VOLUME 19, THE WEEKLY OBSERVER. ZAZE PA: SATURDAY MORNING. SEPTEMBER 2. 1848 GEN. TAYLOR'S CHARLESTON LETTER! We received some days since, by. Telegraph, the sub -101:1C0 of the following letter from Gen. Taylor to a friend in Charleston, B. C. Many of our whig friends then doubted its aittheaticity because, we presume, "the 'risk was father to the thought," and not for any good or valid menu, - They can doubt no longer—it comes in too authentic a shape, and bears the impress of its dis toiguished author's style t.o plainly not to be genuine.— The whole letter has not boon published, but the follow ing extract is copied into the Washington Union from the Charleston Ncws, of thil6th of August. Extract If a later from Gen. Taylor to a friend in this city: "I never had any aspirations for the Presidency, nor have I now; farther than the wishes of my friends are concerned in the matter; nor would I have it on any oth er tenni' than I stated when the subject was first agitated, which is that my acceptance must bo without pledges or being trammelled in any way, so that I could be the president of the whole nation and not of a party. "1 have accepted tho nomination of the Philadelphia Convention, as well *the nomination of many primary memblies gotten up ih various sections of the - Union, in some instances irrespective of party; and would hare ac cepted the nomination of the Baltimore Convention, had diem tendered on the same terms. I am now fully, if not fairly, before - the country as a candidate for the chief magistracy; and if it should bo my good or bad fortune to be elected, r trust that my Course mill bo such, for the most part, as regards tho management of our na tional affairs, as will meet the approbation of my fellow riatoiii. Should they Phil to do no, they will, I flatter myself, have the charity to attribute my errors to the head, and not to the heart. "Very respectfully, you'r friend, ' "Z. TAYLOR." This is certainly the unkindest cut of all. First to tell his Whig friends plainly that by accepting the nomination of their convention ho does not consider himself pledged to their policy—placingthem, the "great witeg party," nu they boastingly stylo it, upon precisely the saute foot ing with the "baker's dozen" of any-parry mut no-party nominations—but would even have accepted , the nomina tion of the Baltimore Convention—the "loco-foco" nom ination—if it had been tendered to him! And thi, ; suppose, is what is meant by a, "whig, but not an ultra whig." Truly, says the Washington Union, hero is candidate for the whigs to scheme for, and toil for, and spend their inc — iiier for, and give up their principles- for, and sacrifice their well-tried and faithful leaders for!— Gen. Taylor says he ,would havo taken tho democratic nomination on the same terms. The country has learn ed, and candidates for the presidency have learned, by this time,lhat the Democratic nomination is not 'to be Id by any man on these sane terms. Thu democratic nomination, fortunately, is understood to mean some /ling, and to pledge something, us to the political 'whirl les and course of the man who obtains it, It will be Seen that the General says he is "new fully, if Dot fairly, before the country as a canditlnte for the thief magistracy," thus leaving it to be inferred that he has some doubts about the "fairness" of his nomination. Can this refer to the statement of Judge Saunders—the pledges made by that gentleman in the Convention—and which pledges it was believed were made without author ity, though the General afterwards entlorsedithcm in a card to Bailie Peyton? Unquestionably that is what ho refers to. In that st tamest Judge Saunders said: "Oa behalf Of th delegation of Louisiana, I will fur tierstate that Gen. Taylor desires it to be understood, that, in his op r Mon, his friends who come into this con tention are bound to abide by its decision, and to sustain tie nominee 'heart and sonl'—that Gon. Tit) for recogni lea in this convention those who hare a right to withdraw Au same, awl will cheerfully acquiesce in such withdrawal. "la case the! choice of this convention shall full on anotherittan Gen:Taylor. and his friends in this con vention withdraw him, it will be their act, and not his, bat in which ho will cheerfully acquiesce; and by the act of uniting with this conrention, his friends withdraw his same from the canraas, unless he be the nominee of the contention." • And now, having obtained the '.Whig nomination by this explicit avowal made in his behalf, that hie name weal 6e trithdrrom from the canvass if ho were not made the srkig nominee. ho turns round and , tells the whigs that their iontination is just as good as any other that j her has received, and no betterL that it pledges him to noth ing, and that ho Weald have taireea lb° Baltimore nomi nation on the santo terms! Who can for a Moment sup pose that General iraylor could have obtained, or hoped toobtain, the Philadelphia nomination, if Judge Saun ders: instead of saying what he did say there, had just gat up sad read this Charleston letter tuad then had taken his seat? llad this been done. the whigs at Philadel- phis would in make have scouted the itlea of giving Gen. Taylor the nomination. what can bo said for the good faith of a candidate, who, after ho is nominated, thus turni his back upon the pledges which, being made is his behalf, and obtained him the nomination, were af. terwasis sanctioned by him? What motivo has the whig Putt' to strive for his election? What ground has the country for believ:ing that ho can, as a politician, be safe it trusted? All show of consistency has, beyond a doubt. Ilea abandoned in the series of Gen. Taylor's letters.— lles the substance of . 4 kood faith with his party been pro- Ot rye d &MIER KICK FROM TIIF. AVAILABLZ.—.WeII rosy the align exclaim with Martin Van Buren, "our suilbrings u intolerable." Close upon the heels of the Lippard no -party letter, another malits'its appearance, in which the " available" declares ho would have accepted a Demo antic nomination had it been tendered to him, and the tali of that is Rearely dry before the Telegraph announ ces that another has been ushered into this political world, is which the "available" accepts the nomination of a tow Calhoun Democrats in South Carolina who have plated him on tho ticket witNGon. Wm. 0. Butler, the commee of the Democratic party: Oh, ho, such a Wince! Tuc BEST JOKE or THE Sassorr.--The best joke of , 111 elesson is the assertion, gravely put forth by the Buf -410 ,Erpress, that Kentucky was the Presidential battle round! Punch and JohnDenkeyrectenbined can't beat that! The Philadelphia correspondent of the New Orleans Delta,' has seen a latter from John Van Buren. in which he savx ""Gen. Taylor will most assuredly bo next Proud dent.6—Boff. Erpresa. Of course—the election of Taylor is just what Martin Van Buren and his son Jelin have; been and arc striving for. They care so little about "free territory," and so ranch for rerenge, that they would tako the stump for Taylor to-day did they not think they were helping him more effectually by, their present core. It remains to to be seen whether democrats—honest democrats—will help them in this "crusade." UJ The National Intelligencer sayiTaylor is 41 pledged to respect the legislative authority on' all questions that may arise during his administration."" Gen. 1 4 aylor de clares how not and trill not be pledged to any thing. TWENTT-T/lIIID COHORTS., DISTRICT OF PENNSTLVABIA. , --IV e are glad to proceivo the nomination of the lion. J /XLS THOMPSON, of the Erie district of Pennsylvania, for a reelection: Tho election of this distinguished de in °cm. who so ably represents his district in the present c 'ugrets, may he counted upon as a matter of course.— The democracy of Pennsylvania, iu all parts of that mat commonwealth, were never in a sounder or strong v: Londition.—.llbuno Argus. \II.. E• ,• • • • • ER- ),I.•• •.1 S . ..../ •... • E. R ' • Select poettß attb Illiaccllangr TE LINXIMN MI: =I Ifem's a song for thee-of the linden tree! A song of the silken Lintels, There is no other tree so pleaieth No other so lit for thyme. Wheri I was a boy, it was all lay joy To rest in its scented shade, When the sun was high, and the river nigh, ' A musical murmur it triode: When, floating along like a winged song, The traveler-bee would stop, And choose for hie bower the lime-tree flower, And drink—to the last sweet drop. ..e twit sweet 1 1 When the evening star shone lb I And the gnats flew round and 11 1 nought for a rhyme, beneath th Or dreaMe'd'en the grass)* grol' Ate—years have tied; and the Is a brand on the cotter's floor And the river creeps through its And youth—is a thought of yo Yet—they live again, in the drea 1 As 'deeds of love and wrong, Which pass with a sigh, anti see Survive id the poet's song. MEXICAN JE (I sketch of the tat Emaran On the 15th of September, two :days after the storming of CE apultepec,,a smrll party,- of soldiers, in dark uniforms, were seen to issue front the great gate of that castle, and, windillg down the Calzada, turn towards the City of Me/ico. This occurred at 10 o'clock in the morning. The .day was very hot, and the sun, glancing vertically upon the flinty rocks that paved the causeway rendered the heat more oppressive. At the foot of the hill tfie pa ty. halted, taking ad vantage of the shade of a huge cypress tree, to set down a liters , which four men carried upon their shoulders. This they deposited under one of the arches of the aqueduct in order the better to protect . j its occupant from the hot rays f the sun. The occupant of the liters as a wounded man, and the pale and bloodless chek, and fevered -eye showed that his wound was hot slight one. There t i was nothing around to denote his rank, but the camp cloak, of dark blue, and the crison sash, whichlay it upon the liters, showed that th .wounded man was an officer. The sash had evidently .been saturated with blood, which was how dri -d upon it, leaving parts of it shriveled like, and o a darker shade of crimson. It had staunched he life-blood of its wearer upon the 13th. The ell the litter, their bronzed faros t pant, apparently attentive to h .was something in the gentle c. I rude men seemed to wait upo that bespoke the existence of a more humanity. There was th the brave soldiers feel for him,_ the field of battle, at their Wed were among the first who bray: zlesof the cannon upon the par! The wounded officer had led t 1 The ecenearound exhibited of a recent field- of battle. T near, with dismounted canno flagments of shells, dead horse by them. dead tee,, and still unbi strolling about, busied with thi of mangled carcases still lay a. ing the swollen limbs and dist composition. The atmosplier. disagreeable odor, and the wo Upon his pillow, gently comm proceed. Four stout soldiers liters, and the party moved slo duct, toward the Garita Helen. halted at intervals for rest and The tine trees that line the gr• Tacubaya road, though much t. the cannonade of the 13th, aff from thehot sun-beams. In t! ing Chapultepec, the escort ent: I passed up the Paseo Nuevo, a the Alameda. Any one who has visited th • City of Me. ico will recollect, that opposite the Alameda, on its south ern front, is a row of fine houSes, which continno on to the Calle San FrAllaiSCCi p and thence to the Great Plaza, forming the Caliper Correo, Plateros,. tz.c. These streets are inherited principally by foreigners, particularly that o Plateros, which is filled with Frenchmen. To prevent their houses from being entered by the Am rican soldiery upon f, i the 14th, the windows , were filled with national flags,indicating to what natio the respective own ers f the houses belonged. hese were Belgians, French, English, Prussians, . panish, Danes, and Austrians—in fact, every kin of flag. - Mexican flags alone were not to be seen. Where these should have be4n, at times, the white flag—the ban ner of peace—hung through the iron railings, or from the balcony. In front of a house th . t bore this simple ensign, the escort, with the Wil k had accidentally stopped. The eye of the wounded o cer rested mechani cally upon the little flag over his head, .when his attention was arrested by noti ing that this consis ted of a small,' white lace hen kerchief, handsomely embroidered. upon the corners, and evidently - such as belonged tot some fair bein . 1 Though suffering from the agony of hiscwouud,here was something so attractive iii this discovery,/ that the eyed . of the invalid 'were immediately turned upon the window, or rather grating, from which the flag was stispen ded, and his countenance changed at once, from Ole listless apathy of pain to an expression of eagerin forest. A young girl was in he window, leaning her forehead agaiugt the reja,mr grating, and look ing down with more of painful interest than _curio city übon the: pale face beneath her. It • was the window of the entresol, slightly raised above the street, and the young girl herself was • evidently of that class 'mown to the aristocracy of Mexico as the "leperos." She was tastefully dressed,- how ever, in the picturesque costume of her class and ' country, and her beautiful black hair, her dark In dian eye, the half olive, half carmine tinge upon her soft cheek,iformed a countenance at once strange, and strikingly beautiful. Her neck, bosom, and shoulders, seen over the window-stone, were f that. form which strikes you as possessing more of the oval than the rotund, in short tho model of the per fect woman. -----` On seeing the gaze of the wounded man so intent ly fixed upon her, the young girl blushed, and drew back. The officer felt disappointed and sorry, as one feels when the light, or a beautiful object is sud denly removed from his sight; still, intwever, keep ing his eyes intently fixed upon the window, as though unable to unrit et his gaze. Thiscontitmed for some moments, when a beautiful arm was plung ed through the iron grating, holding in the most del icate little fingers a glass of pins). A' solder stepped up, and taking the proirered glass, held it to the lips of the wounded officer; who glad, ly drank of the cool and refreshing beverage, 'with out being able to thank the fair donor, whe had with drawn her hand at parting 'with the, glass. The glass was held up to the window, but thehand that clutched,it wait coarse and , large, and evidently that ,of a man. A 'muttered curse, too, in ,the Spanish 'language, watfleard to proceed from Within. This was heard but indistinctly.' The invalid gazed at the window for some minutes, expecting - the return of the beautiful apparition, then as if he bad given up all hope, be called nut a "gracias-adioal" and or dered the ..escort to move on. The .soldier.o,' once more shouldering the liters , passed up the Calle Cor- reo, and entered the Hotel Comp , gnon, in the street of Espiritu Santo. 'i . . . For two months the invalid was confined Wide chamber, but often, during that time, both waking and dreaming, the face of the autiful Mexican n jie girl would flit across his fevered ancy. At the end f this time his surgeon gave hi permission to ride out in en easrcarriage. He'.wa driven to theAla7 meda, where he ordered the car lege to halt under the shade of its beautiful tree, 80 directly in front of the spot where he had rested on entering the city; He recognized the little window The white flag was new not there, and he couldjsee nothing of the inmates., He remained a considerable time seated in the carriage, gaZing upon thehouse, but no face appeared at the cold iron grating no smile to cheer his vigil. Tired and disappoin ted, he ordered his carriage to be driven back to the hotel. Next day ho repeated the maticeuver, and the next, and the next, with ' a like success. Probably he had not chosen the proper time of day. It was certainly not the hour when the! lovely face of the Mexican women appear in their balconies. This reflection induced him to changelthe'.hour,•and, up onc, the day following, he ordered is carriage in the, evening. Just before twilight, i drew up as usual under the -tall trees of the Alai de— , Imagine .the delight of the young . officer, at. eeing the face of the beautiful Mexican through ti gratings of the refit.. . • afar, ound, lime, :den, dead, unny deeps, cr'a brain to die, The stir made by the stopping attracted her. The uniform of next object of her attention. but upon the face of the wearer, a came over her countenance, as filing with some indistinct recol ALOUSY. e Campaign, once thatbeautiful countenance a smile of joy. She had recng The latter, who had been an anxi l ery change of expression, siniledJ ed an acknowledgment, then tur who was a Mexican, he told hitNl proach the window, and offer his lady for her act of kindness upo, tember. The servant deliVeied the mes afterward the carriage drove- otC ninge the same carriage might 11., der the trees of the Alameda. ' quaintance had been established officer and the Mexican girl. A ward, and the carriage appeared valid had been restored to perfect December came, and upon. they about Italian hour before twilight,) cer, wrapped in a light Mexican c the Calle San Francisco, and cm meda. Here he stoped, leaning though observing the various gr whu passed in their picturesque I however, was occasionally turnet u.on the opposite side of the g anee of !tenltity, but eager the well-known form of the beau peered at the window, who, hot. ;idlers stood around i coed upon its aeon-, is requests. - There I re with which these t the young officer, stronger feeling than at admiration which who has led them in . Tha t small group • d the frowning mai pets of Chapultepec. i em to those parapets. he *gal indications item were batteries , - broken carriages,. d, whose riders lay ried. Parties 'were a sad.duty, but heaps .ove ground, exhibit tried features of (le t was heayy' with the nded man, turning sanded the escort to again took 'up the vly along the ague- The littl escort to change bearers. •at aqueduc ion the .rn and rea plod by ' rded a fine; shelter , o hours aft r lea vi • mil the Garita'Belen, id halted in front of 1 adroitly signaled the officer - Mill fingers. The signal was tins% scarcely withdrawn her_ hand ins' a dark, scowling fnie made his side, her hand was rudely seized, she disappeared. -Tile young saw - the bright gleaming of u s' gloomy grating. - Ile rushed across the street, 1 and in a moment stood beneath the window. Grasping the strong iron bars, he' lifted himself op se as t 4 command - a view of the inside, which was now in perfect silence. His horror may be imagined, when, on looking into the room, he saw the young girl stretched upon the floor, and, to all appearances, des . A stream of bl . tod was running front beneath If r clothes, and her dress was stained with blood ov r the waist and bosom, With frantic energy the young man citing, to the bars, and endeavored to wrench them apart. It. was tone purpose, and letting go his hold, .he dropped into the street. The large gate- of the house was open. Into this he ruslhed, and reached the patio just in time to catch a glimpse of a figure escaping along the azotea. fie rtslied up, the steep stone stairway, and grasping the parapet, raised himself on the roof. The fugitive had run along a series of platforms of different heights, composed by the azoteas of houses, and It id reached a low ropf, from which be was about t leap into an ad joining street, where be %void& In all probability, have made good his escape. Ile. stood upon the edge of the parapet, calculating It s leap, which was still a fearful plunge. It was no. left to his choice whether to take or refuse it. A pistol flashed be hind him, and almost simultaneously with • the re port he fell forw ( ard upon his head, and lay upon the pavement below; a bruised and ',bleeding corpse.— His pursuer approached the parapet, and looked over into the street, as if to assure himself that his aim had been true, then turned With a fearful fore boding, and retraced his way over the aioteas. His 1 fears, alas! wore but too just. ,qhe was dead. • A NEW CITY.. correspondent of the New Ha ven Palladium gives the fullOiviiig interesting ac count of the new city of Irelatid,now in the course of erection on the west side of Connecticut river, at South Hadley Falls, nine miles above Springfield. A company, most of.,:whose i m embers reside in Boston, last year-commenced operations preparatory to-founding a manufacturing villa e, which in dxtent m and population, will rival any lace of the 'sae 1 character on the continent. A C pita! of $400,000 is engaged in, the enterprise. Th water is to be ta ken from the river at the falls, a d conducted' thro a canal two hundred feet wide, ho Hided on each aide by a - wall of the heaviest kind, in the neighborhood of twenty-five feet high, laid in water cement.— ' From the head to the spot whey the water again eaters the river, the fall is betw en fifty.nnd sixty -feet: It is calculated that the water will be used twice and give sufficient power ,ta work sixty first close factories, which would support a pOpulation of over 100,000. Over a thousand laborers, almost all Irish, are,now engaged on tl4 works. To des cribe the present state of the gigantic undertaking, is impossible. Since the building of Babel lam very sure that a - similar scene has not i been witnessed. Standing on.an eminence abet the scene of Op erations, I know of nothing that 1 the appearance of the swarmy multitude can be compared to, save a vast ant heap. On every side you see clustering clouds of laborers, with their wonder working bar rows, which directed by science, achieve more won derful triumphs than even the fabled lamp of Ailed in. Hills of solid rock, which n century ago would have been thought impregnable until the "great globe should melt with fervent heat,"lare - disappearing as tho' by magic. The benefits wbich will result from this undertaking to the surrounding county,are incal culable. Ido not know that I }'vas evermore forci bly impressed. With there ach of human intellect, than I was by this sight. ' In- order to appreciate the magnitude of the works which I have alluded to, it is necessary that they should be seen. Mountain-like.•masses,of granite are handled with-a readiness which rivals the ex, ploits of the fabled Titan, end iplacid in the spots to fill which they were hewed out of the living rock, with the apparent ease of a ichool boy erecting a cob house. , • I • . Ido not, know a place,in Now England better worth visitingby, any intin ; who truly wishcfa 6 know what Yankee enterprise is, than thiti!saitie city of Ireland. Certainly a few boort; can be more Profit ably spent here than at any of the crowded centres of fashionable frivolity. . . . SATURD • Fon Ssr.E.-4 large lot of Whig'Principles, sac rificed at Philadelphia, rendered useless in conse quence ,of the nomination of. Oen.. Taylor. They will be sold cheap, to close a concern. BIRTH AT A Pic pie kiic, held in, _II grove near Boston' a few days since, received an unexpect ed accession to its number, a lady present giving birth to a fine, stout child ! ' . ' WO NWAtitD-.,,Ei Y MORNING, SEPTESB IN early Nearly twe years 'pp, young man, who was ploughing in a field by th side of a road that led to Lexington, saW,a horsem a pasaing by with rapid speed. He hailed Win an inquired what was the news, and in return was told that the battles of Palo Alto and Resaca de I ' .Paltna had been fought and won. The oxewet. , quietly chewing _ their 1: duds, and the furrow , was but half finished when our hero resolved ilia he 00, would de some thing for' his country. Poe Ty aad reality,are yeti much like vinegar and oikattd will not readily combine, and we.must therefore eta a ,that the young Ken tuckian instead of calling oat his vassals and lead ing them "casque titt, head and ; spear in hair over the draw-bride that Crosse the moat near, his castle Walla, he very , coolly unyo ell lais cattle, drove them up to the barnyard and to d his "daddy" that lie "Was off." I lia saidthat., e was, going to, Mexico, fur he was ideterrniinidtha one - of the family at least should get a glimpse 9f th , Hails of the hluntezu- Inas- , The old man Wok,d. wu a rifle.ftom a Pair of hooks that were tatitened i I the wall,, and said. to him, "Harry, I ithorildered hot at the , river, Raisin --come back with it; Ido 't care b ow ruatif;: - but don't flinch fire! ' Here, w fel give' me the' titocle ing!" The mother .of the young man, who had overheard the,conversation came I slowly forward, and with tears in her ey •s, puti the hard-earned savings of the season into her htisband's hand.— " Harry," said the old ma , "here's $2O, go and list my boy--take the old t hire mare and spur her 'till you git,a steamer—juinp aboard and never stop 'till you git to . New Orleans—then land yourself on another vessel and steer away for Mexico—give the yeller fellers pills frorM tie:Oren mouth of that old rifle, but above all things Harry, come hoine like a man and not like a dog, or I'll give you the whaling that you e v er caught in your life!" The young man kneti his f ther's temper, and whilst the crystal tears coursed d wn-his sunburnt cheeks, he grasped hie aged I pareu a hand, and that unmis takeable, unspoken, but trt e thrill of affection pass ed through the hearth of bth. It was sadder still to part with the mother, e en though when yet a girl she had made her hom in the "Dark and Bloody I Ground," Kentucky: She did not weep, but there was a moisture in her eye , a nd a pallor on her brow, 'that told that the fotintain of the deep affection in her bosom' were well nigh rokeu up. A moment more and she had pa i nedith her uniy son—per haps for ever! Rifld in ha d and saddle-hags upon his arm, Harry jumped on he old mare and darted off as swiftly as her aged oats would carry him to the fi st landing on the rive . In less than a week in New Orleans, an an hour afterwards en vi he w i rolle himself as a member of Co. C.,--s-Volun teers. The nexti - day embarked for the Brazos, and as may well be expected, s i iiffered considerably from rain, sun and sand. I Orde s were given w march, and march they did until tey came to . Metamoras, H 1 , when they embarked on bo rd the "utchee Eagle," Captain Stevens cornmnding, bound up the river 'for Camargo. After a weary passage of three days upon that beautiful river ailed the Rio Grande, which, - by-the-by, islso cro ked, that a man who' is looking from the bow of th boat, has to turn around and fix his gaze upon' the stern• post, and then is at a loss to know which way he is travelling. It was early in the morning— l the dense chaparral that skir-. Lairtile - oarnitr or situ river vetted 'mu scene beyond from the anxious gaze of the traveller. • Gen. La mar, Col. Whiting, Col. Belknap, and others, were standing upon the upper deck, It was indeed a beautiful prospect. The flamingoes, with their crim son plumage, were to be , seen tipon. almost every little islet, and the tall crane like so many white legged ghosts. struted, up apd &Twit the shore. Oct casionally one mightisee a Mexican maid descend to the river's bank, to till her irrtliern-ware jar with water, and then run away a though the "dell - was after - her." All wer e gaz ug upon the novelties with which they were surr (Hided, when suddenly in turning a bend, the pilot pointed to a boat on the larboard. A grey-Hed otli er stated that lie thought that the boat was blown tit, and his opinion was too true. The steamboat rapidly approached the scene of the disaster,' and it a few moments an aw-_ ful picture was preirtited The "Enterprise" had (t. bursted her boilers and wa a wreck from stern to stern. A hundred whunde creatures were howling, writhing, like so mahy mat hies, upon the deck and in the chaparral. Amongs them was a young man w to, the falling of a pidce of timber, had broken his arm Our Kentucky f iend wua the first to step upon th wreck, and Lakin - the wounded man in his arms brought him on b and the steamboat and nurse him as tenderly as e would have nursed I a chit until they reached It ytiosa. The man who was wounded said be ,was cry grateful and would never forget the kindess of he young volunteer, Well, time passed on, a d a series of victories that appeared like star aft r star in the crimson - firmarrient of war, showed in the distance the hori zon of peace. Harr'y foug t front Monterey to the city of Mexico, and lit was only the other day that he returned to , Net OrleT with the opinion that he had seen sufficient of w rto rest upon his oars for a spell. He had forgottett the "Enterprise" and the stranger that, he had solgenerously attended to. On Saturday last, whilst wlking down Royal street, Harry was hailed by a pe son whose features he thought he recognized. 1 hen the meeting took place, he found out that th stranger who had accA ted him wad the same md i idtial that he had nursed on the banks of the, Rios monde. A change had taken place in the fortunes of bo th , but the gratitude of the one Was not forgott n. The stranger wel comed his humble friend w th all the warmth of a noble heart and 'invited hit. to his residence. Ilere he introduced him te his c tisin, a beautiful young king of about eighteen yea aof age. It didn't take long for Harry to ingratiate himself into the idtti \ sel's'affections—they r a p+ skimmed over the a ir face of life until the( came to matrimony, and in that blissful stream mutually resolved to sink or swim. A noble steamboat went away on Tries ay eveningdast,tind Harry and,his betrothed were on board. The lady brings the poor volnnteere.so,ooo in her mvn right, and he brings her a manly- form, an honest heart, an un. urblemished , character.— (N. 0. Crescent. i - -.. . .. lkf the carriage had is inmate was the livhen her• eyes fell 1 range expression f she were strug eetions, .and all at was suffused with ized the offieer.- I nt 9 observer of ev -1 ii return, and bow ing to his servant, l lin Spanish, to ttp- I in ; I the n ra nks I t o 5 t t I I i t e o young o s u e t p ) g . 1 • age, and shortly Fur several eve seen standing un- Ot interesting ac ietween the young out a week after la More. The in- Arength . • • - Isth of the month, an American otli.: :leak, passed down ased into the Ala against a tree, as •utips of citizens, i resses. His eye, upon the houses reet, and with a iiiiry ‘ At length [VIII "lepers" ap ing up her hand, tier taper, fan-like ?ered• She had . de the rept, when ppearance at her lid with a scream officer fancied he , 1 ,1. IICI tu withili Mt: • SHUCKING AFFAIR AT ST. Lotes.—We, copy the following from'the St. Louis Organ of the Inh inst: An assault with a loaded revolver .',was made by John Jackson, on another man 'named Sherman at the Empire House, yesterday afternoon, and it is only astonishing that Sherman was nit killed dead 1 on the spot. Jackson stood only some live of six feet from Sherman at the head of a short flight of ! steps, and discharged five Emilia Sherman in rapid succession, one of which grazed his cheek and drew blood freely. Sherman stood firmly facing Jackson, and exclaiming durjng the murderous attack. "D—n you, ahoot!—straighter'.--hit ine,if you can!', At the pull on the last, barrel, the cap snipped, and Jackson instal:l4 ; mile Off, running past Sherman into Pine street, whence he made his escape. 'As he passed him Sherman made no attempt to arrest him, but only exclaimed thit if JaCkson - couldn't shoot truer titan thaf,he had better. not shoot again: ,An. old Indian trader, Who; , fronythe window. of the billiard room, saw , the whole affSir,• declared that he had seen men , stand firmly in Indian fights; bat he never had Seen Snell hi:every as Sherman's,: It must be confessed! that he showed no flinching, where ninety-ninelmen would, unarmed as, he was, have turned upon their heels and run from &Leger. - The cause of the aesimit, as we-lenrn, grew out of a pfaYful net, on the part of Jackion, Which `waS tiort on the part of i Sherman with the same .apirit, and the litter had-no idea of having - offended Jack son until ho 'drew hie pistol upon him. Jackson was Subleillently; Arrested' and taken to,the cala boose, hilt Weswaleaded on giving bail in the - sum of five hundred dollaie. _• •,. or The voluptuous man stands in the market to beliouglifind sold. • TIM k'ORTIJNES 0 IZEIE=IMI 'IR 211848. WICK'S 'INTRODU C TION TO MR. PAYNE. I . From Trios Union. , We publish to-daya i l curious letter from W. W. Wick, 111..0. from Indiana, tuldressed to C. Payne, Esq., of thii place, under the following circumstan ces: Mr . Payne, after reading Mr. Wicks speech on a queetion of privilege,.waa so much pleased by the entire good sense. the: quaint humor and unrivaled wit which h. 3 displayed, that in a letter to a mutual acquaintance, Hon. D. S. I Kauffman, be.expressed a desire "to know CI about him" (Wick.) This letter was.placed in Mr. Wick's hand by Mr. Kauffman, and called forth the following unique reply. It is proper for us to say that the writer did not intend it for publication: June 12, 1848. - William W.. Wick is a full blooded yankee,' dm' Orli in Cannonsburgh; Washington county, Penn sylvania,'Feb. 23J, 1796. In 1800, Wick's father, a Presbyterian Preacher,settlecl in the weodir,lin the poorest township in the,Western IteserVe of Ohio; adjoining the Pennsylvania State line.. Here Wick lived, to school,ltoiling at ordinary labor, and indulging in day dreams till the time of his father's death in 1814. He then renounced .all interest in his father's estate,.(whicb was only. some $3OOOO and-took himself off:. 'Till sprin g -1816, heessayed "to teach the-young idea how to shoot," in Wash ' ingtou county, Pennsylvania, when he descended the Monongahela and Ohio in a "broad horn" to Cin cinnati. He taught school and studied, first medi cine, and then law, 'till December,lBl9: read.chent istry principally by the 'light of log heaps in a clear ing, and law o'nights t and Sundays, (wrong so fur as sunday is concerned.) December, 1819, settled in Connersville, Indiana. as a lawyer, and• made and ent his mother a deed fur his interest in his father's real and personal estate.' December,. 1820, was chosen Clerk of the House of Representatives of Indiana, and 'till January, 1812, when he was clie sen Judge of a new circuit, just formed, and remov ed to, Indianapolis, 'where he has ever since resided. In three years he resigned the Judgeship, because it'was starving him, and was chosen Sec-etary of State—served four years—then chosen circut pros ecuting Attorney—then Judge again. Helots also figured as Quartermaster General, and is now a Brig- Ladier. He had committed much folly in holding of ' %ices, and only escapes the condemnation of his own judgement in consideration of the fact that he was never green enough to accept 'a seat in the State Legislature. In 1835 Wick changed his politics— his party did not leave ,him—he left it. [ln this he differs from most great men.] In 1839 he was chosen a M. C. as a Democrat, and as successor to Col. Kinnard, who died from the blowing up of a steamboat when on Ilia way to Washington. '[Col. 'Kinnard had been in Congress for some years.] In 1845 and 1847 Wick - wits nominated and elected to Congress. He was a Candidate for Congress 'in 18- 31, and got bent. Right. Ho was once a Clay ' candidate for elector, and got beat. Right.. In 18- i 44 was a Democratic candidate for elector—success ful. Right. - In the • intervals of the above engagements, he practiced law, never made much at t hat; did not know how to scare and skin a client. In 1821 he married a wife whii died in 1839. lie has a/ on and daughter married, and five g rand children liCilig.— His, oungest boy (a third c hild and all) went last . year "tit see the Elephant" as a private in the Illi noiii Volunteer Regiment—then he i was near 17 years of age. He went without leave, but (good boy) he wrote for and got leave after he was gone. He has acquired Spanish enough to write a good Spanish letter, and unassisted by Wick's name, has worked Ibis way. He is now qlerk to the Depot Quarter ! master at the city' of Mexico, Says the climate in i Mexico is better than in Indiana, and that the boys 1 killed themselves drinking spirits, eating Mexican fruits, and,"cavorting." l —Wick has committed much 1 folly in his time—the principal of which have been i holding. offices, writing ,rhymes, playing curds for money, and paying other people's debts—ail I Which he abandoned htiout the time he became a Democ rat., - . I 1 l At this present writing Wick is 52 years of age, Ifair , a little fat, having increased since 1833 from 146 to 214 lbs.-Six feet and one inch high,} good I cotnplekinn, portly:---has been call4l the best look ing man about town—hut that was ten years ago— not th:lof sneezed at now—a little grey-has had Ichills 11 fever, billions attacks, and dyspepsia . lenough't . kill a dozen }common men, and has I pass ed' through misfortunes sufficient to humble a (score of ordinary specimenslof human nature. HiS sys tem being sluggi l sh, he takes a sarsaparilla bitter, or, some number 6. in the morning, and takes aglass or two of wine, (if good at dinner' when lie can.get it.) He has acquired a good deal of iniscellaheoua knowledge, loves fun, looks serious, rises early, works, much and - bas it decided perchani fur light diet, humor, reading, business, the drains, mu sic, a fine horse, his gun, and the woods. Wick loves nothing, and were he to die to day his estate would Inventory eight or nine hundred dollars. He saves nothing of his per diem and mileage, and yet has no vices to run away with money. He "takes no tloiugh for to-morrow," but relies upon the saute - good Providence to which lie is a debtor for all. Wick would advise young men to fear and trust God, to cheat•rogues, anti deceive intriguers by be ing perfeCtly himest, (this mode misleads such eat tie effectually,) to touch the glass lightly, to eadheW security 'and debt, tobacco, betting hypocrisy and Federalism, to rather, believe,.or fall in with . new philosophical and-morel humbugs, and to love wo man too well to injure her. They will thus be hap py now, and Will secure serenity at fifty-two years age, of nd thence onWard. - 1 A 131 T OF ROMANCE. 1 It is a trite, but at the.snme time, true remark, that .the real :incidents of life constantly occuring around us, possesses a far more. romantic interest than the, fanciful ones conceived in the teeming brain of the novelist. Of this the, following over true tale, told us in brief by the steward of the packet boat Lonisimia, on Saturday, will- furnish an Some ten years ago, as our readers will remem ber, there was what was termed a "rebellion" in Canada, and after the."eatriuts" were subdued, some 'were summarily executed, and a portion banished, fur a long term Of years, to Australia. Rost of these latter were tuen.,of families, from which they were torn without mercy, to expiate in a far distadt land, by imprisonment and hard labor, the crime of having failed in their attempt to rid their count ry' of the eivilsoef misgovernment. We think they act e&very unwisely in proceeding to the extremes they did, but this point we will not stop to con Sider— . one of these expatiated men our tale ha's' chiefly to do. , Fur seven or eight weary years he had born the hardships of a 3onelY captivity, hopeless, of ever seeing home or friends again, when a general am nesty was ,proclaimedhy the British Government in regard•to all, with one or two exceptions, of those wheflias been concerned in the rebellion. Our hero was now at liberty, and his first thought was to seek his home. But he had no means to pay his passage there, and he accordingly shipped on board a whal ing vessel, whichAtt the end of two Years more, landed him on his, native shores. Wife, children, and frisnda filled his thoughts, and be hastened onto his,old residence in Canada. Ev ery thing' remained as it had been—friends and neighbors greeted him aihe passed along—hut how hie heart sunk within him to find the homestead de serted, and to learn.that his wife had been married two yeari to anutber,'supposing the husband of her youth to be dead. She and her new found mate had left that part of the country and settled , somewhere in Illinois. The poor man felt desolate, indeed, and he demi mind to see, and if possible to reclaimhis wife and children. After weary travel and many inquiries, be traced them to Knox county, Illinois, where they were comfortably settled in heir ne he piesented himself a few days s could not have been more a rprise, an apparition from the gray , fors aidered him as dead. The new li rather disagreeably surpri ed to ~ claimant for his wife. What sh. first husband was anxious ti, obtai cond was disinclined to give her 1 his claim as good. - They were reasonable people a original claimant remained in the couple of weeks, during which tiro frankly talked over. At lasi the ri very just.and rational eonclUsion t the proper person to make question, and to her it was fer it, giving her time to co Inge. What inoreT:omplexing . , be placed in ! then that? 119 almost eqUal Claim's upon h the father of all her childre ion of her youth—the other, near and sacred ties, and by bore an infant that lied been - could not for a time decide—Hi:it man could? A tumult of though filled her'heart, alternately siwayin to side. Thus the. conflict I steel e i during which time she was liable into her own heart, and at Ist she decision. .. NVhich• could she choos but whom were twined the tend4lB of affection—to whom she had kiven of her heart? The needle [nay vii but it points at. last with unfailing never-setting star of the Noll; au. the heart of a true woman, baying verse but one fitting 'mate, will, afte turn lovingly to the sunny isarreti love." A disposition of- the youngest el' made, and it was mutually agreed. that, as it could not be depri v ed of the first husband should take wi dren, to be restored to the father time. The re-united family tow m to go to a new home; and so great excited iu the neighborhood by tbi. that as many as a !intited and fifty neighborhood were present to wit ture. On Saturday last they cam: et Louisiana, on their way to Mich will take up their residence.] We naturally sympathize with to whom wife And ehi:dren are Will not feel for the bereveMeut o diticago Tribune. AN INCIDENT OF GE.)I RY THE " Bag/ ( D7I10 Trifle oft speak the grearetm o During the Black Hawk %vas, an ernment troops were being tansfe happened that Gen. Lewis i Cess ed candidate for the Presidency, th War under Gen, Jackson--Itravel State of New York, Then, not a' breakfast in the city of Albany an railroad car, with a certainty in tt of being seated at the board bf a B three hundred miles away; bat rash and packet-boat on the Erie . canal way, at five to six miles per hour a conceded to be "right smart!' getti It was in 1832, I think, the time and summer. The rocky village some eighty miles west of Albany the wonder of all passers-thrOugh those who, travelling canal-Wise, ii tunities for noticing the almost ins stacles of hill, and rock, and chas which were finally overcome in mammoth channel, The packet was passing through named, when, as was his custom, nine or fen years of age, with a bread swinging upon his arm, dr the crowd of passengers, making t to the steward's department, " T as he was familiarly styled, havini brown kitties, was returning, but, name of General Cass mentioned, upon the distinguished man who w those troops and the Black Hawk gerness to catch a eiod view of th by accident dropped his purse into taining the proceeds of his end many, Ito him much. This was al tears to the eyes of the poor "Brea silenced his feeling and lOoked UP his admiration with tears still r face. • The great man had witnessed' tl as the unfortunate boy turned to lei the boat, the heart of the General the boy's misfortune. Stepping said: "My fine boy, you have met wi: what amount had you in your pun "Three 'shillings and ninopence the "Bread, Boy." "Well, little man, do not cry an silver dollar to make up your loss.' And the "Bread Boy" received Gen, Cass a silver American doll gift of one whose goodness of flea t to "feel for others woes." Thai ested act could never be forgotten. which it was done, proved bene was not an act seldom performed, better than the gift to the now SI who teas the "Bread Boy," is one n has been for many long years: an until recently'done battle in the fie more than one solid way, he is • battle for the democracy under the 1,. ro of 1812, the maintainer of "f ors' right," against English usurp triot of his own State—the next United States—General Lewis Ca' Oft yield men great gifts, to make But, dearer is that gift, not giv'n al Who gives his thousands, gives, o And, failing, thus foreer.despairs o Tho widow's mite, in meekness gi Of God, much richer is than thous Tho' given by lord, possessed of ki Trifles oft show rho greatness of thu - WASHIVITpN, Aug. 7, 11319. SPLIT PEAS.-lii an eastern ci ker employed two Germans as por furniture. One morning he load, bureau, and gave directions where "And by-the-bye," said he to one him a shilling, "on your way back They stayed an undsual time, an , they did return, it was Boon age. had enormous "levicks" i:i their infernal reicals," roared the ang both drunk." • "Yaw," said one us ter shilling to buy a pint a pie , and we are pole so trunk ash ter ti KILLED IN A SHAM BATTLR. , Gozette says: "5.'R..11. Barke teen, was kilted acidentally on !the following circumstances. IA f men had gone down the river, ne i en,hWe Island, for the pusposeo ing. A proposition was nutdo.to 4 fight, with their guns charged. 1 all the guns, as was supposed, ha iy examined. One, however, was looked, which contained a Ipad of at the first fire, young Barker was and died soon afterwards, BR 16. ►~~! v home. There nce. The'wife or pained to seo e had long con ! shawl. too, was ee before him a I ld be done? The the lady, the so p, looking upon 1 around. Tho neighborhood a the matter was vals came to tho at the lady was decision of the ly agreed to ra t in ail its bear- • fina Ulna 'eider could a woman twq meu with ions. One was ne, the compan. to her •heart by utual lovo they to 'them. ' Shy rue-hearted we a and emotions her from side r several days, to look clearly was ready for a itio -aver define but bound the " he man around first and strong e first offerings srate (or a time, constancy to the d in like manner, in the wide uni • all vicissitudes, of "first—only ,ild must now be ly the two men, Ia mother's care, h the - other chit at some future :de preparations waa the interest singular affair, ersons from the less their depar up in the puck- gan g where they he first husband stored, but who the second!-- 1 . CASS, iMIZEM while the gov red, I think. it the distinguish n Secretary of ed through the now; might you I step on board a 1, enty-four hours *do hotel, over r by stage-route which, by the that day was gon by water. of which J speak, of Little Falls, hap ever been 'nd especially of • v 9" better oppor rrnonntable ob n, and swamp, ompleting that he village above a boy of some asket of brown .pped in among e best of his way le Bread Boy," made sale of his Fipon hearing the turned to look as directing all Oar. In his, ea ,- great maff,' he the canal, con e sale.—little to pss which brought Boy;" yet ho n the object of !ling down hid le accident; and ve the deck of earned to feel for °wards him, he h a migfortune; e?'' , sir," answered more; hero is it fom the hand of the prompted t ever moves him enerous disinter -The manner in ..lence with him • nd the deed was fling hoy. lie . longer now, nor , although he has d of whiggery in roud now to do standard of the ee trade and sail tion and the ea ,President of the foolish show; men to know but for name, fame •en, in sight lid just ns bright, &.` I .Y part -- neut. l y,"a cabinet ma ere to deliver his •d his car with a to have it left.— of them, }tending eta pint 0'_r7, 65 . ,, w}:Zat at length Irtained that they l ats. "Why, you y boss, "you are i f them, "you gift e; we trinkt him, uyfull" Tho Pittsburgh a youth of nine riaay last under number of young r the head of Sev hunting and fish engage in a sham th,poyi_der only— vinit*n etgeful nfortunttely over. squirretshut, Sad 811 % ( 4 the brew