..;ofrat Zinzechecoif—Oae of the most Otinguished Admirals in the Russian Na• t:y is Count Zinzeehoff, who is a native of iieredith, N H and whose real name is Thomas F Williams. According to an account published of him in the New Hampshire papers, it seems that he went to *ea before th• mast, mailing between Beaton and St. Petersburg. At the latter plasm he was left sick, and on his recov,... ry teetered the Russian merchant service. The vestal in which be sailed was atm:lc ed by pirates, bnt the bravery of young Williams saved the ship. He killed the elitist's and mate of the ilirat• with Hs own bands, carried the Russian vessel into pert, was then introueed to the Emperor, itbaimmediately made him a midshipman is the Imperial Navy; and from rank ti teak; by sea and land, he has grown great er,- sod risen higher and higher, until he has 'become a Cout.t with a hard name, and Lord High Admiral of all the Coe lho!. Males, Females, Total. White, 227,144 191,147, 418.291 Wee Cord, 75,703 77.125 152,238 Blires, 281,260 • 155,245 436.495 The writer thinks that the slave popula tiotkis underrated 200,000, and the free logored people 50,000. The revenue of taxes collected from these 600,000 free -people (far in such a calculation we must or course throw ant the shres) is in round numbers $12.000,000 [Pr or S2O pinhead for every min, woii an dud child! rather a rich country t:I bear i 4. with, Out a murmur or sizn .n. If F Sun. 7 AIi MUM Olt! in Havana.—We coot,• Cie following from a letter in the. N O. Pic .y uae, dated at Havana 13;ii day we had a glorious hu , l never have been Seen in the [lava la PI a sorb bulls. Tear glorious fellows f II in the but before the >fatal thrust %i II did they Rive battle, and four dead f badly gored, and a picador -rug hei l.ut wren the palings and a dyin : z s badly that it is dou6tful if he wi I re , over, attest how well the indomitable ai,i na s fiugi t. To day every mouth is lou,l hi their praise. We have had three eaecuti, a within the past fortnight, and an cgo,i' number of azotadas, or whipped. These punish, meets were all withi n one montn after the comerittal of the offences.' : Curet. the Piles.—Mix flint table spuon fol . of our of sulphur with half a pint of milk, to be taken the last thing every d , y, until favotable symptoms appeal, and then occasionally as the case may req lire.— The above is a cheap, a simple, but most infallible cure fn. that most painful and no pheasant disorder, It has .een used aith success in o'd and i,ivetrate cases, where individuals had spent scores of dellais in medical advice. It is eva ly us, ful as a Fgeventive. It will injoru none, and only *quires a trial . reland Herald, 'A agility of Air awl ►enter Bode ..,Among the various devices to %%bleb modern applications of cauutchouc have given use, none are more siugulir than those in which fluids are, by fr.., rmirtn.., need as substitutes for hair, feather, flock, dais: for stuffing mattresses, pi lows, sold other articles of upholsterin,r. We know not whether this vegetable au'aqa ce was known to the ancients, but air and water beds certainly were, as appears from the fidlovving extracts fisoin Ewbarflt's Hy— draulics and Mechanics: Air beds are not, as - sowe persons sup pose, of modern origin. They were khawn between three and foor d fears ago, as appears from copies of a fig ure attached tothe first German tratislai ion of Vegetius, A. 11, 1511. It represents soldiers rep , sing on them in time of war, by inflating them by bellows. • This application of air was prubably 'mown to the Romans Heliogabalus used to amuse himself with the guests he invited to his banquets, by seating them on large bags or beds, full of wEnil, which tieing made suddenly to collap.e,threw the g,..esta on the ground. !Dr Arnott, the author of 'Elements of Physics,' a few years ago, proposed Hy &nature beds,' especially fir invalids. These are capacious bags, formed of India ro'hberr cloth, and filled with water instead of feathers, hair, ,kc• Upon 0:le of these, a soft and thin mauress is laid, and then the- ordinlry coverings. A person fl cats Ott these beds as on water al we, for the liquid in the. bag ad pts itself to the wt eycnautl'ace of the body, and supports every part reposing on it, with a uniform presents. Water beds were, however, Icnown to the ancients, for Plutarch (in his life of Alexander) states that that the pe ple in the province of Bahylon pt i,he t motithe,gon fi leo with wate r.' 415 111b LATER FROM YUct - rsv.—The Not• Orleaus Bulletin of the 2001 intt. says:— Captain Wright, of the schooner Itenmaik. arrived in port yesterday from Sisal, h l v.. le g l e ft Merida on the Etih inst. Up to the latest dates Gen. Ampudia h ul n .t abandoned the siege of Cam peachy, alibi,' tbe . Mexican soldiers were deserting daily its increased numbers. The Commission• bra had left Yucatan for Mexico to agree on a basis for a treaty of peace, hat the wets proposed were not knovvn. Business On the coast was dull. Coin. Moore was in Carapeaeliy. and the Captain informed us it was the general opinion tl at he was blockaded there by the Mexican squadron. :Rived in St. Louis.—The Standard ease three large and enthusiastic Repeal meetings were held in that city during th hot week, at which $985 were contributed for the stares in Ireland "who would be free." .took his Alan. —A young man named Swatford was recently arrested in London, .elititipsd with a must violent attexpt on hiholin, a surgeon, when) he mis. anwhfok.iiir Gregory, proprietor of are Sa• Stripes fo which paper ha had been :repeat. hany ['helot piteautiplir. JAMES BIT CIRA Nji - N in lhr d1•Ci\1o11 of a Ststilannfem,orrition. DULY IoitiNTING PJST. 111.11P6 VVII. 11. SPIITII,IMITORk. &Pm Prot-' 11[71 S FUE 7: DIY.JIJI,I" 4, 1813 ipe Plige “Support. Home ludunlry.” This is a favorite theory with many of our citizens who are in the habit of viola ting it whenever pride or luxury prompt them to an extra decoration of their per eons or embellishment of their households. There is not a city in the Union in which more skilful mechanics and workmen can be found than in Pittsburgh. Our Cahinet makers, Chair makers, Tailors, Boot Ma— kers, &c., cannot be ex , !elled in the neat. ri:!sr and excellence of their manufactures. We would ad viso those who doubt, to call in any of the principal establishments of the city, and if their prejudices against,"home industry" are rout too deep'y rooted to be shaken by facts, wo fi el contiti , nt that they must admit thill ,, , astern minufrc. tures eau xct I ,disc uir dr u by Pius, I.ui ;No kui n. A! ove all pieces in the United States Pittsbut h is nmed a`)road for the skid, indu=ity and eats: prise of its citiz.n4, and if we appre. - iat. d our own in itistry as justly as str to =er= d nothing c•tuld our ptospetiiy. Bet althoogh we are z al nui s a tirilT. as u na i rial mat ter, there:are among ititti:ose wit.) look with scorn on the industry of our mechanics, awl who send-their orders io eastern cities, fir the most trifling articles :of furniture or Nl*Prof the warm advocates of a high tariff foi.:the purpose of protecing domes' ti,- industry, have their splendid m insions furnished from the workshops of Philadel phia, New York and 80...tni, while at the sa tie time the Cahinot wire r rn trts of ti or oxti city are crowded with hlme manufac lured articles that world Ornametit a pal ace. These same urea will talk to you eloquently of the necessity of protection, %slide they furnish a practical condetnni. ti rn of their atg.iments be displaying their legattt persons peeked 1 ” a•lits of for eign hroadchoh, fashioned into garments by eastern arii , •s, while the workmen of their own ri y, who•e skill and to atness would please the last fleas of a 1) . 0r• say, are neglected and roniemnt d. Ttti4 is a roost reprehensible state of thing, and any wan velo ;iv a it otmtr. nance is a foe to the interes's aril welfare of our It is the i 1 rstr y of our rne cLanics that has ma le Pilsburch w', it she it is their skiH that has spieAd !er f,ine as the f , remost mannfacuiting HI in the and it is tilt , fruit of their toil that has built up the f oh' !es of our capi. talists. It Is wrong, thou. t,) disparage th,•ir worth, or to lavis'l on VI atigecs the pitrotrige that they hal , . a ti2lif I'l eVf'r V 1.) I i n . In kV 1 . 1i.111d11.,01:11 lie't are ti it •o r.i4 ,, ilulfln IS thi)-s, p'itie in ()Li then i y sh.) , Jl I stra igers be preferred ti) \Ve hope that our ci . izewi .1,111 parries will diaeountenan , e thi4 sy-tern (if patron izinE for,ign manufacti rers; by em domititic thiy will iiitroibic , a ( II r i t !iim'ry more hrn fi •i al that all the tariff laws that call be pissed I y Coligre•ss will etre( t. Light .11vad for Ireland. —As tn word of encouraaernent I , r Ire'a id, the Phila delphia Mercury sous that it appears that the secret societies of C Ina 1-t are prep ring th- province, for another outbreak, The Spanish and Frenolt societies are busily engaged in the ea ne object. A few years will see England engaged on all sides with her rialst bitter enemies. Let the Repea! a•rita'ion, therefore, bi peaceful; the tiar to 'mike a blow rn ty soon be at hanc:.— confesi, ourselves, that we dr) not hew live m revoilut , ins entirely achieved hr per., , ua 4/W); b it before an appeal to anon. people ought to ponder on the coneequert es. NEWSPAPER CHANGE. —Mr M. 3.1. Grant has porch teed Mr Coston's share of the Gaz-Itte establishment, and the paper will hereafter be published by ilessrs White and Grant. The editors sac, that th- p iper will oe condacted on the same princip . es which hive heretofore charac eriz l it. .Pri it it will be an Anti it.id Abolition pilot. We pie some the new proprietor, Who is an out, antl.oot Abolitionist, will endeavor to in fuse a little moro of his own peculiar faith into the paper if possible. The transition from the Antimasonic to the Abolition party seems so easy, that we wond e r why they do not blend entirely. Mr Grant left the Antiinasons to join the Abolitionists, who put him on their ticket fir Commission e r. He now, notwithsiandi•rg, his eff)rts ti) de• feat the Autimasons last year,is a conduc tor of the organ of that party. An attempt was made on Monday week, to murder the keerer of the Sing Sing pd. son. While going his accustomed rounds he was attacked by a convict and severely beaten... Assistance came just io time to savw hit life. Crops in the ff*4—ThWeditor of - Atte GrittY Tertock!—.4 xebec was vialtetl Buffalo Gazette lasi" inc.!) letters from... No r. on ult. with it tremendous storno,l them Illinois, Wieconsin and Michigan.— which proved greatly destructive to prop. They all represent the wheat in the arty in the adjacent parishes. At Charles :4round as coming on finely, and present- bourg four bat ns were blowu d iwn; at St. ing the apptatanc, of a larger average crop Ambrose four of five barns, and some in than has ever been realized hef ere. Io :jury done to the church; at Indian Lorene Wisconsin, it is estimated that nearly dou- crie house; at Aucienne Loretta nineteen ble the quantity will be produced this barns; at St. Augustin fourteen barns, one year that was last. More ground has house, an I three oxen, belonging to one been sown than heretofore, but considera- Cute, were fund killed in the field. At ble quantities will be required fur con- Ste. Foy the barn of Mr Michael Antoine sumption by the n e w comers—the large Routier was struck by lightning and set on number of emigrants who have gone thith- fire, but it was put out by the heavy rain er this season. Therefore, the increased Trees innumerable have been broken surplus for export will not be as large as down or rooted up. The whole number the increased production. The same is of buildings destroye lis between for: y ; the case, to same extent with northern 11. and fifty. The heat was excessive. In a linnis. But from Michipn we may ex- short time the thermometer fell from be pect to rec3ive much more than we hare tween eighty and ninety degre-s to between fifty and sixty. The wind is still North this year. East, and temperature sixty-six, .d Pleasing Incident. —The fo'lowing incident is related by the Quincy &Irina, the e liter of which was present at the Bunker !fill Ce!ebration. While the pro cession was desc•sndin; Bunker Hill, on ita return, one of the carriages which con• veyed the Revolutionary Heroes, was ac cidentally dr:Yen against the next prece• iii ig, with ao much v'olence at to break the p de to which the horsea were attach. ed. A party of hystandets in a moment yped the hors •s, unharnessed them, and forming a team of themselves, bore the ctriia2,e aline in triumph, am the deaf. ening In nits of the adini , ing multitude.— The aged I. 3 atr,ots tete . / fled their gratißea tion for the hoe , r of bring drawn by hu. n,an hAnds, by waving their hats and handkerchiefs, and giving utterance to tha most exclam itions. Learn to Swim.—The N. Y. Aurora advises every boy to learn to swirl. A gree t number of lives are pearly lust IP- want this art, which can be acrioirel by a few h .urs pt actice. Begin right, and re (litres but little exertion to become a bold and b-autiful swimmer. When you get jolt, the water, don't puff and throw your arms about like a fii4hten , tl baby, but glide trustingly itt , draw your breath long and easy, as if )ou were on shore, and throw your arms and legs, with a slow and steady motion. The frog is the best teacher, there is nothing m ire gi ireful in the water; and the closer you imitate it. time titter swirnm°r you will be. So great wis the crowd of poldiers in G 'sten at the Boriker Hi.l c..lebruti.m, that many found thernt Ire 4 wit'tiotr a rn.ati.el „rr,.,i to a tentin g I rLecc. T.lp EJOVVVII Cit rilinfi have pat their c imp di it in prin . . They shed t'rtt ri r. frr•S M were provitie I lar thorn, au I that they wrru not 1) - rrirtied t , ) myrrh W Chln fight n. lily“aluirp. to which t i .ey carne to wm _Cl:tt riot a tree, a abed, it tent. a ibr ase it wag o).)wri o r o which th,y tni4ht text thern-elvod. Tley had Hot even a 'hay which then einoedtor4 hid rested Crtrn th"ir labor on that ,let y .are bet",re. M trs presenis a singu larly splendid adpearance to the South eioit, early in the everlin 4 . It may be known by its brilliancy and Ly its fiery color. It is neater th.i earth now than it has been for many years, and many years will elapse hefor it will comb 81 near to us again—says the Bocon Mercantile Journai. Death of a Cods.—A liv wie was pre sented to the New Orleans Tropic a few days since, which Waved around the edit ors' room for some time in great glee, but it soon overheard the uses to which it w.is devoted when the elPTtion came on, and died throu2h mortification and shame, Were we to publish all the rii nors afl int in relation to Cabinet Changes, Se. we would have a precious small porti in of the paper to devote to news, &'. We wll say noth ing about the 'inovementa at Washington,' until we I.a•e it officially. PO'The two democratic papers in St. Louis are into each nth• r hard. The prin ciples of the patty, and the par y itself will gain but little by such squabbles. Sore Mouth.—Take honey and white b irax, eq•t:{l parts, mix well together, and with a linen rag tied on the end of a stick rub the moudi three or four times a day. James C 4 13irney declines being a candi- date for the Presidency on the Abolitiim ticket. His private businesg, we presume, would prevent him from attending co the duties of the i thee ! Frank Johnson is now at Saratoga with h s hand. C7•Graves' precise defalcation is said by the Mississippian to be $44,000. Tammany Hal! is to have another story added to it. The Democrats mast be looking ul. The manor that Biddle was insects mires out to be incorrect. Proceedings of a day.--A Dover (N H.) paper says there is a mai residing with in the limits of that town, wh has had more events happen to him in one dry than is co nmon. lie started from ho ne sober at three o'elock—got drunk before nine o'- clock —got a fl iggin4 b€fure ten o'clock pulled down a tent before &even o'clock— got into a lock u,) before twelve 'a'clock— paid seven dollars for since, an I was re leased before 1. o'cl'ek. Got drunk before two o'clock—fell and injured his leg, and was crried home before three o'clock— and took n ()al before nine o'cliwk that he would never drink any more liquor, and has kept hi.; word. Hs says that no man has gre r real 'la than he has to hate rum, or thank God fur having a lame leg. editor of an 0:lio paper askes the editor of the Gazette for partic— ulars in the life of p ror Eat. the Trage- di4n, whit the Ohio in thinks was an early aequannance of his, What a question is this to he put to Deacon Whit• ! He knows niithing about theatre people, and views them nith a degree horror only exceeded by his horror of masonry. y , to judge from the to k of the Deacon, he would as soon go int ) a man mitt lodge at once, as into a theatre. The al)olitionists in a Convolaion at New Bedlord, Nlabs. a few days since were very neat having a row. S , ,rne of the li'"erty men were f'or taking to o much liberty auti the others di:l not like it. The areawych ,, lltr. are Iwo; ruuni.kg regular ly bct *ern CltieJgo an I :11 , ,ntre.,1. Tuey use their pwp. iL ra Iu going turougll 11't1 and ca ThICC large hill! , 3 %% re .1 , :r1 putla al Lo,l Int!i Ft vc p. ople are aware of he ca!uo of anyiiiilig they p. t`. tHe tt :s p ftsion.— ns't ad of nj , ) . the Li. ssino ut the preseul hoar, stn.'s 6,11.. w Borate pita. tow, wit e'h y thc,i s Uleir pir twit. l he annul evp she.rii._ at N•in'uckol, t-+ ccm.nedced ou .1i I,y last. ‘Varrn ork, we r say, at pr.,eat thom, under ul he G Hunt r ;knock, Yuri., has commenced 1 t ,[[r [l.r 11,11 We B.ker C ,, unlnea o' that State. 11,s hr-t p Aa. ac.th Alt. Vain Buren. Col J. W. B uck 11. as .•ina•Lte the bas:nr!,.s the Exe cutt,c Department dur.rig 'ln, Guvern.r's abset. :e. The Trutnont Boston, now a church, or in the intermediate stage he:ween a church and theatre. waa re...opened ou Al ,, ndiy evening,•vlren a lecture on Ronan pltrintisin was delivcr.ed by Eliho Borint, %5 , . handled Lir.; subjeot in a 4:nas ter!) , manner. 'roe at endanen waa particularly •hin, AI - sgr nlmed jt .opm-, who recently robbed he counting house ne ss A Lambeth k, 'Chomp ;n New Orleans. %%OA arrested in that city on ths 200, inst , and $.2000 of the stolen money re covered. It is thou2ht that others, impl.cuted in the utfltr, ‘N ill be secured. A newspaper is now ptitilt.hed- in Jerusalem in language:, German, English, and Hebrew. It is s,,id t ha under th. suoe:intendant.e of Dr. Alexander, the new Protestant Bishop. A mail named White frill lean a second story VIIII.IOW oi a house in Anthonv street, N. Y, on to the piverrent, and died from ti.e injuries recei— Among tire paie.rs of CI. iron Burr, lately found at l - lartforil,is one in %% filch he says—Spe,• cid pleading defies ( - Tinily common sense sue co nin in languigo. Tde j argon of thi4 science (as it is ti.r.ned) is the slang of the highwaymen, iii vented for similar purposes—intelligible only to do of ihe prof,rsion.' A North Carolina paper gives the following pies. tole of the times in Pearson cu in that Statet— , At a ri le, a few days since, under a valid deed of trust, sheep went oti at 5 eta a head, ha t e at 10 cents—negroes and other property in pro f ortiun. A likely negro hoy bringing but $100! Q 7 FROM CAPE lIAYTtEN By a slip from the Philadelphia Sun office, we learn the arrival there on We lnesday afternoon of the Schooner Orralloo, Ca ; tain Lufkin. in S day sfr m Cape Haytien. The Island continues still in an unsettled state. There rumors of difficulties at Port au Prince, in consequence of a difference of opinion. existing among a number of the government rulers. American produce was generally low. There had been no sales of flour,owing to the wreck of a Span i,h brig, with a full cargo, saved in a dam aged state, and which had supplied the market. The Orralloo had a cargo of coffee, log wood, &c., w ith 82000 in specie Left schooner Cut lew, Robinson, from - and fur N. York. wailing cargo. The brig Eaglerfrom Norfolk, was expected-to sail from Boston. in slew days. Messrs; twlitorsi-4n my siii4munittkOoli.of the Forth 21th ult., T had mother object vicar", ;than that of truth, and stated in the plaine,t larigdatek that I did not use the toa-t court mane • vice nor immorality: nut* th.stantimg•N4gi,b ut ' has insin uated .hat my sticements were dishonest and false I and tied a tendency to give erientkragement to those evils, and even so fa departed Min c iinoton cur I te 4 as to mane a person whom ho bump eted as being the writer of that article, Ilnwever, I have no disnosition to retaliate in like manner, nor yet shall 4 1.Nleilibor' dr .w my attention off from the • matter before us by making a personal attack, but I shall confine myself to the facts of the subject under conaideratio I. I did not,a , , Neighbor' has stated, include other parts et the Township In my , remarks, but had an eye strictly to Denny's field ' and Arthursville. I was well aware before' •Ne.ghbor' informed me, that no one did or ever can own real estate in Denny's field, that being an entailed estate bel mging to heirs, and consequent ly, in my remarks on the real estate of the blacks of the district, I had reference strictly to that part known as Arthursville or Hat 1.1. and I now con. flute my statements to the district mentioned, in chiding Denny's field, which is the line marked out by 'Neig,hl) r.' Dedny's field I have included in the line of Washington street on the south, the stone wall of Seminary hill on the north, the brow o f the hill looking on the Fifth ward on the west, d Cosl lane or the continuation of Seventh et . on the east. Arthursville I have kept strictly be hve •n the lines of Danny's field on the south, the ‘lethodist grave yard on th north, the lane the %tr Benjami t Ncr!ain lives on leaden; to the grave yard on the west, and the Mitier.,vi le road on the cast. I hope that this explanation will satisfy 'Neighbor' as to the district. I shall first hi gin by an exo •sition of the cqtraclet of those of the colored people who r.'side in DENNY'S FIELD. •I'h re are row reerdirr ro D2nnv's fitld,as cor. reedy as could be a:3ccrtained, eighteen colored families, nine out of the eighteen he ng families whine r, potation wou'd not br vouched fur by ne:ghbors, and/our of the nine are hou• sev ui I I fame. Thi re arc one or more other white houses of the same charact. r in the neighborhood, but as their names cold n be ascertained they cannot be given. Tocre's also thre, r gular grugel ier ur wiiiskey sh Ts kept in the h d, ell by whites, namcs eould be gtv. n, nen , . r. of whmri, as I 'earn, have license. 'I has so tar as the field is concerned, altnough much w th 1 like to see it, instead of as 'Neighbor' has asurted and aflir. ined, ninety-five uu. of every one hundred being a common nuisance, on, half or fifty par cent. are orderly, industrious, end respectable people, whose behavior will he vouched for by their neigh us being gond, and ub nri ale fourth of the wh .le, or four nut of the eig .teen fa tidies being such as are in realty a c auirn.in nuisance, for I hdd that ..dl such char:tete' s a. - e a nuisance, whether tiny reside in the fashionable city of Pittsburgli,supported by the more refined and op• ulent citizen, or live in the outskirts ut the town ship for the reception of the more vulgar blacks, and imprudent ynunz colored dandies. 1 shall now call public attention to the character of the col .red p.ipuia ion who now reside in ARTHURVILLE By a correct a•sessmient, the number of colored families who riisido in Arthur sville is ai , eertainee to amount to sis . ,y eight, filleen of wliieh number their neizlib .Aot/ii nut vr,uch fur their integri ty character, anti six out of th- fifteen dimat:ul or 61.1-pICIUUi families, are liousea of Previous to our Temperauez enterprise every house of ill-fame was a &trice ho :se, eiery one of ...loch we have suecie'ci to pilftinz a stoa l'he (Liao! hoa-e on Vie eiiriier alluded to by a 'Naig,iinor' ra ne.t.er ownea our kept by b'..eks, limit lb uxtim mi by a !CFI,' ctable is hoe eitizin of the m ad to of all our in 'rat utioris re. mmilimm•d an,, i:Xt:ki it t 1,,„ a: , nl kis it t by the night m• dam e ::mm cult r aeli --r The I r i ,aick da-e biiing Iteid Is Put ittformittm I 03 , e 0: %Vara 1.1. nx her lac . UJI reside in Ar i.:.arsvt tur , 7o y five ar.: tr e-11,1 ore, the nines 1.31 %vim tr I :11.0ex Zl, 11 iiio, W id v reek, I) Garch•v,2 alo no.• It Di Aolt, (_.; L tw.ett. e, 2 I is any] f I' 1 % .•: u• :71 4.311„n, Ni Dixon, 5 .1 ietis •:,* I: II .1 t; I; P Seirk,* 11 lidotor. J .11 •.• C D•o.hiins, /11:4. AI 16 , 11. V heir-, 2 of-, d J V !Zee 1, E J o , E righm,* A'llif).% it Jh n o-r , i D t it, A itt o.ord, ii,ts ❑ till 1 G Gardner,* 2 leis a-ui l h uses, J Wt It 1:1s. 2 lo's inure, , 'wide ailch property rqu ,11) , .inotig re-ileitis at o t lot ti pie It W ,, ti make ihir'y two lies i .1 ,rs, or put one half ui tee valid residJots ii p iss n of real es. ate. I !,tave fallen a little Shutt of toy prop°. tionat ea'culatten 01 the number of !tie h titters who resod.: to the district, as altos. the nuttlicr of lewd houses kept i y whit, P, the latter, of course, met meg the inure hicnio n atle tire of the city, a "Neighbor” Sas rt tterated that every word that %V z a written by him co icerninz the colored population of the dis rict was true, and that there were not more than fins out ut'every hundred that was not a coin mon nutsame, and net inure than twelve cat the nut-ode wilt, owned re il e•tale; I thong that I have fu'iy proven enough to saitt-fy any impartial r ;rid er. Of the sixty eight resident fain.lie , , nearly one-half ,re proven to be tree holdei a, tor the trot of which proof, I Infer airy one to the county re• cords, and to tee tax co lectors, thr ee four hs a nti use eighth of the whole being orderly, industriimi e hottest and respcctahl cit Zeus, anti less thirn erre eleventh of the whole being a real nuisance, for I aver as I've said before, that all such houses I are nuisances, whether fostered in a city, kept uo by the cutTers of the wealthy white genil. men, or encouraged by the liceutiousness of degraded backs in a inure remote part olthe heighten-hood The grog shop that ''Ne.gtibut" speaks of as hav ing a barber p. le for a sign, was in the two ih it mentioned as being broken up ; 'try as through one in influence tom th,, keeper was taken.- - Neighbor" talks stoutly of respectable white [nail's son being faired in a dance house; pray, how long since has the 'hoeoilriwn' house been bre. ken up in the sth War , where gentlemen's km, were wont to a'ten 'lt did arty one appehl to the 1.• gisiature then? no, if broketl up . at 511,the citizens broke It up. 'Neighbor' risks how the vagaborit.s find EIec,fIIITIC/Chil•iii nod entertainment on the hill, if .ucli a I tQe pot lion of the people be re. niorci able? I have actuated that there are some ead fa ,nt tea on 'lie hill, as there are every plate, an" by his own admission lie has seen as many as fitly in one room, hence, if there were were an hundred vagrants who triquented there, w hick is an extravagant calculation, lava ho,ses w. u d en teriain them. There is also ott the hill, two Meth odist churches belenginz to the colored people, where there is public worship bela once a week in each church, and throe tit,-es a day on .abbatht, ,I