AWFUL AND DESTRUCTIVE CONPLA- GRATION.m Charleston City inftuini. Wo have melancholy news to communi cate to our readers this mornirfg, The city of Charleston has been visited with an aw ful and most destructive fire. A slip from ,lbo, office of tho Augusta Chronicle, dated April 28th, 0 P. M. fur njscs the following particulars "Wc.learn with tho deepest regret, by passengers from Charleston, who arrived here this evening by tho Caroline Railroad, that the ciiy of Charleston has been visited Ly one of the most awful and destructive fires that has ever visited any city in the United States, "Cno thircfof tho city was laid in ashes at die departure of the cars this morning at'G o'clock, and the fire was raging as if it' would at least cousumo one third more. - The fire broke out , last jiigjhfaf a quarter past eight o'clock", in a paint store, on tho western side of Kihg.'strect, corner of Ucr esford at The wrifd blowing strongly from the south west, blew the flame's diagonally across King street, and at the time of the departure of the cars, the, whole section of the city abovo Bcresford street. up to" Socie ty street, and cast of King street, to the Bay, was burnt down or burning. From Ucresford to Society are four streets from King street to the bay about as many, or perhaps more. The fire had also extended four or five blocks west of King street, and was' still pressing with tcrrlflic rapidity up that street in the direction of Boundary st. when the cars left. Our informant believes it impossible t(f calculate what will be the ultimate extent of the fire, as it scorned in no way checked at 0 o'clock this morning. Among the buildings consumed are a number of churches, tho now theatre, the splendid new hotel recently erected, and the whole market except the fish martfet. Nearly all tho large merchants, in tho cen tre of business, on King street, were burnt out, among them Parish, Wiley & co. and G. II. Kelsey & co. llorcam & co. and all in that neighborhood, and the largo store house of Miller, Ripley & co. on the corner of King and Society streets, was catching the flames when out informant left. The Merchant's Hotel, formerly Miot's'had not caught, but it was believed' .to be Impossi ble to save it. At Norris' Hotel, still high er up King street, and on tbo west side, Ihcy had removed all their furniture and bedding, in almost certain anticipation of being burnt out. A large number of houses had been blown tip, to no purpose; All the powder in the city was exhausted, and all the water in the pumps': the people, wearied with a whole night's incessant and unavailing toil, found themselves this morning, able 'to make Gut a feeble resistance to the still raging and devouring flames, A number of persons had been killed by the blowing up of hou ses and throwing furniture into the streets. The steamboat Neptune, lying in the Bay, caught on fire but was fortunately extin guished. The trunks directed , to this office and to the Constitutionalist office, from the news paper offices in Charleston, failed to conic this evening, as we presume no papers were printed there last night; and as tho regular mail was closed last night before tho fire broke out, no other information has been received here than that from passengers, which is necessarily limited as to particu lars. This is indeed aihournful catastrophe! A flourishing city laid in' ashes, her people burnt out of home and subsistance, and millions of property destroyed in a single night! Tho Insurance Companies1 of Charleston, we learn, are of small capitals, and will, every one, no doubt, be ruined, and still be unable to make good but a small portion of the losses. Hundreds of fami lies must bo utterly ruined by this general calamity. Years cannot make Charleston wnat stie was, STILL LATER. Letters and slips by the Express Mail inform us that the firn r.nrpil ble fury for sixteen hours, and oxhausted itself about oxri. V. M. tin ilm oriI. it The cxtentof- tho calamity is frightful in deed. Thirteen hundred buildings are destroyed with their contents supposed' tcr.bo worth 85,000,000! The flames vffira visible for 20- miles. Tho noble Hotelf called the "Charleston," worth, with its furniture1, saoo.flOO,- is a heap of smoking ruins ! Tho Masonic Hall, a Methodist Episcopal, and a. methndist Prnlpslnnl r"!liiirli Cl-itlin- lic Chapel, and Hebrew Synagogue, are uuauuvu, iiu many oi me nauusomesi houses in the city. Colonel C. J. Stedman, Mr. F. Schnier- te, Mr. 1'ieut, anU Capt. Puff, of the ship ncrniu, nave lost their Hve. Many are dreadfully injured by tho falling ruins, and their lives despaired of. Nearly 1500 families are entirely without a homo, and many even without shelter. The distress and suffering are inconceiva ble, About 2,000.000 are-said' to bo Insured' partly in New York. Tte firo had broken1 out afresh in two'or three places before tho last accounts leftj but it was subdued. In addition to the above, a slip from thV Charleston Mercury, dated april 29th, rc dorJa the death of two colored men'employ- ed to blow1 up some houses to prevent the sprcadof the fire. A slip from tho Patriot says that several nerrons mill n mill nttn fintr It ml flier rl Knnn killed by the explosions: nnd that at least iuuu uuuuings aro acstroycu. FURTHER FEARFUL PARTICULARS OF THE TKniUIILE STEAMBOAT DlSASTr.lt. Cincinnati, April 20. We have just returned from tho scenes of horror occasioned by the explosion, and tho accounts before published, instead of oeing in me slightest uegrco exaggerated, (as has been intimated by si fcvVialls short of the dreadful reality! The fragments of numan uouics aro now lying scattered along the sljoro, and we saw tho corpses of a number sojnanglcd and torn,, that tlioy bear scarcely ..any resemblance Iq the human form.., Wo also saw several with their heads and arms entirely blown olf, others with only a part of their head destroyed. and others with their lower exlrcmiltesshivr ered to an apparent jelly. Fragments of ine Doners, and other portions of the. boat, were thrown from fifty to two hundred yards on the shore,' sonic of them haying passed entirely over the two rows of buikV ings on the street, and a portion .of the boil ers tearing avay tho gable end of a stable sifuated'Righ'up.tho'dtcep hill in rearof the houses, .at least 200 yards from tho boat. Othfe'r parts of tho boat were driven entirely through a largo houso on tho street, enter ing through tho window on one side, and passing out at the other. It is positively stated that one man was picked up this mor ning on the Kentucky side, having been blown completely across the river. There was no doubt more persons lost than wo have stated. Wo conversed a while ago, with Mr. Broadwell, the agent of tho boat, who says positively that there were 95 deck passcngcis, whose names were en tered on the boat's register, at Pittsburgh, Wheeling, and other towns on the river a hove this place, for L'ouisvillc, St. Louis, and other'places- below. Here then arc on'o hundred and thirty passengers that must have becn'on board, exclusive" of the very large number who' took' passage at this place, The boat was, nnusially crow ded, and Mr. Broadwell thinks the whole number on board at tho time of tho acci dent, cannot be little, if any, short of three hundred persons! From the best informa tion we can gather, it does not appear that more than thirty or forty of this number aie known to have been rescued. It is therefore probable that the whole number drowned or destroyed, is somewhere in the neighborhood of two hundred, or two hundred and thirty or forty persons! It is impossible that any accurate detail of tho dead and missing can ever bo made, or the precise number ascertained. A very large portion of them were deck passengers, whose humble sphere in Jiff, will pre clude tho possibility of finding out their name's. ANOTHER STEAMBOAT EXPLO SION. We are indebted to our neighbor or tlio Post for the following particulars of another disasterous steamboat explosion: The Oronoko, Capt. Young, eolapsed a flu e near Vicksburg, on her passage to New Orleans, and from forty to fifty persons were severely scalded, eight of whom are since dead,- Several persons on board at the time of the accident, arrived'herc this morning on the Monarch,-who- give Hie a bove information. - The explosion of tho Oronoko scents 'io have occasioned much greater injury than staled by us yesterday. Our fi lends of the Express kindly sent us a proof slip about half past 1 o'clock to-day, containing fur ther particulars, obtained from a passenger on the Oronoko. Tho slip came too late for us to publish to-day, and we havo only time to say that the number of persons be lieved to be killed and drowned is not less than from 70 to 90. No' names aro men tioned:" We' shall publish tho account on Monday, uhlc3sr' something still more au thciitfc shall reach- us in the mean time. The accident was caused by imprudence and carelessness!; Cm. U'his' INTEMPERANCE' AND lYfimDER. On Thursday last tho 3d ins't; an inquest was held by Isaac T. Dodson, Esq. atNcs quohoninp, over the body of Mrs. A. Coylc, wife of Thomas Coylo, who suddenly died that morning under suspicious circumstan ces. The facts as elicited by the inquest were that Mr, and Mrs. M'Nally, in whoso s'tantce Coyle and his wife boardedtho whole of whom were addicted to intempe late habitsthat on Sunday evening tho 29th of April, Coylo being' absent, Mrs. M'Nally in a fit of jealousy and intemper ance struck Mrs. Coyle several times on tho temples with a jiro poker inflicting se vere contusions Coyle returned that night and commenced a series nf hrntnl n,n,.,fm on the person of his wife, and repeated ., , , . . ""w" wiiuiuus wife was found dead m thq morhlngv Wo forbear nddinir nnv fnr-ifi iuFii..l. lars of this inhuman affair, as it will be ro ferredto the proper tribunals, to whose1 de cision wo will leave the suhim. V ,U- this in order that no prejudice may be ere- ..v.i, ij -luiui imuaubc limy (IB UOI1C lo nnv of the parties concerned. Pm-io M' Nally and wife, andi irormnn ivlm mnr.. sent, werodulycompiittwd to wait, their trial at tho next sessions. ' ' ' Mmch Chunk Couritr. From die N. Orleans Courier of April 11. LATEST FROM TEXAS. ,v By the fastrunning steam packet Colum bia, Capt. Wright, in 39 hours from Gal veston, we have received our files., of Hous ton papers to the 7th April, but they con tain' not ono iota of news, if wo except a reported skirmish between a party of Ca inaiichcs.and Lapincs, in which, tho former were defeated with the loss of eight war riors killed. W. C. Quick, for tlifS murder M. W. Brigham, and David Jones, for the murder of Rladied Woods, were executed at Hous ton on tho 28th March. a few minutes pre vious to the execution nf Quick, he addres sed the by-slanders' from tho gallows as follows: ' i MH IxwiCiVaml fellow-ciilzw: I re quest your attention for a sho'rt period! I trtist.you will listen for a few moments to the words of a miserable arid unfortunalo being about, almost instantly to' be launch ed into eternity; and I most earnestly hope, my dear audience, that w'hat may fall from my lips, will make upon your minds a deep and lasting impression. I havo little to confess little' to state as regards tho events of my past life which is novel, or calcula ted lo inteicst those whom I sec around mej but I may possibly give utterance to some thing that may prove beneficial to the rising generation. My life, for upwards of twcJii- tV VCarS. has benn snnnt in n stilf 9nn milho ' " ... distant from this country; almost every act nf iti.i, i:r iin i ".. i r. i w. .i.u. uiu iuo uucu jiuiiuriuuu in uroau day, within the sedpo of the public eye, before the wliolb community. Whatever of evil'I have dono has been done openly. I did commil tlie outrage which lras'p'Iacod ine ill my present situation; I hvc . been ln6d for it and cnnrfi'inneil. anil" nm nnu n. bout to pay the penalty which" tho laws of my voumry anu uic interests ol society de mand. Whmi. limvm-pr. T hivn nnil llin penaltywhen I havo yielded that retribu tion which Is demanded on cailh, and mv body has ceased 'to exist, may the Almigh ty, into whose presence I am rapidly has tening have mercy on my soul! J Had I lime, I wou'ld addrbss myself par ticularly, and more at length to the youth of this generation. I havo been an absen tee from mv father's house sinr'o X ivn 10. years oi age; previously lo that period l had been for a considerable time the inmate of a boarding school. I afterwards entered and served some years in the United States army.- 1 then emigrated to the southern country; then to Mexico, and last to Texas. I am well known: I have tr.ivnrsnd nn nvioii. sivc pmtion of this comment, the world at lairo is well acnuaintcd with neut act of my past life. I have perpetra ted no secret climes, and havo nothing of that kind to communicate to this nsapintilv. I. have inflicted death in more than" on'o in stance, bulit was dune nublicly; and I pray iiiyHeucenicr io pardon me lor the heinous ci-imcj Mingling with the dissipa ted. CVCn though ill Lint nrpsnnt pnsn linl I'nr a short lime, has placed me where you now uenoiu mo. i o all young and old I say, shun such company and the nlacea ihisv ffpqucM. Avoid the slightest approach to tflCm'. and to CVcrV .limismnnnl llmt moi. have' f tendency to bring yod within tlieir IIIUUUIICC I came to this city with as good inten tions as any man; business called nlc hero, and I . tried day after, day but uiiavailingly to get that business finished. I wanted to re turn io my home, out could not for amuch 1 i tt r ruuueu a uay or iwo ueiore; and as it was to bo my last night in Houston, I thought I Would risk' oho 810 hill nl ll.n That ten dollar bill enunciating the Words in iuw mm uecpiy imprcssivo tone, and casting his eyes1 upon tlie gallows that ten dollar bill cost me my life! Ihad'heaid that nothing but dirk's and bowie knives were used in Houston, but was never mystm in the habit of canying a weapon of tho kind. Tho man whom I killed was a total stranger to ui6 I'h'ad never before seen him I slew him in the heat of passion I had no malice or hatred to him' in my heart but I did the deed! and (pointing to the'platform) there I' am about, as fin as this Woild is concerned,' to expiate the offence. The prisoner hero arain" mlilrrss'pil Jiim. self to tlio young, entreating them to trcas- 11K Mrili. .irfi,l..A rk... i .1 l . ,i t nm uuinc (jivuii io ilium oy mc UCl- ler members' of the community, and let his falo bd a warning add landmark to them. Much 'of his time" (he said) had been spout in tlie Instructions 'of youlh; ho had fre quently eiven'advlco to oihi-rs: Imt imM n.r. er, unfortunately, been able to take' if him self. To not having doiie'so he mi it 1. . I 11 .1 . . o'- iiuvH irutuu an mo evns no Had endured through life. Ho repeated he had nothing to communicate in relation to unknown crimes. Ho had been unjustly persecuted in regard to this particular. Tho" newspa pers stated that ho had killed six or soven persons. Of this chargo ho was innocent! I killed a man (said tho prisoner) in Mis sissippi, four years ago; but the act was not dono secretly; it was committed pub licly; the circumstanco was well known, antl I was tried for it in the state whose law I had violated. The prisoner concluded by again humbly imploring tho Divino mercy for himself and ,,y,li;"ou companion, i am about (said hejto die; and I am concious that I go to my grWe 'uiitcretfed, uninqurnod. In all probability not an1 individual who now heats mecpmm.stferftcah the slightest de cree mv fate: but I trust ilmi tin. nil siorjateTGod will have mercy upon bursouls, w,"6 mk ui iivsua Vlirisl, our oaviour. , At tho court bf Ov'er and Terminer, WlllC l held Its RP.qqinu in iliio week, Archibald M'Clariy was pot upon bis trial for tho murder of Johrj Nicely. I ho trial occupied the entire atfentlon of tno court Irom Wednesday till Saturday ovening, when tho case was submitted to tho jury, who, aHcra very brief consulta tion, found tho prisoner guilty of murder in tho second degree. He was sentenced by tho court, to a solitary confinement in the Eastern Penitentiary for tho period of nine ;" WKIC JJt-IHULl III . From tho Union Times ,. . . A FALSE ISSUE. It seems to. havo become a settled habit with, the opposition to falsify and inisiepre- oiii ijitfj iiiuuauru anu inicnuoil 01 tne uerteral Administratioii,; Fpr instance, up on tho subiect of the Cnrn.nKv. Mr u;,i die iys in his last manifesto, that "Tho credit system of tho.ljnhcd S'tatcs, and. the excluslvo metallic cuiTc.ncy, aru now fa.irly in the field, face to faeet.onb or the other must fall. There can b'c noioth- er issue. It is not a question of, correcting errors or reforming abuses, but nf nlwnTmn destruction: not who shall connuer. but who shall survive. The present struggle iiium iiu uiiai. jl ins laise issue which Air. liiddle is' so anxious io make ami wbii-li ia ro.nnlmntl !.. all his whelps throughout the union, is thus . 1... hi. Vi ' -.j: uiui uy mi. uruiuiy a senator irom Ten ncssec: " AS tO 311 exclusive mnfnllii nrrnnnv boillfr nnnpil nt hi ilm mlmi hielmr'tnn .. .1 . "j uuiiMiiidiiauuii uuu its friends, I consider the charge as wholly fcidiimuuB anu uniounueu. A sound metal lic basis for paper issued upon it, and a pa per ai an nines convertible into specie, is all I have heard contendml fnr. Tim imil. is wo are charged with being for an exclu- SITA mrlnllir nitrrnnm timi..nn i" - "ikhhiiw ,wtvui,jr uuuatf w arc n6t in favor of nimer nnt mrivnrriMn in to specie. It is true, many of u, mVself .uiiuii iu uuiiiucr, aro in lavor ol hanish iiig small notes from circulation, that their places may ho supplied by specie for the ordinary daily transactions of life. I have said this was an extraordinary let ter; and it seems to mn tlmt i.vn iin'i, i. tending and connected with it n.-irlnt-PM nf ttlP CUIlin filinixmln. T '. - n.1.1 I . .1 uuii.u xnuiavKi i, ii is uuuressuu 10 1110 lion. Jolih Qi Adams, wjioso opinion upon this whole subject. Ifaij again and again been -....wou, i,uvii viniuiiiaiuutus uiucu more favorable to the bank than those which' now extsf. In a written address made to some oi ins constituenta. nnmei ntftv nfi.i. ii.n suspenstoirof May last, when speaking in reiercncc to this same bank. Jio snvs. T incline more stronnlv in ilm j,ihe suspension of specie payments by sucl w,w.u.w ua Ull 1111- mediate forfeiture of its charter, but be made a penai oiienco in tho president and direc tors ol the institution. Tim vinlni;,... r ' lUluilUII Ul moral pnncin e comimitnd liv n ivmb- suspending specie payments is, in mv esti mation, not infer fnr in tlmt ... v itUUUUIVIIki uanKruptcy m an individual;" Jl Snrintt Mormnir. To wMt among rural scenery on a fine sunny morn ing, is to ramble in the templo of Deity.and itiLiioaa mu bicauvu JITUCCSS. lVCTy IKIJ' almost every hour, witnesses some change l....'l 1.1- I 1 n u u u s , uiuaauius, iuaves anu uowers are wo lnnrrpr nprinrl itmn T nvnnnfiil T t.1 :. r-""- .itoiuu. x iniu u- i uuus, uiuaauiiis, iuavL-5 anu Uowers arn vn. voided the gambling houses till before von by unseen hands, painted by invisible I fixed t6 leave tho city but I liad been artists, and perfumed from ' vials full of o- rrtnnAfl O 'lHf fW i r linl'ni.i ,1 .1 " . '. dors oweet' we look upon ihcrii in tlm morning wun surprise and pleasure, w'vili the first dp. vv nml Anivlinnm n.n ..::i:n. i What' an admirable and perfect taste .niiist no navo viiu pcriorms all this ! There, is no noise, no useless display. Tho Creator therein teaches modesty to Id's creatures. .w wuu.iaa io uij3U VI3IUIU UB U0SS0II1S soon perish," but their hue and frarranco arc viiu uiuiuiuiiga oi a nenevoient mind. Look anno muiuiudeol little heaps of sand that lio in the paths, arid suffer vour eye lo rest lor a moment upon the busy and apparent ly happy insect that bringd out his grairi'of sana. iNothing seems too minute and ihsig Vificant for the Almighty to put his jiant upon and invest with faculties of intelli gence and happiness. Jl Printer's Jlnccdyte It used to be re latcd of Corporal Nymn, a printer,' well known for many years in this town as be. ing more lemarkablo for his odd humor than thclongth or his purse, that while he was travelling from Lowell to Boston, ho was met by a highwayman, who politely (as is the custom of those gentry) demand ed his purse. ' My dear sir,' quotli CorporaT Nymn, I perceive you dout know mc That is nothing to tho purpose, sir, give up yournurso imniniliiimlv in.n...u.i higjiwayinaii. 1 ho Corporal repeated with an earnestness yhiEli could not be misunderstood, ' posi tively you don't know mo I' Well, theiij'said tho highwnyman.somc what surprised at tb ral, who (ho dev 1 aro vonl' 4 Why, I'm a printer.' . . ' A nrintor' did vnn nv? Wl,n,i ' ii rr ,i , ; . ' . iiw.vi iiu off d d dry picking.' Governor Can , , Miiin.cfiici mid m sueii u proclamation for the raisinir of ix ...v.. uuMij.mncoiu voiuiitee.- iniantrv, under tho requisition of Mninr cipnn si...i . serve m the Cherokee country, Many ( and i Jl iummary.Accov.ntefthcftnt discovt VJ "" America. t innANPEii iv. cuno.xotoaiciL onri. ISoitli Amcrifa -tTBS discovered in ih0 nB J tr ii.vfr '!...., .. ",u reign of .... " ".".ncci Had m.lUO VCfV COIimilprnliln nm.v., 1- n. nnv nf llin Hr.l n.1.A..l. . 1 ' " iuicm werotnen of gCi,iu, learning, and were careful to , "uuirnue records of such of their proceedings as would bo n. tcresting to posterity. These records nftord amnio' documents for Americau historians. Perhaps no people on thp .globe can trace the history 0f tlicir origin. and progress with so much precision as the inhabitants of North America ; particularly that pan ofthcin who inhabit tho territory of the United ytntcs. The following will show the chroiogWf order in which tho firist settlements wcio maJi. s , , i una America. nines of places. When settled. I)v wlmm Quebec, 10(58 By the Frenrh Virginia. 1610 Newfoundland, 1610 New York, 1012 New Jersey, 1018 Plymouth, 1020 New-Hainpshire,' 1023 Delaware,, , Pennsylvania", .Maryland, Ucn'riect'icut,' 1627 lC3i 1635 Rhode Island, Jtf35 Now Jersey, ICG South Carolina. Pennsylvania. 1C09 1082 Nortn Carolina, 1710 do. do. 1727 1732 Georgia, Territory south of Ohio, about 17."0 Kentucky 1773 .Vermont; nbout' 1771 Territory N W. oi uiuo river, Uy Jiord do la War. Dy Governor John Guy, By the Dutch af Albany. By do. at Bergen. By part of Mr. Robin son's congregation. By a small English colo. ny near tlie mouth of Piscataqua river. By thcSivcdcsccFinj. By Lord Baltimore with a colony of Komau Catholicu. By Mr. Kcnwick.atSay. brook near the moutli of Connecticut river; By Roger Williams and his persecuted breth ren. Granted to the Duke of York, by Charles IL, and mado a distinct' govcrnnjaiit, and set tled sometime beforo tills by tho English. "By Governor Sayle. By William Pcnn.witha company of Quakers. By a number of Palatines from Germany. Erected into , a separate government. By General Oglcthorp. Bv Col. Wood and others. By Col. Daniel Boon. By Emigrant from Con necticut and other parts pf New England. 1787 Tennessee, do.' 1789 179G By the Ohio and other , companies. B'ccamo a .scparato gov ernment many years before. Became an independent state.- The above dates are generally from the ncriodu when the first permanent settlements were made.' . . New York Evangelist. The following decision of Judcc McKinlev. which we copy from the Mobilo Mercantile Advertiser, is likely to have an important bearing thould it bo sumameu uy tne Supremo Court of tho United tt'tates Important Dkcmiox. A nucstibn'oJ'oTes'i im portance, camo up yesterday beforo tho. Circuit Court of the United States, now sittinir in this city. . a ii ' and was decided bv tho Court. JduVo" MeKinlcv. of tho 'Supremo 'Court of tho United Stales, presiding. The Carrolton bank, a bankinct comnanv chartered' Srj' Louisiana,' purchased in Mobile, through an agent, a.uiu ot eicnangc, wiiicu being unpaid, tho bank brought an aciion against ono of the parties to the bill. The Court decided that a bank corporation of another State could not make a contract in this State for want of capacity to contract; and, there fore, that the bank could not recover on tho b'll. The case will so up, as wo undcistant, to tho Su- nrpmn rfnurf nf llin TTntlnfT &lnl i..l.n.n .,.. w .("f. wmivu umiii.D iviitiu mu ijuta- tioti will. bo settled; The abovo decision has produced ercat excite ment hero, and Is tho subject of general converts- tion and alarm. lis ruinous conscquencca, ifitbff sustained," can-hardly bo imagined. JPotmirf.. Tho Czar, of Russia, has issued air ukaso abolWlinc tho distinct elstncn nnd the namo- of Poland: abjorbing the klngd'orn ihto Russia, and incorporating tho Polish troops with his own barba rians. 'I ho following is the ukare, I. The boun daries of tho governments of tho kingdoms of Po land &.LUhuana,ancichtry incorporatcdlwith Russia, havo ccase'd to exist. Tho inhabitants can pais from ono cduntrV to tho other without askinir for passports at Warsaw or St. Petersburg; there are lo uo no more custom houses between the government of Russia and Poland. 2. The term of military ser vice for tlfe Poh'sVrccruits is to bo 23 years' as-in Russia' Tlih'rlilMr... .,( i.i!...-". i , ".. ui 1 11 ill 1 1 (1 BU1U1L 1 J UIU .v belong to tho government, and aro to Be. placed fn iU' military scliobls. " The'jibcrty ' wh'ic'h the Polish peasants enjoy of changing their domicile is aljolkh od: tlicy aro to submit to iho tamo rules as RusHsn peasants. Amonirst the nnmos nf tlmcn 1.-illiil nn :- board theMoi!llc, aro Patrick Thompson anu iiuwaril 'I'liompson, or Cumberland county, Pa. and ofthe Tho'inn- son, of tho same county. '