JEFFERSONIAN REPUBLICAN Thursday, August 8, 1S50. "FOIi CARNAL COMMISSIONER, JOSHUA I)UNSAW, , pF BUCKS COUNTY, iFOR AUDITOR GENERAL, .JiENRY W. SNYDM?, a; ;. OF UNION COUNTY. UilFOR SURVEYOR GENERAL, jaSJEPH G. HEADER SON, , QF -WASHINGTON COUNTYv DO3 Cholera is prevailing to an alarming extent in 'Uniontown, Pa. Maj Jones,-editor of the JGenms of Liberty,1 and others have died with it. Cholera prevails in a number of towns along the National road. . The Cholera this season appears to . have con fined its ravages to the West and South, no cases worth mentioning having occurred in the Eastern cities. y fjj5' Mr. Littlefield, the principal witness in the Parfcman murder case, has according to the Daily Mail, been o'ffered the sum of $5000 to travel six months with an exhibition of a couple of full length wax figures of' the late Dr. Parkman and Prof. Webster. The .same paper also says Professor "Webster has recently received the religious con solations of a, new spiritual adviser, Reverend Mr. Ware of Cambridge. 05s? A special agent arrived at Washington on Friday'evening frdm Texas. He brings unforma iidn th'ats1560 men had volunteered' in Texas to carry the war of conquest into New Mexico, and that 15,000 can "be" raised if' necessary. They want Senator Rusk to lead them? This sounds pretty large. We believe no great apprehension xist'that they ' will very soon invade New Mexi co ; but the special correspondent of the North American says the policy ofGen. Taylor in rela tion to the subject will be sustained by President Fillmore. Texas will perhaps find it difficult to -wrest from Uncle Sam a large district of country which ;she utterly failed to take from Mexico. lEF-The.few returns of the North Carolina Elec lion, . it is .said, indicate the success of Mr. Reed, ihe-5Locofoco candidate for Governor. ' Accident. As the Harrisburg stage was crossing the North umberland canal bridge on Thursday morning last, it suddenly gave way, and the stage, with eleven passengers, was precipitated into the canal. Mr. Eenj. -D. Jones, one of the passengers; was in stantly killed, and the remaining ten were more or or'less injured. - ; The Contoy Prisoners were at the last ac counts, held in custody on board the Q. S. ship Albany, at Peusacola, until directions could be senVfrom Washington as to their disposition. It isthbught at Pensacola, that they will beised as witnesses against the expeditionaries under indict ment at New Orleans. A correspondent of the N. O. Delia, asseits that the original number of the prisoners was 105, and asks what has been done with the remainder, as only 52 are accounted for. XCF" The total amount of gold received from California since the first arrival, is 25,017,129, of which $19,750,000 was received at the Mint, Phil--adelphia,iand the remainder at the New Orleans. Of this amount, over 17,000,000 have been re ceived in len months, being at the rate of more than 20.000,000 per annum. Since January the receipts have been at the rate of S26.000.000 per annum, and for the last quarter aYthe rate of $32, 000,000 per annum. Sickness in Cincinnati. The Cincinnati Gazette gives a statement show ing the 'average of deaths per day, by cholera'and otlfer 'diseases, as reported iy the Board of Health, fromthe'lst to the 30th of- June, which sums up as Joiiows J? Cholera. Other diseases. Total. Week-ending " 16. - it4,r .' - , 1 i S3.-.., .iv r. .2(56, 197 ' 190 116 775 .142 .4 OS 440 415 346 1609 243 219 "230 754 , Itis shown by this .statement that the average of deathsvper day, for the, week ending July 16th, was 28 of cholera, and 63 of all diseases; for the week ending 23d, the average per day was 28 of chdlera,and 59 of all diseases ; for the week end ing ;30th it was 17 of cholera, and 50 of all other diseases. - 'Lttzerne Comity Jail. There is now confined in our county jail, twenty-four persons, a larger .number Mthan has before graced those old walls on any one day for the last ten: years. Murder, highway robberies, pocket picking, .theft and counterfeiting, together with va rious other less henious crimesi have brought these persons where they are. Our criminal courts will have their hands full at their next .session in Au gust, when several if.not more, .of these worthies wjlljno doubt be presented, with season tickets for admission into the Cherry Hill operative house. k - - Luzerne Democrat. -QEine peaches, ripe and lusciously tempting, have-madeubeir appearance in the Cincinnati mar ket; -.-. D,3Thereceri(k-'orders forrecruitiriglin'tbe Uni ted 'iStates armyi wi!lraise it frpnrSOOO to 14,000 men. President Fillmore,' a despatch states, has taken loQfi)ptAil Georgetown, by the 'ad vice of his phy sicians, as the White House, o.n- account of fogs from the Potomac, is.sickly in the dog-days. Chills -and ferei's have affected some of the family. Accident 011 tfe ErieRailroacl Loss s of kife. ; ' Ms the down Freight-train was crossing the . iron bridge over a small tributary of -the Delaware, a bout three miles above Laokawaxen, at 1 o'clock Wednesday afternoon, the bridge gave way.pre cipitating the entire train into the stream and .the ireicht-in all directions. JThe,traH, was very heavy, consisting of nearly twenty cars, which were filled principally with Liys Stock for the New-York market: , The accident occured soon after the passage of ths Express-train: - As the locomotive of the Ffeight-train came; upon -(the Bridge,it was lob served to settle gradually ; but the Engineer put ting on' all the steam, the increased' power carried the engine over safely. The tender parting from it,-fell.' with some fifteen of the freight-cars, into the ravine below, a distance of some 25 feet. The stock on board consisted of some 500 Sheep, over 100 head of Cattle, and 200 Hogs, nearly all of which were destroyed. Only 25 cat tle and 100 sheep were saved. The most painful part of this calamity however, is the loss of several lives; the number of which is not yet accurately ascertained. It is . supposed that Jive men were killed three Brakemen and two Drovers. Three men had been taken out dead, at the time of the passage of the next train which reached the City yesterday morning, af. ter a detention of several hours. One of these was a Brakeman, whose name was not ascertained. The other two were Drovers, in charge of the stock. Their names, ages, and pla ces of residence are as follows : Thomas Campbell Clapp, 19 years, old, from Menton, Ohio, A nephew of Alex. Campbell, of Bethany College, Va., and in charge of a lot of sheep and swine. Mr. Randall in charge of cattle, from Corning, New-York. . It is feared that othrr lives were lost. The engineer and fireman escaped with some slight scratches. The engine having run off the track, rested upon the abutment of the bridge, and gave time for these men to escape. Our informant states that the Conductor of the train was badly injured and was not expected to survive. A cor respondent of the Commercial Advertiser stales thai another of the injured men was still alive at the last accounts, but was suffering intense agony the horn of one of the cattle having been driven through his breast. The bodies, of the killed were immediately taken into Port Jervis. The drovers and hands in the rear cars saved themselves by jumping off as the train went down, and so escaped with little injury. The scene was painful in the extreme. The mass was wedged in between the two banks of the chasm over which the biidge passes, the cattle being pierced with numerous splinters of the cars, and impaled upon the horns of each other. A few were still alive, and after fearful struggles, suc ceeded in extricating themselves, and getting out upon the adjoining plain. But those that did thus escape were apparently all more or less injured. A number of sheep also escaped in the same way. It is supposed, upon rough calculation, including the cost of cars and bridge, that the loss of proper ty will amount to about $10,000. The -bridge was 62 feet in length and 25 feet in hight. The damages, we understand, will be re paired to-day, and the communication on the line will suffer little interruption. A correspondent of last nigt's Evening Post, who came through yesterday morning, says : The scene was one of heart-sickening horror. It had rained very hard some hours before we ar rived, which tended to increase the gloom and dread of crossing. The first knowledge we had of the catastrophe was on reaching Narrowsburg, some 7 miles west of the bridge. Here the passengers East and West exchanged cars and at the bridge we took the train punctually and came into Piermont. This unfortunate event is greatly to be deplored. The Railroad Inspector had but a few days before examined this part of the road, and this bridge ; it was deemed entirely safe. I judge, however, that the timbers were too light, judging from the manner in Which they were broken. Beside, a ravine like this should have been arch ed by a strong bridge. 1 believe it is the only weak place in the entire road. Honery passed over it several times, and particularly examined it, especially its bridge. I deemed it as one of the most substantially built roads in the country. This failure of the bridge has by no means changed my opinion. It is a great mercy that the express train just before passed safely. The owner of the cat tle being in the third car when the bridge gave way, took hold of two of his men, leaped from car to car, and thus escaped with their lives. New Patents. " A patent has lately been taken out for making clothespins. Think of that washerwomen. An other for a machine to wash dishes. Think of that lazy girls, who fear to soil your hands with the dsh-cloth. Another for an improvement in sew ing machines. Think of that ladies. Jo patent has been granted for spinning street yarn. Think of that gossips. An old bachelor looking over my shoulder says this is a natural attribute of the sex. An Irish officer a thousand miles at sea in the Atlantic, observing three vessels right ahead of his own, called out to some friends who were pa cing the quarter-deck, 'By St. Patrick, boys, what a fine landscape !' A tea-drinking match took , place at Seacombe (Eneland) not Jong since, and the Woman who won the prize disposed of no fewer than nineteen cups. A Mother Killed hy her $011. The borough of Birmingham, near Pittsburg, was on Friday, thrown into a state of unusual ex citement, on account of the following unnatural murder : It appears that a man named Richard Jenkins, son of Edward Jenkins, of that borough, was seen going into the house of his father in the afternoon, where his mother was alone. He was seen a short time afterwards cpming out. A brother went into the house a few minutes after Richard left, and found hi? mother's lifeless body on the floor, and a large club along side. The brains were knocked out, the jaw broken and other wounds were discovered. The neighbors are unanimous in the belief that Richard is guilty of the deed, though no. one saw him strike the blow, He was seen hastily walking away. He had not been ar rested. The motives which prompted the act are un known. It appears that he had on several occa sions made desperate threats against thelives of his mother and brothers that he threatened to kill his mother .because she awakened him early in the morning. Some think he is or was insane, but the witnesses before the inquest considered him in his right mind. The Delegate from Wew Mexico lic ensed a Seat in Ihe IIoiise---S!avery Triumphant Northern " Dough Faces." r One of the most iniquitous and ynsciupulous acts of the present session of Congress an act that will brand it with infamy to all time, was the refusal to allow Hugh N Smith, the Delegate sent from New Mexico to represent the interests of 90,000 people, to a seat in the House of Rep resentatives. A letter of his addressed" to his constituents, was read in the" House by a Slavery propagandist, jnwhich Mr. S.adjMsed the people of New Mexico to forma State, Constitution ex cluding slavery. This was sufficient to put all the slave-holders and their 'allies, the 14 Dough Fa: ces" of the North against him." He was rejected by 11 majority. The following are the "Dough Faces" who vo ted.against him. Those from Pennsylvania are in capitals : . Brown of Indiana, Bull, DIMMICK, Dunham, Gerry, Garman, Harris, Hibbard, Leffler, Little field, MAN, McClernand, Miller, Peaselee, Rich ardson, Robbins, ROSS, STRONG, Sawtelle, THOMPSON, Walden, Waldo, Whittlesey, Wil drich. Young. We rejoice in saying that there was not a north ern Whig among the " Dough Faces." Whigs never desert the cause of Freedom. We call upon the people to look at this case of slavery vindictiveness and outrage : by which 90, 000 people residing in a distant and exposed terri tory of this Republic are refused a representative in Congress! We Ttsk them to ponder upon it and then act in conformity with their own natural un biassed sense of duty and justice, when they are called upou to exercise the elective franchise. flection of JTudge Let the People he on their Guard. We call the attention of those in favor of the election of Judges by the people, to the following letter addressed to Samuel Parke, Esq. by two members of the Philadelphia Bar, which discloses a secret plot entered into for the purpose of de feating, by a secret but extensive organization, the proposed amendment of the Constitution, giving the election of Judges to the people of the differ ent districts. Mr. Parke, being in favor of the amendment, and opposed to the use of any secret or covert means to defeat the wishes of the people, very properly had the letter published in the Lancaster Republican, that the fiiends of the measure, be ing fore-wained might be fote-armed. We trust that the attempt made to keep from the reach of the people the right and privilege of choosing their own Judges will awaken them to the importance of the measure. We have not the least fear that the influence or intrigues, of those opposed to the people's electing their own Judges, where known, will have any other effect than to arouse the friends of the meas ure and thus make it more sure. We know that there are some, who still hold to the royal doc trine that the people are not-fit to govern them selves ; and there are others who desire to obtain high places through Executive favor, which they know that they never can reach through the peo ple. The schemes of these will be exerted to the utmost to prevent the selection of Judges from go ing into the hands of those who elect our Presi dents, Governors and other important .public offi cers. But we shall not attempt to refute the stale argument of prejudice, ignorance and aris tocracy that the people are not fit to elect their Judges or in other words, that they are incapa ble of self-government. The time is rapidly ap proaching when the Freemen of this Common wealth will be called upon to decide whether they consider themselves fit to elect their own Judges, or not ; and we have no fears as to the result. By a majority of not less than FIFTY THOU SAND, they will put their slanderers to shame. The proposed amendment to the Constitution will be adopted the people have willed it and those who calculate by secret organization, finesse and intrigue to prevent it will find how hopeless was the task how useless and contemptible the labor. But we are glad that the plot has been discovered and the warning gone forth. We know not to what extent the scheme may have operated ; but we feel quite certain that even if it had not been disclosed, all the efforts of the conspirators would have proved unavailing. They are now past the least hope. But read the plan of secret organiza tion. Philadelphia, July I9lh 1850. Samuel Pare, Esq. Dear Sir. An opposition is now being organized in various pait of the State to the proposed Amendment of the Constitu tion, by which the Judges are made elective ; and it is intended to hold in the course of next month, at some designated place, a small private meeting to consist of two individuals only, one Whig and one Democrat, from each judicial district, quietly to consult upon, and arrange a plan of action for the different counties. Owing to the circumstan ces of this movement being entirely unconnected with party politics, and to the natural indisposition of most people to give themselves trouble about what does not immediately or personally affect them, we have in some instances, no easy or cer tain means of ascertaining to whom we ought to address .ourselves in order to the procuring in the several distrits, persons to meet at the consulta tion about to be held. Among the districts in which we are thus at a loss is yours. Allow us therefore to beg that you wjll do us the favor to send, or if you prefer that course, to put this letter into the hands of a friend, with a request that he will send us the names of a Whig and Democrat of your district whom we can rely upon to attend at such a consultation, and afterwards, to aid in giving effect to the measures which there may be devised and determined on. GARR1CK MALLERY, C. INGERSOLL. A monster, called a sea cow, has been captured near Florida, and was brought to Charleston from whence it will be shipped to P. T. Barnum propri tor of the American Museum. It measures ten feet in length, and nine in girth. A steamer, which; lately arrived in London frpm Rotterdam, brought a chess-board and a set of chessmen of considerable value, and supposed to b of Oriental make. The squares on the board were of gold and silver, set round with precious stones, and the chessmen wero likwise ofgold and silver, aet with precious gGmst Manufactures at the South. . : A New'Orleans'paperasks why it is thar.the Northern States so far excel the South in all the arts and comforts of life 1 the editor of Detroit Free-Press, who spent five years in the most thri ving village in Louisiana says and in this opinion we concur it is owning to the neglect of manufactures.- In the village. referred to,he says they, have no shoemaker 1 the little tailor soon sung and drank himself to death ; a blacksmth would occa sionally work for a few days and that was the ex tent of the mechanical industry of the town. But then they had three brilliard tables and six groce ries tWo race tracks, an'd any quantity of card playing, carousing and fighting. The usual course of .trade has been to let the cattle grow up with out much care to kill them without any stall feed ingto leave the horns in the field to sell the hides for a trifle, and, in a few months buy them back in the shape of boots paying freigts back wards and forwards, and profits everybody, who had the industry to earn them. Bad crops are reeable teachers, but their lessons. are decidedly impressive, As .the editor, whose, language we quote, ob serves, the introduction of a single new application of labor, however humble, will do more for the true independence of the South than a .thousand assemblages of politicians, who talk so much of nd Southern suint. Let us hear a little more of that homely but essential virtue, Southern industry. An Holiest Confession, &c. Mr. Andrew Miller, a prominent Locofoco of Philadelphia County, has published a communica tion in the Philadelphia Ledger, over his own sig nature, in which he says : " It is a humiliating fact that the Democratic party of the county of Phiadelphia is ruled by a gang of men that deserve no other or better ap pellation than PIRATES, for they exist by the PLUNDER that they can reap, in disregard and in violation of the cherished principles of the party that gives them character and position." The Miner's Journal says :, The above is applicable to many other counties besides Philadelphia, especially along the lines of canals and railroads. Another specimen of "De mocracy" is furnished in the person of John Abrams, a delegate from Philadelphia to the Wil liamsport Convention, who, since he assisted " in nominating Morrison, Banks and Brawley, has been tried for stabbing a man, convicted and sen tenced to pay a fine of $500, and undergo a ser vice of four years in the Eastern Penitentiary." Letting out the Truth. The ;josJ, ihe Locofoco organ at Pittsburg, says " During the last few years, we are sorry to say, men have been elected and sent to our Legislature, as Democrats, who shamefully, wickedly and dishonesty betrayed their constit uents, WHO COOLLY, DELIBERATELY VIOLATED ALL THEIR PROMISES AND PLEDGES." If any Whig paper had aid that it would have been set down as " Frderal abuse and falsehood." . Col. Bliss has taken out lettes of Administrotion on the property of Gen. Taylor in "Washington, valued at $8000. Bolts' Lat. The following good toast was given by John M. Botts at a 4th of July celebration in Virginia : Union and Independence : The Siamese twins of the day we celebrate. An indissoluble connec tion makes them one. Who seeks to destroy Eng is no friend to Chang for the dissolution of the one consigns the other to the tomb. The JBqucstrian Balloon Ascent at Paris. We recently gave a paragraph from a French paper, stating that M. Poitevin had made a balloon ascension on horseback from Paris, on the 7th Ju ly. It appeals from subsequent accounts that he returned to mother earth safe and sound. The following account of his Journey given by himself, appears in the Constitutional : 'The atmospherical disturbance which manifest ed itself immediately before my departure prevent ed my noticing exactly the ascending force of the balloon. Accordingly I measuied it upon suppo sition, and so that I should be certain to ascend, notwithstanding the resistance that might be of fered by gusts of wind, which frequently blew in a downward direction. My precautions were more than sufficient, and I had some difficulty in moderating the ascending force, which in a few minutes carried me to such a height as proved too great for the Jjprse. An abundant flow of blood took place from his mouth; resulting from the in terrupted equilibrium between the internal and ex ternal pressure, by which man is less easily affec ted than are other animals. I traversed several current's of opposte directions, which occsioned an almost continual rotary movement of the bal loon. The cold was almost insupportable ; it is true, however, that I wds very lightly clad. Far above the clouds I saw several rainbows, and oth er phenomena, caused by the decomposition of the solar rays. Towards 7 o'clock I prepared to de scend, and three-quarters of an hour after my grappling-hooks were vainly dragging along the surface of meadows and fields of corn, the fruit trees which came in contact with the hooks being dragged down or broken. Progressing in this way along the surface of the ground, after a journey of more than a league, I arrived, very much against will, at a wood called the Bois de Villemain, near the forest of La Lecheele, in the canton of Prie-Comte-Robert. During the whole of this journey my horse, as he passed over the corn fields, snatched greedily at the tips of the herbage, and even when grazing the tips of tall oaks he thrust his nose into their foliage. At last, however, I was fortunate enouge to put a stop to this perilous mode of dragging along. 1 caught sight of a dried-up pond, and on reaching the edge of it, and grasping vigorously a sturdy branch of an oak, I arrested for a short time the progress of the bal loon. Assistance was soon lent me, forty hearty follows seized the ropes of the machine, and brought it within the circumference of the pond. The ballon was then emptied, and the only mis fortune I had to deplore was some slight injury done to the balloon, in its contact with the trees." The Constitutionnel adds that the intrepid aero naut had not even lost the riding whip with which he started on his daring trip. At Grjsy, near the spot where he alighted, a grand ball was givqu, and M- Poitevin was introduced into the ball-room mounted tn his charger, Shocking. Bois run high in Boston that Webster will never be hung that he will take his own life. Some have thought it a matter of surprise that he should be allowed a knife and fork, glass ware, &c, they being impressed with (he idea that he would, commit suicide He oncesaid, when spoken to upon that subject ; ' am too much of a Christajn to cammit suicide.'1 ''fh Riot in a Church. A serious disturbance took place ima Catholic Church in Third street, New York city, on Monday night last. According to the statement in the papers of that city, the priest of that parish had two cart loads of unmade gar ments taken to the church, to be distributed a mongst the tailors of the congregation not engaged in the Strike.' When the tailors in the neighbor hood, who are most part Germans, heard of this they marched into the church and put the priest and his congregation to flight. The rumor having been spread that the church was attacked, large numbers collected about the church, and there was, a ; serious riot. There was an attempt to burn the chapel. The Chief of the police with a posse of men arrested seven of the ringleaders. Liberal Contentions. The citizens of Philadelphia have contribu ted very liberally towards the relief of ihe suf ferers by the late great fire in that city. The Inquirer says the amount recived by private subscription up to the close of last week, was $22,454. The City subscribed $10,000, and the Noithern Liberties $10,000 in addition, making over $42,000. The gross amount will no doubt reach $50,000, by ihe time the sub scriptions are concluded. . Philadelphia's indeed one ofihe raobt gen erous and benevolent cities of ihe Union. She well meits the title of the " City of Brotherly Love." Trouble In the JLocofoco Wigwam. There is trouble in the Locofoco Wigwam of Westmoreland, Bedford and Cambria. Two Locofoco candidates have been placed in the field for Congress. The conferees could not agree and separated ; when the three Cambria and two Bedford men organized and nominated Gen. Jos. M'Donald of Cambria for Congress. Subsequently the Westmoreland conferees and one from Bedford, organized and nominated Alexander M'Kinney of Westmoreland as tho candidate. They are calling each other very hard names now, and threatening terrible things, but we believe it will all end in smoke. It would be a blessing however, to the district and the State, if it. resulted in the election of a Whig Congressman. Electors in Great Britain. A Parliamentary paper has just been printed, which shows the number of parliamentary elec tors in Great Britain and Ireland, accordeng to the registration of 1848 and 1849, and 1850. In 1848-49 the total number was 1,041,203, whilst in 1849-50 the number was 1,050,187, in the United Kingdom. In England, on the present registration, the number of voters is 839,797, and in Wales 48,019 ; in Scotland, 20,305; making the total of Gieat Britain, 978,121, and in Ireland, 72,066 ; making the total in counties, cities, and boroughs, 1,050,187 Funeral cerimonies in honor of our late la mented President took place in Philadelphia, last week. The display was a great one, and the procession was near three miles in length. Guns were fiired and bells tolled during tho time the procession was in motion. An elo quent sermon was delivered by Rev. U. B. Stevens, D. D, Rector of Si. Andrew's Church. Horrible Clioiera Incident. The Cincinnati Commercial of the 1 5ih, has the following : In one house on Sycamore street, above :he canal, nine persons on Friday night lay sick at the same lime with cholera, with none to aitend them ! When visited by the health of ficer on the day following, five were dead and the rest dying ! The scene is desciibed as horrible. The honse was a low dingy, dark, unvemilated and filthy rookery, seemed a pent up box of every putrefactious order known, such as would start cholera into life had cholera never existed. Upon the floor lay a dead man wallowed in filth, upon a bed two others in tho sleep of death, with features distorted by the throes of departing life, and in an adjoining room lay two more dead and four dying ! . The picture is too horrible to dwell upon. The or der of the Board of Health was nine coffins, and the story is told. .HARRIED, On Thursday, August 1. by Rev. M. H. Sis ty, Mr. Charles W. Rowe, of Stroudsburg and Miss Anna Maria Storm, of Paradise, Mon roe county, Pa. On the same day by the same, Mr. Peter Albert and Miss Catharine Courtright, all of iltddle Smithfield, ATonroe county. On Saturday, the 3d of August by the same, Mr. AToses Strunk and iltss Catharine Halderman, all of Middle smiihfield, Aonroe county. DIVISION ORDERS. HEAD QUARTERS, 6ih Die., P. V. PoTTsvtLLE, July 18, 1850. THE Major General commanding this Di vision, having received from Head Quar ters at Harrisburg, a general order, announc ing he death of ZACHARY TAYLOR, late President of these United States, and directing that propbr respect shall bepaid to the memo ry of that illustrious patriot; issues the follow ing order: The Brigade, Field, Staff and Company Ul ficers, attached and belonging to this Division, will wear crape upon the left arm, in memory of this distinguished deceased, for the space of the next ensuing six months. The Commanding Generals of the three Bri gades attached to this Division, will cause this order to be promulgated in their several com mands, and will hold their troops in readiness to unite in any general demonstration which tho Commander-in-Chief of the State forces, may hereafter order. Bv order. r . M. wiiw , Maj Mai. Thos. F. Beatty, A, A. G. Gen. Brigade Orders. HEAD QUARTERS, 2d BRIGADE 6'h Div., Pennsylvania Uniformed Milum, Stroudsburg, August 7, 1850. The Commissioned Officers of the Monroe Brigade, will please, bo governed by ihe above rder' ROBERT BROWN. Brig. Gen , 2d Brigade Qtb W Aueusl 8, 1850.
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