2 fltmorraf anb Sentinel. 9 . II 4SSO, Editor &. Publisher, WED8ESDAY. FEB 1. 15. S. M. Pettougill&Co. Advertlaiug Agent. S7 Park Row Nw York, and 10 State treet, Boston, r the authorised Agents for the "Dem ocbat & .SBWnFL." and the rnot influen tial and largest circulating Newspaper in tha United States an I Canada. They are empowered to contract for us at oui lOWFST TERMS. t JUN i r t'3U U I i'TKE. P. J5. NChN. Ciiairmaii, Gjrge IMany. J S. Mardis. Oeorpe C. K. Zhin. Peteriluber. Philip Miller. J..hn E. McKfiizie. Joseph Belie. .T.ihn Purhin. David Farner. lleurj Friedthoof. J hn Stough, Elixha Plumnier, Lewis lb-dtrtrs. George Gurley, John MoDermit. Sinin Danmyer, W A Krise. Th. F. MoG.-iih. Jacob Frnnli-iser. J. F- Gndn, John Ihim iltnp.. F. O'Fiiel. Michael II .hlin. Wm. C. Diver, Jnhit White, Henry Topper. Nicho In Caiman. M J. Plot'. J. W. Omd.n. Daniel O.ufair. Wm McOoskoy. D.niel II Donnelly. Anthony L ng, J hu Maish. John It van houtlierti f:iiianclp;il ton. We think it is now beyond a doubt that the South will put into their army :it least forty thousand negroes, to recruit their shattered ranks. That the Southern people d'nl deliberate a good while liefore they came to this conclusion- is manifest, but it is also now manifest that they have concluded to ninke them useful in their army. They see that they can't gain their indejiendenee without them and if they loose their independence they loose their slaves also. They can out in forty or fifty thousand slaves a year, for several years, and not mis them much from ag ricultural purposes. The females and the boys can do the field work, as our field wwrk in the north had to be done this last year in a great measure by females a.d boys. The south is by no means exhaust td or in a suffering condition, except where our armies have trampled over it and made it a waste. Such is then, the Shenandoah valley and that portion of Georgia over which Sherman and hi. army made their march ; that part of course is a desert now, as to production ; but the great body of the south is yet un touched and is a perfect paradise com pared to the fertility of the northern States. Sherman's inarch through Geor gia will give an indication of what the south is, where the armies have not yet traversed. These soldiers never had such living before, as during that ruarch. Flocks of turkey?, sheep, fat oxen, fatted calves in abundance, cake and wine, dried fruit and other luxuries in profusion met them on every march, .and in many cases gold an 1 silver, were not a great rarity to reward their more minute scrutiny. These things arc not to be found in an exhausted country. These arc facts and it is better for us to look at ihom as such, than delude ourselves with the siren song of jieace by the exhaustion of the south. The leading men of the south have always declared that they were not fighting for slavery, but for their own independ nee in order to regulate their own domestic, con cerns a it suits themselves. The republi can party did nut Iv.Tieve them, but when they see them arm their slaves and make soldiers of them they must certainly know that they never intend to make slaves of them afterwards. They will not only free them, but they will free their wives and children, give them a home in the sunny south to make that freedom valua--ble and instruct them to make it agreeable and useful. The southern j-eop'c think better of the negro than the northern peo ple do. They are not so repulsive to them as they are to the people of the north. Their enlistment into the army will l)c done with great care, they will have white officers to command them, and they will be very carefully nd efficiently drilled and will not be led i,,t0 battle until they are perfectly tliciplined. From their first advent into thu army they will relieve the trained white soldier of garrison and guard duty.and let not thein go to the field until they are prepared. Will they bo true Ui the southern cause ! 'Many of the people of the north think fhey wiU ot Cut their raaatenf ' whv ought to know them best have no doubt of it. We understand they have weighed this subject well, before they came to these conclusions. The idea that the negro will not fight for the rebellion will be dispelled after a fair trial, and is like many other delusions that we of the north had to get rid of. The inducements that his master will offer to him will be a great deal more forcible than any that can be presented to him by the north. His home, his wife, his chil dren, his hopes of happiness as a freeman, and that in the sunny south. These are to be the reward of his faithful services. His attachment to his wife and children and to the scenes of his childhood are too strong to be surrendered up for a vague dream of freedom for himself alone in the unknown and bleak north. Tho' there are some talk of peace and of peace commissioners being appointed, I fear it will end all in smoke, ami the result will be a few years more of a relent less cruel and bloody war. Our success j has been great for the last two months but we have done nothing yet but what we thought we could in a year when the war commenced. The south was to be: starved out in a short time, but we trust that nonsensical delusion is dispelled for ever. The south is too fertile and con tains too much territory for our arms to tramp over and starve out the south in a very short time. The nonh and south might both however shortly come to their senses, and effect a peace by compromise If they do not, we may l ave a long and serious war yet, more bloodthirsty and cruel if possible than it ever has been. As the south las ; a ned thiir riches and wealth through their negroes, so it will be through them they will gain their independence if they do gain it. There is no doubt but slavery has got n fata! stab by this war and the southern eople know it as well as we do, and arc deter mined to make the best of it. The south ern people are no fools. They are sharp enough for our people. They might not be able to match the Yankees in striking a bargain for money, but in Statesinenship or war they are fully their equal. They have lost no reputation in this war, no matter what the result of it may be. Their reputation for valor and skill in the field and diplomacy in the cabinet, through out the civilized world will lose nothing when compared with ours. So let us not flatter ourselves that they wiil ignomiuous ly ground arms and sue for jri-ace, in a war that they have so heroically carried on up to the present time. I'eace. There will be no caee,at least so far as any indications we have seen would warrant us to conjecture. I hey are plav- j ing a gnme in the north and in the south i to increase their forces and gull the peo ple, the great body of whom are heartily tired of the war. As we have often said, there will be no peace while there is money in the war. The result of .Mr. Blair's vi lunteer visit to Richmond is this: I hat Jeffer son Davis is willing to send to Welling ton or receive from there Commissioners to treat for peace on the basis of separa tion. The President of the United States i on the other hand is willing to gie hcar j ing to any person of influence who may ! come from the South with or without Davis' authority, to treat on ponce on the basis of submission to the I'nion. Of the the above facts there is no doubt. Cotix Husks We had a visit frjm II orace L. Suowdcn who informed us that he desired to purchase clean corn husks free from nubbins. He will buy tin in in large or small quantities, baled or loose ; parties having the same for sale will write to him or to Joseph Suowdcn agent associated Tress, Mayors office j Pittsburg. Tarties will state what price ; delivered at railroad cars at Ebensburg or Crcssou station or any other station in Cambria county. Pkack Commission ei:s. We under stand that Hunter, CampUM jmd Ste vens are apx int(d caec Commissioners by the rebels to have a talk with the men at the hcud of affairs in our government. We fear however it will all end in talk. It is well enough to talk about peace, and familiarize the minds of the people with it, so that when it does come they will not be .unprepared Har.it and its consequen ces. Courage ought to have eyes aa well as arms. Oleugliioii. : Our enterprising townsman, Mr. Thiiip J Collins has secured the leases of several miles along the Clearfield Creek in this I County, and has commenced operations near Dawson's Mills, within two miles of Loietto. He has got his men at work, and has his engine on the ground. If he succeeds in striking the ik, we will have the satisfaction of having a millionaire of our own. And if he don't succeed, he will have the satisfaction of having lost nothing, for nothing can be lost when a person knows where it is. He will know, if be should be minus a few thous and dollars the exact hole vvlvrc he put it, and can jxiint it out at any future time. Besides he will have the gratification of having giving employment to good indus trious fellows while making this hole. If he is fortunate in his enterprise, and we sineerely hope he will bo, it will be a uni versal benefit to the County. We have no doubt he will give it a fair trial, as he has energy, jierseverence and ability to do so. We don't think however, he will be so resolute as the man who is sinking a well in Venango county ; he has on his sign painted above his well, "On, China, ok Hki.i.," which signifies very distinctly that he will not stop till he gets something or bores through. We wish Mr. Collins luck, there are few men in the country who would risk a few thousand dollars on an enterprise of this kind, unless they would see the oil on the surface inviting them to b-.re a hole for it. There are forty thousand frecdmcn, freedwoinen, and frcedehildren in Wash ington city, who have cast oft' the shackles of btindage and are now revelling in free dom in that city under the eye of their fi'ends the Abolitionists. On the Kith ult., a meeting was held and Mr. Chan ning made it reoit as it met his view after a careful exaininali. n. 1 An old woman on Klevcnth street, was found ; the. snow dripping through her hovel on her pallet of rags, was sick, had buiied two children, no fire, food nor fuel, nor any means to get any, was hun gry haJ begged a match to light in the night so that the night might not seem so loin:. 2. Sully Clayton, a daughter an I two grandchildren. The daughter had an un dressed infant, no food and in a jierishing condition. 3. In another hovel near by was a mother and liaoe without dres, no fire, and twentv io.ir hours without food, a girl nine years old, washing rags she had j gathered from the mud to scli. 4. An old man, many yemsa preacher while in slavery, sleeps in a hovel on a board, a stick of wood for a pillow, no food, no fuel, no shirt. His coliar bone has Im'oh broken and cannot work. o. In a hovel were six children hud dled together without food or fuel, the children of Mrs. Jackson who is recently dead. 6, On Capitol hill in two stalls in a stable, lie two families an old nr-m crippled, a gill twelve years old dying with consumption, a young ihiid starving to death, a sick motherless Ikv, and an other old man. A plank for the old vo ple to sle p on, and broken boards with rags for thu young people, pay $12 a month rei;t and th ir only support a wo man fifty years old, no fuel nor food. 7. On sixteenth street a woman nearly ninety yeais old in a stall in a stable, no food nor fuel. This is a specimen of the condition of the forty thousand in Washington city now revelling in freedom. Their condi tion is pitiable in the extreme, nor arc they in any better condition in any place where our armies have vii:ed and freed them in large nnrn!crs. I Louisiana an 1 on the Mississippi, they are fully as bad. They arc almost naked or clad in filthy rags and the Shoddy spurns them from his iloor w henever they appear lie fore it. Shoddy we snpjx.se thinks he has done enough by getting them their freedom without bcinjr bothered any fur ther w'nh them. Take ali their aggregate suffering as slaves in the south .for the last fifty years, and it would be light com pared to what they have suffered for the last two or three years in freedom under the protection of the Aboiitioni?ts. FKEd. A bill has been read iu the legislature, authorizing Sheriff's, Prothono-lon-s, Clerks of Courts, Registers, Re corders an 1 district Attorneys to charge fifty jH-r cent increase on each item of foes, and lelcaMtig them from the pay ment of fifty per cent to the Common wealth unless tin ir gross receipts exceed two thousand dollars jer annum. C3- Dr. E. B. FiTClT3Broadway, New York, read his advertisement in an other column of this paper. Third supplesiientary li si ft. The third supplementary Draft for this 'Hftnct took pi ace at llollidai shurg on w1Ih1 January l.3th. The follow ing is a hst of those dratted in Cambria county : CON EM AUG 1 1 TOR UGH. . Michael Tfaller. Mathias Wilhelin, William Nerf. l'auiek Coliins, Michael MCartney, Henry II Slaver, Cieo.ge II Hoffman, John Wolf, Chri.-tian o, h, Michael M'Ghee, Anthony Tfa'.Ier, John Net!. Fred-rick Wilt, .I,IS H Washington, l homas Alison, Augu t Lahniaer, G.'orge Kelly, Patrick Quinn, George Ii Lucas, Henry Dibcl. MILIATLLK nOROUG'H. Teter Itowen, Norman Evens, Andrew lirayell, Daniel M CliuIey, Charles Wm i:Ie, Michael o;,Iev, CurNtiaii Urixiier, Tatric Barrett, John Claver, Joseph Masters, Jacob S mii.-is, John Galli-her, John Harking Michael Tighe, John Lan sey. CAMBIUA nCR' UuII. l cter .li;i, George Wagner, John Heckman, Thomas S-ott, Te.ance Tighc, Tatrick Green, George H.-rlman, Wiil iam Bloichey D -trick OlUtoi, illiaai Davis, John II .M Closky, Francis Kol Honie, Thomas Campla-ll. TAYU It TO.NIIIP. Daniel Kiu'.tz.nan, Jaunt Ilaff. rty, Jacob T Dishong, John Gardner, A D G.ughenonr, J,,bn U.mi-on, Thomas Kcelen, William W Wike, William Hoover, Barney K.-elen. . C vHltOLL TOWNSHIP. Barnett M Gee, Anthony iiaiger. Thus E-kenrode, Andrew Eeki nrod-, William J Ntgh, John A U Oakland, Frederic k Tewi.cjer, Francis Lout her, Julius Stick. John Hoover. CnoYLETOANSIlIP. William Gable, Bei.ja nin Miller, David Burtnett G.-orge Wiiss. MUX-IEIi TOWNSHIP. Samuel F N-.le, James M Nocn, Fran cis Evcrlv, Josej h Stel. wir.Mo.ti: p,oi:'h:gu. J I) Tikt, A C Nob!e, John Criilin, Woodburn Benson. GXl.l.iTZlN. Jacob Fagle, Wihi.uu Thompson, John Daslmer, U iliiam Craig. S V M M MI.'HIhL TOWNSHIP, las A Mulhoknn John G Tringle I.-aue lvcam. Cuitibrta futility. The following statement taken from the Auditor General's rejHirt, shows the value of real aiid icrsonr.l estate in this county, and taxable for state purt.ose. the assessment of taxes thereon for the year 1 St4, as fixed by the revenue Commis sioners, and the taxable inh ibilai ts there in for the same year. Valuation 2,101,877, assessment of tax ..4f,0.5), Topulatu.n 29,315:, taxa bles 7.230. e arc apt to be free with our jokes upon Doctois and then- drugs, until 'k and need of their aid, then all alike bow to the necessity of recourse to their hard-earned and often il!-n quited skill. The prevailing belief that physi cians Irown upon whatever deviates from their p. culiar system and usag-s, arises from thtf fact that their better information leads them soonest to d -feet and discard the medical d lu-ions and impositions that are thrust upon the community. I hat they are r.-ady an 1 prompt to adopt any really valuable invi n:ion is seen by the treatment Doct. J. C. Acer's Chemi cal Kemidi -s have receive! at their hands. They appreciate the value of these medi cines W-causcthey know their composi tion, and where is tho. man who ever heard a resectable physician either dis parage them ()r discourage their use? N' profusion or pursuit has done more for thu human family than the medical proflssi. n. None is followed by nobler men or for nobler ends ; nor is there one which better de.PVCS t,e h -st thanks of mankind. Coton (N. Y. ) IhmtxMt. Makkiki. On the 21th ult., at the residence . f ihe bride's father, by the Lev. U.lhaui Lloy.i, Wh.ua.vi H. Skcii- r.s . At lot-in v ..I I C l.'l... I - ff. I M Jit . . tft .111- ns- o.g ,o .u.ss .via;;, daughter of Pees N. Lloyd ot Camhiia Township. Tho' J.e vr was tiH raging and snows drittH wei And tt.o bran, h Md bl.kl up f.r the Ik lilt...- s w inter Tl ey have l,.ud thti) ynn ,itais j tho sweet silken t. Xor .lid they f...eU My their life be a sunnier of hUiishinc and J y ft . .a , i L utraminclleu by sorrow, utdiarrassed by i a re, On earth may they prosp tll,.lr llrst chiM Aud ce!ciiul blis, be tluir portitl frisi., where. i x. See the advertisement of John A. ! Blair, to rent his tavern stand. The , house has a good custom and is well h- i Ciited for th westeru and north-western travel Ilrport r (lie Sarreyur Gcncnl. 'I he second annual rport of Hon. Jas. T. Barr, Purveyor Gt nerai of Ti nnsylva nia, which has just In-en i-su-d by the Tublic Trinter, exhibits a marked" im provement in the business and receipts of the Land ( Iffiee over previous wars. The j 'ine of the Democratic m mbcrs fhun number of patents p.-od for during the j New York. Cotiioth will have a content year, is two thousand one hundred an I ( wUh K.nitz for a jk-at in the next cun-seventy-eifhf, Ix-ieg ali--tit the nuuiU-r . - , - , , , , paid for in the previous fn year. The '" :' ' mi-I't ,,al "'""-.hearing receipts were a fraction under nii ety-two ' " ''''' V"!N and we hopj .McAllister thousand dollars, or something m.re than will get some contract or somt thin-' eL-e ine ,eceip:s i. om in.- sam- source ior me whole seven wars lMi:iiiii:g December 1, 18.10, and ending November 3), 18'.;.J. Mr. Parr rxprf sscs thi; opinion iha, by judi-i'ius legislation, the sum of two or three millit n dollars, w hich is estima ted to be still due on unpatented land, might be brought into the State Treasury in the next ten years, without inflicting injury or distress upon a single debtor. The plat i by wlrch he promises to effect this d 'siisib'.f purpose, is to tax unpatent ed lauds slightly hi-.-her than those that are patented, and thus make it the inter est of ail holders of unpatented lands to extineuish the claims of the Common wealth upon thorn. There is t-ertainlv no good reason w hy the large amount still duo the S'ate on account of lands should not Js collected, and there are man v and wry obvious reasons why it should be brought into the Tieasurv vviihiu a rea sonable p"ri;xl from ibis date. To col lect it summarily would lx a harship to manv of the debtors; and to avoid this, th- Surveyor General humanely suggests a plan by which it may be gut in gradu- allv Landholders who isephct to procure patents from tho Commonwealth do in justice to thoe who have patented their lands, and also incur tho lisk of being .. t. III If C ! tl..ti. . U I 4w.t.Sv ... y., ...i iinn in-jiii-i. oo vera i movements looking to the summary coi- lection of thts ij. bis, havo of late" vaars been made in the legislature; and it would not rurpiiso us if landowners who comumo to pus on ge.tmg patcts lou!ll y.'. compi'iled to par up an incivai-ed -ate , ' -ii . - of interest. J he present rate ran- cs fi..n two to six per cent. p. r annum, according to the piice at w hi-h i ! !:tfd soh' i.niu- aily that which sold at the hi.h. st price ! pay ing the iowest rate of interest. j The p-ieo of land was changed at dif fi rent periods. I'ndei- Penn and his heirs, it was 41,31 p -r hundp-d acres at one ! time, 24 at another. !-id 822. 22 a: an- j other. I'n-'c- the Comm n ve.d.h, tin- . pi ice, which was not uniform ih.-oug' out the State, ranged from SO per bund,-, d acres down to 8r,,r0'!. In certain dis- ' trict? .f limited ex'ont stiil otla r juices j c have i fiaincd from indulging ;n wep the tiievniiing rnfe, at w h'.t h i early ' spei uia'.i.uis . r ixpns-iiig any pinun iu ail tho hind in the Statu were Saken by '".-.aid ie ihe mnny icporis ami r. iiiv;s the ti.-st jmh chasers. ; I'n.ni io ih- -.-iiio.i an 1 designs oi Dr. Append' d to tl o report are b'.-oik f-rms Gum in .Mrxie.., uniii we could ghe tlid which will b- foi.n 1 of ose to j.er-ons :sp- ' exact an I un .'i-putahly .ivuu!i for them, phing for hu d Aki. a iist of the Sev- Tins we are now pivpaA-u to d.i h y.uvv eral ci'uniies of the Cnmriionwiahh. wi'h '".i.i mi reciive l trom U.tre'.ay il.-nrv. i' e uue ot tucir erecii..)i, e .trouj v.-toeb i ; it may ho s-en that fiom ihrrc i.,!!.!,-;. est ;b ihed at ?li first s-t-l.-ment of tho provi-ni-, ( Philadelphia, B-v-ks and C! es to,) Penusv Ivani'i hngr::wn to contain not Lss than sixtv-siv eom-'jes. liKCIIITS IX Jv!!i:NAI. "V'-.M-K. IX till-. SlVKNTl-KNni I)r;irr Th-,, J, tho court, sy of l?..bert II Cfircn. F.i . clerk for Samuel -T. Poy.-r, E.q . C.'.'.I l clor of Ii.ti-iTia! P'-M i-ue for ,p,a. trict. wo i ;no be- n fn-m's'ied wiih tho following tabular statein- n: of tfo ooin j aa'ivo re-. ips 4f r -vi-no - fr un :t s .u:-. s iluiiif .be y :! 1H',3 -m-.J ISO I. Th i-i ocipts duri'vj t ! i our 1S'"2 w r. so trifiing that it :ea not de -iin-l nec essary to embrace thoni in the sta'em-nt. j. 101. j .T tntuiry ti " 2V 77 I V brnaiy , 20 77 1 s ! Miirch f .77 w-J ! I ril 8 I In UU i A'av 7 T'O gfi i -lime 7.7r2 s?. i duly 0 SP'.t ?,o ' Aiu'ust 5 an a ; i Si-i.ten-Jier . H !" -7 ' t her " S.r.as no N -vemt-or ?.; roc. Si , December in ;nr 8 I Total fill f.Ort 37 & no i i r, 7 0 1 3 W, in" 07 SS 11 f Of; 4 1 07 ! .m; 11 JSoi :o 8i n.; w iQa n 13 -0 I 27 27.44t 33 ft 43 S0.07I (;q 2?n r.o. (; Iicieas-in 'iri 'a or4 25 Cemmiitati.in cnlin-f,., hi l'.-t 2!,.8n? 00 Do. do. d.. isc.4 2vn.on 0O Total amount of comnu-iti. m 5 i 'ton on Do. do. In'ern ! Ueveune 4 12 2o; Tufa' of colh-cM. ns 94.10i 00 It will h" soon that, under th. c"a t ions of i ho Internal Revenue, from Ju'y 1, 1H01, tho collei-liona of ri'VOmip, from July 1. 1801 t. J.., 3-1, uju ap proxim.-it- half a m'd'i n of . ilho-s i- t, iliti-iot. Th'-ro tiro not many .'istriets in th- S'ate that pav a heavier t?x for th support of tlo Government, or pay it more promptly. Johnstown Tribune. PkVCK. Olir ncu'tnmuiri liuv-a luun f'l" -" ; P with rumois of peace for a few fta.vs; wo h-ar t,at the ivUds an- willing t lay down t!;eir arms, and come brick inf.. the Union, a vl aoce,.t ; iocobi's terms, so that wo mav have Desire in a few days. Wehojv- this mav all b t m vvhetlicr this Ik true or not, E.J. .Mini & Co. still continue to s. II th i- stock of dry giHwls, gncoiios, lHts and slio-s &e. just as cheap as ever, and t-hall con- tioue too, until their stock is disposed of. Giv them a call before looking elsewhere. The amendment to ih-i Constitution passed in congress by the constitntion-d majority. CoiiVoth McAllister a:nd Uai ley of Pennsylvania voted fer if, so did that will o,tify him in iiwuhin r ,KA party th;.t elected I im. As to IJahey hs losi hi-s political virtue long since. The am.-iidiiieni itM-li'dot-si.ot amount to any thing nunc than Lincolns proclamation freeing the negroes, as ij requires the con currence of two thirds of the states to '"" 11 ' nation. l,n states can defeat it, not on'y by voting 1. .i against it, but if they pay no attention to it, and not vote at all ii will le defeated. As it requires the active concurrence of two thirds of the old United States to make it valid We think slavery will not be much of a question ere the eopla j ot the states pass upon it. So we think fV. ,, , .. ..... ... .... , Cutr,vlh and -UcAllirter ld well if they could make anything out of it. They ha J not much to lose. Car We understand there has a lot of J 8oIdiers cum to town to make this inir lioiue for some time. We are always glad at the advent of strangers, particular- ly when they b-have themselves well, which we have no doubt these will do. If it should happen otherwise we wiil ri-. t ' 4 l. . ' i? . . t . i gic uic:u a ceruncaie oi ct:araner when j leaviiv. j " Acciuknt Four nun, viz., John j Good, Patrick Doran, John Piendon and U ,u UlhWu Wt.re i,U;1!v - y . . ' . : exp.oi-i.ui ot a hx-cmotive on the Penn a . I ':,i;,'o:," r nnyB curve, last Tucs- day. Two of ihem lived at Coneinaugli siatioi-, in this county. The engine, No. ly, was i-ne of Nurris nio.ke. i.rrSici ii Uko. San FkancisCo, January The JJ-.u'ut:: a: c l vvhicn is likelv to be Well .c.-qoai.iled wi'.n llie kiewa of Ur. G'.vio ::o:l 1.1- hi.n.ls ill tills cite, a !io n: Im'.:., 1 m..-" hel lo..owing ri.aviuvius: putis::es !:.; . '""'1 aeer-ili'.e.l agent ot l)c bl i, i.ii ivr lie j iwiieti li .! the Impcror ef -Mexico. M.i.ii::i:iatl lias co:.ee.i hv trust need tv. the Lo-jK ior L-juis VijM to!i, Sonoia, S-ir.it!:i;t, au-I o;v 1iorUi-t-rn si. ins t.l .ie.n-o, the b.n.n 'a; i -s el wtiich have n l o. l liaiiiii li i iiiiiit ! upeii, to i.e he-d :.u I governed t-y the !.:-.tr, under Mi xie.ui t.roiccin.u, as secmitv !i;r the li'.MUillt of lUC l:.hiis of i-! no -e agauisi .Mi xieo m l'uil npoii the p.iMii-.n; ol I i iv sn id claims, wi;h all the ptn; lights secured innlcr French ocupatiu coniirined. Dr. Gwin is governor-general or ue-sei-ivtary ot the Kmpi l'or to the Fr lich, and is n;isted with pi nary powirs tir I he gov tllilni lit of I bo states w I it b r.ii bein tciie.l, and to disosc of the j'uL:c ian Is and amies. Dr. Gwin has drawn up a cinle of I;iw, whieii have liecn apjiroved tv ihr Empe- lor of ilie French, of the most h:nr;.l kind, guaranteeing -ivil and religious ii'o ei ty, providing lor prc-ciii lion pureli.tsC of tlic public lands, and rivulaiing lei in ot ocopation and the use. of inn ics. i Tho Emnoror of the French guarantee 1 a nii:i!:.rf force, under the direction ot tl,t. j,ovcriior-gi nerai, sufficient to uiain- ; tain the j.-uliiic jk.-.-u-c, and ilefend the eo plc of the states against internal and ternal force. Tho jHihcy of Dr. (Iaiii, w liich has the approval of Ik:ii enqieniis ' is to encourage emigration from tbe American States, by off. ring the nw?t ; liberal terms to settlers, in order to bring int dligenf industry, cneigv, and ciiterpitrfi to tlio development of the we!l-!iieii rcsounvs of that region, so highly fao.'tvl by tho natural advantages of the soil. , cimi it , mid mineral wealth, and to toiH j an i nlightencd and suostanei i! popu!ati". which will assure permanency and sci'ii.'i ty, and give slivng h and p wcr to Ie'1' ihe states from li'liVjste.-ing ex;!"! !'"'' , which the unappropriated ri he and '"" I b.i.-ba o.is -. -n litio i of the jieopie have In1!' 'of r- inviti d. Mr I1eti!ov is HSsmtfteJ i .. - i- i i i .1. .rill won .u.i jor .1. i,nj.- alio : act as tho agents d Dr. Gwiti. Tficv are here h-r inviting emulation Xm that rea , - 1 C3P " Mo'ly ," sai I Joq Kelly's g!,?n : whi. " I"ni in poruftory at 'J:e P!es''t " avs ho. .iI wi.at sort eta p'i'r'- " " "".vs she, " Fix," .vl m! " ,,s a Sl,t 'f lialf way house betivn ' to" !,u ' heaven, and I stand it mi. a'sy a',er leaving you" S.iy well U good, but. da well 11 bttr. -