Et= Foreign News II Below v.lll be found a 111111 important m t.teainer Cambria, being Ea from the bld World. Commercially, the news will produce no imme diate beneficial effect in this country, although it confirms the growing confidence of foreign capita lists in American securities. Politically , wo are "all in the dark" as to the probable issue of the struggle going on between monarchy and the spirit of republicanism in Europe'—nn issue dependent now, mainly upon the action of, the new National Assem bly of France. ENGLISH AND,TRISII AFFAIRS.—There has been no further debate in Parliament on Canadian affairs, and the business transaction since the Whitsun races is devoid general interest. Notice had been given that the Chancellor of the Exchequer would make his financial statement on the 15th inst. which was anxiously looked fur. i Lord Clarendon had returned to Dublin. _ Up to the departure of the steamer, toe ,Govern- ment has given no intimation of its intention of the final disposal of the State prisOners under sentence of death for high treason. As an 'evidence of the extreme destitution and misery which exists in Ire land, it is stated thit a, shipwrecked human body hiving been cast ashore. the corpse was actually consumed by the starving inhabitants of the.vicini ty. t The cholera has broken out in 'Dublin and still' continues its ravages in many parts of the country. COYIINI:NrAt, SUNIMARL—The dissolution of the French National Assembly tookplace on the 20th, i and passed over without tumult. The new Legis lative .Issembly met for the tran action of business on the, 23th, rind on tha 30th was the scene of one of the most violent debates that es r occurred in any deliberative body. The F - -rich e- le French expeditionary fordes are still encamp-, ed outside of Rome. M. Lessqp i s, the Envoy, hav mg totally failed thus far to perimade the Romans to admit the French either as friends or as enemies. The utmost dissati3faction is said to prevail among the troop, .vlio openly avow tlieir sympathy for the Roman Republic. I Whil,4 negotiations are going forward Slit Rome, i. c Gen. Oudinot 6 position, with 'Malaria threening his nriny, is far from pleaqant. Every day furnishes him with froNh proof of the pr carious nature of his command, if not of the moral certainty that the troops will refuse, if called upon, to enter the city hy t:tortn. Provisions at Rome were growiog dearer, fur the French do not allow any t 6 pass; but the scarcity was cuntined . chietlY to luxuries. Dread and ordi nary artielos Mere still in good supply. M. Lei- sepa has left the etey fir the cutup of General Oudi but Was C pee Led back immediately. It was also understood that a deputationhad been sent on the prevlou days to Gaeta, %%tilt proposals to the Pope' to return under a very limited temporal rule, and with n total exele.ion of the carthnals from all roe er. The Neapolttnnse having been beaten, have with drawn v.ithin their or territories, and ‘‘ it h Austria ,ceinej inc:itied to let the French have the quarrel all to thenn,eit The nar bet Ween the Danes- and the Prussians continues S ithout,from present appearances, the ri.ttnotest. prospect of a .t.ali4acttiry adjustment of tho paltry matter itolizTute. The town Of Prederiel has been reduced by bombardment, and the Prus sian troops are alvtancing to Orkatis. The Danish cruisers are strictly en orcing, the blockade of the German p.n.s. A dieicion of the Ru sian 11 , et has appeared in the Dania!' waters, wt ich is considered significant of the iirtentions of th Cznr. . Prom - Austi ia nod lungar'y little is po..ituely known beyond the fact that, vast armies from Rus sia in concert with Austria, ure now bearing down upon the Hungarians, who seem to be making- a progressive movement. Large bodies of troop, hav ing retired into the fastnesses of the country, where they will be able to fall upon the enemy with almost certainty of success. .. By the latest news positives information has been received, that the city of (iudu ha's fallen into the hands of the Hungarians, who fare said to have gained possession of the place by itrefthery and put the ganisen of 500 or 600 men to the sword:, Inthe South the Maygers are 'said to be i'li, pos. ~es si or of. Fienne, the only seaport of Hungary, tt hic 1 if true will give a vast impulse to thetcause. si t TI e meeting of the Emperors of Au ' rin and Res -1 sia a Warsaw lasted but one dt.y. 'tithing has transpired as to the objects of the inter - iew. Tun AFFAIRS OF FRANCH.—Upria a close analysis of the result of the late election, it t / appears that there are about 210, or at most 210 ultra democratic mem herr, Which is something more than double the num ber that they were expected to elect, and will give them a vastly greater influence in the present, than they possessed in the old Assembly. There will be rising of suo members electeed by the various other parties, but they are so split up Hall divhled in sen timent, that it is considered doubtful about their being able to unite upon leading questions of public policy. • I Personal disputes among the leading members of the several parties Mould seem to give small prom ise that the President will be able to select a Mtn, istry strong enough to carry on the . Goverunient ..•.tiih that degree of firmness so much to be desi.edt Ausrat,t A:so lltisomtv.—ln Hungary. the conteuL ding parties appear,to be again on the eve of cliang 'lll, their relatite p03161.11/1/S. The Austrian force:fr concentrating in and near Presburg, and on the line -of the ‘Vaag, and supported on their left by the Rus sians, are reported' to be on the eve of milking a for it ard movement. tm.,• 1 141 it is supposed that, iiiiving pro % filen:: and reinforkmd the garrison of Comoro, they will again retirL, behind the Theiss, and trust to the pestiferous climate of southern Hungary to fight is their favor. The alleged Niciories over the Russiann and their reported capture of Buda, have nut been Con firmed. J According to accounts front Pesth of the. 20th ultimo, Often was still in the hands of the Austrians and the 11gyarsnere still filming on the place.— The garri on oi - Olen had ceased bombarding Pest h, 1 which hut greatly suffered, many of the principal buildings / being destroyed. / No certain intelligence has been received regard? ing the inutements of the Ru'iisians, large boles of, whom appear ti`i be assembled tit Goding and Fiend ish!). The estimates of the Ilms:sinn force intended to be employed ngninst the .Mag,yans vary, but most fix it at about 170,00 U men,, who will be reinforced in case of need, by large reserVers assembled within the Russian territories. The Vienna papers sin c that a desperate engage ment has been fought at Kne, - in the Csaikist nisi rim. The Magyars. with four battalions of regular infan. , try, four squadrons of cavalrY and batteries, attacked the Servians, who, with only two battalions nod ten guns, were taken with a panne, and 'shout to fly, when StratoMirovich rallied them, and making a desperate rush, drote back the enemy. ' - It is said that the Maygars have again utterly de feated the imperial forces in thM Leighburhood of Odentn6r, and, in consequence,' Welden has inser-1 ted in time Presburger Zeitting an order of the day,'' forbidding the publication of any news of the army, except in an °Mein! form. Great surprise is ex pressed in Vienna at the non-appearance of the; Rus• siting in Hungary, and persons are asking what be come of them. Probably Hein and Dembinski could furnish some imbirmation on this subject. A sanguinary battle has t ken place between tlfe Austrians and :slnygars near Raub, in which the victory is claimed by both sides. Dembinski has, it is said, defeated the Russians on the confines of Gal- Bele. Baron Elaynau has arrived in Vienna from Rally, and ni toproceed to Hungary. The Russian Government has issued an order to suspend the duty of exportion on non sent into the Austrian domin ions, The Viennapapere state that the Ban of Crotia hes marched into Sinyrirria. fie has called in all the scattered detachments of imperalist mops, and bent an adequate force to rah; the Beige of Buda.— The Hungarian General Periml has loft Paanezova, after having fined the inhabitants of that town. According 'to the Presth papers, the major parlor the Austrian prisoners had enlisted in the Hungarian Pllly. .Tho atstr,of the Emperor of Austria was yeti , .brief nt We roe His majesty, who arrived there on the t. 1.11, took his dedarture on the 23d, and arrived at Vienna on the morning of 25th, at five o'slock, atten ding by Court Grunne. Schwarzenburg came on the previous 'day. On the 22J, the Austrian garr:son of Eannlseha, y theh Cambria. ummorgof the highly in tetvs from Europe by tne .ight daya later intelligence in Hungary,were expelled by an insurrection of the people, and obliged to retreat to %Varesdin. News of the 39th, from Esseg, states, that the imperialist were driven from Mohacs and Funfkirchen, which, it may be remembered, where the posts of the extreme left of the Ban'scorps, and that the whole of the said corps was obliged to concentrate itself about Esseg. Perezel had addressed a note to the Servian gov ernment informing it of the preolamtion of-the repu blic-in Hungary, arid requiring tokens of a friendly understanding. We have intelligence from Hungary of the issu ing of prcliination by the Hungarian nobles, ranged on the side of the Austrians. The namea of many ladies figure in the signatures to this document. An action took Once at Boos, fought obstinately on both sides, but terminating unfavorably, of course for the Magyans,according to the account tattle Aus trians, The Hungarian Republic was proclaimed at Kat:Thaw on the 27th of April. All the Servians, fram fifteen to forty years of age, were, on the loth pressed, at Nensatz, into the Maygar service. At Lemberg, May 22, several citizens, supposed to be quite peaceable, were suddenly' arrested, on suspicion of having circulated Kossuth's proclama tions over the whole country. IVhole bales-ol them were tend at one individual's. Market people, coming from &molt, related that there were hundreds of wounded Russians brought fro a ravine in the Carpathins, where Hungarian troo p had been post ed to receive them. THE Lszcsr.—Vienna papers of the 27th give the following details respecting the surrender of Wen:— "Up to this hour official reports are wanting con corning the fate of Ofen; meanwhile, we give to the public what details we have been able to gather from trustworthy sources. The first storming part: , advanced to.the assault at ten on the night of the 17th. The insurgentsisucceeded in reaching the ramparts in several places. but were repelled with great loss, 400 10 . 500 being killed. The second as sault was made ut eletlen on the night of the 16th, on which occasion they did not advance so fur as on the former leaving several hundred on the field.— The third storming, ateleven, on- the night of the 20th was successful., At six o'clock on the follow ing !Horning the fortress was in the hands of the Hungarians. The Colonel of the Cectpieri infantry was found deed, tlontzi severely wounded in three places. All the officers of the Create and the Gran zer were cut down without quarter; the castle and single houses, where o ffi cers were hunted dJwn, plundered. The majorof the Grunzer (the troops of the military confines,) who with about 200 men held the tetr-de-Pont, ga,ve orders, when he saw the storming of the fortress a ri d the thronging assault of the rebels, to blow up the bridge. His men refu sing to obey him, be seized a match himself, with which he set fire to the mine. S illicient of the powder exploded to rend the - major limb hv limb, but not the leest harm was sustained by the bridge._ The 1-iss of the Ilungari . a us at the filial storming is estimated at 250 men and 40 officers." I,‘TErt FROM ST. Domixem—By the arrival of the schi»ner J. B. Liu Isey. Capt. Harlin wey, from St. Domingo City, which place she lefton the 2511) ult., we learn that another revolution had broken out, and that the army and navy had declared in fa vor of Gen. Santa Anna as President. llerna ones, the President met the troops on the outskirts of the city, and declutch to them that he was still‘tleir Commander. Gen. Santa Anna :then ‘aithd l aw from ilia army, and rntired to his plantation, after which the troops disbanded ; but they, not! being sat isfied, again requested Santa Anna to head thorn, which he complied with, and immediately' marched for the city. Previnils to his march; the city of Don Carlos was burnt, by order of I'resiient Her nannes, with a view of preventing the troops ta king possession of it. It was supposed that St. Domingo City would fall into the hands of Gen. Santa Anna, and that he would be declared President of the Dominican Guy . ern rnent. The schooner Silas E. Hand, arrived yesterday from St. Mark:, St Domingo. whence she called on the 27th tilt. President Soulouque, after his return from his successful expedition again s t the Spa n i s h part of the bland, stated in his d6patches that his army hall been victorious in et cry battle, when, in ram, they lo,t all their cannon, and were in a most tniserahle condition. It svts nit known how many men he had lost, os he took the precaution not to state the fact in his dispatches. Col Fee and wool were scorer, arid imports from the Unitea States had been small of late. Flour at St. Marks and Pcr; nnllrince, was sellittg at $723 Hey tien money. Stood;lh doubloons acre worth from $212 to s2.l6.—.Vet York Tribune. Corros AcTonit AT Rio JANEIRO .-.-YASKBE Go - tbs.—We have a letter from a gentleman at Ri o Janeiro,. giving an acccuut of itvisit to a cotton factory in, that place. It is live miles from the city, at the base of highest peak in Brazil. It is built' of stone, clay: - mortar, wood and bamboo, whitewashed insuiel and out, and driven by steam. Around it grow in wild Inxuriance,oranges, lemons, figs, olives plantains, bananas, cocoa nuts, palm trees, and a thousan'd other tropical fruits, trees and flowers. The proprietor of this is an English man, who went out two years ago from Canton in this state, taking with hint six Enelkh and Ameri can girl, from that 'vicinity. Your of these girls have married since they reached the country, and the other two are about to take husbands. The let ter says the interior of the mill resembles the sweat pit of a tannery more than anytning else. There was six girls in the weave room—three Yankees, one IlogliA and two Brazilians. The writer adds, that his entrance itt neck trowsers, a tarpaulin and red flannel shirt,'was rega - rded with suspicion at first by the assembled girls, but when they found he was a Yankee they were write sociable. The prettiest girl of the whole, smiled very coquettish ly, as much as to sa3J l —oy,,,, didn't expect to see such a pretty girl as I here—did you, now'!" She told me to ndvi-ie all ILowell girls, who want to get married, to come to Rio. but I advise all such to gn to California.—Lerc4ll Journal. AN OLD NEWSPAPAR.—The 'New York Evening Post, which dates the - commencement 'of . its present series al 1810, has' been favored with a copy of a paper bearing ,the same name, dared Sept. 8, 1746. The loner is Diederick Duchinck aged 125 years. The sheet is twelve inches long and eight wide, with two columns on a page. It contains foreign news. There is intelligence from the Hague to the Ist of June—it took two or three months to hear from Hague then—news from Vienna of the Bth of June, from Fran Kurd of the sth, and Liege of tli 10th, awl from Brussels of the 20th. The Frenich were Men preparing to send supplies to Quebec to sustain itself against the English—the Austrians and Spanish armies were ready for a bat tle before Placentia—Europe in short, was convulsed with a -general war, and in Scotland a civil war was raging.. Among the advertisements is one offering rewards for deserters belonging to an expedition against Canada, and one of a farm for sale, at Bloomindal, on °the Iludson, together with horses, cows, wagons, and one negro, enumerated among the personal property.—Rochester Daily . 1 1dver Ilse, . POISON nu BY Roo? BIER —The Blairsville dipal achian of the 30th ult. says, that a number of per sons in that neighborhood have been suffering, for some time past, with sickness, said to have been can.ed by drinkilig beer, iti which some poisonous herb or root is supposed to have been used by mis take. Five s persons, who had drunk of the beer, have since died. It is stated that a Mr. Ginter had pre pared a fineetity nflri,ot beer for the muster, on the first Monday of May; and, by mistake, had used in the preparation, the roots of the wild parsnip instead of the roots of sweet myrrh and Sarsaparilla; and that the liquor hattremained over night in a copper kettle in which th 3" poisonous weed was boiled. OUT informant states that Ginter himself fell the first victim of his poisonous decoction, as also did one of his sons: and the rest of his family were dan gerously ill. Samuel Home and a Mr. Dougherty are mentioned amongst the number of thoiM who have died by the poison and some 'sixteen or _eigh teen persons were still suffering severely from its . effects. IoLERA DIET.—The N. Y. Sun relates the fol lowing case: A young man in the upper part of the city was taken with - a severe 'diarrhte, from which; however, he recovered. Being prevailed on to eat sparingly, and of light food for a nay. or two after his recovery,: he began with a bteakfast,of two quarts of sour, curdled milk, • well sugared, and a sixpence worth of male corky radishes,,lt!is tin 7, - necessary to say ho oval corpse /twelve hours. WHO IS THE PRESHANTI Every day goes to pile up proof that General Tay lor is a mere "automaton" President in the hands of his ;Cabinet. Heal- the New York Express ( Whig:) The Foreign Missions are now about fillettby the Cabinet, and it is a'matter of much surprise to very many thatiCol. Webb of-the "Courier," has been altogether d isappointed. With the kindliest dispo sition on t he part of the President, as we understand, certain_"indiscretions" of his past life have been so arrayed against him • that the Cabinet would not press upon the President (and the President did not feel a t t liberty to take the respousibility,) , of the up-, poin menti. There are certain peculiarities in this matter of the city press, wh_ich here it may be worth the while to notice. The list Taylor man in this city, and for some time, "solitary and aloPe," was Mr. Ful ler, of the "Mirror." The office he asked for ,was given to a !gentleman who had not a claim in the world. The only organ that, for a long time, Gen eral Taylor had among the powerful commercial and busioess classes, was the "Courier,' whose ed itor has been mortified and disappointed. The most inexcusable "indiscretion," it seems to us, that a political man can commit, is to forget his friends. But there is'a still stronger end more retnarltablsl case in the District of Columbia. The incident is described by two correspondents of the Union. It appears that the leading Whigs of Georgetown were zealous for the appointment, of Mr. Linthicum, as Navy agent at Washington. Thoy were suddetily startled one morning by the announcente..t of Mr. Lathrop's !appointment -to the same office: The Mayor of Georgetown was deputed to the "second Washingtim," who replied in words to this effect: "You eau assure your friend Mr. Litithicton, that he has received the appointment of Navy Agent." The Georgetovin functionary returned, of course, in good spirits to announce the result. At that. very mo ment the commission of Mr. Lathrop had been signed by Gen. Taylor, and was being recorded in the Na vy Departtnent. The General thought he had ap pointed Mr. Linthicum, but the Secretary of the Navy had; appointed Mr. Lathrop. Again alarm seized the!Georgetown clique, who were a second time assured, (though now by Col. Bliss) that Mr. Linthicom had been appointed. The truth soon flashed upon them, however, that the mistake had been muds, and their stupefaction and horror may well be conceived.—Richmond E.iquirer. GEORGIA MANUFACTURES AND RAIL ROADS. % ithin a few years past, says the Savannah Re pub I can, the State , of Georgi a, has at one hound pin ed herself indisputably in advance of any other Sodthern State, in manufacturing enterprise and in ternal improvements. NV° have between forty and fifty manufactories - with from 100 to 500 spindles in each, in operation in - this State. Our mines have been partially explored, and we are producing simi lar railroad iron, castings, marble, lime, at. a rice so low that it is used in considerable quantities to revive the worn omit lands of the State• The eternal fields of cotton, and nothing bat cot ton, no longer appear in the up country, except.to a limited extent. The cultivation of that staple in the Northern counties will comparatively cease in a few years; and be transferred more and more to the fertile bottoms of South Western Georffin.— The hill hides in the Cherokee region and Middle Georgia, ,are now smiling -with green crops of wheat and other small grains. •There are flouring mills, as the Eteiwah, Lebanon, Columbus, those in Clarke, and else Where, where the wheat is purchased at a liberal price and converted into flour, which has some time since found its way to the Atlantic mar kets, while some has been exported from this cnun• try to Brazil and other countries. Tho article of Northern flour is almost banished from this market. One year the Central Railroad conveyed intu the in terior 6,000 barrels of Niqthern flour; the year fol lowing it brought down 6,000 hbls. pf Georgia flour, the upward current being completely turned. - These manufactories and railroads have created home markets. They gave e uployment to the far trier. carpenter, the mason, the tanner, the miner, and in short to almost all al o follow the various and devious ways of human ndustry. The moral and physical influence of our Railroads in bringing about this order of things is not stacientry appre4 elated. The Up-Country is now no longer a sealed book. The travel on the State Road has pr A•Ottly quadrupled since it was opened to Balton. It will increase YnStly more when it is completed to the Tennessee River. It has been estimated that when the Nashville and Chattanooga Railroad is completed, the Geor gialßoad wiJl require four times its present locomo tive, power. Our great work has already paid back to the State the cos`t.of its construction in the shape of a multitude of benefits, beyond the power of cat culation, and it is not a daring prdphecy to make that in less than twenty-five years, it will pay all the debts of the State—principal and interest and relieve her citizens from all taxation. GRNERAL GAlNRS.—Generni Gni es was the old• est officer in the army, having recei his commis sion on the 10th of January, 1779,,a5an ensign, in thellOth regiment of foot, jus t fifty yearsago last January. The first most prominent act in the life of Gen. Gaines was the arrest 'of Aaron Burr, for the activi ty dis Played in which President Jefferson appointed him l marshal.of the United slates. 45articular exploit that gave General Gaines reputation was his conduct at Fort Eri , in 1813, which he defended with great ability from the night attack of a powerful British forte under the command of Gen. Drummond—the loss of the British amountir , to 963, while that of the Americans was only 84. The oldest °Meer in the army, new r lioing, is Brev. Brig. Gen. Brady, colonel of ,2,1 infantry. He en tered the army as ensign "f infolitry,lnn the the 7th of March, 1792, resigned for n few years, and re entered as colonel of the 22d infantry, 6th ;July, 1812. I ' The n • xt oldest officer, now living, is Brev.[ Brig. General . H. Wallin* who entered the service the same day with Gen. Gaines, nit the 10th of Jan uary, 17 9, as lieutenant of cavalry.—Peiatisylva- : Snow No Tntaa lIANDS.—The whim now that they are firmly seated in power for the next, four years, are beginning to show their hands—to avow their principles. The Toledo Blade, a bitter whig paper, is out flat-footed for a United States bank! i The following paragraph we cut from a long ar ticle in that paper: "We have always considered, and still consider. the United States Bank, or something very. like it, Ca rose by any other name would smell as sWeet,') as one of the best financial institutions that the Country ever has or probably wi'l possess." The cloven-foot of whigery tvll stick out after election. Before the late presidential election, the Blade mild not have been induced to declare in fa vor of a United States Bank. If q•testioned on the subject, it would have declared it "obsolete," as did Webster. No Whig in the Union would have daft.d to incorporate a bank in the "platform" of the party. Now, we shall not be surprised to hear the leaders of the party in the next Cang,ress, if they Lind they have strength, start the old favorite measure.—De frail Free Press. I ENCOURAGING FUTURE. raoseturnotv.—Among the hundred pledges of General Taylor, before his election to the presider.cy, was his proclaimed-de sire to soften the asperities of party, and by stern example to discourage "the hateful system of pros- cription for opinion's sake." His practice upon this promise has been a system of ruthless, revenge ful, and indiscriminate removals of those who did not vote fur him. The effect of this treachery to plighted faith, it is easy to sae, will be the excuse and justification for the most violent system of re movals in-all parties for all time to come! - 'This will be one of the legacies of a dynasty that came into power with pledges on its lips to put down all party violence!—Pconaylcanian. ELOPEMENT, AND DRAMS DT be• fore yesterday a colored man, and a white women, the couple having eloped together from the northern post of the State, some say from Highland t county, arrived in this city together, and was living as than and wife, on East Seventh street. ' They were yes terday morning early both taken with the Cholera; and died•almoat immediately.. They are both now lving in the grave side by side.. This Strange finale to a vercy4trange.elopementermein. Com. 07'.The Sanduelif,blirriirdetinea •a, member nf. the 'Cabinet .to beta . in eighth'of , a President -unin cumbOed bX39lturlia-Msc,*.bilk,Y!!' etitil 41)hoertitr. ti GIMI2I SATURDA MORNIN . JUNE 23. 1849. .4 ,tic County Domocr ie several townships, wards and boroughs .et at the usual places of holding township he 'nth Inst. at 2 o'clock, P. M 4 toelect det ention to be - held nt the Court House on o'clock. P. M. for the purpose of appoint t of July State Convention at Pittsburgh to f , or Canal Commissioner. I order of the Central Committee. SMITH J AelitiON, Chairman. The Democrats of t of Erie county, will in Meetings on Saturday I egates to attend a Con Thursday the thath, at lug delegates to the 4 nominate a can , ,ldate LP Ede, lune E S&P RESID'I3IIII7 r °Lint tho atartlin4 announeemem that JAMES lie died at file residence In , Nashvllle, on DZIATII or ' The telegraph make poLK in no more. the evening of the 13th from a disease, cause. climate, it was only w. tai termination had be! land that knew, loved forever—but his memo in.grateftil remembra was emphatically a gr are unwilling to ackni friends claim, yet we award blin a hlger tile trate.. lie has played al ! can say that in any en the occasion. It l 'was it of the progressive spir country new fields fo prole of our people. T to be felt taul realized the language of a cote usually assigned to in; quarter of a cc:rimy, b Lion of his administr. 1 mericnn people rental lantic count to Although' suffering fora month or more probably by sudden change of' habit and thin a few days that apprehinsions of a fa n entertained. lie is dead; however—the and honored him, will knoiv hen no more y, his virtues and patriotinin, will be held i ce while the Union lasts. James K. Polk rem man, end although there are those who wledge it to the extent the partiality of his irmly believe that the fulmie historian will h even. The youngest of our Chief Magus more imminent part than any, and no man ergeney he has not 'proved Ilim.elf equal to is fortune to be the instrument In the bands t of the age to add to our widely extended the devolopement of the energy and enter a benefits of this acquisition had just begun i when tie was buintnOited away. To use nporary,touid he hove lived out the period 1 n, how might he, at the ,expiration of a lave exulted hi the More complete %indica- I lion, which will come as surely es the A i masters of the continent. rrorn the At- "The continuous woods the Oregon and hears no bound Where toll Save his ot a hardy and industri wealth. building chic the facilities of inter lion and obedient to 1. policy to which we lu already everywhere ma. But providenc led, his nilkSiOn is en patriots, on which a i chivalrous spirits, to the grave full of yc of their country's cal "The boast of hi All that beauty Awate alike It The path of gli u dashing-;" usl population covering the soil, gathering t, and projecting public works to increase , imunication, living under one Constitu w these }rill be fruits of the governmental s l ave allu/d, and which we arc confident Is ce proved h • the friends of liberty and prop ordained it otherwise. Ills task is comple ed. Weadd another to the list of departed w days Mace we placed the names of those i.)RTII and GAINES, who havegone down s and ohionors. They arc "the canonized ndar." teraldryj tielminp9fpower,, all that e itievlta ory leids 1 SHAVE TREES A. 14.11 SIIRUBBERY,-..A8 we write Om sun is boating down upon ditty' streets and glaring brick walls with an into city tht4 drives the perspiration from the brow of the laborer, and even makes the more for- Monte lounging gentleman of leasure, pant and sigh for the cool and shady' groves of the country.. : Speaking of the country, calls hp vividly to the mine's eye recollec tions of the many 'pleasant, aye, and happy days, spent amid its forests, ind green fields, and besides its mur mitring brooks, and laughing rills, in "days of old tang syne," and we have often wondered since the headless -11095 of boyhood has given place to thought and reflection, why it is that so fi r r of our farmers in the country, and our men of busin ss in town,( appreciate the beauties and comfort of shade trees about their dwellings. To use the language of a l coternporary, a cheap luxury is a gras sy yard and green' shrubbery; right pleasant it is to sit by one's window anti hear the rustling of loaves as the soft wind plays among the branches of the trees 7 —to rest the eve, weary of dusty streets and brick walls, bY gazing en the grass and adniiring OM opening flowers. ' Why, in this broad land where there is room enough and to spare, do those who build dwelling houses so often place them on Oro very edge of tho sidewalk, or Ica •o a scanty space between, hardly wide enough for a spa rof grass or a beautiful flower to grow and flourish? In our city w . e are not yet so crowded but 'that every one can offerd the space fur a little green, a few flowers, a few trees.!—And they add too, so Much to the attractiveness of a home, making evert a pli in dwelling pleasaater thrtn, a showy of theso bewail - 1r adornings of Nature's own device around it.—Too many dwellings in our city are erected trithout yards. Shall it be so in future? Yott who love pleasant streets, a laded windows and cool rooms—who would make our its healthful and agreeable, and create a taste for Nature a works of beauty, plant shrubbery and trees, and leave room around your dwellings for green grass to spring 4 luxuriantly. -To the farmer we say, whY cut down the noble maples and oaks in the neigh borhood of the silo selected for your dwelling? They breed no pestilence, they cost no money—why then ruth lessly "cut those hld oaks down ." In all Erio county, there is not a residence we admire half so much as that of our friend, Judge BRAIVLEY, on tho - Buffalo road; and all btause: it is near a beautiful grove of prim itive maples, w ere, let the road be ever. so dusty and the heat ever no intense, there is a cool shade and a soft grassy couch inviting rest and repose. There, trio, the robbin and tho blue-bird build their nests and rear their young—there their musical notes aro heard with the first blush of the dawn, or at mid-day heat, inviting the way farer, oven if he cannot stop to partake, to admire the taste that spared the grove from the axtnan's might. Blessings, say we, on the green grass and shady gp V 0 • NOT DOUBTFUL—The complement to our distinguish ed representative in Congress below, from Itho "York Gazette," is not doubtful or "probablo"—it is certain. hearty'and onthusinstic. No remark of ours could add to It—lt Is a whc;to isa isna we submit it without a word: Hos. JAMES Twomrsos, or ERIE.—In a list of mem-"i hers elect of the next Congress, published in the Now I York Journal of Commerce, wo find, opposite the name of lion. JAMES Tftomrsos, of Erie the remak: "Demo cratic probably." Dotnocratib,probaUy! , IfJumes Thompson be a Dem ocrat probably, we shoot like to know what the Journal of Coil - mere° regards as a Democrat certainly. When it rains. the earth will probably become wet—water will probably run doWn hill—if you cast a stone into the air it will probably come down again; but James Thomp son's Democracy is by no means problematic. There ie nothing suppositious or doubtful about it—it is the real, genuine article.' The Democrats of the Erie district seem to be quite well satisfied about it—and in our own county, the staunch Democrats ofQodorus, if the ques tion wero submitted to them,; would decide very quickly that James Thompson is a ,I,emocrat certainty—a Polk and Dallas, Cass and Bade Buchanan Democrat, of the clearest and most decide•ly blue stripe. Give us but 116 such probabilities in the ext Muse of Representa tives, and we shall bo entire y willing to take the risk of , a whig majority. HEARTLESS DEPRIVITY.-..501110 loafing, lazy office seeker, not having the fear atho "second Washington." or his seven wise mon in buckram before his eyes, did, at the dead hour of night, when his Fxellency was locked fast in the arms of the dreamy God, clandestinely and foloneously steal and carry away, and convert to his own uso, one of the Presidents shirts, almost new. This heart; less' act of depravity was committed on Sunday night, and at our last accounts the President was still cursing Bliss for leaving his linin out. "God and liberty." Sour. RUNING.-Th? Keystone State run from Chica go to Buffalo last week, in seventy-ono, hours. This is the quickest trip yet. • V' Our friend BROCKWAY has retired from the Edito rial chair of the "Oswego Palladium." While wo re gret to part with so good a fellow personally, we must say his political course of late renders any regrets at his loss in any other point of view, impossible. • To hisl succes sors, we extend the right hand of fellowship, trusting.they will make the "Palladium," neither a "hunker" nor ;born burner," but a Democratic paper. - For a column of doferred EdiMrial see first page. Also, selected and original poetry. and a general variety of miscellaneous matter. calculated to both please and instruct the general reader. • 113 We call attention to the advertisement of Mr. Jacksothin this paper... Our. wire! growers will undoubt edly find it to their interest to call on him. Mr Several articles intended for this paper ere crowd ed out—among them 'an editorial on 4 q:remocratic Abuse. I Convention. vealtlt e'er save. pie hour. ut to the grave." i ~ `". THE Nr,v, ORGAN lie first number of the "Republic," the . new Taylor n. has just made its appearance in this section of the itry. and being a stranger ampng us, it is entitled to • attention at our hands. Wo like to be civil when r power to be so without compromising the truth, would much prefer being able to certify to (Ito re= ability of this organ of the new Adininistratien if ould; but if would not be just or generous to others, Y that it is either good politically, or good looking raphically. It certainly has not the substantinl np nco of the "Union" ! or tho venerable and solid look to old "htlelligericer." 10 t we intended the few brief remarks we can at this bestow for another and snore important matter than' , appearance. The "Republic" is to he the upolegist to frauds committed by the President on the people, t labors to show, in'this the first number:that al li "no proscription" 'was the promise of Gen. Tuy tiet the- performanco was impossible. This may be • excuse for proscription, but it is none for making a Promise: Thu falsehood remains, and it is not pal by the supposed inconvenience of a compliance pledges. The "Republic" honestly admits that 1. Taylor was successful only through the Instrumen /of Democratic votes. Hear what it says: "Mad l y tubers of the -Democratic party united with us be es° they sympathised , with Gan. Ta)lor in his vicWs the importance of Governmental reformatiout and accession to our ranks furnished an important et:- AI in our success." Here then it is conceded by the eyed organ of the Administration that the ••Domo c accession" secured its- success. This accession omocrats—as Democrats, not as whigs, let it be re bered=was the iintiortant element that brought see ' Now how came this accession to be obt iined?— ny scheme of Governmental regarm proposei. by . Taylor? He proposed none! . Tho conyention nominated him whispered not a word about policy! t vas tho attractive power, then, that drew oil this temporarily from the DoMocratic enndidate to the port of Gen. Taylor? Was it the avowal of whig iciples and policy? Certainly hot—for Democrats, as li, could not support a candidate avowing them= it was democrats, tho "Republic" admits, that made accession so important. What then was it? It was iteration and re-iteration throughout sonic thirty-four ko letters, signed at least by his own proper hand, 'he would not be the "candidate of a party,"—that lust be the candidate of all parties or of none—that he ild accept a nomination of the "democratic Fitly Ws i dully as that of any other party,"—that lie had "no toles to punish or friends to reward,"—that no one. Jl4 be removal or appointed to . office on any other r s than capability h and honesty hi the ono case, and ' vont Of it in the other. Believing that Gen. Ta - was honest, many. Democrats sympathized with him with these pledges. Thus wo account for the tic ;ion. No sooner, however, is he elected by this at:- lion titan the work of proscription, shameless, profli gate proscription, bogips and goes on with an tinrelent ing fierceness that Would put to shame the ino,t it multi - gifted tyrant For all this the "Reinte/io" excuses the administration by alledgino: that they could not get iiiong with their official duties "under the iiinnifold embarrass- I.:merits - Itch i which they would he rttrroutirled by un friendly s tbordinates in places of con fi dential rela- Oons " TI is is the apology. t Olga , cou L CCM HI 0 end 1 Bpoc, WO .4 to et typo. pear. of t limo! more, for t and thou lot, sum falst will' Gcn ten the lor • I and I EM MO Now let us ask what-inconvenience would be likely to he felt by the President, and the "seven wi l vg gen tleinon" of the cabinet, by retaining the thousailds of city and cotfiltry Post Masters that they have retnoved?,-of the collectors of customs scattered all over this vast country ? —of District Attorneys throughout the Union?—and the hundreds ofothor officers and employees displaced by this A¢ ministration? They n ere i einoved because they'l could not be relied on as "confidential" in all the purposes of the "seven wise men in buckram" who, under the , name of a cabinet, play the President v ithout any' of . the responsibilities of that office. But this confession i s important in another point of view. It repudietes the infamous libel by implication that the want of capacity and honesty has had anything to do with removals. No- body believe s that this test has had any more influence in making removals than that honesty unu cap.i_i 1... boon constilted in making appointments. But here it - is —the excuse for removals is the desire to procure "con fidential" agents. No want of capacity—no dishonesty is claimed! But why did not Gen. Taylor think of this sooner—this necessity for "confidential" agents? Why did hoi r not r 4tibmit this consideration to the people? Ifhe , had done so, what would have become of the democratic accession? It would never have taken place, and Gen. Taylor - would have been by this,timo an •mbsolete idea," and those who are now Editing and smiporting this "or gan" would be ready to cry out with Daniel Webster, "his. nomination was not fit to ho made." •Bnt rigain— this "organ".of the party of the Union makes this apolo gy fur the abandonment of pledges, and the "organ" of the party in Erie county makes a very ditTeient one. 1 The latter alledges, in substance, that Gen. Taylor did I propose that no preference should be given to whigs over Democrats In his regard, or in making appointments, but that tho Democrats did not belieVe hint, and did not act upon the proposition, but apposed hint, and therefore he was relieved from his pledges. Both apologists admit tho breach of faith—confess the fraud, btl labor to excuse it. Their labors; arc vain—theie,is no xcuse for false hood and bad faith—no apology can wipe out this dam ning stain wont the character of one who, otherwise, would be entitled to the respect of the people. No, Gen. Taylor will have to find a more powerful defender than this "organ" before those who were cajoled into his sup port by his "no-party" pliklges vill forgive him. They see now that the game was won. by a fake trick—that when lio said ho woull accept a Democratic nomination ns soon as any other, he was only fishing for Democratic votes to enable him to reward those who wished the Mexicans would "welcome" himi "with bloody hands to a hospitable grave." - BENEATU CONTESIPT.—An honorable cotemporary we admire—a dishonorable ono is beneath contempt. In the latter category we will certainly hnvo to class the Gazelle if it does not mind its manners, and adhere n little closer to the truth: Tho following is a specimen of themarinor it choses to libel its cotoniporaries: "Et.rcriort or JtMors - .—Mr. Buchanan's special or gan' at l i .nncaster, the hitelligencer, of a. late (fate', con tains arkartiele earnestly arguing against the law autho rizing the election of judges hyttho people. A, charac teriskcommentary this upon Democratic professions of resped for the confidence iu "the people." Some two or three yers ago, when Mr. llerrErt, the present Editor of the intelligencer, bought that establish ment, he took decided grounds inferrer of electing judges by the people, and has continued to advocate tho memos() ever since with an ability the Editor of the Gazette might well envy. The Gazette's whole story is manufactured from the fact that a communication appeared in the Intelligences arguing against the measure, but which communcation, let it be remembered. the Editor distinct ly stated was admitted only because he deemed it no more than just that, as he had adrocatcd a different policy, those who differed with him should •be heard. , We do not know whether the Intelligences is received at the office• of the Gazette, but if it is, as wo suspect, then does our neighbor stand in no enviable light. .. The quotation from the . , /Ifentgomeiw Itratchntan," we presume is off the same piece—at any rate wo shall believe so until the first falsehood is explained. If the , Editor of the Gazette will misrepresent in ono instance, he will in another. Er The Editor of the "Commercial, is very envious of us, because our friends, when they get married, very generally send to the office some of the "fixins."' Poor fellow—we certainly did not think ho was so near star ving as to envy our "boys" what wedding cake is sent them, else out of charity we might have been induced to have spoken to "old Zack" to overlook his want of '•honesty and capacity." and give him the office of Col lector, You should have spoken sooner, neighbor. Thero is ellanovolent society in town. however—suppose you lay' your case before them. • UT Our devil says Editors are like the ladles because they are always waiting for the mails. Our devil is , some punkin'," he ie. "NOT WORTH A DOLLAR." It will bovecollected that Daniel Webster proclaimed on the floor of the Senate that California was not "worth a dollar."—that he denounced the late lamented Presi dent in terms that only a New England federalist knows how to use, for its acquisition andthat he was cheered on and applauded by the party from ono extremity of the Union to the other. This is a matter of history, and it is another matter of history that this same California. in stead of not being "worth a dollar," is worth untold mil lions. Its crystal streams run over beds of shining gold —its mountain :4 are beeined with veins (of the precious metals. and its vast plains glisten in an unclouded sun with sands that would make a miser's eye light up with joy. Ilad an European sovereign acquired such a pos session historians and poets would have vied in their eulogies. BLit thelwise and fur-seeing man to whose in- 1 domitablo energy and love of country the Union is indebt ed for this acquisition', now sleeps in death in tho state of his nativity, but this monument to his fame is left us to be enjoyed by the t i nillions of his grateful countrymen, and it will require neither poet nor historian_to render his fame as lash ig as the hills and valleyS that:are now sending their golden streams among us, to render the falsehood and ingratitude of the whig party the more &tithing. To .11311 i K. POLK and the Democratic party does the country—aye. and the world—owe the posses s:fon of this *mine of power by a people who will use it only forthe %yellow of mankind. Had Louis Phillips yiniiessed the golden s'ands of California, think you France would now be free? Think you the shout of Micky would bow be ringing from Paris to Vienna, and along the 14nks of the Rhine! Think you the republi cans of Hunlgary, Germ any and Rome would be defying the Austrialo and the Cossack—that Born and Kossuth would be leading their hosts to victory? No. the golden hills of California' in the hands of Louis would have quenched the lust spark of Republicanism in Continen tal Europe! !lad England, as she had endeavored to do, obtained possessionSiof this El Dorado of wealth.;can anyi body supppoi.e that it would have been used for any °llia purpose than to strengthen the power of monar cliv and rivit the chains Abe people tighter! England. with this acquisition, that uo were told was "nut worth a dollnr," wont& be invincible. Her arm would be felt in every contest—her power would be' acknowledged in every court, and Europe would fie at her feet. But thanks to the policy that party which has made this re public what she is—the assy lum for the oppressed of every nation—it•was ordained otherwise,- and the gold of thi Sacramento, instead of becoming a curse, will be a bles sing to inankind. And this was "not worth a dollar" in the estiiitation of the God-like 'and his followers. 'Verily is not Daniel Wobster-an "obsolete idea?" • • Ayr1111A(In. itecounLs aro tr pear ti It there are largo veing of Anthra town of Man,ll , 2ld, .Na ,, s. We hope so. glad to keep the money. expended for en ; . itat.. We lv,e e per.oirtilv h"en taxed equal tc. S.,:.1(10 by the State of Penns)lea gle article; and all the people in our towns in Now, England, we presume, ar pioportion; a pretty purse sent to the sue ham Peon, yearlx.—Bo.stort (Are Bran Certainly faietid Wirc Bran,h" yon regard.to obtanii g coal now POTIIII. Iran in, else a great polit,eal party wlaiela arrogate to ikelf al the intelligence and honesty of 114 country, has falsified the facts most grievionsly. Arl!!we not daily Lehi that tho tariff: of '46 :19 ruined the coal lini.‘ness of Pennsylvania—that New York land Boston, and all creation away down east who. under the taritYof '43, purchased their supplies of us, now buy it cheaper of old .lousy Bull's traders? Certainly! The Penn.ylvania coal mines are .not worth a straw now, let ,Taylorism tell the story, and you ought to be a+hanicd of yourself for twitting ,us about the money you Yankees put in our packets. x Ecimirtr.Ni.o.—The' Whigs—that the thinking and working whig-, like Orecley—are evidently frightened el the prospect of "old Z telt" being in a minority in Con-, Every bree. , i whi-pers chin-z,,'' and conse quently every inur to them Ike a clap of thunder. The of Mrk Marsh, of Vt., is one of these shock , to the sentilive nerves of the Editor of the Tr ' ibline. The appuiethmit creates a vacancy' • ' """ al district pi Vo.-esont, which giving Mr. CI iy almost two thousanJ majority in could raise only 518 for Goa. Taylor in This ma j•irity, the Tribune editor fears, will bo entirely destroy ed at the next election, and lie gives the President a gen iie castigation for withdrawing Mr. Marsh from Congress, and hints to Mr. M irsh that lie should nos accept the ap- 7 - pointinent e l f I Minkter to Constanti4plo.l lo consequence of a reductio / fiery l ice, - proposed by the Secretary ofl GLI). BLRIMIss, for a long time cutter Em t:. has been dismissed th 7 6'. was a good °dicer, and an excelle l n the Gipetre can assert that hisdisnki an "eye solele to the benefit of the only account for by the fact that the Toleiation with them is an "obso it r, ask formerly of Me Erie, is missed. - go•ttleinnn always ticket until last full, n•hen riot Lebec.: and Read}" he voted for Gen. Cass, cretary "having no eye solely to the vice." dismissed him. Daring tho last month, there 1 1 irregularities than all the tit Ile of CaNI istration. Whiggcry is giving us so oc.geographical knowledge certainly was an election coming oft that the out concerning their present grievat 7/I arra t. What has became of tho "Tula witty sayimm nod sharp rebukes. app with a wood eta of two old pieces ling along through the Manineo nun ministration of Mr. Nik and "old C. to have an article daily on the irregu fo-co wails." Has its thunders ce spunky as ever? Let us hoar front / A Sum i —Connecticut holds hack n the matter of con stitutional reform under tho auspices of the present par ty in power. Tho .(ast legislature adopted with great unanimity. a propos'ed amendment to tho constitution, providing for the sulsnission to the people in 1850, of the question of a convention to revise tho constitution—and for periodical suhtnit,siens of the same question, after that, if not sooner proposed by the legislature. The amendment came tiq for the -final two-third vote in tho present legislature, and was rejected. So the question of a convention is deferred, if it is over to bo re-agitated, for two years longer. EIJ We have received notice from the Post Master at Columbus, that a number of our subscribers there wish the “Obserrer" discontinued, as they wish to patronize their own county paper. 'While we regret to part company with our many friends in that flourishing village, we and free to say they are correct. Let them first subscribe to their own paper, tho "Ledger,"—it is a good one—and then, if they can afford it, we would like to send them the "Obsercer." A Box.io ROGUE.—Sirno rogue entered the back-door of tlio Drug Store of ;Lill. Burton; in the Reed House, on Tuesday last, in broad-daylight, and abstracted from the safe some forty or fifty dollars—the amount not ex actly known. Mr. B. was sitting at the front door at the limo. The money has not boon recovered. In" If there is a better looking paper between the De leware'and the Lakes than the "O&sirrer," we would like to see it. Typographically speaking, we think it cannot be boat, and Democratically speaking, it will un doubtedly pass muster among the ultras. Srotm—Some body mitered our office on Wednesday. while we wore at dinner, and feloniously took form our table one copy of the "Repubtecc" the new organ of Gen, Taylor. Such depravity ought not to go unpunished. r-r The Gazette thinks there is "no great practical consequence togrow out of ewhig preponderance" in the next Congress. The Gazette. evidently thinks with the fox that coud'nt reach-the, grapes, thdi they are sour nasty things any chow. • • ue, it does 'v ile coal in tho We should be in our own yearly, a sum for that sul lies and large tweed in a like essors of re tnistaken in in the Revenue he Treasuri-, Lieut. onnected with tho crvico. Lieut. 13. t sailor,—hocp then sal was made with service," we can eut. is a Democrat.l to idea." Lieut. nmong the tlis- v.ted the wing ig I uch in ...Rough an. hence, the Se het etit or the set,. ov6 been more mail l e Johnson's admin- 0 rich specimen,' IV o ish the ro )eople etrAld speak ice.B.—Chicago Dal - lu Blade," with its , ropriately illustrated ••crow bait." cra7- ? trader the na tive." it was wont arity of the "10-co ed now—or is it as t.