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PIONEER AN D DEMOCRAT. JAMES I.omm, ‘ ’UIIJIHEI All) PROPRIETOR.I Terms of Sub-cription: Tnl Prawns [I published every Pride ‘ . )1 And {mulled to uubscrlbcrn at the fulloliin'vufill?’ '5“ pdd in dance : ° 3, fold: month»? 00 mm...,..,....,U.....,.‘.....1111;11“"132 g-No pap" will be discontinued u , nless u l “0. ol lhe pnbllaher, until all manger: nrc will: - Anlcnllural. MANAGEMENT or flu: CoLl'.-—.ln '.he firat pine, never trust him to the cure of n per-i son of nngorernnble tcmlier. Secondly, he} should be treated with indnesa from the‘ beginning till he is ready for labor. Since Mr Rarey laid his method of snbdning the‘ horse before the public, .1 have made the horse and his diseases my study. The coil! lhonld be commenced with when quite} young, and handled carefully, as he is quick‘ to resent an injury. I begin as soon as he; I! able to run About—get him so that hei will not run away at your approach—get 111 bend in your hands—if he wants to gen Iway, lct him—you can easily get. him} again. After handling the head so that he( in not afraid, pass on to the side and limbs.j The sooner he gets used to having his legs. handled, the easier he will he to shoe when} necessity requires it. lobe done. See thnti uni dam gives plcnly of milk. If she (lochl not, teach the coit to drink cow's milk; there in nothing better to promote (bei gro‘wth. . .. . . l ' Great care should he observed in not‘ using the dam so as to heat. the milk, 115 ai grout many colts are rendered worthless by so doing. I Ihould in no case let the colt rennin with the mother after he is five‘ months old, as it given her time to get ini good condition for winter, and it in also the but time for him to shift for himself; do‘ lotlot him remain out after tho nights gen cold Illd treaty, as it will do him no good,‘ but much harm. There is plenly of skim-i ”d milk at this xenon of the year; give‘ him I" ho will drink; it will not hurt him. After he in weaned is tbo time to commence halter breaking bin—Country Gallium». ‘ Arnoemsmc F:imuznns.——M. Burrnl,‘ of l’nris, hu lnu-ly made the discovery that rein Water contain: minute quantitiel of phosphorus. He believe: that it cxietll in the Atfioephore in the form of phOSphor-, “ed hydrogen, which escapes from decay-l “guild nbetnncee. As phosphorus is neeeeury to the fertility of eoill, we have in thin discovery 5 key which unlocks the moi. of "summer-fallowed" lauds becom ing fertile. The nncient Hebrew were ac cnetomed to ellow the land to rest without‘ cnhlntion every fur yenrs. This was, no‘ doubt, for the purpose of restoring it from mauve barrenneee by cropping, to re newed fertility. It in now wellhuown that ammonia also nine in rain water, and this in held to be the chief of fertilizing agents. Any worn-out lend. nny be mtored tofer tility by allowing them tenant for repoee, in the nine manner that Mosel provided for the perpetual fertility of the land of Is-l reel. Sanctum Hanan—A correspondent in the Weekly Sun of Nov. 17, asks for a remedy for the staggers, as well as the can" of the diam. This disease has ner ar come under my observation, but. for the benefit of your subscribers who hue not work, 1 till give the following, condensed fromfi“Muonu Farrier and Stud Book." "The etsggera are produced by permit ti o horee to feed on grass late at night wagon], in the morning in the spring and full, {or at those times the pastures are cov ered with e poilonone web, which is spun end Ipmd upon‘tho grese by :1 small lpi der. Thin web, eetchiug the dew on its bosom, cum the fields in the morning to glieten end sperkle. The horse in feeding on greu so covered, collect: large quanti ties of this web end dew, and very alien the Ipidcr. They not upon the horse, pro ducing delirium, giddincse, npoplexy und sometimes deeth;" then after further trac ing the eflect, and giving symptoms he gives the {chewing remedy: “Take from the neck vein i gallon of blood, three times A week; take of umfres tea 3 hell ints. Q pint of plentsin juice, i In ounce ormfm tid|;l teespoonful or eultpetre’; mix And ‘give u I drench three mornings in A week; a; n injection composed of 1 pint oi" , 3 quart: of water, 1 quart of melee" 1'“ end one spoonful of hog-' lord; modern Itely exercise the horse end when he ie; standing Ibould be well rubbed; give twicei _A week a mush of 1 gallon of brun, l teble-i epoouful of sulphur, 1 teupoonful sultpeire,‘ 1 quart of boiling mantras tee, and nn eighth of an ounce of unfetidn, not allow ing the horse to drink cold water for sift hour: eftcrwnrds. Should he appear to re ceive no benefit from the above in four or five dnyu, take 25 grains of celomel, 2 druchma of opium, 2 drecbms of cemphor, l‘wlreehm of powdered fenneliued, and syrup, of on, kind, snflicient to noise the ingredieute into a bull, which my be given every morning for four or five duys. wa WAY or Mum: Barn—A! French chemist mm 11ml. butler any be‘ ‘lmde wilhonl churning by the use 0! I. fil _!er made of white felt in the form of t hag, , in the four corners or which are loaned porou- strings, like candlewlck. to can, of lhe fluid portion of the milk. The bag be’ Jig Inepended by the four corners li-oms twenty-four to thirty hours, the contents ofi the filter will be found to be of the consis-‘ tence of soft cheese. This lolidified crenm‘ is then placed in a linen bag, tied tight, and‘ the bag kneaded like A roll of dough. lu‘ a few minuiea the mass grows liquid, nnd‘ the butter Ind buttermilk are separated. 4 S‘To one who said “ I do not believe‘ there In an honest man in tho world." an other replied, “It is impossible that any “no man should know all tho world, but‘ qmlc possible that one may know himself."‘ PJUNEM AND MEM‘IJLBEBAT, Devoted to the Interests of Washington Territory, Polities, Education, News, and General Intelligence. V7OL. 9. OLYMPIA, WASHINGTON TERRITORY, APRIL 19, 1861. import of James ’l‘ilton, Esq., Surrryar Grnrrnl,‘ I‘ for 1859-60. i "‘ St'm’t-It'on GENERAL's Ol'i'lCli, ) l ' Olympia, ii'ttsltiligluu 'l‘trrilory, < . i September 20, 1500.3 I I Sittzain conformity with custom, I pro-, “coed to make. my nnnnal report of the sur-‘ Ii veying district under my charge I The field work for the past year hasbeen ,lsatisluetorily and faithfully performed, and lthc otliec \t'ork kept fully up with the sur veys. | 1 Closings upon the work of former years} demonstrate the general accuracy of t'ormerl : surveys, and, with a single exception, the. lability and honorable dealing of the gentle—‘ I‘meu employed as deputies. , . Eleven surveying parties have been em lployed upon the extension of the public, isnrveys during the past year, and all the? lwork which was reported as under eontrncll lot the date of ray lust annual report, with‘ lthe exception of {our townships, has been” Itinished, and the plats, field notes, and ae-l counts forwarded to your oflice. t The dimcult and tedious work of survey- ‘ ing the private lands claimed under the do-l .nntioa laws has been going steadily on.—-| iThero are eluim stflt’eyors, commissionedl and instructed by tli‘ti office, in all parts oil the Territory, to which the public sarreys‘l have been extended. The public surveys executed during the," past year include seven townships south ofl ltho forty-ninth degree of north latitude, ~ incur the northern boundary of tho Territo-I‘ Iry and on the eastern shore of i’ugot’sl Sound; seven townships on the easterul, shore of the Sound, between liellinghumil Buy and the sixth standard parallel; all the? settled lands on the large and fertile islandl, of Whidby; the whole of Cunlnno Island; I most of the lands lying between the OLym- ll pic range of mountains and the western I shores of Paget’s Sound that are now set-ll tied; also, fertile lands lying upou Chehalis river and Gray's harbor. ~ Surveys have been commenced in that; part of the Territory lying east of the Cus- ‘ endc range of mountains; about 460 miles l of guide nteridian and standard parallel” llines have been run, as preliminary to the I lsubdivision of the country lying upon the Upper Columbia and between the Cascade | and Blue mountains and north of the forty ,sixth degree of north latitude, or the south- I ‘erurbouugzy of that port of the Territory. I but cisnt “a,” g!” spprov sur lvoyora are now agivv‘or ,or i ‘for the subdivision of fourteen tornahips, ltu the desirable valleys of the Walla Walla iand Clieitutat. . , Some six hundred preemption settlers have taken claims in that region, and umi- l lgration from the Atlantic States, now up iidly coming in to that part of tho Territo ry, together with tho certainty of good gold-bearing country on the eastern slope I of the Cascade mountains, and along the t forty-ninth parallel of north latitude, ren- t ldcl‘l it imperative that there should boa I llargv amount of sobdivisionnl surveying in t the country can of the Cascades at as early 1 ;a season as possible. i ‘ There will be, at least, onethousand pre- I imptors upon uasurveyed lands in that ro- I I gion, by the last of November. ' lhavo contracted for the whole of the I small appropriation made for this year, and I could have employed four or five more our- . veyiag parties with signal advantage to the I preemptors, it the amount appropriated i d been sufliciant. ,‘ I beg to reiterate the urgent request of I rtner years, that the department decide I upon the vast body of land claimed by the i Pagct’s Sound Agricultural Company.—- j Those lands have now-upon them some {out | hundred American settlers, and justice to them requires their title to be settled, as they on making valuable farms, ood a l flourishing town, Stcilacoont, ls springing I up thereon. ‘ l The principal body of land in the claim I is prairie, lying south of and adjacent to a fertile but donuly-timborod tract, including I the valleys of Payniiapj White, Green and Duwamish rivers. poo thou bottom lands there are two hundred settlers, in cluding many old donation claimants, alsol the important town of Seattle. . ‘i I have long endeavored to contract for ‘ ‘tho survey of these lands, but the exceed ing ditfienlty of tho work, the demons. of the forests, and luxurianco ot‘ the under growth hus prevented any deputy surveyor, from encountering the almost certain pcca~l niary loss he would incur, but could I at-I tach to the contract the prairies now claim-n ed by the Puget‘s Sound Agricultural Com-! pany, it would, as a whole, afl'ord a reason“l uhlc compensation. I With regard to the status of the Pnget's“ 'Sound Agricultural Company's lands, 1 begl‘l ’to refer you to the report, with accompany-I ing diagram, kc, which I had the honor to make and forward to your office on the‘l Bth of December, 1859, and which I llel‘C-i by make a part of this annual report. ! In accordance with your orders dntedl lSeptember 29. 1859, i have, to the grentl Isotist'actlon of the settlers, subdivided the Iland (about 33,000 acres) claimed by tltol i Hudson's Bay Company, on the lower Co-i Ilnmbia, which included the town of Van-i ,coaver, Fort Vancouver, and some sixty orl ‘scvonty donation claims. l 1 Last May, in accordance svith your or-l idcrs, i proceeded to Vancouver to hear and! determine some contested land claims, vizzv the town site of Vancouver, the military“ Iresert'ation, a donation claim, and that ot ,tho Catholic Mission of St, Joseph. l have Inot been able to make a report as yet, tot" ,‘the reason that some papers, material to ithe points at issue, have to be obtained [from the Catholic Bishop of Quebec, and ‘from the records of tho Hudson's Bay Coni puny's Board of Directors in London. By )nrrnngement with counsel representing the 'r mission, town, and others, I adjourned the ' further hearing of the testimony uutil thes doeutnenls arrive. J ‘ lam in communication with Colonel \ . ‘ \V. Chapman, Surveyor (icneralof Oregon, lrelative to the survey and marking of that ‘part of the boundary line between the State fiof Oregon and this Territory, as provided for by not of the last session of Congress, ,‘antl have no doubt we will be able to have an citieient astronomical and surveying: ‘parly upon the work as early in the ensuing spring as the season will permit. ; The rust region lying east of the (Ins icnde mountains, including the fertile valleys ,of the liilter Root and St. Mary‘s is now _opcued by the Northern Pacific wagon irond between the Missouri and the Upper Columbia. lam much indebted to Limit. iJohn Mullen, United States Array, the oth -Icient and zealous superintendent of this im portant work, for much valuable topograph lieul information of this interesting region, [Which is now filling up with settlers, and has this year been traversed by United iStates troops, recruits from the 1-} mm: ,Stntes, who have arrived here via the Mis tsouri rirer. .1 i The maps accompanying this feport not ,oniy exhibit the progress of the surveys, tbut compiled an it is from the most authen- I lie sources as u topographical map, forms , the most complete map of the Territory yet I made. lam under many obligations to the 3United States Army officer: stationed at [various points, and commanding the detach ments making marches and roads; also, to Ithe Indian service and the north-west boun ‘dury surreya, for much valuable and authen ltic information. I recommend that aeveralhuadred copies [of these maps be sent me for distribution 1 here. lpurpose this winter to prepare com: plete township claim maps, exhibiting the lurcns of all claims oa surveyed townships, and the quantitiea of public lands made ractionui by the township and sectional hues, and the donation claims. In conclusion, I would offer my'acknowl edgmenta to the gentlemen of my cm (0 ~ the cmciept and [faithful mating-$73114 t “Is—NIEW'W' Hal-ions uttes‘daring t a past your. . ‘ Very respectfully, Your obedient servant, JAMES TILTON, ' Samyar General, WV. T. llou. Joana S. ‘VILSON, Gav-minim”. ——- 4—we- - Ax Axum. Upon Emma—A gentleman walking through Knightabridge on Sunday overheard the following conversation be tween a man and a woman, who appeared as if just come from some pleasure trip into the country: Woman —-"Blow ma Bill, how tired I do feel. I'm as miserabh'a, too, ,uaa atarvod herring. What. a miurabla jworld ia thia] I will: I'd never been born, that. I do; and now that I am born I with myself dead again." Man—" Why, But, what’s the matter with you now? Witt are you grumbling about?" Women— " Why, don't I tell yer I amu miserable In rat!” Miserable. indeed! Why, what on earth would yer have? You was drunk Monday, and you was drunk again Wod neaday,_ and I'm bluaed if you ava’t had pretty near enough today. If that’ain’t enou h plea-are for yer I don't know what is. gaupposa you want: to be adownrlght, hangul hero upou earth.”—Eaglis£ Puccini ”The N. Y. Herold “the: There in o world of diflorenes between talking and acting. It was weary matter [or m Re publican organs and indigent petriote to denounce Mr. Buehuen .- e coward, I traitor, e. timid old dot-rd, 11l old my ..'roid of bio own shadow, end to fly that without ditllenlly he might have thrown re inforcement: and applies into Fort Sumter; that he ought to have done itet ell hazards [and regardless of costs, And tint he ought tto lino arrested than South Carolina Treaty Commissioners to traitors, and "llonelt Abe Lincoln” would soon make those trlitors and rebels understand that we have I government; but “Old Abe," when invested with the responsibility. seems )to como'to pretty much the some way of lthinking u "Old lluek," to-wit: that “cir lcnmstuncea" molt be considered. llence er. Lincoln begins to suspect that this leg -Iscy of Fort Sumter is not worth holding; {and that when n piece of property has ceased tobe of any earthly value to the government, it is inexpedient to plunge in {to I civil war to retain it. ——~W- - L ost: or OLD Ann's Jon: ——llonelt Old .Abe is all old joker; and it is laid thet he !caanot help it. On his leto trip to Colum lbns, Ohio, he [5 reported I: luring related ‘ the following to hit fellow passenger: in ithe cum—Spoofing of the demands of the lSouth upon the North, and the feeling of the latter in regard to tho matter, he laidl iit reminded him of a dispute that occurredl ‘belwcen his two youngee boyl, Tom and illill, n pair of mischievous rogues of eighti loud ten years. One of them bu] o toy! ithat the other wanted, and demanded in; itcrms emphatic and boisterous. At length ‘he was told to let his brother have it in‘ order to quiet him. "No, sir," was the‘ sturdy response, “1 must have it to quiet 'mywli' " t l Mmllanooas News Items. l . l The Times‘ Washington dispatch says ‘Mr. Critteuden has postponed his cnstcin tour till Mny or June, going homel in the meantime. to fight secession [in Kentucky. The secession leaders at Washington are much exercised on account of the rumored withdrawal of troops from the Southern forts. I! it is done, they say there is no shadow of a chnnee to push secesaion any Ifurthef, and every Southern mun who hi vored it. will be tomaliawked. ‘ lilo report of the intended withdrawal ;of the troops has scattered consternation among the seecssionists. Wigfull, who is undoubtedly honest, however fanatical, ex presses the greatest. concern on the subject, and says if it is done he and his friends are all ruined. .\ dispatch from \Vnshiugton says greatl weight is attached, in political circles, to the declaration of Fessenden, in the Senate, ‘ that the Administration contemplated ul policy of peace, and would exercise no uu-i thority not strictly in accordance with lnw,| and not until ample time had been taken for the examination of the question in all: its bearings. \ .l The Southern Cofihns adopted at permanent Constita on. The l'resiidentl is to be elected for six yam. The ullicers in. the Cabinet during good behavior. Cabinet omcers to be eligible to seat: in Congress. - A dispatch from Washington, ”roll 17, has the following: "It is said, on good authority, that Meesrer Crawford and For-i syth, the Coinniiitsionera from the SoutlieraE Congress, entertain the strongest hopes of' iprcserving the peaceful relations betweenl {the two governments. There is no doubt but that their diplomacy is judicious." ‘ Between the President of the larger and ‘the Vice-President of the smaller American Confederacies, there appears to he a con siderable diflerence of opinion. The Presi— ident says " there is no crisis except such as may be produced at any time by design ing politiciansf’ and the Vice-President as serts of the crisis, that " the hope of a re construction of the Union mast novv be abandoned." Quite e. dilerenee. TIM his ML} sis» [Stetsoeoaeistsotaredm emu this. spade extending horizontally throuflri' centre, and equal in width to one-third the width or the flag, the red space. above and below. to he of the same width asthe white; the uuion blue extending down through the white space, and stopping at the lover red space; in the centre of the union a elrce of white stars, co riding in number with the States in the gonfederacy. The Savannah ansbh'ara pnbiishel an inflammatory appeal to the Border States to come to the rescue. In atone altogeth er unaccustomed for so mihi-raeanered a sheet, it says: “ The lentil-go! a Federal soldier to the South after the 4th ofMarch, should be the signal for eeaiiazrstiou et Washingtoh, and an utter route of the Vandal invaders from the North.” ‘ A Western paper menacing the death of a gentl-en in lore, asys': “He was a great admirer of Horace Greeley, but otherwise a very respectable man.” The New Orleans Picayune asserts that the only National Convention in which the acceded State! could take part loald he one which they could enter as independent Stma, “ with entire freedom from obi“ tions to accept it! conclusions or demo-'- stratlou of [ores to constrain aecepteaee.’_ Intelligence from Charleston states that there exists a pretty strong farty in South Ceroiiaaiepposel to ratify a; the Heat gemery Constitution, who will resist it at every point. The Government 0! the we ded States hes owned W. L. Yancey, P. A. Pei,- A. . Mann and 'l‘. Butler King, special ennui-inure to England iaud Franco, tn ohtnln a recognition of the independence-e! the Confederated States, ‘aad to make “eh commercial arrangementsi 'aa their joint interests may require. ‘ A special Washington dispntch of the‘ iltith March says that the President and members oi the Cabinet, foreign mini-tel“ Senators and Representatives in Congress, Judges 0! the Courts, Supreme and others, the Mayor and citizens of Washington, and in large number of risitern. have arranged 'to wait upon Mr. Crittenden and lady at, the National Hotel on the following cream ing, The visit will he a parting enteriain-‘ imcnt, given to the distinguished Senator from Kentucky, after forty years of honest public service for the whole country. Among the confirmations reported in; the Senate are J. M. Edwards, Commie. =sioner General Land Olliee; J. N. Spinner,i | United States Treasurer; J. S. llolderman,l Minister to Stockholm; Col. Thomas, Ad-I juteat General. | The following appointments are also an-i nuanced: Green Atlrlllll, of Kentucky,’ Sixth Auditor of the Treasury for the l’ost«l ioflice Department; 0. A. Hale,ot‘ the Dia ltrict of Columbia, l’oslolilm Agent for‘ ‘Virginia and Maryland. i I In the Missouri Convention, on the lfith,| ithc amendment declaring the State will: ‘nevpr aid the Federal Governmcnt with men or mcana to eoerce a slnlCl' State “as iVOiCII down by 61 to 30. in the Virginia (.‘onvrntion, on the l-l'li. il'nuni itaelutiozi=. um”. i in 1h; .\ii)'.i'i NO. 221 Yvan ling, nnd nntiscccsaion resolutions, Iworo oll'ered, and laid on the table. , Mr. Goggin offered an amendment to Ithe report of the Committee on Federal jltelations, proposing secession with a view 'to the eventual reconstruction of the Union. l'l‘ho amendment was ordered to be printed. The Union men were nsrcrtninod to have a clear majority in the Arkansos‘ 1 Convention. 1 1 The Montgomery (‘ongrcss hns confirmu led the District Judges, us follows: A. 0. [ML-G rnlh, South Carolina; 11. 11. Jackson, Georgia; W. llnrris, Mlssissippi; Thos. .l. ‘Siuimn, Louisiana; John Ilcmphill, Tuna; iJ. Finlay, Florida: Messrs. McQueen and ‘Mclntosh have also been confirmed Judge: in! the Admiralty Court at Key West; D. Ilnlilmrd, of Alnbnmn, Commissioner of lndinn All'uirs; Alexander B. Wilhrll of Alabama, Register of tho ’l‘renlury ; and B. Baker, of Georgia, Auditor of the 'l‘rcnsurfi. t An :1 journed Southern Rights meeting was held in Louiznillo, Ky., on the fin }noon of the “lib Much, when dole ' on were appointed to a mass convention at ; Frankfort. - - l On the lath, in the evening, the Hon. Jnmca Guthrie addressed a Union meeting. llle counseled moderation, and said that erl Lincoln was honest, Ind thnt tho North ‘would ultimately accord tho jut den-od lol’ the South. - l The first war-vessel of the embryo nnry oi' the Southern Confederacy was commie~ ‘sioncd at Charleston on the Hill. The iLme Dari: arrived with 24-poundere, ou fider command of L‘eut. linger. - - I Advices received from New Orleans to itho 16th ult,, state that Cum Cooper line surrendered to Texas. The ignited S'ntoe 'odiccrs nnd soldiers were permitted to march, with transportation and eubeietcnce, ito San Antonio, at which place ell public erme end prouerty were to be delivered to the Tent: euthoritiee. A Gelveeton diepetch of mm alt. aye the steemer Rut/c returned that more: from Bram with Stete Iroo . ~TheF -‘ erul troops evacuated Port. Eon on the tech. They got on the Webster for Key Wat end Tortuga. T l». «... severei hundred Stete M ’.t “A for 11l --\ . ‘9” _1 "Z ' Maj. McLeeo, U. S. ?.‘ heel fl ' : end tendered hie servicee othe S'tete. " Cemp Coloredo, en the northereffwlhr, tree been tekeu by the Stetetva.’ 3, .. Col. Beyer, of the Ooofedmterei‘z ie enlietiog e regiment of eegreee ter fmtier. eeeordie‘ to the older! tit-Duh. .‘ Sr. Inns, Inch ls—Weldo-l’tflkhr eon wee elected United Stem my the Missouri Mid-tented". Gree hefleg heal’p'ruiooelyM t‘ whole vote wee 145: It“ ~‘ "'.l 9:". 18; Johnson, 80; Donlpheu, ,fir "‘ ' fl . '_. .y‘e'yh‘ git momenta. , ~ m J New York Herold d tel-do] ’ ‘thelwl teril end eontitution ere , y The fleeting Irma-10m I. be moved on t e fit , ut not, Sumter. , . ' w A Weehlegton diepetchto the .New York Herald reporte Ihet lejor Aedereee had informed!» Govern-en let it rob [creel-cutthehtuded, Sufi “I“. would innedtelely'fl ell the M eel render eo-nutceueehy weter W. IMO- ' . _, ~ The Cebioet ere eoeidertq flee-see relettve to the eelure of thereveuee utter Thu. ” It to undenteod the Adlai-hunk heve eent oot exam to dilenu Encou lGoveruments to inform the. ”the let!" policy of thle Government, therm- h lend deieeting the object of the 80‘ . ‘ ICouteder-eey heading their ' . [ere the. The lone course will he 'l‘ |eued reletive to Mexico. The Cebloet, ee loan uh Sou. ‘ forte el'eir ieeettlod, ‘ WW , , erotion the collection d , All are known to egreothlh, col lected, but the meeerlllh . ~ Lieut. I’ntnum has errire‘d from Tues iwith diepetchee from Col. Wette, who lies lbeeu instructed to withdrew from Tens, mud wee concentrating hie lroope et lodh auole. Col. Weite will rein-in till ell the troops have left. All the etoree end mn nitione 0! wer were in the head! of the t'l‘ene Commissioners, who eliowed the ‘nceeuery eupplics to eend the troop out of .ihe State. The militery poet 0! Breto llsihhd wee eorrcndered by Lieut. Thomp -laon, Gen. Nichols first inrieling Unit the ,HJK should be eeloted. lie had only fifteen [men and two gune. The Ten- Rengere ere stetioncd from {Brazos to Brownsville, end it ie enticlpe ited thet they would etteinpt to prevent the Governmeut troupe taking away storm and erlillery. 1 X \Vuliington dilpllch oi to-dey, says .the lust remittance from eny of the “and 'Stetcs, on eecount oi the cartoon, were rc-< scared from Galveston, towerde the eioee ol’i February, about $9,000. one. on hell at. w pu‘tious to accession end rcreipte? nilnr‘ "nu from cuetonu, it is said, are Ipm ‘.-.-:| in those Shim», Milt ‘iie CX-‘Pp‘lon i ..- an I , nuns or 513 mm: 9 1 Fur one nquxn, (11 llnu or In.) on Insertion. 83 00 For owl: Inbuquent inurtiun,. . l . . . .. . . . . .. .1100 A lilwml dadhczlop nude to you]; adruuun. The number of lnnnlonn mnu be {II-due“, marked on th. margln o! Mum-aunt- um 111, or Ibo, will he continued till mun Ind chanced ucnrdlngly. Legal ndverflnmonu vlll be dun god to um um nvyuat the 0M ofthe Puhlhher. Sl-erifl'a nlu. notion of Ninth-Mn“, kc. wlll l he charged to the officers oukrlng Mr public-lion. ! '3‘ Job work null] Int-ad It “IBIS“. ‘ _._. ’ Ll I'. FISHER, No. Im. Wan-gun and, an i l’ram'luo, up null-n. nurly oppm'ih lug-Iti- Open lluum,ln Inflwriual m ,tL-cein: Ind an!“ fur üb ' acrlpllum nnd «mam-them In Cullfornh. E The War Den. Law. i .\x .\t:r.to provide fur “96 payment of tho rxpcnscs illt'llrl‘etl by the Territories of l ()wgon nnd Wushington in the lawful -1 ion of Indian hostilitiel therein, in the ‘ yours 18.35 and ltébli.l I Ila it rnurlnl by (In: Sum/r and 110 m: 0/ lfuprrmila/it'rr if (In: l'nilml Slam of elm-um in Cmgrm mumbled, That the ifnllowing snlnc, or so much thereof In any lhe ntrconsury, he nntl tht-y nre hereby Ip ‘propriuted out of any money in the Treasu fry not otherwise appropriated, to defray lln‘ rxpcnscs incurred in the ’l‘crritoricn of ‘\\'ixshing:on and Oregon, in the suppression Int" lndinn hostilities then-in, in the years ’1555 and 1856‘ i For the pnymcntol’ volunteers embracing Xthe first, second und ninth Oregon regi ments, and the three compuuics of minute ,men, numbered sixty, sixty-one and tiny two, and the first and second Wuhlngtfll regiments nnd promiy'uous componiel of Captain Strong and Cuptnin Hun, four hundred thousand dollurs, nfug dedoflinz Istoppuges us nsccrtnined by thqg'hird And ‘itor of the Treasury in M- r‘eport of the ITIh of February, 1800, made in pormnco to! a resolution ol' the House of [it-preheat.- lives, pulled the Bth of February, 1859; lsnid claims to be enmined and audited by. 'thc Third Auditor of tho Tron-q, ih' shall allow to said voluntecro the lam guy and allownnces us were [Mid tn meow soldiers of equal grud- ot \ht M“. _ . . United 5‘5“” arm, mining in tug-u: try: Pradfla'l‘ht payment gull on!) by mode touch theme on M' u 111-ll he shoutifi ~ pad: to have bun ens-gel int _in tho. he'd for the period IE4“ 1 I ”at, claimed. - ' ‘ . For the payment“ I I w toppliu, tnnsportflhl, _ m 'b‘ curred» in the minus... teen, two milks-hum , ‘I dolluu, to bop-id 190. lb! - ' ‘ -,.. crab!) to the nip-tori . a, TI, Phtrauporutloo. If": '- ' M... ,- ~ or lam-glam; “'7‘: “7* _" 'mJg-or- 1"" ‘.‘“f m 1“): " 7, Tate}: 1 WM ..5 m, 1". L, A ~ , M‘- “L- -. I?“ {1 .« .. a 4—7 (In? ' , sl*"~W‘“‘f} ”4 " ' ’5 fl i -z# ' I I 0! _ ‘ M v , '9‘, 422 m- .V ‘ , 1 '.'. .'I 1351‘” ‘1- i . “we." “...... ‘ +4."? ;. outfit: I‘ _ I I : .' 9.. Wm i. f ,. t 3 .. , . -. h) v i v “Ia“: "1 93' A 55" ’1 of. , “gig-‘4; .‘ 5 l I .7 W‘unfn: - "2‘. Mg. W‘w- MI“: “I. I“ "fur“ . , Lufi‘ 3: anllvfip-n r ~i-~r "Mr ‘ V's» . .‘aarr‘uy‘flg ".w ‘ i , 'm‘.~ r I ‘l g i ' . I ' 'if h 7 -~ for the pa ‘ ' '' ' .. _ ' thin-etch ‘ __" :11 “a ' , . . _ ' .. ‘>. ‘l‘“.4 » v J‘ . I . " a “w M.~ t “‘.'“... ,7'v‘-;-r-nlr.o~r~n ; ma‘, v '_ .Arr‘dl‘r' ‘ . _ . hn‘vxi‘ , I .I , t. 9% «...... ~.i I, Aw M «, l W I“I The A . I.» ““1. gas-flo- I‘D-var “..’. “W. l . comm-blandlh '1 . I 's' 11190.8.“de 7, "‘ tot-owe hadron“ ;‘I, ‘s'. - . h: fi . firTIMAIIn-yji 1' . Bcocher'u proton and ”"vfi; 'g'x‘“ 1"! and flnll nny. "on-pic ' ‘. 1 'score of HMO." up I ~L- "' ”,.. ‘.. .*? prom-edit) unlul - .”.; - claim-Mo, “kw ‘: ‘ ' my my. ‘l'; I um. ..“i‘ ' _ 111-Hy . t" " .- ;.2 {that aid, “13:3: £3: , thine, but «out! he = I 3 2 Greeley; who Rh b y“ W the uk- 9! IN coutu.—lh_ II ‘pendiu‘ word, out no Inn-g but i . i—vho mock It dtvielou, an; A country nunlhillt‘ “ M . ilmlmdlmr-m‘ ‘ (- nnnotnrltcbhllfl h. t, ,' I‘lnnd, who I, “BU”: N“ ‘V4 ' : land cron our rights M ' V ‘ preserved Ind kindnd -i ' 1:“ upe-k the voice «mom i , mgr—wig at t “‘.‘lntto for the 0v!“ ion; in; It -r.;r-- 3 “