1 the waters having fallen, every one who . Later Foreign News. does a fair days work can calculate upon Dates are from Constantinople to the',Bth 'bagging' about an ounce. We hoar of of October last, announcing the arrival in but very little sickness in any part of the the Bosphorus of a British fleet of°bier: mines.' ' vation. A salute of 21 guns was firedd by Companies organized for turning the the Turkish ; ships in honor of the British rivers in this section have lured but indif- li ng . ferently; much of this branch of mining the following passage is extracted from has signally failed, mai the projectsentire- the East German Post :—"lt is absolute ly abandoned. A : few associations still ly confirmed that the decree tvhich refus maintain unshaken confidence in the plan, , oil to deliver up the fugitives from Hunga. and the point at whic ( ll the American riverl r y was voted unanimously by the mem is turned near Morman Island is believed Lairs of' the Divan. The document con to promise more favorably than others.— tainina , c' this, decree is signed by all those The company prosecuting this work' have ,members that was actually present in not vet overcome the obstical presented bylConstantinople, and even the Sultan ad hidden springs supplying that portion aided his name to the protocol. the bed of the river which it is proposed ' The hulepenclenee Belie publishes the to drain. When the best is told, this asso- !subjoined letter, apparently from a well ciationill w... have but realized a paltry a- i infbaned quarter, on the important (ies mount, compared with the labor and capi- ' tion i tal expended. Austria, it must be said, is sailing in , "From the Middle Foil; we learn," I this question in some degree 'in the wake says the Times, "that the ' ‘digginst are of Russia. The Vicuna I ' cabinet would improvine, and that a a y n o n ounce da ca! i e too glad ofa settlement of the affair and obtaine r d by all who work." And "that: would not insist upon the extradition of moat oldie parties operating with rockers 1 the refugees. But it is evident that if' Were doing well. There was a party of. Russia insist, the AuStrian government four who took out $6,000 apiece in eight; w i ll be obliged to follow. It is not on the days from one opening, and arc now on I morrow of the day upon which the Czar 'hair way home." ' has rendered his assistance to the Empe- These certainly do not look like -`dig- ; rur Francis Joseph in cutting down the coo raging prospects" for diggers. ; Hungarian insurrection, that the latter In connectimin with the above, it is due , cou ld l eave his powerfulally, especially the liberal yet trialifid ton° of this journal in a matter in which Russia is engaged in Iron! will'il we quote to insert the " 1 "w - conscquence of the very assistance she Mg,: ! rendered to Austria. - ,l'icnic the Placer.--The most Invorable I France, on her side, without being pia ncw's We gather this week from liry ced in a similar position towards England, Creek, at which point operators were do' nevertheless yields to time impulse given ing surpassingly well. The great influx by t h a t power .. Like Austria, she ardent- of emigrants, however, has evidently rem- ly desires a prompt and pacific salutation ; &red haw iii the anines less profitable, 'but if, perchance, that salutation should and We hear of man). w h o Laic g iVril 1 /1 ) n A take place, it i; eortain that it will be I digging and are about to turn their atten- , impossible for Prance to remain an indif- (cation to mailer bratich , .i of industry. ferent spectator of the struggle in the Bos- We leant that 1)r. Boynton's company phorus, the Black Sea, or the Mediterra consisting or six, took from one hole,' scans, Only not desiring the struggle,l some five miles above Mormon Island, in she endeavors to prevent it, and afii•ct an seven or eight days, $9,000. It is said al-lami figment. England, or to speak' so that no one in that vicinity who work- more correctly, Lord z Pairnerston, is far ed, made much less than an ounce per, from being animated by such conciliatory day, while the more fortunate were get- sentiments. What direct interest can the ting several ounces by a few hours work. English government have in entangling The gold washin g s on the tributary matters and bringing about a conflagra streams of the San Joaquin continue to tion ? Does it even wish for such a con attract much attention. "Foreigners," : flagration ? I shall not seek to investi (i. c. South Americans,) have been carat- , gate this question in this letter, but shall cd from the different diggings, and though confine myself to a sketch of the situations every arrival in the harbor contributes to, without seeking causes. The fact is, that swell the number of Americans already ; England alone, of the three powers of employed in that section of the placer in- / Turkey, France, and Great Britain, with dicated by the !Cosurritm, Calaverus, Molt- ; out exactly pushing for war, acts in a Outline, Tuolomne and Stanislaus streams, , manner as if war must be the inevitable the average result of labor is such as to! result,exciting, instead of calming, the encourage and stimulate the mass. Sick- publicmind. mats is abating, and success is more gen- Thence the difference in the language era) than when we last prepared our sum- I held by the representatives of France and wary of intelligence. We are furnished, I England at Vienne. Both endeavor to by young gentlemen located in Stockton,!detatch Austria from her coalition with thelbllowiag facts, which will be read with i Russia, on tl-e extradition question, to interest. I persuade her to relinquish the demand of ' "I saw a day or two ago, a piece of gold; extradition on her part, whatever may be taken from the Biggins on the Calaverusm , the decision of Russia. But in seeking not very far from Stockton. It was the; the same end, Lord Ponsonby and M. most singular, and at the same time beau- i Gustave de Beaumont employ diffe.rent tiful piece I have yet seen, shaped like! menus. The first endeavor to intimidate the head of a bullock with a pair of deaf, ~ the cabinet of Vienna, the latter tries per- solid, golden horns, more than an inall ; suasion. long. I Learthere has been a lump taken Accohling to the lust advices received at Paris from Vienna, Lord Punsonby had out recently, on the Mokelumne weigh ing thirty pounds, rock and gold together. I j ust received a new dispatch from Lord I am prepared to belieN•2 anything that I ! Palmerston, enjoining him!: to declare in hear about the gold in California. • j positive terms to Prince Schwarzenberg, Finally, this so-called mining, back- i that it' Austria or Russia persisted in fle breaking, sun-browning, soul- tiring labor mending the extradition of the refugees, in the gold diggings, whether "crevieing" and resolved to have recourse to coercive with a jack knifb, "revolving an old tin ; measures to the Porte, England for her pan," or "rocking of the cradle," is not I part would take measures to protect the without its disappointments and rewards; independence of the Ottoman Empire, and though that gold hunter must be singular- the integrity of its territory. ly unfortunate, who cannot, during the I it was reported in Paris that the French present and succeeding months of favora- ; ambassador, at St. Petersburgh had for ble weather and low water, derive a spec- ' warded despatches to his government In dy and. fair profit, either in one part of the ; timating a change in the hostile determi- Placer or another, if in the enjoyment of nations of Russia, in its disagreement health he will apply his energies to the with Turkey, upon the subject of the ex work. Thirty thousand Americans (the; tradition. So far from forcing matters present probable aggregate) in the gold ;to extremities, Russia expressed herself reeion of Caiifornie, are incapable of ex- I auxious to settle the differences quietly, 0 hausting the treasurers of that portion ; provided no warlike interfi:r nee was threat - Placer Intelligence. which has been long occupied. The samelecad on the part of England. The same 1' , • "astonishing success" has marked the as-, rumor was prevalent at Vienna, on the Our summary of gold digging news is suluous labor, in a little deposit not three ' 21st ult. aompiled ,Sanm,varioua authentic sources, miles distant from the scene of the first The Patric!, of last night, publishes a and we are indebted to the Placer Times for material information. discovery of this gold, that attended labor first The from St. Petersburg,h, dated October near the same place a year ago. The 6, which states that Fuad Effendi,the En ;parties have been organized within the conclusion then is justifie'd, and we speak voy Extraordinary from the Porte, had ..past ; month, and .departed to explore the , - regtoirr.of Trinity . river, where it is now advisedly, us well as inferably from rhea nutthen been received by the Czar. The ...rendered certain gold exists. Several tenor of our reports, that the world never writer adds that, notwithstanding the im hundred French half-breeds from Oregon produced a more brilliant scheme of wealth, I pediment caused by the rumors respecting were, at last advicei, employed very sac- nor looked upon more magnificent open- ; the movemenis of the English and French . awfully upon this stream. ings fbr immense fortunes than are pre-, fleets, the general impression was, that Feather river, higher up, has been near- setae(' by the gold mines of this country., i peace would not be disturbed;' that Fuad iy.drained of precious mettle, and at this Extract from a letter dated Aug. sth, : Effe i will returr ement. "On e with the prospect Of al al time affesds scanty profit for the few who Big Bar Middle Fork : , poss iate arrangrriv preferits solitude to the crowded wash- in ie m i ner s h e r e have ie : H eined the a p. iat Constantinople, he will cause passports, Inge of the north. A gentleman from the pearance and acquired the conviences of : for England to be delivered to the refugee I South Fork of Feather river informs us settled towns: Every bar lies its sleres; chiefs; and this done, a conciliatory mail that without the assistance of Indians in and its meat market. I lere thereare five, ! will be forwarded to ; St. Petersburghe—e ~washing for gold, labor is attended with and always fresh meat in the market. —, England will have received a note in i.e. very vasatisfactory compensation. Every thing is sold ut mill (Colima) pri- ply to that whieirshe addressed to the Rus ,, There is probably no portion of the ces. The miller should come to the bared sian cabinet., The tone of that note was placer that has proved more productive, with nothing but his blankets; however, ifl very moderate, and that of M. de Nesse'. than the mountainous country watered by ;he comes with animals, there are ranchos rode is equally so. Nevertheless, there is the Yuba river. Mining commenced on I who take to graze at $2O per month.— at the bottom, in both, some irritation." , this stream early in the spring of '4B, and There are abort 200 miners here, two.; Since the above, it is announced that has been conducted with general success thirds canaline and darning the river—and' the question is settled—Russia, tacks:-• through winter and summer, to the present about 2000 on the Middle and North Forks There will be no war—Kossitth . is safe. time. . During the months of July and Au-I—none but Americans allowed." I The Paris Debats, publishes a letter gust, a residence in this region has been. ' The Placer.—Murry are returning . from' Constantinople, dated October sth, found to impair health ; unless every pre-: from the mines in consequence of the ex-.'which says cautiqn be taken ,to event exposure. Bern, trerne heat which now prevails in various! General Be, as aeon as he was in- Thera are about five pr thousand, principal- ' sections of the Placer. They "hold 'over"; formed of • the firm determination of the ly Americans;, at work on Yuba, among' here a few hours, in the course of which , Sultan to resist, the demands of Russsia . , whom the . past month witnessed no in-' space of time they discoverer that they' and Austria, and to refuse aheextraditioni , ~.. egnaiderable . amount of sickness. By !have "jumped out of the frying pan into, declared that his country was his first re-I the following eatracts front the Placer i the tire," and make immediate arrange.' ligioa, that 'the Sultan having the same'; ?lensof : Sept, 22, we are pleased to note ' ments for leaving Ibr the bay. Our ad. enemies and the same friends as it, he was ybetter state health. I vices continue ,o - f' the same tenor as they ; determieed to become fisubject of the Sul. . , . am;Yaaa•nver we have more favor.' have been for seine Weeks past. The tan, and to' servo under his colors.: end ices:, ~; T he sickly. Season is about' waters ere rapidly falling, but we do' not that he would , embrace ISlarnism; that on the,pperatiort at' miners are now! hear of any company or organization, quitting Hungary , his' resolution' was al.. hy. the extreme heat." ' 'that is taking out over a cart load of the 'ready taken;' but that,; if he had not made le taitue ! riumbea ,Of , the above (lust per dtiy. 7 -Plac erZmes, Sep. 1. . Ihia profession oft faith ' sooner,. it. was: be. t=act: i ' , . cause he 'did not `wish to heap the appettai pr ; th'iatak Mioe:l . orlti . tlOO - . fir' ',lll e. pleasure of doing good isthe' anceof yielding' tai'fba6' He added, that loop .In, the , wecithef prininiy -Eine . th . sa...ttsait Weir out " " ' ' -he 'did not • ask , any iihe to , ! follem hiw ex... 4.,'=" ''..‹.-- '''.'-'• I -...._, - • ...., . ....., , -....,... along that paralel of latitude to the place of, btglioOg• : . The following are the officers of the POrivention, chosen September 4. President—Robert Semple ; Secretary ..-;-;-)Nrm. G. Marcy ; First Assistant Sec retaty—Caleb Lyons; Second Assistant Secretary—J. B. Field ; Translator-- W;',E. P. Hartnell; Assistant Translator ~-Henri quo. Henriquez ; Sergeant-at-arms —*S. S. Houston; Doorkeeper—Corneli s Sulivan. • SAN FRANCISCO, Oct, 1. 1849. The city'of San Francisco, at present,, contains:a population of twenty-five thou 'tiand,ltiot including the floating population, ! which must number at least ten thousand more. • • Emigration still continues, awl large numbers, froin all parts of the world, flow in daily; many remain, and try their for tunes' in politics And speculations ; others, less ambitious of fame, leave fbr the mines; the majority, hoWever, take the latter ,course, and, although their work is hard and their privations great, manage, in a little time, 'to realize a portion of their an ticipations. The traffic on the rivers, at present, is immense. Some ninety ves sels, of all classes, including three steam ers,,are const4ltly employed, transporting pasSengers and merchandise to the vari ous 'points, villages, and towns that bor der the noble streams of the vallv of Sac "rnt nt.6.• The embatrados or landing idaceS that...girt the town, exhibit, from Morning till night, one continued scene 'of bustle and confiision ; the levee, at New `Orleans, or the wharves at New York, will not, in the . most hurried season, sur pass the pebbly bench of San Fri nscisro in the amount of business transacted—in 6 'Sinai' way. Every man has a little business to attend to, and may he seen through, all hours hurrying to and fro, up on its consumption. Land speculators, lawyers, miners, tradesmen and even the feW loafers arc, all alike, swallowed up in the enormity of their transactions'. Na val officers, whose lawful pay would scar cely give meat to a dog, are forced through necessity, to shift and follow the tide, fur :k . decent or oven a necessary subsistence. Some arc merchants, others lawyers, and I.regret'to say, some loafers. Yet all arc gentlemen and well behaved, and doubt less with a little drilling in the science of economy,' would eventually make good and useful citizens. This California cli- Mate will have a very desirable effect up on many of these young , gentlemen, not only in a business point of view, but in giving ': thorn just appreciation of the worth and value of labor. The only Vessels of war here at pres ent, arc.qie ;Savannah flag ship, Captain Voorhies,; the sloop of war Warren, Capt. Long, and , the store ship Freedonia. The ''SL-Mary is hourly expected from Callao. She Nvill •proceed immediately on her ar rival to the Sandwich Islands, with Corn missioner Eames on board. DISCOVERY OF A VEIN OF GOLD 1 " From the Alla California, Semi.'tuber 13. Col.. J, C. Freemont has denounced a • tract of land lying on the Mariposa river, "about 40 miles mom the San Joaquin, up on, which has been recently discovered an eiceedingly rich vein of gold. The Mar iposa (or butterfly) liver, wasa few months ~since visited by a party conducted by this emjnont explorer, and washings establish ed aloni the stream. The land occupied l,y this,party was conveyed to the Col. in 1846, and the mines thereupon having .been regularly denounced, according to Mexican law, measures have been taken to work them. The vein is about two AO : in thickness at the surface, and is • found in the usual strata of quartz. The „yield is about Boz. of gold to 100 lbs. of 'melt. A specimen was exhibited at this Office a few days since, together with a mass of gold extracted by quicksilver, weighing about three ounces. There is every reason to believe that this vein may be traced many leauges in extent, and be found of uninterrupted richness. The gold MitteSef California are now in reality dis ''c.oveted. 440/(k.tbrip,.. • 7 7 7 • • MIMI ,_ ~z.,,. MIEMEI ample. Nevertheless, Gene. Kmelz and Salon, and about thirty officers would not separate from him, and they have made the same declaration in favor of Islamism. Kossuth who was greatly irritated against Bern, went immediately to the Hungarian camp, and informed the men thatta Por te resisted the demands of Russia • and' Austria, and that England and France appeared decided to assist the Porte, and that he supplicated them not to imprint a stain on the flag f Christian Hungary, which they had always served with honor. Some words from .Kossuth havinu b given rise to the opinion that Bern and his com panions had yielded to the promises of the Porte, a great agitation showed itself in the Hungarian camp, and it was at one time feared that a disturbance would take place. Dembimski has acted differOntly. He has not become a Mussulman, but he has openly acknowledged that the Porte had nothing whatsoever to do with the ab juration of Rem and his companions, and he has even written letters to the Grand Vizier and the Seraskier, in which he ex- presses his gratitude. Bem is now called Murad Paella. All the refugees, without distinction, arc treated with kindness and humanity. AU STRIA AND HER DEPEND ENCIES. A letter from Vienna of the Bth of Oc tober, published in the Prussian Monitcur, says, "The organization of the army is going on with great activity. Marshal Radetzky shows an ardor which 13 hardly credible. The two armies in Bohemia and in the Voralberg will be completed at the end of the month." The appointment of Prince Lichtenstein as provisional commander of Hungary, is 1 explained by the Prague papers to have been caused by Baron I laynau havino , given in his resignation, especially because it was known that Baron Havnau was moved to this step by his disgust at has ing some of his measures contravened, and others mitigated, by the Austrian cab- Met. I3aron Ilaynau, it appears, com plains that his authority has been disre garded by those who presumed to execute Count Batthyani, by shooting that noble man, it being Baron Haynati's express command that the Count should die by the hands of the common hangman. INTERESTING FROM MOROCCO. It is stated that the Emperor of Moroc co's Minister of Foreign Affairs had pro posed to submit the difficulties existing to the mediation land decision of Mr. Hurt Hyatt, Consul General of the United States in Morocco, but that the French, were not then prepared to refer the matter to arbi tration. Subsequently, intelligence ar rived that the French Minister at Wash ington had been dismissed by General Taylor, when Mr. Hyatt immediately de clined to act. SIR JOIIN FRANKLIN'S EXPEDI TION. Letters received from Sir John Rich ardson announce his arrival at Norway House, Lake Winnipeg, on the 1-th of August last, on hiq way home, He may therefort, shortly be expected to reach England. The whole party were in per fect health, and had recovered from the fa tigues of their sea-coast voyage perform ed in the summer of 1848, from the Mac kenzie to the Coppermine rivers, in search of Sir John Franklin's expedition, the par ticulars of which were fully detailed in Sir John Richardson's letter of the 16th September, 1848, on his arrival at winter quarters on the treat Bear Lake, which letter was published in our journal on the 12th of July last. Mr. Ross, who ac companied Sir John Richardson, was len with a select city of active men to pro ceed down the . Coppermine River this summer, to examine the opening between Victoria and Wollaston lands, and to aid any party that Sir James Ross may send towards the Coppermine over the ice.— Sir John Richardson had deposited pem mican on various points of the coast fur the use of Sir John Franklin's party' should they abandon their ships, and. seek the continent of America.--London Standard. Sir Henry Lytton Bulwer, the new ac credited minister to the United States, ac companied by the Hon. Lady Bulwer, left London on the 25th ult., for Liverpool, there to embark for New York, to enter on his diplomatic duties at Washington.— Mr. Bulwer Lytton, son of the celebrated novelist, would also depart with his uncle, having been appointed attache to the Brit ish Legation. LOUIS kOSSUTII—The Hungarian chief ;•-•-wasborn April 27, 1806;—ho is of Scla- Vonian and Majjar origin ; an orator of great power and energy ; and has exhibit ed as a statesman much boldness, temper• cd by prudence and sagacity. His father was a land-steward, and he himself, in 1834, a poor, obscure country lawyer. In 1835, he wits invited to conduct a newspaper in opposition to Austrian poli cy ; but government would allow no full and free reports of legislative proceedings to be published. Kossuth learned stenog-, raphy; and when the censors mutilated , his reports,. many ardent reformers were employed to prepare copies of what had was done intim Diet, they 'werelithograph , cd and folded in letter form, to be mailed to all parts of Hungary ; tho people:"met, listened, and were aroused ; but the gov ernment soon began to seize the letters at the postoffice, and on May 2, 1837, Kos suth and several other reformers were at., rested, and he pa4sed two years in jail Waiting for his trial. :In 1839 he was a warded a third year's ' imprisonment. In :1840 he stepped from prison to take his place as.chiefof the opposition in the Diet, In 1841, Kossuth's daily newspaper, the Petit Hir/ap, had 11,000.subscribeis; and association, home manufactures, the ma king of public roads, and getting ready far self-government ..and ;freedom,. wore ; his; themes. ,When Louis Philippe was , de throned:.:in amp, Ko'ssutli, the soul .of the 11 -1‘[,11.1 Cii; n ri Diet or national assembly, pressed Austria , for justice to Hungary, became its finance minister rind when the committee of safe ty was chosen, he, as its head, conducted the affairs of his struggling country.—Pal mer's Almanac for 1850. Another InfOmous Wrong. The enormities perpetrated with impu. nity by Bank Charters—says the Penn sylvanian—Arc of almost daily occtirrence2 It is 4trangq that these costly ndmdnitiOns do not protect us from the increase of an evil of so alarming a character. We see whole communities impoverished—lionest toil plundered—the widow and the orphan swindled—and yet we not only hesitate' about applying the rigorous corrective, but stand by and let the system be extended and perpetuated. The New York Police Gazette notices the last instance of bank dishonesty, as exhibited by the failure of the Morris, N. J., Bank. It states that it gat into the hands, principally, of a Yan kee financier named Thompson, by his purchasing a considerable amount of new stock, for which very. little money was paid, who at• once commenced scattering the notes most profusely in every direc tion. Not• succeeding, however, in the extent of his wishes, in this, an agent was despatched west, with a large amount of these uniserable•"promises to pay on de mand." We copy from the Gazette : "While things were in this state,Thomp son cleared out one fine morning, taking with him some twenty thousand dollars more in notes, for the purpose, as he said, I of exchanging them at the east, promising I to return on a certain day, when the bank had several heavy engageMents to meet. On the day set, however,'ffie bank looked for him in vain, but in lieu of his appear ance they received a letter from him, sta ting that they need not expect him ; that he was a ruined man ; and that his dis tress was so extreme, that it was impossi ble for him to• give an account of any of the money he, had taken off, or otherwise abstracted from the bank. The officers of the bank now fully opened their eyes. It was plain that Mr. Thompson was A rascal, and the thunderclap of a new loss, which was revealed to them at this time, convinced them that they ought to look af ter him at once, They received news of the failure of the Susquehanna Bank, whose notes, to the extent of twenty thou sand dollars, was among the assets, intro duced there. by Thompson, who, it was now discovered, was implicated in the man agement of that institution, also. The double game of the adroit Yankee finan cier being now revealed, the directors, af tel• closing up their concern, made inqui ries after Mr. Thompson, and learning he had gone in the direction of Cincinnati, telegraphed to have himitirrested immedi ately .on his arrival therc."\ About 8100,000 oNie notes of this bank are in circulation, with a very small a mount of assets to redeem them. CORDETT ON IRELAND AND POTATO Dl- ET.—Last .evening a Roman Catholic priest, Dr. Smith, from Connemara, coun ty Galway, related the following conver sation he had witlr that extraordinary man, Cobbett, in 18'26: Speaking of Ireland, Cobbett said that the dirty weed, alluding to the potato, would be the curse of Ire land. " How so''" replied Dr. Smith, "what must the people do without it? they live upon it. They have had it in cultiva tion 180 years." Cobbett answered, "they must go back to the same food they were accustomed to live upon previously to the general cultivation of the dirty weed ; that is, to grain, as wheat, oats, &e. You have four millions of souls in Ireland, and eight millions of acres of uncultivated land. The ground must be drained, uud brought into cultivation, and you must again grow wheat, oats, rye, &c. The potato will not last inure than 20 years, when it will work itself out, and then you will sec to what a state Ireland will be reduced. You must return to grain crops; and Ireland, instead of being one of the most degraded, will become one of the finest countries in the world. You may live to see my words prove true, but I never shall." Dr. Smith made a note of the above in 1826, and the same opinion, and prophecy concerning the potato occurs in one of Cobbett's books, "Cottage Economy, or Cottage Comforts," —Economist. (z - From an interesting statistical arti cle in the Boston Transcript, we learn, that the amount of sales of poultry in ono market in that city, for the year 1848, was six thousand three hundred and sev enty-three dollars ; the average sales of one dealer alone amounting to twelve hun dred dollars per week for the whole year. The amount of poultry sales for the whole city of Boston, for the same year, was o vcr one million of dollars ! The, amount of sale of eggs for the whole city of Bos ton, for the same year, was a,fraction short of . a million s& dollars. The Transcript says that the breeding and rearing of poul try is second in importance to scarcely any other article of stock in _New I,;.;ngland. 'a, agricultural statistics of the . United States, published 1840,. show that the value of paltry in the State of,New York was two million. three hundred: and, seven- . three thousand and twenty-nine dOlap, ' AFFRAY AND DEATH IN ,AIIIANSAt3.— We arc indebted , to the , ACers of the Chancellor fortha following statement ofa ditlictilty in Arkansas:, "We arninformed .that at Columbia, Ay4., where we, stopped, a ' few, ppmentS; that a light had : occurred thereon, the 27th ; ult., between judge Archibald Goodloe I and My. Bomulus Paine, planters in Ar- 1 kansas, in which the former was killed in stantly, and the latter,. very dangerously wounded, haying received scycn,shots in various. pa,rts „nf his body. ,;;When we passed the IVlonday folioNyhtg,,iwe ; were' ;,told that Mr, ; probably, ,recov,er, We could not obtain a n ipgne,,ub4a ; ap:to: the etteseef the fighte-r4effis.viffeiGeitrif t . A;tltblif giunblincht cOttoritia.- • • A , A - San Francisco COrfespeenaent ' did New York .107"4-4fvompipx:e,,has the following Picture`o. , cfariiblins in 'Califor 'nia; in his last fetter , ; , • What would you, think fti''s4ae' house around the lltirlion open gambling house, monte-tafiles in . each corner , —faro, A. B. C., and roulette, and' ,nun4erless French games in the .centre; ,a. ,splendid stocked bar—a band - of musicians to en tertain the crowds who throng these pla ces so densely, that you find it difficult to• press your way through, or 'get near a ta. ble. Abandoned women visit these pla ces openly. I saw one the other birenitig. 'sitting quietly at a nionte-table; dreSSed in white pants, blue coat, and cloth. cap, curls dangling over her checks, cigar in her mouth, and a glass of punch by her side. Sho'handled a pile of doubloons With her white kid gloved hands, and bet most bold ly. One man _approached a faro table, staked a hundred dollarS, and won seven- teen hundred in fifteen minutes. Next day I saw him running from' friend to triend, to borrow fifty dollars. He was. broke. Yesterday a gambler, Who' came on in the Oregon, and who iS.Worth some 60,000 dollars, told me that the lirbeeeds• of his bank, for the preceding day; )vere 3000 dollars; and yet, with an inflitUatiOn truly astonishing, men 'fleck, fo'ilieSe;plci,- ces, and stake the products of Months' la bor at .the mines. Now and tlieir;:it is true, some bank gets the worst of ih :One of them was completely broken-up, by a Southerner, a few weeks ago. fie took 36,000 dollars from the .bank, t in,'4wo nights'• playing..• 1: • BANKN Corrected IVeckly tram Pennsylvania. Philad'a b'ks, par U. S. Bank, 12 Chambersburg, i' Gettysburg, 1 Pittsburg, i 1 Susq. County, Lewistown, no sale Middletown, i Carlisle, 7; Hollidaysburg, Erie, 10 Waynesburg, 1 Washington, lali Harrisburg, Ilonesbale, 1 Browesville, lal A williamspurt, 11 York, All solvent b'ks par Relief Notes, 1 Towanda Rel. no sills New York City. Chelsea bank, 80 Clinton, 50 Commercial, Lafayette, 2 Washington, 70 Other solv. b'ks, par New York State. Allegheny co. 60a75 America,l3ufildo, :30 Commerce, do, 35 Atlas bank, 30 Canal, Albany, 25 Brockport, :43 James Bank, 1 Northern Es., 1 Lodi, 20a251 Lyons, 15 State b. Saugerties, 1 Division Ordcrs NO Head Quarters 14.6 Division Uniform•, ed AUbun of Peousy.valata. I.Bwl.Tows. October I.j In accordance %%jib General °Meta, i.J.llell by the Adjutant ' Genernk dated 10th o:tuher, 184'J, and approved by bus Es' vilyncy, the Cunin.ond'er-in• Civet, the I lilt day of Or tuber, 149. the General owl Stall Officers Dad offs• rcr• of the I, , ne, of duo Fourteenth Ui• vision of the Uniformed Muffin of Von.- sy lianla, are hereby Ilistrnyilti In a • dopt the 'lathes+ Frock Coat and Fur• age Cap of the Army of the United States, actor• ding to their r erpecnve rnolt. Officers who Nave prorated the fall .Irevs It' dorm will not be chat• ted by floe order, but all others are requJjed to conform implicitly 'hereto. It is n source of gratification that llis Eicee'llea. cy• the Commander in. (Incl. hes relleycd thp Ufl'i• errs of the Uniformed Militia of Pennsylvania from n ti,.eltem and burdensome expense, and a• !lowed a Uniform rum - cutout and heeotafrig.,4llll in strict accordance not' the Funplicity of . our republican maw attune Ithijor General 14 li Div U. M of Pend. I L. 13ming7 . 1% Aid du Cuirip. Brigade Orders No. 1. Head Quarters 4ih Brigade, 14 b 1/- %Anion of U. AL ol I'CIIn9YIN9niAr CLIRWKNBVI4I.R. November 5,,1849 In necordanco with the foregoing ictitlei of the Major General the Oflicors of the 4th prigado 14;h Division of the lliiiiormetl Militi t u Ponnsylva Oa, are hereby required in conform,ihorotori,,l •JOIIN rivllopt. ; Brig A. M. lL4t.s, Aid de Camp. ROBERT MANL,EY,, ItAIBIIt4.7MV AND. lIIIA K E It. ' l Tin: tihseriber respectfully 'ikoroli zone 01 deciffield colisityl that Iti; bpi refill menced above named busitrear.ioi . thelshupl formerly occupied by 1 L Cufile.;mry ofulirP pectfully scdicits a share of public palr9flng?/ He flatters himself iliut lie "can firruitit; work I all 'mewls ‘lio may..be'pleased 63'011; entire saiiefactron. He trill Ifbeirbn lbarid , d Cabinet-work and Vinsidor Chairs' or , very de.eripnon. , ' Upholeferett, *Motel ntill to order'. • : , ALSO, .Dentist, Invalid, and 'Chan Chairs--C'llair' Beds and Bed Arr• pm Red Chair .con bo ,cooNciied,freffil Armchair u cominem ps.4lil ilytylkhfiliDißßi BD also . %1 ill fold to the BMA compode ih i.can,be tat rind under Ilia arm, It is particir'aili'ettlibbli for Military officers and Professional , gentlemen.' N. 13.1.--CUfline , made. the ncetell I on ,Lhp,ohartest IWlt ,ce.. . nvn leurflol& July 16-19.-th , ; Yil`)l 'C gl vat: 40qtgk lot us ; sqqlp 404 n ,111 sizes, for bale ' , ,it , • , • f flAwt I' MOM T 1.3 LIST. ~; ‘1.3 vhi.nuel l ibla rovers, Bank, CaytiOL:' /1 Western, Roches'., 30 Binghampton, 5O Cattaraugus co.' 30 Clinton county, 15 Commercial, Buf:, 15 do Oswego, 'lO Farmers', Senc4a, 30 Hamilton bunk, .15 Meehan. Buffalo; 45 Merchants' li.v.„ , ; 40 Millers', at,Clyde, 10 o, sweg O 1 fOO Phainix, Buflido; 35 4atcn island,. ~,50 'State b.Butfalo,7saBo St. Lawrence, 75 Union, Buffalo, 30 'U. S., BAUR), 30 NS'atervliet, ' 15 Other sole. b I kS, 1 New Jersey. Dcl. B'ElgO Co. tab . 15 Other solven,t, par Ohio. Solvent Cincinnatili Cleveland, , 5; Hamilton, 15 Commer., Scioto, 1G do Lake Erie,7s Sandusky, . , Norwalk, , _ Fame r4',.Canton,7s Granville Spcioy, Ltincastesr, , 15 Urbanna Wing co. 65 Other solvent,. , li Under Fives, . ~ , 2} It C. IIALE
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers