Taylor's Pledges Exposed. . THE POSITION OF A NO PARTV MAX DEFENDED. The following letter, says the Wash ington Union, carries force with it, be cause Its main statement is true. General Taylor could never have been elected without the vote of the Taylor democrats, and he could never have obtained their votes without the pledges which he gave. We call the reader's attention particularly to the correspondence which passed be tween Mi. Lijpard and General Taylor during the camlaign. The General's let ter to Mr. L. las been frequently publish ed, but Mr. Is letter to the General is now for the fit time given to the world. This letter shjds light upon the General's. It shows whv the General wrote his let ter, and hoivjt is to be interpreted. Phadelphia, May 22, 1849. "Will youardon me if I make bold to say a few yrds with you in exlanationof the reasonswhich induced me to support you for thofllce of President of the Uni ted States' These reasons may also give some ideqpf the motives which swayed hundreds!!" thousands of your fellow-citizens. I am n politician. I never yet asked for an ope, and certainly shall not ask one at yur hands. In speaking to you, I do notay claim to any political influ ence, am backed by no clique: I con trol no pdy of voters: I only speak to you as a cipen of the United States, having no infjence beyond my vote, and the truth hich I utter. In he year 1847, w hile a member of the limocratic Association of the county of Biladelphia, I began the first of a se ries f four works upon the history of Mejco. That first book of the series was intended to comprise a history of yet campaigns in Mexico. While wn iin that work, I became vividly impressed wui the frankness, the iron common sense thi unwavering sincerity of your charac ter. Sick of the warfare of parties, I lo)ked to you as the man who had been cled by Providence to put an end to the Mercenary bitterness of this warfare, by suming the position of "Washington jot with parties, but in the hearts of the people. , And this idea of your character, embo died in the work to which reference is , made, was diffused by its pages among a class of voters entirely distinct and separ ate from the whig party: a class of voters who, imbued wilh the progressive spirit of Christianity, are opposed to the principles of the whig party, as embodied in the history of the whig corporation of Phila delphia, and who are in favor of judicial and national reform who advocate the freedom of the public domain and the right of labor to the harvest of its toil. This idea induced me to desert my party asso ciations, break party lines, and advocate Zachary Taylor as the candidate of the people. In the month of April, 18 18, your chan ces for the presidency were vague and un certain. The whig politicians in Phila delphia at least the most prominent of them all fairly laughed at the mention of your name in connection with that high office. When the Baltimore Convention assembled, it was the earnest hope of thousands of the Democratic masses that you would receive the nomination at the hands of the representatives of the Demo cratic party This hope proved fruitless. But at the Whig Convention, assembled in Philadelphia in June, 1848, party lines were finally broken: the very spirit and front of the Whig party were crushed. Henry Clay, balloted for in the name of the Whig party, failed to receive its votes, and Zachary Taylor, nominated "in the name of the people," was presented to the people without any other platform than his independence from the spirit and tram mels of party." Doubtless, you have often had descri bed to you the scenes which marked the history of tins June Convention the dis may of the Whig politicians of the verita ble Whig school the curses, both loud and deep, with which they breathed your name the tliree-fold sacrifice of Whig principles, Whig platforms, ami Henry Clay, at the feet of Zachary Taylor. Nominated at this convention amid the ruins of Whigism, and nominated in the name of the people, the Whig party did not dare to claim you as a veritable Whig, ot the true Whig stamp, nntil the 5th of July, 1848, when news came to Philadel phia that Hon. Bailie Peyton had, in New Orleans, solemnly endorsed you as a Whig, and placed your feet somewhere amid the ruins of the demolished Whig platform. I his statement gave inexpressible pain to thousands of your friends in Pennsylva nia. Well aware that you had not been nominated as the candidate of any party, certain that you could not by any chance oc ciecipu ;n tne name or on the platform of the Whig party, your friends I speak oi tne masses, who loved you for vour self and for your independent position rcceivea tne statement ot Mr. Peyton with an emotion that was not to be mistaken or evaded. They felt that either Mr. Pey ton was in error, or that Zachary Taylor had falsified his often-repeated pledges. Under the influence of this wide-spread feeling, I made bold to write and send to you the following letter. Its very abrupt ness of style indicates the sincerity which impelled its composition: Philadelphia, July 5, 1848. General; Will you regard a word from a friend as impertinent or obtrusive? It is after a great deal of reluctance that I am induced to trouble you again; but having faith in you now, a3 I have had ever since I pledged what literary reputation I pos .Jerw to you in my book "The Legends f Mexico, or Battles of Taylor" I mike bold to say a frank word to the general of the people. This is the case. With thousands of Democrats in this State, I depend upon your declaration "that you would in no case be the President of a party, but the President of the people." On this ground the Democrats ot Pennsylvania will vote for you by hundreds and thousands. But we are now told that you are ex clusively the Whig candidate, to be run as a Whig, elected as a Whig, and under Whig issues. If this be the case, the State of Penn sylvania will be lost to Taylor and the country. I do not believe this to be the case. Those who think with me in this country do not believe it. But to set the matter at rest, will you answer this letter with one line? and with mat line the Demo cratic hundreds and thousands of Penn sylvania will move in a body for you. General, do not reject this appeal from a man who loves you for your battles, and the moral grandeur displayed in them; but loves you, first and last, because you have taken the position of Washington not with parties, but in the hearts of the people. And as for the line, say simply: " am still the candidate, not of a party exclu sively but if a ca?ididate at all, the can didate of the whole people. GEORGE LIPPARD. Here, General, was the whole case, plainly stated in a line. You are here told that if the attempt was made to elect you as a YY hig, and upon the Whig issues the State of Pennsylvania would certainly be lost to Taylor and the country. At that time, with thousands of Democrats, I believed that your election as the candi date of the people would subserve the best interests of the country. And what was your reply to this letter, which appealed to the best feelings of your nature? On the 9th of August I received your answer, which I annex: Private Baton Rouge, (La.) July 24, 1848. Dear Sir, You letter of the Gth inst., asking of me a line or two in regard to my position as a candidate for the Presidency, has been duly received. In reply, I have to say that I am NOT a party candidate, and if elected, shall not be the President of a party, but the President of the whole people. I am, dear sir, with high respect and regard, your most obedient servant, Z. TAYLOR. George Lippard, Esq., Philadelphia Pa. This you well remember, was after you had accepted the Whig nomination, in a letter which said nothing at all about whig principles. The publication of your letter of July 2 i created a great excitement among the people and the politicians. Whig papers in New York denounced it as a "locofoco" forgery. The North American, in Philadelphia, (once the or gan of Henry Clay, and now the northern organ of the Secretary of State,) seized upon the word "Private," and in weary columns assailed the person to whom the letter was addressed, as the betrayer of your confidence. Other journals, how ever, which circulated among the masses, hailed this letter with unqualified appro val, and placed it at the head of their col umns as "the great creed and watchword of the Taylor party." I must frankly tell you, that had you not made the declaration embraced in this letter, I, for one, could not have advocated your election, nor given you my vote. Certain it is, that without this declaration, (soon followed by your Charleston letter,) you could not have gained the vote oi Pennsylvania, famous for her old Demo cratic majority of "twenty-five thousand." What was the result of this letter, and of the excitement immediately consequent upon its publication? The Whig party in Pennsylvania forthwith dropped the very name of Whig. They stored it away perchance under the sepulchre of Girard s squandered bequest, maybe under the ru ins ot some broken bank but you well know, and every reader of the papers knows, that in the late campaign the battle was fought, not under the name of Whig, but under the united names of "Taylor and r lllmore. The Democrats were asked to vote for you as the Independent candidate the candidate of the people as the man who had no mends to reward, no enemies to punish in fact, Zachary Taylor, who, in case of his election, would not be Presi dent of a party, but the President of the whole people. And wilh your letter in my hand, I ad dressed thousands of my Democratic fel low-citizens, and, on the security of your unbroken faith, stated that you could not, in any event, become the President, much less the creature, of a party. Upon your own solemn declaration, I honestly advo cated you as "the President of the whole people." I did not for a moment indulge the thought that you could ever become the centre of a mere party administration. Had I been told by you, that you would ever become the head of an administration made up of Whig politicians, I could not, in any case, have advocated your claims, nor would you have received the votes of) a hundred Democrats in Pennsylvania. Now, General, the smoke of the con test has cleared away. You are the Pres ident. Elected upon the faith of your solemn pledges, you are at the head of the government. nave you iuinuea these pledge your own heartcall back ttfi jron pUr, pose, mat ciear-souled lntfo-rity, which bore you through the cajPn9se Gf Buena Vista survey the faces f vour cabinet. and the faces of thoVZTznn3 0f VQUr cabinet, who now storm the White House for the spoils of office. Answer me! have a right to ask an answer. You pledged your faith to me, an humble citi zen, and I believed you, and told my fellow-citizens that you had never broken your word, and could not forget to-morrow what you pledged to-day. Was that letter of July 24, which I bore through Pennsylvania, only a cun ningly devised fable? Was it your inten tion to send me lorth to the masses of the people with a lie m my mouth? To vouch for your "independence of nartv" in October, to find you in May at the head of a mere cabal of a party? Did you make a dupe ot me, so that 1 might be come your agent in duping and swindling my fellow-citizens into the trammels of the whig party? You know that the Whig party of itself, or by its own issues, could never have ac complished your election. You know that the Whig leaders, fresh from the slaughter of Henry Clay of that man who has for twenty-four years sacrificed to Whigism the best instincts which God implanted in his nature could never have elevated you to the presidential chau. You wem elected hy Democratic votes. These votes were secured to you by the force of your independent position. They were not bought with silver, gold, or the hope of office, but won to you by your pledges. And now, sir, you will allow me to ask you one or two questions: In what part of your administration are these Democratic votes represented? Among the army of office-hunters who now besiege the doors of the White House how many of your Democratic supporters can you discover? Sir, the truth must be told; and as I supported you earnestly and sincerely, I will speak the truth -with most uncourtly frankness. -1 Your election has been fruitful only in discontent and dissatisfaction. Elected in the name of the people, you are surroun ded by advisers chosen not even from the manhood of the Whig party, but from the veriest hacks and trimmers. These ad visers seek to entail upon the country, on a colossal scale, system of error and misrule, such as disgraced the age in the shameless expenditure of the Girard be quest by the Whig corporation of Phila delphia. Had you been elected as a Whig, and upon the strength of any known Whig creed, I would not complain. Is it not a painful thought, that you, the man of the people, should sit there in Washington as the leader of the mere fragment of a party as the embodiment not of a Whigism like that of Henry Clay, which states its principles and fights its battles m the sun, but of a Whigism which works in dark ness, gathers strength by unholy coalitions and builds its power upon broken pledges? And now, sir, as I wash my hands ot the last traces of political I aylorism, as I state my regret that I ever acted the part which your pledges made me act, you at least must admit that I never served you with the hope of office that I have al ways been among that humble band who, working well and long for you, under the impression that they also wonted for the good of their country, could neither ask nor accept office at your hands; for those hands which were free at Buena Vista free in the late campaign are now tied by the trammels which have been lash ioned from the very ruins of the Whig party. GEORGE LIPPARD. To President Zachary Taylorx ARRIVAL OF THE NliGARl. SEVEN DAYS LATER FROM EUROPE The Canadian Question in England Lord Elsrin sustained in Parliament Advance in American Securities State of Affairs in Italy Austnans, Snaninrds. and French surrounding Rome Defeat of the Neapolitans by the Roman Republicans March of the Hungarians on Henna Probable Battle between the Hungarians and . - 7 W Russians Danish ana Sicilian in surrections German Agitation. St' John's. N. B. May 312 P. M. The steamship Niagara, Capt. Reyrie, arrived at Halifax at 3 O ClOCK, OU A nurs- day morning, and will be due at New York nn Saturday evenmer. The Niagara brings $10,000 in specie and 63 passengers. Our express made the run to D iff by Gut, 146 miles, in eight hours and fifteen minutes. Tho Cambria was spoken of! are Clear on the 28th, and the 'Hiberaia in lat. 46 25v long. 46. . - Thfi FuroDa arrived a' Liverpool on Monday, making, the run in nine days from New xorK..r The Ilprma nrrived at Southampton on the 17th from Bremen, with 130 first and second class passengers, for New York. She was advertised to leave cn SundaCf morning. Summary ofthenfws. Tfc r,,l Horn markets nave slightly improved. The depressing effect f thfJ-L i Krht bv the Europa, ot large receipts of Cotton at American ports, J- . . , l.r, neutralized bv seemed lust to nave uw intelligence conveyed by the same steam- er ', of severc frosts at tneoouui wi Iyeland continues quiet and misenunc ivt ri-Vir nc.tinn has been naa a 15 ever. , .L. tt... f T.rrdsin relation to tne in uie nuusc - . - T rP, n repeal of the Navigation Laws, llic Lords were to go in Committee on the bill on Monday. . Notice has been given by Lord tan,eJ and others of amendments to be offered, and it is considered quite possible that Minisis may be beaten in Committee, and thjbill be so mangled as to induce its author'o resign and retire from office. Detjls of the outbreak of Canada were laidljepre Parliament on the 15th, which fi;Mtft:rme. rlUrnssinn ofno importance, bevondthe fact that the Governor evinced a determination to sustain Lord Elgin. Earl Cfey, in alluding to Lord Elgin s dis natch. aid that it would show that he act ed throghout with his accustomed judg ment, loderation and good sense, anu thathe yas full y prepared to justify, and take theresponsibility of any step of Lord No lomal discussion of Canadian af fairs, nntl after the receipt of later intelli gence, wich reached Liverpool probably on the 20h, in the Uambria. The Hivre Cotton Market has been more animated since the elections, and prices are veil sustained. The elettions in France on the 13th passed of without a single violation of good order. No definite opinion can yet be formed as to the relative success of par ties. No d.nht is entertained but there is a large majority in favor of peace and order. Th Frflnch F.xnedition to reinstate the Pope had - not errecceu - an entrance into Rome at the last advices. The Neapoli tan armv has not been more success- ul, havinjr been defeated in an attack on the 5 th inst. The war in Hungary assumed no new Mature, the fiVhtinffffoes on unremittingly, and the fortunes of the Hungarians are re ported to be in the ascendent. They are said to be within a few days march of Vi- enna: to which point the Russians are pas- sing forward as rapidly as possible. It is thought that the strong protest ot Jf ranee seconded probably by England may have the effect to check the advance of the Rus sians. Sicily is again in a state of insurrection "or the hundredth time. It is stated that the Danish question is all but settled, the only positive facts are, that the Danes have suffered another defeat, and that Lord Palmerston has intimated that the attention of the BritishGovern ment is still directed to that quarter, wilh a view to effect a restoration of peace. J he Daily JSews asserts that Denmark has accepted the propositions made by Lord Palmerston, but what these proposi tions are, does not appear. I he plot gradually reveals itself in Ger- many, ine sovereigns nave evidently combined for the overthrow of the Liber- alists. There has been a formidable disturb ance in Dusseldorf, on the Rhine, but it has been suppressed. At Frankfort the riot was becoming more revolutionary and anarchical every day. All the moderate men have, in consequence, left it. THE FRENCH NEWS. The closing meetings of the National Assembly were taken up by discussions on the Italian Question, in which the Min istry finally obtained a majority of 38. It would seem from the statements made on the subject that M. Odillon Barrot did not give any instructions to Gen. Oudinot, recommending the occupation of Rome at all, and it had been determined that the expedition should proceed to Civita Vec chia and there remain as a moral check on the advance of the Neapolitans and Aus trians, and only to march onward in case of absolute necessity. I he ministry were not, however, unani mous in this; and it is feared that Gen. Oudinot was influenced in his conduct by the advice of a certain faction, of which M. de Fuloni is the head. On Saturday, in reply to an attack by M. Flocon, it was stated, that as soon as the government heard that the Russians were to interfere in Germany; they' wrote at once to London, St. Petersburg, Berlin, and Vienna. They considered it a cir cumstance which must be deplored. They would endeavor to annul it by dip lomatic means, and if they should fail the government would then apply to the Na tional Assembly lor its advice and counsel. In consequence of a vote of censure by the Assembly, M. Leon Fouches, Minis ter of the Interior, resigned his portfolio into the hands ot the President, and it is said that several others of the Ministery 11 " . . . .1 1 - -m win resign as soon as tney can do so with out embarrassing the President. '. ITALY DEFEAT OF THE NEA POLITANS. The Austrians entered the Papal States on the North, and Marshal Winpain threatens with fire and sword, all those who resist him. .In the South, the Nea politans were advancing for the same pur pose, but the Romans met their vanguard at Albino, and defeated them. The Nea politan force consisted of a body of 10,000 troops, and after a short conflict, threw a way their arms and fled. The Romans have taken 50 prisoners and 2 pieces of artillery, with which they entered Rome on the evening of the 5th inst. ; Request of the Pope to withdraw the French Troops from Rome.- Pope Pius on hearing of the resistance of the Romans, is said to have declared that he would not return to Rome at such a price, and to have sent a message in consequence to Na ples, and to Gen. Oudinot, to induce them to withdraw their troops. Reinforcement to Gen. Oudinot. In the meantime Gen. Oudinot has been reinforced by many thousand troops, and he has now probably a new appointed ar my of 20,000 men . under his command, but the enthusiasm of the Romans is rais ed to the highest pitch, and if a single, or combined attempt to bombard and take Rome by storm could be made, the defence of the city by means ot barricade, and by the courage of the people - will be so well maintained that the Austrians are by no! means certain of success. Wn Jmvfi before us most frightful details of the priests being dragged forth by the populace, from their hiding places, and put to death. Their bodies have been hacked into the smallest pieces; and thrown into the Tiber. The combined powers of Europe will scarcely be able ever to set up his Holiness ao-ain on the throne of the Vatican. The tide of feelimr has overflowed him, and the Romans seem now bent on excluding sa cerdotal and political authority. Intelligence by telegraph has been re ceived from Gen. Oudinot to the 13th inst., at which time there was a strong probabil ity of the French troops being permitted to'enter Rome without opposition. In the de'spatch, the General says, "Serious pro positions of submission are made to me. Already, the authors of safety to the Ro mans, the 700 French prisoners at Lome, were accompanied to Palo, with all possi ble joy. A letter in the Times announces the landing at Finimiso, of a Spanish force, which was marching towards Rome. A Tixh attempt is being made at Paler mo, to et up an. armed resistance against the Neapolitans, but it appears of doubtful success. ULTIMATUM OF THE PEOPLE The Austrians had not entered Bologna at the date of the last accounts, they had possession of some of the gates, and the surrender was hourly expected. The Bolognese defended themselves nobly. They had offered to acknowledge the Pope, on c ondition that he would consent to dismiss all the Priests from his govern ment, but the Austrian commander replied that subjects could not be permitted to dictate conditions to their sorereigns. At Venice Radetzky had gone further than this. The Venitians asked for an armistice, in order that they might obtain the mediation of France, to which they had applied. He answered that the Em peror is master, and would never permit a foreign power to interfere between him and his rebellious subjects. AUSTRIAN DEFEAT. The Austrians were repulsed on the 8th inst., in an assault, and the Venitian6 ac counts stale that they made a sally and took 800 prisoners, which needs confir mation. The Emperor of Russia reached St. Petersburg from Moscow on the 1st inst. 1 he troops had already marched into Gal- lacia, en route for Hungary, to the assist ance of the Austrians. Their force con sists of 120,000 men, and 350 cannons, and 25,000 cavalry. Gen. Bern is well prepared to give them a warm reception in Transylvania, and there will be work before it is over. Gorley has posted about notices that whoever refuses to take bank notes shall be branded. GERMANY. Russia has followed the lead of Austria, and withdrawn her delegates from Frank fort. The other principal powers will doubtless do the same. The Grand Duke of Baden has been obliged to fly from his capital. In Elberfield, Dusseldorf, Hager, Ose- luim, and in all the market towns in Rhe nish Prussia, the insurgents had erected barricades, and made the Constitution a pretence for tumult. COMPROMISE BETWEEN THE GERMAN STATES AND AUS TRIA. At Berlin a sort of Congress has asscm bled, and Baron Gagern's scheme of two German Federal States has been revived, a double confederation to be the basis. Austria consents to a closer connection with Germany. The German States and Austria are never to wage war against each other. They are to form a defensive al liance, and a foreign war may be carried on by either power. If this power does not succeed in proving to the other that its interests are materially involved in the dis pute, the Emperor of Austria and the King of Prussia, as hereditary chiefs of the new German r ederal States, are to ap point Commissioners who are to act and advise as the Executive power of the two Governments. The scheme has now re ceived the attention of Europe, but its re alization depends on many contingencies- Morc California Particulars. DIAMONDS AND EMERALDS FOUND. We learn from the New York Tribune of Wednesday morning, that Mr. Parrott, our consul at Mazatlan, is now hi" that city, having left Mazatlan April 10, and come overland through Mexico. He reports having met with companies continually during his overland journey. The road to the Pacific is lined with them and they are all, so far as he saw, doing well. There were four or five vessels at Ma zatlan and two or three at San Bias, for California. The price of passage varied from $50 to $250, according to the ac commodations. Mr. Parrott's visit to the placers was undertaken for the purpose of informing himself, and his revelations are even more astonishing than any which have previ ously reached us. The limits of the placers toward the south arc constantly being extended by new discoveries; the northern districts, owing to their remoteness from civiliza tion, have not yet been fully explored. The earth, in some places, have been dug to the depth of 0 feet, and the proportion of gold found to be quite as great as on the surface.' The richness of the dry diggins is in some places almost incredible. Mr. Parrott estimates that the amount of gold vLich wjlbe obtained the err"- 77 thirty million dollars. " ' Br1 But the richness of California do n consist in gold alone. All the preciou metals are there found, in greater or le profusion, as well as the rarest and molt valuable jewels. Two mines of silver t but few persons, who jealously keep th secret. Platinum is also known to exist in considerable quantities. A rough diamond, nearly the size of i hen's egg, has been found by one of the miners in the Sacramente Valley. Geo. Vallcio, who was Mr. Parrott's informant says that it was brought to him by the finder, who demanded $180,000 for it. Emeralds of large size are frequently met with, but their value is scarcely known. Three or four new quicksilver mine have been discovered, one of which, a very rich deposit, lies between the vallev nt Santa Clara and San Joaquin. The For- bes mine, however, is the only one worked i as yet. The extent and value of these ' quicksilver mines is not equalled by any other locality in the world. . Beds of coal have also been found near I the coast, but cannot of course be worked i' under the present state of things. t Mr. Parrott informs us that in the Sierra Navada, to the north east of San Francis co, there is a volcano in active operation. On the 3d of March the heaviest snow storm in the memory of the inhabitants took place. There are but 50 women in the town of San Francisco, 20 of whom are Amcri cans. The price of lots in the town is, as be fore stated, enormous. The sales took place, however, with litde regard to the title of property, and as there are two or three separate claims upon a great part of it, this may lead to great difficulty in the future. Sometimes the same land is sold to different parties by two Alcaldes. Ihe U. . sloop of war Dale, which sailed from San Francisco for the U. S- on the 20th March, has $200,000 in jrold dust on board. Nearly the whole of Capt. Sutter's 40,- 000 bushels of grain rotted in the fields, for the want of somebody to harvest it. The price of flour at the diggings when Mr. Parrott left was $30 per lb., though at San Francisco it was down to $10 per barrell. There was not much sickness at the diggings, except scurvey and a few cases of fever. Tbere was also some scurvey at San Francisco, owin lo the want of vege table food, the cultivation of the sou being entirely neglected. Put dozen for Trial at a Court of Com mon Pleas to be held at Ebensourg, in and jot the county of Cambria, f mencing on Monday the 2d da July, A. D. 1849. Dougherty vs Shoenberger et a! Same tb Same Mendelrs Adm'rs vs Moore's Adrn'm Zahm, Adtn'r v Shaffer vs Christy. va Hale &. Gates vs Parrish vs Kellv'a Adm'ra vs Graff vs Blouse &. Fouse vs Trefix etal vs Jackson vs Harris vs Young Sc Sargeaat vs Murray vs Yoankin vs Ritter vs Sraay vs Patterson vs Conway vs M'Kiernou vs Parrish vs Pfoff vs M'Farland vs Knepper vs Jones vs James Carpenter St. Clair Austin Kelly Colclesser Douglass King et al Regan Cohick for use Fenlon Same Rodger 3 Smith Burd's ExVs Bingham et al M'Guire Cojle Grey Fenlon Barnes Adm'r M'Gough James Jones Adm'x M Do well vs Morrison Win. KITTELL. Prothonotaty. May 15, 1819.-32 tc ILUSS CDS1 Put down for Trial at an Adjourned Court of Common Pleas to be held at Ebensburg, in and for the County of Cambria, commencing on Monday the 9lh day of July, A. D. 1849. Blodget Dodson Collins Dougherty Rbey Byroad Brown vs Glass' Ex'rs vs Hahassy vs M'Gough et al vs Danlap vs Pringle vs M'Keo vs Bell etal Smith's Assignees vs Easly Douglass vs Blouse & Fouta Rhey vs Gutwalt Cohick for use vs Harris Khrport - vs Newman et al Todd's Ex 'rs vsTenlon - Miltenberger vs Morrison Clark &. Co. vs Curran's Adm'rx Shoemaker vs Hslsell Kopclin vs Williams et ux Smith vs Ritter CornmeBser vs Glass Same tb Same Barnes Adm'r vs M'Farland Cunningham AiKellsvs Barnes Tealer ra Allbaugh Dibert & Osborne v Treftz James vs Jones 1 Jones Adm'x vs James Paul vs Dunlap et al Cobaugh vs Gates States vs Canan Hershberger vs Treflz Wm. KITTELL, Prothonotaty. May 15, 1849. 32 to A Large lot of Bleached and Brown Mus lins, just received and for sale very low &t the store of MURRAY & Z.4IIM. A N excellent lot of Loe ost Posts suitable for fencing on hand and for sale by MURRAY ZAHM. April 12, 1849. 25 DOZEN BOOTS and SHOES of all kinds just received and for sale at Buchanan's Store. I I'