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'',, -'- ...`.--...'.,";, 17., r.,..t.. , ~.. `, . - --- • ;.:,--', ;'---- ,: r r : - - 7 1.6:` -:;,i,-,.;• :777.:,•-,,• ..,--r,::-----...;•.•-•,,... ~-...-:,.., ~...,,...•,,,,,,,.: ''-',-;'.....,2:-17:-."-:1:•.-. r-,.--.., •-•. ; • : : :, - _, , .: - ..:..i , ;--.., ,17 : • ; .-- •-:-- • ..•:-. ir • -, .., -..•:•::,•,,, ;- . - . 4-,-, :: ,- ....:. • ••,- • -.-, ----.••••••,:z.-:,:.-:- -,,---,,,7., - :,..- - - . .7._ • . ',:k - , 4 7 - 2 , ,` , . -,, -.-,. ,-.. - ' -e': , •'";'.` •-•' ' --. '%; - [-. 7-2=3; V;~' .~ ':°o 7 ' BM= the plat) post. MOMIZIG: TELE lines on the death of Washington Irving have been too hastily written. The author should revise and - polish them before permitting their publication. THE F.X.EpTJTION OF JOHN. BROWN. To-day is fixed for the execution of John Brown, at - Charlestewn,_ Virginia, for the double crime of murder and treason. Since the. acts for which he is to suffer the extreme penalty of...the law were committed, they and he have been the all absorbing subject of public-attention. Until John Brown undertook a resort to the ‘ , l4:afitunietit of urigs," the f&naticiam' of Atolihorusru tfacivehted itself m words. - Urgedon by the political leadings of a party which totally disregards the bonds which bind this trnioii together; he undertook to carry putakep laid design ofcommencing a seceita; Aeschtion in Aniekicau hiStork embracing civil war and a dissolution of the Union. The long • crusade of treasonable aeitation, designed, not for the publi6 good, but ttl bujl4 up a sectional political party,haa at lastieiulted in overt acts-of ireason,rebel lion and murder. . ,The more timid Republi cans are appalled at the natural result of their party teachings. They deprecate violent mea aureaans4 ssar, they only design to overthrow the iiiiitieli tions Of the South by montlforce and arl- I surnentative warfare. Still they at tempt to palliate and excuse the Offense of - Jno. -Brown as though it were a political one, merely- , -not criminal -in itself, but only criminal' because it failed. Thus they un consciously: betray the wishes of their hearts "and the designs of their party. We have little patience - with that fanaticism which would disregard all legal enactments and sanctify the most hideous crimes as acts of bravery andherciisramsanctionedby the law of God." It is an insult to that sacred law to make it a cloak for revolutionary acts, de structive to the peace of thicomatly and the safety of the persons and property of law abidingjttjaegs. ~ ..11.eavennever :designed a "higher law" like that which satisfies the consciences,. of those who would glorify Brown and make a martyr of him. The elemente , ithlch•aimpose fthe party who regard Brown as a martyr are at once po _litical, fanatical and religious—a combina tion so comblistible that when once dim (nighty ignited it is impossible for any gov ernme-qtd control. It was these elements which rendered the army, of Cromwell so terrible. ''fteiie'snMe elementa are madly drivingg the men of the North to desperate lengths: it is not safe to play with the pas sions of fanatics. Let, them be brave as Cromwell amksincere as the maddest Round head of_his army, they mast suffer the penalties ofhroken law and outraged social agreements and public obligations disregard- Brown lies eosin the wind, and must reap the whiilwi'ncL -.) The kindliniof 'revolution ary flames must bra prii.*4-7 the strong arm the law. Wgity suffem because by others greater, ~: ~~`~ >'f ~ 1 t '., y :r i , 7. . 1 r high-handed and mar dere e:criminal and the traitor, )Ye lap no_qmptithy._ He reaps the reward of th(Cdeetts-wilich he haa =emitted. , ThVconiartrative men of the North, white theyiye" 1 that the-execution of Brown and his follow crirainals is eminently news ' sary,Jpothaa an example and as a means of checking the, progress of revolutionary sentilents and actions, still carry the mat ter fatter, and hold the fanatical party which led him on, responsible both for his acts and his death. CiptED#4OIARS ARRESTED - AT ' FERRY. The telegraph yesterday announced that three passeugerk:By - the Western-train on the-Balti more aid gido,Wroad, were taken out of the cars on their arrival at Harper's Ferry by the military . atationed there, and imprisoned mder Viiifollowing-cireurnstances: The par , ties, merchants from Cincinnati, had started f or 1 .51 1 # 15 1r 2 1. , At Gra f!gnAhor Were, beard to express thitiiieties - quife" freely relntive to Brown, and expressing sympathy for him and - his fain*: The conversation was overheard by a nun alleged to be espy., -This-is too much. Waren well conceive the alarm which the citizens of Virginia, in their present rixeitesi . • stake may , feel, but it is an out rage to'inUitere 'with the : personal liberty of travelers, in this manner, for the exercise of the gForirtsia priviiege.. of fiee speech, Men have alight. to sympathize, with Brown and his family, and to express their, sympathy in railroadosrsoitberirr,Virginia or elsewhere, and no power an earth has a right to molest thent . t.hisexercise of,tlte,liberty of speech. What these gentlemen are represented to - have said was neitiiii- , Conifiliy ta the laws of Vir giniii49-r,tomly,ether laws, and : no one had a right to-molest - them.- The, ( Virtinia'aUthorities.aricturying mat ters too far when they interfere with the citi i 4 , % ," 11 _;: ~~ ~. F.~- gulf :rbut more criminal CUAIMES• t Carnegie ` entered upon 'his his 4?io,s,y,fitgrdity as Superintenderitof the Western Division of lie Pennsylvania road. Mr. .Carnegie is a capital railroad man and leas acquired hits knowledge of railik3la billtine:4 Undera teacher vvhOliiisile superki , iro the (pantry. For several ye t * Past hi - lias been Chiaf clerk in the office of Col.' ThOmas' . A... Scott, and can make his toast Paul that he has been brought up at the Two of th , 'hat II .10 t, dcso 7471r,e'>tire and A. Itodnaw4si--- were present: the otherg, 1.: it, all were ..,Idieri in the ilungarian War, and of Poland. The Democracy of Pick away county, f have instructed their delet7atcc to the State and District conventions to vote for Charleften delegates friendly h, the nontimition of Mr. Douglas for Pre. The faculty of W• and Mary Coilege, acknowledg , v the receipt of liberal ;?.na tions from forty-cight individuals and firms in New York rite, contributed towards repairing the losses 'which the coliege suffered front the lire that occurred in February last. Alec. T, Stewart gives $.7.!.a:/ for the purchase of a library of books in the ancient languages. The North German Lloyds Steamship patty of Bremen has made as arrangement with the United state , !;overitruent, l,y w they will continueto carry the full United States mails throughout the winter. A convention of Israelite , from all parts of the Union was held or. Su• , day In New York. to confider the formation of a national board of representative-3 or consittory, Fitrifira to those in Europe. The consideration of a n a d. dreas, stating the basis and objects of the pro posed wawa, was referred to a committee. The New York 1i , r4;11 says Signor Olive ria, of whom we have heard high pad:A 4: 11 :1 be expected in this country by the Prince Al bert which was . announced to leave Galway on tho Uth inst. Signor Oliveria has played in the principal t,:ntinental cities, and now visits the United States on a prc.fo....vicinal tour. The whole number of convict! , now confined in the Ohio Penitentiary is h 76, of which lull are negroec. GC, of the entire number have no cells, and are compelled L. sleep in the hospi tal and library. The number expected ly will fill these two last places to overflowing. FARM EZPi t , —W.) call attention to the card elsewhile, beaded nUaltgible Property for sale or Exchange." It is a tine Cara: near Somerset in this State, is well improved, for• tile and desirable. The owner will exchange it fur property in this city or vicinity. A Dea4 thing - cm a Race Track. The Virginia eenr./inns (or seeing blood horses in motion is well illustrated in gn anec dote told us at Petersburg. Mr. Doswell, Sheriff of Hanover county, seeing old Larkin White, au ex-member of the Jockey Club, but now a member of the Baptist church, on the quarter stretch, at the recent ritaie at Ashland, Va., jocosely remark ed to him : " 1411 y, Coy. White they'll turn you out of church for being Luc." " If they do," said Larkin, " tura Tinsley, yonder, out of the Methodist church. I'll go and see him." Accordingly, Larkin went over and stated the case to hie neighbor Tinsley, who, by the way. stammers badly. ' " Oh!" replied Tinsley, " I've go-go--got a d-d-d-dead thing 'f it ! I've co-t,o-co-count ed noses, and there is a ma-ma-ma-majority of the church on the track-I" Larkin turned away, regretting that ho had,in the excitement of his feelings, joined whit he thought now to be the " wrong. church."—Montyomery Mai!, A Large Shaft. One of the largest wrought iron shafts ever manufactured' in the United States has just. boon completed by Messrs. Tugnot, Daily & Co., of this city, for the steamer Metropolis. It is thirty seven feet in length and weighs forty-dye thousand pounds. The l'utcan-ie labor of lengthening and rounding this im mense piece of machienery to, its vast, but beautiful and mathematically-correct propor tions, was accomplished by means of a single hammer, weighing seven and a /fait tons. The senior proprietor of this enterprising es tablishment is a graduate from the Cold Spring foundry, and may, therefore, bo considered "some guns." We commend him and his "gang of forgers" to the owners of the Great Eastern when she comes to Now York for re pairs and improvements. Catching Whales. In 1834, the wZtole number of vessels engag ed in the business, was about 700, of which 400 or four-sevenths, were American, and 300,11 r three-sevenths, were foreign. So that twenty five years ago, Yankee enterprise was ahead of the rest of the world as 4 to 3. In 1869 the whole number is estimated at ,900, of which 661 are American, and 239 foreign; showing Yankee enterprise still more in the ascendant; for we have added 261 ships tdour fleet—a gain of 65 per cent., while our foreign Competitors have fallen off 61 ships,—a loss of GO per cent,. In the value of the catch, the increase is still greater, being about $12,300,000 in 'G9, against, s'ooo,ooo in '34--about, /7r.! per cent, This, however, is in a great measure owing to the advanee4 value of oil and . bone, which has much of late years: , - - ' A GAME DINNER. Shortly after the war with Great Britain, an aristocratic English gentleman built a fine residence in the vicinity of Fort George, on the Niagara frontier, and, in accordance with the old country idea of exclusiveness, he enclosed his grounds with a high tight fence. Hero he lived like an old English gentleman—one of the olden time—with the exception that none but the elite of the province and the officers of the neighboring garrison were allowed to pass his gate. There was a very good understanding between the American officers at Fort Niagara and the British at Fort George, and the men were permitted occasionally to visit back and forth. Among the American soldiers was a queer chap, who stuttered terribly, was very fond of hunting, and who was always gettinginto some sort of mischief. - _ One day this chap took the small boat that lay moored at the .foot , of the walls of the fort, and crossed over to the Canadian shore for a hunt. He wandered over several miles in the rear of Fort George, but without meeting any game, and, on his return, seeing a crow on a tree within the enclosure of the aristocratic Englishman, he scaled the high fence, fired, and brought down his game. Colonel or whatever his title may have been, (we will mil him Colonel, anyhow,) witness ed the transaction, and advanced while our soldier was reloading. Bowes very angry; but seeing the Yankee standing very coolly willt a loaded gun in his hand, he gulped down his passion for a moment, and merely ' asked him if he killed the crow. The Yan kee replied that he did. "I am very sorry," said the Colonel, " for he was a pet. By the bye, that is a very pretty gun—will you be so kind as to let me look at it?" The sol dier complied with the request. The Eng lishman took the Sun, stepped back a few paces, took deliberate aim, then broke forth in a tirade of abuse, concluding with an order to stoop down and take a bite of the crow, or he would blow his brains out. The soldier explained, apologised, and entreated. It was of no use. There was shoot in the Englishman's eye —there was no help for it—and the stutter ing soldier stooped and took a bite of the crow, but swallow it he could not. Up came his breakfast—his dinner the day before, and it really appeared as if he would throw up his toe-nails. The Englishman gloated on the misery of lus victim, and smiled com placently at every additional heave. When lie MO got through vomiting, and had wiped his eyes, the Colonel handed him his gun, with the remark : "Now, you rascal, that will teach you how to poach on a gentle man's enclosure." The Yankee soldier took his gun, and the Colonel might have seen the devil in his eye if lie hail looked close.. Stepping back he took aim at the heart of his host, and or dered him instantly to finish the crow. Angry expostulations, prayets, and entreat ies were usele=s thing`. There was shoot in the American eve then. as there had been in the English eve before. There was no help at hand, and he took a bite of the crow (Me bite teas enough to send all the good dinners he had eaten lately on the satne journey with the ganisoa fare of the soldier. and while the Vnglishman was in the agony of sickness, Jonathan escaped to the Ameri eau Ilion.. The next morning, early, the command ,nt of Fort Niagara was sitting in his qua: t er ,,, w hen --- was announced. f:olonel -- —, come t de mand the punisionfalt of one of your men witted ix groat outrage." "We lrne•e three hundred wen here, and it ivoutil he ditro oil for me to know who it iy you ntean." the oftic,,r. 'Th. Englishman him as a ntutt..ring, -:09 , -.ltottlaerect at•r•ii. I itivrA ham you wean," be i 4 al . fcapt gettilW into Orderly. call In a few :no:11,11:i, roil) entere , l, und - , tot.i 3, !..traii...ht 113tural build would • vt Ira‘:o 4 ..1110ti01l 10119 on Iris ~.unt,ncincr. - "I oil," otlicer, Flo )ou know thi , v0,10.111:1% =MEE V(.11 o , eo Eiiut EK.,Lre7 avaplly. rritftining thy grave expre , ,inti naturia tu Lix f-ve. with him liedured by H) I. a 3fery likeletun.- Cured by lirrltair•s llollatiLl Bitters. MA. A. 7 , 1 Attli LTI, n trnafT, urot,ably nt wt.:l ko w,l 301 . 444 1,-.41 Wt..l( rti , fo:t. vrl / mut 1 , / Girmer In Art: •trchic e' ;:.:y. who /44. !I h,: t.tty tool.eritlg 1.;f3:1 runt tot°. him earns. rhumb* what It,, tilt at faullutt huh a hale aria tantrty 1-1/1/:.; t I 111 , f ft.htlf rl . I lt,t 11,4 Vor,A,NI 0..A11 per attund hF lt,tll4,c'n Iturtan.l flat+ rn, t., wtuta Io nttra naitgy ht , tt.rte.r.a./. - /1" Otreft/Z'l,. h./.1:17 IhAVV . N /1,0:31,1.1 11.T.C , :"3 iftFit up in l'Atf ;,th t Y.,t.1.1un unly, and int ponrst d^thAnti et.itti,rate.l nail otould /4.larcl ar , !toe UAW, !:t, .41 NO- . l' . V.V// .. ., . 1 a. A 0), 27 W4.....1,1.,:twe..n 3feu ',Advertisements ul , l-10E or T 111; 'I7 I .AII'A BF Ml'7l , Alt Si 11' ETY iNhblt t:.(l:('Ci. ) Yestember Al' A BO %ILI , Se. the bdioso rug 11,1,1/.1 , (/ WWI adopted no,:erd, That llu h>ekn unt±...rirra t, 1.4 opeurd for subsoil phous tit the tocressed ,-aptal stock of the Corte puny, m May.lti.s. is closid ou the tn: day of February, 1.0,, en wet after wl,si dote re, subscription. shall be received, and thui scr: 0 bt.ocd for daideti.hf profits declared poor to the year iiih.unle, can 61 too s ed to payment of subscrlru the a nt.rcriatel witstai to the manner as pi espied for in the resolution or the Board of Ihrretors, adopted Bute nth, SeLlw II EN ItY VI.BCHN. Secretary. Irala:tble Property l'or Sale #)r ElTlkange. • 20" LS, in Sompt.set t,ounty, adjoin ing the town of Bornerstd:is ill ht. disposed of by the undersigned cheap for tltt.ll. or 113 at...lmage for property adjacent. or inthoettyoflhttslatrgh. The fano In well Improved wort satusido 6uildioga and taro. aad is a destrable location for a stock or dairy farm lotion diate attention is desired Apply to cIAHTIi et lean cikalm do: oi, J. 1), 'Roddy. Bmnerget. BOOTS AND SHOES, WHOLESALE AND RETAIL, IN GREAT VARIETY JAMES ROBBY NO. 89 IVI.A.RIC.Pa" ST _ NOW offer-, to the public a largo and well Fel ueted stock of lu uaTs and SllO LS, at greatly re. ductal prices. blen'a, Boys' and Youths' Coarse Kip arid