ll iv M n i & u ill AiJn T H E S T BRAN FARMER. CAn in&cpcnbcnt .familji iJapcr bcuotcb to News, Citccof arc, Politics, &gncu!huc. Science nno "ittornlitn. BY 0. N. WOKDEN. "WEDNESDAY, OCT. 10, 1849. VOL. VI., NO. 28-288, The Leicisbnrg iirouicls : f'ubliohfj Wednesday Afternoonf at Lewisbur; Union county, J'ennsv hania. Terms. fc;",l() lor a year, to lie pnicl i thu first hail year; S-D!l, it pavmet.t ho not mtuie winiiu me year : sin: e numbers. . . . - , . , , Oc's. Subscriptions for six months or less to be paid in advance. Discontinuance optional wi.ii thft i 'j'jiisrjer, except w then artvartiges are pnid. j How then can me wonder lhat their settle- Advertisements handgun, I y ins-cled ntinrr,t incieaed and prospered? Their 00 cts. tier square one week, 81, (10 for a , , , , , , , . . A -mi , . . . 'enemies, debilitated by lonj; subjection, mon'h, S-,"u a year. A reduction o! these ' J ' rates f..r lam ..r loiter advimts. ; were T"ckened in proportion to the dao- Jasmil ndvertiseiiieiits and Job work to he paid fr when performed. All comnmn.calu.riM by mail must come no.t raid, nceornpaii-ed hv the address of .. 1 ' ' ', 4h writer, to receive iittPiitmn. O.YiceM irkei street betwi-en Sece-,. and Third. (). X. YVoi:nEX, l'ub!iher. " i he c 1 1 ii on 1 c L e. s&Trumv, cct. c CrWagive lhiwck n...her of th Phi;..-! c,',!ur had pawd, ere a d .rk cloud be th. n S,:w:y 4lh of Jul Oration, lurniflicd hy "nn u ga'her thickly and ploomily over ' r. I.t k ut our rriju L Mi.Cunat.i't e the intrepid and daring co'onists. The I Kinross and Inliiior.ee of American I ibiriv . , ...... 1 t- iinvr- M'M'iii.i -ij ot re, ni aeroruance with ih" r 1 etisto ti of our coun'rv, to cell- 1.1.1 1 - . 11. brjto .hat day which gave birth lo our 1 1 x . V 1 . .1 . . i!ide:4ndeitce. Not only we, but thro out ,i- 1 , ' , , , "... ' . , v-.t, .-V IJ'n .(-'-, CItlU. . " ,. , i-htv grove, every ci'y and every ullage, : .1 : 1 .1 . ii . r . .-, . . . . . , . cheer'u. bc.irts rendering just humane to, ,, , . .,i-t 11 f ion 1. iit 1, .'110 it, on; IlltJIOOl y i " j of a military despot w ho has swept over i th'( country li! rry li!c a tornado, blasting its , . ; , . " . , . . : littrest crops, ail. 1 leaving in his wide track . .1 . 1, . ,u. 1 1 l 11 1 .- 1 nothing but the blackness ol drso.aiion anJ I ii 1.1 . d'Sjiir. vl . rear n.i sculpiured nnriutnctil . . ;.. 1 , m. r.i 1 I I rtiiiii'J posterity 01 the sum otthe spier- , 1 1 1 r ,1 1 . , d..i tit us 01 those who were covered with igiin.ii ny Hud disgrace. Hat we, as patriots and cn'ihtciK'd ci1 z ns of nil mdi pendent r'pnb'ic, itv-ot lo coinria mi,r .te the rr-s tr :'c;iin of liberty, the dawn of the ur.iver s : emancipation of mankind. We celeb rate ;i event whi. Ii n t only enta led the l. es-ings of liberty upon us and all who as J Anerican cilizns may come alter us, but tld n.,r.r..B a.A t. ft ...r.nA I,...- . ... - 7 , ii r 1 also revolutionized tbe dark corners t f des- , , , I I' ':s:n. nn-.l snre.,-1 lerror nm'ir.fr n't lii, ' ' I c . f , , . ii..m tis of royalty. Hut in reineuilieriii ' I , , ; tie nolt'e dppds ot those v tin were eng-igpn at 'he lit volui.on, let us rot forget those -j .ally genuine patriot., who first fos'eied i .e germ of liberty berea-h the dwrnl j tiade of despotic power in 'I." old world. :i'jd transplanted il on the shores of the i i w. Lei us examine, for a momcrit.the heroic daraii aod invincible determination of those ,,, iiiirb. ! ft. 10 first landed tm the Sock of Plymouth, I . ' ,., in the wilds of the western cominetit. ihey ha 1 erossed a sformv nrPiln nf fh.-p ibno. I nnA miles, over whose fathomless bosom waved lhe black fl a ' of p.racv, to endure ! .I:i,e trials and dangers incident to a,. ui.set.led country. They were not allured t the golden dreams of avarire, or th- gV.wmg descriptions of a soil abounding - 1 m ..! r,,.;t. .,! ltore ,n,l .,;,. 1 . .1 i ., I lit vittuui aJ 'i'.:iitiiJt " I'll mi tiir inn with a:I thai could regale the setws or: , , . . . , ., , I rors of war and subjugation, and which for sristy tr.e appetre; neither were they as i , . , ,. , j so long a lime had been gathering in llictr some colonists, a surplus mas, disgorged , , . , , , . i'ohlical hor.zin, now burst upon this from the mother country to ker n the rem- , , .... , ,, ' , , . : , , I devoted ronr.'.rv. then followed lhat idling population sound and pore, and to , .,",. - , , , . , , ,,,, 'series of tnals and misfortunes, of biood- pievent national apoplexy. hat was . . , . , , .... islii'd and rr'n-uy, (f rohle dartn! nnd th-t couniry which thev kdt 7 A country i, , ,,-.. . . . ,. , , . . , , . .' i hemic endurance, the hue or which the in which hcv had been matured in youth, i , . . , , , . ... , , , records of history present no parallel, strengthened in manhood, where they hall eontrt. tb np.st uA mnt coi... ( That Revolution, unlike all which had . 1 and most solemn rob' ions of life.and in which were entombed the hallowed remains of iheir ancestors. N hy did they sacrifice this their country, w.'h all its endearing recollections, for lhe pathless forests of a vast wilderness Why did they deprive thcms-elves of all the com forts and luxuries of civilized life, to suffer md toil and famish and d e in the desolate regions of North America T Was it for Kt.Klgg randizerreu, or posthumous fame ! j that they m:ghl return in a few years rewarded with rich-s, crowned with honor, and bright with glory ? Had such been the motives which induced those Iiardv pioneers to settle this country, we their descendants. i,,.iead nf U.l,. In I tlic smiles of Liberty, might be crouching under ihe frowns of Tv rai.ny. They had " higher, a holier, n purer aim in view. Ii as their anxious endeavor and firm deter- mir.aiion to found a setilemn.t, as a home !u'n, 01 "PPrs10"- " ns aroused to a for '1 ems-elves and their iisteriry, wlt.re !?ne of their degraded and aervile enndi f. h wi.ht enjoy freedom of thought an I ,inn ,hosc wl, for ears lmve and speech, and where each might worship his Creator according to the dictates of his conscience, uiitramnieled by a Pupal See or nn Established Church that they might plant in the Tar west the tree ol j Liberty, which. increasing in the :tp'the Pilgrims on the Rock of I'iymmiiii.h. ' r . , -. , , .ol years, michl spread its branches over t ,. , : evrr' ,,a,i' " "n 1 tcn""h 11 W protecting , H3ue nil rniiui.inj ni'ght rest in security. rPrs cnJ ti'iiuoiili.es of the enterprise vigor of thought an 1 power of action, which ))H.re Wtn dormant, were now sum- . c ,, , , mcned forth by every new obstac c. and J 3 ' 'ren-hened by increasing opposition. I'nity of purpose and determination of 'chancier sust.-.iued them beneath all their i:t'r:r7in ? ,h? r hope rf one day becoming the rivals of 'proud auJ potent Knlaud. Hut sea tee a irons'cr Tvrannv'had alrendv crossed thi- ;AiIh";!c. ":id ui-u" to ravage '.heir (air co'iturv. The I'.ritish .Ministry were already for"in;; the chains which were to 1 l.:..J l ; i .- 01011 ui'-iii 01 itooraru e nuu uesrtoiisni. ' 1 ue strong hand ol power was ab mt to j r iwretn - h from idem those incs'iuialile privi- 1 leges for which thev had contended so loiiir, an I labored so faithfully. Shtd : . they then recod from the nr.i.le stmvle in whieh they had been engaged 1 ih"ul.: thev aliandon, f..r t.biect fubmission. the, 1 I prize of hlieriv. when almtttt within their orasp ! Should they fi they for ever resign the' hope of establishing a government on the; broal pricc;ples of virtue, liberty, and!,r!,ct 'ee people with anarchy and civil ' independence I No the hrjeht star of : 1 . hone, poititinj through the dim vis'a of . ' 0 futurity to the future rrospects of their j 1 ' ' country, cheered them onward, and uriied . to :th'm to oppose every encroachment upon ; 1 1 j ' I their rigtiis to reject, with scorn and c-titernut, every act which weed. I tend to1 make ibt ni slaves. Dat s-ill they showed a disposition to bejstar ln ll'C galaxy of nations, her bnrners c intent with their essential ri-hts. Thev 1 fif"'i"S in every brtrze bearing inscribed p-!itioiifc.J the throne to avert the impend- ' in 'vin letters the immor'nl and mtcfian mg storm. They supplicated his royal J stable motto, "Liberty arid Ir.df iwudtiiee, n.ajps'y lo withhold iho unjust exercise ofi n"NV an' "r Pv, r ' (his power. They remonstra'.ed against his rrpea-ed acts of violence and cruelty. I'ul ail Kuntilicaiion and entreaty were vain. 11 ... . . . : . ill i ue n-ni 10 impose n ,31, omv preceueu i . 7 . ' . the rvtit to enslave. I lie power t r dragging .... . 01 (Cii:''iis ii:uieie-ii 101 any capital laiciiue ui 8,ra0s'! '''''''' i land.withoul j ,he h"5! of jus'ice.si.biected property, liber y, and even lil'e.to ministerial caprice. ; I The spark of liberty which had long been 1 kin. lling, now blazed forth into a bright and int xtinguish alio flame. The eople were indignant, 'lhe whole country rose lJl'i s ,'litJ iii.iii, 01 '.". . -1 1 , uiiliii:,, it, ' . . ' J ' invade their rights. Congress asseniLIcd, . ... , , and a 'ler an animated discussion adopted i"16 l'"- 'n-P"". rep.ete j w,lh I,,B ,,U1" '",r'rt consequences, not i"!,' - V 'u "", ,n";,",!',,:N '.h"' comment. i but lo '1 k,n l- 1 h ,t AcI "CVC,ed tVT ,,e wb,ch b""r"1 i ,hrm ,n n"nh"r C0U"'r'- "nJ sn,nJ,''i 1.1 -i..: c l.t....... Ti.... 1 i...t :. '"K ' ' ,r" "-- ' "' " . t.vw... t. ... A n . r. mm -ml til. . 1 1 t ko I. preceded it, both in its causes and effects, was lhe mighty moving of the inborn and innate principle of liberty a revolution, which resisted the combined energies of the most powerful nation of. the earth, tri umphed over myriads of her well discipli ned soldiery, and firmly established a gov ernment, with a constitution which is Ihp best model lo lhe nations of all coining l,(rc - I,a(1 " on,-v rH,e', aggression and secured the blessings of liberty to the col onies, it would still have accomplished more for lhe regeneration of man than all the magnanimous attempts of a Brutus, or ,,,e "or,l,y cndcavors r Wallace. But l'l!oed influence stops not with the ; boundaries of nations, nor is confined by i.he shores of the ocean. It has sent hope ihrough the despairing hearts of millions who were pining under he heaviest bur- submissively borne the heavy yoke of lv r- j tinny. Il has scattered throughout Ivirope those seeds in w hose growth eager na'ttitisl recognize their "long lost I brty." 'I be spirit, which tillered in the (invert o I i , , , , r already loused t.e colonics from ti e iron I , , krasi. of royalty, r.c.l llie.rt I" no exalte! sta'ion among the nations il ihe earth. re-crossed the Atianttc, tauj-lit mm b:s rights and how to obtain and defend them, overturned despotisms an I nvinarchin.vtiid upon the brn!:er fragmcnti ofihelr splenijel ! ruins erected thrs firm pillars nfl:h 'r(y. In our on country, too, it his excited a powerful ii.fl.icnce. The. ueiv of our national character, lhe spir.t of our ini !u;ious, the comprehens.veiicss of o.ir poli cy, have propaa e.i the principles of reli gion and truth, encouraged the ans and sciences, spread literatuie and know leiV', increased our national prosperity, e.vten.'i'd the principles ol liberty, and given enlarged and enlightened views to ail classes and condilious of men. U'i o what j ivlul anticipations and grateful reunrnbrin -es ought we no', then, to welcome; the anni versary of our national exis'enee ! I. (mints us back to lhe Icvolu'un,and place-- j he fore our deligh'ed visions the examples 01 8 asmngion, an A.latns, a .letters ui. Let us study their char.iciers and endeavor to imitate their virtues. L-t us cherish that love ofii ierty, that self-devotion, that strict regard fir justice, which ever eh:ir- 'r'd those imm .rial patriots. I.et us ! ktier I around the common nltnr of fiecilom, j find !e5eeeh I heir departed shades to look down w"" paternal ofloction upon our , ... country to smtie on .ur institu nuns to guide our public councils to frustrate the anabitious schemes of those who would dis- war to counteract every influence vvh cb might he iieij.t,., ,, wr t,P union and harmony of lhe Stati s. And when in after tunes posterit- meet on this joyous anni versary lo add their prnteful remembran ces to lhe number offered hv those who havp J?""" If'ore them, may they se the I United .States still shining, the brie h'ost InterestillJ Discovei V of a lost Child. Thre yenrs nao. lohn Hurt, of this - ,,, i i,: i, , i r ,,. c" ,,st r"s son. Jw l. aged bur VPMra j'"' lie was an intelligent an I aitrac-; " live little fellow, and was last seen in the vicinitv ,,, circus i;, :h, ,.j,v. T.e o, ly ifrn,a,ion ,!,, obu;n ,,f ,he ,.h;Id ,, whi!c , c in coMp;iny wi,n 0,,e of h.s companions, was looking tiiiinijb the enclosure, a woman addressed h.ui iul invited him to accompany her into llvr cir cus. Since that lime, Mr. Hurt has usd every conceivable moans to recover his lost son. He had always believed him to have been carried off bv some one connected wi,h ,he cirei,s , x,lec!(.j ti) ,,.,,,;, ,OI1Ilcr or ,a!,Tt lrl mune circus (:OI1)pilv. UVith this opinion pre Jominant, he has 1 made several journeys lo different parts e.f j H." eoun'ry, but always with.Mit success. r tekrtri had well nigh made the '. .. . heart sick, mi d ins aiiention was called to a paragraph in a Syracuse paper rela tive to a litlle boy w ho was found bv Jus lice House of ibat cii j, covered with ir.tid and blood, endeavoring to shelter hitnsell from the rain in a dry-goods box. The boy, as the j-aragrnph s'ated, gave hi.s name a , James Hurt, and appeared to be fl or 7 yearsof pj"3. This corre jfoiiile:) wiili the name and ago of Mr. H.'s !o-i child ; hut he had been so often deceived that he telegraphed lo the Justi. p, mal.ing certain inquiries. Tiie reply was im satisfactory, as the boy insisted lh.it he had "ome from iSngljnd three years pn viously. Hut a luller description, in answer to a letter particularly ihe statement that the boy hai a dark brown mark under his left ear so fufly confirmed Mr. U.'s hopes that he went to Syracuse last Saturday night. On Saturday m:ifuing he proceed ed to lhe Orphan Asylum, where the boj had bien placed, mid, without having any description of the little fellow, ins'nntly picked him out from rr eom par. y of fifty, all dressed alike. Although the boy did not recognize him, paeenls can conceive of the satisfaction which ihe happy father felt in thus recovering his long lost son, of whose identity not a particle of doubt remained. , The history of the abduction is snSstan" himself. He was Vpokcn to t7 wowt.,l j ee.ir the circus,a Mr. R.lc'ore understood t This woman took the child to a hou.-. in the city, vvhirh he oWs not recollect. Soon after dark, they went en hoard of the cars,; nid afier about an hour, as the hoy tho'l, they jrf.t out of t.,e cars and lo.,k a caeal hoat Iinmediatejy Hl'ter liiev uot on the noai, ue recoueots 1 imt me woman took oil Irs apron first, and then hU other clothes put 011 hiai a pretty red suit. Ilj Mien remembers reaching the womai.V hDUbt: in Oswego, where he saw a little yirl. whom the woman called his sis'er ; and he was told that his mother and lalher weredea.l. lie was also n.adi; lo believe ibat he had been brought lo Oswego Iroin ivigliml, and a new name was given h;m. have attempted it. but Ihey have come lo lie would, however, somuiu.es say that;ihe conclusion lhat it can n..t be done: his name was J imes Hurt, but he was J Pt I think you may succeed.'' Mr. Hop- whipped lor Ibis Snellen aud severelv , that he was generally known as Frederick G. Je never lldl at home with his abi'uetrcss. and once or twice ran away, aud absented himsi-lt'st-veral days. It was his predisposition to get of! which idtimaltlv resulted iu his recovery. Hav ing heard . great deal about lhe State Fair, and seen, at Oswegn, extensive arrange ments made for visiting it, he determined lo go himsell ; and he cnt accordingly. W hde there he picktd up pennies by run-1 ning of' errands, watching of cattle and so lived in the crowd, without attracting any particular attention. Hut after the Fair closed he did not get aloig quite so well, and used to wander about the canal, walking to 'he neighboring villages and r iiirmng 10 o racuse at mgiit, as 10s i.uiey dictated. It was while thus wandering wandering about on the lowpath, during the darkness and rain, that he fell 011 a stone, badly cutting his head and face, and; rendering him sn insensible that he laid out in lhe rain during the whole night. It was not until the day following thai he was found and cared for. He is itw wih his parents a bright, cood looking and hap py little feliow, and will, we trust, remain, to compensate them for the unutterable tnef which his three years' absence has caused them. We have lhe name of lhe retch hy whom the boy was enticed from bis borne ; but .Mr. P. deies not at present, wish il published. She is wife of a re spectable man ol some property in Oswego, vliii professes to be ignorant of the mari ner in which the boy was obtained. He -ays that she accounled satisfactorily l him for the possession of the boy, but re fused to give her sfory, whrti Mr. Huit I .nut h.'i r.n .'s.ni.l:! t; 'Phi, n.t uoll on. , , , .- , . . dergo a leya1 examination, and it is to tie hoped that lhe guilty parties may be visi ted with the extremes! penalties of the law. Jtibuny Evening Journal. F mm the Maine F armer. Sabsoiliiiij. The ben-fit of subsoiling has been high ly r commended by those who havo made a fair trial rf it for several years past ; yet h. re are compara'ively few, wdieiher sal isf.ed or not of i's utility, who put in prac tice, I have for some time bnen convinced of the propriety of deep ploughing on most soils bv giving greater depth lor the roots of p'tuits to roam in seaich of food and moisture, ns well ns to enable the surplus water the more readily to drain 01T: yet, upon sorno shallow saiils there is an objec tion lo throwing up too n.ucH of wnat is usually termed dead tarth, which, until ii has been for some lime exposed to lhe ac tion of sun and air, h is a deleterious effect upon vegetation. This difficulty is obvia ted by suhsoi!:ng,as the earth is not thrown up, only loosened, thereby facilitating the surplus water to d ain olf, and also the bel ter f nabiing it to retain sufficient moisture in dry weather for the nourishment of plants. For several years we have felt wishful more fu'ly to bocome satisfied as to the real ben i lit of subsoilioir, nd whether it would pay the cost.'w hich mav be reckoned eq al to breaking ti; te land,) but others nf oar nei 'hb-.rs. wi h "renter facilities, would make the trial, we deferred it until last t,r when we tried it for fruit-trees, wheat, carrots, parsnips, turnips, &c..with decided benefit. The piece which we sub soiled for wheal, w ith the exception of two or three furrows, for cxr"er:ment, soon showed a marked improvement, standing the drouth well, and giving a good yield of excellent wheat. Such is our estimate of the benefit to he derived from subsoiling, from Ihe experience cf the post, that we stiutrld no, on account of the cost, hesitate 10 use the subsoil plough for all our future D. Tacer. ernnr. VasbhEvra', 9h it, 199. The New Torlr and Er"o' Railaad waif ' ? Origin of ' Hall Columbia." lii llin ear 1793, when patriotic feelina ' p-ivHiled the country, and when there;1'1 rlir 'Iial an.1 ;cxi:Iuive-, epistolary ero several parties in the field Mr. Tox j H yoiin plaver, who was more a l:n red j f(ir (,js vocal than histrionic po. rt.caded ! nrnn ,,nn kio r,;.t i. 11....1:.. jS,.n R,J aft,.r s!aiing ibat the l.db.wir.g priing had been appointed for his benefit. and expressing great fear for iho rcsi.it, j , no-a single box had been taken, begi;ea , his irieiid to do something in his bt half, ri." said Fox. vou will virile me s.n.. - - patriotic verses to the tune of lhe I'resi- dents March,' I feel sure ol a fuil house. Several of the people about the theatre kinson retired to hi.s study, an I in a short limi wrote the first ver-e and chorus, I which were submitted to Mrs. Ilopkinson, who sang them ti a piano arcorripaniiirn' and proved the measure to lie compatible and in keeping. In this way the second and other verses were wrillcn. and w hen Mr. Fox returned in the evening, he re ceived with delight the song as it new stands. The f llowing morning smdl handbills announced that Mr. Fox wruld sing a new patriotic song, The thea- . tre was crowded ; the song w is sung and j r,,R,.jvej wj,n rapture ; il was repeated eigiit liinsanJ nain e.tcjre I, an 1 when sung the ninth time, (he whole audience stood up and joined in the choruj. Night, after night, " II id Columbia" cheered the , visi.rs of ,hs thre. and in a very few days it was the universal song of the boys in the streets, f.om one end of lhe city lo theother. Nor was the distinguished nu ,hor 0f this truly national song a song which met the entire approan'inti of all parties of the day forgitten. Tne s-M-t hich he resided on one occasion was d, and " Hail Columbia' broke on the stillness of midnight from hundreds of patriotic voices. itftf. T JI1SKPH HOFKlSHS, tilj.. Tune "Presidi-Hl's Mu. c 4 " Hnil, Coliimhh ! I..vpiy Ion! 1 1 Ait. ye her. -ps ! heaven. .ra t'ti,. W ho fiuqlit unel liii'il in re tl..ms enn. Wh.i f.xiehl are! i.l.-J to Fm-thim k t-iue. -nii ftlien the stnrni of irnr was 5.11 o, E: j ijed lhe- pt-are your rator won. 1.1 1 Ii.d. p litlent'u bt our tutt, hver n i ilt'ul nbut it curl ; Ever tcrntelul for Imp per ". Lei its slur reich ihe sk e. Finn unit-d Irt n l e, iiail v lug 'oiueil our l.i icitv ; As a bnd of brottiers j- in- 1, 1'c.cti and n il. ty wc shult fi .1. finrnortai piiriut ! rise once more ; 1). ft' i d vour rights, tlrl.nj your hnre ; l.rl lei rutte f.te, with iiiinus haml, l.i l no riitl" t. e, Willi iui.j..iiii hand, liivude lhe s'iruie where nil ltd lien Of lull and liloml ttie wt-l:-t ameJ i'i7.f. VYh ii; taluiing praise sin -ere suit just. In licavcu vvt; plice a man y tru-t, 'l hat truth and justice w ill i;eil. Anil every scheme, of I'Oiiilage lull. Firm, uniie.l, Ac. Si-ninl, sound lhe titimp of Fnv ! I.rl VV Asm-rGTOs's gieat naaic Ki.i through the world will) loud aip!;ii-e l.i. ig turouh the woild with loud i !ua, " 1 ' ! let rv, ry chine to Freed nn dear Listen wjiU a j.iyfiil ear; Wi h eipnl skill, and g .dlike piwnr, He g ive lied in the fmtfiil hour flf liooid war : or g'tide. with ease, l he hai pier limns nf honest peace. Funi. uiiiled, -Sec. BtboM the chief wha now commands Once more to iT'e hia cnur.try, stand The mi k on wiii 11 the elurm mill he it. flit! rock on winch the siorm will bet, Uut. armed in virtue firm and true. Hi hopes are filed on Hr.iv. n anil you ; When hope was ainkin; in dismay. And (jl.ioins obscured Uiilamim! tlay. His uluady mind, from chns fiee, Ro&o ved 011 tlealh or liberty ! Firm, utiited, Scc The D-rnlcrj of Rome. . A correspondent of the European Amer ican, writing from Rome, says : "The defenders of Rome were not for ei"ners,or very few oflhem.in comparison to the Roman people and Roman army. To call strangers those Italians who marched in rid of Mothr Rome, would be lhe same as lo style a New Yorker a foreigner in Philadelphia, or in the Southern Slates" to call a Yankee one. Let us see how many of the inhabitants were not Romans and not l.ujiani. Lombard-Venetian exiles,4000; Sicilians and Neopoliians, 600 ; L'tgurians and Ptedmontese, 350 ; Tuscans, 250 ; French, Poles, and Hungarians. 150 ; SwisS paid by the States, 1000 ; .lmtri- $r T&nntttr: it ; total, o.soo. Late from CalU'urnta. I ; l1 lono '"H'',, ctirrejipondenrr - 'nl:' :n ( Hutortun, led into fear lhat h j naI 'Mf " Lynched, or h id died sndJi .! 'ecy larf", and sht won i, aid go an J dr j '" s,",:e new ly-dincowered d.seae butweij,st ih-;y pleez-j. L's alius so in noo 'are rleasantlv di-anoointed bv the wen-! kuntric. 1 lion ol the following under bis own hand and seal. He had some ditliculty in deey phering the original. which appears lo have been written with tobacco j'jice. arid had il not bs?n for the gold dust tispd by the writer iniiejd of common sand, and w hich in some rnetsure illuminates lhe dinv mar jcript, the communication would have leen wholly illegible. It will be seen that the previous accounts of lhe riches ol that region are more than confirmed. Vally or Tint SACavMfcSTrR, f April 20, 184!). $ EnnYTfRs or the Tymfs When I wrote colore, spades was trump" now it diitiunds. These preshus stuns is fourdj in br Ivnnt perfusion nn the brow of the Sarah Xaaday, and several as lare as fenix ejgs has bei n seen in a mounting of iold, diskivered last wrek, near the Sam Joking; and when the-snow melts it ts suppo-ed that many of the first water will come down with ihe current, seed oi nitu'.ds is remarkabid plenty, but a l.T.v has been made hgigttherili' 'em, because it spiles the lu'er crop. X.me is aloud lo be geihered under the size of a peace ofchatik limrulds abounds, but nobody is green enuff lo pick 'em up whan ihey cati get I dimunds. Other j w.i'.s is a drug. ISeyonrt 1 "e plain--, on wiuu tney can a ( iaio 01 tne ' mountiogs.bn.sni is of liloe pees of silver! haslecn dug up, which is very o nven - vnnt ,or smail change. A stream runnin into Fether Uivur, and perttkurly rich in gold, has recently h en !ikivered by a -5erman bum'-any, anJ ihey h ive sek- ! red the jiut onership by threatening to ! ' fin l:e 'hey ketch poachm on there j f rk- I on"r f onw otrlar.dish Dutch itvntur privi'edge, ihey rail it lhe liivur ' lloine n. Some ol lhe xploriti 'sociashuns j Woich Ins gonn fiir in'o the intereyur,srnds j wiinl th it the sile ihar is all solid gold sol j with roohocs, but nobody belves these out ! :y in' panics. j The depth of the ordifcroUJ ands on the jSacrjmentur is f..rly-ate feet eleven inches; and :$ kwlurs. Wherever we find traces of gold, we sink shafts and dra-v it up jvv ith h-rses. The sand is so tarnation I ; heavy it puts the m istangs lo there metal, j I tell yu ; but there's no help for Vm ; they must hang on wi'.hull there mi'e mid mane, or doun they go, and then it's all up with 'em. Tvl 'nre quantities rf g'M. at the very least has been sent to Sam Pbrancisco for . sum li ne back, and as fast ns it i- p l i'l lit is turned In in goti. Theaves can not ;esztstat lhe dtgitins bein hung tin the 'shiest suspishiitt. (Irub is rnodurate j llooi ls of a spiri'us nater verry km is- - , . , . 1,1. 1 : salt pronshuns is sot f for a song ; . . . , the tavern keepers most givin em awav 3 , . 1U t'luui ui pi'itiiittn ...till-,,. ...-.in. toi t i-, 1 five dollars a ho lbe l, an brandy ten dol lars a half pint. H iws'ever, as gold is plenty, ever,- J ick has his giil. This puts nie in mind of the noose by , r e.- . .. .1. 1 . 1 .0 I r th steaniur t iililorny, that, a snip load ot . t VUog wen.Tien was ti i-eninu mu on a 111 1 1 -j rvin spekul .shun wiih one Mrs. Farr.ham ns shoojiercargo. We hok for.be same ! witxhiislj . U hat is go'd what is pres- bus stuns without witreniti X tb n but 1 vauitv and vexashuti of spirits. Solomun siys, (I red it t'other day on a page of nrovurbs I was a goin to ue for wadd.n,) S .lotnun says wurtshus 'oomun is more preshus than roohees, and in a kuntrv wiihout a pcltveoot one Icels lhe firse of 'he remark. When a man ba wehh he wants hares to leve il to ; and in coarse--no wives, no hares. Yu couldn't send mp out wun could yu 1 I mean a wife, not a hare. If she's sum pitted with the small pox even, I woodent kare. The ordinari es! goods is valeable when lhare is none in the market. Thare's duzuns I woodent a lookt at in the States, that ud now be thankfully reseved and no kwes shuns axed. Yu can say, nnd trooly. that I'm wurth more 'an my wait in gold, for I've gut a kwariur of a lun of it in stoar at Sam Pbrancisco, besides a spring ling o' dimunds. We hjve a sort of make-shift guvurn munt here (no alluzhtm to the pirryurafl above.) "ul UP extrmnperry as one may say, that ansers puny well for a noo kun try. Gen. Smith ain. nobody. He's kleverchap and a spunky, no dout o that ; but he haint tot no more oriliority lhau a child in arms, if ibare was such a thing I in :hs st itul.nent. tie i-,hK9 generit cr- j nn.i proeiHinasiimw, and fiieh truck "i" peepie rf-ei em, pern te Iiterntoor - ; ' n circe : hut when thej ve red 'em Agricultur in CahTorny is purfy much left 10 nater. It sticks in folks' crop to be soein corn when ihey can dig gold, and so ihey all go 10 the plasers to make hay while the son shines. This is the monster deposit bank of the unervarsal wurld, and we're all rasheres and directurs. Bring ver 'tatrrs here if you want 'em dug, we can't lake lhe Irubble to raise 'em. Tbe only wegetahle weculiurvate is the rule of all evil, and if yu'll sewf fs frutes of the airth, yu can have lhat in xchange. The rainy season bein over, the weather is settled. 1 tFeve the heat fcrsi.'t been below 99 for a week, which, with baJ rum htsprooved fatal to some coiisiitooshuntt. nmigrants of all kinds and kuntries keep pourin in by land and water, and the pop erlashun is very promiskous. Wa Meri cans keeps the upper hand of the furriners so far, but ii rnkrs kunsiderb'e powder and ba'l. Colt's pistols is fine for mutiny. I'he boltk' cau-es a good many musses, but lhe barrel alius stops 'em. I shall ship my pile by the Califoruy, next trip ( and il I escape lhe cholera, the injans, and the yaller fever goin thru M jxico, yu may ' r me oeiore verry long, and per- j n,Ps sooner- A DISBAXDEr VOLUNTEER. Accumulation. An illustration of what a hitle money will become in time, if out J out on inlereslj an(j propery ,a,en Mre rf is alf'rded by an incjji-nt related to os yesterday by an old riident. lie stated1 lhat about 50 years agA bequest of $10. 00i was left to an iutot on L 1112 Hand. le was tneD in his. -infancy, and is conse-' quently now but little over fifty. Soon after his JH?'r decease, three respectable inhabitants of city, all cf whom are yet Lying, were appointed trustees for the cars of bcqiies', with authority to appropriate $300 annually for ;he idiot's maintenance, which was accordingly done. This left at first but a small accumulation, but latterly the increase his been rapid, end the pnn. cjpa now am0unts to over $100 000. Should ,ie pt? ;ve twf.ty years longer, ag is nol miprohable, he will die worth n nnr(er 0f a m,!inn 0f dollars. Pretty well I ir a fool. Jour of Com. Mr. A. Whitney, the original projector of the great Pacific railroad, passed through Philadelphia a few dayi since, on his way lo the Memphis Convention. He is as en thusiastic as ever, and is determined to leave no s'one unturned to secure the pros ecution of his mighty en'erprise. We have j conversed with Mr.Whitney time and again upon this subject, and have found him full ni'iuui.tit- ,ir.r . , ,, ... , . ; of information, thorouahlv acquainted with deer. All . " .' . I la I f hit ti....... pnnlo. .tl I nMn.niH lv mtfnt .... ... ...i limit .-,....ii - umtru it- int. -., .. ... . . t-tri, tti'itrfjiioii 111.11. 19 uitcti aiii'Uil in-l " , , ... .... own plan. He has certainly been indetat- igahle in his efforts, and if Congress should sanction this great undertaking, Mr. W. should in some way be officially connected with the enterprise. Pjme persons still contend that n railroad to the Pacific is chi merical and imprae'licabl. law t get Rlctr. A man wh is very rich now, was very poor when ho was a boy. When asked how he got his riches he replied : My father taught me never to play till my work was finished, and never to spend money till I had earned it. If I had but one half hour's work to d.) in a dav, I must do that the first thing, in hall an hour, and after I was allowed to play ; and I could then play with much more pleasure) than if I had the thought of an unfinished task before my mind. I early formed ihe habit of doing everything in its time, and it soon became perfectly easy fo do o. U is to this habit I owe my prosperity.'" A Curious Affiir. Some six years ago Augustus Kennerly, city collector at St Louis, was discovered to be defaulter in $8,000, and dismissed notwithstanding hi protestations of innocence. Recently, how ever, it came to light, by a re-examination of his accounts, that instead of being a de faulter, tho city of St. Louis really owes him Si.,000 with interest, besides the res. lorntion of a blighted reputation. A Germao paper mentions the death of n police serjeant from tetanus, produced by a bite on the thumb from a drunkard nf whom he was taking custody. The wouud healed apparently in seven or eight days, and on the day afterwards the convulsion began.