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Three squares, 7 00 10 00 15 00 Four squares, 9 00 13 00 20 00 half a column, .12 00 16 00 ....24 00 One column, 20 00 30 00.... ..... .50 00 Professional and Business Cards not exceeding four lines, one year, $3 00 Administrators' and Executors' Notices, $l. 75 Advertisements not marked with the number of inser Lions desired, will be continued till forbid and charged ac cording to these terms. ,F)tittt Vottrrj. THE DEAD MOTHER. Why aro you lying there, mother, Under th-t cold, gray stone, Always out in the wind and rain, Lying so still and lone? Little Minnie is very sick;* On her lip lies the gathering foam ; Why don't you conic and mind her now? 9 mother! come home! come home! Barry and I, ere we fell asleep Last night in our little bed, Were trying to think (shat they meant by it When they told us you were dead! When we asked our father, he answered, The knowledge would come with years; But his hands were clasped before his face ; And under them fell big tears! Ire said, too; 'twos because you were good, mother; _That God took all who were such; Marry thinks we might get you back again If We asked God very much! but why don't you speak when I speak? Why don't you coins to us now, do hear us say our prayers at night, - And to kiss us upon the brow? Old nurse cries, and says to Minnie, That with you she soon will meet; For night after night on the candle Is a little winding sheet. I'd rather that you cane back to us And lived as you used to do; But if Minnie is going to see you, O mother 1 may Igo too The morning you spoke to us all last, When you kissed us each and blessed, You saki, as I was the eldest, I should also be the best; And, indeed, I try to be good, good. mother, Since you went 'neath that cold, gray stone; Won't you come back and see how good I am? 0 mother ! come home ! come home! Ittisttliantous Tabus. Two Hours With Brigham Young A Conversation Between Horace Greeley and the Saint of Salt. Lake. [From New York Tribune, 20th ult.] SALT LAKE CITY, July 13, 1859 My friend Mr. Bernhisel, M. C., took me this afternoon, by appointment, to meet Brig ham Young, President of the Mormon Church, who had expressed a willingness to receive me at 2P. M. We were very cordially wel comed at the door by the President, who led us into the second story parlor of the largest of his houses (he has three,), where I was in troduced to Heber :Kimball, Gen. Wells, Gen. Ferguson, Albert Carrington, Elias Smith, and several other leading men in the Church, with two full-grown sons of the President.— After some unimportant conversation on gen eral topics, I stated that I had conic in quest of fuller knowledge respecting the doctrines and policy of the Mormon Church, and would like to ask some questions bearing directly on these, if there were no objection. Presi dent Young avowing his willingness to res pond to all pertinent inquiries, the conversa tion proceeded substantially as follows : IL G.—Am I to regard Mermanism (so called) as a new religion, or as simply a new development of Christianity? B. Y.—We hold that there can be no true Christian Church without a priesthood direct ly commissioned by and in immediate com munication with the Son of God and Savior of mankind. Such a church is that of the Latter Day-Saints, called by their enemies Mormons ; we know no other that even pre tends to have present and direct revelations of God's will. 11. G.—Then I am to understand that you regard all other churches professing to be Christian, as the Church of Rome regards all churches not in communion withitself—as schismatic, heretical, and out of the way of salvation ? B. Y.—Yes, substantially. G.----Apart from this, in what respect do your doctrines differ essentially from those of our Orthodox Protestant Churches—the Baptist or Methodist, for example? B. Y.—We hold the doctrines of Christian ity, as revealed in the Old and New Testa ments—also in the Book of Mormon, which teaches the same cardinal truths, and those only. H. G.—Do you believe in the doctrines of the Trinity? B. Y.—We do; but not exactly as it is held by other churches. We believe in the Fath er, the Son and the Holy Ghost, as equal, but not identical—and as one person [being.]— We believe in all the Bible teaches us on this subject. H. G.—Do , you believe in a personal devil a distinct, conscious, spiritual being, whose nature and acts are essentially malignant and evil? B. Y.—We do. H. G-.—Do you hold the doctrine of Eternal Punishment? B. Y.—We do ; though perhaps not exactly as other churches do. We believe it as the Bible teaches it. H. G.—l understand that you regard Bap tism by Immersion as essential. B. Y.—We do. 111°G.—Do you practice infant Baptism ? • H. G.—Do you make removal to these val leys obligatory on your converts ? B. Y.—They - would consider themselves aggrieved if they were not invited hither.— We hold to such a gathering together of God's People as the Bible foretells, and that this is the place, and now is the time appointed for its consummation. 11. G.—The predictions to which you refer have usually, I think, been understood to indi cate Jerusalem (or Judea) as the place of suchgathering. B. Y.—Yes, for the Jews—not for others. 11. G.—What is the position of your Church with respect to Slavery? B. Y.—We consider it of Divine institution, and not to bp abolished until the curse pro- $1 50 75 50 WILLIAM LEWIS, VOL. XV. nounced on Ham shall have been removed from. his descendants. H. G.—Are any slaves now held in this Territory ? B. Y.—There are. H. G.—Do your Territorial laws uphold Slavery ? B. Y.—Those laws are printed—you can read fov yourself. If slaves are brought here by those who owned them in the States, we do not favor their escape from the service of those owners. 11, G.—Am I to infer that Utah, if admit ted as a member of the Federal Union, will be a Slave State ? B. Y.—No; she will be a Free State. Sla very here would prove useless and unprofita ble. I regard it generally as a cursQ to the masters. I myself hire many laborers and pay them fair wages ; I could not afford to own them. I can do better than subject my self to an obligation to feed and clothe their families and to provide and care for them in sickness and health. Utah-is not adapted to slave labor. 11. G.—Let me now be enlightened with regard more especially to your Church policy; I understand that you require each member to pay over one tenth of all that he produces or earns to the Church. B. Y.—That is a requirement of our faith. There is no compulsion as to the payment. Each member acts in the premises according to his pleasure, under the dictates of his own conscience. 11. G.—What is done with the proceeds of this tithing ? B. Y.—Part of it is devoted to building temples and other places of worship ; part to helping the poor and needy converts on their way to this country ; and the largest portion to the support of the poor among the Saints. 11. G.—ls none of it paid to Bishops and other dignitaries of the Church 7 B. Y.—Not one penny. No Bishop, no Elder, no Deacon, or other church officer, re ceives any compensation for his official servi ces. A Bishop is often required to put his hand in his own pocket and provide there from for the poor of his charge, but he never receives anything for his services. G.—llow, then, do your ministers live? B. Y.—By the labor of their own hands, like the first Apostles. Every Bishop, every Elder, may *be daily seen at work in the field or the shop, like his neighbors; every minis ter of the Church has -his proper calling by which he earns the bread of his family ; he who cannot or will not do the Church's work for nothing is not wanted in her service; even our lawyers (pointing to Gen. Ferguson and another present, who are the regular lawyers of the Church,) are paid nothing for their services; I am the only person in the Church who has not a regular calling apart from the Church's service, and I never received one farthing from her treasury; if I obtain any thing from the tithing-house, I am charged with and pay for it, just as any one else would ; the clerks in the tithing-store are paid like other clerks, but no one is ever paid for any service pertaining to the ministry. We think a man who cannot make his living aside from the Ministry of Christ is unsuited to that office. lam called rich and consider myself worth $250,000; but not a dollar of it was ever paid me by the Church or for any services as a minister of the Everlasting Gos pel. I lost nearly all I had when we were broken up in Missouri and driven from that State; I was nearly stripped when Joseph Smith was murdered, and we were ,driven from Illinois ; but nothing was ever made up to me by the Church, nor by any one.— I believe I know how to acquire property and how to take care of it. H. G.—Can you give me any rational ex planation of the aversion and hatred with which your people are generally regarded by those among whom they have lived and with whom they have been brought directly in con tact ? B. Y.—No other explanation than is af forded by the• crucifixion of Christ and the kindred treatment of God's ministers, proph ets and saints in all ages. G.—l know that a new sect is always decried and traduced—that it is hardly ever deemed respectable to belong to one—that the Baptists, Quakers, Methodist, Unaversalists, &e., have each in their turn been regarded in the infancy of their sect as offscouring of the earth ; yet I cannot remember that either of them were ever generally represented and re garded by the older sects of their early days as thieves, robbers and murderers. B. Y.—lf you will consult the cotemporary Jewish accounts of the life and acts of Jesus Christ, you will find that he and his diciples were a,2cused of every abominable deed and purpose—robbery and murder included.— Such a work is still extinct, and may be found by those who seek it. 11. G.—What do you say of the so called Danites, or Destroying 4ngels, belonging to your Church ? 1 3. Y.—What do you say ? I know of no such band, no such persons or organization. I hear of them only in the slanders of our enemies. 11. G.—With regard, then, to the grave question on which your doctrine and prac tices are avowedly at war with those of the Christian world—that of a plurality of wives —is the system of your Church acceptable to the majority of its women B. Y.—They could not be more averse to it than I was when it was first resealed to us as the Divine will. I think they generally accept it, as I do, as the will of God, H. G.—How general is polygamy among you? a B. Y.—l could not say. Some of those present (heads of the Church) have each but one wife ; others have more ; each determines what is his individual duty. H. G. What is the largest number of wives belonging to any one man ? B. Y.—l have fifteen ; know of no one who has more; but some of those sealed to me are old ladies whom I regard rather as mothers than wives, but whom I have taken home to cherish and support.• 11. G.—Does not the Apostle Paul say that a bishop should be " the husband of one wife ?" B. Y.-z-So we hold. We do not regard any but a married man as fitted -for the office of bishop. But the Apostle does not forbid a bishop having more wives than one. H. G.—Ddes not Christ • say that he who puts away his wife, or marries one whom-an other, has put away, commits adultery ? B. Y.—Yes, and I hold that no man should ever put away a wife except for adultery— not always even for that. Such is my indi -iidual view of the, matter. Ido not say that wives have never been put away in our church, but that I do not approve of the prac tice. H. G.—How do you regard what is com monly termed the Christian Sabbath ? B. Y.—As a divinely appointed day of rest. We enjoin all to rest from secular labors on that day. We would have no man enslaved to the Sabbath, but we enjoin all to respect and enjoy it. BRIGHAM'S APPEARANCE, &C. Such is, as nearly as I can recollect, the substances of nearly_ two hours' conversation, wherein much was said incidentally that would not be worth reporting, even if I could remember and reproduce it, and wherein oth ers bore a part ; but, as President Young is the first minister of the Mormon Church, and bore the principal part in the conversation, I have reported his answers alone to my ques tions and observations. The others appeared uniformly to defer, to his views, and to ac quiesce fully in his responses and explana tions. He spoke readily, not always with grammatical accuracy, but with no appear ance of hesitation or reserve, and with no apparent desire to conceal anything, nor did he repel anyxof my questions as impertinent. He was very plainly dressed in thin sum mer clothing, and with no air of sanctimony or fanaticism. In appearance, he - is a portly, frank, good natured, rather thick set man of fifty-five, seeming to enjoy life, and be in no particular hurry toget to Heaven. His as sociates are plain men, evidently born and reared to a life of labor, and looking as little like crafty hypocrites or swindlers as any body of men I ever met. The absence of cant or snuffle from their manner was marked and general, yet I think I may fairly say that their Mormonism has not impoverished them—that they were generally poor men when they embraced it, and are now in very comfortable circumstances—as men averag in cr t' three or four wives a• piece, certainly need to be. If I hazard any criticism on Mormonism generally, I reserve them for a separate let ter, being determined to make this a fair and full expose of the doctrine and polity, in the very words of its Prophet, so far as I can re call them. Ido not believe President Young himself could present them in terms calcula ted to render them less obnoxious to the Gen tile world than the above. But I have a right to add here, because I said it to the as sembled Chiefs, at the close of the above colloquy that the degredation (or, if you please, the restriction) of woman to the single office of child bearing and its accesso ries, is an inevitable consequence of the sys tem here paramount. I have not observed a sign in the streets, an advertisement in the journals, of this Mormon metropolis, whereby a woman proposes to do anything whatever. No Mormon has ever cited to me his wife's or any woman's opinion on any subject ; no Mormon woman has been introduced or has spoken to me.; and though I have been asked to visit Mormons in their houses, no one has spoken of his wife (or wives) desiring to see me, or desiring me to make her (or their) acquaintance, or has voluntarily indicated the existence of such a being or beings. I will not attempt to report our talk upon this subject, because unlike what I have above given, it assumed somewhat the character of a disputation, and I could hardly give it im partially ; but one remark made by President Young I think I can give accurately, and it may serve as a sample of all that was offered on that side. It was in these words, I think exactly " If I did not consider myself competent to transact a certain business without taking my wife's or any woman's counsel with re gard to it, I think I ought to let that business alone." The spirit with regard to Vtiroman, of the entire Mormon, as of all other polyga mic system become established and prevalent, and woman will soon be confined to the ha rem, and her appearance in the street with unveiled face will he accounted immodest.— I joyfully trust that the genius of the Nine teenth Century tends to a solution of the problem of Woman's sphere and destiny rad , . ically different from this. The New Jersey State Democratic Conven tion, for the selection of a Democratic candi date for Governor at the approaching fall election, assembled at Trenton, on Wednes day the 24th. More than two thousand del egates were in attendance. Gen. E. V. R. Wright was, after four bal lots, selected as the Democratic nominee for Governor. The name of Colonel William C. Alexan der was unanimously presented by the Con vention to the Charleston Convention of 1360, as the choice of New Jersey for the Vice Presidency of the United States. The following preamble and resolutions were adopted, by ac:3lamation, by the Con vention : " The Democracy of New Jersey, by their delegates in Convention assembled, re-adopt and declare anew their adherence to the Cin cinnati platform, and to the great Democratic doctrine ofepopular sovereignty, constituting their doctrine as understood by and inter preted in the Democratic State Convention of this State, held in August, 1856, and as inter preted by President Buchanan in his letter accepting the Democratic nomination for the Presidency, in which he said, The recent legislation of Congress respecting domestic slavery (meaning the Kansas-Nebraska act) derived, as it has been, from the original and pure fountain of legitimate political power, the will of the majority, promises, ere long, HUNTINGDON, PA., SEPTEMBER 7, 1859. New Jersey Erect ! -PERSEV.tRE.- to allay the dangerous excitement. This leg islation is founded upon principles as ancient as free government itself, and, in accordance with them, has simply declared that the peo ple of-a Territory, like those of a State, shall decide for themselves whether slavery shall Or shall not exist within their limits. " lies°hied, That we unqualifiedly condemn Vie doctrine of that sectional portion of the Opposition who insist that slavery should be excluded from the Territories by Congres sional prohibition, because Congress has no power, under the Constitution to enact any such prohibition—because such a prohibition would be an unwarrantable and inexpedient interference by Congress with the domestic affairs of the people of the Territories, and because all efforts to enact such a prohibition endangers the perpetuity of the Union, and destroys the amity and fraternal feelings which should exist between the people of the several States composing our glorious and cherished Union. " Resolved, That while we thus condemn the Republican doctrine of Congressional prohibition, we with equal emphasis condemn the doctrine recently started, and now zeal ously advocated by extreme men, that slavery in the Territories should be fostered and pro tected by Congressional legislation. We con demn it, because it is violative of the funda mental principle of self-government, and wrong and unjust in itself, tending to violent sectional agitation, unfriendly feeling and disunion ; and because it is in direct viola tion of the Cincinnati platform, and of all the pledges made by the Democratic party in 1854, 1855, and 185 G—pledges in which the whole party, North and South, East and West, united. " Resolved, That we deeply regret, and emphatically disapprove, of the attempts now being made to build up a party in favor of reviving the abominable and inhuman for eign slave trade, and repealing the laws of the land enacted against it, and we earnest ly desire that those laws may be rigidly en forced. "And whereas, The late division of the Democratic party in this State related exclu sively to the admission of Kansas under the Lecompton Constitution, and to the action of the national Administration upon that ques tion, both sections having cordially approved the course of the Administration in other important matters and measures, and as that question has been settled, and no practical good can result from its discussion, or any expression of opinion as to the best action thereon: therefore, " Resolved, That all such past questions and discussions should, by common' consent, be dropped, leaving every Derverat to enjoy his own opinion thereon, untrammelled by any party action or resolutions, and that, burying these past controversies, a common and earnest effort should now be made by every New Jersey Democrat to re-establish our party in power. " Resolved, That we highly approve of the exertions now being made by the General Government to lessen national expenses, and in our opinion, the next Con tress should second the work of economy, by discarding all needless expenditures, and cutting down every appropriation to the lowest limit con sistent with the actual wants of the coun try." On the 13th of last month a woman, calling herself Mrs. Rivers, called, with her husband and two children, on a wealthy farmer, named llezekiah Ferris, at his farm in Winchester, Franklin county, Tennessee. The visitors were Gipseys, and made an arrangement to stop with Mr. Ferris and his family awhile having first interested them by exhibitions of seemingly marvellous tricks. The host was much attracted by the apparently wonderful powers possessed by the woman Rivers, and in less than three days was cajoled by her into a belief that a treasure of $lOO,OOO was secreted on his farm, and it could be regained by proper witch process. For the accomplish ment of this object, Ferris' ambition was soon fired, and he and the gipsey woman imme diately set about the course of the incantation. Three thousand dollars in gold were neces sary for the purpose—so he was made to be lieve—and as he did not happen to have money at hand, he borrowed the whole sum of a neighbor, getting $1295 in bank bills, and $1705 in gold coin. At night the woman Rivers and himself entered the room alone, with a lighted candle, and locked the door against intrusion. A trunk previously pro vided was then opened, and the incantation commenced. The process was carried on by the woman at first, who tied- the money up in a coarse light handkerchief and untied it sev eral times, meanwhile turning about with quick motions, and constantly muttering un intelligible gibberish. When this farcical performance was ended, she and Ferris knelt while she blasphemously offered a prayer, addressed in all mock solemnity to the Giver of all, The bundle she had apparently made of the money was then in due form deposited in the trunk, which was locked and she retained the key. Together they then left the room, she having previously impressed him with a belief that the deposit just made in the trip* should rest there undisturbed by mortal hands for ten days, at the expiration of which time, if he had unalterably adhered to her instruc tions, he would find the coveted $lOO,OOO on opening the trunk, At the end of the third day of their stay there, the gipsey family depar ted, the key of the trunk being taken with them. After the woman had gone, it seems that Ferris grew suspicious that perhaps all was not right in the transaction ; but he neverthe less overcame his doubts, and awaited with all the patience he could summon for the ar rival of the time when he could see himself whether be had been duped or not. He kept the matter to himself for the remainder of the ten days, and then the trunk was forced open. There lay within it the identical par cel he had seen put there by the woman Riv ers. A slight notion of "all right" touched his feelings, and ho hastened to open the cov ering, and lo I there were not the $lOO,OOO, nor the $3OOO, but trash equal in bulk to the Duped by Gipseys. '.q . ,?. : „ . • . - ‘-':'''' . . l '‘ .--;,:-._.. - i:;.: . ' : N'' ' '' .. :,,,, ~.. • J.. .:.C.C. - ' . •]'....f. °lll°' ~.:,,_ . '''...,l' -- • money he had entrusted to the hands of the false woman Rivers. He cast about at once to find the female that had thus cajoled him, but the bird had flown, and was doubtless far beyond reach ; but he was told that a few miles away there was another gipsey. To this one he hastily went and consulted her. Of course she knew about the others who had visited hint, and teld him they had used false names, that their real names were James and Elizabeth Trail. She further said that they belonged in Mur pheytown, near New York city. Forthwith he came to this city. A mer cantile acquaintance introduced him to Capt. Lenoard, of the 26th Precinct, on last Thurs day, who, after hearing the story of his loss, gave him the solution that the money had been taken and the worthless stuff he found in its stead substituted probably at the time the incantation was made. He also informed him that the gipsey who gave him the "Mur pheytown" information had undoubtedly been a decoy of those who had robbed him, placed where he would be likely to bear of and con sult her after his loss should be discovered, in order to send him off .on a "wild goose chase," as there is no such place as "Mur pheytown" in the vicinity of New York. Of ficer Barry was, however, directed to give at tention to the matter, hut he was unable to get the slightest clue to the parties. Ferris remained at the Stevens House until Tuesday, when he returned home, feeling no doubt a much wiser man than when he left there, though any one of common sense, on seeing him, would say he was "old enou4h to know better."—New l'ork Express, 24th ult. General Houston and the Ladies. The closing part of General Houston's Na cogdoches speech is one of the most eloquent tributes to women we have ever read. The following is an extract : TUE LADIES-GOD BLESS 'EU. Ladies, I know that politics are always un interesting to you, yet I believe you have in the general result an abiding interest. It is always a gratification to me to behold my fair countrywomen in assemblages like these. It is a guarantee that their husbands and fath ers add brothers are men of intelligence and refinement, who appreciate their mental ca pacities, and desire their countenance in their undertakings. Your presence• exercises a calming influence upon those antagonisms, which are too often engendered in the heat of political contests. AU parties desire your approving smile, and therefore all are encour aged by your presence. I know that in the direct administration of political affairs you have no share; but yet, reigning as you do, supreme in the realm of love, your influence often controls the deStiny of nations. Wo man's love is the great lever which rouses man to action. The general, as he plans the strategetic combinations which are to insure victory, looks forward to a recompense dearer than the laurels upon his brow ; the soldier, as he trudges along on the weary march, or mingles in the scenes of the battle-field, even with death around him, forgets awhile the carnage, and turns his thoughts-.to the fond girl he left behind him; the mariner, tempest tossed, driven by the rude waves, sings mer rily aloft as he thinks of the little cottage by the shore, where his wife and dear ones await him; the statesman, as he devises amid deep and painful thought, plans of government, which are to tell upon his own and his coun try's fame, never loses sight of the joys which await him when cabinet councils are over, and he enters the portals of home ; the senti nel, as he paces his weary watch, loves the moonlight tramp, that he may look beneath its rays at the dear memento of a mother's or. a sister's love. Over man, in all his relation ships, the influence of woman hangs like a charm. Deprive us of your influence, which dignifies and stimulates us to noble deeds, and we become worse than barbarians. Let it be ours, and we can brave the cannon's mouth, or face danger in ton thousand forms. You stimulate all that is good. You cheek us in ignoble purposes. You have also an important influence upon posterity. The ear ly impressions which the child receives from you outlive all the wisdom of later days.— Sages may reason, and philosophers may teach, but the voice which we heard in infancy will ever come to our ears, bearing a mother's words and a mother's counsel. Continue to instil into your children virtue and patriotism. Imbue then with proper veneration for the fathers of liberty. Learn them to love their country, and to labor for its good, as the great aim of their ambition. Bid them proud ly maintain our institutions. Point them to the deeds of their ancestors. Make these their escutcheon, and bid them hand it clown to their children as free from stain as it came to them. Do this, ladies, and your influence will not - be lost in the future. In the lan guage of the poet, it will still be said : Woman is lovely to the sight. As gentle as the dews of eycn, As bright as morning's earliest light, And spotless as the snows of Heaven Peculiar Customs of the Japanese A letter from Japan gives some particulars of the manners and customs of that peculiar people. In some respects they appear to be more virtuous than people boasting of a. high er civilization. Malversation by a function ary, embezzlement of public funds, extortion, bribery of officials, coining of false money, murder and robbery, are punished with death s and not only of the guilty person, but of his father, children, arid even all his male rela tives, who are executed at the same moment, however distant they may be one from an other. This system, which is repugnant to European notions, and to sound principles of justice, appears to be adopted by the Japan. ese from the belief that crime is owing to bad education. The rpodes of punishment adopted in Ja pan are of different sorts, but all are horri \ ble. The principal is crucifixion, and is' e served for traitors, murderers - and incendit - ries. The culprit is fastened on the cross, head downwards, and is left to die, unless he obtains the favor of being dispatched by stabs from a poignard. For parricide and adulte ry, culprits are plunged into boiling oil,--: Editor and Proprietor. NO, it. Petty robberies, insults, calumny, fraud, even at play, and false testimony before magis, trates, aro punished by , hanging or behead ing, If the offenders be gentlemen or sol diers, their bowels are opened , —they have even the privilege of performing the opera tion on themselves. Pecuniary fines are al most unknown. The corporal punishment of the whip and the bastinado are reserved for slaves and servants, and are inflicted by their masters, not by public executioners. The Japanese consider corporal punishment so degrading that mothers never strike their off, spring, Although the climate is enervating, yet children are brought up hardily. They are made to hear hunger, thirst, cold, pain, ex cessive labor, and the rigor of the seasons. Horror of falsehood and fraud, and love of modesty, justice and virtue, are diligently in culcated. One of the results of this system of education is to inspire the Japanese with a passion for hooks, which causes surprise in European visitors. The bookselling trade in Japan is subjec ted to no restriction, and there are everywhere even in towns of small population, numerous book shops. Great part of the literature of the Japanese is Chinese ; and their knowl edge of arts and agriculture is derived from the same people, The language commonly em ployed is every year heron-ing-more Chinese in character. And yet th,e Japanese despise the Chinese ; they do so because from their early age they have been taught that the Chi nese are not soldiers ; that in ancient times a Japanese army defeated an immense Chinese army in the Corea ; and that Coxinga himself, who was the scourge of the sea and the terror of the Chinese Empire, was a Japanese—as were also the greater part of his companions. A Lqtter from China, The China correspondent of the Ne w Hampshire Patriot, in his last letter, dated Hong Kong, May 16, and published in the Patriot of the 24th ult., gives the following items :—.. "An incident occurred at Malacca which was extremely touching. You have heard of the horrible massacres perpetrated by the na tives of India upon the English. At an en tertainment given on board our ship to the good people of the town, among the guests was Mrs. Robertson, the wife of a lieutenant 'in the British army in India, who .gave us a very exciting account of her almost miracu lous escape from the mutineers. her hus k band had left her in a place of safety, as ho thought ; but she was advised to go to Cawn pore, which was strongly garrisoned. She followed the advise, but had been themonly a short time when the alarm gun was fired, and all was terror and confusion. " The mutineers seized the guns and turned them upon the buildings where the treasury was kept. She was told that she must try to save herself. Upon this she took her little child, about eighteen months old, leaving the infant with the native nurse to follow. She ran some distance through a shower of grape shot, and strangely escaped untouched ; but found that the nurse with the infant did not appear. She immediately laid the child which she bad in a place of temporary seouri, ty, and rushed back through the continued showers of grape to find her unconscious babe. But the nurse had fled and left the infant, which the mother had seized and rushed again to the place where she had left her other child; seizing that, she ran about seven miles, until she came across a party of fugitives, like herself, and taking advantage of a gun carriage which they had with them, she traveled many miles in that way. For two days her poor little infant subsisted upon dirty water, the mother being unable to nour ish it in the natural way, and fur two weeks their only nourishment was bran and, water, such as are given to horses in India. " With such perils and sufferings the heroic mother succeeded in effecting her escape, and what was more to her, that of her two hopeless children. I saw the eldest, who was a daughter, and interested us all deeply by the history of her young life. Yet the little thing, however, was as happy and sportive as though nothing had occurred. Not so with the mother, on whose memory the terrible scenes through which she had passed were impressed beyond the poSsibility of efface ment, and who seemed to hear the whizzing balls and start at the shout of the murderous sepoys as they rushed for her and her uncon scious infants, just as though the savage tragedy was then 'occurring. " I gave you in a former communication a notice of the Execution Ground,' at Canton, and my visit to it. The other day a gentle, man told me he was there a short time since, when he saw twenty-four Chinamen marched into the horrid arena, with their hands bound and their executioners at their sides. The prisoners were required to kneel and bend their heads forward, which they did without the least apparent fear, concern or emotion, when a single blow severed the head from the body, and both fe„..klpon the blood-steeped ground. The Chin seem to attach no value to the lives of others or even their own. " The other day 4, steamer came in and an chored near• us, which had on board a fright ful article as part of her cargo. The name of the steamer was the Fiery Cross, which sailed from Calcutta, and was close in our wake all our way from Penang. The article was the body of Yeh, the late Governor of Canton, who had made the Exeention Ground such a Golgotha by the decapitation, on that narrow spot, of more than a hundred thous and Chinamen in two years leing at last taken poisoner by the English, after the cap, ture of Canton, he was sent to Calcutta a. year ago, where he was kept in confinement. He became sulky and silent when he found his dignity and power were gone, and the ]'nglish and others ceased to lionize him or even to show him the attention they did to the most common men. His proud spirit was broken, he sicken and died. And such was the end of the monster. The steamer remained here for a night, and then left for Canton, were the body was given up to the Chinese authorities for interment." Mar The Muncy (Pa.) Luipinary of Au gust 23, says : " We have the particulars of a most terri ble calamity which occurred near Red Bluff, on the Sacramento river, California, on the 12th of May last. The residence of Colonel E. Stevenson, late Indian agent, was set on fire by an Indian boy in his employ, ear ly in the morning, and the entire family of Colonel Stevenson, consisting of his wife and three children, together with the wife of a Mr. Front and two children, perished in the flan es. The hey instigated; to the terrible deed by five Indians, in the absence of Col. Stevenson, Mrs, Stevenson was the daugh ter of the late Jonathan Marcy, of Willkes barre, and the niece of the Rev. george C. Drake, of this borough," Thar The Protestant Bishop of Durham who lately died (Mr. Malby,) made a will dispo sing of property worth $1,000,000—5500,000 of which went as "personality" to his family,