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S4-2 k.w *s hahqaet [o and th wear. Unter -' -patl y~etl an.lemnt whieh en. -a theyolO It. is ~vious that the pro ~mobe and mahCtieng. waraleek iagu wate Ojily ~ n tof hsd. u betsoa. -s t w ies; that he willr leek's camp asd let hi.i tro . od. g we mst say - nowbagiteftbas worked well - al . ap ae tos tat bs .fully tiB fo~llog nt - . -Our orsodn at Plt . bi relLa ere at in mt so s a all in-hopes that the "5e a cadm. Swndoubtes - d it ather to be Ad dia.star eoi by n a bshmeaselS bly do ss ur-5 nt outbreak vntyo does not seem t the lep t1le'ards'of the gal tieasdroeed hepromp uotatiaio 3rahn.,t'qurrc or aey of-b th at Ifnty wo u jstv dayrX s itO Ilet. - -month, with companies "B .lsry, leflt :yteI - (e : accomps Smith 'n ~ enrose sfmd lli. A 'd or igaO l - and s t~oceed itr canoes and ther i y he ote co -' ~opeSdagB with Lieut. C Riley,j n a sogetAef with their chic tbe arch band a7leek Tustemgge, r now known beosereted on the ens P bank of th St. Johns. Eas-r F at , ad 8 The news fromt T pa is, tha smal lpaties of Indians e tintue to come r , nearl7 all the reneg e ereck ludians b; this une, k is supposli have arrived the heb is-good news acd relieves e ae' tiementa of 3Niddie Vflorida from all dres of these hostile arphes. Thesteamer* was burnupeat Tam - pain Baos the ht inst., having jdst rc ,..: ablie' ocdenfaieaugeal'1re 'e her-alber hatch. alier reaching -the what #ad was entirely consemed. in hagte. 1ours. Correspondence of the Sa. Rep. Bau CxaLsse Swa n, Dec. 25, 181. In my last 1 hadl taken you with urs oi the scont to or skirmttsh near she canmp c HetofksHadjo and his ass~ociates. YIk will rememter that five of our seven day for which we rationed jourselves, laud ex pired with that ,-vent, and on exam i our hayresacks it was found that in conse quence of the bread getting wet in th swamps and other causes, the u-ldiery ha already nearly exhausted their lood,whicl corpelled a return. The bdies of the killed and woundled were borne on th shoulders of their comrade some two mile to the burial. This solemg service wa performed by sinking their remains in thb water in the middle or a swamp, and ron gning them by driving forked stakes oves tbe bodies. TIhis course, although reare: ted by all, was deemed necessary to pre vent their disinterment and mutilation; bus it w as a sad spectacle, an-d added mnuch to the horrors of war to see two brave gui diers, wh the day before had led she way to what we all thought likely enought to be the jaws of an ambe~sscade, thun depowi ted amid the bogs of tbe swamp, compan ions of snakes. and luscrl for allbgators Never before dlid I wiane== a scene so re volting. Nay, I could not look upon it, completion. Although our course was now directed to the nearest depot the troops. 400 ina nnm her, for the last two days of our return, subsisted on the cabbage (thes soft and un exposed leaves.) eut from the patmettn trees. Many of thte men's feet were sore and the objicr's atnkles strained and swol letn, yet not a reg ret was expressed, nor a murmur heard, Oue guides,some of whbnm have been through the war, and the officer. of the scout of long service here, say taa bad as the service is nearly every where in Floridla, nothing has eqtualled this cam paign, and the indians have at last been tauAht that they have tno fastnesses so dif ficLult of access thait we cantnot follow them; We shall replenish our haversacks, and again take op the chase. Bin Crarmss SwANr, Dec. 29. 18-41. Major Belknap's command has now been in the field, or to speak literally, in mud and water, for nearly a month. The In dians from the villages of Sam Jones and the Prophet flo-tal-ka-hsajo, have been trailed from swamp to swt..np and fromi hatmnock to hammock; have been once overtaken k routed ; their pumpkin fields, in all perhaps containing a hundred acres, bunted out and destroyed-and lodges in their villages and on their several routes from place to pla'o, numbering several hundred, have beetn found and mostly burnt. The o~eers and maen, field, 'staff and line, have traversed those swamps. bhth grto deemed inaccessible, on foo., with se ee days puovisions, blankets, &c &e-, ont 1bsir backs; and when the Greshness ol theo ladle trail-has seduced them no far from hat, ~ib jjz~jncptiapU. nsted, ba.T-pith paps e bt mrArtyand hae a theMajor 6aLbutte b h -th Al torChief: a titlewhieb J be ur cto their edi~eati# bo miles or thee borid seispSYveS trpsed by the ar ouise eutigdivions of thsweOomound, 3 tbe.past igoth. buet whes we gt back 10. the dipot "gain ajINll h a'ke a short respite, as man of Pe worm down and siek, t -ankle woe nd i~o wboho] h tTO~i. hiebitiS arabow He-wg .. ..'R-eprder.A l four o'clock yeste da eroton/Mr. Re- t *o. Vauxcoat dbe bearng no esisery to dioe who'tber tbere was s*a c fcienit cause ai bind over Messrs. Nicboltis a Biddle, Thomas Duuasp, Joseph Cowper tbwaitSamIel Jaudou,;andJobiAidrews c I charges priposed againsi them touch- I ithe United States Bank. - % The accused iwere all ja attendance at I Stat boor, and tb -thsm the (ollowing I cOa-r, Nicholas Bi& e--olm M. aad,ZEsq. , -- I , eor r.,Samuel Jaudon-John Cadwal t Foi . John Andrew9s-JataeCH. i -Fur Mesrs* I a plap. and Jo hCowperbwalt4i. ICKanb and William .r ia Esqures. - There alsg'appiaired, cn the part of the - prosetatio . Fo., Mr. 4Anstin Mongomery-St. a Geoge Tucker Campbell, Ea. .. ) For- Mr., Henry Korn.-Francs E Brewster, Esq. The first witnesscalled was Thomas S. Taylor, but his examination was arrested at the outset by Joaf M. Read, Fq., who addressed tbe Recordir at some length, - and oWthe.ppar of his clienas and the other geilemen with him, expressed a perfect ,.illingness to go before a aroler tribunal; and they ware all ready to be bound over Swithout a benring. SNIre Francis E Brewster had anticipa ted'uich 'course; there were constitution. al rt uirements as to- the necessary oatbs but if there was no reasonable oljection, The Recorder, however, remarked, that be cook not take upon himself the re sponsibility to bind over without examina tion. lie bad a duty to perform, and lie should do it carefully, and should ascer tain whether there was cause, before he e bound over, 'Mr. Taylor was then called, and he proceeded to give a statement of the peri. o ds at''which all of the recent incumbents of the principal otices in the Bank had en ered-upon their duties. 'The minutes of he Boards of Directors were produced, as i ere also a large number of receipts givetn various persons for money. but before th last were finished an adjournment took cc until dii-i afternoon, MA v ant Robbery.--An atrocious r itgh( 61 .uesday, ihe4ta instat, on the f person of Henry W. Arneit, a citizen of liarris county. Hisi body was foumun otn Wednesdny morning stabibed ini several plces, and a Coroner's inaquest was imn mediately held. during whicth circumstan ees were dleveloped which led in the ms rest of several sospreted. who ha'..e sice been fully commsnitted for trial. It is heliev edci thuat tie maurdleredl man hadl in posses sin a consideruable amount of moniiey. byv which the villains were tempted to comn mit the horrid deed. "Icey's corner." ihe plnce wihere it wa~sdlne, and where the b)ody was rfound, is a1 notorliu sink of in famy, and has long lbecn regardled as a nu-. isatce to the city. The. citizens~ of the p~lace juuly indignat at thais new and ier ratae oiutri~ge, iiamediately determuined ii . abate the auisance in the shorntest poinile way, and acconwlniely o Wednesday night, last proceeded qjuietly to demsolish the, whole concerni. A heap of ruins is no"w all, tat is left of that once famous haunt.-| Coltmbus E nquire A Mturder!-A sbhoeking murder was comn mited on the hody of an old man nmed, James Tines. on Sunday night last. biy, John A. Gibson, at a lon' grog shoap, nentr the bridge in t his place. The murderer. it, appears,~has kept a lignor shop for someic tie at the above pilace. without a license,, and in defiance or the town authoritiest ande the parties, with two others, a male, nd female were all nupon a drunk~en frolic. < Gihen, we learn, got ofendued with Tites for accompanying the female for water, and while Tities and another person werer at tempting to pacify him,he lodged the con auntsi ofthis gun in the body of Tines, which e resulted in his immediate deneh. Thus uas accursed liquor suddenly sent another soul to the bar at eternal justice. How long shall this moral pestilence continuei to desolate our latnd?-Southern Chkron. e Sentence Doy.-Saturday last was sen- | tence day in the Court of essions. The a sentences were few in number, and the higest grade of ulence, which called for the nw ard of juastice, was receiving stolen goods. Henry Wiebens.convicted of that j oe e. on t wo separnte indict mnents, was i, sentenced. by Judge Butler. to be impris- ,a cited until the first Mlonday in March next e and thetn Io receive five lashes, and the il nexi dasy the same number, in the public t market. Win. Barrett Jntnes, convicted of |j murder. has appealed for a new trial, Charleston Courier 17th inst.e ii Wine in Inrdiana.--A statement is made h in the Louisville papers as to the produc- h tin of a vineyard in indiana, four miles sa from Utica. The vineyard was seven hb ares in extent, with only one acre and a hi half bearing, and vines platnted in rows s n feet apart in jthe rows. The produce is ri stated to have been one hundred andl se- v. venty galtoas of pure wine. The grape it was the Catawba, and the vines five years d old. c' arts.-The bark of willow tree burnt la to ashes, ad mixed with strong vinegar, ha and applied to the parts, will remove all 7 warts, corns or asercacerteeg on any part ti M e Bdukrupt LoAW.r-r. Calboun has dee de.a general iusitriking review of this '" bject on the 12th inl. won. ocasion of woJ Mmseting a petition advree t lthe repeal e'a the late At. The h obngives the fo- c ,wing -aNalyss'of histremarks:-Cha , rl ecry1. ili SENATE. 'h WARIseitida, Jan. I). a b fumeites petitions were presented to- c my oi*tbv subject of.sheBaraunpt law; fur ime for its repeal. modidtkhin, arid post- on onemenf; and, othersaiaonstratina a ev aist any actio . upon i1 ev Mr..Calhoun said he bagbeen regneuted t I ant a petition fr veral ciCizens Yo OW York, pratyinittIi Congrew may it et intereewith Ite a8 pt low, pass. cre d 'iWseuion, aite pealing, alter- lt paipending it, or ing its opera- ed ion. This petition rmaarded to the im with a strong app- -'to his sympa- Ba |s. He could not - - no that there 0rri of our 1m aluable fellow $10 isia ipresent n "eat reduced i 1t Shop-eless state of fusdfency-eitizens VI ho iave just claims up' be sympathies tv, if the conpijunity. .He uld go further. op, le would say noteniy--thbe deeply do- al lored the conditio'a to dicb they were of educed; but that Ife sssicntiously be- the loved. "iost of the insoldats were inno- the '6n s1uferiers-the vijeti Unwise and ci proper legjilation 1a I Arart of this g0. fil Fertineut aMd that 10 oas, in rela- CV ion-to4he currency. 'e d that. tothiI 1h1 ause, raisiainl be ibuted the in- tin olvency and binkruptcy, general thro' set at the country. With tkiimpression. ie th. ould go into- a brief statimentr, ex pliana- in: of the causes o t1W set distre'4. What wasa baukeota t an evidenrce .1 f adebt from the lian e hlder; and irr l,at did it represeni hudtbt-the debi ba o those who got acco~lAti)n from the tit tank? -Tie curreneyoftsceuntrv iten Si was almost exclusivel y debt representin le.bt:,and what was the eject of making hn inch paper currency the ciieulating niedi- In Im I What but to expel thWieountry sio gld and silver, 'which ,aty. under the he tnstitution dlaws, sia y debt, an. d sh rubshitu'e fOr them noath, t evidence of C' indebtedness? And wh ,was the effect to jf that bui. t decrease tW'ana of pay- ( ing delts jist in the san ~piortioon Ihat di indebtedness It increasedF, In prosperiou' imes, when exchanges Win favor of this til loutry, the increase or this bank parper ab tvidentce of indelatednesswoul fie large in proportion to the enateh'he induced by prosperity. Thetn hank qoivity would he at hr high'st, and the espiusion of prper pr rurency Wouhl Ile a' fi IkIte-expellilig It r'ow the coumntry all, or neirly all, its gold Io ind silver. But as certaia as the tide of oi he ocean is suoececded fly the ebb. so cer 'y ain is the tide of bank 7n5ion of heing lir ueceeded by the ebbof a ractiuto Thea c; rome ruin and disaster asi universal dis- Ih ress, then there is the least mean left in tIh the count ry ror relieving i , or for meet- el ing engagenitite and ind .iaes.hecaurse tli the very evidenrao of ii btedness pro- o1 reeding from expansion. d driven out A the means of payin: indri iness. ~ This th thing of inakiig evidence indlebieduess t a bais of currency, hans aed :hat the th result can be not hiang else ide-sprenu I. t is aet 2 1F-_ who, for every pound w0i f atraerial C be laid upon the superstzfetulie he was Vr raisinag, shlould aundermrin, itn equaisalent of pirion of tihe foundation. The wihole su- Ie rstrucltr ust cttme down. This wfis re hat brontcht hive hundred thousiard ciii- in rcns inato sdeb extremity at tocompel thecm re oc mraake their appeas to the symtpathies th f Congreass. lIut ..>rongly aur h~e felt the ppeal, he couldl not yield to it at the hrac. p1 ihice of gre;at and imrportant prritaeiplis ma 'hat ;:o far beyoand present incornenietnce thi urd temipurary individfual suffering. lie pc *,ould not but seec that to yield to the regqnest im these pietitioners woudld he, in ithe etnd. th ot to aggravate the evils they cormplain ch if, and to invoalve n tmuch wider circle in ala re ruin which overw heitms them. The a otiurnlce of ilhe Bankrupat law wilt ug- re ~rvte instead of mitigating the genernI tit istreas censiotned by atn innumed and irre- w eable paper currettcy? If that law is tit tot repe-:aed. it awill not he in orperationt toa arec years. till hnanadredls of miullionrs of ael Itllar worth of property will ha;ve been hri ubitei tea the nuetianeer's iha:anmer. ast a g ite. too. tfaat the caunetry cannaot furcaish cri neanats to purchas.e it unaless at a rutinous pr arice toa both debtor and creditor. Thae cii eslt woul.d he more disastrous thn ilae pri &hcts taf te former hnakrupt laiw. disais- p carn ats they were. The amount tea Ire acriiced will be frar haeyomnd any cjalculsa ag ion ased cat rthe elects oaf that law. Wlaart to vl the creslitor'. benefit lay thre operation er: C this law ? Lii erally nthting. Senrcerly Ia' fraction of their debt will be collected dun raer its operation. And in view of the col ights or creditors, he would take groeud the brat it was one af the most iniquitous laows toa ver passed. When the C;neiiaien was ahi dneted, thtere wais a strong desire matni- to estedl to shope rhe prower ot creating a niaran lBankrupt law, so as to authorize asolvents as well as batnkrupts to bec in- Ml huled ; but thrat was abandoned, and thme ower was restricted t o bannkrupls, ras de- of, ned in thte English laws, then euisuntag id prevailing. It never was intetnded by ye c framers of thme Consti:utiona that the an' ower should reach to inasolvenrts generally. of Buathere was another objection to the nar lankrupt law of te last session. It looks tnl a the first instance to the protetion of the fur ebor, and not to the protection oaf the eo. reditor. This he held to be adverse to tica to true intent and meaninger the Consti- lo. tion; and in view of all this, it would bec det possible for hint to vote in compliance nit -ith the prayer of the potitioteera for the ha unteance of such an unequal andI un- by ast law. It might be asked why would in, e not, conscious of the distresses which owed down marry valuable citiscos, con- Ithe -ut to restrict the law to auch operation as umi e admitted would habeconstiautionai, and e y leaving out all thet w as exceptionable, pa0 ad confining it ?o the class of real banik- stat pta, alord the relief sojuwly claimed by Cii anable citizens. Elis answer w as, that the the present condition, a condition pro- thrn iced by an artificial and inifated curren- tar , e could not agree that any bankrupt Ia w would be just. las operation would shn unequal and improper- In'every respect. mo he real means of payment in satisfac- enc m of indebtedness, having been expelled "yi u the country hy an infated andI irr- hlbn 3d trampled under foot, with a degree of b temiient and idocretion % hich outhin e If a sense of deep wrong could have I used. At this momeni, (iaf past nine,) : 3 ed'ort is being iade to break into the suki or safe. The crowd is large, and ia uder great escilement. The sherli, 3r. Ii very, went iuto ihn midta, mud made an I fort to 'e heard, but lie was picked up I irried into the street. The Miami Ex- 1 urting Company Bank, stautisg only 1 voa doors above, is barred and holied, and r nme wag has written over fle door -poor t d cow." Lougee, upo the opposte 11 irner, has siut up, fron appschension, as t iany say, of violeuce-aaihers, tromh ia- I iity to psy. The Exchange Bank is c pesn, unat paying. t 10 u'cruocL.-The crowd having coi- I letely riui'Jled she Cinciumati Bank broke - 1 i thedo.,rs of the Mliami Exportinlg Cur- I any. and took it through a similar pro ss. Tie ma.s of excited people has been readily increasing. Main streer, trom ( 'bird half way up to Fourth, is literally I locked up. and there ate fuan at the I oruer of Third. The Miami k:xpurting t ompany's concert, we presume, had liL le f value left in it by the managers. ie I ooks and other valuables had minsu likely I een removed; of specio and other batik I aper, there was probably no occasion for I eosaval. We saw bla k checks, &c. lrown out, aid sent flying through ie air; i Ut Iney were all bulak-bubbles merely. 1 The Eatchange B-tuk Is still olen. and aying. We learn that demands have ea timade of Mr. Bates at this bank lor he redemption of West Union paper, Yhch have been comphled with perforce. 'he police and constables have miade some floris to quell the disordet, but whether i liy persoun have been art ested, we are no ible tos-ay. We hear no sympathy ex iresed in bhalf of te sulferers among .e by staiders. The publmc iaind is so iitpletely outraged by the fraud and olunider o wortiless hatuks, that even viu ence and riot is looked upioa as the lesser wvil. This is truly a deplora-tle state uf hings 12 'viLoc.-An effort has been made o disperse tie crowd tny reading the riot et, and other%% te inducing thetm lo dis erse. So great was the clamor and con union, however, that the attempt utterly ailed. and thoseemi-ed in it were com elled to leave the ground, having been iomh.at roughly handled. A portionoil tie Cianeus' Uualso, a military coInmany. aving para-led, wete led, with a few fire uen, to the place, and took possession of le buildings after soime resistance. loo acre freely excinangen with tihe crowd, aud several shots were tired ioy the idit. ry. It is statel that one 1141 bas bret hot. The alarm of tire is now hering .ounded, %e presune to bring the whole A the lire corps together. Such are the deplorable consequences of the fraud and wroig that the %hole oumuntiiity have sifferedl by meaus ill iinl.s:ers. In the excitement ol lo1 und niferng, the laws are trataplod uder li, property is destroyed and perhaps life 1ot. We much fear that the end I-, uiot yet. We earuaealy entreat the good people who may have teen concerued in these Jisaruerly prvoceedings, to desist-to re 4 th~I.. . i-n ..p-a-a ihn maa rhearties to retire peaceably to their bouwes, atiTiet heir faces, like good citizens, a::aist fur her tranagreswson of order, as well by ineans of the issuing of shimpjlasmers as tile eot to viaoeice in their supmpresisiou. What is gaisied by suich proceedinp! We imipluore every reasoninig indiviadual to put this question tot himseclf, T[hle proper. y books aud vouchers of these bani~s. have, ao a great .extenit, oet destroyed; ii may0 se utterly ttmpousttshte, su consequecec for hemi tsi pay atiy portion of their notel; a hereas,omnethiing might have etsnreaiiz d.-lowss. wouns, have beens mtlicted -wha. has becn gaisied ! Aditi that you anYe been a rouged, deifrauded, out raged - ire you redre~sing yourselves ? Are you igl';inig your itijuries by these meane ! tre you nout r.ather destroying the protec iusn of your atn u piroperty-tite pirotecion t thc laws-nsI ;iving cohunteniance andl apljart to a spir~t that regands neither aroperty, laws, ntor lhfe ? '.e haase penned the above paragraphs n great hiaste-. AtE thin. (stie o'clocek) it is scer:iaied shat one an has hid iss leg trokent. ands oneo ,ar Swats otherns slhghtly vouadd-noa sane killed. I t is st.stedl ttitt he craowd have paasassoh elie suadditg.. ['he xcata age liink ::ata twert takent pas esosn of uned coi.it petely rsddlsd after t he ~ashon of1 the mahers. u e have not leatrn,. d s hel her s had steappedl p.smeust ostilt. hia .MLcinaes' nnd l'roders' Banik still osntuntes p~aymtenft. Is is -said to have bumt utile papeor out. .A ttatpts are being mailde ) get sout a .isng fsorce of the miilisary. td disperae the crowsd, limt such is tihe elig utmiong those whto comtpolse she mt nary. that we know limt hsow it is to bc lote. Alapprehenlsions are expressead of irtear viaslence tat night, which we trsust nay prose utafostndaed At present, how ver, the mtultitudo app--ar to havo coim sterea contronl. Hlef past One.-The otlic.. of Longee k. Coi. has beca broken open~ ands gluittead. Lhe crowtd htis much increased, both io umbers anda excilemeni. We earnestly hope taia here this vio ence may he stayedl. Whoerter such wtlI e the case or naot remaoins to be seen. An xceeingly angry spirit has been causead y the ill udvised ateamipt to suppress the istrasce by muhitasry tarce. The mi Ii try. we hear, were compelled to leave thme roudu, andl msa-e to take refuge ini aho lyamr's siflce. We must here clsc our eunt of these unhappy~ praoaeedings -as b paper must gom ii pres. Piray Godt we may nt have worse consequences to re urd to-motrrow. Frone the CLinrinati Gaecie. Jan. 13. Further pairtiuars of thse .Ueob.-We av yesterda~y a hurried accont aif the mob. All is quiet now, antd we are etia led to state more fuily what swas dane. It was apparent early in the morning it the slightest concert of acliion mighat ave arrestedu the wholse mtoter. .alen en. aged in it felt uneasy. andI acne ready to. break" on the slightest shows of resistance. ione was om-red tislthe mob grew strong inumbers; and became resolved to do its The Bank of Cincmntatta was ridadled r-t I,. vaut was broken noen- and its ioks aud papers to a great -te-t deso d. But its lkss was trifling. 1 had we resume, but little money on hand, and its wu paper v as considered worthless. The Miami next came. Its hooks were aved, but its own paper was seized, and. S ottleets say, - large amsount was $to n, though thefreeing notes are chiedy of , 2. and :3s. defaced. aud sound note, of rger denomiuaious." The lose they can S tell tutil their notes are cuanted. The ot,-s discounted are all safe. We presume te losi here will not he very heavy, though e shad know exactly what it is in a few ays. N-xt came Bates. He had steadily re. ein-ed his paper. He was doing so when be mob began its uatak upont his ffice. &at this did not appease it, and his onice as literally torn to pieces. What his us& is be does tics know. After this the mob moved upon Lougee. lie shop has been closed since early in the lay, and all his money and valuable er ets moved. But the mob broke through is doors, and destroyed his office furni ure, and then vizorously attacked his safe. rhey were at iork upon it for some hours. luI friend Shaw k's ingenuity was so great ind his torknanship so strong, that the nob was foiled in its efforts to force an en rance. Longee's l'ws was trifling. When tired of pounding at the safr, vhich was loudly cursed. the cry was rais -- let us go to Brewster's." Here they lid no damattge. An appeal was made to he mol not to injure the property because L beloenged to the! Masonic Lodge. a char table assciation. They left and then pro -ee&d to Easton's. hlere the same ap teal was made, and agai no harm was lone. Th'be mob now collected rounad the lechanies anl Traders. They redeemed heir paper; and couiontetl to do so. yes erday, the directors pledging the redemp ion of every dollar in circulation. No violence was attempted here. No other ropurty was destroyed. From the Baltimre Sun. The Norik Eastern Boundarv.-A Peaceable Adjustneat.-Mr. Ha.mhn, the lad agnit of ine State of Maine, has re reutly nade a report to the legislature, which is important particularly. The igew: has travelled over and is perfectly familiar with every part of the disputed territory; and from observation and the researhes he lis been able to make. he .xpiesses the opinion, that. casting the lo. catiom of the line, which the United States now contends for, sad establishing a new one, by ant equitable scale, the contending powers giving and taking a little. a lino m 'y be run. territory given away and me. quted. bv whi- h Maine, in the end oill tinot he a liser, and Great Britain will have tno caus.- to complain. It is a face, that witi the line as at present claimed by the Unite-d St ate<, the imber and other trade ihat part oftbe State of Maine, eriebraced it the vadey of the River St. John and the Restook, would have to seek a ,arket through the British Pr tvinces. Great Britain p.assesses, and on all hands .. ac knowledged, to have the right of th- terni tory throu;;h which the St. Johns flows, .a,uta irabout 47 legress north latitude. The agent. thotugh he makes no propoe ,ion, 4eeis to think that a negotiasion night be had by which Great Britali inighI lieIfliduced torc'esil i'le H States.- the strip of land west of the St. JIhns, securing to Maine free course it the sean, and rec-eiving in return a portion of the northern part or the State, as at pre sn claimed by tho Utnited States. and which is tnt particularly valuable ton Minle, but woich is regarnted as or great value to Great Britaitn. Frdtm the report, it would appear that the aen~st is sincerely desiros to se a settlemenit of~ the vered gnterion, and is clearly of opinion, that Mlain~e would Ie ntone the los'er, while Great Britain would gain nt great deal, except it be a riht ofl w y, between her Provinces, if sucn an adjustmient should take pIne; and he -uggests the propriety of the Legisla tre, with the co-operation of Mansachn ets, prescuting to the G;eneral Govern ment sonme basis for the settlement of a nw boundary line, upon reciparocal terms. HA a tnax. Jan. 10. The Jeuvls.-Re.-over y of the Gold Snuf Bnor. Gold Scabboazrd. Pearl Necklace and two large Pearls, br longing to the General Gorrnimennt.-This mtornting, bet~veen nine andl ten o's-lock, upon inf'oramation previ .t-ly reetiveel, officers Hays, Z.-ll and K i..e-ly proceeded with a scarch warrant inud byv Justice S~nyder, to the schr. ilary Briht, comman~mded lhy Ca pt. Bright, lying at the head of Smith's Dock. bottnd for ticktontd, (Vat.) anud succeeded in recor e'ritg the famous Gjoldl Snufl lBox. presen el by the Emperor Alexanider to Lieut. larric, the Anmericatn Charge d'Affairs at St. Pet.-rsburg. th-- Pearl Necklace, pre seted bsy the hmanum of Sluscatt to Presi dent Va'n hunren; the Gold Scabbard. pte senred by the Vice Rlov of peru to Corn. Hdle. and the two l'arge Pearls, all of which were stolen from the Patenit OtYhe of ke Ulnitedl St ates, Ott t he 20th of Decee lier last. The articlec when fond, were in a large leather trunk, wrapped up in straw mattinig. The trunk was lahelled aid directed tto the care ofiames Anderson, Ricmaotd. (Va.). Too mutch praise can tt he awarded to Messrs Hlays. Zeil and Ridgely, for their intdefuiigable exertions in rerreing out this valuable -property. The reward ofieed for its recovery is one rtbou. sand dollars. The Somfi Bo: nnd Nec~k lace are not at all itijured The Sword Scabbard is slightly bent, though at can be repaired with but little difficulty. 'The value put uponi the above articles in thet dvertisemfentt wats $12.000. It is gue tn Captain. Bright, who had unconsciouts charge of the precious cargo. to ,tate that he otffered every facilhty to the iiceri in pro..ectu:itig their search. He was abent frotm thc vessel whten the trunk eont aiting the articles was put on board. It wat giveni into the hands of a colored sailor, by a young man, described as being rery Lenteel in dress and appearance. We are sorry to say tnat the thief has not yet been detected. The otfien however, are itt pretty close pursUit.aend have strong hopes that'they will yet be able to arrest him.--Balt. Patriot. *More rum,' says the toe,'os a y the maldeD. .1doreinbscribers',' says he editer. mable paper currency, the clas-o per- M i who would be involuntary bankrupis e Ald be the chief sufferers under the op-| b iou of a bankrupt law, and that under C :umstances entirely beyond their con- a ad yrt under the control of those who v icted bunkruptcy upon them. Under u aspect of the effects in pcrspective of A wakrupt law even of the best kiud, be I a id not consent to a participation in the c nation of a law calcnlated tainlictnot V y rtag ut cruelty. Neither wouldhe t r agree to any remedy for supposed 3 rs -that was to be effected by stretching u powers granted by the Constitu-ion tie- c id the strict construction and obvious ti ent of those powers. For it was his I ed. that upon the restrictions and invio c lty of alat sacred instrument depend the stability of this Government. and IF permanency of our institutions. The 1, ukrupt act of last session he considered F ong the most dangerous of the inva- c as ever attempted toti the Constitution. 6 could see through it Tbe progress of in itins of unlimited extent. And he could t n vie the piroiposition to include in its C erations corporations, asan invabion not ( te of the Constitution but of the rights the States. Anl he would bets say to se in favor of that proposition, that if t y could succeed ia their desire of in- I ding corporotions, they would very soot, d this government stretching its arm to Dry State and to every city and town in Union. wnder the pretence of regula g their corporations. With these oh. I Vations he hould conclude by moving t it the memorial lae referred to tle Coin liec on the Judiciary. Mr. Berrien replied at some length to r. Calhoun. arguing that hankrupts beiug lvents, insolvents were necessarily ikrupt<. and there cou!d be no distitc 0: and that repeatel dieciions of the premte Cort had so ruled. .r. Catlhautn remarked inat the Senator I d but repented the arguments he had I ale in 1826. which werae then conc-l- I ely refuted by able men. whose opinious (Mr. Calbmun) considered far more or ,idox that decisions of the Supreme ourt. But if the Seator was de-airons g-, over the same ground as in 187. he r. Calhoun) was ready to meet him iu Icussint). H[re the sthject dropped, aenl tha pe. ion wats referred to the Committee on Judiciary. From the N. Y. Eve. Post. Cheap Clothing or Dear Clothing.-The ople of Louisiana are clo.thed itao cheap. cost, them alt--getlaer less than it otght, cover their peroursidecently. They are at insedl enough; they pay a datty ofibir eight per cent. ott ready-made garments oau2ht from France, yet with all this reot the Government to .ocuro to them e blessing of dear clatlhing. tihey import eir ready-made clahes from France eaper Mnat they can obtain them raot e north So. at: least, it i :aasmierted by eof tla Speakers of the Ilotme League. Ito, last night, gave informatius against em to that philanthropic association. as e perceive by the following paragraph iaa e Expres: "Home League.-The meeting last even atn the il-ill of the American k 11antute, ampbell furnished maty interestin2 and tnable fact. respecting the manufactiro paper in this country. It was .ta. i by onae of the speatkers that French caaymade clatahingc could now the bioughat New Orleans at less price thtant udymade clotthing fromn the Naarth, tho' ere was a lattv af thirry-eight per cent." If thme latatme Leauea nisht thtat the peal. e of New Oriennis all ohbt~a readly wale clathing fromtt the ntorth cheapcr than ey can impoant it from Franace. let themat 'tition Ceon:res's toa reduce the aduty oan portd1 cloths. The norrt hero dlen ler w ill en be ale toa fu.rnaisht his ready-miade athig lor a lower price. But that is nai: a object of the Haome Lagntae, whaich is onspaiacy aof tmtaufactuares to tax the at of the catmmauntay. They demand rat thec liaw sthall itnterfere to comatpel the :arers taf eiothas-hnt is, the eattire nit m-to pa~y such price as they mnay chaoaose estklish. The mfomentt thev find thetm Ies underhtid lay the mnnafuaurers a rata, the mnotment they find the cuatsaitter tting his clothinag at a chezap rate, coav ag his' limbhs far Iles. tjan the uorthto .ax ica, miheir inadig'unationm is aosed. & abey I upon the goearnamen: tat fulsai, riaeir rogtve, haigh parices, atnd caompel the or aan to hoay hais coat ti a heavier Cost. Naat mang sitnce, a great clamor was mtade I nions certain workmen who combained a o abtutin certasin prices fraom thaeir etmploy withomut a he help of thec lawa, aand the a v was inavoked to punaish this mniwon- I et. Vorse, fair worse thaan any ,uach i abinatiun, is the conapirnecy to parocutre I -pas.gc of liaws to make claathing dear. I grita the faces oaf thae pour. tat renader whoe lahor of alhe counatry tributary, a the itrests of a few. Foma the Cincienati Enguirer. Jan. 11. a iami F&portinhg Comnpany Bak -Cin innati Bank-Great E&citementt, Ri The Miami Exportang Company Banak aterday rertnsedl paymarent of its papher, a : clased its dooars befaore the u-sual time laitg hausianess for the day. This iring the paiper ot that atnd the Citncin ti Bank was refused in market. Thte mr rematinedl closed, and a run was nanenceal upton the latter, whten a no i e was posted uponat the door in the fol kig~ words: "This bank' has suspen- . i r~ twenty days." Anelfaort wa.ssim-. .ueouly made tor cha'se the duours of the k, but the craawd, whtich had becattema this time large, preventedl and rushedar demandinag redIempation of their papaer.c r'he pe~rons in tlcheabank, fearinigfoar ir own personal safety,.n inigi possible to wit hstandl the run, run them. ves. eavinag the premaises altoge-ther int a awessio ofthec craawd, whtich was con rl utly increasitng boath in numbters atnd ex- l ent. The furniture, counters, &c-, of! ancern were now laid hold aof, and:i awn into the street. where they were'1 itly broken up. We aw one individ-lg uth the top of a book-casae on his ulder and a couple ofehairs in his ha ad, ving o Being asked if he had got il mgh to make him whole, he replied as, he supposed so." Papers, vouchers, k.., boosa &c. were torn in nie, n