BY HENRY J. sTmiLE ES 37T" YEAR. TERMS OF THE COMPILER. Ileptsblierzu Compiler is published morning, by Ilsmtr J. STAIII.I.I, every Monday at A 1,75 per annum if paid in-adrance—s2,oo per annum if not-paid in advance. No sub scription discontinued, unless at the option of the publisher. until ill arrearages are paid. . : loviiiviistmENrs inserted at tile usual rates. JOR WORK done, neatly, cheaply. and with dispatch. iiirodice on South Baltimore street, direct 1y opposite Wampler's Tinning Establishment, one and a half squa - res front the Court House. el)oicc ,t3octru. LIFE'S A RAILROAD. Lite's a ritilroad ! Hurryon! 41.1.v.ap, keep a-going i }lever stop to look at flowers Pr the road-side growing. Never think of Anything Rut your•pre-ent hurry, Mhat if you ItvLld lose a truin? Vioult'Wl, you be bully? What'l the use of sighiug .1.1 tor 1).• kuty. !Lying a-Nteep logician the tree 1V here the throw4:ll. win lin,z eat! lyae •p the t:tzy hours, Ant the ,low-paceil walk tier utteou:seiuus ilimerb lieauty changes with the times,. °nee she chose her - shelter In the .11.141,,wy Lept„,t he 'still :414,11.1.1 melt her. St,Long•er-treadlel, she ILL.lies on, Nkm, from town to city, In a h)eutiketive's .hope, Nuthin,eb half so pretty. Lite was once a trodden path, %here the' travellers cheery bpoke Jo all they chanced to meet - Or--would rest, if weary. 4pikik Rest is now quite obsolete ; , Sips or slumber take you, Careless who be•ide you sits, Norwalk draws will wake you Lile's a railroad! Hurry on! Alwap. keep ,t-roim; ! Never stop to look at flowers By the road-shin grolVing. Never mind what's o u the track ; On—though headlong--flunter, 11 engine Progroh, ThaL's ,the great dkeiter ! Select Loss of Life in Great Battles. Our Baltimore namesake gives statistics to show the waste of human life in the unsuccess ful attack on the Malakoff and , ,Redatt appears to have been nearly. as great nOn the average of the most destructive modern battles. More than live thousand of the assailants were killed and wounded. a vast to tortion. when we con- sider how small. comparatively, the storming column was. The French alone admit a loss of thirty-eight hundred mien out of an attacking force of twenty-five thousand : that is to say, every seventh man was rendered incapable, either by death ut wounds. There is. indeed. one modern siege which was more bloody. than this--=not actually, however, but when the ;lumbers engaged are compared with those who fbll. We allude to the second siege of Dada joz, in the Peninsular 'war. That famous- Spanish fortress was invested by WELLINGTON, at the head of twenty-two thousand men, and finally carried by storm after one of the most sanguinary assaults on record. In the attack on the great breach alone not less than thirty eight hundred men fell. Yet Badajoz was a small place. the fort . not being larger, perhaps, than the Malakoff and its outworks. Whoev er would realize half the horrors of war should read Napier's account of the fall of Badajoz. Marengo, Austerlitz, %Vagrant, Leipsic, Dresden, Borodino and Waterloo, were among the most desperately contested battles of the first Napoleon. At Marengo the Austrians lost ten thousand, more than a third of their whole force, while the French lost seven thou sand, or about the same proportion. , A consid erable portion of these were-prisoners, howev er, while at the Man and Malakoff but few prisoners were . taken. At Austerlitz the French lost twelve thousand; or nearly a sixth of their entire force ; but the allies lost thirty thousand, or more than a third. At %Vngram the lass on either side was twenty-five thou sand, or about one-seventh-of those engaged. At, beipsic the loss was forty-three thousand on the side of the allies, out of nearly three hundred thousand, in the field; and sixty thou sand on the part of the French, out of one hun dred and seventy-five thousand. At Dresden, the allies lost twenty-five thousand, or one sixth of their entire numbers, while the French lost but twelve thousand. or one-tenth. At Borodino, the bloodiest battle of all. fifty thou sand tell on each side, or a third of those in the battle.' At Waterloo the French lost forty thousand, or mote thaushall;_ but a large_pore . Lion of these fell in the rout ; yet the Enelish Jost nearly twenty thousand, or almost a Ind of their entire troops. It is often said, in discussing military affairs, that our American battles have been too tri fling to take into consideration.. But if we con sider, not the numbers actually killed and wounded, but the proportion which those numbers bear to the whole force engaged, we shall find that those actions, thus-scorned, were as hotly contested as even the first Napo leon'S7battles. At Eutaw Springs, fur ex ample, in the revolutionary war, one- third of both armies were left upon the.Jield. At Chippewa, in the war of 1812, nearly one-fifth •of the British were disabled. At Lundy's Lane, the loss of the Americans was about one third, and that of the British equally great. At New Orleans, where the British attempted. on a small scale, the same rash experiment which they have just beet, defeated in betbre the Redan and Malakoff, the assailant lost two thousand men out of their army of twelve thousand. From these statistics it appears that battles in the open field are generally Inure bloody, though not always. thairaSSaUfts of entrenched fseetions. The reason is, that in the funnel case tire entire army is usually tneraged, but in the tatter only the sun-mitt,- cortmin. The has by thus,: act ual:y oe se i s s d on the attack is al way a heat ter, hut+ ever, than the average loss of an at my in the open held. would seem. also, that, the allies w their later repulse slide! ed a s set et ely as the Die lish at New 1.1, leans —A defeat a Irs;l1 has ways becn culkiderud tine 01 Ix 11 it y 011 I ccon I . / r II 7 I , V 1:4,\.; lit •L6t .1 ir. 't ti ,t 1 011,_ rl•ki 7-yu..11 lEEE! • , : .414 - • •I 7 L 3 .familq ,;. , 111tur5plyer----Ilruott to lsolitiro, 2grirolinrr, ritrrotur, 3thultit, (Puma Riniutil 110 ,forrign Jotrlligror - r, :Murrtioing, 2untsrintitt, ME 1 . :11',..i.11”1. 111 ed,t 0i0t114.11 The Siege of Boston—Occupation of Dor chester Heights—Washington's First Revolutionary Achievement. [Extract from ti , m. E , lward Frorett's. Fourth of July Oration at, Dorcho-dor. But there is another circumstance which must ever clothe the occupation .of Dorchester Heights with an affecting interest. it was the first great military operation of Washington in • the revolutionary war; not a battle, indeed. but the preparation for a battle on the grand est scale, planned 'with such skill and executed with such vigor, as at once to paralyze -the army and navy of the enemy, and force him. without striking a blow, to an ignominious re treat. Washington. as you well. know, was' chosen to the command of the army in Phila delphia, on the day the battle of Bunker - Mil was fought. The siege of Boston had already been limped : and those noble lines of circum vaflation —twelve piles in compass, of which sonic faint remains may still be traced—had been drawn along the high grounds of Charles town, Cambridge, Roxbury and Dorchester. An adventurous expedition against Quebec had failed ; partial collisions had taken 'place wherever there were royal 'forces throughout the country ; but nothing decisive was brought about, and a feverish excitement pervadedthe continent. Congress wits still condncttug the war without the constitutional existence ; and all eyes and hearts were turned to the army and to Washington: Alen at a safe distance and with nothing at stake, are prone to judge severely the conduct of those who are at the post of responsibility and danger. Washing ton. himself felt the delicacy and the hazards of his position the importance of sustaining the expectations of the country the necessity.of decisive results. But his army was without discipline or . experience, save a few veterans of the: seven years' War—without supplies of any kind—composed of men who had left their homes at a moment's warning, and were itn pitient to return-, weakened by camp diseases and the small-pox—with a stock of powder so scanty that stratagem was resorted to by the commander to conceal the deficiency even from his officers. Thus the summer and the autumn wore away, and every week increased the public impatience and added to the em barrassments of Washington. His private letters at this time are filled with the most touching remarks on his distressful condition. In a letter to President Reed of the 14th of January, 1776, lie says : 'The reflection on my situation and that of this army, produces many an unhappy hour, when all around me are wrapped in sleep. Few people know the predicament, we are in on a thousand accounts, fewer still wilt believe, if any disaster happens to these lines, from What cause it flows: I have often thought how much happier I should have been if, instead of accepting the command under _such circumstances, I had taken my musket on my shoulder and entered the t anks or, if I could have justilied the measure to posterity and my own conscience, had retired to the back country-and lived in a wigwam." At length, however, the re-enlistment of the army was completed ; advanced lines were thrown. up—ordnance captured at Ticonderoga had been transported by Knox with prodigious effort across the country-- ammunition had been taken by Nlanly in his prize ships'—shells were furnished from the royal arsenal at New York. It was_Washingtoni-s wish to . cross the ice to Boston—to carry the town by assault—and destroy the royal army. The ice, however. did nut make until the middle of February ; and then it was decided by a council of war that the town could not be assaulted with success. It was then resolved to repeat . on a grander scale, with full preparation and ample means, the hasty operation which had brought on the battle of Bunker Hill. It was determined first to occupy the heights- of Dorchester, and as soon as.an impregnable position was secur ed there, to establish batteries on Nook's Hill and other rising grounds nearest Boston. The fleet in the harbor was within range of the heights ; the town was commanded from the hills below. The occupation of these points would of necessity compel the enemy tu take the risk of a decisive action or to evacuate the town. Washington, though - preferring the bolder measure, yielded to the decision of his council, and threw his whole soul into the work: A plan for a grand combined movement was matured. Tue heights of Dorchester were to be occupied on the night of the 4th of March, in order that, the Anticipated battle might be fought on the anniversary of the ever memora ble 4th of March, 1776. As scup as the con flict was engaged on the heights, Putnam was to cross from Cambridge with a body of tutu thousand men, land in two divisions in Boston; and forcing his way through the town burst open the fortifications on the neck, and thus admit a division of the "American army from Roxbury. To distract and occupy the atten tion of the enemy, the town was severely bom barded from Somerville, East Catublidge and Roxbury during the nights of the 2d, ',;d and 4th of March. I am told by professional men that these dispositions e% inee consummate military skill ; and show that IVashington, too often compell ed by his situation to pursue his Fabian policy, possessed a talent for military combinations_ that entitles him to a pia - cc beside the greatest captains of the last century. - The 4th of `larch—time day so long and anx iously exiiected —at length arrives. The troops arc put in motion in the evening trout the American lines at Roxbury- arid Dorche.ster. Aim advanced guard of eight hundred precedes : the carts with harem:long tools come next, with the main body twelve hninlred strung under Ueneral Thomas the whole followed by a train of three hundied wagons loaded with fascines, gabions and bundles of, hay. They cross Dorchester neck without being perceived, and reach their destination in two divisions, one for each of the heights. Bun. dies of hay wcr e placed un the side of the causeway al the ino?lt exposed palls, as a pro lection in ease the enemy should - discover anti' attempt to interrupt the movement. Under this shelter pin ties limit the. American army passul several times during the night. without pereelved, lhoir r :,ll it Kati hr hilt moon light. This was tit. log, :1,, doubt, to 1.11,.. can nonade and bornhaidio , . In of the to‘t n how the orpoiqte gnat Let a1..0 the w hole sur rounding country- was ill own - in a stale of painful , xpLetation and al.,' in. Inc ,) Lion, wcie, k.uliductct cf. cApet 1. 1.11 oi, lit .FIL ,A;Lt. I.lc .4 14 , 1 e /I ', 4 2 ; „1 4 1 Jul MENTIIII . 1. r C EMI MINIM - Mat: GETTYSBURG, PA:: MONDAY, AUGUST 6, 1855. scriptive of the scene or of his thoughts and emotions at what he must have regarded, at that time. as the most eventful hour of his life, and the most critical element of the war. —Ttte moon shining in its full luster (they are the words of 11'ashington) through the clear cold air of early March, revealed every - object with that spectral distinctness with which things present themselves to the straining eye at a great juncture. All immediately around him is intense movement but carried 'on in death-like silence ; nothing - heard but the in cessant tread of busy feet, and the dull sound of the mattock upon the soil frozen so deep as to make it necessary to place the chief reliance on the fasci nes and gahions. Beneath . the slumbering batteries of the castle—the roadstead and harbor filled - with the vessels of the royal fleet.motionless except us they swung round at their moorins at the turn of theptid night, tide : the beleaguered city occupied with a powerful army and a considerable non-com batant population. starthlkinto unnu toralevigi lance by the incessant and destructive cannon ade, but yet unobservant of the great opera tions in progress so near them ; the surround ing country dotted with a hundred rural settle ments, roused from the deep sleep of a New England village, by the unwonted tumult and glare. * The morning of the sth of March dawned, and the enemy beheld with astonishinent loom ing through a heavy mist the operations of the night. Gen. Howe wrote to the minister that they must have been the work of at least twelve thousand men., In the accont.t given by one of his ,oflieers and adopted in the Annual Register, it is said'that the expedition. with which these works were thrown up. with Elide sudden and unexpected appearance, "recalled to the' mind those wonderful stories of enchant ment and invisible agency which are so fre quent its the eastern romances." General Howe, like a gallant coinmander, immediately 'determined on the perilous at , tempt to dislodge the Americans hefor'e their entrenchments should he rendered impregna ble. A powerful detachment led by Lord Percy dropped down to the castle in the after noon, to rendezvous there, and thence cross over to Dorchester point, and storm the heights. A heavy gale (a —dreadful storm," it is called ' in the British account) scattered the barges and prevented the embarkation of the troops. This delay gave the Americans time to perket their works ; barrels Idled with earth were placed round the heights, an abattiß of trees disposed around the footof the bill, a reinfince _Meta of 2,000 ordered to the support of Gen. Thomas, and every 'preparation made for a decisive - conflict. — It was then understood that the royal coin inander, not deeming it safe to ;Ake the risk of an engagement, had -determined to evacuate --Boston. TO—prevent—the—destruction—of—Hp town. Washington was willing that they should leave it unmolested. Finding, however, after_ some days that no apparent utovetnent was made -for this purpose, he determined without further delay:to occupy Nook's and the other elevations fronting and commanding the town. This - produced the. desired effect, and General Howe was compelled to acknowledge the . inability of a powerful land and naval force under veteran leaders, to maintain them selves against untried levies whom they were accustomed to regard with contempt, led by officers flow whom they affected even to with hold the usual titles of military command. He was obliged to acquiesce in an engagement with the selectmen of Boston, tacitly sanction ed by .‘Mr. Washington," that his army should be allowed' to embark without betog fired upon, upon condition that they would not burr. the town. Thus,•on the ofMarch, 17 7G, an affec tive force of ten thousand evacuated the town, and with a powerful fleet and a numerous train of transports. sailed for Hallifax ; Put,- than), with a detachment of the American army. took possession of Boston. The beloved com mander himself made his triumphant entry the following day. and the first great act of the thanes or the revolution was brought to a tri umphant close—oh that Dorchester Neck which our fathers selected as a place fur set tlement. - This event diffused joy throughontThe Union and contributed materially to prepare the pub lie mind fin that momentous political measure of which we this day co►mnemorate the 791.1 anniversary. PILAWIT 01? UNIWILIMAININ(:. - -Mr. William Chamberlin. of Lower Red Book, N. Y., drain ed twenty-live acics of land; at an eNpense of ::+6O per lien:, and the first three crops paid the whole eijaise, including cost of cultivation. lie may, then, hereafter look for a iiredil of per acie: on each crop.-- Last season part of this ground yielded 75 bushels of corn. and a part - .WO bushels of potatueS, while on adjacent undrailied fields the crops were nearly ruined by the drought. CosTivKmiss."--The following is a good re cipe for costive habits : --Extract of aloes, twenty grants: powdered ginger, half a 411achin; powdered ipeca cuanha eight grab's : syrup, sufficient quantity : cncx, and divide ,illO Ak=" teen pills. Dose : one, about noon. The celebrated Abernethy is the author of the above reel pe. - - - - ' AIONSTER GI NS —Wrought iron hubs of nionsier size and eillihrt—are in eotirse - facLure at the non works of Messrs. Nasulyth, Manchester. England. ii p war i s of three fret in, diameter and about, lAveivy lea lung, weighing upwaids of twenty tons each, and will discharge a blieit of at least 1,000 pound , : weight a dista.nee of five wiles. StivEN 111 An....—Tire Trihnne ;:ivs that. in Noveinber, ?'4 , a gentleman Baldwin mailed a letter to a grocery house rn that city. It was. never received m heard fir untrl laz,t week, when it. came exactly to its destination. :01(.1- air altsciwe neady year ! —ft-wcynid be pleasant to - huar -- That - let - - - tei an account of its travels dunng, that long petiod. 1: - ; The Re n , ,( ilea' :11aoor Teliaitt:i onc e held Iticetolg and re,olved that the payou fa of the pioduck, %‘a,, tun 'Katy a tent, and a:•lce.i intanitoon,ly therealtt t that - they V,01i1.1 pay wily 1 111. They IllbCr MEM - 4.(11'1.1; s .J 1 I FA', i/N u iitAt :it ;1 r•I• =I 1 , r ..[ , un•ti, ./IN II . .1 i.k.. IV •t I =EMI MEM= TRUTII IS MIGIITY, AM) WILL ritEvAIL ME pluLiuk.t..o 4:4 .61t.t.at,ii: Sawing off a Lover's Leg. The following story, which is calculated to make "each pat ticular hair to stand like quills upon the f. arful poreupine l " is said to have happened in St. Lawrence eoonty, New York, and is given on the authority of a ,e,•etiLlettutubf undoubted veracity : ' t•A young man addicted to intemperate hab its. (luring one of his periodical 'sprees' took a sudden notion to pay it visit to his 'sweetheart.' (hi the evening alluded to, the young lady and a female associate were the only occupants of the. house where she resided. About ten o'clock in the evening the young roan arrived at the house, considerably worse from the use of 'beverages.' ills strange manner in ap poaching the door excited the suspicions of the young ladies, who - supposed the house was attacked by robbers. lie knocked at the door, and demanded admission ; - but - his voice not being recognized, from the thickness of his tongue, the .ladies refused to comply with the demand. Determined to force an entrance he commenced a series of assaults upon the barred and bolted door by kicking and pounding. After a number of desperate kicks, the panuel of the .door gave way, and the leg of the be sieger went through the aperture, and was immediately seized by one of _the ladies and firmly held, while the other, armed with a saw, commo:et' the -work of_ amputation'. The grasp was firmly maintained, and the saw vigotoosly plied, until the leg was com pletely severed from the body'. With the loss of his leg. the intoxicated wretch fell back, and in that condition lay the it maindet of the In the meantime the lathes were fright ened almost to‘featli. With the dawn of morning the revelation was made that one of the ladies had participated in the amputation of her lover's leg. The wretched man was still alive. His friends were immediately sent for, and he was conveyed to his home, where, with proper treatment he gradually and iuiraculote recovered, and is now alive and well. We hardly credited," says the editor of the journal from which we quote, - -the latter part of the story, and contended that the man must have bled to death on the spot, insisting, indeed, that it could not be otherivise. Hut we were mistaken. The leg was a wooden one." - Couldn't Get Him The followin g is from the last number cif the Sin‘thrtti . It reads like one of llooper'6; stories: Old John Sarchem was for many years known as one of th 6 shrewdest men about Moutgoniery. in fact, there were many 'per sons who did not hesitate to say that Ins shrewdness was nothin g ; hut rascality. The chief peculiarity of old . John was, that he could prove anythin, under the face of the heavens, if he chose 1.0 do so, in a court of.jus tiee. gvelt-tlie-law-yers-got-to-be-afraid-of him. (Inc of their number had a note for t•lin) on old John, and for some . time he was afraid to sue on i., lest John' should prove a set off of some sort against it, although there was nothing of the, sort existing in reality. A bright thought, occurred to Greenling. He would sue in the name of Peter Squizleftliter, and as no such man ever existed, it would- be difficult to show that lie ever owed Sarchem anything. * He did At the trial Sat . -chem . proved by three witnesses that Peter fiquizle 'linter was an old "iesidenter," and was in• debted to hint, the said John, at the'time of Ow supposed transfer of the note, and.contin ually since, in a sum double the amount 'JUL it t Nobody ever took "issue" with Sarch• - em after that ! A N INCH% NT Pima! Ex I.F.itlmseu.s 1N School TEA6I,ING.-:-One day Isaw.alittk fellow with his arms about a little wit At of a-girl, endeav 7 oring, if I, interpreted the manifestations right', to iss her. "Tommy," said I, "what are you doing there "Nothin', thut," spoke the bright-eyed lit tle witch, "he wath trying to kith me, that he wath, dun.," and she eyed him. keenly. -Why, Lucy, what prompted him to at so ungentlemanly right here in school " [ ask e d, anticipatincr n some tun. "Oh hehithched 'up here and thed he want ed me to kith him, and I. told hint I wouldn't kith Ouch a thunithy boy as he ids, then he thud he'd kith me, and I told hint he dathri'l, but he thed he teordif do it, MO I told hint I would tell the inatliter if he did. but he thed he care a thitap for the mathter, and then tried to kith me the, hard," and the little thing sighed. "Why didn't you tell me, ns yon would "" I asked, in a pleasant mann "Oil I" she replied with is nah , r/ i I cid Tint often hee, ••I didn't care much if he did kith anti tile IL let hint." neve, the whole school, who had - been listen ing intently, broke out in an uproat ions laugh, while our It Weiler° and heroine blushed deep ly. —Line;,nuati 7'imes. AN Awirm ENT.—A young lady being ad dre,sed by a gen tleMen 1111101 Older that her stll. observed to him. the only objection she bad to a union with him. was the probability Of his dying beliire her. and leaving her to the rt rows of widowhood. To which he, made the following ingenius and delicate comfllimen tary reply, -Messed is the man who path virtuous wife, fur the number of his days shall h e doubled." Swimmtror ItAct; wrru A PlG.—The Buffalo (.11 . . , Cribub a funny raft: trhieh recently comer iii that city. A pig in uric of Llie ca nal ',Oat , " jumped overboard, and the owner followed suit to recover Ills property. Quite a crowd collected, and it w3S swim pig. swim ()whet. 'amid cheers and laughter, until they had nearly reach. d IVashingtort street bridge. whet. di,,hcarterierl, slacked his elibi ts, and the owner skized the liGitive by his ?W1 . .. rit:ict and :,txtirell IV,IILTS oN (.74)1%5' THAI s. .11;11,4e. F'nrrn - er says —Air. 31 tcht.l I of- Curio/ 11 lc , writes us that he had a cow laAstitiinier whose teary acre cowl& tdy ctAuteti With warts. Ile mud than Sirup) , by them in alum water. This LIRA, aittl um col jn~n lint think, will piove (Alecto:11." An 0:- In t it nrttl if Mid ;11, tillE eII,OW gays that a'strong tit' outwit of black oak bail, applit'll twic e a .14. v, al to unihnig, for two or tlirce weeks. is &quilts! reincify. Nat' the_ rennin itinedv cure wart., on luau of be.-4. (At A caziiir; Rat (: i •, : :t '' , ' y, al/ Ll,lidllot t A It t i .J %JUL MEI STARTLING DISCLOSURES. .9n Exposition If Ilse l's-inripks and Power 4 the know-Nothing Order if. Cmneeticut, Founded on the eirtursi Experience uf Council N,. 117, tweak(' in Lytle. uNANUMOITS ACTION TN COUNCIL TI - hereas, The State Council of Know-Noth ings at its recent session in Norwich. in the .rossegt violation of its constitution and laws, by which it. professes to be governed, and con trary to every decision founded upon evidence and justice, did revoke the charter of this Coun cil on the representation of the Presidents of two other Councils of this town—Nos. 105 and WS—that a majority of its members voted at the spring election in accordance with the dic tates of their oWn conscience without fear or favor of any man ; therelbre, -Resolved, That we r..nn regard the action of the State Council in thus revoking our charter Without even 'notifying is-of such intentien in no other light than that of a base and tyriani: cal usurpation of power, oppressiveolike to us_ and every subordinate Council in the State. tirseked, That this action has fully opened our eyes to the manifest d”stimition of the or der to crush out both freedom -of speech and action on the part of its members ; to utterly disregard its assurances and obligations: pro fessedly made in good faith, whenever it shall best suit its secret, dark and unhalluijed pur poses, and henceforth to regard no other law than that of passionate impulse and arbitrary proscription, which has ever been the last re sort of those powers only that have attempted to shield the Brost gigantic wrongs under the dangerous plea of necessity and absolute au thority. . - Resolved, That in our opinion the timo has. arrived for the.alarin to be sounded in the cars of the'peq - le of . Connecticut, and to inform them of the eXistence of a.secret order idtheir midst which is striking a-'blow in the clatk against our institutions of civil and religious litierty,'and which, irsuffeted to go on, will soon destroy all we hold most dear itt politics and -morals. ites,drul, That we feel that we should prove false to our obligations toblod and our'country, if we were to keep silent at such a time a 8 this, and that we hereby see forth to the peo ple the billowing exposition of the Order and the objections which arise in our minds to the principles of itssorganization and action : On. our admission to this Order, we hale givin us the solemn pledge and assurance that no obligations would be impoSed uptm us which would conflict with those we had al- ready taken, and owed to God and our fami lies. For the sole reason that we acted its were bound to do under the Constitution oil the State. and that wo honestly complied with our sacred obligations as electors, we were - ejected - fronr - the -- Orderornatheinatizein worthy of respect, undeserving of any well dence whatever in any business transaeti" and as deserVing only the scorn and' reproach of all good men.— ‘Ve were subjecti.4 to the Most fearful denunciations because' we would nut surrender up to this most, accursed of all despotisms our freedom of citizenship,'and de grade ourselves down to the ignominious !servi tude ta wearing a mastiff's collar. Inview of - such thiogs, what honest man would contend that, any obligations which might be imposed by the order aro in the least binding or entitled to one niOntelteS respect I Who would not go rather one step farther and say that' mail is guilty of perjury in the high est degree" who 'would act. with Chu Order, against his own honest. convictions We believe if the parent for such a cause disowns the offspring, the obligation to keep the secrets of .tech a parent is forever absolved, and the light -- of day should be permitted . to penetrate - tutu-the dark recesses of this inatitU• nun, so win tliless and at the saute time so dangerous - end -destructive to the genius of Amertcan institutions. It is arrayed in war fare agamsi, the whole machinery of a republi can government. it has enticed the people horn their 'homes iii the still hours of darkness, and its nume•- utis Owen of meeting bound them to, its foul and fearful .purposes by administering - the most horrid oaths with one hand resting on the Bible, and the other raised to Heaven, to yield themselves uort'servedly to the' control of this secret pow er, and even to deny to their fami lies and the•world that they bold connection with the Order. Nu person is permitted to hold an opinion which has not the sanction of, the sell constituted mouth pi , ces of the party. Within tins temple of superslwtiasst tr llracle reigns supreme. The devotee who worships at its shrine is cumpletely.uninanned. Ile no longer feels nor acts his Corner self. In secret he-steals away like a cuospirator to the place where 'the most inveterate hatred is engendered against the descendents an d countr ymen of those brave wen whose heroic valor assisted in achieving the liberties which we now enjoy:, lii the same manner, and often at the hour of midinght he gropes his way back to his family again to repeat the bundled times told lie of no connection with this order. So much false hood in this faintly circle, where the utmost confideuee, trutlitu hiess and harmony should exist, has a duvet, tendency to produce suspi cion and mistrust on the part of wives and mothers towards their husbands and sons ; hence we find in every town where a council exis ts, th e tel lt ale portion of the cominuility are speaking out, boldly, their indiguauoii against the Oi dui w hose influence is so inannestlybane ha upon all w ho are couneeted with it, whether newly or remotely. 'lle w hu'iloes not here behold the sure work ings ul demoralization and. ruin must indeed be a pour moralist. lout all these are evil; of small Magnitude and consideration when compared with suave other i gigantle wrongs w ith winch it la:Jors to curse the land. The :,caternig of a new piece:, oh rut piper ol a pi:collar shape oblige:, every -brother ' w al in hilo:,cll' with a bowie-hinle -- and - rcvulver, or other - deadly - weaposeii - and follow the heels of their leaders even to the sin:4l.llllga . blood. The tintrinnati, ,tit.alni other harlot and bloody know Nothilig riots, ale but the le-z.itailiata. workiug., 01 true I triter, and but the ta i ;1111110:;" 0( such : A :OW:, .1., V. CI t; C1134.70:11, 011 the soil ut Fiance.! under Red Republican Those who control and toanage the affairs of, this alai apt comaa a ill it for the spoils or er -- d =EI IL uIILtRdi Li) Compass this t IhC tit...! t. 111 ItgaimiL itl rwn. It rut,' It di, "1.1 ,quoit k it p e rsecution ,„, I I cutirst! round .%:t..) a.< -ti , A 11/ Ile E I ti• I - t* , in Z.ttii OW It 17AIL .01u4a. . MEM TWO DOLLARS A-YEAR 1 gi,,us tests which have been successfully rea -;„,,,e(1 down and removed from the statutes of I our State, are speedily dragged from their '.loathsome tomb and quickened into life. Nu Catholic is to be tolerated. nu matter how sin cerely he may revere his Maker; he is to hold people, have no part no office in the gift. of the in the government nor interest in any of its concerns, while the atheist. -deist,. debattche, infidel; mormon and buddist is recognized as a good and worthy brother. They hive fearful apprehensions that the Catholic Church will.soon_overrun and possess the country, to the ruinnlike of republicanism and religion—and all this too when that church is in the most rapid decline in theoldcountry, and while it is only continuing in • its fold a moiety of those who reach our shores strung in their attachment to its cause ! these appre hensions, then, are entirely unfounded in fact and 'opposed-to - common sense. It is only - a kick of crafty political managers to bring to their aid the religious •element of their coun try, while it is generating dissensions, secta rian animosities,-a-nd the rankest intolerance. History and experience alike teach that no people were ever persecuted for opinion's sale without coming out in the end, vastly - increased in numeral strength and favor. It is a saying both old and true., in all ages, ‘•The blood uf the martyr is the s-ed of the church." No m of religion ha been put down by the for .pr ;. persecution of its ofessors. '. " , Tins Order swears its members never to vote fut a foreign born citizen to fill' any office in the gift of the peoPle.• -Thus birth-place rather than virtue and intelligence. is.tnade a qualification for places of trust and responsi bilityl- What an absurdity •is here ! The Know-Nothing principles and practices would elevate a Benedict Arnold to. place, in prefer ence to suchmen as Lafayette, Ilarnil ton. Mont gomery, Gates, &when, Moultrie. DeKalb, St. Clair, Morris, a host of noble and • gallant men who freely spent their velem , , . . •:, their blood in our- glorious struggle for liberty. And are th. 'people of Connecticut prepared to adopt such principles as these !=-principles which_ are at war with the machinery or the American Government ! We have too much confidence in their intelligence and honor to believe' that they will very long submit to this great wrong.' We feel confident that there are at this Limo, thousands in- the Qer who 'are similarly situated to ourselves . d - Who already see that its influence is fore it upon every interest of our country.' We know of many incether parts of the State 'who feel with us in , this matter, and who' are resolved to conic out and wash their hands of this foul and disgraceful business. . The foregoing is a brief Statement of facts ; no argument is needed-to add anything. to its force or develop more clearly the character of an organization which, while it ostracizes all those biiiii.on a foreigfibiKArtiWs into - its toils thousands -of lamest and unsuspecting Americans, and then attempts to reduce them to a condition Of servitude,- strip them of their individuality, degrade theta to a position of mete machines, and compel them at the bid ding of their masters, to disobey the bidding of their • consciences, surrender their own thoughts into the keeping of others,.and vio late their • oaths of allegiance to"-the Stifle of which they are citizens. Others may elnxise le submit to such auto cioua despetisur, but as for ourselves, we 'de nounce it as contrary to the genius of our in- StiLlitiollti t at war with freedom of thOught, and deserving the open dentinciationor - every true American. , . ltea►lvcd, That the officorit and members of this Council unix their MUIR% to the above. lienaved, That'the papers in this' State op tamed to this organization. are hereby ,reqiteat ed to publish the foregoing. . B. P. LULL,. Pm:lidos. Daniel S. Swan, Manama; Charlet.4l. Instructor.. 'Tilt MUMS of be utetuberuare also signed.) The K. N. Platform. Gioiie discusses the Nativist Platform in a style peculiar to itself. The plain blunt sense and imp' essible humor of John U. !lives arc visible to the naked eye, all over the subjoined. paragraphs : lirst clause solemnly acknowledges the exisumee of an `.Almighty Being who rules the. Li inverse," which, until we saw that CCM.. letiSioll of faitti we supposed was acknowledged every where,•by all men and parties and the. tions—by the American party even, until this manifestation . of a solicitude, to sh , to world that, whatever ~elite it stay be, iris tiet atlicis Lieut. This is an instance or,overduin, , the thing—of overacting a part; ter, this std: cum annunciation sottus • W be as much the child of hypocrisy am the child 'of reli.rion. - - 11 by assert so suletniily and so fortualry What noliody-would have questioned if they had been silent, unless sacred things are to be invoktd fur unhallowed purpoSes, or unless conscience, which wakes cowards of 411 wen, was not stinting then and there on the K. N. oracles f The draughtsman of that list clause niust be once Captain reader of Sha,ksticare, we think, and had in Intl wind that celebiated police on ce Captain liogberry, who in " Much Ado About i thing," say s seine things sinvtlarly coincidental with the hfst clause of the platterin : - Dogbei ry --,Nlasters, do you serve God ? . .. Conirad and Borachio—Yes, sir, we hope. Dogberiy—VVrite down—that they hope they serve tautl—ami write God first; for Ck s t but biod should go before such villains!" J the platform maker. wrote God first, and Com da and liorachiu would fain make the beiieve they serve Wm also. We do itot a.ppiy Ute word to the Know :\ OLIII be IC observed. For some of them w bow we know we have personally much re spect: for their point , ai opinions and fur their piatform nom:. THY. LAROYIST SThAMPIL AFLOAT. --The steam er Persia. built--tor the Cunard line, and launched attilasgow on - the - 3111ns KWH ou pall.no-wheel line. It is said she is the largest: si.t...mer, kith In capacity of hull and steam - po‘L L 1., which has been built. She far excetils' toninr.e and steam power tin: 1,, Lai 11, than or tine ° Lifirnaltryti, and ex ceed:, also by no less titan .1200 LOOS the tntcr unl of the largest of the present Cu naid Her chief proportions 'way be subleled a l , as kit Ii s :—Length ftcxu figura- le W ater, tics ; 1,.k Lath 01 -ate hull, 43 feet ; breachl all, 71 ; LlepLh, 32 lett. l'artuigton expres,se; great appre -114 -1.,0!_.-„leople will UR:: 414 L .01. ..-4-t-;y 4e picks up annoici, Ve/U tputte a NO. 45: