VOL. 6--NO. 3.] Office of the Star & Banner: Charaberaburg Street, a few doors West of the Court-House. CONDITIONS: I. The STAR & REPUBLICAN BANNER is published weekly, at Two DoLtAria per annum, (or Volume of 52 Numbers,) payable half yearly in advance. 11. No subscription will be received for a shorter period than six months, nor will the paper be discon tinued until all arrearages are paid, unless at the dis cretion of the editor—A failure to notify a discontinu ance will be considered a new engagement, and the paper forwarded accordingly. 111. Advertisements not exceeding a square, will be inserted THREE times for oxe noLLA n,•and 25 cents for every subsequent insertion—longer ones'in the same proportion. The number of insertions to bo marked, or they will be publiihed till forbid and char ged accordingly. IV. Communications, &c. by mail, must be post paid—otherwise they will not meet with attention. AD VERTISEMEN TS. T HE citizens of Gettysburg and its vi cinity are respectfully invited to attend the EXAMINATION of the Students of Pennsylvania College, on Monday cs Tues. day the 20th and 2lst ins/ant. • C. P. KRAUTH, President. April 6, 1835. to-1 . T heological 'Seminary. THE Directors will meet at Gettysburg, on Tuesday evening,Aprtl 21st. Ac cording to a resolution of the Board, when the third Thursday of April, (as is the case this year,) fulls into the week before Easter, the meeting is a week later than usual. JOHN G. MORRIS, Sec'ry. March 31,1835. • tm-52 Pennsylvania College. /HE Trustees .of this Institution will - 111 - meet nt the College Edifice, on the /1/orqing of the 23d of April next. JOHN G. MORRIS, Seery. March 31, IEOS. tm-52 IFAIL.A.IIIIN ANION. A N Examination of the Pupils of Gettys burg;-cm I.:male. Academy will be held, on Thursday and Friday the 23d and 24th instant. The public are respectfully invited to attend. J. H. MARSDEN. April 13, 1835. te-2 TEMPERANCE. A SEMI-ANNUAL meeting of the Temperance Society of Gettysburg and its vicinity, will be held at the Court house on Friday Evening Me 24th instant. Punctual attendance is requested, as there will be an election for officers. DANIEL M. SMYSER, Sec'r,y. April 13, 1835. tm-2 31 C ) _ PABINET-WAREHOUSE, Chainberiburg Street. Where there is constantly on hand A GOOD ASSORTMENT OF V2 l / 1 1111881, Ready for purchasers, for Cach or Produce. Oz:7 - Orders fur COFFINS punctu. ally attended to. DAVID HEAGY. Gettysburg, Oct. 21, 1834. tf-29 .i. Walker, *Milliner, AND S. E.llPalkel . ,alltitaturt-inaker, INTEND carrying on the above business at the house of Mr. John Wilson, in Mountjoy township, Adams county, where THEY WILL MAKE, ALTER AND' WHITEN SPLIT STRAW AND LEGHORN SONNETS; • AND MAKE PLAIN AND GAY intatZiT LEto4l o 4l l 2Elqick From their experience in the business, they hope to please all who favor them with their custom. April 6, 1835. 3t-1 REMOVAL. WILL remove my shop on the first day AL of April to that owned by Mrs. Cham- berlain, on South Baltimore street, two doors South of Mr. David M'Creary'a Saddle and Harness Factory, WHERE ALL KINDS OF PLAIN AND FANCY 1111, will be made and sold at redu- • end prieel, of superior finish and ,/ 7 warranted best quality; -ALSO House and Sign Painting. 'All kind of House and Sign Painting and Turning attended to na formerly. DEN WIDDIE. Gettybburg, March 24, 1835. tf-51 (0 1 t r ?) PROPOSALS in writing, will be receiv ed by the Commissioners of Adams County, on Wednesday the 29th instant, for tiirnishing the Court-House and Prison with WOOD, for the ensuing season. By order, WILLIAM KING, Clerk. April 6, 1835. td..! THE GARLAND. -"With sweetest flowers enrich'd, From various gardens cull'd with care." What man is poor? not he whose brow Is bathed in Heaven's own light, Whose knee to God alone must bow, At morning and at night— Whose arm is nerved by healthful toil, Who sits beneath the tree, Or treads upon the fruitful soil, With spirit calm and free. Go—let the proud his ~ v ems behold, And view their sparkling ray— • No silver vase or yellow gold Can banish care away— He cannot know that thrilling dream Which smiles within the cot, Where sunny looks and faces gleam, To cheer the poor man's lot. What man is poor? not he whose brow Is wet with Heaven's own dew, Who breathes to God the heartfelt vow, Whose pledge is deep and true. The morning calls his active feet To no enchanting dome, But evening and the twilight sweet Shall fight his pathway home. And there is music in his car In the glad voice of his child, His wile with hurried step draws near, And spirit Undefiled— Then turn not from the humble heart. Nor scorn its cheerful tone, For deeper feelings there may start, Than the proud have ever ktiiiwn. COMMUIVIC.47ION. For the Gettysburg Star and Republican Banner. LOVE TUE TREASON, BUT DETEST THE 0::7 - TRAITOR!" Mn. Iliznowrorr—Some persons, over their signatures, have thought proper to "ad dress" the Democratic citizens of Adams; and in doing so, they make known, after a great many twistings and turnings, explana tions and excuses, their only plausible ex. cuse—and that is, to usher to the public a letter written in confidence by a gentleman in Harrisburg, to another, as he thought, in this place I!! It wonld.be asking toti4huch of you, (be ing, as I am, decidedly your political oppo nent, and no subscriber to your paper,) to give the whole of the Address and Corres pondence—but can you, and will you make room for the latter? An Undyed Democrat. From the Gettysburg Compiler of April 14 Letter from Messrs. HERBERT.and MILLER to Mr. FULLER. GETTYSBURG, April 10, 1835. Dean Sm—You no doubt, been infood that we have a knowledge orthe contents of‘ ter from Heruer BUMMER, which ho sent by a messenger to this place on the 2d March last, to get up spurious Delegates, so as to keep the regu. lar k Delegates from this county out of the late Con vetion—which letter wo are informed yon have. From our belief, that you will nut hesitate to fur nish a copy of It for publication under the present circumstances, we respectfully ask it for that pur. pose. We have a statement of some facts lending to show a participation in the attempted fraud on the part,of Judge Lewis, which we intend to pub. lish rent week, in connection with the substance of Mr. Buohler's letter, but the original or a copy would be more satisfactory:- We believe our duty to the Democratic party, as well as to ourselves, requires its publication. As the week 'scorning to a close,the Editor should commence it. You will, therefore, please let ua hear from you soon this morning. Yours Respectfully, ' • Z. HERBERT, A. G. MILLER. To hue L. FoLute, Esq. Answer 00171 Mr. FULLER. to /gears. HER. BERT and MILLER. GETTYSBURG, April 10. 1835. GE.VTLEMEN—In complier - ice with the request contained in your note ofthis morning. I herewith sand you a copy of the letter received by me on the evening of the 2d of March last, together (sub. stantially) with the answer returned. I was, as you both know, in Harrisburg on the 4th, sth and 7th of March, during the sittings of the Conven. lion; had I been there on the 6th, I should huvo made an effort to have brought about a different result; and I was only inducad to refrain from ma. king the attempt on the morning of the 7th, by the remarks of some of Gov. WoLr's friends, that he would decline the nomination of that day, if made. I left Harrisburg before the nomination was made, and so confident was I that he would decline, believing there could be but ono opinion as to the propriety of that nomination, that on my return home I stated it as a matter beyond doubt; had I been correct in this, I believe my duty to my party and my country, as well as individuals (to excuse and overlook their errors) would have justified me, corrupt as the design was, to have kept the letter sent here, from the public eye, as in that case it might have produced evil, and could not be attended with beneficial results, as the pee. plo are to have an opportunity of fixing upon an other candidate; being disappointed in all my ex. pectations as to the course of Goy. Wolf and his friends, I do most cheerfully comply with your re quest, as the Delegates of the people of Adams county in that Convention. If any are disposed to complain of my disclosing this attempt to cheat the people, I have only to remark, that I was not 1 the first to promulgate it, for I do know that Judge Lewis, at Harrisburg, on the 4th of March, die. closed, substantially, the important facts contain. ed in Mr. BUEHLER ' a letter. But Ido not seek for an apology in this matter; I have acted upon a full conviction of duty to myself and the Demo- cratic party. and I care net for the opinions of those who are exposed in their corrupt practices by this disclosure. I am for, and go with the 'people, and not with demagogues. You will please to insert this together with my answer to Mr. Buehler's lettei, and your note to me, that the whole may be before the people. Yours, &c. ' JOHN L. FULLER. To z. HERBERT and A. G. Mimes; Eacire. late Delegates to the 4th March Convention. Letter from Hermit Bonui.zu to GEonas Tmot.sit, Lq._ Prothonotary , J. L FULLER, .Attorney at Law, or W u.t.t.hm N. 'Lamm, Beg. Gettysburg, Adams County, Pa. (Private and Confidential.] HARRISBURG, March 2,1835. DEAR Sia—lt has just been ascertained that the Muhlenberg men have had second seta of Delegates elected to the 4th of March Convention from Bucks, Iycomiug, &e. &e. Their object is to leave the de cision on the admission of the minority Delegates to Adams,Montgosnery,Chester,Lebanon, Dauphin, &c. and this let them all in and cheat Gov. Wolf out of the nomination. The only course left therefore for the ET ROBERT' WECITI.I=I.43TON, =mon, PVELISZER AND PROPRIETOR. " I WISH NO OTHER. HERALD, NO OTHER SPEAKER OF MY LIVING ACTIONS, TO KEEP MINE HONOR PEON CORRIIPTION."-SHAGS. szeutunteraunia. zpa.. atekorbair. Qawarti so. me. Democrats. is to take up their own weapons, dirty as they are,and break their beads with their own club. All the disputed counties are to stand aside,and leave the undisputed counties to settle the question. Now the real interests of the party require that you should at once get up a second set of Delegates from Adams, and thus destroy the vote of the Delegates on the ad mission question—and you are accordingly requested, at once, to convene a meeting of a few of our friends, (half a dozen will do)appoint a Chairman and Secre tary, and then offer a resolution appointing any three men you have confidence in, as Delegates to the De mocratic Convention to meet here on the 4th,to repre sent Adams county,and send them over. It is taken forgranted,that you will have but little trouble in ma king this arrangement. The travelling expenses, &o. of the Delegates, should you find difficulty in getting persons to come, please pay and I will refund. The Delegates should be at Sourbeck's Brick Tavcrn,at the end of the Har risburg Bridge, by nine o'clock on Wednesday morn ing,the 4th inst.—there they will find a person who will explain the circumstances of the case. It is of course desirable that you should confide this matter to butfew ' aiul that in strict confidence. It may.not be necessary for the Delegates to go into the Convention at all, and if so, this circumstance of appointing a se cond set will never be known. We only want to have the Delegates here, if they are found necessary to foil the artful designs of the enemy. Please write by the bearer what we mail depend upon. You had better keep the hearer until you have Delegates appointed, and then send him off with a lettereontaining the par ticulars,so that he can get here any time on Tuesday night. Please also seal up this letter again and send it back by the bearer. The bearer knows nothing at all about his business at your place, nor need he—all ho has got to do, is to deliver this letter and receive your answer, for which you can make him wait. Respectfully and truly yours. H. BUEHLER. Our arrangements arc such,that if you keep out the vote of the Adams Delegates we are safe. The Delegates should bring along the proceedings of the meeting that appointed them, ranged by the Chairman and Secretary. EA TRUE COPY.] Extract from Mr. FULLER'S reply to Mr. .11\ BUEL HER. All of my ans rto Mr. Buehler that is impor tant is contains the following extract, dated 2d March, 1835: "In the nomina ion of Muhlenberg, there is danger; in Wolf's still more. Our only safety is in a third man. Alil I cannot comply with your request for two reaspns: First, I cannot, upon re flection, think of six men in the Town and County that would act in this matter; and, secondly, I think it politically and morally dishonest." Y it oure, &c. J. L. FULLER. • A SELECT TALE. FROM THE NEW-YORK MIRROR THE OROISSY YEW. . . The Croissy Yew is IA little_ tale, full of freshness and interest. We wit'. !et - our readers judge of it by an analysis and some extracts. "I will tell you, sir, why 1 come every evening to smoke my pipe under the Croissy Yew." So begins the tale. In 1812, the narrator, who had escaped the conscription, by entering college; which he had since left, did not know what to do with himself. Meantime, he amused him self by climbing up into a huge yew tree, and casting his eyes over the surrounding country. One moonlight evening, while at his post, he overheard a conscript, who was bidding adieu to his sister and his betrothed. The latter wept. The more resolute sister said, "Have you not got a colonel? him who en listed you? well, go and find your colonel, throw yourselfon your knees, and say, "My lord, I don't want to go away—l don't want to be killed. There are my sister and a wife who cannot live without me, and Who are going to throw themselves into the river. Beat me, colonel, put me in prison, but "don't mnke me go away! Long live the emperor! He's a noble fellow! Let him leave me in peace and go about his business! Colonel, 1 am a man and a free one, and I have no right to leave my sister Christine, who won't have me quit her; and who will hate you, colonel, if you make me go off!" The brother smiled at his sister's eager ness, and told her he must have a substitute, and money to pay him. "Well," said Christine, "I will give you every thing I've got. My gold cross, my ear-rings, my silk kerchiefs, my collarettes: in a word, all my trinkets to him who will consent to go!" "All that does not amount to the price of a man," replied Eugene. Christine reflected awhile and said catch- ing her brother's arm, "Well! I am well worth a man—worth more than a man: oh, certainly I am! I will give myself; then. I will tell somebody or other, 'Go in my brother's place and I will be your wife. You see lam pretty—a lit. tle spoiled, but what matters that? I will love you so if you will save my brother!— Oh, yes! I swear by the golden gross in which is•some of my mother's gray hair, I would willingly marry him who would devote himself to you." At evening, as they were seated at their humble meal, without being able touch it, and looking, fearfully at each other, some one knocked at the door. "Come in," said the young man, hastily drying his eyes. An old sergeant made his appearance saying, "Health! Is the conscript Eugene Leven here!" "Yes, sergeant." "There," said the soldier, throwing a let er on the table. Eugene read slowly at first, but after wards devoured the paper. It was his dis charge in due form. He looked at the 'old soldier with astonishment. • "riot means that your place is taken, conscript. It's a pity, though, for your mustaches would have sprouted with a little gunpowder. But enough, you are happy now—farewell." And he was going away. "Oh, the devil" said he, and he returned "Christine Leven—is that your sister?— Where, is your sister?' "Here," said Eugene, pointing to Chris- tine, who was pale with joy and emotion. "This one is for you, Miss," and he threw a second letter on the table, but stopped short as he saw Christine trembling with agita tation, crumbling the letter in her hands,and gazing fixedly on the table. "What is the matter, what is the matter?" said Eugene. "Dear Christine, let us see that letter? Selfish being that I am I never thought of it. Let me see who dares to write to you? U'hat does all this mean?" And he ran over the letter hastily. "Oh, read it aloud," said Christine, "it's the same to me! Good heavens! this is but just!" Eugene read aloud, "Miss—l ask nothing—l go away with out making any terms—l take your brother's place; you need him. and no one needs me. But I am honest and love you, ever since I auwo..l:;i:u weep. I send you a ring of my mother's. If you have pity upon me, you will take the golden cross, in which is some of your mother's gray hair, and which glit tore on your neck in the moonlight; this eve ning you will place it in the crevice of the large yew tree, near the branches. I will get it to-morrow morning; then you will wait two years, and, if I am not dead, I will bring it back. Will you remember What you swore on that cross? Farewell." "What does this mean," said Eugene, slowly. "How could any one know! Ser geant, do you understand this?" "Some fellow on the look-out near you." "Why then did he not come to us," frank ly answered the young man. "What a way of obliging is this?" "Alt," said the soldier, "there's the thing! one's afraid of being treated as a spy; and, then, when one is young, and timid, and full of romantic sentiments! one knows how to write and is afraid to talk, for want of prac tice; that's it!" Eugene shook his head. "Soldier!" cried he, "your hand! I will not have this substitute—my sister shall not be sacrificed-1 will go with you." 'See!' " And ho took up his discharge and prepared to tear it in pieces. Christine stopped him. "But what if I want to have him?" said she:- t; ,After all, it's a fine action on his part. And then he goes without making any terms —and then he is unhappy—and then I have no other means of keeping you—and then I want to, in love with him! He did well, knweve.:t,in not showing himself—one might have regretted him- too much. I will take the cross—but I should like to know,--Ser geant, have you seen him?" "Yes, now and then." "Well! he is not hump-backed, or bandy legged, is he?" "A good jokel Is the French army re cruited with such sort of stuff under the lit tle corporal? Is it not composed of individ uals irreproachable as to their persons, and no fools as to morality?" "Is he a mar. of worth?" asked Eugene. "Very much so, Lanswer for it." "Well, sir soldier," said Christ ine,remov ing from her graceful neck the cross with the black riband which supported it, "tell him that he has done well; and place this cross in the hollow'of the treat yew and then, say nothing more to him, but do not quit him, do you hear! and try to come back with him, to tell me, "There ho is, it is he himself, he is worthy of you." __Eugene and Louise looked on, without being able to speak. The grenadier rose, took off his cap, received the cross, wiped away a tear, and said, "Enough!" • Christine turned to•her brother and fu. ture sister. She was no longer the same person. Hercharacter had assumed a more serious hue. She told Louise; "I too am betrothed; the pledge of my faith is in the hands of a soldier of - the guards." A year afterwards Eugene had to leave his home. The enemy was in France, and he would not have accepted a substitute now if he could have found ono. At Montereau his life was saved by a lieutenant of carbi neers. As this officer informed him that he had no family, Eugene invited him home to his own. Charles, such was his name, soon won Christine's favor; but she had plighted her troth to her brother's substitute, and she was faithful to him. Then Charles handed her the golden cross, and told her that it was he, who, a poor collegian, ashamed of the noble action he was about to perform, went away without seeing her, and finally rose to the rank of lieutenant. "At present, sir," continued the narrator, "we are married. The sergeant died at Waterloo. Eugene and myself have pros pered in the world: we live in that little red and' white house you see yonder, and I go every evening to smoke my pipe under the proissy Yew." Scrap.—Bless me, cried a strap. ger on entering a court room, how many lawyers . you have;hovi is it possible that half this number chn find employment? Nothing so easily conceived, replied a by. stander: they live by watching each other. I conceive, says the stranger, how the case stands. - he catchpole watches the culprit, the attorney the catchpole, the counsellor the attorney, and the solicitor the counsel lor. You put me in mind, says the stritn• ger, of a table I read when I was at school, which was this: A grasshopper wet with dew was merri ly singing under a leaf; a whangam that eats grasshoppers, was just stretching forth to de vour it; a snake that eats whangams lay coiled up ready to" fasten upon the whang- am; the hawk that eats snakes had just stooped from above to seize upon the snake; all equally intent upon their prey and un mindful of their danger. Just at the same moment, the whangam eat the grasshopper, the snake eat the whangam, the hawk eat the snake, when soaring from on high a vulture gobbled up the grasshopper, whang. am and all. VARIOUS MATTERS. Correspondence of Poulson's Daily Advertiser. HARRISBURG, April 9. In the House, Messrs. Stevens and M'El wee had some words of crimination and re crimination. Mr. Stevens offered an amend ment to some bill, I forget what, to the effect that $75,000 be appropriated to the repair, &c. ofthe Eastern Penitentiary; Mr. M'Elwee opposed it, and reflected upon its officers, as well as the majority of the com mittee that made the report, approbatory of the conduct and management of those offi cers. Mr. Stevens said the report did no more than justice to the officers and institu Lion—he said if Mr. M'Elwee had attended to his business, as a member of that com mittee, instead of leaving it to offer his Sen. ate expunging resolutions in the House, he would have known such to be the fact. It will be recollected that this Mr. M'Elwee is the apostate Whig from Bedford, and that he was the member that offered resolutions instructing the Senate of the United States to expunge certain resolUtions relative to the executive usurpations of President Jack son; and that he left Philadelphia, where the committee of which he was a member was sitting, for the performance of their du ty, to come to Harrisburg to call up those resolutions; his gratuitous attack therefore on the officers of the Penitentiary was alike without knowledge, and with malignity. The Massachusetts House of Representa- tives, by a vote of 160 to 120, have passEd a bill, abolishing the punishment of death, except for the crime of murder. - It is stated that of tho 105 representatives sent from Ireland to the present Parliament, not less than three-and.twenty are mem bers of the Bar. The Citizens' Bank of New Orleans, the Real Estate Bank incorporated there lately, ha s , wz peroeive by the various prints, ob tained in Holland Et lorin of nine millions Of dollars for its operations. This is the third Bank erected in Louisiana, which supports instead of consuming the farmer. The im mense profits of agriculture in that State since these. Banks have been established, aid enabled the planters to stock and im prove their plantations are matters of noto riety. Go thou, and do likewise.—Freder ick Times. HUGH L. WHITE. Memorandum of the early history of Judge White---Hugh L. White was born October 30th 1773, in lredell county, North Carolina, (then Rowan county.) When about seven or eight yearsofage,his father moved to Cripple Creek, Wythe county, Virginia, and lived there a few years; from thence he moved to the neigbourhood of Knoxville, Tenn. When a mere lad; H. L. White was engaged in most of .Sevier's campaigns against the Cherokee Indians, and was distinguished for his bravery, hardi hood and sagacity in that partizan warfare. Under the influence of Col. Charles Mc. Clung, who had recently come from Penn sylvania, and had married his sister, and observed decided evidence of talent in young White, his father was induced Co send him to Pennsylvania to finish his education and study the profession of law. He completed his education at some institution in Phila. delphia, whore Congress was then in ses sion, and where he then attracted notice,nnd obtained the friendship of that distinguished patriot and republican, Nathaniel Macon, of North Carolina. After completing his education in Philadelphia he went to Lan caster in Pennsylvania, and studied the pro fession of law under Mr. Hopkins,- then an eminent lawyer of that place.—Knoivale Register. Eitra Clerk hire, in the first year of the Government, was 8109! In the last year, 838,3551 In the two first years of Mr. Jef ferson's administration, it was 8 , 150! He then appears to have arrested it, doubtless because of its illegality, and the abuses to which it war liable. In the remaining six years of his administration, there was noth ing paid for extra clerk•hire. In the four years of John Quincy Adams' administra tion.—that administration so outrageously abused for its extravagance by Jacksonism —the whole amount of clerks' (extra) hire, was rather upwards of 16,000 dollars. In the last year of his succewor—the second Jefferson—who was to "bring back" the Government to the "simple machine" it was intended to be—in a single year it exceeded 838,0001—Alexandria Gaz. SousTurriG NEW.—The Pittsburg Ga zette notices, under the above head, a rna chine lately invented and put in operation in the northern Liberties of that city, for pre paring stone for M'Adamized roads. That paper, says, the machine is very simple and substantial in its structure, and very expedi tious and powerful in its operation. It adds on the authority of Mr. Davis, the inventor, that two men and two boys could do as much with the aid of this machine, as ten . men working in the usual manner. It may be worked either by steam or horse power.— [WHOLE NO. The Gazette observes in conehmied;ri,Wirl - that turnpike, or IWAthunifeetli*Ao : " companies, in the country, would finireiit:' 74 advantage in the the of this machine. -- A ri ouriolv.—Th e following_jodieides aisd sensible letter from the Rev. Dr. Bollea„ oar; behalf of the American Baptist Bold of Foreign Missions, in answer to the one from Board of Baptist Ministers in and zwer . _-1 London, is published-in the Loodonl4ptint Magazine, for January. The Baptist isters in and near London urged upon sectarian brethren on this side the Atlantie - ; the propriety of exerting themselves to pitt. cure the abolition ofslavery in the Souther - 1x '- States. And this application drew forth the;,. subjoined 'reply: ' ' . "In the first plaCe the political organics. tron of the United States is widely &relent from that of England; and this differenie makes it impossible to adopt here a course similar to that which the British Parliarnixat,,, have adopted in reference to slavery hi the West Indies. This country isnot OW States •with an unrestricted Legislature, but _a WO , federacy of States, united . by a Constitblice;:: in which certain powers are granted to the National Government, and all other powers. .. : are reserved by the States. Among these , reserved powers is the regulation ofslavery.--- Congress have no power to interfere with_ the slaves in the respective Staten; and an , act of Congress to emancipate theslaves ": those States would be as wholly null and T . void as an act of the British Parliantent for the same purpose. The Legislatures ofthe respective States cannot interfere with the Legislatures of each other. In some of the States, where laws forbidding emancipation exist, the minority cannot, if disposed, give freedom to their slaves. Yon percetvicilbeth_ that the National Government and the_ peo. ple of the Northern States have na power, nor right, to adopt any direct measures reference to the emancipation of slaves in': the Southern' States. The slave-holders themselves are the only men who can defin. itely act on this subject; and the only proper ... - . and useful influence which:the - friends it - emancipation in other States can use, eon. slats in argument and entreaty. The axis. teuce of our Union, and its manifold Weis. ings, depend on a faithful adherence to the principles and spirit' of our constittithAiks this and on all other points." Tit . r.r.117" few 'days since, a letter in the Codrier ane: Enquirer, giving the details of an outrage committed upon a Fes, in tlie viliae of Orville, Onondaga County, so horrible kilts character and so revolting in its deteda,that we could not—would not—beheve them were monsters in human shape, eapabki of such unparalleled cruelty. Meeting with a friend yesterday,. from Syracuse, we inquired into the history of , this Outrage, and finind the lactates set forth in the Courier and Enquirer, literally tree, and substantially as follows: The wife of Tyler, who was sett; about a year since, to the State-prison, was' left residing at Orville. It was rumored, -- during the fall, that an improper intimacy existed between this woman arid. a Mr.- Young, and although no evidence of it eiis. - ! - ted, and none of the decencies of life were known to be violated, a village itrcitrerent was raised against her. The embenfwerer finally fanned into a blaze, and having 'pas sessed.themselves of a bucket of Tar and a I bag of Feathers, eight men proceeded in a Sleigh, at 12 o'clock at night, to the House of the offender, where they confidently es.. petted to surprise her in bed with her pap. mour. Breaking into the House,they found.. the woman in bed with her children. M._ ter searching in vain for Young, they seized the woman, dragged her, with nothing bat her night clothes, into the street, pit a gag in her mouth, threw a 'blanket over her shoulders,. put her into the sleigh and drove off, leaving three littk children alone, with. - outfire or a light, shrieking with, terror! The monsters drove off about three quer ters of a mile, took her into a field, tore ott . her night clothes, and with the instruments' of torture prepared for the parpose, these eight unfeeling wretches perpetrated, upon a defenceless and unfortunate Fatamx, =- Outrage of the most horrible character. - - After literally enveloping the miserable woman in tar, they rolled her in the blanket, took her to an unoccupied and unfrequented i. barn, where they left her entirely helplesk and still gagged, to perish with cold, talkie found, as she was by accident. _ The crieb of the children, in the morning, attracted the attention of the neighbors,And - upon learbieg what had Occurred,* airruuts was made fur the woman. Nothmg, how. • ever, was discovered, till nearly druk•ribeet a quantity of tar and feather. were r4;1100 ogi the snow in the field were the outrage ems - committed. From this spot the '4 /aim were tracked to the Barn, where Gear . Grennel found the poor C 1113113112 alm - , I.me , speechless and senseless! She was taken .., home and a Physician sent for,„who iruelinr. : iv ered that her jaw had been de:unged! ffene. - „ _t= end benevolent Ladies kindly, essiisietil # l ll relieving the guttering woman Mao :1101". 1 1:7. dreadful condition, and after sever! ineolw her health was restored. A strong leafing of indignation ran rapidly through uniciOifr, ~..; munity. The Mongols were wank kin*: fled, and prosecutions commenced.l'L Z. :- 4 causes were to bare been tried doting,* ”. tnitiz E present mouth, but were willed, a 4.44 since, by the payment of. FO. `-'1%,1: HUNDRED DOLLAR/3,lmnd.: ' ..'.•:-;' dents, to the viciim of their Amtbatiiii - , z Albany 'owned.