M0UNTAI1SENTI1L EBENSBURG, PA. THURSDAY, OCTOBER 10. 1850 Q7Thk Sentinel, ia muck the largest cir t ulation of any paper published in this county -and as An advertising shset offers superior inducements to merchants and business men generally. Those desirous of making us of lis medium jot extending their business can do so by either sending their notices direct, or through the fallowing agents; John Crouse, Esq., Johnstoten. a. iv. varr, wans' Buildings, Third s Philadelphia. v' B. Palmer, Esq., New York Philadelphia, and Baltimore. The Electiou. The election is over, and the democratic party is beaten so far as this county and District are concerned. We are beaten lor Congress, for Senate, for Assembly, for County Commissioner, aud for Dis trict Attorney. As full returns as we could obtain, we publish in another col uron. They may be relied on as being nearly correct. The defeat of our part)- is easily ac counted for. Men of influence made every exertion to defeat the candidates of their own party and resorted to the most unholy means in order to accomplish it. Tickets were printed in the Echo office for Cessna and Linton, and distributed in thewhole north by democrats "who should have been battling for regular nominations. SnCdgrass, the democratic candidate for Conre53 is beaten by Kuhns several hun dred in Westmoreland, one hundred and fifty in Cambria, and about sixty in Bed ford. M'Kinney, the volunteer candidate in Westmoreland falls behind both Suod grass and Kuhns. The election of Snod grass was scarcely to be expected, with two volunteer candidates running against him. We may m our next give a brief history of the whole affair, that our read ers abroad can understand the causes which have produced a result so disastrous go the democratic party. M'Dowell we think is not beaten by more than two hundred in this strong whig district. If he is beaten, lie can well congratulate himself upon the vote lie re ceived, and for having frightened his op ponents most awfully. The contest between M'Cullough and Parker for Co;iiress in the Huntingdon district is close. It is supposed however, that Parker, the democratic candidate is elected. If this is so it will balance the loss sustained in this district. . A telegraphic despatch ha3 been re ceived stating that the whole democratic txket for stale offices ij elected by a hand some majority. Cessna, the democratic candidate for the Legislature from Bedford, is elected, to that this diitrict will be repescntcd by one whig and one democrat. Maryland- The democrats in this stale have a chieved a glorious triumph. They have carried their Governor by about. eighteen hundred majority. Bonoly Laad Sill. The passage of the bill granting bounty land to officers and soldiers of the last war with Great Britain and the several Indian wars, is giving rise to an unprecedented number of applications to the Third Au ditor's Office for information. It is deemed advisable to state that copies of the army rolls cannot be furnished from this office for various reasons, one of which is suffi cient -namely, the utter irapraclibility of doing so. If one agent ha3 a right to copies of the rolls, so would twenty thousand, and al me cietKs in tne employ ot the govern ment could not furnish such copies. Be sides, there is no authority for doing so All applications must come through the Fension Office, (under the direction of the Secretary of the Interior,) and regular a run cates ol service will be furnished to the Commissioner of Pensions by the Third Auditor, as is now the practice in regard to all claims for pension or bounty land. This course i3 necessary to prevent frauds and interminable difficulties. JOHN S. GALLAHER, Third Auditor. Third Auditor's 0ice Oct. I, 1850. Edtiors generally will confer a favor on applicants by giving the abpve an inser tion. Large minds, like larro pictures are seen best at a distance, this is the reason, in say noining oi envious motives, wny'act; and that all such powers ot attorney we genejally undervalue our coutcmpo ratits, an J nvrrale the ancients. Bounty Land Bill. This act being one in which a great many persons are interested, we hasten to insert a copy as it finally passed both Houses of Congress, and was signed by the President: Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives of the United States of America,in Congress assembled. That each of the surviving, or the widow or' minor children of deceased commissioned and non-commissioned officers, musicians, or privates, whether of regulars, volun teers, rangers, or militia milttarv serVj5e Jn any . who performpd i I rnirlmant I ny or detachment, in the service of the . 1 i .i I United States, in the war with Great Britain, declared by the United States on the 18th day of June, 1812, or in any of the Indian wars since 1790, and each ofi the commissioned officers who was en gaged in the military service of the United States in the late war with Mexico, shall be entitled to lands, as follows: Those who engaged to serve twelve months, or during the war, and actually served nine months, shall receive one hundred and sixty acres; and those who engaged to serve six months, and actually served four months, shall receive eighty acres; and those who engage! to serve for any, or an indefinite period, ard actually served one month, shall receive forty acres : Provided, that wherever any officer or soldier was honorably discharged in consequence of disability in the service before the expira tion of his period of service, he shall re ceive the amount to which he would have been entitled if he had served the full pe riod for which he had engaged to serve : Provided, the person so having been in service shall not receive said lands, or any part thereof, if it shall appear by the muster rolls of his regiment or corps that he deserted, or was dishonorably dis charged from service, or if he has received, or is entitled to any military land bounty under any act of Congress heretofore passed. j Sec. 2. And be it further enacted, $-c. That the period during which any officer, or soldier may have remained in captivity with the enemy shall be estimated and added to the period of .his actual service,! and the person so detained in captivity shall receive land under the provisions of this act in the same manner that he would be entitled, in case he had entered the service for the whole term made up by the addition of the time of his captivity, and had served during such term. Sec. 3. And be it further enacted, 4"C. That each commissioned and non-commissioned officer, musician and private, for whom provision is made by the first section hereof, shall receive a certificate or warrant, from the Department of the Interior for the quantity of land to which he may be entitled, and which may be lo cated by the warrantee, or his heirs at law, at any land office of the United States, in one body, and in conformity to the legal subdivisions of the public lands, upon any of the public lands in such dis trict then subject to private entry; and upon the return of such certificate or war rant, with evidence of the location thereof haviug been legally made to the General Laud Office, a patent shall be issued therefor. In the event of the deatli of any commissioned or non-commissioned offi cer, musician or private, prior or subse quent to the passage of the act, who shall have served as aforesaid, aud who shall not have received bounty land for said services, a like certificate or warrant shall be issued in favor and enure to the benefit of his widow, who shall receive one hun dred and sixty or acres of land, in case her husband was killed in battle, but not to her heirs. Provided, She is unmarried at the date of her application. Provided further. That no land warrants issued under the provisions of this act shall be laid upon any land of the United States to which there shall be a pre-emption, right, or upon which there shall be an actual settlement and cultivation, except with the consent of such settler, to be satisfactorily proven to the proper land officer. Sec. 4. And be it further enacted $ c. That all sales, mortgages, letters of attor ney, or other instruments of writing, go ing to affect the title or claim to any war rant or certificate issued, or to be issued, or any land granted, or to be granted, un uer tne provisions ot this act, made or ex ecuted prior to the issue, shall be null and void, to all intents and purposes whatso ever; nor shall such certificate or warrant, or the land obtained thereby, be in any wise affected by, or charged with, or sub ject to, the payment of any claim incurred by such officer or soldier prior to the is suing of the patent: Provided, That the benefits of this act shall not accrue to any person who is a member of the present Congress: Provided further. That it shall be the duly of the Commissioner of the General Land Office, under such reg ulations as may be prescribed by the Sec retary of the Interior, to cause to be loca ted, free of expense, any warrant which the holder may transmit to the General Land Office for that purpose, in such State and land district as the said holder or warranttec may designate, and upon good farming land, so far as the same can be ascertained from the maps, pIat-. and field notes of the surveyor, or from ai?y other information in the possession of the local office; and upon the location being made, as aforesaid, the Secretary, shall causa a patent to be transmitted to such warrauttee : and provided further. That no patent issjasd. under this act shall be delivered upon any power of attorney or agreement dated before thopassage of this ; or 3gtecments considered and treated i as null and void. -i Civil tind Diplomatic Appropriation!. Among the items are the following: Pay and mileage of Congressmen, $416, 398; pay of officers and clerks of Con gress, $41,913; printing and other -contingent expenses of Senate, $100,000; do. do. of House, $197,779; addition to con tingent fund of House, $30,000; supplying light-houses, $147,474; pav.of light Jiouse keepers, $127,448; repairs, &c, of light houses, S84,630; expenses ot floating lights, $93,140; marine hospitals, San Francisco, $50,000; surveys of public lands, $3 19.7-59; intercourse with foreign Nations, $330,397; relief and orntection to! - ' - A AmPNMn enmAr n V. A M n 0 AAA. f Hflfi ji am . I I C 1 - f. f unincuuca in iuiiu ior renei oi sick sea men, and for furnishing five new marine nospnais. zuu,uuo; to continue construe uon ot custom house, New Orleans, 5suu,uuu; surrey of delta of the Missis c.-y.uuu; new custom house at uangor, Me., $50,000; do. do. at Mobile, Ala., $100,000; custom house and post omce, ionoix, Va., $5U,0OO; custom house, San Francisco, Cal., $100,000; do. do. St. Louis, Mo., $50,000; do. do. Cincinnati, Uhio, $50,000; surveys of unucu states coast $ibG,uuj. The Fiend Ilaynaa xi!i imu s uanger at L.otulon is com II w W mented on freely by the Paris papers. The Republicans say that llaynau had wallowed in blood in Hungary, had shot down human beings as if it were in sport, had whipped delicate and noble women, and had accumulated in his person all the crimes which should call down the exe cration of honest men: thev nraisf th brewery men for their generous instincts. although the manifestation of them was not parliamentary. Other oaDers do not defend llaynau precisely, but denounce the act as inhospitable to a stranger, and call on England to punish the agressors if she does not wish 10 develope fearlully the spirit of revolution. Havnau did not go to Paris to see which portion of the press represented correctly the public sentiment, but relinquished his apartment on the Rue Richelieu and went back to Germany. He had quitted his uniform for a plain dress, but was recognized in the cars before his arrival at Cologne. The papers of that city say that all the! hacK, coach, and omnibus drivers, refused to take him or his baggage to a hotel, and that the police had to interfere to protect him and procure him lodgings. A detach ment ot troops were stationed around the hotel all night to prevent his being the victim of a mob. Let his fate be a warn ing to the butchers of the human race; he is disowned and disgraced by his Empe ror, pelted with mud by the London mob, insulted by German cab drivers as a loathsome thing, and hooted at by the children in the streets. His punishment has commenced in this world. Toughened Cast Iron. The most recent practical novelty in iron manufacture is the system of tough ening and strengthening the metal, patent ed in England by Mr. Stirling, whose re searches have developed several new fea tures in the manufacture of this staple production. The process is so extremely simple in practice, that it hardly deserves the name. Ail that is done, is the placing pieces ot wrought or scrap iron in the moulds used in forming the pigs of metal run front the blast furnace; the melted cast iron surrounds the solid scraps, and the incorporated mass becomes what, in the "prices current of metals," is termed "Stirling's patent toughened pig." In this state the iron is sold to the consumer, and when melted in the founder's cupola for use, the mixture enters into chemical combination, producing, as the inventor remarks in his evidence before the com missioners appointed to enquire into the application of iron to railway structures, "to a certain extent, a diminution of the quantity of contained carbon, an altera tion in the structure, and a differently formed grain." Cast iron, so compounded, becomes close in the grain, and without any injury to its fusibility, has imparted to it an ex traordinary toughness. In this way, while the great facilities of application of cast iron are fully retained in the toughened metal, many of the excellencies of malle able iron are given to it, making it, for all purposes where strength and lightness are essentials, a most valuable material for the railway engineer and the builder, and for many of the purposes of the general iron founder. The strength of the iron. of course, varies with the proportion of the added wrought metal the average superiority over ordinary cast iron, being from 60 to 70 per cent., while the maxi mum increase has been experimentally demonstrated to be 120 pt?r ceht A Splendid Description. Oue Paul Benton, a Methodist preach erin Texas advertised a barbacue, with better liquor than usually furnised. When these people were assembled, desperado in the crowd cried out, "Mr. Paul Benton, your reverence has lied. You promised us not only a good borbacue but belter Iiquer. Where is the liquor?" "There!" answered the missionary, in tones of thunder, and pointing his motion- Jess finger at the matchless double spring, 2u?hing up in two strong cofumiis,' with a sound i.'ko a shout of joy from lhe bosom of the earth. There!" be repeated, with a look terrible a the lightning, while his enemy actully trembled on his feet; "there is the liquor which God, the eterual.brews for all his children! "Not in the simmering lIU, over smoky fires choked with poisonous gasses, and surrounded witn me kcnen ot sickening odors and rank corrupt ions, doth your! your Father in heaven prepare the pre cious essence of life; the pure cold wa ter. But in the green gladdened grassy dell, where the red deer wanders, ad the child loves to p-ay, there Gok brews it; and down, low down in the deepest vallies where the fountain murmurs and rill sings; and high upon the tall moun- .. t .1 I - ? tain tops, wiiere me nanea granite gut ters like gold in the sun, where the storm cloud broods'and the thunder storm crash, and away far out on the wide, wild sea, where the hurrieane howls music, and the big waves roar the chorus, sweeping the march of God there he brews it, that beverage Cf fleaUh-giving water. "And every where it is a thine of beauty; gleaming in the dew-drop: sing ing in the Summer rain; shining in the ice gem, till the trees all seem turned to living )ewels, spreading a golden veil over the setting sun, or a white gause around the midnight moon; sporting in the cataract; sleeping in the elaciear; dancing in the hail shower; folding its bright snow curtains softly about . the wintry world; and weaving the many- colored iris, that seraph's zone in the sky; whose warp is the rain-drop of earth. whose woof is the sunbeam of heaven, all checked over with celestial flowers, hv thj mystic hinl of refraction. Sri II always it is beautiful that blessed life water! no poison bubbles on its brink; its foaming brings not madness and murder; no blood stains its liquid glass; pale wid ows and starving orphans weep not burn ing tears in its depths; no drunkard's shrieking ghost from the grave curses it n words oi eternal despair! Speak, out my triends, would you exchange tor demon's drink, alcohol?" A shout like the roar of a tempest. answered "No!" Awful Disaster! Paducah, Ky., Oct. 7, lh o'clock, P. M The steamer "Kate Fleming," Captain Dunham, from Louisville for Cairo, burst both her boilers on Sslurday, the 5th inst., at about noon, at Walker's Run. She had been aground, but had got off. and had been floating a short distance when the bell rang, "go ahead, slow." After making a few revolutions she ex ploded, and afterwards burned to the wa ter's edge. I he cause of the explosion is thought to be a want of water in the boilers. Annexed is a list of the killed, wounded and missing, furnished by J. A. Lowrey, clerk of the Lafayette, who was on board at the time and narrowly escaped. He arrived here this morning with several others in a skiff, from the scene of the disaster. The list is as complete as could be made out at the time. Killed and Missing. E. F. Babcock, Christian co., first clerk; O. Dell, bar keeper; Annette, chambermaid of Joseph Hewitt; Jeff and John, steward and cabin boy of Lafayette; Hutchinson, servant of Mr. Moore, of Miss.; Wm. Jennings, of view Albany. JTounded. Capt. Dunham; J. Thorn burgh, of Miss.; steward of "Kate Flem in::, second cook and mate and several deck passengers; O. S. Dickinson, J. Bayard Thomas, John Shefler, Thomas Crocker, George T. Parker, Captain Mc Que wan. b. P. Moore, of Miss.; Miller Ferguson, pilot; Erastus Gates, P. Hock er, Edward Brown, M. Ostrande, Harvey Bentley, Mr. Webb, of La. Badly Bruised. W. Whittaker, Baily and Brown, of Shelby ville; J. Cochran, of La.; Cant. James C. Bentley. Sol. Wilborn; J. C. Spencer, and O. F. Bart on, (cabin boys;) Caleb Warren, John F. Osborn, New Orleans; T. F. Moore, Maysville; Judge Haskell, of Texas. Capt. Dunham, Capt. Quarsier and Mr. Lowrie, with several others, were stand- g on the hurricane deck, and were blown up several feet into the air. Captains Dunham and Quarsier fell on the bow of the wreck, Mr. Lowrie and others into the river and saved themselves by swimming. Dr. Jones, of this place, left this morn ing for the scene of the disaster te relieve the sufferers. The safe containing a large amount of money belonging to the boat and deposited by passengers, was blown into the river. and it is thought will be recovered. But litde of the baggage and clothing belonging to the passengers were saved. Some had the presence of mind to throw their trunks overboard. Capt. Bentley, of the Lafayette, re mained at the wreck, when our informant left, to recover the safe. Heart rending Event resulting from carelessness. The inhabitants of the lower districts were thrown in a state "of great ferment, yesterday morning, from the culpable neglegcnce of a young man in a drug store. 1 he victim of the heart ren ding affair is a young lady, who was much respected by those who knew her, and was the idol of fond and doting parents, residing at No. 206 Fitz water street. Her name was Anna RJ Nell, daughter of Jes se Nell, who for a short time past had been afflicted with a bilious attack. On Thursday evening Dr. Scoffin, her physi cianvisited her ?s usual, and finding her convalescent gave a prescription of a few grains of quinine. The physician soon after took leave ot his interesting and pret ty patient, and the prescription was sent to the drug store oa the corner of Ninth arm amppin sireeis, wnere it was com pouuded by a young man in the abscence of Dr. Chamberlain, who was in the coun try, and instead of giving quinine, a simi ! j r nnintifi r f mnrnritnn trres x'r 1 he bearer-look the poison to the patient, which was administered at seven o'clock that evening. Dr. Scoffin again visited Miss Nell in the evening when he discov ered some nnusual symptoms', rahd on in quiry being made discovered the fatal er ror. The young lady became speedily very HI. -Dr. Carter, another physician, was cabled in, and every thing possible was .done; but without effect, and at one o'clock yesterday morning the young lady died. Resort was made to the galvanic battery and every other conceivable means to restore her, even after death; and for a time it was hoped that she was saved; but the powerful drug had spread its fatal in fluence too surely. Penn. PRESIDENT BONAPARTE. The French President has returned to Paris from his recehi exploratory and pulse-feeling tour, and is off on ahotEef ! the western part of the Republic, which has always been, and is still, pretty strong ly tinctured with Bourbon predilections. We do not anticipate that he will meet with much encouragement in that region encouragement to prosecute his now very manifest purpose of making himself Em peror, if he can persuade himself, or be persuaded, that France is ripe and ready for such a movement. We cannot believe she is, as yet; but her people are so vola tile, impulsive and capricious, and such enthusiastic cherishers of the imperial traditions, and of the glory of Napoleon, that it would be hazardous to say what they will do, or what they will not, except that it may be safely, predicted, thai the present state of things will not last very long, and that when a change takes place, politically, it is not likely to be for the belter. Ever since the meeting of the Assembly, now in recess, every important measure that has been adopted has been either directly hostile or incidentally in jurious to republican principles and to the republican institutions of the country, which if it the country is now republi can itself, most certain it is that the Gov ernment is not, in any branch or depart ment. The President is no more a repub lican than Louis Philippe was, or than Henry V. now is, nor is his Cabinet, nor i the Assembly, nor are the principal ex ecutive and administrative officers, and, indeed, but very few of the two hundred and fifty or three hundred thousand offi cials who are dependent on the Govern ment for their situations and their bread. The President's excursions are a costly pastime. His expense is about three thousand dollars per diem, and the Great Nation has to foot the bill; for his Excel lency is too wise and too able a financier to pay out of his six hundred and seventy five thousand dollars per annum, the ex penses incurred by exhibiting his uncle's nephew to his now fellow-citizens, to be before long, possibly, his faithful subjects. Politically considered, the President's recent tour can only have been partially gratifying and encouraging. Among the cries with which he was received these are regarded as significant in France Vive la Bepublique ! and Jive le Presi dent! were much more frequent than Jive IVapoleon ! which last is considered as being approbatory of his views in res toring the empire. Bad luck to him ! we say, when he attempts, although that res toration would be better, we believe, than the restoration of the Bourbons. Globe. Later from California. New York, Oct. 5. The mail steamer Cherokee arrived this morning with two weeks later news from California. She has on board 140 pas sengers, and fifteen hundred thousand dol 1 ars in gold. The disturbances in Sacramento ceased after the first out6reak. Some of the ring- eaders are in prison awaiting trial. Rumors are current that a band of 400 men are in tne vicinity ol W eaversvule. The authorities sent out spies in every di rection. Mayor Uiglow is convalescent. Property holders have shown more con. fldence since the arrival of the gentlemen sent by Mr. Lttcher; on a mission relative to land titles. The excitement in the southern mines, against foreigners, had subsided, and busi ness was improving. 1 he news of the death of President Taylor reached San Francisco on the 24th ut., and was recei ved with every demon stration of sorrow, r uneral ceremonies were performed on the 30th. The report of the burning of Sacramento was unfounded. In the'different melees between the citi zens and the rioters, there seems to have been killed, on the part of the former, Sheriff M'Kinney and Mr. Woodward. Woundea, Mayor Bigelow and Captain Rodfield. Of the squatters, George W. Henshaw and Madison were killed. Allen, the keeper of the house from which the first shot was fired, after being danger ously wounded, was pursued and captured. His wife died from excitement during the affray. The Banking houses of Henly M Knight & Co., and Wabass & Co., of Sacramento have stopped payment. Socially and politically all seems to be going on smoothly in ialiiornia. l he accounts from the gold mines are still most encourageing, and we could fill a column or more with placer news. We must content ourselves with a mere skeleton ab stract: We are credibly informed that one man, at one haul took forty pounds of gold on the Yuba, 14 miles from flias-j ville. The mines in the vicinity of Hum-: bolt's bar, the Alta says, are at thejpresent time fully as profitable as the richest de posits in California knowni the Trinity Shastee and Klamarih rivers. Thousands are at work with extraordinary "success, and new diggings are almost daily opened. FOllEIGNsNEWST: ' LATER FB03I EUROPE. . ARRIVAL OF THE CAMBRIA AT? HAlIFAX- The Steamship Cambria 'arrive A Halifax at 6 o'clock on Thursday niu ing, with news from Europe on the 21 ult, one week later. ; The followic ar only items f interest: - England., The chief feature of the English Eevri has been the publication of the Cabinet Synod of Thurles, in reference in ,. educational Colleges of governments i Ireland, which has been Condemned in toto, greatly to the surprise of all Well wishers of that unfortunate country.. i ne Liverpool journal and Chronidt which, being edited by Catholics is 1Bn! posed to represent the popular feeW a.T3orW J22t body, are loud in their ?;,: approbation of the Course adopted by a section of tho-Ir.sh Btshops, who are til at the command of the Pope. TLe Chron icle, says "this is a mournful ancouDce ment, over which the swiesmen may well ponder, for the black i.es of the past u unredeemed by lac sltluest hope of the future. ' This differen--- of creeds, whid it was the object of an enlitened patri' rioiism to heal, by uiiitinr the- youth Ireland, is to continue, it seems, under eclesiastical sanction, with all its horrLl brood of evils had a; ons, and persona! and sectarian antipatiiiVjr. The curse f the past is doomed to lung over the land, and a S3s'.em of eucatiou admirably a Jap. ted to the requirements of the country is rudely pushed aside by the prejudices of the Irish Bishops." At several public meetings in different places it has been proposed to bestow a suitable testimonial of public approba tion upon the brewers and drayman of Barclay &, Perkins' establishment, for their treatment of General Haynau. As an offset, the times states that prepara tions aremaking at Vienna to greet tho General on his return with what that journal styles a splendid demonstration of loyal devction. The garrison is toserr nade him by torchlight, ani the Emperor is to raise him to the rank of a Marshal of tlie Empire. It is alo stated, on the authority of an Austrian journal, that the Austrian Minister at London has been instructed to demand the punishment of the men who assaulted Hiynau, tha butcher, in London. A frightful ra:lroid accident occurred on the eastern line oa the 17th ult., by which nine lives were lost. The Gorham dispute has now com menced to agitate the public mind, A destructive fire occurred at LonJjn on Thursday, in the vicinity of tha Com Exchange. That building was materially injured, and a large amount of property was destroyed. The weather has been uninterruptedly fine throughout all parts of the kiDgdorr for securiug the last rem uanls of the har vest. Alakin aud Sons.fn their circal of Friday, report a fair steady business; during the week, in flour ani wheat, o i the spot, and to arrive, and that each ful:y maintained previous prices, the marke: closing with an upward tendency. It is proper to observe that other authontes ao not give quite so eocouragmg a view ot the market. Trance. The only important political ir-ide".t of the week has been the disco very of an Orleauiat plot, the docu.nenls connected With whicii, whilst they do not appear lo implicate any person, afford the Iari and Lond m Press food for very long edi torials. The President returned to Paris Thursday, and his tour is said to hav been attended with brilliant success. Some of his friends h.re commenced t agitate the question of allowing him as other 3,000,000 fracs for h:s personal ei- penses. The proposition meets with bu. little favor, in consequence of which oe has, it is said come to the determination of making no further progress tai? season. About seven hundred emigrants. chiet- ly belonging to the Old Garde. Mobile, are about to leave for California. The increase of the revenue during the first eight months over the last, is stated at 25,000.000 of fracs. The Bourse, on Thrsday, opened at 9'3f. 83c. and closed at 93 f. 60c. Denmark.' Advices from Hamburg state that oa the 12th the Holstein army made a for ward movement, with the intention oi tacking the fortified bridge across i-8 Schyle, at Messunde. The Danes we" driven from their fortified positions Koshendorff. and other points, into their entrenchments, and then canon ad ed & nhrmt an hnnr th Hrlt!nrc- but WilA out effect, when the firing ceased, they began to retire. The Danes tb& replaced tne bridge, which ihey m viously removed, and crossed orrr the intention of harassing the retreat the Holsteiners, but found themsostronr as to render it unadvisable lo prsss the closely. Gen. Willsen took posses"" of Exkeaford, and established his ne .i . ,rt i n rh fi urnnoa. Di- quarters ai inai - . was subsequently forced to retire, omr to 3 near proximity ot ine ships. The army bivouacked at points soa what in advance of their previous P35, tion, and onthe following day lhe Dsn to give battle. They re-occupied t position which they held previous to J advance, and up to the Hth no fortw movements had been made. - The Ha teiners lost a"out 130, and ' the D about 1T0 men. InGen. Willisen spra-' tarnation, ho says; W bare off? red t
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