tikr_ 1771 s 'theiliii4O7a7"; la '- 14 LATErt. rILOWnITROPtH . -':- . W e ' * V ~..t-: - i".:. , ,: , i-a.. , , •,,e" _.s2' _-'..-.;:,,: , ' ,- PihtrYolts:; /MI. stif•;2 P. H.-, • ,lbtebiteattier America rtirived iktitiiltax on Saw- - day,lind at B o tt o m this rnorniq .• • •:r .-- : - • c I She brings advic'es-frem hverpocil*the gilt inst. ..', Cotton remains •cvithout Changet;43read stuffs were much depressed. Corn had dedline - d. ' ' -ErtaLAND.t : .The British PaOlimenr was. opened on the 37..:4 ult. The QueetetkaPeech-watt favorably fecelved. 'On ThOredaf highlthe..7tkinst., Lord 'l'.kraly Stuart to the plotted of; Cottimp* moved far various papers relating to the;dithafid of Russia for the extradition, of the Hungarian refugees from Tur key.—tbe, Hungarian War.—and the capture of the principalitiestf the Danube ,by Russian troops.— After debate the motion was adopted. , ,- ,„ The navigation law is working welt, -:. - Anirthee . ettpedition in searl of Sir John Praultliu ho been resolved on. - )estrus.—Remains its disturbed as ever. Patisma.....All,the ariicles of the proposed Con stitution, except the - onemaking mittiaters reeponsi ble to the King, hate been agreed on. by the Chain bets, and the King took a solemn pith to theCon .Stitution on the 6th. " " Hissers,;—ACcolmts frnm thalDardanolls step that the Omissions have gained great advantsgea •OXPi' *the Ruiaians on the Om: the Russians having' beon compelled to re'reat with a great loss. TvitKnr...-The 'escape of Madame Kossuth, and the fact of her.joining heti husband are confirmed.-- The extradition question is-nearly settled. Gasucn....Advices from Athena to the 16th end ' Me Jan., state that a serious rupture had taken place between the English and Greek governments, and that a total snspension of relations had taken place. It appears that scone Gild claims upon the Greek government remain nnsettisld; and also, in re ference to some Islands held to the lonian group, winch have been usurped by the greek government. 811riTZNALAND.—A joint note; from Austria and Prussia has been addressed Co the French C a binet, calliag on that goverpment to unite with theta in obliging Switzerland to expel th revolutionary lea ders who are there sheltered. lipoid France re fuse, those governinents are dete mined on compel-' ling the Swiss government to tticedtt to their de mands, even by an armed intervention. nom w Asiwicrrox.=The I erabl telegraphic correspondence adds thus': 4 Before I close my despatCh. it be omes me to remark that a suspension of pubic beef ss has given men time to reffect upon-the.position f parties and per ions With regard to:he great issue There is gloom increasing, and alarm manifest,'notwithstanding the disposition to smile off d.inger. It seems certain that the North must surrender its points in a great measure, or separate the States. 1 Con% ici ed of this 31r. Dickenson is preparing a pla tform of,comprcim- Ise, es follows: First--Iltissourl line to the Pacific. \lSecond.—State of Califtrnia•n.rtti of that line. Third—Territorial governmen nothing on Slavery. Fourth— Compensation to Te:i ritnry. Fifth—.Frovision tor three more Texas to maintaip the balance of This may peeulto be an cxige the Snouth are looking into i the to. with commercial et es, and would experiment, we - muat be prepared of such tern. Faoat VlTasurvoto:r.—Up to the present stage of the session, the Southern men h'ave done the talking and threatening;'and the men of the North remain ed silent. But now the North is' returning tiie fire with interest. 4 rhere is not in the late speeches of Northern men any thing bet acerb and defiance.. 1 never heard a more eloquent, and, indeed, I may say almost terrific assualt upon the South, than that in the speech of Col. Bissell, a member from Illinois, 'and a gallant volunteer officer, in:the Alexican war. It would be difficult to frame a harangue more franght with satire, sarcasm, invective and denunciation...— Journal of Commerce. SINGULAR CASE or Ixsascry.4-The British ship Time, which arrived hero abott Ilv days ego, brought in a man who la.d beer: faker' f nn a wreck ;t sea. iNenould not learn the cir'cu stances lin er which the Wreck was discovered. ' he unfortun xte tar seemes afflicted with a strange pecies of in sanity. No sooner v: a 3 the ship Moo d, on Thurs. day.erening. than she ascended ~t he aidily r !,,.t, ,, (rum wntcn no persuasion could litchi; him to de scend. The sailors hare tried to "fore their crazed topman from his high positiOti, but in rain. From mast to mast ho passes with squirrjel like fleetness, alike defying pursuit and capture. fow long hel will t r., remain in this frantic mood is yet t be been. Sad, indeed, must have been the circu untinees which thus diseased the mind of the poor 0 I can rover.—X. 0. Deitch 3d fiat. PASS ROUND TIM RASCAL.—A p4tmled dentist, Dr. W ; Broth, has - rnn away from Virginia under the worst circumstances—after coCtracting several debts and courting a-lady, 'whom. Ihe premised to marry. -A borrowed horse ha sold at Georzetown. His trunk was found:to contain nething billets of wood. It has since been ascertained that tinder the name of Dr. Federick Preston, he Married a lady in 'Wisconsin in October,lB37; left her in - May fol lowing; subsequently' ie appeared n Howard-coun ty, Mo., as Dr. James L. Dunui in May, he married ' anotheelady at Indianapolis; In., cr nrerted all her 4 property into manes, and, in Marc last; deserted her at Pavpttee, Missouri. He n xt appeared in Philsdelphi)i, as Dr. Borne, and ca ato Waterford 'in May last. He is about forty ye ra of age. Ex' ‘!Sr iii -:ECUTION AND CID tit AT'SANTII FR.—;Santa Fe, November 30.—Tn-d y, A. J. &ins, convicted of the murder of Johnso • Jackson. was hung. He made a full confession of his,guilt and four minutes before his time expired, he drew from his brest a knife, aud, in the presence of five hundred persons, endeavored to commit suicide by cutting his throat. A male ensued, during which ho got possession of a revolver, on the person of the Sheriff. They final ly succeeded in binding him, end then, with one des perate leap, he himself jumped from the scaffold,. before the Sheriff could cut, the rope. It has.'been his determination , alive his sentence, to destroy himself, and ho succeeded. , • During the fore part of this month, an Wray took place between a Mr. Henry Wheeler, latterly of St.• Louie; and Capt. Alexander Papin, formerly of St. Louis. The particulars run thus:l A few days of. ter the arrival of Captsin Papin, front Los Vegas, Mr. 'Wheeler wrote several noticed, and posted them up about the 'city, "which bore lopon their face =the representation o f f a l se a m esnT , t , s as " fum i ng from Pepin. On entering 'the Store of.one of our merchants, he was followed in by Wheeler. Papin remarked, that any perrinn using h; name that way was a rases': turnip , ' round, askedi Wheeler if that is his signature. turnip,' it was. Papin raised a 'yard stick. Simultauet eFlv, Wheeler drewa revol ver, end shot Capt. Papin jos.t above the right ( temple. He expired two days t afterwards, and was buried, with military honors. ‘Vn,:eler is now9a jail, and' in irons.--.. Detroit ..lOuertiSer•-. GRAIN FIELDS IN THR WEiT....;-.faillea Davis, of Waverly, Russ County, Ohio, cultivated 1800 acres exclusively of Indian corn, ttni his %tinter corncrib filled, which is three miles long, ten feet high, and six feet wide. We presume this is one of the largest corn fields in the uurid, ou fled by a single individual. On the Grand _ • Miami Bottom, a t lj,iiiing w rencn burgh, In., about 25 nulls below Cincinnati, there is one field seven miles long by dose. miles bread, extending in fact to Aurora, which has been regu larly planted down to corn for marl' half a 'centu ry. It is not cot up by fences, altho' belonging. 'to abort a dozen owners, all of the families of the Hayes, Guards and Millers./Although corn is one of the must exhausting crops, no manure is ever titled. and the soil is as deep, btror\g, and fertile as ever. Th e Wabash also remarkable for the extent of its corn fields. Between Terre Haute and Lafayette, the road may be Bald to wind thru' a volition/los cork field; 'one field being certainly ten mites tung. ° In the Northern'part of Indiana,' generally cultivated, and between 1.1 *an City, the mad runs for ten mill niticeut wheat field, without a sin& though' owned by several iodivldua •Qazetrf. A" 0 - A - Tyklktt PICTURE OF OF 31INNESOTA. --,. ' -,-. Waata — the Waseatagton thsloiLl . •.' - i'Hert Heintz 13`,- . Fcii L I stinit4;:titates penate: 41.14:. You 411iInAtbe Ito `lf - -few`stiyc einee, to re• Ittest that I WOW fu 4'o u..some information re iatiVe 7ci th - iettiiate., ut nd.pressat condition Min- . ttesota Tenitiry. It 7 'k 4 4 I'proceed to make .the following statement of ;Vifi,which Oust necessarily ,10-hrief, but ktrust-wi tt!-Llo,scatit extent ',at least satisfactory.. . - - - - Thtit part - of Minnesota which lies east of the Mis sissippi rivercoustriuted - aAtortion of Wieconnion Territory, before - the admission into the. Union of. the Stole of that.name, with curtailed boundaries.-- On the west 'of the Mitiiissilipi, the ptiraltel of 43 deg,;flO min. is the line of division between the State of,lowa and Minnesota west to the Missouri. Ali the-country - lip the latter streaiii to its japes ion with tha Ml4.lo9.einiterr,stiottitonOsthai river to the:Brittah possrisiehrititenceetistolardiyfo,liutvieg the lineof; 49iteefeltit - fiiiereirlticuistt.the'extreme adrift weld boundary4;f Witicousion, in Lake Superior, tippers tains'tollinne sofa Territory. Tim area embraced within these:limits:contains .hetween 140,000 mid . 153,000. sqinsti'milesi ,i.quisf ni.Octent to New yt.bik, Virgiiiii, - tiod - rionsylXatila combined.. • - _ .. This ittitgose region • ii:, biotin ifolly watered by the. Mississippi;git. Peter's, anti Missouri rivers, and the Red river of the nortti c and their numerous tri butary. 'stieatiu=, which Ira - verse it ih every item—, •There aremi i lino inerrible bodies of fresh water, ivhiett abound in fish "of tiTituts kinils=thei white fish eape cialjs being found in great numbers in the more northern and larger lakes. The general character Of Migmatite li that of high, roiling prairie; but the streams and lakes are bordered with heavy bodies of timber, which contain every species of wood ktiowu along the Mississippi below, except beech and syca-1 more. At a point about.eighty nulgs above the falls of St. Anthony, west u` thehluosiasitipi, cnmineuces a large and remarkable forest, which extends to the suuth, nearly at a right angle aelross the Minnesota or St: Peter's river, to the branches of the Mekatu or Blue Earth river. This vast budy of wooland is more than one hundred and twenty miles in length and from fifteen to forty in bredth. Many beatiful lakes of limpid water are found within stia limits, which are the resort of innumerable wild fowl-silt eluding swan; geese, and ducks. The deit4e thickets along its border afford phices of concealment fur the deer, which ere killed in great numbers by thelas dittos. The numerous groves of hard maple atthrd to the latter, at the proper season, tile 111:!•111.1 of ma king sugar, while the large cutout woods and butter nuts are converted into canoes by them for the trans portation of themselves and their familie s along the Water-course and lakes. Asilie appisincli ill win. ter the bands of Sioux, save those who rely exclo s , siiely upon the Buffalo for sub,i‘tatic-, seek the deep est recess of the forest, to hunt the bear, and smel ler fur-bearing animals, among which may be enum erated the raccoon, the fisher, and the martin. In this beaiitiful country are t..• be foetid ail the requi s:tes to ''sustain a dense population. . The, soil 1.44 great feitility and unknown ,depth, covered as it is with the mould of a thousand fears. The Indian is here in his forest home, hitherto secure from the in trusion of the pale faces; but Ili., ad vatieing tide of civilization warns him that ere long he must yield up his title to this (Isaiah), and seek another and a strange dwelling place. It is a melancholy• reflec tion, that the large' and warlike Ones of Sioux and Chippewas, who now own lull nine-tenths of the soil of Minnesota, must soon be suhj•cied to the opera• tion of, the seine causes which have swept their east ern brethereo from the earth, artless an entirely dif ferent.line of policy is pursued by the government towards them. If they were brought under the influence and restraint of our benign laws and some hope extended to them, that education and a course! of: moral training would, at some period' liereafter,'etit it le them to be placed upon an eptiality, socially and politically, with the whites, much good would be the result. for territories; a for disputed ter- Saco Stated rfom power. t demand; but sas tter of dissolution ike tit try a grranf or the proposition Tho soil of Minnesota is admirably othote 1 to the cultivation of all the cereal grains., Wheat, oats, and barley are already raised in considerable quanti ties, and corn grows to great perfection. %Vheut and barley afford a sure crop, even at the Beitiah Red . River eolony."which is ii, latitude 5u deg. What will be the result in the cultivation of fruit trees in our Territory has never been tested; but there is no reason to doubt thatthe expeliment will be successful, with all those species which are pro duced in the saine,parallel 'of latitude elsewhere.-- Minnesota is destined tube a great agricultutul re gion, and her prairies are well celeitiated for the raising of Stock'. There ie.-also- inch an extent of water-powe throughout its bread surface, that no.. 4 41 cc.-. ono in 'e pcindived why manucturers should not tluuris also. The reports of those scientific then who have expinred the emintry justify us in the belief that our Territory is rich in copper ores, and more partici:l4;ly galena or lead. Whether coal ex : isle is a problem yet to be solved. If it shall he found in any considerable quantities,_ the discovery will be of more real advantage to Minnesota than mines of silver or geld: 'On the tipper portions of the Mississippi and St. Croix valleys lies the great region of pine which wilt continue to prece a-source of wealth to the-Territory and future State for a century to come. The manufacture of pine lionbar atres.ly occupies a vary large part of the ind ia trial labor oftthe peo ple. The quantity produced during the Test year must have exceeded eight million of feet, although the amount is butt conjectural, as I have no reliable data neon which-to hese a calculation. Much of this is needed fir home consuMptioe, caused by the rapid increase of population, bit the lareer portion is rafted to St. Louis, where it meets with a ready sale. This branch of business is in the hands of hardy, enterprising, and respectable men, who, endit ri tig every species of privation iiit their wild homes, are too often fated to encountre heavy' losses from the uncontrollable Hoods which set at defiance, equally the strength and skill of man. The climate of Minnesota is not subject to sudden variations, especially in winter. Although in some years the snow falls to a considerable depth. yet, as a general rule, we havcc far less than is the case either in New England or the northern pelt of the State of New York. The camparative absence •of moisture in our equal ry is attributable doubtless to the fact that no very large bodies Of water ere to be found, although, as I have before stated, small lakes abound. During the coldest weather in winter, the air is perfectly still; conseytently the temperature Is much more tolerable, and even pleasant, than could be supposed by those who reside in the same latitude on the sternly Atlantic coast. ' The navigation fit the Mississippi is not to be Fe lla on after the first week in November; and steam boats arriae in the spring about the 10th or 12th of April; so that the river may be.considered as chised about five months in the year. 1 have know steam - ers to reach St. Pahl as late as the 18th.. or 20th November, and get - back safely to Galena, mid to re turn by let of April; blit'this is not asually tile case. St. Pant is the present cspiliit of the 'territory.— It is situated on the east :wok of the Mississippi, about six miles below Fort 'Snelling. and eight miles by land from the falls of St. Anthony. It is now a town of twelve or thirteen hundred inhabi tants, and is-rapidly augmenting ifs population.— Stillwater is a thriving village on lake St. Croix, about eighteen miles from St. Paul by land, and I wcrity-five from the Mississippi. - It is second only to fit. Paul in size, and is increasing steadily in wealth and r multition: There is also quite a vil lage at the falls of ?. 4 .f. Anthony, which is one of the most lovely spots in the upper country, and also at Marine Mills, on the,St. Croix river, Sank rapid:*, on the Mississippi, seventy-five miles above the falls, and at Mendota, at the mouth of the St. PetVe river, Point Dunglass is at the j.ine.iiti between the Mississippi and St. Croix rivers, It is u charm ing place, mid is destined to be the site of a town of commercial importance. . • Pembina . is. the name of a settlement on our side of the lineVtithe British - possessions, and contain: upwards of.a thousand souls, principally persons of mixed Indian end white blood. These people are active and enterprisitig. hardy and intrepid, excel lent horsemen, and well skilled in the Otte of tire arms. They subsist by agriculture and the chase of the butildo. They * desire to be reco.emised as citizens of the United Stales, as do sous • thousands of their kindred, who - now reside nt Selkirk's tdony in the British territory, but who are moth nei to emancipate themselves from the iron rule of th Mid eon Bay Company. _ These. people are I only rak ing some action Da i gle parr of the government of the United States, to join their brethren at Yen Lino. rey would form an invalyable defence to that ex posed frontier, in case of digieultioa hereafter, either with the British' government (to which they' ere tuncli:disaffected) or with the Indian tribes. , wheat is more sportn and Mich .) throt a meg a division fence, s.--(Cincinnati I might slate in this coneexionothit the Intlihr generally through our Territory ale kindly disposed towrds the ,whites;and'auxions to a. oid eculltaion. Thi is emphatlially thlicase;w,ith the Sioux_ and Chip as, r..,. a. • I would.remailc, in conclusion, that the pro* of our Territory are distinguished, for inielligencoand high,, ta h e d morality. :For this, twelite menthe or more prior to the establishment by congress . .Of a govermnentfor Minnesota n , alth ough, ` in It.n the anoma lous position in which was l e ft by the admission of Wiscionsin into the Union as a State, it w a s an esriatn to whet - extent, if any, the - laws could be enforced, not a single crime of ahy magnitude - was committed. -The emigration to Minnesota is corn tmsed of men who go there' with the ,well-founded 'assurance, that, in n - lind,wliere Niiturelas laviiii ed her choicest gifis--where sickness has no- dwel ling,place--where the dreaded cholera hes not claim ia.„i„gle siatoo—:.their toil will ber'ampli,:•rewar dedvoillite theiiO'reons and property nye itilly. pro tected by the br oad shield of law. The sun -ehines not upon a fairer region,' One more desirable es a home.for the mechanic, the farmer, and the laborer, or where their industry will be more sorely requit ed, than Minnesota Territory. I hive thus glanced, in a cursory and litiperfect manner, at the' state of things in our country.— blockinore might be Written do the subject; but enough has been stated to enable you to form a 'general lea of t Territory which is destined to be admitted into the Union as a Matein the course of a very few years, and to eclipse some of her proud est sisters. I eta, dear sir, yopra, very respectfully. IL 11, SIBLEY. Bosurrantu Foil MR Cuatoes.—We learn that on the 15th instant, in the Cascade Mountains; on the eastern border of Marion county, two or three loud reports here heard, resembling distant thunder ac companied by other uneual movements in the ele ments. Immediately afterward Silier'creek, which is a good sized mill stream, dried up, and no water ran in it fur some twenty-four hours:- When the water did resume its course, it was so tharoughlV impregnated with alkaline substances is to have the apuearance of strung lye, and as also to cause the death of the fish in th stream. About the time of the occurence stronginds prevailed from the south, a. heavy fall of ashes w s noticed in most parte of i this valley, and a denstA cloud of some settled in the attniosphere, shutting dut the light of the sun for nearly it week. Whether a volcanic ernption has taken place, or whether the phenomenon was produced by some other agency, we have as•yet not the tneans of dent.- mi rung. One fact, however, ie worthy of notice. The whole Cascade range of mountains are on fire and the vast amount of vegitable matter tints consumed would he, entirely sufficient to account for the ashes and smoke which have prevailed. And it is probe, ble that the prevalence of fire may account for the other occurence. The intense heat occasioned by the fires may have extended far enough into the rocky bosom of the mountain to hove come into contact with the gases in the cavities of the'rocks, and thus produced an ex plosion. This might have occasioned a land slide, throwing a portion of the mountain into a deep ra vine, and arresting the water of Silver creek for a time. And this seems the more probable view of the matter, as the gaseous and alkaline substances by the explosion would be brought to the surface, and coming in contact with the water of the creek, would change its character.—.-pregon Spectator, Oct. 16. TIM Dit3IOCRATIC, Sttrertantrir;Ze.The Hartford Times. one the ablest of the democratic journals of New Englandotaye: "TUB PEOPLK of the new territories are as decide dly opposed to Slavery as those of Conneticut or New Hampshire. This settles the question of free TO ritory, and practically puts en end to the ,Wilmot Proviso, unless it be used to create disentions in the Democratic, ranks—to excite the southt against the north, and array section against section in a com mon country and Republic, where there should be sentiment 4 of brotherly friendship North, West and Smith. The House of Representatives, so decide dly in favor of this measure a' few months since, seeing that the question is now settled by she will of the people of the territories, refuses to pass the Wilmot Proviso. The Democratic State Conven tion of this state, which aisenabled at Middletown on the 13th inst., threw it not by a vote of 5 to I. The people are getting sick of the unless ezeitenient and the bitter hostility which the measure ,createir, and more especially ao in a view of the fact that it can du no good." Pitman BILL.—Mr. Win. J. Brown has piesen ted to the (louse of Congress a bill fur regulating the postage, which provides ,that— " Newspapers , pamphlets, magazines, periodicals, or other printed matter," shall be 'charged postage at the rate of one cent for every ounce and is half, or fraction thereof; all newspapers, &c., not sent to regular subscribers must be prepaid; no postage is to be charged on_ newspapers sent per mail within the county where they are published. Anybody may agree to entry newspapers for hire outside the mail. Handbills and circulars charged two cents if not watered. - Letters sent abroad charged fifteen cents sea postage in the United States mail lines.— The Postmaster General may increase these rates. The franking privilege to be continued, but restrict ed to ounce letter, and members may not frank fur a friend under 610 oenalty. Muiwea it CouNrr.—A father and son, named Spmniogs, have been arrested furibe murder of a Mr. Jenny, in Macomb Co.. Michigan.. The details as given in;the Macomb Gazette, are of the moat revolting nature. The young man in making his confession, said that. his 'father - directed him to go to the city of Detroit and to procure some poison, and gave him a twenty-five cent,peice to pay for it-- that he'ditl so, and purchased "arsenic," and "White mercury."—that one day when Mr. Jenny was ab sent, front home, he arid his father went to Jenny's fattier told him in gni(' and sprindle the poison on the foolto be found there, while the fath er would stay "at at the door, " or "out doors," and keep watch. lie did au, amsprinkled it upon all the fund be could find in the house, and.then depar ted. This was a few days before Jenny was taken sick, of which sickness he died, after lingering about fourteen days. The young man farther stated that his father had previously proposed to him to murder Mr. Jenny in another manner, but from the enormity of the pro posed plan he (Charles) had refused. It appears that a most bitter (pure) had for a long time-exis ted between the elder Spinnings. add Mr. Jenny.— Press. A Pgrntriso Benr.—A subject which had been buried five or six years. was taken tip a few days sitter, says the Houston (Misi.) Republican, of the 2Gtli alt., fior the purpose of removing to a different location, and found 'in a 'high statemf petrifaction.— It required the strength of six or eight-men to raise the -coffin from the vault—this caused them to open it, to discover the cause of the weights; when, to their surprise, they found it to contain' a form of some. With the exception of the fingers, part of one of the feet, and a small spot wider the position of one of the hands, which had decayed before petri- faction had taPen place, the body was apparently a solid stone. This circumstance occurred in this county, seven or eight miles north of this place,and presents a problem fir scientific solution. ISlnxice.—lt is repotted that there had been an attempt to get up an insurrection atCuidad Victo ria, in Tamaulipas. The govenor was attacked by twe"ty men, and, after a skirmish, in which several men were killed and wounded, he was made priso ner. The next Jay Lorenzo de Cortina joined a pro onnunion announcing the deposition of the goveuor, and convoking tbelegislature fur a trial. Asornen Smilax or asscurrr.—A fellow calling himself the Rev. Mr. MAR. and purporting to be' Presbyterian Clergyman came to Levsistim some six months fame. bringing highly respectable references from Philadelphia which not alone got-for irnme. di ate appointment but introduced him into the verT first circles-of society in the country round. lie, on (-Mat hias lby last delivered an Addreu on the occasion of a Festival of the Sons of Temperance which might rival Warre's or Guuon's best efforts. and in fact won the good opinion of &t, including that of an accmplished and beau tiful young lady whs, on the sth of the present month. became - hie wife. Suspicious circumstances having come to light, it now turns out he was a jack-dew In borrowed plumes: The scoundrel was stopping with his bride ) at the Western Hotel in this city when, gliding his career was mode manifest, he sloped with his wardrobe and $lO9 cash. He was pursued.',caughtatLanottster. and brought back to this city. and having given gronnds { f or a divorce he was once more let loose upon society. Is this right?-1714t0 Repubitt. , Crie4V.tthlo4mueri E I,E. P,A. SATURDAY MRNINO; MARCH, 2. Pa' ST We ore tended renewed obligations to Hon James Thompson. U. C.. and Moore. Reed and Cossne4 for Cosgresi!oasJ and lagislativa.favors. . Aix W. invite attention to tho article iu another col umn. faun the pea of Hon. H. H. Sibley. delegate in Contra, from Minnesota. It is a !want( ful description oithit. ) oeiv.and Intoteiting territory, about which we hear so many inquiries. and of which apparontly so lit tte' generally . knavra. ' Opts PLANK Roaes.—We are pleased to learn from the Commercial that the prospects for the early commence - 4eut of our plank roads are so nattering It tells us that. in addition to the Charter of the Erie and Water ford road ,which has s already been obtained. that for the Erie and Wattsburgh bei been sent for. and that the Edonboro road has receivoesubseriptions more than ample to organize its comtnencement. We trust that thisfiattering prospect of deliverance from mud. is not alone apparent upon paper, but real. It cannot bo deni ed th t heretofore, we. the citizens of Erie. have been foul alkers about the blessings sod benefits of such im. 'prevenient, bil slow, very slow actors. As long. as it has only required talk, with a little. a very little. or the "neolfa/" to' pbsh forward these much needed improve mente. they lalirCl been with commendable rapidity; and now,, that the work must be commenced in earnest. we trust that tit* having the management of them. will not Bag in their efforts. To push them - forward as speedily as possible right to be the motto of all. Every mile built will help complete the balance—every rod added will bring more trade and travel to our midst. Push forward the roads than—they are bound to pay the stock holders a large dividend, and add greatly to the value of town and country property. DT "Small by degrees and beautifully less" is the strength of this "ne•party" Administration becoming daily in Congress. The Washington correspondent of the New York Journal of COMIIteTC4 says "tha coven votes given for Webb. may be regarded as a pretty fair test of the strength of the present administration in the Senate." "What 0 fall was there. tny'couutrympn." - An Exchange says a newspaper called the Green Moan Min Eagle and Even Follows Gazette, has been established at Wilmington, Vt. The prime object amp paper seems to be to expose the secrets and denounce, the principles of Odd Fellowship, Freemasonry, the order of the Sons of Temperance and all other secret societies.— A similar under-take-in was engaged In not a thnualsnit miles from this plate, but with uo very great success we imaginm as the publication referred to, has been as silent as death for along time In regard to these prints , objects of its creation. A GOOD Scaoesrton*- ltie.uggested in a Tows pa per that the Stone removed from the wall of Alamo, to make the breech through which the enemy entered, be sent to Washington as the contribution of the State to the Washington Monument. The atone still lies at the month of the breach, us it did on the day when Travis, Crockett, and their fellow heroes were massacred. It Is said to be a bountiful block, eusceptibte of a polish as fine as marble. PIert!CSTLVANIA'S Tniours.—The following resolution finally passed in our Stun Legislaturo. on Saturday: Rcsoleed—That the' Governor le hereby authorized and requested to cause en appropriate block of ,the native marble of this Commonwealth. to be conveyed to the National Capital, to take its place in the Monument to Washington. and to have inscribed thereon the State Coat of Arms, and these words: "Pennsylvania—Found. ed 1631—8 y Deeds of Peace." LEGISLATIVE..—We have resided through coluttsn after column of the proceedings of our State Legislature, hut find but very little oI L interest to our readers. We see Mr. Reid !Ms presented a petition from citizens of this county for a change of our road law—that bide have passed the Senate to incorporate the Girard Academy, and extended the limits of the borough of Girard, in this county—also to incorporate the Rtgertown Academy in Crawford county. Also, on motion of Mr. Reid. the bill granting to the borough of Erie a reservation called the garrison ground, for a public park. die., was taken up and after being explained by Mr. Reid, the first section passed—yeas 71, nays ‘l3—and then passed finally. Mr. Packer, from the Senate apportionment committee, reported a bill to form tho Stet& into Representative and Senatorial districts. This bill makes Erie and Warren the 19th district, with one Senator. and gives Erie two representatives. It makes Mercer, Crawford. Clarion. and Venange. the 18th district, with two Senators. Crawford and Mercer forms a representative district, with three members. Warren, M'Kean, and lElk, form a re presentative district with one member. These are all the items of the bill which interest our readers. It is understoed that this bill received the unanimous con currence of the committee. anti will without doubt. pass the Senate. What its fate in the House may be, we are entirely unable to conjecture. So far as We can judge. we have n hesitation in pronouncing it decidedly more acceptable hen either the majority or minority bills of the House. ' In the Se* r. Walker submitted the following resolution, which was twice read and passed: Resolved. That the Auditor General and State Treas urer respectively. be requested to communicate to the Senate. information as to the real state of the accounts. Sand all the facts connected therewith) between John B. ohnson. late chairman of the Joint Library Committee. and tho Commonwealth, at and since the commence ment of the present session of the Logis!atom Largo numbers of petitions were presented In both houses for tho repeal of the *3OO exemption law of last. session, and some against its 'repeal. Petitions for the' passage of a ree Banking law, for the incorporation of new. and th re-charter of old Banks. were as plenty as usual. He t- pecked husbands ) preying to be divorced from unruly wives , and termagant wives asking the same relea4 from husbands that wont stay in ' o ttights; , together ivi h a mese of private matters. too numerous* to particula ice. as the dry good merchants say , and en- ' tirely unint rasing to the general reader. make up the F balance and sum total of the proceedings of our legisla tve.for the week lor ten days past--es. du fact. it has thus far oflthe entire session. il7 There is many a truth told inadvertently. For In stance. the Louisville Ceuriar, in speaking of one dollar counterfeit notes, in circulation, on the State Bank of Ohio. say l c the only difference between the counterfeit and the g twine r is. that the general complexion of the bill is dm or—especially the word "one" in the corner and "one dollar" in the centre. We have no doubt the Cour owl statement is literally true—that the only actual di crone hetwein the genuine and the counter fOit, is the quality of the paper. They are both , frands Upon the people, though one is legal and that other is not. T eiwill both bear watching, however. Fins r Faxmisse.—We learn by Telegraph (Speed's Line) tl at there was a large fire at F'redou:e on Wednes day night last, by, which property to the nmount of $50,- 000 was destroyed. The Fire broke out about twelve o'clock i nt night in two places, one in the building known as the 4.Wooleben Block," corner of Main and:Mechanic agree is, in which were three dry goods tied a hardware store, a eaddleis shop, the odd fellow's hall, the Fredo nia Censor office and several other offices, shops, &c.-- From this it extended to a store house and dwelling ad joining which were also consumed. On the west side of the creek, and full SO rods from the Wooleben block, the . fire broke out i n a large two story building occupied as cabinet shop, window sash and blind manufactory, paint shop, itc,. which was entirely consumed. together with two dwelling* adjoining. The whole loss is estimated at $50,000 with insurances to the amount of about $17.000. The Are is supposed to be the work of Incendiaries.-- We have none of the particulars. The town ii wholly de/albite of the means of etorping a fire. not having no Much ce a fire tmebet In it. The next time e ‘ fire Welts them they will *indonbtedly be trotter prepared to cheek it. _— ----. THE GAZETTE ' AN4HE WILMOT PROVISOIi , GEN. SAM HOUSTON..... Se No H a l o s } ( nu th. i • ' , ABOUT PACE!, • isonth at the present - moment occupies a mo s s 4 044 . :position than But Homo:4 of Team. His recent st tut i After we have ”amoked ' our dotemporary of tho Oa. if an idatirablirdoeornent. worthy of a pars , soles, sate for ihree weeks in order to drive, film into defining. clear h eadrikatoteareee. The Washington con .14 t'Dh. his position otite upon the tilavery question—and partied- i I: t neat of the Basilian Court.,. • whit paper i iii ey ea l iii Italy. its opitilen of the ••thirlY- three " northern whip :of this speech. end ate au th or. s ays ..T he <hum ie 1 who ° toted War Root's molls:Mon to instruct the Cm* ' iretiemus. ithifify Man—frank. manly. and ' t. 4 4.: ' mitten on terdlorfee to repmt bills for the Government of He harbors itiolevil designs, has no covert nor ' a... * New ,Meeico sod Deseret with a prohibition against sla- while he hai vanity . a love of personal displa . 1 .4 ... very. upon the tables—ha s at last showu his hand; and ararbitioshor high honors. he is patriotic and how; such a hand—it hai "nisi er nee , face nor truant/h." . In all his instincts and ill his' impulses. Th Ginioril But let no look at it. - his . I has an admirable physique. He is over six (et, brat. itot many moons gone by. when this country was at , cheated, posaeasea a stately pretence, "ad an Pen coml. i war with a foreign foe, art r il_. all her energies , physical tonanco. His gait is measured, and his tread" cam " and pecuniary. wore required to utaiutain the honor and and firm. - He toes out well. shows a evil Not an i - glory dour Bag. the Presilont of the United States cal- high instep, and used to wear his Mexican bliket a i d , led upon CongressMplac i ln his hands a sum of money , great grace . He is never fidgety, or irrit44,,c to b e used, as exigienCies might reqnire. in concluding n Th e springs of his nature are well lubricated aad pl a peace or in the further pntisecution of hostilities. This without grating. There is nothi .ng small. sospictota, .; request was no new thing-411 our Presidents had been 111-tempered ultra him. ._ His heart is lasge and is t a entrusted with like sums. • under like circumstances,-- right place. His intellect is good and his judgateatekst The bill was reported. but' before a vote was taken aiHo is a pliableonoderate. genial men. We bkt proviso was offered. and by a vote of a majority attached Houston." And so (1.1 the;—if for nothing + a _ itb to it, that should the. President. In concluding a treaty never had uttered a sentiment. or did an act bans at with this money, obtain any nowterotory. there- , should could approve. n 0 suould lake Sam Houston for a t , 14 be neithershavery nor involantary servitude in the said ter- `towing, which we find at tho conclusion of his Imee t a ai ., ritory forever , it was well known that this proviso cobld - ..g,,. th e Buren is not dissolved; and I appreh l ead t ha t have no iufluenoe upon tht future action of the people of son t,e lees ( danger of it when the people are anaksa s s a the territories which inigh 'be acquired with the Money 1 tho slightakt apprefteti4 o io . n o r: i f ,e r s eal f d o e i :get e . o l it T ut i ' a ti a . 4 • asked for, yet was it presseti by the enemies of the war to I p i r ru cl o ac k eas o i t l io re r ri . e .i l i a l c o d wo th h t verge of o f great ) i 3 lniP e t l Y t :: the last point. It- passed the House r went to the Senate, ! * von rowed the farming., the substantial. the 804 mirth. and laid there until the thio of March. the last day of , ton? t have they beau awakened, or is the feeling inlays. the session, when it cattle; bock shorn of its tsunalurnt ', ed to exist from thnewsp r a t te: I p e u a b d l i ications ii i t t i p u e s; d sr , extremity. In this shape.. be question for the Houses° , p rocee din g s e a r re f r i e ,r i o n p t a t r l' ouom 4. bobby , leadi ng th ey orepehrt Consider was whether to c , near with the Senate or not • will carry them so speedily to the goal of popo!ariq!_ , It was conceoded by all thd friends of the Admistration Are you to deduce the opinions of the American p e . p , , and the country, that it wig necessary to place this anon. from these circumstances? Consi t der fora In ne e i m t eat s h y ey in the hands of the Priiiideut. and that the question a t a n k a T rrt d onportion the of the apeopleuect are o sop a h tri l n e k u t h a f I ft i e re a bi i of slavery had not "assumed an aspect of pressing , all real danger of a disunion , they will not be atalwaid absorbing interest"—that .f , Californin or New Mexico" from their lethargy?' Do you think that they wil Rotted were not ••threatened withi tho curse of elavery"—and that, therefore. although it embers might be opposed to • 1 th u e o r ueolovegse:7lle4huopuonoitro you ut will t h he ave app o re o h i e n t ro os el of such danger? amen you carry it to the hearths of the , (fanner, the further extension of elis i very, that was not the„.- time• t he menhanic. who has every comfort of life arossad,,hi ai. 'nor the occasion, to press their views , but that their ac- acquire I by industry , or inherited from patriotic' Imes itirovv.outtaidoewr t t o he en h o ro o a u d ot a e e r g , : i s io or ho th z e or yt o ie r n, oi a:ne r i o l ii tiln ye2 a ' WM, as "Northern men, s hould be modified by circum stances." Believing thus.o number of Democratic mem- war of desolation—the worst or all wars; a war net si bers cored to concur with the Senate. Upon this vote race—a war. not of language, or of tongue, or religis a , the Gazette, and other kindred printa, has never ceased but a war of brothers—the moist sanguinary of Muhl to burp—to use its own d . polite language. it has been - It'"'" "quite rampant concerning the action oP' thikse Demo crats, ”Dough•loets," "time serving creatures of the Pr!esident." •'shaves of the l sonth," have been the coa st:tat epithets made use of in speaking of then,. But now a wonderful "change as been going on in the pub lics mail,'' as rifl- , e0,1 fret Cris luminary of pure amid unadulterated wlngery: 1 tus see how this change has, besil brought shoat. 11 war is over—our aeries victorious everywhere— New M.drido n. 1.1 CA formal ours by purchase—and. nets witiodondlog tbo Corwinal mid Collainars. wished the Mexicans would —weleonio" Gen. Taylor "with bloody ! wa d e to a hospitable grays-I l i." he returned to his home eafe. and became the condillatts of the very men who had given • bind and comfort in lhe eitetny " and oppoied the war in 'which he won his I+als. - in that contest fur l'resident. the Democratic party, both .North and South, ifloodl 'upon the broad plat corm that. (to use the latiusge of the. Gazette surto.) as "Slavery. owing to rositively prohibitory local /auses, could nut exist in rmy of the territories of the 1../ tilted Eitutevl" the odoptioill i of the Proviso eoull —soh- ShrVe no good purpose." told might kindle ••fires 01 ills cord very difficult to extingu t l i sh." They contended that "the intelligent North curtili empty prohibition." This pt which woe fully set forth in then. and more recently in ate, wi t s hooted at by this rroh which the North would firy idllitard, wed nothing but the moral leprosy of sldveryl doctrine at the North and hl lam a groat :Omit" such ''ilil )not C. 1111.11011 .ekIS• fhWtritle. s I, len. Cass' Nicholson „ letter I ts great ? T eeth to the Sen• ere Gazette as also:rd. and to 4 - iot book. The Proviso: II 1e proviso. would "preve n t " Weil by preac limp: this iding up G .ii. Tailor 11,4 • a "aimon-pure" proviso mora; altogether the tvell know') owner of three-hundred negriieti,latid a the South point ing at these seiner three-humfrod "au,inta caule" , re proof positive of his hostility to the'proviso. the w 112'4 succeed • ed. and lie became Preside 4 - But the slavery queetovii. upon the back of which they had tiOsuccessfull rode al tol power. was not settled. califorhia Wes to be Nihon : ted as a State. and territorial governments provided Ao k New Mexico and Deseret. Congress meets —tae,ipies- I tion is introduced—the natal rn wings are "quite ram pant" to pass the proviso , i and show. "Locolueuistit" that "old Zack" would not eexists the "kink' prero r. gative of the veto." But lo! a change conies over the spirit of their dream—the POsident sends in a message which singularly enough sicais the very platform laid down by Gen. Cass - iii his 'icholsoa letter: with the fl single exception that. instead of boldly meeting the gut+. hon. and organizing territorld grWernments without any such unnecessary prohibitiod. the "second Washington" proposes that the territories ern go without 'a' govern ment. except Such as is fore oohed by the military. It was Gen. Cass' plan without ta boldness. Than it was that Mr. Root. afree-soilzohrg from Ohio, thought he Would , see what kind of stn northern northern Tayloriant was made of, and offered his rellution to instruct the terril tonal committee to report,bi t ls fur the government of New - Mexico and. Deseret , tofth the proviso attached, It is conceded by all that ihesti territories ought to be or ganized—that the 'people retire it civil government—yet CVO find. "thirty-three." ocCording to the Gazette. of three soi-distant "rampant" proviilo whigs, bow to Executive dictation. and vete to lay the .osolution on the table; and instead of the Gazette &nom sing them. as it did those Democrats who voted again. the proviso. Wore we had any territory to apply it 10, i I becomes their appologist. and says thp question hod lrot "assumed an aspect of pressing all-absorbing inters ." and that "California and New Mexico" are not "three stood with the curse of sla very." Well, this is all very g od. but how comes it that 1 , they were so "threateued" bt lr fore they came into car ss poession as to require that thi fire-brand, which the ga zette now sans "way bindle fires of discord very difficult to extinguish," should then bil l applied to them. "Pass it only in case of absolute necessity." says this paper now.- but there was certaiuly i o "absolute necessity" for im its passage when it den ocedi Judge Thompson for his 1 veto to concur with the waste in striking it from the three milli:: bill! The 116 is this paper which 'is eternally prating about its "sir rit of decisiou and bold: nese." and does nut fail to Otto the Democracy at all times and seasons , lies comp l etely changed its course upon this question since Gen.lFfavlor's California mes sage. To use its ty.vii linguag4 it has bowed to Southern dictution—soccumbedto the edicts of the Executive. and became the pliant tool of the 0 , e-holding. office-seek ing friends of Goo. Tax fur. T A I ro was a time %Olen it had no doubts about the "ohs° to necessity" of the pas sage °fens ineitaure: No. Irt. , the consequences be as they might. the Gazette scouted; lie idea first broached by Gen. Cass. and Secretary Walker. that slavery could not exist in our new territories—it Would have nothing to do with that "odious doctrine" ot non-intervention! Not it—nothing short of the utterl prohibition by positive enactment, would satisfy it atulkl l the whips of the north. But look. what's change—how pliable and easily it adepts itself to "circumstances!" t i ow mealy-Mouthed it spea k s a b o ut the "action of Nor horn wings" "upon this subject" being "modified by" asch "circainstaneeic" flow daintily it touches the s4ject with the tip of its gloved finger as an "irritating In -essential!" We'pre sums it was all right and an axing proper to `,force through Congress" this **rant, g non-essential. simply because it embraced a good pr 'mini's." before we had any territory to apply it to—end t was rilo very proper to denounce and abuse Democrats or voting St the exigen cy of the times and "circumstati4s" then dictated. but when the people orate territoriell. after they are acquired, clamor for a government . ; and it Is proposed to instruct the committee on territories hi report bills for that rar e ACbe proposition '' Ire , ' Si s vas t! nese with Slavery intended. undid; propositkm Is detest ed hp Executive influence. thesame paper. does not odeeto it otonflicient latpoonea to warrant" ao macb as "notice," Indeed it declares ••tAtos is no just pomade" to denounce those freae-soil whip who Toted to lay it on the tilde. Fought Ws do not wonder the intelligent whip ere sick of eneht s bungler: • • • • • • • . ••il wish. if this Union must be dissolved. that its ruin may be the monument-of my grave. and the Kinsey of my fainily. I wish no epitaph to be written to tell that! survived the ruin of this glorious Union." A FACT son Pta 1RO:t PANIC MAKZII3.We ind elf following is the Cincinnati Gazette. Both the 'Glues and Louisville - Jour:inf.' from which it copies, srs whig papers. They talk about pig iron being outburst. turedut less that $lO per ton with one breath. and corn. plain with the next becature the government does tin girt the manufacturer more protection. Was over hu i etbsp etc so transparent? Enos or vim Lowrn Ouro.-4u Crittenden county Ken. Lucky. and the part'of Illinois opposite. it is known there in an extimisme, iron district. which is just nowintereing prominently iota notice. An intelligent iron master who is now crowing a •Irrge iron furnace in this district, (on the Ifemtneky side ofthe Ohio.) represents tho Ore in commit, toe.iiii e s it. very rich and convenient. He recently informed the editors of the Louisville Journal, (hit the emits, tied yield is over 39 per cent. and the estimated cost of the ore per tin, at the furnace. about 37i feat, Flts 101,11jOit in about three miles front the river. and the estimated mist of the pig iron ou the i. bsuk of the Ohio 6 less ih per tom After making tb,ess stateMems. the Journal says: • s•%Ve 'remember the time when the estabtishm at of th.• first 11 ill fsctory.in Pittsburgh was regarded ft) pre . d.•ot men ns a Lilian hazardous experiment. At a much Liter period the Eastern manufacturers of sugar mile and ooauu preese4l4lfer dreamed that Cincinnati weak ever drive them from' our Southern market. But a fewlyears new hsrdware merchants would not look at a Western hut-hinge or wood-ecrew, and now their customein is. quire fir 4 for these same articles. made by Green ood, of Cincinnati. Cheap materials. cheap subsistent . and divot] coal ere natural advantages that break do a sit artificial combinations by which they are opposed. 7 Et.octusar Aso Tnoc—The following estra some remarks of Gen. Cass in the Senate, the oche n•roply to an attack oil*. Clemens, of lilabama l Etoqiieot awl Truthful •exposition of the rights c pooine or the tvrritories to self government, as a cot rem and striking detioition of that bone of co the Wilmot proviso: • em a great believer, Mr. President, in the rigl wineteve l r may be the nature of the society q net going to sacrifice this loag.l to any abstrimpon, metaphysidal or p eel . I to liege the venlig° of die Territories{ jut the s 4111: rigor to govern themselves tut peoole of the Szaies have. Nor do I believe that ait knowledg.• decreases as lie recedes from the shah the Atlantic. Jr that a wise mar at the East becou foul by gonig, ; (o'lhe Welt: I out speaking here, cif 'spoke in my' Nc.tolsen letter, of organized cum ties. existiii2 governments. But I maintain. as 1; lIIW StieeCil It.tew (lays ago, that all communities haF right to organs; themselves mid provide for social 01 when such order eautiot otherwise be obtained. ) not undertake to say hole many there must be to cle l l 1 leave that to he deterititned when the mites arise. many other que‘hons, indeed /the afloat Whet not purely 1113V1111 aid principle is correct safe, though its applwelio 1, in at aotnettines be Mika, This" . o,,Shout pr0v...0 is-new in its home.. but old I,i prate:intention-4s old as the institution of governmei and it will prohibly lest as long as government exists. fig:laded deeply iii human mature, which is prone to powerand forget right—Every age of the world has Inn Wilmot prelim. Slinli . tinles it is a tax on tea: sO times his a eonsmuito.. like that which the Empero Austria, hi his wisnieni aindouercy. granted to the I! garians: 110111ennles it is a div,leion of, Poland: but a pores it is the restilt of a conviction th..t the gover know 'ouch boater what is good for the governed the latter know for themselves. Suluins. Eaupe Kings, Parionatents. and Congresses. all equally e tale this npioiou of their own paternal authority. and , satisfied that they ought to possess and exercise it. sir. Ido not believe in,this doctrine at all. It does belong to Illy age of progress., State or Territory. the people who ought to gevern. so far as is consii with their relations to the United States." - • HIT HIM Actte!—The Washington correspooden the Washington (Pa.) Commonwealth, a whig print} speaking of the appointment of Niel S. Brown as Mi l ter to Russia. and Mr. Hilliard to Prussia,,waxes w in this wise—.l say that at such times as these:suc wan ought not to be appointed to any place whatever t • • • • "I wish to be plain, and therefore say such fanaticism as this is disgraceful to any adminis lion that practice it." We SeCOND MAT Monost.--A bill has been in duced'into Congress by Mr. Schenck: "It reduces I , legal volue of a Spanish ehilling to that of a dime. 6/ cent piece to fieo cents. Foreign quarters. to fetch hut twenty cents. The mint is required to c - donble dimes or twenty cent pieces. equal to the file - a dollar." _ A RAaa Arts.—Somo of our exchanges tell of ape ufacturing company in Massachusetts. which amplal upwards of one hundred mechanics and laborers, es of whom is pririlsged to subscribe for any. two dol paper or periodical, or any two at one dollar a year.l tqo expense of the company. This ntannfacturing co. pany is certainly a rare axis in liberality, and Freen. nit exaMple that others would do well to follow. Taus Aso Sansiat.t.—The Louisiana Gastas, edi • by Mr. J. F. Claiborne. formerly a Pemoor.dio moon• of Congress from Mississippi, insists that no member Congress has si right to speak in behalf of the Scathe people it, favor of a dissolution of the Union. "Not e of them," says the Gazelle, "can pledge the North the South, the East or West, to any such thing." A BtAca ftatriaow:—Tho Boston Transcript le th•it n black rainbow was discovered oft Toesdayevenin almut 8 &Clock, by the good people of New Bedford. J i direction was from the worth•west to dm south east. 1 111 ; it lasted about twenty mioutosr. It Wig very, perfect. a of great size. . 7 St. Louis is said. the papers. to ba 4 greargvi' • eriby the fire that destroyed, six taillions of properiPT The sew improvyme . nts in streets and .buildiags hat l 4 enhanced the value of the estate far coon thug eneqh to corer all the losses. :~~~ 4.° rd U from I day, II ill I r the ' to of hero ' her• , 0110- have Isar lid is CO s ftier. th D. eke Yaw and
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers