THE ERIE OBSERVER. 1111711 J. V..ISLOAN, 111411•7 r. 8L() A N tr. Y 00l3Z, Publishers and Probrieiorsir 14 trI)11/04 V Democratic State Ticket. FOR BllTltiallt Jt'DGE, WILLIAM A. PORTER, OF PWII.ADELPIIIA FOR CANAL COMIngfiIONER. WEST LEY FROST, OP YAYKTI CO News of the Week. —The Baltimore Republican says a few weeks i s ) a young. besedsomis, accomp li shed and fashionably .d sod lady, took up her quarters In a respectable boarding h se and repreaeuted tkat she was from Ciocinnati, uomarried, with sample means. One youthful exquisite seemed to be partiemially sierossfal is his attempts to On her lavora hie coasideretios. One - unlucky evening both were seated apes a iota in the prior. Soddenly the door-bell tinkled and the next moment entered a tall, stately mv ot : or d roe peetable appearawee, who stalked right into th e and halted full before the lowing pair. The lady gave one glasses to the istruder, them uttered a shrill 01:1011111 and •xidelmed, "My husband!" Prom fame subsequently Irarsed, it appeared that the lady was a resident of Phila_ delphia„ and married to a highly respectable gentleman of that city. They had been united for about two years, whoa the tallithias of the lady for dirtatiou, giddy-headed female amootatew, sad gay young men, caused a decided row between her and ber liege lord. The quarrel ended in the tight of the idle to this city as above stated; but the husband, iseroir4 of her whereabouts, came on and surprised he, is the ifitidat of the affectionate tete.•• tete with her admirer. The dispute was settled between the lady sad her husband, sad Basally both started back ami cably enough to return to Philadelphia. —An eneoemater took place at six o'clock Friday freeing, in frost of the New York Hotel, between Charles Mathews, now awed at Barton's Theatre, and Adolphus ff. Davey port, d Wallach's. The difficulty seems to have originat ed in the fast that Mr. Davenport had obtained a divorce from his wife; 4sbons Mathews Afterwards married. The report bid obtaised csuTeney that Mathews had said that be paid for his wife three hundred dollara. Two cotes, damasuling a retraction or dental of this declaration. bad ham sent to him by Mr. Davenport, to which Mr. Matthews did sot reply. Oa Friday evening, as Mr. Matthews was starting for the theatre, Mr. Davenport same up and asked whether he had said be had paid him the sum in question, to which he answered that be had paid it to Davenport's lawyer. Giving him the lie, the latter assailed hint with a eowhids, and a scuffle ensued, and the parties acre separated by the bystanders. A police officer then arrested' Mr. Davenport, and took him to the Fifteenth preeinct station bons*, where be was admitted to hail. 41,. &Hair created a great excitement- Both parties fulfilled their theatrical engagements that evening. —The steamship ''City of Washington" has arrived ■t New York with Liverpool dates to the 12th inst. The in telligneoe is important. Resolutions of renstire against the Government were introduced into both Ilotvies of Parliament, bat had not been naiad upon. Lord Bilen borough bad resigned from the Ministry and a ministerial crisis was imminent when the steamer "City of Washing ton" sailed. Later intelligence had been received from India. The Fourth Bengal Artillery had been tried by court martini and sixty were sentenced to be bang. A hot weather campaign was deemed inevitable. The opposition in Pairs had succeeded in electing another member of the Corps Legislatif. The Hon. Edward Erskine has been appointed Secretary of Legation to the l'oited States.— All the able for the Atlantic telegraph bad been pat on board the steam frigates Niagara and Agamemnon, and an experimental trial to test the machinery was to be made to...marrow. The English Government had demanded eompeasatien from Naples for the imprisonment of English engineers. The prospects were good for an, abundant harvest in England. The money market was depressed OP account of the threatened misterinia.l crisis. —The Itodtkeeter Ueioa says a man went over Niagara Falls on Wednesday. Be came from the Canada side at Chippewa, in a imilboat, nearly to the American shore, and wu la the act of returning, when be went into the rapids. It was thought by those who saw hist from the shore, that Id was imprudent in the management of the boat, and depended upon his sail long atter be shoat have takes it down, and resorted to his owl to ears blassolf.— It is Slid the boat was actually to the rapids before the sail was lowered, and then it was too late. Who the man was Is not known on the Anrim' side. Boat and maa were bet sight of bag Wore they resehed the great fall. —A Mr. Startarrant, of Cleveland, Ohio, asserts that he can bring hoes forward two months earlier by the very simple process of. feeding them with unbolted rye.meal placed on boards near the live. They "piteh into it at Dees." As of late years beekeeping has become a favor ite aad profitable amusement with thousands—as ao elan of "pets" can, in these reapecu, be composed to them—it is quite possible that a knowledge of the farts above mem. dolled may prove acceptable to mesa,. Bees are like trees —it emus itry little to start them, they maintain them *elves with very little attention, they are pleasant to ob. serve, sail is the sad profitable. —An employee i n thelarber shop of Henry Gardiner , at St, 10)41S, was arrested on the charge of being implica ted is the murder of one Hagh Downie, a drover. After his arrest to eolefeeesd that the murder was committed at Dice o'3looll oo Sunday eveniag ia, Gardiner's shop.— Downie ease Is, took the chair, and resigned himself to be shampeoed. The lather was permitted to trickle to his eyes, sad the. the ropes was applied to his neck. His he was 'mimed in the stove, his body robbed sad thrown where it was found, mid the rope was conveyed where it was found, Three employees of Gardiner did the job. The rematialsis two have lied, but will be caught. Gardiner is also cadet arrest. • --lifollanry who bar been tried is Canada for crimes ecoosaittoil by the notorous outlaw Townsend, is at length rolassed from imprisonment on bail. The Cleveland Plain Dealer advisee him to out Mick "never to go bask no mom' Wsinither like him. He is endowed with lames.* plsek He is a jovial and devil may care fellow, very re freaking to look upon in this unromantic age. H. is one of the few men that laugh at all sorts of trouble. Few \awe been put through w *laborite and tough a slums of sprouts as he has; but be bar stood it all like a Rum 'an, as he saqsaationably Is, and "long may he wave." —lows City was on Tuesday last the scene of a mob, ic th and .t a horrid murder . The facts, as we er them from die R•porerr and the Dubuque Herold, •r so follows: "A pereemal saimosity existed between t o men noosed Wilkissen sad Phi ll ips. On Monday night billips' barn wall horsed, sad his partisans suspected Wilkinson of set.. Slag It oe Sr.. Oa this naked suspicion, they went to the boss. of Wilkisses, tore him from his wit* saCchildres, loud kis bands bailed his back; and east him boadlosg ism the lowa river, ma drowned him. Over thirty ‘ ereis asst. of lowa City were eeneeraed in this horrible act" —We tisess it daft, says the Washingtos Mims, to Cot. gas= to state that the reports in eiroulatioa that he Is a Merman are sot only nafonnded bat ridiculous.. He is • weetirsimetlMr of the late lamented Or. Lase, posaises. As/ his emerge& sad =sterols= character. Bs and his , haft atm universally respected in Philadelphia, where they we hest knows. His parser to Salt Lake as a prl. MO inalvidaa was suaertattis hem motives of pure be sevassee, sail is Um hope that he might be lastramental Is !salmis' the Manson. I. submit to the eonstitutioe sad thalami= sad *as spare the elusion of blood. --COL Jahn W. Miser, specie! agent of the Postale* lbspertmest, arrive/ ks St. Laois os Saturday, laving is charge Wlllism Massing, amused of rabbis( Me mail sham the Mb lam., is Ways* county, Missouri. A pon ties of tke mosey Moles La bees recovered. His guilt is veil salsialebed. He is caly seventeen or eight es years al age. —w. tors from the Canine Doescrat that st • mostiag of the Cuallaseised Coeforesso of the Broad of Wert Posegissis, hole la the Gorses Le Myra of that piers ..lb. alb lest., the Rear. LP. N • • SS peas of Ibis Ober* was fosse ratty of grossly imeseadlisoeset, mad asersded from the otistetry sant the oust masa omeetiog of the Speed_ --43api. William brew% formerly a eesaasear of vowels ea Lake firia, has hats seat to the Lick Ras Aglaia. by thi emit at Cliaelaaad, witil his Mirada la Bairiki wad for his. NO Brows has bosoms issue is seasequesse of his adoptive of the Was of the liisdrittislials. —The lailitwarells +ereuf says a fester was row/WA Is that city ea Illeadey fives Grwaserala, L., swiss, that the "nib of theZweig* Beak ma 114,111 eves with pilaw ell lastaalare awl *WM ha silver talus eall ait• Obi of It has bees manure& sad slims ars am as Ns trash et die bllegian." t • —A vele Tam takes es flaisallay .+eases la lb. At., easels Legisistare, bribe reeiewsk of tb• capital fre i s Illadiees is Milwaskei. II vu i•hal" b 7 "Insist", Speaktee easels' eves Ship Tropic Bird, Aral into, boarded and orwiretied Bark Clara Windsor, bred into, boarded and *searched. Bark tilootsmt,, altarlimilad,a‘ase„.. ~ - --,. Bark W. IL Chandler, boarded and searched while lying at seelior In the port of Saigon la Grande. Twelve other seesels also boarded and searched in the harbor of Sops la Onside. Brig Robert Wing, bred into, bowled and searched Schooner Wingold, bred into, boarded aud searched. Schooner Cortes, seised, and now detained at insane. Schooner N. B. Borden, fired Into, hoarded and seeirebtoi. Betusser Meet* Geed Mee. insedesbnadileetreised What doss ibis mean f NMI the Naglials govennsient desire to pick a quarrel wish Uncle den., or is it merely a movement on the part of the British miwistry to divert tie attention of her Iler Majesty's loyal subierts from some enatemplued scheme at home. Somettneg of this kind certainly mast be the meaning,-or, what is pothers' sore likely, the commander of the English Was Indus squadron has traaseeaded his instraerions, and when the proper representations have been made, that Goverament will at ono. riisiven each and every outrage. ant make its mediate reparittion and apology for the same. 1. , 1n view of She stationed importation of slaves into the isbied of Ca. be, witted', though not legalised by the Spanish govern. swat, is at least winked at by that government's edictal., it may be that fresh ins ruetlons bare best giv - en to the English esamanden\on that station relative to vessels snouted of being enga) la this forbidden trek.; yet, if such is the feet, it triol ible that they go to the ex tant of directing the viscid and search of all curets mot upon the high seal in th neighborhood of that island. 1.1,t41 if they have not—ol they 11Ut. received Instruction. which they art falthfully - eketuting—there has a very grave mat ter arisen between the governments of Great Britain and the United States—no less a matter than Pra tleeel the heel war. Prior to the war that visitation .pd marcher Amer" lean vessels by British cruisers was accompanied by asser• fiat of a right to seize and carry away any of the crew of U e former adjudged by the boardiag °bless to be British subjects. Indeed, the ostensible object of visitation was to search for rush persons—a far more legitimate object, we should say, than to search for evidences that a vessel is &slaver, America resisted, even onto war, the asserted right of visitation and search In the one ease. If we have now to eneentiter an asseetioa as to right in the other case, there is no sort of doubt about bow it will be met, by the government, in the brat Settees, and, if persisted in, by the people in the second butanes. But, as we have said, we do sot audit that the British goveroment has issued any instruetiona which warrant the condos of those of its ships which have been visiting and searching American vessels in the Golf of Meaico and the Cuban harbor of Saguia la Graade, for such instructions would tat tanta mount to a declaration of war. The American doctrine respecting the right of search is as well 'understood in' Ragland as it is hers. It is as well onderstooti-there as; here what that doctrioe was in 1812—what it use when; Gen. Cass blew up the famous quintuple treaty project-- ; what it is now. What it is now has Just bean declared to the British government. Gen. C• 113, in his totter of Apt 10, 1858, to Lord NAPIICR,io reply to a dispatch from thak Minister respecting this same basins.", of the slave trade! said . MAY VW. ISM. "To permit a foreign °deer to board the lof anethe4 power, to aeseme earn/nand is her, to rail for and e.tatniall her paper, to pave Judgment open her Ammeter, to deridd the broad logarry whether is navigated sevdediog ism, ■nd to seed her ie at platters for trial, r•reoot brr. 61 rilliUed to by 003 oddrpesagirmt nattms without injury Cl*fi how... The United Stater deny the right of the ernieeri of say other power whatever to enter their •easel. by forei in time of poses." This is emphatic. There could scareely be a more .4 phasic and unequivocal statement of the American d trine. In the face of it, to suppose that the British go 7- ernment _has Mined orders to Its naval enassanders overhaul and search American ships upon any pretence whatever, is to moppet's that that government is reedy to go to war with es. What its navy has been doing in the Golf of Mexico cannot be eubmitsed to by our government mad people "witbott injury and dishonor." This mob the British government has been assured in advance.— The intelligence from Washington is that the government ham already brought the matter to the node* of the British Minister and instructed our Minister at London to bring it to the attention of the British Cabinet, and issued such orders to oar hour squadron as will, at all hazards Secure the protection of our commerce in the half NOT Qlll.7lE—m. Pre**, which has taken upon Itself the task of regulating the political affairs of this State, gravely proposed the other day that Gee. JACXWAX, the popular member from Clinton in the last Idgis!stars, should be brought oat as lb. anti-administration r,,,ndidate forSongress in opposition to nom dilation Wef, who I. sow so faithfully sad ably repreeeatlag that district The secret of the Press' opposition to lIIIITIR is that he has not proved a traitor to the party that sleeted him, and given "aid ;and comfort" to such renegades and apostates as Forney. This tall of the Pram was very promptly echoed and endorsed by the Games plane—bat, infanta. rudely for the meow of tie sehouse, it don't appear be 11:1110i With math favor OWN, from Oss, JACIEXAN himself .. or the Denseurstie party in the district.' TN Clinton Deis. avid, owned and edited by one of Cloy. Paccun's cabinet, and supposed to sympathies with the (worse of tbe Prow, tomes down on the proposition thus : Why not rice him lase. Jackman') the eery twit VIM jority you can, by sleeting him to Congress as a reward, to.—Pkila. Praia. We will tell you. Yr. Pros: because Roo. Ataison Wwho has made a most faithful, intainitial, and in. d o Representative, will probably be a eaudidate for ro.olaotioa, and ilea. JACICItaI if WO Itrut a Mead of Mr. White to be in his way for Congress. As to "Lecoasplos," the Democrats of this region bare, pima', refused to become embroiled is it---eare nottr, ing about it—wad deem the aseeadeoey of their Party as of induitely more insomniac* than ti theorised Drab town ship pie:rola as exist is it about Kansas. -- That is our answer. 8o that each won't crow ! _ Jew The fleets diselosed by the records of the Deed Letter order at Washiness, will oenviaes any use, upon examination, that meek et the faidteserilsed Witte em ployees of dia.?. 0. Departmeat is the fanit of coffeepots deists tkameelveu Durisg tie Met year, as we see it stated, in addition to some $50.000 in mosey returned to its lawful owners, there have been found is the letters, and restored, drafts, checks and ether valuable papers asnonst ng to three and a half millions of dollars. In the greater somber of instances dead letters which have the been rettarnedito the department. have failed to reach their des timation in due coarse by reason of misdirection. This may doubtless be attributed to the hang in which basks and large mercantile houses close up their eorrespoedetee for the day. One hank sends • letter cowering paper amounting to thousands of dollars—inside the packs*" is addressed to Nashville, outside to New Orbitals, Another heavy remittance is directed to Troy. New York, without any address whatever oa the inside. A third package was directed oa the outside to Louisville, Kentucky the Inside direction to New Orleans. And isistenees like these are itit sugarless, they are the rule. Very siesz of the Republican papers, says a to. temporary, mal persist in fieuougelng Mr. English's Kan • Compranaise Sill as a "swindle," a "bribe," Le., Jm. Thom papers Amid amines the ilecamente beiore than staking fools of themaelveit. The Crittenden Amend ment, which received the rotes of the astir' oppositiia to the Presidears pulley la both Hoarse of Coogress, doilp precisely the Nunn amount of governateat lands to Kamm as is offered by Mr. English's CONIIWOII4IIII Bill Pict icon Aim s ba g t r y again, Messrs. Repablicas Editor... Tour epithets stultify yearselves, tad reflect upon your Mode. reosatiy hsd satasioa to realise that the • • try arsesii )iris is a sisiiiiittal oottatry—a ociastaati ism roving sad hist soaatry--a country ad• lag is Jot area, lissatifal shads t abd aids passkey with bawl swat epos tbess.—Gaseiss. It is saki there is bat was mop from the sublime t 4 shitasiosis, but bars is a sass when dm* is bat 0 0 Sep trim th. riiiiimaisas is the subitas. - "Nat ease sail "pretty maids" is jaztaposftioa la a paragraph WO the she,. I ea asl-I,:aa ma& is • Cost; or skis is of that plea tied lava of tail of dm old lidlow out west who last his wife un t io r i,lort bane•. add rt. lost sows, sag r.. lost fit area," mid ha, ad be laid Ma batter half lieseatii lb. dad, abet sothise dyer ems overt ow like this." Priesft..riblisbeel by, Nam t Heattastaft New Yost, the bet saftbor of wbieb IA Were us is do NW if o mew imathly to be disretoi to tbo loftiest et I. emit. It Is getup is a west esirsiftwetift 1171 e, sad eashalas are *Amble boteeesetbso els the efts sad pre gifts of prissier,. Mao 11 pee saw& desire to valise. wltlt wary menipapee 1. tM Usiss , tborstoes tbeso set.roesidets do lest welsher are request ed to woe 'poetises eoptee *Noir papers. -4 won =hided sad very powerful woman at &air* DeismNei, imiestlif Ihigrodi s hilizer veriorterskr. toe ds• plena .1 tbil WWI, fee titriastagikar Irsobaisd to ibeasirsee. Mien do - washi hid*. or trimly.. Jiliwk ars Alleed bar arts Atm asslied hew & —Mn, *pH wilh Of the POriorather of Madam, Kom., boa bees eooviethi of tho Moe if potheeiog her hothead. Biagiotarly oreogh, the ,erdlet brought Is woo for are* s the mesa& doom Otteettes leek log. lin oar italic; of lite ifith, in aotieing the report of the tined Jury, we stated tbat it reported the Poor BOOS* "lb goad condition• auffill ••lematee well eared fm"— if this is correct," we continued, "thee indeed is madam rumor a most notorious old hoe for we hare beard it reported that quit. a different state of affairs *slat"— Having hoard three rumors, we continued, "ware glad to hear frma eh retipectebie hotly of tare as die ,filretsd Jury of Its Corot, - that they are iscort frt. Was that " e 010• @gearing" a " euetroversy in regard to the County Poor House ," Hardly ! On the contrary. It was vary meet like ending any eontroreray which might heretofore hare existed to regard to the matter. But this Gazette did not, onnoirue it so. and is its next faeao, wit► that ImPerellko" "Sir Oracle" manner that dietiagnishe• the weak and vain, it attempted to read us a lecture as to our duties a. as Editor. To this we replied, showing from the report of the Gread Jury of the Fehewary term, that the " out side tumors" to which we first alluded bad, Daly three months previous, fogad a yoke in guiles' 'atheistic a fors as the claim atm set ap that the Howe "is In good condition" and the " *masa wall eased foe." Hat the Gazette says, or intimates, (bat the report of the Grand Jury at the February term might have been true at the time, and that is May true also. Of Doane the Gazette does not expect anybody to believe this kind of staff ; bar. log unwittingly slumped tato s hole, now like a drowning man catching at straws, it seises the first excuse to help itself rut. Whoa it assumed the attitude of a " Sir Oriel•," it supposed the report of the February jury was beyond our reach, but In thin It found its mistake, stud hence the pretence now set ap that a building which is tuetally unfit for the purpose designed—that • management of the Poor Departmeat of our County which is sad has bees a disgrace to our people —has all been reformed in three short months. It is preposterous. We believe the ink Superintaident of the House, Mr. Lora, wu as eap• able and willing to make the inmates comfortable as any man in the County—but be found it impossible with the Nullities furnished him to do en, cad therefore, as we are erodibly deformed, did not seek to retain the place i*yond the expiration of his ollisialterst. A .iIOVK IN Tilt RIGHT DIRECTION.-16. Sena tes Douai-es ietroduced a bill in the Senate on tbs. 24th %ilia', we confidently believe, will meet the approbation of the entire Country. The title of it is, " A bill to res +in and redress outrages upon the flag and citizens of the United States," and it eonfors upon the President authority to use such force as he may deem necessary to prevent the perpetration of such outrages upon our com eliest* as have of late been the theme of complaint among Mir commercial marine against the Davey of Great Britain, slationed in the Gulf of Mexico. We hope Cougresi will respond to this move promptly. Such a bill is positively necessary, and it is strange indeed that such power has not before hese given to our Presidents. It is not safe at all times for an Executive to " assume the responsibility" when pig powers are daubtful, although k may be for purpose in itself commendable, just and right; bat clothe him with the " power of the law" and he sets with fear. Irsaness, and when some gross outrage is eommitted upon our flail or upon our soil during • rotten of Congress, it ao longer becomes necessary M wait the assembling of the Nanette! Legislative before the authors of arch outrages ran he properly paaished and the natlea's /moor protect ml. We repeat, we hope the bill will pass. Lek, The N. Y. 77. e. ohjerts to being called a "lead = lag black republican journal." It says it is not " true in the Snit place; besides it harti the feelings of its republi can brethren, which is another coarideration of Importance." To this, the Detroit Pree Press replies, that It does not wonder the Times is sensitive. Formerly it has not object ed to the desigaation which it now indignantlyrepudistes, but that was beers the black republican party bad fallen into its present dilapidated condition. That was before it had become a question with leading black republicans whether they should attempt to maintain their separate party organisation or disband and amalgamate with the ltnowsnothings. It is no hobos or profit to be suspected of organsbip of a disintegrating political party; and the Times Is jealous of Its honor as any lady of genitalia age could possibly be whom good name had been exposed, and its sagacity as to the main chance pecuniarily is as marvel. out as that of the rat whieh started off from the ship be fore anybody was qeituonselous that she mu in a sinklag NEW WAY TO KILL RA7a—A writer in the Rochester "'Rios proposes a new teethed for killing rat:L— ille own house being overran with the vermin, the servant girl, who had seen the affects of " Old Bourbon Whiskey" on bipeds, thought she would try an experiment on the rata. Accordingly she took a smut quantity and aside it very sweet with sugar, crumbling in bread numb for the crowd, and set the dish is the cellar. A foot hours after she went down and found several rats gloriously " fad. died," engaged in throwing beast-pods asd hauling one another up to drink. These were easily disposed el; thous not killed left the premises immediately, suffering with a severe headache. The writer adds that the medieine is quite agreeable to take. 110 PR it Is 30.--1 1 re see it stated that Bon. Charles It. Sockalew has been appointed a Minister Itesideut to a Scutb American State with a salary of $7,500 per annum. lie goes to Equador, the capital of which is Quito,' very healthy spot, sad therefare very suitable for Mr. Suckalew, whose physical condition is miserable indeed. A new Senator will bare to be elected is his district, ask leg 9 Demoerats, and 3 Opposition to be elision this fall. Off• To such of oar eotemporaries u have been pleased to notice our re appointment u Post Master favorably— and most them have done so—we return our most sinters thanks. A kind word from our brethren of the prose mac; of whom we have weekly diffitred with on politiesi questions, confines' es more and more that, the path of duty is Dot always a path of lb ores. %L. The Conneaat Reporter pitches into the weather grumbled in this wise : " There's • great deal of granth. Hug oew•a•days about the weather—lt do'nt nit people. It rained yesterday and the day-before—lt rains to.day, and they expect it will mill to-morrow, and they ca f e% plow, nor sow, nor reap ! [asp right on grumbling about that over which you here no control. It helps amaz ingly." ----BOUM fellow who might to be in the Penitentiary, and doubtless will be before be dim, entered the yard of Maj. &Gorr. in this city, on Wednesday night, and helped himself to a quantity of the MOO6l linen. It was rather • novel situation for the Major, we suspect, to wake up in the morning and And be had but " one shirt to his back." W e can sympathise with him; for when we lived on the same street a few years since, we were served the same way—only more so, for they took our pantaloons into the bargain. —Elms bravo is human shape shot • very valuable Woe/ging to Col. D. B. Ci..kair* Of this city, the other night. 'rho perpetrator of the outrage we believe ii sus. peeled, and we hope will he klealifed aqd paalsood. He dwarves a few swaths In Om Brie County Jail or Poor Roam Tao Allagbeay Pealtoatiary is too good for him. —The newspaper's continue to state that the Mar iana war is elided, and ascribe the credit to Cot. Hue.— This Ray or say eat be trae—bst it is a troth that we eaa testify to, that eke wu.es high prices I. this City is am elided. W. A. Ginswota, at the Respire Stores, her. lag determined to keep op the fight as long as there is an aid fogy tel is the field. Ladiee and admits is Roan of chap dry goads should WI and see, sad thee giro bin the malt. The Editor of tbe'Whitewater Register aelreeirb. Wpm the receipt of a box AA Soap to ciao hie teeth, end says he shall " try it." Good 1--0• lope he isnl, sad would suggest that if It proves effectual la reelovlag the dirt free life teeth he obeli thee try it oa lib polities. PIP The Coonnaateille oourier states that garitnalisia I. reeeiviag eoneidelaide latencies Jag bow la t►M town, aad vidaity. Weekly immune an Wadi at willed' es. bertatiou sad demoosteatioas are made by " niediame," with a view of convincing the eredaloos and azteadias Um ialhienea. From the political owapienioa of that locality, we ars sot at all wirprised at Ibis—the ions al. ways lowish Mint libor• the people are carried away by political machete cad asp. ehriekeni Who ever board of a " mantle is " old Berko," or table 'sprite' moot the " satertilied" of t►. gloriosa "loath legicra." —Oa Saturday Wed, of "reek \afar* had, tweedy row lberart Art oeooraiket of tie Iffithedist Prolootast thowil ektforoooo, tk delegate Atom °rape roookil Lysebbitri, Vo.. to ottoad it. soooloo. B. hal boos oo the woo. over sisal fleintary last from the knots ossio• he reprosestE d. 4. emies by Liss New Cassis 'sperm that slam ambers pstrism Wag tio• slims at *at meaty at diem prombiag hot to bsi eissgbt seism to Its. *Asa, Oemsmitias sap so. flu say hay sash Bast has, a vniai bim t. ga right dews to Gammas* as a milssiosary. Timm forty patriots bare svidsady nova isms *Agit tat " Qs. Alas tad d wok the UK sal tie teas lb* Aloe WWII is Bad :. . < ' ,••• NEW OR*. , . theikm. loemOorsilleed .444 of# t Commapoodeocr of a.. Colefbier•Mr.) Ow Yoe.; Ms 24, 1858, rise back wardeees 411 he weatherollmiZal a 4111111 0 14 cheek apes aovemenli tin besieges sad Melded; As regards business, however, the spring trade la about uwor sed4bers an interregenin of Mesas before the fall basiara Keay V fiksatim tisk me; Wage Maas bare beea.maits this wok st S 4 per mitt The effect of this *tee la He misty gimbal IN sees As the ressieptioa of *penile's' by sewb esaselhotareti as pawed through the twists without pommel dames to their credit. The pi e w &semi oottoe see wooled silk are iffirklaff e*ea direction. Word of operatives are Dot rowing tip,hower. er, to the staddard of lest year. The almost entire est off of dessaad for rods from the great west has been seri. ously felt by oar stensheets this 'swoon. Another cassia smut pass aucesiver before the west with heirs paid pp iu debts to the seaboard sail be obit to eater the varlet aad hap heavily. Murder is nothing new In this oh,/ of crisis., Resent... lees, to keep you posted in regard to al that takes place among as, I must mention that there has been two trage dies since my last. One was perpetrated on board the clipper ship Mandarin, lying in the Rust River, bound to Shanghai, the victim being the second oMeer, and the murderer a seaman *tamed Somers, whom the officer had previously abused. Semen, after some word. with his antagonist, drew a knife and plunged it into his heart, killing him on the spot. Deceased was named Atkins, and via a native of liassaehneetts. Somers is in jail awaiting examination. The other affair took place at a low grog pry, No. 332 Water Street. A young rowdy, named Wil liams, entered the piece neer midnight, had some liquor and refusing to pay, the supper, Charles O'Reilly, endear. ored to pat him oat. A scuffle ensued, in the coarse of which O'Reillydrew a revolver, and discharged the con tents at-the heed of Williams, inflicting Inch injuries as mast prove fatal. O'Reilly immediately surrendered him. self, and is now is jail. The only excitement of a local nature this week has arisen frost the suieide of Hoary Win. Herbert, the well known literaterer, who was a pretty fair specimen of•ft clam of "men about town" who lire by their illus. They are men Wllu have extraordinary flicilities and temptation. for dissipation of which they generally avail thetnxelves to the fullest extent- A newspaper life, especially which se. eessitates late hours, itidistriminsie company and nate physical stimulus is very likely to ruin the majority of those who engage in it. The reperters of the daily press, some of whom enjoy a kited of literary reputation and possess a lair amount of education and ability are per haps as reekles, dissipated and hardened a class at to I.e found among our citisens, if we except professional polati elan, who are properly reputed to be sold bodily to the Father of lie, and mischief. The action of oar Government, in relation to the iint. rages of the British cruisers, meets the hearty approval of men of all parties here. The letter of General ('ass to Mr. Dallas tenches the right chord, and elicits, on all bands, the warmest encomiums. The prevailing impres sion is, that the British Ministry will back right square out, apologise for what has been done, recall their mtuleap Commanders from the West India station, -led concede what is demanded in the way of indemnity. This course of action they are the more likely to follow, inasmuch to if tha,contaianders in question are acting agreeably to inttrue lion's. those instructions muss have been kissed t.y the Palmerston ministry, now in diegraes. Hence, in disa vowing the Americas outrages, and preserving peace with the United States, the Derby ministry will have an esee.l_ lent opportunity to give his illustrious predecessor anoth er kick. In amusements doers is little that is worth notieing The weather has been dull and depressing as Ha %dolmen to limo oturtinsua twin we haws been fleeced with a series •f out winds which effecenallY extinguish say latent ten• doses to merriment which may exist in tho heart• of this petition of the human race. The May meetings of last. week passed off quietly enough with the exception of the Tract Society, whose troubled waters still continue to effervesce, casting up mire and Irritated clergymen are a dangerous: el/111 of people, they fie bard and know when they are whipped. The properly religious meetings are still sustained with unabated interest; a boy preacher, 15 years old, named Crammond Kennedy has become very popular and draws immense audiences. Us is nothing wonderful for a man, but his propriety of thought and expression and grace of delivery seems remarkable in one of his years. Busing newspaper editors for libel is getting to be a very unprofitable business in this city, so unprofitable, indeed, that It may be expected ere long, like the swill milk busl nese, to die out. As hardly anybody but Toinbs law yen engage in it; and juries, somehow, are so opposed to giving them a verdict, that even these will soon be obliged to follow some other persnit to keep tiara starving. Dur ing the last Presidential campaign a certain shrieker for "Wisest and Freedom," wandered ever the country, asking Abolition speeeltes, oeesairally varying his song with pitching late the "Know • Nothieg" New York press, uederrating itaeireulation, Ae. For this, the Erierts advertised the sbrielksr us a chap, for which honest people ought to "keep a sharp look oat." Shrisker sued for II • bel, and wanted SS, O damages. The ease has been on trial this day or lye past, in the Kings money Court, and be.. terminated is a verdict for plaintiff of 1,1 rents damages, with permission to pay his own costa. After this there is ransom to believe, that the nuisance of seeing for libel cm any pretence, just to stud the pockets of bun. gry lawyers and their eaufederates, will be permanently abated. It don't pay. The libel suits on the tepis this week bring out some curious facts with regard to newspaper circulation, *drat.- Haim& eta A tionsiderable amount of newspaper brag has been exploded by a strict questioning of proprietors under oath. ERIE. WILL LAOER HIV! INTOXICATE.—Tbis La a question that is just low paszling the lawyers, judges amid juries—though one would think they could ascertain the feat very readily by trying it on ; an4l we presume some of them do, through we have not 14 yet teen any of them on the witness *Wad. Bolas of the witnesses,how ever, that have been " smiled to testify to the virtues of lager," tell some pretty tall stories of their own rapacity —stories, in fact, that completely upset the lawyers, be sides mystifying both judges and jury—as, for instance, the following as related by the New York Alla. The ease was "The People vs. one George Maurer," charged with eslling intoticeting liquors on Sunday. All Jarmany was anbpienied as witnesses.. Hans Saner Krout testified that lager bier we. not intoxicating, cause vy. he has drunkt more as vorty glasses aidout feeling tight. lie swore by the Bisamerheisel that It was "patter as goot," especially for the Toasts vat gets de beetle makes dem Dory smart, so dey row round quick, and berms. so goot as dey aster was soon, coop'e dimes; and what is ante, be said that the Brooklyn boys never chased men who drank lager bier. Adolph Stobberhausea, be swore by the Harts mountains, dal be moot driok lager tatd de beeptie like von dam pall, satinet feeling dipsy In his bet--dat he trick in more as van header six glasses in von fay, and so oar° von taws tow it, so soak as dat—reaping his Angers. And when Judge Daly asked him what elitist it had upon him, he replied, "It make me feel so potter as goot all ofer, I sleep veil—like one tam pig." A member of witnesses testified in a similar wanner, and one avowed that he daruk tweuty•eight glasses that meeting before he came into coast Keiser Lobsooase, weather witaess, said be eonld drink four pikes a day without being in the least affected, aid mother said that he had put under his waistband fourteen glasses that morning before coming into court; so after a Weep" of similar evidence, the case was submit ted to the jury, who, being somewhat divided in opinion, eaCkerithal obstinate, after being out several hours, stood seven for - sicequittal and tow for conviction, one juror baring been excused on weasel of sickness. Finally the jury had to be dbwharged, is cooseqenee of no agreement, the nearest they could some to it was nine for acquittal and two for conviclikin. died so the question be not yet legally solved—will lager bier Into:feats ? Aroma: tits Isspressusets to the st 7. Jest now attract's' a pod dad of stteettos, is the 'sew frame es, City %alms are heilldhog atop* Hs o 4 cfte amend she Past. The objset Is dontdles. In prirtout tams from the bountry eating up the old eon. The objeet eweetead. site, and the forethought of oer City Pathen rather eso. trsordiaary ! par- Thi Ceeesontrillo Cletwier rewords two eases of damage by lightsiag. la Ail Copp, last week. It says that on Etengiay the 4welliag of Platt Rogers, near Itnadels P. 0., was streak by lightslag, Aka laid gowned to part, pia potties minim g o wn the lightidog rod sad the other down the ohinseep tato the oiliar.' soaping through tile walls. 1t,.. Rogan, it 14111, was boldly lout, sad the house sad fondly* oossidonall Wend sod *oboe. The muse olicbt lb, Lon of Wm. Holcomb, sear tbat was she street tearing of oat gala ood, and splintering one of the post, down which It panted to the graced. A rpm of horses was In Ow stable at the other rod of the bops, bet wary not b a gued. Re beer of no rases is this eiensty. , —we seitentesd that the lb* 01ty Mk was broke. iets ewe Weis Me woe. ..4 the ohmage drum depleted tow is et hemp eat, all them wee 16 it, nit vested, dld'ut py, gm pail 1 The Utah Newt Prow tes usiti nasi, By privatskietters reeei n id frons- Yuri , Bridger, we - receive ewe iter iti ,a lion, in addition to those *nave tom Our otterespoidentenow with the - e ofdtab. Gov. Cumming left Bridger on Monday, the sth of April, for Great Salt lake City, with the expectation of returning on the 16th. ft, me . accompanied only by Col. Kane, two servants and two teamsters depending on his escort from the 61.ormotis when he had passed the advanced pickets of the expedition. It was rumored in the vamp that the Governor was to have the op• portunity afforded him of addressing the Mori moos, on the Sunday follwiog, from all parts of the Territory, as they were to be congrested on that occasion to hear him, and decide whetter the., would continue their course of opposition to the officers of the Government - under the GOT , ernorship of Brigham Young, or- accept him, without bloodshed, for their Governor, under certain conditions. Nothing definite was known of what those conditions were—but rumor bad it that the Governor would propose the entry of the Federal officers and induction into office; to eater the valley, but to leave before Winter. Or the other version, thst the Federal officers were to enter the city and upon' the discharge of their duties; as much of the army to go in with them as would be necessary to the establishment of a military fort, and the remainder to go elsewhere as directed Such were thvumors after the visit of Col. Kane. The Mormons thus consenting to admit into toeir city whatever portion 'of the mil itary as might be necessary to aid in carrying out any investigation that Government might see proper to appoint. General Johnston purposes carrying out his own plans, and intends to march for Salt Lake City about the beginning ofJune By that time he will be reinforced by Colonel Hoffman and Captain Marcy. The Colonel would add to Gen eral Johnston's command twenty officers, five hundred and fourteen men, and one hundred and six horses, .with one hundred and seventy s;s mule teams, ono hundred ox teams, with between two and three month. supplies fo r Col. Johns ton's whole, command Accompanying the troops and provisions will be also the ordinary nninhor of teamster=k, herdsmen &c , armed likewise for defence • Captain Marcy would-arrive there accompani ed by Colonel Loring—who was at last advises following the Captain to provide him an escort —with live officers, ono hundred and ninety four men With that portion of the reinforcements, it is certain that ;coeval .Johnston will march at the time -tated into Salt Lake City, as be is deter mined that not words, but acts of Frubm km) on can be accepted from the iiformons. It is rumored in the camp, but not vet con firmed by travelers, that the Mormons had des troyel the bridge over the, Sweet -water, near In dependence Rock, and the other briigv over the north fork of Platte River, 10f1 miles west of Laramie The destruction of-the latter would not he considered any obstacle to the progress of reinforcements or thepassage of supplies, :41 the Cioverumeut ferry at Laramie would suit every purpose; but during highwater the passage of the Sweet-water would be atteded with con.olersblo difficulty The last mail from the States wa , only saved from falling into the hand. of the Morinons by the presOce of the dragoon. escort , and the "Wind River party." The Mormon women and ehildred are repoited travelling south, huddled together like so mauy cattle in open wagmis. The sermons in the City are said to be furious against the tiovernment Brigham had preiched in such a style of the President- and ex Senator Bright that it could not , be published The army is satsSed that the present move through Col. Kane, is merely to obtain time and throw all operations bite in the season, till it be comes impracticable, and in cowrie of time feel lug the States might favor the withdrawal of the arty altogether. It is said that Brigham is trying to mow diAs seusion between governor Cutututog and Gen Johnston A UNION OP THE Two (IK-sams —On Fri. day last the Secretary of the Navy transmitted to the Senate a very interesting letter from Lieut.. T. A. Craven, dated - May 17, in reference to the practicability of an inter-oceanic eommunicition from the Gulf of - Darien to the l'aeifie ocean, by the Atrato and Truando river. The letter wf Lieut Craven c•meisely embodies the result., i f his late survey of those rivers and contains the following conclusions in reference to the physi cal difficulties to be overcome in opening a munication: 1. A cut through some five miles of submerg ed mud at the mouth of the river, with the pros. prctive certainty of constant dredging 1.1 keep it open. 2. The herculean labor and incalculable ex pense of cutting through the lagoons of the Tru ando and the embedded logs of the Palos Caidos where the whole country is inundated -during at least nine months of ) tho year, and where the flood of a day may destroy thl work of a week 3. The vast expense attending the removal of basaltic rock in a country where labor and pro- visions must all be imported at the most extrava , gant rates. 4. The want of anchorage on the Pacific coast. ft. The fatal effects of the climate, which it may be safely estimated, will at all times ble one-third of any force that may he arn t there Von will not be surprised sir, with the preeed ing arguments, if I am of the opinion that th.. proposed canal is impracticable as involving an ex_ penditure of treasure not easily estimated, and a sacrifice of life from which the stoutest heart may shrink. Human ingenuity and perseverance may it is true, overcome the obstacles enumerated; but at least two generations must pass away ere. the world could realize the completion of a much less extensive work than that contemplated BRITISH AtiOßLisloN BlislsTxt) —All hon- or to Captain Bartlett, of the ship Clarendon:— lie has struck a blow for the freedom of the seas and in defence of his'country's flag, which de serves commendation from every honest Ameri• can We learn by the mail of Monday, that this brave sailor refused to show his papers, ur to hoist his ensign at the orders of the British steamer Buzzard, and" that although guns were fired, and one hundred armed men sent alongside in boats he sticoessfully defied, and refused thew admission to hie ship;- while British valor, and rage, fizzled out in 4 dastardly blow, roccived by Captain Bartlett,,but which the officer, who was only allowed to board for parley, denied any in thention pf having given. This was brave and manly on the part of the American Captain, and will be an earnest to John Bull of what he may expect, should be dare persist in these outrages, when our national ships, which are hastening to the scene, come up with ono of his piratical craft; in the attempt to board and search an American vessel. WAsuisrrow, May 23. 8 MOAT,. —The $15,000,000 loan bill was dis cussed, during which Messrs. Soorobs and Crit• tendon spoke unequivocally on the subject of the British aggressions in the Gulf, Mr. Toombs as : vetting that ttio Government should have aunt the British ships, or seising them, brought their officers here and hanged them; and Mr. Critteli , den, while believing that England would make ample apology , saying that the English can not. be permitted stop our ships, would not die. pate with England the abstract right of search, let her found her claim on what prerogative or supposed right she may. list the moment she wakes anion on oar national rights and honor, I aggress ion Mr. Crittenden, tight her upon the fact, with war for the argument. NB. The Washington Gaols doe. not likroahe Southern Commercial Conventions. - It doubts "if a single a railroad, a single ship, or a single dollar of additional wealth, bss seenliod as sae peculiar product of these conventions." 4-,.. .4. ~ . .., . . o • ' ... F: 1 W • .NG L. .•'ll From tilt N ,-• .. 11. Wat• • IN, 7 24, There is a t a • •tne• to in from the Ancona •• hi -• in • y • I hi mr. terday, of more , tb •I i , and Congress is in the disposition to give adi t.' tional powers to the President. The administra. the conduct of its naval offimrs, bat has preps., red to repel such outrages should they be repeat. (J. In addition to the Colorado, Jamestown and Dispatch, of the Home Squadron, the Navy De parlament has ordered the Wabash, Fulton, Arc• tic, Water 'Witch, and DAphin to cruise on our coast ma the Gulf, with order to protect our merchantmen from search, under aay pretence of treaty or suspicion. The broad ground that the American flag is inviolate hiss been tab a and trill be maintained. I II:PORT The bill introduced by Judge Douglas in the Senate to-day to redress outrages upon the flag and citizens of the United States, and which is doubtless given in your report of the Senate's proceedings, is one of the most important steps taken for years Affecting the power of the Exs ecutive, giving the President power to redress outrages upon our flag and citizens, it is precise• ly what Mr. 'lndianan desires. It will place the responsibility upon him, and he will not flinch in its exercise It is understood the Coin mittee OD Foreign Relations wit report the bill back immediate!, Judge Douglass will move an amendment to the bill, the substance of which is to empower the President in cases of the violation of the laws of nations and outrage by a foreign govern moot on our citizens, to issue special letters of reprisal, to be placed in the hands of an offieer of the (Jutted States Navy, who will proceed in a vessel of war and seize upon the property of the government so offending, and bring it to the United States, where by a decree of a court hav ing admiralty Jurisdiction, it shall be and the proceeds applied to liquidate the claim of the American citizens upon whom the outrage has been committed, theineasure of damages to he ascertained by tho Cella of Claims. The British Minister _at In difficulty, for he fl un ky guspieious CilennalittneeS Or appearances justify, under ttin treaty, the search of English cruisers Ile and his government wilt have to back !own front this position or take the conse quences Captain Dahlgreen, now in command of the practiee ship Treble, has tendered his services to the Secretary of the Navy, which will probably Iw aeoepted, t. join the Home Squadron for the protection of our commerce in the gu lf The .4;1 . ' 4111 1.1 , 00Ue cutter Harriet Lane, now stationed at New York, will probably be ordered to join the flume Squadron. There I- itiformation at the War Department --not officially communicated,but reliable.—from Ut a h to April 1(1 Governor Cumuiirg, on leav ing Camp Scott, .fo•r all saterVieW with Colonel Kane, for Great Salt L tke Pity, said be would return in ten (lays ft was believed at (!amp Scott, and is the ,pinion here; that the Mormons tare intriguing to cause delay and check the pro• gress of the army No in-traetions checking the progress or operations of the Army have been or will be given, ut eotisequence of the news yet reeeo,t •I Tti(. C,,trimittpo "f Way, aril :qt.ati- will con sider the fifteen million lo.xn to-morrow Prom inent inember of the (!•itninittee think it iy uot nough—that the Pre.i,letit have asked for mote Th.‘ hill wilt pa-3 A few T eeehes will lie inade agaiwit IL tir home coro.umption, hill in f.tet few mewl, are main-1 it The appropriation bill will he hurried thro', as there is a general do+ire to adjourn on the day lizetl Thi .f re is every probability that, not withstanding the large amount or prig:it, 21,4 other 1.41 s on h.u2.1, Congress will press all legis lation absolutely necessary for the support of the government, and adjourn on the 7th of June The million appropriation for the Capitol x tension was stricken out, because members be. lieved it was an extravagant and useless expend, titre under the present management The appropriation will probably be attached to some other bill and be carried, as there is no disposi tion to retard the work The Senate Committee on Territories will re port at their next meeting bills for the organ . = tion of Arizona and Dakota Territories They have also before them the Mane bill for the organization of Nevada Territory The President sent to the Senate to-day the name of Mr. Farrel/ as Postmaster at Cincinnati also Mr Henning as Register of the Land Office 'at Hudson, v:ce Mr Spencer, removed. • The special committee on the Pacific Railroad will he ready to report a bill the last of this week sff j.lip session is extended, the friends of the bill hope to pass it this session. Senator twin will move a reconsideration of his hill to morrow or Wednesday bier The Washington corre44pouilent of the New York Express mentiooq the following "in. eiients :" The Senate was a little startled the other dsy, out of its dullness and dignity by an accident,— A reporter carelessly threw his overcoat over the rear railing, which shuts off the reporters from the Senate below It chanced that in the pocket of sa , d overcoat, there was a stout bowie knife, which was, by the impulse given to the east, thrown with some violence below, striking the blade into Senator Llammond's seat, which was at that moment unoccupied Fur a utopian' the Senator,: were startled out 04' their propriety, and the Sergeanttat Arms went up to the gallery, and arrested the proprietor of the cost, but when explanations were made, he was releaticd SlgaloUft RIOT IN rte : COAL RIGION.-31111 trouble among the millers of the Ashland coal district near Pottsville, has assumed a furious as pect. The workmen struck for higher wages several days ag•', alleging that, at the rates they received, they of not support their families. As their employers refused to make any conQes sions, the miners went off in a body to ()thereat. lieries to obtain higher wages, or compel the oth. er workmen to - make the strike a general one.— They visited Wadesville and the collieries in that vicinity, aud,by threats rod persinssion, induced the, miners to join them. On Friday, the mob, which had grown quite formidable, appeared at St Clair, and, by their violent demonstrations. stopped operations at Woes', John's, Snyder's, and other colleries. The Sheriff's Deputy was on the ground, but, was unable to make any ar. rests, in consequence of the streokth of she riot• era The Sheriff of Schuylkill County made a requisition upon the military, and the First Reg , iment of Volunteers, under the eaumnand of Col. Johnson, left, for St.. Clair at an early bow.— The military returned at noon, htiuging with them the ringleaders of the riot. Quiet biebeen restored ST. Louis ' May 15. A despatch from Leavenworth, dated 24th, says that the second column of troops for Utah, under command of Col Monroe, had been en. camped 'on Stilt Bun, four miles. below the Fort., since the 2d last , but resumed its march yester. day. The third column, under Col. May, was still encamped in the vicinity of the Fort, sad will move before the 27th Three companies of the 7th infantry reached the Fort on Sunday. In complete returns from the election in Kan. eas indicate a majority of 750 iu favor of the Leavenworth Constitution. The utmost apathy was manifested in regard to the result. The pm slavery vote was bulimia. ger ffetiry Ward ffeeeher is gre4 atla . king ap etillections. ' At the 'old John street Clitroh, on one omution, they wanted 'to make an extra raise. Mr. Beecher e i l i pL wei tent ! lj'adtlreected ib's new converts and litre those who had experienced religion in that ebereh to hold up their right hand. 'Nearly all the right Wand were raised instantaneously. "Now," salt Mi.: Beecher, "pat that hand in your poeket;triten the plate is pained found." ' • They did kept Aeon there 11E1=1 - ---~- 14-Inti. ii,,,,„14,. Korihiii, 11" 194 Bleed No Yore of..the h ear d pee tub: ai,eut liana„ I. '' peso rash have ~ .eglit c,,,,i 7 a by ass , rtin g th at q v T ,,' , t„ 4ri II reject the pr ,, p,,,1t i „ ti ' but no one Seen]. to Cinatr"l 1,1 4 th, .se Ire. The people of Kansa. i,,,,,,. , , • ew-antivnit liet •rs. The emealeiwill•attet vs), , 'llie 111 I: 'Panes ie an arti e i t . , answer to the question, "What h i , the Kansas (,Question?" tluu glastti tical effect of its diitappeartnrafp, political controversy : : Th ie !, pew& of the Kansas tin en 'Ai* d it Illoattfaing" the, i Kansas question has Named to bates of Congress and to vez the tient and long suffering republic ence bill bad th i s virtue in it alit the subject out of the Federal field, where it belonied- 7 -to the people ry. It left them to decide whether admission into the Union, opm • proposed or not It did not d o frankly, and in a style crellitabl e Government; but it did it, It IV in spite of the singly disp utes 44 sophistries which have bee n " mei point, it seems now to be universaii that by that bill the Lecomptiin milted to the popular vote, and tt of the Territory have the full pearl or rejecting it, in their itiscri•tio u decision, therefore, the whole sal tional question, 1324 tees disposedis The removal of the Kan•as c ithil field of national having feet upon pokiest parties lio-comi e.l to be the test of loyalty t o t b and the Administration is shoai nt to receive back to its fold the the flock who strayed into fort bear no more of the President crush the "traitors," and see malcontents struck off by the mony begins again to be enlkod ocratie members of the Bon*. vote together, and it i s o v en JM opposition will be mule by th , in Illinois to tbo re-election of On the ether hand, the 1: , 1 ,04 ySMJ 10 feel the loss of that Imd , nt the K 1 MOS issue suppli44 b..ow The withdrawal of the subject f t , sy, has eomplicateff their po4uon prito/ il. in of el rrtllyirtry e.ry merit of simplicity and of lir lar streug:h. They mint nvw 41, other questions; and they cat' what I. still more perilnn4, a di, dilate. 11feantitne, w, uip. , r%.• au! of Kansas are already voirrieg apt Vass." PuLITICAL A I :sf - RltiTtl: , 4 uI TIP the cant and On trap n( OUT ger worshipping pliticians, they nothing go impudent ant prcp ridieuloug outeryag;ain‘t tin •'; slave olig.aeby, ' and °the into the slave power " Lank at p r e s ent 4‘..sion of llongrewt paa.etl, directly adulating tw, , Minnesota and t lregon —an,l I.rm :addition of the third (Kan'e .1.1.. ..f L,ll ; :er 'l•n N'•• 3r1,1 wit huint th. ntfot Mi 11.11.`, 1.1 'peak f „ amt thr "ininkrant.," of tL •it I l t our r w that th r,i. ueitip r -nr • n it i Trirf.-1 .I 1 amen_ !°I • J... •pg , ti :\ k.'.•p 11, xottunk,ut al tin.' gtreAly, — when, with dm". n tifte.‘u, 4tol with .beverAl tbn Niwtir the g”verninent in tlitir with thohe facia, ipet...re thew, ...Ay 4, ted with thiA etfrouiPry, tai frighten them with thi• of fools sad fanatics agaio,t e the alave oligarchy "—X ) 4,-1. Iliir Mrs Parker. mother tat of the Ironton , it. , etster, way to Brewn•ritie, Nebraska, was death a few 1%), -race she, ‘n her son and uumber aequatnt the steamer Florilda, ascending, dm Before arrivine , at Kansas Ctty, ttio was raised on tiw bolt, aril' for a Lt. the vessel was on fire. Mr.. Vick pn ber bed in the state roam, terward that when she heard the seemed to swell and pimp as tloal ing to get out of her b..ly It of Eire was fake But a feu mot the boat strurk a sna ,, , end the that the boat was sinking. Ti, terror of Mrs P , and vile rad, that. timt., and died io a day of sir After the execution risburg, On Friday last, his pine coffin, painted red, and be taken to the poor-bona driver took his seat on the drove off amid the jeers and bled crowd. fleshy, C. the counsels for Williams, wth mendable interest in the ease the request of the latter'', rioter, veyance at his own expeo4e, in to the poor.h,,u, t. .ee her be As they wer. , drtvints, along the beard a irstoo emning after thei rate, and a- it paced. 3udr the unfortunate 4i.ter to perceive t brother in the wagn, king ti dragged to the grave Such el' tian community, 1. a 111.:( u'' t Op„ Jamaica, L I , was tbt prise fight on Sunday, the pang ties from New York, to the nurol The boxers were two well knr Ross sod Casey, sod the itakw About 40 rounds were fougio. side was declared the winner, making to try it over again stsl polies appear to he nowhere CAUTION ON ItA I LII,IA P• the Directors of the New Yorl have ordered an immediate ar tin of all the bridge; nn the al branches In view of the cident on the New York ec superintendent of the New J a circular to the enginver , ployment of the company, upon approaching bridge , . ou meting that the preferenee Ir be given to the Philadelphia WHAT THE lir.vlATllo ease the attempt ;41 einpf. , r eomrneree should resitll.,de4An i Rested that she wnul , i !lA. Standing on end, ti mou 4 r to more than thrre unn t: l' ti ill Monument, high .'r thin tt. ingtou Monument, litgiutr to the rtorld, higher th4ll OW' body dies and nothint: tnemorated by inch 1 m onutoe be u4ed for the tire ~..etwo over the Mitotimippi IPS. , We are grati6...l t irso thentie sltistee, that Ow road, will be fioighed rir'' bury by the first a Joh. Deli unbroken law by nil fro 11),(+ liatusport, andt ., Noir fork Thr time'"4:rir reduoril to about 1 2 lostir-.' than gixtern hours —A Adam!) , is a 4 chap 1) if be could, but si he call a y show the world that he is o` OM