p a ta ntous, / t or e n Int v o liii r t f i t s. QUM BA= OF CLITILAND EMIT Great none is Cleveland. News from Deseret. From the New Yurk Her* Pth We have received news from Great Salt Lake City, relative to the command sent out there un der Col Swptoe, up to the 30th September The troops arrived in the valley on the last day of August, and proceeded immediately to Tule val— ley, south of the lake, where disposition was made of the Quartermast,r's horses and mules one company of dragootim being detailed to re-' main near Tule city The remainder of the corn mand was g tug into barracks in Salt Lake City. The command. as a general tlaitig, has been well received bt the nit mons A great jealousy however. seemed to exist towards the officers re• apecting the wives, daughters and concubines of the Saints. A few days after the arrival of the' troops. -die people were advised and commanded in the Deseret Ni us. the organ of Governor Ye ung. not to allow their families to associate with the strsmi - ers. Except the epauletted Gen tiles lee-me baptised din could uut expect to move in fc wait •v The f dl.)wiug Sunday. ; Ursou Hyd e c:t11,1 up..i, the eongr, e ration asSeEn bled in the mi.. 1. t. • raise tie ' , rive of grain" o n th e ... Jan , : t i which the congrega- ' tion replied lu onsciiuLuce 01 this 13:10+P. 5 1 . ; ) t - L an 1 4. span (.1 will be sent ou to gi sr. lust , Lim.: stable f d TLC 111,1.,t11's L. T 1 t.,..!httur auini.r. them selves S ui it r vier, u from the Snakes by the I !al-. at,.! 1.4.1: part:. ,)1 the farmer , P.0.4 - tat,„ near Pri vost, nttatked th, I.; ,% I kited tire \Vali-LA-I . a, or Walk, r 1..• et,:tc.i Iry the whites, the Pat t, t., drive off the g iveru went k, prtcaution ha.. hecn taken to fru-trat,. , 1,-ighs. Two Indians were lat. l. eat cut •d f ti. , inurd• r borne boys Sererrd the,: tribe aura ,t cumpany of tiragoons were pro,,u• tt t!te canna Theta_ is vt ry m, , n, r to , , rulation to Salt Lake C..•‘,. tic hear. to and the fail ure' of h ert:.,..isted cue resk;urces of the pt,.1•:.. au t tli! un in the country is in the hand- tL (;, merehants and the ellitrs of the chur, i. 4 K1•; , 1 , I'.‘'l ,He \1• —Nl an y of the "nt ut lay the .Ititi-Slatery Soe',e' : ,k.• .n ot the erritory of Kan , :.-, at • e Lack . ',•l the undertaking W e tin. iille B .etn -.ow e ae,... un t s fr o m one of 11,4 .Itt.t , ".1 vfrun street clerk, tali) went out with th 4 Septeuils r party, from B.astou. writes to his frioads a to .-T doleful account of his suf. ferinzs as that ,fter reaching Kati•la..4 City. he and , tt.is of the party •tartett in foot, gull in hand. tr 1-Jeati,la On their wad, he s a .s w.,re ol,,iged to sleep in the hay gath, red In th • th id-, purchasing a quart of milk fr,,ui an In it.,u -.gnaw twenty-tive cents, to moisten tl:r Lard food. that, upon reaching their destin ,n. iii t•qii.l the ,Lecouitoodations to be a few Lei r wdod and they were obliged:'iii4 , Foqi air Th.: , land now unclaimed e , distauee from the river, and is bare of w "in a , i , i+re ,, fl, tp• •41,- It i• Itecessar) to keep a vigilant t: r upon ih. 1r for fear of their disappcaraue • li , ilei.Jare• that of the party of one hundred and i•ist2, wtei icft with him, at least ninety arc iin their w•i% back to the eastward. well svistie.i tiro tlivN •ire tort fitted to settiv oew and unbriken C •untry The Acquisition of Cuba. The I\'J-}, zt,n re,Netug that ~ I Lte of the Brie-h t •urr/J:. Lary r, ccuro favurvd the idea of the ( L,:ed gettlog ix:s.t-em,ion of Cubs. aa,. it ha , b. en the -unfultyriug rurpnle" of PreNt,l,To r, • ~,t w re that e-lacid bon,r :Lir. as i ht. h.' , lust t , ) biLlLljny: Llrh/LI /HUI ' ttrf 1. ;I,t,Ltip'r The p.z4.ti'rt r •ti .tl , ll t 11, 1• ~dl--- mercv, or t„ ft, -11 ow ion i t ni I-elf stand in the way uf remo‘ lug h. t in; ot probab.e obstacle to a ci inpit t o ~ f amity. between F ranc e, Enc.ol , t Lu 1 tii, n. t t o ofreak f. c..11,-• th. -t interesting in quiry At a„ c,. ,; n•ivel and a sedne wlia, till, Xpt I t , •I n fr.ini the present state of affaii- tu..i I . .u,:latei. France and Itik-sia, that the ; p ac, Sul settlement of the Cuba iu -ti a inay t. w be confidently cal culated up .L 1 n nit o , or. , n.,11 bt:wevn the St-err:- tar \ of St.ite. an i Mr Soule, our Anierkan M.l in 1 , on the Black Warn r : ; r , n1.,1, publish ed, it w , .;, I ti;:o Tilt ~• 4r.• two sole+ to the tine .tlon an i ti,at :einlitn-trati ,-, u it , right in Callti. , l air, ' Th• of it. own high poliey - tiu -t, .u- apptared Ixt u 4 IL' Oil I WI/,:t• '0 -`u 'J letter u• I' tkie wlach tory ~ t rio / ii4e 113,1:nat. !I a:, I of t'ubl )• ;), • - • , nc. in,,, •Itt,i. tin ~r at 1,,,5.t uncertain i r, -is.t - t•... trta-ury. ism forcib: r, rico t• ~t I ':l4.t 0.1 f Anvil-loan pro. posal- I r -• l.nr I • t. •t heard a state ment ot t o I.• •it, rte tt , pn.rc} to glre: u u 1 ),,‘ rr 1) , in , 'an au thority. 0,1. C. I, cc , -cc:n •,. • . Tithe whole of the Jo I, . . ~ nd Coca a hand tiOlitte !••Urf•:c..• • in IT road- and railway , t.. a lvaut,yes, tubs one.. sold, Spain ,ht_;,; reduet her fleet and army, for t w anit n ,, r.:(••(In to rip prehen I %sat w. ' , tate., a, -he nt present ha- n h. ..incte.pli. .I;:grt ssion inter ferebe, on :L par; ot f r :Ur f. An pow, r Ko lieced it .r civ.o•t ut tic, n-. and blessed with an h..u. giivora, ;. it h. pissildt. that such tan , t onntry upon which the curs- of nu .v ru.iniont -•cm... to rest.) ,rget the loss of that cher-he who,• ret , talon, under prisent c,rci.io-t - 111.4 . 1.. qon mien of pride than of pr 6t, ant ;0 wi t 10-. without compen sation, -he tnu-t, I tear, by th, force of events, be prepared r .r i.e. r . to submit " Jar' A phy ,, :t htu ..0 tvt my year.: practice, in reply to a e .err-p , u,it nt ~f the N. 17 Journal Commerce, -that ..in)ser bat 6 may be cou• Calved through the ranter, but the patient should stand on hi:, in that way they are very beneficial CONNI:B1‘1, FELICITY —Under this head the Detroit rulAte. an Instance of a case that curer h f rr the pap:, c"urt of that city. in which a itatt arrangel for whipping his wife the the 'yid a fter marriage He was bind fifty dollar.. and, in def a ult of payment, commit• ted to jail for %ivy chat , Tht AtLuta (Ga ) E.zaminer says, -"the nagroes have organlz.A Know Nothing lodges and are seal , ,u , ly cooperating with white folks in es:ending Anaeriesi t principles." s a., The Alabama papers state that the Hou. j amet , Abere r at ii h i p, a Itcpret•entative in C*o4ll - from that State, recently killed a man in the State of Florida The particulars are not given, but it appears that Mr. Abercrombie was discharged after a jud!cial investigation, thus implying that the homicide was justifiable SALK or THE PUBLIC WoRK —The Harrisburg Telegraph now opposes the sale of the Public Works. It men•ly favors the abolition of the ; Canal Board, in order, probably, that the Whigs may get the offices on our Improvements by ap- , pointment from ttie o.ivernor. Other papers of the Whig and Know Nothing stamp, who were clamorous for a sale, before the election; are begin- ning to sing the same tune. We presume the Democrats who were wheedled into the bargain of supporting Pollock, Mutt and Baird, as a sort Of bargain and sale compromise, will soon being to see how they are to be diddled in the end. rcunml,l if a / . th:/a ,///, fr lin Eig , oti;Arilla • I tri Poa the Cleveland Plalndealer, Nov. It As much as we have heard, read, and written about Banks breaking, we never saw one break till to-day. It was a sight, though, a rich and rare one, and we in propria perxmor were favored with a front seat to wittness the perfomanoe. Talk about circuses, Hippodromes, and Bull fights'. They are mere outside shows compared with this The Bank opened as usual at 9A. M. We should say half opened, as bill holders only had acces to the funds, Depositors having been ruled out by an assignment of its assets. At half-past 10 H A ACKLEY, as Commissioner of the Lunatic Asylum appeared with a writ of at tachment issued by the Court of Common Pleas, commanding the Sherriff to seise the assets of said Bank, or so much of them as should satisfy his claim as agent for the State 88,000 made as a special deposit by him The assignees refused compliance with the writ, thereupon at l,i o'clock the Sheriff and apraisers ptoeeeded to take an in ventory of such fixtures and things as could be cattslide of the vault The last thing mentioned on the ,list was an old rat trap, which looked as though the officers or the institution hat set and Trio ! , merely to perfect themselves In the art of cot( hi /V HALF PasT 11 --Sheriff and Deputies enter with s pick, crow-bar and cold-chisels Hos- WORTH, the big Deputy, mans the bar and ma ke'- a dash into the l 8 inch brick wall which surrounds the iron vault on the west side —Great crowd.—The Sheriff says—'Gentlemen, fall back This Room is wanted." The-crowd retreat a few steps but soon close up again —The brick and morter begin to tumble and the dust begins to fly Mr 13AcKus, the owner of the building and the attorney for the Bank, enters through the crowd, and as owner and agent for assignees for. Mils the trrspws: No use. Punch, punch, goes the big bar, the bricks keep tumpling down, and the big Deputy begins to S weat ONE QCARTER To 12 M.—Ht comes a big sledge A monster man lifts it and swings it against the wall. It jars the building like an earthquake The dust becomes suffocating. The crowd cough The assignees sneeze. The loa fers shout At lenglat the big sledge breaks trough the wall and bunts the vault! Three Aver.. proposed! but—"order! order!' from the Sheriff produced quiet. Biro—bum—went the big hammer against the vault It gave back a dismal, hollow and sepulchral sound like a ten antless tient). "The vault is reached," says an excited depositor in the crowd "Is there any thin, in it?" asks annother. "Nothing but dust," says a wag. "Gold dust?" enquired de positor "No nothing but brick and mortar dust." replied heartless. o'cLoctl —ln comes a new creditor with new attorneys, new attendants, and new legal process Great excitement! The assignees are called by name The papers are read comman ding the Sheriff, under pains and penalties, to summon the assignees, on a claim of garnishee, and to make report to the Hon Court of Com mon Pleas now in session! Here was a pickle. The big sledge which had been incessantly thun- dering at th.• very portals of this tomb of treasure sudde oily became silent, and the workmen stop ped and wiped the sweat and dust from their blood red countenances A legal discussion between opposing lawyers now commenced, with side suggestions from out siders It was feared proceedings would stop ere the interior of the vault was reached Great curiosity of those in the hall and on the sidewalk to see ichqi /poke the Bank Some claimed the Batik was first broken by a few anxious depait ors looking into the street window They wai ted to s.•e what eff, et it would have, looking into the vault itself. One stalwart looking indivi dual said he had six-hundred dollars there, and had nothing noich.rr ,11P, and as soon as there was a bolt. big enough to admit his body, he would go in and grab what he could: The Lake Captain, who the day before had sought entrance when the C.isialer was there alone, and demandek. at his jo'stors mouth tifteen• hundred dollars of his locked-up moue), was also th..re, calm, cool, but determined It was a.wolti-h place to be in, and we were afraid for a time that our cowardly legs would run sway with our courageous body, but pluck and patriotism came to our aid, and we re mained 1 o'cLocK, P. 31 —The pick, the bar, the big sledge hammer, and the cold-chissel have done their work The vault is open and the big De puty is inside handing out hands full of odd coin b its, N.e , &:e , which is revived by the appraisers, counted and registered. The money and valu ables proper in the Bank are however in a burg lar proof safe inside the vault, and the query is, how shall that be opened.' Gam(i and his men Are on hand, and when applied to open said safe, they knowingly .hake their heads, and tell the r•lbcrili he must .tz,ks off the front donr., of the vault and take ou"?.suld it bodily This they art n dottier I' >1 —lu come.- writ, of replevin, at taelinieutq, SZ(.. .&c, trona ..everal other creditors— oue, a .::t$ ru, it $15,000, belonging to the estate of !Jaye,: others of losser amounts Law yer, an? lying about; depositors are excited; j 'kers grow serious; vebgeance seams breathed against all banks; Whigsare turning Democrats, and swearing a Knuw Nothing oath against all monied incorporation-. One old line Whig says, "Guy, give meyour hand; lam with you: If I can find an anti-Bank ticket in Ohio at the next election, I will vote it:" Go-d, wv: "There s more jo,!, in Heaven over one sinner that re penteth than in Ltnety-nine put persons made perfect"— 3 P M —The corner of the vault has been demo4sned, to unhinge the two front iron doors. One SSOU lock has been knocked to "immortal " Excitement increasing. 3 1-2 P M.—The Assinguees concluded to give up the keys to the Burglar Proof safe, in which the assets of the Bank are deposited, and Mr Severance, the Cashier, has taken off his hat sad coat and gone in through the "hole in the wall," to unlock it. The Sheriff stands ready with his tin box to receive the precious contents and the apaisers to note the same. The attorney for the plantiff and one of the assignees get into a dispute, when the whole ar rangement is blown up. The safe is ordered ti be locked, and the Shetiff told to"punch it to h-11:" Matters immetlistely assumed a burg lar ious aspect, and we left, as the time to go to press had come. More to-morrow. DLATH OP A DISTINGUISHED LLDY.—We have heretofore noticed the dangerous illness of Hrs. Alexander Hamilton, the venerated widow of General Alexander Hamilton, an aid to Gen. Washington in the Revolution, and the first Secretary of the Treasury of the United States. Notwithstanding the moot skillful attention of the attending physician, Dr. Hall, and she assiduous 1 nursing of her affectionate daughter, Mrs. Holley, she expired yesterday morning. Her two eons, James A. and John C. Hamilton, Eaq., of New York, were also present at her illness and death. The remains were taken to the depot this morn int and left for New York, accompanied only by the family. Mrs. Hamilton was the daughter of Gen. Philip S Schuyler,of Albany, distinguished in the Revolutionary war. She lived totbe very advanced aged of ninety seven years and three months, and died without a struggle, in full cont. amnion with the Episcopal church, and surrey nd. ed by her surviving children and a few partici ilar friends.— Wash. Star. Ta SMUT AMONG Till QI7AXILLS • —The New York Tribune learns, from a Baltimore cor respondent, that the ghost mustered their forms so strongly among the members of the Yearly Meeting of Friends, (Hioisite branch,) in sessi Qll in Baltimore last week, that it was found nee es sary to appoint a committee of investigation on the sect The Centre (Pa.) Quarterly Meet ing, which forms a part of the Baltimore Yearly i Meeting, s mid to have become quite "carried away" by the spiritual fever. (frit i d etklß dtbstrbtr. ERIE, Ph SATURDAY MORNING, NOV. 18, 1854 :,,, ~ The following Banks have suspended since our last: Canal Bank, Cleveland Ohio. City Bank, Columbus, Ohio Mechanics' and Traders' Bank, Ciocinniti, 0 Farmers' Joint Stock, Bank, Toronto, C. W Exchange Bank, Buffalo, New York City Bank, Chicago, Illinois. Du Page County Bank, Napierville, Illinois. Miama Valley Bank, Dayton, Obin Woodbury Bank, Woodbury, Connecticut. Illinois, Indiana, and Wirconsin money gene rally is not received on Deposit by our Brokers or Banks The Way they do 'em in Cleveland 'lle account of the onslaught upon the Canal Bank of Cleveland, from the Pim'', Deafor, is truly edifying in this "monetary crisis " We do not know when any thing has tickled our fan cy like this "proceedings" on the part of the Buckeye believers in "rags and confidence." A few mire crashes among the "rag mills' ' in that State—and we think we shall have it before long —and "fusion," "rags," and "whigery" will dance a different tune at the polls from that they performed in October We have no such scenes as this in the old Keystone. And why? Because the men we have now, and have heretofore had at the helm of our ship of State, have not been "rag barrons" or "money changers " They have been true followers of the anti-Bank school of Jackson; and hence we have no "Canal Banks," or "Joint Stock" concerns to explode, and rub honest industry of its hard earned dollars. The result of the forcible entry into the vaults of the Canal Bank, as we learn from a late Deal er, was the following astonishing exhibit of as sets: Gold, Bills, Total cash, UtitiO What a glorious "institution' . is Banking, ra• pecially the Western breed: One Idea Ken ! W e don't like your one idea man! He's al ways troubled with a hobby, which be rides in cessantly when he ought to be at work Let, it get a little dark, and he's sure to set , a ghost too, though ten chances to one, his ghost, like hie hobby, is as unreal as his shadow Now, whether the atmosphere of Harrisburg is conge nial to "one idea men" or not, we will not pre tend ti say, but the fact is very evident our Edi torial friends there are great upon one ideas. They get one, and harp upon it week in and week out, and what is a little strange, they think they are saying the party thereby - The One idea is CAMPBELL and FORNEY t and no old hen ever clucked over one egg as tL , ruim. dueks over this our aro. According to tfist paper, t defeat of Bigler is owing entir ly to th, tee' if CAMPBELL'S being Post Ma r I,t u t.ii, and FOB.S EN Clerk of the Hoist W. Ln. th,ag ever so preposterous! Thea oar tr.ewl ~t the Patriot, as clever a fellow s • ever lived; he, too, has got an idea, and hls slduitivr uightly trou bled with a ghost Ili- ,Via is Cameron's aspi rations for the Sen,siOrship That is the ghost that hamar. Lis areaws, spoils his appetite, and sours the t•inilk of his human kindness." Week ly he sets up that man of straw, and as often knocks it down, and every time he does it, he swears by as many saints as there are bogs in Ireland, that to Cameron's intrigues for the Sen atorship the Democracy owe Bigler's defeat.— For instance, a few weeks since we gave it as our opinion that "several of the members," re lied upon by whigs to elect a Senator, "owed their selection to the Senatorial aspiration of Democrats, not whigs, nor Free Soilers." In a word, said we, "the Know Nothing hobby has been used as a tool by certain men to defeat reg ular candidates known as faithful t., regular nominations." This was food to feed the imagi nation of our friend of the Patriot. His one id , a would not allow him to see it in any other light than that we were "pointing unerringly to the machinations of a certain disorgatizer in the me ridian of Harrisburg;" and forthwith he gives Cameron another diy. Now, if Catnerou was the only person in , the State to whom our remark would apply, the Patriot would be excusable for applying it to him; but latiortunatety for the Democracy there are other men, and those ton who denounre him, who are 'is deep in the mire of Know Nothingism and disorganization, as the Patriot says Cameron ie. If the Patriot haa'nt seen this, it is blind, or so absorbed with its one idea that it cant see any thing else. In regard to Senator, we think that so long as we are in the minority, it is an entire and use less waste of ammunition for the Patriot and Un ion to quarrel over so bare a bone: When the Legislature meets, and the Democratic members nominate a candidate, we shall urge the election of that candidate, be it Col. MeCandles, (}en Dawson, Hon. Arnold Plumer, Hon. James Thompson, or even Gen. Cameron. And if the Harrisburg papers would pursue the same course, the party in the State would be better off. POLITICS AND PCLPIT.—We have alrea dy noticed the desecration of the pulpit of New York on Sunday previous to the election, by the political parsons of the Empire City, who deliv ered political speeches instead of sermons. The Church Journal, (Episcopalian) commenting up- on this extraordinary feature of the times, perti nently inquires: "What is the reason of all this! Has the old fashioned Gospel—whi-'h we have been accus tomed to believe was the Everkutiag Gospel— been at length exatutad and worn threadbare? Is no text &sib enough now for preachers and people except it be taken from the gospel accord ing to the daily pipers? Is it drat the ministers are tired of the old topics of grace and ealvation, and no longer believe `Gospel of which they pre tend to be 'preachers?' The point we now wish to make, however, is, that in this country, where, as we had fondly hoped, Church and State—Re ligion and politics—were thoroughly and forever divided, popular preachers are rapidly rising-to be the leadars of political parties; and pulpits are found to be—as in tunes of old—the best re milting drums to beat up voters for political par. titans. And a corresponding change has taken place in polities, too, as well as in religion—both of them rising and falling upon one Democratic pivot—vox popali. As the pulpit, therefore, has grown political, the stump has waxed pious; and if 'Nebraska' ;My oat lustily from the meeting house, it is only is sonorions unison with the 'Higher Law,' resounding from the balls of Con- ♦ Maass for thi ISM Nothiap i We hear a great deal from die papers . Know Natuasism about "Americium America," "American Sentiment," "Ame Nationality," "American patriotism," and man the other high-sounding eapressietuli designed iy catch the groundhogs, and give an air of esteems will ulster their alliance against Russia, to the purity to their political professions not possessed snores ( o l erics. Now, where on this gum by any other party. Now all this win would tit*wl Know Nothing friends be found:— perhaps pass current with us if we tad not, a • . "Note Americans to rule America," say very good memory; but as it is, we are oceuttrain tiny! guy then sustain the first appeal ed to set it down u base counterfeit. It hasn't threatOf will they adhere to that true the true ring , through the "Eagle" and the , 't Am are mixed, upon its force, in beautiful Am ' sentiment," "our eountry, may 'Abe be right; but right or wrong, our ooun ooufueion. We very well recollect bow most of try." a d if, in the event of the failure of the these very journals, that are now shouting so las- first threatened, the "alliance between tilt' for a "purer American sentiment," and de- BD and France should "extend itaelf bee nouncing the Democratic party for "pandering" " you e boundaries of Europe" to our "shoe es to "foreigners,' were engaged in the very oppo- Atlantic," will they, as they did when site, and we then thought, disreputable employ- tbluntry was engaged in a War with Mexi runt of "giving aid and comfort " to an enemy c° ` ve aid and comfort" to the enemy by de with which our country was at War. Where timing th eir own government, and wishing was their "American patriotism" then! When °c Vat army may be "welcome with bloody that illustrious Whig. Corwin, declared that the h ) to hospitable graves." We shall see! Mexicans ought to "welcome our troops with bloody hands to hospitable graves," these same r p a ws in t h e E m i rs Raw journals, that are now possessed of so much --.4,--- de- We rather like the way the recent election has "American Nationality" that they would privee adopted citizens of their rights, were eie.. sili "things 'sized up" in New York. Wh e a l . i s pleasure is attributable to the oft declar qaent in vindicating that sentiment. Where wasi ' 111h .„ then: We answer, egi allt . . atst, prete t a n d at to "m in ise y; r t y ho lo u v g e: w e: m are pa w ny il , l ' i ' ng to con_ their "American sentiment"we will exactly where it is now! The only difference is, ~s that we believe in that same aphorism.— that then they did not play the hypocrite, where. pis There is a good deal of human nature in it; more as now they revel in hypocritical east, and ho than some of your fine-toned moralists are willing through that very means to arrive at the summi to the defeat of the Demaera own. For instance, what is -.co consoling to of their ambition, the lasserated feelings of a defeated party, like party in 1856. oars in Pennsylvania, to see our opponents in But, it may be said, that the journals that Niw York—the men we have been warning the flounced our Army in Mezioil with so much lts - llear people" against for years—in a deeper terness, but are now no "chuck full of American s ,th of misery even than ourselves. And then, patriotism, pure and undefiled," have repented consolation is node the lea* welcome, because —have seen the error of their ways, end heel at deeper depth of misery is brought about by become Atmricanised in tune and sentiment.— e identical cause to which we owe our downfall; If such is the fact, we are glad to hear it. TI d over which the very men, who are now vilest sinner, it is said, may return to the bows aping in political "sack cloth and ashes" in of his Saviour; but when such is the ease we g'. .e Empire State, smiled so complacently and really see some evidence of it besides loud p.o. self-sated. We say again, there is a good feasions, and high-sounding claims of purity, i ir deal of human nature in that same aphorism that t.rcelltnce. The penitent ie politics, u in mi.. "misery loves company " gion, it is always expected will walk humbly , But it was not of this particularly for which fore men, and '.bring forth fruit, mete for rre we took up our pen to write. We said lust week lance." As these noisy advocates of air that the breach created in the whig ranks in "American Nationality and Patriotism," a the Empire State was wide and seep, anal that not done this yet, we would beg to t we did not believe it could ever be repaired that there is a first rate chance just now t+ - We have more evidence of this now than !pence the good work. They will par& , when we wrote last week. Then we could only then, if we point it out; and if, in doing3oewe judge by the complexion of the returns; but now quote a little from the New York Tribus, they the mutterings or a fraternal fight between the won't object. we suppose : * if two sections of the whig party--between the fol- Frvo tie See York Tribune. "All' LE—NAPOLEON —The French &lake M c lowers of &SWARD, and the adherents of FlLL lP:on—have burst forth in loud and distinct tones kin, the very extraordinary step of excluding, i expel , ling, an American Minister Plenipotentiary fr. soil of The artillery of the various orgains of the two France' Mr. Pierre Souls, our Minister to S . on lan- sections, sines the election have been leveled, and ding last month at Calais on his way fro d to at each discharge the "silvery" locks upon the Madrid, found himself stopped by • melodist Paris, and turned back to England again. Our M rat Parts one aide, and the "wool" upon the other, is made Gen Mason, immediately remonstrated ag e his insult to suffer most delightfully. For instance, the in energetic terms, but to no purpose; meant Mr. Settle Buffalo Commercial, the home orgain of Mr. retorted per fore* to England, and is still fo en to cross FILLMORE, in speaking of the adherents of SEW the French territory no his way to the on). at which SEW his diplomatic function* can be discharged altd which, by AKIO, avers that "They hate luny been known the way, he ought apt to have quitted. as desperate politica/ yantblers—nsen of broken fortunes and disreputable associations, always Our habitual reader§ are quite aware tb • mousse the appointment of Mr. Soule iu Minister adrid a most ready for any dirty job which their masters might unwise one, and that we have teen &bars a Melee to confirm our original impression. Buts caile's fault's rawest" This, if uttered by a "rascally 10-cie whatever their extent or character, are n eh as should fo-eo" journal, we doubt not, would be milled in. subject him to discipline at the baud. or hems it t., by famous, but coming as it does from, what the the true of imokenarable perfidy and &slim Em- Albany Journal cells, "the Buffalo mouth-piece peror of the French. Mr. Soule wee n his subject, though he was formerly a Frenchman, eif nationality of Mr. F/LL.MORI," we suppose we must take he has deliberately surrendered. He is4 r au American it as the deliberate formed opinion of that die ceisco, and entitled to all the right., of teen oiti -sen. tinguished statesman, of the political and moral step. jp France as elsewhere. The LO Tress, in as herecter of two thirds of the leaders of the whig c suming that Louis Napoleon has • nib *al otherwise with him than With a native-born &me , assumes what party in the state of New York: Well, this wondered at that the be inbe our tiourernement ma never canoed* oat compromi- g the fact, it is not to sing the personal rights of Three Mill of Oat' People. men so assailed should return thunder fur thun- This will not be done. linvective. sad invective for Accordingly Let as not be misunderstood. We I, 'Haunt ref- er ' triCllo[l, the right of the French Oose rat to determine we find the Albany Journal, and the other satel what foreigners shall or shall not be t.d in Froace. lites of SEWARD, all over the State, ringing a But if the French despot has a right I hide, without a merry peel in return. Our friend of the Fredo reason that he is not ashamed to gives pre s injiti,. o r .. s nia Censor, who, as every body knows, has as our tiovernetnent trout France, we i a right at least equally perfect to withdraw our Emb Or from Paris and many kinks in his hair almost as Fred. Doug request Napoleon's emissary here to El himself out of the las himself, wants to know why the silver greys United Stater. If the Emperor has tight to ',to what be bolted; and, after answering the question by as hit?, with his Own: our Gousernemitibas an equal right, en roc" iv in g a flagrant insult. to de,se farther intercourse sortingt— h at it was because the "State Conven with the author of that insult. Thataurely is nothing in tioo did not nominate their candidate," proceeds the character or career of Guise . "" which should to "free his mind" in regard to them in right render familiarity with him partic y desirable, plain language. He says there isn't a shade of Toe., hr -, d some not DO lii • $ 400 1460 The Landow .as Nome tru , site observations on Mr Su'Meg • not and burial is Europe, and t,n the folly of ours g • Dosuorkuto Pilii buster as our Envoy to the Spi Court. Bat thole afford no paatification for the luso cluselion aad k lo ',diets , . in en apologist for Los . sPsiassi tO Prootobe ri.ixtiniiirenr•e.. For what has th neh ikapuseer hiuuteif been, 1,4 the better part of his a life, but as Masotti rer, an agitator, and a comfit Bow OM* he W be Eniper , r but trough a Boone/du. (dation ihwe smell MC ee.sfull usurpation afterward+ s ii bosons ale Asa pi( Ate of trio hero of the Moodod sad Strasburg Amos strations to reproach us with • it as agitator to /lam' pe' the defenders of tht is Nr•Polsoas who Nona known to thi• City, and still eallir in Lomb:rut, rebuke our functi ,, niw for keeping 1,0 0 41144 1"7? I t is not the bossiness of a French nellisissb to rulitorallorrootstoss for American gotheasatiore, or does the tact that those es socistss, because they as c orpolon are as yet auracitasful, authorize the lucky and ercres4 conspirator to treat this country with marked iticloiCY Ws &wilt with sniziety tt!Pomo* of Gov. Marcy to this instil'. We trust it will oo equal dignity and spir it,if and will prove by its eats ite and obvious iturtie• that the attitude therein taken 01l o f be abandoned. We are not required to spill Frmael b . became of this freak of a despot; but, until he who , 0 learned to treat all our National representative/ oth Comity, it would be well to relieve him wholly of thet PlOyeriee. If be should there upon see tit to add Comostrikl to Diplomatic non-inter course, so much the better' In commenting ups ibis extraordinary pro ceeding of Napoleon, ha London Times, speak ing as is supposed by alhority, deelaree that our Ministers at the Coats of St. James sod St. Cloud, Messrs. Buchaiss and Mason, have "giv en as importance to ois affair which it does not possess," and that if !ley "demand explanations and redress," "they sill not be supported by put.- hir opinion in E i grep r ir probably in the United States." The Londo Nxaminer goes farther, and tbreatess the Alainistration at Washing ton; first, with en i l vesl the better feelings and they more rationalriews of that clam in the Union which ought t , Previll equally in repub lican as in moisarchiii o°eee"naeal• — the dam which possess the real g al gene of the country;" second, in tie event f the failure of the first, "that the present * Aiwa between England and France will, if n ee e s 4, extend itself beyond the boundaries o f & T ie, and protect, even on the other shoes of t'..- , ,Atlantic, interests com mon to bothvountries" 'Now, here is a chaos for our Know Nothing pretenders. The Goer went of the oountry has been indeed in tbs penes of ooe of her se- credited mitimers. matter" sot what that Minister's faults cr 414 ownilllP may be; it is not for the despots o f gerope to punish him for them, whaterer they e r3. He is an ' American "hiss"; the servant, set, mid reisrassetstive of the American governeket, soda snob is enti tled to be trotted honottblYl and not as a Wm) difference between them &US the followers of Judge Bronson, the "Hards"—that their paper s "hypocritically" kept the whig ticket flying, "that they might stab it with better effect"— The Buffalo Express (Seward Whig) says: is clear enough now that the two faction.' of the whig party can never act together again in anything like political harmony. The Silver Grey portion, with a to w honorable exceptions, hare, in this election abandoned the usages, and denounced and contemned the principles of the Whig organisation." Now, if we are to believe both sides—the or gains of the woolly's upon the one side, and the "silver greys" upon the other,—then, iu the name of all that is honest, what a precious set of Nampa the whig politicians of New Fork trust be. We do not know that we can illustrate the position of the Whigs of New York—the acrimo ny which exists between the two ,sections of the party,—better than by copying the following from the Commercial—a paper, as before re marked, that the Albany Journul says is the "Buffalo month-piece of Mr. Fillmore." The extract is pungent and pointed—read it : "Before the election the Albany Jeered/ was sullen, si • lent, stubborn, and stupid—now it is melancholy, muddled, weaning, tad malignant. It is didicult to say whirl' son autos is the most uneomfortahle or most deserving of dm. miseration. It is mighty hard, to be sure, not only to lose the labor,of fifteen years, spent in trying to eoneiliati the fav(d)rif&atitolic Irish, bet to be punished for perfor r 110011,—Wess work. Wait) was at the wrong end of Na g ms, for the moil is touch more effective t h an do n at a eherge. He has been kicked over, and our ad. riceto him Is the same as the boy gave his grandmother, under circumstances about as distreseing. The good old woman tarnished the lad with a pa and plenty of ammu nition, toning hint to load and lire SI often as his cotarnds. Young impend followed all part other instructions, he load. ed every time, but was afraid to ifillAiltbo brought home the gen more then half flan of eastrisigns. Reminding him for his poltroonery,the brave sHm,stsss snatched the piece from his bands and patted tita trigger hermit It knock ed :bsr senseleu; bat Ow wills she Wpm to stir, sad at length attempted to get up., he *inking only aos of las ten cartridges bad hems imploded. called out.—"Lis silll gay, there'. aim mere Imo& so oemo ," The moral of this is, in swore, that the re cent discharge through the "Hied** pa," is on. ly one of the tee they ,bed is reserve for the friends of Seward, sad that aritere's aisle more loads to cone." Well, let come, they won't hurt MP! my The Cossenutvills Cosner "hopes the meinbas of the neat Logialsmass will agree upon Mr. Wilmot so their choice for meoator.". the (buries an so very verdant as to suppose any Gush agreement will take place. No, sir, whigery and Snow Nothingisai don't intend to .piay the fileastorial gams fair, at all. Davy Wilmot won't get eves* moll! Mark that( Venni inth Maud Obssighns " Tits Pwe To have The stone that has raged arostedwea this week b well ealedlibld htt remind all, and eeportially those this think aid owl tot komanig, licit old Winter is t it IPProlchini with his (ratty bread; anti ley etilni. There use In ear midst doubtless many, who, notwithstanding IN whisk'!" voles, are still unprepared to breve in comfort its rigirattif *owing. Perhaps, in pane Instances, this destitution elm be laid to their owe improvidence, or profligacy; but we venture to my that a majority of "the pour ye have always with you," are not the architeeU of their own misfortune( That lone widow,(if we have say sash men' es,)rith her fatherless little ones, who can tell what trials, whist agony of heart--what a beading and a breaking of a proud spirit —what toils of body sad anxiety of mind---death and misfortune here taught her. A kind word to such, a little help, or a generous price fur labor performed, will exhibit more of the spirit of Him who blotted the widow's mite, than hundred* along prayers in the sanctuary. Say more, we have no doubt that the money spent in purchasing deo nel shirts for the Illettions, would be more acceptable to His eye if properly laid out is furnishing the same necessary garineuts for the shivering poor at our own door. But speculative reflections aside; there me many circumstances which will combine to law the coming winter one of Un usual guttering to the poor, the aged, and the afflicted. The high prices of food and fuel will reader it impossible fur many who are in poor cilettuisMaces to supply theme selves with mess neceesaries of life. Parents will weep in vein over the cries of their half famished children !abroad: destitute old age will drab ice scatty wardrobe around its feeble limbs and :buyer over the flickering flame of a scan ty lire supplied by a few sticks gleaned Crow the streets by ragged little scavengers. Although Instances of abject poverty axe comparsti•ely few in our city, and but few, it , any, squallid professional beggar' haunt our hallet/, &vault amount of suffering will neaps:only exist am , ng no. Ilene* we are glad to see that our Benevoleet association is organ icing for the approaching winter; and we would suggest that sow to the time for the ladies to commence a system of assaults upon the heart/and purses of their male friends, to procure the means of alleviating the want and suffering ()lithe poor around us. Ti that it, revelling in wealth and 'oun* your substance in riotous living, think for a moment of the sufferilgs of the poor Coot.—The Parmerir Joint Stock Bank, (which by the the by, we behove ncrer had any legal existence, I harms "bust up,' the managers of the concern issue through the the columns of the Buffalo papers the f.,ll..wing cool card: "The Agency of this Farmers' Joint Stock Bank in this city, being unable to Rcistain the protracted run upon this Institution, would beg leave to notify all parties interested. that the bulls of this Bank will be fully redeemed m real swot. olio, vireo, or otherwise, SA parties may agree " He, all ye holders .d tine, two and three dollar notes of the Partners' Joint Stock 811.131., you can all hare them re deemed in ••reist estate as fur prices." by calling at the Captain's Office. tint that generous now; and then it, ao cool and itenker like. Then, ilk, all propositions from /pock public benefactors, :t ts truly philanthropic, for won't it glee to thousands of the laboring peer who bold these notes, and who would have spent them for e.ntething to eat., if it hul'ot "burst up," an interest in the sot/. Then hulas fur the managers of that great, grand. and beneficent "zustit.otwu The Joint Stuck Bank." To be lure, the amount of '•real estate, at fair pnces," each bill bolder will be entitled to, won't be large, but it sriii be a begin ning, a nucleus to grow upon' Glorious Writ it' 0, ye ad,,catee of "rage," "generous confidence," and paper moue', how nicely your system works! Awe consoling to the poor man, whose last day's work has been turested in gurae wheel' Bank, to be told that its doors are closed, but the money be had earned to buy a dinner, will be '•roduitn ed in real estate, at fair prices" -It is an old aphorism that "be who dance, must pay the fiddler." and the paying IS no great hardship if on" only his the fun the dance; but to '•pay the fiddler" and lose thw dance,doe'nt it ao well. So some of our people think just now. Our readers, doubtletchti•• noticed a card in oar paper, informing the ptiblie that one "J. F. El earth, from Pant," wool I be henry to in.truet our fashionable' in the art of dancing—terms "i 5, v. ad. ',asset " Well, seholare flocked in, in goodly numbers, and every thing went on as "merry aa a marriage bell." lisp.. daily the "$5 to mieoweer Not only did we, "in the 11'. tle Dutch Borough." patronize .Wowsrurk , "J. F. Edwards. from Paris," but we learn be was equally successful in Westfield and Fredonia. Among the inducements held out in all three planes to scholars, was the promise that he would "Unclothe* a new 'top." And that, let us add. Is the only promise tile froy wormy gentleman has kept for the other day when bps ',bola:" assembled it was he had seeped oat, and, also, that the •'s.i in al:Lance." had paned in the "awe jig' Wti ell. it was cleverly done, we most ad. mit, though we are "done" for about $5 in work' A Nsw STs• To all who take a deep tntere•t iri the "Horne Mer kel," as our friends, the Whip. used to say when they got astride of the Tariff hobby, and are opposed to a A. I A tariff on Tea, and Coffee. and other luxuries and necessaries in the Grocery lino, we advise to look at the stock 'or our young friend across the way, Mr. T. J. flosalasos. lie is just flow opening a most capital assortment of almost eve ry thing good to eat. drink, or please the babies. W¢eth• er his goods hare paid a tariff or not at the Custods House we don't know, but we venture to guess that the yaekages of samples he laid upon vir table the other day did'ot they were so ceeep. We have no doubt be has some more of the same kind' The Lecture of Mr. Wiles, Editor of the Aine-r-temn Cric. which was nd•ertised to ci me off this evening, has been unavoidably postp,Jued until see Saturday. The subject wi:lb•—••EMiirrattolt, a Swims of National RreattA.' In one of Mr SI u previous efforts here, be ihgb.tly alluded to this subject, and he then advanced some novel and striking ideas, with which we were much pleased. We .ball be much mistaken if his lecture on Saturday will nAt be a powerful argument against some of the modest' ;111111 of politicikne. Remember the time and place—next un turday evening, at the C.-urt House. go. The King of Bat •rta has decreed that no children aged less than ten years at least. tad who have not re. releed elementary and rettgoina , nstructton. shall be em ploys , ' in manufactories. that they shall not be occupier!" more than ten now.* a day, and that of them, titree am:, be passed at school. In innuy respeeta our laws are far behind the laws o f the worst guy el ned countries in Europe. and with all our boutiag. we Int4lo learn something from this Bavarian tyrant. Solitude is Asnzerout to reason. w about brs.ng favor able to •irtne,-6zerizo9s. Crazy old maids and Bachelor ',Ref can learn from the above the cause that has brought them to their present Emendable condition. nothing but "solitude." A wife and nine or ten rerponsibilities pt a perfect care to the case of a Bachelor, while a Bachelor. -we:l shaken before taken" is a "dead ebot" upon a crazy old maid' Try It! Nan TATTIER. —The full , aitig letters, contaiturg arti cles of value, have been returned from the Dead Letter Of fice, which the writers can bare by calling at the Erie Post Office. Letter from Wl3l. Irvine to John Irvine, Pittskiurgh. Pa.. contains a Deed for land in Mclimn township. Letter from Ann Martin to Torrence Martin, Ohio street, Buffalo, N. Y., out/mins $5 money. If any of our readers know either of the parties. they will doubtless confer a favor by notifying them of this fact. The printing establishment of F. (ileum', of 80. ton, has been sold recently f.r $200.000. This us the es tablishment at which ..Gleos.l%. Pietorof," "Th. Flay of oar Caton,•' end the tole i6vereer' literature generally ts manufactured. The hustncs• muss' • profitable. Ve„ Our Academy sued otf e Warren Xait'. Where does It go to'—what does it go fur'—aid, whelk wilt st be back? Answer dna catectstraa end then go to bed "with e nub." if you like! Igs,. The Painesville Tetegroph says, show it ■ nun that ' "Direr owes a printer:* and It will guarantee t 4 show "a popular man. and one noirorsally respected." We echo the I assertior, and add ”nr testimony to its truth. /Er Frank Morris, of the &agdvlph nig, is very touch delighted beams* the question whether a "man may wear red whiskers," or not, is "maims that attenuon which Su importance demands;" and he also gives it as his doe'. (led opinion that whiskers of that color art "the only kind that should M worn." The secret of this giotillention th, fact, that Frank sports a pair of that same color, and his bitter-half has set kerloce against 'roe 11111. The Editor of the Gamete don't eat matt—e feet that iIICCOUSUI for the verenrion diameter of the Edltonals in that paper! —we have spoil oar table No. 2. of "A 4 l. moors. led" a new !rook', joisrual published by lota'? 4. Wean. New York. "Mb Anisistrused" is desist/41y cue of die bog if not the very bat, of tbo.Now York weeklies. —Matrimony does wee very welt with mote people. Thieriot" Weed the Uttar of the Albany Sanwa. Jetwww4 in the midst of all the dirty turmoil of pointy* bas fonad 'etym., to eater tamely hint the cultivation of babies. He Is now the father of IS ehildreo —his valuable helpmate ia►ing professed him with one every stereo mosiths sines their marriage. We s►osld say that Weed was rather a hammiest Wad of vegetation anyhow. with Tow" New You, Ns, LI u 4 We arejust easergiag fros the esetuneettt , tt t nis r . moat estrwordinary political (auto/as, that this State. There was an army or rather s tme ad, yt WOW elatailldatee us the f old, and the od,:woutided, sad 011eitne are awful The olcial /gores are aot yet annoneesd, set down as orrtals, that Horatio Seymour, Ls , and liquor dealers' osodidsite, Is *Would llos sn ,„, i ergan g n Wood, who was on the aim* „y 4 elect of this city. &pawn probably hat writ rt hundred imaiority over Clark, whi t , mi d sand over natal, Know NoLhint BrTwion• tht 5 of the harder, is ”110-11h01110 * The L1N11.554, 4 ship I. y.t d o ubt, but the probabalty LOC whi t , is elected; suit the rota ts • the immortal ficroggs—linottlier 1./unarm. --4"Pbasbes what a name,") or Lud,ow, It. ar has won the prise. As far as the return „.,, the three Sr. nearly neck and neck Tht be whit by a round mejonty, and snort the congreseiLmal delegstloo, Cvo oosiossn i guard of Nebraska wen stetted In :t, our Common Council, the &airmen eat vs a decided majority. The Know Nothing Tote Gas mosdol though there was some opposittun U. Barka, the Know Nothing eLne.d.:L Iv, received about 17,440 cots. wad comae s4s . , votes of being elected. Hie party claim ow, . 1 . malty a plurality and that he hat been defftwo Why of tortain inspectors of eleatior. to one strong "foreign" wards. Bowe Len thonse t t things assembled in the Part last '.moos Let .; elution& to that 'loot. Alter the meet.tg is poruon of the crowd formed in 54'.53:15.5z: Broadway with music, lights sod bar•Ltrt. foutaborod aboat Ire thousand toss The election bete was unusually quiet liquor dealers being tno bud at irtrlr, iv 4 toogh &jot. before them to spend an) Ate t , The friends of "linen:4," ihorehible e,AT Very sparingly during the struggle' At Viilliemsburg, there was rit.tt and piny sheriffs were attached by the Inst. named William Henry airrition, a respettiy, au fretfully injured about the bead that ;4 ,1,, ;1 : siihworsh, another deputy it., k• sal, and Mr. John 8. Smith. a !realer, z, niacin the oSeere (rum the mist, :at t•.. and will probably di.. Last evt2..rii toe aaaetablerd at Willmlusburc in great'.,.:. intention of avenging the aT uutrages t•a •:• , 'Myna of the Mayor, and of Mr At tree, ton of the New York Corner anti E•o f wow • prevented. An attack was ia,vr rr .; man Cat.bulic churches of St. Peter .L.l •• damage duos to the exteriors !lb.: end* of a strong body of emzeo th.Wd.rn the burning of both edifices. l fear t We have had two murders Lai three in this city since the date of my list evening a policeman named bat a through the lungs by John B. }Limes derma , ' in the grit ward. Holm.. wa• some of his rowdy Ounitittlelatl fr to tat , deers, and was seised by tiourLty anet /tabs upon the unfortunate mill, oce,•Jf e;, ; moat immediately fatal'. it cor,ter I .., verdiet equivalent to wilful murder ega.L., to DOW in the Tombs. On the same evening, .„ , ezurday , - tti• 0/1110 of Patrick Quinn .A 3 k/..e.1 _ knife in the betide of a boy ,f Allen. It mews that s drunken lad, ataggerod against Quinn and a tenet c.r., thew, during which Alien ;awn Lt madeolS. Be has nut yet been :ea.:, An attempt was made to p,sis,n Ls, nic at 133 Church street, on Tatisiss man named Situsah Jane Williams tlas suspicion of baring pliseed the :+c cI: *Lich all the parsons in the h .use •t:e• pour colored persons and one eL.'• r *. dangerously ill by the potionel 9 . girl is in a dytag coadttion A fee cz rem! or fancied injury I/ the sun IC Yesterday morning a desperate IVte: young German of the name M J tt 6- • Miss Meadeley, residing in Itt pearl that she had promised to mer • eftervrazl declined to have him, • - 6- • her with a pistol and knife in a r. Fortunately the liistol which was missed fire and the girl's mother St :6 _ . he was about to plunge the sae. Re was united and • 6 son, with On. he said be lotecd•.) t. ly. and with the other t .•, w a), The above is a black csta,ope • blush for New York as I seal .t Tae pets, I must leave for IC ',ter time, is the pie, thus weak, atmita ms •:r of twine of fir The steamship NJrin red plowall with Ban Franese, ices the li t ., 500,000 in gold ,islet. She ct.....ge_ loss of the Yankee Bade, on tier r,3sie sieco to Panama the ran upon the 1 -,, L ,14 fe•ptiOn In •Ng on tt.e let inst. The s. 'the Akers deserte.i the ship and wo-. , RAE. were swamps 1 in the surf, an: !• - Per•ons, whom were lushes. were • that after the wreck, Milt of tae eteers.;• unitted r 'sorry end murder on board ,ut 31J0 000 sunk w,th t. evrersb: :Loot. The North Star hr ri:• • ceislw attack of the English an Russian star on at Petropolouski sehatka, in which the Brittsh A Iz -s The allies I,st slaty and the Itus..st , sod wounded Art ,, un , linit frauds and forserlri San Franeisco. Henry Melo, of the aiko.t extencre lumber m•••• tailed $lOO,OOO. and r Mal • el **toe SUI , UtA. C.,600,0v0 ui •.. hie plunder in a private arrna•l Let Schuyler hide his ditoin.shei The America is at Halite' w,'.. L 2dth ult. Sebastopol is not t..••' sent. The bombardment ws• ;. • 21st , little imprevoion hal ...• ' harrassed the silted armies w,:❑ •• umforrattly repulsed. Au'tr s • thought that a collision between • \ fronuer and tie RUB/AL. racer minister of Spairs, - has been • through France. The Turks ,•••• e Uumn. Turke• in Ana Ono ut tbe Aretwe'• bwst, ttra satiovnitr Loly Dula. su.i ar Lance, also empty. The ease of Jaspar Poverty, c ed to bun hts warehouse to 1 r.: is non going on in the Court ' The dank failure/ in the ‘‘..' Amason in Wall street. Go , 30th inn. for thankigiriug i 1 r his re -election. The nuaekets an dull. There per barrel in Flour and MOO P r` ' lan Corn ia also a trifle lower - I.lr D. Jayne. of Patent Medicine man. is a ral.,u .r.enate from Penneylranla. ''lll-41,1 We are told As- Cultivate your bear v't:' and remember -whate.,et er n tot reap."—p,.. Te ler pato: . P r what, SM. May we not burr AD ' lO ' 4 phew to Laputk. who beamt , from cucumber', 'ter. oust ployeci than the Oberenure I. from the New York eleet,oo' Certainly you pay -Corr. , * I r' you like, for there Is co uos , z' so muck nein, to "borrow" you can "borrow" with so m uch i•er; " wercial. The people of tee - *boot one hundred thoutaei bite twenty-!•e-or thiry uM I are either nob or to a fair szy of these "4"66141, or tloon.hlog 6 dtswirowasents Wb. worth. or, s <rir F i ao enormous W o e ,.f m oney and acquired by doing hell J.Kr - people quarrel and offend • 6toae has rom — or ly that sbot:tctoterrl .-r 4 ° 4 ti°°' Lock is,. *be II dews:mei td what lower. Oh, take your woo. We sadeteuued that tb• guor-• have ozpoUed a mamba Woos*, I aposeasle ease. and &nether too2oo Tau irDa Wi n. 0..... 1 ~4 ftes e/ Ow g m , 0h.,„,... Suppose is man sows hi. ' • , ' -' ' '
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers