THE ERIE OBSERVER. BRAIJ. V. SLOAN. itidltior B.LOALN & MOORE, Publishers. PIATCRDAI News of the Week Fora long tome past the existence of a gang of man. steelwork of bogus coin, in Lawrence and Scrota counties, Ohio, has been strongly suspected. Bogus Coln Or almost esel7 dostomiaation, from • ton sent piece to a Mexican dollar, has been. mixed freely with the currency of that re. gioe. Snapielon has for a long time pointed to certain parties a.s the manufacturers or renders, and recent tin. rtametwooel warranted their being taken into custody. Ae warningly C. S. Deputy Marshal Barber arrested William Sheppard, Joseph Kelley, George Wright and Joseph Grant, as the countertelteis, and lodged them in the Ctn. chapati All. AU the parties under arrest, except Shop par.!, have been living in &iota and Lawrence coannes for a number of years Sheppard lived in Carter county, IC, where be has • large recall , but had been most of his time tat a year past al the bones of Kelley, and other szsrsieteid parties Kelley who is a young man, hiss a wile and three children, and an eatsseive circle of very respect i able connecticz.. ihioughout the nelrbborbood. Wright has bean keeping bachelor's hall in as old brick hosts* where he was arrested. Some years ego he married • whit w lady, who owns a farm to Soiota county, but far um' reason they stbeequently separated, and he has iince been k•aptor house by himself. Very little is known ot him or his antecedenui, except that he has trartied ez• temeivaly, haying been in Cailfonala. Australia the Sand wish Islands, de. The parties underwent a partial ex, amination before Commissioner Newhall, which was ad sinned without being concluded. The evidence against them Ls pretty strong. O. of the most awful respite of •leep.walklog of which we have hoard fora long time tranepirod ac St. Loebon Sunday night. On Friday evening, .rye the Sc Louis Republican, a farmer numel John Bray, from Ind& ale, who wse removing to come poiut on the 11;esonri riv er with his wife, tether in law, and four children, Oa*. to on the Ohio and Mississippi Railroad. Beteg in straight *nod circumstances, the family obtalne,L permisston to lop for the night in a email room on the terry duck at tLe f o ot of Carr street. Between twelve sad one o'o.look in the night Bray area., to MS sEeep, and tak.og his youngest child, aged three dears, In hi. arms, Etctua:ly walked from the room and into the water The uEteoua wailing cries of the ettlid, and the loud calls cf the ;rater tar 6..E00 drew a amber of pinions to the meotacko,y sedra.; adjacent places on the Levee. The ttw:lr vital ail family partook of the tooohertnee and wildnesA of the ins tau, and Le described to be .f the most Leort ronElertnif description. Before ingenuity could nsi.:v. E.n any wa) of rescuing the drowning otijorts, both hat sank, • be seen no mere The Brownsville i.e . , w the u.: . has the ins In referent.' to the repotted massacre vii of V 'dour ri's auk taken prism's/ire by (den. tdiramon in the late on &moment before San Late In the engagement between the Teenetiatilt forces and Ouse rldaurri, 4W) of the tatter's men wets captured b) the tormer, who, slier see• log them disarmed, and taking from thous their moot rut• gable equipments, ordered his second in command t.s take them from hie sight, and d> with them as he thought fit.— This inhuman wretch, who wel, knew what would ensue from curb a course, placed them in the hands of his toki, di k ery, who were j ust then to a beast:y state of intoxies icon. They immediately fed upon the captives, who were entirely defenceless, and a b madeaere followed A' the end of the terrible scene the iifeless bAtes of f.ur Iced human beings were found stretched upon the ground. mangled and weltering in their blood, a sacrinee t, the holy manse of liberty. The Altoona Tribane notices a remarkable cure of deafneu, by electricity. A citizen of that place suddenly lost his hearing, and after every moans known to the me. dical fraternity had been exhausted, electricity was re sorted to. An Instrument was produced, and placing the end of a piece of wire in each ear, tbe electric current was Let on lightly at first and gradually increased. After con• binning the operation for some ume, the hearing of the man was so much restored that he could bear a beery rap on the table. Again the wires were inserted in his ears, and the fluid applied. on removing them the second time, the patient ooald hear goad talking in the room. Thu op eration took place in the afternoon, and the patient wad then allowed to rest until the next morning, when the wires were again inserted. and after applying the due/ tar a few minutes, the hearing of the man was perfectly re. stored. If there are eily of out young men who are In I tons to get Wist and realise fortunes, let them first send for some of the newspapers of the section, and look at the prchab,• chances of success. At St. Paul, the grand centre, is Aura for the us of two coaches and a wagon to go aloe miles, sad the stage fare to St Anthony, (8 slam , is The people are constitutionally opposed to work, and swap tar for tar barrels. nod tar barrels for tar. that raises fear plants and two mullein stalks to the acre sells for $lOO per sere—the pokeberry and motion harvest being followed by • winter etch , months Imt g Nice pros- peel, that' Who wants to tr• h., fortune' Lot say of oat •owns eatituataeu stay at bomb The prise fighting manta to ppread.t.; among the The Louisville C,urter says that on Monday I ut , a regular prise tight wet red in New Caet:e, be. rerun two eolscrol boys. aged serenteou and eighteen years The amateurs in the "manly art" are aimed Gentry and Ederwile. All the preliminaries were arrannl after the order ri the Heenan and Morrissey estieuff. Daring reached the appointed place, accompanied by their seconds t.Sey pitched into each °tiler in the most apprised purl. /stir style Three rounds were fvugtit and both •ppearea to be equally bruised, when they agreed to decide the 000teit with tams. But thet: seconds tnterferred and the denouement erns postponed to come future day ck.;vaay A gentleman in the last stage of Consumption, And oil his way to the balmy climate of }lands, attired at one of the hotels at Charleston, S. C., to company with bits lady. In two or three days he died, and the beart.brolteo wife at once prelate,' to retort to her Northern home with the corpse of her husband. The hotel bill was demanded and promoted wben to addition to the posthumous charge for the accom modation of the dead man, ten dollars were required for the prinlege of dying Certainly this te a tusur7 we bast a/ways thought 11 man .-ould Indulge to without detritoint to his purse. A castancboly paragraph is in the "locals" of Satur• day's New lurk papers. A poor musician, wle• for some Woe past has gathered a few coppers oa one of the ferry boats, all overboard oa Friday and was dr..wried. flu bat wad addl. cams to the surface, but lit, poor fellow, did nor. Nobedy_lnew who he woo, or wbcre be coal. from, wad his death is ehrwpseled- - an itraeraeuxusiciau.drowt , . itd"--loneluseh, peehape poverty, want, and i.,bscurlty for the poor bdrilerr-and an exceedingly damp resting place at last for his weary eon!, flis funeral knell was o ferry boat's bell, saahis grave the roiling river A most Magasr cam el ilishoucity it a large scale, by an hatable employs* In ► mercattile htuse. Cm just been brought to light it Chicago Frederick Glom, a porter in the store of Thompson 2 Wetmore, rucmeded at varioas times in robbing his employers of gIOSiO in the shape of Wks, teirets, flannels, blankets, hosiery, gloves. bottom* and •atiow artioloo, abieth be sold et sh o ut bait thew cost to various tatlore and small dealers in the city, and bad also peddled to a large extent is the oonntly MOM the farmers. He afterwards added arson to his eftl669 by burglar the store down. Jaaso 14,04itai, a boy of eighteen, was eteeuted In New Tort City on Friday, for killing a man with a knife, at one blow, is a fit of drankennees, about a yea: ago.— Every effort was made to obtma a pardon (rem the Goy. error, bathe was indextble. Rogers WWI not accustomed to Irish—and at the UMe the warder was oommatted, he us.bad into the ,street from a Ewer) whore be had been Malan and attacked the Ibrst man he mot 4 / 1 1 the day et the ekeerstion, the wife of the murdered man solieited a permit to be preeant.. ♦ Chum:lnt strut gambling estalilialiment was bro. tea into by We Philadelphia pollee ou Tuesday, sod dame was a great "lorry to sad fro" moot the crowd of star• pri sod players. One pntlesas crawled tote u ash box. .everld others juntpod out through a took window, and Iseeratad Writ legs by falling law a skylight, Irbil* a st out gutlemas undertook to moosl hie entire person by crawling late a three peek rood maul*, from which he was imbed out by the eau tails, half deed from fright. The °ewe amount the proprietor, and brought away a fine platting apparatus. The police of New Yeah here diseeNPerred a bogus bask* wawa ebbed the - New Regis:id Dank eI Pair edema. The bills were freely circulated in that do and the Walt, sad it is supposed ■o less this $.50,G40 worth of do trash bas bees pushed into the usenet. Oto of Uss guests at the lateraorioaal Hots/, was wank with shoal $4OO worth of it is W pcsioeisioa. A bombard pars Wats the tientraiity o: the Atlan tis Ca 6.1,, which we. so loudly sighed ty President Jisobasiss, lise bee* Airy established. It Ain't a word to my 00 maw M4L NOV ILYI BER '4O, I.Satl. Lead ► esxxilti&st.a apes Mr Senator 11131,406 D, of S Usrolina. has roentitly made it speech to holt 013: 0 1 1 11.111t 3 explanatory of hi* Bourse singe hip eleouunt,, ih Senate, as well as of hi* views no the rariou. question which agitate the country Tali ilro .dnetion, as a whole, wo think the most remarb able that has emulated from a Southern Senator in many years, sod litampi the author at 000 C, not alone as a Statesman, hut es t pstrioi ~f en large views and generous impulse+ Unlike Mr. ll.enstor Sirwmtn, who fnlatinatsid against the -union at Raehester recently, t4l. South Da "fire-eater," as be has too long been called, rends the ciirlo , y a lesson on the value of the Union that cannot but kid a response io ,the breast of every conservative onion loving man in the nation. We have not room for the speech at length, but we cannot forbear noticing some of the paints made by the eloquent orator. Lod first as to the Kansas Nebraska bill. This mss, sure, for 'built the country and the Daaitootatie party are indebted w Senator DOUGLAS, the Sen stor from South Carolina does not appear to think vas such a great osouttisra victory" as the "op 'mod it to be The „errttories, like those ;elate their domestic ty, he thioks existed ,bat bill. It is the fought and made a Congress could either strengthen it or take it away. True, it repealed the Missouri compromise line, but that, the Seal ator thinks, was already repealed. It had long filifilleed its mission. It had calmed the troub led waters for a time It was obsolete until the annexation of Texas, when the South aceeeded to the demand to extend it through the northern deserts of that State. But when California came —auii the 'oath demanded to extend. that line to :hi. Pacific, and thus saeure for her a portion of that magu;fioent territory purchased in part by her blood and treasure—it was refused Then that line WAS blOttOti out everywhere and forever To repeal it was a mere formality 'rhe Supreme Court had reoently announced it uocinstitutioo, el, and so tic repeal was, in nu respect, of any imports:lee This, it seems to us, is a clear and truthful statement of the ease raqueationalAy the south gained nothing by that measure—and yet the charge ie still rung by the "oppaction— that it was a victory of the South over the Nit' Sat we must pass un The Senator then takes up the I.tteompton Constitution, an/ discusses it with great clearness the slavery clause of that constitution, so tar as any ban-fit that could accrue to the - South, was worthies., because it would have been repealed as soon as the State as admitted—for this reason, because it vies ..onferriug no beuefit upon toe 6:AV t tUtOr.••t, Mid it at the same time demanded of the United Sii aces some tweety.ilaree nailltora of acres of ,and instead of the four millions usually allowed to new States, be thinks "the South herself should have kicked that constitution out of C,ln, gres." We confess that, as matters have turned out, it would have been better for the Dem )cratic party, and consequently for the ?wry, if the South had acted upon this coo station We never doubled the integrity of the President in sending that instrument to Congress—we never could see how he, as the Executive, could have done other. wise ; nor, in the complicated state of Kansas sffairs, how he could arrive at any other conc!u, 'ton than that its reoognition by Congresa, and the admission of the State under it, would be the shortest way to untie the Kansas knot And yet the whole north hu gone mad over a measure that is now repudiated and denounced by even South Carolina. The Senator next Lakes up the questiviii w both • er the people of the South are in favor of the Union or not Upon this question he say. 5 satisfied that an overwhelming majority of the South would, if assured that this government we* hereafter to be oonduoted on the true prin• eiples and construction of the Constitution, de cidedly prefer to remain in the Union, rather than incur the unknown costs and hazards of slt tiog up a separstt government. He thinks he state* what is tru3 when he says that, after all the bitt , rness chat bL.I characterised .Jar [(Jag wir. fare, the great holy of the S .tithern peiple d not seek disunion, rod will nut seek it as pri mary. oby•ct, however promptly they may aoeep t it as an alternative rather than submit to undo° etitutional abridgments of their rights many year , . of his life, he believel that till only safety to the South was the dissolution of the L nion, and he openly avowed it Bat upon this point he has changed his views—changed them too in the face of the admission that the. sscen dency of the North is henceforward secured in oar national Councils. Upon this point we will quote from the speech itself : "The equality of the free and slave States ha 4 long been lost in the House, by the admission of California it was lust )n the Senate Since they, another free State has been admitted, and an, other yet has passed the Senate, and in a few years more we shall have Kansas, Nebraska, Waseingtao, New Mezico, and perhaps others on our roll The immigration from Europe to the North is sufficient to form _poe or more free States every year To the South there i s lit e r a l iy no immigration We have, sittoe the clo4iog of the slave trade, added to, our population main ly by the natural increase of our people, and we have no surplus population, white or black, to colonize new States. We lost Tiansa.• partially by our inability to colonize it, and we are perhaps yet to have a stenggle for a portion of Texas.— The idea, they, of recovering the equality of the two sectiona f even in the Senate, seems remote indeed. Si-OPFtING OF TIM SLAVS TEADI IMPOSSIBLt W 4 bare it proposed to reopen the African slava trade, and bring in hordes of slaves from that prolific region to restore the balance. I once entertained that ides myself, but on farther. investigation I abandoned it. I will not now go' into the discussion of it, farther than to say that the South is itself divided on that policy, and,. _from appearances, opposed to it by a vast major ity, white the North is unanimously against it. It would be impossible to get Congress tore-open the trade If it could be done, then it would be unnecessary, for the result could only be brought about by such an entire abandonment by the North and the world of all opposition to our slave system, that we might safely cease to erect any defenses for it. NO NILIV.SLAVN TIBATIONIKS TO St HAD Bin if we could introduce slaves, where could we find suitable territory for new slave Stater? The ladies' Reserve, west of Arkansas, might make one. But we bare solemnly guaranteed that to the remtiants of the red race. Every where else, I believe, the borders of our States have reached the rest desert which sepsrates the Atlantic from the Peel& States of this Con federsey. Nowhere is Africa' slavery likely to flmaish in the little oasis of that Sahara of Am erica It is mush more likely I think to get the Punic slope, and to the north in the great valley, tbao anywhere else outside of its palest tisane. Shall we, as somet, take Mexico and Central Asseritis o mak n t gi rve States? Ai nese slavery appears to have failed there Per. haps, akid most probably, it will never succeed in r lt it twiglll4 what lefre 1., with seven ..r eiight minion% m hardltsemt civil, inikan,, aid the nto .r three s ittillton4 Creole Spantank:and ikon / vele who now hold those countries? ' We" would not en-lave th. Indians Experience has proieu that they aro iaeapablu of steady labor, and are therefore unfit for shivery. We would sovematmate even if that tuhuman aettievemetit would not )tit ages of murder an I inealeulable sums of Money. We cou, 1 utrdly think of Atsqmpting to plant the black rice there, .upori , r foe labor, though ulterior perhaps in lutelleot, and expect to maim tabu a permanent and pcaccful ,industry, loch is stave labor wait be to be profitable, and thoise idle, restless, decieralized children of Identesui cos, scarcely more civilized, perhaps more sunk in superstition than in his age, and now trained to civil war by half a century of incessant re• volution What, I say, could we do with these people or these countries to add to Southern strength? Nothing Could we degrade our• selves so far as to annex them on equal terms, they would be sure to come into this Union, free States and all. To touch them in any way is to be contaminated. Rogland and France, I have no doubt, would gladly see us take this burden ou our back, if we would secure for them their debts and a neutral route across the Isthmus.-- Such a route we mast have for ourselves, and that is all we hate to do with them If we ciao not get it by negotiation or by purl:lbw, we mast seize and hold it by force of are The law of nations would justify it, and it is absolni rely necessary for our Pacific relations The present condition of those unhappy States is cer% tainly deplorable, but the good God holds them to the hollow of his hand, and will work out their proper destinies CITBA :0111IDDEN FRUIT We might expand the area of slavery by ao quiring Cabe, where &every is already establish. ed Mr. Calheun, from whose matured open. ions, whether on oonstiti4uonal principles or Southern policy, it will rarely be found safe to depart, said that Cuba was "forbidden fruit" to aid, unless plucked in an exigency of war. There is no reasonable ground to suppose that we can acquire it. in any other way; and the war that will open to us each an occashin will be groat and general, sod bring about results that the keenest intellect cannot now antioipate. But if we had f.;ubs, we could not make more than two or three` slave States there, which would not re store the equilibrium of the North and South; while with the Airman slave trade closed, and her only resort for slaves to this continent, she would, besides crushing out our whole sugar chiture by her oompetition, af f ord in a few yea' a market for all the slave; in Missouri, lien. tuoky and Maryland. She is, notwithstanding the exurb/taut taxes imputed on her, capable now of absorbing the annual increase of all the slaves on this continent, and consumes, it is said, twenty to thirty thousand a year by her :4 ystum of labor. Sieves decrease there largely. In time, under the system praoticed, every slave in America might be exterminated in Cu ba, as were the Indians. However the idle At- Acan may procreate in the tropics, it yet remains to be proveu, and the facts are against the eon elusion, that be c‘n, in those regions, work and thrive. It is said Cuba is to be "Africaulted . rather than that the United States should take Ler. That threat, which at one time was some what alarming, is no longer any cause of dis- quietude to the South, after our experience of cue Afrioanizing of Sr. Domingo and traUILICS. What have we lost by that? I think we reaped some benefit; and if the slaves of Cuba are turn ed loose, a great sugar culture would grow up in Lmieiana and Texas, rivaling that of cotton, and diverting from IL se much labor that cotton would .rarely be below its present price." We should like to quote more at length from this interesting speech, but space forbids We cannot close, however, without putting on record our dissent from some of the positions assumed by tue orator--and e4pecially that in regard to Cu bs We believe the acquisition of that Island is at once a political as well as a commercial neees. sits We are not about to discuss this qtirtion, f , r the time has not yet arrived to do so; but tf we continue a public, journalist half the time we bare already been one, we have no doubt we shall have the pleasure of recording the aquisi , lion of that island to the American Union. SENATOR DOUGLAS ON DitiOROANIZER.B. S4nator Douglas, in one of hie recent speetbes, thin emphatically cmdetona the disorganlzing Democrats who, in the late eleotions, loot their votes to the so-oalled "People's party," to aid itidefeatiog the regular candidates of the Dtemo• er t aoy -Such of them (his opponents) as are Damo• data, and show their Democracy hq remaining inside of the D.•m^aruto organisation, and sup piwting tW nomthees, I recogns.y.e as Democrats; 4at those who, knowing they, would be voted diusu inside the D.m,cratle organisation, go :ponds and attempt to divide and destroy it, in concert with the Peopled party, have ceased t.• tie Democrats." Thi s is as accurate a description of the Forney disorgaenzers as coo d have been given, even by doe who was in the State and a witness to all ibair movem3nts. Is it not literally true of Them, that "knowing they would be voted down inside the Deinocratio organisation," they "went Outside," soeceeded in "dividing it," and did their utcnot to "de,tr )y it, in 0 )neert with" the inoicut and implacable enemies of the Demoora Fie party, nice operating in the name of "the :People" flow do these gentlemen admire this Wei like picture of themselves, as drawn by, the 'patter-Land of one whose special friends and ad ;vocates they profess to be! And how will they relish ti be told by hint—the Douglas whom they pretend to idolise—that they "haws ceased to be Democrats?" Should-they hereafter have ;occasion to complain of being "read oat of the party," we hope they will remember that it was their own Douglas who did it: air Hon. Charles Lsrrabee, the Demooratic member of Congress, eleoted in Wisconsin, over the [lon. Mr Billingbarst, Black Republican, was a Judge on the &Doh when hi received the nomination of his party Re forthwith resigned his judicial station, and took the stump, and never loft it till he triumphed. Judge Lsrrabee is an able speaker, a sound lawyer, and will make a most efficient Representative in the Coutioila of the Nation. BQw FOR Skutrru.sursu —Au ezobanob states Wit a young man has just returned home who was believed to-hare been lostiu the wreck ed barque Wade, of New Bedford, ten years ago For a long while his father has been conversing with Mm in the spirit land, and the last message through a "mecbus" was to the effect that be "was swag the saints, and a crown of glary was 'waiting his father." His appearance in the land of the living is the greatest blow "spiritual. ism" has ever received. Tui OvERLAND ROUTZB TO CALlrosNia. Four routes have been or will, soon be opened overland from the Mississippi river to the Paeir. is They fie between the 32d and 48th degrees of north latitude The Southern roote will be open to travel in all seasons of the sear The i s, others are only fit for au mer travel. In a short time after stages and alls are transported over threw now vast «alit settlements will spring up al , ng the entire , route, end the im mense hive of population will fill up the inter n-tang late between our A.tlantie sad Nei& poeeep.t. ti, Military posts will, of course, be stationed to protect these important mail and state routes. .1 SERTEI3O.4 Y AN 14tIuMiattIL LOCAL, -- The Crawford Deeti;Orot "gilts itstootshed Kt the sharpness of the Enis Gamete hut wook." Ekt weak' its maws w i * O7 emit tiueees• it.. • _.-- uov. Psalms has bond a writ fot the bolding of en sztra Sisetion Becks sonnty, the !kb Orrogrestional dis trict, eo the 89th of Nevoothoe, to supply the toosooy De toeion•el by the nslgnstios of Hoe. J. Olassy:Josss. —8• r. Jots ♦. Bowsiks, of this city, is lootariag at Maoist& oo U. &mita sollswee, AleeeweWY. Here be will umtk• tbo "see Wan" before• be gots through with thaw. iet The Erie Exhumation Qua hr to be @loved on the 25th inn., by the IllisoNten, If not 801111 ST doted by the e a. we hare reoeivid the Comes*lima Art Jammu for Demistb•r. 11 is • supoeb ambit, rieday adorned wit• oograelogs and wood oats, end tiled with mush good readmit,. We leery frog the Cosseestoille (harrier tbst tke store of Mr. M. Wieser, of that villege, wee tweetts °pea and about two hawired &Ilan stoles N• aighelast week. ?be Cites/ aed the dbti•Cbese dispataau in the Bod/min bore bronglit their controversy to • close. Like a great loony other Capsulate, they bad doebtlees *tiled thenteeivea If %boy baVot say body Woo. maJortry In the Beata of Now York to the Ist. siestioaogslaat calms a Coaatlteit!stial Cairootlon, was nearly forty amassed. Mn. Julia Branch, who Agar od at Rutland and In many other places as the advocate of the "Pros Love" doc trine. has prepared a lecture with the surlily* title of "Mrs. Grandy." Um Julia le evidently • alittleput out" at the freedom with wine% the "Mrs. tilintadrs" of the press have diseseeed her "Inclose" theories. r-- 'Liao Homed trial of Uirs 13010, for t►• murdor of him *HO, io to proem's, to Ms Ashtabula, Ohio, Coin. Christian Jacoby is on trial at Pittebtrgh, for the murder of bis wife, last July. Der hotly was found near the city, on the banks of the Ohio. Ilto Sheriff' will bay. six °Gavials to oomvoy safely to Poottoatsary, from tltta *oast,. this wink. ♦ rather largo roprommtati,n for thts creamy, for ono torn of 00art. —Crawford Drat. Vory possibts; but still sot Imp eeseiderlog the am b. Is the county that ought to go. We are indebted to that mom estimable Democrat , to lady, Mrs. Sagami, of Harborer's*, fora very aompta hie present for oar Thanksgiving Dinner. We min wan her the •bird^ war doubly relished on account of the dcnkr hot must have quiet weather is Beal,. While we h•tro been i mmorsod in mad, slush, and snow, for a stook or more past, lb* Buffalo Cooinsecial complains that locomotion out of doors in that city is ozetwairely dosagroo. able, (..ti account of lb. blab wind and superabundant dust. tehiett dnrei along, and *tidies aren't tbo 'twit like a great Smooto on Saban. To saws, is almost impossible, eblio to open one's !route ut to make a "last bole" of it. If this maid North wind psi/scram in its as welcom• blast*. to We groat disertmeat of feminine pedootriattiom, it will cease old Bones to be intermit bated by dm fair for. --- If the from the Jamestown Jorti n 144:. is true, the prospects of the ultimate tionstroatio• of the atueititelkediof crewel:it railroad, •ia Meadville, may b e set down ILI decided:, flattering; bat—and alas, for • ant —we bare lit•Li too many promotes to the ear, la regard to ra.ir,..adv, broken to the hope to give ready eredtinee every sw ry of this kind that ends its way into the newts pa pert We hare et last something tangible respecting this enterprise, and which was anticipated by our article on the Atlantic and Great Western Railroad lest week A C Morton, one of the contractors of the Iris and N• Y. City Road. jam retorste4 from segottwisair in Eerope • writes to the President of our road from New York, ender Amite of October 20th alt. He arrived by the steamer On the 19th, and states that he has 'Mooed a °esteem for the rails and the necessary means for the crouipiertion of your road.' He expects to commend the. west and delivery of rails next month, and has good ream to believe that there will be nothing to prevent the early" oompletion of the r sod. It is the intention of partite sonneeted with the Madvilie road to bexia its coonetnietion at ones, and to I , cate it with reference to a erstolutSou with this reed.— Tiles' parties were on board the Pena, which was to ar rive at New Tort 00 Wednesday of last week. A poetical of their relic bare heima.ihipped, and a payment made on the contract entered into by them." Wa see by the last number of the Washington States that an Arrangement has been eronoluded between R. A. ?Eton,. toditot,of the Richmond Sena, and the pro. prietor of ifie Store*, by which the South and the States are to be consolidated into one paper, to be rateilehed in an enter form, and to be under the editorial control of Mr Pr r. The paper will be the organ of no person or eliciue, bit devoted to the general interacts of the Democratic party, in neeordasee with the principles of Statestights Democracy: The paper is to male the name, The Soma, and will be stint to subeeribers on the following terms • Otte ropy per year, (Daily,) $6 AO Two oopiee per yea/. 10 00 One copy per year, (semi-weekly,) 3 00 Ooe copy per year. (weekly.) i 00 Fl•e copies to • club, 8 00 Tee eopiee to a slob, 15 00 Twenty copula soot to one &Um, 20 00 As the prooo•diop of tho cooing Congress will be of groat intarsst a t►• whole eottutry, 6 'n. stag.- will keep its raiders fully advised aqua all subjects which way be discussed by thou body. The pries of subscription for the Isaias will be as follow,: On. copy, (Dally,) 13 00 Two eopies, " 300 One copy, (ssmi•weekly,) 1 00 Poor eopict, .. t.) a club, 3 00 One copy, (crockly,) SO Pi we copies to • Nab, 3 00 Seventeen copies to one &thirsts. 5 00 A/I letters. is Mathes to the new arrsatement. eiseald be ►ddrewd to Paron I Buss. Washington, D. C. Sotabody in 'peaking of the latest Paris faebleu. the oottiratios of fat, whirl" is Ito* the rage to that oily. says that **young ladies will now quit WIN' elate peuells, will rise with tho lerlt sod take out door exercise. sad probably try *a the sub tab." We Ala! the latter sot improbable, as they have been ti7beg the hoops on for tome time. Thanksgiving has come and gone, and w• preening "all the *ortd and the rest of mankind" in Pennsylvania eat their turines and were thankful. In tits city the day was very generally observed; services were held in seat of the chute/see In the forenoon, the stares, shop and most of the ether please of business were Gloss* cad In the of tarsi:on cad evening friend/ visits and soetal converse served to wills away the thaii pleasantly. A 'pedal shied= to all the mosey aceaslesed by the appotettaeat of Hon. J. GLitery Jorm. aa Minister to Austria, will be held in Bate smutty oe the 30th. ♦ good many IMAMS are meatioated la miaow:Moe with the nom• merlon. and among the rest J. Lnermica Gm, Req.. of the Reading Gamus. If v me the Democracy of Berle, be is jut tba man wed samisens ►ad sleet—bat ee we an sot, we Gan only hope they will. Th. Bat Wit cootalood so article the other day opts the "Bow. 3fitSsos," is whir& the pees* "Snob" was handled by the writer "without (1..1. - if we did sot tools to the eostrary, wo would be half isidisod to ha hero that oar friend of the Bulletin had • Bois, sitter when he Arm that portrait At say rate the platers it so If. litio—the listausioats ars brought oat es the courses so distioet,—tiuu weasel* whether show law emu of of this use l• the Stubs that Obsset prodisSe ose or Rote who nosed bo proaostacod by &imposes% Adios as the kleatteal .as deeissased by the spew ss Mr. Apse.' Bat hens is the portrait itself—lt is too Inn not ts esti a plate is oar oalsmas: "Tile Iloecdsbls Xi. Sane ha • rumen esettiapt for touenten people. ea exalted opinion of \hued. sad • ost vibo opiofook of those who Bice bim •.posititte by doirsing to U. epos his. Is he • insetbsr of tine mods al profits. 'ion. sad fernialops pill and pritd•rs for the silliossirer —he would es spore sully his faultless isteedelotb or de- Bede his deist, hands by risitiag tbe hears of to poor notebssie and prescribing for se beside potion, than he would sestprosstss digsky by spseMag to • laboring man; or. he Is • legal nostbstwee osil woods is the bast suss of the riots—dose be home to base fat foot, d • cordial coetstspt for all to rest of t h e profossios. His loss ors fast young see, who sirsr rseogeiss ouhror pot?: pis that sere their lisies by boson labor, old his danki are tars their awe with disdain at be isaustrios. tamale or gsetisinsaly clerk. lir. Secs and his family belies in hooplas up tb• Rule social distinetions whisk tb• snehoorsey bare srdatosd as • pristostlee swiss* seal toga penes end the latresises of pisia. peettsal pool* who.. pookosts are est misrflowies with Westin phi— Mr. Sees is $ volute/del man; Atm BIM le as ntoeis Ws wallas; dot Master items ere prollgiews mew; sad the Mess flans me anon bssatifed and great taros! Lot ail the world fall dews sod de hoary* whoa the Snow ommiseand to sir dons seep sad weer Won ths In OM WISI AND orazwwzszo—irs were a good deal amused at a little Beene that took place et the also of one of our lawyers the other day. The deciple Bleekstose, who it the Attorney fit the Banbury and Erie road, was baby preparing briefs Gad bootleg up author* ties, wises the dleerogisismed and to walked a "son of Galen" from one of the townships through which the aforesaid road is 10 , 01i114. "Are you the man that settles fur the tight of way for the Sunbury road," queried thcwlattor. The Attorney informed him that such was his birsiness.— aaid be, "%An you tell me how Miler, there is due to old Mr. Jones of our township." After eonsulting his book*, the Attorney for the road, told ham it was just $lOO in stook. "What kind of week," queried the visitor.- "With what kind Gould it be bet the stock of the road," asked Blackstone, a little surprised. "Well," said this seeker after knowledge ender dttltealties, "that is just what we have been dispistin' about. Old Mr. Jones says, sad he says be can't be mistaken, he was to hare a hun dred dollar. In cattle—end he knows it, was cattle toecart,e ho thought when be made the bargain that it won d h. aeons entrap% to tory, kiln a yoke of steer* and a firths ckse4 of a loss" it is needless to say that the man wont hoar tatty enlightened as to the foot that railroad stoek was a "gray hoes of smother color "--"Time and tide wattefor n. man," h a saying that Hods * verilleatlon suety day. I seems bat yesterday sines we were iso.ioying oar moos merry malthqg at Christmas and New Tear, Theo cam the sombre months of winter; then spring gradually put her "Criss green;" asp rummer, with its blushing romp and ripeniag fruits, id be/m.4ly followed with serum,. when the husbandman gathered the result of his summer' work, and prepared for the year to acme. And here e. are agate—"time and tide" has not waited, but has ear tied as along on Its ebb, until Outsets lug ba• some sad gone, while the aatioipation of the merry day of Christmas is already making many a little heart glad "Time and tide wait for no man." How many a hearth stone that Is now happy in the thought that none members bare departed from lit, will, ore another T tisn't giving or Christinu,find chair Tenant at the annual 117 gathering. Row many a bad of promise will find • revalue spot in the quiet wood on the bill, where the roses and the wild Bowers bloom, and the bird. sing their I:l3wr. nine rotuicielay. How many a mother wrU gale with tear fat eye upon the empty cradle, or the little frock, er the pretty manly *het that is laid away, serer to be age worn by the "pet of the household,"—because it 1/.19 le: aside the garments of mortality for those of iminortaiitt aol hat become an sue& in the hon•ebold of Our FatheT who art in If " "Time and tide waft for c tri.o thesucomer has come, and the harvest Is ended • i , uff little children to come unto rne, and forbid tooth r. of such Is the &Wird , co of ilearen."—ice with one of our eletianges when it says that winter, s tL his biting from and chilling breath, Is now near at bier', the forest laves are falling In showers at eseh fitful gas ;, the rose and the butter cup have dropped tbetr pe,a.s the ground; all velure seems fallen into the "Sears i an • yellow leaf," and the winds speak plaintively, through :t almost leafless grove, is If In sorrow for the drlnvyes7 -- A right pleasant thing it is to draw -the curtVti c ose• over the window, to wheel rheum char nearer 1, , • and watch the railerful blaze as lt dash.• tbru ugh the warm apartment or Laps ois tn. .• fatttasve shares, we feel the happ:a fi-rm which rages is I , ..noest, Theo the pa• , er;eg ed the sleet upon the Wilde* pine *rise,' , •-1 ci the storm with,ut and the crpil.rt who's., 01,1 e.•ri mental contrast the ire ititirtis / frughti r, IL. r,• a . w redder, the carpets beoothefr.fter And ear -- et_ a, the weed which Ise sooty{ re,cla • reGer t • •• 11*se• a RID* or but bpow u •:e ■w*u. more of a r r tag* c!an nitrod R -911 , 3- But ett a we L.:tar ft cattalo...ll , oM an d °bete . % firepAr wiorlni; ! and pstils-p snail. at :is fur). r. w.• w• . • poor? how is tt ot. %twit a ii.an lees wanderet, with the widow and the , art -..• ' 1 otte of thoe I,nao lots have DeeL 3.; whom pt orid•L co as giver, the rtrlnii t t g cooa.,er, when the airs& days an... 1 n,e; ►raropon as, tho poor era sufertng —An we oo a tliseusa leg i"wintry" topic, it may tot r i ots am..? r mind oar readers that a taaliral exchargc i f tce lon that nothing baiter can be wort, outlet eammer ttrin a I, .e • rbirt. Wear it loes.. for it shou:d Lave r. c he skin tLus keeping op a baght ./1 . 1...11,41. Who, the blood to lbe surtare and keep. n there. an I w • Se the case, no one can take co.d—red, f. r wo ,e.❑ I fille up, mats together and broom., •v ,t 1 mperviotis; woolen, the product of a cheep, at..l o• t cotton wool, because that merely &broths the th. u- e fr• the surface, white woolen dancer conaess tt r n, tn.• rk t❑ and dallposita it in dropa on the outside , t Lue which the ordinary cotton starts absoro it, • rt., 1., ner r e ipusure to the intertnr a.r. it IS dred le :non Qr .. g the body. hissing these pr pert to., re Isi I.4l‘nri worn by sailors seen in the and enlist:lir conetraes. Wear a thinner snater.s. susomor ,• state d that all lb. railroad companies between `:.v. rt and Chicago bare discontinued tberuenlng of se:. cars. The emigrant trains will do the r 3•: i LI, 11.11 d the !are on the been to serer dollars between Buffalo and Ch•cs,.,, class fare a fifteen dulling frum Buffel Bridge to Chlmwo.—Proferetr Wo , tPour, - . a i::u•'ra teacher of some colt brity. died et Noe T •rk lie was the author atd c, topiler f A cuccb-r • mc• work., the most popoatt f whloh le-'to "DO a eopiouo colloottoo of aorta) cootie THE SACRIFICE OF EVERETT —The Ile•-.•',urg Cotton My. that Et watm EVERITT bas eitict'roSeed a ;tree. deal personally in hie efforts's. 1..4,11 the foul 1 r •ne chase of Mount Vernon. but be certainly rceer wale a greater sacrifice than when be e,n•ehtell to et,c•r ett eau artiele weekly to ti.a New Tvrk £e. rr, to coutiderat ,,, o that the proprietor, &dere? be/tete, w.,/ pay sl‘t u:4l t ., the Mount Vernon food. The , ffer wet a IPMC` ,, NE cue and no person will question Mr Evaarrr . 4 tt t•re tereatedneas, in doing what will add PO !Argo a Pun] to Pte cherished objeet; to which he has devoted e. cht.,tl ttm• sad labor. If Doggie bad offered Ex Earrr toe foliate amount of money on his account, he Irverti hate r•f,,, e d regarding saaoeistion nab a deshnewitii4er. 1.• t• Ledger, all literary oontecnidetioti, but for the oat re of resetting the Tomb of Wasaisor-a. be t.- ,1•r.,; "tit. his t►aaa ►ssoetttsd wan STLr•3t7a C 4 an. Jr. P=LY, Exalts...a Bh.TSZTT. and that eta •on. • Jerk and to endure the trial of twins it vacs,. it D theirs. Think of the productior.s of the pure et • Braun being planed ride by aide with the U, .-dy L. ter," "The Tyrant's . Tbe Aiaasettl'e 114 , even the forted wittieieuts that Pasertrz inentiferturee at eci mach per ',liable N.. &obi S. stela be. made a rutut hargaia. The New York Loirer wut oblate a otreultitt , m tasking the sipendatue of ton thousand dollar/ a ;uIIN •utt loVOSlMittit. nil motives are s• pure y mere•rl •:. •- Ent anrr's art pare:, parrintle. But west a eicumentery upon national parriottsze it is, when etoe • f :be purest atm best Mai of the contr., to permitted to t &wt., at. t•se greatness to raise a few thvosazd tiollare for the purehase of the sacred ashes and Tomb of the Father of ti l e Con n , try. NEW YORK. Cortoorpoodoneo of tho Erie Oboorror Winter has fshty begun this week. fur, sr. i or -,st are no limier Capone/OMo, even st - tin,iiay, wbe- th e is *hissing bet brightest 11.121 i doing his ba.t e . tualte ocnfortablit. We are reatioled that Thant ey; yin& is 1 , baud, the festival of the roast turkey en 1 bun 1 tr an'i burl which the new star to Now Eng.an i P , etry ha. P.. ',..!e1".1( ly siren to tarn •rality. Dr Hoes: b.• as the poet of Thanksgiving Tae 0-'•1‘:• o^ia a , o•:y giro favorable etrattlts to the new poet, where power lasi 1 " 11 41 Personally reoonittionlial him , s fat . ha: 'ln cosy especially congratulate himself that the reading pub: o sewn to pronounce to his favor It is pr ‘•4 by .ernal In 'Mans AIR the judgesteat of critics 4 •en no• slway cola. Ode with that of the people. Ti. three eueseeep4 of the season Lima far, is a Ittetrary way see. the new • Tat Longfellow. this maiden pops of De Ito rand. and a fresh novel of -intestine by as anonymous anthers who show. that he has beht the pas beton; the bock se veroreiy spolteu of to some orttioal quarters, but the main pilot is —that the book is eagerly sought after awl read It has pe doubt, serious artistes detests, but it had fife and newer, whit* la bowie than nay quail." of des.l art. Manager Ullman u Ocwattir tag to cask' strew for seer Picoototatni, hes veotferations beeoseing totri,r to her preemie properties 111 that of the pubs.. goes away .nee uuttlrerenes. She is now pronounaid an inferior singer sod es ewer-stniisod &Areas. Chishootire, sad other of eur resisleat arises. will rotate th• politic favor lung after Plc eoloratut See been forgotten. Basissas la prey deli, all the wholesale streets aro gulet. Itroadsualls are roattaatag to Dome forward sod eocuwu• late hers la large classical's: people, may rotate•% them, astral with the prospect of Otanp dear this winter. But cheap doer can only be had at the•espeuee of a pour trade with oar great buyer, the West, which regulates its pun chasms by the pries which its great staple crop brings.— The Booth is riots is a large supply of °ewes whit!' pro le/too to toll tie seaman pries*, soda eery good trade is as:waft booked for with that ett44611._ Tbo *maw of usomployod perms' is this and others larro cities IS mory kap sod tit* cold woollier will suitiroltoilly mad as asozpootod provultme• of diem 6 . 0 . 4 " tobooisg oloomoos, as Mars is very little employ - nose •foriag mad ass, animal kayo boa Living throo,glo . trom EDI =I Naw "'Coax l'ivr 13 1 SS• tho annua on wages widolt would out tap body sad soul togothor in eolii woman. Rogers the young atorderesoras ezeouted Friday. There a a great deal of sytaysithy fah for this young tees by au pimp's, sod those wbo are assiusiated with tee patties sod the olfeuthrtso4ll. are wig loud hi exprodeg *Mb opinfon Mat the Governor should hare emantated his Mb. too es. It appears that ale was the first map* the rising men was wow fs, tbe fleet tine ha was awes natter the tat flushes of liquor; his tan companions long Iteowe se out siders of the most hardened characters, sad many Wawa that they swore a halter of their own seeks epos that of Rogers, who was maddened with intoxleatios sad remem bers nothing whatever about the affair. At say rats tie affair is • warning to y sing men eateriee this city as strata gers. Bogart bad ease is frosilie mato &beat a solidi before, eta insooest yaw* wad fill I. with some of AO gurst characters in this city. It was Misfire. goys whleb now sends bias to the gallows. Canomni goes to a fourth trial. The Oregon War Ended—.Snoceas of the United %States Troops under Col Wright. From the Now York Herald As your readers are aware, Colonel Steptoe, with 120 men, mounted and armed tub the short range musketoon and two howitzers, were attacked in May last, about thirty miles south of, , Spokan river, by some 1,200 Indians. After At , fl illant defence of twenty-four hours, baying kid w o officers and five men and his interpreter kil• led, and fourteen men wounded—the Indians having all the advantage of ground, ovehrhelm iog force, and long raoge rides, with ,ihich they] uld stand afar off sod shoot doati his min, l without danger from his musketoons Step to save his men from utter annihilation, was compelled to retreat; which he'clid, leaving two Lotrozers, a number of packs of provisions, and some pack animals, to the JAdians. The Indians, who suffered in this allsieitwies the lass inflicted ~o us, were instigated by the rumors that the white men intended th build roads into their country, (there is new an appropriation for that parune,) to drive/them from it, sod take it for themselves; be the "Coeur d'Alene.," "Spo. kans," "Pend/d'Oreilles," being ignorant of the power and motives of the whites, were influenced ay the most desperate of the "Yakimas" and •• Palouses," "Walla Wallas" and "Renegade S e Perces," thieving bands who having depre• ist , trfor some years 'upon the frontier settlers mud/ miners of Washington and Oregon Terri ,./rier, who wished to unite as many powerful 4 emds a; possible with them against the whites, whom they had already made enemies As Col. Steptoe was in the midst of their most populous sod fruitful, or rootftl region, with a small party , fs.,ltliers, they selected their own time and the po.ition to fall upon him, which attack, being among what as yet were known as friendly be was- unabie to resist To punish the eneeg-t1 in this and previous outrages ,z-..11.1-t the whites, Col Wright's command was qg,solzed by detachments of artillery ordered trom t's , .lorn IA (...the of them bad to travel from int , nit t. "ttutti, , by dragoons from Washing nr„ sod tufintry from Oregon territories; the onwsnd ot WO left Walla Walla on the 7th; attar a five days' march (during which part of Cal W '8 command suffered' much for want of water, the heat and dust.) Snake river, south Irk of the Columbia, was reached—a road bay ,og tkeu constructed part of the way Here, the •Iream being wide, rapid and deep, boats were aunt with which to cross the men and stores, and , fist constructed, and a garrison of sixty -I , e of the Third artillery left in the fort to pro ,•t the ferry and keep open our commuciciitions with I' , rt Waite Walla The rest of the cowsl stand, 540 stroog, with thirty-five days' stores end pr ,visloas, carried by a train of 500 animals, er d Snake river on the 25th and 26th, with , u: the I •••• of an animal, and on the 27th of Au.zu.-t to,k up the march for the Spoken coun try, 14 hero it sous rumored the united tribes of the Who:• tv,rtli had prepared to meet them AitPr d l ys match over a waste of rocks and grass having b -en burned most of the r ,, ute—the advance of the siisew. 7 saw:iced our pteiuets forty miles south of the Spoken river, • and were driven off The next day, after a se-' very march of twenty miles without water, the rear guard skirmishing part of the way, we camp• ed at a small pond, being near what is called the F , ur Lakes. and twenty five miles from the falls ~f Sp Iran river Next day, the let of Septeuat her, the ladi-ns who were all well mounted) bid the impudence to approach our piquets and dire us out to fight them (Hitherto we had continued our march to their villages on the Sp , tkan ti. Wright, with 300 men, consist log of parts of companies K, G, A and B, Third artillery: 13 and 8, Ninth infantry; C, F, H and 1. First dragoons, were formed. The dragoons, one column, were directed to approach a high bare hail (.oa which about forty of the enemy snowed in •inset ves t by the left; the artillery and infantry, on foot, approached the hill by the right; when opposite the hill a detachment of each (the foot under Capt Ord mad the dragoons I un ler Litut. Davidson) drove this ,party from the hill: discovered the main body of the enemy, about SUlt strong, occupying a strong position between two lige., bordered with timber) at the toot this hill; the position of the Indians being fi diked by the two lakes and the timber, was such that it could not be turned. The attack was made; the result you have read After a • short sharp reeistance the Indians fled, and we drove them, or the scattered detachments of them, for several miles; their good horses en an:cd nearly all to escape, though thirteen were . ntorted killed arid 'more thee twice that number wen dad After this battle, called the "Four . Lake.," we rested four days On the fifth we marched fur Spokan Falls; the enemy in great rf%irce attempted to intercept our march by burn mg the grass on the plants, and attacking the column during its march through the woods at every point which offered them cover, so that the march was a continuous and harassing fight for lur fist. boars, during which we were at times surrounded by the flaming grass, under the smoke uf which toe enemy attempted a general attack; they wee , repulsed and driven, at and from every po in t We continued our march, which, being without - water for twenty-five miles, wore out the ton' men more than driving off the enemy. We had but two wounded; the enemy lost a number killed and wounded, but from the nature of the ground this loss could not be ascertained. Spoken Geary reports having lost two °this brothers sod the Cosur d'Alenes a chief Oa the 6th and 7th inst., on the banks of the Spokes, the Indian', gathered and supplicated for peace, but Colonel Wright drove them from his camp unless they aou.d submit to an unconditional surrender of themselves, with their arms and families. Oa the B , G, after hanging an Indian against whom warder was proven, the march was continued for one Coeur d'Alene Mission, distant sixty miles, at whim point Col W. was informed by the priests the Coeur d'Aleoes were assembling to submit to his terms. On the way, in Spoken Watley large herds of horses were being drives off by the enemy—Spokans and Ps-louses. They were pursued, over a thousand captured, and the herds being too numerous to drive along, two days were spent in camp to shoot those animals —a cruel but necessary labor—the best having been selected fur use; seven hundred and ninety two hones were shut. Our march was continued to Cceur d'A.i.ne lake—a pretty sheet of water, surrounded by mountains—thence through dense pine, cypress and hemlock forests, over rocky spurs, across quiet glades and pretty valleys. In three days we reached the mission, with its tow. ering old civilised looking church, around which were huddled the uncouth Indian lodges. Low ing herds, smiling, well fenced sod tilled fields, barns full of grain and many well constructed log houses, told what fifteen years of missionary labor had done for these savages. Evening and morning the air resounded with their prayers and hymns; and under the guide**, of their priest, whom they had forgotten in the best of battle, they agreed to Col. W.', ternts--deliver • - ed the leaders of the attack. ow Col. Bteptoe from Itheir band (four hostages) for future good be haviour, all the captured property, and proved themselves sorry for what they had done. It was on the 17th of September that the council I was held with the Cesar d'Alene*. The bead I chief (Vineeat) erased the sousail by rising and saying: "My people hu t c crime We are fully ern/scion, are . deeply sorry for it• I and la y ' pitied that you are willing t o j ot ' sat down, and the Colonel we, a, your chief has said, y ou s e „' a great crime. You att ac k ed • when be was marching peactfu4" country, and you clew some orhi side angry your Great Fatkier,'‘hd sent to punish you But yog ha h you shall have it ou ceruilo G res s Spirit bears me Yoa teed against us hopelessly I ' soldiers, There are as R imy zot . Walls, sad I am eapeetiag Salt lake. What ma you d o t i a r , i , plies lay soldier Yon your canyooi fishing grouted*, and in the moue ' match game /ad gather beast, ta t ~, families essinot nip away. Th ek , ditions q 8 which you may her, must deliver up to me the young met t h e ute blow in the affair with Q ue .. I se& take them to the Geiser% f; li,eirr to me one of your chiefs lad /au, with their families. I win tik . Walls Walls, as seounty for loot pr i l hereafter. You must deliver tome L i, tl of every kind taken at th e fi g h t , f You must allow all troops and 1 ,,. men to pan at all unties ormolus% your oouutry. You must not allow s al Indians to come into your country,. not engage in any hwttliue , at men. Besides, you must he at p Neff eso Peroes. On these eooditiousi4 peace. I will withdraw him you r , you may have peace forayer that "he wished to bear the X e Ueleirnal.ii Weir chief , nav e , behold we you. I will 4 11 to yore. I desire that there %la, tween us. I will never wage sou nor against any of the friends of ito Vincent replied :—"lt does my makes all my people glad to hear ys I have ever desired peace between shall never be war between us, nor and the white men. The past Is The pipe of peace wan smoked ad , eonditions of the Colonel were cos and we hate with us here (Air at LI braves and a chief and four roes with t' Meg, as hostages. From she Mission we followed down d'Alene river (a placid stream, tl forests and mountain meadows t with the lake of the saute name pine covered hills to St Joseph! flows through a beautiful lime TL., this camp on the L'Hatta, spars of pines Here we hate Spokane, who have gladly versa v terms as the Coeur d'Alene.‘ r some of the worst Yakima, sty we bare twenty•foor prisooer,, notorious "Owhie," a Yakima charaoter ; have executed eon 1, worst Yakima alive since the in., I I mammy." In addition • I:er t we learn that the tw son, ,f chiefs of the Spokane and prin7.ps. of Col. Stepkte—are wounded, tat was nearly killed by a Shed, ..ii ;:.1. oases plod renegsdo Ntz Perces tr• meet us and take any terms 1,,r pcic banks of Palouse river, for 'Leo to morrow. Yesterday we reciter- sore left by Col Steptoe, and tb( officers and men killed there T b in the space of six weeks, is entir, open to travel L-more than .ixty including some of their leadinw wounded—security obtain, d tr indemnity for the ps , t— r. w,,uutled—a number t th, houses, containing erty, were burned on tLf tent, and many of tke:e bor.,• which I omitted to attributable to a g,, , d e and armed Thy r , ad from Frt Walla Wall' will now so ~n It i-L.. will not be a hostile Indian ~•ft t•st through which it passes wrst . The officers and mon of z.,? • worked hard and fought weli The officers, according to rani Col. tho. Wright, eonsiaaridiog Envoi Xajor W. N. Girisr, Capt. £. D. Kaye.. Capt. S 0. C. Ord, Capt. F. F. Nat, Capt. C. S. Wiader, .z Capt. J. A.. Nardi*, First Lintz iI G Gibson, First Lieut. 11. It Fleming First Limit. It. li. Tyler. First Lust. J L. Whits, First Litint. M. R. Morgan, lint Limit. B. B. Daroaarm. First Lint. D. Ratiaotas, First Lista. Georg* P. Ibrie • Second Limit. W. D. Ponder, Second Lieut. D. MAN Greg. Sesoad Lusts, Lyoa, Dandy,lioseo I ;: And the staff of Col Wricm• Kirkham As a i s ta, n t i. 6 , ELL - f rzssW Burgeousj. F. limit:nano t First Lieut. lifullan, Topographical Egifickeer , ar.i Owen, Adjutant Ninth Inflow! COrItTINO ITT WIDOW AN DAT:GRTER —A romantic affa adelphia lest week, the partiena lated : Mrs. B---, a handscoi , and the mother of a pretty summers, by some means holm. /- a young carpenter, who, man, was in rather poor clrcutiot:ini penter visited the lady's remdec. - ly, gallanted her to church, • scarcely ever paying say met. the daughter, who somttimfw , Madame Rumor, with her tl 6000 noticed it that the carrel et were about to be made cot sac vitiated him on the irc•pc.' shortly being able to “Lang cr widow, too, was compl;theolt:. tanees, and in fact sht tegsr. thing would take place. a.tr. 4 had not, u yet, "popped tt.' With the craft nature: : v r -w° 4 * den," abe threw out a hit; ' next interview, and fr,a, 'L granted that she was loyit , nz to a matrimonial union It Z it Waa time to act, and usdt ,, be certainly did, and morning be eloped with :Lc all the gossips in the tt..;::" 1. they one and all pror,ClLtvl girl's 'mother, however. to takes it philosophies• young people, who art Ds' ' family residence. She ro° for the shrewdness the 311,7 courting, and also the .errc in picking from the tw , 'b' prettiest. A Private letter re of trrti rtre Oet 10th, in giving ID %beret coeirmatory of ,be r eee. statements, says that tips- fil 3 " "Pug party, consisting ' occupied three boost@ in the *t: between the opposing }Name' If an attack had teen m ade 1 have hoisted the American ass' it, being well armed, and harm{ nition and a brig in the hirM two nine p on eders. to retreat Lieut. ?dowry was ready A . with his own men The eir •E . surrender of the s atboritits When after getting what lh , Y . _" obtained s g uarantee of :inst.: : tion, the rebels reinstated tat a.. Americans were not a ttacked. position and their deelio,ng houses to the rebrl irstierr —Sharp's Eltie boss • icrre mimeos to rano/It 14,00 of tber 4.1 iiiaai ME ; W Ike EP"