while waiting from Constantinople further by her tyrants? Will England, once hor orders as lo the continuation of our sad hope, not become her consolation 1 journey to some distant shore. I rho political interests of civilized Eu- Even the ambassadors of England and rope, so many weighty considerations res- France, to whom I ventured in the name petting England herself; - and chiefly the of humanity to appeal, were so kind us to maintenance of the Ottoman Empire, are assure me of their full sympathy. ',too intimately bound up witlfthe existence Ilis majesty, the Sultan, was also so of Hungary for me to lose all hope: My gracious as to give a decided negative to ' lord, may God the Almighty, for many the inhuman pretensions °four extradition years shield you, that you may long pro demanded by Russia anti Austria. !tea the unfortunate, and live to be the But a fresh letter from his majesty the guardian of the rights of freedom and }m em. arrived in Constantinople, and its, inanity. I subscribe myself, with the cons'equencci, was the suggestion, sent tomost perfect respect and esteem, us by an expM messenger of the Turk-; (Signed) L. KOSSUTH. ish government, that the Poles and Hun garians, and in particular myself, Count Great Fight with the Apache Indians. Casimir Cathiany, Minister of -Foreign It will be recollected by our readers that Affairs of Hungary under my government, :ti e Mexican State of Durango, which has and the Generals Messaros and Perczel, i been from time immemorial, a prey to the (all present here,) would be surrendered savage incursions of the Apache Indians, unless we adjure the faith of our forefath- t ; who have ruined their agriculture, and til ers in the religion of Christ, and becom- : Most dissolved the bonds of civilized socie ing Mussulmais. And thus five thousand t e placed in the terrible alter- ty among the poor Mexicans residing at Christians ar f facing the scaffold or or spots distant from the large towns, decided native either o a few months ago to invite adventurers from the purchasing their lives by abandoning their united ,sautes to form guerilla fiiith. So low is already rotten the once bands ' in order to make war on their mer 4siath's Letter to Lord Palmerston. mighty Turkey, that she can devise no .le' ss foes. ["or this purpose the Legisla other means to answer or t•vade the de- ciless WIDDIN, (Turkey,) Sept. 20, tare appropriated a certain amount of ; mantis of Russia. Your Excellency is, no doubt, already • • head-money, $2OO, for each Indian taken Words fitil me to quality these aston informed of the fall of my .country—un- ishin„ dead or alive. Several companies were sugeestions, such as never have happy Hungary, assuredly worthy soon formed, and some terrible encounters of a been t 'made r' yet to the fallen chief' of a gen better fate. have taken place between the Americans ,erous nation, and could hardly have been It was not prompted by the spirit of dis- ex rind the Indians, in all of which the latter, pected iii the nineteenth century. 44rder, or the ambitious views of faction ; j have been worsted, losing a large number My answer does not admit of h:sitation. aning of their chief warriors, killed or made pris it was not arevolutionary le which ; Between death' ;11111 sham' the choice can induced my native country to accept the neither be dubious nor difficult. ciovern.. otters. The Mexican papers at the cap mortal struggle maintained so gloriously, ital at first denounced this system of pier 'or of Hungary, and elected to that high c brought, by nefarious means, to so ' , -• ' • cenary ware, and we believe that the piece by the coundence of' fifteen millions unfortunate an end. of my' coontrynien, I know well what I Congress passed a strong resolution con-' Hungary has deserved from her kings one, to the honor of el the conduct of the Durango mor of my country even in the historical epithet of"generous nation," exile., haven as a private individual I have isigishiture, iii id also that of Sonora, which and faithful adherence to for she never allowed e hersell to be stir- had imitated the former. Our last advises, an !emulsible path to pursue. ( hiee haov y'however, from Mexico, received yesterday, passed in loyalty ernor of a generous country, I leave no her sovereigns by any nation in the world. ; state that public opinion in that city had heritage to my children—they shall, et Nothing but the most revolting treach- least hear an unsullied „,„,„. 'God's will lt:halite:Li on this suliject; and the SO), try, the most tyrannical oppression, t and be done. I „ 1 , prepare s to sip ; hut, as 1 0111' of the most influential of the metrepo-1 cruelties unheard of in the words of histo- • titan prints deelnres that there is no other. think this 111'!OSU 11! dishonorable and inju ry—nothing but the infernal doom of an- Way Or getting rid of the scourge. rious to Turkey, whose interests I sin- i nihilation to her national existence, P t ' crely have at heart, and as I lbel it a duty '1 man , the American companies that c , served through a thousand years, through • • exile if I have distinsuished themselves in this war.. to save my companions in , can, tire, that stdversitiesso numerous, were able to arouse that cemmanded by a Capt. Box, in from a degrading alternative, I have her-to oppose the fatal stroke aimed at her . plied the Grant] l le • • •I• re- the service of the State of Durange, is in I to Grant Vizier in a conci iatury cry life, to enable her to repulse the ty- , manner, and took also the liberty to apply the first rank. This body had a terrific rannical assault of the ungrateful Haps- 'to Sir Stratford Cenninseand General Au- encounter with a band of Apaches on the' burghs, or to accept the struggle for life,'3d or September, and although but thirty pith against this tyrannic act. Ifffull re honor, and liberty forced upon her. And against between two and three hundred, lianee On the noble sentiments and ffener she has nobly fought that holy battle, in e they' came off victories. The Mexicans : ous principles of your excellence, by which, with the aid of Almighty God, she ,which , are quite enchanted with their deeds, and as well as through your wisdom, prevailed against Austria, whom we crush. E the Sigh) oldie `2lst ult. devotes a consid- : you have secured the esteem of the eivili ed to the earth, standing firm, even when emble space to a narrative of the ir exploits. zed world, I trust to be excused in enelos attacked by the Russian giant, in the con- • ing :We translate from that paper the follow- 1 co a •s of my two letters to the Grand seiciusness of justice, in our hope in God,inu •—N. 0. Pic. - 'Vrzier i and Sir i-trattbrd Canning. s , ' t and in our hope, my lord, in the generous 'MOST IMPORTANT. , I am informed that the whole matter is feeling of your great and glorious nation, , I a cabal against the ministry of Reschid ' STATE or Dims:sect, Sept. 6, 1849. the natural supporter of justice and nu. I Pacha whose enemies would wish to force For the information of the inhabitants; manity througheitt the world. But this is! him t° our our extradition, in order to lower m,. the State, we publish an extra contain.' ever t what tyranny began has been by lin public estimation, and render impossi- I ring the following letter received by ex- ! treachery concluded ; on all sides aban- I bie its continuance in office. It is certain I press from Santiago Papasquiaro, giving cloned, my poor country has Wien, - not I that in t the grand council held on the 9th an account of the fight which took placel through the overwhelming power of two; and :and 10th of September, after a tumultu- 'at daylight on the 3/1 Instant, between the' great empires, but by the faults, and I may ' ous debate, the majority of the council . savages and the valiant guerilla company', say by the treason, of her own sons. ' declared in favor of our extradition—thej of .forte-Anicticanos sent in pursuit of, To these untoward events, I pray God , , majority of the ministry against it. No t them by the supreme government. We that my unhappy country may be the on- decision was come to in consequence of cong r atulate our fellow-citizens un the vie-, ly sacrifice, and that the true interests oft the altercation which ch took place; but, not- tory gained over the ferocious enemy, and peace, freedom, and civilization through! wi i A. tnstanumg, the ministry thought fit to we trust that it will reanimate our people, the world may not be involved in our un s i rnake the revolting suggestion I have na- and convince them that the Indians are not happy fate. med. invulnerable, since less than thirty men , Mr. Francis Pulsky, our diplomatic a- , This mode of sol ving the ditlieulty. would ; have put to flight more than two hundred gent in London,' has received ample infor- ! not, I tint convinced, save the ministry,: of them, after stretching upwards of tw en ;nation as to' the cause of this sudden and unlooked-for change in the affairs of Hun-, because a protection, only given, in con- ty dead on the field. an p d is instructed to communicate it , tradiction of the Su generous feeling, 7b the Secretary qf the Supreme Govern. gary, at the price of five thousand Christians a- , era went of DU ra ago. to your Excellency, if you are graciously bandoning their faith, would he revolting A„ E „ 1 „ : , c„,„„ RILLA Cu. or c Ara . pleased to receive the same. It is not an tiptithv to Austria, though so well merited ,to the whole Christian world, and prove ' Box, SANTIAGO, Sept. 6, 1849. at the hands of every Hungarian, but a! hardly calculated to win sympathies for Sin : Last night I overtook the enemy • true conviction which makes me say that lTurkey, in the event at' war with Russia, among the ruins of the emetic of Talave even Austria has lost far more by her vie- , which, in the opinion of the most expert- ras, distant one league from Pepasquiarre I tory, gained through Russian aid, than she j' encerl Turkish statesmen, is approaching i At 4 o'clock this morning the battle corn would have lost in merited defeat through l fast. Imenced, when lnd thianse positions and iindt rcnch honorable arrangement. Fallen from her d position to my native country, Turkey does, ments of the were carre by as- position of a fast rate power, she has nowll believe, already feel the loss of the ne- sault. They fled, leaving five killed and forfeited her self-consistency, and has sunk i glected opportunity of having given to ten prisoners, whom I handed over to the Judicious (lints [or \Vim. into the obedient instrument of Russian I Hungary tit ktgst. some moral help to ens-, Alcalde of Papasquiaro. The Indians I ambition and of Russian commands. I hie it to check the advance of the common I shortly afterwards recovered from their Never complain that your husband i Russia only has gained at this sanguin- enemy. But it appears to me that it would surprise, and finding how small our num- pores too much ON er the newspaper, to cry game ; she has extended and strength- I be a very ill-advised mode of gaining be her was, and their own overwhelming su- the exclusion of that pleasing converse ened her influence in the east of Europe,Hungarian sympathy by sending me to an perioritv, they returned and made ttfuri e ! which you formerly enjoyed with him.— and threatens already, in a fearful man- I Austrian scaffold, and tbrcing my unhaP- ' ous attack on us—five Mexicans on horse- 1 Don't hide the paper; don't give it to the ner, with outstretching arms, not only the IPY companions to abjure their religion, or . back, and the Americans who were in- children to tear; don't be sulky when the integrity, but the moral basis, of the Turk- ! accept the seine elternutive. i trenched within the emetic. Being re- boy leaves it at the door, but take it pleas ish empire.No friends to the Turkish government pulsed, they dashed otr toward the spot' antly, and lay it down before your spouse, I May it please you, my lord, to allow me would spring up from my blood, shed by' where the Americans had left their her- I Just think w hat man would be without a to communicate to your Excellency a most / her broken faith, but many deadly foes.— ses, which necessitated a retreat by the wor news kpof ciaper; ilizati treat it as a great assure agent in the revolting condition which the Turkish go- i My lord, your heart will, I am sure, ex- latter to defend their cattle. ' von, whichassuredly is, vernment, at the suggestion of Russia, is ;cuse my having called your attention to As the Americans were on foot, I with land think how much good newspapers about to impose upon us poor homeless ex- i our unhappy fate, since it has now assu- my four men on horseback kept the cue- have done byte xposing bad husbands and iles. ' med political importance. Abandonei in my in check until they reached the spot wives, by givg their errors to the eye of I I, the governor of unhappy Hungary,' this unsocial land by the whole world, even; where their horses stood. Here the en- the public. But manage you this way.— after having, I believe, as a good citizen! the first duties of humanity give us no counter was tremendous, and the firing When your husband is absent, instead of and an honest man, fulfilled to the last my' protection, unless, my lord, you and your I was without intermission on both sides.— I gossiping with your neighbors or looking duty to my country, had no choice left me , generous nation come forward to protect 1 Mr. Thos. Cloaland [Cleaveland, perhaps] into shop-window, sit down quietly and between the repose of the grave and the' us. . I was the first that fell, after he had killed , look over the papers; run your eyes over inexpressible anguish of expatriation. ! What steps it may be necessary that , l two Indians. He was captured alive, hay. I its home and foreign news; take a rapid Many of my brethren in misfortune had you should take, what we have a right to ing been suddenly seized by the emy, I glance at its accidents and casualties; preceded me on the Turkish territory.-expect from the well-known generosity of who immediately cut off his head. The ' carefully scan the leading articles; and at I followed thither in the hope that I should England, it would hardly be fitting for me Indians, finding their loss so severe by' tea-time, when your husband again takes / be permitted to pass to England, and there to enter on. I place my own and my ' the precision with which the Americans) tip the paper, say—"My dear, what anew under the protection of .the English peg-; companions' fate in your hands, my lord, delivered their fire, at length retreated,' ful state of things there seems in India;" ple—a protection never yet denied to per-' and, in the name of humanity, throw my -1 and again took up their position at the lor "what a terrible calamity at the Was secuted man—allowed 'to repose for a! self under the protection of England. I ranche, which had been abandoned by thelgow theatre ;" or " trade appears to be while my wearied head on the hospitable! Time presses—our doom may in a fewllatter when they hastened to the defence tkiurishing at the north," and depend up shores of your happy island. !days be sealed. Allow me to make an; of their cattle. on it, down will go the paper. Übe has But even with these views I would ruth- humble personal request. I am a man, I The company returned to the charge I not read the information, he will hear it • er have surrendered myself to my deadli- my lord, prepared to face the worst and lj with admirable courage, and again storm- I all from your own lips ; and when you est enemy than cause any difficulties to t can die with a free lo'ok at Heaven, as II ed the intrenchment, driving out the Indi-have done, he will ask—" Did you, my The Turkish government, whose situation I, have lived. But lam also, my lord, a ' arts with a heavy loss. The latter then I dear, read Simpson's letter upon the dis. 'well kneW how to appreciate, and there- - husband, son, and father; my poor true- made an attempt at the cattle, but the A- covers of chloreforml" And whether . fore did not intrude on the Turkish terri., hearted wife, my children, and my noble! mericans pursued them, and after half an: you did or not, you will gradually get into ' tellies without previously inquiring wheth- . old mother, aro wandering about Hunga.lhour's combat put them to flight. The In.' as cozy a chat as you ever enjoyed; and er. I nod my companions in misfortune' ry. They will probably soon fall into the I diens returned to their inteenchments at I you will soon discover that, rightly used, ' would be willingly received and the pro- handS of those Austrians who delight in i the ranche, when the fire having ceased, the newspaper is the wife's real friend, teetion of the Sultan granted to us. !torturing even feeble women, and with ! they collected their dead and wounded, fir it keeps the husband at home, and sup -1 • We received the assurance that we were whom the innocence of childhood is no which lay exposed on the field. plies topica for every day table talk.-Cam 'welcome guests, and should enjoy the full' protection against persecutions. I con'- The fight lasted three hours, and 1,500 Chronicle. protection of his majesty the Pudisha, who jure your excellency, in the name of therounds of ammunitioh were . expended by • would rather sacrifice 50,000 men of his Most High, to put a, stop / to these cruelties , the company. From twenty to twenty ' own subjectS, than allow one hair of our, by your powerful mediation, and espe- ' five Indians were killed, and 10 were made Beads to be injured. . . ' ! cially to accord to my wife and children prisoners. ,The Americans, quite fatigued . ''lt was only upon this assurance that we an asylum. on the ° poll of the generous- with their continued, exertions, were una ble into the Turkish territories, and English people. :. . ~ - , I ble to follow up their . victory. The num , ;- according: to , the generous' assurance, we • :As to my poor, my: loved, and noble i beg of Indians was about 200, according ~. ~ ere' received and tended on our journey,' bletcountry, must she, too, perish forever? ,to appearances, although one of the : priEi i 8 1, - - „- 44 in . Widdin as the Sultan's guests, 'Shall she, unaided, abandoned to, her . fate, ' oners stated there were 300 in all.' The , , r+N...-..""pr'' l ' .aspitably, during four weeks,' and unavenged, be doomed io annihilation , hole number of Americans and Mexicans , 7 ..1y weilL ---',-,,,:-•-• , . Sate ..h . tt scheme. But precisely be cause it is a great public object, the little State of Nicaragua has no right to claim solo possession of such a passage by a di rect violation of the territories of an inde pendent neighbor. If the canal is to be _made, it may fairly be the subject of n treaty or eqpitable convention between the different States, through whose territories it may pass, and the terms of such a trea ty ought to be of the most liberal kind ; but if the exclusive and unfounded pretensions of the State of Nicaragua are taken up by the United States, instead of an amicable combination for a great pacific purpose, the two countries most interested in the success of the undertaking may be expos ed to a serious misunderstanding." We are not at all sure that the Times is not right and. reasonable in this its view of the case. At all events, it leaves a door wide open for a harmonious adjustment of the question on the basis of an actual en trance upon the work of constructing the canal, which, it will be remembered, is avowedly to be open to all nations, on equitable terms.—N. Y. Com. Adv. ,0 ' engaged was only twenty-nine. The loss on the part of this little band was one kill ed and eight wounded. Through the great disparity in the num bers of the combatants, there was no pos sibillity of capturing any of the cattle that accompanied the Indians: (Signed) LUIS TOSTADO. From the l'etinsylvnom Inielligeover A Day of Thanksgiving. The following proclamation, recom►neu ding the observance of Thursday, the 29th of November inst., as a day of general thanksgiving throughout the State, has been issued by Governor Johnston, The proclamation is appropriate in lunguague and spirit : and considering the many blessings bestowed upon us as a people, by ajust and beneficent God, the recom mendation is highly proper in itself, and we have no doubt, will be universally ob served throughout tile State. Sevet al oth er states have set apart the same day fin• the same purpose. Certainly no people under Heaven have more reason to be thankful for the many blessings vouch safed to them by the Great Ruler of the Universe, than the people of the United States. PENNSY L VANIA, SS: In the name and by the authority of the. Ci►neutonwealth qf Pennsylvania. BY W I LLIA M F. JOHNSTON. GOVERNOR OF THE SAID COMMONWEALTH A PROCLAMATION, A. beneficent God has hies 4 4,0 (ce- 1 , sed the people of th:s t ottunon- Mj ~, wealth with health and abund t,-.1:4.---1,,44" once. The fields have yielded 41110.- bountiful returns to the labors of the husbandman. l'he enterprise of the citizens, in all branches of industry, have been appropriately rewarded.— P e ace with all tuitions, has been vouch-1 Accident near Parkersburg s:it;•,l to the co untry. Civil and religious' We present, below, a letter from a gen liberty, under .the institutions of a free :1 Remo n at Parkersburg, Chester cuunty, government, have been Fes( rved inviolate Who was a witness of the scene which he : and the largest measure of ea Hid v ha*. describes. It may be proper to mention ness, has ben graciously disrensed by an ! that the Commonwealth employs n> con all wise and merciful Providence. 1 , dr / dors for burden trains, such being em- These blessings demand our gratitude' ployed by tlw transporter on his own ac- to I lim, in whose hands are the issues o fl count. The State employs eight agents 1163 awl death—r% ho controls and directs , for pass( lig( r i in the a fliiirs of men— whose %% ill i. ; Omnip- ! PARKELU'IIt:IIG, Nov. 1, 1 , 5•19. Ment to save or destroy, arid who mingles i A sad accident luisjiist happeried o n the in the justice of His jtlgernents, the ettri- / I Railroad. The engine "Clarion" coining Bute of Ills mercy—before whose power !front the East, with a train 01'25 cars and , nations arc exulted or cast down,—and a section boat, was at the .wiibi• station at they call upon us as one people, to unite ! thi s pl ace w h e n a couple,` broke, and 20 in solemn Thanksgiving—in humble sup- !cars from the rear of the train, started plication and praise to the Almighty Au- i down the grade [25 feet to the mile) tow- thor of every good and perfect gift, for and Coatesville, near five miles distant :no these his undeserved blessings, to his weak I , conductors were with the cars, (they be- i and sinful creatures. They require the ing! all in the hotel.) A nother burden- I I • profound reverence of penitent hearts, I train had left herefiJr Philadelphia, about, 'sensible of the unworthiness of humanity, ; ten minutes previous, which was °vertu- A anu of the enduring mercy of a righteous I ken by these twenty runaway ears, at the God.lwest end of Coatsville viaduct, where the 1 Believing these solemn truths ; deeply two tracks come into one, for the purpose I impressed with the duty of devout adore- of crossing the bridge. These twenty tier and humble . prayer ; in compliance 'cars came into collision with this train, with a venerated custom, and the desires I I and broke and scattered at least twelve of of the greatbody ati lt; people: I, WILLI.OI the ears, and precipitated three of them o- F, JOHNSTON, Governor of the Common- ver the bridge, all smashed up, together, wealth of Pennsylvania, do hereby appoint with the goods in them. At the point and designate THURSDAY the 29th day' where the trains met, three of the men 'of November next, as a day of general tin - T i m:x( l by the State, in repairs of the Thanksgiving throughout the State : and road, were at work: they did not perceive I hereby recommend and earnestly invite' the train en the north side going duo ii, all good people of this Commonwealth to a until too late, when , the cars struck Linn j sincere and prayerful observance el the i and Patton, killing Linn instantly, sever :same. ling his head from his body, and danger- Given under my hand and the great ousl v injuring Patton, who k scarcely ex seal of the State, at Harrisburgh, this; pceted to recover . The third man esea twenty-tifth day of October, in the yearlped. Linn leaves a wife and three child of our Lord one thousarakeight hundred , r , :n. and forty-nine, and of the Commonwealth! [Pater in!brination front the scene, in the seventy-fourth. forms us that the evening !nail train from By the Governor : the west was (I,2lityed, until the track ii us TOW NSEND II Al NES, 'cleared, % hich was soon accomplished Secretary of the Communlecullh. by a strong force from Parkersburg.— The loss to some of the transporters is ve ry serious.]—Pcioisidranian. Sign of a Hard Winter.—The Bangor Whig tells us, that among other prognos tications of a hard winter the coming sea son, it is said the squirrels are migrating south in vast numbers, which is looked 'upon as an infallible indication of more severe weather than ordinary, by those who have paid attentionlo . ' the movement the timbals; •. , . . • .01..;1,.),.1 ' t ' , i t Great Freshet. Meriting tinder ' "% St I,o4ipi, ...21 • - ' 1 /, From ilio Canon Sentinel. November 2, 1 An awful tragedy occurred last week at We are pained to learn that the heavy Barnum's Hotel the particulals of fybleh,i . , rain of Monday, caused a tremendous areas follows,:- , -Two yearn Fr,encli gett- I , flood in Hickory Run, a tributary of the ticmen calling themselves Gonzales:de Lehigh, in kidder township, Carbon coun- Montesqui and Count Raimondde Monte — s= ty, which caused the breaking of no less qui arrived in that city and putup atßarn than three dams, and the destruction of um's. On the evening of October 20th three saw-mills ; one belonging to J. &S. about 11 o'clock,' as Mr. Barnum, a" neph- Gould, and two to Mahlon K. Taylor Esq. ew of the proprietor, and J. J. Macomber, and several dwellin g s. Nor is this the •steward of the house, were retiring to bed, worst of the catastrophe—seven lives -,iere one of the Brench gentlemen came to the lost. One, a daughter of' Mr. Gould, and window on the gallery and tapped lightly the entire family of Mr. West, an enter- on the same. Mr. Barnum pushed the terprising blacksmith, who had settled there curtains one side, when the man outside sometime since; whose dwelling was fired a gun, the ball. from, which passed swept oft, and familyy with the exception through Mr. Barnum, and two buck-shot of himself, drowned. lodged in the arm of Macomber. At the The Mauch Chunk Gazette furnishes report of the gun, Mr.' Albert Jones,- a US with the followingadditional particulars. coach maker, residing in Third street, but It a , who had a roorn,adjoining, rushed to the ppears that on hickory Run, a door to see what was the difficiilty. Ho bout five miles below White Haven, there I had scarcely passed the same,. when he re. was a large dam, belonging to Mahlon K. calved a iiot whit!) felled him to the floor, Taylor, which covered about 70 acres of'. and he died in a few moments. - A coup ground, when full, and in some places 40 to of gentlemen who also entered the gal feet deep. During Monday night, in con lery, we're struck with buckshot; their sequence of the heavy rains that day, this names were H. H. Henderson, wounded dam filled to overflowing, (the waste gates in the forehead, and W. IJ. Hubble, of hawing been neglected to be hoisted,) and Liberty wounded in the arm. the dam gave away about midnight, swee. The assassin was immediately pursued ping everything before it. Houses, with 'to to his own roorn, where, after a desperate their sleeping inmates, were dashed to at struggle, he was secured. Ile is the oms, and their inhabitants, without a mo younger of the two brothers. Both of meal's warning, carried away by tho them were arrested, and appeared to be mighty flood, insane. On opening their trunks, letters Nothing has been heard of below the were found showing them to be Parisians mouth of the creek; and seriousapprehen skins are entertained for several fmilies of wealth and fitmily. The trunks also contained some splendid accoutrements living just below, w gorge.—, in a narrow and $1,500 in German gold coin. They They must have perished.. I refuse counsel, and state that they will As the Lehigh was high at tic time, we plead their osi n cause. Albert knes, ' ic ry much fear there has been disastrous, work along the ii hole line of the Lehigh who was shot, ,iied instantly. He was' shot by an ounce bali and 001arge shot.-- navigation. Young Barnum, too, will surely die of his wounds; but the rest of the wounded will Jealousy—The Baltimore CI pper states that a gentleman Of that city lett home on Wednesda) morning, informing his wile, that business would probably keep•him a- way until the next day. The wife being an timid nature, after her husband had gone, sent for her sister to come and stay with her during the night. She did so, and occupied her husbands place in the bed. It so happened that the husband was jealous of his better-half, and having completed his business sooner than anti cipated, went home shortly afler midnight. Going into his chamber, he undressed himself without disturbing either of the oc cupants of the bed ; but just as he was going to get in, he discovered—what his immagination and jealousy instantly con jured into a, man ! Quick as thought, he seized his boot jack, and commenced be laboring the supposed usurper of his rights, about the head, in the most desperate manner. The screams of his victim and wife, however, soon showed him the mis -1! take lie had made : and without taking re. I port for authority, we don't doubt but that he feels foolish and ashamed of his pre cipitancy. His wife's sister had both her eyes very much blackened and bruised, and the side of her face so badly cut, that r► physician was necessarily called in to dress her injuries. We advise him here after to follow the advice of Davy Crocket —"be sure you're right, then go ahead." CANADIAN ANNEXATlON.—Resolutions in favor of the Annexation of Canada to the, United States have been introduced into both Houses of the Vermont Legislature, Papers of all parties advocate the meas ure, too, together with political meetings and Conventions in all parts of the Nor. thern States. The following resolution was recently adopted by the " Free De mocracy" of Putnam county, 111., on mo tion of Harvey B. Leeper, the Secretary ' of the meeting : Resolved, That we are in favor of the peaceful annexation of Canada to. the Uni ted States, and that.we will I use all 15%4 land peaceable means to that.efrect,';l,l( li COS 'I" The Peeifie Railroad. Some of the Practiral Thomas Allen, Esq., in a letter published in the St. Louis Republican, suggests some practical difficulties in respect to the Pa.; rifle Railroad, which must be considered! and provided for. lie says : • "You will sox, f;ic example, on the sup. position that the business of the Pacific road . o ill be in proportion to that upon the Western, and that it will require over eight hundred thousand tuns of water per' day ; over five hundred thousand cords of wood per anum, and over three hundred and twenty-five thousand gallons of oil to grease the wheels! These apparent dn. culties, we trust, will all vanish before tho application of genius in developing the re. sources of the country, The want of wa.. ter and wood upon the few hundred miles of plains intervening between the forests which skirt the State boundaries and the mountains, may possibly be supplied by rtestm wells and pumps, and the shells which go down for water will, doubtless; at the same time expose, occasionally, at• least, subjacent beds of coal in ample sup• plies for the necesary fuel. "It is a fact probably not thought of, but in the diminishing supplies of sperm oil, we shall find the necessity of elovating !the swine to the dignity of the land whale, and taking from him the oil which the deep will no longer give up. The Pacific railroad, in full operation, will consume the oil of more than thirty thousand hogs !per :mum!" BANK NOTE LIST. correcied wec.loy born tho Pdpers Pennsylvania. Mitten. Wks, par U. S. Bank, 12 ('hainbersburg, - fii ( kttvsburg, Pittsburg, Swig. County, Lewistown, no sale Middletown, Carlisle, Hollidaysburg, Erie, 10 Waynesburg, 14 Washington, ltd Harrisburg, Honesbale, 1 Browesville, la 1 -1 1 Williamsport, 1i York, All solvent b'ks par Relief Notes, 1 Towanda Rel. no sals New York City. Chelsea bank, 80 Clinton, 50 Commercial, 2 Lafayette, 2 Washington, 70 Other solv. b'ks, par New York State. Allegheny co. 6605 America, Buffalo, 30 Commerce, do, 35 Atlas bank, 301 Canal, Albany, 25 Brockport, • 25 James Bank, Northern Ex.; 1 Lodi, 20a25 Lyons, 15 State b. Saugerties, 1 REGISTER'S NOTICE PTO ICE 's hereby given to all creilitora,legatM 1.11 and 011er persons interested, that the, follovi i iff, it, counts have been passed and filed in ttieB terlitflice 'ol Clearfield county. and that thes will be presented to the Orpheus Conner said cgsk, Iv for confirmation and allowance un the 3d JAY!' ,Heeenilice next, in the Court house; in the befog'. 'of Clearfield.,y. let. Tho account of. Henry Hegarty and %Villi jart k:xecuters of Outlast wilt and testaniests, John flegarty, lam of Bi•r:caria township, dace ` 2d. The account of Mary Gideon D low, Admini.watots of 00 opluto of Isaiah lqw, lute of Lawrence township:deceased.' • tit W LCIJ , Oetobei '9 1849 r • . • Sattiiteils at th . e .0 2 5, ,l ore al - e ° 11ed ti ~ INGLER,&P litiiANlC ll4 far ide 100 . -..i' :.01 Hank, Cayuga L. 1 kl'estern, 'Welles., 30 Bilighampton, ' 50 Cana fungus co. 30 Clinton county, 16 Coininercial, fiut..,ls do Oswego, 10 Fa rulers', Seneca, 90 1 larnilton bunk, 15 Median. Buffalo, 45 Merchants' Ex., , 40 Millers', at Clyde, 10 Oswego, CO Pla.tnix, Buffalo, 96 Staten Island, '6o' Stateb.Buffalo,7saB o St. Lawrence, 76 Union, Buffalo, . 301 U. S., Butlitlo, 90 Watervliet, 15 Other sole. b'ks, : 1 New Jersey. Del. 13'dge Co. 8 Yardleyville, 15 Plainfield, Other solvent, • OLIO: Solvent Cincinnatill Cleveland, Hamilton, .111 Commer., Scioto,,-14 do Lake Erie,li Sandusky, Norwalk, Fartners',Cantoo . ' GranvilleSoeiety,?" Lancaster, Urbanna Wing cp.:l4 Other solvent, UrOLI Fives,