~ j ~. ~~•v = __l __-~-- ~____ r_ '_'~-- ATOLL ME XVIII. THE QBSERVER yq FURLISRED EVERY SATURDAY, AT ERIE, Eri,ooosattr, Pa. A. P.IOI.IRIM. B. F. SLOAN, Preps and publishers. crrlct MINIM 'VP Sf A TE 91Urr AND rUpLIC SQUARE, OPPOSITE THE EAOt2 HOTEL TERMS OF THE PAPER isubscribers (left by the carrier) $2 CO Dr mail. or at the ofller, he advance, 1 50 WI( not paid in Livelier, or within three months ! T ao the time of subscribing, two'dollars will be charged. to dtriatian frr m them terms. , .• No pew discontinued until all arreareges ere paid trreja s at the option of the publishers. stW'All communications must be post paid to secure 'motion. TERMS OF ADVERTISING. ov.„squsre, one year, $8 00 Three 'Num.'s, I year, $lO At, ida oil months, SOO do do_ 8 mos. 8 do do three do 300 do do 6 do 6 Irsetieit advertisements 0 erns. per square for the first inoertion sod 25 cents for peed sub.equent it/OW . IIOII. trot - Yearly ads ertiser• have thr pri , idedgeorchanuing e pleasure, but at no time ere allowed to occupy more thsnilare• equates, and to be finiited to that' immediate Ad~ertirements not bating otheCdirertions, w ill be in• WWI Jai forbid, end charged oreordiagly. 4 D , 4:arde, not a ceedingG Iltiee, inserted at $3: per 77 :74q telit iP lae i nINT i • tie.. HIRAM ‘Volerale and Requil Dealer in cheap wct." . ", , 1l Dry Florally Groceriee, at No. 6 Bunnell ' State St. Erie Po. L. WARREN. Si.h. Blind and Door Nlantnacturer and Dealer in Glass, Is est side of State et, between 7th and st., Erie, Pa. T. W. MOORI Dealer in Gioceries. Provisions, Candies, Fruit .N.e. No. 1. Perry Bloc', State street, Ei ie. Pa - MARSHALL Zr. LOCKWOOD, Attorneys at Law, Office up ituirs in the Tam many tlatZbuildin% , ,north o! the Prothonotan 's 9 SNIITII JACKSON. Dealer in Dry Goodi, Groceries, Ilindware, linens Ware, Lime, Iron, Nails &c. \o. 121, Cin.apside, Erie, Pa. _ _ . JOHN H. MILLAR, Count% and Borough Surveyor; office in Exchange ,Baildingtv. French sr , Grip•. it: N. nucnr.ow ac co. BUFFA LO, N. Y.( STORAGE, FORWARDING AND PRO DUCE COMMISSION MERCHANTS, A ND Dealers in Lehigh aid Erie Coal. Salt 11 and Prinked generally. Particular otten- Lon paid nt, the oak of Produce and purchase of N 0.3 f 4 Coburn Square, South Wharf. E. IN. MILDER; • U. DRIGGS. 1311 IL la. N. Y. 49 " BENJAMIN • GR.A.NT, , torney and-Counsellor at bu w ; (` flue No. 2 Slate kt.opposint tha Fni!l.• I1"10. Pn. GRA-lIAM ir. THOMPSON, tatrne)s-6... Counsellot satl ,a , l /tiles out French etre, t. mei. S .laelssua .ti- Ca's. Stara; Elia Ap ItO:3ENZW.EIG Zs;, Co. Prnleri , ifs Ft iciwi arid Duittcciie Dry Goods'. neatly Mail • (I , atliii), 1;1,-) an 3 611cr., ke., No. state Siteet, Erie. Pa, GAMMA-MIS & LANE, tiorney% sod tintinsellois at Lim --Office on h street, xx es. side of the Putilie Stiutire., Elle, Pa. C. I I RR 4.1711 I= G. LOOMIS t. CO. Dealer!, in Wuwhys, Jewelry, Siker,Gototauo Sil ref., FUN! and Hi i.tunniu W are, ii.oy and F.iney Goods, N 0.7 Reed Llotore„ Erie WILLIAMS & WRIGHT Vholeqale and Retail Wafers in Hry trrie, Hardware, Crockery, filus.ware, Iron Nails, Leather, Oi ,'toe. "e..c..ruer o f sc u t,' mreetAnd the Public Strati, opposite the Eagle Tavern, Erie, Pill 4 WILLIAM ILIBLET. Cabinet Maker, Upholster and Undertaker State Street. laic 114 S. DICKINSON, 11. D. Physician and Surgeon, office on Severn?) Street wept of the Methodist Church, Erie. Pa. WAL • R fg.. COOK, fle4rat Forwardintr, Commission, and Produce Merchants; Red Ware House, cart orthe Pub• he Midge, Erie, JOSEPLI KELSEY, -‘%) Nlannfacturers of Tin, Coppei and Sheet-Iron ware corner of French and Fifth streets, Erie. LESTER, SENNETT &t. CHESTER, Iron Founders, wholesale and retail dealers in Stoves, Hollow-ware kc. State street. Erie. Pa JOHN H. BURTON & CO. Wholes:Amid aqui I dpitler•in OriUß, Medicin^s Dye Stuffs ,Groceries, &c. NO. 5, Reed House rrie, 'Po. . C. 111.. TIBBALS, ' Dealer in Dry Goods,'Groceries, No.ll l'heapside, Erie Pa. GOODWIN .5.i. TRUESDAIL. Dealers in Dry Goode, Groceries, er.e., No. Bonnell Block, State bt.,Erie, Pa CARTER 131tOTI1ER. Dealers in Druzs, Medicines, Paints, Oils, Dyc, stuffs, Glaiis, No. 6_ Reed lltmeu, Erie- Pa. 11. TONILINSON E,T, Co. FonrardinP. and Ceininis.tion Merchants; 109 French Street, Erie, and at 6th Str. et Canal Ba son, also dealers in Groceries and Provisions. HENRY CADWELL. , Dealer in Dania are, Dry Goods,, Groceries, :Erre. east Side of the Diamond, and one door east of ill Eagle Elmel, Erie, Pa. • - EAGLE HOTEL, 13 . r 'firm L. Brown, corner of State street and abe Public square, Erie, Pa. Eristern, Western, and Southern Stage office. „ LYTLE & HAMILTON. rtshinnable Merchant Tailors, on the Public Sqtare a few doors west of State meet, Erie, JOE. Diner in, Theolog L JOHNSON ical, Miscellaneous, Sunday &ad Classical School ijouk Stationary, etc. etc. Ns. 1 - 11, FrenchStrect, Erie, Pa. P. A. R: BRACE, &::othey and Counsellor atlaw, Prdiric du Chien, T. practides in the counties or Crawford. Grant and lowa, W. T. and in Clayton county, lowa Territory. „ ittiGUFFEES' series of School LeeiL. I, .2, .01 3, 4 and 5, for solo at No. 111, French St. I ' 4B . Niay 6, 1847. 51 ~, ' , Ntw p3TABLISHMENT, " Sidi 3lrtrt, nearly opposite the Engle Hotel. GLOOMIS 4 . CO. are now receiving from . Nw York m and ening their w store /I to etien , , e i ‘e assortent o o p f Rich at Fa i t und Fiontiltrie J EWELRY, (embracing the Inteat siyie nf work le market,) watches, Clocks, Dialed and prittapia Nee. Fine Cutlery, Steel Trimmings, Camphene 141 Saar Lamps, Looking Glasses, Gold Pens, Loge:her with a general variety of Useful and Or ramental articles. CaU and see that ,yeat wilt sec. _June 2 6,1947 r 6 Cash Foe Flax Seed. CASti will be paid for onto thoumnd busho7P of Pict ficed by r; ARTRR. Si BROTHER.. Au!! 27, 1!17 Ne. 6, Reed How. . . vt.,) • , . , • i . , 4 , , / • • . . .. 1 , t ' . • . . 2 ' - I . I I, : .. . ' i t i r 4,..-i-,,, -, .3 , , ~,l's r :,F t' i . ~!.. ; ./..„,-.; i' . ',' ~.:!. ;.S: +V: ,7 , . if . i.„ 1 ,i. i ~- . _ : • „!, I " ', .7 ~.. ii: .{. .i,-: : :„, .. T , . , 41, . . ._ . J.- , .._ t ..::..„. :.. .._ ....,:.,,„ 1 - :.: : - '-. • ' .. •,:,, „-, ~ ...; ; „1 %,,: ~ • Tai' ) . it ;! 1 ; • 5 . : :IT . • : . , - '1 ... • I , , 14 1 . i, Y . -, .= Y' -.. ;I , 1 .0.! `.; i , ' - i) - ..5 , 1 ~..,'...171 1., , ... 1: • / ~, - . i ' i . .: : f ~1 ; ':1 ' .::' • " : t 1::" U : t i : 1: : , .. 7 .1 - 4:: :: ;. 1 :: i: i ' , I . , . • , ':i ' . , ~ - t , .1 ' fl. '. .) ..,' ; ;.' S . ~ _:. : : ~.. ~ , 1 . • lf ; ,a , : ' - , Mt EAIHNi•WN IiVBECK BY.' DIRS. A. M. EDMOND It drifted o'er the introit sea The sport Of wind and wave. :0i frail and shattered thing was she, The deep denied a grave. :To footstep trod her briny deck, No'stalwart form was there,- s on she plunged, a lonely wreck 1 With broken nest and bare. 9 where ire they who mined the ship, Iler brave and gallant craw, 3Vito ISM her toa a careering dip _ )onder depth of blue Ask not of landsmen ,S.herc ascends The curling smoke of boqv, Or where like dimwit music blends The city's busy hum. Search not for them among the crowd Wlto rove lib footetepe free, • Nor seek the in the churchyard shroud— But oak the of the sea— The stormy sea with miverns dark A thousand fathoms low, There lie the men who manned the bark . That foundered long ago. They Alice') where countless wealth is strown ' For hands that toil no more,— Where glittering treasures ell unknown Adore the enrol floor, flout on, foil on, 0 lonely x reek, And•ial thy tale nt . woe.— Where bleep am men trlip_trod.thy deck !A thouetvid nithomslow. The giant wovet.l“:".B aidelt• rung , Theil futterh,!.kuell. - But thou %nit •tornrr, ►Adder Do.t 41111 the lidtup IV.stern Lerivry AfesstOgh , ATALANTA UPON SiATEN Someo bat more than twenty yeare-ago, i a fine old mansion on the St. Lawrence, nee Montreal, lived General Paul Leroux, Omer ly of the French army, and a devoted Bonn partist. l On the final fall of Napoleon, h• had e'migrated to Canada with his family, tin a portiOit of his once princely fortune. Geniral Leroux was a widower, with tw twin lildren, Henri and Eugenie, at you service tny reader.. These two, having Ins their m other in early childhood, had spent some years with their relatives in Switzer land. In that wildest country, in the midst of a latige household, hetself - the special pet of her grand-uncle, a veteran soldier. Euge nie Leroux was allowed al) the wild an healthful freedom of n Peasant girl. At th age of sitteen, when \she eccornertn'e ' V said Engeriie, making en effort ttisMile. es, ,my love. r 4 shall grieve deeply to . , t xvith , you:.but I shall not be comfortless.' .w, I ant going ont: when Captain Hamil calls, you must receivellimhere, and may f plait' to hiwthe change in your circums an - as regards me. % 'Dort weep, m y chi d—. nit, I pray! I will visit yon in England -it -nri and—and my wife, in the courFe of the mmer: and you will return to Canada, some . /ne. God bless you, my darling"' and the •emplarY fattier took himself off. ' " , i. ugenle had hardly time to dry her tears, • mpose her fare, and smonth'her' ringlets, kfure Beptain Hamilton walked into the li! 10". 1 He waa some What surprised at meeting En g nig again, and expressed much regret a ni t being} able to see her father.. The poor gi I was r sadly embarrasSed, 'and could otter little more than brief replies to the questions o her lover; After a few momenta of pain fu constrained conversation: the ,Captain ro e, ItissCd hastily the hand of his lady-love, a d not trusting himself to look upon(her face, le t her once again to her tears. She stood' eali statue of grief, and listened to his every sl pas he'descended to th'e hall below. Then, Cc: rce consciouspf the net, she flew rather then ran down the at'airs. Her Inver heard her light, step, a; grpcsped his arm, ddr, and 'mormu ri "If you must g m not needed 'hin.was the irst time Eugenie had ever ea led tier lover 4 Genrge'," Mx -gentleMal t , ,' , re, der will pleaFe? reeqll the feeling with wittpkt he first heard his own :name, from the lips of tht woman he loved. Under such ;extraordinary ciretin Ftances, Captain Hamilton FOOII obtained leave to de lay for a 'short tine his departure for England; and in the course of a wCek, his marriage with Eugenie took place, with all the rites of the English and Roman churches. Of course, the bridegroom was T.ronnun7d elegant in %%late gloreS and wuistonat.; and the bride adorable in satin arid orange bins, sums. The usual nOmber of jokes, at.d eharn paligne bottles were crac!;cd, at the expense of - the former; of glove l s and sashes soiled at the expense of the latter'. Then followed forced smiles, blessings, tears, the parting ! - That night, hour afier.hotir, in the lonely room which had once been Eugenie's, over a harp, whose strings the delicate fingers of the most loved, might wake no more„ leaned a .polo acid fair-haired )moth, weeping m ildly and bitterly, with thefeeling that his twinno • oT heart had been torn asunder. That nig i lthiski his owi't room at a tall and handsome man, yet in the golden meridian 'of life' gazing mournfully no the portrait of beautiful girl, in- , 'a Eite!ing costume, which hung against the - opposite wall. There own,: a strange quivering in the lip of the soldier. a stranger glistening in his eye. Then, 1w dreg front his breast another picture, and he gazed on that till the smile of the lover shone' through the tear's of the father. - It is evening—the first evening at sen, and Captain Ilarnilton and his bride_are on deck watching the last point of American land, as It fades into the blue of the korizon. 'The niiid.b.otrA fair—theveprel reels ho pte..ure of the brevzo! And. ow tfteet ara thousonit Silo Trap! to 0., carewrine 1"r Eitgeniessweet eyes are 'flied with tears, as, stretching helfitrms toward the dim shore, s he murmurs— “Adieu, dear adopted land! father, brother, adieu, adieu!'' Her husband folds her in liis, bo:zom, and whispers—." Yon have , , indeed resigned much to follow me." ' "Yes, ail, home, fri:inde, and it may be, my religion. And now, d'eur George," she adds, smiling through her tears, you not ad mit that Napolen was the greatest hero the 'world has ever icnowo?" "Yes, yes, I yield:at lest: but in return for this concession, I take the liberty, my little Bonapartist wife, of kissing t r od on the Etn peroes check:"—Godejs Lady's Book, for January.- Isumaut..—One cannot but feel an interest in Ishmael—figuring him to be a noble of na ture—one Of those heroes of the wilderness who lived on the produce of his bow, and whose spirit %VHS nursed and exercised among the wild adventures of the life that he led.— And it dues soften =our conceptions of him whose hand was against every' mart and every man's hand again . st him, when we read of the influence of his mother over him, in the deference of Ishmael to whom we read another example of the respect yielded to female eve', in that so-called barbaroutrperind of the world. There was aciVization, the itnmetliate effeed of Oligion, in tihese days, frimt which men felloway la's the world - -grew older.--Dr. Chu Inlet et. A L1T414 NEARRIV-A p“rishone: com plained to the parson that his pew was too fur from the pulpit, and that he Must purchase OIIP . . nearer. \ •'Whyl" asked the parson: "can't you hear distinctly?" 0 0, yes,,l can hear well enough." "Can't you Fee plainly 4" Ui P PS, I can see perfectly." then, what don be the trouble?" 4, Why; o there arci:Fo many in front of m e, who catch what you ray fiat, that, by - the time your words-reach my ewe, they •aro aq fie? iii'dhiti-wateri4l ; ; 11 4 •.' Pi •. 'd turned -tnward her. She caned her head on his she'll d— , George, Idle me - with you! ere; I '!.hall die if you ;earo E=OMEMMIENZ, ME A 111E14 ;38. lEEM= t ls,zratifying psee,contingalecidence the progress of and politics; in Etirtinee, The, demand for eform comes '1)1) fietn . tl little I I. cal_Ommt nitres that, in - times pa.l babe played so Co tspicuous n part in chili tinny It is here hat the' people have-f play,for - thCir act reaches the - rents7eT. ciety. Let but t! e Wants 010 better firgitt valor] befelt Cher —let. there be intel!ige concerted action I yre:--4ed pothing -vi t t -ist the pro:Tess f political ref9rm':::Th iewarhi are sugg:Qted by reading. ' a let, from Hungary th t cite ass'mbly iifthecnt ty (4 . Pesth had i lstructed its nimbus in mid the next gen.? rsl assembly the l lowiniArtieles— "l. The comp' before the' law, 11 debates, and the e'ec i tialky ill' bit c.itiz pulliicity of the I*fineut by jury all cr cepting political crimes on of a court of catietk: inn! affairs, not e 1. The format '0 that of Fran 3. The aboliti impositions - 4 th: of form' labor, and like l naturei Id be r:qpia ributions. by nbibPrical cm 4. The e6tabh desi inc.] to assist hment of tst ganeral by commerce and imlustry. each village vibe repres •rs in the county as...fern 5. Tho right fu red by two inemb of which it fortn!t prirt." The history of the ittnetican revoluti when properly written, will be a noble w of encouKagement to such commettities - as county of Pre,th.' , , It was in our 'towns t it may be truly F:;:d toJtave commencH: in that formation of public sentiment, 1 concet !ration rif efilut, that Wile organi (ion, effl , cteti by the clonitter‘i of corrasp. dence. But it wa s not until the people w thorooghlysittfortr i lmi as t l o their rights, felt maintaitourrth , m, that the worlt g l ee.'. The' The' commonities of Europe h , a him puthlbefore them, in their noble 'hand for. "equalitylof all citizens before law"—"the abolition of force.' labor," Ile right for each village to be repre=ente Tot.: DoOsv or ova Wonto.--=‘Ylint t change is to bn, we' do no; evon co•ij,let but tve see in the heaven: themselves ,omo traces of destructive elements, and some indi .eationi of their power.) The fra . :ments of broken planets—thdtzeen: metoric stones upon nor .globe—t be ttheelbng cumets.tvehl-. ing their I,onsu .. tur.teriala at the solar mrrne,o —the volcanic eruptions oti our (.;wn sattellite —r.themppearanceof new stars, and disap pearance of • others—are all I'o:shadows of that impending,cauvalsion to which the sys-' tem of the world is doomed. - Thus a Dead on , a planet. %% - 110 is to be barat .. under heavens which are top.iss away; thus tread ing, as it were, an the cemeteries,- and cltte,i l hag on the r arieselenins of formor worlds- let us learn the lesson of humility an 9 wisdden,,; if we hove not_ah:ea ly boon taught it in tho soh DM of reteluiien.—.l"erVi WM . 'S TO BLAMR.—.A band of deprehtors which had hitherto defied the police of Paid... htwreeently been discovered and apprehend ed. Liupn "to the orening, eNaminttion their leader Thilbet, and sav where the "Flow old are your' ""As fdr a+ I cau, judgeatiout 44.". profesbio3?" "That of a:t hief." "What w yoor father?' "A thief Ititetike, rind died it roil the Fe l t; trc+l3." "And your!tnot her?" "A thief also, and died in the pris'on of Grenoble." _"Autli o you o ere thus left aion". why ; sought yyu not 16 learn nnothei. trader' "Because I was was driven from door 'door, because no in stitution is 'open, Cl!'!? r to those teho sin oe, whose Pthers Imre ilice! hr orc them!" CoNsumrrto..,- 7 Dickens gives the ing daferiprion of this hich constantly carrying sorrow and cd , t-tdat ion into thou undo o families in many parts of the world: "There i. a, drcal disease, which co•pre." pares its vi.tims, as it were for death; which so refines it Of its gro , i-er aspect, and,throws around fami iair lool:s, unearthly to lications of I, the coining hange—adraad_disease, in which , the struggl, between the son; and body is . - 0 gradual, cp'tiet and solemn, cod the result Li . , sure, that il l y by day, and grain by grain, the mortal part wastesi awl withers away, so that i' Ole spirit g l owa ;light. and san7nine with its li g ht e ni n g ; tad; aid feeling immortality at* bawl devinr ii.but a new term of mortal life —a diseas, in which death and life are' stran;;ely h ended, that death talies-the glow and hue of life, acid life the gaunt Rio? grisly fn-m of des h—a disease %Odell medicine ne ver cured,-wealth t..ariled ofT, or poverty could boast eiceMption from—which sometimes ant strides, uni enineuntea at a ish pace, but slow or quick, is ever sure and ceHnin." iniives :ardv,flat ar1,.8 rfal christimi, seldom Aces ft ne.,zllbor. A pure" lake reflects ky, the clouds, and the overbseg. la when it is ii rd it reflects no. pore. A bail man, a real sconil -1 Fees ? geoi trzit in the cheroot? bor. An irorerfect glass refec a reclly,,but Shows its own deficien; feet mirror reflects nothing b-t A rod defect in iri n.benrrtiful ing trees: thing that i drel—selcr of hit; neigl tinthink eti cv. A pe bright and sure images. !MID has a narrow escape 'fri: from a co:iision.ofinediners on ti ' ion-the Gib mop% Thertlyaa the_baiit, but Mr. Barniim pick! inikin and bore him safe td t • TOM Tf drownl ng r Mthsiesippi cotiftteitm it up the ma IBM! Itorre farti" inquired a man of Orae, dealer. sq3eab , crealion, !Oa's ail bottom,- Wla, him - so fast in'one day, thatittoc g ' et\ him back again!" ycok Vermont 1:1(m l'te ttoirei two do) . 's t.t• 11Injelx, Qat* Yteturiti, expec (Mier to be co r: =EI NIVE En 1 I re nd e- i