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Collection: Newspapers > Nevada Journal

September 20, 1851 (4 pages)

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A JOURNAL, . THE NEVAD W. G. ALBAN AND en ple — a neta eesle enne ah ent tee Misses Potter, of Providerce Island, and . two other persons, names not rscer tamed . was upset in a gale, near Bristol on San“Tday. The four young women were . drowned. Mr. Reed sustained himself {hy swimming, and the other two by . clinging toa portion of the mast which remained above water, until they were . ARRIVAL OF THE INDEPENDENCE A. A. SARGENT. Satoriay Evening, Sept, 20th, — : ae sso Nioarnaava Rowe. Ten days Later Intelligence. Concerts, A number of Jadies and gentlemen . *Liberty.” . der command of Don Serafio Reira, . ter this the combined forces attacked a} company of the Zaragoza Regiment. . which soon joined them with the ery of On the Sth they arrived at! Coscorro with 380 cavalry. and 200 infantry. On the 11th, a detachment. unadvanced on Santa Cruz. but at the river ! of Nevada, amateur singers, have it} The Steamer Independence. of Van. T’S°Ue i by the erew of another boat John M. Cookson, was arrested on Frilay, Aug. Sth, at New York, on the . charge of murdering his wife, and was in contemplation to give two concerts . derbill’s Line, arrived at San Francisco . “ ' , ~ ° : next week, on Friday and Saturday . 0m Wednesday, 17th inst., having made evenings, for the benefit of the Metho. the run from San Juan del Sad in sixteen \@xamined ut Pautucket, on the 12th and . days. including stoppages . . . . Ww \ ohh (i i P is is Cet te thts ie elk i ichte . : ® fre im-. committed to prison. ; : iy ' . debted to Gregory's Express for flea of . these pioneers in the faith at Nevada, } New York to finish their new church, and pnt it . States papers, delivered early on Thurs-. A tribe of Ojibeway Indians have ta : ; day evening. From them we are able. ken possession of the Island opposite Ali & condition to resist the storms of! ¢ clean littl ‘ . bany. — ‘ j glenn little of inte 4 we 6 lia . i i Gis dete pe ae : ' reat, The new i Robert F. Witlock. a lad sixteen years Phe . from New York ¢s to the 16th of August. . : : i , ol, ; lof age, hung himself in his bed-room, at object is precisely identical with that! The revolution ta Cuba was progressing . Albany, on the Sth inst of the ladies’ fair,so generovsly patwith mach epirit. and had grown into a 1 i the coming inclement winter. The potato ret has commenced, and Pronunciamentos ' have taken place at several more impor: . look as if they were frost-bitten ; if has commenced earlier than usual, and will rove more disastrous than usual, for some of the earlier varicties—-never y fels have heen taken ond shot, they are! known to have been affected before—are 2 performers . yet making such extensive preparations . tetting. have yoluntecred their services, and! for war. that itis evident that they have} the best voes! musicians in aeirenit of . many tiles, as the Mountain Club, ete. are embarked fn the enter.) Sen says According toappointment. the French ter. g tony \ We have reliatle information from, Assembly, we presume, closed its session New Orleans that Genera® Lopez hag; n the 10th inst., to meet again in Nofrom New Orleans, in. vember, unless the Assembly select comthe splendid steamship Pampero, and hag) Miitees of twenty-five should conclude T x y . taken with him eight hundred men and: that the movements of Louis Napoleon he Methodist Chureh : phe aang tik ‘ alias embling seven pieces of artillery, ,;may demand an earlier re-assembling His lending it is said, will he the sig. After the settlement of the constitutionWherever the ring-. 1! fora general rising of the Cubans in al question against the revision, the As“tall partsot the Island. All suceess to) Sembly had proceeded quietly to dispose the brave fellows who have volunteered . Of its regular business, preparatory to foot of man finds a! to aid the Cubans in achieving their lib the prorogation, , ful j strange lodgment, thither comes the, °Tty From Spain we have the grate > ’ i COME: 1¢ ’ . . } . } he Que vas out upon The following dispatch reached us telligence tha the ueen was upon last night: a pious pilgrimage. for the safe delivery . of the opoete heir or heiress to the . throne. The country was infested by . rouized by our citizens a few weeks, 2°"er4 movement, azo, and we trust ample funds will be vaised by these entertainments. Those who love music should 20, for some moet excellent instrument tant poinis. and although the Cuban . government announces that all the rebThe foreign newsisscanty. From the New York Herald of the 16th, we clip The New York . the following items : yet an enemy sufficiently formidable ti Glee. excite hensien. App prise; and those who haye “no music . in their souls” should go, to encourage one of the best causes that could be presented, from its” first inception, has been a pioneer society. sniled for Cuba, ig axe firet disturbs the forest echo, wherever the Methodist missionary, with his earnest } ‘ ° . eles . } . = devotion, his good tidings, his warm . Baltimore, August 7 The Southern mail has arrived. by it impulses, toda the the mission of his . : , [we learn that 250 “Fillibusters” have thieves and ro ; high Master. We remember, many left \W ile tow Cuha, In the Austrian provinces of Italy and . r hs ag Y ; , aes ae SRA . ; Hungary, martial law and its cruelties . months ago, when we first arrived in The stenmer Cine‘nnati, which was : . are supreme. The smouldering elements sent to convey the news of Lopez) upon the surface indicate another erup‘tionto be not far distant—waiting perhaps, only the signal from France ; for upon France sill depends the liberation . of Rurope. Kossuth still lingers the prisoner of) ; . There wasa report that an insurrecs the Sultan, while the representatives of . tion had been attempted in) Matanz, the great powers continue chaffering over . offorte in the future, and help them to, and troops had been ordered to mareh the question of his release The chanto that quarter. ‘The result had not, ces are about equal that he Will be rebeen heard when the Georgia sailed. Nevada, the old church we thoneht a to be barn, on Main street, where the Avethsealing from New Orleans. was despatchodists had already set up their altar. ed by the Spanish Consul, and Lopez's They have done much rood here, as success may depend much on the speed conservators of morals, at least, and dow friends generally, encourage their of the Pampero. beautify and make comfortable their church. The political news from the states in. belvre his liberation is otherwise achie. Iuprovemenrs ap Grass Vatuiny —. dicates the general trianph Hs Union Nhe paltry question of the Danish suc. , tendencies, the stutes which have! cession is reported to have been settled . {mooted disunion. In Alabama, Benja-. by the joint consent of the continental . min G. Shields, the Union candidate for . POWeTs. Governor, has been eleeted over Henry . W. Collins secessionist. , eniicks in We are always pleased to notice indications of the growth ana prosperity of this beautiful village. not only from the } natural pleasore of witnessing improveArrival of the Oregon. To the legisla—ture, Union men have been eleeted from . ulmost every county in the state. ; at San Franciscoon the 18th, fifteen days Geo. 8. Hon etan jae been elected to ‘and three hours from Panama—a remarDav! Wubbard? ~ the! kable run. . Southern Rights’ Candidate. We are indebted to Bowers & Co for the ae ‘ tis F -anama Echo, from which we elip some : f N Btinie vient re.) Panama Echo, fr 9 clip s cond story; the Missouri House has re-. orth Cardlinia sufficient re i friend . turns have been reeviyed toindicate that . ; : the Union ticket generally had been for New York papers, also to Hoffman & . Co. for tiles of States, and State pa' pers, ments, but because we imagine we fore. ree & corresponding inerease of our subscription list. The Mail Steam Ship Oregon arrived On Main street, we ob-. serve that the Farmers Hotel is being . ; Congress over built over: a) the Grass Valley Hotel and Minois House are each receiving a se~ t From vontly been enlarged : and our el Sentty has added a new front and pi: agza, and also a supurb dining room, . Successful. kitchen, ete., to his well known establishment. Indiana. Evansvitite, Ind, Aug 8, . In Cuba, matters have reached a cliIn this distriet L. Do Bruler, whig, . max, and the about . is elected to Congress over James Lockhart. MeGaughey, whig.is thought to be defented in the 7th district. } 1 . ‘ a hae All the remaining districts exeept the and revenge which will sweep Spanish yY gone up: asigniticant facet, when 4th. have elected democratic members. rule from the Island. The Echo gives taken in connection with the furthe The demoers ave b ranches of F . F = a ieetic t he rther ' di moc ratshaye both by ink hes of the following account of this affair: circumstances, that three weddings have the legislature by a large majority. . ; ; beled: Ke ri It seems that some four hundred ot taken place in that street within a short entucky those who had enlisted in the United . time past. (Query: has the soeker been Adilitional returns received, lerve no) States, on receipt of the newsof the Cusuperseded by the Jone tom?) doubt of wn election ‘sf roe (demo-} ban Declaratien of Independence, sucf : ‘ crat.)-a8 Govenor, and J. B. Thompson, . ceeded in landing on the Isl palais ‘ ; :) : ; ie ( t ithe Island, a few : We ; learn that Mr. Dubosg. of San (whige) as Lieutenant Governor, who . days previous to ‘the avrival of the FalFrancisco, has purchased the lot at the runs far ahead. ; leon. A portion of the party were uncorner of Main and Mili streets. below } Hoth the whig and democratic vote . fortunately so delayed as to land right Muatiy's hotel, with the view of erect. has fallen of very largely this year, par-. in the teeth of a large force of govern5 . ticularly tho whig vote. A number of new stores are ‘also in the process of erection, and to be commenced. On Mill street several now dwelling houses have recent: . sanguinary event of the massacre in cold blood of fifty Americans, will excite a spirit of 1etaliation . . ; ‘ , ‘ dents ment troops, part of whom encompassed ‘ tore o 7 ¢ arere he "ed . IPAsse PR: MNOS OF ih and furnishing * las Be . Four Whigs, five Democrats and one} them by land and part by sea. Being stock of goods, imported by himself, to, Independent have been elected te Con: . ynarmed. they surrendered, with the {mand of Col. Conti. the fields. in the agrieultural counties, . . Najaza came up with four companies of} jthe Cantabria Regiment, under comThose they attacks . led and defeated, taking prisoners the . . colonel, six officers, and forty-six men, . killing thirty-six. and wonnding a large jnumber. On the 13th, the Patriots were . joined by a section of artillery under . Don ¢ Inhrie] Fortun ( ity under Don Augustin Aguero y Ague-. iro attacted and defeated eighty laneers: ;and threa eompanies of the Regiment (of Isabell IT. On the 20th, all the Pas . triot forees combined and marched tos . wards the mountains, defeating and disi persing on their way three companies of On the 2tst the insurgent forees encamped on the heights ef Coseorro. amounted to 2.000 infantry and 680 cavalry, with four pie~ . ces of artillery. Active operations were . to be recemmenced as soon as (he now: 1of the movements at Trinidad :hould be . received There is that ees ‘g) ; lof the patriots is gaining groun 1, al. the Regiment of Cantabria. . . it a little doubt the cause . though the vigilance of the authorities has thus far done much to prevent the The moment ltrath from transpiring the enterprise of Cuban freedom assumes la form of probable accomplishment, of Providence, his two daughters, two. killed and twenty-eight wounded. Afjean be formed of its violence when itis} Tntsu Riop known that potatoes were torn up Oo it of the hard ground.” Cnro.era —The Missouri Republi cholera in the West, showing that this or Ct in gives the following cases ot fatal disease is again gaining ground. Cases of cholera were very frequent in St. Louis. We 4 ¢ have been shown a Ietter of late date, from a citizen of Princeton, . the seat of justice of Dallas county, communicating the unwelcome intelligence that this disease has made its On the 17th, a par. appearance in that town, and already . made victims of Col, Alex. Dartch, together with his wife and only daughter, Mrs. Hayes. -There were several other cases in the village, but there liad been no other deaths. The citizens were fleeing from the disease. Cases of cholera have again occurr ed at Springfield Mlinois. There were five deaths Jast Friday. The panic season is over with the people, and they take the affliction very quietly. Col. Thomas Whittle, of Quiney, [linois, died of cholera, at Muscatine. Te was 70 years of age, formerly a resident of Alexandria, D. C., and then of Baltimore. The cholera has broken out at Car’ thage, Hlinois, one of the most healthy . places in the State. On the 16th, there were four deaths; on the 17th, one; and on the 19th two more cases . deterred by t ; steamer Abanero came in sight, and disleased by his sufferings and the climate, . eovering thom, ran them down, demol highly important news from Cuba, also . ghey F jing at Havana. jvenge of these atrocities will be territhousands will flock thither who are now he possibility of being shot There are now 700 patriots . occurred. Among the deaths were Mrs. Ilamilton and daughters, Amelia : and Ada Hamilton: a Mr. Frisby and yt apo Miss Chapin, living at Hamilton’s. under arms, and the Echo learns that. ~ ites ig eae Ae ) >halfher. We learn from the Christian Advothe Pampero had landed nearly half her . 7: N ‘ , eas leate and Journal, published at New force (610 men under Lopez, with 7000) — hier : k 1 2000 rifles) within tt York, that the negotiations, consequent pe aaa et ae Mi ee upon the earnest recomendation of the rel Bayaus : ue then went hate . Court for an amicable settlement of the other point some distance off. Tho} unfortunate dispute between the two Echo says: ‘branches of the Methodist Episcopal “The who'e force intended to unite, Church have failed, the South makat a point on the opposite side, and those . ing it a prerequisite that the justice first landed were placed under the di. ¢ ' {rection of Col. Crittenden, who found it . neeessary to divide his force, sending of her claim shall be adinitted, and the North refusing to make any such ac150 of them in advance by land, with, knowledgement. the heaviest part of the guns and ammunition, remaining himself with the . balance, who were divided into three . parties in separate boats. Scarcely had the parties separated, when the Spanish ne.. The following affectionate re. membrancer from anold friend has been handed us by the very Tencu in quee‘tion. As to the watters of fact in rela. . tion to his California experience, the in. dividual says he is worth enough to come ishing their boats, and precipitating them into the water. They were then . to Cazenovia village, buy the “Madisoa picked up, taken on beard the Abanero, Re ty Whie” a off ak dk ine ¥ , tdi 2e and transferred from her to the steamer . yey MB amp LSERG Sue ben ABE Esperanza. which conveyed them to . ftll-sized Editor. Havana. There they were tried, sen-!St, Marysville, the spot tenced to death, and shot Jin &n open! down in his geography, ground two miles from the city. . : Gen. Lopez marched against the Cu-. j bans, with a view to rescue his com. }rades, und at a distance of two or thrae . miles from Hayana, he was met bya . large heady of troops. A battle ensued, . land a large number of the Cubans were Tencn §. Fatrenitp.-~-Who in thie /killed, among them the Commandant. . Tesion did not know, and docs not re. general, imember with a sigh the extraordinary ! combination of brilliant talent, wit, sen timent, misdirected impulses, assurance, grace and good nature. catled Tench, who was successively, and ere he reached his majority, printer's devil, law stuis not jotted and as to his
playing subordinate parts. be has always taken leading ones—he not only . don’t lecture on temperance, he don't even practice it. . Avery strict vigilance is kept over. jall Americans on the island, and pass. . ports must be renewed every fifth day? . . Itisalso stated that the Spanish sol. ‘diers, not content with the blood of the . Americans who were executed, brutally, . stripped them, and placing their hats) and clothing upon staves, carried them through the streets, with shouts of in-. the . linois State Temperance Society speaking before the Legislature with great applause, editor of the State temerance organ, State Delegate to a world’s temperance conyention at London, clerk in a village post office, and \sult to the peaceable Americans resid. crier at auctions. . He rana brief and splendid career; . more successful in avoiding fame than . notoriety, he was master of a fervid elo. quence, and the slave of his senses.— . Having fewer dimes than needs, he sailfed to California two years ago. His course has been as erratic there as it ;was here. Immediately on his arrival, . he was shut out of employment by a for . midable attack of constitutional wexari;ness, which continued several weeks. . He then fled to the Stage for relief and . was successful, formed a company of his The Echo adds :—-If this and other items of rumor eoncerning the circumstances of said affair, be true, the roble. Indeed, we think it not at all improbable that, despite the vigilance of the U. 8S. Government, another large foree will be landed in Cuba as spe edily as possible after the receipt of the news at New Orleans. If this is done, these martyrs in the cause of liberty . . . . . \ . . Gi Be sold hy wholesale, at prices less than . gress from Kentucky. . promise that their lives should be sparlowa. ed. Notwithstanding this promise, they Trinexe Orvicn, Dubuque, Aug.9. . were all executed, in accordance with The Whigs have elected their ticket, . the following ; sd shalt : in whole or in part, in Dubuque, Jackson, . Havana, Aug. 17, 1851, ly Well ‘nt a judicious location In the! Scott. and Lyne Counties. His Excellency, the Captain-General, mines. Deleware County is uncertain; Clinton! has ordered the publication of the sen2. a ,is probably Democratic; so also are Des. tencefissued against the fifty pirates, taA man named Gaston est into an ™oimes and Cedar, . ken by his Excellency and the Com—— ‘ : : : yy Ph eee tits cis sa mandant-General of Marines, a altereation this evening, in this city : Hp Democratic majority in the aad he hile pladed 8 thé Senses! > ‘f) “* of Kepresentatives at Washington so far eae ae hn . i with anather named Sittler, a Consta. sed, “Pweiy ‘ A i ~ perior authority of the Island, ? ; ‘ as beard from,is twe t A . “CREE hawt ‘ : ble of Nevada township, about some , Bet ane : Decker.--It having been disposed in a hi ; A valuable deposit of Iron Ore has the general order of the 20th of April Ogs, Which soon enme to blowa, in) been found by Mr. G. P. Smith, on the! last, and subsequently reproduced, what hich Gaston was severely stabbed ee ee of Lake Superior, at Groscap jah uld be the fate of the pirates whe 4 ‘ ‘ . near Micipoten river. Large ities Pwo ( f} 301 his Isin the hip and left breast before they t bie ag ny bad t Arge quant ties "would dare to profane the soil of this Is ia : ioe Y (of tron are found in dykes, so near the lamd, and having heard the declarations Were separated. The sinb was pro. const that it can he wheeled on oar 1 a of the said fifty individuals by which bably made with a pocket dirk, iuflict., Ye" ’ It is said that thousands of tons! they have been found to belong to the : ; , . way be obtained at that place very) band commanded by the traitor Lopez ing a narrow wo eg tee q tye pA : ‘ " : ‘ yt s ia ound The wounds readily. Three men in one day got out) . have disposed, in accordance with the were examined by Dr. Knoy, and it. five or six tons. is his opinion they are not dangerous! than gold digging. . the ry ey and more especially, the ; = : The low rain : yin.) Royal Order of the 12th June ultimo, unless internal hemorrhage should sus! he lowa Inquirer mentions a new in ya , e Ie ne ' . gs {vention connected with the art of printWhich was issued for this particular case, pervene from the wound in the breast. ing. It is no less than a printing press . that the said individuals, whose names + i . propelled by galvanic magnets, upon “ppear hereafter, should suffer the pen= Eldridge’s Theatrical Company which . which not only a perfect register is ob. Slty of death, by firearms. The execuhas been playing here with considerable . ined, but there is said to be no limit ae eo aed 5% Dyer shed te P " ¢ is 1@ o th fi mi -In-Chie lls success the past week, leave on Mon-. {Pe d. An apparatus is arranged + Veer Serpe oF See . for cutting tie paper after the sheet is, City: day for Downievillo. lestted, ees Pees . ) they can be brought from Sacramento. . » We believe a jobbing house, possessing . the requisite capital, would do extremeae . Jose pe La Coneita. Gh Bigg ARES RRS Spry . At Chicap . ok The Echo gives a very clear and conThe press of States’ and fureign news. yy: ; hicage lately, the water of Lake . . & WOE QeOer nd Waused-by ¢ betint met . Michigan, rose and fell from two to four . sistent narative of the operations of the Iva! almost simultane~/ feet every half hour during an entire! Patriots, as fellows ously of two Steamers hay crowded eut . day. At dusk in the evening, while the : digs : : . A resume of the operations of the Panearly al} Original matter from our te: . surface of the Lake was perfectly . triots, since the be phe of the revolt dsy's ikvue ‘ smooth, the water rose to the height of! shows that the ree a ride tei four feet twice within an hour. Similar " as Se place on the 4th ult, in the partedos of Guaymoro and Gibaniea, where 250 mea assemled. The next day they maiched . jon Los Tunas, but mistaking a party of . . Patriots from Holguin fer Governmsnt Rhode Island. . troops, a fight ensued, in which, before A boat, containing Mr. Rufus Reed, the error vas diseovered five meu were . occurrenoes have been before remarkcd in Lake Michigan, as well asin other A young woman in Pr vidence, uamed Mary Rhodes, has been ar, . Breet lukes and the streams which cen; . nect them resied and fined $20 and costs for! #ppearing in the sir_ets in male attire. { . ' That is much better Royal Ordinances, the Geweral Laws of . pronunciamento took jsieep, had their brains dashed out by the . will be duly avenged. lown and failed. . Six weeks since he was playing subor. dinate parts ata little theatro in St. . Marysville, and lecturing in the dig. gings on temperance. [Madison County . Altogether the news by this steamer is the most stirring that has reached us . for some time. There seems to bea method in the movements of the insur. Whig. gents that promises success, as well as! insert tecitcs soni unaciosumatinon . 7 . . 9 . ” ~ . . that spirit of eonscious right so necessa. Tur Norruern Mrixcs.—Ie aro con\Ty in & movement of the kind. What-. ever may be thought of the Americans who have joined in the struggle, the . Cuhans must have the sympathies of all who hate despotism and rejoice in the stantly hearing the most suecessful accounts of the miners through our up ceuntry. At Barton’s bar, Long's bar, Ousley’s Sicard’s, Park’sand Rose’s bars, . great suecess has attended their efforts . this season, $12 and $16 being their av: brabsichecay ici! jerage per man, At Union, Indian & Nespread of republican institutions. . gro bar, not a claim is to be had at any Storm. —A storm of almost incredible . price. At Missouri bar they are makvielence occurred on the 3d August in. ing fair wages ; at Bullard’s Foster's . Pennsylvania and Maryland. The Cum. Slate Range, and Geodyor's, new discov. . berland Civilian « . eries are being made constantly, and the } n says: . prospect, a brilliant one ahead. . “Its ravages in the neighborhood of A miner from Condemned bar, on the . Selbysport and Accident, were most ter-. Yuba river, thirty-five miles from this rible. Theusands of trees wore blown . down, stopping up the roads and predacing a wilderness of confusion difficult to }coneeive. Heuses were unroofed, barns . and stables eyerthrown and _ fields ef . ployed. grain destroyed. At Selbysport,a child) Myr. Batty, just from Rich bar, at the was killed by the falling of a roof, and’ Forks of Feather river, says, “the mijin the Sime vicinity a woman was car-/ ners are doing exceedingly well.” One ried off her feet and torn to pieces by company, the name of which we do not . the hurricane.” remember, is making “large strikes.’ . . * The damage done to preperty, . The cry everywhere we hear from is, is very considerable, and will be severeOro nasranre. ly felt, The loss of property is not the =Wyannor Diecincs.—At these dig‘only loss, for several lives were sacrificed gings men are averaging $12 a day and pened —— oalareity. Gl wok new leads are being daily discovered. . infants, re anry f s oth IGINGS ni ‘ ; and Heng 3 fd oho ease on ; fe ajar i dint within oe . ithe above region, tells us that within the last two weeks sone new discoveries have been made, and that should the rain “hold of” for a month longer, several will have made their piles. . for some weeks past, $75 per day to the man. There dre twenty-seyen men emfalling stones of @ chimney, which, together with vue house, was prostrated to the ground , The stor.a lasted but an instant—a single }'ast and all was over. Jt seemed to have invariably moved in belts, a fow hundred yards wide. Soce ideu $12, $lo and $20 per day ore being made here.— Marysville Herald. . The weather has been pleagant of late aeAs to his playing at . dent, lecturer on temperance, agent of) place, infurms us that the “Big Eddy } . Company” are dividing. and have been . ~ aoa een a nO a. ~ nee IN LIVERPOCL.—Lhe . Orange clubs of Liverpool celebrated Afonday July 14, (the anniversary of he battle of the Royne,) by a proces jsion Between two and three thousand persons took part in the ceremonie . The procession was attacked by the Irish inhabitants of Liverpeol, and a . fight ensued, which resulted in three persons being killed and a large nnm. ber dangerously wounded. ‘is thus described: . As soon as the procession had got a \little beyoned Seymour street, the lTri-hmen saluted the Orangemen with a volley of brickbats and stones; the Orangemen advanced, those who had pistols drew and fired upon ithe crowd, while the swordsmen and ;nalberdiers rushed on to their agsailants, wounding many severely and putting them to flight. The scene at jthis moment it would be impossible to describe; several were on the ground . weltering in their blood, others were hastily borne off by their companions, ;and the Orangemen being left masters jof the field, coolly reformed and pro iceeded through the streets, the banda playing “The Boyne Water,” taking ithe route through all the principal the. roughfares of the town, the line exjtending a mile in length, and the ‘swordsmen at intervals thronghont jthe line on either side, about 200 po . licemen, with Mr Commissioner Down jing at their head, formed into a com . pact body, bringing up the rear. . At Parkslane some fresh rioting joccurred, without ‘any very serious consequences. s The scene bay Below we give the official vote \for District Judge in the 10th Judicial District, by which the democratic candi. date, Wm. T. Barbour is elected by 110 ; majority over Stanton Buckner the whig . nominee Sutter County Barbour 126 . Buckner 1dl—maj 5 Yuba County. . Barbour 2465—maj. 159 Buckrer 2206 Nevapa County. Barbour 138] . Buckner 1425~—-maj. 44 Fatat Accipent. —In our issue of the 14th instant, we gave an account of an accident to John Shrineir, a German, at . Grass Valley, by which his log was hadlly broken, in consequence of his falling . forty feet down a shaft, on Gold Hill We regret to learn that he died on the . fifth day afterwards from erisypelns, . which set in—upon the broken limb . Shrineir was a hard working man, of jgood habiis, and has left a family in . Uinois } ah . ' ecreaigne : The New York Tribune of Saturday evening, the 2d instant thus contradicts jrumors respecting alleged }marrisce &e.: For a week or two past the papers [have been swacinit g with all kinds of absurd rumors respecting the marriage of Jenny Lind and Bellitti, and one notorious journal in this city has even stated positively that the ceremony was to take place in Canada in a few days ' -? vennys 7 All this is the merest gossip \Jcany Lind and Signor Belletti are not and do not intend to be married The latter will probably leave in the Atlantie on Wednesday next, unaceom ;panied by Jenny Lind, who. we un: . derstand from good authority, contem. plates spending the winter in this couns jtry, though itis not likely that she . will give any more conéerts, A/r. Benjedict arrived inthe city last evening, jand will leave in the Atlantic on Wedjnesday, Ile is now staying at the Iryjing House. . . The correspondent of the Missouri Re pallican, writing from Paris, July 2d, say3 :— . . “Lola Montes, the real bona fide Lola, is now under the instruction of a celo{brated dancing master, in London, res suscitating the performences on the light fantastic toe,’ which made her @istinguished in her youth, and which brought her to the notice of her old royal lever. . in Whose palace she soon forgot the art which had before given her her bread. It is said that she will accompany Mr. Barnum to America in the fall, and give a series of flings and twirls at each of . the principal theatres of the Union. . The disgraceful celebrity which she has acquired will, doubtless, cause as great arush to see her as there has been to . hear the pure, noble minded Jenny Lind. . But so it is with people in gencral — ‘They turn frem gentle Julict’s toe To count the twiils of Fanny Elisier’s toe.’ . . And this reminds me that Fanny Ellsler has at last left the stage, never. she . Says, tu return toit. She gave her last . performance on the 21st of Jane, at the . Imperial Theatre of Vienna, und has . now retired to her beautiful Villa at . Eschl, with a fortune of nearly two mil‘lions of dollars. TS“A girlat the Womans Rights Conven‘tion at Akron, Ohio, declared, for ber own part she leved man individually land collectively, better than woman, land so, she was sure, did every one of . her sex, if they, like her, would utter their real sentimenis. — She wa* more anxious for man’s elevation and improve. ment, than for woman's, and so was every . «rue woman.” —Boston Transcript . . The subject of the division of the State excites much discussion