TEEMS' - .i.r, dollar Pr inom-lilI wry 3tlK mrn ... . . - in Jine. I . a ...n rtUoul me mm quired to pjr the wau" " ' trrinlitm Htinee.. - "-; RITBS OF ADVERTISING. L ,, (not rwrtdint 16 !" Ihu ,r .... . , ijpr)' ftrtl intrrtion, one doiur; etcii iok-. irtion, lwen()-Ce.ei. ' , , T Tl. .rer.i.ementi ot Cltrk lid Sh.r.fft will Se eh.rrl e1w,JK8JVod -d.Ww.. 5.! p.r ...!. will be mede from ibe r.gr pri . ee for il.terlitcn bjr llie Jr. . crT Letie.s ' be EJitore i i tjW RALGiniT, SGlT. 23, 1810. TK PEOPLE'S TICKET. FOR PRESIDENT, WILLIAM HENRY HARRISON, 7'Af invincible Hero if Tippecanat the incur ruptible Statesman the inflexible llepubliean U'u patriot Farmer of Oliiti. ' FOR ricn PRESIDENT, miiv TVi rn tSltlle Hi (.' tftpuuiicun y uic nuiuai ij .m one of yirjinia'i tubkt on, and emphatically fl'-. if AmrrietC mmt aacioui, virtumtt and ffilriolic statesmen. if Tin broad banner of HARRISON, LIB i;iiT' and the CONSTITUTION is now flung to t!ie bnez inscrihod with the inspiring motto -ONE PUKSIDKNTIALTKRM THC IN TKGIHTY OF T,H U PUBLIC SERVANTS THE SAFETY OF THE PUBLIC MO EY THE DIVISION OF THE PUBLIC LANDS THE DOWNFALL OF ABOLI TION AND THE GENERAL GOOD OF THE PEOPLE. WhJ. -Electoral Ticket. Col. Chablbs McDowslk, of ltrkeeonty. (Ji?n. Jas. WeLLBor.N, of Wilkes. David RiMsoenVof Lincoln. Jamss MtBT-f CaswHl- Hon. Adraiiam Rusciiir, of Chatlmm. John B. Kelly, of Moote. . Of. James S.Sjirfn, of Orange. Charles Manly, of Wako. W. Ciisitnv, of Bertie. J vmks W. Bry t, of Carteret. Col. William L. .Irf-so, of Halifax. Josiaii Colliss,. of W'ashingtoB. Thomas F. Jotits, of Perquimons. From the Lynchburg Virginian. CEN. HARRISON O.V ABOLITION. The Nail Clixched! Let him who hath cars, hear! We remarked, in our last, that General Harrison availed himself of the celebratfon of the battle of the Mauniee, the anniversa ry of which brilliant event occurred on the 0th of August, to address his fellow-citizens, to the number of several thousand, who were assembled on lhatday at Carthage, Ohio, on ths Abolition question partic ularly: We have now the pleasure of lay mi; that address before our leaders. We ask for it a dispassionate and' unprejudiced pc rusai, oy inose who nave ncrelolore, al though scouting the idea lhat Gen. Harri son was himselt an Abolitionist, entertain ed a suspicion that he was nevertheless the fv,nie of the Abolitionists, and that he had marked out for himself a course of silence on this question; with a view to court their rotes. Can this suspicion bo any longer ntcrtained will even his bitterest enemy herWer pretend to doubt either the eotfnd- n?t'of theGenarars opinions, or tho fear lessness with which they are avowed, when they sec him on eve of a irreat elec- tiohy m the result of which he must necessa rily be deeply intcreated, both as a Man Mil as a Patriot, boldly latins the hish' ett ground which it is possible q,. take', in ilefence both of State ItrghU 'and Southern iasirtirtirnlsT ' W ho will hereafter ' dare to brin; his own candor into question, or to insult the intelligence of the peoole.'bv.in finialihg au Geu. Jlarrison, on this.qneslion, jo vital to the South, or of the firmness wkh which he avows his opinions, with a full knowl tilge of the fact that the Abolitionists, whm he forever drives from the ranks of his sud- porters, by lhat avowal, though relatively eaii in nummrj, are yet strong enough in several of the Northern States to hold the balaaee-of power intheiHiands; flnrtWhtf ol their votes? If any Southern man there be, whs shall hereafter intimate a shadow of a doubt of Gen. Harrison's fidelity to his old opinions opinions to which he fell a martyr in 4821 which nevertheless he re. iterated to his constituenta in 1823.. at Che tint in J833, at Vinc'ennes in 1833; and up sn numerous occasions in 1836--and which he now once more emblazons on his ban er, in language clear, explicit and emphat let him be met by Gen. Harrison's dec- i-anon in the subjoined speech - a declara tion which deserves to be printed in let. Jers ef gold, on the portal of eyery legis Istire hall in the non-slaveholding States nd in Washingtori: Rca.l it fellow ciifosens tttheSonih: "I mnst take this occasion jo repeat, (says Hen, Harrison; addressing, w it remembered, a crowd or non-slave-wlders,) vhat 1 have before declared, that w discassioji of ihfl right of one portion of atates which compose our Union to hold muf' M afiinhUg? of ritizens of oth ' T$ Vhich hold nnr, is in my opin wrtrftHt atrf.jJ byihe rnir t of the con uttlrtn." - Are yon not satised wi;h this fnai Z " ""''f 8 ''it nut tuw what Soutliem map ever nu.i -G3Sjtvf5asf rest nshAfffiifft "'HiJirwrffii. wavA- wtfrs: tr.-! 1 . NortiTCaromna Powerful in moral, in intellectual, and in physical resourcesthe land of our tint, and the VOL. XXXI did, or ever can go farther? If it be un constitutional, us Gen, Harrison asserts it is, even to "discuss,' m a non-slaveholding State, the right of thc Southeni States to re; cognize slaveryr upon what ground can the Aholitiotiists for n moment stand? If thij sentiment were general in the non-slave-! holding States, is it not annarent to the most Boeotian intellect, that the ery foundation of Abolitionism would be at once and ever swept away? c are often told of Van Huron's veto nlcdjre and our special cratitude and ad- S- . . : i . it i c .i t i i iiiiiaiiuu are ciiaueugi-u lor mo ooiuness with which he nyows annul a law, should suehan one be passed during his term of service, which he knows can never be pa??ed at all, not bnly dunnj Convention. : his term, but never, at least until the knell You ouht all to write to me OFTI2X of EHsijiiion has been rung in our ears, and ,AVe are not upon a bed of roses. ; ! the reto power is itself buried, beneath the! , --Brrjrtfttftr"'JlA ruins of a violated constitution. And the! THOMAS RITCHIE. friends of Gen. Harrison are twitted be cause they hive declined to ask this sense-l fenatW-ifflrt?ft' fr"MWi': But if our opponents do really deem such pledge essential have they "not got it, in lan guage" even more emphatic than in the promise of Van Buren, w hich, resting on expediency, alone, may be violated to-morrow, should a change of circumstances, in his opinion, render it expedient to break the bands of servitude in the District of Co- himbia, which he now deems it inexpedi- cut to touch? We repeat, have they not now Harrison's pledges to veto any such I must require that the saine.be tranffmit law? Did he not give that pledge, when, ted to the bank of Opposite forthwith, and in his letter to -Mivlooy of -New "Oi leans, ru.-st you to explain why the amount has in 183(1, he said, "I do not believe that Con- been so long retained in you Uajids, press can abolish slavery in the District of (Columbia, witliout the consent of Virginia at;4 Marj land, and the people of the Difi trici!" So believing, he would be bound by his oath,- a stronger pledge than a pro mise based upon considerations of expcdU ency alone to veto such a law. We have Ida pledge, then, in its most imposing and bltgalory -farm. But-ean Van iluren's friends extort from him such a declaration as that made by ' eu. Harrison at Carthage that, under the constitution, (he people of the BOn-sIayeliiildiog Stales have RO-rkht, fhey fare not. With all thqcondescend- ingieadiness with such he has answered and I am requested to write you. In do ccrtain intcrrogatorie lately wo venture the ing so, I can only ttj that , I have been prediction that that question, were it put to gratified in l-arning that his depnsites him, would, like tifoso recently addressed have bcn made to your satisfaction; and to him by certain citizens of North Caroli- if no, I hope that minor maltrri, if mere na, in reference to the application of tho irregularities, will be overlooked. He is principle of the iMissouri restriction to Flori- reputed to be ari honest and honorable da, remain forever unanswered. man, and I do not believe that he has in One word more, ajid -we will introduco tcntionally either done wrong or violated Gen. Harrison himself to reader. The his instruction. It would to some extent State Rights party will see tliat Gen. liar- produce excitement if he were removed, rison is not only perfectly orthodox on tho fr , has many warm and influential Slavery question, but that he places the de- rriends, bo'h at Fort Wayne and in Dear, fence of Slave institutions upon. the broad burn county, from which he removed to and impregnable ground of State sovereign- his present residence. Better let it be. ty, upon the unquestionable right of each' With much respect, member of the Confederacy to manage its W'm- Hrndricks. own internal affairs in its own way; and the iiipn. Lev; W'oodbury, Secretary of the resulting consequence that it is therefore a Treasury. yjQlaMnpIl paciwnen one state, eillier in its political capacity, or by voluntary associations of its citizens, intermeddles, even by discussion, with the policy of any other Stale. Here. .he"i"V?lonIy"-the mof',,ecJ,,led Anu-Abolit.on sentiments avowed by Gen. lrT T, f T8' 'v? my iecUon S?ll f,$n!-innA,m,i LHulyCt wLlri-J ue IZl cnoun?e!byn Xioliti.n ! H! ?r HJate, .uth Abolitionists, ' and himself a Federalist!!! 1 .heir ,b. o. JfluZfh Z ', ' 1 be rrcalurc ilo Uieir dirty work Eua.' -ti .T- r-1 ; . . V ... . I he Mid4r.inan publishes the "followme leiier irum Air. KHche to a metnbea ot congress, wn.cii it vouches to be genuine, ? ,. t Cre lor c,n,lor' (it it had nt be o 'under the rose") touch- j ingarson r iK ana the bed ,T rnaejti,,- iLef the psofle look vAttw':the.-,irmdeufta' mmmmmmmmmJimJmm iinn no iuu except the- IrankingDrihi-m Uv members" iT''XohgrVs'"'io"iubsri1erM'.' Tint was a gross abuse he privilege: and a to the "bed of roses." If the Editor of Enquirer as early as Febuarp. had made the discovery I tut he was not "upon a bed of ro-es," wnt must be his experienre in Angttai?-The VirgintaEteciions, Con necticuf r Jlmle-lslandr7Lnusini7 nd to all appearances, N. Carolina, declaring agaiust his little pet in the interval? I t must be a bed of thorns by this time! What will it be by the 20ih November? Our syrnj aiy is excited at the cnntempla tinn) for we know aomething of political defeats and drubbings, and that put what fare on them you may, and disguise the matter af your pri,!e will, ttill,n,i )hey are a bitter pill." V' :. -.- We expect to see a pretty set to beA 1T." Par,nTV P'-k and our neighh'ir. t ink's real n,Temling was the librrty he took with Dr. Brockenbrough, which, if passed over at the tim was not forgotten, and as we See, lost him the lis!inguished honor and profit of becoming Edjtor of ihe Crisis, snd figured 6riVmrtrnplita-i thea tre. j-CRich. whig. ; , ! , V' ' ' fjnorv.y ' ' '. '. "Richmoko, Febuary 16, 1840 My DAi -;' I have time only to touch upon one point in your letter. A wvkly piper must W "up h. re, ; ptirPy p'di(iratbt -whetlier it is to be and Ex tra Kiinairrs. nr. nhiit I fir.f.,e afinfti 'X sn-r. w, i (?VCMC1 weeks P-ihap , . - v f t oiivpitinm mnet nq Th'irdsv. Meantime I must whl-per y ud(.r the IlAtEIGIl X: C WEDNESDAY SEPTEAIBER 23, 1340. rne, that Fisk is not cmc(1t the msin U'u late s lacks upon Broihetibrnuzh, an l uptm .Drmnjoolee, (quoted injijs own Di ,ril'' nnt Droomgoole, his rsthcr ultra- '' : "-c "re pun, i mic re- nested an annlication tn he made to the brother of S-nith, af Culpper. who once 'conducted spirited paper at LTncIiburj. ! Meantime, go ft work among our friends, for-'and sea what sums they will contribute? to lbs returned in so many weekly sheets, to - circulated in their Districts-(the names hereafter to be designated.) YoumustaU i :i ..-.ltt: il i .... I .. u u"ici iuc i.uiiuiiiuiiaMjLjjmk.ii-iwTXT" isTsued. Writs me by Tnursday morning-that we may tee "what ' we can.do when we all get together in the How thk Public Monet hasGoxe neys, a sub-treaurer at lort Wayne, In diana- lie' was found a defaulter, and Mr. Woodbury addressed him the follow ing note: - " Treasury Department, August IS, 183t, Sir: our letter of the 8tl ultimo, en closing rour monthly return for June, is rereive-l. Seeing that thebalsnc in your hands amounts to In sum of $100,599 82, No answer to my letter of the 8th ult., has been received. I am, Sic. Levi VooDnuaT, " Srcretary of the Treasury. ( Heeeiverof Public Money, Fort Wayne, I n d i ana . - -On the 31st of Aiisusf. rishleen days afier Alc W'uudhuiy. wrote WvHian-lIti- ilricks, I ate Senator in fjongregs, now Van Buren candidate for ele'ctur in Indiana, wrote to Mr. Woodbury the foUuurin; let- ter; - OTaASti:Kt n tWttHW it "ill & i MtioA it S wwfaf. John Spencer, Receiver at Fort AVayne; enlial friends." and the , elecliun is ap- procnin spener was "let be.V and wro(e , Womlbury a letter, from which we ; ,i)e fuIuwing: Z Fxtraci of a letter from John Spencer to , Levi Woodburv. V ; Mr'' democratic friends-think that 1 not leave until after we hold our e- lection lor President, on the 7th of e"ber. which I have conclu.Ie.I to avait.' - i. . u l i ..: A defaulter retained because he ha. ...n- flentul fnends,y 'democrallO friends, ' who think he should notlcjue until af- .. i .i.,:n I late Fort Wayne Sentinel state., that a suit Ins been at last commenced against r Spencer for 933,000. the balance now A CANDID SUPPORTER OF MR. VAN ... BUREN, r"':. "r The "Western Steamer, a Van Buren paper of this city, contain a long editori al on Saturday, from which we make the following selections, indicating the can dor of the editor. We do not approve of the harsh language used by. the editor, but perhsps his knowledge of the individuals ol whom he is speaking, may justiiy the se verity of his remarks: ' w : Cincinnati nep. "Wk have been compelled , to witness the machinations and duplicity, of those who claim tri tie leader brine "party, un til we have drOped them in disgust, and and have erased from our columns the foul blof which the name of A . Duncan and Inm Henderson had fixed Upon the pa per. At we stated at the ouiser, we ad opted 'he ticket upon trust which our democratic brethren hail made. The nominees were, at the time, personally un known to us, and we regret to say, that oar opportunities since, have disclosed facts which would call up a blush to the cheek of every lover of hit country. 'We cannot, we will not, for friend or for fnefnr love or for money advocate the claims to impo tant trusts of tuch aban doned wretches, nor will we lor any earth ly consideration be kept in leading things, by a Junto Jieaded, hy : suejh, , metn as Moes Dawson. Piatt, eteifi Just ouch manage ment on the one hand and blind, devotion rtri" the oiherr hat 'tmughtr this "rwrntrj to humiliation and ruin, and has filled the legislative halls and other Important of fices w'uh men (hat gallows would not nor could not disgrace." "That the comparative weakness of the rulf Democratic cause in thit xity,-it is to he atteilmtetl toanrHHirrrinerpletr Jttnto fiere and particularly the print neaneii oy Moses Dawson, is at clear at the noon day Sun. That'paperit an intolerable nuisance, no man of any pretentions to character will endorse the wholesale false; hood and slanders with which it daily filled, to say nothing of the terret intri jne of this personification of Old Mortal ity, whose looks proclaim the villain, and whose whole life has given daily and con vincing proof: that the Creator, writes a legible hand. Until Dawson meets a just rebuke, nntil ihe influence i f the Clique that surround him it checked or destroy ed, the ? xertion of patriotism it vain, and sll attempfa will but sink the psrty lower and lower in the tcale ol respectability and uselulness." v . Complimentary. Petticoat Allen, n Sen ator of Ohio, and a lawyer f!!) said, in a sneech at Columbus. Autr. 8ih "The Bar of 'the United Slate are purchased, bousht up by the heid, and psid for, by the Hanks." '' - w- - i ' Zedediah Williams. Esq,' of Salifbnry,1 Md., ruined by the mulbeiry specuiaiion. . .I !. - lumped Iron a sreamooai in viicapte bav.'and wat drowned, ections." NO. 3& We do not know how it may strike eth ers, but to our iiiindl the argument against the sub.Treamry icheme in the following Dialogue is about a unanswerable as any thing we have rejtl upun the subject: From the Connecticut Cinanir DIALOGUE BETWEEN A LABORER rANDANErsnArroTtNiLEs;) Laborer. Good morning, Mr Senator. Senator. Good morninjr, Mr. W ilson t iHts'ii-'a-'iiolo-iIalijwTifryuur wife and children how do they stand this II r ...T ' . naru winicr anu now ones ln irnou cause id tho party get on in your town? Laborer, pretty well sir, though timea are rather hard, money scarce, and labor is not as well paid for as it used to be stilUwe haveiil,turned-.:Whig.-jeti and ion i niean in. Senator. That' riiht slick to the par. by to the last,, and we will, in the end,. I reasury will make us all rich. It will ;ive to every nun as much muney as tie wants, and that loo. of the right kind the real shiners. Lahore?, But I hav read in the speeches f .Mr. Buchanan and Mr, Walker, that he sub-Treasury will diminish the price if labor. Having always looked upon you lis the "Dr. Franklin of New England " nd knowing that you have recently been i uostun to tai.K to tVie talks of Massarhu ells, I come down to-day to ask you how he sub-Treasury will hdp the laboring man, when it reduces the price of la bor! - . V ' : Senator. O il you can't always exictly tell how a thing workg for every indiviiTu- 1, and yet it is ea-iy to see how it woiks lor the uenent ( the whole, Laborer. I bnught a house last year of my neighbw .Wheat on) I paid him $300 in cash, and cave him a niii teage f jr.850U. to be paid at the rate f $100 a year. -Now,- tins 1 could easily save, with wavs at $1 50 a day and in five years the house would be paid for. But if (all that I have paid on it, will, at the end of five years, go back to Mr. WheaUin.--How, then, am t toe benefitted? r Senator. This it a kindof natural ton sequence oC gcneral ru'e. No general rule works well in every case. You shouldnt have g'liie in deot you'd no business to goon the credit system it it a wicKcti system. Laborer. But how could I get a house withot it?t I 4iad $J0O, and in five years couttttaniiy have earnt therest, and liv ed in the house all the time. Senator. No matter it it one of the principles of the party to have no credit: no real good Loco hat a bit f credit) and you must go it, or you are not true to your Pr'r- v ': Laborer. But you have not yet loH me how I am to be benefited by having the y!.iS.v.u.woi..-MMwwAw Senator, Why you belong to our. par ty don't you? - -r.-7-.t J?. LabororVYes. , . , Senator. Well it is for the benefit of the party and therefore it it foryuur ben efit. , " ' ' '. ' ' . Laborer. This is not quite clear to me, and 1 am not saiiin that it it quite right. But, since you have been . to Boston to lecter, I suppose it must be true. Senator. I don't ice mytelf exartly how itt gnen to work; but I hive great confi dence iii Buchanan and Walker) they say it'a all right and it's how become a par ty measure, and therefore it must be fur the good of the People, , " . .;, Laborer. Will the pay of the rnembert of Congress be diminished? If jou are marte Governor xf.pmgwilly'ger h ss wages than Governor El'sworih, gets? Will the wngi i of tlje , Postmater,ti1iSje-. 'diced?- ' !C : ,i Senator. The officers wil H get as much at they do now, whii h may be worth a irifle more if every thing else is reduc ed one-half. ' Thit it an incidenlal. ben efit, and could'nt well be otherwise. " Laborer. Then the ofliCe-holder will all be behefilfilTiy" (he subireasuryT)iTlwiir my, sii r . . Senator, Yet) a kind of incidental ben efit, which we do not well tee how to a void. . !":. .:'' . ...... '. """Laborer. And the laborert, Mr. Sen ator ' ' .;: ! ! ..I f'iVa Senator. Yes. the laborers will get a kind of general benefit, which it is not ve ry easy to explainjbut still, ihey will know it when it comet. Laborer.- You don't in pppsf ; M r." Sr n ator, that the benefit .which the officers sre to receive from the sub-Treasury bill it sny reason whjf they are alt jn it favor, do you. ' ' , ; . ' Senator; Oh, no! by no meant. " .They tre in it favor because it i for the good of the party. 'They don't want any thing irnm n ior inemsrives. Laborer. I wish I could be a little more tartin about thit reducing the price of la bor being surh good thinr. " J , ' ' S"nator. You must rely little on yoor psy they will do every thing right. , laborer. Yes. I know thatt huf.now, in our town neighbor Leavenwortti's factory is stopped, and all Ins hands are discharg ed. I used to get fjooil wages, and mon ey was plenty) but now labor it down home of our affections, J HUGH McQUF.ENV FEN," ? p fXMAY5 THOMAS J,. I iitor. nobody has any emidoymrnt, and 1 can not get a sixpence. - ' ; - Senator. I Itll you neighbor roil' mint , have confidence. If is a good "thing ut have labor down. I can now hire a man , to work in my gardrn next utner for right dollars a month, tnstcsd of six tern, ay which 1 shall make a cjean saving f fifty dollars. " - - .'- , Laborer. But will that be a benefit to the laboring rnin or to out" ' T;. ... "Senator. It will be a'kinif of incident! benefit ta me, and a kind of natural con- serjuence Jo hiin. : - Laborer. I rannot exactly see. ' Senator, how labor is benefited by having wags reduced one half. Some ifur neighbors have a notion that the office-holders are in favor of it because their sa'la ries will then be worth more thartT they v are now. ' . Senator. It is certain that the thinr will work so. Bat, then, it is only a kind of incidental benefit. - . Laborer. Bat don't you think they re ' oly-meaiHo benefit themselves" "at the tx pense of the laboring classes? ? T Senator. Oh, no!! Ther are a hiah. . minded rare of men, who would not do any thing for themselves. . Laborer. But they always stick migh ty class to their oiiices. . Senator. Ye but they go fortheirprin- , ciples and their party. . . -- Laborers Their principle! and their par- ty, you must confess, always lie alonr enator. That may be, but it is merely accidental. - ; ". .i , Laborer. It may be so, Mr. Senator, but still 1 can't exactly are why- all the ', . incidental benefits should go to, the office holders, and all the natural consequences, -' as you call them, should operate to de press labor and kdiscourage industry.. -Good morning, Mr. Senator, when I n,JC,,u.J... timel will call and converse further itn you- - , - v-; -r --,"' The N. Y. Times of the 7ih says. Stanl.y, of North Carolina, delivered a very sensible and sound speech at the Log ' . Cabin, Urnidway. on Saturdity eveninir. ' ColoneLO'Fallanr" an offlecr " during Ih " " whole war, spoke warmly in fr of the ' old Chief. ' . .. .. . , :,,.v : A Short Note-A Whig in Savannah, t says thtt Republican of tht place, sold - -me goods the other-day to I Locofoco, and took in payment a note payable one -day after, the election of General 11 ask j soit. i. i.::..-i.' .. ;.- counties be correct, ' Lane, our talented whig orator, triampht by 1402. Thank God it it not by fourteen thousand and two. Frankfort (la.) Argus, , ' ' - That beats the Dutchnun who thanked . God hit pipe wasn't broken when ht lost , his leg. By every thing humorous, we , admire thit fellow's philosophy. W are beaten by fourteen Anntrei! and two, . but thank God it it not fourteen thousand , and two!" JSapital! Well we do get a . god thing now and then in a political pa- per. Wc.-,: . , - ' , i u . H I ii lira ...iiii I" A Jtad Smell.- A man by the name of John Smelt wat caught picking a pocket in Baltimore last week arrested and sent ' to' prison. ' - ' ' " ' C7 Blind i nt roa ' Ho as as. These are ycryjitdf lited.opw. in, England.. fioslon they are going -out of use ditto of New York, ssys tho Sun ditto of New . Orleans, says the Picayune. -These facU i speak ttrongry against the utility and ncces- tity of the blinkers. . W'e can report but ' one rase in out city. One of our citizens lint discarded the blinds from hit earriago -harnctt and findsthat hit horses work just as ... welt without them. Ii'not indispensable, it should be an act of humanity to reform them out of use si together. Opening a Grockbt, The New York' Planet tayt: "A journeyman printer, who ia f rather hard up at present, tayt ha intends to , open a grocery, provided any one will lend . hin a crowbar. 1 v "J .- y .1 i 'i "'I J .-- . ' ,, E3S7",A i party of Oerma.n rouiiciant in . New Yoik recentry attempted1 to serenade ' Fanny El.ssler.at.h. . were prevented by a graceiest mob, Jeaded . by the '" notorious Dixon The mob teizod tha instrument and .broke them over tho. . heads of tho unoffending musicians. Shame on the community where tuch outragci ire -perpetrated. ' '" .. .'.,',.' : Death on a Full Stomach. An x change paper tayt that a porpoise seven and ' a half feet long, wat shot a few days since. inMaspeth. Creek, L. L, and lingular as it.T may appear, the old fellow had roado hit brekfU-of thirty celt, three flounders, two oad fish, and abouthalf apeckof soAcraba. ': j - i ii i i- . t. , Suplcioui,-A young man named Geo. F.- Kinney-died- Teeently at Boston, and wat bufled with military honors. His . tudilen death gave rise to suspicions : ho wat ditinlemd, and arenio found in hit -ttomach. Hit wife, it tppeari, wat the widow of tht Revi Mr Freemtn, of Low. ell, who died in the tame manner having ; been taken HI tn the pulpit. Mr. Free, i man't remain were also disinterred, and , confirm the tuspcionaa to bit death.--Mrs. Kinny ha dissppeared. She is said , in be a woman ol great penonal beau Patixo ma Ptrisn It Appenrt that tha cost to thi United States for keeping the eventeen Amisted negroes In custody, and their board, is over two thousand dot. lars. ..