DM= ARRIVAL or rite • CAMB RIA:. ',' DAYS LATER FROM'EtfRoPt q'he 'Cambria arrived at this pa, 6t* . t days later news from •Eor, from Liverpool on the 11th-inat.l PROVISIONS.—Tho marke t ions has been firm since our provi Ims been freely taken, and Bum ti per cwt. Lord is in fair request; and 11,0 earls port of last week, has in GRAiN.—The imports of forei pro.ittee into Liverpool, 'London ' purrs of the United Kingdom, are and thew combined with a pretty home keep the market on the' will In the ab , cence of speculation thi total want of animation., Buyer the supply of immediate or pre `.1:1-1; Lane on Afonday last IF he l l abl's fur red, and at 55460 for MO ' CORN .—The be. , ,t white (Et)! 03.3 per qurft ter. market ten: doll, and; in di elute of Id per 70 lin; on Englis milted to: The tollowing rates ican descriptions., Canadian, fre t ‘A Tote, Clnited•Stati mlote., Rs FLOUR.—The demand for At dull, but the price, guid e d tnri•'d barrel for United States and 27a: United and Crimid sale f butt. prices were lintintnined, ti toted at 301.31,; Cntuu lion rtt per bbl. vorrentle troops, niter eight ,ilys ei inst. Six days ha,' been cmisiimet bring the Vientio:si) into ti=niiiis were mode by mine of th tain bctter terms of eurrender Iroop,i, Lott till to oo porimie. tht the _nth therelore 'Want This attach oa the stihutb.. Ou I tnents ‘‘rte chiefly cunt - 111 , 2 , 110 tl chile - on the mesh heard the bombs of Jolltrchich--) talten;the suburbs of NV wden. 1,1 Guards threw rltp,t. it their nruel e.eapons acre (ming in the canal tat the contrary, dis'playeri great s were observed; bait• at kvns prei:rt i !nid aide their peculiar co-tutne, righting - ins' , „. :Cot nu,ny b"rt been thrown into the city, as on acne destroyed. At II o'cioeliat night nothin ; ui on. beiond the vietorioiii troup. It is ssi,l that ttri early !dir the inhabitants had in nian,t 6/lute flays, a Rich were itninediu!! the operatives. ()lily a few shellrp were throt of tile'?Bth, a means of iti -pi yule directed against the Quiver her of rockets were also thrown 011 the 2tith the troops were al el, andv ithin from 200 to •100 via!' of the city by mid-iteiy, eeiced upon, which extended to at ni-Am. At the expirnthin of this to %%ho hud crossed the frontier, a I s ola the city, attacked the im t\ etc, however, completely defe, The Viennoise having com t %%as again 14onthartfed o ihla tiny a force of 18,0001 he lc ft o ing Windiachratz Jelinchich. Messenhansen, at body of V iennoiEe, at the 611M0 a gate in the vicinity of the Red i was repelled, and thellungariat, lv and driven into the Danul Windischgratz sent the follosvi spate,' to "Weesenberg, Preside' ha unconditionally aubmita; tb will enter Vienna." The greater part of the Hun! orPr to the enemy; among othe I.clitensfein. The struggle in na Naas of short duration, and ; in Tsos&.ession of the Imperial tr On the evening of the 31st made their first °weaned to the already captured all the Fauliourg t / quietly towards the bastions up, n w Fad beeti raised, they were suddenly shover uf bulls. Upon this, shells at immediately thrown into the eity. Lilo sty a portion of the Palace flames; when the town submitted sr the,Karnthrstrasse and the 'square o weleocropied by the troops. A brie bring still kept up upon the military' ihms t f the Burgemial Karotheer, Al stormed and battered in, and the troo Borne lay assault. , The stutlenti fought like. Inn4rnen, inns! of the city li;ill gi% en up ',till t.elves in the t icluity of the AtitiA, orlion of the tt oilmen. On i Oho tttli , held cut. 'rile troepb bad taken about 00 pr e.y. 11.1Pgraians recruf , ed tl ezLi, wilhdruw. 'l'he (1( acial of the Taipetial trot); Lin cuudit iral= to the Catl,.el u Vie until 8 I'. M. for deliberation, but 4 ,,, rie IN Ow litifillmyylunt.til in care Ind k m:plied ith. 'l'i G,Lartls It% it usher hi throe utltl: tltia übiog 14}t• l i • The m3.1..pt chiad at Tiad4 - 4 w r.tcialy. in 11; - lantaltactl : ud the amotalt 441 in the 1.411:411 4.d. A rc%;% of the tumor that a ilego t tot h.r cedtt Cttba to the lluii cttua TI .r cotllito and to airy 1 - 1; N II I" 1!../.1 that R.ItI/Si'ilildS ( . ‘f TO' I.(ildrtt'‘ Ilfrairs in !di contributed to the french foni:4 '1'11" fluoe per-cent us file e-pr-r cotils, to pro -:..44.1, ievivol in p ral l'au.igatie lind provider] 11l of 11110111 Hr but lII,' Itcd liopubleans' Lc Alta Wire u 3 110.11 • 'l-, , , i1i,.,1‘.;•,p0iF.0n's eli.eti.ffi iv -till e %rill be ;die' n feeinfirl ig'oo. t • 'l'he lornmh Conf 14'16011 had fi l ial . notun of the National At.semblv. The go‘ernmet had granted a sub : inn.ltens to Faidinia. The Eng Pri , s , 4 forebodes evil to Northern Italy, The. cooniyy w a fusion. An iniorreet toff liadbrolten The r,lrtitglite - r on both sides et Vi totle:tee. The defeat ef the littna' chich4es id to have been complete. A DELI ATIf ITINT....The Secretar of the navi recently . ( - Toyed a letter in a lady's hatl-writin V. 111(.11 enclosed the announcement, cot front a new: }.riper, of•martiage of a young. officer in the Nay and .a reference to the. twenty-fotiffir chapter Deuteronomy, and fifth verse, which list as follows .• When a man hash taken a new wife, he aha ,I not go out to war, neither shall he b charged - wit any business ; but he shall be trait !Unite pne yea and shall ;cheer up hie new wife %•hich he kit t at e'n . " 'Very delicately tone. ADviCe TO TUR LADIES.-..AlWayeArefie pa nce ly and plainly sit pasaible.-.40t Flora be your iew i on am a raga.bud the only gem abdut you, ''Phi l entrffti.g yntrroolf with gaol-grew/ a lilto fat cattl only noilicatet that you ere iptendtd, Ike OLIO," to •trt, Yoas Nov. 25. rt toohy, bringing pe, having sailed for cured provi one notice. Pork has advanced '2a lthsough lower in ince recovered. dgri grain and grab and other leading rapidly increasing, Y fair quantity at ole wolf supplied. i 3 trade exhibits a only purchase for !f sing 'wants. At :gt was sold at 451s ;te per quarter. link) brought 311 some Instance "R se eat ivi6 sob ere paid for Amer -e, }tell 7s Gd per , s mil 7s 101,8 s Id, Fieriti,rm flour was feod i ti 128332.. s per Oi for Canadian. an Flour had a dull thr I former being. I •et 0.1 a:l9s 6:1 l ed to the Imperial Up to the Itzith in erlea‘oring to Fevernl at irtimbitants to oh from the Imperial lbgrakz eCtmnteneefl tat day t he engagit !e rmutherti and ens- Fa batteries were ho had completely (tithe Nat iott '. and a great many The workmen, alor. No student:- ned that they had for the purpo:e of hs appear .to have y 40 ur i .- )0 house:: kg ha.] 'wen detes tits. .advance of the the previouA eve v tin:lances shown rtely torn dots n by ;•ti on the evening ing terror. They ity. A large nuns- ready on the Oa :pacea of the inner 'the truce' the'following day litnif:ariuns d by a - sortie 'flies the combat s 181. _-_, • raafts attacked the right of d of a large tallied out from The sortie ited'complete- At, 12 o'clock egraphic De ~later; hVien q iny soldiers El= g to t Ali a da a troops went regiment of streets of Vien • Thole city was tinn the Ist inst. perial troops ! o ts . )wn, hiving Bich. Advancing ich whitellogs received by a nd rockets were The linperini were soon in rd the Bonrie, •' St. Stephen ;lc fire, however, from the win le gates were )ps carried the aria tl) the e l he mi ' ope .: he 11 'nner lend when the efewled them lippnrted by n Nov. they isonera ou that thrt on the I s proposirb gale tlicn threatening ti ettiis Crete I ing ti%t to did an advaheo. iring dit•trict had tacreas iti.l h ed States hat bus eubsided had clk , ,terrain he 'ropor 'celiac , of th', had fallen a J. There i IBM stleons of to: osttrection i l collected a • us c%er. pected., but y received td idy of 20,00 ITALY conFPtii:oncti in great co but in Germ: stnti, had bee' . i ritins Je11• LATER FROM CORPUOCIIRI The following-itents'eticePled freuall - Christi Staref the 24th of October; IturtawiteA piny of Germane paned here a day or two ago, and reported the body of Indigos had bean attacked on; the o of the San Antontoriver, by it compeer Reagent • According to there_pert the in the best of the battle s and 'the Texans we to give back, leaving a number pf their me the Setd, and bringing of Some nine or t wounded. From the demeription given of of the Rangers, we were led to believe it tainßutton, whose company was recently ) at this place. If it be true se reported, must take the liberty of doubting, until fu vices, we have ne doubt that thceitizene turned out, and ere this hags puniued . the even into their,manntain home. ' ' FAME SALTILLO.—A party of America here last evening from Saltine. They re 'every thing was quiet there, and that B was expected to arrive in Monterey on th next month, at the head of two divisions of troops—the, first commanded by Genera who wee, second in command, and the othe Mejia. The cause of sending these troop 'frontier was to put down any insurrectione l metals there. The people talk considers separation from the central government, b ed to be generally opposed to any foreign once. Arista was nut in Monterey when mints left, but was expected there in a, 1 1 malls. The party crossed the country f illo here, but neither saw nor heard of an i the runic. LAIIIMO.—A gentleman who arrived fro , -sterday, state that they met a number of ing Gam Son Antonio to Laredo, and tha ) I um was a member of Captain Sutton's of Itang,ers. The latter informed them 1 Siniiany had been disbanded, and that the neir having had a tight with some India loped by us in another place, was without The murders lately committed on the .an Anta ll') river, hich wero at first attributed tthe. In dians, now appear to have been committed , by a par ty of Mexicans from' C:l3lyier's Ranch, ,who were seen to come in with a number of articles of cloth ing said to have been recognized as belonging to t , murdered man. The Mexicans state that they ursucd a party of Indians whom they met on their r mte, and that they took the clothing from them; t ut this story did Jun appear to be generally credi t tit. The. N. 0. Delta publishes the following lett r ! 'rum its regular correspondent: CORPUS CHRIS ri, Oct. 28, 1848. The mail bag from the Hunt %as returned yester day, and with it the above letter, which 1 have. en clutod, although its date will be fir back ere it reach es, you. You may, howeler, find something in it worth culling.`, Our town continues lively, and the increase of trade,from the Mexican side of the Rio. Grande is considerable.-'' There is'not a point on the river f-urn which some one Fr not in Corpus Christi.— The Mexicans who have removed to the _American side, come here for advice as to what course to pur sue, until the arrival of trtsips op the frontier—how l lind where they shall register their land idles—: whether they can rote at this election, for thOlneit l President—in lino, they do nothiirg ethout consul ting Corpus Christi. The reason of this is, that Col. Ritmey knows every Mexican un the frontier, and every Mexican knows the Colonel, and they hate unbounded confidence in him.. . . To-day I met with a merchant or trader from Mot.terey. lie' represents the country as quiet, but does not believe it Will lung remain so.. From Tatn pico the military had sent to the Governor of 'New Leon for men and cannon to assist in putting down the people, hut they were denied. There seems to be an understanding among the Btates:-comprising the Northern .Provinces, that in all matters pertain ing to the Federal Government, they ; will ,act .in concert, and it is generally believed, that the first dilEculty—the first attempt at .e revolution r in the capitol,-will he fo st ilowed hy'a move on the Ameri can frontier. fur 'eparetion. Even men who aro opposed to the sore, believe be the case. On the other e eof the Rio Grande Americans are treated with t utmost consideration by the Mexican.. They. respected and .honored ;more than any other. lur) nets--not only _by private cit izens, but by the vial offiters. I expected' that a few years alter the war was over such would be the case, but did not look for it so' soon. - Our wells here are getting along famously—the one at the Oso is nearly one hundred and fifty feet deep, and Mr. Cooper, who is operating in the town, is, progreuing finely. No further depredations from the Indians. - CUAPPARA.L. ?tom the New Orlathe lilts. Ner. 10 A very elegantly-dressed ‘yhig friend was yes terday stinted by an- extremely ragged individual, whose rase bore striking proofs of his having been engaged in some one of the numerous -melees, fur which the election and John Barleycorn are respon sible, with the request for the loan of a dime, sta ting that they had voted theism. ticket, sod taken a drink together on Tuesday! "Sir!" replied our Whig fnend, HI hive not the remotest recollection of ever having seen you before in my life." HA LunaliAn!—When the telegraphic news, pub lished in the - Pienyune of yesterday, wee read out in the telegraph office, a certain cotemporary, who felt a alight interest in the result, raised aloft his yellow-white mouequeteire, rolled his eyes heaven wards, and in a voice of mingled joy and solemnity, exclaimed: It The Lord is in his holy temple—bless ed be the name of the Lord!" i•liurrahforTaylorr Our cotemporary has been better ever since. DOUBTFUL.--A very ardent Democrat was over heard reading the following telegraphic report, ac c'•mpanying it. with ~aundry strong ejaculations: "Maine, New HaMpshire, :Mt definite." "Well, that's bad, but let's go on"- 4 New Yolk, Taylor."• Well, we ennstnno that." •' Pennsylvania, Tay lor." '• That is tumuli runs bad." "Ohio, doubtful." "Oh. Christ '' " uoir, Sinbbletield! Well, Ih t beats all creation.— It was bad enoegh for Pendsylvania, New York, a, other States to go or Taylor, but just tot think of my gond old Democr. tic State of Illinois, voting for a fellow with such a name as Stubblefield —that's the unkindest cut of ;11." , It turned out, upon inquiry that this mysterious individual, who had carried I linoir, was an awk ward way the telegraph. has of spelling the word '•doubtful,•` PROM WAsnixwros.—The and fancy are taken from the BRI Journal of Cutnineic lNh • 2 Ft. 1 4 . 1 } t he question oho will be resident on the 4th of March next, I have answered by showing that Gen. Taylor may take the oath pre cribed by the Consti tution, and assume the ditties of his oilier, on Sun day, the 4th of March. But tis presumed that he will follow the,exam ple ofllr. Monroe, and take the ottili on the sth of 5/arch In that case, David It. Atelti4on. the President ,pro ten . ' of the Senate, will be the acting President iif the United States for one day. ' - The offices of &Tres' mit and Vice PresideM'become vacant'on the 4th i f March at 12, meridian, and persons elect cannht assume their du• ties without taking the prescribed oath. Should the President and the Vice. President elect refuse to take the oath, neither could 11.460111 ' P the duties, and the President pro friapore of, the Senate must disoliarge them. _ _ In confirmation — of this view, I am told by 'one who was acquainted with the Senators in 1821, that, on the 4th day of March; which occurred cm Sunday. it wns said by many of the Senators, that Mr. Gail lard, of -South Carolina, then President pro tern of the Senate, was the President for one day. It lately came to light that Captain Tyler was the person who first proposed Gen. Taylor as a candi date for the Presidency'. It lappears that Brevet Brigadier Gr'n. Z. Taylor was in this city and dined .with the President in 1844, and then received Orders to' take command of the troop'? ordered Is Corpus Christi. President -Tyler, sa i d to him- jocosely,.— "General,. you arcordered- doWn to- Corpus Chtsti, --you mayihave a broah mitli ; the Mexicans and, if you do, it will make you P asident of the United States " Vsax ,porsoo op ""Cut your emit ocaordingto 'that It was "Very good &dole; taco no Oath. you must' out y - , THE FIRST VICTI M DEMANDED. ' .tge . titt'iisvlifit journal is out In favor of proMpt removal, by UMW Taylor of General Joseph defend the Governor of onrireit. The sasigwed pause, is wipe ell fogad inibe - filet that. General - Lane. volunteers of ' his State ' from unjust Attacks. , : From the Geiteral in Mimmenti,down to•the lea. eat subordinate, there boattednOtalrover, officer, or more devoted pitied, than General JOseph Lane.—. Wherever fighting . was to be done, there Glaberal Litu&wal to be found, and so much Was hiS diving! and chivalrous conduct admired, that the army, off., cent and men, bestowed upon him the suberquiet of the ,6 Marion of the Army,!' theldgltestpraist! that could be bestowed. : . 1 ' ' ' ' When appointed Governor of 'Mien; be prlmpt ly left friends, home, and all to rally to thefiescue of the citizens of Oregon, in danger of sfaughnn. by their savage enemies, and at •the time this call for his removal was made, General Lane was strug ling i r with the snows of the Rocky Mountains, and i now if not cut off brthe savages, encountering th chill blasts of the . prairie in a nonhern I,latitude still struggling on aniniated with the hope on rea ching Oregon, in time to defend if, with hie single tr op of mounted Riflemen, against ths savage hOrdes,'hose numbers have cut off many of the best citina of that land. ' • , ...,,, - Such is the man that Prentice, of the Loui Journal, demands shall be removed (rain office , is the victim who is the first marked for the G tine by the leaders of a party that professed ti scribe prsoer;ption, ' Let them do the deed—l gallant soldier be recalled and our Indian fil will make him Governor of a State, instead! territory, and i that too, by a moiority' that wil Whiggery tremble.—Ohio Staleaman. iM El= through 1 a tarp her side : l ee - T o xino i t forced • dead on li ittioriAy e captain 4 ill Cap , tatioued ich we 1 her ad ! to:rally • savages !ii arrived .ft that !stemente 16th of Mexican Minot), by Geo. to the y move le rt appear interfer• ur infoi q oupie of out Sal- Indiana I Laredo f traders t ftmung company that his report of le, 111011- . founda- Tim Mimosa or Psu,entusat.—The city formed with . beggary, Which, sits,' ha ggarek blearLeyed, at the corners, or reels weak and ti inga l long the walk. Many of the Most distre scenes are of course impositions, and are gq with great .care -,to their effect. But while 1 denfniug these disgusting forged drafts upon our synipathimi, we must not forget the inifferings)':thich they are the means of in fl icting upon their i atru meats. An' initance come under t o ur observ l ntims yesterday, which should be made Online. AI Ger man woman came to the St. Charles Hotel,%i f itk a poor, skinny, horrid-looking little child, which Seem ed as if on tip. pinta dying from stariationThe benevolent Mrs. ‘Vatriss, whoite sensibilities were m Iv ~ deeply touched by!such a ectacle,l set. (rk at once, and trainonce, her non stores and those of h r la dy guests a comfortable supply of ',clothing ml a considerable sum of money were o Food was given to the mother end c hil d—the later eating with frightful voracity. Tti l( guard a abut I r. imposition, it was proposed to atten the won an to her home, which , she . said was iti,lForty-seventh street. Upon reaching the street, heWever, the wo man had disappearled with her child and epull no where be found. l l)iligent search Was made for her in Forty-seventh reet, but nothing'could be found of 1 her ; and there can be no doubt that she was an experienced impoitor, and kepi-the child starved down to beg with,lthat she might ike more success. fully carry on her:Partible business .; It maket sloulder to think that a mother can so act the with her own child, for a little money ; hut Olt too much vvidence of a character 1 similar ti above instanca, to permit us to ,doubt.—Xew Tribune. -.._ 1 ,21 COFFEB AND rt . s v arrtnis.-00,0 has be n so long abused by the Medical faculty, and so natty tlh.orders have been attributed to its use, that it is quite refreshing to find the world wil,ing, at length, to give it credit for ant? good quality whatever.—' The London Medical Gazette Ores the result, of nuttier mc experiMents with roasted coffee, prr.ng that it is till , most, powerful means trot only 9( ren : i dering animal and vegetable eillu%ia innocuou but of actually destroying them. A room in which' meat in an advanded degree, of 'decomposition had been kept for Some time, was instantly deprived of all'sniell un an open coffee-roaster being carried through it, containing a pound of . .coffee newly roast ed., In another,reom, exposed to tbe.eilltiviurn oc casioned by .the Cleaning out of a' dirt pit, sri.that solphitrated hydrogen.and ammonia, in great qtianti ties could be chemically detected, the stench was completely - removed within' half a minete on the employment of three ounces or fielh roasted - entree, whilst the ether parts of the house were permanent ly cleared of tho!same 'smell by being simply tra versed with the coffee -router, although cleansing of the pit continued for several hours after. . The best mode of, Mikis the coffee es a diti . oct ant, is to dry-the raw bean, pound it in a tnurta , and then roast the poWder a Moderately heated , iron .late, until it assumes a dark brown tint, when:it is ady for use. 'Then sprinkle it in aloha or tees-pn.ls, or ley it on a plate in the rciOwr which you Wish t, , have purified. 'Coffee acid-or,coffee oil act* aim r•edily in minute (pant ities - .—Timee.ik, Keystoine. , '-' foll?wing items of fact orliespendence.cf the : dated IVashington, !idthieof ;ths•eaypog: : our remarked IDo rioubt, bUtiiryau .ur Ca" SOn3ebedy: wipe f±bieesed.aje for diet/ rerery be lir :touters." - • l i A New 'Seim ix Mitalutautat.—The foil wing appears in the Bradford ( Ps) Reporkr 'a No .16: —Mrs: Loomis , and daughter , maccornpani by Dr. Q. J. Elykeer—(as the ,bills Saida—have been exhibiting to our citizens, during the present eek, the wonders of mesmerism and clairvoyance. The drictov, however, it appears, had, some time ince, separated from he company, but made Ms appear ance hereon Saturday last, to obtain poseessinn of the “daughter," who was his lawfully wedded wife. r.. , Fiom what we can gather of the particula , - we learn that the.ductor had made arrangement for taking forcible possession of his "better hal ' on Monday evening, by seising her on her way to the lecture room, and driving off with her ,in a Wagon he had ready. The denouement was ronte'what hastened by the doctor's accidentally meeting his wife early in the evening, in the hell of Woodruff's tavern, and despit e her struggle and screams; she was placed in the wagon, without , bonnet or shawl, and carried off to i ßarts unknown. TO affair crea ted no little excitement, and some Iffisappoinil lm e n t to the audience who were awaiting the young lady's appearance at the lecture room, and who, alt 'ough the doctor "was in•the .bills," were not prepaid for this new scene. Rosurren AND FLOGGING to THR, Nsvr.--; mantic incident domed on board the United ship North Carolina the other day. One hands who had enlisted, in the naval service' been on board the North,Carolina for some m. was brought to the gangway for some slight . bedience of orders and sentenced to' receive a . with the cats. (Cate are great favorites w greet majority of the officers of , the navy.) culprit hesitated, but the, order was peremptor . strip it was. The Boatriivain's bad his cats combed out, and the Quarter masters their las ready to seize him to the grating and gangwl When the culprit was fairly strippr off. alt bi trowsers, and prepared to receive the stars stripes on his back, he was suspected'q rertaij mistakeable - indications, of being al woman a•,: he proved. She was reprieved for the none the middies bad not the gratilicatiOmof seeinl other dozen well laid on. We ,believe she ial awaiting the decision of the Secretary - of the whether be shall he discharged from the semi; nut.—.DivoldiriAdeertirer. ALL ABOUT A CAT.-Our weal Y. Sun, speaks of a "terrible ex Connecticut village all arising fro cat of a broken heart. The cat, i litter of kittens and the housewife capitate them with a butcher knife, of the old cati wit() performed curio the operation, licking the head of H rolled .011 the ground. IN, hell the: w house, the cat followed and afte l antics, laid down before the murder! and died. A little: time'after one children died,' and the superstitious'r hood Predict that the balance of he ' low, to-avenge the menee of -the Whoieverthe auperetiiien may be of cal killing is not cundemdable. TAYLOR , BRATEN AT , 11011,13.1 General Caes over'Generel Tartar is six. :General Cass Is ahead in his own town, his own county, ku. , max, - in General Taylors' own boatel both are beat known, Cala is best li be bestqualified, as he deubtlees I the United States. This perhaps! food for the reflection of 'those who - o ivirbont' a:why or. a ‘wheraftire." jng Eagle. - - ` 1 ' THE WEEKLY OBSERVE& SATURDAY MOVING. DECFMBERI.- 1848, Wooo.—We ire . mnehT in need at We article nt pnnr: entt and would :vain tearind those of oar subscribers who hare stipulated for the Foment of their paper In wood, t h a t it we are compslied, to lay Wear winter's supply and pay the wit therefer. they must not complain' if we in turn exact from thorn the "ready rhino." It's a poor rul•-thOwout with be* ways, , Furrcitsa's Dannisnium' Oscasair:-4Ve call the at tention of the public to, this ostabliehment From per mina! inspection we{ can say Mr. Fletcher'ii pictures are superior to any we ever saw taken in this place. and equal to any of th famed galleries of New York and Boston. tICT The Reed Wane hew passed Into - thehands of Memo. Mayberry 4.c McCarter, two young gentlemen every way capable fof giving sntisfaction to the public. and making their guests comfortable. May They meet with that success their ebtarprise merits. QT e concur with the Mercer Press in hoping that the question of slithery in the new territories of California and New Mexico tiny not be settled this winter.. 'lt is one of those quest i on, upon which Gen. Taylor stands pledged to both sides by his friend; and it is therefore peculiarly proper that lie should be' made to 'show his hand, and -14:4 tho People know whether in future they should believe the 'CorWins, Smiths, Filknores, and the smaller fry- of, politician of the North, or the B4riens, Peytonsand Hilliard' of t oath, on questions af like character. Beside",•the question was not in existence when President Polk WEIS elected, hence the rosponsibil itrof its settlement one way or the other should not be forced upon his alrulders, but placed where it belongs, in the hands of one who has been elected with direct ref erence to that question. Mr. Polk stands pledged in his message on the Oregon bill to yeti) the ordinance of 'B7 villa ch uillo pro- t the lends of a make s de and otter •seing •t up eon- —Gen. Taylor stands pledged by his friends not to'do so —the North should demand, therefore. that the question should be loft uutil l it will not encounter an Executive ve to. We say. then,l we trust this question will not be set tled at this session': 115' The Editor 'of the ;Woodville Jonrnht id ontirely mistaken when he says, in alluding to the withdrawal of our late partner, that "some suppose this retirement is a more sham, in order to save n fat clerkship in tho Cus tom House!" That individual does not expect to "save a fat clerkship in' the Custom house." by any- such Means, or by any 3ther means. He knew before elec tion, as well as ho ',does now, that when the whigs said "Old Zach" would remove no one for opinion's sake, they were tolling a falsehood, and ho expects no favors at their hands. 'fis Journ , t, therefore, need not snake itself unhappy fur ear any effort will be made to retain the "fat clerkship l in the Custom House." When the' headsman is ready, he will be ready. F one fiend ~ r e is "T 11 1 .3 u A GlirAT COllMltili.",—We had palpable evi dence of this oft repeated proposition, this week, in the shape of a subscriber to the "Observer,"‘ all the way from Oregon_ City', Oregon territory. We forwarded pa pers via New Orleans, per steamer Falcon, for the past month, and trust they will arrive at their destination in safety. By them l our subscriber will learn the whole his tory of the late political campaign, the defeat of the De mocracy, end the atlCeeSe of the heterogeneous combina tion under the banner of "Rough and Ready." lie will learn that this con bination succeeded with that worn out cry of no proscription for opinion's sake, upon its lips— that Zachary Tis!vlor goes into tho Presidential chair pledged to remove uo man because he is a Democrat— and he will hardly arise from the perusal of such prom ises before the next monthly mail will ,bring him the in telligence that the first victim claimed by the Ruben spieres of this no.proscription party is the galliant Gen. Lane, the Governor of his own territory, and (motif the bravest mon the Mexican war brought into notice. Ho learn that although Gon. Lane won his appoint ment to the post he is now on his way to occupy in Ore gon upon the same battle tield (Buena Vista) that the President_ elect achieved the laurels dust have dazzled gibe people into his support, yet the headsman is called upon to make him the first victim! But he will also learn that when the bandsman's axe falls upon the neck of Gen. Joseph Lane, it Will but raise him from, the Governor ship of, a - territory What of,a great §hato..and peihaps to hi her • ition4' the York We Rome le's! Taos.—The Pennsylvanian easy it is rumored that Gen. Taylor. in order to show; his high sense of the nor at the America.. troops. l in the recent war with Mexico, will, in all case., prefat these Inave men in his selections for place. tothe noisy opponents of that war. This minor comeelrout the beet. authority.—* finch's decision would out off the hopes o , hosts ofirhig expectints. . Its CHARACTXJI.--.A harmlesa paragrap of clans, .in regard to the election of State Treuuter, a aeized j upon by the Contstsreisl es a pretext for lt direct attack upon G. J. Batt, Esq. Now we obeli not defend Mr. IL, because-with the ignoramus; of the whi s t patty , who believe that because a person differs with other in pol -1 itics, he cannot speak well of him withou having some sinister object in view, it might injure tha gentlemwes prolpects, and 'we do not wish to deprive him even nt such support; but we will say that in all thiftconstitntea a rr l gentleman and a man of talent, that indivi • ual combines • more of the els ants Mint all the scribbli g harpies that do now, ever have, or over will aurtound th • office of the Erie Commercial' Adrertissr. • COMFORT /On THE •Trtortson Wntosr—The North Carolina Standard hu no hesitation in assorting that the contest in that .State turned mainly upoi the•silavery question; and that as many as forty thousa whip, and probably a thousand democrats, voted for ton. Taylor, because they thought he wouldreto the intot proviso; while on the other tho whigs oppose don. Cass, and democrats failed to vote for him, becaiso he was a Northern man. 07 Mine/tote has elected a reptesentativ• who will claim his seat from the territory The bill establishing the State of Wisconsi peel the old law governing the territory, co settlements not embraced' within the State the Territory of , Wisconsin, and fully entit eantative in Congress. 01110 OFTICIAL--The officieial vote of n following results Cass, Tayleer, Van Buren, • Cass over Taylor, 16.456. Twenty-seven counties which gai.e a mn i n '44, have given Crum a majority in '4Bl six now counties—all of •which'have given! jority. • Total vote in 1848, 323,714. In Increased voto 16,490. This does not incli Ponington tow.nakip, :Licking county, dor was not returned. e N. it, a of a lad a d e _ enee Ilopiry of I .itement " ' 11sc_death appears, proceeded .1. in the pre le antics d j tich kitten .man.antere, several r of her,ki l I:,f this'wos of thi neig family wi 1 dead felin: north, this 1 ring na it Too LATZ.—The Philadelphia Nativeia foal Taylor papdr, takoa the "National Roi Club" of that city. severely to task for bar an intended celebration by a public dinar' 'voniary of the battle of Buena Viata.:—becA rortiOn of the Taylor patty, have trittsn their own handtexeludingall "indopemi Native Americans. Auld patriotic ! whirr." millet. of arrangements, the invited gttes* wonder that the ! Nati v is t s take umbrage a Jiang arraigen*nt•—but nOw that the ell they have nothing for it but to poCket the the ree) tens an's bor fol- e • i h- n"Prit, Dattm !alma mil to . xep th ! Thus,. ed.,ber- tor.Presi. II i -cyu 'otedfor T. , !spark r for .ugo d, in cli. hero MTArt this is' the tiessad for coughs an, seem proper car, us to recommend to the to a highly valuable mediCtie for the care of I'. Hall's Cough Reinsdy.•i, is said by tl Ailed It. to be of great service la the cure of - evideuceitt its favor are autuynad if any doubt it, all hih;etri do is to call upon 'try It for tlieti '" l " ll 9 l We; shall .do so !hi have • 'Taits. j• • • !ns, of l b of 9+ i or they that not eon- R E. PA! TH,E. PEOPLE SHOULD NOT FOROET: Amid the daMor of the, Taylor ;party, for a radical change of , measures, anti an indiscriminate removal of ' °files's. tits people should not 'forgerthat Gen. Taylor g was elected on theist:en of pledges of tedirect contrary I character. They shouldi b keep in mind that be is pledg- ' ed. if aft reiterated promises calk pledge a man. that be I will not bo the President of the whiff party, nor elena himself to party schemeal" Ps . the language of the New Toili Day Book. a' neutral per, l orulticted by active whip, the people should het forget, of allow Gen. Tay lor to forgot. "that ho comes into that office under the MOST IPOLDIIII OTT.HEIT X5l AAA D PLEOOLS TO CONTEND its power wholly to its priMitive. Constitutional limits, to emancipate the country from ilia tyranny which the Fed eral Executive (according to whig doctrine) has for so many years- exercised throtigh partisan office-holders, 03" to reward no personal or party service with office. to proscribe no office-holder on account of political opin ions. or even opposition M his election." "To thlse pro fessions." continues the same paper. "Zachary Taylor owes his election. Without them, and without 4. con fidence of the people in his truth, sineeritrand firmness, he could not have beeti elected. If ho forget thorn, or be overborne by the clamors and evil counsels with . which he will be constantly beset from this dine unti(the policy of his administration is clearly declared and established, ho will be by the public voice. (though probably not by the public press,) justly pronounced ret.sr., "reErtua:ss ADD TACILLATINO.. Meanwhile, hie Character remains iu doubt with all those who have not the adv , .ititage of long personal acquaintance with him. Theie "grea t i men" of the whig party who claim to have ern'cted his nomination aild.eletation, to some of whom ho has look ed up witkadmirationand respect, Crittenden, Clayton, Berrien, Mangum, Sergeant, Ingersoll, the Johnsons, and an innumerable band Of the bamo tribe in this and other Stites, will encompaes him and clamor for the re moval of those office-holders who have opposed his elec tion and for the appointment in their places of those who have "worked for his election." lle will not probably' 1 seo one man among his n umerous "Mends" at Wash -1 ington, who will not deinftn i d this of hiin,- -, certainly not_ I one who will have 0)3 honest; and courage to raise his voice against this ofrice-seeitii;g clamor " 1t will, there- fore require of Gan. Taylor a great deal of the moral firmness which Gen. Jackson was so eminently posses sed of, if he remains true to such pledges. We., for one, believe he will not, nod in believing thus, we think we do that distinguished soldier no injustice. Ile will be in, a poation lie little dreamt of when lie made the pledges —ho will be surrounded by men, who. have made politics a trade, and i i Whom, ris they have stood by him in this, contest, he will very naturally have unlimited confidence. lie Must either listen to their advice end council, or of fend them. Under the astsll plea that the public good demands of him a disregard of his pledges, and by argu ments based upon sophistry, they will overeothe his scru ples, and ere ho has been a month in his stoat he will "yield himself to party schemes." This will be no ex cuse, however, to the people—they must not fordet his pledges—they stead bold him and his advises to a strict accountability, and it he deviates one iota as President froin his pledges as a candidate, let the indignant scot ii of a deceived people be his reward. Upon the great question of Slavery in our new territo ries his friends in the two opposing sections of the Union have pledged him to opposite policies. By liiiiitii'aioilig n silemen on the tinoltion he has.given countenance to this dkrepulable 'course, and tho people ah . ould nu: for get it. - Had GOB. cuss been elected the who!o ques:ion would hove been- settled on the side of freedom -by the laws of nations, but as this non-interference doctrine, up on which the dem tcracy stood, has been condenined Norill and South by the highest tribunal known to a re public, the ballot-hoc, the people should not forget it, and allow any such compromise to ho hatched up by the tra ding politicians in the Taylor camp who, ha.virtg rode the proviso hobby at the Nort't, and the Slavcry-extensli hobby at the Sou h into powor , aro now Willing to dismout t and occupy the very ground they were instrumental in condemning. There are some other pmfessions of the Taylor party during the late campaign, which the people shouldAot forget, but an enumeration -of them at the 'present moment is not necessary. We shall hive sni p% time in•the future to call them to reeollecron, of which we shall moat nrquestionably avail ourself." _ - CABINST MAKING.—This kind of work is now all the rage among the letter-writers and now!-mongem id and about Washington. The last "job" we have seen, the proportion! of which we like better than any other that , than come ender our observation, is furnished by the New Haven Herald, from a particular friend of Gen. Taylor. now at Washington, written to a avhig friend in that. place. The writer says: "Cabinet making is now the order of the day among the friends of Gen. Taylor, as von will ace by the Mere. The New York Editors aro making themselves ridiculous, In their piognostications as to who will compose General Taylor's cabinet—for they all set them down as whigs.— This; I am confident will not be the case, however much some of our Whig friends may desire it. vie General knews he was not elected*, a'party candidate, and you may therefore look to see his cabinet composed of men of both parties. i Idm willing to risk a nett beaver on lbe following arrangement: Crittenden, of 'Kentucky, Secretary of State, Jefferson Davis of Miss., " Treasury,, • Gen. Worth of N. York, " War, _ 1. E. Holmes; of S. C.; " Navy. Truman Smith, of Ct., Postmaster General. D. Pan! Brown, of Pa., Attorney General. I may be wrong in the last name, but it will bet vary essentially from The above." /f Taylor should form such a cabinet, wo think tho mooted question whether saltpetre will explode or not, would sink into insignificance beside the explosion that would ensue. , By C. W. Kelso. Indiana Locoforos—Good runners —They got such a start on the 23d day of February, A: D. 1847. at Ruches Vista, that they couldn't atop on the 7th of Nov. 1848 to vote for old Zack. • Coxretsrs.—The above toast was given et the Whig celebration last-Tuesday, add is a hit at the Deenocracy because the 2d Regiment of Indiana volunteers retreated at the battle of Buena Vista, and because Indiana has vo ted for Cass. Ire disclaim making-any allusion to the individual who gave his toast—this re - lunation even among his own party is not / of a character high enough to allow even as humble an individual as we are to level ourself with him—but•comidg as it don from a whip celebration, responded to as it undoubtedly was by those preitent, it thereby obtains character enough to require a reffutation of the slander it ecatains. A military court' martial, after the battle of Diem Vista, convened for the trial of the Colonel of the 2d Regiment of Indiana volunteers, and it was proved and admitted upon thiat occasion that this regiment retreated by the order of its Colonel—that he gave that order through ignorance. of his duty, supposing that O'Brian's ba4ery, which ho had been ordered to sup port, was retreating, when in fact it - was only moving over the field for,the purpose of taking up a new position. For this order he would have been cashiered and sent home in disgrace,'had not his good con4lett after he dis covered his mistake, and the fact that.lie was somewhat excusable for his ignorance of duty, on the score of sick ness during the previous part of to campaign, operated• is favor before the court. Now then, if any ono was to blame for the "Indiana locofoeos" being such good "runners," it was Colonel Bowles, and he alotteitet it be remembered, of all the field officers of the two regiments from Ind. engaged in the battle, cas a TitOor Man durin-g the Tate canvass. This fact alone should have kept Such a tohst °tit of the Iproeeepi ego of . a Taylor celebration; but when we add to it the DPP/ report of Gen, Tailor himself that this l , reglinent lost 107 men out of the .500 engaged in ,the .battle (or every fifth mail) the coarse and insulting sme l l er becomes disgusting. There was. - hut ono,other regiment engaged in the battle (2d Illinois) that suffered allieverely in killed and wounded sus the 2d Indian's volunpers, and Yet because they wore commandy ad liy min ignore try, though brave man, aed 0316yed , hie order.; the are •nitject to the brandy-bottle aneLors of a Tailor celebrati.e.. , to Congress, Wisconsin. in did. not re iisegnently the ILaw, aro still ed to a repro- hio show the 154,862 138,399 35,456 jority for Clay. There aro Casa a ma. 114, 31%223. He the vote of locrat; which ' un, an ong gh Ready antniunced r, of the 'nai l: tile the ivhig he matter Into ten democrats. from the corn &e. &c. 110 thia monope- I. dtion is over. ffrent. colds it would bile the ul of °ugh.. "Dr. • who hale coughs ! The of our readers As Doctor aiid, Ent time We Gra. Scorn %admen, Patti 'Wade between t i tetiationiand r The Washington correspondent af the at sip mutual eiplanatiorls have been con . quercir of Mexico and the it dmitt n.licett will asinine iris old qu ere and ogroplis for the in Jatmox.—A pions but odd cl re, while endeavoring to imp of ; the all-seeing power of r Wiped squirrel in s stone w ircan't see him." * As Ono C. 1 4 . 1_0w Ilampsh hearers a se ' , pod is like see you. but SAUSAGES. I Dogma of- Cie ] twelve month millions tif Too: I fists' Advertiser says that 'swath have ent-10.00illIogy, 'into signers, sod that they 14 1. oda. FLORiDS S It is unde elected by the that etate:" NATORS.—The Pensacola pet tood that George T: Waid whip to the Vatted Staies Q 3 The S. election in lion Defeite. cheers for the . 1 • , uthbrn Whig snowmen the I eorgia, in the following ,teriffs ; Georgia' aediemed !I T keystone state of the South cc a "Free Soil " victoryl. • way to aarnoo , ARRIAGE.--ai young lad id I are wOulthy has married his . the the yoting lady who ANOTAIR 1 whose paren as an offset coachman. - EXTRAORM I sixteen years lady, and put brother and si the lady cam pears ticat th. family of chip 110 TO M on the 7th in Mr. Jonatlin out for natsi. •11.7 ELOPP:3II.IIT.-A young old, arrived at Cincinnati, wit p at the City Hotel, whew) th tor. A row days aftorat on and Trested tho youni lady we tho mother 01 17011 XE A WHISTLE fir A PIG'S ,liesnut Grove, by tho•IU ! & Whistle, to Miss Jcdut I WALI I:l.—According- to the Union will, upon relinquishing the ehar ge tartruent, ret,unue the practice of the i •tates Supreme Court nt Washington 1 'anent residence there. SECIRE ran rotary Walke Tmasury De the United make his per NlAnTur.—Some wag, not haring :II rs before hie eyes, perpetrates.the h, Susanah A LAs - roott of 13nriibtirn parody on " 1 the otlwr night ;$ hen all around was min, Old a vning inn ‘vni w hid nioutli,ttre tear • tt as in Lis beaten north and eouth, bUtionny don't Itgain, he's got no friends." " 1 bad 11 drew' 1 thou:4k I r.al A cabhg‘• quak Sayv %Ye' "nit him. o Hon. Miss S' lv female free paint/ we uvor heard ' . Leger, who having been d i iteeeeti king the proccedlngs of the ludke m, as forced to take the cli,gtves I 1 - Ito walk in the ntaannie pr(7 l ens t ) , L)!. ~. to be gee': in a)rnost even l o , 1 nr i 't of overlo t , faiher'e house tir:ed afterwards Crli' portrait Ireland. ,I,,c t i E . L .fi l i,,—Q uite au interemtiit contract .w,”,tried Int Fre' Court, 111.-:t week, in lehi:4l °tit s tnuleted in the !Atm of l ivo Lu A CAUTION of broach of Virginia Sup, )(mug citizen SIVKING CI Crass n copious est 'editor says lu (wrath: friend returns with 1 hiptiiiies the returns of the from the" 16th claiiiter or Ji cow. peerlt r! r.ppropriat iphirti , :f, a, it V. nil enable th hide." Isccors.-rdlold up, high aboti I I your hand:44:lln back in yot h and throat, 80 as to give a f ,rnathe yen anfilv and look at CURT. FUR two lingers ins your mott your lungs ; fingyrs. Mtt. ditninguislied' S. Senate, a: The last rumor es to the gentletnari is, that he will re &there uttempt to had of it eallti.r Gen. 'Fis:4lor likes it o truo the whits will het•e plwt measures, w ,should prove or ENGLAND.—The I.olldo I picture of the condition of r ically and morally. Some . putted the 'aubject of the reps TIM l'Eol saute a gloom England, ph)4 have openly 1 national debt DYING MAN.—The late PI inflow College, a short time bel wife as fullowa :—•• You upon your bed end weep wk mourn for me when God has when you visit the spot whet and monmfultime ; do not gt er in the-dark night. ) -Thee .ave of a Christian ; b l ut•gait ashine, and when the birds SATING OF well, of MAI saddrsesed his sure, lie down You will not to me: And choose a sad of evening, t to visit the g in the bright cEr Gene 1 216351 , vote! Mr:Greeley of the Generl but eutbusiae; Taylor received in the State ; Mr. Clay Mr yea l re ago ?gnu that •this fact contrath l'a great popularity; and indi for the man. ItrA w0., 1 of ago,..died death she eta that her hush, had lost all h • n named Elizabeth Stei , Naw Yarkon Sunday nigh, l ed she had -tiling to eat ad had died twelve yam_ 1r friends. Er - Th..c raged aieariv Cases were re accounts. uteri has spared Ireland month in Enniand and orted in eny pareor train rr A Con' Massachusett January, to p fesaion, and LEAP YJ cation of Lawyers, for th is to be held at Bosto M oto the honorand Mai l l evant imposition by pettif. 'se • .—Yes, leap year, !adios gone--only a little over is tnonth left— you havn't got a " " your Minds riuichly—don't stand shill' the question _out with it, quick—yot l right to speak. A sentence—just one and a 4iusbalill is yours E? Amon'l the articles latoly stolen f out the Patent office. is tho bottle of iittar of roses sent te l tin Van Buren by the Imaum of Muscat. IVo ho! thief will have magnanimity onnugh . to mend it Van Buren at his resiticnce at Kinderhook. - It certainly he revivifying filter the late defeat. Bu i him the attar of roses—do and a bottle of—eolcg, John. blvnnca 01 1 , 'MAJ. ' Wal. Seru r The, St. Jo'rei'h's Gazette of the loth inst.. announces that Major :roger, Paymaster iu ihe Ti. S. Army, Mal wife and sister. Wet° murdered and robbed in Saline county. 10. The Major was proceeding to the upper part f.the State t o p a y to such volnutee s 118, wino entitled to iitheir three ninths pay, and had n his possession $l O O,OOO. He had been inarried,but u short time. and together si..ith his wife and ebiter, ti l era cu l t off in the primal of lif . The soldier' who 11)7(4 hiel escort have been stiopee ed of being the perpetrators of this most find crime. I candidate is out in the Genova Gazette for the post office at Geneva. He drama that. ho hits once voted the dentoi.ratic, once the Whig and lastly i the abolition ticket, and thinka that he must came up to the , definitiOa of "not an ultM", politician. Allj that won't do. To he' "not ati,ultraichig," rinuit be to stave neyo voted, It . big ticket. , Aa UNRE436Nasta Errrom—The junio Highland Messenger has retired frotn that tion, and given thia hollowing, reaarna for co a liberal cornunity will doubtlela regard tory. la it not "glory en - ough",lo ho The lie sentiment?" ' ' " With the last number closed the connec 1 1 ens Jrwin as junior editor of this paper.l • I aim is rather to be fed than to be famous, h ea the honor of editorial life to t °se Who hope, (a.very substantial diet by the wai fatten on air. vHe want* some "sterna ' his &Ahoy continuance in his present o Unlikely, to afford itr he is compolled ',•grey goosie'quill" until the cravings of rentain h's unmentionables are f vsfied itePti ese oa .said I—he Mew,. is th4 t , ighed twe r K 11 4 ,131 b e ens% irom email of th e 1 1 "1411' 'in theassad I " What a Cinci l ister'a 'naL l ecm) k d bet = fellow, 11Dly h a genteel ey passed e s a broiler of row. It 17. •petiei 171/1 f no inter tit v. slr. - So 1 1 a Pigtail. arn.d. vab!., LJo3/4. Sec. ([the ah 11:1 and 1111 NM In Ihr :n her Ste 1 ., and Mil '~ e l :ic for EINE head, I=l CM of the not. .T of tr Time; tho po t" the . litjationl Mil opleir • apen of tilt) °Teaser ore his ill not .0 I am been aJ . I lie, in the '1 Cal& dAnth, I to 12M QM are no •the me tlllBll, nor lare sing of Nov! York !MEI ate& any P, fifty Befo CM re her e l eki, . P d she ZIE fore, ap ut to last far, I .tland, b ME $ holo St , ou the d Ird of th, is aud 0 earlia3 I da of 13ITI ME tp —PoP 3 cut uce—f ',nc, ma' MEG MEE MMIC editor jot the üblic I !) Ong—which , s r g : 1 S r f i pSfunbe ion of Mar s his present relinquish* can live on or feed Ana fr. „ a pd sa velion e nni s tiv down his stomach and "subdued