= =1 Eleetro-Magnetism a Motive Power. Tun I MPORTA NT QURSTIONS SITTTLRUI:4"(OfOB - Page, in the lectures which he is delivering be fore the Smithsonian Institute, states that there is no longer any doubt of the application of this power as a !substitute for steam. The National Intern geneer says: "lie exhibited the most imposing experiments ever witnessed in this branch of science. An immense bar of iron, weighing one hundred and sixty pounds, *as made to spring up.by magnetic action and to move rapidly up and doWn, dancing like a feather in the:air, without any visible support. The force operating upon this bar he stated to average three hundred wounds through ten inches of its motion.— Ile said he could raise this bar ono hundred feet ns readily as through ten-inches,and he expected no dif ficulty in doing the same with a bar weighing one ton, or 100 tons. Ile could make a pile driver, or a forge-hammer, with great simplicity, and could make an engine with stroke of six, twelve, twenty, or any number of feet. "The moat beautiful experiment we ever witnes sed as the loud sound and brilliant flash from the galvanic spark, when produced near a, certain point in" hie great magnet. Eacit e snap was as loud as a pistol; and'when ho produced the same spark at a little distance from this point, it mpde no noise at all. This recent discovery ho stated hearing upon the construction of an electro-magnetic engine. Truly, a great power is here, and where is tbet limit to it? "He then exhibited his engine of between four and Ave horse power, operated by a battery contained within a space of three cubit feet. It was a recipro cating engine of two feet stroke, and' the whole en gine and battery weighed about one ton. When the power was thrown on by the"motion of a lever, the engine started off magnificently, making one hun dred and fourteen strokes per minute; though, when it drove a circular - saw ten inches in diameter, saw ing up boards an Inch and a quarter thick into laths the engine made but about eighty strokes per minute. There was great anxiety on the part of the specta tors to obtain specimens of these lath', to preserve as trophies of this great mechanical triumph. "The force operating upon his magnetic cylinder throughout the whole motion of two feet, was stated to be six hundred pounds when the engine was mo ving very slowly, but he had not been able to Asper tainlwhat the force was whenlthe engine was minting at a working speed, though it was considerably less. The most important and interesting 'point, however, is the expense of the paver. Professor Page stated that he had reduced the cost so far, that it was less than steam tinder many and most conditions, though not so low as the cheapest steam engines. With all the imperfections of the engine, the consumption of three pounds of zinc per day would produce one horse power. The larger his engines (contrary to what has been known before) the greater the econo my. Professor Page was himself surprised at 'the result. There Were yet practical difficulties to be overconie; the battery had yet to be improved; and it remained yet to try the experiment on a grander scale, to make a power of one hundred horse, or mo e." From the New York 'Frame. Carving on. Wood by Steam Wo spent an hour on Friday at Worrsll's ma bine-Ankh) Elm 'greet, to witness the operation o a new and very inzeninus machine fur carving on wood, which has lately been invented by Mr. J. M. Singer. The machine is so simple at first sight as scarcely to seem entitled to the name often invention. Yet, on examination, it will be found that Mr. Singer has applied a new and beautiful combination to an old form, overcoming what has hitherto proved an insur mountable difficulty to all who have attempted the con struction of a machine for carving. The simple in strument called the penta graph has longheen in use for copying nutps and drawing* on a plane surface. By adding a vertical to the horizontal tnovemements - -the two being so nicely combined as to work with entire and venness and steadiness. Mr. Singer can prodime every possible motion requisite in car ving. Another important change is this: the- cut ting point is stationary. The block to be carved is fixed in a sliding vice, which is attached to the pen tagraph, (so to call it,) and obeys a motion, lateral, vertical,:forward or dackward. The steel pointused in cutting the wood infixed to the extremity 'of a vertical cylinder, which, act in motion, revolves with great velocity, cutting a smooth and beautiful channel in the block below it. The'plan of working is as follows: A model, some what larger than the desired carving, is placed on the table, under the further cod of the frame. At the junction of the levers composing the pentagraph is an iron point, which moved (by means of a handle to the machine) over the model, cccaasions a corres ponding movement in the block of wood under the cutting point; so that, in the space of two or three minutes, a block letter or a gothic,ornarnent may be cut as neatly as the mostexperienced workman would do it in at} many hours. By substituting other cut ting points, or varying the size of the copy, twenty or thirty different" kinds of letters may be made from one model. We saw some beautiful specimens, cut with a:double swell to the sides of the letters, picturd, frames, saw and plane handles, ornamental mouldings. cornices, &c. More elaberate pieces of carving aro executed. by parallel lines, on the same principle as engravings. Specimens of coati-of-hrms which were shown us, retained the exact lines of the origi nal, needing only some slight finishing by hand. The uses to which this invention may be put tire manifold. An addition to the numerous forms of' wood-carving, of which it is capable, it' answers equally well for cutting in brass or steel. One man with one Machine can cut four hundred block letters in a day, which, sold at one-third the present prices, Would yield a handsome profit. The manufacture of wood-sarvingilior churches, public edifices or private dwellings, will, also be reduced in coat, that wo have no doubt their use will become very general. Mr. Singer' has patented r his ma ltina in the United states, Great Brittin, France and Bet .t 'um. lie hr. has just'completed a machine which will sent to England in a few days: He will shortly establish a manufactory of wood-carvings In this city. As Et.opustunr.- - -The police interfered at the Depot last nigt,and took in 'custody a man named Jas. P: Chamberlin, who was about to leave town in company with a widow, named Weaver, whose husband died a few days since. Chamberlin is a married man who was arrested at the instance of his wifeand some of the neighbors of Mrs. Weaver, wtio suspected foul play in the death Of the lady's husband, inasmuch as the parties were familar be fog his death. On an investigation of the matter, thdto was nothing to justify suspicion of any agency on the part of the accused in causing the death of Weaver. Ho was committed, however, in default or bail to support his family. Neither of the parties 1111V13 children, and are recently from England. Mrs. 'W. is a bright, intelligent appearing young woman, and seeps to manifest a strong attachment for Cham berlin, and he, though guilty- of unfaithfulness to his lawful partner, was not so inditrerent to his' du ty and her claims upon him, but that he provided her with some means of subsistence before his at tempted departure. Ho made over tho article for a house and lot to Mrs. C., and gave her some other means, but of course she preferred retaining the man.--(Rochestie American. . "A lifosurrna California correspondou •of the Salem Gaiette (Joseph S. Wallis) says that -Colonel Temple litbets, formerly of Lewiston Fells, cut tree of the Redwood species, in Collier} which was two hundred and fifty four feet high and measured at the top two'feet in diameter, and at tho'butt twelve feet in diameter. The tree was worked into lumber lip hundred and forty •feet from the bolt, where it measured five feet •in di -ameter. There were made from this giant of" the foret 410,000 shingles, 6,000 clapboards, 4,000 - ;tree by four joists twenty-two feet tong; and there were - left, at a moderate calculation, from seventy to eighty cords of wood. The clapboards were sold 'for $5O per thousand. the shingles. for $35 per thou sand, the joists for $275 pet . ..thousand, and the re maining port of the treo would readily sell iu this - city, for fire wood, at $.40 per cord; thus, at a mod ert,teVriTu'Mtion, there was derived from the work jog of this mammoth dweller of the primeval forest tlio-neat little sum of 811,350,—N. 0 . Pie, FALLING OP ABU/LOT° AND Loss. oP lorn.—Ono of the new custom house stores' in" Dock street, Phil adelphia, fell on Saturday morning •wittt t► terrific crash, while the men were engaged in hoisting goods unto one of the upper stories. Five men were dug f r o m the ruing, badly iWored, two of whom havo - piece died at the hospital. Kosstith's Letter to 'Gen. Cass. . ICUTALYA, (Asia Minor,) May 25, 1850. • General:—lt is already ten months that I have tile anguish of exile to endure. Nature has man's mind with wonderful elasticity endowed. It yields to many' than of fate, and gets accustomed even to adversity. But to one thing the patriot's heart never learns to inure itself—to the pangs of exile. • You remember your practician of Venice, who, when banished, feigned high treason, that ho might at least from the scaffold cast over the Rialto, a glance once more. ' This fond desire I can easily understand. I can so the more, because yon Veterion, thourgh exiled, knew the fatherland to be happy and g 4; but 1, sir, carry the color of millions the pains a down trodden country" in my wouudred breast, without having even the Sad consolation to think that it could not ollierwile be. Oh! had Divine Providence only Iron, treason designed me to preserve, I swear to the Almighty'God the threatening billows of despot ism would have fallen like foam from the rock .of my brave people's breasts. To have this firm con viction. sir, and, instead of the well-deserved victory of freedom, to find one self iv exile, the fatherland in chains, is a profound sorrow, a nameless grief. Neither have I the consolation to have found miti gations of this grief at the hospitable hearth of a great free people. the contemplation of which, by the imposing view of freedom' s wonderful powers, warm the dispoulent heart makin g cr it in the destiny of man kind believe. •••• ' • • • It is not a coward lamentation which makei me say all this, General, but the lively sense of gratitude and thankful 'acknowledgements for your generous sym pathy. I wanted to sliete!l the darkness of my des 'tiny, that you might feel what benefit must have been to me your beam of light, by which you, from the capitol of free America, have heightened my night. It was in Bronssa, General, that the notice your imposing speech has reached me; in yOnder Broussa whore IlannibalbewaPed his country's mischief, and foretold the fa'l of its oppres)rs—llinnibal, exiled like myself, but still unhappier, as he . was accompam ed in exile by the ingratitude of his people, but I by the love of mine. •••• • • 7 • Yes, General, your-powerful speech was not only the inspiration of sympathy for unmerited misfortune so natural to noble, feeling hearts; it was a revela tion of the justice of Gedit was a leaf from the 'book of fate, uneveiled to the world. On that day General, - you were sitting in the name of mankind, in tribunal, passing lodgement on the &pollen' and despots of the world; and as sure as the God of Jus tice lives your verdict will be accomplished. I Shall I yet have have my share in this great work or not? I,do not know. Once almost an efficient in strument in the hands of Providence, lam now buried alive. With humble heart will I accept the call to 'action, should I be deemed worthy of it, or submit to the (loam of inactive pufferinge, if it must bo so. But, ba it one of the other, I know that your sentence will be fulfil:ed. I know that, aged Europe, at the sun of freedom's young America, will herself grown young again: I know that my people, who proved so worthy of liberty, will yet, not withstan ding their present degradation, Weigh heavy in this balance of fate; and I know that, as long as oue Hun garian livoi,'your name, General will be .counted among the most cherished in my native laud, as the distinguished man who, worthy interpreter of the generoui sentiments of the great American people, has upon us poor Hungarians the consolation be stowed of a confident hope, at a moment when Europe decrepid politics seemed our numerated fate forever to seal. • - May you be pleased, General, to accept the most fervent thanks of an honest friend of freedom: me hopo . that should Mr. Ujhazy, (iny oldest end best friend, and present representative in the United Sta tes,) in the interest of the holy cause of which you have so generously your protection accorded, addreSs himself to you for something which you might, in your wisdorii, judge convenient and practicable, you will'not withhold form us your powerful support; and please to accept the insurance of my highest es teem and Most peculiar veneration. Anc. Governor of Hungary, To the Idonorable:the general Cass, Washington. I hope you will excuse ray bad English. I thought it my duty to addess you in your own languaffe. SUICIDR.-A young Englishman, named George Nichols, who had been in this country about three months, committed snide about 10 o'clock, last night at the 11011913 of John Perkins, No. 97, Hamilton Street, by shooting himself through the head with a double barrel fowling piece. There was found in the the _ , "This is my last will and testament. I hereby give and' bequeath to ray sister, Mary Amela Taylor or Driff/eld ) . (Yorkshire) England, two hundred pounds. I also give. and bequeath to Mary With erwich, of Grimsby, (Lincolnshire) sixty pounds, to be pkid as soon after my death us possible. Gao. Nrcuot.s." / No good cense has been assigned for the deed.--. It is said that for three months he has bean trying to procure work, and that his Obits have proved un availing, and that this disappointment caused him to commit sqic i ide. The coroners jury rendered a ver dict of prerneditated death .—Evening Journal, An. gust 16. • • COOKING nv GAS.—Among the novelties produced at a grand Agricultrial Meeting at Exeter, England, *as. one which excited great curiosity; it was the cooling of the monster joint, called by M. Soyer the baron and saddle back of beef a ti Magna Char ts, weighing 535 lbs'. For the first time in the an nals of cookery, this was subjected to a new pro cess of roasting, by use of an agent which has been discovered half a conturv, that is to say gas. To gratify the curiosity olthe public, it was placed in the middle of the castle yard,-resting upon a dripping pan, evidently with bricks, and surrounded with 216 jets of gas, and covered with sheet iron. It took five hours to roast, and consumed 700 feet 'of gas of the value of 4s 3-4 d. It weighed after being cooked, 497 Ibs: the dripping 23 Ibs, the osmazemo 3164; thus losing by evaporation only ,111 lbs. To cook this piece of beef by an ordinary fire would have taken fourteen hours. This apparatus was invented and fitted up by Mr. Warriner of London, who was prepared to have roasted all the dinner by the same means, that is, 400 chichens, 58 quarters of lamb, and 33 ribs'of beef, at a cost of I2s for gas. Fine AT Sixo-Strio.--On Friday, oth inst., 11' fire broke out in the North wing of the State Pris on at Sing-Sing,and, before it could be extinguish ed, the entire wood work of the building was de stroyed, including the "Union File Works" of James Horner & Co. and the Carpet Factory of John IlOmphries. The loss of property in these estab lishments is some $17,000, but it was insured the entire amount. The loss to the State, as near as can be ascertained, is $12,000. This is the second fire which has occured at this Prison this year—the first being in February, and occasioning a loss of $30,000; both of whicli, we believe, it is supposed were the work of convicts, or other incendiaries. A sevens fire also occurred in tho Prison in July, 1843. TIM MARVOLS OF CA uron:riA.-....HRNOT A. SCHOOLCRAFT,'.Of &COMM% California, is HOW on a visit to his relatives in Albany. Ile is about twenty-five years of age, and went out to California as a private soldier in Col. Stevenson's regiment. After his discharge from the United States service, he obtained employment as book-keeper for Captain Sutter, and has since accumulated an estate voided at $350,000. While iti Captain Setter's employ, he had at one time the paying oil' or six hundred clerks and surveyors., not one of whom received less than thirteen dollars per day; Ile states that du ring his stay with Captain Sutter, $15,000,000 of that gantleman's money passed through his litmds. DIISTRUCTION OF TIIR C(bux - rr COURT 110U5R.....: . The Court House at Jefferson, fell a prey to the devouring element, 'on• Friday night last. The cause of the /ire• remains a mystery, fur the present, at least. The bounty incurred a heavy bill in the erection of this structure but a few yearsago, whiah' long pressed hard ilium the tax-payers; and now the whole is in ruins, 'rho building appears was insured tothe amount of.soooo in the Calum buslusurance Company. The record arid files were saved; but there hain been •heavy individual lo sses ,: The tinelatv library of N. 'CHAFFEE, Esq., together with his papers accounts &c.; is a total .161 m. The Clerk of the Supreme Court, 'SAM- HurrpnY, Esq., is also a autfur : tua large amount. --Jethabula Tcicgra.phi - thrum lasonen.—Tbe Troy Post relates a "good one" of ,Jacob Barker, tho -Quaker who, hearing of the loss of ono of ilia vessels which ho had omitted to get Insured, wrote to a broker with whom ho had 'woken on the subject as follows:. "Dear Friend— If thee had not filled up the policy which I bespoke on Saturday, thee need not, as I have heard from the vessel." The Broker, in fact, had not filled up the policy,. but presuming from the tenor of Jacob's note that his vessel was safe, and tempted by what seemed a good change to clutch , his percentage without risk, he filled it up forthwith and sent it to Jacob with the assurance that it had been made all ready for him 'on Saturday. On Monday morning the first thing that met his eyes on opening his news paper, was theloss of Jacob's vessel, which ho had so wickedly ensured on Sunday. Then also ho discovered the cunning ambiguity of Jacub's note she had heard from the vessel!" A SHNfflllfali MAN.—Gen, Garribaldi declines still a public reception in New York. Ile says': No such public exhibition is necessary to assure me of the sympathy of my countrymen, of the Amer ican people, and of all )rue republicans in the mis fortunes which I have sugared, or of the cause out of which they have flowed. Though a public manifestation of this feeling might yield much gratification to me, an exile from my native land, severed from mylchildren, and mourn ing the overthrow of my country's freedom by means of foreign interference, yet believe mcithet I would rather avoid it, and be permitted, quietly and humbly to become a citizen of this republic, of freeman, to sail under its flag,, to engage in businesi to earn my livelihood, and await a more favorable opportunity for the redemption of my country from foreign and domestic oppressors. SUICIDR OF A CHILD.- he Jasper county corres pondent of the Lafayette Is.) Courier, writes that a daughter of Mr. George Grisseil, about 12 years old, committedluicide, tie r Ransellaer, on the 23d ult., by hanging haerself. to the joist of the_ house with a bridle. It ape,'par: that she committed the act through fear of being punished for accidentally breaking a crock. After meeting with the accident she dressed herself in suitable burial clothes, and tel ling her little lirothor that "she would ,never break another crock," she got upon the bed, tied the bridle to the jois t, fastened it around her neck, jumped off. Her brother succeeded in replacing her upon the bed, but the jumped off the second time, and before he could ebtoin assistance, she was dead.—Ex. pa per. IVhat a system of shameftb cruelty must have been practised in that family. The whip must have been the only monitor, and applied unmercifully on all occasions, whether fault or accident was the mo tive to its use. Love and persuasions could never have been employedin a family where a'child was so much under the influence of fear as to voluntarily take its life rather than meet the punishment expec ted.—Phila. Ledger. A DAVs'EATING AT A Borst..—The following are given as some of the statistics of the United States Hotel, at Saratoga: t I There are now about 700 guests at the house, to which may be added 100 children and 300 servanis, making 1100 persons to be feed daily. They con sume, besides many other articles, the following each day-600 lbs. Beef,soo du Mutton, 500 Chick ens, 150 Ducks and, Turkeys, 2,500 Eggs, 600 lbs Butter, 1,500 Rolls for breakfast, 4 barrels of Flour? A LADY SHOOTING AT AND CIiALL'HNGING A GEN.. xr.natax.—TlM New Orleans papers give an account of a case. of great interest and excitement which came °tat Carrollton, on the 7th instant: Mr. Benjamin Mason, an alderman of the city council of Carrollton, made an affidavit that a lady, who is living alone with her sister, and whose hus band is now in California, shot at, with a double barreled gun, with the intention ofltillting his life, on Sunday, the 4th instant, between 6 and 7 o'clock in the morning, the shot striking close to him, but doing him no injury. Deponent further stated that tho lady had threatened his life, and that he was in bodily fear of her. The affidavit also charged one It. N. Avis with threatening in shoot deponent'i. slave, Maria. It appears that Mason was accused 'by the lady of having , circulated certain slanderous reports abaut her, which reports he obtained trout his negro girt Maria. This so enraged the Isdy that 'she shot at him, as above stated. But, finding that the shot had not taken effect, she sent Mr. Mason a note, of which the following is a copy: "CARROLLTON, August 1, 1850. 1.. Kossurit. ".Ifr. Mason:—Sir; Having been grossly atul vil lainously slandered by you antr,your incompliance, Maria, and furthermore molested by having spies set to watch my house at night, I demand satisfaction from you. I shall expect you to meet me with pis tols as soon as possible. (Signed) ' The examination took place. It was not attempt ed by the defence to deny the shooting. It was proved that the accused was a lady of unblemished character; but the Justice felt it to be his duty to bind her over to keep the peace fur six months in the sum of $5OO. Avis was also bound over. A suit fur slender will be brought by the lady for damages in this case. SflOC " 4 ' . , 11 I 1. INO DBATIL-.-..A DIAN CUT TO PIECES ON Tote RAI ROAD.—WO learO from the Pottstown Led ger tlict on Wednesday, the 7th inst., the Coroner of Montgomery county held an inquest upon the body , of on on flown man, about 35 or 40 years of age, who had been killed on the Readinglßailroad, a short distance hove Port Kennedy. The body was found dying on Ithe girder of almidge, between the tracks, and mangled in a shocking manner. Roth legs were completely cut off; one of them close up to the body, The other leg,was served just abovc the knee. With the exception of a slight Scratch on the side of the face, the other portion of the body was unin jured. The deceased had on a dark roundabout, dark pair of pants, lark vest, a pair of dluedrilling over hauls, and black c'oth cap: He had in his posses sion a small sum of money and a "pass book," on the inside of the cover of which is written the name George Reinhart, which Is supposed tube the name of the deceased. The names of Henry Collins, and George .11arkle, also appear in the book, under the head of "boarding," and at the end of eac h name are a number of marks, as if specifying the length of time the individual had been boarding. The deceas ed was seen at the village of Dridegeport 'the day previous, in a state of intoxication, and it issiippos ecl was lying upon the Railroad track in the same condition, at the time his death occurred, A carpet bog, contain a shirt and few other articles, was found at the end of the.bridge, al few yards distant from the body. . The Boston Traveller notices the departure from that port of the Ship General Taylor. She is a "three decker," and is estimated to carry seventeen thousand barrels, and is entirely full. She has on board 15,651 packages of ggods, among which aro 2300 cases shoes and boots, valued at $4O per case, (a low estimate,/ is 64 2 8,000; also 2700 cases and bales domestic prints shirting and sheeting a $6O per package, is sl62,ooo—the remaing 9751 Pack ages, consisting of groceries, hardware, crockery, Rte., may safely be put down at $lOO,OOO, making the entire cargo worth $390,000, which goes coi n signed to 332 merchantile firms at New Orleans, A considerable part of the cargo is destined fur lit. Louis, and placekon the Mississippi river Hoornn Sn►rs.—We learn 'Cram Newcastle, Delawareohat a new steamboat, named after the town, has just been built there by Thulium Robinson, on the hooped plan, invented by his father. She is one hundred and twenty feet in length, is built fur a company and intended for California, whither she will be carried, on board ship, in pieces,' like her engine, which is about being completed at the works of the Newcastle - Manufacturing' Company. The "Newcastle" is, we understand, entirely occur ed, according to the plan of •construct ion, by iron hoopa, no timbers being fitted in her. Mr. Rubinson is about . laying doWit the keel of. a similar vessel, one hundred and lifty , feet in length, for a gentle man in'WashingtonVity. who designs her fur the trade of ,the .Potomac.—Philadelphia Gdzeite. Fmk EIUNDRKD EMIURANTS DRAD,;-...A letter from Bitter Water, 28 miles west of Fort Laramie, June 23, 1850, to the St. Louis Republican says: 4, From.the number of graves I have passed, the amount of sickness in trains we have found lying by, and from information received at Fort Laramie, I have no doubt•thero has at least five hundred emi grants died , betweeii the Missouri .river and Fort Laramie since the.firat of June, 1850. This aide o f Port Laramie) have foundbut very few graves." erit 'WeeUhl Olyarutt. ERIE. PA SATURDAY MORNING; AUGUST 21, 1850. DEMOCRATIC NOMINATIONS. CANAL COMMISSIONER., WM. T. MORISON, of Montgomery. AUDITOR' GENERAL, EPIIRAIM BANKS, of Mifflin. SURVEYOR GENERAL, J. P. BRAWLED, of Crawford CONGRESS, C. B. CURTIS, of Warren Congressional Convention. The Democratic Congressional Coinivention which essernbled at Warren, on Wednesday last for the purpose of selecting a proper perion for Congress, have placed in nomination C. B. CURTI3. Esq. of Warren, fur that re sponsible station. Err The absence of tho editor, who was a dclegtito to tho Congressional Convention at Warren, will account for the scarcity of editorial this week. o:Twe aro informed, 'that at the lotting of the con tracts for the construction of tho Erie and Edouhoro Plank Road, the contrast for constructing the entire road was token by Joss GALBRAITH. Esq., of this city. We are gratified at this result as it gives assume() that the work will be vigorously prosecuted, and that wo shall soon be reaping the adv . aniages which tho completion of that important road will bring to our city. NVe under stand that the ground will be broke upon the work, on Friday of next week at Eagle Village. and that the work will progress as rapidly as possible until the whole is finished. Seo advortisoment in' another column for proposals. ' Burglary. The store of Messrs. Vincent; llimrod tVCo., was bro ken open on Tuesday night last, and robbed of about $l5O of their duo bills, familiarly known et; "Prceterink tarn," and four or five dollars in cents. The thieves ef fected-au entrance by prying open the door with en iron bar. Tho clerk slept in the store but did not hear them. No discovery has yet been made to lead to their detection. An attempt was made ou the same night to form open the door of the store-of S. B. Powers, but was not suc cessful. The dwelling house of John Ryan, Esq., resi ding just out of town, was entered on'Sunday last, in the absence of the family, and robbed of money, watch, &c., to the amount of about 70 or 80 dollars. Thse things are becorning-quite too common for the safety of the community, and it is high limo that some measures shidd be adopted to detect the scoundrels and bring them to justice. .What are our Railroad Prospects ? This is the all-absorbing question at present, and ono too of great importauco to this community. and we con fess that we are utterly unable, from present indications to answer it. We have solved and re-solved the ques tion so often in our own minds that wo are hardly copa l& of coming to any conclusion iti the matter. There is ono thing however that is certain. Erie county holds the key to the groat western world, and can turn the lock so as forever to shut off an eastern Railroad connection with that world if sho;chooses. Will she throw away this pow er by allowing any company.corporation or whet not to, build a railroad through her territory. making scarcely a watering place in it, and thus virtually cutting the throats of her citizens and making them forever tributary to' and at the mercy of Buffalo, Cleveland end other rival cities? Is Erie, with the best harbor on the ichole chain of fakes for safety and capacity for commercial busiuesq lc, Jio thus passed by: and sacrificed by the influence of the Doilati and ,741141 of a company of an adjoining state, and the business which :ightfully belongs to her trans ferred to °there? Wo do not bti!iove it, and yet we warn our citizens to beware. There is tt henvy game playing and we know not who will be loocd. (Id not believe it will be us. becauso wo hold the cards that muse Loin if they are played. Wo are not among those. lietvei'Qr confident wo may have boon heretofore, that will sit qui etly down in that confidence and declare that there is no danger until it is too late to prevent It. Nolo is the time for action: Now is the time to stand up. with the direc tors of tho Erio and North East road,-who with but ono exception spurned tho offers made for la'yingdown a 'track with the same gaols between Buffalo and Cleveland, thus preferring the interests of their town to money. Now is the time, we say, to stand up with thorn, and give thou; people, and our own too, if there aro any who *favor it, distinctly to understand that no such road can or RIIALL be built though this section of Pennsylvania—but that Erie County and city must be consulted and somewhat benefited too by whatever arrangement is madp. We understand that several. propositions were, made. at tho meeting of thu Directors of the several roads, of Buffalo on last week. but that nothingidefinito has been done. Tho agreement between the New York and Erie and North East and Erio roads still remains unchanged. and that is what must bo fulfilled, the efforts of the cen tral Railroad to the contrary notwithstanding. Small Notes. . .."' ,1. Below we publish tho section of the act, boing the 45th Section of tho general Banking law, passed at the last session of the Legislature for Om suppreseion of the cir colatiou of email notes in this State, and in so doing wo are led to inquire as to our duty iu regard to the laiv.—: There is perhaps no section of the State so peculiarly situated in the matter as the citizens of this county, be ing as we are betwcon two groat commercial states, with tho citizens of whom four-fifths of our business id trans acted, and consequently, nearly our emir° currency con sists of the Bills of those adjoining states and Canada. Our duty then, as good citizens is -to collect the small bills and send them borne; draiv the spscio and bring that here to supply the vacancy occasioned by the effects of the law. This Can and must-bo done, and should have been commenced sornetinniduce, in order to have been ready to meet the requireme me of the act liko good law abiding citizens. It is useless to declarS hostilities agaipst the law, or to attempt to resist its provisions, for in our I opinion the State has a perfee.f right to regulate its.own currency, as long as it keeps within the prescribed lim its of tho constitution of the United States. It Is cone°. clod en all hands that the State has a right to suppress the circulation of shin plasters, and we are at a loss to discov er the difference between the due bills of a company, an individual and those of ati incorporation. Let us all MU hold of tho matter and assist in carry ing out the law. and wo venture to assert that in less than three months we shall have a currency hero that we would not excliango fur all tho oue dollar bills in chris tondom. The following is tho section declaring the penalty, oSic: ,• . SEC. 45.—That from and after tho 2.lst day of August, One thousandeight hundred and fitly, it shall nut be law ful for any person or persons, corporations or body corpo rate, directly or indirectly, to issue, pay out, pass, ex change. put in circulation, transfer. or cause to be issued, paid out, passed, exchanged. circulated or transferred, any bank note, note, bill, certificate, ar any acknowledg ment of irdobteduess whatever, purporting to be a bank note, or of the nature, character or appearance of a bank note. or calculated fur circulation nEf a bank note, issued, or purporting to bo - .issued by any bank or incorporated' company. or association of persons, not located in Pon.' nis) Jeanie, of less denomination than fiVe dollars. Every violation of the provisions of this daction by any corpora tion or body corporate, shall subject that corporation or body corporate to the payment of five hundhd dollars; and any violation of the provisiona of this section by any public officer holding any office o appointment of honor I , or profit under the constifirtion nd laws of this State. shall subject such officer to the pa went of one hundred dollars; and any violation of this section by any person, not being a public officer. shall subject that person to the payment of twenty-five dollars. one half of which shall go. to the informer, and tho other half to the edusity in which the suit is brought, bud may bo amid fur and re covered as debts of like amount are now by law recover- Shia in any action of deb!, In the name of tho Common wealth of Pennsy lvania , as well for the use of the proper county, as forthe person suing. - Correapondenee of the Erie Observer. BOSTON AND THINGS IN 2. BMW'. August 16. 1850 Lot us look at Deacon Street, the residence of the "high bloods" of lioston,or assome would signi fi cantly say, tho "codfish aristocracy." l It is indeed a beautiful street, wide and airy, and as clean almost as a parlor floor. It fronts on the Common, and from the whitlows of the tall brick and granite mansions, there is a magulf icent view; embracing an agreeable part of the city, tho,whole Common, the Public Garden, and the adjoin ing town of Roxbury, with its handsome white collages/ and green and wooded, heights. On this street, those old retired merchants, stuck jobbers and bankers, reside, who have amassed in their several occupations, enough of the "root of all evil," to outtHe them to live in 0330 and luxury, to clothe their wives and daughters in silks and laces, to s heep their rakish sons in "tin," and well wrapped in broadcloth; and to walk about the streets themselves in fine weather, with half their faces con cealed behind mammoth double starched dickies, and their pecks enveloped in intricate folds of cambric white as the driven snow. - 01k; saints of the calendert how ripe and succulent they aro; how fat and sleek they look, as with cane in hand, and hat drawn stiffly on, and with huge gold watch seals hanging down the right leg, they promendo the streets, seeming say—" Look on, oh childen of the poor! loOk on, ye sops of toil! behold ma. and the estate to which 1 have arrived. With these hands alone, I have carved a fortuno,-and built a mon ument to my own industry. Ssy if you please, that my wealth came from a distillery; that it came from vend-, ing the inAiriating draught, and from following in the steps of Shylock. Still, I clutch the gold; still lam mas ter of untold sums; and being master of gold, I am mas ter of all else! wish." Beacon Street is :he fashionable promenade: On a lino Sunday afternoon, what gay peacocks, and ,fiao but terflies, tread its sidewalks. The mustachioed dandy, just let loose from his mother's bandbox, hero walks and sucks the ivory head of his cane, ever and anon, bend ing his perfumed hoed and casting corkscrew glances of thci most melting character, at the gay,. giddy, bird-like, fniryltke "creachaws," whom ho cannot help meeting for the life of him. But enough of Beacon Street; among its residents there are doubtless many sensible persons; even many benevolent, kind hearted individuals. So let them bal ance the vain, the, foolish, and the purse-proud. Let us walk upon the Common; a place combining all the beauties of Nature, with all the adornments of Art. Notice the extent, and variety of scenery in this enclosure. Fifty acres of level land and beautiful knolls, covered with emerald grass and. handsome elms and ma ples, interspersed with walks, yellow as gold, hard as freestone, end on which not a pebble'can be found lar ger than a pea. Nearly iu the centre of this charming place, this pride of Boston, is a little pond or Lake, al ways full of sparkling Cochituate water. Its edges are walled with granite and its bottom paved with smooth round stones. •In the centre of this crystal pond, is a powerful fountain, capable of throwing a heavy column of water ninety feet into the air. Its mouth piece con be adjusted so as to play in many different forms, low or high, giand or simple, fanciful or artistic. Handsome treoisurround this pond. and beneath the trees, and in deed beside the walks all ever the Common, are placed easy and .convenient seats. on which the lover and his "fayre ladye" sit and talk away, the flying hours—the politician smokes and enjoys his newspaper—the tired man stretches himself to merest his exhausted frame, and the honest citizen and his careful wife, sit and wtach tho games of the children about them, thinking of their own young days, long since burie'd beneath. the furrow of old Time's forward cutting plow. Around the entire Com mon is a neat iron' fence, the cost of which was more than $lOO,OOO. I From the Common, wo bavo only to cross Charles, Street l to outer the Public Gordon. comprising an erca of about twenty,acrep. Hero wo find good walks, skirted with beds of shubberY and flowers, a handsome pond and fountain, a green house, and pretty treei, and vari ous arrangements for childrens' out door amusements. Boston may well be proud of her Common and Public Garden. No other city in the Union has anything to p i csmaro with them. They aro of great benefit to the people, they aro breathing places, whero the dusty tradesman and mechM - tic can for a while forgot the bus tle nr the city, and be reminded that Nature still exists, an d to still' able to adorn herself 'with' such beauties as man cannot pi S e ed to imitate. yours, The Southern Plot. It has been generally rumored, but wo tit:zt not: very generally believed, that a plot has been on foot (or some time past, for the formatron of a new Republic out of the Southern:States, Mexico, and Lower California.with Mexico for tho Capital. However loth we may have been to believe this rumor, it has assumed such a form as to leave scarcely a doubt on our minds as to its truth, and that the plot was only frustrated by the refusal of Mexico to co-operate with the traitors of this country in their grand !scheme for self a,ggrandiZetnent. Iu speak ing of this plot .the Philadelphia Bulletin very truly re marks that the times are altered since a somewhat simi lar plot was charged upon Aaron Burr. For an alleged' participation in such a conspiracy that notorious intrigu er was arrested on a charge of high treason, ignominious ly taken to Richmond,nnd there tried for his life. Though acquitted of the charge, the Odium clung to him; and from that hour he became, a's it were, an outcast. A large portion of his fellow citizens believed Burr inno cent of treasonable designs against his country, and con sidered that this plot was merely ne for the invasion and dismemberment of Mexico. J ut ,so strong was then the pnblio feeling in favor o to Union, that the mere accusation of a treasonable intent ruined Burr.— 1 Ile went abroad j after the trial, resided in Europe fur some years in' obscurity, and finally returned to the U. States to live iu comparative poverty and died neglected. How is it now when a real conspiracy for the dissolu tion of the Union has been set on foot, and when the parties engaged in it are publicly known? Three and forty years ago, when a similar plot was thought - to be hatching, the iron hand of the law laid its grasp on the principal offender, though then but lately Vico President 1 Grillo United States. It is true that; in the present case, no overt act of treason has been committed, and that consequently no arrests can be made, • though time, and place, and persons are familiarly known. But what the law cannot reach, public upiewmay. Thoughlthe guilty participants in this conspiracy escape through the tack nicalities of the law, there is a bar of the people where no trickery avails, but where right and wrong are infalli bly judged and sternly maintained. At that bar these ungrateful children of our'common Union lain bo tried, will bo Condemned, will bo outlawed. The remark which•the late President, in the indignation of true-pa triotistn, applied to the delegates of the Nashville Con- I Nention, may be applied to those concerned in this plot: and the whitest man that has participated in this nefa rious scheme will, in the end, bo blacker than the black est character iu the Hertford Contention. In the im partial pages of history, these men will be infamous forever. We use strong language but the occasion .demands it. When men plot treason, we call them traitors; and the dismemberment of the Union is treason, if ever there was such a crime. It is treason not only' to our own common country, but to the human race. Since the pe riod of authentic history no nation has ever existed.which, in the short space of seventy years. has done so much as this for the progress of mankind. At the present time there is no one which promises to work such marvels in' the future. Imperfect as our institutions still are, and must continue, for a long time, to remain, they are better than those of any other people, and should there fore receive the hearty co-operation of every• friend of his race. The success of these institutions. however, depends on the continuance of the federal Union, for, without that. there can boon permanent peace on this continent. and, without peace. human progress moot go on. The mac, therefore, who plots the dissolution of the Union. conspires for a treason more terrible than any recorded in blatory, a treason against i the cause - of civilization, of ,freedom, of material and spiritatl provement. Ile attempts a deed which, if succce,f,,, must put back the time-piece of humanity for center,;, Yet them are—we aro pained to record it—there sr, such men in this country. Some, from a mts:ak:s conscience, would abolish the Union, in order to what they think right. Such men are like the boy ‘ . te broke his wagon against thostnmp; bucause, he said t:,, bunts b ,ae bvsirtllttsin the road, 'and he was not geisz o o way to it. Others would dissolve the feder a l mpact bucause they fear that slavery cannot contioot f orever under it; and regarding slayery as a patriareLV institution, and the only relation between winter 1 5 1 blacks to be tolerated, where both live in one cowry, wish to perpetuate it. There are still others, and they aro worse than all, who desire a dissolution, because, 1.3 the event of a new confederacy being formed, they h 5 ?, to rise to higher honors than they can ever expect to st. tarn otherwise. Mere ambition, ambition, too, withou: principle, is the riding motive of these traitors. Too,. trance their personal ends, they would plunge the coca try into civil war, blest their fair name of repo`o'.itwan u , and destroy the hopes of millions who look to this !a z ; as their guiding star to liberty. Wo repeat, as the law cannot reach these plotters,:e: public opinion punish them. Mark them out, cans z , and patrons, mark them out for public ostracism! Cos, fer on them no offices, show them no countenanee.te., when you can, display your indignation towards them Thus will the public be saved, hereafter, from a secor.... brood of such traitors. The Convention held in Meadville on the lath ice. for the purpose of nominating a ticket to ha supported 4 1 the Democrats of that - county, at the coming electiqs resulted in the choice of Wm. P. Shattuck, Esq , for Congress; James Porter and D. M. Bale, as Represen. tatives; A. B. Richmond, Prosecuting Attornsy; Henry, Commissioner; A. W. Mumford, county Stir. veyor, and Andrew Radio for Auditor. The Democrat speaks iu high terms of the nominees. InnVe learn that the time for holding tho County Ag. riculmral Fair in this county, has been changed Iron September, to the 21 and 3d days of October next. ID" The followiug resolutions a tribute of respect t 3 te motnory of Josieu STANCLIFF. Jr., one of the riC. ms of tho America who was buried in this city by the Independent Order of Odd Fellows, and subsequendyr e moved by his friends, were passed by Central Ledg, No. 12, of Conn., of which he Was a member, and tral, mimed to us with a request that they be published. Whereas. it having pleased Almighty God to realer! from this earthly sphere, our beloved brother, IMP 2 Srasextre, Jr. under circumstances of a peculiarly Su tressing character, therefore. Resoired, That while we mourn his early departs!, and give his name a plade in our memories, We bow in Submission to the infinite Wisdom which directed an event so fearful and unexpected. • Resntred. That we tender to the widow and othet afflicted relatives of the deceased, the assurances of our grief, that they are thus called to grieve over the sudden loss aline endeared to thorn by so' many amiabibuei of heart and excellencies of character. Resole:al. That we very gratefully- acknowledge our indebtedness to the officers and members of Presqeep s Lodge, No. 1071 of Erie Penn. for the promptness Be d assiduity with Which they sought to discharge the pees. liar duties of Odd Fellows, and blhten with their be. nevolent attention, the last hours our departed broth. Resolved. That lino. 131:11J. Gstasr, of Phits Lodge, No. 299, in his ready and affectionate ministries, commends hirnselr to us and the family of the deceased, a s hi g hly deserving of our gratitude and esteem. Respired, That the foregoing Resolutions be forward. ed to the relict of our 'late brother, Presque'lle and Bro. Benj. Grant, and also inserted in the papers of this city, with the request that they may be copied into the Erie papers. ' C. A. NEWELL, Secretary. Must Serve the People. Anong the members elect of the . North Carotin L. islature. we notice the names of Kenneth Rayner, W,l liam 11. Washington, 'William B. Shepard, and Rome- Ins M. Saunders. all ex-members of Congress--thy hit named Minister to Spain under the late President Polt ELT Min M. Death is the name of a whig volunteer candidate for the Senatorial delegate to revise the Con stitution of Indiana, for Rush county, in that State. Hs regular whig opponent is terrified by this unexpected ant inauspicious visitation, and it is more than probable that the Democrat will beat both DZATII and his adversary. Population of Pittsburgh. The Pittsburgh Gazetta, on data furnished by the cen sus takers, estimate the population of Pittsburgh arit surrounding tows at 78,760 persons, and of the county 1.12,739. This is en increase of 80,000 in ten years for SCRIBO the whole County. EL The Freemasons of New Eleven are to celebrate, on the sth of Ssfittimber. the one hundreth anniversary of 1-+am Lodge, in that city, and invite their brethren from abroad to join them, to whom a free public dinner is offUred. IL7The legislature of Missouri just elected, Win poll 161 v gegen joint ballot—it will therefore require 81 votes in fug convention to elect the United Stites Senator.— The prospect is. that no ono of the three parties will have that many votes. ILFThe New York Block for the Washington Menu. ment has been ordered by Governor Fish to be taken from the quarries at Glen's Falls. 115 - Gen. Houston has confessed, that aelltestacZ: live to a southern confederacy was presented to ht last winter, but says it was not by Gon Lopez. JEWS IN THE UNITED STATICE—There are, it is sop posed, 50,000 Jews in the United 'States, mostly in the large cities. In New York, they have ten synagogues- Ono is about to be erected in Syracuse. MT"! wettish to schipp•in the Lucille," said a Dutch man to the clerk of a shipping of f ice. "Well," said the clerk, pen in hand, what'syour name?" "It ish Hans Vanasmanandereaunsevaneymendeymi teheitenschupflopeldtmidtdeschupeneridrornp!" said the Dntchy, gravely spitting out his old quid. and taking a fresh ono. ' "Mavens!" said the clerk, "do you huow what it 13 in Englishl"l "Yaw Irb does. It is Ybon Smith!" NEW Pcarrortn.A candidate for office in Michigan, thus announces his platform: I am, sin in favor of the next war—opposed to the cholera—in favor of high sat• aries—opposed to uncurrent funds and poor brandy." NAME Esecon.—We have received from Newport, Ky.. a daily paper bearing the following extensive title: "Tho Newort and Covington Daily News and Licking Free Bridge Advocate." If it can beer up auoh a name it will have a deal of vitality about ILTRhodo Island is a small State. Its Governor the editor of the "Providence Journal," one of the beat papers in the country. The General Asset Ably of that State adjourned its session ort Saturday lest, after a so- Sion of four days and a half. j f tErA large number of the,:rioheat and most respecta ble citizens of Concinuati have petitioned the Common Council of that city to loan the credit of the city foreight hutitirid :thousand dollars ' to the Ohio and Mississippi railro d. The hat is headed by Nicholas Longworth,the ricitesiman in Cincinnati. GROWTH OT 311 X WESTRRN Crrirs.--thicago 4 rhas quadrupled her population since 1810, having at that time a population of 24,000. The increaso of 51ilwaukis -has been more rapid, - having grown from 1,900 in 184) to 25,000. 07The canine returns for Willismsburgh made do present population to number 25.000 souls. In 1010 the population was only fi„000 showing an increase of 20.- 000 in 10 years. 117 The route for the direct railway line between.fiyra cute and Rochester is to be definitely located immedi ately. Surveyors are now preparing for the work.— Palmyra Cour t Fussy Mirmic—The telegraph to Toledo antiouri au that President Fillmore had appointed Vim. Dellarne collector of the port of Buffalo, They meant to hare written Wm. Ketchum. Wo doubt whether Mr. K• would recognize himself under the former garb, Crawford County Ticket, G. W. liaitats, N. G