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A 0 ~ i. - - . - !t 4.-_,,, , -...m.p.. • ..... 1, 1 . . . r• a - . ''. \ I, , " • ' .t . 2..:1 - .1 4. k. iftl l O!' "'':/ - J 1 .. 'e ei 1 , 4 i 1 4,:, 1- r , .1,,,:,,t,q. , ~ ,`/ • Sl ‘ %, , r ' I. " 1 . 164 4 t trigATASOMPiti**l,olllllX.ll, ' ... . -.. ) ' r'. . M :".; r ,....11 . - - —.-• ''. •P 32. . - . r ' r e" ).01 4 4 " , ' rall " 4 llN • .''., L - o : .-.... .%. • ' ',,7 . \\Vit i I .17 , , ~ 111 .,.; ' ..._, - twit 46 ) ',:n., - 404 ,00pArAelootic- • ~.....4„. .., . , . • . . , . ''' it' .<- ... 2 AI '' ' --. l "' ill ' ' '''' ' . 14 -‘ .- -. - • , • - " . ' ~'. 1 ' -1 , . \ \ ~.../ • C ll - J 4--- AiAkfA,• l, ,i,... ' --' - ~,%1 " ,,,f - '" :I'l \ : / tti ,, , I ~ : ., , r," ' 5 , ,,r.7 -- 4 - - . ' itt 191 1 111411iir .'i i - , 41-. sSr: •z,' , 4' . , 1 . , - ~ . , .. 4 . . ..., ''''''' ' .4 3:j r 's' e " . ' ril V.- i l li * 4 4 1 i..- , :- •-> :::: ~. -.!-. 7... '. :' 1„ , , ~.-------- :r ....101, ...r..._ . 1 , IMO 1 ' . I ril I ft 14 ***7 - . :, „114.ttri ••.-. - ,•—. " - • 1 — --- ' lllll -,:-'4L it t di ~-** t - . l lir elitiA,• Bl,*RoLt.#4 .', -' , --r ~.. - .". , - ----;•„, ,p \ I r . ~.. i _ 40. ssa-Libt 'lll 4=4llLATl'ATAitl.t. o oi4PLW,, .;',.- : ' ---' -', ',,..:' - ''•'-- '' - ' 0 4- '.” " ' •. • . •. ... - .:,.. .:,.. '' --'-' -----^' . _ —Clials4ololokalthiitrO" , , , .._, -.._,-- Nodiai4ii--,-.•- . , , - - , , , • ,- ! ----- " ViiLii." iliti i ALITTWISTWIf Al010:1ffle•V ' 11 0 10.: ,i,-• irr ~ ; i. ' '• itt`teWild'illi•O tellffik - ii4i.t. ;• - r- -• , tr:ffettletria Voloi - •1 - IMitik spin rtes. ---- -.-- •••• .... iih wonder protiliddistforf both big eyes :- ''''-''• iffe•tat ePli. hirsdomplikew got oheof -bed i-; , , :',-- !,•;-:-- , tiektdopiat the ceiling add tiown`ow,tko hoori , r ., - „-,- Auffi Platindmwhindoii - WM tile otitis hitid,,,,L, :-.-„- • -114-HlWallylirmdlthe 000001, IPA 1 ,, -.-- ..• ..: kintlinskitont*lieliniikst•Wskiaking &mite - : - -.- , YAIII model it inteliqeditethibo44o h 4 • ,• - .• iTithaoll seirett isstessiti would - jot% itto tots:. ~.. ~ -- ~ ,t tlattititOliVishmtkk thtgliotiViiiiiimulo B ''' ' '• '- * Wm he. Littleton troks,„'arsi was Littleton het, -,:.• ...:::, wim•h°7gt InkiPeMeattic-derrhad.fellyeeroko,‘ lid Nand- 'athwittairpwa. LittlotenVokei ' '', --,-- ThAt meifelddieldrialieddelidadd •:- e.';,l - -.7.• - • •. ffyidedot idritery(4o *dada* , trille. ,, -'•,- - . • '--- •,,,' . ~ , _____, „_ ,_ - Idiaaariallt ,tittc kw Essititsti , smis 4 .truir 'WNW-0 ~._- ,-„ t1 --,- , 4 1 ,4 w, 't"."dthveololo4.the diedi di Ada aieidds.:, • ~ , • .. Tbsisiddingo.risporsiti . ** kinslosdid 'Mir ; ,--:., 'r.? simESbabsor fertund were ail opthinn *two-- .; ~- The atinit-tips,: the Bruck - ..the :Inapdtrir, , the ri Ittiketlps;..-- , ••,, .!--; -I- ,:-, - ._, -,7- , •--.. , fi-. , , S , :, - ; Out Om tuestiorimrieektlow matip,were psptinnt, -- , .: For this much is certain, that one of them there-, ,ffhti-iffetiloyhoittratir ititsitY tiz-Polodieot` , .:, ' -s': wits , Paw tierlitneelPWlUMWAlOW to-Waltrrr =-4 ,- J. ,-I Add iti debtlo her uncle far itutisst ~ - ~.,,,,,,, Thiv,,pnitinsisi e r t rsiiir,. IlinststtiWr trAs i gs sninstlyitstitsej Bb oigeWr _3, . Itiital,,4ltr.er , ~,,,, s. . Prost the h **old' lov e Jik/tilili a 7tileed , Thar peeked totrAlitim, ene_wiiit ..fon ktour ... To old Sara toga-, oT fiiihten k ildi,Prt i -',-..'” - Where rosokies rar sephtreilditkteilmy dote Ilan. ••••- '. • : _Lcien l A-44Pasittbeir ewe* op _ th e lipkot the bride; - wasrdelejsd;Sidridileastittiolio work he had dode, brratiritlikeiditterq ii&fitelebigeti., l 6. ,-* • .` =•• :"--• ThstagaritAW.ktittilissiled, Wslittst with his wings :,,:- ?Si k 01044 6 -04 1, 3161r0W 014F144 ,1 1 ,1 Pt1f I the springs. , Esiatlividily *kW:Mimi , isiggi ,, .-1 , . 'ROWhiltaidAtitirititirertliat wonder 0%11 - -,-.- - . • - ,., ,~ WheteAlikawareliintetirde,,di iteme,W, sty dowin*, , r. ,.. I Chant, therietheaket na*rald'hotiethdlAppai. , L: The deep thundoktendeAti tde einiliiith emotion;' pAwaditrieted - add•beleWe The goveLniuet da.,1,4) , . A.,_ 01 • 44 t/fhmit blf-SSNose; - N- th s pared devotion, , •- w, 4 - 1 1 14 ,,, otreiliwodr.i4thlehtew-to-therpordu, - L- • ..mi ' titi rty; Marna* I erMichedd. • •..- Thor 'Noted Wdir - at - iteddered i'. the bride 'wee de =Ala Miffto der hiebaticWhile paeidugidodg, ' ,-, , i - Litalbred-dropdlathoetretttl mat odr• heertif -be aditedi- , -ti, - - - - , ! -, Y:-.• - i- -- ; =,tr , .: , - -- • - •3" -,,•"•,•-: .---; _•- .i lair laieilikeffiletitii ; , 'laiit ihd:stromr_ti ' - c::' , - ' , 2 " ffee, - M--adetiefellt husb and, ` t - , •arac don't' deem -Me= :Theett - iitpltesti reed *l l 4'rofiawfyrithapaaai - It, aptedil'rettektir,do r•'• latVe dearest Jewel; , ;Thbeirdreptrakildt - ese&W , kiillt be - Tallied out.. - -•••,* hay edge* upt - iloylo4d4sid/O. not tie Urge r • ... ~. , Is the stream ef-:ditr lore there - than:de do eascade.r) , "I* Wits isialt - t glittiir , f-She iiid*ith a sigh.. ' - - i' A dradieledis-treoMl , :bli readrireplyi - -.-, bat iyeakttitiMiti4imillitie dreethat -I: ,•,: • "-" - ' - A wiretap? - aidity,dnd'hddgri; and dry ;.,' -,- - • poeffittit944 stubborn; psi din oats her tali • •- '-, Atirix&C.lriffeieTerh•br &theme at tidilalle.v - Wald telloWWite MUM:id , and done ir we platen, I ; ~--- tut we dib , t get: aws)•-Iread sub troubled Mitheim , - 2 - "Ihdrik,ltik ripulemoyperooka that, ,Itave Jamie* eier the - ,iiiterteting.pertieuleia •of-'a oourtoidp, have married off diy hero to .0. --- tiorlitti troth She °tide dream, and bare got him ae, tar as Pliassare; L ed hie inidel tour: .fienkr:iMit nudiiiir' il adeff -give sedil7f.Miled: hire of the gossipa t tiidsiiitti, and it otrtaln porgeo do not letliTtlussddeg'orei,itie - :lnicia•;iii oneoi,itikaii+re there, i eri I - wllL:daintoiriedge ; tore& Me " - Ma in' oaf* st the IsdiSsi herilitier would have ail the imit I ts or:46i siOuiiit. ^1,4041 4;tilesi, tor • the next ratiei= . biii:;lik nltife`P)Altd„, ii :edif."torget . the kiddies 11.4 elitblug x poilLottorlf 10 ,Jittql*,l"l3 TOWER HALL, 61# :BURNET Biteet fil r- frk,r , , , ,L, .-, ..: , , ....- IMPeetra, "'' 7,lo3tDMlrt-rovitaiink•, lIVARBIATOIPTIMITABLE • - - coy,. atO Pon tin HEAD At i bnle t tU t he nti ma r al i' 'E; proo J-:. Gonttiptei intite4 foad eigan - 13.14 E1 - 1 ,&,60e# IMF:AT/Wl' ISTAYMV, I Akar= ern Inlotiut ragOrthetrinsl. La reineAWAX9 lll O/IVIAT 01 0" 11 0 48 U 110041 4, rentirityc, - NAViii#olo;4'.4s4wilou t,- 15irit6;410r00,11-10M000410111,14.a. ** 4 4 1 4 1 0 1 0;09"4" sna, areuivior qualts;-, , c -t, , ittil4.l4,bAlt r - tatoisso otiott' " Eiiirmaiic,wibmiitori; • - - .. r eiry, comtelate., vest Chains. - flpliWbf Toni, Ifstriblo: " - • , intitlkiandi,_eogas'Bsketo. • .1 4136011 10#4 VoltgY 4 - 89 ' - „ ' • Clufjokft Y Art 6ol l e - ta r.it• • .ItrAlladi plqo f Abe "le of Char et Trodation'CLOADM Tnia- - 9 . !!grit, s: Rio , NVILLTAI& MOON & asimggruns'as- OF SLI, tr.f1.11,1f4/2,8, • •;;;"--0 8 7A4 181 /EDA B . II t) .‘a,,,,ootitddreart&J.mo ' 0111111 T BY %%%%%% „ A 11141'1151MitiNent Ad - lIIINSR/W 11 041,4 of every de. lortpttorgerttitadtf,rod feitiof;Or raids to order to pate& inittaters - of' Illtetpda 4 - ' glum ',lmported 118044-1117,- I 8. olAßDitt 414 010: " „„ otesattall t air A ctr. N..; liker!3, oat Sttotp slositortithilr top , effl bram'atsigits"l44l.oreple Vain; rltomitits, • offxraJourst:willNite - ikuk • ' lEBTCeitrOUS-_ ,NtiTylgtOPOONl9,-74103,. flideltion au Mats -a mita: Xpßienr-GOLD, _ ' • • -,t • - BIC HA N G BogitlitAndigit - „ ' ' $1140141.i.00 fiuT__' Jalrdtfeb4, araath 4 1' IRD et. AmEgioo,:ignip ;; . - - Irri 4 ar a 144 - FAer. ILF2XsOURSENT ,ItAT$S t " ' A`J7/ . tit ; •• Vow* ritutalcro 4'; , towqrp,.., \,\ 110PLAMe. 11.0KCANDA; ATIONERt -I.II I ,IIAYLWII4IOO - AN, Blank 86orMinnfnogurer; Eitgfortorniot Prlnterrtlo.looWAlditir Street, gfo. pore& st.llll.3loseo t 6 flgrahthitoither from the aholteli or Aolike,:to-teder,Allooko.oforriq,desciiptioni suitable for, Bois. Eddie Othorsollexisguriteicand ether, of th e best quality oT English or Americans rasOrisn!glontol in minus stylsiTin theroOnftbohilinntlairiinanse- Went fat :JOH AlittftithlAor 'leverr,46iertpthhte falrovituok44loo44l*-LeXeestedltti* nestuemo. general ossortisent of Eusiliall, Ers'nels *nil Ameri °la 341419nerV,-. -4 Coll*Mtig ge.VlthiillrOgaatteito ths,orpathl - f id ditakmetoo,hubitttoe frwile4 1;11 bookoTottatirjnig, ld the bra' lis tits Ngtt%te Thtoolesties , otiheinatartiOg AgetWthi! IV" 11 8 006 ., #l4 l o*l ll o l %** Feoo#4. MX' 4114, - • AUL.. tq t 15tr.M,PPIPIttm„. , IrMarrllaila 11 4,,t7tr„ 4;41,61 - y IA; tt4tl-1, t et i-te- -- . : t ' -Viiiirtairsatert 4 l. , !. 004ittoxid4tafolaglita - t-:: htetthiluse ; )14, r.;:tbe 7tr:7ll4* **E CitWA:`!' llgael., if i 51 %, • Xl4 . ol,o4l4thialat. ' autt ir 0111:4t1fitis 'Doe 40t:1 4 ,4!#41: 1 0 44 ki*.1 1 1.1V4., • ituss.l.lol,-lii'-vec444i!tetim-f3; 0010,1)- 4..44 - • &.g OO c"...4“:13;00 15 ' 20410 Niadr Noptiii; strer,:- .4V irtatiathroskotoph alibmiber) . " - 1.44 Yoe , g-Intand , Vielisk L 11101" • We 'mill sink= toViViettia,a4 at Of 044. 4 ,„ • -...o,Troettkiliet,g44l44o44ll4lmit 410,1j0k- Thrwitkestmr.lamei,--- _______. ~} 1" i ~~~ ' =ZEE ih - loxos GALLLEBIE_S - ,- • I Jr. 4 t,i. • latiattfiVgageft nzrovotiqs, • M A,r ott F,ti,--A ,, XtRi ,tl 7 - 1 "9 . A- 44 2 111 F - V ° Pcilit.9 ;itrY. cti• !'N'IgAIVX 4I, ICP*k .64 , ONINEOrili SA4 is+ l tVt‘Mitli wltyki‘icid " 'llfitiAtifOgrif" -• • - nt glinITAll4- tklt .:4'5',14i111*1911141104q,54-, A! , :ckatraA Velfa* - 7.6trussli: , • t'4' 3, winsioot• l ipl# , J? . ? ".seDtwomlßo . .„ , .71 . 41p7 . 011,77i.' r `,,Maßs4 lo 444r. , ** 4l `"iiitinisi ; Ar rtri art* • 10 14 11 ki t i FL,*** *414 romp!" ~1 13 . '- •AttoA-o,o*-' 44 f , . - voL. o l • le . P 4 SATURDAY`,' JANUARY 18, 1858 ITALIAN prettn ifl THE rtIltED STATES; ,•,The upera in • New. York seems to haVe:;eolltibsed:, Mr. tfttsiA sr, yam', has ,been ibis - latest imirressarto in the- Empire' City,• has been compelled tp cleats 'up, and the latest et. -kert. (but;"tbree) 'was - to have been made last night, ,When,- 1 ! - Peit tainvanni,";•very well east, yttalelrvelmenprodUced. Mr:Urint.titc has t;eee , - - tlo,vttira oft- ',tarn-out: et the , male chorus:' -TO d eelaresthat Since the beginning of Baptembertiebee made goed , all his peon finlarf2engaternerits; ereff„,pdyitig in' .geld during_ the panic,lind now is -driven into aa '0 6 7 1 0 1 41 1 1q. to live through the last'-four months. He ful. promise of 'bringing sem& of the first performers 'from . Europe ; In If, word, the Opera ; ii his bonds; liaS been a failure in this z'OPeet • _ _ tWhyittitin;has it Veen failure in a perm -niary:se.hfsly "-Mint nausea have - nordbined to itakeltifo.:lTheexpenSes are far. toe heavy. , •1:11:0 Opt bf,the•iicadenlY.nf 4410 $20;000 ,a•inite;,provided'that the edifice be frequent chiteeits, public leciures, and s ,sotel2 , ,,itgairtitite highedt foreign talent can -4033'4 red,l9',Ottiffallie-,Atleiftiii,„without • the indqintrient ortritteli higher remurferatien that ,it,•Wolad - Europe. „, Minor talent, thinks -excessively, high of itself, ex. 'poets to bdiaid•tifan equal ratior with major, !SO 'note' latillent Flgotai:tthiger but, thinks thathie other assistance is iedispensable, and "nlneVb, e accordingly. , The expense of , new'seettery, new maChinery, and' new ward `robe; is hairier 'here tbin.• in the long-es •ltablished opera-houses of Europe, and is formidable drain upon the manager's 'funds. 'nearly' - all 'the Opera Houses in 'Europe are supported by pecuniary grants from this feitmelivn Oovernments'. • It Is so al Paris, 1 30lartilleilin, add St. Petersburg. - London ;the tind'rfch‘ Sentry take their boxes by: tlie season. This 'is the case-under Mr. '4l9f4r; at Her ,MajeltiPs, Theatre, and Mr. .G•vij at the Italian Opera,' Lypeum Theatre— ,Witleb;by the way, is the better institution of the•two. There are no 'subscriptions worth ,any.thing in '.New Yk - ew or autl,.with - a great talk sports the •4lsdta, the 'New* Yerkers *seem to 'care -very , - little for it, If they really under steed it the:) , - ivoußnottave allowed Pants°. :risuadvertlsed , by. Mr: UtrAtior, three years agn,,fliattaVitig a worn-nut end faded voice) to ;be' passed upon them,- by newspaper puffs, cis a ivenderful anger;-nor Ivould they, have * . tnitted charming Madame 1).3 Wltuortsr; , Atiriply because - she hadbeedone of the “Up- - per, Ten,"„ to, figure., as "tt :piker detract, `and ' then go to Europe to learn how to sing ! We have really had, more succesis„ with the lialkin •, • • ,Opera in this city. The first season was brit tent and remunerative.' The second failed— Wpm the depressing influences of hard times. ty*Ocnik:nothintaf the hiture, but we have Isati-ilfAhe• hOttt:Clioira. Houses In the world, a‘peneri Machinery, and ward. • •s $ „_ • . otau StielriCeompanras idr..Utrataz brings to- Oettiertetti,if ti r eirerniaitee er:t 4 Den`Gievariiii," aslaii4y, met, at one theatre, even in Europe; priinge; dkrid'Caradori ; with - Gas= pier, Rocco ; - Labocetta, :'and Carl ooMpday, as this. woidd- have Iwienjiretty sure-of enconragettint.'and 01441. lila city. ,74ire hale-half a mind- to ea ptain de not, visit Swam; " morn lately, , Lem, Pi xa's - company, realiied litigely- in this Country:, &Calla had ! - sonie excellent artists, hutlAtusi,Pxxx depended, ablest exclu alTely; igen her own,Toice=fer Ilawasox, the tenor y ceased to . be a good singer years ago. Mib ' YF - Iti Taunted to,Englatid; last year, and took the Lyceum Theatre,, still assisted by niiirtta6R: ' She' played several, English ver alOte:3 of Italian' operas; without muell'aticcess, bat' biamonds" made, a hit, followed by 'a new opera, "The Rose of Gaitile,". - :coreposedn by ,BAI,TE, which had a ran - for' -Mentlai l ' and, drew more crowded .bottles at.the r.lose than atthe commencement. 'Lo6lo',PrttX.ljricl belief is the "Rainy Of Eng-' lish:Operayandf the result showed her to be 44; „In it short" thus, "the byne-Harrison Company mill reappear at another tlieatro, and a fortune is awaiting the nianagoment. They re-open with an opera (founded 'on the story of 4 4 Rip Van. Winkle,") .composed by an Americawartiat,Nr. Gaottaaßantrow, of New They have been paid the compliment, by Queen VICTORIA 'h self, of being corn ' mended, or commissionedyto represent di The Rose,, of Castile" at the Italian opern.houses on the - occasion of • the approaching marriage of„the Pt - incise E'oial, when all the London Theatiies•whhbe gratuitioasly thrown -Open to , , • , • Whit if 1,11.. IIft.TRAR, or some 'other mana ger; experiencing that Italian Opera does not pay, ge, back to English .Opera 7 We have ao .Government hero willing • or able to nay cuff so lanai per annum ' corer mana gerial losses. We have no aristocracy, to make tiberardisliarsernentty, 'A taste for opera Runde lifts: to ,be 'created, after ill,'"add why , ..shorild'not EintlisliMiera take the initiative 7 The litorrllaichlfair• Madigan Catintn , New i We teentiontd,bri, the ()timidity, the mur der at Poolvillo, M adison co., -N. 'of 'Jared Cometook andßlerissa. bin wife, by their own eon, „William Comstock. = The parricide was arrested. lkiel a man about thirty-seven years of ago, about (hi feet and wren inches in height. clothing Woe bosmeared.,,witit blood `- when be was found., Ue ties alirays resided . With his parents in Nardi- On and is unmarried. Ile had boon drinking hard ,ter IMO time, orals evidently laboring under the elfeets of ;mania-a-potn. • Be contersed calmly. in 'relation to the awfttl deed, manifesting ne concern for, litilself4pealting' of t ote - Mannilin which he. Vier ( hisperenittollifo ati if he had been hutch- Ile skpl,thitt for, four or five' days, something i. seerned.tb tell :hint...ho JIMA -have , a number. of repeated to - him many times. ,Weeeented to life in Sherburne, ands wire ' came oreiihiihillvientidetteg with the Loom, telling him kelp* haise a number, of Amelia. Some one.who" Sherhurne,soomed,to tologreph,for them Flies-Rs fonkAleysisgo. lattimptetl-te kill - my.flsther- to get his boast, Yesterday' went'and-pleastran size in the room, ltjtauditig-tt7 could And my brother and his wife I:sittingdown, telliftlienfboth at once. It seemed -4 tiino.biyo l bliwthoti 'hearts, About dark (er3o,,kipfatber.'s arid found. hint and my roothersittstte;was,seeting. I immediately. struck ' her wi th hig a akillet and prole it. I 'then etruoleiny fother"over thevhead , three orlonr timed while the , retitittno of the Skillet' and Attempted in Futile axe? Aftbr kneeling my father down, rgott,tbe axe and,ont mtt., their. hearts, andot theta Id t he sforit , and burned them. The voice Mem .44 Will MO thlit 4 the heart/km. be burned... '4ftetthe. wished -my,: hands, andafter remeleingin thwhore a short. LIMO left, and went doisse-fdA:Stustings ' serhern r arrived I found my thetr visiting, and told them I Ited pjiiiffit4lnstitiatltztlter'e..4lta qd-OlOntijlitere sliori One 1,413:40,Wil to the 'boil Ilasmem clustings;; told them to-get 1110.4 , qttare'.of, eider watt tcbottie and, Aar _obtaining id I°ll.f°F ons faillefltionse, without mentioning • sitythints i, aineerning.the deed. - • On tor ringt, lardeVrefixpon the Joiinse, nest my fittit ,kild'tnether,'snil'elept,roF.ol73o tirne— until until; -• airskenbig, 'I ; left the itess*P4 Cioffor,SLl Ill.iiiofetening towards it. lllPAOtreeelleetAine.elle&informod of the deed treviinuttotidsx' -As they. approached roe some one' itistr d alait w eiti t il reel bee• n doing:, 11 116lapenfirsintsitiOnenf Apt s Is#t_of thififireappiltd, mei witileit Couple o• ttut the his titer beeset le silio:4 o otter's. wiltre_l'Wee ttriestedc., , , g,tiretnight,And after the dean,' attempt,. erlittlakebotti life,nndthairoloorthe Warmly .. Wetit'!fct , iny er'e-lioese••tu kilt r; the_pinele tit the'dder AR11VY,104140.t103.•:1-',. BY* ,9citia" btit,,lCalsaCaPain 'Liitirroal'attaaptape, at A:o,l'ooin 'gam :-tliakmat-i , ,ellowleyarragat wavily at ,tltat•-trort, ‘15( 41 - 4 744:tailetatsita that i miitthouburePir !I; mad, taigany t a ,cap 1,,,0tig- , andltive of to ta oat of a 'aw otlLoVodf :titrintlrittt I I tlie4 . A. .t - i-Vaateltattrapt eithivaqattititettect 141* aka' at It( altally M=MtIMM • SABBATH READING. TUE DEMOCRACY OF TILE BIBLE. BY,GRAYDEARD [Per The Press.) That Democracy should be popular with the Masses of intelligent mankind everywhere; is not at all surprising, when we consider that under the sway 'of aristocratic rule the happiness of the many has always been sacrificed to the licentious tyiannyef the few. Democracy, technically de fined, Is "government by the people," as contra. distinguished from forms of government in which the Will of the people is not represented. As, however, the drowning virtues of a Democracy, or a representative government—which, to all prac tical purposes, amounts to the same thing—are that it mitres Wail - at equality of rights which, under every other form of government, is denied them, end that it thereby secures to its subjects the widest possible personal liberty consistent with the !titbit° gdod, the &reef may be' substiftited for the cause, in whiekeaso Democracy is at oneO pre sented to us as that justly popular element which Prompts every man to respect the rights of his fellow-man ; to acknowledge merit wherever it is deserved; to respect the man because of Ile manly qualities, rather than his wealth; to attribute superieiity to superior virtue only, and to own no sovereign in the universe but God. .To undertilkelo"prove that this desirable state j of things is more . nearly realized in this free lend of ours than in , any other on !leaven* toostool, would ben work of supereregatioc ; and yeti it weld certainly be the height of ungrateful ne glect towards the Author of all our:blessinge for or not to acknowledge our indebtedness to the Bible for whatever advantages we may enjoy over lands less favored in their politioal t social, and religious Institutions. Deep _down in the foundation of this Republic was laid the oorner-stone of this dovout recognition. .7 The pilgrim ao he-topped forth from the May Flower and kneeled upon the rook of Ply mouth, did it no more ecirtainly - under the con oclounneoc of having left hie native chores to es cape ,the han of civil and reitglous • latole ranee,_ thea. be, did it with the vow la hie heart:to honoißod in his nary home, by adopt ing the teaohlogs of the Bible as the fundamental rale of his future intercourse with men. A God•fearing, a Bible-loving, and hence a law-abiding nation of men, was thus developed. Every step ,towards the consummation of this righteous liberty among Men was marked, with the Christian recognition, that the' Cod in whom thay put their trust was the Laid of glory. "Hap py is that people whose God is the Lord" was the language of their every act ; • and if the divine truth, that "righteousness exalteth a nation," hue ever found a hearty resi:onse in the souls of men, it was among those pilgrim pioneers and their children who founded this Republic. Well may wo revere the memory of, that band of Chris• Can heroes, who in the darkest hour of our birth as a free and independent people—when the world may be said to have been in labor to be delivered of the Arius of a national liberty that had long been maturing iri,the ,womb of the thirteen colo nies—forgot not to how 'in humble prayer to Him whose throne is in the &arena. A.h! that first prayer in Congress, after Independence had been declared, what a baptismal halo it oasts around that deed of deeds—only second, in,the importance of IM results upon the destiny of the raeo, to the Saviour's advent! . et every turrhdo we see some ominous tri bute to Bible truth ineorporateit in tho motives and plans of the founders of our Government. The mottoes of inspiration were adopted u the watchwords of our Incipient liberty, even long be. fore it was sufficiently matured to be heralded throughout the earth. That ominous inscription from the twenty.fifth of I,evitiod6, "Proclaim liberty thro . teghout all the, land unto all the in habitants thereof!" cast as a motto upon the boll intended for the State House steeple, as early as ,the year 1752, nearly a quarter of a century be. 'fore it was notually used 'to echo the triumphant Sultirnent,of this prophetic inscription throughout ,the land, will stand forever as one of the !nest mar ,voll.nss and pleasing coincidences in the record of ;any nation ; and yet, had it not been for tho foot that similar mottoes were' engraven upOn the hearts etrthe nut of that age, the bell and its in. IrlpUon could at most hare been but " as sound is brass or a tinkling cymbal , - Civil liberty avd Domocotie simplicity may, in vie ammo,. be said to be traenyinous ; and, if hie. 4410*, s*Shitaf , 3 4 .guk hinkfftol# ` thil fr g usuri that *hie& eutreto er_ve `he people of their equal OVAL The undue and _ _ Amintious desire for office, instead of a more ar dent zeal to evince our patriotism by acting the Partbf good citizens in private life, has always led to unfortunate results. It was this orafty and corrupt strife of the few to obtain, through foul means, the mastery over the many, that hastened the decline and ultimate fall of itorne. Amongst Ithe Jews the shameless stratagems employed by Ambitious aspirants tO the sacerdotal dignity, who coveted the, priesthood more from avarice than zeal for religion, were the canoe of many of their meatest misfortunes, and doubtless' had much to 5 with the ultimate ruin of that once chosen peo ple of God, and it is not unsafe to predict that no nation, however firmly it may be founded, can al- Waya withstand the tide of this undercurrent of self-aggrandizement when it once. acquires the I power of defeating the popular will. " Where the spirit of the Lord is there is liber ty," "wrote St. Paul, and never was divine truth more explicitly stated. With the spirit of righte ousness carried out to the letter, liberty would be so perfectly adjusted that the restraints of human law would be unnecessary; bul, bow was that spirit of liberty inaugurated ? Certainly nothing was ever more unsparingly denounced by the Sa viour of men than their undue aspirations to places of power and distinction. Ills lessons bearing upon this point are almost innumerable, Instead of countenancing in any respect an aris tocratic 'assumption of social or civil superiority, He rather exalted the humility of servitude. Him self, although a part of the divine Godhead, count ed it no dishpnor to wash the feet of his disciples. " Whosoever will be great among you, let him be your minister; and whosoever will be chief among you, let him be your servant," is the language of Christ: "in 1,0n6r, preferring one another," woe the motto reconimended by, the apostle. Not only was this virtue of unostentatiousness repeatedly set forth and commended, but in one remarkable instance we find it laid down as the legitimate, road to future preferment; hero is the substance of the Statement ; 'When thou art bidden of any man to a wed dingrait not down in the highest. room, lost thou be re9uired to give a' more honorable man thy place; but when thou art bidden,to and sit down in the lowat room ; That when be that bade thee oometh, he may say unto thee, friend, go - up high er ; then shalt thou have worship,':, &o. This Is a most beautifutembodiment of the prin ciple or preferment on the score of merit, and em braces, with the quotations already referred to, the whole ground of what was stated in the beginning as constituting the ,iillhot; and substance of true Democraoy. That .very muole for which the shield of De temoraoy is ()tainted fails far short of the Christian basis of Democracy upon , which eur fathers based the magnificent structure which we have in. limited, is, indeed,' to be regretted yet. thanks _A+ god theletteett , is by 'no Means exhausted; and if In seine Instances we °Mild' exclaim in _anguish of heart • with, Jeremiah, " How is the gold become dim bow Is the Wog fine gold changed !" there .14 itill enough _evidence of lelievah!siartlality for the American nation left t 4 make usiraud' of our goodly heritage, and, it 14 to bo hoped, enough to etimulatelhe patrietio zeal of this and [dun generations to efforts wet , thy of the prize eat before' them, so that when the talent entrusted to our stewardship is. required at tho hands of this natton t vie may not be found in the i9Sition '.6f the 4 wished, and 'slothful ear. Vent," but - rather irt the' condition to yield up this temporary inhe ritance, with' the certainty of limiting in the delights of 'room enduring scenes In the Theocracy of Mar en ! . The following officers have been ordered to the United States sleop-of-war Marion, new fitting at Norfoßeier the Afrioap coast Commander, Thomas W. Brent; lieutenants, Chas. 61. Mortis, W. D, Whitney? E. E. Stone; Weaver; inestar, John M. Stribling tassed"inwistant sur geon, RandelplaT. Mum( ; acting bdatawain, Chas. Sitaith noting gunner, Chas, W. Homer; ear. penter, Jos...p...ginee; eating sail-maker, Samuel N. Turner. • _ Indgthent was rendered on the sth instant taelest Oen. William Walker and his , surety . , S. Blatter: Ciropit' Court. Of 'the Un ited States, at New Orleans, for 10,000 on the recogel. lance of the loiniirlo-to for a biesett of , the neutrality laws, and which recogni-, aflame was forfeited by hie departure in the Ptah ifin•inlieveniber.-• • " „. Jaen)? Leicenring has been appointed post . I master at Northumberland, Northumberland 00., :Prht-vlOC4tteob Nip ; Dlotion.appointed pctmanter at St. Thomas, Franklin , eosintri Pa., .v oe, reolgned ;, Levi Strohm 'p tmeiuer at Lee's Arose O u diboirltind co., tkOroft, resigned. ; ' ' Charles L. dater, the. murderer, of Warden Tenney otthebiamaohueette State Pelson, who has of late been sufferinlawrefely fromeenanned plow, riey doring Moro squ a w year of confinement in inn POO? tit to eieetrtiori, suddenly died I ,Jio: liiniatoeriSiad cone. )y,+s, 4a offonitod .to '. 4 .llfount, Benj. Sprier,” theoha - ogo n pos9p3miter, • , • I,t PHILADELPHIA; SATURDAY ' JANUARY 16, 1858. RELIGIOUS INTELLIGENCE. SERMON TO DE DELIVEIMD to Tun. PH11,4. flaunts FIBISMS:f.—The Reverend Newton See l ton, pastor of Nazareth - Methodist Episoop tl Church, having been requested by the Rood Will Engine CoMpany, through ite President. Wm: J. Pascoe, Esq., to preach, sermon for the special benefit of •firemen, responded in a nest note of acknowledgment under date of the 11th and froth which we are permitted to girdle the public the following In view of the /act that firemen are tcss fu quentty made the eubjeote of undeserved Gentler° and abuse, Mr. Reston quaintly remarks in his letter that, in his opinion, time might be better employed in saying good things To them than In saying hard things of them Deeply sympathizing with the firemen ass cues, and acknowledging that 'their duties are such as often to place that brave and indispensable portion of our follow-citizens in a felon position, he. has generously volunteered (without any oxpeneo to the Department) to preach a sermon' to the firetnea of this city, at the same time &sig. ' noting, as the most suitable place for each an occasion, National Hall, Market street, below Thirteenth street. The Hall has already been secured for that purpose, and the sermon may bo expected on a Sabbath evening eon, although the committee whisk has been rip pointed to complete- the necessary arrangements with Me. Heston have not jet fixed the time. The desire 'of the Good - Will Company is to enlist the interest of firearm general* in thle-AltiV,etur t lit , feeling assured that the occasion, if earriedtixt ak Mr. Heston has expressed a wjah that It should be, cannot but prove highly interesting. The plan of arrangements recommended is to commenee the services precisely at 7 o'clock ; the different companies to leave their respective houses so as to arrive at o'clock, each company coming in a body, and to be announced (rpm the platform by a committee as they arrive ; the whole to remain standing until all are in thellsll. -An effieient choir has already beam ,engaged for the occasion, Mid, we have no douhtin prove both interesting", and profitable. The firemen, and-ear citizens in general, will await it with a great deal of pleasure; and We trust this contemplated spirit ual repast will carry with it an undying record of good to all who may participate in it. . INCREASE OF CIIAPLAINI3 IN TII6 NAVY-AND ARNlr.—The religieue community is 'daily becom ing more fully awakened to the importance of this movement. A meeting of the clergy of this city was held on Monday afternoon of this week, in the lecture-room of Dr. Wadsworth's Aura, for the purpose of making the necessary preparatory ar-, rangeutente for the meeting to be held on Monday evening next, at Jayne's Hall. The design intend ed to be consummated le to increase the number of Government chaplains. Disavowing anything that would favor the union of the Church and State, the gentlemen engaged in this movement feel no hesitation In saying what they believe to be a strong conviction in the mind of the American pee ple, via: that for cur national freedom-and pros perity we ere mainly indebted to the prinolples and institutions of the Christian religion. They say that the system of chaplaincies was introduced by Washington himself immediately upon taking command of the army of the :Revolution, and was maintained by Congress throughout that glorious struggle ' and that inasmuch as the annual expense 'of keeping it up hate never exceeded the sum of $lOO,OOO, and now that the present number is ma nifestly inadequate to the nation's wants, there , should be no objection made to this increase. The meeting to be held at Jayne's Hail on Monday evening, we understand, is to bo addressed by four able apeak ors from as many different religious Beet*, and will doubtless be largely attended. SABBATII-SCIIOOL AeSOCIATION of PIIII,ADEIL rote.—The meeting held on last Monday evening,' In the Santomoitreet Baptist Church, announced in Tun Pares a week ago, was not eo largely attend ed as was desired, owing to the extreme incle mency of the weather. The eiteot of this meeting, as etated by the chairman, MeNteorge 11. Stuart, was to take council together and devise means for ,enlarging the usefulness of this Important hue iliatyaf the Christian Church. Thera were dele gates from sixty-five schools present on thle occa sion From the statement of Mr. Martin, general superintendent of the association, It appears that the number of mission-schools connected with the association is fifty, embedding nearly four thousand :children and five hundred and ten teachers. Forty one of these mission-schools are sustained by thir ty-two of our: churches, the remainder not being oonneeted with any church. The fact that there were still some thirty thousand children in our city without the benefit of Sabbath-Wheel In :qv:DM ion was considered a saillele. ,„`.. neentfinwlatirs‘- triende of the I difsr.l.4.es , ,f ' — Branch.—Siiiar meetings have been recently' held in this oity, for the purpose of eliciting state-- 1 meets respecting the field occupied, and the ne ' tare and results of the work performed. Bncour aged by the interesting results of these meetings, a more general painting for this purpose was held in the Third Reformed Dutch Church, earner of Tenth and Filbert etreets, (Rev. William J. IL Taylor, pastor,) on last Tuesday evening. The system of oolportage, and its present doings in this State, was reviewed at some length, and re vealed facts of deep interest to our business, as well as our Christian community. lIIITTONWOOD STREET Cnuacn.—The congrega tion worshipping in the church, Buttonwood street, above Fifth, Rev. T. J. Shepherd, pastor ' him, under their present pastorship, progressed flatter ingly, if we may judge with any degree of cer tainty from external evidence. They have just embellished their commodious edifice with an organ at a cost of $1,500, and as we had the pleasure of being present at its recent opening, and hearing its rich peals of religious melody under the hands of several able performers, we have no hesitation in pronouncing it a fine instrument. In addition to Ole mark of prosperity, their debt, amounting to 0,500, we learn hue been paid off, and withal the salary of, the pastor has been increased to one half more than that on which he was called; which latter Is certainly no unmerited tribute to eo faithful it spiritual servant of his charge. It is, doubtless, pleasant for the Reverend Sumottun to have thus attested the love and confidence of his devoted flock. FROM HARRISBURG. HARRINBURO, Jan. 15, 1858 This being the day fixed upon for the joint con• vention to hear read the returns of the loot gene• ral election for Governer, both houses met in the Hall of the House at 113 A. H., the Speaker of the Senate in the Chair. Tho total rote announced Was: William F Paoker David Wilmot Lame liarleburgt... Packer's plurality-42,707 Majority 14,546 Goo. Di. Wharton received 7 votes, James Pol lock 1, Wm. Steele 1, Goo R. Barrett I, F.'P. Schwartz 1, Samuel McFarland 1. Mr. J. 11. Donnelly read a bill in place to-day, authorizing students of law to practice in the courts with the consent of their preceptors. If any client does not give his consent by power of atter nay,the preceptor shall be hold responsible for all mistakes the student May make. An sot for the bettor regulation of the Becks of this Commonwealth was road this morning by Mr. Foster, of Pittaburgh. Section Ist prohibits banks from purchasing or discounting any draft or bill of exchange at a creator rate of Interest than one per cent. above the legal rate of interest. Section 2d declares that not over eight per cent. per an num obeli be declared in dividends Section 3d, that.no sum exceeding ton percent. of the capital stook shall be set aside as surplus or contingent fund. If at tho time of the passage of this: act more than ten per cent-surplus shall be on hand it shall bo divided among the stockholders within six months. If at any time after the first of Janu ary next the surplus shall exceed ton per °apt. the excess shall revert to the state. Referred to Bank Committee. Mr. Molloy, of. Philadelphia county, react in place a bill changing the representation In the Common Council of your city. Heretofore there was ono Common Councilman to every twolvolm• dred' U . /tables, and no ward coulc have less than three. Hereafter it provides there shall be ono for every two thousand taxables, or a fraction over cote thousand. This is not to apply to the Twenty third ward, which is left undisturbed, Mr. Evans, one permitting select and Common Councils to fill vattancies In their bodies until the ensuing municipal election. The House, to..day; voted down, by ayes 41 to nays 54, the proposition to buy a house for the Governor, and pay for it *lO,OOO. This does not settle the matter. A moonsideratlon will be moved, and I feel confident that ,before the session efoSes bill of: the' 'kind Will, hecinne a law. The objMnion Of most of those who voted nay was that the sem was too email fora mansion suitable to the dignity of the Governor of Pennsylvania. The progrimme of the Inauguration wad rend to day. The oeromony will take place in front of the capitol, providing the weather sults ; if not, in the Hall of the Ileum. The following is the not offered by Mr. Hooka law, to which I referredlostordny : Au Act to authorize the publication of Minority Opinions of . Judge.: of the Supreme Court c its Conatitutional Caw. - . Stamm:l. : Bo it °nested, Sm., That it shall be lawful for the reporter of the Deatsions of the Su preme Court to publish Minority Opinions of the Judges of said Court in oases where Constitutional questions are Involved dnd decided. ' •I find the law h to apply only to the doolsions on constitutional oases, and not upon every ease of iMportanoe, ae I had supposed. There is an amendmint fhat. might be added with propriety—. whiels;dhould; indeed ) be added—that 10, to au thorise the publication of a.volume of dissenting Opinions'(lo Such Cues as they are, hereafter to be 'phtillehed) delivered by the Court since 1851—the 'date of the Outten of the Judges by the popular vote. is .. .. . . LE TEES FROM CALIFORNIA. . 0.114.10...4.n.• et Th. Pram 1' RAN FRANCISCO, Deo. 21, 12.57. Nil of of very momentous interest has trans- I pired e rhis region since my lest letter was for ard . .: .4 , ' LIZOT. , IIIIALR'S LXPSDITION. 17; *bit hoe - returned from the survey of the a n Talley route, and, I believe, he has already sentifolerd his report to Weshington, lle had mi;' , :ble with the Indians, but succeeded in !be ntent of his duties. lem informed that he fi ats to fit out another expedition, for the noose Of making further observations. It may • ~ hollow, that the Utah diffieulties will °co •lon,mr.delay. mit '. te principal featttro'connected with these .urvoyeja the arrival of Lieutenant Beale with hie camel end dromedary train. The appearance of he Ae2•440 strangers evened the utmost astonish , oat itniong the native population, and drew ~ .rontUref hundreds from distant parts to Tejon, h(tivgui party to eneampod. Mr,lSettle, who is regarded here as one of the oat tterprising and accomplished of our pioneers, ,d i t 'is universally beloved by the people, ar. Ivelq,4Aan Francisco from the South a few days ge bis hotel was besieged by friends anxious i t er • ie. '. the result of his expedition. Thinking ha't .readers would like to learn something of he,. , a' gentleman who accompanied Mr. . eel . e furtilehed a short narrative of events whie.'T ave transpired sine. the commencement o he .e•pedition. [This narrative -appears JO an . thep, • t of this day!' paper 1. - ' f I ;ffivle assures me that the foots above sot (01: # '.. k . correct, 'butS s artt inclined to think that • '- t darnel ,4 - opelling are not eel forth is soffit 1 4,0 y deserving terms. 2: It might possibly be thou_t # if the whole truth were told, that the storm:, grossly exaggerated. UT.411. Oxptain Somme!, who distingniehed himself so gall*tly in the war with Mexiee, is, I am in fortnel already prepared with a regiment, la ': ielpation of a requisition for troops for. . I eineerely hope that the General Gine ant will give California a " chance ': (in cal %nonce) in this struggle with MODIDOII - a I said in my last, ahem) settle the diffi oni to-handed. Her eons have been tutored to h lie, and " long to follow to the field a eon) leaflike lord." The rumor that It is the in. e n) 'O(Brigham Young to take his followers to It is not believed bore. It is evident that the', ?anal intends to fight to the last. He Oa 11.1peet support or sympathy in the Britieh one, and mush lees could he hope for favor She Mexicans and warlike Indians at the I 'lt' gale," , t , h , b an al° rtiheee wholesale reepe ting murdertLi ei' d o o r s t o ry ,: so A, 4re true, wher g e o l y n o i ß s A th . e difference between Se Aim and Mormonism '+ So If 11' 're have been received in this city from Ca" n Isham, to the oiled that Comonfort has age it - to the ealo of Sonora to the United Stu ' for twenty-seven million dollars, This, t o aft ail ,' : may bo a Moro rumor, but my in fo tis reliable. Should the Intelligence p :rtle , , thousands of Californians will flock to th, ' '* Territory, and Guaymas will not fail to t at b e'en Impor tant Ftr, opulent n e u ri s d nnis o city. Intelligenoe that Walker had effected ano tndiog in Nicaragua did not occasiom much at` •'He is well known to be a man of strong 0 . Aind undeviating purpose, and a soldier who ip tue rollow up an idea until death overtakes las many active sympathizers, for there lanifest-destiny mon" in California than sr State of the Union. I see from your at you are inclined to view the acts of Hoe with disfavor. You must not be I disagree. only the duty of the President to fulfill maintain the honor of the nation in id it may be incumbent upon his Ad- , 1 - to oppose the schemes of the over. I portion of our feilow-eitizens. But, Why protect the stunt-civilized people America, only that they may out each 'roam and turn a beautiful region, he laws of nature belongs to the inAus thole world, into a desert' Is civilize know it, a curse, that theme people ebarrod the benefit of its enjoyment 7 )wn people as well employed that there ).r fresh fielde of enterprise ? You will specious ' but I think there is some , philosophy, else the entire history of I writ of error. ~ of nations le a law of exceptions and . rules—at least, it ham ever been practically ,regarded. , We havo progressed in a certain steikin spite of that law, and not by its aid. And ,dse4.olPnot think that the time to rapidly approach. ._ Irtion the public mind will net np a grand pro se for the annexation, if not the conquest, of • *bole territory to the Isthmus of Darien ? It yb be a dream yet—but nevertheless a dram ; - li .'lt it not looked forward to ex a necessity ? ~,_,,, habit I - - 4 ,"- rums OM !eyes. - ..;.,'"''' ' • PINANCIM APDAIIO 4 ' 4 k i . 4 '' ." 4 - 0..,e,.' nftreafit r ystleat. set have not up_ e• a Celts at e result of the francrarotase at the East. Our merchants have made stupen dous efforts to assist their brethren at the East, as onr enormous somi.monthly shipment of treasure wilt show, but still business matters remain undisturbed. Comparatively speaking, money le abundant. It is true that our " banks" In the mountains yield a never-failing sup ply' of the precious metal, but we principally owe our proeperoue condition to the Constitution prohibition against a paper currency. If our ulster States would pursue a polloy which would lead to a gradual substitution of gold for paper, they would be in like manner, to a considerable extent, safe from the influence of panics. Money, in the hard - currency sense of the word, naturally soaks Investment, and if it is released from em ployment at home, by the circulation of notes in Ito stead, it will go abroad, and cannot be recalled Immediately, Big wanted. There is not likely to be as large an amount of gash in the public treasury as has been antics Dated at the opening of the Legislature. This arises from the delinquency of our larger tax payers, who have a chronic habit of lighting off the tat-collector, finding it profitable to receive two or more per cent. per month for the money from ' needy borrowers, and pay all the expenses of a ' prctraoted law-suit with the agents of the State. that Legislature, however, will, without doubt, put , the screws to then obstinate rpeenlatore. The State Treasurer reports that there is some 590,000 on hand. The suit to test the oonstitutlonality of the law by which the public debt was submitted to a vote of the people has been dismissed by Judge Botts, end, I suppose, that will put an end to the eon trversy. TEE NEW ALUADSN The mit to obtain possession of the now Almaden 'qukkeilver mine ettil drawn its slow length along in the United States District Court It in now hold by Bolton, Barron, & Co., and others, princi palty residents in Mexico. The stock in divided intotwenty-four shares, and the receipts from Oka mim are mid to be FOllllO 8800,000 a year. 'AS' owning parties are principally resident,s' eT. thin city. They claim that Bolton, Blazon, & Co. obtained their title by the forgery of dlomments which were ',signed after the annexe.- - tiniief thin State to the Union. The opposing par ties `save been. siVietl by Mr. Forbes, who was consul , here, Atilt for a long time, held pos. 'tendon 'AI the Milo, behalf of Bolton, Barron, & CO witit importand,oorrespondence tending to oho, lb* the title was manufactured to order, and antmdated, romp time, I believe, in 1850. It applare that Forbes* been ruined by specula- Boni in quarts, and thBn when be applied to B. B. Ce. for assistance, be was badly treated. Cha grined, and having been offered' 820,000 for the documents in question, he determined to revenge hiunelf on his ungrateful partners The dom. monts have been published, and created quite a sensation. This, you must understand, in only ono tide of the story; the other hoe yet to come. 185,R46 116,189 28,111t1 The fact every day becomes more evident, that California is more fertile in natural resources than oily other country under the cuts. The announce , tnoni of the discovery of borax, in immense quartities, has recently boon made A person namod Dr. Veltch, in company with a Major Lewis, while on a hunting excursion in the northern por tioned Napa county, chanced to taste the waters of Iliftt appeared to be a spring of very pure water. The peculiar taste Induced them to bring a bet, tie fell of it to the settlements, and the ehomista 'donned them that it contained boraold acid The parties then, made further explorations, and found that the bed of Clear Lake, a sheet of water of considerable extent, in the vicinity of the coast range, was composed, ton considerable depth, of crystals of borax. Beyond wealthy gentlemen then formed themselves into a company, with a view to the development of this new court' of wealth, and I believe their agents are now in Eu rope endeavoring to make arrangements with capi talists there for an extensive trade, In the article. I em intornred that the supply of borax is sufficient for the wants of the world, and the value of the property is variously estimated at from one to two millions of dollars. Uncle Dilly Rogue copper mine, in the Sierra Nevada, about which you doubtless bavo heard, has not been so susqessful halted been anticipated. The ore is very (from 30 to 50 per cent.,) and axial,. in Inexhanatlble quantities, but the mine being situated in an almost inaccessible region, and WI far from a seaport, capitalists will not pur chase. ATROCIONA VILLAINY A foul conspiracy has just come to light in this city. The Herald gives the following doecription of the affair: A Mr. Coburn and 11 Mr. Taylor rent for a Mr. Robinson, paper•hangor, to furnish a room. While on Coburn's premises Robinson was seized, and, under threat of immediate death, was compelled W assign over to Taylor all his property. In the theatrical world hero thorn is little of Interest (to note. Miss Noe and Julia Dean Rayne are the stars. The latter lady Is ' playing to L orowded houses at the " American. ' The former lady ie playing at cities In the interior. Mrs. 'Jayne will leave in the verso of a week or two for New York. She has grown very womanly, and has won the universal admiration andlrespeot of the people during her stay amongst us. Political affairs amp a very quiescent condition. Demoomcy is predominant, and has nu roman worth, oC its steel. All eyes are turned towards iYashing ton. I am informed that Captain Stone's surveying party will leave for Sonora on the Ist of January. On Thursday, the 17th Instant, the cele brated horses, " Oloncoe Chief," "Jim Barton," " Now York," and " Rhode Island," came to. gather on the Pioneer Come for purse and stake of SUN—mile horde, trod throe In five—to go to WOOL This contest ITO oi4llo for Crittornla to MIEZIII BTONIt'S 'PARTY -- be ae good, if not the best race on record. "Jim Barton" made the first beat in 2. 3 :1,abial Is good time in any country fur trotters. Then comes "Now York," the pioneer trotter of California, once the property of "Corinthian Tom," of Por ter's Sprit of Me Times, making the unprece dented time for a sixth beat /11 2 3M, going to the half-mile in 1 131, and closely lapped. by " Jim Barton." Below we give you a summery •' Mr Forguron's (Capt. 8. Cards) b. g New York, 2, 0,4, 3,1,1,1. Mr. Jas. EMT 's s. g Rhyde /stand, 3. 4,1, 1,4, 3, 3. Mr. Werner's b. g Jim Barton, 1,3, 2, 2. 2. 1 2. Mr Crook's (Mr. Peas) g g Glencoe Chief, 4, 0,3, 4,3, 4, r. o. Time-2 325, 2.35, 2.35, 2 3d, 2 35, 2 325, 2.35 ADIOS. flighty Interesting Narrative •t Lieutenant Beale. , Wages-Read Expedition' trim Fayt Defiance le the aitelorade Diver. [Correspondence of The Presa I . SAN FRANC:WO; Doe. 17, 1857. The expressed objects of the present expedition were these : First, the 'Harvey of the line of coon try lying on and near the 55th parallel of N. let., and situate between Fort Defiance, in New Mexico, and the Great Colorado, at the supposed month of the mojave, with a viers to the °engem:Don of a wagon-road from our Western settlements to Cali fornia, shorter and more desirable then those now traversed by emigrant trains. Stiormd, to test the adaptability of the camels (already imported by the Government) to oar climate and country._ Leaving Philadelphia on the lath of May, Lieu tenant Beale. with the majority of his party, pro- : ceeded to New Orleans, and from thence by, steamer to Indianola, Texas The necessary arrangements fur the journey having been completed, the tratta started for San Antonio, where they arrived dn the 16th Of June. Leaving his party encamped OP the Leon, Lt. Butte continued his way to Camp . Verdi, lowhlch place the rentals had been eenveyed,,frout the coast, and accommodations prepared for them' by : Major Wayne, U. 115; A. Having discretionary orders with regain' to them hors the Secretary of War, ho selected twenty-two camels, and three dromedaries, which he considered a auttlelently large number. With them he engaged a Turk, two Greeks anal two Arabs, in the capacity of pack ers and drivers; the last t wo,: however, left,the ex pedition at San Antonio, being anxious tO return nom. On the 25th of June the train storied on its way to El Pain, the camels carrying the corn for our mules. During the march from San Antonio, they proved themselves capable of much harder service than was required, bearing their' heavy packs easily, and without complaint or fatigue. They kept pace with the wagons, anal seemed quite as contented browsing upon the mesquite bush, on the barren portions of the road, as feeding upon the rich gram of the Doudo,or Verdi. Incapable of being stampeded, and requiring no care, they are as much less trouble than mules as they ate their superiors in strength and endurance. Passing the well-knownpoints on this road, they came in sight of the Rio Grande on the 23d of July, and descending into its One valley, found grass in abundance. Continuing on the road running on the eastern bank of the stream; they passed El Paso a few miles to the southward, and reached Albuquerque on the 10th of August, having seen throughout our journey along the Dol Norte, a fertile anal beautiful valley, filled with groves of magnifusent cottonwood trees, and affording sub sistence to immense flocks of sheep. Albuquerque. a Mexican town of no very prepossessing appear ance, is built of adobes, anal is the depot of United States military stores for the troops in that quarter. Like all other places of the same kind, its size appears leis than it really is. The popula tion is kbout 6,000, the majority of whom depend upon the army for support As the baggage land materially decreased in weight and bulk since they left the coast, Lieut. Beale turned over to the quartermaster his useless wagons, and with the rest, crossed the river, and took the road to Zuni. Passing over the gently s undnlating plains, intersected occasionally by the mountain spurs running through thieportion of New Mexico, they reached the Pueblo of Laguna, presenting all the characteristics of the Indian villages of this country. Like Albuquerque-Tome and tho rest of the towns upon the Del Norte, it is constructed of adobe blocks—instead, however, of building the houses one-story high, the Indians of Laguna raise theirs one above the other, in a pyramidal form; the ascent from one room to another being made by moans of a ladder resting upon tile parapet below; the dwellings are piled together in a strange irregular Style, and though entirely devoid of beauty, hare much that is ran guilt': and picturesque in theli form. Tho lion was now upon the route of Coronado, whose journal gives the Brat account ever published by a European of this country. Continuing upon the i road now scarcely discernible, they reached the a new town of Zuni, lying a few miles to southeast of the ancient ruins of that name. Crossing the • 1 Rio Frio, they awaited the arrival of Col. Lever ing's command, then at Corcro. The Piseado, a small stream of cool and delicious water, upon which the train ku at that time en camped, runs through a valley covered with a sheet of lava, It has evidently poured from the crater of 150010 extinct volcanic mountain in the vicinity, anal rolling down the gorges, burst into the vale, and there sprepd entirely over it, pre en:fling-at this 'time ithevermaminfllPPenrootlor-sf Nee4,l-.50 wilt swotting waves green anal nun tient trees. Leaving the expedition to proceed, Lieutenant Beale and Thorburn, U. 8.N., made 'detour toward the northward with Cul. Levering to Fort Defiance, in order to procure the aeon given him by the Secretary of War. They had now reached the southern part of the Navajo country, a region more beautiful than any yet traversed. Interminable forests of lofty pine trees cover the mountainsides, and the long slo ping valleys seem ever green with that grass moat highly prized by the pioneer, (the gramma.) On the 231 of August, the train emerging from tbo dense forest that clothes the back-bone of the American continent, passed down the elope on its vrestern side, and encamped at the base of the cele brated El Moro or Inscription rock—so-called un account of Its sides being covered with fumes and verses of various dater, some of a century ago, oth ers more recently inscribed. This remarkable natural monument 6303, with out any previous indication of Its existence, 1000 feet above the level plain extending along its base. Ire sides are perfectly perpendicular and smooth, while the aturosphorio action upon the soft, white sandstone of which they era composed has made them !wok as if enamelled. Ic is formed like a wedge, whore Finale io crowned with an ancient abo riginal fortification, evidently the work of the acme arttrons whore tumuli are visible from Peru to Wisconsin. Sloping from the Poulbwoat is n plateau leading to the western entrance of the mountain, which forms a natural corral of great sine, and evidently impreg nable to the aboriginal warriors, who doubtless lived through this country. Riding into It, they found growing within it the largest pine trees, whose heads are far below •tbo crest of the rook which rises above them. The party from this point proceeded to the Fie redo, whore they awaited Mr. Beale's return from Fort Defiance lie with his escort arrived on the 28th. They then travelled to Zuni, where they spent a few days trading with the Indiana for corn agd pinale, of which they have hbundance liFrom this point the expedition traversed Lt. Whipple's trail, and found in every eamping-plitee plenty of fine grass and water. They passed now over a comparatively level country, occasionally Airting ranges of mountains of volcanic origin; 11119 mountainous feature is the prevailing turo graphical feature between Zuni and the Colorado. The expedition came in view of the Little Colora do on the 2lth of September, and on the 6th arose- rd it without difficulty, though the river woo swol len by recent rains, and its northern bank very deep and boggy. It is very narrow, winding, and muddy, with very little timber on its hanks. From the point where the party left the Colorado Cliiquito, they may be said to have passed over a country before unexplored. Though the features, except to a geologist, presented no change from those already witnessed, the same wave line was perceptible In its plains and volleys, and the same irregular black serrated mein tains of metamorphic rock were often visible. They encamped at a con siderable reservoir of nater, to which Mr. Beate gave the name of King's Creek, and from that point ho despatched exploring parties in various directions. . . - In ono of these, led by Lieut. Beale himself, they discovered what was believed to be the celebrated (Wien of Aubrey, and described by him in his notes. The natural peculiarities of this part of our route are worthy of remark; the palhande ft,rma tiona crowning the suuunitv of the mountains era formed with such regularity 113 to appear loss like a work of nature than of art ; and the road being over the perfectly level 111;e5a3, tosembledothose great thoroughfares of ancient times familiar to the historian. Tho route was covered by the moat luxuritnit blue gramma grans in greater abundance than many of the mountain men of the party had ever seen it. Here petrifections of the moat wonderful descrip• lion presented themselves, whole trees, in many instances, having been seen turned to stone; and on one occasion, on the bank of the Rio de la Xara, a. trunk of a large cedar was found petrified and imbedded in the solid rock, rising at least 20 feet above it Tho party moreover diseovertd on the rooks, and in the caves near the bunk of the Colorado Chiquito, ancient yet nneffseed inscriptions, evincing the change from the idlographio to the phonetic style of writing, among the people who once undoubtedly inhabited in vast numbers this at present deserted country and whose remnants i of civilisation are described a the works on Ameri can nrehmology. The guides having preyed unworthy of trust, the expedition 11118 preceded by parties In seateh of water, which was always discovered at reeve nient intervals, showing that tip to this point the route is in every way available for emigrant trains, it having bees scarcely necessary to double team in any ease. They reached the (treat Colorado on the 19th of October. Its valley resembles that of the Rio Grande, except that it is wider and its mountain ridges higher. Being in the hnmediato r Molly of the Mojave villages, our camp was full of Indians, who traded their corn for our blankets, beads and other art, elm pr ised by savages. The passage of the river was made without diffi culty, and near the same place whore Lieutenant IV hippie crossed. ' Conveying their baggage over in au India rub ber boat, the wagons were floated after it. The mules crossed without trouble, as the stream has numerous sandbars in its bed, which enable animals to rest themselves. The current runs about four miles an hour, and the river, from bank to bank, is about two hundred and ninety yards la breadth. The camels here refuted the opinion commonly entertained of them, vis: that they are unable to swim. After the passage of one of the toilers, who took the water without difficulty and swam to the opposite shore, the rest were led in In squads of five and seven, end without exception passed with ease and safety. Bare the travellers found the only sandy coon- TWO CENTS. ill , en their mute, this being the northern cantiati- Alton of the Colorado desert, However, they *TM enabled to procure * artheicatt amply of Irldar, and continued their course due weft, shin etabinig the Mojave river. Pursuing the bank it tie 14111 C until atriking the Mormon road, the train immed the Cajole. and Arrived safely in Lou Angeles on the 20th of November. The Tragedy at the St Lawrence Trial of 11. sem Washbor.n. 581111, lot 114 :HurdArr .f Richard Carty** YNSTARDAT'II PROCCSDINGS. (Replied for The Trees I OYER As,, Team t est —Judges Allison ant Lad low.—The testimony la this protracted tot re markable trial diced upon both Ades yesterday afternoon, and Win B. Mann, Esq , will addres the court tide morning for the Contmeaweaith: tin will be followed by Mr. Thayer for the prisoner; and these speeches, it Is exported, will conclude teday'e proceedings. Oil Monday Mr. Drown will address the court on behalf of his client, and Joseph P. Loughead, Esq., will mewled* for the Commonwealth If these latter speeches do net ',onetime the whole day, Jedge Allison will charge the jury, and glee them an opportunity of reliev ing themselves speedily from the perfeemanes of what must have prated a most irksome duty. It is expected, from the kntwa repatatlen of the manic) on both sides of the bar. that }hey wilt die tingufeb themselves by their eloquence, and legal argumentativeness, and certainly there tuniseldoin or never been a cue which sfferded finer oppor- Insides for forensic diqday. Miss EimithiCoulteraW.—The corrreMetion on the i 13th-wee torilltined some utlnitteiv lesser; blether' iteldire lisle wiiQng fer the Itemtponcknant; dud, 1 i DMA let astir° miff; it is thila lades plate to suit her Own convenience in Making fteb ea lip. pointment ; if she wills it, you know I will to the postponement, though lam perfectly ready and anxious to be married today if she says so; if ' (bete be any censure, let none of it attach totter: my shoulders are breed, and I will beerttall:" that he couldn't see where there was cay ground for censure, after having honorably obtalsed the eon. sent of her nattiest father to whom be had written on the subject; I told him there was perfeet Propriety in that part of his course; thit I had earned that Mr. Mee. was a kind, open-hearted man, a very worthy gentleman, and would be dud if he would pay him the respect due him at thlit time; but at the same time, considering the put kindnesses of Mr. Carter to Lime, it would be but a becoming respect to pay some consideration to hie wishes also: thought he could not consider himself under any par ticular obligations to Carter; that if he ex= peeled him to cringe to him on account of his money, ho wintld find himselfvery much mistaken; that he should ask no favor of him then or ever afterwards ; he was glad Rim McCauley's father was ndt a gentleman of opulence, as he would prove to him and the world he had married his daughter for no mercenary motives. but for her own worth and the love be bore her; that if she wadetiling to take him, be would risk all for her, if he lost thereby every friend he bad in the world; I returned on the evening of the 13th, leaving mat tore in that elate; I received intelligence of the marriage tbeday after itby letter; next visit to Philadelphia was en the 11th of January; Mr. Carter was in the city at that time; I called with him upon my brother and his wife where they were boarding, in Seventh street Mr. Carter met them as a father would his children ; ,that visit continued the part of an evening; he knew of the marriage; he remarked, he had felt a little ed at first, not receiving aimed. but that such mat ters seldom affected him long, that he had got over it entirely, and should act ad if nothing bad hap pened the next day I returned, the 7th of Janu ary; I visited Philadelphia again on the 4th of April ; they were then boarding at Mrs. Leonard's, Eighth below Chestnut; 1 saw Mr. Carter; he took tea at Mrs. Leonard's on the evening of that day; after tea he accompanied me to a religious meeting held in a private house; the next morning he called and accompanied us to church that was en the Sabbath day ; I lett on the afternoon of Monday: I next heard of my brother about the 13th of April, by letter; that is the letter; I re ceived two by the same mail ; this is one of them. - - - M etterread by Mr. Brown, as follows :I —-- Zdary : My wife hem a female heir; keep still ; I am a stranger to a father's joy; it cannot be my offspring ; come op and mourn with me ; Heaven has decreed me a severe fate; I have written to uncle Stephen and George ; I need your counsel, withdraw not now from me. The 16th,of this month is four months since our wedding. Oh, God be mer ciful. Lib knows not that I suspect her chastity; she is too weak now to break the subject to her; I leave for York Wednesday. I went to my brother by the first train ; he met me in the hall at the boarding-house, at Mrs Leo nard's ; I found him as I had never looked on him before—a living picture of wretchedness—soiled linen—dishevelled hair—unahaven face—and a grief-worn countenance; he folded me la his arms ; throw his head on my shoulder and yielded to a paroxysm of uncontrollable grief ; his first audible words were, "Mary, oh Mary, what shall rio,: am 1 . -114 kralillta4 adab4 103 , homer is is thee bßen most grossly deceived; I Would es soon bare suspected the angels of heaven of a wrong as my wife ; Oh ! God, how I loved her' I worshipped her, and this is my reward ; what can Ido ? shall I leave her , bow can I leave her, and'yet how can live with her! I can neither think nor act for my self; I have sent yen to counsel me; she dreads your coining; she knows you will advise a separa tion; must I nut leave her now?" to which I re plied "No, not now, you are not in a condition to decide properly, and we wilt do nothing rashly; take a night's rest, compose yourself, and In the morning we will be able to decide the more coolly;" he then entered her room, and returned, saying that she wished to see me ; we entered her room together, and as I approached the bed side, she exclaimed, " Mary, oh, Mary! can you forgive me for having so deeply injured your pure-minded and open-hearted brother Tom has been an honorable, true, and devoted boohooed to rue, and oh, how I have injured him' Can you, will you forgive me ?" I told her that I was ready to forgive--if she had sinned, sbe had offended a higher tribunal, a greater than man—that she must first seek forgiveness from Him ; she replied she had, and she thought God had forgiven her ; I then inquired of her whose child that was lying by her side? to which she replied, "Carter's, it is Carter's"; I then in quired " whether it could be possible ; whether I must believe what she had told me; " to which she replied with great solemnity, " Before (led. Mary, I tell you what I expect to say to Richard Carter, and John McCauley, my father, face to face, and to say ln Judgment, " Thu is Risks,/ Carter's Meld " adding, " and indeed it is my first offence; Mr. Carter took me an innocent girl from my father's home, professing to be a protector to me, but he has proved my be• trayer, , " I left the room shortly after ; my brother's state of mind continued much the same throughout the day ; be obtained little if any rest that night; be occupied the room immediately above mine, and, sleeping none myself, I heard his footsteps over head the greater part of the night ; the next day his mind was in the same un settled state as to what ho should do; he would first ask me whether he should not get a divorce; and shortly after he would say such was the strength of his attachment to his wife, that he didn't see how it would he possible for him to leave her, adding, "Oh, had she but told me the fatal secret.l could have forgiven her all ; I would halo taken her from the dust, and would have gone away and found a home for her in a far-off land ; but, oh' that base-hearted man, be led her into the conspiracy to cover up his own shame ; and I never for a moment once supicioned his honesty ; the day before this heart-brokeddiscev. cry I would have trusted my wife to go to Europe with him." After deliberation my brother con cluded that his confidence with his wife had been so sadly shaken that he could never more live happily with her; and the only honorable repara tion left him was by obtaining . a divorce, which he concluded to apply for; knowing the intensity of his affection for his wife, I inquired of him whether ho was quite sure that that was tho only alternative; that having once determined on sue a course of action, he must never for an instant swerve from it afterwards; oa the morning of the day he left the city I stepped into the street on business and on my return to the house found my brother in the parlor convulsed with grief; I a proached him and endeavored to console him, tail ing him be must rise up in the strength of his manhood and strive to outlive his difficulties, that there was schism a life picture no dark but that some ray of hope might be found gleaming through the gloom; I endeavored to direct his thoughts to the only mums of true consolation, but, said be, "Would you not have a man feel on taking his heart from his living body? I have just been taking my things from that room, and It 'has almost killed me." lie said, "I wen torn to misery ; my life has been one of sorrows; I have known what it wait to be a fatherless boy ; I have known the eorrows of orphanage; I have known what it was to be a homeless wanderer in a strange land ; I barn buried the most of my kin dred; I have stool by the grave of my mother, one of the purest spirits that ever left the earth, and no son ever idolised a mother as I did mine, but all my life's sorrows are nothing to this; this Is the grave of all my hopes—oh, aft retfail God, why war 7 lout to sock foto?" His grief M. Houck! little abated up to the hour of his leaving, which was on the afternoon of that day; that was at Mrs Leonard's; I saw him again on the 6th of June ; he wrote tome from New York to meet him at the Madison house, in Philadelphia; these are the letters I received from him : • • NevE YORK, April 18, 1857 My DEAR MARY : now hare the tables changed —now I ant hopeless , without hope. lbw I ask glom pardon for being :John. to you Though it eras tinder a gro I i error, and JOU tl'lllforgi re me. It is hard to realize my situation It is dlr. !butt to think of her who was once the idol of my thoughts. I fear she will come to wreck. I dread lest she be in el ery MOM an again I would cleave to her, but I never can have confidence in her. It is better that we be sepa rated. I our Brother, Tow. WASH. SEITH. Care tiherman A Co„ 1 Vesey street, N. Y. DEAR SISTER : Your kind letter wee received. I am reconciled to my trials—am ready to forrive and forget the errors of • foolish woman. It may be all for the beat. It may be that the Author of all good saw it was necessary that I should pans this serer, ordeal to be fitted for a home en the skies. I have a sister—her manse! shall direct me, I will discard all others and live for her and the world. Mr Keen has been here ' and kindly took me out • walking. Went with me to church ; condoled with me; counseled me. and comforted me. I will wait the workings of the law, and anticipate a separation her who has done me so great a wrong. I wfillro m never see 1 her again, only cue stranger Let Me hear often I am your loving brother, New York, April 20th, 1657.T0w. WASH. BRITH. I saw him at the Madison Houle; be received !yams TS CaILSESITIL Clai;e4•o4' slip Rat * " Tat /NW ;ril3 Oral ba is afilil tit* /d'art', rater ivory comanes unmet be bikewesebel rJ do ewe* et tine gnu.. la order le Were eectielmenef trjegmAr. lei JIM Whie it e 4.104 mitturvass. Ire 4114111 •Creette 11113 pi beralltoums Is 'was sat War s to arttpatltrOremWwls -leatNA erre et the ikr is timer esebeekese IMO 2 ` .o k , see We aeseeesefilit eeemig, Ike IMAM Mr 0.11416416.0114 INV kidbreeeele fiat win be tbeeeedbeg tam palMliet task,. " will ' an t tl i f *A simplicity whit wh kb a little seed rite% pared after se Lang ebeesse ; eareemet Imp, eiapPe t t kge heads, laughed, sad ; aim* about the nom milk greet d irlareired et kin km be had hot *lag ear sopersaale, to whisk. he had " a watched sae. but ears dam he had sesillite, he was well and alma& .pie •" isAlet them the *feeds et &deadly hai Sam thigh he by at heat sea triad hit Id - Iliell stood Wising, al segardiese of the Waresedig sea as ma the eatf-tasure reek et ae triad Isreshag, ea at gale: I htraired al him ewseeraing ear ear tad Dissedle he XIV Yea, addle, daisy weld Atha *ad talk ot pleasant aims, and hare amass lay tegelhor; eactuanad a ismerematioe, bed le eery amt rammed tote a It et rastreettek ham which I issaleaand to anew him try stakieg Ida by the arse, saying te bias that it. was : i g i, leg a 'peer eumptunget In his resat le himself is lseame se ninth absorbed in lissgth Mg *elm entimiy namindlid of ber pastime la maid uP, ond requested me to excuse him, wbg "that he bed we eon tett ever his tit Mid duly ver geed as seatmaity te kik 'si the twit* turned to the pots," he awe Intend &pea them at some length ; li• spots et kis lawm, sad said nee whether I fida't Chink be had Wee kited 17 Carter; I altid Ilem‘`lso, I timed is Ilea Oise' I inquired if he thought Mr. Rea emelt asereo ' mend him to any gentleman who was cul t of bats g bribed; be whisk he niplied : "Woe, ha couldn't believe it either; irs was ales masumed of bl s easelfter thinking so 7... hat after . haring sem bee tie gteredy and OCIPIIIy takes ella s zej i . b bad es everybody eta . hem that aid atat he had naiad merino Wool; fr several gentlemen on the saLjeet d his am bite ; nom had advised Met to seek a brake, and ethers a legal eettlossere of Ms dieleelato hynoo secution ; mob counsel he repread,amaddiag te. salt to injury ; t h at m on ctspeing pads war torn itrAttak , tion della bia, ste w the feelao of a seas at o;h4geetanefireart; is was inaiderleg to think pripsiaddistibibs be ley, iiirly ars - stain vath — geld ; We ate -heart* Mitaght At ant oil aberasamee te him; tbe weal (egad 04 - vvirt. tint sr Richard - Carter's or any ether asaa's saoseey, a theta eirousestaseee. as • ovataisigaisma • ea daypassed on, end ow the Unnamed a; ay laving, be grew 11ed.,4117,441,0ba kite wield lea have me with him alwanke wean he lbenif again; I tea him that if he Nereid worsen wield never leave Ida, that t 111,1 with w r iami blot to the end of the, he . mar armed against my ' aseemlue ' kith, itsp, ing that he . weld - near" -- ere le the inconvenienced of secit kat& hhe m kin before leaving be inquired where we emadind er home together, where eel' aright lire amiaget strangers, who would know hot mad Isar twit at Ids disgrace; I told him we maid •go to saes of the Western States, or California, If he ptvane& it; the idea seemed to please him —lw add ed, it seams -like a lard. ease, Mere, but I'm a man a longer; IVA Will haft -16 , think and act the mat for us boa; by the elate of that day, I 'found that - time, the restorer, had failed to Mont .the keen edges rg grief, and that the night at iakdlect was in deed gathering about nrcoely brother; le cere• ducted me to the depot; I sass him so sere till August ; he came to Fe* me while I. was at the coun resident.s of a s t a y i n g ; at was the inn weeks Auguit ; I war at Mr. Mitre.' house; my brother stepped up on the etwaisda in front of the house, whgre want matrd a samba at remora who had known him from has boyhood, and so changed wan his appearance that maw him until they beard tbeimandbf bleireiZM pearnce Wei trel !a lad grown thin; hie arum tenants and mama ; calla* keto his eye told the earful truth that reason was tot tering on her throne; he pained lunwhaly fate the house, up and down the arid area mad he must return to the Tillage s ,, !Ise= en fem. June till then; it was raining at the time: he had walked through the rain vith=t an eniteala„ and determaed at once ,to ream; &Wag him resolved to" re,turn, I reared ' accompany lam, being too anxious to perm i t him to go alone; his friends darling as theaatined 'pm going, ordered & carn age ri and sent es to ars • village : my brother seemed rery deteselsod to leave that night; had he done so it wee Wi full purpose to aceonipanyhiat : be Yielded to the entreaties of . his friends and remained wrer r.t : s h ,- the nett da y be war more emaposted and to Baltimore; law him agile the least part et' August; I visited him la „Beltimece 7 , I toad kat at the Manion Rotel ; I towed him better than. when I saw him last; I remained with hit. several days, morty a west; be we. eta quite errata; he wea lealthsg hater; . onseusi to be regain ing ' his flesh :' T saw ha - &tont the mild. of October ; whet 1. lola catere to visit me at the . college hr - Malan= his mind was very much dioteubed; ha much as he had when'l had seen Mai in duvet; he had the game wild look ; I attempted to essmoks him; he remained with amw thee far an bow or two, and then took tear. of me, and **Who await see no more of me fey a - long titer: be lll turned again in the afternoon, afterhaving akin leave of me; dashed her riedly unto the doer:aid I must prepare quickly to accompany him; we took a ride; we rode together for eagle thrusts over the Philadelphia pike, whisk there IVY by the Brandywine.; dame Nag Omar dismay vantage of Auriga ; we were together for &s hear or ma*: for same time we ode Inc Meese, I thinka' g iny ic - il c tritittosiseareenti--_ , the reason to him; that though la early man hood he had lived to me the maw= of hope,. Oa future could only be to him a bleak and amen winter." I next new him es the 6th November, is prison. Croce-teethed by Mr Mann.—l hare no sister or sisters living I have but one brother—the pri soner. , The defence her closed. - Mr. Mean horn announced to the court that tbq expect to occupy the 'hole of tkis afternoosi in re buttal. lie therefore asked the coed to steam till 3 o'clock. The wart adjourned tin 3 o'clock. - [For the rwela•ioa of interiors proceorliap NO ecoad pare.) GENERAL NEWS. At York, Ps., on Monday, four persons werg arrested on a charge of creating a disturbance. tineof them. named Fisher, made a deepersta re sistance, and assaulted nigh Covetable Ruby wed, several citizens pith a long-bladed kali*, but with out doing them any injury. The York Ra7wititxus says: "It was with much dilatelty that be was tied, thrown into a women and oncreyed to When he arrived there he managed to got a bar of tree, with which he unsalted one of the keepers, Injuring him aoretrehaL _When in the WI he tore oil the spiggot of the hydrant, which he threw with much force at those outside, who namely escaped felting its weight- lie then broke up tome of the wood work in..ode, with which he made a club, sad swore he would knock °cattle braina of any potion who should enter the cell. Hit conduct was such that the sheriff ordered Wm to he shot, sad two balls were fired at hint, one of which grazed one leg. and the other ball took effect in the other leg_ Ile then submitted—the ball was extracted, when he asked to see it. and seer 311 ea Aniki it immedisay. The ste.troboat AtiLansits arrived at New Orleans on the 7thinst with a large erowd °tin diani consisting of tsrty-four Seminoles and Mx Creeks, including the two principal chiefs of both Rations, viz : John Jumper, of the Seminoles, and. Yuca-bacbs-Milo-s, of the Creeks- They are on their way to Florida, under the charge of Mr. S. Rector, superintendent of the Indians west of Ar kansas, Mr. Rutherford, agent of the &minden, and R. M. Johnson, clerk, for the purpose of i n _ ducing Billy Bowlegs and his tribe to emigrate to their lands west of the Arkansas. It is the inten tion of the visiting Indians to land at Tampa, and proceed at once towards the imam?' in search at Billy Bowlegs. ' A colored man, a sailor from this city, was killed in New York on Tuesday evening, near the Astor Home, by a quack doe tor. named IL L. Phillips. lie confessed that he did stab him, but said that he did it in self-defence, Laving been at tacked when in NI man street, a few doors below the Tame: of ice, Roberta and two white men. He did not know that he had inflieted a serious InNIZd until the otscer whom he bed told of the fuscous ter came for him nest meriting. The eoroner's jurylatemed satisfied with the story and dine:tamed hint, but the coroner held hint to bail in il,Oen. la plantation of live-oak, made by some care ful walla alter in West Florida, is said to be de•- fishing, finely, and Colonel Claiborne publishes a letter, In which he propose. to establish exteriret plantations of this oak on reserved lands In Loui siana. He says the lire-oak grows there with astonishing rigor and rapidity. In seven pars from the acorn, it forms • beautiful elude In twenty years it has the tenacity and durability of iron, and Is ready for the axe of the ship-car penter The City of Chicago is only twenty-six years old The town was laid out in 1830, and the first sales of lots were made in 1931. Its growth is extraordinary. The annual data:tents of the extent of Its commerce and trade are every year more surprising, and the increase of its population appears to keep equal rare with the growth of trade. In 1840 It bad 4.470 inhabitants; in 1330 it had increased to 1;269 in 1883 the Egstreawere 83,300; in 1330, 110,000; in 1537, 130,000, or as increase in rerenteen years of 123.530. The people of Bristol, R. 1., we see it stated, are losing their hair, without any known canes. The Phanix says that several have lost all the hair (torn their heads and bodies, the whole dis appearing within two weeks, leering Dot evert an rye-lash. The doctors cannot comsat for it. The birthday of Daniel Webster, the 18th instant, is to be observed more generally than It has been in years past in Belton. The Webster Association, as well as a large umber of private clubs. will celebrate the day in an appropriate manner. On the 6th instant, a hostile meeting took piste near s am medi, Georgia, between Mews. C A. L. Lamar and Henry Do Signori, et' that city, Odell reselteui in th e latter gentleman calving a pistol ball in the right eye, intiedng a very serious woluxl. The tempo Gay Head, Ospt. Mayo, which arrired at Roston on the 13th, from Cetuilantino pie, his en Merl nineteen lire Angola goats (Mo hair) ant three Angola sheep for the United Stated Gorernment • - The Toronto Moll has an announcement of the election of 31. r. Peptises's to the Pr:arterial Parliament, °Tat the ministerial eandidate. Kr. Papineree was one of the " rebels" of 1637, and goes strong for a republican imminent They must have a remarkably warm cc apell“ , up in Michigan jest now, for we notice. In •D•tralt paper of recent date, that a woman was arrested in that city, " baring nothing tm bet palm bat a lore letter and a deguerremype." Colonel Thomas Arkow, while attending the races at New Orleans, on January 2d, had his poeket picked of 11,3 w in money, and BOW to the Taloa of Deseret thousand more. '%o•"`"