ljult - ttie - Y - feilli ► feTtint. , ,4 y, killed hint. During the night they' were too terrified to proceed - in removing. the traces of the deed, and in the morning, to their hoe ` 'for, a disturbance broke out in .their i, 0,4. diate' vicinity. Madame , And recht , rif-..„ htl r turned, and -the news of ,the great , rob ert spread like wildfire through the town: What was-tnore,natural than that the nedirest:ho* . ea would bd searched I The w ool-spidner'it was the very-next. and the board's were stilt wet with blood, and the corporal's corpselay in thebellar. This must be prevented, and suspicion cast on some one, till they 'found tine to remove the traces.' . The wool-spinner's wife had the honor of ~ devising the devilish scheme, which seemed to 'save them. The Blue Dragoon might be - the cuiprit,for he had:so eftediseeretly elim,b -,6d over their hedge.. At the same time be h a d flirgOtten a handkerchief 'in-ter home; long before, 'which she had not returned him. Both circumstances tallied. The handker -ale( might' be laid somewhere hi the neigh, hoilioed, and suspiekm would arise 'apontane ,ously. The baker's inventive talent came to , '' the woman's aid, and one idea. produced the -other. One„sigtt was not sufficient; a - see, „bid must betray the' dragoon's presence. in ;.the louse. On a market-day the 'baker had : completed a bargain with a-peasant just be ' fore the Blue ,Dragoon's house. Ile had to settle with the peasant, and asked, the ..land lord fora plebe of paper. The latter. gave :hirnan old declaration to, wntc his accounts on theback of it. This. paper the baker still _had in his . peckethook. - His name, howev erovas on the. back, and" the account and ~,his name were burned off. The baker fol. _lowed the police into the heuse, threw. tins .paper. into a. corner, and then was 'the first to piek lit• bp‘and hapd it to' the oilmen. They . had, howevek acted too cleverly, and their . .extreme caution brought about the discove ". ..ry, as is so frequently the case with critui nals. Had they let the wool-spinner's wife write the letter to the burgomaster, as she ..offered—she went afterwards to. Rotterdam .ito oast n—suspicion would hardly have been ' :aroused against them. The deaf and dumb boy betrayed them, and their fear soon drew .the;most ample confession from thein. On -.the day that Isaac van-C------ and his accom. , . ,plices were hanged; the game Elite befell the ' haker If and. the wool-spinner,' Leen ' .deri. van Ig-----.. - . • NEWS &11 OTIONL .--Within a few days nearly eight hund red . , emigrants have . left New York -ou their re -turn to Europe. —Three hundred Sharpe's rifles have been\ ,sent out from Massael;usetts to Kansas, at the!request of the New Englanfl emigrants,' :to enable them - to defend themselves. 1 • =The grain crops. of kinds, through the . .wh'ole . of middle and 'upper Georgia, are rep ,-j'ayserteCd, as, being excellent.' Wheat is already 'lor the sickle. : -L-The . Herald states that `Torn Thumb, the • T:l..relebiated little great man ; was married at `'Webster, Mass.., on Thursday list, to a . hiss Tinton, of Bridgeport, Ct.'• • ---Democratic cannonadings• in honor of the .victory arc nutherous in all direc .7' tions.. At ond in Boehester, N. 'Y., a filtal sieeident occurred by the bursting of a cannon, lilting one man. \ L.-Several deaths are 'reported as oe'curr ing from the absorption of washing soda, the sal soda entering the system through some, scratch .on the bands of those engaged in wash ing where it was 9sed:, , There have'been no attempts made at '" assassinating. British Monarchs since a law -.was .passed by Parliament inflicting upon all :assassins of this character the'degrading pun ishment of a putlie whipping. —The Houston Telegraph states that 1200 Swiss watchmakers will compose part ofshe slew colony • which Mons. Consideran is about to establish in the neighborhood of Dal. las Texas. They will carry on the watchmak _ inghosiness on an extensive scale. • =Tut. - cost Of the 47orWalk digester to the New' - York and Ne Haven Railroad has been -$280,000, and there- are still unsettled claiirts against the company, outlying. It . will not probably escape the liabilities and losses on account of that terrible affair short of $300,{100. • - —The Easton (Pa.) Angus says::There arc 'still large quantities' of last year's wheat - stowed away in the lianas of some of our fann ers... 'We heard one _men say he had 200 k_bushels on hind. Atough wheat is $2 80 _ 'A bushel they are holding on to it with the hope d that they will get more!' • : 'knots twenty-five years ago, only, the insane were treated like, criminals. here how, in the United. States thirty-two in- . sane hospitals, in active operation, and nine others in construction. 'Thenty-eight ofthese are State institutions, and the'number of the insane is nearly' 20,000. —Tnz St. Louis Intelligences formally takes leave of the Whig party, and announ- Res its withdrawal in the following terms &We - have renounced the old Whig party as