OJNE MXICO, M Later from Mexico. • • Our .leanings from cipious ille.iicat , c corresp' nience, 'and extracts from Mexican papers,contained in our New Orleans ex change .of the 10th inst., do not include much i) I that he not before been given our readers. We have before noticed the eStablishment ' ofun tvt ti-war party in the city of Mexicci; and in con tection with this indication of the tunes that Picayune remarks, that there is a . ver large party in Mexico in favor of making, • ace with the United States, is becoming . ciaily.more evident., ' This party has nut. yet been hehrd amid the' senseless clamor of the tlytthiniOnit mob, and the loud, empty boast ings of military pretenders, but it. will , soon find a. voice potential in the affairs of the Conntre, . Nothing appears in the files of the 'Alexi • can paperli in regard to Santa Anna's tecep tion in the capital. We cannot therefore say if he were stoned or ittaulte.d by the pa fulace. That hiicountrymen are profuudly indignant at his repeated failures, Contrasting so shame fully with his magniloquent profession= ; we ' have not a doubt. In various modes the press has given no ienialrle ideate of such a state of their feeling. Thel Monitor of the 16th states, that Getf- Oral Valencia, new commander In chief of the army, was preparing, with , a force of t regiments and battAlions, the number °leach is not. stated, to march towards Puebla: ant that it' has been inferine 1 that the men are generally and anxious tomarch imme tliatelY, but that some of the brave officers; who are . alwaYs disposed to concoct a pronanf clanteato, were essaying, by obstacles and .in algae's, to dettfat the enterpri ; .e. Banta Anna (as beforestate:!) arrited at the capital on the evening of the Ittth, but we cannot find in any of the papers before us, an account'of the Manner in which-. he was re ceived. On the 30 th his manifeste was pub lished; and on the 21st he teal: cha rle of the Presidency. According to the papers, Santa . Annul was recalled, that he mightonake the neeessary arrangements to resist the invaders; _And the Command of the army was in cense querk4o conferred on General Valencia. A meeting of the authorities and other in fluential citizens took plate on the of the 21st, in order to-adopt tesolutions in ref-, gard to the defence of the capital. It was tinatly concluded that the eityi;hfultl be prop erly fortified, and that the necessary steps should be taken fbr a vigorous defence, in case the Americans should present theinselve's ireight of the capital. The papers in the capital publish all the general orders issued by Gen. Scott and his thvisiod. El Monitor p Calished Gen. Worth's letter to the menicipal a ithorities of Puebla, . dated at Amozoqu'os, the lth .11a„ in,which he manifests his surprise t not r-ceiving an answer to his comfaunition lithe 12th, which he adds, might have been in ercepted. • The Government has orumed the discun tinuance of the proceedings against General Arista, in order to employ him in the defence of the capital. Afletter iddresseti to El Republican°, dated at Puebla, on the Pith, giveS n hill acceunt of the forees that entered that city, and the or ' der in which it was done—which we give here • as we have not seen it statod elsewhere. Ist. An advance , guard of 100 cavalry,rand 4 pieces of , light urtillery. 21. General Worth, with his division of it*fantry (pro teeded by a' baud of music) of 1320 men mid 2 pieces of artillery. 3d. A l battalion or in . fantry, of 6130 men, with a band at music, e nd followed by pie cbs of artillery. -16.. One ' mortar and 2 2lounders. .sth. A regiment of infantry, of 64 men, with a band of music. 60. A battalion f.iufantry, of 330 mpit, with --.Lauitic. ' lll 4, ll qt^ IVI enfes....witit-41ck,,,e. battalion 4- infantry, with a 4eneral at Oleic head. Bth. A battalion of infantry; 4to Men followed by 200 wagons, e:r.corted by 400 in fantry. Making in a1P4290), men, 203 wag ons, and 13 pieces of artillery. i The writer proceeds to describe the Man ner in which the Americalps entered, 9nd where they halted. On arriving at the-P aza they stacked their arms, and many of them laid down on the ground and went to sleep totindly, confident that they would ,not,he disturbed, though more the., 5000 Mexicans citizens surrounded the Plaza. They re mained until 3 o'cbick P. M., when they oc euPied the Bariach e and Com :nits of St. 1 110- mingo and -kwis. r .. The eal e Letfer states that many of the le troops atte mass, as the Mexicans them ; selves woul . Not a few of them deposite I nlMs in the alms-boxes, placed in the church: Lien. Worth visited the 13i - -lay on the 17th, and as the Bishop returned the visit on . the seine day, the guards (Americans) posted at the doors of the Palace, did him the came honors as are done to the American generals on!similar cmcashms; This has had greatin fltience loon that class of people who secm?}l Kitt enrag,ed against OEN. heretic.;—"the of.i w men." 'l4, 'Santa Anna \forms:l I is Mini: try on the With, by which Senor B- malecimtinue I act . _ Jug as itlinister of 11,)rni! an I Earr!go It•t:;i• , tins of War, and ttic. , i'dinistry of Finance. w licit was oToled, firi. Senor t,) 2nor 11, , , ,, ta, will It xt to Sencr.llondolo, ‘vaf, reft:bod by butt). MEXICO AND TIM MEMICAN3.—.Mr.IT , ;vii of i the New York Sun, says that no English or • American family could Ike a year in so riiM a ;country—or in any habitable spot whatever •-.4-without collecting around it more luxuries stid.refitiements than is to be found in a •A1t , ,1 , 'village. Among a dozen families von will - I.lot filed a floor (other than the gritint4 or a Window. Onemeeks's labor would provide a hole village with an Mimi lance of d3licim fruit the year round. But how can the poor stan thinkof planting trees ev en . in th is glo- TIMM climate, when he !min's not how soon the owner of the s , )il• will tak-? hid .c6tt age fom him, or he be torn from it to serve in the army as a soldier. 1 haltr' in the near neigh-. herhood of the city of .taco, a company of soldiers returning froMa recent recruit hunt, With the score of Volunteers they had caught tied together with ropes and dragg,ine; them after the horses' heels. The poor 'fellows I I °lied sad enough then, but When they have erved their year or two ut a hopellkss distance from their• homes, they becoMe themselves °Moralised into man-hunters, and when they returned - adrift at last, are wore than ready to turn rubbers' by trade. A bad land system tnd twenty years of military despotism have iled the ccuutry with a reckless floating pop- Otion, hut the great body of the people are aceful and Welt disposed. Under a just and peaceful they would be industri ous citizens, and soon make such places as this neglected, Poturo, bright with the horn of USibestr. . Santa Anna must be so m e relative.of John boor Botts. c ßorta promised to head Capt. yler, or die. I He failed to head Capt. Ty • cr i and totallydisregarded his promise iodic.. anta Anna protnised to drive back the inv-a log Americans or die. He too failed. .Ho Otn't drive ba4k.the Americans, and ulthough given at Cerro Gordo a tnost tempting oppur !unity to die, ;ho nut only would not embrace at, butactuall.ti cut dirt with one leg its' if Specially studious to violate his pledged faith d save his eares?s.—Vicktdiure Sentiziel. Foosic—The dead body of a man , es found about fotir miles up the Lake, and no mile from allot° on Monday last. He l i ves dressed Eike a seamen, with nothirt of ny value about. ' No name or -paper ould be found on his person leading to his dentity. He is supposed to have been one of ha cow who Orishedsni the schooner I. C. loann, that wag capsized near Conneaut some- Iveeks seinee.: Coroner'a_en'quest in necor iiatiee with the above stateMenfr—Casette. Arrival of ti!e SteamshlP ganOilA DECLINE OF BREADSTUFPS-;4bDEATH OP DANIEL O'CONNIML ANL/ REV. D. CHALMERS. . • NEW YORK, June 11-3 i P.. N. ' The steamer - Cambria reached Boston at I before 9' o'clock Otis morning. Brea:hut& ity:Ve'declinecl in the Liverpool market., The quotations of the Market on the 4th inbt., were: Flour bad declined to 40s, but on the day of the sailing of the steamer it was bringing 425. Sod averaged from B'7 to 383 per barrel, American Wheat 10s Id to 12s per 70 lbs. Indian Corn was steady at 63s for prime yellow, and in some instances white has commanded. 2s, more 'than yellow. • 'urn Meal ranges between 28 and 31s, with a tendency to the higher- quotation. • LoNnoN Mxium - r.—lli the London market Flour is quoted Cotton hes advanced and 39,000 hales Upland was sold at 51 . 1. Tne ProvistOi l i Market was languid. Bier scarce alnd nut touch in demand. Butter and Cheese maintained fair prices, and the con , sumption has I.ter.in unusually _rent during the last three months. Hams were also dull. MoNEt MAlMlM—Financial pl'ospeors are animated—the crisis 1.1 over—the Bank dis c,o_ints Inure fieely—the Bullion increased lore guarlcr:: of a ;fit . llion in the tveck.— Part pf the litissiait luau had arrived. Ex chum re 1061.,,,nt 10'). Pr cc.; are supported. 'Ti ship Mary Ellen, Capt. Dearbourn, front N. V., with (quit cargo of Teas, was lost On Ow 31 of I'ebrnary. NYE!! OF O'CoN'Nm.t..-- i Mr. O'Connell diel ;it Genoa on the 1. - ith May. Chalmers died on the 31st May. 'l.)ie weather for soma time past has been favordbl,•and the crops lhok rsetriarkalny but the potatoe rot has again Made its appear ance. FURTHER iTnNis . IIY TIE CAMBRIA. AccOunt3 from the provinces speak in ht. , eriog term, iu rt‘gard to the cowing hur , The Mexican C.niso 14 at )livreandat Mar : F y;lles hvie protes i ted against the right taken by the Un4ed States forces of sAibstituting their own custom, qul laws fur those or me N: ice,, have.notitriicd the French Merchants - that they 'mist expect their property to be contlated. -Ae A , O upts rrinn Spain say that the dilfer ; eners!bet ween the t).,:teen and • her Consort I have arrived to 5u....11 11.•ights, that the ques tion of ans-iniinedia,te divorce has been discus sod in the cabinet. It was rumored in Madrid, that:a new 'Min istry -was about to be formed. 'Mexican PriYafeer which captured the American ship Caimelita, is supposed to be mithing but . a *panlsh 1': rate. I)ate-4 from Lisbon] to the 29th ult., state that hostilities were suspended.' The. Junta had decided to rejett the Convention, and Cit.- the; initructions front .I.;:igland were anxious ly exp ected. ' Soup disturbance had taken place at Leg turn, on the piThlication of the Oeciee relative to the press; the dragons had to be called out to disoerse OM a 4seml.ilage. Stei!zeriand.—Tire new radical constitu tion has been ticee;.teYby the peciple, by 5817 votes , against 3087. The %:nte has been re ceived ‘% ith every demonstration of joy. There are iwlications of un insurrectionary in,ivement in Greece. • 4 DISMESSIN Ace:Dr:ST.—A distressing ne occured on b.tarl the steamer Missouri, at D.stroit, un Monday morning. Mr. Mce,t.o.tAs, .-1-4sistant Engineer, withontin forelting tinv of the hands, went into the wheel. : hou.' , e for the purpose of ascertaining wheth qrfthe wheel was in proper order, and while there the steam was put on. and the I nichi n _ • --5-1 P ad, ki,vorqw Ale “c , 4)(4010,4 iwatt7; afterwar4. was on h onest ,. iwlnstrious man, flighty esteemed by his boat associates and acquaintances generly. Ho leavc:s a wife awl ,seiTrad small children lin this place to mourn his untimely loss. W are gratified to learn that '1',150 were conei _ bulei by hands ant passengers on board the steamers .I.lis.eAari and Louisiana fur their befwlll.-1 t ery creditable piece olliberalitv: - — Mr. Mc Citliiftn's remains were brottuht to town and intern:. I no Tuesdly.--arr.ette. avruna floor..—Whilo the . Chosapeakel was larin Y to.hor anchor, gradually sinkirig, an 1 just before - she wont down, a trontleman sought out his wife, wie was starujing on the hurricane deck. mutt thus accosted her: "Well Y. raid he, /'tthat long mooted question teiil very soon he scaled with us" "What do you tn'eaur sail the wile; "what quoition d you role:. to!" "Why,"- sail hP, —the Tet, , tion v. bother that old Red Dragon has eKren heads and ten horns, or ten he mad sere a horn "0, husband!" said the la dr. "how cm you jest•al such a timer in three.miml:v: - , the boat went down, and • as ill luck would ltrive?, this im;vrturable jester was saved. lie , ought to have had a t peep at the "old fellow,' just enough to have couvince:l him that such an animal is below, and in waiti, for such chaps us him. Our 0:11.1,9Yr:11 hero %%as the veritable editor of a Sn m iar pub!i:',lieci in Cineintiti. The two jetter3 ofy,,Ws name we believe to be G. \V. La.ibury. Ii takes -ttn editor.— Plain Dea!zr. TUE k Vit.+, ;Patter.—.V deep tragedy, the resnit•of a piece of black hearted haseneis,' was enacted fit :4km tgomery, on the 11th intlt. A physician of standing, Dr. S. S. w4C -hot dead in the Post Office in that pl a "cf l by Col. Winston. Perry was/Win stoles lutnity phygicien, his personal and po litical Iriend„ aud had seduce,, his wife. Tie 1.-yinpathy aPpears'to he entirely with Wimuon, whilst Perry is wholly unmourned '...—ooless is be by his injured wife. Col. Win ston was State Senator for Sumpter, amP(or th'e two last 'sessions President of the 'Senate: Perry was last session a Representotire from that county, both Demoerat , . The affair produced the most intense excitement in that community. A judicial iavestigatien of the aflair wee to commence on the 12th. Perry had a six barrel pistol in his locket at the time he was idiot, but had no time to use it. PITEtt:tC LIBTLUtII:3 01 'nu; lINtrED STATES. —Theing:tiror its.thc foilowing Paragraph, which is pre.bably correct, as that paper is es pecially accurate in statistical marten,: cAecordin„, ,, to a table compiled from the re searches I pf a - literary gentlemau of New York, these urewin the Ms itol States no less than 225 public hi:harks. The aggregate number of volumes set down at 2,351;260. It appears that the State of New York has 33 librarieii, with 114,00(1 volumes; Pennsylvania, 32 li braries, with 116,100 voP-nes; Massachu setts, 30 libraries, with 003,000 colonies; OK), 23 libraries, with 68,000 volumes; Ma ryland, 1 I libraries, with 54,000 vorumes, and other States stnaller numbers. Rhoda Is land, itt"propOrtion to herpopolatium has the largest number of volumes of any State in the Union. MOST SINGULAR EXIMOSION. , -. A very un happy ocetirret*e in slacking lime. Mr. John Haven of West Hartford, at tempting some limosiryteto.slaCltsnmelime for whitewash, with hoC water in a boiler on the stove, had rednee&the whole, as he sup posed, to be a liquid, Wit onadding_anoth dip per foll'of water 'the - whole exploded with a lend noise,and scattered the whole mass about the room, hewing some of it with great force against the ceilling,,,and in the, face and eyeli. 1 . '41 We advoca tedt. the tariff of 'l2. We do not in end to go into a lengthy argument, fortified by quota tions from our colutnis at that tiinc, as we might do, to prove our nighber's pOsition un sound and false. We do not think our read ers take interest_enough in the runi-tion ta re quire it, and if we did, we have neither time nor room. When our neighbor ,harmonizes his accuiationsi now aril then aga nst its, we may thinkdit worth, while to 'suss in ourAelf by such ineansl.—uot before! In 1,811 the e.l- itor of the Commercial said we Were the ad vocate of Free Trati,?, add that rok was the. I Free Trade candidate. We denied this, and t I claimed ti be in favor of a ',Para for relienue, ' which would afford incidental protection to 1 all interests, including zOrnmerce, manufac -1 tures, agriculture and th . e. arts: No' better explanation of our, an I the demovatic pari ty's, position in regard to the tariff in 1811, can be found than the following from s chaii lenge 'to the Whig party, adopted i by thekick- cry . Club, of which one of the editors off'this paper was Secretary, and the other' on the' committee to draft the propositions for discus sion. The 4th propositioh was as follows: 1 aTtie,Democratic party and their candidates are in 1 . /1%44 of a tariff' of .duties for reveutier, with discrimination so as to afford incidental protection to home industry and dome4qc manufactures which most need encutira'ge moat the whip party 'their mindidate are either in favor, of !Lis policy, and Got - sentiently there is no essential difference. r issue between the parties on this subjecq Syr they favor what they' cliff protection,'witlWit regard to revenue, to which the dem/lei - it tic party areopposed. Discuss this propositit;ini” NOw we claim that the tariff of '46 such a tariff as one alluded, to in the abovet— It atrurds incidental and adequate protection to aldbranches 9f industry, and dues so atftin irir-nTsTies-firtPate ii 's r v n a . ]n f es r the government in time of peac?. Ono word - more and - we -are done, Mwe said tiefOrei the editor of the•CoMmercial in 18tt acdused us of being the ailvoc ; ate of free trade. He says notiwe advocated the tarifnif '42 at that%tir., Will he answer, without equivocation or reservation, whether he bore "false witness against his' neighbor' then, or does so now A DlCtt We find the following in the Detroit Free Press. It is a hard - "nut" for the Wilmot proviso loving whigs, and we should like to see their and Gen.,Tay.ler's especial Opt), the Commercial Advertiser, "crack it." We caution our cotemporary, however, the to .smash his fingers in,the effort. By the by, if he should do so without raising a "blood blis ter," Appose he takes 4 his candidate's let ter to Gen. Gaines, in which he takes ground in favor of the /nether extension of territory: 4 .Prejodkes ever have and ever will be in dulged by thinking men and a self-governing people. review, free from its influences, and most of men.are biassed /ay their early impre;- sions and opinions. Tem writer of this tte— knowl&lges.that to some extent, he is one of the number, % and he proposes Ito show that General Taylor has been, and prrbably is still, as liable as himself to the like impeachment. At Green Ba 3/, in tik , spring cf 1817, when Brevet Major General Zachary Taylor—new Major General Zachary Tayldr,—was in corn-, , mend of Fort Howard, at a 'dinner given by l himself, or by some of the of*ers of the Fort,' ho proposed the following sentiment: " "NO MORE. FIELD OFFICERS FROM NORTH OF THE POTOMAC!" There were present at this dinner, among others, Col. Chambers, Capt. O'Farrell, Lienti Gray, and Lieut. Armstrong, tf the Rifles; Capt. Gray, - Capt. Grosvenor, Lieut. Hopkins and Lieut. Morgan, of the Infantry; John Boy; er, Esq., U. S. Indian Agent; Mr. Ervin, U. S. Factor, and Elward Biddle,Esq., of Macit inac. Some of these have paid the last (Hit of nature, hilt others are living to testify t;f nccesary tO the truth of this statement." I spaa:.tog-it right our A corresp'ondent of one of the whig ripe a in Pittsburgh,. in speaking of their rece t county comlention, says: 1 "One map, 1-know occupiOd a scat on the floor of that!body, who I wonder was not afraid to trust himself in the Court house he so ot , famouslyrobbed, and two others, from tlie'first Ward in Allegheny, owed their return to dis graceful frauds perpetrated in their r presenm and with their encouradentent, by a notorious housebreaker." The naughty fellow, to tell such home tritths of his own poljtict4 flesh and blood. There must havo been a sale of the Sheriff's nt+i nation, or some:other fat &flee, 'as there was once upon it time in a Whig county 'conven tion something less than two hundred tulles north of Allegheny. Population of Pittsburgh. According to a new directory issued in Pitts burgh by liana Harris, the popultition-of that city and,the surrounding townsoind auhurbs within five milethie 100,00, of whom the na tive born citizens number 55,000. The Irish population is estimated, at 1.5,00 e, and the German at X 0 . 07.' Our friend of the Easton' Argus,gives "D. Walker's Apole Mintrels" a puff on our account, and .chaiiis ua five dollars , for the same. He can take' this article as a draft at eight on 'said mittatrels for three, the interest on which, by the tinV3 ho, collects, it, will amouut.to about fire.- ' ' A Withering. Reinik e, -- We find.the following in the Ph Times, extracted fropt,the cot reaps the North American, one of the lea( papers of that city. This paper ha t of the most prominent in t king tl .Mexico 1n the„present strt g4le country; - arid its correspoa, ent : preSume, is one of its own pol We rejoice to know that: no edi the Democratic faith, has been of such a rebuke frOm an countrymen: "IN hetherthe war is.wrrig or righf,•this is not the time to discuss t. If Wrong, it must be brought to an him( rable termination, and to do this all should be inked.' The peo ple we war against need not yo r encour agement to lay in wail for your b others and murder them with the lassc and 1 itichelle'.— They'need not gone: pious' curses upon. our ends to incite them to hat, ed of very thing daterica rt. We should lui ve yai r aid and support; , we need your enco rage? ingt to sus tain us in the trials,and ha -dsAlps we encoun ter in this 'unfriendly dim , te. tar love of country and our patriotic tam& s, made its to the rescue of our fl gat tf e lir'st call,, ir and we can bear all the burdens % ar impose without murmuring, but w cacao brook your cold sneers rat our Stlierili s. ant , your hyp&- critical prayers fur our dkfeat. Thousandsi 'Ono of the G'hals," I now here will never see [home or kindied 'A letter has been redeived by a glentleman again—the hail-storm of blutle irt the un- in Nov Orleans fraini a highly respectable la healthy, climate will thin dor eau :s inure than tli • Ai , 4ed •information even quit may desire, hou4-4 you v e i ns swell i 111 a , ' a rna, Wl ' full of tory blood. ,Even shoal it be .clearli from him as to wjmi - iiild make appli that the ProSideut was wrong in the course I cation in order to be lto join our'for he has pursued towards Mexico, is it fair, is I ces in . 'XiCO. &U.; says that she is doter it patriotic in you, as .314rican. , to mbar- miaed, if ossibic to do' her tart towards su4- r :es hint, and aid our enemy t destroy us? , . ;. ' \ 'e, hors, know nu party we k ow no fee- . ta `""g the honor of her cmntry, an 1, from tion; no political considerttions innuenca us, theltime of her letter, i..:eiiiins willing to editor aii why should they inn; once- ail at such a either an infantry. artillery or drngTim tinet kVe care nothing . for t r. Polk, as a pany.. • Show the lei} Ichance., by all means. , Man; and if he does wrorqr, we s tall not be be hind any in avowing, it wl en th proper time (I:t' A nothcr curuilruniilatiun from it An COMOS. lint we can se °the wode to :do o h,, erver, -, on the „count.o, Press," will be flist make, an titis a pity you a w t better , . ci t found in to-day's'paper. It Will 1e read with 1 . seems that the' volunteers in Mexico slnipfo!jed. .4r you wilt tt ke pa I with the en- . ehny, come here and do it like it en; show thatt ue_ eres i t t. 1 I i4ou have as much court ge a treach(fry int r,---- your hearts, and that y u are not al . raid, to d ; o odo things b y 'hakes. At [Nina Vista do that. you /visit. done 'Ty our foes. pou . o 1 4 • , it,:telo fl og: Mr. Polk, go aft ad, - -bat o not ' they recently burnt Tom 'Corwin in [effigy, Iti amt t• our throats in the dot ig of 't. i on the same day a felltiw who had stolen "Pe:siring you to a mierst n I that the I a horn 'e a short time befire. was discharged 41inerican Volantc , ers li, ve g ne•vtly r 11 H l l' ia: id drtantni3d out of the ;Tr) to the cidebra-1 to appreciate your efldit., and t xtellent mein'- I . ories, L &hall' not was 0 pa: et liy .ifying 1 4. ' 1 air Itocr Ms 3,Earcli."'t ___Ll ___.._± ____,...... • , . aniithin4 further to you While in Mexici). \ f - 1 . - . ,,, { (ris , , l. ....m. int , spcm.mj. hatia . .3tor t.; u' d , 1- , il '/''he sentifnents so to ngihdrl'y mit tbgetir- , • er hiirearebut the tech, of w tat is felt and •• of one E torO ivies from Indian:l'l,ol:s, ,spciken by every man in (he' ar ny." I now on the way to IL-Nicer, says: "This cow -1 The editor of the Tit, „s jo tly comments ! puny, wipe in composed of 91 men, consi-is • upiin the cunsummate c‘olne.s , which would of ;iINIITV-TWO democrats and !1'....0 wings!" prjmpt a twin, (after . tteri ! 't g. such bcriti- This, we presui•, is almat,the ii•iiitieal Mil mnnts its kaVe 1)01 4 4‹. erect by many of the lidexion of all the \min nteor , neW in Mexico., PeAeral editors,) to qui Ely ad tit into his pa"- par so, withering. a ;leminciati a of his course. A parallel for it can on 'y be ft on tin the ease of one who would villif an a) sent friend; and then seek to 'justify hi emu se, ivlrm con fro)iid ant chaiged wi It his cowardice and ichery. llaPpily a lay o reckoning will net and then the . fexicr at Whigs, from rwin dowl'i, will ree lye tit , ir ieward. tre I Pl' efi INVe envy not the lress in its attacks lon this brave officer 13 have the emphati a d the' grii.lging ar isE and political enemy, ;ol cause Gun: Pillow is t do the lriny sought for y i he as been attache w: • whieli we can account for from the Mexican pr liic - In this we do not role:. to We should be sorry-to la,: but we must think he has uputiGen. Pillow, all )w. ings to Bret the better of this is so that officer 1 as 'uw Orleans Delta o th and able reply to Col. llt of the Tenues , ee egi accused him•in a pub ic potency. The defers pletely uses Col. H : his own military sk convicts the Tennessee o Oract. ing misstuletnants: First, Col. Husked m 0 orks in the enemy's lir Secondly 7 ---he miss, to:: fact, I intended eitife,ir to assail, and the 0 ;nit 0 sailed,. Thirdly—the - c he regards as a blunt er and the only one by vld ties could possibly ract i the regiments were, eel with this express ob Oct der for the Jormation of of battle, which he says and the ranks of his regii proper; and agreeably to no possibility of his win ing reversed. . Gen. Pillow then proc at great length, the corr tions,/nd he accuses Co his Nitichl and person that one officer pronounce Gen. Pillow, ftike, and r anl that Major Parquarh duty with - that regimen Capt. .NaylOr, of the 2J mein, and his oilicers, wi this day, perfectly identi and character of the regi independent of Haskell's signed . it. .11 , 1speei . not careful} men shows that such a, Col. Haskell had p , rson , own observation and pa ; connoisance, that he wa truth. .We would goln fence, but that it is of et militarylmetfonlv ,can ; stand it. li,',t3 profess.t acquaintance with "win' "adjaCent angles,l' "rev: Geth,Pillowi thinks that Tennessee regiment(th address) is cowardly an Colonel is more medora; tertnins the opinion 04 is ignorant withbut the ('lt is said there is ahrati in jail in l'iu s burgh, charged with 11, ring three ,wives, alt Tieing within ton miles of that place. Some r * envious old 'bachelor ,o the ' press, like our neighbor of the ,94:zet e, says it a must be a blessing to him that the are su cif institution, as prisops tc?l'shut his % 0:7- A, scamp name ' sotheryillaniei, had del?• ter ' , was.rode - npon - a r order , of Julge Lynch,l days since. lie was r .with.. iladelphla' i ndence of, lino Whig . 1 I e been de on of th tii - tt ~ 'it is, fair to itic I friends. tor irofessing eon ed worthy ort / i r n of 'his .Gen = lutt Bu is brave ec'atation of Scott, of his personal But be erat, and because 111=1 E tt On hetivenesi 0 oi her way r2ct .onsmf these men. % it ' a h'erd— i it his recent attack ed his personal feel hi= judgment. That fu ly proved. In the he Bth, he basil long as! ell and - the oilieers im nt, who recently sta of incom.- of en. Pillow com ell up, and vindicates an I knowledge, lie oil cer of the follow- Mates the le, nil their positions. s t le work which, in - Ho! For Chicago ant .7n4 tli. We 4). hit rseft• or W Y nk°° P i Before this number of On' paper reaches all vhi h was actually as- J Y • I 1/° ' l-6°ll6 "and of the Sacker State: \i'hatever ?.e eo new ior in eres 1,.,., c, . . , fill{report of 1 ord -, r of march, which V'. r t eado_r t s . ,:e t ai ll er be wi o i t i o a or , dy to the, of mine, was proper, ; Chicago Convention, and Irobablj; before , 11.'e ich the assaulting par- r:retarn tale al.tont over some of the prairieg h t sir di i laced in the march, . t. Pourtl4—my or- hi command i nto li ne ! the doings and sayings at Chicago on tbe..sth,, '•cterscd the wing: , I will be duly laid before our. readers. In the , tent, was right and o hat Order, tb - ero wal h s and his ranks be-r time ° can i mean time our senior partnerlwill devote what spare from hii official duties,' in ri, catering for our readers. demonstrate,; ° Hs 26 i trtness of these posii :Haskell of hein4 I enemy, and statet the harges i against fuse to sign 6q -in, Iton who Was Upon , in J tat battle, ' l and Pennsylvania Itegi ()se position war:, on fled wifh the conduct ment, but who were influence, ha...e not ie charge that he had red th 6 works, he' , t the case, but that I knowl2dge, by his ticipation in the re- LEM = lIIZI tnibrepresentitig, the tre, fully into this de l c,t a character that ppreiate and under be innocent of any s" "reconnoisances." rsi4 columns," Bze. the Colonel of the 2 I alleged author of the I ignorant. The said e; for he merely en ii his superior officer {cowardly. Ives out. Catlin, whoi'among itched his outa desigh li and then ducked; by t Clinton,'Lop., a few ughly but justly dealt The Pittsburgh Post says a late number cif the Boston Whig closes a long article headed ,The Whig Party," by declaring that:— - "At this time, we regret to be obliged. to affirm that upon all the greatest issues of this time; there no moral responsibility resting upon the NVhig pariy.for its action.".. A subject for regret, truly! But is it pos..: sible you have just made the discu. ) .pry! Why' this is what tlMDltnocrats have been telling the people for years. ".11u r ra/ responsibility" forsooth! ' Th ere is responsibility resting upon th , l7ri of any kind. They are thorough ly bankrupt in morality, is patriotism, in pol itics, in every thing! They favor irresponsi ble banks,-and laws by which swindling debt ors can get I clear of their credit&rs. They are, l t irresponsible in polyeal principle; be cause they dare not avow those which they seek to establish. They are irresponsi i ble in patriotism; because they are against" their country and in favor of the enemy. 'And' if they are not irresponsible in morals, they have improved very much since 1840. We would not like to trust.to their morality, until, they have given proofs of possessing a greater . share of it. ' 0„:,,,As the ‘writitiv; editor" (if theObservet , contemplates being absent from his post for a few webs, he t ru,t s lbc i"wriiing editor" ',of the Glizettc , Vill have tiriitnagMtniniity to rb serve his tire until M.; ret ru. wlreri by hop'es froni a ?-h , •-rt frorn,lcHt. to his duties for t•omething over limr years, he v. ill realm with 11-2;tlth int2rove(l, - mind in , - viljorated, an 1 withall.bettei:\ fated to return Mow for blow, and shot fur shot. in-the cause of democracy and equal The 'Washington, Onion says, ``tire moss c on fident iy the hest an.l the n r icist r cent it/form:tint) we have I,:tvi able to 'oh- At; chief, if not the solephed:cle to (I 11:1 .•ti.". JA“ ii•at ca O. .4110 II COM 1% to f"tiitlt io the hop/03,10n pro,loreld upon the govenOileot nit 'people, by the Vast, tiio! present tone and attitude of 3';...0 . ne of the tideral leaders and federal prints in‘relation the 'war, oa , nze: r.n.i it 3 f-401.-: the whig party has "aided in thn pro,o- eution of thi‘Var''t aid as the vuittire l ives the bilinh. • Q` Tite 4 C.litor of the :',lereer Igimirtary is 4 . linelc full of editorial tight. After giving ; nuc neighlior of the Gawtte a pretty eriectual ,t per F ; thrashing. he now wants tabe "lvt" witit I'ost ft We can't accommodate him j•l7 , t now tint v.:hen tc return, if he still .feels dispose.' o Iliow his 'Abolition "grintlers," we finny kro„tify him. We hrb.-e - already two or three lilfhis WhiLr alli . es snarling, at ro,, and we flnnht ho s t wecan ae,:ormnoclate as many mare. ' fin the mean time-we:will turn hint cner rgour krienl Garvin, of the Pre =s. number of 12t_The cry is still they come. Byl refer ring to our advertising columns it will he -step th a t the “b'hoys" are destined to hare another loud time of it—another Circus is coming to town: lima. ,fitor the ‘dt'hoys," let them , go it while theyre young, whe they get old they can't. ie stoi the Westfield Messenger that the Steamer Dianiond will visit our city on Monday the, sth of July, "with a freight of Fredonians, DoultirkatiS,Barcelonian., West ) tieldites; £<.c." We hope our Urn's will be on t hand to show them every attention. I ' (t - " Our neighbor of the Gazette must have been a laWyer in his:day, He. chages us with a certain cotiree'pf 'editorial policy, and .when we ask him to prove his charge, turns round and gravels tells us prove that it is not so*--thtm, by a mere , dash of the pen, 7 = versing,the plainest principle of comppn law, that a man is always considered inndent nn till proven g`uilty.. Shales of Blackstone, is'nt. he a bird! ()Ve.%. stated last week that a correspon dent of the Girard Free Press had been guilty 1 of plagihrism, in n pieced poetry Lontributed to that paper. We did not then knew who that correspondent w s, but from 1. ihe' tone and temper, manifested, in the last ntunber of that paper on the subject we are constrained to helieyethat its terresOoinient, 4, Sweepstaltes,'! the inditer of tniser4le twattle, the pilferer of ether peop!es thJo4lits, and the !editor of that paper, are on' and the saw; individ. nal, Now, as a ;item ry thief is the most des picable of .all living .niinals,, any further no tice, or reply-to the personal abuse of us, by "Sweepstakes," alias, the editor of the Girard Free Press, krill be entirely out of the ; roes , 1 tion. ~ -1, . , President Polk arrived in Philadelphia on the.:1:1(1 inst: and was received , by & large military and civic proceSsion. Awful Destitution. IA oat that "Aut." Eur the Erie Observer. r !. ; COUNTRY •PRESS. E9 i rroits: — Theiou s b pe li r c it a y re of mo tz ested in the oli 1 , fess," than tiara sight would at° those who cast but a super- - at! , thersubject. The school house env it is true, are time honored of, learning: but the veriest A B (Ideation is taught in them, and ells us how much of What is learn ] od has, in mattner.years, to be uti forgotten. Life with its turmoils .ud l es t lies outside the school house; we are clear of the teacher and his •istattt, levertheless l we often need : alWays a practical teacher in the Nol . of manhood and duty. This in tutor and isovereigii guide, we find nt i ry press," the; organ of opinion, of , thought; emphatically the en... dem, because it is the great scliool teacher of the age. This nation lull of enterpriie, growing in: opula tion," prone to daringachieve- might add a nation of men let loose, ints cut free; will] naught to check save the intelligence, morality - so generally dilTused and chew onr race. The 'pill - world, famed , iiti and wrong, is floating to our entintbers of lie 4 people; ranging iterate boor to t 4. 'pan of scientific attaiiimenisid scholastic refinement. Ma terials sopposite tin their character, destitute of sympa hi sing rititributes, are to assimi lated,hef firs to each other and then to our insti-: cations. • This power of absorbing ingredients so dissim.tar,is a mystery beyond - the corn preliensir n of those who claim to rule by . "right di 'i mi." This power of absorption and assiallon„ atiiiributes peculiarly Ameri ' T e bands of tyranny, unloosed, the hu -1 exptruds, the Dind comprehends its measures its power, feels its interest sto icliarn its duty. The first lesson :1-frOtn the- "countr ',press"--and is calm teachings of atriotisni, Of du edorn, regulated bj salutary laws.—• -,-. ,?..,1,0 cendenial to the human heart, Ch i a warm respons e tit the hands of k_II though they be dissimilar in char -4 feel that -intelligence and liberty e'e:ith ,alVare acceptable to all, and the common condition of all. - The i, the as simil ating organ, as "well m'servative guardian of public liberty. itt omnipotent 'instrument of public thou common educator of the people! dare contemn thy usefulness or thy The phyr - ,ically bra ve, who wi th bay-. 111;.1, can chargeupn to the can One , -E r in',., from' thy reproof as the resh 1 Il4 l af withers itt - the rays of the n u !. Go on thy mission press. litrald i om—thou art of thnpeople—s hin in tru . g I I ribd--a potent messenger of e um. 1 . m inister of reform.' - . I9n to view the subject in a more roc -1:It. WC are a nation of readers.-- l Hendom presents not such a seer.— li read; the high, t e low, the rich, the hliand young-. Newspapers being mi -Ini present, have fo"stereillearnin and, ted Chet people to read and th nk.--- iti..; trail in the- American cha eter. erance ilthe child of habit: vi e that associations. Ignorance is the ruit of , ion. As with men, so with nations— vimples etevate the character atidlead • I Ti ;(1 . , l e public mind, quickened l and itr,l by the press, has expanded; and g - ttself disciplined, is equal, to the des l' the nation. Ilo%v admirable the wis r ur fathers—thhy provided liberty for •:1 1 ,,m1 :mister of the.nation, the newspa- r 'r , .;=. We bare a War, a Navy, and a. _Mice li?partnient; the two first are sup by government, ,the last by pestages froin the private funds of the people - . ,lieers cy the Army and Navy draw sal that astonish the . minds of our toil niiiions.: The civil employments of -nnic. , n : t are equally well paid- r - 1 while 3Ui stations are not neglected; Congress or iristanee draw f;tBTer - Alay, With am: • nileage, and privileges' , . ` -suffici e nt one I think to overthrow their republicanism. : institution oT the government is so well In ted, as the Post OtliCeiDepartment, to ,t the intelligence and;-elevate the con *of the pepplel - I kiow of non e. The 1 v and Narf are publie charges; taken in .orison theylsink 'into iosignifioance.— on the timpluyeesof government. and en xalted Congressman; to -shell out a part lie ,cash retuned to support their respec deparitnents,_a-nd Fco what a burst of pa le- indignation yor Vl5ll meet. Turn ye e Post Masted, General--Lthere Ate sets at 1 ; ;hing,tott, and likd ' all his predecessors, etids that the department must be sup .e.di out of portages. ; , That is, the people have no inoi-e favors from thiet govern -1 than they pay for.' Call on the chivalry o [Artily and Navy t*hare in the expense teir respective dePartments, andkee what wl you will hear, Lace and glittering o - is would be cheap. • h i d l se oontrasts are not made in tin invid; • r lpirit, but rattler that the. people might tsickened to review the acts of the goveru dj i t, an reflecting onitheir result" be indu i,n due season, toi demand red r es in Ow_ . ilts es. It is a palpable misread ng gibe I k l itrition which makes the Post pffice de meat support itself' , The public will no ef' hold him guiltless who aims to cast the hen of it wholly on the people. I It is the pie who are most deeply 'intereted in the o,ition manifested. to cripple th.L. prosper of the "country press,"- so usefUlloihem ti organ of intelligence and thought—ard hits article shall serve. to awaken interest he mind but of one man, , then we nrd re riled.' ..--r AN OBSERVER,. EE Alssse.s. deeply inter reuun s try seem appar. fieial glance) and thp ace., receptnclcs C of tife's experience 1 ed in boyli. learned tir and vie.ipsi and though birchen4ts• reproof.On trying sell dispensiblel in the "eo the vehicle gino of frc master an is young wealth,in ments. I from 'resti• or guide t 2111 and teristic-of for opprp;' ,bores bar! from the i EMI BIN= position c i and zeokl 15 gl tile den tt, of fr.( mcPt NI (11t111: all MEE 1111 , 1110111 tel erre.; the c h opinion no man BEE MHZ n ' if 'HI' i d M:r 1, ERE of freed l 1 11 , "It 0 t i 0 !)--a I INI All cite We al ['nor. oi Ct s A h frtsitu MEE MEI of evil IBM ME to (~n;din' lEEE d mu MT 16211 ~• 1 1 , MIS 3 gme i p‘diti. men t ple i ‘l, U 'l,‘ eaten prom' ditia Arm corn Call the of t five ME to tl NI a port , Ott 21. Y! Inert uou be if met cei pre Cot RE Ithe editor of tho gazette brags about some traordiutry 'strawberries presented I"indirectly"ivtady., We have s=B - °6r tabk, (rout til ti of our friend, pl.lClark, we are ready to go the cream raw ici berries at Kekh's, are larger, more de ng, and:withal ,o 2 better berry, than any [ ndirect" present duribachelor friend Byer got, ever will get.- 1 Otto of tho Loot from tho Ottoaapoako. • Tho body of D. A. rolsorri, formerly of , ester, N. V., one of the" lost from the ill fa- r . - Chesapeake, u start picked up on Wedues• ay i evening by, the . Fratikkiniand brought to place. His WHO LOCH to CIOV6 OId, hero biR farniiy-noiv residue, fur interning. I r 'Rtra.