lIE / 3' Fremont, the Choice of the Nation. Ain-' Red White- and For. Fremont, the choke of the notion, • The pride of the fearless and free, We II chink to Ills lie:•1 ',lt andhis station, Though Fillmore basrome o'crthe sea. lilt lir nit beats for' fireedom,'reiliailiii.":' Qii the saki ttlittip"4rlibt:rfy . grew—,•_ • For our brethren In RuprunisustAining The five flag—the Red, White and Blue There aro lands wbortilho,hvhilons aro yearning ' For Frpedom Troin.tyriinity's chain, • While to Kansas our efforts arc turning To shield her frton Slavery's stain. For Fremont, ho stands with devotion, •Anil swears to the Upton he's true; .11e crossed o'er the mountains to ocean, To plant thorn-tljo Bed, White and Blue. No sectional fonds shalt e'er serer The bands which our forgathers wrought; The Union forever mid even Unsullied, unstained nndunbought,. Is tbo watchword for Fremont we borrow, Anti he stands by hisiirouilsc so true; Then who will our leader not follow, Wholi his flag Is the . Rect, W,bito and Illue Otii• voices arojuined, then, for Union, The, stars and the stripes are abane; all for Frew:lll and Dayton!' Iluzza for the men that we love! The old Unton ship, when well guided, . • 'Twill ho found that hertlmbers are true; And s.uni will the stem:where subsided r c tri•ted, White and Mum-- ~Jolifirul. FREMONT AT ROME Correspornloneo of the Boston lhrlatian Freeman, NEw Youx, July 23, 1855 DEAR Fnnuta.ari :—Thie forenoon I started out utaler a but BUD, to fulfill an '_engagement which I made yesterday. • At Just ,1.2 M.,'l rang the bell at tho—dooe of No. 50 Ninth Street. As I. stood tbeie waiting• tin ' an answer to my summons, I instinctively caat• my' eyes up to aeo.wherelbe bahiony bud been. brokeu: .for_mot _many_ eveniugaAinae Was a crash there somenhere, mile quite a 'precious load was upoait. But I could see nothing, the !iamb of the artificer haring made . . all 'right, I, had just seen that they! Rae !loth.? ing „1.0 t)#„clienti WhellAhe door waa:opeuetl." handed .my caid to the Attendant, • and :wail conducted to the front parlor on* the ettorid floor, where I was left alone 190030 , ten , or fit: tee, ntinutes, ' Thu apartatent was furnislieii in a style of simple lutzeriositese; eTerythiligi . there beini,micie either'for notnfOrk. or use.t Upoa' the walls :were Aetna lininahle paintings,. ant4:etnpag .0,,.„ lruli C 4 eitess iho -, ,iroa.statointia arolina, Ciinatirt}-= ' Many . b uels:s wero , there, 'setae' of. the& much reto:; . 'Otitl yfipuld not but ' notice, that' these latter Were,Worite,Of pithltittnerit==nioilly oat, entliie; trO'foli.‘ 1,04 had oertainlY,,,been,oftotithttailted„. , itlength.the attendant called , uftin6nii;nnd desired in° . to fOlinw ;hint: :In a 4ulet;ariaOi' furnished,apartmint, .11Pcinll.L Orthe, tirst r fl o3' oor, I foand , -ua. , llr.:_ltainet.' pre - pared'io - rcleet such a WkileL . Nane:(t!itili,liti twits& priiii.ot hita:lthliEkbadietitrAitr.hiin jitetiOe: Yet' .11 e 1 4•COL'tlahti Charles rieninO•Pi ItAil hand. • , II ;~. • • I had expecteA to:aea n stout"-built, full•fea tured,rdikik,.nharpveyed igi!nt With tht?,airlif was looking for an .eye "that should . pieice_tue' • through, and make nie feel anywheie but at' botne. slirt,l. ,. wps all pre,intred to," keep: cool and wear au outward show of ease. But I mot a man rather below the medium size, as Tar as Mere bulk iifeencerned,:with,itjuild modest. expression ' , of couritenanCe; a .deep meaning eye, but beaming With intellectual light . ;' .. a brew uobly•formed,. though half bid , ' den by the dark curling hair 'which. parts. in: the centre and floats away on .either_sitie; a -,-- bold - acquiline - neserWith-thesse-fi-nel-y-ourved, •nostrils which mark the' fearlesk• firm smiled • . Man ; )ips. rather thin,.-and not at, all hidden by the gracefel moustache; , aprominent chin for character, though in perfect keeping with the rest. of the features. I neirer saw a was online face-with•so mush bohle . ess of .outline,. and less'of the animal. .There is hardly. an animal feature discernible. . • It is : all'•• IVIAN.,- 't rif 6,- pure and noble, -.llis- feelings. afleakti t plainly in his face, especially in his eyes and lip!;, and the'varying shades of his counted- mice betray at once the-man who 'is not Used to concealment or prevarication. - " '_ - - : • • At first the visiter is hardly willing to he- - • liege that the lightly built man before :him is - thsAlexander of California- the Vespuehis-01. the Rocky . Mountains lint when- we note .. that thinness of tunscr—:thatfine knitting of .Tfratne--1 hat.-v seperabeifilance of_ nerve: and • arranged , mescle—We are nolo'ngerat fault. I bad not spoken with 'lam a full Minute hefore I felt us perfectly at home int though I had been with a member of my own family.- . ' his salutation was {rap k mid manly, free flint' •• alPstitly, and bozo upon its tone agenial.wel .• coma.---l-wondered ere I win!introduced, if My Colueine.was au fail, or ,COlll7liC it- foul, tot '1 (new that some of ouiplain ("} Republican , gentry, when called upon to serve the public; were very penctilieue in this respect, and it is no-t-Wiatt-.woadood-lat-ilutt-ere-I-leff,the Ara w-- •ing room I gave One last look into the mirror,:. - to be assered•that 'all was right. But when • I toUnd the Colonel, I:thanked my stars' that• ' . studied my own comfort in_my costume. , . . :Ilia Own • ress - consistpkof a par of thin pants • -- without suspenders, im cost and a common, loose, brown-lie Vii suck. 'And so he received • his guests: . - - •Why, 1 teiTyou, lie is•a perfect man,•just.as - God made him, without foreign airs. or fixings of any sort or kind. Ile is ltepUblicatt - to the , backbone; and pm limy reel assured that' he haste '` backbone," too. None 'of your stiff ones that can't bend till it breaks,.nernone of your India-rubber ,onas that• head to every thing.l7-but.it Itt, ono of your, 44131 y - tempered steel'fixtures, that bends . hetioutb 'no ordinary weight,-ontlnpier bends to leide its noble up-. rightnees.' in coiriersaitin lie is . free,.. easy. and pleasing ; with language just titled to con .. . • .._. voy his thoughts ; a spirit of mild good-nature predominant ; with just fire enouth in , those deep : pet eyes to. show they 'con - Id / burn - rather warmly were the . istroke given- As we talk . - on, we find him prigessing a wondrous fund of sound, practical sense; keen and .penetrat ing ; reading motives easily, 'and deducing his,conelusions.witb more than ordinary ne !limey; • il__. _presents ono •ofqltose peculiar moral o an tot mations,which seek good iu every thing; ever. ready to grasp good advice; seel: lug council from - thoti - qualified to give it; never acting . uPen a preconceived • plan when he is shown a better ; •but no more. to'belurn ed from what be knows isrighti.than his own' Rooky _Mountaintrimti be4urhetl into 'the Pa Mk. ,• • .•., •. . a •. • • I have seen just enough of, John Charles . Frement to assure me that no mortal , power. can swerve him from the Path o tif ditty;iind that no man' knowe his' duty better . „Why, his `whili3 - life is one li*ing; I ,iid•;"pictured.proof of this. 'where ie.' the . matt who has .faced ~ • . . death ofteper in the Pattilof dutythan' he ?—• --AWhere-istliO-nienWhO--bOatinerificed toore--of bis personal comfort to Abe good,of .his .coun-- ' try - than he t . Surely the man "cannot be • found . • Amid the*. pride; pomp and - Oirotitti• •. -- stance ofAlorioniwar" many men will stake - their lives; but we 4411111 find few, very feti, who , will• „nobly . - brave : the'thousand' deaths' which'ataro uyon the pioneer . nmonithe' 'ker..; nal snows : and .wild savages -of : the Rocky ~. Mountains, and that,' too, for the '•eingle. purf ~ pose of opening the.. read..,Of oiyiiization and - 'Christianity to the vest,- rioh:.regione lieyoull ' • Freitiont's mieSion-WasWniet enitihtiiictilly , One. ' of Peace and'Good Will; 'ailq his highest,' hope wae.that tie might be .tiblis to, open tefidieoun--, - trymen.a'etiort ands . safe route ..to.the -, 'cilia _country. Re did it -' aye,,he did it, or ho `would not now be resting 'upon his laurels. , Col Frenion w t was Savannah, • Geer.' gia,:on, the,.2lat of januttry, - -1818,; and - is"eon-, eequently at, the pres e nt time forty-three years or age.. JULIA at prime of life—to the vigor, '.. of full ',manhood ; 'With a:rtibiO,,eiperience - trash* upon 104. 1 ono '44----140.. tinot,li .la she broadest sense •of • the expression t with .his 7-iiymPathieslvertitAbirHilattnanitY-v-WO'Lbitter . ',... prejudice*. towarp,_bis - judgment;. but finah and etreng.:llrm in the Right, - .and 4:looking; .•' OAT . :te the eter.neilawoof . aosticeoniuTiiith; . for 4111;gai.dn,14e, *toads it . thi ' present AM° i.`;'OrienYiePt4 1 41luilifif4j4 : • , r 6 PreseeVAP • , !Ile 1 1'PrWari*Nne: the: tilie_ , 4el)9o49u‘4l..PAlV mentof title tierittitif Intieth.:,:': . ., -:•• :::•-'::::.i,...-,::,;' dctrliMe ijeratb. ' -Frptiu too Indupend'ent, Aug. - 7. The- poi? Noble and the Empty Hole. HENRY WARD -11EtClIEII; first slimmer which we spertrink,Leuox, yy' 441(1 : along a - very intelligent deg named Noble. Hewes learnedln many - 11- hy his dog.'hore excited the undying tion of,allthe children. But there Were seine things iviiioh'Noble Could newer_ learti.' occasion - seen a red squirrel' run: tutoa hole in. a sione , yll,lie 60d-7n-et-be persunded that hewas-nal there for everinore. Seieral 'red squirrels lived close to the house-andAr,ad-beinitonalamillinr,thetnot They_ kept qp n regubir . romp with Noble They world ceine do 'rf ---- r1 0)0,i-tipple trees. with provoking coolness they would run alma . t run, along • the fence nitnoSt within reach ; they would cock up - their - tails and sitil .across the rood to the bard.; there was.such n.well timed cnlenlation under r apparent rashness . , that Noble hlyftirrived the -spot , just as. the sqirrel felt it. . On one becattion - Noble was so close. - upon. his red backed.fplend that, untih:e tii get *up the tnafile tree, he dodged ,intu a hqle in -the wall, ran, through the chinks, emerged -at a ittlo distance, and sprang into the tree, The utenseenthusinsit4f ilia dog at that hole ann. hardly be described. Ile tilled - 1i full of bark. ing. Ile iiiiiVetrand 'Scratched as if , under mining a biistien... Standing. at -a—little die:. tatiee he' woicid - pieree trio' hale with a Oe•ne intense find fixe d as if h e w ere trying magne . • . tism -on-it, Then, with and everylinir thereon electrified, be wank! . -rash 'ai, the empty biditlitith it prodigious onslaught. This imaginary squirrel . . haunted Noble 'night, and day : The • very squirrel hlniself ‘, would run .up befbre his face into the- tree, .and crouched in a crutch, would • sit silently watching- the Whole-- process hombarlling the empty hole, wi great sobriety and relish.- Btt---Noble—would--allf of- no d.inbts. His norviCtion'that that by e.had n sqirrei . in - , con tinned unshaken-for six weeks. When all oth- er occupations failed this hUle remained •to ~ When_there. mere no more to_ • hurry;•no pigs-to bite,.tio cattle .to =.chase; -- no children- - to romp with; no expeditions, -to make with the'groWn folks,, and when - he had slept all that hiS dog skin would- i be would Walk out of the-yard, yawn and stretch" himself, and then look wistfully at the bole, as if thinking to himself, " Well as there is oath ,ing else to do . I may as well , .tiy that hole again !" . - W,e bad 4161°st — forgotten this' littlo trait until tho•conditot of, the The N.: ,K : .Ezproos. in rispoot , to Out. Vt.Omout'it religion; to : Ouitit it luilicrottsly to mind again. Col, fremOnt is and always has been, as sound a Protestant as John Knox evir-- Ho f -was bred hr the Protestant faith, and has 'never changed. ilo unacqUainted with' the dootrities and ceremouied of the Catholic -Church, - ntfl never attended the seiViCes. of that , C urcl , witli - two or thrde exceptions, when ouriosit ur some. other extrinsic reason 11488; a• witness." We do nt,ik state this uportragil-e -belief. We know what we say. We say it upon our own/personal honor and 'proper knowlesige.,_ . Col. Fr not, now, a Roman' Catholio. • lie hue never been wont to attend that Church ; nor has 'he in any way, directly or indirectly, given ocba stun -for this report.. emojitnever was ' It is a gratuitous falsehood, utter, barren, a:heel - ate and unqualified. The story' has been got,up for political effect. It is still air ciliated-for that reason, and, like other pond., cal Hee, it is:tetheer, unscrupulous falsehood from top to bottom, from the core to the skin and:frem the skin back to the core again. • In all .its parts, in pulp, teguinent, rind, cell-and' seed it is a thorough and tatal untruth, and they -who spread it bear false witness. And tts to all.the stories of the Fulmer kind, etc., as, to •the supposed coditErtialion - frith - Fre Mont, in which he defended the mass, and what not, they ire pure fictions. The' never bippened. • Tlie authors of them are slander ers ; the men.to Witte theta are dupes; the men who spread them become indorsers of wilful and corrupt libelers. But.TWExpreaa,'like Noble, 'has opened on .„. this bole la the stall, and can never be• done barking at it. Day after day it •resorts to this empty hole. When every thing else fails, this resource reinaine..' 'There they are, inde fatignidy—theßzprese and Noble -L-a church without q Freinont, and a hole without a equirrel in it l . - • - some reepecte, however, the dog' had the adiantage.' 'Somitimeii we thought that be really belie:yid that there was a squirrel there. But or other times he apparently had' an ink., Bag cdthS ticlicitiouetiees • his conduct, for he would drop hie taii,..ao Waik toward us with hi., tongue out and hie,eyeexiittle seeming to say, 4 ,`ll{y dear eir, you - don't _Utt. - d - eitiral -1 4 14 a -0 0 -1 :0 44C--/-01001d-ot-aiuree muChPrefef ettOirrel, 'ir can't'; have aati au'empty , hole-ii 'better than n o thing. ,imagine how_L „ would catch him it ,Iter i ces who Pau doti't kusist the fade. They think:that I'have got some. • thiug. It is needfuitto keep up my reputation -for annoity, rpeaides..-tdo , tell the, riith, looied hito-ibat bole aolo4 that I have half peratuided`niyatilf thuttheke is a squirrel titer& or will be, if I keep on." every dog •Intist. hive his day,and every, dog roust have , his way. So doubt if ye •werfilirbring — baa—Nobles—noW-,--after—twer summers' abseitue,, he would Make straight for thur,hole iu the wall with ,just o ne much.. zeal as ever: •' • rinse; i,a-, 11e never 'read. the Express, now. , a.daye, vithent - tilinking - invpluntarily, - Gondoodiol he dog id° letting.off of alai hole again."' .MORMONISM: - _ ,133 r the Air York Tribune; of 7th inst. a letter is published from GeearSalt. Lake, •tia ted-the 80th of May' last, froniwhich we make tho uppeiided . exiract. If the statemet is made.by the writer of this letter are corrt t, 111 u itnouistn , is IL greatblot.64 our national cutzhee,n, - -and Brigham YoUng is a magnifi cent scoundrel. "I . um aware that to. some, it rimy seem in.- credible - that - if'donimunity embracing, as:this dueskr espe- tehle . port ion of American citizens . , 'should be al,olutely governed by one To:solve this,, it Will bo.'necessury to, under stand 'the nature of their libiun. 'The saPer,-, ticiul observer, or •). • er -would middy stip': pose that it, differe not indterially from other religious sects 81.11 , )11 0.14 gun:, that eve in. their - rqteveliitions":there . was nothing hin d:lug when_they cuullicteil with the retition turd peat bt . AlS . e uf its Jnembers; that still less should Itte.edkond of-their PrUpliet be implicit oheyeil when those idiots conflict with their • sworn r duties iis+juitges and juroili. :But such, •arlitr, is the mot. Arid, when; rightly under- Stood, thin Oriental leaturo roses...part • of its deformity by cotkrust wirh' others as ilegta . u man, and iniinieirr to our Govertittieut. There is a light' within the TeMple, not inten ded tor vulgar eyes. I will - nut give you all their rums and cereal - mules' their endow- mutts" iif this awe, which are part, and par cal -oidiuut.c.es" of the -House of the Lola." Suffice that in one o y their degrees .the candidates are tootle tokheel at the unar; and with' the •rigkt. hand supporting and the lett, hand covering-tho-Holy . HirifeHßOok-of- Mormon sad-Douit-ut-Doctrine and Covenunts,- they there tatty uPoti. t n iieunielves au - Oath to 'Oheythe eett should 'that qouncil.at Clie time conflict with"whitt they deem right and proper. Tuuy abrogate "and annul alle giaiice w this i und all 'ether Coverninents They !deicer to avenge themurtier of themouth that makes thel Mormons, nut the obServituce of too , simple .ordiMplees • lied, aiteruirteuts taughttand given to us by Him "who apakens never muu spike." I would remark that while the founders of our Republic avowed the priu'ciple that we were capable of self.governMeut,-autl suc cessive' years Of prospet ity and national 'home have hiore than , verified , it—these pecu liar people utterly taid'practicitay deny An admission on theirpart, that with their integrity and good sense; they could _legislate fur would - destroy the vary foun• datiou if their fabric. • For, they protess to 'have restored to them the living, vital power comse• (pence, they must give uP thew wills to .him on whom the shuttle;Sliould auy antis - otter for (Mice, or advocate any prinuililia without having received the. sanction of the Prophet, or.the sanction of their High Coun cil', both he and he and his pretensions would be blasted. If a theocracy is established— and even if the word ditnoc hi attached thereto —it Must be uppareut to every retteating mind that alland .everything. must' emanate from the head of the church. Should thin be doutite, ed,4 call your attention. to all their public acts.. ' sTake the Legislature; ,for Every session H. C. Kimballis elected Fresi• dent of the Council, and J. hi. Grant, Speak• ei - nf thif - House ; unanimous Votes ,. they ,7 invariably receivo.'- , L- Them; worthies are the Prophet'a Cou9aollors, and; with him, contititute the &tit Fresiklenoy of the Church. Moe betide „Gait Memher whose temerity should induce' htni even to nominate any other. Politically and.religiens., ty (they are 4ere synonytnes) "he would,. to use their own significant cant, "be banded over to the buffeting] of Salta" .Not, a 'bill or . g iont.emanatiog.frem.that bed,r='-fronk the , most trivial to the most irupOrtant+frout the' WEI ,taking away Terries frcini old inotintaitteera who have lived in these Valliee for thirty years, to the establishment•' of impost- duties, but first iteceive's the approbation oltheir Vrophet. , Sigalog then), after their pas,age, is ~ 0 were form. This course accounts for the haintony andrunitnintity which they boast" scr winch 'of .: Thus . while' Epic's- benighted, ennelives the Mormone speak, sot and' think' as one of the Katy-did eielkoeT. It , • eney; be it Slays Stem, : it seeiy, be J oe.' Free State_efk 4dalseiork. _ %%tee oies ilia :the tane kinywn on ,you - r Olympia 'couiler; ;14:iroe to 'the racer *hose eqewitraeted from the, mark of rectitude of-them; If it were Briglideife,poliey to - have 'this n slave State: (African l': - "meat - 4) 'it (ter ! talitly would be aueb, notwithstanding •three: fourths of our population are.foreigners 'of :that claps who readily aff!liatem74 spmpatliiiie with the negro. pilt African Blayery e of, all ki t o si _B u iie..h4a_least.• It' 'is White of deeper dye and more degraded 'feint this or even Russian serfdom,. that "spits beat his purposes:" The . tag on the Mountain Peak! Foiirteen years rigO, on the 16th of August; .1842, Ccd. FREMONT climbedthe highest peiik".9- ,f_t_bet-Rocky . .7iouutainsil_ti4.oing yip . 18670 - . : feet, and planted the stare.atid'stkipes upon its summit—tin act ettiblesnatic : -vf—tbitHglorioui banner being lifted upi by the earns noble-band' 'front tbeluire in which it hay. beeti so - log. disgraced by corrupt politiciane, and placed aloftlupou'ilitttallest_pinacle of a ioual dlgni- ' ty and honor, eiirlY in ..Novetnier next. or i . feat we read the fofiewing . account in Col._ Fremont's Report of liiißockyllonntain Ex' • pedition : ... "Puttitig hande.noci feet 'in the erevieps , be• tweert die - rocks, Isueeedtled iii gotiegover it, mud, .when Irehelted the top, found my cum- , paniens win email vutiey. Deseeuuhig to theM, we couttueett etheiiieg,neit to a chort time reaelleii the erect. 4 cpraug ,upon the uunit; mid ttuothei istep would have I.)remp r itute.ti we Into . It field ut.coUw 6UO Net below. lu tae edge Ur (Alb field Wzitl icy - preei: pies, and tiled, with a gradual tall, Wu field, duped off tor about u struck the luui uf.uuuther lower ridge: 1 stood uu a. nar row crest itliout three 'feet iu width, with ,an intibtatiluu ut utiuut 211 degreeu th,' 51 de gr,,tes Lust:' As 'boon ad 1 had gratified the nibt leeinigs of curiosity-, 1 uesceattud and uch miiit ascended in In turn;• fur 1 would vuq uhuw uuu taa titna to mount the uutita. , blo flint preournme winch it etiemed a o liFelitti - WO — ard - h 11111 - e - TIM -- a byne We mounted too but:otneter, to toe' Booty on the SULLIII.IIi, and tixiug it rauirvil iu tie 'crevice,'" 21.1. E IVA II/LtAxl.,/, bLdG te:wilve in triunip/i tiViereAly ?fever" wavea tejiire _ Frightful Earthquake in—Moluccas-! 1.110116,1.N . D LIVES LOST. - The ludic until Lalugs • iuteiligetwo of an eruption of un uctivm voicuuu uu tuu tell/hit of -brat Sauglr, fut. ;I (leg. 60 utiu. N.; loug . 125 kleg.t . it/. Witt. E. Thu utuuututu of eirtivo t , (1,01.10 wet abuve the level of the ecit,-euthlettly uu the 2tl of Alas uh, checliurged Ludwig wuter I au(' Itivu, which Altietroyett fur acverui wiled r estattive ituti 'groves of`-cocoa- This frightful picture of Beat! uotion, the horror of which waS mcreased by the 'shrieks of wen outl beasts, the 'a ilu iouhr.ng of the tempest, and the crashing of thousauds of trees torn up and carried away, was followed about au hour later, by p..uis ut thunder which shook the earth um( ututeued the ear. A black Column of stone and ashes then shot up' from the mouutaiu to au in/men:tie height, fell, illumined by , the "glare of thelike - a shoWer of.the upon the surrounding country below, kroLluefug ailailtuess * that, only nova aud theirtuomenturily broken by, the • ashes of tightuing, was so auteuse, that-people could not, didoer4 objeas Ch.ibe 01, htilll3,. MAI which completed thtiiriotifusiou aud despair. 'Large stones were hurled through the tar, crushing whatever they fell upou. „Muses nail crops which had not beenk destroyed by fire, sunk and disappeareilbeneath the ashes and stories undlbiti hill Streams, stopped by these bar rleria, (tinned lakeii e whiell, breaking over their bauts,',VOtia provided a new source ot.destruo- T is lusted some , hours, i 1 ioiit Enid, night the r ief j g elementa sank to rest; but on the followtog day about noon, they resumed i their work o detdruction with fenewed vie lenee:-Irri 0-mean ti mei- the -- falt - of - ashins continued without iniermission, and , was so thick that'the rays , of the sun ,could , nor'pene trate through . it, and an appalling darkness prestilled. Scar4ly reolivcred iu some degree feira fright; the inhabitants of ~this; _, par: of Sangir were again disturhed :by: an eruption on the 17th of March, whlelideistroy 'ed aunty fields and a great number :of !Tees on the Tabukan aide.: Sincei - Aken •the volcano , "haa.reniained quiet, ' - .. The toss of Utiles been great. It le esti ,. , mated as follows, in the Undertiontioned dig *riot* :--,Taruna, uteri; wothen • and "children, 722 ; Bandher,lnen,' women and obildre . U, 45 ; Tabukan, men, women. and children; 2089; total 800. The greeter . .number met their death itythe goirdens, Tbe,vfied in all direc• tions, but webs overtalien and sWitilei.id by the ,fattiV fire etrasto. fibtosi cried to - rave tbelioiehee in the trees, but were' either , 4104. rigid away with theta or killed the- march,. .;,./40LIGIENT Coanatrounar4e.--Tho ried 4 atone (Va.) 'Whig eaye; oth-of N.. camber, soventeeti-negritee bars loft tht!uOiliiv . borhood, 'of Middleburg, 'and not more than half have been heard - from." • ISE
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