Newspaper Page Text
BY W. S. JONES.
TEEMS.
THE WEEKLY
lIfftOMCLE *V PK^TINBL
IS PUBLISHED EVERY WEDE£ftY, j
TIIUEE BOLL. _S per Aims.in; !
.
two WHFN v.\n i:. j
4DTin
u* within TIiREB MO CHH a ft-r tlw !
comm;, {teen: art, cf tjje
S^bbcri-”
it* CCVBS or-fUJUj ~u se<.dfc*u|T
Motions, SIX ime -n■ r - **. huccnt rer .. &• |
year, fcjufffuralut
SIX ODfflEft FOB ’Tfcj* DOLL AH 3 ■
o* a fr© tsopy tu •! 1 Who may afr. ill Pttf etb
•cribs... and Jjprwtfd * th* Wpy. Tl? T‘p
per w$ u> bo inst-ar lta be ,t atstbis**t or.iwes tb- 1
Tl* b- LUAB- 1* D-'t.tr.- j, f. ,/r. , s . N'or wi
part* Os Clu!> b teCehoo Tie %hoU ta *”■>’
•one logetkr*
THE Cii3oWlCfo£ A TSNirlfTUi
BAfIT As<l>
At 9 * pubiid *; j vt dsu ‘-i.ioe. ml Ci*vUo<( to 3£h
UAIGY P.VPRK: if e n> 0 >r.bAW
per,.-*ou hi sriv*- And Dwuh f
I Tfi ilefeveil e ; ej-j -sJotk*.
1U WKE&LI PAH. . *’."• Dollas*. in ad
vaoee. and ?ve Do up if payimsnt hedeiAyor
rKr. *nTßr.
Rate* for Weekly Airentaemois.
ORDHUKT *‘lelTl'’ . |TI A* t \ nr.** B
week, in D*iy, Week **. W ~lt j gp-.e* and
tal/cea<e per )in.', tor <& oirsertfon
iJrti iiL NgncrS. 7Vn Ctntry rime, for ihsflri
tasort lour cud EtgfsCenl. per Uno for each tubs*,
qo-tt ir* niou,
DttrLeTEo AmvreTftini.-crs, Tm Cats per
line, for e>.cL in*-t ‘on.
Maf-ttaijh, Irr.T.s. and Ftrr.rF.ai Xoticfj
Fifty Ctr t • -..0c Omr, i a;ts, „7> f’-jtt pe
line.
” 1858.1
HOME INDUSTRY!
A NEW era:
MENDENHALL'S
NEW AND IMPROVED
HAJSTt) LOOM !
Patented m 1857.
‘I'meUHiJI <i*nn.d-.pi-.>b - (femnw
J ami M’ hr >ni 3dac©d wi*t* a jv*rPi profit
uix tery ! anu ‘il Ptu-ut .m m iheftta i. lilrh i dc
.)pnpiu*<l by y p roa fINWn * k ri of A t<M ** ■ fftra, ajid
•rill wtitv e easily, to tln^tv > atl, p
tay, w th facu tv nuu • ar< than tig i* yaida cun
ejjroflnew) ©n the nl4fiuihJoii*d L on
Thf Macbln4n nt th-’ ih** hiuip'ft” ■+>■ • ;u t c
arga*t oceupyintf - *k *i at ef4* by R t>* •! t'• * ,i .. l ,
and ean b- kfps .n pc.fet r t!;.. ] m
blacare. It- *T’ inu * J iq iiVit *o
tiictanfl. tJtib*- .hv or i th i t vtar w Tw
•hnttla, oparaf • tc*k !]••• ur : <*
offtfc ffrr Il i* Iho.for -, tfc- yiHM. nd. w.tL t*
tfrefttew* ropf'norio*’ u* tbatDieaC **lnnt*ra.
It h# Htjaug#*! that. * , 4d t Uiffh -i>r kin b> $j bn
*in lx- m>v*n <• tha aavne web, jui MU*’ irtrit
oDUe-dp’ fffndiU ‘ any a- -i* 4.iabelc .14 be n.wU*
TAfbautfQUbN-di, for ax^hD^
61ng Plain, Double Plain, K.cji
tiiCky JealiH, Satuiet, Hu:ring
Bone, Blanket Twill,
beamless Hags, &c
Gill L rea4Uj produced |'h se con rt.fjt.* 1 mojjt
ueeful and ,J vb r l<’ ti
Jhib I no* wa Pafr nu and, hi Jarwbiv mvr. amt >. 5
le cwn f® at tli<* aUirfbrf W H ORfFi*iN, j
Broad Hire<t, so nlioin *w*t Q Ui.U*r I i-d ad : ift- -.jpr
anqu'tm mu t t*A.t-.Hsed WI Xfl-f M. Hi *L,
A nfw tr Ma 1 tfLr
<i M.: ‘ .- < r >.'S j
UNRIVALLED
sEtfut imitmifu
jlfttK
FAMILY AND PLANTATION USE.
rirur R . ti e - Vj-m. n- {I ■.ON j
| me iA.V . a) l;uth tee U..- 4 ted |
Print p-i |i e 4M-H. •-*•., :’•• . Y -k
CU le-ton lur. .< r t, .ft.
tJolumOH, 8. r Hoprtwgr-ri A •-. .
Aiiiit.’stA .tiv'.uK.p fid.i'-.ru'; lyo'i
Store, t4d Mro*.: rett.
ri.XX rIiHKAD •)! f.anp. ~■ Si ,t i’WI n,
duwim Mkli D rOiL Uu IQi
App'V r a topy Sioi-> CV Cy ‘ •
rr*l bT rnljl. : * ■|ytvr
FO It SAUE,
1 HLIiABLE fLiM'ITIOi
Ibalonaiug to tbi> e.Ntat* of Jvi-ulf MAer,
k-r-k-w-H omfix
Tbraatuda half in .L* \m*w * Z-bul.ta, I iU{i.
3a , and tmriwu m lea nath Gi *Ui
ONE TiIOCSiLM) ACRES,
AkeekHWefV ji.->,r. .... n in. wa .th pr ptjily
ditched, l*** l 1 ;ht acTiv* A co;.al<l**i iol%
po>ti*iiuft e UnCi.-r duj,’ iu,d'',i'or;? S2O.
au 1 tbat vvhlb b**a be lin edit vatloa ** v*u to be
vrell adapt and tt :h#=owiiidCyteon, cfvti., &c
The nt!r 1 act - Itv 1 nd ia bgr Tfered out tUr F.Abt
and doutttbr L.ktn rfhtPlhe Farm U inter
•porsed with CJncT brandnw, w.tl a a paid td k9<*pl?g
atW to UtlleAiyfaW
<)n thawUt'lr , 4 iioua 0* <
Jle vobrgia ami
the pioaent fr*?, pntrlia>c ■* *rb roQltjrU to pall and
4 t;. \V . 1 1.NEK, ( gj x *' 8
ap%s wTJrtt H J *>.*!, 1 j
BOOTS AND SHOES.
IA DI EN fine Heel SLlPHEfffl.
* •• Koest|e
• • •• 1U O A l TBR:*
** ’* Lace ” *’
fineTutnp El 4 lHWn’fi,
•• • ti ts
“ * l'jggefi V
Meti’ri Graiii-d and K'j’
Ia lies and Miwe*
“ . I ft f RS'-'t'l
OUT* If or aodCa IdewH F )OTS
Ji. re’vuo fcr •*•© hi CL*’ R4iC A Uo\ At.
JrLi <U w3 _■
EXE UVJXU A b -ri ALL.
IHE pioperty, mmpiieaij tbe whde ee
tate of Mv Joel Grawfor ~ ce - ed, tat# ot E-rlj
•K>uotr Ga.Nwln t> no 4 si puttee auclon on
.'ny. Uie ifitfc ocDFcSM:*Li. ccz- °
u*#v ry I'wvate cnu. • t to ii.
Oak xn& Hk-ory LAND on Spring
eivefc, mihe tb of h.aiy esa*ty—l 000 Scrts
, *'!hCC cr<* of Pin* „AND. ‘.Titit. V ip Mill snd Ketl
leuCV 0” C;um. ‘e. cresit la tb* :•. dlsmdt. --f
3 0 aotes olasred
■too. rjln ffiesu duirietot Oiltner ccuayr, -am
■.ng'oi Loo tin Uiii ‘.i3tTntad vl9intteWtt
i -.rif t >’( *ftid * e ’ ‘j*- ... . .
Ain-. 9 - .S£|>M>‘.. •! “■ -'hat P*r*a s.u
deesaeSd , , ,
Ter.u of eale —Oae-tbird on delivery, tu ta. .1 u.
%oe year, aud ins>WiW-- UJ tw.) ytjrs--ifce two k/ae:
‘•earu.s ‘uterett from tetf of delivery
Jam vs !*lchano v \
CiliAb F. CRAVN*\>RD.
May IS. 183 e. - w “ -
fIXKAVnJ OH toTOLUN,
ABttiUiiT Sot at MALE S’ ‘ . 0..1. b.-
loagk.® toC J. C*bliUt tl 1 0 i y .no i °f
modlutu stse liu wbu p<* u the tereh ad. hu;.
soot tr\x te up o its etiOk, ud the k m thei <oki* j
affec sd w.tb **’ ‘‘ wsrrt ” - u I
inv one woo iUr.nuni aM *** mt gnmmqy uiteniwt* l
tou which msy teed to b#t J
Wtf AUifil>ia,-it* j
* UAiiAWAY
L'HIUI th* *os.;..r, -11 tie t.-u ‘ N , -- ;
r Man, AWI* N yh * 5 “ {,v v ‘‘ “ I
His com|*L*A.Hn i* h *** ■ T. w ‘. A*. .* • j
weighs about one V ’ •* ‘ ‘ ‘
rroo* Hit “n, “w 1 ®® v< * \ * J
uomoaiue \A V v swbc 1 Ji’t , j
crown k*i au : tL >i. iwu .
live re to in. oo my ; •■’V-a u 1 a ‘ 0 ,u
Fo-reluui, Tou Tol ars i- ...
whore i may for aim. xmo wUi give t ty I
found in tbe *ny*wbte '*; t*:.i t
tMnp*iug : o make off eruk h'ui Wi h >nu..*ei t ig xrtc J
eonvtoi way mi oh vOrvu'ico J* s Atbt
t|EN ‘ AMfN F.
poweltow. . Atwila? 15- > m > ** “ ‘'■*
FLANTaTIOM FOR SA.LB
Ii HE fcub crlher ri offer jg iji -*.e b ANT A
TION io Glay eeuuty, Gw. con.stua g a>> j 7c j
acres—aoout Acre* yoc-i i'-vei i- i.._ |
Uoua* and, ajc;-ew,.ai Hvv- an*kiy rv vU U-ia\ er sown
Bnr $ ao.es sue vs >\;t tie* <•. . , I
isbfi wtt JA -. DRILIL j
tor sAUib,
, PLAMTATI< oi-it .in Land *• ‘
timbered . *ooacre*’ 4---o> * ue be ,
oea Uiauo Covu i. Muu- A v * ‘
wivatury DweUiujC. ,'tais ir*’ -p v i- rco.j* -* ... ’ ,
ffrapisc*w. t i4O teei I'flxx* KitCa.SD orwJto aloom
wo-slory Gotten !lease, G iril-wsfi,qpfinlherosu'-.i.igf,
arena •beprect.-o. wi-bs Wo'., oir* ,
raa^efur H 3ge ard Catt.e V!*h auk Jyatera r.
in large abuudsaase- A vucreboii’ thjr. , tor-a:toa
• oot m> *> ioard •> */ arti Georgiy Fur*b-. .
Icutar* • t-'*>u * .- . j
• ; Savan- A. * v. WOl ULr. *
Vr
.
rll E uofiMttgv r ’rofteee• to CU R• p R \TO Y
every ie-cv pti” tie : b j ■*;,* i'tpicr’ ‘> iv*
Sue ft--nth of o Pe ut* vr a re -*■’ by ‘r*eCt *
Uneo Potet. Gr • * -> <4% . V Mog • -urn esc
be ita aaj-w'ere hr r - H th and. itr
jiv.ag Ui o% 1w . miU'ui *• ty, 1
an* pvd t tty 1 v f try Nag r-*
sft.cted win L'. ‘,> v. - Trne- _ ay
saettefewTory ocesre-d.
L Kx C Mo.>eg,
Msite/Gicmfis Grtne rwaely
Taw t u certifv tbk. ta* *. iad a negefi uen ts
fltetert wit* l o • ;a.i i 3 bye*
verel p-'yeevLe* wiiboia any care. *.vSe 3 te apjn ad
U G. Bnxme t r t ,-a y “which cured lRn Be
•till Virrn* sad In (wCw he^.“'.
Jan ?1. itsic *IENKT CHk-XPiaN
tttO) Point, u’ , iL.p .?.
ap -w ‘ an 1 ‘sm
Ban two Bank.**
4 L u j m a a*-*i *ud F*rn
/V tift*A >i)> rs - -U&* a _ V *.u4 ja
Tract*. at *s©Vm iUJ# *?r w> *' : t pdS.!>to*r A>o.
ftu to of *.* Tsxa* Ltai* with riaar
titl** is oo*r off c at * • T*rv *W r *vc at the tfc • ttjocr**
LacdO*9ce. ta * -•
Bills of th Aatjfsia, aAL&u. tea the
Chariesto* tau afat4ei Ba •, * u
4-n in parttetit at |iar vi -e S*r as tahs a'.-
ee, and be c *6t ca* ft- •*•-■ wed
Parse*: • das.rous ot r-min.r Ciahicp
■f- investee n til - ‘•* * * th*“.r jxteraet to Cfc-tA!
“—***-’ jU*V£j fc t* W()s .”
Llud'SVyDt e.-d Bee t-vtac *.oser.
jlMlwwii
‘ sou rae** ‘ Aoi • i*- - 5
K -fc'-iBY#-
Aupusta, Go.
‘ I.H Raebecrlheroffer* formic %- unrivalled eciiectica
1 of Southern PRt'lTa-idtjRSAMES I AD Tkr-i
eortentiog tn part of Apple*, Pear*. .*ee ‘-•• • ”- r - “*
MedarUtee, Aertpot*..Strawberries Raspocrtee, jnp* .
Pin.Rdt'a, ‘.*reaa.ent*J Sarube, Ac *
OutiofMtf fn l ai-f . tnpMC
(Al Tree*, etc eith li\ Uil Prapm Cfcifeat M’ M*’
w >4 b* *ect u, a,. apphcaata by call tree cf
j<l|tt£t Adireea O REDMOND, Augusta. i*
tfC Ouunfn* tun-j. sad anltn ri*-iTrd. ty
(,B MKI-MasWc u J Broad-suact, Ai*u ,u
J TidiWAW
iTi NT ‘ i;:>i(’l\ :•
The Liver Invigorator,
FRrtPARBD HT pR.
J ;* i *"©a - ami daily
1 1 toMierti it <•**-
|'*iy oa.fr-a:. Wen the firat don© giving ar^>.
1 (<r- than opfc re-, need toeareanTfc. on
f L T*r ■ f-*jn tba w Jaund.aeor Dy>ppp
l to acr qj a uead<iche of vrkiob are the reatEt .
X. .ft * --* re^atexor-<xt *te
I a'i w-i <rfofuiiufuncuoavre*
-rtr. * lUy d< vo*opß <L Th*
-a* r. a. ~t r- \ d-or tho beilthy
1 - *. 4 ‘f'por tf Ka
_ . m*rr W' ath :atfan t the bowftla
I .*f *. * Ui. -ct, >i. •> antfer* in c* ife
> A 4 f. %n —%Fn k Lvt Ywiuf cease*: tc
A**- > f u> 4 •av e-of tbat organ, onact t’nr
i> i•u r - -a- -a * r W 4 -'udy r in a practice ol
j k , ’ vury jee’ ‘I u> Hod me remedy vrhert
. t ‘ *y*naoy ‘ derangt'enent- to
lir.at ti: re Cirij ia at iaat found art
**- <>rr r and v*■- I. v- /-S er. Tojaplau t In any
•, .Tftfcmt Vb tli|.&nfa ccnvicti. a
n-c ‘ Inaeo oy ul Skiving gnma
‘zt-aptO-i ’hzi f*art “EicL io aolnble for the ae
• v-rt.ta of it’ • ** ‘me Tbe-egems renwr
r or-b .and n* *r. f.<*ta the ayatew
>* ‘1 * ■ ea'* ; of bile, invleoi iUc
.(>’ * Tt eog • :e#t -•cell, D
■ e* > A wvw toW #T-d l_ *otbe vrbolfcrkacl.i
• -i* .ng be cais•'be dtaiaae, and effect
c*f a Car :''*! are vntCom ri £ ny u- diaavre
e- v .y Mineral Fo
Ob* ft r 4. s snffiorf t> reiicre in.
v 4 k -pi isingr wad •ont
** I*
y jt , takas r beCoro retiring prevent*-
o. - .kt at night looaeoa the bo wet*
* # 2’ - a*.d cur* r. ’•t’va’ neke
teta ’ r afu r each . r m care Dyspepsia
tr— • - v 4. r;xi£scfaia tv.J aiways re
;*.>. tr 0*49 n t r-i
•* “t e - j;r’c-r v £*motion remove,
-*e o ‘ >’ -n ‘ oakea a erne
v >a : yr* mrriCbeliCjWbilt
rc a r.re race for Ohoi
I\ ventrve c/ < Jr ’ iera.
1 ‘. >ot th* -occurence
t ana A*v, *r*3i * r i’ 7<e\.ev.k 2;! yi: of cl /e-oi
rs
4, r u.r 7 ©ne ry K*e lW - needed o * v y -st ont of the
“•>a< :.< f-. :ou-; toi Jh ndice rem<vea ai.
, f ’ ■ or unnatural r 1 cater from the
- 1 r&kr- ibor time etcre eating gives
v - . ;he ?ad *W ui*V ea io*>d d’gettt wclL
j. o*f<; ea'odfL mreK Obroui'. DlarrLc*
o w !at rffis ‘/hiU^eSnnimer and bowel com
>*-a-a Iy* da’BV- :te tLe ’fl^stdorfe.
t y> ‘ cur<* attarka caused by worms,
Mm vr -api If. ‘:hu i rep, there is no surer, sa*-
r .-44 •. remedy Lj f rhe world, as it no vert ails
i*. r <-Li n these statements ; they
i.c* j *o ‘.o*r facts. we can givo evld-nee
wi pravg w hile all who u s** ~ :t are -.dvliig their unan
In. .4 ’leeuneny In It, flavor.
‘.V ttlWi :nftoit•> plfciaore *n rccommetllng this medi
Autit a prevenive f-.r Fever fnd Ague, Ohiu I’ever
il*. r 1 t <>ver-, of a Bd'OCs typ. It operate# with <;er
A lg the -undieda of Dver Remedies now oflered
pto iX, :?i#e arendee we can to highly recoin*
... !a* Dr. 1A .FORD’S INVTGORATOR, ao gone*
cm'y L-. r* now throughout tiae Union. Thla pre ara
* , ‘.• t r u _ a>Lfver Tnvigorttor, ] rodnclng the moat
bAf’ v<^r< s> r/n all who ue it. Almost innume able
- ‘p'C'r h:.ve buoc to the great virtue of this
.m- by iboe i thfl blgheat standing in society,
. 1 v v ‘ - , , tto be the ben’ preparation now before
U Ik —hi:ds.>n Ormniy I democrat.
* iil‘ ONE DOLLAR PER BOTTLE
SANFORD 4- 00.
VfOpHetosfc, Broadway, New-York.
•'LI'MB a LEITNKaanUW H. TuTT, Agents in
A- S lid by Dengg ita generally.
_ r,>W. ; wiy ‘ f
JACOB’S - CORDIAL.
g'4lL-aT OLMI HTOKK
(J ?-L AT v b STOKj-
AJ L AT Ol R STOHy.
Llv 1 - at 0?; t ST’itßj-:
J GALL A'l t>UR brOltL
L I.L AT uuk^ltorh
AND OKT TBK FKUjJBS
AND OKT TIIU VRICbS
AND GET THE PRICES
AND OFT THE PRIOR*
AND CRT THE PRIMES
AND OUT THE PRICES
Ofe JACOB'S *OO I DIAL.
OKvJACO** CORDIAi.,
OL J'C<J tX& CI-RDIAL
<* • i.VjS> PL'IDiAL
i J ijf* ’ ■ OOKDIAL,
; t-Ob's CORDIAL,
THAT GREAT REMEDY,
rHAT GREAT REMEDY,
T HAT GREAT RRMRDY,
THAT ORt AT REMEDY,
‘i h at great remedy.
T f \THEAT REMEDY.
j O -X VEST OF ALL REMEDIES,
ji. ! ,\T LST . F A Li/ REM Ldl KS,
(M.u T ‘ T OF A 1 (, u Mr.dies,
(i.t: ALLfToF’ ALL HRmEDIRn,
Qb - vTV <T OF ALL REM LIMES,
04’ : rjfcffT OF ALL REMEDIES,
J DYSENTERY AND DIARRHEA,
JN
IN DvSiJNTEHY AND DIARRHEA
JN D nKNIERY aM) DIARRHEA,
fN L y N TEkY AND DIARRHEA
1 DYSENTERY AND DIARRHEA,
15Y THE DOtfEN,
TUB D >^En.
LY TUB DOZEN,
| T;V Tutft DOZBF
jDY I h L DZL 1”,
I BY TUT’ D’jZZV
FY THE GROSS,
BY THE GROSS,
BY THh GRi>Ss,
) Y Trfß (4ROsS,
BY THE QROtb,
*Y THL AtcOSS,
r Y THE TTO GROfl*.
W TEL TEN‘GROSS,
*tv the ts N Gross.
nV T HE TEN Uffoafl.
BY THE TEN GkO^S,
Ls i IM TEN GROSS,
BY T E m’NDRRD GROSS.
LY TUB HUNDRED GROSS
i Y Ti .E HUNDRED GROSS.
BY THE HUNDRED CROSS.
MY THE 3UNPR D GROSS.
BY THE HUNDRED GROSS
HAVILAND, CHICHESTER & CO.,
Whv*ea*le PfllgghttS, Augua^Ge.
jelg ctvAwlm
if you have dyspepsia,
Use the Dolnmhhm Bitters 1
li y i Uotb t'EATAOni£,
t ? the Lolumhlay Bitters.
If, . ODH-iBSS OF iHB HEAD.
Ut ‘he Cdiluinblaii Bitters.
If, .U -
<e sue (olnmhlan Bitters,
ii - fetE .
15. *jfi Cc Uimhlaii Bitters.
li roa flavo NO AFPiJXITE,
Ise Ihe Ovlauiblan Bitters
i *";Te PAIN I* SIDE ami HACK,
lise the (oliimbliiu Bitters, j
ii- ■ ft-r- aiOK aroxaoj, ••
Tse the Columbian Bitters.
fr.ya h JAUNDICE,
Ise ti e Columbian Bitters,
Ji j ,ur ulv*Eft !Drs&A.,2D,
l*e the Ccfnmbtsn Bitters.
l i .™ a .ifljs. ttv COP • iVENBSB,
Use the Colamblan Bitters.
!o'.. t, ~rTY C’-'V’ t Bottle, ->y Uerabsote !
** ‘ ‘iAVIUAYD. oicgestbb & CO.
V A Ii TUTT
PLUMB A LEII'NEB
kIMA.wJn Augusta, Geo
AYERa’ vJATHARTIC PILLS!
PILLS THAT ARE PILLS.
PROF. Hayes, State Oheuilst of
fiß Op Me-au'in o etia, s*ay- they are the beatof
MM a * ! P*. i, and annexed are the men who
c*rrity thsl Or Days* know# :
t R J 0 A liDENER, Governor of Miw
—naefeuaelu*
KM OKA WAwHbcRNL Ex Gov ot
I MMfc ON BTR ANLu u i Gov. of Ma>*.
I K ‘ -d HT, S*t r t&rv of State of
1 t.rr i.N rnYd’AiRIOK, COtteUe Bishop of
. ; N ! ORTftiY, -'t i*.o Jcfiogo of Phy,;elaiw
ja .n rirt* New-York Oity
j l■* C 1 JACICMQN, 1 igfet of the Public I-uid* of
ML* aTRAI A.RJRMfiN
] rr •*. _ ♦!*•* ‘Th>e%R*9 *bis Pill Ur * eured with axtouiah
! n*r we may moot cn
!. ‘ Ua. - RiLvUi, CofuploinU, Rheumatisui, Drop
-▼ ■•c*v. Headrrhe, anting from a foal sicm&cb ;
v iDff*ge*tiou, Mor’ikd lnaeuon ot fee Bowel* and
• -x'l.-jsg lb- -eftom. Flatulen j . Loss of Appetite.
T ‘.-rr.>nsandOntare<Tns Dtatwaea which require an
| “ pa-. Medic ne . v or*'nßa or K'Ug’s Evil They also
*i rv uc the otooii auo ;uma.*ing the system. Cure
. ry ( ’mpi.-nt’ wh hi* < utduotbc sappowd they
c r* 1 reach such a* L>eafb--s, Partial Bim<ina, Neu
re!g*aoa Ne.wns Imtabil ty D.rangemenu of the
Liv oi*i Kidney - G •‘ut. and v *her kiedi nd complaints,
a* : ‘a itr-’mi ow stale m the body, or ob-tmetinns of
“si'atc-ana ‘TVs are the i>et Purgative Medicuu
I rf* r mvd aad yoa will but need w- use them oace
[ ‘ r od Uy Dr. J C AYER. Lowell, Mas*., and sold
• *, * e'-pee%el ‘ P.uygrit in New-England.
* : ,**V v HA.YILAND, CHIOHEcTF*K A GO-,
I Alum-la my#s*d&w2m
SALVE vs. LINIMENTS.
lilt. CAVA.NAUGHS
GREEN SALVE
• cs*wr>il F AMUiY KV.MEDY. exceed*, .n It?
us*’ ve uu s aiiy article ever offered to the av
r* I no: tkeaaii'tJKt
J t- o - *JI aad every rank of ii^r,
lIARI ITS EFFECTS AND TEST THEM.
* wKt.Ve itso~< a HUPS .-r in a
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k * r r. ‘■ * • - • Li- r.-ienff* an-1 pa*rons
♦or -:r f*. f> , # PM vear y a * <*Biy jy
t ‘ YT *?i .&va* :♦ f wbc r ora tre
yean, i y x*C tt-sai ic
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I rOTTON YARNS AND CSMBIRGS.
- Irvj nui kee; a eotsta-v snpp.y of
\ ■’ / r T Aftv ap.j O>K AtTitilt xaada o> Jxe
j N*w Mauaf ■ :ortor \ oznpa&y.
iv. ; -e prempt j t;*oidcd Goods sai lat Faet
I P 86E84.
Oocus'jucc MwtLifili
CISM*’X avpc.M P WMCt Bc>A
CfJjnnuhe £ Sentinel.
Opinion** of the Enalliih Preaa on tbe British
in the 4>n)f.
We presume that our readers will feel interested
in what the leading Enghsh journals aay with res
pert to the recent British visitations. We therefore
subjoin copious extract*.
F ram Ih*. London Times cf June 3.
\h e wiU a few minutes upon the itnagina
ti lof eur readers. l u the year A D. 1958 the
Halted Siotoe of America having then tilled up tke
grand cutiii o expies-ed in tbeir title, stretching from
Barrow's Strait to Magellan’s, ana comprising a
population ot near 2fro,ooo,hi>o. are enabled to take
oigfa ground on xxtora. and religious questions, at
!*a*.‘. io that aspect of them wiricb is most disagreea
b'e to other people.
At the call of an unccmp*omising philanthropy,
they have constituted them-elves the protectore or
Rii barbarous or semi barbamna LatioDP against the
vice* and the itnmcrai traffics of civilization. Bu
ihe> Lave -ent forth a score or two fleets of cruiser#
ati o er tfce ocean to stop the supply ot opium,
spirits, and all intoxicating liquors to the rae?B whose
Weak keel appeals to their protection. Their cru ; -
p?rs beaut the Bay of Bengal, tne Chi: ese waters
or.-* toe Malacca Straits, Lntiiog the craft of ail na
tion.® the lintish partcnlarl_ . with blank cartridge
<*r round eb-ot as k may be i bey order our shipj to
li e;o. t,u, off boats, peo ton Wo rd sway:goring Yan
kee <>tficer. who overhaul t% .tinp'R p;.per3, ask a
mul l ude cfc impertinent qne* ion-, demand to lo k
into tbe hold, aud perhaps eodwiih carrying tiie
ebti) into port, aod throwing tr.e c*rgo everboard.
Another squadron cruises in the enups oi the
Channel, or *fl tbe Irish and Scotch coasts, and in
tercepts every outwa’d bound merchantman in quep*
of wine, brandy, or other spirits aud Bass’s and
Aaoop’s ale. day ro'umusof this paper
tiom numbers 50,000 to 60,000, are filled with etuh
stories ai that wuioh we read the day before yes
rerc ay in the JeLrer of our New York correspondent.
Every day we read that some splendid clipper ship
• 10.006 loai, sailing and screwing io rea to Mel
bourne in 50 days, baa been brought to by an ugly
Ititle Ya schooner, and has lost h If a diy and
a fair breeze, beside having lo e<aad no eud of gra
iu j*>h insolence. Oa all sides taere&re loud com
piatols, cuergetic remoostraiioes, aod as muoh aie
p ei iou to resent the Indignity by force as wiil be
compatible wih the comparison of our respective
meHiv and resources.
NuW, we don’t pretend to say that the present re
alty is so bad s the imaginary future we have de
scribed. We admit, and are prepared to maintain,
that the proiec ion of our fellow creatures from ac
tual capture, abduction, slavery, degradation and
death, ia a far more legitimate object of national
philanthropy than protecting those same people
from the temptation of intoxicating liquors or drugs.
But, granting—for there is no harm in granting it
—tuat the pracuce may have been justifiable hither
to, do sit tollow that it must go on for ever ? It is
an n,dispensable law of morals 7 Must we go on
doing it t Does society at large, do nalions, do in
dividuals, always persevere to the last in whatever
they once felt to be matters of high merit, and even
obligation T
11 England to gu on for ever with her cruisers at
the mouth ol every river in the Western, and even
the South-eastern, coast of Africa, and along every
thoie West of theAtlantie? Is she not only to
keep up this coetly force, this drain of money and
men, but to increase it continually beyond nil
reckoning, so as to keep pace with the ever in
creasing traffic, and strength too, of the Ameticau
States 1 What sort of a force shall we find necessa
ry in A. D. 1958 ? At present there might seem to
be a chance in our favor through tbe difference be
twee.n the States of the Union on the subject of
slavery ; but national pnde, as we know well at
home, t. ever apt to prevail against the differences
of parly, and even religious scruples , and we may
sec by the feeling exnibited at New York how read!
ly allthe tiststes, tree as well as slave, would combine
against a foreign power that pretended to flog them
into their duty.
Ws see no prospect whatever of tbe Americans
mending their ways iu the course of the next cen
tury, and, ns wc have observed above, the day
mu i arrive, betcre the expiration of that century,
* hen toe question will be settled by the immense
growth ol the Union. It is not that we shall da
crease, but the States must iuereaee. The strip
ling, now our equal, must ono day be a giant. Were
it any consolation or any real gain to us that Ame
rica had its owu troubles in prospect, we might
have it intu-ipation.
The simple facts that America, being under a
treaty to suppic ss the slave trade, will pot stir a
finger, and even connives ; that it permits an im
mcn-e importation o! slave, a 1 ! but direct from
Africa, and that, oil the whole, the slave Stater are
bullyiug lire free, are ominous enough of future diffi
culty. But that we coucerive to be no affair of ours,
except as proving the nature of the community with
which we have to deal. We don't convert Ameri
ca by Gin present course. We do not compel her
to the virtue she has not. Before very long ‘lie
mere attump must bring on a fearful war. Is there
no such a tiling as giving up a crusade which began
wrp being optio al, and is lound to be iuetfeolual 1
is nothing to be surrendered except after the loss
ol 3IIIHIO live, on both sides and thirty millions of
money ‘f 1 s there no other uee, equally benevolent,
to whioli wt- could put the half-million of money ana
the valuable lives annually sunk iu those squad
rons ?
From the London Times, June 5.
Is it necessaiy to add to what we have said be
fore on the obvious oertainty that this anti slavery
crusade must come t > an end 7 It might “go on ‘
lor this year or the next year, or for 10 or 20 years,
but auy one who thinks for a moment on the cha
racter of the Power with which we have principally
to deal, must see not only iliat the end will come at
some lime or other,-but that the longer that end is
.laved eff, the woise it will be. It isihe fast
growing sen or younger brother, rather lubberly
we may phase to think at present, very saucy,
p?U-wiiled,aud qr.oinire2 lor physical developments
than bound by moroi ties, i.et us not quarrel over
much with this disagreeable stage of existence, for
it belongs to the youth of men and of nations. But
thi, earns Power must one day have fifty times our
territory and ten times our people. Besides re
comug year by year from the Ulri World the popu
lotion ot an English county, it is more thrifty of ile
bom citisenethau we are It bar uo army in In
din, uo fifty colonies to bo gnrri-oued, no immense
navy in oominiseion, scarcely oven the pre'enee of
an anti-siavo trade squad. nu.
Tiro time must. one win a, invincible as wo may
bs on our own soil, our or i shores, our own seas,
and auy wlibi'cou equ-il term., wc suould have to
contend witu il.-.i United States on every unequal
terms on tjjeirs il, their shores, tbeir seas, and gen- I
eroiiy lu the New World. To this must be added
the g-eat pecuhariiy ot tbeir political constitution.
Jt is by no means settled out there what the Union
may undertake or promise, and as in this particular
cflaii the auti slave trade treaty is against the con
science of many of the States, aud the interest of
nearly all, it Is m vain to expect that a thing of pa
per and ink wid either compel the Union t -sacri
does or the several States to compliance. We see
not whence the virtue to fidelity and constancy is
to come ior where we are to look for the patriots
who shall stem any tide -f popular exasperation as I
al'e.-ed -‘British outrages ‘ That thne on'rages
are very got up affair., that our cruisers nave plea- ,
ty of work to ao, if the treaty is to be mors than
waste paper, and toat every Kankue skipper has .
i an interest in making a iiiouui aiu out of a molehill, .
I we grant to thuee who rogue Iroia these cousidera
- tloneagsiust being bullied out of a noble cause.
Hu: if it was necessary there should be a treaty—
if ia order to suooeeßiul operation of our cruisers it
was necessary there should be an understanding with
the S aies, then, we say, li, is quite obvious that tns
necessary condition fails together. The ground
sick beneath our fer t. It is not that skippers are
pourh giu complaints and demanding dsmagee, or
that shipowners ana the public generally are getting
up a b eexe. but ihnt there is uo pt-w.-r in the Fed
eral Government of tho Union to etani by its own
tmaties aud oo justice to its allies. At the least the
&i.lance is b -tu een British enthueiam and American
decency We may all now see what that decency
has done, —-‘not one capture against fifty of ours, ’
fu and what it is likely to do against the combined pas
lion cl Southern planters, Northeu merchants, the
shipowners of the whole seaboard, and the anti-
Britishers of the whole Union.
miuimeif IUC nuu^v
Os oourse we shttll be told these are the counsels
of a coward, s U that we are setting the terrible ex- |
ROiple of yielding to the areutnent oi might We
mini,; almost concede this. We might even confess
that 11 the truth must be spoken, we are yielding to
a sti-l woise argument than that of might. We are
yielding to the argument of tbe United States Gov
ernment being incapable of standing its ground
against tbe pasaioi-s of a populace or tbe interest of
a class , iu other words, to the argument of superior
weakness and immorality But there are cases in
which courage is mere foolhardiness; which we may
dhow the courage of our race If anybody doubts,
we may point to India ai.tbis moment, where we are
fighting against as great difficulties and odds as
those cEOouutered by Cortes or Pizarro.
But even courage itself, if it be not unnerved, at
least ilsteus to the voice of nature and cf reason
when il finds itself face to face with its own flesh
aud blo .and, with ils owu kith and kin. Who are
these people, so unruly, so uoprovocative. and so
glad r y pick a quarrel with us I Who are they up
011 whom mere animal courage would goad us to an
internecine war 1 They are those who have a.
ready been worsted in old home quarrels with us
They are a starved out peasantry, ousted tenants,
dispossessed cot tie*, the younger sous of younger
s ns, lett handed workmen, uu.ucky speculators,
disappointed politicians, men ot every class, who
have seen ands. tiered the worst of the old country,
the wo-si at all being that they inherit our restless,
oody. ill-ccnteuted nature ‘lt ts an old grudge
these noisy fellow? are|working out against us on
American vantage ground. This, then, is rather a
social than a political quarrel and ae ill au occasion
for heroic courage as a quarrel with Ireland or the
populace of our E cgiish cities.
Washinoton Nxws —Private but authentic ad
victs accompanying Gen Johnston t despatches
from l’ ah, state that the submission of the Hor
mone was sullen and unsatisfactory, and potwith
standing ail their professions, they still bed actual
military possession of all the pa-ses. Gov. Cam
ming ascrices paoifl.ation maiuiy *o CoL Kant e
efforts, and Cos!. Ksne's objeo: in coming here is
mostly to have the Government sustain the Gov
ernor unqualifiedly, as the best means cf insuring
his authority in Utah. It is probable, therefore,
that when the despatches are publiehed.Gov. Clim
ating will be endorsed fultv.
Tbe destination of the Mormon? is not positively
known, though the impression appears still to bs
that it is Sonora.
r„e-e is vet a possibility that CoL Kane may re
tur H . “most sffe dual argumeut for bringing
-bout sacmifsion of the Mormons was to convince
y jng and other? cf tbe folly of resisting the Gov
.ruraent, and that war must end in the deetructiou
of t he.r religious system. The tecoad-dMs leaders j
were unfavorably disposed t r him, and endewored 1
t excite prejaoice. which was tuppreesed by
Yt'ffjj;
The French arrangements are completed in Niea
ngus and Costa R.va. and there is every probabili
ty now tbat the Is hm .s wilt pass under thatspeciat
protectorate, though as may hereafr-T Redeveloped,
Eng and is equally intere?-ed. Under Beiiy'a advi-
Ce Msrcoiett a, formerly Ni'-arauran Minuter ~ere,
and cor. roeiding at Pari?, is sppuirted uuis -rto
Franc*. This fset, wthotb-.s sh. ws th-; - e
sebwme was as inso'i'-tl •oi ‘.ouis Napoiecn.
The o 2tract for -arr t’- a Pacific mails ™
Te’ uauupec i* -1 ,i T o.’ > a: 4 thepartiee
tjn,*e star.ed Lotus. T . n- Ly - ‘te uij , ccasioz.-
ed by hesitation in d;aiiug ritni £*, the Pteoj.
dec T . as an individual or in anofi -ta! This
at. Agement is to begin in Octocor. ('-ontrict. have
already been mate by toe Company lor .fie ecu
strucUcß ot bridges, to begin tu August when the
wet reason is nearly over, tor steamers t etween
N-w Orleans snd tho terminus this side, for iron
?*earners on Guataaicoloos Ei- er, for three large
hotels two terminus, and mid wav for ICO Troy
coaches, and with the Pacific MailS.ip Corps y
■ r the t-acf portation of passengers to San h ramus
Cos Ail to ire completed and delivered for starting
in October
Illfeis of Mxtor WitaE.—We regret to state ;
that ‘fee Bob R.cberd Wa oe Mayer o.’ Savaonah,
bae been vtry m for eevtrai days past, under a *e
vereat acAoi liemor*ha(t®- A report ot ti Ccattt
|| current ;n the city yeeterday artarnoon, wcicn,
w, are gratified to be able to eay. was wholly withe
ut fo-mdatrau. Though hts oondiui-n it rtgardea
u oriticml, at a late hour last evening be was quite
ectcfortab-e, and etrong hopes were entertained of
hi* recovery, would there be no rrcu:reuse of the
heawnhege.—se. Rap . Wpdmutaf
FOREIGN INTELLIGENT .
China.—We have private advices from the CV
lestiai Empire, which are of interest. A letter da’
ted Hmg Kong. April 12. saya that me Plenipo
tentiaries. iu their j out c •ODmu*’ to the Em
peror. delivered atSsoochow, expressed their deter*
muiatum not Jo negotiate at tbe South, end that
tbeir visit North was to demonstrate the truthful
ness of th&t ueclaraiion. The same letter also says
that toe Pekin Gazette had inaunested a spirit of
conciliation.
Tfce following is the reply ot Lord Elgin to the
British merchants at Shanghai, which is understood
ro bint plainly at the policy I e intends to puraae.—
Tiro paragraphs of it have been nreviously publish
ed, but we repeat Them as they form pari of an im
portant document:
_ Gentle*ln—l am ihankfui to you for this ad
dress of welcome. I trust that the kindness which
has prompted it, w>H aieo induce you to favor me
with the valuable aid o! your experience to enable
me to judge correctiy of tbe causes which have
contributed to give to Shanghae i‘s eminent
pos.tion among the ports opened to trade with
China.
It is satisfactory to me to learn th&t you approve
of what feae taken place at Canton, and that I have
your good wishes for tbe future success of mv
mission. I should respond but indifferentlyrio there
expressions of rtgaid, ii I were to refrain from
luitog to you frankly the principles ou which 1
Have nitherto proceeded, and trill intend to pTo
ceed, in the discharge of duties that have refer
♦ Let to matters m which you have so !eep on in
terest.
In furcishinr instructions formygi anoe when
1 was appointed Hgh Commissi .*uer in ,’hira. Urr
jlajeety’t?Government saw tit to entr. _ me with a
wiue discretion. Girourr. tances, hi *ever, as you
probably know, which were altogether unforeseen,
at the tme when those ir atr actions were framed,
rendered them in some degree inapplicable, and
thus mt renal y enlarged tbe discretion orginally
confided to me.
I found myself Accordingly un my arrrival in this
c< uatry compelled to act in a great measure on my
own judgment. I accepted th:s task, as iu duly
bound, without hesitation, but not I hope without a .
due rtense of rhe responsibility attached to au agent
who, in a distant land, beyond tie reach of ad-, .ce,
and in chcumstances ot unueuai difficulty, finds
himself the guardian of the good name and interests
of a great Christian nation.
In my eornmur ioationu with the funefio ‘arka of
cl e Chinese government I have been guided by two
riiUple rules of action. I have never preferred a
and ;inaid which I did not believe to be both moue
ra'e and just, and from a demand eo preferred I
have never receded These principles dictated the
policy which resulted in the capture and occupation
ot Canton. The same prine : ples will be followed by
me with The same determination to tbe results, it it
should be necesiary to repeat the experiment in the
vicinity of the capital ot the Emperor of China.
It is matter for me of the highest gratification to
know that in pursuing thi 4 policy of combined
moderation ana firmness, I can count not only o;
the hearty co operation and active support of the
Representative of His Imperial Majesty the Empe
ror of the French, but also on the good wiil and
sympathy of the Representatives of other great
and powei ful nations interested with ourselves in
extending the area of Christian civiiiation, and raul
tiplyitg those commercialities which are destined
to bind the East and West together in the bond of
mutual ndvantage.
Oue woid, gentlemen, in conclusion, as to the
part which we nave respectively to play in this ira
portaut work, and more especially with reference to
the last eenteice of your addfees* iu which you ex
press the trust that the result of my exertions may
ue “more lolly to develope the vast resources ot
China” and to “extend among the people the eleva
ting influences of a higher civilization.”
The expectations held out to the British manufac
tures at the close of the last war betweeu Great
Britain and China, when they were told that anew
world was opened to their trade, so vast that the
mills in Lancashire could not make stocking-stuff
sufficient for one of ita Provinces, have not beer
realized, and 1 am of opinion that when force and
diplomacy shall have done all that they can legiti
mately effect, to work which ha - to be accomplished
in China, will be but at its commencement.
When the barrierp which prevent free access to
the interior of the country shall have been removed
the christi m civilization ot the West will find itseli
face to face, not with barbarism, but with an an
dent civilization in many respects tffeLe and im
perfect, but in othem not without claims to our Bym
pa by and respect. In the rivalry which will then
ensue, chiistian civilization will have to win its way
among a sceptical and ingenious people, by mak
ing i manifest that a faith which reaches to heaven
iu.uii.hcjd better guarantees for public and private
m rality than oue which does not rise above the
earth.
At the same time the machine factoring West
will be in presence of a population tbe mo3t un
iversally and laboriously manufacturing of any on
the earth. It cau achieve victories in the contest
in which it will have to engage only by pro ing
that physical knowledge and mechanical skill ap
plied lo the arts of production, tue more than a
ina’ch for the most persevering efl /ts of unscienti
fic industry.
This is the which is before * ou, and toward
ihe accomplishment ot which, w i hin the sphere oi
my duty I shall rejoice to co-operate.
Teentsin, whither the movements of the squardron
had beed pointed, is the port ol t'ekm; from which
it is distant about sixty miles, and is accessible by
gun-boats and artillery.
The writer of the letter adds
“Meantime band3 of marauders, whom it has be
come the custom here to call rebels, have appeared
in force without any concerted mode of action, at
various points. TANARUS e advices from Shanghae state
that a large body of the3e had enlered the province
of Cbeekianrv and menaced a city called Kwffchow,
the detenees of which being inconsiderable, its fall
va anticipated. Apprehensions were entertained ;
thao tbe important cities of Hangchow’ and Chlnki- j
ang would be attacked.
“Some alarm was felt in the tea district of Ho
bow. At Foochow the authorities were buying rice
for transmission to the troops iu t lie interior, which
would lend to prove that di turbances are likewise
occurring in that neighborhood. Mandarin reverses
in this province have also taken place. As nothing
is said of any recognised chief, nor of any common
cause exciting any unity of action, the probability
ie that the scarcity of food, so prevalent at present
all over China, and the weakness of the Govern
ment, are the causes of these desultory and disas
trous movements, lt should be remarked, how
ever, that these disturbances menace the neighbor
hood of the tea district more than they ever did
upon any previous oooae'.on, a fact which may he
fairly aliribuled to the resources of those di tricts
■ offering more .emptation than others for pillage at
I this of the year.
i “The slate of anairn at Canton is indescribably
[ auomalourt. The brave.i have shown no symptoms
whatever of coming to terms —-the oily and the ap
proaches to it alone being in the bare possession of
ihe allies. The Chinese authorities have continued
to carry out tbeir views of subservience to the Can
ton war party with their characteristic duplicity, to
such an extent aa actually to kidnap, torture, and
conceal acme of the Coolies attacked to the British
military train. The outrage waa ouly detected by
the escape of one of the unfortunates. Iu all such
cases, ignorance is the never failing aud successful
excuse. The harvest is good and the people of
j ccu> ee busily employed upon it. Business ie cer
; t&iuly becoming extended. The duties are receiv
!ed by the Canton authorities, and doubtless from
the inducement that prompts them to tolerate the
i continuance of foreign trade, for certainly they
i could stop it if they wished to do so.”
MiMcellnneona.
The Trade Between the Noth of Europe
and New Yore—Messrs. Palmer, of Jairow-on
the-Tyne, are just finishing twop werful iron vtearn
phipa,’ the Hudjon and the Weaer, of 3,000 tont*
j each for the North German Lloyds. Tbo Hudson
I wiil be launched in June; the Weser iu July. Both
{ th’ so vessels are intended to run between Bremen
{ and New York. They will be fitted up to couvey
! passenge e and goods’ and will each have accom
j rooddtton for 100 first class passengers, for 125 eec-
J o d-claßß passengers, and 400 third class passengers
IThey will also each carry lUOO tons of good-*. Both
vessels will be propelled by ecrew, and are expect
ed to eteam 14 knots an hour.
Russell, tha East India correspondent of the Lon
! don limes saya that every day adds to the prize
| property at Lucknow, and it is estimated that the
! sales will produce £600,100.
‘ Advices from Napies of the 24th, state that the
j crop of Silk has been almost entirely lost in conse
quence of dioease among the worms. Sicily, how
ever, has escaped. The oidium has re-appeared. —
Corn has advanced iu price.
Tbe first, second and third mates of American
ship Gleaner, (J&pt. Lunt, named Summers, Brown
and Cunningham, Done of them Americans, are un
der arrest at Card ff, for savage and unprovoked
assaults upon the men on b'-ard, one of whom, Ri
ley. a black man, wad dangerously wounded.
Eruption of Vesuvius. —A conespondent of tbe
London rimes, under date of Naple?. May 27. de
tails another exter.e ve eruption of Vesuvius , which
had ju t commence 1, and it was feared would be
more than usually destructive :
The Resina guide now informed us for the first
time thst lava was flowing t hrough the valley oi
the “ Atrio del Cavallo,” and that the ordinary path
to ascend the cone to the crater wad cut off. aud he
brought us forward over a path seldom travelled,
and of a most difficult nature ; we, however, pro
ceeded, the c'.oudof smoke increasing as we went,
ou ail sides; we had to part with our horses and
proceed on foot, and had not gone over 300 or 400
yards from where we left the hordes when we cam p
up to au enormous mass of hot lava ro 1 ling onworca
towards tiie Somma, and we now became aware we
were in the immediate neighborhood of a coneidera
ble eruption ; our anxiety now became great indeed,
ana pressed forward and presently arrived at a won
derful scene. The entire of tue lower part o f the
great cone of Vesuvius app< ared on tire, and tbkk
masses of smoke weie thrown up, mixed with red
hot stones and flakes of lava; travelling over a
most rugged way oi old lava, we made our way up
to tfce point whence tbe stones, lava, aad smokr
seemed'to rise in greatest quantities, and we arrived
on a rise iust over the greatest fissure.
It is difficult to explain our feeling on beholding
this wonderful and unexpected sight; we here found 1
eeveiai guides, and from tiern we learned that at
about 9 o’clock A. M that momiDg a number of
6m&u craters aud fissures had suddenly opened and
iava bad commenced pouring out
It was now nearly 5 o'clock, and we w-nt quite
close up to the larg*-st crater, which we were ena
bled to do. as the wind blew bteady ana strong
down the valley, and thus we got within eight or ten
yards of the next open, trom this we counted five or
six distinct fountains of fire, the largest putting
forth volume of smoke, stones, and lava; from
another a literal fountain of burning matter wa
ejected, and from all iava and smoke poured forth
in gteater or less quonti ies, the whole torrent of
. Uva uniting into a regular stream of red burning
I liquid pouri g down the incline side of the valley
VVe remained b*-re observing this wonderful sight
for over an hour, then determined to ascend to the
j u p of tbe great coae. After a moet severe walk by a
path seidom travelled, we toiled to the top, where
| we arrived to see tbe last streaks of daylight g:id
{ irg the distant horizon.
it wa- now Buffi.c;en:ly dark to see i he
trace fire from all the fissures we had lefi below,
ana standing on apr feting piece cf lava the en
tire Jay at our feet • the eruption evidently was on
tue li creaee. srd acies upon acre® seemed puttiog
lorth in fire. Tee stream of burning lava now in
the twilight became awfully visihle, snd rolled
a.ong at a rapid pace w> tfce bAtoxOHi of the vahty.
up to tbe very Bidet cf tbe Mccte Sorarna. We
wue perfe; Jy tics rrht ro pencil ociA j
pen troy cr pen d.tcnoe.
Oiir guide Dow u : ius to deseet. I ; the leva Tc - j
racuiDg sxict'y t the p cioee ta iion 4 - ‘
Soauca od whi b ue had travelled, and it was q*iie.
tv.dec: ’htt rhe smoke which was blown down the
vaiey towards the aea in tbe event oft
change ot wioto leave vur only p.-ts of return in a
Uic*t impassable condition.
We therefore cas-.ened to descend the oone as
; weilaa uecoold.the oci lenciug na a
; partial giary lignL Tfce descent waa difficult and
! dangerous.’sand to our aLkfes, intexanhed with
! srgemmpaof old lava Every moment we were
in fear of turn burg cead ffii-emost the precip
itate descent. We, however, got safe to tne - bot
tom ot toe cone, aid bad now to pars tbe narrow
\ rpace between tbs burning lava and M
| which here preeects 8 face ot perpendicular rock,
penectj macceaeib’e. and we became quite aware
’ we could not possibly gat up tne side of Monte
Somma.
j I muat confeas I fek here consider ably nervous,
, and 1 saw toe double danger of tbe lava stopping
our path anu that of a ofcauge of wind, whioe wouid
j certainly have smothered ue id an instant i and a*
1 we pressed on over the rugged road, we saw the
eruption increasing inomenriy. In one place the
I lava was robing down the valley ia an enormous
M Hr
sjfl : - -
-^1
.
-
- \
’ ::
i. fl ‘-t
- - ,-ix
i.r , fiv*- * urinate, e;.,f ihe united
stream o: red no be u* dtr eight ten
> ards wide, andon like a very rapid river
UD-.l i? was old ’ava lying on the
side us tbe val’^^^Hl
The Atlanr^^^HoKiTH.—Her Majesty's
■ .-n*-; ciui:p >ny wi'h the'eteain
r, .a C Niagara, aid G .rgon. relumed to
Py u’h evening of the 3d, after
Bay ot Biscay wi;h
v ■ ‘en.-ntnls were
is sa'isfacotr^^Hr
r - A . v arrived in latitude
47 1“ N., about two bundled
Lores from
ou Wedne .day, mode Ee-., ral sucoaesfui ex
paj-i,Hants. TnoSHEer fine ; depth of the sea
2.530 fathoms, orrootit 2j miles. The cable war
splio- and four times, and the Agamemnon and Niaga
jri sep .rated on Beaily four m e.—
Tue ships were putjflktri- >os spsi and , and by tbe ad
of iho uow app cable witust .odthe strain
m a salisfactori’y S.n?e tiie last trial the
power of haul" I. i mp greatly increased and
improved. The cub e was piaycd out from the Nia
gara on one trial at the rate of seven knots auu
tiom the Agamemnon at toe rate of wight nuts per
hour. Bu >-i were occasionally attached to the ca
bie, which also passed from the stern to the bow,
a, and -."Ti-:."U'-9 resteu in a vertical poeiticn.
Electrical messages were s silt through tbe wire
when iu various positions. The -eapc’flitfon is ap
uointed to etur: f.om Plymouth fine ly on Wednej
day tbe 19th
Dentil.* by the Vuuderbflt.
Tho steamer Vanderbilt arrived a; New Vork
Saturday morning from Havre aud Southampton
Lett ‘h.-’la-ttr portat7 31); on the evening ot June
Prh, with 195 passengers aud a valuable cargo.
We are under obligations to the purser for the fol
towing memorandum: —
“ The Vanderbiit has made the quickest trip on re
cord, which would have been shorter by many hours,
had not an impenetrable fog prevailed fiotn Cape
Race to Montuuk Point, causing serious delays in
stoppages for soundings, and the necesEary detours
for safety.
“Apparent time to Cap Race 6 days, 10 hours.
“Apparent time to light ship, Sandy Hook, 9 days
13| hours.
“Not finding the News Yacht a f Cape Race, the
despatches were run ashore by a fisherman.
“ The weather ins been favorable throughout the
passage for laying down tbe Atlantic cable.
“Ou the 15th, in lat. 4iy)o, lon. 55 00, saw nume
lous icebergs.
England —ln the House of Lords, on the 7th of
Juiio, after some discussion on the late riots in Ire
laud, the second reading oftwo bills to amend the
Oaths bill, and empoweg afmgkj.lou.ie of Parliament
to moriity the furm of was fixed
or Friday week.
In the House of the same day the
following resolutions, httfHmf the bill tor the Gov
ernment of India, was J^^Ored:— “That iu order
to HMi-t such Minister ia the discharge
of his duties, it is Council he ap
pointed ot not less than inure ti, .o 18 uiem
uers.’’
Mr. Gladstone moved as an amendme..., that
regard being had to the pqMtiou of affairs iu India,
it is expedient to makJH Court ot Directors of
the East India an act of the pnsent
session, a Council ior admitth-te-ring the Govern
ment of India in the name of Her Majesty, under
the superintendence of such retposible Ministers
until the end of the next s .esiou ol Parliament ’
Alter much discussion tie House divided, and the
amendment was lost by 265 votes to 116. Mr Roe
.uok moved that “Council” be omitted from the
re.-oluti >n, which was negatived.
Mr Lindsay moved to amend tbe resolution by
ineertiug thu words “and that the first Council of
It Iteconsist of the prt sent Court of Directors."—
sh s amendment was also negatived.
lu the House of Lords on the evening of June 8,
the following remarks were made ou the subject of
Hggress'Oiie upon American commerce :
The E-frl of Clarendon, who was occasionally
ve.y iuuistm.tly boaid in the gallery, wished to put
a quedton to jits itobl,: fried opposite, the Secre
tary tor F> reign Affairs, with reference io the sub
jeo:, to which the uobleand lejanieit lord (Brougham)
had just al'udoi. He w-ishod to know who her hit
coble friend au and afl rd tho House any informa
tion that might tend to atoy the greet tiurasiuess
which had prevailed in thaSublie ufiud during tfce
last few days vti.h cettdin alleged pro
ceed. ugson the part ot thfjjßrit sh c.uteers, aud the
preparations it was saidijwßuited State- Govern
ment were making to prefl ae’s which they re
gard, and aa equivalent to {Ma@igt,t of search which
hau never been cun.edefl%T*t!.t- United Slates .and
which was looked upon in that country as a nation
al in-ul’. He (Lord Cl irenduu) believed that no
information ou the subject had yec been received
in this CO an ry beyond certain ij fjurte , t,.lament.:
wti-oU had been published In the U.u ud Suits, and
tbe abstract of some correspondence whied had been
laid before the Congress by the P.-estd nt.
‘l'liere was, therefore, nqjpeaiiß of judging how
far the cruisers of ne. ha l exceeded their
instruorions by stoppjjJHßae American vessels
which were engage t igiThqHMtiuq tiade, aud by
fii .ng into others. I faXfoC-ltMmf aop-rd, bur expect
ed, that it would be fpnndljfcre had been a great
deal of exaggeration iflßbe ’ sfatement” which had
appeared on Lilts -*ufin l e itad no doubt that
if bis noble friend liad rdMIK any information he
would not hesitate to their lordships. ;
At all events, liis noble friend would probably iu- j
form t heir lordships whether he had any commuuica- j
foil Irom the United States Government on the :
übjeot, aud in what state matters were. If, as be
(L rd Ciaiend •; ) had no doubt was the case, no ;
truer or more stri tgent instruotious had been sent j
rut than those ULtler widen cruiser.* had been iu j
the habit ol acting, he felt assured that not only ;
were there no grounds of quarrel between the two i
Governments, ut that ihe lrritulioii which would j
be justified if the stste ueuts that had been put ;
tovth were true would be but momentary.
There were no instructions of which be had any (
knowledge under which ihe commanders of British j
cruisers would be authorized to do what it was <
said had been done, aud if they hid exceeced tiieir j
iuatruetions Her Majesty's Govt rument could have J
no hesitation lu staring that was the case. This j
was a questi m uMflOrliicb, in hiß opinion, it was I
requisite that gre^^Hyeatance should be exercis- 1
ed cy h-rii (.tear, heat.) to prevent a
rings of them would desire—
an -ii nr po
Ate ‘ 11
Mi.', yat
. ri”
! -a t
~ r 1
- , i ~
■
ar)
pl- C -0.
s-,’H||Hpn|t!
< - ,
- t-oua
fide
as the AmeriuanWwre of the honor and indepen
dence of our flag, and j ial as determined to protect
it whenever protect!,"! was lswfuily olaimed and
could be legitimately given (hear, hear); but we
should consider our flag tarnished if it were made a
cover for netarious tri nsßCtions such ae he had re
ferred to; and, so far from finding fault with any
foreign powers which should interpose to prevent
the perpetration of such offenses, we should rather
bs ottltged to them for their interference. (Hear.)
He did uot think the American Government
would differ from us on that point, and he theretore
hopnd tiiat both Governments would calmly con
sider the matter, and o nUnuing to entertain toward
eacn other lriet.diy feelings aud sentiments of mu
tual respect, cerne to some good understanding on
the subject. He wished to ask his noble friend
whether a: y late cou.irunioations ou thi-subject
had passed between he. Msjeaty s Government and
the Government of the Uuited S'ate ’ whether
anything had occurred to justify the apprehensions
which had been entertained ? (Hear, h, ar.)
The E riot Malmesbury.—l am exuem Iy glad
that my noble triend opposite has prelaced his
quest ou with the jud ciuus language which he has
used on this subject. It ie of great advantage in a
moment ot and fficuliy. when a difference arises be
tween this and any other country, that an eminent
member of the * ppositi in should rise in his place
aud express sentiments aud views like those to
which tny nob e friend has just given utterance. I
am not iu a position to give the House any ascer
tained information upon this subject. Up to this
time our information has in a great measure been
derived from ex parte statements made on tbe Eide
of the American Government. If these are cor
rectly reported, and proved to have :eally taken
place as by the American Goven.ment,
c-r’tritey Her Msje-ty's Government ate cot pre
pared to justify teem. ‘Hear;
I tru.-t that a great deal oi exaggeration has ta
ken place in the dee ripiions I cave seen, though
at the tame time, I must confess I fear the.t some
acts have been committed that are not justifiable
either by internstiuna. tew or by the treaties that
exist between tnis country aud *he United States
1 am informed that on one occasion a oody ot men
were lauded from one of 11-r Majesty’s st pt ou the
coast of Cuba, though that, is of course a Spanish
question, wh-ch canon y be inoiientaliy mentioned
when regard to America. State-
Ulelri. ! nVC -a - UsIV-. l ab.e am.uy
: i
. -
- : 1-
. Hr
,-mH la.
H Hr .
r
‘H
- -
..
(Hear. . , ™“’
Af.er , uar^^^P e fr ,, n bat oe’.n reported to the
Cat ed S:t.teelßver*.:-- u: aAerfrie tSefirery of the
ciespaLoh whicM have written to Lord Napier, and
after tb* oidere that nave been sent oe our officers
in these e. I hope there will be no repetition of
iuen acts a* have oeen describe dto us, whe.ber truly
or not. (Hear, bear I In theee etteumstancee I feel
that this country neu .emam under no appretien
iun that any thing wifi occur to bresk the cteat.ce
t -at eo happily exets oetween the two oooutnee
[He .r, hear ) ...
The Eiri ot Hardwick said, if aryexcese had been
committed by tny ot the othcere cjtnmandt.g in
these s as, it was not in consequence of tne uutruc
uons that they had received. ‘ (Hete)
In an editorial article on the sains subject in the
London Tunes cf June Btfc, occur* tbe following:
Tbe treafiet France and America nave
expired, and It for us to go on asserting
pre enstcns tostrung and independent
i it Tae Igood done by tne
•earene. nrte.ng oompared
with the bad b'-o-Hhoy pryc, n-.d though th - eo
called-’outrages’ of the Lriri-'icraisera have beer’
no doubt exaggerated by uo'i’ oof and commercial
speculators, cm ugh is kuov l to prov* that Ihe
searchiag vee .**> under the American
titg ought to be brought a or.'e to an end.-
The house ot Mr The tivv Schmidt, which wa-*
-tneof the principal am og those that suspended
during the crisis in November last, has resumed
business, having paid ail com ads with interest and
eharges.
During the month of May trio number of wreck*
reported was 128; in st .p month of ,T*tiuary
154; in Febraary 162 : j Ma-t-h 179 : and in April
; making a total dt : op the past five montb
of 765.
In ihe town of Athlon .Ir'iandt au attempt was
made on the life of Lor-i ‘Jastlemaine, by a mac
*iam* and Kelly, formerly a tenant on his lordship’s
property
Mr Howard, a r-ec -ty appointed U itish diplo
mat at Florence. - - ti:-. bis commission with’n u
t*: w days of his at • *c, ostensibly on account
ot ill-health, but rt trom caprice at not being
made enough ot. Ti. English press are very se
vere upon his conduct.
Th- Dowager Countess of EfEng’-am, at, the age
>f eighty, has recently married a Sar'ptuie ref.-'.-r
a- Brighton, aged thiity . The Countess possess
a vety large yearly income, Ltd lit r ton is oceol
the pec-s of England.
Tfce Atlantic telegraphic fleet was to sail on Tu •
day or WedLesday, June 8 or 9. and n* t on the 19th
as mentioned by our l. <ndoj c rresimndeut.
France—The Ir Me d-nreceau fleet, an
choreit ii- London ru"o>onthc 7th ot jane.
Tiie Times Ptr.s *r --p mlcit ea .s, that n lt is
generally admitted that there lift, net been more
commercial uistre-s expert U’ .-J ip peris siuoe
the Revolutica of 1848 tr .o at the present mo
ment.
Accord, Dg to private letters from Catfaro, two
F ench ebips ot the line have aDohored before
Budna.
Gen. Almonte, Mex'cau Minister to France, was
daily expected at Paris, aud he is said to be autbor
iz -rt t • make a full settlement of the Mexico-Bpauisti
difficulties.
Prussia.—The Times * rr-espordent, 6" T >sthat
the powers of tbe Prince of Pm s.a to act as Regent
will be prolonged for three mutPb* rr. ire. It is said
t.iat whitest Coburg, Prim- A'vert s ! gled tbe
document by which he masae . - .-r / : - hereditary
rig* tr to the Dnohy of Coburg to ft;* - c u.d son.
Jukkey and Montsneoro.— -he news from
Cousfaniinople of the29tti fit, to .... th-rtt’.o ntm
ber of the insurgents in Oau*t. ris tt-cn ifiog. irive
other districts of the iehnd haw C t the
principal leader of the r .volt, is a-ivr.- it Ua
nca at the head of 1000 men.
India.—The London Morning Hot.-.ld giv.-rt Ih
following ou ihe authority of a corre-uoude. t in
India:
It is perhaps not generally known tfcat gold i.-
found in all the rivers cf the Pm j rub befoie they
leave the lower ranges of the Himalaya at Dt-kuu
on the Sutlej ; Nadown on the ii an I Aknoitr on
the Chenab,gold washing is carried ou to some con
siderable extent.
Ti e Calcutta Englishman says that the case of
the ex King of Delhi has been iorwarded ’0 the
Court of Directors ior final decision.
Italy —The Eruption of Vesuvius— Tbs ter
rible eruption of Mount Vesuvius, which commenced
on the 26 hos May, was still acrive at the latent ad
vices. Th - following extracts from correspondence
of the London Times show the character and pro
gress ot the eruption :
Naples, May 3i.—Since Saturday the eruption
has proceeded with constantly increasing violence,
and has presented at night a more and more magui
ficent spectacle. Iu my last letter I Mentioned that
there is- u=d from the great basis of lire in the Atrio
a einglo stream of lava, which, alter a toituous
course, was descending the and iviry of the moun
taiu. This stream has coutinu ‘ its course, varying
in breadth according to the < cidents of the ground,
and Reams now to direct itseli to a point between
Purtici and Torre del Greo i, bill much nearer the
latter than the former. It eppror.che” close to tue
scattered farmhouses which lie abov ■ th * -owns at
the foot of the mountain, many of wlfick it cau
scaroely fail to destroy.
In the afternoons ot Saturday and Sunday two
other streams of lava broke out of the . -eat basin,
and are descending the mountains toward liten igh
borhood of Portin'!. These streams ; ism to follow.
the direction ot ravines, which run parellel to tit”
ridge on w hich the O bservatnry and tbe Hermitage
stand. Teese buildings have been hitherto saved
trom submersion by the lava by their greit eleva
tion, the fluid naturally foil- wit.c the oi notion of
the lower ground at either side of them
Last night, the spectacle waa peculiarly gran t
ami imposing. The la a was poured iu increased
quantity ulong each oi the streams already estab
lished, and being in a high sLcte of incandescence,
presented a peculiarly splendid appearm.ee.
At about 8 o’clock an immense torrent of lava
broke over the ridge which confines the basin of
craters, ini he direction of the Somma ; it flowed
down the declivity of the Somma as au i rneiise
torrent of liquid file and with su.,h i-x raoroinary
rapidity that in less than &>. hour it had dr-ce ,flail
through a considerable pot” ion of the men tsin. It.-
pregreas was then retarded, ps tly by hu diminish
ed steepness of the g ound, auu parity by transverse
ravines which must be fi'lod fcjtoro the Huid can
advance. Nothing couid exceed the splendor ot
this torrent of liquid fire, iurirlug Ihe fourth princi
pal stream ot lava; but- the moat extraordinary
burst of splendor which has been presented since
the commencement of the em otion, took plae soon
after 9 o’clock, when all the mouths seemed to be
simultaneously called into \ ioh nt action, and to vo
mit forth such ton ents of iavr „hat the entire moun
tain seemed o e blaze of fi. i; the varied colors
produced in different parts, o ing probably in part
to reflection, presented r. beririhul and striking ap
pearance. The lurid light diffused from thi-euor
inous burning mass Tenderer ? isible the subjacent
couutry, the towns, the coas’ and the bay.
On each night several thousands of persons of all
ranks, from the peer to thf peasant, urged by curi
osity, repair to the e<* ic of this extraordinary spec
tacle. The darkness * am/- complete, and the route
iiftiauy parts diflijul en-o par yis furnished with
a torch, and a view o those hundreds of torches
flitting about betweei ti e streams of lava is most
curious, presenting the appearance of multitudes of
fire flies.
The hermitage, which ia close to the great basin
of craters and rivers of lava is approaoht-d by a tol
erably good carriage road, aud, as may be snppos
| ed, hundreds of vehicles of every description, from
i the calecne of the mtllionnahe to tic humble cori
colo, are collected there toward midnight. Donkey
parties abound, which ludies do not tear to form
a part.
June I.—Thee-ate of the mountain last night
’ was nearly the same an on ti e pre tt and ug night, the
i eruption, perhaps, being a lit ie loss violent. The
; great streams of lava already d-scribed continue to
I flow slowly in the same direction.
Part of the extraoi dinary splendor of the specta
cle on Suuday night was cue to the burning of
’ forest, over which the lava passed. The Neapoli
t tans congratulate themselves on the circumstauce
of the lava having been directed into so many fiif
j ferent streams; for if, as iu former eruptions, ft had
j all been thrown iuto one channel, the destruction
> which must have ensued would have been tre.neud-
ou*. 4
The lava begins where it did ia 1855. At the
end of one of the etreatbs of lava, that on the Cos
tellamare side of the Il*-rmit!i,je, there has been a
ceremony, I suppo oto stop the lava. There were
a saint ana some priests in attendance.
Man Killed by a Woman in I.) fence or her
Husbband— On Saturday nig! trite City Marshall
was aroused from bed to go to a house on the north
ern extremity of Leavenworth str ..*r.
Here was a horrible eight. Korin:. ’ In bed was
a man by the name Branham, h th o hrn's-d up,
his shirt covered with blood, and his wife, ft j ot,
good looking woman, in much d'sMeoit, cud attend
ing to his bruises. About twenty feet from me
back door, in the garden, lay the dead body of
Hugh Wilson, his features scarc-lr incognizable,
his for-head smashed in, aod the blood and briua
oozing out profu ely, a large aud bloody ciub by
his side, with which the woman, wife of Branham,
sad Bhe had done the deed in defence of her Lus
bo ld. The plain story that the two told waethat
Wimon (intoxicated) had forced the lock ot tiie
back door, had Jerked Branham out of bed atd
dragged him into the garden. The wife fiew to her
husband’s assistance with a club, and, by dint es
well-directed blows, made of Wilson the most hor
rib'e corpse one could well look on.
Statement of Mrs. Mary Branham—Myself
aud hUßband had retired to b and, when someone
broke into the house and came to the bed before
we could get up. The man seized my husband end
dragged him out, st. ikiug at and beating him. He
called tome for help ; said that the man was trying
to wring of bis neck. I could not ,et hold of any
thing except a piece ofb ard, the same now iu
court. With this I ran rp to my iiU-ba'd, and
found him down with a stunt? utau testing one
knot on his breast and strike,g him very severe
blows Aa I got in striking distance tho ntaD was
making an attempt to wring ofj the neck of my
husband, who seemed to be almost helpless. Itm
mediately struck him witn tlis stick. did not,
cease until his hold upon my husband’ head and
nock waa relaxed. I “track him with nothing but
the stick. My hush md 1: tel l>e. >: ! --h ”i bed for a
week previous, and was r.l.n ulessasa
child. I struck to .ve toy husband’s life, end be
lieve he would have beeu ktiiod :u a tew momenta
if I had nut struck.
Decision or the Justices — -We, th” rndctsigu
ed Justicse, agree uo-niniouily that the h itnicufe
committed by Mary Branham on if h ‘.Vbson war,
justifiable, and she is dHcht:--ri dfr :l ustody.”—
Platte ( Ahtsouri ) Argot of June 10
Shooting Whales.—An exhibition was made at
New Bedford on Friday lost, of (j. U. Brand's Bomb
Lance, which is reponed toheve given great satis
faction. The experiments were toiiues ed by ship
masters and others. This new instrument of de
bt ruction consist? of a heavily made short gun,
adapted for throwing ai mb into ti e vital part ci
the whale, where it ex nodes, and either ki Is or so
far cripples him that he is easily captured. They
are made of two sizes ; the bore of the smaller be
ing seven-eighths of an inch, and of the laiger aii
inch and an eighth Oi size weighs 18, aid the
other 24 pounds An oiuin. \ry r.tie charge of pow
der is ad that ia used, the gin being loade with t
bomb, cylindrical iu lorm, ar ; d sha'peued at the
forward end, and having a father of India rubber
attached to it like an arrow, x> guide it to ito mark
Th*” cylinder ia twelve inch long, silk and wi'.h two t*
four OUBC--8 of powder, acci - ding to size, and hav
ing a shank six inches long, ’vith a ruse inside. Tnis
tuae 13 ignited wheu the gui. ebebargad, and ex
plodes in just five seconds, which gives sufficient
lime for it to penetrate tne t jale aud do its d*sadly
tfice. The piece ie tire f ~ from the shoulder, like
the common gun, and tbe omo is projected with
the precision of a rifle bal! If it penetrate a vital
part of the whale, it V 3 al mo t sure to kiil him at
once ; if it lodge in the • es on of the sp ne, or of one
of the flukes, the whale’s cock is broken, or hu
•*shoulder blade” shattei* by the explosion, so ’bat
be can make no farther effort to escape Tne lane
's then upea and tbe monster killed with little risk ot
life, or having tl bca* stove. The most ugK
species of whJe to ji - aid to be the “ Califo Lia
greys.” They are r jely shy, and wneu aftor a
lon(. chase, or by bl . r’-e, an iron is tautened iu
them, they run as last ar a locomotive, dive to ib
bottom of the oeeau.orir.ore frequently turu upcu
the boat aud crush it to atoms with luetr fi. k .
Several 6hips which have Detu fitted out a’ the Sand
wich lelaudi, for ertr ing on the c .ist nl Ct o
have hst nearly ail tbe r b ?.’3 b/ ‘-rb
theee warlike whale*. The oomb !ar>ce bB. core*
quentlr become an i do peur&bie artic e in tc oil
fit of these wt.alers Some carry one gha •■■t
each bt)**, whil -<■ -.tr* : -r.t only one ir wo. Tee
from S4O o4> each, .cd j; bombs $3 56
a piece. Oue chip —y ar- .ed at fjczketuu,
which reported baw.ig ien 15 0 tun. o: oil by the
use of tfce bomb ia:.: - T■<*et.
The Female Slav-EocJ LgKdjn—The Loiioo
Weekly Tioite ays that r te y-ung milline * and
drese-makcra of that city are c ndecnaed to tfixtoi l
seTfeDteen or eiphtoen Luirb of toil o.f the twenty
war in eaen day and ni<ht. Their work is carried
on in crowded, un ventilated ro an-, where their
frames are kept bent at their labor until their eyts
ache and tbeir uoibs refu-e t> perform tbeir duty
They have a short ana painful i fe and an early
grave. In a recent speed j. Lord Sbafresbury f-aid
toat many of ytourg w. men bad been trained
gently and tinder y, in de.icaie atd happy homes,
possessing aii the virroes and ter oemets that be
kongto the fr-maie sex, aud rend-.red by rhoee very
characteristics rnoce obeaien:, more unmurmuring,
more feiaviehiy subject to the aujfeor’.fy and tyranny
of those who are put over tk*m. ilia ordship aods
that they have no alternative be'-Ws.ei* submission
and the street door, tote a.ke, ~p toe ooecu
tion of Boob a young woman ce wbit better tnan
the condition of the most wreushsd t:aye in the
Southern Slate# of America 1” A qus iixi u> he
Corju-yundenre of li, K O. Picayune
The Frazer River Cold Mines.
Siti Francisco, May 20,1858.
All California is alive with anew gold fever, and
•he disease will soon become epidemic in the At
‘autic State*. Tbe rhmor* which have reached yon
üb‘-ut the discovery es rich and extensive gold
(pines in the valley of Frazer River are confirmed,
nil mare than confirmed. Well authenticated ae
counts have been received that the bauks of that
stream, for more than one huudred and fifty miles,
trp at rich in fine gold as ever were the banks o’
“UY f * Te f ™ California; and although no other part
f New Celtdonia has been prospected by white
miners, yet every body is snti tied that the diggings
must be extensive, for we all know ihat fine gold
on the batiks of a river must come from a oonsid
ruble distance ; and if there be irmokof the nr.-
e ous metal, tbe fields whence the gold was brought
down by the floods must be extremely rich, or else
or ad over a large amount of ground.
Frtzer River is larger than the Sacramento, and
the unites commence at a hundred miles from its
m; nth. whereas the Sacramento three i.rn ‘red miles
non the ssa has no gold ou its immediate banka
■a the valley of Frazer Rive r is as large as that o’
- te Sacramento, the inference is that the auriferou-
Ttßi'z or dry dtpjings wbioh tupplied the gold o
he cits iu the former stream must be either nearer
‘is centre of the vallev or immensely moreriohthsu
h._a<- of the great artery of California.
■ here sre as yet nut more titan a couple of bun
urea ot white miners in the ro w Et D, rs-v., and
‘be ouly rou'e ot frtv. 1 now open, the river i‘self, is
so high and its currant so fierce t ho’ i< itntxsib:-
tor any one to reach the diggings. There is a road
trom tbe coast over land, bat it is not nowpassa ie,
because it crosses the Cascade mountains, which
■ire now covered with snow. Ia July the river v.-iii
fall so that can. ins can ascend it, and snows cu tbe
mountains will be gone, so that trains of park
tnules cau cross the mjuu i.ins; and then there w i’l
be a grand rush from Catiiornia, rivaling perhaps
the rush to this country in 1018. Already fifteei
hundred people have left this port, and two or
tl ree thousand more will start within the next four
weeks.
T< e rainerg now on Frazer river are making
f.om to fii a day ou an average, working with
rockers ; and this is aa much as to aav that v. ith
aluicee, and when the water ie low so that the rioa
e-t partef the bars can be reaehed, the uagee o
experienced minera will uot be ieea than S3O or $lO
As die row. working with instruments which are
discarded almost entirely by Caliioiniu miners, the
neo on Frazer ri vor sometimes make SSO a day,
oid son e have even made as much ar $l5O and
f-.MIO. These statements come to me tr m sources
- Inch Ido not doubt; but there are many men do
■ - better than that in California. The difficulty
” is. however, that all the good claims are taken
up, or are to be found with great dilli ‘ulty, so that
strangers stand compara'ively little show f. r making
fortunes by mining ; whereas, in anew miu.ng dis
trict Jike that of New Caledonia, every man etands
a good chance.
Provis on ■ are high in the diggiugs, rating at
from 135 certs to $3 a pound, and with a small as
sort me ut at that. There are no stores, the only sab s
mentioned being those of men who have lost their
tools, and have been compelled to leave t..r want
of ii-.eaub to work ; or who have started otf to en
gage in some epeculatiou from which greater profits
are h< pad for than from mining
The Indians are numerous iu Frazer Valley, and
they are a warlike raue, well provided with mu*
kets, aud skillful m their usi; but up to the present
imethey have been friendly, th ,ugb they steal
everything they cau lay their hands on.
There is a rumor, however, that they have taken
all the provision < trom a mining camp far up on the
river, aud, if this be the fact, other ao.a of the same
kind will probably follow, and a bitter and bloody
war must enene. It is contrary to past experience
that the whites aud Indians should dwell together
oeaceably in considerable numbers. One race
must give way, and the red men have been com
pelled to yield in every casa herutofoie.
Tne mines, as I said, commence at the bare of
Frazer river aud ex'ends up about 150 miles to the
Hig Fails, along which whole extent there are
-mall patties of white miners, most of whom are
Americans. There are also many Indiana engaged
in mining, but they U3e nothing but sticks to loosen
the dirt, and nothing but pans or little wooden
troughs tor washing it. and yet with rude contri
vances they have dug $3n,000 or more, and it has
touud its way to the c ffers of tho Hudson’s Bay
Company, who have by law the exclusive privi
lege of trading with the red men in New Caledonia
Most, of the Frazer gold dust has been sent to Eng
land, but some SSOOO or S6OOO have been reoieved
here. It is very much like the dust of Washington
Territory, and Belli here at from sl6 25 to sl6 37;
an ounce.
We expect that the result of the discovery of
the new mines wi.l be of immense benefit to Cal for-
nia.
The spirit of speculation had been excited here by
Frazer river, and w e expect to see the scenes of
43 and ’49 re-enacted. Already the people of Bel
langk&m Bay, which is the nearest laige harbor to
the mines, are claiming that their place must be
eorae the 8:111 Fraucisco of tbo North, and towiid
•ave been laid out in the midst of an almost im
penetrable f and the lots at the latest; dates
w. .e selling like the extras issued ny the San Fran
dsco papers aitor the ariiv 1 of the steamers Irom
Puget Sound. More than a thousand persons are
now collected at the embryo cities of Whatcom and
Sehoine on that bay, and cards, liquor, bowie knives
and revolvers play almost as great a part as they
ever did iu California.
Correspondence of the Savannah Republican.
Crop-, &c.
Upson Cos., June 21, 1858.—1 regret to have to
inform you, that, both rust ard lice have made their
appearauoe iu the cottou. The former has but r•-
cefitly appeared ; the lice are doing considerable
mis hies. Some persons profess to have observed
indications of rust in the corn, aDd in the leaven of
certain trees. The weather, I am sorry to add, in
favorable to both of these enemies of the planters.
Yours, 6lq. *
Upat ie, Muscogee co., June 21,1858. —The last
has been an unprcpitiou* week upon the various
crops of the farm. On Mundav, the 14th, at sun
rise, the thermometer stood at 62°, Tuesday morn
iner 15th, at 64°, aud on Wedne day m< ruing, lfitb,
at 68°. These cold nights and mornings have caused
the tbo to get on the cotton. The cold dry weather,
‘with Ihe lie, hes checked the growth of cotton very
much. I awo (Uncovered the boll worm at two
f daces in ny cotton last week ; what effect the ear
v appearance of ibis cotton destroyer >e to have on
the growing crop, is affnystery which can only bo
solved by time.
Our corn in this immediate vscioHy was euffori”g
very much for the want of rain a! of 1 wt"k. On
Saturday evening and last night we wero visited
wit 1 two friendly showers, which have, caused com
and all other vegetation to revive very muoh and
to cheer the feelings of the planter.
Truly yours, L.
Those who have seen a tamed eagle, loafing lazi
ly about a barnyard, will be prepared to appreciate
the difference between the proud “bird of Jove” as
painted by Tennyson, and the ea rs bird as painted
by our friend G. Whill kins —Chicago Times.
EAGLE TIIE FIRST—BT ALFRED TENNTSON.
He clasps tbe crag with crooked hands,
Close to the sun in lonely lands,
Ring’d with tbe azure woild Le stands,
r l he wriukled ca beneath him crawls ;
He watches from his mountain wails,
Aud like a thund-iboit he fails.
EAGLE YE SECOND—BT G. Whilluuns
With crooked claw s he clasps ye fence,
Close by ye hen roos ; gating theute
He spies a mice wi-at’s got no sense.
Ye mice beneath oa .’1 well see him ;
He w atcheth from his lofty limb,
Then jumpeth down aud grab both him,
?. 8 —The difference, tb- ugh only faint,
‘ fwist that anrt tnis 1 now will paint 1
His eagie’s wild, my eagle ain’t.
The Riots at Belfast —The telegraphic synop
sis of the Europe’s news had a brief reference to
certain eeriourt riots in Belfast, Ireland, —Hut SAid
nothing about the “cause” of them Our files make
good tbe omission. It was the old fried between
Roman Chatoiica and OraDgetnen. It broke out on
a Sunday afternoon, on the occasion of the burial t f
a woman, the daughter of a member of the Roman
Catholic guu club. The “mourners” seemed to
have walked in procession, and some of them carried
green boughs—an enblem of offence to the Protes
tant, of course. Somebody fired a stone, and a
fight commenced on a grand a*ale, lasting nearly an
hour. For forty minutes th s battle raged with ter
rible vigor. Stones fell as thick as hail in tbe midst
ot the rioters ; men fell as if struck by gun shots -,
and women too—for the “softer” sex—if the term m
applicable here—were among the most prominent
leaders ou both sides In fact, the women superin
tended the ammunition department of the respec
tive parties. The rest is described by the Belfast
Northern Whig;
“At one time,the Roman Catholic body retreated;
at another perioa of the contest the Oragne party
gave way with all ihe stratagem and mauosuvering
us a military campaigner the purpose of entangling
heir foe. Once, the orange p trty appeared as if
defeated, in order that the Roman Catholics might
pursue them over the wall which divided them, ta
king care to leave come sharp stone-throwers in am
buscades, ready to pick down any oue woo had t.be
dar ng to mount the dreaded wall. This contest
lasted for about half an hour, when the combatants
determined to close quarters. The Roman Cat bo
lies, as we have mentioned, were well armed with
bludgeons. Iu ain ment’e time they rushed at the
OraDge party with tbeir cudgels, and a hand-to
hand fight ensued. The Orange brigade having
wrt stod some of the t ticks from the opponents, bjth
s’de.- were aocut equally matched. For a short
period he soence which occ .rred almost belli *3 de
rtcription. Broken heads and Bloody noses were the
order of the fight. Several men foil down senseles
aud w'ere catried off in that condition to be replaced
by more able combatants Daring all this time not
a member of the cinstabdiar/, not a ‘ local” nor
soldier were near the spot.”
VVe baro from o her sources that the war was re
samed ou ihe following Wednesday with increased
vklpnce. Tbe rioters virited tbe more populous
uara of the town. Several places of worship of
different denominations and private house* were
nt ta kd and a considerable amount of pr perty
destroyed. These disturfiancee were of so alarming
a character aa to attract the attention of .Parliament,
The English Gold Medal. —Tbe British gov
ernment have bestowed upon Dr. James Wynne
me great gold medal of that country, as a mark of
‘heir high appreciation of his scientific label's. Tais
is, we beiie ve, the first instance in which this medal
uas be*-n awarded to an American citizeu f>r scien
t’fie ability. Dr. Wynne has held many official po
sitions of a scientific character, in each of which
he has distinguished himself by the ability and prac
tical nature of bis investigations. Asa writer ou
♦object* relating io public health he occupies a po
riuon in advance of any oth r in this country, aud
has contributei much to place this i nportanr sub
ject in the elevated place it now holds in public ►-
umation. Our readers will remember the va liable
course of ler ures on the effect of occupation del v
ered by him before the Smitbsoniaa Institution la*t
winder, aud his able expoeitb nos the Cause of the
NatK-i.;*.! Hotel disease before the New York Acade
my of Medicine, which resulted m detertniniug toe
inalarra! origin of this apparently myESfcrioas tn-la-
J dy.— Cor. Nut. Intel.
LAfISG,THI CORS.-R fr THE “GE orOA \
oCiCtKr roa tke Blind/ Ar.au*;euif. lih htve •
been a-z-.’etor thecoroe*’ oU.. -of tr.e p v
iuc-. : ’ u to Se -iected in tbit wh ok ?sto
■■si:*, pi sueJ Iy. ‘>f* in en'h->;
tiled tom> tiurt t ■ ‘-iiwi'*; -> otiCi.nta
by Macon Lodge, No. 5, b. A -** 3 : ‘
the Grand Mazier, r Depn*y G -
{Who are i vited,; when a Grv.pt C-mmurnca
vr 11 be opened. Officers and Brethren of *d toe
subordinate Lodgeo are invited io attend -
take in the ceremonies Other orders and societ'es,
and the military companies, wifi probably oe in at
tendance. —Macon Mess.
Our Gold Dioci .6* Dorn Gold Mine ttifl
oouunueilo yiold biilUanf. |jr fl-a to ite lonu i
owner. It is an old thin* now, and downed attract
the attention it diu at loe outaet Yet U
oreat value, ranking indeed but lt*tl oe
Cw the fo'etnoat of IU rival?. Our informatluu Is,
thtt ,t is now paying'rom SISOO to per week,
at a teta. per week We have re
centlv seen a super h spec men taken ‘rom ite neto
ect vein and weiefa reminds us forcibly of what
*they*eli’ of California aid Auatra la.
The Dark Corner Gold Mm* ia also wa beheye,
being worked with much sucoena- Edgt/Uld Ad. !
verliter.
A planter, livingnear Choctaw Island, Miaauslp. 1
pi imd twouandiedand forty o*ttie drowns by
tea vTerUow of UwriT.
VOL. LXXII.—NEW SERIES VOL. XXII. N0.20.
La>i” from Havana.
The steamer B’ack Warrior, ftorn Havana tbe
15th, arrived at New Yo r k on Saturday night.
Tho United Stated . Fulton aud Ss
WdcVhad i>e*m cruising for-the Styx and Buzzard,
but had uot fade iin with them. At last report they
tiad touched at CVdenas Andret-umsd their cruise
The Aiacrioau shipm-v-ters in Hwaua were t,
hold a meeting on ihe Jsti, to pledge themselves tc
ustaiu the Sick'ee resolutions, and to make ar
rangeraents to pu s their vessels upon a footing to
resist visitation and search upon the high seas.
A lMnish bark had landed 3lti Aaiatic3 at Ha
vana. a large number having died on the voyage
The coal piles of Djii Stlv&dur Sama, at > C R? ‘’
BUuca, near Havana, amoauting to 8,009 tons, are
lU)> will not be less then $l3O,
It is repotted that she-British cruisers had caught
•t slaver with i OO Africans on board.
Theraitwjy from Beglato Matanza.y wiii ae com
peted ab -ut the of June.
Seizure of tho Cortes.
Correspondence of th- He. cUL
Havana, June 15, !85S—Tie mush rtf cf •**
American schoorer Cor£-2 hv the British go’:hos p
Forward. rud the. pr.-lun : a-y P’occeHtogi for !,•?
coofl-'ca’ion-as a slaver by Utß' : >h G vernrou.c,
-may Bo a Very serious ma ter fer the parties c m
cerned m it, os bv the offi-ial infonija' ton whpi i
nropo -n .v iorgivs you, io appears that there air
two sidos to the story.
1 have been fu aishsd with the foliowing absrrrtoi
of testimony of passengers by tib Oort- a, aken ii
the Consulate of the Unitea S'atVs by Don Juan
Alberti, one of the deponents. I -übsequentiv o’ hi
i.ared it with the original on file, in tbe U-dL-ci
B*area Consulate, and .ound it to oonlorm in even
PVticu*ar as r > word and fact:
D m Juan Alberti deposed, “that he took pa
aage.in the srh roner Cortez, wi b a regular p*-s
p rt from the Gover mens of Cub’-, and in oharg*
of tho cartfo on b *ard of the sohoooer. bound to tbo
island of Anabou on a lawful trading voyage, and
t om the port of Havana on the morning oi
the Lfitfiof April. That h* had with him on boarr
in hia trunk, beside his wearing appaiel aud other
small articles for his own use the sum of eight thou
sand five hundred do Lrs; that Is, five hundred
doumOoDS ; that the cargo ot this schooner under
his .charge, consisted if empty casks, rum and pro-
V'siotis, to the value of twenty thousand OBe hun
diod ami ninety dollars , that ton the following
morning her BrTannio Majesty’s gunboat Forward
captured the schooner Cortez, that the boat of the
man-of war came alongside the schooner and an
officer demanded the vessels papers, Winch wen
exhibited to hin ; afrer which ‘he Amerioap wac
hauled down, but the mato interfered, and a'ter
some remaiks made by him, he hosited tbe fl vg, but
it was soon after forciby lowered away by the
British officer or his men, and the British fl g run
up iii its place ; that himself, the other passengers
the mate and others us the < rew were much abused
by the British officer aud his men ; and subse
quently himself and the others were oonv*y®d
n board of the gun-boat, with all their baggage and
effo ts.
“On arrival on board of tho man of war, the
Am* rionii nrtato aid stamen were Landt ullVd anu
imprisoned. On the third day attar beirg taken on
board the Forward, the commander a>;d his crew
deprived him and all the rest of everything thay
p.)Bse&Bed. except a small poftiou of their cloihina;
that previous to this last “Ot of -t'mse, be, with tiie
others, were compelled to strip alin :st naked, and
tkeirptrsons searched with unneiessary violence
and sham^-lesemns. At, this tune the man of-w<tr
was off Cayo Piedrn, near the^ieutrance ot the bay
cf Cardenas. Tue boat of tbe Cardenas pilots wan
lying t here, and the passengers asked the pilots to
stop for them , but not being willing to be detained
by the office's of thegunb at, the boat was about
Htartiiif’ fr Cardenas, wh*-n the British com in an
der hailed them, saying, “Wait a few moments—
the Spaniards have plently of doubloons, and alter
they have been well stripped you may take them
away 1 ’ Af er this,as the British officer was very
much intoxicated, he treated the passengeia and
crew in the most outrage-us manner, assisted.by
h<s officers and men, as if they had boon found guil
ty of the most heinous crimer*. The officer then
returned three watches, of no great value, one rs
them the property of this deponent; aud at about
9 P. M himself aud the other passengers, aud one
of the Cortez’ crew were put ou the pilot boat aud
sentaway.”
The other protests te, viz : Don Manuel Vidal
Pores, Don Miguel 8 deraud Do j Autouio Flores,
say “ that they have heard the above statement ot
Don Juan Alberti; that they were all pnßPengers
together ou board of the sohooaer Cortes ; had
regular pa*Bpor<a from the government of Cuba,
and were bound on a lawful voyage, and that tbe>
haJ no reason to eu-pect that the Bchooner afore
said was npt a lawiul trader ; Uiat the facts ae ee’
forth by Alberti, are, to their knowledge, true and
correct, although they do uot know the amount ot
money that was tak-n trom hiinon board the gun
boat, but tbaf it was a large Bum in g.!d Spanish
Doub’oonß; that they experienced the same oruta!
treatment tiom the British efficers and men of the
gunboat Forward.”
Manual Vidal Perez further states “ that he had
ou board the Cortez th© turn of six thousand dollars,
which was taken from him ”
Miguel Soler says “ that he was robbed by the
effijers aud men of the cruiser aforesaid of the sum
of four hundred and twenty two S laun-h doubloons
or ounces which he had with him aud Dn Ar
tonio Flores stales “ that the British officers and
crew of tbe Forward, took from him, with violence,
two thousand dollars.”
They all declare -‘that they saw all the ship's pa-.
pers of the achooner Cortez, as well as their own
passports from the government of Cuba, in ihe
hands of the oominander of tho gunboat iu tbe cab
in ot the Cortez, soon or immediately after he first
came on board ; that he reed and examined them
carefully and retained them and enbaequently deny
log to t-em, on their demanding of him to return
their passports f that he had seen or had in Mbposses
s on any papers ou board ot the Cow* z ” Th*y pre
Burned that tbe com kpder of the gunboat d**at!oy
t-d all the papers, although lliey could not to
it, as they had not seen him in the act ot dee’ruc
tion. They do swe r “ihat nobody else had o*sas
pion of the papers after lie came on board of the
C rttz, and they were placed m his bancs.’ V. ey
all did aud do protest ug inet ihe ai)jo*fiflb> ai'l
illegal ac*s offerßritn ic Majesty’s tcreiv uu
boat,ihe Forward, her ffioers men. au** amo
rally declare that t’.ey bold her Butamiic M ijep|y’B
govtnunHt! foj ihe muo-ys and * (feds
taken lr m Jnm individually, also for damage* for
the wrongiul iinpr sonment and other injuries to
which they were eubjeoted by Her Britannic Majes
ty officers aud servants, as w“Il ae to the ityury of
their busine.-#, by viriu© of the detention to which
th y were subjected, and the total disruption of their
lawful voyage of busmese on wbioh they were pro
ceeding. They do, therefore, in addi’ on to the
Bums ot money, property and good© taken irom
them,demand indemnity from the government a’ore-
Baid.’’ The deposition is signed and eworn to by
Juan Alb rti, Manuei Vidal Perez, Miguel TSoler,
and Antonio Fiores.
The mate Archbold and Bailors, named lu the pre
vious history of the Corlez, also depoped that ryery
thing was done in the power of the British officers
and crew, in the four or five days that the Cortez
wa kept, oi uising with tbe Ft rwaid before she waa
despa’ohed for Jamaica to impair In r honert ap
pearance, that her lockers were emptied, many of
her rum pipes tbe same, and much of the rum ta
ken on board tbe Forward for the free use of the
crew, and many of tbe goods for trading purposes ai
Anabou, an well as provisions for legal traffic, wero
broken up, thrown overboard, and taken on board
the Forward for use, &o.
All these things were cone in the presence of Lt.
Henry Davis, commander of the gun-boat, who
ewo r e to the necessary depoeitians for use before
the Vice Admiralty Court, which was to hold a ses
sion ou the 14-h ult.
No doubt the British Government will fully in
vestigate the matt r.
From Ike Louisville Journal.
New Method of Bryin* Prachee.
Messrs Editors i- Aa the furze which covers the
peach ie very otjec ionable m and yiug tiiem wiifi it
un, and ai pee!log the n f*r arying is pro-
CC'B, and causes the Jus? of much of she eweeteet
and oeicof ihe fruit, ap'an whi -h will obvhite both
thf-be objections, and giveu?? Uic dri< and trut li g od
a3 if pealed, in fa t even better, is n d*s diera
turn, the finpplyiug of wine . would oe very a;ic*-p-
Üble to all who arc in the l abit ot drying this ex
cellent and desirable fr lit f r tbe table uae. A adv
friend of the writer has founu it and com muni
cated it to him, u -d he will hs: describe it:
Mak“ a tolerably strong ley with wood aches, by
bo lmg them in water- letting it staud, after being
boiled suffieftfltly, until the ashes settie to the bot
t m, when pour off the ley. Then put the peaches
to be dri-;d in th s, warm , but not hot enough to
cook them any \ and rub them in it awhile. Then
take them out and wash them iu clear cold w iter.
This proct-03 wi 1 U ke all she lurae entirely off, and
leaves them as slit k and smooth s nectarines, with
nothing but a tbin skin on them. Then cut off and
dry aL unuaL Peaches dried in this way will be
found to be very wwoet, and have all tbeadvanrairen
of not 1o b ug any by the uaual proceßß of peeling—
as the sweetest part oft ie fruT is generally that
next the peeling. We have eaten pnitry mode
from Buoh peaches, and cau speak from experience.
Henry oe., Tenn, April J. R. H.
Levee Broke —A Great Calamity —At dire ca
lamity has befallen our people To our Borrow wo
have o record oue ot the worst strokes of fortune
that could have come upon us. Thursday night,
the Jevee on** mi e above this place, (on tbe bank ot
ihe Pass ) broke, and when discovered at uay-light,
the break was abou* twenty feet wide, but before*
the citizens could assemble, it was thirty ya •
wide. Strenuous eff'.ria to stop it were made, but
ro no purpose The wo k was continued uuril th *
breach bad gained sixty yards :n wi lth, When it
was abandoned. Tue eliannel is widening and deep
ening every hour The water has a tall <f eight or
ten feet and is ru-h ng du*n with terrific rapid.ty,
with such power and force as to foil trees m its
course, throwing waves and spray high into the air,
with a roaring ciiu to that of an approaching tem-
pent.
The damage iu this county i* almost incatoulaole
It is etimated by Judge Shelby and C. Bono, (old
resident.) at Si,L(JO,OOU. Judge Shelby eewwtt*
hiß loss at |2.>,U00. Mr Bobo cßtiaitHea hi-* at |I ( J t *
000. F E. Shelby eHtimatee his loss at $3,000. k
will injur© a majority of our planters, by destroying
crops, Hock, etc If the river retna nB full it will
r ood the country along tbe lower pans. We are in*
lur.ned that, oue hand, with hours work, ooulo
have thrown dirt enough upo i rkis levee to have
prevented it from bi caking. If true, t.ere has been
grosi neglecr and carelessness upon the part ‘d
somebody. It was not oa the part of Col. J. L, Al
corn, levee commissioner, for ho been absent
from the county foi the last week, and w il regret
it. and suffer an much from .t as ->y other cwtixcn
Who is to blame? ,
Alter tlu> above we put in type, we wMfl
from Mr. P-jrter, Sub levee Com jus ty.**, ™
was at the levee where the crevasse •'’t ooc a.
on Thursday evening, and that it “°™?*}*J***t
qaireu irum tig .1 to ten io3ht n4 10 th. r./ r
over tbe levMat tbit ~0i..0 t..e
fla-.ooatu.en Uci a Lcl .; . .
|, [
: ’ft.' 4r r-W? .T’r w>V ‘hatthe Anti S aver,-
oraaor s,h’ ?.i i-i-wsU- fr >m E-K'anJNL. poilnn ,-i
Ie Atnericaa 00-nVrjity wbkb w< u!d wtenr-eo be
Sn--.n nearer ro u by in ereet yio by ino.ir.a n—
-karlo* tbe Mibefux nt ci-pui- the tm'y temperate or
f'iendy lan K uKe toward-Eo* and proceeded
from tue fcoutbern ai a the s o he
S ave States proclaimed with amusing nx’fhva
gance the roperi* rity of the old countr) to the hated
Yankee territories of the North. Anglo phob a U
by conflicting orators and tactions .prfoci
pahy because it is sjppoeed ta iuvo!ve a sen'iment
of ouanitf.onß t-unpicion aud di.dike. If the cotton
growers were by the sußpenaion of the slave, tr uie
agitat.on, left to the Datura’ operation of their Bvm*
pathiea with the c .tlon buyers, quarrels with E g
iand would become oUb ful party questions, m
stead of furnishing a common fmu of popularity to
conflicting
to confine tbe irapr-nding controversy to tbe facts of
the alleged aggression. And genersl dLcues'on of
the policy of America in ng r tto the slave trade
w.T only give unprofitable offence. It is certain
I that the exist.ug treaty has not been vigor* udy exe
i cut and, and still more c ertain t hat no American Frasi-
I dent will < ffeud the most influential portion ot uis
constituents by emulating the seal of the
cruisers on the Coast of A’rica or of Cuba, du* P
’ dent Governments, iike men of \ f
I hte, look for no efforts of extraordinary zeal from
j those who comply egoinst tiieir wiU.
Prone the *>/. Louis U publican, June 16.
Umli—liiicre-tine Parllcu’wrs Loin Great
S.tli I.ahe City*
By the pohtenets ,f Mr Fi) vVorthen, late from
-mm thnf place to the 13th ult. Mr. Worthen c*me
iu with Col. Knue s c nupaty to F.oienoe N L’.,
aud pasej th.ough ihi cuy ou his way to Spriug-
1 I hceof his father D.\ W r hen, state
gc jiogi t of iliiaois. Mr WArtreu volunteered, With
oii.y one Oompapmn to car y G v. Cldi nmg s tirot
espa.l ©3 taCcl Johuetou—theegu the rom bs
.weenUmp Bcoti aud Salt Lak’, Oil, wuh. ford
1 >um distance, U et by hosti.e I ; d aua-n r wbict
si l vice he rtcerved in© Governor’s ib-.uk >. Al
though the snow wos etili deep u, a the inouutaiLß,
y tsieck the jouruey id foriy-eiKlit hours.
Mr. \\ or ben s p., a s-es tcu :h inter
, est inn tie ta-t oi b 5 hwmg p.sji tho wuoleof
lasi YVmlbr at >o‘t L k C.ty. Uo :ap, ris a high
er degree of-tiijc o ;o; *t tL Morin n iuklt . y LUiU
Wnß-geueiadv . opposed—indee wou'd imply that
Ui •. laiit ittiic 4y UDder J >hn to i was cApjecd
to pic. do. danger th..u tl ey .i e e aw one of.
With respect lv ihr ntv\ o .in ot >b ist yt M ;rcb,
v 4 .-.j LotkpujJX'i. u i>ait L .'a o ‘ 1 Ler it w u j
o Loan attack oa Gn.J iu 3 on’s s lion or tuat
•i cupi.d oy ttM. Cta ac H mry a Folk, aoao.—
i’iio btso raiment >rs*; ot the n:w levy uad
bjic.o C* 1. Lmuo'h arrival in F-sb.u-tiy.
Sjci. y at.e; that event, raers v/out to Bear r.vr
!c stop their advance, ad tne military orgauizi
'm awm rta erm to t*- 8 i -ae ata-.o es last fal, rs
dicmg the tttpcltv* ;u Oi under orders to lane
\Cf t-v thoueand. He l ro *• ra* btuvveeu bait
Last oty aui B idger n and e j u Oi i? ;a in, iu obe
litnoe to oratS Lorn G v cu umtlg, eXipt a
“P^ ?, v of li.ty, ..Uc profesc-.-d t-j be out wi.u kii
approval
oivv. uammingß a. ••run.*, Lai been thagm
trait eiiife’of ecnveitn,. on i*i> v> y vbru Air.
v\ Liv Evading a pie<l u.’y uaul ot tue Bau
lks auci sjo-nees, by t.ii' 1 -g ,if iue road to the
he cUeceeiieU ai o ia ii-o utotiUeway
11 uiv Aiormoii videitos anu until close
apon oue oi tiieir pi in.opu
pt r discovered him ty ae, ug i t Br.i- river,
dnd made otf; but scon re.u nd, lnilowid r >>
al tiers, closing 14 Oeit.ro aun li behnd, OOnduuLed
Uie Go x eriiui to one of Luti. oidtim.e, wheie wciO
abeut a hunareii other L rte and aM* rmon bnga
diur. The ongaiiier leceivt-d Guv. C. with great
PpiiteiMss, ami mtoruieu him inat no oppo.-itioa
would be by his commanj to t ie t*uvtru. r’a
(u jcetdLug io Sil L iRu-Uii y, Out Uu w.uii co well
c be provided With an escort.
Gvv. (Jummii g was use rts i by o;m jjarty and
a-.idtffer all ike to the Vaiisy j.. i. with t ieir a3-
iistartce, when ihe load was bai i t*c t >w irou-
D.c>ome, hu aruv ed iu god h.a.ta, *\ v u expre.-aed
ainfstli as very intie mtigaoii. :u story in Suit
Lake w as, tuai eo.n oi no ouveii r ses. oiL uad
ruccfivored to u.sm'i'; iiiui iii.iu procueuiug by
li;LoCanon, b lc u la-gt body oi troops was sta
tioned, about whose t n.. non t toward tue Gcver
uor th re was Teas ii to U.ubi. G-v. Cuinmmg
seiiitd tue matter by eayiu r , hat bo wihoa i j moot
Uiem ior lhai very reason. Tulii pleased the Mur
nuns he wuh ; uud, as it Would appear, iho
gains on ut EjLo a.so, to wiuiu word w s sc-ni iu
advance ihht the G vtrnor was coming I'he
ooene ai the Gauou mu t Lave beau a ruai.-nkabie
one. Tne Governor and ecC -i l were brougtic to
pretty lungmy by the various guai*i’ and pukaia,
buu as Boon aa LLj last *in< Wud t asfied, tue thy was
on li„e wnu bonfires a wong t., rocks, where tuo
soiuit ra nad been galheii p..ei ot dry cedar du
riLg the day. A quite general jue dt jo •, tvO, let
him hear sutboicully d.BUuoiiy the renoes iwia
wti.cn the d,uie lake-’ ils nan e. The lemains uiauo
oy G V. b'uujui ug lu reply lo ai: address iu m the
Golouel cominaudiug at E 00, wuji have b .cu
io (ken for with mteieci by t.*e M lu taVorof
Kfh adinusion. ihey wero and l.vtr.jd ebv.ut 10
’ o clock one evening, aud a i epor < f t-heir tenor was
(urcaiaied in Sa.t Lake Guy %. iiy the nex'. evening.
Tilt* dfßtauco is about 5d milts. It was a pretty un*
compioinising bon oi speech, but ns eiieui on ihe
popular mind was aeciuou y lavorabie.
The old hands genera ly sn>od aiooi from Gjv 0
C , fdlr. YV. ihoughl.) bu. ho had ma le great Lead
way with the boys, wno voted him quni he th n,,.
iu a speech whn h had excited muon enihus-a ui,
he hafi promised them that he would le u.n iroua
Caflip hcolt Withiua week, and wouii bring Mrs. G.
his heio c lady with him. Air. V. tumks Ine g-ne
ial Icoiing is now such towards the Governor mut
he can do so without p ill
Much division prevailed arming the Mormon* re
garding their policy under present ciivum-lances,
Mr. VV , however, was sanguine as to t-.e rucceoj of
tue pence party.
Brigham )i oung had come out openly in their fa
vor, and Mr W. note not thu k any : au or set of
hn ij in thtTchurch can sand up i.gaii st him, aud
regards any u .popularity on his part bat t empora
ry. Toung Imd tone so lai as to staito. a gu-nru in
ISilt Lake G’tty a.,d several Upper seiLcuiefild to
prevent their being burned, winch nad been the
cause bt Borne re aik, par.iouluily in ine fiiout .era
settlements. But tjit-y complained u ..b bitterly of
‘ his not allowing them to lake Him up, !y trains ihia
Spring, and said that i e mt. need u ict u-ui all
cuaie in and make biidgcr impiegnable. Mr. YV. a
pefsonal ip niou isti at noaitaok on United States
i reaps or ua.ns ij now intended'by the M.r.. ous.
lie thinks thai tuey would not interi'ere vi itb emi
grants to Catiioiui. conducting themselves o screet
iy. The Indians Would mr, nei* conlid nt, mo.est
Americans slating themselves to bo aaju. Mr. \V *6
opinion, howcv r, is deciutdly in ei ppurt of addi
tional levies, iii ca-ie o! war he does nltl iik iO,-
JUOtl men would be a sufficient for our pur ore
Mr Wortbhii ooiifilms tue rep. rt ot the tvatua
r lion of Salt ‘Like City, which commenced shortly
after%oV. Guuflning arrived. Except around the
guard houses, ihe ciiy is almost a solitude. Tbe
Murmtli- had somewhat resented Gov. C.’s issun g
proclaixiauun inviting persons injured to aj p y to
him lor redreoii. For near ya w eek, they came iu
large uumfiers to uih resideiioe, wi.rie he hau tne.r
mirraiives written down, and when he reinruru to
Camp Sector,*Le<-amtd the whole or them off w.th
him. iSo OvUbL this prniH.-Wu thy step fiaU cooled
the ttennge oi some oi Gov. Cu minus's Morn oa
adherents; but Mr. W. aces uot ibink it wifi prove
euoug i so to alter matters materially.
From the. £>L Louts Democrat, June 16 k.
Tbe paitvof Kane run Car pSc >’, arrived
here ycjterday m-ruing on the ..uirr Emigrant.
The Colonel r mar ed but a Jew hi U's, leaving ior
VFsahing'ou on iLe > io and Minsissippi afxrno n
tram. ‘The Informal ion brought by his party, of
4 bom we may give teo tiauie o M jir Howaid
Egan as auUuui y, repeats, w it additional inmeat
ing details, that tok-g.apLed to us from Boon villa on
Monday nigh’ .
Tin party left Camp FcoU on the 16 h of May.—
Gov. Cmnmiud Lad r* ■ ih •-o from Salt L ka
City. He stated tiiat aluioet i . . antiy upon bis ar
rival at the it/*iry be : u and the popu ation
moving * flf. The movtu T ;i had i deed ocintneno
ed and shortly inci .as ril* the entire people of the-
Noitffera w i. i : ra t on. Brigham
Toung ferinaliy denve. and in‘o h.s fcaodu the great
seal and ad State retards. Tue Morrn n chiefs ap
peared particularly eoiici'ous -iat Gov. Cumaiing
Bboud take not-SL-skiou if Ui.?. ome.itms docu
meu’H, relying upon ibis m sure .j the only one for
their preservation. They were urgent that the Go
vernor fbOuid at once Uepo-k t iin a
nate. The rea on of this eoo- iransn-reil wi.U the
dUo-overy that exienaive p’repaiauois had b en
skilfully made to give the city t j thi fl ones, ala
tiie Russians at Moscow, ij-irge quantities ot dried
feuce-wo-d had been arranged in many bousee,
which a match would have kindled to cuLflagration.
Happi-y better oounaelß prevaned huiong tne lead
ers, .and strenuous endcav. ra were tu cessltly
made by the major part ot the population to prevtut
thecataatrophe.
Having received capitulation oi B igham,
and ttken efficient means t-> pnv i t t . ei dl drreu -
ed burring of the city, O =v. Cu injo:g it
proper, it possible, pe.tcol” y ’ ; pre eut ‘ue migra
tion Southward, ao(l e r ctf r*.f:er t!i trails Tbe
whole populatmuof tbo r.. Lein eettienients were
onttoroad—c lew guards alone ceing left iu the
villages. Thenuni Aioi i w<>menand children
could eo&rcely be in*a t> > a : .;U. Many weis lar
advance ; so that :t waa u:itle-b to pursue tte.,
L'he forward trains were three hundred ui lee down
the valley. Tbe-ftyveruor Ooumed eeven hundred
aiid fiity !adtii fvi . Icmnes. ‘i bey wro
abundantly provisioned, many hundreds bad ‘ hut
ted ’ by the way, 1. e , bao ouiif auobs Lous a of Lo
road uitid. The cold- an 1 heL* v ta ■ s Lad oisap*
pointed their -xpectati •hos ue w- alh -r ntCie
s .ry to the perm n-. r-y o*’ s. ;h r-u -lureo, eu i Lad
washed, away liiefr wails ‘1 !•-. y tnus Itit ix
pofled to winds and rains Butt Lei e appear*- d
no very terhms Buffering, though cnucii and trying
iriconvtni*3Dce. Tiie attempt to procu e a gmeiul
abandonment of the march w&3 ot cour-e futile.
There is uncertainty about the dastina ion which
the M rinou leaders now p.. p istd to tbeuieelves.
They keep their own Ojunsel iu Lis respect wi b
remarkable cloeeneea. Tue th at they
are bound for Cedar City ,p rather dicredi ed by
toe fact that thy Lave driven large herds ot ibor
cattle much BOutn ward of that point. I is feared
that lAey may coaletoe with some of tbe Inoiaa
trihJof the bouth, winch are already •ufiicielltly
vexmlouw, and give mu :b troab.e to tne gov
ernment. Tuey themselves oompliin oi tne
treatment of roving parties o’ Indians. wn Aiding
tin m rfelenceless on the road cannot re i.-it tro
temptation presented by §j muoh oooty. Tro lu
dians ridieme tbe Mormon*, sayiugtuey are squads,
and can’t fight.
Tie oepir.ure o the Mormons appears toVe con
ceiled by the lekderi, and those iu the Anner oaa
camp, as probably tne u -at cotiren .ea-ible. be
cooiueftS, address anddirmness of Gov. Cumu l g ia
Becuiiug the adop i>o of this alternative to war are
dtronglv attested fy the eye-wit esc-s oi h.j o*n
dflCt H smanagement Oi tbe aru y in Pi critical
cirouifistaLices also ehciis, and wo u abi not and turves
warm euconaiUine.
Mr. Ka.no.has arrived at Philadelphia, and what
aCcoUi.ti be Lae gweu off e u-ntter r-oireepcnd
mainly with tiie n&iTative ot Mr. Worthen.
A Death Clock—W Lave rtceutly been In
formed otxi uuly w-jndt riui clock, which is said to
belong to & family residing iu >towpori, Ky. We
relate the pecu iarities ot to ,b clock as tDcy were
related to.u*, leaving our icaueis to dr*.w their
own conclusions-as l<> the mystery. Tne clock is of
ftlffiple ooi BtruptiOU, aucl Lei* ngs to tne am iy of
L v, but all the effort < l to-; cock u a
k-rs have not been able to m-ke itkoep ton con
s*q lentiy it ha* been per mined to root in ri euce --
A lew Lours belore the death of Mr L va
Sie er w hich took place some time ago, tbe cio< k
suddenly t uck one, after a s iecce ot several
months. It thus continued sueut unri another of
ue family waa pruti rated with a foTal in lady,
when i again siru* k one, and on tbe following
day U.e tiri and waa buiied A year tl p<td. when a
Second ci.ild sickened anu died i tbs clock waa
punctual iu Bounding one a few Lours previous to
ms de.ith.
A third ehili, a little boy fifteen motitfci old, was
ifft t-d with scrofu a, w. i:u b ffl and tbe ski 1 o. the
p„j c!ane. and on me Lird cay oi the month it* r
uains were deposited in toe grave. T>e to k
tie u'iju warning end struck one I. n ver
fife !a> u * .0 dea a k’jell wbeft a-jy one of the
t\ miy in whose p'>ssefcrtien it now it*, wero abo*it to
pie. *T.,jere a e stranger thi gt iu heaveu and
‘ e-tfth, i7atfo iLi.n ire p eauit6f in ou; pai.ujo
'i.y.’*— Cm ctrinati Goze’te *
Pabu ‘•CifD-.i. -i.,. . . e-r.
hasi riten Copcu -’i>g l: e e‘.j t of an Eugu h
g -HMetnan foi oe a. t * .a. it. uiverpool, where he
*fe,qui;ed a forityue lo fcaifor eomo been
*rpenalty’ Li t*a:a>,f with j.j u fooy Oi good lauit*
iy, aieO .rotii ti.e n igiboruou i of Liverpool tbe
genriefhaiv ie inarutd -o a young and pretty wife,
superior in ail thing.-, to i*-y say, to her rival, out
w a iting the chum . t nov-iw aloLe to fix the tickle
fafcte of her frail ttiner. A telegraph citpatch
aiinjginceu, in business ..a.-- tbo oepariurd
of the guilty Cniiwle i ‘ <u Havre ‘of .Nt>w U-ieani
Which was rent •-’ -‘ > 10 - • ow 0
w*ite. “to proven : wit* tow-*
10 lMg
os i|ie reauyno•) so l: f *’ ? :;l1 ’
Thi Flo dat Gaiko-’ ppt*Ti the danege
idouo by uie Uouiitt! , lar less toaa at
toXt'P neo. The II j 4 -* V*** ntKt t 0
tlrTr'm being A cooeider
able portion of t Uj town is d, but no b-ute
ot auy ooneideranle t zeLas y t Oten depiroyd or
rt expected to be lbe less principally la in trLOes,
outhousee, goods, 4uiLiiu*e, 4tc l**iLCipai t uai
ntss b *u3es et il above tne wa ei and will contime
o The loss as yet is inconsiderabie, and will ecoa
be repaired.’*
Bodies Found —Two dead bodies were
Friday last in Old Biv.r, btbw Four’s Point. One
body was wellnrcaced and uppeaie i to be but buie
diatiguied. They were n t taken trom tfce rn er.—
Ouriniormant that tie b die were trem
tne bbeamer Pennsyivaiaa.—Jat F*pSus Anralancfa