TILE REGISTER. 'I. W. oE*4AN, 'maitoz7, TEURVAY, MAY 8, 1811. „..4erou, wool. AGAIN..zz _ Blank Deeds and a fresh supply of Itisticea '2 3 / a nksinst "minted and fur sale at this office. ,;" - From our Extra of Tuesday TREB . IfEN/SOVB .snip IU MONTROSE! - A,Ppzcitiraluable Buildings 'Burned'! Loss:—About $40,000.. of the' most terribly destruCtive Fires ever .Itiiewoin this part of the country broke out between J.2.and:l o'clock this morning, which has laid a large pet:thin iefthe'lnisinat part of our village in ruins. 'fire"WiiS first discovered in a barn of L Searle 1 4k the.,Tear of his large Hotel, (and linden circum stances leaving scarcely a doubt of its having been fired by an incendiely,) whence the flatIWS rapidly eomniniiie.ated to hist upper ham and stage coach elteds, and thence to the rear of the lau stoi e ufthe Alessrs. Searle's adjoining. with the -:groce'ry - storetofd.Etheridge. the shop of IL liTii*ton and the large store house, burns, shed-, lin and:Sheet Iron ManefactVry and - finally to the ,:large n dwelling house of B. Sayre, and the adjacent -Isrlares of Messrs. Little & Stree'er. Here the 'vacancy between these and the dwelling, house of • 3T.. Vu (Life Col, Lnik'st tin the corner near ...tite-,Courthouse, enabled the CII1Zellt• With great ex .ertians to Stay the-devouring element, although the loss of Mr. Webb's house too, for st.xne time -eetned inevitable ! in the mean tine Searle's very large and exten- Aire Stage Hot6l tin the loWer corner of the tii are "—mitich was from the first in tuo-t dan ,ger,fronithe burning barns and sheds in it, tear. was expeised to the most tremendous heat on the xiortb wing, from the large store Rinse near it which burped so long. But the fire company with their excellent Engine and ample Hose were ear on the ground, and planting themselves by tho recer voir on the corners, fought the raging element at this most dangerous point of attack from one till nearly four o'clock, with unflinching enerLy. and finally succeeded in saving the Hotel, and ,with it probably nearly the whole town ; for had this 3 an d story building been given up,'the .Engine must have been driven`from the reservoir, and every tither adjacent corner and extensi‘io-tilocks of build ings in each direction must have successively fallen victimoto the fire. As it was, the whole row on 4 , the west side of Public Avetnie with the exception 1 Ivr.ot'i Bt fir-t despatch sent , Mr. Brown of the Telegraph I )fiiee, after the of Searle's Hotel and Webb's dwelling was all at ante on fire, presenting the roustfearful spectacle: reported in the N. T. Tribune s e-terday , morning a most mutilated form. It says the tire This town has ever known since the. great fire on first started in Mr. Leonard's Liere v e st- a bl e ... \ i n _ 'the side of the avenue some 20 rears ago.-- Aough highly favored hi' an absence of steal! of Leonard Searle's Stables: and that the :Ovlrttle row from liallet's to Webb's. (instead of the 'firit„ - tlie burning cinders were blown far and, fell Hotel to Webliz.) was soon a heap of ruins. This this over all the eastern portion-of the village, made the news very blind to persuns abroad, know which, but for the rain of 'yesterday which left ev ing that no such men as Leonard or Mallet resided erything wet, must have rapidly fired every roof far.snd near. here at all. T . c. De tcrat, of Timithannock. says all the row rat But the gallant "Rough and Bendy" Fire Comps- be Court house was -destroyed. including - to/ . my have covered themselves with lasting Timor by t , 'Tebb" among the principal sufferer;. We -the noble and effective defence they made again H ' l ` j * the destroyer at the all important -points. Their9.are.llo,l glad to be able to sdy our friend Webb Efforts and success should hereafter forever pileti-e(,-,:t(' fur the time, dubbed nith a mill every murmur against the utility fled merit of their I ( tar title) has yet a hospna4e mansion left th i s enterprize, as thi s tr i a l ba„, pave l indisputably of the Court-house—thanks to the exertions of their organization and the approp 'Jur 'citizens.. lot forge. ting the " Water-Witch" and rt o expended - for their Engine, Hose. and-the. I,e-swore sunk for ! her 'ablaut Jule crew. - • ' the storage of water, to b‘t. the most ptofitable in • vestment ever made by the 'Borough. . The old small Engine too, called the " Water Witch;" which is mainly worked b: a company td' ' • young lads organized under—that tuna', thd most proise-worthy service at the upper end of the Ay .e.outs, in saving the house of Mr. Webb, on thoiutr ner, and keeping the house of S. S. Mulford at 3, others on the opposite side of the :Street wet. sviar but which the extensien) of the fire in that direct4:Bft ' must have proved equally fatal to the east part of the town. The Boys richly deserve`their share of crecntfor their noble efforts, though omitted in the haste of making up our extra'oo Tuesday, (great praise is also due to the energy and per „severance of the Ladies of the place, who rendered '\sffieiTit our nitizenf.4. both in carrying water and removing geodt-froM the buildingskhreatediby . 'Are. '1 7 -But wpretzret,(for the credit of - humanity) to ntid,lbat,:astn ttle tuatiySimilar . ,aises, this calami .l7,7as 4,.."2.,Tarat!bil , Ay the depredations of 'those brutes in humangape, seize.upon such an cc trrasidn pilfer and hfreff the goods of the nufor- Itinte"vihiniti others have'exerteci themselves to such eat , ea_are said to bare occurred. •fotal loss is. variously estimated at from 880;060 tof40,000 . ; but a small portion of -gas Fovere4 b r insurimee. ' .- *eitavereferred,tp.:tlie prevailing opinion that the fire Wa..4 designedly kindled by come demon in liiraftivfiitro.-'''lliii4ftpposition 'is based pm 3 .the : • Arrest of a Gank of Counterfeiters last evening (only a few hours pre riou. to the Grav, i ttccompacied by a poke a.ssi§t, brOught in:froin LaneEboro' and committed t,, t. jail *is persons .arrested in that place on a &erg(' of .touterieiting,. A suspicion bad for some time existed ~ihat'agang of black legs atalepunfeireiters itife•AUl 'VartOusplaces along the N. Y. 4: Erie, .Thiulrone. A private despatch was received Saturday eight from Binglaa6ton. that two or three of the suSt3e.c :,'*' had arrested there., and pointink to some 'tii3ii . iditi;;Ekt.pae feather left in L aiiiesbore, when!, 1 1 ,P9a, 04 1 4t1ff 01. - rp oT.. T. Richards EN ,A: J. H.Di ni t • :Oa Pros. Attorney hastened thither and 'succeeded ly: .,i. 114 , ihe arrests: The names of the prision 4,!Vtre4,,!..,,4*9ith4;hntel keeper, at whose ; :- .....4fquig rcrillt 4111114 1 37f0r - altering Bills were found, L reis:' , .Meriiinald*n, :,:k. Junior 'where more'of : . 4 . • . . . fLriapptni t u i l r*_ cut*, JOn f 1 ... /drown, Silas . ..11Vtitttis,Anl"-d:illit paitimv , it is believed that • -1.- - .., . • • {,,Y( the ;vf the same . Ong,. some of ; :iribitiO fug live followed th here with the-di .:'Sdic'olinltlpurjmef..* 10. - aft4 4 - 6:To la.aect a •• • r Si** the above- was in type we learn that -..,.:At?aieuspectO,pr. belonging to the gang, was ar- V; - 74*-41S ai -.)ll;rtes4ge. saidsaid to have _, .theexantitattion before F. A. Ward E. fif#4 , (9llo l d to ,brewllll.fopic—perhaps tqthie place, - saineihtug abut the dark • Further Partiouls of the. Me. We are ittforuieti by - ?,thosej,vl4 42.4 collected closer estimates of the losses ; that the amonat of darnage‘iiin uelilarger• t h an we stated at first. Thejoss of teontlaSearlU in the :exteuele barns and shed's:nounect6d with his r potel, with 3 horses that conhl not be got out, six stage coaches and Carriages; with hailtesses, sleighs, kr-, .3090 bushels of •giain and much hay, and thelarge store building, and the immense dainve to bis hotel Stir niture in removing it witile the hone° was in rlan ger, must amount to from tltsooq to P 310,090. Insurance on the s a me, t 32,400. There were aLsoiotorses and se-veral carriages and other property fiiravellers lost, amounting to probably a thousand dollars more. Among these, Mr. Levi Gregory of South Auburn lost a valuable span of horses, wagon, and load of wheat. Searlesß e Co. must have lost from the store bbildiiip iu goods: to the amount of :5,3.000. George Fuller, Book and Clothing Store in the same building, lost some f. 41200. William W. True, jewellei, also about $3OO. John - Gl s -owes, ,hop in 3d story, $l5O. L. Hindi, Shoeinakur, 51101) hi ditto, x.OO. I)r. E. S. Park i said to have 10,4 inany books ,te.. left in tiro room lately orctipiol by him as an Dana Ant(!in, occupying the basement ns a gra- eery lc_ last probably i.: 1 100. making altogether some !!;:i0;10 10,, on Good, in the si,ire building. J. ,theri.lgr bciml ab.ent in New Turk, very lit tle of lie •tuck of goo l: 'n i i saved. Nig loss in 1)1111 , 141z/1 g,(H) , inu:t be at least 5.42.000. B. Jameson, Tailor' -lum,acly..iirg. loss small re; the :; , eaten , utleier of all, w At S. H. Fa , re t en.. 10.. t in -tout rnd L ... , 011.. barns. out lumber, tin shop. strtv, , . (in 1 stme•ware, nn , l in their clWelho , hou-e and furnaure. from fif teen to eiLtit!een dollar.,, on which only fifwen hundred V. LI. e‘er a 1- , w 550)). 8. S. lien;:ey, )n carn.tge Lour and contents N. J. WOO,. in dairivre to furnitnre, c2oo The 6 13-picion of ineendiarisin it.t,ed upon ma ny circumstances• 'l•he Ere was bursting horn the south-we-t corner of SearVs low , cr barn • near which spot was found a ,lark lantern rite next morning• probably left in the hasty re at of the b.coundr,-i. 13ad tht• tire extended be yond Webb's, as „was to be expected, the Court .House and :Tall must huie•e gone, whieb was proba bly the deign, to give the pri,oners a chance to escape,. , IlEnnic Arr.—Among the noble exei tions44 the fair .. , ex la the fire, the heroic aet of an Iri4ll %;r1 -.. esirling at Mr. S:tyre's should not be r•r:.;:itfel..— . Alter the work of savnig, y things ft,,rn the hie ,Ras n ear ly .v,harlonerl, she reeollected that 4'tittle daughter of George` V. Bentley:: aged sears, NViIS -leeping in a remote ,inom at her,!•ra..ndf.ithor's. (Mr. Sayre.) and (rick as thought she. darted the smoke. seizing the child foigotteti by the rest of the family in their alarm, and bore it with the brad safely into the street. ho.pitality of many of our private citi zens as well as of the hotvl keepers on Tuesday :morning is worthy of high comMenilatiOnftllefre,h -ments in the ..bane a hot coffee, ca,kes, bream and butter and other eatables were liberally circulated among the laboring i 4ttselr rind the , crowd, and 'Mr. Searle's hotel be.i4T temporarily broken up for that , day, lnany of Ids boardkiivith numerous oth er persons were invitedll) '.breakfast at .Hatch's . and at the houses of sevoral of oar citizens, which were alto freely thrown open to the housekw.- STAICTEVG Andkrzi.-21mFulitzr has opened , the remnant of his stock, of B o niz..,.alothing, 4:e., in the uh 3 Store rfx,ai of Mr. 3111111 ;rd. , S. IL Sayre A: Co., have openekl in the store house lately (;Ceupied by Lathrop anti Salisbury. INir•True has his jewellers shop in tlib room lately used by C:l33ldir in as a candy chop.' ITEALS„ A little girl aged two. years i a child of James Onion Of rtrnion, N. .so,ieverely .briddCd as to muse-ber death. on Saturdiiilast. A yoeng 'roan /In 11..*(1 John t.l.',llaisted, while ali t gaged in propping the . overhanetng bank of earth and rock in a coal mine in Lnek4wanna valley, was crush ;d to death by its filling, iij on the 21:st A powder mill was blown ,Or 3 u d entirely de .rtt Now Troy in Wyouling Valley oo the - -- nigh( ' of the 23,4 ult A 1 . 411) bel(mging to S. }larding of Eaton, Wyoming_county, was .struck and en tirely consumed by fire oti Suntlty week, with ics convents. Loss, t',•4000.. Rev: Mr. Mi. Whe'eler, a Unitarran :Minister in Massa chusetts,luis recovered $.t2,400 ckiroages of a Rail road company, for serious injuries sustained by a collision of the cars last‘winter. .N. boy aged Arteerr hung; liiinAelf--:aceidehtally, it is suppowd—while tribig an 4petiment. in Di!lt au-are county lately. • , q . . A. ‘'olllUri in Postori litOjr . airbided a scamp who had boasted of haling sell her. Served him right. ! ; The Hotel-of Mr. Knapp in NV; kesbvre, caught fit last Fridat, but vas ertingin '' heti *fore much damage was dope. ~ _ 3 NEW .I"_aralt.-zrWe hare ieceired, the first num heiof, netriniper cutlet' the "ffniett ltretra;s just stirred at I,ltuon, Browne county, Pi, - Y.,l,!r_Auricrp F.:lQufatirt,f,„ lirtirefeases to be-1 -01tfal ?Aa polio . bilisrepresetrtation.,,persisted Ist. When we intiinated, two weeks ago ri confidence that the editors of the DernOctartnight show, them- Sel4 , es possessed of the candor and fairness we had grven them credit for, by putting us right" before their readers in relation to their misrepresenting us as a stocklr - Lier in the late bank of Susquehanna Cciunty, it seems we were altogether too charitable —toward the junkr editor at least—by his labored and pitiful attempt last week to fasten some orb nro upon us by persisting in the misrepresentation, instead of doin,,2 , '••:ias the justice which any gentleman possessed of honorable and manly feelings would have done, by simply explaining to his readers bow our name came to be used in the report of the Bank Commissioners, from the minutes on the proceed ings in the bidding off of stock, - before the Bank was organized. We say the junior editor, became the senior, as will be seen by our matrimonial record, was last week engaged in :be more ennobling and coon-bendable business of taking to himself a . " bet ter half." This - whole community knows it to be true as we stated from the the.first, that the editor of the Resister never owiied rt dollar's Worth of stock in this or any other Bank. It is generally known too, that in the mere bidding off of stock, it is a common thing for Persons io.he asked to bid for others Ne'hose absence at the tint:or r engtigetnents as Commissioners, renders it impossible or iiiettn: . - venient to bid • for thertiSelve&n4 If t•..as any--; tilio4 wrong. or (4;ireputable in this, 'Ally are not the-names of• nutugrbttt other- citizens who dil so . . mentionod as well ita °um M: l3 9n whom night be uamud F creral of the most r : eveetable citizens of their own. party ? It was indeed so trivial n mat-: ter that we did not even recollect having been aril; ed to do it, nor know th*our t name tvas thus used with their resolutions. sic., and nominated Urbane ell sin:e the alleg,ati2 waajzinati, Yids is the rca- 'Burrows and Gilbert Warner for Delegates to the son we did not explanfthe nuttteket . tirst. State. Contention; those resolutions and nomina - The stock having hten immediatify trayerred thins were accepted by the Convention. After that on the nookA to the owners for whirl it was Doct. Patrick offered an amendment to the resolm bid, before the Bank was a Bank by any organized tion substituting the name of George W. Stephens. existence. it is strictly true that we were never 41 Esq. in place of Mr. Burrows. This I considered stnekb,,l,l,r in the Bank, no more than the sopienq to be out of order, inasmuch as Mr. Burrows: name editor would be the owner of a farm or dwelling, had been accepted by the Convention. It ought to for being employed as an attorney to hRI oft such l have been done before, otherwise the two respec• a pi e c e of property for another. And we might i tive gentlemen ought to hare been balloted for, and Zvi h equal propriety call hint a " or a "toe- I let that have decided the matter. No wrong was dy" for being thus employed, or l a bor (like him) to intended to Mr. Stephens. llad his name come up cast some stigma on hint, should some owners or I in a proper manner, I presume nu gentleman in the managers of that property it dozen years aft r- county would have received a more unanimous ward be guilty of some fraudulent transaction i u I vote. lie would . cordially have received mine.— its management.' it b regard to such language as " you lie," "you • But the "murder will out': of this business may be understowl perhaps by the editor's finding no other way to rem his spite for the exposure of his silly threats of a " libel suit" week before last. up on the mere suspicion created by a hoax upon him got up by some ()Nile Printer Bogs. rff" The communication of Mr. Cassedy, Chair man of the late Whig county meeting, renders it unneces , ary for us to notice in detail the various falsehoods and o gross misrepresentations Of the last "Democrat" relative to that meeting. Mr. Cusse d,- :is a gentleman whose integrity and veracity is unimpeachable, and though he may have erred in , some of his decisions of order according to strict parliamentary risks, no one who knows him can doubt the honesty and sincerity of his intentions.— I It du:is bet-n customary, as he says, with both par. , tiess. for the Chairman of the t.itandingonoutitee ' to state :very briefly the abject of the meeting in calling it to order, and frequents to prolsise a Chairman in doing so, tlnuigh ire think the onor proper way for 111111 is to a-sk someone else to nomi nate a , second. and then put it to vote who shall be cl:airman. We believe Mr. C. is also mistaken as to the pripriety of admitting amendments to re ports ad - resolutions . . If the mere ,;:ce-pt;,,g a re port of is Potiondiee is to be understood as 0,1,v4t • it, why was there any further vote required to adopt it t if it wets not adopted already t it wavyf course subject-1u amendments until the, prevatus griestion be•cafT4,l:•which could then 014 y cut of amendments leing*terwards offered. Hence there are numerous instances of amending resolutions &d. by cutting off all but the bare word "Resolved,' and substituting entirely new and_ different restitu tions altogether. But here was only a difference of opinion about the rules of order. 17:e attempts of the Demoeiat to distort these differences about order, and the animated discussion which ensued in contending fur their respective views, and their piselerences for the different individuals proposed Ilpelegates, is only a ludicrous effort to make out our.Q,S% ig meetin* to be as contentious as the Lo cofoco inciiirgs frequently are. As we have be• fore said, there was only just such a spirited con test among the Whigs as to show that' their cause is advancing, and that in this State there is a sure prospect of something worth' contending for. The assertion that tie exclamations "you lie"— " you are a liar," ac., were bandied back and forth by tlie7lt‘s., is false. ITlnv_ thing 'of the kind rd a was heat nil, it was arnorli the Lows them selves,,sume -of-whom manifestod their readiness ' to contribute any amount of "noise,- and,confusion" to the mee4.F.- Nor is it true that any atich-reso -1 Itition was rend to the meeting as that imputed to Mr. Stillman huller. The resolution he proposed to Mier was not read at all, and the.as4-ortiontlut the meeting adjourned and brpk2 up in a row to prevent its passaiejs therefore false,'sis scarce any une . but himself knew anything of its contents. For the Suicrielinnna Register J. W. Caroller, tsu.—Will you please give the following communica tiou an insertion in the Regis- ter and oblige the chairman of the - late Whig Coon_ ty Convention beta at Montrose on Tuesday eve ning April 22nd. I have no desire to enter into a newspaper dis cussion, and it is with regret that I now 4:oeiy• self called upon td answer an article wintenki th i e editors and published in the Montrose .Deumerat, May let. •In fact, I should not have noticed- it, had it been 'written in such a manner as Would hate done anything like jcstice• to the Convention. and myself. I have not the honor of an acquaintance with the editerii of the Democrat, but ant a subscri ber td,'and a reader of their. paper. It h qtnte . re een_ that they liaveassumed the eiliterialcharge of it,. ,liow I.had been led to suppose. that they were gentlernen*ho'soared • above everything not strictly in accordance withtroth and This honorable principle strictly adhered would have lieen_a.guarantee 'to their future standing and use: fulness before •ailiseriminatipt puhd. , . Truth is mighty and - WM'. Doubtless feW, years e" iio r i s ,xpefiencOrill i teach theta a pr7xillesson • th-At a flourish of words even emanating from ; per. : eons in as conspicuous a position as the editors of little country newspaper, when not based upon candorkand truth, will soon serve them np as fiat jecig of insignificance. Messrs. -Editors, periiut meL tocorrect you In some of your romarks that• you have dealt out so profusely relative to the late W}iig ConvN - didn. The Chairman (l i the Standing Committee did omit to state the object of the meet ing, supposing as it had beeuipublished ster. that was sufficient, and that all kav what w e convened for; But Opt the Convention had not half.assembled• is false. I presume that a large number of the Democrats who graced that meeting With their resence came in after its organization, who seeing that the Whigs were a little divided, each having his preference in the selection of Delegates, took advantage of it, and when the yeas and nays were taken responded at the top of their voices in such a manlier as suited their purpose. Notwithstand ing, whenever a vote was clearly ascertained it was decided accordingly without fear or affection to any - one or any party. I charge this falsehoodback up on you. You have much to say about a clique, or a few persons governing that convention. Now I disclaim having any knowledge of a clique, or par tiality for any set of men who are Whigs, other *ise tli4l those who merit the approbation of an tell igOit community. Froni the vividness of the editors' recollection and the pith of his remni•ks, I smx led to suppose that tin occasional yea or nay might have aceiden4, tallY f 'slivloal out pf his month. Am 1 right t I ofilyin!.4.lestl, a. 4 he --question. After thii.Vatainating Committee had returned are a liar,"&c.. I did not hear it—perhaps others did. The idea suggested itself that po t isibly the sound of those words. in conni•ction with others too hard to name here, might have vet been ringing in the ear of our worthy friend of the Democrat, since the harmonious meeting of the Democrats at the Court House last fall. Now if the proceedings of the Whigs, at their meeting, as yousay, could not 'half be, told, or described upon paper, it puzzles Me very much to know where the miOutesef that Dem- ocratic meeting, headed by its chief champions ought to appear. I am Mound by no clique, but in the broadest sense of the word am-a Whig. and a Whig from principle; and am ever ready, boldly and fearlessly to substantiate the fact as long as I consider the principles and measures of the Wit; Iparty more conducive to the real interest and hap ,,,piness. or the American citizens than those profess- ed prioc9Res that you are paid 'for croaking so loudly to the so called Democ:racy of Susquehanna County. I have too much confidence and esteem fur ninny of our worthy Democratic fdends in the County to believe that they would stoop so low as to,mi.represent facts, even should they happen to attend a Whig meeting, where an honorable differ -I,,ezice of opinion should part them from their oppo news. How mile!' feeling is manifested by these patriotic editors for every Whig when lie chooses to assent from seine minor point of policy advoca ted by his fellow. ass - eciate in politics. I now put tile question to every Whig in Susquehanna Coun ty, what political favor have you ever received, or ever will receive, at the hands of Democratic edit ors ? Will you look to them for ah exposition of your principles? Nark it, no stone will be left un turned by them. to start an entering wedge, when ever an opportunity pre nts itself. to dis 4 ract the Whig party. United we stand, divided we fall.— Now let every Whig put his shmilder to - the wheel, and backup those principles that we have all gal lently fought fur side by side—let us array our. selves in solid phalanx, and teach 'our opponents that we love and cherish the principles of the great Whig party—the same party that, when thorough ly orgar ized and united,, have led us 'on to victory, and carded terror: and dismay into the ranks of the 'enemy. Who dare say they are not able to do it again I Let me ask ydu, when has Penns; Ivania ever occupied the proud - position that she now doe., under the administsation of William F. Johnston Look abroad and see what the opinions of different statesmen are in different 'sections of the Union with regard to the Governor of Pennsylvania. The Democratic press are well aware of the fact, that through his wisdom , and sagacity, the honor and credit of the State has been redeemed, and she, is rapidly marching on, should nothing occur to clninge her present course of policy, to a position worthy of imitation by her sister states. The good sense of the people begin to see -the fact, and we honestly believe that the great mass of citizens in Pennsylvania who duly appreciate their own pros perity, as welt as that of the whole state, will be cautions hereafter what they deposit in the ballot box. Gentle reader, you will oblige us much pondering this matter over well in your mind. Respectfully, Dimock, May sth, 1851. • A. CASSEDY.: A LARGE DAY'S WORK.-- On Friday of last week the income' of the Erie Railroad was over Three Millions of Dollars. This is a larger day's work than was ever done by any Railroad in the world, and yet it, is easily explained. At the commencement, of the Road, the State loaned its bonds to the amount of three Millions of -Subse quently an act waspassed, providing that if the , Company should construct a single trhck from the fludson River to the . Lake Erie, and run its engines over it bofore the middle of, May, the' State would release the, Road from the lien.of.three millions which it held upon it. On friday the necessary affidavit was filled . with the Controller, and of course the release miagranted in ;accordance with the provisions of, the.act.--Yoto F-ori; Tenverancegeethg. The friends of TemPeranee %neat the Court ' Honse on Tuesday evening, April Joab Tylei., Esq., of Harford, ,was'ealleifto tho chair. The committee appointed to - draft PrenMble and Rei4,. , lutionii then reported.._ Report " adopted. Bentley, Esq., then offered the iollowing-Articie which was ortlered to be published with the report of committee. When its the course of human events, it becptnes prudent and necessary for any people to abjure al legiance to any power to which they have been subject, it is not only proper, but it is a duty they owe•to the opinions of others, that they should de clare the causes that impel them to such a course. We hold these truths to be selferident,-that man was created to lore andglorify his Creator, to do all the good he can to his fellow men, and to in. crease the sum of his own - happiness and that of others; to the fullest extent of his activity and means. The history of the" Tyrant Alcohol" is a history of repeated injuries, anguish, distress and ruin. To prove this let facts he submitted to a candid world. He has held in the most abject bondage all his subjects from the beginning of his reign down. He has exploded steamboats without number on our oceans. lakes and rivers, and sent the precious freight of human life with which they are loaded, without warning, into Eternity. He has caused collisions of ships ott the waters, and of cars on the Railroads. causing more destruc. tion of life and property than he can ever atone for by all the good he ever has, or ever can do. , He has detbrined reason, he has prostrated the proudest iatelleats into the dust, lie has blasted reputation and destroyed char:Let* The brightest prom-wets have been changed by lam into the gloom of midnight; and the rich by him have been made poor, and the happy miserable and wretched. He has taken the husband from his wife and children and left them to suffer and to starve. He has made the v. - ife forget her sucking child, and to become a fiend incarnate. He has taken the young man from the family circle, and has cast him out, a wretch and a wanderer, and an outcast from the home of his.chddhood. He spares neitbe•r age. sex, nor condition. lle stops not at widow's anguish and wo, nor at the wailings of the heart-broken orphan. He destroys all the finer feelings of the sant,- takes out of man his own heart-,that onre heat high with hope, and swelled with social feelings and en dearinr, attachments, and places instead thereof the heart of a fiend. He invades every rank and walk of life, and wherever his allegiance is acknowledged his sub jects become his victims and he their dostrover. • He has filled our poor-houses and our prison with wretchedness and woe. He has increased our taxes and our burthens. He has incited and encouraged every vice and crime, in the va...t catalogue-of human feelings, and has ever been foremost in the destruction of.every 'virtue. In ehort, Iris reign has been at all times and with out ceasing. marked with cruelty and blood, sorrow, despair and ruin. A Tyrant whose course Is thus marked has nn claims upon the world, and is inAt to hold any pea plc in 511 ilission. 'Therefore-- • Resolved; That we hold him and his reign m ab horrence; that we henceforth declare untir!:lg, tility to him and to all hl friends, officers and sat- ellites; and that we do fureyer hereafter renounce all allegiance to him and to his government, and do hereby declare thatin a:suitable ways we will make war upon him. • Whereas, Undeniable evidence is almost daily presented to us of the appalling fact, that Intempes ranee, thdt bane of society,:pest of the domestic circle, and destroyer of wan, is assuming an atti tude among us which demands at the hands of ev ery friend of humanity a united, systematic and en ergetic action to check, if possible. its further pro gress. And wherea=, experilmre has dettmastrated the truth dint a great public object is seldom ac complished wirhout associated or organized effort : therefore— Resolved, That it is expedient that a Society be organized, ke.ed upon the principle of total pence from all that inoxicateA, whose object he. to restrain, it - . it caiiii,A.Li i ipre,izz, by a rinkl and comistent coure of example and persuasion, the dreadful yiee of icktAtutpertko.ce. Resolved, That we. here assembled, feelimt the importance of the subject. cortia-fly .elicit the z•o• operation of all the frtends of Tempel:thee in this: community. Resolved. That there ought not to be, thfit there cantrot con,i••tently berany sort of cututiromise on the subject o f intoxicating drinks as a beverage, among strictly temperance,men—that wine, strong beer and eider should be excluded from encritnon I ,: e as a drink, a-, being deciderllyras deleterious in their effects and results as the:stronger liquor:: Resolved, That the man who is nut 'true to his. l temperance pledge, at home or abroad, is nut true to himself or his friends, and fatsifis his own-words I and forfeits the respect of curanuwity, till he sfiall practically acknowledge the obligation of his pledge. Resolved, That a meeting be held at.the court. house on Friday evening, May Oth, for the purjao.se of organizing a Temperance Society. r. Resolved, that a committee of three be apiioint ed to draft Constitution and Pledge to be rop?rted at the next meeting. • Resolved,l:-bat-Oeo. Fuller, E. B. Chase and A. Chainherlin compose said committee: Restilved, That the citizens of Montrose, and es-, pecially the'Ladies tie 'invited to attend. C. W.,11.10rr, Secretary. Temperance Meeting. The Lenox Temperance Soeletyheld a meeting on the evening of the 2nd in4t.j at the €d School House near H. Metid's in said town. The evening being very pleasant, the audience was quite large and spirited, even beyond thelexpectations of the must sanguine. Off:kers for. t4e'exisuiwr Indlyear • ° were elected. Several able productions were read_' and apprn pripriale remarks were made 'thy metabers of ,the • Society. . • The following resolutions were offered by Chas. F. Reed, and unanimously adopted -by th...‘:tr.saety: Resolved, That this Society 06nsiders rutnseUing the most detestable and abominable traffic in-which avaricious and unprincipled Men were. ever.-en gaged, and that it is the duty'. of every friend of temperance to disconnten*e,jand as far asalkeas onahle and lawful, oppose the iibborrent truffle. Resolved, That it is the duty of temperance_peo ple while journeying, to refrain 414 far rosimssihle from licensed houses, and patrnize temperance houses; in all cases paying liberal and hying pri ces. I Resolied, That a person Whoi resorts teekeeplag a grog-Shop tor a livelihood is' : no longer" .worthy the esteem and confidence of, cranmrinity, .buf'de. serves to be detested Meth° vile - and wretch who cares' not -for tue misery and stifferit . tg which he. 14 - daily causing- his fellow .beings, an who Weald not hesitate sbonld j 4 11 :9i,Portunit.Y . 1* presented, to commit - nit otheri.cattrage'lltkon ikoci ety - for the sake of gratifying lusts. 1. Resolved, That the,' Elecietartppiepare. the ut ta of thia meeting and the - 010 - ve , resiifationiilor imblication in our minty • The Society " adjourned to meet irlitiat the same place' on the evening; of n6tlFridaY, in Juie Lencm, May 4th, 18M Posr OFFlcE:Ciumales•—The name 'of the Poit Ofr)CB heretofore ,ealled AlinerlCentrq,je.,l4,l --zerne county, his tiiett iiatiguaficOira*lFlY: ..-- ,, Wretk orAlitgell: **et .F.Z. ~ sia4 4 2l , l4:tes'i ~, .iltoiii>iNe ICI,V, 185 i,gesi; of the Sijiponen, . let br :,rhat..the ISCl‘ooneo lifineifik of sized in agnat-jiff •Ffref:,island niii cielbektinfrbilisdaYniglit, a tiering sixteen, were lost , ...-. EserfaiitiOn' scraii iiasie by to rescue , the unfortunate. men, running so hkill a boat ,could not )i - ls . as fond(' unpotwible to - get . reach, the wreck nfierzhe hatt.Lrersc bare Wei. -Tim Mine:N.:ltbloated Y 0 1417, 4 116 9 g ~ i vhigti- Owe or inL,P men—wcre IJtrii, the solind 4 . and fainter. _thit:2.44 .th - l ata hear4, - e_xcllinrin she 4 vo k lo . viriall' . (3"mi's4,,:C Pir Pli*".--yetn and remained'.'' there could see notbink of . 14 - npferten his' vessel. :11 - ellhiervi. - Wit' , her first fishing Cruise •iiifl.lfi..Cr. . The Epglish „.arch : During a recent visit'al• . Stratfc .li Rev..eniy Ward 11.2C4/0 itteht Established Church, dud 'in - a Jett pendent - thus `describes" ' the Softie sion \: ; --AF T. - approached tbeelittre . ' 1 1 1,1 , was to be passed, add an Wien:tide? ing overhead, formed a heautv soul exulted to-go tip thus ti?., The house was stately an ,liesatit •andi aiti"ticit destrihing anything , but am describing myielf - wAtite id I scenes with . t-liir,h.yomare familiar.i., in the pew el,nse by the reading desk-M(1 looked along to the chancel, which stead scin, or sixty feet back of . the pulpit a deck, ar4, upon the wall, the weliknown bus nt"Shak, and I knew - thdt beneath the pave eitti n d, ti his dust reposed.- - , • . " In a few.miimtes, alittle let , collar and red ctiffs f advanced from hind the pulpit,. and led the-way 1 man of about Jiffy,. bald, except on head, which Were coVerea with ich 1 been anxious Jest some Cowper's should officiatec.andthe sight of th' good. Tho fore! of hi:4.feet! 'and firearm., but 31st?' were suffused' sion ofben evolence„ He ascended t and the SeiVieeS*l*, in. You, kno was, until her itinfriage, in 'the coat Episcopal Church; this thought . while I,s:if,: gratehil for the privileg ping God through tvsery ice that ha, often tier devotions, I etpulat tell I was affected. - .1 had never had su worship,: aria I shall-never have sue' (of beard - until I gain the gate.)' " kaarso ignorftnt of the church trice, cannot tell the vit*ions pants by -the r right :a —but the portions- which most sifted me the prayers and r4sponses whichth' choir sat. had never beard any part of a supplitatinn-a rect prayer sung. by a choir, and it- erred l e I I heard not with my ear, but with y 1;601.1' dissolved—my whOh.t being seemed to me !it . .? incense wafted gratefully toward G 0... The I presebee rose before nib irt • Woridro s majesty. of ineffable gent leness• einigoodne S., and I a not stay away' from mane familiar • pyriath, ' seemed irresistibly, - yet gently to i d - . Gal soul, then thou diilst magnify the.l.o• , and rele in the God td-thy salvation. And th a came t,; mind the Many exaltations of the-Rs. hes of Do and never before were the expressio,s and fm SO noble and so pecesiary - to•expret ithati I had risen, it seemed- to-me, so high, thail where, David: Was, when his soul conceived' things Whittli be wrote; - • i c ' " Throughout the • service, (and it was an . and I tt ~14tiertt. . e long,) whenever an • tuten' wart it wasf giVifti, lay•lrti: elioirOiectimptini t\ is! the gan and the iemigregation: •; . oh - iliat. irell aryl • clan cadence rings in 'Mr ear Vef:"` ;once, ro single time did it occur in that servic 'from: mug to end, ,without .br,j4ng tears fain my ey I stood like a 'shrub In a Spring monaing--ot leaf covered frith deif, aind . 'every tweeze - 410 du wit some drops. I frerrible‘tl'So much atrial that I was obliged . to 4t down. OIL When re t prayers Vreat hed,- forth -in :Strains of sweet, Eitap solemn music,- On .IEIO of .. Christ-was:4"mPa'. how I longed tlien iti.give rutrerance to what :h lie seeUtz-A to mc,.. Thenre,was amiorlient in Yili the heavens 5eet00.44w 4 ,11 to ipa,aild I saw glory of God! ;VII the earth seemed to l l= ast honee of imagei,, 'made to -et forth.the redet and could scarcely kee , p:still from crying ow never knew I never dreamed before, of what' there was in the-i.vord amen. r.lerytirsie lin, feral ark- died-nwav-soleinnly;.not•g(i,Ailikaot. mind, bat my w i liole being.,Staid--=Savior, so let be. . . " The sermon Was preparatory to the , ion; w4iell',l.flien first learned was to be celehr, ted. It was plain and good and although the reo tor had done many things in a was that suppose that he sympathized with over muclo molly. yet in his sermenhe seemed evangelic:l' gave a ,right View . Of the Difers Supper. Fe first time in my'life I went forward to common. , an Epi4copal•Plitireli.''lWithout any intent of Inv own, but loeeatise iseTrin my seat it was neuest.l knelt down 'at , the • altar 'with the deft of Sias peare beneath 'My 'retie' I thought of ten thou= things - without - the least-disturbance. It seernela 111 stood upion'a place t to high, that, like one WI ing over a wide valley, all objects conspired make but one view:',"too, of the gene a4tfendily and - the 'Cint& of the first horrof mother and brother, and. children in heaven, of a riving family you, of the whole char' entrusted to my halidg....:7they off;, I up'"? banks'a - the ' AorrArro\ pc-kik of DoittsioN -- --The gut oPalitvery„ in Some' of VS heariwi,s, is again ere the 7 Virginifinti. - It is 'anti its disumon gre - ssin- . tho - Fiee§tatieTs; that ,excitu: theta, urnirguing it:iii'thkir Own Piin.4ntuthisiaVr itatiou of 1 popUlittion nnirfiropefty basis of representation tali& Irglidritlig. r ves the. eastern sectilitCor t,lic; , '#titte which, most slaves, - a" Mucli lariO,r - - recite . ..46unit knfl l 'legislature than ,the'we'stern SteCtiO;altlaV latter has more whitninhitibitente, - - has ; 4oD,oo:'WhitiTilitibitatite; and, lust Virgirda492,76:l. The foifine:ilo 4.0,b9 0 `' 'and the 63;ficite ' The western Men tioit`ufallthe cettiities-orth'' tat raile'd *bite :pniullailiiti.''The'exiterii. se'this:.because will deprive them oti .tror ofithe'legisyturC"iivhich.control ttikt as nCiessiii-v'oi-atteist highly protection the,inbts nf slave is - miiiithY,4:reingiEt.hat.-tlia - nuil: .U141'1)6010 4.1 , 1'40 and Sauer IGePi c iEr* . lit - each the larges' ,thusiaveiii nee the iioinerist. Try each country is striyieitti olpin' representre upoa,whlte_populationet-Statelifvftle, AVe`:fearn.(rorix he : Morris Jersepa>slSll the jodietrueritigroivioi out`--of - the CLOW' State 13" at M o rrie,4 ere-to', be tried et :4 term of the toortS.pr Atiioountv ,, . The iniatei: hitt t!eiti" 0ti#611146410 4-3 0. 1 eei*e**h - o,reOc:gijijkeideCtf 1 014 disobiitiiiiiitnte Ondritirthee. - roirol ofot,:iii:ifiiilt!N*--t-, 'the resl'craßafraf dosng'*!: • • ••• • - In theTow.oluPof MurnNN'-., tst or Atfv:l4. - Youngt ____ otit 'o4 o4 o) l lfobac wow -PatAlot.istw; ito (1MAtc90,1440.44:4;40.Ma * solot*, P/ 'an Cat itiga:410010041 Miner va , 3t. Nell B • I . 1 4 gut, a! hand; ' tit th e st, • r e encounter i t , 13" i 3 ail e tleogi P*oerl d "e:abor , • Arwing ii9ts aM side no r the P.m, be side, ni to imit inNierLi aged mar cad hid; ith an r readit my 1:1171 8 tllllO6 ilf dly le ou how 1 6 a tram another
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