II (frit Obstrint. THURSDAY. SEPT. 14, PM. Brian*. Vienraca it vii PROPiII as ear Puna es P,11011 , i - I,tiv•nlrf'"• l l • DEM.OOEATIC STATE TICKET. AIIDTTOII GINIZAL, Coz. W. W. IL DAVIS, Backs Co. tuiturroa GINIRAL4 Cot.. JNO. P. LINTON, Cambria Co. Democratic County Convention. The Democratic citizens of Erie county are requested to meet at their usasl places 'of holding primiry elections, on Saturday, Sep tember 16th, (in the townships at 8 o'clock in the afternoon, and in the boroughs and aside at o'clock in the tveniog,) for the purpose of selecting delegates to a county convention to be held in the Court Mime, in the city of Erie, on Mosnay. Elmawass 18ra, 1865, at 2 o'clock p. m., to place in nomination • county ticket for the support of the Mends of the Union and Constitution, at the October eleetion. The Mlowiee is the representation to which each district is entitled: Brie, let district. 2; 2d, 2;_ 34, 2; 4th, 2 ; East Mill Creek, 8; Weak Mill Creel, 8; Harbor Creek. 4; North East township, 3; North East borough, 2 ; Greenfield. 2; 8; Wattsburg, 1; Amity. 8 ; Wayne, 8; ronoord. 8; Cony, 2 ; Union township. 8; Caton Mills. 2; Le Beouff, 8: Waterford township, 8; Waterford borough. 2; Greene. 8; & tom b, 8; McKean. 8; Mid Ileboro, 1 ; Washington, 8; Edinboro, 2; Franklin, 2; Elk Creek. 8; Conneaut, 8 ; Albion, 2 ; Springfield, 4; Girard town•hip, 3; Girard borough, 2 ; Lockport, 2 ; Fairview, 3. D. W. Hirroutosow, Chairman. E. CaltNiktresx. Secretary. August 28. 1865-to VOTES Of TUE B4OLDIBBB• We do not feel touch concerned, says the Dayton Empire, about the votes of the soldiers, now that they are-at - home. and can mingle with the men who have been so infamously represented to them, and may read papers that many of their superior dam% were so base as to deny them access to. They have sense enough to determine in a short. time who have been their friends and with whom their interests ought to be confided in the future. When they come to under stand that abolitionist, protracted their term of service and caused their sufferings in the prison pens of the South, and now that their success is to be used, rather to make the negro their equal at the ballot box than to restore the Southern States to their former position in the Union ; when they come to see that they have been bear ing the heat and burden of the contest at sixteen delars a month, whilst the patrAtie stay•at-home gentlemen, who have ben so vigorously patting them on the back. have been counting their gains by thou. .sands and tens of thousands, and are in vesting their surplus profits in non-tax paying government bonds 4 whilst the la bor of the country, to which all these re turned soldiers must contribute, is taxed to pay the enormous debt incurred by ar unnecessarily protracted war; when al' these things and a great many more come to be understood and comprehended, a• they anon will be, we will have nothint especially to fear from the votes of the 1101 Q iert. The lives of the common soldier in this • war have been sacrificed with heartless- ness and prodigality as brutal as was un necesst►ry. The butchery at Fredericks burg was an illustration of the sacrificer that were made to appease the clamor of the cowardly stay-at-home patriots for r more vigorous prosecution of the war.— Virginia to day boils the bones of no less than fifty'thousand brave private soldiers whose lives were ruthlessly sacrificed to the importunity of Abolitionists and news paper politicians, who were constantly ex erting a control - over the operations of our armies in the field. The slaughter of some sixteen hundred brave men, by the explosion of the Sultana who after surviving the thousand dangers and hardships of the battle-field had to fall victims to the groveling, heartless av arice or some speculating Abolition quer termastera is unatoned for. We bear of no military commissions to_ try the mur derers of these thousands of brave men— thes were but private soldiers I It is the responsibility of the party in power for the immense and revolting sac rifice of life and means, that resulted from their fatally mistaken policy and the con trolling influence of Abolitionists, that now rises like the ghost of Bsoquo at the banquet of Macbeth, "with (a million) mortal murders on its crown to push them . from their seats." It is this which makes them anxious about the " rotes of the soldiers." and which prompts the continued falsification of the conduct and purposes of the Dem ocratic party. Time will prose all things. Srawrorr.—There is no public man in the country who is so generally disliked and loathed as Stanton. He gets more kicks than kindness even in his own par ty. The Tribune, for example, in the course of an article yesterday, on the return of the 54.1 s (colored) regiment of Massachu setts volunteers, charges him, in plain terms, with cheating and .dishonesty. The only complimentary allusion we have lately seen made to Secretary Stanton was the resolution endorsing and praising him by thePennsylvanis Republican Conven tion, probably not adopted out of any respect for Stanton. bat as a covert means of disparaging President Johnson. A convention which damned the President with faint praise iss one resolution, rind rebuked his reconstruction policy in . an other, Mai to belittle and eclipse him in a third. by extolling to the skies the man Stanton, whose name is a stench in the nastrils of multitudes in his Own party. Tug Harrisburg 7elegrop4 • berates the late Des:Mantic State Convention hitterly for not adopting a resolution "proposing to give to the soldiers of 186 . 1-0, one hundred and sixty acres of land in lieu of the bounties they failed to receiie." The joke of the matter is, that the Convention did pus a resolution to the very effect which' the ntegrapA abuses it for not ou tdoing. Will the Telegraph have the kindness to tell us what action the con vention of Its party adopted on • this sub ject? If we are not mistaken, that e body failed entirely to pass any resolution on the question. tarrridis qi! 4:oM . Prwww_ mon 001" DAVIN AND UNTUN. The following are the letters of accept ance-written by Cols. Davis and Linton. in response to the official notifications of their nomination. ' They are both unas suming in style, and will commend their writers to the kind regards of a candid men : Lill2l OF COL, W. W. 11. DAVLS. DOTLIGITOWW, PENWITYLVAPILL, August 29th, 1865. Genuses—l have the honor to ac knowledge the reception of your letter bf the 25th instant; announcing my nomina tion as Democratic candidate for Auditor Gener .1 of the State. Although' the posi tion was not sought for by me, I secept the- nomination, and tender my thanks for the comphment thus paid me. A decent respect for the opinion of the people of Pennsylvania, whose suffrage is so licited, seems to require a frank statement of my views. I was opposed to secession, even when simply a political dogma, advocated at the hustings and at the forum; which is prov ad by my subsequent conduct when it had grown to armed insurrection. I am opposed to negro suffrage, as every white man should be. Nature has erected a harrier against the two races enjoying equal political rights in the same commu nity where they approximate in numbers as in the Southern Sates. San Domingo is a good case in point to prove the incom patibility of the two races exercising equal political privileges in harmony. There bag been almost perpetual warfare between the negroes and mulattoes since the island has 'been in their possession ; which has been only a struggle for the ruling influ ence between the pure* African and the mixed blood. If this people, of the same race, but of a different caste, cannot gov ern a small island in peace, what are we to suppose would be the condition of things when the negroconies into compe tion with the pure Caucasian in the strug gle for empire in the South ? The found ers of our Government intended that the white should be the governing race in this country, and it will be a calamitous da3 for both people when the black man is given the p gitical franchise and eutitled to hold office. I am opposed to • any change in the State Constitution in this respect; and deny to Congress all right whatever to fix the qualification for suf frage in any State. I am in favor of President Johnson's policy of restoring the States, lately in re bellion, to their constitutional obligations. I cannot admit that their ordinances of secession took any of them out of , the Union: For a time an armed force inter rupted their constitutional functions, but did not destroy their identity as States. Hence the States, in their political signifi cation, not having been destroyed, they need no reconstruction, but simply to be restored to their reciprocal rights and du ties ; when the Union will be made whole as before. Whenever they shall send rep resentatives to Congress who are qualified by the Constitution, and the laws of the respective States, there is no rightful pow er in that body to refuse their admission. I appreciate the peculiar and trying situ ation of the President,and think he should be treated with forbearance by all parties. His plan of restoration gives evidence that he dues not intend to ignore the rights of the States, and be led captive by the radii. cal doctrine'of consolidation. The Convention did well to demand an immed.ate and complete resteration of all civil rights in the loyal States. If there was an excuse for withholding them in the days of rebellion, there certainly can ite none now. You say to the President iemly and kindly, restore to the people he Wats corpus and trial by jury, as fully , s they were enj led before the rebellion and abodsb military courts except for the rial of persons in the naval or military ser• vice of the United States. These thing• ,re granted to the people by the Conatitu I inn, and withholding them violates it in 4pirit and in tact. When we ask that they •4s restored, we only demand what belongs o us. I am in favor of the most rigid system , f economy in the administration of pub. .c affairs. In view of the heavy taxation here should be retrenchment in every mossible way. All officers, civil and mili •ary, whose services a state of peace does not absolutely require, should oe disponi .d with; and our system of taxation should ne so amended and equalized, that every nan will be obliged to hear his share of the public burden according to his abili ty. am pleased that the Convention took action on the subject of equalizing the counties of soldiers. There is every reason why the patriotic men who enlisted in 1861 and '62 should -b* placed on an equal ity with those who enlisted at a later pe riod. Should I be elected, whatever in fluence I possess, official or otherwise, will be exercised in obtaining justice for the early defenders of the Government. What ever honors °triers may nave emtintreo to the contest just closed, the private soldier, aho bare the heat aid burden of the (ley, will always remain the true hero of the war, and he is entitled at all times to our consideration and gratitude. My past history is sufficient guarantee that I shall not overlook his claims. I remain, very respectfully, your obedient servant. W. W. 11. DAVIS. LITTZII OT . COL. 'NO. T. LINTON. Jouseyowts, Pa., Aug. 29. 1865. GCNTLININ—Ycins favor of the 25th list., officially informing me of my nomination for Surveyor Geueral "by the Democratic State Convention assembled at Harrisburg on the 24th inst.," has just been received. Not only was this nomination unsought and unexpected on my part, but had I been consulted beforehand I would have urged my friends' not to introduce my name into the Convention. A•ty hesita tion, however, in now accepting, might be construed intols want of appreciation of the distinguished honor conferred by the Convention, or a want of faith is the principles promulgated by it. I certainly feel neither. The importance of the po sition would - have been my chief reason for not soliciting it, and the resolutions adopted are hut a practical application to existing exingencies of those cardinal principles which I have always consci ously maintained. Accepting, therefore, this nomination and its responsibilities, I remain, Yours truly. NIGRO 1517/11VMAGE. The Republicans, through their County Conventions, have declared in favor of "Universal 'Suffrage " in 'the following named onanties CRLWFORD, UNION. The following named Repnblioan news papers have declared in favor - of "Univer sal Saffrage"--advooatiou either ii change' of the State or Federal Constitutions: 'Press. Philadelphia city. • Qaantercial, Pittsburg Allegheny County. daseas, Dispatch, ' " Teigrapil, liarrisburn. Dauphin itountY. Ex m oo r .. Lancaster. Ltuosoter • county. Record Rom Ito& Berko county.. • Deward, ICattunning, Axmotrong extu ti. AVeghititat, Ebon!sbarg.!lambris county. Reporter, Towanda. VAdford county. ,DispoteA. Mercer. Mertes county: . _ Ods - Democratic .00tomporsties will pumas' add others to the ehovalist. *lvan panied with the proot—.-Harriabarg Patric' The Patriot may add to its list the Eke . Gazette, the old established _organ of the: party in this oity.-, For proof we • refer to any issue of.the paper that has been pub , ' Halted within the het three months. Tie party in' every county arifortb-Western Pennallianis is Committed *Yon' and:, sod brooches to oso e.- , j JNO. P. LINTON. NORTHAMPTON. Wo . arii_ifiehted to M. Israel We Mill Civet. for a lot of . the Attest pears sad apples we hare ene this leans. ,tlome'of Abe 'pears irelgh 'sloe moan, sod 'sole of the apples three-quarters et a pound, and bailee this nil, they see as gooll as they in large.' bir..lllsl4OY has ei 'yotiog :aal.theirleg ohited or. mioli or' "4.Shoioest Ma- is Erie ao!iltr,-- /tax, of sus triAteile think they sea WO - idea, let tliaia totwari as simians. , TUI ZIPLILICAN IPAIITTOfte Ur. From the present signs of the times, an exchange comes to the oonclution that it is apparent the Republican party is pretty nearly • used up morn.. It has the sable elephant on hand, and don't know what to do with the 1/IMlttibUS animal: The firm is composed of two 'partners, each wanting to dissolve from the other. But they cannot agreti 'upon the term' of dis solution, because they are suspicions of each other. • One fears the other will get too much African for his Share. and the other trembling with apprehension lest he will not get enough. Both factions are at a loss to know how to make a plat form, or to find any one willing to en dorse and run upon it after the construc tion is accomplished. We would advise them to try Spaulding's Prepared Glue, or some othez adhesive preparation, to stick the concern together, so as to keep up appearances until the October election. In our opinion the ebony idol is a dated piece of mechanism—that i s wor shippers are in the last stage of galloping consumption, and are only walking about to save their funeral expenses I Tua Republican leaders are be(Mming alarmed at the popularity of oui 'candi dates and the harmony of our party.— Their papers are filled with appeals to the frithful, begging of them to he up and working. The Harrisburg TelegrapA sounds the alarm a follows : The Democratic party of Pennsylvania is to• lay more united than it has been for four years past. Our Union brethren, therefore, in every district must not ex pect to walk over the course - We must go into the contest expecting to fight the last desperate battle with treason. The Telegraph is frightened so badly that it has become slightly mixed. In stead of "treason" in the last line it plain ly intended patriotism. It may well cpl culate•upon the campaign this fall being the last "desperate battle" between Abo litionism and Democracy. We expect to whip them so severely that future contests will be no battles at all—merely skirmish es. • Ha. ODZLL, THZ NATAL °moss.— The appointment of Mr. Odell as Naval Officer of' New York,iwaa made against the de termined oppOsition of the Radicals. The Woebi says that this fact being known to Mr. Odell, "he promptly addressed a let ter to the' authorities,_ stating that it was true that he resisted the election of the Republican candidates last autumn, and voted for 31tClellan and Pendleton ; that if he was appointed to any office it must be with the distinct understanding that he was a Democrat who obeyed the discipline of his party; and in conclusion be asked to be permitted to remind the Administration that Me Democratic organi zation was the only poly which was a unit in the support of President Johnson's State r;ghts plan of restoring social order cud rc-establiah in7 Me normal authority of the Union in the in surgent States." The' N. Y. Co►nrnaeial'a ;(Abolition) Washington special says: The leadirg politicians of the Republican party have been 'gathered in this city to consider heir policy in the fall electinns and in the new Congreis. The difference of opinion is wide and excites angry contro versy. Thorlow Weed is playing a prom inent part. He has warned the radicsls that they will be displacel from power if they press their extreme views upon the people. It is doubtful whether tbe,con flictitig elements can be harmonised. Senator Wilson on behalf of the New England Congressmen. seems to reject all compromises. .11is plan is to rely on the party 'majority in Congress, to resist the admission of the Southern States and vie wally appeal to the people against Presi dent Johnson's policy. Tas,Democratio candidates are every thing that every democrat or liberal mind. ed conservative could desire. C,ls. D tvis 'and Linton, in all their private relations, are pure and upright men. As citizens they have always dilichargod their duties as became men of good and high resolves. Their characters are not ouly of the very best, but they are above suspicion. As lovers of their country, their war record also is all thet could be desired. They never deviated from their love for the glorious old Union, and their devotion to it is now written in scars upon their bod 'es and maimed limbs. Novivas.—The Philadelphia News, a shoddy organ, says that Gen. Hartranft, went into the service " imbued with a re. ligious sentiment," and "„devoted all the energies of his soul to the cause," but that Colonel Davis only marched forward to " draw his pay," and to "seek the honors which the Government might bestow." It is strange, however, that Hartranft got all the honors and Davis all the weinule—Davis having been wounded three timeaand left his right band upon the battle-field, while Hartranft bears not a single scratch 1 The honors of which Colonel Davis has been robbed now await him at the hands of the people 1 How cart 'the Republicans justly call themseires Union men when by their own admissions the us opposed to the restora tion of the old Union and in favor of hold the Southern States u conquered proyin ces. A POILTIMIT IWO the record yesterday of that extraordinary well, No. ,64, now producing 1,290 barrels a day. Mr. P: 0. Louok, of New York city, Is one of the Isrgest owners of this well. Mr. L. par chased an eighth Interest luthis well when she was down 200 feet, shoot the 18th of July, paying $2 100 for it. The usessmeets for •pattieg it do's' afteunted to $2,100 more. Mr. Loack (Send a .half of Ms interest foe sale at $2,000; but found no one willing to look at the well, or take him up, aid well for ,hl*, that- he ,kept it, Air when lasted - she lowed 800 • burets, and Is to•day, probably the largest tlowieog. well in the world. . Two days,before she vu struck, Q. Roberts; of No'', Vorki.Pald $2 200 fora onsaixteooth In this wall as bought it of: a workman. who had att, pest. Lath is its suooess, sa4 Mho Voisli owls himself militia by selling out to lb:. Roberts.-21auvOls _ . At. 1; oink, the- gsatioauta above rotund to, bao'bosa !for someateatbs a • resident of thhrefir.- Politiasi Brevities. The shoddy virty of tratou toasty hue doctored 4 favor *Curs stqrap. The Abolitios Oonvoidiat of Tummy*. ionoty. Ohio. defeated nay oohrur oaadidoto announced for aotolastioa. • • The Harrisburg marry* Uri Oat Mr. Bloater. the present Detneastio Auditor- Genera, "mule the most soeommodating officer the Eitate bed for yews. He vu steady boned and upright, and ably discharged the arduous duties of E. position." It is said that De. Nat Batchelder, of Hp- Pier. N. H has commensal • a suit against ex- 00 % Berry for imprisoning him in Pert Constitution; laying damages at 110,000. Goy. Brownlo w Ba ys he would not leave East Tennessee to go anywhere bat to the Kingdom of Flonven. The Governor may u well decide upon regaining in East Tonnes seA. lie will never be called to ' visit the "Kingdom" named. At the late &publlcan State Convention in Maine. negro suffrage was fully endorsed, sod they declare themselves is ken of "the. removal of all disability on &mount of cooler, sod to secure to all perfect equality." In the Abolition bonveatios of Susquehanna oonnty Gainsha A. Grow made s speech de. nunolatory of Preoideet Johngen's restoration policy, asserted that the worst deka., were yrt to be met, and declared tbot the egnaiii.Y of all rotors was the true policy I Tho Abolitionists of Motioning county. Ohio, passed the'following resolution at their County Convention held a few days ninon : Resoled. That our Senator and, Represen tative be Instructed and urged to amend the Constitution and laws of Ohio, 40 55 to strike the word " white" therefrom, and grant uni versal suffrage. • Lntciozm os sac Equanrrr or R 4011111.-4 am not and never have bees is favor of making voters or jurors of negress; nor of qualifying them to hold offioes or intermarry with the white people, and I will say in addition to this, that there is a physidal difference be tween the white and black races which I be lieve will forever forbid the two races living together on terms of social and political equality. And inasmuch as they cannot so live, while they do remain together there must be the position of superior and inferior, and I, as much as any other man. am in favor of having the superior position assign ed to the white race, to which I belong.— Abraham Lincoln. Gest. 811111/141/ os Neale .Surraaan.-!-On the 9th of July Gtn. Sherman addressed, the r•turning soldiers at Chicago. On the ques• Lion of giving the negeoes the right to vote, that veteran soldier said: • ".I want those who have been in the South to bear testimony to the condition of these freed 'woes. My opinion is that they are not fitted for the exercise of the franchise. (Loud applause.) I want them to get a fair price for their labor ; but I do not think they are_ fitted to take part in the legislation of the country." [Renewed cheering.] " Brick " Pomeroy says, President Joh.- son is like a young widow. He don't stink to black long after the death of his " better half !" A Republican place-bunter In the New York Custom Rouse thinks that the claims of those who have 'revved their country during the war should be regarded. Not that be hits served personally in the army, but his full. grown son was deaf ed and put in a substi tute who remained in the service twelve months! " Warrington." Boston correspondent of the Springfield Repubikam, oslls the Itepubli• can candidate for Governor of Ohio, a " poor stick." The Republican papers +are dropped their motto " Stand by the Piesident." The Abolitionists of Perry county. Indiana, are desperately sick with the Kentucky Black Vomit. They lately called a meeting and resolved that no negroes should be allow ed to come kat) the county to live. The citizens of. Sullivan county have -Also taken similar action. &mom Romig —The Disallowed° papers in Mercer. Vensego, Clarion, Jefferson. And many other counties, are new published by returned soldiers. The editors of the negro suffrage orgtna in the same counties are stay• t t home Abolitionists, several of them holding office and getting big salaries out of the gov ernment treasury. The action of the Abolitionists in Philadel. phis fu'ly accords with their spirit in other parts of the country. They made many and 1 end professions of friendship for the soldiers before their nominatingoonveritions met ; bat when the time came to test their sincerity they refused to place , a single soldier on their ticket., and gave all the offices to the old and worn out pelitioel hacks of their party. In every instance in which a soldier and a civil ian came into contest the former via beaten out of sight;-the collier's candidate ftr Mayor pollitig only 14 votes, and their candi date for District Attorney only 61 Dr Leiber has been placed at the head of the Ford's Theater Enron] of Archives, by Secretary Stanton. At the breaking out of the war the Doctor wrote to a friend, in reply to questions about seeersion "If two fami lies are living together in a large house and cannot agree, one family certainly has a right to remove into a smaller house." As the Secretary held similar opinions at that time. the Doctor's appointment is net a'won• derful event. The Doctor should not neglect to put his own and Stanton's secession letters on record In the Bureau. ' The Republican State Convention of Min. nesota met yesterdey at St. Paul and nomi• noted a ticket with Gen. W. R. Marshall at its head for Governor. The equal rights of all men without regard'to color. race or birth plaoe, including, of coarse, the right of suf. tense, with the privileges of education and social elevation, are unequivocally asserted Strong Around was taken on the Mexican. question, with a demand on the Government to force the withdrawal of Muimilllan and his forces. A resolution approving the ad. _ministration of President Johnson was voted down —N. Y. Tribune. We see that several •papers are advertising the ~ L ife of Lincoln," expecitiog to pt • eopy for their pains. We thought Democratic editors bad seen enough of the lifeof Lineola during the last four years to satisfy ahem. A negro antopen a white man ' s head on a canal boat at Albany, the other day, with a big cudgel. The white man was a hand on hoard the boat. The negro had been sent in the morning to wake him up. Some words ensuing, the negro, as "the superior race." chastised the white insolence. President Johnson has not been appealed to, as he would have'been had a white man struck a negro down South. Prentice, of the Louisvikle jourad, is ab. solutely incorrigible Re irreverently as serfs that "moult of the discussions on the negro are wholly without talent. The authors may have the negro question on the brain, but they have no brains on the negro ques tion." - Th. einoinnati Commereiel says : Wash ingtaa is defended now by 1.400 jams. eon. mended by two hundred commissioned others —a sword to story seven muskets." This is the way the epaulettes are:provided for. And the people support the epaulettes by hard A Caen os Dagrrrumoz.—/in exchanve, eommenflog upon the statement thgt the con ductor of the Weghingtou C4rogid4 will not permit nem boys to sell the psper. eitoluing. Forney wont't live up to his principles I" The trouble probtblyls that the gestleman la question hasn't got any principles to live up to.—Booton Courier. The EIS 071' Fastrn.—The Ohio Sluts Jew gate Ihe central organ of the Abolition psitr of Ohio; announces that Dille,. the State Treasurer. is a defaulter. Thus we lave is that 8104 in prooeudee, Bresteu, Blisii; fen; Stone cad Donk% all State treasurers, sad all defaulter,. A man is Baltimore was run over ssd kill ed by a hearie.—/Ita. • • This is the ins we how that (Moos Welles was dead ; for sorely there is ;Weaker owls A - series eo slow as to be rase . o'vs •by a hearse 1--.Gto Orono Desioenst.• • In SettfitoTry over' one* bemired isflitary officers hen bees buffeted for ibtorruPting the freedom of milfrige. Bpi' Bethke will same of it—Hloyetty M 00Tem.every sin end *mime , • ig-* speash sad. at LaillWASiet I)7_ Thaddeus Steven; he elboldlp avowed 'ale belief that the verWasistasoe of the a*P Oll dau 'Party diPsvodell epee ,he rebel &etas Wei kept out of eh. Ualoo ter a heir adwiseioe would seeder the =Pk if 4 10 Delaftraily iiMlViiikklia n • : • BINH OP OONXIIIRON. --- i Report of a Majority of the Anatol!. The as&nelgsel—ea4lters—epte4ted by *smut, reepsettally report. Tint after Wag 4 sly even to dts *bsrde their Was se sob Lailkaf with MU% they Wand apes as esanlaattee et the statteni Nitrated to them la the math of Kay. ISM • swifts dila? has 'Mind Is Use promo of their labors, by seam of as seessesty and continued att seam dose of th.lr somber. se wall ea bf the ammo of KIM of the books of the Bask ; slack. OW dnig•nt snares. the► keys been sash!. to 604 soy trees of. and without sag* they an usable to presest as }afoot asd wiseste s repast as they whited to dn. The most Isepostast of the. books are Loafer A, Wag the Silt Ledger to ago In the Rrle City Sant, sod the Stock Ledger. Another sours* of delay le foss/ Is the fact, that a loss Urns *tared between the enspenslns of the Rank of Commerce and the date at which It went into and inny of the perties. will, to th• th terim. were emamted with its alWre sad mum anent, ars beyond the resets of the Auditors. The Matters hive •urniaed 68 the elms of the Rank - whose *Mimes eottli be obtained, and they sub. mit herewith all the testimony takes by Woe, to sa ilboat°, of the hat tint waste of this tsethanay may be sousidemd irrolarsat or supra tons. It may be pro per to et its that the Auditors were of arms Ity, tam pelted to allow 'liniment the utmost latitude is eclat their oddest*, la order to elicit all the hitt the! might throw any light whatever altos the subject of this in quiry., The duty of the knitters ander the provide's se the Let of &movably may be "laddered u two-fold. Vint, to make a strict broestigatios of the dram of the blahs awl &mortal" whether Ifs issolmsdy was headelest and, sesondly t to examine thrifehmous sod acearsey of the stationeet made to the Court of the affair* of the Bank, se required by the let of Amiens*. , Is this investigsties of the stairs and manarenent /oldie Beek of Commeree. the Auditors lame diseased It Seema', for a fall asderstaadiag of 'the matter, to ex tend their in Iniry back to the period of the eonissence meat of the Itrie"City Bank. et is shown br the boob of the Beak and by the tar time°, t ikon, that the Brie City Bask was organised under the arodelone of ita charter, ea the 27th day of Augur, 11153, and went into cremation immediately thereafter. The bloke also now' about twenty-three hacked chase of the capital stalk of the Bast as tab rattled for at that time ; of videh esseast tsa than twa headred SUM were takes by the Maumee of this plat% rhea the Beak proposed to do its bailees. The basses of the stook wee held by Sherfeki, aid to relativel and friends. Yr. Sherwin was the first evader, aid contracted the dock and basin/me of the Bask. FIAT per cent. of the amount subscribed ap pears to have been paid. The reattemescomposilic the Baird of Direst ore were holders of smell amounts of clock, act alter the drat year of the ististeam of the But but little interest appears to have been takes in Its affairs by the Roard. The Minute Book shows that from idamosher 20th BM. to May, lett, there wee no "meting of the Board of Director', at which time a quo ram was present. is Ares, 115.1, Yr. .Teseph G. Las ten, a son-reddent em to that time, acquired by purchase the Interest of Yr. Sherwin and hie !Wendt in the stock of the Beck. and as would &sowu from the evidence of Joseph IL Sterrett. he rata Sr. filterwie a lahre b ma.. Yr. Sterrett farther tett des that the fan& with which Yr. Lawton Dahl this bow, ma paid Yr. Sherwin for the stook was takes from the Saab. On the boobs of Jibe Rank Yr. Inwtou appears to bare bees a debtor pre viously sod at the time hs armmed Kr. flharwites place, - to tlis 'stoat of over thirty thouiand d Alan. Kr. Law ton was elected Oselder on the 27th of Ines, 1811, and was at ones 'Mowed fall control rf the business of the Barik,the Directors not bolding any carting again Rani the fotlowing November, when a dividend was declared sad divided of Wes per cent. upon 273, 1 26 of paid stock, .sra,ooo of which shod in the name of Jos. G. Lawton and friends or family, From qtrvetativr, 1666, until Kay, Ili% there was but yes meeting of Dtreetors, the occasion of that one being the dscith of the President of the Beak. la Kay, 11134, a dividend of four per peat. was sle ds:ed. The ammint at paid stook at this time was re ported as Iltstc• Is. Title lama., In the amount of paid steak is partly sesoanted In In this manner: Rome eleven hundred shame of capital:stock were te emed to parties, doing a banking• business to 111240111 , Oases (Wens of Erin; with this agrosesent or condi. tion:that that were to hare a line of discount, at the Rent to an amount of two-and-a half or three times grnater than the amount paid by them for stock ; either without tatemet, or at a rate less than six per cent , and when these loan. wore paid lip the stash of the Bent held by them parties was to be takes at its face In payment of the debt St least more than dity thoneas4 dollars' of the capital dolt yes Issued to this way ; how met lases t u toditare an unable to say. Tb• o•zt misting of lire+tn•s was hell on the sixth of November, !MA. and a divil.ed of three pereent. de eared. The paid et** of the Sank at this time was :Im panel iss $ 1 60400; ■bunt a =math afar this the Bank was obliged to suspend. Prom the testimony before the Andibre, and from the hooka of the Bank, it appears that Wr..7. G. Lawton, Cashier of the Iris City Bank, had, without the author ity of the Director; loaned very large mime of money oat of the B bin r.iativ • • and buglosss friends ; one Others puttee, lar 6 A Lawton. owlet the bank ewe hamfrni Ikessmul Misr; some of these debts had bees ',Wed by : the return or the capital stock of th• Sank to the urn met of $76.00L twenty , two thousand rf this being returned by rr. J. 0. Lawton himself. There were some Western Improvement stocks and beak docks in the Erie City Bank es collatevals to a portion of the remaining indebtedness of them puttee Party titouswt4 dollar' of the stock of tbi Pox aod . whemaeln Improrement C moony had been played to the Beak as collateral' to the debt of Mr. !Aston. Twenty thoueaud doll sr" of thle stock was soot to John Thompso of New York, to be held by him as collater al" for the ?Oahu' of the notes of the Bank. leaving twenty tboasaed In the Bank the stock was Dent to Thompson by J. 0. Lawton after the suepenelon of the Bank. Of the reintiog twenty thousand Nr. Lawton etaimed , to have redeemed ten thousand dollars with thedrealetion of the Bank. pid took up that much of the shock leaving tett tee thousand dollars legally In the yeeworim of the Bank Then were some other stab and Western bends, but apparently of but Ilttle value. In the tall of 111 W, 10.11 B. Wright, representing the Arm of 0. B. Wright b Co. of Yr* Wright • Co. o' Philadelphia, the !loathers Bank of Imitate. sad ono or ter; other beating !saltation., received from John Thompson abs et twenty-gee lhoumed dollars of the circulation of the Brie City Beak, which Thompemi hsd bought up. 'paying him for the sane eighty or ashtr ays mats on the dollar, end merit" with the notes, the hunt y 'thousesd dollars of lox Itlvie and Winton sin improvement stock. held by Thompson as collateral. Time notes of the Beak were taken from Thompson in "Ittlemont of claims against him held be the parties. whom Yr. Wright espressatel ; Mon Is sous minors of testinsooy as to tke rate at which they were taken, but Yr. Wright and Kr. Great. the only wit:ileum who testify positively upon this point place it at eighty to eight pave cents. lir. Grant, at the mum time. took a small quantity of the beak note" from Thompson to mt. Omani of a *labia held by a Inn lo Erie at seventy•dve mute on the dollarorithout collateral'. fa the mouth of. Noveinter,lll4l, the outstanding cir culation et the Iris City Bask bed been reduced to one handled and thirty-three thousand dollars, and the en tire iudebtedness of the Bank at that time. exclusive of the capital stook was 'bast one hundred and thirty-Orr thousand dollars, as shown by the books. sad by the repirt of a eostmittee of Directors made to the Stock To redeem this, there weft, aesordlng to the books and the fieldmice, an indebtedness of 0. A. Lawton. of one hundred tbansaed dollars, and other inde bted as of Weetsta and Southern stooks of about fifty thousand dollen atom as eel:latent to this debt. Thou wan la the Bank about a handfed thoused dollars la stooks of Western laprovenuate. la addition to this. there wu also about lito.ooo of *this Indebtedness, as, specified in the stateseat .Wished to the rvideioe of Great after the easpeasioa of tbe tete City Seat, the Lees!' tare ;mend as set legalising the saapeasiou of the bask. throughout the Mate. sad *zings dote is tbe epilog of ISM as Kistler* lisr rosamiag spools rumuelte , The Warm tiara deemed this brief history of the Soak ap tothseprieg 41 1 11 1 1, aerreetary to a Proper to derstaadrag of Um amidities of the Bask at the time of Its resamptlea, arid then fee trailed upon to 'thereat.? lee tits amageureot el the itrk City Baak from Nemo bor. MI6 up to tiro poriod of its MIS wispearka JIM as ettrsorsly orojadielal to its ktureste, sad disastrous to its provosts. ' Jo the eprieg of itpl,kfr. Q. B. Wright, after one a.. satiation, with Kr. (hut. the Trashiest sad Attorusr of the Bask. aseistral fa 111 reeassekia sad, faratibed $ parties of the Ands raked to mime beshiks with the wet - of thew. rands belag :shed oa f some of the se wither bold by the Beak. The gustios here adsis ' was thri - parties gorge." basest la their stork to Kart the Bask meals, sad to Mantel tr Urki the goers, wers'tlity Jastiled Is UNIT leg that,the Bask skid renew rued pay at its ttabUl tau eat of tits area la its possentee? • ' Kr. Wright testilles that Kr Great. 'Kw Tessidsst art; Dfroekre give kis essiwasees d the; sailleitucy of lA. swag Se pegKe biskiffiesstibir ritesijezebudve of Ulf *wad stook ; of As sepal stork thin wee bet Uttl. 7 ott, swept that isebt bj Kr. Islet's. who eras largel. • dikes is the tat: Via the lkak wee. pressed* Kw sia'arr agates% 10. Lim**, eat hew wed dungy alter 'be rwraupt ea. moat of the eth• .11`uslora steers tied bowls were'elutaged .f se *heated 4 ilk! *km . 1 11 suerearese Cleipses the oilseed We tsweelterf Amp Mad by th• leak, Is iridology estimated at that Bak Bay t 4 104 11114 . 1110 K Benak. *s.ay KM bows *pea Is frog Neu! It Ca., sad other bsokent of at the Meet two for one. or fifty per east a* the doll Li.. orrtot reprersotel et !meat 1131,001 of the out pies tin ehroolotiot ; sea other eat nate were held by part„ who growl to keep It oat of the Book for wan theo. Too frossfalog Of the Soak woo worth somethlag, bio ta: a rosier of yews to ran. Trout all the forte beam IS. we an 44 11 believe that from the ootoretort r im, owl the condition of the or rte, Yr. Wl' gbt oft jeaded to believing that the Book ottg%t oahltr name within the ti no Axed by taw, sod do • sate bestow Had t'i Cris City Bank gone Ist, Ilanidatimk at that time IsstesA of rOjaMilig, than to but little 4,nbt that the D'rsetora anti Stacinnido-s frosll have been liable airier the lair for tke eireelatlea oat By th...feeree of Ws Coed, the memo of the Brie Mt* Balk ere. rhymed t i the Sink of awn le wee, sae whro It morstd .tslasst, at It or tits old Mrs dilates "VI r.. dAmsd Alb U, ass Issas. sad most or the old stink exespt thathild by eltls:us of Ibis statist% vas gausd to ra•rrsmo= JOLT/. The Bank. goon after the reesuip`.ion,ottopted the sy.• tem of protsottos loans, the °stare of which is this ; the Bank gives to a party a certsbn amount of its elresitation. neslviog, la Mara. one•hJf of the amount to cash,and the notes of the borrowed for the reinaind , r, signally prey. a certain time after call. and at a small rate of tattirwrk or without 'stemma.. The circulation lewd to this titirty is marked, and he bin to Winton to protec`• it or, in other yule, to miles' It from the Bank with other Canis whenever any of it mey conseln their poi melon. Kpeh has been sJd In derogation of thht system, veers decide By of the opinion that then easy be awl are instances la whisk it m►r be of practise! beget , ' to the B►ok, rip wittily when the Bank hue bat a 11112111 %ratable capitaL The sank receives an amount flue to ono-half of Its protection loans In convertible funds with which to diseount paper, or provide for the re demption of Its own notes, and the notes lewd for thee. loans. la • baglases eon:mangy ilk• this, when the circulation of a Bank satara , ly antes through the m•iouschannel.lot, the bands of lrok.rs, the Beak Is sec-ssaril#ollital to be .oared In this Issas of its notes. a 'trim pravided with iiiple wane for their red•toptteo The Beak of 4 :cornered, wu cot so provided, *ad hen • tt amid, w.thoat &truant, Ose a. part of lie drool/Won in the way of protection loans.. Ia 186% lifriaht becalm, a borrower in thie way from the Sant. Be bor•owed 103,030 of the note , ' of tho Soak in retar• for which tie gave the Bank tithe setae 110 the amount of ten thertnnd dollars. and We Inver for the lltie sunt sal agreed to pr ,teet the $20,000 of this d•ontat'oa. It le in eridelee, that Mr. Wit & ht had a dank of hie own to the Ella for the tettletneot of the business of the firno of C. B. Wright k this firm having Weeolved. and Xr. Wright having bought ant tug inbred of th• other two 'trine•■ Also that lir Wright at floss discounted pepe• hlecussif when the Bask was unisb/a to do it, and In doing so a portion of the funds he used wee . Bank o' Coscrnerne notes. V. ere nimble to see the' the .Ditsin•st of the Bank was in •tn4rfvre I with, or its eonilti a at all inland D 9 these tr•usaeti-ns of lfr. Wright. The Rank bed tee lved and simonising as amount, Kalil to ons•hatf the amount rT its lone to lir Wright, in other and available feeds and the use of this wet not - only advantageous to the Bank, but reallv neualsty. TIMIS° UPTIOX TO STOOL, !TO It is abitedsatly established by the ',Metes before the Anditon, Oat •liortly a'trr the opening of tte Bank to trondithval stitsorlotton to the capital stoat of the Bank wu started. and • onwber of sub itorlotiovs obtained One of the conditions rf this sob seniotton, u tostltled to by a number of witresses, was the the a‘notiot of one hand ed thousard do We slioald be subscribed And Yr. GalbrePh testifies to another oonditien.r . s : that the liabilties of the Beni , weie to be removed. The sneehl•d 'mount of •ob:eeire Bons 'were not obtained. mid o the watt w fell thrones Sometime In leflt, when some parties wars negoti 'lnv for the Bank. with • view to Its resamption. they le. Seared •es transfer from the p•rtlos who bad rieeed the 021111 U twit ruSeartption of the emanate to which they had subacribed, and It was siren, Derint the programed the attempt to raise this sub Yr W. G. llooreirad was asked by Yr Wright to ate some of the etack. Yr. Woorshe Id sig nified his willlogne•s to do so if they w yid take &men re , & tee Railroad irtoeir, two ter one. in,exehanre. The latter stock wts at that time settles , far about elght'en dollars per share. Kr. Wright took theltaliroad stock saving he troll' refer the matter to the Direct/fie a-d Wr Moorehead's atm, *se pieced upon the ennAltiooet suseeriptien list. The Railroad stock was placed le the sate of the B•et. and eoueted amour the agents by Yr noild The natter of the es-haage wag net referrel to the Oirefebrs ; sod after retinoins the it &roe d to v ► sem* tinste.the tondltlefeal subseription hevint !trod lir Wright returned the Railroad deck to Yr. Moors head. Yr Woorehe d t .stlffee thet be Doerr recelyeet the stock. A certificate for the same was lensed HO taken by Vt. Wright. as appesre by his ?sestet at the bottom of the margin in tint certiicate book. Afterlife R•llroad static vie returned. or at s,me tt.ee, th words 'trot deliverer were muted upon the ceargin.o' the cortifteate. Some clunitinos sense out of thlie Pans action among the Auditors. and are. wing them tier a met! Investigation, we are of the °finials iii• .eaturn of the Railroad stock Iris not ("temper. if is evident that the 'tack eboold net bevel em coon* among the sorts of the Rank. Point so was foe error 't dace not seem tone that the taking of the Mime' etoek was as opers'ion f-om which the Bank would de rive any .direct advantage. The object of procuring subscriptions to the cep l tal stock of the Pink wee to provide a capital for the Irmtitutlen, and the dock of dittioubney & rrie Railroad was not at that time testi •bis ter 'nett a purpose. Leaving tale view or th•oir.e bowery, it a evident to us that this enb•cription of Yr. Woersheal entered irate and formed a part of the ooddltional subeetiption referred to. and was not at spy dam • complete oprralinn ; sad the rev finding wifeever agreement there was, appears to nava ten Justified on the Fart of Iltr.wright. It isstat•d by Wr 6 F. Else, in his testimony before the • trlitore that the firm of Taylor k Ki gwu in domed to take te.. thousand dolials of 'took of the Rack of Commerce by the representation of Ifr. Wright Titer• to, amass the papers and trots of the Bulk. Wien-. that D. C. Tesler - it Co. were stockholder' In the Fr'. City Bent before its saro•naion; 'hat they had given their mote. er that of Taylor a Ito& for the stock: that when payment of this note wu denuaded they claimed a right too meal it by a ruturn of the stock tinder an 'O - eg-cement with Kr. Lawton ; that 'he officer" el the Brut dealt:il to recogo its rust' a right, al" placed the plie•re in suit ; and that it wu =ettlei by an agree meat between the parties, the original of which is in tbeposiession of 'he eatignee, and a ropy is Hereto at tithed. marked Schedule B. By that asree•nent Tay lor & King were to pay Bye thousand dollars of their paper for the balance and D. C. Taylor Jr. Co , or some ea. for them, were to hold-the stock then ovoid bv them. No new sloe& was Issued is them. and no stock at all was leaned to the - a at any time. It had been lamed to them before the Iralpeltillll of the life City Bank. In oar opinion, the reddens taken don not r j citify the con di/too that stock subscription' we-e obtained by false representations, either of the condition of the Bank or of,tba dock list • It dlea apps-, beyond queetion, that a etron:r 'effort was made to Inane* sabierlptiona to t-• capital stock among th• business men of this community, to an sato•at that would place, the Bank upon a permanent to- Is. While upon this branch of the matter, we deem it prnpsr to say. that although at the time of the rennet htlen Thd9, the capital stock was not considered of any deffned value. Still she stack that had been !settee and paid for in whole or in put end that had not bee, nnosled, was still shah of the Bank, and conthitted to be capital stock and the B et of Comm -rte. and was properly emoted by its 'Deicers as such. Whether oath dock was held by the Bank itself, or acquire . , by pur chase, or otherwise, or was he'd by individuals. the Biak of Commerce was not, in any sense. e wsw lien. There wes no chum, but that of name and con troL Without going minutely into the dtseussions of this tiuestion, the simp'a fact that it operited under the original charter, places the, matter, In our mints, he et:tad donut. The starting. of the Bank et enzirm.r6p. metsists'y the eminaplies ea' /rig aty Rash. In per. MEM of an let of assembly, authoritieg Its lega (sing the attepension of Bente. And under the new tilts which title was now oh mgel, the che A tee o f th e g al a-. rights, fratichisse and liabilitise The charge of, nape of an Indleilinal marks a change of his Indentiti It to tholnottios of Buts to dal to their own eiplt•l otoobk to purchase and hold it, sod to coast it both as sock Ward, sod emits CO hand ; ndo not doom it ea esseary to &woo tM propriety or polloy of tech o pm). Nee. It appears to test to • largsaitsat,vad to In le . The Bank of Commerce iru the. bolder and owner of eom of the site City Soak stook "Nero Iby purchase lothesetilesiest of debts owlog to ht ; sad that stork irso pisetimilly capital idea Woad. cod was so co llet of the Bank *Monti we beim it was serer Melo, lied woes the sent' norms= Aso anossur OP m Nast. The pulses% of the Desk sites the time of the re. trooptiort tales!, appeals to have Wu ,earefoll mos net- The papers dirosuotsd la the piing and to e was puerallY pastel aro by the gourd •of Dlreetera. oaj to 11131 by Ali irealmott ennealttee. laud the 101N44 ware asustasllv small. The .yr Attila& low were en 4o:option to the Oar* rule. is they do ee, sew to bay *vibrated before the *odors eadlssouat aolusaltte• be approval g these loses he were all paid up in The dLreeterilved teraltv Inestlega, a wojaritr of am Wag peer lily rsisil. sad bet for the Rauh her as he wry theisarieg bra of frees *se handed to oar twaty theiimal dean of the eidedvadav *o f whisk WWI . , ipeatt tos ridagsgtloa suit fail,, than lbeed bees antlotpstsd, the b ut , would have Imes larval lelwemest, bo a is profit. sod s faro disbursement i t th, est oft mai borrowed b 7 the Rime N it would have Men scolded. Kest of the nap yid piper as hall at asdassent. Was 15 the Bank at the ti t The aintelatem wow_ not annually to rt tbe =Taut author ad bw law. We do ant am oiled neon to Imply f rto eery of the Busk In (dosing Its loin s oh, are thee entlrely . wtthes' j ' , tal l y, routoot to eeriest n.1111W.,0 2 . f would not have base Imprnsor ir it hvi l ut \lrt ed In the prow weer : t' AM 1. , by it hoard of limiters •of the l'"c'O'oli.o. 'llahrst that the Bin WWI not m - till at , contrary. the gapes were In . .itt.„ , f il thinhaw-wanted fin. y the fart, N t the espsetattne of t I put's' II towed lona atenant le all woe r•arni tr% t o et,' the Bank, duty is - wiring It o! !). „, , which to do tonslnem aid flr,•, ‘ t l / 4 . quartet as a ha-rower of in-an s wth ,t 1 ,. ,4 ctrenlatloe that had heed Issosi. The ltshilitlos of the 8110 k ant ant tz,t, r eows whit that wars before, of at the tie tion. ]tee IWOMIN us alt Ito Ithit to they Urns wore aad tho Ices .o I,hl h 516, so how sow, as It r00 , .1 h %vs he sz , Lat:4 fig ddsttaa at that time. ' • In tr 0.1 1 ,101 or srmr,s. Th• Sank eosod its doors on tht hat; 0 4 , brn,llloo, mod a portion of the uoet. room prelim:oily °tempted by Yr Wont; Block kept there fora ner dye, . 1 , 1 Others of the Bank were engwyel thw. returned to the B ink building ;The nl a ' , sets eat a part o! the set of clo.ie g upon the eami footing; it It a 4, e n . [apart, "were the agate of the Book e , soesotalori at the time (f ity mooted for." Ths prinrlpel part 0 of the flank were notes diaeont , .! sed,wtoeh formed the rain put of sweated" &cermet, la the ledger. Tb, t Merl from the erldstme,wae mad. sp of so ilecoanted, and taken !Pr the Be. of °rotation loans, not es taken fe- eto.k explalmrt Items The Tickler k. -pt t 1 a, shows all the raper diseinntf.d by tit mid shows what portion o f that ere. c was oft watered at the time of a vela:, 'Bad each a plea ban fasiblt,tbe A. examined all the parties whets yoFec, the Reek. kit beside the impose b lit, on ;hly, it wee very oneetfooable whril could bore throen maelo light on , I. their paper or it+ proceeds. The 6 , 01 still beptafter the suspension as the , I ripe' the books ail tie roper ig iieeormi , what is still on hand. . The evidence upon this point linthat ~, the paper li , i'i by the Beek. se ir.r, g% It, ,at tli• time of scuspenoton, was use I h debtedoese of the Bank, and a relent: e by the Auditors substantiate, tb IR r:t anieunt -*netted In payment of the ;a; Bash, with the with on hand at the Hot den (including the Beale, own ootefl mired from various sources, en 'h ae the payments up°, imbleriptios to stock, k, conn 4 ed fen by the *mount of inihie. , 1. osetificates pal and the Bank cl.to'atl yzned Afte the surpenelon, 14%, laving of 'books is rtry clew. Atli closing this retort, the undenriloot Al say that to thei outwit they wee^ eine' the importance of the reapow ilitr It aid entered upon the digeharzt , ' or :IRV determination to make their loree'iratlou impartial; this detweinatioo tl er hie delivered to carry out. Thee here rim Interested. the opportunity to eart lA , information in their lonerledge, and n , information has been fully heed wh or. Auditor* have spent mach tine, art a. of lathe wo,ans of Infortnetino enio hollering that the report it b Bed scout Vhe Pei teeee, they respectfully ell,mlt +: grat'os of the Court. ' (StPed,) Smear Wagn.-21 Neu. SAre, Id passing around the suburbs it t oar wool is occaslonnlly, we eviv busily engaged in cutting and 11; well known herb, the nade of el the article. On enquiry left foe? in the employ of Mr. John S Cal they had already secured seeerei of the weer'. We forth :r lured satire supply for the corning yet? located it this season, prec. itpproueh of frost, when the neti , of the plant are in their fri!l learned also that in extrac: l og al. the juices of the weed for future ing, alcohol to the amount of tone? of dollars is required. T his, wit outlay for glass ware, paper, pric• to., is muoh beyond what we hnii Ohl-nigh most persons in this 7:: known that Mr. C. has been engert time pest in preparing end: Eer medicine compounded of this reel. nresume,_ are aware of the extent t has become known, or of the amour to supply the demand which hu for it in all parts_ of: the country, evidence that there is value in, tl tion. • That the Smart Weed is posEe valuable medicinal qualities, we long been known to medical meal , . all know that.. as a domestic re:.: been quite in vogue with mot her; But' to Mr. Carter belongs the ereli ing it out in its present form sal 12 to family use, thus securing to the re the advantages of one of C.7f Cat and abundant medicinal tube, awl of but for this course would still have its "sweetness on the desert sir" 1 accounts which we have heard of Mr Compound Extract of Smart Weed, from the amount which we know this vicinity, we should judge it t valuable • article *as a‘ family and one that all families would t keep in their possession, especially seasons when bowel complaints, coil ris, sorb throats, rheinustiam ani prevail. As a warm friend and admirer of Camp, we must enter our sole© against the spirit of rejoicing meV . the mss of our Republican citizen mortifying and untimely fate. After work he has done for the party, ectt ment is very ungrateful, not to +ll r'=; is dead now, forever and forever,--oi to his political tomb,—gone to the ei from whence no political traveler nfi and it is the basest uttmantineoo io essociat,es to be kiokin The DeIIIOOTSAIO Convention of county tmet is Meadville bast week, lasted the following ticket ; Asst than Hall, M. W. Jennings; Diet ney, Clark Ewing ; Treasurer, Car Bell ; • Commissloner, John Collom; Geo. W. Long; Auditor, Junes Them) are etro l ag nominations, snit to make a good rue. We coops; 'friend Ewing, formerly of this city honor the Convention awardedhits Elm its candidate for DistriA.Atto MARRIED. AKItiLT..—BAIXII-43 1 7 Rev. J. A'e &Aural*. ' Sept. 2d, Mr. Joostb to Mrs. Bliss Barns, both of Corr PROWLIT—MCGAVOnIIT—Io North E ship, Boptember 7th, Richard o' o Mill Creek, and Miss Blies )1 eldest daughter of William lf Esq., Bishop Young offiolatier• Nost.l—PsYson—On the 10th jut., Bolley. Beg ' Mr. R. A Noble. or E 17 * N. Y., to Miss Barth M. Fs Eris °dungy, Pa. • •DIED. Seinwovo —On the eveniog of Orb. George T. Sherwood, aged and 8 maths. WIT. if Gll, JAB. G PAT