- ; - , enik tome •fire-arms, I question it this t could occur in any part of undisturbed England. The visiter opened the door at which he had knocked, before Burnett had time to . raise the latch,— but Grace, as her trade - tutned to do eo, made time enough to whisper Michael, 'lf you'll be a good boy, sod not repeat what vexed uncle just now, for three days, I'll give you a rosy cheeked apple, and butter to the potatoes for a week.' Mick laughed with deligle, and Grace finished her speech juse-in time to say 'Kindly welcome,' illustrated by a pretty curtesy to the muffled up stranger, who was now standing in the widst of the apartment. He was a stout thick e 4et man, whose blue great-coat, strong brogues, and well-fitting beaver, told °f o lds belonging to the 'warmer' portion of the commonalty; his 'shillelah' was more earved than as it is usually seen in a countryman's hand, and when he politely removed his hat, his brown clustering hair ceded around a handsome, yet disagreeable countenance; at least, so Grace considered it;she thought of the simile in the mock aermon she had just read, of 'a leek being as bad as a pro cess;' and after dusting a chair with her a pron, and pushing it towards him, she wai'ed, expecting that he would speak in reply to the friendly greetings he had ale ready received. He stood, however, in• his old position, looking alternately at Bur "' nett, st Grace, and Michael, and then in- vestigating, with curious eye, every artic'e of furniture in the kitchen—the dell neatly art anged upon the dresser—the three deal chairs—the stools and 'bosses'—the nog, gins—the settle—the wheel, that most un usual !twee of furniture in an Irish cottage —a small work-table, anti a neat book shelf 'facing the dresser,'—all were care fully scrutinised, until, at last, Burnett be came annoyed at his visiter's rudeness, and, in lesongh tone, said, 'he hoped he liked all he saw, for he would he sure to know them again.' 'Ay,' replied the ma-•; 'like to he sure I do; every thing here, is to be liked; and ----' his eye glanced f nilliarly ,at Grace, 'loved,.for the matter of that; but —' 1* paused, and looked around again and a gain. 'lt's a wild nigh', and I'm thinking you'd better take an air of the fire,'said Burnett. 'Thank ye, so I will; it feels - eery rem fortable,' said the straneer, w tin ler the shadow of the wide diiinney, arid spreading out his hand: to the heat, which Grace had increased by the addition of some 'sods' of turf 'The boy, a natutal; the deg,' he con hued, talking aloud, a• d yet as if to hirrnelf; 'the deg; the pretty girl; every thing exactly as I saw it; it is very strange!' 'May I make se bould as to risk what is 00 strange?' cm-piled Burnett; 'Every thine; every thing here,' he re plied, tuinine his back to the fire, and a gain sot veying the apartment. 'Nothing out of the common, sir, barrine Grace's lie!e work tahle; a cienpliment from the carrenter.' ehscrved the simple- minded man, xt fide Grace blushed beatei fully at the illusion to het; (truth will out;) her loved.- 'Stranger and stranger still,' resumed the traveller; 'and that that young lady's name should be Grace!' 'Young lady!'- repeatetl Burnett; 'she's an honest man's daughter, and a good little girl, but no lady.' 'She's your niece, and that poor ft llow's ycur nepl ew, and that dog's name is Snap and your name is Conley Barnett, com— monly called Black Curney, ur B'ack Bate nett.' ~:• ~i.~~ ,~,. tit 0 41 4. . , . ...it.. ~ ~~~ :~~ r ; :~,.s ,~ ~.;~. _. 'Holy Mary defend us!' ejsculated Grace, crossing herself; even Mick opened his large brown eyes; while their uncle said, 'Why then it's Ituawn you must be among the neighbors, though you're strange to me, and your tongue's not of this country.' have waked seventeen miles since I entered a houe—l was never in this part of the world before; and I was born in for eignparts•rand yet I am as much at home here as if I had lived in the parish all my life. Evety stick of your furnhura I feel as.used to as if it had been my own. Black Burnett crossed himself as he turned to lenk round his col taga, flail Grace slid slily out of the kitchen into her little her fingers into' the chamber, and dipping vase of h , ly water that hung a t the head of , her humble bed, sprinklini ' herse,if with it; wetting her fingers again, so that cm her re torn to the kitchen she might convey a few drops to her brol her's person: livr uncle were a scapular so she considered him safe. 'Why, then, may I ask agam how you pined your information?' questioned Bur nett, as he seated himself opposite his mys tifying guest, who, on Grace's return, was seated also. 'lndeed you ina ,' he re ,lief; iand, what'' not alwaya the casa, I'll answer you; I dreamt Upon this there was a loud ex. clamation. Their visiter looked round anti smiled. 'Do not be ashamed of your reli gion, my good friends; I have been in many countries,and one religion's as g ood as anoth. er if it's acted up to; that.' my belief. Cross yomsellagain, my pretty maid, and you too, Master Burnett, and I will tell you how it was; but:" first let n,e ask, is there not a deep line of sand-pits near this, a little way off the road leading to the left?' 'There is!' replied the uncle and niece together. .-..`And, now mark me! is there not a very large elm tree a law pereheslarther on?' 'There is!' responded the same voices. 'And when you pass that, you descend a steep green valley?' 'You c', 'At the foot of the valey runs a bright clear stream, with a bridge over it?' 'There did run a.streani there,' said Bar. Dell; 'but Peter Pike turned it into his mil. dam, as I told him, contrary to nature and . act of parliament; so that now there's a bridge withnnt any water under it.' (To be Continued.) It - is said them is a good deaf of small poi in Boston. • t ~~-~- - - x j • JAlt E i.3.11:10111 ;iii A.N so4e i t 4o tliktileriS;(*Or)o4l Con talon. DAILY MORNING POST. Tl 9. PHILLIPS WM. U. s !TB, EUITORB aND PROPRIY.THRS MONDAY, FEURUARY 6, 1813 see Ftrst vage. U . 8. seniktok s• The election of Edward A. Hannegan, as Senator from Indiana • This it the twelfth Democratic Senator elected within a few weeks, and the thirtieth chosen, since last spring. In the same time there have been THREE Whigs elected. The account stands thus: New Hampshire Connecticut Vermont New York New Jersey Pennsylvania Ohio North Carolina South Carolina Alabama • Missouri Mississippi Arkansas I linois Indiana Maryland -will give.-us another, which will be gain the fjorth, arid will complete the number to be chosen, for the next Con• gress—beting the Tennessee Senator, Good,-131unister, the actor and author has joined the Washingtonians. We hope he will keep the pledge more fit brolly than hay.: some of the oilier members of his profession who signed it. The New Jersy Legislature have adop ted a resolution fixity* Ilext. Tuesday as thy' day of Adjournment. The applications for divorces are oven more than usually numerous at this session, hut only one or two have been granted, thus far, the Coun cil having determined to refuse all appli cations which might be made to the Chan-. cellor. A Governor in a bail fix,—The Gayer nor of Illinois has sent. another message to the legislatute; requesting its immediate action upon some plan to raise supplies from %%hid' to pay their own t-xpeuses. Having nothing hut auditor's warrants to pay, with, he is obliged to give more than double, the sp_cia price for articles for the public use. - It is said by wise calculat.rs, that six millions of dollars is thetotal annual amount of the cog of all the newspapers published in the united Sates. We more frequently seek counsel to Eear our Own opinions confirmed than In have our judgment directed.—Bost. Aril we may aid, that men read more with the view of confirming their fixed pinions, than of learning anything which they did not before know. How many persons are there. who will even burn books and papers, merely b cause they advocate doctrines & creeds in which they were no t taught. This detestable spirit of illiberal ity is a drawback to every etYrit of reform. If we would be truly intelligent we should hear all sides— read everything. .Itteinpt to fire the Miller Mbernacle,— The Boston Timrs says, "about 11 o'clock last everting some person attempted to fire the Millar tabernacle in Howard near Court street- A small flame tenement at tached to it was neatly destroytd, but the main building escaped without injuty." Shot Down East.—A few days since two deer were started from the woods and in their race came upon the ice in the Pe nobscot, and clambered upon one of the wharves in Bangor, where one of them was taken alive—the tit her escaped, Upwards of four millions of specie has been brought into New Orleans during the past few months. Nothing but the hard is to be found there now. What a change of times we would experience if our finan ciers would only graciously permit a small quantity of it to find a habitation and a home in this region. lt, with the aid of Brodie's Pills vi ould have a healing influ• A hog weighing seven hundred and sixty-one pounds when dressed, was slaughtered is Cincinnati, a few days ago, U. S. • Loan. —The U. S. six pet cent. loan has been taken by New York capital. lets. Cobra Passengers.—A bill has been passed by the Massachusetts Senate, pro vidiug that Railroad corporations shall not make any rule disc:iminating between the accommodations of passengers on account of color, and making it a penal offence in agents who exclude or assault persona on that account. - 166: Arftrrolo3ok curious at.' phia, ota.n ra4l‘. to houst'4 3 o'''... - 1;;fo re the New es. ' 'fie intersperses knflecettrestwit '.ll44lLectistature.:' , " The 40plication canie recitations, stiiries„: dialogues , &c . which I.ll:t!hys!)anwho charged his wife Ad' much iriCeresTto the entertainment. I witiiheing too familiar with a young man, playing cards and drinking switzel. At* , Let the documents were read, a letter was sent to the Chirk's table, which had just been receive from the wife. She said "she could not oppose the divorce, but the bill ought to be changed, so that she might be divorced from him. She was married to him when very yowl, and in about a year she found she had mistaken the man. He could afford her no pleasure, anti she sought it elaewhere—for pleasure and hap piness, are the aim of every one, and if there was any gallantry in the Legislature, she thought they would change the appli cation, and divorce her from her husband!" Democracy at Boston.—There is to be a grand Democratic festival at Faneuil Hall on next Thursday evening, the 9th inst,. in honor of the electi,m of Marcus Morton, as Gmernor of Massachusetts. Cool. Jones.—Washington papers say that the President has determined to recall Commodore Jones from the command of the Pacific squ idron. The gallant Com' inodures pugnacious conduct at Californi wi'l get him into trouble at home. dem. \Vhig 1 —0 1 - 0 0 1 1 0 0 1 1 0 1 0 dlecidents in St. Louis.— A. dray man named Mahar, while watering his-horse in the river, drove too far in, and he immedi ately sunk. Two men in a boat went to his ass . stance, and succeeded in h.riding the horse's head above the surface of the water, till they cut him loose from the dray, when he swam round the ferry boat and came on shore below. The dray was shortly afterwards taken out, but no trace of the driver could be found. A search was made during the day for the body, but without success. Al.mut sundown, some five persons commenced firing a small piece from a yawl, for the purpose of raising it, when the, powder pr , vided for the purpose was accidentally ignited, and injured all five. Two of the persons in the yawl were seriously scorchad. 1 (gain) 0 1 (gait.) 0 1 1 0 0 1 1 0 1 0 1 0 1 (gain) 0 Magi Travelling through the air by Steam.-1 It is said to be a fact that an invention for 1 navigating the air with the aid of steam is I about to be tested in London—lt is entire ly distinct from ballooning. A. W., Miles, a scientific gentlemen has given a desctip• lion of it in a letter to the Londan Atlas, Ir,•m which the following is an extract. "It is Feifectly true that such an inyen , ton is in existence, entirely distinct from ' ; , ballooning; that a working model his been shown me, which by its action, appears to 1 fistablish the pefect practicabiity of travel— ing through the air, being, so complete and simple in its construction, and the combi.. nation of is parts so extraordinary, that little doubt remains that the important re salts of the invetion will he fully achieved. 1 am given to understand that the nest car. carriage will be ready for operation early in the present ye:it; it, therefore, behoves individuals to iva,t. the develorment of this wonderful invention, when it may he_ comaan important subtect fur con— sideration, as to the changes that «i ll rrs'Ult to society, whether under the control of Government, or in the hands of a public company." The Pniladylphia Lodger stated that M jor Noah had been appointed Surveyor of the i pott of New Yolk, but the*: Y Union, a paper formerly edited by the Ma• jor, denies the statement, and says that no change oil made until after the next 4th of March. Departure of Mission ariex.—The, Justin Perkins anti Bishop Mar Yohannan are soon to returs to the country of the Nostoriana, and are to ho accompanied by Mr.' David Stoddard, of Northampton, Mass. Snakeish.—lt is said that on bEint , re • moved to Arica, ran. esnakes which sel. 3om exceed fiv: rect in length in this country, attain the en .rmous length of eighteen feet. A lump of gold weighing 83 lbs. has been discovered in the mines of Zlatoust, Russia. It has been deposited in the mi— ning museum at St. Petersbut gh. A State Conveniion of the \Villas of New Hampshire has been called, to meet at Concord on the second day of February, for the purpose of nominating a candidate for Governor, in place i,f Col. Cilley, who declines bei-g a candidate. Millerism is increasing at Philadelphia. They had a gathering there lately of about 4000. In the last eight years, 89 vessels have been wrecked on Lake Michigan; 118 lives wrecked, and property to the amount of $1,052,450 lost. S7ci g,hing.—Tbe snow at Prairie du Chien is five feet deep on a level. The Illinois Senate and House cannot agree on the State Bank Bill. Hon. R. Gardner, Member of the Leg. islature of Alabama, died on the 13th ult. John Neal is lecturing in Now York, on the Rights of Women. The debating societies have taken hold of the subject of pantaloon straps. It is creating a great excitement. The Quincy (111.) Herald is now pub lished semi-weekly, and goes it strong for Van Buren. We notice that many ofthe western Democratic papers are advocating the nomination of this distinguished States. MEM Latest from ilexeco.--New Orleans pa. pers of the 23d ult. have later news from Mexico by way of Havana. A new ver sion of the 11Iontercy affair is all we notice, which is of no interest. Business is very dull at Havana. Negro Shot.— A negro was caught in the act of entering a store; at the corner of Craps and Mandrille streets, New Orleans on the 23d ult. and shot by the proprietor. It is supposed that he was mortally woun ded. Fitly seven persons in ,Montgomery co., Ohio, can't get married because the fees are to•r high ! What a pity ! Forgery.—The New York Com.ner rial of yesterday says:—"Wall street was thrown into some ctriftision this morning by -the apprehension of a y iun!.7, man wh o had presented a forged check at the Bank of New York fur 8500. The case is now tinder examination at the police office. The check was not paid—the forgery be ing discovered by the teller nn its presen , ration f r payment. We have the name of the young man; but withhold it until the present legal investigation is closed." Naval Court p )rtion only of the (Fleets, ordered to eroistitute the Court Martial on hoard the North Caroli na, ftr the trial of Cult mander Mackenzie, appeared on board yesterday— Co Downes and Captains Slow, Smith, Storer, nud NN yman not appearing. These ffi cerm are all stationed either at Boston o r a t Portsmouth, Ne - tv liainpshite, and have undoubtedly been detained by the slot in, %% pr v nted the arrival of the Eastern in:dl, due yes•erd is 0 orning. A f.cr tirvil 1 o'clock, Coinino• dor,. Read anti, naced, that, as the President and the other officers na r ed ab ive had not arrived, the Uottit wiittl,l stand tnljotirlie.i tintil 10 o'cli4-1: this in:'rning,—.V. February 2fl, From Florida.—By ihe ar:ival last ev ening of the St( 'am packet St Matth"ws CaptMcNelty, we are i, possessor of tin., Jacksonville Tropical Plant, of %Vednes, day last. The following are extracts: We ate happy to announce to all, both far and near, that the small pox has entire ly diAappcared from this town and vicinity, and we hope eternally. A party of set lers, (rom Glenn county, Georgia, passed through this town yester day, on their way to the Nut-li-ga. The Indians who escaped from post No. 4, as yet have not rctuined,nor troops who who went in search of - them.-- Sac Repub., Jan. 27. do Editor Robbed! —'['he Editor of the the St. Louis Ledger has been robbed of 180 dollars in specie We regret that he constrained to state that "tl.is blow has a stunning effect upon our prospects.' The amount stolen had been carefully treasured up to meet our enganements due upon the estab i±,metr, and of er thus working fre. quendy eighteen hours Out of the twenty t'our, to establi,h our paper, it is a hard af fair la be robbed of our industry by a thi , .!l. Since we started this establishment, we have not enj , yed au hour's recreation; day and night, Sunday and Saturday, has been one unceasing, round of toil, cheerful toil, on our part, in the hope th tt we might firmly establish the Ledger, and secure to our selves permanent employment and a liber al remuneration for our toil—and just as our paper is winding its circulation, aed becoming generally known, we are thus thrown back in our prospects. We are it is true, somewhat retarded, but not disbar led. TREA'URY NOTES OUTSTANDING, FEB 1, 1843. A nt , ntit ottis anding of the . is pt ior to the act of 31-t Janu:try, 1342, 33,757,612 33 Deduct cancelled notes in the hands of I heaccouuting cf. firers, 34.731 63 A moun t ismed under the act of 31st January, 134., 7,959,994 83 Deduct arrent radeeined recorded in Il ia hooka of Ibis office, 52,855,994 55 And ihe ant's In the hands of acruount ing officers, 114,894 35 3,970,888 90 Amount Issue! uuder the act of 31st August, 1342, 3,025,554 89 Ded'ct red'ioed 4- recorded in this office, 3 000 00 And in the hands of ac• counting of ficers, 3,164, 33 TRRUCRY Dursasusirr, Register's Office, February 1,1843. • 'P. L. SMITH. Resister of the Treasury of the United States A god ►.ured frienda o u rs,-ffh o WO; a ri t ifioiliiiiveold of a %rife, with dodbie edged wad of a tongue, apph - ed tis the other day, with tears is his eyes, cif know if she- eouldu't be prosecuted and punished, apiler the law against carrying concealed weapons.—Pic. More rascality.—Great frauds have just been discoverel in the Canadian custom houses. It is a , serted that three quarters of the revenue has never reached the gov ernment. Ono collector returned less re venue for one quarter than was known to have been received to a single importation within the kti.iwledge of the inspector. Temperance in Swedert.—lt is stated in a letter, by a Frankfort j•iurnal; from den, that all the brandy distilleries in that country have been abolislisd; anti that a law has been passed ordering that the names ()fall pet sons wh r get intoxicated shall be posted on the door of the parish church, and that the clergyme,ti *hall put up prayers for their reformation. We have not befo.e noticed the scandas lons articles which have recently appeared in the Paris paper against !latiame Stoltz. the celebrated Caracarice of the French Opera. She has been persecuted beyond endurance, scandal declaring that she was the chree amie of Motsieur le Director. At length the fair artist snualit the protec of the law, and brought an action for libel against M. .Champein, 1 ite editor of the Melomanie, and now e li:or of the Musi,cien, fur a series of articles, published in the for mer journ 11, under the tit'e of Memaires inelitts de Fug,antini and (o some verses addressed a lafavorile. Theuse came on be'ore the Tribunal of Correctiona! Police. Champein applied for a postpone cent of the hearing, on the ground that the advocate to ' to whom ha had applied to defend him. had declined undertaking the cause, bu.l (lid not make known his resolut lot: until it was too late for M. Champein t give insttuctions to another counsel. The court refused to grant the required delay, and therefore' M. Champein suffered judgement to go by *de f a ult; and was condemned to he impriSiba ed for twelve months, to pay a fine of two liiiimsqou frinc., and da naies to lladame Stoltz, to the amount of six thousand francs• The Court further ordered Ilta! the judJe meat s hould be inqert e d in the rllasicies, and in three other juurnels:to he chosen by Madame Stoltz. Was 0113 of Virginia's nob'est sons. A purr r hearted Mlll never lived, and , tie min I was as clear as his heart was pure. Virginia loved him, and she will ever rher isle his memory. If there be an O'n'o D eriver it, n ow my reader who is igno rant Tit' the honor due to his name, and of the hi 2.11 rßuk which _ he held among the fAners of American 12mocracy, let the inf ,rrn him that John Taylor was a bosom. friend of Thomas Jefferson, and that prop ab'y no man lived in Jefferson's time, with whom he.more cordially or more perfectly agree I la political sentiormt. About thirty ye;trs rg , r, this great man and lm Fe Democrat entered into an elabo rate investigation or the met its (or rather of the demerits) 'tithe paper money cred it systHm. Among the conclusions to which h e was broAght. by that ineetstig,a— -[ tirm. and whilt he published to the world, I were these doctrines: That the papPr sys . tem of this country is 'a system of public plunder.' That. 'hope who become the creditors of the public by the i.4sue of paper credit, 'subsist upon the nutional That :he paper contrivance; sanctioned by law, are 'the syren notes of weahh and cunnng, designed to fascinate labor while its fruits ate devoured.' That 'paper credit is insensible of the. least Jegree of fellow feeling for labor,' and that pre+sperhy, is adversity to the mass of the people. That Banking systems are indissolubly connected with every commercial and po litical question, by an interest generally at enmity ‘vith the public good' That a privileged paper money is 'a d e adly fo e to republicanism,' laboring in 'the fields rf hypocrisy and deception, and making goveri:ment a credit shop for dis— pensinlY, unequal we Such was the sroug and unequivocal testimony which din Taylor, of Carn'ine. bore against our present panking system, nearly thirty yews :go. Ido not stop to comment; but if the candilreade'r will con' cider for himself how amply this teitimn‘ ny has been confirmed in every particular, by the subsequent sad experience of the country, he will ado it that I have present ed an honest-, a sagacious, and truthful witness.— Ohio Statesman. Indiana —We eopy the following striking itc. cnunt of the past an l present c.)ndition of thk . ingß in Indiana, from the Ohio Statesmar: ”We I rev. Fed s , iine years ago, in the Rummer, WC think, of 1834, dinonelly, from southeast to northwest, through the state of Indiana, on hoise• hack, taking our time lei:qtrely. A great portion of it is the richest end most hcaut4 - ul country we ever witneescd.... A ha r iy and it dustrions popu'a tion wa. pouring in from every road, and making the wilderness to blossom as a rose, A happy and pmsecrons people met eon at every turn, and every one boasted of his rich po-riessions, and of the great prospect ahead to the seller. At 4hat time there acne not a bank in the slate, except. p-rhaps, n small affair of doubtful ere it, 81rna , where on the Ohio river. -$3,722,831 20 "Rot the plundering fund•mringera cut - 0d not let her ci , izens rest in their peaceful abodes—they were good plucking and the last feather must be had. A (+real state bank e•aa recommended and eQtablish: d, "safe to thelbill:holder and profii.. able to the banker." It was the model system and specul it in:r, and credit; and fund...mongering followed rapidly in its rear. State debts acru ou 7 Inted with monstrous strides, and the plunderers rode in full triumph in the cdrrupfion they pro duced. The state is now, in a few short year.i, dishonored, bankrupt, and without hope of paying her debts. The people are groaning under bur dens an I•misfottunes in horrible contrast with theirformer happy e mdition. The State Bank.the fountain of their troubles, the great betas , . ni wick edness, is floundering in the -ruin it has created." 4,989,105 93 6.164 33 3,019,390 56 $11,73/.3:17 69 . -r "" ~. . Scandal of thr... French Press. John Tay ofCacoline, From the Van Buren (Ark ) Death of Tom Merrit. This scoundrel and hardened desperado .4 is at last gone to the devil, his own place,-ee,„, Thuiliartielitao;ei we fra've heatedaauttri)i. g ood antbiaiity, are as fullnws:: I Young Mclntosb...a.bule.Cherulutea44+a!a had been strolling over the western. ries, and out of personal curiositq.. Wit there alone to the council on the Brasaciii. which the Texans held with the wild Indi ans, and seeing a I he wished, was on 'We homeward route, when near Ed wzrthe a who lived far up on fittule mules from Fort Gihson, he met t vo mep, who with levelled rifles ordered him to dismount. Doing so, they robbed him of his mule, his powder, bail and provisions, and giving him his gun - with the load there in; told him to march, sr•ying he was ito Indian if he twilit not snap() t I.imself with one load. • They then left him and wilt on ten miles, and camped. llclntoahaiio2- ged them to the place, and Coming upinotid one of them at the fire; the other had gone 'town the blanch for the purpose of hoots ing. Surveying his ground, he got behind a log as a screen, and 'slipping' softly. tip , to attain it without discovery. From themes., he - et - mid - =ly see the man's - head; and the set ulte eurlinai above from Ilia pipe. Draw ' ing bead he fired, and the ball took effect iii the robber's head under the left ear, ,pats sing out. at his right eye. Melntnah-ran then i noediately up and exaniined. . lfie man's gun, which he found loaded; hearing him mutter, he drew' the man's own knife from its sheath, arid g ive him two hesity thrusts, which soon put a fierimi toltie mot terin Mutint then got his awri-P4w eer and balls, reaesded his gun. tookehis mule, and the robber's, his pocket ko6k, in which ho found a $1.03 counterfeit and Ins knives, and started on. • a Wh:ut Mclntosh came to &icy:trite he was asked whether he had met two men, and answered he had; Edwards remarked it was a wonder they haul not maltreated or killed him. :Mclntosh replied ..11e.ba.,4- killed one of them, and related how they haul treated him, and he had revenged-Um. self, &c., showing the things he had taken. there 'Mclntaish firstrleatned Who WiereAhe robbers, and drat he had.killed toln toter ritt; for the gnn, mule, and some leggings which Tom wore, Edwards had given ti Niertitt in ex - change for 'Mark Atftitil*,' the fine horse they lately took from ThNgs anum; and Edwards knowing the .mWe, gun and leggings, was enabled i dentify the man whom Mclntosh-had thus speedily killed: Ed wards insinuated to the young 4(3- okee, in a way he did not like, that hairbe (Mclntosh) killed. one of his uhrolltrial - Ilie would fallow him to the devil but,be would kill him. Nrclro , )Qll I eft Ed wards and proeceled no his way. After: coin°. semels nr 20 miles, in passiee amiss a .prairie, 110eraced hark (as he had done frequent ly from awl• picion) and perceived a taae fn railiOnr• suit of him —so pnosed to be Jess :Ik;ijit. I Soino w reds skired prairie...to the tight into which Merritt turned, and going aryne way paused, dismounted, and starte&tria - a ravine with the inn:talon r f rhe lin e ' Me: Intosh, which the latter discovering he dismounted and endeavored to intefrept Merritt's louse, which was a fine blek one; this . rh:inged Merritt' s course; andl he started hack, and when at the d stance. of 30 yards fro:n his horse he fired, thelall pasi , ing close b- fore Melntosh's face; as Merritt was in the act of mounting, :Mcln tosh, at the distance of two hundred yares, returned fire—and the horse bttunding l i and his rider being linable to gain his place for same yards. :Mclntosh believes he vv'ound• ed consummation devoitilyto be desired. Nlclntosh caret home and surrendered himself to his agent, bef ire whom these fists were deposed, giving up:all the pro• party he had taken fr , m Merritt,as he Said lie had 110 wish for it. At Fort. Gilmien he learned that there was a reward offered for the Merrias, and he returned imMOdis ately to the place where he had killed' Tom Merritt, and is new probably in that reeve. in rinse pursuit of his brattier villain. Al' good citizens pray his success, for so villa' nous and desperate a man as: 1044 -1 1 4 e ritt should receive all rigor, and death.- The action throughout shOwed grearbri very and determinationawr the part Intosh, and lie ought to he . accounted brave.' The Somers .Iffair.—lt appears jj well understood, now, that the G'ette Naval Court Martial to be held for the , t al of C r nmander Alavkenzie, will ,pppy i p m board the , Nuril) Cantlioa on Wi4l4 clay next, the ht. ~I February. The Cot will be e,) , np"eed of the following min- ber3: President—C .irninndore D3tvnes, Uot mudore Read; Captains W. C•miptorißt, tom Dan. Turner; Charhs W. Skinne ; Isaac McKeever; J•din H. Antic; Delany; John Gwynn; and Thomas. N °- Wyman; Commanders Henry W. Ogden, Irvine Shutarick.and Wil:iam W. McKean. Judga Advocate, Samuel Rusb, of Pk*. - 4 -6)mmander Mackenz - e, who on Frida'y rece ived the order for his arrest, will Jpo triad upon three charges—the fio3t, nark der, the second cruelty and oppression. What the third is, we have not heard. We learn that an application has /mkt' made to Silvanus Rarelje, United States Corn rnissioner,for a wart ant to arrest A'l4a ander Slidell :Mackenzie and Guest Gan* sevorirt, upon atii.lavits charging - diva with putting to death Samuel E. --, !.etk.. well, by hanging ltiin to the yard-arm of the United States brig Somers, on the - high seas, and,thst the application M S ref ,91 Nv on the ground that the charges ere,ap: 8 time the application was under 'ex pa: tion, end undetermined in a legal - tribmal a , created by Coortresq for the 'toirefiffritifft. of the navy.- -N. Y. Sun. , •