Jndge Lewis. . . . , The followingls:the-translation of an ar ticle in.the . /Think Democrat, the Gtinnatt organ of the: Whigs of Union county, and' which is edited bYjiluel - Gutelins, Whig well known :to many of Mir - reader& J.i:u sayer ...There aro ten candidate's-before the-pee. ple for the Offtee of Judge . the Supreme Court. We pro,persenall,y;steguainted.with. indge Lewis, and will take-this opporttini ty to du justico to our oldfriead. ..11 - 8 was a Judge lin our county when we were Sher iff. 1540.. In 1841 wo met. with an acci - dent, having our leg fraetured. at", three - were confined for' nearly ; year' The times - were herd ,th There ;ti:great 'deal of .b'usiness' Ur - the Sheriff. -1 Our Deputy bad neglected find mismanag • ett -Our business so that we were in tlanger losing :largo suit* efmcittey ; our bail - Would [mei, had to puffer, 'With us. •; But ihniugh the! goodness' of Judge Lewis, we were saved, for ho plead with the Plaintiffs irf eiecutiott, and : their Counsels, for time and. Space, and assisted Cs that we could get - our bpsinees;arranged: We • rejoice that we have an, opportunity of expressing oar gratitude towards the Hon. Ellis Lewis, with was: our friend at .. that Wo needed a friend to save us'and our bail. ...Ttidge Lewis, was a poor boy.: he worked bi - k.way. into a. high station he occupies by lgivhonestyl and industry. - Ho - had no money or wealthy friendi to hint i in the estimation of the_ rich ariit e eratieP He ,emphatically a 'soli-Made ;Man,. • and -is the true . genuine friend of ,thy, poor. We have_ given the avntimeats Of .our heart long treasured up in our bosom, in faeor of our- old friend jud l ze • LCIWiI. " • PmEi canal COmmissioner—Gov _ ! .Johnston, The °allot Cormnissiaper annually sti- Jectel to tis,ist in the expenditure, of 'so large a slum should be no ordinary man, A Iliihnoest! officer might Use his position to plunder. the. Treasury and aggrandize -iimself. ~tIM ignorant officer would be in - : Competent to see that others, subordinate -equal to llirri in office, :discharge their ,whole datytwitb honesty .:and fidelitsr. _Cheeks in such a body as the canal Board are dt'ArahlO and--necessarY. They cannot be t o mimerons or great. .One of the most _ ,ffnctireli., a representation in that. Board nt ,each 'c.f the-political paqiesof the State. .Sitell an arrangement would destroy much of the eppirtunity .for wastefulness, and would result, in the: saving et large amounts to.the State Treasury." I*;We takeithe - above extract from Gov 'Johnston's I speech, - delivpred before the ,Federal State Convention at Lancaster. .the'Fhigs were in power in this State, and when the three Canal Commiss loners. were appointed hy the Governor, how did it happen that " a representation in the • Board of each of the political parties of the :State" was 11146 rernilimetlded then ? Du 'ling the lUtuer dyn'asty three full blooded IVhig,s composed the Canal Beard.- Then, itideed,.was wastefulness' practised--; aye Alio; people's money' ;Was squandered by thousands, 'and used'for base political pnr • prise's,. If Gov. Johnston bad the 'power I ,tested in 'idea to appoint the three - Cattail 410mmissioners, is it at all likely that be., •W,iill*.select a • Democrat as one of thel • Board ?, Islet he. , But be 'uses the lan gtiage of a hypocrite to induce the people believe, that he *old like to see the Canal .Bnard enmPosedofmen oftlifferent polities ! • The xlishonesty, of this profession "stieks , j . out a feet,''; ' Why•did not Joseph Rimer.; When be appointed his three Cadal Commis-u' Sinners, select ono from' the ; Democratic! partY? '• When our Federal opponents an swer. this question, the pen* may bd in duced to believe them honest in their pres ent profeadons. . , . Now, in our opinion. it 'would he a seri, ens it to the State to have the Board of Canal Commissioners composed of men ilifferentipo:iticia. It invariably creates jealousies and a division of sentiment iu re , Bard to the business of the Board. We' • treed only instance the tact that during the tlirc-e years that Mr. Power (a clever nun lint a nole'nt Whig,) vas a - member of the Canal Baud, there was leis harmony and, more wrangling'in the Board than ever was knowu before. Two DeMocrats and Mr. I Power composed the Board. Mr. Power `,was ever vigilant—not in,the discharge ofj ' big public ',duties—but in'bis effort to fa :Mint discarabetween his democratic col . leagues: This was his btisiness-, , his only business. L.He felt that hp had no respon-1 sibility resting upon Lim,; and if he snocee sled in getting the Demoeratic Canal Com - mixsionera h - Kteriteatis;, be felt that he bad discharged his duty---to his party •at least. if not to' the State, Let the Canal Board then be composed .of three Wien bolding the same political . views, and the interests of' the State will be snore serupnlously guarded than they would _ b Ire if the Bard contained men of different 1 'poll:jell views. Goy. Johnston, had he the , . power would place three Whigs in the Board to : inorroW; notwithstanding his present -profeSsioes. We hope , to see our Demo ratie brethern of the .State pull together -for Ctovue. ;he is the regular nominee .of _ the democracy for; the ; rtspousible and Natily honorable office of Canal Cen miss- Y. ors-, and he deserves, aMi thhuld recieve, ..very Democratic vote in; the State.— Car : , lisle rolunteer. t TUE GoVERNOR WAria TYSTE.—Garen.' • nor:Jolwaros - tvi!l at Sign the bill to, re- • , th:2(Thstruction Lair,- till be has had ..tnqu. to nonsbler 'is in no hurry. - ]1 tine hundred and -thirty-three members the - Legislaturein two 'Tars could not ever Jt,why shouid ono man be - t 4. nitcomglish it;',Bobnei? 9.06 u-ding Its h g rule of Arttlunstie t eevernor, af -1;4., Laying i.ddlaying iand de ntinthe bill ,for two_ ye*, in the -.face _.r urgent efforts inite.faver—after body 4ir imndred and thitty4hree - .lnen' bnd this time , ;in gv4nig even - a paititd .toi.Mtute' tlitough-ltn4,llitakebbn,-. at the least two itV” . to make Up A. iii tie paiwnee,.as ;tell as -„4,ktln,,titn . o, it .J 0 $000..13 neeossery iitbe Getup r's :'lsehemes.--Pennsyltanifniszv., regard IfSt fie , ; r1 :in y+ ur wsuter.:e4aa , Qsnal . wifl : ea " use: she tfit; Garthto be distifirtly,,vigi4 thing keitner heart t " Ogee get there. loldsoP icion ommand...tle,entire domain. A:corner herTeinicYloMisize liwicr_e,,atAttat tivalpit ' , ' M=Mll N:,• „ \`‘...••• • •14. , ^"Te • • • • Thc - 1 Ilma - painof#2or, Largcbt Circulation in; Northern Pertiert 1,584 COPIES IV,EIPIELIC: lI:TEL4gE, - Eorrc'nui; MONTROSE, PA. Thursday; August I; 1551.- Democratic State kibininations FOR GOVERNOR, WILLIAM . 13IGLER, • . Of-Clearfield County: FUR CANAL COIIIIIIIBS-lONCE,I . -E -I\YA r -it* Of Vilarloat t:e. TOR ,TL - "DiTES OT'THE'SIIIVENIS COURT. JEREMIAH S. BLACK, oe sonsßser JAMES CAMPBELL, or4lnranti.rina. ELLIS LEWIS. im LAsdAsTr3l. JOHN B. GIBSON, or CtIMBERLAND. WALTER H. LOWRIE; or itaxGorsr. Jon ‘Vonn.- tire inritevour friends waniinq Job_ firork of any deseriptionto giro Call. We will do it cheaper, bettee,•einil mare expedi tiously thad,any other establishment in this sec: (ion of country.. • . , . 12, We have received it copy of the Ad. dress of Hon: -Gee. W. VVonaward, "delivered on the occasion of the erection of a 'Monument to the memory ofthe late ;Fratieis Shook, at Trappe, Montgomery cennty," She pith of July lest: It is tIM production . \ it :e mater In tellect—the nemter production. of the .d;:y. It' is very lengthy. We innke . eopitutsex.' tracts from it next week.' • ' ILI We nublish to.dv,i a list of the town ship Committees, whose duty it Will bolo ct as a BoaM of Election in the election Of Dele. gates to meet in County Cenvention. • We feel itrourduty to urge upon the people —the Dem6r,reisL‘to attend these 'primary meetings, And see that their Wishes and will are not misrepresented: Go to the election, ; De mocrats; : and our word for it the nominations will praise on for it. LVc haye rather steljped aside from our beaten path this week, 14 'attending to the Judge and his nun John: hereafter tice.shall pursue the even tenor of our way, and- attend to them Ai' odd spells," should they need, any = more looking after;- nra JUDV.I.I Essyr.: When we ,eornmeneed toy examine the claims of judgd Jessup' for the highest Judicial eta-; tion in the Commoirezaltli; we snpliosed we had a right to do so. We Supposed that s .tudge Jessup, when he voluntarily pLeed himself. before the people, expected to be treatcid as, other men are in similar positions. never entered our mind, that he. %VA.'S' an eXception I all Mankind: :mil that when he chose 11) ask an office from the hands of a people, tOose [de:artist 'rigUs hp has. ever trampled upon with imPUnify, and whom . he has treated an the slaves of his contemptuous and aristOpratie will ; that men might not i'rettly express their, Opinions in reference to him ; as they do Of oth ers; that his - acts'in a public capacity Might not be truthfully examined, and his fitness for :the position, which his incirditutte ambition as pires to -Mach, might not be questioned from his past history. - We all do knc4 that men, who, in coMpari son- with him, have "talentsangel bright," 'and characters angel Owe froni The,guilty stain of - fraud and financial rcibberi; undergo the stric; test scrutiny; arc followed as 'relentleSsly as death itself by the same presses and the same men, Who look with sueli . .4 holy horror upon_ those who presume to lisp the,smallest cios derogatory to Judge :Jessup. Now,t.rhy is this stll. - 11avethe gods of yore thrown ar- I ound him and his guilty deeds; a mantel the touch of which, by the hand.of common men, I is sacrilege! Is he exalted abo..e,his fellow men so high and hezietward, ;that earthly mortals must veil their faces to took upon abe ing thus pure and .good, and lovely,! Is his sway on earth so omnipotent that morality honesty and law were not 'Meant to -restrain 1 1 him, and penalties not intended to reach WWI . When -he speaks, must his - fellow-men, like I the beasts of the desert When the Lion roars, hide themseiVes, and when he choosei to raise his arm in defiance of law and justice; and with I an unsparing temper gray, the s:afti,maards- oyl society—the laws of his; countrvhuri them I from • their allured mein:merit" and trample them iii the dirst—ride rough-shod over the rights and pritileges; the !character and repu tation, the position and property of his fellows —when he does this istteinnitutity,passive and 1 meek , aithe caged dove, to play the sycophant I at his lord]) shrine; _and like - au:hipped s'pan-'I ieb-Shrink, and tail, and fawn, and tremble qtt his potential mad; liffitia up holy hanctnnt his' c command'? Others 'lna Y do it; may hang their sinking fortunes to hiS Otilluted I - " • • skirts ; others rung obey, his lawless behests - others may yitiht up their own nianlineSs at hiS Phariiim"nataltar i - otherimaylined in the dust' and kisi the hand that synitei theui, offering, hp' drunken oblations, and 'sending; forth their pointless malice;; from the bottom of a' heart eoriscienge,i'hhielteried-and- seared by, the leathsomp'.assiaciations - of the barreom'aMlthe gambling.shopi but rts ';for.its.;from our most soul,.wc will 'Pray,from such,',"goodLOrti l ' l Yetri - mt, : and think fiat Cvelii/ive:fii. much respect for v mankind,'ier to set such an ex- Jessup, send, on you legions; ft • • - ample before the - World. We feel that our. aught ef,e -care place a score - of presses at.t ei rights; and the rights Of Others ; eria.,f a r: 'too se. eominand,for you have to face, a great and ie end; Plafr.itiiiiierbeareh-7blessedinatibn; telligent peeple,Who *We long wished, lb a , 4 ,E 4 are- fri co 4 l i : egua;"thafeilarbater audit- opportunity: of redress. , , Yea hereto face tr tl putationarehieasuredbere by eaiducti and not d justice,rlad. in an armorsteel;; and m a - 0 18 0 , " pad thgbity.;2rdld'So long ai - we have whose bosonuo. beat honest hearts, • a OFengtt(lii*-61004ev'°i6e:il'aCcaa.bei heard;wlnise countenances ire Imid Witb - lionest p we will defend aura and our comniunity 'ilases and inteidlintS. Xr 01 :0 3v.idon , .A4rOthliss aggressions `judge honort this .corrupt boktiei:eentered in' the heart; of r oll ipiny lie keeps: peisen can. innfl Susguelianpn:.!Ceunty, , and who have ,preyed o f ' Ru h judgment. - .onr -readers win' see f and lire l''preyin upon` the _ L sustenan ae thernselves what kbui bf *teen base tl?ieeetnfp#ty.i, outragii.4444r.Tights;: atus• into 1 and' ottee. . Now, : , ;4,41,4 1 ; 110 sc . 'Tag ' a giAttl4 `4, 41 V.? 44 114* l ar Not 1 t tJ ua t -! t • Ifortuni,4o inctnme Airier* wives, will tad i „ • - tit;tOkii*atabbi:t.q . *o'4: -int!be ;r•J, wimp ! ltibenyvalititikivbeeßV , ibtAl W. 2117 qn ?oar Buttcmlates,Ta ll - " /01. iliontis Peirter9relam: Cll7O ARS. It • ' % • • • I.rrce ass* - o;TPec°4' yileges ; breaking.. 4,41 i: laW, andd - disgracing 'morality; to accomplishlturposes, . hot-steeped 'in the heart Of inigtiltY t ond nurtured in , the bed of Morel:MO.66oo -*irruption. '- Though all theWerld . should. fall down' nd worship the "golden.ealf,"„yetwOure not. Igo, .so help !us Heiden; we; will:not - sierifite our manliness at the pollnted altar reared by ,. Judge Jessnii or any other man.: We glori in the loathsome ithitielteatied iiiOniabY hint and his dranken tool. We'esi laugh ; and:p4r, the - - -MiseMble, drunken blackleg, that Judge Jessup puts forth-16 be •hiti great - expotinder;•anclbis great defender.' Community, too; - will. look with scorn upon Judge Jessup and his hapiesdaiso- Mate, - . ..llfert of all Parties, will ask is -the! "nice young man'? whom . Judge Jessup has M s . keit into his confidence;. who for the past two yetis has set at the feet of this :Judge in Isniel, receiving instruetionsluleW and inorality'from of all parties, too, Will 'hold ..ludgelessnn ticcoutitabl, inasmuch as he has' taken this young mairrotalisOffice;end pine s ed him in possessiott , of press andty;peto Character of men,who are discharging ', an-honeSt duty is the public... They will.read the scurrilous predictions of this young.' man, elothed•in the lowest 'obscenity of bar-rocim dialect, and asitlf such are the associations that the „Indic, has kept In his office for the last tie years;—if .such :.are the', arguments with which he• intends to insult community, defend biraself, and ride over an independent Press, : engaged in defending co =Unity again st his assumptions and usurpations. T'lese • are ' some of the -quecitious that will naturally re-., volve idthe minds of the honest voters of Sus quehantin, before they deposit their b: for Judge Jessup. They,- unlettered in ,modern distinctions, will judge him by the Company he keeps. I .IOIIIN ILL HILLER talk of men ing anything in the shape of property ! Why, he lived all his younger days frord tho • contri bution box,Und has nursed the pap of charity to this hOur. -Indeed; we have been solicited within a few weeks to try and 'collect a debt against him ,for necessaries; and, knowing it to-be a hopeless task, declined; and out of pure pity for the werthless.vagabend, 'it the same time, discouraged a prosecution, which was about to be commenced - against him, for ob taining goods under false pretences. What care we when suelt a drunken hound calls us a liar; he bet does the work of his master, the Judge, who MIS been putting the finishing touch upon his education for two years past. It is his 2naster . whom we shall 'hold accountable and not this miserable fellow, his tool. • Look at the picture, citizens of Susquehanna; you who have been robbed and plundered by . the law-forbidden outrages' of this modern Judge. Look at him as he draws himself up in all the pompous dignity of conscious supe riority, sitting on your Judicial Bench, spurting with your rights, your liberty and your proper ty. Picture to yourself from his assumed dig nity that he is the model man, and then let your nand run back.over the history of his dar ing outrages on your rights—en your posses-' sions—and then turn and read that filthy ar tide which we print in another column from, his organ the Register, and reflect that such is the mode of warfare Which he hai adopted, against a press that dared call in questidn his right tct the highest judicial station in the Com monwealth. • read and reflect that the Ed itor who penned that article, has been fer the last tWo years the especial favorite of the 'Judge; studied 4 law in his office, leaving it im mediately on the Judge's nomination, to take a position in that paper; to impose uponlcom- Munity; traduce honest men, insult deney, and do the vile work' of his patron-saint Judge Jessup. Think of this .ye honest voters of Susquehanna; and tell us at the polls whether i von Will elevate 'a man who stoops sol low ; who, raWs around him such. corrupt and de moralizing inflences; - who sends into •yonr fa milies a paper teeming with such - lOW- and loathsetne ribaldry, to the Supreme Bench.-- Tell us, ye independent citizens, would not ,the Bench of your State, from whence should l flow pure and healthful streams of jistiee, be disgraced in the eyes of the world by his. ele; • cation *' ; and come to be !regarded as the patron Mend of everything demoralizing and corrupt in society.- By his works we 'know hint, antl4 his company icejudge him. • • ' We supposed at the outset • that this cants paig,n could becarried 011-111 reference to Judge - Jessup, Inc . gentlemanly manner, and we in: , tended personally to carry it 'on thus, having no unkind Personal - feelings towardsthe Judge. We suppesed'that we could examine him as a political man as other men are examined. But no, this could not be. We had the audacity, in the eyes ofthe Judge, to speak of him as other men are spoken of; - hence r Mr. Chapman Must be 'displaced and a drunken rowdy, with out character, respectability,. or , repiitationi placed thereter the mirpose of black-guarding us, into silence. Pretty : compnny. for Judge Jessup, and. a pretty business ; hell. find itl— With the merciless ferocity of a tiger he has pounced upon us ; and we assure His. Honor, that "the warwill.now-be carded into Africa. We meet him' on his chosen ground, and, fear- 1 lessly defy hint and la reprobate horde s So :help Mt the POWeri, the long-abuied people'of Susquehanna county,tind the State,shall know ! w ho Judge Jessup* an d how to appreciate thin It shall never be said again, that thefe is luotone person la the eontity, Who dares clew theeorruptiOn that hes underneath the ft,ruir l d ,surfaee.of that J.udge 4 s throne. We plant standard in the midst of the throne-itself, there it shall 'ware till it falls froth our pals', grasi. IYe eourtAlte battle,for it is aeon ,et for the rights of our eitizens,..and -will fall, - not till. shevlall, - and the flag , wave While'thetstand. 'So, we say to Jtif I=OZ== Jgdge's organ last week. 14 saddled wittl all that • 8 iii ielation to ti ns Bank. • - . atthey;'..who has wpe . - trages4 With Mit gen= rye most distant ociinain: by an article in th I There, T, ,P,, St., J ,, is mean cml He is We acilundiel trated these gliirin ter= we have n king Tit ro o r its Wo knew ntho previous to the fail. p were busily engaged in people, till a fov ure of the Bank.. theniand mtide . orpotight 'atances, -We recollect the study of the la to toako but few at . of Seelig; fretistentl in the streets, this man St. John, .or one *d.to be him ;.and in all truth, we saw him ner in Judge Jessup's, society than &Teti ' roan.' , They. _were fre -quently,„,arm-in-ann, rtnnenading our side- 1 walks, or rolling past cif office .in the Judge's carriage, "halo fellow well wet." We don't 1 doubt that he_ is a coundrel,-4 Banking scoundrel,-and an old nd very truthful adage says, "birds of a featb r will flock together." It is well known, in thi community, that Bt.! John ions introduced in society here, and sus. tabled in all placesi by le influence of Judge l Jessup: , No social gatierin' g at, the hour* of the Judge, that was not graced with his pies; ence; and , no circle, w4ther' social or in the 1 Church, that was pot considered by the judgel I incomplete, if St. Johns was not there. He was the 'peculiar favorite ,with the Judge, mid' the Judge a faVorite 4th him. To breathe a word or suspicion against St. John, was to encounter the same force that is arrayed now; when we speak of udge Jessup...- We doubt not that he is a consummate scoundrel, and was brought here . to consummate just what Judge Jessup dare not V. All reason :points to that as the only explanation for the Judge's worm affinity for scoundrels. We have shown in previous articles, how the Judge set the Bank in operation by fraud; without capital; and ho was sagacious ' enough to see that it must soon funder. Hence, why he stepped out of thcsinking ship, and introduced a scape goat for his sins. Yes,reader, 'Wm. Jessup & C 0.," included the whole, and St. John, while hero, was the pet partner of the con cern. - - We, es before said, intended to, conduct this eau3paign ;with,strict .regard to gentlemanly propriety. From the course of the Judge's organ last week, we have been led to write this article. If he chooses this- mode of war fare, we will try to let-him have it to his heart's satisfaction. We don't know of-more vulner able subjects than the Judge and his man John. •So long as that course is carried out, we shall yoke the Judge to his own car, tie his misera ble hound to the "hind end," load in the Sus quehanna Bank, place St. John on the "boot," and let the pretty trio perform for the edifica tion of community. " e. b. chase." Our ives: •' Greatly troubled'' , etc. From youth; we have heard that all in this world savored of strife and wild contention: and that the heart of man was a stranger to all liberality and honesty: that men, could only be men,, when self.gratifieation came not in the way: at all other t ttimes _they doffed the ha biliments of humanity, and prowled about; striking where thev-vould get the largest mouthful, like a. boast of prey, seeking to gnat ify the imperative demands of hunger. We say all this had been taught us: we read . and listened to it, as we did to the manyy - Ghost stories told us, only to forget it; but not until the appearance of last week's Register, which hasrecently come into the control of J. C. 31.n.t.sn, were these , teachings evidenced to our Mind. Until then, we had supposed that there . were depths of slang and malignant abuse, that Men would not stoop to fathom ; that there were seas of blackguardism so black that the eye could not penetrate their waters, and so unfathomable that no lead could sound them. But our eyes are-open, fully open to a new truth, namely, that there are pens knoWing no such limits; -and thus; is : the world constantly iunfolding itself, and darby.day we grow wis er in our opinions of men and " things." • Bet to the Register and its sayings. We Ipurpose to review onlytsuch parts of the art': cle, (the whole of whichzwe give in this week's ' paper, that our.readers Nay- learn something of the characterof the Judge's `organ;) as r&: lates to ourselves and the Democrat. _ The commencement 4f, the article, led ns to suppose that it had its origin, from our dec- lination to retract the statement, made in the Democrat some three weeks since; that" The others, spoken of by Mr Chapman, as having purchased the establishment, we understand, are Hon. Vin. Jessup and two or-three other gentlemen residing here.t As sta. ted in his Card " to. the; Public," which visa given rerbatim in the Democrat two weeks ago; he did call on us, at our office, in the ab. sence of our associate, asd asked a. retraction of this statement. We 'told him, that as we had heard . it _repeatedly from Many sources, those which we coruddered reliable; an'dd as we only stated tlutt we bad understood such to be the ease, which - was true; we saw 'nothing to ;.etraci. He, in his own behalf, stated that he had himself heard thi same thing, namely, that iIIDGE JtSsl:7l!_ purr:based, the Press, b ut . that our readers would draw the inference from I our article, that we hollered and knew him to . Ibe the owner; (thu 2 impliedly admitting the truth of all our stat ent.) • Not deeming our- r inferences, which are al aried as the 'tiaras of the e subject.: .1"o our asso. the result of the. con- selves responsible ways as many and sea, we dismiFsed . ciate we comniuni, - our absence that week, public in our paper, -These case, and. if it partakes 'or dishonor, the charge r. ferenee, and he i d made the statemen d are the facts in th a aught of nnfairnea and not Upon the'4unior e should fall upon II Ed4or. e In the . outset, lk r poor Tray, We ha MILLER thinks that "like fallen into bad company, iation ; 4 and` he is led to, a long and intimate ac. o not thank tbeg,entleman ih such a connexion. Spani ° idst of suela low; n~aligj mined in that article!!—r us an uittruacy with= one tea- such language!-4 one who - can stoop rsona: tualied Spire-nal in our,present asst this sage belief r ,la! guaintarazi'' We for his cetaplimen our name from th nant stuff as is cc Intimate? Spar from ivhose pen Sian hi an Win so •low to .. gratifk ' Oh! spare us!! • A., - i. True College lila araiOollego wallisfonrail us one. year togetti'and'lD'e!LsPs'tVe might Alinp'otildifferent o t t mmtrae. Ina lot moist!, of bilutk,mol lloartis7 ASP jilleatipu may be taa.e by any one wishing to puy,, Chase to,Stunner Dean, at the mill or to the subretibers. - • - or • - 114YOMP & LIT 11. E. Aire Corn Mich, gimp •Untkere".. • tr444: 4 44obefip, -*CIO& ON, . somewhat ilitPrent habit's, there wereldircril placek, Whera wp were not found tog,ettier. We had intionties iti:Collegoi but they were nbbie apirits.i..4niniltheritte--thatwe are now proud to own as such-rmott whom the world will receive into their'embrace with oPen arms --Men of frank'brows and Ache sterlint In. tegrity; 'and men in whom we could' 'place more cohfidenee, and men whose habits and - tastes, likes And dislikes sveio - more congenial , . with our own., And as, Mr. Miller claims tin "intimate acquaintance" with' us, we ',wonht say, that wo, have known him for, several years,, and he is not a person in whom we cbuld ever place Confidence 'or esteem. We would nr pudiate, the Register's compliments:, e would semi them back to their source, unappreciated as' they by us, with the saying of :Oh : eller pen than ours: , .. The man who hails you Tom °thick, And proves, b)) thumping on your back, His sense kir your merit; 'Bench a friend that one had need Be very much hie friend indeed, - - To pardon - or to bear ' TIM attempt to separate the Editors of the i:)emocrat, by shamefully, slandering one !and complimenting'the other, is utterly vain.— Whatever other journals; may - know, ours knows no differences, and what reflects on one member of our firm, reflects alike upon both. As Conductors of this sheet we are ono—one in opinion and•netion—and when the oppeii.' tion press heaps vile abuse .upon one of us we consider it against both;' and as the Editor do. ing this forfeits all claim to, our regard, we must treat. him accordingly.' • True, as every part of a machine has its own peculthr office to perform, and as every eitablishment . has its oWit.internal arrange ments; so we have ours; for it is only where System exists, and where each ono has his own work to attend to, that .You find efficiency and success. It is Well. known that the .Conduct ors of the Democrat, are also in. the inictiee of Law together; and 'when the arrangement' was made between them, the understanding was , that E. B. Chase .ShOuld have the main management of the PolifiCal department of our paper, while to S. B. Chase should belong, the other departments of the paper and:theLsw; Of course we sometimes' have to &part from this, but as a general thing we haie adhered to our original plan. But notwithstanding this internal arrangement of_ our own in con ducting the-paper, which concerns no one, but ouiselves; no article has ever appeared, with out first receiving the entire approval of both the Editors; and it'any of these - Calls down ,the, anathemas of the Whig organ ; it is worse than folly to rest them on either one of us alone. . . Thus far in our political warfare against Judge Jessup, we have been courteous and gentlemanly; why then do we see such low, contemptible slander and abuse in his organ ?, In our view 'Judge Jessup possesses. not the requisite qualifications for so high and honor able a position as he now aspires to: he has been connected with a corrupt and swindling institution, which has robbed the people and cheated them out of their hard earnings ; in such a manner as to, in our view, make him unworthy the suffrages of the people; end can we not have the privilege of showing this to our readers; Is the freedom of the press to be thus insulted? But notwithstanding the personal attacks of the 'Register, something that we would never stoop to, we stand un daunted, and shall continue to manfully defend the right and condemn the wrong. Our ideas are,our own—our pens are our on,--and though we say it, our press is our own*---a.nd for this purpose we shall use them; nor elan world of Judges dismay us. The Editor of the Register may be a Hero-worshipper, but can that excuse or palliate such low steeping? Does he expect to advance the cause of ' hit Hero, by heaping disgraceful abuse upon those who refuse their homage at his shrine? - But we tooare Hero-worshippers, but nn like our imtagonist our, Hero is . the principles we most lOve,,cherish, and defend: to no low er shrine do we ever bow ; and to do the bid ding of no other &sit. will we ever come. In regard to the 800 circulation GRATIS which the Register attributes to us, we would say, that we have,a'regelar . bona fide cirettla tion of 1584 copies weekly, (which multiplied by five, the average number of readers to every paper, would give us rather more than 2000;) each espy of which is paid'for by the person subscribing ; Lind Your word is doubted, our books are open to anY one; who wishes to-sat isfy himself. And.farther,though we would not wish to frighten the new incumbent to the Registir, yet we would say for his benefit,that since July first, the time . which he assumed the charge of thatlpsper, we have increased nearly , 300,and most of these are Whigs ! We submit the foregoing statement to our readets, thanking them for bearing with us so long; but we could not do less in •jestiee' to ourselves, and the party. S. ILCICASE. 'ln regard to the ownership of . the .Dernoerof we would request any who doubt us, to call on Mr. Hempstead and ask him who purchaied it of him, and whose obligations be holds for the bal ance of its payments. ' _ OURSELF. Our readers are all well Mara of the'course .*e have pursued to - wards Hon. Wm. Jessup, since his: nomination by the Lancaster Con. ventian: It has been: our aim to expose the public. and official misconduct of His •Ilonor, faithfnlli and fairly. God : knows we have no disposition to do him injustice: What we 'have Written; heretofore, has been backed, by duthOrity,by evidence. , Whileit has been our aim te'Write plainly; tve haVecarefully avoided using Pngeatleruanly language and abi/SiriCi): ithets. • Indeed, we never thought it any hen:. or to be called ituart at btackguarding; or to appear learned in 'Vulgarity. - Stich fame we dO not'Aspire fop - - The Articles that:We have written are betoie the public,-and we are not ashamed of, them. They are not merely:before the readere.of the " Denvisivt," but they' are before the people of this 'great commohWealth. "} : - .. Scareely - 'a_Paper in ; the State, save those of the opposition; that we take up, that does-not contain them length, or "copious extracts from them.- We speak ofthis, only to. hurl back the kunnus.- :tliei,llett:,,.9tir, cour s e not etidorse.d the party with which we have the loner to .- atria, We luive intended to dent justly, and yutit- , • TtiST teemed - a mw stock of oningaild summft *mesh, AI at thtoFtorn nf , - +- -.,11 T tri,rrr XPgil raga wonted, Elan!) sUlt "not, of intention. r" We hold Ourselves i" S. B. & eitifr - 441144M: open to correction, at all times, from the the tennalMileitAt*eigta! ! e*; Qr source -.; ', . !- ' • f.'.•:.. a it of sti . 4,44,l(**4_o4o4ostgai : ..,. Vir ti , werti-Welf-aware, at the outset ,. betb - O ‘ 2 4 o nl if t ,D. er att l bort °1*-11 0 1 1ritif - O bl ty --.1314411 ;i1V . di l l ' ... eitormr. - wo should - encounter ini this contest: statat,whe*t*fifkofisitirsist&- , _ • Wei well imosy,that our icputation,- would be thin triafektifitTPlLlifitiiitsdk*cs "f 1i " 1 *"...• 'assailed, our' motives !maligned, and our ! char- t ' f ,'!:9L h e ,,,,• o- i st * l„ 4 . n. T tax ! !!! tia?" - ; -• ~ioei* .., . Teeter vilified. "It \for our readers to Zi e - se tu es Tir" .-I 'V e r,th ' , f - irt hi littlitir 'imagine, that - We rdpoAc 11Ci , t D bed of roses, `of thablUalt - Or i Sisqu' "; - bilOo ' ilit ' ii)iii '. . 'situated, as we are, in the aiicioty of meit.L- te ! . t .d_ o wi,.thAtl - Ori - _td44thet„tftilPes th ,..., whose every instinct and interot impels them ;` l2s ** lll-d ge4eooP ramairr -, , .. - ‘A-1-. iliiiii t r; 1 'to crdsh us: We foresaw all this, and count. - Brute Cairietti _,Wetfesz"figiiii 3th : !-f9ll"k ed the cost .: Oa the one hand \ t,s.as our own ebenezer b, chant:l4%Q: is to WU. ittint - ,•,,1L didate for : Ankle: of:thittlti"" !ease and plevure ;on the other'-our duty to Dtrlct. I . lis d pre."eixihientlY : lamintivis ‘o'. ne t !the public and ourselves. To follkw the-du . tates of the former was to sacrifice 'the hitter; and -esp abilities , waft; his r st a ,.. t i r l il rs tegri n fi* t7 l Fi r th Z 1 acid incur the disgrace uf assuming a ‘ position - Pede of a. defaulting. eashier„-stre - all Oa. which - Et :/Am for - the :benCh.,t.tithlivtah•-• " that we had ;lot sufficient nerve to maintain:: fo r his legs to ion throughlorizinatolit, - --For - - We have chosen o discharge our-oblitations sad e-Judges; T. P.!and - A - Sf.4o"fa - Acre• highly "-.' to community like _a man; and, so help is recommended. `We wexiirtictitlfiiii.esto to ' Heaven, tie wilt ever do it.: ;We wish - not to help ebenezer "up kittiattni.! t &;l4ll4P r keg...iff.,, Ibe "driven to the wall" in this matter; .I.n4et, Aug : 7th:., , • - , ,.e..„ 1 ::271: , ,U - i.!,‘,. - ;... ',.;.!-..,!!,!'" . c.:;.:' . ..; the same time, wemish.others to act their() -a - zlr m . C. 9 :_eil i f ° n .. . n ! i! . . a l s rO slol2l . , dlie! ",° Tk r ut '4" I pleasure -about driving us there. We ass . ,;,Awt."`"1i.”4:1;5n.:1°,:ii..A°114,...;e13...,513,.i.14;,-;!aiiinso - them of one thing, ( we ;mean the eiders -,;;;",-„e"!--.--pr--"'" -'77.'`-`,",'"'"‘"r"--77.-.,..-'4,.;i!--, abetters of this crusade) t --flat, if they oho ! ..- •-• • •!" `"r i - - . •-!-_,-'!! 7 ~..-.!• I 7 to 'follow it up, they will hare war to the ygi.; • ....:. ,We ahall neitlier ask nor ;give- qparter; and :1 - they must take care, of their "outstanding - etc. , . counts?' We are not to b putdown without - 21 a struggle ;.-.....we - Will subniit to no iny.asion of our rights, as long as God grants us strength to defend them, and a will to retaliate. . . . ~ New,"one word as to 'Mr. MrLtsu and the . , ~ Register. W,ii havedeemed it jiistice . ,to`Our. selves ' in-another article, to, tell the public who I - .• 'and what he is;' and for-whatpurpose ho has been placed in the position .he now occupies. IWe have done-this because heis a straiiger to , .. most -people of the county, , who,. therefore, . may not know what reliance. to .place. upon him. He is known to those who will biz*, it, -, , . . fo:.;bo a loathesome blaekituard,—a drunken vagabond.—a fit tool for men to use, whose object it is to hide their rascality - by preying C t , 1 upon the character and remitation of men:- -In "). .. proof that Mr. .Tons C. Mitir . .n is: just such a -,,, ~,. character; in prolif of his fatiailiarity_ with bar- r i . I - rooms and gambling shops ;-.,-in proof that-his 4 'associates in secret are just such characters; 4r I we copy the following article from his paper s'., - . of last week.. Read it, nnan rr, READ IT`; 't and. then tell us if every line. does not speak the language of the midnight debauchee; .oft , the man whose heart and donSeience and soul, i are steeped in vice and degradation. - And of- i ir ter you read it, fellow citizens, reflect that such ';',. 1 is the man and such are the, arguments, that ,-.-`;' , Hon. Wm, Jessup puts, forth in: hi*fiefence.,, against the,charges that We! have, - 14.4, - .lVhis ,'`. . , • ;-- 4 j - -Sire, door, in behalf of the citizens of Sitsquelian.,-, We may deem it advisable to gitricsen,6,eh tern from Mr. Miller's College lite.hereafterj . . - .1 but we opine that "our citizens" willneed;il(... l 1 warning "to look out for hien" after' readingl.--isor - ... the following article : '"e. b. cbase.7 , .: . Greatly Tro ublefl ~, 4 . The junior thing, (We will- neitlief...Call. hit editor or man, fore is a disgrace to - the era? and a libel upon society) is in great troublet„, -find out some imaginary owners Of. ouiprin#lss, ing establislunent. Fancying, from his 'ow 4 .: experiencethat there must be sonic incog. pe •,, son - or personsto own and'contiol at polities I , l _ newspaper, he hasswildly'eharged - lhe mime , ks. ship of our materials upon divers persons, no. 2 1 one of whom have.any interest in it. We sa!, 1° the junior, for a long and intimate acquaint ance with S. B. Chase, leads us to believe thatyks. like poor Tray he his fallen - into bad compar - Mr in his presentassociation, and until he for faits our regard, - .,we shall consider' him, ail,,; . heretofore we have :done, a gentleman. ' Ai4 • the public - In - ay not know the difference twixi3 tweedle-dumand tweedle-dee; we willsairti • , . ularizei e. li. chase ; the junior; Is the "lon e _ to v, flat"treature, with an. illuminated couni...., tenanee, and an exalted' opinion of his owe , t, 'abilities; leis the great factotum of the'.con- i) i .ern; whose stipple- eonscience and utter desti •,d 1 tution - of character,-renders him of great vale -;`,, to his masters when they - have any, dirty to dO . on Qne would think, to' look at him, that an ,o 1 : 1 ;1 elo' sign had blown down from its fastening: I in Chatham street, and was drifting about the,,Li world without an owner yet the thing'boist4 ,of his extraordinary beauty, and had the:char-7; 1 ncteristie vanity-to publish in his paper that lil m was the finest-looking, and most talented spec, imin in the late Reading Cattle-show. - _He 2, 3 :1 the little end of the five-lawyer power, the - - i conducts ,the Democrat; . and unquestionabl,* the dirtiest and most imbecile specimen of an? l I imated nature that:ever saw the inside 'of r7rl printing office. -We scorn to notice shch z,.4 !, contemptible poltroon,destitute alike of brainqst i 'character or honesty, and. justly a -subject 'o 77 . ,' 1 ridicule and contempt wherever he is: knoWo ' 1 We ask pardon of our readers for alluding tLlati [him in any manner in the columns. of our pa s ta per, and we premise that in future lie can ravoicki and bellow, and-bleat, until hemorrhage of thriii lungs takes place, unheeded-. Ify 'Us.' To 1)4 blunt and plain'with the miserable fellow, wecim , will hang him up as a farmer's bay 'does t t ,ll dead snake; a foul and offensive thing-diem gusting, not dangerous—Lwhere the Publia:cair second avoid-him. We, pronounce him a Rua. and poltroon, and'he cane take - it • just -.nil 11. ;. 4 i pleases, as we entertain towards him none 0th. , ..- 1 er than feelings of contempt. - ' • •-•:. •77 • ° e l He is a liar when'ho says thatJudg,e-Jessupti', is an owner of this'establishment. • 7 1.- . 'hit : He is a liar when he says that we ever askiTzi ed him to' make a correction . ' 1,17 e would nsql soon think, of calling upon -an trapty-heitderAsi gander for such-a purpose. -. His well :knowiPl reputation for meanness renders - it impossibhl. that we should so far forget our self-respscli as tolask him to'make an , honorableretrictiol No, indeed; we never haVe, and never will ea ~ upon eh...chase on such an errand,' for the sim`-i pie reason'that the falsehoods of a loafer. are harmless.r': :: - - - - -i • . . ': . -.:- ' ''' ~' He knew he Was lying when hi, Publishet: aafroin the:Bradfiird Reporter an article avliiciii, originated in the rotten .rain of-this - same 4-.7:. b. chase. We wish Mr4Goodrichmtich'joyo:a his Buchanan ally.: .. .-:- ....:" - Tie is a liar when he riays . that we told hiniii, that this establishment ayes - owned bY:any otV 4 or person or !writ:MS - than bursolt.i. 7-* If In' justice..to Mr. Boyd, it is proper. to stab that lie , hasfrom the first been employed:7'h' the:week as Foreman, upon wham the' PrineL ..- ... .. pal be:sine-as •Of the. office 'devolves, and fiirther ,„„,.-• . *"."P cn r than that; has no interest in it whatever. ' ,-: ' ti" s3 "'' .l A 4 : /° C 4 44 s i wini :f nat i ° ! s ''' o "' I ' 'So thia sagacious animal; e. b; ehasei..infter lufettod:lo.tbelCourtsLiond .a . .0 3 4 1 4 1 itt40 04 [ all hbftronble, ta as far From the truill'an'oieri ,the ,PprPirse ;r ; - ',;:; ,-.. , ::i*,. .., ' - ~',. "'' I and his long vaunted ' threats of *blowing:us ~,..11'hyi yestlyittnOlvg P! , ur,113•915131, Otes : np," have turned s mut odierable fizzlo.: . . Bat tberaistricate" ina:g(akeiblapin fel! latv . what is-the community to :think or a mind that and. lengthY sessieMi, ,-of f t4i Col , will indulge - . ircsuch bentemptible littleness -, 1, 4 j,, u , sil i ett. „,4,,,,ii N. a b r i t , - e eta.. and Edseliatide, togratitY a personal-441'10 - 0i -'. - i - -. , • •- r , ••-• --. • • " , „,; 1 ,- i ii 4 i o lis VindletiVe malevelenee. pad' a creature won d 4 4 7 , : w '".'.' 8 ,• 13 9. olictkl!tia 5Y°Y...:4,-- ; .. op steal the last penny Own a•bliki nutn's hash 'of these tte9.thtleetB.; ':.'11,„:., ~ .• , t • i . and ;His is the very 'disposition to comthit 'any :d ' jtitlitigneittnine,44fity,a regulat : gestOr s s .a nd taidly - br etowardlraet,'andwOadviaci our. 4: ! awn:don:Of niegitiAhan Ono . Nyeek's Witt; I (Ice -- 46 . 0, and espeeielly his iloeefoeo. "4i/hole t ..; 6 % fl •'• ~ - c' ra t. , - .' • • 'too el ily,"- to look "eutlor'bitn: - s. -,-...- '• :. • ~ 1 :.; - .i ~-1 11)! .! u °1144 ? , 4 ' 4 l l l - an' °T . While:on the:ltuestion of ownership, won ' AlieTeeltle.•:',..At the'additlen of a nev iail clao It not be.tvell fore..b; chase to State '.whii'sii i Court Hiin.Se'ivill-ao - weli tough ''ret . 0,7 1 • - il l the bona .fids: , '‘utiliterCandeentrollerai4 11 e fthiA;' - '''''" . ;t2P 7 , , * - :'-!::‘,-'7 . 1 , cl ..:: ; ' '"-•=s i! Montrase...Mmlnflyie,:ix.i. 5,1re11. IMPti t By this rrahmte 14W.ttiiikirTa aw l : ~i 4l rt ; ur AN:r ED 1 ...),,0,nq0 buobil if. chits; = 3o;ciffrlif.irludiu, - - 0, 0 - 4fur, pie! ifyimntAllikantai deign. - -- ,111- elcolllyo • sad - Com for, which the' , high's; - 8 -,„ 0 „ . .. ,i„o : fii i i,i t i,i g , iii,;: . - , - , - Ai r) , seep; 4 ' ptise.Will he paid in cash or finds bp . . '....-. -;; .ii en .i i3tili'Lieii - Beinei far initebv.: , . ..i ; , ~, D. FL If • • GIL CO*: - : - ~.. ___.. . 14 N .. ) .,T,AND. A •', NEW suVOS °frau at , .--,:- •• - _ Vait.s,ste(e.Peeer, relator ) . ,- . _ • ,, •• . r,,./7„,,, • - „I.‘ Mentroe , , kitty Ip.! , LTOKS 4,01.01 1316 • i e o rib, Academical Departuumt,lu whole ~ or part - - • • - 21,00 llusie with use or Plano, . ..410,00 Drawing and Painting, _ .15.00 German • '• - ' 15.00 u Nit RI, the n and purpose ot tbo.; Trustee' h. appropriatedbtriplino. hy the enure or xtpdi part by the thorou:r.nes of the Instruction Impute.' are 4 the forint les furnished, to secure tot thls A6ll, it, 114 lertu ding moons the Literary Austlt whin, albs /du out land. N.B. Pupils tiom ibina.l.atishlnk to obtain hoard el l recess e ertion to o:meet/applying to /Lilted Ilaida* or Win. J. llullotil,Uointnittee. lion. Wm,,JP.SSUPj Praia's). Ii: Seer, , Ma.on S. iVilstrn. Treasurer, 15,1950. BAUXiOADS, FREldiff,Eze., (.larre ',I , 1p • I . r i n 1'1;'4; :-. 71 - ! 4't ';.'' - Rillaapo &.• Pater;4an and Pala. L - son ,&'lll:dsost Haver . care Sultern't Depot at - . Leave New:York at - , i'', .`5 o'ciock 30inha. A. 31. 7 o'clock 2('ico n . 4 . kr 10 '• 3O loin. A. M. 3'. 15 told; .1, od " 110 ruin. 1',31. 5_ " - 45 coin. . p,s, . • , ..altliasAy aliktr.p,. I heave Starer's' s Depot.' heart Kiev. yorh : 4 *G o'ciock :',O win A. 31. 6 o'clock . . E.l. , r, .Or on theatrical of the Elle trains On: East: .••i' ~ A s I , ssNuri TscA ;Ns:. . ~..., • 'Lear e Pattr.son ut " Leure New-York.,-- 7 o'clock A.M. Market- et. - 7 o'clock Waal:l t A.l 1'; ii , / " •. Pat 'n Dep. P " r.O .. • I 1:4. ". M: i " ... 1 " - ' ' Pl. 4 4 .. 1 . .. It. .1 t 4 3 o 23. s . 7 -..- ", Market.rt. 15 .. 45 " - . suzaktv rrc-tutot. Leer e Puter , ur , ut , I Lear e Nete..York of . •.' o'clock A. M. .Market-st. i 9 o'clock ' £1 4 .5 S " P. M. Pat'n Depot. 1 6 .. ' ' Pa ', .. N.D. On .340/o/ovotorningttbeirst tr3rw from SuM.To .',..: Will :caveat 725 win. or on. the attired of the Port Jars ..., train. The 7 30 A. 31. rind 5 45 o'clock P. M. traint. cram 1.1"i ,. .;.' York, Will not gfc.iCat, tiliyi 4 tetlatihorth of Bataan, o 4 cept ItoeL ltoad and lloliokus. 'I he trehi, which leavelNew Took at TN A 11-sad 3 1 p:, P 31 will he tritium t o tent the Erie trains, morning nt : z ^ ,, ie a ing,, going Wc.t„ Ist Sp ferns Depot. Angart 22,15.50." 1 31.1 y. ... . • ALBANY & BUFFALO, l'irstr 'York & Erie, Cayuga & as. quchanna noads, Seneca • and CO nga Lakes: ... . „.....„, EVERY 1101.il'' MARKET LINE ',- / ... o .} L ,.. uti c nt r :, :s tze u rtlo ., a ,„,,,. i r ,z u n t t , : ,rt z i . yr 11:1.1Glff T. - ;_ ‘ ittlifa:o, Atue.l.ol aiaviii, Bergen, Rochester, Cittr4 '..;'' no. Geneva, Dresden, Offid. Lodi, Dundee, Landlil 'if .!:-,'' ereoo, Ilavana, ILitloort,-flueseheuds, Corning, Dan ..7: - .., Vactory vine, a priag Port, Itedder's Ferry, A urona,l4 ‘ ,:., - f en, Candor, Owego, Union, Binghamton ' Great rd , Lanesboro', D epoeit, and Ilancoch, every day fathead ?..' Counday- excepted.ityud eon thane with regularit3thaq ~[.; ',.; out thesea.,on. They wil I attend toforwtadiao them* 1. - ,.% to the Nen York Mark eroenerei t vill leCeire the puss if,` at attention of oxperieuel . dsaleenten.who will attend* 1. 1-1- ; theselling ot the saute. and return the ;. - roceeds to lon ;'.' attlelunds.lt either of tho above points, to thefallo4 '',:', persons: .. ... , r.:;" , if ulTalie,gtorebonse nflfenry Dow : Attlea.Sterelaa f - ,:f of I l enreSyford; , llolnaia.liturehouse.oiLuciorA.Pol. „--- rasgen, Storehouse of; Daniel McPherson; Boehm/ elfare ,of Fairbanks -& illiredge; Caninliguo, 03tto ...,.',C. 'lV:titer Corcoran; Geo alya. C. Law :' reace; Dresden:tee , ... house of Whitney 4.310t0ri1; Ovid,Fergmfen It Finro 'l' 4 Loll . ; Dundee Landing; /It °rehouse of T. Tuthill &&. , Jefferson, oilier. of E. 0; Norion. on the pier, Bann -.. office ofJ. F. Phelps; Slillpost. store ofJ. Roll; Slay ',lf comas. office Of J. A. Ft tell ; Corning. state of ifol Arnold; Elmira. Morel ruse of Thurman '& Irrhra, Factoryyllle, store of . harks 11. Phi ' , held: Ita& -r,' Ferry; Aurora. store.oll/1.& f 3. P.:Votes*: It borax* ' O, of P. If. Drake -.Condon,. story of P. ltarsgiT; Osero, .. r Geo ofllatitaniA Ells; Union. store of C N. Sileet itintchoutton. °Dice of James Sish: Great Bend, arra J r .', F. Churchill; Laneoboro'. since of F A. Ward; Derr i store of Ensign & Dean; llancocl. More of alio* I .': Beeves. .I.A 2 , . ... t f.-1.. . Dinalauutora, i - - . - 114..W1IITNET. Dresden, ,fl C.F.Q.P. SIONELL, de, .':. ' ' NATHANIEL ELLS. Ofvera AGEXTS.-7tnitalo, Henry Dan; Attica. Thane ford; fratar L&lur A. Smith; Duni el:4db ?MI: Rochester. Vairhants & Eldridge; Cannudirs, Watt v rCnrcoran cuera, C. Lawron re • Ovid. leurca & Spragpe ;. Lodi; Duniee Lauding, Tuthill & Co.; rercon. R. 0 .Norton; Havana. Y. I'llelps;lliliport I Stuli ; Iforgeheads..7. A. Ferrell; Corning, Wm. J.t' no'dr I lwira. Thurmanlc lubiiram ; Factoryrille.o 1 Shepherd; Aurora. &a. P. Mnipu ithAes.P.lL Drake; Carolor. S. Ranger; Tinton, C. ii. Wheli'n Great Rend. P. Churchill; Lane: 4,ra% F. A „Ward ;Ir posit,Llnriga & Reza ; • Hancock; Alli Eon klt . Capt. James Mt, 3Yillenponintetrl the bueineee throughout tht Ida) re. rad reeeive nrelpll all orders for ' ex. a . sle artn. width - bebong.ht at the loweet wholeeale prier. New York, aud forwarded to any c theaboee and Ii ew stp,ge A rra ngeialent at Great • „ nentr. rpTil - bep t tetily Liieeiof Stages frees 3S4rat.Beseitt !ileptroFe er ill bereuttar Irate he t4a , 1i.e.1 ilatrld C.Ewith In the immediate vicinity of the Depae,a.fk own: At 4A. Itt and I*. M.; on the arrival ai road trains froth New York, passing through New .MM to A:entre...v. wh•tiew q fait ',line TOW. In ~arid therewith to tinting:rifle Tnnkbonnock and Wilkeebint , another via. N cholson. Fnetoryville. Abington:Cr:Ur, Proridenee and Ilyde Park - t a herantonia, t thew. plies being along the (taco( the tremits Gap Railroad t tuning. the, stage teaveit Ferantonle at 4 A 3 4 4 through the above places to.3ltintrose, whence the lias leave in time toreacb the GreatoAtindt Depot before 0.1 trains goine East. • - Also. a Dally liner leave* Smith's es arrival • f the noon train from the Wen 5 r- 0331.0 1 Sommeratille.Sew Mliford,lLi rford.- Ltrk ox are TEXESDE).I. a, CO. Great Dern!. Jan. 22-iFSI: ' ' (111 3116.c1E14,AN1:0138 D VEItTISE,3I S. -New Goods ITAYDEN& Lrttl.E'S stock Of hew Loch havr.orrivell. comprising n complete. arson. milli of Dry Goods, Gtoceriea, .Ifardivate. Son N Vivo Zinc. n its, Oats. Sush Wooden .Wwl Drugs. nod iYe dirinrti, Paintai Ode, Fish, rice and Salt. . i Also a first 'rate lot and good, aefoilroeidd Ready Made Clothing. of almost ulldeectiptiallif• Boom and Shoes, 11.. m. Cops ani fleimets almoet everything, neually found in ti couulll Storr. - , , • „ Our G ioos inurt be sold, 014 :boll :be, at l - Ft very lor;est !visible prices:. Our fricutiteare let) to citlFund look ut ouretock.','. Prcrincp.of most all kinds, wanted in etebans for goods by the aubscriberi, • IIAYD&/%1 Natv- 1%1 ilford .Mar 1rt ,1851.