- - - . " 0-, - 1 V - - f .Y'-Jl -"Vv .-.1 111 1 . T . d I 1 -r . I 11 I 1 - " V if. 1 1 if t -i ..1.5 J VOL.1. !,A: I i II l- 1 t i I ! I nrs v Ill iTf . T Ti eington anb )aiikm iTiag. PUBLISHED WEEKLY BY f JAMES B. SHELTON. ; ; JAMES A. LONG, Editor. Terms : $2 a year, in advance ; 2 50 six months, and 3.00 tfiTer twelve N ' months, from date of subscription. Rates of Advertising. One dollar per square (fourteen lines) for the first week; and twenty-five cents for every week there after. Deductions made in favor of standing ad- rertiscmenta as follows : 3 MONTHS. One square, $3.50 Two squares, 7.QP Three " (i ol.) 10.00 Half col until, 18.00 G MONTHS. $5.f)0 10.00 15.00 25.00 1 TKAR. $8.oa H.CK. . 20.00 35.00 Occasional renewals without additional hare' granted to those who advertise ..regularly, through the year. - .' ' - Three dollars for announcing candidates for of fice. Court orders rharged 25 per cent higher than the above rates. Orders for divorce of husband ; and wife, $10 each. Persons sending advertisements are requested to state the number of insertions required, or they will be inserted until forbid ; and if it is wished they should occupy the least space possible, write upon the back "close." Otherwise they will be put up in the usual style and charged accordingly. No' discount on these rates. ' Facts for the People. (continued from last week.) The follo wing police statistics demonstrate truth of ihese observations: HTATISTICS OF PAUPERISM, CRIME, AND DESTITUTION. Jersey City Prison, for 1854. Americans, -11 -Colored . ... . . 7 Foreigners,-r. J 043 Philadelphia Amis-House. , Americans..... ,. , 914 Foreigners. .. 2,407 The census ofUhe House Agent for the month of December exhibits the following results : Americans. Foreif ners. .Colored .... 557 , 1,745 143 Total number in the House 2,4C5 Police Statistics of Philadelphia. Americans 443 Foreigners 1,509 Culifornia Police Statistics. Americans.... 195 Foreigners 305 An examination of the hospital reports and statistics exhibits too plainly the source of much of the disease, which infects the large seaboard towns and cities, and which is from thence propagated throughout the surrounding country. In PhiladelphfayNew York, Boston, Baltimore, Norfolk, and Xew -Orleans, which cities are heavily tax ed lor the support and medical care of flis di , . f paupers, much the largest portion of the patients are foreigners, many of, whom are transferred directly from the immigrant ships to the hospitals. Even in the cities, those direful and pestilential diseases, ship fever, yellow fever, and small pox, are al most exclusively confined to the alleys, lanes, and streets, and low, damp, filthy, any illy-ventilated haunts, which are ex clusively tenanted by foreigners. Scarcely a day passes but that the journals announce the arrival of an immigrant ship at some one of these cities, laden with the maimed and diseased carcasses of European paupers and crimnals, which have been transported hith crby European authorities, either in obedi ence to their strict and rigid sanitary regu lations, or as a measure of personal safety and security. The following is a letter addressed by Mayor Wood, of New York, to the Presi dent, in reference to the shipment of foreign paupers and crimnals to the, port of New York : 1 Mayor's Office, New York. January 2, 1855. His iExcellency Franklin Pierce, President of the United Slates . Dear Sir : There. can be no doubt that, 'for many years, this port has been made a sort of penal colony for felons and pau pers by the local authorities of several of the continental European njations. The desperate character of a portion of the people arriving here from those countries, together with the increase of crime and misery a mong that class of our population, with oth- . er tacts before us, prove, conclusively, that such is the case. It is unnecessary to refer to the. gross wrong thus perpetrated upon this city. It requres from me no allusion to the jeopardy of our lives and property from this cause. Men who, by a long career of crime; and destitution, have learned to recognise no laws, either civil or natural, cannot fail to produce feelings of terror at their approach. The inherent right of every community to protect itself from dangers arising from such immigration cannot be questioned, Xew York has submitted to it long enough. The disease and pauperism arriving .here al most daily, from abroad, is, of itself a suf ficient evil ; but when to it is added crime, He must be permitted to remonstrate. We ask the interference of the General Govern4 ment. As it is its duty to protect us from forreigri aggression with ball and cannon, so s its duty' to protect us against an enemv' more insidious and destructive, though com- lllir in n ll rt Vi or Cn-rm I call your attention to this subiect. lioivM mg it will receive from you that action which its very great importance to the whole country Aemands. 1 ; -I am, very truly,' yours, : Fernando -Woon, Jiff yor. a nese convicts, crimnalst '.paurierst anfl easef persons, .against the insidious ana destructive innnpnrn"VnrJwbih' iKU launch Democratic Mayorappalto the" w V U 11 ? V V r w wmmmv i icaiui iii jui .putbouuiit "f-i pcii,j3.u jjitracufc iiu iui ii lsiraiion is nerealtcr .to I any political privileges in their native couOt becdmevthbigaritc Ikvr of futare.StatesX tfie T We nor position, and by their "longcareer of crime and destitution have learned to re- cognise'Jhd laws, either civil or natural and yet this saihe persons are by. - our :nre-1 sent!lavsientitled to the same political priF- ileges (as the native-born. Is it just? la, it j ricrht ? Many of tKem have been inmates, ! from ytititW, of jails penitentiaries, and pest j houses. .What is to be done? The Presi dent disregarded, this appeal ? he refused to assist Mayor Wood, to avert , the importa-r J tion of crime, paavensm, and. destitution. TJiere is but one remedy CongressionariDr ten ;to Jlorida ; aothat, tinder th t"rni51 and" State legislation. From ihe; foregoing we make the follow- ing Reductions. , ; .. ; nvi 1. That, immigration, is the , source p crime , 2. That immigratiou is the source of pauperism. 3. That immigration conduces to disease, disorder and immorality. . v It is a tax upon the property and busi. ness pursuits of the native. Besides this, they are bought up at elections, and control mem, auu iiiuku noi, oxoousnea, ana mur der. ' : Fomerlv, the better class came. The old Scotch merchant and Dutch farmer were clever. They came with their substance not only to adopt a country, but to help to build it up. But they that come now come to live upon the country. It needs no comment. No more potent argument could he urged in favor of the pre sent " American Reformation.', Pauperism and crime are the inevitable results of foreign, immigration. Yet, to gratify demagogues5 and unprincipled partisan politicians, must we continue, by Congressional legislation, to encourage the importation of pauperism, crime, and destitution ? ,No national pur pose can be promoted, no republican insti tution can be sustained, by such a course of policy. Besides the direct result, there ate many collateral influences, consequent up on the unrestricted importatian of foreigners. Foreign Immigration. The immigration to this country was From 1790 to 1810 120,000 " 1810 to 1820 114,000 " 1820 to 1830 203,979 " 1830 to 1840. 778,500 " 1840 to 1850.. ' 1,542,850 And statistics show that during the present decade, from 1850 to 'I860, in regularly In creasing ratio, nearly four millions of aliens will probably be poured in upon us. With this alarming decennial ratio of in crease ; with the astonishing statistical facts that nearly four-fifths of the beggary, two- uiuuo vi puuuviiiii) auu lliuit llldil till CC fifths of the crime, spring from our foreign no- . . . I V... . .. o . pulation; that more than half the public chan ties, more than half the prisons, and alms houses, more than half the police and the , - uusi ii duuiiuisiruiii: i i iiiiuai malice, are - . , 6 , . J"0"' of their statesmen, and wise statesmanship suggests, that National and State legislation should interfere, to direct, ameliorate, and control these elements, so far as it may be done within the limits of the constitution. , The calculation in the Census (see Ab stract, p. 30) is that if it increases as it has, in 35 years from this time the population of this country will exceed that of France, England, Spain, Portugal, Sweden, and Switzerland, all combined. And any one who: will make the calculation will find that in fifteen years the foreign will outnumber the jiauve ponuiaiion. ine auaniiivr oi ine immigration is therefore alarming. IjUt the quality is still more so. In 1854, the number of foreign immigrants was 500,000, of which 307,639 arrived at the port of Nr-w York. The white popula- tion of North Carolina is only a little over 500,000, so that enough come to settle a State as populous as North Carolina a yearw The following table exhibits the white population of the State therein enumerated, voeo nffAr0 ...c n tU0 HIIU tllV AULOO KJ I IKJ k I LL ki kill HULL 1 1WJ LU IU L kk k & country, during the year 1854, above the re spective populations of the several States ; or, in other words, it demonstrates the a larmiug fact that the foreign immigration of 1854 was more than sufficient to settle a State as populous as any therein mention- ed. The third column, headed the " ratioJ of foreign immigration to the respective po-, -pulation," shows the number of States, equ al in the population to the State mentioned, which might have been; settled by the im migration of one single year. A table comprising, the white population of the States therein enumerated with the foreign immigration of 1854, and showing the excess of foreign immigrants for this year above the respective population of the several States : States. White popu lation. Excess of imigrants. 337,811 73,486 418,365 225,237 136,901 328.83 1 452,717 308,119 374,509 82,057 . 104,929 204,283 182.544 34.491 356,125 365.966 Ratio of, &c. 3 " Arkansas 162,180 Alabama .......... j 426,514 California , . 9 1,635 South' Carolina. , ... 275,563 Connecticut .... 363,099 Dele ware . . . . . . 71,169 FZorida 47,203 Iowa... 191,881 Louisiana .225,491 Maryland , 417,943 Michigan. .......... 395,07 1 Mississippi . . . . . '. 295,718 New Hampshire.', i . 3:7,456 New Jersey. ; . ... i 465,509 Rhode Island 143.875 Texas . . ...... 154,034 Vermont 2 13,402 i 5 1 1 7 10 3 2 1 X 1 1 5-6 1-3 1-5 1-3 2-3 ! 1-2 , n ,as6,59sr VV isconsin ' 04,756 r 195,244 . Let us analyze this table. : The last Con gress pnssed.au act for c the: orgrnization of i the Territories of Kansas and. Nebraska.vinM which it grauted the right to vole, to: ycry;j immigrant who might settle in either ot said f lerntones and gave to eachr settler-' a-cfir- ; tain number of acres of land, as an indnc ment t6 settle there established, by land Durnoean aesoota wm i EederaLegisleture., AWac. tori&s acqnirthe reqiite orlaiionVheyv haya' nh't toajpply' Torahtf emani!"' aa: missiori inttjithe 'ThftpnVn'iequaliTOtV in with the other StatecBy;eferericfe to the, :foreffoing .table, fiitrwilli beeen that the foreign,, immigration of t5i4 was. sufficir j em, iq nave settled tr.Tee States, equallo-Ar-. karjas, thjee equal toTowa, three quaT'to Texas; two to Louisiana, four to RhodVls land,iite: to- California seven ; to Deleware,- lmmigrdirits continue 'pouring in unoji' us at thctjre-gent rae;Ve:i iriarve:iin' oeA j-ear tenhew States applying for adniissldit into the5 Uhion,' emitleilr;tdntheir'. tweritv Senatora in the UnUed StatesSenate r and yet this would be hui theSenatoriaV repre-J Bpiuauuii ui owu,uuu loreigners. ntne, ra tio of imrtiigratiort con tinues' to I S60 its" it"' has been ince 4 850,- during the r ten year from 1850 to 186a there ndll have four millions of foirignersvintovihU -coun-J eiehf equal to Maryland -North Carolina, " South arouiiui- corgia,,:iunigan;. xviississippi t Vi.ii rkiauaiua,. new. llilllipsilire, UT Nw Jersey. So the Senatorial reDresen- tation of foreigners may reach one hundred and sixty members of the United States Se nate, and cannot be less than twenty in a body composed now jjf but sixty-two mem bers, representing thirty-one, State?. Is. npt this a most startling jreyeiation ? Is it not - - r- - , r . . time we should heed the warning voice of the immortal Washington ? " '" - Against the insidious wiles of foreign influence I conjure you to believe mer fellow-citizens thej jealousy of. .a ..free people ought to be constantly a wake"; since history and experience prove that foreign influence is one of the most baneful foes of a: republi can; government. - - , . :': " nv.d n ? 7: Thus spoke ;the father of-his Pount-rrr And has not the. " future" reached .usnto which the sagacious Jefferson referred when he said : ' ' ' ' ' r' 44 1 hope we may find some means in fu ture, of shielding. ourselves from foreign in fluence, political, commercial, or in what ever form it may be attempted. J can scarcely withhold myself from joining in the wish of Silas Deane, 4 that there, were an ocean of fire between this and the old world' , . . Truly, indeed, have the prophetic words of Washington been fulfilled- "foreign in-,t Jluence is one of the most baneful foos of a ' rWlca1 government. 'I'ho niiacHAn mill . republican government. : - The question will naturally occur to eve- ry reader, is there.sufficient territorial area which .max.ftu5.,?e settled by Ihe present territorial arei is 1,723,821 square miles", or 1,103,245,440 acres of land, Which is sufficient to form forty-six States equal in size. to either Kentucky or Maine. Adopting either as the basis, one represent ing the slavci States, the other the free States, the danger to the' settled and established in stitutions of either class of States is appa rent to every reflecting mind ; arid judging from the present ratio of foreign immi gration, ;whicli is 500,000 per year who is there who will deny that these dangers may:not Overwhelm us during the present decennial period ? ' But this is not all! 'In tlifi AAii pflo rif tVto oncmnrr A tro troora no rrrtr ; acquire possessions equal in extent to those j j a r e : ' Statnc Animl altlin n If rr, n.T-Tnina States, equal either to Kentucky , or Maine, we may have doubled that number, and vail inhabited bv foreign ers. 1 t . .: ,.. - r ;f .'"hi A Cariosity. Otis Manchester of this city, "exhibited 'to ns 'yesterday a stalk of ! wheat of singular appearance and history. j It will be remembered that some years since j 'ePf,s kernels of wheat in tjie iorias OI c.loin wnicn enveiopea an r.gypuan. ' iviummv, was maue, wnicn must nave i ,lnmmv.! was mane, which must have re-- . ' . . mained there f at least four thousand years; These kernels were brought to this country, and planted on Long Island. The specimen here presented is the growth of that ancient seed. The stalk is remarkably large' and smgulai-Iy shaped- being ' nearly conical The kernels are almost round, and wholy dissimilar in shape and appearance to any. grainve have secn.-rrltica Herald. Col.' S eaton in London A London let ter of the 21st ult. , says;. - - - 41 Colonel Seaton, of Washington, is here, and though over seventy, is running about London" with the zeal and!" activity ' of a- ! couHy house of a Yankee iob, nearLon- young- man ot twentv; iie went to tne don, lately, and bagged a dozen .brace of patridges in a few hours. A man must haw slotit legs, as well as editorial experience,' to go through such exercise at 75. Singular, Suicide. An EJnglish music teacher, who called' himself Professor B. Grange, was found'in a dying condition at his lodgings,' in Trenton N. , on Fri day, last, and soon-after expired. - He had a h large amount pf clothing", music books med ical books, a treatise on botany, and a bible i from all of which as well a large ' breast-. pin, some name had been tcarefullr erased. He left a fa w lines addressed to the- land lord enclosing st .T week?s;;re0t, and directing his effects, to be sold to nay exoenses ; the ! residue, if' anr' to be given to some dis-. 7 negro in Boston , had, seyere attack of rheumatism, whichT finally settled in 'his fdt.!',Hc'b'ath"ed;'t l&tid fubbedv At? and swathed ir;btitir to norpose,-' Finally teais mg away the oanaagesi -oe astueic ir xuaiana soon i exercise an. abso'lide'control orm- try, euougn iu seme eignvy taeSi equav to ' Florida, thirty-two equal 'toV IfHoie Is-" land, sixteen equMlto' JifluisiatiaXor ' '(,TlieheeraWer u PmiadElhi!4; Oclbfcer "Wife" vi.riii fjitvatv .iv-s.. Ilv . if -. optmom tnis tijiojtiTof- Janef Johnson, to -viashthe Iwritof habeas corpus in the caseofPassnioreAVilui Srr.crr. .7..,t-Ui tVl1' V!V U ." 1 tv. TtfJVWS "C1, JV."a74 statues in the Cobrt,and the hiatter nttrerv withr out i jusdicliort? ir: i&x si t-n. Inexiopiiuo,if thexaurtl isrverrielabor ate, reviewing, the whole ease and re-affirm-J ing.the former onisioni Ju r is. asserted that l?e Pnca 7slans '-'detiits1iK' cruelties right of prActiced on' the." Chineselaborers employ transit, of esand everf other species 'of edin ;the export of guano, unaerhoauthor property, thrtouh tentory where Jvslaverv is- " r 5 " .: -. - - - - - eegnuHnheTIobtrary. prm lty of fT rPnSible -to he i govern- watt S3nciioneo,!the Jtinie mifflit comewhea L'. .i. 1 r t ! . ' " I H S99nM rV9u?ial3a, -beri?? of -Carolina, and the, rum of Ne w, England' would be i restiicted frbm!4raffsportat"ibh wTthoiit'the maintained that: the Federal -ponstitutioh rep cognised slaves, as, property, :and upto483o1 - I i i r. -r J . . Kl r it, xisied in the,.. thirteen -original, States. .The, saiid "Wtlfiamsori's' djityj then as rjov, was to rirodtice'J'ane JbhhsOrind her chil dren; ifthe petitioner 'were led to abide- the actjon of the. court, she. would have-.the right to. ,e heard ; but .being without the ju risdiction of the reccords of, the court can not1 be opened for a strahger. 1 - On the tjonclusibrt bf the readin of the opinibn of thercqurV JohniCadwalade i member of the bar, not engaged in . the case . m order , to remove a,, false , impression from the public mind, said that, from his reccpl lection of the circumstances attending the commitment, fit Jgs-mqre -Wjlliamspny for contempt, the proposition was . made to,-a-mend the return to the yrit, when . Judge Kane replied : "I will1 not receive ' an a mendment nov'btit will be prepared lo re ceive it -when the reccord has been' com pleted .No such motion was subsequently made, and thepubliQ.jimpression tliat. per- mission to amend was" refused. is not war- anted bv the facts." ' Judge Kane replied that the reccollection of Mr, O. was correct. He had been pfe pared to receiye. a supplimentary;. return from the. counsel, but none has been offer ed." ; ' ' c ;-' i Mr. Cad walader suggested that ah addi tion be made to the opinion of the court, embracing the remarks, of. a member of the bar not engaged in the case, and the. reply of the Judge. He 3j:asindurcd to make the suggestion. by the best feelings. to wards a worthy, but mistaken. man, hoping.that it might lead to the adoption of a course that will end in his liberatron. K''"" The Judge consented tor the proposition of Mr. Cad walader to embody.' his -remarks and the answer pf theeourtto tliemso as to complete the reccord. . . ! John M. Readv.couiisel for the petitioner, j the opiniQnf lh ,-ourn-but it had failed to convince him that the petitioner and hex ,u;uron woro nnt f tho mninont tu'" said thatjie had listened with- attention ?tb children were not free the moment they touched Pennsylvania soil. - : Ti'' a The Image of his Father.-Oii the birth day of the. seventh child, all the womeri camejto see the dear in font i and to congrat ulate the parents on the happy event. Oun friend anticipated the visit and instead of having the child prepared lor it,, made the servant bring in a sucking pig, anddress it up. in swadling clothes, and covering up (its face, he laid it in the. place the real child .should have occupied. Trre ladies were introduced into the apartment, and gently approached the bed ; the coverings were turned down, and a portion of the face of the grunter was exposed. 4, Bless my soul ! said, one of the ladies, 4 what a remarkable child."' So very interesting.said a second.- And so good natured ! ' observed the third as she commenced toying with it. 4 And how very much like his father-remarked the fourth. vThey were all immediately struck, with the observation, and exclaimed: . 'The very image of his father ! ' -: Thp' flattered parent rushed tout of the room, eo&vulsed with laughter, leaving the old wpmen to discover their mistake. A Fight St6pped by a Dog- Twn men got into a fight yesterday, on , Sugar .Alleys east of Third street, when a large dog rush e'd'out of a house near by, and made a furi ous demonstration towards the combatants, who immediately, seperated, and decamped in opposite directions. Ooe of the men be ing closely followed by the dog, was oblig ed to take reffuge in a shed ; and although: he succeeded in closing the door against the animal, he was compelled to remain there until its owner came to his relief. Ohio Statesmen, A Paclflc Kail Road. Xbe Pfew York Swi, says: A substanq al and decided step has.Ve learn, been tak- en in tne ainxuon u. a,r vy ...w. Par.ifie on the Texas Route. ' It isf know that the Siate f Texas gave, with the char ter of- the Western Texas Railroad, the. magnificent grant, of 1 0,400 :acres of. land for every mile ?f the road constructed. This amount xi. land, of great lertuity ana goou o-eneral advantages, is sufliicient of, its self to'build'tii'e road and put it in worXing. or der. unqer inese iavoraoiecireuuiwucc the 'Western Texas Company contracted; anu Slgneu on oaiuruay leisi aii nipcuitiii. with "responsible men in Ohio and Texas for the boUstructionf the first section E of the road. i It runs in -the partly settled country: between the TrinitTiand 'Red. Rivers, and is to be" ready fdrlheTilsorr or befofe the J first of AuoTisrnext; ' - v-,- r There j$ pp better.definitionj of , ff old- fo- gies': than , theri famous i saying .with.w'hiebi Napoleon chit-joffthe fBourbons: Ma l-ncy neveri earn.anvinmg anu-iuy'"VTcriuigofc , A New Slave Trade Opened., JV.f PP?ars jfrom" a.parUamentary4paper?, presented tp,lhe- House vof jlds;" entitled 59pOidencEMpofir' the subject of4min i- gratior fromChina' thaFanew slave trade. ls growingup in the world, and it must be confessed, -under British" auspicest .t'TJie : revelation ! -is frightful AVmmKirom certain sninmastpw: latAlv n nm. f.n. certauV; sP1PmasleJslatelr " "Wn$l from - cu,: xuac uwununaie men are . j i ' , f --.l . 4 rcprest;nieuu) oe carrieu irom iinna to the Cliihchas for the roost part, if not exclusive ly, on board of British vessels : No sooner are they landed from the 5 ""1 ' WfS Diaced over thpm brjtstrfiin" armn.l iit a lash of four plaits of cow hide, laid up in l . . - ..MIUU, MilllVU miii I mane tonuiot-' what seamen call "rnnrifl sennet,"; five -feet in length and -an in inch" and a half in diameter, taperinff. to a point. During the forenoons for regular, ollences. j (.or such-as the .overseers please, to term sucJi,)-this, instrument is npt much used, but at about 4 o'clock in tljg afternoon, many, of the weakest '.had not performed thoir taskwork, the hdatswain': freely Hised to start "those behind to bring the days Su pervision to a close. - ' , The slightest resistance was punished by a 'Bogging little short of murder, as ma lt r melancholy occasions we have witnessed bciiig nearer than we. tlesired The first six to twelve cuts stifled the most agonising cries that rang through the fieet-i-crics we j heard day-by day but only then knew the tle;full amount of ;SulTering that called them, forth. There was no tying up, the nearest. Chinaman being. compelled, by a cut of the lash,,,to lay hold of an arm or a leg, and stretch the miserable sufferer on his stom ach, on the guano. The mere weight alone oftheiasH made their bodies shake, black ening ths flesh at every blow--bsfdes cut ting like a sabre ; and when a'eonvulsive movement took: places a subordinate placed his boot on the shoulder to keep the quiver ing body down. 4 wo dozen made them breathless, and when rejeasedj after, tbirtyr nine lashes they'd seemed slowly to stagger off, reeled and.felU anu were carried on to the hospital ; in most cases, if they recovered," commuted suicide, for ho Tinman heart, unless elevated by-Christian training, could, after undergoing-"' so'' cruel an infliction, ever hare more than two t feelings that is, death to5 those suffered from, or to himself. Accordingly, during our stay there, many sprang overthe cliffs -many , buried themselvess alive in. the guano,-; aivd ..many hid itliemselyes in the ca ves to starva; tp-death ; their dead hedies floating all, around in numbers. In one in stance two,, emboldened by pity shown them by a. ship-master, hid themselves on board his vessel, one. of whom survives and is now in this country." murder and Suicide. About three weeks since a young man, a stranger,who stated that his name was Au burn, and that he was from Boston Massa chusetts came to this city and sought andt obtainecL work . at the. cabinet establishment of ? Messrs. Binford &i Porter as a designer, and carver. After working a few days, and provding himself a first rate carver, and earning thirty-eight dollars',' rhicliwere paid himrhe rented a house on Main street near Twenty-second street, and employed a car penter to fit up the same for him for a gro cery oyster'and drinking house. He also employed a young man to assist him in the grocery which was to have been opened tot day. On Friday night last Auburn was ar rested on a charge of . enticiug away and harboring two negro men belonging to Jes se Williams and James II. Grant, and who had disappeared a few days previous. The time of arrest was on Friday night last and was effected by the police, who stationed themselves around Auburn's house and waited his return, whichf was af the late hour mentioned. He resisted the officer with pistol-and bowie-knife in hand, but was overpowered and taken to the cage On his way to prison he: drew from his pocket a phial of strychnine, and drank a portion of it, and -spit out a mouthful of it in the face of the officers who had him' in charge. Two physicians were immediate ly, called -to' his relief, but he died from . the effects of the strychnine about two hours af ter swallowing it, and the ccronor held an inquest over his body on Saturday morn ing. The charge on which he was arrfest e"d was satisfactorily established as follows;' He had received about one hundred dollars1 fforo two' negro men, under a promise to convey them to the Northland had con cealedthem in the third story of 'his house, , nri,nftmforv tn sendinff t hem away., .Une ol the negroes having complained of being un- W.elU he gave him what oe- said was a r dosa of .medicine, but., which no , doubt--, was st'rvchnine. as the rieerro died soon after tak ing the dose. Auburn then dug a grave' in er negro, hurried his murdered subject, first cuUinlns hro'afi Tipping open his abdorn- his cellar and with the assistance oi me oin en, and honbly mutilatmg his body in otn- er places. This wasdone, it is supposed . r - . to nrevent the negro from recovering from tfie effects of the strychnine. These bloody l scenes occu ring before theieyes of tlies oth er negro, naturally produced. milch. llarra and uneasiness in-his mind, consequently he embraced-the first opportuntty: to escape mym connnemeni, wnicn nem oy, apf house' He then returned to. -mV master J and revealed all he knew oHthls shocking, J singular and horrible. transaction: -fit Is6be-3 liered Auburn was. in league with others en- ffat-fdan the. mKinotsoiTunning. on, staves bufvo accqrrjrpUcerhg,Te yet been detectcd.n rAuburjwas a. .young tnan of genteel ap pesr ance andUmanners,-randiiad capacities r.3 a tarver-and engraver to iearn --tromf five to eight dollars a ayi.He'gave as -a4rreasoa for renting a house and opening! a-rroccrv. the expected visit-of: his mother and sonri of "her family -fromhe-North: to reside with .1 iSJrh'narerrPct: 15' ' ''tti".vL ' - o ' ti' v . Horrible Sacrafice of Lir- ox the . of steam on the Western waters 1 there have been thrrty-nine-thousahd six hundred and j. seventy two lives lost ..by steamboat disast7 ters;-three hundred aiul "eighty , ono boats -and cargoes vlost'i' and seventy, boals'sefi-t ously'injured,arnounting in he aggregate to j the cnbrmotissum of sixty-seven million? of.; dollars It is" to be' hoped, that, this forth; cbrhingorkvill Ki.ye the erTect of arrest inthVtteiitfon dfihe Gbvernmeni to . the ; importance of Western interests, so far as our great rivers arid lakes are concerned. 'Cin: Times. The Voice or John JAV.Hd the carn-i estpatriot, John Jay, the first Chief, Justice, of the United States, , lived to the present homvit is highly probable that herwould have been a prominent and an active mem-t ber : of the . American -party ; fort says the., last number of the American Re riewr 44 he. proposed that .no . Roman Catholic who held that the Pope or his , priesthood had power to anul oaths or even to grant abso- lution from sin, should be admitted to civil' rights.".. . ... t Kr "Arrival of tlic Caliavba. ' New Obleans, October 4. The stearnv er, Cahavba. has arrived, . with Havana dates of the 1st inst. v - - .-.,:-... i : Gen., Concha has paid the indemnity" allowed -in the Black "-Warrior affair. He seems to apprehend another fillibustering-' expedition, as he has-ortlered the names of all-machinists. 'doming from or going to. the United States to be registered periodically. ' ' The BlacU Warrior Indemnity. -The - steamer Black Warrior,' which arrived at New York on Thursday, from Havana brough home 50, 000 from the Spanish Government, as .an indemnity to Mes Nevy York, for - the detention of their vessel, the .Black? Warrior, at, Havana,. about 18 months ago It .will be remem bered that ; the authorities! of i Havana seized the ship for not complying with a, port regulation, which-had been obso--lete for a long time, but which theyhad suddenly put in operation.. - " '' Gev Arista. Among the papers of Gen. Arista, who recently died while on his way1 from' Lisbon to Paris, was his will. It directs that his .heart be em balmed1 and sent : tb'Mexico.'Hq left nothing 'to his wife.' He . bequeathed His property, to a relative and his person al effects to a servant. 'Interesting Fact.- In airing a room both the'upper and lower, parts. of the windows should. be opened, as the heat ed air, which, frora its lightness, always ascends, will pass but of the top,and the fresh cool air .come in at the bottom. - , Another, Attempt to Assasjnate Loris Napoi.eon.A correspondent of - the New York Qourier, writing w from Paris, states, that: Louis Napoleon-was fired, upon on the-; night of the 20th,' by a cent-garde. The scene was in one of the, halls of the palace-, of St. Cloud, and the Emperor was wound ed slightly in the'point of the shoulder. An; inch lower and. it would lave been mortal. The assassin was'iraihediately arrested.. It, is said that Jip, was. ; bribed. , with 300,000 frances to cdrnmit. the crime by the: Orlean ists. An investigation was immediately or-, dereda.nd at the last date it was procced- nnr-in cnn.at ..Wo 4l l Yt t l n fi T 1 1 f T C f I kk ... J W W . . . . . S M..; .. V . . - " the report in foreign. papers; though it must have been prevalent at Paris,-as other cor respondents of the American press mention Heroism op a;Dog tn the Crimea.- The following' account of theexploits of. a dog in the. Crimea, which. we translate, from the Gazette ,of; Triete, surpasses everything, heretofore recorded of . the devotion and bravery of this noble animal: - "A great sensatioirhas beeri caused in the' camp of the allies-byVthe -heroic-deeds of a dog belonging' to CoLcMat- mann, of the 73d; regiment of Ihe Line; On tbe 1 6th of ;August; during thej bat-: t(e of the"-f Tciiernaya the quadruped! .broke. his chain, fought in ..the: ; ranks'or the army, saved the -life of a'sergant arid a soldier, and took three Russians pris-, oners,: -A ball Btruclc his foot, but the L wound only embittered the animal 1 the more.' - He threw chimself upon a Rus- j sian officer, flung him tat he ground, and i'dracrffed him prisoner bv his coat collar to the French. r Av physician :ha bound ; j iht. wnimtf" knd-tbTmiiCfootftd - hero" ! . t " - j , up the wound, and the four-footed - hero r- .'"i.-t ' tit; i.:;n V L-'IC-tt --1 is coiyaiescing. ne. wm prooauiy ceivesbme mark:4of honor, as another , do i rTJthe 'English 'army had been , rei -vardcd, with -a medal fbhHis deyoM9n I?. : his master.- -TJrli5 Palmef 6f JCommb!a;vS.&:C. has4 b-?a Jf d toM f PISf51 eL?X ixtfM iV??.ttev-- -M.r Scott, of tbe:&rst. rEresbytenan Church,; at;w Orl;ans,sat jJaryv of SGfipOi per annum;; r.iir.Zis. ' 1 r:r