Iradiagni, ion* 110 la inti /4113. Dreadful Murder by the Editor of the Daily IPreesuia I== I Few% tAs Rrst..klipa .Ift,rteswo l .1,,nr,0,d, 10.0,4 , Last bight about ten o'clock, the neighbor hood of Atlantic street, in this city, was thrown into a state of great excitement, by the report that a horrid murder had been committed by Mr J. N. T. Tucker, editor of the Brooklyn Disay Freeman, who had killed one of his children, and severely cut the throat of his wife. On making inquiries, we discovered the report to be too true, and we then gathered the following par tienlan of the tragic occurrence: The unfortu nate Mr. Tucker, it appears, resided with his wife and three children, at the house No. 403 Atlan tic street, and last evening he left the office of the Brooklyn Doi . Pri•eni,iii, in a perfectly so ber state, to pr home. On his way, he call ed with a friend and drank some rum, which in toxicatcd hint, and he arrived home at about nine o'clock, carrying stath him a small pop-gun for the children, with which they be t au to play. In a short time they quarreled about it, and hearing- them crying, h bevame excited, and told them in an excited 'Manner di it they should not quarrel about the pop gun more than halt all hour. Shortly afterwards lie g,,t up f row his .cnl and took a razor from a rase, and laying hold of the little boy, four year, old eat hi.' throat from ear to ear, 'severing the jugular veld, and killing hint instantly As he win , about to ...annul the fatal deed, the child en ell, in pitiable accruts, "don't kill rue, daddy and these were the- last words the poor babe yoke, Gtr in a seettud he was dead. The mother, who was in the room, and little thought that her liu.dtatuti was alma to commit.the horrid deed, , lirieked, and h. im mediately caught hold of her anti cut her lii from the left ear; but the razor luisst tl the jugu lar vein, and cut the cheek Ile then made two other attempts at her tir.oat, ulakiug •Ivlrt . rs, gashes, but the strlgi'. e d and :ought with lion, and° prevented his aeeMnpliAting hi- wurderoti. purpose The daughter of t his mato [Mate WWI, and her tmothor, escaped flout the rt.,tai and ga%r the alarm, and NI .01.1 t rl). one tit the ' Third District, and ...event other up stairs to withhold hi- iiturder , u- baud On entering they found )Ir 'fucker , trug Ong with hi 4 wife, in the art of rutting at her throat, and nn the floor lay t lir hod ) of the wur tiered child, weltering in it, bliss', 'e hurl made the room look like a slatigitt...r htot,.. One of the persons who first ctn. red •truck the unittler er upon the head and kno. k. him down, and one or two others, with tht it—l-Lauri. of ti, Ai- eer, held him' down Ile tri•.l to get hi. haul into hi pocket,ta I reateuin , to ;Aloof th( 111, cut the officer raised dui, to -trik• him 11 lie made any attempt to *in them The) !lieu secured him and t • the Third Iti,- trict Station llouse, win r, li•• locked u p o ut of the way of further harm Iti the of the horrid deed Lc out hi, own thumb seven.- ly. The unfortunate man it IS bei a consider,..l to be deranged iu his mind .(t e“rdiag to the statement of hi, prim r 111 Mr Thompson, especi.tll) when laboilieg umier the influence of liquor. Ile i, a ULM a , :i L11 , ,V4 u in literary circle, and amongst. has been connected with the pre,,, and :Let, •I a lobby member round the Stitt LegisLour, at Albany, which city he it It a li•w to take, charge of the Brook lyu /,<. A medical man was called to attend Mr , L - cr immediately after the fat..l oveurreuei, dressed her wtuintl., and at tack( o'clock I.i.t night she was in a tianger••o. state, with It that her life would Le ..aeritieeil The Greytown Affair From thv Pholadelplun Lertrer. iaetw .1 After all the hubbub respectiug the I:ret town affair, the facts disclose the eha-tisenieni co a law less set of rascals, who have squatted upon lei ri tory which doe , not belong to them, and undta• the "protectorate' . of Great Britain have thine pretty much a•-• they pleased. rut :t nn,the.r of years This "proteet:eate" was :1 Ira iv lof ~ mi.., disgraceful character, on the part of Great lirit• tain That government had desieu- of her own to accomplish iu couuten toeing the pretended claims of the lawluss -authorities ' of Greytown She wished to get into her posse,,iiin and control the port and river of an dinin, which was the most feasible and , hottest route to California, and is probably the only route practlealdo for a ship-canal Not being able to g e t I ,,,s e s_ sion from the government of Nicaragua, she set up the miserable imposture of a Ntitsqueto Krug, a breeehless and drunken 'writ, who had no ei. the .11`.11 iiI•1 4 1 won . right over the territory ea II IM territory than Great Britain herself had,„ and Ilea' she assumed a protection ii ‘or this •itviig. u u d er suc h auspices, and with •11c11 N It•µ•, if is nut strange that the ino,t intense bitterne..., should be exhibited in Greytowii -:oward t the American Transit ('ompany, a hieii ,11,-,.esstnlty opened that route to American emigration to the Pacific If the inhabitants have 64 t severely punished, it is their own fault.; they ntiouhl n it have merited the chastisement by their lawless acts When remonstrated with, they only re peated their insults 4 lur tiovernment treeted them as their lawlessness. iliservial—broke up their settlement, because of their depredations and constant annoyance of .liiierieati travelers and citizens engaged iii-iini lawful pursuit of their business. It served tie in as it series the savages on the western plains, whenever their acts make their neighborhood dangerous to the peace and safety of Athericau citizens It broke up their village, and drove them .01 to some oth er place, where their piratical prept-u,ities may be indulged with leas mischief to society. It is said that it was a poor, miserable, weak village, and that it was benilit it the dignity of the l',nited States to ( :Tend its strength upon suet' an insignificant ••power '. So are the In dian villages on the plains insigniticaut and weak compared with the fortified town- .of ciei hz e d na tions, yet nobody doubt, the ju , tiee of chastising these marauderii when they fall upon the de feuftless emigrant , , l,•king homes in the iiistant wilderness. If Great Britain ha, the "rot ctor ate" be assumes ov e r I ire) town, now is the time for her to step in and assert it. Nobody will doubt that she is a power sufficiently exalted to give dignity to any quarrel which she may seek with the Unit Status, arising out of this cue tempt of her p deal anthonty. T % I Some of the n wipapers ascein to argue that because Mr Borland, the Am er i ca n Minister, once had a fracas on the floor of the Senate, that therefore his character is taut aud the Greytown authorities were justified tu treating him, though ea accredited American 'Minister, with the con tumely and disgraceful violets -iv they visited up on him. This is a new doctrine entirely in in ternational obligation., 116 character was not too bad, in the opinion of his Government, to al low him to be entrusttsl with an important diplo matic mission, and whether his appointment was proper or not, once entrusted withltliat duty, he was invented with the inviolable privileges of a a Minister Plenipotentiary. An insult to him, was an insult to the Government which sent him for which there was just cams. for asking an apology, and inaicting exemplary punishment if refused. A MYSTIZY.*---On Wednesday last, as Dr. Gibbs of this place was riding through the Mine Hill G sp, some vivo miles above town, a 111"0111aa who was up on the side of the hill, picking w h er !. - tleberriea, ran down upon the road sereanin kg that there was a deed man iu the woods- Upon search, the Doctor found a skeleton in a hole be tween the rocks. Th e Doctor carried the skull h ome with him, and upon examination found large hole, as if insde with a pick, in the frontal boas, from which and other mimes it is suppo se d the man was murdered, sad earned up there f ee concealment. From appearances it must have been laying there sines early last winter, as the clothes and leak wire all rotted of --/Ifinerlasifie r ' . _ Mir- Patrick McMahen beat hig v t if e c i d.. rine to death at New York am the 2d inst. Csole, run. The President'sa=Vetedyg the Rim. To the,6olBo, !Pt Rerreseisiatituite 4 1; I ha. riveired * bill en •"A u aft nia g apiaanpriationm th e " r , p r efati d edllipletion of sin p c wet* eret re eilitinentr o d at r the bority . law. Itrem:hes me in the expiring hou7s of the Ses sion, and time doe-, not allow a full opportunity of examining and considering liA provisions, or of stating at length tlo r,asons which forbid me to give it my signatur, It belongs to that class gf tnensuftli which are D .uemlly known as Internal ImProvetneut, by the General Government, and which, from a %cry early period, have been deem -0,1 ..f doubtful eow.titutionality and expediency, mid have does folded $o °boats the approbation Of successive Chief Magistrates On such au ( .„ I „i nat i on of this bill as it has been in my pow• • er to make, 1 recognize t certain provisions, mitioual in their chartiovr; au! which, if they stood alone, it would Ist compatible with my con- . • • 1 t', ~,,„ it.. on tut. rig ht track cierlorts of public fluty to assent to, at the same ! goar- The Ilirott i ' time` it embrace, other , which are ui, rely ),,,,A, in reg. trd itt tit, ••eatiens system' . in khisemapt3, and not in my jungeineut warranted by au‘ safe at. all) note; awl wc rejoice that it is so The or true eonstruction of th , ..0,,....tituti0n T" Kditor SUN:. he ita..4 "tfili. a new Iliekory flail" and make a proper and ,tuutl iliscrun , in , atiou be- 11 , I •1, tween these difrtrcut prtwisiOn s , wou ld require A , .1:e rmin44l to break comobody's head, hit in l mono,' we say Don't let ' o e deliberate slits-us-ion el the getteral principles, a. ''' un— -t: well as a earrful scrutiny ttf details f3r the pus- up. but gRe it to 'mu right and left, hip and thigh pew. of rightfully applying those principles It , Titev tleservw it all, and more too Year after each separate item ,if appropriation. \ ear. we have sown "the woi kings of this 4yStetit PUbile opinion with regard to the V3lllO 31111 .: , 11l our .IWII vounty:' and year after year we have imp, .r 4 ante "1" Internal iinprovetneuts in Inc: , country is melt% tded Ti t e r ,. ~ ~, ai,,, p ,,,i f „,„ „„ pre:slit:l and iduittst pra3cd, agaiu , t. It All all Intuit tai lei% t• 111,111 pioseruhl with cm 43, altmc Li i, with no E.. 4 pt' x.e to blip it.., Wild mot and to ,ri• 111, tovft,..flt, ~ttglit t, L. (1111.1111 ea by sh i t ‘‘. '\ .. Cot help W.' feel like "speaking right them fully reti:iztt.l. The lontlik . 111011L• 1.411 of ',„, , ~ • 1 ,,, ! ' T 1,.. F, i ,, ~ ,; 1\ - di , . \ 11, ~I I Di . ..rent . .. between tic..., wMt ba‘ e 1, 0 n rega.r,lol ' ' t 1 ' ' 111. ", men . ) I, ol" lre not ttt o t itmcd t., Chi a- the frivii‘l..,r a r.\ •I , 'lli ,:. irifernat tinproe aieti.t- by Ow (;.•11,1:ii (;,, ; , rtimt „ iii , ~„,i t h,,,,, l • , I 1111), it i- i.I,•N il.•III 111 ~ \I i the room, •ind , 1i t:11 .ate eOll , 11l .411 portte-, ulllll Itl •••• e up st it ittinfrd 1 . 1 , Net', 11l 'ugh 11110 ft... 1 ( " 1 " 1"1"1 Tl l l , \ 1 \ Nt.rtl .11 tt true; wt. 101tionli. It ail with r ,, teo,lerat 14,11, ~t expelirlic) ttWll but there 11.1 n e mi , tsion t , •tii julgeruetit, ot is, tc. II ku •,111, , ,t11 gr•ltni , l,, lAeu 0pp,,,e,1 1 , , t "g. it. 141 ,3•44111 Id into nal 14.1. i i ir : t , ""l : . 1" , "' 'improvemeurs ' r,.,1„.„1 n. tuwent, a 2 l;r, k- ;, •,uti tt..1u,11,11.11 :11.' unc u.v,tl vv.lt tt,.. fruit) irrntati-Lietnr‘ 1.. • I, t • \ t..itiliti,it. tll.lll a, 1,, r It, tt-e".` then lutrr:llll , ir tleripeld,.. J •t 1.11 tiot Valita./11- I.l(it,ti• 1,, lit, ..away it 111.,,• ~r ,•1 1"e ' ' If 411, • in Anil win. fectitA f ,, r the ~Eject , Hitt nyl.tt ) , , ,i ;It:tit effivt• eider it itst;iintl,,•ut 111 1 .. lilt -.4.111 10 lit.: lirt. i'r, ,1 , 1, ti: • vent :it it •ti - ,ti watur, .1 lett tr, vitt ~ff ;‘,/ 1111npriati,11.• t.ll,lki• O f tit wlwle 1 ~, dome, „hug 1,, w.) or( Wll . l the r . ;•,, f, 1! 11 , tell 11 , "1 ti . • 1 , ...11 , t 1 th. , le . ,llart. Villillll , frlll tit 1,11 1'1111V11•11o111, EN...1.1101 • t - ter h\'L, I. ;„, I, is it.t.t4 nil. Ini ~1 r r, t. , 110 I -tr. , tit d •, 1 ,1, 1 •,,prt.,11• • I, •LI ti.)tt will ailtuit mu; •.1,111,.14. Itt It" -1164, , , 110 ' .11..11H b , • .I. .1.11. i. h 'ug 'I'I, r. -.l'lll. .1.-tt • tn. I r. • 11:1`. ditt•roll,.,• 1.0 I , :un INIA ‘li- .011) lull. 1.. ilit• lit xt 1/;1:,!‘ 1 . 11.141 to eUr~' iii it , :tit-. .• itioati , r, Jul Ow inn t bat th.. y. 1,. . I 111 , :111.1 f .rbit ) My.' 1. , , mi. „ii , i , p , „p i I A at pr,,, , t0, .11 ;1 u,l, I, 11-11 d. -.lllt-11 tur.., if h.. 11 1,, rt • l'r , -i tit hull elf the „( ,„ taht. I , I , ,tt ~), toll 11 , ttr -in 1.•. Mated, ind.f, 'tit, ~ t, 1.1,11 te fly \k•l au, /// vflur.l,lA.r, ttht, It, inlif V to•S r.. fil• • .14). r .1. •I t V . , lt I , Nt. t1it. , 1.1 i "„i •,10 1 „ ,1t wittild itinoptllildt• Wllll Lt.. !r ,, 11/ if Illy IT, .t,.! Thy tv..t11.1 I) C • 11,w,‘y. I tel.pll sto,- i K .1: lii ot, I I her h, al tII 1 • s';•• Ill••101.•s Is 11/ 1/t•lt'lil, lii rJI ;s r !it :1 better to day,' :Mil it Iv‘.til , l h , , .tlicr to, I. de vids•sf I) 1,. tt,r 1.111 I. [ lvo t i ts :111 \ Wa, gi w n vs \t caul, t., the tar , lt,, ' author of ate 11, 1 , .rtivur:thh. l ulh to], "1 think 3,oir , :rati.ititothet must Its , 11110., ill IL.• IIJ Vila ur ;;t , Ils II Is• sit!! ;- , • 1 11 , I 11i.,r1.11 hip --.d %%1111. t t Als• liti, 1.. ,u every da:„ • 11111, bet: • Ih.lll he %.i• 111. da% Is•tore: : I - 1,41, Walt such sill :lc eutonlati. , ll keg-ping her I+ol. - It scs.ms 1., u. tiho ii .11111, I f•. 1.44 'Slat nt wir in n I,T Is Ist; ; %.1.• sect fr,.ni .4, , -i. eiLiniher I'.vert arri‘.ll 11- 2 r, .1/ oi small, mid i•v , 1...1 i•• Il• Is It tic nu II the af Tog 0,• Inc t half' Isost, ota paper, twice 01.11. l'I• t, tl , 10/‘i 11.41 I) brought lilt„ ;h. It , 1 , 1. zel Nct. aria ) 'redoeed ,0n5i , 1.r,1,1y1,. Htk ipptbmg, tie.) 014111 t.,1111 011111-eh 1 • ••• 111 rt•treatuig It I, true, from th, list, ..r Litt It Netter Iss; It! As ,it .1 `ll . 4lslglll , pss;lit V/J w. - I ,k ,• .1 hittct •.1111u111141t )• It i. phi!' the ;east 1111 , 111 g, lit ohs rv. r t th. Turk, httt,l- „h 3 th, ) tt, uht , uu.l worthy ;:, .1 or it il! Turk' 4 . 1 \ c...iggerated The e• , rii 1 . •iis I ;lit, it prtt.y much their "au ;, •_1,11.11 411141 ill, the newspa per.; lilt .11 ti ;If t 11h, let, carried off his full 'AI ire s•I s Else hoportt. Et In true that vci‘ hciailfs a new victory for the Turks, lint it gclicrall . ‘ demolishes the report of atL wing tic hunks balanced as be fore, eou--idpialac doubt as to the correct ness of ~ a l i the credit the Jonfaul tcliot,As lion% Tit.ti gio".—Tii , Robert M Graham, charged with the ~f Col boring, took plaoe yester day f , retioon at the Toombs, iu presence of Cor onet O'Donnell. To the usual 11111CtsIlilltW asked him b) Ili.. Coroner, lie answered, through his e•ain.ci, that be was :IS years of age, was a prac tising physician, and bas been connected with a drug store in New Orleans. In regard to the charge, he said:—"l am aware a st.iteu3ent male by n o cannot be used as evidence in my favor. The eircuinstances I would wish to explain eoitld have been easily kroved , hy the facts which might have been elicited 'on the &Toss-examination of - the witness against too. As the Coroner refused to permit we or my . counsel to (Toss-examine upon the case, I respect • folly decline to make any statement of the par ticulars of the caw; but T do must solemnly ile tlare, that whatever I did at the unfortunate and melancholy occurremx: which has placed we now before you, I dial it in self-defence, against a most. .sudilen, violent and unexpected personal attack upon me by the deceased. The Coroner then fully etimmitted fist murder, and refused all applications for bail. The prisoner tlieu took leave of his frieutl,, and was conducted to his cell by the otbeors.—S. 17,r01d. Custom DIscoVERI 1)N TILE th.ssirr.—Zio- Dk SPRI;44IS.—The party eugawd in the surrey of public lands, under Mr. Pool, found at a point about 50 miles east of St Felipe, in San Lido county, a singular collection of fountains or springs of soda water, +hunted in a tautly plain or depression of the surface of the desert. The spring is in a mound of symmetrical shapu, taper ing like a sugar loaf, in the centre of the top of which is a hole, unfathonable, containing the carbonated lieverage, fresh from its natural lab oratory below. Some of these mounds are six feet high, and clothed with a grmn and iuzuriant coat ofgrass, while others are shaped like an in• rotted bowl, and MITI by a growth of mine. The water is deacribt. as baying the same spark ling and effervercing finality as that ordinarily bold by apotlieutries, and was drank with avidity by, both the men and as belvtgiNg to the party. When' impregnated with acid of any kind it produood instant efferveacence, anal in that form is peentiarlricfresbing as a drink. Some of it haik,been &Might in, in order to be chcmi ea/ly tesW, with the view ,to,lnako Ud flies:ovary of some prskikal utility.— Cohyoraio Alper. I A ooniole oft Bowery b'hoya Wag caught is a thunder squall is the bay, Toe, who waa Fueh frightened, Salt!, to Ma causraioa is 4 1 Na y Move, out gas S yr. , "Ncs a Pt Wal Ige . ip4‘4Vblity • ORM UP, ileaset 3!ess . 4 .. sur : me t pair . , lAA a voyd, ,, ft . , . . 1 , 164 .7, isys Tom, "soasedis:sti await 40m, aid tbs. 4-11 zaidt."—N: Y. iffrror, \ .; oittc **ea t tr • E. it. r. .54 DEMOCRATIC STATE NOMINATIOIS FOB I}IWKRNHk• WILLIAM BIGLER, Of clyartield Fount} .1) 1/lik of 4:01.41. .IFREItIAII S. BliAolo Of Sourt-r,el Omuta : Folt CANAL COMMISSIMSEIt HENRY S. MUTT, Or Pike elonaty l,•11•:!! r - ral Mill It ! r • rj! , 10 ;„ , Itom , Lai.., (hi (I, .141; s , (•• Imply IN :Lit II lip iitil u,t i rpai it him it tiriiit tt nu t hi; —if the Swat ha riill ~f w. r. is; I ti M"111 , 111,it.• it, :i11,1.11131 E''.l .1) i, • , 1 711,3 Lill pr.pk rly :LII) UM`. thin Thi , es itkut. ulv. frtini the langtnn.re in another bleu -hall von -nler it ineuntiwnt "f.. preqcnt prosolit :it It to•xt Inattiroi Vli•l% ; tilt' ,nt)- • rt, .oit it, I ild 11. 1.1 4.1 /I . li Q. 41 .4 t 1 . 1) at uu ..wti tr•1).11 ri UIIM 1 . • •1 •o. •pt II Sief •• • „ yO, I ' ll 4 I 4,1 i, 'Oil , I 1 101(1 Ilt•• I r , 11-ITll , ' , ll^lll T.rvoi ~..., It 04-c, .twi i; I 4 t.wrr • ;I Ir.)114 e, a paper with di , siiit4l speaking of an ad .:l recent!) e—tited by Die Democrats of Phila ,h•lphia, on the of tho ;Slow! Vaud, ..ye: revicws the legislatiou-giyiug a part of the fond to i.eet.triati tti rt .4-wit-lie., and showsi that the:noir , olmorhois inter , ty tlsr 1,%. s, 404 htic se, i T 1 . // 1.L19, Ly erhig g,./ Whig sows. Thu dutasutetit is a rpm) one is many of its detti6e, and tslaiorse/eHr/y that the Whi: , Committee had I , .ry"tft a it lee - thi . ol4 Nu h;Cl,,rq of if:/r.' ny , the by, the Go.. ilr i, a dumb :is au , ty:do..4r upotkt hit, part of t h u whiz Wares's: SLA V ENV IN KAN4As.---.Seventl weeks age, a meeting was held in a frontier town of Missouri. at which resolutions wer4• adoi ted in r e lation to the settlement of Kan-as, of a most fiery pro-sla very eltarauter. The preu,Alitigs 4,1 this meet ing wore published in all free soil whig presses, accompanied by extended editorial remarks, try ing to prove that•the sentiments which animated that gathering were pArtieipausl iu Ly the whole body of immigrants trout Missouri to the newly orgattheed Territory We were perfectly satisfi ed that sueb was , trot the ease We knew that there s. .• re f,.4 Ira I let. at Cite South as Wei I as the Soil'', and that it would be no more reasonable to judge of public sentiment in Missouri by the engine of a few "fire-eatin:z," brawlers, then it would be to ledge of popular ttelitig in Pennsyl vania by the Anti• Nebraska meeting iu our (!ourt House. en N1111341:I evening last. And o ur be lief in this respect has pr..ved well founded A correspondent of a Worcester print, (a whig pa per, by the way, and repuillished in the (Sodi.d."- iniims last week.,) in a recent letter from Kan sa*, says that "a majority of the NI i s sowri anA w ho Imre arrived here,,far freni countenancing the lan less protestations of a few of their number against the immigration of north e rn In• e i ne n i n t o the Territory, are opposed to -)avery, and are oven anxious to have northern and eastern men settle- hem, regarding them as the most enter prising and the best fitted to build up a flourish ing State. The resolutions adopted by a few hot-headed CIOVILici are by so weans a tair sam ple of the !labile fitelisg." Sear The President of the , upon leering be Cdpitol, on Saturday afternoon, was grossly insulted by three rtiffians-L-sahl ls. southern. ers.- They ailed him to take a drink which he donlinotl, whoa one of them threw au egg mid bit the Provident of the lirad. lle was arrested promptly, hut dimberged at the request of Geo Pierce The wets here intoxicated. ---.►- - lir The elerviand /Posh/ tlii• im portance of cultivating the willow as d braneh of agriculture Mud onmimerce in 'he Stnte of Ohio. It mays davits Nortberat Ohio much land lice unoccupied which, by the rearing of willow, would yield from .114 to omo huadesd per cent. upoe tile integument. 'became may be said of a large portion et Pausitytteniel "-The %reign sews by the At%title does log 111.1011111 t to tolitib, mod Aesop we lave not desised it soomeagy to hisber sp our Siisslts with the diefetle. UM raw ,r, 4l ! 6,•V1.4.41 ts••• 6,2 4.1 ltd 11.1 , - d.•w ~~~ ;i ILl' r N~ 0.1,, .1 di I,ltisitii.irastic.ti 1:3111 - - Fussesirgeebilliurit is It 1, pretty eirblint now that linos" in Penn ylvania is "up *stump," and nintemptendy the triumphant mtri.poo which Fetlock hoped to ride lute the Giiipernatorial chair, effiligleti'll swaiiiiwii in the tialongh of deeptensi." 'he hid thrown out to Abolitionism and Free &item, by the Whig Address, which, by the by, was the last trump iD the paeh, has met with no response save that of derision. This is evident, not only from the sedan of the Free Soilere themselves, but from the proc‘e4htge of whig meetings sot the whinings of the whig press in various sec tions of the State. Even our ootealiporwy of the (;,ceit, has abandoned hope in that direction,antl, waking n virtue of necessity, tells his readers that "there is it yeotriv feeling in the several Northern states in favor of pm.erving the whig pal ty intact, - and then ad‘iscs them to "stand by their organization, local, Suite and National " 'i'his was not the language of the whig press in i'enn.ylrania six weeks since. Then a grand "fu ,lf sll the eletnents,"black spirits, and blue iippiosed t. the Itetnis•racy was confident ly talked of as the result of the passage of the Nebraska bill; and so sure did the whig press thi:ent it, that the idol, of giving tqi the distinct Ii galliaati"ll .ir their party, sad of 'ignoring its wow. Been, and ciiining out under new and !dark , 0.14er-, wit:- fir trim iliStasteful! (hi the other Lind tle• Fri • weri• almiast perstutilA to cry ,/ No, po, end sii ill fir volts and victory itut 1111.11 the- It it deceived so .11, 11 I,y their whiz. liretlicwa---; hey had been so repeatedly ti— ed to aettii so sleeves..., and foreotten •••iii soon after It wa- •••1 - that 141 their Ulla III , .) "Iscitlaoti t.i I.ik lief ire they t the I.it.il pluit4•• Ilene,. we ftuil that while six week ..Am.. u 1 mom eiery paper in the St a t e , Kitll rrer-r oaintenallet.ii it“w but a • "111.1 r) -.IWO 11111:1 4 / 1 •1 1.1111 cntertaiii , it for a mom. nt: .lti.l it t. w. II 1 ,, r ttt it Avlirti4pect that. such is the fact. \V.. revollect well. and so dilubtless the Free Soder-, how it was lir just such a - Sinn " a , t haVi• Itolow.-...teeking that t;c t i 1'a:,144r amt Mr Filliuore were elected—the ime -11‘4.-1101.1, r Ind 1114. other an .avowed \Vett, the Free !..loilerti helped toneconi plisli that .in .I they helped upon the di, hurt th. power reeeiL V a ( illt'i•k at tin Laud of the Wit if Ili I. ck war, t he FggillVe , lave law, -111,...1 mid afterwards 1.1 the W It! N il ',,nvotati”ii, will •Lti-wee. Thi- W. tl. . lit. it oilment the wing party iuvi 1, .1 th..ir :-44.11 allies to in It;. - .l and IS:e2, the, are agajn invited to it, •r th St.o.• I ',liv..ntion which nomin a ted !iv t solutions of the 11:111.:more Convention, the rugitive Slave law resolution and a ll: Still, . is wt .131. i heftire, the Frt...e tiotl• 1- 1,1 , 111.1 h tc. !Or l i i‘ eti, if they could not forget, ail thi, if the \l . Lig Stat Atitllrt , S had ammo up •ituare anil 144.1 the tuark )tut it ditl not, and lias gone to pot in Pcunsylvania! In iNiiitlerlititi with thiN, we notice that there are ,ther+ Of our whit brethren, bestitles our neigltlew oi the t;,•.„,1t., who mourn over their 1,13, red hope. ,d• "fu-ion," like tho.,e that can not 1,. emitforted Ilk. Editor of the l'itt,hur , h o ot•dttite4 fie had set his heart up on ••:.1.-1,11,.' It WL. 111, bread and his in , :it—liis tlome by day, and his dream by niht. With it, lie eimuted with confidence upon tb ' overthrow ot it... iayineii.le Ifitanocracy; bat alas; like many human hopes, the frosts of disappointment have nipped his }podding hopes, and Jeremiah-like, he cannot he eionforted! There is a depth of wo in hi , Limentathms that, were it not for their ..-- grotesque Surroundings, would b,' truly pitiful. As it is, we rannot but smile to set. bow he pleads and wrestles with the Free S.silers Ile says, "lio sees with iinaff,s•ted regret, (no doubt of it I indientions in certain ituarters that a portion of the Fria‘ Delinwratie voters are so far dissatisfied with the address of the whig State Central Com mittce: as 1., refuse to enter into hi.ans of "tii.ioti" mill go for Poi,hia'K. This be CO saile rs tilt . unkindest cut of all, and more CI , n hints .i•- th it it is inflicted through a 41irit. of "g•ratuitous fauludintling," which he stigmatizes as "unrea sonable and exacting " lie tl.o n g o es on t o t e ll them how deeply the course they have adopted "grieves" hitu—what an "interest he has felt" in the project of "fusion," and how truly and unreserv.slly he, himself, has "felt the outrage and the wrong o ffered to the North by this dam ual le Nebraska bill." That flight is what we call "piling up the agony," especiallytta it comes from an Editor who, during the.life of the Fillmore administration, was as consistent and as unreserved an •LtiVqe:ltli 3Liti defender of the Fu gitive Slave Law as any in the State. Many and many au Folitorial we have seen in this same o,,rnliwo.ial .1 , ,,e,-,ial of Pittsburgh, approving and endorsing that, law. We always read them with pleasure, for we thought then as we think now that the law was just and right in principle, though perhaps scone of tin' details might be de fective; and that however much we of the. North mi g ht....b. , opposed to slavery, duty to the Consti tution demanded thatollits protisions shdtald be faithfutly ohs. reed. „ . SKNsllll.}: To TIIK "ART.—The Fredonia Ad e, rt , don't g.• "firiioci" with the Abolitiooists; on the contrary, condemns in round terms The proposal "fusion" Convention of fag ends et Sar atotra on the llith It thinks that the plane of meeting "has any thing but a healthy look," Saratoga being the "summer r e sort of invalids and aristocrat,." hence it thinks it not at all strange, on the thmtrary "quite fitting that the broken down and sick politicians of New York, shouhl meek to mend their failing fortunes by at tempting to direct the populAr current through Saratoga Springs4ne if that locality wait, instead of being regarded a corrupting atmosphere to all healthy moral if not physical organizations, a popular and convenient place for the resort the ycomaury 9f New York. To speak within bounds, we way say, that tbil actual cost of a wwei meeting at Saratoga, inch to is NillalliMpirl t4A, will AMOn at 1,0 more than the expense of mending a thiomitel emigrants to Kansas This a ltrtsrfirtil rid* of the waiter, nod we hopy will not 'be Mat sight of in this or any other lo cality "As we said before, the Aff . terfieer is entsulile to the Nal stir Another able addreis has been issued by the Democratic Central Committee, which we shall take an earl) , opportunity to publish. As we said last week, throe aliseivas of the Ciwasait tee will keep, and when the hot weather is over, and our Verniers get through the suasmer's work, will be read with Wend. sir Another iiikwel to 'pretty beery extent Las occurred in the Plidledelphis Mist the et feeder is as ; 'rep yes, who, report sip, lesibees allowed to creepy, Thir sit-nit* ti" One of the Whig poirn here . the resolutions of the mettlsoll haltthil Court [prose on Monday eve, 410:ws immark, able for vehuninnatinesejlind verbaity *an for any other quality.". We acknowledge that this criticism is just to some falcon—still they are remarkable for something else. They are re markable, because they pledge the Whig party to *ever sews the egisetios of the ekes qua- Lion until Aie act forming the Territories of Ne braska and Kansas, is repealed. Asa repeal is impossible, and known to be so by every speaker and actor at the meeting, we take it,,ibe reeled that ''agitation" henceforth will be-the pro viuce of the Whigs ei Erie. This must be so, or they must repudiate their "resolutions. But why sb9uld repeal be sought, whether practicable Or not'' Pollock, the Whig candidate for Oov• ernor"---3 man pronounced by another resolution at the same meeting, to be "an experienced Statesman," a "pure patriot," and "an ineor ruptild.• man," asserts positively and without Ilitalitieatitin, that "slavery. can have no legal existence in those territories"—that if it goes there "it will'be there, not only without author ity of Constitutional law, but in violation of all law - It' this is so t and the Whigs should not contradict sod/ an "experienced statesman,"tben why pledge themselves to unceasing "agitation?" thick we an 31.3! the outiVe, and if the peo ph• cant, If )1), then 'they have not got the pene tration we give them credit for In times past the NVliig party had well defined principles and ineamires for which it contended, but as defeat 31 . 1 •r de fea t ovcltook the party and ile leaders, aild tle• ....1/11tt.i. nniontres and principles of the I lemoerney were tried and approved . , theirs, one : do 1 - to e ., hecaiue "obsolete, until at last they , 41:11i.1 now with a single plank under them, and that a borrowed oue—"agitatiou." As liucle Cabin was a I send to the Abolitionists, %cis the Nebraska bill to the whigs. To use I he la»gnage of another, noisy philanthropy, loud it I , .11 t I patriotism and sonorous theology can not exist in quiet They "abhor a racisum."- IVe have a class of people amongst us who have t.omplacently assumed a monopoly of all the mo rality and all the virtues They meet at regular periods and sing each other's praises, and flatter their vallily by contrasting themselves with the wicked %%odd around them The very essence of their exe-teuee is opposition; like tin:lama .licepsk in that is stretched - over a drum, they art• perfeeth quiet unless struck, differing only that. they continue eribrate - longer This is t h e e t : pot of people the whigs hope to catch by their resolution: to "agitate " Rut will rltcy ..tieceed.' Aye, that is the question'. We think not, for when people are troubled with the insa tiate vanity alluded to, they are not mach in clined to follow, but rather to lead. And this won't suit smell whigs as made the speeches and wrote the resolutions of Monday evening. Tlusi part of the programme they like to perform them selves, and henee we are inclined to think that the pledge to "agitate" will he as hastily aban doned as it was evidently hastily made. - ter We can say "we have taken wore comfort in olle hour" in following op such defenders of Slavery as the Ote , rier, with sharp sticks "than w e e ver ill" in our irle,d , life" ls•fore in playing, a he does, the lick-spittle for Southern men wh* pers • "dearly beloved brother - of the James town 1 is evideutly beside himself! We won't . y_as was said to Paul—for that might be const ed into romp:trine him to l'aul—that "much learning liath made him toad;" but we will say that .'negropliliia'' hath! For certain ly no :tittle man would charge that because' we sustained the principles of non intervention--the principle that the people of a territory, like those of a State, have the right to regulate their do mestic institutiens to suit themselves—therefore we are the "defenders of Slavery," and conse quently "the liek-spittle fur Southern men-whip pers " t• acknowledge that we have little.aym - polity with the noisy abolitionists of the North, who, like the Folit,w of the Doinom-reat, stand off and bark at Slice holders, and think that they are thereb) loesening the chains of the slave We have always looked upon Slavery as a great misfortune, not only to the .lave but to the mas ter—end not only to the master hot to the coun try—lint we are quite shre that political, noisy, ranting, Uncle Tom „fasilitionisin, will never abolish it' It. can onlyibe abolished through the efforts, and the aoquieseense, of the people of the South themselvev; and Ilhat. aequiescense we are equally as certain never! will be obtained by the denunciations of cowardly northern fanatics, like the. blditot of the Demilerar. We have a good deal of sympathy for tht , efforts of the real phi lantlimpist--otie who will'brave thelierila of the deep, and the perils of tlie land, to carry joy to the h ea rt s of others; but this mock philanthro py -that consists in instead of acts—of words instead of money-L.-of ranting instead of reason--was always and live r will be our peculiar aversion. And we acknowledge farther, that we fear wo would shed but few teen, if any, if every such babbler, whether he ,be guilty of the act through the eolumus of a' tuis-called Dentorrai, or upon the floor of Congress, should be subject ed to a tuonth's regimen under a "Southern man , whipper.- The Council Bluffs Bugle sap that the first white male child born in Nebraska since the passage o? the organization bill, was horn at Dr. Clark'A Hospital, Nebraska Centre, iu June, IMSI, and was christened Bill Nebraska Kinney. Ili:. father is the lion. J. F. Kinney, ChiefJua tiee ..f fifer A fellow who attetnpted, one day last wet:k• to poison d faintly of thirteen persons in New ealled by tiw pap's "an eccentric individual " should think he was rather ei.e.ntric n•.‘ lung rupu and a short shift," wonl,l the proper penalty for such eeeentrici ty "A Lirri.i Moue GRAF'S, CA PT. BitMM."— Boum; from N,irth Carolina isdutitt the belief that thug, demo rat, a brother to, the famous Capt Bragg, has beat Dockery, Whig, for Gov ernor, by some 1500 majority. The Login/stare will also he Derneeratie, thus immuring two United States Settatmo:--. The State went for Meru in 1t452, by only some (KM end previously wu as Doted for Whig victories, as for its Fitch, Tar, and Turpentine! - 4 Herron DMATlO.—Bestes los bees de• tested for Congress is the 'Bt. Leeds distrks, by some ROO, by Kiursierr, whip. This is swim' & doulAss, W Bestows As4asiwasks `41411110 A Nirr rcla irOkkliftiniga:--b sspook made aMt days i s ! l, 111.4440 14 S wa m Clessat, Fob of - 404 io do fiat that. away thusasa4ll4l4 sim ai : m / die Dealantioa at l ailipsamma wi ~: ~` lasi week milapplisialt took lowa(' TM" (risk tee Ami-11110~1Niviii. williag MOM Wit imildedi Oa room," oily law saw was seek is tlis bask *sled io Obi logs, sod almost poralysoi la Ow "orgasm"' of igossult. Tile dosesstratios woo Samoa Ihr egad war; Ilsoloi bawl Ws sag imp impswitiess avow** ms meth, bs 1101 sad mambas ts witness the Immadiairs °gashes oyes, wee* ma ammo aa the mewraere at the illseral ef a hunt meakey! True, 11/110S die hen ring as Blemggy mai s two tallow rearaas. eat bate fwar penes, threw their Oak stria( light spew the same of aids" bat Ibis, se paw a show .1 "gnome far the wiiiiies." only tamed ey make the pig gismo Rope %visa Id*, fillets( the lemabag. The int Mien was I. *pais% bet it wp some dew be furs any sae email be *wad ...apes "oath to free tlit male, sad bettome a father to the "great eartee." Bet a "father" wee a‘ hut found—set orardy w "foam I. L. mei," but a father la the wills eitabe awaited tie rostrum, sad deslared tie abiLl berm, its eyes fatly apes sad Us hem bib and molter is toed realities to b. Lela- Wed to tie dimly maxims audience. Tim mil had t.- formed se that aim at Meet of lbw distiagalefied waters of the Wag household wesisiNseader their amatheessis ap es the bead of th. "Nebraska errissile," bet whoa the time ease, sad the word was gives to Amp, two of them ems eat They blot duabgese meek Where afar o(, sad being "old stagers," cosseladad that to new laurels were to be wee ia seek • Mid. Net so the third. Be had got his speech writtee oat—bad auselitted it le memery, sad as uppodenity of delivering it was eat to be lost, eves though the proven was gloomy. Mr. 8111 apsmed by paying be was bun. a whig—(geed, what ea (iamease deal of trouhle tint leaky tam mast have saved his aurae) sad be rhered tie muse been of its wsodfiest priariplea. WeNiought that a good hit, sad inetinetively reeenvid to the "steadfast adhawstee" to Coca skis' sad bard eider is 11411—to preteetioa in 1844—t0 military glary in 1848— sad to that "rich Irish beggar" sad "sweet teases se eent," la Int. The Demurrals, be routisedea, west lo foe peddle pleader, bet thsi whip, dear dysp•ptie souls, "had no relish for pleader." That is jot watt the spider said to the Sy, wises the Ay wee out, just what Corwis said wheal be dipped that Gardner spasm isle the Tremor ry —Just w bet Crawfurd saki whoa be barked aphis tiskpbai eart, mid shoveled Uncle Bum's late it. Re this breached of sad went is ea Negrophohia—deetered the Cisintorrat. the natural allies of the south, the right arm of the elate power, lost foegot to say it was • whig Presi dent that signed the Fugitive Slave law. la regard to the Nebraska bill, thus Ow Whip lurelaS to repel, bat how the thieg was to be aeoomplishod was 1144 ar clear as the noon-day sea, or even the dickering tallow tamales that male darkness visible. Io roped to Pollock, the speaker thought he was a decidedly great mis— treat as a lawyer, great as • politiolaa, greet as a states man; and groat, is a wont, as "sumo pumpkins." He was going to Le elected, too, he thought—that is, Who gat votes enough. Upon conelesion he moved the &feeble meat of a commies* to present resolhstious, which was of course carried. Them ease cries for "Kelso! Kelso! Kel so!" but no Kelso responded! Though down in the pto gramme, he was ,wt of the farce! The 1/01141 kook atasent ad the tali for orewr whip, when our Mimi W 11.10114, tlf the True A...rico., seeing that the &adieus* would rot stop to hear the resolutions naked "something was dose," arose and asked permission to speak. - What he had to say was brief, but pointed, for it laid bare the baceitaisteney of the whirls course upon the slavery questing', and what was more it was received with ell Went delight by the audience. OW friend MAGILL, of Harixwmiek, soother Free Sailor, gave them a loath, sad a "touch on the raw," and no sir take. He told them in plain language W they wasted to "save their beton," they must come over to the Pres Boil ers out right—that if they . dieret, Polloelt would hp defeat ed as sure as fete--that Metals was after him with the nailed Denincrsey at his bark; sad more than that. Bei. tea was a good and true man, s sea of the peep*, and the people knew it! This *tinted more applause them any thing that bad been said doritng the evening, and showed conclusively which way the wind blew! In regard to the resolutions adopted, the apaimarseiesi, Anti-Nebraska whig, says they - were "more remarkable fur volismioussess and verbosity than any other quality." And as to the num►sr presoak the same paper declares that "the meeting was not large.at any time, neither wag it particularly harmonises." As to its eathesiaass the Chnoticie, another whig anti-Ifeheaska organ, says: "So lice interest was mattifested by the meeting on the sab jeen, that oat" is at • loss to easjoeture whether a twepritg of those present preferred one mode of preasediag or the other." And thus died, without burial{ of Clergy, Anti- Nebraska's's in Kris. Peace to its ashes. kis. The weather we're had for a work past has bees Superb, baths/ the writ of a little rota. We've (.41 as fine as a new aad them *stow; rosad fsU Moos, ►ow wildly it has looked down, aad what risk's. of ealico sad bliss it has infused iota the heads of horse we wet No it boys, but deal aide with the ageetioas of that •, of doateetie productions—canoe sad whaSeboae! tionie Iro—The city Yule** of Syniesse Imre etepied of the grog on Sundays, and now they want to stop the people's milk —that w they are trying I. pan an ordi• navies, against the delivery of milk on Ehandays. That is what we rail rafting the thing into the grosad. go. A fight same ut the other day is Washington, be twixt) two Honorebles—the Hos. Nike Walsh, of New York, and Hon. James L. Seeterd, of tieorgia. The "Hs" woo gives by the former to the latter, which was respond ed to by the geodesist' from titter& by giving the great Subterranean. ie parliamentary [envisage, "the sour"—a ehair, n.it a revolver, was the weapon end no the ottestaioe. This is a p.al begienieg; and we trust, hereafter, that if our eigh duller per diem houorables "will let their angry passions rim," they will select, as Mt "the present instanne, other arenas beseitte the hal of the HOW for their bellig erent thapthy, to,. The good people Conneetient don't do t►io(l by halves' When they go, "they go it," whether it be epos the water question, the whiskey trassidea, or both. Their Maine Law moat iota operation the other day, amid the Ilerifor.l papers wort that for a month previous Mugs Ittpwr uno Fold in that eity than had boon for the previoas twelve month..—that is, the liquor bueittees of a year was erowde.l into a womb. The aloe ware sot isoalinini to the "rumier," either; by tw mama. Everyhooly, and es. eyyliody'r relation, laid in a stank for a "rainy day." AV- The Cleveland /...eler says a married use was Arnaud from s carriage trout the side ors bail use by his lawtoil wife, sad soundly hisnie-whipped, near the Wesley an Much, ea &gelid Snot, ea Saturday altersoos. The crowd amend her on, and voted lbst she was a into+, sad right into the Surds. .351/1" Fro for the milli°. protolsod Am Cirrus ad tyrtisesiost fa ottothor colors. Of corns the boys win mole., but we doubt whet or say body otos shoo* stin, all work rashes look a dun My, sod gob( to lb* Arms is better thou %to foe Mall! The Bahia papers state that •large amber otiose weft& !free ea the Oneida Beek, are to etrralatioe them As they wfil doehtlee Ind their way to this "seek of the sonde," we advise oar Mime to keep a sharp look oat.— They are said to be well eakelated to deceive. Csirrton.—Wo Notice /.sing bambini op fee' a gift en terprise, to Itsd-naiuteee of abieb ie at Weedlaiti. The fano. meek, aaovary Wag sloe, srodoselidese vetoed at stsoit twine what dry are "meth; bailie, which these aro a tlioasnad or so ofoar s' sehoeriptioe to the Weetield Tntrimsip it, to &swim( of aws of whisks would Ise a worse aalletion than so attack of elteloott Cava Asa groom—The other day the "Angel Q. si„" the vagabond who is blowing the trumpet of the Know Nothings throagh the essatry, held forth at Palmyra, N. Y. The dent day the telegraph recorded the feliewinc “TheiAsgel Gabriel held forth Isere hat efresiag, sat daring the sight the Callaelie Mut* wee broken epee— the Altar faridleas destroyed, sad stn saseweeeellel attempt made tot barn the building." "Tam Clem," is Ow tido at a woo lowsisal welt. &- pissed Ise the sot of Choirs sad Cburobso gosismily, - V. C. Taylor, Ilse wbo esethisto6 die Illawisel Coeviostimi of We oily. ispolisibms at 'bp witilior , will worm. les is rseawasswottog li bi die woo at tb6 pub lic It osiiiaiws tM but at dos OA ~is will ornoisidlew Ma boa; by at Ike walk b wall kid far doai laabaded ba yolk le a sib weft op Ib ads ► as trot r mire haeilb a.i Ma Ile Wat Se "Olias o "usy 1.,..t atilbout Ibbanyouo at a amber. mobs. b. bad by agOlamiga I.J. J. Late at Ay. Um. • spiel* loaf, NOM 011 posistllimel Ns led 10 ft she Ausesis ingsmatte-- Mmvoits hr nolibe• i •Mii, *ibis le Weft ill be siorses. Rift N 116 .411101 us% lie par alb 1111104; lo• 41016 .6 WI " baawialgost tM aldl be veil faalhuir IND %Ali lb* rr Mai names be Res dia SIOASIS. 6111/1111•11 MOW W 4 bePP sonise" Or Maw lls WA • bow as% *Watts nisidisti lest %OW iainiCat find Th. artumiNks Oath. Vas inn liditti Oreresp ile elm iris ClUft,,,,, New You, Aug . s , 1/54 Alter S few days of maps, the see mes s Mt as ever. So hot tins It seem. t. haw. k :Z . assaking to( a everybody. This proesisest steel is the street whitest soy toes bed ille reit , 1 " Weak that sandiest 'without say vats sae s l ,„„ si o w e iptes, fte bet that stiff etestd-ss sonars si t the hest, sad seekdies loosesise e s " 4 7' the roast esti are sass se sere. I reed is I s, 4‘ SOO N mere the afai.l repeats of the tholers, sad nosy," week Wire trees sexless eeestry !deeds i sn i sd ff I. get oat Qi the city if peesible darts( the Out ae 1 it lasi hew Pa•••• 117 o( • "Mk os t 7 shoiess, or say mhos as of the ordinary saw ,111, Seises, sad wiereervor, se I sever felt better % mi ., 4. pertieeier mesas, I go as shoat so weal, tads' vegedtbies widows Peer, despisig sal, that they Ar t ripe crt, stele. There is se sews. What lint, g i .„ has bees spoiled by the beet sad rendered nit V. here, bower, s soot mid rebellion, i s s, (Messer's to rook whkh oawiaiss b.( .14.1 s em, Jedge Bette both the U. S. Stearin Coen la ilk. the. Side preetieee therein. The }Q at , 4 . 41 - : ycetas Lawyer, hes already seised a sossadevssi, l ,, i. Woe as •MY SOMPlitha prestitioser hat father, rare his greet seseees is sit mass of (omit s i m s „,„„ wifti Me gives rio. to some jeeloseiea us the tort ,x 0 ,, 0 , 4. Nos. Is a ease of some importaare, tweedy Judo Betts is which Mr. O'Coaaor ear weasel us es* AU hod Goo. Botts eh the vibe?, and O'Ouasee, welt of Semi airlifted *mu how tiro at the course of the ether 'pea tar mai, Judge is erereallag die metioa wade by M, rr eolopLiikol of the saassal WWl' of um. Wiklet eossuated a tiro arganwat of as tfteidootal Prar be was goveraed by principle. M. lamb, did out doubt that • &endue to tie sew ell e m is overruling tile salsa, maid be found is ton of debases' Saporta Mr. treesser tbereb.re with as ollits Ed SIAN, wile► be nukes hue dellesey to Mr. Goa Berta. if 'SW. of ...al. 6, us* sue► derides Is deltaeoa's iteiporo, or r.. , emitters reediest* that Ida Mier" derision say of albs/ list of Abdo. vasubed by ha*. Ineb.4. , i 4311 the 1 7 . 8. Fispretrei Conti. sad the Court Coact of Commas Mesa, the Somme Curt 111.1. tier Court of t►. State. What 11111.111101 anai-eltalleage, manias to 1.. sees. A good setanyt,ingenims mind. hare lieul• 4, 4 seam time to diameter souse way of making pap er using up cloth. Several materials pronto t.„ rap in this mi. There is a gentleman nor ati who Laptev:nag • method fur tagging tt trus t , t ,„ emu. There is • kind of paper railed -tn. pro is coarse and tinny. The stew of gnu net those of core stalks are mated oa the outode •to thisiag surliest. This seating itt in reality 1a.,. ralists call it WM, and it is precisely the , stati all the 'Colt of • Sew Thee reatieg sites to. obetecle to the else of ma vegetables lot paw .4 aorta, homage it snide bet a very brittle teller' now thought however, that this dillieulty if , T new proem °reentering the sae:. Aram the assay queer businertse in oar -try tie queerest sad at the same time not the lan , is that of village making; aad this is tb. !t „, saburhaa villages about our city. Mr Itat , eyast Bangea lead Mr. Norcross form dilllll.9th ra let, IV sad purchaee Muslim co Long Lased al slew they , thee divide tato three hundred lot,. tok of v king lily lota for himself, leaving the rev r tired and Any to be disposed of. The item it. open as 0111614 hire ma agent, draw plane est village of "Utopia," advertise to the world tee village building company," and wait for the ' a seschaoir tomes dews to the Awe to 104 .r, sad talk about purchasing a lot. i hly fnagality try he had 184 up a thousand dollars, and Ie My a ermarealest spot is the country, where himself a heave !nod live on his owe lead, ea , the map with the s i gnst, who is a very agreeable gives him ranch ealsoirk ...format..., he soot. lot °messiest te the depot---not yet balk. let swot forgeto to tail hint,) sod saki his prs-ss the agent, 'That lot is takes by Mr. Sttatyper has also the five adjoining Wt. Ho is talkie" . • factory there." Our stectiesic know , akr ay 114 a shrewd and wealthy real roan Mho. maiden °, in the "Vtitspias village Milting isersessa. H. poise" to a lot on the appetite wireet. "'that says the war is tikes 11 Yr Mr. Owes has an iamain.. repatriates to „ ty. sever knows tu,touek marling wino coatis( golden. "But the sext lot is sot n. tinned the meat, sad it is**. se good Bees promised the refusal of it to Mr. Norcross. lot on the other side. "Does he own awl asks oar Mend. "Issaioneely," says al, tot of half a doses or sore of Mr. Noreroo' Inu where real-estate i. going to rise, be doe " of the Whir to dud the lot is made otter to o his CM are aide over to the eqmpany to spare one hundred mod illy lost are Mon da the faith of Mr. Muneypnany, Yr. &wpm se , moss. Thine pm, and the worthy trw sell • lots as theylkd sold out the former tsie., sod pia is rsally,turaed from • fox= tato siting.. to est in it ia all sold, they have bought s new few a new company and christened a see valise. mound poerkedag the funds $ 4 a new .perawt.w is the way New Yorkers make their tortasom for SM,OSS what cost wiz months before slo* , t the way in which suburban village. ere Wilt York city. Yours, Barrier advertises .3elfolk Pqr." be got his original stock fres Prins, Albert advertised Jenny Lied, and every b..iT erof hesbegged• Of MOM the Prince Albert Ow pip, nod every body will be humbug is bet one stop, it avow, hes the rohlini. loos, even in heinheg. Jenny Lind and 40 64 - The (inutile ea/aloes its reatiers "not any u( the nostrums WA which the Issw‘i That's jest what we dank.. A skit Oita id is his newspaper fare prescription, as be e.e. his boots to the baker's shop to bars thou moo` cry one to his trsels." —.A. w. Sisvess, Zs+, s Yeats* 1.4a , .. - ts T. T. MIAs, Esq., am use of tike Ledrr. We with the wow lima aft u( let chilly the huh to get their pay foe their labor Bdwana Qafaey, Treasurer of the 4 mewls Slavery Soekay, says if it was'al t" sea like to drink ems like this. - Ti• 14""'" gal memory of dessaiiel ullrysold." Thu u the htD 4l eta out atria& Anti-Nobeneka agitator* " 1 "' wet &Wed or the Jamestown • oil o*w ' mute et' We sotie• t•* they Mre been ha. lut Wu up es doe Westerre i• Ohie hue. D remarry is sa ery •s • ibper'. m , •uth ow • woe —0, W. Showe, gag., kw retire , ' Ir.ui , b. vibe Marin., sad to sseee•ded LI Mt.Vr. Glair. As prevkitaly seeueerea, Grow fur the porpoise of eatatiolishieg hi. •.N. , .✓.' "Wog nay it wave." wmaryper s►eimoually Ira sot moth heldad &boa The Ciro •n r that ratans Ito tharpaars Omagh 4.4 Is , days an we ►ate bad—will nevor Kei 3 ° ll 4r. a that kis& *law Ilontuseis T•01:111.F. - T6e no"'" at*****" Net homier of the Ka°. N" th ' g 1.11 noisily hose arrested for %bigamy C- 614. " " IP iiseiples Imoresbosts hip him s lath' _ -- Willie= C. Toby, leder died is lisevielmenk rosistly of eooostupto on Ma way Nosik tos liss Woe& was • for writer, and of a A labottag 'sea while diW &I, howl a "areas lox." (roma, mid* es examataatioe, vat •611 pia Is law alsemat ut Ilea sus Pie sisa in silver eui ba isobar hot lbws bay at Ow • NM Us* MOW WOW .114 W "Ow se isaa waist, arisilia Apralb, whose Issaoss iredby se aftsaties. If Ir. w.f.. usill:tiglw IN aoUo of ii. rl," he year asespape The MittttlM Americo. yea solimitift. that do Itricraak- -, air/al Ws a somisoa liana Wig ass at aramotaa I=l Air GINS lielb limo eposol ia the M • «.t..—t. awl MS 2Eil ICI