ARMAI, OP •1,100,400 IN The steamship Cherokee 56 o'clock. The California She brings an immense nu .2.200,000 in gold dust. The general news from C The country remains quiet heard of that a general feels the comMunity., Tradi is the miners were never doin is looked forward to with of real es tateli4improving, tight. The country wears perity. The amotoit.of ree possessed by the city-of Ss ant time is $17,74.5,000. Francisco to Panama took manifest. A terrible riot was repor Chagres bytween the native, - Wane. Many per4ons are 1 A passenger by thg Cherok forty natives killed'and a nt Adams &. Co's.measeriger, I was left behind, and it is ft by the natives. i F Returns.from the late ele , : all the candidates of the De, l from one to five tliMiaand. Governor by about 1,500 m, shat and McCorkle are elect' majorities, Maj. Roman; Treasurer, ,leads his ticket! majirityover Bort. his corn! cvption of the Vote for Gore: ty in the State gives a maj. , ticket. The Legislature is both branches. The whole is about 45,000. Purdy, D Governor, and, Pierce, Si elected. Mr. arshall wa ion the 4th of October, The Oretren paper,' give atittellj of Indien.4 01) the f/77 The steamer New Orlea eine Oct. Ist, with, pasien ..for Panama. She was Ao Sud. The Cherokee bring The Vigilance Commits to prevent immigration of Funnel which, seems to be The•bccounts fr.)m the S On the TIMIM carried on With-a gren deL at Talcolvigelieve also do, Accounts from the Whe Irons than those previously known to have been tota!ly There is a large quantit into the &fiction of Sim ire great anxiety to realtze : aced at 7 or 8 per cent . .er Dates from Oregon 23. There is still a ti.ftic uon of the Capitol. .The p on the Cirlgon Ricers hatel tition. ` FORMIDALLESIOT - AT CI grerarose out of alt at len.• eign boatmen to pretentnli passengers to And from the sometimes transporied the tariff fixed bt the toreiL • native boatman was atta. en by some of the others imaiediately presai)cd °Lille other side pri . pulition of natives, CA negro!s turned out armed end crossed the river in a b boatmen . fled to the o chrds fined by the asspilants, an learn three of the foreign violence was then offered arid negroes declaring tha • with the boatmen, and the to the Califdroiaris throng livelihood. Shots were tif of the . American eOIISUI whom they were kreatly r owner of several boats, an . he took pert with, and su.ti The Amer icans holds solved that if any native LSI in the morning, to take, rrn the mails and treasure ha be fired into. Next morn Spanish side, and about 8 natives bad crossed the ger, to take off pa+sengers al of these Were filled witl - o , g e, when suddenly, regt Jotter, a murderous lire nv guns and revolver+ by Ito slated by twiny California , several boats, emptied of k with shots.; a ere seen pr number killed and druwiie mine. Thine of the naji which was continued so I them we's in reach, psildi of the river, where the fi prevails. The.streets were again in redoubled numbers. an cans was shouted from cv fire from the other side beach, and (Orions cries Presently there ass a cr drerTS of them hurried up Powder was procured, the old gulls were Inputatt to bear upon the Anieric firing, spkiarentiy w ill' ro About this time we sa we reaot•nized as pas-en rounded by natives, who sabres in a savage st3,te. thronged with armed men death to all the Althi3rl - quarter. _ A Killer - mg as commenced along the tenizi-rice filled the atr.— of ...11 Castillo." att.! hen,' he hill to the old fmt. nd Fume of thN empiletof d on the wall and adjusted n town, and commenced and shut. two Arne. leans,' whom 146 by the Oregon, Fur pre cutting at them wi th ‘ They were fi nally thrust ipso a how and the 'duo c'o-eJ. One of them we. afterwards seen at- the Company's Agent. dread still breathing. Of the hearfat the time we wri his wounds theft* could . ' "Mr .1. C. Hackett, of Tedford and Cr'i.s. Express, Ruudl his packages sa •ly off; rernaintng among the•last to see the !negate all nn board the boats.— _ Fortunately RN - itro* ti e a boat with an Esiddish Hag WS+ seen comine up he river, which was known to the English steamship And soon after it landed atithe Embarcadero on •-:Ir side of the river. A' brief Sate describing ition of affairs was writ ten•to the officer comma ding the boat, requesting aid'. Soon afterwards . pt. Symonds of Medwav, secompsnyed•by another office!, in uniform, and - a few of the Jamaica negr ra, whom he had a pparent ly-ealisted on Ins side, peered at the hotpie and hurriedly as passible too all the ladies away under his charge. We had 'hi pleasure a short time af terwards, of seeing the. nit cotonininir them, pull ing Out of the river qn olested. Capt. St moods satd•thpt there would lot n be taco more boats from hie ship, one which a we leartied afterward. was . to take off the treasure ntended fur the Cherokee.' and that if it were posei•le he would then carry tiff tbe,remainder of our pa y;• Two litiurs :Afterwards the boats arrived, and to ing advantage of a panic that had driven niost of he people from that part of the town by the intellig-ace thrall cannon-from•the Cherokee had been pitied id on the other side of the ricer, we sallied forth w all the brggags. were e ore was on board the E ton, the male, and Mr. '. If*, aided by Mr. Folk l o t ie Ceeded in getting it !, . he launches in whic tst English specie ca . borits' crew tinder their led( themselve. op Ivy. exiiitement. flow ma n ! be isscertsined—prnbab ' ' sire of those drawr.et4 that we knew of, 'and 5 side. . ' Farm:cram—ln the irtiek, Daus Barrett eye, the ball coming o head, sad, strange to ea At last •account. the i there was a possibility Etnigratitp-fromutre tensive a sale as eve country represented i tendeaciey. i ozl DirllTl IMUMMI I rrived this afternoon at ate. are to Oct. I. i ber 'of passengers arid I liforait is unimportant: Ind crime is so seldom Ig of security prevadeit ' oroparatively doll, yet better. The fall trade ontidence. The %aloe Ithour,,h money is a little general feature of oror and, pt raorial' property Protein() at the vee rhe Oregon, from Sea '2,000,0U0 of gold on her d to have occurred at and returning Ca!dor aid to have been killed., e reporto mune thirty or ber of Californians.—t •tth alt their despatches red that he was kitle4 tion ali; . )w majorities fop ocratic ticket, ranging John Bigler is elected j irity.. Messrs. Mar • d to Congress by heavy emocratic candidate for having already 4,7q0 et itor. With •ex nor, pearly every e.itl- rity for the Democratic strongly Deniocratic in vote polled in the State mom!, elected Lieut. e Comptroller. is-also to leave fur Washing- l iainful accounts of the ;grants. • • ts sailed from San Fran- P rers, freight and specie oueh at San Jitsti Del a very large mail. is exerting -its etnrts omicts, especially from threatens 1. • mthern mipes are very le, operations have been ~f•Fpirit. The, miners e Hell. fleet are more disas received-15 seoFels are of 'goods !it'll' thrown cinni, and liolders evince cu days prr is neguei- I , etkieroket are to-Sept. try,r4s re . gords the loca ieeeuttra%e7 end freight been reduced by compe- cats.—The r(tt,at Cita "li_ti.e part of r, e 0 1% e a tr.,ru carryiirg e•eatiler3 beentit , e they frir a leers pre than the .11 Imo'lub. On the 22d . ked a reveille bent the AnierMan side...-. 'Om greatest excitement cf the !Rm.., 'The mi hole hagenianis and Jamaica with giprie, Rabree, •dy. lklost •If the fureign but several shots vi ere as nearly as we could rs were wounded. No passenger:, the natives their quarrel was only they would d..) no harm. . i i? whom they earned their . i ed however at the !Ace , I. Mr. Gleason, against i etagperated, an he is the td it was undersined that fined the fureign boatmen.' 14 ( I eetiog at which it was re wtthe cthssed the riser senger- Or the Cherokee; 'tog arrived, they should 1 frt all was quiet on the clock a large qumber ofi i er, tits:m=o6olls of dan-• to the steamer. Sever•. . travellers and their bats.' rdless of the safety of the . Milpetled ()pun them %kb ; 'American boatmen, as-' i s; and in a few mthittea etr occupants and riddled fting out to sea.. The . it is impiissible to deter es n ho escaped the fire:. I , ng esti boat belonging t‘f• d back to their own aide kt fearful excitement now •tiice of the_ Brie-It Ily mangled and cot, but other, nothing could be e. and from the nature of little duobt of hi. , death. th Capt. Symonds and with ' n in his boats. , The tceag eliair launch, and Mr. Clif yd, purger of the Chero , the conductor (tithe train. 'H. (about $2,500 000 I ) out it came down the riser, in itr, in *hick they, with the charge, a ss COT peilfo to i nfirty during , the hcat.of the Isere ki!leti in 01 cannot i •. 12 or 15 natives exelu -4 any,) and tan Americans r 6 others on .the Spanish ough of Troy, Pa., l i n at his brother through the i t through the back of the , the brain was not injured, ritra man was liAing, and i bat be might survive. ad is conducted on as ex• The drainage upon the frightfully depopulating is flit Rifthil ,Ohstruer. ERIE. PA. H . SATURDAIO4ORN I NG. NOVEMBER 8. 1851 Glorious News from California. Notwithstanding the tremendous .•Wow" the whir indulged in t aboint • month since. in rejoicing over the defeat of ••th.t other Bigler." in California. it will bes e en that John, like his brother Bill, is Governor elect—the one of the Key-stone of the Atlantic. and the other of the Keystone of thii Pacific. - And not only is lie elected, but the entire ticket is also elected be majorities ranging from 1,500 to 5.000. All hail Californial. I . New York /Motion. We have nothing definite from the Empire Bute. Stich return` nit we have seen leave the chances about an eves thing, though the woolly horse with the "silver gray" tail is thought by good judges to have a little the advantage, and we should not be, surprised to use him came out a head. 11 he does he will be wind broken for' next Fall. certain. Give Is an . A ' bleCandidate .1 ' OT The UMontown Genius of Likny goes for the "Nominee of the National Detuociatic Convention fur President." This is correct as far as it goes, but then it is a little too indefinite. We go for that nominee too, but we certainly shill i;tritre to secure such a nomination sal can be elected. That is the important point. Give us Availability as well as Talen,k. t`opularity as well as De mocracy, and the contest neat fall will be almost decided ere it is fought. With Caul - or, Buchanan we are swim lied the state: will be irretrie ably too to us, and as gods I it" the Keystone so goes the a+. We infer the leas of I , the State, if either of these t •ia prominent candidates are nonmated, from the •facttt is many Counties the - fend M between that r respective fie ds has been carried auch a lit pitch that it is more than ,p °balite, in case either receiv es the nomination, the friends of the unsuccessful would openly rally in opposition. itir secretly connive at his chi-. feat. Such a state of atturs ought to be avoided by sU means, and it can only be evoided by choosing a new, man. Certainly the Danderatie party is not so hard run fur timber that -they are confined in their choice to the two candidates named. But, then. says • friend of Case, that breve old soldier and incomparable statesman was cheated out of his election in 1848, and he has "claims" upon the. Democracy which esti be no longer poetpobed. True, he lost his election! by a full conspiracy, and his since and pen have both been potent in our Legislative Ilallit and in oar country's Diplomacy; but-that he was not elected is tot the fault of the Democracy. and as to "clam*" that is preposterous.; No man has rc4ime" upon the party, though the pal/ may balm "olliiiais ou the mani.and this is a case !in point. The party hail a "claim" upon Gen. Cal? and Mr.- Buchanait to stand chide. and give room fur a no m inee that can unite its conflicting lowest., slid- secure it a victory. And the i same may, he said of theoft repeated propositiol attempt. osi:1 to be argued by some of the friend' of Mr. Buchanan 'in and to Bennsylvania'sbasing "claims" to the Can didafe:tivk tune-. Nansylvanie has no "claims" unties she can.pre*t. a candidate thee can be elected—ethat its available: and ilieta ' • of tile party upon at the presefill crisis stake at issue is tog rertaitity, such as ivatioit of either Bi with s .bf Ilona' Co nvention; peinfir sinTiperson 71211 =I kitsch'. little fends and bielterings that have crept into the lank, the Democratic piny of this State. - While either Bouillon; or Douglass. or Butler or Wool, would run as well in; other portions of,the IJoion as Caro or Bu chanan, iniPennsylvania they :would find no enemies in the ranks dr opr party Ito stab Ltje T i in tho dark, or throw' the weightkil their niqrses az,altisiltliena an public. With either of them for a cnud+dote, Broadhead and Forney, Cameron end Bowman, Harper and Frazier, in short all who are nir seekins to work out the poliqal an n hila; tion of the ther in the Democritic household of the Key- unite in honorableientolation fur the mamma F:o lie. con of thelr pr Choir Irmo. oclples and candidates. But could they and s, fur they oil have 'friends, and those Friends are among ithe rsult and file of the party, Cheerful{• do so in the othei event?l 'seine extent perhaps they would. hut there anti' be' a cooloess, a distrust ! that they were helping to construct a gallows to hang thensaelves upon, s that woulifbe sufficient in the end to lose us the State. and oonaequentlf the notion. It is the sheerest folly, then. to t.,lk longer tateut Mr: Iluelutiaan's or Geu. Cava' avail ' ability in Peurisy Imam. They arel not available—they cannot etther carry tho State over the head or the other, and hence should , norbe nominated. It? Swan, Snoovisu.—We meet with a good nits) amasing Opageafn.the fight. Which has commenced in tins State, weep the , bet !friends of Senator Cooper end Governor Joh ston. Whilethe adherents of the latter gentleman do not acrupleo chirp the friends of the for mer, tbrether with the - ailininistration of President Fill- . more..aitir contributing to the lucent overthrow of the whig party id Ilia State. the Cooper men are not slow in remihding their accusers *Me fact that. they are but "squaVera" in the ”domaini'Of whigert, and therefore ought - not make themselves so Unhappy about the condaCt of older and bitter whir than themselves. Here is a ) rpecime froin the I t hw laare ,Ccunty Republiras: • ' • ”Not nly jai the Preshlent charged With contributing to the d test if liar candidate. but Medium. Web.ter, . Cooper nd other:doitingm'slicd whiga. who have labor. d all Mei hoes fdr the recesses° i.f whig men mid whig ! mesaures, are s end to have lent their'aid to bring •bdui the remit. 1 me mcia who note call its question the po • lit cal fide hit' of these gewlemen, were doing service m the ranks el the opporinn when these tried champions were battling for whig pr,re pies." ILI" At a enceling or the stockholderarof the Erie and Edonboro Pla'nd Hued on Monday last. lite following officers were chosen for the ensuing year. j John Gil break'. E-q ..Pres;dent: Smith Jsclmoo, %Vm. S. Lane, A. A. Crag. T. D. Chelha, and James H. Campbell, Directors; Win. A. Pa breitlt. Secretary and Treasnrer We under st and the a nnt 'of tolls received upoii this road since the election of the Gate. indicates that it will be a very profitable investment—averaging, for the Ave miles finished, over fia, par tiny P:r KENTUCKY SIPUNX.-.11 verdict_ of $10.090 wu lately given to a young lady in henry county, Kr.. is as action of ,dander earn - Ist hei faithless lover. The Lou isville Courier, of the B,h, eats, thit so soda as the ver dict wee randered, the fair!. riontucky plaintiff; ..Corning Ito toreceive . the Mono ► of the efendont— her only object being the einific.ition of her anis from his calumnious aspersions --directed her coo ul to enter a resuittinst for the ampulla of the verdict; yin what woitid be sufficient to compensate them for th , iii,services. Upon consulta tion they consented to be satisfied with five hundred dol lars, and in accordion e with/the instructions of their ch eat, released the defendent - 4om the payment of the nine thousand'five hundred dull4v. ' : . 0 iNTERNITIONA - L. n. 1641 Y E — T he ko rembir No Of this Magazine betrays no tilling off in interest.. It is well edited. handsomely illifsixated and weedy printed. Among its *Wein.. We rimicir * "The Greet Exhibition of the New-York State_ Agriettltural Socliety at Rochester." with illustatiota. a ertiicirmj of William 'Roes Wallace. the Poet, with a portrait. " eministentee of Fennimore Cooper." "Mr. Jerome the Stud); et theAttgle on Language." with ny ether contributions of erit and ieserest. Terme f siebeeription $3 per year. Striate, ik Torrivend Pit ors. 2513 Broadway. New. jrurik• if J - At en election for ofii. ford Plank Rail; Company. tut. Irvin Camp was chose' Marvin, C. M*Sparma.X. I Managers: wad Jonas Gainsitte ers of the Erie and Weinf eld in This pity on Monday Presidelii; WEL KalleY. J. t Tibbetts arid 3. A. They. la Sten/Stu:find Tree/lir- The Hopis of the enmities. We scarcely pick isp a whisrpapereince the electioe diet is not sanguine el success saltrall, whew•Fte piso. pis will be called epos to choose a !resident. Watt tilt 1864, says Wrong tillhigery. and we will show yearhow sat it will be for. Millard, or Wlnfield, or somebody else "rod and boo." as the iettiein of the political Inde-of the inner may be. to defebt your candidate, be it llooston„ or Douglass. • or Buchanan. or Ceas. Oar neighbor of the I Gozeaa ie dispoesd to iodate to this kind of comfort himself, .and advises his readereto lay in a sufficient stock to last them iu their journey to the head of that river of Salt, so much talked of by potiticiass. Nos, af ter calmly looking ever the political aspect of coun try, and comparing the past er:th the preieni, we are inclined to think slur opponents moat be shockingly given to 6rarging. or the organ of Hops open the cranium of whigery is one of very extraordinary development. Oot of the thirty-one States of the confederacy, but three are now the possessors of whir Governors. Oct of all the elections that have taken place since the idvent of no party Taylurism in 18-18, not agleam of•etintfort—not a ray of hope. has shed its light• upon their pathway; nor one solitary crumb from the political banquet has fell in to their up-turned mouths. From the Pis. woods of Maitos, to the Chapparel of the Rio Grinds. from the Coral Reefs of Florida to the Gold CIA of the Pacific. the banner of D:niocracy, with three solitary exeeptions, is floating front the Capitol of every sister of the Union. And yet our opponents profess to Hoes! If they turn to the national Legislature, the prospect is still mnre gloo my. for there they are met at the very threshold by a ma. jarity of at least fifty, against them. If they turn to their own shattered ranks, wild discontent, internal bickering% and feuds, are their only prospect. In Pennsylvania, no/ sooner was it announcod - th-it Johnston was defeated than Ins organ and mouthpiece. a paper edited by his Brother, commenced a violent assault upon the Administration of Fillmore and all supposed to sympathise with It. Daniel Webster. Senator Cooper, and every other whig not tainted with the odius doctrine of the "Iligher•Law," were placed in the prisoner's box, tried, convicted and excommunicated. In' New -York the same results are perceptible: while Ohio, once good for 20.000 whig ma jority, is now 'as strongly Democratic. .And what shall we say of Kentucky—a State that has been longest and truest in Its devotion to whig men and whig measures. It it perhaps sufficient to show how overly whig hope■ are blasted-in this direction to mention that Kentucky— yes, Kentucky, has a Democratic Governor, while iter Congressional delegation is evenly balanced-5 to 6. Su much for the general,p_rospects of the whig party in the convass of 1E352. • But our opponents tell as-their national convention will I heal all these transient iliiriculties, and- with • popular standard-bearer, they a ill be able to rally as of yore. We are awarwthey are, both rank and file, whipable ma lariat. and with a military leader, "no principle* for th (public eye," or "no party" inscribed upon their ban r, sometimes invincible- We found it so in 11340. an gaiu i 1848, but nom the state of the country is • ogether di rent front what it was in the first na d contest. I whil there are deep and all absorbing que ions at issue I•that in he Taylor Canvass were new d the policy el .the whig 'n regard to them *airflow Such is Ito the \ case at the aerial time; their poll 'is now -k nown; they have been t rio in the bahince a fripird wanting iniond faith and fair de mg' towird e halt Of the'Republic. Ap adiniuistrationlironght .- o powerby whig votes: and ,protessing to lie whig. as sanctioned a Compromise brought about by its grimy in regard to the slavery question. The nit* party, however, everywhere ip the North has repodia4d that Compromise, and the politici ans of the South. of every political school, see that there is no hope of its faithful maintenance except in the suc• cess of the Democracy. And it is that they thus see, and where their ark of , safety lies that iudu._ of the South, almost tananjinonsly, to rid ing National Conventionimill atiS, at their latter how pressing that demand may be, consent to approve the Compromise, or in any way open ly assume to maintain and execute it in good faith i_por settlement of the slavery question. Andthis Imo dge will deprive the whig party. if Scott shoulkbe th r can didate. of every elector's!_ vote with of Meson and Dix on's hie. Do our whig blends doubt third /f en, they have to tater to the tone tied temper all the Southern . whig preu, and they will fiud proof strontand incontes tibia. A paper now before us, the St. Louis Alelligsn cot, declares that **no National Conventioit, however or gentled, can entrap or induce the whip of the South and West. into the support 'deny candidate who is not full and thoroughly committed to the support and defence the Compromise measures , not only because they • clothed with the authority of Ls, but becatiseethey i are ie themselves just, and manre' thap just to the Sim t." This a fair 'index of•the tone .f the entire Souttern press, Ind when a sentiment is as universal as this and as universally proclaimed, there can be no retreat.reien to serve a party`purpose. Now, how does this pitsitiou utilise Southern press and the Siiuthern people.square With that ash* whig party universally at the. Norih? In this State it is • ell known Johnston and with him the entire party. proclaimedthemselves hostile. tot he COM• promise measuring—den uuced them as unjust. and i de clared their determinant) to agitate a repeal some of them. In New boat the party, under the le of Sew - ard t occopies the same around, and the New York Timis. as well as other leading whig papers. admits that the par ty is too deeply committed to the Seward and Julineton platform to recede from it in their National Convention. A dtsruptionmf the Whig party, then, or an Abandonment of its Northern platform, and the nomivation of Fill-. more is inevitable. In either cue; what :can our oppo-. nests hope? Not a State etectinn, if we except Tennessee, Vermont, sod 'New York, and the last is diiputed ground, his been carried by the Whigs since Mr. Fillmore became President. This is . certainly not a cheering proSpect— not sufficiently- so, at least, to enable our oppOnents to predict with any very great certainty their suedes. Ti ext rail. , . crr Icarrury DMA COUP , ier says a boy fourteen or fifteen years of age. by the name of Samuel NichoLft. was committed to the jail of the county:a day or two ago, charged with stealing pia dollars from the hostler at Duty's liotel;on Sunday morn ing. The boy was taken between,Albion and Lockport. on )li\wer to Erie. and the money was found in hii-pos; sesion: The House of Correction will pr o 'b a b# gno him employment for a term of year*. QT Ceutton.—The Crawford Democrat' says suits have heir instituted against several perilous for fraudu lently deceiving the gate-keepers-on the northern plank road, in regard to the distance they .liad traveled. It will be well for those who i.e that road to remember, that an Act of Assembly makes it a serious offence to give 'Also eatement In the gate- keeper of the number of miles travelpd. The tolls have been reduced very low by the company, and their liberality should be met in an honorable spirit by all those who rise their road. IET AFt uat.r Triter A young man, who gave his name as Weaver, alias la Lows, alias Logan, says the 'Mercer IVhig. was arrest . in Mercier ea Friday last, charged with stealing a ho r . He admitted having 1 / 4 taken the animal, but said he took cir out of his father's field about sundown the evening be . and said ite lived in Centre township, Butler county .ef being in cus tody: a while, it was discovered that the th was ute nsils. Here is romance and reality. tEril i a t ud 1 t. hea d- 1 1 At a meeting for the election of officers att. Wattsburg !lank Road Company. on Monday IL Williams was chosen President in place of Walter' tor. declined; Jacob Fritz. J. C. Spencer. Henry wall. Timothy Reed, George Seldea. Managers: ■i Giles Sanford Secretary and -Treaso VT The bate. Us is unfortunate lit "sticking" its "pins" this fall: A week before the election ititnuotenced that John Bigler was detested for Governor in Callfevela: and dint the "other one" would be in Pentissil/Ritill. A week later it acknowledged the later "pir anent stock fast avid now it mules down on the other; We reeks, it will 4. to the eonelesion of the numerable deride pietty "tthite men berry unsidirk" . isirTixesirzolt OUR 110-HANOM WITH IDITIPILIAL DAUM DT A TUL 'ILI QT; WE,LL 8a 11. —Ompi of our exeinangerr says eon subeeribera to newspapers generally mean to pay; inn some inn too wean to do k. Trim every word *rile fo" The man with the potent tooth wuh. warranted to taltO tartar of the teeth. and enamel too, was in town yesterdey., irr President Fillmore has appointed Mr. Bloomer Postninster at Senses Y., Mn, Bloomer, of the •,Bloomer dress" notoriety, being the deputy. crrihin. Jehd C. Butcher. forme r$ a Member of Con grerts,*ud Into Associate Judge of Dauphin county. Pa.,, died at Harrisburg. on Stinday. :P. !Mt. WO:titer is said to have'riceived SSIXVI fur his argument in the Day and Goodyear India rubber care. at Boston• last week. ••IVothing like rubbers" LT 'Gov: Wood's majority iu Ohio over Vinton is from 25 to 20.000—Ins majonly over Visitors and Lewis from 12:to 47,000. Enough fur all praelieal purposes. rr The Mercer De; icrol lie;,r;isod the name of James, Buchanan for President. - Well, eee e ee One of his taste, es the boy' said *hen he kissed die cow. ILT ,forr So.—The best reason a, merchant can give fur not adverheing. is. that by refusing to let the public tkaaw that be has goods to tell. he is not subject to the I wiper* of !mph)} iaL clerks to assist him in selling them. trr s dn..; Smith said there were three things which . every man fancied he could do—farm 'a small property. drive a gig. find edit's newspaper. We have tried all three. and never did tithe* to suit tie yet. CETTnonss Putt.t-trai Esti . late of the St Louis Union. hu become_ joint Editor and psciptieter of the Pttt.burg Post. • The Post. though always a goad paper. will now be better. ! Ti.Y. GREAT QtltllTini!..—The g t question. ac cording to the Gaulle. i 5.... Whet h"s • come of the Pitts burgh end Erie Railroad?' Just what has become of it? Echo answers "what!" UT The Pittsburgers prop. e making a Railroad along the Allegheny riser to con ect with New York. Gor. Johnston is mentioned ■ suitable person for ?rent dent of the same. Er A land of I rty is a land of newspaper.. "I had rather have 'eprpere without a govertiment." said Jefferton. "t' o a government without newspapers."— tirosible a. that Jefferson. ' I:p' , company has been started in S■o Francisco for the ..rpose or supplying ice to the thirsty of-that 'outlaw. T g ors determined to has" ice iroin their ewe. side of 0 continent. . . Ttiac'E of Austria and Hayti—one white end the other black,-;:have lately astonished theirinabjeets u well as the "roster mankind." .by aseries of magnifi cent displays, receptions'. &v. We cannot will which is the imitator. Er A cross ehd bath says that girls who ••aim" hand some, hate thoie who are—while those Who J ere hand. some hate one another.. though they were never known whether handsome or ugly, to hate the ••(ellen," he •might have added. LIX An English journal is of opinion that the tempora ry superiority of the Americana iis l 'seitne things is thi re sult, of a deceased adirity of ate screams system which makett Us &tight. but share heed. That is the reason oar people are so apt to "go it. while they're young." ITT Pennsylvania is the State for Colonels. t very sixth man is one, CO siqa a New York paper. The rea son is obvious--about our sixth of the able bodied citi zens ef the State are .whißs. and Gov. Johnston appoint ed them an "Aids-to•the-Governor." azr Mrs. Anu S. Stelphetni. thei distinguished author ess. iii preparing for the pressW work giving the rebult of her eap co. and observations during her interesting and prolonged journey in England. France. ,Germany: Russia. Turkey. Italy and •LWATI San• 11X IT I• e Francisco Morning Post t whig) groans loudly at the d efeat of the whig par ty in California. and says. "whits the whip made the most the Democrats dii the .. most work." It is al rea'ye'so—tihe wifige make a great deal of itoisa before eleetion. the Democrats after! Tr, J. Ellis Bonham, Esq.. the able and radical ms'm ber from the . Cumberland dihtrict, is spoken of ID various varier. fur Speaker of the House or Representatives' tit Harrisburg. He would certainly make an efficient and popu!ar &chiding officer: QY Twa Vic-roar rs Ouro.—The Cleveland Plafri deafer in speaking of the glorious Deinocraitic victor}' in Ohio 4 remarks: **Talk about the battle of Waterier)! II wee a mete skirmish compared with this. A very P;;ei t) dernonstraticUl . of die catridge•box.to be surer but noth ing ta der` With our Ohio victory." Int in Virginia every man who marries has to give recnrity for the support of his Wife and babies; whiich being often times duiagreeable, perhaps inconveriiiint. many/Virginia lover' go over into Frederick CO:. MJ.. to ha e the ceremony performed.. I The Ablitabola Telegraph; after railing arainityhe Free Soil party iu Ohio for mai utiang its separate origitn hatiani. askeihe question: "ls not Free Soil very tlex ilifer" Of courses—it is' but the off shoot of Whigery, and Ate parent stet" is the most flexible party extant. Horace L. Brooks was convicted. op the 30th st Cleveland. of murder in the second degree. for cann ing the death of snlengineer on the Cleveland and Pitts burgh Railroad Intl'. by 'Putting a stake on the track and throwing °Ch. engine. A righteous verdict, only it ought to lime been in tho first degree. CCP The paper. say that Charles Denton. of Peoria. bee iorentld a Reaping Machine which far tor- . passes McCormickhs, cutting the grain whetheritanding or lodged; green or dry, upon rough or even surface, lay ing it. in fruuttles, and doing it welt. - IVORTAKT QU4sTIIIIOI.--WhOI fads all the onslorel titat everybode loses! Every man we meet loses the umbrellas he hnts..but we have neveigot acquai riled with the man that Ouds thelm. Can any one answerithe question before thq peat rain? tir Hon. John.lM. Botts. a very noted whin posit an of Virzints, has rofired front the carve and armietie•• of politics —Ez papeir. i John. it appeors„thashad a great many ”eares and abx ieties" same he sleiit with "Tyler too:" eat the least of which huh been tpe get into- office. • Having failed al mint every time, hip nifty signifies a desire to retire. We more he be peimi led.' UT One of der exchangers, we do's% know which or we Mould give i credit, thins poetizes the. sneak who don't pre-pay his I tters. The man t now-a-days wilt write., a And not epay his lever— fa .. % . oi l lorbor n Ilse heathen are. l . hat d 't know any better. • ,And If fo take a tine tooth corub, i Anti rak down "all creation.' •. . .. '.. Ton could t And a wooer ma . . _ . ii this e a mighty nation. I' ef A Uerevc .14:11.—A patriarchal lamp-lighter M- Imints the litinOep ere of the cite! of Richmond. Va., and his ease is•ihos de cubed: lie has between twenty-Rye audt thirty childre and raised them all. Ne has five sons who fought th poet the Mexican war. and came back aimed and well. le litres happy with his second wife. teaches his num ono progeny" to read and elite, and' cleans the lamps a dollar a day. _ , \HT Weems. um CID Manic —The I•dial;ii pelo Otale Renton' moues *e l following atarnage De. ttee'Atraardieary • Oa t 1 )b\ 9th i tlyassaa. a tad doughter a odge CO Rae* • • Q Mr Ila I 'a lue‘ i ,' . • . by Esq. Houtoo. Mr. Iloont W. nopooo, to Miss JVU♦ D. Weans, IDeoterooomy [loggias. oohs "Queen is what a Hugel—a yon did til-;.we • :Er We era iinfebted to oar old friend. Purser Ram sey, now on duty as the coast of South Amerlea, for espy of "The British Packet, Asentitse News." a newipaper published in Buenos Ayres. about belt the size of the Ofurraw, at the extremely low rate of Rte number. 4ir $l4O pm. year. TIIOIIO who VA fable at our price, will do well to thiuk of that. P Five carotin the North East and Ene Road have arrived at Dui over tfie New York a d Erie Road. The Duniiirl4ers, we presume, are convinced by this time that we ere in earnest abiut having the six'feet track, as those cars are of that width. If sot, the locomotive to draw the:* which will come snorting into their depot on or abontlhe middle of December, will remove all doubts we Oppose. "Hiner ea 1 0a i'refessionqf Medicine." is the title of a pamphlet abdut to beissied by that popular' pribli'skinc house id Bolsi°. Derby and by Dr. Wood. U. S. Navy of this oily. Upon erhitever subject the Dr. writer. hells sure to , flud readers. for he writes well—the work In quastion. therefore, wilt no doubt • have an extensive sale both iu end out of the professioo. • re In the constant accession 0f new establishments in our eicy, people ►ho9kl not forget their old places of do ing business; Now: there is Sarni's: No. 3 Cheariside, the advertisernect of which will be found in ',pother del- - umn, si r herei we have lie doubt the hatless Mid mildest, can trade as cheap is at any place In.town.- Call and see. —__—___ i'..T We regret to Ifi t irn from the Gazette that one.of our subscribers Ir. Archibald Kirkpatrick. of Harborcreek. f was badly iii'irred by the explosioa , of a gull - on Friday evening. I la right ear "wad taken oi l, with wwwidorithio Incitation 0i , that aide of the head. • f!e , 4a. we are ihfurin ed. insprovilg as rapidly as the nature of his injuries will allow. •i ___ _.. _ .i _ ffr Mr. f. It. Buis's. a Landscape l'ainner, recently, .from Ctorionati. has ensconsed himself in Wright's Block with t• view of-pursuing his profession. Some specimens ,of his work inhibited to urs bespeak e high degree( of artight taleut; and we take the pleasure in commending hum to the, favor and patronage of thi's commuMly, %Ve are the mdre d.-iiroua that he should b e properly ;encouraged becanse, auperadded to his un doubted proirro.iontil turrity, be is a native of Erie Coun ty, and iliittkal a yiditiz gentleman ofpersonalexcellence. —Gatettc. In consequence of tile platicto gezistior betweent the subject (gibe above tootle , n..d mielf. we have felt del icate about.callTitg att.. nt..,11 to the'ruerif of Mr. S as an artist: be t as our cidei..persiry tr the' Gazette hate broken the ice. we may be excused lye sad iug that. In our opin ion. tie giri.s Rroniiao of pretninenee i nt his woreosioo.— Indeed the In:Flare, he has already peint . za here, thou& but two in hiumber, are sufficient to Adam!, him au true topyest of iistlre.—an artist of the*higiliest Those of oar c.tivienis who have a taste for the floe efts. will no doubt find: ihemselvee agreeaddk intertaiued by giving him a call{ i, The Contested Election. We copj: the following paper, iu the matter of the con. tested election care before the Court this week, for two reasons. k'ir'st„ beeauiie it is a matter of general interest, in relation to which the people are anxiops to be inform ed.• The kesoons set forth by the thirty-four original pe titioners, (one having been 'crotched off.) need no ex planatioo.;though it may 'not be amiss to say, in this coil nection. dist if this election is illegal (and we presume the Court Wilt say whether it is or is no' before be go to i press.) there his been but one !evil election in twelve years. %0e copy it secondly—and we wish we had no "suchies'en—because certain managers of the whig parts are induriiiiousle endeavoring to create the impression thrit, because sir. Marshall is the feed Attorney of the- peti tioners—nd we have heard it said of the present iocum- • beat of tht (dice also)—it is • "Loco:ducts" movement. The otter Wdsurdity of this charge is apparent upon the face of the following document. The polittcol complex : ion of th petitioners are thus,—•twenti-nine Wei . 7s, and four eneorrats. Oar of those four 'Democrats is the retained A ttorney of the petitioners, another is a brother. in-law of lte present incumbent. and the other two Cure active friudii of his on the day of the election. Perhaps justice reiliiires us to siy. also. that Mess:s. Thompson and Grail. were retained by the petitioners as counsel. but upon[ ascertaining the' Art that the men who were mainly inistrunieletal in the prosecution, were using their names tol;adele the matter upon the Democralic party. they veryt properly abandoned the case. Justice to nil 'concerned. ton, requires trit to say that J. B. Johnson. LIN . tho•gh his name does not appear among the pets ; utters ii. 4 our copy, it having- been scratched off of the riginal. Was very active in procuring the signatures below. l IVii do nut mike these exposures willingly. I, but becapse tue coarse ceitain prominent acid leadiligt wings }itre seen fit to takein endeavoring to affix time alum of? these proctiedings upon the Democratic party. has lorcetl us, in sels-defense, to do so—and because we believe it a good mom. IMih to politics and private life. that as people untie their beds so ihiallthey repose; To the honorable the Judges of the Court of Common Pleas 41 k:rie County °Cute November Term. A. D. . lai.il. , IMEMEM Your !etitioners, being qualified Electors of the, said coliUty4fr Erie. would.. humbly cinisplain to the stud llonorobile • Court of an undue. election 'and the return of Sexual. jl'uct.f r. Esq.. as elected to till the offices of thonintoly of the Court of common Plea?. Clerk' of the Court of !General Quarter Sessions, Over Ucer and Terminer and Orphans' Colon in the said county of Erie. held in the said iouute on. the 'mind Tuesday in October. in the yearbiatir Lord, One lliousend Eight Modred and Fifty-ont. and respectfully asks the sarciPourt to set aside the said election and return of said Samuel Perley, Esq. for the fcillowing reasons. tie wit: t c , ht. Re &use the-said Samuel .Perley. Esq. was not voted for 'lark of tha u Courts of General. Quarter S. stows. Ot r and Tertnmee•nd Oiphens'Coart. All the T ic ket s 4eposited in the tatot-box for the said Seinuel. erley &Detained on the outride the &equation o 4 the office Kilt which he, the said Parley was a eaudidate. ()Lily that of •!Pruthouotarc " 24. Btcause the said Samuel Perley. Esq received no votes at the election aforesaid, for the office of Clerk of • the Coul - ts of General quarter Sessions, Oyer and Ter- • miner ad Court of the said county of Erie. lid. 'cause the ttckt is deposited or voted - for the said f i. Samuel ye:ley. Esq., did not contain on the outside fur or on sir part thereof the designatqm of the offices to wtsich tie said Samuel Perley is returned elected. . 4th lecause a large number, part or portion of the bal lots or tickets veiled or deposited in the hallot.hoseii with in the several election districts in sattOcucuity at the said electi*ul were east, voted or deposited iu the bellot-boxas for Stowe! Perley. Esq. for ••Prothonotarr on seperatb ' slips "or tickets, which the !oleos casting or voting said said seperate slips or tickets with° same time voted other slips or kiekets for candidates' (be the various offices to be filled atissid election, accordmg to the provisions of the first section of the Act of Assembly, passed the twenty sixth d tit of Fethrattre. A D. 1819. And the. number of ballotslr tickets tl.us es< or voted in violation of law at said ele twit for Samuel Perley for Prothonotary greatly exceeded the apparent majority of votes cut or voted at said Dictum for :311,iut I Perky over the somber cast or• voted for the cot:T.:leg candidate at said election fur the same offiee. reie 'pinery. ss.—Hezekiah Bates,-'John Hill i.ud S. :I,l"terpenter being duly sworn according to law. depoed and sayfthat the Lute set forth in the above and foregoing cemplaipt•are - true to the bat of their knowledge and . •- - lief. t ' •H. BATES, , ~---- - .E.llO. HIL'IL. • t . ! S. M. CARPENTER.f. • Swor mid subscribed hefore me, this 24th dee u totter, 1 'l. C. lk ECK.' Justice of the Pea sti.44.s . Cumber, ' S. H. Goodwin. John P.lViocenl. ' .Charles Cole. Williant Ho:46unit. .M. Carpenter. . Willia M. Gallagher, ' onas Gunnison. Thome; G. Colt, "'- Jos+li S M. Young., Bernard Hnbley. • John Hill, James C. klershall.' J..iiinmerly, . '- James 4..:. Reid, • P. It Oliver.' • .1 ../.11in .4. Justice. H. Deters, - John A Tracy, thit. G. W. Barber. -• J. W. Seynohis. ' C. W. bilsyhory. M. W:t a itti. ' C. ItlxSpinets. . Samoa S. Forster.. Wm. Tubbs. J. W. e r tinore. : Wm. L. Scott. S. M. elftigt, 3. M. Bryant. .1 1 . W. . 1 - ' H. McAllister. A.. Vas Or-labor f.)..t. 1851' . Octo r 30th 1851. the Court fix sod assign Woodsy. the 4thlday of November. 1851. fochesri•tf, ate., end di. rat ' al ep Is be /even to lismiasl Perky th is day of this opplica 'on and order. By the Coort. G. CHURCH. Piteldeut Jodie. tria l Nasty. se.-1. James filkietor. Prothonotary of [L: $.l Ma Coat , . of Common Pleat iit and for said LOCAL AND GENERAL-ITEMS county. do certify that the alibi tole copy of the complaint filed undue Election and Return et offices of Prothonotary and Ch and of the order amd direetwa th e 'son WIMPS! my Hand and Seel 30th day of October: A. D. JAA The shave 'ease was argued Marshall ■nd VinCesf on , the Me4lllll. John Gaibritih. Lat of Mr. Parley. T. decision given in when we went to pr THE LIM Are respectfully invited to • et the Female Benevolent Soeieft, Thurday. die 13th inst.. jolts P. M. in the Lectors Room o . The.objects of this Society community. iiind the intellige shell be sustained in its effort, want, the coming winter. Ti aid from the 11enevuleui. A. A. E. WICIFIT, See. • Er.e, Nor-5. 1851. Ela" We invite We ;tieMini; verfisement of Aries Cliciry! our parr. u a remedy of Mil iuunity. The certificates mit from uukuown names, but fri:i chimed men. Stateemeh. Plsys.mans give their stron mediciue fur the cure of put lied un with coufilleuce by the truly hope its mutts in our sem ctusiiins else w here.—Adecriu MAR Ou Thursday 23..1 ult.. t) 8 G. WILLIAM. and Miss Oar the Ist inst.. by Rev. Tl 3. of KCOC/Oht.. WA, sad 06f:de. , In Edinboro. 30th ult.. b W. H• StrAms 'I, of AlcK stoum. of Waslisagtott. Ott the 30th ult by Z. E.. r vrTx*Pub.t.es and Mien Ss Benson, all of Waterford. DI• Ou the 19th oh., at tuare GRAHA/11. aged 56 3 ears. Oh the' let inat., at daughter of James and Eltz'a New Adve I 10 DOLL* TllF:al.irrreward oil be pl coollaloolooa 10'• of o he Erie 11 itk The Inoue) between r•lo”rti . l. Telegraph i q Ward able be paid .by leas lug epd'lL Trlegoaph (Once 161011 ,1 f 'll ...Int ei.entng r. L. lin ,t. 1.111• Elie rued trailing ti BOlik t f.i11141,1111/ Pi my-two Ijul a 1. iS", tuLr. lie different n.i111,/, There Vl,l 11112,./ ut illl• . ;w:ekrt ntiont one ior 03 given lir' i I -31 1.; thtt firokett But tern !eziok. N uts th • tt here H iiLr f rmd. ur b1.11.0i ‘V.111.01 , 11 . 1: !hair rt•cca‘c Nor Va Nor. 5.1 '131: • LAW wkll fill WI on, eln Lan Ito6tr. an lon bill au 1 ?tin York pr.et-. - - - c'E . IF StII,(IMON fog pt a ivi!the I. :•e In Wr.t -11011. N .. 111 iutt IA-1, %lc Cu Alatel) 01- fitliNs. N. V.. villireeene :4 do* fof about e 9,000 Imo the retate of loaraod vil4l.lled treq,itly. F.ro., Nov. -,1-31, N+ll4 • ttot •vi t ; t . D e r ' :71:::rni s t:;11 r N, 01 11 mule tur%vtail, pruse %IrOrt = .13 o nr 4 T ,AVISK Api.intr 1. My Illartyri... it l l o rt• rP•tv am! he ( /' ,11 . , .T) at She at.Ac Artie' %mark tlfirts. I:ne. Ivr sale, ta-t titt.lllll 60 NOV. HATS, CAPS AND F t r • • Clear this ; w. by e Inn t h ij i . n ., ,t n t r, h r e k lft , r w h t , the r..:•eern r me-. or n ,e,tario etre I lee to -ell th• 111 s 4, lots that I ) .1, the 'll It ere 5at.141e•1..,0 that the to, pl Beautiful Silk Itutbio Rel.e. tor, 3sl, Nlcx,rl othi•r goal- at like km 'amok. el run call and examine for It tr. turget the'' $t rhe.tie.tde. •' Erie Not eruher E GI.IIIT 7S , A'Yta ;den k,L or heto•e the i le of Dect mberier, time, tree... PAM %111 be pent lit to the RNA e feque-t tteeest4irtl plate the orrice in the hands of Lll4 Erie. riovember P. IPA r •ale, by C. Sibley.. al their Sibiu. a am MEM i Attnuil Mooting of thoTitts • ore' and Erie Rail Road Clonspiny. rr HE Stockholder* of the ritt 4 4irgh and Erie Rad Road (.7.,rh• • 1 Ainn). are hereby notified that an election will be held tit the (Mice of rant COMOlny in the if iOr Erie on the tir-t WI, la, of Dee inter neat for the choler of • Inrtern Direct..r. for t , ,e ensu ing )1 nr. and for the trannact.co f naeti other 111.,1if-‘.1 4 ., nil, l.f . tt• reoilimil. . _., t D. ftrAlat.A:f• I L.R. Seex. il (Mice l'illaburgh and Erießnilroqd Co., t , A . 6th fiAuveuther. S.II. ) et2B A dverteier and Gazette Copy. i •_. - - - -- - - -- DZONGL DION. iNiTr WE - is hereby given in:ii .he co- ..irtturr•don fornod) el -I.tlnn between the suhseritifers mi r the firm cr l'hoinion .k.. Co .nt the Eagle Woolen Vac!ry , tra• • ti the llt h di. of An rust hart, ii ohs ed by mutual CO viCliii. Tit noun, hooli•,n114 of • f f WO, of the late firm are left in in liande o ttalnuri I.llei an I Nark . / i ark il. l'wauttiont, ilythe old .t rod, who u I rontinue thr tie in;:il i-si 1. tufniefiV Wirier the tiro' of 1.11114 r. Br moot. A' ,', Prr . ti , 11.4 hat tug el:lints:main:it the I - to firm are re, pted•t, vp,..ent (hem dial) aailienticated for pent •nii , nt nn.d t ',fed ti.ll please call and thbeltatge the :lame n nhont • eh v • ' • don't' Tat R'liTt)Y. - t r FIAMUEI. i.iIxv. . • ii.,ii. ei3i %Il INV; N•dirilen Not .3. - IS 11. - • .1t 2e That' Sall is still Rolling. vvE are retewrinig da ii v. ow Ka.5 . ,1111 . 1 , a IM,Ir ot linr. , trim It• Cada ell. who es now al,sesif. Anti nibo a ii ter...dtt .il the i Vitref of Ido- ant. New York, ant Plbiladelpb.a littlll the a "Inc up or the fad trade. the eteateid arirty of the I,e het.t el, h....M1.1 all ktaid, of Drew end Dentott Gook, that acre r•er rthlhited hi nor pone in any rity:,,anti eh p rier., for ra•h, ire too tow to mention. Many of Mein aid b .01,1 at one half What it roei to make them. So ii., It for the t . M. fselillanr... HT., Clt uo“ Ilatak.lttowes es it's an ill wind that bloat • nobody -itoi.ui—a i hi . tiw iimnufaettireer Imo is the Fafwer'svin. Now is the hiur zo to lay IT owt-11 g9ods. , Not estit.e. h, EMIII =OIIS eavirstrit stArtitoev. NEIN RoUTi, TO Nix vogK CITY. 114 DURKIRK Ala. Ka ilrna d. rontirt* lin tt With 11r( etas, stu.flurrk un Lahr Erir.lll4t t fir h Cnwerand.Calutnhd• n 'nr,ol,' I. • le% ci lull odd eitn.hurgh and Pthunintky and rinc n .1, ron&. onrOtteninent on thr Ohiolnnd Muniblentlin nd ()Wu, ludtuul and Penh.) Iva nin eannlo. TR•Is. 14 AVIS [RANIER AS rockows 4it• Irt „ Morhang 4.lloresa Train at It A. M. - . 'Morning Slatl Tram at 10A. M. - Are.ommodat idn (4 chap), at I 30 P. M. . Eventna 1.:11,re... Train .it 5 P. M. 1 , \....,b1ja Express rattle Fretctit at 3A. M. '''‘' Gib; Way Freight at 4 OA. M. Faze from Ilunkork to New Ycirk. $i 00. - VIN . D.—Th.. 3 o'clock P. M. Train v. tli leave on Sundays and Litt on Paturda}s . OrcondelaresParscncert taken on the Aeromtpodatem . 2 .^ at le o'clock. P. M. Fare throoei to New York. 15 0 . 1 ~ Thin 4 . -onlinin Y I. Prepared tokrattsport lave Sloe k and FTP" oral( kinds wand front New Ylirk: Partteatlat attcotom paid itrdOck, The go., of tht•ll , _ " o4 . brink G feet u ide civei this route greht.mtvantagrr o‘ rr e;if" Rallrom , .., itt the transp?natton pr nt.or