THE HUNTINGDON GLOBE, A DEMOCRATIC FAMILY JOURNAL, DEVOTED TO LOCAL AND GENERAL NEWS, &C. THE GLOBE. Circulation—the largest in the county. MiItraTITIDOM 2/A. Wednesday, November 25, 1857. AMERICAN AGRICULTURIST.—We desire to direct the attention of our readers to the ad vertisement of Orange Judd, of New York, for his "American Agriculturist," found in another part of this paper. The Agricultu rist is highly recommended by the press, and doubtless is an excellent work. Read the advertisement. A. Hundred Dollar Bill. The Valley Spirit states that a merchant in a small town in Virginia went to Petersburg lately, taking with him a Bank Note of the denomination of One Hundred Dollars, to pay a debt of that amount due by him. He paid out the note directly after his arrival in the place in the early part of the day, and before he left in the evening, the , very same note was paid back to him by one of his debt ors. Curious to know the circumference, so to speak, of the circle it had made from the time it left his hands till it came back again, the merchant made inquiry and found that it had gone from one hand to another, till it had paid debts to the amount of One Thousand Dollars in a single day, and, as before stated, had come back to the same gentleman who paid it out in the morning. This incident will serve to teach us what good we may all do by circulating our money, if we have any. That Hundred Dollar Bill was a relief to at least ten persons. It paid their debts, and doubtless lightened their hearts. It went around all day, doing good work as it went, and in the evening it came back to the worthy gentlemen who had start ed it out in the morning. That gentleman paid his debt of one hundred dollars, and yet carried home as much money as he had when he set out; and What is more, he carried home the very same money he had started with.— He also carried home with him the conscious ness that he and his Hundred Dollar Bill had done a good day's work, and that was worth something too. Now, what was done with this Hundred Dollar Bill may also be done, but in different degree by a note or cr_in of smaller denomination— by a five dollar bill or a quarter eagle. In deed, the smaller note would in all probabil ity circulate far more rapidly than the lar ger, and t'hus in a given period discharge a larger indebtedness in proportion—in other words, a f ford relief (for that is it precisely) to a greater number of persons. Some men find pleasure in paying their dues. They are the men who give life to business. Others hold their money with a hard grasp, and only pay it out when payment is unavoidable. They injure others without benefitting them selves, for the less they give,' the less they can receive; whereas if they paid out freely, their money would return to them, as did the Hundred Dollar Bill to the Virginia mer chant. THE FORTHCOMING MESSAGE.- - The' special Washington correspondent of The .1 2 )-ess- says it is rumored that Mr. Buchanan, in his first annual message to Congress, will take bold ground on the currency question ; that he will re-affirm the principles laid down so clearly in his celebrated speech on the Inde pendent Treasury Bill. He believes that it was the intention of the framers of the Con stitution to establish a hard-money currency, and that the action of Congress since has been a steady departure from that intention. It will be his object, then, to retrace the false steps taken, and to bring the government back to the true ground. The issue will be made in the next Con gress, whether State banks have the consti tutional power to issue circulating " promises to pay." There will be a large party to take the negative of the argument, who will not, it is said, yield until a decision has been given on the question by the Supreme Court of the United States. A general bankrupt law for the banks will be presented for action. This will provide a fixed legal course for putting into liquidation insolvent banks all over the Union. The Five Points The following paragraph, from the New York Express, gives an idea of the fearful ac cretion of vice and squalor in the field of la bor occupied by the Five Points' Mission : "In attending to his duties recently, Mr. Pease found A dying woman in a foul apart ment in Cow Bay, occupied also by eight other women and one man, all drunken and debased and infamous in the last extreme.— In the upper end of the same pestilent court, or close, were found, in fifteen rooms,. twenty three fami lies, making an aggregate of 17.0, per sons, or twelve to a room! In five of these fifteen rooms, intoxicating liquors were kept fur sale ! Indescribable filth, privation,. dis ease and indecency reigned through.them all. . Yet seventeen children from. these rooms at tend the schools of the House of Industry.— In eleven other-rooms were-eighteen families, and in nearly half of these rooms spirits were sold. In one of the garrets lived two negroes with eleven, abandoned white women. In twelve other rooms were found twenty four families, consisting of 124 persons.— Here were two blind women, two just past the peril of child-birth, and seventy-one chil dren, only eight of whom. attended any school." Here, it would seem, is a field large enough for the exercise of sham or real philanthropy, without going to the cotton fields or rice plantations of the South for subjects to shed crocodile tears over. %Then will charity begin at home ? Ozlgin of Thanksgiving Day. The New York Times, and some of the Philadelphia papers have expressed their dis approbation of the appointment of a Thanks giving day. They think a day of fasting and prayer would be more appropriate, as though in the present distress we had nothing to be thankful for. To those who think thus, the following history of the origin of Thanks giving day may prove instructive: When New England was first planted, the settlers met with many difficulties and hard ships, as is necessarily the ease when a civil ized people attempt to establish themselves in a wilderness country. Being piously dis posed, they sought relief from Heaven, by laying their wants, and distresses before the Lord in frequent set days of fasting and prayer. Constant meditation and discourse on the subject of their difficulties kept their minds gloomy and discontented, and like the .children of Israel, there were many disposed to return to the land which persecution had determined - them to abandon. At length, when it was proposed in the assembly to proclaim another fast, a farmer of plain sense, arose and remarked that the inconvenience they suffered, and concerning - which they had wearied Heaven with their complaints, were not so great as might have been expected, and were diminishing every day as the colony strengthened; that the earth began to reward their labors, and to furnish liberally for their sustenance; that the seas and rivers were full of fish, the air sweet, the climate wholesome; above all, they were in the full enjoyment of liberty, civil and religious. He therefore thought, that reflecting and conversing on these subjects would be more profitable, as tending to make them more contented with their situation ; and that it would be more becoming the gratitude they owed to the Divine Being, if, instead of a fast, they should proclaim a Thanksgiving. His advice was taken ; and , from that day to this, they have in every year observed circumstances of public happi ness sufficient to furnish employment for a thanksgiving day. A Deplorable Picture,. The following is an extract from a letter, of a highly respectable and intelligent citizen of Baltimore to a friend in Washington city.— It gives a deplorable picture of Baltimore. But, deplorable as it is, the picture is not a new one to our readers: BALTIMORE, Nov. 5, 1857. "A word now with regard to the election. In this city I had hoped, from the promises of Mayor Swann to the Governor and citi zens, that the democrats would have been protected in the attempt to exercise the proud privilege of an American citizen—viz; the -.elective franchise; but how villainously have we been deceived! Not only have thousands been denied that privilege whose misfortune it was to be born in =other clime, (many of whom had resided here for twenty, thirty, and forty years,) but others who were born on American soil to the number of several thousand, some of whOm- had been engaged in the war of 1812—'14, and defended this very city from the invasion of a British sol diery. Th9B Iknow of my own personal ob servation. The plan adopted to deter such from voting was to approach every person with a Know-Nothing ticket, and if they re fused taking them to - issue threats, and to drive them from the place of voting. In one instance, in a family of my acquaint ance, where three sons of a lawful age, and a father, who had lived here for ten or twelve years, they were all compelled to flee from ' the polls without voting, rather than be beat en from them.. In every instance almost where a foreigner approached the polls he was knocked down and beaten in a most brutal manner, and . half grown youths dis guised and made to vote the know-nothing ticket. The torch of the incendiary lighted up the dwellings of the Democratic voters ere the close of the day's brutality on the part of the ruffians. The papers do not contain one sixteenth part of the doings of yesterday, simply because the reporters were deterred by fears of being assaulted hereafter. The intelligence from other portions of the State is cheering to the Democrats more especially from the north western, as you will perceive by to-morrow'S papers. This city is a doom ed city, and many will be compelled to go from it for peaceful security and the exercise of a freeman's rights. God knows I desire to leave it, and I trust in God that something will turn up to my advantage by which I may be enabled to do so." AFFECTING INCIDENT.—The editor of the New York Independent, in the leading article of that paper of last week, says : A friend of ours was called upon the other day for assistance, by the wife of a mechan ic, a saddler, who had always had work enough at this season of the year, with ample wages, but who was now entirely out of em ployment. The gentleman offered to give the husband work, for a day at least, in his own cellar, splitting wood, piling coal, &c. But the man had pawned his last coat for a trifle —as well as his watch, and all his furniture —and must borrow another before he could come. The next day he came, in the gentle man's absence, and worked till afternoon ; when, just when he was leaving the house, he asked the domestics to give him some bread, if they had any, as he had eaten nothing till then all day. Another friend of ours was compelled the other day to dismiss nine of the men employed by him in _manu facturing a certain article, Said he, 'I dis missed all the unmarried ones, and I shall retain the others as long as I can. J3at it was pitiful to see the suspense and fear of those men as I went up to pay them last Sat urday night. Their faces actually whitened before me, in the evening light; they could not look me in the face, fearing that I should say I had no more work for them.' ytm.lt is said that the seat of Mr. Ruther ford, of the Dauphin district, in the State Senate, will be contested by Mr. Haldeman, on the ground of fradulent voting on the part of the Black Republicans. yThc Brownsville, Washington and Waynesburg Banks continue to pay specie. From the Huron (Ohio) Reflector. Immigration on the Plains--; , The Mor- mou Hand Carts. Mr. Henry Buckingham, of Norwalk, Huron county, who went to Oregon seven years ago, has returned by the overland route making the journey by way of California, in a little over one hundred days. Mr. B. gives the following memorandum of the number of emigrants, cattle, horses, sheep and wagons that had passed the Devilts Gate this season, as kept at the Mormon mail station: Emigrants, - . - - - 12,500 Wagons, - - - - - 950 Cattle, - - - - - G 7,000 Horses and Mules, (about) - - 2,500 Sheep, - - - - 113,000 There were several large droves of cattle taken on speculation, hut as a general thing the emigrants took only what they thought they would need on the plains, and for a good start when they got there. I noticed a few fine blooded cattl, About fifty wagons would have gone the Oregon route, but were afraid of the Indians. Nearly all the emigrants went by Soda Springs to avoid Mormondom. There did not seem to be much love between the Mormons and Missourians. The Mormon emigration is not in3luded in the above list, which Mr. B. thinks did not exceed 1000. He thus describes the new propelling power which "the Lord revealed unto the Latter Day Saints by the Prophet Brigham" last year, whereby a Saint cap became a "perfect hoss" on the plains—a hand-cart train l It was certainly the most novel and inter esting sight I have seen for many a day. We met two trains—one of 30 and the other of 50 carts—averaging about six to the cart.— The carts were generally drawn by one man and three women each, though some carts were drawn by women alone. There were about three women to one man, and two thirds of the women single? It was the most motley crow I ever beheld. Most of them were Danes, with a sprinkling of Welsh, Swedes and English, and were generally from the lower classes of their countries; scarcely one could speak English plain; most could not understand what we said to them. The road was lined for a mile or two be hind the trains, with the lame, halt, sick and needy. Many were quite aged and would be going slowly along supported by a son or daughter; some were on crutches; now and•then a mplher with a child in her arms and two or three hanging hold of her, with a forlorn appearance would pass slowly along; others whose condition entitled them to a first-class seat in a carriage, were wen ding their way through the sand. A few seemed in good spirits journeying to the promised land; but the majority thought "Jordon a hard road to travel." Hard to Explain. Our Republican friends, when reference is made in their presence, to the numerous vic tories recently won by the Democracy, tind it rather difficult to answer them satisfac torily. If we ask them how it came that Gen. Packer was so triumphahtly elected, they will answer : `Oh, the Quakers did not vote.' 'But we have carried New Jersey, Quakers and all ?' 'Oh, that is owing to the railroad.' But look at New York ?' `Oh, that is owing to the canal.' `But we have carried Illinois ?' 'Oh, that is owing to the Germans.' 'But we have carried Indiana?' `Oh, that is owing to the Methodists.' 'But Louisiana is also with us ?'. 'Oh, that is owing to the Catholics.' 'New York city is overwhelmingly with us ?' `Oh, that is owing to the Irish.' 'But Minnesota, where there are few Irish, Germans, Catholics, no canals and few rail roads. How does it become Democratic ?' 'Oh, that is owing to the Federal Govern ment.' `And Connecticut ?' 'Oh, that is owing to the Yankees.' 'And California?' 'Oh, that is a new State.' `And Virginia ?' 'Oh, that is an old State.' 'Look at the South, which is composed of an Anglo-Saxon population—a race unmix ed, and where internal improvements and .eternal salvation do not enter into politics?" `Oh, that is owing to slavery.' `But the north is organizing equally with the South, in support of Mr. Buchanan ?' 'Oh, that is owing to emigration? `But New Mexico is Democratic, where the people came over shortly after Columbus; and which was settled before Cape Cod?' `Oh, that is owing to Heaven knows what.' Finally, the opposition run out of apolo gies, excuses and explanations, as the Demo cratic victories pour in, each one requiring a different theory.—Pittsburg Post. CRIME IN NEW YORK.-1118 increase of crime in our midst is truly alarming, and enough to make the stoutest heart quail.-- Within the past three days we have been called upon to chronicle the murder of no less than three persons, and the mortal wound ing of four others. Where the carnival of blood is going to end wek.now not. Citizens can- no longer resort to the public highways after nightfall, without the fear of sudden death beneath the bravo's steel.. The killing of young ITamilton in a drinking saloon in Canal street, marked the commencement of the bloody epoch. The following night Fran cis Vincent was murdered in North William street; Wm. Marshall, the negro, was mor tally wounded in West Broadway, and a grocer in 17th street, named Fraser, received a fatal stab while ejecting a rowdy from his store. Scarcely twenty-four hours had elapsed when we were again horrified by a wholesale butchery at a dance in W:tter street. The following table of the names of those who• have died, and those who are now dying from the effects of wounds received at the hands of assassins, will give our readers some idea. of the extent of crime in the metropolis since Monday morning last:- I—Henry F. Hamilton, murdered on Ca nal street. 2—Francis Vincent, murdered in North William street. 3-Iklo.l - anus, murdered in Water street. d--WilliamMarshall, (colored,) mortally wounded, corner of West Broad Way and Ca nal streets. s—jno. Fraser, mortally wounded in West Seventeenth street.. o—Richard Barrett, mortally wounded in Water street. 7—Susan• Dempsey, mortally wounded in Water street.--N. &raid, Nor. 21. Posting the Books.---The Next House of Representatives. Elections for members of the House of Representatives of the next Congress have now been held in all the States of the Union, with the following result: Dem. Blk Rep. K. N. Maine, 6 New Hampshire, 3 Vermont, 3 Massachusetts, , 11 Rhode Island, 2 Connecticut, 2 2 New York, 12 21 New Jersey, 3 2 Pennsylvania, 15 10 `Delaware, 1 _Virginia, 13 South Carolina, . 6 Florida, 1 Arkansas, 2 Missouri, 4 1 2 Illinois, 5 4 lowa, . 2 Wisconsin, 3 Indiana, 6 . 5 Ohio, 8 13 Michigan, 4 California, 2 Texas, 2 Kentucky, 8 2 Tennessee, 7 3 North Carolina, 7 1 Alabama, 7 Georgia, 6 2 Mississippi, 5 . Maryland, 3 3 Louisiana, 3 1 The House of Representatives consists of 234 members-118 members constituting a majority. It will be seen from the above table that the Democrats have a clear major ity of twenty-two over the combined vote of the Black Republicans and Know Nothings. This majority will be increased to twenty-five at an early period of the session by the ad mission of the three democratic members from the new State of Minnesota. It may be added as a most significant fact, that six of the seven Territories of the United States will be represented in the next Congress by Democratic delegates.— Tfrashington 01,1011. ND'..The political representation in the IT S. Senate is as follows: Dem. Opp Maine, New Hampshire, Vermont, Massachusetts, Rhode Island, • 1 Connecticut, ' New York, New Jersey, 2 • Pennsylvania, 1 Delaware, 2 Virginia, 2 South Carolina, 1 Vacancy, Florida, 2 Arkansas, 2 Illinois, 1 lowa, 1 Wisconsin, Indiana, 2 Ohio, 1 Michigan, 1 California, 2 Texas, Missouri, 2 Kentucky, Tennessee, North Carolina, 2 Georgia, Maryland, Louisiana, A labama, Mississippi, 35 25 Democratic majority, 10, 111)-:*200(0)0kv4Wei, , . Soon fp(*),; Colonel Alexander, commander of the van guard of the Utah expedition, was within thirty miles of Fort Bridger, which place is occupied by Mormon troops, when he receiv ed the following Fetter from Brigham Young, through the commander of the " Na,uvoo Le gion :" GOVERNOR'S OFFICE, UTAU TERRITORY, GREAT SALT LAKE CITY, Sept. 29,1857. To the Officers Commanding the Forces now Invading Utah Territory : Sir—By reference to the act of Congress passed Sept. 9, 1850, organizing the Territory of Utah, you will find the following : Sec. 2. And be it further enacted, that the executive power and authority in and over said Territory of Utah shall be vested in a Governor, who shall hold his office for four years, and until his successor shall be ap pointed and qualified, unless sooner removed by the President of the United States. The Governor shall reside within said Territory, shall be Commander-in-Chief of the militia thereof, &c., &c. I am still the Governor and Superintend ent of Indian Affairs for the Territory, no successor having been appointed and qualified, as provided by law, nor have I been removed by the President of the United States. By virtue of thesauthority thus vested in me, I have issued and forwarded to you a copy of thy proclamation,. forbidding the entrance of armed forces into the Territory. This you have disregarded. I now further direct that you retire forthwith from the Territory, by the same route you entered. - Should you deem this impracticable, and prefer to remain until spring in the vicinity of your present encampment—Block Fork on Green River—you can do so in peace and un molested,. on condition that you deposit your arms and ammunition with Lewis Robinson, Quartermaster General of the Territory, and leave in the spring as soon as the condition of the roads will permit you to march ; and should you fall short of provisions, they can be furnished you upon making the - proper ap plication therefor, .Gen. D. 11. Wells will forward this and re ceive any communication• you may have to make, Very respectfully, BRIGUAR YOUNG, Governor and Superintendent of Indian .Af fairs. The following• is the proclamation referred to by Brigham Young : PROCLAMATION' BY THI GOVEANOR Citizens of Utah :—We are invaded by a hostile force, who are evidently assailing us to accomplish our overthrow and destruction. For the last twenty-fiVe years we•have trusted officials of the government, from constables and justices to judges, Governors, and Presi dents, only to be scorned, held in derision ) in- 128 Vacancy. 1 suited - and betrayed. Our houses have been plundered and then burned, our fields laid waste, our principal men butchered while un der the pledged faith of the government for their safety, and our families driven from their homes to find that shelter in the barren wilderness and that protection among hostile savages which were denied them in the boast ed abodes of Christianity and civilization. The constitution of our common country guarantees unto us all that we do now or have ever claimed. If the constitutional rights which pertain unto us as American citizens were extended to Utah according to the• spirit and meaning thereof, and fairly and impar tially administered, it is all that we could ask —all that we have ever asked. Our opponents have availed themselves of prejudice existing against us, because of our religious faith, to send out a formidable host to accomplish our destruction. We have had no privilege nor opportunity of defending ourselves from the false, foul and unjust as persions against us before the nation.. The government has not condescended to -cause an investigating committee or other person to inquire into and ascertain the truth, as is customary in such cases. We know those aspersions to be false •, but that avails us nothing. We are condemned unheard, and forced to an issue with an armed merce nary mob, which has been sent against us at the instigation of anonymous letter-writers, ashamed to father the base, slanderous false hoods which they have given to the public— of corrupt officials, who have brought false accusations against us to screen themselves in their own infamy, and of hireling priests and howling editors, who prostitute the truth for filthy lucre's sake. The issue which has thus been forced upon us compels us to resort to the great first law of self-preservation, and stand in our own de fence—a right guaranteed unto us by the ge nius of the institutions of our country, and upon which the Government is based. Our duty to ourselves, to our families, requires us not to tamely submit to be driven and slain without an attempt to preserve ourselves.— Our duty to our country, our holy religion, our God, to freedom and liberty, requires that we should not quietly stand still and see these fetters forging around us which are cal culated to enslave and bring us in sul t jection to an unlawful military despotism, such as can only emanate, in a country of constitu tional law, from usurpation, tyranny and op pression. Therefore I, Brigham Young, Governor and Superintendent of Indian Affairs for the Ter ritory of Utah, in the name of the people of the United States, in the Territory of Utah, forbid _ First—All armed forces of every descrip tion from coming into this Territory, under any pretence whatever. Second—That all the forces in said Terri tory hold themselves in readiness to march at a moment's notice to repel any and all such invasion. Third—Martial law is hereby declared to exist in this Territory from and after the pub lication of this proclamation, and no person shall be allowed to pass, or repass into or through or from this Territory without a per mit from the proper officer. Given under my hand and seal, at Great Salt Lake City, Territory of Utah, this fifteenth day of September, A. D. eighteen hundred and fifty-seven, and of the Independence of the United States of America the eighty second. BRIGHAM YOUNG. The following is Col. Alexander's reply to Brigham Young : Headquarters Tenth Regiment Infantry, Camp Winfield, on Ham's Fork, October 2, 1857. . Brigham Young, Esq., Governor of Utah Ter- ri tory ; Sir :—I have the honor to acknowledge the receipt of your communication of September 29, 1857, with two copies of a proclamation and one of the laws of Utah, and have given it an attentive consideration. I am at -ires ent the senior and commanding officer of the troops of the United States at this point, and I will submit your letter to the General com manding as soon as he arrives here. In the meantime, I have only to say that these troops are here by the order of the Pres ident of the United States, and their further movements and operations will depend entire ly upon orders issued by competent military authority. Very respectfully, The News from Utah. Front the Nebraska News, October 24 We learn by the arrival of the Salt Lake mail that the advance party of some thirty or more United States troops sent out during the summer, have been driven out from Salt Lake City. Brigham is preparing to receive the whole posse of the United States troops. He declares vengeance upon all heretics. Our informant tells us that robberies and murders are frequent on the plains by the Mormons and Indians. Five hundred United States troops have started for Utah ; but these are thought to be a force totally inadequate to quell disturbances at Salt Lake, and it is not expected that this small force will reach, this season, the Mormon hornet's nest. They are to winter upon Fall ri'ver. We have late intelligence by express, sent to Messrs. Russell and Waddell, says the Leavenworth (Kansas) Times, that three of their trains, consisting of seventy-five wagons, in charge of Dawson, Simpson, a nd Barrett, containing government stores for the army en route for Salt Lake City, were captured and burned by the Mormons at Hand's forks of Green river, on the 10th of Oct. Five wagons, and sufficient rations to reach Fort Laramie, were allowed the drivers and those connected with the trains, and ton minutes given them to leave. They have burnt all the government stores, but did not offer to hurt any of those connect ed with the trains, saying that they did not wish to spill blood, unless one of the saints should be killed, and then they would anni hilate the whole United States army. They have burnt off all the grass for a dis tance of two hundred miles around Salt Lake City, for the purpose of starving the stock with the Government trains. Jesse Jones, one of Russell & Waddell's agents, had gone to Fort Bridger for supplies. He was detained there as a prisoner, and is supposed to have been killed, as it is known that he is well acquainted with all the roads and mountain passes leading into the city. Had the troops of Fort Leavenworth, under Gen. Barney, been pushed on early in the spring, Utah might have been awed into sub mission without the sacrifice of life or prop erty. Now we, may look for both, and along and bloody fight besides. P. S'.-IVe have unofficial intelligence that the advanced trains, consisting of three hun dred and fifty wagons, are with the troops, and are safe, E. R. ALEXANDER From Washington. Special Correspondence of the Daily Pennsylvanian W4.BIIINGTO.N, Nov. 22, 1857. Great preparations are being made for the gay season,. notwithstanding the financial re vulsion. Parlors are being newly filled up ; milliners and mantua-makers are busy doing their parts ; tailors are' making men by the score ; confectioners are increasing their sup plies; a theatre is being fitted up, several largely attended concerts have been given, and in short the indications are that we will have a fashionable season. The beads of the different departments are busy - 'making up their annual reports. This ig ame re occupies the greater portion of their tim4 for it is well known that no little reisearekr is required in making them. The -report of the Postmaster General will be un usually interesting. The expenditures of that department ter the closing fiscal year exceed the receipts to the amount of upwards of four millions of dollars ! This is a very large deficiency—much greater than that of the previous year. The propriety of making the Colorado-River of the West the base of our operations. against the Mormons, is urged upon the Administra tion with great force, since it is generally be- - lieved that these rebels must sometime next Spring leave Utah for Mexico, I can,• how- - ever, hardly credit the fact that they will at tempt to escape to the South. Should they determine upon such a course, the chances are that they would be intercepted long be fore they could reach their destination. The position of our troops, if nothing else, will be sufficient to keep them in check. The Mormons can fight best in their own , strongholds, and it is quite certain now that they will he able to keep our troops at bay, until spring, but after that they will be forc ed to change their tactics—to fight on the de fensive instead of the offensive, and when that takes place, they will be forced to•beat a retreat, And the safest retreat to which they can go is the Russian possessions. It is generally understood that bills will be introduced into Congress, at an early day,•for the organization of two new territories—Ari-- zonia and Sierra Madra. From the Sacramento Age, 0ct.16.• Mormon and Indian Alliance. Twenty Thousand Indians Ready to Take the' Field Against the United Slates Troops— Women to be butchered. Yesterday we had an interview with a gen-• tleman from Carson Valley who, from inti- - macy with Mormon families, has some knowl-• edge of their future designs and plans of operation. If his conclusions be correct,• not only the settlers east of the mountains,, hut even the people of this State, will have' reason to deprecate the exasperation of those" American Bedouins. lie says that the Mor-• mons of Carson Valley and San Bernardino have sold their cattle and property for nearly nothing, and, at the bidding of their chief, have repaired to Salt Lake, with the secret design of re-organizing, arming, equippin returning, murdering And plundering their Gentile enemies. They-declare that, lbr ev-• ery Saint slain by the United, States troops,, ten Gentile women shall make atonement: that they will first exterminate the troops from the east, then come west, and in preda tory bands, allied with Indians, they will ravage the border, rob, plunder and murder, until they shall have replenished the Lord's. treasury, and revenged insults put on his cho sen people. Of their ability to execute this threat we have but little doubt. At.the order of their leader and prophet, they dan muster 15,000 men, armed with the most effective instru ments of destruction. They have many thousands of the finest horses, trained to camp service; they have,' a foundry where cannon and shells are cast; a powder mill and a factory, where revolving rifles and pis tols are manufactured, equal to those made at Hartford. They have every munition of war, and necessary provision and means of transportation, within themselves, and even the women and children are instructed in the use of arms. Add to this their geograph ical position. To reach Salt Lake, from the east, it is necessary to pass through a canon of twenty-five miles, under hills so steep and rocky that a dozen men could hurl down an avalanche of stones on an approaching cara van ; and even in the event of several thous and troops reaching the valley; the beseiged, with their herds, would take to the moun tains, and, reinforced by their savage allies, would, in turn, besiege their beseigers, and Cut off supplies until the invaders had starv ed oat, They have, it is said, 20,000 Indian allies, whom they are ready to furnish with arms and horses on an emergency. These Indians are partially instructed in the Mormon reli gion—enough to make them superstitious in regard, to the God of a superior race, yet modifying none of their ferocity. With al lies like these and fighting for their homes, and, according to the belief of the ignorant, under the direct supervision of the God of Battles, and from the ramparts with which nature has surrounded them, it is easy to conceive what would be the fate of a few thousand troops, who traveled a thousand miles to fight their own countrymen,, brave as themselves, as well armed, better used to field life, and stimulated by their love of home and family, and assured of victory by the revelations of their prophets, A CANADIAN VERDICT—SPECIAL 'PROVISION FOR A FAMILY.—We find in the Toronto Globe and the Montreal Transcript some interesting details of another action a.gaiiiskihe Great Western Railroad Company, to recover dam ages for the death of Mx. Alexander Grant,, caused by the terrible accident at the D. esjar, dins bridge. The action was brought by Mrs. Elizabeth Grant, the widow of• the de ceased, It appeared in evidence that Mr. Grant was a man of great industry, ability and foresight.. He had commenced business as a gardener,, penniless, seventeen years ago, but he realized sufficient to commence a curiosity store on Goat Island, at the Niagara Falls. In it he acquired a considerable amount of property,, and at the time of his death was making $3OOO or $4OOO per an num, in the regular course of his business. He left behind property worth about $33,000 and debts to the amount of $13,000. But he was not alive to meet the latter,, and certain mortgages being due, his property had - to be sold, leaving his wife and children—of whom„, four were- girls under 16- yews of age—. l almost destitute. The jury, after half an hour's deliberation, returned a verdict for the plaintiff. Damages-as follows: For the widow - - - - $ 6 , 000 Ist child . 400 2d do, Y 600 3d do. 1,000, 4th do. 1,200 6tb. do, 2,000