Cie COigl) Register. Allentown, Pa. THURSDAY, MAY 3, 1949. Circulation near 2000. V. B. PALMER, Esq., N: W. corner of Third and Cli!,:situt streets, Philadelphia, and 169 Nas sau street, Cl ribune Buildings,) New York, is our authorized Agent...jit Tor eiving advertise ments and subscripti sto t • for Register and, collecting and receip g for the same. 1? In another colum , will be found a very Interesting letter from Dr. Walter J. Martin, who left here ' en route for California, dated Tampico, March 30. 1849. The letter was written to a friedd of his, in this place, who has politely handed it to us for publication. Cr In our next we shall republish the article headed "National Prosperity," with comments, of which friend Flutter of the Easton Argus com- plains of Houses in Allentown Allentown was river in a more flomishing condition than at pr sent, if we are to judge of the rapid improvement in real estate within a year past. The burnt district has with a feW exceptions been built up again, besides many other buildings in difrerent parts of the town and yet there was a scarcity of houses this spring and rents continue enormously high. We have no doubt that one hundred more moderate siz ed and convenient houses might have been readily rented this spring to good advantage.— Though this is a condition of things that we all have reason to rejoice at, as an evidence of the rapid, though healthy growth of our town, yet it is not without its draw backs. Like the fable of the frogs, thoogli it is sport to sonic, it is deatEto others. Those who have houses to rem- may be satisfied, but to those who have reut them, it is quite another thing. But worse than all, "and wore to be deplored," it is death to those whe cannot procure houses even at the rates charged. But this thing will work itself in due season. A large number of houses are being built, and Nom present appearances there will be more build ing the pre s ent season than there has been for .many years. Lehigh County Bank It has been with no ordinary measure of satis faelion that we have read a copy of the law pass ed at the late session of our State Legislature, appointing our townsman, ./allies S. Reese, Esq., commissioner to settle the affairs of the Lehigh County Bank. It will be %evil remembered by our readers in Allentown and county generally, that immediately on the refusal of the charter of this Bank, the person who then had charge of it locked the doors of the Banking room and disap peared. %Viten the room was afterwards entered, by Elie uliirets. having executions at the Bank, nothing It:is found except the /putt Sqre, mid a few articles of rurniture of very trilling value,— not a book, a paper ur a dollar in spe cie or Batik notes uetc left. This happened about the first of March, 181 i. On the ':3. day or November, 1846, less than four months previous, the Cashier of the Lehigh Comity Batik, made Lis report to the Auditor General, under oath, in which he stated that the funds of the Bank on the 10th of that month amounted to $158,4.16 67. It is therefore fair to presume, that funds and securities to that amount were taken from the vaults of the Bank. In the report of the Cashier to the Auditor General alluded to, the amount of notes of the Bank in circulation is put down at $.40,175 00. The bidders of these Bank promi ses to pay were left without remedy. We have of late years heard of much og,tound•and lofty ttimbling" anti of many "slight of hand tricks" among Bank officers and Bank Managers, but we believe there is nothing in the history of Banking in the United States, that equals in aur . dacity the carrying away attic entire assets of the Lehigh comity Bank, It was a bold °potation and showed a contempt of the laws of our State which our Courts of Justice will doubtless know how to reward, when an opportunity offers. The selection of Mr. lb.ese as Commissioner to :,ettle the affairs of th;s rotten 13. ink, is a most judici ous one. He is-a young Lawyer of highly re spectable talents and acquirements, resolute and persevering,. What ever ean be done to redeem the honor of our comity and vindicate the out raged laws State, we feel confident he will do. The power placed in his hands by the Leg. islature appears to be sufficient to accomplish the end proposed. That he will use. that power energetically, we do nut doubt, that may 'do it successfully is our sincerest hope, National Convention A Natio:,a; Corr:0110011 of the friends of Sch , c - 0, and Chivel.i.ll I:,:oration throughout' the i, invited to aiqiint , le in Philittiel .l.:it,l oi"iku;:iust nest, for the pro :no:A:it t i tro., inleri , ,t of our - Chand ho it dia;inlan of ;Le cue.;;;;;•,:, rnents, an 1 ..‘‘.lfre..l L. ‘l:n;i.t eeretary—to tu:Ay I 0 addres ! ,,:. Bishop Potter, Pi . cifes•Gr Pact , e, Hatt. Horace Mann, Dr. King of New Jersey, and pilfer friend uni:e in the call. Odd Motes' Eicction.—The annual election for officers of the Crand Lodge of the Inde pendent Order of Odd Fellows of the State of Pennsylvania, was held on Monday night, at the lialf, in Sixth meet, Philadelphia. The e!e:tiott reheited in the choice of the following • named gentlemen : R. w.G.M.-Dr. 11. S. Patterson. IZ. \V. D. G. \l.—George S. Alorris It. W. G. W.—W. 11. Witte. R. \V. G. Secretary—William Curtis. R. W. G. Treasurer—F. Knox Morton: K. IV. G. liep. to G. L. U. S.—W. A. WelLs Our Educational Wants The principal obstrUction that education has to meet with in this district of country, is the circumstance of the German language being so prevalent in a region which is surrounded by people speaking only the English; for it pre vents that interest working in the English pop ulation, from formenting also in our own neigh borhood. We Germans are in a measure iso lated from the rest of the world; our ideas and actions are in some degree peculiar to our selves; and we aro as exclusive, that is, mov ing only in our own prescribed orbit, as any aristocratic circle that shrinks front the contact of the vulgar. As long as this peculiarity of language exists, there will never be that uni formity of feeling and, action which ought to exist. But if this distinction in language must exist, let us seize the opportunity to make the most of it. The German is a Very noble lan guage; it is with respect to modern languages, what the Greek is to the dead—,the most vig orous, richest, the most plastic and expressive which the human mind can employ for its ex ponent. Its literature is one of the most re markable in the world; and its influence as it becomes more and more known, is spreading with an irresistible force. Such being the case, we, (Vat least, the most of us being more fami liar with this language - than with the English, have an opportunity to move along with this current and avail ourselves of its advantages. But as we are situated at present, we are from appreciating its value. This results from our defective School organization, that of our corti mon schools especially. Whose fault is this? Is it the fault of those who superintend their di rection? Not at all;" it is the people's fault ; we are too lifeless on the subject; we are lean ing on our oars and letting the beat take what course it will, right or wrong. We do not as a general thing demand suffi ciently high quail tiLations of our teachers; and this is a principal secondary cause of all the. defects in the cause of education. We fear that the matter of dollars and cents govern us more in this cause, than an earnest desire for the improvement of our children. Let us take a more extended view of the wants of our children, and cease to think that a little reading, writing and cyphering is all they re quire! Let us adopt respectable rates to be paid to teachers and appropriate funds allowed for necessary expenses; then let us be rigid in our demands for the requirements of teachers. Let citizens inteirsicd ill the atlitirs of edima lion be appointed to supervise the schools. If we do this, we shall have accomplished a great stride towards reform, and all other desi rable things will come in their train. The subject of good teachers is an important one, and we hope will receive attention. Our country is rich pecuniarily and mentally. We have all the resources at hand ready to accom plisli given object, if we only make use of them. One of our objects then, should be the establishment of a normal school, or school for the education of teachers expressly• Private enterprise alone is of no use in such an undertaking; for if all the wealth and talent of ehristendom were employed, they would be superfluous, unless the people co-operated wilh its insthution and heartily gave to it its influence. As our country is agricultural in its charac ter, it should also maintain an agricultural school alone, or connected with its classical one, where these sciences essentially import ant to the farmer, should be practically and the oretically taught. Is the design of these things visionary ? We are persuaded they are not so touch so as the expectation that they will be car ried into effect, which idea may seem prepos terous! •We repeat, 'however, that we are rich enough peeuniarily and mentally to carry these purposes into execution, and ghdious purposes they are too. There is another cause which prevents the extension of education; that is, that so many parents are not aware of the importance of a regular, continued course of stud ie s M school. . This is not only applicable to this county, btal is also characteristic of individuals through out alt the country. A scholar goes to school (Hiring the winter months perhaps, then stays home the rest pt ihe year, thus forgetting dur ing his absence wrwtever he may hare been able to put in Ins heat: during his scholastic term. (Inc might almost as wgll stay at home altogether as to be so irregular in his course. It is not only almost useless to the (atm.:out but exceedingly vexatious to the teacher. The hardest lessee generally the student has to ae. quire,and the one. which the teacher experiences most elitiiculty with, in the imparting of it : is the art or habit ofstudy. A schular whocomes only a pall date year, just stays long e:o.ugli to have acquired it; thus doing himself no good, and making void the labors of his teacher. We would like to discuss * this subject more thor oughly. but our limits forbid an extensive stir.• vey. We \‘ di, however, resume fur a little futther space, our übservattons upon the,ativan taps that may result flout :he German and lish language, Leinj Lt.) coucurrcntl prevalent in our neighborhood. As editeation is now pur sued. neither of the above languages is very rarely studied thoroughly and consequently both are imperfectly understood. Now there is no necessity fit this, there is nut necessarily any good reason why the study of two languages.: should be a hingerance to the proficiency of either; for if a plan of instruction as we have roughly sketched above, be carried into effect, it -will include an arrangement by which wherever it is thought necessary, the study, of both can•be efficiently pursued. It is by no means an impossible thing to be proficient in two languages, and those who are so, possess fa cilities for business and literary communication of great importance, not only in this neighbor hood, but in almost any part of the country, from the fact that the German population is increas ing so rapidly. We have remarked in a former article that our German citizens possessed that staunch, capacious nature which would qualify Ithem for great things, to as great a degree as any class of people, probably in the world. But they do not do justice to themselves: they do not exert themselves enough in the proper •channels. ,We hope this reproach will not much longer be attached to them; we hope that they will arouse to the importance of a reform in these respects. Let it no longer be said that we fall 'behind our neighbors in social and intellectual yrogress. Let us like the sleeping lion shake aff our drow siness, and show ourselves in all clor really su- perior might and energy. We have but one more remark to make, and that is, that where facilities for education are ex tensive, the value of property is :proportionally creased, for to intelligent parents who desire he est advantages for their children, to .be in th- icinity of good literary institutions is as great a Consideration to them ire their purchase of property as any one thing. For the Lehigh Register. Letter from a California . Emigrant TAMPICO, March 30, 1849 Esteemed Friend: We arrived here on the 24th inst. after a pleasant, though not remarka ably short voyage of twenty four days. We passed in sight of Havana on the 15th; the captain of the vessel going in as close to the shore' as he safely could, to, allow us a good view of it. Any description of a place in a let ter I vote down as a decided bore, so I refuse to say anything more of it. We experienced a gale in the gulf which very nigh blew us on shore, having made laud just before it came on, and kept us out two days longer. Of all the inconsistences in the world I believe this gulf to be the most; at least I imagine so; we were laying in a dead calm, no ripple disturbing the water, and in five minutes after it was blow ing great "gulls," as the sailors say, with the waves rolling mountain high, and our little craft rolling and pitching like an unbroken colt. For one hoar II thought I hail bid good bye forever, to friends at home. The shore was but live miles distant and we were float ing towards it with an eight knot current. The sails were hoisted but had scarcely been drawn taut when the fore sail split to tatters. Our on ly resource was the main sail, which very lucky for us stood the gale and we escaped.— Nothing very pleasant to be placed in such a predicament. We passed custom house inspec tion and thanks to a very gentlemanly officer, it was avery slight one. Our passports were examined previously, since which time we have been on shore. ‘Ve occupy a very large house here which was used during the war as a barracks. It is a pleasant and cool dwelling We live quite in the military tashion—mount ing guard from six in the morning to ten in the evening, to prevent the greasers front stealing our elects. Tampico is a very nice place containing about five thousand inhabi tants, of which a large proportion are English, French and American. , The only difficulty- to a stranger is that there are no regular boarding / houses. Taverns there are hone, so that any one coming here, if he has no friends to stay with, must hire a house and go to house keep-' • ing. 1 attended church last Sundhy, and much ' to my surprise, no seats are to be :Nall. Most of the ladies thessed in Silk. flue thii,g pleases me very much, they do not hide their laces in botine:s, consequently yen have a critit al view of their physiognomies, and pass judgment to merit. Instead of that boxlike appendage they wear splendid scarfs which they throw over their heads, covering them about half—looking very tasty. Our party numbers forty under the direction of Capt. West and Mr. Diehl.— We expect to get ofl here this week. Our horses have not come in yet, and they have to be shod. We pass through San Luis Potosi, perhaps Zacatecas, and some more principal cities in the west of Mexico, besides 'dewy of small fry villages. We expect some hard ships, but who does not when he lakes a journey for "tin " TI - e only thing that worries me is the probability that there will be no ves sels at Mazatlan to take us to San Francis Co.— I The accounts from the gold region that we have here are very pomismg. Accounts state that some new discoveries have bred made to the southward of San Francisco about forty The citizens of Tampico are talking very openly about having a pronunciamenio for the purpose of having that mate annexed to the Union. They tried to raise a row the other night but it would not go. There was liriag of guns close to our quarters. I am well and glory that I can say I was not sea sick. Yours Truly, W A LTER J. Al A RTIN ,Manufaeturing at the South It seer p: that the Montgomery Manufactur itig Company has non' ill successful operation a large factory 'impelled by steam, and it is thought to be yielding profits altogether com mensurate with the most sanguine anticipa tions of its enterprising and public spirited pro•. prietors. In addition to this, the same Compa ny in a separate department, is turning out a variety of work 'in wrought' iron, dust iron and brass, including steam engines, gin gearing : saw and grist mill irons; together with a , large assortment of lighter fancy and ornameotal work. Another department is devoted Jo making window blinds; sash and panel doors! in the best style. They also have a wooden deparonelo. Wool is carded and lindseys manufactured to suit the demands of the mar ket They also anticipate a speedy preparation for convening word into fabrics on an exten sive scale. Besides• the foregoing there is a grist mill, yielding a quality of flour superior to that hitherto obtained from any other quarter. The. establishment at this time turns out fifteen or twenty tons of casting a week, seventy bar rels of flour, and three hundred and fifty • bushels of corn meal per day.. • ar Compaiiles of California emigrants to the number of one and tpo hundred daily, are arri ving at St. Louis. 6217 Nature's beauties do not fade with her leaves, nor wither with her flowers Insanity. Of all the afflictions with which Providence visits man, says'the Pennsylvania Telegraph; there is none so horrible as •the loss of reason. Every other misfortune sinks into insignificance compared with this. Fortune may be fickle, friends provo false, health may fail, poverty may sink a man alMost to the depths of des pair, yet there is still room for hope, that with a sound mind all these difficulties' may be overcome. But when reason is gone, when the intellect haS ceased to be able to perform its legitimate functions, and the ravings of the insane man only seem to show the wreck of the noblest faculty of our nature, it is then the heart grows sick and the philanthropist shudders at the contemplation of the work of the destroyer. Of late years it has become a question of no little 'importance, what constitutes insanity ! 'Monomania,'orcraziness upon some one point, has been sufficient in more than one case to exculpate a man from the blame attached to the performance of criminal actions, and it has become a common thing to acquit a man charged with murder on the plea of insanity. We see it stated in the Baltimore papers that a man was lately tried in one of the county Courts in Maryland for stealing a measure full of whisky from a certain distillery. It was in evidence that he had already been twice convicted of stealing the same measure full of liquor which he drew front the same barrel, and had suffered the penalty in each pre ceedisg case. He was acquitted at his late trial on the ground that he was insane so far as regarded a passion for stealing that identical quart measure! How far the jury performed their duty we will leave for every reader to judge for himself—at all events it is a danger ous precedent. It is a well known fact, that in England the private mad houses are often used as places of imprisonment for persons who may be in the way of others wishing to have the control of their property. Sane men and women are en trapped into these dens, and are there kept un der such treatment as often to drive them real ly and hopelessly crazy, There are villains in every station of life who are ready to do any mean transaction; and professional men, under sufficient inducement, have often 'de .based themselves by their connivance at such infamous transactions. The attention of the British Parliament has more than once been directed to the abuses of the private insane asy lums, and the evils of those establishments exist to a niuch smaller extent than forrnedy. Chu• own country has fortunately, until very recently, escaped from the imputation of any such atrocities. The late Moamar) case, however, seems to indicate that even here, men in a respectable position in society can be found who will lend their aid to the perpora tMn of such villainy, if money can be made by so doing. The award of thejory, ten thousand dollars damages, however, will serve to pre vent repetitious of the offence. It is a terrible thing to a man of sound mind to be compelled to endure for six long weary months the com panifiliship of the crazes, aud'lhe treatment of tht it keepers. We hope' to have 'no similar cases to chronicle for the future. It is too re volting for human nature to contemplate such cold-blooded cruelty. Protesting Promissory Notes The Court of Appeals of the :State of New York have decided the following points, with re ference to promissory notes : • A defective and insufficient notice of protest may be aided and helped out by accessory facts. The question whether an endorser of a prom issory note has been duly charged as such, does not depend on the fact whether the note was cor rectly described in the notice of protest, but on the mind or knowledge of the endorser. Any notice of protest, however defective, will be held sufficient, if when taken in connection with ac cessory facts, it conveys to thu mind of the en dorser, information of the identical note intended to be protested. A notice of protest may vary according to each particular Case, or the education, intelligence or quickness of comprehension of the endorser, as its sufficiency depends upon the information which it conveys to his mind. A notice of protest need not show that a de mand of payment of, the note has been made, that is Matter. of evidence, to be given at the trial. i t notice of protest, describing a joint endorse ment as an individual one, is sufficient to cbirge the joint endorser ofa promiss'ory note. • Emisiness Maxims. lie who wishes to sell should advertise his EEGM He who wishes tb buy cheap should buy of those who advertise He wito wishes to pay twenty per cent. more for goods than they are worth, should go to those who do not advertise. The man who wishes his carriage to run well should grease its wheels, and the man who wish es his business to thrive should advertise. Scrcn Girls Wanted. ‘Ve have before us, says the Cincinnati Commercial, a letter dated Ripley, Orleans county, la., and signed by sev ea girls—two of them 16, three of 17, two of 18 —wh.o signify a keen desire to marry each a California bound ypung man ! They say they are white, ben good , chanoters, and are all tiderably looking. The letter has a speci al reference to the isew York California compa ny, who advertised for wives: but we presume the Hoosier girls will not refuse, any respecta ble young men Who may visit their places with holtorable intentions. Land Palennts•—The Commissioner of the Gen eral Land office has decided that the affidavits, of two or more respectable persOns are necessa ry to suspend the issue of a land patent, and that where the soldier dies before the issue of the warrant, the right descends to the next of kin provided for by law. Cause and Cure for the Potato Rot• As every suggestion likely to be of service on a subject of so much importance, is worthy of attention, we insert from the•-ltiorris Jerseyman" the following: "One of our farmers, a few days since, while in, conversation on that subject, said he planted his potatoes earlier this season than usual, and that he dug and put in his cellar some thirty or forty bushels before the rain came on. These are still perfectly sound, while those which re mained in the ground during the recent heavy rains are utterly worthless. To the autumn rains many persons have attributed the rot, and consequently they put their crops in very early, to enable them to arrive at maturity before the heavy rain commenced. The experiment men tioned belovi may be considered of some conse quence, as-we have seen it sufficiently tried. A lady from Mississippi spent the past•season with her friends in out town. The all-engrossing sub ject of the potato was on the tapis, when she ob served, that in that region many of the planters had been experimenting on that vegetable, and the best result was from transplanting the-slips into rows, similar to the method of cultivating the Carolina potato. Her friends tried an exper iment, and finer potatoes we have not seen or eaten in many years. The potato is planted ear ly in a hot-bed, and the slips, when about three inches in length, are taken off and transplanted some eight or ten inches distant. The orig inal will continue to send forth shoots for a long EMIS The production of iron is rapidly in creasing in this State, and one good evidence of it is given in the Cincinnati Cazctte. The editor of that paper, writing front Chillicothe, makes note of the operations of a Company which has been chartered for the purpose of engaging in the manufacture of iron in Lawrence county.— Their charter gives them power to construct a railroad through the heart of the iron region, and a sufficient amount of stock has been subscribed to finish it a distance of twenty miles. They have also purchased a large tract of la s nd on the banks of the Ohio, about two miles above Hang ing, Rock as the site of a manufacturing, town.— What the prospect of building it tip is, may be judged front the fact stated that at Hanging Rock there is a forge, rolling mill and foundry, and within 25 miles of it 21 furnaces. The statistics of these furnaces are thus briefly given by the writer : 21 furnaces ; 32,000 Inns iron ; $1,000,000 in value ; 2200 hand's employed ; 1400 oxen em ployed ; 10,500 people supported ; 6000 barrels of dour consumed ; 200,000 bushels of corn do ; 1,000,00(1 pounds of bacon do. Besides all this, there is a large proportion of beef, potatoes, groceries, and other articles al so consumed. It is added that four or five new furnaces are to be built Heroic Milking.—ln a letter front Santa Fe January 13, to the New Orleans Picayune, re ference is made to the disaster of Col. Fremont's party in the Rocky mountains, and the following surprising fact is stated: "Twenty days having elapsed, and no return of the party, Fremont started out himself. He arrived at Taos, a distance of 350 miles, in nine days, having walked the whole distance." This is near about 46 mites a day, and taking into consideration the circumstances of cold, snow• and hunger, under Which it was done, is perhaps unparalleled. E , :4lpleen Hawlred and IVII-twa.--The St. Charles (Ill.) People's Platform nmninates Thomas H. Benton for the next Pre , idency, and John A. Dix for Vice President. The Hopkins. vine Delta renominates James K. Polk. The Baltimore Clipper and the Milton (N. C.) Chron icle declare their preference far John M. Clayton for President. The St. Mary's (Ohio) Sentinel renominates Lewis Cass. Gen. Taylor and Hen. ry Clay have been nominated by several papers. The Florence (Ala.) Gazette nominates Edward A. Hannegan. Lock Jatv.—The I3altimore .Snit says I have noticed lately several deaths by lock jaw, and for the information of all, I will give a cer tain remedy. When one runs a nail or sharp iron in any part of the body, take a common smoke pipe, fill it with tobacco, light it well, take a thin cloth or silk handkerchief, place it over the bowl of the • pipe, and blow the smoke through the stem into the wound; two or three pipes full will ha sufficient to start the wound dis charging. I have tried it myself and five others, and found it to give immediate relief, If the wound hac been some days standing, it will open it again if the. tobacco is good. !fry it any one who may chance to get such a wound; Law Against Arson.—The Legislature at its recent session passed a law for thewunishment of Arson, which provides that any 'person who shall in night season wilfully burn any building, pile of lumber, boards, &c, or cause the same to be burned, shall be guilty of arson, and shalt up on conviction be subject to imprisonment for a term not exceeding fifteen years, and shall forev er thereafter be deemed incompetent to be an elec tor, juror or witness, or to hold any office ot hon or, trust or profit; and any person attempting to set on fire any building, shall be deemed guilty of misdemeanor and upon conviction be subject to imprisonment at . hard labor for a term not ex ceeding ten years. Emigration to Califimnia.—The New York Herald publishes a list of all the vessels that have left the United States for California. They are 309 in number, and have taken put 19,777 persons. Of these, 226 vessels and 14,191 per sons have gone by the way of Cape . norm via Chagres, 52 vessels and 3547 persons; via Vera Cruz, 11 vessels and 698 . persons; via Brazus, 1 l'vessels and 762 persons. Cancellation of Relief MM.—The A utlitorGen• eral gives notice of the cancellation of $26,000 of the relief issues of sundry banks, in pursuance of the sth section of the act of the 3lst May, 1844. Of the notes cancelled, $5,000 was the issue of the Eric Bank, and $2;500 of the Exchange Bank, of Pittsburgh, the balance being in sums of from $lOO to $1,200, upon some thirty banks, Gleanings from„the iMrifil• lIITThe Democrats of Northampton county have appointed as delegates to the 4th of July State Convention at Pittsburg, H. H. Matchler and E. P. Blech, Emirs., without instructions. tar Hon. James Buchanan declined the invi tation of 814 citizens of Lancaster, Pa., to a pub lic dinner, in anable letter. tar Whatever busies the mind without cor rupting it, has, at least, this use, that it rescues the (lay from idleness ;•and he that is never idle, will not often be vicious. larThe editor of the Milwaukie Sentinel does not boast "of the size of Wisconsin babies,".but says "they are an uncommon sure crop."' .. • k3'The colony of Swedes, in Henry county, Illinois, are manufacturing a fine article of linen cloth, made of water•rotted flax, suitable for sum mer wear. It is described as a beautiful article. rir Snow fell to the depth of Three feel upon the Pocono mountain, Monroe county, on Tues day night, the 17th ult. n' - The correspondent of the Baltimore Patri ot, speaking of the National Intelligeneer, says that the outstanding debts due to that establish.. ment are estimated at $400,000. Assault on Parson BrownlowThe last num ber the Jonesborough Whiggives a long state ment from Rev. W. G. Brownlow, accompanied by affidavits substantiating the same, saying that on theminth of the 2d tilt „he was assailed mur derously with a club by a man named John Ry land, Jr., who laid in wait for him..and stealing, behind him iron a dark alley, beat him over thv head with a club so badly that he was confined to his bed for fifteen days afterwards. Mr. Brown_ low was just returning from a religious meeting in company with several other ministers. The cause of the assault was that he had published a communication in the Jonesborough Whig char acterizing Ryland as a deserter from the army in the Mexican war. Interesting from Canada. MONTREAL, April 26, 1849. The Governor came down to the Legisla tive Chamber yesterday and gave the Royal assent to the bill fur idemnifying losses sus tained during the rebellion. On leaving the Parliainent House he wns pelted by a mob—mostly Orangemen—and forced to retire to his residence in the country. Last night while the Assembly was engaged on the judiciary bill, loud shouts gave evidence that a riel was foMenting outside, and before a moment elapsed a number of stones were thrown through the windows. The mein.. hers rushed behind the Sgeaker's chair while stones continued to be thrown inces. , sandy. The benches were promptly deserted, an well as the strangers' galleries, and mem bers were seen flying up stairs to the Libra ry.• The only member visible was Mr. Stevenson, who had placed himself on one Of the benches between the windows, and eyed the havoc with the spirit of one deter mined not to flinch. The stones for some time were thrown only from • the front part of the building, but in a few minutes they were thrown from the rear, and in about live minutes there was not left an unbroken light in the whole range. A slight cessa tion occurring, several members entered the house front the lobby ; but the rioters re commenced the attack from all sides, the house was again cleared—not one solitary member left—missiles still continuing to en ter through the shattered windows. At last a cry was raised front the library end of the budding. ..They come." Those Iwho had taken refuge there then rushed along the centre of the hall, and disappear 'ed b ehind the Speaker's chair—the lobby at that end being crowded with members and clerks. Immediately after a dozen per sons entered the Assembly Hall. armed with sticks. One walked up to Mr. Stevens, and seated himself in the Speaker's chair. Another looked around the Hall, and mut tered something about dissolving Parliament. ! Others commenced destroying all before them including chandeliers suspended from the ceiling, glass globes, and other lights. One I of them visited the front row of members' I benches on both sides of the house, striking all papers to the floor with sticks. After him, another, more determined on destruction, tore the benches up, throwing some into t hei centre of the floor and jump ing upon or brtiaking them. The splendid mace of the assembly caught the eye of one, who speedily marched oft with it over his shoulder. The Seargeant at arms, L. F. Alagistry, witnessed this daring act from the door-way leading into the Library, and as the fellow passed out caught. hold of the crown and nearly succeeded in rescuing it. Two or three of the party came to the res cue and struck at the sergeant with clubs and forced him to relinquish his hold, and the mace was carried ofd: Ha •ng destroyed as much as they could, they eft the Assembly Hall. A few soon retu ed, but some of the members having entere rotn the rear of the Speaker's chair, the riote s contented themselves with over turni the benches ; and but for the exer tions of Guan and Robinson, the former of whom ejected a fellow in a blanket coat, about to demolisH the Clerk's table, they. would not have left a single piece of furni ture. One ,fellow had arrived with the rod of office of the Sergeant-at-Arms, and went striking at every article in the rear of the Speaker. He was obliged to seek es cape, as the house had been fired at the •McGill street cud, and the building was in flames. A cry' was got up to save the li brary. Sir Allen McNab used every exertion to effect this, but all seemed bent on makinr their escape from the fire. Sir Allen Mb Nab and -Mr. Badgley went to the library and attempted to savd a few -volumes, but were unable to get them' out, and to save their lives wero compelled to des (c xxl by means of a ladder. The Parliament house and others are to, tally destroyed.. Many arrests have been mode this Morn ing. Sir George Moffat has been =eked, charged with high treason. To-day i 11 is quiet.