Political and General News. From Washington. Correspoudeuerof we N. Y. Daily W•sioncrroar, The President had a recepticiu this morning, which was welt attended. Tt.c day was fine, and he and the cabinet appeared to be in good api4 its . They hive notiot through with the Cuban affair and alt its consequences yet. Thou g h the British subjects who were sent to Spain ameng the follow era of Lapel have been already returned, there' a nu certainty that onr men will be. Sone carrpositive ly state that the Queen's Government will be sari,- . tied with the pr.ipositions and explanations of the ailecretary of the State. • But the case of Joni S.Tintssusia assumes an as• peat of mare importance than that of auy.uf the prisoner.. Lie, without rev t i4ence of ha‘.llg emiamitted any, oireofe iiga.o,t the Cuban Gov.!. n rostni. t•i he cruelly sacrificed, because he is 4LI Guizers, und because he interfered in behalf of the `American pristmiTri. Thit this harsh treayneut is OCCll,ioriCd by the fact that he is an Am lf lest: and was sus! acted of sympathizing with the re Julian, is not taite Conirriodore Sty cktnn ulTered a resolutinn to day, calling f,.:r infoimat ion as to the charges against Tunssazz,, and the proceedings against him, with a view to see whether he had been as ttit,ch wronged as was supposed. . But it will turn out that this GoVernment tins no information on the subject, none indeed upon which they can act, except by asking for Thra-her, clem ency and mercy, al fur the prisoners of the I.:4pez expedition. Twaisasua was hurried off to Spain in' a vessel apeOielly chartered for that purpose, and for the rea son that an energetic appeal ioa Ids behalf was es• peeled from the United States Goveriusent,threugh tbirhew Consul, Mr. Sliarkie. ' The Cuban authorities, it is believe:l and stated by Americans in-Havana, do not tilsh nor intend. that Mr. Thrasher shall come back to the Vatted' States, because his energy mfght be detoted with much ardor to revenge for injhries and Vittlittnities l i tbst'he has su4ggd. Mr. Websterns'sent ins4ctions to Mr. Bar vingerbur.Minister in Spain: to procure Tnnssu glea release, if possible. He has also applied for a copy of the regord of the proaeainge against him, so as to be ibi.e to. determine ( whether titer° is ground for an interpesition in , h favor by this Got ern- MAL - -If there is no ground for th persuasion should tail, then in a very bad way.i, Remsentationst hire bee tiqs. cement in favor of friends and they may bate a Judging from the constitu on Nan Affairs, of the two dist steam projects would be ery bucce6Eful. • Two of them—one fur a li.e of mail steaMeri to qalway, and another fur a ti e fr.un 'Cahforwt t t o China, were eubmitred, and r•ferred to Dr. GWitt . tl Committee in the S6nate to- y. • X. V. A WHOLE FixtLY Possw:im.—YeAerdav morm i servant girl in the employ of Eli-ha 'slanted Nancy Farrell, was +tepee(' and brought he• tore hii Honor the Mayor, charged with murder— by the administration of p01..4.th. Within the last five weeks, the family; of Mr. Forrest have town seized with a sudden sickness at the stomach —and three of them, the tvif' and t n clii.dren, aged respectively two and eight 'p'ear , , have suddenly died. Mr. Forrest and oldest sun, .%thu were also ,Ist one tine considered rn a critical ci.Plition, have partially recovered. •The last of the three died day before yesterday. when the physician requested permission to hold a post mortem exainination, it being his opinion thnt.the child %vv. , poisoned. The resif' of the examiiiationi has not b e en . made publte. it ha s' ts been as^;:iLa.a.id !that on Tuesday last the servant , girl, Sane./ Farrell. pqrchated arsenic at T. Salter's Apothecary, on Broadway, for the pur-. pose 113 6113 Statel of kt,li iz rats,. It i 4 PUripoSeti that the poison was admiot.stered thr.nigh some of the food of which the fdroilyipartSok. iMr.. Forrest residss.on High street, neartCollard.• Nancy Far. Mt was eominitted to the mayor. fur an ex anitiation on Monday' mor g next at 10 o'cloelc... Cis. Coss. Dec. b. • LATE AND rtlttEaTl.N(i vi IT TO JArl,:g.--ive find in our Colifortris tie• an intereiting account of a recent visit to Jspan; %vhich appears. In be some what of au improvement on the singular and jealou non-intercourdefolicy of that people, though the • are intll sufficieutly eilligted in that nay: "Tbe brig Rose, Capt. Anderson, on her recent trip from,S.ngapore to San Francisco, was disabled and compelled to make fur the nearest port, which, proved to be a village called Nipaliing, in Japan, with d population of 25,000. it id betieved this is tee first time a foreign vessel e%)er entered the port, and no sooner had Capt. Anderson dropped anchor than his vessel Wei surrounded by three hundred Japanes boats, nhol.ept constant guard around him untilitis departure. lie was, after some difficulty, allowed-to go i n yon EliortN and was escorted by sixty men (h.-Gogh the principal, street: All the places of bosiness was cludel, although Capt. A., when he neared the port, saw no PAlenl4l.'e morket house o, an, and an animated appeared to:be going on. Het was, Iff..l' I,,intly, and furift-hed with.sixty aeon t-, repair t .;•-- -I. although. i•• tole fiereenaine.i, three or' t .r addition il po: lice were -.n 7.1; iining islaiid.f They appeared to St. t , j,,ceti at his &Tortii re ." TRIMIBLE COMM IN NOLA NA ..17.,t1e Ilthzpqr Journal gives uslhe full min:t parictilars:V . keonrad Suit, whose death restitted sniWiiy, it is now ascertained by c4illei,ce,. leadiii.r to t'.e disin terment and examination of the body, 6111 n was . the victim of his own wife's wickedness.. The body born the marks of blows, aratlio stomach lad poison in it." . ' A neighboi named John llopkit;e whose intimacy at; &lee house bad been suspected, arrived there be fore Soli dieJ; he was seen giving something in a spools to Suit, who made every ,effort to reject it.— Hopkins had previously told the neighbors that he bad a powerful poison fur dogs and j wolves, which would kill a man if rubbed upon ANthe time of Stiles death, Napkin's ts ire was very ill and ex pected to die. Since that time she has recovered partially, and Ilapkiii's has gonerazy. One of the children told a neighbor the day`befote its father's death, that they were going to have a funeral at their house that week, and when asked to explain. said that its mother said that father would die and be buried this week, Mrs. Solt aisn told a brother of Ault's, that she intended to kill Suit beforej,he snow ' came. . After the filial burial, Mrs. Suit sold off the things and left. She was heard of five or six miles above LoglooPprt• Pmts' kiss.—This is the singular name of a singular man, and one of the wit distingttislicd , of the Hungarian Generals who were taiga' prisoners end executed by the Austrians in the late war.— Tlie following notice of him, is condensed from en interesting account of Hungarian Generals, publish e,l in a foreign journal: - • • Fattest Kiss was a wealthy proprietor, owning twenty-three villages, and was a man of. exciseive, perettnakefrgance as well si chisel& courage. He regularlfiene his linen all the way from Hungary to Paris to be washed, and was. in similar respects, a D'Orsey as well as a Bayard. His coolness in danger was remarkable; and it is told of him that on one day, within reach of an Austrian Battery, ma , Meg an observation, be ordered his servant to bring him a cup of chocolate. A shut took it from ,his hand and killed his horse. ' , Clumsy rascals!" said Mis t "they have upset my lireakfast." When ta ken oat with three others to lie shot, be was superb ly dressed. The o rer was given to fire, and his companions fell, *bile he sto,Al untouched. 4•You bum forgotten mei avid Kiss to his usual tune of voles, The Corporal of the plattoon stepped up'and Sled, and the kat: striking him in 'the forehead, he fell dead without* stouggie. ruin Ntcauuao►.—Aeeoonts from iiicaraugua •tats that a good deal a( excitement exists there be muse of the /wrap ori the PremeAnfe. and hopes an euiewalsed that the ocaurreoce will lead to some positive ection on the part of oar Government, which will settle thantuvotion of sorereigaty of that coun try. Vanderbilt, howirrer, is said to receive uni versal' aciedemeetioi for refusing to pay charges which an *mead upos and admitted IT all met alloid stmosoes visiting shit port of Son Aran de Mc ' Erre. MOINESOTA POLMCIAN.,—When this territory was organised, Aaron Goodrich, of .Tennesee, was appointed Chief Justice, Mr. Goodrich forru6rly resided in Buffalo, a clerk ir. a foundry, iiil4l was at one time an Alderman from the First . Ward. lie was a young gentleman of ordinary talents—impet uous and reckless in his temperament. He Was, while Alclerdermirn, Indicted , for an assanit with at tempt to kill—haunt; eiaered the store of Mr. Ray nor and attacked him with a deadly weapon. Sub sequently he removed to the north part of Michigan where he figured als President or Caphier of • wild , cat bank. The next that was heard of him was his arointment to the impiirtant office of Chief Justice of Minnesotalitt.oppiiiiitnient which every one who knew him regaided as "not tit to. be made." He was removed about two months since fur conduct h.s station—and Jerome Fuller, IE-q., of this city, oppointeil to acecei him. We learn that Judge Goodrich, ,halvever, has concluded that the lirlident'had no power to, remove him, and a vows los determination to hold his courts as usual, , disregarding ,entirely the order lot toe removal . The Court is , composed of.three Judges, and it. has not trantpirefl whethet the other two will recognize I.Goodric!) or Puller r. 3 tkc Chief Justice. On the flaw are like.y to hai.e alivriy time hi :Jig ' llCS4tit•—. 7 llbriny Ntlite Register. Taacc.or KcaTtost,--TiterLnuisvil Cos r -. ler, of Friday, gkes 11 1 ;e particulars uf.a sed lion and ret env, affair in that State, about three miles from Niihulasvine, Jc.%lB,:nine county: Mr. Ben. Furd;.e carpenter, on his return from a short absence, was inftirnted by his daughter that en itnower intimacy bsd existed fur some months be t een Mr. Grorge Frazier, a constable, residing id the neighborhood, and Mrs. Ford. immediately on hearing this; Furd, ?maddened to desperation, took &two his ride and went to Frazier's reridepce. Ile called him out, and when Frazier made has appear ance, h • leveled his rode and shot. Fratier drop ped dew t before the trigger was pulled, and escaped the ball, bat hi, MI, a lad of some I twelve years, uhn wa. immediately behind him, receiced it in him shoulder{ which was badly shattered and broken.— F rd lin keliatelv gavq himqelf up, and on trial was eld to ail in the tutu of $3OO. Pablic opinion seemv.ll favor him stri)ngly, and the only regret was tha the seducer wa4 r:.4 the i.ufferer. The la dy ie nisi very respectable and wealthy family with• hem she is now staying. ... GEOLOGY IN Prxx.ivt.v.txt.,4lle State geolog ical Purvey of Pennsylvania has been prosecuted in tile Southern Anthracite Basin, since the month of July lath b u t I'ruf. ROgers and his corp.; bat the work is now snspendelf on account of the inclemen cy of the season. 'llhe researches thus far have been c , mdueted with Aare - and method, and have Ire sulted le a large irier se to the positive knowledge before poseessed of II distribution and range of the veins of coat.t Nearl • all the smaller basins into which the general con) fieid is divided, have been trnced and connected and their centres, or the lines of veparati4n of - the Plorthern and Southern dips, are accurately deter, ined - by measurements. • Two extensive seta oisurl eye have been carried through the valley, and prep rations ire in progress for a Topographical Map, !which 01111 exhibit the leading featurei and valued f the that l o , lands. Professor Rogers totpresses an opinion. that large amounts Of money hate been 14' .ted by the present mode of sinking slopes down Ot inehmitiou of the coil veins on the spies of. the lbs 141.• Perpenliculer shafts in the basins are re4mmended aiffar preferable as well as leis expeneirie. • r.j i, se of force, in case ' I.II3.ASUCR iii I fear de to-day to the pi s. by some of Los ood elliTt. 'in of the Committee' kilns, I should think • Rei.v.noos Etivecito3.— Not many in milts since, , at an e.; )4cogal Sunday school, nut a hundred iniles front 110. ton, the fee or of the church was examin ing the children oft church on the lesson of the' day, the 'crucifix iersiof the Saviour. After some re- marks-addrissed to the school on this event of the Scripture, he asked::"My children can you tell me wh a thbse , people were that crucified our blessed Redeemer?' A dead silence prevailed. The ques tion, from its extr‘nte simplicity, puzzled them.— "What!" said the minister, "d o * y au not know who they werA'• At last a flint littlevoice responded in the corner of the room with, "I know sir,"— "Well,• who were they, my little child!'' •"The LO co Focos, sir?' The effect upon the parents of the children many of whom were present, can better be imagin than described. ' And what a comment it is upon artizan inculcation! ' COM 041 SING TIIR Wlllti Psnre.—The Demo cratic party, in eon ress, laid the resolutions, en (l,)rsirk• the Compronl tee, on the table. The whigs passed the iesokution approving of the "pacific meat sures." Let us see 'WI' ic'n made the most out of the movement. ,The llemocrats went into. the House 1 on the most liarmr;nious terms, and elected &Speak ' er on the first ballot almost every man coining square auto the rack.' The whig goh, on the contrary, ex pl,,ded and -Licked the gunners t•ky high—the high ' e-t vote for'Speaker heikg 111, which was cast for Chandler, of Pennsylvania.. Fillmore - and his friends are hvinonizing the whig party with a ven• geance.--clalny Knickerbocker. ' THE REVOLUTION! Is 111gs:co.—A correspondent of the New pr!eava Picayune, says ccivitie Revolu tion in dlileaa.): "I thii.k, rum all I can leap rf rom good authori ty,}. and tr(:na rer.ocii, who' know the cauntry and the men wall, OM the revolution in Eastern hleciico oas got up morel to have a chance - 10 inundate the 31ex.lin•Provioces on the R o Grande with goods from tin; Atriei-ican flit ' of • Ise river, free of duty.— flrtis iisville has been rapid y going down o Ain the last sig mouth., in consequence of dna:severe watch kept by the Mexican authorities over the smugglers, and, in corisequenct;, patriotism mse i and pitched in to t-he Mexican - authorities. This I was told by a gentleman from G4lceston,,who had just returned from Brownsville, and who had, lived there long enough clearly to become Mayori!)lle says the town oas being deserted, on account of lack of t ade, fleece the revollon." - .. —=----- - • New .i1A111( 011 DiATINCTIO:I.—A e!esolution has been 'offered in the Kentucky Legislature, Which provides that the keeper of the Penitentiary shall dye the nose of each male convict perfectly black, to ith some chemical preparation which cannot be washed off or removed until time shall wear it stay —:-the application to be renewed as often as may- be necesss-y during the term of imprisonment. Pike of that Kentucky Flag, it in favor of the resolution. willilan mendme,pt requiring the Sheriff of each county t4catch every delinquent newspap.io sub scriher ihis bailiwick, and black his nose, and keep it blacked until he pays up! *CRYSTAL P.l LA CR 13 NRW Yoam.—A petition is alktut to be presented to the Common Council of Neq York for the use of Madason Square fur the erection of a Crystal Palace to accommodate the second Great World's Fair in 1852. Mr. Paxton has made the derlign--500 by 200 feeti two stories; and the contracting agree to have the structure corn• pleted in three months. Mr. Kiddie, United. Steles Commissioner at the Wurld's Fair, has the pledge of so. e seven hundred contributors of articles. DEtenstarg..—.A young woman named Mrs. W est: et. at e about 9 lichick last evening, threw herself off ti,e gust! near Brown lir-Larkin'. wareliiuse with the evleant intention of drowning herself. dr. P. Johnson, conected with the warehouse, hearing the noise, rushed out and plunged into the river, and sititairied bey, until assistance arrived. She was about 25 years of age, and a resident of Geneva, Wisconsin. Some domestic trouble was evidently t he e tt e,e' of the act. She was cared for in the irr'n tlest manner and is nem recovering.—Daily Wu esnsin. • tr. A MISSIONARY Preacher in California thus dmiciiiies an incident; in his experience:— "At Columbia the moat eligible room we cluld ob tain for the evening was a restaurant. When we arrived at this place, the tables were occupied by monte-dealers. The r keeper of the house, with great . politene t iss to me, notified those present th a t the house was to e opened that evening for religious wo rship, and requested . he gentlemen when they had finish ed their games. to give place to preaching. The proprietor kind's arranged the benches lot us. With the bar behind me, my Bible on a- mouse table. and a mixed audience Safari me, I proclaimed the.olrers of the gospel. Common or Tea 'Wessman Rivoss.—We veer by a memorial to Canons in favor of esseeving the obstructions ,in the western rivers, that the amount or commerce Sestet on the, western rivers during the last year iv *etiolated at 112110,000,000; it is greeter than the &whoa of the total exports of the nation. brie Ohotrutr. ERIE. PA SATURDAY MORNING. DECEMBER 21 Mil. Low of the Steamer Nayflower. The magnificent steamer Mayflower, commended by Capt. Van Alfas, went ashore about eighteln .miles above this port on Tuesday night last. We hUve been unable to glean any of the particulars other an that there were no lives lost, though the passenger. and crew suffered severely from the intense cold. It le "apposed she will be a perfect wreck in a short time, as oho laya entirely exposed to the fury of the waves. fler engine will be saved. probably, as the point she *track is a sand beach and the water shallow. The immediate C4USO of .he disaster was Lilo breaking of the tiller.chaius, thus reuderiog her unanairtgenble. She is owned by.the Cen tral Railroad Company, and was one of the .11101 t nificent boats on the western waters. Canal ConunissiOner. We tee any quantity of "names good au4 true." men- Boned in our Democratic exchanges. in connection with the nomination of Canal Commissioner to be made Lt the 4th. of March Convention. Prominent among these aspirants may bo reckoned Cal. fitirdoo F. Mama. of Bradford; Cal. Levi L. Tate, of Columbia; and John B. Britten, Esq.. of Cumberland. The two latter aro Editors; and as that class of men are proyerbial for work. Mg- fur nothing and finding themselves, we think it is the height of impudence in them to ask for so impartial is office as Canal Commissioner. Hem*. we shoot throw our infloence for either; for should either succeed it' wonid have a most demoralising infsenee on the press of the State. Indeed, should such a peecedenl.be smith halted there is no knowing where it would end. Why. we do not know but w‘inight ourself be seduced from the beaten walks ofn pack horse for politicians, and attempt to get an office..l%lo.mo. it would never do—never: Edi tors were not triStio l o hold office themselves—it is their friends and "perm " they labor for.. They make ve ry good stepping stones for others, but as for themselves, they Joust be coolant to plod *lon in the same old beat en path. Se Messrs. John B. Bretton and Levi L. Tate just please to stand. aside feral:Me body else! Not Ger din F. Mason, probably, for be is not of the 'right stripe' to succeed. and is. withal. too capable a man—but for tomebody that has been anointed by the ``favorite," and shrived by confessor. Troublesome, Very. r- Somehow. we don't exactly sett how. though. the Ga- =tie ie very much troubled by "country friends" ntet au. dershanding its position. on many,pubjects--ench as the George Law, Slov'ory. Free Banking, etc. etc..--,hence about •vitry other west:. it is Ahead, to devote a pod potoll 0 0414.00 Or 00 in **tlaArling its position." 'This . w kit •loriaders" through four several articles, in all over a eiiluinn. to prove that it, and seversl of its friende. Iwhich it names, are for the six foot track, and •' - nothing eke;" that '.•Publico" is'nt William Kelley. Esq., but an entirely different- 'endow's, who has'at any interest in the Railroad now. is'at likely to have, and above all, dt.Fist mean what he wrote., •:st alt, et all" All this. we :should judge. is very tronhieeopie, and we do not wunde our neighbor. "good easy soul." that he is, 4 should get out of patience sometimes. Now, to ease our Usighbor a little, we are willing to say that our cores pondent .-Erie" was wrong in his surmise of the author ship of ":Publico." have good esidelece of this in two 'communications from that redoubtable gentleman now in our drawer.. which we shrewdly suspect have been Irojected by.the Gazette.. We don't publish them because we have ne idea- of raising such a storm about our ears as has evidently raged round Abe Grum office fur the last week. The world, however, we apprehend, won't la.se a great dell by their suppression; for, after carefully reading them through, we are ati"Usiath in the ,dark as ever as to what he is driving at. - But enough of this, The GiueUe save we have not denied the material statement of ••facts"l4 its Eittortm of last week, raking up Walker & Co's quarrel Of Jest winter with the western read. What "fact." does the Gazette wish ner to deny, or admit? Wes, it 'lrish as to deny the fact that the Ohio,roid sells its Stock in New York tcr raise Money topriwecute its work? Why, where else,weuld• it Sell its Mock i Where raise Money, if not in New York evßastan? And what harm is there in that? Thent - the E.i tern road sell its stock in New York for thsvemme purpos ? And if it is any hats in the one , certainly it is in th, other. Why.'we might as well com plain of the manageie of the Easter; road 7mortgaging a portion of their real Ornate" in New York to raise money to finish their road, m the Gazette to herald it as a crime in the lettere' toed to sell its stock for the same per .pose. 0 . all silly and nonsensical complaints we ever saw in a public journal, this of the Quarts is the most silly and child-like. • Torre is but one other matter in this column and wharf of **llouedering" that (eclair/1 notice. and that is the as. sertion4st Got. Reed is itt favor of adhering to the re quiroments of the Gauge .. sir. That is not true infect er by - tu'etence. Ho has not only openly advocated its abandonment, but ho lies bests givioraid and comfort' to its *moments abroad all summer. The Groats knows ths..—or it ought to—and yet at places biro among the 'friends fof the pis feet track. Sham*: 87The work on the Washisigton National Monumein has Me l ts suspended for the season. It has now attainec to the Igteigisth of one hundred and four feet from the ear -1 face 011ie ground; and. if it advances with theism* ta pictity isi it has so far done, it will , s in a few years , reach iits apse at au elevation of five hundred and seventeen feet. fo'rming the loftiest structure in the: world; ono that will do great honor to the American people. by whose volunt ry contributions it has been thus fat constructed. frrParrry Goon.—Tbe Osiers Praliaison says Pres ident Fillmore be selectid exteusively from among his poli4l friends in Buff.lo, and gives them good places at Washington. A slight acquaintance with some of the Prosirieut's proteges, from Buffalo. reminds as of a re mark ;made by a Syracuse .papter a few years ago, when a gentleman high in office, and having an appointment to a hicrative place in Ili, power, chose his own eon—it being very clear that the young man oweed his appoint ment more to natural affection. than to any qualifications The paper referred to remarked that "it Will ever the tat ditty Cr • man, when he attained poWer. to provide for his relatives, especially if they didn't know Much." • Er&mar is • way the Plattsburgh N, Y. R•publicatt stirs op its deli oettisubseribem. If meh notices do not fetch them w at will? "There are so.ne of our subscribers who owe us for several years soltscription. who are able to pay. mad who shall pay. We must raise some "foods" between this •nd ths first of January; end by the aseistariee of W. It. Jo:tive, Evq., and the Sheriff. we mat Itusaicss Now s AAAA 11 AT HATAIiA.-A letter from Davao' in the New Orleans Picayune soya. that the cir culation of the Picayune aid Delta. and the New York . Herald. had been interdicted in the Island of Cuba.— Characteristic of despotism. 117 k Newspapers meat to be rather illy. appreciated in Indiana. The Joaroal says that thorn are not more than three or fuer. prolmbly, eat of the nawspapers that are published in that Suds. that are mooting their's:knees. And there is little danger of those that are paying their way realising a forums. The same May be said of more States thee tedium we eeepect. • iIT GILACLUI . , siamber for 311.11111111 —a doable one—is the fins* thlag slier WNW by ',Gra ham." Tbs isugratinvi ere ountorons and splendid and the costribstioss by distiugaisbati istitsro. As original" story by (barest English siovelosit. G. P. IL Asses, is estotiosekesii Is this sosobsr. Several stile( sow &mans an also edited. Er Red saw; troves an. add sad say viand if a ewe*. hats bees the !estriss stapes Is assrlsei weak. Preddestial buthm. Every day strengthens es in the opinions that tito true policy of the Democratic party. in the presont canvass for a candidate fur President, is to eetiet a am mass! One who, while he is • true DamocraS and a sowed statesmen. is unesceptienable to ail., eau command the support of all, and who. above all. in westing his nomi nation will not have to do so by the force of party dril; or, after a numinatino, will depend *tam that moans to secure a triumph. We don't wont • nendidate that it will take the entire Democratic preu of the country to fan a flatus of merely petty enthasium for; we want one who will crests a dims of ••spostaneons combustion" onion' the pesp!e hies .elf! Ti It's the kind or a cindi das;—ene after the feshioac of Jackson and Polk! Theta we shalt much to victory—'itt It on the lather band, we amnia eta a candidate over the heads of thousands of his own party. expectinz that party drill will ring such thou sand* into his suppart, why: if we obtain a victory at all, which it is extremely doubtfiil. it will be snore on account of the division or apathy of the whir titau throtigh oar own exertions. • Bit we not sit do•vn w:th the intiutiou of arguing the point in 'question, for it is self eviti c ent to every one but a wilfully Mina stickler for “state-p;ide," but to note • few of the indications going to mholthe drift of the popular current.; In Maio., Cunnectieut, and throogh out No 4 England generally, Gen. Semi llouiton appears to be tiro favorite. De hat, in the lioittford Times. and the Augusta Cones States. tw able and maths elastic champions, and ree shill not be it all surprised to see all Now England vole for him in the National Con vention. In Ohio. the hero of San Jacinto is oho making great head-way. We notice thatthe Nab!. County Cou rier, in that State ; Dooms' him for President, tud Col. William Madill, Lient•Governer elect, for Vice-Preiti• dent. The Ohio Patriot (edited by-Mr. Morgan, Audi tor of State elect) runs up the tloustorag—ai dote al-. ee•the Wayne. County Evil. a new amocratic paper, together with I others, the newels of which have *seeped our memory. S I of the Ohio papers. on the, other hand, have Come"out for Dam William Allen, late Senator from Met State; but it is evident, neverthelesie, that the conqueror of Santa Arnie al r l favorite with the I • Ohio Democracy. In some of the Western Stiles. and in Kentucky and New York, Judge Douglas has many i friends; and they are Mealy, too.ovrho let vin appaitunitt slip to further his interests. Were he five or ten yearslido:l:we would pre dict Confidently on his uominatiou; as it is, however, we think he will field oppositiou where he little expects it, and in the end Will be defeated by a chnabinatioo in favor 'of some older candidate. But this is inerely speculation; and th f ere is to telling who will be the lucky eaudidete among the new wee, for that neither Buchanan nor Clio will be nominated, we think there is abundant evidence. Congremional Jottings. One great byre of contention in C• 'g ross has been din plaid of—the joint resolutions welco ing Kossuth. We are glad of it, (or never was there a iiubjectio effectual:- ly worn thread bare, both by the prises and by politicians.' as this man Kossuth,. lie is andoutedly • very great man—possibly a very great Republieen—we do not in sinuate that he is not—but the adulation he has met from the peas of that numerous flock of bipeds connected with the American press, called toadies, la perfectly sickening. Every ono has had something to bay. and every one thinks the reading public wool.' bo unenlightened were it not for him.. Indeed, from the m i anifestations in Con gress and out. a stranger wo'o'd los ISJ to suppose that a Republican. • patriot, or • great snail. is • ram dais in this country, where as tlieyspriog.op. Boorish for a ilea son,and go out monthly. But enough, of this—he had been •feasted and talked to its New York tis his heart's coolest. and the joist resthations of web:tote have passed both branches of Congress: in the S mate 33 to 6, and in the 113nsi b 1 nom; hang hike 230 majority. So that Tars i Oats is fettled Gen. Cass, always the first in the field when his coun try's Ironer is at stake. indrodneed 1 resolution of inquiry in the case of the Promethena. lie deemed it necessary that the,Gove ansent should exercise a surveillanze over its flag nod sintaiaits honer. The, resolution . was adapted., TI s Hosea bill. providing for a trawler of Lend Warrants. was taken up slid !turerred to a Commit tee o't the Public Lends -Ssweralinternorials were pre sented, mito4 them. petitions from American exhibitors at the World'a Ir.tir. asking that their censuses Might be paid, and 038 from the logisitturis or _Missouri. asking i lauds far railroad purposes . The first of these memos is certainly ought to be listened to and the prayer grant s . Why not I Certainly the. Creverurnent ought to pay t e expenses of *very "free white men" that wants to maim the "grand tour to Europe." 1 I - Among the bills introduced, vis see one by Mr. Bar ton& graining a pension le the widow of the brave thin. Worth- liters ma a very worthy wid ow for governinint sympathy. but we insestion.'whegh l er it will _elicit hallos roach as has been already axpeudsd on the "illustriiiiis Elongation." 'Mr. Foote's resolutioas,• declaring the CI r declaring the Cornproe4 • heal settlement of the slavery question, has' been upon the carpet, and he and Mr. Sensthr Butler havebeen de. bating whether the resolution's federate a falsehood' et; not. We think Mr. Foote Os . ading this compromise hobby a little too fast. Aftee ridibg • into the Executive chair of his state upon the strength of it, it memo to us he ought to let the mutter rest--especially when by not doing so, agitation is invited. But some people never know when to stop, and Mr. Foote is undoubtedly one of ,hat kind. 117 "Heiman soft Ina Laril!'—The Buffalo "Queen City," under this bead. etimmenta very severely and just ly upon the recommendation, contained in the Report of the Secretary of the Navy, to restore Bogging in the Na vy. 11 say* it is truly humiliatii4 that a man occupying a high position in the Government of the "Model Repub lic" should have a bead sufficieutly cold and cruel and a head sufficiently weak and ill-balanced as to deliberately pat forth such 'a propositiffti. The, lash, faggot, the thurftb-screw. and the whole in fiC,rnal catalogue of instru ments of torture have bad their day.. The cat-o-nine tails will never again lacerate the back of a man dad an American chime on board of a National ship of this coon toy. Such ii national scandal ae the log of the hadepen • dears on her last cruise to the Pacific will not again shock and disgust the feelings of our people. The number and merciless brutality of the floggiUg scenes of that cruise will afford, for all time, an exaMple sufficiently powerful to deter our Legislators from again allowing the dandies and squirts who figure so largely on the Quarter peck front enjoying the cheap liszney of ordering poor Jack to be "Diced up and soundly flogglid." Mr. Graham should confine recommendations of this delicate sort to the over seers of his own plantation. and the backs of die owe us (roes.. We can't interfere with his domestic arrange ments. But in the name of the comas 3nest decency and humanity, we raise our hninbli protest against the resto ration of the reign of the cat add the lash; against the ri val of those painful apectschis4thero BOMAN flash is cut and torn withitripes 'W h ich revival niereY4 with !IL bi. a tin: heart, Weeps when she see* iutheted." U 3 Cot.. Barroa.—Since the retain of Col. Ben . n to Missouri. the waibetwerin the Beaten and Anti- num B r portions of the;)ensoeratio pa4y is that State hub roken out with renew d 'spirit cud bitterness. The lac Louis Uaies, the organ of the Bontinites. has proclaimed that 'hare can be no uoion between the two partieiotad pub !hikes with commendation the proceedings or a aisatiog at which Cot Benton was, semi timed forCespess. end el pre ference expressed for Gan-Wm. 0. Butler for President. and Gen." Dodge. of Wiecensio. for Vice Presideit. ILT - Hos. Wm. L IR taci.—The Kinderhook Sella Mel of Thursday. • paper published at the 1!00110 of Van Su. res, comae out strongly ii favor of Gov. Marcy as the Democratic nandidato far the ; next Presidency. Cr Vasty PuosAst.si—Boyier, of the Carlisle Demo crat. says boy much hi dreaded. is his itiboslboy day% to los polished by slid*, batmses two girls. Alit tho force of education. is atter years ho Warned to submit to such thists without itiodding a tom. Er 00407's Lady; Book: far "m isery. fatly sustiloo its highropstuOss as ■ Malaise of itsperior teen!.• ft mesas tie essivolutse hoe si. ' ?rift. •3 Par Yew. Oar Country's ?regrew. :Tee census of 1!!:0) exhibits' gratifying evidence of the "regress. le Wealth. 00:sulitioa, cud every thing else con. sainting a happy and prosperous :nation. of this country is, &sr the last ten yeanz nail if i any thin: was wanting to Ei pat to Bight thst"ruin" and ...alisc," croaker' of the press tie and of Cuogreer, the exhibit.; roferred to furnish it. So Cr fez as population' it cincetneri theCCensus teblei exhibit a ratio of increase for the teal yetris prior to 18.59, consi• 41 derably grocer than that of the preheding decennial pe- th nod:'tad thos e estimates of popuiskion which had been N Wood d upon a uniform ratio; of increase , turn out to bawl wid of the truth. This reaults tram the extraordinary tot e influx of foreigners. Wh:eh has otkan place within the Ti last five 7 1 cars) During that period, the number of im- rii migrants has been equal to the fifteen preceding years: an and the tide still swell,' higher with every recurring sea- re, son. It is alioady ascntairle4 titit /bout 233.000 Air- m eigners have leivirsil at IN owl York atone during the first co elevin months of the preeett year, leaving hale, doubt i t • . that by the first of Jaauary . lhe number will reach 31?".- s e 093: Fur the other ports, it will be within bounds to es- ba •fimste the Nair if. at 100.01 more, making a t nal. uf om 400.0J0 trianygriate in one hoar! This is equivalent to t o , adding such a:State es Nlicliigati. with four Represerita; fro tivcs and two Senators, per ; annum. front this source alone, besides one of equal i4ze from the natural increase of our people.: It May he salfely estimated that five init. 'I lions of 'foreigners' will Ravel inigrrted themselves upon f° Our popii'.itien ha t.a yeoirs !ruin IS.10; and there is hr almarient evitence tlist.thalt nurnh!r exceeds the total °' amount : , :I"mi:ration to t4ele shines, from the set- denten. at Jantestownep tS this time: It is only with in a few years that our poppiltitlon has beep. materially iud.re%” , l by Lim•nigration. j Prior to 1825, the umber of ie.:a nt.grants rarely, if ever, exceeded five thousand per aaauss, while within the laid two mfg. fifteen thousand have arrived at New Y a weik: The world Ir.: !) , :•t, wondering fpr thirty year) at the rapid settlemeut 3..1.1 giowtiti of our frontier States; but it the progress whic:i iis.s been witnessed in the past is ae C nothing comp irLd .3 that which is destined to exhibit it- / Y ',Um coining years, %Vitro the State of Ohio corn- li mined its career, the :iepulciona. r die Union was little c: more than hiur tnillione, dad the emigration from DPI rope was perhaps five diutUtand par annum; yet, in the itv first five ye/rs of her exiatence, her population rose to ~.‘ forty-five thou'eand, and ini the next too, to two kindred ~ and thirty thousand. It iii to be remarked that at that period Ohiefm ored the w 010 fiat tn vier oldie free SLAW% St 1 1 which cir-ustonce canc.. tr Lea the whole tide of eini : grayed opal that State. istlliarets, at' the present trio- ( 4 1 wren:, that frontier extuudS from the parallel of 49 deg. to L 40 deg. 3) tnin.; and wa i st of the State of :thesauri, it 111 will COUP: down to 35 degi 311 min. Bar notwithstandiug d this wide filld whizli opei s b•-forti the tide of emigration, the iminen+l volatile wit eh it has acquired will fill up uti Michigan, Wisconsin. a lowa. with a ,repiti.ty which I r his newer been witnfneseli in the history of the older , States. Tbe progri es of I Wisconsin in the ten years pri. I 1 or to the taking oldie let i ie coastal is unparalleled. From . thirty thouSan•l iu 1940, its population rose to three hun dred and fire thousand ia tb.so; and if, like Ohio is its ear:y b:seciily, Wii l icon in . had been withuut rivals in the absorption of Northeru i • 4 European emigration, there is little doubt that its poput tion would now number a mil lion! But Alichiganj ll nevi. and lowa, all equally rich and accessible, have inc eased with nearlylequal rapidity; and by spreading gle p puleuou over a wider surface, broken into separate St si organizations, have prevented the exhib.iiim of the sub hue spectacle of a groatcom - pact and Fitipulods State,ithe creation of ten yearn! ! I , _2 _ • Newspaper Postage There is evidently a Combined efTart making by the city pig/Wiers to induct' Cuagress to amend the prawn liberal and just Lew of , newspaper postage. They are not satisfied with its disertininating feature by which newspapers are charged postage accord:mg to distance. They wish to go back. to near as may be. to the (Alma system of the old law, by which the blanket minims of Philadelphia and New York were transported hundreds of miles sit the same rates that the lac it newspapers' were ca'rr.ed &netts, And strange as it incy appear this move, which it does not take a vole great ansonnt of brains to soe is a d.rect st sb et the 'country press.fiudfc countenance and. indirectly, sit n:.ort from thc i-ery quarter it is intend- . ed to injure. T:11 - orgcmaction we refer to is known as the'••Nser York cheep pesters Asseciatibe," and in num bers of Or conntr; cote cooraries we find thq proceedings of this sell cautribuTed body of regulatorti as regularly chronicled s.id hoticed es thnues it had for its aims thee accomplishment n'fthetr..t lan hide object in the world. When we see o uot wonder that the local pram is inefficient and without intiaenceifur how can a press be etTscMnt and have influence that•does not know enough to take care uf .:g 4P Plow can it be respected when it voluntarily assunili the office of turning the grind-stone that sharpens the knife 4estined to sever its ern jar:Liar . vein. For yee-s the kcal ress. which may justly Be called the bone and sinew of e dry, public enterprise of the coun try and the spree i of initellip , nce, from a district school to canal* and t:ailrusda; has struggled against the odious featuresiot the.old nawignMer postage system. tinder the new. ivnich' is a veq fair step totrards equal end es actjuitiett. it is fast assuming an inlluei!co and positron commensurate with its iinportance. But this does not suit the intermit of the geutleinen of the - metropolis. The leesl press has been their "hewers of wood and drawers of water" too long to be given up sow without a strug gle. The city press has been the pzpouents of public opinion so lung. that its conductors are loath now t.i step ba4 to their true position, Hence these "cheap pox tap associations." They know that "cheep postage" is a popular hobby, and they think if under it they can se cure a ianiform rate of'!one cent postage on newspape tar any distance," they will regain the foothold they hay lost. .ti.er under these circumstances what is the duty of the cauntry press? Simply to be troe to itself. T.' shut the door io the face of tneie "cheap postage" gun tiensen, and when they send their circular, forth colic ling cisoperatien in their schemes, to bead them bee under aisvelope t unpaid, and thus force them to take • dose or their own medicine. • I . _. The Erie Ots, rt.,. .se in favor oCCoI. Snowden f r State 'Tretteurt r. If .ve lived in Penusylvatsia, we won d go iu for Sloan. of the Observer. He's a righteous be . and oeght ,to have the allies —Oswego Palbufiuns. Thies so: but then wo are told the ••rightelas" were persoCuted in all age.' of the world; hence our hence fpr eci office iu Pean.ylveuia is *boar as flattering as t.l a prospe i cts of that !alio* quadruped is a certain namet se eiiispot 'Thou% claws. The fact is. nothing short oft "q - eral.'f or "Co' utel. - "lor "Meier." ever gets office h.q.. and it is not, ery mate l ral whether the "General," br "Colonel.!' or "Alskir" aforesaid bail brains or braes. en that he beaves 'in acid wo•shies our political trinityl-- Buchanan. Forney and Br. twier. . . Tlir. BENEFIT or AUVLII(IitNG.--.1 . 40 B•311t0t1 Ti • of Thursday. says. , The gentleman who wlsoltised for a wife in the Ti about a fortnight sines taelis,l on us Yesterday and said t at through that advertisement he had been able to select 1 one Of the bestof women and he was the happiest of in n. In addition. he handed us a ten dollar gold piece, • d insisted upon our accepting it as a.present from his b etter half. , • Think of that. ye , freezing, bottomless, shirtless, b h 7 ekirs and forthwith court or advertise: • ---.._ _ _ ______ _ ______ , i IltDitave or Gas. .131Lasar.—Tbis Fort Smith 7 aid 41 the 21st ult.. 'anomie. s the death of Brevo4 ' ig. Gei. William G. Belknap, .of the Fifth Infantry. his snit leek place onithe 10th ult.. WI the General ree f re turning from the thisaos. between Preston. ingexas, end Fort Was'ute. Gan. Itelinap's family was at Tort Gal loon. to whibh post he was proceeding on sick leave. iHe watbetweee fifty Mid sixty years of age. and has been a fisitkfal and gallant! racer. ' - , , Er la the 3%090.000 of the United Statae.populatiou theta us more pompon who habitually road and Writ( than eau be found is 150.000.000 iu &snipe is one art 10134110tt Off in any shape you please. iti The MediOa N. Ir.,.Clitimi(Beward Whig).`tpar a •fosounti•ig rote over some remarks which it aka is Ostia' to Presiid' eat Fillets:Vs 'rose Musa • Sittific tot. I • I GazeUs, among its melee that an effort is maid dy. i n to torn out a portion c 'in nd North East road. I m intended to be thus mriright, Ind Tracy. Icl zette in morn scared than hi Is ascertain nothing 0, er. is • determination t ewr. ork directors in pie ho it is believed. had bee r m f the New York met ra we heed heard it ! and Tiny are intim,' the former has a he; 21= than fair to the lute esti gie t 1 n4nonity that he ehohl and oftener at it, -Ti nv movement on fo• • a • , except that for the ot • :lieve. and the Ga ze , o . a pod drat to tte Irk Cthe tree clanger up 0.13 1 - la The o ffi ce of tho 1 -t. caught flre on T he prompt eff.als ur • • beets consumed. $l5O to $lOO. il l / - VIRGINIA Ei,tcrtois election nadir the n i k. end, for th. first ::=Em is that the Denise rwbeiming majority, ir Mr. Franklin Mo is °tice, has bey°. tangos ascken, a ' We wish ••Frank' ly look of the ••Sock nay, we have no cl. 1 .., 1 r s )tile time a compositor on tor the pehlisheis'of the per übliehed at Randolph, N. tuu ant ruccees, and front the " nd our knowledge of L a tth wish will be reala.ed. _ _ _____ _ • r . PISTOLS AND - ColliV.E!. ens.— has written s most Albert G. Brown. . rout and malign/in agely on Mr. Brow lg - Our local colum .11 44t 16 owl cau'L lupakt 1.1:1 10, -that it can't be rea he, uld be like soarchiu ! fui - 1 more honor than :uc, W 0 .looked in at tb• it; o g M the Reed fiouf, r n? had not been qtt e s t ea could get the te l w t e evenlog. Perhaps -ni i may be more coral tahl ar to ascertain, and 'f th, ut you, whib the' . übs en. Scott and his a my met, of Mexico, yo et% yen if your toes ache and (Cr A Ntw Mitt. Cu: WI to have lire,' uta.e. st the practicability at c era to any diststice. y to mile of pipe !was laid. apera were to piss, nd otritnuniestion In t. a WI o:k. eaa be etticte' In a! :r7 t 1 •'3colt and . r.ll el by the wfils.re of Yes: !ere tint ••t;re roir o ai •'onrcntign or ow C cu 'mum or no Virden. ' Vl3 C,Ni" hiss luta -try); ••±I .1%2 c;:untr, firK: 11,1 I:, v:f..rnitcm;,l to g) for Sc.,:t, n:i. t. J.k!i.l-ton or 00 Litas;on. E• . pi uions do not cost any that I not mak any thuig for :ha. preeum6 the"'Clni AN cljourne I mating o th - >se fay. , rab'e lc the cree tion of a new c.Mnt • . out u parts of Cr,w'rer t and Ens counties. will be h fit at "einhruigt , . t.raw,urd coun ty, on Monday, Dee :Thh. It is exper t el th a t all who have au interest iu this pr ii-et, will ho 11l 111:' , Uliallet. there to give an'exp espion f their opitie.m...A., a nice t• ing held at Wettd . ° .ontt e 13th inst.'. it-was kesolred. That we petitioU th. Legist turn of Pen us) I s a ,, ,, , !fl.lists a law erecting a ne • coon v out of the parts u' Craw iurd and Erie counties. ti be ca led Lehttati; with Wolerfora as its county seat. That t eefing was large 04 entha simile. and warm) - the b lief that success will troop the efforts of those iow mo ing in this project. It is then earnestly requested • hat all favorable to this nie%cment will be in attend in-. at th adjourned tneceinE to he ne:d at Cambridge op Ic. 29t1 . ' LEI.III:LFF. ‘Valerfurd. tlfec. I. 185 . ox t..—We call attention W t 6 • now in our paper. •od en colds end coughs.. are it contains will not be found ATtliS CHERRY PLC. advertisement of this, Itrtiel thisseasonof the fear prevalent. the inforinatlon unwelcome. • The l emiae it, are coaclnnive trjoth f' we here been,t`evo'?• wi many distinguislpt4 indiri ers Who echo le r t e lts thei me4ine fo the 7ery dangeron disriaseeJ It is Vac, dis eertai+ ver tlicted with cough. told nese. or indeed an yl of the will do well to try 4lte Cii cause to regret thelesperi t mimes. lent to MOMMead s value. In addition to these • the perusal of from .uals as well as humble sufflr indebtedness to this ialuehlt f their health from painful and at once safe and pleasant to powerful to cure. Those al . asthma. bronchitis, bowies various affections of ttie leap. wry, Pectoral. and will have le aunt. NAitB,IED. • Oa the 9th inst.; by th ♦s McNAto. of COlOll6/10 Rom of Green townshi. - At the res:denee of h• nano. on Tuesday ow• %tams. aged 76 years I On the 13th inst.. at John Cook. in ktilleree eites Taverit • aTHE well known Ea& V ttlKe. Otie a creek lionfe. • it o (null on the tiro or Arr a. quire of the sutorrther fie the YO, 1,31 CPRNER of Fourth and Model Arehneed, by d 21mouthly parka. • The above work is.des I those directly interested I eaneement of am noble or their taste and 'aeauainta manner in which x ie pr tasteful ornament liar the neatiousgive it the!highc., 1.1. and 3 Prwe--50 e•-• 'Race klqU EL 5t.0.1.5. ed to meet tip. , builtlinget, but all titt ,,, !.-•re , i" tn our ztutuuy, au.', ce with arch Ile, tut,. • t red and embetii.h , 1. r , , ty"' Itawine-rouin. *title • practiell r del:very • Addre . a4 at•ot e, pH( Lt supp, Dee. I.A ETT ter ==! es - Cii NA . ele l~lou; Deo 80. AV A bei thy eeed. le ' r CITOCI 6., Jewt insperinat A N M 'ell 'etilt7.l = Erie,. Q RV k.:l 14., him that the Erie. madAtiqg in skad melee. About in the p. 111.—The snide, eveir se Meet. will brut % the h et t - "l . Jes`: l .f',i' 0 ;, , , , t , t le. Opposite BrOt , • thin Hurt. 011!Or s'flonaderings," in t i. ..) , ; somewhere and by some ( the prksent directors of the t also intimates that the goo, rated are. Messrs. Kelley, this, e apprehend the Go tt. 6 far. as we hats be ep the ki d iii intended. That prey sat the elect,on of two of Me is. King and Jackson, mar ed by those at the bob ent. there Can be no doubt, pate that, as Messrs Court. ely anointed in business, try c tract in Canada which, of 'th time. it wvtild be co' I the company and th e . re ace to setae 420 equal = : Bat that ':.ere is any to hange al. ponies of tbe Cti it of Nos e I uric,, we do is • rirrilt,,,ne the: tLeca HI, n Tort to lead I , ;e pub'm ct ratscent. Tart . I uha Gaibralih. an &ma poraial haat, and bat • MOO .11114 Calitaa. WOOid was, the damage II mit Nile 041 Waniuiou held her , ucituhou ou Monday hist h e c.tried t YO 'n her history, the people ett autho:it.es, and the re :hes State by ILI ay 1/.O+!Ql Senator Groin, of Catfur‘ rd n.T biter 10 the ex-nuldier, charting h:nt w:th we: rchee," and cowmen: og rOrite sod public charac:er. •zett op this week. Ths .e 3,1 with therstercury dawn on Li • 41; a 'twenty-Coot piA.. St rSi John Frookku—a rat leess a Pannarataa, new ex1,.5- huridly evening.. It thi d, we,.do not know bat:, pat at a ill tr:er L, vaying 41.1 igh as it e. its 1441 ea the city, tie• at toaat it win attic coo! s. ter is bay tir the spirit et :6 tc s tikes up iaakee Doodle u at seen marcitiag through the •Iti of regret qteexper.daare, to it'd cktatter.l ,ss• rasa:.—A ui ri espenent • on small scalp, in Boston. to ioneying letters end new•ps te sof atmuipher,e pressen th ugh which the letlerssisi the onclust)u is arnveS V. :hit 'lly between quston t : .,1 Nts h.) , I (-4.4 r tiztretzv.r. ©ICE, Rev. J. F. fired, Mr. Taos- Ohio, and Miss C►nousa N ~E D . son-in-law. James 'fest. to V.- /line the 2d inst.; NartamnaL nd 7 days. he residence of her !gather Mr. !; Miss Ei.tcta COOK, aged 4: , • forialo az 32.7nt. • tol vtittittmt• Tar., st mot •ttot , t , • t•it• • II Fred fur %LI: It \ r Fur ~lwr r ascr piew, - J ,, -t rt. t:NI.\111 ONES & G. Emma Oa's pare OA ,r ht. rranted pore an I .4 ,, I J. H. BUR ri" & • Plagti.lN44;l,cap. ',vie i. , ..‘'. ' isp4rent arl (4, , i _ J. II Ml' It" to. R 1 ' try and Lemon. 1 . i I : • •• 01 .1. 11. lit Kl.O. & e. I. 1144 Almond. R •e• 3 , ! I , fineEalai 11 . 1 J. H. 111 g I' , ' A . 1. ift.whelt of 1% Litt ' J Vrorruti tat tot• ft.} tht higtteit price (1.410 be Ready. hie Wittier Na ok Present+. whit!' n :I: !re rt!'`o wc re(1114,4:. .•3 Jaw elry. . Lk. l tinrr ' 4 . Off children's lu.o , • 4,111 h• at sloo.kloN'S .tra fine dnele% • at ;. t t. ,1 % ro• iti TO)ii it•it •-*-- .lin uit'l 0 0' be 4 prncd ta!!..e, aat Mai* Vr.Alll. the !To idnirt h 3 surer? (bumf at ibi.t `t• After exan.me.c r).lu. te Iment than. mun s-.e