THE ERIE OBSERVER. !IRMA. F. 81.0API. kditer. SLOA N a 1100Blk OVIIIIIIIa I De WILL. OYA i A. Atatit, rya 414111blahR, BUY--- FROST, . AAR LiTEITIC CO. News of the Week. —The boa ddeepasequial epos the loageoittianed Mae at the welt iiitep.baeit my illustrate to property sad life. Friday astaralag Oeshet them soaking dews anu hie at Roues. mar Batdt, lfiaooaaifi , nail either underlain/id the bask of directly rearlud the holm of Horatio Daley, which wee overtaraed sad canted away. The Weep Peas giros lb. fentiwiej pactiodan oF the meldllebelY itasealty: Ifa Ji siabsi lite clergy is wife and their _eight ebilithree 4.4 in their beds, wale they were swept Into thdraiOsig tarsal. 'Mu father alone senaged, *two airatatioasty, 4 elredt aed reetked the tank yearly er.lisattad, Molcodur and bereitildren were sena no more alive The Mc* profaned searatlon at one* per vadep that satire eeatuuatty. The that active uesearee were at aline teinittib renewer the bodies, and ap to else o'cioek, A.lLtoarb.d bete taken out. The eight Andrea were of verbena V at mem; frees infancy to seventeen years of pee. wine one mesh beloved in that coassafty, dad the isitliatethat has swept them Moss into eternity will &WO imasyieare. Other houses were also swept swap, tat we INWIN DO WIN being beet —Tbi betg M uj it New York, which attired at that port no WedasehitY, but Jamaica, with a teed of logweed, was °verbatim" by the BMA steelier Sty: de the teth iliac. whoa within abilithii• or tea mile* of the Florida coast- Olga.) glue was, end (bleak shots) for him inlay to Capt. Parktasalj hisioelliee sad kept ire his way, bet the steamer wan ybeitidireedy is hie troth and stopped. The !Wig waa this her, to sad was boarded by a boat from the steamer. a•parr lathed the usual coseetioao, bat did mot eater die eablikto tbiaithd to se* the papers. Three Magna, veriedinarith their ookimilyiag, were in company with the lerilltrbitt eirstanatitteed by the Styx. When asked to exploit' e ats liar wen allowed to pass, the °Seer re , OW "Shop gee useeele," and also repeated what he had told . 000.,lintre, et ibe Mobile, that he was order ed to bawd all Asitpriesba Omahas he met with. lie gave Capt. Parkin er4a thfatitailoa about sew light booths os the coast, dad bilithilifig hied civilly "good Onerous" weal on board hit fkip r inaily:., —The Cli Novices says that one day last week, this. passed, itoso Oa the chaainer Michigan, a wan baring in imam aindiei'.4ellad 1141S0 three years also. reduced hie sister. siMacilos . was soder promise to marry, *ad the waddles day Azad, bat the seducer ran away the day before. The &wait of the Wand warms started is pursuit, cianglit him at aria but by some meant the rascal escaped. Mi r 16thef still kept on his track and found him again; alpthi he lost his. Month after isonth passed op aid dill tie resolute brother wandered about in pursuit., but amid get so trace of the object of bit search . ♦ little while ago, however, be saw a paper published in Ripon, Wirt. la which the mime of the seducer ap • peered as Thither be west armed with a requisi two from the Guesser if Peeneyfvula, arrested tad now Aar a parsed of these years bas the violator of his sistenelfaewiff traity in hie grasp. The parties live in Ponneyheaka bet when, or what their sasses are, we failed to Mom — T A worthy dl., ow of the pressitais to attends/bee apes tha Woo& timitaseace of the Methodist • itplpeopal Church Sawt i. barn theetateMArteases, stopped at the SL Cloud. Upon stilt to had be told the serveat who coo. dusted bits to hie room that be wanted his boots blasted The servaat told Mat to est them outside the door, sad the boot black wield attend I. them. He did so, sad in the !morning the boots ems up adagio& Instead of 'et dog the boot* oat la the hall he had planed them Getable the frost 4Gor. That preacher boa cot a very elevated opiates of the wiosality of the people of Nashville., He wears a pelt of mar' hoots." —The Haute Committee ea Coulees have reported le favor of removing the railroad bridge aortas the Ms. sissippl at Hoek Island, 111., as as obetractioa to the nevi gatios of the :film,. The Hesse Committee ea Commiserate report ihal they mutat doubt bat that the bridge, as at present eesairseteg t ietilAwedrivw tau teetiolzielutv• &LIAO ample power to remedy say evil thetas, wattle Atpreseet they are dlehtelhied to reeeastaii4 wi6 amities by Napalm la the premises; bat whether, atinle 1114 p 111% I; *ay sot be expedient to Ono, the prepeelitir teem of the pv animist to proceed Val*" * 61 441/4 tHI e*llattes will set Dow undertake to deterstaa. • ' • —At Die Noidirri. WSW an Susday night last, while a young mashy till *se at Jams Chandler was taking a walk with a 111 Me Clip be Well shit dead in Ittraeks, and Miss Mae *as SIM* wounded at the same doe.— TIN mgrs. was WIIIM IBIIIOII 1 4 OP* Obal. ROOM?, who supposing be b WIWI them both, *cod the semi* of the pistol is Malaya bird sad shot blineett n• tragedy Isla the pasalier Ralwarry, Radom having beetiaapplaat ad by Obssigar is the alsotioa of Miss Vag. Tim lady to tiara* ads Mom. .Rosaitsr died the seat day.— Tits seals has eared groat ossitassont. -:-The ilinitsCalistss Marshal for the Wasters District of Peaasyksaidaotwaseilted a rasa maimed Georg, Bash I. the ecinatyjail s yesterday ntsraingoin a eitarge of par. loiaing beemakfrom thoo COW States mall. Hs was Post Master atalllWholilliallittiOit. earl ischargad with *wain- in& oimssisib 441 iaii.oleallag from letters to bit olio% at ration time, rasaaip sad other vehublea Beata two baadred tidlaes 10.1iotay, drafts sad other articles of valise weralwakal owatishal la his bed. K. was 0001,1214. led by wrist if the Usited ‘ Btatee Coaualmioaer, sad will be &tallied ter • farther bowleg. which will take plate Beat wadi. Iteitatoa has sot a very lively appreolaticia of the las sets. is the mane of an art dimension is the &sate * other day, the General "eommented os the statue of ithe hay, alma IN supposed was the Goddess of Liherty, intevideirtly tat' woe* of a foreigner, she being is as aardarfalsttllalla, Aid h s classic robe, with the @ism hwelles4, sad ow IN foetal pair of plan tation bropseia■' 'this was Crsorfeers humps, 'Wile of ••Amesion,"- Is fairovissele Nadal. Old Ban Joeisto saw -, plsabyfsaloiNgaaal —A Pie maitiag liudeare galas by di sale eAttary debate, sad hivested jV said galas fa real *stalk mlials,4badaggeasesettiea sad lines Oa 1000•01 St ids illaggliiiiiamissaaaveyed to his wife. After a skii• aslialriVilliketill tea, Rad. matisifti it bee is. batisiOWlhalalte poiasai o but was dissuaded try his Maeda ' bit 4411. jowiso Mugs, Ilia SU his property I. her pasaboolproosediegs ter *diner., whereas is lid, —TIMPO Wad lIMMAIIAkt• held 4Am a im lot g(," tie etkoksigg L ighialtdesqlboil is a Disseetatie ukajority et - b". TOWN 0 WV." *a Abe "fasiosion." It looks very Inn p ! min, Oipilinpt priasOpier asd sligbt filmed be n etis with " " Itoryninosiose, is Commonest. Mop • w e IKAIMO i t.P. O OF 4 Y •T•e tit.. is Now J Hans A ioliwyoy. # —Sow 110100fint Ilighti aims, to 1111aositiem fooro. • bossd sriedstwasibillbi, &Prows. and Imolai bin es tin lookaalwollOS oak* boiling as in. The roam or Um nos won bawd by perms. Wanted by Me in, sad b. ram rynnr4 g ,gits.faire was bans* ids. Brows was ! awls( M I NF fill" .1 1 . 111 rAP. got& bb *nab with deopenNss„ . • .:#. itbets to koo WS ..pilaw. —?l* pi° ' , ...Pwar alp tint /Ira Casuist bars .'' to fare is Carroll minty, Obio, Most to ... . , . 1 . ~ _ . . asekshowt massy nine iron nab , 1 j; • , .. , , lis . fan" Men tie ban of us Ist* Dr. -:- payise WWI doss fm it sad . Nilli•4l6l posSOSSIOIL Canada Plass roast. — .4 sad Pinnate, Me ion of the by a eallaios of was esseisome, . ..edit for D 4019. Vist,_ dam years ' betinnstw wan UMW, tessat. !brae nine 'firm skie's groom —A lady nitArAttii Atelfila pie*, New York, ~ Mee In - !t era baliAtiteets treat nese sidAimed 11blatiedir . ' : -0 If tbe •alidisittio be So tresai ° tl. rune, akiriv .1 •fi 4•., ' • • ... of it eeriest ewe be mei ofdis wilike whddsser, *meas. las ti '''' r..AS some doe gbe pew *UN ars No essliblie 1 EMM ...JONI is. ma OA Orr. os was got las k, e its ibltrbt to 8s• .. • a year• .11alf he wow lead t sot • • L i t t ered it cosh' plateible • airy by et should m it e right feastaume . re • 0 • "remain sad seek to wrest Aram the imastitoted authorities their power... 2l vw. Iles *mu. Ai Pate reign of foots Nothingiani in New (Meats. 1.0 is every other piece, has weakened nubile smell lens*, berm/sot jo nee the_ language of the Peasiegfectaia«, wherever that party has ohtaaled power, it has need It for the most rue and astrageoas purposes. In Baltimore the member, of this party hare made the elections a fare., they bare domatared Mite.eteesta Linalerilla with Oro Maoist Akins anoffearliag citizen; sad he New Wawa@ the name saws of riot. tarbetleaey and bloodshed have followed their ele - ration to power. Ie the latter city the peopje bore the repeated aatrages of this party satin no lifalwas serum, am his property safe from the torah of the Won diary, or the tools of the burglar. Brea the Laois Noth ing pollee of that oily have been caught is the sot of breaking Into the bogies of well hum Misses of Ifew Orleans, and yet so strong was the political ties which fettered those high to authority, (bit they were allowed to leave the city without even being arrested for the agleam The political freedoms of the videos' of New Priam* we e a birmt. Since 185 S, when the Know Nothings came into po . wer la that City, each a thing ass fair election was on. beard of. A bend of men railed "Thugs" were employed by the dark lastern lodges, end Sot only were molly per. wow 0/opposite pontiesisererely boatel before the Malkin's. but *evertl were killed and many hondretis were driven from the polls: In the subsequent city elections this system of thaggiag was carried to such as ezteat that last year only a little over 4,000 vote. were east oat of about 12,- 000 registered voters. These proceedings were palpable sad well known to the ciliates, hat the Know Nothing. leaving the control of the whole City tiovernment, p l ed any steps being taken to redress the outrages of the past or prevent like oecurryinees in the fetters. To pot • atop to these oceurrenres, and redeem the city from this deplorable condition, Major U. T. Baergeosito was nominated for Mayor in opposition to the candidate of the "Thugs," and • Vigilauce Couimittoe instituted by the Independent party to meet the crisis. This Committee leaned a proclamation, sepersediog the Know Nothing municipal pollee officers in the exercise of their misused power, and aanooneing that it would dispense jostle., mid that the "Thug*" Mast leave or perish. The election took place on the 7th inst., and the member, of the Vigilance Committee expreeesd their determination to opholdTthe law of the State with refereaee to the manner in which said election should be conducted In view of the alleged reemerges sad violence which deterred many palm, of the Demacratle party from Talus, lb. Demo. erotic State Legislature, some time ago, palmed a law to regulate elections is New Orleans, It was of • wary stria. gent asters, sad pat the etrodnot of tbe Meadow cruder the control of • State officer. The attempt to earry it io ta elect last fell was, however, a faitem. The elestion it self was a quiet one, WA it was preceded by act* which effeetnally intimidated • certain purdah of the population from golag near the polls. The " Theo" have allowed that law to be canted oat. Vs the contrary, they have opealy opposed it, and shot down every promineot man who VAS bold enough to stead op for ite .nforesment. The Vigilance Coniwittee was based upon these foots, and those composing it assumed • deep responsibility.— Tb e y w ill b e h e ld see-amiable (or their /Salons at the bar of public opinion. Those who take unusual MlOdell for re• dteesieg grievances, moat be ears that circumstances will folly sustain them in the conrs4milopted. MIL. FOSSE Y is still dismissing' sad hammering away at the "LecatM„ bagaleanises the dead micas, and end, upon the public as s lisiag issue! He eh' "hilt' with the desperation al* mother she He is another 6,i) lag hope is this world Waiving to revive the inscription on the toad: extinct polities' question. 9 The above, from the finitude/phis Wessels, Jo paper that km steadily opposed the polky 'Alb. Adak tration, is tree to the letter. It shows, too, Is what esti mation the ielp whisks the Editor of the Prek is prefaring to the pie-bald opposition Is this State is held. As the Journal says, Ike Kansas question is extiset, and neither the efforts of Forney, or Lem. Todd, or Dave Wilmot, can revive it. It has been turned over to the people ot Kan ens themselves to settle, and whichever way they sleet, eith . to ease in as • State ceder the Sagfish bill, or rentals • territory, the eoastry will aoqulesee. As will be loan by the lastructloss of Gen. CAls to Gov. DarnVitit, the Presi dent is fully determined that the election 'ball be a fair sae, ail we are telly convinced that it will be so if Goy. DICSITYat and his democratic eolleagsee ems make it. If i i_frAillitrepa barna. of the States - MOW harp upon the willow so far es they have anticipated IA occasion of playing the old tune of election frauds.— Gov. Durres: has bees alagulariy successful in his ed., miniitration of Kansas slain thus far. Forney and the black republicans have not been able to make any very valuable capital oat of say act of his, and we are convinced they will sot be more fortunate hereafter. The election Will be held on the first Monday of August. The people will then decide whetter they will avows become a State or remain a TerrltOry folk few months longer. We are glad to perceive, as we do from all the Kansas intelligence, that the people understood the issue and that they will vote upon it, disregarding all fehme issues. The true lane deekied, we should like to know "by what process thereafter the Math republieans expect to make Kaabas still bleed.— Sum if the people sleet net to eome in with the Leeomp. tea Constitatioa, fro present Indications it is very evi. dent the territory will_have to wait but a very short time before !twill have the requisite population to beaus.) a State. Indeed, if immigratioa continue u it has commoseed, she will have the requisite population Wore the end of the year. The losmkpaate are pressing in by thousands.— Steamboats are aot ioag .sough and large enough to carry all who apply. Si: boat. leave St. Louis every day for Kansas and Nebraska, with an average of two hundred passengers each. At this rate Kansas will soon have her 93,600 population, as by tar the largest portion of these Immigrants are baud for that dfiatination. Let, therefore, the result of the Kansas election be as it may in August, there is a good deal of point la the suggestion of the Journal that the disappoints's( Editor of the Press " another old, Mortality," striving to revive tVb inscription, on the tomb of a long exiled politial question;" GAS ONCE NORN.—We notice by the proatedings of the City Coomila that a comnaeleation was received on Monday night hoes "the Erie Gas Company, notifying the Camells, and through dim. the City of Brie, that the contract entered tato *Awes* the City of Erie and said Company toe lighting the Street Lamps with One, is not reeeiaded, bat exists is fall and binding fore*, and that the Company have daily waasfaetared, sad will *mantle to do so, gas foe this lighting the alibi imps, sad will be la rya/limas at all time to famish the gas for that purpose, in moordanee with the said contract; and also, that the Voispany will hold the City of Erie liable for all damages which tatty be *unlined by reason of not lighting the street, lamps with gas." This is right; and no hope the Gaw•Coaspawy will follow (i op until "the people—tim MX payers--are brought to a mantis( pease of lb. (oily of electing am to 'elliee who have as more appreciation of their position than a majority of our present Commas appear to hare. They have sot Daly violated a eontract with the Gas colonial) , and the City is liable I. harry damages therefor, hot theghave west farther, and violat ed as implied costreet with • portico of the tax-payers. For Inseams, Cu oast Fifth Street, as well as mural other Streets, *4 property omits asked for the privilege arm. The Name' graated the rawest, kid dews the pipe, emoted the pests, mad levied a tat apes the property Go the Street to pay for the same. That to: was paid; the poets am there; the Gas Company is ready to supply tale gas, and the tax mow are ready to pay for it. New, It this state of fasts deal sot 'bow a seatated hawses the Ana Camay sod the tax powers of that Street ea tlw eN side, aid the Vily on the other., that the Street shall be Na, Ohm we dears kenos Oat a amuse. is. What ware the.peetivreetai tat What wae the pipe laid down fat ? —awl what was the memo taltaa lima ear pockets to pay lee, *slow wa were So have She haw& of light f 4pd yet, Mews* arms el the " Ott, lathers"-owe slimes mid City where go?" can't town ! gas, smothor waste to b Mayor otext,spriag, irldhismethirr watt with • eat ps whit I na lived "d moww to Vareammt," (what a OW ha haieliilallalliaal,*tra .01,14"1 eosin'. t o tied rah sprat a trawls*. There ti winesking's* • to (hit wee to almost lareed to Wall liit► ' of tiie iattigiation astasally Warn, sat* ink at the Wide of Wits' aer. vast'. There'll hat aiih ifip sari roe *Ho 41 V 14 4 14 Wed ootecoMs, asttlit is it paaamt &Ow. Af aiga in Stares mg: dwalfitift,' wig litpiose a tines eviiiy - Wan slat; dears saes retarrte Mit ass tit WNW easillebli or. Ts ow hi lb• 41 0,0 10 , chl th• 401 0 0 4 aislea" 1. fbir A!totiOda Dissdps,, Is *Alc44•li, was l im* la the grousti as plasky . , It* it 11.4 - Gut It wit tat opo fro pram • ' 41164irai it Weer Boum —w . ' whirs thisaoa.ll4 11.11`alkot. of imaniab 84 s, It o ooto row. sesealhai Or. lb* Poor WNW& Soloollsosto. fie Aro iwiptioottlAtoitom of 60 thiii B4 ll MB* viNDt. &ono" too , i4lllO ontoi~Jott 411wiirta . - ; its• . z . :2l rum e, voiiitY. , Thom Pa, .., tined _ ..1„ u 4r . new au te ti is l 0 . tweilif 4 , 1 In tile . g : Vail It ths neseloa ea 4 14 'kith. it T l"liira ..m. Omiappiral of twirweethineurft. tip It Minis hielpd .. elite* ninlmst alp-alltliatiewrieoatitior.. saleit:be holies with ~16 polities' renegade's ail Swipe and Irlaalgau. It rays Its party has aria, *melt bends with the sea 141 - HA andlnii is ortinAmmt betrayed. True, net' owlet"' leer intimates chat he has no abjection 1.. the help of Lhasa "airier" repeated traitors. bat rays he. with peettiest ma. Owns. "they aught. iti •iew ,if the past, to have tii pea donee to keep their mimes from any pabliebed ealle."— This linakied, but it is not more so, theta the tolls/sift with which war eotemporery winds up hi, pretest naiad the compaey be Is likely to be fused in renotrallp watt tbie Fall: "The Rapublieaa ass set H down as as ottehlishnd Ina that the flandemun-Plealgen-Swope footles will sense keep faith is as, politlesi antangermet. They are peril. san guerrilal unlit for emaciation with mss who aro gov. 'rued by homed soothes le political *Aloe. They have cheated as la thee* campaign*. and it rosnalus to be aeon whether Repubikeims will millow themsol►n again to be rolled by ere► tricksters. We are willing to snits with honest oppeweitts of the extension of Blavoly, and ev aporate to overthrow the yorsiest National Admiaistretioa, his we are are williwg to*a, heads or sondem with vowel kids,. who make a show of friendship only to betray.— The leading politieleas may wake what arrangement they Onus In this matter, hut if they in any any team the ordinal iwilteiples of Ropittilienntant, or if thy expanse from our deg the motto of "No more Attire States," they will else:Ts and receive defeat. We mesh to the battle under no mongrel flag. They isM dad thousands of stauneb and true freesia is the North and West who will repudiate any evasive. pnmenniag *dans, no matter w ho the candidates are. We warn the Republieans to beware of the scheme" That is pretty sharp, bat it won't de—' tbe Sanderson,. Flanigan-Swope faction" will rale the Convention on the idth, and oar eoterriporary will blues.) swallow it. Mark the prediction ! PONGRESSIONAL.—Tbe light DIMt the aomivatioa for Congress in this distrie4 waxes worm an "deg day? approach. There are several Richmond' in the Sad a/- ready, with a fair prospect of a "few more of the same sort" ore the "ides" of October. Brie county herself has bpi( a dozen at toast who would be wining to "erre their country at Washington for a couple of Jean ; and as to Crawford, there is every prospnet that she will insist on the re-nomination of the present member, Oen. Dig a. A. imileatire of the "signs of the times" wi quote the fol lowing from the C.Dareaaltlll l o °owner • "The nomination of a candidate for the next Coegrees„ we observe, is engrossing the attention of the papers of Brie County, they claiming the nomination at their right in the next canvass. The friends of the various eandidatet are quite industrious, and we may reasoesbly aatioipate a spirited campaign. From what w• can learn we are led to infer that Hon. Jose H. W4LICIII is the most prominent candidate from Brie County, sad without detraeting from the claims of otters, or wlshing to dictate to the Kepubli• cats of Erie county, we can safely say they eosid present tin man t. the Republicans of Western Crawford, more sic eeptable, or that would Niemand a stronger vote, being well known as a An of eminent ability, strict integrity, and a reliable Republican." The &nutmeat of the work on the eastern divine's of the Sunbury and Erie Railroad—from Williamsport le Parrandsville—was made in Philadelphia ow Tuesday.— The Perm rays there were upwards of six boiarod pro. pose's, and the allotment was consequently at low Again; but the soeeemill bidders are men of reputation Is their Ilse, which Menne a sun nempliane• with their liostraelit. li also learn. that it 'is the intention of tin company to prosecute their enterprise with vigor, so that e train of ran may pus from Philadelphia to Lake Erie, via the Sunbury I Erie Railroad, before the close of Gov. PALK. are+ term of office. liaaasa questira, 'qua fraud." Iluw r ors to impose it to bin defunct • so remain- Mortality" If a lung fit.' A lawyer, at kladisoo, Wisconsin, objected to a juryman beciuse he declared that if the law of the State was opposed to God's law he should feel obliged to obey the letter. But Judge Collies overruled the objection, on the ground that it was not to be presumed that the laws Of the State were in confliet with the laws of God. With all doe teepee. to the opinion of this lammed Judge, we should think, from the amount of comer/tips re cent investigations re developed in Wisconsin legislation, that it .to be "p . med that the laws of that Stale ore in waist* with the lane s or (NA... tilli. ;se /OAST Fittnens," through the columns of the On. retie, recoup end Coes. W. KELSO, Esq. of this city as a very suitable non to receive the Republican nomination for Congress. ' any Friends" had better eavp their ink and paper—en old d experienced Lawyer thartbuld'nt secure a nomination !District Attorney last Fall against a young man just adteltjed to practice, does not stand much dimwit with such mein the geld is Walker, King. Babbitt and Diet ! That's ceislpinlon ! ... .... ..or. e tam Evans . Brady, Rsq., editor of tt ir\k‘ the Brookville Jefersowifiss, is a esi tkW ild' * for the Legisle tore, in the Clearfield, Jefferson, and Elk District of this State. Kr. Brady was a Clerk nGo last House of Representatives, and would makes s4slisl Mt =WM of the Legislature. , .. There are but nine American men-of- Wne in the tielf, or under orders to appear there, carrying 184aas while the English hale nineteen, carrying 151 What business has England to keep tech a tone so nen: our coast in time of peace ? If we had such a force on her °oast, she would be re4tay enough to Inquire the meaning of It. tit. The Myeloid Reread notices the arrest, in that city, of D. 8. Leelead and J. V. Doolittle for highway rob. berg ; and the Gozeas says they formerly resided hare.— Here Is another instance going to show Isom qalekly peo ples morals become corrupted after leaving oar highly moral city. Hugh', of Indiana, and Harris, of Illinois, were going to tight a duel In Washington the other day because one called the other a liar, and the other retorted by say ing "you'r another ;" bat "friends" interfered, and instead of peppering one another with eold bullets, they drank each otkers health In a glass of punch, and shook hands. Like our own aneestry, the Irish, it appears they quarrel. ed for the purpose of "drinking friends.' OP. We see by the Buffalo papers that the Buffalo, New York A Erie Railroad hiu reduced the fare from Bal. tido to New York, or vice versa, to $11„ and from Batavia to New York to $5, and from Rochester to New York to $4. This is a vigorous reduction, and will probably largely augment the travel over the B.N.Y.A. R. Road. The dectlon abosid be borne in mind by the traveling public. Soule of the eastern dry goods &Alen are now ad, remising "The Princes. Royal Looped Extension Bridal Skirt" It Is announced to be "perfeetlon itself," hawing "attached to It a new beetle, simple sad entirely (metros any,intrieate, ennsberaos or useless appendage." Aare any of our dealers pi the article ? Aa affray took plat,' at Latertnwro, Kaasaa, oa the 3d lactase, between General Jim Labe mad Mr. Jettlos, le whisk the latter was killed. Mr. J. was a preasiaeat tithes of that plies, sad his death Me eaused a warted sermstioa. We hope Greeley will set 41111111 this outrage to the "bonier relltans." WM. B. ANTIERSOM. Hag., who forserty represented the Carbertaad District la the Hume &mate, died at Me reskleare at Aodersoaborg, Perry remsty, as Wedgies* greeting. Hie age was shoot Mi. Si , There was great rejolegag as Dayton, Ohio, Waft, the Dinnotwany, apes the 'moonbeam's' of the adasisalask of Colonel Valkadlagbaa to his sew le the House of Rep rasestativea. A salute of thirty , three guns was and in Imes of the 'seat. J 404•16• Wale Comae& Ceased bare appropriated $844 to Want* Jim moist Pearth of Jody. This weather will do. We say it, sad let ao lover of suarbine dispute our authority on weather ology. Be. tel I- We bare epokea ! Tao gronhoppers of the West an sold to be all link grey to tie Middle Static We bare meal "Oven' bete We/Ay. , editor at Hui Hsnietsrl Herakt say as soma sty, tie Mier day, is tta Wisp* oda lady iritiocid Aare.— Howl ab look ? Tim Tort Triboon says that la lizaealiy whoa /edge Ttoestas votod with dm Adslialottatioa on all tha Ramat oppolatiaoati to aka. . —_.«. Ws sun iiiiisiossol re War Willis& publisher sail dissist Is Masi; foe a eery of hi. bOW pier% seabird ol'esiod rteattra." WOOD'S 11411, HISTORATIVIL—Prist W. 4, the risowasmt disooverso of Oa isvalliabts Hsk kowtowWs, gin toothusf to labor is behalf of tkorallietodt. • Ku staaisiass are saivorostly admitted by um Almeria*. Mat to be far saportar to all Dams foe coasts( the halt oa tbit bad of tho "rod that hashes, silvoors4 for away years, biro, firth trtth as mash rigor sad lazartaaso as whoa blsasd Istth the ottraotagos of 'oath. Mom are ha so dtaliht ass It is eas the postai di& includes la the shatteat world. It testsres partassaatly gas, hair to Its Mesa. actor, sad mates It ammo a hominid 04 talgarsr wblah has bass vsoy 4adtabie la At seas of tho masit..-41k. Leas Airs* Brosid. Demist, . Likiii.vooosor of Ow Melo Nsw y C , Jane 7, i L.:. Mtip sadden wen; of t :panic of 'fa • .1 not a gent many bogus — oaceran which bad calculated on thing i• • • • cover up the traces of fraud. We have sees toady how stay stook eampanies aro goe up merely to famish a fewatasameastai sod extrair. agent business men with fatsalaries as presidents and bookkeepers. Life Insurance is one of the greatest hatabags of the day; the Policy holders being the stock holders, an the project amounts to in the end is to pay back in the course of 40 years the money which the policy holders invest, hat without interest. The interest goes to the maintenance of retired officers. Along Wall at. in some °Sees, you will find a amber of firms and single names, without soy 4ensible business attached to them ; if von look io the Directory, opposite such names you will generally find, "Business refused," their real business being "note shaving" which is eon ‘sidered rather disreputable when not done in connection with a money broking business.— There is no reason why brokerage in business paper, if merely done at market rates for a set tled commission should not be regarded as an honorable business ; but the fact seems to be that money in that line is made mostly by taking ad vantage of the necessities of parties who happen to be "short." lof one per cent as commission could not enrich a paper broker very fast. The crafty old brokers have their own ways of draw, ing victims into their toils. Tak© an instance which actually happened last year, at a time when one per cent per month was a high rate for money. A merchant in good standing meets a very reputable note shaver early in the morning and says, "I want to get U,OOO to-day," "well, call around about two o'clock ; guess it'll be all right. The merchant comes around about an hour before bank closes, expecting to find the money ready ; the broker seems surprised at the demand for money, ho denies that. ho bad made spy definite promise ; finally says be will Pee what be can do, but will probably have to pay well for the money ; goes and draws 81,000 from bank ; takes quiff. a lunch white the mereitiot is sweating in impatience, finally comes back in a pretended burry and says be has obtaitked the money by great exertion at double market rate ; viz. two per cent per month The merchant enraged, but there is no escape ; bank shoes in fifteen minutes and he must have the money or allow his note to go to protest ; the two per cent is paid. This is "note shaving." The return of warm weather is the chief item of news in a local way. It *proves trade, ea eourages amu s em e nts, and seta people to think , ing where they shall spend their summer months, of the advent of which the majority of people had become utterly skeptical. The amusement par excellence of the week was the Royalta of yesterday, which however, was nearly dished by the impossibility ol i ggssising the wind " Business is about over for spring, and our merchants are preparing for Fall trade which will be pretty good if an export demand makes a market for the great cropg of Breadstuffs with which the country is like to be overloaded. Cot ton and silk keep up ; •wool and breadstuffs are low and likely to remain so. Our "people's Mayor" is succeeding fingly in his grand crusade against lotteries, gift enter prises, bogus ticket sellers and all kinds of swind- lino .....6...... • o-- r ............u.5t . a mamma gni soon be obliged to emigrate to some more con genial clime. ERIE. Mir Unusual activity prevails at the Navy Yard in New York. The sloop.of-war Constel lation, which returned only a few days Since, from a three years' cruise, is ordered to be fitted for the Gulf, without delay. Two weeks only remain to complete the time for which her crew .shipped, and there is much dissatisfaction at being sent away so soon again, when they aro so soon entitled to their discharge. Provisions and ammunition are going on board, and she will be ready to depart by Saturday. Work on the Sa , vannah and Babino is being pushed forward with all despatch. The Naval Department have in , quired as to the practicability of fitting the North Carolina for sea, and the probable expense of re pairing her. Her bottom is said to be sound, but it would cost as much to raise her and fit her for active service as to build a new sloorkof war. 1S The recent development with reference to the Atlautia Telegraph enterprise, whereby, it has transpired that the Company has changed its character, and virtually handed the line over to the control of the British Government, have caused the Committee on Judiciary Affairs in the Senate to frame a bill recommending that inasmuch as these movements have been perfect ed without the sanction of the United States, and since the appropriation of $70,000 per Imam was allowed, they are therefore unjust to the United States, as a partner in the enterprise, and the Committee recommended that the appropriation be withdrawn and the partnership dinolved HOUSTOPI'B PICCITMOTORATL—WC see it mated that Gen. Houston, having failed to induce Con gress to establish a "protectorate" over Mexico, has determined to get up a "protectorate" of his own in that quarter. The New York Evening Post says the General will invade the Northern provinces of Mexico at the bead of four or five thousand men, soon after the adjournment of Congress. In the distracted State of Mexico, it would not be difficult to a a few thousand nten to effect a conquest of the provinces skirting the Rio Grande. Tux KANSAS Euterton.—We ptl6lisb Gen Cass' letter of instructions to Gou t DATIVES, for , - conducting the election is Kansas \ It will be: sewn that the President is very explicit in direct, lag that every thing shall be done to insure a fair expression of the will of the people. It is to be hoped his *biotic pnrpn.o of eliciting a fair expression of kupwiskr will of the Terra tory will not be thwarted. We trust illat with this election, no matter - how it may r -mit, will sad all eontroversy shoat Hama' ont-,41e of the Territory. &aura 'or Nib:WM In MINPUIZIPPC—Tbe Court of Error mad Appose*. is Mississippi has decided that a bequest snide by s cities* of that State to as suuuteipated Negro who had left the State sad beams a resideat of a free State is valid. although if the negro bad bees seat to the State only for the pupate of essaaelps! ff,t, ioa, sod with the view of reiterate', to 11 1 / 4 ~13*. he bequest would be void. The Cowl he ld that salvoes, allisoigh sot &lavas, werfasollueliaent, that they were proiestke,elmUto mesh right.u might be eoeferred epos We is the States where they glo b mad that de as /*diet with ifie laws ot Awn OM dein them. • „ • • - I ?bel ovitig 7 • of tia sunia A— , - res ' • "PaPeri)?! ' I Loa'. ' 4 ClOariek * ye . • A blab lead lbe la • - pnileakkdapltiiik and' and oily rages winked at by the Know Notbibg autbori tie'. WUre.DOkarIfITOWSIP.I4' Tile `!'ff'249` Lion" occurred three days aner,the publication of the following: 'NM/MIMS() Cues—ROT Winne and for heatingo in tolerating evil and evil doers, the citizens of New Orleans may claim precedence of all the world. Whether or not ini . * Christian spirit or with a Christian sense of6dnty,,they dsvo assuredly borne with wrongs, outrages and insults, with a most tolerant and motet charitable disposition When smitten upon theitight cheek they have turned the left, and when the coat of order was stolen they have freely given up the cloak of law also If Thugs him forced them a mile nut of their way they Winn cheerfully gone another. If office, emolument and infiuince have been stolen by conspirators, they have piled honors upon the heads of the thieve*. If mid night bands of conspirators have made auffersge a farce, and freedom a mockery, public toleriume has sanctioned their assumed power Ind given up the public rule into their bands Violence has won the stake that rascals playedlor, and our patient and forbearing community biol confirmed the triumph of terror and assasination by its ac. quiescence Louisianians and citizens of New'Orleans, we would be the last to acknowledge tiisiblack dis grace and deep dishonor that bear upon us with' out good reason We would stand Up to the last of our blood and our breath to defend our city against any unjust imputations. Nut the troth is open—palpable--plain as noon day, that mores of men steeped in crime parade out streets in hroAd daylight, laughing at law and setting our tribunals at utter defiance. Men.whose hands are red wihb the blood of murder, c "elbow us on street corners, flaunty the badges of office in our faces, threaten us by deed and wird, boast of their former rasealities and strut proudly under the load of infamy they bear. Thesight of how- est men is offended every day witibassaitmins should have swung on the gallows long ago or been consigned to the cells of ourpenitentiary Need we racapitnlate the long, black list of crimes—unpunished crimes—that have been committed during the past thrite or four years? Need we open the grave to point to the victims of assassination! Need we bid the tears of the children of_niurdered citizens to start anew? Need we revive the memory of the days when brutal, bloody terror flourished over us? Shall we call the roll Of the honorable men of high standing who have been assaulted while in the act of ezereising the high and sacred right of suf (rage? Our readers would not thank us for drawl ing again in detail this damnable, bloody record of crime in New Orleans. We know that...the fanatic yells of rascal mobsstili• echo in their ears We know that they have not forgotten the murders of '55, '56, and '57. We are aware that they know in person or by name the villains that have-robbed, beaten, assaulted or murdered the citizens of New Orleans They know by whom, when and for what the reign of thug ter ror was established. They know tts origin, they know its cause, they know its abettors and its chief actors But all the efforts to punish such crimes have heretofOre been thwarted. Associt ation, cunning, fraud, terror, partisanship, pri- vate pledges or something else has always inter posed to shelter scoundrels from the avenging hand of the law How long must our fair city continue to groan under this load of unpunished crime? Is a rep- etition of all these outrages to be invited by a refusal to punish well known assassins? We have much faith in re action The cup is often filled to the brim before it is dashed aside.— There is a time when forbearance ceases to be a virtue; when will that time come•for the citizens of New Orleans? The skirts of. the metropolis of the South and the Queen of the Mississippi ,f bus when will she vindicate her fair name by dealing, just punishment to the guilty? This is a painful theme; we do not intend to dwell upon it. We love justice; and hope to see the day when itshall be meted out to the crim inals now at large in our city. We respect law, and hope to see the violators of law rewarded for their rascality. We love peace, and hope to see the hands of the disturbers( of peaeFeffectually tied. We believe in the entire freedom of the elective franchise, and hope to see it freely exers eised without fear or favor, in spite of salaried agitators and reed assassins. We arc satisfied that the honorable, respectable, law loving men of New Orleans are now nearly convinced that scoundrels have had things all their own way quite lone enough. The cup is fall! Tag "WEITXTLINII" INDIANS.—Some ti me ago the Cresenteity Herald published an account of a tribe of "whistling' radians, in the northern part of California. The Santa Rosa Democrat says on the subject: "From Captain Ford, of the Mendocino reservation, we learn that the story is mainly true. They are the ins habitants of a district at.out thirty or forty miles south of Capo Mendocino. They are very shy, and the appearance of a white man among them is the signal for a general retreat into the bushes, and out of sight. But after the whites have pitched their-tent, and prepared for a resting spell, the bucks reappear, timidly and cautiously, and after a little flirtation and a good deal of whistling, will come into the camp—the wn men, however keeping entirely nnt of sight•— Thy are harmless, and seldom attempt any cons. munication, either by word or sign, to the white man." CAPTURR OP AN ESCAPED NEGRO CONVICT —RESISTANCE Mr ADOLITIONISTS.—A few days ago we noticed the escape from the Michi gnu State prison of a desperate negrb convict named Dade. lie was traced by an officer to Sandusky, Ohio, where the Dittoit Free firm; skys he was arrested and lodged in jail. Dade claimed to be a fugitive slave, and tbo abolition. ists procured a writ of habea s rorpus and had hint discharged.. He immediately left and was followed by the officer to Bellefontaine, where he was again arrested. lie still claimed to he a fugitive slave and was again taken out by a writ of habeas rorpros, and the eraminatinn adjourned to enable the officer to get proof to identify him as the escaped convict. The officer telegraphed to Jackson for proof to identify him The abo litionists and negro worshippers meantime gull , ered in great numbers to set Dade at liberty and lynch Adams as a slave catcher, but they were prevailed upon to wait a sufficient time to gel the necessary evidence to prove him a convict.— In case of a failure they expressed their inteu• lions of putting their threats into execution On the arrival of the train, on which the clerk of the prison was expected, a crowd of sewn! hut dyed collected to see the result. Fortunately for the officer the clerk was en the train with proof sufficient to satisfy the public that Dade was re ally an escaped convict, and net a runaway slave, and ho was 'returned to his old quarter*, The negro states that lie preached a sermon, the next Sunday after his escape, to a large audience, and took up a collection, the audience subscribing a sufficient sum to enable him to buy a horse, with which to proceed atva fugitive slave. se. A 'Weather Prophet, writing to an agri cultural paper, says: "When you wish to know what the weather ie to be, go out and selneet the smallest aloud that you see; keep your eye upon if, and if it decreases and disappears, it shows a state of the air which will be sure to be followed by fine iierither; but, if it increase in size, take your great coat with you, if you are going from home, for falling weather will not be far off. Tbe reason is WE ?hen the sir is becoming charged with electricity, you grill as err, large *loud attracting leaser ones towards it, amid it gathers into a shower; and; !as the emstrary, when the Raid is passing off •or diffusing kW4 Abell a large cloud will be seen briskidied pie and diode*. - Deraey or el .'. WAsrtimoTos, ,1 .1 jlt . • W. D ' fAe rr rayer Esq., ‘ i , of Kansas, Leeont Slit: I - transmit, t o _ • • • Congress approved May 4th, 18 8, "for the ad: utianimuilWitlittiAtLEAWAllr ilw.crn: . Your duties under this act are o itte mostl A cute sad important character, but they are clear ly and distinctly defined by thei act itself. (After statiog the main provisions of the act it proccedst) Under the second seetioo of the act, yourself, the District Attorney, the Streestary of the Ter ritory, the President of the Council, and the Speaker of the Houseof Representatives, are con stituted a Board of Cesunissioners to conduct this important election. The President has en tire confidence that so tar as in you lies, the elec• lion will be fairly and properly conducted. Your power, and your duties are sufficiently pointed out by the Act, and by your previous iestructions. It is greatly to be desired that the five Commis. sionen should art in CfnleCri in all the proceed. inys. The President above all things desires, that there should a fair e.rpression of the popular will on this important vestion; aiul that any person who may attempt to commit the frauds punishable under the Act, may be prosecuted with to utmost rigor of the late. 16 is to be hoped that the people of Kansas, relieve I from all out side influences, may be left to decide the (peril. on for themselves, whether they will immediate! ly come into the Union under the provisions of the Act, or will remain iu a Territorial condition until their population is equal to the number required for a Representative to Congress inclosed herewith you will receive four copies of the act referred to, one of which you will send to each of the Commissioners named in the act, in order that they may be properly informed of their designations • At the same time, you will provide fur au early meeting of the Commissioners, so that the elec tion required by the set may- take place without unnecessary delay, and that all suitable arranges went, may be made fot this purpose. The President earnestly hopes that these arranges Went* may tw successful in securing a free and fair election, and that at. the present important crisis, the pe3Vt , Of the Tt rritory may not be ins terrupt ed The net for the admission of Kansas ought to be extensively circulated among the people, be , e.iuse the question to be decided by there is one of vast importance, sod may involve the welfare and prosperity of their fine Territory for a long period of years For this reason, whilst this act very properly prescribes that the day of election shall be at as oat ly a period after the proclamas lion as is consistent with the notice thereof to the people,ilic intervening period ought to be null. evslitly long to 1 . 11:1111i.itu to fully to understand toe question iu all it lwAriugs awl consequences. I ball have icu thi.uNaud copies of the net grin ted In this city, and forwared to you for iininedi. ate circulation You will not probably convene the Board um til after the appolutwent of a new District Attor ney for.the Territory A atomisation for this put. pose will be -eat to the Senate on Monday next Should you deem it .2,1 vi:,able, you are at liberty to publish the whole or any part of these tust rue• tions. The President wishes to give every as surance to thu people of Kansas, that he desires above all things, that there shall be a fair expres sion of the popular will at the election; and that the re-sult may be to produce peace and harmony among themselves, and promote their lasting w el fare I am, sir, your obedient servant, I.6xvls CASS. TOE GREAT DETROIT TROT —The great :10 miles trot at Detroit for 81,Att0 fizzled down to 'V mile•, Mr Efner, the owner of the Buffalo bore., "Unknown," barking nut after the horses were brought to the stand, and proposing hi pay forfeit of s2fll, unless Mr Belden, the owner of the )otroit ii,,r4r Frank ti ranger, would con .eat to reduce th ,- rsee to 20 miles After ennshler able parleying this was agreed to, Mr l', claiming that his hors• was not in condition to go the 50 miles Frank- granger passel the Pen ro ahead in every mile, and "Unknown" only ..Itowetl him his plates twice in the whole distance, and then only for a short time. Sueb cruelty as the owner of the Buffalo horse permitted should entitle him as many lashes as the poor brute received. Before the •111 miles were trotted the horse broke entire. ly down, first dropped into a slow trot and finals ly to a walk, from which no effort of his driver, by cruel application of the whip, could rouse him Ile came to a dead stand on the third quarter, dropping upon his knees from exhaus tion. The tortured animal has since died.— Such brutality is disgraceful to the "sports of the turf." ST IMUN, J11:4 E —The I:or/Wet:Ws Lesv cowurth correspondent learns from a man who kit Camp Seott on the nth of May, that the troops would be out of beef by the llith; the oth er rations would last till the Ist of June. No dispatch had been received in camp from Gov. Cumming, and nothing bad been heard ;rom Capt Marcy, who was expected to reach Camp Scott about the Ist: of June. Col. Hoffman's command was snow-bound at Laborite Creek, eighty •Hiles beyond Laramie Most of the ad• vaneed trains of Russets, Majors and Waddle, were met near Platte. Tho trains were getting along finely until they reached Big Blue, where heavy rains caused serious obstructions. A Mor mon named Williams, living near Leavenworth, received a letter dated Salt Lake City, May Sth, which represents everything quiet it, the valley. Gov Cumming was in the city at that date.— The people bad abandoned all idea of fighting, and had gone to work on their farms The Independence correspondent of the £' pp/divan, writing on June 4th, says that the Salt 14 re mail c 4 the 18th of April had arrived, in ,rigingoiews that au express had reached Camp Scott, from Guy Clowning, stating that ho had been well received at Salt. Lake; that Young was willing to transfer all authority, and enjoined his followers•tn rre,tgniz a Cumming as their fu• lure Governor, and aid him in the discharge of his duties mlll_ Rev Joseph B►rlow, a Pre , hyterian cle;gywan in Franklin Co. l'a , Inst his life in a shocking manner on Saturday night. Ile was aroused by the cry of tire, and opening the kitchen dour, where it originated, he probably inhaled a portion of the flame, as he immediately sank down and selreely shOwed a sign of life after , wards. His wife and daughters, the only per sons preseut;after attempting in vain to loosen the death grasp of his hand upon the door, at length, to save themselves, were &impelled to leave him to be consumed where he lay. MILITARY kiNCAIRPIRRNT.—Tbn Governor and Adjutant General Wilson, have issued orderA for holding a "camp of indruction" at \Vilhan's• port., (rani the 7th to the 11th of September.— The encampment is intended to include uniform. ed companies throughout the State, and Gen I►. K. Jackman, who is designated as the senior officer on duty, is cliarged"with the immediate arrangements for the encampment. The aids and all officers of the staff of the Commander_ in-Chief, are ordered to be present, armed and equipped in full parade dress. Tnn Au.attite Twat/7 Bantwar.—The Hoe. ton Tramikr mays that the reason .why Mr• Wolcott did not Appear for trial at Washington was, that he did sot know the case was coming on that day until it was too late to reach Wash * Eton in time. The Heston Herald says thane is another man, whose name has not yet been mentioned in eonueetioa with this subject, who knows more about tbedietribution of the 175,000 than any one else, and that more diaciosures are to ensue upon the subjeot. The Bestow Courier insists that• Mr. Weleott mass '"oat Irish it:' and tall all alms the disposal at that $75,000. ME -- i O.-- —..,e. -- • COOLIE TRU - 17 — ' - 1 fol vowllol4-7-----atimi:n, Ni p, th .,,, as . ftirtirear o ski* that twenty ei g h t it :'leat . nodredis thirlYtie -hi be„ 1 : 414 101 g . eouiles% UNita.lll 114411 mo— w e" tiet iis , . , bit al 1854, anti that ( 4 ,„ . .._ ....is iuut.i . !Cud four our..rltira,t,:ll:7 thew liras la tiumsitu —a mortality of s , ht i and one fourth per mut. ou the g r„, delivered. This i s the traffic Which has the tlueeth. teuse i„,i ma d Nippon' of the British go ve ,„7" and of its ally, the Emperor of Fisa ce 7 oarried on regularly, under the stati l 4 their laws, while, at the same time, waling, tlie world resound with their 4, tartan professions against the horrors of rican tibiae trade,' mai are employi ng portion of their navies to nupprem it. boo Illustration of British hypocrisy, six indubitable proof that political policy actuates it in the demonstrations of z ea l it is now making against the slave trad er , Coolie traffic between Chiba and Afri ca British and French possessions, it the trade revived in its most horrid form, r 4108SCS INS worst features. The ignorant and Chinese are inveigled upon the Britoi l eels, and, by force and fraud, are induced , a contract, the nature of which they h ills , iog about, binding themselves to service a o n e years, as apprentices ICI the B rittBh French West India Islands They sre crowded upon the decks in great nu m b ers the privations of the voyage are such that one-eighth to one-quarter die on th e and the remainder reach their deattnaboi most emaciated and miserable 4:outlaw s. quently rendered desperate by their at they rise upon their captors, and the m ost struggles take place. In more than one: they have set the vessel on fire, prefern s , to the bottom of the great deep thus the miseries they are called upon to - . . Those that arrive in the British colonies to labor with which they are unacqualr" long before the expiration of their mi apprenticeship, they have, nine out of Ic, iuto their graves Those that survive guarantee whatever that they will be sot at ty, unless, indeed, their condition li ga d their owner• prefers to turn them out to rather than support them. It w ill be ;een, at a glance, that regm very and the slave trade is far preferable . so-called system of coolie apprenticeship, which the British are the especial protector, cause, in their view, it js the only meac which their colonies—ruined by the aliolit slavery—can lw again rend, red productive nourishing, While Great Britain thus openly ;a , this infamous traffic, is uot the pret ex t g et her recent .lekintiou soil search of ,Jur rem the Gulf that she suspected th,ru to be el, in the highest degree irritating, and calc, to arouse our indignation ' t ier fi rst her legal slave-trade 64,4, A be employ„ highhanded measures to arrest that whi illicit and illegal When she does that also compels Spain to enforce the treaty tiro 'mule many year ago—that u i inoto should he landed in tuba—the Amcor while they woul4 never recognize, aim cireunistancmt, the rigrii r f suer. h, with more complacency of their rt-t-tto boarded upon the pro. xt which itt now ! But until sonic such proof of sito•ort't we tire warranted and justified in d... 1 . 1 z e n reecta :set, 11f l;r, mi Britain, not iql:Kl. 10 grum.itin up , nl cur nationality, but tnea t e 'ling the plea which 11•, given for it ~• cal mill itilnutons in th. , ortreine, inleteleti to (11,2111.- rlttt retc.eoire ~1 %ht. A 1'1,1.1111-i %s'. St II•71T1 TI, —Wht u C t .11.1: I tl• ft.!' ttllt• NOrth t th s ht• was ilittigtmA 1, 1 a tlemau who 63,1 taimn if to tf of 151'.2. I). coy riog, in 11,t vmtr , ... tti vas., Opt military ref utatit, ,perating ,troligl) to bt, iiicu prejudice, b. eluded t 104 th fNuplr kuk.‘‘ that hp • unknown to fiwc a , a a soldier hulls, cordingly, in his next speech, bp hi. 4 achievements in thi• tented 11. !I, My competitor has told ) ,, o ~1 ;be rendered the country in Oh Is., irlr Let you that /, too, 2 , •' , . 1 I buiiibia past ill tneruorable comes: t% t, ti u t t,esiu of summoned the chi%.llry , ftbe West to the defence of the irktkaral li , ator, 1, Miter zeus, animated by that pitrwto •pirit glows in every American boson, tote for Mat mat, and tI, I 0, • , f 'hat ON bleaching effi the thsl,lbs 1;:q.11"' The Tribune correspondent .say, I.)rd received despatches yesterday to)m the wander of the West India STit.lrqn disavowing having authorized the resat visitation, and explicitly disclaiming any dons contemplating such a contingency lie stausi further, that, immediate! being informed of the offensive prose despatched the sloop Jasper after the other cruiNeN with orders to bring tilt tending to hold the officers to a strict These despatches were communicated President and Cabinet, and produced of relief. Lord Napier feels satisfied, from am gence, that his despatch from England, next week, will authorize the reflect Lion The iontructions under which the squadron is now soling, arc ten years old OrrictAt, 111;11:i I:1 IN V. A—We published an ace.oint of the Wisconsin ease, and now comes another report of ti proceedings in I.vra The Dohtnine say : • An," lliplbhea orraidiva . —NV # bare received the report of the Spceial l'onitnittre , pointed by the Ileum. of R.Tr.- , otanteg' late session of our Legislature to ture,of alleged frauds in the location of the e! I)es Moines. Wo had heard of the et dishonesty alitl bribery against the RI Commissioners, or a majority of them. #1 appointed by a Republican Legt-iatait to cate the Capitol ; but this report nett b 6 makes known and confirms a greater • rascality , ' flu the put 91 t 1 2,;:.,.. Caw than we had ever beard AN EXTRAORDINARY Vitt t,IK —ll4 O papers chronicle the rosette, Sundty elf Fairport, Lake groe, f!ti mils , how waters rough after a light gal', ~f named Parker, a f.troier, lt‘ing ear Dock, (42 miles east of elevelind,) man about J 5, awl a b..v, kel) belul families living in the saute wino) ri Wass 1 light A kiffof mole ,leaeriptiov they were driven out by the gale ea:- noon, while setting some fish hue+ T' three times they were iu sight o f the shore, and cheered by the tr.pe of "n *bie to land safely in llor .t) 1 when the wind would ehaoge and the) in be driven bark upon the tentr , tu"' Wen it is reinettils-r , - , 1 that lit , i• sixty miles wide, the ri.a.ler trill I,e n bie a proper tile* of their perilou were rescued by the .iehoen..r Butler. - NIP Mrs. Swi4sheliu, wh, tic pre.. fro diali"Yeti by Mr Shepley, hr , recirt,l et UOtol ViMitor She i lertotesi•ecente ru to the Shepley quarrel, land drel3re+ dot "attacked a nursing lioni , s bel'" xYIL COMMUNWATIIiN, r:Te-t roues Liar, speaking of a rnrmb r MY*: Tbn first year he went te .111 any 108.0tanittgentious Likst he utterly refot ' ve his allotment of .fraling 4, In the ail l4: Woks sod stationery. The to at par he besieste--and finally mime home usable Ole truth, soder the moat favorable eir 9111. N E W yARK, Oil