THE OBSERVER. R. F. SLOAN. Editor. kiltlClS: $2 $0 PIM YILAB rot ADYANO SATIIIMAY, OCT. IT, Imo liscroas As Lazo*. RICHARD VAlrt DUTRICT lILIICTOSS. I Faso. A. Sairnia, *l4 Wm; Rscinrow, 2 WY. C. PATTIC2IIO9, I I6 Geo. D. ikcisoti,. 8 Josrrn Clamor?, 16 .1, A. Am., 4 .1. G. Ba.axxxa, 17 J. B. DAssita, 6 G. W. JAOOZT, 18 J. R. CaAwronn, Caul.s. HaLucy, ':l9 R. N. Lys, 7 0. P. JAMS, ,24) J. B. Rovru., DAVID Beaux, '2l N. P. PtrrsamAs, 9J• L. Llowntim, I M BAWDILY. MAIBLIELL to S. B. BASSIP.R. WILLIAM &lox. 11 T. H. WAL.z.sa, 24 B. D. HAMLIN, 12 8. B. WINCRIIIITZR,r26 GAYLAND CRUNCH 13 JOIIIIPH LAiBACH, Whst will be the Result New York possesses the power to pre vent the election of Lincoln ! Will she do it' We have c c great herpes that she will ! What then? Aye, what then ? Either the Union will be shivered into fragments, or the Republican party will prove recreant to its past history, and Its proclaimed pledges. One or the other of these'things will take place. But; my. the Republican leaders, the Chicago platform proclaims no scar upon Southern-rights.; why then should tae South distrust our friendship, or our disposition to adhere to all the require ments of the 'Constitution. TLe public prifessions of a party are like the public professions of an individual. if stn indi vidual professes to obey the law, I nth hu man and e divine, but yet daily and hourly violates it, what are his profession' worth! Just so with the Republican party. What tfit I 3 the Chicago plc ' worth when we look at the past hie of the party, and the sentiments of its' era. If that past history is worth anything—if it is not at all a lie and a cheat to' catch votes; if the publicly proclaimed sentiments of i'.9 lead- ers. its tviddings, its Sumner*. its Sevrards its Greeley's and its Lincoln's are to 'oc relied upon as the criterion of its tuuire l action, thenolisueion is not so far in the future as many suppose. The South will not, and welfare free to say, ought not to submit to such dominion. And why not submit ? Because is it Lot patent to every man, if Republican leaders are not base hypocrites, that the success of that party will be the first step towaru en insurrection of the slaves, likt un to the atrocious and re volting tragedy of St. Domingo. Does not the South know that if the Anti-slavery party of the North should get control of the government, the negroes of the South, ic..l on by, the John Browns of New England, would gain courage enough to revolt in a night, and spread rapine, massacre and beastial debauchery from the Ohio to the Gulf ? Does it not know that with an Abo lition party dominating the whole laud, with all the moral, if not physical power of the National Government in its hands, the South would be filled with the incendiary emissaries of Abolitionism, and flooded, through the agency of an Anti-slavery post al department., with such pestilent and revolutionary sheets as the New York Tri bwm 1 Does it not know, that with such spirits as Giddings, and Greeley, and Sum ner, and Lovejoy and Seward at the head of the government, there would be a sud den stampede of the Southern slaves to the North, and that the basis of all the proper ty and wealth and industrial prosperity' of the South would be stolen away and pro tected against recapture by the politic...l confederates and accessaries of the thieves? Does it not, know that the Supreme Court of the United States would be, as speedily es possible, oocupied with Anti-slavery Judges, wbp would do the bidding of their masters, and hold their. seats by 'b sly sanctioning the most infamous system oif robbery, ancrdenying the clealest prey.- *ions of the Constitution ? Does it not know, that under the rule of a Northern freanegro dynasty, the Fugitive Slave l et would never be faithfilly executeo, and that the Pasunore Williamson. of P6llnsy 1- unix would vindicate the vilest crime of hypocritical philanthropy, by pleading be fore our courts the doctrine of tile "higher law" and the natural equality of the black aad white races ? Does it not know, in short, this with the Federal Government placed in the hands of the Abolition- party of the North, the Constitution would be trampled upon, the South deprived of all security and peace, apd the whole country involved in conflict. tumult and disanitrous disruption? Why, then, with these inev itable consequences staring us in the face. should we hope fur repose and prosperity? Why these, those who say, in the name of the " Republican " party, that the South will suffer no harm if that party is successful, and that, no harm is intended' And why should the South wait until the negro has put the torch to the home of every family and the knife to the throat of every man, woman and chill ? The whole mischief is done when the Abolition party triumphs by the vote of the I..;orth ern people, The election of Mr. Lincoln will sound not ail:, the tocsin of the South, but o' the razor The moderate and con servative members of his party will not lie able to oontrol it--nor will AL They will be swept away by the mid and furious pas sions of an army of fanatical enthusiasts.— Such a paper as the Gazette may cry peace —peace--but there will be no peace.— There will be servile war, brood-shed and revolution, and no arm will be able to stay it. The fond fools of prudence and patriotic sobriety will have helped to raise a storm whieh they cannot ride and direct. All the weak dreams of the .political opti mists will be dashed in an hour, the flood gates of anarchy will be opened with a crash, and the last and fairest experiment 1 of popular government ever attempted will be blasted beyond redemption. INA. The itepubl!Nins have not only, in all. probability politicayi lost the next Hoes of Representative, but they have, doubtless: 4 lone , tinder" in the present ROOM, which they had at the last session. In December the opposition to the Repub licans will beieinlorced by Mr. Staflwortb, 'of Akihene, whose sicknetsprevented him from attending the last session : b 7 Mr. Brown, of Kentucky, who could not take kis seat there because ha was under the enstitatiosal age ; by a Democrat from Berko canny, Pennsylvania, in place of Mr. &thwarts, Itepiablimn, deceased. This nukes . change after &phut the Repub• haw, and bents them, es they sr* only able lest winter to elect their Speaker, Mr. Pennington, by one reiriority. ___ --- The r;,74-fre has taken upon itself the exclusive rhamptonship f Carl Schur z; and . most happy tune it waif heir of ill it kelpon It not only melts to beep M our Mentor as to what we iheigld w ' about that individual. bulhal‘stilliat shallquote'concerning him. As, or exam ple, last week we copied from the Psoussyl *MAN 801126 strictures upon his Springfield liposeh, in which speech, it will be reool lsited. this German infidel declared in IL2Ol'O l / 8 . ClEoi,f BRIM substance that if the signers of the tie;;lii &Hot did not mean that "all men are cre ated' equal," negroes ss well as whites, then the Declaration was a "diplomatic ilodt," "a hypocritical piece of special Plea mg," and the American Revolution "If mean Yankee trick—a wooden nutmeg i—the most impuient imposition ever prac ,Oced upon the world " Now, we have got •s Simple question to ask the Gazette, and We should like to have a categorical an swer,. [) .es it think the slaveholder who saute, Aid the slaveholders who ,signed the Declaration of Independence, intend ed to include the negro race when they Proe lai kue .l to the %corld that "all men are created equal." If they intended to in clude the negro, than Carl Schurz was right. for titer onttnued to b old the no tiro in hoiela4e. and did no t treat him as they declared he had been created—tteir ;" If they did not intend to In clude the negro in their sweeping deelitx auon, hot were ,ale Writing for white men. Mitt 'vliite us we think they were, then Carl Scirur.. deserve. lo he kicked I y even honest citizen, who respeets the Jefferson and his corm beers, from Ms ne to Cs.liforida Come now, nu (lodg ing , i,d Jetlenoil un•an whites or black.' Or "r''ill„.4Vilefi he mote ITICO are cre ated equal " In la.t I.r , ' , ter , we find the following to rept), all article of ours the week previous "As to the al:. gut ton that the . rejoicing' of the Remit:gloat., •savors more of a vin dictive pert.ortal tin/mph than patriotic exultatlon over the sticeess of dearly cher ished principles,' we beg to assure the writ er that he is mistaken. The Republicans are\gratitied—they would he either more or less thau human if they (lid not reivsce —hut we trty that, as a body, they indulge in ;leers' t*any form of 'denunciation' at the expense of their political opponents. It', in individual cases, they have manifest ed in an improper way or to an Improper extent an exultant spirit, the fault ng duos and not that of the party to which. they be long." To show that the G.l:tue's denial of the charge madeagainst its party is worthless. we have only to turn to tun preceeding column from which the above is copied, where we find in the proceeding of a Re publican meeting at Waterford the follow) ing resolution Resolved, That among the many causes that have combined to aid Republican prin• ciples and the sucee.s of our noble stand• ard-bearer, Curtin, to none are we snore indebted than tb the recent visit of the "Subteranean Fred. AsJeeps" of the city of Erie. and thei4 brethern of the sur rounding country, a that this club ten der their thanks to t it eminent spmkers, Messrs. Galbraith, I rap, Marshall and S. M. Smith. Now, there are fe intellects so obtru.e as not to see that tki r. solution was in tended as a "jeer" and a personal insult to the gentlemen named in it. That it fail ed of its mark is owing, not to the malig nity of the party which concocted it, but to the inability of the individuals who stood sponsors to it to insult such gentle men as Messrs. tiatlliraith, Marshall Do- Camp and Smith : And the only wonder is, that a paper making such high profes sions to the amenties of life as the Gazette should have prostituted its columns to so base a purpose. REPI*BLICAN I.V.—W hat mly be expected from the Republic-n -if they succeed in electing Mr Lincoln, may be inferred from the following. Ite Bosum eau' -r. in mak ing some remarks about the daappearance Of i.r.,, , , i. w i raised in Massachusetts to aid the cause of •'free.lntrt in KansaK, " or in other r,ls, to pay John Brown for murdering\slaveholders, or men in favor of Slavery, mir4,lie following language: It is sons -tit alleged that John A. Andrew is , ibt .tn ' , olitionist, and tE. Re publican part , of J chusetts are not abolitionists: - At the p ublican Conv,,n• tion, in September, Tito that same Mr. T I ALdrea presided , an we uote from his opening aldrcss, sane , / oiled h.• crmsenting plantits of the tone tion '•Whether in 166 n .or Igiel. tli\ k iotir woula et come when the bright sun ould rise upon no slavefA.y. a. -o re u., 'cal hued, the.e , words were true- -as sure human hearts beat and felt. Be faithful, men and brethren of the free states of the Union, after the manner of your power, and old Kentucky and broad Mi-ssouri will re-echo your shout, aml aid to carry your banner on to victory," Ibis is not only the mot deliberate abo litionism, but the very frenzy of abolition prognostication. It. k for thy• people to my whether they will Hinction, by their votes, •uch half-crazed fanaticism its this. Perhaps a more audacious piece of ef frontery, if not blasphemy, is rarely to be found ! but it is a fair specimen of the views of the loaders of the party, and most conclus:ve aa.svrer to the claim set up by ch. conservative element of the Repub lican party the the South has 110 cause to rebel against the election of Lincoln. •Ili The Gazette, take all in all, is "the alfiredest. shirpe.st, cutest paper out." It hat discovered one typographical error in the Observer, and An advertisement insert ed longer than the "la* allows," and, rea soning from that Lauda, it concludes the "Editor is not,aware that the - 41evernbr's election has 'si l ken p!ace." If we sholultl point out all the errors in the Gazette, and all the advertisements inserted longer than pair; for, we apprehend most people would imagine the Editor of that paper had con cluded "Gabriel's horn" would never call him to account. 111!!1.',The readers of the Gazette should be thankful that there is an Observer—be- Callid were there no Observer there would be no editorial in the acv. The last number of that paper devotes seven or eight articles to the Observer exclusively Or If our Democratic friends can and no consolation in the returns of the reeent elec tions, let them turn to the Good Book ; tt can be found there in abundant*. Listen ! "Whom the Lord loved, He thasteneth ;" "He who doeth all things well" regards us—we wean the Democratic party—with especial favor.— Do we not "Behold the prosperity ef the wick ed"—the black Republican party. "They are not plagued as other men ars," and "their ayes "Mad out with fatness ;" yet .we coat dently expect at no distant day, to behold their M. Watch and pray, but above all--vote: &w ad fem. 4- " • . (liiiseteontaw,Periey . •.; -, ed May, thii29ollll#eviallift, .„. , 1 1 0 k; vili f gi le D lt il a T r l fe t t i :hea " alipaare% at Yolltte ( . During the pert tau yaws there have Wafts deaths from that disease. The Richmond Esquire . editor dashing that not one man in Virginia doeirm s dire hition of Union. " A lot of way is 11141mottox sty pain tip a burteoqm roooptloa of tie Ittlatto ofWebs. It Is to Conte of soon. Two blaokataithain Brooklyn, N. T., had a dual with sledge hafnium the other day, and both were fatally Waved. Advioes front Wasbingtosi Territory state that the American and British Boundary Com mission will probahsly ample* their labors this year, the pending flan Jams question hav ing had no elect to obstruct their operations. Bowater, a leading New York artist; sad the painter of inert, barge scriptural pieces, bas been commissioned to paint a large picture of the Prince of Wales and Janie' Buchanan at the tomb of Washington. - - The walls of the Asylum for biebriates. at Binghamton, are abcut half completed, and the work is proceeding rapidly. There an nearly four thousand applicants for admission, mainly from the better classes. -- The Philadelphia Ledger of Saturday says that the Grand Jury has found • true bill . against Wta Byroly for the substitution of false election returns in the count for member of Congress in the First district of Penneylvs- - The Governor of Beath Cecelia& has **- sued a proclamation calling an extra session of the Leilalet*a of that State for therpsrposo of electing Presidential electors, and, "if ad ♦isaWe, to take action for the safety and pro tection of the Beau." A little girl with her baby brother is bar arms beoame so frightened at the sear ap proach of a train of ears is Ciatinnati oa urday, that she dropped him alma the track and the train paining over him rowipletely crushing his skull. Ilr Seward has looked through all the great policy of the Democratic party since 1820 which lug added seventeen States to this Union, and kept all the world on its good behavior to our people on land and sea, sad he arise out that oar government, since 1820, has been a fail n re. The salt manufacturers at But ilsgUmw, 3fich., are meeting with good sweats. A spe cimen of solar mathu been forwarded to Cleve land, and the Leader says it is a beautiful &r -tittle of coarse salt, clear and pure as a crys tal. Saginaw bids fair to become a rival of the famous Sew York Salt point. Portions of two meteoric stones, Wash fell se different times, one in Mezice, and the other In Brasil, hays recently been saalyised in a Gorman laboratory. The structure of both was found to be essentially the same, be ing composed of more than one half iron, and the rest being made up of slake, cobalt and phosphorus. In early life, Mrs. Edward D. Margin was a milliner, and Mrs Nathaniel P. Banks a factory girL Yet a prince of the royal house of England, and heir appanet to the throne, has danced with these ladies, who &ford such proof of the elevating character of repoblieen institutions ; and no doubt considered he was honored quite as much as they could be by the Acct. Curiosity in regard Ito the domed° af fairs of John C. Heenan has been foiled spin. The case Woe* the Now York Courts in which the public thought to ascertain whether Ads ihaaca Neaten was, or was not, the eheaspiou's wife, has been ruthlessly postponed until Jan tiary. Till then, let rumor mu wagging her busy tongue, and the tide of domeetio adairs flow smoothly on. One of the most shocking murders ever perpetrated in Berkshire county, Mw., °s cared at Alford, Tuesday evening. The wife of Urtah Reed, who was stopping at the resi dence of }tor father, John B. VanDusen, was approached by her husband and shot dead.— She had left him some time before on account of ill treatment, and this fatal set was commit ie4 for revenge. Reed has been.arrested. The Sew York correspondent of* Boston paper writes that when the Prince left that city he wit.' literally covered with black and blue spots—painful remembrancee of the ball; that women who had given up all hope ot be ing introduced to him, pushed him, pinched him, jostled hint, squsesed his arm when they thought ther eould do so unobserved, touched his coat, and stared at him with a wonderment incredible. g\ine el sem e. tering es I.bor was ve . heat of the sum drop of water 0. . covered, they speed that they were ap • d the stream was ten miles o John Schwartz, e t •• • killed on at Cincinnati on W • . bursting of a mill stone. Ele was the Excelslor flour mills, and careless machinery in motion at its full speed. ,1 . . --Captain F.ehels, of the Tope, raphieal En '', has fully tested the fitness of the cant ill the southwest., by his reeonnoi -dition in northwestern Tessa. Th. severe, and for six days in the ier the camels did not have a \the day that water ways dis - by their increased thing water, th a moment eloped when • large sited twill sumo burst, and scattered itself through,' the lower story. A portion of the same was projeeted a distance of ten feet, and lbw en tirely through and eight inch brick wall, but fortunately did no other damage. The Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, hare delivered an opinion diming the beide& a Judge Pearson, of Dauphin countr, in the ads agnate the Pennsylvania Railroad Coikpaay fer the tonnage tax overdue. Judge Pearson decided the tax to be constitutional, and the Supreme Court, in ailirming the decision, have thus nettled that point signet the Railroad Company. A eonsiderable amoust of massy, withheld by the Company until this question should be decided, is now due the State, lot will doubtless be paid without delay. A good *stay is tiiated of a oviducts, as a railroad, who was a etriet church-yds( ass, and was always found promptly at his amok on the Sabbath. Oaseaturday sessisilds Baia was i n very late, and he did set take his cue tonary amount of steep. whish, Wieser, did not prevent his attending divine Barrios 49 usual During the sera= he unwittiugly yi into a troubled sleep, soothed by the spieniew. none voice of the oiercroas. AD at sew lin s p rang from his seat, thrust his hat under his art, and giving kis neighhorla frond a push, shouted, "Ticket, sir !" The startled adighber also spraag to his task whisk dkordelelft aroused the smuttiest; who, bxddast wfdly around, and timing all eyes toward bita, at rally recaprebeaded Is peddles, sod "sat" amid a suppreised titter of the vole eawysgs:" ties. I• • . • t 0711 .1 • ' toe say, ,ts . 11 s. T i Bearer, Bedford. Berke, Beedford. Beek!" , Carbon, Contra 01 maws Clanon, Clearbold. Clinton, Calm bin, Crawford, Cumberland, = w, Elk, Erie, Farain, Forest. Franklin, Fulton, 828 Greene, 1,629 Huntingdon, 8,070 Indians, 8,672 Jefferson, 1,886 Juniata, 1,608 Lancaster, 18,012 Lurrenos, 2,646 Lebanon, 8,847 Lehigh, 4,166 ltzeree, 6,662 Lycoming, 3,616 *Mean, 1,048 Meteor, 8,624 /4 Main, 1,728 Monroe, 822 Montgomery, 5,212 Votitoar, 982 Northampton, 3,507 Northumbertand, 2,429 Perry, 2,416 Philadelphia, 40,288 Pike, 324 Potter, 1,410 Schuylkill. , 7,301 Snyder, 1,704 Sernarset, 2,977 Sullivan, 394 Somquehanna, 4,110 Tioga, 4,147 Union, 1,820 Vonango, 2,681 Warren. 2,112 Washington, Wayne, Westlooreload, Wyomift, York, Curtis's gorily, 82,092 BL'IIIIIIT AIM KIM itmtsoen.—last week there was an excursion, from Philadelphia to Sunbury, in which quite a large number of Manufacturers and Merchants of that city par ticipated. At the latter place the excursion ists were complimented with a Public Dinner —upon whicilc s oomudon numerous touts were drunk, and speeches made From the tatter, we select the following, by PHILIP M. Pax it, Esq., a Director of the Sunbury and Erie road, and can particular attention to the sentence we have put in Ike& It embodies • hint that may solve the enquiry, often asked in regard to the Atlantic and Great Western Railroad, as to the Anal destination of that work : Mr. Price said :—Nothing but the import ance of the work which had been alluded to could induce him to appear as a speaker. With one esception—and that one an associate—he believed he was the only representative of the Sunbury and Erie Railroad present. The President of the Company had been prevented from attending. Bad he been aware that os this occasion the business interests of the State would be so well represented, it would have atorded him pleasure to have extended the ex sursion over the completed portion of the Sunk bury and Erie road. Mr. Price proceeded to give some very in teresting bats relative to the present condition of the work. The distance from Sunbury to Erie was 288 miles, of which 143 miles were in order, via : 82 miles at the eastern end and 66 at the western. These portions were trav ersed by two trains daily. The intermediate link of 140 miles was all graded, with the excep tion of 26 miles. From Sunbury to St. Mary 's, `there was no grade over thirty feet to the mile. From St. Mary's to Erie the heaviest Trade was My feet per mile and this was lees than some of the ascents on the Pennsylvania Rail road. It was easy for the intelligent railroad men whom the speaker saw around him to es timate the coat of the superstructure of the 140 miles. It would be less than $1,000,0410 and the whole oast of the unfinished grading would not exceed sBoo'o. In the north western part of Pennsylvania was a region equal in arca to the whole of Massachusetts, and possessing unusual agricultural and muting advantages. The central portion of the road was under laid with coal, and the surface covered with fine threats. The part already completed be tween Erie and Warren was increasing in rev nu* daily. But the freight carried over this route was sent to New York instead of Phila delphia. Ile would speak of but a single item of trade, and that was the conveyance of coal oiL In the first. month of its discovery two hundied barrels were carried ; but in the month of September the amount transhipped had increased to three thousand barrels. All this should have coine to Philadelphia. Re cent statistics had shown that the lake trade of the relied States exceeded $8,000,000, of which Philadelphia got absolutely nothing.— Not content with kerpearent swpretwocy, Men Park, tlerowit English eapitahats, was about to ask tie privilege of laying a stz fool gulag( on Me road-bed of the Sunbury end Erie rood to the cite of Enc. fa justice to diet place, the rposkerikatated trashi er die Prissispiesetse corporation could refuse the request. The Sunbury and Erie road would be the cheapest in the United States. The whole ex pense theretofore, has been eight or nine toil- Was. and the Hae may be completed for twelve or thirteen millions, while the New York and Erie road has cost $40,000.000. • The speaker then reverted to the legislation which had blin obtained heretofore for the Eterprise. Should the two Houses this winter Dt to extend a helping hand, the thorough would be soon completed ; otherwise loss would accrue not only to the State, but to the corporations and private individuals whose money was invested in the work. wao insiaatly Lay. by the - lid la OPP P." 0.-- - -Aay one reading the above in Mead ville will please Wave out the allusion to the "A. & 0. W." la. Mi. ASIDIIII STIMAItt, of the Fay ette District, has been reoeiving a large number of very Battering notices from the republicans On the supposition that he had been elected to Congress. It turns out, bewever, that he is defeated by-nine hun dred *msjority now that the votes we counted, so that the puffs he has received will all go far nothing. Mi. Judge Ounscn, the Democratic Elector for this District, writes a hitter to the Crawford Diswerat declaring his first pridereette for Dosstas and Jotursos ; bat if elected, and it becomes necessary to defeat Lntcotx to vote for Bascesintress and Lau, he will do so. A very sensible conclusion ! On the 2ltt lost., by Bev. Z. W. Shaddeek. st Wellsburg; Iris County; Itr. LEVI BEALS, ot Elt. Albam , Vtsto Mrs. S. wffrridon, of the Naos rites. Os the the saes, .Mr. EZRA gs. STUN= Igl \lll4ll JANE A. STITTS, • sausty. • Oa ?made/ Nis We ult.. it Bea m& Tp.. ALICE, lissighter at Jamas sad Jaae &avast. sod 27ears sad 7 ascribe. __AlliSissat. amity. Wis.. Bss .. Mn. /VILA A. =LUX, wits of David Daddy aged IA TiaraThijlrwasoi; was tits ilasebter at the lite WIN LisaM; of itillsrask. Pa. Old fieiea lasi; M ittkeissk, nal WT, wits if (kris Lona, gad 66 years. 2,464 6,888 8,061 6,664 8, 2 8 1 • 8 ' 1 4* ,52ff ',549 .......r f yirr. -"Amr.c,...losp 1 1. 74, 1,980 EH* . • 2,824 .7,640 5,913 • 479i1 *1,755 2,040 1,760 1.708 1.848 2,686 6,277 8,178 3,625 8,716 4466 3,802 , 3,1881,996 421 6,613 688 2,469 8,882 3,666 126 66 4,058 3,379 EMI 4,788 t,BlO 4,830 1,192 6,922 Y 62,349 230,257 N_ARBIAGBB. I) goat Pam Wl* ftielgleriivnl beailento erotic eillenebehier's, 4=‘;1:4101... English isey be expeebed I 2;561 10,818 2,172 2.828 ice` The Banbury and Brie is about to add anodise train, front &is to wart's. • A i r , lfoni . ktalrol so d . nixty4lurte dollen were relayed by the Indr fbi the benefit et the United Essagelieal riit's (*Web. sir Vas Jamentema Jeered states that a viroleta *Woe VOW bier & ptialsiliag st Columbia, *lmp Co. Vaal' are dying— several victims out of awls filaflks. i ldr- A -wry Poet Mee has been astabliabid in Crawford eonaty, oa the route hem Mead ville to Titusville, four miles east of Sugar Lahe, ealLsd Mash At*. mar A cotessporery advertises ”blank oil deeds" for male at ids oSee. Then ars a great many bhmk oil deeds mold outside of printing offices, now-lays ! sir By sdartisemat, elsewhere It will be seen Mr. Dat.a.no, of Buffalo, will open a Danc ing BeJsaal hi Purse Hall on the sth of Novem ber. Mr. D. is -* favorite teacher beret, and will doubtless have a full class. mar Oil Refineries ere the order of the day in this city and •iciuity. There is one already in operation at Oak" YAsrs Plana &Co-- another in the same place will be operation la a short time, Messrs. Wright fi Co.--sad in this city, two are about being commenced—one by Messrs. Lowry I Co., sad the other by Min S Lane, Esq., and tir. C. Braude'. Stir After mature deliberation we have concluded not to emigrate to the head of "Salt River. - Limp Republican friends ace urging us. We have-found a more delightful "spot," as Lincoln would es, nearer home. It is Bensinger, Elk Co Here is the vote of tiat i delightful retreat at the recent eleotios: Fos 'Ma, Cbasts, "nsuTy ens ;" Kali, fur Conrie4i 179, PArros. 000' Bensinger - did &or duty, certainly ! 4 , 206 037 s ir The Republiana, Itisadvilla, states that. at -die recent elect ion, Crawford county pollad 8.23 roles more Lima Erie county Eris county polled 886 more &public= -votes titan Craw - ford, and Crawford polled 700 more Democrat ic votes than Erie." This indicates that in itoorals and p pniatlon Crusibid 4 the superior of Brie. Sorry to "record IL" 6,276 1,366 6,666 280. 7 gas„ The Chicago Press' says the schooner Cow*4ht, Car. CymruS, arrived et that port as Fridag last, having aside a round trip from thereto Port Colborne with a cargo of wheat, beildes going to Erie for 400 tons of coal—all inside ofdays. The Coini ng/It Is owned by . 11=. Hearn & Scott of this city. This is the quickest trip "recorded." On Weddesday night, abo . ut midnight, a Are broke out in the old trains building, cor ner of Fifth and French Streets, and very haehly for the town, consuMed it without com municating to the staining buildings. It was occupied by Mr. John Lantz, saddle aad har ness maker, and Mr. Win. Riblet , cabinet mak er. In both cases most of the stock was ear ed. Four or Ave hundred dollars will oovei,the entire loss of tbe occupants ; and as to the building, itmitt to have been burnt long ago. It was owned Oen. Reed. ifir The StlCharies Hotel. Pittsburgh, has always been good a house as there is in that city ; but the proprietor is now determined to make it the best. Calling there the other day we found every part of it undergoing thorough renovation and repairs. The painless, uphol sters, paper-hangers, and carpet-dealers bad almost entire possession. From miler to gar ret they were busy. Old furniture was giving place to new ; soiled carpels were being re placed with a finer and more modern article ; old paper was disappearing item the walls and a new and brighter article being hung in its place; the gat : fitters weriibusy in introducing that modern luxury into every room ; in short whatever improvement taste or comfort eug geuled, the proprietor of the St. Charles was having introduced., so that we came away fully convinced that the St. Charles was about to become the first House of Pittsburgh, and that the proprietor, HARRY SRILLAS, "can keep a hotel." His corps of assistant*, too, are of the '''right stripe," from the Drees of Clerks in the office, Messrs. Truta and Srrnsz, down to the "gentletnen of white - apron and napkin" in the dining room who furnish you your soup, fish, and roast. Reader, when you go to Pitts burgh, give Harry Shirbt a call. and you will agree with us in regartt to the St. Charles. githr rite Jammu:lint Editors are the "best pleased" set of chaps we know of--and all be cause the locomotive whistles occasionally in their streets. Every paper has something to say about "our railroad." When an Irishman drives a spike they chronicle the fact ; when a paddy breaks his wheelbarrow, in wheeling dirt for "our railroad," they give him the ben efit of half-a-column ; and so on to the end of the chapter. Here is the last information of the prestress of the road, furnished by the Journals 4 RAILROAD MAWS= —Since tat kat man tion comidarable program has best nab in our railroad *or*. The greecanksfid be/last ing on the track already laid is being terwsrd ed yo completion. The long Drifts mess the Outlet is finished and was crossed f She Am time on Saturday last. The t i telsglsk i te progressing west beyond. A , - ringer and Freight Depot Take p-aph, and Basilian Olees lute bean eteated. The road has at once sprung into sew, heavy freighting business. Every tads Mg" or carries several car-loads of morobandise sad prodooe. We notice in the depot goods ship ped treat the last (or Sugar Grove, Endear. ville. Mayville and other images ?sr mad near. The Bost brings down large quantities of dairy prodner (reel the head of the Lake to be shipped.by rail to New York. The Passen ger Onsiness is also innexpeeodly larp. Two new lesuraotivee Ire been finished and are doing servos on , .road. They are of the first class in knish aid construction. LAue boas.—Copt. Campbell, of the pro peller Cataract, reports a doubtful topsail sohooner ash.* on the north-wet shore of Long Point. O.s. R. also states that a black fore-and-after was st anchor elose in shore, which is probably ere- this beached. Signals were nude to the Cataract qiir relief, but owing to the heavy load of the moo .1 1 the hi g h sea, it was impossible to reader .t • assistance —both vessels being In shallow water.---Copt. MeOnw, of the schooner Wyandotte, reports seeing, on his hist trip down to BO*, below the Islands, en lake Brie, a entail vessel of about 20 tens buirthim dirlinnetbd as 4 VW tinily NI of water. Owing to the roughness of the weather et the lima he wan 301 able to approach war enough to mototala her mom —Wo kora from Detroit, that the tchereter Freeman, of that part, want ashore ea Pelt an Pekoe, on Mestily.—Tite eiheefter W. A. Adak, boast.* Dahl* from Brki, pat back,. teakiag, to Dunkirk, and was run takers, to prampit her slahhtg; Skir has oboe gees to pieras.---The Light Bowe Do d er meeting ma lm keshied le • the bums atthe math .1 (tread River, at Fairport: The &mad Las been Mot op with mad, eo that se meld ea' ester. - ler Des Rios Irwin Philadelphia Ism week; his circus wee dm hi thelhadew State, sad will quarter of*. ei n "dhoti. He wahine the re* of*. 4.edee Slaphant, Lila Ithillreslir•ti thelpdre Rice has re easily sued Ilk Alivolosi her husband. oA viareeild allr The Cleveland /braid readied its tar ty-1M year oa *Way last. Ono waste think, alter tarty years devoted to polities) sin the, Herald would be disposed to repeat ; bat sw is annonnehtir the Sok n still`duetwwwlas ds• tormiaation to adierr•ta pasted error. jar A very serious accident oormared of th,t-Sairi Lad Cirrelsad railroad on Saturday tear Pahumille. As the Mail Train that fore noon was mowing a highway half a mile be yond Painesville Station, it caste in contact with a two Immo restos, imitantly Willow the wife of •Soloaron /Mona: ands ion of BOOT; Dyke, aged about 14 years. Mrs. Dyke, sod a son of Mn. Stoats, agtod abopt 14, and an in fant were seriously injured. Or The first nastier of n new monthly sheet., entitle the Mani Swat Mail, has been published by J. Holbrook, Esq., long known as an experienced officer of the Department.— The Mail will supply information on our pos tal laws, and its tables of domestic and foreign postage, will be authentic and official. A correspondent wishes to know what are the effects of "California Yeast" when used in making beer or bread. Be has heard that it is poisonous. For ourselves, we are so ig norant as not to - know what •'California Yeast" is, but we do know that CLAIM A CAll,lllllllel Pure Saleratus, manufactured in Eris, is the best article of the kind on sale in this city.— tio and pi a paper and 4.2 it. - The Gesell• states that the Erie and Pittsburg Railroad leas commenced running its trains to ibis city. No other paper has the news—at any rate, no oneliut the Editor of that paper has seen ao Erie and Pittsburg train at our depot yet ; and if he has it must be the result of imbibing too much of "Middle ton's Old Wheat." Who'd a thought it ' the hurry of business and the tur moil of politics, says a writer, men die and are buried, and the friends of years forget them ere the grass grows upon their graves. This truth was forcibly called to our mind, by read ing a notice in a cotemporary, of the death of IL H. At.mos, Esq.. at the residence of his brother Tin-law, in Harborereek, two weeks since. One of our earliest and firmest per sonal and political friends was frank and hear ty Hssat'Almor, of North East. His was a nature that drew friends to him, and made him a favorite wherever known. But an .insiditons disease of the lungs seised upon him, and af ter battling with it for years be has passed away Few young men of the county in life had more irked", mid in death was followed to the grave- by a larger number of sympathis ing friends. His age was about 86 years. Ifir A young man named Footunocon, ,in driving in to the city with a load of wood on Wednesday, met with a very serious accident by which he will meet likely loose his arm. In coming down the Nicholson hill, on the Edin boro plank road, his horses started to run away, and threw him from the load, --1 lie w heels passed over one of his arms, and crushed it Dr. 3 . L. Stewart was summoned, but found it so badly crushed that he thinks amputation will become necessary. mar Do you like good, sweet, light, and wbolmionie bread, cake, pastry, biscuit, ke. ' Ton eau have h by using De Land & Co.'s Sal eratus. It is perfectly pure, healthful, and can be relied upon to do one day, what it will do another, and give perfect satisfaction. Sold by most dealers, and sold at wholesale by the principal grocers everywhere. Manufactured and for sale at wholesale, at Fairport. Monroe Co., N. T. gar A most melancholy and fatal accident occurred to Mr. Lows Sorniwicit, of North East, on Saturday. Ile was at Portland, N. Y., on business, and in placing a blanket up on a horse, stepped behind the animal to ad just it, when be received a kick in the abdomen with such force that be was utterly cut open. He lingered until the next day. Sunday. when dpath came to his relief His age was about 45 years. sir Here is a piece of information, a little late now, but as winter is an excellent time to procure the remedy recommended, it will be acceptable to many of our young readers "The best protection from musketos will be obtained by marrying a pretty woman Theee pests bite a man when they can find any thing better and sweeter." j The Prince of Wales had, in Boston, a rival bon, in the person of Prince Leo, a colored stranger of the "royal family of Nubia." Both had a ball given in honor of their presence Baron Renfrew must have been delighted to thus divide the honors with Lis sable highne The English and the Nubian lions wade a characteristic amalgamation of .114 t emelt t for the "modern Athens." s ir When the "Wide Awakes" were Kt.ow Nothing*, and consequently net —wide awake," they had a famous motto, which read that -the office should seek the man, not the man the office." As an evidence of the progress of po litical disinterestedness we record a fart, vouched for by the Deneorroi, Meadville, that there are ••already of some ten or fifteen per sons, whose patriotism his grown so strong, that they have concluded to sacrifice their peace and happiness, and serve the country ae Post Master in that borough." Here is disinterest ed patriotism, for you! Jar Here is a curious piece of information There is a stream called the Whitbeck, in West Cumberland, England, so impregnated with arenic that all the villager, of Whitbeck are regularly' arsnicised by the um of it. Few caul* live long in drinking its water, but, the people there are stout, florid, and healthy.— Nevertheless we do not advise our readers, who are lean like Cassius, to practice ersnic eating to make them ht. a ir The people Moog the Lake Shore, whose bushman or pleasure lead them to visit Pittsburgh, will have good causo.to eonpatu late themselves when the Erie and Pittsburgh railroad is finished through. At the present tints they have bat ens avenue of eouunsmies- Lion with that city—that is via the Erie and Cleveland, sad the Cleveland and Pittsburgh roads. Aside from the distant* traveled, the read from Cleveland to Pittsburgh is perhaps the worst managed, and most unreliable road in the country. We have traveled ovet it ear. aril ease, and k seems to us IA never maim a totitasetion, it it can be evoked. ler en. ample ; we WI Pittaburglktiae sight last week at sae o'clock ; there was ao saddest aid so detention, sad although the Lake Share train does not leave Cirrapil till 10, A. 11., we billed to make a seasestiou, sad were eoupelled to reseal* over is that city all day.. Niue hears between Pittsburgh and Cleveland, and the. thit to =meet, is those thee., M a rather “sloweeaelt." It could be eine distil, without grumbling, tither. appeared say seeeesity Ant it ; at lames, after breakfast, we lost enough' time, without **perceptible aquae, to have afforded ample opportunity to hove method Cleveland in sexton ; at Hud son the sane sort of delay wan experienced in short, al every suasion it appeared as th,. th e Coodnotor, Engineer, Brakeman, Fireman, nod Water Boy, each and severally, bad bust new far sore important than all the puma. gen :twilit:fined. It is related of a railroad 'down Sootier that the Conductor stops the train *miry dine he sees a squirrel, and 1111114 es himself by "baging" the game. The Cleve laud - and Pittsburgh road appears to be run or, about the same principle. Comae' Coxes: Cones :--41reasing, Back Cheater and Pine—of Ivory, Bbell , India Ruh her, Buffalo and common Horn. kipantitte, qualities and prices to omit everybody almost' CARTER & BRO Ham listosnne.—By the dozen or tingle at prices ranging from twenty cents to twenty shining* eaeb. At the store of 3t--19 CARTER K: BRO BIM/KIS ! BRVIIIMI !—The greatest variety and the largest stook ever brought Into 11)14 market. ems be found at the store of Bt-19 CARTER t liitii ao-fay's Advtrtionntuts. TO Rm. PLEASANTLY Situated HOUSE can be ntall leek rented by apply tog to J. C. Borger co A S. XOTICE TO JEROII2. TURORS summoned for the Ist, Honda% trof Noinasber are hereby notified taskby order ur Res. R. Brown, Presiding Judge, they sae directed not i, aglow until Wednesday morning. the Ttli of Novenibei 0et.97-21 J W. IPLANE, libent - - PIANO TMIIIO AIR. WILLIAM WILLING will prompt ty attend to all calls for ?tAJO TUNING. ettlie, A IR. or through Mr JOHN ILLIINSMA. an woo Oahu* Ptaao Tumor and tisuutectantr from Butislo, .1,.. nag seestaatland at I. Willimet Maga Mom - Nr. W. will Lo rdhimself responsible kw iv work that may oct.S7-81. Oa *Gus by gautliiioast ander his auspice*. ERIE ACADUT. ON MONDAY, OCTOBER 29th , the last half of the prroont term la the Academy 1111 rw moos. &Moises will be meeived for the remMo4, the to ros at hair this Twitiols of the whole seesioti. WAGN KR will occupy a room in the bear hi. Gorman classes, and ocholars rap bars tLe !lege of studying German with a native teacher MM. WAiirmsa'a tenors of thalami for • amiloa of f.art.ti. limas are, for German and Froarb, ti 4341111•14114 4 4,1, German for scholars pa:suing English studios, nu oct.27—n. ft. W. GALE, Pruse.p.sl INSTRITOT/ON IN DANCING -AT FARRAR HALL: MR. DELAS'O would respectfully gi% Dotes to toe citizens ceritele that he will coal mance Ws School for the laeteectioa of Young Laos.,, Dissesabd tauter, at FABAIIt BALL, ea MONDAY NOVEMBER 3th, ISMS. la which will be taught the Labeitaad meet Faahiottabte Daueea Terms of Tuition $4.00 par scholar. Deductions viii oc made to termite. "coding more than one Scholar ' one del lar each. Hours of instruction from 2to o'clorek, P. S i , EVE/111111G SCHOOL for GUMMED( W 111 commence Oa the ahoy. ET nape. Hours of fooffiic Uon for the first Leeson., from 7to V o'clock. Lech Gen tleman will be allowed the tuition of one Llll4y to the Da 3 , and Evening dcbool. Tuition for Genthmoeu Kea N. 11.—I vie, Gentle:mac mituctiber tetra be entitled to all Dancing hour. from 7 to 12 o'clock during the Term Private Lemons and particulars then by applying t.. M r. D., Farrar Hall. oct 2.--21yre, CASH DRY GOODS HOUSE! Wholesale and Retail ! MANY JOB LOTS AUCTION PRICES! NII :W I. sclit•- • i . I.mk mil 1 •j, ii I, ht.- 1 E7'Y11..16,4 HE -1 N K gr BY.-1 ATi LKS l'Attrf h. Furtil.litmi. ti r• - 4 i NkW HEST STYLEg- CHF: ti• NEW 'loop :)kirt - rtti;At STYLES cliF.ti• NEW 'ilk CHF k P STYLE-, 014 iP HEST. eiii,t, HEST Soilertno.• auid Magenta i. clik , l . BEST. - CHF: AI ~EST I ... .. arpetlng M1..1 ihi Cloth. `.""t' HF.4IT CHE ll' WM. BELL, Jr .No. 3, Exchange. Erie. Pa. $1 0 0 R.* WA RD ! isserol, - FROM the StoFe of the Subscriber eeu Sunday evening, the '4th loet. , Goode aisionatirc to $240 or , $lOO, conalotinir lo part of Wadi and dr., tiotha, shelf goods, hat. end CA pg, shaerhi Yankee N, UNA tite be $lOO deflano is offered 11111 a reward kith apprehension of the thieve. sad recovery of al* property LEWIS ELMS Y. Spartanstiorgh, Oct 17th, 1860,-21. OF COMMERCE. THE Annua ection fur thirteen 1)1 rectors, to mere., the ettpuiti year. will b. held • The Banking Hnopr, in Erie, oo ander the 19th liar t.l Havotob., twat, twt ref.!, the boon nr 10 o'clock A 11 and V o'clock H. A. HILT , unt.27-2 I Cantu., NEW GOODS! lin 9 II HALL, IN now rem...fug frnm Nn• S'.‘l4o STorli or FALL AND WINTER MILLINERY, and Fancy Goods! t.f lELIET.SILI and Straw BONNETS, of L. toto•t StJ tes- HAKER HOODS' MISSES HAT,S, RIBBONS AND FLOWER. Caps, Head Drawee and net. of rarsous deaeripttots• Zephyr and Shetland Wools for knitting. Gilt Omameyt- Hoop Bkirta, %twain Conan, Beads, Yankee Notion., I. siery and many other things too numerous to romition wleh will be sold etimpfor Cimh or ryady pay. a ^ Particular attention paid to bleaching and res. Bonnet, colored any desirable color 1111111mrs from the Country supplied at Wholesale at a small percentage above New York price. MRS. S. H. HALL, Peach at., above the Depot, Erse, Pa. New Goods ! New Goods ! PREPARED forth. PALL CAMPAIGN ! J. 11. JOWIICE Is sow opening, ►t his Talionog ■o I rowdy hin/do Clothing Emporium, No. ri, Brown's Hotel, State street, a two sod impostor stock of FALL AND WINTER GOODS ! in hi. line, width he will make up to order upon sh,,r ties, and warrant to give antisfsetten or so gals rer sea in want of anything in his aen .I,spetui hying fairly dealt with, as he is determined not I. tap any goods bat such as miller, sathifietion Hr kssp• eatistantly as hand a good assortment of READY MADE CLOTHING ! : wens make and warranted to Le ail re premen te,/ e_ re ended. parehasisig tot CASH art io.at , l t.. e.i: .y Goods sod Priors, u 1 .m at:ttron,d OW* snails* NO dons on short no t,, ssd w•rratstr..l JOHN 11 JUSTICh: =I! Way, Gentlemen ! 2e31111717* LL i, lINTER CLOTHING • aENSHEIMER'S Corns? of State end Seventh sts., Brie READY MADE CLOTHING, naked to the slum" Coailhoelaii of 1 DPW, Frock and Sack Coats 4=1 4 0 , 01 4 Pio*. Vat* or at krado, crooat., I. 11 his, Drawer; lteeediteratteds, CoU.r 11.34 w,, et infilliMit qsaltUes ; is abort, be keeps ever; Artie. Ulliany bapt 1111% Cl.4Yiai Istabbahrocat. kite Cloths', useaelbotonat by hhooodt, sod 'smarted eval t"• Is the city. Perms' obits( articles to Me hoe . • welt to eall sod sisodso W idoell, as ha intend, oot be modenold by say estsbilabempot wept of New York - Cll*l=o soNtr MShort mediae. eati#ool. Hiseller's Corner, Iv , ors 41 Slats sal Antis. Oct. 31....41N0. JOHN °INBOUND( occ.Y7—_