The Court, titer deliberat'ieti, decided,
wiih the consent of Ike Attorney General,
that as doubts existed whether a legal jury
could now be obtained for want of a jury
list, (which according to his construction
of the order was necessary,) lie would con
tinue the case, and refused to discharge the
prisoners. The result of this decision is
that the .Court of Oyer and Terminer has
proved utterly fruitless for the trial of a
number of cases, and the Court immediate
ly adjourned.
We suppose the order of General Sick
els was issued to aid in the suppression of
crime and the punishment of criminal, but
we (ear this change in the qualification of
joryracn will not only servejo retard the
course of Justice, as in this case, but will
frequently defeat it. If our criminal laws
are interfered with much more, andcrimes,
when committed by certain parties of our
citizens are allowed 10 go unpunished, or
inadequately dealt with, we very much
fear our District Commander will not be
warranted in repeating, a few mouths hence,
vhat he so truly said ot us in his Chapel
Hill speech, that
'lo people of whom 1 have read, or
among whom 1 have lived, could beat them
selves with more honor, dignitv and order,
than this penple have exhibited under the
peculiar circumstances."
We know not how far this order will in
terfere with the cause of justice in our
courts, but we "greatly fear that its opera
tion will render jury trials so much of a
larce that military tribunals under charge
id educated and honorable officers, wheth
er life or property be at stake, will be de
cidedly preferable.
MEXICO.
IxrERULlST ACCOUNT OF UW't 8VRREKSEK.
The border papers furnish the following
particulars concerning the fall of Queretsro
and the fate of Maximilion and his Ueue
rals :.
Ciwre.f ondence of the Duwnsv'Jle Ranchero.
. gahilb, May 3;a.
Up to the 7th instant, the Imperiilists,
as now admitted by the Liberals, were suc
cessful in every engigeruent. From the
Tlh to the 15th nothing of importance l.ad
taken place. Oa the morning ol the 15U
the Imperialists were to have made a gene
ral attack, and. if not successful in routing
the Liberals, at least compel Ivcobedo to'
raie the siege. J he puns were ail lau
and success was probable, but there was a
traitor in the camp, by whom probable
victory was turned iuto a t unavoidable ur
irnder. For several days previous to the 15lh the
traitor had been in consultation with the
Liberal General Ve'ez, formerly a reaction
ist. He had si!d his ovrrciio, hi coun
try, his companions it arms and h:s btn
friends, and befure .daylight on the 15th
instant bad delivered hi sacred c-arge of
lumsn fiesh up tu his enemy. Hvcobedo
was aware of the treasonable 'plot, but was
far from expecting mch result. A evi
dence that he disbelieved it to the list,
f.e would send but two bun ired men to take
I osion of the invulnerable furtigation
1 1a Crux, but he was son spprUeJ of
the occupation ol that main fort witlnut
firing a hot. TWpiman he ordered a torce
! enter the ritjr, under the enmmand of
Colonel Pa!cios, who took We pia-e oy
surprise. Hesuirounded the tento! Mali
roiliin and demanded surrender. The Cm
peror adsancd, sword ia hind, in a dtgsi
fid and undaunted manner. He told Co
lonel Palacins that he coul! not surrender
V an officer of inferior grade, and demand
wl the presence of the Commander-in-Chief.
General Ecobdo, who was a
league distant, was ent for, and on bi ar
rival. iecried the swoid ol Maximilian,
which, report iav, was richly decorated
with diamonds and valued at o immense
sum of mosey.
Eseobedo'nnw report that hi 1mA fif.
teen officers of the rank of general, eiht
theusicd pris-mns, and all tl.eir arm, aid
immense quantitit i.f ammunition. This
result wis not credited by the Liberal here
ur.til the matter wa eapbiiifd by t'se ex
position of the sjcctsa! trea-ub!e plJl.
No Egbting whatever occurred, an I the
rnlr shots fired were by the trait.r epen
their Liraier companion in a-ms. Hit
delirery t( the trri'n of t'.e Cu a
complete, ard wad ne ondr the ,jp ri
ion and by order of the nice o! thr th;
in person
Who was this infamous taNT, thi mi
terable retch, tVtabaed ofiRi'r cim
tnitted that black and damning au? it
was Colonel Miguel Lpz, wl,cnr;iOiar.d.
td at Clupulteprc as liicrfior of the Ca.
tib and was afterwards colonel f the
" Empress' rrgment of cavalry. He act
ed as escort to the Empress. He was the
Woman friend of Maximilian; a. man Ibftt
had been loaded with favors by that prince.
Maximilian was god-father to the traitoi'a
first child, lie is uncle to Marshal Ba
raine, and had, by his prowess and galUn
try, won a decoration of the Legion of Ho
norall to conclude with an act of treason
and infamy. His price was one thousand
ounces.
n ills co rough, k. c.
Wednesday, June 26, 1SGT.
THE PRESIDENT'S VISIT TO BOSTON.
The President left Washington on Friday morning
lst,Q hUconletnpUtfJ visit to Btwton. . He wt
accompanied bj Secretary Saward, Gen. Kouaetut
and eurg03 1) jsil Narris.of the United Htatea armj.
lie potJ through Philadelphia without stopping,
the City Council having rriujd, a 00 a former 00
cau'on, t grant him reception.
lie waa, however, receired at New York wit great
cordiality, and a Providence paper aaji his trip through
to Boston was a continued ovation. Resolutions were
unanimously passed by the LegisUtore of Connecti
cut, ad al by the Legislature of New ilauphire,
inviting him to visit their respective bodiea. and ac
cept the bopitaIities of those Stales. Gov. English
and staff were to receive him at Hartford. This shows
omelhiug like the cordiality of old times.
SANTA ANNA CAPTURfiD. AXD.SENTEXC
ED TO 15 E HANliED.
Santa Anna lofi New York s-rae fir or sii weeks
ago far Vera Crux. o!eniMr for the purpore fUf
i.ig himself at the head of a revolutionary pary in
Mesico. He landed at Vera Cruz on ihi 4ih insient
rid was.iamediately competk'd to depart, and left
fjr Sisal. 0. arriving at Sisal, he wis I wciMy taken
from tin ship by the Liberals, subjected to sum
miry trial, and senrenrced to be hinged 0 the 6ih
instent. -
For the Hiiyjor jUib RworJr.
TLMNIPS-TIISIKVALUE-CILTIVATION-
PRESERVATION AND U?E.
It seems to me, that turnip, especially,
as a crop for stock, are tot sutHciently va
lued by our farmers. And tiie time I as
imw cJjup, when hih farming shoulJ b
the mirk ; and nt help $!.ou!d be nc'ectrd.
I shs!i endeavor U give yoj a short practi
cal article on th ubjftt, drawa fro n tnv
ot t'bservation and cip?nnce. I t til
(p?ak to tHe reader of a large White Turnip,
which I have been cultivating wiihsscccsi
for more thia thirty year.
TaEia Valve.
1. The yield of this kind of Turnip, ii
very largf, I hive myself raiel over eisht
hundred bashel to the acre of them. And
have had them to weigh as hijh as thirteen
pounds wi;!i the top od.
. The whole peno lof tha growth of the
tarn'psutt our farmers, esprcullv t ioef
them who du nit make either cott m ori
tabacco. Beets, Carrots ur Parsnips, are
better rnj. ; but they nmit be planted in
early spring, when joa are sreatU prcicd
with your work ; tbey mut be hand pick -d
after tiiey ire cleverly up, tn clear tHem ol
the grass" and weeds which come up along
witit ttfin, a teduus atd expensive joU ;
they occupy land, ma le as rich a a ,;r.
den".a!rt1eao;i,tttthe exclusion of ecrj
other cropo?i the sanve ground, and ti.rv
must at latt be dag up out of the groun-l
with greit labor.
.Vit with the turnip ; you sw tHe
seed the lit of August, which 1 the !4ck
est time ab iut work the farmer ever .a ;
Ir at that time the com erupts laid by,
and the small grain crop has al! been har
vested; an J the farmer can cotivmienrU
taro his artent' n to ts crup. SecniU,
you sjw then on stubble land, where vuu
hae j nt a crop. Tairdiy, t'tey t erja re
very tattle work; and fourthly, you githcr
10 the crop ol tirop ab'jut the 1st ot De
cember, whtn 3 on a'i" bae tim to do i,
because vonr at a' I iratn is all sowed and
yo ir coin i gi'JiereJ ad in lut crib.
j. A di'i g'ud turnip up in vo ir ta
b'e ?ry ;ay hotti (.tob?r t March,
whici by proper ounigei'ient you can ea
sily bate, 1 iu btd thing with gil beef or
bicofi I r nun. But e are provilmr.ow
clieifly for sock. lornips are drat rte Lr
your ut!en:rg bgs; bitied with their cira
until the grain is sott. Uf cnurae ni"al
muI I do better, and a ltltie siH is to be
a ided. Aiy b jdy no.v can p-j op a 'iden
rgj n roue r withf sheet iron bottom. 1 1U1
ters. brieve, yoi can then by save at le,st
tie" t .in) of t:i J corn fUflU If J hwj in
fittetiiiig h and also get a great deal
m-MC pork, becaate the brcotne fal'tr
fiTi when fed on corn alone. And lor
your st.eep thmugh the winter srd catly
spring, especially for the ems and lambs,
you want nothing better. A iu, reader, 3 uu
may lave all tie oats your ad k c rs tat
ia the winter, for your-horses, or for sale ;
and take the wheat bran fro n them also and
give it to your hogs, the most profitable use
you can make of it ; and : give your cows
plenty of good hay orshuks, and plenty of
cut up turnips morning and evening af
ter they an milked, which prevents tm
milk from tasting of the turnips, and two
things will happen. First your family will
have plenty of milk, a good'thing. Second,
you will never hear that most uncomforta
ble complaint, " old man, we are getting
uo milk, have you got nothing to give the
cow if"
Mods or Cultivation.
Take the best piece of stubble land you
have, wheat stuhble is the best, the richer
the better; break it up well with a two
horae plough as soon asyoa can after har
vest, two ploughing wont hurt; let it lie
till last of July, wha all the wheat left on
the ground will be up ; then put it in co u
pleie order ; then take a one horse plough
and tun it oil' pretty deep, in sindu furrows
just two and a half icet a part, ana sow alon
111 thee lurrows, fvo. 1 Teruvun Guano, at
the rate of 100 lb, to the acre, then reverse
this lurrow again with the same plough;
then with a common coulter, run a shallow
trench right aboe the guaoo, oa this re
versed furrow; and in that trench, saw
jour seed, not too thick, cover them very
lightly with the corner f your hof, running
it along before you; aod tread along the
furrow to press the earth to the seed, ll
you fail to get a stand, keep on aowing ir.t.t
September, till you t!u get it. If a raiu of
a day or two comes, aow on the ground
without covering. When the tops ire a
lew inches high, thin out to a stand of V tu
U inches apart in the rows; aod if thej
ground gets hard afterwards, or much :ras
or weeds starts among the turnip, coulter
tnerx, outttirow uo dirt to the turnips.
Gathering axd Kicma.
You must watch, and gather them before
the largest turnips become pithy. About
we wteii u nuembifr is the right
tune.
lu gxthcring, pull them up and put them
in coatenieot piles in the patch ; cut off the
crowa, being sure t!u; )uu cutof iheb id.
i:ii keeps tnem from proutiug alter ward.
In putting up turuip, for winter use, twu
th ng luusi be guarded agost; namely,
Uati..g and lree.ing, eit'irr ruins the tur
nip, ad they are.very lublelo bath beit-
ILmcc yu njtt it pat
t.iem iuM Ur-e nti. aud t!ev aui b
- d
has recently invented a machine which
nukes and counts, in bunches of twenty'
fire, over six thousand envelope an hour.
lie has also invented a rotary printing ma
chine for printing envelopes, card, and
other small work, the capacity ot which is
six thousand impressions per hour.
as
rj aud tieczi.12.
Unie
1 1 r .
iiiicrru in) keturriv. I'di ;i n -hp
' . " "-'"J mm
voa will uc by the lt ol January ta a d y
cclur cr in a f ouse. Isut tbey keep b;t
out ol dojrs for hter use.
Pat them up ia this way ia rows on a
CMOtcoient piece of ground, uhltH he
bettet if a little il j tog, ta j rcieut th.
water fioci ttaading. Hurt the pfo t'Mee
lect wid- at the b ittoai and coming to a
ii'j'i rnlge at top as vou cai lorm; put
tin toj Uw'wu alut: tle centre cf t'ie 1 04,
aijou pack the turnips, ab;ut three ieel
part, aud p;k to thi row of atobs. Tnea
cuter t'ie idet of the io with straw
lightly, art! take the earth Iroii g!o'g the
rows, ana ovir titcoi an or ec'it inctes
h
puttin dunn ttie stubs
wr stake is to make tmtt f.r the l.rated
air to escape frm the twrnip when t!.ry ,ie
giti tti twtut. Af er a few weeks they are
in be !ii out, and the ciout'u of the hules
topped with loue traw.
et wiii n it hurt them. In us-
. - - ' .'- l'nH IUV HI
deep, so that thr can't be Iruxew t'lruugl
it. The inject cf putting dnn the stubi
Executive Action Under e Opinion oJt
thi Attorney General. Ve t e eatislac
torv authority lo saying that 'ro is no
foundation fur the tndustrio"C ' presenta
tions multipled all over tk ,un to the
effect tha: because the President .ias been
officially advised, and having with his Ca
binet approved the advice, of the invalidity
of the removals and appointments of civil
officers by the usurping commandments of
tne south, he is, theretore, about to ruh
precipitately to a complete nuliDcation of
all that has been done by these generals.
without discrimination and irrespective ot
expediency. These atatements are alto
gether groundless, and calculated to excite
and intlame in advance the disannrobation
, ,
u all who think they realize that some
progress, however little, has been made to
ward a restoration or the South, and who
would regret to see this progiessive move
ment thrust back to its starting point. Kven
in such fi igrant eiamp!ea of ururpatioa as
thosf of Sheridan in the case of the Gover
nor and Judges at New Orleans, now that
iris vuwnnv ia m n. r.nr.i.ji mi. iipnv.il
the question is viewed as one ol rationat
eipediency, to be governed bv the circum
tances, as they are now, am! nut as they
were when the outrarc was committed.
We learn that investigations are to bi
. - s.A t.a . St
m tue, rrpurts re to ue iuu, anu ;ne wnwte ,
loatu-r deliberated upan ass practical rpes
ti'n in every one ol these cae of infrac-
tion of the laws of Congress aod the princi
ples of the Coastituti'iiL la a word, the,
rreaident will act cfticiently, but he will 4
act rrmedially, not vindictively.
4?. lii!t,'t'gtnttr.
Ytitycn Method or IIt.ixo ToXiTots.
As iHn a a cluter of fliwert is visible
ti cstrcm topped d wn t the cluster. o
that th? fi wer terminate t'ie stem. The
ttfsci i t!iat the sip i immediately in
polled nn the two ld next below t!ie
cluster, which soon puh 'runjly and pro
duce another c It ster olfi ii rsetch. t hei
theur are iib!e the branch to which they
bel:i i aUn t'pp"d d'iw.i to'their level ;
and t lis i di:ie Cve time sacceitcy .
By this means the plants bcone ?uf,
diarf bushes, mt sbovr e-ghteen inches
hijh. It i-ru-r tu jreet;t th"ir fvlbng
cvrr, sticks or strings art stretclieJ hui-a-Kitally
al-'ng ih rw t as to keep the
plants erect. In a lJsti:i ta thi all t'i
iatcra's tl.at have ro R wers, and after ti e
fifth tvppuig all ths'latera'i hatfver,
are nip,ed ilf. In this wi the ripe ap is
directed iuto the f'ult. wUch acq lire a
beai y, :.e, a.i J eicetlenee u atuloa j'e
bv other nca.ni.
In various partialis of the sdttth the mt
gratifying reports rr ma l of rrenvery
fr m the ds!afion t f the war. In (Jenr
gia ton e than eer.tv cotton factories hte
ben erected since the war, affording en
plvneot t' the detitute,and paving gnml
dividendi l the stOvkhalders. The city of
Atlar.a has ben r raily rebuilt with food
aod subtatitial brick s'ores and bou,
and aa opera l.ne is in coirc of cvn
strut tin to est f 100,0)0.
alter taking uut what vou want at a time, Several old membfrs of the municpt
suS'tlie aptr:urc well with straw to ktep !gflernT.ents r 1 Mh le recently refused to
1 ri mm S--... m .1 t SlTT m
w t -S
ing tbem, begin
at one end f a row. and
vi 4 1 t'.e air nd cid.
I) 1 1 tlseiii f ir l.jg, and cut them up raw
with a spade or lutthet on tie batti t! &r
i)t cow snd sifip. Voj caant make
5'ot.ud ti rich lor tttruip. Vou tiny
.oatture highly and ue fiuatm bjtli, and
use i'J poviaus t- Hie acie iiistead of 110
if J u like. III. Ireih t:uaure breeds cr
min, h;ch de!ruv tie turnips. I prefer
t nu'ure the ground 1 intend for turnips
t'ie fiil befjre as heavily as I can, sow it in
t'.e little purple s'raw 'wheat, which has a
stiT straw, ant Ice J it o.T with my rows and
lambs ""iM fit gromi it dry, till 1st ol
April, and thru a ; i the guano at the tune ol
towir.g.
But land in otlur rejects suitable (ur
turnips wi.ic-i uj;i mike 4 bis of corn or 6
b ishels ol vtWt u t?ie acre, will pruJjce
a very la.r crop ol turnip. A.
Ora.iJf.Jmo XI, IS',?.
r
II;v. Mr. Willi ri(Jf SufTxIk, VaM re
cently indicted in Sex York on a charge of
picking a wo:iur's packet, has been ac
quitted, the evidence agitnitj him being
deemed unreliable and itMulHcient to con
vict. The f 'iends of Mr. V. and religion
will be glad to hear this.
IMwin Allen, of Norwich, Con., in
rcn'.or ol the wo)d.trje cutting ra.t:hitic,
JS
ol rci
aitt-r 1 avmg bren tern's e J. u?n. hwavne
has t'.ert f.re ordered that the vacancies be
fi!!cd by colored men.
?om of the colored peop!e of the south
are still l?a ing f.rr Liberia. Ant ing others
who have recently left under the auspices
f the American Ct! jn'.ttin rviety, is an
entire td red 1 lurch frum Macon, a , in
eluding the pattur and deacots.
O n of the tu rn disgraceful 'exbibitinns
ious fni'.icini it the r.ersecutioa
of the J-w. in the nw state of Itosmanis,
tn'.igted by a laiaistrv whose members
heretofore laiJ claim to the name of Libe
rals. The governments t France and
KogLnd acted Dolly in promptly and en
rrgrtically interfering in behalf of the per
secuted Jews.
t The Piiiladtlpbia Age styi that the
rennstlvanix wheat crnp thu year will
overreach that of inr one of th? pait ten
years.
Toe oflkial report shows thu there were
registered in New Orleans up ti the Sih
Jr.st. SI,82U persons, of whom 11,73 J ere
Mies.an.i I3,uyu were black. In north
western Louisiana there were 3,317 blacks
and ;nr whites.
rep
New diicoveries of gold bearing rock are
ported ia Meck'fr.bu'i.