TII El CALIFORNIA - GOLD' RtGION. SAN PRCWISCO, Feb. 1, 1849. Oar gold region or placer is actually-'; h e only thing or eircomsuinee that 1 over knew not",exag crated; Law, gospel and politics ;are becoming obsolete in the great eagerness to obtain ti (share of the placer. Last July. our gold diggers were satis fied to obtain tiro or three ounces of gold per day; now they throw up thespade and pickaxe if they don't find a "chunk" every hour or two. Up to this date, 'BOO has been paid for a single lump. tram inform ed there''is in this town a piece weighing thirty poundSz I have heard of several pieces weighing each fire pounds; there is in town a piece .of stone weighing . seren pounds, containing about three lbs. of gold; it looks as if the stone and gold had been half melted up together. • From November to March, the San Joaquin and Sacramento valleys aretno cold for gold digging, although the people have built from four to six hun dred houses, and are busily engaged in tindingooll. From the first of April to Augnst.there will beifaily turned out of the banks and • rivers, six to eight thousand Troy ounces gtild, 21 to 21i carats fine, which sells here fur merchandise at $l6 per ounce, $l4 fur cash. After August, thousands will leave ' the placers; one fourth of those who remain in Au gust and September will be sick With a fever that .heids them from thirty to a hundred days. Some twenty cargoes of merchandise are landing in this port at this date. From hence wgreater part is reshipped in launches for the Sacramento and San Joaquin Rivers, 120 miles up, a run of two or three days. Freight at the rate of ;,: ; %3 per bbl; passengers sl6,•each one feeding himself; common board $3 -per day; stabling $2; rooms 6 by 8 to 14 by 16 feet each, 'sill to $lOO per month. A hotel is next month to be opened here; the building cost $30,000, has --8') rooms that 'Will bring $O9O to 1,500 per annum each. < The owner i-alcillate, with the nicety of a Van, tree, thus: Should the building burn down in six ni intbs. it pays c -is', an-I the bar and table pay $.2,- 000 or 3,000 per month. Should it last over that time, it pays 18 per cent. per month in re .ts only. There are small houses paying ,the same rates.— 'Freight to :11oeterey, (one day's sail,) $lO per toll; brigs are chartered ut e3,000-per month; captains' wages, $3OO per month; mates 150 to 200 dollars per month; pork, 60 dollars per bbl.; flour, 10 dol. one 1 week, the next 25 dol.; fowls, Ito 2 dol.; eggs,3 to a dol.- per dozen (riot an hundred;)' wa-hing of chitties, 12 to 21 dol. per 'dozen. Sonie merchanta send their washing to the Sandwich islands, only , 1500 miles. (louse lots of 25 feet front, are bought up at 1,000 to 5,000, the purchasers sending to Bis• ton or New York fur their hou,:cs. I,lre have nn Woikinenoior time to do anything but dig and pocket gold . . No one has much time to don a debtor, and n o debtor has any•time to listen to a creditor—a very happy state of affairs this, ut least for one party. Even ourgovernment at Wash ington appear iii the same way, as far as attending in California, which, with New Mexico, cost Uncle Sam 61 5,000 , 0 0 0 , the interest of which is, say 675,- 000 per month, tj•hich the duties colected in th is port alone will cpver• and the plaCer will distribute one millien per n oat h hod no mistake. Any man, womati, or child who may need a thousand dollars, has only to go to the "California Placer Bank" and take it, and he fii i ids himself immediately a-ready made steekhultier and director. All are on the g0„..-)trhead-get-gold „..-)trhead-get-gold principle—doctors, lawyers, trailers. bent.nen, Carters diggers, thieves and murderers. Up to this dat the murdered bodies have been rec ognized—at leas could be counted. This year I fear, they canno be counted. Gold, real pure gild, is so plenty you may see it piled up on counteri and tables like so many bags of shot, one to three hun dred ounces in al bag. Nothinir• is more carnmea for a person travelling, front num town to gonther ou horseback,-to refuse to carry gold for a friend on at eonnt °fits weight: it is eqiiivitlCilt to asking Your friend to carry a bag of corn to mill in any other vouatry. We have become a strange people,- and live hi a strange country. Nature is not saii-tied with covering, the valleys of the Sacramento and lian Joaquin with g'ttild, but to please us, she has this winter cos ei ed the earth with slum to call up old associations. We have, for the first time, snow in the, street , . .Tlinnsa rid a f. Doh ion nt , iii War,4l tog ~...--.1., .-1...,, gladly cogi - fe here for 1. 1 :42,000 per annum, but [then they arrive here and find eitoks and stewards ash iit9Oo each, they will as gladlyresign and take to fliEgirig• . A salary of slo,oooper annum for Gtivernor won't I.'3'. now the officers now in i California •pagienily awaiting to he. relies ed, pay their way I hardly - know. The temptation to digend speculate is great —yet, flom the Governor to a Lieutenant, they linye attended solely to their din) , in filch- repective dices; perhaps reen were never so tempted befeie. 1 CA urtiroya----A noon "stufc."--We believe,ex cept it he Ali . .. Stephens, of Georgia, and a few other I iinpracticables, that all people now agree that, in the purchase of California, our Government made what n Yankee wrth! call "party considerable of n speck of,it," So, at lea-t, it seems, thinks the Leaden .Horning Chronicle. In an article on the subject of California, on the irh ult. the Chronicle says:— ilrother Jonathan, it. mu s t be admitted, never made more successful deal 'rhan''when he bauf.r,ht, iiir ready cash, the vast bliek npromising land, throngff n remote corner of which rolled over it-4 glitteting sands the otalisco%ered Pactolas of the West. He has a right to chuckle over his purchase. like the treasure-linder, who, turning over the soil, erhis newly purchased acres, throws up a crock of . gold. A twenty years' lease of the patch aground which comprises the valleys watered by the San Joaquin and Sncremerno, would fetch, in George Robins' auction-room, more than enough to reim burse the price paid fort he feu-simple of the whole tr 44.1 of t%hich it tunas so insignificant a part. "The Yankee bti in- little knew, when he cioed his bargain, that he was purchasing nu inheritanc: uh;ch 'night enable him to cheapen the circo:aticg medium in the markets af the worhl, and t - n.rhaps to beat out of the trade' th - . imperial gold merchant o.` the East, w lioae article, extracted with greater la bor, yields a less ample profit on the cost of produe- : tom. The Mex ican:; on their side, must feel atone mortification at discovering. on late, the %nine of n province which they bartered for the blessing-a of peace and a round sum of Amerizati "But for them we feel no coin passion. The source cf - protit was pntent and obviou s then, as in the day , : when Drake picked spa handl:if of earth, r7Od tinted, as it crumbled in his fingers, the shining particles which betrn‘cd the riclics.ef the soil. The coon-. trymen of Cot - az—more lazy and apathetic thug) their Indian subjects—would not give themselves the trouble of stooping to pick up the gold to quest of which their ancestors roamed the American con tinent from sea to sea, and perpetrated every crime that can disgrace humanity. It was reserved for the sinewy arms. and stirring, bustling spirit of the Anglo-Saxon race to turn to account the wealth which it s former owners were too careless to secure. Bc r apn.- g , scooping. raking, digging, washing,. sif ting, filtering, the Yankees will have turo.).l the whole country iuside out in less time than it took them to make it their own." Tiu EliriTS or ANNnxAronr.-1 writer for the Cherokee Adrocatr, from Texas. speaks as *follows. I The annexation of Texas wan bitterly assailed by our Federal opponents: Annexation hue given to industry a spur, and has prove,' to the - general prosperity of the country, a blessing. The time of starvation hos passed awoy. . The past tt as a season of excellent crops, yet the rush of emigiation is such, that grain and provisions generally command a pried price an t l e ,lt i s believed that the vast country yet unsettled, w i ll • ECI attract emigration, that the products of industry will long demand good - prices. Land can be bought cheap.— I have just•seen a gentleman who has been out look ing and purchasing. lie found one tract of a 'cair n° of land, for _sale, for twenty-five cents per acre. 'He purchased a tract of ever one thousand acres for one hundred dollars. Not an endless prairie, as some people think nll of Texas to -be, but good timber, connected with prairie, and two small creeks run ning through with excellent bottom land _for culti ‘atian. One more feature of. Texan life, and I will clwe my prevent letter. The Texians excel other people o f a new country in schools. In every con siderable settlement I have found a school. Truly, the "schoolmaster is abroad, in the land," I have not found one country seat permanently located without its school, and generally of a permanent nature, and of the higher order in 1 . 4, -as. And this tells well 'for a people so lung anti . 0- grieviously oppressed with a war far their independence. STARVATION IN IRELAND. We;Copy from the*ew York; Tribune the fol lowing,. condensed accdunt of the'Pitemita condition of,thOrish people, Their autreringt.',:tre truly heart Shndeing. • - "A pitor female, child was foundifeadl- in a erases street;'itrappearance at once suggesting the destf-' tutionof which it was a victim. An impost was held, land t verdict of ; "death from, starvation, re turned. An inquest was held in the County prison, upon the body of a woman named Mary M'Certhy who had been committed the previous day as a vag rant. ! She was in en exhausted state at the time of her committal. The Jury returned a verdict of "died Ibr the Visitation of God." A man 50 years ..of age, was observed by aNvornanammetiCatherine Engliish, neat the Chorch 7 yard of Drutricullei6 She askedihmi so toe qUestiotis, to which he replied that he was weak. ills clothes had mud upon them.— subsequently'lfe crawled to within.' h quarter of a mile bf this villug,e, where he was seen lying in a ditch; but no one wished to_admit hit4r into their House' as they were apprehensive that lie had fever,• or srlite other contagious disease. Information having been conveyed to this towni the Police pro ceeded to the spot, amithend the poor creature dead. FronV the history l ofellie case, coupled with the emaciated appearance of the body, the Coroner was of opinion that death was ,caused by hardship, ex posure to cold, flab, and general debility. The ju ry returned a verdict accordingly,- - - - An inquest was held on the body of Micheal Devitt, which had been !found lying - en the bill of Currag,more, in the . parndi of Kilmasinlla, on Friday, with life extinct, anti a feW turnips, some of which ha l 'been eaten, llyiogibeside the corpse.- - - - Dr. Edward Kittson, of Nenagh, on his examination, stated that having entered the house of the deceased, he found bins lying on the fluor in a most wretched condition, dead. His wire and three of their children were lying , on some straw in another part of the cabin, in tiM emaciated and weakly state. Such a scene during the eon rim of his professional_ experience, he ticker witnessed.- One of the children lying dead by th'e side of the toothier, and another eget about eight years cowering over a few embers, whose ap pearance was little better than that of those lying by_ the side of Vie wretched "'nether. The body of Der4t presented no marks of violence IA the Doc tor supposed he must have died of extreme want and xitanalation, accelerated by exposure to the inclemency, of the night. A verdict of death for want! of pr oper' nourishment was returned in the case of the father and daughter. A poor man nam ed Jrllin Ryao, residing with his brother in a hot near Puckawa, died of narration. The poor wretch had not eaten a moisel of food since the Friday pre vionsL, and repeatedly called for "a bit to eat" a few hourii before his death, which his brother, was not n'Jle I to procure hint. The 'condition of the corpse was ,revolting in the extreme, stretched on snine strati', with no other covering than the rags he wore during the day. The condition of the entire corn menhy in the parishes of Curriortholt and Kilhally is awful in the extreme, principally front dis soperinduced by cold and starvation." ; MEI = LATER FROM MEXICO. e — Netv (Menus Pienyune Of the '2Bth ult. hits veil tiles of, Mexican papers from the capital to 3111 March, inclusive. T reee the he que:tion of a loan of $1,500,000, to be nel,ro 'd on p:edgre of Ow-F.:9,000.000. a portion of the nniiy to be paid by the United Staten i/1 May ha4l given rise to-lunch debate in the Senate. T a neNt XIX any that accusations gravely cana lising the Ministras of tVar, of Finance, and of dgln Relations, are to bo forthwith brought be- Pongress. It adds significantly: "Then you a tniuirtry full of popularity." • 11 prow Perri fore hay • T to assassins of Nlarcial Wane° at Oaj tea !ive beet fund guilty and cowl _mined to die, E Sigto dtinoonces the British authorities at Be lize it giving countenance to the insurgent Indians low ravagiog the fairest portions of Yucatan. The 51.1111 paper remarks. that the insurrection, which secined to be on the point of extinction, has broken out itguiu with fresh .violence. , TwApache Indians lately Made nn irruption into 4 the epartuveut of Smiora, Committing ai f . okr o w .. i strJefrthiee se Aral detachments of armed men rent against them. Seventy-three Mexicans wer e slain dnritio the foray. mid from 800 to 1,000 head of c l itlie carried off: - This visttatio4 ; and the little hon orkertained of protec'tion by the government, Lac mliltiplied the emigration to California. The t o talzrilin of Sonora is anticipated, if, as is stated, the rumor be true that the resident Indian popula• tion (Tagil?) is rising in iebellion. The Situation of Olege families, that ha re ar) means of emigrating to Califoinia, Or to other States, is represented as fridlit fol. I iformation had reactied the capital that there waz a party in Tompieu intrigulng , fur the return of Sal to Anon. The Neticioso, of that port. express es he de.-ire that he should he restored to the re ptilie, but not through a revolution. I is 's tated that no less than seven weekly couri ers 1 belonging to the post. office department at Do rittro, had been taken by the Indians and put to I death. - `he sudden arrest and departure from the ntetrop 7 of Gen. Perdigon Garay is commented on by Sigin and one of ita correspondents, as a very t handed measure im the part of General Arista, Minister of War. Gai•ay is accused of conspii against the government; but his being spirited y without any form of law, is said by his friends ,e an tutu - see which could,not. be ,exceeded in .the ropolis of Turkey by-the despotic Sultan. • "Li the Rig the revs~ TION(iS tv CALIEMINIA.—:.•The Balti m4e Pali tot publishes a letter from San Blasi writ ten by a gentleman from Baltimore. on board the steamship California, and dated the 14th February, which says, , •three ships have left San Bins within ,s many weeks, crowded with Mexicans for the ni ies. There are three others up, which start. ins fay or two. We found 30 Americans there, await n4 the steamer, ()It the Captain refused to take lam. They, endeared to a' get a passage on the , re. gels going fro th there, bit were refused, not yi ' listrinding they offered to pay more than double lu price of passage. The Mexicans will nut allow Ai 'lyrical's to go up on nay Of their vessels. They all go up well armed and equipped, and say that ih y intend to drive the Americans.olf. They will have 30,000 men there by the Ist of Jun'. They buy up ail the arms and ammunition they can get. wrier was worth four dollars per pound nt s'an. Was, and•one of our passengers was offered $330 fo a pair of Colt's six shooters. I expect we will have some difficulties with them. I omitted to'say that the Americans at Stitt Bias came through from Vera Cruz and Tampico. Besides the large num bey. of Mexicans going up the coast, many are p in,' by land. We apprehend 'no danger. By the A'• J u l ie we will have '7,000 troops there, and priohably 10.000 emigrants; and with thisSorce they will not dareto trouble us." FILO3I TLICAS.-•••DISTINGUISHED the arrival of the steamship New Orleans, on the 24.1 . 1, at New Orlenn=i from Galveston, Mnj. Gen. Worth, Mnj. teas, Maj.:Pemberton, and Capt. "and, of the _United States army, came passengers. IGen. Worth left San Antonia on the 20th. 'Phe et igrants at San Antonia for California had all gone on, not deeming it necessary to wait for the retection of the government troops. Gen. Worth's ekpedition to the',Gil - al will start about the 20th April. r At Indianola and Lavaca there have been several cases of cholera and some few deaths. Capt. Rod gers, of the schooner Ocean Wave, died at Indianola, and Mr. Hensley, of the firm of Hensley & olgeri died at Port Lavaca. ' pie of the comp'anies of dragoons is now station ed near the old Towiash village, thirty or forty miles shove the highest settlements. Emigrants may now remove to the fertile valleys of the Bosque and Noland's river .without fear of molestation. A small hand of hostile Indians had lately appear ed on the frontier of Fannin county, and a rumor prevailed there that five men had been murdered by them. I t . is supposed these Indians are Shawnees, excited to revenge the murder of two of their tribe, a few months since. Santa Anna, the war chief of the western bands ofthe Canianches, has none on a foray Into .Iso Mexican settlements west of the Rio Grande: • - • Toe Prim—A lady, motedTor;her bind feeliniri op bearing that the Pope was' a fogitive from Rome; exclalined, "Poor old man! has he got any' firnityl"- •On the matter being .explained to her she ,added, 'Well, hope he'll, marry now." • • r. :•..• • ;2::; 'Airarerstas • - 04 TM YOURTE ' NI G .413 7 1 CA r o x#,LAy.. .4 R EU op . r `"- • - P. M. The steamer Niagara arrived at Bahia*, after the short passage of 12 days' froin Liverpool, on Thursday at 3P. M. • •••••••• The Europa reached. Liverpool March N. Tayloes Inaugural. address was telegraphed to London. Trade had beere r ileliessed In curse ten . ie of, 04 Continental neWi,' • until three days Celine the sten& er,sai!edovhcrkfasorahle !Joys caused an iipprove- FOREIGN- MARKET. Cotton had fallen of it-penny, but _rallied and the market closed with a brisk demand. Breadstutis übt improved. .Prices condom to. , recede. %Vestora, flour 23e per bbi n 4 a23s Gp. American wheat 6;44 per 70 . tbs. Indian corn in moderate dennind-274' to 264 per quarter. Dist yelloar - corn meal 124 61r. 138 6d. , 1 - Cured Provisions steady. Liverpoid Beefrfalleo 3a to 5s 'per tierce. Pork teis L7p, chiefly for shi)l stores. Bacon active at former prices. Lard full len Gd per cwt. American stocks maintained thee price. ) ENGLAND. Mr. Disraeli's motion to institute an inquiry is to the burdens on land,"was 1°0,280 to 180., t The army and Navy estimates have been cams! ' by large maj,nties. The. India News has created a great : among the I'mglish people. In Um manufacturing districts the demand, fir goods had fallen off. Manufactured iron has slight receded. Trade in India is healthy, Money is Lnudunjis abundant. First class paper 23 to 2/1. TheNarigation bill passed its second reading b.: a majority of 56. M. Gladstone explainedthat if the Americans did not give them reciprocity, the British could by the bill retaliate .• • The Cholera is disappearing— total deaths 816 In Irela nd however, it still races, PRANCE. The r Isla at Bruges were still going on. Two of Gen. Brea's murderers have been guillo tined—the others pardoned. Theaed Republicans clamor loudly against tie executions. M. Prondhoin,is especially sarriae.— Clubs ha,ve been abolished bly the Assembly, 378 !o _356. the Secialists areumAqally active, sowing As affection among the troops-- In consequences of the' state of Italy, troop; are enthdriting at Toulon, and the army of the Alps is' recruited. The French funds have &ciliated. HOLI,AND. .' T e l King of Holland died at his place on the 17di HOLST Et N The armistice has ceased butweem,Dimmark and Holstein, and!ntlicial notice has been given of the fact. ElVlrts were made to prolong it for three months, whiell it is said has been done.' ADDITIONAL FOREIGN ITEMS. The wires gave out beyond Calais, Me., before all the news had been received. lant.cso.—The west and smith of Ireland seem to be in a deplorabit state. Several frightful mur ders are reported. The Cholera is committing extensive ravages in Limerick. To compensate for the sad and distress ing visitation, the farmers have commenced tilling the ground, awl the potatoe is. again planted to a great extent. The friends of Ireland, however, show considerable alarm at this recurrence to a sys tem which has cost much life and treasure. ENOS...ANIL—We rejoice to say that the Chulerais fast disappearing. The tothl number of cases h as r ea c h e d 13,304—0 f tvhich 1,200 were in the tnetropltlitan districts-1,100 in the country. and more than 11,000 elsewhere. The total deaths have been 3,401. Fithcn.—The trials'of the political•prisoners were proceeding. But little interest emmentrateil npon them. After a paintitl- invest4fation into alI .the Brea, the 'l6ll-rcilftfigfttclt,-.willi the mor.jer '.;E•11. the convicted parties, with the exception olthose who were bronglit to the scatlord on the 14th and guillotined. • • This first application of tWs dreadful instilment fit punishment, since the last roolntiun, has exci ted the Red Republicans to uncontrolable fury. They have the Preotleitt as an exe cuti mer and inn assassin. Since the steamer, floor has fidlen fir. awl pro visions dull with a downward tendency. •- Merchants are waiting fur their lett:era, Gitt;ar FIRE IN TORONTO. SATlmmtv, April 7,-7 P. 51 At 3 o'clock this morning tt tire broke out in the rear premises of the Square formed by King street on the South, George street on the East and Nel son street on alio West. It spread with frightful rapidity, the wind blowing fresh and changing se verat times during, the conflagration— ' Among the ruins is the Cathedral Church of St. James, erected a few years ago on the spot where it gas before burned. 'The whole range of buildings on the N o rth s ide of King street fromthe Cathedral, commencing witb.O'Niel,s depository, to the home of the late M. Sprouts,. Grocer, corner of George street, comprising three entire lots in the centre of the business part ofthe.city,bas been burnt to,ashes. The only tenement in his range now standing is that of Mr. Spots►e. The whole of Nelson street on the cast side from - Poste Tavern inclusive to King street, has been burned, anti on the west side from King street to the corner of Adelaide street, including the bakery of N . A. s m i t h. The whole 5 , vare t bounded by Church streets on the West, Kina street on- the South, George street on the East,-and Adelaide tied Duke streets no the North has been burned to ashes with the exception of the range of,houses included within briundery named, fronting on George street ) the residence of the Rev. Mr. Gsssett, un Adelude street, and two or three houses adjoining, besides these there are the old City hall and the establish ' meta of the Patriot and Mirror newspapers have been destroyed by the conflagration. This was altogother the most c.tstensive fire that ever occurred in Toronto, and a vast amount of prop erty. both in houses and mercliiiilize, was consumed uy.it. have herd the loss variously estimated by persons on the spot at from £lOO,OOO to 150,000, but it is impossible as yet to give any thing like an accurate estimate of the loss. A great portion of it is of course insured anti from the great extent of the ,loss, it must press heavily on the' insurrance companies. The tire is now so completely soh:hied that there is no pprellcnt-itni of its spreading farther. TRAnICAI. AFFAIRS it ,Mtssonst:---The St. Louis Republican states that a fatal recontre recently tool; place at St. Genevieve, between a young man nant• ed Andrew Scott.and Dr. Writ. L. McManus, for ;rimy o r Baltimore, in which the letter received five balls in the eh:lot:tem, end - •expired. almost in stantly. The difficulty is said to have orioi l lated from an old feud existing between. the doctor and young Scott's father, and, at the time of the bloody affray n challenge had passed between the two let ter: Young Scott, a few moments before commit tad the homicide, stepped into the grocery; with one or two companions, and expusetl,a bowie knife, os tensibly-for the purpose of measuring it upon the ;minter. This act brought:on the altercation , with Mr. McManus, who was in the house' at the'time, end Who,' sopt, after drew a revoker end attempted to shoot Scott.' • He discharged four barrels without effect, his arm , at' every fire being beaten down by the latter, - who, finally dee* a revolver, in turn, and fired fire times in quick succession, the balls . taking effect as before described, and Mciktenus almost instantly expired._ COirtunizan At-ism—Much excitement wee caus ed in Broadway, New York, on' Wednesday about noon. by an assault made by a woman named Kate flutings, the keeper'of a boarding house in Leon ard street f upon Mr, -Edsard Z. C. Judson', editor .of Ned 'llunfUne's Own, in which the lady had been dierespectiallY spoken of. • Mist-Kate. inflicted up- Jildsop several s e vere blows with' a raw hide, and then told him to seek redress through the %am-- During the affray 3udsoa drew a pistol and ltreateded•to shoot hie faiiiiisaailant,.but,khe disre garded the threat, and finally knocked the,pistol from his band. THE WE ELY OBSERVER, =MMI SATLTRDAt MO . APR 44 14. 1849. A cHArro,,,9l-: , ,0;',41q Ecpivomy The Deputy' Secretary of the CommpuwenlA►_hein • - troduced. pro/meta a meanie fromilm tiovomer.,nom. inating,cortlin gentleman as preaident judges and tneuci- - hteTudgeil 011 motion of Mr. JOHNSON the Message was referred to. tho Conimittee, op , Exectitivl Nominations. who oti• talticOntirCi to sit during the session of the Sonata. In a slitirt time thereafter,' the committee reported unanimously on the nominations; and on motion of Mr. JOHNSON; -thetiittot*tietit intoexecattiva 'session and nuaniMouely confirmed them as fellows: For Tresiilent Judges.--Nntlianiel B. Eldred, for the counties Of Monroe; Wayne'. Pike and Carbon; Horace Wilson. for-the counties of Bradford, Tioga, l'otter find McKean; Willium*psup, for the counties of Luzerne,' Susquehanna and Wyoming; George Tayfor, for, the counties of Huntingdon, Blair nod ' Cambria: Daniel Durkee, for the counties of York and Adams; David F. Gordon, for the county of Berks. -- The above Parogilaph from the' proceedings of the Senate of thiti State announces, the appointment of three new Judge's to three new Judicial districts jusivrented.— This is whig reform: This is 'part of the - system of economy that Gov. Johnston promised the people before the late election! These three districts were made for the solo purpose of enabling a whig Governiis to provide fur his partizans.' We learn that not a solitary petition was presented by the pcoplo asking for these changes—. changes Mitt add 6tintially not less than eight thousand dollars (taking into consideration suleries, 'Mingo and other incidental expenses) to the ir r xpenses of the Judici ary! Was justice suffering that' , this meastne became necessary? Where is the evidence of it? Not ono soli tlfy pinitieWtvas presented! Not a single complaint ut teied: Is not this, then, au unpardonable political spec ti alien with the 'people's money? Taxlpayers what do you think of it? Eight thouslnd doltmsof YOUR_ more!' to favorites! But lei us look a little further into this mat• ter and see• what the business to be done amounts to, not only in tlindistricts thus made, but in the distiiets out of which these new ones are carved., The - c4nties of Brad ford, Tioga. Potter and McKean forni a now district.— Bradford county will require four 'terms in the year—four weeks: Tioga three weeks: Potter three weeks: Mc- Kean two weeks—neefro weeks —making in. all three months, at $1,600 salary, and about $250 mila,gc! Pol -1 ter and McKean belonged to the district composed of the counties of Clarion. Jefferson, Elk, Potter and McKean. The counties taken ,offi { eiltiee that distric, to three v oi l a. I tits. Clarion, requires four weeks court annually, Jet . - fersou never more than three, and Elk, with her small population, only two—in all nine weelth! Tao months work for alinut $1,850!: 'hike is created into a new district! Thirteen years age when judicial business ,was j as great. if nut greater than at present in that region of leountry. Judge Bs:tits did all the business in Berks. Northampton and Lehigh. By the ncse arrangement of •Gov. Johnstln, Berks made a -{ district with 'but little ilicreos of business—not ten ( per cent greater than when Judge Banks presided in the district composed of the four counties named. North ain t °and Le high , with the Business not so great as p an a t that time. front their diminished size by the etee. ; n of the new counties named, urn lemma into a r district. Berko county will perh°ps requit9 eight terms annually—eight fit sixteen / u r n :red dollars! .tioth ampton will require five terms—jire teaks—Lehigh four terms, four weeks—in all nine weeks for about serenteen or eighteen hundred dollars!geed pay and little; work! Could anirnan better i foritis 'friends? l'hesa three new Jnilieay.with their annual expenses of eight thousand dollars, will last 'for tett years! They cantle'. be legislated out of office, and cost the State °bout EIGHTY THOUtiAND DOLLARS principal—the interest on the sum thus . expended to rowaitl peliticut partizans will be about $1.3.000 in ten yours—iii all. the enormous stint yf ONE,IIUNDRED and FIVE THOUSAND DOLIi.AKS:I stun, aPl'ltod to the - . the State debt wOuld be something weith thinking, about. It would lighten our taxes materially. Or, if it Munt ho expended to suit Gor. Johnston's ideas of economy, it !• would, in ten years, lttuonie a petty addition to the gellOVI ' fund. We understand that the . bill for these new dia. trios was introduced and passed, and the Judges appoint ' cd, all in three dogs 41111.3! This reminds one i f whig re form about the ,time the'United Slates Bank was char tered! 1V '45 have always rejoic at 'me good fortune o ou r old friend, Judge' F.:l4mt:u, who is one of the foregoing appointees h% Gov. Johnston; mid while we t•ould most cordially havO•wished . him . success - , we should have pre ferred it to have been derived from some other source. In connection with the above, wo think it imt justic e to let the tax-pagers df this county know whet part the Senator from this district took in the passage of the above bill, and for this purplSO, wo give fhe followitig report of 'the proceedings from the Ilarrishurgh Union: It will he seen that the bill was forced through the Senate under the previous question! The gag was `applied by Mr. J. B. Johnson to Oil the questions and all tho sections or the bin.' The canting complacency with which he.al ways talks about reform at home, is in bas WO contrast with this (mirage. If be is not already politically damned. in this calmly, the part ho took in this affair ought to set tle him! If there is any honesty in the whig party it will! Thu following are tho proceedings: Mr. Johnson moved that the House bill relating to the Judicial districts of this Commonwealth [novnles for three additional.] bo taken up, and that the Sonata dis pense with going intd committees of the .whole; which was agree(lto. ' The bill then being on second reading— ! • Mr. Miter said this was the most extraordinary course of proceedings ho had ever known to be taken in this or I any other legislotivo body. Hero they were called upon, l'without being allowed an opportunity to examine the bill of great finportineo to their constunents—to act on it with gteal haste and without it moment's con ' sidoration. flo protested against such a coursn as this —of boin2 compelled to pass a bill they knew nothing of under the coercive influence of the waif) and spur. Ho ti then moved to strike out the word "M'Kean." and ed for the )eas and nava. Tito (most - lint bring tho motion was not agreed to—yeas S; nays f.)11. `rho first section was than azreod to 15; irlYs 88. 'Ali Mawley moved that the Senaten_ j di ourt, —Lost —yeas 19; nays 7. ' Me. John'on wored the precious question on each of the fire sections, which motion was seconded, - Mr. Drawly every time endeavoring to obtain a hoar- , ing, and protesting against being muzzled, he being de- I sirens to make a few remarks in reference to those parts of the bill which most seriously affected his constituents. After-the fifth section had bean agreed to— - Mr. Dratyley, moved a call of Cie Senate; which was a greed to; • And the doors of the Senate were accordingly closed I for a period of about three minutes—when, On motion of Mr. Matthias', all: further proceedings in the call were suspended.—yeas 19; nays 8. - • sixth section being under consideration Mr.! Johns9n weed ate" precious question, which was secouricd. . The section was agreed to—yeas 20; nays 8. On the question of preparing the bill for a third read ing arising— - Mr.'Mitson eald—this is abill which affects the rights. of freemen ni every district of this CoMmonwealth. more or less, and if• it is to pasS without our knowing anything about it, why let the people settle the matter, as most as suredly they will next full. 'Thiele a bill of a chiaracter which your celebrated Governer would do right in vetoing It is the most extraordinary hill I have ever seen since I have had the honor to occupy a seat on this floor. Mr.... 70 1n100q moral the precious . question tohich tea's seconded. ' And tho bill was ordered to be prepared for a third reading—leers 20; nays 9, The rule woe, then suspended which prohibits bins from being rend twice on the same day: yeas 20; nays. 9 Mr. Vorsyth demanded the vitas and aays..which Why ordered and taken, the bill was passed by the following vote; , Yea-.Mesons.' Best, , -Boas; Brooke. Cunningtiatt, ,Harris Johnson. - KinmlionigtnitcherAttarrouce. Mat-. thins. o:verfield. Potteiger.. ‘ Richards. ,Hadlor. Savory, :Smjner. end Hereto. Speaker-19. ,‘ , , 'tatort—Meettra. Brawley. Drum: For s yth. Hogue. wee. tda‘nn. M'Caltin, Sinai! and Sterrtte..4.9 •'U brain. 'tnytin: has= friends lo coward, or enemies to RtiftiPb--Ite _hewn!! Only 16040iltUriatershnire • been turned oat of 'ogee. in pennsylvaaia alone.l ecatiso they wore Democrata!' And more are to go.'" STILL HE WORK GOES ON ex) wlt incre ttion is worked at Washington worm weather and Aog-days ;Bp. late decapitations by -this new bad. no enemies to, punish or of prosCy sod fury*. along the ion, which f EMI Ostsinist rtleilds t Marshall our friend JOHN KN:tTLY. Eg., loward,;fs I fAe Wiftifte Mr. Memr ikoont, mng iflo officer; h o District of tido stork s Hie stic c i der Irwin, of Clearfield, who, for o a very good man, and rnuko a t why 11r. Keotly should ho re- BMW' is ought .nro,, very corm tuoied to Caine into 1413 by RD tubnistiatratiott thg Vim' .proscription.proscribed' i embla nner—why un honest min and `turned out by those whose boast 11 that they intended to bring the k to that purity aid simplicity power with n every bl Or should be zoned up good otlie for the la uppointio Practiced removed tin that ' t year tiaab, power, ba by the "oarli by 17/0543 WI ho oak; plea '.poiotoients. wu would Il r Presideuts,"—wh. ho t;houhl be el thned previouy to the elec. on which 'should bo a3hed in re "is he honest?—is he capable?" cto have explained: What were Ir,.Koatly? What breach of ai , gains"( ' him? Nothing, we von barged against him except that opposed the election of this man to pUnish." Let us be under".• 'plain. because the administration d appoints whigs=we hopo they until not a single democrat holds l ost insignificant post-Mike in the ncy itself WC% complain because thing—because in doing so the wing contrary to what they preached ,n, and because by such professions uring the votcs of a large number credulous voters silo believed in gard to , a' —is, orbs tho har, chi ilut) tuts to es against is aleofgcol sort, Was mocrat, and 110 is a d thot had = 6 tO0f)-- o do not co clomocnts IC MOVCS will coat an office' Lind lop ()Idle 113 party pr, proviutt they su of tre/1- theirpr , Gen. T i , d earne ladle . nistic tic to do et from the n o the PresitV I poeracy of Ili tico e.‘ac o tho elec I seeded in s 4 neaning nu: put 4,ith is their proroi4N that fesssons. as ylor would ofLby Utp An "era of Introdtice that .era of "4 - ,,bod fe'eling." Mtn philosilibers and credulous old Nod feeling" between two antago tween monarchy and republican i • ocracv, progressive, ever-onward ralislui Nonsense;- In politics as the victors belong the spode: All lot exculpate the wings from Fan • hey have so unerupuluusly denound on to their conduct. It does not curse, that will ',tick to them like essas, of falsifying every thingt the,: din condemnation of removals for ns. Not a bit of. it—and we ask the eir condnct now with their profes then never again to be eneght by "no party" candidate. "The blo l od . seed of the church." . 14,11113 ipid appointed , work—let no mercy be ye that erd of goad ft•eling proniise4 wn to be, as wo prophocied it would '9cruptilon3 political proscription, as ! starved by Democratic mem:Jolley, inflict. 1 . ,rinciples—bi istd-I)tweet] Do Detnoe soy, and red in war, wo say to this, however, does tieing,_,this doctrine t ed.' It.du no papist , f r o nt ,_ lase rn t h an t he the bloady shirt of Is 'have heretofore sa paliticr i d consideratic peoplelto ca t atr,,A t' Sloths hist fall, and Whig i ii of the lotino rotntsps, or nortyr ie the' then do its shown ] but let in b hy`Gett. Taylor MI be, an , ere of as u - • whigs; famished im alono known how t abny, beautiful Spring—aaeet, de 4ring—that eeason enjoyed with So itu,tie by sathiblo, mon and women— tnoo-witruck-would u poets an,l l ors and misses—S:ls cape, ir AVU corroberated by tiil. 1 song of the INT EWS.—Briglit licious, delightful, much heartfelt gi* . and highed over lack-a•itaeicai nine. have all our excha and d. Probably thiy.nitl not bq neICS to , who get up in thr morning early tostiinony of our feztthotod authority, bn to ono of our t,J%rn-lirerl our country reader. enough to hear thu but it certainly will who spend their t iu th style of bonnets, di drru female toilet. news that tho rout; ornings in snoozing, (heir affernoons •ir even . ingi ditx: l 4ssing the grin r eases, and the oth,lr ietcctrra^ of mo •To all _Filch, wt; lt: I wo no doubt it is n is die fii",t intrsa cteselay in the niod t portion ot_t!lic e era 11Cd-Mtittl, \Via' it sings its sw Ulm who passes ttt tloinottit , iuq cheeks, bright with it intlfe. to li,te ves, step erc(l iort , e , ter. . er wu ITIB-t nncti with dulight to the glarlmss, or n mp Immit-t1 1, :Intl o:11. DI pt. tTrl3.—That tore by Mt. 13.111, of thiet rt• the State n•ith t h 11tokl A I3‘n MEAsun cod into the I"tr,:sl : form a partnorship riirpos of raisin: Lrancir Canal, that this iinportai slioa!d. hav crc; and ‘vo regr• I the rnean4 to compirto thr, N.,rth 9 again been dcreate.i. Wo regret t me a sure, the coil-11,1043n of that b.,e,n coupled with odinn; n men- it tho try;re from the fact that FuMO . zeal for trltis tneasnre, arrayed them l • ' positton and were fen I voting with lithe democratic par,y (Lad democratic roped or the committee to the Leg •ect contains all the fact., tht . 'n no ono rtance of compleling this work at the period—not only to the whole.. North State genet ally. Yet. impottant as it it can never jmt,fy resort to the vi raising means by forming - a rwner and•s'authorizing the issue of small It may we never come. It would prove msylvania and her people. The ex t ii pregnant with sad teaching,N.,-• I n. proved by•adversiq, is to avoid the 'nowt' and to steer clear of threaten es democrats, in thei seir`O - 1 with_tito op' the 9 d enemies o pri - Aiplos. If tho qlatnre on thie, su cnn doubt the ilnp earliest practicable IT l gion, but to the Ruppobect to be, dons expedient of ship With 13anks, notes. To thOest rt sorry day for Pa perienco of thq pa l The part of %wi3do rorwhielt are ing dangers. „ s t .IKtt.ROAIII i n Omni and oth ec{rttciniqated .accomplished der contract in sponciple upon 04 streli record with f confident ero the itiha4+. re on will nary t ti ith Thant° and ; East.—Grit Gige. /F. TATI: I T IN./..--WO under,tand that irr,nssisted by 14:111.9 C. REIP, 1\ ' 11. , 0:4 rill ot)t) continence the survey of the mall to tho S tato Line. R. will be tout three weeks, and the Read put un• diately. Several enterpriting and re rave already consented to 1711;i, contraets f bars stock security. We make this of sincere pleasure. It induces the t but a few years, at most, will elapse of Erie and this portion of the Lake to advantages of a Railroad connecting ill the groat commercial marts oC the [e.. MI2I rs,! R-i i inn ens gth rliu f th -,--The Periwylranian elif, the Feder ! this, the o nly State in the Union, I openly to boast of their oppo;ition to Tr,: site tg't... Of course nobody ex se. When tee ;:g':: of truth is not shut: e of wealth, tito cause of tho right must Ili Anthony. Federalists, elected Ow:- King, Fed., to Congress from the first la. Thurston, Dom., froni the second Ives the national representation .tw in I he Federal loss since last November-is !tired with the Presidential election.— 's' Federal. , . 11.11014: ISLAND., ::::StR have ctarie! in which the) l, do unrestricted nd pected onythhtg e out bylho Witten prevail. We thi pawn, George G. districts; and B. district. Th sle last Congres. ' About 1000, om The Legisleittru A Goon ihnss i tt.—:-The Democracy of Ohio have un furled their barmor to tbo breeze, and- otiiblamned upon its folds, the following truly Democratic measures. We hope to aoo the, same- adopted by the Democracy of Pennsylvania. froM the Delaware to Lake - Erie. Our brethron in Ohio aro bound to triumph with it, and if we in Pennsylvaiia but do our duty, the atuno' success awaits us: , , A total reformlin our Judiciary system and the prac tice of onr courts.) The election of all officers by the people. Ne,incroase of ithe State debt, except by sh,,rike of Ato peof)to thernselvetl. —ll system of common schools, and of education, worthy of the ago and of tho State. •- Nolegislation, but what the people can reform or me nub, when f..inui injurious. GUMS. no You smut 111)111—Tho Alts •'Californian copies a paragraph about a meeting of the seattnetresers in New York, complaining of the hard work and poor pay. and comments thereon as follows: , "No would advise.a'colony of the same wonting girls to come to California as soon as possible. They can earn from , $5 to $35 per day. in the manufacture of clOthing; and if they be anaioue to do still better than that. they will find hundreds of young, good •looking and enterpriaing men. reads• toembraco on,opportunity'whiCh promisee a good wife." FURTLIZII 711011 Csuronst A .—Ntre tgis'e below IA el : tract from a business' letter received by a re s p emili house of New Yorkcity engaged in the 'North Wen t rgt, j froin its correspoqt;rit at Sau Froneiico. Thou g h ~z 4: of the statertionts seem almost incredible, the pap er f rom which vreccopy it,S New York Tribune,) roaches f uuthenticity, having seen the original letter: or , . . . SAN I' Lin F t ba , • You ask me to give you, facts as they are, have a plain statement of inattess as they exist .. 1 4,Z' unt there is little or nothing doing in the placer, i,7„ • sequence of the immense quantity ofensw t h at hu E - 1 , 11 1 : en, There :ire at present some, tut° thousand permit, u Mines. Sonic aro living in tents, and others 7 . houses. Many have perished, from expiisuie t o co l fevers, &c,, but such is the rage for gold, that („b„, durgu the most unheard of hardships witli the Passing the winter on the spot., so as t o o i n i i Ibt z4 of the first openipg of spring. whigja is ►tol4ttil with great hopes. As regards the richness of the mines, I can es i i that tho most exaggerated accounts may be heb ee a . A few days ago a Ontleinan came•froni th e • with $14,000 whichgold dust, which dag is tit 4u. This is a feet which you may rely upon. 1 have ittniat, parsons, eyes witnesses, whose veracity cannothednnts. I i»yself saw a piece this morning weighing ken p(ionels, the most curious Specimen that has yet nude he uppearancc. The extraordinary richness of thi sii t s e er or placers, for there are many, surpasses any thi n , the world has ever seen. 1 can hardly realize it myrrh, There have been upwards.of five millions el &D ow gold exported from San Francisco 'alone, ereleme that by the trailers who have gone to Ore gon We United States, who hive Ail camel (mu tit i t twenty thousand dollars with them. All - who go to the mines do well, which is the rust convincing proof 1 c!sit give you_ of their great nedat,„ 'fete: iIIVG Fe:ctn.—The cholera It;tslost its lemon —tk'ofever has carried Mr its thousands te, , 1 „ ) . „ a ng i now, that genial sunshine sud balmv bums, bare succeeded old ilorens„rude blast, a worst disetss lias'lhdte out among a large portion of the idehoo to cc' gees, about our streets It is nothing, less than the spire; fcrer! Tho symptoms of this malady are deserib te li ; qr. : Ellis, of the Goshen Democrat, as fellows:l'Nya. tient is cominonly seen lbout II o'clock, A. M, seen old Phaaus' has reached atproper a latitude iii 1)1 0 4, 14; sitting upon the soft cocci' of a dry goods boe, oo one if the taincipat avenues, Asumetina l s chatting [ d emo !, with a comrade, laughing at ?dal< joke., or disrassiei the proininmt "pints!" of the Inaugural, or if alone, jeck-knifu in hand, making the.five hundred aruff ort i e th notch in that same box . , or twirling 4 straw for lint et hotter ant:lse melt t. Great thirst /Ind parched skin ars ,coiselinses; experleneerl. f Pationtf feels in his breeches pockets; nn unchewecd quid of tobacc o , or a g ray ones his hand and muses upon vacancy—is inclined too into tho '".:llajors" or ' : Tome" to Ell .!stithim4 to take"—hut 'though the spa:arsNotting, the 'flesh is weak. 'filo boobs creak on their :hinges—tho tit:nodes retitle their office work—the heart cease; is Pulsations, and unless: iiitnediate relief be - afforded, the unfortunate sitliject ceasics to ho nobody. - ' I The high medic- 1 / 11 arithunt) ;lives the- lONolliq `prescription Apply . the left hand to the lI3PC of the ;a. tient's neck—with the right grasp firml the auticpstel remains of tile scat of his-breeches—raise him fee t l ! from his position, give him two or three gentle ttnau!z• tory motions and then land him in the midj oflld t' street. tlihott ho resume his position, crookfa prd, oil plice it upon the dry goods box, point upwards„,.. Shtdl this fad. place Min in an erect position, step ter his reh, '' draw hick vour right foOt, and give w r Jou‘o. Should ho stop to argue and you feel inclined t heten. rillr al • I your fortitude, and run for your life=-ion itte ; geltio, the fever i ourself!!! ' r D' We learn from the Yredeni.i Censor ihst a Thea's ical compa l ny, under 00 management of J. pJPonsu, }:,(1., liiii bee.' pl.iying to crowded houses in i '' that r;,, ago for a wee - I:vast, and intend visiting thi city, it i proless'en i al nay, in the course of the COnlqli week... The Censor sr( aks of t h orn and their aciing i se fulls,' •Tite Comp int is the iii.ist that has eveotsited thee; a - gc Mr, Poweli, the manager. is a igIiierIGIIICIOI, Is his Ilia fonnulice of The Stranger, Railmiand Chii ? Wand::: I:iii not - of:ea surpassed, in the 'mist ctlelaSil Outstires. I ailis. r Vvi . ..itil , a •11.•-• r......:1.1_4 p_, .k w r IlalllrOr in her delineimoas, and . in "IlduriMi ii," is a I*.ad) of the Lae, cannot he Euridsioledil .111ka a 11,i . di: s" liiiiieat is minim:it:et!, there will, AO IIiANI4 he a I rood, it 1.00 , c. Mi. McKilibin. the (did gestiesu, pt N. - metes. Wool policed) . his lam, whether i it i Maestri ' actor of an ekliitly damn or a gentleman isfl he "Wu time." iiir .Milier ia,fi young actor of prom -, urea ••riviito.j' in the tzegt dy, was highly - apPt tided, N I._ also in iieei al.Wier pieces did himself milkcrisis, Nlis..Nliihr is a veiv cleaning actress, and Y' the this t t act,rs she has at (ed , has given general s's isiiiieties. Mr. Mortiis is highly applauded for theist lie hie tidet As "I'L tc l r," in the play of the "Stranger." he acteilb liar wli l. Of the other in3mhers of the campanroi ill suthce to sziy the t.int cosomhte is by those Who ti . axie siili Igor of Ntring— tii:tg, anti that ❑o n ill 8.1(It 11.1 w ,;% bi,JOUI• or :inz p 5 tswt ct uriLkc r re•- . , ,on g of r tva hie Cir:r ut!uiln IMRE lONE nes-ed the best performances in the counsed, thougtme ho well worthy o f support and patronage bv l the !Grua the Dra a. Tho 1/errors - none° of last night. of; the celebrated rd difficult o.ty of RICHARD II L. agreeably tilippoststedte crowded pudienee. 'rho characters' were admirably II tai net! TIIE A \ew Toi tvls tht. Sr IT IS Dom: —Th e c I; Mtnld, gives following icams are cut otl by the , m, cription"Adininis:ration at Washint The administration is stoadilv at pointments. Mr. Ewing, Mr. Coll Warren appear to be the-nctivo cli; Warren makes quick, work of it. complains of the unfitness' q( a Inc "Make tour charges." They ore e your man and hi., recommendations —Salisfac l • tors." Presto, the ..vhie , b .Ir. Calimner." ....til right " 4 inl (fay's tvutit 3lr. Calf liner presents h 1 Old Zeit-it says, ..I rely upon you. I bin. All Icor; ect; but niind you have placed,,and tNe right one put it." 1 ' ••.7:.0 tei.in s tic um !Ct.turi int into the Nyhite House, Z,,chara Talei climb the tr tree, autl,already the limbs arc giving way beneath k: That gaol old federal limb, Cuntiectiut. has broak 'rt. tici,th his feet and sin ished the•heads of those who el hanging ~ ott to his coat tail, besids scratching id tit'aiminc, half-a-score more of his foil were. Tbatevi i old fetlerl.il limb, Rhode Island, has c ackid beneath is feet, until it it as unsafe as Connectic it, 1 % Nis otilyher• now—and a poor one it is—rests on 'irginia, ladiut, and one or two other states. If these do not prove''‘7' 'ger than Connecticut and Rhode Island,' down he ON - at the mercy of a D3mocratic Congress. Er FATAL, AcctvENT.—A sailor named {Cams 13 , AwN . fell from the mast of the Rev, Utter Pi t t ' l° non. on Friday last, and was so nine injured that to died about twe i lve hours afterwards. I,*o hare Delco ti some papers left by him Containing evidence of his cap city and fidelity as a seaman and a err &cote of - his n't ular discharge from the Naval Scale , of the lila! Stator,—Erie Ga:cfldi ;Co DPUBT OF JT.—The Washington the N. 'll. Erening Post , asserts that it that the arti . elo in the,/iidnot ladlig tory of the free Boilers; "came from the We have not the least doubt of it; and predicticin that in- less' than a year. we from na auti=veto-noiparty-Prosiden "free soil" question. l There is a good there is! D3' - Although their are two Telegia city. that °Tigris/ Taylor paper. the co heard a word from the.first political ban Presidential election—wo mean old Col has happened?—did'nt Taylorism pay land of wooden-nutmegs? ~. I:a" "I aye no friends lo renraed an punish," acs Gon. Taylor, and slap Mr. - Fitz" lenry Warren• across tho n andtsjitY postinasters in Pennsylvania. i (17-7' Some ono has said that many a gone to an evening party and como out We can say, experrimentally, that, on o "a now hat" cone out "a bad old bat' the mortification of she owner.—Gaulle While we deeply sympathize with on I the losetof his hat, we cannot but .adtrii displayed to let the swotici know that he-, "evening party'," end wore a bran nor )1 I 1 rre.,p6Udgut of Oa p l e irt 7 , ..ro Un .a t o of rj tb i , . 103: work o pnn the 37. mer. and Mr. Fi inpions of rotahot. roan comes is ati ,loco posttnaqii.— ludo out. "Preset'. ' "Here they are' "Take that u at tho eud of list to Old ha hold von retpor 21=11 Tura."—To onespondeat II musot be iiecini ' ncer, clello d/.- White }1 •n we TO nture ti. 6 ball in. i VI4 a thin st P limn nonlor P of d,,, 4 Lh. merciA 1 / I dit e.field since 0 needed' Ine expepce in 0 no en e°l gode the a : ta k one hu e ' one "14' o b o ad o sosudocuss s ! d:bwres otenipooq! 7 the kiting?: has b °l° at.