{ title: 'St. Lawrence Republican. (Ogdensburgh, N.Y.) 1833-1858, August 11, 1857, Page 1, Image 1', download_links: [ { link: 'http://www.loc.gov/rss/ndnp/ndnp.xml', label: 'application/rss+xml', meta: 'News about NYS Historic Newspapers - RSS Feed', }, { link: '/lccn/sn83031401/1857-08-11/ed-1/seq-1/png/', label: 'image/png', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn83031401/1857-08-11/ed-1/seq-1.pdf', label: 'application/pdf', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn83031401/1857-08-11/ed-1/seq-1/ocr.xml', label: 'application/xml', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn83031401/1857-08-11/ed-1/seq-1/ocr.txt', label: 'text/plain', meta: '', }, ] }
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Hl-*2fv?£QSK~>s'WJ i-v«a\ NOTICES. - AGE SU-IJB. * ACLT SAS BESN MADE the autaoI t three Hundred and -si s centa l wttich i^ claimed t o is notice , o p a certai n mortgage , oni.pfcil, SSM% execute d b y VJNA,J4istwif^ of Ae town of St. Lawrence , and Stat e of New PELL , o£ th e sams j plaint, and of th e Cjerk o f 85 . La*renct ; . *resaid, m Boo t master 22 of ae^.aa th e Ttk iay Of-July, -u., w^ticfe sai d mortgag e h&s, lion , tteeni dul y assigne d to th e scut 6? proceedin g at la w o r t o recove r th e amount s o „STow, therefore , notic e & here - ics of a p$we r o f sal e containe d e statotejn such cai e made and lescr£bed-&i an d co^red b y sai d at tra&to¥parceloitaiic f situat e tintyoTSt. Lawrefice^aa d th e ig fcBoank and distifnga&bed a s nrision ofF sai d to^n of Rossie, to wi|,-c Beginnin g at 3 piece of th e intellectio n of th e O x Bo w : th e vil&tg^ Q£ SomerviUe , ron - afc r 0 / th e sai d O S Bo w road , , wes t foqr chain s t o a sta&e ; an*I a half degrees , wes t thre e . I A tqj a &taKe in th e groun d , , * 1 iegfees , eas t thrfte chain s an d Aitrr of tfie QonTexxteor roa d ; f t saidi road , ndrtn fifty-two . —* ^:.a»ua an d seventy-nui e i-jtrtasiing one acr e an d 'acre of laud.,, a s aorveyed'b y Ler i 7—will be aOul a t a public auction , ow n of KoSSte, a.:.d Count y of St . fa day of Septenitver next , a t \£ laced, th e $Oth da y of June , ls5T. •SKfiSA. Bf. WEJUA Assignee. :y *» for Assignee , >' Y. - U ta. #H IS PRHHSiB AND PUBLISHED EVSJHT TTJISDAY AiotBrarar«aB,ST.iiiraH™w\«»V»^ BY mrcHcocK, •msmsss * smwHi. Editors ana Proprietors. omce t» wow mn*\*\?!, **«*«» ' Street, one door i ».B. HOTHOOOt....M.W. KH0IS01I . ford. .r.G.STttWlLL . TBRMS OP THE RBPTXBLIOAN : jiES? W ^T^er-oSeBollar and ta#M < ° 8nts - 5BBMSF0K ADVHMISlKa : S^\ IS Wo do. lTo'Kcolumn.onemooth.SOO {& do three do. 3 25 • Bo. do. two do. »O0 g£ do. «x do. 400,Do. do. three do. 1800^ One column, for ^—^r^' * BnsiriessOaras, of 3 lines ortess, inserted nnderap- ...S^teneaXwfthprivnegeorchange, at*« per year. 5S5SS£5SS^W««5.- above, coined, to the Zdvertl*s?s own business. Legal advertisements ln- .arted at the rates established by law. ,^„«. r . pjj^ ^Communications mustbe post-paid toinsure a Mention ,^-mnn ST. LAWRENCE MSTTBLICAN C6BSTISG.HOrSE ALOTAWAC, For 1957. It is not in*, a VOLUME 27. srd^Jver^ »* ari ^ 5 ° .\***»«*. that the people WJU toa^l»»>''^ ^^ ^teetSon^bt^ OGDlNSBTJRGH, II iSG REEX MADE US THE \^im siim> of moniy, secure d to u ..f,gagc t ,ts.trcaieU b y HOHAC& eac Mockh-':m» Coont y o f St . ^ffW \?^ an d MARTH A U,hi3 W£BST£K, ^ th e sam e place , j, l 1 ^, an<5 r**o.rded in th e Chant y •wrencv Ccnnty ^.'oresaKl, o n th e iSKl, at 3,5s ° clt'CS. p . m-, liEBook », o n page s 1W, Ac, which aaid Jjfe«jla , ass^gnea, : raii^ierred and B1K4, ot ite 't vwn. Coun^, assignjiien ^ .lat, 1 ! October 22d , the Count y Clerk \s office afore- / of Octobee,.l&5ji Ti m H^S. No. 2U agea 158^ Ac Tfie premises m - ar e describe d therein , a s tol- u iodowin g parcel s e f land , tying tow n off Stockhoba , being mow •t-N\ 1 W , \bounded a a follows n n* link s ^ooth , TS*W^fh)m -.: e ' East StocKnolm %l«eting Houje , L^iih ; ^ , Eas t i cbjun s 19 Unfcs t J %-Vr. ~~ l.ai s u a J ,«t, thence , a. *V» hnfcs to a post ' thence^ Sout h Mt-c a^oat, th«rfc«, N . 18* v W_ 6 -t , thcne* 1 , N. 7.^ , EAst-^S links rtfe 1^ , ^V 5 cfiaibs to th e niiddle t *e, N . r2\ , K along th e mirfdle of 66 hnfe^. thence , 5_ I> r Kast 60 beginnmg , containin g <i &&-U«o less. AJSL>, d.*i tiiat >ither piece, Eiisterjy ^rner uf a lot of land fiibonir, Si li* , Kast 6 chain s from wa y leadin g Westerl y from Eas t •use, and runnin g thence , Nort h - a post thence , Nort h 1>*, Wes t - ence,fiont h 72 , Wes t 834 linka to I 5 , ft e^s _ chain s to th e plac e of * .6O-.UIHJ.V thousandths ) of an acr e mor e o r less , onte-bich mortgag e ftte a t tlae tim e o j th e first pnbhe - e su m oJ.fivt- hundred an d fifty- y-thre e Centa , ai^ l ther e is, t o be- strage tw « t.andni d an d fifty ioi - Uctobeg, 1***, w^tb interes t from tiie furuher su m of tw o hundre d n th e his t aa y 4.! October , l3&a, tt.bt-r lsu , l*«5o, E^nonntjUg in th e tnteresitj, to $L,t'7^ S3 , no w re - seciut-ijby said mortgage , an d DO r • .n e^ait y t,a#mgi>^ n take n t o re^ ^y'part tl'erei>{ Now, therefore , \n , tl.a i pttriuaa t to th e powe r of ' mortgag e [iuJ ^ f Uie statut e m ; Trorule*!, sam mortgage d premise s be solU ^t pabi*c auction , to th e < Liun>f o 0 th e said premise s o n tfad \t , a t • ^<yuck tn th e afternoo n of 'igdenibargb . May tfGth, lsfil . WAj&£N StlU£» Assignee . Attorneys . * ^Sti-lSw; TtJAtE SA1.K. • VINO BEEN MJLDE IN THE «. certain ; mortgag e eiecute d b y *., an d Elizabet h D., hi s wife, of ;n of Canton , £t . Lawrenc e County , :H*N U.-STXPLKS, STEPHE N l\ .UK \\. KiTTLE , of th e cit y of n precju-ses m th e oiunt^ofSt. *ed Octobe r 2itl-, IsM, tosecure nd dollars on or before the d recorded* In th e office of th e roont^ aforesaid , o n th e 1 ^ 64 - 1 aSi -^ A. M., . n Boo k of Mort - ages asi, V*)5> &38, an d 554. Said fVrward s sold, assigned , an d trans- t.tie anil .ni-erest i n and t o sai d trnment thereo f in writing , date d •orded m th e Coonl y Clerk' s office mty aforesaid , o n th e 3th, da y of , m Booij No . 94,.E . of Mortgages , 'fEp-taes diclnde d in sai d mortgag e >owb, t o wit. All that certai n lot , •end situate , tying' and tjeing i n th e Falls, tow n of Ca n ton , count y of of Ne w York , know n and des - ' ind opposit e th e gris t mill and be - u-c Bonnel l an d Davi d A^5, the sai d ;v-oBe.hanfiredthe o r eight-tenth s of z erected ' thereo n aAme .an d a-hal f j^onse, a£nd a small barn, and. bein g p. Shall , m her ow n right , free fromiail heirs an d tncmnbrances , whic h mortgag e ther e is claime d to, uf th e first pabbcatio n of thi s notice , san d on e hundre d forty-seve n dollar s : 1 n o proceeding s havin g bee n take n .* for the ; purpos e of obtainin g th e \ mortgage o r any part thereof : Now , • ereb y give n that pursuant.t o th e aine d in sai d niortgage , and of th e # made and prodded, sai d mortgage d d a,€ puffitc auction , t o th e highes t > of Jtidso n & Powell ^ i n th e village the cotint y of St, Lawrence , and » , o n th e twenty-nint h day of Jtegust , t m th e forenoo n of that day.—Date d LHAK M.STAPLES, } ..^^^^^ : tES U. OADWELL/ f a «*8»8«* i. Attorneys, ' . •nrgh, SetfYork. {SX-lSfj SALE OF RJELUL * ESTATE. SERKBlf GIVEN, THAT PUE- jrdej of JAME S REDDJGTON , Sorro - of St , Latrrence , tiie subscrtbe r will ^tion, at ih e office of CHAPMA N k • [•v.ilage of Morristown , in th e town of eighteent h da y of Angus * next^atone • ae right, title an d Interes t of whic h \ h 4ie d seiaed , of th e folfoi^n g describ - ei'of lan d : Beginnin g at a poin t th e • bi th e Englis h Settlemen t and Black , [rrms sout h thirty-five degree s thirt y ,teen ensvina and ninety-on e link s t o a , <• ot th e Englis h Settlemen t road, No . • Its from a p&$£ an d stone; thence , 'egree s thirt y minntes , eas t eigh- -seve a link s t o a postans^stones; o degree s thirt y minot&s, eastsis- • t y h^y a to a poin t i n th e cente r of hirty-seve n an d a-half link s fro m he.ncV, alon g th e cente r o f sai d * r- seve n degrtjea^ thirt y minntes , *^rt i^xi's and seventy - tw o link s t o th e ^Jac o * L.tainlng tb4rty-e>ght acre s and fifty-foar 1 acr e of l^nd , exceptin g an hal f acr e * rg e .Ramsey homestead', as surveye d b y Cth, IS40: Also, half a n acre , in - >wn a s th e Vrooma n homestead , mak- aii'-nded to be- sold , thirty-seve n acre s [noredth s of an acr e of lan d ; th e aaid 5*£te of cultivation , and upo n whic h b#ro.—Date d Jane 13th, 1&&7^ \ , SACHE L CHASE , , ..nistratrt g o^Edmon d Cn&se, dec*a. iCBS 1 . —Cor NTT OF ST. LAW- t Edwar d Kingi Charle s Epiety , Alei- • am Pope , jr„ John T . K. Hayward, , r, jr% Ralp&Pomeroy,BlotHnfield Usher , I Benjamin^Coshjng , Edwar d Cooper , fet, Peter & BelUnger.Anstin Willis , rdson, Wailam iligby , wmiam Dewns , • Lyon^irs i % P^ench , tthamar Sweet , Hiram iL Peck , Norman fiactaider, •if Troy, Sank of Ukfone , Georg e F. , t . La Mot , Senio r U . Hudson , Josep h W. • V. Gonldinf , Henr y L . Knowlea,Charle » Watkins , Alarqnxs Hough. Koomflel d . frontie r Bank, Cms Pierson , Tro y • Bntler^^B. BlciinoftaKeeth , Blahar d # , a . Johnson, Charles H. Dudley , Alfred Richie Banki focgaSerdSank Oomme?cial . ^»Pat^cKHa^ t Gswrge Hand , Henr y ' InsTrarSfa, Joseph EL Banford, an d Jerome t ta* Yon sift hereb y summone d t o ss~ mtof Ai^ft ^ S. Coster , Josep h W . Foster , , Edward Corying , Jasper E- Corning , » 11st i ge t pta> n ufls, w bich wa s fifeflSn the . of St . Lawr&ee County , o n the 27t b . , an d t o serv e a cop y o j yoa r answer • , at PotsdBEi5%t, Lawrenc e County , N. • bty days afle r th e servic e o f thi s sum - of the dayio f service; or t& e plaintiffs ,e Court fo r the relief d^iamnufid In the; tied Jnne 231.1857. - A¥m . „ Att»yjfb r Plaintiffs , Potsdam , N. 7. « r€OUfiT.— i't>( ^TY OF ST. LAW- . AEVTL 51. fOLLETT , agst . WILLUM H. EW^ &. All£ S To LEWIS a AMES , . •ndauts : YpQ an> hereb y sammone d t o • iplau n of B£A£VfL BL FOliLEPT, plain - ', biph wil t 0 9 filad in the office of th e Qafr * af St - Lawrecce , an d to serve ft cop y <^ Y th e subscrSber^ a : Canton , St . Lawrenc e • , wHfart) twectv lay s after tie teTTSso • exeiostve of \b • da y of service ; and U ' said ectopia-a t aa hexebj^jQin^dred, • tl'ta&p jodgm-n i against ym f f*r J s1*ty . teres ! thereo o fi-em th e 20th..4»3: of Se p •eiodes costs. Lv .8 seo»mCB»P'^mtaPs ^iWney, Canton , Bt.»wrence CofflSty. N Y. 'OjrBT.-^CO'CKTY^F^ LAW- iNOL D SI. S0$iLB? a^e. WILLIA M H. SOBS a. WBIfiHT . T0 WILUAjHLIa, . JOH N H . WSMJHT , 4rf»ndantS 2 Ton jflsbned to answer tiie* ROfflpliini *£*&* * ^E\', puattut, a ay tf wfcte t <« 1 \ b * . ice of. th e CtBt*. 'J : « t>>«KtX S^Bt* *•»»• a erve a ropy jf y-ar anisT^t ffip^ 1 * \^ * iatoa, .*t Lawr^-.ce CoOTjM™ YO T*»* . (Ejya af-tr tv ^rvtc^o^-^^/mnmana,, e day -\sar^.ce acd &^J?i^CaH to aa-» ^i m y.n for c^b^(»a«a:doaara, with- S3 J-'RB Isrn lis* la? ur3tswg»« ui<1 AUf&EB-iiiJsr^'.po- fii8«S>y eteiwued to dUsirir.tSoccaa- - ,,_L^ainr -v&s 5i«i' ii Ga efflea et? tl%*« i aL f .•.•urvs' , a cw'jy. of £«3 affltwex* \- >', w.thinpf;3tyiJay9(jftati»«i.:Si, 'r ~-f i:fci.-.<i*U ;;a tic &-ip.ai>lt-', \ ;. TO. . -BEEQJi? 1. 3 .-idigj psirsi, ••liifcos (2-£BS- - Is-aaifs'. B S.u S ^3 ^ ^ ,S S li's i< » * r 777 \\ _ I 3 S JULV. 4 5 6 T ' 9,,> 25-26-OT2S29 3U31 . • • AUS PFR 1 i S 4 &. 6 T. 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T < 9 1011 12 IS 14 15 16 17 1*19 30 31 22 23 24.25.26 37 2S 29 SO n 12 3 4 5 6 X- 8. 9 10 11 12 13 1415'l6Kl-*^9 20 21 22'2S:24 25.26 2T2 8 393U .•• 12 3 ''4567'' 910 11 12.-1S14151617 I s 1»202 1 22 28(24 35 26127 28,29 80)81 . l S,'m'i » 6; T * 9'10in2 1SH4 151617 I S 19 2o!21 ?3 2S-2425 2 6 273H 39 SO' •' . • • ' 1 21 8, 4, 5 f, 7 s 910.111 2 IS 1*1516117 1Sjl9 2o.212 2 2S,34j25|26 27 2*29'801S1 '. LINES OF TR2¥V3EL. CHAKLES I. BALDWIN fcs ' GEXERAL r.iSSEXUKn AG EST, _gj For all Points East and West, Ttirotlgll Tickets ca.n b e Procured over ti»o followiugr • Roads: SRAND TStttlK RitLWAT, of Canada, SRETiT WKITKB N RAILWAY , of Canada, MICHIGA N CENTRA L RAILROAD , NEW YOR K CENTRA L RAILROAD , LAK E SHOR E RAILROAD , MICHIGA N SOUTHER N RAILROAD , POTSDAM * WATERTOW N RAILROAD , RALDWnrg LINK O F STAGES , And all Railijoada West of Chicago—at the lowest rates of fare. - E^* Offleg on ?tate street, at the old Drover's Bank. Ogdensbnrgll ; January, 1S57. [7-\) ROAD, BUSINESSJ^DS. ~ \\ ~ GEORGE WITaEBHEAD, Dealer in <;rocerlcs and l*rovi*lon», —^itso,s - Honr,Oorn,ileal, Pork , Fish , Fruit , Wooden-Ware, *o. OGDENSBBCTRGH. Wajter-St., opposit e A . OBASKI 4 oS's-Sardware Store , ^ff-Cash pai d for Country Produce . All Ooodt de- UTeredtnthe Vlilagefre e of charge. ts-tf j A. It. JEMNEK, Wholesal e and Retai l Deale r In a l kind s of Winea,Gta, Brandy,Monongahela Whiskey,9 5 percent Alcohol , Old Ohio Hig h Wine s an d Whiskey , Old To m Gin , Cherr y Brandy, Porter , *o. ^ Doors below J. iV . Onwell's Store, ISABELL A ST. , O8DENSB0RGH, N>- Y . [24-tf ] BESTAI.OPEB .VTIONS. KLODUETT A; LEWiO, DENTISTS, Operatin g Rooms,i n Kagie Block, overSeel y & Freeman's Store , FORD-ST. , 0GPEN8BFRGH, N . Y . CARD. Having associate d Dr. Leggowit h m e i n business , th e office here will b e constantl y open . Thankfu l for the - libera l patronage I hav e r«s?eived, I would most respect - fully solicit Its continuance for th e firm. [25-tr ] 8 . S. BLODGETT . SMAVlJiU AND_HA1 R^»RESS1 ^«*; UENRY WATKINS, Stiaving and Haii-Dresslns Saloon, i s TH X Basement of Royal Vilas' Building, Pord-Btreet, OGDKNSBITRGH, NEW-YORK. &£T~ A variet y of th e bes t Newspaper9ar e alwayson bistable. tSO-tf ) OLDS' Dagnrrrian and Ambrotype Callery, NO . s EAGL E BLOCK , Sign ..f th e Mammoth Eagle , For d street , OGDKNSBrsGH, S. Y. [24 if] HITS, HI'S AND rl'RS. E. W. BENEDICT, M15UFA0T0HKB AND DKALXB lit flats. Caps, > nrs* and Robe*, Ladies 'an d Gentlemen' s Fu r Gloves , Collars,VictortDe s Children' s Fanc y Caps , Ac, oomprisinga genera l assortment of In s ..wn an d cit y manufacture . ^T-Oash pai d for all kind s of Furs , Woo l and Sheep Pelts, at th e old stand. No . IS Mechanic' s Row , Ford-st. , Ogdensburgh.N. Y . 45-t f TlBE^^pATJWE^ AJCFS.1 » «oss, Dealer |n Eiebause and General Land Apent, HODSON, ST. 0R0K 00ONTT, \WISCONSIN.- ' ^r~0ollecUon»'nMtae anfl remitted, money loaned or invested for the usnal commission, or on joint account- Land Warrants, bought, sold or.lssatea at KXf-ot ?Hra liind offloes of Wisconsin or Minnesota. ps-6mT] ~ KEVIN et GILBERT, ~ DCAUEB8 m REAL ESTATE, Aim Kcneral Laud Agents, OMAHA OITY.JNEBEASKA TEEBITORT. 0AVTO A. MVIS. 0E0I1«» J. OttBtRT. Will Oolleot D^bts.Invest and Loan Money, Buy And Sell Real Estate, Pay Taxes, Enuntne Titles, Lodate I^and Warrants for Ncin-Residents t and attend to all business entrusted to their care with promptness And fidelity. • ' § RIFKRENOES: Hon. John Wilson-. Chicago, Illinois. Messrs. Cornell, Jameson & Bass... \ \ 0. N. Holden, Kiq \ •' B. S-ShepardjEsq \ \ Messrs. Wm. Warmer * Co Detroit, Michigan. Hon. J. C. Hopkins -., Madison, Wisconsin. Rev. 0. B. Smith Io*a City, Iowa. 0. Wilcox Minneapolis, Minnesota Territory. C A. Burnham, Esq ? f»»rtnn.hnrffh. N. Y . G. N.Seyroour, Esq Hop. Preston King— ~. Prof. OalYm Pease— ,.: &. T. Boaraman '.. Hon.B-V.Agan A. Watroua— [IS-ly]. POET&Y. ... .Ogdensbnrgh, N. Y. ' *' ' it u .' iBurlinJton, Vermont. ..Middiehnry, \ Granville,N. Y. Balsto n Spa , \ R. T. LVON, COMMISSION MERCHANT AND FORWARDER, Mo. 5 0 ITIerwin-Stxeet, and Cuyattoera River, 0LEV1&AND, OHIO. Solicits consignments from the country of all kinds of Produce, Merchandise, ftc. Will attend to the purchase of Goodsfor COUNTRY MERCHANTS, Andjgive them the earliest infonnation of the state of Foreign and Domestic Markets. Strict attention given to the purchase and sale of Produce suad Merchandise, for the Northern, Eastern, Western and Southern Trade. Always on hsn4, Flour, Pork, Lard, Butter, Rggs, Cheese, Grain, Hops, Groceries, Salts, Water Llme,Whi te Lime, Blaster, Vish, £c PRODUCE AND MERCHANDISE Purchased at a small commission, on orders for shipment to all portions of this and other countries. a Charges moderate. [19-ly] Et?\ Refer to Business Men and Bankers generally. [Written for theSt. Lawrence Republican.} DEATH. BI a . BtOKKIU, JR- Oh Death what art thou? Antetypo ot nature's marvels, The seed and dormant ottryiallS^burstlng Into energy and glory. TOTPSB. Our human life'» a tale untold. Where mystio problems blend, And who shall all its depths unfold, Or solve them to the end ? Tiacatted a gentle river's tide, Calm, placid and serene, Down whloh the years and ages glide, To some dark gulf unseen, \Ms called a dim, unsounded sea, Where every bark-must sail; Whose whispering brccrEl, lloathjf free. Forebode the approaching g&Mf i - - Tjtcalled adream,*consoiousstirte «?. In death'sunconscious'sleep, ^ Where change, and chance, and destined fate incessant revels keep. -~ Veiled by its sordidnesa arid case, We see-not lift aright, \ Bo fixed our thoughts are centered, where It shines with treacherous light. There is no death, noahdless night, No black obscuring pall. Whose mantle of decay and blight Must darkly cover alL As shades of night, that softly, creep O'er mountain vale and lake, Soothing the weary world to sleep, With morning'e light shall break- As misty vapors, now that lie Along earth's enrface rolled. Shall float upon the evening sky, In danllng clouds of gold,— So shall the form that mouldering lies, I n fadeless beaut y shine . Triumphant over death arl e, Immortal and divine. POTSDAM, August 1, 1857. MISCEIsLA^^ THE CHARGE 0]| J&&ST. A LEGEND' OF. TIESK 0. BT GEO&Oa UPPAR1 . Tbore was a day wlien an .old- qjan witjbi white' hair sat alone fa a small chain fer pf a national mansion, his spare but mus&olar Sgure resting on an arm-chair, his bands clasped <|nd his deep bine eyes gtusing through the Wintci 1 -'—. «<«—»—,- sky The brow FORWARDERS A^iD IMPORTERS. CHANGE OF TIME. o v 3»>, . A. VN AN'D AFTER THURSDAY, JULY v^ Passenge r Train s will rn n daily , (.Sundays cepted ) a s follows : GOING EAST. FIRS T TRAIN—Leave s Ogdensburg h at 11: 20., M ; (din e a t Brash'9 Mills) arrivin g a t House's Poin t a t 4: 4 5 P . M., connectin g wit h Vermon t Centra l Throxitfh TVatrt, arrivin g at Bosto n eaitiy nex t morn - ing, also with Lak e Champlai n steamers , for Saratoga , Troy , Alban y an d Ne w York , an d with Cliamplai n and St. Lawrenc e R. R~, for Montrea l an d Quebec SECON D TBADi—Leave s Ogdensburg h at &.G0 P . M. t arrivin g a t Rouse' s Poin t a t 11 , p. M. , (t o lodge,) and proceedin g nex t mornin g b y Vermon t Centra l R. R . and Lak e Champlai n Steamer s for th e Eas t an d South . GOING WEST. FIRS T TRAIK—Leave s Rouse 1 . , Poin t a t 6 A . M-, con- nectin g a t Ogdensburg h a t 11, A . JL, wit h Qrand Trun k Railwa y Expres s Trai n an d America n Expres s Steamer s for Kingston , Toronto , BeUviHe, Coburg , Hamilton , Niagar a Falls, Buffalo, Detroit , Chicago , and al l point s West . SECOND TRAIN—Leave s Rouse' s Poin t a t 2 P . M-, arrivin g at Ogdenshurg h at 7.SU, P , M., connectin g with G. T . R, B~, an d America n line of steamer s for th e Sout h and \West (excep t Ma* Saturday's, ) whe n i t vrill leav e Rouse' s Poin t at 7.45, P. M., o n arriva l of las t train s and steamers - AH trains connec t at Potsdam wit h th e Potsda m an d Watertow n Rai l Roa d for Watertown, Rome , Ac, alfco a t &Sooer% Junctio n wit h Plattsburg h A Montrea l R . R., for Montrea l and Plattsburgh . GEORGE V . H0YLE, Superintendent. Office Supt . R . RR . Co-^ ^ t Slu.oaK , July 25,1857 . f T6-tf ] GREAT NORTHERN EXPRESS RAIL BOAD LINE. To all Points Wests. AN D AL L PART S O P CANADA . L EAVES BOSTON, LOWELL DEPOT. A3! 7# A . M . and 1 8 M . Th e 7J.J trai n goe s f&oitgh. to Montrea l and Ogdensburg h sam e day, connectin g a t Ogdensburg h wit h th e America n Lin e Steamer s on Lake Ontari o and Grand Trun k Railwa y for Niagara Falls , Toronto , Chicag o an d th e West , and al l intermediat e points . Th e 12 trai n M . arrive s a t Montrea l th e follovT- ing mornin g at 9% A. H- , an d a t Ogdensburg h a t 11 A . . SL, connectin g a s above . Throug h tickets,* and all in - ' formatio n ma y b e obtaine d a t th e office i n ScoDay' s Building , No . 5 0 Oourt-street , Boston . J . W . RICHARDSON , M» y 26,1S57. [26-4m] Agen t for th e Line . POTSDAM AND WATERTOWN RAIL ROAD. ROBERT W. Bmi, GBSBBJsk AQEHT 1»D Comiuiftsion H*?rcliaiil, Plour , Wheat, Corn,Pork,Pish,Water an d Han d Grind - stones , Ac, OGDENSBURGH , NE W YORK. REFERENCES: D . C. JUDSOH, Ogdensburgh , N. Y. , S. Git3aar,Pre9t. Drover s Bank , JAUBS Av*aKUL,Prest.Og- densborghBank.JuH N D. Juhsos.Preat.Judson Bank . _ [«-tf] feEFRESHITIENT SALOONS. FIKERON'S P' RT£U-UO(/SK As n OINING SALOON ! (Two door s from th e 8t . Lawrenc e I2**jnthlicnn office,) ISABELL A STREET , QGDE^SBDRGH, N . Y . Keep s constantl y o n hand a choice assortmen t of Li - -— t. —1„^,„„ that rart* inventio n anj \<&£k constantl y o n imu u > w .,«.^ .. quors , inclndin g that rar e inventio n anj moa t deliciou s beverage . Lager Bivr! AUM) ROCnESTER AN D ONONDAG A ALE I Ol'STER Serve d u p i n th e bes t Style . Warm an d Cold Meal s at al l hours . H e extend s a cordia l limitatio n t o hi s friends o n bot h sides of th e St . Lawrenc e rive r t o give hi m a cal L T O MANUFACTURER S AN D DEALER S in' PIW1B AND SPRtfCnB L mi BE It. Wf% \VVILJi PTJKCHASE SEVERAL MIL- I V V Uoaa of feet of Pine and Spruc e Lumber , to bo ' delivere d at thi s place , or alon g th e I<ine of the North - era\ Rai l Bead, during the present Winter, o r I n the month s o f Hay, Jung o r July , next, In quantitie s of On e Hundred Thousan d Ffiet, and upwards. A s w e are pur - chasin g for Western Markets , manufacturer s will find i t decidedl y for thei r Interes t t o ascertai n t n due seaso n what is mos t desu*able,.»nd t o confor m strictl y t o style s of Lumbe r bes t adapted t o ou r trade, as th e larg e ma- jorit y of lumbe r m&nunvoturea for Eastern Markets , i t quit e unsaleabl e i n Western. To parties dispose d to forwar d fo r 8ale,-on thel* ow n account , w e woul d say, that w e have ample facilities fo r th e transportatio n of any desire d quantities , N. B.^-An y enquirie s by letter , addrcised t o ui (Writte n for th e St..Lawrenc e Republican. ] HEAVEN. When social ties'o n eart h ar e riven. And friend from friend mus t part. Th e though t that w e shall mee t in Heaven , Cheer s thi s lon e doubtin g heart . In Heaven—A h ! wh o can paint th e jo y That w e i n Heave n shal l kno w f Well dwell I D peace , withou t alloy . And b e wit h Jesu s too . There'll b e n o pai n no r sickness there — There'l l b e no deat h no r gloom- But jo y resoundin g throug h th e air , When w e meet beyon d th e tomb . Wh o would no t gain that heavenl y land , Where w e shal l part n o more . Bu t dwell i n Heave n a happ y band. Wit h all ou r sufferings o'er ? NoaroLt , Jul y 17,1867 . J . A . U VARIETY. A Wile's Second Love. hereTwill receive prompt attention. Ogdinshurgh, 'December TO, 1S56. 18S? BABOLA¥, HALE (L. T. BABCLAJ, <>• J- niu! > L. LYON * 00. I«-tf) 18S7. & CO., is. 1. juIBaa.) Storage, ro^rdgjk£ Commission Oudensbargh , Novembe r SI , 1S56. HOTELS. M. FINEROUC [&2-tf) BALDWIN HOISE, ^ OOENER O P CATHARIN E i DIVIgION-8TRK?T8 , Near the Steamboat Landing , 0QDEN8BOBGH, N.T. jKasmiB BALOWIN, Proprietor . Oarriageswill b e i n readines s a t th e Rai l RoadDepot, and Steamboat Landing , t o conve y Passenger s and Bag - gage t o aad fro m th e House, Fre e of Charge . Th e bes t of Stabling and theiargest amount of .Stable-roo m of aoy Hotelln Ogdensburgh. 41-t f WASIUMiTOS HOTEL, KJtPT BY J. W. CARRIER, Washington-Street , Ogdensburgh , N. Y . Thi s hous e has bee n thoroughl y renovate d and re - paired , an d i s no w ope n for th e receptio n of traveler s and guests . Th e bous e Is larg e an d commodions , and is pleasantl y situate d near th e busines s portio n of th e Vil- lag e of Ogdensburgh . J25-tf. ) Blue Warehouse, below Walker's Point Bridge, MTLWAtrmsB, WISCONSIN. Dealers in all kinds of Western Produce, on Oommlsalon. Agents for Nortbern Transportation Company's 14 JTttST CLASS PR0PELIEB8, Connecting at Ogdensburgh with Railroad for BOSTON, and the Ogdensburgh'Railroad to Rouse's Point, thence by first class Canal t)5aW, via Lake Champlain k White- hall Canal for NEW TOBK. [From the Home Journal,] 1 There is a turning point in the love of a wife 1 for a husband which should be carefully watched. In s0me5.it occurs very early, long before thirty, especially if the match were one of passion or family convenience, but in the majority of instances its appearance manifests itself abont the approach to the middle age of woman, from thirty-five to forty-two. There is a revulsion in the whole moral and mental being—a kind of chilling, cold indifference, which the slightest nnkindness on the part of the husband at once kindles into a flame. It is difficult to account for the transitory condi- tion—bnt there is moch proof that a woman loves twice. She loves the husband of her Spring ; in the Summer hep attachment requires other sus- tenance than that of habit and association—it hungers for the spiritual element, becomes dreamy, and every word of anger, every slight, every in- attention, every weakness on the part! of tho hus- band, crowds on? th_e memory of the wiife, and she becomes miserabM without knowing wherefore. The husband th«J should become a lover again. HABDWABG, &c. (Commencing May 11th, 1S57.) Trains leave Potsdam Junction, going South as follows: 6: 15 A. M., MaU Train. . 12: 45 P. M., Accommodation Train. Both Trains make direct connections at Watertown with Lightning Repress Trains on the New Tort: Cen- tral Rail Road, for ALBANY, TROY and NEW YORK.': also, with Express Trains for the West. Trains Leave Watertown for Potsdam, at ' ft 00 A. BL, Accommodation Train. l,0u g^-aCjaau Train. fjy THROUGH^. TIOKJiHS to Watertown, Some, Albany and New York, may be obtained of 8.P/, SO BEY, at the Northern Rail Road Ticket Ofllce, Og- deniburgh. GEO. B. PHELPS, Watertown, May 185^ Superintendent. n5ieA\WA AND PEESCOTT .. Hallway. 0HA3JEY & CO., WATER-STREET, OGHENSBURGH, N. Y.: Dealers in Iron, Steel, Nails, tllass, Sbelf and Heavy Hard-Ware, Wood and Willow Ware, and Manufacturers of Copper Brass, Sheet Iron, and Tin Ware. Agenc y for the sal e o f Indi a Rubbe r Belting , Hose and Packing; Duryee , Forsyt h A Co' s Scale s and Safes , Ohilson' s Furnaces, Metropolita n Cookin g Ran- ges , Ac, Ac . 41-t f \TT04KSTEYS AND OOtiN.NF.I.OKS. E.H. CRART, Attorneys and Counselors. MADRID AND WEST POTSDAM, WIU promptly attend to all Legal business entrusted to them. , _l tn-wiaD rnuRV, t St. Law. County. I NATHAN CHART,* 1 __3Iadrid. i N. Y. >_ W. Potsdam. CHAS. J. K.INU, (Formerly of the Firm of Myers A King,) Attorney & Counsellor, OFFICE IN AVERBU.'S NEW BTJUDING, FORD ST. {3r~Professiona! business entrusted to him wtll be promptly attended to. ~ H AGKNTS. • OTIS Kiir&iu.. 103 State Street, Boston, Mass. JAMSS F. Omascfl Rouse's Point, N.Y. OEAWTOKO ft Oo Ogdensburgh, 9. Y. CaAMRCTi.re, Otuwsban A Co Cleveland, Ohio. • A. GoDiKD Toledo, Ohlq. J. MYSBS 1ST Broadway, New York. J. L. WARSIH No. 8 OoentH clip, New York. RioTisi> CBAHS Whitehall, N. Yi. EL R. MATOSWB Detroit, Michigan. MATHM A CO Chicago, Illinois. f3T* Property forwarded with dispatch to and frpm New York and'Boston, and to all points in New England, via Ogdensburgh. [2S-tr} EXCHANGE IMMIGRATION AO&NOY ' . i . . o». IIENBY eilAPMAlV At CO., MONTREATJ AND QUEDKC. Cot sale Sight Drafts en England, Ireland and Scotland, AXD , PAS8A0E QEBTIHQATIS i By Steamers and sailing vessels, to and from Liverpool via Portland and Quebec. STARK * CO., Agents, [14-Gm] Half Uoad Wharf, Ogdensburgh, OLD BLACK 'STAB £%«E OP •^-SAILING PROM 'Liverpool to New York, . „ , , . 'IsU dth, Uth, 16th, 2Ist,and 26th'of t eaon month.^g| The subscriber is prepared to sell PASSAGE TICKETS in-tbisLine. Also, Brafta on ENGLAND, IRELAND ahd SCOTLAND. ,' , . , LAND WAKItANTS bought i t Kew York Prices. • • • OEOl N. SEYMOUR. April ai.JSoTi ISfctfJ E. , NICKERS0N, Attorney and ConnsoUor, * Waddington, at. Lawrence Connty, N. Y. ftl -tf.] _ W. A. C. BRIGHAM & CO., General Commission Merchants, r \Wsr r \\-»» wrmn -• Summer Arrangement. COMSIfiNCISa ON. MONDAY, MAY 1STH, 155T. MAIL TKAIN, L EAVES OTTAWA AT 7: 45 A. SL, mS riving ta 'Preseottst 10: J^ A. SL, eonneoting at Junction with Trains going S6*t and West, and at Prescott 'with the Northern Rail Road Trains for New York anil Boston—also with the Lake Steamers going Weit Leases Prescott •* At 19: 30, • I?. M^. on fas arrival of the Grand Trunk Trains from East and West, and the Northern: Sad Road Train* from New York an* Boston—also the Lake ana River-Bteamers from the 8sst and West, ar- riving to Ottawa Ely at 3: 08 p. M. s ACCOMfflCODAXION TBAEV, Leaves Prescott at 6: 80 A. SI., on arrival of the Grand Trunk trains from the West, arriving in Otta wadtvatlOjlO.A. Bat. . * ... ,*ei^8..«fje*M*5Bt» eor ? eetin8Wl»gMg^jf«r*»«ia|r9«tte Eaa? Prescott.'MayjlS, yk?.. ^ji^rf^^a^ent* Dealers In Butter,Cheese,Pork,and allkinds of counUy Produce.. Oonaignmenta respectfully solicited, and cash advances made when desired. NO. 8 RUSSIA WHAEF, BOSTON. w. A . 0 . aaTOBXJt, [ST-tf] DENNIS D. M0TT, Attorney- and Counselor at Lattr, MAS8SNA VILLAGE, ST. LAWEENOE CODNTY, NEW-YORK. . [23-tO offered for sals at agoodbargiin.. Convenient Store, nearivjiew, SB by 4S feet, well fin- ished ; three Store Houses, Carriage HQure,jtnd Stablss, lAed; three ^'%£F%^^W£SB* Shdp, and oneDweiabgllousa. mtMt ,~ n the-oaJaSXi'th 8 <• The*n«e W^f^^SS^E SU ab^raegde«». beautifnl Btoer St. ^°^Xf„^S^rlt cenntry, Power of Enduring Cold. The following paragraph is taken fiora Dr. Kane's journal: \ The mysterious capacities by which we adapt ourselves to climate are mote striking here than in the tropics. In the polar zone the assault is immediate and sudden, and unlike the iuaiduous- fatality of hot countries, produces its result rapid- ly. It requires hardly a single Winter to tell who are the best beat-making and acclimatized men. I Peterson, for instance, who resided (or two years |^t Uppernavich, seldom enters a room with afire. Another of our party, George Riley, with a vigor- ous constitution, established habit?, of free expos- ure, and.active, cheerful temperament, has so in- ured himself to the cold that he sleeps on our sledge, journeys without a blanket, or an; other covering than h(s walking suit, while the outside temperature is 8J>°- below zero.\ — • s> i • — B« Gentlemen at Home. t There are few families, we imagine, anywhere, in which love is not abused, as furnishing (he license for impoliteness. A husband, father or brother, will speak harsh words to those he loves I beat, and those who love him best, simply because \ the security of love or -.family pride keeps him from getting his head broken. It is a shame that a man wQl speak less politely, at times, to his wife or sister, than be would to any other female, ex- cept a low and vicious one. It is thus that (he honest affections of a man's nature prove to be & I weaker protection to a woman in the family circle \ than the restraints of society, and that a woman usually is indebted for the kindest politeness of life bo those not belonging to her own household. Things ought not to be sq. The man who, be- cause it will not be resented, inflicts his spleen and bad temper upon those ol his hearth stone, is a small eoward, and a very mean man. Kind words are circulating mediums between true gen- tlemen and ladies at home, and no polish exhibit- ed in society can atone {pr the harsh language and disrespectful treatment too often indulged in be- tween those bound together by God's own ties of blood, and the still more sacred bonds of conjugal love. _ &.C. BE0WN & SPENOEE, Attorneys, Counselors, oGDaNSBtmsH, N. r. ££** Office lately occupied by James ft Brown. r. o. esowa *. o. aMbiots. April 12, 1854, »l-tf S*£S&K3Lfi3B!8^* «<* convenient (or CJanaffa baSe, antf has Moved the te5f location for « eouiStry iWrtfto tne County. • r^-Time given on good seenrity. *or<further ih- (ormation(nojnreof,orjBJare»* ,, i Osi JJouv?, Bt.3*wreBce Cotnftyi K, Y. \ May 18th, 1S5T- - [SMraJ £ G. STILWELL, lunraer and dotuxselor at Law, J^sticTot theFeaee 4: TBoTtm Clerks Jn8MCe O0DENSBTJB6H, NEW-YOEK. • Mr0Bee,in ST. LAWEKSC* ROT»L!CAB Bunding, j tsSella street l 18 \\! ] lIomAvtheFTJEBlT^ Ho/ggord-Sfflet.., TOLEDO, MttWAOKEB, RACIHB, KKI0SHA, WAC- KESAN, GALBNA, ROCK: .ISLAND, BURLING- TON, DBBBfOTaVa«BW», TOWA 0TTT, ST. LOUIS, St. PADL, AMD ALL PLACES IN THB WfiST AND SOCTa-WEST. The following New tow Pressure Steamers form the fcinefrojn • • Buffalo to Toledo, , Connectiog with the mCHIGAN , SOBTUEItN & NOBTH- E»» ISDLAMAB4la. KOAD, ONLY 24^ MgLig TO OmCAOO: W^TEBil &ETBOPQZI3i 1.1. PBHAITV Conrt, Leaves Bdaio Mondaya and Tlnirsdays. ••. ... ^SformmSJt^ f*TO8. Com\ Leave, ifSSmmlrtiBcnffa***^*** com*. MOEBIS&VAKT, Attorneys and 'Connaelorp at Law,. OaDENSBURGH,, NEW-YORK. Offloe—Marble Row, Comer of Ford andWater.8treets y.Ail professional businesa entrusted to them will receiveprompt attention. \ BP~ ADDITIONAL BOUNTY LANB obtainedunder thelate Act of Congress, passed Marsh 8rd, 1855. o»o>a» ScoiBia. n 5 -\! JrtaoriTT B. va»T. J, MoNAUGBTON, Attorney, Counselor, Ac, Gives his entire attention to the practice of hisprofes- slorivandsoliciupatrohaite. , |3r~0frice—Corner of Ford and Isabella-Streets,0g- aenshitrgh.rtew-YoTit. [M-tfj •• ~ JUUSON & POWELL, ^ attorneys and Counselor* at Lavur» 0SDENrffilTE&B,rW;LAWREN0B 00., N.Y. Ofaee, No. 8 Eagle Slock, »urd-«treet, op stairs. ; wisoTraw^misoii. — ..gr^tfj.,_...>^mroirjii,jgj \ * ' \cf^'BALbwiN , r i Attorney at Law,.. OGDHSBBOBfiH, ST. LAWRENCE 00..N. Y. ' fl-ly 0fflceIaCa3tQm-Bt>aseBundlng. : *«ia for iutio.. SS^Sl.' 9S OAKBIfera e« r u „„pta thtrplace^oinWirfhf: 10 TOP BTJSGIK8, work wul he *oB ,W«»dus,s5S(n) . Newspaper Patrons. Sb all idiom itrnay a/ncfrnf • This thing called patronage is a queer thing. It •te'veiy rJOfrectly rerhaikfedbyBOme one, thatltis composed of as many colors as ft rainbow ,*and is as changeable as the hues Of the chameleon. One man subscribes for a paper and pays for.it •to advance-i-he goes home and readsit'the year , round with the proud*- satisfaction- that it is his J - li.nothermarisayai>— a l?Jrt xny;nair(e on Johr list of subBcribers,\ and goes off without aS much ( as saying \pay \ once. Hoasks yon to advertise —but says nothing abont paying for it, Tirao passes; your patience is exhausted, arid you dan Mm - Wfe fltes into a'passfon^perhaps ho pays i£ji4 ;s •-u^.r.il!*A lot -J-'aS^H o> i - ^ - rJA9»» I4r»> Tt> « ' , JlilfvEBY •rtiird, that»»« Rfce T^MO* 9*- li.w.i, a» »• *f\ •^ - —rssts*. •'BtofrTX***** \a«to3 Ux^s-'eia^i-'li, lOSiUli t-* « » C^at-J. ;,%,!» in r>q-3*rd s»sa| .%.\%i HiSsW*. ''O f**. -'ti-'i.~?--t; =' afu«ut°,iv, ««f ! 2J^on»Sa^ \• \^-.to SXhibi* press Train fro^BoitonvAIl?any aaaVHew YArrijajrongh to Toloda wltteat iaadtog- where, passengers taScs tr{9, L&htnlagEitetaiTciijj Cr-CSfaign.arrivtngtlare^iT-. ty thBBB^evealosJsftir oeparture from Baffato; ^av u»«lntiitfJalMgo:»l^«jRari5o?d^rmmir«We3|« 8oaat-W*«t,aa!i Stesiaerron lake Michlgaa.- • - - . Passengers, by deUveriinj tseSrObeeki to as AgaMrett tia^Ctrsv tsis csve taeir6aj»tf9 ednWyeato'&e: Boat fresw^ns^,»^rilrMicea»rMs;K ••,'\ '•\--. i afcje r«3iBTs* sptea al?a cots&rs. earthaprdSsfftdaSiiiMS 'SfrcgatjCaDUce Kss 'u°* l( ~ru»j«90<isstsu Aa,y«isit'actsai S! Tj t tS ; a j.«c3Te cr 0. Fotbes,\ As^ntot-Ccisrjanr's Kt^aAur,, haS^o. • A t Tcieao^lhl j tirm olSMiaerJ ebhne't o »il» . iti TOLEDO. WABASH SSft WKtfiltS Eilj, »JAB \ \ PaaKB^r?'%S» ilf^«?Stj?»' J^-*i»'vTS»»ii«ipio*, .'cMtaiatisLAWB BU'-'SB JW l ROA&.ftWtaitig ,'• Bha^e, far Deft;:*, *isna!^?iiiiiiistl?!a Bra ej 4 j 4 :with •.\.-.'..• . - ^ - • • , Simitar rw and . -. - \-'.\-• Ai L. EEOCTOB A'Ca, x , Wnolesaievsit'd t6^«aIl' ; Dc»le*»tnGio« • «eriest>Satti Wiitec-Limc, ftonr, ; ',:... .r s%*6jrsx»-Pprfes; &9*j''-A;C. .;'. rsrr TERMS,;CASH. Cash i>a.ld lor Butter, Chqcidj ^„rk Beans.Pcae.and allkinds of pountTyft-oauce.,; •fWinW «rff0K BLOCK, W4TBR-STBBBT;! ; i. ,_ -iwamk. OGDENBBUKStt. o.t.aow*Bp. 'To,;*! J UST p^Qnip ^BTOTOR ii Office oJTJheBfc JiwjsaKO* Bjpm^ojtii, »gpo ply of SHWPBta iBSiS, for ffii usFoi Merefi TorwaiaemJamtotterii.. . ; •., , •>. . ,,, .Match ^ISoT., -_ , * rjttrlfBt- him.- Mfr ffie3 into a'pasaipn. yon—-pBihapa not. Another man has been a subscriber some time '-s-h» becomes tired of it and wanfe S change.. Thinks he wants another Journal—gives it up, And yon abadnime. One '«f Ws papers is\ roturnod to you marked \rewmfed 1\ Paying for it is among his tast thoughts. '-\- -1 . '-' , \\ > After a time you-look-orer Iris account arid tend Km »s oilt of \balance duos, 11 Bnf'he dojjs not pay ifr*.fteafe jou> with tiileitt contempt. This, too, some feofele'call jjjtrouaga' ;'\.'• . jrktfother man1iVei«e*r' ttffi--^nevertoolt- your ;w*per*-i8i8 too small^-don't lilto-tilO^ paper,don't | uke if* principles--too l^a-SollisB^'leadie^s hire 4oo^Btrong,'itt ( tales too dry, vice- Yersa,-'Qr' [-toraethingelse—^yret goes regular to liia.ridghborfe and reads it—finds fault with ite contents, and f disjmtesita pofiWon, and quarrels with the type, l&eV^»y* » dumberjperguartor. This, too, b : - Another (and bless nait-doeaus good' to «ee such a tnatiygays! \Tlieyear&r-#Eif^I tiRYi paid is about to expire, I want topay fof another.\ %&B is pateonige, Imiah, how rare! , : -' ^fiUier%aB.stitJso^wr»wantB7ori-to:g1««U t^eadaitf «refnny v anVl'wlB'iil«»ftygr^kisa it every [time he sees yon, as being a good •pap^r, -wfehea o{ the old man furrowed .'wHh.Jwrinkles hjft hair rising in ttrajght masses, white as the driven snow, bis sunken cheeks traversed by marked lines, and thin lips, flxedl^ corhpressed, all an- nounced as^oug and stormy lifei All the marks of an iron will were written upon, his face. . His name I need not jell yon was Andrew Jfckson, and he sat atOrfe in thefWhite iHouse. ^t visitor entered withontbelnl; announced, and stood before the President in thfform ot a boy of nineteen, clad in a coarse round] jacket and trou- sers, and covered from head to foot with mud. As he stood before the \President cap'in hand, the dark hair falling in damp cinsterjp about his -white forehead, the old man could uojt help .surveying at a rapid glance, the muscular fceauty of his Srf£ ure; the broad cheat, tho sine Jjy, arms, the head placed proudly oh the firm shoqlders. \ Your business ?\ said thef: old man, in his short, abrupt way. ' \ \ There is a Lieutenancy vacant 'in the Dra- goons, Will you give It to met\ i And dashing back ths dark rSair which fell over his face, the T>oy, as if frightened* at r.is\ooldnesa bowed low before the Presiddni The old man could not restrain that smile. It wreathed his firm lip, and shahe from his clear eyes. T \You enter my chamber unannounced, covered from head to foot with mud—yjpu tell that a lieut- enancy is vacant, and ask mejito give it to you. Who are you?\ i, \Charles MaVl\ The boyj.did not, bow this time, but with -his right liartd! on his hip, stood like a wild young Indian, oreetjtn the presence of the President. 11 What claims have yon to (t commission ? \— again the Hero surveyed him, ^nd agaiu he faint- ly smiled. • \ Such as yoiu!\ exclaimed tjhe boy, as his dark eyes shone with that dare deijil light, while his form swelled In every rausclo,, as with the con- scious pride of his manly strength and beauty. \Would you like to see me rid* ? My horse is at the door. You ace I came post|haste for this com- miason.\ , ji Siently the Old man fotlowa.ll the boy, and to- geher they went forth from thjB White House. It was a clear, cold Winter's da^; the wind tossed the President's white hairs, anil the leafless trees stood boldly out against the blue sky. Before the portals of the White House, w|th the rein thrown loosely on his neck, stood a magnificent horse, his dark hide smoking foam. He uttered a shrill neigh as bis boy-master sprang wittl a bound into the saddle, and in a dash was gone, skimming like a swallow down the road, his mane and tail stream- in\ in a breeze. J- The old man looked after them, the horse and his rider, and knew not whichjjto admire most, the athletic beauty of the boy, orj tempestuous vigor of the horse. Thrice they threaded the Jivenues in front of the White House, and at last stood panting before the President, the boy leaning over the neck of his steed, as be coolly exclaimed—\ Well—how do you Uke me ? \ L \ I do thiuk you could ki}l an Indian! \ the President said taking him by £he hand, as he leap- ed fftrfiThis hprse. • \Any—and eat him aAerwftrd! \ cried the boy, ringing out hla fierce laugh a| he read his fate in the old man's eyes. { \You had better come In aod.gefNyour commis- sion ; \ and the hero of New Orleans led the way into the White House. ' There came a night, when jm old man—Presid- ent no longer—sat in the s|lent-chamber of his Hermitage home, a picture ibf age trembling on the verge of eternity. The light that stood upon bis table revealed the shrnnkon form resting against the pillows which cushioned his arm-chair and the death-like pallor of tjis venerable face. In that face, with its white hair, and massive fore- head, everything Beemed already dead, except the eyes. Their deep grey-plue shone with the fire of New Orleans, as the old man with bis long white fingers, grasped a letter postmarked \Wash- ington.\ { \ They ask me to deajgnale the man who shall lead our .army, in case thef annexation of Texas brings on a war with Mexico\—hia voice deep- toned and thrilling, even in! that hour of decrepi- tude and decay, rung the silence of the chamber, \ There is only one man who can do it, and bis name is Zachary Taylor.\ i It was a dark hour when pis boy an'd this Gen- eral, both appointed by thefsuggestiona or by the voice of the Man Of the Hermitage, met in the battle of Resaca de la Palmft. , By the blaze of the canhon, and beneath the canopy of battle smoke, we| will behold the meet- ing. | \ Captain May, you mns| take that battery.\ As the old man uttered these words he pointed far across the ravine with his sword. It was like the glare of a volcano—thp steady blaze of that battery, pouring from .the jdarkness of the chap- pareL. 9 Before him summoned |l from the rear by his. command, rose the form |of a splendid soldier, whose hair waving in long masses, swept his broad shoulders, while his |eard fell over his mus- cular chest. Hair and beard as dark as midnight, framed a determined face, pnrmoanted by a small cap, glittering with a single golden tassel. The young warrior bestrode i magnificent charger, broad in the cheat, small |n the head, delicate in each slender limb, and witp the nostrils quivering as though they shot forth lets ofrlame. That steed was as black as death. ' f Without a word the shiftier turned to his men: - - 1 Eighty-four forms; with throats and breasts bare,'eTgbty4b«ubatfJe hofees, eighty-four sabres, that rose in the clutch of rjaked arms, and flashed their Bghtolng over e\gh WonrfsceSj knit iftevory feature with 'battle fire. | \Men follow! n shoute| the young common* |»der, whoibad bee^ereatecj n soldier by tHe hand «rA»dr£«jJacfeBonv!88 h& tall form w>66in. the sttrrrjpa, v ajrid. fte battle ireeze rjlaycd with, his long Dlarl hair.', There' l *raB no resrl6nBe-i h words, but yijra should have soen thus© horses qrKver' beneath the spur, jandspring and launchawiyviBawn upon thesod with, gneterrMe h J?* catao tjie BOW4 ot their hoos, white through the i jr rose in glittering ch> oleSao^tMtfeBCimetaTi[- • ' ! ^\ \ ! ; • yonr- yards in feontrod|Mayj himself'and l|lgt. horse the object of a thousand byes, so- certain was the death that ioomerrbefore him; proudlyiri his warrior heau^ he ro|e \that steed, MB hair Hosting from beneath his Wj in raven curls up6n ttheTTinA. » ; ' - I• • • ''\' ' i. He turns his h'ead-rduaj men see JUsilace siih stern lip and knit.v they JMthe fiwothis eyes; (hey \hekr^-not.\ farm forwardp-*b)jt \ntepj- foliow!\ and away, like'r* rrnmense'hattfe'engiee composed of eight^y.fouriimeu and horses, woven tot^tker>yiBwords-^waJftoaoii4heydaBh<.. - They near ihe'ravine; told Taylor foDowa-ihisriij'. witjt hushed breath, ayejclujshing hia j«w.Qr4J)ilt, 1 |ie,'sees th'6 golden ttoejof M»y glearain^ ih lheJ canno'n flash.:''-\'• ' * •••••••• J -'= \-. Tbey-aro on the vergi in ftont, Ms charger flin neathhini, s wi^h cfJoesal tbeconnoi's fire rushed into their faces; Inge, even as lis shout rang on the air, Was laid a mangled tl ing beneath his horse, and seven dra- goons fell it the. battery's muzzles, their blood and brainy whirling into their comrades' eyes. Still Ma; • is yonder, above the cloud, his homo rioting ov« r the heaps of dead, as with his sabre circling ov jr his Sowing hair, he cuts his tfay through tt ^ living wall, and says to his comrades, \Come.\ ... AD aro ind him, friend and\ foe, their swords locked to ;ether, yonder the blaze of musketry showering iron hail upon his band, beneath his horses fee, the deadly cannon and ghastly corses,\ still that ; oung soldier riots on, for Taylor, has I said \ Sile ice that battery,\ and he will do it.. The Me icans are driven from their guns'; itieir cannon or i silenced, and May's heroic band, scat- tering am ng the mazes pf -the chapare), are en- tangled in a wall of bayonets. Once more the combat d< opens, and dyes thesod in blood. Hedg- ed in by hat wall of <*teel, May gathers eight of his men, < nd hews his way back toward the cap- tured batt jry. As his charger reara, ais sword circles abi ve his head, and sinks blow after blow into the f< emen's throats. To the left a shout is heard ; tl e Americans, led on by Graham and Pleasanto i and Winship, have silenced the bat- tery there, while the whole fury of the Mexican army seei ted centered to crush May and his band. As be we; it through their locked ranks so he came back. Eve rywbere bis men know him by his hair, waving in dark masses ; his golden tinselled cap, his sword they know it, too, and wherever it falls hoars the gurgling groan of mortal 'agony.' Back 11 theicaptnred cannon he cuts'his\way and on U e brink of the ravine beholds a sight that fires his blood. A solit iry Mexican stands there in all the frenzy of a brav) man's despair; he entreats his coun- trymen U i turn, to man the battery once more and hurl its f ;ry on the foe. They shrink back ap- palled be ore that dark horse and its rider, May. The Mex can, a handsome young man, whose fea- tures cat scarce be distinguished on account of the bloot which covers them, while his rent uni- form bea -s testimony to his deeds in that day's carnage, clenches his hands as he flings his curse in the fac e of his flying countrymen, and then, lighted n atch in hand, springs to the cannon. A moment more and its fire will shatter ten Amer- ican sold era in the dust Even i s the brave Mexican bends near the can- non, the dark charger with one tremendous leap, is there, ind the swoid ol May fe circling over his head. \ Yiel 1! \ shouted the voice which only a few moment- ago, when rushing to tho death, aaid, \ Come!'\ The b ave Mexican beheld the gallant form be- fore him and handed Captain May his sword. \ Gen ?ral La Vega is a prisoner,\ he said, and stood wi h loldcd arms amid the mangled corpses of his so diers. You iee May deliver his prisoner into the charge if the brave Lieutenant Stephens, who, when Inge fell, dashed bravely on. Then would you look for May onco more, gaze through that ,wall of hayouets, beneath that gloomy :loud, and behold him craehing into the whirlpoi rl of the fight; his long\ hair, his sweeping beard,«nd sword that never for a moment stays its light liug career, making him like the embod- ied dem an of the battle-day. In tb i rear of the battle behold this picture. Where Hay dashed like a thunderbolt from his side, Gi neral Taylor, in his familiar brown coat, still reo >ains. Near him, gazing on the battle with an interest keen as his own, the stout form, the stei n visage of his brother soldier, Twiggs. They h ive folloSvciTwith flashing eyes the course of May , they have seen him charge, and seen his rueu ar & horses Wrled back in their blood, while still he thunderetkon. At this moment the brave La Ve; a is led into the presence of Taylor, his arms folded over his breast, his eyes fixed upon the gro and. As t! le noble hearted Geueral expresses his sor- row th .t the captive's lot has fallen on one so brave, is in obedience to the command of Twiggs the sol liers, arranged in battle order, salute the prison! r with presented arms, there comes rush- ing to ,he scene the form of May, mounted on his well-ki own charger. Gi neral, you told me to silence that battery, I have done it\ He >laced in the hands of Zachaty Taylor the sword of the brave La Vega. The First Summer Letter. BY a. W. BBKCBBR. the expedition, patronized ;'jby the Academy of Sciences at Paris, and setreltil other learhed so- cieties of France, England, aid Germany, and'fa- vored with special instructji jns from M. ,A, de Humboldt, was ready for\ its'ieparture aboht |he beginning of October last, fj t- consisted Of MM. Aubaret, a lieutenant of (he J Irencb. navy; Meyer, a German mineralogist; Dr. Bichard,.a botanist; Geng and Boteslawskij officers of the Austrian corps of Engineers; George sPouehet, a zoologist; . Twyford, an English captain; Clague, aphdtoM grapher; DeBar, a draughtsman; and Taboulle, secretary to the expedition, ail under th.e order of M. Eseayrac de Laoture, an African travieler of Borne note. An immense diiantity of provisions . and articles of every description necessary ifor the J journey had been prepared, including, among \ I other things, a distilling apparatus, two field guns, an apparatus far electric liglji, and even a sawing machine. The Viceroy placed five hundred camels and a large military force at the disposal of the ohjef of the expedition, a circumstance which induced him to conceive a higher opinion of himself and the authority entrusted to him than was perhaps quite in, accordance with the interests of the expe- dition. It appears, indeed, that at the very out- set his imperious conduct and the military organ- ization which he attempted to impose urion the members of the expedition, led to disagreablej scenes and to unnecessary delay. Meanwhile the\ vanguard of the scientific expedition, consisting of Captain Twyford, M. Pouehet, and M. Clague, set 4 off from the Port of Bonlaaon the 2f)th of Octo- • ber, in order to proceed by: jthe Nile to Kartoum, where they were to be met by_the, a main body, which was to cross the desert. The description given of the passing of the 'first cataract is inter- esting. The word \cataract\ appears, indeed, to be misapplied to the rapids which impede the navigation of the Nile, they being nothing, in fact, but a labyrinth of islands and rocks between which the waters rush with more or less violence. There are special pilots called ma, trained to that calling from father to son, who are entrusted with the guidance, or rather the rescue, of the frail barks that are to perform! the dangerous feat. When the boat reaches a certain place where the width of the water is no more than twenty feet, about two hundred Nubians, under the command of the chief of tlte cataract, tow the vessel up the shallow stream, and at the'most difficult point, a .dozen ofthe stoutest jump into the river and ac- tually lift the boat out of tlse stream over tho bar which impedes the passage,; beyond it the water is deep, and the lateen sail may again be unfurled. The success of this operation is greeted by the applause ofthe numerous spectators assembled on the banks to witness it cuKivators is continually diminished. Tf ws. j?p-j pose, this process to go On like a matu'etaiticat se-1 ries, without arrest, the connsqnenoe would he ultimate Bjarvation; hut, of course, the prafimin- ary symptoimpf.8uch a calamity would be guni. dent to drive td&ny from the cities to the country, and thus chan£e>the current. Stall, We must re- gard, flie inverjttoudma success of this agricnlfe ral machinery as a pjpvidential .interference td; ; Invert for a time the alterna^.ye of starving inciSeS* •or returning to the Count— ~' \poLmc^at wuHa^ffigBMngRprairjp, SEW ^'iP^^^W^^^^&l&f^^S\ •» >/.!B!»|ar^aBB^]»B^^ B0SI0rtl^iaf^uaalngi»«tlM«e?JV NJiYy-YjjBK-tobtm'eB&wmi!'; '\-*'\ - !¥BXUDBH?HIA—N. W. eor. Third and lphesnat-Sts. BALTHJORff^JW.-cor.'NorttandJayette-Stroets. MATTKWAS, Jul y 19, 185|. - Th< Summer has broken forth. The earth is filled with heat, and the whole heaven is hot The i lorning greedily drinks up the dew. The plum| stems, by Doon, loose their tenseness, and wilt t owu. The afternoon rides over the subdued Howe s. We all seek the Bhadc, and hold our open necks to the winds, meanwhile greatly ad- miriu; the insects on every side, that grow more nimb e with every degree of heat. With the ther- mom iter at 60 °, -flies are very sedate and thou; htful; at 76 ° they grow gay and. musical; but a; 85 ° or 95 ° they become wild with excite- ment! and whirl and dance through the quivering air ai if heat was wine to them. • Bun we have taken to ourselves the friendship of mountains, and made league with them against the Summer fervor. They lift up their great orb as a (shell agaiust the morning sun, \and when, tnrnpg their flank, the sun comes down from the |.60utl i,'they breathe forth a cool wind from their hjdd a» places, and we defy the heat I E ei-y Summer has its own portrait and pecu- liar individualism. This Summer has brought arou id us multitudes of birds beyond any former one. Wo are living in a pleasant old house, arou id which fruit trees have grown in which Dirdi have bred and lived unmolested from year to J ar.- It is but a dozen wing-beats from the home to the mountain woods.—Nothing can plea is a meditative bird better than to have do- mestic scenes on one side, and the seclusion of the JoresTon the other. A bird loves a kind of familiarity. Here we have a gar8ea,Ja door-yard, an orchard, a barn, grouped together,—-and then, on phe other hand, the young forests of scoped mpilatoin side.—So tie birds come down here, for lunjand group there for reflection. This is their world; that is their cathedral. I notice that they are Ivor)' fond of congregational singing; not only, butlevery one sings his. own tune, in his own time, and to his own words. Nevertheless their singing sounds well. They begin when the.stare fadi i in the morning, and not an hour till star-time oga o do they leave untremulons with music. The 6W etest of them all is the sqng-sparrow or eong- fin( h; arid it is most numerous and most constant in is music. Two or three'pairs seem to have .neste in the yard, and apparently many neighbors cqipe to visit them and have a chat over a social The Babolink has ceased his song. This fantas- tic {fellow only shigB daring his love season, Then thejtakes to the duties of life with: great sobriety^ ^ejaqes through bis season, and flies off to the Igton to become a rice-bird. The, song of MB insusoraids to me as if they Were try&g to laftgh antt!sirjg'*ati\flie same (Sue. Their sdifg is' in en*t$hts, like an old harper's preUminary touches; befefiiW sounds forth the. reai tone; only, they ar* Always preluding,,and never eome to the real A quarter of an hour after this dramatic scene, the little flotilla of the expedition lay quietly at anchor in the port ol El Mahatta, an important Nubian village. Thence Qapt Twylord and his companions proceeded to iDongolah, and uncon- scious of the squabble for authority still caging at Cairo between M. Escayrffic and the other mem- bers of the expedition, arrived at Amboukoul, having exhausted' their money and provisions. Here they fortunately met the Viceroy and his suite returning from his journey through the pro- vinces ol Soudan; and from him they learnt that, owing to the impossibility of establishing harmony between the chief and the members of the expe- dition, it had been dissolved. Nothing, therefore, remained to be done but to return to Dongolah, amid great hardships, owliig to the ill-will pf the authorities, who thought !(hey had fallen into dis- grace ; and these dilliculrajes did cot cease until they reached Rhoda, a plaice twenty leagues from Cairo, where they were received by a Govern- ment steamer. The resupls of their journey in a scientific point of view sjee very mea«re, consist- ing only of a confirmation (of facis already publish- ed by previous travelers.' 4 a* Beware oi£ Brandy. [Fro m PorTSr'sJ|j^titj> r th e Times.] We warn the good f pegple|of this city, who oc- casionally take a little \for the stomach's sake,\ to beware how they drinjk brandy, or we should rather say, the red hquioiwhich is handed out to them at tavern counters^ Under that name. It is a well-known fact,/that khere is scarcely a bar-, room in the city, jrowever extensive, elegant, or pretentious, that contain* a drop of the genuine article. Indeed, veigy'liit tie of it comes into the country from France, au< I what does come com- mands an almdst labulou i price^—a price so great, at any rate, as to exclud i it almost entirely from the retail trade. Indeed even with the best will to sell a good article, t le tavern-keeper caunot surely get it. The artic e which he bays under custom-house lock, and ' finch Unquestionably has come from France, is no fting more nor less than a portion of the millions ol gallons of ** pure spir- it,\ i. e., alcohol, which; has been exported from this country, to receive, in Prance, its coloring and its flavor from the essential \oil Of Cogniae,\ and then to be imported back. This is no iUosiou, but a fact of daily pract ce, and it would be safe to conclude, that any gl iss which you may take up, at any bar in town^ is -nothing but colored pure spirit, flavored will i a few drops of the oil alluded to. The same may be said of the stuff ..that is furnished you in demi-johns from the wholesale grqpers and iquor dealers, for family use, at the rate of five, six, and seven dollars a gallon. Through the fain re of the grape in France, and the immense cot sumption of the article of brandy in this country i, not one-twentieth part of the demand made upon France can bo sup- plied ; and as the major part of this demand is for high-priced brandy, it «ill at once be seen what perilous stuff, even the nost fastidious and care- ful drinkers are obliged to swallow. The only safe course is, therefore, to abstain from calling for brandy altogether. Th sre is but Jittte good in it, even when} t is best; at d it has been; saddled up- on as a national drink, n place of the compara- tively harmless beveragis chosen by dther nations, by a school of red-faeee old cocks, Whoj with the profundity, if not thej iiobriety of oaaclfes, yoked our necks years ago wjl h- the notion that a little brandy was \ the best thing in the world for the stomach,\ especially (Iter eating oysters — a double fallacy, as hash ng ago been proved. We, therefore, advise that.t randy be permitted to go out of the country—aw I, if we must have a na- tional drink, let us folk w the example Of the na- tion, w^icji manufacture's brandy for ha,' and adopt something as a daily,biiverage, that is, at least, a shade lighter than hell fire. LFrom th e Correspondenc e of the Cincinnati Gasette.l - Kansas.j GOVERNOR WALKER'S CAMP TALK—WHY HE DID NOT PUT A STOP TO THE TOP^A CONVENTION —THE ABOLITIONISTB TRYING TO BLOT WALK- ER'S CHANCES FOR THE PRESIDENCY TN I860. LAWRBSCE, Kansas, July. 25. The supposition expressed in a letter to ypnr paper a few days sfhce, that the secret of Walk- er's movement was to get the troops in the field in readiness to act in opposition to the success! of j our August election, is being confirmed by thel Governor himself, who, in conversation with dif- ferent gentlemen, has already admitted the fact Yesterday, Dr. Slocum, formerly of Oloremont, New Hampshire, and now of Southern Kansas, Mr. H. Boynton, formerly of Maine, now of Deer Cree|r, in this territory, and five other gentlemen, visited Walker in camp, and had a long conver- satio|n with him upon political affairs. Mr. Boynton has furnished me the following ac- < couut of that interview, which is confirmed by ! Dr. Slocum and others. Both parties, during the conversation, made an error in supposing that the Topeka Constitution recognised the \ property in slaves \now in the Territory, which is not the fact. Mr. Boynton, while in conversation with Gov. Walker, in camp, asked him if he considered the people, in voting for the re-adoption of the To- peka Constitution, as assuming a position antag- onistic to the United States government, to which Gov. Walker replied as follows: \ That election is either a wicked and iniquit- ous farce, or a reality. It is rebellious and. in- surrectionary, setting un a government against the territorial government; as Buch my duty and oath of office require me to put a stop to it; I must and will do it. 1 went to Topeka when that legislature was in session, and requested them not to enact laws. They concluded not to, except to take the census and memorialize Congress; I have no objection to either of these proceedings.; I ad- mit the right of petition.\ Mrj Boynton—\ But, sir, I regard the action of the people in voting for and presenting to Con- gress that Constitution, as in substance making a petition that Kansas be admitted as a State.\ To which Gov. Walker replied: \ Nothing of the kind, sir. They are merely making agitation for political purposes, to forward their nefarious schemes and ruin the Democratic party. Moat of the Northern papers have com- mitted themselves in my favor. In the very intel- ligent city of New York, but one paper (the Tri- Irune) remains in favor of the Topeka movement I There has been an immense falling off of your I v» 1 i: , „ „;., Tl.i j T.otB>«»n/.A mnvpniont ' '' frrom W»ef&&ree%reaj, '*July SjCF' We have succeeded with somedjffieultyinlearn- mg thjijiartieulars ofa shockjngceqnrjence which took pace on flje\gEgntranjcS 'mjucsheg ooblast ^esdayi'ni*Wnich*a boy,-*e1e\in : yeaW\-o1cvwa8 ' actually eaten up alive by a bear, within sight of .fecitj. ; Tie. «usmns^anr^HpfitiieiCase jre as follows: .Aroan named Joseph Bademacher, a I German, Uving on Maleomb streetj between'Biv- ard and KusseU; went on Tuesday morning, in 1 company with a little brpther, to pick raspberries. They carried their dinners with them, arid^went some five or six* mileSout, before commencing their day's work. Rademacher deposited his din- ner4»rfcetjuidt!pa^)U!the ground; and 'employed hhnseTff§r~' B ome' J tim^ hi picHngbernes, when, his attention being attracted hy a noise, he* look- ed' aitoTandJalSa'W'his iBtense astoirjsfirnenl^saw a large! she, bear, #crimpanled with fhree oubj en- gaged in devourmghis dinner, tt \was but'the work of a moment to-iorop his basket-fif berries and hurry; with his youBg^rother^ away from the spot. He-aavrctwo foyevuBtgar from tgra When he left the spot,*at s4d'uo&jng to them. Be- fore himself and'brother had got*.safe distance, they heard terrible sereains in the airectiori they had left, which only served to accelerate their pace, and place a greater distance between? them and danger. They, were stbtf.^ertafcen. bj- one of the boys, who came iTObingntW them in a be- wilderment of fright, screaming that'the bear was eating up his brother. Bademacher received the intelligence in utter dismay, and took ttfhis^heels With a will, followed by the tWo.boys/efadia'esert- ing the sufferer to his fate. The cowardly race soon bronght them to the city, when they spread the alarm,' and a large party was quickly formed for the rescue, which proceeded to the scene of the disaster, accompanied by Bademacher and the father of the nnfortunate boy. A long search resulted in finding -the remains of the boy, the bear having eaten up about half of the corpse, and buried the rest for a future meal. Bemnants of his clothes were found -scattered .around, to- gether with Rademacher's coat, torn to pieces. A general hunt was commenced with a view of finding the bear, whieh has been continued up to the present time without success. The boy was Irish or German, we are not certain which. His name also we have been unable to learn, bnt shall ascertain it to-day. His brother, a boy of thirteen, stated that they almost stumbled over the bear before -they saw him at all, when he suddenly turned with a savage growl and seized the one who was nearest A word of warning from Bade- macher when he commenced his Sight would have saved the boy, but he was too frightened to do anything but run. The bear was a large and powerful one, and must have been excited to great hunger to com- mit so bold a deed. The contemplation of such an occurrence, happening almost within the lim- its of a city of 70,ui)t> inhabitants, is sickening and ;\\';,r •• . mT\\ T .'„ „^U„_~„,„^„„t I terrible. V?ild bears have become a rarity in Republican party, su-. This Lawrence movement I . . . , . ' , . ^ • •> i . i c .u I most parts of the atate. vet we are visited in the is a usurpation of government, undertaken for the I \\•\\ P.™ \' . ou,u; i } « _\___*_ri_ . J.^J Jen H \8. HHllTrJHET, ta '.iSrn'ifai Pdibis;Otij,trye-S^i,Wi°3oV.G'lac3Vff3^a»rcotyp« '-'StoMiOtsjliCiiBd Sar\i^lL^stirui2ent3 < . .Mo.'.i' n«Gr.aTtVa«.Bam-STaE^Tv0ttt?g--J\>B<'3.W;-Tr i : S'iail5Ei> .*?. -1' HftltfE'ST, ;&¥KsU,.l<S-lW.'taL?.£r a r 't Fiiia.tijiCpsprf .-A't'o. • \ r '\. -H'c«Tiion S?Ul3sc4 N> ».., '\ -- -i' •\' ' \-• MANBEAtTOftja, A fcecfisTCWfaatly'cn fisnd aAKRMQKSA (JLHQlla boUlt*uc> aud viaio.' H^- (fill'iatfi i s atote.- -' vm& «QIN6 ; ^ : M**M**V#. Tl It AILS UOANW r*»e*, » ^^rirrSKflneidawi $£&^$$ Sl?i« «r^Sryifiw*.' aAtAttaSa^anc EoijiiejJ?\*-' the cannon, sbxrtaop^a blood and tegTimme J - Iti9Kidgtey,wto-- mantleof Snggola, tmd .hi8fijW5«tohfijei#t' May; sh4 s^rttgWi to ( T < nOne* 1 *»ometi.«r'«Sf jfiWrfltts , '-v.'' l .-~M-\ cannoh speai out to «he|batteiyarkfcfter»Tine. 'Htafiashibis;Bmoke'hsWe hot g'ond,-bnt,hark! BldjOtlfiear tnial : ator* Oi'--cottDW* balls clatter agiihi»au»-c«fljorfr^ blneJttiithehwf^luBr^sgW^ ; .,, --'•. '\.''•« Men, foUowi\ '.iMy.oaSW.ftat.faw'gtesnl- tng with battle.fire, thslsehnetar cutting lis ghtj tering circle through tbiaiyj-Those taen can hold . i -4< .Ofthe 1 ravmO,\«ay*Ull : \ ig. tbe. earth feorn be- 08, wheo froni omorig Mad figure, red witir ; Bfiwrier. ; , * ' 1' haaiwQrn to wear the weai-itWell. Atonqe fo* Wi^g to the eyes<^f tj ^hoh,lie shouts:. •• MtWiyaiM will draw aiojri; his Bpg ajheiKJib'; are always prtuuuiug,,iu*M 4 M.^ WV ». . sflpjectmatter! Then we have goldfinches,.or. \ Jrenow-birds,\ the egottstic \ pbrfbes,\ that' at . anil call their own'name for amusement; the pert ^r^springy wren, ..baTpjswJlows, .ant}, watti; ildisms. robinsjjarksjand at high^rJiupppof jrito. Blesse* ba the'wmppporwul 1 that opens, np so many volm. urhes in the mind and sets one thinking backward ;—jif, as. I did r ono ever heard them in their youth^, l.wjdiing ,in the moonlit chamber to hear tberh goodMowl epand their notes, bold and .plaintive,; xinon tbie ™\ ™\ rropt that ptood in the. edge of the wtieai-fieldl g^ijLwdfii. i^om that day to thfethe ,*Wgpimmai Bad 1 SFP^^aH*, ^%$V%2&*** ever, dayat^m, o,4a;i3TTE. 1\A« -CHvi'v.^,. , ,:\\ • ' Oeipri) «Bb>itotentf«3t» e2a A;rK)WS«,Teav.A ir - : nt, - ^ \Hirc&- : 8..1 ,: \-'. _„'^_„--^- * '-,~ <-'- T^ -\sfii* rus *«K«t»A«i»rif»s ^*Sr^AlL i.WHL'Wni, ||||T — {juu„. *SJS'»?»Sa« T ***i .%ftaL^sBH\ 1 test»a»»* r «*» \*•*.Jj* in sum town! MM., ,» or ass*** , ,i.»at*d a****. AS» C»A»TKB>«I #-!OAHmG MANIFESTS, ^JTO <W \J «o«* papsr and ia *« J^U^^L^i w Hsgch IT, i«r. ^ W ANTH)^-A» XXFSXmCSD DJB T ApcUlClJBJ. »«s-. '*i;a-*'-Kri • ' WtG'SA^EB, '' .' stAT» R-ratiT, ^fln^si^riR'iiT, prrosjta jbate*'iifiJC«:..', W>g«,Mainf LM^OTOIS ndiraldJ-, Seyt So han^-ot i made-to-order, |a^\^•otlg^^^ 1< , tf ^Tl't'o*-t» !^5ttl *'I'' l , Chang*, -^ \,£iv^' oftA W 50 ' 8 S0W m HAJ '»- cDUSTfey *JU\ Merehaata lot\ Fourth of Wj- Ooousillteti tanpttsa at the lowest fats*. ^lio; * coaaplete variety of Powder from lite eelebratal \f^ard r»*.(v,-n* ^y^^J trials,, crin^mai ca>es«no;appru,.rM»^ : ....~— „. — ' name, totrethff with tuformaUon or* rriaunhl Batters, «« U>M fwoa in as* »*«' »«»n«p«r, > . lar-BiibstiriptioBs,*^ Ht »»hu*; 41. t«* »ft month* fniietnbtitciii,, , n bscfiber»,<»!io'sliouli write tSeir Bame ami u« t QW n. cowif »,,»od State whero they reside iV'WnlT, * To R. A. SBtMOEK, **,'.£' \ n * 'mpvUtor or th*s Hatjvual Polie* aa««tte, taS-WJ . Hew York Ctty. iK^tfl LAr»» SL'ttVETIIfU. THE SCBSCKIBia HAVING TU33 considerable experience in SarveyiBglaad in the Soath part ef ««. Lawrence county, assm HSS sarvten <• the prafsrMtors of Uw assMfstM *»*\-\ - \\^\CHAWJB im.' l,»»tfl»»,l»T. t***») .StrftGEON Ocean Steam NavlgatlonL •':,\• . ifrjjmtho^leii^SJi-AJissrteariJ'. , Twoi'GftBsof the g^oS'taluo(bit thghutiii} weight) of imptSrtittibri3 frOTtti EcgUttd abdixancq- .irito^tnop-ortftf NoWfyoi-k feby.riecail steinserSj I .mostly foreign.. Mr. j|crMedj,.rkp$r1ntsbdefit-0|: ; the-cini'grarit, depot aWaatie Garden, has Showcj. 'thitt of s.e.osd passeogem arriving here. durtngJlei-l last .six; months^ lS,4GU!. wereibrought tm-Bteamera^; -iflj-tho to eighteen months only tws werY^uni: pder tho united States %g, agidaBt 4S tmdey the Bfitlstt. fiss English ate now scry rapidly tjutl •Btrifrpiug us-instoaraers.. One of 6i« cotemporai rtes-saya that,at trA»ww.entttero4reiiolc8« than thrfca jbohdrtd steam propellera, ranging ftottt one tnSM»»na to fifteen hundred long, fcniidy, ims OB the Clyde awd lit the porta of Gw*t Srit- »'w. Tins Britiab. Bteatt e»Mpne b«ildet» were; never wore ban than at Tjrenetit. Side--wheel steamers a« apokea of ta likely to be wholly au-' p*riieded^-Bo vfswat of .that description being coustniettd. Meanwhile our shipyard* are desert- ed, and icarealy a single si«*m*hip of an; tixe is building in the UniUjd States. their shouts ^0 longer, HatkJ Tbelt»ho|»ei,,, their spurs, And wprri horaeaiWhWajfeha fhl ravjnei;' . ; . the old Wait TaylfflV ho neves telt-lds peatt ' Porjt rrasftigwriow- tadml the air with crie*- echo them. They strikj? J, into.; .niadne^B, their iderawijj'-to «^e deadly sifter?the battle, •thai; ^as[»diatheiJ,. ,•- ght toseo'that jonngmar} liSfj w Aji^KwHi o*»» Tasia7aa««s. was*. •** KsT«»», JCBtWlt BUKJst, *MM«« jm \ Br. natrwui he la *»H*l» eat****. « PU hwnfc JO» witneaa witboot g*°*«f' \jj Ws*tiM! reply- ^, '— Htafistart, May; aittehsad of his Madron, .dashing' neres9 •th&v&e, four yarda-p advancft-ot-hls foremtst' rrj30» shile iongaii* djifc, bshiBa'.hmi stretched tho solid Jwoflf teawlorj-arjd their.ia^eds. - <r , •. i ' Throughthe-wltidowfoitb»elmidaeorpcgleitius ' o? ennlight fall, they. HgP *e &<#&<* tassel on tto «Ip' the* glitter-ion thw upraised sword, they ulm mtaa the dark horseanfthiaridcr-with lifHenm I clow, theywteai. the battery, yon, i*e it,aboYa Khofaithcr bank of tlie, ravine, i f owniug death fronj' every muscle. \| _,,',,', . , „' Near and nearer, up arjd on f Never heed the death before vou,tho8|b it is ewtala. Sever mindi the lqa». thOBth it fet|f*ihk Bat tip to bank and over tho cannon, hurrah! At thUt dread mo- «enf, jo*t as his h«* »*** f o» aie«h«rge, Hay inmsiiai use* the sword of tiie br**el0Be onw*. right, turns again ami »*ds his owft soul written ittthefircot8acket*aeye. To bl» men once more he turna, hla hair flo** Ine Imek behind bim, »e powte to tfie eaMOti. to SI »teep b»nk Wd kther certwift deatk, »nd •» ihough invitingtbaWtmeand all,toSi bri«W feaat, he \•!»» ' ,i , \Come.\ • i ' JdsjMitroor The English papers n;e repeating many uf. the sharp and brilliant sjarings oi the• lata Douglas] Jen-old. Among the j iest of the nqmher, .may be I included the following, which appeared in the no- tice of the de^effledii) the London Mhentenm.-^ The orticlobeara-inter lal evidence that it is from Thackeray's pen: -J\ 1 \\ ' - | Hb Wwas|aQ- steel' points,—and Jus ,ta]k woe like squadrons of laMlra in evolution,. Not one pun, we have heard, M to be found |n his writings. His wit stoed neaterfe poeticiancyjtiiah his broad humor; ,! The exo^dsitiVeorifusiOn of his tipsy gen- tletnafl| i»ho, ftfterBBrMttig' the door for aa hour •Witii his ; latchskey, m u badk and pclairqa, \ Bj , JoYel sorae^Stpiar.il'-haa stole^-^stolen—the itey-hole r 1 comes ai i ear farce as «iy of bis iiiasf trations. His cel^bia ed definition of Dfigrhagsa as ?* Puppyism cprrip to matorityj'\IobksJ*e•» happypnn,r-bnt is sJokettb)g-far jpgre.deep .pd. phHosophic. Betwaei tifls, ho'weVer« ajw Buca fanciee^i bll'dejcrfe if ^t'M0M^\ land Boft^'triat1f%o%fiS to !«»«», ft.iangha with-allarveaF— mmmaA^m^eaf ^ ^ ' One of those rflywrig%J#BO|Oecopjed Old] Drary, hnder fiiei% ich,a|»w'stwhom he wage* a ceaselessfffl'T-of/;*! r feraSf, ^.djesoribipg bim-: self as suflermf* frrATSrier-of thfi*rain. '•Oow>, IS U UOUipaUUU VI gU,LI,.u.v..v, »....„ purpose of killing me, politically, and electing a Black Republican President in 1860. It is done by a faction in Lawrence, who qbey the abolition- ists and abolition societies at the North; such men as those thut manage and support the Tribune, the great fountain-head of the mschief. They can have no hope of being admitted with the Topeka Constitution. It is impossible.'' One of the Free State Meu—\But sir, many of us-th'mk we have a well-founded hope of being ad- mitted under it, as we expect to poll an over- whelming majority of the settlers in its favor. Our institutions aie not treasonable; we merely ex- press our sentiments through the ballot box; we make no collision with the laws of the United States; we intend to vote in October under Uni- ted States law, which we should uot do if we aim- ed to previously supersede it\ Gov. Walker—\ You have no hope whatever, air, in that Constitution. This Congress is oppos- ed to you ; you should wait and vote on the Con- stitution about to be framed ; your people of Law- rence have tried three times to provoke me to bring the troops here; first they refused to hold a delegate election in June, took possession of the polls and prevented the citizens from voting, and now have refused to accept the charter from the national legislature, but have framed a city gov- ernment themselves—an act of rebellion against the government and laws which must be suppress- ed. Your people, under pretence of retnbving dead horses and cats from toe-streets, have taken the position ot rebels against tbe government of tho United States, and actually compelled me to come here with the troops; the sheriff has made the assessment without a right to do so.\ Free State Man—\ But, sir, we bold that peo- ple should not be taxed without representation; we have not been represented in the territorial legislature; we regard the payment o^this tax as contributing money to usurpers to provide fetters for our own limbs. In \June many of us were not registered, and consequently would not have been allowed to vote. I was not; no census was taken in my neighborhood. Gov. Walker, after an interval of silence—\Let ^ me get a cigar, sir. Your Topeka Constitution is an imposition upon the people, sir. It contains a provision guaranteeing the property right in all slaves now in the territory. But it is done cov- ertly. Why not openly avow it ? \ Free State man—\That clause proves that we are uot robbers; that we arc disposed to regard the property right to the. few slaves now here; but which will be removed by their masters be- fore it becomes a Free State. It caunot be done covertly if, as you assert, the face of the instru- ment shows it\ Gov. Walker now. assumed the position of champiou of the Constitutional Convention, de- clared it to be tbe hope, object, and aim of the abofitiouists that they should form a very ultra pro-slavery constitution, in order that the nation- al Democratic party maybe drweninto opposition; and then elect a\ Black Republican President if 1860; \but their expectations will,probably be disappointed.\ He madetherfiargeunheard of before, that Free State 'men>-a*fprOTl6us elections have voted by proxy—one man ffirWRing twenty- five or twenty-six votes, and throughout* a three hour's conversation, showed himself the wary pol- itician rather than the statesman. Hd also reiteiv nted his former promise—that the ballot-box should be returned to the people in October; hi this he is no doubt sincere. I represented to the Governor that a cowardly and brutal attempt tri/assassinate me had been recently made byjMefntorial officer, in the pre. sence et a TJmttArStates commissioner, also jus. tice of the pescey who .refused me a warrant for his arrest; also that a sheriff present declined to take the ruffian into custody, and asked hhn what means I- now possessed for Ieg^-reiiress. He fiankly acknowledged that he did not know. ^- ? ' ' \ ~:.1-*»1,» trnnnq . still,16 8 very metropolis by one that perpetrates a deed that belongs to the early annals of our history. It is to be hoped that such visits will be rare in future. •The Country of the Ottawa. [Prom the British Whig.] There is no such standing disgrace to Canada as the general ignorance which prevails of the wonderful country above the old town of Bytown, on the Ottawa River.^ Here, for three hundred and fifty miles, more natural curiosities and more wonderful sights are to be seen than in all Amer- ica put together ; and yet np one, except 'when journeying on business, will give himself the trou- ble to go and see them. People travel from all parts of the world (Canada included) to -visit the rocks, mountains and cascades of Switzerland, and ' no one thinks it worth his while to see the great- er sights of Canada, though they are almost liter- ally within a stone's throw of his own door. Many years ago Dr. Barker wrote a Series of Letters on » tlie Country of the Ottawa, which Letters were read and praised in Canada and copied into tbe New York papers, aid it was then hoped that public attention on this continent would be drawn to the beautiful country described; but the hope became a mockery, and the same ignorance pre- vails now as was general then. And yet there is no difficulty or personal fatigue encountered in reaching this great country. A railroad fakes the tourist from the shores of the St Lawrence in two hours to those of the Ottawa. Thence by stage, steamboat and railroad, be is conveyed to the Des Joachim Rapids, on the Deep Biver, 60 miles above Pembroke, and\ nearly 200 from Bytown. To proceed further he must seek his own convey- ance, or take passage in some lumberman's canoe, of which dozens are-gbiognpand down the stream every day. _ An Expensive Freak. [Prom the Boston JanrnaL] A few days since, a New-Yorker, who -was a passenger-on thePaSSumpsiqSailtoaditi Vermont refused to be \*bOther^a % with 5 the checks which were given him for his tickets, and allowed-them to fall upon the floor, where, he told the conduc- tor when he came round to collect Jhem,'.They would be found if bftwanted.fhem. Thesuperin- tendent happening to be on board, the case was submitted to him, 'jypeiilie tojjdthe passenger, finding that reasoning had no'effect, that he must either pick up the checks and give them to the conductor, pay bis fare anew, Sf.get out of the cars, which at the time were hot very -near any hotel. The New-Yorker was furious, declared that the checks were on njin'ecespiry tax on the passengers, he would tibV^brrjitto it,'and would expose thp company fH&e-BBrrspaperBj&c. Not making anything %f his ^&tel^\rl8wever the New-Yorker4S:#a&lW«y.hiaAre—$4 20 for himself and ftdy—f^fljerSiaa' pick np the tick- ets or be put oat ofthe eara <• • • • ssaVf ^ -'v. The Cltizenaliipbf the Negro. To the abhfiaEticle'ialhe Bostotii£aio.iSeporfer upon theDred Sbott«a?% Charles Ef, Adamsfnr- nishesanappendi^, jcailmg attention to the re- uTarkablaiact tbatilireeof the first five Presi- siys JerroH, ^Hhere'Js no. tije luck to\ gather about him fond associations.-— Bjow.little be knows, unconscious messerfger, what hfc is saying to mo! .,.- .....-..-., ., , i ' ranriamed birds there are, I know ffb|\hd^r trjaoy. ~ i But I have ray boofe. I shall find out every one of you, whose riamos are there written; aid If-there be anything worth imparting, our r^addrsdutli have the benefit, thereof, , u C- \\ Charles Srinttawr to ttantlon. v ' \ ; JiJayarATaykir toa recent letter ft^rol^doo,- t lates tlfe following anecdote of CharMa Satoer: ' \^iSdouier'ishere.-dt murI|yV;Hetef,'in ; egsmtStreet. j bare BQt:yetfeOTi#i* , i t * < « n a 14 iends'^ihehoislookijjg Yotyifell.—-No Amer- i an has everhcen more popttlarin England than I iimner, and he is'at prisent floating on the top, d 'afre/omnoWsbdety* IbeardShe other-day, '•4 ^ood story .ofta: arrival hereJ - He entttwdhw j loston, and was aawrduiBhrse^ down by m testmorainsoiioof*hfllatter-catoO ^^J,\ 1 \^ UaoddMc«it]tMU,ii Ac oo«saM**7 up th« bawk, tollowlng May'* » -»«- » banner, and atrikiauypanlj ^^*»fti*sa*fffcCrfl thromgh tbe roar of^Stoki trWt of freoay. *' Come.\ ' It, that word i^waahelfresh WfAyiVt* was Suftot^on MiibotiiAisto- \Aye aye,\ a the .«...„-„_-..„ , . . _ «os«(»fe*8B, We qdoia a portion: .-, .» , ,., » rMce ;82K part' Of^hfe foregowgreyiew which relates to the dtizenship Of ftee negroes wasprin- ted, oin-e^htiofl'has%en J dii^tedTO''ttlmsB of the Eeametttsiien out of ithelime.ncan *lgale C^aopeaie,,J>y the British shipofSritJaCewiird in 180i, whioh was th«begmpirjg*f^hediffi®dty • betweeh the tJrntedStatesandGreaiBrjtain,tbat iflamatelyled to the war-of \fftXS. Thettommit- po »„* _-•• {-.—yi-.^ja not know - • teeot-theHonse-of c S^reswfatiyes,-«owfioni«ie ^lyaeknowledged ttot he Ad BOCTOOW. ,^ TO |errjed^ep(»te4t0ithe Honse^flat Tib Governor, with ^JJ^fSSS Sl^hiop^.lyp^vei., as fisMHoqiv ^camped m West ^^^^JdSoS nvm^rmtlraBeument No. 8 willow,,that M P. _ . . • L. AL^Mtnnafi if anVthmiT 'WflO *vr*<, i /u'W-M ft5'C : ' '{ S it* Wbi G^izotand^ob|#«p e *» Pi talk otmrn^w** ? f ™ abusing »f# P d P* riBns^iwe row jn.tha.ssrne.^-™^ • — • , ^SfwW,' , h»wIt.»^^^esorJls.' ^M ajeudluipr,or*i\?himmywok.ad- santage^ The fe»1*w i he<ver eaw Tom Dib- 3™ that wortb»W*^>«** aa ' 8Wl S wtherEaidj d&i2 Wfctl^r • ?M!3 Sdie,.«M*«^ff ll ^ k - , ^ SaBan ' \I'navel al CTBfiaeneft h«* »lp»WtthegfflBea/' -\t .^f^tafsl n^m^ty- and, its .BrtnlW. .;' ,. - jitomtnelttallKiaaEecoroVJ ' ' SU years eirice, iiliohio; there were fery few agritattahfl Tnatmirh^TidW-therilWA^iWanse number. Tie '«e»|'of raaictiitits W doing the * mo#er with ^ShorsesV't*? %$j^?S tf so, it must save ^I^^tfS^al Irfe Now #e- fcufaw- OH\T{* rmp *S* v^TZ rial Executive, which threatened if anything vraa done by authdrfty of that eharter adopted by the people, \he should, if necessary, employ ie^ j whole force»of the United States Gbvernment'to Ijnt.a^toptoit''- • '\ - ^/' Tboiaorder of a Fugitive Slave in IlUnoi*. THE DEAD SLAVE'S HEAD COT <5tP AND SENT'. BACK TOrMBSODM. I A correspondent of the Chicago 7WS«8», writ-' ing from Nashville, HL, .npjei', .date of dvi$ T $0v gives the details of the-mwwer of arfogjtirof slave • near that) place, wmdAoooimt'of which has al- readsheerjgfeeni} •*..'\{••-''* •' '• * - .'' \ I had hoped fer Pie boner or the eotmtry \tiiia no. adoount of: the tofflsaotion wonlrl hesgiTea by the T«bliopr#. Hiving gamed .admittancetheffi it is bnt'right that the wholo truth should be knowii, and that the guilty party; and they ateSe^ 'shotitd e'affer the withering seem and contempt of aninjlignant public; - .'»«*':'•'--' I f bVee negross ba.d escaped from. M'WQur^iand ^reward ol fSciO for each or $800 for ajtiasof- ferad-ftwliheir reeairery. They-werSphllued'w'Sih- irjnt legal process. The ptrrsuera having 'passed them, were^etiiijrung toNashYiDeij»h6nfl»ef«» ties meu The testimony gftferi sjatp they were ordered to surrender, when thoy rushed qpoa their prrrsueifs, and Hftbsfield.fired ii| igfJaerence, kilhBg^nB xd ,|he aegraes, , Iha- Btatehieht \was made that the npgva raBuing.uporj. Mansfield was inelos^ fjpntiguity to Mffl^but the shot Were very much scattered. v _. - ., . • ,. I aminformed; by a^mtieman of cWiKblBty, thAtduriog-the p,^oa<iss.M &§ inquest he, tia|i- penta^ lb' wwojiorlaiteaflf on^ of tiiaaf ~ t \ 4 \*» l ajmgTprinted'aoeument No. 8 vrill, |how, .that [•threeoi'1ihetnB\r« ! : taken (nammg theffl) ' are'e'dj- Ijgeha'ieftftef^rnited Statea.' fy^g&mtfadFib- iferredto, it appears that tw.oof : these ihreemen w. * * fithout *«W^»«l U ^t1o\gafor*\ar^ihefo^ fe B ^T^iL^Sed, and he asfes for youl\ W Jwice J« Sli. the cool'reply. After E^rlhh.tad SSa** <»>• ^ter cine VgcC I? 8to S,?eredand* little aggravated; \Sir &ti U^m^'t Sng&as ealW to £*o« t» \Bhow bim op,\ repeated Mr. Swn- l^ Thea* astonishing facts were no doubt at ^communicatedto thelandlord, for^ejext S..I Morning /W announced the arriTal of \Hto EwHency tic HohOrabto Mr. Sumner at llawi- ^'lJHotot 1, ' .^ .„ I«U ExptdmoBtrp ** Hlto. ^ i Our reader* are aware ^HJ^SSl, Wid, Viceroy ef Hrt*itt^ m 2tiirZl C*Wtm 0 mento^*w«he ^*+l ES Lid to exi« bttht _«!^t*»iOT~ *£ ^tate et'laree there *»•)»» beabquleightthousand rthft^ia^Iedmten;- Supposing thst they are •^ffiSS *itt#ve, la nloneirpaid for labor, K'W be about *>70,000 only f m that ,K1I wffl be * net akehite gain m them ofTnore ll^tfromaiiooariefannuin,, tf we took to tbe ^ie Btatee,- the amvine will be mneh greater, Urn United Sutoaflat l«r«e, probably ti»« labor * 000,000 able-hoflied men waaYed dqrfng two r ihioh has three: pentegia «*^»ijW^«-^mp»^wragw. I now, w T »_ ww-p r^-s \\gji ^ rt^ teforowttsnv HsBsfield was asiratted, what was hundred and ^feu?MTme5l\hD ^^'S&VW'&teltototrSto- mqst save the labc* « »v?o« W\X^«\u*'„I. S in » ihir>h is of themostYalaetothecoinmuhify, A« one tn-* of bartdcnaaO,, ifyg A ,,,, [^«M. S scia»t1n» t tti»t essiig»*«l*» •• \\* • exist Itttbt l«s*»»v t »i«wpaw\\' ||tU( eroedtiiil, ***«*. *****:?*\* ** (ttootbstathe yew. twenty BuUkina oTo ing, too, it taade m laving of moon 1* tb»<aYin«. Th** dern citiUaajBon, * feraooe to *• awn already r«sVrr*l,,»» the taodametoaof - rural ae JWI. - m. 'IS^SS^SSS^^um^ Thl» » equal to «»?ey to Ian fmvmm. »«• «*•• lelaar^fivejiewt Bat the ty no raeaoa tb« »«DtA part of w<»fW|o»l»,tBO«rits»- b?ib«ttl*»aV*^f>«tf«»- orraauAet«*•».. Web»« awlnj hsTf»|>ortiea«<>feta> mdl pons uwuck a*«9 \'M >»™» •\\ -\p^fii pr ing which is ot the mast talaeto the communify, ftBlafikRepubu'cait,orarreadriegrO, t The next morning the grocery rabble iearped the corpse out for burial, singing awl drnmraing on ftecoBiB thetiineof • OtifieKeci.' ftjbiequebt. iy, a gart of this aatae tre* asaigted tt>« kidnap- per In, exhuming the body, when thrh**i in* drawa across the corner of the coffin, mi %tfij an as was dtaiTerodfrom tha corrupting waains, and being plaeed in A nmA o| ^Wt% mm taken to Miaaouri. , • The honest German from whose »hep the ax j WAS taken with which to decspKatothe dead body ' was w borrifiad at th* Art tnat he refused to're-, ceivo.lt again uyim the prsaniswa. - The aSMr, however, la not yet over fleW*** Ctrart holdi Its taaatoti next month—»« »• *•» gee if the people «m suffer such vtfaaiw to,** peipetrat«»i is» tb* raidit wtth' ' ' lHdtttoa* Scfua Oksatsj k»a M«r u, SlSs»«^iit tion mtordicting^nc.hsrb» ( 8rid>water3 to,Britim wraedrvesselAjla^aaiJTOeiHdfiy, after, fhe^onjt. 'ra'gei t^d-m'That no cfrctrfflslsuee rnigMbe , »j«vb- tirig'to mark its character, it hadhaen previoualy .aBoertatojed tl^tnhe ; seameh demanded were-s«». -ti?^of.lfe¥«ifedi8tatBS,':' p. 6. This-pweltastii. tiQn,w^M U n|^gne ( d*y^ii^^^#er|J«s ' retarybfsbtfe., • '. ,:. .'-,/'.„ . ; <,-^,.,,. ;- ^mffiirj^ltfhisletter^W \msi^^^^4m^miii0ii»^ ^e Brifeb *ere-cM8»n8'0tthe IfrdMStatee; andJbvMoi^ TOe,iahUl6rrkl demaridupoathe Bntishgdy- owment, said-- 4 ! hAYe the hcinorto trakmltyou pad*, pp. B, 10, Sft, Aif : W*rM¥-rei®laCBi ; are to fte-Jpublio .documentsprinted by ;Orderof j the Honseoi \M^^^tmM^i^kssiSm 1 of the tentii CWress, , Q ti^.apjwsarA^ijrijBnW ffiatthrdeofthetoffiveTreeiaen&^toeUta'Udl States, twftofthetn «en who {sadtaken «gteat &prst.«att|! iai4>arf4ag;ow^t^^ systerq^ot^?«ttu«r4^ia:B «f r^JoriMl tsStt as cWwflsof tho tJnitedSta^; buttiat Uiegovarn-; raent made tho'defenca of their rights as citizens a-auae for puttir^the tiatioftin aloe^eAttitaae ; <&o)>a^th«F««a. ;, .. : ;,, , the Chester nunete^w^&itfffrwid:' 4 l^e theat harrest w no* ended, ana the nwchiae* have commenced the work of threshing pat the grain. As it i» threahed and measured, tile yield i» fojfiid to *» beyond expectation. From o*e- smiJlpiBoaof ground on which only dx liWlii* of seed we sown, one hundred w d at**ty-*air tHiaheat bare been obtained.\ And thara areothatt eao^ertraordinary. ^CtowtaBd ff<raj</notices atKiilWwpQ. ta(«M for future delivery, at at;««*»%«shet Tbe North^^low* !&**&&*, «W*~.. «W» never heard arf«»flw«ri pttjWat csfsoe •• travelers tsj«''sWa»s*a credit IMMWSV 5-» with this MM*. The wt**mmmm hi&tj fATorahta, .M two* tor-tw*,^***