Waltham, latip al folititid !du. A Duel Between two ',, ' , , the Party Bhot Fro. lA. Oisci.mas, Casette, Sept. 7 We were yesterday informed by one of the i.s of "the Stage Company, the particulars of rt d'uel 'Which took place on Monday last, in a field en Mr. Brenson's farm a few miles from Alexandria, Kentucky, and within a half a mile of the turnpike, between two gentlemen of this city. Sometiii:e sing*, Mr. Henry short, Jr ' a clerk on Fifth street, became attached to a beau tiful young lady, residing on Eighth street, and to whom be soon engaged himself for marriage Mr. Short, about a month ago, went to Philadel phia a visit to his parents, who reside on Chestnut street in that ffity. During hie absence be received a letter from a fellow clerk that his betrothed lady love was keeping the company of a young "limb of the law," named Alexander Peacock, now a resident of Chicago, but a native of this city. The letter gave Mr. 9 reason to . 7 believe that P k a*d his lady love were en gaged Mr. S. returned home on Wednesday evening last, an found that all had not beeu told him,—that P„ had slandered him, and defamed his character to the young lady, and thus won iiiir affections. Determined to have an explana tion, he wrote to Peacock and the lady, and de manded the same. They both treated him cold -13, and requested Mr S not to annoy them with his communications—the young lady at the same time returning her engagement ring This so Mr S. that he sent a challenge to Mr en Ci a rt e i d ch was accepted, and rifles were chosen as tEe Weapons. Seconds were appointed who fixed the place of meeting and time as above stated. No persons were present except two friends of each party, and their seconds. At the first fire no injary was sustained by either of the duelists. An effort was then made reconcile the difficulty, but neither party would listen to any compro mise, and the,parties were ordered to their post for the second_ fire. The word was given, and Mr. 8. fell bleeding to the ground, the ball hav ing taken effect in his left shoulder He was then picked ap and taken to Mr Brenson's the farmer's house, and his wound was dressed. He is considered in a critical condition It is now understood that when 'the young lady learned what had happened, she refused to have anything to do with either of the parties, and has resolved to break off all engagements with each of the gentlemen. It is therefore evident that in this ease the old adage of "Faint Heart never won Fair lady," has been reversed Tait LOST CHILD —On Saturday morning of , t% e knew that timid women, and small chit. last week a little girl some three years uld— dsuchter of R wc n b e, of t hi„ town, , tart ,4 dren, were afraid of "thunder," but we had no with her older brother to drive away the cows ' idea our moldy neighbor of the I;azetu was The little boy, after sending his sister home afflicted in that way livsl, we pity him; through the woods, went off to play and did not fear is certainly an afflietion in any case, but return until about 3 o'clock, P. M The pa to be afraid of "thunder,• and u "cla p of thunder rents, supposing the girl with her brother, re unconcerned until his return, when the 'from a clear sky," at that, is doubly so Now, truth, awful truth to a parent's mind, came up- we have no idea that those hard-hearted men, on them, that their child was lost to the woods. composing the inquoetatic Central Committee, Rapid search was made by the almost frantic when they got nut Ow call for a bemocratie mother till evening, when, the father returning, County Ci,nventein— o r rather„ts the (1,1,..it, the neighborhood was rallied, and the woods, for a limited distance, was searched, but in vain has it, that "clap of thunder from oi deer sky"._ No trace or track could be found. The search knew of the nervous state in which our neighbor was continued during the night with torches, but was in Had they, we have every confidence that without success It was dark and rainy The they would have considered his fear of"thunder," mother became'wild and frantic Morning came —but with it no child and suppressed it! liut it hum been done, and Early on the Sabbath our village was sum- there is no use in crying over milk soured by mooed for assistance. Never was a call so that "clap of thunder" or any other! We enu cheerfully and heartily responded to. Every only now seek to remedy it That can readily be bod e ig y ht thato'clock was able Lines were formed, to travel W 3.4 on the with gromen und done by the Convention today -merging politi- at eo close that not a foot of ground could be passed cal cousideratioUs in a magnanimous de-ire to unnoticed. The line consisted of near three promote and secure the general good " Thi, ("111 hundred persons. The woods in wh i ch the be done by not nominating a ticket, but re c o m . child was supposed to be were some two miles ! Democrat ic party through from east to west, and about thirty miles the p eo p le in g enera/ ' a n' ) th e from north to south. This body of men bad in_particular, to go to the not . witirtarg ►giill',"4hl"ndct7blie4vna whrct ru „ inter e- t,, • iry they w hip beur they " That .11,11 will be dip When find discovered she stood by the vide of a result ,bs drliben,h,.n+ of th .ii,..nti.,n t,,, large berry pa...ch, quite unconcerned, where she had evidently been pickiug and eating Never did day, we have every euan'i"e''" kin] case it r—' we hear such shouts as resounded through these ! should, will 'or neighbor de e be afraid of "d im' dense woods, from one end to the other. Horns ' der." were blown, guns were fired, and all kinds of de monstrations of joy were manifested. Almost in an instant, scores had gathered around the child, all anxious to see the ek - ist one. Never shall we forget the look of that fa ther as he gazed upon this once lost treasure Eagerly seizing her and impressing a kiss upon Ler cheek, he kneeled down amidst the gazing crowd, with hands and eyes uplifted toward heav en, exclaiming from the bottom of his heat and with feelings that brought tears to all' eyes, "God Almighty bless you all—Amen." A run ner was immediately desparched to the mother with news that the child was found alive Her joy wan unspeakable—yet for hours after the child was restored to her, she was strangely wild From appearances, the child had suffered h o t little, although in the woods over some twenty four hours. Quite a liberal collection wah taken lip tor the child. On giving it to the father, the good old Grand Mother exclaimed, '.God bless the Yankees!"—.4fr Kea n Citizen A FAALLY KILLLD BY LIOHTNINti —A cor respondent of the Detroit Free 14e*s, writing from Pecatonica, Winnebago county. ill , on tht• 14th inst., says: I witnessed, yesterday, one of the most mel ancholy scenes I ever beheld In the town of Lysander, one mile south of Pecatonica depot, there lay enshrined in five coffins a Mr. Mer chant, two sons and two daughters, all of whom were struck with lightning doling the thunder shower, alma 2 o'clock A M , leaving in the family only the wife and one son about eight years old; they both being much injured by the shock, the woman remaining mentally deranged, continually bemoaning the loss of her family The circumstances of their death ought to be a waging to the public to manage differently from that they did. The night being very warm they took off their beds and laid them on the floor in a-cool room, Where stood a stove, and the highining, coming down the stove pipe, di videdoo the hearth, and struck the whole family of seven, of whom only two survived CAMBRIA, PA.—Abram Longneeker, Esq., of lsekllek township, a few evenings since started to watch a deer lick He reached the ground about sunset, and mounted a tree, for the par pose of watching. In a short time he heard a noise, and looking round for the expected prize, his eyes fell on—not a deer—but a panther.— Ariother and another appeared, until four gath ered near the trunk of the tree he had ascended. He took deliberate aim at one of them, but the ball did not take effect, and the savage animals commenced looking round, and at length discov ered our adventurer among the branches over• heed. He loaded again and fired, only slightly roiling the fur of one of then. In his trepids tioa, a* stopper of his powder task was loot, and he had no further means of defending him• self. Tbe7 then gathered around the tree, sad attesepsed do ascent. But the small sive of the tree, sad the smoothness of the bark, prevented this.' At this time Mr. L. commenced yelling most lustily, and some aeiglpbors, attracted by his yells, with torehlights sought the some of his adventure. At the tight of the Are the feta okras animals vansosed, sad the %lure was Mies , 44 bleu hie perikow situation. Mr TIP% Amami lota at laud are dared for sine by time Canalise Govenummat, ism the even ties ,Or Wellington, Perth, mod Hera. Part of thew we whoa Mc* sad will be mold for taro &non as sere; tire others are wawa lands, and wilt be sold for one dollar sod lifty mil per is both tam payable is tea annual hotel man* with interest. ildr The Editor et the Jackets ?rye trates, map ►e 4 ghee set seen a drunkest mut is Jae - 'SOO oboe the Legislature adjourned. 1101 Grit MAIL) Otsburbtr. ERIE, PE SATURDAY MORNING, SEPT 16, 1554 DEZOCRATIC STATE NOITHATT°79 FOR ooVF.RNOR WILLIAM BIGLER, Of Clearfield County JUDGE 01 , SUPREME COURT JEREMIAH 8. BLACK, Of Somerset County FOR CANAL COSOLISSIONEK HENRY-S. MOTT, Of Pike County• Gov. Bigler'. Health. 1 We regret to announce that GOV. BIGLER, ''vrhile canvassing the Northern part of this State, last week, was taken with a violent attack of siekne mi li i . k s ich, for a short time, endanger 'ed his h e is now at Waverly, N Y , on the Erie railroad, and at our last accounts was recovering We sincerely trust that he may be able to resume his labors, for there never was a time when the Democracy needed hia services as much as the present! air Through the generosity and foresight i f our friend of the Pittsburgh batlg ' Wail, we were enabled to‘tay before in,,st our readers, on Friday night of last week, the opinion , mf the Supreme Court in the Erie and North East Railroad came We believe when a man d ilea a generous action in letting the world know it.— We telegraphed our friend of the raion, in Thursday night, asking him when the opinion would he published in his paper He replied on Friday morning thus: -I have printed and sent you, as a present, th' - ) copies Erie Observer Ex tra." Now if that tion't proVe K lANAN to be the best fellow betwebo sunrise and sunset, we don't know what would May we not have th e pleasure of seeing him here .m Tuesday next? Afraid of "Thunder." , ..o. Is the Whig party Abolitioaiseo Those ~f ..ur render , . wh., It trd Jo I ~ LOCK on Tuesday-, and the re-p, ~tentleinen who followed lion, do not require .0, answer to this question They there hetri I Iko assertion boldly made that the whig part) m lon t !cr exist ed—that it was the grossest f‘,1.1 . ) t contend that there are enough whigs to the st ate t o elect Pollock—and that the speeker• retied, not upon the whig party, but the fag, n 1- of all par ties, to carry him in to the Gubernatorial chair: Not only were these itssert ions made in substance upon the stand, hut tlie wholo Course of reason ing—the entire aim—appeared to be, with Judge Pollock himself, to cuddle and wheedle the Abo litionists Into his Gubernatorial net A short time suite we bad Giddings among us, and all know that he is ultra enough in his denuncia tions of the -peculiar institution" and the States that tolerate it, but Pollock, and Curtin, and Lor imer, threw Giddings into the shade upon 'this point, if they did not throw a cloud over the best efforts of Fred Douglass himself This being the fact, we really hope our neighbor of the Gazette will take the demise of his party philoso phically! We know he has reasoned, as no other Editor can reason, that it is not dead, but liveth; still he will not disbelieve the evidence of his ears nor contradict the assertions of such an ex ? perienctud undertaker as Gen. Lorimer, or the ver dict of the defunct's chosen Coroner, Judge POL LOCK. The whig party then is no more! requiem is sung from every busting; and while its only live legitimate child, the Fugitive Slave Law, is branded and denounced by its dishonest Administrators, the heritage left it by Clay and Webster, and its other illustrious leaders, is dai ly bartered away for Abolition and Know No thing votes! Alas! for the whig part)! A Voioe from *the Working Ion! We call attention to the proceedings of e meeting of the workmen employed in the trot. Foundry of Messrs. Szivarrr & Co.--compri sing some eigholour hands—proclaiming th )ir determination to sink all party distinction in the coming contest, and. vote for those they know to be true to Erie. These men, unlike some of the politicians we know of, have not , forgot the ser vices of Wu. Biome They have not forgot that when we were in want of friends, he steped forth and periled his reputation in our behalf— that it was the shield of his official name that first drove back the tide of popular indignation which our wealthy enemies turned against us;— and they are not disposed to now turn coolly away from him—a tried friend—upon the mean plea that all he did was but a part of his "offi cial duty." They leave that kind of gratitude to men who live, and hare their being, in the dirty pool of partisanship! Working men them selves, they can understand the doctrine that the men who do not stand by their friends, will 110011 have no fronds to stand by. But we need not enlarge elm skis demonstration. It is lobe right quieter, and speaks for itself! -. Several matters in the last Gaaette, orhiolt should chain our notioe, are unsvoidabli post posed for want of time sad roots We efal try sad pay oar respects to them in our next. .'Unless the Leghketalte The l'ittabnrgh Mbar btitt'been in the Legislaturth makes the follaiting cant remark in etinmentingspon the decialon of the &aprons Court: It will be seen by this opinion that the Eri were not so entirely without excuse fur their 'war upon the railroad last winter, as their calum niators at the east and west belicred That por tion of the Company's road which obstructed the streets of Erie was built without right or char ter; and was a nuisance —a nuisance that must now be abated, usixiss TILE LEUIRLATLILE TERTERE. Tie rwrie V . Eric will et/171' oat right yet Here is the exact issne--the apprehended "in terference of the legislature;" and to guard against that, every citizen of Erie county ought to throw all other considerations aside and fill the two seats from this county with men who will exercise a commanding influents• with both p ar ti e s No mere partizan is wanted there; no mere stick, to vote yea or nay as the leader of his side of the House may indicate e No, this is Dot the kind of men Erie county wants in this crisis. She wants men that she can rely upon—men who, if the Legislature does attempt to interfere, will be •'at home - in Ligislative strategy, in Ligis lative debate, and iu outside legislative applian ces! This is no time to let party considerations bind the people; neither is it a crisis when mere party leaders can extricate our local questions from the "slough of despond" the treachery of rusted political servants has sunk them: "I hold it to be good democratic doctrine," said Judge Pot,LocK, in hiaspeeeh on Tuesday, "that • every man s hould vote according to the dictates of his own independent' judgment woo all elftie , •iliZellA Ili . Erie (N^HI/ely lio ,lott. sue 11115 prin rip/. this, The man who strictly follows PARTY is not worthy the IMO.' of au America)] citizen -if we should have asked Judge Poi.- ' LOCK for an admonition to his whig friends to lay aside party for this once, in order to secure that for which Erie periled her good name last winter, and which she i now told she will -i -nure, "unless the legislature interfere, - we could wit have desired it in plainer or stronger law grtage! The doctrine is not only "plod Democratic doctrine," but it is. what is of far more importance to the people of thiscouuty this Fall, °ow) bocTitiNE! If it is carried out practically. then indeed may we hope that "the people of Erie will come out right yet " If it is disre l .,iardeil—if party limier, are allowed to rule, and the free awl spontaneous action of the peo ple ernshed----if their generous -7.inpathy for those who sympathised with and 411 Nal by them in the hour of trouble• tt those R ho have been weighed in the:balauci and not f quad wanting, are all to be set aside for raw recruit, who oul) entered when the battle wa. half fought, and our en mien lines broken, then we !sillily pro claim our belief that the "people of Eri , will ir , ,r come out nght We have her, tof ire urged the people to adopt the same cour.e Judge Polloek rec•iminends. and we again urge di, to to do ii‘o: "The man who strictly follows iv, rig " it) this crisis, when we are threatened with interference, "is out worthy" of I, lila rank. , 1 a friend of Erie: And SW" The ( eI•I r nr,uu , v'.llloy the idea that the lengthy , • f. , rin, ana ,o,li ~ g ati4.4 the . 11 t, •ippwir• ed in it, ~,lutun, a few •14- - e•ectiti n7ru.r w 14,1 g, , •, it 1,, Id, -ICI I n., (~,,o 11, Misreprr.. tic • . cle_tr:) . one of your t S -kr; tle.•• lengthy expo sure whwo 1!)io te.• I in our r •Ititun4 a few weeks sato ,e/ it; More than that, he ptp,riti which it originated" has not acknow- Wg,,l it to '•be au arrant hoax." It first appear -1 in the Richmond Araminrr, and was so cred ited in our paper The next week you published to the world that the Richmond Inquirer, quite adifferent paper, had "aid it was a hoax Now, whether you attempted to deceive your readers by the similarity between the names of the twn paper., or were the subject of "gimerons coa t . deuce - yourself, we don't know and don't care We do know. however, upon evidence just sueh as the Gazoi , crucified the Masonic order upon, that the exposure of Know Nothiugmn we pub liAied is true in every essential particular! What will they Do 1 Siuco the decihiou of the Suprane Court w e are met daily by the question, "What will the railroad company do now?—Will irs Board of Directors obey the injunction, nod remove the road?" We are nut in tle• ..ecrAs of the Coinpa ny, but we think w , c.in ;et: through soule of their movements. Vey.) opportunely. with that decision, camp Judge Pot.t.ocK By the merest accident, coarse, tin o radr.J.did sun li ist awl West, arrived here at th , mime tits - By ano ther accident, too, tw well known legislative bor ers, herrtot'ore in the employ of Kelly, Richmond /t Co , one a Philadelphian and the other from Slieuylkill, came also in the train of the would be-Governor! All these gentlemen, together with the Erie and North East Board of 11irectors, have been in close consultation this week; and although we were not present at that consultation, w. want to make a prediction It is this Between now and the Election the Directors of the Erie and jNorth .at road will be very busy surveying, malting plans for removal, attempting to get the rightof way, &c., &c., but actually doing nothiv. . I Then, if Pot,Locit is elected, they will never re move a rail ur tench the road, but will go to the rlegislature and ask, and qrl, legislation legali. zing the road where it is: Now, if that knot the plan agreed upon in Erie this week, we want Our readers to set us down as no Yankee' And that is the way we answer the question, .4irdiat will they (1017" Ilidr Wino LEADERS were never required to be more• decidedly tiosableffuwer than at this time. To Protestants, they pretend that K1)01,44(46- ingiam is only intended to check the power of the Catholic Church. To the (I.!rtu•ins, English, Welsh. and Scowls, who have heretAdore r o tA their ticket, they declare that their opposition to fote;gners is only aimed against the Irish And to Catholics, these same consistent individuals whisper that leis only designed to break down the "Looefoco" party ! The last is nearer the truth than any of the rest; and shows what a consistent set they are ! &muneAwr.—The Trim American, the or• gam - of the Free Soil party in this county, repu diates the action of the Free Soil State commit tee in withdrawing Porrs and selling out to PoLLocx. The Editor says he beard the same Petty story told by Judge Pollock ou Tuesdty in 1848, and as the Whigs deettived him the'', and passed the Fugitive Slave law, he haefut mush faith in their professions now. Sensib e; besides what is the use of being *pump, to Toutip Democrats into the Whig ranks, if one gets nei ther boner nor profit. Re Ras MOO Hie alike - - mau who Word Judge Pous)cx oD Tues ilay—uo luau who witnessed the events of that ( i s) , or saw who were his "body guard". here, need lxw told that Judge IbLtA►cit has made his choir, as to•which side of the Erie difficulty he will stand, and that side is the side, of the Hail- road /tad against the people! He that L. 4 not for us is ag,aiust us e is a true saying; but it to hip more than that a LUAU way b.• judged by the cowl: any he knew! Lot MS then examine Judge Put.tdocri and INN where be On Saturday w.• called upon Ithn, though the columns of this pa per, w define his positiou—to tell the people whether he would be for Erie or &Outlier next winter, provided he was sleeted That call was re 7 eelocd by the on the day h. spoke'. What answer did he make? None at all, unless the few general remark" which he vouchsafed us, at his opening, be (tom-trued into a response ; an d they could with equal propriety h echoed by the Shanghai Coisti'tuo'ou, and no charge ..t ineou sistene) would lay against it for uttering thew: The fact is Judge P o t,i,ocit did not meet the question at all. //, dody , tl , liyprr efrd arra Merit t11 , ,U I Hut it may be said that di,. Judg • w.t, uot peetol to limit; • every thing newspaper Editors say, or every question propounded by th-rue acknowledge that in ordinary caves this would he Ito; but this is not an ordinary question' It has absorbed the public attention licr f eat - it has been before the I,egtslature for t h e length 0,1 time! ft has elicited the atteutoin and the time of Courts, I»th of the ITniteil of the c mincinwealth, and, if we are to I. li.v.• our opponents, has been made the -ul u eet if ,rat'. Cabinet deliberations :the White Ho w ie' vt,t.si it then an issii.• to hi- dodged, as .bulge l'ot.tiorK dodged it tin Tic -Ist, even if neitlii•r the (//i, r err nor the ILL.I C3llOl ltt.t•116111 h. it! Was it &top!, ut .L cau•ltiLve who expects his whig brethren in Erie to vote fo r hi ii to de vote to it the few non e immitt tl, " 2 -oo 1 1,T?•.4 , , "law-auil-orler" generalitie. which fell trim his lips iin Tutstlay? We answer No!—for the unbought, uupsrchasable people of Erie, we repeat it, His competivi-r iris in 0 the I-- wci! or id to him, he stand- up in th, record with Erie: been equally trunk: lie was frank tc-ugti upou the charge made tluit-tie viited for tile annexa tion of Texas, Intl .t rill fr en tit • sour-, to dhetiny p ',Hon up in ior 1 , 141- I , ,us, he wa- mum as if afra.•l :lie elihre bro.' of Stisughais woul.l ••i•ritt4:ll up ht. it 11 , dared to peep ! We said-ab 0 this titles.; 0.1 ty v .1 by tit.: Judge, im Ittroday. by pres.m-ertcd Arrange Mehl We repeat it Wt. hay , • it upon id lit thority that wh..n the rt pp t,. mop! hlrn at WAtelf wh t ttr of the (;,1; , , broached lb , -übjcet t.i him, a diseussitm artiste Living hts -body L r,u.tr.l" .L. c I wino he should 4 . ) Th.• litor th.• , to hi.. credit h. , it '4 pk..ni, in.i."ted that It ~liould mite out flat-r, eed upon the .ide ~r Eri • ILI- Shangle.ti intere.t. however, .111 I t !trout! met i Atesman, M. Finny, of Nlea IN gen tleman to whom Erie is vastly itnh•leted =yen pathy la , ,t winter, oe. reh /, Velarod POLL OCK 4110111,1 ii 1h) "4111 .11:114. YV ulud up hy more titan llutwn, tl,,tt in our Editorial brother -wait a 6.1" Wheth er the "MU,' V o rin t.atiry,•r - meant mi. , ally, or only as an in.sinuation that he w.t. a Kritne NOthi t i, we viii not pretend to .-ay; at any rate lw carried the .lay, and PoLum•K did n or c o me out /141-1,5 , 11 la our f, /of .t lit , 'r dcsired h, i/wee/4/.' What dons 0114 4h. a' 111n ply that already therailroadintere.,i "the pow• er behind the throne, greater than the tier our it : self," and that if ht beeome I ova rnor— which 0, - ).1 forbi , l -Erie w - i n to a . w,r-e than Southern b.indaLtel ti kr W =I nature this is evidait. also, froti tile c..inpatiy lie keeps We prq,ume it struck others, :1,,s it did us, as a little 4ingular to *ay the least ,if ;t, that nearly all throve who came hero. with him, or found it c,mvenient -nrround him after he ar- rived, were wen wh•i in some manner •'r oth,r identified themselves against Erie List winter First, there was our good looking friend, Gen. Wilson, of Franklin, the gt r• 1,1 rye,' N I L, V , n ,, ,. ,p) R,tilr,MlJ Then there was tor fr.en 1 Ber ton, of Meadville, a deter fellow as e%i.r lived, but unfortunately identified b sly and soul with the Railroad men Ile it wis that .',rte d that f a mous meeting in Mea•lville Itst winter what!' gave three qrawias for BIGLER bleau-e of th • pas sage of tit • bill repealing the eluirter of th•• West ern road Neat in his ;ram, ass tar as Water flirt were th hxt ( ' twin Itrithers iti oppl , itt.,ti to Erie, Pinny and Lotal The fir-t tlit authot of a series ••f pas z , o l at ivi r. ; 1.1 winter lietl , fUllit:lll,4 , En• , tia• Wa• more than suspected t whotiier justly or not, w•• will not say,) of being di autlior of those disgr:::ful letters published in the New X‘trk not , .tt any rate, he is busy electioneering igaitist Bit; LER upon the ground, as he expresses it, -that he, the governor, sympathised and idetititied himself with the Erie mob." No wonder ti i i t i n si ieh a crowd, the only two ••pponents .1 the Shang hais upon the committee that went over to Wa terford to meet him, had such a poor show when the question of what he was to say in ;he Erie War was discussed No wonder it was then and there decided that he should tiottly the question as he did: No wonder that when he arrived he found such disinterested friends of Erie t • to greet him as ALFII,EP KELLY, Mr STONE, ,Jul"tg Micas, Judge BRAWLET, and th• entire Board of Direetnrs of the Erie an•l North East. r •a•l! No wonder the motley that paid the expenses of hi' I visit and his reception was raised, in a great part, in and 'aim,ut hi. D.-pot of the Erie and North East road Ani although it was agreed at Wa terford that, fot appearance salt, , il l • Sitaugliai Whigs should imp off the stand, yet is it 311 . 1 wonder that the moment the Judge left it, he was taken in charge of and surrounded (siustsntly by them, while our neighbor of the Go.:xtb, and the whigs who act with him in our lied quarrel, were .atedthroogbout very much like a .•houn.l boy st a husking." PoST °PPM ROBBIIIRT ti CisicisATl —A young man named Clinton W. Pickett, of Cin cinnati, was arrested last Saturday, charged With embezzling & letter containing $lOO, addressed to Tweed k Andrews. Re plead guilty, and was held in 111,000 bail, to appear before the IT S. District Ciao.. Ile was also charged with embezzling lepers addreseed to W. Lard, of Lard's Dewier, who was him employer at. the time of his *West, but he did not admit that he bad, and Lori declined to prosecute. Of roam, the young gesuletnan was "the son of respectable parents. , • *number of letters, containing va ricose sums, hoe recently bees minted from the Cilseiwasti Met 011ae. ----~-- 41,14i1w the Illab4erm. Quite knumber of whir in F.rie and vicinity, deeming that the ineeessful issue of our local questions 'would be more certainly secured by the musty hairing a representative of each party at ilarrishmig this winter, than by two of the same polienwl party, have dared to call upon a Denioerat' to become an` independent candidate for the 14gislature This presumption on their part—thiii attempt to walk alone without help from the l'emnant of the "market house" clique, has aroused the ire of our neighbor of the Gazetfr, and be ailasinisters to the guilty culprits "A few, wholesome admonition! We trust these retire:int whip will listen and obey! and upon b..ts l ied knee attit his high-mightiness of the etr ti forgive them' That is the way cab is,r,4 should do when found guilty of insubordi• nation b . y their Lord and Master! What right have they to speak and act, when Sir Oracle bids them to 'hold their peaee! What right have the p , opl t,l disregard party, even if by so doing they mat sa , l all they have gained by the decision of th Mourn:' None :it :ill! therefore we say we are r 14,14 sal to 400 ow G. It —tile Aelif .0 4 )11- it U 1 4 ,1 wa,ter if the wing party—ad minister "A t: Worti, - to them: We trust it will roteruporary to ap ply thy, t -erew. it lia.4 brought recreant wltig- term- beton., an 1 doubtlecs will again Hut t hilt. w W. 1., a rv,kouing tine day The fo.cil i- -own' when the thitnocracy, wit at Hoak, t. ihrtri•iitvg, at Wa.hiugton, and before Sop. fl y, Court, bor.• the brunt of this local tight, aep b,oik and wit... 6 rlicir hind. of All further par ticipat /LIL I I gr, fri• , 11 the (tug . . st fir, we to the IValker., and the Tracies, t ' •urtrights,andtheirShanghai follower., ' l l'l4 14, pd • t. , / 'lt it MlA•a•retoto r.“: But it will 1..• fll h , fun we have' 0, no. whim you H (Wand Skinner, antillYuriii•, by your in:taking this question into ou.• ue keeping—Anil have made it exelu -ii. Iy isluir,.iu I hem. have to take the respon -Ciiiiit f (.li/itri or =ucci... upon you' ..wn broad ofi ler- —l., not think it unkind if we, and r' , ICIIIINT:111(' frieuilii, mere "looker; ;in Vi me. -hall laugh to sic with what e .,,,• that now m ore than half wou, —And by your applying your So go ahead, g"ntlenien; up it, p tii yitur Linn • 4.1 I 111011, +u I in thy legislit turt wlnt. r. ,/„ ;111 The Amend/ Honorable st•glii•Li fait week. upon the authority Attic li miwratie liarri-linre, that Juilgu rir zinnex..itiiin -upp .it i,.ur.4e, that tlii fact '1••••1 6 , 11) 11)1 gilllllq ruuri , l4 th. •.1 th, t ,, r a ur ut6 r $11..1" , 1111d.'t 111 c ler) un.c of the ..111.1g.. twith..r 11.•, ti r frivti.l4, had tieuieti it th i - Ift , r travoliug the whole lel:trek of ill, State, h. that th, Erie ilh.r !Ito! i,nu , And bug 1,,a1);1, mut pie , tlon ru En(' that w qil , l , ii. point. 11 ) • 41', 1,. Iluiri‘ t h ro , r(l, au-1 ' If ,1, , 1 h i ; 1; , 4•' Eltll, TL,TAIJI LP —11) p•ft r, nee to the de eibilai of the Supreme delivered by Chief ;t will be -eeu the Borough of Erie 6 :1 4 be en ac ti ng legally iii what wa. terwed her "riotou- proceed ing- •' Will the pre:, that vilified and altusied her eit MCO4, give curt. qty t.. ttlis tiecotion' %e hnli Aee—PittAtoy/i rost Well, you helve semi; and what is the result? Not one 4 tho paper- that "abused and vilified 6(4 citizt us - has "-given currency to the decision." Not ! Tic Tr,7,p,,,. has garbled and denoun ....A it' The Tim , . has inertly published the de er,. of the Court, with a few ill-natured back ‘lown comments' The Buffalo papers, the r, the ;,a, the and the El are silt nt atti. They "villified and abused - our citizens, and now when they have been oonvictrq it before the highest tribunal in the St.t'e, Olt% Arc too dishonable to allow their 'elders to km .% it The Cleveland papers are in the same category Out upon such mean ness, say we' is unworthy of the pres— wort hy of rn, n At a meeting of tho empbled by th, firm .1' Sennett ~ 11 Woln,Aay evening, thy 6rlbmiug preamble an.i resolutions were paNt: Wherr,t,, in the Lite eo fiie t between the city. of Erie and the Erie and North East Radr.tad Couip.vn the kinds of this firm have borne their part. and it all /MD' , manifested their willtog ne iu ..t.iving the progress and oppo, in.,: the ituquiton, invasions of a p .aerful moni ed mouopoLv. and, whereas, the citizen , ..f Erie and I.larhon t ek have apt, muted a meeting to ie held to thi4 plaec nn Tuesday next for tit pur pei3e "t• a Lltrating the victory achieved in the late decision of the ! 4 upr nee Court of l'un ti , ) Then.low, MBE That w,i re•peet hilly request Miessrs Senn. it i to el. , Sk• di , ' lit ..f their Tuesday next, that we may have an opporinuity of uniting with our fellow citizens in iebrating the ewtory achieved over the com bined aristocratic and powerful mo nopoly. Re46/reo'i Tuat - having faith fully wan 1 the duties of the Gubernatorial offiect i gg 1 'ing expect lly shown himself the friend Erie in the day of her trial, we will not now, in the time of our prosperity, forget his kind interpositions in our behalf, but, overlook ing all party distinctions, we will most cordially *endeavor to secure Lies re-••lection to the Gover norship id this State lies+„lees), That Gideon J Ball and Morrow B. Lowry having proved themselves the firm friends of Erie, and having full confidence in their ability to vindicate our rights and protect our local interests, we will exert our influence to secure their election to the next Legislature of Pennsy' van ia. it,soh,vd, That we cordially endqrse the' nom ination of Alfred Kfig for the offitse'of Priithono tor of this county nd will give liitu our hear ty support. Re.o/ved, That the Tedings itf -this meet , ing be signed by the ,]Beer, and together with the reply of Messrs. Sennett tt. published in the papers of this city. JAMES 110141-J NT, 'resit b fit Cot.s, lira /'resident. I, iris F. St. ns, Seerrhiry. Below ita the reply of Mr Sennett, for Sennett EMI Gen/h./it's: —Your request has been heard and is most cheerfully granted. We remember with pleasure the promptness with which you always responded to the many calls made upon you for your time and assistance during our late contest with the Railroad monopoly, and hope that you may always be found battling for the interests of our State and County and against all monop lies of whatever manner or kind, which are pre. judicial to the interests of the people. NIL A submarine telegraph is to be laid dorm from Bristol to Cardiff EMI - 40 ,- P .SRNNETT liaitnal ak food autlatins. Judge Polka in Iris In noticing Judge Poissoneu visit and speech to our Cit izen., we do en with considerable apprehension that we are trespassers on the peeulutr privilege of our friend WILIOII, of the True American. We hare a deep dislike for anything like larceny, literary or otherwise, but inso much as eirrumstanees alter cases, we obeli feel at liberty to notice the second free-soil ediuun which was tuned on Tuesday last is the Park. Judge PoLuo - n, the Whig can didate for ilovernor, arrived Is Erie on Tuesday morning last, at alsost I I o'clock A, M. Ile was escorted into the city by • Land of music, two two-horse carriages, and an iteeidental buggy. In one of the earrings!, the one con taining the committee sent to meet hint, we noticed the high-priced of Know Nuthiagiem to Brie county Straw's, 'to said, snow which way the *lad blows, and if thin "straw Is an exception we're mistaken. Thus man is not known lb Erie u a Wk/g, or a politician, or even as a cal: Ten. But this astde. The cortege was not immense, 'tie true, hut then 'twos* so choke, and hope dwelt so fondly on the masses that were swallowing hot dinner's in hotter haste to crowd the Park at hall past 2 P. N , that ',big gery eon/soled its trembling self and p a ti e ntly wa ited._ The Court House hell sounded the time for assembling, and true enotigh, the ..reading in by “whole hands lull," until the speaker's •stand was surrounded by not less than from one hundred 311 , 1 tilty hundre.t and filly men, women, Derain-nits, Whi4v and b o ys Af ter the usual organization, the would toe tiosernor was in troduced by the Prevnlent of the meeting, and proeeeslo4l to "pipe his not. " Luke all public. 'speakers he was de- Ygt ll,4l to meet the "good people of iii. 4 county," and was quite sure that he never would forget them, which he prohahly will not. "lie had been anxious f o r years to see Lake Erie and the county that contninvel the only Penn. Lake • sty He Ira, uu,,un to Le here, 'weans. , there had been a liwal difficult) and he understood that we bad come .ut a length :awash lie war a In u lort ay tied bitc-ado• 4.1. my edixen, and always believed in appealing to the courts in such eases roust had said that the people were right, and be hoped that every mail would quietly vulonit." 'nip., or t cry nearly tht-, wit- the meagre, ems- poo•• notice whith he gate our 'great local question.-- A lid it appeared to u., that eleu .eanty parsvotpb would have Leen sacrificed to the trdsangliat iievtion of his party, it the tall upou him to the CioNourie of the same day 1.. r an expression, Lad not forced ii out, such as it Vi'• hwie only to sad. that if Mr PoHoek or any other watt, by eutpha.ising the words "la tc lot.ny" and t , . the •leaden of the New 1 1414 rl Mem he iv w.•l.••.me to all the capital be eau Ksth, r trout its But tut, I 'ortatttutit,a and Wsliter must be e.,ileittatud, and are, kerma iti Litt chute, clevaie and ~mate language of .1 Lueuf,ett," t course hale tit, rights in rite. preitii,rl Th• pelt thy •peaker wrr 4. a,,unt the .man Llaok pehy that Ighhhagr,pele a tve,k er prat mue en the +acne ground Here the Judahe leaurtahht at :Arge. The .•eutrege,u , Nehre•ka end 6anw. knevery, - which bee wrent had eh e.urpe.l p ,a.rr trute the Mande eenttTeee .11 4 1 re-4,,k1 it the ws- twitlidell with all the rpt!lirt4 that the .Ithl4e. ueabui.try ...,uld afford. It wn• 41111Pitlg 1.. 1 4 411..1114. 111r4.10444141.4r ~110 tumute a.4erted to the PA/a 611 i. X 14.1 tht • lir lit lit .:11.1it r,I ri g it, because the authorised t appoint t h •• territorial offierr , But tt, goutletilaa t .rirot to inform hts auilleuee, hulk they hate iteretiitiire Leen .elected, tt LIOt Ly the Pros- Arra, With the advii•ii .Lll , l let tiler - rollate. The our- war ‘ery touch tta , h an .m.• w,u1 , 1 have I 1r..n3 i,olding. Frtl I),u4las• ,411 tIiAL ..tne fa-ltp.nr,l loth li el] Wero ilt•dmti•itie.l with the ••at, Lin,u, vni. thilt !hry I.•!t intb uwu.gui•• 4 4trgutt kfter P•. 1.1 . 4 ,• .11 . 11 . 1U , 1 0, 1 4, Ul' three beers r itau t t e•otne one thr- litnl vat The tia,r zo•lu , 1 , 1 that th.• 1311.1.) a ,a4l t..r herr , was 11i111tAktf. rti,/ ..rd th, rel. for the other Two rile, two-ihird• it gli eta, mei we ore far within the 1.0utt.1.4 proi.lolit, when we Mn" tLAI Wallidllt )13 , W 4. kraril n ttur.ab i : it,a.bri Lar,luer, 4 i'llt.burvb. ~ , 11 Al ler iti6 , LLAILi4 th. ta tbat 4in.appk•intra 111 the Lllllll - prepent, Sit.l ti.Lt he W.s. Sery aitith atrA.l that Olen. w:1. A lesem puliierkllerr, Gr In , . unted aDJ t SI, a turn tn, , • wnlly and th , ,itgli he ,Infrit say s", oti;1 we iALICIL . there ~,nxieth,ug lurk 110 ..ye. wui .uCgented that the animal ww. a twin hr,,ther ‘,l Bnrouin's f the 14,drnbr,y •-•flu cow:hailed by przymg the Whlgs v . t Erie .•uunty, that it they could nt iutocienttous- . 1%). St , 11.1-Irtl 111 1C... tory wuuld'nt .11inmsb 1 .ti do make rowarJ• uo all' l'uttni then addressed the meeting fora short tune. He helimed to making utie man re.punsible fur the politi .al sins another And though Governor stgler had ttu hand in the passage "1 the Nebraska bill, still it was a "good enough Morgan — for the otea:,ion, and he must stand it He th.,ught there was no Whig Tarty—it was now the Liberty part) What woulkrnt tiarri.un, or Phil lip., or tireeley the Het, Antoinette L Brown, give fur that •sr,et inortiel t.. ndl under their t..n,.:u•s' Fan Ili gentletuou Nvhor-, th,r, 's use ~1 grutni,ling Frum headluArters euLuv- the ar,l , r 1., file in and felt .ar and tog• tt . Lie ban 't Tur 1:.,..r TUX , TRICR Law —it, Ma 1 , 1 Fitia Lctly n.pti.•.l4 thr rent dPerplytt ”: the Suprethe Court. thu. pc- the - ri.d on the ntilr..B,l leg,. Ilow does Ell ' l.e. NoRTII Ewa hit rea d er. retnetu. her Ih• irreat Erie war. when lieeau-e the eititetti. of Erie auult t permit a rajlroad eompany °lli , . to rial t , ,wn. in t n , latwn iif law,_alt New York into t , rI anal letriareled that Preaeleut Vier.e iulit -end the l - army into the field to attack the women Eric r ap the rail+. Whether deterred y •I•Lani. the wonn , nor the iolly of the requeot. the Pi, .i dent del not do it. and Erie walked into Ciiurt t.. -.lie the nattier 1e,:a113 The z.iutireme Cirurt of l'enn.yliani I hat lo a decree that the railroad ry A pa l• It lie- part upon ....rutin •treet.ln the hor , eign Et 1.• 1,114 part n public retail , I' n” Lilly, here itt Jeerer t It will be 'leen therefore that the ..1 EN , rioter,/ were m ling 1t.,;21d I i glrri , i• • •Ipiny /i• / `I. %V,• D ri * l l u..w ilK•ruuhe We ' rt. h••• mr,lryt•••l ~.11 1 1 are tilt r n.,t I.s th Nll.lll •I 411) 0 d t.ii I flv . ! lire f t! , Albany Tr."... • 3 , •n tu tok —tit the tit••r 1,,1% ••1 the thilis iu t•• thit,ll a. th•• 1, 91. , ?L grit. t r all:. if O.',a man I • tut way tr. In gl , ,rit•us •pecta,•ft• Wed in a I 0.. w 4 ru t. 111 C .• 1. v.or ..1 L 4.1 Jong hurt ; ; n Livntitiful 11,0 will no.I n•lmire put•ti , 1 ,, z w..rh ..; ont,ir v,ung -ocnery. 4011 turh en art 'do as i)) the thing to he a•les,red ~ l / 111 , 4 her. wife ”r it g; 11211) , .• • tbk. 11.,V1 thtt 1111[101 Freneh mode pi in ...toe to distitipii.ti a reepeetAlde 1,0111311 Iran the tenet :•11..u1.1 our good moral Mille., tier-iet in donning the die‘hing low neekeil Farb , be taken for their trailer 01•1 , 1, they must Mane tio 'seek e., and doff .tioh at re. i.ni) befitting people of tree suit tau.) mend+. Even d matrons of sixty may he teen daily with tine rakish ri • tsgi.. The Painsville Tekyropi Oen. DiLt. of Alentor, was run over by the Express train, near the AV- Mt pit about; mite and a half east of Patei.v die. on V idly afternoon, and instantly killed. The decess•ol was an old re4islent of that county. lie formerly represented Cuya hogs t'o. in the State Legislature, and afterwards repreikin teil what was formerly liessuira eo.. in the same body. Z,4,4.. A fellow tried dew n. down this weak et, the pr 'e of advertusing Ma run-a-way better-half. 111 our•a ha Jni'et surcord VWW that i• UMW enough to adver tlor hie wife, must pay the full Kum, red the "ready" at that' tad!' In another column we give the }tartteulars of a duel between two young men in Ctncttutati, till tsbostr n stomas.' One of our exchanges the finale of this af fair show. the - perversity of woman," for when the lady heard of it "she determined to cut them both." We think it rather exhibits more cruelty than - perversity," for cer tainly one was punished enough by being shoe without being wounded otherwise' 14‘. The number of idiotic and I°oll4 or feeble ru,n.l - porgot. in the United States ix tnneh greater than grnerally supp osed. —E.rrAorle. Dues the writer judge from hie own knowledge"- rhaars Ledger. No, be judges from the extent of your eireulation. tioota—lt it rumored that LOC• STuFlt, of woman's tights notoriety, is shout to be married to n wealthy gen, Montan in Cincinnati. We prophesy that hell wish there was another kind of a Snt, shout his neck, before "Miss Lucy takes her time" a great while, pi- We are rettneeted to notice that the Emerald Lodge, I. 0. of 0. F. of &lenburo, will dedicate their new Hall on Thersday next. the 2let. at Id o'clock A. M. The brethren of the order, and the public generally are invited to amend. A GAO shower we h•d yofteniay morning, with • prospect of as aboadoece to the fatare. It was very wash sessiltal. We got • papal yesterday front away up among the mantel= of California. asking an exchange. Of coarse it shall kin it, if for ant other seism than the distance it ease to oak W YttUts inn Altsini. Corn..l rm a...et, Ns , . Yam, Sept. from Ar•karratir--Onmatilhor of tAt A *kw ry .Vrore— ("aril , Same tke W„, •"a —AwatArr qua bay .rpl.,drd - ert—Utter /kink We are hariug • week of walla weather aflet 4 r too cool for eutarner This kitattets the mu, 4 o f N o w Yorker which poured out to July and to uuw d ue here ( Iperstiono of ail coo. . are emuntencing for the r.tuting trailer- The Wee are receiving plant &n 4 ° l t 'inat••tvr • uev take the place of the present ettet.put, a-A fabric. Autong toaa7 propesaia. nn. ortk., 4 . vurahly. Thu ia. that the new ray 1141 i, to.ltel nit. 'beeves to Itte th. mly which to at all peeuitar with A turn. 4 building.. are awnidleti after magna;;,. to tare~ of marble, granite anti frrezt,,ti• thing n.•w and pra,tscal. There ar „, wireh"uar., moral' and esanufartori..4 n dryly of tits uist4ruil, utio or tw , , •t,,r,- Cry Pull Palace principle, with v.. 11 very elegant appearance. up tow., whip yard, whore a •mi.l r.O pa,caaa .s.natructwo, intended for th, Wino , . Thai great river, thong', a . ingly shallow ;mid no wooden veeeol ,•rg. asvipn• the stream to say dtaan, though about SI feet long, tintw• ohiy • ~.,,• Thu to being fitted out by a private • lb. Onsoco, with a new to commercial dinary vessel, do not la.•t long on t),, , •, eoaet. Timber ix very rapidly deetNyc-i .; afiol a specie* of worm whn•h will lan y timbers before ita operations are ercn - /MeV a piece of to&mr taken out ut ■ 1 f,. t .- . on ber return from a nrier ~ , outhern bled the nests of the 1.1,,u,e-wasp. Their & eonstruction of steamships usalt,it the ival• uo as the place of heavy timbers ran be murh by comparativery slender tods of this m-t., The Astor library Kt-owing intu g.Len, present boors of admission, !rum 10 A N ~ vent tbe reeding. hall from being , er , wtlei e it uudoulitedly would be opened Mann{ There are generally about thirty per..,n• in the Library, though there, rro w out© 4Lt or LW., huudre,l. The VI!,IVO! at , .!..I,eru who have come to t,noult cane r ir. artists, who wtsh to feast their Jr. ~n t h, epee 1131 CD. of art, whtch are ' 4 tt, tins last inenuorled •-ena• 1L twin:tor. , til tho 114r.Lry hive n 1. • ..10( of AIon.IUN t. .r • w r novels and entertaining 1i,,,t,•, "err ,i,;,,,, eeti I . ,,nlbey, &night w l 1 e Awn) Lht 1r R, ; , , , the) have justly e., -i•ler, i: , Jahn Jaeoli Astor inteu,le,i toreot4 of octoore riwy hi% tt• reference, In a 4reat 11 u.l • bot,ko which are valuable t , De•. tura, which through thr•. Drag, aro ..111 t. , L twen the intenurtn ..t .1 J A r. r tsirTV vircutalltig L,Grrr‘ %er) courteoU,i , / & gentlemanly young anai•ttul 1 IP 4r.wluat. • WIZ!: sequehth, ot the f.u.n..u. L;11.%. r- •c ,o‘her is a cra.luatA ~! in: Irt• 110 4 t1 ..r- bevy ••V••,,,, • r- I= Bel , .re le , • 14.151.4 tr,IJ the equ.derau.pu ,al the "1,1.1, life. wi• will omery r tort tt, i , taany rueadertul thla4- ;;; t ;,; and paper A new lepartta. a I ,rtho.,:ntng • SCWOOII.II, .1( 1• ' tiii.;rt•• &U 111 It 1•• 1.14 . 10 UP *44 ny(i• I engsge.i t..r I,llltlf IC- I to erasion, ntt•• never ,wen ,n thi• Laatiairr. au.l ttw) ..r chaptor w",!1 kiuencau h.t‘.. ••• will be u ri t ;,r , ,u4 attettipt CL.• ••••• . (AUL f•irWar •I(No•kro nivertising rt.•r long pr anket..l 40.1 IXIN rt•tt =I ae , ottipl.•b,l• , ,curthalg Th, Pnote bees th...ryughly repstre.l And mad , - utket, vu board her men. tor s lont: be or.lere.i t.. the P.. , tf10. with 11.),4:. town, an I impair.• nt If 113( t ..umtnenetng the htttubstedmeni shall trettahle to tour er,%.,, thinking, the other lay, 1 • able military exeurmon would howoma of , happeb have v,•01 - - prinun4 h u an 1 w ,rk• P luvz , intr wh tha, ail %Argot I: e I ns t., ,hot at, a• •et 3 l,ht. prinotA w ,ul.l n• i•ltern.r . to eh r I 4.ty • :1%, •: :11 •Il make nr+l rrs.• Id Tut , .1413 01 nau--:. 1•111 ; it.ai c• ps.+•rl,xl' I IP• i NI tr... art. tb.• :n.u.• rile 111,1 'clan!. an I '.i. nu, nu lA. , ITI‘l .tr ~IJ• I h hi White k .I• to In 1. th.• italmn.. lett in it. r r $ brad ti.ttrim pu1104.1 ut tt:ty whit' :lielttinalo,l ai tit t, ,v &Hen. S., Mr k trn lako theittrek griug , awl Hy .1,0 git , • .• , n.•rrt• 11 10 , ..krate prirt,l. h. I ,111.1 thr 1UL1.10 , 11 rep-111.411.n 01 Al.. itt *it tlArtti.ltu,: th.. rt,..rtn•w• prlo, eyer pr •••••.11k. t hat 1 zr.ton.: rib ku en , rni,i, per ••• hatid4 01 middlemen and linelfoner*. ers, anuoymnev, kto.t Ii "iit -twery eget A illet tip than at r•nnpar:t great v:L.rt is melting., on the p trt t got up the pry,. 0 guesti , ni 1..1 the patron.' ~t t prop•rty' Thor,. seein• to ••• • ' jvt A ttliSU RAI 6141..tra 4 , ..1g..0.1 .ti I erty It is yet to ! i •-• have been .11 0 1.. ty 1534br F/Jo $12.0 1 n0 Tt]t) •t k m 6ri.• • an 1 nuq /...,111 he p I pried of Erie is the great El l 0 per erat smee SaturiiE T. It, • tremendous gale tdoenr.: ' «<'''` Y ..I1 r • res. We fiu.l the (.11 N .4 to the point, sod A Tee ERIS W•H.- the ...nduet of the r It an innerolt to learnine In 1: ream has sustained :11,• the North East Rath- , •.1 • ' streets of that ettv and Ihrt ,, r or Erte its western terrain t• tory of that RMr prof e• hti slandered. 41•11te. an ex,:ttruirlit '••&• and Allegheny city, h . ‘ ;h.. I. • "I •"" persons, +6 , wit in and t ..ir l• •J' tlematt wit t.tk. tit 14. thew, ' whore he propdaed vet the •' the fact 14 her heaug a rlave ' an t i to le.. time then tt (alto and her ohddreo vw.•re ~”L o d L'• out of the hotel, and e•tnt ov• I ' " Last part of the ray zth i•t• 1 t•, await and implored th,t- • tr•••tt• wail her mutter; they "' l.l entreatiee, and c..nt eyod En talka. P1111&011 has 041.17104 the Lion which Whigery ~,ry mu hr' '"‘ much like the Dutch talt‘ug 11.1,unt vir • have Bern r goi.l moo our day, but the one rinses takes them all down The ri.tor standing in the railr,wid 11. it It • h"'' standing shoot two feel n !,‘• poeket • bus-4101 of use at. - 0 •e" ty under his cheek. and retuArtei th .• ' 1 It 'bel't c°°6l" • ewe, where theft CC' ^ "'" of ean!" The liar on whiskey bar stn"b °s w d of causing the pries to 'Wool"' - W other way the yes ranee to r 0 ,11 *d good. If It would only 1.1,4. it per PUno, It would du more a* gtrilkireat as they may. ESE =I lIME =II EMI MEM MEI ~ a r 1^^..1 .a. ,-, lIE I MEI