THE FRENCH !RESIDENCY. From the ruts Correspondent otthe N. Y.Trlbune. a main interest of the day is; end for the p ant mains, the Presidential Election, mid the q Lion is '' Who will be Preeidentl".. The numbe candidates has rather increased than lessened, we count already Louis • Bonaparte, Cavaig Thiers, Bugeaud, Ledric-Rollin, Itaspail, La - mar and ,Caussidere—otot less than eight candidates, without counting the' impossible sad Quixotic didates, such as the Prince de Joinville, Dult• Bortieaux, &c., iirx. Althcingh Louis Napoleon fere' again a terrible overthrow in the Nati , Ass mbly, yesterdny, as you will doubtless pert by t e printed accounts, the universal opinion ne thelesa concedes that he will receive the majt of votes, pince tha greater part of the army, dies. fled with peace—almost the entire peasantry, I by the most rificulous promises of his age n t. considerable f ,actlon of the Legi l timiets, (out o humor,) the Liborere, (out of 4ite,.) and the cialiets, (in th l e hope that he will make Raspail Prondhon Ministers,) will vote for him. The mer recognize in him the name Napoleon, and w by all means like to s -e him in the gray surtout little hat of his great uncle; thel others, especi the peasants, swear the Prince has 2,000,000,1 which, as President. he will divcde among the 000, communes of France, and that fur five y there will be no taxes to pay. You may easily *gine what an effect this last piomise must upon the ignorant and creduloustpeasantry, who the osual taxes very unwillingly and who have come very angry and embittere on account of added tax laid ova them by the IRepublic of I In spite of the good sense which France, shown, it is still to be feared that the thorou ! mediocre Louie Bonaparte, who ie, in every res unfittedfor such a post, may, be Made Presiden the Republic; but whether he wiß ling remain another question. Most probably he will d many stupid acts (and there wilt be no lack of ple who will lead him to it,) that he will soot set aside. It rosy be that France is to make experiment over again, since this seems to be martyr-lend of all Europe, and all political TX mentt.are made upon her, 'as_ in anima viii. may see from the following statistical coconuts which displays the dispos.tion of parties with t able slit accuracy, that my fears of the election of N,oleon are not without good grounds. The r her of voters in France is 10,000.000, of whor least 2,000,000, from convenience and other cal sill take no part in the election, and the reins! 8,000,000 may be divided as follows: 1. Socialists (different syatems) 500,000—v f 6, R•spail, Louis Napoleon. 2. Imperialists, 500.000—Louis Napoleon. 3. Legitimists, 1,500.000 do. • 4. Democrats, (genuine Republicans,) 3,00 Caussidiere, Cavaignac. 5. Tri color Republicans, (party of the Natio I,ooo,ooo—Ca vaiglinc. 6. White Republicans, (very moderate) 1,00 , --Thiel's, Lamar, ine, Cavaignac. 7. Philippist-Regency, 500,000—Bitgeand. From this schedule Louis Napoleon will about 2,500,000 votes, Cavaignac 2,500,000, Rollin 800,000, Lemartine 500,000, Respell 'ooo,Rugeaud 500,000, and nowerds of 700,000 will be scattered in lavor i4sevslral other candid The greater part of them will be thrown for T and Caussidere. -I am c invinCed that I hay: deceived myself in this reckoning, anti that fru 000 to 30,000, will be the,bias between Louis aeon and cavaigilac. SiOce, _however, the Cu lotion requires an absolute majority;jihrough the election of a President bythe people is genuine, and in this, case neit er of the cand will have the absolute tnnjorit of ill votes (4 000 and 1,) the election of one of those ca n & who has the greatest number t f voles; will b an e conc m l s arra yirel ernent, sin to the Nat ce that iumil em . H . tly 11. sAs ody bly cannot ere we otherwise than take the'cnittlid to who has red ly the_greatest number of Vote . This will be Napoleon. Should he bejreje ted, in order to I ... the next candidate below him probably Cava —President, the Assembly would strike a tilt the Sovereign people, audit might then easily pen that we should have a cil war, with a I dent in Paris and a counter-P ,esident in the, Sneer—as there was oncea Phpe in Rome counter-Pope in Avignon: 1 As I write these liiies,lat the Tribune for nalists, in the National Asseibly, the-most % porliamentsry strife ragei4bel w:in the Hall, whether the PreSidential,Elect,ion shall take on the 10th of December,jor be postponed to unappointed time, after the completion of t Odic laws. On both sides, striking reaso displayed; the most celebrated speakers are e in the discussion, and it is not yet possible .how the vote will terminate. I hope, howe% be able to communicate the result to you be cICLZ :his letter. ' Louis Napoleon also spoke at the umet). of the present sitting. His Imperial Higlin pressed himself very ill! Immoredly, becaus had made sport of him yesterday. He mg pear in the sittings or not, it was of no conse to anybody. His Imperial Highness also d that he must graciously accepted the candid of the Presidency, since H. 1. H. believed th renowned name could contribute aorm•thing f protection of Society and the prosperity of F ,A universal burst of scornful laughter follow Arrogant declaration. A QUEER C4LCULATION.WIIO first set t in motion that has resulted in the election of Taylor? 'That is now as much a matter of ..ardhcounter claim, as was the controversy ab thirth place of Homer. .The nativists have all had the credit of being the,first organized b patizans who brought the General lorwar we believe are entitled to it., But there is a unsettleddispute as to-the Man or print th • suggested his name as a Candidate. Th. York Herald puts in a claim which is about olde than any oiher--ilating back to May Boston Herald parades in proof, a prop na de in April, '4.7...that Gen e . Taylor would n et President. But en ingenious French an of New I , ears o'o . the claim from all the rest of the pr early ink late, and no mistake. By a- ape arithmetical necromancy, he pretended to c • five days in advance, the pracise electoral io Gen. Taylor would receive, to a mathematic tainty. The N if ' de New Orleans Bee of the 2nd instani fished this curious prophec r y. The letters alphabet were all numbered in their order fr.( to:bottom; the letters.of Geit. Taylor's nams then selected, and the correispunding figures together, and with 26, (the numberof the all were found to foot up )73: This was asst be the number of electoral votes the General receive—and the peat and i most difficult n arta io'unme•the states that were to give t But this was attempted, and it is remarkeb'. calculation which would have been regard at the North, as wild enough, has turned ou pearly true, and if Mississippi and Winona gone for Taylor, entirely so. It remains to whether this whimsical prophecy is really t the calculations of probabilities made by t experienced and beet informed politicians, easing In of Town or Wisconsin and Weal Disarm DtataLos.—Respecting this, one • uit•hed citizen of Louisiana, whose death -a ly announced, " Nola Berta," in his last e the Condordia Louisiana Intelligencer, turn al follqw ing iteeresting but painful particular. : "Among the recent deaths here, I notice ti scarcely attracted a passing remark, yet I e pan wt.*, twenty years ago. stood at the h society—Martin Doralde. Born of an in •i and affluent family in Attakapas, extensiv ly nectsd,mugmenting his hereditary tenon b ceesful imeatments, married to a diught.r Hon. Henry Clay, 44 ho .skas at the zenith of hi ularity and power, Mr. Humid', weer 11 courted, coniulted and caressed. But e memoir him ; city property rapidly ran do .1 wife died ; his friends diminished with bin nt and at the commencement of thepleslean • man, once so rich, in popular, and in honor set) obliged, for subsistence, to follow ou with a few packages of merchandise. Hs embarktn: on a trading schooner, at Tempi. torn home. , The deadly fever of that coa off every one. of the crew but a small boy, a the vessel, after beating about in the go' made the bar of the river withla signal of the captain was found dead on i pallet, at • foreunateVutelde by his side in the hat ar no medicine, no water ccurcelyZa radon 6f food on board. What an illustration of the.vanity and ri eisetudes of life! : ' The trips of 64 famotis frontier-man acrosi the prairies are not certainly over " belie of mot." A California cortespondebt of the New York Carr ier writes thus, giving some idea of the-every day's occurrences of his ventursome life : We haie scarcely • come In sight of the .river ( Loss Angelo.) when '.the yells cod shouts of the Indians were - heard, and looking to our left, we per-' ceived several sandy knolls dark with Pah-Utahs or Root Diggers. They bec kened us to come on, cry ing out they were friends . • Their language being a dialect to the Ttah, Carstin , understood much they said. Kit warned'them fill; telling them they were bad—the, whites were angry with them, because they stoleanimals and treacherously murdered the whites. One old fellotin corpulence and rotun dity equal to Jack Eas friend, Mr. Osbelly—be ing more venturesome tan the rest, and perhaps ambitions or desirous f--signalizing himself, ap proached to within a few yards of us. Here taking a bunCh of arrows into ne hand, while he held his bow reedy in the other, and twitching his quiver around a little forward fi the shoulder, he boldly l insisted upon our atoppi n I to trade. On him Car son wasted no werds,.bu raised up his rifle, when this awkward, nude lump of human flesh waddled on; somewhat after the fashion of a fast-running perguin. Some of the I 'diens 'followed us a short distance, and then•returned to their hill or their vil lages, which were near' by. That evening we en camped in the valley of the Muddyy where we made a corral of mezquite bushes to secure our animals at night. . I We have not 'yet cr- rleted this Wn ity i tie .red lien _ yk about 20-Indians appeared on the opposite' aisle of theliver, and from a rocky bluff. one of them com menced harranging us. He said that they were friends—he said that they wanted to trade, not to fight, and`that we must eturn whence we came, if a fiibute of' some kind was not paid them for pass ing through their countrr. Carson's reply to this was that. he knew them well—that the whites did nut like the Pah-Utah, for he would kill and rob.— "The Diggers are bad to the whites," be continu ed, "they say they are friends, get into comp, and then murder," adding, wide to use a Thespian ex pression; "Oh. you d—L---d rascals l I know ; you needn't stand there's preachin' to me—it won't do you no ',dud o good:" The Indians positively de nied the above asseverations, when Kit said—" The Palt-Utah lies." Several bows were immediately strung, but only one arrow was discharged, and the daring savage who perpetrated this rash deed re turned to his lodge and his squaw suffering, perhaps dying, from the wound inflicted by the round arrow of the white man's fire-bow. We saws no more Root Diggers that day. In the eroding we burnt a ring, about eight.feet wide,'arround our camp and corral, thus effectually preventing the Indians from driving us away through the tneans of fire, which, by igniting the dry grass, but for the precaution we had taken, could easily hare been done. o is El :11C8, Ining t►og ~ 0011 !A ,000 IMO RUSSIAN Dicrsr.ors.--A great deal of talk i- oc casioned at Berlin by au act of dirtied. Submission of the Government to Ru l ssian dictation. 1 The case was list of Michael Bakunin, whose name figured in the papers three or four years since . . The gen ileman,'by birth a Russian, and withal an ardent Democrat, as are many of the most intelligent men of his nation, publishedi in Paris a Democratic pamphlet, in consequence of--which he was ordered home. Not caring to, !receive the paternal disci pline of Siberia, which! IT knew awaited him on his return to St. Petersburg,, he did nut obey, and in consequence the Russian Cabinet addressed a spe cial note to all the cabinets of Europe, asking the Surrender of the rebel ions subject; as a rebel and a disorderly person in general. After the revolu tion he came to Berlin, and remained some time un disturbed, with the knowledge of the police, who simply required of him-not to go to Posen ; slime weeks since he went td Breltia and there, where iedru 00,- OICS teM. left rises I do tire- 0111 A ( make Ignite 1 w at haP reai- roc- tid there was leas likehhuld that he would find sympa thy or support among he people and where the af fair wool.' not excite =o much attention as in Ber- lin, he was suddenly tournoned before the police and ordered out of the country by the most direct road to BeigiuM, as a imsaian subject without the necessary 'Luskin las Oort. He was also informed that in case he shoul again appear in Prosaic he knir iolent as to place would be delivered ol,•r to the Russian authorities. He accordingly start d, end wfiri, he arrived at Dresden, where he had to stop one night, the police commissary informed him that Ire must remain in his charge, not as a prisoner, but in order that lie might be sure that he continued his journey, as he had special instr i nctions not to allow him to remain in the kingdomi'; from vihich it appears that the Russian domination is fully reestablished in all parts of Germany. The fugitive has addressed a protest to the. Assembly here and to the Second Chamber of the Saxon Parliament, in IA hit h he states t eve facts, in regard to v. hick the Ministry of both coun tries will be called to account. some /, or s are 'gaged o say I r ' to lore I • ment re ex- they It. Bp ttence SINGULAR .occuanrocn.—A most singular cir cumstance has occurred several times of lute, at the extensile varnish factory at l'ergen Hit! New Jei• eey. I At this 'establishments are forty vats, or cis terns, used fur the purpose of preparing to pmnine, each of which hold about six hundred gall.us.• It is-necessary, very frequently, to clean these tots, which is generally done by drawing off, and by the die of a brush attached to the end of a pole. On several occasions, a man named Juhn hlcKearnan has descended to the bottom' of one of there vats, and in a short time the influence of the gas was FO great as to render him entirely insensible. The last time he attempted it was a few days since ; against the remonstrances of till who knew the e i ffect it had upon him ; but he had become so habijnated to the pleasing intoxication produced that he persisted, and, came very near losing his life, since which lime it has become necessary to keep a watch upon him, whenever the vats are undergoing the process of being cleaned. The effect produced 'is said to be very much like that of -chloroform, but what the chemical properties are has not been ascertained.:—. This will afford a fine opportunity for the scientific to make experiMents, and probably discover some thing heretofore unknown. Thecae are only used fur preparing turpentine, which article, in itself has not been known before to produce such results. and it is evident that the vapor arising therefrom 'has a narcotic effect which to those who have seen its ef fects, is entirely unaccountable. It would be well fur sonic of the great chemists of the city to exam ine into this matter, as it might possibly lead to some ttiluable discovery.—X. Herald. icinred • terbtp 1.• t hie r the irence. d this 1 deans )pheip, iee of !ciliate e that I or- pub of the m top were THE "GOVEItRatEnTIVAVELE," which the despatch thrmigh the telegraph. announced were stolen, at Washingion, consist of a valuable diamond snuff box, pre,erited by the Einperor Alexander to the Hum. Lea%itt Harris; American Minister to the C l ourt of St. Peterinurg. The value of this article is $6OOO. The bottom of it only was found in the room. ' The gold scabbard. belonged to a sword 'pre senied to Coin. Biddle by the Viceroy of Peru; the sword was not,taken. There were besides a large bottle of otto of rose. from which perfumes could .realize $2OOO or $3OOO, and the pearl necklace and two large pearls presented to President Van Buren,' by the Imam of Muscat. The string Miami', and three of the pearls left behind. There were also stolen medals, coper and silver, of various GeneralS of the U. S. Army, among them- that of General Wayne ; a gold medal of Boliver, presented by Win . - self to a person who prevented him from being Or sassinated, and Other, medals. The building wils entered by the robbrrs.on the double front. and aS ceoding to the National Gal:ery, they unlocked" e door with a false key . They then secured the do ir with ropes inside. The articles above enumerat d were in a douhle case, the glass of which had to hei broken to reach them. Fur fear of making a nnitie.' the robbers first spread a piece of pink blotting pa per with gum arable and pasted it to the outer glass,; then with a inife of pievcer the glass was 'broken by,prying it around the edges, The fragments ad; heted to the paper, and were thus silently removed., added .habet) med to via' to eralion 1 7 m " — bet \ d ere to be 'n ove be een b. file 'e fist by the si!) i. los er to :orbs that as a led of ntial y,itie- Of the is ..p -s dos, v.rces ; hi, Gaotirto AND L011 , 71' TVMDLIIO .—On' Moaday (says the Cincinnati Times) • matt fell' from the 'fifth story of une of Messrs. Wilshire's stores on Walnut street.ltear Columbia, through the hatch. way to the lower door, and then got up andiwalkod off! This sou* marvellous ' but when we state that the 'inflame's were eoverett with loose 'boards all the wayldown t ant strong eeeesh t, 3 h o w the man, but strong enough to give sa .elastic _rebound, and then break, letting! hiardowa easy to the next, end end 60 on to the latttoat-n4he marvellousnees evaporator, _WAlejortka,t wwtirserely Injured; bitty:Once' vete Ittvalkeit • ' - d. him march (Tent!) , to, to re ! I wept nd when Im f; fleetly • ties, the un- I 1 Mee end KIT CARSON. "&" •••• AA. m aim% 7 1. , Or •, N !Yon', Nov. 20-10/; M. Steamer Atadia arrived alalostea yesterdiy mor. sing at 6 o'clock, her news= Is impOrtailt. • Cotton has advaUced ja 4. Fair Orleans 4jd. Corn market quiet and a shade lower, but ip mod erate demand-33s a 34s for white; 3416 d a 004 for Flour, 29e6d a 30s; sour. 375. Indian meal, 17r. 'Wheat, 7s a 803 d.,• - ,•• • Money Market easy. Parliament his keen,prolunged till Tuesday, the 12th December. i Inucimi.—The news from this country Is re garded with but little iniereet. The "state 'trials in Dublin have commenced. - The. Attorney General gave - hisfiat fur ore writ of error under the certiticsfe ludg O'Brien 's counsel (at his trial, and cony', Clunmel. A similar sanction has been gra, the clown of Messrs. Mepgher, Malt O'Donohite. Fttsiscit.—The 'Assembly have resolved President should be chosen on the 10th of ber, aeloriginally fixed upon. The succees o;coit is considered certain by his ow I= Gen. Caanginier has signified his intention to de cline. Louis Philippe and the governMent have arrang ed concerning the private properly of the 'Orleans family'. A loan of 20,000,000 francs will be raised to sup port the - families.now in England... • Riots have occured between the Guarde Mobile and the soldiers of the line. The clubs are marked by special violence on the subject of the Presideney. In one the orators pronounced a eulogy on Marat, Robespierre, etc. In the Assembly the revision would be completed before-the end of the week, and the constitution proclaimed. - AusTats...—Up to the last moment all is doubt and uncertainty respecting the fate of the Contending parties, both in and around the walls of Vienna The lest dates from Vienna through Berlin were to the 27th October, when every inducement having failed to induce the Vienne's° to surrender. Prince Windischrdarts had commenced the bombardment of the capital of the Austrian Empire. • The advance of the Hungarians to "relieve the city was eeteral times prevented by the imperial troops. A whole week had been passed is desul tory conflicts attended with considerable 'slaughter to both parties. Latest intelligence received Via. Ratisbon itt, that four of the suburbs are in flames.; The troops aro in possession of the northern line, and have not suc ceeded in taking any of the suburbs. In Jagerseii a tremendous barricade has been erected; it is de fended by eight cannon and as many companies of burghers. A perpetual firre is kept up against the enemy, but they , are beginning to husband their powder. ' . I There was still a supply Of provisions. There has been an encounter in the strewth between the tri-colored end the two-colored burghers r in which the latter were overcome after they had set. ihek streets on fire. . A captain in the National Glinted has be l en hang ed because he Wanted to inform the enemy of an in tended rally from Nesting. 70,000 flori a which were destined for the military; have.falle into the. hands of the National Goer& • IMI . The Polish legion lots au twin ed conaide able loss at the Praeter. From 60 t 70.tlead. . The Berlin Journal give the , terms • hieh the popUlace demanded, as follows: ' : 1 - A general Amnesty. • Nomination of a popular ministry. Removal of the troops.frotn the vicinity of Vien na. Tl:eEmpernr,was at Ohnutz and had issued or., derd to tranJer the Diet from Vienna to Krenims, a cityidwav between Olm.itz and Vienna. Wiln er ar id Smith's papers says the deathi in ni London from Cholera amounted a week t 0.34. Dai ly average being only one for the attendent live days. 18 cares wore rerwriocLan- riNteamloy 1 7-.4,44 fa _al and 9 est•ed on Wednesday ; 7 fatal. Thera iii yl5 cases, 12 fetal. . In Edinburgh, and the neighborhood it still lin gers. There have' been 5 deaths since last report tniakih , g 169 deaths since October 4th, out of 290 cases. niseb lismittn ionk.--The following i 6 from a little work entitled the “Ilund-book of inking," re• centlir published in London, and republished in the lam Home Journal:— In order to be n Yankee jolter, many qualifications are requi,ite. First of all, repudiate truth, - second ly, call everything a fact but the truth:: thirdly, the ( 1 joker t lis t be pretty well grounded in the works of Munel ausen. and a firm believer in the vclacity of Grolliv r's Travels. The Yankee joker must stick at nothing. After about six m nthS sharp practice, something like the following may be perpetrated. Talk of Crockett! say Ezekiel Nash, a genuine down-enster. could send him to eternal smack right slick off. Nash chews chain cables for "bakey" takes gunpowder fur s' off, and blows his nose with a tilt pocket hatikerchief; he sleeps beiween iron sheets,,which in wititeriere made red hot. Instead of rats and mice, wolveil iind grisly bears prowl about his room at night; b u s he sleeps so sound he's obliged to be thrown out of the window every morn ing to woke him. Mother missed him when hewer, a babe,- and found him at last seated on a hornet's nest playing at bopeep With a pair of rattlesnakes. As an infant Zekiel was - - - 1 - Wonder, I guess; he had razors and beyonetsfor toys, walked in topboote when he warn; three days oft!, sucked hot coals and used to rob his gums with a 'nutmeg grater; they weaned hint the very day he was horn, and fed him on pap made of flint stones and lignamvite soak ed in prussic acid. His npetite, fur a boy was awful; ho once eat k buffalo ,and -three parts of a horse, and then asked if tea' wasn't ready. When Nash travels by rail, he gets out to walk a trifle of forty or fifty miles, and waits an hour or two till the train overtakei hint. Theengine comes up panting and blowing, and'often says with a forced laugh, "lest my byler, Zekiel but -of. ail 'Mortal critters, you're the biggqst; I reckon your_father war a flash of lightning, and your mother, an earthquake.—. Darn me if you aint an ornament to creation." 'As a Speculator, Nash is crewel ItickY; He held some shares once s , which went to alich a pre mium,,that he *as obliged to send a broker up in a baloon to sell nut-. • • - , , FROM SANTA FE.—.We copy the following front the St. Louis Republicaln of -Nov. : Dr. Waldo arrived at Independence, from Santa Fe, on Sunday, the 224 olt., in' about eleven days from Santa Ft. Dr. Waldo left Colonel Wash ington's command about a day's march from Santa Fe.' Mr. Charles J. Asbury, of Johnson cdunty, Was killed, soppos-d to be by the Apache Indfns, about twenty-five kniles i this side of El Paso. 'He was re. turning from that place to meet his wagons, which he had left a few days before. As he had not been seen, Search was made, and after some' daYa, his body was ,found, with the body of a Mexican ger= vant,.whri had accompanied him. From the wound upon the bodies; it was supposed that they hadteen shot from some concealed point' the Chaparali on the road side. • ' - - By this arrival, we learn, that the Indians 6re l making incursions into every neighborhood, av they' have.complete control of . the country , and the-with draWal of .the United, States troppa have given en nintiagerneat to `Omit,: The primped.. of trade; and the eale of merchau. 'hie in Chihuhne, were Ilattering:' n • LOcnraw.-4 have noticed Jats ieveral, deaths by lockjaw, and for the information of ill; I will given certain remedy. When any one Infra''' . nail or any shirt) iron in'any parrot his bodY,',takeittOin-' mon smoke pipe, fill it with tobacco, light •It - avell thea take a thin cloth or 'silk hankerchia4 place it Over-the bowl of the pipeaad blow the smokethrough the stem into the wound, tWo or throe pipefulls will be efficient to set the wound discharging: 1 bare tried it on dayssif and five others, 'sad found it to give immediate ralieL If the wound ii of some daye standing: it will open it again, if the, tobacco is good. Try it, any one who may chance to get such tivround:-«Baltimore quit,. , U. A paper deseribiat ,some sew eallftad -amok whys t gine ipra anvil* lam acid= a l pine et 4101didt G(Epaesengeri! u.Oh'isetTs Oracle end..,. THE WEEKLY OBSERVER. SATURDAY MORNING. , NOVFMBER 25 a MEI . _ El 7 Among thkimpravernentsof this city. we notice new bell in f the UAlvsaeicrrr Coon Cir. hence fear days since. It was purchased from Mr. Andrew Fulton. Bell Founder, Pittsburgh, and is unquestionably the richest voted in the place. We believe it equal. if not superior. to any of tbe,same weight cast in the East. From this specimen me con e cheerfully and confidently recommend tiny who wish 'to procure belle. tothe fciundry ,of Mr. Ful ton. "Tullfaux JOURNAL Jur readers can bear tes timony that we seldom puff, much less publish OA pros pectuses of the literary journals of our Eastern cities, because most of them are scarcely worth the paper they are printed* on. "The Home Journal," of New York. Edited by Mounts & WILLIS. is ao exception hoWtiver, and we call attention to the prospectus among - our advertisements.. It does not base its claims to public favor upon the number and length .of its columns, and the low price for which it can' be' afforded, but upon its literary merit. its 'intrinsic excellence. All,' therefore, whotlesire a good littirary - pf per. had far bettor send two dollars for it, than one for such blanket-sheeta , as the "Model Courier," etc.,: etc. EOM by Mr. . mon at 1 , fed upon aus and ,hat the •Deeent of Louie parti- Gum vs Ltaur. i —The Philadelphia North American. in the first flush of victory, boldly proclaims that the election of 'Gen. Taylor has sealed the fate of the Inde pendent Treasury system, and intimates that the now Administration will seek some other depository for the public treasure. Wo beg leave, through the medium of the Ameritan's l ethe here, the,Gazette„ to enquire what is to be the substitute for the present system? Is it to be a National Bank? Or are the local banks 'to be the ,safer depositories of Uncle Sam's money ,Bags? •Or even yet. what is more improbable, is Zachary. in his supe t rios wisdom. going to invent and patent a new system, free from the objections of a National Batik, safer than the local, banks, and superior to the Constitutional TreaSury? Give us light, we say, on theile points. The people want to know whether the purse is to be united willilthe sword by the incoming dynasty? -As it \ was not deemed im portant before the canvass to designate the means that were to be made use of to effect the great reforms prom isedby the election of one, whose nomination Webster said "was not fit to be made," we trust that now, when all danger of losing' votes is over, the informal will not fail to instruct the uninformed into the mysteries of the neWants-slavery-extension-no-party-native-whig admin istration. Give us light. good sirs—give us light) A Sconr. or Orrics Stems "Dust Bnows."—The office seekers in mid about the chi of Boston were mist egregiously humbugged—taken in and done for ;-last week. A The Yankees are world renowned as being 'Cute. MiNjb.ey are occasionally "drawn on," and "polish. ed" without the help of "Day and Martin.V Last week there appeared at olio of the "crack Hotels" of the modern Athens a "nice young man" who registered' his naTe us the renowned Major Bilge, thei President elect's priv to Secretary. All Boston woe agog—particularly the office seeking portion. There never was such•rt time since Adam was a small boy. The fascinating Major was the center of attraction, "the observed of all observers," and the invited guest of many of the Cotton Lords; 'the reg ular officers at the Army and Nail-, esil'ed to' pay him their respects. Capt. D. D. Baker ofMarihe Corps, was graciously received and delighted by the cordiality and fraiikness of Old Zach's ninanubnsis. Tho disin trested patriots Who reluctantly consent the serve the country aftefr the 4th of March next, in the disagreeable capacity'of Collector of the Port, District Attorney, Na val °Mier. or Post Master, wore on hand: their atten tions to the Major were unceasing. and not a few were apprehensive from his generous friendship for them, that they would be called upon to take the weighty'resPonsi bilitiee of ono of MCI° offices. Fortunate folMws, their appretionsions wore relieved; it Was discovoOd that ho Was not "the genuine Witte." That instead of being the perfect Oise he represented hitmielf, he was nAiuri otis imitation—a "wooden nutmeg" and "limn grin flint," sort of a counterfeit. How ninny fainted, or what hu,tn bar took to "brandy-and-water" to drown sorrow, the pa pers do not inform us; but great is the wonder among those that were not "bit," what he will do with about a bushel of letters and recommendations for office consigned to his care to be delivered over with a first rate notice Sem the Major to "His Excellency the President." It is said he left a card for awould be Post-muster, on which was written, "Mg wounded are behind we." [l7 . Tho Ceminerrint- is out for Andy Stewart fora neat . in Gen. Taylor' cabinet, as Secretary of the treas ury. Good—we go or that with the proriso, that John ny be called to the responsible position of official editor. Andy could not tto . withotit • Johnny, and Johnny could in)t get along with Out Andy.. . Quetta FIGURES.—Of 'all the queer figures at the late extraordinary election, the following comparison made by the Bulletin, of the votes of Nev York and Philadelphia cities and counties is the queerest: Full vote of New York, • Do. Philadelphia, When 160 consider the difference in favor of New York in population, as compared with Philadelphia, we may then find out whore the great Taylor majorities in the city and county came from. To be la Congressman, was once considered a groa honor; but, ales! those days have gone by. Any man even Moses Hampton—can now bo a Congressman! piusborg/t Post. A little mistaken Mr. Post. We know of several thu can't—one, in particular has tried twice, but it's no go. The two first letters of his name. Oro James Campbell and he Biros in Clarion. Fiat AND Loss or LIFT. AT NTAT CASTI.E.—WO learn from tho New Callao Gazette, that on Tuosday evening of last week a man • badly intoxicated, who had boon wandering about, was placed in a carpenter's shop be longing to McCormic, Peebles. BrOwn & Co., adjoining the Orizaba Iron Works, in order to . protect hint from the inclement weather. Care was taken to ascertain that no fire existed. after which the door of tho building was locked. About half past three in the morning the build- ing was discovered to be on fire and soon enveloped in flames—tho door nas burst open and after considerable search amidst heat and dense smoke the drunken man was fotiMi and dragged out. apparently more dead than alive. He was discovered to he seriously injured, but ho lingered until the afternoon of tbo subsequent Thursday, when ho died: Ho gave the follci i wing accent of the orig- , ination of the calarnity: He stetted that mil iistiakening the night ho felt cold and attempted to kindle a fire in the stove from matches he carrild in his pocket—the fito caught the surrounding shavings and led to the !eta! result. He was too much intoxicated to either arrest the flames or save himself. HO wee a German and a stran ger nam i ed Frederick Ourie. The loss in property. build ing, patterns. tools, &c., &c., was considerable. Tut thrrzasocE.—=Dobbs says that the only difference ho can discover between a general and captain is; that one says "Come on." and the other save "Go on"-one gathers cypress and the other laurels. ''The captains-be come candidates for the grave—the generals for the Pres idencyl--&-•paper. , • It mob be that the whip will find less difference than • thatkrtween their Captain Tyler itnd General Taylor.— , There id only•adifference of and in theirutunee,..and it humaney hintedothereirron'tbeaven ' that in their acts. We shall see! • - • , - -- • Tirg Ninon. or GO. 'Tarim'ls Fattrits.-.-Ther escatesOf . Oen. Taylor here at the north. pledged Gen. Taylor !tot to ititerPose his veto. should Congress extend the'ordivance of- 'B7 'over oar new (territories. 'Thefol lowingiromthe National Intelligistiii. since - de eforticnt: show's hen, much all such pledges are worth: ..Unfektersd ly'etity sediment pledges. he' will he the , President - of thonahow looking to Osgood and rights of t a:r Our ell itsrnapbevo: and sm. unranuffia of temper ftf arctic and coutprolort in which the federal constitution was.' and in an d d ..wi n s which' Only it mild haoll ha framed: sad thus making '- Out Ewell,' policy the spat of s more 'who* 17P1011 of , foot to oh (11 theico and of the ,people: ", . - • 1 pleustit offi :• ' I 1 E lE. PA. "-Op THE UPHEAVINGS OF. TAYLORISM The "noise and confusion" of filo victory achieved by the allied forces tinder the hero of the battle of Buena Vista, has scitrcely diid,upon the ear—even the festivals Incident upon such °Cattail) is' have not -been held in many places—and yet the wrangling.of the victors over the spoils, ,the criminationa and recriminations of the different captains of divisfons„ may bo heard in every town, city of village, from Maine to Texas. If ,these premonitory upheavings may be looked upon es an index to thefuturet. Gen. Taylor's adminiexa n will ho one of the most; stormy ever known in o history - a the country: If; they ore the forerunpei o he tempest, he will find tha i chair of State a more uneasy t than, the back of "old Whitey" even amid the leaden il of Bue nit Vista. The discordant elemOnts that ' • united r for worse," by the talisman of "suers mill ," have begot), ere the "honey moon" hath I full, to indulge in matrimonial squabbles that "for bettor tar► ren ow waxed to i will ultimately lead to`a "divoice." We, of course, take no interest in theie "family' jars," other than as 'a "look er on in Venice" whose dnly,it is to keep the readers 'of I our Papers advised of / the,doings of the ; world around us. We would that ZatharY Taylor should-fill the -chair of even eVe s some.of his numn-wombiping friends have proclaimed Ito would, like a second Washington: but wo fear that he will fall so immeasniably short of such a standard that some of those who have elected him will, before a twelve month front his iriauguiation, call down the bitterest anathemas of politic'el hatred upon Iris head. It may beCortio then the province of the Democracy to shield and defend him against these who would "mm el come hint with bloody hands" to a hospit-ible lolitie-il grave, It may be that then', he and the count y Will learn that those who placed him in the chair of State did so in the hopes of public plunder, and an from any lofty' motives of patriotism, or gratitude for his great deeds in a war they had pronounced "God abhorred," and waged (or the "extension of Slavery."- As we before remark ed, the bitterness manifested in the upheavings of Tay 'orient since the election, is proof of what we have writ ten above. ' For instance, the ; New York Mirror, the first paper in the country of anyi etiracter, to unfurl tho banner of "Rough and Ready,'? comes down upon Clay . and Webstand their friends, with a relied that tf oun da like a polit ical discharg e from .I.lrag,g's battery. It says: "Now that tficie is aiiy clanger of injuring our (its) favorite candidfor time Vresidency, we owe it to the indefatigable indePendent Tnylor men, both in thiS city, (New York) and throughout the Union, to state that they have triump ed, not only without the aid of the great champions : of the Whig party, the eastern and western "embodiments" of win g principles, but even in despite of them. Neither Clay tier Webster have ren dered us (the Taylor party) any assistance' in the great contest which has resulted so gloriously for the - nation.— the "Sage of Ashland" has doggedly maintained a si !once, when, . • 1 "One blast front hisibugle horn • Were worth a thousand mem" while he has been industrionsity writing privately to his idelatrousifriends that 'the l'imil i tdelphia : nomination was a degredlion to the Whig 'party.' " Time Mirror then goes on t say, that having succeeded without their aid, "the Tay or party, now the one great-pa l .ty of the nation, owes the 1 nothing. Presilleilt 'raptor Days them noth ing-;" and iii regard to Weh4er or Clay. being honored with a seat in the General's eibioet, indignantly exclainni, "Thank God, Gun. Taylor knows his friends, and what iaistill botcr , never forgets his', won dal. 1 He knows The differenc between the veterans who haVe suffered in his cause an I the political by poerites who liave simile both hie cause and his friends suffeir by 'their lyetus stabs." f In asubsequent article the Mirror, Mal speaking of the hopes in lulged of Taylor's receiving ti_lb vote of Virg n ia, rents' Its; I , ”It se ma probabla that Gen. Taylor iis deptivcd of the crowntn glory which his friends foncllV hoped awaited him, of air. tog 'ell Virginia, his n..hive State, by :be treason 0( the vltra Clay oten;in that aitcient c.t.wel of Democr cy. Tins is clearly shown bv the returns limn sunthyhig counties. 'print:v.llly in th tide-water Fee 1, lion. pm compering them nith the retains fiotri dembr erstic co antics; the former showing a Whig toi-s from the vote of, 1 8 81.4 and 1840, while the latter show handsome gains. Ve give a few specimenb beloe id these re t urns; exhibiting plainiy the game that has been played to place old ZaCk in the list of beaten caadidates in his native State to which Clay and Ilartion belong." After 'thus consigning to polineal oblivion 'the two great "einbodinients" of Whigrry, Messrs. Clay and I - Webster, and their friends, the 111q•ror ;ventuies to' form a eabine't for the old General. This is going a Hale too far. and the Philadelphia Narth American comes down on the Mirror in this wise: THE NEW CADINET.—Si , ver.,l, of the papers=-particu larly thcise that possess no 'other method of bemg heard or seen—are melting themselves busy by speculating no on the composition of General Tudor's Cabinet. The President' elect will doubthiss feel the importance of these suggestions; but at this early , day, ,it does seein—to say nothing of the indelicacy of disparagiag men of distinc tion by an endeavor to pre-occiipt• - the publiel mind—a little presumptuous to undertake ibis sort of rhetatjon.—' We attach no sort of consequence to these htde ti,nove ments, and we entertain, personally and pol.tiealls. the highest respect for those who have been named in thi connection ; but these attemptq, tf countenanced by the influential press, t.an only lead to distrhetion and emh:tr rassmetit. fili; ridiculous' 53,158 53,167 tone, to Rat• nothi does not condesee offended, but parn no other method oj i fluentird press" no , interference. In regard to th the ..uPheavi igs' ing as those U thetpoite. out the !progr• tariff of 181 fiext i "a rein presume the "the liberal it Lion of the y ultra Whig ouppOod th and denounc that "nrhid I that the "tri net pledges, adtninistrati. tires of the d Now York try, utterly re' aro attempti I General is al l accordingly. snits the He tribe the °nil The Indepe conform tot old U. B. B ated for a re-organiz' manta. On repudiates t , and a:dahlia • Verily th vastly emus given is but winch, of C. OTThe Anseriecua, place? u rrlaw• A l r l tsar down. I ID' John Mexico. it i Coss carryi only dsmoc out of this 0 t ; ye Iv aristocratic is the North American's tcg of the jealoul hatred batraye'd. It : 1 1t1 even to nam the papers iltat have tcularized them tis a class “th i at pozisess k bring hcard"--anti calls upon tho "in it to ...cuuntonanco" any ouch plebeian measures of the ne l w administration, appear to be as various and conflict- Jard to the cabinet and the disposition o mei American,be forO alluded to. make , and cntbracesl in It the "Repeal of the a td restoration of that of and of the independent Treasury," and we stablishment of un United States Rink; • tprorentent of rirers and harbors; °cells rf publiC lands," and various other 1 eas4ires. The Philadelphia Sun, which old s General while tho . American abused .d bim, politely informs its brother in arms, unkerism" is "knoelicOn the head," and mph of Taylor and Fillidore was the result of old will lead to a popular, not a platform, in;" thus plainly intimating that the mess funct whig party are "obsolete ideas."' Tho ercild, also the first Taylarpaper in the coma ticiates the Whig platform. which the ; tdtras g to"lay down for Gon. Taylor, and says the cted independent of all parties and • will act In refere9ce to proscription for opinion's id pays there will bk none' of it. .111erit is test \ when appointments are l to be made.— . dont Treasury is to be revise - 4i and made to o wants and experience of the couritiy. l the I I nk. or Deposite Bank systeni not to be toter.. Intent; r a revision of the-Post (Mice law; and tion Of the pinto, War and liNavy Depait the subject of the tariff, the Herald utterly • o Whigclaim to repeal the tariff of 123.16. a hig i hrotective tariff. i I• upheavings of Taylorism bids fair to be ng. if notoing else. • The chapter we have a tithe of what we expect hereafter; and l Ut3tl alien bo duly laid before bur readers. EMI • azitie, following iu the footsteps of the North Hs Ibe a repeal of the Independent Trees , hat system does the dezette propose In its I .former should .propose to build up Ss weU as , 4ell, of New Orleans. latel minister to id. bet upwards of SBO,OOU on 'Oe'neral g Ohio. and has won it. Ho is about tho at we have heard of that has mado anything lection. 1 temporary of tho iqautte is unusually pa . manticly sentimontal, odor "church belle' r enjoyments," this week: We mention the that Toylatiam has not yet had any "tm ct upon sensitise minds." _ VANIA 07FICI1L.—The follow •of the Fres:dentin] election in and Fillmore, nd Butler. wen and Adams, _ •FnneialL footing up For Taylor 44' Casa a .4 Van B , Total vote, Taylor's njority over Case and - Butler give the table in our next i• NV* wi ME It IC OrFICIA L.—The official ote of New .I"iici is: Cass 11-1,542; Van Bur n 120,519; Tit. 1. Vau Buren and Cass ovm Taylor 16,56 t 1 to this there arc about 3004 scatteriag votes, ed to Cass iud Vari Borer's majority 4 , 0 eves him in a minority of nearly 20,000, „ tTION TOIL F T A I LOR SOIL ll/1.3....T14 ! , /ler di/ of yesterday pevv..a: 'There twili t . 4 giug of Gem Taylor from., his fic = ition—f„,, Ili fe, from his character—the} should the wil. iso be passed into law duri g the term of hi, -, he will apply the veto to sich a law, delpe, zertions in aitraner to the cortrary, by a, ~ office -beggars, trading politicians. and dim cription." _ The italics are "the Herald's, Nkw Y fpoti up th' lor 9.18,55 In additio which ad 'Taylor, CONSO4.I Now Yor doubt, jut ; his whole plot Pro Preildenc of rill the gems of th of erery d - olocCon of Gen. Taylor cilia oft' Henn ity of whicht ho has been the distinguishedlead, artt•r l of a century. -Amid ilia general arro: a protid and lofty tnonumentnf what Mlig, en. • lU' Tii:! from a pa l or for a qt ll he survive ere Ito bt QuxEn Ri.so n all the placrs w lerr Diniti strr spoke in M eh.achusetts, ' ; the Free,,' Softeralhare et; joritirs—the lust t lace the largest of paper: Of court C. .Zayler, as a reward for such el irast service, will offer the "God-like" a seat in his cathson, , ointment to some foreign court. O an al, r. Trit TRUTH o igifial s eeliundi the !lanes against Ili dealing, II Cat-throa t and all fil" the Till IN A FEW AVOIIIiS —The New York Ifirror,th i for paper in New York, thus runs the cold tit. the fifth rib orcertain Taylor gentry: "Inez eh farmer talks against a candidate he rota also. It takes a trimming, shuffling,donbl e hypocritical politician to denounce a men u a to-day, and exalt him to the skies to•morroo i for the sake of honor and offie." Didlntsoro t for men hero set for this portrait? ilVe 0:14 nye the noise, ears, eves and; mouth'. • rOltltESL—This gentleman reCon EMS'S '4 Gothic C. banks'of I thu.4E, cm made al e judg l tv." stle in the style of the ten the Hudson, garq et gran! ontertainmentt a 'toyed upon it a fe% l l; days ugh. Speeches trey sins and by hint, and Irons a published rem he diNpla)od all the bouut ul hospitality of* Lord, with the true spirit of tnodera "Fraterm• si. Dl' AMEltlckti EXTOIITS.--FA parlimenterytt. .1i0h.4 from the United States to GriCet nntsin earl, from 1843 to 1847, shoals an agg l u gateie. rice 1 1643 of mm 0 than one hundred andhly pe. mong the articles enumera t ed are oil, st'arei , tli , s, beef, tallow, hides, pork,baban, lard, cheese. •orn, flour, corn meal, rice, wool and hops.' The itieren,elof l bacon, ;lard and cheese, ii equal to one has deed - I deed jicr cent: of corn more _than fifteen million per rest: there hating been none etb , o'rtet.l ilBl3, ad 13,54. tl 523 bushels in 1637. Tht4 is the !Ltlited States pouring etchheretchhat vests into the 014-,worleT, I%crut: I port of c for five crease si cent. A nival stq wheat, e, Mt!. BOTTS "HPIAL.III."-.31r Bofts, at a meet:ag in Richmond, since G 4,71. Taytor's dee ion,. declared that d I the Pres i dient elect delivered_a "\vhi I inaugural arldreo; and appointed a whig cabinet," h would give him u ,;. cordial a support as. if Henry-Clay h i ad.been elected. An indiv:duat in the crowd l aAted him_•" l if he ever saw Itelnisl ttke physic," which was tesponded to by the tuctiing ,with indignant shouts of t.O - 0, hint out."' . . ,—...: .1. cie The notoricus LIAEDEUS STEVENS is urged IT sont6 of his tpdies for a seat in Gen. Tsyloes'esbinet. 11 the General appoints him, we hope ho won't overlook the claims of den. Santa 'Anna. wa such nantuu shouhl not be sepn.r.ted. atthee. - Taylor, Esq., has acnted the Etrotial the l l'o;umer,i:il. Fairs - cif. INlatthevr-wheawi I will you a copy of ••Wayland's Political Ecoti. idGen. Cass's Chicago lett6r. That's fair lent tU' \ 1) : od (I.c, we;:, it? tw N •sr trEns.—Wo fi d the following looting about on the s sea of, )ewspop l t . rdern, with. it or car-mark. If we Itn , w the author, yeti n canonized as nn apostle o l f truth, 110 tells IL.O vet.) editor can endorse front his ownTentonti :on. ‘rtain 'nail hit his too agnin t - a pebble•stone tad long to the ground. lie was vexed lied tinder to ice of auger and active sclf,urficiency, be Id mother earth right saucily. With tuipuriun. itv, ho looked to see “the just groho' itself cl:e and color to naught. flu the earth remained, v his poor faot was injured in the encounter.— ' ME agrayli out err hnr4 I %% Inch obso. Pell lit, the hi the way of man. An ar him hi a weak place. and dm, hid tipper, With Z. . on to see a crash, when t ado to be. ,Poorfdol ►to h. a world that.does not perm res, to no extent, any one )n..ecr.—Sonoo of the Whig payers are argiog on of - "e/rfet_sked N n llt nmisiv.tarit, for SW , We object to such an arrangement: and we arc not of the faithful, l and strictly speakieg.- right to enter our protest, Ilike Gen. Jackson, se ore s'non-ibilitc Eff - , county Ina voted whigtret e ghost of Billy Morgan sit the people crary,oti has never received - acompliment from the Ste.e., nv presents a candidate to- State Treasurer, in l on G. J. BALL, Esq., and we say he.nist les If he is pot; and a tklea l tr4 candidate for Ct. I mm,issioner preferred, welt know the reasOVIV! tho Tree thou haye ii tulto t since, t nY )“, COE the pe elected' nal 'ol AD TO SET, IT.''—WO are glad to see that the l ot good fellows, S. S. BE. :WIZARD, Esq. , of the rn Nctc Torker, has been elected Treasuitt eI lug county, IN: Y. Sam is a good fellor,ll ho talks whigery like a took, is every iEb ,rat-11:.'s only mistaken in' the track, that's all iza [EM 117 e te i IV v . tri tlrnt gl - , deuio The Editor l of theCommetcial is informed theid i rtu .itching' for our birth along side the "fit us wo understand hp has it will be entireli tn. ry' for him a to come with "sharp stick, n al how fight with any such gerne, having a Volt tho peculiar' era:U ti oy leave Wt'l!' t sight. I Ex•Sicsixioa he has MEI MEE mover. Ilk° to leave MT The Gazette . object-to DAlOor Bliss beingalled to \!.he pepartment, be'cu 3 se he is young. fl of c' grrle : seein that \ he is a whig. ‘thtik the objeetloi l a °; but haw wcAtlfi the Gautte likethe_sppointinest \ Col „left Davis for the same etati , a7 We think ittold to a capital appointment ' N EAT ,CONTE7IENT.—Ii LS • too !ii(ik to vote for Goo. l Tay') is ve7 convenient, especial( 91ing fifty miles to vote..l um .1 . 1 4 4 , 17.F.LIZX TUZIR WI DING W --F T ON AT."ourteee sr plica± for the Post office in El r ittaburgh, left that city 1111 week, for Baton Rouge, to sea l "old 'Lack.' WO W I they'lLall be satisfied. By tote by, when are a,orite 4 f ° patrio going to start for thel: l atne destinaticie i ,‘ 1201 A vinoyaPd tit Cio6l cititti. awned by Mr. 1 16 i. has produced. In nine yenta 'wine to the v i ue of 0' thouslind twohundred and t,-enty-nine do) rs Ind 6 i. 1 1 cents. Deduct from this amhunt Thep cost of l l t a vin is l4 and cultivation , and we find la priifit l of two thouss 6 " hundiid and twenty-five , dcillers and fiftyfeuts for lb. nine vears, or two huudrui l 14d eighty dolleht and urn` one cents per s ear. t_ (MAlL—flubed H. Morton. the Native Americans fur ,Cri his residenno in Harrisburg 01 We are studying nui•i trill Blend nal correct ehnrt were .e. • is the oleic State:' IdS,sl 3 17IA 11,263 —......... 3 C8.7:12 ---...... 13,537 2,Z4 avo'nt room 12 who is erecting a h century, on ft, tick in n neNspeper straight -way-he ten& eal stilf-comlaceT; ho object of big s i nk/a only hit liiso;ro toe rtibly feel the the& !but himself. ow said Henry' Clay ire r. Sickness, s'iictletim e ‘ I wtion one is farad fir E"l.. twiCe the ;teati al Commiesioner. gad Monday ftioe—if any of cajr fried Salt River. •it miqb°ll