Astonishing flnclosnres. rrgs Condi tion of Thins;, . , The Chicago Democrat has I he following ac count of a gang of rascals, whose depredation nnJ atrocities have boon very extensive in the Western part of the country : Robbery and Mikdkh. It ia supposed that Birch and Sutton, alias William Fox, two noto rious villains, who have been running llio lines of Missouri, Iowa ami Illuiois, Ibrlhe past four years, are two of the gang who murdered Col. Davenport. Birch is said to be the man who Dold a cream-colored horse at Peru, not long since, (llie circumstances ol which may appear at the Winnebago Court,) to the same man with w hom Bridge (now in Rockford jail) changed the money with that he rubbed Multbrd of. We cannot yet yet the name of the person at Peru ivhn has the horse, but be is kept on (lie island, nnd could tell strange slotics if he could talk In thir mno gang ia ''Davis, the Keutuckian," mIio was in Lee County late in November last. 1 le was arrested in-Iowa, last year, and with irons on bis feet was scut out to c'inp wood with guard. . lie struck the guard over the head with an axe, and then cot off Isis shackles ami rim ofTto Bride's in Washington Grove, Og4o county, with his head shaved. He remained nt Bridges, mud wore a blnck handkerchief over Iiis head till his hair grew wit. He then went ' our farmers have been deterred I nun making use ingtoniako his deposit, and tako his money, Bridge had the impudence logo to Mr. Swan, and aslt him w hen he was going to leave. Swnn took the precaution todate his departure a week later tliun the timc,he did depart, nnd thus saved himst It! A plan was afterwards made to rob the office in Iho night Two "gentlemen" of respectability were got to ascertain where the key waskept, and did so without mistrust. Dew ey waa to stand near theolTicn with a wagon and two horses to run off the money, and Bridge was to entei the office. Circumstances preven ted this plot. By the way, in the history of this plot, we can plainly sec con ft rm.it ion strong (lint Mr. S. could Imve been robbed, in our city of the public moneys without any discovery in the annals ol time. 1 1 h J Mr. S an been robbed, in the staffo or at his iiflie.c, as Bridge planned, how ma.iy would have cried, "he robbed him self." In further development of all these things, pretty good circumstances are brought up as proof tbnt bogus isnow manufactured by whole sale at Nau vi in, as also is counterfeit money. Nsuvoo bn'iis, and counterfeit Indiana have been described tons accurately, and we are con fident that it i the best of the kind. Ul AM), IkF.xiut KTini.t st ppi.y of Gpano. Many of THE AMERICAN. Smturtto?, .ImguU 9, !85. 1. It. a7 If. Ctv?., at hi Heil tVs. late and Coal ftfT.ce, tor iter of Hit nnd Chenl Street, Vhlladrlphla, I atdharittd to act a 1xent, ard receipt tor all mmtle due tht oflcr, for mhrrlfttlan or adrertMnr, Jllao at hi Office .M. 161) Man S'rert, .Mr IV Is. Jlnd S. K. Corner mf llaltlmore and Calvert t., Italllmore. Sitintnt yo Ems Raimioao. The able E-j ditnr of the United States Gazette, ever the faith ful and devoted friend of Pennsylvania impiove ments is arousing public attention to the impor tance and necessity of this projected road. We trust be may be successful, but, in the mean time, could not he lend us a helping hand in extruding the P. It. & P. Railroad to the valleys of the Susquehanna ? Give us a lift. 1'ulhville Km. porium. P. R. & P. Rail Roai. It will be perceived that the amount of coal passing this road this sea son, up to Thursday last, exepeds tOO.nno tons. We question if there is another road in the woild that has passed so great tonnage in the same time. And looking to the future, we msy From the N. Y. Mirror. WILMS I.Ef TK.lt J FROM KIIIOPK. NUMBER FIVE. Mr Dsar. Mottius It is more a matter of re joicing to Americans abroad, than Congress sup poses, when Foreign Ministers are the kind of men, in manners and mental culture, to da credit to the country. Mr. McLean's appointment as Minister to England is a worthy succession to that of Mr. Everett two more admirable repre sentatives little likely to appear at the English court for uny nation. I was dining a day or two since with a former member of the Queen's ca binet, and, in the London papers of that morning, Mr. McLean's appointment had been announced. Our host spoke of Mr. McLean and afterwards the rirhrst mineral region in the Country to the Susquehanna, there to connect with the propo sed Sunbury and Erie Railroad, which must and CTTTiik Wiikat Chop. Finer wheat was J will be accomplished ere long. The stock will probably never grown, than has been produced : then be, if it is now. the most profitable any this season. We have heard of farmers w ho j w here to be found Pnlh. Kmptrrium. have wheat that weighs OS lbs. per bushel. ak what is it not destined to do in a few years i -. tit . i . , . . . i i ,, , I of Mr. Everett, with a whole hearted tribute to muir, yiiii'n me roau Mian op extended uirougn to Indiana, ami persuaded a man to come to Lee mid Ogle counties with several yoke i oxen jiinl a cart, toscJI apples. The man bad about SoflO with bim. lie proposed to West to go and kill hiiu. West would not go, oud so the tuan was saved. This Divis, about six years ?o, with a man by the oauie of Seailes, found out that a man was travelling between Prinee toiiund Hennepin with money. They waited rn the urusli, neaj keeper's Mills, and shot him from his horse as he rod along the rond. They got his money, from ijiOIKJto iji-fXI, dragged him l within thirty rods of the c-teek, on the left baud Hide of the road, nnd left iiiiu behind a big. This murder was never mistrusted, nor has (he body ever been found. This Davis may hi; known by having one of his ears bit vl3. At Bridges, ii tlie bushes nenr the house, a caucus was held, which decided on the murder ol'Cump bell. Bridge was present, as a Iho were several of theDr-skclls, Birch and Sutton. It was vo ted tliat yming Driskell sliouUl kill Campbell, as he did. Bridge was at Inlet Grove on tbe night of the murder, and West was making bogus snd sell ing it two for one for Michigan money at Platte ville, Wisconsin. West got clear when arres ted for his knaveries there, by getting Dewey and Bliss, of Inlet Grove, to go his bail, and he ran away. Bliss and Dewty are now in Alton I'euiientiary. After the murder of Campbell, old urn u Driskell and his son, Win. Driskell, were Linched, and young Driskell and Biidge tied from the Lynchers. Driskell never return ed to his State, but has figured extensively as mi incendiary in St. l-on is and other Sjuthern cities. Ho was lar-t seen trying to pet a passage down the river from St. Iauus, but the Captain would not take him. Soon after the Captain refused him the police came on board to arrest him for setting a building on fire. Sutton stole a hot ia from Dr. Adams three years ngn, and fed at diss' hoiiro, who is now in the Peniten tiary. Bircii, Thomas, Atken and Baker stole horses fvo years ago this summer, at Warren county, and brought them up to Washington Grove, Ogle county, and were there arrested by the Warren county officer and were taken back. B.rcli wus not bound over, but Aiken and Haker were, nnd afterwards broke jail. Thomas At ken lives iitH.) miles up the Missouri river on a fnrin, six mill's lock from it, and keeps enter tainment. Baker is still in service, here, and there and every where, stealing horses, robbing houses, killing men, and pa-ning bills on "well regulaied banking institutions, stockholders indi vidually responsible." In the Mulford robbery, Birch was present and told Mulford whilst tearehinL' his house, "My name ia Haines; I nm n robber ; it is a legil profession ; I have fol lowed it for years, and no two men can take me." Mr-Dole, now in Rockford jail, field the rifle to Mulford' breast. Davis helped Birch search the house. Charles Oliver, now in Rockford jail, planned the concern, but did not attend. Birch gave Oliver a large share of the money, which he owed him for board, and on an old di vision of stolen property. Oliver not daring to pass the money, made an exchange with Bridge fort lot of stolen horses ; and Bridge went to Peru and got a friend there to exchange it. There was a robbery in Iowa, last winter, of Biercr, formerly a merchant at Rockford. Oli ver is said to have planned it, and put Birch on the track. Although Bierer was a brother-in-law of McDole, and he knew what was on foot, he dsre not interfere to prevent it. Birch is known to be the man who s'ole a horse at I-a Moile, in Aureau count), on the 3d June, one rainy night, and run him until ho tired him out and then jumped off at the east end of Pulistiue Grove, and went on foot, lie went to Bridges, snd was followed by the inlet people without success. It is generally known tint he went from Bridges down Uock Rive r and down the Mississippi to Nsuvoo, and a man answering Ins description was seen in the Nauvoo region. He had sgrecd to get Bridge out of of jn I, and beucu he was removed fiom Dixon to Rockford. Bridge is now confined for plotting the breaking open the Dixon Land Office, for receiving sto len money taken from Mr. Haskill, at Inlet Grove, by Sutton, and also for receiving two sto len horses from Birch at Inlet Grove. Bridge, with Dewey, Davis, Birch, Sutton, Baker, Lane, Bliss iSc Co., laid a plot to overhaul the stage, of guano, trom an apprehension that the supply might fail, and that so powerful a stimulus would injure the soil, unless the same substance could be annually applied. Erroneous as this last no tion is, it will perhaps be more or less entertain ed until repented experiments sli:ill have shown in this country, as in others, that its tendency is permanently invigorating : The fear that there w ill not be found an am ple supply on the coast of Peru ulmir, for the "wants of Europe, and the Uuiud Stutes, will cease v ith those who can give credit to an i fli cisl report made to the Peruvian Government, in li l'J, and published at Limn, under the au thority of the Treasury depBrtinenl,(.liii.erif tie Hndentta. This report wives the result of a survey mnde by order of the Peruvian govern ment, of three islets near Pisco, in latitude about 14 dep. South, called the I'liinehas, where is found one of the mnvy deposits of punno, which abound on tbe cons' of Peru nrd Ruliv'n, to an extent of HKI miles. The surveyor, after ome remarksupon the origin and nature of jjuano, states that, from admeasurement.be toiind the superficial extent of the deposits on these three islets to be l,.ri."i I,4(M npiare yards (the vnra is computed at !WJ inches. English.) and the depth to vary according to the iriegubir surface of the rock upon which it is based ; but mnkiuo liberal allowance for the points of rock rising a bove the bed of the gennral mass, h calculates an avvrafje ihplht'f (K) vuras, which gives the sum total of 5t:i,i;(i l,:i(!0 cubic vars. The re port ad. Is, "The cubic v.ira of guano as found in these deposits weighs more than half a ton ; but taking no account of the rx.-ess, wo have here -lfl,f)3"2.10 tons which, if extracted at the rate of TiO OtKl tons per annum, wml l last more than 000 years : and v.iloed at scitl per ton, n mounts to sVl.'Jfl !,(( KM NX), a sum such ns no mine has as jet pioduced." Mak ng every reasonable iil'oAniice fur er rors of survey, nnd over estimate of depth, I think here is abundant evidence that Peru, from these islets alune, enn supply the world with guano for many ccoeiat ous. EDWARD BAUTI ETT. New-York, Msy 12. l"'t. A mrrirun Ait ricurisl. IcUABOE Glano. The N. Y. Courier con tains the following cxtiacls ot letters from J. A Bi:s.NkTT, lvi., of loug Lland, respecting tins valuable muiiuro : A phi i. 21. 1M.. That Ichahoe Gun no is a most powerful ver mifuge in destroying worms, tliere can be no doujt. I applied It to some peach tries that were neurly liead, and that were full ot the ret hedra white grub, that kills them. After three days took up one and found every v irm dead. I make this fact known fr the benefit of I'd rul ers, that they may be eirtbb-d to save tbe most delicious fruit of ourcotiuiry. Since writing the above, I have had ample opportunity to oUerve the effects of Guano on vegetables. A piece of wheat to which I appli ed only I.Vl lbs. per acre, as a topdressing, and which was winter killcdt as well as the worst in the county, is now in point of color and heijrht, the very best. Cabbsge which I put out in the open air with Guano, has exceeded those without Guano un der glass, being twice as lare, and Itoth put out the same time. The Guano Potatoes have There is but little smut ti be found. The crops on the bills, however, are in some places light, though tbe grain is excellent. The long con- tinueil ilry weather has alreaity, we tear, serious- j ly injured the corn and potato crops. The corn, in Ihe bottom lands, it is true, will yield ex ceedingly well, but on high ground it has suffer ed severely for want of rain. The potatoe crop i eeneral exposition of its ril.-rt. until after j .lay night last, at about eleven o'clock, .Mithael i and intliiencing we fear, will be small. The water in the S ipiehauna has not been so low for many years. C"7Lr.f.E Chops. We understand that Mr. John It Shipman, nearihis place, w ill have about 10UO bushels of wheat. The wheat Clop of Col. 11. C. Eyer, near S,;insgrove, will b-- about 2 J! 0 biihi-a. and the crop of Mr. App, between this plate and S-linsgiove. about touo bush-Is. pyTnr; Si air Tax. The ipiofa of the State tax, for Northumberland county, has been paid into the State Treasury The strong democratic counties of I'.erks, Westmoreland, Columbia and Noitbumbei land have been ns prompt on this occasion, as they are when their votes are re quired at the ballot boxes. They did not boast of what they could, or would do. but went quiet ly to work and pel formed their duty. Iho great whig county of Lancaster, on the other hand, made loud professions of w hat she intruded to do ; but, wo believe, the State received no other aid than her good intentions. Some great coun ties, like some grmt men. are great swaggerers We r.-collect that some of tbe counties of the interior received no email share of reproach, in the Legislatme, on account of the alleged low valuation and assessment of their property. The Representative of Lancaster, we thought, used to take aw fully big nnd important strides aerosi j he poor man, which nre said to have been he.ut tlie Senate chamber, when talking of the great rending, soon attracted persons, who released county of Lancaster. The result of Ihe laWs of j him from his dreadful situation. lie received the Revenue Commissioners, however, soon ; all the attention which medical skill and tip; showed that she was considerably bet.md some kindness of friends could command, but alter of the comities complained of. True democracy j lingering in intense agony, he died about .' will never fear ihe tent of scrutiny, and is al- ' o'clock, A. M on Monday. i I I'.MKnri.iK their qualities as men and diplomatists, that would have gratified the friends of these gen- tlemen not a little ; and. indeed, wherever I go, Mr. Everett is landed without measure, lie has been in London in a trying time for a representa tive. Our national credit lumped without dis tinction of States in one sweeping dishonor has been like a visible cloud about him wherever he has appeared, and he has been waited on, of j 1. phi a', L.rillllilllf-C-l, VII t.l-3l IIMIH II IT IIMIIU lllll answer without pain and moitilication ; unit, ! ! U ll .1 .: I 1 I r . - i ai . ; iuiwiikh nu mis, iiu una niiriuii v ris'n in me. re- correct information, at this time, concerning the ut sp-ci oi Miose around mm, ami now si.nnts p'-r-J'or ; . . . . 1 sonally higher (so I was assured by one who spoke with authority) than any diplomatic re- i presentative now at the English court. "At an other party I heard a very fine description given ' n f tlw, . fT. f 9 nrliia intr, il.tr i InMlletii-n Imnnnnn ofth-ie committees. Thy hail f-lt, in deliver ing what they had to say, that they had plac 'd him as the respondent, in a position of over whelming embarrassment. His reply was wait ed for with a sympathy for him as a man. From every one of these gentlemen, however, h" 'drew j tears,' (so tbe dt scriber stated.) and they left bis bouse cm-banted w ith the man, if i.ut more con tent with w hat ho had tootr r on the part of lit! country. Surely tin difference between such a j representative ami otheis who are capable of be- Fatal Ai.i Iuknt at Coi.i mi.ia. Pa. On Sun- ; The operation of the new Post-office Law, ac cording to the Washington I'nion. is a follows "I'pon application at the Post-office Pepart- meht, we learn the impossibility of acquiring correct information, at this time, concerni general operation of the new postage law. shall we be oble to lay before our readers any th end of the present quarter, which expires on the ; hist day of the next month. From the city post- office we learn that the number of letters, papers and packages passing through their hands, uncon nected with the business of the government, has increased about D.'l per cent., when compired , with tbe biisiii'ss of the month of June. The gross amount of proceed, from postage on these has fallen off nearly M per cent., while tbe post- ageebarged to the government for its letters. &c. received and sent, is enormous. For the Post- j office Department alone, it is said to reach near j 10,(100 for the month just past." I.fttrr from tlrnsscls Correspondence of the Public Ledger. Ji-ly 10, IS43. To judge from the tone of the British Prints, England is now resigned to the Annexation of Texas. It is now mentioned mere ly as a historical fact. "Tbe Texans," says the Times and other papers of more or less standing, "deserve to lose their nationality, which bas scarcely lasted ten years ; they were unfit to preserve it ; they sold themselves to the highest bidder.' And in the same breath the London Times asserts that it is not the fnor inlerfnt of Texas which will decide the question of annex ation, but the number of voir w hich the Ameri can party would be able to smuggle info the Texan Congress. This is about as fair ss tbe usual argument of English writers on matters concerning the T'nited States. Ths Texans nre Americans, and by returning into the fold that is, by re-annexing themselves to the mother country they set to the world one of the noblest ex.tmples recorded in history. It is usual for colonies to improve every chance of making themselves independent as England bas certainty learned by our own case. When their indepeii ; dence is voluntarily resigned, it proves that the laws ami institutions of the mother country are ! neither selfish nor tyrannical ; her protecting ' equally all classes and strong enough to protect j those living at a distance ns citizens under their immediate influence. A nation is not easily de ' ceived about her own true interests, and we are 1 yet to learn the case in which England has, from disinterested motives, offered her friendship or protection to any people. If th English negotiators, in Texas, haveh"en bilked, they were served a. from their officious ! interference in matters vrhith did not concern tln'm. tlicy richly merited. If Commodoie Elli ott and little Mmtrir ilr S'alniwfi were so fool ish as to believe that by securing the Executive of Texas, they were sure of the whole nation, it is but proper that they should fie punished for ch-rishing such obob-te European notions. Commodore Elliott may, perhaps, be pardoned : be came to Texas directly from the Celestial Em , pire. and the contrat mav have bewildered him; sent abroad, is worth the country's looking ' '"" M""s "e Saligny l.a.I been Secretary of Le- Schloat, an unmarried man, employed in the warehouse of U. Leech Co., at Columbia, arose ; fiom bis bed, in the second story of tbe store, 1 hearing, as be supposed, a canal boat just ar- ; riving, for which he was on the lookout, and be- , ing.it is bdieved, ina state of but partial con- , sciousness. fiom a half recovered sleep, he mis- , The Morning Post of to-day contains Long man's first advertisement ol the English ed.tion of my "Dashes at Life," and. in another column is the following formidable passage, showing the humor in which any thing American is likely to be bandied. (It occurs in a review of Mr. Hush's book on England ) "There is o much in th American character tool: the place, and walked over, falling on the : end of the iron break-handle of n railroad rar !o excite the contempt and disgust of al' npi gbt standing immediately against the side of the : '""I bonest men, that w e can scarce be exc I bouse ; the iron handle projecting upwards, pass- j for letting slip an opp.u tunity of abusing them ; ed entindy through his body, entering at the sto- j but Mr. Ruh so overwhelms us wite bis courte. mach and coming out at the loins. The cries of 'es, and o gratefully and handsomely acknow ledges the splendid hospitalities with whii h he was received by the noble and wealthy 'liritisli i rs,' that we must tirrtti r unihr om- vrmtm till mint mo'r Jlllinn occaslim for r tiling it gation uinler Mr. Contois, nnd ought to have known us better. His blunder nnd fillister at New Orleans are unpardonable and deser e expo sure. The events in Texas w ill, perhaps, feaeh the Court of Europe that it will not do to semi the mere refuse of their Diplomatic agents to the I'nited States, or such men merely as have stu died Diplomacy in anti-chambers, and practiced it at the ball-room and the card table. The time has not yet come when American statesmen are to h put on an equality with such moths that thrive by candle-light. Diplomatists in America nm-t be men ol business, and ugt merely men w ho know bow to cuteituin and to be entertained in society. , As to the charge that the Texans sold them 1 selves to the holiest bidder, the accusation maibr by the Uritish press, clearly shows that England ways sure to come out right end up. Cy Tsxa. Tie- convention, from the last ac counts, is progressing harmoniously in loiminga constitution I r tin- stale of Texas. There is a proposition to loi in two new atatcs, one to be cal led Austin. CtT" There has been cons deiabie falling off in ; the pot-ol!ice revenue, in Chilad.-lphia, but not j as much as in New York. This was, however, j expected. The postage of the Government will, I we presume, reach nearly ? 100 000, which with the 7.'iU.0n(l appropriated by law, will, we think, be sufficient to cover any deficiency in the reve nue. Next year the revenue will, no doubt, be greatly increased by the increase of letters. but was not rich enoiiiih to buv tbein It is j What with Lockhart and Fouldanqn.. for a- j ,he ailllro 0(- ,hir favorit(1 n,1jc M,li(.h n,.(k(., , vowed adversaries, (of old.) and the corps of cri- ; ,h,., r(imM, . ,r tstiVwg ;,, the (1wl r,.U,.f0f i tlcwl'"'" Macready keeps for his uses, and who I n w. .... , .,-., .... i w ill now retaliate upon me, my having ihs-ent-Two w eeks have elapsed since i )om ,h(! bomago paid j r country to this ! the fire in New York, and now. on the place of i artificial actor, mv Tales are "nut." as l'alslaff savs of his soliliei s, "where they will be Will large brick store, one bu.l lred feet long and ( penpeied "' Ma v it make them Sell ! forty-five feet wide, and neatly completed. Gen. FiiiAPY At a dinner given, by the Tra dy Guards, to Williams' Light Infantry, among others was the following, by tieorge C. Hates, Esq : "f.V;i. Hugh Braily May we all. like bun. ever have our knapsacks ready, either to do battle w ith the enemies of our country, or the King of Terrors himself." one of the stores destroyed, has been erected a It is to be roofed, finished and occupied by its owners, Messrs. P. Naylor & Co., some day this week. This is showing energy and despatch. If the proper attention bas deen paid to building the house well, substantial walls and fire-proof, the owners may not have occasion to exhibit their energy in the same mode again for a lone-period. tnhlishes the fact that England is no longer th predominant power ol the new continent, and that the I'nited States occupy in regard toAmeiica the same position which England occupies oppo site the continent of Europe. In this respect the annexation of Texas will give the I'nited States a position in the consideration of the European poweis which they have not as yet occupied, while, at the same time, it spare-, us fiom the hu miliation which would have followed our yield ing that point to England. lr regard to religion, the banishment of some of the mo-t prominent Catholic lisenters fiom CT?Another Roorback story has been going lieved that bis last hour was at hand. The fa mily clergyman was sent for, to break the ti dings to the unconscious dying man. The duty Trie Phila. Ledger says the Press in Germany is snbj ct toextiaordinary oppression. A French paper states that in I'eilin, a celebrated advocate has been condemned to four mouths' imprison ment and a fine of four hundred thalers, for wri the rounds of the papers, in the shape of a letter j - '"I " article recommending the opening of the from Col .lobnson. acknowledging that not be, ! courts and the public administration of justice, but that Mr. Fig bad killed Tecumeh. Tbe j A newspaper, with a circulation of .1000, has story was so palpably absurd, on its face, that j heen suppressed by the government, on the we did not think it worthy of notice It has ' ground that its writer gave the censors too since been contradicted by some of Col John- ' much trouble in correcting their articles. Our j was discharged kindly nnd tenderly. Instantly son's frieiu's. bv showing that Mr. Fig was never ! Emopean correspondent, in his letter pub- ; the old soldier raised himself in his bed, and ex in the eii'M'enient. lished yesterday, speaks of the oppression and claimed : "Well, sir, let tbe di um beat my - . i restrictions which arc imposed upon the press in , knapsack is slung !'' Detroit Atlrerliter. Germany. The Washes Mrni.i:Kii. Petitions have j A Valpahlb Newspapf.u. A passenger by been put in circulation by the friends of Joseph f the Cauibrin offered tor sale on Thursday morn Carter and Peter W. Parke, to be presented to j uil', in New York, a copy of Wilmer it S nith's those entrusted with the pardoning power, name- ; Tunes, of (he P.lth, at three hundred dollars, ly, the Governor, the Chancellor, and the six j stating, that an hour's perusal ot Ihe only other Judges of the Court of Errors and Appeals. The j COpy in the market had been sold for a similar day on w ho h these unhappy men are sentenced pnc Some newspaper publisher doiibtle-s paid it, for ihe purpose of laying ihe news early the Rhenish piovinces of Bavaria, has given won- The felicity of the compliment can hardly be ' r"' sU,,,,if,h ,n '"'' soct- f",mt appreciated without understanding the allusion, j ow l"'e hundred and four congregations in (,er Gen. Brady, though far advanced in yea.s, has j """'' amI fr,'m the tone of the p -ople inhabit seldom seen a sick day, thank, to a hardy frame iB the provinces of the Middle Rhine, those and a life of temperance, though of exposure and i Catholic provinces are forever lost to the papal hardship. Il.it a year or two since, he became ! hierarchy. The new sectarians, were accused seriously and dangerously ill, and his friends be- of cherishing communist doctrines, but this very The Post masters are beginning to discover that their office does not require all work and no pay, and the number of resignations, the I'ni on says, is considerably diminished. This is since the publication of ihe Postmaster General, allowing Mstmastera for the current year the same compensation they received during the cor- exceeded Ihnsfl nut nut a nmnlti nnrlii.r u-it!. ........ fii. The d. (Terence in the receipts for postage, at th be.! fif otliAr umnnris It, rl I h-ii-n -s. ... vuu,c , . . . i .u , , , , - ne i iiiiao'-ipui-i I osi-uiiice, oeiwreii mr iiiumii to the conclusion, that there n no manure in , , , ... , ., ,, , of July, lMl.and the tame mouth ol lbl). un the world equal to Guano ; and further, 1 have ! , ., . i i f 1 ' ' I di-r the new ostage law, shows a decrease of tried the Peruvian alongside of the Ichaboe, and ' c . . . ,. r., , " r .. respemling quarter of last year; the only cur tailment of compensation, now, being the loss of , ,Q be hm(? -f ,h(.OOJ ofthi m0I),h the lianking privilege. ..... ... - I A New Tiieorv of the Gri.v Stream has been broached by a writer in Hunt's Magazine, for the present mouth. It is written by John A. Parker, Esq. From information furnished by ('apt. Tilpou, an old respectable ship-master, Mr. accusation insures then; the greatest popularity ; among the masses. There are now men in eve I ry part of Germany who espouse their doctrines j from political and social reasons, and of late, a vast number of Piotestauts have also joined them. They style themselves now "Rational Chris : t aus," and are alike making uar against the ill ! tras among the Catholic and Reformed Chinch. ! Simultaneous with their success I must not omit j to mention a protest against the Orthodox Evan i gelical Protestants, signed by four hundred of the most respectable Protestant inhabitants of Rre ; slim, praying that the rving would not interfere with their religious belief and worship, and not j force upon them what they are pleased to call the . Protestant Jesuits of licrlin. All this shows, in kilj Swan, the Receiver at Dixon, s ha was go-1 creatures, find the latter decilidiy the best, I am desi-1 rous of arranging with you lor DM) tons. To Messrs. E. K. Cot it Co., N. Y. Pttoc.it ens or Ex ira v Ao am e. It is, men- July, IMI, July, 10 1."), o,"U 50 Pai ker arrives at the conclusion that "tbe gulf stream is a sub-marine cut rent from the Pacific Ocean, which becomes heated in its passage the midst of piofoiind peace, the complete moral, before his readers. The Evening Post mentions ' social and religions disorganization of Germany, the tact for the purpose of showing how romark- I with an effort on the part ol the suffering masses nhly Ihe law of supply and demand 'mintams 1 throw off the disease by some violent remedy, itself under the most extraordinary contiugeu- j T,,e Germans, more tb.ui any other people of ciuji. j Europe, are prepared to fight fur liberty of con- . ft.i,.t.ei (,. vt-hich they have already spent such Falmnu Oi p. The receipts at the X. York l Post office, during the month of June, under the tinned in the New York Mirror, that the tost of i . , , ,. , , tll ,nn . . ' . cheap postage system, were only about $9,000, ladies' funs in some of the stores of Broadway ia just half the amount received the preceding one hundred dollars. The editor says, he saw t , nd(.r h oJ - : ii i i . I J - . .opi.mu iwHiiij jvuiijj man I'uiiuanv one lor his intended, and pay seventy rive dol lure. Seventy-five dollars for fan ! This ex ceeds in extravagance fifty dollars for a pock et handkerchief. At this rate it would cost as much for fashionable belle to rig herself out in beau killing style, aw it would to fit out a steam frigate that would blow up a Mexican town and kill all the inbsbitants. It is not an unmeaning phrase lu call some ladies "tltar Ma. EvratTT, our Minister in London, on re ceiving information of the, death of Gen. Jackson, invited his countrymen, by public notice, to join in marks of respect to his memory, and re quested that the commandera of all American vessels in the ports of the I'nited Kingdom would hoist their flags at half-mast, and that the usual badge of mourning be worn by the Consuls, Vice Consuls, and all other citizens of the I'nited States, for the same length of time ai at home. Our hards If your trees hive moss on them an enormous amount of life and treasure, that it or their birk is rough, scrape them in the spring is the opinion of German historians the country .i i i . i ii i I lint whether thev are sn rr not takes mixture ; na ,lot 'et entirely recovered from the war ol through regions heated by neighboring volca- ' ""l wiirim r uiej pre so i r noi, ibhr a '"" j of equal parts of soft soap and sulphur, and;,"c'"" " - "ecu more complete- The Duties paid at the Roston Custom House on Thursday last amounted to $12').UU0, and during the month of July 7uO, 000, being an in crease upon the amount received in July, IS 1 1. A Prime Mikisieb's Est i mats of the Power op the Press. Charles X., of France, might yet have reigned, but for one power he had pro voked the press. It was against this his roups d'etat, (strokes of policy,) were levelled, and it was by this ho fell. So grsat was its importance, that Prince Metternich considered it the actual government of France, and said, "If I were not the prime minister of Austria, I would be a Journalist at Paris " paint the trunks from the roots upwards, as far as you can well reach. This will dostroy the insect embryo, and preserve your trees from fcirdling of mice and rats. To destroy the worms ofembryo, which msy be in the ground, dig the earth from around the roots of the trees, for a tew feet and to the depth ef a few inches ; submit the earth thus up to the operation of fire; when cool, mix with it a gallon of lime to rach tree, and replace it. If you doubt the efficacy of this treatment, try it on a few trees this fall and we will bet you a peck of 'ladies' blushes, that sou'll subject every fruit tree on your farm to the same operation next fall. American j I'urmer, ly destructive of German Independence than all the campaigns of the Flench Revolution. tier, many is fast approaching some great crisisif it is not a religious, it will at least be a political one. Mr. Bancroft's History of the Ignited States, which has just been published in two different editions in Germany, and Baron Von Raumer's work on America, are considered the two best works on our institutions ever published. In some of the Italian Mates were translations of Mr. Bancroft's work were to be published, the work has been prohibited probably to be the more read. The melancholy new s of the decease of Gen Jackson has made a deep impression in Europe,