PI iiBliurrila GAZk'f'll.Y. YtratiYallp BY WHITE AV 0) •;. PITT! 811868 girltEADINe 'MATTER NUL, BE I'o err. ON RA OR PdGl7.or,F.T=.P4'itag.r. pIaDAT' XORNING:' MA,Ir -1,;:1868. . _ its,Pvlsician Warty .0k741-4...... lb& extant,* Ch.., • lanCla of Our Wady Osisettii oerralo car bwrinus men • . a mod dabablo smiedlaatef mattait.thelt badness Irnoix ' Cur entliitiO 01. barna lirormad ISra tbonsead., read. Ins sizteetirery audnavattle Western nab tad tasteni IaNO 1 DV 116 21 1 01113=-IlettliF the Z4Howiallkkomo, wor Yohotas idoblishmont of, thw-17alco. Wonoso. m;- OPMed oh st.g..y. ADvaparszas who &atm the, matlasla ippon. In t o on Malodor months: D bud thcLlmfwkb_estrack.cal Estwoll/ mixockerto ,Nom---inosii. CIASAL coßkzonoseg, MEOWNALL, .Of Lenesiter Cou4 73 . 2. LITDITOII GULIIAS, X.K. , ALE.3 34 3PLOE.-Of Fmali. Count, roivenviToi oenluz, CEIBI9TIAN'UEYSEU3, Of Ciarkil-CountY ...awes tneootiony to min ; .... , :_ - 7,..' • • , • :, :. ...itt.tatflotteuoutotoueet moon, .;.. -: 1•, We pablieh.sitielee in to-day's paper on two "--. 7 , • • distinct case", 'of eppreislon. One to:14 p1.:6 Un• der . the i fraunioal ffovernment et Austria—.the ithir:ocourndUnder our own nominally free .1.; . ,goieibriiiit..:,,Bot.b. are grievous wrap' against ,-- • •,-,;'..,- ': .human nature, and etriking -evidences - el the - • ~,-•, -. -' : erneltycfnean rindereirtain circuritstances, and buth woralhe natural effects of the institutions ,-. , ;"•• ttialiterillOh they took pima. -The "one victim 1 , '• • -"'" - ,elidii - beautifiti and Intelligent woman and her' • lifiliiiiitrinii ii: lore of country. The other was Tfailiatimitii &akin of eben hue aid a soul of he- Itraitrtfertitride—he died,for. his attachment to ;.- :••--- ~ ..I . ...."',:p• i tional freedom. , • . :• ' . - . . ' -::.! -. •• "::::' ..;:' ,Telt itsriute to lore one's country—to desire .. ' _•,-; 4 : )iiilielitiom, Independence and prosperity f • Noe - , ,'. -••-, -a l. - iertitird trot. ,Pairintlisn le among the virtues; ~*- ~n f ' . .` , ,,' ,11. 1 1. itth :have been the most applauded. Bat . ildriethim "to Hungary Is a continual reproach' -.,!.`,...-. ...., ,„: ...tilliir:tyrant of Austria.. It endangers the sta . : - • ' , .. • :,,::-,411.1iy,"0f his throne, weakens the power of his ' , • aPireitsive rule, and threatens Ithi•with a just • •• : ' ; '• ;.", - ;,.-:,' ,• iltribtalon for his crimes. To love Hungary Is %".'td hate Austria: A Hungarian's patriotism ie of-- l."': -- fineire to the Emperor and criminal In the eight :.....,:_,.i.."- . . •, •- „ ,.' 1 -of his bench . of JUdges. In Itself the sentiment - , .„..i , ." ... ., -.4 , , is all right; it Is it tido° ; and In Hungary, in view of a prison and: of death, it Is a eublime - sirtui; . but it la treason to Anstris, and life is '" •.-- the forfeit. . . ' ~..-.; • -' telt a crime to aspire to personal liberty, to 1- : -. enjoy „the natural right of -owning one's self, to -.,••,-, ktiow and feel that those hands' and feet, this .c . . - -,':lfead and body are one's own property,-and that - ..,.thvprodono of -these vigorous limbs and these -,,- God:like !idol:latent powers, are also one's own? There is not a 'single man in this wide Country 1 , ,,. : will dispute the proposition that he has a _ :.. right to himself—a blther• right than any other ---, 1104 man. It is a political' axiom with us, :- .014 !Selt ntert'ore created feee:ind equal," and thousand, would lay down - their lives to defend ft. . This goel far beyond whit we are now con '.'"ald erlng el:Wright . if possession to one's ;soul and body. Bat In this‘bossied liiid of freedom, • where the personal and political rights' of men are bettergionnded than In any other country • . on earth, it is a crime for some men to vindicate their own personal freedore.' Fir doing this, - they msy be whipped until; the flesh falls off their bones; they may be sublieted to cruel and revolting paudzimentwhey may be hunted .filth blood-hands, and shot :down like wild ' beaste,-and all this may lordone, too, in after '' &nu pile laws! . : .; . .- • Oh! says one, this cannot be. 'We can be lieve lt,poatible that Austria should imprison • and murder women for the crime Oitcnring dear- . ly one's own oonntry; but it not possible that in thhiland of liberty men women and chit.' drezt are whipped, and - tali' oned,'and. hunted • with blood.hounds; and cruelly murdered, all in acoordance with laW, for the crime of desiring to own thenteeivat I fittotrhoteors cannot exist In ' : this land of liberty, la this Chilillan and Protes t?. - tithe • nation, In this enlightened , henevoient, glorious nineteenth century! . . . . 5. 1 How glad 'err' should be, could we esy, that the abort description wee all a fiottin. But we --- '"‘ .... W. 4,,, ,,*A5tit1-fite,letif.s.,,,,Ti_ui or +-„ _ of-human beings In this counl4--metts. 'tad -.stunt with bodies and - souls; latelleota:and street. lions, senthatents and pumices, ,•and immortal natnreof and natural • hes such as are{ possessed by all men alike, bat whose political; religiose', civic - dacha, and personal rights, ace completely deatroyed by law! ,„ • --And what is he strangest- thing la all this anomalous and most terrible oppression Is, that • tom--fren men-;- men living where this oppres don does not immediately exist—religion. men - —end ohl most Passing strange—adulators of . , the benevolent. and 'peaceful gospel—apologise for this wrong, deny its sinfalness, and are gall .' tiofthe blasphemy of andeavorlig to recohbile • 'St to the laws and commandments of Him who . -has made of oao 'blood all the nations of the earth; and who Is the Holy and the Au: Net , • Alan% laktunanity to man is a palatal subject _ of contemplation; bat It reveals noble traits in . thefiuman character. An AustriMi prison could not break the lofty spirit of the fair Ilangari - an. t - Thi gibbet could. not ,compal a traitor .- be, thought or lot to her heloved ciaatryt Hu man fiends Ind same blood hounds before him, • and the dark, boiling waters of the turbid filio aiseppi rolling on forever, an emblem of that eternity •on the borders of which be stood, could not cause to quail the indomitahlo lover of • personal freidont. ' Sublime In his manly hero lam, be waves aloft his trusty cluh,_as a token of victory, and sinks into tho bosom of the, ?dia. i lliettlppi, a freeman! - ICddIYTWO IT PRITITT Fast.-11r- Calvin 111. Brown, ,iste husband of the lady formerly known Mrs. Ann L. Piet', the "'spin-medium," died .. .lately_inNewYork,,andentim occasion of his !Unmet the parlors of his howe were crowded . friende'of the deceased, most of whom were ennead to G believers Ire the so-called itual ManifietatiOns. -Rev. B. B. Britten dello end an address, in. which he dwelt with mach I earnestnees upon The euperiority of ,tbe life of I the spirits ea. callipered with that of the body, I etikepiike of whet is called death, .not u the "Slag of Yfrfors.", beautifal and glo• . . eons charge from a lower to a-higher puce of weimenite. Attendees pinta in his atdrese, soya :'the account is the 'Pelham), there were rappinge, ntierasea ap plrently en the bottom Valle colrus cod • go otheri. open tAr Per, as if in response to the: untie:mats uttered. The Tappings were load enough to Abe dlitincitly heard in every part of - -• the room, bet they elicited no remark froM any, .sass prof, Britten #nd a communication, pore :porting to bare come from the decemed since bla !strange into : the spirit-world, through a met ' now who, was not present, and apparently intend. edfoilhoseassembled. While it wag being read the raiplast were very distinctly beard.— At the elm et the address, several "- friends sang the Dletti , _ ;"Gameye disconsolate," after which Bee. • kir. Deputes mods stew remarks,- daring irkdah . the toppings tons" heard more distinctly than . . Thistnnugh to all she minds Is . -if all rightg inn. The Impoetarj 'are eari7lDS 61ats with a high band, just note; but el, /ill nietinouut to the end of their fitting: pes!a Boole of Bus Nom Purrs.--Iltelllos tiat'atilibalsyblat'eontabalog stilt advertiser:este; -- ons gal:, past!, hasieeetty tiftn lined by Mr. . ljya, Claohaiatl, pobllehor of tio Detecior, slab ttlll be fond nodal to all Rho are reedy. ID` ylob paper ae learn, ft incti!itu loped =Al of CO g,s,ni" diC,1110,4.1' coonlerteltero for reamealtlitilig eipurloos Sotto, ' , blab; sere "ebtaliteliat s eale of eifeeti of / Darand & Co. rttsntrere A fall . page Illtuitratioa of ter. .ersk•Par:o l . " o3o 9! la; clititastloo, qua* ttnlmponanc feature of the poik. , • -•1. Nieto Fuse, the (Aber day- pt himself kip 'trouble by - men7 l ,FC two wins- A treat awn! White zees da the wee by ituary!ag one. ' . ---1 1 6/11 Thra Mil*Wol4l3 'Bunn weeks waiters/ tie 'the list anneal eft I - Eton, nritioticed the you few:l6lolth bid been perpoirited =Ali' tine tet'asold the 'Vince on' the Portage Railroad. Ho besotted la the public nand with poi:Weil pleftidice, that these revein- Cop were of no effect, and Indeed we despair of bringing swindlers and peculators on the pub-' lie fonds to punishment. as tang as the name Dr '^r is • - -.tad Jen:c.c.s:toy Is • corer sad shield for wy mange, hoverer satztoodingupoiOthe Interests nod rights ,of the people. The letter beiow is copied from the Once jn-d Dmacrat, the organ of thelleatooratio party in Cranford county. Sir. Merriam; the writer, Is a Democrat of lot:acute and standing, and 'am: a member of the late Legislature- We copy it for thepurpose of showing the troth of the state toenns.wo roads last fan, which were doled by the Leeolooo press, and not with any hope that It will lead to :any inrestigation or atty reform. The so-coiled. To i emocrstio party of this State cannot ' o reforuted. Nothinebut its entiro ov erthrow, and retonstruction, can relieve it from rIC unprincipled men who prey upon the putdie parem tor the Crawford Democrat Panatela, April 9.9, 1859. Jamie E. s liVkaziase—Bre—l notice in tho Democrat Of the 28th, that you say the ,charges made against the Canal Commissioners were un founded, notwithatanding every opportunity was allowed to those maldagete charges to prove their emetic& Probably you ore not aware of all the facts, and In order to let the public under stand the whole matter properly, I will make a abort statement, Tor the prevent; of facts. In the first place, I am one of the men wbo made charges of fraud against the Canal /bard, and every word I uld was proven by men whom the Canal Board had subprensed themselves. It was clearly proven, andlhe facts entered on the Journals of the H oare, that the Cana? Board de frauded the fa:layer" ont of /8150,0001 n letting 26 miles of grading on the New Portage Railroad, by letting the work to favorites, when as good men es are In the State bid the work that much lower; and not satisfied with that, the Board has been raising the prices of 'enrol of the Con tractors elnoe the first °entracte were made. The Tunnel on the mountain was bid by good con tractors from 20 to $20,000 lower than it wee let at; the Sections were bid from 8 to $20,000 lower then the Board let them at, and many con. tracts were made that no notice had been given publicly that such work was to be let, and at prim one-third higher than the work was worth; and $200,000 might have been saved if the Intermits of the Commonwealth had been consulted. It Le true that the Committee made two re " ports; three of the Committee went In for white washing; their report, I belie,* was written by Thomas Wilson, Clerk to the anal Board, who Is kept under the Influence of New Whiskey all the time, in order that he may be more reedy to do the dirty Work of the Baud. The minority report, eigued by myself and Coo. H. Hart; glees ell the testimony that was taken, is, on, and will appear on, the Journals of the House, when the public' tan judge for themselves. This was not a fight between myself and the Canal Board; but because I had the indepen dence to stand up for the people's sight., and was unwilling to gin my vote to appropriate any more money (critic Canal Board to foun der, and I further went iti'far selling the Public lie Work 4 which, le what every honest man should do. But it appears by the reading of's number of the papers of the State *that a man cannot be a Democrat unless he will violate ev ery principle of honesty, and back up the Canal Board in all their rascality, and givethem what money they auk to squander and lavish out to their famine.. But. I can tell them that what their wish is not my Democracy. One ward ia due to Col. Hopkins; he was not a member of the Board when those trunsations took place which the Wile has good reason to complain of. I am prepared to meet my con- , stituents, or any one else, end bank up my canna Toon; rompectfully, Omani idiumuudir. , Alit= or 'NOVIiIOII AID CAMS DMALZE. —The Alton Telegraph undue - bends that Mr. 3. P.ltatchelder, of Upper Alton, who has been a heavy dealer in stock daring the last, two fee, Sons, las failed for upwards of $BO,OOO. The St. Leads Itepublicanaddethat hie failure, al. though stated to be for the sum of $30,000, is not likelrto result to serious loss to any of hte creditors. MS assets, all of dein of • mahatma alai character, will be nearly, It not quite, stiff, cleat to cover hls liablllties,.and very general testimony Ie borne to the honorable manner to which he has noted throughout his 'temporary pecnulary esabarnssiments: Tam Wheeling Interngetistrr persists in its dune tb►t the pending Wu:notion spinet the Hempeeld road CUM from Pittsburgh, and says, Niue Philadelphispapere made the eharge,"' originally. The Intern ear is mietaken. On'e meat originated La Philadelphia, and eras purely their owri Mir. The other Phlladelphla papery made ho allusion to the matter, whatever. • Cnora.--Late arrivals (eoliths East bring the Interesting intelligence that - the rebellion in China Is advancing with fear r fol - rapidity, and betokens the complete overthrow of the present Whir DPhil/. and the re-eetablishment of the ancient princes of the Celestial Empire. The civil wars and commotion greeting out of these changes will most likely be favorable to the In troduction of a better cilization,lnd of Gilds tianity, and may be the I:quota opening up the Empire to free intercourse with the world. &TOW AID Tll/111 Iliurs ti letter frnmA s e Prandial Untie Compeny, pub lished in the N. Y. Tribune, we are gratified to learn that this work, so important to Pittsburgh, to going for Ward with the most flattering Frei peots of somas. Mr. Elder, the President, MP: “In to har sa t e course of the present we 11111 t lout one bandred miles ofyear track to ld, all, the iron (or which is purchased and paid for, including e i charges to the time of delivery up. on the line of the road. It is now going for award. The track for the most of the diatom is Letraded and ready for thaltemedlate'reception.of the rails, a large quantity of which are now on the way there, having been, shipped come 'two weeks since from this port by way of the Canal The contractors are Thelpe, Mattoon 22 Barnes,' of Corbeled, Mass. These gintlementueve re ; cently fledged the Rome and Watertown Sall iuo N road, a ew re York now consirsualeg the Rani*, Corning Railroad, and .serenel others in 'the State of New YOrk, and they are well known to poems the energy and pecuniary means no; money to carry them imccessfully through this undertaking, and they are urging the work forward with a 'view to its, early completion. A large foroe Is now at work upon the line, and the progress of the work is satisfactory to' all our friends.”, • „ daiontsa liltrannt We have received formation that • man'named Themu Kinney was shot dead, on the night of the 2d instant, be tween twelve and one o'clock, In Banutide, Clear , field county, about 26 miles northeast of this plaoe. l The gun or pietol,with which he was shot had 4012 aimed with a piece oilmen Instead of a ballet. It entered the tack part of the head, and on a post mortem examination being made, It woe found lodged in the brain, and was one inch and a half in length. Kinney was shot as he entered the door. Ills housekeeper, bearing the noise, asked "who I, there” when a Mee 'from without answered, 4 •Yee, who le there!" .Feeling alarmed; she called to a man who was sleeping up emirs He comedown, procured a light, and discovered the body of the dead man. The alarm was immediately given. Buapialon ;was fixed upon ace Jerry Phelan as the murder ,,er, as It appears that came merlons diffichlty has 'for came time existed between the two, sod the !attuned made threat, to take KIDIIOf/ He was obeerved during the day lettering around, apparently on the wet& for Kinney. Phalan is an,lyistnan, cheat 6 feet 6 inches high, heavy set, dark eyes and lair, and , wore a dark tweed coat, dark pazitaloons and black hat. Ho has ,not yet been arrested, and fa - supposed to have gone westward. —lndiana (Pa.) Register dray 11 A CANAL rose 8611.—A. P. MINS, President of the Board of Public Works, advertises the Moran County Canal for sale. Tide work es, finds from the Maud CABAL at Middletown.; to Lebanon, and is now open to purchasers If not to isevigatiell, together with the Water power and other privileges pertaining to It; inoluding the . right to breed Frogs in the main °banns! sod raise Gross on the tow•path. Proposltlone as buy 'the whale or a part" of the line will be reosivert.—Dayton Gat . A Boston correspondent of the New:York Er eilogPost says the attempt to raise.by subsorip fon a fund to - pay of the incambranoes on Mr. Webster'e estate, which hae been feebly lan guishing along for some ens, has it length been molly ertingoiehad by the presentation of a 'cline for 1 110,(NIO bjr Caleb . enshing, on aoroan t ct miner loaned to Mr. Wanton - The Triter adds that so then Is an Indefinite amount out. sindlog of similar obligation inourred. by Alr, 111,blat r , lib hardly likely that the committee onths Ant will mune their labors. - • -:. • • - . " fIP„. . nos zirw sant: ecaftrenlcrt.cl the Inttsbinaa Gant Nov Yolk, May 1.0, 1853. - The discussion of the New. Haven Railroad ao eideet confinnes the prominent idea, of the day, and the excitement increases. Public epinicu .eeerna to demand that Legislation shell at once 'be bad, impostraktqlon every railroad company tv heavy dividend . frir:any accident resulting to the lora of life or limb. Safety seems to be quite out of the question, Irom any arrangement. the rotas are able to Make, and they con only be taxed into finding a new mode of management. Ur. Tucker, the engineer, le one.of the beat en gineers who ever ran s train. end to ,t eeide eau lioll3 and cool to a degree rarely am. He is ease to be a - victim la some shape, brit the New Ileven corporation to the only reel criminal. A dew opera heeee,vhieh will eclipse the mu sical eatablishments of. the old world, has been determined upon, the ;Ito secured, and ell the money raleed. An ancient manager is at the heed of affairs, and ho hut engaged Grist and Mario, with whom). will open the house. In all probability the neat census will show New York to be the ally on this tide of the Atlantic, as pee-eminent in 411 respects', as London and • Paris now are in Entope. Were the whole ecer gie, of our alarms devoted to extending and beautifying New York, it could hardly lie urged on more rapidly. Rumors are afloat today, to the effect that the steel:nut:it Louis, on the Nicaragua route, has been loot. The particulars have not been allowed to transpire, but the depreciation of the etock shows the.rumor to be well founded. • Money continues abundant and comparatively cheap. Seven per rent. is the full price for good paper, and six a more general rate. - The _ship matte of cola last .week were quite large, but they male little remark, being made to points other than London, the centre Where exchanges are regulated. Considerable mime: of gold are daily expected from the West, and from - this sonnets our banks will throughout the spring and summer get a large:stock If coin as usual. Raciness remains active with merchants gen erally, and it ie a subject of coma:teat that at no former season were payments ever made with more promptness. The stooks of goods, though ample and well &exerted, arersot excesaire, and the season will Mae leaving the goods in the hasads of the country trade, and not, as come -feared would be the ease from over-importation, in the bands of Importers or.of jobbers.. The new Centred New Yorkaoad will be Bully consolidated on the let of July. - - Au arrange ment has been made by which the - various lines running Weet will. keep the fares up to the present rate. Should the Legielateires tuned, for accidents, a higher Cato of fare must be paid for careful watching of roasts, and temperate en gineers are not to be had cheaply ander the pre. sent reckless scheme of railroad mismanagement TEE MURDERED NEGRO. Wnrrx—l think the case of the mur dered man, referred to in your paper of this morning, demands something more than the no tice which -yen extract, not from an abolition paper, but from a journal published in the neigh borhood of the occurrence, and in the very heart. of the slave region, near Baton Rouge. It is no; given as an extraordinary transaction, but ern . ..Mted in just about the came spirit and cold bloted language In 'bleb some would notios the kill g a mad dog. No word 'of ceenors, not the slightest intimation is thrown Opt that thin killbsg.of a human being with a colored akin was wrong or improper. The article it headed, "Runaway Kula," in the Louisiana paper, but in reading the article, we find it expreestretated that "be woo suspected of being,a runaway." We alas find thathe was at work on a flat hoot, in jutlernohody, but trying honestly to earn hie wages. Under these eircumatoneeo, two mean white men, brutalized by their eendition of de gradation below the alsrebeldere, took into their heads that they might earn a dirty dollar by rob. Meg • helpless stranger of his liberty. They• chose to .suspea" that he was a runaway ; and they knew that Mil if be was free, that there was no risk in imprisoning him, because ho Would have himself to pay all the expenses before• he could bereleased from prison. Well, they eeised him and were carrying him off, when he min fully resolved to 'resist, to maintain his liberty if he Irma a freeman, and to obtain liberty if be was a slave. Be Felted a hatchet and serioaely wounded the hose seoundrelrielto had Foluilteer- - ed imprison a poor negro, who was "sus pected to be a runaway." If he had killed the scoundrel Outright, the Feliciano paper would no doubt beveled Dome Ware to shed, and would not hare treated it co coolly 69 he does the case of the poormegra. Well, the parties retirnto Fort Hanson, pro cure "arms audn'egro-doge," and !tort-lapin in penult of the poor negro. The ',find kith stand ing on the outer edge of a pack of drift-wood, armed with a club and pistol, at tenet ouch to the statement of the itcoundrels who murdered him; but there is no mention cf his using the pistol, although he did. use hie club. Well, there he stands on the outer edge of the drift, with book toward the rapid current of the Mississippi, resolved to !dive free or die." "Finding him absolutely,detertnicel not to surrender, one-of ' his pioncuhre abet him,"- ears the . • as • e cot to be mita that whim an ef f ort wag made to mate him.from drolning, he made: battle with his club, and murk, waving his weapon to angry dastme at his pursuers." This Le the account gives by the organ of the slaveholders In that region, of the death of a brave man. Thousands of white men have been glorified in the United States for their coodect in the Mexican war, andyet, among the whole of them, not one of them him manifested as determined love of liberty as thin poor negro. It seems that the moldered negro would not give the name of hie owner, end this Is the clo sing remark of the Loniviana editor: Doubtless it smezery otiktod in the negro to refuse to for. eish that information. If that editor had known it he might have manifested some feeling in re lation to the case, even bad It only been to say that the unfortunate jean had lost a very Talus. ble piece of property. It may be after all that this poor 'murdered negro was a free man, one of God's Grin negroes. Or if-he was a slave, he :may have been 'the slave of a fellow like Legree, .or Slater, cr, Soother, or Castleman, or Tomo other man, who, Instead of killing him by three shots from a gm), may have whipped him, cob. bed him, burnt him, and washed him In hot Wa ter and red pepper for twelve hours. Certainly the gold boom of the Blimilsalppi wee greatly 'preferable to each a home. Now this 4 cate to not an extraordinary one; It was the result of that In/attrition which come of our religions paper" compare to the marriage and the parental relation. The killteg was all in order, and the owner, if there was one, could have no redress. if the negro had been a valua ble Immo, the owner could have recovered dam ages, bat is Slate Stales, the laws against the slaves most be rigid, say the apologiets of the accursed institution. It is the defences of this imillution by proalavery 'preachers and politi cians which our office beggars are now using In their appeals to Pierce; it Is an eager - contest now between each mendicants, who can etoop :lowest, crawl deepeet in the mire, and make the slimiest pro-slavery trail. Each latoCre to excel his competitors In bearing ouch stinking icomme to the foot-stool of the elaveoarecy. All of them bear about these defences of Blaney and abuse of airs. Stowe, in the eamo matiner end for the came purpose ' that we hear of Irish mendicants borrowing or hiring deformed or misshapen ba bies to excite the compassion of the charitable. Office begging, always a beggarly boeinase, boa lately sunk far below zero. C. - - MATTIRI IN WASUISOTO2I.--The Washington Republic's correspondent says: The Attorney General tuts played hob with the, calculations of those who hoped to get a nibble , at the treuury through an entire change of the partite engaged In the construction of the eaten. aloe of the Capitol. On Haturtley he rendered his opinion on the points Submitted to him la this connection from the War Department, which was snob as to induce the Secretary of War to removettto ban hanging over the further peso. oution of the work; which was resumed title morning, to the groat joy of Waahlagton, by the three hundred kande wboeo daily waged had been thee stopped. The:seleetion of the:Harrodsburg Bpringe,with two hundred SIMS attached, for the site of the proposed woatern military asylum, in preference to the Blue Licks, gives eminent dlesatisfution to the friends of the latter'locallty now to Wash. legion; some of them cannot redline how It comes that General Scott didn't cotton as meth to the Dine Lick's on this'oceasion as before the Proal , dentist election. The wage are huddling, in a c t, that the General's mortal diversion to these Neale Blue Lithe aettled the question in favor of Har% rodeburgh at $100,090: though the Licks afore mild, with four hundred acres attached, were offered for $BO,OOO. It seems to be estimated that the Harrodsburg site is worth in open mar ket some $BO,OOO. If so, Uncle Sam has comb off better in the trade than hi the purchase of a site teethe Memphis. Navy Yard, having to pay only talon as much as the land Is really worth. However, fifty thousand, here' or there, to • re mo cireainatanoe to the Gi'lernmcnt In the matter of witting the very beet possible location for such en establishment. • ! The London Timm' Ave that the oammernial adulate from the west of Franco mention, with regard to the prospect of th is yeatoe harvest, that the wheat crop In Ch i t section of the cm. try must be a baokward one,: and cannot be large, although In the dry and', high lends ap• penman are favorable. The bread th of land ' wider 'wheel In the five or six departments whose outlet is at the port of Nage; was estimated at the' end of the year to be one fifth under an aver. oge, and the subsequent elate of the weather EA, presented any locrease. Spring corn, how. ever, will be sown largely. i Fn . 11 Mt Sii . r -: Z , 4 Tim., A . ustauji varAzuffy:• . The Austrian przes rives no iintiell7, about Hungary. • What few journals w e . get from Perth, are evidently published undergo strict est Pollo-censeratalp. Traveleri ye rigidly excluded from the interior. We OLIIF catch an occasional murmur from within the ill-tated c :until% ~A list of executions, casualty detailed is a Vienna official-paper; or a mooed flogging or an-normal barbarity, reported by tome too onerous newspaper our:tape:den; is all that tells us of the painful drama, now enacting among the conqUered people. _,-- A report, wed authenticated, has jest rcaohed the Hungarian here.. through various private har.ds, 'of an even 4 entreaebieg air yea known of Anstrisn ooldiblooded, judicial tyranay. Da ring tho Spring of 1851, two years eid er the Eesoliition, _and in the midst cf the 1 let cf. Slavery, all Hungary was aroused by the news , that a young and distinguished ladyhadvadden. ly been arrested, the Conntees Blanca Teleki.— She was high.born, crone of the oldest families n of Hungary--a family beloved for It", many deeds of heroic paiziotlein.' She had been'owner lof large cetates.—but, though of the aristocratic order, none loved her better than the pesiantry. They all knew her as the friend of the poor. And In many rural dietsiots. the Sendai Sehools and Schools for the lower °lames owe the'origin entirely to the ;elf sacrificing inhere o if le la dy. Sospicion had never breathed up 0 her name. She loved Hungary; and she wajj f a wo man or heroic spirit Then were supposed o to be the reasons of her arrest. The charge amlnet her wee, that she was in correspondence with Kossuth and IdaszinL No one, even there, supposed the Government would dare injure Ler, or hold her long. The News reaches ua that in these, first Spring dam the young Cou to!" Telekl was•prioattly executed in her prison— probably that of Grog Warden. • The news will etrike Indifferentry an many ears—but to no ono who remembers a end and noble feu, looking out from the iron gratings of the priaon cell, on theteantlfol fields of a land loved better than life—and who thinks of a soul, which seemed to grow more heroin and More generous under the dull round of petty wrongs, it brings a thrill to the heart. On her writ trial, she said before the Inquisitor,.with all thy primly dignity of her manner, "I am prepared to coffer nnytbdag, if It will only aid my unhap py country." The provost who guarded her— eto:wet the only person whom she eaw through the long day—eaid among all de prisoners he had held, beide and low-born, he bad never. neon ore of such hereto spirit, and auch sweet I kindnen of mincer: Every one who approach , ed her seemed to feel the neighborhood of such a souL f The under officers related with glee, the way with which the State prosecutor Was cowed in no effarf Ar vulgar familiarity; and en old woman, Bent to watch her, became attached to her as to a daughter. While she never 'hewed any weakness to her jailor, it was noticed by all that her cheek grew paler each day. It is two yearesince then. The long Summer dap, the cheerless Winter, and the hoped-for Spring of '62, ,which waste set Europe free, have pasted to the lonely.. woman. • Perhaps she would have gladly died in public and on the battle field for her country—but this dull wearing away of life is very bard to bear. Another year of lone- linear., hopelueneurpetty insult and cruelty, and the pain hardest of all to the Hungarian woman;' that the free Hungary ii crashed beneath an' Austrian tyrant—and with the Spring comes free- again. A mock trial, a few stern word", the ' dull scaffold in the dark prison court-yard—and ; the young heart which has beat so warmly for freedom and for. humanity, la cold forever. WM? She in no breaker of law; no passion- I ate, or violent, or unprincipled woman. Pore, disinterested, sincerely religious—she seems the very one,whom any earistlanGoverament would I gladly mare as • a supporter. ' There In no ex cute in sadden anger, or In the etem right,' of the conqueror. It is four years den the Revco. j lotion, and Anatria can peers, to be generous. She has epent these long peen, and dled Weer- I ably in her young womanhood, simply becausei she is known to love her country better then herself—and the mere um - pinion of this Le diti , f ger to Austria! For Mo Ga.Tette. Thy death hue been very and; Tema! and thy last hours, perhaps, without the completion of a friend, or the higher consolation of hop. for thy cpantrlt Bat all site, end the thoesand tzsgo dive going on in the silent prisons of Hungary, are pot in 'silt- We believe in God, and we be lieve that evary tear, and sigh, and groan of the unhappy and enslaved is known by Him. A bat ter fruit shall spring up for humanity from these oppressione. Them is—there is, as He is good, ' a higher Future for mankind—of Liberty to the slave, Jamie° to the wronged, Hope, Love, Free dom to all. Bach deeds as this of the Austrian lequieition shall some time Muss the nations from.their otepor. PllOlll THE QUAZ II-1 11/18.--By.the date arri val, we bare lettere from - &Ir. John A. Coldne, dated Grass Volley, laird 271.14 (mailed for the previous eteamehip) and Ban, Ft6IIOIBCO, Aprll Bth. Tie statue that the roads from Ehaeratzento to Nevada County were again. all but impassable forleanie, owing to - rains sad floods: The pas senger stages wore exposed to hazard let fordlog the bed s of