hit Makin Obstrbtr. ERIE, PA SATURDAY MORNING JUNE IG, 1355 Native Convention. We suppose, in order to keep our readers post ed in theyreaf . events of the day, we must tell them all about the Native American Convention that came off in Harrisburg laal week This gathering was not a "Know Nothiug" reunion in the proper acceptation of the term, though it is probable most if not all its members had seen "Sam " From what we can gather at this dis dance from the scene of action, it appears that those who got np the assemblage under cooeider talon , are not the sieves pur e followers o f "Sam," but eschew "Sam's secrecy and lying What they are they proclaim to the world, and, like the darkie with the enorrneus mouth, tell tho.e.! who examine their countenance that if they don't like the appearance of things, they need'ut jump in! In this part/ell/sir, therefore, the "Natives" who assembled at Harrisburg last week, are to ke commended But to their sayings and doings at Harrisburg. The Convention was organised by appointing Dr. Wm J. A. Birkey, of Phila delphia, President, six vice-Presidents and two Secretaries Gen Conrad Shinier, of Nothanip ton; Kimber Cleaver, of N..rthumberlaud; au I Bloomfield M Spicer, of Bucks, were then play ed in nomination for Canal Commissioner, and the name of Gen. Shimer having been withdrawn, the Convention proceeded to ballot, when Kim ber Cleaver received 18 votes, anti was declared duly nominated. A resolution to nominate OM - modore Stockton for the Presidency- was lost by a vote of 13 to 7; when, on motion of Kimber Cleaver, the following gentlemen were recur* mended to the National Convention for nomina tion: R. F Stockton, of New Jersey; Kenneth Raynor, of South Carolina; NVtu Smith, of Ala • bailee Anon Jones, of Texas, John 31 Clay ton, of Delaware, and Jacob 8r00m.., of Penn• sylvania. After which, and the appAntieete of delegates to a National Cinventien, t!le Couven tion adjourned. lu regard to the cat.(!tdate for Canal Commieeioder, we can ,n)). .ay with a uotemporary, limber is an old nag on that line, and we should thank wu,t hi- pretty near tired of running by this time. How is This? We hare two eopi, 6 Of the GUZPitt: of this week before us, and what i, a link singular, th y are /20t alike In No. I, in an article honied, -De c itied —no yet," net. uni the following,. • • • we do not regLrd th , vernor Pollock'• sesoninit hesitation/LS noeeteartly Act/1603ns from t., rep/Hatton for firmness And o•urag". when we consider tit , • tieture and 'inety of the influeoccs hruuzht to herr for the purpose of prude/nog a Cite Ot letter from HArris',,,rir .litted the 11th they, asy,. Lai sattsfted that meml,•r. ~1 the Su preen• Beech ere ruLieeroring L. , eXerCise ru mews/see aeramet Brte. They desire the retutog of our 11:11 lam rsof wurtarkes in their tporposes, nor to the efforts they hare made" But the impropnety of interfersttee from .arA quarter, mutt, we think, be ressilaly 011111feSt t.. His leney, and ,the ...Mort' of lA, ir 'news c,initequently pass for a►usht We are by no LoVaLl de•ip oilcnt in re• card Cu the result In N0."2, in the awe artielc, tkeenpying the same apace vacated by the above, we find the following: • • • w , do out ',lewd Gurornot Potluck's seeming hesitation us Benin/aril, detracting from his reputation fir ursituvss stud •rawu.c w . last the na ture and variety the influences l.rcischt tv bear for the purpose of producing a veto These influenced we 0.1,1 Dig Ihrw spec early refer to: they will simmer In time. and deinonstratof the mitif.rturie of Erie in haring the opposi tion of men uecupy tog ' high places" in the State of wbicb she (rotas a part The liueerhoeti mistake is not in the want of friendly feeling, but in heekLug the repre,entativu" of hostile wally+, end to relying upon assurances of an amicable adjustment. Believing him to be etr, tly honest and disposed to dv right in the p,•emise+, we are by D means despondent in regard to the result Which is the true Gazette, and which i. the false? W i ll somebody answer In No 1 ortho dox, or is No 2? If th 2 latter, our extempora ry must have been in the posit' when he put his paper to press, of the voter that didn't know how to vote, because the man that told him had'ut been mind yet But joking aside; Nu. 2, is evidently the true Gaza", and a more scath ing commentary upon the attempt made to la. the Governor's pusillanimity upon the shoulders of the Judges of the Supreme Court, could not have been uttered. It is easy enough to charge crim inality upon "persons in high places," because identity is covered; but when, as in No. 1, the individuals are pointed out, the attempt to shield Pollock by tying him to the apron strings of the Judges of the Supreme Court must fail, for the simple reason t4at they are wri‘ini men, and if necessary will nail it to the counter But ad• mitring it to be true, what a complimentary light does No. I place his Excellency, JAMES Pot, POLLCK! MR. BuctiANAN.—The Washington rition gives the speech of Mr. Buchanan, at the "Royal Literary Fund Dinner" given in London the 22d ultimo. The Lord Bishop of Oxford, in the chair, proposed the following toast:—"The literature and science of the Unite.] Stater, and the American minister, Mr Buchanan." Mr. Butt:masa responded in a very handsome speech in which he alluded to the fact that, the day was put in England when it could beaslerd with pro priety, Who reads a American book? "But," he proceeded: "It mart not be interfaced that, althongh preys' of your approbatioa, we estimate oar attainments in humane and weitince \eyelid their proper rides. We freely admit ant ours is nothing more thee the early promise of a healthy wad aprons youth, but we lies a the evallilent hope that oar inanrity will more than justify this pr•mtim. "We have bat fairly commenced the task, but as we aim at exeislikee in llitarature and science, we shall re- Ina our 'Car anal, if possible, we attain a pia* in the temple of fisase on the littoo proud tali:10110e with yoursel ves, "We wilt try"—yea, "re riff try " This has become a motto of our country." Bari.= Hild Mont.—A few evenings since, in the board of Aldermen in New York, a rim occurred between two noted aldermen, Briggs sad Howard It appears that David O'Keefe sad son both hold office under the city adminus tration. Briggs, by *ay of ridicule, introduced $ resolution requesting the Mayor to appoint Nra. O'Keefe matron of a statioaliouse. This ;silted the ire of Howard, who pronounced Briggs a coward. The•tatter retorted that Howard was s public pauper, whereupon Howard seised an lab bottle and threw it at the bead of his brother alderman, who fortunately dodged in time to save hinuielf from the ink stand, though that did not mad his troubles, for when he left the ishamber young O'Keefe "pitched in" and gare hint an unmerciful eowhiding, for taking such liberties with big 'bother's name.- Served him right. gm. A 'dispatch from Washington says, the hide spread rumor that Col. Green of the Beaton Alt is to sneered Mr. Buchanan as Minister to England is wholly untrue. "Stand up Beal" Senator Joao, of taannwen, Juia - writant a letter to the Memphis "kis, is which he animadverts with such sewer- Sty spin , the Ham Nothing inoventent. Fiertator Jowls is a nit*, bet he Nat stead ~yaw% ran to bat the Dowoortit. seal 4 IP .- -..--"" Who is Itswaisible 1 Our neighbor "round the corner" is unusual ly sensitive over the &Amino we made last week to the deception practiced, for political object -4, upon the people of this comity last Fall in assur ing them of Gov. Pollock's friendship for and sympathy with them in their great atruggle with the railr,iad monopoly. We certainly buy, no desire to wound unnecessarily our cotemporary's "sensitive nature" his "personal veracity" w 44 do not call in question, nor the houraty of his motives in adhering firmly to party—but there is such a thing as party blindiese--a suet of politi es! hallucination, in which the unfortunate sub sect of it, sees and hears things from political fa vorites that are totally oblivious to the eys and ears of others That, we take it, was the case with our neighbor "round the corner" last Fall: The fault, then, is not his—he is not responsible —but we regret we cant say as much for those who follow such "blind guides." When the blind lead the blind, they are both apt to fall in to the ditch; and that is just the catastrophy that has happened in thisease. Erie county has trusted for years to the "blind guide" "round the cor ner," and Erie is now in the ditch! Hut to return to the specific matter ander con sideration The Gazette says, among the other evidenceitalludes to toshow that it is the Gover nor who has deceived our people, and 'not the Gazette, that he used words "from the speakers' :rand in this city" of "sympathy and interest" that lead his hearers to suppose him favorable to the question at issue—i e. what the Gazette then called our "local hobby." We beg leave to say that there is just where we blame. the Gazelle, for no Editor, unless under the influence of some deep hallucination, would have told his readers that the speaker upon that cocas . ion defined his position with satisfaction or clearness. On the contrary, we know, for we have been told since by the Shanghia's and Anti-Shanghia'e who were then in his train, that the Erie question was dodged by ale:vet/lent, and that the faeces then publishe‘lby ue,were substantially correct. And yet the Gazette told its readers, sod they relied upon its "veracity," that Pollock had then and there boldly irk the issue before the people, and bad committetehiruself to the Erie question: It also ••impeaehed our personal veracity," for it denied in Coto the version we'gave of that affair; but time, the righter of all wrongs, has demon strated that the statements we then made were true. and the warning voice we raised, was the voice of prophesy: We ere satisfied: But to further clear himself at the expense Pollock, our neighbor "round the corner" sass 'c c . "ought to know that I ;4)v Pollock addressed a letter tv the Democratic 13arbeette Committee in which he boldly committed himself to the gen cell features of the Erie question " Perhaps we "ought to knew" this, but we cant perceive how we —ought t" knew . ' what wets never com municated to us In the first place, there was no Demoeratie Berbacue Committee" —the com mittee efinvitatien to that wonderful performance being composed of both political parties; and in the next, we were not one of that body, so that any insinuation that the publication of the letter tf any was written of the character claimed by the Gazette, a claim we very much doubt;—was suppressed by our connivance or knowledge, is in spirit and iu letter untrue: In regard to that "extract from a letter" from Pollock, "given in the columns of the Guzette last November," we have only to say that our recollection of it is that it was written before the writer was the whig neruinee, and hence can only be regarded as the opinion of a private gentleman, written in con lidenee to a friend, and hence in no way binding upon the actions of the Governor—,and so tie Governor undoubtedly eonsiders it. In regard to the signing of the repeal bill by Gov. Bigler, about which the Gazette has beep ed in season and out of season ever since its tAers laical trinity—Walker, Tracy and Gourtright— ' betrayed the interests of Erie, and sold oat to the Buffalo railroad King, we have simply teisay that e have never yet been able to perceive how the Governor could have consistently doese otherwise. Had the gauge laws of the State bees outfitted to the roads running through Erie county, the question of repeal would then have worn a dif- ferent aspect; but unfortunately such was not the fact. Those laws—for there was more than one act—iuterfered with almost every projected iirk provenietit in the counties South and East of us, hence when those e 'unties asked to be relieved from their operation, the Executive, who owes no fesity to any particular county td the injary of many others, could do no less than give their ap peal his approbation. But it is useless to argue thisiluestion, for the Gazette is not Ito stupid as noCto see the point involved; besides it knoll's, or "ought to know," for the fact is recorded in the proceedings of the Legislature, that an at tempt was made (and we know it was made at the instigation of Gov. Bigler himself) to exempt Erie C7uaty front-the opera/14m of the act repeal ing the yauge laws, but it was met by the stern And uncompromising apposition of the members from Erie county! Why it was so met, is now evident.. Walker was then the brasen image at whose feet the people's "blind guide" worship. ed, and Walker is now—where? Just where for ten years before he went, we had told this "blind guide" ani Its followars he would be—if he was tempted. A few words more upon another point, and we" leave our ootemporary to "chew the cud of sweet and bitter fancies" these remioenees call up. The Gazette lays great stress upon, and cau tious its readers against what, it pleases to call our "attempts to manufacture political capital" out of this question. The views it expresses about the necessity of not allowiug this question to become an element of party differenoe, are all j °Ng or " la ' ll "T"a al— A c^rre"Prmient (" very well in their place; but we may as well let % t rte Boston Paw relates a ea-catboat:tee that 04: our position be known now as at any other time. I -tarred on the Ito cheater and Niagara Falls rail- W e are willi ng to let t hi s b e t h e quest i on b e f ore mad the other day, that is worth repeating. At the people, and upon its merits call the people to a way statiorr. the oorrespoodent says he noticed the haute; but we say now, and we want it di,. a very dignified but an-riouslooitiag eoeutenauce timely understood by friends sad foes, that if entering the 41. tr, the possessor, a woman, aft , r our help is wanted to thrash the Biteagtods am 1 asking a akcH'ele eelectioe of a a eaL al'P e ared Per their allies, the Know Nothings, out af their boots fectly composed sad emnfertably situated fur the this Fall, it can be had;' but it eat only be bad je2eneY. He thought nothing inure of the air by the ignoring of party lines, and a fair deal cumstance, nut if his attention was attracted by the cards. There must b e no uebooting reea af a sudden, quick movement on the part of the the board." oa r Demeeratie fries& shen are, I Lune female toe "iris the door, screaming to the if we can prevent, be "hewers o f wood sad draw _ oondsctor, "Oh: dear, cant you welt two ur thol: ers dwater,,,saleas grey are tamed to "sit down. ' minutes, 'till I r es up to the hotel and get my at the first table." We hope we are un d ein e ma it 1 1 baby? I forgot ait *Low it." That was uu• as. We understand that Judge eanmati; doubtedly one of ,'Ae mothers! Thursday Let, decided, in the case of Kellogg 4 i sir Mr. J. Hol iwtlß ape , :la. agent of the against Tharataa r that it was not imellsry that.; Post Mee Deferent eat, bee issued a letter rela, the individual cleated Ju s t i t s of she Pewee, five to the statement rem mtly published respect should be an inhabitant hi the district for which r lag the practice of Malt elietitrin g P a p er ,fr " la be is ideated, at the time of his eleeties, bus ) letters, b a nk Dotal, frail a +ita-, procured from met be a rellidhat of his "erie• iftermulki do- post offices JKr. Hof hem a says the matter boa lag Liu Wm of swim. This maim Thoesess ben fay fan s i ga t e d, as f peered to be we tier • 41 "" fue 4 ° 11 °4 Word for the fry auks. This Di *just as t ale expeet4 'Oft we yam Sid tad the an. A Know Nothing Platform. “Illr road:iris are doubtless aware, there has been a grim , ' Know Nothing Biannual Conven tion iu rrs,.ion in Philadelphia for she past ten dap, the o.tensible object of which was the e on. struetion of a Plat f , rm, but the r-al object do parceling out of the tederal others in 1856. Ail the broken p hick 4 i,f the yountry were there; old wiu-I broken Itoirierats, ling blotted and spawned f.undertal free writers, and ilisappomted wer,- jumbled up to gether, an I lahele.i .•Sain ” 41/011 (WO was it supposed that this pie-had party could agree—hatred of the present Adminnuration, and an intense longing for the flesh pots of official power The first Wu+ natural, because those eotu• posing the assemblage who had not been lov% r looked in the dispensing of official favors in 1853, were the men who have figured as leading oppo nents of the I.leinocracy, and their measure, for There war. Johnston, of this State, Col- = fax, of Is , Prentice, of by . and many others whose past history is linked with defunct Whig ery, but whose parti , -ular identity it is tainecrs , sary to mention Suffice it to say, they were all there—the "Tray, Blanche, and Sweetheart" ~f the opponents of Democracy. And n u t o f this material were selected thirty.one of the most ex perienced to construct a platform upon which to rally forces for the overthrow of the Ad tninistratiou. We can finey we see thereuegade Democrats in the Council chuckling, while this committee was iu incubation, over the prospect of a sweet revenge fir their fancied wrongs;— while the o'd wh.z. stagers, hungry and gaunt from their long fast, were smacking their lips at the bare anticipation ..f the "fat thongs" succe-, in '56 would fill their empty plates. But then, what blank awarem-ut must have Spread over their faces when the Coui mit tee upon the platform reported one which, upon the slavery question. tnibodies the identical principles of the (ilium,/ Democracy, WA that hest abused of Democratic measures, the Kau-:ay Nebraska bill. But least we may. be autewatil of misrepresentation, we quote the slavery portion of the Know Nothing platform, as reported iu the New York /Tirol& Yttn.auet.E nis i June l' The following reaclutious r , •sp .c,iug the slay /Ty question have born adopted by tl.c platfnrin cotutnittee:— Restdee,t, That tine American party, having arisen up on the ruins and in despite of the oppi sition of the whig anti Democratic parties, cannot be held in any manlier rspon.ibie f.ir the ohnox i'us acts vt vii1.... , t pietigo , , of e i t her; that the systcmatie agitation of :he• slavery question by those parties hits elevated sectlmal hostility into a passive element ot p rir Leal p ,wee, awl brought our instituteln. iutit 'a.m. It Its-, therefore. beeonic the iwpt rat ivy duty of the American par ty to interpose t pr the puepise of gi,ring pea,. to the country anti p , •rpt.t atty to the t hi ill; tlt 0, as experit nee Liu shown, it is impossible to re• eon e il e "pinions so extremae as those which sep arate the ilisputa.nts; and. as there can ho no di. honor in submitting to the laws, the National C•mucil has deco:U.4l it the best guarantee of c ola mon just.lee and of future peace to abide by and maintain the existing laws upon the suby , et of slavery, as a final and conclusive settlement of i that subject in spirit soil lu sub.tasuce Re.wlool, Thu: iu regarding it the highest ' ty to avow these opinions, upon a S':hjet:t. portant, in distinct and unequivocal term:, i t hereby de,iareti, es tue sens e ~t cal Council, that C po.i t tes.ses pole, , Jill the C )Eotittiti.,ll W legislate 111. oh hc -tif.lr • t slavery in t.Lc Sta . 4 +.or t,, t•xeitt , l , • any Spat, is ot, admission into the I . ni t'ou,•itu tion CIO: , or ree ,, *ll , l' .1. 11.-titUtt , .o of 1 slavery as a part id . the 1 :,, 081 ex pressly permitted any of opinion up , u the power of Cottgress r en:at/10.4 Ur pr,,iiilor slavery in any Tciri.orv, it is th • setts.. of this National C that Cougre-s ought not t gishite upon !i/ et of -lav , •ry .t- it exist , in the District. Cotumbia, and that any interfer e:pee of Congrc..- with slavery, as it exists in the said District, would be a violation of ttie spirit and intention of the compact by which the State of Maryland ceded it to the finite(' States, and a breach of the national faith. There is a discovery for you: After tiles grumblers have denounced the Administration to the lowest depth of political damnation, be. ctsuse of the passage of the Nebraska bill, they now turn round and clamber upon the same plat. form; and, in the language of the Cleveland Plain Denier, by so doing, vindicate, bcfuo. the world the engduet of Senator Douglas, the Idministratien, and all the friends al e that mea sure. In a word, so evident is the truth eoncer- Ding this matter, that now, at least, the mist bitter and malignaut among the oppments of Democracy am constrained by a sense of ju s tic e , by the dicta ',tea of a sound and by the de mands of tut imperative necessity, ito' only to endorse the much abused doctrine of popular sov ereignty, bat to make it the basis of all the hopes indulged -f isueces4 in the futnr 1 .411.211 as we abhor the infamous principle s of Know Nothingiam, and little as Wklre 4 ll 'et the motive by which the so-called "order" is governed, wc can do nolcas than rcjolce, that, out of the months of those babes and sucklings of Pr isertption, the praise of Democracy has at length b6en perfect ed. But am can hardly restrain from glancing at the state of things which must neeessarily I>e produced b r this deathbed repentance of the Know Nothings. In the first. place it fixes an impassible gulf between the ••11.qublican," or free soil par t 3., and the friends of "gam, - ren dering a Fusin e impracticable, without involving the elements e f destruction to both parties, and leaving the two factions on opposite sides of Jor• don. And se eondly, it, takearoua the Know Notishegs the h tst excuse for hostility to the Dem ocratic party, t while , they still bold fast to their infamous polici of Proscription—a policy which will sink any party below the twit of either compulsion or .contempt. Our NI sad the GowerWitt • 0. • we tift not ovoid tlettorrant PedinelVe *easing t"'"u" , "" 1 " ""orearcitly detracting true hie rip i st a g" for iira WWI and auaraca—Oisactit.. We would like tsi know the featercs and di wee-ions of the assree's Pitapdarti of "fineness and courage be the editors of that seett lack even enough of those leanly qualities to-kiwis au intelligent opinion upon, •'r have they ehrrucit and definite notions of them, and yet too touch e , oicerued for .‘ pal try, e• mtniet party purposes," to g i ve th e ir r etu kt a a u honest, fearless and frank faith; with an wholesome applica tion where needed. Tell us what constituter the resolute, courageous man!" What asaktat the trustworthy, reliable representstive is it the prompt, independent deichary of dtity, or that vacillation and "hesitation" which puts off the day" until to.rnorrovr, or seeks shelter from the heroin assumption of resp , nvtbtitn, beneath the coward's mantle—a comproutis, , ? These are plain questions, understood by all witiaoot offort, and only to be avoided by palpable dodging Al re.tay are the citizens of Eros and the county answering them for thctivw) rev, in tones too wh irh, if the troubling and imploring style of the last Gazette is at all significant, are very far from b ing agreeable to the ears of its editors. If there any one trait peculiarly and universally cha racteristic of the peoplt• of this country, it is nu unwa.nring, hearty devotion to a4l admiration o f co sod c ourage" in thwarter. Th.ae were protniiieut among the powerful spells th.tt bound Americans so utianitnously to the support ,S a Washington or a Jackson, and yet bind them w their memories. And this always will be the case autongst au intelli4eut, free people, living under a representative government. Wheta men of true and decided stamp are at the "head affairs," a feeling of security and a conscious uesthat every emergency will be boldly and in stantly met, and the proper &ensures promptly adopted to grapple with it, are infused into the mind of the citizen and constituent, and that hearty devotion to the sources of those comforta hie feelings is the natural and due result If these reactions are just, then our friends "arnund th ttocuer" must ackniwledge that "their Gov ernor," at least in the "Erie matter," has 'Mown ;ht. "white feather,"and instead of singing hosan nas to virtues that evidently be d nk't and racking their ingenuity to frame plausible ~.e . e u„ .,„ Cro the ‘poeltetiug' of Our Hill, or a pro. ,pective veto, they had better ooufess to the de ception practised, and the pusilla.,iimity of POl I.wk .r our part, this ruinous deiay of action by Governor totally unaccountable upon sound An,i.pr per reasoning. Toe SupretneCourt, slut yoar •igo, decided 16.0 Fate was "legally" rlght, Au,l tlwrefor to he .ust.iined in her positooa as in.itter of LAW, 'lire Legtslature, by au nun ,dally large and complimentary majority, two tuontlis sineA;, pr Ju.,uneed Erie right in r e lation to the J ttc and I,Jcal IuGeMSIS, and therefor to be -astatine(' in the matter of POLICY. What up.re c..uld au occupant of the Executive chair a.l, to warrot energetic, prompt action iu fa• v er of this e immunity! Right in Ltw, right in Policy, anti yet t,u be denied utterly the practie.tl tvantages of a position so high in principle! us, there is more thin a wont of "firmness iii,l courage" in this neglect of duty; a something it lo ,ks very much akin to a want of moral uonesty. Governors are 2$ W u r IA to "support the Croistitutirm oftbeState, and perform all of their duties with fidelity." The rights and wants of t:t C rople are, aceororiug to the same Constitu tion, determined by the Courts and the Legisla ture The rights of Erie, as we have just said and every body knows, have been defined and de feuded by both those departuatnents, and thy' ..imple writing of one wan t s name is all that is wanted to practically accomplish the will of b That name has not yet been written, nod we ark of the Gazett., where now is that "fiti .lity" which th t lonsti tu t ion of the State requires under the sol • emu sanction of an Oath. It will not exeulpAte the Governor to say, that "Le le:II sign the Bill when he gets'ready," for it is a time honored pro. verb—that a "delay of,Justice is but little short, of a ./rnfat " N 0011.1.88 OF THE WEST.-Our exchanges have been full, for a week past, of the sayings and doings'at the celebration of the opening of the Chicago and Burlington railroad on the its, iu..t. Among the incident particularly worthy of remark is this. At thedinnei., Fitz henry War r,•ti, formerly assistant postmaster general, intro duced to the meeting Gen. Cass. The general mounted a chair, protesting that it was rather to dangerous, however, for an "old fogy," and made a Terch in which he referred to she history of the west, ill, rapid advancement, and the difficulty of making eastern people believe the woalerful pro. grem that has been made in so short a time.— lie referred in conclusion, to the preservation of the Unk.n, and the importance of western people particularly, or keeping it intact. Every allusion to the subject was hailed with deafening cheers. Mr. Douglass spoke next, and while Gen. Cass referred to the past, Mr. D. talked of the future. The Pacific Railrmd, the union of the states, were referred to iu strains of eloquent enthusiasm. and received by the assemblage with great faviir. Depend upon it, Stephen A. Douglas embodies the future of this great west more than any other matt in the United States; and as the west is destined to shape the fortunes of the United Sta tes wore than any other section, it may as well be reinenigered We quote the N. T. Day Book correspon dent.-- "Evsn Western people themselves, although generally seeused of ''boasting," have Do ade quate conception of the uawritten history of this vast north west territory, embracing u it does a r,.gion of country betore which the kingdoms and empires) 01 Europe sink into insignificance. My observation here Des ootiviootii me, even con trary to my former eonvictious, that eastern peo ple who are in the habit of snee ring at Mr. Douglass, "will wake up some fine morning" to bud that they have been sneering at a great luau." There was a mass meeting of the oppo nents of the new anti license law, in Lancaster on Saturday last. I was numerously attended, and its pioceedings marked with much embusi um- Delegations were in attendance groin Beim and L •benon,ns well as from all seet:ons of Isia. caster county. Several delegations carried ap propriate banners, mid were so !omptutied by brass heads. A proeession was formed under the direction of Col. W. 8 imwake, which moved through all the principal streets of the city. So it appears there is opposition to the prohibition in ad ieks'y idealisms as well as Democratic serke. Cott ueentrille Banner please notice! le. Two lotailrad everaisq for she aaval aw oke were skipped as tiro, baked Swim Naval Ranlosvour, is Plrlia#4plio, dui* tM swoush of May. This is the talc amber shipped as that efatios , far fee 100111101. do bet us Arrival 'of the &lath& CLIVE*D. Jibe 12 At three o'ehich this naoruing, off Blair Biter, NSW YORK, JOS , 111. I the propeller Delaware ran into the schooner E. The Atlantic reachpd her dock at 81 A. M. 1 M Lyon,laden with Aual—vesashankeventy with Liverpool dates to anonsad / 02 &wt.. of water in twenty ukintest Th e w Win pllLlS4Dgert , saved. The propeller sur thefts/lelht, The news is of the utmost importance and ex. J mititook it fur the Cleveland light. The vessel eitingithar:Acu r, conveying as it dots three dia- was insured for 82200 in a Cleveland Co ' taut successes by the Allies. Fat, by the LW learn flout diepatt% jirst-Virteived fhat a we had a brief 'announeetneut that the French , dat r uetiye fire was raging last night at Hillsdale, bad driven the R u hm a ns front a strong position I m ie b, Th e operator at Hillsdale 04)4 the town of defence or:place d'art Ute before Sebastopol wan burning up. and the wires Mr. re in Ereat This occurred during the nights of the 2.2 1 / 4501 . danger of being destroyed • N... forth -r parties 33rd and was a most sanguinary affair, the place I lars at present being defended by nearly the whole garrison The total losseS on bot. 4 lllltlB andwoun- ANCriallit KNOW. NuTatiga C LIRA Y M ded set down at 3000 f Another o f the s e Hitploo rro.readd, the notable Gen. Pennine, says the Russian loss was eller.' author of &ever in chi Dark, took away a MAU'S mous, and that of his own troops eonsiderable i wife, in Brown county, Auid 'traveled fur pl..ssure . but much lees The French retained their with her till the wronged hu.sbauti ov e rt,: lac Lieu. Prince tiortschakoff's nee .nut is this:— 1 loving pair And this LUAU ' S titait I....Virg ped- Yesterday e vening 1.7 ~:tlt.itt. of the meaty by his brother reverends throu;:ti out w • with reserves, attacked our trench of counter, I land to co rrect the toorui, of the young pry approach commenced the day before in front of I and lo excite the old folks :Against eat ti..ll,isin bastions Nos five and six The combat was san• A singular way sowe aeli , rs have of .enttug. gumary and lasted during the whole night. Our h o ly exetuples b. fore their flocks, and u i e iu..- 12 Imitations lost nearty2solltnen to dnviug back tiug the young by placing such vulgar IP the enemy the one alluded to, and litiga.u, and Maria 31, Pelissier ttlegrapbs under date 25th, P. 31 : iu their hands —(7.rnwitt t ()G.') San To-day we havo ueeupitd the line ot the Teller- uaya. The enemy who were not in force offer- i etl but little resistatme an 1 retreated rapidly into! the toils. We have detinit-ly established our-' selves in the works tnirried during the nights of the 22d and 2.3 d An armistice was agreed ou for estimate the dead, and we were able to form au estimate of the enemy's loss - They must be! about .ittUu or WOO killed awl wounded May 27th —The enemy bad made no demon stration either iu front ot the piece or against our lines k.. 0 the Tchernaia The works of for (Mention at Remand.' are priors-dug The san itary condition of the army continues good. May 27th, 9 A M.—The expedition to Ker took and Yeutkale has been attended with cow -1 plete success The enemy fled at the approach of the allies They blew up their powder magazines, destroyed their batteries and burned their steamers, The sea of Azof is occupied by the allied sticadr , m. It am rumored in Paris that Pelissier had attacked and routed Liprandi's firer Canrobert was reported wounded, and another General aided. rutuor was rugarded as very doubtful Lord Raglan telegraphs a s follows, May 627th. We are tuasttrs of the Sea of Asof without any casualty The troops landed at Bertsch on her Majesty's birth-day, the 240—and the enemy fled, blow.) mg up the fortifie:ttions on both sides of the Straits, and de.troying their steamers. Some vessels and 50 guns have fallen into the bands of the allies. Lai Raglan further telegraphs —That nn the I:sth, Gen Sir George Brown had reached Vent kale, having the previous day destroyed a foutt- ' dry near Kertseh, where shut, shell and Minte Galls were manufactured In advance the French were on the tight, the Elvish on the left, and the Turks in reserve A despatch front Laid Raglan of the 30th, say Litters trim lieu Brown and Admiral Ly , ms of the 24 announce the destruction by the eueiny of t'our Russia war steamers and large depot of corn The Allies' ship+ had succeeded in bbiating up a magazine at Arabat and desiroying abut 100 merchant vessel*. Only one Russian War steamer remained in the sea of Azof Advice, tr" S.r tie° Br.wn, et the 2th state that the troops enutmuetl healthy Five vesseis laden wtth e.iru ha/1 ruu tuN)Kerth uut kuowtug the place, and w. re eapturetl Ttitt'uusubcr guns fouud by the Allie., ex eeeti 100 A. breach account say: the ltus•lans burned 9 1 0 transports as well as their four s,teamilipq, slid destroyed 360,U0tt sacks of corn, 160,000 casks of oats, and IVV,OOO sacks of dour Fourteen allied-teatuers entered Azuf Reinforcements were daily arriving at Con stantinople. The occupation of Galata, sod an attack on !small and Real were confidently spoken of The garrison of Sebastopol drew most of their supplies from Kertsch Its capture, therefore, must eitereise it speedy influence on the seige Fifty cases and twenty deaths by choleml were reported ;Among the linta-b forces, wig! sows ca. sea amotle the French. before Seha-topol The S a rdinian coming, tit 4d 10'01 landed in :plcutlid condition, and well ..tipp',ied with all the materials of war Beat had succeeded the rain Large convoys had en t ere d s e i,as t poi u n Ow north ride, and the Russian , were workiiii; vi t trrously on that side creetiug au earth work, Sc The Allies had completed their forth parallel. and the British were moving all their heavy mortars in ts the advanced parallels. Two deserters from Sebastopol reported garrison very strong The hot weather was causing sickness ASIA —Letters from Erzeroum reports that General Williams was very busy fortifying the city with earth works Kurdistan is not yet quiet. The Ras-wins had recently tuanifeated Doane i n te n t ion ,1 au attack on Kars The Russian Minister of Foreign Affairs had issued a circular respecting a blockade nt the Finland ports in which he says: `"inat Eug,land has de parted from the principle, that the flag covers the cargo, and he warns ntutral vessels of the circumstances." The expected rostunption of the Vienna Con ference had not taken place, and it was doubt fully reported that the new Austrian proposi tions were peremptorily negatived by Englaui and France Au‘t run negotiation is more active than ever with the view of obtaining for the Cabinet of ienua, a supremacy to Ger many. Count Buol, in a circular to the Austrian rep resentatives at the German Courts, regards the publication of the protocols of the Vienna Con ference by the British Government as premisture, in consideration that the negotiations for peace could not be regarded at terminated. 3feneehikoff has returned to St. Petersburg, and was well received by the Emperor Seven hundred and forty-oil Russians were prisoners in the hands of the English, while the former have but 10'2 privates and 15 officers be. longing to the British. No returns of the , French. The K. N's lied a stormy time in their con vention at Philadelphia yesterday, and the ses sion was protracted till 1 o'clock this A X. Numerous speeches were made, and there was a great deal of criwinatiou and re crituination. finnally a vote was reached upon the majority report of the platform committee, and it was agreed to 80 to 59. The vote cus the minority was M in favor of and 92 against it. And on K e n ne th Ruytior's cotyprotuirie proposition the vote stood, )eaa 44; nays 97 The conveution adjourned till 9 this A M., when it was thought the injunction of secrecy would be removed. TM& CROPS.— A gentleman, who bag been traveling through the principal portions of this State and lowa, reports the crops as looking most promising. In fact, be says he has never seen them looping better in his life. There has been abundance of refreshing rain and no blight of any kind. He heard a few complaints of the in juries inflicted by the chintz bug, but they were not such, either from numbers or extent of da- mage, as to cause any anxiety whatever. The prospects of the growing crops are thus highly favorable —f Vetyge Dem- Naomi Duanso.—is gentleman juin from Gaston, Salutes County, informs us, sap The jlersoniasi, that the negro boy that murdered Miss Thornton, near Gaston, a few weeks since, was on last Friday burned to death on the isms spot where he perpetrated the b or . rible deed. Failing to procure a jury for, his trial among the indignant citizens of Sumter, the venue had been %banged to Greens. Learn ing, them facts, a lugs somber of adieus re. paned to tire jail of Bampter, fat the boy oat, •aarriall M the *au issiampod abets, sad Jar* Nogas laj _ ll4,i Nad to . intim maaap qf a breearra4 at raw ale NEW YOILK, June 14th E:so sir The grady's Iron work ti tve been sold to a Rusttui company for 11490,000, there being included in the sale several thousand acres of laud, containing e TeDli Vt.t ore awl coal privileges on a4joioiug land•, four blast 4 urtoce. a large bar iron and railroad iron r ding will, shout tw, him lr l dwe; hug houses, w treh storehouses, 11 , 4 , 6, , a stork ut ore, tt , pig nierehan its; au l itripLon , -ntA v:,1.i,•,l at tolo,ooo, lh , • thou ;awl tons of tiniyhed ralir .11 irou, together with Western lt,iilruad rompau:,, Ronda to the aitiouut of 8100.000 THE C A.Sh STATIC') —Thu Bunker 111111 Aut,at, a well-infuruaed judge of 'pantin g evtuts, Lbw, succinctly states the Portisuti case:— "Blood was abed without sufficient cause awl unnecessarily We should rather bare seen toe whole amount of liquor running in the gutter, than the blood .tf one Ulan Tt,„ ilta iia datou ing one; N ea l I.),sr, the fat 100- of the )Isito• it quor law, whose euergits and seal base b..en long devoted to the dostroying of liquors owned or held by other people, absolutely purchases all amount of liquors hitusel!, and thtu the people of Portland, to be shut down iu the streets, by his order, to protc , ,,t liquor' • 'No.:al-I the thing be r:ght or wrou r z--jo.odishle n•,t such is the fact, and rt cannot be altered ills use of the military stay be deemed legal, ins purchase 'of the liquor Justifhtble—the tact that the people were shot down, by his order, to pro tect it, cannot be dewed:- )lea/Co —}tt•o•nt acc•mpt, It”lst the R. 1,, Grande state that the whole of Northern Mexico is in a ferment ot revolutt 4.1 in totrw-quence ,tt the arrival of an t . tit w vsa r y of Santa Anita at Monterey, with orders to arrestand put to death several of the leading citizens G"veru, r was forced to surrender, Awl the livks or al, ~: titn3 were s. area The insurgents tuude de monstration up , u the town, ALAI the Governor fled Nlutatuomu .I.oe. to the 12th ul t that the revolutionists in Luis 1 14 ,1 issui d pronuneitimento, au i trap, wen - partug to leave M3otto ,, rto. to d well tl,, it,ui torn 4 'Lltattriittzt t, rt•prt.d .0 the vve d u revolution FALLING OFF OF EMIUKATIoN,—Tii , anas , 11 .krcy Metive, in a letter to the S Y T mr., ttitt , figures up the falhug off 4,1 etntgratiou t.. thu. country till+ yew p to :1 , 13 . y of tie present year, tti •re were only 41.).1NII) arrived tigainiit 87,0410 same period ',l-t Eotu cr4.l i 40,0!5i, deduct 10,000 returto.d. to Europe frt•ri, :Li. Bostou, and Pl3ttad.lpttia, slum lit 01 J tnu cry, and '20,000 •who have lived tot )e3r. tu States, reported by Mr. 'Locke, etc tgraut ag••nt foresaw:. West, :14 haring passed Int , , that Prov ince, cud you get a rttn ot only some 10,000 sgaiust N,Ar POLITICAL. C LEH() Y NIEN —Mr Fewienden, t tie newly-elected Apcnker ut the Rhode Island As sembly, IA n el,rgyntan The Speaker of the ill.. Massacbu,etos Huu.e of iirprest utauiven IfiJN ui :•4) a clergyman Tue hu , w-ti. , thingl, who pru• to Le oppu+ed to vierleal Interference in ties, r.et•ILI t,, etithy.e e, - , t but inmtst , r , to Aloe. BETTI'Nti —To !•lleil au exteut ,ltd r tor betting on the Virginia "icet ion prevati in Wash ington city. that .'ne f th,. goverutneui tractort for ti' L.Tito( extension. :trier tint up all thy "rtx it," he o , uld rri.e -rak the warble bluektt which were designed th , structure Le Was puttiug up Lucy he 1..... .0 the safe stele, and i reported to hay, - w.m up* al $50,001) Hew York Markets Repo , -le If ,- tie Oboe, rer y J3ret I Co •• Jfe , ,44 gee, t Fn"( Steiner, Sew Y '4 Below, we hand you oar rep-rt of our Pnodtr•'e in,rset. Cinee (ant we hare had more free arrivals , 4 Bread•tutl,a..4l under Cato influence a decline in Pflell. With the advance of the season and rood prosnveta for the r main crops. Float and Grain have eonle out wore trecy. Wa tovte as follows: Bread.tutit State. 9.7fu1t10.12+- Exty., ti..ll,•ttee, i I Ai::: ow:on:ion to goo,lWastarti and Sout Tern, 9 7.1:10,12., ElNtra ,1... 10.25• al2,:os;eouicetun to 100,1' , •utherra, 11.1,311 Z,9. for seper ano 11,75 Cu (or rats,. ct. Cunselu.ol 1U,1291.10.25 for eommuo and lu D.. 11 for extra 1,) r 1 , our ; , 50s. Corn Meal 3.1' , 1a462i Wheat.—White Gonesol 2,83, whit* Caumikan recl (lbw an [thaws 2,10&.:2., whito t ,en,:ea 2.75*2.75 Rod 1,701.1.73. Corn 1119.112. Oats 7 1 / a 93 tor State and Weston) nod (1•470 f an) S.-yoth.rn Provistous.—Pork, new Mess. priuo2. , Beef. country 51e55.10a1.....5u, prime, KJOa9,l:s Chicago and Indiana 14.7541, ham• 1700..0 Pdrk kain• in pick& .ma 12.03, sts, , o;•ier. putkie,l 7.75; ern .ked d,rU.% Lied 10.25aa1040 to barrel and 11, 50a1.2 in ka4s. Butter. yellow, Kra's, 'el. readily at 2Se for Orange counts., 2232.1 for CAW dairy. 20 C.l far well packed dt , re, Obto *rid P.uneytrania Indiann and Illinois 2041. Choate 10411 fur prime new, comm. , ' Rag Promisemourd—Whise Beans 014 , very Pia I , t. and in de mand it 2,7513 per bushel Canadian Peas, I 31a1,50 de. Dried Apples 71.:4r. Peaches. '6%144.! rdi n• 144, Vs Bg i rs are l‘ellinz freely 10,144 fur Western and I Se per 4.5 en for fresh F•tate. Ashos.—We quote •aloe of Pots at 5.75. Poor!. 6 DIANN'S =SIC STORE 0011tiOlief to jaereare lb P.plikatttr, and *POIOI t , i be rupplying the wholo country with .iplenilia instrurnei Thor* Boer' efUta and Bray Putau Furter ore suuKbt after Ar and soar. NIL, Mann has recoeatiati io tnaitititarrsaisments with Mr. C. F. Matborrt, from JsmeatoAra. • teacis, r from th. Normal Musical Academy of New Y..rk, to assist hips, sod dub may deplowd ups having ery apporthatty fur tscad adratieemost. En*. Juae, e, pg x . Poor armee. Rime. PA. May T. 1655 e After this date the Mans at tbts oMee win be eloped as follows. rm. Buffalo, Albany end life* Torii, at 11 A. M. and 5 30 P. M. Philadelphia, Baltimore, Washington, Bostoa sad Hartford, 5 30 P. M Way Mail. supplying all Alec. between Erie and Buffalo, 10 A. M. New Tort and Ririe B. B. Magoupplyitur all oilleea betwe.•,, Dunkirk and New York. City, b P. M. - Chicago. St. Loam, Dubuque, and Cleveland, 12 M. and 7 30 P. M. Pittsburgb, eta Cleveland. V A. M. Lonise Detroit dte, Cmsdanati, Indissaweisa, Toledo, Coln el bu s and 12, 111. Way Mail. supplying all tam between Brie and Close land, 9 A. M. Way Mail between Eris sad Pittebarg WattsSurgh, Tumidity, Thursday aad - Saturday at 6 A SI. M'Keast &Lisbon and Meadville. 12 M. The Mime will be spoon thus 7 A. _M. to 8 P M. on Sundays from 7in V A M. and Ik.SP. M. :No Moots re.. vt4 Nat G P 2 " 0410 .1, osscopt the Southern. B. V' 5L0.1 . 31, P M. Lake kis Asmaistion. Tlis Lake Brie asseetatioa erill I'o4l tb aaaeal esoloit la Glued. Maio soy INs., se jams WM llrodeeeday sad Thera. isy. Ib 111111 sad lass et Jam thAsS, sms4 all liss moist, Asalsimila ale usimosss atibsisisissisi i‘Shilslositg As 11mi bsm ClulliesOot nosh** was aikessi, mussmati. CZ Yoinc, Jana 11, I-6.5 ttall the A s•to ..1 41. : "‘ r • r, of the NieAtieol her., 1./.1 Par us.el 1 .~ •1 II ~~~LC tr ei , 4l i• suirttual f niat NoTILL GALEN" B. ZE F.,,,,,...., f .+i• : ty. urty t.e 1 un.l a: J New Y , .ilt, Itve• 1 ! '1.1.• 1 .6 , m1 , ,x a , ~: 11 Itsbdolseham , l. 144 A. 4 Q tr , et, iNir g .,n, 1„, happy t.• •,.• a.I i+ . ~ 1 .1 !,. ')•1• a,/ • '.• • art 4,,s 45..1 • •L., t , • .q` , 411.• 1 ; sl4lt •I"* y+• $ lIIX euttelautly L•Pti A', • iftiTe - , t at H ' l"l. / ‘- 3 Tt.• ,13.0 .argv •t• I ‘u•., • 4f I •I • I . • it . V . •!at rn►•rr 0 1. t, %G r.,., , e-r t Ex ..,, , • ..1. J I MN GUITAR LEGS ID .1 itt uu. orr ~ ,r 131 ME tva. L, I IL., i a .c tif %er• $.4 lLa Ipt•aUtiil k? M 34664 a Milt" ..t6t.t. 116., ur.ter. wLII Ilutued.4l. +u. t , dits, LA•in F.rx, J~uu: 1~, A rag Latta] C.r Fru) • 111 L r" 11. ~nr, I Is. it • W . IS ~• It =a •urr • o,r 411, C.l4Cr k w••, 1121Itil ta,.,... 11 , M•lnr' • , lot uut tt , - to art. toatLutt ~t t atot I Ilk. I .1•r r. P•il. Vtol Pia ni d eXp.l. 7 .1 r.,1 mint ,1 LO to•L V For pnis.4lll\ 0,1,7,4 t „ $1 id, 1 .- 11,4 wt.. ••.al 111,1 , ••'t TER 6 1:1;.. rum., N., e. , it • .•• <, SIM V 11.13.7 IDILPO T tlf r. h I 11l J•• wrap. al. Il'dr - 1.. ,pt.r .1,0 • NY r ft • v ~ f ^llfutA =MEM 11111•=1!iii .I,r; 1'.1;.• 111 II 10,... , 1, .00 IK I.It• fr.lre V ei/ ...T1 S 1 !Jt/Ct 14 . ke•pt.e ti(u =EMI PtOf 4 t ' , TS% . • w.•. rreiT, I II IA • . , 4 'l4 I=l W., Me it VP Ir I o the r It UL -, I t ek. b llt V.' les EIMMEI =MEI I) t. .r ' l tlle / I . Ilf I MEI =I 10, • • • 014 IMEIEMM ------ -4.- MARE.: ED k 1:1'11C Utl •}:lfON f. ft u. • iltro MSc° of t 41. bury PanY.-.4..). 50 30 e 1 I , llt , / ot , =ll2 ZZ...:ZaTOit i ti ) I LI ~ poi• 01, e OEM {p, ,er..vor lJig •.Ald.- •Clt , I, I 1 I 111121 Cr iv.ati f • Na• . .r•d11.1 fe... I) in. Lt 8 k.l la 3 6 S t y otcnuzis Za v 4. MIZE J ILIZI 1,, 1 - ANTnELIINTIC Rt t.:.1.1 %A) i I hr tv tr 4. i l , MEMO % I I. . fA r 1 60 , 44 4 . A. EIZIO tevi , 'II 11, I 1•11 V,Nfr. ( . 4 • :•.1 4 hr , . 4 ' 441, ptt.'ti • 141 , 1 , 1 ,u. • . • I 4,04 rem • ) .vt al4 TO. 1' 1 t_ I ALLI 40 141,11 ❑len /11;y1 GIME • • r rlOl :111ft. I, «f 1u•r 1 /11 V'l 4. A . •Co.,"e • 141 taltPf Tref it.truv, I,•• • 1 4 rA llt•ft ' • 11 n u,r I 0V,1...01,r f .30 A Lilt 1.• w ' • ..11111t •I Ali W .1 It • CutiA.A.ll , l the , 110" 1 / 1 , pat, 1./ l'It• 1.1 t •.• ItirKTON .1. • \ C tz_ t • 11.111 •.1 V', .5.5 K ~, O'r I /;.• r2r r I C ...Lb • I .1 •. • sllk‘r,oll e 0 • • 11111:13311 WM • , /.I• Id ,W Glres tn. 16 (32rmala Vagatalild C.: Lit it( :.t I. 1.1,•0 1,411:1 01 y we f isMe. riv , 1,, WA.SIIINGTON LINE zwiGt 24 il NV YORZ ANI t. lid 4st Nviti )1.,.. J .1 ;.; Ji'n 3 14 . .., 4 1 , , .. l'l AN4hir i•Jr.ornaer fLaeine . •ther•• l• . , •1, • , =I I=l lEll CIEIZEI 1'.4•oll. part. 4.nT• r nig 0, I, •t, , ,1 0., h..4r I n to 1.7 T wlllt to 1/1 ea • • Iry 0 , 1,1 Cetta.,ir .% )(U‘e. lUgail,Zr yr I h 're i • ( 10- • t• • ka..l tar , ansdll With We •114 /Etre the, r dui Fart *.ll pa) a 'Yr. Yuri, isa tim•y usually tw.a. 'unarm , there all 1 11. E Na...4.ed et se% Dere at litter. , r u • • 4 fur war bed by Aau Run, by +team IStott tu the me born made to forword tm.•elvor , !or The above I ine !meta l the .Vei l Wahluguat.Cap. YiN, . Noss rr aof the at ri • • • . Cop.. Gardner e, aorta, rapt It t r.a..11, U.. v,. 111111b , A1Vi. Capt. Pratt ss ft Vl,' fr , .retie Hr., 111 - .llli l rPiand. j, In 1V I • ialatlCtel."ll SU!. , rfte.,•e" . 1..11 .td 0,04 Lll . 4lLwenl I. 4 twit .1 ltr of tit yiterelids. Inlay iiiey I.t' ..tt..l d 1 VI,. Air. rut 11M.Y.1 t.% It ow n.. 141 athe -is or to I. I I r1...A etety *reit el or is t .J lea Vt oti. -.retype. 81.6 i• THE lINIV - Ell,B iTY FAN' I leiN I t U uu,tet plie res.. twit 1.11.114 euJ Ireelliedicino and /Pt:Tut 1-36vueredoyWe Otite W Pen. s. ran ot t VAL tit' 6,10.,000. , he eirlog of 131'17.13.10V4 310 Also fio • , ippiritt the o_lam ir it, wbrrerer • egmapetssit Ptry.lcan c.,ws bab , vat , hayed ha► Dr. Jou. , R. ovcreas.cl'ar Tasai br upward of tw. my dye "lecurt(.,llEY6lt %GI (Or tiOVE.E. COMPLA %TO. Itaihnirt Compound Syrup Of Witch highly approved and pug the fur oomph. ltive uare‘routy's gegue.ly Air op.p. YliethoOrenity% y Fe/ Wort, ei d , ...2 11 , %Up, • ani s ri s oaf 4 1 1 . 1*. VA. mn3 IMEE =I SEE MEI line =1:11 ME IMII MEM INNNE EBIEM 11•111 }WIWI%) N.