Erie observer. (Erie, Pa.) 1830-1853, April 22, 1848, Image 2

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THE OBSE
'Th. World is Gorerais
ERIE, p
SATURDAY MORNING,
VOit CANAL COit ISBIONER,
ISRAEL PAI!STVER,
OF WESTMORLAND.
(reTelos. if. Et.r.isom is duly authoriied
agent to procure subscribers for this paper.
a:?- In order to lay the i
news before our readers ear
issue some hours ahead of ,
To Busisass Mu s.—'We hall, as previous
ly announced, on the Ist of: May issue .he
Observer three times a wee • We have ben
induced to do so from the be ief distille wa is
of the business men of this eity, and the grow
)6
ing importance of tho p ace, demand and
- would sustain the enterpri e. Shall we be
disappointed in this, and t r large expendi
ture (fur us] we are making to presents sheet
t
worthy of patronage, beco a loss? Prom
indications we believe suc;
misfortune will
net befall us. Wo do not expect to real
ize a profit at present from it—all we ask or
demand is to be kept from kiss—bot t o i ns u r e
this the mere subscription ,sill not do it.—
. We must be liberally patronized with adver
tising. • Most of cur-business men advertise
I •
in ottr weekly, and of co urse derive much
bene4t from it, or they wou l not do so. Let
thetri ;extend the same • fiber I hand towards
nur aim enterprise, and we dimbt not their
patronage will be like broil( cast upon the
watee—it will Come back] after ninny days
four- Cold. Try it. I L
i _l,
SIMPATIIT WITH PRANCT..---A meeting
at Washing ton to express stnnpathy %•ith the
, I
French People was held on thd 11th. It is
described tie large and anima t i ed; res lotions
were adopted in honoryflibetity: The meet
ing was addressed by several members of
Congress; Mr. Moose, oi Louisiana; Gen.
FOOTE, of Mississippi; I% r.' TuOstreos, of
this State, and Mr. STAN+, of Tennessee,
and Mr. GRUM); the speech s being -inter
spersed with music from the arine band.—
The Maiseilies Hymn was 'sung, amidst
cheers of a large 'Crowd and tie music of the
band.'
07. We wonder if, i‘wi hin the recollec
tion of the oldest inhabiter tv it ever bloWed
herder than it did on Wed:testlay afternoon?
We merely ask for information, as we_should
like to know whether there has been any im
provement in this department within the last
century. We have some faint idea there
has
CANT.—The Philadelphia
'p,Torth American affects a great deal of, holy
horror ta d the contents oral tone of the
biter of C. M. Clay addressed to Henry
pay, an extract of which will be found in
„another column. It says, "To expatiate up
an this loiter is'ine,re than we can attilnpt.—
;,
) it has made our heart sick to read it; and we
Would not inflict a similar pain on others.—
We:know not how any man, a Whig, a Ken
tuckian or au American, could have written
it." What cant! Has not the North Ameri
can assailed, daily and weekly, every demo
cratic statesman, with more malice, because
without even the personal motive it ascribes
to C. M.'Clay'l Who has assailed Mr. Polk
with more bitterness than the editor of the
North American? Who Gen. Cass? Who
Mr.Buchatian? Who'Mr. 'Dallas? No one!
The language used towards Mr. Clay by Cas
sinstis mild in cornprison with that daily
put forth in the North American toward the
President and his cabinet—toward every
Democratic statesman whose talents and po
sition indicate his future eminence. We do
not think much of C. M. 'Clay—we thought
him in 1844 a demagogue—but the North
American, before it, 'indulges in any more
such cant as the above, should recollect its
vindictive and senseless libels last fall upon
Gov. Shunk and his cabinet—should pluck the
Lem from its own eye, before it condemns
the mote in its brother's.
TRUTII FROM AN Esinstr.--The following
extract, from the Washington correspondent
of the New York Courier and Enquirer, is
rare specimen of Whig truthfulness; it is an
act of justice to the_ able head of the Treasu
ry Department, which nbthing short of the
moat successful administration .could have
evoked. We place it on record as a s.nt of
Jesus eatunc—an oasis im the barren wastes
of falsehood and detraction, with which the
leading Whig prima usually teem:
Erritscr:—`•Mr. Walker has certainly fi
nancierid this administration through some
very tight , place, and it must be conceded
that he has done it in a manner which not oln
ly greatly benefited the j Government, but
bore as gently. As possible, on the moneyed in
terests of the country. 1 Thotigh an ultra-
Democrat to the back-bone, he has never had
the appearance of arraying one class of so
ciety against the other; nor did he attempt
to build up one at the expense of the other.
He has been it statesman throughout, and the
saving of the present adrAinistration in: more
than one respect."
('One of our exchanges says "merriage
ble girls are wanted at Clarksville, Ark."—
We have heard it hinted that the same arti
cle is in demand not a hndred" miles from
the Gazette office.
a. The junior editor is expected to return
to his post this week, and will again resume
the editorial ci t arge of the "Press —Berke
Courtly Press.
Glad to hear it --thy se ior steals like bla
zes. Tho paper from which we clip the
above contains an article l of about a tliir.l of
a column, of ours, leaded I and palmed off as
original,
LADT ' S Boon.—Wo have the May number
of this work, The contents are excellent—
• the embellishments surerb. Thsit of _the
queen' is the most exquisite and appre.
priate embellishment yet, produced among
the monthlies. Godey knows how to please
the public—especially the lady public.
lir he Pittsburgh Commends! Journal,
Weir/ore an ardent Taylor paper, has 'tooled
'Awn the Dag of the old General, and substi
fated tilt of tifteetr CLAY. Truly the old
herits,prospects "grow small by degrees and
besatirolly less." •
Eirosurro,ali lloston Courier oya,
a ill not support Gen, Taylor for the presi
dency "no way you sae fig Welpter, anow
nni fiire‘er," it; its motto,
VER.
Out'telegraphic despatches announced last
week that Mr. Clay, the "great embody meat"
Of modern whigery, as his friends have de
lighted to call him, and the man „who, they_
soy, possesses the "brightest intelect of any
living etatesman," had proclaimed to the pee
pie of the United Stites in general, and his
whig friends in particular, that he had deter
mind to once more submit hii name to the
people fur the Presidency. The 'precious
document itselfis now before us, and were it
not well authedficated, we should be- very,
much inclined to believe it a hoax. Not Oaf,
Henry Clay isnot capable of perpettatitig just
such a piece of folly—of penning just such
absurdities as it contains—bath:it his friendi
and advisers, in and about Lexington, men
who have the reputation of being shrewd poll
iticians, should ever have let such a produc
tion see the light, is what astonishes us.—.i.
I,'lte public career of Henry Clay Is lull of
joist such fires pus as this, but the publiccerl
tainly had a right to app . 's° that experience
i
had taught him to consult more ilm,judge l
ment of others than his own. It seems such;
however, is n.tt the fact,, and as in 1844 11
is bound to kill himself with his, p - en. ', That i
howc% er, is a matter he must settle between '
hiinself and his supporters—it is no concern
°fours, except so far as it insures the Demo
cratic party a more easy and decisive victory,
Mr. Clay commences at the usual style
of all demagogues,by asserting his strung dis
inclination and unwillirigneas to again be
come a Pandidate, that be had, in fact, deter,
mined n hen he left hiS residence in Decem
ber last, "to, announce to the public, in :some
more suitable form" his "'desire not to be
thought of as a candidate"—"but on reflec
tion' he "thought, it, was due to" his "friends
to consult with them'boforo" be "took a final
and decisive step." Ho ,has done this, he
says and "they (his friends) have represented"
to him that the withdrawal of his name would
be fatal to the sucdess, and perhaps lead to
the dissolut:on of the party with which_ he
has been associated, especially in the free'
states. Certainly, Mr .Clay is a modest man,
a very modest man! Should he not be a can
didate, the party would be dissolved—fall to
pieces like a worn-out garment. How this
bold Assertion—this direct thurst at the Tay
lor men—will be relished by those editors and
politicians who have been laboring so indus
triously to push him aside, 'remains to be
seen. Mr. Clay says, if they had succ 'eded,
the dissolution of the whig party, in the free
states, would have been tin inevitable conse
quence—therefore, by the natural laws of
clinie and effect, these_gentlemen - have been
guilty of endeavoring to destroy the great
%%big party. Let them get , down on 0...dr
knees, and ins sack Cloth and ashoP, ,ail the
"great embodyme.nt's" pardon, Mr. Clay
then goes on to say in the opinion of those
friends that at no lormer, period did there ever
exist so great a probability of his election, if
he would consent to the use of his name that
in all human probability New York and Ohio
would cast their vote for him—that the former
would more certainly do so than for at,y other
candidate, and that Ohio would give her vote
to no candidate residing in a slave state but
him, and finally that there is a better prospect
then has heretofore at any time existed that
Pennsylvania would unite with them; and
that no candidate can be elected without the
concurrence of two of these states. Here,
it - will be observed, is another stab tit the
Tinier movement. He, alone, of all the men
in the Slave States can carry Ohio, and with
out Ohio chances are slim indeed. Gen. Tay
lor,resides in a Slave State—yet Henry Clay
could notjhave'aimed this thurst at hint!--the
man who is a "Henry Clay whit," and who
would have voted for hint in 1844 if he had
had-an opportunity! Certainly Henry Clay
would not have been so ungenerous! ,
s Evidently Mr. Clay has never heard of the
injunction, "never hollow until Your are out
of the woods," or he would not have been so
ready to endorse the assurances of his friends
that New York is certain for him. If any
thing will heal the unfortunate division in our
ranks in that State, and insure her electorial
vote for the nominee 'of the Democratic Con•
- vention, this boast of the "great embodyment"
will do it. There is unquestionably a large`'
Democratic majority in, that State, and when
the truth is brought home to them that their
divisions are exultingly paraded before the
country, by the whig candidate for the Pres
idene;y, as. evidence of his success, we much
mistake_if they will not teach Mr. Ileury
Clayili'tit silence is sometimes a political vir
tue'. But admitting that it does not, and that
division in our ranks gives him that Stale,
We'sitould like to know where he finds the
warrant to believe that Pennsylvania will
cast her vote for him? G ls, itin the 18000 ma
jority i.he gave against Irvin last fall? Such
a defeat as that we should think would satis
fy even Henry Clay's "anxious friends" of
their inability to carry the Keystone for
I ttim.
If, however, it does not, they coa'try it again
the Democracy of Pennsylvania are ready!
—aye ready!
But as we dive deeper and deeper into this
pronunciamento, evidence accumulates upon
evidence of the great age and failing intel
lect of its ayther. Only in this way can we
account for his extraordinary assertion that
many citizens, both "native and adopted" be
fore voted against him purely by mistake, and
are "now eager fur an opportunity" to vote
in his favor! Alas for his hopes! Alas fur
theblind infatuation which has lead his friends
to tickle, his over credulous ears with such
nonsense. Ile defeated in 1844 because the
people were decei‘fed—because they did not
knl
-non him! Nonsense! Has ho not been
begg ng them year after year to make him
Prcisident!._ Has he not billed and cooed:
them like a love sick ewin, from 1824 to the.
d\ sk
present day, an et he would have it that
the people did not nown him in 1844. How
came they to know "one James K. Palk, a
third-rate Deck river lawyer," as his friends ,
sneeringly styled the present able - executive_
of the Union, to' the z ,exclusion' of "Henry
Clay-, the greatest of livinli Statesmant' : ISlii i ; ,
it was because they -- dicf 'know kint -that -he
was defeated. -They knew -hini- and his'ntin l ,-.
c ipi es .....they saw his shuffling zig-sagcourse
on the' Annexation 0 . Texe — s;7they ' riqneni- ,
beihis . abuse "of General "Jackson, rev=l
recolleCted his various Olitical sins; and' they
voted agaijuit.bio3l . They bays not, fOrgoti
them yet, and wili:voletwainsihitn,ligein:
ttio tduoth"
PRIL, 22, 1848.
Iportent Foreign
•
as possible, we
tur usual time.
, .
.V`I O 7 I FAT ilt4Pg3.g*qg IPPmbe! of the
Legislature of thia,Statep from Mercer coun
ty, died at 'ford:l,l)4g on the 011) Oat.
MR. CLAY'S MANIFESTO•
CLA Y, VS . CLAY.
.
'When 'CI reek ants ateek, theo'coitoes ibv ink of War."
We thinit it entirely,tinnecessery OP . make
anrapology for introducing the extract given
below, from a letter from Camelia M. CLAY,
tddiessed to ilarrai 0. - AT, recently published
in the New i r eekevui;ter 4. , Enquirer. The
author is so well knoWn, and has so many
!warm admirer's among the whigs in this sec
tion, that we:doubt not anything from his pen
will be ccceptable to them. We have some
idea, too, that for certf i in obvious reasons; it
will not find a place ' the columns of either
of our whig cotemp ,
i r 'ties, although. oof
them does prcifesa to ; be friem.ly to the nomi
nation of Gen. Taylor. The chaste and ele
gant manner - tt which the writer alludes to
iir t
PresidentiP taz will give uur whig readeis a
keener relish for what follows. Should' this
precious morsel meet with tliat, favUr at their'
,
bands which Ms previous efforts in their be-
half - elicited, we 'shall expect some handsome
compliment—saylalote of thanks at their
next public mi3etintr—for so generously open
ing oar colunaiis to such a characteratic whig
document. Ire v ill not. however, detain our
1 whig friends
,longer from its perOsal,.—wo
know they rutost, be anxious to dttvour it.
Read it, then—it is from a near neighbor of
the "gieatest Of living Statesmen!" , ,
"The Administration had all the responsi
bility of the lossiof honor, men and money,
by the war, our Virliig Generals reaped all the
glory. The success of our party was cer
tain. The public, with a unanimity never
before seen id this, country, looked to one man; 1
a man who, growing too great for the powers
at Washington, was left to perish with a
handful of men before twenty thousand troops
in the enemy's country. But ZACIIARY TAY-
Loa was not the man to die, to accommodate
either President Polk or his ally, Santa Anna!
The battle of Dueha Vista; fixed General Tay
lor in the hearts of his people! Neither you,
nor the wire-workers of party, nor the Pres.
\
ident can cause him or his friends to "surren
der!" The honest old soldier was generous
enough to give a parting compliment to your
name, by saying he would have prefered you
to himself to lend us once more to battle....
1 1 1 7 mi have taken h m at his word! Immediate
ly yopr friends of he 'secret circular," under
the pretence of b ing "the friends of General
Taylor," stab him to the vitals. Then, sharp
sighted patriots f and out that General Tay
lor was not the hoice - of the whigs—that
this willingtieSs of the grateful heart of the
people was all a sham affair, in A word that
you would reluctantly consent to run again.
I am a plain spoken man, sir, I tell you I
know these men; they would not have ven
tured to tyke this step without your consent!
It is true this is not fair play! It looks to me
like political rums/nation! Nor will it lie
cured in the eyes i t of all disinterested men by
the spirit of violence which vm,r friends i n
Frankfort—in lialtimoire—;n bincinnati--and
in New York, hre.e ventured against the
friends of Tnyler and "the liberty of speech!"
The ver.lict of a jury against your son, lately
1s kentocky. ought to tench you and them,
that we are not at Ives even to Harry Clay.
It is true that his is in you deep ingrati
tude to Gen. Taylor; but you are just play
ing out your life-long genic; for when- - did
lIENR CLAY spare an enemy or a friend?
I congratulate you upon your determination at
last to denouncetit° Native American party,
to whom you %mite encouraging letters du
ring-the last can ass, and
_Which they were.
kind enough to s u ppress; you can do so with
impunity! The' Native American party is
dead. But whether the Irish and other for
eigners will be ail easy in forgetting a wrong
as you are in h otl remembering a favor re
main's td be seen
The city demi !
in New York, w,
election upon yotl
strings that your
fuF' to chahge a ,
ity at least"
mof a Demncrtz►ie Mayor
dlet your friends put the
r popularity here, demon
nume is indeed "all power
4rilig majority into a minor-
05 1 ' Our coter
becothe copetim
iiporary of the Gazette has
t.ntary—.-Very! We tickled
ith a very small straw, and
own on us with the tallest
goose quill." He: says we
logician," that contemptu
g the slow rules of ratioci
mgage in controversial bat
i sin tifiti clenched fist, knock
I .under foot all opposing
1
stabil i li our point by d sort
As we said before, Our
!Ina r j ,- but we presume he
'y.
tilinost daily exhibitions of
it State street; Trotting
age, and the way some' of
Past our office, is a eau
nd dogs.' -1
him last week w•i
in return lie is d
kind of a "gray
are a "powerful
ously disregard'
nation, we ever el
t'e with excited b
down and tramp
arguments, and
of physical fore
friend is compli
feels what he sa
- 07" We hare
"fast horns"
nags ere all the
the "b'heyd . l Eel 1
tion to children 11,
..—This welt known esiab
ergone a thorough repair
is in excellent order for the
firs. The • 4 111tijor" is still
lough he has effected some
iuse fur the better. he has
n prices. I-le is ready,'how
41_ e at all times.', Try him!
EAGLH lIGTE
lishinent has on
this spring, rind
reception of visi
at home, and alt
changes: in his it
made no change
ever, to take chef
I liac has appointed JofiN C.
ioga enmity, Judge of the
strict, rice - Judge Burrell,
was rejec i ted by, •the Sen 7
as been confirmed, 'and is
Ann who has all the requi
, ,aod is, besides, a gentle.
teour and prepdesessing
(?'Gov. Sh
KNox, Esq.,
_of
10th Judicial I
whose nomipati t
ate. Mr. Knox I
spoken of as a
site qualificatio
man of most cot 1
portment.
(-•-• The Phil
Louis Philippe,
shown by the tr ,
be n holder of n 4
dollars of &ele'
(rp The To
daily—it has b:
Weekly hereto
ct!delphia Ledger, says that,
ex-King of the French, is
nsfer bocke of this State, to
tout five hundred thoueand
cent. stocks. •
o Blade is to •he published
u istued Tri-Weekly end
e. Success to it.
do Morning Herald," is the
oily in Buffalo—liescli
• and prOprieture. It is oeu-
Ctr The "B
title of a new
Campbell, edito
tral in politics.
(17.1'110 Frei
stands that the
running a daily
Palo to,Cleveltia
ports,.:-forth on
"Fashion," en
0 m played.
nia Censor. says, it under
oject is in contemplation, of
liine of steamboats from Bd.
I,ltouchint.aeall intermediate
)] back. The “Diamond,",
r ne other Steamer, are Ao be
arMrlope:
Clay, hovhiiiiie
Orleans, Jori'ilie •
signed' rci ths
dead whin disc
' resin, grandion of - Henry
f tkt itice• St. - Chirlee, - New
• inikt. 'l4o =ctiokie'll
act: He: was' Orfottly
Voted. " •
iOm 0 ---- ,pee.lhe wife of nrnan
0 hioanundtdm jyAng on On,
and takin g ; 4 now.7.hide o nho
gt 'Arnesj_nu: ~„BeF9co,, Nn!,
.ihort i
in Steubenville,l
pavement, drun
.• •
him a . ea%
,-
Or Col. R.
soldrefeln
a volunteer can li
fur ilte old wpr.lf
JohPigorAß l PRO ouC ht,
'Oft Pke'PhP 3 P . icezdo.okYs Altl
idaea for govarpor : Harrah
r:a
Corryppendettes ql the hie
Mtn, Witco, March
Musllllo. *rrocs.—Here dm I
faithful chronicler of the tim
both great and small, so far las
under my conservation. Babliat
Inst., was a 'momentous day f r t
of Mier--its i• gossips will new r
And a brighi sunny day it wa.,
upon,the"la'bd of the citron a d
cage and poregrante." '
It was scarce eleven in the
the good people were aroused to.
reflections by the mellow not t s
and casting '!.heir eyes to . a hi IL t
the northwest of • the tovrn, th .y
ing down the gentle declivity th
the 3d Dragoon*, camped loe. r
and private dressed out in his "b
tucker," for 'a holiday parade.
—clank, cl4lc, rang the hoof- of
steeds, al o v e r the paved etre° s
swept, the very town alive wi h
.their hedvy sabres, the jingle of
ous traping4 and the martial et
brazen band;
'T was a iay cortege, and
culated to iniprese thenalivenl
that "log dliericonos" were 1
These in connexion with l
the 10th infirtry, having wi
"Plain," formed in convenient
metered, Col l . E. G. W. Bollei
E. Dragoon; now in comma!) ,
of the "uppdr Rio Grande," a l i
his adjutant,lwho bore in his I
standard whose silken folds
grateful bree l ze, rode up to the
trumpets sou l nded a flourish, a
seined, the solute enssvered,p4
addressing h i mself to G. Wm
Captain of the regiment,,spo e a
follows:
"Cpptain: Although the ra
been some tvelve months in 1 e
of them fallen victims to the 'cli
Rio Grande, whilst others upon t
tsnt fields of the valley of Mexic
en uplife gloriously battling for
try's honor, 'et no banner save
common country has waved over
t.
though - 1 havp been separated fro
'Tient and pla ced in a more ex em
gponsible sta tion, yet has the
t
honor of eac 1 and all of you
my fondest care. And nov
honored wife r -a descendentt
has sent me
Washington
standard, anin presenting
me say that, 'Like the white
1
the 4th, when borne aloft in
lead / you to Itiry and to vict
the ,trumpets flo urish and the i
in the hands Of the Color gut),
Captain CI then replied in
and fitting terms—thanked t e
present, spoke of the hardship
had undergone in dischergi tp,
duties of camp life in an un to
without the {hope , of that r w
won upon thn field of battle by
lessi stern then is required' to•sul
dier in`dutiea they had performer
I
He Would offer that as au
whea the ho4r4ould come they
under the fink las gallant
1 I ' .
men were exor ed "to hold of
end"—not "th faint by the
1
they would lertainly receive
their country, the esteem of s
patriotic citizens as a rich
their toils. He said, that w
were great, to but cast their
bright standard, that it would
those dear ties of home, the
denting sister, whose most ar
was for their honor—that th
would burn , i l vith renewed ze
The para e was over,' an
Mexicans dislike very mud
hated foe an u idea that the
"anything e x tra ," yet as the
off we disco vered quite a "er
the ground. )
The most amusing thing i
notions. 4 a nation the
stood still f 9 r the last hun
Mier fills my idea complete!
that' was built after theft
- I
Here they associate quite
Americans, and I think it is
changes—particularly in dr
the aristocra t cy having piscar
them) the g-aceful g•rfboaa,'
bonnet which they wear wit
as a blooded colt would — a - ou
bridle. 1 :
Chairs dr
when youi e
cushirin tit
yourself iil)
ele.
General)yrthe figurCs of
good and ihCy walk and danc
We had lie .honor of par
'ipper-el:in:1 fandango' the
when ailkia, satins, and dimit
alarming iae. A little old
sweet muiier upon an ancie
termed 6, , 1binj0."
Although so far as our
concerne4 whispered , comp
pass betripen "any lord and I
1 .
thew “resin I sons" more fusel
i i
dot of, fa'r Mille preasures
thealince s apply the pine
then whe i ease large lost
j lore in eyes that (are sure I
ie
oils feels vr y much like aim
liaoing the' orld. Mom
beunditp by any foolish law
smoke—Lso oes your lady;
niarks very' reely about yo
without a d übt she does 1
inincirig ch rity. -
Yostiiiday, the Camenchee
. !inetioriom l e ' ion miles from
ahOuibies," l(me"). ' burnt the
other4aineke. 'Capt. Oiga
i i,o,
1 4 1 i,bi,en ileiistched r withfoty,
I l se ths rascals. endverily", i
orerhauls,threm'he'll seerob ' be
•., • i 1. 143 Di ti ,
P.,13. t o 'II this lotter,te s
'6 ll toi;lt l' illite ' ‘:fiere itai4lie'
if4ut i n; )ifOciaig,antl licPiiirit
.dregoenoi , ,vi r kleit IWO - ,10"!ey„
P50, 1 :1h49: ';'erfi :61*).41j:dit,
)(i . irdiniiiiistciiii,"iiiii tiiii)sei
ritfrhollteet pletple. At the t
MOM
From Meile
14, 1848.
spin, the
...of event•
they come
~ the 12th
little city
orget it.--
s ever shone
live, the or-
Irning when
I
. their pious
the bugle,
.at.' rises to
;. A t wind
& battalion:of
sere—officer
-et bib and
t , they cache
heir fretting
e cavalcade
he clash of
the numer
°es Of their
getlier cal
h ,the idea
ompany of
ed into the
er und quiet
the 3d U.
the district
tnpanied by
a handsome
tied in the
!are. Tho
aza:z
were pro
. the Colonel
well, senior
mewlmt • as
goons have
fields, m6y
i !late of the
Ihe far dia
. have giv
their coun
that of our
them. Al
my regi
,:ive-and re-
being and
• a source of
a Ituly—my
ho illustrious,
is beautiful
I you, bida.
no of Henry
tie, luny it
" Again
li ner is placed
xplimentary
dy 'tor her
his battalion
the onerou3
thy 'climate,
rd 'Which is
Patriotism
port the eel-
•arnest, that
would rally
should—the
Maul to the
side"—that
,gratitude of
'ood men a td
ompense
their trieM
1 1
upon th•
int] them
us thiiugh!s
heir bosom's
Id patriotism.
.Ithough the
give their
asides them
rtege moved.
.Of them on
L i
i antiquated
e to have
'years, and
E e brit town
!Id with the
I. ucing some
ertain of
(as they wear
d doffed the
much taste
some blind-
1
le here, and
hand you a
Lion to plank
e family cir-
quite a scarce
ter a house t
a very polite it
n the floor anion!
women are
y gracefully.
,ating in an
er evening,
uriahed atan
"discoursed
rp, vulgarly
ciationd are
nte:tuay not
•," yet hnre
on thari you
you mix In
words; sild
orbs "look
peak again"
I: a tree and
you aro' not
iquotteyou
!make your re
partner—and
hie - with no
~i
e doWn on a
, killed two
see and done
11,6i:4460ne
the Captain
I,
—sure.
I ''; (iv 144: •
thtt 4 Otte
I TIC,! 1 ,7f I T.
or Oe, 8d
i d tire Lieut.
McPherson tßrew hit; pistol asldc, and 'asked
foes change Cifliveapens. Lieut. Maddox's
second objected, aiche had a right' to,_:,•Then
McPherson declared they had chosen 'their
weapons with • yiew,of eseapihg
uniturt—
called them coWards, - nrid. shook his fist in
Maddox's face. The change was then grant
ed, and at the first fire the unfortuatoman
was shot through the heart , and' alrPost
instantly: A deep and settled gloom rests
upon_our little community in consequence.
Bpt no mere at present. Yours, kc..
l obi EGO."
07" The Gazette wishes to know what we
think of the result of the chartr election in
t
"Albany, Brooklyn, and last tho gh not least,
in New Orleansr , To the first, we think
that, its the whig majority last fall was 1705,
and now only 135, they i cAin -cii i ow over the
joss of only, the smog amount e 1570 votes!
That is what we think . of the result in 410a-'
ny!l Brouhlyn is Whig bow, and when has it
eveli been nti - erwise? As to New °flesh?, it
has previously ;:gone nine tunes out of ten
Whig--and it has rlone,so again. , 1
07"11aj.Borland,who was recently appoin
ted United States SenStOr from Arkansas, had
just previously received the appointment from
the President of Secretary of I t .egation to the
Colin of Spain, , Which- he declined..
lIFIAR CASSIUS M. isten to the
candid avowal - Of this talented nd thorough
going Whig; who has gallant! l bore his part
in the war; relative to Mr. Polk, and our Mex
ican difficulties. At a festival in Richmond,
Ky., lately he said:
"Though a Whig, I do not st ml herons a
partizan, I shall speak with thi. freedom of.
history. I have no sympathy for the lair
outer / against President Polk as bringjag
on this tsar. I SHALL LW THE PRESIDENT THE
JUSTICB TO SAY, THAT IN ALL IVJE*ICCI I
NEVER HEARD .THE FIRST .MAN ALLEGE TJIE
MARCH os-Cancr.aAt. TAYLOR TO THE Riv
GRANDE, AS THAT CAUSE OF OFFENCE, OR OF
MIK WAR."'
0:7 4 ' The following .18 the extract from
Gen. Scott's letter, dated at Puebla, 4th June,
1847, in which he demands to be reealled-L
"Considering the many cruel disappoint
ments and mortifications I have been made to
feel since I left Washington, and the total
want of support and sympathy on the part of
the war department, which 1 have so long ex
perienced; I beg to be recalled fri this army
the moment that it may be safe fo r any per
son to embark at Vera Crux, %%hick .sup
pose will , be early in November."
WWO SPEECHES OUT WEST.—hvir.
a member of Congress from Illinois, made a
Speech a short time since, against the war and
with the usual amount of abuse of our gallant
officers and soldiers, a copy of which found
its way iota Wisconsin to ,an old customer,
who returned it, with the following, written
on a blank leaf, to Mr. L:
"This thing has" found its way away out
here in Wisconsin. I dare not let my chil
dren read it, lest it should corrupt them; I
dare rot show it ,to my neighbors lest they
should suspect me of trot son. What then can
Ido with it? I will tend it.back to the nuthor.
it may be of use to him; he may find...some
one green enough to give him credit for polit
ical honesty. lie may find one so idle that
he will-read it, or as big d foul as I have been
to waste his time in giving it. all attention
required.
If I expected' to live twenty years, I would
preserve it, to show posterity that traitors we
had in 1848; but ns I am an old and infirm
man, I cannot survive so long, and therefore
send it back to hint who gave it birth. Let
him do as he pleases with it. But. for God's
sake don't insult a democrat by sending him a
copy."
MaxtcAN Arrxtes.---The I,Vasi ,
iingtoncor
'respondent of the Philadelphia Ledger, tinder
date of the 12th inst., write as follows:
"lA'ihife I am addressing, you something
whispers to the the war with Mexico is at an
end, and that Sur troops remain..there merely
oral charity to the government.‘
A rumor is in circulation, ever since the
latter part nflast week, to the efnct that San—
ta Anna has actually surrendered himself to a
colonel ofour army, on condition that heshould
receive a salves concludes to Vera Cruz, and
there be permitted to embark. I think the
rumor well-founded in truth, and am' under
the impression that Santa Anna is at this mo
ment, no longer treading the Mexican soil.
With the removal of Santa Anna, the prin
cipal danger of a renewal of hostilities is gone,
so that though not many Mexicans may be in
favor of accepting our terms of peace, their is
no one in Mexico capable of obtaining better
ones, or even showing any disposition to at
tempt such an enterpise.
On the other hand, it is quite true that the
negptiators of the treaty will be disappoin
ted in regard to the mode of payment of the
fifteen millions, and that Mr. Mclntosh,
Mr. Tristle generous patron and coadjutor,
may be a bankrupt in consequence. Neither
will I deny that the Mexican clergy are apt
to feel hurt at the abolition of their immuni
ties, and that' the Mexican' people will Share
in the dissappointment; but between feeling
hurt and feeliiig able to resist, there is a con
,eiderable diffe'rence.
mother or
The Mexicans may not like the treaty ns
sent to them riow, ratified by, the U. S. Sen
ate; and they may propose new alterations
and changes to gain time—+they may, for in
stance, demand ten or twelve millions down,
or in c atock cnovertible into money—but they
are bound to take what we are' willing to. give,
and are by this time pretty well reconciled to
the lass of New MexicO and California.
• -What will become of Mexico after the with
dinwalrof our troops, nobody can tall; but my
opinbm is that anarrhy.,and civil war will
soon-; nduce her to implore our assistance,
and that the States adjacent to the Union will
claim as a great boon to be annexed to the
United States."
INTERESTING REMNISCRINCB.—We bad the
pleasure of conversing not long since with a
won'ty and venerable democrat from New
Yorke who visited .Gen. Jackson, two days
before his death, most of the particulars .of
whicli: interview have long since been'given
to the p.iblic. In the coarse an affecting re
trospect to'some of the most important events
of hisiiie r the dying patriot . and christian al
luded to a charke of hastiness of action. which
had been made against him by his political
enemies, and remarked that he had nicer dur
ing his, whole presidential course, decided up
on. any 'important measure, with9ut.fit et inqui
ring of his inabir and supplicating his guid
ance - and blessing. ' What a continent this,
upon the justice of political censu a! What
better explanation -can we need o the:heroic
death of the ex-president than is f rnishedby
this interesting fact? He feared othing,—
He was It mend prayer.—frovid .nce
•
Patri
ol.a , •
Ma. Ct.sisGettaT,PAsse.,, , Hr.
tainly the luckieStsaintlio thcfpoli
ac. OrdinaryObjeCts of p opular
content with oile'"great 'day"' in
Ilvart few their' hero lit i ‘ buti if we a
St. Harry, he has a 44 jreatest day
about twice kweek
one)of these "ikeat, dive
list WSW site ot. - eight4- r ..iind AO IT!
has "nothing, else." The only 1
which teems-, tiCbeilletersolned
grasp - I the Kentuckian, is th e
March.`-John Donkey.
BY TELEGR
Dispatches tby the Obsifryor by the Erie
Limo, blllos La Williams' Bloc:
LATER FROM EU
PIIIISSIA A REPII4I IC!.I..TiIE DING
FLED TO ENGLAND!
THE PEOPLE EVERY NY
UNPHANT:
BUFFALO, Aran.
The Packet Ship Dutches de
Richardson, has arrived at New .
in; advices from Haire to the 271131
and from Paris to the 26, and Loki
.
25th.
The most important intellige
port that Prussia has acclared h- r
public. Capt. R. states that • thi
excitement prevailed in Paris and
rich in apprehensions of being 1111
poor. The military were cglledo
on the 27th for the purpose of cis
outbreak that might take place.
urea con tinued to occurat Paris, n
out' France.
A Telegraphic des
.iegrapni.
ligni's Messenger, Mach 24, - th
states that a Republic has been
at Berlin, the king dethroned and I
and ministers under arrest. This
confirmed ih Paris by the Commer
'paper says this time the fact is o
telegraphic
,despatch Posted avi
leaves no ;doubt of its authenticity.
letter says ,the Prince of Prussia
England. . 1
Before his flight the
manded he should renounce all rii
throne. We learn from Berlin tl
Poles in that city have been set atl
On the 22d ult., the date of the hi
ad vices, Berlin was tranquil.
doubts over the news received froi
the proclamation of a Republic.
versa! Gazette of the 23d;utl..stat!
- King had placed the property of'the
chiding military stores, under
of the citizens and inhabitants of
A revolution is announced as have
red in Genet., which has detached
Sardinia.
A new ministry has been formed ;
A letter from Munich, dated the
says: King Louis has abdicated at
tire to Sicily. The Prince Royal al
thrmie? The insurrection is gener
out Lombardo and the Venitian
Milan is in the hands of the people
The King:of Hanover has grants
demandwpf the people.
The Emperor of Russia is said to be great
ly exc i lted in consequence of events in France.
Great activity prevails in the wardepartment.
and the army of reserve is directed to hold it
self in readiness to maroh upon Poland at a
moments notice. I '
At London on the ~sth u!t., cons Is sold of
810 -
At Paris on the :lath .tho transactions on
the Bourse were heavy. Ainount i of protes
ted hills 'on the bank of France are stated'to
be 20,150,000 f.
Admiral Baubin has declined receiving
5,000 fr. salary as Member of the Bureau of
longitude. M. Suvrien has donated 20,000 ft.
to the provisional
,government.
Large numbers of Getnians and ; Belgians
are leaving Paris for home'.
Arrests had been made for destreiying Rail
Roads. Disturbancea .have been
suppressed by.tbe Naar,' al Guard rind people.
Jerome Napolean Bonaparte has 'killed the
National Guard as a private.
a'he Provisional Government is adopting
measures that check commercial , prices.
Four hundred , Poles have formed compa
ny to retake Polao. M. Thiershaii declar
ed far the Republic, and 'accented a nomina
tion• for the coming election.
Excitement in Naples; Jessuts left for
Malta. Revolution in Poland confirmed.
Berrato, April 18-4 k o'cloc
About 12 o'clock the wind c
blowing a perfe i ct gale from the
and has continued without abate
the present time. The water in
has fallen some. 24 feet and fears
tained for the safety of vessels a
end of the Lake, - i
There are now two trains of
Buffalo for the Falls, one at 8 o'clol
and the other at 5 o'clock, P,
NEW -YORK, Apri
Steamship Ohio has arrived at
leans,. with Vera Cruz dates to th.
and Tampico to the 2nd inst. Tho most in
teresting portion of the news is il - at in rela
tion to the movement of Santa Anon during
the latter part of March. - One of the agents
of Santa Anna obtained a p"Empo t for him
from the American commander atl .
Crinaba;
thence proceeded to Vera Cruz for the pur
pose of chartering a vessel to convey him
away from his country. The agent charter
ed a Brig which at the last accounts wai ly.
ink off Antigiia, 12 miles north of Vera Cruz,
where Satita Anna proposes to embark and
proceed thence to Jamaca. The Guerrillas
were still very troublesome on the roads.—
All the civil authority had been turned over
to the Mexicans, It was the conviction' at
the Capitol, Vera Cruz and Tampico, that
Congress would assemble before the end of
March, and that the Treaty would be ratified.
On the 21st and 22d ult., seven Sentilors left
th 6 Capitol fur Queretaro in order to take
their seats.
The arrival of Gen Scott, who is reported
to be on hie way home, wae r hourly expected
at:Vera Cruz.
Tho wind blew fresh from the NOrth-gast
during yesterday, which caused the water to
fall - somo three feet below low water mark in
the creek,,being lower than it, has- been for
many years. The, Steamer Lexington arri
ved at the mouth of the creek about fl o'clock,
IM., but could not come in, there not being
or er ¢ feet Water on the bar. A Pro broke
nig last night in the Ilwell!ng , of HO. P. C,
tove,'on'the corder; of Mohawk end Franklin
streets, consuming' his,barn, Wood-house and
kit Chen, end to, (yr
_OlO Prompt exertions of
'the firemen, would.hare 'burned his dwelling
house eftire t : Loss fully covered
mice,
I{lap le per. .
[ 110;0 alrean,
yurihip are,
a sear eet
a to believe
in his life"
re, lie had ,
&Aphis not
w Yid( he
'great 'day"
elude the
Fourth' of
'Nsti=Yorac -
New tYotic papers of th!s • Ailkorpipg cpr!tfin
Teiegritithic despatch that: Gin: Scott had
been impeached, - TheTbilpdelphia papers
\\
PIT
Bliebigas
PE,
Ell
.M, ,
,8, Capt.
k, bring
of March,
on_ to the
is a re
elf a Re
greatest
1 1 avre, the
d by the
Lt at:Havre
.eking any
srge tea
kthrough-
, atch recely
d by Gill
ted Metz,
aoelaimed
is majesty
news was
e. That
Ida I.
e Bourie
A Berlin
lad Left for
people de
ght to the
hat all the
liberty.T
atest direct
is throws
m Metz of
The Qni
•a that the
State, in
protection
erlin.
ing occur
tseli frtim
.t Vienno.
21st ult.'
nd will re-
I sc'ends the
)1 through-
I kingdom .
ed 411 the
P. M.
mmenced
MEM
ent up to
he creek
are enter-
the upper
are leave
k, Al. AL,
17-M
New-Or
31st ult.,
BUFFALO, April 19, 1848.
N
give quite - another version cfth,
say that . Gen - . Scutt had irnpei c
deuce of Maj. Burn., who: claim,
author of the celebrated Leone
The seventy-seven slaves wh o wt
to the Chesepeake Bay, t ogether ,
Banchker and his crew, are sit
Washington. 'Mr. Smith, De w
Columbia County, N. Y., was ah;'t
the breast and thigh by tworefß, e
returning from the residence
Windt., on Satuday last.
petted to live. He knows th,
him. •
ifttyerst.o, April gr,
Accantsrr:—Three mea fell of
the Steamboat' A. D. Patchin,
while lying in Our harbor, and h e r,
once could be rendered one of tht
Charles Campbell, was drowned.
yORK t April 19.
The Secretary of the Treasury
tised for proposals for the aim
loan at 6 per i 4ent. , to be reintt
twenty years from July. Bidsvn i
ed for e5O andl upwards, and °pen t
19th of June 7xt. The payment,
in five month! installments.
',The New Orleans paper of th e It:
the proceedings of the Court of
the 7th, 6th onl 9th days. o n
Riley. Gen. Cadwallader, Ca:
Lieut. Col. Duncan, Lieut.
Polk, Lieut. Ripley, witnesses ff:
low, all declared their belief that
lineations in ihe . "Leonidai' letter
in - the hand - writ ing of Gen. Pillow.
Burns, alio far the defence, avowed
the Writer of that letter, interlineal;
declared that- liewrote it of his 0,
no man's instigation, though he
partly from a partial report, wbi
found on Gen. \Pillow's table,
knowledge of that officer. On
Gen. Scott, the prosecutor, Croat. ,
Maj. Burns at length, with the tin
pup' and impeach the testimony c!;
ne*. The questions put, were cf
searching character, tending to
the allegation that he had been it.
of writing letters highiy laudatory
Pillow, and Irani:mating, them ()pet
Gen. P., and that the probability'
done 84 in the case of these lett(
Burns declined answering on the
he would be committing himself.
9th day, Gen. Scott put on record
of the refusal to Answer by Maj.
comments thererin. Gen. Pik
objection to the cross-examinatior
B. put in a paper hi reference to
cross questioning adopted by...du
complaining thereof, Mid calling(
rto 'protect him from insult. Tht
amination con t lineed, and Maj. I
fessed ,on compairing the letters.
three were in certain passages near
cal,but he could not account for coif
After Maj. Burns testimony was
Capt. Naylor, was called when al
of the proceedings by the "Ohio,-
The Americans peaceably eat
huahua on the is: of March. ,It is
serted on the aithority of a letter
c ity of Mexico l that American trot
vaded Zacatecas and San Louis
ANECDOTE OF AN EiPRROR.-••T
Emperor of Austria is represented
more than half-witted, who had he
United. States, instead of being- el
ruler, wduld stand a rt uch better
having his head jshaved, and being
blistered, and furnished with a c
apartment in some benevolent ass
is nominally the head of the Empire,
reality a mere tool of Metternich. '
an anecdote concerning him, u hiebvi.
to show the'eXtent of his calibre:
When the , lamented Muhlenberg
State was Minister at Vienna, at tb
well interview, the Emperor. mar
grave questions, asked him - by win
conveyance he expected to retur
tive country. The Minister
that he should proceed te London,
embark in a government vessel forth
States. "And what length of time
lake you to reach home?" asked the'
The Minister informed him.
Heaven!" exclaimed the us onista
"and d, yLes travel day dnd niga
Minister replied that there were no
houses on the sea, at which trarelli
stop over night, to resume their jour
urely in the morning!,
And this is the class of men, 'AL
Old Word continue to insult man •
theme Hertion by the, impious a,
that They possess a "divine right"
ruin the masses! Far better acts
themselves Usurpers'', whose right
only in the exercise of_ power and;
missiveness of their betters. But
praised! the time is 'hastening, wt
gilimaey" of Kings and Emperor
pronouttced by the voice of universt
"an obsolete idea."—Lan. Intrllu
'Tarr.
THE PROPHECY OF NAroLso:s
the political destiny of Europe has
refered to of late. The following i
tire,passage, extracted from Las Com
language was used in 1821: "1 10
fifty years from the present time, A
Europedh system will be claw
French will cast the Bourbons& d
'off; as my Arabian steed wculd
who would dare to mount him. Tbl
son be in existence, he will be seat
throne amid the acclamations of
if he be not, France will go back-ti
lic, fur no other hand will dare testi
Ire which it cannot wield, T
branch, though amiable, are tc
other Bourbons, and will share ei.
Willey do not choose to live fisting ,
under wisatover changes talm' place.
once more a republic, othercountria
low her exampleGermarss, Prussis
Italians,
,Danes, Sired* and - Roc
all join in the Presade for liberty."
MASSAeaR or Onto VOLUNTIM:
ter received in this city, states thi
Kesler of the "Young Guard," of
ough's
. 4th Ohio Regiment ! toget
several of his men, while con;from o
atteelied by 'a large force pf ?desk
and inhumanly cut to pieces,al
ved five lance and sable woun s, I
ballet, five of which wire ow al.,
married to a young lady in this
day, previous to his regiment letwini
Ice; and has many friends here.
jutent of the Regiment when it t
was elected Captain of the ol'ot
when Captain Mohr was electec
onel. Since writing the shoves!
(piker, we copy the following exh
letter, ' received at the' Timer
James Sanders, formerly of the
Reedy redets, but now of the FIJI
ery, on detached service, dated Peel
3d, relative to the death of Capri
"On the 27th of Fehuary, Col.Yc
Kessler, Lieut. 4essler, two privi
.ler's company and myself,startr
en. When three miles beyond
thirty miles from ;Puebla, we -
large body of Lancet - et, some three