HHHBHHBHHHHIHBBHHSHBHHSHHBBSHBHBSSBBBBBBBBHBHHHBBSSBHBBBBHH^ Vol WXV.-Wliolc Ho. 1537, Rales of Advertising. One square, 18 lines, 2 squares, C mos. §5. 1 time 50 " 1 year "8.00 2 times 75 A column, 3 mos. 6.0U 3 44 1.00 44 6 44 10.00 I mo. 1.25 " i year 15.00 3 " 2.50 1 column, 3 mos. 10.00 6 4 4 4.00 44 c 44 15.00 1 year G.OO 44 1 year 25.00 2 squares, 3 times 2.00 Notices before mar ■' 3 mos. 3.50 riages, Ac. §l2. Communications recommending persons for office, must be paid in advance at the rate of 25 cents per square. [From the Louisville Journal.) SERENADE. Look out upon the night, lady, 'Tis sweetest in life's iiours ; Theloving moon is kissing now The little loving flowers The air goes whisp'ring by, lady, And murmurs to each tree As softly with its perfumed breath As I would fain to thee! Look out upon the night, lady, Look out on yonder star ; It gazeth on its earthly love Night after night afar ; My love is like that star, lady, "it burnetii bright and fair, And though a cloud may dim its ray, It still burns brightly there ! Look out upon the night, lady, See how the moon awakes A thousand things to live and love In ail the forest brakes ; Thy love was like the. moon, lady, O'er all it shed its light, And made my life a lovely thing— How beautiful, how bright! Look out upon the night, lady, The moon is growing dim ; A mighty storm grows o'er the sky. And hushed is night's low hymn* So dimmed beneath life's cloud, lady, The light of love to me— And like you moon, so fled the hope, The hope i had in thee! Look out upon the night, lady, See how thy love's decay Has spread a shadow o'er my heart— My light has passed away ; Do'st see yon dark abyss, lady, So full of shadows strange, Where light showed many a lovely form ! E'en such is my heart's change ! Look out upon the night, lady, For love aione 'tis meet— Its magic and its loveliness, Alas! like it are fleet! The dew-drops on the grass, lady, Beneath the glare of noon, Leave not a faintc-r trace behind, Nor pass one-half so soon ! Columbus, {Miss.) March, 1849. R 4 ***. jfH tj9crll<mcouo. SEW SPA PER PATRUNACE. j r This tiuug called newspaper patronage :■> a curious thing. It is composed of as many colors as a rainbow, and is as change- j iUe as a chamclion. One man subscribes for a newspaper and ;.us for it in advance; he goes home and •ids it with the proud satisfaction that it .-. his own. He hands in an advertise ment, asks the price and pays for it.— This is newspaper patronage. Another man says please to put my name on your list of subscribers ; and he goes off" without as much as having said pay once. He asks you to advertise, but says nothing about pay for it. Time passes, your pa tience is exhausted and you dun him. He j il es in a passion, perhaps pays, perhaps j not. Another man has been a subscriber a •ng time. He becomes tired of you and u 'dnts a change. Thinks he wants a city ' piper. Tells the postmaster to discontin ue, and one of his papers is returned to you marked 44 refused." Paying up for it is among the iast of his thoughts ; besides he ar.ts his money to send to a city publisher, j After a time you look over his account, a:id see a bill of 44 balance due." But does :.e pay it cheerfully and freely f YVe av 4 him to answer. This, too, is news ;per patronage. Another man lives near you—never took • our paper—it is too small —dou t like the -.tor—don't like the politics—loo Whig- j t - i, or too something else —yet goes reg- j - sriv to his neighbor and reads his by a xl fire —finds fault with its contents, dis x-s its positions, and quarrels with its , y. Occasionally sees ail article he likes : -M*es half a dime and begs a number. ' too, is newspaper patronage. Another sports a fine horse, or perhaps pair of them—is always seen with whip ind and spur tn foot —single man —no ; for him to take a newspaper—knows • jh. Finally he concludes to get mar- j <—d >es so —sends a notice of the fact '■ a 4l please publish and send me hall / a copies." This done, does he ever j • for notice or papers? No hut purely j J don't charge for such things !' Ibis j i newspaper patronage. ' v >ther man (hle-s you, it does us good hucii a man) comes and says the which 1 paid is about to expire, j I want to pav for another. He does 1 "I retires. •D* r H not newspaper patronage a " thing ? and in that great day i hnilest men get the reward due to j ' ><>** ty, which ay you, of those enu- | above, will obtain that reward ? j * *iil be seen that, while certain "of patronage are the very life and 'tice of a newspaper' there ate cer '•o'tr kinds that will kill a paper stone YANKEE DECISION. Sometime between the years 1812 and 14, when considerable animosity existed between the people in Canada and the United Stales, and when some of the Brit ish subjects who were "dressed with a little brief authority," looked upon the yankees as but little better than brutes—the follow ing is said to have taken place at the Cus tom House at St. Johns : A Yankee of considerable dimension en tered the office and informed the officer that he wished to enter the load and re ceive a passport. The officer.cast a sarcas tic look at him, and said that it was cus tomary for people when they entered his office to receive passports to take off their hats, and requested him to do so immedi ately. " No, 1 thank yer," said the Y r ankee, "1 j gin four dollars and a half for that hat to keep my head and ears warm." " Y'ou impertinent puppy," said the offi cer, working himself into considerable of a passion, " how dare you insult mo ? OIT with your hat immediately." " No, sir-ee, can't do it, keeps toy head proper warm." After several orders of a similar kind accompanied with curses and threats which met with no better success, he stepped up to him and gave his hat a blow which sent it to an adjacent corner of the room. The Yankee paid no attention to this, but waited patiently until he had received his passport, folded and safely deposited it within his wallet,and was ready to pursue his journey, when, turning to the officer, he requested him to pick up his hat and put it on his head. The officer, who was wroth, ordered him to leave the office, or he might get in to trouble—for he did not waste words with men of his description. " I say, mister," said the Y'ankee, " you must pick up my hat, and that in one min ute's tune, or you shall feel the weight of these mauls," shaking his fists nearer to his lordship's face than was agreeable. The officer raved and swore all to no effect, and then threatened to cane him, if I he did not depart. 44 Mister," said the Yankee, 44 time passes considerable kinder fastand at the same time beginning to unbutton his coat, ! " and you had better be going after that • hat." After several more threats, which had the desired effect upon his opponent, and the titne being nearly expired, he sneaked off for the hat, and offered it to the owner, but he was not satisfied with that, and or dered him to put it on his head, precisely as he found it. The officer hesitated, but seeing the determination of the Yankee, he set it upon his head, and was about to de part when he was collared and ordered to place it as he found it. "Here," said the Yankee, " tuck this hat under, pul! it down more in front, stick under that left ear," etc., all of which or ders the officer reluctantly fulfilled. "That, sir, that's about right," said the Yankee, "and now, my friend, before 1 leave, I'll gin you a small word of advice —never meddle with a yankee's hat, unless you are prepared to take a peep into futurity.— Good morning, sir." Speech of Lot Doolittle, On the Bill for the Protection of If<n Roosts. Mistur Speaker —I've sot here in my seal and hcered the opponents of this great nashunal measure expexlorate agin it, till I'm purty nigh bursted with indig nant commotions of my laseerated sensibil ities. Mistur Speaker, are it possible that men can he so infatuated as to vote agio this bill? Mistur Speaker, allow rne to picture to youi axcited and denuded im agination some of the heart rending evils which arise from the want of purtection to hen roosts, in my vicinity, among my con stituents. Mistur Speaker, we will sup pose it to be the awful and melancholy hour of midnight—all nature am hushed in repose —the solemn wind softly moans through the waving branches of the trees, and nought is heered to bieak the solemn choly stillness, save an occasional grunt from the hog-pen ! I will now carry you in imagination to that devoted hen-house. Behold its peaceful and happy inmates, gently declining in balmy slumbers on their elevated and majestic roosts ! Look at the aged and venerable and highly re spectable rooster, as he keeps his silent vigils with patience and unmitigated watch fulness over those innocent, helpless hens and pullets ! Just let your eyes glance around arid behold that dignified and mat ronai hen, who watches with tender solici tude and paternal congaulatiori of those httle juvenile chickens who crowd nround their respectful progenitor, and nestle under her circumambient wings. Now I ask, Mistur Speaker, am there to be found a wretch BO lost and abandoned as will enter that peaceful and happy a bode, and tear those interesting little bid dies from their agonised and heart-broken parents ? Mistur Speaker, 1 answer in thunder tones, there am ! Are there any thing so rr. ?an and sneaking as such a rob bery 1 No, there are not ! You may search the wide uuiver-e, from the natives who repose in solitary grandeur and super lative majesty under the shade I*ll ! cetlara that grow upon the tops of tlie flitn | muleh mountains in the valley of Josophat, down to the degraded and barbarous sav ages who repose in obscurity in their mis erable wigwams on the rock of Gibralter in the Gulf of Mexico, and then you will be so much puzzled to find any thing so mean, as you would to see the earth re volve around the sun once in the twentyfour hours without the aid of a telescope. Mistur Speaker, I feel that I have said enough on this subject to convince the most obstinate member o( the unapproacha ble necessity of a law which shall forever and everlastingly put a stop to these fowl proceedings, and I propose that every con victed offender shall suffer the penalty of the law as follows: For the first offence, he shall he obliged to suck twelve rotten eggs, with no salt on 'em. For the second offence, he shall he oblig ed to set on twenty rotten eggs, till he hatches 'em. Mistur Speaker, all 1 want is for every member to act on this subject according to his conscientiousness. Let him do this, and he will he remembered everlastingly by a graceful posterity. Mister Speaker, I've done. Where's my hat ? '1 he eloquent gentleman, according to the Boston Post's report, here donned his sealcap, and sat down, apparently much exhausted. What Are You Lookinz For ? A man was angry with his wife, as was often the case, either because she talked too much or contradicted him, or for some othei reason ; in short he was out of humor with her, and resoived not to speak a single word to her for a long, long time. He kept his resolution for a few days very strictly. One evening he is lying in bed, and wish es to sleep ; he draws his night-cap over his ears, and his wife may say what she will, he hears nothing of it. The wife then takes a candle, and car ries it into every hole and corner ; she re moves stools, and chairs and tables, and looks carefully behind them. The hus band sits up in bed, and gazes inquiringly at her movements; he thinks that the din must have an end at last. But he is mistaken. His wife keeps on looking and searching. The husband loses patience and cries— -44 What are you looking for ?" " For your tongue,," she answers, "and now that 1 have found it. tell me why you are angry ?" Hereupon they become good friends j again. POETICAL.— In a city well known to every hod} , (if they can find out the name,) a poetical genius was hauled before a ma gistrate for kissing a girl and kicking up a dust, and the following dialogue ensued: Magistrate—ls your name John Jay ? Piisoner —Yes, }our honor, so the peo ple say. M agistrate— Was it you that kissed the girl and raised the alarm ? Prisoner-Yes, your honor, but I thought it was no harm. Magistrate —You rascal ! did you come here to nuke rhymes ? Prisoner —No, your honor, hut it will happen sometimes. Magistrate—Be o(T, you scamp, get out of my sight. Prisoner —Thank'ee, your honor, then I'll hid you good night. SSORIXO. —" My uncle P was an awful snorer. He could be heard further than a blacksmith's forge, but my aunt he came ?o accustomed to it that it soothed her repose. They were a very domestic couple, and never slept apart for many years. At length my uncle was required to attend a court, at some hundred miles distant. The first night after his depar ture my aunt never slept a wink ; she uns eed the snoring. The second night passed away in the same manner, without sleep. She was getting into a very bud way, and wuuhl possibly have died bad it not been for the ingenuity of a servant girl ; she took the coffee mill into my aunt's cham ber, and ground her to sleep at once. TIIF. LAKE THAT HAS NO TUKNINO. — Q- What lane do the ladies like best to walk in ? A. Mouseline de laine. Q. What lane do the ladies like best to walk OUT of? A. MAIDEN LANE. The last resource to raise the wind is that of a shrewd and unscrupulous yankce, who bought a bushel ol shoo pegs and on discovering ihev were made of rotten wood, sharpened the other end and solu them tor outs ! RELIGO MEDICI. —At a parish examina tion, it clergyman asked u charity boy if he had ever boon baptized. " No, sir," was the reply " as 1 knows of, but I've been waxinated." A man was boasting about his know ledge of the world when, a wag in compa ny asked him if he had ever been in Alge bra. " I cannot exactly tell,' said he, "hull think 1 once passed it on the coach. SATURDAY, JUYF 23, 1849. The Ultraist Cualilion. We have noticed more than once the extraordinary combination which unites the | Nullifiers of the South and the Abolitionists iof ilie North in a harmonious agreement upon the subject of disunion. 44 A contin uance in the Union, as it is," say the Nul lifiers, 44 will ruin us politically and pecu. niarily, and corrupt us morally." The Abolitionists chime in with beautiful con cord. "We confess," such is their lan* | guage, 41 that we intend to trample under loot the Constitution of this country ; wc i call upon you to do likewise." It is kind in these gentlemen, having such formidable intentions, to give the coun try notice of their designs. We have no doubt but that they truly deplore the ne cessity they are under of trampling upon the Constitution, and would avoid such an unpleasant extremity if they could do so consistently with their sense of solemn ob ligations. The fly sitting upon the ox's horn was not more distressed ai the idea of his being oppressive to the ox, apologising in the most polite manner for persisting in such a liberty, than are these friends of man, under the self imposed persuasion that they are bound 10 dissever the Union and destroy the Constitution. A painful duty, especially to the tenderhearted ! But since the thing must be done, the sooner the agony is over the better. It is annoyiug, and to nervous persons extreme ly worrying, to live in the constant appre hension of a great catastrophe ; as, for in stance, to go to bed, night after night, not knowing but that they may wake up in the morning and find the Union broken and the Constitution ttumpled under foot. Willing to know the worst, rather than continue in a state of deplorable uncertain ty and alarm, we venture to suggest to the amiable philanthropists of tho North and the inflammable fire-eaters of South Caro lina, that agieeingas they do in their high and solemn purpose of destroying tho U mon, they should meet together in Conven tion, and fix upon some system of co-oper ative action, by which their great cause may be forwarded, and be put in the way of a successful consummation. We under take at once to invite them to meet in the city of Baltimore—a central point, easy of access, and known to be a hospitable place. Mr. Calhoun and Mr. Gariison might fra ternize here with loving sympathy, and to the great edification of surrounding specta tors. There are many convenient struct tires in our city where the Convention might h<-Id its sittings ; but in view of its great design, and with an eye to properac commodation, we might mention the top of the Washington Monument as admirably adapted to tho purpose proposed. The municipal authorities will probably have the city clean by the time the Convention meets, so that, altogether, the delegates i mav expect to have a very good time. Baltimore American. A MAIDEN LADY'S SOLILOQUY. —'Tis wonderous strange, how great ttie change since I was in my teen ; then 1 had a beau i arid a billet-doux, and enjoyed the gavest scenes. But lovers now have censed to vow ; no way they now contrive to poison, drown or hang themselves—because I'm thirty five. Once, if the night was ere so bright, I ne're abroad could roam, without —' The bliss, the honor, Miss, of seeing j you safe home.' But now 1 go, through rain or SHOW —fatigued and scarce alive— j through all the dark, witiiout a spark be j cause I'm thirty five. ] George Sciwin once affirmed in compa j ny that no woman ever wrote a letter with | out a postscript. 4 My next letter shall re fute you,'said lady G . Selwin soon after received u letter from her ladyship, when, after her signature, stooJ— 4 P. S. Who was right now, you or I ?' SATI-FACTORY DEFINITION.—A little girl asked Iter sister, 44 what was chaos, that papa read about ?" The cider sister re plied, 44 why it is a great pile of nothing, and no place to put it." A 44 single man" advertising for em. ployment, a maiden lady wrote to inform ium thai if he could find nothing to do he might come and marry her. He did so, i and touched twenty thousand pounds. _ A barrister observed to a learned bro ther in court a short time since, that the wearing of whiskers was unprofessional. 'Right,' replied the friend, 4 a lawyer cannot be too barefaced.' A TEST.-" Tom, stand out of the way of that gentleman." 44 How do you know he is a gentloman ?" 44 Because he has got on striped trousers." LOVE YOUR ENEMIES.—A clergyman told an Indian he should love his enemies. 44 I do," said the latter, 44 for I love ruin and cider." 44 IF you say another crooked word I'll knock your brains out," said a blacksmith to his termagant wife. 41 Ram's horns, if I die for it !'* 44 An honest man'? word is as good as his bond," is a trito maxim. So is a rogue's in nine cases out of ten. (Efjoicc Extracts. A CHRISTIAN'S LIFE. lie envied not the pomp and power Of kings in their triumphant hour, The deeds that win a lofty name, The songs that give to bards their fame. He sighed not for the gold that shines In Guinea's brooks, in Ophir's mines; lie stood not at the festivals Of nobles in their gorgeous halls. He walk'd on earth as wood-streams pass, Unseen beneath the freshened grass : His were pure thoughts, and humble faith, A blameless life, and tranquil death. He kept in days of strife and wrath, The christian's straight and narrow path, But weep thou not—we must not weep— When they who rest in Jesus sleep. Think of it, Reader. In a few short years—perhaps a year or a month—perhaps to-qiorrow—you may be called hence, and forced to part with all your fine possessions. You must lay down your pride— for Heath humbles all—you must resign your wealth, and take up your little abode among the worms ! What a humiliating thought that the millionaire—the proud beauty—all the en vied of earth—may to-morrow be food for worms ! Isn't that an extremity, reader ? If people would think more, there would be less vanity and more real happiness on earth. The i richest man is as poor as the beggar—aye, ! a thousand times poorer, when death knocks at | his door—lor all his wealth cannot prolong | life an hour. Who is rich, then? The man of 1 millions ?. No. The beggar?— No. Who, then? He who fears God, and loves his neighbor as himself. Neither money nor position can make man happy. IMMORTALITY OF THE SOUL. BY ADDISON. There is not, in my opinion, a more pleasing and triumphant consideration in religion than that of" the perpetual progress of the soul towards the perfection of its na- i ture, without ever arriving at a period in it. To look upon the soul as going on in strength, to consider that she is to shine with new accessions of glory, and brighten to all eternitj r , that she will be adding vir tue to virtue, and knowledge to knowledge, carries in it something wonderfully agreea ble to that ambition which is natural to the mind of man. Nay, it must be a prospect ; pleasing to God himself, to see his creation forever beautifying in his eyes, and draw- i ing nearer to him by greater degrees of re- ; semblance. Methinks this single consideration of the progress of a finite spirit to perfec tion will be sufficient to extinguish all en vy in inferior natures, and all eontempt in superior. That cherubim, which now ap pears as a God to the human soul, knows very well that the period will come about in eternity, when the human soul shall be as perfect as he himself is ; nay, when she shall look down upon that degree of per fection as much as she now falls short of it. It is true, the higher nature still ad vances, and by that means preserves his distance and superiority in the scale of be ing ; but he knows that, how high soever the station is of which he 6tands possessed ; at present, the inferior nature will at length mount up to it, and shine forth in the same 1 degree of glory. With what astonishment and veneration may we look into our own, where there are such hidden stores of virtue and knowledge, such inexhausted sources of perfection ! We know not yet what wo shall be, nor will it enter into the heart of man to con ceive the glory that will be always in re serve for him. The soul, considered with its Creator, is like one of those mathemat ical lines, that may draw nearer to ono an other, for all eternity, without a possibility of touching it; and can there be a thought so transporting as to consider ourselves in these perpetual approaches to HIM who is not only the standard of perfection, but of happiness. FoilE I G N IV EW S BY THE STEAMER CAMBRIA. From the intelligence brought by this steamer, we select the latest items of news published in the city papers : ENGLAND. —There has been no further debate in Parliament relative to the affairs of Canada. Lord Clarendon, who had been on a visit to London, has returned to Dublin. Nothing has transpired to induce the be lief that the Irish State prisoners, under a sentence of death, will be pardoned. Extrerno misery still pervades unhappy Ireland. Such is the destitution in one particular district, that a corpse recently washed ashore, was seized and greedily devoured by tho starving inhabitants. The cholera has made its appearance in London, and prevails also in many parts of the country. FRANCE. —The dissolution of the French National Assembly took place on the2ith, and passed over without tumult. Tho new Legislative Assembly met for the transac tion of business o.i the '2Bth, and oil the 30th was the scene of one of the most vio lent debates that ever occured in any de liberative body. The French Expedition ary forces are still encamped outside ol Home; M. Lcsscps, the envoy, having to tally failed thus far to persuade the llo mans to admit the French either as friends or as enemies. Upon a close analysis of the election, it appears that about two hundred and ten, New Scries—Vol. 3 —No. :*.• or at most two hundred and forty ultia democratic members have been returned, which is something more than double the number that they were expected to elect, and will give them a vastly greater influ ence in the present, than they possessed iri the old Assembly. There are rising of , ."300 members elected by the various other parties, but they are so split up and divi ded in sentiment, that it is considered doubtful about their being able to unito upon leading questions of public policy.— Personal disputes among the leading mem bers of the several parties, would seem to give small promise that the President will be able to select a ministry strong enough to carry on the Government with that de gree of firmness so much to be desired. VEMCE.-The Austrians are making tre mendous efl'ortsto take the fort of Malgher, but as yet wtihout success. Upwards of 500 shells are thrown every day, but they bury themselves generally in the sand, and do no harm. General Haynau having sent an order to the consuls that all foreign ves sels of war were to leave Venice, theso ' gentlemen have replied that they can re ceive no orders from an Austrian general, but that they want instructions from their ! governments. Food is becoming very scarce in Venice. A difficulty has occurred between the Austrians and Americans at Leghorn.— i The American ships before Leghorn took | upon themselves to save the greater part i of the compromised persons, or leaders of ! the revolution of Leghorh—some say, as I Brother Jonathan always does, as a mcr | cantile speculation. THE PATAE STATES. London, June 2.—We have letters from Rome to the 23d u!t. They state that the armistice between the French aud Romans, which would expire on the 25th, had been extended for ten days. The Austrian Gen eral, Aspre, was advancing on Rome at the head of between 12,000 and 15,000 troops ; but General Oudinot had forwarded a dis patch to the imperial officer, requesting him to suspend his march for the piesent. The defeat of the Neapolitans, on the 19th, at Velletri, is confirmed. The Minister of War and Marine of Rome, Joseph Avezzana, publishes two bulletins signed by Roselli, Commander in Chief of the Roman troops sent against the Neapoli tans; the first, dated from head quarters under Velletri, at one o'clock after mid night on the 20th, stating that the Neapol itans, 6000 in number, sallied from Velletri on the 19th and attacked the Roman van guard under Garibaldi, but were repulsed with the loss of 30 prisoners and many dead and wounded ; the main body coming up under General Roselli, then attacked Velletri, and the fire lasted till dark. The second bulletin is dated from Velletri itself, at half past nine a. m. of the 20th, and announces that the advanced detach ments, sent forward to reconnoitre, discov ered that the town had been evacuated during the night by the Neapolitans. The Romans were in the act of entering it at the time stated by the bulletin. Letters from Naples dated the 22d ult., confirm in every way the Roman accounts of the defeat of the Neapolitan force at Velletri. AUSTRIA AND HUNGARY. —Accounts from Venice, dated May 28, announce offi cially that the fortress of Buda was taken by assault on the 21st. The Vienna Re forme of tho 29th May states that the prin cipal officer was killed ; all the Crotian offi cers and soldiers were put to the sword,tha castle and some private houses were pil laged. The major who commanded the troops from the frontiers, occupying the fortified bridge with 200 men, ordered them to blow up the bridge; but he was not obeyed. lie then himself set fire to tho mine under the bridge but failed, and tho building suffered no injury. The major alone was killed. The Hungarian Republic was proclaim ed at Ivaschaw on 27th of April. All tho Servians, from 15 to forty years of age, were on the 15th pressed at Neusatz into the Magyar army. The defeat of the Servians by Gen. Per ezel and the entrance of the latter into Pan czova, is confirmed. After levying a con. tribution upon the inhabitants, he retired. The fortresses Ofen, Temcsvas, Arad, and Carlsburg, are beseiged by the Hun garians ; and it would appear that tho lat ter three have already surrendered.— Such at least are the rumors given by the ministerial papers of Vienna. The Victory in the Rothcnfhtirm Pass. —The Democratic Pacitique has private and authentic advices from Hungary, which confirm the reported victory of Bern over tho Russians in the Rothenlhurm Pass in Transylvania. The reason why there is any doubt or obscurity with re gard to recent movements in Hungary is that the Austrian authorities take all pos sible means of suppressing intelligence fiorn thai quarter. The Democratic affirms positively that the Russian advanced guard suffered a check near Jablunka, some thirty miles from Cracrow, in consequence of which a division laid down its arms, abandoning its artillery, with horses and equipage, its •aggage, munitions and materials of war. in the defiles ofFperies Dembinski has beaten ttie Russians, and driven the whole body which was advancing by that route
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers