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Cranmer st Our Canadian Correspondence. aiasisse ia caniliadl Saen nied alii a An TaenerGinery, Parra}lel Railroads. fought after toe bottle of Bunker's Hill. One of these: Torowro, April 1, 1860. ee B rian A The general railroad bill has passed both houses wns the battle of Saratoga, in the Btate of New Y " sii sre yo Kos ’ S COMPANIONS=—DETAILS agouTr | We read in the @ late . : which # 4 Canadian Opinion of the Webster Case—Mini | yyw ax THEIK SYPEKIMIS INTERESTING ANic> | Fre neh paper, that one Joseph Sheetal of | ofthe Legislature, received the signature of the po es 1 Pipe on the lever principle, and | “hele rich imp. counting te 5,700 men, is : terial Shuftes—The “ Clean Grst” Reformers DOTES. Aiguillen, twenty-five years of age, without having ] Governor, and become the law of the land. Rail- depends not on the instability of springs ; besi s “ng de] hs Amestione, snd a, prisoners, Extract of a letter from a lady at Constantinople | Hsceive dany other education than that which the children of peasants in the country generally re- ten times the safest, having ten wires for the Changes in the Cabinet—Mr. Merritt « Progr took place on the ivth of October, 1781, was the lust ats - vs roa now -be built wherever money can be ee t nig part sive Reformer—Annexation at a Stand-ste to her niece at Washington :— ceive, has just comple alee 4 i fok their construetion. use ofthe pilot, answering one an; same pur } atte of the War of the Revolution. It was said that ¥ a tome . . . completed un extraordinary piece of ¥ ate ° was M Death of the * Independent” —The Clergy Reserve Lense, 20th January, 1850. | mecheniem, of his own. invention—a veritable chef fe presume the public are not generally aware | F°* be pee ages a "Sal fe the eet oe eas oe ee ater The Americons did gain the yvietory over the The former bad the joy to soe the latter lag born cate arms. and Lord QOornwallis surrender his sword to Gen, Washington. Soon after the battle of Yorktown, the British troops went back to England. Then the were pec free and independent. As soon as the: war was over, the American troops were disbanded, Lact ag haa his commission as com. ‘Tue Weavruy Citizens or Bostox.—Mr. J. Hy Eastbur, the city printer of Boston, has issued a list of persons, co-partnerships and corporations, taxed on six thousand dollars and upwards, in that city, in 1849. The publication is authorized by the city council, and gives the amount both of the reab and personal estate of the chief inhabitants. The list includes about five thousand names of persons and companies, and many of these give an oppor- tunity for some curious discussion. We present from the pages of the pamphlet a few extracts, which may have some slight interest for our read- ers. Those with respect to the Parkman and ‘Webster families will be very acceptable just now :—= o fact, that the best and the most feasible route Was not selected, for come cause or another, in the construction of the railroad from Syracuse to Utiew. The following statement will establish the fact, thet a better, a shorter, a cheaper, and consequently. better paying road, can be built between these two places, than the present one. 1. In the first place, then, a road can be built that will be not lees than four miles shorter, which would be qhite a saving in these days of economi- cal expenditure. 2. Iathe second place, a much better route for a roadcan be found by going north of the preseut road. This route is almost entirely level, situated ppon a ridge that extends nearly from Syracuse to Utica. By going a mile or so north of the present vead, at Chittenango, you will find this ridge, which is composed of the best kind of material for a railroad, being nearly free from muck and marl, which so plentifully abound on the existing road, This muck and marl, on the present route, is, in some cases, between twenty-five and forty My Dian Nince—Atter writing to you oa the | d’@were—and one which would suppose the neces- th instant, | visited Pera, and was detained there | sity of « prefoend knowledge both of mathematies Y be sompletely inundated with de- | 27 Be#tly three weeks by the severest suow storm ! nechanics, in the person designing and execat- ‘ou have been so comp y m ever experienced in this country, during which, the | ing ‘The invention consists of a wooden bates on slavery, the details of the Webster case, | fish passing from the Black Sea down the Bospho- | clock, which the inventor has appropriately enough and other domestic and foreign news, for the last Toe, periebed by erg oe hundreds of thoa- | name a “moving calendar.” + is provided with al avi ot! exci Mw sends; in returning to this place yesterday, owing | several dials, w mask the hours, minutes, se- few bate pop anne \ oe ee coi | to the depth of the snow, our carriage met with | conde, the day@of the week, those of the month, wunicate from Canada, geht it needless to | several accidents, which, however, were une the months of the year, years and centuries; the write you. This Webster case, by the way, seems | tended with any unpleasant it. In iny last, | rising and setting of the sun, the rising and setting to have been strangely conducted from first to last. scknowiatenes e qeoeins of your Atlante ieee, | of the moon, &c., the tout cusemble moving with a wi f in . gave you all our domestic hews, and shall now | regularity.end precision truly remerkable. The arrest, the dragging the prisoner to the col- | confine myself to a relation of the sorrows and sul- 4 be wheel works being admirably arranged be- lege to see the mangled remains and account for | ferings of the brave but conquered [lungari hind 4 glase front, which is interposed for the par- their discovery, the secret proceedings of the Co- | Heving, as I do, that there is scarcely a heart in t pose of protecting the delieate machinery from dust, yoner’s jury, the illegal character of much of the bosom of an American, which does not sympathize | the visiter is enabled to examine the Whole at a M . with these brave although fallen people. We | glance, and to satiefy himvelf of the wonderful per- evidence against, and the strong, multiplied, unim- | are truly gratified to see in the papers trom our nae | fection of each part of the apparatus, as well as of peeched, evidence for the prisoner, the charge of ive land. tba land of liberty and of sbuad.ene that ep il ngec of its Sina Same prsieec ng e ; " the unfortunate Hungarian refugees have me and diuls, upon a surface about yard in length, the ape Drags toa —_ aaltng a la! mt £0 | Kind and generous reception, such a one, indeed, a8 | ranges a beautiful ery, with cells in the middle aniq ng d of an English law- | could only be eecorded by a nation of freemen, to | and a tower at each end, When the hour is about yer, that one is ready to conclude that the Boston- | patriots in distress. We have transmitted many | to etrike, the door of one of the cells isseen to open, ians have thrown the principles and well settled | American papers containing articles, which could | and ‘Time, armed with his scythe, comes forth, widdliw péactice of Engliah law ‘Wikere there high. | Dotbave fuiled to have soothed the wounded spirit | followed by our Saviour, who, with whip in hand, as re : - ere there high- | of Governor Kossuth and his otheers, who, with | pursues and drives the grim messenger before him, spirited anceste ster is probably guilty; but is a man to be hung on | Staying with a Major Bouck, the private secretary | At the first stroke of the clock, a sinall cock, perel- Question will probably break up the Cabinet— Great Floods—Steamers—Rariroad ducing to the safety of the vessel to Which itis ap- plied, and a most valuable acquisition to the many improvements of the day, reilecting credit upon the inventor, whose reward should be its universal use, for his enterprise, industry aud ingenuity. | Ce Weet and the other officers of this beautiful steam- er, are gentlemen of experience, tact, and talent, euch being peculiarly adapted to the post of his ap- poiniment, Asa whole, this splendid vessel re- dounds to the great honor of E. K. Collins, Esq., whoee name now stands high in. the est of hiv fellow-citizens, for his enterprise in -build- ing, and he presents a noble example for the emu- lation of those Who are coming after him, As for Stillman, Allen and Co., it needs but an examina- tion of their work, to convince all of their siill and ecience as machinists. These remarks from one who hopes to stand won the deck of this noble ship, as the enters the splendid docks of Liverpool, presenting a living example of what we can do, and the precursor of what is yet to be done by us, os there are seeds of knowledge, of science, and of the arts, thet lie hidden and are destined to be developed in the glorious career of our beloved and native land, far porer and richer in gold than the auriterous soils of California. I subscribe myself, your Fettow Crrizen. threw the teaoverboard. Web- | their ladies, are now at Shumla, We have now | forces him into another cell, and secures the door. probabilities 7” When judgesare of counsel against | 0! Governo hh, who was with the Governor | ed upon across surmounting one of the little tow- | feet in depth. Henee, a much better, a more pet- 5 Real Estate. Personal, apritoner, and when juries substit prayer? | during the whole of the war, and has informed us | ers, flaps its wings and stretches out its neck, a8 if | manent foundation for the new route can be se- | The Annual 000° and * balloting’ for a careful analysis of facts and | 0! many thrilling evente which are not generally | about to crow. The striking of the clock having | cured, aaa 175,000 eomparison of testimony, we have made a pretty | known, some of which | will relate. ceased, Time and the Saviour return to their re- 3. Iu the next pluce, a much cheaper road than We have received the ‘Thirty-tirst Annnal Re- — decided step towards he practices of the middle At the ume when ull was lost to the Hun- | speetive celis, into which they enter and close the | (je present one can be built. pert of the above institution, as presented by its oOo ages--the days of fire and water ordeal, or gudi- | @@rians, and each had to seek his own safety | doors, ‘ J it must have cost the present company at least | etficers to the Legislature, according to law. 200.800 cum Dei. | by flight, Governor Kossuth and his lidy, who | ‘Three times a day, namely, at six o’clock in the | .ixty thousand dollass to enter the city aeey ater, This sort of reports, of which a great number are 35,00) Lut Canada, you say, what is going on there? | had aceompanied her husband throughout the | moming, at noon, and at six o’clock in heerane Parliement is to assemble on the Lith of May, and | War, thought it best to separate, in order that | by means of an ingenious piece of mechanism, the all parties, ministerialists lean grite,” tories, | Che of them, uf possible, might save their lives, | sound of the Angelus is heard, The Holy Virgin, anti-Church and State men, annexationists, and se- | for e sake of their children, who had been | leavibg her cell, appears for a moment on the gal- veral others which might be mentioned, are prepare | le der the protection ef their grandmother. | lery, and then enters a chapel; at the same instant ing for a regular stand-up fight. never was | The Coyernor determined to remain with his } an angel is seen to descend,tlap) ing its wings, from H ng Which members eso much at) brave officers, still with him, and to share their | one ef the miniature towers, and entering the cha- annually made to our Legislature, are, it may be said, proper end necessary, but how farthey are ceafal und valuable must depend upon many eircum- stgnces and contingencies, They are, in fact, re- pore of their own conduct and management, made y the individuals themselves; and as persons be- longing to my 2 institution naturally beeome very zealous in its by the way of the tunnel at Lodi; and all ‘this ex- penditure ‘for the purpose of reaching the lots now cccupied by the Globe Hotel. ‘This expenditure of sixty thousand dollars includes the building of the tonnel, the heavy excavations west of the tunnel. and for the tunnel itself, and also the building of the bridge at Lodi, and the sewers, ete., that have Among other rich individuals, we find the fol~ lowing, though the sums do not indicate the whole of their property, such as stocks, real estate im other places, &c. :— Real Estate. Personal. 00 $3,000" Benjamin Adams and sevens,” us they are likely to be this. | fate. » K. informed her husband and a fe- | pel, places itself near the Virgin, towards whom it fol vor, and are inclined to believe it to Pay coveriment will*usve's emmadl exhsority, Hiei | ofan officer, where she would | Inchnes, as if bout to addrees her with the sublime | he water that comes hom the ewanp: through the | Ue the best and most perfect of its and, wale ander | Same, ApPheeoy, Fayed cannot be depended ox e Court of € very, | el sty, and as every moment was | salutation of which we read in the scripture. |] ‘unnel. But this expenditure of sixty thousand | ‘heir management, hence there is a little tendency | w Appleton. 250,000 and ove or iwo other questions will melt it away to | Pre ‘ate lady clothed herself'as a beg- | ry becomes agitated; she trembles, and the behol- } dojjars does not include the expense for the ex- | (©, self luudation and partiality in these reports, | Eliphalet Baker. . pre a minus quantity. Ministers see this, and they are | G82; her husband gave her his signet ring, and the | der may perceive her holy fear. This touching | cayation and piling of the first mile east of the | Which is allput down to the credit of a great zeal | Jobn W. Bradlee... 26,400 230.000 a ready talk: g of adopting the miserable shift of | Seal of the government of Hungary, that these | scene takes place durin first strokes of | (unnel, which must have cost the present company | ®Md interest for the institution itself, From the | Josiah Bradlee & Co. - 359,000 making them open questions; t. e. they will not risk | might be a passport for her, in the ‘event of her | the Angelus. The sngef twice ascends, and an often a round sum of money. natural existence of such tendencies, which are 30,000 the loss ot their porridge by either supporting or op- meeting with those who were friendly to their | repeats the same movements and the same saluta- | ~ ft must have cost the present company over thirty | Common to all mankind, these reports of their own 400,000 posing them es a government. The public donot for- | cause. Without any clothes, except those on her | tions just described. thourand dollars to cross the canal en the weet aide | conduct by the individuals themselves, are most 70,000 get the w contempt poured upon the heads of | back, she commenced her sad and fatiguing jour- | In the above description are given, in a few | of Canastota, and at Rome. valuuble when they are mere business reports, con- 185,000 the late cal. nel, Who were driven into the same | Bey on foot. She travelled long, experiencing all | words, some of the detaits respecting this magni- It must have cost the present company between | fined to a truthful statement of facts, without fore- re gomef, by these gentry, then in opposition. The | kinds of hardships, privations, and dangers. en | fivent master-piece of human skill and ingenuity. | forty and forty-five thousand dollars for driving | Stlling inferences by sentiments, opinions, or flat- 200.000 eciophament will be returned now, with more than | stopped by the Austrian or Russian guards, she | To the inventor is due the rare merit of having de- | piles through the muck and mati, to enabic them | teting representations. This report, now before hans 250.000 lawiul interest. This cabinet cannot last beyond | feigned extreme old ege, and said she was in search | signed, as well as having executed, the entire work | to draw in embankment, and to obtain for the pre- | US, We are happy fo say, seems to us more free from esrneae 200,000 the next session, unless they move on in their re- | of @ litle grandson who had got lost in the war, so d nearly every thing connected with it; and it | cent @ foundation for their road. the sin of poetry, in the sense above referred to, | Thomas Wigglesworth. 115,000 than some others which have heretofore come under our notice. It appears from the Treasurer's account that— they lether pass, little knowing the value of the | may with truth be said, that the execution is not h faster than even their best friends ex- prize they had in their bloody hands ! less admirable than the idea. The whole of the forms mu eet them to d It must_ have cost the present company, (to say nothing about the mill pond in Syracuee,) over six- Our Baltimore Corrcspendence. { | e reformers are making rapid | The pre she continued on, until she reached an ex- | wheel-works are composed either of wood or brass. | teen thousand dollars for the bi ‘ect the By A . ene " ’ ‘ ean the brid; TO8S 1880. headway. are known by the vulgar, butex- | tensive pasture country, uninhabited, except by | What an amount of patience, to fashion and impart ‘ “ m, ging 4 ‘The receipte of the institution, during the year 1849, a ‘ janrimone, Apeil $3, 5 j , ' Rerde | tothem that degree of finish and nicety of action eo | Onelds valley, most of which was useless, inas- | ¢ J" very rource, including the balance of $004 76 on | Fciling Ward Elections—Fight and Stabbing—Death pressive, appellation of ** clear grits.” They are herdsmen, almost as void of intellect as the composed of the old liberals of the country, and all | they guarded; here she sought and found a resting | necessary in a work of this description! During holding democratic principles. The ministry, | place. These poor serfs made her a fresh bed of | the day, this peasant industriously labored in the though elevated to power by them, have not given | Saw, covered her with their cleanest sheepskins, | fields, while at night, by the pale glimmer of a them the measures, or acted in accordance with , and fed her with their brown bread, and here she | candle in one corner of his cmel inconvenient gar- the policy which they approve—hence their deser- | Femained three months, durin, which time the | ret, he completed his wonderful clock. The ob- tion. Among other things, they demand retrench- | Winter cold came on, and having ut little covering, | stacles which he must continually have had to ment, Which is anything but pelatabis to the office- | bi may easily conceive how intensely she must | contend against, would have eflectually disheart- holders. In the teeth of this demand, the govern- | have suflered. Gov. Kossuth had sent for his chil- } ened a less determined or enthusiastic mind. At ment lately atternpted to fill up a useless office with | dren, that he might take leave of them, and give | every step a difficulty presented itself; but difficul- one of their parliamentary supporters. | them his last blessing ; they were brought to him by | ties neither disturbed his patience nor shook his The annexationist movement has come to a dead | his mother, and again taken to their home. The | courage; he planned, reflected, and success crown- lock. The want of sympathy on your side, the de- | Austrian executioner (Havas cath, ani those | “A Yow wel cided tone of Ear) despateh, the political revo- | commenced his bloody work. ‘ossuth, and those A few weeks only have elapsed, since the work lutions going x ourselve ne the prospect | With him, fied towards the Turkish frontier | was achieved. The humble peasant now ranks of reciprocity of de, have together deprived the | to the fortress of Widdin. Icannot enumerate all | among those rare geniuses who become familiar movement of life. The Independent newspaper | the sufferings, losses, and anguish experienced by | with the arts and sciences, without having studied expires with the next number. It has been pub- these unfortunate men during their flight; most of | them. What greatly enhances the merits of young lished only halt a year, and had reached a circula- | them, however, reached, Widdin. They were no | Cusson, is his having done all himself; with his tion of about one thousand, which in this country | Seoner th than their first thoughts were of Ma- | own hands he made the turning-lathe, the greater is very progress; but the want of funds, and dam Kossuth and her fr the wife of the officer | part of the tools with which he wrought, as well the indifference of many of the first and most influ. | t0 Whom she had communicated the place of her | as the wood and brass wheels and their appenda- ential annexationists, induced Mr. Wilson to give intended concealment, determined to seek and find ff &e. In a word, this extraordinary man com- up the enterprise. All parties, except the ministe- if she was still alive. She sat out on her | bines the avocations of a joiner, turner, and clock nalists and fossillated tories, will now unite their ry journey, habited in a similar guise as that | maker, and his work is so exquisitely fashioned energies to secure elective institutions, extension of am Kossuth—as a beggar—and thus she | and so beautifully finished, that it would be an sufirage, vote by ballot, and other democratic re- | passed the soldiers and guards of the enemy, until | ornament to the most elegant salooa or drawing forms, Which will gradually prepare the people for | she reached the hiding place of her friend, Who had | room. organic chenges of amore thorough kind. ‘The | been the companion of her youth and happier days; | — Cusson resides on the right bank of the river discussion of the annexation question has don and now they were to encounter new dangers. | Lot, a short distance only from the handsome menee good in this, that it has made the di The herdsmen built them a little cart, and gave | bridge of Aiguillon, where he and his clock may sion of these intermediate questions perfectly s them a horse, as Madam Kossuth, worn out by | be visited dail and proper, and cured for them th anxiety, privations 1 sufierings, was no longer of the most bitter tories an an able to walk; the roeds had now become almost Sir John Franklin's Expedition, “Now you talk sensibly yu go for impassable, narrow and slippery on the sides of the AMERICAN SYMPATHY AND NOBLE GENEROSITY. eleciive institutions, for assimilating our govern. | mountains; one false step would have plunged (From the London Herald, Mareh 23.) ment as much as possible to the American, but not | theta down into sn almost bottomless abyss 5 Our readers are already well aware of the intense joining them, we gowith you.” Thus far they are , bet with the gallows in their rear, and their | interest felt by our trans-Atlantic brethren in every- willing to go to prevent Worse consequences, But | husbands before them, hope gave them courage, | thing relating to the hoped-for rescue of Sir John d not been openly and boldly dis | and onward they went. I know not what length | Franklin; but they may not be aw: that the private tes of these democratic reforms | ©! time they occupied in their journey, but, as it | ¢*Pedition to Lvewelgg Henry Grinnell has lg a would have been stigmatized with all manner of | W288 in winter, and they had oftento conceal them. | “¢¢atly contributed, together with Mr. Silas KE. Bur- ' ; 4 4 i Iieous epithets. “We have thus made alongstride | selvex in clefts of rocks and overhanging moun- | iyi'cr May. for Lancaster Sound und arrows Straits, much as it has since been filled up with earth, ren- dering the bridge of but very little use. It will yet cost the present company an immense sum of money before they secure a permanent foun- dation for their superstructure, in consequence of the muck and marl where their road is now located. All this expense, and more too, we do not hesi- tate say, can, and would be saved, by taking the route above proposed. In consequence of the perfect practicability of this route, and the facilities tor doing such work econo- mically and understandingly at the present time. the writer of this article will bind himself to build a road with a double track, ready for the cars, for one-half what the present road has cost, and it shall be a better road too. ‘The grade also on this new road shall nowhere ex- ceed twelve feet to the mile. The grade east of the tunnel, on the present road, must be twenty-four feet to the mile, for a mile and a half in length, This side of Manlivs, it must be, for six thousand feet in length, as much as twenty-four feet to the mile also. Where the road crosses the canal west of Canastota, the grade must be thirty feet to the mile. The new road will have a decided advantage over the old one in th ct. This road should enter the city of Syracuse on the north side of the Erie canal, in the street im- mediately north of the Unitarian church, and should cross the Oswego canal, so as to tween the Wallace House and the new State building, in order to reach the high ground occu- pied by the salt vats west of Salina street. The embankment across Salina street would not be high, and could be crossed by teams easier than the canal in front of the Syracuse House, by grading Salina street a little higher. There are ample grounds unoccupied, between Salina and Foote street, for a station-house, engine-house, and store- house, for freight, &e. The grounds being imme- diately in the vicinity of Hill, could be filled up with earth, sufficient for all practical pur- poses jor tive or six thousand dollars, and probably jo) from Grief—Peach Crop—City Mortality— Genera Scott, $e. Yesterday was as excited a day in our city as it would have been were it Presidential election day, on account of the holding of ward meetings to scleet-*an- didates tothe democratic gubernatorial convention. From an early hour in the morning, the city wae thronged with the clectioneering parties, visiting the workshops, and urging the friends of the different can- didates to be present at the meetings to be held in the evening. The opinion throughout the day was, that Colonel Gittings would obtain the delegates from the city—in whose behalf all the office holders. office seekers, and political shavers had been busily at work. At night, however, the friends of E. Loui« Lowe, Esq, of Frederick, turned out en masse, and elected tha delegates in seventeen of the twenty wards of the eity, by large majorities, The vote in the counties will now be looked for with great interest. The question was settled, in the Eighth ward, by the openi: f polls, at which several riots occurred during pao Wn +e fe gh Mace riots be smaed men were q not reecei rss wounds vs y—one wing as many as n Sunday night, the wife of Mr. George Waldman. died wry suddenly, after a short illness, anda post mortem examination was had to know the eause of her death. Whilst the examination was ssing, her husband exhibited the most intense and fell and expired in a few moments The cause of the wife’s death was found to be a tumor on the stomach, and an examination of the husband showed him to have been. in op gen Bene, his death having been caused by ex- cessive 4 The peach crop in this vicinity is said to be damaged by the recent severe frosts. In the northern and western sections of the State, they are not. how- ever, injured yot. The number of deaths in this city, during the past week = 83, of which Sar peg he under 6 years of age. Consumption carrie: as usual the most grasping of all other diseases. oe hand the close of 1848, amounted to $53,250 04; and the disbursements of the year have been $55.1 61. leaving a balance.against the treasury, on the Slst day of December, 1849, of $2,128 57. Then follows a long list of sundries, and the amount paid for each article, filling up about twelve pages of the report, containing such items as the following: currycombs, ies cork- screw, 22 cents; potato pounder, 18 cents ; cuning bays hair, $8 40; cranberries, $6; pie plant, 38c.; shaving-boxes, one doz., $1 including every possible article whic purchased for the xeylum, from sixpence paid for a ot of blacking, to $12,032 31 paid to the employees for their salaries. We think this is going too far for a report: it is like copying the account books, the jourmal, and the ledger, and having them printed unnecesearily, at some little expense to the people of the State ‘of New York. Certainly, all the eccounts of such institutions ought to be most strictly supervised and leoked into, but we do not see the necessity of printing the kitchen ac- count books by the Legislature, it does not help in the least to make them correct nial The following is the present state of the institu- tution as to the numbers admitted :— ‘The number of pupils returned to the last Legisla- ture was 220. Of these, thirty-nine have left, and three have been removed by death. During the year just closed. forty-two new pupils have been admitted and two former pupils re-admitted, making the number of i ils aoa in iron ceria Le: e Bist of a 0, ax will appear by the accompanying catalogue, Of these ihe Beate wupports png dow owe wen sixty; the city of New York sixteen, and the State of New Jersey nine. Their own friends defray the ex; of twenty-eight; one is supported by the Commissioners of Emigration; and the number of those who. for the resent term. are boarded and instructed gratuitously ty the institution, is ei Mort of these, as in tormer years, had been selec! i. Superintendent of Com- tading pasate tthe incsaonsemplaged neludin, juates of the n, employed as domestic depurt- teachers, or in the mechanical an ments. the whole number of deaf-mutes, resident in the i hs : General Scott passed through the city yesterda towards th and must keep our ground till tains, fiom the scouts of the enemy, it must have We are sure that this announcement will be hailed hese locat nna © ey x ok the tim tinal step. The Montreal been a long and weary one, and, when discovered, | with admiration and deep gratitude throughout the the wane teen oe apis os “ithe following extract from the report we cannot Rerfoik. 00 sap y weilvana hic ooseees ae don bn . Lwas Pape ser rhng yar, They lt cel gs fom countsy iek yo FFM gia née te ongeas. a ome Fi the fact that this lis sh f, the | refrain from making. Itis deligh Rite ‘the feel- ing 8 pbttasten groct attccaion’ evan to 1 told to. y have # 0 to | their bloodthirsty foes. imately reac! fee ,. ‘Mf alone ji one-half. i Meet with auc! oasis not ree the great captai nto Pp pos ko pAekei the town of Belgrade, where they expected to find contri grades much ea: and the expense half that to with such an in the wil oguise the great captain of the ago. uted no less a sum than $30,000. or be nate g of £6000 sterling, towards the fitting and equipment of this expedition, as well as towards Mr. Silas Burrows, the great promoter of it. We believe that if the sub- scriptions amount to $20,000 over bove the sum alreedy collected, this nobly undertaken expedition of this life,"and it reflects great credit to the managers of our steamboats, railroad lines, and other companies: it is an example weer. bei followed. The liberality of such public bodies an companies in this country is well known. Sometimes, also, steamboat or railroad companies ex- tend to our whole school an invitation to some excur- tion. by which not only our pupils derive much plea- sant excitement. to diversify the monotony of echolas- tie life. but in whieh their Koeyleiet fpapneny od of vetural history acquires a surer basis. We must not omit, here, to mention the honorable liberality of the pi "s Line of steamboats to Troy nice between Troy immer at on two of the present |, the present company never could compete with this road. Passengers could be carned over it for one dollar, and the company uble to make as large dividends as the present com- pany. ? For reasons obvious to every reflecting mind, the contemplated road from Syracuse to Rochester, along the line of the Erie canal, would connect with this new road, in preference to the other. In fact, both roads should be built at the same time. In this way, the new road would secure all the passengers and freight from the route connected with it, as well as the travel and the freight over the Oswego road. If this roed should be built, as above mentioned, and managed by a man who is good mechanic, instead of a diminutive lawyer—a man of enlarged views, free from the accomplishment of his own telfich purposese—a man who is agreeable in his Manners, and respects the 7 of others suffi- ciently to treat them with deferegce and Rigo f in short, n man who is willing to be what he should be, the publie’s homble servant, instead of endea- voring to make everybody bow down, and be an pre their husbands, and a termination of their safier- sort,” but v ilvon has made up his mind to retire ings. lmagine, then, their feelings of disappoint~ rom the field, asa matter of policy, and this | Ment, when they learned that not a Hungarian was help will not be likely to change his purpose. there—all hed been removed to Shumla. What ‘The question of clergy reserves and rectories ia | Was now to be done! They were worn out, and | will consist of a bark and two schooners. exciting a good deal of public attention in Canada could proceed no farther. Hope even had forsaken | On every necount we congratulate the country on just now, and is one with which the ministry are | them. No husbands to Pec gy — friends to os bay aoe — oe tee ae hed us. ae ve e seve of the ly he up- | Welcome them. ‘They decided to throw them- | always been of opinion + the danger attending ex hore este ap tedbewedry anh by Ie. Tose aan the covet th peditons in the Artele regions. has consisted in mai amount of foree employed, hitherto two vessels only having been dgspatched and occasionally one, Our Philadelphia Correspondence. Paicavecrmia, April 23, 1850. Passage of the Bank Bille—Pennsylvania Reilroud— Serious Riot—The Stock Market, §c. Yesterday our State Senate, in a sudden fit of libe-~ rality, took up and passed, in a single breath, ten bills re-chartering as many banks, besides incorporating: the following new banks:—-Farmers’ and Mechanics?’ Bank, at Easton; Anthracite Bank, at Tamaqua, and Mechanics’ Bank of Pitteburgh. Of course, all these institutions will have to come under the provisions of the General Banking Law, which the Governor has Just signed. The small amount of banking eapital in Pennsylvania, compared with that of other States, renders the business of banking at thie peculiar time exceedingly profitable, as the divie dends of the last eighteen months conclasively | show; and, as a natural sequence, bank stock ix sought, after with the greatest avidity, even by those who have issed mo) ay “of the same to province Was originally set_apart forthe ‘sup- | Selves upon the humanity of the Sardinian Consul. sort of a Protestant clergy.” The Church of | They eee gs s door, which was smnee Sy Sngland party made a des eto get the | the Consul bimeelf. Two beggar women st : \ i before kim, the pictures of misery and wo. Ile pan Ppl MyM ornqnge Tose g pigs pe. F asked them what they wanted. “They answered | is safety. erly nm » | *foodand shelter.” Ife requested them to come in. WwW not but feel areured that there will be the srovinee | Then the officer's lady introduced him to Madame | most triendly feeling and cordial co-operation on the Kossuth, wife of the President of Hungary. He | part of all employed in these expeditions ; and that. could not believe it until she took from her bosom | With @ mutual SS will towards one another, be | to any, until at le the signet ring and seal of the government of | Will se re — _ soul orgy Mo baa sae uve Was called in to. Hungary. "What followed, ro Gan caally conjec- | Cems of hemanty, end, trusting in the God of aii ; mercies, leave no effort untried to restore to us our by ture; they were received and treated according to | 1oct countrymen. par ge Was granted to our pupils going home to «pend the veeation with their families. But for this generous SS poverty would compel many of them to forego, year after year. the happiness of a visit to their long unseen homes. The like favor was also shown to some of our pupils by the Erie Railroad Company. A list of all the pupils’ names now in the institu- tion is then given, with an account of the classes, and the several items of study, after which an ac- count of the annual examination of the progress of the the aid of the 1 settle the row, which it did, or tried to r fiving a large’ slice to. the Chureh of ng- | their rank by the kind-hearted Consul, and after |“ Gne word about Sir John Ross's expedition and, another to the Church of Seotland, or | they were sufliciently re he made known their | js doing in regard to it; and how t Kirk, another to the Roman Catholies, and | case to the Prince of Servia, who sent them his | progressing? It will be s another to one body of the Methodists, | carrioge-and-four, with an egeort to take them to | another portion of thi i aaetae caamen te data to Garett Shuma. ‘The weather: was terribly cold, and. the | be started in all Feepects effeientiy, and vietwalied for | humble tervant to him, it is hardly enough to say, | the scholars is given, which is very anverenting. tuifered geverely by the falluron of the United Staton, denominations w hor roads as bad as they could be, but they ultimately | three years. No verse y expedition should be | that this road wou fot} iz head St pow ne ns Specimens are here given of answers made in | Within two or three months, the pestp pepe ot a perpetual bribe is’held out to the clergy of the dif- | arrived in safety. a isi ana ame acas the best paying roud gy a a alt would alo be | writing by some of the deaf und dumb scholars, | city banks hae advanced trom $10 to ppt ig 4 felerteects to come and (cel at the public.eriby | 1 have mentioned in former lettersthe generosity | 4, J not do for any one expedition to hamper | iCattitlt benefit to the city of Syracuse. Will, | which indicute wonderful intelligence and mental | the stcek of the Philadeiphin lank, yerrerday, one » be put upon short allow: | of our good little Sultan, to all those who have | it ,rill net de for Say, tee orate nee umioas | eet, the 1 iar | developement. | The physician's report, annexed, | tor $146 per share, or forty-Sve per cent above ite pas should they for any reas ance at home. ‘The effect of this # has been most di and ha value. The war between the saints and sinners. in reference: to Sunday travel and trafiic on t Pennsylvania Rell: road, is with unabated warmth. Th oth, nnd unless the sinners, look’ shorp vestigate this subject, and oblige is Very interesting. staternent of the daily course of meals will be pleasing to every one, and will show the liberal scale on which our public institutions are conducted in the dietary de- partment :— On Mondays they have for dinner roast beef with *y nach or lettuer, or egg pli oreal in the form of cold slaw or pickled. or cucumbers with boiled beets and boiled turnips and potatoes. always with some one system Sought refuge in Turkey; but Ihave since learned po ae tha! the sufferings of the Hungarians, both at Wide | Sittkise sense? seer eee mee one Provisioned den and Shumla, have been very great, owing to If Sir John Rows’s the neglect and carelessness of those to whom the | must be supported Sultan had given his instrictions, ‘The sum which | Inck of funds on th had bee to Kossuth for his support was | ther private expedition P » bank notes, and they do not pass — - nm or Shumia at per; he sustained Talk on ‘Change. On I KER Steamer Adlantic=O: Mechanics. w York, April 22, 1850, pedition is supported at all, it nd we trust there will be no the Atantic for that or aay close on for the next three or four days, their Sabbath ob« serving opponents, will come out successful Hon. Morris Longstreth. formally and publicly de- clines being considered & candidate before the Mr. Bexsern— ‘ Every man who claims America as his birth- place, should exult, and his heart should swell with oe the exalted position of his country, mammon-loving priests erally cast- ing about for some excuse to offer to their r pple for asking a slice. A determined efio made to appropriate these reserves tc ideroble loss. The Sultan order- [Liverpool Journal. April 6) hese pach of gory apt sencwn yer tes bar tn tas | enue some « Seu ‘oe’ the pumceeatelae cation, of somy 4 ed also clo for all dingto their rank, but | Trade took's start om Tuesday net, and, in eoase- | im visu ‘of futarity, The ag in ehh we live ia, Fhe poe y di tea n mernph be +o Saag oveasion for bie thus gi of | Taeed * ‘triotic self-denial, stood as much chan of the ‘DeminsUon as cae worthy correspondent. As affairs now stand, the ‘choice gy yee a Bigler a , Black. on the new railroad, west of the $e! = Kill, struck for higher wages yoaterday, and for soins time the mort bloody results were feared. One or two of the ringleaders have been arrested. Poor Pat! There ie very little sympathy shown for him when he <a to reduce the association principle into Mre. Fanny Kembie reads © Richard iff? at Sanrom Street Hall, to-morrow evening. amd it _ me pleasure to add. that her glorious readings continue to,piteast large, brilliant, MNeetaal andiences, here was ® pleasing bustle on the fing I who choose l the Sulton was kept | quene had no clothing during & curious fact, known to indeed, progressive, when the genius and skill our countrymen, which should receive every en- couragement, aro making rapid strides onward to the seme of perfection, and every new effort in science end the arte gives proof that adds to com- fort, convenience, utility. These impressions were created with trp on board the Atlantic, from the Novelty Works, the first of the beantiful steamships that compose Mr. Collins’ Liverpool line, and is to sail in.« few days, to give to the world convincing proof of what Yankee skill can achieve, and, more especially, ample evidence to our John Bull competitors th Brother Jonathan, as the vulgar phrase has it, seme pumpkins.’ The gracefal and swan-like would derive an equal bene * laity of even | Clothing wasn se the bodies named in the act, will, a large portion of , igmoran’ of it, eo they ha them, go for taking awey this bribe f their cler- | thie terrible winter, but what they and their wives gy, and the other religious bod are united to a Could carry on horseback, int flight to Widdin. ber man on the subject. State support of religion, of hos seen und had compassion on their brokers, editors, and planters, in New tather of irreligion, for that is the result, will no and, by His overruling providence, | York and New Orleans. Georgia and Alabama. all ger be tolerated. An“ Anti-Clerg setve As. who have survived thus far will not be left | declared that cotton would be cotton, on the princi- city, and will com- to perish. Major Douek, who | have already | ple of the coal merchant, who did not consider slates The minority mentioned as our guest, had occasion recently to | to be “black diamonds,” because there was & positive wait on the un minister, who desired to be | certainty of « eee a ye aby as aee informed as to the state of the refugees at Shumla, | Will not be am abundant crop and that is comet and the Major sold him all. ‘The minister had it | Eaited: that it may be 2.210.000 boies, but, will not be Hately to the Sultan, and he, | 2900.00; that this quantity will be barely seMicient Teward hia, sot without lose of time | Sree Gvereavéemans, Vue thet the detssnd wil be ie, and gave him an unlimited order to | trade will be active, that there is a total absence of all Satordays. roast beef Sundays. cold ham, or cold boiled beef, or cold pork Vegetables ax on Monday, for every day in the week. ty day in the week, either of boiled rice, or pudding. or apple dum; kinds, according fraron Breakfast. coffee. with fried breed, hash of meat and yemeeee cooked on the preceding day. and bread and na At tea, bread and butter, and cheese or emoked beef, or cake Be mence an agitation are in a dilemma nuns, it the casesn ity of the religious orders in Low property orders in Lower ( different. The proj * footing. taken complete possession of he “ balla, er Canada wey secured to them by the a those cireumstanees which alarm the reneibility of | model of this vesselis a nid specimen of waval i pinfation at the rime ofthe onfirmed commerce, that there is not in existence the materials | j.ebitecture, end presents to the eye, as You scan asp abacenmd t a nearly every description of secarities was sold at @ y the treaty of Paris. The reserve * pperCanada hat and feathers to « toothbrush, nothing mist be | of anoth e rasiey w a 2 oom nd | her life-like form floating on the bosom of her na- | to questions to them, are deserving at- yr sprees over yesterday's prices, Should Were a parliamentary gift, and may be resumed, if omitted. 1B. was at the house of the Pacha, and | * ak the tebe orate of tive element, one of grace, of beauty, and sutpas | tention. We select the following specimens :-— pa 9 mas cet chen nearly due, bring intelil- in a, the general tw At the request of one of the gentlemen acting as exa- miners, the class wrote, as a preliminary exercire. their names and a few facts Cope: bene ye They also stated the names of the gentlemen who had just entered the room, with the tof their visit. The following. from one slates, may serve asa specimen of the ease aud correctness with which the clave poy! performed this exercise — “My * B La 1 reside ia Malone, Prankiin York. Twas born in the year 1828, but I my birth place T came tothe inatitution fe basis; tl ney the public requires it, I have been thus saw boxes and bags filled with fine garments, and | plethorie with the gold; t particular, a# this is a question which may split up all rorts of winter clothing. The Pacha told him Teeth taerebant oan oe ech oehe nee thé present cabinet, and lead to a dissolution of the that these were but the beginning of the purchases. | [hc( there union between Upper and Lower Canada. When A steamer will leave very soon or Shomla, with it comes up, your renders who take an interest in these supplies, and will ‘also take with her what Conedian offairs, will better understand its bearings, Will probably prove equally acceptable, a large Great floods have oceurted within the last ten umber of letters, and American papers, from days, on all the creeks and rivers his section of | Which they will learn that they have, at least, the the province. Mill dams, ph ee of a great and free nation. On the pescinge have been swept | rival of the steamer at Shumla, the Hungarians sing elegance—her exterior arrangements indi- cating that the can end dors thing of life” My pen fuils in the descriptive as to her interior, and a Visit will only suffice to cogecciets the imag: pt 08 panne!’ res oiled gildings,. the tables of martier the. ta ree mirrors, and sash-work of stained glasa, filled with devices of rainbow tints, all adorned with national lone, few as they be than otherwise; thai there are now no speculate, and that as the world fs 4 abrond, that plenty, comfort, and ve trade, whatever to amuse or punish the people of y France; that although the epring trade pointed people in the United States. the lull isonly momentary—for the people who have money Several lives have been lost, and an immense | will embark for a town in Asia, three days distant | Sil yJend it. and all will, ere long. “ad - W id. M J “ 5 . “go ahead in; ' » yearsold. My parents are living, M. amount ofproperty. Large quantities of lumber col- | from Broosa s That the raw material Of manuiectures can berdly: , a - Ban we! 4 po Bk butcher by trade, but lw 1s not now emgage in lected at the mouths of the rivers on the shore of lake The Austrians are devising every way and means | therefore, be lower ; but that as execs ive caution is - wor J beapea here usiness, One of the gentlemen who ha® just plements, where it was necessary to take a light. he vivm of the highest order for those who it \his beautiful handiwork, and proudly elevates t ch aoe + our Leone mine ave i piscina, miring the bewut elegance r suite of mag- nihteest cabin, with what wonder and surprise, as you enter her engine room, with its ironed walls jucted into this echool room by Dr. Peet, the ident of the Institution, is Mr. Johnson, the de- perintendent was accompanied by two other men, and upon entering. the cellar, an. oa Aang of gas took place. ty whieh the plaintiff and his companions were enveloped in flames, in- Ontario, have been ewept into the lake. Lunderstand | to get Kossuth and his officers into their power, | the character of: Amwgican lumber merchants, at_ Oswego and else- and are making use of the Croatians for this put- where, will be heavy losers. The «pring is very | pose. A plot has been discovered here, which has backward. Ploughing has not yet commenced, | put the Turks on their guard, About twenty Croa- and all kinds of business, except politics, are dull. | tians went to the Porte with the Austrian Drago- ¢ time, the spinners are iucredtiloay andi ference to thetr opinions. eager, and the market dulled a St « have commenced their regular tripa on | Man, to get passports for them to return to their Law Ini , om 1. in opening. cited similar the la There will be a Setermataet oppealtion, country, but just before they reached the passport Important Decision at Savawsant, Ga.—United States | ond stairweys, beg mat Ser yan gare ixaker were pa ky & and consequently cheap traveling. office, a man went in haste and informed the Pa- | t#. the Seamen of the Eurora— We reported yesterday, The City Council are likely to take a large share | cha that these men were employed by the Aus- | the sequittal of the, detendants i the tore case, on in the Toronto and Lake Huron Railroad, as it is | ttians to go up to Shumla to assassinate Kossuth had been shipped in Chariest: ated by Mr. Capreol, the projector, that ‘Ameri. | and all with him; the passports were refused, and for'e veyoge, elated by the ship : Brastee 10 be to the ean contractors have offered to build’ the road, ta- | they could not proceed on their murderous purpose. | Kast Indies, and that the shipping articles which were hing their pay in debentures and tickets. The Pacha caused some of them to be arrested. All wanna and cent to {ibarleston for exe. dia ond os a Tie propelling powers, that d it and massive steam ing Ts, that de- fy the world in comparison, w! ee beams end shafts, and butky cylinders, with highly po- lished and mirrored surface, ieate a gigantic strength, and eeem te bid defiance to the extreme fury of old Neptune; and astonishment seizes you, inery. inj carters t) party. Pye er 3 e we plaintif’ wae ver: As a closing exercise, they were red. bi La week individually a suecinet account “it rucll ‘ thie, feet oe amt dented, beets toteass is that ect a» hed especially interested them. The fhe injury done by the ‘int'synopee ef the reveludonsty war" was copied wd abmequns Sxplatton ook rece ree ee resulted very happy to eee him.” mare eres Prsurscota. at Shumla are op d to going to Kutara, in Asia; Nn = vill yet rally, and h, to one or more thet feeble man can conetrest with such beauty, Ps sank me iee the} wich serena atthe Hane the rely 0 enter tf Good Hope, from in such precise and symmetrical tion, this Putidings, im which the plaintsd pt bon ay ponderous engine and boilers, so jem. Am Mt there is one plete masalaates ‘i c harge in Kurope or the United states” The seamen, i ry, and unite with them. They have been poy hered 40 ‘mon the windlass." for the pare Apnit, 4.8 kept in fotal ignorance of their real situation; they pore of weighing anebor and proceeding on the leveral witnesses having been examined to prove the seri seating Se ateriows nature of the injuries and the skill and geni e retraction try were eul lomerees ir to be elected, at th: y know not that all is lost, but this they will learn as ot t bule : “ bjeets Somereee tebe elected atthe next etnon, Vowupply | Know no that al is lost but thie they, will bests 00 | Fornge, refured, (although, at, tne turbulent or vio | inventive ingenuity, that stands ont in Vold relief, | wn Vastament of Rrgland treat vale dat $20 «day, 'M aes techen ea expires on the dth of March next, The democrats | ters and papers. ‘Austrians have insisted on | the impresion that, the ship wa: bound for Cal | AM deservedly tumet, hens endeteeteed ty. ad py I the defendants. moved fer a nonsuit. whieh being de= will doubtless rucceed. though the whigs will make | the right of guarding them, and of keeping them at | cutta, that they had since learned that she was Cheaiee Howkad, up 82 Greenwich > Cf thie, he sent ten thousand soldiers nied. he opened the care for the defence, and con~ the bert possibie effort to defeat them, 0 Sumatra, and to this lattes port no consid. minke the peeple bebave better; but the disturbances bemnserhy t force of argument that his cliente . Kutara for ten years; the Sultan has answered that | bow ‘nited States Commissioner's OMe . gua tion would t them to go, Sumate was the | It is observed conspicuously in the centre of the pec in the present action. ite submaltsed: bs Before Richard Stilwell, oe a Seva tenon ct we a Stee et te Thien the oat “es long a destined. | ¢ ngine — a having tie helt —— tothe ieeeen: Tes toes a) ‘whieh oon eaet tarts the rong moment * leakage wae rari \ k - J e Court (Hon. nC. Nicoll presiding) charged | engine and 6 vin, Ie a ta en sent to avoid the ng attempted t how long he would ee proper to entertain them | tye ary that the deveription of the vorage tn the ar- | Din viset a tn Yuh aay ot Apel 1775, TRE secon bari | {f,aneer unl they were rected: he ueged that #8 given offence tothe Austrian government, sufficiently definite aud legal dese) has withdrawn all communication with the } sony) pag hegre ike lows ofthe nies Mr. Marsh is etill detained at Naples by | stetes, that the contract, therefore, wae void. and Po lankman. the counsel for the | the indisposition of his lady. that the eeamen, for this reason, ae well a* for not Ar with having attem; to cor Sieees tees mani’ Or Poe tate . +: . Ingenuity ir secured. and the Commirsioner decided in committing were examined ere cross-examined with much that of Bunker's Hill, which i* in the vieinit; injury done to the plaintift the explosion wae Rertvom, tm this, battle. the Americans were, come | throwah his own neg ead thet Lie wreaking of manded by Gen, Putnam. Dr. Warren, « brave Ameri- ‘ag oveasioned by the weet of the mat can general was killed in this battle. Tt took place on ere to substan- t ple of t ilin wet. This invention [deetined to be of great utility to steean vessels of all cleanses, and is adapted to hotels, restaurants, _ beving been ex informed ef the port of desti- 17th ot June. At the commencement of the war. G. the prisoner for trial ae Raval In * nation Intended by other parties to the contract. Washington #a¢ appointed commar der-incebtet of the At 8, Louie. Me. on the 1ith instant, snow tell to The U.# schooner Taney J.C Wiech, commending, were not guilty of the eriminal offence of an endeavor American armies by the Continental ( ee He fevght very nobly and bravely rgainet the feh for Tuise. to make a revolt and muting. by quietly refusing to , Atwericcn independ: nee, Severn) viber battles were commence the voyage. V: aecordugly abe depth of eight inches. wae at St. Thomas about 11th instant, fro » Le >