,D. A. *MILER, EDITOR AND PROPRIETOR VOL. XVIII.-40.1 PRAM BOOK SITIMEg t oErrrsßUß4, rIHE Subscriber tenders his acknowl -1• edgments to the Public for the liberal and steady patronage with which he has been favored for a series of y cars, and re spectfully announces that he has just re ceived, at his old established stand in Chambersburg street, a large and fresh SUPPLY OF DRUGS & MEDICINES , tPaLla tt'utintMaind Paints, Varnish, Dyestuffs and every variety of articles usually found in a Drug store, to which he invites the attention of the public, with assurances that they will be furnished m the most reason able prices. The subscriber has also largely 'increas ed his assortment of BOOKS, by an addi tional supply of Classical, Theological. School, and st cellaneous BOOKS, embracing almost every variety of Staml ard and Popular Literature ; also, Blank Books and Stationery - - of allitinda, GOLD PENS, Pencil s,' Vi s iting and Priming Cards, Card Cases, Ink stands, &c. dm, all of which will, as moist, be sold rj..llT THE LOWEST PRI CES. __Ott Arrangements hare been made by which anything notineluded in 'his assort. rnenowiii be promptly ordered from the . • . ff.' B. BUEHLER Gettysburg, Oct. 22; 1849. 1);:r1 have al present'on hand an excel lent assortment of BIBLES, plain and fan- cy, for school and family use—at very low prices. vALIJMILE PIRERTY FOR REXT. Subscriber, Executrix of o tr I &Nick*, deceised, and testamentary Guardian_ or his miucir children. otters for I RENT, from The lyt dayof aril nexl, the valuable property known as the _RH "Virginia Mills? " `An They are situate in flamiltonban township. Adams county. 1 miles from Fairfteld, and in one of the boat-Grain-growing sec tions of the county. The Mills are newly erected, and in complete repair ; they con sist of a Grist Mill, Saw Mill, dce., ell in good order.' There are about 500 Acres in the Farm, with. Dwelling-house, Ten-. ant House, Barti, tie.. a large quantity of meadow sad arable lands, dm. -gess:PhoTeerne.lisiltho-maile-knotenrbr. the subscriber, residing on the preinises. Applications must be accompanied by pro per recommendations. MARY MYERS. Virginia Mills. Oct. 28, 1847—ff SHERIFF'S SALES. IN pursuance of sundry writs of I endi tioni .Expetuta, and a writ of Testatuns roldidertißotottas.issued.out of the Court andof Common Pleas of Adams county, and me directed, will be exposed to public sale on Sattirday the 18M of December, 18 47, , et 1 o'clock, P. M. at ihe Court-house, in the Borough of aettystturg,,the following Real Estate, to wit . A_Tract. of situate in. Hamiltonban and Liberty town ships, Adams county, Pa. containing sod acitiks , more•or, lees, on winch are erected a two story . , , Dwelling House r • 1, (part log and part stone,) a (1/11130/LP 411112a4 with two pair of Burrs and one pair of Co'Lanky Stones, a Saw Mill, a Stone Bank Barn, Wagon Shed, Corn• Crib, and other outbuildings ; also, a Tenant Itouse, a well of Water near the door, and a variety of Fruit Trees upon the premises. Said property'ils situate on Middle Creek, ad joining lands of Jacob Weldy, John Eiker, Wm. Loudon, and others.—Also, A Tract of Mountain Land, CONTAINING 200 ACRES,c . p more or less, adjoining lands of Christian Musselman, Robert Slemmons, and others. Seized and taken in execution as the Estate of MARTIN NEw- MAN, deceased, at the time of his decease, with notice to widow, heirs and terre-ten ants I=MIZI A Tract of Mountain. Land, situate in Franklin township, Adams county, containing 128 Acres, more or less, adjoining lands of Joseph Baker, Lawrence Sheinine and others. Seized and taken in execution as the Estate of 11ENIVWEA VER, with notice to Fredetick Herr as ter re tenant. L S O- A Tract of Land, ,situate in nenallen township, Adams co., artjoining lands of Joseph Taylor, Nicho- Aas Akar and others, containing 93 .1. ewes, wore or less, on which are erected ,a twolstary Jog Dwelling-house, a one and s ( half story log Dwel ding kpute and Kitchen, a log Stable, with Thresbiueloor,Sheds, &c. and a log Sta ble. 4. pOrtion of This Tract (about 20 Acres) is covered with 'J'imher ; about 12 Ae'res of Meadow; a Etuail Nursery; the balsnce is iu a good state of cultivation, with Springs through the premises.---Seiz ed taken in execution ;is the Estau3 of JOIIN rePersons purcheskig property al Sh"ilra sale, will have to pay ten per Gott. of the purchase money on the day of of role, BENIAMIN SCIIRIVER; SuEnter. .',lteritraollO.c. Gettysburg, td Nyvodor 19, 1817. A pousE SBURG AND ( LOT IN PETER, S.) AT 711BLIO SALE. On .S'aturday the 18th of December next, AT 12 O'CLOCK, M., ON 'rim PREMISES, I WILL sell my 110 USE and LOT. situate in Petersburg. (Y. S.) front ing on the Hanover and Carlisle Turnpike, and adjoining lot of Robert Livingston on one side, and an alley on the other. The Improvements are a large Two-story Weather-boarded HOUSE, 00 feet by 30, a one and a half-story Back building, a Coachmakers Shop, a first-rate Barn, a well of excellent Water convenient to the door, and a fine Garden. dlso, at the same lime and place, 414? (1) :II Lit l !No across said Alley, adjoining lots of Win. Gardner, and others, with a good Apple & Peach Orchard thereon. pJc.The Lots will be sold separately or tOkether, as purchasers may. desire. The Terms will be made known on the day of sale by .. SAMUEL A. NEELY. - "Tetiirisburg, (Y. 213.-1.3 VALUABLE STORE HOUSE Ua1P22i470 ed=2o N" there is a rare chance fur Mer chants to get one of the most v'ehls- Me situatioria for 'buaineptinffie The aubscriber will expose fo. Adige Silo ! on Saturdq the Bth of January, 1849' at 10 o'clock, A. M. on' the premtles, Valoftble Property,. on which he now • resides, situ- ITU ate in PETERSBUR(4 (Y. S.) Adams county, Pa., on the corner. of Main and Harrisburg streets. Thelthildings are first-rate., Call and 'see them,. and judge fur yourselves. Terms made known on the day of sale. ' JOHN B. McCREARY.- N. B.—lf the above awned propeny not sold on or before the Bth of Jenuatiti, it will be FOR RENT. ItZPHe would.•allse inforns , dl4, Pub that he has • a splendid assortment Of - • \IRV GOOlOll4, < which he will sell off at wholesale or re tail, at reduced prices hut) great bargains. lAM going to Schualiiit colony to com l. menee the Coal BEning; business, (I want Money.) and. give, notice to all , per sons indebted to me to call iiinaeiliately and seple the mama. . If their accounts arc t eeltfed on or bore ihelaticing bb +wary neat, they will not blame.me tf,atary find them in the hatais of an Oificer., 'JOHN B. fiIcCREARY. , Petersburg, (Y. B.)JNpv- Re• 1847•. N 111611102,111 % KOKUL ICE is hereby giten to all Lep steel, and other persons eoneented that , the ~11.01111NISTR.I.TION. 11C COUNT$ qiihedeeetsed persons herein after mentioned will be pre tented at tintiCK phans' Court of Adims county, forcemfm: mation and allowance, on,pursday, Me 41st day of December next. viz . The account of Wm. Wolf. Administra tor of the Estate of Joseph Miller, deed. The third account of Wm. Albright, one of the Executors of the last will and festa -1 ment of Daniel Evsicr, deceased. 'fhe account of Anthony Deardorff and Samuel Deardorff, Administrators of the Estate of Samuel Deardorff, deceased. The second and final account of John Marshall. Administrator of the Estate of Samuel Knox, deceased. • The account of George Heagy and Wm. Gilt, Testamentary Trustees of Mar 7 Ann I Icagy. ROBERT COBEAN, Register Register's Office, Gettysburg. Nov. 26 1847. YORK SPRINGS SEMINARY FOR FEMALES. THIS School is located in a healthy part of the country, within of a mile of York Springs, and 20,miles west of York, at which place persons arriving in the morning train of Cars, by applying to Samuel Hays, will meet with ready con veyance to this place on the same day, and those coining in the afternoon train can take the Gettysburg Stage immediately for Gilt's Tavern, on the York and Gettys burg turnpike, where they will be accom modated over night and conveyed here the next day. The School is also easy of , ac cess from Baltimore, Carlisle, Harrisburg, land Gettysburg, as stages from each of these places pass through Petersburg (one mile north of this) every other day of the week. The course of instruction comprises all the branches of a solid liberal English Ed ucation, together with the French and Ger man language, and Drawing. The summer Session will commence on the first second day in the sth month, and that for the winter on the first second day in the Ilth month, and each continue 22 weeks. TEUNIS.—For Tuition. Boarding, Wash ing, &c., $5O per sesssion of 22 weeks, one-half payable in advance, and the re- Mainder at the end of the term. No ex tra charges except for the French and Ger man languages, and Drawing. The use of Reading Books and Library without charge ; other Books and Stationery, when needed, furnished at the usual prices, Each pupil must furnish her own wash basin and towel, and have each article of clothing marked with her entire name. JOEL WIERMAN. LYDIA. S. WIERMAN, York Springs, Adams Co. Pa.-3in SCHOOL BOOKS AND STATION ERY,ofaII kinds, constantly on hand and for sale, al the lowest prices, at the Book and Stationery Store of Ike. 10. S. 11. BUEHLER. GETTYSBURG. PA. FRIDAY EVENING, DECEMBER 17, 1847, Tram the People. Jountal HOLY LAND. E=E= This day, (Apri fith,) we were to visit the Jordan and Dead Sea. In the early morning, about fire o'clock, I ascended a steep mound near our encampment, and saw a view as different from that of the preceeding day as a change of lights could make it. The sun had not risen ; but there was a hint of its approach in a gush of pale light behind Moab mountains.— The strip t .of woodland in the middle of the plain looked black in contrast with the brightening yellow precipices of Quarata nia on the west_ Southwards, the Dead Sea stretched into the land, grey and clear. Below me, our tents and horses, and the moving figures of the Arab,enlivened the shadowy banks of the stream. We were off soon after six, and were to reach the banks of the Jordan in about two and a half hours. Our way lay through the same sort of forest land that we had en-'' camped in. It was very wild : and al- ' most the only tokens of habitation that we met with, were about lithhah—by some supposed to be the exact site of the ancient Jericho. This is now as miserable a vil lage as any in Palestine: and its inhabi tants errs as low in character as an wealth. No stranger thinks of going near it who is not well awned and guarded. Yet there is no need to resort to any means but hon est and very !moderate industry, to obtain a somforeable onimisance here—if only honesty were eseonraged, and industry forotemed by a good soma state. The fine karma that are sabered around, and the abundant prairie' oldie few crops that are sorra. show that the - soil sad dimte are not to blame. At ilia Owe there is a Minna barer. amailimms far above the trees, which sonsetemppme to be the sole remnant of the grmit_eity4.bau it cm hard ly be norkeni monk in haver belonged to tyrr esiebst On the ham* in the midst °film brush- Arobdt wit law a fewliads of sash a adze that one of do pasty in a sanment of for . cried out, mestriebes r There ate no ormiehmalism/miry; bet deme cranes baked very its ihuns.while ma the Teet . .....Ons*.mne *my mese,sketrhistg out their ourn.buse behind thew.cendisly the tartest birds 1 over saw lly—or pmattsbly shall ewer sea. : - - ' ".TIM* wo - ind liewn Idd, and had mead. that the rive: mild net be des via the treveller emehed its any beds, we meld not help leoltio . giselt. Throe bend ter mem base in he hammed ; -and than it is Wink its **Op bald, where itaiL.e ltid dea *meet tie woodhed. he depth d water: minas noels at irdeniat anseene though. has'sew dim isnwedy. The Sotifaltea *peek welnueli of die eneellow ofilenismaidefikilienotheirep swill* diadem. that it is mippeed that formerly the fiver was subject to imendr: deans, *kith —y barn limed dui three termoiss above memiedd, and crowd the calnaldthery intiTstir of she plain in old laws; mar dintthrwild bens which then barbered is the brakes. came up le terrify the sheathers in the itilds. flees this may Wm. it is net so sow. The channel is ended* deopmedLoad the river now. io the, haat sesson. only briaMover its banks into the Wakes, so as to stand among I the asses. and never reaches the terraces. Though we awe all ea the lookout, and thoegh we reaellied4he river at the spot which is cleared for the approach of the Eargitina pilgrims, we could not see the wa ter till we could almost touch it. The first notice to me of where it was, was from come of the party dismounting on the Pilgrim's beach. When I came up—t) ! how beautiful it was !!—how much more beautiful than all pictures and all descrip tions had led me to expect ! The only draw back was, that the stream was turbid; not only whitish, frorn a sulphurious ad mixture, but muddy. Rut it swept nobly along, with a strong and rapid current, and many eddies, gusbinz throu,qh the thick woodland, and do w M. , in among the tall trees, now smiting the white rocks of the opposite shore, and now winding away out of sight behind the poplars and acacias and the tall reeds which crowd its banks. It is not a broad river ; but it is full of ma jesty from its force and loveliness. The vigorous, upspncTirm character of the wood along its margin struck me much ; and we saw it now in its vivid spring green, The pilgrims rush into the sacred river in such number, and with so little precau tion as to the strength ofthe current, that no year passes without some loss of life ; and usually several perish. This year only one was drowned. Whatever supersti tion there might hale been among our company, it was not of this wild sort ; and we bathed in safety. The ladies went north ; the gentlemen south. I made a way through' the thicket with difficulty, till I found a little cove, which the current did not enter, and over which hung a syc amore. whose lower branches were wash ed by the ripple which the current sent in as it passed. On the branches the bath er might stand or sit without touching the mud, which lay soft and deep below.— The limestone precipices and wooded pro montorr opposite made thei river partic ularly 6eautitul here ; and sorry I was to leave it at last. It is useless to attempt to make out where the baptism of Jesus took place, or where his disciples and John administered the rite. And on the spot one has no pressing wish to know. The whole of this river is so sacred and so sweet that it is enough to have saluted it in any part of its course. One thing more we did ; we remember. cd friends far away, and earned away some water fur them, having provided tin eases for the purposes. The Queen's children are baptized in Jordan water; and I brought away a easeful for the bap:ismof the child of a friend who lives further away from the Jordan than our Queen does. This business done, we were summoned to horse, and rode away southward to the Dead Sea. The belt of woodland soon turned away eastward. and we found ourt.e;res exposed to ratrc:ue !tee, ttrt a pain crust- "FEARLESS AND FREE." ed with salt and cracked with drought.— There had been a closeness and murki ness in the air, all the morning, which was very oppressive ; and now it was, at our usual slow pace, almost intolerable. I put my horse to a fast canter, and crossed the plain as quick as possible, finding this pace a relief to my horse as well as my self. The drift on the beach of the sea looked dreary enough ; ridges of broken canes and willow twigs washed up, and lying among the salt, and the little un wholesome swamps of the shore ; but the waters looked bright and clear, and so tempting that our horses put their noses down repeatedly, always turning away a gain in disgust. I tasted the water—a bout two drops—and I almost thought I should never get the taste out of my mouth again. And this is the water that poor Costigan's coffee was made of ! Costigan was a young Irishman, whose mind was possessed with the idea of ex ploring the Dead Sea, and giving the world the benefit of his discoveries. It would have been a useful service ; and he had zeal and de:otednes enough for it. But he wanted either knowledge or prudence; and he lost his life in the adventure without having left us any additional informatien whatever. Ile had had a small boat car ried overland by camels ; and in this he set forth, (in an open boat, in the month of July!) with only one attendant, a Maltese servant. They reached the southern end of the lake—not without hardship and chili ' culty ; but the fatal struggle was in getting back again. The wind did not favor them, and once blew such a squall that they had to lighten the boat, when the servant stu pidly threw overboard the only cask of fresh water they had. They were now compelled to row for their lives, to reach the Jordan before they perished with thirst; but he sun scorched them from a cloudless sky, and the air was like a furnace. When Costigan could row no longer, his servant made some coffee from the water of the lake, and then they lay down in the boat todie. But the man once more roused him self, and by many efforts brought the boat to the head of the lake. They lay help for a whole day on the burning shore, linage to do more than throw salt water over each other from time to time. The eiertmorning, the servant crawled away, in hopes of reaching Rihhah, which lie did with extreme difficulty. lie sent Costi irs's horse down to the shore, with a sup ply of water. He was alive, and was car ried- tcr' Jerusalem in the coolness of the night. He was taken tare of in the Latin mount there : but he died in two days. Nets now relating to • his enterprise was owerfotord , r ant daring his illness he nev er spoke On this eubject. Any know ledge thist.hs might.have gained has perished withbier andfloreliebleinformation could beololited.frook,tris servant. Costigan's grans* in*? American burying ground ; 04 7 . the stone which tells his Melancholy story. .He died in 1835. There appere to be no satifactory evi dence u to whether any fish are to be found,in the Dead Sea. Our guides said that some small black fish had been seen there ; but others deny this. A dead fists has been found on the shore near the spot where the Jordan eaters the lake ; but this might have been cast up by the overflow ;of the river. It is said that small birds do not fly over this lake, on account of the deleterious nature of its atmosphere. A bout small birds I cannot speak ; but I saw two or three vultures winging their way down it obliquely. The curious lights which hung over the surface struck ' me as showing an unusual state of the at mosphere—the purple, murky light rest -1 ing on one part, and the line of silvery re fraction in another. Though the sky was clear after the morning clouds had passed away, the sunshine appeared dim ; and the heat was oppressive. The gentlemen of the party, who stayed behind to bathe, declared, on rejoining us at lunch time, that they had found the common report of the buoyancy of the water of this sea not at all exagerated, and that it was indeed an easy matter to float in it, and very chili . cult to sink. They also fourd their hair and skin powdered with salt when dry. But they could not admit the greasiness or stickiness which is said to ai here to the skin 'after bathing in the Dead Sea. They were very positive about this, and they certainly did I observe the fact wry carefully. Yet I have seen, since my return, a clergyman who bathed there, .tul who declared to ine that his skin was se sticky, for some days after, that he could not get rid of it, even from his hands. And the trust-worthy' Dr. Robertson, a late traveller there, says, "After coming out, I perceived nothing of the salt crust upon the body, of which so ! many speak. There was a slight prick ing tensation, especially when the skin had been chafed ; and a sort of greasy feeling, as of oil, upon the skin, which lasted fur several hours." The contrast of these testimonies, and the diversity which exists among the analyses of the waters which have been made by chemists, seem to show that the quality of the waters of the Dead Sea varies. And it appears reasonable that it should ; for it must make a great difference whether fresh waters have been pouring into the basin of the lake, after the winter rains, or a great evaporation has been going on under the summer's sun.— In following the margin of the sea, we had to cross a creek, where my skirt was splashed. These splashes turned present ly to thin crusts of salt ; and the moisture and stickiness were as great a week after wards as at the moment We wound among salt marshes and brakes, in and out, on the desolate shores of this sea: this set, which is not the less dead and dreary for being as clear and blue as a fresh mountain tarn. As we ascend ed the ranges of hills which lay between us and the convent where we were to rest, the Jordan valley opened northwards, and the Dead Sea southwards, till the extent traversed by the eye was really vast. How beautiful must•it have been once, when the Jordan valley, whose verdure was now shrunk into a black line amidst the sands, was like an interminable garden; and when the cities of the plain stood bright and busy where the Dead Sea now lay blank and grey! As I took my last look back, from a great elevation, I thought that so mournful a landscape, for one having real beauty, I had never seen. From the Nation) Intelligencer. SECOND DESPATCHES FROM MAJOR DOWNING. Headquarters, Mexico, new addition to the United States, October '25, 1547. MR. GALES & SEATON : My dear old friends, Gineral Scott and 1 find a good deal of bother about getting our des watches through, or you'd hear from me oftener. I do think the President is too backward about clearing out this road from here to Vera Cruz and keeping it open, and introducing the improvements into the country that we stand so much in need of here. lie and Mr. Ritchie pretends to have constitution al scruples about it, and says the constitu tion don't allow of internal improvements, and Mr. Ritchie says the resolutions of '9B is dead agin it too ; and, besides Mr. Riehie says these internal improvements is a Fed eral doctrine, and he'd always go agin 'em for that if nothing else. But 'tis strange to me the President hasn't never found out yet that where there's a will there's a way, constitution or no constitution. All he's got to do is to call all these roads round here in Mexico "military roads," and then he'd have the constitution on his side, for every body knows the constitution allows hint to make military roads. I know the President is very delicate about fringing on the constitution, so I dont blame him so much for holding back about the internal improvements here in Mexico, though I dont think there's any other part of the United States where they are needed more. But-there's no need of splitting hairs about the roads ; military roads isn't internal im provements, and he's a right to make mili tary roads as much as he pleases. And as them is jest the kind of roads we want here, and shall want for fifty years, (fur our armies will have to keep marching a bout the country for fifty years before the'll be able to tame these Mexicans and turn 'Om into Americans,) it is confounded strange to me that the President is so be hind hand about this business. What's the use of our going on and annexin away down south here, if he dont back us up and hold on to the slack ? And there's no way to hold on to it but to keep these military roads open so that our armies can go back and forth to bring us in victuals and pow der and shot and money. Here we've been, weeks and weeks since we annexed the city of Mexico, wait ing and holding on for the President to setril•us more men and more money,• and tel us what to do next. This backward ness of the President since we got into the city of Mexico seems the more strange to toe, considering. For, when he was fixin me otr to come out here and see if I could make a settlement with Santa Anna, 1 tried parsaaJe hint to .let the armies hold still while I was making the bargain. I told hint lie could Myer bring a man to reason or to trade when he was knocking of him down all the time. But I couldn't make him seem to understand it. lie stood to it his way Was the best—the sword in one hand and peace in tattier, all the way along—a word and a blow, and the blow always first. • "Why, Major Downing," says he, "it you want to reason a man into peace, that's another thing; but if you want to conquer a peace, my way is the only way. That's the way I begun this war, and that's the way I mean to carry it out." "How so ?" says I ; "how did you be gin the Was in that way ?" "Why," says he,"Slidell was the word, and Taylor was the blow ; and not only my friends, but even my enemies, admit that the blow come first." The President said that was the rule he had gone by all the way along, and he meant to stick to it; and not hearing any thing from him so long, I'm afraid he's got a HO lion that peace is conquered. But that would be a had mistake, if he's got such a notion ; for it isn't conquered ; it's only scattered. It's a good deal as 'twos with Bill Johnson, when he and I was boys, and he undertook to conquer a hornet's nest, expects to get lots of honey. Ile tpok a club and marched bravely up to it anti hit it an awful dig, and knocked it into a thou sand hinders. "There, blast ye," says Bill, "I guess you're done to now," as he begun to look round for the honey. But 'twas n't con quered ; 'twas only scattered. And pres ently they begun to fly at him and sting him on all sides. Otte hit hint a dab on the arm, and another on his leg, and an other in his face. At last Bill found he should soon be done to himself, if he staid there, so he cut and run. "Hullo," says I, "Bill where's your honey ?" • "Darn it all," says he, "if I haint got no honey, I knocked their house to pieces; I've got that to comfort me." I wish you would try to convince the President that 'tis only scattered here ; n't conquered, and he must give us the means to keep moving, or we shall get badly stung bime-by. If he only hacks us up well, I'l! pledge myself that we'll carry out the campaign marked out in my last despatches, which would bring us clear down to Cape Horn in four or five, years ; I and I'm very anxious to get there, it strikes • me that would be such a good horn to hold on to in all dilemmas, even if all the rest lot the country went by the board. I dreamt 'tether night that we had got through an. nexin all North and South America; and and then I thought our whole country was turned into a monstrous great ship of war,' and Cape Horn was the bowsprit and Mr. Polk the captain. And the captain was walking the deck with his mouth shet, and every body was looking at him and won dering what he was goin to do next. At last he sung out, "Put her about; we'll sail across now and take Europe arid Asha and Africa in tow--dons stop for bird's-egg. ing round among the West India Islands ; we can pick them up as we come back a ; long—crowd all sail now and let her have it." • Away we went; I never see a ship sail faster. The wind begun to blow harder and harder, and then it Caine on an awful storm, and at last it blowed a perfect har- rycane. The sails begun 'to go to tlitters,l and she rolled as if she was going to upset. Some of the oldest and best sailors among the crew told the captain we should all go to destruction if he . didn't take in sail, and furl and clew up, and get things tight, and bring her head round to the wind. Mr. Richie was standing by his side, and says he, "Captain Polk, them is all nothing but Federal lies, as I've shown hundreds of times, not only in the Union, hut years and years ago in the Etirmirer. Them fellers only want to give sid and comfort to the enemy ; dont pay any attention to 'em.— Here's the chart, (he held up in his haml the resolutions of '9BO sail by this, and I'll risk her on any tack, and in all weathers." On we went, liekity:split, the harrycane blowed harder, the timbers begun to creak, the sails split to ribbons, some oldie spars begun to snap and go by the board, and then all at once there was a terrible cry, "breakers ahead !" The Captain then jumped as if he was wide awake ; and, says he, "call all hands and put her about." But when the officers conic to give orders to the crew, not one of them Would mind or pay any attention. The whole crew was in a mutiny ; and the ship was so large and the crew was such a mixed up mess of folks that there was more than twenty different mutinies all at once in different parts of the vessel. "Well," says Captain Polk, "I wash my hands of this mibehief ; if the crew wont turn to and help, the ship must go ashore." Then an old sailor spoke up and said: "All the crews in the world couldn't do any good now the ship was dished and must be plumped on the rocks ; her sails and spars was gone, the timbers sprung, and the hold was already half full of water." In a few minutes she struck, and the rocks 1 1 gored a hole through her side,. and the I water poured in, and down she sunk lower and lower, till at last she gave one mighty goggle, and plunged all under the water, I except a piece of the bowsprit that still stuck MIL The storm and the waves swept over her, and the whole crew and every body aboard was lost, except a few of us who scrabbled up and clung to the bu wsprit. The hard apring I had to make to get on to the bowsprit waked ins up ; and, al though I aim one that thinks much of dreams, I cannot help thinking a good deal of Cape Horn, and 'laterally feel amrious to get along down that:way as fast as we can ; so I hope you'll urge the President to be a little more stirring, and let us have men and money a little faster. I shall have to break off here for to-day, because I've got to write a little despatch to the President to send by the same post. I have received some letters from Uncle Joshua and other relations and friends in the old United States, and send some of 'cut along to you, which you can, if you think best, hitelion to my despatches, jest as 6ineral Scott takes the letters dins un der-officers and hitches on to his despatches. Su I remain your old friend, ,NIAJOR JACK DOW:UM; No. 11.-7'o JAmEs K. POLE., President of the United Statcy and all annexed count, ie.y. vidquttrtere, City of Wilco, A ottatexed United BwteB ()Nutter 25, 1817 DEAR COLONEL : Things is getting alma , here as well as could be expected, consiti. erin the help we have, but we are altogeth er too weak-handed to work to profit. If you want um to hurry ,alutg down south, we need a good deal more elp and more money, It wouldn't be no use to give that three millions of dollars to Santa An na now, for the people have got so out with hint that Ike couldn't make peace if Ike had six miilions. Ile's skulking about the country, and has as touch as he can do to take care of himself. So I think you had better give up the notMit about peace altogether, it'll be such a hard thing to get, and send us on the three millions here to help us along in our annexin. It's danger ous standin still in this annexin business. It's like the old woman's soap; if it dont go ahead, it goes hack. It would he a great help to us in the way of holdin ou to what we get, if you would carry out that plan of giving the Mexican land to settlers float the United States as fast as we annex it. I've been very impatient to see your proclaim-1 non offering the land to seders to come out! here. You've nu idea how much help it would be to us it we only had a plenty of! our folks out here, so that, as fast we kil- led a Mexican or drove him oil from his farm, we could put an American right on it. If we could plant as we go„in this way, we should 30011 have a crop of settlers here that could hold on to the slack themselves, and leave the army free to go ahead and keep on annexin. I thought, when I left Washington, you was a going to put out such a proclamation right away. And I think you are putting it off a good deal too long, for we've got land and farms enough here now for two hundred thousand at least ; and, if they would only come on .fast enough I think we could make room for twenty thousand a week for a year to come. But I'm a fraid you're too delicate about doing your duty in this business ; you are slush a stickler for the constitution. I'm afraid you're waiting for Congress to meet so as to let them have a finger in the pie, But! woultrnt do it ; if you do, I'm afraid you'll wish your cake was dough again. From all lean hear from home, things is looking rather squally there. Our party seems to be falling off ; in New York State they are all faded into Barnbtuners and Hunkers, and it looks all over the country as if the Whigs were coming into power and if they should, it would be a terrible calami ty, for they are too narrow minded and too much behind the age to understand the• rights of this annexin business, and it's ten chances to one if they don't contrive same way to put a stop kc, I've got a good deal more that I want to say, and sonic advice I should like to give you, but I shall be obliged to leave it till my next despitch.• I needn't stop to tell you about °Moral Scott in this, cause I spose speak forbimielf. But I must toll you I went out tother dity tcrsee oral Cushing, and found him awfully tick led about being nominated for Governor of TWO DOLI,i%R PER ANNUM. I NEW SERIES-NO. 30, the Old Bay State. At first he was a good deal amazed at it ; he was as much surpri sed as you was, Colonel, when You first heard you was nominated for President. What amazed hint so much was, that he'd alwayspeen thinking all along that he wits a Whig till the nomination route, and then he jumped up and snapped his lingers, and said he believed, after all, the Democrats was the right party. He is in great speri is, and says he'S no doubt he shall be elected. He goes fur annexin now the hottest of any of us, and says he takes the great Alexander for his model, and goes for annexin as lung as there is any country left to annex. His ankle is quite well, and Gineral Pillow's foot is a good deal better. • I have the honor to he your private am bassador and faithful friend, from fifty-four forty on one side down to Cape Hord on tother. M AJ, JACK DOWNING: [ Following official example, we defer the let ten; from Major Jack's relations, which he speak• of; to some time when we have, more room for them than we can spare tollay.—Eus. NA?. her. 1 TO ~i t WHIG." Sin :—My reply to your communication ap peering in the Star of the 2 . 211 of October last, has called from you a lengthy but aqueous production , which it behooves me in come measure to notice, in order that your wisdom. foresight, and tolen - lion may be 'a.icertained and duly aPnredared. Giving scope to your embittered feelings, you have stigmatized us as dishonorable, denounced us as traitors—have substantially declares! that our re eistanro to whatyou are pleased to call principle, is ipso farm, treason in its blackest form—and have sagely discovered in my answers jacobinical as sault egainst Whig principle; and, therefore, an ticipating an utter demolition of that dear fabeic, have hurried to rescue a sinking cause (as you be lieve it) &Om impending ruin. We are some where told in ancient history that Osepho, a Lyb ian king, /1116.1U3 to have his subjects believe him a Cod, and pay him divine honors, had the birds of the groves taught to pronounce, as they flitted through the tree; -thipho is a God." The words, were repeal„oad again and again until they were considered oracular, and the gulled Lybiene bow. ed in adoration before their king. In our daY,tou, birds are to be ibund prating this one a 'God and that one a Demon. Aye, in very truth, can we find (lien croaking load 0111V118 to the 'people a gainst thus.t who, scorning servility, sea proper to exercise their constitutional privileges in opposi tion to, the dictates of a tribunal in which may have had no faith. Prw.sibly, you, sir “Whi's," are one of theme bird', and, urged on by vanity and selfishness, have crooked out against us a train of hackneyed and ti u te•worn invectives, for the bare gratiacatiou of a willful malice. But let us 50C. You start with the sweeping and logical asser tion that my communication "isaltogether a com pound of erroneous &Kathie and fidlacious reason-. Mg," nrl, Willtont halthig to alurer the doctrine or the reasoning, vault to the conclusion "that no true and honest Whig will endorse them." If, by true and honest Whig, you mean one who hag made of himself a party machine, ever ready to do its bidding, right or aeoo,4—who has squared his principles in accordance with the precept, "thus far shalt thou go, and no further,"—thrn I give in and admit the truth of your assertion. But if, by truo and honest Whig, you meau ono devotedly attach ed to cardinal Wing principles—one who believes it to be the right and duty of every man to think and net for himself—one who believes it righteouit ness to trample upon every action of the disergan izing log-roller—upon the scandalizing rapacity of sanguinary and headlong wranglers, their I hurl back your assertion, and tell you it is false, 10 time, the great arbiter, will prove it so. When, before your memorable cemmunication of theit2d, were Whigs called dishonest, treacherous and set fish for not yielding to the ticket entire support I surely not five years ago, when "professing Whigs,' if you please, saw proper to &pat the en tire ticket, with one exception. Ah ! there was no "Whig" tlien to denounce the traitors mid brand as treacherous, dishonorable and selfish the then action of the voters of the county. Surely H ot two years ago, when Oxford wouldnot yield her entire rapport to Mr. Kurtz. Why was not your voice heard then ! Why were von not then among the "flesh-pots of Egypt," crying aloud, and sparing not ! Your adherence to prt.iciple want then dots,' devoted, I presuirie ; or rather, your • love of unidehers not to enthusiastic as at present —an enthusiasm that has forced you to prove yourself a Philip or a Caesar, to torture us into submission and humility. But "Lnvy her own snakes shall feel, And Persecution mourn her broken wheel." Again, "Ile seems to he thoroughly impressed with the idea that our County Conventions have heroine the hotbeds of corruption of late—that he is no longer hound to worship the idol. it xis up fur us, and that it is not treason to the principles or the Party to withhold his support front those id 01.." I used no such language. I gaVe you no room to make sorb declarations. I did trot say ant not hound to worship the idols it sets np fee you ; but I now say so, and you are welcome to its broadest acceptation. I put the interrogato:y to you, whether you aver that when American freemen cannot conscientiously support an inffi ‘idual for office, they eunimit les.on to the pin:- elides of their party by withholding hem him their support! And is it ycur desire to be Understood as expressing the opinion that whenever dna County Convention (whether honestly or dishon estly gotten up) erect an idol, the party Is hound to worship that idol ! Yon have answered by mi.-- quoting my language, by torturing toy Meaning' ing and exposing yourself a garbler. Again : "That this has been the prattle e of thi; County Conventions, we are bound to betieve from the assertion of Vindex, and he earleavor• ! j o g to enlighten us Whi g s of tine darktaltdoptira with his revelations upon this subject." Lord save utt—hare it wisdom ! But do tell us what as. *colon I made, from which you arc bound to Ile hieve that tins has bean the practice of the County Conventions; and what this subject is upon which I am .endeavoring to enlighten you. I think I strove not to enlighten—ratber to chastise. I made no , reeelations—rather dennaMations. am no "Joe Smith," but such ei I a4lr L Id nien! ar ' , dried nor eleepingt" Gad if/ billiArY"' a just reprirnand toe the Illttalling US - r m. 'your vile rebuking*, you have yourself to But further: "It is apparent that the aryirwir