democrat & BaittncL C. Si. MIHKAY, Kditor and Publisher. EBENSBURG. WEDNESDAY MORKIXG::::: .AUGUST 4. DEMOCRATIC STATE TICKET. JUSTICE OF SUPREME COURT. WILLIAM A. PORTER. Of Philadelphia. canal coMjnssroxiRv WESTLEY FROST Of Fayette County. FOR CONGRESS, CYRUS L. PERSHING, Subject to the desdsion of the District Conference, Constable Flattery started in pursuit. M' Culloch finding that he was perked, rede xAo the woods, drew out a pistol, and shot the horse twice in the hea l. The horse, stracgJ to say, was still living yesterday rsorniDg. M'Culloch then fled, and .after an exciting chase, was arrested about five miles below Johnstown, on the Pennsylvania Railroad. He is now safely lodged in durance vile. Stabbixgi Affrat. We learn that an af fray occurred in Cherrytree Borough, Indi ana count',, last Sunday eveuinj,. betwcea two brothers named Benjamin and Joshua Davis, which will probably result in. the death of the former. Joshua it appears was intox icated, and beating his- wife in the SWercst possible manner. Benjamin interfered to prevent thie. and a fight immediately ensued betvreen them, wheD Joshua immediatly drew a knife from hi-: pocket, and stabbed Benja min in th.o neighborhood of the heart. Ben jam.Va wc.d living at last accounts; bat slight j hopes were entertained of his recovery. Josh- 1 . . t T 1 j 1 T IT ua lias Deen arrestee ana toagea in iuo auui- ana county jail. COUKTY TICKET FOR THOMAS ASSEMBLY, H. PORTER IOR SHERIFF, JAMES MYERS BSZ'A man named John Walker, was ar rested in the neighborhood of Johnstown, last Saturday, and committed to jail by Justice Cohick, on the charge of attempting to com mit an outrage on the person of a little girl named Pickwortb, the daughter of a Mr. John Pickworth, who resides within about two miles of Johnstown. The parents of the child were absent at the time. Walker was accom panied by a man named James Wallaek, who succeeded tn making bis escape and in ttili at arse. FOR COMMISSIONER, ABEL LLOYD FOR ACDITOR, HENRY HAWK FOR POOR IIOUSE MICHAEL M DIRECTOR, 'GUIRE DEMOCRATIC COUNTY COMMITTEE. THOMAS McCONXELL, Esi.. of Sumnierhill, Chairman. Allegheny, James McGongh, Jtfacklick, Joseph Mardis, Cambria, Thomas O'Coimtll, Carroll, John Buck, Carrolltowu, Henry Scanlan, Chest, Washington Douglass, Chest Springs, Montgomery Douglass, . Clearfield, Edward 11. Donigan, Conemaugh, David Williams, Cuiiemaugh Borough, John Brawley, Croyle, Win. Murray, EhensLurg, T 1 lYnlon, Callitzin, Jol.n Trainer, Johnstown First Ward, J. F, Barnes, Second " (. Nelson Smith, Third T. L. Hover, Fourth " Nathan W. llorton, lioretto, James O'Donnell, Minister, John Thomas, Richland, CJeorgo Orris, Summit ville, James W. Condon. Susquehanuah, Charles WeaklauJ, Washington, Joseph Burgoon, Taylor, George Kurtz, White, George Walters, Yodcr, D. B. Ciamer. JC?" The absence of the Editor from home to-day, will we trust, bo a sufficient apolo for any typographical or other errors in the present number. OPPOSITION COUNTY CONVENTION. jC5T"We had the pleasure last Friday of taking by the hand, Morchcadoi the Indiana Independent, and Camjtbtll of the Blairsville Record. They are both gentlemanly whole souled fellows, and wo sincerely hope that the Newspapers they conduct may prove to be paying institutions. jT2We have been prevented by business, rom paying much attention to our editorial duties this week. is Wo find in the columns of tho last Johns town Tribune, a call for an opposition County Convention, at the Court House, in this Bor ough, on the 10th inst The delegate elec tions will be held on the 7th inst. The Con. veution is to be composed of delegates from every faction in tho county, now arrayed in opposition to the National Democracy. "The object of said Convention, (we quote from the call,) will be to select Congressional Confer cee to meet like Conferees from the counties of Blair, Somerset and Huntingdon, and also if it be deemed advisable by said Convention to nominate a county ticJcet." Tho call feigned by A C Mullin, "Chairman of op position County Committee." Tho part of the above extract from the ca which we have italicized, contains an import ant hint with regard to the tactics of tho op- ' position. They will nominate a ticket provi dtl always they think it can be elected. Gentlemen, release yourselves from all anx iety on that point; it can't bo elected. The Mountain Democracy are not disposed at present, to abandon their old landmarks, and their candidates, for the purpose of allowing you to boast that you have triumphed on the t?oil of Cambria. The entire Democratic County ticket, can aud will bo elected in spite of all your puny efforts. Tho contest among tho ojiposition in this county for Congress- is at present exciting. Abraham Kopelin, Esq., and George S. King, Esq., are the candidates, and their claims to tho nomination are urged by their respective friends with an earnestness and zeal unusual among the opposition in this county. We do not know which of tho rivals will triumph, nor do we care. If Pershing is tho Democratic Standard bearer in this dis trict, our triumph is certain. jT2?See the adverisemcnt of Dr. Sanford's 'Liver Invigorator" in another column. Two Men Suffocated in a "Well. A most melancholy accident occurred on Thursday, on the property formerly owned by Felix Bobe, but now by Mr. John Albeitz, near the grounds of the Agricultural Society, in the rsintu tv ard. lue premises are be:ur put in repair, and anions other improve ments a well had been dug in the yard, which was intended to receive the contents of an old vault attached to a water closet. When it was completed, the workmen engaged upon it, proceeded to tap the old receiver. To effect this purpose, a platform had been constructed, abont eight feet from the bottom, and the well being in depth only twenty-two feet fourteen feet from the top. This platform was made of cross pieces, and the two men placed themselves in a sitting posture, while they worked ignorant or unthoughtful of the frightful risk which they were incurring. An orifice was scarcely effected, before the well was filled with foul air, and the two men fain ted away from its effects. A tLird person, David Hay, who" beheld the disaster from above, called others to his assistance, and was lowered to their relief; but he had not descen ded far until, overcome by the noxious gas, he reeled and fell upon the platform. Those who had collected at the mouth of the well. now procured a hook, and made an effort to grapple the unfortunate victims, but were unable to eret hold of any but Havs. upon whose arm tho hook fastened above the elbow, and he was drawn forth. After laboring with him an hour or more, he was resuscitated. In the meanwhile, the well filled with water, and all hope of saving the others was obliterated. The accident occurred at half-past eleven tfclock, and they were not removed from their position until forty-fiva minutes after twelve. Their names were Francis Granger and Wil liam Whyer. Tho former was about forty five years of age, and was employed in lumber yards, and and at well digging. He lived in the Eighth Ward not far from the Round House, upon the Central Railroad, and leaves a wife and one child Whyer lived in Alle gheny city, and a wife and six children re main to lament his loss. He was about fifty years of age, and engaged generally iu the same employment as U ranger, lhey were 1 ., . J 1 i.ll. DOtu nonesi, inaasirioua auu re-eciauie men, True J'rcss. From the London Times, July 6. The Leviathan and the Atlantic. Cable. The cause of the failure thus far we cannot even conjecture. The American ship brings the news home, and if its people bad simply ! stated that the breakage was- not on their side,, and that all they knew about it was the ces sation of the signals from the Agamemnon, we should naturally ha70 concluded that it : was at the latter ship When, however, they add to this that the electricians on board had experimented on tho broken cable, and had thereby arrived at tho conclusion that the breakage must have been at or iiear the Ag lnemnon, they take the niat.ter altogether out of the depth of the uiearned public, and leave us to ima'.Le or suspect anything we please. If it is possible to measure over so approximately the length of a wire by elec trical experiments at one end, then we have nothing to do but wonder at the progress of science and ark. But we wait for further in formation, particularly from tho people oa board the Agmemnon. The electrical conditions of the problem be ing known, this is only a mechanical question, with no other chances of uncertainty than those of an ordinary mar'atmie character, winds, waves, currents, and 'what may be called the deep-sea anchorage on which the cable had to rest. With regard, then, to the mechanical difficulties, and to the provisions made against them, it cannot be said that this trial was a very hopeful one. ''Two ships gave a doublo c banco of failure. Each was evidently unequal to its moiety of the work, having neither proper stowage room for the cable nor for the proper quantity of coils. The Niagara left our chores so deep in the water as to excite misgivings in all who saw her; and then we were told, though the Ag memnon looked better, she was, in fact, a ship of less tonnage, The paying out tho tackle and the brake had been proved with a success which the scientific alone could appreciate. The spec ulation was, that just now we should proba bly have the Atlantic at its calmest, which, as it turns out, has not been the case. To judge from the picture of the expedition as it sailed from our chores, Agamemnon and Ni agara so filled with their huge freight that the gigantic coils spread from the hold into every cunrooni, ranrway, and cabin, we were reiving too much on the favor of the el ements, and laying ourselves at the mercy of T. - ' I 1 tueir caprice. it is premature, liiucuu, to say that we have been beaten by the ele ments; but the next attempt ought to combine every precaution su-rgested by the past. A euirirestion has been made several times to these columns, and feems to us worth con sidering. The Leviathcn is as yet only a shell- Except that it has not even her en gines on board, it is exactly in that state, to which, at great difficulty and cost, the Aga memnon and Niagara have been reduced for this service. In the Leviathan, any length of cable that could possibly be required could be held and stowed in tho manner most con venient for paving out. The pitch of that huge vessel will be quite inconsiderable in the From the Leavenworth (.Kansas) Times, July 17. The Storm and Flood in Kansas Houses Floating Off. We had another deluging storm of rain on the night of the 15th. The day had been sul try. Yet a breeze had softened the heat, and our citizens stood it bravely. But towards nigbt dark murky clouds gathered in the north, and about 9 o clock, P. M., the roar of thunder and tho vivid flashes of lightning gave unmisakeablo signs of a stormy night Soon after y o clock the rain began to Ian,. and it fell as if the heavens- were made of wa ter. The effect upon Three Mile Creek was instaatneoufi. It oTerSowed its banks, and by mooalight was higher than ever known to be by the oldest inhabitant. The Villa House, Wing's grocery and all the buildings in the neighborhood at the crossing of the Govern ment road were under water some four, some three, and some one foot. But at or near midnight the neighbors in that section of the city, (who had &o- ress that night,) heaid the cry of distress. The wild shout of " help !" " help 1" sounded strange ly as borne on the wings of the wild storm then raging. It wa3 ascertained that some wagons were in the creek. Brave fellows volunteered, and very soon the water-bound were relieved. The wagons had to- be abandoned. Enough that life was made secure. Goods, beds, and what not, had " to go " The men, women and chil dren threatened with death by the madden ing freshet, were relieved. Then came ano ther cry of danger. Houses from Cincinnati (three were borne away on the bosom of the waters) came float ing down the creek. One evidently had a family in it. Near Wing's grocery their cry for help was heard. Some few men breasted the storm, took out from the floating build ing a mother, who had been confined to a sick bed for some four weeks, and four chil dren, and cared for them. In South Leavenworth, where we happen ed to be, we supposed that the people in the wagons and in the house had been lost Some of us got down almost to the bridge, but the land slide had been swept away, and there was no possibility of crossing, or of lending aid to sufferers on the other side. The people in the neighborhood of Wing's at the crossing on the government road, be haved nobly. Young and oil were out, ready- to do what they could, to breast the darkness, lit up only by the lightning, and the fearful storm, and the angry waters, to gave life, and even to rescue property. All the bridges are swept awav, or t?o brok en as to be impassable by teams. Lumber, parts of houses, large planks. c., are scat tered along the creek, telling too plainly of tho fierceness of the storm and the fury of the waters. We rejoice, however, that no lives were sacrificed, and hope it may be long ere such another blast of wind and rain may visit us. Conemaugh Constable Flattery of Borough, furnished a young man named Samuel M'Culloch with lodgings in the Jail in this place, yesterday evening. It appears that M'Culloch had obtained a horse from a Mr. Patrick Nevin of Johnstown, under the pretenco of borrowing him for the purposo of taking a short trip into the country. Nevin shortly afterwards ascertaining that M'Cul loch was a hardened scoundrel, and that ho intended appropriating the horso to his own use, procured a warrant for hii arrest, and roughest seas, and the strains on the cable will be therefore uniform. Sufficient length may be taken on board for the most lavish use of the cable, to even twico tho distance from one shore to the other. It is plain we must not bo stingy of mate rial if we are to succeed. J he ingenious writers who enlightened the public on the wonders of the deep, tell us that currents car ry the cable miles out of the ships course be fore it touches the bottom; that, ever so freely paid out. the cable probably hangs in festoons from one submarine mountain top to another; and that, even if the cable is eo fortunate as to escape the sharp edge of a precipice, mere suspension between two distant points may stretch it beyond its strength. If this be so, the more cable wc have, within reason, the better. No ship afloat but the Leviathan could car ry ample supply for the whole distance. It alone could carry coals sumcienc ior paying out the whole cable at the rate of five, four, and three miles an hour, if necessary, and could afford, even in the midst of the process, to make any delay that might be thought ad visable. Whatever mao be thought of this suggestion, we feel assured that nobody really expects much from a fleet of four ships sailing cut to rendezvous in tho middle of the Atlan tic to lay down one cable all tho ships con fessedly overtasked, and all of them reckoning upon good weather and other favorable cir cumstances. There is a unity and simplicity about tho undertaking that ill accord with so complex and hazardous a process. Kore of the New El Dorado We yesterday entered at some length into the chances of making sudden fortunes in the new El Dorado of the North, and are now glad to perceive that the San Francisco Her ald an exccllcat journal by the way dis cusses freely and impartially both sides of the question, giving the shadows as well as lights. The editor is decidedly of opinion, that for workmen the rato of wages iu Cali fornia arc as high as could be wished, and that employment is far nioro certain in Sau Francisco and other large towns, than at or near Frazer Diver. The following table of rato is given, as paid at the Navy Yard and Mare Islaad : Salaries and Wages of about S00 persons now employed at tho United States Navy Yard, Mare I:-land : Master masons, Foreman of masons, Journeymen masons, rorcman of stone cutter9 Journeymen stone cutters, do. plasterers, do. slaters, Foreman of ship carpenters, Journeymen ship carpenters, do. . ship calkers, Master carpenter of buildings, I oreman do. do. Journevmea do. do. $8,00 per day, 7.50 " $5a coo 7.50 6.00 6.00 6.00 8.00 7.00 7.00 8.00 6.25 5.50 8 00 7.50 6.00 4.00 3.60 3.00 it From the Boston Evening Journal. Julv 2G. Death of a Little Girl from Hydrophobia. The littlo daughter of Wm. G. Lewis, Esq , of Franiineham, who was bitten some four weeks siuce by a mad dog, exhibited, on Thursday evening last, the first symptoms of disease. She complained of her throat, and soon after began to dread the sight of water, shuddering whenever it was put before her, or even spoken of. During the progress of the disease, she would frequently complain of hunger and thirst, but when offered food or drink, it would distress her greatly, and she would turn away shivering, and hide her face. Convulsions became very frequent and severe, and the child seemed to suffer intense agony, complaining of her throat ear and head, and losing her consciousness while they lasted. During the absence of the paroxysms, Bhe possessed the use of all her faculties in a re markable degree, her sense of hearing partic ularly being very ucute. An attempt was made to administer ether, but it affected her so violently that it had to be discontinued Dr. Whitney, her physician, succeeded on Saturday in giving the child some morphine, repeating the doses frequently and keeping uer unuer us innucnce, as it appeared to mit igate the severity of the spasms, which grad ually lessened until death relieved her from misery on Sunday afternoon. The child's face had been much lacerated by the dog. having been bitten in four or five places, tearing down the sides of her mouth. and all the wounds but this had entirely heal ed bdlorc any eigns of sickness appeared . JtST Col. Robert Evans, of Blairsville. has purchased the " Marker House," in tha village, for 1D,575. From the Genius of Liberty. Broke Jail Ground and Lofty Tumbling. On Monday night of last week two prison ers came near making their escape from the County Jail. They were Mills, who entered M'Clelland's hotel in June last, and Ilibbon who committed a burglary in Conncllsville Mills Pot the hobbies off his feet by rubbing the rivot with a small stone procured in his cell. His feet being freed he soon got luto open hall of the jail by breakiug the lock of delphia. his cell door. l'rompT.cu, no aouuc, uy a. fellow feeling." the same that makes folks "wondrous kind," he lent his assistance to re lease Ilibbon. Hibbon's hoboles, however, were too strong, and could not be cot off. About three o'clock in the morning Mills con cluded to take his departure leaving Ilibbon behind, who would not venture with bis teet chained together. Just as Mills was going over the wall the noise aroused Sheriff Boyd, who sprang out of bed, and with no clothing but his shirt, commenced pursuit. A few steps back of the jail is a high bank, covered witu a strong growm oi inisues. l'liua too down this bank and the Sheriff close after him in his naked condition. Both running and rolling together soon reached the bottom, the Sheriff, like the dog and the wolf, a little ahead. Mills sprang to his feet and started at full speed up the next hill and the Sheriff after him. Mills, exhausted no dou"3t trom his efforts in breaking out, soon gave up the chase and sat down The Sheriff then took hold of him and returned him to jail. Be twecn the scratching of the thistles and run ning over stones, tho Sheriff on his return found his shins and feet very badly skinned, Master blacksmith, Foreman. do. Journeymen do. Helperrs oi do. Masons' laborers, Excavators, &c, Regular employment at tho abovo rates may be considered an inducement ior goou workmen, although journeymen masons who are engaged on buildings at present progress ing in this city, receive from G to 7 per day, and other mechanics in proportion. The intelligence thus far from Frazer River, is regarded by the Herald as mere hearsay. Those who desire to emigrate hither, should, therefore, be particular for their own sakes, in obtaining reliablo information. By way of showing the necessity of caution, we sub- join the ioiiowing extract oi a letter received per the Jloscs laylor, by a citizen ot l'hila- The Physical Geography of the Sea. The above is the title of a new work by Lieut Maury of the National Observatory at Washington. This book is the most elaborate of the woiks published in this country; piobabfy the ablest heretofore published in the world,, designed especially ti observe, record, and classify all the phenomena upon the science of meteorology and navigation, iuis h preem inently a practical aga of ours, all scientific truths are mainly sough out, because oi tueir bearing in promoting-the comfort, welfare and happiness of tbe human race, iiencc inauc tive scene, in opening up the two grand fields of modern discovery, the ocean and atmos phere, is mainly engaged in exploring them because ot their tendency to lasiutate com- mercial intercourse between the old and new continents. Lieut. Maury, if not the projector, has at least been the most successful collector of facts respecting the winds, tides, currents, and temperature of the ocean; the results" of whish, entitled V mds and Currents Charts, he" published a few years since. The use of these charts have already re duced fully 25 per cent, the time required to make voy ages in sailing vessels across the great oceans of our globe. The most of the maratimc nations of the world bent delegates to a conference at Brussels in 1853, aud agreed upon a system of meteological obser vations throughout the world on land and ocean, that before long must be collected and published, will be of incalculable value ti physical science and the commerce of the world. The English Admiralty have organized a department to superintend these observations, and the N?.tional Observatory at Washington, under Lieut Maury'a superintendence, has now the benefit of nearly all our army and naval officers, and thousands of accurate ob servers connected with cur commercial ma rine, are engaged in observing and noting facts, which, when they have been arranged and classified by fcueh a mind as Maury's, must be of great value to advance science, and promote the welfare of man. That mighty river of warm water in the Atlantic ocean, the Gulf Stream, moving on ward with a current one thousand times great er in volume, and more rapid in its velocity than the Mississipppi river, has become, in stead of a bug-bear, a boon to navigation. In regard to the causes of this remarkable phenomenon we cannot in the present state of science satisfactorily answer; though we do know that tho theory of Dr. Fraklin here tofore generally adhered to is not in accor dance with the facts and observations since made. Whatever be the cause which propels this mighty current of heated water from the torrid zone into tha North Atlantic Ocean, it there produces very marked effects upon the climate ef that otherwise inhospitable region, and causes most of the food necessary to feed the starving whale and other sea monsters that inhabit rls gelid waters. Another remarkable fact established by these observations is that nearly double the quantity of rain falls north of the equator to what falls south of it. The mean annual fall of rain, evaporated principally from the tor rid zone, and by the winds and currents of the atmosphere, carried, abroad and deposited in the foria tf moisture, is estimated as equal to an ocean 24,000 miles long. 3,000 miles broad and 10 feet deep. "Thij immense amount of water is annually raised up into the sky and brought down again by the ex quisite, though somewhat complex, medium of atmosphere, which never wears out, breaks down nor fails to do its work at the right time and in the right way." In regard to the depth of the ocean, former experiments were reported to have been made of soundings to the depth of 30 40 anJ even 50,000 feet without reaching the bottom. But more recent and more reliable experi ments have shown that tho greatest depth of the ocean docs not exceed 25,000 feet, et four and. three quarter miles. They have also found a ridge on telegrapic plateau, ex tending from (Jape Clear in Ireland, to Cape llaco in Newfoundland, a distance of 1,640 miles, at no point exceeding 10,000 feet deep. On this riJge the effort is being made to deposit the Atlantic Telcgr?pic Carlo Indian Massacre on the Piayy persons .Killed. Goloma Republican er, Tl. e n. - lLli u tuutsuiy last by a Mr 1 frcttrt .Tnrtann pnnnf.. Xi The lowing as "-unvu toumy, iMlSSOUri iaius r,r . , .u "uiib aim EiramLt' ner He says ho left Independent v bis wife and two children on t'l" June, 1857, in Colonel Gilr;',. i 1 r :; sistingot X'l persons, bound f,rV Y hen they arrived at Salt Late , were stopped by order of Brigham V were forced to remain there urn ' Cummiug entered the city, j, ,a' allowed to pursue their in,, t with no trouble until they rc-i'lj 1 Stony Point, where tUy night. About ten o'clock at E1ht thev -tacked by a large band of pab L"t' : or, as our informant thinks, wbJr- guiseu as Auaians this belief yBr tned by s&irxs remarks whK . ham Young address to ColoptftVv7 icey leit can j.aKe, to tbe effect t -r 1 1 1 ctl l ui me viuyuy buoui i ever rach f and in fact, that no emigrants" through until the United inncs lb restitutioa to them for what tbe v u7' J 1) A .V. i- . V"..-- uu ttiiuncu lucui IU live m Tt' o time the attack was rLale tUv asleep, (it appears they kept xn'rl the hrfct intimation of das?-? !! was a volley from their foes, among them. Our informant states that wbqi V; he could discover none of Lis c-e-v and thinking his only chance f t - get away, no lmmediattlv ceeded in gaining a lcd-v were at no great d.Uanoe ho which he crept and thus escaped r'ij Jle remained in his Li-Jmg place f.r. nights, when be concluded tin In take the chance of getting awivt;r J tuere and dying ot huer nl ; started and succeeded in getting :. At that time he discovered Ii coming along the road, aud tLli..: be Indians, he thought Lis t:.ie L lint n iTioxr rai-ir rvfar.r 1 .-. they were white men uiea trLs xr: Lake with the army, aul vr.r; through to California. Hec. to the party his condition, ktii;; by theiu went to the seen; of tLe : There they fouud the bodies of sir. his wife who had boen scalped, i:: children, who had their ka'.Ls They buried the bodies, a pjrtL: had been devoured Ly wild auiaui engaged in that nielancLoly- du; y, J. another man who Lai e.-caped ;.; came to them. It a7-a-. s tharir gained the shelter of the rocks lain concealed. When he cau.e :. was the firt time he knew tliat ar,v. exception of hinelf, Lai escape: came the balance of tbe way tiCa.s with the packers who Lai eoopportuL to their rescue. Mr. Jylcn l-.-ft X with the packers in Carson Valley, tions the names of Robert anl J-La John West, Wm. and 1'e'crN l': of Col. Gilpin's were killed. a - i ua:r. am aiiiu- San Francisco, July 4, 1858. You will see by the papers that more than twenty thousand people have left for Irazr River. 1 here is a great deal of deception and humbug practised by the steamboat men, who are making immenso fortunes out of thj excitement. Many of the small mining towns are entirely deserted. Miners leave good paying claims for tho chance of better thing3 at fcrazers. lhe miners are waiting until the river runs down, and by the time it is down, the tall rains begin, and tucu the river corn- But as tho river is now receding a little we may expect to hear the truth. Every thing is very stagnant. Rents have ereatly declined since the Irazer river fever broke out. l'roperty is forced into the market at prodigious sacrifices, to raise money to go to the new mines. One-fourth of the men of Sacramento have gone, and many are still going, borne by land and others by wa ter. The country will be well "proved," and if there is gold, it will be found. The bars in Frazer river, as far as now as 1 sv i certamed, are nos sulhciently largo to give employment to two thousand, instead of forty thousand that will De there in a few weeks. sickness, privation and the Indians will it is 2r. Dallas on our Diplomacy and Diploma tists. Our Minister to England. Mr. Dallas, at a dinner civen at the London Tavern, on the 5th inst., in honor of our national anniversa ry, made certain remarks about American di plomacy, which, though uttered in a tone cf pleasautry, were expressive of a very serious and significant fact. "In Englaud and on tho Continent." he said, "diplomacy is a life-long career. With us it is nothing of the kind. American di plomacy, compared with European diplomacy, may be said to resemble the militia as com pared With the regular forces. (Laughter.) lo be sure, in the outset, in the United States, we have always hud a partiality for the milttia. (Cheers.) Our first military achievments were obtianed by men who were enrolled from among tho rawest possible ef recruits. (Uueers.) And so it has happened that our militia has over and over again proved equal to tho best regulars of Europe. (Cheers.) It is in that way, perhaps, that tho diploma cy of the United btatrs has been able to do something towards giving expansion and pop ularity to the principles of the American rev olution, ineers.) upon vcrv manv occa- sions, although our ministers have boen drawn from the ranks of private life, yet at the most distinguished Courts of Europe and through out the' world, when in conflict rather than in argument with the most refined of the diplo matists ot any country, it has bo happened that these militia men of diplomacy have 6till achieved remarkable success. (Cheers ) From tle Cincinnati G.i:e'rc'. A Fixe at Ncr.1 Eerd. (General JIirrifvn,s old .t'1 Mirrow escajc of Col. Tav-n Th "old Log Cabin." so fra-a cal history, has gone at last. It i?tr-'h rf nnr.l Hamlin Z.i " about fifteen miles below tLe c::y, was nominated for President, 1 famous by a thousand fonss ist-4 of 1840. Miniature hvunhr.! vi rrpf-.l in ererv cornet CI tiid J praises of 'T1? Rns;h Iv-p Cabin, That tells ns of ellen tin: were upon every tongnc, and p: qaite as mnch influenco in tho eler. other subject that was eanvsci "latch-string" has disap peared it '. We have no minute details cf : gration, but learn from the pi---arrived by the Ohio and Missisf:;-' yesleiday morning, between c: o'clock, that as the train arr:r:i Bend, the old Log Cabin ws rs flames, and the destruction was occupied by Col. Wm. H. Ij (who married a daughter of G-.a--aud family, and wc learn thii si.- rapid progress of the nrc, am covcrv. that tho members cf t-e . . I barely escaped in their c.. - Of course nothing was n-a l- furuiture or documents, ani tLe. ; is that many valuable paper? leu t . .i :.L ,i;..; C. larrison, togetuer uu mw" relics of tho Old Hero, and ott tory of tho West, havo been u the building, lhe oniy p----- Ilarrison in existence ipaia.", with two or three of the Gcner. different periods of his Ufr. ri i i i uestrovcu. .. t urs. Harrison, cut and bruised, so much so that for several days he was unable to leave his room. The Sheriff acted with great courage too much bo, it was probably rashness to pursue un- I feared, cause great mortality among the gold armed so despcrato a character as HiUa Beckers. J&" Catharine Ceho, aged seventy-sir years, died of palsy, last week, m the Wash ington county poor house. She died a fow I hours after being etrieken with the disease-. 3J Ralph Bogle, once a citizen of Johns town, and a contractor on the Pennsylvania Railroad, died at Harrbburg on the 221 ul tlUJQ, Ex-President Pierce. A letter from Ex- President Pierce, states that he left Punchal in a sailing vessel on the 12th of June and anchored in tho Tagus on the 20th. During the voyage Mrs, Pierce suffered severely from sea-sickness, but recuperated rapidly after being installed in comfortable quarters. Dur ing tueir Bojourn ai Madeira, 31r3. i-ierce, i mt i . tuougu ieeuie, was enabled to ride out and enjoy the invigorating influence of the bulmy air almost eyery day. lie was to leave Lis bon for Cadiz about the 2d of July, thence in ten days lor Marseilles, thenoe for evay in Switzerland, to emov the last summer and early autumn upon the shores of Luke Lemau Democratic Nomination. -Cincinnati July 30. The Democratic Convention of the bixth Congressional District of Indiana, has nominated Martin M. Ray. IT : r its DC1' uarn.sou, luriuuiun - . -j . a .... . w.'ml 1.. . the venerable uay f"-., residence of Hon. J. ie1' ... c ,v:ai Gen. II stead. a few miles pub North Bend is not only - , - pretending residence ot j. but occupies no mean i ; . Tf .a tlli firt i1"-." John Clevcs Symmes, theoiv j all the laud between was at one time regaracJ & .. cinnati. or "Fort Washington. a i. x- v i,n,1 .Tudiza -y" the grert "Miama City. tn man out streets. laWD: all the arrangements for magnitude; but a totuu-w i' the tide in favor of the Ts flourishing metropolis, and . ever since remaiued a te from the dust, impurities, an the city. -. -T" hour l1 lv:e?iJi t reri At a late throusrh Mr. Phillips. Police and Fire Alarm r . me by beiug thrown from ,,t,t in an insensible condition. ful gash over his eye, , his skull ia fractured taiaed of his recovery, mi 5