Y. W. CUAIU. TKiiawo' s vim: u iv Tins. n. ''?''"' "' V'r" """"" r .l, m,i it wit lil i 'iMff, four ' ru"'"' " """"A' Tim ioUtr wt' bdthiiifxlnfix month 1 ., mutr Jinrnitinuid until all urrruiuifri "r' '""""y'"fC'l"'' HATKS OK ADVERTISING i Ono uaru (twolvo HiR-i, of Mm, Crovier mninre) one uiaertion & Kiicl. ul)MiUnt hacrtiou ' W lianineim card one year SO 00' A liberal deduction will 1)0 mods 10 ihoee who' advertise by the year. rVT the iiumher of inwrtibni iliould be nettd on the margin of nn a.lvertitement, otherwU it will l pablialicd till forbidden, and Charged aoy cordingly. PZT OMtaary noli ecu will be charged hair tut -A Weekly Newspaper, devoted to the Interests of the Laboring Classes, and advocating the Hide ot Irutu i everyissnc.- whb Mtum "V- -I i v I Payment fur Jub Printing mutt be mailt Or, Vor,. VIII. OREGON CITY, OREGON, JUNE 2 1, 1802. ilrlirrry of thr. work. Tiik l'lumi'KCT in Ki.uoi'K. Ah tho American question draws near its solution, thu Kuropcuii nutions spin begin to ex liiliit evidences of unlmutioti. Tho revolu tion lino only licc.i stilled; it i nut quelled, nor lias Garibaldi for ono moment lout night of that grand object to which liu pledged himself on liiH return to his unlive land; namely, tho redemption of tho na tions from the tliruldotn of absolute moti nrehy, and tho establishment of a Constitu- lioiml system of government in every part of Europe heretofore subject:! to onto rrutic sway. In his recent speech l)efore tho (lenernl Assembly of I -pti tus from till tho Italian cities, in tho Puguunini theatre i.e r Hitf-i.t,ndeinoitu. I 1'ahhon Uiiow.m.ow. A correspondent Only in May, 1800, Mr. Toombs, of 0f tho N. Y. JItruld, who rodo in tho cars Georgia, delivered a speech in tho United with parson Browt.low to Philadelphia, States Senate in which ho manifested a thus speaks of sorrro fucts which he gath- high respect for tho supremacy of luw and t,red in conversation with the old patriot: Tho old gentleman, now J7 years of ogc, bears abundunt evidences of the physicul tho authority of Govcrnmo.it. Wo com mend what ho Buys to himself nud tho re bellious people who support ft confederacy established upon tho ruins of laws and con stitutions. Wo have rarely met a case in which ono could more forcibly Kay " out or thiuo own mouth will 1 condemn thee, thou wicked servant!" Wo quote. " We tulk loosely of this being a Govern ment of opinion: wo talk loosely of sover eignty in the pnople. This is very well in snmo places in Fourth of July orations, inli;cat;V)) 0f wt.UP IU1(1 truVcl, figured silk T"K PAHT 1'KIIKUHUKn I.Y TIIK F.NUINKMI Coin's. After "urroiitlor of thu forts at ySw Madrid, wo (Col. Bissell' engineer pglueiit) were engaged four days un nikiig iim cml,KlnK lu:rivH. wtttWish J. cw works, and other engineering mat- ten. 'l'1,cn w0 wer0 8""t 0Vi'r ,,y 0;"' fopo to Kscerlain whether It was not prac ticable to establish batteries opposite Is- Uml N 10' " 10 m'11",,u ll" 'r wol'' on tho Kontm-ky short-. Wo spent three tlnyi in Hi Hwauips, In cunoes with negroes , gui'h'", f01""' ,1,u l,rj''ct itt.pnt--tio-blc. Col. ltissell, however, slated that ho cohM, '7 ,U"'J l",",r' (?L'1 ,,'"l","mU 1,1,11 llat boals lhroiili tho woimU and bayous, nud" bv that "rons land our forces nearly p,rsite N-w Madrid, and tako all the rucniv's orks in tho rear. (leu. I'opo i.i,n . ,r Wm.V. and he sent to l"u - - j- ,mt sovereignty made tl.eir Mute govern-1 ,own 0Vl.r hu ..... ii 1 1 lint the cmaucitiatiou of thu continent as ,,.i0 ml mmli! this (joverumcnt. onil :! n 1....1....1 r..n-i.i,r. Um V. fr lour steamooa.s, x nu.s, unu - . . , r(lfw.t . . .. . .. 1 .. .. V ..7,.i - woods .Metnouisi prencuer, w jiren-.n-uu harangue, but would, on compulsion, coin Tub Tkiiiiiiii.k Weatox. of the I'arrott Kun, at the The exploits siege of Fort Details of ISast'evn tiitrifi ut Griioa, Garibaldi, who bus been elected ' when men sometimes talk as though it were , t likewise anticiuc anil dark gray pan . ... .I . t... - ..1 I... f..1bit.r m.nan SiiP . ' . 1 i . I I .. .... ('oininiindfr inl'liief of the National Guard, declare was not oily to mar sound by talking sense . ' . . i .. ' i o i . . ..r . i. The Kev West correspondent of the Ex- Puluski, ore but the prelude of what can r, finys t!ie frigate Potomac hag arrived1 und will be done wilh that tremendous froin Vera Cruz, with information of the' weapon. Tho guns, which from their po- complete defeat of the Frcuch, and their' sitiou on UigTybee Islui.d, over a mile retreat to Vera Cruz, from the Fort, were uble to drive cast iron gun Francisco; Jafio !Hli. A privots bolts throiiL'h the stone wall us if it had t,.tic tMm Aconulco: dated' May 20th, ,k ciuuiui v. rr . . I ..i.:.... . ... . i a - and mental anguish which he has endured, uecn a ciiecse, wi i0i.....K u- soys me r renen nave oeen rq For three months he expected daily to be 'pounders, having only tho same ea libra as on( limBi on May Tth, at fuebla. They taken out und hutm During a purt of, the old mnc-ineh smooth-bore, lho one attacked a fortified hill, which' overlooked .,..,:... I. c.,rr.,riiwr wiili tviilnu ft;. ! hundred pounder, to tho production of the town, and lost l'.OOO' killed,- wounded iua miiiw mo . "-b -.i ..: ... f ,. U'r !!.. nu Uk ftnfr WI1ILII IUU luauuiwa v. ii.w "V" v... nn,j IQIIDr, 1 IIITJT UllUUKl.'U mm vtvvv Foundry have lately been directed, is a lnPrli the Mexicans had 1'6,000. This is a piece of vastly greater destructive powers, vcrv corrCct account from private iuforma-" as the rebels will find out when they hear tj01l from it. When the first specimen of this Memphis papers of tho 2d, contain Rich- weapon was turned out, a short litno ogo, moll(j divpatches to the 1st, which says: there was a greut deal of theoretical doubt 'p,e carnage in the battle of Saturday and of its successful operation, but experiments Siiiuluy was dreadful. The Yankees two' which were carefully made at tho lounury, t0 ti,e rebels one. Gen. Hatton, of Tea-' ver mid believed that his liriSOIl keeper, a man whom he had denounced us a forger, intended to poison him. His weight wus reduced in three months from one hundred and seventy Eve to one hundred and thirty pounds, lie wore au old-fashioned, rusty int. bound Willi crane, a oiacs cioiii com. tuloous,tlnuwerenolo fashionably cut " "-"ii -r- - . , , i - . i j i. Ill, ll l,l v M ...win... ..iv.... .......... , - , r l- It i irwui, .uui i-.im - -- - 1 1,.. ....... .In 1,1 i In. Ki.vlTill Stlltt.'B 01 tlll.H L II- I . . .1 . . .....I I.,,.,.. lvlnr,. ,1 in so many words that Ins o.0ect , , thu fX(.rds0 of K - - T " , I ..romnUy took tho hint, and has enough yBllkee. fo,,,,lt welV.' lot tho regeneration of Italy nlom-, , ,. , , , , i. ,i.r stut Govern- .,..,.. ,,. i,i,.i ......b. I Parrott one hundred pounders in the right Minister Morris has notified Cairo such guiis as could bo spared. They sent ! . If. Terry, John I no, tho stoutuers 6'iinur and J-.'mmu, wilh t!io barges, . . I I I...r .i ami one eli'lit inch i lam11 , .. , f. . ..... ,uL n ,......ler. Tools I'il"1" f '"''' l"l'ci,y for CWUni'iiH" t - .r..n. I for the rcL' nici.t carries goMT..,..em, .7 .c.m..-....H UMJ "' "i C well. Long era lius, n is inguiy pmoaoic, Kiirojiu would huvo been deep in the throes of a civil war, had it not been for the ca lamity which promised for a timo to mini- we everything from tho heaviest ropes and acre! down to fine steel drill for unspik- ing gui'- Our mute is about twclvo miles long, of which two miles were through timber, and Hie remaining ten through narrow, crooked bayou, grown up full of brush and imall troes. We have cut our way right through, the track being fifty feet wide, in which thirty are required for the hulls of th" boats. Tim timber is cut four feet below the MirU-o of the wstcr. In one short trclch wo cut seventy five trees thus deep, nut one Icn than two feet through. Tho machines were rigged from rafts and our lowest Hats, and worked each by about twenty men. 1 n the first place, three largo hunches wuiit uheud to cut out and pusli out of thu track the uudcrl.rii-h ami drift wood, thru three rafts followed, on which were the men w ho cut dow u and cut off the trim; theu the saws, then two largo barges, then out) of the steamboat. Very large lines were provided to run from the cap elan of tho aliamUiats, and hauled out by match blocks what iho men could not han dle. Then followed tho rest ol tho licet, meu iM-ing engaged all tho timo converting the IWboatH into (loafing butteries. From the river to tho levee the distance is about 500 leel: hero the water was shallow, and the route full of stumps; it took ono whole day to pas this then the cut in the levee. Hero thu fall was over two feet, and the ruhofwotcr was tremendous, lhe tar get boat was dropped through; with live lines out ul.ead. Theu a cornfield, over flowed from a cut in the levco. Hero was something of a channel cut by the sw ift wa ter, and we got along nearly a quarter of a mi!,, to the woods; here was tho labor- two straight and long miles to the iicami puiul in tho buvou. Then it took eight days to K't ll'r0,,,, Tl,c" W'U"!' liayou, Fast llayou, then St. John's lluyou, which empties iuto tho Mississippi at New Madrid. II you bavo Dover seen a Southern swamp, you have no Idea how thick it is; a New York elm swamp docs not begin It sometimes look twenty men a whole clay to get out a half sunken tree across tho bsvou. Such a place u that kept us all U-k. md none of the rafts or HmU could get by, ami all bad to wait. The water nfler wo got Into tho woods was about six feet deep, with a gentle current setting i. i.. i.',. a llnvou tho across the ieninsum. current was tremendous, and the boats had to In checked down with heavy head liner Hero wo found some obstructions caused i.i.:r. i ...iiiinrr n(T one or two ojr uriil-ncupn, uui v n - logs would start all down tho current. Art engraving of thfi saw used in culling off tho slump is Ihen given, and tho wri ter adds, by way ol description: At each end of tho saw n rope thirty feet in Icntrth Ii fattened and carried to tests upon which men aro stationed. Tco men man and work each ropo. When tho aw rum right wt have cut off a Hump two feet In diameter In fourteen mibutes Often it ninched and run crook- ed. then . ffnmr would be two or three hours on ono of tho somo tin. If t1,cr0 hnnnmiml In tin nnv brusll Ulldor tllO water It ..i,i.t ...!. ia i hi. labor: It all had to be fished up and got out of tho way. J" rn Correipondtnct. lflm.i.i,n. iwn MrniiVicAt. Cot. i i. in i.... i.nn i-mwirtrd in Benato ..run, jv inn unn iiuv.. .. i - . .i,,.!.. i ....i. KiniA iKnt will accept mo ""tlllblUty VV Vlll-li 1 - ofJcr under tho conditions attached, Ann .1.- ....I.IU ilnliiaill for OUl'U u acre oi vim m . Senator or RctH-cBciitutlvo sho may lo eu tilled to in (VinrrreNS. Tho fund Uiu rais; ...i..i,i;y,Mient and support coUrirt for inoclmniei and Bgrlcnllurists 1 r....u...i.-Tho lloodgnl of China appear to have opened anew tins K...I,... .i.i... l.vn lately arrived t Ban Francisco tram Hong Kong, bring "K About ono thousand relesllaU. "7 stand the press of $2 f0 ud M P'J" noiith, let them como-tlity will dtcai tho State debt, its first century bad expired, the first ex periment on record of un attempt to bind together under ono harmonious governmen tal system, a collection of Slates embraced within ull tho principal degree of latitude, Iniliixt iIipih with tmwers to protect the rights of each and every citizen n;;uinst ull assaulU, from whutever quarter they may conic, cither from without or within, even from tho people themselves. "While we speak of government of consent, thu philosophical enquirer into our system will seo behind the even-balanced scales of justice thu gleaming sword. It represents the power ol the people; it rep resents tho majesty of tho laws. If you acquiesce in the just administration ol right ful laws, you can cull it a government of nmu.nt if vou nlense oppose the exercise the Stato' places to produce tho right effect at the Department that the Turkish Government rl.-lit time. Mr. l'urrott has made iinnor- ilns ic.suej mi order refusing Confederate' 1 1, ,i,l ImtirnTf.tneiitH in the CUn lllltl the mis- ,,r;-,ili,i,ra nilinission to nnv of the Dorts of sile since his first invention, the nature of t,Q Ottoman Empire, in accordance with which it would not be proper to speak of tl0 treutv of Paris, signed1 in 185C. in this connection. It would be equally Corinth, June 5tb. Gen. ilalleck mot-ill-timed to give the wonderful results of c(j ,i8 headquarters to this place to-doy. ' certain experiments recently mouo ny inc xho cuemy are reported to oo bu.uuu wa" stronz between Uuldwin anu uuoiona. v .1 f ... in tni.nwinn TriLfir the exile not ong, pernnp.s lor uiu re .euuon m At st acconnts rope s auvanco was iui. r loyd Gen. Jo. Johnston 1. igg, me ex it ... . rnn(ler Kata in ... nf T.n, Mtio'creek. The en-my'- promise upon a fight, and might even rise to the dignity ol a rougii anu imuuie puna at arms with dirks or bowie-knives. Ho was torn in 1805, in Abingdon, Vn., i i . . ..... .K..,l T.a ilm l-iiimd tntrn WU re us pareioe uieu . T,c scielltific world n,U,t and in me same year, wero uum uun . . . nf ... . r. . i ', .! . ... M'..:.... it., -vii.. not oinr. perhaps for too repetition oi from Knoxville ,-7Z Vt U thee experiment ou a grander scale in si(Iu of T,ellty Mi Creek irum Jtli"Avmi, unu n. .. MA..fi;. Tim nrwl ct nil U hot a HnnM nw1 wan am I m tnnl with interests apparently as opposing n ' of jU tj p0Wcrs and duties, ond thot the poles. While tho contest raged with I Kenlnin 8WOrd settles the question hero as equal promise to both the contending sec- j well as nt St. Petersburg!), and it ought to lions, tho le,ions of liberty abroad were do it. You may lake the most tnll.ng ar. fain to stack their arms and look ou in si lence. Hut tho war in America having been carried at lust to that stago which en- coffer. He was oppreniiced to a carp0"' l.l, t hit Government to assure itself of tictory, tho volcano again begins to throb with internal fires, und an eruption must shortly follow. The secret agents of the revolution are In every important city nnd province of Kurope; their associates meet in conclave in every capital, and their pub lications are read in every modem tongue transhileublu by tho types. Tho lute pub ii .i;.ini-l.i,iv at Koine mav be taken ns i nf nroiinrtv and tho most ineonsidera bio article into any State of the Union, un der a State Constitution, and whenever ne cessary the public power protects it. Hring .n nriinn of trover for a borso in Oregon his value is immaterial let your ngni be established by the humble judicial ollicer having cognizance of that cause in that dis tant State, and you can be protected in that right by tho whole power of the con federacy. If the officer who seeks to exe cute process in order to put you in posses sion of your own is rrsitcd by illegal vio lence, he enn coll upon the sheriff (or the power of the county to aid him in the exe- en ion o us uinv. n "-- ,i,'i..,l l.i...si.lf nt a V rir n a rau one, u.ui, mw K.cav a. u . school with the proceeds of three houses which ho built for wealthy gentlemen, lie has eight children, five of whom are girls, and two of his uovs set type in uio omce nfii.o k'nnvv!lln Wliii?. His wife wus a Tenuessecan Jo. Jul military man in tho rebel States, and suys tlmt y.i.Ilii'olTcr never lied, cheuted, or did a mean thing, excepting the joining of the Ho thinks, however, that 'iillicoffi r"s reduced fortunes had driven i him to desperation, ond he boied to re trieve himself when tne eonicuerucy snouiu ln ..inlilislieil. Flovd. he savs. wus always nvinptoms of tho coming storm tho I'ojic is liko to lose his crown. Hir Our Goveriimenl refuse to allow such newspapers as aro ociily in favor of the rebellion to have a place in the mails. This is right. Common sense approves it. Hut treason is cunning. It is fertile in ... f I......1 ei.,li.i tl.nrA nr. t'etlicuis. ill uiu iu;" - manuL'crs of newspapers, who, deeply sym pathizing wilh tho rebellion, or cherishing u deep anxiety to make money by ostensi ble sympathy with it, aro wory and pru dent enough not to declare outright in fa vor of it, and at thu sumo time are doing whatever they daro in the way of promot ing it. They are evidently informing tho wotk of the Knights of tho Goldeu Circle. Their whole aim manifestly is to commend . . . it .11 themselves to rebel favor and uo reoei ser vice. They muko every effort to render the U. S.Governmeut odious, distorting it acts and misrepresenting and maligning its motives, and publii.li whatever they can find that is calculated to encourago tho re bellion and discourage tho Union cause. Now, in our opinion, all such newspa pers should bo as much excluded from the mails as newspaper oicnly advocating the r..l...Hion. What a traitor is not allowed to do directly ho should not l.c allowed to .i Indirectly. Crooked treason is no uci i,.r tl.au tho straight article. Let the ilov.mmentfixiucyo upon all disloyal publications and stop lhe spread of their v..ium Tho Government can and should, Bl a timo liko this, decide lor itself what nhall ond what shull not bo curnei mails. Disloyal publications, wenricg mask of their disloyalty, are sought eager ly and circulated extensively among tho rebels, and rebel sympathisers ol Kentucky and no doubt of other Slates. I-ot au ex tinguisher U clapped upon tl.eiu.-w-ri' Journal. in which 'great for that, the next call is on the Gov ernor for the wlioio luinuu i uiu o u.... a ri-nr irnnril was on the SOUtl) Side. Still r- trcaliiii?. will iipsst a good many notions ol invninc- By ordcrof Gen. Hallcck, tue ataie or rability that arc uow regarded as scientific M'lsSouri, except the counties of Pemiscott, truths. A nd the end is not yet. G uns of cw Madrid and Mississippi, will constitutor still larger calibre are in process of con- tie Military Department of Missouri, un- struction; which will in their turn shoot dcr command of Gen. Scofield. Advices from Uen. turti srray in Ar kansas say that scouting parties iu the vi- ty ol Little Hock Lave been very soc- - . cessful lately in breakins np rebel camps- T .. n: . r i c -' . Hf.maKK adlg r i.ekck. in mo omuj u nnJ nmag ,jowr guerrillas. Secretary Perkins, of the California ool jUJ- jj0,Vt;ni commanding a detachment Growers' Association, is to be seen the 0f iie 'r,irj iowa cavalry, on Tuesday felt fleece of a French merino, only 16 months n a r(;1)C campi fifty mileg west of old, belonging to Patterson, of Alameda ijlltcsv;ne scattering the rebels in all di-' county, which, as u nea on uic uum, ..i.- rccl,0s nlui capturing mucn camp ana gnr-- K'nnwill.. 'Whi.r His wife wus a structiou; wlncli will in meir mrn snoui dcr Comr Vm for new ideas into J-.. v Advic ohnston, whom bethinks the best furnish a new topic to tho Lritish 1 a. .m- knMg ihr. n.ln.1 States, and says ! me.it.- . 1 . Journal of t ummcrcf. mAj 0 stabli.hed. Floyd, heay was ..ways , fife fecti ttml wci,,hs, 42J lbs. C(lllipnKe,'many0pnsoucrs and a largo p ottmg, scheming s eal, ,g 1 but h uuiforml v,ry fill0 per- umJ ? P rlv li Imn rnnfiiieu lumsell 10 tllie. mi;. , ., . I,,.,i,,r . . , latterly he has confined lumsell to tnieving ! i.uls a pound or two at tho edges being Krntvil nlV Rrroilll!. '. . . II .1... Sini'uturlv cnoiiL'h. tho appointment of Fremont to the Moun tain Department. He favors extermina tion, and thinks the Pathfinder is radicul i.nnmrli to suliservu his purposes, lie is . ----- - , . Vt Wri 'lit has been evacuated, and 18- coarser than the rest. We ore told that up.j i,y tie federal troops; the rebel this is tho largest single yield of such a 1,. 12 guns, some of them spiked. Thr sheep ever sheared in the State, with the pCljt.r.,i gimboats steamed down the river., exception of one which weighed a pouud rr)ere is ;tte jou)t t,at our flotilla- or two more, and was tascn irom a mm u . Kaclv$ Memphis, sjo conliuent are' - . .. -i iril.;. Jwml. nrove mat ennalo or unavail able for tho execution of the law, then the be culled on in tho mode ...r;iu..l lir iho Constitution. Then the Liir m.v' tlm entire navy, the entire n.iu;. r.r ili Tnited States, con be inarch lllllltl v" - ' I ed to those distuut shores to protect, uic most humble claimant 111 the secure enjoy ment of his property. " Tl.'m Ik vonr Government. It recog- .,;,.. nn Mivercie-iitv. itopiilur or other sov- in tho Territories or eisewuere, lawful or uniawiui, - n .... r inu nu v. uuu anxioustosec I'remout.auo eu ...... ..-MoM(,r nierin0i ownej t)y Fhllti 15ixby & thc riTtfr mell of St. Louis that the river U the rebels of Last Icnncssee have colleclu , The general uvcrage weight of fleeces boats nrc ndvertised to leave their forces and tiieir f,Hfta; 3 the world over is reckoned at four pounds, t'itre for Me hiS( Yicksburffl ond 'eW ; . .. v.i.. ereignty, no power, no means ton limm eveeuted. lie believes a orlti eru man can whip two Southerners, and tlmt fact is ircnerally conceded in Knoxville. Upon the question of slavery Ins views have not changed, though ho thinks the end of the war will be the end of the insti tution. His only necro was stolen by an Alabama regiment while he was in jail. He savs tho Unionists in Last Tennessee are becoming obolitionized, but deprecates and the average weiglit ot ine iai year s 0l.i(,nn, clip in California is estimated at six pounds in.sicn;s revocation of Gen. Hun-- oer fleece. At 42$ pound lleecc, parucu- iut fleece. At 4 2 J poum la?lv when laKen 110111 so young u ..ei-ji, .a something to look ut. If worked up it would make seven heavy woolen uiaiiKcts. S. F. Bulletin. strong enough or crafty enough, neither by nny nnti slavery policy 011 the part of action or non actios lowrcncuoiiev.-.. tic (i0vermnenl as the sure mernsoi un. i;,.n,.l r'u.l.L from the criisn or tne le 1 nui4 her allecianee. 7 A1 ter's proclamation was well received at Port Iloyal. Gen. Hunter had organized a brigade of contraband, and was about to assign them to building fortifications and iutreiichnients. A sharp engagement had taken place with rebel batteries at Stono Inlet, and the Uuion forces were virtually investing Hie citv of Charleston. A letter dated Port Iloyal, May 2. says all arrangements for thin . . . . t 1 . ihr ttinrrme vowrr tn tnii lima, mn- king by lhe twereipn ;woe f the. States -tho only sovereign 1110 rmiKmU-,.- This kinn, Ihi law-gnet mo io errr.s Stalei and has irlt rieeutea, nor u thereby lessen, dimiui!li or impugn iiiai sovereignty." Wouks ano tiik War. Wars and rev- 1 . 1 . olution bear a great bkoncss to cacii otner. The vounir ladies In various seminaries and schools In Maine" and Massachusetts have led off in repudiation of Hritish dry goods, as their Revolutionary great graml-motners did almost ninety years ago. At Chelsea, Massachusetts, all tho teachers and pu- nils iu one school have entered into mo p- ... . . 1 triotic compact, and picdgcu iiiemsei.er. observe it faithfully, and to do an mcy can everywhere to propagate the feeling. Should such a policy bo generally adopted by the women in respect to everything that wo can produce, it would go far to insure our complete manufacturing independence of Great Britain, and touch John Hull in his most sensitive spot, tho pocket ncrvo, while it would afford him no sort of excuse for pitching into us in warliko fashion. u i. not a tenth part 10 strong iu ..uiu.. resources as Jonathan, and we havo but The Hr.r.oic Fuee States. Tho Tiev. P.obert J. Ureckinridgc concludes u late letter as follows: -- .. i..il.n.. niA linnet Atnr-il to feel .. .. i.,i .i :ni.,i.i,i ..n-niuTation of the ennture of Charleston have been maae, lliai uiu uiutiiv "M"' "I . 11" 1 .. , , ,1. :i:.. The dispatches say: Two deserters wh renort that Gen. Jos, ninritr of fifty thousand. forget, lor on instant, uuu . . - v j --- . -1 , . . , , ,, ... of tu vrie states that sued tne jounsiou was c.:iuu.t --.-- 11e1111nfcsd011nueu.ua .......,...,.. day ben the eroin by a Al nio ball during me law reason of his great property imperilled, and natmn Kentucky would this day ut a ti e gro y cimmaud. is heartily glad that tho ' Whig renegade' desolation but for I 100,000 orllr. b e U e . U h.. iHHrn ruined by the la of hi iron nnlh, men wlio f me to Uu, .d 0 our JO 000 or O r .... the rebel Ho relates feelingly . Ins trial. ... 'u-uuu' killed, and states the circumstances 0 yerpow erimj ,aA a v0 material chance" ..ril.A ti.. firn U'iflKI'IH'll IJV L'li' 1 tuiiiv wniiukw "o- - Knoxville jnil, connected with the hanging of the Ilur-.ol li.o n a. on ,a - -v . a, . ttiecnemy'. position. .? !i",r7 .LxthThatc'onid have It is conceded that oor los in killed and tllV lllnri.'iM I '. r.sv lu,'atitV 1. . ii.i. ' en unu in nii iiiu u iui " j to let hi ware, severely alone 10 mnaoi...-- - - ff om, fU-w Scott' Oimnios or McCi.ki.i.an. TI. enemies of flen. McClcllan must wince under tho hearty nnd honest exprea on of confidence which tho veteran Uen. Roott ha. lust delivered in tl.o ikiii ...y ally of tho young commander of our army vrtimvn. In speaking of Ocus. Me- Chilian and Ilalleck to I.i Irtenai ai -i.ii. v .t flen. Scott said: UIM.-111, 1 - ....,i There aro two men wno can uo ur, ed upon under all nwTe ZZ J nmenrcnrv-I mean (Ion. McC ,1 llan ' . .. n.t ..it t, Tiinrn anodouuiiuey l av.crentop...ill'n to contend with; they l avo grcni 11 t,)(j bntMcU-' i n ,ilcll w "7.W0 K ' . of hi. Powerful call form an i - j mliid-thnio -- - V-oo QuZnA nro honest to mo core, tray their coumry. newspaper c' . .,1.1 that tho ..i. lip .minion " .. Louhvlllc surely fellow as 'umblo as Urioh Hcap.- Thirty per cent, of In wnoio export .... for a number or year, como nu .. try. Nor will our patriotic women bo requir ed to Impair charms by discarding British fabrics, for, In color, texture aim many descriptions or American ury gooor., ... tl.n very ton of tho world's market. niu " .t.i Patriotism, economy and a desire to pieaee S It I.I I Alt " pUU IC O.M.I - - Moni(or . jVMI.ini - . - it 1. mi.nt n.hl 11 mill. 11 111111 ti victed a rebel chaplain pi 0 lie, and he was hung over his own grave, previously uug, in the presence of thousands of citizens. Old Herman, C5 years of ago, was propped np in a cart, he having fainted while sitting on his own coffin. They strung him up with execrations. Hrownlow was imu l,.;iv il.ut ha would be hung, and finally escaped sentence by conrt-murtial by n sin do vote. Ho wus nearly murdered ot Cumberland lion oy liuruee. and reached Nashville a shadow of lumseir. Ho will buy a fnst Hoo press in New York, and go back to Knoxvillo with the Federal army, revive the H'A, end wage an unending war with his political enemies. A subscription is on foot to provide him with tho press and splendid fonts of new type. Ho has received in uoimuuns, .'!.... einnfl! his book will net liiin about jf 10,000, and he could, if so disposed, re ceive immense prices for lecture in the Eastern cities. A speculator oucreu ...... leciiircs, wounded at the battle of Fair Oaks wa much larger than was at first stated. It will probably reach seven thousand. Representative Odell, of New York, wha has just returned from the battle field in the volley of the Chickahominy, say it if a cheering fact thut the remainder of ouf ...ri.l tl.n fata nrenurcd for it by a revolt such as no nation ever before suppressed. GaMbai.di is the Field. Garibaldi has come out from his retirement at Cop- rera, and once more entered upon the field ol active duty. His first work appears 10 . - . of disoreauization bo to stimulate tho Revolutionary Societies w,ic1 ccnerully happens after a great bat into action He addressed one of these nt t!e. The Generals of McClcllan' army Genoa a few weeks since, when he promi, Ehrongb . ed his auditor that ho would not only .JJJ, channeli ,,J wbicb we confide, that emancipate Italy, but even Hungary, from o Uniolists 0f Texas will soon be heard Austrian bondage before ho ng ii.i sheathed frora It is understood that their arrange' the sword Such a declaration, coming mcnts for restoring the State to the I oloa from any' other source, would sound like have . been quietly . 2 to tbe ..... i. will lend himself to no such mer J & - ... l.n..t . rnll ilinfV AH ll l' "" nil n. 1.11 has tho last Ol 11.8 nrisi.ii 1111, M.m ... - year' file of his paper to consult, ho will complete 111s oook soon, 01 uer source, twnu ,, ..-v. - . . , , ' ii,; 1 iv invo thrown the old flog to the merest bravado, but Garibaldi lias mus t,)e leod of gftm 1Iofl5,ofl. fur performed all he promised. Advice from New Mexico state that tbe rwvlw ix Tennessee. Nash- Texan rebels are in scattered parties and They had reach' i.-i p...n with the nurnose of evacnat- cotton market ot that point. Buyer arc . . Ttirri,oryi Tiie remnant of the scourins tho country in all direction as Colorado volunteer and tho Third United fur as tho protection or the Federal line States cavalry, were in me t.u.. j . ceiisry enterprise, a; . Kepv , . f(rl,ier Cral? The volunteers are oi.uanuea ex- of his pr.onlr, anu ."- - ", 1. .7" " H ,it f ..racti- cept Kit Carson', reg.menv 1110 piumcis n." "o "" 1 " Washington, JUI.O 1. COIOnCI ueorgn cul sense, and are quick to trado. Good , al prcgcDt commandaut at New . . .. ... 1 ''.1 '.' .' .....J ci:i.M rinw. middling readily brings sixteen ami sctt-u- Qrt.nua, lias been eppomicu .umw. v.- rents in SPCCI0 or O. A rcusnrjf crnor 01 i.uuis.uuu ... I .in r. rennrt mat briskness ill the com,, eteiy uen. ru.. nnv - I o-- 10- The editor of the N. Y. ledger wrote to Gen. lix to inquire n to tho ori gin of tho famous order, " If any man at tempt to haul down mo American iw. ""7 : .l shoot hi... on tho .nl, tin order having tho young men w .0 ore , u w to llic t,t ..... ...u,1 pnnrtir In making wrain ngaiiisi. i."h - this movement " take" among our you, women. If tho ldie of the North would make it fashionable to dlspenso with Knfr y, goods, and use Iu their place American manufactures, they cou.u oo m-m. bio the menacing roar of the TJr.tia 1 lion than a dozen liuo of battle. hip, mawir men of the North could by the mere en-prlco-or rather a patriotic and sens.b e ' .i...l,,of fashion, cost F.ngland a trado worth at least ten millions of dollar a rear nnd benefit our own country to just J' .1- n T.,t the that amount, win wrj uu ... - - -patriotic example set by Maine and Mas UusctU be followed by the Iodic of .11 t,he loyal Pt.tci. tilo brain of Secretary Stautou. Id reply to tho Inquiry, Gcu. Dix write os follow: Vmt will Ond tho original ' Shuot him- tho house of my son, Uev. Mr. Dix, 42 Charlton street, framed ...,1 i.n..rli.r? In his narlor. N'hen I cove .1.. ..i-r. 1 ..ml nn itlca that such on itn- nortalico would have been given to it but when 1 found it making 0 stir, I Inclosed tho original to my son. No man suggested a word or saw it until after ll was written. Somo months ago it was attributed to Mr. Holt now, I understand from you, toMr- Stanton, by the Ledger.' jbj- Tho exports from California during the month of April last, were to tho value of $18M13, exclusive of gold shipment teen cems m ni.-i.. - - ' . v. v-.v . . , ,1 ...,iu.BUn ... I Knci'ln 10 1110 .tew iv,. r.,.v.. j . otes, aimiwcmy-iu..u t. , .... " ..., .,..,..1 tb. Senate o mi i. ... 1 uiu tu. un y . current Tennesseo paper, mere is .a that the House will holding back on tho parlor tho planter. hmray ij0 ttb0 to recognize iU own off- rBOurr.-On tho 28th ult., Adjutant lnn- jg lhat tBer, j, Gcu. Thomn. telegraphed to Hrigham lnit one ,m,rubcr of the Cabinet opposed to Young to raise, and equip, a company of t10 president' policy of emancipation with cavalry for the protection of the overland m mail. It was ordered out for ninety days J; n,j(.ctcd ,,y the Senate 11 to 23. and In twenty four hours from tho time old T)B bil) )i)Rit0(1 with 01y one nPf,tiT8 TOte.. Hrigham received tho dispatch, niuety-fivo Captain SchullX nrrlved yesterday froaj, men were enrolled, In tho saddle, and ready with , th. . If-tyfa; E' 1 .1..... SlOII Ol IIIBBIUTO Hl"l ,B"" "J to proceed tod. Rmiru-ation, hnvimr been exchanged, the,. Gntn. It appears that the law. the entrance to tho Devil' Gale is pared Moilt Jackson, ( ..) June thj Frth i.li rrnl.l Discoveries of great richness n.ont's hea.hpinrtcr are bcre. urWier, with gold, y.scourics b t f JttckM)n j, impossible Jo4j, have lately been mn.lu In thi d s r et , (o the RI)dJeD rht in tba Bhenatn Nevada Territory, gold being visible to tho A po,,oon bridgf, replacing th. naked eyo in nearly tho wholo of the quartz. Me burned by the robels, bclnjj com. Thorompany havegiventhelrclai.il the pu-tetl. part of FremoiU' forces crossed th name of CI Dorado. mer thi. morning.