isctilatitouogeivo. .. - • •.: .. The Hagerstown (Md.) Torch ligl,et says. "The Governor has ordered the She r, HT of Washington!County to appoint a suffi cient number.of deputies, residing aking or - near the boundary line bet Ween this State • - and Pennsylvania, and others residing along the line of the POtomse, River, who may • be - impowered to act with authority of law . in ' 'case of any assembly of unlawful characters,' or men whose character and purpose ia not 1 . - known, and to arrest and detain - them; Ini . . pursuance of this;order, the Sheriff has sum moned five hundred men in various parts of county to act: as.his special deputies." .. : ~... Can a- woman be . whole-soled with her,little toe cut-Off r—nsks The Home Tour - nat—and.says ~ 't' This is to become nn inte resting of Fifth- . venuediti, as the Peruvian / Custom of ampu ation of the fifth toe, to 1 :make the foot.ponted and small, isbeginning 1 • to preVail in Paris. At Lima it is the rule ( . to perform this operation on the female in fait • f ' shall i!i no t t he be era c d o `•-;' one week.. If this fashion . ghould become I 4 e. fin....e,d ß t u o t at the e h r o u u ‘ s i a e e m ore. surgeon, than now advertising In Paris, offers t.B perfom it - on grown.up female's, warranting that they F \ niversal, the male sex, we think, will be the 2 . mpletest in toeltoe .—Bostan Post. • - . . , .... ne Evening Journa! 'says that; a " z" / w II informed kentl q athn whose husine i ss takes him frequeAtly to Cuba, assures. it ttt \ • Senior Oviedo, !of " Diamond Marring " 'memory; a worth only from $150,000 to 1 $200,000; bUt - expckta, from maiden sisters, \ mpettne to hirr4oinplicity in the. At neon lave.Trade; 'and that Senator Seward will - , ..... The Courier and Enquirer intimates that Thurlow Weed will .shortly commence m a li m be u l ch su m ita re LK l st s the New York Ilerald,toi• \ ' he advised by his friends to do the same, on account of the Herald calling him a traitor in its articles onithe Harper's Ferry affair. At ShipPensburg, Cumberlind 'c'gtin \ f - tyi,Pa.,A suspicious person was arrestid 'on Saturday, , the 12th inst.iby officer Read, on . the inforniatian 4.Mr. John Spahr, as i - sup:. . ~ posed Harper's Ferry insuroent. •After a --.. hearing before Jitatice 'Mack b y, he was dis- Charged for war{, of proof as 'to hiS Identity.. C. Long, F.-sq.;Appeared for the prisoner. . . • H.. Our Bgirut (Syria) correspondent writes under date of October 40th, thit -,, th ugh the energy of the Ameries4 .Ccuisu itir . --- -1 authorities at Beirut, the perpetrators of - the outrage upon the Dickinson (American) . • family, have at fast been brought to justice. Fciu of the accused have been imprisoned for life, and the deadhody of the fifth ,A nd principal crintintil bad boon _tannitcht into oi. rut. This promptness .has. caused a much higher estimate-to be placedi'in,Syria, on the .Ajnericao name and power.-&•Bosten Travel ler. . . , .... Writing of the. Republican candi- dates for office in the House_of Representa tives, the Washifigton correspondPnt of the Post says : " Candidates for the elective offi ces of the Housii are already thick as Black. berries. Sherman and Grow are .talked \ of for the Speakership. For the clerkship new. men are coming forward every day with Claims. Forney, McKibben, :Underwood, Schouler, Huffman and others. The l e ast named gentle Man is a defeated Maryland 'Congressman, and claims the votes of the Republicans oh,two grounds: first, because he owes hisdefekt to the Harper's Fen): out- Vreak ,• and again; because he owes his defeat to the fact that when lasvin"Conarress he rot ed for theespulsion,of Bully Brooks. For the postmastership of the House is Lewis. ri.. r .h....; elf ti p i . k. oity. Born on Slate oil. he has fur teenryears worked faithfully, lest Slavery Extensjon, and in the elections i f the 'last four years has, in connection with the Republican ,tat-yociation here, 9f.which he is. Secretary., seat off millions of documents to the Free Slates. He has never sought •or received officenor pay for his work, and he is the special mark for the arrows of our prominent Detiocratic bulliestin .Washington Mr. Goodloe, of the Era;l hear, is a prom! nent Candidatefor tht3 Public Printing." .. The host of personal friends of Ger. rit Smith will rejoice to learn from most credible authority, that Dr. Gray of -Utica, has given, hiS fsmily encouragementN to reel tliat the afflicted gentlethan will be en• tirelyrestored to menial health. It is a l.. his opinion. thitt . .Mr. Smith's . bodily • health kill be reestablished. prostrated was he when he arrived at Utica, that it Wastlie opin. •ion of his physicians that be w ,, uld•riot .have . survived fortpeight hours longer, had he* re mained at his home: • Ile Columbia Coral - tam of the 12th inst. ss3s: "The premium - offered by Col. A. M. Hunt, for a specimen of ua live African, to be exhibited at the ,State Agricultural Fair / was taken yesterday by Dr. Bland of Edgefield, who brought two on the grounds. Theirtarrival created quire a sere sation with a large•crowd , as,embled in the amPitbeater. The premium was a ,beautiful silver goblet.• Printice; in one of his recent witry feuilletons,saysAat, in America it takes three to makelt pair: ihe, she,,- . aud a hired girl.— Had Adam been r a modern there would have two a hired girl' to look atiq little Abel and raise Cain. '.... A - traieli , r'stopping at one of the ho , _telt; in MinnestO, recently shw the phra:e • "Fried Water Chickens" on the dinner bill of fare: Desiri 4., to knoW what this mean. _ he sent fur a dish of the same. Tried - them and found thcrri excellent, recommended •- them to the rest rof the party, ladies and all. - All who tried !him liked them wonderfully. and tilimot all till them became frog eater,_ without knowinglit.- ' .... The skiei around 'Davenport, lowa, are now lightectii.: in:every direction, by the prairie fires. Albeit of fire appears to sur .round the earth4 - which makes the nights ap pear even darker then they ;really are. 'A great deal of datnage is done every fall by • these•fires, nianylof tl2etri being set by malt. cious rieesons with a - view of burning down •'their neighbor'S fences amid bay stacks. 2. . ~6, • We undels.tand that the pikes found ' in Old Brown'aspbssession - were inanufactur: .. ed at Unionville, lby C. Hart, who voted for J. B. for Preside t, and has .ever since vot ed the Adminisiration ticket. Of course, according to the lVgic of the Buchanan papers, the Annnistration is implicated !-L—Llarilord Prin. 1 , • ' ..... Late accounts from Utah state that Judges Sinclair aid Cradlebaugh are on their way to Washington. Murders and assassi nations continue. but no arrests have been ruade,"as the Is4rtnives systematically .0). • etr.nct i the course id justice, and the Courts of Justice are •perfectly useless until some - change is made iii i the of Government. ~Gov. Juin:vim is lo restricted by instructions: that he cannot afflrd protection to those who seek it. The preztence of the army at =Camp Floyd is of no earthly use but to add•to the rosperity.of the Moimon• , , in consequence . of the money spent fur supplies, . _ , ..:-.. A Tennesfee paper '• states that the census of 1850 reported upwards of seventy. : seven-thousand native wte persons-in the State, who had acknoWle ged Iv ..the census' takers that they were-unable to read, which` ,Ittittout onetuurth of the rearnumber. The influence Of free schools cannot he very great, in that ; pert pt the !world. ; .. . . . ,' F. A laisiiatch: has been r'eeeive Wall egtOn'ifreln General Twiggy, to•t1 feetlt Etriiivntiville, Texas, has been it ashe y Coitin' , the Mexican leader, 1,00. p the inhab tants massacred. The i Inen,l Is ciisdedi dat Washington. . 1 t ILI. An p iiyrnons letter has been writ s no' , tea, OiCyntl•# g in(l, Ky., forewarning she -p . ~ pl c f Harrison, county xi . f a conternplaled -1 slay :insurrtictiOn. The people haie a -teed the sblves sind have sentler a - fresh St pply of firearms,i'atid the whole country Warmed. .1,4. There Was great excitement at Oar. 'perir Ferry- Ihmi Charlestown; on the'll7th init.,in conseqUenctof a rumor that a t rescue oroldlJohn Bro'Fn was to be attempted.— NtlFittrper'slFerry it was rumored that, two litintr6d - andififty men,armed withl•illes;were encinlped, aliß e erry ovine, near. Charles, own, `nneditliting,rentieue. There was' Brea ex eiteinent at :ihef, Ferry; and armed' guards wer'e, atr olqng the streets and roads. Des pati* s werfi received at Richmond •hich .cauie .the a' uthorities there to take :Pr mpl i actirin , ; and, e thre 'hundred men and two piec'eslof artillery left Alexandria by °V. ' Wi4e''r.orddia.., . : - ---- • ..L;.- .A.NiTashingten dispatch to - the Tri: . bun' flays 1 Intelligence from Pennsylvania Jphti L. Dawson will probably be the • 4Nt. e i l i voratie candidate for GOvernor, andklOti 'tovode the Opposition. If s 4, the hittir ail , 4e elected by 25,000 majority.. c .1... enbet; of.theirera/cl,--menaced With a hind s it for editorially[ chargingTharlow ;Vied with 'being Concerned in the Slave- Trajule, thus4itielts down is his paper : "We theiefore, ulliesitatingly • believe and state • that', he was, l noknore concerned hi the lave. Trade than' the Southern-. Demoericy and Southern statesmen ,, or Mr. Buchanan's, Ad ittirOgtratiotii gu)ti thus 'we restore our amia blelboterriplrary to his usual peace of 'mind ar.likood standin •in the commtmity: Stet. ) son,J, of the Astor, will . please' to empt one of his best bottles on this point." - 1 ! The peo i ple at the South are arowing L craxily lawfess ,ra view of the . BrownPlot.— , A Mississippi paper coolly proposes that no persons shill trivvel in Southern States. Iwith. out Pitssports, according to the custornlifEu ropean dsPottams. • . '.`Brighain Young. tells, his foil veers some serioifs' truths. ' Ile said in a !ale, ser mon-to the . Saints : "Many of,you wqr ex: change you last bushel ~ of wheat with 'the stores for ribhons and g ewgaws , wheni you need it for I' brlad. • A nd, with . shamefaced. ness l'say ii, some will` take the last .1 peek bt grain to the distiller to buy whisky', and then beg their bread." Similar. truths M ight be told. of rilanv fools out of Mormondclm. ~ .... Bishop Oaderdonk; of New 'York, whose 'appeal, 10 - restoraion 'or ma -Ditioe rie failed thibe;sustained in the late Ho n se of Elishops at ,Riehmond, has now decided to try the matter .a new way,„and will bring a legal actiont Once to recover damages which he alleges having sustained through the de privation othis office and its immunities. [ .... SPlney Smith, .in urging against theborror 6,f some Cliristians;at the thclught cf indulging evlen in . innocent amusenienth, speaks of them; as•always'afraid of being 'en, ter.tained acid thinking'no' Christian is safe who :s not 4till. • 1. - . The oldest painting in the word is a Madonna land . Child; paieted •s. D. 886. The .oldest in 'Kngland a're said to be-the phi.- traits of Chitreir-, painted on p a nel, in the ear ly part of the,l4.th pent., and of flenry-lVth, done in the beginning of the ilVilt 'century.. .. ITon.,.loshua R; Giddings '.re4ntly passed thronghSyracase. He was welcom ed by a large concourse•of people at the de. fll.i, ~ea ~..10, introduced to the as.sembly by -Hon. li . B.iStanton. Mr. Giddings replied to 'the greeiin'g briefly, remarking among oth er things-that $lO,OOO Was offered for his hem in Virginia, and that the . Virginians could have hi.i3head for ttrat-sum as' sop he was da4 w 4-01 it. He al remarke sound head ? ," and brains wer e lAadly n at the South. : [laughter and cheers.l '.4 1 , which the train departed, carrying' the, ,_aentleman With it. ' .... lowa has just erimpleted.'a Sratel sus, sbowing a populatien of 633:549 110 192,214 in 'lB5O, 43,112 in 184.0. , hak urore dienitrebled her population. fa ;it. nine l yclars, and increased it about fig told in nineteen years. -• . BertatOr Sumner .is.pn hie way from Ettriitle. j - Ilk health is .represent he completely restored. • ; A friar! in Jlartford bas. made • cation for as divorce froak . his :Wife, on! grOund of her being,laz.y. lie -allege' -he will not, get up in the: mornivig. .b . fire and get, his breakfast at a seasonable i l Re finds nd tither fault with•his bosom piinion,,and the Court reitises. to grant ptfayer of tfiejkititioner. • A Suit!iiivolving the qiiestion' wheth er money 4 itt in a registered letter rZ.- tnittance; vies decided ih ••. 4 Nevi York a feW days sine•O`i ; Edward Morrison sued the Farmers' Elitnli of North '.Carolina for two hundred . .aridqty dollars;:the product lof a draft Oulleeted„and'which was sent to him in a registered:letter, but not -received:l The zurt held:that as the: defendant was not au thorized teirethit money instead of drafts, as is..the .usual i cOitom,' the money Mailed o the addresS.Of the 'plaintiff could 'not be con ides-. ed pay and the defendant was therefore liable in the' adtizin, The jury (timid fors' the przintiffaceiiicngly. . • , Allyoung man residing 'at Silver Cia.ek.,.Chaflitantple Co., N. Y., a . week 'or w;, since met High an unpleasant ad venture,while• iileavins the! rouse of his " Dulcinea," where he had heed i engaged . in - that - very pleasant oeenpation,4clept sparking. The young mat was bowed ;onto:vine time during •iwire smaT.l3iitirs, but through the darkneseof.the inorning',-otlfrOin theliztoxication ofthe part--. ing kiss, helbeezurie bewildered, strayed from the path, And brought up some distance limn the house,• I by-'stepping - into an open., well nearly 'twelve feet in dejoth—walled uPitiy hollow treei,, .''here was about four fe'et of water in th - ci i ; 4ll, where this luckless Lotha-,' riohad tel rkinain till . . bread daylight; is be was' unable io getout ortinake.bintselflieard so-as to drOng assistanpe; The _Vietithized lover is . ihe Son - of a Baptist clergyman; but he says his . #„titynents w 11 hereafter be decid edly..averse;.. to lin - Mere : kir'. - . . ..Theittital vote cast by the-larger boa.; 'oughs of f+enpsy I van is at the last election-were —York ,150, Allentown' 1394, Ilarrisburg ,l2l2,..Pottsiille 1.185, Easton 1125. : 1 A terrible 'accident occurred. q 9 the Indiana Central Railroad, Nov: 18th,4 'fear Catnbridge City. Itappeanstbat a rail on the track raiining over a bridge had beeh tak er. up for repairs, and before-it could be re. placed, - a triiifi r ef eighteen' cars; filled With - hogs; came tiltinirat high speed. The.ingibe and thirteen,li.airs ptuagrd through the bridge int , the .river. ! The, Conductor,- brakernitn, and a droVe4:4ere - killed, and Several firti. Judi were injUr4l.• Over Ave .hutidredi hogs were killed. ears were literally" smash ed to atoms:" . . D. - Appleton Co, have leasedliheir bulding for $441,000, per - autum,`froini the first ofJuly ite3o, to two mercantile: hObses. .—Xe - ti 3 or 4 '2 6u, e . .- s Allen A.gall,Editoi of the Na.rAville ,Ne t , ?B , op the 19th inst. killed G. G. Pohl dextercEditer ISt tbe . Union cild: stmericaii, in a street nirre4'; growing tut: orsit aef id in and tate- The :ptdepeqPiqt ileptibiieq* MOULATION ; 23284 ai F. IEAD a H. H IrR4.#HH; ENT* E.LOOMIS. CORRESPONDING EDiTo j IEOII7'IIIOMS, P.ll. 1: . 07;emiztl, 0/fati: 21, 1 efi .. 9.:1 1 • .-. • L ir Our next State Convention is called to meet- Itarrisburg, February 22, 11160, to nominateM candidate for Gevernoi, form a Presidential Electoral -ticket, appoint =Senatorial, and designate the titrie and mode of electing District Delegates to the NA- P tmnal Convention, &c. - . Ur We learn that - the latest excitement at Marp , er'3 - Ferry was. caused by. the 'burning of a whoit stack ! The Whole region exhibited - the wildest ter+ -4at least one thousandmen.were put : under arm+- tiro thousand pounds of powder and Minie, catrideis- Were ifitipatciled from - Washington to the scene :if the burning wheat-stack; but no incendiary, instil , rectionist, or traitor could befounill,and before fhc, arrival ef tbe powder and balls, or the warriors who Were to use theni, the fire. was extinguished. The alarm was giien by .C s ol. _Davis, Commander of Oe BprderTo'rces and Keeper of Marches, and when xhe,people discovered that it was a false alarm, di c ey turned their rage against him, for making them sip pear so'ridiculoui beforfe the-world. Ile has a deli cate post, as commander of to-much •Chivalri," and may someday-. lose his coMmand, if not his he4d: lar The very.latest,news from the seat of wariut [carper's Ferry is - that Col. Oavis has reeeived.a new tight and sent another diipateh to Gov. .(Vise, who immediately. (on Sunday- lag° put. himself at t,he hCad of LO men and scurted for the scene of actidh. The Governor .passed through Washington, on his mime, at which place the whole affair was thought be - a hoaz; but still Wise went on, saying,' that the eipedition would give his troops experience and\-ii.e pine them to repel the next invasion. ..This' time thC fright is said to have :originated - in a conVersatihn oferheird in. which it was stated that a"band of s ' l.ifi men num . y.wr, Jay. i'acr companions:' - ' . .1.. i t ar The Supreme Court of Appeals . of ruginia4m the case of John Brown, on . Saturday refused io award a writ of error to the judgement rendered by the Circuit Court of Jefferson. ..The execution, there fo'e, takes place on the . 2d of . December: , i . __• , ' 1113r-2:he Montrose Derntieraf r —either ignorantly ttr wilfally r sgeti a great way off from the truth when. it states that the KansekHerrildot F reedom is a Re:: publican paper. We lisit s n'exclianged with the Her ald of Freedooi most- of the time for the last t. 16 years, and we know that it opposed 'bitterly and iio GM last theorganizlgion of -the. Republican party. lin thSt Territory ; . that its editor, G. W. Brown; 13 bit - pi, and despised by the Republicans there . as atraiiir tolthe Free State cause, whith he once professed 4,13' advocate; and that he is generally_ supposed to he -,-- • .v un l der pay from the Democracy; while he makes pm e.1,...0. profession of Free Soil principles . to. enable hire fro' do. some injury . to the cause. We were iii• formed by a citizen- of Kansas who was here recently, that the Herald of Freedom has but a very small .Olr cuation in the-Territory,, but-depends, for its suppprt &telly on its circulation in the States,, where its •cd iter is not so well known, and on the advertising . patronage bestowed uponit by the General 7 Govitas ment. - The fact that, when there are so many. Woe oer f atie papers published in Kansas, the Pa3toillite and other advertising of the Federal Governmentl:le giyeti to the Herald of Freedom, - together with ( }re general-course of that paper, is suffitient evidenceof lta editor's-unsoundness. For example, if the lage p4ruient- Republican should be kora Y .4 *.r.anFr . 11!..r oi l usa. s -esery movement of the Republicans of that counts., .or State, and recklessly libelling , all he pr t ominent men in the party,,rind at the-same time it received advertising patronage from the Democratie' i • • i - . Administration at Washington, would any, one •adMit • lint it deserved the name of a Republican paper? int the case of the Herald of Freedom is still snolig, , e . r. That paper noes not even claim, and: never has chntned to be fteisublican ; though it has pretend'ed tobe iti favor ot Making Kansas a Frei State; A im- I as many Democrats here at the INorth have, wh i le they also, like G. W. Brown, were working to, make it a Slave ...P State: " . ' - IL No Kansas Republican will hesitate to tell Mkt r - QS that eded mid 1111 cen- She She the teen !back . -. to I PPIi the that ild a i huur icont. the you Am ,fis G. W. Brciwn is atuiserible and cowardly libeler. The .charges of unprovoked murder that. he hilas blings against old John Brown(are as unfounded trutkas many of the.allegations helaimide against the best Republicans in SaeOr If he knew of sti l ch crimes committed • by old Browtt-ris he now charges against him, why did he never mention them till Ike l a tter was a wounded and condemned prisoner '?h e 'fact he manufictures these stones for pay, to Ihr rdsh the dilapidated Democracy with a new sapthy - of political caps*, - . • ,• rGenarr SRITII A Rzrusucatc.—Since tt has be. come known that Gertit, -- Rridttrirse involved in ibe Itarper's Ferry egheme, nettle newspapers bane sat. ed that he was a Republican." The New/ :Terk T,ritune in order. to Clear the skirts of its • party F of sbch a disgrace, denies it; alleging as a reason that 'tie probably did not vote tor Fremont, in•lBba. Rut .Inxitickily for the veracity of the Tribune, as well 'iut for the •honor of its party, the &press hunts up Lhe Tribune Alinanae for 18b7, wherein he is classed Asa Republican" Member o,7Congiess! As this-4as the year after tire Fremont defeat, the present denial of the Tribune is entitled to 'teem& The Iribtthe Almanac is good authority, among- its followeri-;_ they believe it next tend some in preference) to the Bible; and if it saya timith is a 44 RepubliCan" is lit not so , Messrs. Repullicans?—iforitreu Democrat.. As the Demonerat apkarent/y desires a rest:4)44e' to the above, we will *ate a few • kcts, which the editor of that sheets welconie to copy intohie neitt - • &we, for the inftortnatiott.of his readers: - , I n I. ; I Tribune Almanac . for lEfp7' does. not ela t e s ! Gerrit Smith as a Republican Member. of Copgreas. (See that annual.) - .. . • 2.—Gerrit tSmith• was not a Member of Congteas 057, but wakelected to that body fp the Fall of 1843 (before the formation of the Republican partY,) and served only part of 063 - term; •:t . -3.—The Tribune Ahninacs fin; 1853 and - . 1 85.44- the only ones in which we find : Gerrit Smith await] as Member of Conclassify _Members, 'Misr., Democrat*, and'Free Boiler., aid GerYit Smith is plaCed under.the last head. d —Gerrit . •• • .` - Smith stated sometime since, it ,lett'cr toiheßew York Tribune, that he tikl- not vita . fin Fremont. • f l Smith rue for Governor of- ki New Yolit, Last year;against theßepubllatau*didf Ate,iuntiOn• IY proclaimed hisoppositlon to the Rerjublkan park. 6.—That famous N. - N. iegin,•thel New. York gr, • pr is very: P°or authority ; and ' the editor of to Democrat had bear refe'e to the Trzabune or rome.other go;!od laWneeiri, than 'trust to 'the: . .14. r. veracity - • ' We.taiiadd thai we have not yipr seen'any tiVl dence that - Gerrit Smith 7 veu Inioited In Harper's Peel scheme; nor do we consider tb .at he would; II a4tepublicandilagrao Is the pony ow 'twit is NtlAlrahi Rralker, Brigham Tome; latioselladt' anazipliqfilim War. diaricts the bmaioustie p• "rip' • . ME , 11," in the cottrse 'of . 1 sensible article gn the means to be teed to secure a Republican triumph - it' 1860, the Tribune remarks that it la already time to beilintgr labors for that objesc'and.that, where ao much ramie! and'effort will be expended! by : those who hivet4strol of the drifted States Treasury, to enable thea,teketp it, we cannot expect to beet, theta WithAt semi outlay of Money and tithe op our part ; and' ft thetigives the folloWing plan of organi- zation end operation, which (or something similar) we hope lo SW adopted in this as well as other coup ties wittulmf fear • ' ." 1. The fematiolti n every County, at the County seat, of soul equally commanding location, .of a Ite-. publican Campaign Club, composed of all who arc willing to wee.gbr a Republican triumjib in .186.- - If there is t live C,aunty. Committee, let that be de ferred to in all thinie; but two-third‘of the County Committees, even where.such practically. exist, 'are dead as Julius Clesai: 'A live Club at every County scat is indispensable, and itoughrto be . formed at occe; let its books be open to all who will joint lei an Executive Committee be chosen by it coin. posed Of men who will certainly put heart and• brain into the work. - . . _ "2. The ntoment ouch a Committee is constituted, tee eaeh member of it to work, by correspond enee and personal visitation, incite . the foimation of similarClubsi in every township and village of the County, and at ,the County seats of other Counties. - . . S. Let each County Club employ, -so soon as"may be, a tompetent.and•flustworthy Agent or Actuary, to traverse the County, urging the.formation of kin dred Clubs -- ; and " 4. Mak ‘ e arrangements at once with the best Re, publican Journals, giving the preference to those of your own County, for supplying their respective sheets forth° ensuing year, at the lowest possible caslr price: Let it be the business of each Club,and the special ditty of the County Agent nn Actuary, to got a good itepublican paper subscribed and • paid for by every person in-the County who can. be 'in duced to take one. Have specimens of all the jour miliat hand, and let every than take that which he prehrs, but'Ary to strengthen the local journals as Much as possible. Of course, we Mean good jour. hats, conduct4l by editors of unquestionable ability, intelligence, and integtity,.o9 we trust most'Republi can - jOurnals are. To circulate any - otheiw is to dam age seriously the cause you desire toPromote. But, having procured tpecithens of the best f tet a united, systematic effort b 3 promptly made to put one into the hands of every voteiTirhicant be induced to, pay the lowest gash price for it. And if there he anyone who, by reason of some Providential affliction, is un able to pay, be Sure that he hasa . copy supplied him without charge, and is thanked for takirg it. ' ”8. Let the County,Cluti open• a, correspondence at once with 'your Member- of Congress, if a Republi can i If he is not, then witlistbe Republican Member 'Whit lives -nearest • and have hies forward the Most important Speeches and Local/adds to those w.hcise names feu will fu0613.- Don't ask him 'to pay fur out. of tll3 OWLS pOCktVlbtlt fltntl tun &few tli* hire to corer the coat of paper and printing; he will gladly do kis part' of the work for nothing. But even though You ehouldb.e too poor, or too mean, to pay for the documents, send hint the , names:" • Cam' From St. Louis we learn that 'a dispatch from Washington to the Republican, states that Govern ment has determined to Seize upon the 'northern States of Ifezicol and that.sis Companies of heavy frOm Foruest Monroe, two of light artillery, and three of infantry from Fort Leavenworth,. were to Proceed immediately to Brownsville. We-ave also, from Washington, au Mtimittion 'to the effect that our Goveriument intend to occupy the northern part of iddicoiin order to Secure4atisfaction or the 'claims of our citizens agree* Mexico.. . rir A dispatch from NeW-Orleaus assures us that Brownsville his not been sacked, arid that nearly there. Cortinas'a chief Officer loot rated that Dr. Noyes, the enter• the Kuickerbotker Magazine, intends piesenting iCrall•three-dollar subscribers for the cdming year, the migni'ficeni - steel•plate engrav ing entitled , •14;erry-makinglu , this Olden Time"— r an inducement which we should thiiilcarcely needed to extend the, popularity of that ably 'edited periodi cal., ... . • - N • Book- Notices. semen YovEuere Aie - Tcent..sTiLze : Being a Crit kitoca ty - Tne - insztrryof Ltvii44l. Prose FV ,4 - ion- By Laidd-Masson, M. A., Professor of ' Englisk -Literature, University College, London, 4tuthiqmof The Life and Binies of John Ma : The above is the title of a handsomely pripted book, (price 75 cents) sent us by the AMerican pitb- 7 ,_Messrs. Gould and Lincoln, Boston: The substance of the volume was delivered, in the form ot.Lectures, to the members of the Philosophical In. stitutiop of Edinburgh, in 1858. As a further indi• romptinn O . ' the nslosy or tLra arccrlr, aro iftem tho of some of the tcpies treated of in the firit lecture, -namely : "Nature of the novel l —The novel - term orpoetry=lts relation to the epic—:-Relative tapnbil ities of verse and prose in fiction—Points ;got a novel—The theme, or subject--;The- inci 7 d ents- 7 -The scenery—The eharaCiers—Extra-poetical merits,' kc. After glancing at early prose fiction, among:the Greeks and Romans, and et a later .day 'among the different Ittrtipesin" nations, the anthoi comes to the history of the novel in the. British: Is land; Which he traces frointhe "Mort di Arthur" of Sir Thomas Mallory, Moore's " Utopia," Sidney's f " ie.— ineluifing Buriyies ; "Pilgrims' Progress," through, thehnt over prolific intermediate period, down to th i.timp.of the master spirit of them) all, "Silt Walter Scott, " the'Wizard of the. North ;71 1 and thence to Dickens;Theckerny, and s the multitude] of novelisis who have folloied the author of. Wareri fey: It is perhaps tinheeqsary to add that the subjee • is treated in a Masterly manner, • and the work wil prove of.greai interest fe ma, y.. Taff Spasm.: Or Methods Of .Teciehing the Comma, 'BraViches, Oythoepy,- Orthography, Grammar; Arithmetic, and -elocution; Intruding' the Vali lieu, Tech 4iealitiee, Ezpiatialftna, Drynonsfral Dejfn Weill, and Methods, Introductory anct Peeidiar to each Branch.' By Alfred Holbrook; Principal of- .ffornuif School, Lebanon , Ohio. - Published by A. S. Barnes d; Burr, anctf. John Street, New York. Price $1,0 . 1),,. It has been aptly, said that a shorter and better fuune. forthis work would be, " A Book-of Common Seise for Teaclierst" We hare seen no work tfiia;4 this Itubject from which we think teachers can obtaiji wore practical ideas for everyday _ use -in the self I rooms. W . e. think it is even superior torage's "Theti ry a odPracticeof Teaching,"so widely known ainong the teachers of this State. It contains 'much useful infol-matton for those who are not practical teachers; the analytic charts of the:different branches, and the ireatias on Elocution ate particularly valuable. . T.ICTVISS ON MINTAL AND MORAL COLWELL. By Samuel' P. Beata, if., Suppinteodent of Po& tic hub tiaion , Crawford Co' wily, Pa. , Tide letheside of anoher new book, lately issued by Messrs . liarneadi Burr. of uniform style and price with the - preceding. It consists of a series of Lect ures delivered before various Teachers' Institutes. on the following inflects" Dignity of the Teacher's Professi' "The Boyhood of Napoleon," "Tie Power iipokenlhought," 6 ' Vocal Culture," "The Study. of Language," . "The Means and Enda of Edo; cation of the. Moral BensibMtles," and " The l True Basis of 'Liberty.'! The author has endeavored in these Lectures to present, in a popular - and inter esting form, some of the leading topic's .which 11109 . iutlinatef) concern the Teliehe'rn and Patrons of our yr Joint 'Thosin;.the principal actor'. in the tad acenee at liarPer's Ferg, is add by the Litchfield liquirer to have been a native of Torrington, Cone.. where a record of Isis birth la found in the toed reg• hotel., showing blot to be abot4 .63 years of age. is a " ea hew the , hite 'de a con 41in Brt + wo, of New Hartford;Ranfamed CO! hb. 04^4a4 theoloi* kirONV 101. Child to Ocivernor Vise: The follOwinigharp paragraphs. of a letter from .11..5. Lydia *rift 'Child. to Gov. Wise, sufficiently explain far themaelvds thocirtromstatices .underwhich . they Were written:: With !this gigantic letter4iiit ljng,powet*, the Governor has found-more than his ! match in this Boston woman, whet:at:l first 'only; In l gutted oi -hitn'ithethei• she could visit 'old ' - itib*-- , !Brown in . safety :. • • . .,. r . "In your ciVil but very , diplomatic reply.' tit :.Ty lettei, you inform me, -that I have a . constitutional !right to' Visit Virginia, for peaceful purposes, in coin f monwith every citizen of the Matted States. ' ,:! \was ;, perfestlmell aware that such wits the the'piit of eon - istiititkinal oldietionin the Slate States; bin I . Was' ; also. aware. of. what You . - omit to tn!urtinn . 0t... (that the Constitution has; i, reality;ltfen completely tanthsyStentiticidly nullified - whenever it suited the convenience or the policy , of the Slave Power. T.0 1 4r. Constitutional obligation, for which you profess SO . !much' respect , has - never prated any •proteetion to !citizens of the Free - StatesWho happenedto-have a ... . . t o- have ;black: brown , or yellow completion; noT . .to tiny jwhite perslit' wheal: you even suspected of enter (tithing opinions opposite to. our pitn; on a guestien tor vast impartmeet) the temporal welfare and moral lexample of out-common country. This total disre lgard of constitutional obligation has been manifested not merely by . the Lynch law of Maim in the ,-Slate !States, but by the deliberate action- of magistrates land legislators. Whit regard Was paid to con'slitti,: Go* obligatinn . in SOuth Carolina,.When .lifissachti- Isetti sent the Hon. Mr . . Hoar there-as an 'envoy; on a purely legal errand? Mr: Medic 4 .; Professor of Political Econoniy in the University of North Caroli , tut; had - a constitutional tight to reside in : that State' What regard was paid to that right, when he was driven from his home, merely for declaring that he cotutideied Slavery in - hapolitic .sysler4, injurious ( to the prosperitt of States? What respect for Con stitutional rights was manifested by Alabama, .when a bookseller in Mobile was compelled to flee for 'his -life, becausehe bad, at the special:request of:some of the'citizens, iniCotted a few copies of a notiel .hat everytiodY was 'curious to read? Yotir Own ,citizen:. Mr, Ihnlerrod,-harlar constitutional right to live in Virginia, and vote for whomsoever he. pleised.-- : What regardwa;l paid to his' rights; when . he was driven from your State for deelaringlituseli in fiver Of the election of Fremont? With these, and a mut' it.ude of other example; .befere iont- eyes, it ',would seem ag it thelesithat was said: ahoit "splet for constitutional obligation at the - South, the.-better.—.: slavery is, in 'fact, au infringement of all lair, and adheres to law sate for its own . purposes of ..pi- pressipu. • " "Volt accuse _ Capt. John Brown of ' whetting knivei of butchery for 'fie others, Sisters; 'dough% tees, and s babes of Virginia; "Jul . !! you informme of the well-known fact 'fiat he . Is "qw . ,....raigned for the crimes of murder, rolbery,-and treason ,not stop here to explain Why . lhe4vethat Otqerti to be no criminal, but-a martyr to principles whick he inc4tode Anctioucd bj his OWn .. religion;iiews,-though:upthy mine. AllowingThiat . .Slept. Brown did attempt a scheme in which murder, robbery, and treasonlveie, to his bin consciousness, Auv.olved, Ido notiiie how GeV. Wise canconsist 7 . ently arraign, him for crimes he has himself com mended. Von haie 'threatened to trample on the Corrittition, and break the Union, if • a majority of the legla voters in thine Confedeiated States,: dared to elect a ?resident unfavorable to _the 'extension of Slavery:. 'ls'not such a declaration proof of premed itated treason? Inrihe Spring of 184 - you Made a speech in Congress,-,from which Icopy the following : ." ' Once set before the people of the Great Valley she conquest of the, fi l ch Mexican Provinces, and Yon • might as *ell attempt to. atop the wind, . This Gov ernment mightsend its troops, but .they . would ruin' over themlike a herd of puffelo: Let the Work once .begin; and Inc; not:lniv that this llouse would hold me very long. Give 'metie millions of .dollars, and I would undertake to do it myself.. Although I do. pot knew hOw to set a single squadron in the field, [could find men to de it. Slavery should pouritsell out without restraint, and find ii s o limit but the South ern Ocean, The Comanches should 'no longer hold the richestliines of- Mexico. Every' golden image which had received tile pre faruttieri of a false worship, should soon be melted down into good Ainerican eagles. I would untie as much gold to cross the Tho del Norte as the mules of‘ Mexico could carry ; aye, and I Would make better use of ir,:tOo,.tbaii anylazy; , biloted,priestho . od under heavyn.' - . When you thus boasted that -you and 'your bootedioatertrtvoulciiiverrini the troops-ofthe Unit ed States . ' -like a herd of buffalo,' if the Government sent them to arrest your invasion of .a neighboring nation, it peace with the United States, did yori .: not pledge yourselfto commit trea s on 'Was it .not by the Murder of unoffending Ifoxiatzs that yen - Catiect ed to 'adviince these schemes of avarice and-ambition! What humanity had' you for.Meximui`mothers . and bate i, whom you. proposed io make childlge and, fatherleas for . what Purpofle Was this - Whore: e l sale massacre, to 'take - place - !' ; 'to,' right - tb wrongs of any oppressed class; not to sustain any great principles of justice,. or of freedom'; bukmerely to enable ' Slavery to pour itself .forth . without 're straint.' • - " Even if Captain firowrt were as bad at you paint. him, I should suppose he must naturally remind . you of the words of Macbeth i • _ ',We Mit teach' Bloody instructions, which, being taught, return ' To plague the inventor: ;This even-handed jusfice . Commends the ingredients of our poisoned chalice, To Our own lips.' - • • . - " If Captain Brciwn intended, as you say, to coin mit treason, robbery ? and murder, I think 'I have shown that he 'could find ample authority for such proceedings in.the public declarations 'of Gov. And. if, as he himself dechires, he merely intended to free-the oppressed, where could he made taore fore . ible leOon than Is furnished by the State Seal of Vir ginia? I looked at it-thotighthilly before I opened, your letter ; and though it hid always' aPpeared to me very suggestive, it neverseenied to me as much so as it now did in connection with Captain John Brown. A liberty-loving hero stands with `his foot upon a prostrate despot; under , his atrpng arm, man e acles and chains lie bioken and the motto is ' Sci &Tye, Tyrannis ;" Thus be -it.ever.done to -Ty. runts" And this , is the blazon of rtState whose most profitable bri'siness is the internal Slave-Trade! In-whose highways coffee Of human chattels, chained arid manacled are frequently seen ! Aral the -Seal and Cofflcs Are both lookedSupon by ;othet -chattels, constantly exposed to the same fate ! - What if some .Vezey, or Nat Turner, should be growing up muting those apparently quiet spectators? It is in nn . spirit of Munt:or of. exultation, that I ask, this question. I never think of it but with 'anxiety, sadness, and sympathy..; I knowlhat a slayehold'ing community necessarilylives in the midst ol'ii,unpOwder ; and, in this age, sparks of free thOught are .flying' in every. direction. - You cannot' quench' the- flies of: - free thought ittrd'human sympathy by any - process of cum ning or tong but there is timethod by which yon can effectually wet the - gunpowder, • Engliuril has al ready triectigiftb safety and success.'.' Would that yoti could be persuaded to•set aside. the prejudices of education, and candidly examine the actual work ing of that. experiment! Virginia is 'so richly diiiired by nature that Free - . lnstitutions ;thine . are wanting to render her the moat pro:Tereus and pow. erful of:States."' . , •_. ". A WOMAN PASSIM} 46 • M. reit Fokyr Texas: roollt extraordinary, revelation . was made at . Inquest reeently, before the eoroner i for !Alford, Sag; land. The body Of e wan was found iti; the sluice at Mode Wheel, on the river Irwell, ind in the evening an inquest was held. On inquiry, it was, found. this the,deoessed, who went by the name of Blur, Stokes,, was In heti woman ;-that _she-had Worked as a bdeksetter for about a quarter of ; that she had been twice tuairied during this period; •bed , ketit; .beer . shop Mineliester during the early part of her career, but in every way elindueted. ber- - aelCatelnan.- The -jury alter ■d Ansbingllol4 tumid a wirdie4 kind droned," _ . Ara the Hartford PresS, Nor' 1 L . John Brown's Duly H,lstoryTAlmost a D.I. • Want of space compels us to abridge somewhat a comtntmictitlonleoeived from - t Williain traalloek., o f Cabion Ctitttre,liesigtind to correct erroneous stnte ineull concerning CapL John.BroPre. We give that portion relating to his nerly l , l4. The .public are . , al •iendy-amliiitejsith. hiitidstdriduring,the Fist:, few years- , "In the .burying-ground near the church in Canton Centre, ' cOni., stands a marble monument upon which is inscribed the following: " mobOtro - 1 Capt. John Diown ' who di&l in thOevoiudomiry• Army, at NewYork,Sept 3,1776. fferWalt of die fourth generation in relar descent f angigott i te w itarnifti t ette i tcymea, December 22, 1620: " Capt. John Brotin, at his cOubtrre Mill, led forth_ comPaliir - of Mist SimehttrY (noir. PallOn),trociPs , to the deadly conflict, and fell a victim to she Shen prevailing eTddeinfeln the,Anteticktt camp. Ho left a nuinprous grcluiof little.oncs, who were feared by his widow rith'siiigular tactstid judgment, to habits of industry. and prineiples of virtue, and all became distinguished citisermin the communities in which they' resided, One of the sons became a Judge in one of 'the'dourtsiof Ohio. One of the.daughters had the honer of gi;ing to pne:of our most flourish ing See' Englind'ecillegeti :a irasident for tvtenty yeirs,sin the'person of 'her ' , • Owen Brown, l i e of the mai, and father:o the ••. • , present Capt. John' Boas, - a daughter of Gideon Mills,-Esq., who was himself (Mills) ant:dicer in the Rovnlutionary army, and was, intrusted with the cemanand of the guard who- had in charge it fargaportlon '4O - the prisoners comprisingßurgeyne's nnny, thni proving that - John Brown inherits his military spirit through:, a patriotic ancestry. Soon after the nifirri4e of Owen Brown, hammered with his family to Torrington!, Conn., where the present ipt.',lohn Breit' *as born. ' he was yet in lane) , or:earlY childhood, the tlarenta returned to West Simsbury, and there remained for a few years, when they, emigrated to Hudson, Oki!), !hire Oweri - BrOwnbMame onenf the principal pioneer settlerS .of that then town, ever respected for his probity and derisinWeharacter. He was endowed with energy and enterprise; find•went!down to his grave honored and respected, about the year 1852 or 1853, aged .87; • • • ; "At the age of eighteen 'or twenty the . present (apt. John }frown left Hudson; Ohio, and canie east with the design,of acquiring a liberal education some of our New.Mngland colleges, ilia ultimate design way the Gospel-Ministry. In pursuance of this object he consutted and confinMl with the Re . Jeremiah HaHoek, then clergyman at Canton, Conn., (whose wife was a.relativc,) and 'in accordaned with advice there obtained. proceeded to Plainfteld,Mtum.; where, tinder instruction of the ',late 'Rev.. Moses. Hancock', (father of the Present . . Senior editor' of she . Journal of Co?nnterce,Y fitted or nearly fitted • for college. While there 'pnriminghis studies,. he was attacked' with intiammatioM of the eyes, which old. tely becsik 4iihronic, and prseludedhim from the Pos4ibilitY ot-iholerther pursuiti of his studies, when he rettni_to Ohio. had not this inflammation sti perverted, Jo myroWn-wonid not have died a Vir. upon Virginia gallows, but in all prob ability would have ••on a feather bed, with Di D. aflhxe to Lis name.!' • • • •, Is It Made Henry Hunter, a young man abovit kin of the Mr. Hunter who -Conducted the; prosecution, against Brown arid Ms confederates at Charlestown, Va., tes tified before the. Court that he sttot:i.priioner niimed • • I Thompson. • • • . _ "NVe, burst into the- room .where. he was, and !Muni several around - him,'they Offered but a feeble resistance . ; we brought our guns down to his 'head repeatedly, myself and another person, fer_the pur , po,seof shooting him in the room." , ' "There was a young lady there. the sister of Hr. Fouke; the hotel-keeper, who sat in this, man's hip 'aud covered : his face with her arms, and -"shielded him whedever . webrought our guns in bear ; she said, to tia=-For God's sake wait and let -the- law - take its'eourie ;' my associate shouled to kill him ; Let ns elred his bloo,'-were Ids werds; nll'arennd wer . e, shouting, ' If r.. - teeicinin'ti Worth 'ten thousand! of these vile abolitionists;" I Was .cool about it, and deliberate; toyvgaan was pushed up by some one who-seized the barred, and chen : moved' to thethaeltisiii Ofttheiroorri,, still With '‘rttirpoie.' Mf changedjbut with a view' to divert s attention from me, in order t'a to get opportunity, at some ,moment when -the crowd-would be less dense; to shoot .him; -• alter a moment's thought it occurred to me that that -was 'not the - pmper place to kill him; we thefi pro . posed•to take hini out and hang him ; some.,persons of.our band then opened- a way to 'him; and first pushing plias Fouke aside we slung him out of doors; I-gave him a- pash, and many others did the frame.; we then Shrived him along the platform and-down to the trestle work of ,the bridge, he begging for his inv..ll we. inug,' yerrinteousty ui DM: "By•the•by, before wo - took him out of the room, I asked the question whaihe came here for; he said their only purpose 11743 to free the slaves or die.-- Then he pegged. ' Don't take my life 7 --a_ prisbner but I-put!, the gull to him, and he said, '..T00 may kill ree,,hotrir will be revenged ;,, there'rdre eighty thousand persons 'Worn tomarry or;thi.6rork, that -was hialast,expresston, We bore him out on the bridge writh:thOpnrptise of hangirrOhn; we had no rope, and none could be found ;•, it was a moment -of wild.ezeitetnent. Two of, us raised our guns-,:which one was first I dotiot know—and pulled the trigger. Before he had reached the ground; I .suppose some five or sia shots had been fired into his. body ; ;, he fell to the rail-track, his back down tote earth and his faceup,"' • . . In the [North a man who would -rimless such a fiendisficrimeitsthat, would be likelf,to he punithed for thit as it-is no doubt in aeilvardance -with Southenal viewa of tight, no notice Will be taco of It by the President or the Cabinst, or even by Gov. • WO" ig illustrates the boasted chivalry of Virginia hy , publishing the following in eitetnent Ito kidnapping andfmurder : • .$10 .1 4)00 11; E IVARD..-40SilUA R. _WRINGS having openly -de coked hlinself a traitor in his lecture at Philadelgbia, on the 29th of (October, and there being no process, strange to say, by which he cam be-brought to jus tice, I prOpose to . be one of one hundred to raise 810 ; 000 pr hitt safe delivery in Richmond, or #5,0641 for theproduction Of his head. Ido not regard thLc proposltioti, extraordinary as It may at first seem, el. ther unjust or unmerciful. The law of God and . the Constitution of •his country both condemn him to death. • • • For satisfactory reasons I withhold my name from •the public but it is in the hands of the editor of the liichniao Whig. - There will be no difficulty, I am sure, in . Tiiisifig, the 310,000 upon &reasonable pros pect of getting the sald Giddings to this city. •Riebuttind, Nov. 1, 1859. • . Tat incerioN or Vasums:LL-Vesavias is still in a State - of ernption, the lava hiving now reached 'a point titt l e. miles from the crater.. The „present mouth w s opened 18 months ago, by a violent earth quake, the cinders from whichwere - carried as Tar 119 Constanitnople—annther proof of the great eastern parent. The . lava now Issues from the base of the chtic,'paeses.doWn'the, Valley below. Piano Ilene ,Gln etitrei and falli.kito the s great ravine known'tii the Sane-Grande; 250 feet deep by 'l,OOO feet braid, which is 'now completely filled..., Below . this it .cuts Aeries the. 13.11{8g,e" Mein three places; destroys about twenty houses and 'sem, olive groves and vine yalrds,. and Is now :near the ,temetery . of Pardee; whose inhabitants are full of apprehension. It is es dented that 20,000,000 cubic yards of lava hare is sued "frcn the crater during this eruption.. The temperature of the lava is i,OOO degrees Fahrenheit. The guides have provided theniaelies with melds' la which they . pat medallion heads-of' ihe _Bing arid ' Queen of Baideti;Lohle'litioleon; Queen' Victoria, Vicky 'Salina; dzai:ilexander o - and even Mind, aitd Giitbaldt: "- • ~11,11111 i11e10,1197111111/0111p900147 - . A Night , in - Pigeon Roost. ' '. i ;eat gior . the wi -a & Pigeons roost.in , innumerable numberaln the Chenango SlisimP, Crawford county .Pa., ibtitit two miles .cast" of the Ohio - line. • The swamp LI about ten mks long by two or three wide grown upliith•Ttamerack . or larch trees and 'alder • bushes. l The•editor of. the Aalitabule Sentinel has 4 0 - been amtM the.pigants. He 'aye : . . . u When within two riles of the roosting place, we t began to !ar the roa f the :cringe of the millions of hirda-the t re conyegnted„ which literally equaled ,the roar oflgiagam. Pat the eights and. sounds that greeted ns is we neared the:siamp, beggar deserip; thin. Thibre were protty a Inndred hunters assem , . , hied and !at) sort/. ...T w.f.. '1641. , • • • of not morn man two or three—some in the tamer. nris andiseme iri the aldern. At a shOt in the Will es the 11(14 rose in a mass and Fettled in the trees ; 'and, when Bred cipon here they flew , to the, bushes. This clit)ging contin ed all night.. At a single shot , the flo cltdireys . roge and a - short .distance s in T de settle or iid-fited II again. •This s seene lasted 14 night. - .'hg !minim of hunting the pigeons is• for _two menolgia toget er-.-one. with a gun,-and the other with 'li bag ,and lanthoin tuid'matches. ' As . ,soon allhdlqhhitit IS 6 -9d.lbe bag Min strikes a light 'and "baisil• tit r e...birds ; and this reust*done speed:, ily, or the i l eoundedones will hide and be lost, Six: dozen is nice a heavy load for any man. -We " gin eout"..urf er five doin, very soon:- We were told to fare with izone barrel it•the bushes, and with the oth er at thel" bile up." I I he term!! boil 'ttp, - is a very natural title, foe nfte ci eves y shot the flock will ri'o etntighripWard, an 'after circling a few moments, make a Swooping Trite, and , th en alight perhaps within a ' few yards o where they rose. The numtr • killed seems tamest neredible. - One man killed !put dozen at ittangle shot, and nine hundred in 'the night..' 7 , APa Aetna K 11.... ' A.D. - • • —Re . J.hn W. SloseleyLainember ofthe Presbytery of Central Mil.. sissippi, hotand id led a Dr. Wilson, at , Sareoxie, lasso' riri;' on the let ust. , Dr. Wilson was an \ old settler of that pla r and 'had a ' wife ' and several children4—mieson ' wn and a daughter - married. fie had fo' some ti e been making unlaWfut advag. ...) des to Mcigeley'els t i;ter, aho ii the mother of sit children i lto wie her a letter of eight pages, pro. posing ni4lopenient and marriage, and sent it by his daughter-in.lawj --who banded it to Moseley's mother, heslio l etl it to her son , and it resulted in. his t tilling Wilion. 'Moseley was immediately tried Aratiacquitie , by the civil anthorities, with t demonstrations of - t applause among 'the 'people of the btiwit i and co ty.: • ' . . As Is l a, tocs 'l6 e. An nteresting operation .wat successfil compiled lately, in' Port , Dundas, sCot . land,fe,.tte iefitoratiort of a chimney. which bad set. trod oot.OltiLipmieddicular. This was accomplished brsawing.several f the mortar beds betweeli the courses on the sid frees which the. chimney leaned, thereby allCwing i to come back by its own Weight, without flag gppli don of anreiternal force. Only . . cut , . , one draft :was t a 'time, to ',guard against . any' shock which thigh have endangered the stability of the tiniling, and ylieeping the saws wet, a bed .6f mortar taa prepar 11 for the suzerincumbent weight to Bettie: ilßirn npo • Twelve cuts were made in this mtuiner'ed differ t parts of the structtire, which generally set befo a the saws had passed through half of th circum erence, particularltin Those -near est.the grpund, w ere the weight was greateSt. The principal !dirndls .ni of -the chinmey are :—Total height, 468 feet; from surface to top of cope, 4f,4; outside diameter . f foundation, 59' feet ; er surface 34'feet ; at cope, 14 feet. . ' - S/1.1 thulgritfs abut e 'editor of the Louisville He rat,/ famOue riser of 'Kentucky : •" It was on the nks of the old Salt river that the , . ..,, men once -lived ho, when taking down "flat-boat lands 'of s , alt to N w. Orleans, became thelcrror of the land from their bomes.to the mouth of the Ifii;. sissippi l i ;They wcrC'n ictigh:lartry race ; ever redy • fora d nt or a fight, and not inappropriately were called tli!el' Salt Myer Tigers." 134 were the men vtlideel: a i red themselves one-half horse; one-half alli, gator, and the othertialt snapping-tuttle; each man, 'cheaper of them ever rea y- to .." whip, bill weight in wild: etas." flit those. js 'are passed.: Kenawhal pro duces sii* so time 'cheaper that can be made' front the iprings and' w . lls on the banks of Oft ricer, that the sal -boatia‘n'it occupation's gone,. and a' mote peaceful ;race now :dwells In his' haunt*. To lie ',' rowmi up Salt iver"_was Mice no idle,threat, no trifling [miner, :though now it's but a ."figure of a _ ~,.. - - • • • . • Pro II I no. Public°. • , REA[It'PAY . TIIH updlistlgned. de, Glee lotre,,Sik of II H AMAPA V.; JINN MEDICIS kg. it greatlY'reauced THEYEI:=TRI IT, rims of emhrsetnethe injunet lorr-::” owe commence nn Monday oext„ Goons, nROCEItIFS. tlittsEEEV: ud CAPS.ItOOTSanitSHOES. PATENT yAN t NOTIONS ve, Pity - 011A y, • adran . I.a.—e to himeelf, but also te Syfug mash for cas,ll4 by tilde debts whkh they must 'of oem-eit, t i So bring stung "your pie.r l a. Rye, Rutter, Emts. Res.:wax. thied azt,,siee the RE,Uty. p.ky sYsTEII soot like It better than the old war. tb, K THE TERMS and tint aek crtl:it. for Imo fully persustleitif the behrett inlty ar large and myself. So `Dodos amigos:ern themselve, scesei:: • 7, N, BU,LLAPJ)... ... ~ Eli' ad. °reelin g .% ttiflhe not onbl; who am lit the habit 91 . pd I tgrd to Ulp pay for Wid d mad:doll the credit syate you rag onhey..l:our 0 1 plot:l'o4.7.mA, e.. a " fhlr trial,- thee If you eethm top: I Now, If a i em th vottuut got refl.: sa the leme,;both to eon 4 let every 4urtakr"partieu4 ~ M ont Noi% 15591 hearts? Clot ' ATERY ajice for ladles V Pleibeicall mid ' - a, Broad :Cloths, &a, 3rear.iiiid also for Overcoats, - for sale IF sae "quality and prices for resolyipay. I • L N. -BULLARD. .sugars, 141:41,17 . b. 7 lasses, and -Syrup.. FA sir irortb esmdniny for Cai6 dom. If 80, 8 - 01% and . Shoes, -0,E 1: 13 , trolls adios UP In - of pods In tt purc .4 .1: Not Lie, ?Mil . BILIT A T Siat and- Caps. Lnut sick In tho aloye branches, thr..z t tine will do well to examine pen- Mt!., ,ko oft -to the end of the chart Er. • - • I. )I.I3I.,LLARD. Turk' Is Salt, and, Solar Stilt F em. r.vitaya, and bbl. salt, by lb! .. bbl. or br 3. N. BOLLARD. 311outr . ose;Nov. IttOf. New Milfl rd High SchooL the' public that the next ttrm of WEiwould Ames Info 11/ tw-hool will etuntue • liVednerd under the siuiSonislon or COMpetloll. trarlgerw. We rtwelred the ()meta ttnn mew *cowling to its to ke,tsyer week. Also ' 'ullletermatlou st,.New I y: D0i....14th, 1559,: E. IL IIAWLEY. Ikinclpat, am,at,! eel gmtefol for the tares pat rtrcap I:tt • 2liii Would tyrlin prfallt forri , pa: . 'nerd., itatint twty tit artalir I fr r PiliS for [hope irho tp 17t , Artl be had "ming or x. 141 .J+: r, . 7"erpeof Cnmindri ExigliAls .111;theedo., an a lltsthe I=raNsp_enei;,• Vocal Musk. If desired. r 2'ertn of Thiitern tiok, =I nt drnim o► .I)mila:rat,: MEM SCOTTS LLE SCHOOL TILE Winter Ter , 11 1 WEDNES Olt rem Is :peal ache rs admitted, p for Wein. Our Orn! tervir't iejuiered a Terr,lu English' b done ;in .Languagesl PcTrfetits are requir tegnisafig and iniddl Yang, lacli&i and acteniecorreedy, an language,of g and the irltlidtit patchwork, espetiialb those wh and. parcelled, then4elvei end "th can 4 , 6 had" infeo Bacillus shosida at couimenoemen Of this School will connornee AY, D E CEMBER 7th, i ant and, con forteihle,- No small .Vitaoll being otherwise • mods It - are moderate coMpared teilh ngintr from three to -ties nchea; s et,'On, extra for Itst:111 . Eft* cents fee fuel, 'lights, ie., - DS at other like schools, at the • 'e of the Term. . • - gentlemen .who, wish .to lean , the idlosophiesreonstreietiort t relation and agreement of junk res.peCtftilly inritedtto are willing to govern Mt-moires all the relations pertain ing to school.: peaceful habitations sVILLD re3,,onahle terms.. I be present to enter the crawl of 1 . 4e Tenn: - . .yeller and Definer, Deitaer mat. k, Sander's New Third fteader,. toddard's American Intellectud New Arithmetic, ReVised, 'Geography. (latest -edition? .Geometry, ,1:11440's • I.egendre , mum, and Reader. Every -schul: •Webidet'a Dictionary. Other shortnatice. • 0, Prof.-IL W. 8.1111 1, Nov, li t 11111$01w - . 1160101: Town's sllt totters on the.bi rovi'n'i G rammar, I Aritijnittic, .A.diuns,) n i viaWAlgebni,.l3no Cutt4r'a Physiolog y Galin G it rsonired to' hav 600ka can be had o Tucker In eh , "ow* Qa t r DULLARD