irisalintous, reign antqolitical llttas. correqvade The itebellion'— of the Alta Calitbrniatk. portant Movement of the States Squadron.' United = , )/9' Kony, ..4pri/ 24, 1853 The rebelli m gt ore serious - p crowed lowing it up b,pr( Nanking, they tex, — deeded to th'e ,Grail cuttinci off,all ar -by. theTawitie tit porial troops *Mil leading -to the which is. again in and causing which may now I J r‘porteci two forces, Rebel iIII u.lttle ari iy, t 4 t ic I, nose- beginning to .mistune a et.• The rebel havo taken ".heir leader its Emporor—fol- Aamation.s, etc. After taking d E titte-kiankfoo, and then pro. 4 eaasiorith the intention of id Portuguese Michas sent np Shatighae, assisted by the Im tiNLiheits—.lreve them back, andonskint of Che-tiang-foo, the possession of the Imperial he rebels to retreat to Nankin, em*dered-their stronghold. at on' the 12th of Mr . eh, the I:jand .I . .mperialists, were to meet hayc a grand and decisive bat- The Pekin E' off„:- with' 30,0 for hinr. the fore; izinz for defenCe ~ .0 . , ~ v ing, se. t h able •t 110 Men to manage the bueiness gners : at Shanghae were'orgati it 1.);. - ihg reported that thie re. yto them.' At S.haughae the States steamer 'Susquehaluta, s.of-war; and one French. eery is new here with the Ali. • toga, and intends to proceed ae and Japan, without waiti • , placed or to be placed uncle yet to arrive. •The policy questionable, as it will be co. peetations, of - the Japanese, wh of all our movements, and wi r result iu the total failurcof tb penttenf of: which, it,,, leaves fl teritan Interest to usher friend! i;% a - disturbatece which is nova !Ai*, ltetlali"e7o — n - siderni. - s-,..if commander of the - Japan Expedition, an not of the East India Squadron, or in anticip tin of a ,re-call , rn the new powers at 'l l Vathin , _ ton, of this e ravagaut Expediticin, irlien on vozsel 'would static:kit for all practical pa poses: • .1 Dr ..)leG tin bas puhli led a tang etsa 'on !..Moribund pd. nisi:Tilt Dynit ties and Chriq ,tianity" In Cii thi, which doses thus: Unquestion IF, the people cf China-now pre fer the Manch, („he present Tartar) yoke to cm prdtcetion -wh k Western States might afford; yet it is aeo MI belief that fate has dettined_ CI,. 17E1:6 unfrien. h.tvc the Unite. t?-Pee .British s ooutific*re and Bar Shan.l tLe .-qua bi;• ct , mmaud, this native is-V trarY to the ei are fully advi. in all probabilit bad f, :Won %If A eq,c,ls d'it tax. otherwise, and who .are aspi ti: pra nut .•• could -nurlon influences, un., is approachin., sated we ',ft.vp ' .of this part for.cuuwel, ruent turn to jit is' altogether probable that they jr}.. to role the black haired race . foreign t.yrupatity, however ;e , tain 1 t if.:, that a .nattre dynasty 4 e ist iuqependeutly of extraneous is it les: eprtain that -the period . , whether to b,.. • - ciesiretiiir 41epra. . o to itartire. -when the million; ,f Llitlia, sh a ll l oo k to Washington tt of other portion s of the eon- IA ridon for iirtlers. _Mit' , thick , that the rebellion can. akedi a long tim.. will be required 4,Lne! argues thus. thitt its FUeel." iI It j .) *ho t ', .. , rei: , n iutttest-. II: de,irahle? My reasous are brief 'rho ~.- r &at ohjet.t desired by for -1 ‘edeut ~ 1" intercourse with this us i• pl.lc‘,-3 upon a thvoritble and stn.- h a dot e rxtt . of wealth and affluence e ille . Chinese to , consume Cage foreign tuanufak:tures; anti such a al peatie and .1 tdetness as will favor goo 41:. . : . . The I h init not :Ateceefi, t to put - 11•.1 - 0 w°•uldl 1:= it- ~ t eec ic. toll..:;•.:I rlgprrs dre, a- will Pinib Ornite transit thilkli al reaWr de feel assayed ion, that th oral, these objects can be obtained to a I (e under this dynasty than ;Inv one prospect . of being established. I he bitol-y of China justifies the opiti presenl. i, theunest culigheened, lib- 1 4 and it ustrious race of- kings that 1 he thro‘ of the "Middle Kingdom," tis ineut btincy . this great people have , lii-eriae enjoyed snore peace, and i i 'from re hits and front mal-itilmin ( favoritt,. ithan:during any preceding 3 in can nuenee they have increased (ilth, pi ptilation and power. . 14:it 'lg., . t avail d hildt-elf to the utmost of 1:c, lin the Tarts and sciences. :What in . tit...ir bani,litnent we do not - exact, 1, euld 1.,: -rather an anomaly 'if, •-n;t , 11.,;,l . arritatd at such a hitch of (Mt not f tigage in political iulrigues: But apatorer . may have IkiiAt the I know t .e Chine 'e are much much op ! reign iu t mousse than the - 4 1;1:1C/111:, - . in ,43 int: VI- ' 'Lltit.lll tii3ii can bt. erato•- :ar ((},e(l facilities 4 intereour-e, if the upetor- and the;cla-- of p,m(ple most it i f re isiv.pellt-1.. kind a n:itiVe race of tiz, lislicci: and expccjallt when the headed - ht 4 . ahtitix;.e. - the most bitter bikeigintr, in all Chinas! . et.cr ...ut and during 'been bitter -tiff red ler... MEI= :I , 4:Lasky, an! • trreatly in w tci ni ski • MEM 1,11: 111, J . , p•twt.r. ibal• a rea,, 3.' r‘f El Cuctl,ii. , 611 bould , aceet'd in dividing the Empire. re ,41t. end ~ f internal strife and an- If they etitt t urell v that nart- of ,th 1:!).;:••• hiel ibe peace: • if : :the) <eeiirg _ 'on!: will thr. liord Tart.try t there eiti iwaec ant i•an tlier. prosporit• • favor int. Atievess Until it 31111 (Alt t . will continuo bet %Teen the geparnteri n eounGr:.• arid the local bands of rob would every, where ari.r . : ( lo plunder Id, peopl e in such a stare of society? fineteed even in taking the,,capital, and adhgrun e e of all the prov,inces,,- how tliey, be liarrit,.:,e4 by ,titt4 attacks 'of 1 4, that %mild malie ineunsions from 1 ertrieli tlienisilve , with the wealth of . accumulated &wing two i enturie: re prosperity' IVhat rea.witlible profrphel, be entfaqpirmil of, increased ,wealth, , , , and pence. among rho people so - as to - eased plitimereial iite - reour-c, from - the 1 the prap..o.cil rofcirmers of abuses?— 1 41i be emaliliqbe.l trial thieNes, robbers ; iws are likely to make tlic: most upright, ml ituprti:ll official-. .1 Kee no good ;...rtind I ) expei;t ..ny . gobi to the peeple of Chi na. eivi ly, socially, eetnitierelall), -morally, or religiou y, from the Queues:: of the insurgents. Fears are.entermined in Vant..in that the rah cr hle of that city, excited by the r -mt. of the pro grv.s of ithe insurgents, . will rise and as they are known ,j ito be bitterly hostile. tc 'foreigners, the 41,44 hiong I? , .yriter advises" th lett , rte be.pre pared for emergencies. . Ti,.! .aaer Auligiretut,:m yr the Otrietriets of Nam hai and lifts, n-yn have prohibited the exportation ~f 1.4,5 e i ' - -.Tits WIN E Srierx.—A Correspondent of a New Ydrk paper, says that the Mesabi valley is already' celebrated for its unequalled grapes. • ThiAtqrsitory 11 -capable of producinit wine euoughlto supply the demand of America and Europl and not inferisCr' in quality to that of INl:adei'4; if it be attended with care and skill. Thirg4pcs are of the very bestquality, and when preperlY cured, become the very best raisins in the world. •It is from this .sequestered valley -the limited Oltates_and the mt of the world will get the wine that will throw Madeira and Sher ry wines, and * those of F,ranee, completely into the shade:, The tuiraioVary 'houses of the Jes uits in California, in former times, were renewa l:li ed f the excellence of their wines, which, in deed. i we may-believe the accounts of travelers, excelt . tluXte of any " ether part of the world. ACCIDIMS ON iirlKE ItCRON.—We learn e Meitner Ruby, last night, rmened three 'it hat irbieir had been upset on Lake , ere* Miles froim Goderiel. It appears' party of four 4 0%4* out en' tt, pleasure sail; ti o n who took barge of the istiat undertook b the tenet disentangle the riggin, the breeze, though slight, added to his , upset the boat. It ik supposed that be f)t , clear himrlf of the sail and eordage, Sa.s seem no more s His name was Robert re, a shoemaker in Ooderich.—Ddroiti - fletrcrilser. , 11 that -t men I Hu that a the to cli n when • weigh could iv. I,e N'lnt ity 1411,1111.1 1 TOOTII ' GET THERE.—An vielJ, !min . -Loco sunk at Charleston to the Ara, Witliout ollaining water.- 1,010 feet a shark's tooth in tine • on was found . - . Ho t " , sket iru depth • ,At Tem pendaptia_ of als OP- Mteqril ed in NeNT much subsided. G. Tries,- who waeasht. so early in May, with eight hundred soldiers artillery, is said to have been the bearer of a let. ter from Mr. Conkling, our Minister in Mexico, to Gov. Lane, suggesting to the latter to "recede from his' position as gracefully as possible."— Tries did not occupy the disputed territory, be. liar ing—by roma of the loser .0140 mer's refusal to support Laine—that the qeizure would' be condemned in the United States.----I Tries became quite cordial to the Suiericana.— The hospitalities of El Paso were extended to the American officers and 3 grand fandango got up, in which Americans and Mexicans frater. nixed in the most amiable manner. Gov. Lane has been nominated for Congress by the Mezi cans of Rio Abajo. Mr. Grienier adds that the Nasajoes have re cently been giving trouble which may lead to 1 more serious and protracted difficulties. Early in May last, a party of these Indians made a de, scent on a I-niche situated opposite La Canada, on the Del Norte, and having killed a Mexican herder, and taken five children captive, ran affray with the stoek. A demand was made fin. the restore ti on of both prisoners and stock, ands surrender of the murderers, known to belong to Black Eagle's I band, who inhabit the Canon de Chelle. he chief, in his reply, said that the murderers were of too much .consequence to his tribe to be thus surrendered. The Navajoes were allowed until the 20th inst. to comply with the orders. Col. Summer, in the meantime, was making prepara- . dons for a sally in their territory, should they fail. -Much trouble was feared by the inhabW ants front this source. But India GalPhanim luring the last four years of whfg mabadrnin ist tion, the people of the United States were sabj •ted to a aeries of Galphinistic operations of a very complete and acientifiecharacter. Abe hold manner in which the Treasury was plunder ed, startled the whole country. But we are not laite.sure that even, Crawford, Corwin, and 'Ew ing, and their ready imitators, arc not surpassed in official peculation by the reigning King of Oude" - a province in the. Mt Indies. Bayard Taylbr, in a recent letter to the N. Y. TriErne, from that region, says: The present King is silly almost toimbeeility, and pays the most absurd suds for his chandel iers amlglass tigers. The two finest chandeliers cost hi'm $50,000 each; but it is not to be sup posed that all this money went into the pocket of the merchant. The Grand Vizier, and other officers of Court had their shares, down to to the eunuchs. The King gave a'small gArden palace to one of his Wives the other day. A wall was necessary to screen a part of the garden from the view of the public, and a mason was called upon to undertake the building. 'On being asked to state the coot, he at brat said 1,000,000 rupees, but, calculating afterward, that of this sum the ij ran d Vizier would keep the half, the Minister of di, 'treasury 20,000' rupees, and various'other privileged brood-suckers a proportionate share, while the building of. fir wall would actually coat 5,90 rupees, he gave up the contract, as a los ing job: NU descriptiini can fully illustrate the corruption of the Court of Oude. It is a politi cal ulcer of the ninq virulent kind, and there is no remedy but excision. For the sake of huinan ity the East India Company would be fully jus tified in deposing the monarch and bringing'the kingdom under its rule. *** ' * * To such an extent are the Kings of Gude plun dered that it is relatied of a French cook, who spent some years in the service of a former mon arch, that lie went home with a fortune .of $350, 0(10. It was; recently discovered that one of the parasites of the Court had been 'receiving 2 seers (4 Ibs) of rose water and a jar of sweetmeats dai ly fOr thirty years—and for what service? The father of the present King wps annoyed, thirty years ago by the barking of 4 dug. Ile sent for the owner, and commanded him to silence the ' animal. "Your Majesty ; "d the man; "noth ing will stop his barking, nns . he has two seers st i of roc water, and a jar of.sw tineata given him every day."... Take them, Weil," mid the King, "only let us hare no more tioise." ,The knaye took his rose eater and swkatrueats daily, and had lived luxuriously upon the proceeds for thir ity years. „ .. . . . Ttst F'istlyttEs.—We learn from Washiug t kon, that the Cabinet: held a consultation on Mon ' day last, op. the subject of the fisheries. , It was I,agreed to act with the uttuoit promptness and I forbearance. and to bring the subject to an carry ; . .tdjustment: Mr. Dobbin, Mr. Marcy:and the Picsident, have acted in this matter in a concil ' iatory, yet decided manner. The Prinecum and Fulton, steamers, and the brig of war Deentur, are ordered for the fishing grouni. Commodore Shubrick will probably be iu his command. ' The Administration are convinced that an ad justment of the difficulty will soon be ; effected, and will endeavor to prevent any collision I*- twcen bur fisherinen and the British and. colonial vessels, _ 31r. Crampton, the British Minister, actuated by the mast just and peaceful sentiments, h , . rcft Washington for llalifax, to 'obtain person al interview with Admiral Seymour.on this sub ject—the matter being too inaportant'tolx trust ed to a letter; or to au agent. Iteeiproonting tltywishes of the Administration, he will endeav-. or to procure a suspension of Bride& orders, until time shall be afforded to the completion of the pending diplomatic arrangements. The Price ton will, if no difficulty oecurs, take in conl at Halifax and thence proceed to the East Indies. of rionmeroe, , - INrAmOr s.-2l relative of Gen. Harrison gives notice in a card published in the Cincialati Times, that all persons assembling in the graveyard in closure at North Bend, for the purpose of revel -1 ry, will be prosecuted as trespassers, and cites as a reason a disgraceful scene which ceetured on the ItOtts nit, which is described as follows: "A party of several hundreds-came from Cin einnati in three steamboats a pioneertand hay- precedo.l them the day before in an omnibus, and this pioneer baud pAched their tent in the Grarryird on; Sunday for the sale i without leave Orlirense from any one. Yager day that graveyard was selected as the spot upon whieh the company danced all day, and vol i co . ; of the • Profeasors, ' in calling the figurer, could be distinctly heard the house, alquarter of a mile off in the valley below. That moral re• creation of card playing., so refining and elevating in its inflaenoes, was indulged in by many of the company upon the bumble graves of the pi. queers of this settlement, and drunkenness and revelry reigned supreme. The tomb-stones in eur family inelosures have been defined, and the names of those who slept beneath partly erased, so as to make them read differently, and even the names of the individuals committing those acts written upon the Stones in pencil—an insult to the dead and a wanton outrage on the feelings of the living. The depredations committed upon the beautiful mound whore the remains of Gen: Harrison repose:are disgewefal in the extreme. Every little shrub and flower planted them by the hand of pifcetion are rudely destroyed .by these moreligioto Vandals in their haeclialnalien revelries." A ''STERLinn" PELL(m.,---"flie following unique advertisement appears in a late number of the Lebanon, (Kentucky.) Roe: ‘ , .1 a m in jell, and very unjustly, I. think; and I am lonely and desolau, have nothing to whjle away the bout*. LaoLim a sham of paten* in my tip; Taikrkg. I will work veki low — half P46,a , 04er thou be idle. - Sttrling. Lebanon Jail, Fele tory, 18/33." He might have atitital, as an additional induct: went that he wouidalwayr be fiend attolne• OTAVI NOMINATION& FOR cesel. commisatormai THOMAS H. FORSYTH" Of Philadelphia.' EPHRAIM BANKS, Of Mifflin. TOE•IC .OKI,nIaAL; J. PORTER BRAWLEY, 01 Oruro/ord. An We • Pest Pee!get By the superficial ebserver this query would, doubtless, be answered in the affirmative ; but the calm reasoner, the, deep thinker, will pause ere he so answers, at least so says, and justly we think, the St Louis Inteliigencer. rA writer in -that journal sixties that it is not the celerity with. which we accomplish prejeets—nOt the speed with whiCh we built Railroads, steam boats, annex territosy; annihilate space, and the like; but it is the slow standard we set up to compare those feats by. Thus, before the age of steam and telegniphs to have done what we are now doing would, doubtless, be considered !fast,'" ,but it is nothing now—it is by no means "gist" in the present underitandhig of the term. We no - tnitsgs now, it is tine, in days and months that our grandfathers could not- hive mem . plished in as many years, but we are enabled to do so because science has taught us to use to ad vantage the elements' heretofore li:wiled up in' the great store-house of nature. A kind Provi denee,,in its own good time, has given the pres .ent generation the gCnius, and impelled that genius in the right path, for such discoveries of rapid motion as the magnetic telegraph. And when the forces of nature starting out from their hiding *laces forin new combinations, which show how easy is the performance of things be fore thought impossible, it- is no imputations Man that he follows in the path pointed out by nature or rather by the author of nature. It is not, then, a demonstrable fact that we are a fast people,' because we do things. in a hurry. By no means. It is true we talk of steaming it to Europe in a .week but as yet we have only run it in ten or twelve days. It is also true we I talk of running from New, York to San Francisco and (Canton in six, and. in thirty days, but it is still nothing bat talk. When it &COWS a reality— when the Merchant in Broadway or Chstnut. street ilweives advices from his correspondent on the Patine in six - days, and his agent in Can ton in thirty, then we, shall begin to be a "fast" people. When the representative from Nova Scotia and the honorable member from Hawaii— the gentleman from the Isthmus of Panama, and his brother member from the Straits of Darien— are seen promenading arm and arm down Penn sylvania.avenue, we expect it will be no slander to say we are verging 'towards the reputation of a "fast" people. When, by our intercourse with Chiistiinixell China, And the consequent influx of immigration from the "ilowry land" to our Lent) of steam 'and lightning, the names 'of Ke wing . I cuntot Chung,, and the like, become as numerous and &Millar as the Browns and the Smiths, then we think it may be put down is an absolute that that we urea Vast people l" ENGLISH' "Paosrzarrir."—The London Ttuus expressei the opinion, that England, at au former period, was as prosperous as at the present time. The Tai 39, doubtless, right ; and here is thi-evidence. Reliable authority as: aerts that the "list of perso"s bribed" at the last election in Liverpool, embraces one hundred and thirteen names. If that is not sufficient the fol lowing will strengthen the po.ltion of - the Times: "The Londoners have a new source of amuse ment this summer. A camp of nine thousand -troops -has , been formed at Chobham (pretty name which is rninch frequentici by Cockney visiters." And - this will prove it beyond a doubt: "On. the same day, in the same court, and-by the same judge, a woman was recently sentenced in London to six months imprison ment at hard labor for stealing a pair of corsets : and) a man, for kicking, biting, and beating his wife till she was senseless, was fined .£5." gar THE WAD : RAILROADS MAME PROPER EY.—We learn says the Doylestown Democrat, that Edwin Schofield; of. Jenkintown, has sold his farm for $250 per sere. A year or two ago it would not have brought more than one half of that sum. It . is near the location of the Phila delphia, Easton and Water-Gap Railroad. Ja cob Paxson, of Abington township, has been of fered 8250 per acre, for hislarm. The Railroad above mentoned, it is believed, will be located through the land of Mr P.; eluting it up into two ill-shaped 'triangles. On this account it has probably be;n doubled in price. The farm . was sold a few 'years since for about $BO per acre. - --410.- Wrttram Cturts, of Philadelphia, well known'thronihout the State, as an ogicerOt the Grand Lodge, I. 0. of O. F., by been appointed by Judge Eldred, a clerk in the Nivel Office, to fill the vacancy occasioned by the resignation of Mr.. Meredith. Tire Oswego Futz.—'The Oswego pa pers estimate the loss by the.contagration of the sth, at from six to eight hundred thousand dol lars it is probable, however, that it will be found to exceed a million. The *Mount of insu rance is not yet fally aseertained ; but it is.anp. posed that it will exceed one half the entire loss. The Hartford and several New York Insurance Companies are among the largest sufferers.— Among the local Companies, the North Western is the heti-lest loser. The Probability, however, is, that no Coinpany will be seriously affected. lier,The Reading Gate 1k says the rumor which has found ite Way into the papers, of al leged frauds upon the Reading Railroad Compa ny, 'kr a_ coMbination of eft :stain noel operatOrs along the line of the Mine-Hill and Schuylkill Haven Railroad, with the weightnsater. at Schuyikill.Haven,.is greatly exaggerated. The amount oqt of which the Company has b een d e . kauded, Is not near SO large as re* . sPated, and the loon of it. will dcruhtlesa be refunded, to save expo4ure. • • ----- +- SAvrstts BANK. —pie advertisement 14 the ,tlispeney Satrings fluO, established under a meant act br the Legislature in the city 4,4 Nen Avtirk, appc . ars in the city papers, thnt ;JOitis ready to do business. The principle is a novel one. • *he Prodding' lie Preside, evejing for Ne, hied the Cryis tut. He was accom) vie, Cushing, Davis, and hit Private Secretary. At Eattheore he wig vetemned by tlkethottaszth of people assembled at tie Depot; $ lerlge turn out of military was also in attendance, by which : he was awaited to Barnum's Hotel, where a stand had been ertetail,tistifidly decordtd. Re Was there introduced to the people by the Mayor, and In reply take woketne extends'', be lite Ponded in substance as follows: ,qtr. Mayor and fellow-shims of italtire--my heart Is n i p, and it would be dile& to apron the depth of feel lag with *kWh this toadied reception U. lamented me.— Year eltleana by their partial friendship, and more than Memo conidenee, previously imposed epos me a debt of gratitude which years devoted to their service,_and to the Interest' and honor of oar common coubuy, can warmly most (Cheers.) To be thus surroonded by a popoissk, D . Sot less distinguished for its chivalry then for Itc WWl gene* and tried patriotism, is peculiar!y erctifYing, and among the pleasant elemoties meggestod by the occasion, who can flail to be reminded, where the banner ef undestod, tinqualtled religious tolesadon was Ant freely even to the breeze? You cannot be ia such as atmosphere without feeling its vilifying beineace. Every maa who has a pa triot's longs mast feel it, becalm every man knows that re ligious toleration lies at the foundation of civil liberty. (Chars.) No transient traveler can enter this city without being ;Keck with thi evidences of enterthise and hottest thrift which everywhere meet the eye. Baltimore has stood prominently forth in that astealshiag promos of our coon. Icy, which may be truly said to have outmatched prophecy. Her peat advantages hi a commercial point of view he,. of course always been marked and app en# bat her wen. mending geographical position, se hr as internal oem. merce is esseeneed. Prato snarled to by Washington as early ae s MO, is only beginning to be appreciated, Amu by yourselves. As the great West pours in its boundless re sources as the bidding of your enterprise, the Judicious ap- Pliecticc of you: means to these internal improvements will leers the derniny of Baltimore Is• one of the great cities of the t worki no wetter of doubt. ( Cbeera ) Bat after ail, it is not the increase of your population and wealth—the aug mentation of your shipping interest—your crowded depots red marts teeming with the prelude, agrktuluerel and mend, of the interke—me erection of spleodid *dile* i ring as it were by magic—nor all these combined, which i- i chiefly engross the thought. of the patriotic citizen, and .give his pulse a quicker and a prouder throb as be eaten yo r environs and seek these monuments in the illanetea y may crumble—that is their destiny; nay, they will mc , alder aid mingle with the common earth; bat the la.' apiration of UM deeds of valor they commemorate, which eared you from the peewees and the shame and dread of a foreign soldiery, *ill perish never. (Applause.) Who shall say:what has boon the client of the power, of the ex pie, of self- eacrilleing heroine which signalised the da te, eorNorth . Pointand Fort Meßenryin 1814 (Applause.) 1 It as a dark and. trying boar in our history. We morel perplexed, dint sot in despoiri—eastdown, bat act destroy ed,--when your example andwess„ re-animated coar. ago and confidence everywh ere{and it was Mt that the sh lid of . proteetrno superior to all human power, always gaited by our fathers during their great Wylie, was e I over us. Let us remember it, and ever aellaowledge It h humble and grateful hearts. Who shall say hew much y monuments for those who fell, and year reveres.. and donate esteem. for those who survived the eondicts of tb ansiuus days and nights to which I have smarted, have had to do with the free and gallant libation of Maryland blood upon . "o many melds of Mexico? {Applause) •The fathers of the revolution taught their sons that they owed dale ant ditty to their eountry,—a duty not to be avoided, but. to be chinnfully rained in the free of all eonsequrn ern and at every haunt B not the Almighty Messed td us, their descendants, their example, their experiesee and their lessons? .Nobler penis, cannot be honeyed, than to say that no State hr this Centederac7 less furnished a more impreuive exemphleation of the power of that teach log than that before whom, people I have now the beam to spade (Applause.) Mr. Mayor, a pleasant incident at this moment comer back to my memory, to which I may apt be censured for admaieg.,_ Bees after the back Nap ter anchored, with a p0r6,31 Or the Ninth hifeatry, near the cud* of San Juan de taloa, about the lath Jena, 1147, another transport wee to anther within a eahle's leagtit. We could sot dissent the ship but in a few minutes we heard, pealing forth from her deck, the Mining notor °taw "Star Spangled Bennet." The erect was elearical. I thought, prolteMy from a ssoeiatioa, that the ship was from Baltimore, and the fact reviled the impression. Bova were lowered;and friendly greetings eesauseamed between the sons of Maryland and New Englend, whieh I trust may Fever be interrupted. (Apptause.) Bat berme ea by my feelings., I am detaining you midi too long, (Cries of "Nei for) if alteedy yours were not designated throughout the land as the Monumental city, I would venture to christen it as pre-eminently entitled to the name, "'The city of the Star Spangled." (Applause.) While yun will hall with joy the appearance of every new star, as one after another shall be added to the constellation, you will always proclaim upon the honor and faith of Maryland, that the number shall Dever be less. (Great cheering.) I thank . you all, gentlemen; forum, presence her. to-day, anti I bops we may meet under agreeable circumstances loeg years to come. • The Pitideut retired amid the most deafni cheers, when Davis, Guthrie and Cambial_ were severally called out, and responded in their uswal i eloquent manner. , . . From Baltimore the President proceeded to Wilmington ; and all along the route the Utmost enthusiasm was manifeited. Indeed says the National Democrat, we remember no demonstr.- tion of a similar description so truly and sincere ly ardent since the days of General Jackson.— Wherever his excellency appeared, the people*. corned him with au earnestness and sioceritty that spoke volumes; he has won the goodwill and confidence even of those who are his political op. portents. He arrived' at Wilmington at:l2 o'. clock M: on Tin;sday, and was escorted to ihe dian Queen Hotel, where the Philadelphia CoM mitteeieeceived him. His honor, the Mayor of Wilm4gton e in a very happy speech, introduced General Pierce to the Philadelphia Committee, on whose behalf Hon. Geo. M. Dallas received him in an eloquent iddress, to which the Presi. dent replied with much feeling. Mterwards the Committee conducted the' President, is the steamboat John Stevens, to Philadelphia. The boat took the Jersey channel pluming up i going close to the Jersey shore, and turning .opposite Kensington the boat passed close to the city front. Every wharf and vessel was covered with a mass of people. The shipping was gaily deco. rated with flags, salutes were fired from.the boat, the band played numerous patrietk airs, sad the crowds on the boats and wharve sloudly cheering, rendered the scene most exciting, The United States steamer San Jacinto, and the receiringi ship Union, were decorated with, fags from deck to the mast head. The President landed at , the navy yard punctually at 4 o'clock, and was re ceived by Commodore Bead and a. large utiMber of naval officers, f4li uttlfonit, A salute was fired from the navy-yard battery, and the I ma rines were drawn up and presented armsi A procession wits formed, and marched up the yard, headed by a kend.. The president retired to the Commodore's office until the military espw; was ready, when he mounted a :horse and passed out of the gates into the eit 7 , After reviewing the-troops, the President.took hi s position iu the centre, and the peclee il ei eu took up the, line of march along the route de sireted. The'Preiddeat was recited w es t ea . thuiastically With cheers, waving of haudtter chiers from ladies occupy' , windows, etc., eta Oa the procession reachi Imlepeadesoe Hall the President was official' welcomed by-Mayor Gilpin, in a brief address, t 4 which he responded: For want of room we are 'tumble to give the ' ,leech, Imt it as listened to with profound in ktrOat, and o lt4 close iltis heart, rheers We, give/ELL The party then left the hall, and the President was emoted to tie Merchants' Motel. f •, ' sons were ever ready to respond to the call of their country;. and wherever floated their flag victory was sure to follow. After the crowd had dispersed the President and suite partook of a spleitdid banquet, given by the City Council, at which about nine bloated sat down. Mr. Bu chanan was one of the guests. Mayor Gilpin presided, and gave the "Health of the President, to which the latter responded, returning his most cordial thanks to tha Mayor and to those who differed with him in politics. Be said; in the change of circumstances, he hoped his party would show the same magnanimity He saw no reason why men should differ persoitally because belonging to different parties, and thought a man would serve his country as a soldier, or in the councils of.the nation, no matter what political party he may choose to adopt. In conclusion, he expressed his happiness in meeting his ftiends, among whom 124 included the Mayor, up* this gratifying occasion. - On Wednesday morning the President receiv ed the citisens generally of Philadelphia, and in the afternoon, accompanied by an immense 'dele gation from New York and New Jersey, kte de parted in a 'special train for New York city.— His reception, we doubt not, all through New Jersey was as enthusiastic as that given• him in Baltimore and Philadelphia. sir moor Lewis cm, our able and worthy Charge at Rome,. hap just decliners public din ner tendered him bytha citizens of Detroit, where he is st present, on 6 visit to his family. The recent loss he has - 6mtained in the death of his mother, is the cause of his nonacceptance of the invitation, but the compliment to his worth and lerviees is not leas, by mart* of his inability to accept it. i. The Detroit Democrat of the Bth, states that ibout half of the wheat in Michigan is madcled, and the crop is universally good, mak ii ing the fourth year is suomssion at good yields. Corn looks well, is late; oats, very light; sad grass crop above an verve. Rain needed both for corn and potatoes. Tho same generil facts may be observed in regard to the crop in this section. mgh, The Seim* America* says that purifi ed white India Aobber, his been patented in 'England for sinking artificial faith, gums and palates t It adds: "'the adhesion is complete; it .can- be moulded' with perfection to suit every in equality of the puns and teeth, and supplies an artificial perchrotum, Us it were, to the teeth, when they become painNl by the: lusting away of the gum. Added to these is the elasticity of the material, which eoandtetely' *dates the bum weakness that arise' from any motion with arta= dal teeth made by other means." From the way oursjelly sometimes, we should mistrust we had got, the start of this English patentee- Nir Kamm Busr.—The Washington Re public states that 'the President pays weekly, visits to the Ihquirtmente, chepeinto the 04008 of sbe beads Of buteauii, and, so far as his time will perish, make himself acquainted with the business and practical operations of the sev eral coordinate branches of the Gkrrernment—a practice which every body will commend, and which will lead this people to believe that ho wm esideavor to 'take care that the laws be faithfully . oreented.' This -very terse requirement of the constitution imposes upon the President a res- 1 ponsibility that fear appreciate, and which, if , strictly complied \, would keep him pretty busily employed."' with, sec todt, ges. 11 will be I remembered . by our readers that General Scott met . with a severe acrid it some months Gime' while walking in New York. We learn that he !is very slowly recovering the use of his arm , bn it is very doubtful if he will ever have the full! use of it restored to him.— Ile is stow staying; at "West Point for the benefit of his health. 16,, Judge Gmbunn R. Beast& , of Pennsyl reale, has been appointed Codifier of the Revenue Laws, wider the hue sot of Congress, appropria, sing ten thousand dollars for that purpose. , ifir A GOOD DIDD.—The Fourth was cele brated at Tarrytown, Westchester County, by laying the coiner stone of a monument to be erected to the memory of Williams, Paulding and Van Wart the captors of Maj. Andre. - Senator Gwin, and member MoCorkle, of California, fought a duel last month. They freed shots *whitens scratching skin or drawing blood, and then Called their trillicidties settled. That's ►sensible Ivey to-light a duel. ggL. The farni known as "'Clay Spring," is Hanover eounty,,Va., and upon Which the orator 'and atatesman kienry Clay was born, is offered for oak by Its present owner, Alr. William 's. Dourly. fiatr Is. Mr. Pe Cr. Washington has been ap. pointed Acting tari of the Treasury during the absence of : y Guthrie. sir The jovial is said to be pn3iehed finis A. *pita of Chicago, in seven different langua ges. The populatten of the eity is 50,000. aigi: A case warn recently tried in Montgome ry county, in this state, in which Judge Soper wa r soled that an pt to sigi a will—death ea oaring to - t ilgning--is eulcient to sustain the will. In ' ease _ the decamped. had com menced hie soma by writing the letter P., when ea; ni h e sank kook sated, and died is ter minutes. . - - --- ---.— DE/TIM/LW ` THE CILERICB.—Th i e Otero-, kee Advocate i 0111113 ns that a short time since a deputy marshal of the Northern District of the State of Arkansas went into the Creek Nation and arrested a Creek, charged with sellik whis key to the Indiins. The chief of the district, clunking it an insult to his municipal authority .and a violation of the rights of the Creek Nation, interfered and set the Indian at liberty. The Advocate empresses its regret at the occurrence, and thinks it will put the territorial rights of the Creeks in danget; not because the chief is not right, but that it will bring on a conflict with the United State s, who are so sttosx, atait the In. thugs who are 'CA w ea k 49. de Ir tliemielTek against ioplatice• -,. NWT SPILVIL ALL AT 0111 ' CZ --Venezuela has seat forward a motion to be admitted into the American Unidn. A correspondent of the Uni ted States Casein , writing from Porto Cabello, makes the foil/drifting exclamation:--“Wooki to Heaven that Bther Jonathan would, in the 4w. 1 1 50.4 te geuetosityooke tie eottutt7 es the coves of his big Irv, and add another a to the glorious American con stellation." Y. Ev 1, one the i to the in vogue through Out the world, as one of the de visee of ...the people are juggled-and betrayed. They have ever been the prolific sources of corruption as well as of war, and ought to be abandoned by all en lightened, well-meaning, and just governments. They have done more to crush Democracy in ARMININsion the kings and emperors to man a perptteati oonspiney against the *144 sut444 the good of mankind, and are at tb day the very pabulum of that infamous rile/ under which Poland,_Efangsry and Italy tic t 143114 In feet, nearly everything that isletestable in the despotic system by which the millions of Etr tope are managed, by which they are plundered, bamboozled, oppressed and degraded, is maintain; ed by that diplomatic intrigue sad seeretty,througla which the governments operate. A few leading men in the different cities, getting together to consult, or else arresponding ' formal state Dotes, do thus by their disagreements or cconi 7; mime throw all Europe into wet. The vset.in tames of the nations me in their hands, - and are controlled by them, according to 'theSchemes or caprioes of their sovereigns, and tot e a ding to the gent and abiding convictions Of the people.' It may not, perhaps, happen now t as it did a century or' two ago, that the whim of a king's. mistral' should precipitate hostilities- between neighboring powers; but when the proeeedings of government are secret..there is no telling what trivial tenses often lead'- o' the most important events:l Rabelais, in his important history of Gergantua, has ridiculed the grenade on,which monarchs make war with Melt other, with• tear. sistibls humor; but none of the grieVanees that he describes were more utterly foolish than some of the real or pretended, provocationt on which ihe European cabinets get at loggerheads. Weie they tnide public, that the COMMA sensed maga kind might canvass theta, they would produCe universal outburst of laughter or derision. But in the Macey of bureaus they are exempted from the corrective of titoit! Kt.! • f ; Ti ,Our own government wc6 o Y ti 6:• lave no interment seperSte from the people, and which, re preseating only: the tral afithe pagan; she* have no comealmentlifre**WWßlbt t ii fore ne-inducements to engage in Say dark, sin ister or selfish intrigues. All its mte, both in respect to -foreign sad domestic questions, should be open and above board: It.shottki , thootte its course deliberately, but owe baring amen, de- - clare, is the frankest Manager, its buena and pur poses to the world. Ab among • indiVideals .the smallist minds only resort to chicanery and mi ning, ao among nations, the wisest; and best go:v mud are those whiebare die franhiest anditreint. mippsead kiwis .quarterihatrthe ii iiest smoseihd • ptiliticiens ;`those , elm are ys mousing over petty schemes, aid{ pushing tbeir own interests through all kin& of ssnsona tool unknown paths; but that is a . great seiseako.— The men who, enjoy the confidence of , the:pubric are the men who achieve most, Mil mph ters as those of Jefferson orJaeltsen, areill i tst universally popular. They defeat opposition by the very candor and sincerity oft their actions,. balling the overcautious amid winning the revel* of the generous and brave.. Wbes the Duke of Wellington west to one'-of the eoStinestsi Cos reopen, to, la Mal t 4154 ARC asnuaiyl criseteteu cis purposes at the outset, which seind mys tified the veteran diplomats, what led d not ,con ceive that a man should really can what he spoke, that is their eagerness to discover what he was itt, they allowed him to carryliisplans. Thus their cunning overreached itself, as cunning is -apt to do, and a simple straight-forward honesty won' the day. Cannot a nation teas great as the Duke of Wellington, or must it Sue itself.en.a level with the fox, and emulate the seertiveness of the weasel? • Neu , Y/rk, July 14. The President arrived at Jerseliii this A.. .X. about 9o'clock. ' was Ott Mayori and made a short epees*. Be }he troops • At 10 o'clock the President s niulanito arrived at Castle" Garden, when; an' immense concourse awaited his arrival. , • He was welcomed by the Mayor, het replying in a speech complimentary to ,the 'commercial metropolis of the Union_ 1 Gen. Cushing afterwards, in response to a re. peated tali, made a short speech, when the re ception ceremonies closed. Thd President then retuned the troops. The President's progress through ,New Jersey yesterday, was one continual some of willunPh• He arrived at Newark at 6 in she evening and remained all night. The Charleston Courier announcer, the aU•rl- • vat at that city of the steamier Inssibelhi from Havana. • The landing et snore tileorne , uint nenfirmed The reported isunurection of' Ckisese Coolies and the murder of overseers, - is likewise con firmed. There is very little doubt that Mr. Buchanan win decline, the British Mieeieen Mr.'Vandeventez has been. re.appointed to a 401=14 in the Post Offs* Department, Buija&,•Jite:y 15. :The market for flour wits rather inactive and nneettled this mom*. BuytTts are . not (tie toroperate to any litttent• at the advisee dimxitel by, 491deni• Wive parodic .0 are not very,pleniy., Tlmt sall,ard . sowd libls at Si-1816420 1..)a tor god brands Ohio'and Michigan: Wheat is fair requeet ; pace& of white are scarce and firmly held. The rake are .-16410 white Michigan on ptitatis terms;_ 2000 btu red! Ohio st 9 Ocii!wit 26441 bu "jvn itiery choice saniple; at 92d- Corn quiet ; sound scar(4 l and'helii at advance. Sales of 284* hit ware at Ode. New York, Jtriy 14. FLoint.—Demand fur low l eeks of state aint. western less active," prices easier and market 'un settled. Increasing firmness in freights. ' Cad adian better; fair demand. Salem 1100 bbe at 11546 in store and afloat. Sales western canal 7400 bbss ats4 iSlas for mixed to Sway Mich.' and Ind. 1.4 81 /a 4 /2 fur eouttaoa topical Ohio; *8 fo r maim to straight state, closing very tame, (laara. 7 —Ltittle change to note iii wheat; de mand fair for prime parcels of white, hat this is not plenty. Sales 14,000 but prima (Olio at $l - part on board hbv, 3c freight; 280 u bu good $1 •28;1700 bu do white, Catpuliau S 1 35. A bs),Y, ( I {4lo. fitakke rte did nut heard while standing tq front of Pollock's Grocery- Store, ou Superior street, yesterday, was &diger °wily wounded in the following Wanner: lie had a quarter of a pound of powder in hie right peak. et, and very foolishly itud rookloooky put Watch-, ea in•the am pocket. Thrusting his hand clown to get some powder, the naat - t left iguitt4l, and the powder exploded. The bog was very, seriously injured. life itlr (lumen was seeribly 'submit(' and horned, sri,l his i band 140ersted. tla luittaino, were. tau sad broken. Ile , Wu not: especial to five. WI ; un derstand he was takr.o w Orieg..n :Ansi. Ma horde /tai in dui oinnary.—Cikrei. persona mpressions, genor . His ideas in regard to the Little Val;e2 In are erroneous. That Road we hare litio be built-, fi 04.44:w. §. 4 1 41 4 0311 4e , ,ib 4 Pr' tht - Tarnt rangenient of th e New- York and Erie Roal passengers to Buffalo, thus In effect abandouizg portion of their road; while no one knows Editor of the Cower that the t'filteilkies fn. gdp., this point are ,greater than at Dunkirk and El? Ems. Ps.—We ray* gore a tay, or - o nd saw evidences of fts'Sontiened growth aid The eity has bee. considerably Attended to tit; of the Railroad Depot. Pare axe 'cyidencel onerally manifov. fp the city. s.. The contractors have Commenced Opertt.or.l zt ••t bor, for the coiattruetion of the Bcitibni7 a Er.t • which is to terminate at the Lake there. 14 Let ys completed, the saving listanes to New Yore, railroad connective witb - Pktiiedielphia and tait.trortv. it will open, will draw considerable eliipp.l.g , *ad to some extent, perhaps ; divide tic hair... * •, limit York a Erie Road. Many of the peel,;: .- taro hopes of the' cottstroctlotr.of the Eric i road. In this, we opine, they will be the stock is raised along the line of tLe reed. lamely be an object for eastern capitaint. ; x; ., m illi o n of do:Mani on a railroad line en essent.ar, . that only 11 miles will be saved, and with e Fre.; , 14411 feasible than the lake shore route prt-er.t-, a : , feeillities for shipping are no 4 rmatestsllY ineetsi,i the present terminus. • The city antlioriOes sue contetoplatuag the intno '-.... Opus* water into the eity,'and propo , ,e to cte. gm miles, iroducti with sufficient heed to c..nreit il • upper part of every baildiag. • i A company has also ;early completed the nees:tv paratas for supplying the eio with ga... The vtrii well constiu and will soon' be employed L. ..r.l.r. the people. The dark mlniral 1 for that purprAp it yr ; amt in that state, and in that respect cities et other • ate largely indebted to that foribe means of their eminent. . N'otwithstanding the reports 100 of she od4'ti.46:tt , i softer to Banks, he Yee 'tenured the Post Office to tae -. ding erected by the 1.7.t..8an , and adjoining G t . fixed upon for the new city B in . The bull ling u 1..... ted some sixteen years since, a a cost of about 6i! r. The marble which compose* • front mil .colutat.. brought from Vermont. 800 so two or three years .g building was bought by the t. E. Goreimmentret ';',25 for a Custom House, aid there being plenty cf r. Frank took possession, rent free, to terse the pee • himself as Post fitaettir. The new spapersof Erie ate partaking of the sp. p ie. improvement which rvadez the city. The G.,,,ve Obserret have reein been enlarged, and p:,:tent a aid business-like ap ranee. The former was cout: about a year be:cacti:ie. &tutor, (la Imo 4, m a J M. Sterrett, who la now {he ItiliOr proprietor. Thil to the leading adirthistresion paper of Western Ptant: nia, and is printed on a ppwer press.. A new Court House i in process of erection n.t. site of the oldjell, et sit expense of SSO,OOO to Etty., , t • After itacompletion the ipuialie nuisances that def,:m appearance of the city common will be retuoltd The Erie and North-East. Railroad is one i th. s 7l in' road* we hard ever travelled upon 11. 1 ire dray atddied and furnished, and vtr, ft' pity they are obl dto stop at the line, e.1.t, : , t rac k near us would egos suit them if ilia c4ttr., were supplied. • Eniak is bound to be of Ea e account, when the end tther improvements are oompistea, but the iserovement was awakened so late, that met: u 'neighbors had got far in advance of them before' ....,7 gun to appreciate the importance of their r,or.tti: It lake connection of st-State of sneh immense meter'. and tide advantage will be retained, in spit, cf ~ tardy efforts. A correspondent/at - Sugar-Groce wrvt.F. giu-41 W the mate of the,Senburyl Road, and I, line which he eleileel to have advantages is tanee over say other route surveyed. from a point one-and-a-halt intleo oast of Warrci lees old garvey, diverging bolas-right of C Creek, to the mouth of Jaelcon's ran ;.up rai•: filer's Valley eind to Sugar-Grove, is eltno,l a rrti: directtot:4'dt% a distance', as reported by a bf only 13 miles, antra grads of but 15 &et t., tht Fran Bignr-Grove to the age of Ashi ills in >s• la a point intersecting thesErie and New Yorlr is a distance of six or seven miles; with egnalV,_ grade; awl from thence:6 Erie is 36 miles, from the first named point tln Erie only 33 za less distance than by any I othar, route. .hints of our coriesportdont for 'that they as, rr lag, if there is any thing ia them, thte harate tie est of the road in charge trill' examint the Ll:u, ac aceordiegly. PcTrzea.--,The Reading ,Osaigte says it bi• k ten f' 'enough to do a vast =auntti a rdling for is 1 rtWaahrand companies , and received a good =AL kfc#4, than kisses for its pains:, There Is no Tendons and their prgleetn hoceine as iatolear t feature of ibe puffing :jet: r.-. tame; bre die hich Editits aro Ireldected to- e 11111112161 calls to • - . IO woad, mbar!, I •sporstiott would recollect it after moment h breaths; or , at !ram IL: alone, it famed* the poor der,; , •f et , ! time 11111C0 been 'esays. it then cOnarnon,r e for hie,ofirTioe 7 , C 7 food daal i npore than ov. • pOrr9ioue tato enough am& is done; trot the meat it eau or . 1 or wham • •nd as the Oast kiek4 I deal of thit--a txperkpeol in a iebool 7, n have been pallet tor. FiSE§i i• r has been ia .ItricOr c0v.3:3. d.n..r.: left td hie Mother, 'Whe:llcr !r.w..; i rg direct, or by the W 3 c.: •3: Lie a visit.lre are hot 3,/v12...4 Ger. rug, welt; ois tura to Harris thus give our !rea, Esq. has sold oat hL. , eu Oso. F. G{Llfo2lB, E-%:1 3 AN' L. Pittsburib Po of the• Leeds' from tiwi ipreft mr bit Phillip doubt it will m crude Journal. . fro, Allestiehy Cimuty, on. The piper will he e. ^th!'t. a Oiltnure, ia , tutain its popiiinn a. an In.,«I• been Zen catwa of drownlz; frt ions . tti lan. The :s-e ced a yivag man of inu,:h i r with hia yotuts friend, Mr. cursion to Illftah Roth, 11a There two weeks pr - Mr. IN5o: T. ' • rem • OR • tailipg e Aiwa, h skiff 40 apse mast hate e ,, swimmer,' wad swimming to e 4 to bii io •tdpn't be inwpwliately ed share the II staking the • Faggot tell. a o:halation exertion to • ed abeat as h wben a canal F 4 , 31, topposed ;Om 0. Or etxitied •owe injury, tltr L•• - ou being ttittrarn into the w - itt•r arde the ?hire. Ina moineut. or •. , potion to eotue and help know efbat I am about.'• i tem to ?knoll zracbmg bar, ••• I • lody, mad hicio eatat together twic, trd time 3fr. B. exmicatld himself tt got' sabot*, though in to great a ioseaaibilMr. that iereqaired ecL '• Oold* Mr. Weed's b 0.4 r aftarwurik. chum, fluf HADDOCK. EMI. lif, Cleirataud lime Pcalocrtst Ra) ._ bap akmuty hewed much Ilir :7. ent NtheiDatocrot Our of .90'ner of tb• 4V.? del* itki "'Law* cillf CITY Am Coy :rt At two acissiosertatit xecuted 'Sews of Some r LLB United Stew,' secoinry • : articles by Chits. A.lsas - al sketches of Western ic•r: recalled t 46 • pieeeuCwen Amery of th - historic& 'o " f "64 ,San rrart beau. 1 fork. 'The mend it to th tuanitar, I Ptibb4e4l. by Ilermse ork tY woOky of .pstronk,,, lOvors of Jibe Rite Arts Pr.'. soddenilopta:h too* to Itte Church, $e walk to the • there expired tiatabielioly (Hinds to In, em—TheXeadville papers erp...:an: • that plaew lasi week.. Hs. d • osarr‘ge nsremnny;a; she was takes Widdcaly , clan of .M 43 Reynolds in tb , •Y• in n• very few minutpl.. d leaves n I, , srge t titcle - /. rn her smitten' de lie. In Tuesdayi the Mail train 2. n. Ind time, ;t'it4 to gomvtlon DILATED. two boars he On ite tOp west, the •'un. 2 the Lxcnuotly switching 0111 the tender an track. The or the liglitniag train at K in:. thrariga taiggar imr N .. , n , gine of thb ligbtninz train m .'• fur Ow pa of drawing the !toil try a 1, ing back, th drive-tt heeli of the hare! tr.'" thrown oft th , track. The lightning tr.l n ‘va and (lea ;et it art!. half an r . ' -- .. .1. pretty l woman ie like ii, grett truth rk,n - o'ss, and haalne more right te bundle - Ipr - 71' 1 green roil or 1,,1)- 'ether similar ohnritin•qi , ~. •' lime je put . ',n i il l ereen speetneles. So toy. , ..!... tharilo Re.. lt-, and so sly ~.......__ i • —_ _ .. The in , city is awful ktud. pplt„ ' shamefully II ndere4.;, Ass were. 11 1•: I.' I •utti goirsety-!j. ettisti.rits to the Jail ... sagranry, . nketuasse. asUl diourdarly •••. • inmsths en,ll otsJtily lai. ""ly of rimitq •- n 00 , .11' , A -- .• 1141610 "• .11., `MI4I, eui tO ith .1-atit by 7 ro , • 11 I Thy Sib an tqw.st the 'mood EC=
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers