i J E FFERSONUlREPUmN Tit ii rstlay August 1 1S50. 4FOjCc"ANAIi COMMlSSIONEKr JOSH. UxV D UN G A N, a4: 'OF :BUOKS COUNTY. 5' Fail ,AU,DJLT01t GENERAL, , , HEP'Y W. SNYDEK, " of uiaoN county, : ': ' M;," FOR SUBVEYOR GENERAL, JOSEPH G. HENDERSON, OF WASHINGTON COUNTY - TIic flfcw Small flfole Law. The act passed by the last Legislature.-prohib iun; the circulation in this State of the notes .of the Banks of other States, under the denomination of $5, goes into operation on the 21st inst. It is very severe in its penalties. The passing or re ceiving of foreign small notes by a corporate body, subjects it to a penalty of $500; by any public of ficer, $100; and by a private citizen, $25 otie-half of which goes to the informer. The act of passing or receiving small notes is also made a misde meanor punishable by a fine of from $1 to $100. The subject is brought under the. cognizance, of grand juries, and constables made witnesses to prosecute violations. Grand Lodge of JPcnn'a. The,Grand Lodge of ibe.I. O.of O.Fof Penn sylvania, commenced its session in the Odd Fel lows1 Hall, North Sixth Street, Philadelphia, on Tuesday the 23d ult The annual election of of ficers took place the same day, which resulted as follow: ' M. W. G. M. Geoiuse Morris. it. wro. g. m. w. h. witte. k ; . n.'VJ G. W. Peter Frintz. 7 , 4, 11. W. G. S. William Curtis. v; , , R. W. G. T.-rr-F- Knox Morton. . -: , - - -G; R. to G,.L. U. S. Smith Skinner. The .total dumber of voles polled was 731; The Cabinet Miuislcrs. Of the seven Cabinet Ministers heretofore an nounced as having been appointed by the Presi dent of the United States, with the advice and con sent of the-Senate, the following, says theInteUi gencer, have acceptecTthelr appointments, "and be ing present in Washinitori, have been 'duly com missioned; viz: Mi. Webster, the Secretary of State. . MrCorwin, the Secretary of the Treasury. . Mr. Hall, the Postmaster General. Of the remaining four, it is understood, that the following accept their appointments,. buldiave not et reathed the city, viz : - . :-c Mr-Graham, Secretarj of theNavy; 1& -j 'r- Mr. Crittenden, Attoney: General. - The folluwing -gentleman are now Jactively'en gaged in discharging the duties of Heads -'dfe- partments : Department of State, Daniel Webster.1 Department of the Treasury; Thos. Corwin. , General 'Post Office, Nathan It. Hall.' ' ' Department of War, Maj. Gen. Scott. x . Department of Navy, Com. Warrington.,. -Important from Texas. - Galveston papers of the 20th ult. publish letters from Governor General Andeisofftb the Texas Senators and Representatives, requesting them to inform ihe President, that Texas denies the right ofthe general government to continue to exercise civil or military authority over Santa Fe, and de mand that the instructions heretofore given to. fed eral officers be revoked, and that a complete and secure jurisdiction may be guaianteed. Massachusetts VU. S. Senator. Boston, July 27. The Governor and' council met this afternoon, and "appointed R Ci-Winthrop" U- S. Senator, in place oPthe Hon. Daniel Web ster, Tesigned, Iflaiiie S. Senator. 'r Hon. Hannibal Hamlin was on'Thursday last, re-elected a IL S. Senator from the Slate of Maine, by the'Legislature of that State, for the term of six years'from the 4th of March next, when his present term will -expire. Oixio Vi S. Senator. Hon. Thomas Ewing (late Secretary of the inte rior),.has been appointed, by the Governor of the Slate-of Ohio, to be Senator ofthe United States (until an election is made by the. Legislature of the Siaie);io succeed Mr. Corwin, jesigned. , ID GenrTaylorVbusiness affairs were left by his death in a somewhat unsatisfactory position. He left no will, and the directions which he left respecting his property when he went to Mexico, are inapplicable now, as his property has since then entirely changed. He sold his plantation on the Mississippi, which was liable to jtfmflow, and bought an estate adapted to the production of su gar, on which a large portion ofthe purchase mon ey iSUnpaid. ' Mrs. Taylor will remain permanently at Balti more; with her daughter, Mrs. Wood. Skip Wfeck Iis8 of Eafe. The ship Elizabeth, belonging to Philadelphia, from Jjeghorn, was wrecked at Fire Island, on Friday night, in the storm. The vessel was im niediaiely.jr.broken to pieces, and her valuable car go lost. Thg" most .melancholy part of the- disas ter is the fact that eight persons pn boafrd, were drowned. Margaret Fuller, a talented writer for merly connected w;th the .N. Y.. TriSu'ne, was ,a. mong the number. ' ' JDeatli of a. Member f Mgres. Boston' July 26,TJi.Hon, Daniel P Kiug, a.jncmejr: of -Congress fjr.oafihwjcoiid District of ijjsStalc, died ya.sj.erdaydjseujpry, pjen? iracted whilt at Washington.. RVasouaVJe ejcpecUUOHffpf his Recovery wet.t Heriained www vveuensusy las kukh ne fiMtjaiiy vwk uif'iMfo died. The funeral which Was private, KH$ p'ueo tliia afternoon, at DuurcH. Rights oMIamcd yoci.TJiorhfladelphhi; Daily Sim, says :. V. " In Hhe Courof Common Plea, JudgeKing delivered ibSfirat opinion';' Under the newiaw in? reference to the rights of married women? over the property possessed by them. By this decis ion a wife has.jiot only, the absoljagonjfrol oyer her own property while living, but may dispose of it as she pleases, by will, at her death, without re gal d to the husband's courtesy. George N. GanibTe's; Estate In this case, the .point decided was that since the act of 1 llh of April, 1848, the. husband of a-wifej-the owner oi real estate in her "own right, 'has no interest in such estate that he cannot either sell, lease, charge or incumber in any way, wjthouUier con sent; that the only interest he has in such estate, if it can be called an interest, is his expectant right therein, for life, in the event of the wife dy ing intestate, seized thereof ; that his expectancy depends of such intestacy because she can by will dispose of it absolutely, without regard to the husband. He therefore, has no more interest in her estate than any other of her representatives under the intestate lawthe right of both resting alike on the fact of the wife dying intestate. Splendid Balloon Accnion. John Wise, Esq., the famous aeronaut, of Lan caster, has constructed the largest Balloon ever made in America, containing 157G yards of silk, and is capable of carrying eight persons. With this Mammoth Balloon, called Hercules, Mr. W. in company with a party of passengers, will make an ascension from Lancaster, on Saturday, the 3d of August, 1850. This ascension will be the grandest and most interesting Spectacle ever wit ness in that or any other Country. Important Movement in Ohio. A memorial, numerously signed by citizens' of Hamilton county, Ohio, has been presented to the Constitutional Convention of that State, praying that In the new Constitution, provision may be made "for the removal of all persons of negro or of negro blood, from the State of Ohio." It will be recollected that a number of negroes, freed in Virginia, were not long since forcibly expelled from Ohio. Boy Destroyed by a Bear. A most singular and unfortunate event occurred in the fear ofthe Caholic Chapel in Portland, (N. B.) on Tuesday last. It appears that two young lads went about a mile into the woods for the pur pose of picking berries, when a bear deliberately walked from the thicket and carried one of them off. The ill-fated ladwas between 1 1 and 12 years of age, the son of a sHfring man named Goyle, who thus without a moment's notice was deprived of a promising boy. Search was afterwards made," and the mutilated remains were discovered. The bear was accompanied by a cub, and was evident ly its dam. , k .A Beautiful Reply. A young girl about seven years of age, was as k'ed by an atheist, how large she supposed her God to be ; to which she with admirable readiness replied : He is so great that the heavens cannot contain him, and yet so kindly condescending, as to dwell in my little heart. A prize fight took place a few days since, eight miles from Nottingham, England, between Rich ard Hall, aged 17, and James Brown, aged 22. They fought one hour and twenty minutes, when Brown was completely exhausted. He was con veyed to a railway carriage, but died almost im mediately after. Hall and his seconds at onjjes caped as fast as their legs could carry them. The police started in pursuit, and succeeded in cap turing one of the seconds.. Expeditious. ' Mr. James Shad'rick, a.steamboat pilot of Louis ville, was stabbed in several places at New Or leans some two cfr three weeks since, by a wo man of ill-fame. He was taken to the charity Hospital, and died from the effects of the wounds three days afteraving received them. The Cor-, oner lieard of the occurrence, and went to the hos pital in order to hold an inquest over the body. When he arrived there, however, he found that the body had been cut to pieces by some physicians for anatomical purposes. Lightning and Steel.--At. Bourneville, Ohio,j Jacob Storm and John CooTc, young men, were killed by lightning while whittling under a tree. Another young man with them, who had no knife, was untouched by the electric fluid. KF The " Five Points" in New York, the sink of all iniquities, is in a state of reformation. The ladies ofthe Methodist denomination in that (city commenced the good work, and it has been car ried forward with surprising facility Pnblic wor ship is held there and well attended ; a Sabbath School and Temperance Society have been organ ized; employment was found for the benighted inhabitants of the region ind with these means and the co-operation of the police in suppressing disorderly houses, a marked change has already been effected in the morals of the place. A modern Sampson. J, Williams, a Welshman, employedjn. straight ening rails at the iron works on the Conesoga, Lancaster county, uses for that purpose a sledge weighing ninety pounds. Every rail made requires at least "seven" blows with this immense ham mer to straighten it, and as all the rails are straight? ened by hjm, h is compelled to give nearly H one thousand blows with' it every day.'? It would seem as though the human frame was not capable of such tremendous exertion, yet Mr. Williams en. joys excellent health j ,;and apparently :grpws strong er with every day's exercise. Flyery seyen blows lie striKes. ne raises oau pounos: ana iuusl 18- 00 eg tke' weight of 90,000 founds a day, or pourUsi a week, XTlie papers state that the 'most distressed man who wjTered ,by the late firtSan -Francisco was a DiHciwiwi .who lost Jus fiddle. He, was perfectly ipnsolabk, wentthraaighhe streets crying and'spreanungat'the top of fits voice. ' oh, - l V. t . rt.ia 'Y- ill '' & " illjue iiuaai aiuw uuua ; H'iShs:flWi'-miHiTfta in the citv oftSTYork? on TOesdayfa week', in honorof jfi. . i 'm tA-JL. f tUa mnsHimoosine ana im ,aiea irresiuem ncio ir . pressive character. Seven columns othe;.ln bune are occupied with a description of the' sol emn pageant, including a report of the Funeral Oration, delivered by David Graham, Esq. in front of the City Hall. . ,-- - From midnight to morning the inhabitants ofthe principal streets were busy in putting" up the. pan oply of woe, and from morning until noon, fifty thousand- persons concerned in and about thepro cession,were busy in their arrangements, of that grand affair. - " ' The Procession was, precisely three hours and twenty, minutes, in passing a given, point; and must have comprised at lea'st .Thirty; Thousand personsof which 5000 were military, 6000 fire men, 3,400 laborers, &c. &c. Certainly not less than Two Hundred Thousand citizens and stiang ers were spectators of the scene who took no part .u Q,-omnniPc Thfl immense numbers of ill WIC LUlVi"Wlj. men, women, and childrenchiefly the two latter classes who lined the streets along the entire route, was quite unprecedented, evincing the uni versal interest which the melancholy event has excited. We have never seen, and expect never again to to see (says the Tribune) such a grand and im posing sight .as the immense funeral procession of Gen. Taylor presented on'iuesday. JJeloved oy the whole people mourned by the whole people, it seemed as if the whole people turned out. to do him reverence. The side streets, a block or two from the procession, were as ailent as if untenan ted, while evejy point in the line which offered the advantage of a sight was occupied. It was late at night, nearly midnight, in fact, before the drum beat and homewaid march ceased. Jt was, in deed, a day of mourning. May we never see its like again. Prof. Webster to be Iluug. The committee of Pardons, to whom were refer red petitions for the commutation of the punish ment of Prof. Webster, on Friday morning, the 19th ult. presented a unanimous report against such commutation. The report was accepted by the council, one member, Mr. Copeland, voting in the negative. Friday, the 30th of August, is the day fixed for his execution giving him just, six weeks to prepare lor death. The decision is accompanied by a long legal re port of the circumstances of the whole case. We quote from Boston papers the following items : Dr. Webster first learned the decision of the Executive Council, in his case, by reading the re- Don in an evening uuuer. i is oiaicu mau u& , : ' . , . , . . ' r i i but slightly agitated, having, as we are informed, ' . 7 Jrt rfjj lK.it Vte ittiO prenareea nimseii lor me wursi. n is lunwci slated upon reliable authority, that he had expres sed of late no desire to have his sentence commu ted, and that he appears to have a more- realizing sense of the awful situation in which he is placed, and also, that he is evidently preparing himself for the awful fate which surely awaits him. On Friday afternoon Mis. Webster and family visited him in his cell. They had not therj learned the decision ofthe Governor and Council. His Excellency, Gov. Briggs, promptly affixed hJs sionature t0 lne . Death. Warrant," which was duly transmitted to. the High Sheiiff. The family of the prisoner, for a long time past, have studiously avoided reading any hewspapeis whatever, and hence cannot have, been advised from that source of the progress of any matter per taining to the painful case, in which they are so immediately interested. The prisoner expressed a hope ori Saturday morning that his family would be kept in ignor ance of the day fixed for his execution. In connection with this case, it may be stated, a somewhat singular coincidence, that John VY. Webster committedlhe murder on Friday he was arrested on Friday The verdict ofthe Cononer's (secret) Inquest was made public on Friday one ofthe regular days selected for his family to visit him at the jail was on Friday, the final decision ofthe Executive was given on Friday, and his execution is to take place on Friday. We learn that the health of Prof. Webster con tinues unbroken, except from the efTect of long confinement and exclusion from the fresh air. There have been gros'sly exaggerated reports in regard to the character of the meals furnished him. They aie simple and moderate, and he often shares them with his fellow-prisoners. The death warrant was on Monday officially read to Professor Webster. He was perfectly calm, and said, "God's will be done ; I am recon ciled to my fate."' On Friday evening the barn of Mr. Erasmus Krcamer, in Upper Nazareth township, was des troyed by fire, together with its contents, consist ing of Hay, Straw, Thrashing Machine, and his entire crop of Grain, the last of which had been hailed in but a. few hours before the fire took place. The bam was one of the largest class of-Swiss bank-barns, the value of which, together with its contents, cannot be short of $3,500. The fire was first discovered by Mr. Wootrmg, Steward of the Poor House, who serit two of the paupers down (about a quarter of a mile,) and with their as sistance Mr. Kreamer succeeded in saving all his horses and cattle, except one, whjch was burpt to death in the barn yard. A large dwellingdiouse was near the fire, but was saved by the favorable state of the wind. Although the fire was abput 8 miles from town,, its reflection was distinctly seen in this-place, Our energetic fire companies were soon on the road, expecting to find it within a, few miles. Af ter dragging their apparatus four or five miles they all relumed except the Phoznix Company, They continued out dragging their carriage and hose a distance of more than eight miles over a hilly road in an hour and a half, in order to assist in extinguishing the flames. They got upon; the ground in time to be of great use in saving por tions of the property, They formed an attach ment with the Nazareth Suction Engjne, and work ing together, rendered valuable service . Wo were pleased xq learn that the Phoenix-men Wrp hospi tably enertajhecl on the jr. waj home, at the hotel of Danjel Reigle, and; by tlie -citizens of &aza reth The conipany ariypri in io,w.n about five o'clock in the morning," without having metjvith any accident. Tin's was a great. feat beat it who can. They .Jiave- a -rgl)t;:pcrp-because they have sometljig;tp crpaof,74, . 4. We undgrsUrjd; eetingviias bjeeri heTd. ahcl committees appointed to collect' at fund for the. re? Jiefofthe sufferer a,Qfffl' rqvsie, Tljis.ljs right. A liberal contribution will lib doubt bo made, Easlon Whi rrr '. OnivCandidates 7SSubjfinedfwe giattfiBtU(SjaIn vor.oijeourxcamiiuaies, .aim . , wcy o those Iwhoknd iliem.bsst, we -'comment! them to the attention of our readers. 'From all sec tions of the Stale 'we hear the voice of good fcheer going fonh, and unless we greatly mis take "the Vigns ;nf iH: unfbVfUi "overwhelming defeat awato the Locofocd patiy in October next. If '..;'! $?r.om tlievunion Star .U . JBeury W. Snyder...- The nomination of Henry W. Snyder for Auditor General, by ha Whig S.ate ,Conen tinn.ai Philadelphia, will be received with live ly satisfaction fay the Whig of this county, M rf Snyder is the son of Simon Snyder, whose ad- . W j .f Dniiir!"vnilln m nulralinil AS llflVerilUr Ul IT Olllioj wui ever reflect honor upon his name and cause his memory to be cherished by all those who love the prospcriiy of the Old Keystone .State.--We need not refer out German friend to the conduct of Simon Snyder, hile Governor. They already know it much better perhaps than we do. Th.ey: knew him to have been a pru dent, sound and practical statesman and our good old Commonwealth prospered greaily du ring his adminisiraijon. His son Henry W. Snyder, our candidate for Auditor General, has inherited his father's integrity and sound judg ment, it is altogether superfluous for us to tell the people of Union conniy,that Mf. Shyder is eminently qualified to fiill this oflce. But we would send it abroad throughout the Common wealth as the united voice of Union Co., that we who know him, can and do bear tostimony of his honesty, iniegrity and ability. As an accountant, iMr. Snyder has few if any superi ors. He possesses excellent business habits an obliging disposition, an enlarged experience, and eery other qualification requisite to make a oonular. faithful and competent omcer. ivir Snvder being of German decent has a thorough knowledge of that language, anu is luenuneu with the interest and feelings of our German population. His name will be a lower of stengih in the German ponons of out State; and wherever ihe friends and admirers of old Simon Snyder 'live, Henry W. Snyder, we predict, will receive a strong vote. From the Westmoreland Intelligencer Joseph Henderson. Of Washington county, the candidate for the office of Surveyor General, has a name inden tified wiih that ofthe pany in the Siate ; and no man in his county ever enjoyed, or now en joys a larger share of p'npular favor and confi dence. He "has represented it in the Legis lature, of which he proved himself an able, an efficient member, and he has at various periods been elected to high offiices in ihe immediate - . eift of the people of his count 8 I I y. He served ffice as Chief clerk, discharging its dutieTwith an ability ... i t r . ... I Which e Clieu praise even irwui lunuum ujjpu- .,.. anJ .c J. .here ,h. cxp.,1.-.. and business readings which qualify faim o admi- rably io fill the higher office to which he has been nominated. As a politician, his character siands as high'as ihat of any man in the Com- mon wealth : and he has ever been most zealous and active in auppon of ihe principles, the mea- !ures and men of the Whii pnr.y. As a pri- sures, and men til me win par y. a vate citizen he has no superior, his moral char: acter being unimpeached and unimpeachable. From the Bucks County Intelligencer lnehn iiiii Josl,l,a nnau- . 'PL. t. : ,.r .V. P,.M..nnlinii r,r liana I "nm. missioner, is a citizen of otir own county, a na tive of our own soil, identified wiih our own interests and those of our beloved Common wealth. .Born, and bred upon the farm on which he now. resides, and which he culiivates wiih a judgment matured and euligntened by long stu dy and experience, he is one of our most skilful and successful agriculturists. Though always takintr a livelv interesrst in quebtion of siate .1 nr.. I ntfnr TC1 1 A tl ID 1 0 n A O hand in aiding to es.abl.sh and maintain the principles ofthe pany with which he is iden- lifted from a sincere conviction of their benefi- cent influence upon the country, his attention has been more particularly directed to the in- terests of his profession, -and it improvement and elevation. Hence he was led to unite with others, seven years ago, in organizing an asso- ciaiion of farmers under ihe liile ofthe "Bucks Coumy Agncultuial Society. I he enterprise of which Mr. Dungan has been one ol the lath ers and pillars, has already grown in importance and usefulness, until it is scarcely second to any similar institution in the State. His sever al addresses before this society, to which we may lake occasion 10 refer hereafter, evince an houerable enthusiasm in, his occupation, a high ly cultivated mind, and a knowledge drawn from observation, experience, and extensive study, which constitute some of tho highest a- dornmenis of the character of tho American ag riculturist, These characteristics, added to his plain, unostentatious manner, his sterling in- tegriiy, his liberality of Beiniment, and social qualities as a citizen and neighbor have endear ed him to an extensive circle'of acquainiances and friends. All who know him respect and esteem him. ; and we. hope ii may not prove presumpious in us to predict that his character will disarm parlizan rancor, and exton justice from liis. political oppnuents. Important Letter from General Tay lor. The Washington -correspondent of the New York Evening Post-says, that among documents which will form interesting materials for the an nals of President Taylor's civic career, is a long letter, not upon the flies of the Slate Department, addressed by him to Mr. Buchanan, while the writer was on service in Mexco It is reported that, this letter, taken in connection with subse- mis letter, taken m connection wun suuse- it events, affords more satisfactory proof of the city, foresight and abillity ofthe writer, than of his published writings. quent sagacity any oi his published writings If this report proves correct it will disclose a fact thalwilldo po credit to Mr. Buchanan or those ident vas ptirioiped' or snatched' away and con cealed from the time, tq.o, vvlien it Would have done service to author ajid to, ihe country, J( vrilL require sjmjpla.natiqn Jrm Rfr, 13'ucha,nan to. release hjip frjgffyhe suspicion of having robbed or aUo'vfed io bQqghedtheSiate IleRartmenV o( the fJr0v'rnmWntrdrgfiiLHM fpir1 white undirhia cen trqlj Rjit see, Becejsty f & nrQmpexpinatiqh if innqqenif such iusnicioq, iirju wo nope uiai ue wilt op lounu pu. linrlfir him uhn nhartTR nf thm nrnhitrfifi nf ihfi UlOfO Or UUUU I Ul , o . . -A ' . a. r .at :iz' '-Li T-uun 0n tfmKr,i wih Oak, unesnui. oiaie-jjepanrnepi. it win spow inai inis Jienur " - vhtch reflects sb much credit upon the late Pres. Hickory, &c. lmprovememeiit . Tlie President and ttte Guerrillas. jA When John:Tyler became Presidentby the deatii. of Gen. Harrison, the nondescripts in Politics and'; of Loco-Focoism under the guise of neutrality, at nnno 'r-l-iimOfl him fnr thif OWn. Thou ( .ftaroA 1- cajoled, wheedled, duped him with the notion of heing a no-party President, and as such re-elected bya general uprising of the People regardless of ; party distinctions. With a blinding mist thus cast before his eyes, Mr. Tyler walked onward to' his doom, waking too late to find himself betrayed by those he had trusted and scorned by those he had too iaitntully served, l ney leu mm onnuiom into , the camp of his enemies, and these rewarded - his infidelity to those by whom he had been elect ed by like infidelity to him. When he ceased" to have 4 Spoils, to dole out, or power to misusethey ceased their mockery of regard lor nim. and ne left the White House a more forsaken, fallen' Ber ing than ever Aaron Burr had been. The same class of hybrid politicians have.djs-. covered rare merits in Mr. Fillmore since hissud? den elevation 4o the Presidency ; they are voluble in his laudation and prompt in his defense against any intimation that he. may have erred in judg ment ; they are fond of drawing comparisons be bftween him and Gen. .Taylor to the disparage ment of the latter; they intimate that his access sion has rescued the country from great evils into which it was rushing under the guidance of his predecessor ; they announce that he has changed the policy of the Administration ; and, in short, they would like to lead him the dance they led Tyler, to a similar doom. There is one obstacle to the realization of their hopes which these gentlemen may as well apprehend, fortbey will find it a very serious one: Mr. Fillmore is a Whig. Grind him in any mill you please, and he will come out that. He did not turn Whitf at the-eleventh hour, as Tyler did from hostility to General Jackson's Force bill, but he has wintered and summered in the Whig ranks, and, whatever may be his faults, political tergiversation is not among them. His attachment to his party is genuine he would not swerve a hair from his principles if he could thereby secure a re-election from his life-long adversaries in deed, he would refuse a re-election at their hands. No man in the Nation felt more deeply or resent ed more-indignantly the treachery of Tyler, arki merely because it was treachery, impelled by a sordid ambition, mere never was u greater mis take made than employing upon him the arts,, of seduction that proved successful with Tyler.-r Mr. Fillmore is a Whig in every fiber instinct ively a lover of Peace and an enemy of Conquest a Champion of Internal Improvement, of Pro- 1 tection to Home Industry, and that whole benefir cent System which recognizes the diffusion, of Plenty and the diminution of Misery as among the legitimate duties of Government. There was nev er a more unpromising subject for the experiments, of the hybrids than he is. j?or our own part, our day of wholesale laud ation of all the public acts of Statesmen of our own party is over. Jf the Governor of our choice, or the President in whose principles we -confide, commits an error, in our judgment, we shall not hesitate to say that such is our judgment., any more than if he belonged to the other side. To eulogise his mistakes would be as unjust t him as to the Country. But that Mr. Fillmore will, on the momentous and critical questions which must soon enarosa his-' attention, "act the I nfo St:tfsman. a Patriot and a Whiff. IS a r"u' " , . t. , ' . ,;U to i-'S mosl vociferous in hailing hh ac cesgion and most clamorous in scouting the au- acity of all who have not declared his selection 0f Cabinet Ministers in all respects perfect. We give these new friends six months wherein to keep up a semblance of devotion to the President; by the end of that term, they will be out upon him determination toatone for past forbearance of obloquy. Nothing m0re cfearly foreshadow;s to our mind the ferocity of pp- position which the' new President is fated to en counter than the plaudits from strange quarters lhBt orMted h5s accession. Let the result estab- I O . lish or disprove the correctness of our forebodings: N.Y.Trihune' SHERIFFS SALE. - By virtue of a writ of venditioni exponas is sued out of tho Court of Common Pleas of Mon roe county, Penn'a., and lo me directed, L will expose to public ae on .h Friday the SOth day of-Aicgust insi at 1 o'clock p. a. at ihe public house of Joseph J rosier, m u.umBm w. .oI following described propeny, to wi: jftwHk rhal cona,n ,ar8 psWfflL Frame TaverJl House JjpmEand LOT of LAND situate on the corner 0f Walnut and Chesnut streets, in tho Bor0Ugh of Stroudsburg, in said County, ad? ;0inu,a lands of Dr. William D. Walton, Mi- chaej j3roWn and said streets, containing.about Three-quarters of an Acre. There isalso on said premises a large new , Frame Tavern Shed 40 by 75 feet; frame SADDLERS SHOP, one and a half stories high and an Ice House. Al so a good well of water near the door. This is one of the best Tavern stands in the Boroygli of Stroudsburg. Also, At ihe same lime and place, a certain Jrm or Tract; of Laud, situate in Smiihfield tow I ship, in said Cou uny, adjoining lands ol Charley p0s,tens, John Brown and others, containing Ninety-Five. Acres, more or lers, ninety acres cleared and in a good tttate of cultivation en acres of which is ex cellent meadow. The improvements are one good Frame House, one and a half atones high, and an excellent Spring of Water near ihe door; one BARN, pan frame and part log; APPLE QR- CHAKD and other HiUU l KCJb. !The house is within half a milo of tiid 'mainroad loading from Srroutlsburg' to Milford. - At the same timo and place, another. u cJiikfi.u'mn.hin Una U W Hid Smiihfleld joining land of William Cramer, W ilium nold and others, containing about 50 Acres, fcleated, Frame House nn anil a half stories high. IherBj is an excellent Spring of Waiet near tue uoor. Seized and taken in execution as the prop erty of Etlwara Postens. and to be sold by roe. -l PETER. KEtoMEREK,.;A August 1, 1850. ISStiKa. I 1 1 . 1 f uUiinh i 1 A