of Greece, especially of Alliens, whose territory, being nf small cxlcnt, and of indifferent fertility, wo unable to iimiiiluiii its lurge population by its own pnsluce. There is a deep classical interest in this subject.Ih-iuns-thenes bos, more than once, bad hi eloquence excited by ll. Besides breadstuff's, it still ex ports hides, morocco and oilier tine leatln cades of the Thousand Islands, made him fa mous during the rcMlion in Canada, some sev- unacquainted. A svicntihV invent tuition fms revealed the I not that it is Kuoliu, un oce-diugly valuable porcelain clay, quite scarce. It can boused in the mauiil'acturu of porcelain ware, tiles, lire brick, the ghiingofiMrdsnup, puint, Ac. Tho dep.Hite nt West Millopl s of tho purest kind: it is of vwrious colors, white, red, chocolate, and others. Tim Hirvelain maiiufac-tured from il will Ik? equal, it is ihuuglit, to Iho ln's-t Kreneh. The depiwii is large, und u company ol eapltnli-l" Is uIhiiiI (o 1m Pinned, under the name of the Miicknpiu Kaolin Co.. In work il. Similar deposits exi-d iu Japan, China. Sax ony. Krance, Luglaiid, one at Aiimoy. diM overed ami oue ol ail interior Tin; composition of a. und it h generally formed ffntn di-uter,it'tl granif. .Vrtrnrk Daily .idverthir Tiik Di:iornTirCMniHri: Mu.i tn "Snip.' Yesterduy Aflrrnnori, Andrew CitU-n, Istt President of our oily conueil. mid a leading Democrat In tins city, with is ii in nainl, rode The Oregon wheat crop is ripening lu-t, the harvest will Is; abundant, mid less nil it ted with smut I han has been generally sinqtosed. There seems to Ik- a growing interest In agriculture now awakening luroughoul Ihe Terri tory. This Is right; Oregon has Is-eti destined by nature, to lie the garden of the I'aeilic coast - let It Ih' improved and cultivated. Bi.iutii. Mr. John Koree. of ihls county, h.is brought to our table, Kngli.-ll gooselierries ol his own cultivation, measuring an inch and a quarter iu diameter, tree from spines nud of the Imest lluvor. Wild gooelerrien are now found in abundance aiming the hills and iu the low In mis, nlsnit the size of large currants, un-p'iiuled. alio oi an atcreeuiile (art lluvor. Kn-plHTries, uud low-bu-h bl ftlsuind itt this season of the vear. 'lin y are commenting on the fuels stated by Its corres- ' J v lenteen years ago. and who. as a conw-quonoe or thriMih llie principal sheet of Ihe cilv, tiding remaiks : his excentricities, suffered a lung imprisonment I ,. ,.ii ., i l.,.-.1.i ... t, ,i .,., '...r.nl H I here was any distrust of Knglaud's In- i the jail at Albany, now litis the po-t or light- I pn.rtv" would Is offered for nle at tho new teullon to curry mil the Clavton-Bulwer Treaty I hmise keewr, ou liock Island, one or the abovo flllirl hlmsr door, nt !l o'clock preoisrlj. At Iho Iu good faith, a little esrnest correspondence I named group, a short distance below French j nw IHl,m.,i, aMll ,, ibuusand -.h-iso,- hiul would have .piickly settled the mailer. But i Creek. The Island is what Its name imporl, tt , ,s4.l),tllcl, al,d were wailing lor the auctioneer, there was in lucl. nu g-ssl ground for sm h .lis- clump .if rocka. almost destitute ot natural soil; i.'jimnv, r, (;i,(, Inimt, ,i hm.i U..u u pile lrul. There is no evidence whatever that Great but ,l..husm has ,,aiiea pnslucllve garden there-( Mone. and culling the cr-.wd around him. he Britain has lately exercised, or attempted loex- j "n.hin vegi-lnblea dem log their nnsteiiance from wmtmri.d ), -p. -rsonal prorerl v" lo Is u.ubiiig ere ire uny )urisdiclionoer Ihe .MoMpiito t mt, , woo n we utwi unn-niiii u m tin mmo though h'.r' eniistn.clion or the langusgeol the ! laud In his host. Tho Nilrtry nf bis olliee is ireuly iu reference to her abandonment ol ihe," II, either niiL.tl or 4mi, but be lives frugally, moled- nto materially ditlcrs from thai ol (be ! 'y picking up something outside ot his reg-pivnl adiiiinistrution. Thetpu-liou. however. "li"" '"isiness, by means or iMwig and kiudnd ni,.i;.iiv u.nl.,,1 iu,t .,'nr mm whi-n iho Pursuits, lie msiiages to iave a Considerable arrangement was made bv Mr. Welter that ! lsirlion of the amount every year. He is rim. (ircvtnw.i should be trcalcil as an independent j tented and happy, and fond of seeing visit, port', subject lo no foreign jurisdieliori or inter-1 to whom ho recounts the remantio Inei-lereiice. We have vet to leant that Great Brit-1 dents of his vrentful career, and inagnllles thu ain has not olwerveii the engagement fatlhtullv. ' achievements winch has gm-n blm so much milt is true. Indeed, thai there Is a dilllcultv yet toriety pending in reference to the question whether the i He gives an amusing account of Ibe manner Icrinn of that Irealv in mil-racing Cenlral , l which he obtained his office, through tho in-4 ri..." ..,.n. i I,, 1 1, mil nrHa in th tut u.f i slmmciiiulitv of Gov. Marry. He wont to Wash- region the British nnqiiesllouably continue to , higton, w illiout any recommendations orcreden-ev-iciso jurisdiction, and they evidently have Hals of any kind, depending wholly upon bis candidate lor Ihe Board of Public Works, Mr. G. then inquired "ilow much," "How much," a bid of one cent wud ottered, then two ceuls, and Anally three cents. Thf "pripiTly' waskinx-.k-ed oA at three cent-- Cin. iitizette, Vr.su st Lavt. Wc are orry to announce the death of Mnj. Dumi. well known hi this city, and throughout the West, as the n'"hi, nr muny years, of various coinp.oiieA it Minstrel. Ae. He died ut Rm he-ler. on Thursday, of u diseu. like cotcumplioii. Hi" deaih wlis pre uutu rely nnuouue'd some weeks ago, since which time hope have Iwrn etib rluiin 1 of his ultimate recovery, which were domm-d to be di.-Uto!iitd. .Major I'liuti nad ii ienu uen'ver lie went, iur i i....:.... i. ii... i ... 1 nersnniil r haraeler. I i tain nir an nlerview Wi i ws n oeu.-iun, six iio'm ituui j.mooo, nun ui: ihe dinic.ltv to Is- n.Iv1 bv Ibis extraordinary , Ih" Gvernt. be disclosed bis wishes, wltlioul dealh will be regivti.,1 t mauv not Is Mind to . , display of violence, why was not ihe violence ceremony or circumlocution. " I m Itill John- mm ? "'""' ' .kk-rrles also I ..V.J,.,., , .,!,.. iM.n. said he.-vou know me bv remilat ion. us I relatives in tins city. Huff. Ihrn-tcrat. w iv hii nut I in- ii.ito Hti iinieoi ill i,ei e i nsieiui : " "j nm i li ha.i case. Ilis religion, we lliink, might cosily Ito Hilk stutfs of Kosieru fabric and pattern, ouii' ls' I l'llt"' ''!" Kn-alest abiindaoce ulsuil iho spurs j f (jn,vln,vn ; h n mner of noloriclv that ! "1"' pin'' Ught-house keeper on Hock Island, ... . . . Ilf nil III II IllllK ....... ,..,'., I .,...., If t... tl In ma 1 hid under n bushe).'' i hair, woo, skins, dried fruits, w iues, and uu end' "An undertaker, a veiv religious man, who! leu vaiiely of other products, for which the happens to reside in a part o this city where ; Crimea, witu its appurtenances, has eoinpara- Is.th Mr. Bulwer and Mr. Clavlon undersl.Hsl . In SI. l-uwreoee. r you can give it to me. 1 I lhal Honduras was nol wilhin Ihe scope of Ihe j shall i itiuukrui-ll not i mul try waowun. treaty. Mr. Cluvton hiiiiH-ll has on the tloor ol i "ui n. .... Hie Senate u.nde' a public avowal that such wa. ' j ve hean all about vou Bill, and know you j,,, fael i perfectly well, i ou shall have Iho place. And In view of Ihin meaning given to the Trenly ' li'"1 from the Governor to Mr. Secretary Gulh- bv Ih- who frs I il, and at least uifst of those ! rlc did the business at once. And If Gov. Mar- Si-nutors who vol.tl lo rslilv it, and in view aim i ry needs any aid in Bl. Lawrence county. Bill id' a mode by which, In ease d Turks, united under thu common deMgoa- have lsvU bleeding the Slate so extensively, I of the fuel that our government had previously Jnm' "w mM rv,l,l,r ""M- i " ..... ..r lino nf Turlars- l.nl il.... . C..t 1 i;u. . .. ....... . il.., iiirili..ti,n i.i'ii.aI Itrtlnin ovi'f I tldviftistr. lloitduras Py necreilitlng a consul lo u iiiiiiit Sir. I'Olh luimillisiraiion, wuo acini iioorr a veral others pract isiuir tho name profession, and who on that account has to lie ou the alert for business, heard a short limo since, (hat a young man. residing in Greenwich street, wan sick and not expected lo live. He Immediately iH-lllOUUlll III 111--II Tho poMilulion nositccouio a very mixed one. and on this account is only the more likely lo sustain an advanced civilisation and industrial progre. The largest proportion, no douiti, consists ol Mogul: if death, he might secure the Intern t of tho i ln or Tartars; but there aro Greeks, und Un Silent Land, long era we reach Grunt Tliorburn's age. Some will step nut by one door and some hy another ; some willingly, some rciuciunuy, some with ample warning aud alter long illness, others suddenly nnd unprepared : but how few at bis age. of ull who live Unlay, will bo thread ing Ihe si reel sol New 1 or, as old t .rant liior burn glides altonl them now and with a young bride. V. I'. Evening Post, A gentleman In an eating house, the other day, oked In vain fur a bill of fare. Not Htidiugone, he Inquired of a waiter, a new comer, who was yet hardly Initialed into the mysteries of his vocation, "Will you Iff Ing me a programme T Yes, sir, he replied; "will you have It boiled or roasted !'' The gentleman, fearing It might he rather Indigestible, declined both proposi tion. HaUTatiok. Whlggina says that we Americans have a strange mode of salutation. When a friend meets a friend In the street, he extrnds bis hand and asks, " How do you do?" The other replies, " How do you doT" TheT both, apparently well sailsfled, pas on, although not one wbll ihe wiser sonoernlng each other's health. !Ui separately ; and sometimes, nol always, i letdish: if uot lhat. a little fruit, such n may lie cheapest, and in Ihe rljH'st season. But there Is very little of each thing, and it is rather In arrangement than in material that they appear rieb. The idea that the Kreneh are gnui-mauds in private life Is incorrect. They spend iltlo In eating, and they eat Inferior things. though their cookery Is rather a science than a mere accident of civilization. At borne, the great aim of the r rencb is to savo ; and any stlf-sarriAce that will lead to this result Is cheer fully undertaken, more especially in eating, and in the luxury of mere idleness. No frenchwo man will spend a shilling to save herself trouble. She would rather work Like a dray-bom1 to buy an extra yard of ribbon or a new pair of gloves. than lie on the softest sofa In tho world in placid fine ladyism, with crumpled gauie or bare hands. What wr am comimi to. A gentleman In Loudou batchts hens' eggs over a naptha lamp without a wick. Seventy eggs bave been hatch ed at the top of the lamp, and tbe cblckeu rear ed by an artUHiot moine! t ue Bottom. IsHly. Although he was unacquainted with either the funiilv or the vouiiu man. vet he imme diately called ul Ihe house, und Isung admitted to tlm invalid's chamber, sympathized with him j in a very tender manner, nud alter conversing lor some time religiously, he asked permission to engage iu prayer, which Isdng granted, he knelt by the Iwd-side aud offered up an earnest petition in Ihe young man's behalf, holding at Uie same lime one oj am business earns in n hand! At tlm close of his prayer he shook the invalid ullcctionnlcly by the hand, and laying his curd upon the b,d lo lell how reasonable he would furnish a cotlln, shroud, unit near1, nun in what cemeteries he could bury the dead, very politely depuited. "Such bungling urtllice could not fail of detection union ir ncrsons of ordinary discernment. A day or two utter, our friendly undertaker called again to Inquire nfter the health of the young man. He wiw asked by tho lady who opened the door '"Are you the person who left the card hero llie oilier uny: "Yes, mu'iioV replied he, his eyes bright- "-Well, sir,' Mild she, with no little Indigna tion, 'when we waul your services we will send lor you,' und Ihe conversation was rather abruptly terminated by the closing of tho door," sians, ami even uermans. in considerable umu- hcrs among them, and thoso latter have, for some time post, it Is said, been rapidly increas- "IV The gentleman who recently purch.w-d the new Male House, and made a bid lor llie entire Stale, is 'ojoiiriiiugal llie Capilol. - Statt Dim-1 oerat. i If the uiiny of Lih:niH-o boNHW, coutrurlois. superiiileiideiiK clerks and eoiniuissiourr-, who should sthk their bills into him a.i deeply i they lme been slicking 'em into (he Stale Pnnr-AiUMn pk Kipk, The annn Treusury,llieL!enlleiuNiiwoolduiit"soioiirnongi 11,111.1. ,l,(1 u ,!i,i r.H.nl. no little I Ihls Society, for Ihe advanremenl of Roman at Ihe Capilol." in ilher would he Hud himself anmnce on the pari of the present adminlslra- Catholic principle .slates that during the year years of e British off Irom llie Honduras ' 'i" " ", r"' ". n o w 1 in a eonditlon to " bid for the entire Slule." The gentleman who buvs the new Slate House ut w hat ll costs will make a bad bargain- - in our j opinion. tion to order the coast, whether Ihev will or no. That was not a "'";. n-muin ng Platter lor llie to seltlo dircelly on the r.o uie y...r i... i ;"- nm", mus spot with nil hot iirgumenlsof thirlvtwo pounds ! RilK "'1 fund or &,MAi Irancs Tr os-weight avoinluisus. Kor the Pn-sident's appro-' '" 1 Ihls large amount of money I- mure viat.on ol Ibis, we should ! duly thankful, ll ' contributed J.;tti.i,l IM Irancs, Sanliuia .11 1 U in -1 .0.1101011.- tor us lhal the British have i Prussia 3iHj.win Irauc. and Great Brit- At the ladies' celebration ut Burro, in Lughind, nine hundred ladies were present. One ol Ihem Hivimi 'KM." At one of the sin nil gather- let off ihe followlnff toast: "Old bachelors: mav ! 01 unbirlunale individuals who were con- hii-j .o o.. . " "77" ! " IT "7 ' ' nisfa to answer nny more questions alsuit Ihe their own kitchen-maid 1 " Pkxxhyi.vaxia. Tho fact U dallv becoming more and more evident that the anll Nebrn-l.u ticket In Pennsylvania, nt the bead of whirh ! stands the name of Juik-o Pomjh-k fur i:.u-,.rn. i or, will bo elected by a sweeping majority. At' Kai.i. Klmtions. -The folhming is a list of a largo ami enthusiastic moetlng of Ihe Deinoc- J y vote tins lull, and the time or, h , , ,h(, ,in,turascoas. ll won a raev ot Sullivana count and vlelnlu- ..1,1., i holding their flections: i ...i.n.L.. ti,ni tl,.. i l,. i.,i..lt,.lu. i- 'IVenlvdid nut i i. i.. .... I .... . ... I rur...i- i'.. v.. iu.h I....L u.ui i .1.... i..r il... Himmhiii- l"K iu franc nw luimu wy llOII. HAVIO ll.Mor lllter I ' " l,M ' ' 1 r"iii.n.i ,..nl- r...-. -r i ...v - -- ... . , i,i,.h .iH r ...i...! .. i .,.'t; Maine. Seideuikr II; Peiinsvlviiiiia. Octo-! ment ol thut .H-cunuiicy. 'I he importance ol nil miss on in r.uroK, .....v.., - .v.,,..iIID nvrv .no-ieu uou . . . . , . , , - ...... t , . .., , -.lllimi.r,.i-l Missions In A "IB,.. adopted with great unauimlly. The following N,',lllMH' , ' . ,. v ' v,L v ' I 'r.il WU l.,..l.. ; ami with it Increases Missions iu Afrlcn. veiniier 7; New Jersey, Nine ml nt 7; Illinois, 1 the dilllc'ully of adjusting national disputes in NovemWr 7; Michigan, November 7; W iscou-1 connection w ith It, luvoli ing commercial inter-sin, November 7. I est. The laitsnfaire policy will not answer - In relerence to unv or these Central American Mk.ssiis. pp'roim: Will ou pleas., a k the tpieslioin. We are lor tln ir speedy and full StilttSinail ll Ihe UlipUUlttlX Ilt of Mers. Slllilh ixllostmenl Hot it Is wrelehed indirv In com- Artnlivrf. Tliat Inasmush as Ja,r l'tillnrW h... .1... 1 ,rl Mild SlicklleV ns Stilto llilln I 'iiltnni.Ki. T ll l,.r u ii.ti.li.li IU ill. nil not' vpiiiiii uini ( ia in latur ! I fiiarl ri Ui-Uw n hi,-i u,i ,.i ul in i .... . p.,..r ll ...i 1 1 t ...l .. i.:..i i .i... . ptehiMlM elm err In Urril..rlr. north ol tliin. U ,li !.. '.. ... ;. .. ' . " l",n",' irH.s.n.l tl.iilv ..iloiitrs n-rll. Ulllmlr, an.UI-,. oi la ""M""' " m" '"i.e ll llieso iwowoilliy vnrortlin nianiDiilKionofaiiT 1m- llUvnll I,. , tlori 1 oiiiml-sioliers, uiP r ItM-ir aipolltliieuts Were """I'lssnis-l h m-tre just ami I.I ml limit I In their p.sket.. did li-d thn-ati'lt lo resign, )( Ti:i:siiu; foip at Hu.i.km. .mie two or three Ihou-und silver dollars have ju-d been found at Harlem. N. Y., the history of which is as fol lows; Samuel Benson, ihe on uer ol the nn lute during thu revolution rvmowd up to Kish-kill, and Is fore leiuiitg, buried Ibis money on his farm and planted a tne over it to number Ihe spot. Si ion Ihe tree died, and wns removed by his nrvunln, and as the ground h id been Iiloughed and burrowed iner, the IrvOsuro was o-l. The ollur day, live workmen, two Germans and three IrMimen. found the money aud nal Report of' ,h,'r P,M'klt' willt " RUl1 lun A Ycncr.ildc in a iron ot Norlli Aduins, Mnt gae an "old folk-t' lea party" livs since, nnd niimtig ttio guesis who ain l!':t,7 17. The manner in which this was ex- were present were tour hotut ot ihi- n-sperlive ages of hti, $1, Ml, 7n, and tlirie gi uilemen of s.'i, Ml, tit, making Ihe united a-s of the eight person, ineliidiug the hoh i,li years, un average of M. Six of the-e ht"iis own farms, on whirh Ihey reside, all In one nefghlsirlnHHl if less lhau u mile square, ami have Ik'cii rrsl- will Iw specially Interesting at this time. If all Iho Democrats vole lor Pou ch k, us these men phnlgo themselves to do, there will Im a mighty poor show for Mr. linu.t:it about the Jd Tuesday of Octolier. inteii-T liidigiialiou of '. lhat 'wllliout ltilrinB Ihe raiiOnn utl ha Wlujt IVnlralLoinmilK') me i-itFni II tmr July In Rita Jii.ltfi- r-ll.-ck our lull ami artlte orjsrl iu'lli.' umioi( I'l.-c I inn. the verv puny wilh which we hate lo deal most j Bala.H-iM.f,AeessotriH:eiptHrorthe lirsl prt leulai ly In the coi.lrov eiv, ami w l.leh on Its payments lo Ihe missions ot .it, . . 7:-'. ' . . i ... Sum ti.ti.l Isil lliai we sre eutirciy uiiprepan-'i i M-udiHl In thus staleil, Iho amounts quoted be- i dents of the (own over tit ly y. ars. H'li; Pi '',ln,',, ''"'"' th" loth Instant, in I i iii'' in ! f,'l',,,',''n 1,1 '"- sehuvler fraud- und over insues ' Jr ;wi i 'l,H'k xhi con,4'r.v' r'-"trks : l,Mm n A,,r c. . , , , , , s . ,,,i,r,r,. Missions in Oceanic 4LI,iN i ,,', ii.i- t t r r,,. .. ,,.i,Li Kx. iw.,ol VrlMntt 1 10 Annul. . o., , , d,.k,.,,, ,, ,' ill W , .t,u. ,Hr in In l.n. ,0,. cnulrlr,.. . 1,1,1,3., j UlM , , ,, ,,,,, 1 tloiuliug us wilh bonds, the ia itieiti even ol (lie iniercM 01 which iieieniiMt opui 010 plaining ildiliotial sums on demand. pals, Ac, uutrlrs,. . Iu France und foreign countries,.. Total ofetpenses for the year V.;t abme, 4,127,271 , shows Mate House. Wu pity the cHieern. It is a dangerous sign when a thing gels so bad lhat ll cannot be de tended.) Tin: Nr.r Phksiiua week, one of his t-,,itr hotdirs. a candidate for n county office, famous for " hiving" voters, le- Mkmkit a TutssiiisiTioN. " Wouldn't vou ' one so uproarious owing to the hud quulily of call this the calf of a leg?" usked Bob. pointing I the whiskey the Doctor furnished, aud cul up to one ni ins netner iimoa miner cmiivw uj en-1 n,cn umaMta tricks betore the unhappy audl-eawl in representations of hnrlier polls and run-, nwo lho4 lllc ri y J , comitclkd ll , tE letf of a call" "Prluiand him publicly, and even threaten '"''''"''" '"'""Mate for President. Mr. ; 011t .. 9 .,. .,,,. ...... n. .... - .... . IIIKIIS, a,t 1.1. V K I'ra. ,1. till,-.... iitiii n i.ii ,'A,uip,ii mi, iii inn uninii in rtry 'n- " " , ..u. iiiiimiii. An Allinny tmiHT wyn nn nlunn nf lire tlemrn who Imil oonilpKiuuli'd Iu fiillulilon Iho 1 lt MIII1,Ibo'III Hrtmilrr, thu (jporuiii IVIilii l th"ro, nlKlit or two lncc. Iiy ml-! peopio In llio coiinly. on Ihu .ulijpct of Hlu I s,' l",l"1'' 'l"ur lo Ihi. mmilmilim, ami i,.,-,.,. , I,. ,,,UKi, , , y, (i0), ,nil llto IWu,, T,lk , ,mtn, um b. iin'iiiimn v , cnmli.Ul ,,tS I Till M'l.ll T 1M-I'it l. lil CKIl-, lllirlirO Ol Sum lotnl o.lMl.'.'iii Ih1 rt't-nil envi-i niiii'iil nrl- in 1 1,.-f I r .,1 Aiiut- Iho ll.ir.1 r,m,,i,. r. -HitIi iI Ir I V ! lmu ih .nl.i.cl in nv rnlm ..ml (..ir l-mfn ol ' Ihfw "III olmvnl n II, in !... for Icnn ll.-.in.lio ..l 1 in . Il, I -. I l.nnc lumU.: 'll.ir.Hy. ili.ln'l tl, li.i.i rm.r .-..v., min.l. Ilnr novrnnu-'nt .i,.l,l Imvo Ink no ' "V lh "Annul, of tho IWnll..l of Iho , " o,,lnlii.uncl,.l k-n.-iul I..,,,,,,,.!,., ll..- I nvi-.! ,,i,,l KaruiU I'.i I. I'nv. ! ,nror y I.. Ih.rl il .mil mU I'"1'""""" l"n,J ovory t... . .- li.' Hi.' Iill ,. ma'.v. l m lloiulu- rw.V.i.il.liJ. ...r!..- ..r .. .r.- ,'""r"J ' """""" niniilh, to tho n.in.Wr ot IT'MHlil oonlo.. In.,- nu., tho 1I.ii.thI i.ini.i.,ii,',l .... iiui.i.'ino eon- o 2Z , IK 1 ! t- ! m- Tho ll,nl ol I With hnvo dT,mll...lo.l ,';'"' tajWH. I..W. I f l',.l. I.i.hi.lms I hl,-l .l.ji.luii... wt luuiioi piomiH( nun uil auswer.an we see lliu ! - ...... Kmr is i. In Oenuau. I.2HU in Snuu s 1. rivll nud milit;irv, and, niter rending the docu- Statrsman "caves" In its lost iiumlsT. und re-, ,nt',r rt'lN, " " pV " t-ieveianu. uu ., -,.n,i..lt 2l,:hW in Italian, 2,:hhi hi Por-' ment to ihem, raiiuu-d it into a ramnm wilh his Vlatn D'nUr says, In speaking of tbe cholera. 1 1,, 011 in Dutch, and .i00 In Polish. Asia hand, (Hiinted ihe pieee ealwnid. and tired it lie deallts fmve oci'urml aiinosl enureiy : and America ap-ar 10 is me culcl llelils of una-1 oil. . amongst the most degraded and uncleanly of 1 nionary lulntr lo which this Propaganda devoles the population, perhaM not one doien of the more careful and resist UWlo having died or - The Monigt.mery 1 Ven bveu ailacknl. ll has at all evenU now Journal, Ihe leading Whig pu)Nr of Alabama. , disspieai.M, and the general health Is excel- her bonnet on. Bed headed girls make a great ueai ui iron mo iu Ainauy. The following is a true copy of a sign upon an academy for leaching In ono of the Western Stales: "Freeman aud Huggs, School Teachers. Freemen teaches the boys and lluggs ihe glrhV' Piiui:ssoii.hhii' Aih'kitkp. Tho Huston Bee .earns that the Itcv. Dr. Orestes A. Brow nson has accepted the ProfessonJiip es tended to him by the Irish I'niverslty at Dublin. He Is at present preparing his first course of lectures. The salary 1 about :t,tHH. that I an V, V. V. who luul started out lo hive" "r 'rever I What Southern State will his friends, to lie expelled from such a crowd as nnmlnato Seward ! , Olim, Kankin, A l.'o, Could mortal man sink jfr.Smiiii.ti it i:.'.TZ i- . to a lower depth? t,,,',. Ml-, ha. 1 71"". r'" 1,1,1 'T rr- Hon, Thomas furrtw. formerly a menv tri. . , , ,", k r . to .econn-n, ti,- . .. . 7 ? K 1 u'r ,,r ,h -r- rt- s"'"t'- rcnldence In v , , .Mv. ' ui 1 1 w -ftar w dis af. Itself, and the render w ill no doubt U atnick with the lnugmtudo of the sum credited lo the latter, when compared with the total expenditure for missions.--,V. I". Itbnnrrr. .tuA correipondenl of the Louisvill Courier, from Anderson county. Kentucky, writes: "There will not ho half a corn crop rained here this season. Some persons arc turning f,n'r hog out to die, while others are killing the most Indiflerent. Some time since, souie griiosol' wheat, which bad Is en taken Irom an old i: ;)pliati sarcoplia-gun ul Cairo, were given to ihe Agricultural Society of t'oinpcigm-, by whom He y weri sown with (he nu-l surprising result.. Thu slcim which have ri n liom thn -. d ar- as large u.--a tvetl, llielemes areuii.lv limit an inch in iM t iwtlh, and the ears have eueh mie hundred grains of very lurge sle. -o thut seernl 01 the oilguml sfeds hive multiplied i. r.dd. It Is thought that Ihe seed dates ai far Iweh asSesustris.orat least CleojuAira. St a vi K of (iov. t'oitwiy. T. D. Jones, tho f'.iuui r.ri.iw Cnv U.ini linn eomimilail OelelirnU'd K-ulptor, loruK'UV ol i.iUviuiiSU, Will the senience of dealh against John How..t, to 1 tjwc Uw Rmtt . . .. , ue ol liov. I orwin, which will Is- placed either liiiprinoome.il fur life. Howlkt was lo have , lt llllvtn, uV (-ji,,,,,,,!. been hung In Septvnlicr, at Cleveland, for kill-1 puiabHM sre arllii glu tlevolandatfrom in a nan by the name of OsBotum. 1 ou to tl U ier bushel. )
Object Description
Title | Ohio State journal (Columbus, Ohio : 1849 : Weekly), 1854-09-06 |
Place |
Columbus (Ohio) Franklin County (Ohio) |
Date of Original | 1854-09-06 |
Searchable Date | 1854-09-06 |
Submitting Institution | Ohio History Connection |
Rights | Online access is provided for research purposes only. For rights and reproduction requests or more information, go to http://www.ohiohistory.org/images/information |
Type | Text |
Format | newspapers |
LCCN | sn85025898 |
Reel Number | 00000000024 |
Description
Title | Ohio State journal (Columbus, Ohio : 1849 : Weekly), 1854-09-06 page 1 |
Place |
Columbus (Ohio) Franklin County (Ohio) |
Searchable Date | 1854-09-06 |
Submitting Institution | Ohio History Connection |
Type | Text |
File Size | 3769.94KB |
Full Text | s hVia State gammal. n rriumii DAILY, TRl-WKKKLY AND WEEKLY nr im OHIO STATE JOURNAL COMPANY. Incorporated under the General Law. TERMS, INVARIABLY IN ADVANCE. Dmr-nt .uWtibcn W 00 p-r.rsf. Mh11 6 00 " Hv the Carrlfr, ji wet 2H eta, Tm Wuxu w l" r. - Weekly 2 DO ' Cluba often and uer 160 " TKKIM 0 ATiVEBTISISU BY THE 80.1' ARE. (TO IIXU Ok l-fc MAKR A BUl'iHI ) Ow wtiar- 1 rrr ..$. 00 ; one aquar 3 wi k, . .W M (me " 9 month 16 DO; one " Iwwhi... 2 M One " monllu Yi 00 ; na " 1 wt-k.... 1 60 (In " Smunttu 8 00 ; one " 6 days 13 On " 'jmontlii 0 00 ; mm " a.iayi 1 "JA nua " 6 wos-aa 6 00; on " S-lnyrt 1 10 Ona " 1 m..nth 4 60 one " I Itut rtlnn 50 ttplyl .l-fertiwroi'iiU Iwlf mora thao the abuta Artftrtlmnt, leaden" and pUred In the column of "Special Nnlieaa," W ( ordinary raUt. All notiwii rf'iilifd to be puMUhrd or Uw, lefal ratea. If orderwt on lli lunide txrlunlveljr aller the tlnt wek, 60 per cent, more thnn the above ratei ; but all eucli will aptirnr in the Tr I Weekly without charge. HiiilnfM Curd, not exceeding 6vc Hun, per jrar, In-aide, tt.W per line ; oulaldn t'J. Nullct-a of mw ttnga, charitable aoelettea, Are companies. c., half price. A liertirwim-iiU not arm m panto) with wrltlan dlrec-tlwii will bo in Med till lor bid, and charged accord-tnirlr.All transient adortliemrnta miut be paid In advance. Wmklt One iquire one week, 60 cent ; twn weeaa, 16c ; tliree wreki, II ; one month. Il,'i6 ; three muntua, 3,50 : lit month, ) ; one year, 110. Under the present lyitem, the advert lar pays ae much for the ipare ha ocruplea, the changva being ehargeabte with tb coin pcisl tion only. It ia now generally adopted. Site h (lone. Just opposite our house stop a minute, there li music In those two lout word lot us say them again. How sweet they sound once more there in a great hill opposite where we are sit-ting, repeating those two words, and here tbey cotuo back again. Echo is over there in the deep shade of the trees, in that valley, and he ays, our house. Well, just opposite our house there is an alley or court, leading away tip somewhere behind the houses, where there are other houses, tenant houses, holes for human beings to suffocate in. We have never been up there, but we know that those who live by labor and havo to labor to lire, are up there; lor otten of an evening we see one of the tenants come home with his dray, and ho unhitches his horse by the pump outside, and then he turns round and says come, and walks up the little court, with bis faithful servant at his heels, and for a long timo wo wondered if they both lodged in the same house, or if not, where did ho lodge the horse t So wo went over one day as he wus go-ing up, and peered into the fourl, and there we saw the man open a little side door Into which, after shedding "If his harness lor there was not room enough for any thing but his body the horse crowded himself, and then the man opened another little door over his bead; no, the oilier extremeand there, in a little cuddy hole, was some hay. for which he whinnied his gratitude. Then the man went up to his own cuddy hole, where, under the bed, he had a lug nf ouU; we know it was under the bed, for we saw the dust nn hi knees where he had knelt down to (111 Ihe little measure, for which be got more whinnied thanks from a good servant, a' faithful friend, and grateful animal, though It was a dumb beast. Ho dnv after dnv. for months and years we have seen the Mime uinn anil same horse Utterly the horse wulks a though getting to feel his age and hard work, and the man looks care-worn and tired of long toil that brings him nothing but a lodging in that same hot oven, near where he boxes up his horn to sweat and stew all night brings him only a smull loaf of bread they are very small now a days, for his whole family. lane 1110 Journal. JttTltS Of licit)! VOLUME XLV. COLUMBUS, OHIO, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 6, 1854. NUMBEK 4 He turned to wi)ie away manly, honest tears. Putting tbe QuestlMi and wo well, nu matter. We went and sat i v t i... , ..i- u..i. down at our desk, took up a sheet, and wrote Allhouuh the old rule of turning; slrauevrs out iiinw uireo wonts uini were ringmg in our Dram of tbo (luri Ue tic pr0CC(i8 ut djvi. and hum ng in our heart-" 8 '-and : 8ioUi hfta bve roioi awlt it Jia with a exception only held Ihe pen, while we were only conscious of one thing--had but one thought all elm; was alorled in these words : ".She is gone." A. Y. Tribune. The Kivcr Amazon In 1701 Mr. Stanton Sholes writes as follows to the fiatiomit littritigtnttr of Aug. Ti '. In KeptemlKT, 171)1, vto entered the mighty waters ol the gi't-ot river Ainuon, of Booth America, tnd moored our Khip fur up the river, m ar itn left bunk, and abreast of u plantation. My object in reeuriitig to this pnrt of my journal ih to fliow my viewrt of the connexion of (he waters of the great Amazon of .South America with tliosc ot the Gulf Stream of the North Atlantic Ocean. Aftvr tlmt voyugt- to the Amazon I made severul voyages to the Cuyenne,the Surinam, auu tne Lfemernra rivers, ho mat l oe as retards those who sit in the Sneaker's gallery. and who might cause inconvenience by gettiug among the Members. So, that declaration, "ritransers must withdraw," through a brut urn fulmett for the strangers above, turns Ingeuuus out. He muHt, tiiereiore, nnHten up stairi, ana watch the proceedings from tho privileged gallery.Thero is a sand-glass on the Sneaker's table, and this is turned over when the debute concludes, and during the two minutes that the sand is running, members, duly wurued, hurry up from the library, smoking-rooms, diuing-rooms, and the Thames promenade, where, at high-water, and when tho wind does not bring over the reek of those foul mauutnctoricB, a Senator's lounge is not unpleasant the accessories of tbe Hconu being the sparkling lights, plashing river andnoodcigur. The time. U up. everybody has been whipped in, and see how Iho bur is crammed, and how tbe loremost rank pret forward toward the centre of the Houm. The Speaker order the doors to be closed. He then came well acquainted with the count as well as tne interior ol mo country. I will now oivo my views to prove that the : . ' , ....uii.. r.... i ...uii waU-rs of the Oulf Stream are nothing more, nor umiiy iWmi,H hvrQ but liKrt u wt dflnK,.r less than the waters of the river Amazon. This of B mukc wi,ippers-iii being alert, and Mem-groat rather of waters Is bedded more than one , k(I0willg iUe advantage of following their thousand miles immediately under the equator, I t-uilort. Tho proposal was, that tho Criminals' Knfrauchisemcnt hill should be read a second Ho my we escape broHtk t To the Editor of the A. Y. Tribune : Slit Tho calamitous effects of our present drouth arc so evident as to occupy the' attention of all classes. Retarded in our spring work, we foretold a scanty harvest; but the latter part of May and the early summer were so favorable 0i0 Slate Imtrol. WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER , 1K'.4. Louicii. Tho Richmond Enquirer copies that our hoiws of plenty were juclly incited, and 1 n, -vi,-n fP..t .,.i.iin n.i.imM r u,.n - so far as the hay crop Is concerned, our expec- w' , , , ,, . . ,. '. talious have been fully realized. Indian coin, w-w rcunlvania, which follows, and however, our main dependence, as well as pota- ankn " hat will Southern Whigs, who have toes, roots, pastures, Ac, are sull'eriug imnient!- been led by their organs to view with suspicion ly for want of moisture. If the drouth contin-, tilc cnd,lct r President Pierce, say to the fol- d,3LroS ; t'8 f t - yl,.j, ; nous anli-Nubraska and Abolition letter? These aro the fnctx as they present themselves I Should not the South stand by an adniiniBtra-to every examiner. Ourcouutry depends almost ; tion whose great otl'enee, In abolition eyes, is entirely mi her agriculture ,u..l hence must sur-1 lhat u biw tw mmtMy Malned the constitu-fer lorgely from the casualties of elnuate. Were , . . . this unavoidaolc. we mmlit convince uurtelves 'iu that we ought to bear it liliilocooliicully. But. when it is Ihe tiled of gros-n Ignorance on thu part of the cultivator, it merits the severest rep- renenwon. We will pass by tho nunipllou, for the prc- neiit, that the South in this struggle to put slave-ry In the place of freedom is only enforcing a Tin. n.,'i,.tB uht..l, il.n f .r,,,,,, ,. n.i ! constitutional right we will also pass that oth- uwv easily obtain, iustrutlion are verv mimer-! er "nomalous assertion that President Pierce ous, and we propose to notice only the point in i could be " too manfully " in anytkini; nnd and all its tributary streams for many thousand mites are constantly pouring tneir not water into this mighty reservoir of water. As these waters are gathered in under the burning sun or the equator, it Is extremely warm t far more so than the Atlantic Ocean waters under the equator. This great body of heated water shoots out . into the Atlantic more than a hundred miles, in the face of the eternal trade winds. Tho Amazon Is sixty miles wide, and, attor being belted In its irresistible course, It curves olf to the left and scuds off before tbe strong trade winds till nut of their reach. Driven along with great force, it takes its course around the (rreat bay formed between the two continents or North and South America. Dashing along the northern coast of South America, and passing to the leeward of tho West India It-lands, it leaves tho shore of Culm, and proceeds along tbe shores of Horlda, tne capes or Virginia, anu mo souiu coast of North America, and, passing the shores of Newfoundland, ends its mission among tho Icebergs which lloat out of the Northern ocean. Cut utl the Gulf Stream, and It would not Im many years before the North Atlantic would be (11 led with icelicrgtt lhat would w very destruc- !..n lA nnlmil..i, lint wisA 'rnviil-nfr I ma time. Sir F. Thenigcr s amendment was, that instead of the words " a second time," there should he inserted "this day six mouths." The Jmestitm Is, whether the words proposed to Iks eft out, namely, " a second time,' shall stand. " Those who aro of that opinion, say Aye." " Aye," say a great many voIccb on the government side. " Thoso who are cf a contrary opinion, say ' No.' " " No t" comes In thunder from the Opposition, who have better lungs than the Ministerialists. The Speaker then casually rcmurks; " I think the Ayes have it." IIo is, however, instantly nnd flatly contradicted by various Noes, and without contesting the point exclaims: " tic Ayes to the right the Nocrf to the left." All the members come down from their scats, and the lloor Is crowded. They are making their way slowly to the lobbies appropriated for them. The Speaker nominates two tellers on each side, whose business it Is to ascertain Iho number, a couple of government men, and tbe mover and question, It is not too wkl an ussertiou to say that no good, practical Jtti mir wilt itfloie tits crops to sujf't r largtly from drouth. The remedy is simple and natural. fciuloil plowing, ac companied by under-draining on wet lands, and even without tt on those wlncn arc sumeiently dry, Is a sure protection against thisruiuluc-pro-ducing aconr(H. A lew moments relleeliou will convince any man that this must prove an infallible remedy, because we know that there Is always the .-nine amount ol wnter in and about the surface of the earth. In winter there is more In the soil than in summer, while in summer (hut which has been dried out of the soil exists in the atmosphere. Iwing maintained hi a vapory condition by the heat resident among it particles. Without this crammed down their throats by the cry of "abo- tivo to navigation. Hut a wise Providence has geconder of the amendment. While tho House provided an eternal reservoir of hot water con- stunt ly rushing around over the back of the cold Atlantic to its destination, where, after spending its vital warmth among thu iceliergs, It Is hurried away by a new supply of native warm water from tho great Amazon. Seamen can always Icll when in or out of the Gulf Stream by dipping the hand in the water alongside. Surely the wisdom of an allwisc Being Is wonderfully displayed in these trade winds, which hurry this great IsHly of water on its destined course so soon as it is free from the confines of its great reservoir. I'lidoubtedly this view will 1m new to some renders, but what 1 have written is from experience, and was seen while 1 was roving upon the mighty deep. Ihe luill mrcam, I repeat, is him something else-over night l.e.i he came i nothing more nor less than the waters of the home, it brought a little girl about leu years old. I fH Amazon of aouth Amenea. I have crossed with the prettiest soft red l.nir-we have no great , " l lr many years have gli- Innd.icss lor red hair generally, but Ibis a 'led through its warm wa er, u ways pleased to n.ti i.,.ii,. uitn . r..nu dr.n ih nmrt hitve it astern. The most violent storms Irom and un mi the dray iust before It got to the ; whatever quarter they may come, never change pump, where it huu to stop; u coum uoi go ov, lor the old borne had stopt there so long he could not go beyond that certain fixed stopping place. It was a short ride, but a merry one; 'twas childhood's happy hour. Our man wiw an early riser, up and away often before we hail dressed, but early as it was, the red curls were there, and she would Imund up on the dray and cling to one she loved for one more kiss, and perchance s ride to the next corner, and then back st a double quick step to the door step of the limine next to "our alley," to catch a last look, and scud a last kiw usn the magnetic telegraph or a waving hand, with a "giMsl bye, papa," as bo went round the corner and away to his work down town. Often for two hours In-fore sun down she would sit upon that door stone, watching that same corner for the expected one, for nomctimu he came at an early hour; and then she ran to meet him with more joy in her eye, and more in bis than all that ever was felt by one who never heard the sweet sound of "Oh! tfiore comes papa." Sometimes she hnd company; a (all, graceful, neat woman, with a pale face and a frail person, who stood by her, looking In Ihe same direction. It wu n-ood nlaee. loo. In tbe shade of mine dark green trees, whither she could come out of tfiat CUl 00 MO Ol a conn, worm ime im-mm-u hot air all day. and carKmio acid gas all night, to get a little mi utf of Ihe evening breeze corn-Ins nn from thf lower lv. That breeze Is a blessed Inheritance of the New Vork poor, whirh they should enjoy, liut are cheated out oi ny ML-nrv nn alio Imihlft their hollSCS. One evening we noticed Hint our Utile girl of the alley over the way was nntaiono in uer usual aoat umm the daor nte n. In her Inn lay a lit tle sister, very young, small, and pale as her mother, with her mother's own sweet face. Erery pleasant evening for nionthn. that little girl brought "the liaby" down the court, out into the open stroet to leel the soft air or tho aea breeze, he could not run to meet papa, but her eves weut round Ihe comer In sharp glances, aud she tried to direct baby's the same way as she said "there nomen pnpeO' So. as she could not run to meet him, as soon as ho turned old Dobbin alHiut loaurd the pump, before he slopped to unhitch, he jumped oil and enme and stooped down and kissed twlb. Of their life in noont, we anew noiuing. nu one m mn-i nuuin-to bis children, must have been equally so to Iho mother who bore them. We could have sworn it often, that he wan a kind, good hulutid, when we saw the market Istskel upon bin arm, nr the slop Imeket in hit hand, and ihe little hits or kindling wood on his cart all kindling the (Ires of all eel ion In the heart, as well as the household Are In that one room, where all lived and cooked and ale ami slept. Ob what a pity, nr olten thought, lhat such industry could not bring a better reward. I Mil In the country, in some snug farm-house, how the color would come lck to thai mother's rhwk lor It was there thai she watt horn and those two children would grow up to healthly womanhood.A Tew days ago we went out of Ihe city -it was one of those burning dayn of that hot month ol Jul ll was thai crv day thai all Ihe world ol Aiuerira turn into all look' day. and burn tuns ot nowder. while Ihev gel gloriously drunk, shouting ' what a glorious Independence." ( ut in the country- In ahady groves and in deep nooks, by cod spring gu-luug out of the roeks, we saw score" o city children, thai live in just such courts as the carman ami his little red headed daughter, and they were so happy, and it gave life such a healthy joy, that we wished she too Its course or its current, but it continues to move on In that irresistible power which was given to it in the Power uhnve. It would lie very pleasing lo nif I perhaps one of the oldest seafaring men now living) II some one of our unva! gentlemen would silt these. niiL'irest ions, ami cast uvcriionnl whatever is chuu"; remembering, however, that they enmo ; tu, ,.rt 231. from the hum I ol one wuo lias mono ai me wneei through many a rnging storm, aud one who takes great pride in our young nnvni officers, who will lie the pride and bulwark of our national defence. God grant it! Hayjor-Ueneral Stark Extract from the Spierh of Hon. Hiand Hall at Hen million, .tug. ItifA. Is clearing, the four tellers linger nnd exchange jokes. A member Is taking tho opposite side to that of his party, and a teller culls after him that he is going tho wrong way. A young gen tleman with a large paletot, bos arrived Inn Highland urcss, iroiu some masked oali, and one of Ihe four, as he passes, invites him to take oil' his paletot, in orucr to dcllgut tho hpenker a eyes with a view of his costume. As soon us mo House is reported clear, Hie tellers follow to do their work. Now the memlwrs, having voted, begin to reenter in single file, nnd return to their seats. A clerk in wig and gown goes to tho Opposition grecn-lmx to be ready to take the uuinliers. Sir Frederick Thesiger comes in. looking quite triumphant, walks un to the clerk and speaks a sensation round tho House, and then n tremen dous Opposition cheer. Enter Mr. lluytcr, the Secretary lo the Treasury, not looking quite se well pk'UM'd, and he alfo approaches the clerk, 'flie four tellers then lorm in lino, aud retire, bncklng. As they do so their position Indicates the victory. The right hand man of Ihe four Motigs to the winning side, and in that station in tho tall form of Sir Frederick Thesiger. Another tremendous. Opposition cheer, utid the four go bowing up to the table, and Sir Frederick reads from a miner: 1 lie Ayes to the right were Tin, the och to lerritic cheering, tiovernment iieaten iiy I I, aud the triminuh hPlrancliisc-ment bill lost. For a few minutes business is suspended, mcne hers luugh over tho victory and defeat, uud Ministers are seen in converse. Ingeniius may suppose Unit they arc consoling one another under tho liainmi catastrophe ; nut ll Is more nroouhle that they are arranging what other business snap Ik; taken tliat night. 1 he door having oeen re-op'-ned, meniliers depart, though so large a MuvioM.enerul John Mark was a mail Ol Hoiisu usuu lv leaves a mellv lui-tre Friiirmeiit considerable note in Ihe Revolution. I. pon au- up to Iho lime of adjournment. lliority we learn inai no was uorn in uie uiw u ui Londonderry, New-Hampshire, Aug. 2Mb, KliH. In 17:t7 the 'family removed to Derrylleld, now Manchester, where he resided till Ihe close of his life, lie served in the French war ; and on bearing of the Iwttle of l.einglon, he repaired to Cambridge, and. receiving a colonel" commission, be t-ulisu-d thw nunc day eight hundred men. He fought in the battle of Breed s Hill, wan engaged in the nttuck on Trenton, and was in the butllo of Princeton. On the invasion of Dtirgoyne, in 1777, he received the command of the New-H amp-hire Militia, lo oppose him, and hud tho honor, by his nkill and intrepidity, of achieving the lirst step towards the capture of that General, by the defeat of Col. Baum in the battle of lieuiiitiglon. In September he enlisted anew and larger force, and joined Gntes. In 177 ! he nerved in Khode Island, and in I7H) in New-Jersey. In 17hI he had Ihe command of the Northern department of Saratoga. AI Ihe close of Ihe war be bid adieu to public employment. In lfl Congress voted him n iM-nsion of sixly dollumn month. Iledicd Muy h, y-, aged !U years. The late Justice Woodbury, ol the Supreme Court of the 1'nited State, in reply lo UtRSl IP! liniM'-tinr, rgn.nv "i on General as follows: -Stark hud enjoyed more experience than any oilier oiliccr from New- II snip-hire, having been engaged in the previous French Wur, and in many Indian encounters. He was looked up to niot Tor advice and skill, but not forcournu'e alntve the rest, where all were brave, aud all true to the spirit of ihe times winch 'tried men s souls. General Stark hail been a hunter and un In dian liuhter: a prisoner among the French at Montreal, and ranom.il ny .ew nampsnires sending a public agent lor that purprse, whone journal, many yearn ago, I rend with great in terest in manuscript. I ne giory ue niierwarns acquired in winning the battle of Bennington. iiiMilli d Ihe hi if li eMwctalions formed it I rout him at Bunker Idll. Only a few years More his death, 1 lraelrd several miles lo sec aud con-vrraewllh him. and klloW lloW a hero looked. Picture to yourself a man under the middle size, with whitened locks, lient shoulders, on the verge of ninety, with a voice, however, still Ann, and w iib opinion very decisive and conversation terse, and you can see all that wan lefl of one of tbe niol daring chieflains of the day. The heart and -oul. rather than the stature, constitute llie essence ol such men. A controversy was then going on as to who was leader or commander in the buttle here. His memory was considered by bis family a not perfect, especially about" recent events. But he replied, without hesitation, when aked, that there was A TorcuiNfi ItKt.ic or I'ovi'Ktt.--In digging out the ruins of pnmeii. every turn of tbe spado brings up some relic of the nneient life, some witness ol imperial luxury. For fur the greater niirl or Un; rullcs have a merely curloo Interest: conunis-1 jjn.y tjflonje to arcliH-ology.and Hud appropriate resting places in Historical museums. Hut there are some exceptions. Here for In stance, the excavator drops, an uninvited guest, upon a banquet ; there be unexpedly obtrudes himself into a lomb. In one place be llnds a miser cowering on his heap ; another shows him Ikjiic of duueiug girls and broken Instruments ol music lying on the marble floor, in the midst ot Ihe painted chain l Kirs, Ituum, halls, columns, touutaiiiK umoug tne splendid evidences ol material wealth, he sometimes stumbles on a simple incident, a touching human story, such as strikes the imagination nnd suggests the mournful hi tercet of the great disaster, as the sudden sight of a wounded soldier conjures up the horrors of a Held of battle. Such, to our mind, is the Intent discovery of uie excavators in huh melancholy tieiu. it is a group of skeletons In Ihe act ol Might, nccompa-nied by a dog. There arc three human beings, one of them a vouug girl, will) gold rings and jewels stilt on her lingers. The fugitives hud a bug ot gold and silver with (hem, snatched up, no doubt, in haste and darkness. But the fivry llood was on their trocK, and vain their wealth, their flight the age of one, the youth of the oilier. The burning lava rolled above them and beyond, and the faithful dog turned back to share the fortunes of his mistress, dying at her feet. Keen by the light of such an incident, how vividly that night of horrors looms upon the senses 1 Does not the imagination picture the little group in their own bouse, by the side of their evening fountain languidly chattering over the duy's events and Ihe unusual heal? Does It not bear with them tho troubled swell of the waters in the bay ? see, as they do. how the night comes down in sudden strangeness, how the sky opens overhead and Haines break out, while cone, sand, and molten rocks coine pouring down? What movements, what emotions, wlml surprise I The scene grows darker every instant; the hollow monotonyof the hay is lifted Into yeBs, shrieks; the air grows thick and hot with Humes, and at the mountain's foot is heard the roll of (he liquid lava. Jewels, household goda, gold and silver coins, are snatched upon (lie instant. No time losuy farewell; darkness in front and lire lchind. they rush Into the streets; streets choked with falling houses and Hying citizens. How Hnd the way through passages w hich have no longer outlets T Conlusion.dnnger, darkness, uproar, everywhere; inn snouts oi parted irieuas. uie agony oi men proceed to usk, on what ground tho Emuirer expect Southern Whigs to Huslaln the present administration ? Ccrtniuly not for its support of river and barboriinprovcmenls anil other great commercial nnd fin tibial Interests, which Whigs North tiffd Soejh have held prominent in their creed ! Nay, is there one pi iuciplo which the Whigs of tho South hnve ever held In com- mou with the DiRiiuiouisls nnd Nullifies who now control the administration r,f the govern inont? Even on the subject of Shivery there hub strictly never been uny feeling of agreement, Tho repeal of the Missouri Compromise was 1 S) nipt ess In Cincinnati. j A special election for Councilman look place i in tho 9th Ward, in Cincinnati, on Monday,! which excited some Interest. A largo vote was cast, and tho result was, notwithstanding the Germans have a largo majority iu tho Ward, the election of Col. Joux Uouinsox, an old aud respectable citizen, by a very largo plurality. Tho vote Btootl Robinson, 214; Dr. Boyd, l it); L. hwartz, 115. There were one or two features about tbe election which are worthy of notice. Tho Times, from which wo glean these facts, remarks: "Though tho Germans hare a largo majority in the Ward, they determined to elect an American John nitcbcll and Archbishop Hughes John Mitch kix is an Irishman, aud may therefore speak of bis countrymen and the Jesuit Clergy without fear of being called a "Know Nothing' by the Northern press of the Slave Democracy. Hod a native uttered the hard things which will be found below against our Irish population who, in tho patriotic language of the pious editor of the Statesman, "dare to die of cholera," he would have been considered as no Democrat! Wo call the attention of the editor of the Statesman specially to that portion of tho following extract which declares the Cutholic Clergy to he the enemies of popular liberty. And why t-bould they not and nothing else. Dr. Boyd, who, we believe, is bo! They owe allegiance lo the worst foreign a Pennsylvania German, uud who, wilh other i despotism ou the face of the earth, the desnot- demagogues, attempted some time since to array t Um that tyranizes over conscience. Mr. Cox's tno uermans against our common schools lor me j own testimony, before ho beenmu a party hack, most seltlsh purposes, and who stood at the polls, b,rc evidence to the sumo ctfect. But to the the best part of the day, tlcchoiutrmg Jor him-1 extract from John Mitciikus letter, which wo selj, was budiy acfculed. this contirins, lo a j hope the pious prejudices of the Statetman cdi considerable extent, what we have heretofore j tor will allow him to read: asserted, that the mass or the Germans ol this I oi course, when any man has abuse to dis-clty, arc thoroughly imbued with the spirit oi l charge upon me. he takes euro (copying the Republicanism, and that once free from the des-! Kuglisb Press) to throw vitriol upon me ; and potism of party, and the influence of doma-1 lPyJ' "l" Abolition Press) to cast an 1 ,. 1 .;, . . , Alabama plantation In my teeth, lour Grace gogues, they will support American im-titutions u mtt oriKiim; aiia u-ing able to llnd nothing cn masse. The German demagogues, who have ; wwrao, you come out with old stories us fresh been endeavoring to Isnlute the Germans, of this as ever. Now does your Ginco seo unvthing so city from the American portion of the commu-1 horrible m a plantation or negroes? Are you nut anuiu unit iri ivnin, in-iniiin, moilllMUl ICS, yea, Popes, have held slaves? Vet it is not wonderful that yon should not covet a plantation in the South, mo long as you isissess that cnviuble piece of properly, tho Calvary Ceme tery, where, I we by the newspapers, -lis of Ita Bktoe, by .naki,,,! m.jut Mlwkt ..,.. Ibe j J jMar, l0 , wi(h " nily, aro now fust lot-in g their power and they know It, The Germans are beginning to think for llieiii selves, and act for themselves, uud we predict that thoso demagogues, who have been endeavoring to make themselves popular, over heut, it must immediately contract nud Is'cume liquid water; ami iur tuis reason a com pm-her robs heat from Iho vapor of u siiminer aiinos-phere nud causes It to bo deposited in a liquid form. Tho cold cnrlh, at night. Is thus supplied with dew. On the snme principle Subwullug prevents itroutu. ll opens tho suaxoit lor a circulation or 1 i.,ii r iii.,ri,n ii,i.,t..c i- r,. ,tr Thin y..l,.n from ilu eliinl,.!! n.i.iliin In i imv, u 'i.nao u- vm always cool, and hence it takes heat from the moisture of the air permeating it. It acts the part of the cold pitcher. This is the simple, natural reasons for tho whole action, and nny farmer in Ihe world may undemnnd it. But tins may tie called booh-tiirmnte, so I w ill give au example of its practical chui iicter. 1 yesterday visited the farm of Prof. Mupes.. The whole country about Newark wears a pecu liarly Diirnt-up appearance, nud the dust ou the roads was deep, even for New-Jersey. 1 had previously asserted lhat 1 knew Mnpc' farm lo ue exempt irom llie ravages ol drouth, nud truly I found my prediction fully realized. Not a single plant seemed suffering for want or moisture; and, with their roots deeply located iu the subsoil, they seemed fairly to snap their fingers at the cloudless sky, and rather lo rail at old Sol for trying lo interfere with their private al lium. One crop of com deserves csnecinl notice, from its nlu-olutc iiingiiiliceiicu. Notwithstanding the fact that it is growing on the north western slope ol a hill, uud bus not been visited Throiiuli the corrupt imr Inll'H-nec of its patron- uj nun un livens, juv u ninims, u)Ti imj r- UKin the people s KcprcHoutaiivus, trccdom gardlcsB of all untoward eireunitaiices ; iunl, ul- lllH tat.n Grayed. It must Ih- overwhelmed at though, from its location and unluvorablu sea-1 ,,vm. ,,;! ignominious defeat. We can-sou, one would think forty bushels per acre a ! llol ;u,iru. h constitutional term oi office, but large yield, it will, without doubt, bo nearer) Wl, ,, Htrlktt down its allies in every State, one hundred bushels per acre. Here is an in- district nud county. It must have no props iu stance where truly scientific knowledge has reu- tIL. states upon which lo lean for the support of dered its possessor entirely independent of 1h . its iuiquitiius policy. No man should lie elected greatest drawback to ordinary success, and eiia-1 1 responsible uAlce Governor. Memlwr of t,Vn- imil nun kj mini, ginm .lin id a nail w muii, greSS, KCprcSCIllatlVC W llOM' rellltlOHS Ol IrlelUl- II this Is not practical jarmmg. I would nk ,jn nml uii,uloe with Ihe National A dm mist ru-r..n . r n. l c.iiw.- i,.n i . . ... . . . liliunisin" which the Dkihiotiists raiecd ugainst the men North who resisted tho outrage. And it would seem from the dally language of the Nullification press, that that is now their main reliance for forcing the Southern Whigs Into harinoniotiK action wilh the patriotic udiuiiiis- Will it suc ceed ' If the Whigs South are tillable to act with Northern Whigs, neither enn they net wilh Nulliiiers nnd Dir-unionlsts. They are bound lo maintain their distinctive organisation, or make the support and bprend of slavery the sole article of their creed. We of the Free Slates will ebvc the Union and the Constitution from Ihe destruction which awaits tho triumph of the Nullillers; the Whigs of the South inu4 save themselves as liest they may. Their nominal leaders in Congress have betrayed them ; let them I e careful how tliey follow such destructive lead. Here follows the extract from Mr. Wllmot's address, which the Einuirrr think ntlordt good reasons for Southern Whigs lo support the present corrupt administration. Logical, very 1 " The first blow mti'd lie alined for the overthrow of the present National Administration the mere tool mid puppet of llie slave power. German English schools will soon meet with the fate of Dr. Boyd. The Lies of a Demagogue Dr. Omm feels himself cornered, and is trying Grace joy. I thai) lie almost tempted, instead of n well-stocked plantation in Alabama, to wish lor a wcii-pepicu gravc-yard on bong iNluud. "Mr. Mitchell turns up,' you say'uslhe apol ogist of the scurvy tricks which bis associates played, whether in Conciliation Hall, or at to escape the dilemma which bis course on the Slicvegamon, after his taking leave of thecoun repeal of tho Missouri Compromise has involved him in. On the 3d of April Inst, our German fellow-citizens of this city held a meeting to denounce Ihe Nebraska swindle, when the following resolutions among others were passed : " Hesotval, That wo regard the Nebraska bill as a direct uttack upon the Missouri Compromise, and as a gross violation of the sacred rights of the free States. " Jlmohid. That we demand of our Representative in the popular branch of Congress, to vote aguitist the passage of tiie bill in the House ; and that In case he should side with its friends, bo will low our vote and support in the future," Iu the latter part of April, Olds was at homo, nnd iu a speech at Circleviile denied having re. ecieed the resolution, although tw o copies had Ir-cu mailed to him. Bill he was then advised of their character, to say the least, and, notwithstanding, he returned to Washington and voted for Ihe swindle. The tUrmans do not now at-tind the Doctor's meetings .' We shall try and republish the proceedings in full ol Ihe meeting of the 3d or April. some follower of Iho gniud-falhcr system to Icll . what is. Let Ihe devotee of national growth usk him self which will produce tho greatest lteuetlt to tho country, doubling our commerce, or Inducing every farmer lo use the suluoil plow and drnining tile. Gkouok E. W.utui.sn, Jit. New lnrk, Aug. 41h, IK(. Protecting the 1 eachi yct l0d himself in pariv nlliatico with the pres- The following communication, which uppeured ; cut Administration, lie en mud be trmttd ; In a late number of the New England Fanner, 1 ,nl no mm- a he in trmtid so nurr will the conlirm the opinion which we have repeutcdly p,ople and tlnir rinhls again be bctrayid.-ex pressed, that iu nearly every country in the iiK. tiiun who will not face in open and munly Northern States, crops of cacliCK may be sue-1 resistance the aggressions of the slave power f-cessfully raised, by selecting a proper site, and ennuot Ih- relied upon lo do so on the oc-giving proper treatment. Shortening in the j easjon of n future provocation, lie is hopelessly trees, so as to keep the h'-uds iu n small, com-1 rottenunsound to Ihe core, and will sucrlllce pact, but not crowded head, would greatly fiieil- ),; nmiiti 's highest hi!i re-t and glory for some uuie itnuer hiucimiiii, ihjsmh-h nopiutiOK toe paltry party CollMUerutlons. ff" We see by lute foreign items thai Mr. Guk'ioky M. WoitTAiiKT, a unlive of Beyrool, In Syria, bun ln-eu addressing a lurge meeting in Glasgow, Scotland, on his favorite project of evangelizing Syria. Wortnlet visited this country In 1kV', und tiaveied widely lecturing on (he habits and character of his people. We tion are open to suspicion. We mut accept of j h''rd Win In November of that year on several nothing in ihe candidates presented lor our suf-, occasions, and from some intercourse with the frages short of undisguised hostility lo the ultra young limn was (.truck wilh his earnest zeal on Pro-Slavery power ut Washington iything tll0 (J t ( thrlstiani7.ing his native land, short ot this is lolly. Idle, trilling, shilly-shally ' , . 8 . . nonsense ; nud designed in the end to lean uie --n - - people step by slep into acquiescence In the pol- favor, as a vote of Ihanks was tendered him, and icy of slavery. Let no candidate pretend to : a committee appointed to consider in what way the work of evangelization in Syria could be best promoted. ges of evergreen boughs, and these would doubt less prove very eltieient. uud would Iri easily applied in such dislriels us uro largely supplied wilh pine, hemlock, or cedar forest trees. Coun try t. vntl, man Thf. Cnnn:.. The news from the scut of war leaves no doubt about the determination of tho allied (towers lo luvudi-tbc Crimea. This U Iho first olleii-ive mcusure of any real InilKtrliuice Mknsim. Eiitoiw: In answer to au inquiry in thai has Itcen undertaken by the allies since the your last week's paper, whether trial has been i commencement of hostilities. The only point made by any one iu protecting the peach. I am j l)U ,, peninsula whose defences will ofler any happy to say 1 have tried it with comp ete sue-, . . . Scmst(im, .,,.. h Kiiiks. This seems lo bo llie season of destructive tires. In uddition to the lire In Troy, N. V., we have now to mention a terrible fire at Milwnukic, on the UMb Inst., by which, twenty- live to thirty buildings were destroyed, many of them among the most suMnntial brick buildings in the city. Loss estimated at .'iPil.Ddtl dollars. The Insurance companies suffer largely as usual. The office of the Daily Wisconsin was destroyed, with loss of a large portion of Us type and ull its presses, steam-engine, Ac. A tire at Waldohoro', Maine, destroyed about hull the town, on the Will iust. The loss Is estimated at ?.'i(),0(io dollars. While the tiro was ruglug at Milwaukle, a de spatch was received from Kenosha, asking for try. ' Yes, Bishop, I shall never cease to le proud that I had such associates. They failed; and therefore have forfeited all claim to your (i race's sympathy: but for the sako of arousing uie oor uowu-iroodcii starving people to one munly clfort for Hie, and land and the liberty lo live on their own soil, those associates of mine, risked their lives, and during many duys sought au opportunity of throwing them away. In vain: they were met at nil points by thu Catholic priests, who drew oil" the jieople as they were assembling round O'Brien, nnd denounced ugainst them the vengeance of Heaven. Mr. O'Brien himself has told me tlmt men came to him while he was out on his noble but vninmission- came to him shedding tears of bitter rage nnd disappointment, declaring that they wished lo fight with him for their country: "and God knew they little valued their lives' but there was his reverence standing by, and eternal damnation was the mildest threat ho made them "Aud what were they to do, God help them!" Ves, Bishop, if that insurrection failed, and without so much as a blow struck, the failure Is due, 'not lo cowardice or faithlessness on the part of those you call "Young Irelnnders," but to the treachery and iiieuuuess of the Irish Catholic priests. But desire tho fact to Ih noted, that In all the short popular sovereignties of '4K, the people everywhere. Cutholic and Protestant, before all things, almlished every disability and penally for religion. Other forms of tyranny, tho tyranny of money, tbe tyranny of mobs, muy arise in these latter days; but of that peculiar oppression, religious persecution, l be whole world is sick, except the clergy. Hereby it may lie seen how averse from the Idea of religious persecution the Irish Cutholic laity must lie like all other liuty. .Maxims of religious freedom have been familiar In their mouths for ages; nud, although I do not ut-bold O'Coimell in ull things. 1 take him in Ibis matter as a tyjic nnd representative of the Irish nation. Did you ever sec, In any sH-cch or writing of Daniel O'Connell, any allusion, nd-umbrntion, or hint of possible future, or puulo- Hsl in lure penalties lor conscience sake: Are not his sH.-echcs, for forty years, full of the pluinest, broadest, lxddest assertion of the perfect right ol all men to worship as they please! Therefore, 1 tell you. Bishop, that nothing can so grossly outrago Iho feelings, or tend to damage thu civil position of your countrymen (but I beg pardon your Grace, I lielicve. Is a Welshman) of the froth In America, as the teachings of Iho Catholic press, especially your Grace's organ and Dr. Brownsou's Review, in favor or Iho intolerant despotisms of Euroe. If half the nations of the earth must lie held iu civil bondage forever; If Democratic freedom itself Is lo tie oM'iily denounced in Ihe old world, and undermined and sneered at in Ihe new; if Amerieun Repaid! Main In Washbiglon, Cormpomlence uf thf S, Y. Courier ft Knuuircr. Wasiiinoton, Aug. 21. 1 learn from an authentic and authoritative source, that an important correspondence has taken place between Mr. Buchanan and Lord Clarendon, relative to the port of Sun Juan and the Mosquito protectorate. Mr. Buchanan took early occasion, after ontering on his mission, to l li tor m thu Secretary tor Foreign Atluirs that this government desired to resume nud bring to a conclusion all questions respecting Central America which were pending when Mr. Everett retired from Ihe Stato Dcpurtmcnl on the tth oi .Murcn, lNi.t. lie stated llie views aim ex-pectutious of his government at sumo length. Lord Clarendon replied iu n statement embody ing the claims of (treat Britain, and advancing on her part pretensions which were supposed lo havo lsjcn yielded by the Clayton and Bulwcr convention oi inoo. ir. uuciianun rejoined with a counter statement. In which be reviewed the controversy from its commencement, and stated with convincing strength and argument, the position and rights of the United Mates. He declared In explicit term, that tne Ameri can government coukl not recognise any Indian clnim to territorial jurisdiction over any part of this continent, and, therefore, could not admit the validity of uny protectorate or guarantee oi sucn claims, mis communication is understood to comprise the ultimatum of our govern ment on the Central American question, ami is iH'lieved to require, not only the abandonment of the protectorate over the Mosquito coasts, but in rL'iuiijiiiiiiiiM'ii! in Kciueuieui ut ui m-i-1 ize, and the discontinuance of Iho colony or the Bay of Islands, on tho coast of Honduras, as formed in in:i. The rejoinder to this significant Stale paper has not been received, and probably none will bo given. Though on the side of the British Cabinet tho correspondence aiqwars to be conducted by Lord Clarendon, it Is undoubtedly managed ny ioru ruimerstou, llie Home sec retary. ineucspaich which elicited Mr. U. s second communication was, it now appears, the proxi- innie cause oi tne ooinimrdtneni nud miming oi Grey tow n. Tbe Indisposition of the British gov ernment to meet the question determined ours to act, aim a resolution was formed to smoke and burn all foreign protecting powers out of Central America. Thedestruction of Grey town was but tbo beginning, and It is expected that Iho same extreme policy will, within the ensuing six mouths, secure the evacuation of lilew-llelds and Belize. England in now engaged In a conflict with Russia which ubsorlis most of her available power and resources, but were she disengaged from that struggle there can bo no doubt that the acts and intentions of this Government would be held good cause of war. Tho mere professions or belligerency indulged in by President Polk pending tho Oregon dispute, produced preparations for wnr on a ciirautic scale. The positive acts of hostility committed by the present administration, und so unmistakc-ably avowed by the present olllcial organ, must lead lo important consequences. A few days since I questioned the correctness of (he rumor regarding the correspondence described above, hut the in forma tion received today leaves me no doubt of its accuracy. INSPECTOR. -.k - ; .1, . 1 ..I , , i. :. Ilcutlous for land defence may now he. does not I Mp agnii.st the ravages of a destructive fire coldest weather. This place is situated one de- sena to ! well uudersbssl. Two years ago j tbfn raging at that plncc. Tho Ins at Kenosha grec north of Portland, in the n lute Mountain ibey were descrilwd by au English traveler as "u stuieu, mil is said lo no large. r gioo, nimio m i. .ou ..... . )ut , l; i,t U WW uvidcilt tllllt lie hud Hot Tim prevalent idea that extreme cold alone w il kill the pcitch, I Isdievc must ls abandoned: nr rather, the Idea that when Ihe thermometer Is 'Tl 1 '" i ... , , ,,., ,.. I- .,,, strained in his movements from a wuut of leave , .'! After all tho ellbrt made by Dr. Omm Cadet Life. From an article on " West Point aud Cadet Life," in tho August number of Putnam's Magazine, we extract a passage relative to appointments, which may be useful to young aspiring genius. We hare known more than ono smart young gentleman give way More tbe ordeal of initiation and the first year's drill : " How can I Income a Cadet!" Is a question very prone lo rise in a "young American's mind when stirred by life and feathers. Briefly thus. For earh Congressional District one Cadet is ul lowed, whose appointment is pratically in the gift of the Representative iu Congress from that District. Contingeuces considered, a vacancy oceurslsuit once in three years for each district. So, querist, your apjHiinlmonl depends lirsl, on there being a vacancy for your District, and secondly, on your worthy or unworthy M. C, The President makes twelve appointments at large each yenr, but as you value your cacc of mind, do not hope lo lie one of his elect. And lie not over-sanguine on any score, for it Is said that during the Mexican war, nearly ten thousand applications were made during a single year, if 1 rememlwr correctly. ApHiinlmeiits all come from the Sccrelury of War, to whom a formal application should be made ; but your M. C. really selects for appointment. Now a far more vita) queMion for you lo consider is whether you areyir to be appointed. Of ninety-six Cadets appointed In the class of 1MIM, only twenty-live graduated, anil generally only from a hull to a third of those first appointed, " ddf the Cadet to don the Brevet. The surgeon n examination Italian Opkiu is Evulanp. The first Italian Opera ever performed in Eugluud, was produced January .'ih, Di7l, under the auspices of Catherine of Braguti.a, (tjuceii of Charles II.,) whose devotion lo that style of music and exclusive patronuge of foreign mu-iciunx. did not increase her popularity iu Englund. The divine compo-sitidiisof I'urcell were then considered tbe per- lecliou ot melody, and were more in unison with uuliuiml taste than the arlilk ial uud elnliorato stylo which has since been permitted to supersede the Inspirations of nutivo latent. It was, however, long ere an English audience learned 10 reli-li the Italian Opera, much less to give it the preference over llie masques of lieu. Jouson and Milton, and the operas of Dryden. combining, as they did, tho simple sublimity of the GreeK tragedy with the enchantment of vocal poetry nnd instrumental music. It win; not easy to persuade the publie in tho.-c days tlmt a combination of incomprehensible sounds how ever harmonious they might bo, were capable of exciting feelings of admiration and delimit, like those with which they listened to the national opera of .Irthur, where Dryden'i-numbers are wedded to Purecll's melodies, compelling British hearts to thrill impulsively when the stormy deliunce of tho battlf-chorus oi the Saxons is uiiMvercd by the spirit-stirring air of Hi Hon, Strike Home. Mrs. Strickland's tuetim of England. Tuv: Mixsksota Lami Fhaup. A Minnesota paper thus pluinly speaks of the late fraud perpetrated by the Clerk of the House of Itepi esen-tut i ves in altering un important w ord iu the Alin-ucHdu laud bill. ' Since the passage of the bill, wo have heard 11 whisncml mining knowing ones, (lint It wok 'ull right' that the Iriciidi of tho lute bill had been 'sold,' and the Hist operators would lake the luuds under last winter's uct of our Legislature. I'ntil this recent exposure, however, we little understood the nature of the garni that had been played. Wc little dreamed that the rapacious harpies and speculators who lulorcdso strenuously lust winter lor ihe pussugo of un act by which they should make their fortune at the expense of the territory, would descend to such despicably low cunning and meanness such treacherous, Indian warlare us lo sneak into the Clerk's room ui.d niter au engrossed bill, giving the charter lo parlies for whom it was uever intended. If we ever entertained uny double altout tho corrupt menus used to puss the charter thro' our Legislature, this Huishing stroke bus removed them ull.'1 The first gold mine discovered and worked iu the United States was the " Rcid mine," in Ca-liarras county, North Carolina. It was brought lo light by the discovery, iu a brook, of a seventeen pound lump uf pure gold, by a little son of John Reid (tho proprietor of the tract), while engaged one Sunday in shooling tl-li with a bow uud arrow. This was In the year 17!''J. It was not, however, until several years afterwards that the lump was known to be gold, tho boy's father having kept it meanwhile, on account ol its weight, ns a good nud curious looking Mono which would keep his cabin door open. Wheu informed ut length that it was gold, und asked tils price lor It, lie coiu'luoi U lo sell il lor tte.oo. He was ono of the Hessian soldiers who were sold by their " noble prince" to England, lo light the American!' in the Revolutionary war, and one would naturally suppose lhat he ought to have known the value of gold, if uny ono did. Hartford Tunes, That's tiik Tai.k.A ' Nebraska Democrat '' writes a moving appeal to Father Sax ton, of thu Canton Hepositary, the oldest editor in the State, urging him to keep up tho Whig organization ol Stark county. The old veteran replies thus: Our correspondent ennnot expect from us any I UKsisuuice. iu uie prnjeei ue suggeis we repudi ate it entirely, tie nave piiiuii uie nun started ut Columbus on the Lllh of July, und shall strain every nerve to perfect and carry out thu plan there devised, to reform the corruption ami ex-Iruvngniicc of our National, Slulo aud County Governments, and to stop Slave aggressions. Wu unite wilh nil good men, whether Whig, Democrat, Freesoil, or Know Nothing, to t licet these great and desirable reforms. When we reflect that during tho administration of John Q. Adnms tho expenditures were l2,(HKi.ti00 now$f-il,l)U0,-ooi) w hull tin; expenses of the Stale of Ohio have lieen trebled within a few years and wheu Iho taxes coil-clod in Stark county havo risen from nlsuit S.ono lo over SliiO.oitfi, tve think every honest man must think reform Is much needed ; indeed ulmidutely essential totin-Interests of every citizen. Come join us iu effecting these reforms. 12 deirrees In-low zero il is fatal; I havecoulen- ' lo make exploration. Time enough has elutwed ded for several years, thai It is not so much the since the commencement of Ihe war to make the extreme colds us the strong winds, pellingsleel I imurd delenees correspond iu some degree and snow, nud sudden changes of temperature ... ,. .. . , . , ,, . that ailed the iM-ueh. We hud the thermometer I w,,u ,1U Vi&m Aw ' "Irengll. seaward, once last winter at :U degrees, aud at severul I The following brief dcNrnplion ol the Crimea times from i down to that extreme degree of lb taken from un article iu the Jniirnal of Coin-cold, and yet our peach trees that were protected merer, mw jui l at this time will Ik-read with ny matting or nr nougnswere not injured at an. inturcist : Mv practice is this: Lato in the full I draw ,,.'., , . , , , , ., the limbs of the tree together, ami put round L '"' nn,i'a if,,l" I'""""'' K1'1 some mailing, a single fold will answer, drive a wfll ling a greater va- ntake down by the side of the tree und fasten r!p ,,llU,,r'11 "' niiy tbe tree to it. I Ino mm. can protect from one to ol ".'l- Y" " i... i !.. ...... ' t) i.i i. . of it are wa-hed by the Black r-cn.nnd the North- ken not lo unwrap too early iu the spring, so us l V? UK " " ' , "l ! with (he aid of all Ihosc, there were not enough expose the trnit huds lo the lulu Host. , ", '...nil,, , n ......mrv t ,...d de-1 drummed up lo half fill the City Hall I 1 also protected a locust Iree in the wunewnv, l,rmill c,,n m," "T ' l!,,lin.,r.v Ll V' Ul ! 1 1 simply by lashing a few fir houghs to the north-' P1' ,. " 1 " '"" ""ni-my west side ol the tree, it now iooks as origin as though it w ere growing in the latitude or Phila- H 'tasrl, to get up a demonstration In favor of the Nebraska iniquity on Saturday night last, it resulted in a failure. It is true, the Penitentia ry was represented by all who were "lying around loose ' ubuul that institution. The new State House Managers showed bow deeply they were interested by sending their contractors, sujifrinleiuleiits, foremen, ic. The long, low range of State buildings, tumid out well for mi ml tors, and the bangers on about Ihe charitable Institutions of the Stale, were not behind iu shewing (heir adherence to the party that fur nishes them with breud and butler. And yet, MAi.uuiAN'ri ToMti. Poor Mallbran, ono of the few theatrical women one takes an interest in sleeps at Lacken. cbue to Brussels, In (lie prettl est ciiurcn-vnrii in iteicium ; jihi uie green. ou nr. tranquil place that a church-yard shonM Iter grave ts covered hv un anomalous sort building, that would look like a h'.i tinner house If it had open windows. Excepting nothing from the in i graceful iiess of the exterior, you are startled when you look through a small aperture in the iron door and lind Iho inner gloom lighted up by a white marble Maine the figure, as of un ascending angel, so spiritually lair you might take it for a ision. The bare foot is just parting from tho earth : the rlx- seem nlrniuy to have liegun lo lloat, and the head nnd fn now in tbe full light under (lie glazed roof, are steeped iu golden glow troui the loyt level rays of (ho selling sun. Seen thus, the Usly mouldering in the dust, the spiritual part ulready in the light, and almost iu the presence of God, then- seems no long transition , no floating upward and on- irar.1 i.uyl nl !- tlm lu-t tm.,-1, ..C h ofU'nsiguiliesfXfM-ifforadozenneopfiyten,an.l!thL, ,wt ,,linM,w ,tf hlltM r Mw ni-oeauiing asmuny mora exhibit such idosyiicracies in read- r..n i,,, .,i fc.,ti-!,. ,i i.,.,-,-, ,.r i- n.i it... r,iimii ins, writing, orthography and arithmetic, that i .,.. tt.,.1 ,n. ,,u i..,-.i i; Irish are to lie set against each other in deadly ,ht' unsyuipalhiziiig Aciwlemic Board quietly i ' 1 ... , strife ; and all because Iho PoM- rules, and rules I mimd Ihe.n back to citizenship. Then comes Amxs I ..iH:i:uin.--About a year and a l,llv twit nrineitinlitv In Ititlv Iip .orr(l ! Iho Januury examination, when the algebraic I ''"ce, some jhtsoim hi searching at West lhat the Irish here will liegin to cum the Pope-, I wwks are consigned in rearful nunilwr, to the ; M. fonl. Passaic county f-r Iron, rame achsi a ...i i,i- .ir- i,;. i,. ..,,..,! Parental underwriters. So too in June and Jan- '"-U or clay, wilh the nature ol which they were j.v.i.i ,v .... mv iiriwnmni, iuu uinn- helmed, the mul-oilapted, are singled out from among their stouter fellows, and with stern justice are hunMied from sens loo rough lor them. The martial aspirant should consider these things Ik-fore becoming a Cadet, and remembering well lhat Cadet-hip is no mere holiday training, no refined peacock ism, but a fouryeurs of discipline lo isMiy, mind nnd Heart, severer hv fur than lions, conclaves, colleges, and Ihe rest of the clerical upparatnn." (It'll F'oukiuj' Hklations. It would seem by a communication from Iho Washington correspondent of Ihe N. York Courier and Enquirer, which wc give in another column, that tho administration Is seeking to complicate our foreign , ., r ... . ,i, ,. f Riiroiiicrcoocu- oiiuicourBCinuuriawiinvoivcH. relations as a means or gett ng out of the very , J(iJ .f MM(jnent rf v manliyi C)H1I. discml.ta.de imsitlon In which it has placed it- n(tc lrttlntly to endure present trial for future elf by the destruction of Greytown. There g1Ml. and alsnve all. If an onlerly zeal fur intel- really was no justitluble causa for the wanton ' lectiml culture aud hanlihotnl are living facts In attack on now to hung this petty pic assumed Insult to Ihe apology for a public rep resentative. Borland, ou Ihe non-intervention I Bill dis'triiic of Mr. Monroe, in a (etiiful attempt to j The smuggler and patriot, whose exploits on convert the ridiculous Into tbo sublime. In 1 i ihe m. Lawrence and in um intra- s no justifiable cause Tor the wanton ' lectiml cullure ana hanliliotnl are living lacls in ? riwiue, i-nKt.voo.vin this neutral town, and tho attempt ! nalnro, tlwri I know not how else a youth j M' Ihe geological survey, , ,., . 1M , - ,. fl ,rt can Ikcoiuc so iiiurh a man, as by a nest Point kiml near l tniadeipuia. ing this petty piece of revenge for the 1)iucUlol 1 th- clay is alumina mIIci no rominnuder of all Ihe Amvrican troops on i ,(.. Mir..,.,n il.,.,i,.h if. hiul i this liuni rouiihl day. and that most of the otli- L.n i i,t. ,ii., l.il.l Mint ft rnrd eers who conducted men there, all Mng moveil ' ,iri,,-U ,l,,un l.v r 1 1 ; onlnn.i..- r.n- tnidnes. went from our heart t ners. i "j " r"- - - ami uespuir uncnaiued; nere, penury ciuitumg Wo came back Ihe next day. hut we did nol ; end. fought Iho common enemy much as they u ctLnmi .p. tncre K,ittrtiy leeding on see her. Morning aud evening passed, and she deemcnl best, each acting pretty much on I Us llital meal, ami phrcniy HtrikinR In (he dark wu not there ; and then wc ihoughl, yes wc felt, own book. Tbe ashe ol the noble veteran now t0 rorC8tull death. Through all fancy hears the that she had gone to the country ; perhaps, jusi j weep uimer "j young gin s screams; iuu lire is on iter jewel leu del oh ia. lean seo iid reason why peaches cannot he raised in nny part of Maine, simply Iiy protecting them iu ibis way. It may not lie known lo all of your readers l lint although wc live so far to the North, Ihe ground is rarely frozen to any extent in winter, I he early snows prevent this, j so mat It is only uie top oi siieii trees uiut need special protection. It is iiwle-w to attempt the cultivation of thu peach in this State without some kind ol protect ion; Ihey muy survive one, two or even three winters, should they 13 mild, but the fourth may kill (hem ull down. 1 can see no reason why tho tender varieties of dwarf penrs nud pimmt may not bo protected iu the same way, and ihus largely increase our to Ihe evil liilluenee of Hussiau rule. So far I 1 "regnu Statomtm gives encouraging from keeping puce wilh the progress til the age, 'prospects for the farmer. The new mountain thoCriiueuhussadlyreirogrnded. Ib-r products rilad will soon lie completed, und no doubt n grenl tide of emigration follow-. It In remarkable how even is the range of the are shinned otf in considerable oitantilics lo Ilu: sia, much of them extorted from her In return h,r lln. Ciir'a nri,frrtt,t, The fertililv uf winie parts or Ihe Crimea Is so great, that hcirrul ul i thermometer. In the first fortnight or July, at the most valuable of tbo fruits of Ihe earth ran o o'clock, it vuried only a degree or twin-about tie cultivated, Willi nut sligm uusir, pi uie great- t 1 nt noon there wa more varintioii-7 1 tort I est perfection, aud loan astonishing extent of Increase. This was known to the ancient Greeks, and was taken advantage of by Greece under her system of colonization. Six centuries Itefore tho Christian ru. ihey hnd begun lo form colonies on Ihe Northern shores of Asia Minor; and we learn from Mralsi, and other writers of antiquity, that Ihey pre- erreu nils HHliHfnin, noiil iistuminiinin niuiij then, wan sitting wilh lather and mother under ! ial gratitude, on bis farm, on l ho bnuks of the the shade ol just such a group of fragment cc- j Merrimack, in sight or the hill of Amoskeag. darn, on jnnt such a rock, near just such a spring where he scared salmon in bis youth, and near i had sal by two days rj. lore.with one ot " wauuim waiinum-a ... .-earest Utile girls in ihe world, wbib- other , be trped beaver in malurer life. ', were enjoying an we I the dearest I little irirls. more inclined to play, life with high glee all around. Tim Lit rus Out Max. There bo goes trit- We were almost sure our surmise was Iruo. ping along through tho rain, as If be were ry-brcausr the cart stood Idle In Ihe slreel ; 1ml it (n(r ,IMK,. tin- drops, as spry as a cricket. A only stood so two days, and then we saw old lit :!, sin -it, crablied old man. dressed in an old-Dobbin backing out of bis oven ami coining , ta,,iii, . suit, wilh abroad-brimmed hat cot-down Ihe alkv. and walking In between the l iwil wiili shinlntr-ular.rd or India-rublier cloth : shafts or Hit carl by the pump. It was an old, I (inl (;rRt Tlrliuni 1 He la over eighty. familiar sight, and we really tell comfortable lo ; ,i y,q troubles Ihe young woman by his see il airain. We hod iust taken a cold bath, as : .i.iP ' heallbv. stool, blooming -It troubles her we always do at six o'clock every morning, aud lt keep up with him. Now Ihey start to crow that mode us In a mood t be comftu table with tno street the sea of mud crowded with all outside Inlluencen. There was one thing, j h,)m., carts and carriages. The lady is timid though, that detracted a Utile from our comlort. I the old man rushes ahead then he turns back. We Ihouirht the carman's eyes looked a little nU forward, and stretches out bin long arms unusually red, and there was less vigor In his riuxingly towards bin young wife -for the lady slop than ought lo follow two days' recreation hid m.w bride and of course she scir.es hold In ihe country ; and we emild not help thinking 0f tl(.m Rm comes on. Now they are safe oh that he had done nhnt a million others of his i tho other side, burning along the sidewalk co-countmnen had done upon Ike same occasion, j ty ingetherlhe old man cheerful and bright, Just " in honor of Iho day "got drunk. How : t', young wife robust and fresh as a rosebud we did wrong that man. After he was all ready tnr.y trip along lovingly together. Hastily they to start, he got down and went back and looked inril n . rig,t HtH enter a More of Sunday-up tbe court, as though be bad forgotten some- ( -hod IsM'ks. or somelhing of that kind, thing, or expected lo see somebody running Yes, that In old Grant Thorburu--onco Ihe dow n. Why did not somebody come 1 Hal nho i rimiiiiiliince and friend of Thomas Paine, tho did not, and he started away, looking back as he Celeliratil inlidel, but always the very antipodes went around the corner 1 out no loving giance ( nf 'Hn(. (,u the wiliirct ol religion. net his : no kins flew from a waving hand, like I iiP landed in this country, we Mlcvo, with an electric Hh to hi heart. W hat could It , onT u,m( CcnU In his pocket. Me bus been no-tnesn ! Ah, thought ws, he lias Wt them iu the 1 ted and succrhsful as a seedsman ; has written country. Gmmlps fell so In love wilh ihe litllt ,u ,iw n autobiography ; has published much un-city girl thai be must have her stay a while j ,ier the signature of' Laura T-sId ; bos lately with him ; and grandma thinks it must Im loo . nt.( a MT, (n dm Custom House, from which hot for the TMhy In Ihe ctiy, ami mamma a nraim ( h w as dischargtl lor carrying a lamp in a tor- Will be all the belter lor a wee mere. luxuries. A little pain- must 1-c taken even with 1 ytccmcnis to n.u is r.ai enierpnse, w m-ma the apple ireo to inuKc it uiirisn. I navn known 1 """' ''.,, , ' ; persons object to eullivaie the IssMia grnp All true, vet all false. It was so true It ser- fed for a lull of any anxiety In our mind until Saturday, and then nnmetsnly at our house wanted a cart, and called hiin of tho opposite alley. While be was waiting, we said we supposed ho went to the country to enjoy Ihe Eourlh ofJuly.'' " No ; It was a day of little enjoyment to me." " Were you sick ! ' " No," There was a strange suspicion coming over us. We dreaded to ask, lor fear It was true, hut could not turn away, and so wa said : " And your linle girl!" "She Is gone. Sir. ' "To Ihe country V " Yea." We breathed freer, until he addsd : " Yes ; kIm baa gone to the country to Greenwood t" "And lira little oneT" " It went with her. We could not part Ihem. Her last words wre. 'Oh, lake good care of Ihe baby till 1 come for (t. It won't be long. Good hytl' Hh dia at evening , she came for ber ' pt at dawn, and wt laid It upon her breast, and carried them both away to-relher. You iTe missed her. too, 1 have often noticed you looking at us. But she la gone now." " And the mother T" . , JW 00 hUow, I fear, and then I shall bidden place ; and. withal. has recently taken to himself a lliint. or a louriti wile hand. No time lor thought, no pause; Ihe Itood rolls on, and wisdom, beauty, ago and youth, with all Ihe stories of their love, their noen, their rank, wealth and greatness, all the once allluent life, are gone forever. When unearthed alter many years, the liaiue- Icks group has no other InijMirtance to mankind thnn as it may "serve to point a moral or adorn a laic.'' A French Kenan nt Heme She helps lo cook Ihe dinner she hasItought--for servants uro w asteful w ith charcoal, and she knows to an Inch how little she can use. In thai marvellous place, a Kronen kitchen where two or three little holes in a stove, cook such delicate tliabes aud perform such culinary feats as our great roaring giants of coal fires have no conception of sho Hits about like a fairy, crea ting magical messes nut oi raw muieriui oi tne most ordinary description. She mixes up the milk and eggs thai make Iho foundation ol the soupe a IWilo, if It he meagre duy. This sor rel soup In a great favorite in economical households, and is vaunted as being highly ratraii h-ihsant for Ihe blots! indeed, ono ol tbe most refreshing things you can take next to a tissane of rime flowers. She mixes the salad oil, suit and M'pper are all nbe puts Into it ; she fries the poialoe cnips, or peeps inio uie pot ot nancou, or sees that thu spinuch is cleun and Ihe asparagus properly liollcd. Aud then she turns lo Ihe plal sue re or sweet dish. If she have one for dinnerthe rhiz and rliuin, or Ihe oeufs a la neige or the crcme a la van i He all simple enough or cheap, and not uuwiltingly rejected if procrly made. In fact, our friend does tho work ol a bead cook, the servant doing the dirty work. Yes, though o lady born and bred, rellued, elegant and agreeable In society, a belle In her way, yet she does not think It beneath her dig nity lo lighten the household cxitcusc by iirac- llow few ol us will lite to see Ihe years which I tlcal economy and activity. Tno dinner of a he ban seen I All, perhsits, expect to do so. Kreneh family Is cheap and simple. There is nl-llut. one bv one we shall le summoned to Ihe i ways soup, the meat ol the stew pan sometimes. 11 not striei in cxK!iiuiiure, auotiier piniv oi meat generally two vegetables dressed and si in pi v lecuu:o Ihey must lie protected thr person ought not lo pos told that tho vino gli tho winter; such a ss many comforts. M. T. TRUK, Bktiiki., Maine, May 27, 10 1. O.VK OK TIIK l;XlKllTAKt;i: respouileiit comiuunicute A New Vork cor- the following hard was found lo yield a return of lilt v times ilu seed. At one time, Indeed, it was cmr uli nil tho granary of Greece, especially of Alliens, whose territory, being nf small cxlcnt, and of indifferent fertility, wo unable to iimiiiluiii its lurge population by its own pnsluce. There is a deep classical interest in this subject.Ih-iuns-thenes bos, more than once, bad hi eloquence excited by ll. Besides breadstuff's, it still ex ports hides, morocco and oilier tine leatln cades of the Thousand Islands, made him fa mous during the rcMlion in Canada, some sev- unacquainted. A svicntihV invent tuition fms revealed the I not that it is Kuoliu, un oce-diugly valuable porcelain clay, quite scarce. It can boused in the mauiil'acturu of porcelain ware, tiles, lire brick, the ghiingofiMrdsnup, puint, Ac. Tho dep.Hite nt West Millopl s of tho purest kind: it is of vwrious colors, white, red, chocolate, and others. Tim Hirvelain maiiufac-tured from il will Ik? equal, it is ihuuglit, to Iho ln's-t Kreneh. The depiwii is large, und u company ol eapltnli-l" Is uIhiiiI (o 1m Pinned, under the name of the Miicknpiu Kaolin Co.. In work il. Similar deposits exi-d iu Japan, China. Sax ony. Krance, Luglaiid, one at Aiimoy. diM overed ami oue ol ail interior Tin; composition of a. und it h generally formed ffntn di-uter,it'tl granif. .Vrtrnrk Daily .idverthir Tiik Di:iornTirCMniHri: Mu.i tn "Snip.' Yesterduy Aflrrnnori, Andrew CitU-n, Istt President of our oily conueil. mid a leading Democrat In tins city, with is ii in nainl, rode The Oregon wheat crop is ripening lu-t, the harvest will Is; abundant, mid less nil it ted with smut I han has been generally sinqtosed. There seems to Ik- a growing interest In agriculture now awakening luroughoul Ihe Terri tory. This Is right; Oregon has Is-eti destined by nature, to lie the garden of the I'aeilic coast - let It Ih' improved and cultivated. Bi.iutii. Mr. John Koree. of ihls county, h.is brought to our table, Kngli.-ll gooselierries ol his own cultivation, measuring an inch and a quarter iu diameter, tree from spines nud of the Imest lluvor. Wild gooelerrien are now found in abundance aiming the hills and iu the low In mis, nlsnit the size of large currants, un-p'iiuled. alio oi an atcreeuiile (art lluvor. Kn-plHTries, uud low-bu-h bl ftlsuind itt this season of the vear. 'lin y are commenting on the fuels stated by Its corres- ' J v lenteen years ago. and who. as a conw-quonoe or thriMih llie principal sheet of Ihe cilv, tiding remaiks : his excentricities, suffered a lung imprisonment I ,. ,.ii ., i l.,.-.1.i ... t, ,i .,., '...r.nl H I here was any distrust of Knglaud's In- i the jail at Albany, now litis the po-t or light- I pn.rtv" would Is offered for nle at tho new teullon to curry mil the Clavton-Bulwer Treaty I hmise keewr, ou liock Island, one or the abovo flllirl hlmsr door, nt !l o'clock preoisrlj. At Iho Iu good faith, a little esrnest correspondence I named group, a short distance below French j nw IHl,m.,i, aMll ,, ibuusand -.h-iso,- hiul would have .piickly settled the mailer. But i Creek. The Island is what Its name imporl, tt , ,s4.l),tllcl, al,d were wailing lor the auctioneer, there was in lucl. nu g-ssl ground for sm h .lis- clump .if rocka. almost destitute ot natural soil; i.'jimnv, r, (;i,(, Inimt, ,i hm.i U..u u pile lrul. There is no evidence whatever that Great but ,l..husm has ,,aiiea pnslucllve garden there-( Mone. and culling the cr-.wd around him. he Britain has lately exercised, or attempted loex- j "n.hin vegi-lnblea dem log their nnsteiiance from wmtmri.d ), -p. -rsonal prorerl v" lo Is u.ubiiig ere ire uny )urisdiclionoer Ihe .MoMpiito t mt, , woo n we utwi unn-niiii u m tin mmo though h'.r' eniistn.clion or the langusgeol the ! laud In his host. Tho Nilrtry nf bis olliee is ireuly iu reference to her abandonment ol ihe," II, either niiL.tl or 4mi, but be lives frugally, moled- nto materially ditlcrs from thai ol (be ! 'y picking up something outside ot his reg-pivnl adiiiinistrution. Thetpu-liou. however. "li"" '"isiness, by means or iMwig and kiudnd ni,.i;.iiv u.nl.,,1 iu,t .,'nr mm whi-n iho Pursuits, lie msiiages to iave a Considerable arrangement was made bv Mr. Welter that ! lsirlion of the amount every year. He is rim. (ircvtnw.i should be trcalcil as an independent j tented and happy, and fond of seeing visit, port', subject lo no foreign jurisdieliori or inter-1 to whom ho recounts the remantio Inei-lereiice. We have vet to leant that Great Brit-1 dents of his vrentful career, and inagnllles thu ain has not olwerveii the engagement fatlhtullv. ' achievements winch has gm-n blm so much milt is true. Indeed, thai there Is a dilllcultv yet toriety pending in reference to the question whether the i He gives an amusing account of Ibe manner Icrinn of that Irealv in mil-racing Cenlral , l which he obtained his office, through tho in-4 ri..." ..,.n. i I,, 1 1, mil nrHa in th tut u.f i slmmciiiulitv of Gov. Marry. He wont to Wash- region the British nnqiiesllouably continue to , higton, w illiout any recommendations orcreden-ev-iciso jurisdiction, and they evidently have Hals of any kind, depending wholly upon bis candidate lor Ihe Board of Public Works, Mr. G. then inquired "ilow much," "How much," a bid of one cent wud ottered, then two ceuls, and Anally three cents. Thf "pripiTly' waskinx-.k-ed oA at three cent-- Cin. iitizette, Vr.su st Lavt. Wc are orry to announce the death of Mnj. Dumi. well known hi this city, and throughout the West, as the n'"hi, nr muny years, of various coinp.oiieA it Minstrel. Ae. He died ut Rm he-ler. on Thursday, of u diseu. like cotcumplioii. Hi" deaih wlis pre uutu rely nnuouue'd some weeks ago, since which time hope have Iwrn etib rluiin 1 of his ultimate recovery, which were domm-d to be di.-Uto!iitd. .Major I'liuti nad ii ienu uen'ver lie went, iur i i....:.... i. ii... i ... 1 nersnniil r haraeler. I i tain nir an nlerview Wi i ws n oeu.-iun, six iio'm ituui j.mooo, nun ui: ihe dinic.ltv to Is- n.Iv1 bv Ibis extraordinary , Ih" Gvernt. be disclosed bis wishes, wltlioul dealh will be regivti.,1 t mauv not Is Mind to . , display of violence, why was not ihe violence ceremony or circumlocution. " I m Itill John- mm ? "'""' ' .kk-rrles also I ..V.J,.,., , .,!,.. iM.n. said he.-vou know me bv remilat ion. us I relatives in tins city. Huff. Ihrn-tcrat. w iv hii nut I in- ii.ito Hti iinieoi ill i,ei e i nsieiui : " "j nm i li ha.i case. Ilis religion, we lliink, might cosily Ito Hilk stutfs of Kosieru fabric and pattern, ouii' ls' I l'llt"' ''!" Kn-alest abiindaoce ulsuil iho spurs j f (jn,vln,vn ; h n mner of noloriclv that ! "1"' pin'' Ught-house keeper on Hock Island, ... . . . Ilf nil III II IllllK ....... ,..,'., I .,...., If t... tl In ma 1 hid under n bushe).'' i hair, woo, skins, dried fruits, w iues, and uu end' "An undertaker, a veiv religious man, who! leu vaiiely of other products, for which the happens to reside in a part o this city where ; Crimea, witu its appurtenances, has eoinpara- Is.th Mr. Bulwer and Mr. Clavlon undersl.Hsl . In SI. l-uwreoee. r you can give it to me. 1 I lhal Honduras was nol wilhin Ihe scope of Ihe j shall i itiuukrui-ll not i mul try waowun. treaty. Mr. Cluvton hiiiiH-ll has on the tloor ol i "ui n. .... Hie Senate u.nde' a public avowal that such wa. ' j ve hean all about vou Bill, and know you j,,, fael i perfectly well, i ou shall have Iho place. And In view of Ihin meaning given to the Trenly ' li'"1 from the Governor to Mr. Secretary Gulh- bv Ih- who frs I il, and at least uifst of those ! rlc did the business at once. And If Gov. Mar- Si-nutors who vol.tl lo rslilv it, and in view aim i ry needs any aid in Bl. Lawrence county. Bill id' a mode by which, In ease d Turks, united under thu common deMgoa- have lsvU bleeding the Slate so extensively, I of the fuel that our government had previously Jnm' "w mM rv,l,l,r ""M- i " ..... ..r lino nf Turlars- l.nl il.... . C..t 1 i;u. . .. ....... . il.., iiirili..ti,n i.i'ii.aI Itrtlnin ovi'f I tldviftistr. lloitduras Py necreilitlng a consul lo u iiiiiiit Sir. I'Olh luimillisiraiion, wuo acini iioorr a veral others pract isiuir tho name profession, and who on that account has to lie ou the alert for business, heard a short limo since, (hat a young man. residing in Greenwich street, wan sick and not expected lo live. He Immediately iH-lllOUUlll III 111--II Tho poMilulion nositccouio a very mixed one. and on this account is only the more likely lo sustain an advanced civilisation and industrial progre. The largest proportion, no douiti, consists ol Mogul: if death, he might secure the Intern t of tho i ln or Tartars; but there aro Greeks, und Un Silent Land, long era we reach Grunt Tliorburn's age. Some will step nut by one door and some hy another ; some willingly, some rciuciunuy, some with ample warning aud alter long illness, others suddenly nnd unprepared : but how few at bis age. of ull who live Unlay, will bo thread ing Ihe si reel sol New 1 or, as old t .rant liior burn glides altonl them now and with a young bride. V. I'. Evening Post, A gentleman In an eating house, the other day, oked In vain fur a bill of fare. Not Htidiugone, he Inquired of a waiter, a new comer, who was yet hardly Initialed into the mysteries of his vocation, "Will you Iff Ing me a programme T Yes, sir, he replied; "will you have It boiled or roasted !'' The gentleman, fearing It might he rather Indigestible, declined both proposi tion. HaUTatiok. Whlggina says that we Americans have a strange mode of salutation. When a friend meets a friend In the street, he extrnds bis hand and asks, " How do you do?" The other replies, " How do you doT" TheT both, apparently well sailsfled, pas on, although not one wbll ihe wiser sonoernlng each other's health. !Ui separately ; and sometimes, nol always, i letdish: if uot lhat. a little fruit, such n may lie cheapest, and in Ihe rljH'st season. But there Is very little of each thing, and it is rather In arrangement than in material that they appear rieb. The idea that the Kreneh are gnui-mauds in private life Is incorrect. They spend iltlo In eating, and they eat Inferior things. though their cookery Is rather a science than a mere accident of civilization. At borne, the great aim of the r rencb is to savo ; and any stlf-sarriAce that will lead to this result Is cheer fully undertaken, more especially in eating, and in the luxury of mere idleness. No frenchwo man will spend a shilling to save herself trouble. She would rather work Like a dray-bom1 to buy an extra yard of ribbon or a new pair of gloves. than lie on the softest sofa In tho world in placid fine ladyism, with crumpled gauie or bare hands. What wr am comimi to. A gentleman In Loudou batchts hens' eggs over a naptha lamp without a wick. Seventy eggs bave been hatch ed at the top of the lamp, and tbe cblckeu rear ed by an artUHiot moine! t ue Bottom. IsHly. Although he was unacquainted with either the funiilv or the vouiiu man. vet he imme diately called ul Ihe house, und Isung admitted to tlm invalid's chamber, sympathized with him j in a very tender manner, nud alter conversing lor some time religiously, he asked permission to engage iu prayer, which Isdng granted, he knelt by the Iwd-side aud offered up an earnest petition in Ihe young man's behalf, holding at Uie same lime one oj am business earns in n hand! At tlm close of his prayer he shook the invalid ullcctionnlcly by the hand, and laying his curd upon the b,d lo lell how reasonable he would furnish a cotlln, shroud, unit near1, nun in what cemeteries he could bury the dead, very politely depuited. "Such bungling urtllice could not fail of detection union ir ncrsons of ordinary discernment. A day or two utter, our friendly undertaker called again to Inquire nfter the health of the young man. He wiw asked by tho lady who opened the door '"Are you the person who left the card hero llie oilier uny: "Yes, mu'iioV replied he, his eyes bright- "-Well, sir,' Mild she, with no little Indigna tion, 'when we waul your services we will send lor you,' und Ihe conversation was rather abruptly terminated by the closing of tho door," sians, ami even uermans. in considerable umu- hcrs among them, and thoso latter have, for some time post, it Is said, been rapidly increas- "IV The gentleman who recently purch.w-d the new Male House, and made a bid lor llie entire Stale, is 'ojoiiriiiugal llie Capilol. - Statt Dim-1 oerat. i If the uiiny of Lih:niH-o boNHW, coutrurlois. superiiileiideiiK clerks and eoiniuissiourr-, who should sthk their bills into him a.i deeply i they lme been slicking 'em into (he Stale Pnnr-AiUMn pk Kipk, The annn Treusury,llieL!enlleiuNiiwoolduiit"soioiirnongi 11,111.1. ,l,(1 u ,!i,i r.H.nl. no little I Ihls Society, for Ihe advanremenl of Roman at Ihe Capilol." in ilher would he Hud himself anmnce on the pari of the present adminlslra- Catholic principle .slates that during the year years of e British off Irom llie Honduras ' 'i" " ", r"' ". n o w 1 in a eonditlon to " bid for the entire Slule." The gentleman who buvs the new Slate House ut w hat ll costs will make a bad bargain- - in our j opinion. tion to order the coast, whether Ihev will or no. That was not a "'";. n-muin ng Platter lor llie to seltlo dircelly on the r.o uie y...r i... i ;"- nm", mus spot with nil hot iirgumenlsof thirlvtwo pounds ! RilK "'1 fund or &,MAi Irancs Tr os-weight avoinluisus. Kor the Pn-sident's appro-' '" 1 Ihls large amount of money I- mure viat.on ol Ibis, we should ! duly thankful, ll ' contributed J.;tti.i,l IM Irancs, Sanliuia .11 1 U in -1 .0.1101011.- tor us lhal the British have i Prussia 3iHj.win Irauc. and Great Brit- At the ladies' celebration ut Burro, in Lughind, nine hundred ladies were present. One ol Ihem Hivimi 'KM." At one of the sin nil gather- let off ihe followlnff toast: "Old bachelors: mav ! 01 unbirlunale individuals who were con- hii-j .o o.. . " "77" ! " IT "7 ' ' nisfa to answer nny more questions alsuit Ihe their own kitchen-maid 1 " Pkxxhyi.vaxia. Tho fact U dallv becoming more and more evident that the anll Nebrn-l.u ticket In Pennsylvania, nt the bead of whirh ! stands the name of Juik-o Pomjh-k fur i:.u-,.rn. i or, will bo elected by a sweeping majority. At' Kai.i. Klmtions. -The folhming is a list of a largo ami enthusiastic moetlng of Ihe Deinoc- J y vote tins lull, and the time or, h , , ,h(, ,in,turascoas. ll won a raev ot Sullivana count and vlelnlu- ..1,1., i holding their flections: i ...i.n.L.. ti,ni tl,.. i l,. i.,i..lt,.lu. i- 'IVenlvdid nut i i. i.. .... I .... . ... I rur...i- i'.. v.. iu.h I....L u.ui i .1.... i..r il... Himmhiii- l"K iu franc nw luimu wy llOII. HAVIO ll.Mor lllter I ' " l,M ' ' 1 r"iii.n.i ,..nl- r...-. -r i ...v - -- ... . , i,i,.h .iH r ...i...! .. i .,.'t; Maine. Seideuikr II; Peiinsvlviiiiia. Octo-! ment ol thut .H-cunuiicy. 'I he importance ol nil miss on in r.uroK, .....v.., - .v.,,..iIID nvrv .no-ieu uou . . . . , . , , - ...... t , . .., , -.lllimi.r,.i-l Missions In A "IB,.. adopted with great unauimlly. The following N,',lllMH' , ' . ,. v ' v,L v ' I 'r.il WU l.,..l.. ; ami with it Increases Missions iu Afrlcn. veiniier 7; New Jersey, Nine ml nt 7; Illinois, 1 the dilllc'ully of adjusting national disputes in NovemWr 7; Michigan, November 7; W iscou-1 connection w ith It, luvoli ing commercial inter-sin, November 7. I est. The laitsnfaire policy will not answer - In relerence to unv or these Central American Mk.ssiis. pp'roim: Will ou pleas., a k the tpieslioin. We are lor tln ir speedy and full StilttSinail ll Ihe UlipUUlttlX Ilt of Mers. Slllilh ixllostmenl Hot it Is wrelehed indirv In com- Artnlivrf. Tliat Inasmush as Ja,r l'tillnrW h... .1... 1 ,rl Mild SlicklleV ns Stilto llilln I 'iiltnni.Ki. T ll l,.r u ii.ti.li.li IU ill. nil not' vpiiiiii uini ( ia in latur ! I fiiarl ri Ui-Uw n hi,-i u,i ,.i ul in i .... . p.,..r ll ...i 1 1 t ...l .. i.:..i i .i... . ptehiMlM elm err In Urril..rlr. north ol tliin. U ,li !.. '.. ... ;. .. ' . " l",n",' irH.s.n.l tl.iilv ..iloiitrs n-rll. Ulllmlr, an.UI-,. oi la ""M""' " m" '"i.e ll llieso iwowoilliy vnrortlin nianiDiilKionofaiiT 1m- llUvnll I,. , tlori 1 oiiiml-sioliers, uiP r ItM-ir aipolltliieuts Were """I'lssnis-l h m-tre just ami I.I ml limit I In their p.sket.. did li-d thn-ati'lt lo resign, )( Ti:i:siiu; foip at Hu.i.km. .mie two or three Ihou-und silver dollars have ju-d been found at Harlem. N. Y., the history of which is as fol lows; Samuel Benson, ihe on uer ol the nn lute during thu revolution rvmowd up to Kish-kill, and Is fore leiuiitg, buried Ibis money on his farm and planted a tne over it to number Ihe spot. Si ion Ihe tree died, and wns removed by his nrvunln, and as the ground h id been Iiloughed and burrowed iner, the IrvOsuro was o-l. The ollur day, live workmen, two Germans and three IrMimen. found the money aud nal Report of' ,h,'r P,M'klt' willt " RUl1 lun A Ycncr.ildc in a iron ot Norlli Aduins, Mnt gae an "old folk-t' lea party" livs since, nnd niimtig ttio guesis who ain l!':t,7 17. The manner in which this was ex- were present were tour hotut ot ihi- n-sperlive ages of hti, $1, Ml, 7n, and tlirie gi uilemen of s.'i, Ml, tit, making Ihe united a-s of the eight person, ineliidiug the hoh i,li years, un average of M. Six of the-e ht"iis own farms, on whirh Ihey reside, all In one nefghlsirlnHHl if less lhau u mile square, ami have Ik'cii rrsl- will Iw specially Interesting at this time. If all Iho Democrats vole lor Pou ch k, us these men phnlgo themselves to do, there will Im a mighty poor show for Mr. linu.t:it about the Jd Tuesday of Octolier. inteii-T liidigiialiou of '. lhat 'wllliout ltilrinB Ihe raiiOnn utl ha Wlujt IVnlralLoinmilK') me i-itFni II tmr July In Rita Jii.ltfi- r-ll.-ck our lull ami artlte orjsrl iu'lli.' umioi( I'l.-c I inn. the verv puny wilh which we hate lo deal most j Bala.H-iM.f,AeessotriH:eiptHrorthe lirsl prt leulai ly In the coi.lrov eiv, ami w l.leh on Its payments lo Ihe missions ot .it, . . 7:-'. ' . . i ... Sum ti.ti.l Isil lliai we sre eutirciy uiiprepan-'i i M-udiHl In thus staleil, Iho amounts quoted be- i dents of the (own over tit ly y. ars. H'li; Pi '',ln,',, ''"'"' th" loth Instant, in I i iii'' in ! f,'l',,,',''n 1,1 '"- sehuvler fraud- und over insues ' Jr ;wi i 'l,H'k xhi con,4'r.v' r'-"trks : l,Mm n A,,r c. . , , , , , s . ,,,i,r,r,. Missions in Oceanic 4LI,iN i ,,', ii.i- t t r r,,. .. ,,.i,Li Kx. iw.,ol VrlMntt 1 10 Annul. . o., , , d,.k,.,,, ,, ,' ill W , .t,u. ,Hr in In l.n. ,0,. cnulrlr,.. . 1,1,1,3., j UlM , , ,, ,,,,, 1 tloiuliug us wilh bonds, the ia itieiti even ol (lie iniercM 01 which iieieniiMt opui 010 plaining ildiliotial sums on demand. pals, Ac, uutrlrs,. . Iu France und foreign countries,.. Total ofetpenses for the year V.;t abme, 4,127,271 , shows Mate House. Wu pity the cHieern. It is a dangerous sign when a thing gels so bad lhat ll cannot be de tended.) Tin: Nr.r Phksiiua week, one of his t-,,itr hotdirs. a candidate for n county office, famous for " hiving" voters, le- Mkmkit a TutssiiisiTioN. " Wouldn't vou ' one so uproarious owing to the hud quulily of call this the calf of a leg?" usked Bob. pointing I the whiskey the Doctor furnished, aud cul up to one ni ins netner iimoa miner cmiivw uj en-1 n,cn umaMta tricks betore the unhappy audl-eawl in representations of hnrlier polls and run-, nwo lho4 lllc ri y J , comitclkd ll , tE letf of a call" "Prluiand him publicly, and even threaten '"''''"''" '"'""Mate for President. Mr. ; 011t .. 9 .,. .,,,. ...... n. .... - .... . IIIKIIS, a,t 1.1. V K I'ra. ,1. till,-.... iitiii n i.ii ,'A,uip,ii mi, iii inn uninii in rtry 'n- " " , ..u. iiiiimiii. An Allinny tmiHT wyn nn nlunn nf lire tlemrn who Imil oonilpKiuuli'd Iu fiillulilon Iho 1 lt MIII1,Ibo'III Hrtmilrr, thu (jporuiii IVIilii l th"ro, nlKlit or two lncc. Iiy ml-! peopio In llio coiinly. on Ihu .ulijpct of Hlu I s,' l",l"1'' 'l"ur lo Ihi. mmilmilim, ami i,.,-,.,. , I,. ,,,UKi, , , y, (i0), ,nil llto IWu,, T,lk , ,mtn, um b. iin'iiiimn v , cnmli.Ul ,,tS I Till M'l.ll T 1M-I'it l. lil CKIl-, lllirlirO Ol Sum lotnl o.lMl.'.'iii Ih1 rt't-nil envi-i niiii'iil nrl- in 1 1,.-f I r .,1 Aiiut- Iho ll.ir.1 r,m,,i,. r. -HitIi iI Ir I V ! lmu ih .nl.i.cl in nv rnlm ..ml (..ir l-mfn ol ' Ihfw "III olmvnl n II, in !... for Icnn ll.-.in.lio ..l 1 in . Il, I -. I l.nnc lumU.: 'll.ir.Hy. ili.ln'l tl, li.i.i rm.r .-..v., min.l. Ilnr novrnnu-'nt .i,.l,l Imvo Ink no ' "V lh "Annul, of tho IWnll..l of Iho , " o,,lnlii.uncl,.l k-n.-iul I..,,,,,,,.!,., ll..- I nvi-.! ,,i,,l KaruiU I'.i I. I'nv. ! ,nror y I.. Ih.rl il .mil mU I'"1'""""" l"n,J ovory t... . .- li.' Hi.' Iill ,. ma'.v. l m lloiulu- rw.V.i.il.liJ. ...r!..- ..r .. .r.- ,'""r"J ' """""" niniilh, to tho n.in.Wr ot IT'MHlil oonlo.. In.,- nu., tho 1I.ii.thI i.ini.i.,ii,',l .... iiui.i.'ino eon- o 2Z , IK 1 ! t- ! m- Tho ll,nl ol I With hnvo dT,mll...lo.l ,';'"' tajWH. I..W. I f l',.l. I.i.hi.lms I hl,-l .l.ji.luii... wt luuiioi piomiH( nun uil auswer.an we see lliu ! - ...... Kmr is i. In Oenuau. I.2HU in Snuu s 1. rivll nud milit;irv, and, niter rending the docu- Statrsman "caves" In its lost iiumlsT. und re-, ,nt',r rt'lN, " " pV " t-ieveianu. uu ., -,.n,i..lt 2l,:hW in Italian, 2,:hhi hi Por-' ment to ihem, raiiuu-d it into a ramnm wilh his Vlatn D'nUr says, In speaking of tbe cholera. 1 1,, 011 in Dutch, and .i00 In Polish. Asia hand, (Hiinted ihe pieee ealwnid. and tired it lie deallts fmve oci'urml aiinosl enureiy : and America ap-ar 10 is me culcl llelils of una-1 oil. . amongst the most degraded and uncleanly of 1 nionary lulntr lo which this Propaganda devoles the population, perhaM not one doien of the more careful and resist UWlo having died or - The Monigt.mery 1 Ven bveu ailacknl. ll has at all evenU now Journal, Ihe leading Whig pu)Nr of Alabama. , disspieai.M, and the general health Is excel- her bonnet on. Bed headed girls make a great ueai ui iron mo iu Ainauy. The following is a true copy of a sign upon an academy for leaching In ono of the Western Stales: "Freeman aud Huggs, School Teachers. Freemen teaches the boys and lluggs ihe glrhV' Piiui:ssoii.hhii' Aih'kitkp. Tho Huston Bee .earns that the Itcv. Dr. Orestes A. Brow nson has accepted the ProfessonJiip es tended to him by the Irish I'niverslty at Dublin. He Is at present preparing his first course of lectures. The salary 1 about :t,tHH. that I an V, V. V. who luul started out lo hive" "r 'rever I What Southern State will his friends, to lie expelled from such a crowd as nnmlnato Seward ! , Olim, Kankin, A l.'o, Could mortal man sink jfr.Smiiii.ti it i:.'.TZ i- . to a lower depth? t,,,',. Ml-, ha. 1 71"". r'" 1,1,1 'T rr- Hon, Thomas furrtw. formerly a menv tri. . , , ,", k r . to .econn-n, ti,- . .. . 7 ? K 1 u'r ,,r ,h -r- rt- s"'"t'- rcnldence In v , , .Mv. ' ui 1 1 w -ftar w dis af. Itself, and the render w ill no doubt U atnick with the lnugmtudo of the sum credited lo the latter, when compared with the total expenditure for missions.--,V. I". Itbnnrrr. .tuA correipondenl of the Louisvill Courier, from Anderson county. Kentucky, writes: "There will not ho half a corn crop rained here this season. Some persons arc turning f,n'r hog out to die, while others are killing the most Indiflerent. Some time since, souie griiosol' wheat, which bad Is en taken Irom an old i: ;)pliati sarcoplia-gun ul Cairo, were given to ihe Agricultural Society of t'oinpcigm-, by whom He y weri sown with (he nu-l surprising result.. Thu slcim which have ri n liom thn -. d ar- as large u.--a tvetl, llielemes areuii.lv limit an inch in iM t iwtlh, and the ears have eueh mie hundred grains of very lurge sle. -o thut seernl 01 the oilguml sfeds hive multiplied i. r.dd. It Is thought that Ihe seed dates ai far Iweh asSesustris.orat least CleojuAira. St a vi K of (iov. t'oitwiy. T. D. Jones, tho f'.iuui r.ri.iw Cnv U.ini linn eomimilail OelelirnU'd K-ulptor, loruK'UV ol i.iUviuiiSU, Will the senience of dealh against John How..t, to 1 tjwc Uw Rmtt . . .. , ue ol liov. I orwin, which will Is- placed either liiiprinoome.il fur life. Howlkt was lo have , lt llllvtn, uV (-ji,,,,,,,!. been hung In Septvnlicr, at Cleveland, for kill-1 puiabHM sre arllii glu tlevolandatfrom in a nan by the name of OsBotum. 1 ou to tl U ier bushel. ) |
Format | newspapers |
LCCN | sn85025898 |
Reel Number | 00000000024 |
File Name | 0874 |