JIVTAIX 5, are EBENSBURG, PA. THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 14, 1850 Congressional.- The Present and the Future. The present Congressional delegations ' in tho five States, (Illinois, Wisconsin, New York, New Jersey and Michigan,) which held "elections for mem bers of Congress on Tuesday, Nov as follows-" New York, New Jersey, Wisconsin, Illinois, Michigan, W. D. F. S. 32 1 1 dem. 4 1 0 1 1 1 dem. 1 5 0 0 S 1 whig 3 10 3 Ag The aspect of the above table is already wonderfully changed for the better. It - -m T l J T A ' - . Br J HE SENTINEL, nia t'tnc 1 l fie .largest cir ' -""..t- eulation of any paper published in this county stand, now as far as we have reliable and as an advertising sheet offers superior f . inducements to merchants and business men l"nallon as follows genet ally. Thus desirous of making itf tj 1I this medium tor extending tneir tiusmes? cant do so by either sending their notices direct, cr through the following agents; John Crouse, E-q-, Juh nstoici. E. W. Carr, Etaus' Buildings, TLitd Philadtlphia. V. B. I'atmer, Esq ; XeioYork Philadelphia, and Baltimore. New Trucks. From the advertisement of the Super intendent of the Portage Kail Road, which will be found in our columns this week, it will be perceived that the Canal Board contemplate putting twelve new truck up on the road so as to accommodate the large and increasing trade upon it. Proposals for their construction will' be received at the office of the Superintendent at the Summit until the 19th hist. This is all light and proper and we are pleased Jo see the efforts made by the officers of the Commonwealth to accommodate the sec tion boatmen, and to avoid delays heieto fore occasioned for want ol a sufficient number of trucks in transporting their boats over the mountain. W. I). F. S. 17 10 1 dem. 1 4 0 1 ii 1 6 0 2 1 21 28 3 T.'ew York, New Jersey, Wisconsin, Illinois, Michigan, Aggregate, Quite a pleasant looking alteration. Pennsylvania!!. JS'ew York United States Senator. The recent election in New York gives the "Whigs the majority in the Legislature and defeats Mr. Dickenson's re-election to the United States Senate. The Whigs, it is said, intend to elect the Hon. Hamil ton Fish, the present Governor; or, if Washington Hunt is defeated, as seems probable, in the election for Governor his name will be proposed as a candidate. From the Pit w Orltans Crfsctnt. ! Oprnin; of Julia M'Donosh's Will. The last Will nnd Testament of the late John M'Donogh. of the town of M'Don ogh, commonly called M'Donoghsvillc, in the parish of Orleans, and a suburb of the city, who departed this lifeon Sunday last 26ih inst., at 2 o'clock, suddenly, aged 74 was yesterday opened and read,- in the presence of a crowded audience, by his honor Judge Buchanan, in the Fifth Dis trict Court. The Will is in the olographic form, written by the testator at great length, fil ling twentv-forr pages of foolscap paper, closely and neatly written from edge to edge, and occupied nn hour in reading. It bears date the 29lh December, 1838, and is without a codicil, or any appendage whatever; but disposes of all his property and estate, which he owns, or may acquire and die possessed ol. The testator sets out with much devout ness in his aspirations to Almighty God, make permanent disposition of his prince ly "estate." After declaring that he is without heirs in the ascending or descend ing line. 1. lie bequeaths to his sister, Mrs. Ha met, and her children, a lot of ground ten acres more or less, with its improvements, in Baltimore county, near the city, and gives her a legacy of SG00O. ti. He bequeaths freedom to all his do mestics or house servants, ten in number, set them free and directs his executors to as soon as it can be done. 3. He directs that all his other black people or slaves on his plantation, etc , be emancipated at the end of fifteen years, and sent to Liberia; and provides the means and manner in which it shall be done. 4. He then directs that all his property real and personal, and effects, be consid ered as his "general estate," which is to be divided into two equal parts, between emigrate to that territory within the next five years. In all cases, one half of this land is to belong to the woman in her own right, not liable to the debts of the husband or subject to his control. Mr. Thurston, Delegate from that territory to Congress, remarks, for the information and encourage ment of those who wish to emigrate, that the prospects of Oregon were never bright er than at present. Labor commands from five to fifteen dollars a cay, according to the nature of the work, and in various brandies of the mechanic arts, workmen receive as dav. high as twenty-five One Week Later from Kuropc. ARRIVAL OF THE STEAMER AFRICA. GREAT I1RITAIN. A Club of all Nations. An effort is about to be made in London, to form a club of all nations, ou a liberal mid com prehensive scale, not excluding English men, but embracing every intelligent and respectable stranger, properly introduced, come from what part of the world he may. Death of Lord Stanley, of Jllderlcy. Lord Stanley, of Alderley, died cni Tuesday, at Alderley-park, Cheshire, aged 81. His lordship was connected with the oldest families in Lancashire and Cheshire. He was raised to the peerage by the ing can be said against the legality of the measure. The cholera has again broken out at Vienna, at Sweden, and at Alexandria. A husband and wife, named Michard, committed suicide in Paris. An English paper has been started at Shanghai, under the title of the North China Herald. The establishment of the Dominicans in France has been canonically recognized by the Pope. The Australian wines have at length found their way into the Calcutta markets, and are selling there at 32s. a dozen. The Royal Engineer Corps in China has been left without a single commis sioned officer by the death of Lieutenant Philips. A young Taures, has Columbia, cf restriction of S! avery fror. cf th the territories, and the repeal fugitive .ttci, are 10 uc mrust constatf. upon Congress, by the Seward fact ion cf the Whig party, or the Democratic Ab olitionists, we shall have no peace, no useful legislation. Discontents will t, increased, both at the North ar.d Sou'h ana ine naimony oi lae l eaerai utterly destroyed. Badly as we think of Locofocos aj such, and earnestly as we deprecate their restoration to power, we have far less abhorrence of them than of the re!-r,t-I-ss agitators of Slavery in the North. If there is no other lion at Home by violoncello. In the Sardinian way ot puttmsr doxn le agitators and preventing the election of their men to Congress, we hona rW j W h;gs an J Lrcofocos w:U un:te corJial.'y girl, Mademoiselle Teresej for the cccornpl.shment of the purpos been making a great sensa- nn matter whether the big or the La. her performance on the; enfoco pasty may refit most by the union We would far rather see the most iavet dominions there are'erate Loc-.focu m New York or C320 monks, and 2340 nuns that is, one ; EnghrvJ elected to Ccngress, provided Whigs. report for the kst Proclamation by the President. President Fillmore, under the act of Con. gress, has issued his proclamation declar- that, as the Chilian government lias mg removed the discriminatin nage and imports levied duties of ton in the ports of that country, on vessels from the United States, so much of the several acts impo. sing discriminating duties of tonnage and, their address, without the pre-payment inmost within the United States are. and;01 P0b"!e i - tha'd be, suspended and discontinued, so far as respects the vessels of Chili, and the produce, m3iuifaciures and merchandise imported into the United States in the same, from Chili and from any other for--ifrn country whatever. KsBennett, of the New York Herald Mhile walking with his wife in Broadway on Saturday last, was knocked down and horsewhipped by John Graham, the de feated Democratic candidate for DistricJ Attorney, in that city. Graham was in company with two or three others, who have all been arrested. Verv respectfully Your obedient servant. D. SAUNDERS. For the Second Assistant Postmaster General, James D. Taylor, Esq., Cincin nati, Ohio. 1. To establish a free school for poor children, to erect tine OrictC school houses Test Office Rfgnlalicn. The following letter from the Genera the cities of New Orleans and Baltimore, Post Office, which we find in a Cincin- each to ke one half; but in trust for cer ... . , , tain specincd and almost innumerable ob- nati paper, settles the question whether i - . ,i ... i , i i . 1 ' ' 1 J?cts, winch the testator details and ues- casual papers sent from the publishing crihes with great minuteness; office, are to be prepaid before mailed: Post Office Department, Appointment Office, Oct. 21, 1850. 5 Sir: Yours of the lGtb inst., relative to the forwarding of newspapers placed in the Post Office by a publisher, has been received. In reply you are informed that the Postmastet of your place will be instructed to forward all such newspapers agreeable throughout the city, so that no poor child shall go uneducated, or without moral and ilJlMOUS fThe message of the Governor of i Kentucky, shows the receipts in the Trcas. iirv for the year to be fcQl0,01It and the r.tp Treasury the ndiaturss, $522,15 1; balance in the SO, uo sars. m"The Indiana Constitutional Conven tion adopted a section that there si. all be no imprisonment for debt, except in cases of fraud. There is also a section prohibiting the right of suffrage to negroes and mulattoes and another section abolishing the office of Associate Judges in the Circuit Court- Extraordinary Invention. The New York correspondent of cf the Philadelphia Inqurer, has the fol lowing:"! saw a machine, to-day, which if I am not mistaken, is destined to create a revolution in the preparation of sugar, In my presence sone two hundred weigiit cf the dirtiest character imagina ble, and as Hack ns soot, was placed in it, and in sis minutes by my witch it cair.e out white, dry, and perfectly clean arid sweet. KnowioT nothing of me chanics, I cannot give you a good descrip tion cf it. All thai lean say is that cylinder lined with revolves about tin ee the . i i t wire ciotti, which i i i . : nunuieu imie.s u minute, and after making about fifteen hundred revolutions, the sugar Is found to be clean and dty. Centrifugal motion cleans it. The machine was first applied to dry in? cloths, but it is admirably suited for clarifying cil, rectifying sugar, and a a thousand oth-T purposes. religious instruction ana exemption Iron; vice, &c, amounting to about 6100,000 in yearly instalment-. 2. A donation of one eighth cf the net revenue accruing to the portion belonging to the city of New Orleans, to the Orphan Boys' Asylum. 3. The same amount to be given to an Asylum for the poor; to free the streets from indigent and beggerly persons, and to teach them industry, morality, and re- i li ion. 4 One-eighth of the net "general estate" to be laid out in the pur chase of a "school farm," in the vicinity of the city of Baltimore, to contain from 500 to 1000 or more acres. It is to be cultivated by the poor and indigent chil dren of the city of Baltimore, and of the State of Maryland; and the poor and indi gent children of all the commercial cities in the Union. The mulberry tree and the manufacture of silk is recommended to be carried on. The poor children from four to fourteen years of age, of Baltimore first, to Maryland and all the commercial cities of the Union, are to be taught, in addition to a good English education, the put suits of agriculture and the principles ot religion. The Bible is directed to be the principal class book in all the schools. The sum of -53,000,000 is bequeathed to this insti IRELAND. The Dublin trade week is again favorable During the last two years and a half the houses of 1051 families have been leveled in Ivilrush, and 403 other families have been unhoused. Emigration. The tide of emigration is continued as vigorously as eve . From Kerry considerable numbers were pro ceeding to Cork and Limerick, to embark for the United States. Jin Insurrection in China.-' The news by the Overland Mail from India reports everything tranquil ; but in China an in surrection of a serious character lias bro ken out in the southern provinces. A pretender to the throne has collected an army of 50.000 men, plundered several of the towns, and boldly aims at overthrow ing the present Tari;:r Emperor, and re storing the ancient native or Ming dynas ty. Great alarm exists at E'ekin, and se rious steps have been taken to suppress the rebellion. There is a vague report that the imperial troops have hitherto had the worst of it. Tilt WAR IN THE DUCHIES. The war in the Duchies continues without interest. One or two trifling-j skirmishes have taken place with the res-: peetive outposts, but no event of the income of his ' slightest military importance has occurred. J he IJcssc-Lasael otrtigglc. In Ilesse-Cassel the struggle continues, but both parties seem to take the matter very quietly. As the Emperor of Austria is about to proceed to Warsaw, the proba bility is that German affairs will continue in the present precarious state until the result of this visit is known. SPAIN. Letters of Madrid of the 19th instant announce that a new band of Carltsts have hern attacked, beaten, and dispersed in the neighborhood of Salsona. Five were taken prisoners, and shot on the spot. The steamer Castilla left Terragona on the 13th for Cadiz, with the remaining detachments of the Uheina regiment and some artillery, where they embark for Cuba, to ioin the expeditionary force des- monli lor every uU inhabitants, anc' nun for every 1G15. The Queen ol Spain danced with Gen. Lord Howden, the British Ambassador, at a grand palace ball, in Madrid, on the 4lh inst. The Vienna Austria publishes an arti cle on an important project for connecting the Seine with the nhme. J he projector is a M. de Laveleye, a Belgian. A steam company is on the ee of being formed at Constantinople for towing ves sels through the Bosphorus and the Dar danelles. "The capital is to be 150,000, in 1500 shares of jCIOO each. The Sultan ; and most of the ministers are on the list. I one; he be in favor of the adjustment laws lection cf the late session, than see the any hig who should go for the distur bance of the Compromise. The question between peace and harm in v on the cna side, and agit;t!OT and disunion on the other, is at this time para mount to til other questions. A Patent slcam BreaJ-bikin; Haehtcj. There is now exhibiting in LonJoaths first apparatus erected under a patent granted some months ago, to Mr. Le, of Glasgow, Scotland, for making brealani Summary of Sews for the Lasl ForlnhthL Before this mail reaches the United Slates, the intelligence will doubtless have been i received of the fourth conflagratiuii wlr.rh has visited San Francisco wiihi ..;ne bi i trie j was i Messrs. t-e a;:d - r , niiii uy "irmis ii machinery, ana Dy apj. icaiion o. steam in&iead cf tire operation ot this novel apparatus exhibited at the bakehouse of Lee ani Bobitison, (ih paten r) in the classic region n:s nar:- cf '-v''p; and ja large number of per c nc Mr tf....trtt tx.tit. t n t ...IK... , i c . i 1 ..v(v I'l'vc.v -J Hiini luetic UKIUy months. 1 he disaster was torfuna.iolyl .i , ' -r, -, , ,. , r i 3 land piact.cabtlttv "t the inven:son, wtnea confined to a portion ot the city uere; i ; - i- . . , ,. . , . v it., has lor its object the accomplishment cf little business was transacted, and the lo. ,f a MU.:i a- j u. .l. ,, . . - , , . 'tbe following pi as stated by the ri is consequently less than it would other-. lc.n.ee. wise have been. The fire raged for about i , V " , , , r , . , , , , ... i f . . i By the suostitution of carbon ited vi hiiii.ft-H oti1 n 1 1 t rM c etc . inn OAtno I c . J i 1 1 v . t v ' ! r n : i - - lipimr tint exenedintr h:ll :i million nf dr!-! .- o 3 " 'CO'tC lUCilIi iell lars. There is every reason to believe ' "V. i . i ol un i:n io'.ea m mat it was me work oi an incenaiary, al though, if so, the perpetrator has contrived to escape the vigilance of the police. in Phil. ZjfJenny Liud closes her concerts New YorK on the 22d, and sings in adtlphia on the 25th, 23ih and '27th of November, and then proceeds Sou'h and West. Great Haul of Counterfeit Money. On the Mlh, at tuffalo, the officers, suc ceeded in obtaining possesion of both of the "Artistes" themselves, and seven thousand seven hundred and fifty dollars :i counterfeit notes. These notes were tution in yearly instalments. It is sup- tineil to protect that island tosed from 1000 to 10,000 chilurtn .fits and it, Jostenng care will uid receive its oeti education :'.nnuailv 5. One-eighth of the net r. mount pro ceeding from the "generr.l estate," to go to the "American Colonization Society, ' at Washington City," which will amount annually to a large sum. After the above bequests and donations are settled, which tho testator supposed would be accomplished in 40 years, iho entire estate to be divided between the States of Louisiana and Mary land. Com missioners are to be appointed, three in The intelligence from the mines is of a mixed description. Wherever the streams have been dammed, a plentiful yield of gold has been the result; but several of the dams have recendv given way in conse quence of the rising of the waters, and the! labor of months has thus been rendered fruitless. Gold-bearing quartz continues to be discovered, and this in the end will form the great resource of miners, when surface gold fails. The news of the engrossment of the California bill in the Senate, produced, on its receipt in this city, the liveliest emotions of joy, and the hopes of the people are raised high in the expectation r b"ei I in -ti nutri- j t.r cut. ia tr.j g t ! oe i, by ra ir.j thjj cf s ib-: itmift ' steam for fire. The gradual al nix'.u e of flour w"ith the water without manual labor. To ensure the oven being kejt of an equil heat by means of an iniici tor a-id regulator, rni by means of whi;!i the heat can bj kept exactly as my fcj desired. By the use of an ingenious contrivance to regulate the desired weight of bread, whether from an ounci; to any nu -r.be r cf pounds the biker my desire, without the possibility of error. The saving of all manual labor in tha manufacture of bread, with the exception of that of a few boys ta tdace it upon, zr.i of hearing by the next steamer, of the ad mission of this State into the Union. Should we receive this joy ful intelligence, there is no doubt that business would forthwith revive, and an immediate receive it from, the voiding tiit necessity touching or knee ling present occasion Mr. mard of th. j tie. hw mm hand described the with much mi- the dd Jh. nature ot the niventioi nuteness, and gave the spectators an op portunity of witnessing the practical ef fect of the machinery in its various s;a- which sought was the saving cf lime and manual I.ihnr in tht nnnnfartiirp r.f thA ai Presem' a waRl most important necessary of life. and. in tThe Nashville Convention was cr i ranized on the 11th. Gov. M'DonalJ ofi Ga., made an eloquent opening address smacking strongly cf secession. Many deleja'rs were hourly expected to arrive. There were about fifty members present. i icn thf f.ilio-.vm Ol Uie .vitCiiaiuc s uaiii. ui.piv ut-aium, Mass. 81,810 in ten dollar notes en the Farmer's Hank of Michigan, and sixty dollars in twenties, altered fiom ones oa the Western Bank of White Cre-k, b in ks-5,750 30 notes r each city, to carry out !)jecls pro- Im tuENsit ScrPLits of Gold. Three steamers armed at New York last week, with California gold dust. The Chero kee's gold dust amounts to two millions and the amounts chiefly in the hands of the passengers, brought by the Georgia (AG93.0C0) and Empire City, to N. York and by the Alabama, at New Orleans, will reach to at least a million more. Ac rordin" to advices, two millions and a half, destined for the United Slates, were at Prnnma when the Cherokee left Chagres. A Lot or Uichmonds in the Field. The Lancaster Intelligencer names Bell, of Chester, Woodward and Conyngham, of Luzerne, Black, of Somerset, Champ neys and Lewis, of Lancaster, Thompson, of Erie, Strong, of Berks, Hepburn, of Cumberland, and Findley and Parsons, of! Philadelphia, in connection with the eltc-! Hon of Judges of the Supreme Court. Washington county, New York, persons upon whom these notes found; were committed, and names as Henry Thompson Griffin an! James Bates". The were gave their Mary M. SVcic Enterprise. We learn, says the Philadelphia American, that a company, some of the stockholders of which, are located in San Francisco, and Mhers in Eastern New York, are now engaged in manufacturing concentrated mtlk and coffee, for shipment to California. Each preparation is in the form of a thick paste, neatly packed in tin boxes, with dirtcticns for use. A small quantity of each is to be placed in a vessel in which the colfee is to be male, and boiling water poured upon it, when it is immediately fit for use, and, we are told but doubt fully equal to that made in the ordinary way. posed; but if they fail to follow out the in structions, then tho "general estate" tore vert or fall immediately to the two States, whose Legislatures are to comply with the conditions and carry out the objects donated and bequeathed. The varioCs in stitutions donated and provided (or in the Will, are to b incorporated by the Legis latures of the two States. The city of Baltimore to act as a check on the city of New Orleans, in fulhhrig the conditions of the Will. Many benevolent, charitable and highly moral and religious sentiments are iuter spersed throughout; and the cause of edu cation, morality and the duties of the poor toward the rich; and the duty of the rich to educate and protect the poor, are freely indulged in the most affecting terms. The duties of the poor and the rich, and the preservation of the Union, are also in culcated. The property of his "general estate," is never to be divided or sold, but kept to gether, leased, managed or cultivated in perpetuity; only a portion of its proceeds to be'applied to the purposes indicated, and and only then when the revenues shall reach a certain amount. A donation of $20,000 is made to the Bible Society. Such is an outline of this great Will. Thanksgiving Dav 1 ri th of December, icxrv single man who mw reside Ioducem -nts ta Settle in Orrgon. The Oregon Land Bill which became a law at the session just closed, grants 320 acres ot land to every married, and IGO to in or MISCELI.AXEOrS. Executions at Pome. A wholesale military execution took place on the 0th j inst., upon the person cf six ohenders, charged with having been the principal agents in a horrible tragedy which sullied the streets of Rome with blood last year, during the early part of the siege. General Cuvaignac and the French lit public. - Considerable discussion is going on in the French papers as to the probable course that may be taken by the military' members of i lie Left in the As sembly in the case of an attempt at a re vision of the Constitution, or the prolon gation of the powers of the President. By some it is contended that Gen. Cavaignac would place himself at the head of a party to resist vi ct annis, it necessary, any attempt at revision, unless in the manner, and at the period prescribed by the Con stitution. There are few who will deny the title of General Cavaignac to public gratitude for the eminent services he ren dered in days of danger; and his ability rs a parliamentary debater is equally admit ted. But it must be a calumny on the General to presume that, in case the na tion, by the voice of its representatives elected freely by universal suffrage, and in whose hands, to use the language of the day, the popular sovereignty has been deposited for a period, demand the revision of a Constitution so full of defects, he will enrol himself amongst mere revolutionists, and become the general-in-chief of insur gents in arms against the National Assem bly, of which he himself is a member. Gen. Cavaignac will, there is no doubt, express his opinion on the question of revision, as on all other questions brought forward in the Assembly; but it is very doubtful that, with the memory of his own treatment of the insuigents of June still fresh, Gen. Cavaignac would himself become what armed resistance to the decision of the Assembly would unques tionably make him. It is stated, however, in well-informed quarters, that there is no intention of mooting the question of the revision of the Constitution until May, 1851, the period prescribed by the Con stitution itself. It such be the case, noth rps. The frnnd nil rrni provemcnt would lase place m me conui Hon of the country o. conuuence causes eery lumg 10 remain orJer lo S,J0,V h(JW lhjs ob- fce in contusion, anu me emoairassments -M j cjrrieJ oat ;Mr Lee exhib:led lhe en. our business men are attributable m no j lire esg of Uki blVild anJ b5iCuIts small degree, to the perplexing suspense j from the fira prepalion of tbe g )Ur tc caused by the delay ot Congress to admit lhe hc the jl, h jlo ,he ovedTli the State into. the Union. Our greatest wilhtjrawins it when readv. for Cja$amp trouble would vanish on our admission, ! tjtn and it is generally hoped that Congress j i! th is was deno by mechanical con will not adjourn without doing us justice .itrivanccs. and the men employed wer ltwou.dbe a ternbe disappointment if j no, even ca!led u 0 u. h lbe d h the next news shomd prove unfavorable. or mt.asilre lhe SlZe of lhe ioaf lhe ?. The coming elections to be held on tnejraraluSt when set jn molio;)t befn caI. seventh of October, excite much greater cujatej l0 serv-e eve ry pj,p;lSe which ia interest than was anticipated. The can-;the orjjniry piVcss of baking, is achtev dtdates for the various oiiices are almostcj by liancj Tne result of the experi innumerable. The tickets made up in j men.s afforded satisfactory pr cf. that Mr. tins city will be found m another column. ; Lee's discovery in the art f taktrnr Indeed the all-absorbing question of the gerve3 everv encouragement, as vteU 03 admission of California is lost sight of for; lbe srore 0f rconomyi as from the fact the time being, and everybody is anxious tiial it introduces a more speedy, and at as to the result of the election. jlbe sauiL. t;UH. a more c!oanjyt miHhoJ of The improvements in this city are pro-! ma.iu raC!ui ing bread The rapiJitv with gressing with much spirit, and it is hoped ; which t! work may be cairied "on by that by the commencement of the rainy ;ln;s n.vv ailti interesting process is most season the streets will be substantially .'surpassing. For the supply of bread t3 planked. Several ot tne ltiorougntares schools, or ether lare estabiishmen' are aireauv laiu wan Dianx. anu sewers c,,-! unions and to bo s; prsons ecial'y licable. Extraordinary Human CtRiosmEJ- such as tjo-ir .aw have been constructed, running from the:t.;s invention seems hills to the bay, so as to carry off the: water. The district burnt down twoj weeks since is already more than halfi covered with buildings in process ot erec-i jr g. K.-ux arrived at the Fremont tion, and before the departure of another J House yesterday with two Kaana chii steamer it will be nearly all rebuilt. jdren, a boy and girl, of an almost extinct Tue accounts from the overland emi- j race Df Central America. They are the grants furnish narratives of suffering of the . most OJtre locking objects ever brought most painful description. The expediency j xlis cou.itry, but they are ".lateral ha- ot making a requisition on the Uollettor i mans ntu iihstandiiKt ih:it their anneir- mans. of this port for an advance of one hundred ;ance at firsl gianCe is rather .gainst thousand dollars, has been suggested, and them. The boy is 32 inches in height. it is probable the citizens will resort tojanj wei.riis 16 pounds; and in lhe opinion that mears of alleviating the terrible dis-lnf vr CiWmtn V-t nf Xpw York, ii about 10 years of age. The girl is -is l. tress of which the accounts reach us day by day. The resources of private benev olence are exhausted, and it is but right the government should afford assistance. A report of the existence of cholera in our midst prevailed in this city some days since, but we rejoice to say there was no foundation for the rumor. San Francisco Herald. ches in heighth, weighs 14 pounds, and U supposed to be about 8 years oi ag Their heads are not larger lh".n a ne l-rtr,i infn?.!. and they mav be tdmost said their to be 'fest!tiiTe ci Perpetual Agilulion. We find the following pointed declara tions in the Louisville (Ky ) Journal, one of the most zealous Whig p ipers in the United States. Atter noticing a re mark in a letter to an Eastern paper, the Journal continues thus: If the topics of Abolition in'the District 7 ... 1 J.U j ?. i. C V" A 3'i d i:e:r e 'heir rrr-cc vts ar; heads while CX ?. -:l -i Ti covered '5 descends forwa nearly to the eyebrows. The face is ver7, sharp, the tipper lip projecting, e chin receding in a corresponding degree Notwithstanding the almost entire ab sence of forehead, there is not in t- profile view the least resemblance to " Simmii tribe. They are said to ben
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers