hr r> J!ivrr . i:li V b'B II,A J XI I 1 > t. vS f,^ ~tlV^ House ' j rf* g i rtf' 1 ?, .u"* 1 ' in advance ' - T*r 83.Q0. I IL^* 1 * m Y* * S Un. ,aJf I'/v o "oanl |wt4^ nd |'i II iK i'r ■ q F .ijR f " J "wupied hy tfjkg | i p- v '■? Filler J Kc;>gy All bu.-inr-s f ■" his vare will receive faitbful and I lie-to I Mil i tary rlaima - Peri-ins Je, i I, June 9, 18il5. ~ 11 i,; PE t. r ir.'u' I 'it a mr it :gm \rs-A r-LAjH/r wvtiiAjigeif a>i- c.U(, 00 vutrvietr i their i| a /,) ml k S to I r\v to *" ,\ u - shortest no- I Chw adß "" 1 , ~,„.n fe il Claim Agents I fgntaitj \tt v r„,eeution 1 ~ ...1 attention {ur Venn-ns, \ ■M 1. Bonntj ban' •. Wl>uth „ t , he I M I street. one tU , rrr 1 nearly O\ \ ■ A^ v t, j-a fki- vv Ni- \1 I.VW, fl At IAV. j M!' 1 --; P r ' H> order |OQC< TRBOMQff A urz KdUor# a „ d , OAS AM,T AltlCh. Ihe following poena in written in <*M generally called "Pennsylvania mas/ ins is a peculiar dia!ect,created t >tn|nge mixture of all the European tier •ikfcct*. with a large sprinkling of Kngli-vprds and pronuu. iationa. It is passing-ay before | i he victorious progress of the "giish. and must ultimately become e.v ct#lt will, 1 lW,, ver, always remain ass'iwJity in lit eratire. /his poem, writte taMi Pennsyl lauia pastor, is here request of vritry friends. has, Offii ve, the ring of the true vernacular. W ■X 4 jTohr, Ah bin oir aa! f Jnich widder ip h am <*er Krick, : "Bkst an'; tjfs Hans. ininde aco-er g'west, ■arbel, S;' on Brick ; s 'a s geseh, crseh wsp# any day, an der Krick. da fne is, un' will fort. ! in t/nmt geh: in awer forna naus, mbtig Owa draus. erd's sclver seh. u l - rum in alle Eek, | ! high un' low ; I h in kennem Spot, Kiel Joy gehat, Hk Schul-haus do. Bunch do alles a' ! ra ilenk, uu' guk : ' ' bier vcrgessa hab. rick, wie aus seim Grab, ie e' Spook! U verebei wie's hot, 1 i; fpielt hab do : j • „ M-h snie — JanK.- bi'% Ins itm ■ ;; ylafqH 0 was d '• 1 l)Ve Schwa s VI-A ..ht ■ - '- "rli. Itaw , von Dreck ? TJie Un s Wart Us Werm, Nord be* . geUrm, v.s-a e \a, alms l^- s w ar W° Tch- C •„• . I)och . „ijLtneh so, Por alUs cf ( | t Do bin Wo Ich n;rr gans Kle ; Dort war ' " al'nit ri jt sdtc ■ 111. Kra . \ . . i. . " H tort ofm ' e Es'if'v ft'ohtenk' jj as si i • ,ri.y WO" Uf le-m.lorl "b'V fcuik War'. \ e ' s y tow - Da fir, . h Vlmtßchl : I'er cypi ir *erO~gebuch (■■'"' i'' Jcli k'steh : !Lserved, ■■ i'fu hot's deserved. Con r- "'y. i n bid). U ' a " 8 ,L, war mis, *.: gt: the Principals A this 1 - j e &leP ft M \vts9 d ® - ! v-^ cu *r, cA 9 ' iu ne ! m ' un f!rVoX \ j *5, \S a ' u U A LOC -fIP BBNERAL NEWSPAPER, DEVOTED TO POLITui EDUCATION, LITERATURE AND MORALS jJpPie grossahen, die grossa 'tagg't K Die Klcna all vermist! P Wie sin' sie g' aprunga, ah un' nf, Wer g' wonnabot—verlos dick drul'— Hot tuechtiglich gekisst. Am Ohristag war die rechte zeit— -0 wan lch yucht d' ra' denk ! Der Meschter heu mir naus gesperrt, De Tuehr and Fenster fcst gebarrt,— "Nau, Meschter, e' Geschenk !" Nord hot er mightily probirt, Mit force zu komma uei; l'u' mir hen—als cr hot gcklopl— En Schreiwes anna naus gestopt, "Wann's scinsht dan kanscht du rei.'' Nau hot der Meschter runs gelanst— Oar lvreislich sheepish 'gukt!— Aeppel un' Keshta. un' noch meh, S'war yusht a ment in fact reehtsehoe : Mil hen's mit Luschta k'slncht! O wo sin' now die Schuler all, Wo hawa do gelerat ? A deel sin' weit awek gereist, By fortune uf uu' ab gecheest,— Deel hot der Tod geernt ! Mei Hertz schwellt mit Gedanka uf, Bis lch schier gar verstick, Konut heula—'s dut mir nau so leed— Un' doch gebt mir die groeschte Freed, Des Schul-baus an der Krick ! Good-bye ! alt Schul-haus —echo krcischt, Good-bye ! Good-bye ! zurueck : O Schul-haus! Schnl-huus' mus lch geh? Un' do stehst nord do alle' aleh— Du Schul-haus an der Krick I 0 horcht ihr Ueut wo nach mir lebt. Ich schreih euch noch des Stick : lch waan euch, droh cuch, gebt doch aelit Un' nern mt for ever gut enacht, Des Schul-haus an der Krick ! N ASHY. "Shall the Democratic Party l.ive or Dip f'.-Jlr. Nasby Gives his Views on the Subject. CONFEDKUIT X. Li'lAl'S. ) (wieh is iu the State of Kentucky,) November 26, IS6O. ) BejpThp papers un the country are very gen braliy discussin the question : "shall the Democratic party live or die," wich when we take into consideration the fact that, t lie corpse is afore us. seems to me holler mock ai. and V boartl.'sK.irilJn with the fcelins av-the friends uv t lie aeov-. There aint no yoose uv talkjn uv its n j t „ j n j ts fc put up, ria rail's of • comific-uiiP ratin its virehoos. The Chicago Times, ana tarious other papers are advocatiu the- gi uv fl .ppin 1 over to niggoi uli'r. ■. i hevV my wV.n I vr 1:111 AN intelleek iitc unto at I various times, and the more 1 h<\consider i edit, the morel am .-ttishel ; L: .yt wont do A naber uv mi"' wunst stuui mick akc • and applied to me lor a\,„edy. In a spirit uv jot ui >nt., I told 'k that striekuine wood euro tint as well er phy-iele ills. The pdpr tellow no%,ji n itwuiajoke, took an ounce or tws_ n need ! state the result ? He sleeps iL vallev Niggc. suffrage *ich is rank p would end the troubles u the Itooc\ but wooden tit end Dtuo*is> also . rutte die gracefully g"W t4 ', „ui resurrection cz Abolshu - s .. a Woodn t the people wnen w i •■ tombed, forget to awaken us „■ ,„r suffrage, tor the reason that it the people 'desire it they'd probabV go to the Inventors thereof, that tl.ey aight k as shi)ure(^ idcan'Vgot.'t afier he is a man and a brother. The Taf tjees is we'd keteh em on the score that l\c trash natarally gravitates to us. Weaietoo late for this. The nigger just now is leak in up -notdown-and ef the tax wuz lien oil uv whisky, so ez to bring that essen|al to Dimocratic success wunst more win.n our means, and we shood devote ourse.lv, en thusiastically to the work, we d J able to get'em down to our level in Urmtj J °Afore that time, Ishcl hevgone other world where polly tix wonttroublene, and if the orthodox reli,us bcleefsuv ;4e (lav is correct, in the department ot he tot her world in wich I she! pull up, thre will be a strong Democratic majority. -.1 lift up me eyes from thence, it will do me i pertickeler good, cz I kn ?V,T their Pre! that the. Dimoensy hev elected their Pre. dent hv nigger votes—that ntclligcnt woodn t suppjy the place uv the water! shood be cailiu f or - , , .• ,;(■ Its instant rcleef wc need, and cl hie i. ever pumped into the carcass atore us, t l,, P he (lone to wunst. f hev an Ijee ioi the salvation uv the par ty, which it acred on will give us a lease uv power lor jear> - j * Here is suthin feasible. Let the South adopt the Constoo-licucl Amendment to wunst, providin Congress will knock out the third section wich disfranchises the nclt uv us who arc lit for Congress, and also repeal | the test oath, and iiinuejitcly let .Johnson ; annex Mexico. How wol it stand then. , We hev ten States out, wich we can depend upon Kentucky, Delaware and Maryland make thirteen, and .Mexico can Ik- cut up into twenty more, or thirty, lortnat matter, ■ giviu us a clean majority in the bemt, f louse and Electoral College 1 her jet u,v intellcck out.onto this suhjcck an lam t mis taken. In Mexico is the precise population we kin best work upon. " 1 bey can t un derstand our speakers, sez one ohjo l tor. \'er.v good. 1 admit it, and wlijF' " il . ,iv voters who km urn. rstaC I we want uv voters woo so, i The downfall uv Diuiocri-y cvwr ! ininnit the people begun to uud-o 1 So long CZ they took thing# m in the atf-" k, but , ~ . to a®! \ iry Clay O lC t v> y**t- w'B ~-. John YU* w \v **• „co- *■■ ,v msbrrth moras, VV '- " ■ \O^P* Ax U^^lLn7ti. av * t * iL.ne ,- ? T v "o *** •£** ' roiferf r-'J"'' 1 oV.'°- \ v ft°i% U l . lU ' jeeiv?* I \ l \svUo ' •' s^ c \f.t\'V tt * pOi li^jjppS \V ' ••'•' . • a - Otf< U BEDFORD. Pa.. FKil>i.Y. JANUARY 4=. 1807. sides the State afrsee. The hundretf uv thousand uv Diwokratsnow tiiournin |r of fisis, and who can't be supplied wc -there find opening. Think uv it! Thirty gates turned over to us with a people thatcidn't compete with us for the offiscs. My nourplan is to Ut it march and git out uv its way. JTcmoLKi AI V. NASKV, F. 31.. (wich is I'ostuia-ter.) UOKACK GltbtiLlYS WOK TO l'L&tr.ttVU.LE. When Mr. (li-celcy was in : 'alifornia, ovations awaited hint at eve y own. lie ! had written powerful leader in tie Tribuw j in favor of the Pacific llailroad, which had I greatly endeared him to the eitiens of the i Golden State. And therefore they made j much of him whoi he went to jee them. At one town the enthusiastic populace tore his celebrated white coft to pieces, and carried the pieces home to remember him by. The citizens of Plaeerville prepared to fete the great journalist, and in extra coacli. : with extra relays of horses, was chartered i tof the California Stage Company to earry mm from E .;>■ m to Ptac i die distance tty imlc>. The extra wa- in some way wvcd, and did not lea\e Folsorn until late .%■ afternoon. Mr. Greeley was to be seven o'clock that evening by the !. fe that ho should bo there at that ' wi the Stage Company said to Ilen tuisiM the driver of the extra. "Ilenry, M i"lit Wi-t be thereby seven o'clock to man Henry answered ; "The groat The rStfherc. riu" the *,';** ln an awful stale, and du ' nigre-s w.%' v ' titles out of Folsom slow "Sir," sfj e - . „ that 1 must \,\f rcclu 4 are „>'™\ :, ! vavc night '" *4 laeervillo at < o clock to "I 've got uiiL , . ~ ed Henry MonW r f> laconics ly riturn slowly forward, xfe tau 601 dragged "Sir," said Mr?. , . . trifling matter. 1% ,v. , ls _,?, ot a Again came the }®X, e at '/ orders.'' ' ve Put the speed was ?. Greeley chaffed away \jf oase ' a ' a "'' then, as he was again a *" er " olir • with the driver, the ho*" r, "ioustratc furious run, and all soi* artc "* lnt P a F yells filled the air from tie* encouraging I Monk. %t of Henry "That's right, my good i .. ~ sGreeley. "I'll give you ten dlll ii,,. *(,. rr i. vt .1 & 0t lieatl "''glit have aMOTij®M|F\TinCIOW, It W, "I don't care , it' we ioure at 7!" Hot my orders !" Fresh horses, "gam .'aster than before. Over etuuips, on one of which the ■'• wly escaped turning a summer- s .y. e '"V . "''licked Greeley, "I don't l ..arc if we du, t get there at all!" ',, 7-1 v, '- i: '.T y orders! I work for the California. fc-e Company, 1 do , That's will work for. They said, 'git ! ,s .t"' 1 ". ' I'-' b by seving. An' this I 'V;V " S 01 ",. Vh. You bet! C,tt VV hot) up ! I a ' j Another gi Jul jolt and Mr. Greeley's j bald hea i sv iati ly found its way through the roof of ct.ach, amidst the crash of the - mail tin -r and the ripping of stron • I canvas.*. "Stop you i%.l maniac!" ho roared i gfi. 1 vegot my Knp your rent IJor- j ! >p & a village a few miles ' f •}' met ! laige J-: g.-niou of citizens of Piaeervile; who had come out to meet the celebrated editor and escort him into town. There was a military eOtn pany, a brass band, and a six horse wagon toad of beautiful damsels in utilkwhitc dresses, representing all the States in the Union. It was nearly dark now, but the delegation was amply provided with tore-li es and bonfires all along the road to Placer villo. The citizens met the coach in the outskirts of Mud Springs, and Mr. Monk reined in his foaming steeds. '"ls Mr. Grecly on board?" asked the chairman of the committee. "He was a few miles back!" said Mr. Monk, "yes," lie added, looking down through the holo which the fearful jolting had made in the coach roof—"yes I can see hiui! He is there !" "Mr, Greeley," said the Chairman of the Committee, presenting himself at the window of the coach. "Mr. Greeley, sir ! We have come to most cordially wolcome you —why, God bless tne, sir, you are bleed ing at the nose V "I've got my orders," cried Mr. Monk. "My orders orders is as follers : Git him there by seving. Standout of the way." "Gut sir," exclaimed the Committeeman seizing the off leader by the reins, "Mr. Monk, we are come to escort him to town. Look at the procession, sir, and tbe brass baud, and the people, and the youtig wo men sir !" "I've got my orders." screamed Mr. Monk. My orders don't say notliin, about brass band and young women. My orders say, git him there by seving. Let go them lines. Clear the way there. Whoo cp ! Keep your seat, Horace!" and tbe coach dashed wildly through the procession, up setting a portion of the bra- s band, and vi olently grazing the wagon which contained the beautiful young women in white. Years heuce, gray haired men, who were lirtle boys in the procession will tell their grand children how this stage tore through Mudd Springs, and how Horace Greeley's bald head ever and anon showed itself, like n wild up pa rat ion, above the coach roof. Mr. Monk was on time. There is a tra dition that Mr. Greeley was indignant for a while : then he laughed, and finally present ed Mt. Monk with a bran new suit of clothes. Mr. Monk, himself, is still in the employ ment of the California Stage Company, and is rather fond of relating a story that has made him famous all over the Pacific coast. Gut he say- he yields to no man in his ad miration for Horace Greeley. THE CA.tiDLE FISH. Mr. John Lord, an Englishman, who went to British Columbia as scientific mem berof the commission appointed to mark theboundry line between Brirish and I'nited States territory, li.i published in London an account of his travels, in a volume entitled "The Naturalist in Vancouver Island and British Columbia." Among his stories is the following account of an extraordinary fish: "I have never seen any fish half as fat and n • "■ ir.t l food as the lilt e or fry tl> tin ] !"• 'We to broil oil. Some • ! . th ir u. ."Vrtf-wrt' i.kuv'sr may Is g! ;Ti 1 from the fart that the na tive* use them a> lamps fur lighting their lodges. The fish, when dried, has a piece of rush pith, or n strip frmn the inner bark of the e\ j ■ t • fltnj-t ■iyiH'en) drawn through i . a Imis round to- die made of hard wo> 1 b tc. ml foi the purpose; it is them ligh i and in .us steadily until-con sumed. 1 have read comfortably by its light; the candlestick—literally a stick for the candle—consists of a bit of wood split at one end. with the fish inserted in the cleft. Thcsi ..dv niadi -a -and)-—little dips wunttn: oiuy atviek 'tiat e m be added in a iiiiuno are ' !■ trausf.'itmd by heat and pre. u mi" liquid. \\ i :i the Indian drinks .osl id of burmsg them, begets a fuel in the shape of oil, that keeps up the combustion within him, and which is burnt and consumed in the lungs, just as it was by the wick, but only gives heat. It i- by DO mere chan that myriads of small fish, in obedience to a wondrous instinct, annually visit the northern seas, containing within thetu.M Ives all the elements necessary for supplying light, beat and life to the poor savage, who, but for this, must per -h in tho I itt .• eold of the long dreary winter. "A- oon as the Indians have stored away the lull supply of food for the winter ail the fi-li subsequent!' tnken are converted into oil. If uv stroll down tothn lodges near the beach, we -hall sc.- our-elvcs iiow they manage it. The ii-ii reset eu toroil making have bf a j -led in heaps until partially de composed; five or six fires arc blazing away and in each fire a number of large round pebbh Hi be made very hot. By each fire are four large square boxes, made from the trunk of the pine tree. A squaw carefully piles in each o".x a layer of fish about three deep, and covers tlicin with eold water. She then ; uts five or six of the hot stones upon the layers offish, and when the steam has cleaved away, carefully lays small pieces of wo if over the stones; then more fish, more water, more stones more layers of wood, and so on, until the box is The oil maker now takes all tLui thi.> box and uses it over again V often as ter in filling another bio- " be made I off as ii floats <** quantity nf r ' 1 >' ot „ ''""o with, mnch t*. , .'i f x(| actable from them. r< fnv,. o thP\ ' a monster gridiron. mm o rhe boxes, liavini: been w-wn Wi.l porous ,ts, is lilueed on the stage, to V Mled ami ir. -ul by t!..- arms aud ciiesta I X"ntS;S t S ; T 1 "'V °' , i thuf wSI iV; >•- S^JSnskrHi it awn hi '['l,,. "ottles to store | to nn i. • sea wrack that crow arid fori,- ,"„i ..'"I 2 ? f'boso northern seas, 1 •stalk, ,X 1" iT"" 1 ' bas a hollow root end. W i'VfY' 1 °°l' ' ,0 ' e fl sh at the feet, these U o ,' a ' ,out three the end are , ithe bulb at ' quired for u-,a \,j' '.V ,P f wet until re stored away inV® ! h ® , 0|! ? obtained it. i s or rather larger*®? ''' "™ ! T'art bottles, I hold throe pint*. ' '' so 'o of them ! ftn. Uoys in "Tn i,~ meeting tt w|jich ,of llarnsburg had a the inauguration of /*. res olvcd to attend loth of -linuarv \% r,,or Geary, on the pointed tot ue an ann^ l " ul, , t,oc ' wa =< <*P Blue" tfirlgbout ffi\ t0 tb ° 80 7 8 in cer. n.ooies Vd niako U'V to attend the j mouts. nAoonimit „\. c ry arrange- lowing iwrneU nUeme,, % il art. ( ii air til i • i Xjhuo S C'mm.-vi K. Ayi ( . r '" v ' ni (.\ t 'Y- Jeimings, Simmons, C'apt,/ if )/■ ' on s Oliver li " W - '' V'.nd Oj'V' V. V R - Barr, gam/ations of '\ . • 1 ' B. \odei. Or par mi pa ting in i.: that propose no.it, M i„ r Ln\ f { !"■ ■• doshould ' oiliii :t■„ of .H i* < '' 'cm,in of the VOLUME 10: NO I. THE WAYSIDE FLOWER. I saw a wayside flower, and .said, from this I will gather instruction. The passer by had not deigned to look upon it, and it had stood unheeded and unappreciated all the day long, wasting its perfume upon the passing breeze This lesson the little flower taught me : that, in our daily walk, we may p-'S unnoticed fair and beautiful beings, who, because they are unobtrusive, are un &p predated. 1. resolved tc seek for beauty andgoodnesa everywhere, and make my own choice of the beautiful expressions of (rod's love strewn along life's pathway. The kind Father's hand has left no place desolate. The world is full of life and beauty. The sky above vies with the earth beneath in splendor and conscious gladness; there is no sight or sound iu nature but speaks of joy and praise —from the birds, the insects, the waving trees, the sunlight spreading a golden man tle over all nature. The sweet sounds that come to the ear, set to the exquisite music of Nature's own heart, all tell of love, deep and pure, that distils on human hearts as dew upon the wayside flower. The chorus of nature is as a wave on the great ocean of eternity, to be wafted onward, and break at last before the throne of the Invisible. How strikingly the blight of nature tells, by its fate, the knowledge it has of human destiny. Surely it was fashioned for a happier world. I saw the bereaved mourner, bending over the form of one she loved, stricken, smitten by the hand of the spoiler. There was an unutterable anguish on her brow, which no pen can describe; grief, which He only who sent it knows how to assuage. As a blos som broken from the supporting stem, she bowed broken-hearted ; then were those un accustomed to weep subdued to tears, and I took deep into my heart this lessou of human sympathy. I was glad that God had given us hearts to sorrow with the sorrowing, to weep with the mourner, and to pray with the broken hearted. Dankness hid settled over the earth, and I watched the stars as they one by one, reached down their finger lines of light; and, as I stood gazing into the immensity, a voice seemed to whisper: what lesson art thou learning ? I looked, and beheld worlds upon worlds, reaching out invisible hands to other worlds. How my sou! swayed with admiration and feat! — Again T sought the ! wayside flower. Front musing upon the starry worlds above and the immensity of space, 1 drew down my gaze and heart to commune with the meek eyed teacher of earth. It was just dying. Some ruthless foot had just ciushed its modest head and bro ken its slender stem; yet, a perfume regaled my v uses ; for, like some pious saint, it shed the incense of prayer and forgiveness upon the heart and head of its heartless de stroyer, and lay in the dust meek and sub mis.-ive to its hapless fate. Ah! what a heart lesson did its sweet ministry teach me ! Frail wayside flower! the gentle, the angelic of .-pints are all around us, as we tread with liaste cnergx-M • Impupehfare of life. May we not It ar that amid its oust and roil some | gem of immortality lies ncelectcd, ui-nypj-fl . : aad-fttilovod: or. in" for getfulness? • l- ull many a geiu of purc.-t ray aureus, The dark tinfat Tu>ruetl caves of ocean bear, l ull man; \ flower is born to blush unscon. .AnJ vru.-nc its on the de?ert air." UISIM; IN THE WOULD. You should bear constantly in mind that oine tenths of us are, from the very nature and ueci'- ity of the world, horn to gsin our livelihood by the sweat of our brow. What reason, have we then, to presume that our children are not to do" the same ? If they be, a - now and tben one would be, endow ed with extraordinary powers of mind, those extraordinary powers of mind may have an opportunity of developing themselves ; and it they have not that opportunity, the harm i-not very great to us or them. Nor does it hence follow that the descendants of la borers arc always to be laborers. The path upwards is steep and long, to be sure. In dustry, care, skill, excellence, in the present parent, lay the foundation of a rise under more favorable circumstances for the chil dren. The children of these take another rise ; and by-and-by the of the parent laborer become tccntlemeu. is tbe natural progress. It is by attempting to reach the top at a single leap that so much misery is produced in the world. So ciety may aid in making the laborer virtu ous and happy, by bringing children up to labor with steadiness, with care, and with skill, to show them how to do as many use ful things as possible : to do them all in the best manner; to set them an example in industry, sobriety, cleanliness, and neatness; to make ali tbc. c habitual to them, so tfcpt they never shall be libable to fail { 0 ••• ntraiy :to let them always .fto get at I living proceeding from lahree and fraudu- I remove from them H>eep far from their i the goe U of o* Vl 'ients to hypocrisy and M OOL-GROWrNO JX MIVVTAiVPi t„ • S '>y there were .in 1,, -- •! f„°" i' C ' g - r,ve pounds of I lsfil Wool exported. ]v|'i 3.000 pounds. ' yue '°°° " fz°r ; S,K ' 24 2,714 " nrr subject in other seo- S t'hrfe a ". THE following additional particulars of the explosion at Barnsby, England. have been received. The pit where the explosion uficatxeil.. is two luiudievl aft] fifty yards in two miles. Some three hnndred perBS were in the mine at the time, nearly all of whom were killed. Forty dead bodies have been counted within a space of one hundred and seventy feet. A very few sufferers have been rescued in a shocking state of mutila tion, but there is no hope that any more can be gotten oat alive. The excitement in the vicinity Ls of :t most painful nature. Eighty of the dead had been taken out when the second explosion occurred, and a portion of the rescuing parties who were still in the pit are thought to have perish ed. ALL accounts from Mazatlan, Mexico, eoncui in statin# that Corrouna shows hos tilities to Americans, and not having found prominent Imperealists on whom to wreak vengeance, has imprisoned forty people who occupied subordinate positions under French orders. Another American citizen, J. Lewis, has been at rested for high trea son. It is said there is a bad state of affairs at Sonora, where the Yoqui Indians arc still bent on fighting, and will not submit except on terms of their own dictation. The Frigate Susquehanna was expected at the month of the river on the 13th inst.. with General Sherman and Minister Camp bell. General Sheridan sent a dispatch boat to the Passes to meet and bring them up to the city of New Orleans. AN erratic individual, styling hug* . ' "immortal J. N.. the greate?£ [, erej to-day' orator end satirist Hi imt with Jefferson Pa and sought an intan* he obtained entrance vis. % and while in conversation to tb" , • ln arro! Hall, was requested by an officer of the garrison, before he object of hts visit could be accomplish- -V meeting of Southern loyalists, T J Purant, presiding, was held last evening at Maslungton. An address was adopted which ignores the present Southern govern ments urging that the States he reduced to territories, out of which new States can be made by Congress who will provide for them institutions republican in form. This nlan IS to be immediately urged upon Congress I Inches of the (.residing officers ol 'hoi'h Houses were expressive of great determina tmn not to succumb to unlawful demands The sentiment of the Legislature sterns decided in favor of a territorial government rather than the acceptance of the constitu tional amendment or similar terms. r„ Al-