Erie weekly observer. (Erie [Pa.]) 1853-1859, July 15, 1854, Image 2
C 7F--- 7- viR, for Creasers. ,14- r Ville. wing ties; the New York Obeiresr, i of ablest and best cogitated religious gligrApa in the ocisittry, is tbsereing , at k *hien n)akers: 4 / , '9 , . , me'e th? dlsunionists at the East, proposed th'it the ueill Fourth of July celebration should __........... I be omitttel.tbis year, in coasetteuec of the pee _.._ere ea,: , of 1 , 1 , u. , xi els measures by Congress. We Free lais Maar Di". Pr.a ate happy to learn tli wtheir counsels Stets tot We yesterday held a conversation With a very i he.altd, uul that so far as we can judge from the intelligent gentleman of this city, who has re n Tap t,'” is. thcrd was as touch enthusiasm as tweed from Kansas after an absence of be " .l. '" .v r, tnl,is tr in; devoli in to the Uni on , and to weeks. Everything in relation to that Territ rs - th , 0ti00, ,,. e.5 , ,t dia ri ,. :aLiratiort of I n g epen i, is now specially interesting, and we present such „, 3 : ' _ . Lots a s w e remember, hoping our readers ail bo If any man groani because one laws are not 1111" wed with a more detailed account ("f Lis ob " alamys such as he would make if ho had the pow enevations in a few days. , r let him S' abrade! ~.., or study at h elle the chu ffs traveled e 1 the Kilian river some hundred leer of fir ige ,v,virnments. EL will soon i nn and twenty miles, and says that the sod is very that Olr laws., with all their imperfections, work rich and productive and the country exceedingly oti: more happiness 'for the people than they do beautiful. &long the river, extending for a for In otncr lauds: that our glverument, with all its tnileaon each side, the country is densely the- kf,,i oi -i, , s, tin , ..w. 4 r 1 "5. Oa , ends of government, bet bered, and so also aro the borders of the small . ter than ahy oltter. What is the '193 then, of streams which empty into the river from the f rattio,) on a an face, an 1 sighing over the aw• other side. On leaving the margins of the , tit: ce...uption el . our "times, the to ncy of streams, the country is high, rolling priir:e The , t i v i ong- - t: rui.), when in ail that makml., v. ria SOU is good, bat the want of timber and mite.- .i sell "Tea:n•vsa we have stlvaue el an I aro &vane will be found a serious drawback t) the rat--,J, :ng w:vh a yeecr uepreced.ated in the world's settlement of that portion ef the Territory. Tuv..ta E.: , ry. climate while he was there was bracing v'nvi V It is alive ;-s true that the nearer we tome to healthy, but those who reside in •the, country, i . peg , - ~ .L on, the iesi we are willing to bear with complain that it is very fluctuating and change r i „it s . This is well, whit the evil is curable.— able. ' Bit ri- hunt .n govo-r..nent can boperfect.— The Shawnee Indians own the territory on the 1'„ re ire ...i L a tin ler all systems- Fewer and south side cf the Kansas, for some two unadred t .., : b: „. c :,, , ,„ ~...,...,.t i , , ours that in any other. _ miles west of the Missouri. liar informirut . says , L:t us t,,, , e1c Cr , 1 a ~... 1 tal:e, enrage. they are very considerably adcanund in eiveize. In ta , eoue:rv. wrongs are mire freely expos• lion, and that ho was very oomfortibly enter- i 0 1 th in i n r,ov ~ v,l.i lat.& •irl tl,:.s is the result tamed while traveling smut% them. They de" of thv li ,1 1 1-,r to -,-I'. s.:).ne %via:eh h , re prcv.,ils vote their attention to agriculture, an Im .n f ~,,,, t , , z .„ ~,, i v rr 11 speech. OJr country, them have large and very fine farina. T., „..' - ~ i.v,, .., ~,.. ~,, , ~,,! 1 ,; .; , v iv,, , ,,„, : „1,i,,, f reest, log cropspromise of an abundant il ::. - it " g c‘ , „ --.. •.'. i 1: .9t r: -el e.:. on the earth. Le: Our friend urea us that thelausban it} .1 ::, - • a. i;r1: •1- 1., :t.r .-.., I,s: a. w:Cla, but abatis w 'hams will compare very favorably with that r t ,, . ..t:1 ~..) MJ-.I Lt.i . ty , the ma-hierry their neighbors in Missouri. t'..tt w :.',,.... out s) trash gni. Ii cruse that gaol They appear not a little uneasy sill rcsatle.s. , i m x I ‘,. ,11 sate er.i He ini4ilt as ‘5 , ,,,tl under the passage of the territorial bits. 31 in). , ~,, .1 . T i ' 1 * l .l 2 roan on a;: •, ionnt o f ..., . 3 r es )tq , or of them have been cherishing the hope that e:: tt , 7 „ 1 ~ i . :, 1-3 r is sill It is a,. cryry grnoti long they would be endowed by Cougr)sta with ' s i „ , ~,, v l ~ rr ": 1 - fi'r wel 1, and a larsl-rol the rights of citizenship. They dress, ;iv.. an I e ~,,.,-,... 'v.) 4 "' ; '1..,-1,it ,, 0'-1 inhabitant, in act like white people, and declare their doe'', , 5,..,., , : 1 ,v. ~.: ' ion' ni, s', vul 1 enftgrato to nation not to sell their lands on any con,leera- v 4. , ,, 1., _ ~ . ~ . , ~ 1 ..,, :, .. ~‘,., I fol by oi , 0n .., tioe whatever. - %. . v..) , v •1:a it b.:, , t.....:. his ow.: laud is The Delawares occupy a section of country an „. va' - . 1 • k .' 1 f.i...1 '..3," t i l in any other haul OU the north side of the Kan,as, not ueliso in its characteristics that owned by the Sha , t ;pet, A delegation had just returned fr.,in Wt, , ti.uei m, and it was understool thatthey‘se el at • st , Willows to sell all their territery wet. the , •.- eeption of a reservation front lag tee miles op .1 the Missouri river, an 1 extenatug forty tu., back into the country. The rcs,lrvltioa Ine. LI je, all the inhabited portion of their territory.:du. treaty had not yet been signed, but We pr.,..., nary arrangements for it had alt lo'c, n in... .. The Delawares are also living !noel iu •la . lugs, though they are not so tuteitt 2 ent an I h., far advanced in civilization as the SlawneL-. The emigrants are pouring into the L. , ' i'..ty in great numbers; but according to the 1.,,v, ••• the United States, or rather the treati.:., of 0/. Government with the, ludiaus, they ~re to t p . mitted to remain there. The 1ed..,,/ 1..., : , ~, lands is not yet extinguished, aui wl, •it , a", - friend left Fort Leavenworth, th.! U. S Ma, - shall was engaged with a posse 1.1.,,,•,0 1„, squatters and emigrants out of the tert.tdiy.— litany, however, were pushing onward IL vu.i ......,... Fort to the border, ). of the great plait,-, Nt a :: they hoped to be beyond the reach u' the M ,r -gut. The country is not yet „ pat t.', s..tt,e meat, and cannot be tili the In drat ii•l.: 1, t). tinguisbed. This will no doubt b.: elT:e:el ~ rapidly as possible; but the plit,aullir .p .:.t u, ask, where can the pier ludiau g goesti4o suggests sad and solemn rttl_eti ,e , Let us hope that many of them w,ll i., , :i.va civilised, and enjoy with us the Li.)a,,,u,, , ,- ty. liberty. The course which the officers of tire Govern- WVIIIIIO &VI DOUna 1.0 kr...stit., 1.5 1,1 /11.1...11i 6 L...•. '.l ill feeling among the emigrants Tie) are ~,„r: and enterprising, and seem deter/tow LI L ~_., I himself to pre-occupy a large site of chi- ii..w and valuable Territory. Dap.2rate eff ,r,;. ar,.. being made by the Missourian, to itiluee 5,41 vt holders to go there, but the balauce,pf the ft:. :i ug is against IL Many of the most inte.tiget• slaveholders admit there is no chauce for theu; "rake and Irvr7 esooseafte over hers; literary "ilaseidisairr is vexed, and while pettieg us 11,maisligly with one had, scratches us billy with the other; yet, by th e aid of Provident, mad the editor of the New York Daily Dirntl., we shall continue to nib our pens and coolly packet oar receipts. . FAN :s Y FERN. The Japanese. Capt. Adams , _ whose arrival in the States with the Treaty made with thu authA o(Ja j an, has already been minti•Atted, the California with setae lattarti,ttu,4 Far titulars concerning the people of. that rlr ,iti re gion, and the circu rstances under which Treaty was negotiated. We r everything in connecOon with these Lr people is a matter of interest, alai ,sv Li 'lit, show us something of their habits, cha.r.it LI. au , : modes of life. During the absence of the squadrin, niter kav • ing the President's letter, the J.ip au ',- ties had a fine building erect2d uipoa an t in the harbor of Jed.lo, where tb.r..l ten thousand inhabitants, an d when: it war tu• tended by them the treaty should 1, ut i le. Commodore Perry was not, however, nifurin.l of this till ha had passed the inland and ancia his fleet higher up the harbor, Wilt 11 ue, rju.le 1 to return. After much negotiation. th.! C ' l / 1 :11 J• dare was allowed to choose hi 3 own s.te, uul ac chow a broad beach, near Ycdn, wl.4.re the tenua of the treaty were arranged. om , re Pet r was present with five princes, of Luc .1 , :- partments of the government, and Our.n,: • whole of the intercourse with. them, the ip, neseexhibitedextraordinary dignity and coo The Japanese diplomats, in their convens.m with the officers, acknowledged that they Nl' behind the age, and that they thought it bvt.tr to make some changes is their government, uud to mix more with the world. The applaratic- .if the people is far superior in every respect to that of the Chinese. The conversation which was held dunng =.uen di e exhibited a g eneral ku ' uieti g e `)/ —T:w 1.1p3: of fifty years on the Part of the Japanese which bed not ; elllinz ; •11.?, been looked for. Among many que.tn;us asked, ; u ~,,1 t..a ft,„l!y of 1! 412 .- one in q uired in regard to the success of the A'; !:Of a e...ntu-v J;;,) the B. itish tic ship Ericsson, another how the Panama ILii road was progressing, taw tit I.l* t v nreugl,TC Nary and may questions ware , asked relating to California. They expressed a ,u war ,tri.o. Lon 1. a uiurper anl a persln dan • %%Oa 1:11;it. ri nine: —iragal belief that gold was to be found alt over the Pa- to ft ,. ‘ti' n ne za ei6e, and were about organising a geographical !,,,,u t,w g ull f Eur p , l cry was vi ver corps to search for it in the interior. ThtY .w, mak the change that hibited very little astonishment or suptose at inn . : \vr Slut weAti rig), at au things that were merely new end not gran d, hu t nua;::l L 'Yalu by Count We were very much astonished at the operation of tueor, t i :u-ni , the Q I ,, en of the steam engine of the Susquehanna. When a;; reu.t of tl:e rooms leaning 1 4 1 : 1 :" ..41 exhibited to one° them; he placed his on ::n •-f ; ‘,tht, ant, ou redline, saint successively upon Waahiugton, New York, cj , 1 : • t ;, c Ir4 e .. lc ) c i Liverpool, Paris and San Francisco. In their ii „ ;,7, j s N great A'apateors ky a rids. a short distance around the city, the officers ow Well cultivated gelds df wheat and grain of allkitieds, and some of their agricultural imple- I Ted MottrALtrY , AT C AC/O.—The Board mum Were far superior to those which were car- of llealtla of Vitieigo have res.Aved fot the pre rind over for them by the squadron. Particular- ' sent to issue da;ly reports of the interments in ly Mws tbiathe cue is a fanning maehine, they that ei . y. , For the month of June they report having one of an entirely slq•enor make. 3'63 1k:11 1 .14,142 of which were from cholera.= In pastry and oonfeetausary work they are ful- &atlas from the Ist to the Bth July, when ly equal - to the French, serving up these articles the naorttiiity was the greatest, were 2.42,- the In the most elegant, palatable and varied style. number from Cholera not being given. Oa Sun are vegetarians to dseir diet, seldom eating !day, July :Ha, the whole nuustwr of interments 'abatis% almost 'entirely upon SA and ; was btl. We conversed 'Yesterday with as in vegetables, and occasionally only indulging in ; telltgent gentleman from Ching°, who says that poultry. They have very tine carriages, some ; oho eity was as healthy as natal until within a *hich, belon g ing to the witariei, are drawn week or ku days. The extreme hot weather y four horses, and attended in their interior ; front ;the eatumentsencal of July has no doubt travels by beaded two at throe hundred armed I been• the main tonne of the peAileou now raging ' I there. Tito deatict7 in a population of .66,000 is not a grant tsoriality. in the number, are 11116 The jaassu (Tess) -Del"cft, teals a la:winded all. omigraata - arming by both the goal joke of a go:kilotons is that vicinity, 1040 t bile:algae C.otri a t i ll SJutherult.tilroads sea mired hie bone's scalded back by toting ts o &Wm frost W/60 , 11 aid cholera a;nonk "Maps* Oieffetelt," sed et** Preiee eirshe this portion oft community hire been inly "Mat illthlaad hieratic b reed file 1 00 1 01 4ef alarming. SuoJay and Monday last the Inab&m , whelk fratramPlici" the traffic. She dradkracrad ants more taierlibt• there; bat . grent- alarm wad alkalis (imams was raaoameadad for "rotator- s t ug siunceska oho best i i useaa , se t ins• lag tin keir"•••living if a trial. She dil et h leaving tins city far the Ent. sad it I eikaaiplilawkor d bar *airr roma blaats - la me WeersviWar(d laat broosks dove as OW ma Lamd Lk) tanaphai Gar. CM '=7 r clrr:spin . lira ..2 11 1 S LL2 N s 111 ~1z a 1., .tra'.nr of un,n3p)rtant 1,111.0 C 011'U111.:LI 01 . I Z K,l, up 110:r. , ad .I'. 11 tv.ng fl orlr C oppl3l:im 11 7 L., Ile w.,y. ,:•., w i. or 1: ,It: 11 • 1 /1/ r• ... , t . IBM I 61.: 111 Of 1..• %•.,rlll approval nt ‘.ll I aU . vo:, euthu :11 Itrll4c,,i Lo r iu tae II y ti la r•lau of a na.itc!il..:s , • . it:h.:a y}a fuel AS , • 1-1,1 ' ,1.• Cur.: )JUeau io. ai 'Swum 1'..t,1 to bct ::Avert; 'cat y ,u ku,w tuft I/ I • . r tiA tub t 1„210^•, ar shaui_l by alelf a., AI; 1.111 , 4r:I1y of SAILLLI Cu . ) !J -r, lIIMMINEI ME lEEE OEM MI • 1, '5 . I a repined by t) 11111te ME Mil cl,. =IMIEMII MEM ‘‘. . u• 1, %% 1.1 ;, EC A i.. 1. :1 n. 1. SIM IL t ..•; t'; ME = Ellll.ll Iffni 11 f r .s., I= • t o 'l I 'J.ll3', Ti:,. • F ,; . c.t:f.rl , /1.2t..11 tet.lfte 111 :- of tlieui at tribut- t thzi II ,u. ..I,)v Li r T..iuu...5.-tee, - •. t' to: . )... - trs )re that I LI • C.. r cr ,if cirnei4 .aa I it, I.t s Cf..taly 31LCun ; ,1.11 i 4J r,-t) L.,: r ant gal cta are ttae L 0: urging it. in sca• C% I.lfla .1 tlia f.,r 441,1 six. i) s iand, free of Q]aarg,:, t..) every head of f.ti, , or wi low." . : ....• runato individual, is it. 4 PS •C:111t), I MEIEM MEE t ./111... 1 L-p.I I :111.n/ G • I ...t1 ) ale S.,oeit.)r% he.ia of Ca, I j Liknai ~:r1! ;.tt ,3 MEE i p - of the ' is Wnit jof note, u in this bill t witu the law t. 1 4 , i • 7. a. t.. t1:111 4.f , (Jiang. • ;h. 1-4 .11 Eli I" i,u I; 112 - •itter T .1 .1:11 . ! • t du y I:4tcrior ,f 11111 C, Cae., 1 1 .) ru• e p.r,tueat, tui• A pt,wcl, S D,:p.,rawat U: . COQ .a ut nur pub;ic af .- I-L:.ituate:y UIM setrltDLY MOIL WO, JULY lb, tss4 ILIMIUMO MTh NOMULTIOXIL rot oovnNot WILLIAM BIGLER, Of Clearfield Comity. J171)011 07 MUNI COMM JEREMIAH B. BLACK, Of Sonsraet Oausty. • ...... 7011 CANAL 00XXISSOMni: HENRY S. WM, Of Ms Couty. no. The Gasoiks haa answered as in regard to Mayor ring godlike "Sunday Liqemr Italic." It's answer is • it—i: is to the MX . .. „...._ point—it is definite; and be the Temperamos men know just ossetly where - staels—inst ettsetly what its profossiona of traversing au merild "Wei" etclaims this apostle of temperance, "kens me dio pisiaos to flow Mayer rung, aping kis ewe in. GU/mamas into a warn of edam cakeleted to ept ii." "Efact"_whast Why, the "Sunday L.quor Tratia," of unrest We went turpentines men to note this faeti—ire want temperance men to look at the consistency of this deelarationl— "The law," says the austle, "is an trainent4 beneficent ons, dolig sod to io ark oil groat and sa ble .*ls," bat then, 0 ooniisseney, "wag the Carets, "have n)displaition to fire', MaytiKing, against his own inclinations, into a course of so don, calculated to ofact it." "We ars his friends, personal ail political," says this paper,and yj, 1: though the "law is au emineetlyk benilioent o , le4ignci. to work oat great and noble ends," still we, the (lauttte, will not lift oar coioe, or use our "personal and palitial inluonie" to persuade )layor King ti suppress the Sunday Liquor Traf ic. An] why won't the Gavotte do this? Be ,:nuso, to use its own language, "it CA sot his pri ulze keeper'? That is the only reason it gives! It is great on Temperance —still it 6 not Mayor Kings private keeper. It can preach Temper ance by the yard, and mlratity by the bushel— st:ll it is net the Mayor's prirsia keeper! We w /at Tamp:Tam men to note this: It is wor thy of their especial attention, fir certainly such ~.ci effo:.ent Tdmparanoo advocate should receive slme mark of ackalwledgesont l'em them! The G.1.241:e wants to know if we will ol.operate with the Mayor, should he conclude to m ike an elfin L. suppress the Sunday Liquor Law Trail°. In its own language, we answer that we are not his -political friend, nor his private keeper." Just what they %urea It ie pretty evident some of the Democrats in Cmgress who, in order to court the favor of the .bolitionists, betrayed their party, and voted against the principle* of non-intervention as eon t aineli in the Nebraska bill, will receive the treat ment all such politicians deserve. The whip and .Iholitionists have all along held out the idea that every person who had thna acted, should be re.urned, no matter what his polities 0, said the Greeleys', little and great, every man who 64ht3 that "iniquitoils schnuae," must go back. e'll all turn in, "'Trey, Blanche and Sweet! hmrt," black spirits, an i blue, rag, tag and ple bild, and rand every wan of you hack, despite the fogies in both' p iitical parties. This we, the langlige of al. , whip before the bill passed, ku I str.lnge to say there were Democrats from milu Lily whiff Dietriets who were fools enough ) bait d)wo, hookand ail. Tie result is, every one of them has been landed high and rj' upon the bank of Salt River, and the whigs ,re n)vr laughing in their sleeves to see them flop p:tic; about trying to got into the stream again. I%ie case of Prato; in the neighboring district )f Ceautauque, is ono in pint. By the bad man kgPmenrof the whigs, together with some perso oat popularity, Renton was elected two pars since is that strong wilig District. Of course, until t'Es bait was thrown out by the oppenents of Ne• traska, the Honorable Xember from Chautauqua lead no ilea that he could be re-elected. But Greeley's "peck of oats," in the shape of a le electioa, came tinting by, cull he punned upia it like a hungry shark upon an unfortunate young , larkie. Ile took these whip at their word—be spoke against NAraska, he voted. against Nslorss- Ica, and what islll3CO he has help distract his par-, ty friends at home most effsetually. His name is quoted every where by the whig prose—es. cept when a re-election is talked of. Then they pliy a tune upon another sort of fiddle. True, wLig paper down in Csttaragas, the Elliot of which don't appear to be "posted," has taken it for granted that the "peck of oats" thrown out to Fenton, was'nt a cheat. The greesy thinks it was air honest, and hence he calls for Fenton's r; .election! The other papers, however, are tel ling him very plainly to "shut his mouth if he t want to to make an au of himself," thus plainly indicating that the Hon. Mr. Fenton, of N Y., will be &rowed to remain at home, not withstanling whig promises that all who oppos, ei Nebraska should be re-elected. And the ver dict of every Democrat will be, served hiss rigid! Tbc Constisinn' tat liar, employed by the R tilroad companies to traduce Gar. Bros and the city of Eric, asserted a couple of weeks sines that the Pittsburgh Chroniek had "healed drys" the name. of Gar. Bigler, and substituted that of David Wilmot. Lowing there - inane truth in the story—that ho had manufactured it oat of whole cloth to gratify his "Shanghai" employees, wo told him so, foriritichers were assailed in his usual style, and the falsehood repeated. Now here is what the Chronicle itself sap about it: "Oyu Postrox.—Wo twice sa artic!e Bing the setmds of the whig press, that the Pittsburgh Evening Chrottiakt,a paper devoted to Democrat ic men and measures, has taken down the name of William Bigler for Governor awl put up that of David Wilmot. We never did anything of the kind. The Clwosticie is not a party paper and has never placed at the, head of its columns the name of any candidate for office. We occa sionally give our views of men and measures, which we certainly bare the undoubted right to do, but have never advocated as a partisan the claims of either party exclusively. Our course is independentand we shall maintain it regard less of who we please or wbo we offend.", a wir. Ctrs friend Boas, one of the shams► of man--n ait of money—bas jut added to his ea , tablisbment between the Reed Howe and Brown's ilottd, a "chair as is a Ghee In which all the comfort* of a good shave can be had, and no mistake. We arise these who went to me the espies vitro in the way of s chair, to all end try it. 111" We saderstead that the regional tamp. .4t DieuUm sepias* for the ofises sad Liesteasat Governor, Grasso C. Balsam gatA "Ilestkosi - Tiss Bask t Xr. Fillmore, is 4isposed sal surillasci nl ►e alb( of •Sintional Agi tation" Witiand watering ittieowit:' The Clina ssercial is right. Why should meth men u Fill• tam beriMinnnaktitienif o n t ow ne meM - Gillett; aitai Sowards, and Chases of the Free Soil herd. Why should Mr. Fillusere's administration and its' measures-- among then the yugitivejlihtvii Xmw--.be con signed to oblivion, and repudiated by those wh o led epee his &minty, In order' that' Seward may them* sad his Abolition allies becomethe lead ers of the old Whig party? Again we repeat, the Chotturrint is rigbt; "Sectional Agitation" should not receive countenanse at the hands of re liable whip, even though temporary success over I the Democracy might mown the "fusion" sought. The Cbssasericiol is also right, and use., the language of "truth and soberness," in repodi l . tiny, as it does, the impracticable 'keno some of the whip are attempting to raise, of the repeal of the Nebraska bill. , Smiting of such a repeal, the Ceneftweini use the following language, which we 'oottunend to the Garda' tendon of seek of our readers as ha.* been away by suck an impracticable idea. T• it , too , might profit by looking tbrmkth tlss •. s spectacles: "We will suppose the furls - tie* ok great sec tional party as the result of tkie present excited •I state of public feeling. As such a party would have n o thi ng t o expect from the South but a strenuous and deadly oppositisia, it becomes evi dent, at the first blash, that'ito must exist to no practical purpose, enless it should embrace very nearly the entire North. 'Co llu di ng , f or t h e . sake of argument, that all the obstacles to North ern unanimity may be sttrurounted, we are still prepared to show that the whole orgarimatiou would be utterly futile. During the existence of the present Administration it would most ob viously be so, unless it could command a two thirds:majority in both &elms of Congress, and so estraet the sting from the Executive veto.— But there are thirty Southern Senators, in a body which consists of only sixty•tovo members; , and these thirty Senators would, to a man, under the circumstances we hive supposed, oppose the repeal. The expectation of a repeal of the Ne braska act, during the proreit Admiuistrati o o ;./ any body is simple esiouyA to entertain it, u (slalom:4y idle. Lsc us suppose, then—it will I be perceived that we are, (lispused to make very liberal concessions for the sake of argument—elt us suppose that in the next Presidential election the sectional organization should carry every Northern State, and elect their favorite dste. We will suppose, too, that every mteaber of the lower Hons_ from every run-slave holding State is an unflinching ailvoc.aii of repeal. We rig 110 e know whether any abol(tioeist is quit so much of a dreamer as to erpect all this, but even all this would not accomplish the object. The reason is simple ' but couclusive. Tue Senato rial term of Stcphen A. Douglas, does not expire till the year 1553; he is the father of the woe sure you seek to rtpiai, an.l hay staked his poll tical salvation on it; it is certitiu he will vote, net with you, but with the S 'uth. It requires but one Northern vote to mike a tie in the Senate, , mid prevent the passige of any act that is resist ', ed by all the &where Senatori. It is perfect. ly certain, therefore, that up to the year 1859, the Nebraska act will stand unrepealed. But before the expiration of that time, the question Win 14 virtually taken out of the hands of Gan- Iress by the people of those nrr;iories, Who will then lie demanding admission as States. Thera is every reason to believe that (ivy will be rapidly settled, and by a class of in/Lobito uts who will I ensure the rejection of slavery. Having thus shown that thin sectional ayitation can, by no possibility, accomplish the eltisci at which it pro- fesses to aim, it follows,that such a party as is now proixised would plunge the country in all the evils of sectional agitation, for the attain ment of an object knows b-forehand to be utter ly impracticable; and that is therefore an im mense scheme of public mischief, whici deserves the reprobation of every patriot and every holiest man. To men of sense there can be no more conclusive I argumentagainst any enterprise, than is demon grater: impossibility. We hay already iuti mated onr - opinion; that if i the repeal of the Nebras ka act wejo fimsible, it would be worth cousider able exertion to aozomplish it. .Bet ais fully —nay, it is madness, to let loose the atorui for the mere malevolent pleasure of gazing on the' wild uproar that accompanies it; for the fiendish delight which turbulent and malignant spirts will feel as they witness the convulions in which it has its birth, and the desola;ion which marks its path. With the abs?,lute certainty bef ,re us, that the Nebraska act cannot be repe.iled while r e pe a l would be of any avail, we deem it our du, ty, and the duty o/ every man who set; any value on the public teanquilit4, to witiastael the insane sectional project that is now agitated, and to frontit with an earner t, resolute and inikisiblo opposition." As intimated above, we commend these sensi ble Views to the careful consideration of the Ga zelle. They emanate from a'source certainly en titled, by sympathy and association, to consider. ation. While we do not agree with all the xrri. ter says, we certs.inly do think he "hits the nail on the bead" in saying that to "men of sense," as we take it our friends of the Gazed& arc, "there can be no more conclusive argument spinet an enterprise that its demonstrated impassibility." That the crusade, into which the Gamie has madly rased, is an "impossibility," there can be no more doubt than that two and two m a k e f ou r. Viewing the matter thus, can any sensible mat arrive at any other conclasim than that those who are engaged in this matter "deserve the rep robation of every patriot and every harm! mon!" c i e The Gazelle has a good deal to sey now abou • "Democratic victory" in New Ha,:ep s " This is not to be wondered at, for it is not mouths sine it claimed, in bold and t language, an overwhelming tchig vic tor in the Came Suite. At that time we denied that the whip laid achieved any seek victory, and tia proceedings' of the Legislature since has proved that we were right, and the Gazette wrong. In the first place a Democrat was elect. ed Governor, and has been inaugurated. Then Democrats were elected to all the offretis of the Senate and Rouse. Then a Democrat wet-elect ed Printer—a partner of Burke,who was Commis sioner of Patents under Mr. Polk. Then the Democrats disagreed about Candidate, for Sena tor, and postponed the election until neat year, in order to go before th people upon the matter at Wu between the o.4.lidates. Now, if the Gazette osa And any thin* in this record to 'jus tify its claim at the time be donna took place of s whig victory, and a Democratic defeat, it certainly is tankful for Wall favors, IN it all" I doubtedly is. allr We Chapin will row, in As Dtimuummo Dsar Germsa, is the employ a d frittebulh, wO6 is pair of driving oftesh6 is putting them optiot with that purpose, elippeol the fullers wheathisimmi hem his bo4y. What do you think elf, the NW lterkitwin. 414 4 ie the *airy. Jae as I espaited,,eply's ion", close observer of ass and thins, the for the last year or two, has it ad his eye on railroad schemes and railroad managers. Over two mil• lions, thi 'abject of one man's fraudulent man agement, is a large and astounding figure, even for a Railroad President; though the truth is, what such *aisle mit accomplish or undertake in the way if knavery is scarcely worth mention iag. litany, no doubt, were but little surprised atihie Schuyler fraud, having had a foretaste from individual experience on one side or the other, for we suppose it to be pretty sustain that wherever such immense "piles" are suddenly so. cumulated, as have been by roma railroad epee. tdations, there must be somewhere a correspond. log "excavation" in order to supply the material. It is said that the effect of this swindle will be Widespread and ltmentible; that in the Eastern States of late, whenever an industrious laborio; maw bad a few surplus dollars, be almost inva riably invested it in some rpputed good railrisd stock, thus bringing the present blow where kat deserved and most keenly felt. The shock given to the oordidenee of man in mss is likewise of great evil-import. The credit system, in its widest sense, seems essential and unavoidable.— The wants of one man art the wants of another, and one failure to comply with agreements, ei pressed or understood, twri carry destruction to hundreds before the evil is arrested. What en gagemerts, then, should be more scrupulously ob served than those incident to DEN, public, or private?' One thing is manifest from the late disclosures —the exteusive and intimate connection existing between the various E iilroads in the country for mutual "aid and comfort." One DM is Praia• dent of six or eight roads and at the same time Treasurer. One company guarantees the stock 1 of another, while it in turn agrees to afford some equivolent, no outsider knows what, until some accident exposes the villainy and corruption in 7. each. This fact of combina • ld arrest at once the attention of Lo.gislao and their con. etituenta, and bo guarded again!' if possible. It is high time,,indeed, that the swelling swarm of chartered priviiegos now infesting the land should be hived by the hand of the people. If the abuse Of power and the practice of deception reached no farther than the immediate circle of the "tiedi• ants," we would have no particular objection. They might pick each other's bones until they all starved; but when the "spirit" of these institutions move them to promiscuous plunder r theu, in dr: name sod on behalf of the uninitiated and un chartered massas, we must solemnly protest. When. our citizons charged corruption and criminality in high places here, the press east and west of us asemed wild with rage at the idea L I that 8 dlreed Presidents and Ihreators should for a moment be suspected of even a passing im proper thought. How diff:rent their tune now ! Schuyler, the principal operator in the New York fraud, was, ae,clie; to the Nan. York pipers, descended from one of the most wealthy and aristocratic families of the country. A Rovolu tionary ane:stry of the highe)t rank; an individ ual c'uaratter h.!ret,f)re above suipicior--a positiJn am inn hi, fciloirs tha most caviabio,— and yet, uotwithatandingAll these constitutional and conventional safeguards, he has recklessly ruined hundreds, if net thousands. It :mild seem that PO purity of morals, no attending circum stances, can resist the leprous torch of railroad gold and stocks. Bat these devellpments lists come in due, may we not say, pr6vidontial season to endorse the incidental points of our 0130 in the hearing about to be bad at Philadelphia. When, if ne cessary, it sh ell be said that the managers of the Erie and Neill East Road threw their charter to the winds, and built their road regardless of Law or the wishes of tha people, the Court will not be apt to be prejudiced in their favor by the fact that they claim Abe of the "first cut" and "best breeding" The Court will see that the monster wLiala was to be strangled by the "Erin War" was one of...feafful and gigantic dimen tints, eaten flog half.wa-y acres, the continent, and well strung with the "sinews of war."— They muit feel far the people, when a vast pow. er is seen striving to crush t'aeln in it'S path, spurning and trampling obligations the most sacred, blast:ug private cnaraoter, shooting or impisoning at IA 111, and' at its pleasure viola ting even the hallowed rest of the grave. In these remarks we would not of course in. ( dude every man throughout the land who hap pens to bo connected with a railroad, for all gen eral rules aro subject to exceptions. In fact it is said that the exception rroves the rule, which being true, it will be proper for every man who knows of one honest man connected with the management of railroads, to infer that there are Ginty nine of the other stripe to be found as an offset. In view of these facts wo would suggest the following addition to the Church Litany— " Front Railroad Rogues, good Lord deliver us!" sir Q.iite en irarrtant arbitration was held this week, in this city, between Arohiball Kirk. purick, of Harborcreek, plaintiff, and the Erin and North East Railroad Company, defendant, on a claim for damages for broach of contract.— It appears that when the Company were locating their road on I , .rkp wick's farm, they agreed by their agent, the chief Engineer, to build certain cattleinards. Thia was in the year 184 or 50. Tile cattle-guards have never been built, and In consequence of the Company's want of good fai , k atriek.has had three fine colts kit , ono team so, ono et and a heifer, al together wort h about hundred and fifty o r ! four hundred dollars. The Company true to their corpo:ate instineb refuse to pay him no mat. What makes the matter worse is, that if I be fails in Ibis prooeeding to get damages for the stock killee'end also for the permanent damage ! to his farm from the absence of the guards, he and his property will be at the- mercy of the Company without remedy forever. The guards ! if built will be on the-Company's land, so that if they refuse to build and are sustained by the law, Kirkpatrick will not dare to build tho guards himself, for ho would be a trespasser.— The Company claim, we I Jeliere, that tbV were tot bound by the agreement of their agent, be canoe the writing was not attested to by the urporsto seal; seeking by a legal - quibble to rob a. man at once of three or forr hundred ikil lars, and him, and his posterity o as many thou sands hereafter. It seems impossible that there walks tabling to man or set of men who would be black hearted enough to perpetrate such s piece of unblushing villainy. The law being as tab/lobed, profoundly 'at lost, to repair the wrongs and protect the rights of porloak we' amid hope for lie oaks that the Company will hat Be,. Mt hours, tams. Church, on 7th t go Ragtime, a Mean. Shoeuberpr, act of oaaoupliag a omehinory l sad in piece of ,tiros oast for backwards between oomplarair mend be "beesikt to timer No woser the_ Harbor creek boys arc easious ' , to let bv.r tip," ,r :1. above is a opechetan of tho outrago they Liv ,been sebioCted teb In 001.0q1181111111 of siekucs• of s• . me of the ;a bitraitors the ease is ant plt 1. , Troth Fitly Sp3ken. - The Montrose Dorta:,•at r,f f, w T)^”.l OCrltiO papers 1n this Ei•vc 1••;.e d against the NL.bra-k b ; ' does not blind it to th • itilo , :r tiou to the bill itself, as well as cite 11, 3 u,tte , of the whi* assaults upon Q 2•• •L cent number it tedministei;e4 , to the whigs: "Scott was nomitaated, an 1 th'' Law endorsed. The o ss .1 • - fgpthwith the great fl:Ig w•ls , 1 • • a6d the wildest deninn tr by these saute bat-rs •,f •—• anti-Nebraska Whigi, ' ‘• tionsly wedded to un.;:: -rn I , could support nin r t'. for the moat ina•guirvnut t • WO have no CJIIL'2/..1:l, party, or its tTorn.nees, a)? th pee with them, in thi, fast how awfully he has be_n for the Fugtt ve ,••• •. their party may see a cur t.• 'rotes. Had the c Nebraska 13i11, the 'V. Igo have eadersed it also. Th. y• of Pollock, ne matter what h._ • braska, and wJu: i ftuppert '. . were he fur the LI: an : 13:4' what is the souse of D_tn selvee to bo cheated and f. Critical praNSSI..II34 "W.:, know G)vern): seen him untlzr the acv:: • •: the brightest LIJ;s of p , • mately a:uuccai discharge of 'fri : I of social, p,litiza:, pened to hay') r p ; • I; I • character of the At.: tef with him wh..t loped but tu , .re s`r.)ng' . / unbending lutegn'y ; 6.nest 1...n1pp-a I.is from al/a%O that but ~ n_ this fyytsto .1, ;re • any we ever knew. .1•, I fieS , abused and. . the past few w,..Lks, w_ , less of cmsegit...uc2s \V sod see • • dOlitillAN of lategr,t) in i \Vt.! will not aa, as man p; . w.„ ease and e .1, • .. : the servieo of the P-"1:"- we will not sLe 1.:E:1 S. a set of uuprine:p!ed t wittiout det..nd ~,; truth and justice.'" Tho abw.-.1 is app:',....161: srbig it:lpr.! as 15 eq app'ic4b l ,7, Ire i Dot tlge rep:ll :f N after, fur they arc SUZ.I peal possible, but It i- Bigler's defeat, thei—o , N,braska and gratta," t t', is there any llnn Detnler4ey, iu • wents of gratita t , o)cupli : O./ thid tr: « . Bigler threw th.: ton upm the s.,,:te of u, I._ ter—when be br,as't t' r)und u., nal b . ed the Preii,leet of ~.;-. a corrupt and ua: versal shout is c ,u,c) t here ani there a S., . that, as it ougi.it. ti • 1 more enthusi by the NArlsk.: the narrow and e , a.r v z‘2 p Nothings" t•Aal:y honesty of BIGLER has t=hlwa a farEtieandhcrpAi:A. . to become the Frey of ;-3 S scoff of all h )h)r , n »>-.. n.); stani hls A.. . to staal a ti ai, nitics as TS las in. J. sir The..Ft2;-i C coaippid Fl';'.: S In! la adop'et a ra , )lu. IT:- 1- Tlicy c3l th,nn-tit-es It p to rqud:a. ,- ; cn.s of B.el , ul.l,cani-ta-11., 6,; f .rw tik_ir Detroit Ac?;;. , :-!,'ser, Slato, don't go on:y !Lc e w an 1 It 6 olnd:Ltes. I. 313- We are much to stale , r , iF • , trge t!if: c twn do tilt alrf a.y : _ " • gro,sly dneiv• 1, .1n: t ' in entistia , th a ino‘ern, , ,,t in t.• party of Miclii;at, 1.1 iuto it eletwirs -I ;••:, .t• end prove ru NV•• • • getttletn in press u: . t ~.• completfly CI.: '••• „..., that thoy tutiriy tt t, I , that the great tu 1 , , f :lc went there ia t , aside for a tittle p 1 .;••, pose of wresting the j, • ' present Adatin:+tra'i ,, n, ,o 1 once for the repel' of the Nebraska 11,11, u, 1 . 2 to find theins , A‘is free-Boilers, hawever CI • at the quite unuc,.es-a , y which took place on 'Ay.) This movenamt c h and directed by g td an 1 trtio to the simpl, obj3ct of our" ;1 campaign all the Administration, might, in 14, , l'r 'LI parties in Michigan, h.re actuarresul L Ott ty rh olc .z , ;; any way to frateroTy.i wit ii a I.ct. , I 1 practicable R pint an.l ultra t. more to built up the p “trer taan causes combined. It isvideat, tero will to a gp , .l I_ 7 and conusion"- in tho "fiziaion," before th.a thing ~0 a. le. During the ef)nru.inn in- 1•n ••, ' log of the steamboat 1115%1 NN . y week, to German immigr.int %rib 1, 'r treasure and a treasure of a wit. his wife overboard and ,Ir Itrge• l t The woman was rescued Ly , restored to the arms of her afr_e:i Or The Imisville r A - num fair one, up in chillie) , .l.:, w , 7 Wee lover, last week, an 1 :41 it N . meat by promising that .., 1 1.! L t and then !pug himself t.' an r S gni& MOGgh i n his reply, ‘l,e G 1 z pi-3t..,1, has face, Wpb—nearly spoiled his beauty." Mr r t { " , • =I EMI EIM NI ID SEM! ; II lir 11111 EMI E EWE 111 10' 11 EMI EIJI ,l• . t ) " I- it 1 I • I v =ES Stitto ft Cuereepowithaee of the £ Xt.% Tim 7".• mo.nver— 114 Cnkie obo F,4rits— TA, (;:e,, I e. the I:aiga4 I/ ...AI 1 . ) 0w.% catcli ciht ns oj c.ty tho Lit • ' • tin etnte ne animal WI 1:-11^.1. lokrvive I ay. r or COO foUrtl.l &VA fi a". 4 auk• wlazro 1"t' .11 ! AU nvsn no , of pit in 0p.rat.04., 11,a I er7 marrow, sod refs•, an , manta his n .t , al:C ' luWlal~ tt,ti i " nta.-4,ltattly rt:•arr r.; AL.b,';,et ..f t. ,; .tent.l aid I:r.wcrity izt ~ 1 1,,Y1Lt in whuto to put D%bast and P year*, •' 1 1. 1. 000 or t p Rao WS$ stlp?oSl 3 s l '' We eszcNt tr.it , ,a; 66.1 ex:on ! oa - 6: , • filiort n-: - . f r t , .7's' • aru if th 4 - P;:sl.llrtt tr toy. had ivt - to about • I hte qwe pti•po 7.Skent to ah.Lorite the s'.l f , r 01090 .1 .Ju 'god lecp +kr, Sch , 7 =EI MEM I:, , e 0 TO ~ . , i•• • no 40.1 ~dHnd.•.•F - .S• all 1 e-. I ~•~ =IEEE ai well I (Ji •:A' ur Z$ Nr - a - St, a t I= r 1- . rc ..• , 'era, I 1!1!IMil!Ilill MIR r y .3.1! f r la EMI I' .3 • . Lo ,aL• lEEE ESE lUMM =NM • f In, r - ••, • ! s' MINA I a 7 I ' -;• o I'6a =I MEIN EIZEI I .1 ni AI: i. 1 lEEE r a, I 11.11:13Zul: I LIII!III=1:Ill 'a•. -E l ' \•S . l f.:r Cory that t' 3 }.. lE!E J:,~ .U' HEM OEM MEM! rt . ! 'f .n if ' ; 10 000 Tz;t'a iaSu 11:3ectkfl'1 N.ll B B. z`.e I: in a:, w. St r la~:zr r‘T. IMM ~: ?lA.( , ',r, il (21,Atri. ^ .71tr! 1 6 '. I dt r11o.". t~~, . . r., =I MEE r• ' g ME =EI EBBE illa EMI lc I t ie tt.6.llth, e u II idea ; v.tz , n4q y.. 1 7 . 1 In' wrt.tcuk , I ;,11 EMI U A pu - . - 1 13 ')I (01.3 1 ) I +A.II =I of .tii. ' )nr, tll2 .1 1 11.1 !Lie cw. try cutt s a; him off a gy , .2rw Th. PAtout Offr ue3-. MIX'S ca 1 tv-11.10:e. 1‘ ,1.2 ;Luber of n Iwi pr , . lla4ly x 1 past year. 13 BM EMI ismi ME