THE ERIE . 'BS " VER. DISPIJ. 7. 8L(0•PI, idlt•ir SLOAN & 110011 E, Publishers and Proprietors, .4(TUMOAT Democratic State Ticket. FOR St'PRSIIt JeDGZ, WILLIAM A. PORTER, Or rIIII.ADZIXIIIA FOB CALL COMIIIRSIoNER, WESTLEY FROST, AY IrAYKTTZ CO News of the Week. —The will of the late Joseph Paul, a wealthy farmer of Washington township, Ducks county, is just now the rub jest of much surprise and remark. Mr. Paul was killed by falling front a barrack. He left a widow. a lad# who at the time of ber marriage, was possessvd of $2,060 or ,53,0041 in her own right, but no children On vpcaing the will, it war discovered that she was left comparatively nothing; that a brother of the deeessed had been willed fear times of ground, and the balsaee of the estate bad been left to two nephews (his sister's sons) equally, upon the singular conditions that they were both to change their sautes, one to Joisepb Paul, and the other to Joshua Pool; and in cal. 'Mbar one refised to do so, then the estate was to go wholly to the one who complied with the conditions. One of the nephews, both of whom reside in Backs county, was a married man with three children, arid as a change of name would be rather inooriveuleot under inch circumstances, be has sold out his right to the other for„ . 114,000 in cash. The purchaser decided to comply with the °auditions, and has accordingly been changed into Paal by the court. The widow, however, not satisfied with receiving less than she brought, has filed a cereal against the will to the courts of Bucks county, and intends evillest:ldg It there. —A statement has just been, laid before the Scoots, whichthews how very handsomely the State has been Mooed by one of her agents. It appears that in the year 1862, John M. Bickel, who was then State Treasurer, appointed the Attorney General and Dr. John W. Ham- Mond agents to collect dues from corporations then or that might thereafter be ib default. On the retirement of Amenity General Campbell, F: W. Hughes was associated with Dr. Hammond, and when Mr. Hughes retired, Thomas R: Praaklin succeeded pm. The appointment of Dr. Hatamood was renewed t , sueeessive Suits Treasurers.— tinder the authority thus trived, be isolleeted from vision, corporations a very tare amount of money, mush of which he paid into the treasury, but the sum of $25,727 still remains unaccounted for, u per re: ceipts in the treasury, although Dr. Hammond's term of °flee .spired in May, 1856. The Treasurer says it Is by DO lesions eertain that there is not stilt more in his heads. Hammond never gave any security. The Attorney Generals associated with him aila in no way implicated in his dor fmalt. Their connection WWI to have been merely e.l offloio and formal. ,—/ire..Loviaa Fisher, of Newfane, Niagara scanty, was oit eumniaptiob before hulas* Donnelly, of Lockport,N. Y, oa Thisreday last, under • charge of Grand Larceny, in taking Notes, Certificates and other papers belonging to the estate of Warren Carpenter, deceased. The ease is somewhat peculiar. Mrs. Fisher lived with Carpenter for six years discharging, all the duties of a wife and house 1 keeper, and it is eversupposed that she and a child, that she says, Carpenter is the father of, were to have the pro perty. Carpenter made •o will, and hie brothers took out leturs of Administration on the Estate and caused the ar rest. It came out in evidence that Carpenter purchased MN. Loving of her husband siz years ago for the sum of US, and that they bad lived together as man and wife since that time. She was held to await the action of the Grand Jury In the sum of Is2oo. It is said that a snit is to be brought in her behalf to recover the property or a portion of it fur herself and child. —Borne shrewd swindlers, in New York, mourning the name of 011iphant, Bartlett A Co., and claiming to he er lenitive manufacturers of West India coffee, have been for the past month doing a heavy business in swindling (*wary merchants. They commenced with sending 15,000 circu lars to the leading merchants in every city and county in 1,, the Union, °mutilating them agents for the sale of their coffee. As the fruit of their' enterprise they have lately been In the Tempt of letters remitting over $ 1 . 00 41 41111 Y. A man tamed George Bradley, alleged to be at lbw u....--. • _ 211 • aw.•••• ClKer ...ape arrest Mr. Phillips his clerk, was arrested Friday, the only one thus tar captured. —A great deal of excitement exists In the neighborhood of Chariton lowa, in consequence of the tercel discovery of gold la Clarke county. It was first discovered about sight miles north east of Comas, the county seat, moms eight weeks Ago, and has since been found in three other planes. Idea are making from three to five dollars a day dilating. It has been fully tested and proves to be 'real stall,' and is found in quarts rock, sad film black mad, similar to that la California. 'Keay are now oat prospect tag through tlpit county; with what samosa is not known, although the prospect seems very favorable. —A Ire broke out oa Tuesday night at Harrisburg, in a frame stable attached to Notiowea's Hotel, oa the corner of dicreend sad Chestnut street, aad before it was elan gftteleed, destroyed four frame buildings on Chestnut Street, and the Presbyterian Church on &mood street. The total lees Is about $20,000. The Chunk was a large and baud some brick Wilkie, and had been erected only mate few years ago at a mast of about $16,000. It was insured in the rrasklin and Pennsylvania Companies 44 Plilladclphiti, for $7,000. The House of Representatives on Wednesday morainig, generouely granted the use of their Hall to the congregation for Sunday services, until they can make other artsagements, —Oa Saturday main' Charlos Burkhardt. /fraternal California, with $2OOO in:gold daft, was obarri d in Detroit to alas Kars Miller, daughter of a rich brewer; bat tie Wise, having before forbidden' Lbi mosii,"raiseJ a karma corpse and the polio., and traced the pair to a bed in the Michigan Ysxhaage, whence the bride was takes to the paternal roof, while the groom , bad to Aop round and get bail for his appearance at the pollee court. The young lady act being at age, the Californian is likely to And thy he has been brewing bitter aiL —The Newark (N. J.) Atieertierr says that some of the leading Soeoad Adventists la that city have again set • period for the destruction of the world—professing te have discovered the errors of their previous esieulatioas, and to kayo finally ascertained the exact Irat►. They regard the mint ansmeial depression and tbeprevariling religi ose excitement as among the last days. By the next arrival.from Rarope they expect to bear of the destruetioe of the city of Rome, end this will portend the eonellgra , lion of the world next summer. --James E. Wilson. • swindling polygamist, has been weeded at Philadelphia. His mode of operations appears to have hose to soaks the acqsaintanoe of some female who had moiety, and iodises her to merry him. He would lima get poaseuloa of her money and decamp. He obtained one hundred dollars from mai" woman in Phil 46. delpbia,Mee from another, and fiBoo from • lady is Tomas Is this way. He appears to have operated all ow" lb, eoestry. —Oa Thursday morning of list troth, says the Browns- vise aboit 9 o'clock, come porLoaa al work Boar Wltarma's Parnsee, Wbarroo township, in Payette ounnty, sew what day describe as baring boon apparently a blase of Imo! a triangslar slaps, shad forty feet wide and one kindred yards keg, In the air. Prom the rear of this issued bails of tiro about the Ilse of a man's bead, sad manse. Almost immodiatcly after pining than, it es. pladed, with a swim to which the report Of a camas le said not at all to compare, causing the earth I. shake antler their feet L B. Hadsse, of Moths Cailago, was sea one and killed am Wataseday aid* MA at Oinwasad Mika. sa the C. C. •C. Railroad. Ha was he yams oil and Mew a wife and throe enfant'. la widitien t• kis posi tion -la Morita College, be was a molar writer for tint ozooliant paper, the Mao Parraw. —Dm Mom lb monstanousts an to tremble, sad despond of beams insessa. Wham is those palm- they Mead rmeity Ws for their mematostonm, the amide Is mew a drag. This Mow I. attribotod to the puma au of onsonas . sad the heepa♦tsreb irsios no Mayer raeotassey to pro. dais mgmosiom --.1. oak fur divorce Is poodimig In itookestor. NOW York. GAM, seigiasted in a dispute beam= Mr. B. sad his orkb as to *imam Ms; should kayo boststmk broiled or suss maw kW tor breoktu4--41e, lady. whose lamas ass es. •404 elmigiadieg tor Um kWh , . It as Saistl, ea 'bat appears se be saaesbeal whee l/4,015t the alt, d Obseessati, Obis, malefas mere grog. seeks ties say of city is tie Ualtad Saws, maps New York. —Aber .+w pow Dam is Wo Hooi W Arkossoo(Wo warm oro Is Ow WOW of subs& iw simido•Wil wow AA, iww *WA wbow yet wow her pw towed to Ilmoo ;odor Tlfigrearee of ties lingerity in Congress, partieularly that =lf um Moja* sleeted as amok Lepahliesee, to • pettily of the Adaabahttimits fa attemptiag I. toretilb• Mormon late submiesian, eatoelahm the whole cesenify. We eaa underetaad wig they ehmaid, as tr" PaZielßMs oppose lb, caw. May of the President— bat 1.0 mann autimfabad why, attar mol•maly rettoleitig la their Philadelphia pleittons.tias emigres possessed the power over poieseray in the timiterille. they 'Yoshi now tare round and roam to aid the Presideat in suppressing a rebellion among those who practice that arise against eivilisatioa. There is an laeossisteoey la :his pa/idea— s want of patnotie satimieat--that desaastreles to as, clearer than any position that party ha. ever tato., its utter want of principle. Let us look at the Sets. At this opening of Congress, is view of the state of affairs in Utah, the President recommended an laments of the regular army by raising ire additional reglseate. No man in his sober senses; will say that thee:Jemmies of the country did not doomed this Memos. Petting oat of view the Ilionsos rebellion, and casting the eye over our hastens frontier, with its numerous Indian tribes to be kept in subjection is Washington, Oregon, New Mexico, Texa s and Nebraska.—territories thouseads of miles apart,--the conclusion forties itself irresistibly lapis the sated of iho Minting men of the Lumina, that our peace establishment, .111inotaating lo less than 16.000 men, is entirely inadequate Tor the service. L.ok tog at it tp (his light, and addle g thereto the complicatios of stairs in Utah, the Pretideet ramoinsasoded the incraa.e alluded to above. Coarse promptly passed • resolution declaring that rebottle° ex• lewd to Utah, but when the bill for the Sr. additional rig Iments to suppress it came up; we Sod the Bleat 11.spetili ewe joining bands with a few "fire-eaters" at the South who affect to be opposed to a standing es-my on priseiple, and voting it down. The next move was the istroduction of • bill providing that the President be authorised and required to receive into service One regilgent of Texas mounted volunteers, who shall remain In. service eighteen months, whose ollicere shall be appointed in aceardanee with the laws of Texas, but who shalt be subject to the same roles and regulations as are provided for the regi ments of cavalry son in smoke. It was designed, though the bill did not so provide, that these volunteers should be employed exclusively in Texas for the suppression of lodise disturbs's', taking the place of the regular troop. now outplayed is that service, which have been, or will be, ordered to Utah. TIN bill further provided that for the purpose of quelling rebellion In the Territory of Utah, for the protection of supply and emigrant trains, and the suppression of Indian hostilities on the northern and aorthwestern frontiers, the President be authorised to eall (or and accept the services of any number of volunteers, not to *sated I. all four regiment; of hundred and forty privates each; the sass or any porticos thereof to be organised Into mounted regiment' or infletry, as the Pre.. ideal mey deem proper, to for the term of eighties months, unless sooner discharged by the President. This bill parsed the house by a vote of 124 to 73—tbe -.APRIL. IS IVA& negative vote being comp 4 4 'e' d-of members of that name republican party that had declared its hatred of Mormon practices in their Philadelphia platform. Why wss this? Simply because it was beliOved that raising and scoop- Ponce of these regiments of kitlionteers, would enable the War Department to employ a sualeient force of regulars for the speedy sappreesion of the Utah rebellion. Ia the pursuit of its policy in that dimities the government has the sympathy sad support of the montry. The *tort in some quarters to emite public seed/mot against the use of force ip subduing the Morales reboil ion and re-establish• ins the Federal laws in that revolted Territory, has met with no enemas. It is perfectly understood that the Administratioa does not " tasikewir" upon the peculiar religion of the Utah inhabitants. It is not designed to "crush out Mormonism." It is not designed to meddle in the slightest degree with the domestie affairs of the people. o soppose that such is the design is so preposterous and ridiculous that it is surprising that otherwise sensible journals have babbled snob nominee. The expedition goes out Amply and solely to re-establish the Territorial government, which has been superseded by the government of BRIGMAX Yourro, and to maintain that government in authority, just as any Territorial government would be maintained In anthortiy if there should be rebelliost re sist/tam to It—jut as every Territorial government mast be maintained in authority, in the event of resistance to it, unless independent gtvernmionts, within Federal terri tory, are to be tolerated wherever it Is the whim of the in habitants to set them up. It is a fret, to which we direct attention then, that the black republicans In the House ' opposed and Voted against this rotas leer bill, toe they bad before opposed and voted against, and he the blath republi cans in the Senate bad opposed and voted against, every proposition to augment the military force for the purpose of putting down the Utah rebellion. The assembled dale tete. be use Waal" repahtioaa slitsmal °envenom at Phila delphia in 1856, which soillinalthi Itamoor, as before rcopareed, voted unanimously for it moieties which pro. Doomed it the duty of the Federal government to put down, not the Utah rebellion, bat the Utah religion! They voted solemnly—as solemnly as such knoll*, assemblage maid vote--that Congress possessed Use power, and that, it was their ditty to exercise It, to suppress polipany is the Terri, /oriel! This doctrine was mad* a plank in their party platform._ The President dons-sot propose to put down the Mormon religion; he proposes only to pat dove Uth Mormon rebellion. We might reasonably suppose, in view of the black republican platform, that he would have the hearty and active support and sympathy of the black re. publican members of Congress is this undertaking. We might reasonably supple* this. Bat we see that be has sot.. Wo see that they oppose him, and seek in every way trethwart his policy. We see that they take that coarse which is calculated not only to porpeluate the Mormon re, hellos, but to stimulate Mormon polygamy. We see that they lave abandoned their platform, and from having bees intensely anti:Mormon, they has become practically the partisans of the Mormons in Congress. Certainly, with regard to all prepositions designed to suppress the rebellion, terminate his authority, sad set up the Federal power in the Territory, Bitionsw-Yor so mold wish no better par tizans Ikea he has had in the black republicans in Coo. gross. They will not have availed him, however; Sever theism, be ought to thank them, and we presume he will at the lint opportunity. zarT sae. TURNIID UP AGAIN—A reapie of weeks sloes a. onpoood the Imposition of a oretsodod "fugitive Mate" upon the too suseeptible eharity of *soot the leading black republicans of Grans ; and ao supposed, frac" the fats . of his Imposition having got into print, we should boar no more of him along the lake shore—bat by the following from the Ashtabsia Seefi.ei It appears he is still "roping is" the shriek's,: That papa deeceibes him thus •He Is a light esolatto, supporod to be shoat IS jean old, slend er oboist 5 fat Z fishes in height ; has India Ink Agoras tattooed on Gab bead sear the thasibe. He Topmasts blusoolf as Wing the slave of Hos. John B. Tboopoon, of Keatacky.—that h. bas spent the nista is Weshingtoa, aid from them made his asap. to Now Tort City ; thine* to Ditakirt, where- be 'eras arrested sad re*• cued frau his mates and the marshal Hs elainss to know all shoat Washington City, tho inashen of Commas, sad all promilasat pasties men—fortes. Grata is parthiar The Conneast Reporter, la noticing the matter, says be "is andoubtadly the same one that roofed the radiosl good people es death Rides about a t oar ago. Ile raps toasted to the Ridgovillousoi that be era the sus and body -.errant of 800. Mr. donobody, Somata from Louisiana ; talked faailiary at Washiagtos notables sod events; said be bad jam had a desperate woowenter with his pursuing manor sad the U. S. Marshal at Marsei, but tad ereoped etathod ; sdfeited food, money, sad assistaace, end get theta all ;—a Radom sou•fugitive law ma took his to a "revaread champion" la tipriegisid. Pa. wheat be mated the same porticulars ; hat toms. ant 6eli.ved, avail h. .►owed the sears of srusiods received while in slavery, she., Thoms like dm moo believed, alt." Our Grasso township sympathiser will Uses we that it total this "dss kis" a good while to get to Canada. Us.. Mr. Tomah' mussed, by • 'pewit is the &mate, tbe other day, to quesolt the z *table awed by the of Mr. Critiesdre. O. the a tof the seas day, rrire Competes of Philadelphia, if sot to be out- does by a Bauer. mastered ia meat fore' to pet out the wora horeells.—Okoodead Ploie Ambler. Is is set as., soothe skeet the Pieiedoeter assessood pith pest " eildratiasm" that it editor bad autpleirod this ease Toombs to defied him is a nit for libel, com eby Greeley ; but see Greeley sad Gray weepy the pate bed, mad both are ready to /seer at Neosho Mies. me as opportunity offers. Ilse Is this ? Did the Cleve Led Tire Oteepasioa, "as if met te be oat dear" by Greeley, " miaow is etreas tore* sad per sw" the Pladadoniser eethasiast for Tombs ? Somata ALITZ.-11,111 man iroU (pa.) Parr utl u Umber the Mary abut a sishase wood Sul Wog buridod au at Holland, to tint anoty, is tree sr not ? PM Butletts. 0, costataly, Then is as oath phis' as " Sollaast" fa Iltls Desaff. Pa., seressantly tits surd is satras, w hay as Its losialos Is seasoned. Then is a Hattawr hi Brie Nasty, N. Y., aad the ant time Ws saw the tale of timo " lies bestir ft was tlas heats& We apwasimmd, bensver, that the whets thiag Is a faimeteatioa. Wo sodas that Ilassra Swaim & llassicaa are oposiag a toy largo stook of Wet awl Dry Oroosrisie Mask Liquors ad nip Cbasikay, la oho oosaosoliesw Nan ram mast of Al sad &tato !knot formarty two.. allsisa• Vote* MA came boats wastiog sop. piles trill /*SI OM ditair *kW, at tat. satabilliatoaa, thee Uwe a atil. (iree the Miserver ) GOT. BiItDItARY,•I owl, and VOL. VOMNItY. Amid die strife sad esimilet of aviation Open ,oilitiesd ' mabjeflts which dies *sour I. ear country, and which is incident to the fail and fro' diminish% cii every garottes, the 111•1111 Who deserts urguseat, sad silage to personal abide as tie tempos of if* warfare. shrews }fie weeklies" of Ms tenna, and the mediae of kis dispositiOn. "Prins+. Pies. and sot me.", the inexiss of tree statesmen. seems to be abandoned by Col. Forney, the editor of the "V•ev," for dm billingsgate of pommel hatred, and the raving, of disoppoiated ambition. No one who differs with him on political question' is safe from tie v.ooo, or his quill. In his attacks upon the Provident be soon found "that be was gnawing a file," and in I.olt log around for some more digestible food fur ids mastication, is his paper of March 29, be f ilevotee . half a column of tirade ag moo Gov. thituaL MEDS•ST. Our. Medeary is a Peon.ylwanien, sod was bora, I believe, in Montgomery county —he has always been proud of his native State, and has always boasted of the waelthi latelligimes, and stunk DerSOCTS ry-u( the Keystone. His early recostleetfons cluster around the beaks et the Sehayikill and the Delaware. guograe tiag as a boy to the wilds of Ohio, he /ewe the hardships of • meet country. took as active part in derelopieg the resouresio 4 that great State, and bap Joe. a' prominent sod mogul comes from that day to this. Who is Col. For ney. that he should beard this veteran in his declining years ? The political bieroey of Col. Medeary is full of triumphs fug the Democratic party—in days gone by ho performed a knight' service in the muse of big country. Aide leader of the Democracy In Ohio, his powerful pea mattered, in distills', the ranks of the opposition—be was ea independent man among his fellows—the idol of his party, the stern and victorious foe of the opposition ! Where are the triimphs of Col. Forney'—where the eel deuce' of his Eitatesmanabfp I—where are the • itneeses who can testify to his greatness, or attest his patriotism. Alas, there are none—the bribery of a few hireling poli• tieiana, on the ere of an election, with the parse of others, is claimed as his greatest merit, and the full extent of his sagacity. dames Barbican is the idol of Pennsylvania, and Forney la bat the satellite that shone by the reflection of his greatness. Ile charges Gov. Neckar, Sq refusing to yield to the appeals of the Detaoersey of Ohio, who were urging him to vote for Buchanan at Cineianatt. Mr. Verney- it is true was in that city, as the friend "par szeollesse•" . of the President, but be might ai well hare beep elsewhere for all the good be did there for Buchanan. While Forney's quarters were lilted with the drinking and gossiping pall titian. of all shades—while he war eating good dinners, and drinking the parejaice of the vineyards of that neigh borhood, the real work of that convention was borne by others—by men of action, not of words—and while thus enjoying his ease, and dispensing the smile, of his bor rowed greatiies to a credulous few, the great achievement of Mr. Bisebasoa's nomination was effected by others, who knew bat little about him, and cared less. The po litical secrete of the Pennsylvania delegation were not i imparted to Furry, and the problem was solved by others without the belpiof his magic influence—and I. t me say to him here, tat Ow,. .11rdcory, the Douglas man of Ohio, l l "'"gived Mr. Buildup from a combination fur a third party ~, at would bare defeated him. What had Cal. Forney to with all this at Cincinnati I Nothing whatever; and yet be has claimed the whole credit aljhousaod times over. While Gov. Medeary was the open and consistent friend of Douglass at Cincinnati during that memorable eontest , yet be saw in Buchanan the chieftain who alone could, guide the Democratic party safely through the thousand snares that beset its path—and even while be did so, there was but one obnoxious feeling that lurked behind, and that was, that Forney was supposed to have an undue in fluence with the "groat captain." It was a feeling shared by a majority in that convention, and Buchanan's mutil ation with Forney drove away many a friend, and made others lukewarm to his cause. This feeling, too, was grow. lag latOn dame even In Pennsylvania, sod finally broke oat in the onpffsgrstion that consumed Forney, and elect ed Siam' Cameron to the U. 8. Senate. But Governor Medeary has lately been appointed to a fat office—poor Forney has epee—the long lotiked for spoils that was to compensate him for his sycophantic devotion, has eluded his grasp, and be sees in every office bestowed on others, the gold that ought to be his. Disappointed ambitiop, that, sin by which "the angels foil," is doing its work upon Forney. Ills race is run, and his pun has gone down behind the hills to rise no more for him—and he might exclaim with Wolsey. "I have ventured, Like little wanton boys that swim on bladderv, This many summers In a sea of glory , Bat far beyond my depth—my high blown pride At length broke ander rue—aud DOW has left me Weary, and old with service, to the merry Of a reds stream that must forever hide me." "W LITTZLL'S LIVING AGIL—We have received the grit number of the new series of this admirable publics , tiro. To those who have been in the habit of reading this publication, it is quite unneees.ary to refer to its in trinsic merits; but thereon many who have never enjoyed that privilege. To those we would say that it is a-weekly publication, at $6 per year, each number containing so page, of the beet literature of the day, selected from the English quarterlies, monthlies, and weeklies. It will thus be seen that to all professional men, to clergymen, lawyers, physicians, as well as to merchants, ruiners, and merhau cis ; in short all who desire to keep up with tbo literature of the day—and yet hare neither time nor money to spend on each of the various periodicals from which the Age se leets—this work Is indispensibie. Thine of it—four thou• sand one hundred and sixty double pages of the cream of our foreign and domestic literature, for six dollars ! Address Litt,ll, Bon t Co. Boston, or Branford A D e li.. Der, 657, Broadway, N. Y. --.—We are requested to state that the Ilev. lq —ATIII•NIKL &tact, of Co buskins", Warren County, iyill canopy the pul pitof tho Universalist Church, in that elf), next Sabbath morning. In the eveaing be will give a discourse appro priate to the meet diapeosation u( Providence in the death of Capt. Yaatl; STUDIO. —D. W. Hrtcnisson, gig., of this city (of the late Arnim(' Brigden t Hutchinson) has been commissioned by the tiorerison of New Torte, Ohio, Indians, lllioois, Michigan, Wisconsin, lowa, Missouri, Minnesota, sad Kansas, Le., ma Commissioner to take Testimony, affida vits, sad acknowledgements of Deeds, Mortgages, Powers of Attorney, •e. die., to be need or recorded in the shore mentioned States sad Territories. Ins. We are indebted to the publisberc, Meows Dtt £ Prrzuntstn, No. IS, Ana st. N. Y. for a copy or "The logicians OWN Book, or die ;And. Art of Conjotriny," - If you hare soon omelets cooked in bats, birds brought out of ow, rings extracted from the Interior of oranges, wine changed to water, papers burned to ashes and then re produced "as good as new," Nelda tapped from men's beads, solid rings taken apart and put together again moat isexplleably and mysteriously, firs produced with ice, and all that sort of thing, and been lost in amazement, be amazed so boater, fur all these secrets are out in this ele gant book. There is one trick, however, which we have in vain looked through its peps to End—and that Is, how to tars old accounts tofu rash. If the "art of conjuration" auuld only teach re that, we would study It to the end, Aside trout this, bowever, the Rook is a cartoeity, and well worth the duller it coats. Moe sale at Naaoa's. Park Row Rook Store.. Dr. C. Y. Adam*, recently of Boston, MII/f., ha s located i• thte city. Se* alma is another column. W• Sae• speelvea Alan Mosare. Dies a Ftneas ♦w, No. IS, Asa at. N. V.— "P►e Young Hopsoowifo's Book, or 'Hew to Eke oat Small Ineone— "flow to Detect Adulteration in our Daily Food"— "Mind Your Stops, or Ponetuation Made Plsin"—and ' "MesterGeld*s art of Letter• Writing Simplified," Foot very sashl little works, posting only 12; eta. a espy, wbleb *very body ought to bay. For sale at NA souls Part Row Book Store. 4 The editor of the Piqua, 0. Register has a very aufortanats propeasity forquoting latin, sod stealing oar editorials. The kit I. bad, but the latter is wors•—espos eially as he has to alter some of 'es over to make them read aatl-Leeomptoa. If be would take 'eat Just as we write them, we would'at eomphiln. XS. Lib' a Mauer ordes is spring. B:akir's Boasot rooms, is Paragon Block, are spelling up with all the vs risartvi bass col tits reisbew—as riots as taste is selecting, sad garb in baying, ran saki diem. It is bard times, lost the ladies must bs pissaid, sad Blake is detscsisisd to de it. , J'T • At r. The &ohm sad Iris bill has bees referredle tie Committee oa Casale is the &mato. This Committee is favorable to the It is said—sad heave as early sad favorable report is looked for. AR attempt was mule to WM it to tilt Ammo, Committee, bat It failed by a &sided majority, sad although the vote at this sot be iteasidered a test, yet the Meads of the measure are esagalas of its lasi passage. We sitteerely hope their wt. postatioas will be realised. P. & 811100 the above was pet la type we bare seem a letior hes ear Senator dated the 6th, la *blob be says "tie sad Id. mow is the &tem, mad absorb*. math wilt pope.* Tb lire ben Bata* I. Now Yerk, via the New Tart ad Isis rees, hos boys redwood to $B. This will osiiiiwis u,_ Ihs a swum. NEW YORK. C riespnadAhcp or tb. ;trig 0410.TTI'r•J Nsw YORK, April 5, 1858 Bummer is looking ■p a little this wewlk; the oosekte7 trade is earning in here to PAIN extent and will be intim In rrowds as soon as isav'swilon npena. The 'Market s however are not sustained fur most descriptionsof mer ehandite. Stocks are lower as a reaction from the late speculative motetneut assessitated. The sale of goods at auction are still unpreoedeattAkv large. • This week,. moreover, the three steamships of the Collins lily were slaughtered" at auction; bringing about one hundredth part of their value. They are probably bought in by the late owners. The experiment of an opposition mail line seems, to have utterly failed. The extra expense incur' however, is mostly owing to the tremendous rate of speed at 'bleb these steamships are driven, the extra three miles an boar eostl•g double the quality of fuel to attain, beside the wear of machinery which is much greater than when running ordinary time. The famous Capt. Nye of this line formerly, is now residing in a niegnificeut suburban villa on the bill ranges. of New Jere, y. Among the natives he goes by the name of the " old navigator ;" • plank road lead. doirn hill from his house to the Newark Depot, and down this 1 . 01141 the Captain velocitates ever, day in a one horse buggy at a pare which starts the planks tad admonishes every quiet Jersey wagon to clear the road or risk the beck of its driver. The Capt. drives his horses as be was wont to drive his steamer, and by natural consequent*, his consumption of horse flesh per annum is 0110M10Q1 The reign of horrors, which for a time had ceased, opened up again on Friday 'with the revelation of two mysterious murders, the perpetrators In each ease being unknown. In one ease, Charles Samuels. • young man residing at No. 235 5 Adams street, Brooklyikwas the He was stabbed to the heart, and then thrown into the Ruttiest, with • large stone attached to hi■ body.— The other cue le equally horrible. The mutilated remains of an unknown woman were found packed up in a whiskey barrel, which was directed to W. T. Jennings, No. ISS Leonard street; but It wee ascertained that there was neither such an individual nor such • number in that =I! Since the gift swindling enterprise of C. R. Todd a Co., In Broome street, was broken up, over 6,000 letters, ad. dressed to lb* propriewrs, have been taken from the Posi Office. These letters contained over SS,OOO. The money has been P all sent back to the writers with the following note from the Mayor "Inclosed you 'will find the sum re mitted by you to C. E. Todd A Co., who have been arrested in this city. Be on your guard against all gift enterprises/ lotteries and all other bogus schemes, as they are intended to defrakd9lo the unwary." By the by, speaking of this "swindi;" t Wetter from one of your cotomporaries—the Americas, I believe—was found among the effects. If you talent seen it, you ought to procure the ErrelN of that date, an read it. It is certainly a model. The re igion meetings still keep up their numbers, and the inte r t appears to be rather on the increase than otherwise. Bunion's Theater has become an amazingly popular place of resort. These meetings tend to diminish the patronage of public amusements as merchants have got in a way of taking their country customers to the prayer meeting instead of the theater. It is quite as well for the country customer who in reality treats himself on there occasims, though the city merchants cash the bill. Among the hopeful signs of the " great awakening" 1 Is the eonversion of Dr. Jos. A. Smith, one of the attaches of the Daily Timea.• I have no doubt there are oshers, its the same concern, who could be bettered by a little of the same levee—" the little villain," as Horace Calla Raymond, `fqr instance, not excepted. But the most sensible remark we h ave b ear d, in connection with this matter, was made by a young man la the dress circle of Burton's old theater the other night. This place, as I said above, has been turned into a house of worship, and is the centers of this great revival. Well, the other day, after the defeat of the administration on the Kansas Constitution, some of the Beecher enthusiasts, thought It a good time to put up a prayer for the President and Congress —so they offered one up with peculiar unction. This brought out the young man aforesaid, and he told them plainly that ho was in favor of praying fur the President and Congress, but he was also in favor of every man taking care of himself, as he believed that God would take care of them all. The number of four mat novellette papers which have been'started lately, emulous of the success of Mr. Donner's Ledger, is sigi6eant of the power of advertising when conducted on a liberal scale. But Mr. Bonner has the start of all his competitors and no one will now be able to play the same game with equal success. The number of new papers proves that there is plenty of capital seeking investment in that way. New buildings are going up very fast in the centre of the city and property is rapidly increasing in value in the vicinity of the City Hall. Offices in the new Times build. ing opposite the Park bring higher rents than in Trinity building whiish was formerly oonsiderd so eligible a lora- Lion. Business is now certainly further up town and pro perty below Wall at, will hereafter remain stationery in i i- price if it does not decline. The old site of Columbia I College, iu Park Place, is utterly obliterated by rows of handsome marble front stores, the finest wholesale stores in the city. The weather is delightful, the last week has been a rata evil for the month of March. The spring crop of wheat is said to ilok well all over the country. ERIE. SENSIBLE, l'Eßl.—Thurlow Weed, formorly editor of the Albany J, , srwal, Come timo ago was traveling MI the Western States, and made some Bxoellent practical ci,bier vations on the Win* manufacture in Ohio, from which we select the fallowing sensible paragraph "My friend Oresly complains that the Wine bueineu of Ohio prevented the adoption of the Main Law. I cannot but say, though (with no intention to resist the 'Main Law,' for that experiment, I presume, is to be tried) that cheap Wine, free, as this is, from alcohol, would prove the most beneficial 'Maine Law' that could be enacted. Fur nish the people, at small cost, just so much of stimulant as this beverage contains, and drunkenness would flee away from as. He bar seen as I have, countries where all class. es drink cheap Wines, and where there is nothing of in toxication, and from this cause, nothing of crime or desti tution." This is all true, and it le truth uf a most important char. actor. If we would haven. real Temperance reformation, we sboald make wine as cheap and as .plenty as cider ever was in New Rogland. Not only is the manufacture of wine one of the tonal profitable kinds of business to whit* and one can engage, but it is among the most commends ble,inatimach as it is one of the Ftrongest safeguards against the frightful evils of intemperance. The first mitacie ever performed by the great Founder of the Christian religion, my. to turn water low wine. Wine making cannot, there fore, be considered immoral or improper, even by the most fastidious advocate of temperance and virtue. DR. r. R. RR AINERD.—We copy the following, in. relation to Dr. B. and his patients, from the Coneihmoa, the editor of which has visited the Doetor's rooms, stud otherwise made himself familiar with the subject Dor waits Diana conversation. with Or AR .4 I rasen, the (Mutat and Audit, and with ha patients, have fut saUslied us as to his bl temaltae skill and somas/lin his treatme t of the delicate organs of sight and bearing The practice of the D or has been immense, meeting as we undentand, forty-eight thousand came, and no ere has ever been injured by his methods. i the of the moot extraor dinary cams is that of Miss -alinon who was blind from birth until the age of 41, and who now ewes perfectly. lire B•rell of Lockport, two Misses Atkinson of North Emit, and James Lord, machinist, and wife,of tbie city, are among thelloctor's mod recent patients use of the Atkinson lathe. has suffered from a chronic debility of the organ for eight rears: her sister's cane is a very tad scrofula and inflammation of the cornea, which in one week• time has been t hree-fourths cured The other patients are all In the %art of Temir recovery, although the eases have beta of long s_ 4 , an Injured by improper prelims treatment. Prank lad or thug biafter four daye' tmatattint very much Im_proy of a nervous dentheas which had always afflicted him. Tha Doctor can be corw a sAi at Brown's Hobs! until ItsiturdaY afternoon. On / 1 ... 1 .1 eyes he will deliver a free lecture at the AmdentY Hall at ilirard. prescribe op Tuesday at Martin's Hotel until 6 F. M.. when lie mill return to Erie and remain until Friday the kith Dud.. at • P. N. It should be °Marred that Man Salmon will be present at the lecture and hotel at Girard, aqd also Mins Elba Cook of Lockport. Patientsnay be men and conversed with at Brown's Hotel a A. M., and 3 P. W. Notice of Dr.Brainerd's ulterior appointments will be duly given A NICE LITTLE SUll.—lt has been shows by °Mahal documents thait to the Banks of the city of New York there are upwards of forty.-~ millions of dollars on deposit, sad the seemmulations of unalaimod deposits are said to be be • tween two and three millions of dollars. This large amount has been advertised ,for many years, but still =las sad goes on increaslog by the additloa of interest. What to do with this mosey, has now Weems a question of considerable importatiee. Attempts hays beps repeats 'idly made to withdraw those deposits from thebs, I place them under the direct control %a their pro bes& to be applied to public purposes. Two propositions to that effect are at present before the Legislature--Dr. Brandreth's and Mr. Law'. —the one haring in view the beaefit of common schools, and the other the completion of the Canals. Nl^ J. Russ Thomason, Mg, of this city, has been sp. petaled Aid-lathe Governer, with the mak of Lied. Colo. aeL Coder the Imes kiwis:Mad by Gor. Thames predecessors, of making aids by the reerimenr, this mull of preference would not pass for mach, bat as the Governor has 'initialed his determination to make only twelve sp. petal/meats of this kind during his attire term, to broom, of the doses twelve," is a eomplimeat worth mentioning, Kaden honor worthy to wear. We therefor* salute the new Colonel. "sr By advertisement in another column, it will be am that Prof. COLBY has removed his Dagnerrnotypo and Ambrotype Gallery to Romozweig's Block, corset of Stant Street sad the Diamond. The Protease/. has /11111 the but apnea rooms In the city, which, together with his will llama skill la as art, entitle. his to a sbiwi of the pab. Ha pstrawrip.. , s • LEAD IT.—Blio•wh•r• *we &se * *tar tram rtnimair Parransen, Seq., to the Wasblagton grams, en this state of puha* eentintent in Santee. Mr. P 4 as some et oar readers will doubdoso maitre, was OPlalfar d OOP' Learbilatnre la 1010, and is a-maw whose views and date emits are entitled to lunch wiiiht. What *B l 7 l elere• - poods *lib °thew Infonnation Clam that ilitritory. The people—GM the paUtielawa-,wasit pewee. 'They west the state admitted, on any tin-peal They know that if there is any thing objectionable io their Constitution, it can be al tersd—bist in the eosin time they desire ttr twine into the 'Union, and the sooner the better. So long as agitation Is kept op eralgratiuo will be retarded. and the business of the country remain suitable and gectugling. But give the people the highest attributes of sovereignty —that is, make the territory a elate—and all this will be changed.— The occupation of the political agitator will be gone. The • of industry and the march a civilisation and improve. asset will resume their wasted sway, and Koons, freed from the incubus New Noigiarid faaatieirm ow the oat band, and Southern chivalry upon the other, will tate her place in the very front rank of our Weston States. What a pity, withauch a prospect in view, that Coupes did not listen to the wise recommendatiou of the President, and end this eontroverey months ago ! ' 111(.41111: YO('R LlFT.—lartattees (*cur every day 'bowing the benefits of Life Iniroranee..lndeed, we are inclined to thint that, with the daily fluctuations of trade to which every business man is more or less subjected, the person who neglects to provide for a dependent fatally by the mean" of life insurance, le wanting in the essentials of a prudent head of a family. We have been reminded of this by looking over the annual statement of the Peon iiwtstal Life Irondrowee Comparry, of Philadelphia, furnished us by the agent for this city, L. Lrtit Irma, Esq. Editor o f th e Coustitreion. Prom the exhibit thus furnished we should think it one of the safest Inetitutioas in the Unlon• Its capital stock is $800,006. Its aceusulated capital since its organisation is 1848 is 8715;030 83, and out of this it hes paid Irises to the amount of $336,267. Pam phlets setting forth the advantages of insuring and ail oth er particulars can be had on application to the agent. The best dog story we here read lately, is related of a small, half Scotch, half English terrier, weighing 15 lb., fox eolor, and *seriously inelisod, which belongs to the editor of the Savannah Rep.&hens. This deg wine I. the aka of a cotton merchant, in that city, smelt • rat, and soon reread the "varmint" from his biding place. In des• perate haste to-avoid a bite, the rat made fpr the first open ing, which was the office window (through which goods are boilde4) looking over the bluff, four stories high, ur about sixty feet from the ground. Ths rat made the leap, and after him went the terrier, heedless of the consequen ces. They both reached the ground side by side, at the same instant, having just missed alighting on a big negro . / cranium. Era the rat could recover from the effects td the julep, be felt himself in the jaws of the terrier, with his spittal lone considerably dislocated. The terrier did not seem at all hurt by such a tremendous leap, and he is now more assidnous than ever in his pursuit of rat tails. Fa- Hero ij the way they do things down among the Puri's; The Boston Trawler-I'M says that in a single bniliii in Boston, the other evening, there was a prayer meetinig on one floor, a boxing exhibition in UM roian above, and a calico ball in the upper hill. A passage (roll, one room of the edifice to another would have given a good illustration f Pope's line: "From gra,ir to goy, fromly to orverr Sm.. The Petersburg f4.epreat records the marriage. in Dinwiddie cc., on the 17th inst.., of Mr. John W. Sturdi. vent, In the 2241 year of his age, to the amiable and well to do Miss Martha Oliver, aged bit years. After that, " So/iy Assn," of the Conoeautville Conner need out pair—there are hope. for her yet. f!• We neglected to not the fact tat week that ~or friend, Dr: J. I...BTawaar, bad disposed of bit intermit in the Drug business, and may now be found in big new of flee in the Paragon Block—for which inlormation r is eard in another column. WOOD'S HAIR LYE.—This admirable article is rapid ly improving the hair. No article of a similar kind, now before the public, enjoys a better reputation as a restore_ tiesand invigorating hair tonic. Its peculiar chemical qualitips have a benellnial effect upon the growth and oharaeter of the hair, giving a silky and glossy texture to that which was formerly of a coarse and dry nature. It has, also, we Ullderlt&lld, a tendency to preserve the youth ful color and appearance of the hair, and destroying or eounterseting the effects of age. With such recommends'. Lions in its favor, wo hardly perceive bviw any lady or gentleman should bo without so valuable] an adjunct to their toilet. The article may be bad of the Drggists throughout the country.—.lltwourt Dem.-rut. Sold in Erie, by all Druggist. From Washington. Naw YORK, April The plan now entertained on the Administrr. tion side, is for the Senate to recede from it&dis agreement and then to amend Crittenden's sub stitute, with the view to a possible accommoda• tion. This movement, however, will depend on the further developments. Mr. Badger, of N. C., is here, and says Mr. Gilmer's district will sustain him in opposition to Lecompton. Mr Toombs says the defeat of Lecompton will lead to an organised demonstration in the South, but Jas. L. Pettigrew, a distinguished gentleman from South Carolina- ' writes to Mr. Crittenden chit the masses of the southern people cordially adopt his proposition. It is now known that Secretaries Cobb and Thompion, and Senator Toombs are the south. ern gentlemen alluded to by Senator Iverson, as having advised Calhoun to certify there was a Free State Legislature in Kansas. WASHINGTON, April 7. Enough is known to warrant the assertion that Gov. Powell and Maj. McCulloch, peace com • miasioners to Utah, will be instructed to assure the Mormons that it is not the desire of the Pres ident and the United States authorities to wake war upon them, bat to secure the. enforcement of the laws, to which end they will be counselled to participate.___ The comtn4Sioners will also inform them that some troops will be retained in the Territory to protect the emigrants to the - Pacific against the attacks of hostile Indians. The commissioners will go with the next reinforcements to Utah This forenoon a man named Peter Besancon formerly of La., bad violent words with the Sec retary of the Interior in the ball of the depart went. The former struck, or attempted to strike the Secretary. The latter turned and discovered Besancon in the aqr of drawing a pistol upu him. Mr. Thompson thereupon seized Beasan• con and threw him upon the floor, dislocating and fracturing an arm of the latter. It is bc, lieved that Besancon, who is well known here, was refused office by Secretary Thompson, which, with pecuniary embarrassments had temporarily debilitated his mental faculties. : Besancon has been for several years in the employment of th e government at Washington, and is looked upon with respect by all that know him. tom. At Ann Arbor, Michigan, last week, Mrs. A. J. Eggleston left home about 7 o'clock in the evening—Sarah Bell, a young girl rem ,in ing to take care of a child one year old `urt. ly after a man entered, bound the girl with her apron, and after some other proceedings, the Ann Arbor News says: He lit a candle and went through the house-, went into the buttery and spread a quantity of butter on a cloth and put it on her face, probably intending to cover her mouth. Ho then took her skirt quilt, which ballad torn off, and bound it closely about her bead and face; placed her in the rocking ()hair and tied her hands to the back of the chair with portions of her torn dress, and placed the child in her lap. His last act bt fore leaving was to pull her shoes off and throw them on the Move—one of them falling off, however, but the other was burnt to a cinder. These Iran sacti.us occupied, as the girl thinks, about an ho u r. Mrs Eggleston returned bout nine o'clock, and found the little girl in the situation described. In addition to the other nitleauts, her hair had been shamefully cut and mutilated, apparently with a jack knife; most of it being cut off quite short. She describes the man as rather above the medium height, thick set, dark whiskers. No clue as'yet - lias been obtained to the perpetrator of the outrage, add the whole affair, beyond the girl's statement, is shrouded in mystery. TAKING UIM AT 1118 WORP.—Tbe Indiana polis Journal tells a funny story of the Sheriff of that county. The day before the escape of Shears and the other prisoners, they were coo. plaining of the jail fare, whereupon the Sheriff facetiously edeissd diem, if they didn't like the , board, to have. And they left. the People of Kansas Desire Admission WASIIINGTON CITY, Much n, ro the Editor ol the thitiost:—.-DY.AI2 81a: d 7 -ight I lii4to received within the past two days eight at Fort lirideet It 1- I. jets from Kansas, from some of ibe most nifltion. f,r ai„ , eirly it..tw tr.! to 4. •, till citizens of the Territnry, (mpstly free - Srate LFA \}\ „. ,! mln) all setting tortiLzheir anziatjtior thlr lie, dy thoren awn art i%..1 1 , , admission of Kansis as a State into tl, rubli, Bass e t Th, y 1, f t t i,, and expressing their hearty willingtl—• t r ii, rep wt C.. 1 .1„h u ..,,,„ , , , . alniision under the LeCotkipton e mlatittition, 1101 • Johnsto_n tots then, , , , ~ wi li the construction put upon it 1.)I 1 I ii• _"r ! si- • viiions we re tiviti4,„,l 1•, 1 „,,, , dent. The ffrst impulse with the o ritt 1. .1 'ill far of thr Morin..i.4 Ti,, 1 t ''' these letters was opposition to t h e e,hs.iiiiti. , n, some skit ini.lie. with I. Si , ' t. ' mit was with the National I),Anovi,,t, pi oited , early ,unino r, but that t Na. . 1 at Lectempton, which' was consider,l I„• It, mu .erica,t i .pe ration, unlit 11,. ••! . '': l cretitrfree-State oigan; but upon the ...,t., rst eund meats from this place 11, „-. I thought, and a fuller examination ~ f it. pro- make any attempt. to tb: r ,-, visions of the bonstitutioni they hay nut..! in Kelm) Cation, but wit toin ht, , captaining it, regardless of what they may have can uhtatn entrance tbr.,ugh t,, ;• , Raid in opposition to it before ley TheA.4.! 111, II i•ll.n .., I t , i 'The people in Kansas are bedewingeuthu.i- Mormon, will pursue an, • , - 1.,, an ki n i n f avor o f a dmi ss io n Ono If toy e .re• = determined guortlia %tartar, , , ,•...., pundents says that an epistle from \\'a-liiiyi• u, two or three years to comp.. t., \ ~,4 ; explaining the policy of the l're=ident, 1.. lug It will not be very diffient• • r ..„ ti , reed to a large meeting of eittzvn-, bionglit f 4121 van-cc into Salt Lake ('it , , 1 • , ~., three hearty cheers for the Union, Ao l'io i-. out will have to be advau« i 1; r i , ~ debt, end the Lecoinptun eonstitutio i sitliout a the in at t h a t p i aci . , W 1,,,, 1 ..1 dissenting voice. a is rf.ct knowledge • I t 1..• .• 'I would not advocate a._ine a sure had I the le ist fanatic desperation, fail Ili .1 '.• ;,, feiir of its creating strife, much less civil war, in pede their rattle, aud.hy . v 1 ; ~, , the land of my adopted home !raving grown lar warfare exhaust and d, ni..•, ~, no itt the peaceful Mimics of the old Keystone, Nor will attempts to •.•l o nvlthing but the fertile plains of a Kansas could their duty be wanting have induced me to leav, it We h iv , in Icy] I t' II Johnston', I' .1/Ifllifi I:.1, . Batt the elements of peace anti prolwri•y Only ou-iy, th..ugli it has horn • , 11 ... t , , relieve us from .:Artside iufluenve, :1111 w. -hall privation.: the mru are , a.,1 2 Donn grow to the staters of gr, At n...; iti.l ,d m l':it Wont)! viLigh from t• t. ; , the respect of our sister'Skate Your-, p..und-, out at present only A - i i . FIN DIA 0..:Y I'.\7"rEltSf IN f...ir Loh Ir. 1 pounds Th. ~-,..,.. ..... .. ~,,,,,(in.,.. t, be lifted up in , tl From Washingtoi The on:y appr, hen-ions 41'01 to he if. fe l :ard to hi= •upplic.= WAslitNiiTON Clll, A pril :. ( -1 t i- IN., rt till I arr.% t li-t tit,:itt •tale that an e 4 from an authentic rce, that there has 14,.e0 ~ ...carol at Fort Laramie told tilt ti , not acceptance, either onditioual or unconditional, 1 ofl volunteers for Il lor other servie. und..r the toil had written him that he (i',.;,• , 4 ,_ . Auppile= sumcient to haat ht bill now pending ore Ciongreqs 1-t . f May, and not one day I ur The ,anent rime the lire-"l''"t dell 111 ' bast-. of that letter an att. tor 1.,. a reconstruction of his Cabinet a„• wi' I. Mt st tad a train . I =upplies t'l r I " f o u n d a ti on The member= eoitipmoug it Ire a, poacibk ; ,,, aid Irani will pr, 61: • koown to be harrnotitou= on the g in ' " 1 I''' he r tc.i 1,1 tre t hi. t 1111 , TI .re ,r- oil the Admioistration and friendly In iiii %h. i t four month% =upplic.. tor I „ a ir ^ t rtdations .. 'nap. , mnpatii.'"l ItW , 0 post Gen Perstfer F Smith has Mon 0r.1.p,1 to. i',1 1 ', , , euief vow- (t4bnetr7toati,d‘c,,,nt."l'l4,t,ti.aerl7l:.b.i "Crl,.:;,r; rtah as well as Gen. Harney mind will devolve on the formic : r Tamp Spilt The four e.tnr,ii,. , Gen Sargent, of Cincinnati, had t i say a and K of the Ist cavalry, and re formal interview with the i'remi.lent and ten ler the rich infantry 1 which : 't i • et' a regiment of Ohio volunteers for service in rose expect to nrriv.. •,. i• -, 1„:: Ut a h. ,Flt wet support, il by the r,•.•0r0n0.ti,1.1. aceompany the three eo, itt . at , , ~. tihn of the Legislator. 41 that state , place in e-ortltv•tho hr. , - ~.,i , , l lt is repotell that Gen Dame) re-p- •tful , .) :.;,. ~,, Lot will p i „l .;3 ! , ,r; ' So. though they exp• :' • a, 1, protests agatn.t. being plamd .e....t..1 in V"lff 0/ tfl'i , Older Geri. Smith in ila, [tali ,xp .1,t1.11 .i:1.1 twenty...woe day. I, • • t ., ,k , desires a command 111 ...111/. 4.1114 r t:r • .'1.,11 1:0; gClreriatneut w : tt, t ' r.:• 0 .. On the ropresen'arioti. • t i; -4 i; .ht •t-, pt.: Col fieffm in cum'„ ,u 1. 1 , t, t l . . State Department ha, r• 1,-ii iI. - i at , r in int,J,tl. to feed it, I I t•' StirlletlODA to prevent the orgatil 4 a t 41i 4. , r ht ' lli g me , - at lor I.arinste •u . ''., ti _out of unlawful expedition. wit Oln ree onitt-4 of the United States 1. r Ow i1.v.i.1,01 ..1 N 'rm.. it, and other ~ , in., I ,t. 1 , , States tat :Neer" . It .th 7,,veltitii. iv. ill NI, .i. ie..) r 'hi betwe. u - KAI Kew) , n m have writte to hi ~ 1 1 CL. ti -I , j ~. I .1' 11, ~1.1. • rh. o.• uld ti4t I , c , cially corresphtidq (Italy - with lii n , I. - 1 , " 4 ' ' an ti' ir)j-. expeete 4 l shat t by our own government tl • .r • .11.., I. for I 1- . ti Col Itenion's health ha" mate: i.,i 1 ill i,ft ‘,l., I , 1... \ 1 coed .: within the last few days 11 , -peak_ ot 1.. td, .., i , $ soli, . r , , 1-tat and at, ai drawing_to a C1.,.', cony. r- , - eh.- .. nu rt 0.1,. I wit., atm . , tt F , tri 1., t, his friends on public sti.lirs, au I-, , . ii, , , I ,; 1 i , 1 ; ;_; ; only great measure to which th.t . .t -.1. , t , has been successful, i. the 'ICU, Irl'l al! .0 ..: It,. : practicability, at it:l seaSoti- is li , if, !a . _ central route to the l'aetlie. The Senate has not y..t, o Allied l ~, i 144 l ittl adverse ae•iou tan : 1 610nt,!...in• ry • -1 1 1,...• 1 : i , The notice is ex peel4l th-tntirrok .1. to" 4 1 of the failure of the Kan-as bit tan i i ii' ; r 1 circutustauce•, an eli ri till 1 , ,• in el tr in I • Democratic soh., to coopi, K ill-:..s %% :1„ t 111,1,, sots, tusk in : : q,;, Willi , -.110,1 1,7 ,141.• Itt , 0 . ft• , ii that of the oilier. Judging from preseut 6,• d. tin cy appropr,ation bill, embraei o di. u •.i.“.1,111 fur the army, will lie del :1'•1 .11 i .• lktrui There is au iticrea•ma I :, to cheek furtlwr moretuen;:: th.• I Ili, tam l'he eutire nititt.try t .re ttit..ll , !, .1 t., thrown into Utah kat/qui :1.01111 now Senator I) a ri4' physie.tl condi' )• .11 ii.rt •01.1)C wore critical lie ha., lord, the :•1 ! , ..1 c) 11r~t:ae —llr Otero,'of N( w dueed a bi:l fer the con,tructiti of tia.rou and and emigrant road in New The lloure went into commi:t(e "1 1 1 1,, fieieney appropriation 101 l The:two special cotritnis.,,,n to I t 4h, NI e:e.rs Powell and McCulloch, will leave in a few Lily. for Leavenworth Thence lb), y will i r•ae. , l with the reinforcement:4 to Ctali The select committee of the {louse "Li pi in t t il Lt intend to rer;rt a bill for a printing Imp au - Another murder was committed to 11 ishitig• too, yesterday Two broth, rs n uu.,l Dt . Vlll.l kiiletl a man- tooled Berry, al. In.l seiluce I their sister Ex Judge Loring, of .\lassacbusett•, -sf.l is appointid I;nited States sulisTr..asur , r f It too In Bro ,, kl;in ye4terday the inniveip.ii eieeliou resulted gent rally in litv..r ~1 tLe driu.,erits.-- Of the aldermen elected z) are , letnoeratl, 2 Atnericans and 1 republican I /at. district in d ou b t ►they otTiceri in about the sante proper The Tribune , 13 th, French colutuer, inl h(inaes have ordered their correpp , utleuts in this country to remit in WI. 1.0 Louduit instead ,‘1 Paris They have uo cluthi,uee ut t :• , tability .Nepoleqn'n governtut ut. ‘VASIIINGToN, ; 1101'3E.—Mr Letcher, Va , said the tee on ways and means were placed in an Bulbar; raaaing position. They had been fired ..n fr.m the democratic side of the lieu... lip - crate were against, all provi-14,114 hi;;, and others against the particular all seethed to concur In the II ILO , tin less the bill in it. every pro%i•i;oi eau .1., mid; ;temptable to them, they are preleireil ;t down, and h tie the gov,ruiiiehi u r ; means of c..irrying out tl e witieh it 1,:i•• nt augurated lle showetl that the $3,11011,0011 arkeil in anti. Clpation of the iegular hppropri•iiit.o would able the war department to - wiltr apt r coil tract for the transportation 11l , for I than if it w.ia dela)ed till ant Lunt, The 81,250,00 U deficiency to ht the bill came as a legacy fi urn 11,, , pri v ministration. If the Utah expeilitiun wa, lib properly begun as is Arid, why did Rho I pass a resolution declaring that taielliou exists there, and aubkquently pass a hill to furniA volunteers. It is now too late to urge as a p:ca for the defeat t•f the deficiency bt,l , that the Presid.ut did not get the ,eous, tit ‘.l . Cong,Ter.s before he hegau re-inforciug the tr...lops in Utah. Mr ',etcher defended the bill goto.rally • Sr. Louts, ..kptil Thu Leavenworth correspondence of the 1t • publican says that the constitutional convention adjourned on the night of the 3,1 Under its action negroes are allowed to vote on the consti tution, and at the first general eleetioti thereafter a vote is to be bad on the queTitiou of ut u r cr . a l suffrage Foreiguers baying declared their becoming naturalized, are also allowed to vote The question of negro suffrage eausrsl a good deal of excitement and angry discussion, and the rePreseutatives of several couuties signeohe constitution under protest. PweviDaNce, It. 1., April 7. Tim Awvrioaas and Itcpublicaus have eleutra their satire ticket for Uovurnor and state officers by a majori!, of both branches of the general assembly. Tho voto for represeutstivt A In ails oily is very tuu,b 'phi up aud..thero are prublbly owky two members of the Assembly elected hem. WAbui‘..l„ Mali t; Z 3 Frutn th , . Ut ' T:i ll' t lu t , tt 7 ir • ' ~i I IME =MEI I t.:/ .r , li-wr..V1.1 ,t, EWE Mil From i Harriet r ,r, 1)1. it It 1 it. I. ME . . cr,‘v4 I 1.. t.• I' „ r~uu~~ ` 1~, ral iny, 'l4 vh.. itntwo t 1/..: , S:at.• I w . :. , n Stat.. Er... Corupau y Ti •-• a 1....ry 11l etd..1u1..1 .1 .... , 31,'1 • i 111 t it %yid the •114 , 1, , r1 this (lays. , alre.i.ly retching 1 :toy b..lieve it fabui -.1 down in New V r'h : • ; ert•-hugn t.. wake the ci %% attribute ytoir great pi -1 polfltt , 1 to the great lye:: connecting that proud melt-0p..% bill will pi' l in c itupetition Co that trade to miles slic,rter and of better kr.l. thrce years, without it or sonh and direct aid from the a cousurutnation way l.• Cau Philadelphia :.f .r 1 down upon her :.., grist Central eon 1 a course, she .1. v ; more freight • •• chAved at l'ittsburch 1.. 1:.. ling . differ, as the figures wt intercept flu , by the titian , . own wharves L.vl ; it •lie 111; t. t, ettnpt.t.. fr..igitt. t , I ;tit •tti I l l , ' • 1 it lr 11tollip' , • 1 , 1 1- ..1 . 01 hill 111,11 i V 1 11 Tim thg• N:01 , 1,.11 i n!a:lt.n “ftltt• %ley, :1, to !1.,. .wli 'lre k 1: .1 ~ 1 111.11- I lII' ) , I\ I ti,rl 1 tl , 1,01.u1,1 !lig t.. 1,. f r. .i• ',jug urgau.Led ~1 ;1.- , the I:ni:ed Stair, Much mutt. Delivivuey Apprept r clearly t 6 ever 1:,1 , present for*. 'ft, fart that the !•uppi: - p , II I “ti I t , itnwetliatc 14.T..trtinent . • tracts cutcri..l into - • Iti t •y d; t, Lt..; tdatclut.ut , ‘. , rbitati Ir trap-part.,ii i the Nvrvtee }, tt, 11.1 Nit% th etilt•ul tor O , kw • 3[141 dt partment t• ••,1 " Aim ,or awl are uluort be: u A• 1 114 =1 been I •rin .• Itus-ia awl phu w. • Guvrruu„ tit t, f L. I , in He ~.1••}, -• ' al i•un.uit , in show- 1 , 1 - i trade 11y 11t c Ch jlnuu-.t. tl-1), - a • • of a prem.:AA,: au.i tbk -• • State, and taloa-ay, LA • • MI =I AM =I MEE IMO !I 1 Mil , r ' L.tti r t IMMI 1111 MEI )n ' \ NI \V lIM