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Interesting f,om New Mexico. Santa Fr, New Mexico. Juno 24, 1654. Our Santa Fe spondence—War with the Jacarilia Ape —History of te Tribe —Attack of 1 nant Bell—Subsequent Movements an r Battles—Close of the Campaign— 1) °2/s of the Utahs—Hint to the Cabinet. As you invite c+ of the world, and : parts except hese others the same gy cews from this plo: There is but o1 present, most » ther pleasure nor proi engrossing topic + the last month or, fw, the Jacarilla Api« one hundred fam wartiors, They by New Mexico by « source of sancy» Territory, havin, + the inhabitants v have had wus un: co administration of his government, esta roying tribe in & pu: quin, which, on b his eugeessor, and (1 ering and plum Leen allowed avy Gov, Lane’s time, rv« ing the precent to ite subscribers. The has been the war with tribe composed of about aud at most two hundred Kearney, been a great the authorities of this ~* and plundered at will ‘The only respite we liberal and energetic wal, wus abandoned by re urned to their wan- sary, aod only during ‘ed any presenta, Dur- s ration they have al rent timese: » tn'\'o4 depredations for some- | thing to eat, ard tustances taken horves. | In the moni f Maroh last tg mumber ¢ wales pursuec dragoons, who « ing the cattle, or refused), attacked oumber, amongst \ chief. His loss, i | and three woundeu i. eutenant Bell, of the them, sud on demand After this, the Apaches collected, to the numb r of about one hundred | cinity of Fort Union. Here they were visited spondence from all parts aver to receive it from all i sm induced to afford to ifeation that I receive from your universal paper, by giving a few items of peper in this Territory at bly edited, affording nei- vervation in this city, for er since the conquest of raoe Lane, who, during | ined a portion of this i on a farm near Abi- ing habits, They have never | Affairs in Buenos Ayres and Montevideo. Our advices from Buenos Ayres and’ Montevideo are to the 10th of June, The elections, it seems, were concluded ear'y in May, ocd tho British Pocket speaks of them in the follow ing te ma :— To ; #sting along the streets during the day, noth ing Was to be seen inaicative of tae fierce struggle that attended the fustallation of some of the elec- toral tebles, jedging from the matual recrimiuatioas of the contensing hats. At all evente, tne voting was +0 upifo:m end the majorities so decided that potbing alleged can vitiate the act, or materially affect its « baru and valitity; and we thiuk means might very easily be devised to avoid for the futare all tbe in/o:malities or irregularities counplai ved 0°. With a properly arranged list of we electors in each | parish, it would be easy t» decide at once wh» were, end who were not, entitled to vote at uny given table; as alse to record on each oc asion those that ir elvetoral rights, and those that ab DOIN $0. exercised th a fr gratul | this new and classic textumony of public ovatidsace. Ata prepuratory meeting of the Senate, held on the evening of thé 15th, Don Fehpe Liavotol was elected President ; Dr. Lorenzo President; ana Dr. Marcelo Gamboa, 2d Vice Presi- dent; after which the meeting was adjourned till the 17th, fer naming the conespondiog commirsivas. iu toe meautime we con- | te the senators and represeatutives elect on | Our Washington Correspondence. Wasarnaton, July 29, 1854, The Cuba Acquisition Scheme—Gen. Pierce's Re-Election Policy—The New Patent Law —Judge Bayly and Henry A. Wise—Mu- nicipal Government of the Know No- things—San Francisco Navy » Agency— Arrival of Judge Campbell. The projet for the acquisition of Cuba seems to be absorb'ng much of the President’s aften- tion at this time. He was closeted a few days since with the chairman of the House Commit- tee on Foreign Affairs (Judge Bayly), at the residence of the latter gentleman in this city. The interview was held, I understand, at the suggestion of =the President. My opinion is that this is the hobby upon which Gen. Pierce ig toride again into the Presidential chair res, Ist Vice- | cy on this acho | will command the admiration of the country, |’ | He will. I think, make some bold stroke of poli- Cuban annexation question, which and enlist the sympathy of the masses. The At a meeting of the representatives, held on the | adminfstration must have some éclat, and of same date, Dr. Velez Sursneid was vlected President, but d+ clived, on the plea that his suties as a direc- | tor of the bank, and a member of the Commission of Pubiic Lands, lett bimno time dixposable for the duties of the offive: when the vote being taken anew, Dr. Manvel M. Escalada was elected President; Dr. Mustaquio Torres, Ist Vice-President; and Dr. An- dres Somellers, 20 Vice President. The mrmbders then took ‘he oats, avd atjourned the meeting till the following evering, The seme paper, speaking of the financial situa- tion and prospects 0: the State, aays:— The acceuut current of tue uequer to the end of all ordinary claims, of upwards of eleven miltions | curvengy. “We need not stop to draw the infereaces that reauund to tiie credit of toe administration, | aud especially to that of our worthy Minister of Fi- | nance; the mere fact is moro expressive than any comment we cua oiler. ‘The avnuul’ message of the Executive power to ‘ | the Legislative s-eembly, alludes to many looul im- hey | provements, The es ablishment of public schovls in Board, aud un improvement in tre postal system, messuge will give some idea of tho deplorable ction therefor (it being | condition of the centrai an { northern departments: — routed them, killing a | Tanderiaken, by. thecGn om was El-Lo-Bo, their | visiting the deyartments of the north and centre, derstand, was two killed | The excursion undertaken by the Governor, in accompanied by the Minister of Government and Foxegn Reiatons, leaving the enpreme command deleguted in those of Finance and War, bas enabled the government to uppreciate the most urgeut ne- cessities of the rural distiicts, The goverament | could never have sormed an idea of the state to by other officers of the urmy, and declared their | which it was reduced, however mach imagination re for reotion of Picuries ana the western boundaries of the settlements, avd oa the were visited by L about sixty dragoo: and rumor here says declared thy would not fight un- der apy eiroumstuuces. From thence the indians moved wertward to the mountains be- tween the villages of tue Picasios and Sene- guella, and about the of Taos and the Kio Arriba counties. Here they were about the lust of March camped with their families, tht». ui their chic having ac- compenied Major Blake to Fort Union, to have an interview with Cui. Cooke. the commander of that post, Ou thir return at Moro these ace, ‘They were moving in the di- | | out any in many popucous neiguvorhoods | of those things that uo bonor to a government, aud are @ necessity inherent to the social life of maa, are to be found among the inhabisauts of the coan- wutre of the settlement | try, if we except the works which the Might have exaggerated the awful evils tout nave | Welded upon it trom a Jeagen hand fortwenty years. Rio Pueblo | il | tenant Davidson with | &ttained to im;ortunce, now ruiaed and desolate, Iv is painful to say it. Towns that had formerty barely begin to re: over from their decadence. Tue charches in generat dilspited or neglected, or with- None vernment undertake, and gone ‘on preparing little by lit- tle, amidst the disturbances with which we have had to contend since the downfall of the tyranny. Nevertheless, it is satisfactory to say that tue civil and milltary authorities, aided by the intelugent and wealthy classes, labor with noble decision in effucing the deep traces that have been left in the three ohiefs, becoming alarmed, fied in the | country by the sauguinary career of a prolonged uight to rejoin their peopte. A few days be- | tyranny. fore some two or three, thet Major Thompson | was bringing in fro the northern settlements, had also fled. Ou the 29th of March Major Blake, in command at Tnos, despatched Lieut. Davideon, lst Dragoons, to the camp of the Apa- Yanding part. Invasion oF Inprans.-A communication from The booty «hey had colie.:ted was re- ches last mentioned, where, after a night's | taken, and five of the number killed, after a keen march, he arrived about ten o'clock in the | pursuit of twenty leagues, ia which @ corporal of morning. with sixty ¢ragoons, 4 few words between the Indians vanced guard, who were on foot, the fight com- menced. Lieutenant Davidson charged their camp and took it, but thu Indians attacked the ec tbat had been left in the rear with the and after | {From the British Packet, June 10.) rIDEO.— Aftor te lapse of a quarter of acen Moxtry . and the lieutenant was compelled to go | tury the imperial forces are once mure installed in to their assistance. The Ivdian eamp wre on the east side of a lurge mountain, and the | herses bad been left xt the foot of it, in the | centre of three nigh hills. The fight lasted | moro than an hour, when the troops were com- lied to withdraw, to save the wounded, and parsued about two mites. Tweaty-two loth in the fight and the retreat. jose is not known, having removed their dead the same day, and fled seetward. Twelve dra- con horses were found deed on the field, and the Judians captured twenty-two. a3 well as the arms of the killed. They cid not scalp any of the a from which it is believed their ioss was very severe. Immediately after the news oxen; 18 were left dead on tho field, and twenty. | Amaral to introduce the thin edge of the wedge one wounded made good their retreat, nol u third part escaping uphurt, tent . A eros “ legitimate effects; a feeling of dis Licutenant Davidsos bebaved most gallaatly | oan Whee bac Ram Fd = - The Iudians’ | } Spa: the interventors the delicate p and if any doubt remained as to the identity of hu- , term. man nature, the protest of the 8th tures of the first standiag aud respectal have dispelled the itusion. We sympathize deoply with the patriotic Orlentsls in the noble stand they make for the independence of theig country, and de- the capital of the Cis Platina, nominally as guar- Oiavs ond allies, virtaslly as-—what time and chy may deiermine. Contrary to tho usual cour things they appear to have multiplied on the march; for the 4,000 tiat were to cross the fronticr 000 on their arrival at Montevideo. We srarely happens in the tranapertof a tr at all events, it was cunsiderate first. The imperiat protectorate begins to pr ts to end in dectared hostili and the examplo of t they had to play; Mar, signa- ity, must of this engagement reached Col. Cook, he took | pounce the insidious means employed to reduce the field, and maroting to the vailey of Taos with his forces, engaged the services of thirty Mexicans and Puebio Iud-ans, under the com- | bas been made tb: | srempting to fleec a mand of Capt. JH. Quinn, of Taos, as spies. He was also necompanied by Kit Carson, ladian agent at that pl.ce. The troop under his com- wand consisted of cragoons, under Licu- tenaate Sturges, Moore, Bell and Johnson, aod ® company of foot under Captain Sykes. On his staff were Dr. Byrne, as surgeon, and Lieutensnt Maxwell, as adjutant. On the 8th, Coionel Cook discovered the In. dians om the Rio Ojo Calieutes. They were prepared to receive him, and fought come mi- sutes with the spy compsny, but, on the arri- yal of the main body, tied in great confusion, There were at this camp seventy-seven lodgea— about 150 warriors. Colonel Cooke lost one man killed and one wounded. Enemy's loss not known, but thirteea ei and all their cam ui left on the ficld. From this antil the 24d of April Col. Cooke pursued the Indian: incessantly, passing south to the Chama Mountains thence turning north them to a forced submission and si | ready to be employed, in lent acqniescence. ‘The appearance of the ominous “‘illnstration” scurvy pretext for fleecing or the Orientals of a constitution: ht, with & secrecy sud precipitation that clearly show the uns ripulous agencies that are arrying ont @ measure of fairly entitled to doubt, al of public disenssioa whose ultimate sims we since it sinks from the and free inquiry. If every gis straightforward and honorable there is nothing to be feared from the public press, wolch, on the contrary, migat have been rendered & seazonable ally and an effev- tive auxihary. In speaking of this odious measure, uo less a per- | coragethan Don Mamnel Herrera y Obes gives ex wression to his sentiments in these terms: — The bill of the government is something worse than an error—it Is a crime. Its tendencies are ntonly dangerous—they are insane. Tas it so soon forgotten what Montevideo did to repel despht- ism and tyranny? There are moments in the life of communities when the honorable citizen is bound in vonscienc» to give publicity to his opinions, when indiff-rence would be a great crime. Ihave therefore no dtili culty in authorizing you to make what tise you may again, following tbe trail to the Savoga river, | decza proper and expedient of this letier, where he wae caught ina very severe snow storm, The snow being some fourteen inches deep, it was impossible to foltow the trail, and the horses bemg broken down, there being oo forage, he came into the settlements to refit. On the Ist of May, Colonel Cook ordered Major Brooks, with his own com- pany of infantry, Lieutenant Ransom's company of dragoons, Captains Quinn and Valedez’s com- | Free ms tHE Woors.—For several days past, fires have been burping at difleront points along the line of the railroad, which caused considerable alarm and apxicty among the farmers along the read for the satety of their buildings, feaces, and astures, as well as with the railroad company for be safety of their own Property: bat owing to the vigilance of the hands Gat bye any, to d jast watch it, it bad done but little damage, till | for the pone he holds. He . a i \ of udition and moat excellent ent, Colonel Laureano Diuz, dated Bragado, May 17th, | viens pa at nt abet antenh aii aite gives an account of the succeasfal repulse (! & ma- 4 of some 100 Indians, who hud made | ie aa ption by the frontier of Bragado Chico, on ie 15th. ce | , I éisclaim any imputation whatever w such waterial as this (provided a war is not the wir ding up of our negotiations), much can be made, Wars make military men famous, and pander to their success; but wo unto the diplo- matist who undertakes hereafter to make politi- cal capital out of them. John Tyler and James K. Polk made Zachary Taylor President, (unintentionally, however), | and the country has hardly~yet recovered from 1, presents a balance in hand, after settling | {he imbecility avd rascality of the Taylor dy- nasty. Poor old Zack! charity compels one to draw a veil over the part he played; he was | honest, and actuated by good motives, no doubt. | The others who survive him, have sunk too low | tobe raised by the hand of resurrection, I ! cannotlearn the nature of the interview cited irom near Fort Union, | the districts, fe creation of & general statistical | above, but it is mect that you sit it down that | this Cuban mtasy will ere lon, among the foremost. The following extractfrom | Bu) Gobea chs y assuine a most tangible form. Some predict that “the engineer will be hoist with his own petard;” but I can hardly believe that with the aid of Marcy's political astuteness, the President can be much injured if the whole affair should ex- | plode, : The proposed new patent law which has been introduced into the Senate, modifies and im- | proves the existing system very much. In its general provisions it meets with the approba- | tion of Judge Mason, the Commissioner, and | will, lam told, receive-a warm support fron | Senator Seward, of your State, when the bill | comes up for consideration. There are persons who oppose the imposition of new powcrs and patronage upon the Commissioner; but the op- | position comes principally from euch of the | Solons around the Patent Office as have been affected by some of the righteous decisions of | the Judg& From this same quarter come, | also, the unjust complaints that we sometimes | hear of the examiners, from whose decision an | appeal is allowed to the Commissioner. Judge | Macon, I understand, is a native of New York, | but was appointed from Jowa. He is a gradu- | ate of the West i’vint Military Academy, and | “a marvellous proper man,” in every respect, | ntleinan | with a great deal of character, and a better knowledge of mechanics than many who have made that the stady of their lives. No better | appointment could have been made. While on | this subject, it may not be improper to mention that the “Inventor's Protective National the “ Blandenguez” was unfortunately killed, and Union,” an institution founded at the Crystal | and his ad- | 82 Officer dangerously woundod. The papers of | Pelace in your city, has its office immediately | Mendoza announce a more formidable invasion as | \ onder way, but the authorities invoked are of quos | tionable respectability. opposite the Patent Office building. Its name | sofficiently imports the design for which it was | originated, viz.: the protection of the interests of inventors from every section of the Union; and this purpose it is accomplishing most satis- factorily under thé superintendency of its Pre- sivent, br. T. G. Clayton, of Norfolk, Va. Hon. Henry A. Wise has been summoned to attend as a wit! in the investigation of the charges against Jndge Bayly, of the House. | The old feud existing between these gentlemea will doubtless be revived, and if so, we muy “look out for squalls. The new native American Mayor, Towe! | seems not to have given very general satisfac tion to those who placed him in power. He | nerve, they cay. Some of bis former nds are already revolving in their minds the means of his displacement at the end of his 1 think, from all Tcan learn, that the next candidate of the Know Nothings for the Mayoral- ty of this city, will be Robt. W. Latham, Esq., the banker, a most popular and execllent citizen, and aman of great wealth. He is of the Me- thodist persuasion—“native here aud io the manner born”’—and, it [ mistake not, has been o minister in that church. He isaecredited for the possession of a most benevolent disposition, | and has Javished much of his wealth upon ob- | jects and institutions of charity. -His name is already associated with the growth and pros- perity of Washington, and as he is comparative- oung man, he will not “lack advance- ment” very long. I have somewhere seen, within the past few days,a contradiction of my statement with re- ' gard to some of the circumstances attending | the appointwent of Dr. Ashe to the Navy Agency at San Francisco. The writer asserts that the Dr. has been several years a citizea of California. This I understand to be untrue 80 far as itis designed to create the impression that the Dr. removed there from North Caroli- na before the promise or prospect had been held out to him of receiving this appointment. mn the motives of the Dr. or bis friends, but I cannot permit the veracity of my former statement in the Herarp to be questioned, without intimat- ing that the information was derived from a most authentic source, and one entirely friend- ly to the new appointee. Judge John A. Campbell, of Ala,, associate Justice of the United States Supreme Court, reached his home in this city, yesterday, from the South. This is the geatleman who excited the ire of the New Orleans De/ta and other fili- bustering prints, by putting Gen. Quitman and | Mr. Thatcher in limbo, for their designs on panies of spies, to procved tv follow the trail of , Wednesday, when a strong, wind sprang up from | Quba, The Judge acted very decidedly in this | the Indians, who, at the last accounts, were moving north, in the Los Tusos valley. Major Brooks discovered the trail, and followed it antit the 0th of May, when, being short of pro- visions, he marched to Taos to refit. On the dof May, Major Carlion, with parts of two companies of dragoons, under Lioutenants Da- yidson, Moore and Jonnsen, and Captwin Quian’s company of spies, were ordered to pursue the eame Indians, if possible, uth «oof May, Major Carlton tains, by means of his spy company, Mr. Carson, Indian agent though it was some some twenty days old. After unparalicled marching through the Wahatoyah and Ratou mountains, and trailing equal to blood-hounds. he came upon the Indiaus on the 4th of -June, near Fisher’s Peak. They were found to be twenty-two lodge», who fled immediately, leav- ing everything they had in possession of the troops, y-eight horses were taken by Capt. ulon's company of spies, four of the Indians were killed and many wounded. ‘This bas closed the ae at present, being | the firet series of ful operations against liane. The Utahs are now threatening “ them also, while the troops have their in, and New Mexico is blessed with an soldier, Gen. Garland, in ‘tment. i ‘ ‘There is no clashing between the military and | civil eathorities, as has heretofore always been | the cage, as our Governor is at preecntin Wash- ington or Kentucky. Perhaps it would be well to suggest, through your valuable paper, to the Department, that the Governor and the dif- ferent I officers of this Territory should side at Washington, and they would not thus od it necessary to leave us every fear, ant do- « of their valnuble services. itis te ed they ere paid for. right ad- s the government by proxy or by tele ved leiter, and, from ies erpericnee, I * would be quite as well. : «oll bear from me again next mail. cestroycd. C between here and Westfield is ’; many of the meadows adjacent to the trac! On the | jy en entirely bart over. discovered | the trail on the east of the White Moun- | pelon; and | belon: wes feared at one time t?at Mr. Hanford’s houso | and barn would also be destroyed; but owing to the | will be done.—Silrer Creek pon sid en toto depreciate, i t onl; the Apaches, ana it would he the time to , mavifold efforts to deprecinte, it not only stands eo firm, but continues to gain steadily in 4 We believe the judgment in Its favor is a | one. | and economy, and more strong. l, of coal daily to market, and is constantly increas ing ita facilities in every advantageous mode. It is pees Ba to defy Wall strect and all ite evil agence fitable concerus in the United States.—1 Journal. Atkicson, of city yesterday. mer at the Lake Hoose ed off ina state of insanity, He got oa board of tLe eastern train, from which be was ejected by tne te creek, where hls body was found. the west, which increased the fire, and it spread with great rapidtiy, eetting fire to the fences, brash, | old trees, &c., and it was evident that ail efforts to stay its progress would be frritioss. The railroad compauy bad about 7,500 cords of wood on the side of the track, atout one mile above here, whi corsumed. & the lire, oceup'ed by laborers al ‘opsideratle quant! so Iurat, while ve In the vicinity of Irving, we learn that a barn i o Mr. Campb-I!, and two stacks of hay to Mr. Hanford, were also burned, and it energy and vigilance of the people in that vicinity, and the assistance of several of our citizens, who, hearing of the dauger, aay went to his relief, they were saved. The extent of the damage to the company or to the farmers along the line, we hare been unable to ascertain. At the time of writiag, Thursday, the wind has changed and moderated, and hopes are entertained that no further damage zelle. CUMBERLAND Coat axp Tron Company's Stock. —This is the only coal stock of this region thit is now regularly bought and gold at the Now York in epite of adveree markets and ‘eo ighteons ‘he Company is managed with great ability every day becomiag more and It now sends more thaa 1,009 tons 3, and will #99n become one of the most pro- iners Sticipr.-~The bedy of & man named George W. iebm ond, Va., was brought to this Mr. A. had been spend:ng the sam- Skanoateles, and wander- senductor, near Oncida, and und saibtedly comonit- viciée by throwing bimzelf into tac Oneita He was onmar- lard, and reputed wealthy.—Syracuse Siw | of completion, the Lalan: en ordered to the | even if the Secretary of V matter, and deserves the pa Ag of his countryment for so doing. T he strong pat | | of the administration fur Caba does not extend, | it seems, to the justification of these piratical and marauding expeditions. Gen. Pierce, and 1 shanties along | not Gen. Quitman, must have the prestige of the rad, wore | snecess in the Cuban affair. f railrond fence | Sovrmernrr TuE Rock Isrann Bernar.--We learn from the Advertiser, that the Rock {s!and railroad company } eeliay to meet with some trouble in carrying out | thei | beyon: | that river at Kock } it will be remembered, is the western terminus of | the Chicago and Rock Island railroad. On the op- lan for the extension of the railroad track the berg dl by means of a bridge across sland. The town of Rock Island, posite side of the river, at Davenport, commences | the Mississippi aud Missouri railroad, which ex- , tends to Council Bluffs. | point is divided {nto two channels by tl The gps at this @ [sland of Rock Island, which is several miles long, and con tains seven hundred acres of land. The Island be- | longs to the United States, and the Rock River Company proceeded, under the gencra! law of Con- ee: gtanting aright of way to railroads through ¢ United States public lands, unless such Isnds are actually occupied by custom houses, navy yards, forts, &c., to build thelr bridges across boat chan- | nels, for the 20 of fe a ti ith the oe Purpose orming @ connection wit '¥) issippi and Missouri railroad. But recent after the bridges have nearly arrived at a etate d_has been claimed by the War Department aaa Ser eerie It seems Great Bitain a fort | that during the last war | was built on the southern end of the island. This fort was occupied as long as there was any use for it, and then, a number of 8 O20, abangonede== Now, however, the Hon. Jefferson Davie, of War, maintains tho claims of the War Depart. ment to the island ari refuses to ecil or lease on any terme,the right of way. Mr. Davis has also oS Ng tac tho by on og instructions to re- Move the trespassers from the apot. Tho c who have heen sustained throug y the advice force otimen employed Sue Mises in wll eats men on tke ) it is said, ia the be: | oes y of — peed ings, will not re- except upon compulsion. No troops hat be s it, and it is tho rat that Wat sends all the he can spare for the purnose, he will find ditcaley is Hinge Ste a ye » Tae end ie not yet—Bos- | ton Journal, July w B i Hl SE i great talent aad industry, comp: and discretion, and sofvened bya « position, which made her with all a sale and welcome com, As an only avd mnc rents were resolved to give her an excellent p cal education. As they were unwilling to spare her from the ltue fumily ‘circle, she received much of eduvation at our excellent public E ° ‘Theatres and Exhibidons. Bowsny TaaTRe.—The farewell benefit of Wr, E. Eddy is to come off this eveniog. Mile. Ma ip Duret and Mme. Margaretta Olinza are to sppeer in conjunction with toe entire provided for this Eddy will eustain ths a fo will cust e part ae ascension of Mme. Olinga on the blindfolded, and the drama of “G: which will introduce Mile. Duret and B. Eddy in the leading characters. Nisxo’s GarpEN—Mue. Anna Thilloo, the popu lar English cantatrice, whose perf bat ways elicited enthusiastic sp) The cocasion consist of ” in which E wing 3 the extraordi- private tutors. Tuat she , something of the ing its vives ond be taught self-reliance under ju revails. The great ravge of on the P Hee inakes it an ‘uncommon! es ered x The water power is ad: the: innumerable smaller streams and branches rupning throughout the whole extent of the Territory, s0 that no pxion CEI without a good and generally pure water. Nebraska Territory is less favorable for agri- and ornament, but which should, in{case of lace her beyond that degrading and ig ot dependence, ders the life of a female in this eatitied tarina. This belag the last night but two of her appearance on ang supposed that the thea- to its utmost oapacity. Wm. Moore, the talented stage man: his benefit on Tours: ited artists have bec cold day evening next—several ta- in agricultural, it is said to possess in mineral janwered. Nationa TaraTee.—The commenci: will be the popular drama of ‘‘Ntok of mating the charac- will be followed the pew extravaganza called “Plot and Perso: ton,” Miss Hatbaway aud Mr. Fox austainiog three charactors cach in it, aod the whole will coaclade with the drama of “Taming a Cartar,” in whi Mies Hathaway will appear as Mazourka. AmerioaN Muszum—The dramatic lately given in the lecture room of this establish- attracted very large assemblages. « ramatic romance of the “Corsican Brother: 8 now in its fourth week of representat probably be played four mors, so become, and the now piece, styled to Court,” are the pieces to be given this afternoon and eveni: Woon's Minstrgis are to repeat the burlesque, jin this evening, togetner instrumental solos. ember cere hs submitted and entered } Gradusting at the end of six months with the highest honors, she was then emple; in the higher department of one of oa hair Ay betel cal were or exhibited an aptitude oi ity for teaching saticfaction. But the death of Gea. Ta: consequent elevation of her father to the Presi compelled his family to relinquish their resideace here and remove to Washin; her into a new sphere of action, bnt she moved in it parent ease and grace that she ad she been bred in the midst of As far as tho political destiny of these now terri- tories 18 concerned , the general appearances are that neither of them will ever come in as a slave the Wood-,” Mr. J, the The coil of Kansas may be very well fitted for hemp, but even if hemp shuula be cultivated—which for the present is almost out of the question, siaco all settlers begin with the raising if, by and by, bemp should be cultivated in Kansas, be cient to make slave labor rofitable. Nor can the few slaves who it here out of spite by some stubborn ropagandist, stamp it as a slave State. understood here, that Kansas will be essentially a farming country, and that the haod- ful of slaves-who are pow brought here, are brought here st a loss, not for any industrial but simply for the fanatical and ridi pose of giving to the North an e: of their power to extend the institution. instance of Kansas, the fanaticism of the South for | universal slavery will wreck against the decree of Pro- vidence, who, as if to aseist all hovest men in their position to the iniquity, bas unfitted’the soil of nsas or Nebraska for any labor which is not the labor of freemen. Let them, therefore, The miserable bravado will ited men who follow blindly their bad aesions or their rotten political leaders, witaout ce to their own benefit and to the beneiit of their fellow men. Their dictatorship in the territories, although backed now by the pro-slavery the Union, and altheugh sup v0: of Fort Leavenworth these government employ independence of mind and thougit are so elastic that reasure of a acanty salary, of sho:t duration. God t Kansas and No! soil. The soil is unfit for slave labor, and those who attempt to force slave labor into it, will gocn be rpeet roman field intelligence emigrants from the East. nts havo idly arrived yet. In the of cora—but oven This introdnced with the same a would bave dope the society of the federal city. At the close of her father’s official term, she was destined to anffer s heart rending bereavement in the dea‘ of her excellent and devoted mother. She returned with her father and brother to their dos0- 1.te home in this city, and b; to the duties thus sudd upon Ler, «be relieved ber fo’ a and nto those hy Rome oo ualities which gave a grace and @ charm, as z ularity to the home over which | e again called around her the filends of her childhood and early youth, f fortune bad in tne Jeast impaired ata—ettacbments which she continued to cherish with unabated ardor aod devotion. The howe of Ler bereaved father had once more become cheerful and happy, for her whole mind and heart only brother, and they kindest and most grate! She had some weeks since promised a visit to ber grandfather at Aurora, about seventeen miles from this city. She went from here ia the afternoon f Toesda; spirita and apparent good Aurora fn the eve: appeared well and cheerful on her arrival, and, after conversing with her grandparents, she retired to test about nine o'clock. attacked with what , unwilling to disturb sbe called no one until after twelve o'clock, when a hysician was immediatel: her entire devotion r from all household ic and social * Rochester Knockings,”” with singing, dancing, an BuoxiEy's SmaeNapers.—The burlesque on the opera of “Cin jerella” will be represeated again this evening, with the same good cast. HrrropRomE.—The as system ond rey t scrub race is to come off on Wednesday evening. Fifteen horses are to run fora purse of $75, and a saddle aud bridle worth $25. The usnal performances will be givon this afternoon and evening. Signor Buirz is to give one of his pleasing enter tainments at Tarrytown thiseveasing. He offers a very good programme. MADAME THILLON'S CARD. The following card from Madame Anna Thilloa THE EDITOR OF THE NRW YORK HERALD. pporea to appear im viicly mentioned Hi io Sunday) Dispalch, of the 1088 her t devotion with the and Fort Riley, and by all whose conscience and y heaith, and reache: 3 e has been pul ‘ ibe niece of the late Mr. a. B. h which appeared in the ultimo, soliciting from me a contribution towards erecting a tablet to his memory—on that gro I must take the liberty of requee ur widely cireulating + Dispaich ia utterly {6 with Mr. Hunt. J have, sir, only one uncle, and he captain in the British Navy. Of the Mr. Hunt mentioned in the Sunday Dispatch 1 know nothing. What money, sr, 1 haye made ia, America is my 0 lay Dispatch bes no which I em more indebted to the liberality of the Ameri- can public than to any intrinsic ability I trust, however, it will not be ceemed obtramve in meto ray, that I have always enteavored to pleare patrons, and that I have the most wards the American people in retiri ‘the “land of the brave aymest gratitude which » female tible of, for their kind aj forte, and in seturn for Almighty has decreed t! shall eent for, but alas! too ger itched for her father and brother, bat they only arrived tosee her breathe her Inst, unconscious of their presence. She died about eleven o'clock on Wednesday morning. ‘The effects of this crushing shock upon affectionate brother, be imagined, but cannot be deacribed. ely removed to Buffalo and interred yesterday én the Forest Lawn Ceme- tery, by the side of her mother. She was followed by & numerous concourse of ‘Those ei meanwhile the f themrelves up as tainly not free from mischief. ready from three thousand to four thousand, chiefly | drawn from the most reckless characte Mis. settlers of the country is cer- iT wn, with which the fusiners, and for » Men who cannot itizen, and who revel with d ich frontier life holds ont to all lawloss tendencies. They are squatted all over the Terri tory, marking out tracts of intend to cultivate, roving king like beasts, ewearing like faries, convening savage meetings to proclaim siav: heavenly blessing, to denvance op; extension as criminals tute and intoxicate the Indian women, and to drse- crate with their banditti presence the inexpressible beauty of the vir; Axother ot thei morrow at Wall! ny teful feelags to- ‘the ans sorrowing friends. In the absence of the Rey. the Rev. Dr. Shelton vices, and we have been she discourse which he Dr. Hosmer, her pa: 4 in the funeral rmitted to extract from ivered upon the ocvasion, he following, which contains a jast and beautiful tribute to her worth and character:— “The affliction which has desolated this house— this whole community by its Fuddenness—-which has re-opened the fountains of grief which so recent} thoso most difficalt for ees of the many favors conferred on me, g hoursI have Et in the associati friends in the loveliest and ep ANNA T. lump and irresistible. Without ‘“»ver- stepping the modesty of nature,” the superiority of “oveliness and happiness” ver ali other countries on the face of the globe rankly confessed; and without the slightest idea of ipply does the Afficrican le justice. She bas had a triumphant run on Atlantic and on the Pacific side of the continent, and no wonder; one of the prettiest little women that ever trod the stege, and one of the most faaci- nating of little French coquettes in Engtish always sprightly, piquant and interesting, there was no such word with her as fail in these United Her “intrinsic abilities” as an is actress, in light, laughin, estioned in themselves, hava bee: by extrinsic abilities, absolutely all ber American audiences. She buta miser with her money; and if it would be a source of ‘any relief to the Sunda: dou bt not that she would c! bution for a monument to the memory of poor soil of Kansas. wild meetings is to be held to uge, the seat of the Shawnee Indians, forty miles northwest of the city of Kan- but tho mischief of all this is not as great as Most of those people are the very scum of the worst class of speculators and peculators of their respective communities. Here and less indecent speculator from.Ohio or I! even they don’t intend aettling here. All they want 19 to establish a claim, and to make some money by In this scheme, however, they will find them selves grievously disappointed. No survey of the land has as yet taken place, and only the through practical and experienced farmer | conld, by tio mere loek at it, tell whether it is Most of the fellows who are here, are novices in the ecience of farming. The majority of them have | no idea of settiing permanently. A fow of them in- | tena to goso faras to break without even raising fences they endeavor to grow some Aber for the purpose of selling it to the emi- nts. oe one word, they want'to make much m sible; but recklessness i8 great country overflowed—is among man reason to reconcile with a wie and merciful Providence. Men stand is not safe to their fect, and that the next step may plunge thom into the other world. In mysterions dispensations of God the worthless, to human view, the vile, the wicked, are spared. rolonged to the full measare ile the good are taken in the | of their usefalness, and the young ia the of their hope and in the beginning of their | astonished. The ttle proclamati | which they tread Their lives are often men existence, wi The instance before us exemplifies the force of these rematks. For to human view none could have been taken with less appearance of wisdom, | and goodness, as fur as haman means and onr feeble obeervations could jadge. In the very begit her days of usefulness, with every opportunity her that covld be presented, an: sition to improve those opportunities grace of her parent’s home, the idol she haa been taken away as by a belt from the skies, without a moment's trought or apprehension. Grown up among us, as she has, she has been iden- all our scenes, and associated with the past livesuf many among us, so that alls »cicty will miss her presence and every walk lose the gratifica- tion of her cheerful and happy companion=hip—not only here, wrere sho has alwa; apheres, removed frem our quictand com retired life, she has been known and loved and hon- i this wide spread coan- is scene is made, am nm, there will he a $0 G deserving of her hi ition, shonid bave been taken from all eart pines, never more to be secn here. | the parent of such a daughter there is but one boundless sea of grief and anguish of heart, there is but one overpowering and crushing sense of disap- hepe of—bereavement—aad although the people of a mighty nation will thize with that bereavement, yet mortal cannot bring back the lost one, or heal the death has occasioned. For human sym It has its value—i -bat it can neither heal its sorrow, | nor even bind it up. anne the province of reli- hear e alone binds up the broken we peek: She alone | taneously healthy balm. She comes an angel of | wr dafies eres Buffelo Express, July 30.) lo 5 . rald iearns that Gen. Frede- ,in this county, dicd at Dispatch, we heerfally make @ contri- the ground open, and Disverssina Occvrraxce-—Two Persons Drown- Ep.—An inquest was held by Coroner Lowry, dn tho Monongaiicla" iver, about six les 7 ed in the Monongahela river, six mi from the city. From the evidence piven to the named Nelson and les township, crossed the la river on a shooting excursion, on way in the woods when did not reach the bank of the 10 et across at that across shouting to those on the op- ir to send them a skiff, Nel- to to a free had all retived for the night, and her fruitless. Immediately girl named Ellen Woots, daughter with as little work as laziness bear within them the germs of rojects derived from such sources wi 'y fail everywhere else. Bat with all their vices, these men will be of be- nefit to the country. They bona fide settler; and altboug! with the mud of their dirty passions, th may soon be obliterated, residents of P the way for the been, bat in other Sie. Fagen “i ietumning home, they commenced sha posite si le of the rive: ored; and wherever, thr try, the announcement of the millions of our cou; so héalthfal, 20 and north, and south, exlightened teachers, ic editors come to neu-- horrible influences unavoidably flowin, from the contact with the loose characters emigran! This is the time for patriotic and whole-souled ci- * tizens to lay sound foundations for thi of these new territories, if they are to be saved from itical, and sociat evils which are lainly perceptible in some of the new States, where and education have fallen in bad hands, who went out, not because they intended to do good to the new country, but because they never could do anything good in the old. Let education itapress every child born in the new itory with horror of the idea of trafficking in and let the heart be educated simul- the brains; let the cnild 0 trained and generous, as well as to think how to make mone, and to be smart and go r tois, ahe met a her pointed and blig ihe pul it, press, to persa: th entered the boat and pushed off from They had not got many yards from the land the skiff became Sih bm instead smoothly along the stream, it commenced to whirl around on the water, to the terror stricken hig i abe, ineffectual propel skiff, Mrs. Nelson sed , 88 OLE more suc mana. the akiff than two; she copeented ad) Mes, Me 9 passing to the bow of t! iff to permit Mies Woods to take the oars, when she unfortunately lost her balan:e and fell into the Miss Woods, alarmed at the accident, an: nce of mind, also fell out of the sk hing was done to alarm those ‘borbeod, by the woman}who had accor panied them to the shore, and who witnessed the entire ecene, the parties were drowned before them. The body of Mrs. Nelson was recovered shortly after the accident; the lad mother respected by her neighbors. Miss W: gent girl; her Bi to love, and to be kind ahi Nothing is more common in the country than to ace the farmer, after having made some eee look W bis neighl re on aristocratic te fngs are tha wow sown—not in words and manners, which are always oi democratre sweetness, but by facts and substances as hard as iron, and a8 repulsive as insatiable self ay grandizement. The less nt and lees wealthy feels not de- rich and less clever; rick Richmond, of Sardinia, Sheboygan, Wis.,of Asiatic cholera, on the 17th inst. He was 69 years old. The General's public services and character have been euch as to dove-ve a passing notice. He was born at Ponltney, Ver- mont, and reared a farmer, receiving but a limited cdveation at such common schools as the country at He came tothe town of inia) with his father in 1809, and en- farming, which he followed until the war oke out in 1812, when he volunteered, and served it. McClure’s company, Col. went into active service on the Ist day of July, 1812. He was among those who volunteered to cross over to wn under Gen. Solomon Van bravely in that memorable unt heard an anecdote of t! with that ape which it down with cuntem was in the act of oe that time afforded. 4 as a lieutenant in Ca; scouraging Debbin's regiment, an bilities, that, instead of stim healthy ambition, he generally Let education in the new territories look to the heart as well as to the braiv: ings of sympathy between man and man will be chasten aod neutralize the tende: wi owe bya iges hia life mis - ‘oods was about and was a spright was not recovered returned a verdict of burg Gazette, July 29, 8, aud thas warmer fecl- Deatx rrom AN Ovenrpose op Monramwg—Yeo- morning, Mr. Wm. Irvit "et oe te et £ H of mercenary edi- | i \<: i I 3 E : F : t g rH pnd God, love of humanity,a love But to retara tothe place from which I pon this This is the bead quarters of the Wyandot Indi- ans, who hold a the of ask! from the q the close of the war, ganizing and il ¢ i nil Canadisus—ha!f i Most of them are quarter