MM=MI; "araigovi) gtopintce. / 4,1 .1).- I. 4vP SP 4 melk, Xree-Men Nl~w for Free Terraorm. co. GOODRICH, EDITOR. Towanda, Satasday, July, 31, 1852 —Titans of Tito Reporter.- , gm 50 per annum—if paid withtra the year 50 cents will berefedneted—ful cash paid actually in advance* t 00 will be deducted. No paper sent over two years. unless paid for. ADVEIIIIEXII4ri., p er square of ten tines. 50 cents, for the test sad 25 croft for each sulisetkileal insertion. ErClffice in the 4 . Enton Blocs." north side of the I...bhe hiquateOtext door to the Bradford Hotel. Entrance beiwecn Messrs. Adams , end Elwell's taw offices, Democratic ICominaticns. • Iron PIICSIDFICT, GEN. FRANKLIN PIERCE, OF 'LW 111)11 . 1 . 011/E• lOU ytcs rucsi LENT, WILLIAM R. KING. or ALAB•I.I.I. lOU C.LW AL CPI.I3IISSIONER. WM. SEARIGHT. of Ifayelie County The Difficulties about the Fisheries The Cod-ti-heries of die north-east coam of Am erica, have been,'at different periods Fillet/ the me rattier', a source of much bitterness of feeling be tween the fishermen of the two nations, (England Arnetica,) as wed as the subject of much di plomatic disputation and national disquietude. By a new consiluction of the ILA article of the convention of 1818, the B. itidt Ministry, it f eemg, flow seek• to esclude American ft•hermen Iron: all the fisheries on - the'cost, which yields anythi-g like rennmeration. They clsim—aiidthe careless wording of this ar , tide wilt bear the .construction—that Ambrican fishermen most nog come within three milesbt any chord, draw.r from one cape, promontory or head land to another, throng r the center, irr any wirer point of said chord, may be a hundred mites from the shore. This arbitrary construct:nu has long been contended for by the British colonial fisherman ; but n has never before now, been encouraged, or lis. toned to by the home government. The Tory Min i.try, now in power, have !t-eided to .put that con. 'unction in tome immediately, although they have practically conceded the right of American li-lrer. men, to take fish three miles from any such shore, for thirty-flour years. And this enforcement is al tempted without a word of notification in our govern ment. The first intimation of such determination being a marine force, sent to those fishing wounds, with order to seize ail American- fishing vessels found wfthrn the claimed limits. This in a case so iMpOrISUit, is a btile,too unceremonious to be submitted to by the people of this country, however ;t may affect the stomachs of !ha IrTPEC/11 adminis tration. What Mr Waraccrt will recommend to the t're 'Latent, remains to be seen. lie says that he does not agree that this-constrUction of the conventim is la accordance with the Miention of thacuns:ructing• parties, and thinks it may endanger the peace of the two countries. We think so too. The fuller .es furnish business and mean: of support for a very tiameroat class of the people of New &Oa:id-- They ma a peculiarly robust, enterprrsing and people and they will not submit to have the - e rightir which they Rielly deem common to the whole human family taken friim tent by the myt m Onus. of Madame Balt, without a tussle. They have fi-h -ed for cod, and caught then), and made chowder of them, on all the American tisbirig grounds, from the first Kettle:Wein of thiS country- to the present day; ana ttey will continue so to do n by some meant or other, as long as a cod or a haddock wags hit tail on the American coast. This is as fixed as fate; ari2 if the English will tight übout it, wny they must fight, that'B It is greatly to be regretted that a case so omin ous of a collision between the two nations, should have occurred With DANIEL WEI:KIER at the head a the State department. indeed, it may well be doubted whether the hlinistry would have ventured to take a step so boldly defiant and ag greseie, had they not calculated on impunity from that circumstance. They very well know what they have heretofore done with us, with the. same Daniel at the head of the State department. They remember his bombastic flourish about taking mil- itary possession of the disputed territory ; on the 4th of July ; and they remember the resuli.of the diplo matio visit of Lord America - I . ON. They also remem• bes the visit of Ms. ‘VEDSTEII to England, in 1839, the object of that visa, the contract made by him, its min-fulfillment on his part, and his readiness to give them half of the State of Maine as a compro mise, for the time being._ For ought we can know there yet may :amain a heavy balance: Am.other money monarch may come to defnand the other half of Maine,'llie exclusive right to the fisheries, or any thing else they may take fancy to. What securi ty have we, whist that 111811 remains at the head of the Suite affairs, that the rights and interest of the nation will not be sacrificed to British rapacity t ft ts, indeed, a bad slate of things. theop Petbiteallon Depot. Da. IL C. PJRTICa has established at his Drug S.cre, a Depot for the Fate of Cheap publications, r. los the delivery and sale of the various Maga iine Literature of the day. Magazines will be re ceived anti ready t for delivery as soon as they are published, and iettavance of any other method by which they can be obtained. We are indented to the Doctor fur a Harper's Magazine for Angust, and he assures us that he intent's that they shall always be on hand with equal punctusli . y. Orders will also be received and execaleS, for all the publications of the day, for late books, and for ell articles usually vended in a Publication Depot 11.itY.15'roax.-4 thunder storm accompanied by hail passed over this place, on Thursday afternoon last. The hail - wad. unusual siie, and had it come in any quantity would have fairly nitivred down the , crops. Fortunately, there was but Hide hail—but pieces were picked'op varying born three to four cruswes in weight. iedistuedzthat the iury.of the .rorm was stearly'ezhausted before ikeptched this place, and that twat of us much damage . may.have bout tioStiL;..„,§44 furls toes was occationett here by 141tirnatdal of window panes, • s 4 -poir ' . • I(Kr The kidnapped colored gill Elizabeth . Park— er, whO, it is illeged, was stolen from Chester co.; PB., seven months ago, has been at length bound in 8 - slarre.ptison in, Baltimore, wherte° she will - tie transferred to4lieonntyjailop au t o her tria l for flee:tali: l After being taken - frorn e Cheiiiter comity She watilodged in the sanici.slave frisoit, wlienee she wait transferred to a similar one in New Or leanerniined byilie same personS, and Irarii ther sold to a Louisiana planter. Wheir l it Was publicly stated at the , North that she was a fry girl, kidnap• pet', she was broughl back to Ballitnote, where her Chewer comity !hoods recoginzed her. She is the sister ol Rachel Pallier, but was claiMei in Dahi mote as being an ab.-ennded !darn named CMSUS. The lowan:tie tragedy which took pluee in regard to the seizure of her "is ter, made her own 4iarie koowu. Rachel i.. still in the lLiltiinore court ly ja;l. NA7.11. FOUCE 1 - On TrIE, Fi.ticaltq.—The New. buryport Herald announces that the U. S. meatn obit) Saranac, and lie Sloop of-war Albany, have been ordered to the Gulf of St Lawrence, to protect American fishermen Cunt Long is to command the sqnatlrott. In compliance with a request made by the Commodore . , the owners of fi-hing ve-sels at New bnryport, have deputed it committee to watt Upon firm immediately ; and advise him as to the nature and position of the grounds, and all flattens pertaining to them. Capt. Geo. %V. Knight and Capt Robett Bayley, were delegated to meet him. STIA11? Sanorrio.—M. C. Barber and W. P. Ab-, butt, two sharp•eho.)ters of Bradford Vt., each sh,.t twice at a kutle Wade, G•ur tolls di,:ant, and s;du the ball in the centre ert ry Ex. paw. Hold on gents, that very _cod —but nu have a-gentleman iu our L;orot.11, 11.. J. V ..GEtnb.a, ho split dare tral6 iu tlieo ekli:Cit,l e shins, on the edge of Suite blade four ruklz I %%ha can neat it ? Cal:ll33ll°ns riire—T6rrlble 11)Path The Albany 4411. is give.; Cte following account of a most disnessii.g scene whieh was presented to I the citizens of Albany . , on Friday evening last: List night about half-pa-t eight o'ci•,el; an explo sion was heard In the time Areinbald McClure &Co wh.ci, at once will illutotita.ed wilt tholes. Two persons w'e'e seen Iu lnno front th e —one a mass ol flames f 0:0 head to four, I.rs cal also on Gre vriich he, tossed from hint Ile tad wildly first down the Fide v. ,ilk then up, arid then in his agony lay on tlie ;ground arid tolled over \V A lt.ce ; (um: ulthe ptop.ieturs.) who had tusked afros final the opitortie side of lnu sticet, 'brew titursidt on him, ct.r.eriti - g Ins burntitg lace with his hands. alters lashed up wilt cows arid and extinginshed tic burring thud unlit which ins clothes seemed s..imtated. -- The victim was Wdltam Camber, Deputy of the Attorney Cietieial Ale iv as eat r.ed home and plac ed under charge ol Ur. St% Not linty Itic Inntts, breast and back wets badly bunted, but the hair was burned ftom his bead and lace: and it was leafed that he Lad inh.ded the fl.oce. The worst anticipations were teal:zu.l, and 1113 agony terminated, plentifully, at dead: al one o'clock this fliorfl tog. The o tier person tunr.ing down the street, in flames, uas John Vice, Cleik m the*- stow. After 'uniting some fifty feet, he iliiew himself on the ground, uliett Ald Alcktoalit, taking ca his coal, wrapped It about his limb, and quickly put out the flames. Mr Riee reunited to thu scene ut the ca• lamtiy, and for an hour or Inure e. as bu-y act Woik there and in the adjoining buit.lur2s. B.:I 1116 ioju ties were greater than i.e supposed, ant he rr as taken to Dexter & Nellt,;ar's upoltecary shop, and the usual applications made to the wounds, and at midi luta was tereoled to the tit uie of Walter F. Bush E-q. Its injuries, though eta Ito: d 's * ' ll.e tho, accorditi ,, to the account rendered by Mr. 'Limber, death, and by Mr. John Rice, ciii,titiatell in an acctdent. Mr. Bauiher de sired to putcdta-e a gallon 0: il l .e0.1(11 for ;he pu,i.nse of dissolving some camphor. Ile desired to hare it of the highest pruol, and although some of an tn. dinary Ghat actor was on dtar, he . ichiscri it, and the y i er k. c her some ut,jectionace , w uat of the ont.. vedle:l;:e larger, prcceeded to draw some of the required sire,.;'!: from a full barrel. • Mr. Member held a lamp in his Land—Mr. R using both bilids to tip the c.-k Pam which the I:- quid was drawn, 1,0 l by a faucet but horn the bung ul bat;el, a vine, of ripe' being used (•.ot toi uncommon mode) to ccuduct the stream. When the measure way tiled, Mr. 'Limber shitoped , to take it up, the light still In tits 1ik114.1 Ther e was an explosion—bow, neither could tell, which in stantly spread through the build,' g. igniting evety thing , and seizing, of course, ty.nt the dripping do hes of Mr. 'Limber, and of the clerk, the latter, however, who had.stood behind the cask pinny e,- caping the teach ul the flui.l, which (Ludy fed upon his shoes :and the lower part of his pantaloons. HoN. Jens MeKiet.ev, one of the Justices niche Supreme Com% died reeently, re,i,lenee at • Ile was lot runny years iti public life; and commenced the practice of the law in Kentucky, from whence he removed to Huntsville, Alabama, and took an active pail in the podtics ul tha. S ate. At I luresvi le he becan e eni olved in an unfortunate affair, about the year 1822, ire con sequence of having wtittea a severe personal article far one of the papers, against Mr 111(A:111[1;4,a Idw yet of Hutitsvitle, who was a candidate Ica the L. tslature. ilcClung called upon the editor ul the paper for an explanatiou The l.uter who ea.; a high spirited young man, refit ed. and Mt:Kull:ly sae kyr/ in the back grout•.l. The cott,equenve was, a street tight between Mr. MeClurer and the editor, in which affair the latter wan k tiled. The pub is excitement was great. and the leettog strong • against both :McClung end McKinley. The limn er lost his election far the Lednsla ore ; and the later removed to Florence, Alareona on the Tenn essee slyer. In 1826 Mr 111,-Ku Idj had sn recov ered his popularity that the Legislature if Alabama elected him to the Senate of the UM ed Sates, as ,a supporter of Gen. Jackson, arid he contiiiLei a member of that holy until 1831, when h e was sun . ceeded by Gabriel Moore. In 1833, the people elected Mr McKinley to the House of Kepiesentatives, but lie continued a member of that blanch of Con:Tress on'y one term. In September, 1837, he received from President Van Buren the appointment of Justice of the s o preme Court of the Untied Slates, and he has, there fore, been on the bench of the cow' nearly fifteen years. Ha some years since removed to Louisville, Kentucky. The legal talents of Judge McKinley were not considered of a very high order by members of the bar. One of his decisions as a Liicuit judge, we re collect, was unanimously ter eised by his colleagues of the supieme Court --Herald. A W ' INDFALL —A young lady in Brooklyn, natn• ed Payne, has rcrently received a lecancy amount inc to sevenly4ive thousand pounds stetting., from a Dim Gay Emanuel Hernando, a wealthy West lathe planter. This lady, it is said, was married In the planter in 1846, when she was scarcely :fit• teen years old, but the matriace having proved, an unhappy one, it was never proclaimed. Shortly af. ter he left her and took up his residence in ;slaw Orleans. In 11348 he received inhumation of his lathes death—he returned to his estate in South . America, and succeeded in increasing already ;large Fortune to one hundred acid tilly thousand lbs. sterling. As was about tb embed! for Havana ha was taken with the cholera, and died on his es• tate, bequeathing seventy fire thousand pounds to his wife (if alive,) and the whole if she never mar. rind and resided on his estate, which will' render her the wealthiest heiress inithe UnitcifEtates.— ' Lee. Pont. . : 2 -.7,, The following letter from Mr. Everett, written while he was . ouLenittistet in Englnal t _shows . ..that, the , ight of talthig fi sh in the alip'ol Fnutlat was' , concedetT in 1845 by the British goietuinent Ainerieink, vessels. The letter *4'o eunimunioatetl, BesuidOiurier by Mr, Wistilsteri.itow 'The fisheriev.of which the British 4overnment, 1, •row see/is diriiiired to assert the uninoi)ofy, are iil the very waters the freedom orwhich was conced ed to American vessels by the adtutnienation-With which Mr. - Everett negotiated : LoNuoN t 23J Apr 18-15. JA:bIES BUCHANAN, I q., Sectetaty of Shoo : Sir ; With rr' de6inooh No. 278 01 25th March, 1 totrotnsined the note of Lord Aberdeen to the 10111 •ul Match, commutticanui.the important lamination that this goveritineot had come to the demi initiation tu i;uticutie to American fi•iterrnen the tight of par- suing their occupation within the BA). of Fuudy it W11:4 left Eminewhat unceriaiu by Lord AbCrdeen's IMM2==Ol3 eutrlitn-d to the Lay id Fniudy, or to extend to other pullouts of the comps of the Anglo American pos. sessions, to wh.eh the principles contended, for by the government of the United States equally. apply, and pariieularly to the waters on the innate:went r ththes t•I Capc Breton, where the •' Argils'' was cdptureth In my tines of the 2501 ultimo and 2d Inman!, on the r•ubject of the " Washinglotr • ' and the Argus" I %%a's careful to point out to Lord ALk rdeen that all the reasons for admitting the ugh( ol Americans to fish in the Bay 01 Finely apply to thu,e waters, and with rupei/Or Lave, tiouenatelt as they are le,.s liteiriocLed than the Bay of Fundy, aud to eXptesA ihe. hope that the cuitee,sion was meant to eliend 10 them, which there 0V;IS Enine tea-eit to t;u: - .!c, hum the anode in IA 'Heir LORI Ab: to,:eoo exp;e:,ed vri,c,tho eaEe. I teceired, last evvt;O;,.. , „ tlit.4,wer of hif , Lord. ship, iut,imitig RIC :hat my tw-tx ial;es had been le• kl red to the Cuiot.i 1 Ofitce, reply eduld not be te.tiriletl II he , 4 1toult1 Le made with the it ,11:1 of Uo ; untl that, the. ii,ea!i iiroe ; tho inu,t ;,e ;,..) b 2 Ihni.ed io the Bay R Fin.' v. metes oi the (lit ,inn Et) clear : ;hat f can na; hot d ont...quad that the election of the Colonial will be in larvr ot the Iverul a • rtetnteuuu or the uunreu:iu❑ la the mean I beg le.t%e to 511'44eSt, that 1:1 any 1)0 no , ice who. h tray be given that tale Bay of Foudy t henceforth ove n t o mei wail it 'dumbd be carefully ,•ta!e,l :nal the eNneto.lol; 01 lint (..me p;;;, ;40 ;0 Ole other 4:cal bay, oo I!le ot Ao4',-.l.netwan de pendencies, 16 a :riat:er al lIP4f/C {at lon between the two ouvertiments. My notes 01 the 2511 t of each, and 2el umlaut n ill :4444e5t the ora,oo for pre•eni lug the actual state cl the cutittuvetq in this form. aro, with ;weal respect, Your otletl!eot .oi cant, (Soznetl) ED;VAIII) EVEarxr. To uodetmalid this !Wier, rvineinberud itiat liit! I of 1818, WIAI G:eat lintatn l se• ewe,' in our cttt7. rn, ihu 1141:101 li-biug ihe sea ( oast of !he 1,110n.h p ori beyot,tl three miles tom 0,,e coast. &,• exiso.ot:.!! of C:,04 cow eptiall nluctt the Aniviitaii L:roeoitrineto al ways coo:ended b aouhl give rr.zhl to wullin toe bay,, ti..c bow toe ‘ory owty, the 1 , ;(..1 .mm o :fl it , ( .1 N ova s en o a colueildril chat 114e4 lore .1 llre cua,l, l um which the twee tn.les stmuld b.; Ilie.lqlred. biltilAti be dt:r.vii t.iii Le,,ulaod, and that Ititt bays be excluded ,:ii:oey) whatever was weir L'X• Sane Ametica:i fi,;tlll4: ve&i , ek %x ere seizes] oil accoul;t ptirNurtl empl, , prieto whili• Cae ed I , y the ile• t1;011;:es to be pto:ttbeed Jlr. Slevetlboe. in IS4 I, ee:ed to teireeisda:e will the ell' 'Tient az,ciNt what wt. Lill 11111del1011 01 convetrion The letjuited the opi.litt:l 01 ..ite law (thee., el the ttawsti, who :•Llf. th N tv,11••,.t: 01 :fficipretibi,,at. Tlit t y gave as t1.,•11. tictl :lot glos of ti,l.ttly t.) the Arhttp:alt tra I: o-oio r i ,t, ;tic ettlivvit 01 IglB, autl t y t:.•. Imo the prescribed dc • ice mites rs su oe measured from the ite,.d -, ur eX:rvitie land, of of the eotrahen id da)s, at d th,l fr.w. the interior of shell bays. c , f of the coast ; that Ito convention dii‘l not cut,ce,le the tight 01 navigating the shalt or passage 01 Canso, and that American cbizens h a k e nu ueht L ,, catty on i h e li-heries how the slime, ut the :‘l.l , Islands. This consituction of the terms id the surivention was e-teemed such a hardship that tiew lemon strobces were ad:tressed to Cie British government, w:.s( . in 1845, led t theeuncession spoken ul by Mr Es s•••n the !otter :v.a. have quo:ed. I . it is ill be perceived that the same le. the construction of the e s 1 , o as anticipated it: the case of the other bays and waters of the 131 cosh prat tines wh,ch was ob leg' st to tire Bay ut Fundy That ex. per:beton, however, was not fldided land , Falk land, the Governor of Nova Scotia, addressed the British Government, stating his objection:- to' the con strut..net contended fur by the AflletlCiill itintister, and nutft,:ig twitter was stutter. The rePtaxation ul the Biti,slt clam was coelined to tt,e Bay of Fundy, but nu measure.; lute taken to drive only the Arneitcan fishiti4 vessels hum the Gust of the St „,„i other ir„hrirg grounds from %%hitch the 111:etpretal101i (INC:1110d Weill, tllllll how. The Derby ministry has truss lei vet' the old inter pretadust is int all its snit:mess, and, as we un detsiand its late proceedings, claims the right to en llrice it in the Bay of Fundy, in spite of the conces sion once malls, and without notice of any design to revoke it. The fisheries, ss loch have so long been pursued ss t hoist molestation in the Bay of Fundy and the Gull of Si. Lawrence, are about to he rudely noel t opted by a formidable array clam ed vessels, sufficient In watch them at every point r I die coast A New Brunswick mint, the St John's M orn i n g Sews Id Monday, says : .• A blVditil of cruisers is about to light upon the fleet of Lawless h-nermen, that infest our waters born the land of Ii0;11.11,3, !laving, by systematic i :attention to his depreda tuns. encouraged Jona 1-lan ,0 calculate cm fits " vested rights" in the bloat ers of our bays arid hashers, it IS rather to hard to visit hint Ishii so sudden and unprecedented an ; but sit :1 is. The Ilahlax .Muttring Chroni ck furnishes the following list (.1 the vessel, that are to cruise on this s2rvice in the Bilt,sh American wa.ers during die present summer : Cumberland, 70 (11.1 g, So G. F. Selman!) Cap tain Seymour. Sappho, 12 sloop, Cum. Cochrane Devashe ion, 6, ' learn sloop, 300 horse power, Corn. Campbell. Buzzard, 6 seam sloop, 300 horse power, Coin. —. Joints. 4 steam sloop, 220 horse power, Lieut Ne.ley. 3, ketcli','Com llyiraston. Bermuda 2, schooner, laetd. Jolly. Ar bligandire, Tele4raplh—schooner Halifax, 2 bri4arviire, Master Lay bold Belle, 2, brigantine, Master Crowell P.esponsible ; 2. schooner, Master Dodd. Daring, 2, schooner, Master L)uly. 4' In addition to this formidable force, His Excel lency Sir G. F. Seymour requites, vie learn, two more vessels besides the Arrow and Tele:lmph, to be fitted, provisioned, officered and mooned by the British Government. The Buzzard, hourly expect. ed from POII,GIOUIII, blili4ri out men to man these hired vessels. To these most he added two horn New Brunsaick, one horn Canada, and one horn Prince Edwards Island, 1114k1112 a total of nineteen armed vessels, from ilie "tall Admiral . ' to the tiny lender, engaged ut ilos important service. His Ex- CellellCY the Vice-Admiral deserves the thaiik4 of the people of British Noritt America for the zeal wish which lie has taken up this momentous mat ter, and also for the prompmusle of Ins eti-opeia• !lull with the orevinend government. The Janus came to Newfoundland direst from Gibralter ; she is an experimental steamer, constructed by Sir Chitties Napier, and by shine said to be a splenihd failure. The duniberlautl sails immediately for St. Johns aud the Newfoundland coast." (*... Quite a business has recently been doing in the Southl.vestern:States in the way of selling free negroes—the white speculators dividing the spoils with their ebony victims. One or two of the ne• &Trees had been 'grabbed, but the White men h a d '!ucceetled in getting out of harm's a•ay. -,, i ,ticatt.on-Naturalisatkoni The 'Tribune is at evadethe true point in dispute rvitpeetitrarficolys-rinious on the ject rit nattt rit zing Imeigoers. t The cltikquiGenerat',§cott that. at SC tiMlb,whell he vOultt liatiW sqi his mind' on ea vra*lf imPortaties, anti:While aspic be Iligiudidet*l o7 the ViesitleitCy he enter-: laniertAtto'' urn owetiOntil hinsf tanatieat views on This question—that he entertained them for years; that he wrote au address to the people, setting them .forth,•whin►his friends.auppressed; . that he after-, wards methodized them, as ne called it, due is to say, reflect upon diem as much as he is in the hub- 1 ii of refledling upon tiny thiiig, and put them tote form in a communication, sigued Americas, addicts- sed to the A 7416 0 ,1111 Intelligencer, copies of which be, iljrnihnted uratrhg liikf ' riettils.. -There views V. 0 %; eictriiingandy illiberal as to justify us from witlihr , l. ding bolsi him who-could entertain them in his ma• lure age, and after the reflection of ) ears, all tale to be tegaided as one to whom it is sale to commit the adoinristration a public affairs. The Tilinose ilsell WS acknowledged nearly as much as nits: lt nays ; "Gen. &ott Clever was a native candidate; never gave a native vote. But he did formerly in view of the gross utilities of our Naturalizition Laws, and the violence at the polls in which In. migrant* from Europe wine conspicuous, that the privilleges olNatuta !ganef) ought to be inatetially if inn wholly withlwlrl in Mune." Why shoeld the 7ribrine employ the phrase " if not !" General Sco't's specific proposal, in the pa per signed Americus, expressed in the clearest terms, was, that no loreigner bbould be allowed ,10 vote, in any election whatever. There is no toren for au "it not," or any whet hypocritical re:i•lwe of doubt. . Rot General Scott, says the 7ribunt, "never v.itN a Native candidate." That ue believe is u li.et The Nativists did tint provedy Appieriai. Ili, zeal t.o . their &mimes. and this made it easy for hint to go over to those who held dillerent opinions. l..h.es the Tribune mean to say that the irealeat of the Na tivists to support him led Mtn to defeat their oliu.te alter lie had so %%amity evpm..ed "I In 18.18. an Iti.h 11l en, named William l Rubinson, alum bon a letter, intimating that title was not mote liheitt on the subject of the nainializ.ition law, the Irish men in the 1:1 - lied States cou.d nut suppoit hon.— Thi. brought tiom General Scott another letter, le caum..4 the doctrines in favor ol which, a shot! tithe before, he had been so zealous. These are all pans of rims history—the extraca gat,ce and illibetality of %iews, and the rushing hunt one extreme to another, We do not wuh to keep a single tact in this history out of sight. %Ye 101 l such a man an Ss uti not only responsible for his present opinion, but for those which lie has held loimeily. They matte pant ol his public charae• ter. Senn was rr.ore than &Oily years of age when he held the mad and impraeticaole notion , on the ....ob.. jeel ut nalutatizalion Which we have exposed. He held them by h,e own atlrm,:Aiutt,l3olll 1840 to 1844, and whatever may have been the motive which operated on his mind, he gave them tip only wl eu It was clear that they could tender him un Selvice in reaching the object of Ilia aril 11111 On—the pfesideil. ry. General Scott has backed out of his Niagara cam paign. flis ph) sizian says he is dire:veiled with a lire i the rear if he goes so fir 'feu the interior, has advised hint to go to the se:. shore; at least so we constrac the ful!owing horn the Alba ny Erming Jottina/: We have rei,soe lo aPpreltenti that Gen. Semi n ill be compelled to foreio his purpose 01 uni'ing with his compatriots and fellow-cmzens in the an- niversity celebration of the battle of Chippewa and I Bridgewater The seeds of disease contracted in :Mexico ; which proved ro fatal to so many gallant spirits, MC not wholly eradicated Ircrri the system of the Conqueror of Mexico. •• During the heat of summer, exemption from fatigue and excitement is deemed essential to the meteran's heahh. Ilia prescribed sea bathing and sea a'mosplieri; and their advice may induce a reciinsideranen of his n ne n rion 1 0 vi si t ,N,- ,y , ra %re shall have posrive inlormarioo However great the disappointment, Genet.' sru is faleirtle Will most cheei fully neynesce iu a decision whit h concerns his nealth. That con-i -derationrises above all others IVe are dorapointed ; we conleFs, at this char 2 e of programme, but ne will p,ornise not In complain tf the General Will give us a I niod long letter, and among other things tell us who those two gentlemen I were, whom he Sat down with-in its private par lor at the Astor House what become of that Ap peal nhich they prepaied, and what are the names of his physicians who have dissuaded hint from gn- Ma to Niagara? If lie does not think proper to give their names, perhaps he will let us know whether they do nut Mole hequently wear M C. at the end ut their names Man M. D.—Ecening Pug Gov. Dewy, of Neu' York, in a letter it, the Sher. ifi of Duchess county, dechnes Luther commu tation of sentence, or the paid on of either.tun 11 , a2 or Jonas Wtllt.rnis, convicted of murder, and sen tenced to be hung on the 30th ins "The case presents no eitPlinating features to jnsiify me in releasing lies firmi the Lenience of the law. Oir the eiiiitrary, her crime,: of rhe deep est atrocity. %V ithoot even the poor idea 01 resent. men.. she desticiyed a kn o t and confiding husband. by mingling poison with his daily sustenance. She destroyed her lawful pro.eetor In gain a paramour, and obtain flee scope for the iniltil4ence of a guil . y passion. Having conceived this diabolical purpose, the proceeded to execute it di'egree of perse verance rarely equalled. Failing in the first at tempt, she procured poison of a tuner potency, and continued In ad m inister it until her trusting victim found relief in death. It was a murder made doubly detestable, try the superadded crimes 01 treachery and adultery. The execution of capital punishment upon a female is repugnant to the generous ufrpuls es of the heart. But the criminal code shake.•: no distinction between the sexes in the pn sit f • of crime. The woman who has tenounceo virtues which adorn the . fernale character, and pto. failed the laws of God and man, by the delibe,,v , murder of her only legitimate protector, appears before OA disrobed of all those moral graceS entitle her to plead the prerogative of the gentle sex. She ceases to be a woman; her hands are stained with the blood of the innocent; she presents a melancho ly spectacle of the guilt and ((egret:anon to which ow common nature may descend, when the noble affections are extinguished by depraved and licen tious passion." Kew Yorm ITEM —We learn from the New Yolk corr 4 spotoent of the Ledger, that a malignant diseaAe has made its appearance at the gnu:tonne hospital, Staten t.land, which is producing weal alarm. It is not ship-fever, and the physicians have not decided as to whether it is chole,a. Fe;:rzi ate eitleilained that it will prove very destruc tive. The French nod Canadian residents of New Yock held a meeting on Saturday evening, to devise rtieaures of reltel for the suflerers by the late fire in Montreal. On Sa.clitlay, eight vessels arrived at that horn various European ports, bringing together l i • 737 passengers. The opinion seems In prevait that the Croton . aqueduct will grove insufficient to supply water lor the growing wards of the city. GEMMANY —The famine ih the moon mitt dr:miens of Southern Germany is yet unabated, and provisions scarce and prices exorbitant. A let ter to the New Yolk Express, dated Prague ; June 3d, says : Families formerly in easy circumstances are re. duced to beggary and to severe sufferings from hun ger. Bakers sell bread 01 rye and oat bran at high prices ; people gather common gratis along the pub. lie roads and big,l4ays, and moss in the. woods, cook and eat' it to appease their hunger and prevent starvation. Such sro a few of the many glaring ' features of the great !amine, not in the least crag. aerated, but authenticated by the official reports of . •the local author ittes Id their respective Governments , , , AktitoP.DoaSit AttiUtTrat-Thelitrionlneil'Er i i. , copal Convention of . the Diocese of New Jersey, met at Newark on Wednesday last, to hear the re. - port el the Ciiiritifittee of seven fitS - iriiiii apifiiiiiied._ at tho'lasf;sesiden to investigate he charges flail isi Bishop Doane: . It occupied two houriOntd •: a, half Am rnistlinkriontd.C:omprises, besides:ihis.Ceonhir • re: a large *Count of documentary •evicres:pe, lets ( ' terk:inetititorieti schedules, 8:e iklibickiykilllrgUe i 1 when pubtisled a bulky parstpillit , The convicts. ion to which the Cum iii Mee arrived was stated to , be. that they have increased cusifidenee, in ,the, pu, t tiny 2::1:1 integrity of the Bi;hiii), and' iliaf there lit no et ~iettee to sustain the charge 'cif immorality 1 mid vice aottinst hint. The report gives a relation . El of ,, 10l me action t h e L Amarnoitee, recounts the origin of Bishop Doane's difficulties ' goes into the history ol St. Macy's ,Hall r tionlingtuti College, 8.. c: , and 'Cirri 1 ~ takes up serititia the heenty six charges contained in the presentment ; explatmig or retuning !hem ;W.. eortlitig to testimony taketi - befoiefire" Corn Snit: tee. . . Jost. nontNsos, TUE Boalxor.--41obinson the fearless boatitial,, whys rerr uCd mu firilei Mini, no Monday; say, the Buffalo Commercial Advetn•er r from the rapnls above the anise Shoe Falk at Ni agra, is the same gallant fellow who saved the car penter, a few years ago, who fell. tram the Goat It lamt, lleitl,se, and was carried by the torrent to a small Isla •d near the Hug's Back, above the Ame rican Fall. No other M3ll but llobmson dared on. dartake the tendril task, and no oilier man but him in all probability, could have succeeded so well.— Wan his strut:, arms and steady nerves, he guided his Ihut balk among ihe foaming rapids, and took a•>vay the despairing non from Me very verge n the cataract. It was a bold and daring act, but not p?rlmni_d in the spirit of daring and foolhardiness. 4 %L.r.ic•Ji.ick: tN (11:limstry.—A traveller by rail- Diesden to Hatiover, ort the 9th of May, gives 'the following, ile , croptiOn of the appearance 01 the field,: 011 the route of his'day's journey.: •, The country throne,h which we passed is smiling in the laxi.o lance of spring. The fields of rape, glow i.c.4 on :di (iamb w hu weir blossoms of intense 100k,M2 as though columns ol butterflies h.ut settled down upon them . Most- of the Loup oil u-ed nr Gelatin.y is made front rape seed. Lat..r in this season ; tbe• fields of poppies unfold their Wes...omi oh blus•hing, red. From these needs an'oll of bet ter t- expre.:sed, - u-ed 1.4 the table coal lor otire, putpw , es. Poppy neetk are an layor aut ingredient ire same of the varieties of cake so abundantly' produced in the German CUISMe. Derawr Nue 07 hosscrris.—Kosseih left New Vorlf, quite unexpectedly un Werlitet.day, ii it.e steamship Africa, accompanied by NlaJanie Kne• sulti,,and his aid-de-cainp, Col. Redden. Ills in tended departure was kept enki ely sccrel even lion' the journals undens.tond In tie in his confidence iiil at vk as nut until lie went on teettj 11:0 A trwa, jolt belnie she sailed, that tl v‘ ac known tie was a g.iiing in her, the annowieemeni hat iii,; been made that he would sail in the I\a.-liiit.trin on Saturday. Hta ol.ject 01 this quiet departure was. uo i f e et,i, to avoid the unkind insahuatton , ihal might have been made if he had lett more publ.cly. lle trials.° de sirous to arrive rinietiy in Eii4latid. and have a few day , : cf undisturtvd ii ercou se kith It in mother and Me.e, before hi" piesenee in the eoniiiry be -tallies generally known Jim PlituPs.—Mr. Eta' since rutin a rrirr..tort in some of our phifanitirop"; of a.ceirartritir , the whe fugi!ive slave Jim,Phili in Hariisburg,aa the p that Stafe. He .found hands of a Slave trade his reputed owner Iwo; and who holds himlat . engaged in the laudabl, alystrn ;0 purchase hia his family and irienra FM THE EAT CROP. We regret to hear says Coe Germantown Telegrapht'mure and mote every day, as the wheat crop is being harvested, and the gram becomes matured, that-the crop wi.hin a.re:4lott thirty or forty miles roureel-Philadelphia, ha; been very seriously lojaied by the weevil. We have examined heads in which more than one hall the grains had been eaten by tins destructive insects There may be lucalittes within the humid, to which we refer, that have escaped ; hut judgm4 born most of the newspapers in the lit-92htworitig contilir 4 es ravages have been pre-try :.!enerat—not only in the new crop, but in the granaries. rr The Scott I,V logs of Ohio are working with all Lerr strength against wool and tole, %%filch are roan and swelling for Pierce &Ilia King. Tie wink as hard and discouraging, hr, many who were expec eti to lend a helping hand deny that 'hey he. long in the Soups," and will hani notbnr to do with managing the Scum balk. Thetu are scores of \\*lugs itt this te l ti , io, who ottp , o,ll.oe enlitely the %Villa nominee, and will he (flow; lighnng uhtler ihe Democratic banner ill tierce and Kio , t . T he 21e.it t leirtomitickworthvive io to 1141111. nod they Loire taken ilien`kedis ur its . train —Cm Eng. THE NIONTIIEA 1. Fotr..— fhe Moniteal Gazette es. tisnate4 the total 10,4 by the 1.00 Cite at ..£3 000 000. This, added to the .C 2.000,000 lost by Me tire t•f the 16th June, makes a total of amiut t7-.5 000.000, with• in a period of little more than oz.e month. The it4ettkid the Hartford Protection Ity.ur.inee Compatty sti.ies the loss of :hat Company itt the last fire is only 610,360. Liocrut. —The Albany and Buffalo -railroad corormy on the recent passa2e of the remain: , of II :.fy Ca) . over their toad, tendered the u-e of ii to co ,, v .• ) i• the committee and ',•, ea-ed. The at • 11.0 curt of tootling the Rrpubltr,) mut have .f • AOII.IIS. Cr A revolt has broken ow in Alr2.eria. A tribe of Atabs, nurnheiing IttonAand: ro , st and attack ed a camp of French ‘vorktnen. ki!htig some, and caw.tog the whets to Hee The insurgents alter wards matched on Ghelma, and had an engage mew with the !loops hum Bona and Constantia ; in which the French appear to have been worsted. (t 7. ). The explosion of a powder magazine, set on tire by some Mischievous boy e, at La layette, la , teultetl in great injury, to altno-t every house in town. The wnuloarrof the C.cliolie church, more than r half a mile oft. were nearly atl crushed The magazine contained about 2,000 rounds of powder. (*-- A public mewing held at Lexington Ky., have Aeterinined to elect a " national monument 01 conot.sal proponions" over the remains of Mr. Clay in the be:lomat Cemetery near that coy. NOTICE.—The North Branch Association of Universali-ts, will hold its annual ses• sion at Monroeton on Wednesday and Thursday— AugnNt IS and 19 1532. Religious serdices Will he hi d den both days at the usual hours, upon - which the members of com munity are respectfully invited to attend Sheshequin, July 20,„ q 52 a. CONVENTION -OF THE FRIENDS OF FREEDOM IN PENNSYLVANIA.—A State Convention of the friends.of Freedom of Pennsyl vania who believe in political action, will be held at the Court House in PITTSBURG on TUESDAY AUGUST 10, 1852 at 11 o'clock A, M., for the pur pose of effecting a State organization, and choosing delegates to the National Convention to be held in that city on the following day. A General attend ance froth all parts of the State is requested. WM. F. CLARK, JOHNS. MANN, 7 State Goth. IL EVERETT, C. D. CLEVELAND, wn returned a few days Vegiia, on the part ni e citizen!, he the pUrr,O,ti eiihouts anti smiaiiiio of We s. arreoited a short lime ago arty of a urtitlemen in itri in - the who purc}ra-e,l hr r Lora idler II:. arrival in Virgima, .;ea. emzeiiii cue ❑uw tank ut.rm-tog the rieresf- Ifreedmii pod tr-i,r4 - film to here.-11tert)burg 2dc. ENE! In Towanda on the 215 t tom., ty th e p e. McElhenny. Mu. Cunuttog D. D ri ,„, k ,: , ; , :k , 1 - 6111S1 HARAI rrr Mt NJ LK, of •at,• New flbslettiscrants. 12 LOTS, 4 . , t• A - VC rF 3011 wdi.sel! some of the most desirabl •el4rel :u owanda at public sale IN FRONT by WARD HOUSE, on Saturday the :sti r d o 0 4 4 u st. next. To s n. I uciteithaei cnvhara7e:uoc:f means,li ratted and to r render al lage proper t ymore convenient lots theproperty now occo r ,,, d ;, , Laporte ; the corner of the square fri Pt.-the Dam and S. uth street ; and I4e c.•" and State street ()early opposite C. L vale residence. and will sell the sank: to bulderon the moat accommodaun z A diagram s.f these lots will be posted, P 11, Brower's previous to the day of sale. NOW is the t.me fOr those who wish te themselves lots, with or without purchaser of Me large corium , tou '7;4 occupied by Judge Laporte, can hare desirable in two months frith: the day balance in less than 30 days. Title to a l ".` lots indisputable :--Deeds executed ' b. isti: ter the sale. lc • Valley Hill. July, 1852 REGISTER'SNOTICE.—:xOc.ce 4,„,, that there have been filed and