A Second Pocahontas, At the last session of Congress the following interesting communication wa received from the War Department and referred to the ap propriate Conunlttce who reported a hill, which wbb passed, granting n pension of eight dol lar month to Milly, the Indinn woman men tioned in the letter. WA8IUS9TOS, April 13, 1843. Sir : I have the honor to re port that, in my re cent visit to the Creek nation of Indians, I found a Creek woman named Willy, a daugh ter of the celebrated Prophet Francis, the Creek chief who waa executed by order of General Jachson in the Seminole war of 1317-19 ; and, believing that the circumstances of her history presented a case of very peculiar interest, I made it a point to obtain from herself a stnto mentofher conduct in 1819, when as public history Ins already recorded, she saved the life of an American citiren who was a prison er in the power of tome nf her tribe. Being in the vicinity of the Indian girl, near the mouth of the Verdigris river, and being acquainted with a portion of her history, I rode several miles to hear heratory from herself. Slip began by saying that an elder Bister and herself were playing on the bank of tho river Apalachicola, when they heard a war cry, which they understoodd to signify that a prisoner had been taken. They immediately went in the direction of the cry, and found a white man, en tirely naked, tied to a tree, and two young In dian warriors, with their rifles, dancing around him, preparatory to putting him to death, as waa theirright, according to custom, they hav ing taken him o prisoner. She explained to me that in such caspa the life of a prisoner is in the hands of the captors that even the chiefs have no authority in tho case. Milly waa then but fifteen or sixteen years of age. "The prisoner was a young man," said Mil ly, "and seemed very much frightened, and looked wildly around to see if any body would help him." "I thought it was a pity," she said, "that a young man like him should be put to death ; and I spoke to my father, and told him it was a pity to kill him that he had no head to go to war with," (meaning that the young man must have acted upon the advice of others, and not upon his own suggestion in going to war.) "My father told nie," continued Milly, "that he could not save him, and advised me to rpcak to the Indians, and I did so ; b'lt one of them was very much enraged, saying he had lost two sisters in the war and would put the prisoner to death. I told him," said Milly, "that it would not bring his sisters back to kill the young mnn , and so, talking to him for some time, 1 finally persuaded him; and he said that if the young man would agree to have his head shaved, and dies like an Indian, and live a mong them, they would save hi life." She then proposed the conditions to the white man, which were joyfully accepted ; and the Indians changed the contemplated death scene into a frolic. They shoved the young man's head, excepting the scalp lock, which was or namented with feathers ; and, alter painting him, and providing him an Indian dress he was set at liherty, and adopted as one of the trib Some time afterward the young man propos ed marriage ; but Milly said she did not save his life for that, and declined his proposals. I asked Milly how she now lived. She told me that she was very poor, and hud to work very hard ; that her father wan put to death in tho war, and her mother and sister were dead. Her husband was aUo dead. Of eight children she had but three living, two of whom were young girls, and one a boy, too young yet to help her. But she said that if she could recover her property from tho Seiuinoles she could live very well. She is now about forty years of age ; and after having seen her, and being entirely satisfied of the truth of her story, I am in duced to recommend that her case be laid be fore Congress. Milly bus now no huidjand or brother, or any near connection, to provide fir her, and is in need with a fine promising son indeed, but too young to be of service to his mother; and, owing to pledges mode to the Seminoles, it is probable she will not be able to recover possession of some negro pro perty, now held by the Seminoles, belonging to her. Y'our obedif'tit servant. n. a. niTcurocK. Lieutenant Colonel yd Infantry, &c. Hon. J. C. SrnxeER, Secretary of War, Walter Forward. A Washington correspondent of the Com mercial gives the following glance at the ear ly life nd subsequent career of Hon. Walter Forward, late Secretary of the Treasury ; Mr. Ex-Secretary Forward has left this ci ty t reside once more, in the comparative qui et of Pittsburg. During his residence here he has made many friemds. Indeed no one can be long in his society without perceiving that be is intelligent, honest and affectionate : and the last two qualities, rare though they are among mankind, are peculiarly unseen among politi cians. Hence they are appreciated here. Ad ded to these, Mr. Forward is a self-made man. Horn in a little village in Connecticut, of poor and worthy parents, he inherited but a Yankee's birthright 'his father's blessing, and his own wits.' The first of these lie deserved ; the second were bountifully given, as the succeed ing years of his life have shown. While yet a boy, a gentleman in Connecticut gave his father a hundred dollars, to bo used by Walter whenever hedosired. When he was ten years o'd, hisfiither removed to the Connectic ut Re serve, as it was then called, (the Northern part of Ohio,) near the Pennsylvania line. At the age ol thirteen, Walter concluded that he would take part of his money, and purchasing some classical works, study for a year with a man who h id offered to instruct him gratuitously. 'The year passed away, and so well had he improved his time, in studying by fire-light, and by the light of pine knots, as he could not pur chase candles, that he was able to go on and complete his classical education without assist ance. . Another person then offered him six months' instruction in mathematical and other studies, which offer he embraced and improved. And then with twenty dollars in his pocket, a new suit of clothes, and his baggage in a pock et-handkerchief, ho started on foot for Pitts burg. There, as he read sign after sign, and met person ufier person, uncertain what em ployment he should select, he saw the name of Mr. Baldwin, (now one of the Justices of the Supreme Court of the United States,) and con cluded that he, also, would be a lawyer. Mr. Baldwin pleased with his simple-hearted intcl- ligence,gave him a place in his office. Through trials which it would weary mo to relate, or to a full and successful practice at the bar ; thence to Congress ; thence to the Coinptrol lers's desk ; thence to the post of Cabinet Min ister; and now he returns, respected and belo ved, to the quiet of his home in Pittsburg, and the practice of his profession. A Great Discovery in Mesmerism. Dr. Gibbeu, ofColumbia, whoso experiment in Mes merism have attained much celebrity, writes to the Editor of the Charleston Courier as follows : "I have parclyzed the tongues of two In dus so that try could not use them until J gave them permission. Numerous and res pectable witnesses were present and saw the process, and the ladies were both "wide awake !' My first impression waa cntre nous, that my discovery would be of immense prac tical value in domestic life, where an inordi nate action of this member existed ; but a moment's reflection satisfied mo of a serious difficulty it must be p'rftclly at rest for a ft w minutes, w hile the iutjiieucc is being de veloped ; and this, you know, in certain cases, U a '"thing impossible." Good hi (ill. Where spades grow bright, and idle swords grow dull, Where jails are empty, nt where barns ire full, Who church paths are wih fn qne. fe out-worn, l.nw r. U'i y"ls weedy. silent and f vrtorn ; V 1. 1 c do-i.irs ft it, and wl.e.e far mm ride, IV I, s, e eg altouod and youth mdiiplied , W here UV ':s etelj indicate A bi-jTy fft ' t; J ft te. An Accomplished Villain! The Charleston Courier of Tuesday cojitains an exposure of a great scoundrel, who was in troduced into the committee there as Dr. Charles W. Applvtan, in thedisguise of a Bap tist minister and declaimcr on total abstinence. He ingraciated himself in the good graces of a widow lady, a member ofa fumily whose hos pitality he enjoyed, and ran away with her. Just after he disappeared with the victim ot his arts, a letter was received from New Jersey, giving a portion of his history, which showed him to be one of the very worst of men. The first we have of him is lit Richmond, Indiana, where he acted badly deserted his wife, went cast, married a young lady whom he lived with for a short time, and deserted. I le return ed to Indiana and to his wife, feigning repen tance. He induced her to go to Illinois, there left her again, came to New Jersey, w here, as a Baptist milliliter, he moved in good society, and married the daughter ofa respectable and worthy gentleman of New Brunswick. He soon left for the south on a temperance and re ligious mission, and in Charleston won the af fections of the lady before mentioned, whom he will in turn desert. The guise of a mini.-ter has been his chosen character, first appearing as Methodic, then as Baplibt. It is to be hoped that so successful a villain will not go long un punished. He is said to bconc of very dimin utive size, and rather emaciated, and thnt for these peculiarities he may be known among a thousand. People cannot be toocuulious with regard to the itinerating classes. The Charles ton Courier hopes tho disclosure of the iniqui ty of this man will cause our citizens, who have been so often deceived, to be more cau tious in examining into the character of itin erants before taking them into their confidence. Vrsra visifiLE in tub Day-time. The new comet is not the only celestial phenomenon which lias been observed. A Bulngnal journal states, that on the 2th ult. a truly marvellous tact was remarked in that city. The planet Venus showed itself distinctly in noonday: it was visible to the nuked eye, and as it was surrounded by an aureole, some persons took it for a comet But it was impossible to be de ceived ; it was Venus, which owing to some atmospherical circumstances, appeared to the astonishing spectatori Lttler fiom I'aris. As Atnosimikric Phenomenon. On Sun day afternoon, says tho Oswego Palladium the wind easterly and the atmosphere clear with some clouds we had the most extraordinary vision of distant objects upon the lake and be yond it that has occurred for many years. Ma ny distant objects, which are far below the ho rizon, became distinctly visible. It is not an unusual thing in easterly weather for the Cialoo Islands at ISO miles distant to loom up, and come into sight. On Sunday they were not only very plainly in sight, but seemed to have diminished their distance one half. Tho Ducks and Pigeon Isles, which are some 40 miles off, and which are rarely seen, were in plain view. But what is still moro wonderful, the whole Canadiun shore from Point Peter to the Kings ton Passage, and the entrance into the St. Law rence, was visible. With a tuleseope tbe whole I loomed up in plain v s v, From the New Orleans Picayune. t.ate from Texas. We have dates from (Jdveton to the 15th Inst and from Houston to the 14th, inclusive, brought yesli tdsy by the steamship New York, Cip'ain Wright. From our files we gather the following summary. The Texan papers, or at least many of them, ap pear sanguine that a large portion of die Mi. r pri loners hive made a successful relrent, although we must confe-s that we have strong fears that surh is not the case. That a few of them have hern fortuna'e enough to reach the Rio Grande in safety there is but little doubt ; but the Mexican accounts of the recapture of the main body look so positive, and give time, place and circumstances with ruch an appearance nf truth, we cannot but think the main body ofTeians are again in their hnnds. One account is, l' at on die morning of the Cth ins)., a Mexican arrived at Mount Vernon, a small town about thirty miles west of Washington, with a loiter containing an account of the escape of the Mier prisoners fiom their guard, of their arrival at 1'nmoreo, and of the taking of that place. The Mexican w.is direct from the city of Mexico, and crm-sed the Rio Grange the day afier tbe Texans entered and look tho town. He was despatched by one of ll.e San Antonio privnnrrs (by permission of the Mexican government.) The letter is signed by several of ihe Mler prisoners, and no doubt is entertained of its genninenrss by those who have seen it. II stairs thnt Ihe prisonrre, finding it Im practicable, on account of the scarcity of wuler and provisions,, to purt-uo the route wnicn mey origi nally designed, the; crossed Ihe mountain at the head nf the San Juan, and continued down that stream until within a short distance of its mouth, when they took the road to Comirgo. H iving be. come desperate by long suffering, and probably sp ptehemling tin attack from the Mexicans, while cr ssing the RioGrandc, thy d teiniimd to hazard an attack Upon ihe (own. When they cntcreJ the plac.1 the Mexican troops were already drawn up to oppose them ; but such wis the impetuosity of ihe charge of the Texans, that the troops of the enemy were routed in a few mii.utcs. lietwten six and seven bun J red Mexicans were killed. The Tex ans lost but twenty five men. An arrival at Houston on the night of the Tlth in-t. confirm the above, and Mates thai they had all reached the Guadaloupo, and that some of them had arrived in Montgomery county. A rencounter, resulting faulty, occurred at Washington on the 3 1 at ult., between Col. Jas. R. Cook and a Mr. Adkins. In a dispute Adkins struck Cook ; the latter drew a knife anil wounded Adkins severely. Adkins ihen drear a pistol and shot Cook dead upon the spot. It ws considered as doubtful whether Adkins would survive the wound received from Cook. Copt. Elliott, II. B. M. Choree d Affaires for Texas, arrived at Washington on the 5th insl.,and after a long interview with the Piesident left for Houston, It woa rumored that his visit was con nected with Ihe recent despatches from Mexico. O. Bulletin of sun an a, 'i I iiui-aHMgggga...i I THE AMERICAN. Saturday, Jtlay G, 1843, We have on band sixty teams of print ing paper, similar in site and quality to the sheet upon which this Is printed. Also 38 reams of su per Royal 21 by 28 inches, which will be sold at enst ind carriage, for cash. Qj On our first page we have placed an exceN lent article in relation to the making ofbut'er, a subject of great importance to our farmers. The butter from Holland is worth from 25 to 50 per rent more in the English mirket, than our own. This is wholly our own fiu.lt. as no belter butler c .n be produced than some made in this country. But we regret to ssy, that for every pound of reilly good butter brought lo market, there is ten pounds of indifferrnt and poor. An excellent temporiry bridge ba Wen e reeled over Ihe bienk of the embankment above town. The bridge ia peif. et'v aife, and is a great convenience to the travelling public. Mont j Matter. The Money market is much ihe same as quoted in our last. Relit f, according to Bicknell of Tues day, is as follows i Relief Notes of Penn Township, Moysmensing, Mnnufactureis and Mechanics, Lewistnwn, Beiks county, Erie, Northampton, Towanda, Wilkesbarre and West Branch banks, Ca7 Pittsburgh hanks, Columbia Bridge Co., t er mers bank of Lancaster, fijafi Mechanics bank of Philadelphia, Northern Liber ties, Delaware county, Chester county, German- town, and Farmers bank of Burks county, par Other Relief Notes. 5ja6 New ruuntfrfcit. Lacistkh CocnTr Bias:, Lancaster, Ps. f0's altered from Snuthwark Savings Institution, dated Feb. 12, 1839 ; F. Roberts, Cashier G. F. Benckerl, President, No such persons have ever been officers of this bank. Socthwass; Bank, Philadelphia. 10's altered from Snuthwa'k Savings Bjnk, a fraud. Signed F. Roberts, Cashier F. Burkelt, Pres. No such officers of this hank at sny lime. These spurious notes have recently been put sfloit at Pittsburg. TowAsnA Baik, Towanda Pa. 2's, altered from the genuine plate, Boyd and Dyr emission, by attaching the signatures cut from I's of the reiiu l.ir issue. Very well done." Hold up to the light. The water was let into the ennnl, from Nor thumberland lo the Junia'a, on Sunday last. We stated that it would require two or three weeks to make die repnits, but by the exertions of the su pervisor, it has been accomplished in about one. week. The engineer at Hsriisburg, we understand, had an iiles that Ihe breaks could have been pre vented. That they ought have been prevented there can be nn doubt, if the guard bank had been raised, which for the space of three or four miles was two or three feet iinder water. Without such a precaution, 10,000 men could not have saved the canal. The Bloomsburg Itppistor, speaking of the I .te fieshct, rha'g'-s us with having said, that ' a hick of the Sunlmry Canal, nearly finished, was undermined and carried away." The Rrejs'er cerlainly never saw any thing of the kind in our paper. Part of the embankment above the lock was carried away, but the luck, which is htised on a rock foundation, is as firm as the rock itself. Tint Mux Piusosfrs. The N the21t publishes a li tter from Monterey which it says mut silence nil dou''t as lo the recapture of 130 of the Texan pr s mers who made their escape. Two 6Urcefs've o il. n hv b en g cn ly lh Se en tary of War at Mi xico lo shoot every ten b man of ll e number, to be derided by lot. Gen. Mex'u, who disobeyed the first order, his been arrested, and there is no doubt ihe second mandate has been executed on the road to the r.ipilal. The sick and woumb d weie secretly marched out of town on the 4ih ult. Tl e w liter ad!a. that the case of Ihe prisoner who were taken at Uexar, and confined in the Cs-tle at l't-tote, is onu of peculiar hardship. The gre iler pari of them are gentlemen of talents and high respectability, connected with some of the first families in the I'nilnl Slates. fj" The following named gentlemen were elec ted borough officers for the ensuing year, at an election held nn Monday last : Chief Rurgess John II. Pur.ty. Second Burgess Francis Boeder. Issiilant Burgesses Alexander Jordan, John Budd, Jesse M. Simpson, Silas II Enuel. Common Council James II. Ilu-ted, George B.Youngman, Georce Lyon, Samuel J. Fry, Frederick Lazarus, Thomas A. Rillinet n, Charles J. Bruner, David T. Trites. High Cimstahfe Edward Lynn. Clerk Peter W.Grav. Tttai SI ul Infers. Four of the men recently tried on board the Tex ss ship of war Austin were found guilty and sen tenced to death. The sentence has been before this rs'rid into execution fsys the N. O. Troic. Two of them were found guilty of one of the charges and sei.t' need to receive one of them 100 lahes, the o- iber 50. A letter from Commander Mooro to the Edoors of the Tropic detailing these farts says : By ihe evidence presented lo the Court, a regu larly concerted pln had been forming for some time. t' scire tins ship and the s.diooners San An tonio ami Sn B-rnard, (ihe only ves-els at sea.) arid run them into Veri Cruz. I have thought it le;-tto give you this inform ition, as in the course of human events we m ghl all goto ihe bottom. The lenience of ihe Court in the ce of Mid shipuiau K. II. Clements, will nqui'e Ihe action ol Ihe Pre-ident of Texas tho other I will carry out in a few d.ivs mvi-elt. Wc ail lirsl for G Iveston, where I contemplate slopping for a f w hours, when I will sad direct to attack the squadron olf ihe co.t of Yucatan. !Yrva from llraxll. We have received lotell gence from Rio Je Janei ro lo Ihe 20th of March. The Prince de Joinville and suite arrived there on the 1 9th, in the frigate 1, i Belle Poole, lo marry the Princess Januiio, the youngest sister of the Emperor. The frigate anchored at Fort Santa Cruz, and it was rxpected that the Prince would land on the 20th. He would immediately leave for the country seat of the Emperor. Extensive pre parations were making in Rio to receive him. There wero on English and five French ves sels of war in port. The U. S. frigate Columbia was daily expected there from Moutevedin. Troop writ daily looked for from Rio Grande. All ws- quiet at St. Pauls. It was said that the difficulties in Minos Gacras remained unsealed. The late Merlin; at the Capitol. We have heretofore neglected to noiice the pro. cecdings of a meeting compo-rd of Democratic members of both branches of ihe Legislatuie, held at tha Capitol, a few days before the final adjourn ment. An addiess and resolutions were adopted, in which the necessity of union nnd harmony in the selection of a candidate for ihe Presidency is strongly urged a decided preference is expressed in favor of Mi. Buchanan tbe 4th of May is de signated as Ihe proper lime for the meeting of the National Convention, and it is recommended that the delegates lo the Convention be selected by a State Convention, and not by Congressional dietiic'ts. The members of the Legislature had not, of course, any authority from their coniituent to act for them in regard t' these subjects, and their pro. cerdirigs are to be regarded as nothing more than a mere united expression of individual opinion, which emanating from a respectable body ol gen tlemen, will have due weight, hut cannot be con sidered as sn expression of the wishes of the De nver icy of Pennsylvania. The Democratic yen manry ol the State will in due time make known Iheir opinion upon these suhjerts, accorrding la the usaaes of the parly ; and until they do, we pro test ngiinat any attempt by members of the Leuis lature lo fores'al thai opinion, by an apparent as sumption of ower never delegated to them. We believe thai there is but one opinion among the Democracy of Pennsylvania, as to the proer lime and place for holding the National Convention, and ihe proceedings of the meeting express that o pinion ; but in regard to the person to be nominated, there is not quite tho some unanimity. There has been very little said in the public prints about the mode in which ihe delegates ought lo be chosen, and we have yet seen no expression of opinion by the psople in their primary meetings in regard to it. A great deal ran be said in favor of both mode, and we intend lo notica the subject again at our leisure. It is due to the members friendly lo Col, John son, to say, that they did not attend the meeting al luded to. A servant girl, says, an English Paper lost her life at the hou.e of Mr. Ally, of Donoughmore, Queen's county, last wk;he wa brushing a greit coat, in tha pocket of which there was loaded pistol, which went off and shot ber through ! heart, fj Our friend of the Reading Gazette speaks of a new ladies' shoe alore, esubliahed in that place. Old maids, we presume, are not embraced in Ihe category of neui ladies, although they rosy te oil one. Gtusaai Casi bss bven appointed Rageot of th Mtrhisn Vni'etsi'y. MISCELLANY. K1llorlal, Condensed anil Selected. Specie to the amount of $598,000 was received at New Orleans on the 21st ult. Of ibis sum i f251, 4CI were from New York. The number of white persons in connection w ith the various Methodist Churches in the rity of Philadelphia and its immediate vicinity, is said to be 10.8G8. Fanny F.ls ler's investments in this country, ac cording to the Boston Post, have increased in value upwards of f 15,000 since she left Amnio. They are all in Mr. Wickuff ' name, and controlled by his agent. The Commissioners of all the counties of Massa chusetts, except Franklin, have refused to grant licenses to sell anient spirits. Improvements in nitnliurg.h is said that in Pittsburg more contracts for buildings have been entered into this season, than for the last three years. Stopped Work. In consequence of sn attempt on the part of the i mplyers to reduce wages, the factory girls of Pittsburg have united themselves in'oa body, and discontinued woik. Judge Sharkey of ilri'sir'ipi. Judge Sharkey, who, about five years ago, killed one or two, and wounded several more, of a mob, which attempt ed lo lynch him on account of some objections to his decisions in a certain case, has been elected by the people to the office of Chief Justice of ihe St ,te. A Rroutiful Cactus. Tha Low. 11 Courier says. Dr. Boyden, on Central street, has in his store one of the most beautiful cactuses we hive ever seen. It i about 7 feet hih ; an J has nearly 100 buds, many of which are ju.t breaking out. Ii wo th looking at. Doings at Washington. The corre p indent of IheN. Y. Express states that T. L. Smith, the Reisti r of (he Treasury, has issued nearly four hundred thoxnand dullirs worth of Treasury Xotes hryond the amount uuthuriscd by the lute law of Congress befure he discovered his eiror ! Northampton Bank. The New York TiT'une says: "The Northampton Bank, Pa. has made an assignment, in which all ita creditors are secured i excepting those who ate unfoitunale enough to! hold the bills of the hank signed by John Rice, I Pre-ident. These, ai we understand it, are repu diated." The Paris National estimates the profits realized by the French government from the monop .y of the tobacco and snutT manufacture t-etween July the first, 181 1, and December the thirty. first, 1 812 at 1,488.123.613 francs, a sum exceeding two hun dred and seventy-six millions of dollars. Nutritious Iteminiseence. The Cork Examiner nyg"At present the Scotch poor are not fed, they exist on tho recollection of what they ate in former years." Upwards of $3G,000. in counterfeit notes, were lecently discovered in the upper pari ofa darn near R. ading, supposed to have been placed (here fifteen or twenty years since, by Mr. Zuck, who ab sconded under a charge of passing counterfeit money. Light fur the Blind. The American Bible So ciety has computed the printirg of ihe Bible f r ihe Blind, under the superintendence of Dr. Samu el G. Howe. The work has be' n done at great coit and Inbor, and stand a monument of the no blest philanthropy, Death of an Old Tar Henry Moreland aged 6.1, and a Virginian by birth, died en Sunday in New York from the effete of inb mperate habit. He was one of the boat's crew that conveyed Com modore Perry in the battle of Lake Erie from his own vessel to that of Cap!. Elliott's. The Bsnk of the State of New York has de clared a dividend of 3 per cent, for the last ail months. Stuart, the American painter, painted a whole length picture of Washington, for tho Marquis of Lansdowne, . Trom lhi a copy was taken, and an engraving made from it by James Heath, engraver lo the King, from which he realized fi0,000 the largest amount probably, ever made by one en graving. Mr. 8tuart did not receive one cent therefrom. Abolition n Ofuo. The nhio statesman says that il is (he intention of the abolitionists of that state to run a candidate for Congress in every Con gresssional District in il. The Maine Banks, at Portlond, Me., are do ing their concerns, and pay their liabilities en heing prsxantrd at boras. Gen. J. H. Cocke, of Vs., has resigned t!i Pre sidency of ihe American Tempsranre Union, and Chancellor Welwortb, of New Vorkj ha been chosen in his stesd. We see by a Montreal paper that a gentleman with wooden legs, in that city has challenged a friend in the same condition to race, which was to come off in a few days. The Bri ish Government has, it is said, officially informed the British and Foreign Anti-Slavery So. ciety, that Slavery has been aliolished at M duces, Singapore, and Penang, including twelve millions of people who have been in bondage. A new copper mine has just lieen di covered id Warren county, Ya., west of the Bine Ridge. The investigations have been made by Captain John Penman, who has spent nearly three years in de vtloping the mineral resources of that St. te, The mine is said to be very rich. Col. R. M. Jonvso. arrived at New Orleans on the 29th. He wss honored by a public recep. lion. There wore in Connecticut 1481 voluntary ap- plications for the benefit of the Bankrupt Law. Superintendent of Indian Affairs It is stated in a letter from Washington in the New York True Sun, that Mr. T. Handy Crawford, has been removed from the office of Superintendent of In dian nff .irs, lo make room for Mr. J. Washington Tyson of Philadelphia. John W, Paulding, a son of one of the captors of Maj ir Andre, has been appointed one of ihe high constables of the city of St. Louis, Missouri. Cinai.nsL. Scm.iTTtn, E-q. has resigned his Commission ssChiof Engineer nf this State. We unders ond that Mr. S. has recently been honored with a commission from James M. Porter. The amount ofspecie imported into Bo ton from the 1st of January, 1813, to the 22 I inst was $3, 919,739 in gold, and ;M9,520 in silver. These Im ports were almot exclusively fiom England, by Cunard steamers. A letter published in the New Orleans Tropic states that since the lata Earthquake the Island of Martiirque had changed its level ; on ihe north ern side it is two feet higher shove high water mark than formerly, and on tho nppo ite side il ia sunk two feet. The letter adds that all the houses have an inclination from the perpendicular. Dralrucllve Fire. On Tuesday night the 25th inst., ihe large and extensive Carriage Manufactory of Messrs. A. D. Ac R. Patterson of our Borough, wilh all its con tents, was totally destroyed by fire. The fire broke out a few minute before midnight, and so rapid was its progress, that before either of our En gines could be brought on the ground, the whole range of buildings w is wrapped in flames, threat ening Ihe destruction of all the surrounding build, ings; and it was only through the noble exer. lions of our firemen, that the dwelling h ues of Mr. Wise and Mr. Morrison, and the Stor- of Mr. Correy, with several oth' r buddings were saved from sharing a like fale. But while we record with pleasure the exertions of our fireman, we must not forget the ladies miny of whom entered the ranks, and handed buckets to supply the Pat Lyon En gine with water, during the whole time the fne raged ; while ah ut one hundred twnl ged ani mal, we will not call ttv m gentleman, for such tip y certain'y were not, stood by and looked on with perfect indiff rence, notwithstanding the ap I eats ma le lo them to render assistance. The loss of Messrs. Pattersons is estimatid nt between four and five thousand dol'ars which is total, ihey having no insursnce.iVtVuliuit. C4nTVTF.nrF.IT Coi. Spurious hilf dollars madH of German silver, and closely resembling the genuine coin in appearance, are in circulation in this city. They are dited 1.33, and like sll coin polished with quicksilver, have a greasy feel when ruhb d lietwcen the fingers. The counterfeits a bove alluded to are so well executed that they will readily deceive iheincauti us. Bait. American. A letter dated South Carolina, March 29:h, says : I have been impatiently awaiting the approach of spring since I came to this slate, but the weather here is still what the inhabitants call winter. The S"ason, I am told, is more than three weeka later than usual. Fields of Indian corn were planted in the deginning of March, which must de replinted, and the cotton planting is deferred for fine weather. The peach and plum trees have stood in blossom for weeks, and the forest trees, which at this time are usually in full foliage, are as bare as in Decem ber. Cattle ore dying in the fields for want of pas ture." Joax Qeivcr Aiiams. The following is given as an accurate account of the domeatic habits of Jortv Qi-isct Arams the most wonderful of living Statesmen t At Aume John Quincy Adams is universally re spected, and on all occasions acts the part of a genuine republican. He always rises at day-break and long before the sun is up you will find him at his desk in his chamber, writing or poring over paper which have been handed down to him by hi patriotic sire, who served his country so zeal ously and advantageously in the stormy day of the revolution. Mr. Adams enters heartily into the wants of his fellow-townsmen ; he often offu ciate a moderator al the town meeting in Quin cy, and as often acts ss arbiter in settling disputes which occur between bi neighbors. He ior. live and full of instructive anecdotes. Ha attends church constantly, snd notwithstanding he keep two or three carriages, he always wa ks.- When ihe tiJe suits, he is fond of walking lo th beach. about a mi f'om his house, to have a solitary swim in ihe 'salt sea;' and this is pretty well for a gentleman of his advanced ags. Mr. Adams is now over osvrnty years of ag, 'and being exceedingly temperate and methodical in every thing, he al ways enjoys excellent health. His constitution ia ss seund ss it wss thirty yesr ago.