aim ,i tia-fc.x-ivn mb. 'i iWiit-rriTCTiiiH.a.jtgageagij , j JJtJ 1 1 b mm , , tmummm urn i n n ill 1 1 " i rnm aE'ipn m m'muji '-'- t ,n i n i , m, , m t mwtiim i bmiimijxj-juujjjji-li-'j-'i ii iiiViiV h mi wi n w imimn m tu w - n ' ',' , ., ' -. .'I : i; i 'i ' " -1 i , -: .. '.' 1 ' ' . X .::''.' 3: ! ' i . -. , " ' ' , ' ' ' ' ''. " ... - .' . . ' ' ' - ; :V: : '.V-'::-- .' '., . :.- . ' ' ' :y' ; " ' -r'r 11 1 - . ... i , ... . , , . - , , ' ' ' ' ' . . - - i i : ; " 7E GO WHESE DEMOCBATIC PHIKCIPLES POIET THE, "WAY Jr WHEN THEY CEASE TO LEAD, WE CEASE TO FOLLOW." VOLUME VIII. EBENSBURG. SEPTEMBER 1618-52. MJIBER 48. t j ' TER 31 S... The "MOUXTAIX SEXXIXEL" is publish ed every Thursday nioruiiig,'at One Dollar and Fifty Cents per annum, ' if Jaid in advance or vithin three months ; after three months--Two Dollars vUl be charged - ' ..- ' Ko subscription will be taken for a shorter period than six months ; and no paper will be discontinued until all arrearages are paid. A failure to notify a discontinuance at the expira tion of the term subscribed for, will be consid ered as a new engagement r - w ADVFJlTISEMEXTS will be inserted at the following rates: 50 cents per square ftfr the first insertion; 75 cents for two insertions; 1 for three insertions ; and 25 cents per square ror every subsequent insertion. A liberal reduc tion made to those who advertise by the year. All advertisements handed in must have the proper number of insertions marked thereon, or they will be published until forbidden, and 0har"-cd in accordance with the above terms. All letters and communications to insure .tnntinu must be post paid. A. J. RHE1 . From the Milford Herald. Cam ii town Raec-Conrse. Conic, cow, boys, and let us sing Do dah, do dab, About our leaders, Tierce and King Oh;! .do dah day, ' They're the fastest horses on the course- Do dah, do dah, And they are bound to win the purse Oh ! do-dah, da, We're bound to run all night, We're bound to run all day ; We're bound to sing for Tierce and King Until Election day. ew-IIampshire's nag he can't be beat Do dah, do da, He's the best old horse on. a four years' heat, Oh ! do dah da. With gallant King iipou his back Do dah, do dah, lie's bound to clear the Federal track Oh ! Do dah da, We're bound to run all night, &c. We cot well whipped in forty eight Do dah, do dah, "Cut fifty-two will bring it straight U 3 Oh! Do dah da, Old 'hasty' Scott, with his 'plate of soup' Do dah, do da, Will not find us a willing dupe Oh ! Do dah da, We're bound to run all night,- &c Then, Coonics, now bring on your Scott, Do dah, do dah, We're Democrats, and falter net Oh ! Do dah d l. For Tierce and King will win the day Do dah, do dah. And 'Fuss and Feathers must clear the way, Oh ! Do dah da. We're bound to run all night, &c. Letter from General Pierce. . The Rochester Daily Advertiser of Aug, SOlh, publishes tho following letter from Franklin Tierce, the Democratic nominee for the Tresi dency, in regard to the religious and property qualification tests of New Hampshire. The let ter was furnished to the Advertiser by Mr. Warren, to whom it was addressed : Coxcorp, N. II. July 15, 1852. My Dear Sir, It is impossible that a charge should embrace a more direct attack upon truth than that with - which tbe Whig' papers have tpetned with relation to my sentiments upon the religious test contained in our State Constitu tion, which was . adopted in 1792, ' and never amended since. The charge is contradicted by every word and act of my life having reference to the question, in any form directly or collate rally. ' ' ' I advocated the call of the Convention for .the amendment of the onstitution, which assem bled in November, 1850, and the most promi nent object in my own mind was to strike out the unjust and odious provisions commonly call ed the religious and property qualification, tests from our fundamental law. In haste, . , . Your most obedient servant, (Signed) . FRANK. TIERCE, , John l Warren, Esq.,, Coopcrstown, New York. ! ,- BgL-A physician took a student to see a pa tient who was confined to his ted : "Sir," said the physician to the sick man, 'you have been imprudent, you have eaten oys ters." . . i - - v ' -' The patient admitted that he had. Return ing home the student- asked the doctor how ho had discovered: the man had been eating oys ters! . -' : i - ' ' - ; ,. "Why, replied the doctor, . saw the shells fender the bed."; v ! 'V. - t . . . . . 4. few days after the student, was sent to vis it the same patient, ; He soon returned, howev r, saying that he had been .kicked out of ; the house for telling the patient that ho had been imprudent he had eaten horseflesh., . . s ", "Horseflesh, you. young, fool ! what do you fcean!'! cried the doctor. n '., , ; , f "Because, sir, .1 saw a saddle, and .pair, of stirrups under the Bed." TheI)octor gave him fca 'sheepskin.'' " ' ' " .' ?. i Sam was courting" "Miss" Poily:;GilImore;; --but Dever called ; in a - perfect 'state of sobriety! Oae night he proposed,' but the lady refused on: ta ground of his drinking habits, although wil-: ling to take the vow if - he -took the pledged "VilL" gfly8 Sam, agreed give mc but a gill more tod i'll take the pledge !" GBi. SHIELDS' SPEECH. We give below tlie speech of General Shields, delivered at the Democratic Mass Meeting in Tlttbburg, on Friday night, September 3d. , Fellow-Citizexs I am truly sorry to say that I am in no fit condition to make you a speech. Weary and exhausted I have arrived in your city, and my being here to-night is the re sult of accident. I have accompanied ray gal lant friend Gen. Houston, in the capacity of an assistant, or aid-de-camp, to use a military phrase ; and I trust that, after having listened to his excellency address, you will not expect one from me. You have heard to-iiight, one of the most dis tinguished Democrats in the land. II is life has been a romance its wonders have never been excelled even in fable. From the forest to the ocean from the valley to the mountain-in eve ry position and every situation his life has been one of action tnd vscfulnes.'-. Frcm early strug gles for ofiice in his native State up to his noble efforts for the disenthralment of a nation, he has been a consistent patriot, and an honorable man. His name is identified with virtue, freedom and independence ; and the history of his campaigns in Texa3 shows the actions of a brave and gal lant man. You have heard him epeak, and I have only to repeat after him the words of truth which he has uttered. Where I disposed to make you a speech, I could no better do it than by humbly and feebly repeating and endorsing his sentiments. I know both distinguished men, who stand be fore the people of this nation at the present time, as candidates for the Peesidency. I know Gen. Scott well ; I have fought under him, and I will not use denunciation against him. He is a brave man, and his gallant deeds form a portion of the history of his country. I know Gen. Tierce al so, i fought by his side ; and he is a gallant as any other of the brave spirits who fought and won on thc.ficlds of Mexico. Gen. Scott, as my friend Houston remarked, has been all his life a soldier, living in camps, and accustomed to the rudo array of war. Gen. Tierce is emi nent as a civilian, in addition to being a brave soldier. And yet, when he returns to las native land, and when, in a just appreciation of his. worth and excellence, his fellow-countrymen se lect him as their candidate for an honorable of fice, he is charged with being false to his duty, and his name is coupled with with the foul epi thet of coward. For my own part, viewing this matter in its proper light, and knowing as I do how well he fought in Mexico, I feel that this is cruel and ungenerous injustice There is some thing ungerous in such an act, and no upright and honorable man should lend his countenance to the support of so foul a wrong. They who fight for their country, (more especially those who, like Franklin Tierce, have fought so well) should receive tho respect and just judgment of their fellow-citizens ; they should be at least free from calumny. There is no man in this vase assemblage before me (unless he bo himself a coward), who has been in Mexico, but will say with me that General Franklin Fierce is noth ing else than a brave and honorable man. Gen Scott himself, although his interests are opposed to those of Tierce, would not, and, I am assured, does not, approve of such conduct ; and he would not wish to owe his election to the false charges which arc brought against one of his own generals. General Tierce did all his. work in Mexico with a fervor and earnestness which did him honor. He rushed through the battle field until his strength failed him, and exhausted nature, unableiurtber..to sustain him in his toils and anxieties, caused' hiitf to1 fall as many brave men have done before him. But enough of this unjust and cruel falsity. It is of that kind of ingenouos calumny which will recoil upon its authors, and will re-act with terrible force opon that party which endorses it. I feel deeply upon this subject ; for, like Gen. Tierce, am myself a citizen soldier. I know well the difficulties we had to encounter in Mcx co ; the misunderstanding and conflicts with the regular branch of the army, and many other unpleasant circumstances. All our troubles, notwithstanding, might be cheerfully disregard ed and forgotten ; and we might,-ag citizens an 1 as soldiers, have feltViat the just appreciation of our services was a sufficient reward. .'But, what must be the feelings of men who have the consciousness within them that they have at!east endeavored to do their duty when tho voice of calumny assails them' on their return to their native land ? Surely such conduct is : in the highest degree reprehensible. " ' - J' I have nothing against Gen. Scott If he has failings, do not think it my province to expose theni. ,! But I am a Democrat and on the truth of the principles. I . profess 1 oppose him as a Democrat. There is one thing, however, which maybe urged against Gen. Scott, which has been ' noticed before, : this evening I allude to his peculiar and exclusive military character. Here is a man, nearly seventy years ' old, who has been all hislife a ;soldier--'ari(f nothing else.' Now'feHowcitlzcns, I earnestlyask you wheth er, in view of this fact, (it is an incontrovcrtibly one,) a mm of this discription can with safety be put at the head of a Democratic government? I feci confident and I know you will bear me out in the declaration that he cannot, be eo.en" trusted. . - I have served in the armies myself, and well do I know the despotism which is essen tial to discipline ; for it is not an army unless subordination and blind obedience be strictly and uncompromisingly enforced. And it is na tural that it should be so. On the one hand we have arbitrary command ; on. the other, implicit obedience. You cannot make a. Democratic Tresident of a man who has no other recommen dation then military glory. Washington and Jackson were eminent both as civilians and war riors. They were soldiers in time of danger ; and it is a poor argument indeed, that would in sist upon the elevation of a military chieftain to the Tresidential chair the highest civil office in the land simply on the ground of his having rendered the state good service in the field. Some other qualifications are needed, in addi tion to the merits of military renown. We all remember the glorious career of Gen eral Taylor, that houest and simple-minded old soldier, with all the qualities that brighten and adorn the military character. He had all the virtues of a warrior, without any of his vanity. Well, General Taylor was nominated as the Whig candidate for the Tresidency and what was the result ? New York, and Teunsylvania, the old Keystone State, aided in electing him, and he was by their assistance placed at the helm of state. He is now dead, and I trust his spirit is engaged in better cause than the one he support ed in Mexico or Washington. I saw the gallant sinipie-hearted old man in Mexico ; . his very ) name was a terror to the enemy ; and he posses sed the esteem and confidence of every one to whom he was known. I saw him again, in Wash ington, surrounded by theEwings, Claytons, and Crawfords of his administration.- lie was not the same man. He was in the Lands of the Thi listincs a mere plaything, which might be used for the amusement of the grown-up children about the capitol. He .was an instrument in the hands of selfish politicians and designing men, who used him for the advancement of their own sordid ends. Totally unacquainted with either the men who surrounded him or the mea sures which he was expected to countenance, he was bewildered at his situation. It was not his trade, and he doubtless deeply felt the grave mistake that had been made in placing him in the position he occupied. If it had been beseig ing cities, storming batteries, or marching un falteringly to the cannon's mouth, how differ ently would he Lave acted. Then he would have been at home, and knowing his duty, performed it with energy and skill. But. why is it necessary for me to speak of these things ? You all know and feel tho truth of what I have said. And now, judging from the past, I ask you the question will it be different should General Scott be elevated to the Tresidency ? I think no good reason can be ad vanced, showing that a different result would follow such a course. My opinion of Gen. Scott has always been freely expressed. He is a brave j man ; and I know that I appreciate his excellence more, and am a better friend of his, than many who are loud in their professions of attachment and gupport those Nebuchadnezzars who feed on the garbage of the land, they live in. I have before spoken of the inconsistency charged upon tho Democratic party by our oppo-nents,-'in declaiming against the military spirit characterizing the Whig party. For some reason or other; the name of Andrew Jackson is'invari edly Uscd in this connection. Instead of stating (as was really the case;). that he LadleftLis pur suits a civilian to go to' New Orleans afif flog the British; they would have everybody think that he was nothing but a soldier that he had no reputation as a legislatoi : or indeed in any of the pursuits of a civilian. Gen'. Houston has this evening shown to you the utter shallowness of this fallacy, and nothing remains for me but to endorse what he has said. ' ' '"' What a change has come over them now ! Thoy will have nothing but a downright general. A man like Andrew Jackson would not suit them in these days of availability ; reputation in any thing but military affairs goes fornaught. Those who have gained a name on the battle-field- are the only ones who are considered fitted for the chair of state. They have an inherent, esteem and attachment towards chieftains they love them for their own sakes. - And this, by the way, is rather paradoxical. We! all "know how the Whigs abused the authors of the Mexican war. 1 But mark their inconsistency. They then abused the war they now take to their bosoms the warriors ; but you may rest assured there is an object in it, and that object is the war-cry of the Whig party availibility. J ' ' ' ' ' You have, most of you at least, seen tho re cent life of General Scott, got up for "general circulation" so says the title:pagc. I mean the one which bears so striking a resemblance to a book of nursery rhymes. As a man who pro fesses to know something of the history of Gen eral Scott, I pronounce this pictorial lifo a gross caricature. ' You "may read it over, and over again, and know no more of his biography than when you first sat down to its perusal. It is, however, written in the full belief that it will suit tho intelligence of some portion of the American people. Why, Mrs. Trolloppe never published such an overwhelming libel on Amer ica as does this Life of Geu. Scott," written by his own supporters. It is a fit companion for Mother Hubbard, and other juvenile romances. , The chief .principle of the Whig .party if I may be allowed to invest it with the name of principle- is availibility. What pretensions can iey possibly have to any settled, policy 2 . Thejt. have never originated any great national measure.", save tho Bankrupt Law, which may, indeed, be with truth denominated essentially Whig. After they get into pow er, their -policy is wholly of a negative nature; and the best than can be said of Mr. Fillmore's administration is, that it has done no harm. It has allowed (because it could not well be pre vented) the National Legislature to act without interference aud this is as much as wc ought to expect frcm a Whig administration. . A few words more, and I will conclude. My campaign in Mexico has not improved the pow ej of my lungs ; and I must be brief. I have known "Genejal Ficrco for years. I was acquainted with him before he went to Mex ico, and from my knowledge of his character, I unhesitatingly give it as my opinion, that not one of the many distinguised gentlemen, whose names were presented to the National Demo cratic Convention not evea excepting my gal lant friend, Gen. Houston -was better calcula ted to carry out the policy of, our : party, and lead us on to victory, than General Franklin Tierce, of New Hampshire. He never cast a vote that was not in favor of human rights, of liberty, of economy, and of the rights of con science. All his deeds were imbued with that high patriotic feeling which is his birthright and inheritance. He is endowed with eminent qual ities, both public and private, which will make him an ornament to the high station he is desti ned to fill ; and he will nobly bear the bright houorors prepared for him. In relation to the ' slanders which daily issue ffoin the presses and the public men of our opponents those who make a trade of defamation, I would simply say 'and who in this vast assemblage will not bear lj?e Out ift the assertion f ) that they ar unjust, wicked, and malicious calumnies. I have never, in all my life, seen an audience which gave me greater feelings of delight than the one I am now addressing. I do not mean by this, your vast numbers but the courteousness of your deportment, and the kind attention with which you have listened to the few remarks I have made. And here, fellow Democrats of Pennsylvania, let me say that upon you devolves much of the labor of this campaign. If you are true to your party faith ; if you desire the perpetuity of Democratic principles throughout the land, and more especially in your own noble Keystone State, let mo earnestly entreat you to do good service in the cause. If we succeed and when I see this multitude before me, I have no fears for the result we will cease to be in our present minority, I mean by this that we will nnt. onlv have a Democratic Congress, but likewise a Democratic Executive ; and not only for one term, for I- sincerely believe ' that the election of Franklin Tierce will be the harbin ger of half a century of successive Democratic administrations. And wc will have, too, a con tinuation of that policy under which our coun try has prospered in day3 gone by, and which will add to our present and future high destiny. What Napoleon was to France, the Democratic party now is to this country it is -its destiny, and the hope tit humanity is centred m it. - How different the policy of the Whig party. Its principles arc changed e'-en as a man casts aside his worn-out : garments. Its members have at : first opposed, and 'finally accepted, every measure of importance which Las come before the country. Its opinions and action up on a National Bank, Tariff, &e., are sufficient indicatiouj ' of the truth of this Assertion; and the policy of Tresident Tolk, that unassuming and patriotic Tennessean, which settled so sat isfactorily the Oregon difficulty, is now acqui esced in by all parties. Suppose that Gen. Scntt had been placed in Mr." Tolk's stead, in the a bove controversy, do you think that he would have so triumphantly and honorably vindicated the rights of the nation? Or, suppose Mr. Tolk had been placed in Gen. Scott's position, as Commander-in-Chief of the Army, would he have achieved the brilliant victories which have "iven so bright a lustre to the American name? No, fellow citizens, Scott is and has been in his proper place, and Tolk was in his. Tolk would have been as good a Geueral as Scott a Tresi dent ; but each was in his proper position, and did honor to himself and to his country. Keep in view, fellow Democrats, the importance of the coming election. Consider that your votes may gain or lose the election of our candidates. But, come what will, let -Pennsylvania bo as true to her principles as her sons were gallant in Mexico, and Whiggery and Galphlnism wi'.l ( be numbered with the things that were. , . , At the conclusion of his remarks, Gen. Shields sat down, much exhausted. Ho was frequently interrupted by hearty cheers, and the utmost quiet and attention were manifested throughout. Officers wlio Support Gen. Pierce. . All tho whig reflections on Geu. Tierce's val or, Lis talents, his popularity in the army, and indeed every charge against him should be effec tually silenced by the fact that nearly all the of ficers of the U. S. Army in the Mexican war are his ardent supporters. The fact that not one officer in the army in any of our wars has opeu- I lyadvocatedGen. Scott is equally significant of the relative positions of the two Generals, with that branch of the public service. The follow ing is alist of some of the officers who support Gen. Tierce: Gen. John E. Wool, of New York. Gen. Wm. O. Butler, of Kentucky. Gen Robert Tutterson, of Tennsylvania. Gen. Jno. A. Quitman, of Mississippi. Gen. Gideon J. Tillow, of Tennessee. Gen James Shields, of Illinois. . Gen. Joseph Lane, of Indiana. Gen. Thomas Marshall, of Kentucky. Gen. Caleb Cusbing, of Massachusetts. Gen. Sterling Trice, of Missouri. Col. F. M. Wynkoop, of Teunsylvania. CoL W. U. Bissel, of Illinois. Col. Ferris Foreman, of Illinois. Col. J. T. Weatherford, of Illinois. Col. J. II. Lane of Indiana. Col. J- T. Drake of Indiana. CoL G. W. Morgan, of Ohio. Col. Jefferson Davis, of MississippL Col. J. W. Jackson, of Georgia. Col. J. R. Coffee, of Alabama. Col. Maxcey Grieg, of South Carolina. Col. George Wood, of Texas. Col. Jno. C. Hays, of Texas (now of Cala.) Col. John W. Tibbats, of Kentucky. CoL Reuben Davis, of Mississippi. Col. John S. Roane, of Arkansas. CoL T. II. Seymour, of Connecticut. CoL Wm. Trousdale, of Tennessee. . Col. R. E. Temple, of New York. Col. Wade Bunret, of New York. Col. R. J. Farquharson, of Tennessee. CoL E. G. Butler of Louisiana. Lt. Col. Black, of Teunsylvania. Lt. Col. J. W. Geary, Tennsylvania. LL CoL J. B. Weller, of Ohio. Lt. Col. S.'IY Anderson, of Tennessee. Lt. CoL M. L. Bonham of Georgia. Lt. CoL W. B. Randolph, of Virginia. Lt. Col. J. Clemens, of Alabama. Lt. Col. W. A. Richardson,- of niinois. Lt. Col. G. W. Hughes, of Maryland. Lt. Col. W. A. Gorman, of Indiana. Lt CoL G. A. Caldwell, of Indiana. Lt. CoL R. Hadden of Indiana. Lt. Col. J. H. Savage, of Tennessee. Maj. Wm. Brindle, of Tennsylvania. Maj. F. L. Bowman, of Tennsylvania Maj. Solan Borland, of Arkansas. Maj. John Forsyth, of Georgia. Maj. . II. Gladden, of South Carolina. Maj. Wm. T Daniel,- of Missouri. Maj. T. L. Harris, of niinois. Maj. J. S. Gittings, of Ohio. Maj. Wm. II. Tolk, of Tennessee. Maj. R. B. Alexander, of Tennessee. Maj. C. If. Trail, of Illinois. Maj. J. C. Breckenridge, of Kentucky. Maj. M. Hoagland, of Ohio. Cteu. Pierce at Home. We find in the Richmond Ei'juircr of Saturday last, a letter from William F. Ritchie, its editor, written from Concord, N. II., from which we make the following extract, going still further to show the high estimate in which Gen. Tierce is held by his friends and neighbors at homo. The letter says : "The Democrats here are in the fullest Fpirits. They are still rejoicing over the great und en thusiastic mass meeting at'IIillaboro', tweut3--five miles from this place, on - Thursday last. At least twenty thousand persons were present forming the largest popular gathering ever as sembled in New England- rTLe friends and neighbors of Frank Tierce turned out glorioutly to testify their love and respect for the man and the statesman. As to the enthusiasm, . I refer the Whig papers to Messrs. James Lyons of Richmond, and Wm. S. Reed of Lynchburg, who, I learn, were at the Ilillsboro' gathering and at the touching "Ninth Regiment" dinner here on Friday, and who were delighted with General Tierce, and astonished at the enthusiasm , mani fested by his friends. General Tierce, to my great regret, is absent at Rye Beach with . his family. I am truly soxry that my engagements will prevent me from awaiting his return. The high encomiums I hear of him, from his neigh bors, enhance my desire to make bis acquain tance. I to day eDjoyed the hospitality of a Whig family, and it was most pleasing to hear them, ladies and all, speak in the most affec tionate terms of "Frank Tierce." They refer to him as pure as he is modest, able, clear-hea-deJ, and in every way fitted to bo Tresident of our great confederacy. The charge of "abolition" sentiments iu him, is openly laughed at as most false and absurd and the New Boston calumny and the slander of ."tilieve-gammon" Robinson have not a parti cle tf basis on which to EtancL This afternoon I strolled over this handsome and flourishing town, with its neatly painted houses, its broad streets, lined with beautiful elms and Rock (su gar) Maples its plain, but neat an I solid gran ite' State House and TenLtcntiary and birgo and commodious free schools. I passed the neat house of Mrs. Williams, where Gen. Tierce boards. It overlooks the Merrimac, whoso water-power turns so many thousands of epindles at Franklin, Manchester, Nashua, Lawrence and Lowell. On a building next to the State House which also holds tho office of that excellent Democratic organ,. JW a- 'iriot I ew painted on a 6ign the simple words, "Franklin Tierce's of fice." Next March his "office" will be removed to the White House by the command of the peo ple1; '"I have been treated most kindly by Mr. N. T. Hill, (brother of one of the editors of the Patriot,) Mr. Butterficld, senior cditor of that paper, and by Mr. Geo. M. West of Richmond, who is ou a visit with his family, to this, his native place and who, although a Yhig, means to vote for Geaeral Tierce, of; whom he speaks most rapturously. Tho peopledicre'I find plain intelligent, kind and hospitable indeed, very much like our own Virginians." ' Further Particular of tlie Mortality a mongtheXew York Troop on the lsth in 11 M One lluiKlrrtl Deaths lie port ed Desertion of the OlUers. cc. Our telegraphic despatches of a week or so back furniehes some particulars of the mortality among the New York Troops upon the Isthmus. From the Tanama Herald of the 17th Vc derive the following details : On the 5th of July, eight companies of the 4th Regiment of United States Infantry under the command of Lieut Colonel Bonneville, left New York en route for California via tho Isth mus. These companies consisted each of about one hundred men and officers, with an unusual large number of women and children. The U. S. Mail Steamship Company, at the request of the heads of the War Department, Congress having made no appropriation for the transportation of the troops, agreed to convey ihe troops over for $120,000, and wait the ac tion of Congress for their pay. ' Tho troops embarked under the contract and reached Navy Bay in good health and without the loss of a eingle man ! Before leaving the etcamer Falcon, at Navy Bay, four rfup jrovLt. ions were prepared for each soldier ly the officers of the Steamer, and these rations wcreerved out for their sustenance on the Isthmus. On their way over the Isthmus the hardships and troubles of these poor soldiers commenced. Deserted, as we believe, by every commissioned officer, and left alone in command of the non commissioned officers, it is no wonder they gave way to eveiy species of indulgence. The rations which had been prepared on the steamer at Na vy Bay were either thrown or gives way, or sold for liquor by those who were too lazy or too feeble to carry them on the road Coming, as those men did, from a temperate to a torrid zone, their systems, unless properly cared for, were susceptible of contracting any disease Without officers, and consequently without dis cipline, they were their own ignorant guidep, reckless of consequences, sleeping in the open air on the damp ground, drinking noxious and poisonous Jiquors, and going without food ex cepting fruit, it is no wonder thvt something like the cholera broke out among them. On the road over the Isthmus some died by the road side, some in the rudo huts of the natives, with out medicine or medical attention. One soldier and his wife died on the road leaving four or five little children, the oldest not over four or five years of age, the youngest a nursing babe. The women was loft in a native hut, but in a dying condition. The mortality on the Isthmus was not great, but the seeds were sown which ripen ed their deadly fruit iu Tanama. The acknowledged mortality was fearful in tho extreme. One hundred arc said to have died out of the seven hundred enlisted in New York! Only one of the commissioned officers died. While seven per cent, of the poor soldiers lbt their lives only one per cent, among the offi cers laid their bones in this place. The officers and their wives cumo over in tho usual time, on mules, in good health and condi tion. Even the regimental quartermaster, Capt Grant, could not tarry to attend to his duty, but must come through and await tho arrival of the troops on this side ! Many of these troops came in three days or more utter leaving Cruces, wet and almost furnished, having had nothing to cat for twenty-four hours, but probably plenty t drink. It may be said it was their own fault ; S'j it was still, had the officers remained ut . their posts, they could have kept them in order and prevented their running into 6uch excesses, but this the sequel will show, they had no de tire to do. WLeu a Chinese lady is blessed with im in" crease in her family, from the moment of her accouchment tho unhappy husband is put to Wl also, and there detained for forty days, aud du ring this delightful penance ho is subjected to all the rigorous treatment of his better half. Should medicine be administered to her, hemusj partake of it also; and ho is strictly confined to ' the same diet that she is obliged to ' un- 1 dcrgo, which consists, on an average, I believe, of about a thimbleful of crem of rice, admin istered every three hours, to say nothing of the pill at bed time to prevent iudigcbtion. XccVs Residence at Siain, r.l I' lr . -' 'f i ' i-. M - , - i I h i v i 1 1 - i t - T