( it t ie a 'WE GO WHERE DEMOCRATIC PRINCIPLES POINT THE WAY I WHEN THEY CEASE To'inn 1-r.AOj W E CEAS E TO FOLLOW. BY ANBSEW J. BUY. - M I S C E L L A E E 0 U S. From the Knickerbocker for April. ESCAPE OF 5MJSX:TH. An Authentic :V:trra.lIve. f Puking the month of August. the Pres ident -Governor of Hungry, Louis Kossuth, w'.t'u the principal authors of his provisional povernaen;. were in the fortified town of Arad, cii the river Maroseh. Between that place and the town of Zegadia, on the Tisch, in the vkin itv of Arad, Georgey, with the Hungarian troops uader Lis command, lay encamped, while behind him, toward the Tisch, was the Russian army of reserve, under Paskiewiteh. Denibinski, with his men, beseiged Temeswar, and he had already carried its third wall. Between hira and the Tisch, lay the united Austro-llussian forces. The army of Bern had been -defeated at Iler mansfcidt by the Russian General Lttders, and he had fied with a small band of faithful follow ers toward Temeswar. With this position of the combatants, the plan of Dembinski was to unite with Georgey near Arad, and then to attack the Russian for ces. Before this was effected, news reached Liai of the capitulation, of Georgey, and that the Governor, M. Kossuth, had been compelled to forsake Arad, and retire to the town of Yilajcs. Before leaving Arad, the Governor separated from his wife and children, and their parting scene is said to have been one of the most touch ing nature. Under the circumstances of the moment, it was a subject of more even than louoi wneuier tuev ouw cut auu uii-a u t . .i ii : - , earth. It was only when a young Hun itrarian I nobleman, named AsLbot, now in exile in Kuta h withM Kossuth olemnW swore to Lis y eh with M. Kossuth, .o.emuiy snore to his w luai u oU1., that Madame Kossuth consented to be separated j from Lim and seek safety in flight. The children were confided to the care of a private secretary of the Governor, and this individual subsequent ly delivered them up to the tender mercies of Ilavnau, for the purpose of securing his own pwlon nad safety. Th?ci.;'Wrra s-t wt bsXutd. thcir niother, and the latter in Ler flight, en deavored to keep at least so near to them a? to hear now and then of their safety. Madame Kossuth songLt out a brother of hers residing in the town of Yilago, and Le is now imprisoned in the fortress of Comorn, " with many other cf the unfortunate Hungarian pa triots, for eighteen years, on account of tLe uceor which he then gave to Lis sister. Leaving him, sLe next went in search of Ler children, and wandered to a fctta, or farm Louse, of Bo tksak, belonging to a relative. There she fell ill of a typhus fever, which nearly ended her life; and when so far recovered as to be able again to travel, she continued Ler journey in Be&rch of Ler cLildren. She soon learned that they Lad been given np by tLeir protector to the Austrian General Haynau, r.nl taken to IVsth. Her own safety depended wholly upon the fidelity of the Hungarian peasants, and on their attachment to Ler Lusband. Now, Laving no other object in view than Ler own safety, without friends better off than her self, she Boon became reduced to a state of com plete destitution. Ia disguise, she wandered over some of the moet miserable portionsof Ilun pry. She even, as a means of safety, as well m support, sought for service as a servant, and by telling that she was a poor woman who had just been discharged from a public hospital which,indeed, she Tery mnch resembled was fc j fortunate as to find employment in the family of a humble carpenter, iu the town of Orash Haya. who littld thought Le was served by the lady of Louis Kossuth, the late Governor of Hun gry. Even where notices were exposed in the streets offering forty thousand florins for her capture, and proclaiming death as the pun iment of the person who would dare to harbor cr conceal her from the authorities. Among the persons wLo fled with M. Kossuth before the overwhelming number of Lis enemies, as aa elderly lady, whom it is necessary to designate as Madame L , and who, from be ing unable to ride as fast and as long as those ho were stronger and younger than herself, oon became exhausted, and was left behind. She had a son, a major in the Hungarian army, near the person of the Governor, and both the son and mother were warmly attached to his interests. Madame L , when unable to pro ceed longer with the fugitives, in order to reach a place of safety in the dominions of the Sultan of Turkey, determined to remain in Hungary, and devote ht-rself to the findingf Madame Kossuth and restoring her to her husband. For this benevolent purjose, Madame L di.guised herself as a beggar; and aftef a long And weary journey, ofteaer on foot than in any conveyance, she crossed the vast sandy plains cf southern Hungary, and at length reached the place in which Kossuth's children were, but could hear nothing of their mother. She learned that the children had been sent, soon after their mother had lost sight of them, to the house of General G., now in the service of the Sultan in Syria, to be kept with his own three children, hoping that they would thus be screened from those who sought after them. The eldet. named Louis, after hi. father, was seven years of age; and all were told if they acknowledged they were the children of the Governor, they would be imprisoned by the Austrians, and never see their parents again. So that when an Austrian officer traced them to the house of General G., Le was at a loss to know which cf the children were those of Gen eral G., and which those of M. Kossuth; and approaching the eldest of the latter, he said: So, my little man, you are the son of the Governor V To which the youth replied: am not, Sir." His firmness surprised find vexed j the officer, who was certain, from the statement of their betrayer, that those before him were the long-lost treasures of Lis ambitious search. He now endeavored to frighten the children, and drawing a pistol, directed it to the breast of the boy, and said that if Le did not at once ucKuuwietim-- lllt-a tuum auui, ! . -.1 1 . 1. . A I, . 1 . , . f T - -.. .1. I lie wouid put a oau uirougn nis neari. t - lounS 1 Louis who, it is said, shows himself, now in snow s mmsen, now in of the character of Lis equally firm: "I tell exile at Kutayieh, much o auiilvl xi-uiicu ixl x i JU 11 1 i.i . x lull . you, ir, l am not tne sou oi Kossutn. ine ofSc jr, bafded by the child's simplicity of man- ner and apparent sincerity, was divested of Lis convictions, and led to believe that Le had been imposed upon. But before Madame L could get near thorn other agents of the Austrian Government , , . - i r - t- .1 .i i " iuem. jier mey naa lert tne pas Lad been carried off in secret to Testh, near the ' , , J , .. , . , rr, ! ture grounds, Le passed as tLe Lusband of clutches ot tLe butcLer Havnau. TLe motLer i . and sister cf M. KossutL Lad also been captured, and placed in strict confinement. It may be Lere mentioned, in this little narrative of tLe siitT.'nn"-? nriil iiMivor:irirp fit tip relatives nt : c- " Louis Kossuth, that Madame L , on finding , i i M i -.iii- i where and Low Lis cLildren were situated, found out her own maid-servant, an 1 so succeeded as , t J This person never kit them until the moment j of their deliverance from their Austrian jailors I was arrived. After thus having provided for ' In tlie evening, while the two ladies were sit the welfare of the children of M. Kossuth, j tinS together in a miserably cold room, the face Madame L renewed Ler searcL for their ; of Ioor I;iria so muffled up as to conceal her destitute, suffering mother. -JL3 no trace . ..er, Madame L- de- tcmiined to follow the fugitives, and if she reached 'Widdin, to ascertain from M. Kossuth I himself where Lis poor wife Lad gone, and then j return in search other. Centinuins in the ' dissruise of a beggar, sometimes on foot, at oth- ! ers in a farmers cart, this heroic woman reached ; the frontiers of Hun' arv, and crossing them, i entered the fortified and wailed town of Vuddin, i where the late Governor of Hungary, and Lis ! brave unfortunate companions then were, en joying the hospitality of the Sultan of Turkey. Madame L applied to M. Kossuth, but not ! being known to him personally, and the Austrian j General having set so high a price on the cap ture of Lis wife, he at first regarded her as an Austri-n spy. Having. hor ever, soon found her son, who had followed the Governor into Turkey, he readily convinced M. Kossuth of the identity of his mother. AW the information which M. Kossuth could give Ler was, that there was a lady in Hungary in wi.ose house he believed his wife would seek a refuge; and if she was not still there, this lady would most probably know where she was. The Governor now furnished Madame L with a letter to this lady, and another with Lis ! own signet-ring for his wife, which would be ev- tr:lto. There the former spoke cf them as sus dence of her fidelity. It is not here necessary ' r'cious characters, but they were not told of to fellow Madame L on her toilsome journ- j what tuev wtrc suspected. While the examina- ev. Devoted to the philanthropic work which i tion "n'as CoinS on, Madame L slipped a she had undertaken, she wandered over the sandy steppes of Hungary, until she succeeded in reaching the little town in which the lady re siled, and delivered to her M. Kossuth's letter. This she read and immediately burned it, not daring even to allow it to exist in her posses sion. This lady informed Madame L that the wife of Governor Kossuth had left her resi dence in the guise of a mendicant and intended assuming the name of Maria F n ; that she was to feign herself to be the widow of a soldier who had fallen in battle, and that, if possible, sue would go to the very centre of Hungary, in those vast pasture-lands, where she hoped no one would seek after her. With this information, Malcme L again resumed her journey. She feigned to be an aged grand-mother, whose grandson was missing, and that she was in search of him. She made many narrow escapes while passing guards, soldiers and spies; until at length she reached the plains before mentioned. She went from house to house, as if in searched" her grand-son, but in reality to find one who would answer the description given her of poor Maria F n. At length in a cabin she heard that name men tioned, and on inquiry who and what that person was, learned that she was the widow of a Hun garian soldier who had fallen in battle, and that she had a child who was with its grand-parents, They then described her person, but added that she had suffered so much from iilness and grief, that she wa3 greatly changed. "Before she came here," said the speaker, "she worked for her bread, even when ill; but after her arrival, she became too much indisposed to labor, on account of which they sent to the Sisters of Charity for a physician, who came, bled and blistered her ; and when she was able to go, she had been conveyed to the institution of the Sis- EDM. MAY ters, where the then was." Madame L , feeling convinced that the poor sufTerer must be none other than the object of her search, ex pressed a desire to visit her. At the Sisters of Charity, Madame L Lad much difficulty in procuring access to Maria, and tLe latter was as much opposed to receiving Ler. At length Madame L told the Sisters to inform her that she had a message for her from her husband, who was not dead as she had supposed, and that she would soon convince her. if she oulJ permit Ler to entr Poor Mari fear end hope, gave her consent, and Madame L was allowed to see her. Madame L Landed her the letter of Governor Kossuth. She recognized, at once, the writing; kissed it; pressed it to her heart ; devoured its contents, and then uestroyed it immediately. Soon, a story was made up between the two females: they told the Sisters of Charity that Maria's husbantl tm lived an(1 that she wou!J rejoin lim A UuIe wag(m as rrocure(1. ag manv w : ,.i i . , . . r . .. : ; t. , , , . , . . suspicion; ana these two interesting women set out on their escape from the enemies of their country. Madame L Lad a relative in Hungary who Lad not been compromised in tLe war; so this person arranged to meet the ladies at a given place, and in the character of a merchant Maria, and the elder female as Lis aunt. At nigLt, they stopped at a village, and were sus pected, on account of the females occupying the bed. while he slept at the door. Thev started ; .J i. v .v, . . . . 6 1 . "uaL,ilIJ ' iiiaiuci ucuiiiu iij icam somciiiinz more oi tne rr - " cuu naa given nge He aln OTerto(.k a3 th . . suspicions to wnicn ineir conuuet naa given to feed their horse, and bade them be trreatly fcrtallJ j featurest and induce the belief that she was suffering from her teeth, both appearing much as persons in great suffering; overcome by her afiiictions, Maria had a nervous ntt.iV. nn.l haughed and talked so loud that her voice wa ";m"'1 i an Austrian oracer wno happened to be in the house. This person sent a servant to k tuem to somo ir'to his room, where there I was a Re Madame L inquired the i;ame cf the "good gentleman" who Lad the-kindness to invite them to Lis room, and when she heard it, Maria recognized in him a deadly enemy of j her husband. While they were planning a means of evading him, the officer himself came into tIl?'r apartment. Immediately arising, they made an humble courtesy, in so awkward a manner a3 to divest him of all suspicion. Mad ame L spoke, and thanked him again and again for his kindness, but added that such poor creatures as they were not fit to go into his room. So soon as the oOicer retired, Maria had another attack, which would certainly have be trayed them had he been present. Madame L. implored her to be composed, or thev would be lost. Starting again, they were not molested until ! in the evening, when they were apprehended anJ conducted by two policemen before a magis- bank-note into tho hand of the superior of the two policemen. The bribe quite changed the affair: the two men became their friend?, exci ted the pity of the magistrate in their favor, and they were allowed to depart. Thus they went on from station to station, until they reached the frontiers of Hungary near the Dan ube. They entered the little town r,r s.,n.;n an,i asked permission of the head of the police to pass over the river to Belgrade. This was refused, until they said they wished to go there for a certain medicine for a daughter who was ill, and that they would leave their passports as a security. He then gave his consent, end they crossed the Danube, and entered the dominions of the Sultan of Turkey. It was night when they entered Belgrade. It is not known by what route the lad'es reached the capital of Hungary; but it is certain that, supposing their presence would not be sus pected at Pesth, they heroically proceeded to that city, then in the possession of General Hatsac. It has since then, become a source of pride to both of them, that they, safe in their disgiuse, passed that celebrated military "butch er"' in the streets of Pesth. Among the letters with which this lady was charged by the exiles of Widdin was one for the lamented martvT of Hungary, Count Casimik Batiiia.ny, then confi ned in a prison of the city, waiting the cruel fate to which the "butcher"' subjected him W hen it was decided that he should be ignom'in iously put to death by the hangman's rope, that excellent and very mild Hungarian patriot en deavored to pnt an end to his own existence with a razor; r.ut uniortunatcly not succeeding Hay nau dragged his mutilated and bleedin- hn.U , J from the prison and ended his life upon the gal lows. The letter whidh Madame I f- him was from his brother, who had escaped into Turkey with M. KossrTn; and she had the sat isfaction of causing it, through the venality of his jailors, to be placed in the hands of the sufferer, to whom it was no little source of con solation to know that bis brother lived in safety. '8, 1351. -oeu ai tne aoor of tLe Sardinian Con sul,, who Lad recently been stationed in that frontier town by Lis king, whose wLole Leart sympathised in the Hungarian cause, and who Lad formed a friendly alliance with M. Kossuth for Jhe freedom of Italy and Hungary. The Conul had been advised by M. KossutL tbat two females would probably seek Lis protection ; but not knowing tLem,Le asked them what tLey wished of him. Madame L replied, "Lodg ings and bread." He invited them in, and Madi-ne L introduced Lim to Madame Kos suth, the lady of the late Go vernor of Hungary. It wiil be readily conceived that the Consul could scarcely believe that these two miserable bc-iegs were the persons they represented thein Eclves to be. Madame Kossuth convinced him by showing him the signet-ring of her husband. In Lis Louse Madame Kossuth fell ill, but re ceived every possible kindness from her Lost. They learned that all tLe Hungarians and Poles Lad been removed from AViddin to SLumla; and notwithstanding tLat it was in tLe midst of a severe winter, tLey decided upon at once pro ceeding to tLe latter place. TLe Sardinian Consul applied to tLe generous and very liberal Trince tf Servia, in whose principality Belgrade is, for ki3 assistance in behalf of the ladies, and in the most hospitable and fearless manner Le provided them with his own carriage and four Lorses, and an escort; and in this way tLey started through the snoTT for SLumla. TLeir journey -was without any appreLensions of dan ger, for the British Consul-General of Belgrade, Mr. Jr ,' had provided the party witL a passport as British subjects, under tLe assumed namev of Mr., Mrs. and Miss Bloomfield; yet the severity of the treather was such that Mad- Tl.HT- 1,., 1 1 ... . -.- au.u, m iu m te oi ner neaitn, suffcri,, v muth 0ften the nQW wft5 a? deep S3 the breasts of the horses, and not un- frequeatly four oeu had to be attached to it in their 'a-es. A journey which in summer would have required but a few days, now was made in twenty-eight. Oil ihe twenty -eighth day, a courier was sent in ad ; nee of them to apprize Gov. Kossuth of ihfh.- s,-vu.. lie was ill; and moreover, on account of the many plans of the Austrians to assassinate him, the Sultan's authorities could not allow him to leave Shumla, and go to meet Lis wife- The DWS of her deliverance and her aPI'roach occasioned the liveliest satisfaction to al tue refugees ; and the Hungarians and Poles went as far as the gates of the city to meet this heroic martyr of the cause of Hungary. It was night when the carriage neared the city, as she entered the gates she found the streets lighted up with hundred of lights, green, white, and red, the colors of the Hungarian flag, and was welcomed with the most friendly shouts from the whole body ef the refugees. When Madame Kossuth descended from her enrringe, she found herself in the presence of her husband, who had risen from his bed of ill ness to receive the poor 'Maria F ', of the plains of Hungary. In place of receiving her in bis arms, M. Kossuth, overcome by feelings of admiration for the sufferings which his wife had undergone, and by gratitude for her devo tion to the causa of her country, threw himself at her feet and kissed them. She endeavored to speak and offer her husband consolation and tranquility, while her own poor feeble heart was ready to burst with emotion. Her voice failed her, and amid the reiterated shouts of the Hun garians and Poles, this heroic woman was car ried to her husband s apartments. In March of the past year some seventy per sons the chief of the Hungarian Refugees, among whom were also several Poles were conveyed in one of the steamers of the Sultan of Turkey to the place designated for their fu ture residence in Asia Minor. From Shumla they travelled by land to Varna, on the Black Sea; from thence they were taken in the steam er to Ghcmlik, in the Gulf of Madanieh, in the Sea of Marmora, without being allowed to, stop at Constantinople. They crossed from that place to Broosa, at the foot of Mount Olj mpus, and after a short delay there, agitated by hopes and fears, they continued on to Kutayieh where they still are. Madame Kossuth is with her husband, and greatly through the labors of Mad. L , who undertook another journey into Hungary for this purpose, she now also has her children with her. Among the individuals who persist in remaining at Kutayieh with the ex-Governor of Hungary and his lady, are Madame L , and the relative who during the dangerous wan derings in Hungary figured as her husband. Many of the refugees are but illy provided for. The amount which the Turkish government al lows M. Kossuth depends wholly upon the Sul tan, whose protection was so generally and and so effectively granted to the conferees. It is also known that the Sultan has refused to de tain him for a longer period than one year, and that this period ends with the month of May of j the present year. To detain him beyond that I AM(v1 "tt" 1 11 V.A v (ICttl m & a 1" CT.1T1 C 1 T .ll i V 1T1 the eyes of the world which will weigh heavily upon the character of the Sultan ; who has, thus far, possessed the sympathy and the admiration of all well-thinking men on both sides of the Atlan- arry out what he has so successfully begun; and to permit Kossuth and Lis unfortunate com panions ti seek a home here, in the distant 2Tew World, where tLey cannot, even should they de sire it, which we disbelieve, disturb the y-an-quility t.f Austria, and where assassins can never mole?t them. In the United States they will all find a hearty welcome; and in the paths of private life each will find that sympathy and assihtance to v.hich their patriotism and their sufferings so strongly entitle therj. .9 GREAT DISCOVERY. The English Railway Times has the follow ing: "The decomposition of water has at length been obtained, and thatatamere Jyviiominal cost, and wnh unerring pre cision. This great discovery, originating in America, has Ween perfected by the experiments cf an eminent German che mist, and patented in tLe three kingdoms by Mr. Shepard. The caibu retted hy drogen, may be formed to any extent, which, wtiiie possessing an illuminating power equal to tbat of coal gas, is capa ble of producing an amount cf caloric equal to that of live ccal, and consequent ly well and cheaply fitted to act as a com bustible agent in the conversion cf water into steam. This tremendous power has been for some time engaging the attention of our most eminent engineers, and will, when sufficiently tested, be experimented upon before the public. If successful, as there is every present appearance of its being the revolution it must effect in the eco nomic working of railways, and indeed in every branch of trade and manafac- iure, wnere steam is employed as a mo tive power, is altogether incalculable. It almost opens to the wondering gaze, the Utopian vista in which unskilled manual labor shall be no longer necessary, it is sufficient for us, however to state that several of the leading railway companies are in treaty with the patentee, and that consequently, if anything whatever is capable of being made out of the discov ery, the lailway interest will possess at once the first benefit and chief honor in i'.s realization. ritlsbnrli Morals. The Pittsburgh Chronicle says The morals of our dark city seem to be de generating there is scarce a night, as we are homeward bound, we do not hear in some one or other quarter, the yells and hootings of some rowdy band, young", too withal, yet adepts in the art that makes man worse than the brute. These rioters, (for by no milder name can they be term ed,) are generally the sons of persons who occupuy high positions in society, and who are looked upon as being the leaders, not only in the fashionable, but in ihe would be religious world. A common rowdy invariably has to suffer for his deeds, but the rich blackguard, who dis turbs the quiet of a community; insults respectable persons as they pass the streets, and cuts up all the mad pranks that whiskey can put into the head of man, are seldom seen by the hired guar dians of the city's honor they are per mitted to do what they please and as they please, while those who in soul and spriit are infinitely their betters, are often times subjected lu cruel treatment and the most degrading punishment. The Railroad Dfpot. We have al ready stated ilu-t it had been decided upon to have the Depot of the Pennsvlvania Railroad on the triangular piece of ground, bounded by Grant, Liberty and iSevemh streets- The Company has taken the ground on perpetual lease from Captain SSchenley, on very admirable terms. It is an admirable location, and will suit all interests probably better than any other that could be selected. Pittsburgh Pest. Melancholy Scicide. The Phila delphia papers a few days since recorded the fact of a young woman, belonging to a respectable family there, leaving her home and going to New York city in company with a person who had been paying his addresses to her. Her father tra ced her to a house of ill-fame in New York and conveyed her back to Philadelphia. This was on Monday last. The papers ot Friday state the unfortunate victim com mitted suicide on Thursday night by swal lowing a dose of laudanum. Death of Chapman. The Indianapo lis State Sentinel announces the death, on the 15th inst., of George A. Chapinan, one of the original proprietors of that pa per. Mr. Chapman has been well known as one oi the most popular and influential Democratic editors in the west, as the "Crow, Chapman, Crow.' man. The Welshmen of N ew York citv, and the descendants of Welshmnn, hae had a meeting to deise ihe wavs and means of contributing a stone to the Wash ington Monument. VOLUME I 1MII1 29. Troiu Our Ivclimiscs. A gentleman who affects Shakspeare, went into a barber's shop in Pittsburgh the oth er evening and said, "John have you any of that mixture? I wish you would put it on my wLiskers." "Col." said John, "I fear it will burn your skin." "Don't care," f-aid the intre pid Col., seating Limself in the cLair; "on wiui it. on witL it, I shall stand the hazard of the dye.' " Judge H , a witty old fellow, tfter spending an even'ng with a young lawyer whoso office was in the second story of a bui'd'r.g, took his departure and had got half way down stairs, wlten he stumbled tnd fell to the bottom. The young lawyer hearing the noise rushed out, and seeing the Judge lying on Lis back tt the bot tom of the stairs, inquired, in a tone of great anxiety: "Is your Lonor Lurt' TLe Judge by this time had regained his feet, and looking up. he replied "Tb, but my Ugt are.'' In the Court of Quarter Sessions cf Phil adelphia county, one of the prisoners among the vagrant cases, a Jerseyman, accounted for get ting boozy by saying that he drank some Dutch beer, and that it flew right to his head. Judge Parsons said it was no wonder that he whs thrown upon his back, r.one but a Dutchman could drink that it would soon kill a Jersey man. The prisoner was discharged amid roars of laughter. The journeyman carper.tc-rs of Hasten. Pa., who struck for higher wages, have resumed I their work at !?1 25 rer deim. Thev demanded J i 371. vut oomrmnnsed with their emrdovers by cgrecing to take two and a half cents less. There is work enough for all of them. The bricklayers succeeded in getting the advance they asked. An individual named Leaky killed anoth er named Snider, en the Baltimore and Ohio railroad, west of Cumberland, a few days since, by shooting him through the head, and then through the heart with a revolver, and all be cause Snider, (who was deranged,) laugLed at Lim when he a?ked for-whiskcy at a biackmith sLop. Leaky Las been arrested. In taking the census of New Mexico. which is returned at 61,574, the Marshal found a father and mother with a family of twenty four children, all of whom were living in tLo same Louse, and all of whom apparently were in the enjoyment of pool LealtL. TLe fotLcr and mother promised to live yet many years. TLe Supreme Court of JTew York, dis solved the injunction which restrains Mr. Ed win Forrest, the tragedian, from nioies'ur.g his wife, also the injunction restraining him frm alienating Lis property, but enforced Lis disa bility to prr.secute a siit for divorce in Penn sylvania. The joint special committee of the Lrr iilature of Massachusetts, on the subject i capital punishment, have reported a bill for tic abolition ef the death penalty, and providirg that the cfTcnccs punished by dc.vdi under tie present cede, shall 1-e punishable by impn la ment in the State piic-a for lire. The telegraph wires in Browne atrc-;. New York, suddenly sr.cpped on Saturday, and are said to hsve struck a tree thut sis inciif s in diameter, cutting it nearly in t-xo. TLe wires then caught a coal scuttle, standing cn the side walk, and hurled it to a grrat height ia the air. Fortunately cone of the passers by were ir-jured. Tha West Carter Village Ex cord ts that an Irish family named Khby. wLcc mem bers came from the old country only a tow months ago, have already lost three of the household circle by ship fever, and one or tvrc others are now suffering. The Saint Augustine (Florida.? ITcra'. i states that sugar is destined to be the groat s'.c pie of the State, the climate and quality of the soil giving it peculiar advantages beyond any other portion of the United States. TLe trad-? La moss, Lemp, arrow roi.t, and tLe orange and lemon, bas also become of much importance. The Cbarleston (Va.) Spirit of Jefferson says tLat tLere is every rcn?oii to believe that s silver mine Las leen discovered on tLe form of Mess. James and Dennis McSberry, of that county, f-tu.'ted cn the cast bank of the Shen andoah river, and at the base of the Blue Ei Ice Miss B , a lady of considerable i"'1- Uriety in tlie southwest, made her appears :;ci 'atcly in the Placjuciniue Court of Louisiana, to argue hr own suit. She was armed with a pistol and dirk, and frightened the lawyers taif to death. The Danville Rolling Mill has sipr1. n consequence of a strike for higher wage-s by some of the hands employed. Green peas 8nd strawberries made their first appearance in the Norfolk. A a. mcrket on Saturday last. Father Matthe-r ij at present at L' uia- vllle, Ky., on his way cast. The Sa--quehanna river is ia ltt fas rafting condition. . Mad. Teresa Piroii rrcit Iiia ")per Girgtx is givir.g concert at ?w Orl&anti Col. Bigler rdl be tlcvtei b; -CyA0.