EM (Erie `llleeltlq eiserner. ERIE, PA SATURDAY MORNING,. JUNE 28. 051 DEMOCIL&TIC STATE NOKiNATIONS. FWGOVER NOR, WILLIAM BIGLER, OF CLEARFIELD COUNTY. TOR,CkSAI. COMMISSIcINER. SETH. CLOVER, • OF CLARION COUNI`Y. _For Justices of the Supreme Bench. JEREMIAH S. BLACK of Somerset. JAMES CAMPBELL o Philadelphia. ELLIS LEWIS, of-Lane l Oster. JOHN B. GIBSON of Cumberland. WALTER IL LOWRIE'' of Allegheny; ' Postage on Newspnpers. After the firsrof July, next wee k subscribers to the Observer will 'receive their pap4s free of postage at all Postoffices within the !nits of Ede county. We shall of course, after that time, send all ou picksges through ' , the and our sublacribers will therefore please call at their Post Offices for their Paperi. Some have supposed that the Postmasters, receliving no compensa tion for•delivering papers under the fret postage act. \ weed pay vory little attention to that part of their duty. If this should in any instance prove to be the case. our subscribers-are requested toadvise us of the fact. we may lodge coMplaint with the Postmaster G -The postage oppapers going out of the county, but not farther than fifty miles. will be five cents§ per quarter; over filly and tinder three hundred miles. ten cents.- Celebrations on the Fourth NcriFridaris the an niversaryof our National Indepen dence, and it appears that preparations are being made all over the country to celebrate it., in a becoming man ner. In our pito city, our adopted Gerium citizens, true to the instincts of patriotism , are fi rek i -pa: ing their res peCts to the„day. 'They are to have a 'dinner and Ora tion—the.latter by C, BENSON. E:ii:, the talented Editor of "Our Ir ortii"togetticr with ritheirappropriate cer emonies. At ‘Visttaburg and lidenbarl, we understand, i, ,they are making preparations. At {he former place t e orator of the day will be WM. S. LaNs: Egg . and-at or latter Rev. Dr. Fuly; both of this city. There may e. and doubtless are other point;ri'n tl e, county where they -are making similar reparatiois. ti the 11C111 have not been communicated to us. - Whig Nomination& V?. leans from a private dispatch to Olt (o:ttle that the•whig convention, which assembled - at Lfaticaster this week, renonnnatrd Gov. JlChi4tr by acclamation. John Sire ,of Liiicaster , w nomimited fo . r Canal Commissioner. and a ticket for The Supreme Bench formed, composed of Jake Coulter, Jude .Chamberp, Mendeth, !alb Secretary of the Tree.mry.. and Messrs Crom and Jes-sup. The three first of these Frill - are emitiently qualified for-the -stations to winch they have been aliened—the two last are unknown to us, and ire presume to most of the people. Judge Coulter ' was appointed to the Supreme Bench by Gov. .Shutak, cud received. some 23 votes for Ihe same seat in the Democratic Conven!iou at Harrisburg two weeks ago He may therefore be set dowh as a pretty good Demo. crat. Judge Chambers was rocently appointed by Goy. Johnston in the place of Judge Burnside, deceased. Itlerideth, though not a very brilliant secretary of the Treasury. is without doubt an able and brilliant Lawyer Of Gov. Jiohnston we need not speak. It Is sufficient to' know that he has received A untnianou.. aomanition. to eampreftend stance that the D,ainuerazy must no! isleep • tt they hope to erect taut. trgier. In Jean avant ws have no Hss political history is .tou well kn nto the peopie of this Sustain doubt that they will admintater - to him in October a just and scAthiag rebuke. As one oft /user's Canal Cin:amissioners.'iu conjunction with f. tha notorious political bankrupt, Thad, Stevens. cud as one of the meriabers of Congress who evoted , pigeons' Supplies to our army in.,7llc.cd. his ',unreal history is so vulnerable that we wonder it the temer t tor- of aeon , ventmu in patting hint in ,nominat.on. }firth sues al candidate Clovers election is a "fixed fact."i r: Western "Artists Union of Cindirinati." • We have repeived a circular Um this Institution for the promotion of op) fine-arts and the eneonragetnent of Western Artists, and take pleasure in Calling our readeia' attention to its' praiseworthy objecis, The subscription is $5, and every sub-caber is ettlitlpd, on the payment that sum to two splendid enravings; "'Catching }Lab hits" aod . a.print of •..Wa‘ltiugtnn,". after Stuart's cel ebrated portrait: and in addipou :ill be entitled to a chance in the distribution rf Paintings and other Winks of Art. The institution bag - now in its room nearly a hundred paidling., by tome of the Mast celebrated artii.its in the country, to be distributed this year. Paintings have alao,been ordered, in addition to this number. from < T. Buchanan, Reed. IT. %V. Whitridge. J. P. Barton, J. 1.70 X. R. S. Duncansoti, And'a:!kei4. For further infor mation, apply to the itionorary Stcret.dy in this city, - 4c:4/Juts GRkST..E.c. , -• • More Railroad Projects , • We stated listoweek that the "few York and Erie mad bed concluded to adherejo its orikival contract with our road, and extend the six feet track to this city. Weseve this rumor upon what we thought good authority, Mit it appears it was viol:. and that no such determination has lieee expressed by the ma i usgers -4 the New York and Ens road. J The fact, however, that ouch a connection will tee made with the Erie' road trainee. and by some ll route, Wised through Dunkirk' we th nk is not a matter of doubt. Two projects are already. i foot for that pur pose. seconded by the people of Chant uque county. The first is to form a company by the citizens of Westfield. Fredonia. and the northern part if Chautauque ceouty, .for'the purpose of constructing si" , road from the eastern end of the Ere and'North East, reed. at the State Line, t through Westfield and fredo'nia, and Mteisect the Nro York and Erie road some fin e fide east of the . latter place. This project is entirely frapAte, mud ought to lie l eneonraged in every way by our citizens and the man agers of the Etsreand Vdrth.Eaat, rood. T4te other pre. ject is the Vie and Little ‘lalley'routti revisp.d. our Jamestown frieude, we see are raciarrig in-it, aid titmice a determination to be first lit the field. From an article in the Jourrnal. 'exhibiting vory the addantsges of each rt,radroad, we extract the following: "The projected road from Faialto its junction with the . jiew' York and Erie road pusses through a country itch mu Agriculture and manufactures. sod which fur fifteen or twenty miles on the ninth, and thirty or forty ustles csa ( `thisoath would depend up**, it as almost the sole chad i* nel fo r . the transportation of product:mid' the irnpurisaion of articles of exchange. In this respect the rued would possess substantial advantages over other mojectedtoads is the Mono, which for Meal hussars% eau deseud only upon' the'country on onels'ide Of the route. "The through busineas is Of course the main,consitle• ration, and the amount of this would be incalcul.ble. With the western terminus at Erie. it would be the route of the tracts of the great WeCt to New . York.' add once . - established; no other route could take precede lee of It. If immediately prosecuted. it Would. in our opihion. ohri atktu a great measure the iiticeiwit) of a road from Stin t bury to Erie. and tuatert.lly tossois prospect* Lf that , prslieet. besidea the saying ; of distance to %Totem Ira, dors. a communication between the New York and Erie railroad and•the West ecui)d be estati!islied much earlier ii the semen than by way of Dunkirk or Buflato, and • this,is a consideration which'smald be eery geickly ap preciated." A conTentiou to take into consideration this matter ' was to haie been held at Jament - own yesterday. QT The Castile Malts that the iron for the North East and E. road, bas been receiv.d in New York, and may be cud here in about ttm days. LT Thi U. S. Steamer. Michigan..bai returned. Sb• brosiht down to Detroit. from Beaver bland. Nasty Marshal. Beardsley. Coyle. Belt. sad Do rt. wbo bad m .. 9harge 8 prisonine, indicted for mint *Wag. • .. Poraitainillie Op,— The New-York Tributes h an imposing lot. to an article headOd "Preen est ' *akin." ii somewhat iu this wise t "My fritiarkr." exclr ft western preacher. addressing his a dittoes in serionsness upqn a serious subject. 'this is a ' .isiness that maths driv." —The idea of the western divine and, t i that entertained by some o f the ei uld-be " President Makers" of Pennsylvania, as exemp ifiedfey - their acts. is identical. " President Making." in t e Keystone, "most be driv." axidilici people, whether ley will or oct e t "Wart be driv" into this positiep of endorsi g cir not • dowsing a pkrtienlar Prier i i r dentiel candidate i tX October newt. We ,do not know hil 'many times the Demobratic party of ,Pennsylvania bas presented the name of Or. B4hanan, ilie "favorite iron" of the State, as a vaisdidato for the PrLidency, but ceceain it is that at no lima has the claims of the et favorite" net with much consideration at the hands of the •spreoeulAtioes of the Dentocracy of the Nation. Certhinly there must have beep a reason for this—else, why alionke the claims ief 'a iatste whiCh has done such goad services irCtlie cause, be disr4arded. That reason, to OUT mind, is plaits At no time has the name of the so-called " favorite sou" r oils prseuted with the hearty concurrence of an undivided patty. At no time has his him been a rallying cry hat could sum mon all the Democriitic legions of the S to to the field, and hence a Congress bf the party, corn red of-fimOar dal delegates faim ill the'other.States, deemed it die to the success of the cause, that *nether 4tandardbetrer should' be' chosen., • Do the friends of 'Mr. Buchanan wish this reason to operate even more powerfully against. leim in 1952 ti if so. they have but to"pnrsne the course •some of hie particu u r friends—ar n i unfortunately for hint lie has particular f ands4-have arked i out for the tip; preaching Gilbert, oriel Canvas.. Tliciy• seem l to have imbibed the idea t al the busineis in which they.Srit en• gaged—President linking--" is p businirs that Imnst be driv.7 Hence we And them. at.the present _ it -inmost. when all their - tae ies, and' all ;the 'ti.eigies of the par ty, ought to be dir cted to the success of our Guberaa torial' nominee, str sting to construe the nominations a d votes at Reading i to demonstrations of the " forlorn s" strength id the tate—as indicati.uts)if the ?envie'. , • epic. on the Presi ential question. Wi ace awe that the friends of litr.:Fluchanap are not alone cu Ate in i this matter. Thai men *tin seized aped th nenteiot Gen. Cass two years befUre the President I question ought to be agitatied in 'County or Stain - :•onventio?s.' have soniething us . answer for, if this ni; ling op of the -Presidential question with the appronchlrig contest,should endanger the succ.C.ss of our Party th fall: Theirs hai been bad policy, Oery, had—but . the/Itoliey some of their antagonists have 'Varied is anise/ Suppose they shall succeed in ampresi.ticupon the / iuhlic mind, in convinc ing the anti-Bucli - pnan leadeis,ia the State., that aurnivanon was is; BuChanalybommition—that Clover's nomination was WDuchansti nomination, and that their success would be Xi Mechanists triumph—would ihey not furnish a motive ¶or tho/e who hate Mr. Buchanan more than th•ylove the Democratic party, to quietly stab those nominations in ttiit ) titier ? 'To ours nand there can be nothing s Phstuer• let it once be understood that B gler and Clover are the candidates of a particular interest. and not of the whale parsy, and their defeat is the' death knell fti the hove. of that particular interest in the -Na tional ConventioU neat tear. Stich things have % hap pened in Pennsylvania. and may again. Wm. B. Fos--, ter was oVerwhishned because he was unjustly charged 'cuter faction iu -eth shared the wartithe friends the anxiety of with bolongthe to. and favoring a part he De tuocrane ;party.. Judize Longst lame fate from the same enure; and we of &earl and clover tolleviare i i'resideutiat anniauts • to turn their popitl , hand, anil defeati on the other, to their o they do of feud i,lienuselies overwhelm of their friends. : We Itafre no ditubt the more th.in'eris tura of the par ty—those who arrogate ZO theinselVes th R i eder and or. ganahip of the i4rty—r, ill call this humb g; but it sboulti he.remembered it to:mutation iu Penney vaoia is no lon. ger au etectim. iwe m.... 4 it .. to to i ..o.llt. 10‘.1 we have the saMe unscrugulous opinion' n•witit the same unscrupulquv aid untiring candidate t combat. This athimpt, t.- , '“).. to forestall public bpinioin on the Preti ,l dentist suekt.ton. by representing this or that nominee of the M whole - party es such and suCh a an a matt, ought iit be frowned down, come from what sour ait May. All' ter we have " foUght. the good fight," a d victory perch• Ca upon the hamer,of the Dlinocratic candidates—net the Buchanan or Casio candidates—Hi ler and Clove•;, then we go fm. ' id That tloiroughle 111 then no go fur Canvassing, an. ist th ;roughly. too, . qualificcions, chiims, and, abovc all, dip. cAanee4 (11 sat'e'i eras of the carious Presidential candidatels pained Then; if it &hall ba,show u tit\ Mr. Buchanan ea u unite our par: ty better id! a majority-of the St i tes, thain any other can: , didate, we will go, as see did ilt IS li. frir gi‘ in: him the vote arrd itiffirerice of the State in the National Conserv- Pon . ;. but in! the meantime we prOtest monist his or any of his not iiier•wise and indiacieht friends claiming the votes given 'or candidates Made at Reading, as " I,Bu chanan triumph.." or !fl! indication!, of , r. Buchanan's siren: h." As to the JudiCial Conveittun. its •otee,nomi narions and result!. they eigri do - withithem as they please. They can claim them or own dim, it maters lade Ilk hiCh.' I • Copstitational Re It is one of the most gratifying passive rpirit,of the age, that Cue everywhere progrevaing ; and in es' racy are its advocates and defender ' Illinois: Kentucky and MarOatied. ergtveic taws of the State have , he cratic hands, and carried at the poll In Ohio thee Mg party, with aingtil.l tho adoption of the blew Constitu , i people last week, but in vain, There the whip had, not the boldf in Ohio., They dare not make or form, but ts,..ued a seeret circular I ters at Baltimore. ite Which they in brethren that in:the cite" the lob{ man will vote against 4. - but that tl take open ground agalpst it" Tk ali opponents of popular reforms. Mari land, thanks to her democra by aide with Ohio ou the broad - plal al Reform; • . STATIKPRIDE.—A united to advertise tn., guard against low water in i... arra:iguanas teak the New l'ito, wliereny• Roods bought from Mem in . he forwarded to the Lakes it lie' RAM ri O and insurance as if ehipprd fr in New-Yi feeling or Peno”leania ple ie uld have si pat-it-Wien of this arriinge 'nil But we, n plaint. Trade will go where fskilities offer, est prices 'will win the Aeld, Moor nivn log ere ttinS to be stripped of ItnairirJes this year. so nestiyesr. Our own 0 io self POllnPiciVl will relieve the New York and - Erie of th dreughi tipctn the transit tr e proper of Per i Pitts. tons.. Journal. : Statei pride; forsooth ! If Pennsylvania the lealit particle,of State Prid' she won ed off this New York and Erie Rolla by Sunbury. But no—." Slate pride." or rath fait, has forced her capitklists to build the which never can and neler will compete shore Foot l e fo l iNew Yolk ,So our Moho *try can "hang his beep upon ` , t our Ohio and Penneylemons rai bb content to see the itUrsess begs of the Like Cutitrtaiall tb Ural channel through Erie to N. And this wilfremain oci until ti le built ; which evony *the,by, aerie imagine. ; 1 E? W. bate receirea a copy Philadelphia aodlial iaiere Rilli i t rione commercial him pm 4: tif eve re ry stet. Now York. gorge w proprietor.. A valeat - . el of am., ITerms1 Terms. —W 10y Ni 1 M.Ditili $l, in advuO. inekvail action 'I reads t used a , pee of ? I i 1 0 illtl above quotation from the Spalator. to the whig The whig party is •• so various" that it not only "se) but is an " epitome" of all this " isms" that the/ pot af polities has thrown upon the surface for its rank. may be found "Anti-Masons," "At . "Free-Soilers,"•;Anti-Itenters." "Native- mericans." "Federalists," ••Nsitional Itepublicanis."•• ".tiver Grays." "Woolly Heads," "Higher Law" men. • illmors meth" ••Webeter men," "Scott mon," and s. on to the end of , the chapter. ed itijimiluas, from GI • dings and Seward down to Fred. Douglass. A party thus composed can be nothing less than " stiff in opi ion,': and if it is'not •• always in the wrong," it is's dom }fight. Let us cast our mental vision-back a few ears. and see how history tallies with the lieutiment of ur text. We need go back no farther Wan the Veto o the Bank by General Jack son. Who was in the " Tong" then 1 The answer is given in the fact that a iitional Bank is do lOnger a part mid parcel of a true wI g's creed. Distribution ofthe pro •ceeds ef the public ads among the Statetf was then, also, emblazoned pop every Whig banner.; but now, alas. where is ? .if remembered at all, it is er4 as one of the " good e ouglt Morgans till after election;" which are nicely stred away in the memory of politicians. Opposition tithe Independent Treasury was a pre-requi sits oncodadmission to the whig church, but that mea sure of mocratie wisdom has lived down., not alone the opp/sitiou of the whig party, but in fact hat received the in at approval of a whig presidont..Mr / Fillmore. Th .• Tariff Of '42," and " nothing else" will pot long sit e the only measure that could save the country and ing back prosperity, but now even thasel who were 'loudest in a crusade against the bill of '46. ate willing to take a slight modification. Even President Fillmore is appalled to a high tariffand henry Clay recently declared that lie would not even propose to alter this essential principles of the taiinuill of 1846. Again• thl democrats were abused for standing firmly by their cunt try in sus taining the Mexican War. The wings. • borrever. took up one of this leading men in the prosecution pf the'War, and elected him President, thus proving that its this pal.- ticular they were •• suff .in opinion" and agaiu •• in, the wrong." As a result of thin war, California and New- Mexico became ours, whereat Daniel W'' even the •• God-like." declared they were "1 dollar." and the leaders far and near, mid th! file, with one accord: cried •tamen!" Nu' 'this assertion of the " God-like"—this end the party of a policy that would have given its gold and its commercial advantages, bad be reconciled with facts. Was the whig champions right ? Let the millions mat are tracted from the California mines; end thr tended commercial relations pf the country, b by this acquisition of territory, proclaim Again, in lel4B. the Democracy went tutu tl with their banner firmly planttd upuu the volition" platform as regards Slavery in tl The whigs sneered at it, and, without pro, "principles for the public -Cy e," took a candid, the • bleed-stained" fields of a war they ins god•abhorred." ■nd,succeeded in defeats helm of the bliip of ewe was placed iu thei era they hare occupied the post a yearotise them 1 Not, certuipty, upon the •• tiou ray, on the oue n account, that d in the house Zin 'rideeces et the pro ' titutional Reform is ry else the Deface: I . In Ohio. ludiana. hese reforms of the u.formed by demo• by delHOOratie votes. r nnanimity. opposed on. subag r itte. to the also in Maryland. r eds of their brethren ti war afpon the re otn theirlherd queff armed their couniry voters isicnest to a rot of course acteristic of 4 avail. and to-day side onatitution- 23CE s is ells It dud 13., . altautlel oral of .hatits ha s ext. that rr Ante eta e c Paltry .elphia m y t of Frei i rk. A lit le r t re o lw o o e c dl I a)id the low. water boat. 'it Will not be [tie Railroad mortifying pop Tanis ad possessed d have head heading the its counter- Pe etre! red. ith the Lame Rh Cote mpo- " Alms in the Wring." ' ..-. " A man so % irtuous that he seemed no be Not one. but all mankind's epitome. , Stiff in opinion. alwaYlkin the wrong, Was everything by starts, and nothing bag ! But in the enamor one revolving moon. Was thYsalsti tiddler, statesman and bufibmiro P AY. ats." proltSc itiolliila." •• MO , '" .i) • p ' C y Cli 0 pi it i dr / Of U . o I r We ma bat a peel's licease" whoa we apply platforeof Geri. Cass? It is even so—s Cumpromme pleasures are Luta Legialativ the platform of the Democracy op the al a in IB4B'. We might, but need we go, ferj the troth or our t,st, that the whig patty is ••St d in opinion. abase is ths wrens, ; • • Is vretriiiing t y werts,and unithiajr ton Hut in the eourre of one revolving moult, i Is ellyuaist. peddler, mien:monad Of bonnie, nothing else can be meant,. quotation, by that last line. Dal Ins •• tiara fuonery" of IS4O ; and with this hint we I. to 611 up the picture from the prolific peps fel rear as suits him best "A Tirade Against Tot—," • A week or so ago our reforming ueightiorlor the prizerds indulged .in a "tirade against tobacco." In which ihe •• filthy practice." and those In the habit of, using the •• nauseaus weed" received's very appropriate acrd-sen sible lecture., To show that our cotempormy is not alone p his anathemas against the use of the weed. we will quote the opinion of the Lady Editor of the Bostoii °Lido Deuisois. Mrs'. D. says she does not mho up the subject expecting that •• it will do a particle Of good. or nick. one chewer the leas:" nay, she even "tut pacts that many a gredensau wall run the sweet inerse/ more lovingly around his mouth as he reads, and take another bit, to Wei the he may enjoy his paper with greater zest ; like the old man who listened gravely iMa long exhortation against sena: and at the close. lapping his seta-box. exclaimed. as he took five extra pincher, • Good argument, brother—good argument ; I'll get rid of this as qumk as 1 car " ' Notwithstanding thw forn gone couclusiou that what she ry say isn't going to have say elrect, also pitches into the weed ; ill this wise : " Tobacco. tit our mind, is about the Meanest article that the soil can produce ; disgu,tingly ltaMleful ; a black. shiny, loathsome reptile. toiled up in hetes. a mass :of filth when &comp:med, offensive to the sight, .offensive to th e , smell; otrensive - to the good air God has so freely given. and 0..0,1re, in some *ay or other, to the health. If there was a 'train of beauty about it. either in looks' or taste. we wool& nut say a wthd but there is absolutely nothing to recoitnoend it : it 18.10 itself, total depravity ; and yet sometuties the very Sideocatea of holiness coon tensile. it—and n pretty countenance it gives them, don't it ? / m•gtne' • long row of huge teeth. garnished as cooks garnish a ham—decorated ail over with the filthy leaf. and the MUT and refuse piled up in the corners of the month ! A pleasant sight. is it not. Mr. Chewer?— another bite ! And then it is so charming —yen will bear me witerse. ladies—to sit beside the tobacco Mar 'shipper, andr, inhale the fragrance of his - burnt idol, or chewed idol, et-snuffed idol: so pleasant to g-t is a song seat in the care in • dirk station house, and find 'pur d -heats robes in a large brown standing pool some fifteen 'minutes after, 'utterly ruined ; no pleasant to • meet a friend unexpectedly. and wait before you can shake hands er get an answer to your salutation, for him to turn about and sprinkle the side-walk.and your dress with tobacco juice ; so delightful to behold a questionable dumb on your rich carpet, or a long. pen;temial, yellow tear, on your cleanly white walls-.take another bite, gentlemen : so pleasant to protein hour after hour, and day after day.' that y'ou will not try to be orderly and neat, if your par. Mrs. and kitchen, and steps, and yard. are to be besmeared With these plague spots of tidy housewives." After thus freely expressing her opinion of the qttali 7 ties of idle weed itself. shlP Sari when she notices young men'filth cloves in their months , especially toward.; eve. sing,r they are smartly dressed, she wonders if some body Ole dreams that they chew tobacco. She would. viol she therefore warns every young lady under twenty five, mild as many more over that age Mt will heed the ad- Monition, to look well after young gentlemen that smell of cloves and cinnamon. lEr AU the other Editers in town havinf tasted "Mom son's Nectairfits. Soda." and pronounced it first rate. we can do no lean than coincide in this judgment of such an honorable fraternity. and. withal!. seek good judges. It has been said there! is " nothing new ander the man." t • but w e think this beveragemires each a '• star so" rank herbsy, for the " Nocturna .&da" is both Pew and good: A *livers:me man ean !drink it with impinity, mid it watt hart sae fond of a " wee drip of the critter." eves. W. C. hileatisit; Lockport. Eris County.- romtfactersv. to ilrhom &limters most be addressed. Craig Biddle. Coq, of Philadelphiai-has been sleet. ed Beereiary sod Treasurer- of the Banbury sod Erie railroad. Hew the son of the later Blithwine Buldlo. who in hie lite time labored hard to effect a atonection of the Lakes with Philadelphia. The Phibidsholteapapers speak is high terms of this appointment. 117 Some idea may be format af the popolarity of Col. Biglar s iaiiag his isigitimors. from the feet that ia 111411. thoslogiwisoa, for Ikea teams* Ito aotteivod way,* in mei immtety,"akbough Ascii *so a whit esadidato I. tloo SIP 1108 Plo* OUR EXeRAROES WITH zrorronisi. D►%HSI 3T . • FRCS PM A Western Editor has got on the korprof a diktat- I. a. fie wishes to know. if pintiloons end short dresses bileonlas common with women, what will be done with the aids males 7 Sure enough. , • ' The Pittaburth Post sayi •n Irishman i■ that ate a half !Mead of mould candles. • small bask crackers, and drank sit bodes of porterj on a bet. • I - mast have been a man of taste. LT Another number of the Custansread is issued. and it in not a whit behind any of its '"illwririone predeces. pore" in ill the attributes of a party organ. Whigs of Erie.spin we congratulate you. IT Mato G. Bistoirr. father of Hon.fesse D. Bright. of the United.l3tatee Senate. died at theiresidenee of his son. M. G. Bright, in Madison. Indienii on the 9th inst. Mr. Bright was seventy-seven yeses of die. _ • ' rr Aas Walling. of the CoshOeton((o.) Democrat. has taken to himself a bigger and. we hdpe. • better half n —a genuine Backs with cheek lake roses, tips like obi lET The _ Editors in the •• lower part" of that State -•• 110 Ord the regions , of folk." We think such feats are notionlined to Ken- Meky. The man that **Aim" into , llpOnting °Two, ex pecting to 01 rich. is guilty of the moat extravagant fol ly. That's oar experience. ilfr Eurekal. we have found it. or they seen it. A veritable ':Bloomer." once , twice, th limes. has lieen upon our streets; and sooth to say, the initume is all it's "cracked up to be." No gaping crowd followed, nobody stared—our young men are taught better manners. Now that the ice its broke, we hope to see a g•few more of the sarn• sort."' IlZr:The hands employed in the UllllOll office in Wash. . ington. presented. on-Saturday week. ',handsome silver pitcher to, Mfr. Ritchie. the late editor of thin/aims news• paper.: The president and the Attordey General were piesent. Mr. Richie made a feeling elddress on the ?c -ession. Cr ••Out of the abundance of' the I hemt the mouth, spesketh." The bachelor Editor of ithe' Gazette. now absent at the Whig State Convention .t is writing a fried of letters home, ind the very first inclideq he notes, in his first letter, is embellished a ith a ••QQ ►~adlB and a baby!• This is significant; and leads one almbst involuntarily to exclaim; •• coming events east theii sitadowit before." :hater, yea, ,not worth a t l3 rank and fr, how can nemeot by California, . . 07)TheChronirls, in a very senile article on the Sunbury and Erie railroad. speaks s o the go.quehanua and Eria Compitny as actually 'organized." This is not correct—that project is still an abortion; no one having beenlound'yet patriotic enough to pay the COO tax to the State. When 'such a disinterested iidividual is found, we shall certainly i,starin the public. ' to Mexico, rty and its monthly ea. greatly ex ought about u gnawer: catripaiia' non-inter• Irk There was.probably more taleut.inthe liarriAure Convention than iu any sunder bod • that ever asSem bled in Petin”lvania.—Easion If Abet is • facto then all arr have,to say is, that they itoot a very poor way to . ahow it. o territories LT Here is %specimen of true Yankee independence. The Let Well Seers iays a girl was refused admittance to her work id the ruff. on one of the trorporations, because she happened to be dressed is the new Bloomer costume. On being told that if the would come dressed at i . ►he ought. she could go in. she - thanked her informatp, at the same tints informing him she didn' care about going at all. aiming any e freakftom proaolinced g ue. The hands, end e do we fiud erVe titian" r. Ftlltoor.*: UJ “Life is s good deal like a pair &if hreedies.•—:Com Add. . liudeubtedq the Editor of the Cw4inerris/ speake from experience—his life. and his breeClies' s being so much alike —both need pdtchingbadly i rendition of •r) quesoon. bor to prcve U 7 Sit.u!BWmat.r..—The Cleveland Herald says "se t•eral of our 'cilium were' .taken rn and done for, by a caliphs of English pedlars, who sold ;them I:mantilla silk pitmen. at 11 - 46 each. The febrile was unusually beauti ful,)l, end the e4d Ms I•3ed all edit , but the remainder of the pattern habit an , cotton. ‘ Thentenr4t inerahants plashed the smite gam successfully in Washington' some time since. , ok on for them ye who dress in silks." The PaineWille T graph says then town. so ithitity 11l .11i1 that his toe nut the wrong w . y out r pure stie th a r mi. worse he is courin to he than win., iloa* • t we apply the eider" "but. to the readar la that swept- paper. And brothel, to the for it.. fits tfinails be has-no bag '..?1 "Dvccurvivit'' •stii•Gaftivivvi• I "--,T, ten interchangeable, as if they siguifies g. ••Dutehhi•n,u, piopelly signifies niitives of the Nether. lands and liaised, of whom there are but few In this country. "l , .moans' is a name !fret to inhabituts of Austria, Pru ia, Wurtentburg, Salrony. and oth i t Ger- It mon States. id is the prOper title by which'to designaje that large. in ustrioue. and frugal !onion or our opul - lion common l y called "Dutch." i' I ' - .1 I CL:r la notleitikthe fact, thiLa fellow on inoltie Waid been relieved, Vitae course of • lays., of the snug , 10401 mini of $1,458 . for fulrgettingie main• a ghillie hadsworn fidelity to, ankrifterwinds marrying a widcite. the bacl. elor Editor ottfie -Citroniele pronounce. hqn a "senedde man," sad eickirmi.."Who would•nt pad' i double Mist surn ; for suns.for thirsieme privilege?" 0, Atnts, mos 4 we' si'm afraid you tin's. disregarded Mr. ,Seniuol •%VeOr's 'd eme to all young men in your Libation, "to beerare id the Vidders." . I ' ' 1 IL.F . ltere is as incident, related ,by the Mining Regis ter. whickliaa its conaterparte in the experience Of every editor: "We listened patiently. the other day, to aft r hour's discourse from an dltra timid whit. Who had. acitording to his own story, been made alndoet a benkrot frdm What he was pleased to term 'free trade.' - At th e con-, elusion of his remarks, we solicited him to subs cribe fur our paper. bit hi excused hinte4f.by saying: ',l caret afford it—l am already taking two. papers fro New York, end threefrorn Philadelphia.' couldn't afford to subscribe fur a paper printed is his oleo county! This illustrates the wide dif f erence between the 11)04 dud prettied of, It may be, many well meanitg men:" rrir Barnum has sot gone to EaroPe yet, he she Old come right out to Erie. We have a rate curiosity ()eke, slims! iu all respects to his EliphOnt calf—if not's litre more so, especially the stiff. It ik an Editor thir don't know whine cotemporary speakslof him ironically. but construes every thing he hears, if it refers to hinieelf, into a compliment. For insianesi, s we sneeringly called Os 'Commercial a "bold. dignified, manly and talented newspaper" last week, and the Editor actually Ulrike We earnest. were in "Where rnortince is bliss, 'ti folly to be wise." the adage say': a d wa are certainly; willlng the Editor of the Commercial, enjoy his ignorance to 'hie heart's content. I . ! arTlie Gic.dts has been appointed the "official 'paper of the city." This is right—if only one of the Whig papers is to hare the "pap" of the part , the Guistrs is fairly entitled toil. not only en accoun t its age, but because oftti fidelity to its ancient prejudice*. But we have a better appointment.than the Gallittes—we ate the '•pf c; al" organ of an - nnbinight. unserficited set of cWtti4hgrs, consequently we Jangh when wn plisses, and gretiferhen we think our corns are tread Upon.' What we like, either inliolitical friends or foes, we approve,—sing ,tt iat we' don? like, we are not slow ts• "let out thopet" be known." All of which is the Toss!' of learningi to live without the "Itapting bottle" of party. Whit alglor i jous 'b eam is povertyl—tt severe one up like a blanket; and =Limits ea independeutu a/a L eries traveler. Z7' LiARBER3 'man Loos Ova,,—A revel tried' in New -York recently. An up:tewn gondolas's. "secordieg to his affidavit, bad iplt the "scaled halad"!fied. and be prosecuted his berber for allowing biri tolealeh it; alleging that said barber had *rushed and- coosbeil his hair with the same brah mad eolith that had beciapOlied, a r a w boors previous, to the bond of avows vihorp the bestose li?“.f* be inallorisi free* that ioaths_oont digitate. A . islijaame area eiatatioad pro static**, and tiampr the rut Pbaloa, tisk 'war, of the iialvheated an who dota l toki tight to grow: the be brother to eo B roadway Hairtl l resaing Saloons. who nid that he had known cues where not only the scaled-head..but °thou Wadi& diseases. had been distributed among a brtris,r's customers. when one of them happened to be affitcted with any such ailment. Mr. Phalan saidrthat ha was 40 well sangfroid of i this fact, that, in his esaablishineut.he never allowed a hairbrush to ho used' more than glee without being thoroughly purified . lodgment was !r a derod in favor .f the plaintiff. to the inroout of two hun dred. dollars. • /up. t of Us • ,The flew-York. Magazine." String* • - Town Scud , p olishers, is one' of ths' monthly visited we know of. It is an it compeniiin atlimenis or abroad, and bid" - more popular With the general rear' temporaries, not exceptiog Her Its monthly record of A ble in conceptiOn ant" evidence of great low rate of crease. 6th,' ipe usable lair to beFoine /Than any of its co .i'n' New Monthly Itself. lor's and Books" is admiro iiiimplete in execution, and!gives elitoriat ability. With the iticnming tags, its mail eirmlation most greatly in or sato at 0. Spofford's, corner of Frani!' and sets. .1 By the arrval of the Crescent City, we'have tiles rof Oreg.') papers to May 101 h, ineusive. The steamer Willamette wall nearly reedy to take pher place un the rivers Columbia and Witheynette, r which she was expected to du as early as the 22d of May. The liusin'ess of the city of Portland is represent ed by the P, , rtland . Oce#rfinian iv be increasing.— Lergy warehouses were erecting, and many vessels were discharging anti loading at the,wharvhs.' As en indicalion of the seasons in that latitude, it is mentioned that ripe strawberries-made their up itearance on the tables on the Bth 0 1 M a y. l'he people of Oregon had held a public meeting dri the Ist of May, and appointed! a 'committee to write a letter of condolence to Mrel. Thurston; %Ad- Ow of the Hon. Samuel 11. Tnuraton. the late delegate from Oregon Territory.. Reaululiona - of regret fur his loss ainhof respect to his memory were p a ...ed. 4 The weetiier had been bad on the Oregon' coat With pass and profuse rains. The-steamer G ;limb. at A'turia, had not out t 0 .1 1 ,4 la - consequence of a heavy gale which had blown for some days, andi no fessel had entered ihe river fur some time on the "'same account. Theocean steamer Columbia. wlitch lwas due with the mail., had wit arrived, and it war oppotevl that-she was at the mouth of the river welting for the southwest gale to abate; so that she could come tip in with safety. There are three ocean steamers plying between t Portlend, in and Jan FrancitcuonCelifor -13115, betides T11101(4'0114 sisihrig ve.sefe. Thee, ,are alto, inellitfing the Willisinette, three river 14ain l' ere, hcaides a host of smeller craft, plying up and I down the titer. A st, , ,,mliat, to ply between' Lb Cascades and the Dallas of the Colombia, ha. al-0 been contracted for; the engine has been tohipped ' from San- Francisco, and the steamers to be in [motion early in The Oregonian of. May 3d says: '•By this plan, emigration can be amply accnmil - and find the means of access -to the IVilliam ette salty sure, and without the delay of fo-nter years—as bve underhand the Companylof the Cas cades hate a!rearly nearly completed a railroad Around the portage."' ex a mple of The Oregon, City Spectator, of May 6tli, gives the follosvitio xample of Indian customs: , • "On Sunday fl night last, near the city, an-Indian, after greatly ibysing and beating his squaw, Ivitig her op by the nii.ck until the vital stark had f1.4-z-- Ills plea fur the cruelty he hull inflicted uptoe,lier was that she would dt.t stay at hoofs, and .-tu break her of this habit he thought'he winiNl beat and hang her awhile, atter the co•toni of the whited. V:, he hire -eff,cterd a cure. This may be said to be. One of the benrfits.of cis ilziatioit. • If we mistake not, it is agrave otience sin , ng-th'em for one male to ;kilt souther, but the husband ho'ds . the power of hfe,and death user the wire.'' Geoeral Joseph Lane is a candidate for the place tf Ile:egtve to Congress from Oregon Terrtt"ry, in place of Mr. Thurt.ton. It had been expected that he would take the field in Oppoeiti'm to Thurston.— The onmitirtion is,made in this wise in the Li pec•a -!or of Nay Inr, pooloOsed at Oregon Ctrs: 4•We have been requested by General Josrph Lane to announce him as a candidate for IhkgiltetU the next Congress." GOLD BY TIM CR 'scwir Crer.—The amount of gold nrooght ttttithr. 'reseont City on consignment, is set e....i . a11ir70;145, tint ut is valet] by the New York pa.i.er, that the offices of all . tfie tiealefs Wailat reel. were throoged yesterday in ii.og ts sel era of gold do-t; wiluse'lrea,sure was WA rodort eil in the specie of ,the steamer. One of the la •g est of these de4erz, estimated the amount thus brought in private hands at wit less titan 5b2,003,- 000- As there weir. over fits lin tired was-enzers. this would gise to each one an as'erage • of about *4OOO apiece. One builiop dealer in Wall street bought trout a single nissenger $ . 100,000 whichhad not been reported. Thi> arrival will g” far. to pre vent the depressing efrec:ts on tile niarliO, which might otherwise base been anticipated-from the oth er intelligence. In this conin , ctitsp we may remark that the mines seem hi sustain public expectation wages are high, and the yield does not seem to have fallen Qff, The disaster,. which have befall en the two 7rinctule cities of C h i l l i:l mi, will & 1 1,. many iitto,ille hdigzings," who-e labor' will proba bly swell to some extent-the future reetsipts of gold from that source. A MIR ADV ' t L Accintoe.—On SaturAav evening last, a fatal accident occ-irred in Wiltsaw town ship, this county, the Particularsofwtdch are as tot lou s ; • Between sunset a' nd dark, two brothers, named Lindemtith, repaired - to a sick, for the- purpose of watching far deer. A yoting man narvedlLewis Ir %lire al s o came to the "same place. unlvilown to the other's and from an oppobite` direction. 1 I A few min utes before his arrival deer hird been s/en which had escaped, and when he endeavored to make his way through ;he bushes to reach the spot, Oeorge.Linde truth, knktaking him in the uncertain pight for one of the animals, dischar,:ing his gin at{ the a. ROCP of thirty paces. , The ball took effect in the body of the unfortunitte‘man, and he fell to ti ground ex claiming tliat. he was shot.. The fate error being thus discovered, he was conveyed to I i a home, stir (gical aid summoned and the bullet 'et° ac!ed; but tif her lingering in great pain, he expirti l d on Monday morning last.—Brookrille Jefferioni,'n. Tint CtntA Bove.-Quite a large 'ttiumber of the Celestials have arrived anr.mg- us of late,' enticed hither by the golden romance which has filled the world. Scarcely a shw arrives here _that does riot bring an, increase to this wort,hy integer of our pop ulation. And we hear from China papers• and pri vate advice. from the empire, that 4 the- feelling is 'spreading all through the sea-board, and as a con sequence, nearly all the vessels that are ail fur•this, country are so fur the prospect of pas.sepger i a. A flaw Chinamen have returned. raking Home with them some few thousands of dollars in Cali ornia gold-, and have thus given'an impetus to the f eling of emigration from their fatherland, which a not likely to abate for, some years to come. TI rough their c t hiet here, and their agent, tilfr.Woodworth,- they have got posse;tion of a large track of lend on the 111§quelutnriei which they have commencifd cul tivating, and are fast settling it. Thee are kmung the moat industriont, quiet, patient people among us. They seem to live under our.lavvs as if born and bred under them, and already have commenced an expression of their preference by applying for citizenship, by filling their intentions in our courts. What will be the extent of the movement now go. tug on in China and here is nut easily foreseen,— We shall undoubtedly have a very large addirinn'to tar population, and it may nut be many years before the Halls of Congress are graced by the presence tif a lout queued Mandarie pitting, voting, speaking beside ippon from Santa Fe, and Kanaier from . Hawaii.—wllia California. I POOR loirgAll 8116111 Nipp . er, who lire. lb it metal tenement, a lone woman, Nam quite "flutitrated" the other morning by an early call from bachelor neighbor. "What 41? 'you come here afters' soul Miss Nip per• "I come to borrow moldier," he meekly replied. "Matches! That's a likely story. Why (Mott you make a match? I knAw what you come for." cried the exasperated old virgin as she backed the bachelor into a corner: **You came to hug sad kiss me alma! to death! Bet you shan't—without you're the etrongest, end the T.ord knerr's you ark. From Oregon. - Oust Fire in Sea Francispi The steamship Albany, which spitted at New Orlcans, On the I +kb, kir ings th now of another terrible cobliagration in .8 Fraiiciacn. The M. lowing account we ext ct from a correspondence of the Tribune: . ,Jts devastating. ealatolties which stacked this city, has laid in t a xi ..sf built, most densely inhabited and host. .4110r1 of this city, since the departure of the' ..i. steamer. OnOthe 4th of Hay, 1850,‘.0, 0 , 4 3 o'clock in the morning, a fire wastliscovered which, before it was extinguished, destroyed a large polite* of the city. Three times, between that- and the • 31 of May; ISSI, did dekructive firestrun &Magma destroy the results of energy and persevereance hob: ertd unparalleled in the 'annals of the world. Oa the night.of the 3d of shay, at 11 o'clock, a small sham), about 12 feet by)2o, was disc nered to be on fire. By 7 o'clock on Sunday mornin g , t j," th 'Shay, more than one half of the city laid in smoki al „ I ruin's, and the buildnigs`.and property were destroy': , ed, more than equalling, in extent and value, all tri al the tour great fires (besides the lesser ones) shict, 'had occurred within.* twelve-mouth had consul*. ed. "rite toss is incalculable. Yon will find the va. I ,loos neuspipers etitimate it it from men to hie * . 'ty millions Lf dollars. 1 think the latter e5t,,,,, t . will be much nearer the truth than the formrr..... Hundreds of persona who were . r icer on Saturday night, on Sunday morning had nothing but the clothes in which they stood. • Multitude s o f p e ,,,, iik I did not save a paper. M id, ale's, nunibPri lost their 1 lit es. In on store one corner of - Nliint g 'aw ry and SacrantOitosits., no less than six met soh a Ifiery -death. t y,oiiine four or five, whiwie name, ars unkitown, oral - now nto have perished in the b urn , ling 4treetsottid some are believed to, have perished. in burning buildings, whose fate will never b e k sowo lon earth save,by conjecture when they ate nem heard of again,. + Another of Piave two ofter all the br new's . But the nsJst wonderful of the history of the fire is trie energy. aud persevereucedjsp;ayed by the cit %ens here. 'Latrvage does riot contain worda ant cent to describe or commend their courage-mod de ternrulatiot4t Four times destroved by fire; and four times rebutitrthis, the fifth catastrophe, is as fur front disheartening them as the first, ln forty eight: hourniafter the'-tire. bllhdln2s isereierected • and bitsiile4l transacted over the still stnokingruilm. On this, thii.eleventh day since the tit ,cttcoidingNi two Siiitdvje.) tnere are nearly 460 tmi..illirs erect ed or iu ',fovea, 'of erection in the burnt dorricr, most of ttsgin being completed and iiccii. , tei. I hen. and nothing in ayiti g that in sixty days the shale district wilt be again covered with buildiogs.- Near ly all uf tlbae buildings, it is true, are of wood.. ? .t But wherever there was• brick iiil.:in 2 pretiionly, preparativiis are made 111 rebuild oh s ....'i addition al securteieis against tire as they ate lernel by the re . Cent . calarnity, and in sortie, ca es ; larger buntings than the previous ones are beta erected . Includ ing the buiohnga beiwz erected utride the bounda ries of the tire, fully 600 kfullitn,z . v i aresrected or ' being built since the fire. It is perkcgy astuniA, '• tug.: It mii.t be seen to be beileed. i i had n,icin ceptiotrjoir what could or wou , ol-be done prior tothis. 31y ex l ierietice had been vyry varied. I loire been in &fret:int -count' lea, eft - mates, Sates and citia., but - basic noer seen any thing like slut !have seen here. New-Yorks sicfr•re•l by fire=; lilt nothtne to ' coitynristurytO 4 Sin rranci e sco. A tic tii.:slevi-Turk wilich abould conspire in prop-onion 10 the extent and peilthlation i.f that city. wait this last in San 1•'-rt - iic_vg I co, would sweep away the %hole city be,ow - Itroiini Ft., from :North . to Ea-t layer. And abut . • would be thought even in the Grept all its vast population, capital,'-sktil end' reenurces; of bun who bliould prophesy that so much would be rebuilt till any manner) in 60 days. 'the prophecy heoe is a matter of course. And yet this is t,great fire in twelve m.mths. - ha the c ,, ntiagrattuti all the newspaper offices wr ol except that ut he dila Calsforhtd. Tne Pacjic.Vtits., C.eurier; Picayune, Herald,,Baliatce, 1 True St.indied, otlices. all were total y 'de,tral.ea except the :Veuv. Herald, and Balance, Mlle) nr• • ed a portion of t-teir miteTtal,. .Tne by obtairnag• from San Jose 'nine matenak CfP Cl • it had there, and the Herald, with what it had sated. ' hate since reappeared. Tue other; litsve) not tet d toe so, and there -is no prospect of their , mom/Jute i re suntpti n. In the first place, there are no et!cel to be purcl.n4;cl„ exce,pt ujjj inferior and incorrfste one, tort h.cit an extr iVigint price is demand:4'olnd in the sti , thtl place the rates foe work baie bemso much red iced that the grices paid for itomptt-o,on per 000 em.) have nut - only ah:orbod :CI the ii.ttette .4'l tie like, but to some cares rim ettOr d.—ab t. The fact,W, the fattest.. bars have betut Ilte.gons which ta,d the golden etztz-t, Ipt there m now employment f.tr oat h.i.l the number that ere was before the fire. There has r.lro::'fie;im a great fire In Stuclacta, wtoch deriroyealli,ooo,poo of property. ' ANIYIIIEIt SCIENTIFIC WONDER. rr.rs,j,K..o rtific cal e Thud. or Gairric Juice a ru.t spePvia c arer, repared from Rennet. or the fourth uno..cnsf thelrx, afteF direction* of Barou Liehipt the great•Pht,inpral eh...rural he 2. floogtoon. M. 1:1 r No. II North Etchrh &reel I Philadelphia, Pa This or a truly wonderful reined) for Indigra . - ' Gun. 03.speri-ia, Jaundice. Liter Compt;unt., l'otiAil" . "On and Debility. curing alterinature's rayin method. 1.) natut..*ou d ageat the Gastric Jame. See adveritfernent In another column. C : 4 A SMAI.T. ONl4'oi , lENT tilt: Atti .ARTICLE Rl:l'l.lVt_Lt. , %ND FuR SALE ‘RTER AND !MOTH . ER. !At i. It F.I.D I, DR I IlEt;11S' BL' . (*X. If, l'he valnable . .Hoothnd Bitten., wine h ha( Ca , g, tr.! to extensive popularity, and co alumni Iv larr a le, reFl.n-rated only by Uri Jackson. at the German Metl.tuzze store. Na 10, Arch strecc. rhila:elphia. These bitters hate a a. re non for the cure of liver complaint, dyspepsia, ch.o,,c or tier. rods ,Ittotity. etc relieving which. they bate 1.0 rival, st 4 h.t%e itt.teet proved blessing to thousaids. , Tv ho near I In. brit. !...n as their pre4erser from ma untimely:grave tVe hi C seen the most o , ,st Mate - cases hi dyspepsia speedily an,lradic4 „ %iy rims! by them The surest test of the excellznce of an arte:. coamerfeite I , this Is the case with these Caters 1 o Jr. Jackson's authorized agents. seliUme, 0 14) MARRIED At the Reed House. in this city, on I,he Lich ins! , 1y- S. 31 SIIIIOI. Esq , Mr. H. Dunkilf, of Trumbull county. 0:. and Mine Lucinda Alien. of Medina. 0. On the 22d must.. by Rev. Mr Sharman. Mr John M Sturgeon. of Fairview, and Mrs. S A. Pray. of Fri' o.m the Nth in•t., be Rev. J IL Presiv. Mr VITO ; ir.. Shattuck, and 51tss Ilulda Li Wuollt.,. both of • Greene. • • On the 26th 'hit. by Rey. P. o,borne, Mr. 11. F. : Fterna, and .M•ss Lucinda Tracy, an of Gawk', --- DIED. .9 If the 19th just. Mr., SILAS CVI %Eli. of this city. aged 67 years. NEW. ADVERTIEMENTS F.RIE 'col'N TY MEDICAL SOCIETY Ftll rarer 9C , cordioc aajottraineut. at Waterford..oa r j at Ito Wel, ea P M. A. ILLILBE. JAtt t • II 'rt ART, Rye. Seey. Lne. June A. M: JUDSON. ATTellter AT ei.W.-4)lliCe Ole Chronicle r Wr3oo.'s Block. 527741 AT 80/ MD. "CAME to the residence or the s able 'the e in M'Keran t arar' ,l r 111.11,day, Ilie dapple h a y m art . c o a. Ore.: Or Carr years wait hlar,k mute. tad, and kir , . -hi.d t'" 4 • and a the wrruead. The (A% ipcf it , pr.,* e pplort‘, pa) Charges, and take at away. . Juae 2r. 1e.511. 13a1 JOHN 1t00PE.... • ALL P101.07:11 I NuitaTen to the subscriber are requested to ralla ,, :iria li s% itlaitit a 1.1.7) a 'cii•t s it ill Le wade on all •s ho neelot: 0 " '- lice-atter We first of August hest, Without reipert of iwiion- June ........ ...SI 7 ' J. It. FL 1.1. l hill , -.... - • TO FARM. F . yein With to ttee agood asaortmem of St tho. Sa4la , .F ol*. ' X Cradk, , , H.lkr*. Stones and Rinev, call ai tat Hardware:4.)m, No 3, Revd [louse. J . - nritrltA . 1r . IN freali Variety at Loomis &C , ..e.. L cenht:teine Lad". 21! 4; ` (.! nifllllo. Breilig I'm.. Finger Rings, "l'ettcth. and e• ~. La oe!, Cud I' um:. limp. k•t,. and ether At...amble aru6es. all oattaT" Laid repre*Ctitcd. (Rl' in—no charge for id l ow,ez. 7 1-1.<7....' CM.VER GOODS- 2 013in and Threaded Table and T , l 5 9"" ce ., 1.71 Fork,. Butler Kul‘e , .. etc. Of our own want:alum mot 01 the fl4lent.l4 of llollun. Engra.e. l June 1..: 6E , CO_ CI A CiiiiitrtiA 1.4 )1:t) Mahulattured to ot4t l.) 111 tO tv,, Breast l'ino, Uraeclet.. Chauu ur rntl.nc{^' sa any .4,1 e., at 7 G. lA)4'l%llz, mrar ,YORE A 21111112.1111 OiD• J. Boarn & Co., *ger ts•' --- .0 3F% PC RIM DUCK. 1.32JE.. PE .4" V.l . A ht. prepared weoutract [NWT. Cheere. and ,ttlt.r 114' 1. n,.. I.rle 10 New V ork—tfirough in that) 101 A I:Sir—Agents for 'Lines on Erse Canal—au traorh;i 4 re"" through direct If MU 111111a10 to New-York. 2_, lot-dale. C.tal. SAIL %White Finn. and Witter Lune. Erie. June 'V. , VO TUE LADIES —A beautiful areortniesit a Mile & . & EnpUsb. pron.), Awl 4 mrri •nn. 1'. , 1 Joni al. a VIITER t FF.O