Arri Val of the Steamship Cambria-. IFTEE:y . DAYS LATER. New york, Aug. 18-71 P. M. mbria reachedl . the dock at Boston live o'clock this afternoon. , o 1 Aug. dth.—Flour 275a27a Gd Philadelphia and 4 13altimOre ‘var-: l eet—ais to 26s 6d. Sour 218 to !mond and Alexandria, 95s to 26 s. ails and Ohio :13s to tirss. i States wheat, Mate and mixed, er 70 lbs. Red. 7s 6:i to Bs 9d. The t' ! quarter t . • Liverp tier bbl. • ranted ea 234. Ii i New Orl United • to Us 2d -15 lba., 3(135 GI, Barley per.6o lbs. 480 tbs., 30,134 4 , Peas per 504 lbs. dian Corn sound, 2Gs to 30s pr mount and heated, 20 to 213. In : Meal at Its pr - bbl. Some* par iah Corn which had been slightly restore), were yesterday sold by 5s pr qr,, and some western canal fid to 235 .(id per bid., but the a were generally unimportant. 'e is the result of yesterdays mar lows a serious decline in the value Ws. -A panic has ch: . cidttilly taken Aerated by the gradual downward lof the late London markets, ,the .rable state of the home crops, and a lof the money market. 'tlon Corn Market on Monday, the •mivheat of S' to 10s per qr took 'y have no quotations to give of i transactions. line mess per tierce of 304 lbs 'new Ordinary 81 to 675. Mess ,per 111 1 5 50a585. • Ordinary, 40 to 50s. ness, 70 to Wis., old 70a70=, Mess litlme, 51 to 6 i os. , ricid and smoked. I,IJ, 40 to 455: s free from bone, 52 to 655; in rib short 54 to 6.55; .shoulders 30 to . smoked or dried, in canvass, per 50s; casks, in ,ult, 47 to 525. prime, 50 to 57s per cwt; middling ordihary 40a4 Is. is leaf in kegs, 50 to 52s per icwt. Ds or,dmary, to middling 42 to 455. I sensation has taken place in the ket since the d.Terture of the last id which in a greater or less degree d every branch of trade and mann- For some days the funds have been -ISCUICIA state, awl though BACCLI In a very ti, _ . lations Ira o not been to the extent which it Was appre tended it ,‘‘ould; the financial con dition of tl e countit may be said to be in a Mate of th most painltil uneasiness. The t Manehest r business bas.for the last few days been of a lithited charlictrr, and if the mone tary embarrassment Lib:atm:es, increased dis tress will be the inevitable consequence. The ]lank of Eigland announce an increased scale of discountskvhich causei an immediate fall of 'half per cert. " I par4ament has been dissolved, and the new, elections re proceeding V . igetously. ,So far as the ret erns havelieen Made, they show a complete riumph for the Ike trade principles. Lord Johi Russell, who will form,a new Cab inet, has een, re-eL.cted fur the city of Lon don. ..,43a- . :: - The pr skel:s of the harvest still continue unexcept orLably encouraging and every where ( promises'a most abundant yield. It has al ready ben begun in tile of the southern counties.) The craps ,of wheat, oats, 'cane barley are invariabl lnulthy, The potato, notwith standing ail that has been said abuut the re appearan IA of the di:wa i t:A.la last year, is af fected Int to a very Hunt .d extent. Repors from Irehind are generally glowing, famin•xt d di-easetire rapidly banishing-, but ange anomaly, outrage continues • rife. The al aragt at Party, n steadily proparii the intpc :cessions of the pr'elacy; priesthood rof the country to the Ohl 'lreland e l'arge,'und the ‘venlthy inhabitants 'nerease. It is expected that it large of the repealers will be returned to lal Parliament nt this election. The rI I barked 1 where th rnalti3 of All% O'Connell wete Behenhind for Dublin on Sbnday, cy arrived the: fullowialr day. 1 heavy failnrCs have occurred in the e, and many Others of a serious char apprehended. Sever , corn tra aster at A fort tidable con , piracy of the ny)st des picable haracter Iyeterred at Rome.— rile obj et of did co Ovirators, whottinotinted to Ee v rat %vat to itassacr: remove the -Po'pe to Nap] sby - form?. Five Car.linah;, with ex alted ci ii and military ntilecs, have been dis covered to have been 'abettors. • Popu ar feeling hIS become inoro tranquil in France. The Eing was well received by the pe&ile 'on the celebration of tile glorious t three d ys. The Chamber' of Deputies is about t ) be dipsolved.: \ ~ Sere al sti»g,trinary:,battleb have been fou(!ht ), wee 1 the Rosman.; mid I Crca.,:liatis, the former being defeated with considerable loss. Swi zerland is threatened %% ith a revolu tion. 'rut: Mtx icxx GAN ai the city ut Mexico, or the 2'31110f, vad 'receiied n few day ago by a re hie firm in till's city. writer, who to be a shrewd observer of events, says y expre , hes the of all intelligent n Mexico,avowia. , hid surprise that Ico-rr ha d nut Set then advanced upon Or: ter da July, epect Reems he on !nen Gen. : pital. Two good re Jolt., this writer would spring Iron] ScoTT's advance, the C aversl all indications weal clearly trilitiv sy possession of the city; find, that a l , and valuable aoluinit of goods %Iv b". 11137) g for that event, to enter at Vera Criiz, and al bis e'l Urg e waiti; hope and belief that it would facilitate I misage from Vera Cruz, to Mexico, nod ote an actitc, tr.,de with the States in miscalled republic. The goods, vain ig they are, would pay a very large amount ties under Mr. W A tatiat's lute 'rarifrreg- Ala, and would, in this itopurzant respect, Jy facilitate our tine/alio) Another t %%mild be that all tiraftl;'qpri the Amer government cduld be fN4 , 5 and willing fgotiated on the most favorable terms, by alist:4 in the city, who, with uttdoubtpcl -is, are alike reluctant to emhark it-iii - the jean funds, and afraid to pend_it-out of the try, most of it being syecie'. We give oPiniol73 fur what they are wotrh.— indicate ? .„,at_least, a state of feeling higiy favorable to penr4.., and are important ass . ) owing the direction of public ;30 raiment c am ng the mercantile and moneyed classes. Pr mvtranian. • II EATII OF TIM WHOLESALE MURDERER..— WI .LIAM FREESIA N, the murderer of the VAN X:: 3: family near Auburn, died in jail at thnt pla e on Saturday morning last, as we learn, fro the Advertiser. lie has been in a most mil l erabis condition for some weeks past, and all 'who have seen him within that time have be ome satiS,fied that whatever he may have ben u hen r ite committed the horrid act for ~,... 'Wh ch lie has been so long imprisoned, he had be onto a perfect idiot. • A teleg raphic des tlat..ll was sent to Dr. BRIGHAM, of Utica, ad vis tig him of the fact, arid on Saturday even in be visited Auburn, and held a postmortem e initiation upon, the body, the result of which sr) I' prdbably be ' o ni Veit hereafter.—tieffara ft .Fte; , tilic. • • ' i -- - --- ---- - •- „,. _ - , if 4 T.; TIM itiA 'V TO - raLm.---A ue.tvew York T it i ie Sun, speaking of the tirades in the Eng lis pre:a:Li against America, and the idle rant inioor;git press in relationqo them, days: 1.,, twos. Own part, we do not object to Eng., his) abuse, , till expect to hear a great deal int re of it, TbD more John Bull feels his sink in condition , the more his wrath will boil or r. in words. . His Smiles and his ' frowns a alike 'valulesFi, Ile never.was friends, but v'th tyrants and robbers, and his elle - lit" hat. sedto be forrri dable, We will forgive his temper,...aud ' ontitme to feed his people ten" they lire i want; but as to disturbing a peace bete/ en the two countries, ' his 'stile Littitude %%mid ho' like a revolt in an lii-limise. an Mu remedy is to 'slop his 1 EMI - , • From Mexico. POILADELPHIA, •August 21, 1847. Di I Eawkins, of Baltimore, died at Tamp - co on the '7th August, of yellow fever. ' The Orleans brinemails from Vera Crti l ,z and Tanipico, and a large number of Paiteep gers, among whom are several officers of the army and navy; 122, discharged vol nteers, and *ix soldiers and foriy-five teamste s.' The mail bag was stolen just bef re the steamer arrived at NeW Orleans, and, rifled of part of its contents, including three treasury notes of fifteen hundred dollars each. A par tiontof the mail was subsequently received. A detatchment of Capt. Ilesancon's compa ny,' while scouting, _was tire,d upon by gueril las, fifteen miles front Vera Cruz, but no hartn done. - . .. A train, egeorted by one ihOusand men, left Ver Cruz on the evening of the sth, ,under Alajar Tully, Wilson being sick. Some aci counts get down the number ut from fifteen hundred to two thousand. A number of loaded pack mules arrived at Vere Cruz from the interior, without molesta tion, and it is believed that Jarauta, in orderi to raise the wind, has adopted the 'plan of granting permits. - , • - A mail arrived at Vera Cruz on the ad, from Ilaps. The bulletin paper printed at Jalapa ves some further particulars of Pierce's march through that town. By that it appears that the train passed by without halting; but Pierce, with three hundred dragoons,'entered the,city, and addressed a note to the tnthori ties of tho rlace, demanding provisions, and intimating his determination to send them all as prisouers to Perote if his requirements were nut complied with. The authorities -were extremely indignant at - the demand, but furnished the provisions. The saute paper says that'great'discord ex ists between the volunteers and regular M illers of the American army: and, also; that it appears, from intercepted letters, that Pillow and Mimi American Generals did not deern it advisable to attack the capital;,autl also that the American detertera represent desertid,ris from our camp as numerous, that Scott's ar my would be destroyed, if sufficient induCe ments to desert .were i)eld out; and says as sassinationa at Jalapa were frequent both . of American and Mexicans. Tire Picayune ex press rider before a:Flounced killed, it now tip pears_Was captured, tried and shot. Further Mthq6in papers contain a series of decrees of .3antit Anna, promulgatiA through Lotnbariino,i - eferi ig to organization of troops, forced loans, yet., ect. •031 commands strict compliance with the order directing all Amer icans to leave the capital, and remain at. San Juan Del Rio—the order inCludes naturalized citizens as well as ArnericiaUs by birth, and who, underany pretext, hatUobtained leave to remain. There were various other decrees*,_ showing how abiOlute Santa Anna's uuthori ty was. The New Orleans touched at Tampico on the 10th.. The Sentinel says they have not been attacked, nor is yellow feverraginobut that it was reasonably healthy., Letters from Taylor's camp to the,2sth of July say nothing of his intended movement's' towards San Luis,Potosi:: The steamship Fanny was to leave - Vera Cruz for New drleans on the 10th. Laier'fra . ffli ganta Fe St, Louis papers of the J Ith inst. I are In ter intelligence from Seidl( Fe, receive 4 by a party of traders who left Santa Fe on the "th July. At Nos, 75 miles this side of Santa 'Fe, in -1 Iligence was received on the sthibst., that ieut. Brown, attached to Capt. 'llorine's ompany of volunteers,with several of his men, ! f ind been killed at a small place about:ls milqs otn Brjos. Amongst the killed were J. Mc lenahan and C. Qmsenburg; I one report f' aye that the whole number of loped wto; 14. On receiving .this intelligence,.,Maj.,ll.ld nonson, with a party of his men, pursued the 111exicans, overtook them, fought with and killed tive or six of them, and chptured be tweet' 'thirty and forty, whom he threatened to hand..idly this energetic conductl he induced a conl4sion from some tif them that there was anotho conspiracy on foot to bring about a Inassaqe and revolution at Taos and Bagos. A loiter was found upon one of the prison ers, purporting, though not signed, to conic from the ring-leader of the former conspiracy, in whiCh he desired to be informed of the pre , vise time when Fisher's company 'of artillery Would !leave Santa Fe, as that was nece: sary to'the Inatnrity of his plans. He declared, in this letter his determination never to rest while there was an Anieri6an alien New 'Mexico. Of the disposition of the pris4mers we ha 'e no further' infor4timf. • Mr.:MeCartl , 'met the first train of Goipin meta tragons about otte'hundred miles from :-'anta Fe. "Lieut. Love, 'who' has charge of the Government money, aniounting to more than 11300,000, was met at the Upper Semirone Springs, and Colonel Easton's battalion of in. lautryou the Arkansas. A few days previous to hismeeting, Col. Baston's command, while some Of his men It ere employed iu gefting wood on the opposite side of the river, they were completely surprised by a party pf the, Catnanche Indians, by whotn eight of the: Mint tier ‘Nere killed and three wounded. Olie of the wounded was scalpetkilive, rind c l was, found in-this situation by thus who were sent to relieve them. He stated hat he was se,dlP - e'd by a white roan —tliat he legged for his life, telling him that 14 had a family de pendent upon hiurfor support; but that the on ly replyreceived from hisautagonisi was, that he did not care a d--m. We regret our not being able to state the names of the persons. killed and wounded, M. the company to Whiel they Wonged. It. tku be two or titre dayk , before we have thiChiMr t mation. Lieut. Si npstl, of Mike Claik's Artillery Battalion, was le :t. jat C9bncilczrove, on his way home. • . M Ewalt) ty OF A SOLDIER.—On 11,Inn'claY, 26th ult., the steamer Yazoo left New • Orleans, bound up the and whqn she had proceeded about six , miles, she strimk a snag, which carried' away her,wheel-house. Lieut. Niles, commanding one of the companies of the 2d, Illinois regi ment, just returned from Mexico, and who were so conspicuous for their gallantry- at Buena Vista, x% as a passenger on the boat, and having gone below at the time, was car ried away in the wreck of the wheel- h ouse and drowned: H; baly was •not funny' when the. boat left the shore, after temporaieily re pairing the damage done to her. This was not a death meet for so brave a soldier! - The Washington Union, speaking of the strides which have been made,• and are still being made towards subduing, our infatuated Mexican enemy, and qcourpiering e peace," says: "Troops (and a peculiar species.), are about to assail and overwhelm the guerillas, Andre- store the line of our communication between the capital and the coast. Should the Mexi cans now'decline the-olive branch, we must strike the harder, and make them feel more sensibly the pressure- of the war. We_ will then -see men of some moral courage arise to brave all the consequences of public opinion fact, to givei it a new direction, and to smooth the way to pacification:" A Jury, in one of the Sriuthern counties of Ohio, who had been sitting on - e trial for steal ing a Jug a whiskey, rendered, the following ver76l: , - "We, the jury, find the defendant not guil ty, 'find recommend him .ttimer.4.. • The S her itr to tretit i he jury—the attnrneye to pay cost, and..llle - Indge•toftli the jug which the defen dant. drank:cut of, and which the jury have emptied during the trial." "What do you cell 'here,'.! bawled out a loafer ppaaing a harberdasher's shop %other day. "Illookheads,". returned the surly'deal er. "Must had a darned good Bale," replied the fir*t, "ar I den': tee bat or* !tore left." 111•11 _ Effl! THE 0,13S "Tlii World 4 Govor 111:1111 V. 4 E!!!!!M1M =Ei DEMOVHA oovrk F R j : t. FOR CA. AL CO5l MORRIS LON CU -- °Tilos. iI. (Tea to procitre LLTSON ttbsc rib The Commerci 1 more ( that 11 f Odd 1.': 1 the or this and last, wee gan of the Order u the fact. We etr eiety, unless the tertned.! MEE o:7*The storeiteepers . c ing the baby jun i per as Os to their stores, for th those 14dies who go sho hies. T. W. Mahe,. at • I has the article 01 hand (17'1'1)e Gszei of $9,8'32 89 toW er's eleoon had F. tlemen, wo wane fine twined seine in the mean hail, t, to has s ne&zed:ont one item lards to 75,000 it said POw aved tit State. Come, gen the ,bal are in figures—not mces 3 as we said before—anc: I l e, we will take measures to itil of tile item given. So, Jill talteiseveral weeks yet to lance, at that rate. ascertain the tr chalk it up . --it make oit the ball The Demberals of Pater county have put in numinatien the following ticket fur County ollices:1 Assembly, Hon. Timothy Ives; t3heritT, Niles White, Esq.; Coroner, Dr. AMos French; Commissioner, G. H. Olm 'steaA; Auditor, ifforace Lcet. They will be erected, of course. ( Q?' Neither the Commercial nor Gazette itid a word to 'say about Gen. Taylor's last ter, ''in which he says he has yet to make his mind about a National Bank and Pro tectiv.e tariff. May be the? had not seen it— and then again may be 7 —which is a great deal lnoro probable—they wished to see what their eaders said of it. McKean Ct;unty Democratic con vention met at Smethpore on the 16th and nominated the following gentlenien for Cou nty offices: Assembly, R.l3ennett; Coroner, B. C;'Corwin; Commissioner, Elias J. Cook; Treasurer, Ezra Ilar,i; Auditors, E. F. Cdr . - rier and John P. Melvin. OZ' The Gazette pays us two very high compliments, for:which we are duly grateful. Firsi, in attributing our article last week on Gen. Taylor's march to the Rio Grande, to the pen of Judge Thompson. And secondly, in acknowledging its inability to answer it, and resorting to the columns of the National Intelligencer fur a rejoinder, which, we . may as well here remark, is just no 7ejoinder at all. It is scarcely necessary for us to say that Judge Thompson never saw the article. in question, until it apkared in print. He per sonally cares too little for the misrepresenta tions of the Gazette to refute hem himself. (qr , ' Our friends in Clarion appear to be wide awake, and determined to give the Whigs "Jesse" at the coming 'election. They have put in nomination the•'following ticket: As pembly, John Emitlyi Commissioner, Stephen D. Barns; Treastirer,, Wm. T. Alexander; Auditor, Peter D. Simpson. We are glad to see our cotemporary of the Democrat among The fortunate. ; He'll undoubtedly be elected, arid make an'excellent yreasprer. (The Gazette crows lustily over the re sult in Tennessee. When it is taken into consideration that the State has been always Whig, there dues'ot appear much left to crow about. Dmocrat4 of Jefferson have nom inated the following Colnity ticket: Assem bly*, Joins Keatly and John W. Jenks, subject to the concurrence of Venango and Clarion camties; Treasurer, JOhn liastingli; Commis sioner, James M. Wilson; Auditor, Samuel Mitliron; Coroner, Jacob Schaffer. "Will Shrink bo Re•cle 4 cted?" We are daily naked this question by our 110emscratic friends from the country, and we havuitsvpriably answered in the affirmative. Once for all, however, tve jtow say, so far as our information goes, there is not the least doubt but that he will sweep the State b e y ten thousand! All our exchanges Speak intim fident and cheering tones - of Such a result, while all our information of a private charac ter, goes to confirm it. The Democracy are 4 eNory where united and awake to the impor tance of the issue inVolved, and When such is the - case, can any one even suspect the , Keystone of rccrcanc l y to her long establish- ed and well tried Unlitical faith. The prinei pal hope of the whigs rested on dkisions in our ranks when they nominated Gen.- Irvin, and now that that forlorn prop is - kncked from under them, they see defeat, inevitable and overw elm ng, staring them in ato l l face. At first the T rilFof '42 l .was , to be the grand is sue upon which the battle was to be fought— "ruin".at "panic" were to be the weapons used to ann t note forever the political ascen dency of the Democratic party in Penntiylva. nia—w bile "British Free Trade," 1 and "pro tection to home industry," were to he the clap trap cries of deception to mislead the,honest and unsuspecting into the ~support of , their men and schemes.. These, hoivever, have all failed them. "Ruin" Weetd not cOtne at their •bidding. while "panic" coUld.nobe raised i without it. The manufacturers a d the peo ple' generally are all prosperous, and conse qUently desks no change; hence "protectiorr, • and "free trade" hare lost their' power, ab& are fast becoming,.as Webster said of a Uni ted States Bank,- "obsolete Ideas." If the de 7 s moara4, - then, are true to themselves andit elf party on' the second 'Tuesday of Oct o ber, which *e have no doubt they will be, Snorts will undoubtedly he 'tritiinphantly -re f eleSed by at least ten tliciti . sindl- - ' A Poor To'ol." The Boston Atlas; whik, in speaking of the Rev. Mr. McCall'', the last public Whig ness.-agalnat,,ihe Preaideg r a whose priadtidtkin'i have,lieetibaWhe'd strut' by the Cliisfilelni Grazote atte.onunerciat, says; • - ' "He w,as" an npilicnnt fcii an' aii piaintment. ai a chaplain, which the President "refused to give him, and therein feted right ly. He is unquesti9nably a poor tool,', End the sooner be, forsakes the, professieri the btsttrii 11111111111111111 . _ ... . _ ...._ _ . , . . I OPPOSED TO TECE lit /A3. - -." .Tell a whigrin cOriversation 0 1 61 his part is opposed to the w'ftri and ton to d i ne,he readi , Iyadmits it. Make:the - same chage throogh• the iblumus of a paper, and the same individ- \ ult.( wipl talk largely, if not learredly, about 1.413' 4 . sfulseltoe'd and profligacy"• of the demo cratic Press, and wonder an edi or can have such a;disregard of truth 95 to say so. In this ,he, will su tamped by his party i,ress, which, l., although' we OY - teeming with riles denun- I ciatory of t e Administration, a d condemn ini every ovement ovement made fUr t, e successftil prosecution i' hostilities, hypoc itically pro fesses :frien ship towards the b eve Officers, and Men w o peril their liviis, ' nd s'tcritice theit,'Comfo t, in defence of th it country's honori and' ights. While they never let an opportunity escape to claim Pa lor, Worth, Wool, 1 and tideed every rancor in the army. whosif poli,t,"cal opinions ate net •w ell known, and who hit at all distinguishes himself, as true and ld 'al whigs—"lferiry lay whigs" 1 . , —the e v., ls? _ do not scrupte•to r joice, "with exceeling teat joy," at the election 'of mem-, bets cif Congress opposeditO the further pros ecution of the wan' Not Tong siriee two mein.- 1 bers 'were elected from 'Neiv d'ampshire - - Mesa e . Wilson and Tuck— b • their 'union with he abelitionists,*Who are 'nown, if not pledged, to oppose every ineasu e calculated to bring Mexico to terms: Fo thwith con gratulation and rejoi4ing. Wer ' the order of the da l y.;-o cry federal paper opt ur exchange teemd wit exultation at the t 'ought of the 'emba rass ent they would can e the admin; istration if hey should have am r jority in the next Congr ss. •Now, having pretty certain ly ascertait ed that they will ha e a majority,- their 'exult tion at the prospect o stopping the supplies fo the army knows no ,ounds. 'And yet, they a e net opposed to tl e war! No! RVER. ,od too Muth." nuu7 1541*. 11N?TIftNL NOR, HUNK., 'IIS9IONER, G S 1' R. E T 11 . s a duly authorized rs for this paper. lan intimates, both Observer ist he or llows. Such is not an of no sect or so- tic party may be so rawa eabt are adlt neceisary appenda o accoinmodation I ping with their ba- No. 1, Perry Block, although t' last Cont.: Union, vot additional the federal chusetta an Bed resoluti irty-four of es, represent: ed against th number_'of .State legisl d r lrerment to io s denouncj unnecessari'"Halthougl ly and daily, teemed wit it n? "qediabliored w the extension of slaver has never ventured or d red to eXpress a word of disapprobation of th course of the thirty four members of Congress who voted against the army bill, or those l6islatures which for sook thc legitimate bu iness o f f their several states, to'donpunce the dminis ration and the war:—yet they, the fe eral w rig party, aro not opposed to the war! Wes ver effrootery or brazen faced impudence mor bold! ' Haskell, pit the stump in .'J pounces our soldiers as "blood proclaims his Course in Coogrej (which thank, fortune / lie is in call theni cidi, "acknowledge tl way, take a retrograde march, of B•mapatte's retreatfrOm Mo reach the east bank' of the 11 Corwin in' the Senate, tells th! wele,ome : pur volunteers "wit and d h ospitable graves," 'and is reeled by the whole federal - cl to Georgia—and yet, they ate the war! From the time Cong state of war existed by the a they have mit ceased to throw I in d o way of its prosecution! tiv has been assailed, and evei ci • ocr t engaged in,, the Service i aim [ sod, vilified acid traduced— belie been stqinitized as men alsj" enlisted under the spell dti ' • " dr mming an t rtnking, an ex Berated tales of the mortali circulated te prev,ent others fro —and yet they ere not oppos Their course has been such a: 1 111 'deans to believe that "or in this country •' is opposed sip , onuneimento' would soon "one entire party' and the "w s cil - James*: Ifolk hurled f TI ey bevel tlius given "aid th ,nemy, and S'et ;bey tell no 0", nor never hive been, oppu but only tolthe flawkward,a thore of it." l• , • They forget when thy makp assertions Use this that Congress has declared that Mexica is l i i„, the "awkward and villainous authors of it," and that Generals Taylor and Scott have both endorsed, ver their own si natures; 'what Congresst us • affirmed. T ere is, howei.- or, tone !nit, grdat while, a ress that stum ble. into the truth and exposes this cloven foot of the partA which they o industriously e,t/eavor to hide, in such a thanner that all • an see it.l Whether this is i done in accord miee with the Old adage, that "children and foils always ' tell the truth, r not, we leave 1 fo others • l to sar — but certa nit is, the 'Erie •C ronicle Of last week, illet t to cat out of the ' 1 • b g." In ! exulting over the esult of the re c nt elections at the South and West, that pa= p r says the success of the whigs acinnot but b . regarded as conclusive p+f• that the peon p e have - turconfidence in the national admin. iitration, tir that its principal measure, :the I 1 . tsara with .1 1 Yezico, has not the approbation of the mass of-our citizens. In the nokh - ern and raiddle•States this, fact has all along been'ap p?rent.P lAnd yet this is an accredited.or : - gait of that Oarty which would fain make •the people- be lieve that' they arp not opposed to lbw ' war! ,Ilt cantiot be said if them, as it was of one of old, - that "much learning hath made thee ,pad,' l r for after forty yeirs of. almost un interrupted defeat, they have not yet learned that, even in politics, "hbnesty iri tlurbest pot- , 11' - • icy." - ' , , . . ~ /•-• •_ • , Gassy'. Lady's poet ~ Our friend Outley's. highly popular mag azine, for September, „has hoer* reeeived.-- Theillusirations are, "Purity..", a, magnificent Mezzotint ' .by Warner, Wien? °file Alay, , of N9W Vor.r. a.heautifilline, !engraving by 4, h.neei .4 ,Ode/ cot t ages , thre engra.vings.l4a 7 dies voreri• Oe?artment, thre , engravings, ~ t rul the . fine ; arts, in., all nine . e grayings. ,' ~t 9 otitrilitttions pre, rich ; and ,various , by 6 : 1 0 I I docipal iiterarreharacterg / of our, country. det*livaYikget flu.t• a:-g99d°lf4 4 4 l Dßl 11 0 his p 'tuber is onii,of his best- ',• ' •I , 0 - (ool4tii bciariar at' 4 : 2 90 11 4f' i'faw'yiti,i - iti'2ista4had 'a Loot Th . itre o 1 'Hiatial4 . *. Mae a . 1114 'a hfi,...Widitiaanie afP with ee tatOh'll s otioriti he di ti froth ih a - •fight with 'Capi.‘blaielall..6l- "- • Now that it i Whigs will ,have rim(' (ingress, pertanee-. l .Wbat peal the Tariff of fpnet abortlen of ' from it..such a rn.l laical death-knell! they will: be false sions=ireereant tot Will they repea And if, they do, u in its stead? A L the question, an'. long Mince .conde . preserit system to ry on the hypaciis bet„ ,They f liev s e 4 practioable 7 —:coud was odious and ba.; the power, if they the: country of . su it, in what light the country? Ho conduct before th: questions, which; they will not repe ry, or even make What course/ w the war? Will hounds," as Husk teers? ,Will thej a retrograde mov. Grande? Will th army back, and r • plies of men and r robbers of our n this course, one, Will not wipe on. tacit to the name oppbsite, they vvii the justice of the po,sition and den by principle, but many other point in the majority, but which time umber iu the etions of the their ng all s i e bill fl volunte I stores, 1 North lig, it a. their p article: ar," 44 i .r raising an rs—although from Afassa arolitia,,pas "unjust, 'mid l oss has week stigmatizing olts' war for the like, and y can no lon mune responsi will he their dea The light is destined soon• , ," an the gods intend Half cra vorite in 1844, of all their high together withth ure,.the tariff condition to ec partial sucelss i undertook to oppi thwart the govt. No Sane party a ce.ss came, and t Captain, its lead askiutif. bb ay . : l held but t» him t 'ennesseo ' 1 de hounds," land Its, if elected, tt) - ‘4ll be to lie error of 'our under the tune , scow, until we Rio Grande"— Mexicsirs .to bloody / hands': petted and .a -+ n front Maine not opposed to ess declared a is of Mexico, every obstacle The i. ExeCu ' known Detn f his country, the volunteers of mleose mor-, of "whistling, I frightfUl and ty among-them 'in, volunteering l ed to the war! to induce the ideney, andilab( General, 'itqa as "Polk's var . subservient to Was all in vain spoke, he s td pt party. Try 1: the oakl firmer, uuddeided as to hero now sands apart front ; boll knowledge he or tariff's, and they will s:lake to support the : ful proseeytiun through the ar the Presidency the respotribili named reting ask, whatiwill irrj• since t control , it has the Gazette, thro whenet hard p now` act ally Cri charge that sort the pio"4:that v itorials. By ail of that cintcern that they have sotne other indiv thif pal +r—wk Such islite it them. lit our to the wql, tll body belles u Now, th is, t espeOpll whe f, dilations: O a•ti ent as 'udge friendly 4 1 s We ford to i t hit already lquir yet to gti n. ' gull years agl an have thal aro toriul di ussi ,e s n ing by y tar lo errors, _ d e and 'false! oed itthe boy r: -day without. luau to knowlome as well a his lc , give adi,ice e entire party7' to it—that / a .0 made by this eked and ime- I em power."— ', nd comfort' to us they are not sed to the ‘'.ar! villainous au- =1 What 1 the, Whlsik,Dot f , . ' i, 1 poitt' c.ertin that , the , lite II thijority 'in ',the II : fitlcui it;tl bebomes of 424 I the aiii, , twii, thoi e -4ld a & ettbtitituto the de=, _ : ore ihey do itl,, .Fat vemcult would be their po- And to all heir o the In l lint lily i flited ; the ned. renial of tt I eclare i i toned I ; -rand tion•Avi. 1 , , . fe andlim it for eve y thing that now iivb a they have o.not l i r, make\ a ,effort to rid h an i cuhuti, as , they tertin will the partly ;stand before i v will hey account for their j)eopl ? These are grave oust b answeied!, Andyet, ! , I the nilepen eat Treftsu u effort. II the pursue in regail i d to theY "call off the blood :• It terms our b eve villen , adepthis cours ,and make rhent to the easti of the Rio 1 y, as Corwfn said, call our .fuse, with him, to votesup 7 ouch least we,i'be thOught ighbor?" , If. they do take undred years of repentance the infamy, which will at of Whig. If they take the 1, by their ads, aoknowledge War, and show that their op nciation wi(a -prompted, not dy party spleen.' There are upon which, new they are ley mn - st she* their hands, 'ill not allow us to notice.— er hush-fight, but must now ility. That, responsibility h warrant. Their game is et flickers in the socket, but be e x tinguished. "Whom o destroy, they first make ed by the defeat of their fe ud the consequent downfall. hoi , es of ft wer and place, repeal of their darling meas '42, t h ey werci in complete me totally inane by their the recent elections. They so thelMexica l p war, and to rn roentin its prosecution.— 'unit' Ire done this. Sim ley sou i ght to appropriate once r, its chieftain, without once s for or with them. They ie temilting bait of the Pres red to !render the victorious r whi+ they had denounced, g l or te . tension of Slavery,' heir' p rty designs. But it S soon as the General • Inly h wen not for or of their t iler winch he wrote clin6hed land rendered them still more course. The veteran 12 is.own hook, aloof and ;s and democrats-lac retltiig of either banks tells I the • whigs that ilending their energies ,ration iii the sticaess- I war, than in hunting ivailable candidates for Bout a leader, and with u 3 measures we have lir shoulders, we again !thy do i l . . - ME upon f whig nowA 122:13 kutitiis,' of th y for Wit h lof i :‘ n Oi l Ihe Obierver came under our 'ln the invariable custom - of igkall its change of Editors, eiseti in! an argumelit, or as ,Ven t theq , allfito Make th One ise baithad.a ','finger qi Bare - tot thewriter Of our ed.,' ; it ap (Tara tat the Man!ager think if 0 Y can 'make out I Yeea tit th ro do cOmti t 1* idual that t e actual ed Mr of 4, they' haV escaped A; hurt. resent - posture' of affairs with last, we pinned them so cloie at they cry lustily that Slime s has been throwing hot shot. 11 very complimentary to us--; , follow, they ascribe our pro-' I arid such acknowledged tal- Tho`atirson. But, really, as are to the Judo, we can't .0 f [ i flourish on our labor—he has ••d a• name, while we haVe ours Ye know, gentlemen, that it is i vood to you, that we, but a few .bseure printer's devil, should' 1 tery to enter the arena of edi ; it, and without as much as say ) •e, sirs, combat your political pose your hypocrisy, deception ,but s then it is a free country is tile man to-morrow, and may, ring. any just censure, assume little of potitica and politicians, seniors.:, They may sometimes gegtl advice, too—and ours, is, ' l6O such frivilcius subterfuge, I;ses your weakness, and shows ing else to say. never tub resO as it. oul OW you hat; It =ham's Magazine. ber number of this„ popular I . sine' is alieridy on our table.— , ments are Niotoria, Princes 1 iful engra ving by A. S. Diet," • m,". by the same artist, and, .ss" a superb picture by H. S. a drawing by Sir Joshua,Rey- , .r The litepte l l motthlyirneg ,l I The embellie i 1 lima!, elheitu 4 iJacob's i l l Dre l "The E l ba 1.., .Wagner' fro ~ H , be _. nember, re b 1 er, Pollen, Jot! vall.,:lr , i -I rincipal contributions for this Godman, .1 ; Fonnimore Coop ! 0 C. CaMptrell, and Ethm4 Du- • 071)r-' a Pet ten, w'. w frreOlc; "Outtg!., la, bi#aug bi+tital tf fig% • rge W. Leach, one of the "up.. iirrested . in' New' Norltv last ' with - cruelly beating 'hie 'wife ter;•the letter Is A.tepresented to young girli eia l tieelf fifteen years A- AA 0,-*A„;;.'- .• • J. orThe or 'tit Meryl , Oandideteler GOVeii.4 nd le Mr. Thnniee f - the-redetal : rou h : t h e former ' l i e) t*l aWohlik. 1 4: eiplee 'will, not 'etnind ME Niter dress stedaiii docilott The Fredonia Ornitoelletnrusi!ltoncT4 When an individnai -becomes ang ' „in a, I r) , ontrdvery, and re l sOrtir low personilabuse j! ' pettish and ungentle' anii i tlines aeliigop4 ' Went Wllich are in r;cp tray periine i tt, to the uestinn at issue it,' inlay bnittfelY ii. down that he is in alight place r and does not pose. seas the manliness or moral henesty to ackpowledgnit. Such is -the present posit* of the Editor of the Fredonia Censor. We have charged the Censor with being one of the mot ultra anti-war _papers in western New York. Is this not true? We have charged it with favoring the attempt to bring Gen. Tailor forward as the candidate of the whig party for the Preside*: Is this not true? We hive compared thekt two positions of that paper and pointed out s their inconsis tency. • All tipoevidenen pf the first charge— not to prove it, for it is self-Oldent—we said it sustained - Abner Lewis, Member of Con gress from that district, in his Vote against the bill raising an, additional volunteer force to prOsecute hostilities against Mexico. This 1 the Cenaor pronounces a falsehood. It is an old and true adage that "actions speak louder than words." Let us see what the Censor's course hasbeen accordipg to thiS role. , First!, it never has condemned ‘ , t Vote. • Second, it has, supported Mr. Le fo r an important office since he gave that ote;! and third, the 1 whole tone Of its editorialli since and' before that vote has been of the CorWin, Greeley and Lewis stamp. Now, if we have ;itisrepresented it, the blame must lay at its own door; for if it has not sustained the vote of Mr. Lewis,' we firmly believe we coulil make good an ac tion against the Editor for flee pretence be fore any twelve men in thnconntry. That Gon. Taylor advised the march of the , c Army to the Rio Grande, which e whigs said, and the Censor among them, :'brought about this unnatural war between two repub lics," we think we proved conclusively last week; hence we shall not waste our time and . room further irr discussing it. If the whigs have got themselves into difficulty byicharg ing hostilities upon that movement, it is their own fault, not ours, and they must get out of it the best way they can: Ono thing, how-, ever, is certain—we shall not let theta change' their grounds, and lay hostiltities at the door of the governments claiming fights up to the Rio Grande. yet, if they do not, their former proles etronrieea.. epende it Treastiry? -tem wil they a4opt ;fates B nk is out of I, they have eider, the commeeta ill it !•t bank If the. , what •I 1r oppo 1 it uns In regard to the pettish fling at us by the Censor, we have only to remark that it comes with extremely ill-grace from such a quarter. By referring to our file, we find that the pub lisher of the Censor was once , the Editor of this' paper; hence if we are an "apostate whig" i t, he must be an "apostate . " Democra . We t however, think none the less of 111111 ecaus6 he has seen fit to adopt different political viewa from those he held then—a wise man some- I. times changes, but a fool—never. And we rejpice that such is the fact, else we might;' at some future time, find the irresponsible, half-crazed scribbler who, for a conside \ ration, the publisher of the Censor hires to do his. dirty•work, throwing, discredit upon our prin ciples by claiming to belong to our party! The New New York Evening Yost, Gaya that the receiins of the Custoin House in that city for the week ending,on the 7th inst., was one million of dollars. This is the largest amount that was 'ever received in the same length of time. And what 14nportant, it was all 'received in specie.'` What has conic of the Whig cry' that a reduction of the tarn woultk decrease 'he revenue?' 'Where is their ridicule of the suggestion of the Dem ocrats that it Would increase the' revenue to reduce the chides? What has become of the oft repeated declaration of the bank men that the immense duties of New York could not be collected in specie'' The fact is' they have. signally failed to establishn single fact with reference to the results of abolishing the tar iff. of 1842 and the establishment of the Inde• pendent Treasury. T,lie efforts to convince the agriculturists of the country that no'great-' er market could be obtained fur their prolluce, by asserting th t elf supplies 9f grain to the English and cot ilueittialp'orts i would be ob tained from pOi its the ,l Ttaltic I rand' Black sea} has been entirely ilisproved and 'the contrary truth uta! Jeel • eatablished— that this, y 4: up send he piednets there at as few if ne loWer t tan any other nation. The prophesied "ruin" of our opp - nents, was only the wail- of 'a' reckless an i tl disapp inted party, whose greatest happiness would ave been to have seen their prophecies fully rea ized, if they . could but have placed in their hands the reins,of power. 1 . . -- At the recent election in Kentuqty, a, IPvoto WaB taken upon calling a c nventioh to, revise the Constitution of the I State. The vote in the aftim,ative carried byPa large ma jority. It t will be necessary, according tithe 'existing laiv, that another vote in favor of the Conueution, should 'be giver' by the peo-' ple before it can be called. Tho Ruin Predictioni of.Whigory Ina Fix. . Tho Albany Atlas Bays. there" is no ap t thor - ity to elect a lieutenant goillernor ins New York at the approaching election, and the of fice is vacant by the appointment of Mr. Gar c diner, judge of the court of appeal Th 4 making of constitutions is very delicate busi ness. A good Shot. Greeley, of tho New York Tribune, makes a good shot sometimes:, and this is one of the best. Webb, of the Courier, Bays, in an articles, , that ‘ti.liere. will be no peace in the whig 1 party while the Tribune is recognised as whig paper." 'Vhreupon Horace responds that if he 'must leave the whig narty; he will not go out with one cent less than ss2,97s4—being Worth, he thinks, as much as other folks. s _Strairs Show The Taylorfeihs among the whigais rap idly abating. • His letters do not show , him to be op tou.ch.of ft./Oenll Clay Whig" aa. the wire-vorkera.of the party were la, /IPPe i , to find ,him. hia star goes . - ,d9Wn? • lien,' Scott' 8, ascends —tcir instance, . the Whi g fonvention, in Harrisburg on Moodsy, .tcti,o tosolutions laudatory elate Itlaline stud qnal igcations"..of Gen. t4cott , for the Presidency, were adepte,d,,whilcOld,Zisch, simply Ts ,facred to,aa: 4 !entitlad . .to Irstlende of the -PeuPl9" c4adhitieoioa; acooiriPs4ied by bis j aidrklateOt. Col. Abotorombio sad Capt:Wit., bi` war on Mo~t'day or Tuesday Gen: P. neitunto ihe' commend of his diviekin ue dor MaJ.- (ien.Scot:, - • I=Zl Another Latter from 0 • Taylor. In another, Column will • : found a ft:A Gen. Taylor—whethe it is' the lan c e the series remains to, be se, n. It is a pe lt .. neat and true remark of the Washington ITa. i .: ion that this letter speaks f:r itself. I t d ye , 1,. indeed speak Orleself, and In doing so pl ate , i those w'higs who,rave beentso eager to .wits 1' upon the . General's military fame io the hop e , .• of riding Into ,power and place, in a very . 4, , • comfortable'and awkward dilemma. "If this letter, in Gen. Taylor's altusiovo his !min t ,. ry life and avocations, 'does &Ain satisfac torily why he has not yet ntade . np hi s m i nd , 1 as to the main tesues between the two partie j , - i";: it certainly does not eiplaini—it is, On thecei, *: awry, v!ery far from explai ing—the grow l & f upon, which not a few oft e most rabid oft/ t ,''' (whig jcSsrnats, have,hither o professed to see ,--. iii Gen.iTaylor a rbost.ear: and trusty' tepe e . .. • sentative and champion of their party princi.• :. pless and party policy in P dministratiem of the Government. bide -d, in point of fact, `", !- irpnow lappears in black •nd white,"over the ~, General's own signature, liat,so far frombe: ing prepared to carry out as President, e t k . creed of the whig part*, h: has his own vim ',l and opinions yet to form i. 'after inrestige. t j lion," upon all the null) points which d i; t t creed embraces: What •rewe to infer fro g all this! But again—in •hat attitude before the people an before the big partidoestbi l !,.. letter o'f General Taylo , place , •et(ose'whi g '(‘-' journal's who""df their o vn positive laowl. 1..•,. - edge" have so often and:Qaudly claimed him 1 - as "a sound whig and a Staunch - whig"— , a 1 - whole whig and nothing but a whik"—.4y, 1.. ; and a fu I-toned Hen 4 Clay whig io boot?' IF Is a full toned Henry Clidy stir* one who ha, r• no settled opinions about , is , loonal Baur or a "Protective Tariff"44-abOut i their "necccr sity," their "effects," and ! thepower of Co:. gress" in reference to them? Can a manic : a "whole wing and nothing else," by , silk .. nothing' about the t 4, its "jtstice" or its "necessity," save only to acknowledge "his duty as 6 citizen to vlo all ire his pacer Is • bring it to a speedy and h norabie close by th most rigorous operation I" Li this the pla , •,- 1 form upon which "tie 'oundi i and staurd 1 whins" of the count-ry pl ntthemselves, in tc lation to the war? Is it the ground of Mr -. . ,Corwin l and his l otlowers. or of Mr. Benin' is I-his followe r ? or of r. Schenck and iii follosVers? or oth%legi latures of the %lit 1 States from • Mass Muse is to North Carel: i Ina?" • r •-, - ", 'Hauling Down the • Sometime since the GI Sunbury ( American had Shu 4 flap," and refused , • nations t)fShunit a nd Lorq it a , /,Reorback'l at the tit lin a webk or to the folli :from tiui Amerman itself, i iWe have waited ta week 1 !pee if tie Gazete, would ;retract the fa sehocui. I and we are compelled to' • ical deception ll it. , "Our neighi Ors of the been exceedin ly hard i paragraph, las week, wli ' highrY, import' tit news down the Sim k and Lii we _sett , they tatetnent were opt aivit ,e that eit self had Undergone any the time, Peasti out the ti matter ready for the pre making room for iinpo Army, inst as we were ill be he • a Expres , plt from excavate hrou,gh t e -twelve ight uti get ov• At this oesday., Tlie!Fredim for the Telegr being iapioly I borers; passed !Jay; there «•e I abouf-oveniy-s feet in deth, • miles perilay. on lon(14) 1 , or' Tile St. Louis 19100,000 received here . the Dixoa Land Office, in American gold—the sovereigns, and other shows clearfy to whom ti 07' The editor of th says he has been. blessed of a most delightful jaw• past. We call that h jaw-a-ment. I:U=' A fair estimate stuffs exported, from Greatßritaki since the amounts to the vast sum' fl Mr. , Jewett weal Illicois, to Miss Marth!' chaisge calls that it d The ghost of Coletitan s ('Major Wm. A. " 1 to Congress in the distil by Judge Douglass, in II ocrat, distinguished of Buena Vista. The Board of • Managers of therett National Monument to Washington, to be erected in X i Vashingion — city ? are about ton , th# chllectiona for that obleci.°- ME! lir- The 'Editor of the•Rahimore Clipper, l 7 ; few‘days a4o, saw a German tiamontsudgirt along with barrel of flour strapped oabf back. There is no danger of a famine seen ,) such women are. Better than Punch. Tho following letter - from Gan. Scott Os Hon,/ M. Fi!Wore, is the Coolest thing we Imo . seen during the present hot weather. It oat Punches "Punch," and throws "Yankee Duo- die" in thishadesity several points., HEADVARTERS or THE MIST. .MT MAIL SIR-4 have - received the two let.,_ tare (one from the Rev. Mr. Angier, and tb' other signed by Mr. Van Wyck,) a sking,i ca,-, several ground's; -the discharge of Jame Thompson, a Private of ttreaecend regiuost , Of artillery. tit. t -He has, since Ws -eon& Merit, , .r*Fiied his habits. This bilge/ 0 : .' ment in favor qt his serving mit_ him 'time, lea; he should ivlapi3e, if discharged,..bilore-one 'fi r rmid , in his retorniation—militiry discipline highly. favors reformation. 2d...111e has be.' - -?1: ii.corne piolll7. nis. mikes him at-once a$ ter soldier and's' better man, and-,fottesse, '.....,. we . ti?e not without wpm pions, iifieep men in Or, mutts; bufBd—ji 1..411'10 o' l ' l _ __. ~ he his imbibed pOnscientious scrap lemeiliwn i" , ,, performing mi itery duty. tithe minollow :, t, l v he canhadi r se irged on * surgeon's nitelso f,:,., tn . thaiefFeo .. but if he has only.tnroed 0 3f 1 aid, we hive *pie means of poWiling hill ': if he shonld, i , ben ordered, refute s to fight. ' I returtilillottors go 4, enci*dr and ' ' mein, my des sir, wt eat irsteem.2. 00 billy, .- T .' • WMIELP.SCOr . " HOri. M. TrLMORE. ' '' . MEI = MI Stunk Flag." zette stated that the. "hauled idoiszi the ,o support the nomi st ret h. We t h ,gitc: c, and sure erogi wing contnidatioi[ nade its appearance. before giving it, to t; have the honesty to t has not done EA '• - fasten another poht- Milionitin must hate n for the subject of; n they a One need the .f our having hauki streth flag. Before n • the Bliltouitu we . er our paper or our• hange. We ,di , J, it ket, as u ell as other .s, for the purpos of tent nett a from the ping top ess:'- Soon. . saylibe post hole Buffalo tr • sttrattl art I--the,thggers atd let village on Bator of Ahem—they bor, N$ to the mile, Ett er from four to' sit rate they should hen j ew Era says ilia Jr Friday last, from l ut 20,000 of it was balance in thalara, , . ore:gn This e Tand was iota. e Carlisle pemoat with the 'cOmPiin! echo for three day , .htfur ero 0 - 1 bread ;,,,,,.*. States to ~., at of September but! of $45,564,186. recently married Windharp. An et• °llan' Attachment: !on' Id haunt the scam? ' 'citrdson-is_electel et' lately represotei linois. He is a dear himself at the bank