Erie weekly observer. (Erie [Pa.]) 1853-1859, September 08, 1855, Image 2

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    kluit atethig Ob.strber,
ERIK, PA
SATURDAY MORNING, SEPT. 8, 1855
"Fui4uL"
The prospects of a "fusion" of those who have
life long been political antagonists, in order to
save our,county and city from misrepresentation
ettet*burg, and more efficiently protect our
before the Legislature, seems to become
mote L4bering every day. Last year it was
wonted; but it was adopted practically never
theless, and the result proved eminently antis
fibctory. Hence it is, we suppose, that such com
munisations as the following are admitted into
columns of the Gazette:
Misuse EIRTVILL-A fusion of parties on Assemblymen
seems to be generally desired, on account of nes nature and
importune of our local interests. I can coacetve of no
method of carrying it oat so completely and triumphantly
as by sending beck the old ones, Messrs. Tuours on mid
BALL. It is not too much to say they are the best men,
the most skilful and practical, fir the position to be found
in the Co. I therefore trust that action will be speedily
taken looking to a general rally upon them by men of all
parties. This done, I think they can't any longer withhold
their ament. But if they should even then peremptorily
decline, let a Whig of Wit4 , ol K iso' , 4 order of character
and qualidostioes be associated with some Democrat occu
pying the same position on our local question, and the sup
port of all true friends of Erie invoked in their behalf.
In the same vein is the following upon the
same subject from the editorial columns of that
paper. There is a gratifying change in the tone
of the Gazette sinoe last Pall:
wa. The suggestion of a correspondent that if there is
to be • "fusion" on Assemblymen, it can best be effected
in the name of the gentlemen above mentioned, is, doubt
less, well predi ed We have nothing to say in the spirit
of fliststion—we have no desire to assume any sort of
leadership in the matter—but we are satisfied that if our
local interest demand such "a coming together" as is pro
posed, (and we incline to the opinion that they do„) the
end eoatemplated can most certainly be accomplished
through the Instrumentality of the geudemen who represent
ed use ably and efficiently in the House Last Winter. If
our shimmer all parties are convinced of this, they ought
to send them back—we were going to say, "willing or not
willing." We premiss, however, that if put in the field,
neither tumid peremptorily decline
Elo it appears "Ephaim is not joined to his
idols," therefore let no democrat be captious or
unreasonable. On the contrary, let all respond
to the oonoesion ;lave in the same generous
spirit it is extended. Democrats, after a pro
scription of twenty-five years, you are beginning
to be appreciated, therefore bear your "blushing
honors" meekly and courteous 4 The dawn is
breaking!
ABOUT RIGHT.—The Buffalo C'ommerciai, in
noticing the fact that Judge ELMORE, of Kan
sas, recently removed by the President for his
land speculations, has written to the Attorney
General, in substance, that he holds his office,
independently of the Executive branch of the'.
Government, and that he will invoke the action
of the judiciary to maintain him in it, says it had
previously regarded the removal Roma E as an
ill-advised and arbitrary act, suggested by con -
siderstionsuuworthy of the President of the Uni
ted Stites, and it is still inclined to suppose
that he was displaced in order to make a show of
oonsistency, after Gov. Reeder had been sacrific
ed to propiciate the slave power, but the Judge
is manifestly unfit for his place, and ongh t to have
been turned out, any way. A man holding an
important judicial position, who talks of resisting
his own removal, through the Courts, after the
decision of the Supreme Court in the [case of
Goodrich, the territorial Judge turned out by
Mr. Fillmore, ought to be removed, and no ques
tions asked.
MO
JUST As WY EXPICTED.—We suppose our
readers have not forgot how, when the juror
cradled by "Uncle Tom's Cabin" was at its height,
the Duchess of Sutherland got up and circulated
a petition, called the "Petition of the Women of
England," for the abolition of Slavery in Amer
ica. Like all humbugs, the great "Duchess" was
the reigning deity among- the Sambo sympathi
ses, and political mountebanks of that school, in
this country. Her philanthropy was ever in
their mouths, while the sin and shame of the cru
el slaveholders of the South in not listening to
her "regal" appeal, was the theme of many a
Sony barfangue,and eloquent effort from the pulpit
the press, and the stump. Well, time passed
thephilanthopic Duchess and her famous petition
became, like "Uncle Tom," dead stock in the
American market. Not so in England, for we
notice among the items of news by the last arri
val, that the Duchess of Sutherland, the great
London friend of "Uncle Tom," and the leadipg
subscriber to the petition of the "Women of
England" for the abolition of slavery in Ameri
ca, ham just permitted a poor bed-ridden woman,
with her new-born babe, to be turned out into
the open fields, for the non-payment to her hus
band's estate of a trifling amount of rent' Hu
manity, like charity, should always begin at
Lorne.
TB/ Nxw STAFF. OF RIO GRANDE.—A New
York Sunday paper, in referring to the proposed
new State of Rio Grande, humorously remarks
that new states come regularly knocking at the
door of our republic, and ask for admittance.
The United States, u a people, appear to be
looked upon as a sort of bettering house for the
sick, abandoned, and pauper off-shoots of other
nations. The moment they find themselves un
able to support themselves, they rush inconti
nently hitherward for aid and protection. Nor
do they modestly solicit charity, but ask at once
to be made members of our '"happy family,"
without waiting to be mesmerised into a condi
tion of affectionate unity. Rio Grande, they
tell vs, is to be our next visitant in this way.
Texas is to inttednoe her and endorse her propri
ety. In Brazil, it is customary tosay, "Mr. So
and-So, this is my friend. Recieve him into your
eonidenee. If he steals anything lam responsi
ble!" Whether or not Texas will be as frank
with au in requesting our consideration for her
Dew protege, Malin tO be MM. , Perhaps it may
be meneosemay. We shall look, however, with
eassiekushio interest on the scene that must en
sue when Rio Grande makes her curtsey to Con
gress, wad the north and the south look the lit
th beauty is the face, and begin to mint noses
to see bow she would look if seated at the family
table.
ib i lhe,Doosoonts of Woresoter, Mao. held a
=lnay ass ting 0111 Elatordoz anoint last. One old
ake lout in Ave under Trinidad Pines, snored •
m o i s ti m si d.watos the Adaduistrotion. It was totolod
lath hit one dienossing vont, No arra.) sad sishosquently,
by resolution. beaded over to tlo
Ow Mood "mad tie eoroor Amid lave boos there.
Rio vs* trombl 1111•11 esostodeoro.—Googue.
Whilik in addition to that of the mover, would
bine made dowel Quite a respectable array of
/KOMI NM is s State that elects His 466.
L tlllllSp WINO* on the memory at Webster, sad
Baalme Irdl, mad repudiates the Ceestitatias of
the earatry. Odle a respectable vote, indeed,
is s lbw that bum Owes* sad thea refus
als to pay kr timm—that sends “amalliaig ea
Witted' ire paivaishosamsta pry into the alair
ai• sad vie 'pis' bedroom. Aye; yea, say hos
. roil wit to coat *to is auk a ikails.
Three out of the four political parties in the
E m pi re &idolises held their annual conventions,
laid down their platforms, and two of them nom
rated full tickets: viz.: the Know Nothings and
the "Hard" and the "Soft" Democracy! One
other party is yet to show its hand, and bring
forth its champions—the Seward whigs! If pol
itics in new York has heretofore been a mystery
to us outriders, that mystery is now doubly mys
tified. We see the names emblazoned upon their
banners, we see them marshaling their hosts; we
hear the battle cry, we read their resolutions,
and we see far in the distance, the spoils—still
the mystery of the political field is as dark as
ever. Why Seward Whigs, Fillmore Whigs,
and Know Nothing Whigs, should not train un
der the same captains—why they should not oc
cupy lovingly the same bed, and eat from the
same table, is a problem deeper than our philo
sophy! Why also the "Hard" and "Soft" Dem
ocracy, should jostle one another on the day of
reward, or rejoice over one another on the night
of defeat—why the broad platform of the party
upon which they both agree, is not broad enough
for all to stand upon without additions that they
do not nor cannot agree upon—is also beyond
our fathoming. We have a shrewd idea that
John Van Buren was more than half right last
week, when he said, in -discussing this Kansas-
Nebraska humbug in the Soft convention, that
1 1 be thought it was more important that the Con
vention should take measures that New York
was well governed, than that Kansas was well
governed! There is much sound common sense
in this, and it would we well if we in Pennsyl
vania would heed and practice it Charity in
polities, as in every thing else, should begin at
home. The Missourians have outraged the whole
country by attempting to manage the affiairs of
the people of Kansas for them; but why have
they? Simply because they have carried out
practically what almost every convention that
assembles now-a-days does theoretically. It was
a sensible remark, then, of Mr Van Buren that
the duty of a Convention of New York Demo.
crate was to see that New York was well govern
ed, and not that Kansas was well governed We
I never could understand what could be accom
plished towards making any of the territories
free States by the election of a Sta to Prison In
spector in New York, or a Canal Commissioner
in Pennsylvania, favorable to such a result I t
always seemed to us very much like a false issue
—a blind to some ulterior design, that was at
least of doubtful propriety. We are pleased then
with the position assumed by the Democracy of
New York, to practically ignore a question like
that of Kansas, and leave it for settlement with
those to whom it belongs—the Settlers of Kan
sas themselves! The following resolutions, we
think, does this. While they endorse the Adminis
tration, they also condemn the interference of
the Missourians in Kansas, and reiterate in em
phatic language the principle upon which the
doctrine of Non-Intervention is founded; that "th.
people Qf a territory should L. left e rf,rtly
. frr,
to frame and regulate their own (bon $1 ie. in.titu
t ions in their own way." •
A FRIEND ..v ERIC
Resolved, That the National Administration has our
hearty concurrence and commendation in its management
of the public finances, in the exercises of the veto power to
protect the Treasury from being made the ?oil of specu
lators, and to arrest improvident and corrupt expenditure.
that the system of rigid accountability to which disbursing
officers have been held, the scrutiny and N titilance with
which defalcations have been detected and exposed, and
the attitude assumed in support ot the American name
abroad, as well as the important treaties with foreign gov
ernments, extending the system al rotninercial reciprocity
and freedom of trade, are marks ot an honest an•t faithful
administration.
Hee-deed. That we regard the organization of a hand of
armed borderers, and their intrusion into the territory of
Kansas, not as bona fide settlers, but fur the forcible sub
version of the rights of its legal elector., not only as a vio
lation of the peace of the Union and the rights of the com
munity assailed, and as an example full it danger to the
States, the safety of whose institutions and domestic tran
quility require to be protected against external influences
and the instigation of secret emissaries, but as distinctly
subversive of the intent of Congress, as declared in the bill
organising the said territories to leave the people perfectly
free to form and regulate their own domestic institutions
in their own way, subject only to the Constitution of the
United States, and that all the power of the federal and
temtortal governments should be exerted to redress these
outrages, and to vindicate the rights of the people thereof.
Revolted, While the Democracy of this State will faith
fully adhere to all the compromises of the Constitution,
and maintain all the reserved rights of the States, they
deem this an Inciptopriate occasion to declare and repeat
their fixed hostility to the extension of slavery Into the ter
ritories now free.
In regard to Know Nothingism, the "Softs"
take their position along side of the Democracy
of the other States of the ITnion—in opposition!
They do so boldly—there is no dodging or min
cing wohls about it, and in this particular con
trast favorably with the action of the Convention
of the "Herds," which was held a few days pre
vious. Here are the resolutions:
Ile..loed, That while we concede to our fellow citisens
the largest liberty of opinion and action in civil affairs, we
deprecate and protest against the Know Nothing organisa
tion and its principles, and all parties which aim by seutet
oaths and pledges, or by intimidation. to deprive any por
tion of our people of the free exercise and profession of re
ligion and worship, without discrimination or preference,
guaranteed to them by the Constitution of the State and
of the U toted States. That we regard the exclusion of the
masses fleeing from tyrannical oppression in the Old World
to the enjoyment of well-regulated liberty here, as not on
ly ungenerous, but as the rfversal of the policy which has
largely contributed to the prosperity of the Union.
Retxdred, That we eangratalate the Democracy cf the
Union upon the signal victories which they hive recently
won by their political brethren in Virginia, Tennessee,
North Corollas, Alabama, and Texas. and that we are en
mongod by this gamen against the old federal party, in
its last disguise, and under its new name, to hope for the
racoon of the united Democracy of this State against its
traditional enemy, under whatever organization or form of
coalition it may present itself.
FWD AND FAITH.—The grasshopper& have
eaten up the third crop of grain in Utah, and the
Mormons have no alternative left but either to
'at the grashoppers or flee the country. Grass -
hoppers are considered a great delicacy in Egypt
and Arabia, sad with us they would hardly prove
more difficult to digest than a few of the doc
trines of Mormonism. The "saints" may be
more fastidious; but we fear that they will soon
find themselves rightly named as the "latter day"
imposters, if they remain much longer in a posi
tion where hunger must soon put an end to their
homes and their hypocrisy.
A GOOD NOMINATION.—Among the nomi
nees of the recent Democratic Cocvention of New
York, held at Syracuse, we notice the name of
Pkruck 11. Aaks, Esq., for Inspector of State
Prisons. Mr. A. is one of the Eiitors of the
°windage Standard, and his nomination is a
compliment richly deserved for the fearless abil
ity be displays in the iidvocecy of the principles
of his party. We do not know what the emol
uments or the honors of the office are, but we do
know that, great or small, there is no one echo
will beer his "blushing honors" more worthily,
or expend the dimes more judiciously or liberal
ly. We hope he may be elected.
TIMM VP Aoant.—Rx-Parson C. C. Burr,
formerly an abidition loiterer, then a temper
me lecturer, subsequently the editor of the New
York city National (Hard) Denioaret--eurns up
in the New York Know Nothing State Omen
tioa at Biaghanton He had not been previ
ously hard of in politics for a whole year,
a rommkabis eireumetme when one tame into
toomidamatiat the hat that he is the .greatsg
etesn it pipe IA peewit hew* to the patio;
g( dm
Kew York Pontiac
" A as of. Rare Onsistosey!"
The Crawford Demeerat, simper, which drape
as it may appear, sees sto arregateteiteelfallthe
Democracy in this Sestistorki district, and at the
same time is the chief &gleam of that prince
of Know Nothings, D. A. Finney, tells its read
ers this week "that it has but little time or space
to notice the Erie Observer;" and to prove it
devotes three separate articles to that same 01,-
serrr. In these articles we are curtly admonish
ed not to assume the province of a "Dictator" in
the Democratic ranks. Some how our ootensp
orary is now, and always has been, very much
afraid of our "dictation;" indeed, it is a kind of
a hallucination with that paper— a mental mala
dy that shows itself periodically, and like a fever,
or the small-poit, must take its regular coarse.
The only objection we have to it, is the fact that
some people who don't know its insanity upon
this point may think it sane, and imagine we are
a kind of political Napoleon—s character we by
no means desire to acquire! But we let the Dem
orrat speak for itself:
The Obreiver complains of oar giving over the District
tarthe opposition, and la the same paper acquiesces in
Judge Thompson's deelanetion to support a" Wkiy, Demo
crat, or ice. , Soiter, if he is oaf, rtyAl els the railroad roe
tom "' Hen is cousisiteacy with a vengeance. The re
marks of the eleserrer about "treachery" are mere bosh. It
wail never do for it to assume the Dictatorship as to what
is consistent, or Demoorstio The least about that the bet
ter for the Otwereer. We advise Mr. !hoea to' keep cool
and good natured. The Democracy of this county are not
to he dragooned into the support of its railroad policy
with.mt a struggle. They will try to take care of their
own interests. They are opposed to the policy of tearing
up rails, burning up ears, and destroying bridges. They
know their own policy best, and neither the Oeserocr, nor
it. , emissaries, can induce them to "play "second fiddle"
to demagogues who are determined to "rule or ruin" the
dertiny of "the best harbor on the Lake."
Now, with all due deference to the superior
acuteness of our cotemporary, we can see nothing
inconstant in the position of Judge Thompson,
or our acquiescing in it. It seems to us that af
tet the fellowship of the Democracy of Erie had
been repudiated by a regular convention of the
Democracy of Crawford, there was nothing very
inconsistent in Judge Thompson and ourself list
ening to propositions of fusion from whigs or
free soilers; especially as such a fusion was never
proposed in any official form until after the "Erie
question" had been made an issue before the peo
ple of the district by the Democrat and its coad
jutors. As we said last week, the Democrat's
political friends in Erie are where they have been
forced by the treachery of itself and friends—
while our local quarrel with the railroad is made
an issue in the district, not by the action of the
people of Erie, but by the interference of the
people of Crawford who, in reality, ought to have
no part or lot in it. Suppose we should inter
fere in the location of a railroad through Mead
ville, and say it should run south of the town,
when the entire community desired it to be built
north of the town, what would the Denwerat call
such interference? Impertinence, no doubt, if
not something worse. Well, that is just what
the Demtx-rat and its coadjutors are doing in re
gard to our matters. They are interfering in a
question in which they have no part or lot. This
iLuarrel is none of their concern. It is between
the people of Erie and the railroad men; and the
Democrat and its man Finney would both appear
more consistent to mind their own business. We
speak thus strongly, because Mr.- Finney him
self, in his late letter, in substance acknowledges
that in the settlement of this question, upon the
plan proposed by the railroad men and advocated
by him, Erie will make a "sacrifice." He says:
"That the sacrifice to Erie in the settlement of
her railroad difficulties would be more than com
pensated in the increase of trade and business
the road would bring to the city." Now, who
invited Mr. F. to become a judge of what Erie
ought or ought not to do. Not the people of
Erie, nor the people of Erie county; then why
should he and the Crawford Democrat take upon
themselves the province of Judges, and tell us
what will "be more than a compensation" for the
"sacrifice" we will make in having our local
questions settled by the plan they have dealt out
to us. Erie is of age and can make her owls
bargains in her own way. In doing so, we do not
want to "dragoon" any body into tlfirsupport of
our "railroad policy." We only "want to take
care of our own interests." And in taking care
of them, it is very little matter to us whether
the people of Crawford "are opposed to the poli
cy of tearing np rails, burning cars, and destroy
ing bridges" or not. The Supreme Court having
decided itirregcdity of our "tearing up rails and
destroying bridges," it is not at all important
whether Judge Finney or Judge Democrat ap
proves of that decision or not. And as to our
"determination to rule or min the best harbor on
the lake," it does seem to us that those who live
on that harbor, and own property there, are bet
ter judges of what will "ruin" it, than either
Mr. Finney or the Crawford Democrat. Al least
they are better entitled to "rule" it.
FACT.—When the Know Nothings were beat
en in Virginia it was the open ballot that did
the work, according to their newspapers. They
have tried the secret ballot in four other States,
and the result is new disaster to their hopes.—
Desperate at the prospect, they now seem to have
resolved—vide the Louisville tragedy—that no
body shall hereafter vote but themselves.
Barra Amtux.—The immortal Botts is out in
a letter for a reform of the Know Nothing party
in Virginia.. He is for abolishing ill seeeresy
and oaths, and all religious distinctions in the
order. Or in other words he seems to ns to be
for abolishing the order itself. We thought
when "Sam" got the boas, his days were num
bered, unless he proved stronger than horse
flesh!
elk. Frost has been experienced in Musachu
setts, and sections to the Northward. In Ded
ham clothes were frozen stiff on the line, and in
that and other towns cranberries, beans, and
other crops were injured. The sojourners at the
White Mountains will find cold oomfort for their
summer ruralising.
Banbury sad Iris Itailroa
We are glad to learn that the work on the
line of the Banbury and Zrie Railroad, from
Milton to Northumberland, is warm* rapidly
towards completion, and that the intention of the
Company
is to open it on the 20th of the present
m .This link is one of the moat important
in the whole line of the Company's work, and
will command, immediately oa its completion,
an immense trade in anthracite coal for °consump
tion on the line, and is the interior of New York
and the lakes via Buffalo.
We understand from the antraokai as the
work that this link would hive been ready
for opening in the early pert of the last month,
bat for the frequency of the aims whisk awed
the streams to rise to aesh as amulet es to often
interfere materially with the work. Its ample-
Um, hewer*, in Is prisms woes* will be pea
Awake of pnst reselle to the Osespasy, us by it,
is. eoaaetios with that peas el Um week sow is
see, tbe-Oespesy will at sue be is peessidos
of
a ism teemeteibej sag pr'* Whim
Naos,
NNW ?Olt.
Owrogpitediree• if the lir* Olisawir.
aim You. Ilapinsber 301154.
A body of leaned men and women are meet
ing up town this week; en exesllent Om for
scientific deliberations, far all up town is as qui
et as the regions of the grave, bat a very bad
time to get those provisions for the renewal part
of man's nature, from the want of which even
philosophers are not exempt. Out of one hun
dred and ninety-five Emilia on the four sides of
Washington Park only six at prawn: are in their
domicils. This has been found to be the ease
by the Committee of the "American Association
for the advancement of education," which is the
name assumed by this learned body. It is their
fifth annual meeting, commenced on Tuesday.
Instructive papers have bees read by various lit
erary and scientific celebrities. One rarely sees
a larger collection of intellectual heads and fine
imposing eountenanoes, than are gathered this
week in the Chapel of the University. There
was Prof. Bache, with the serious look and ear
post tone of a man who is doing a great good
work for the world. There was Rev. Mr. Hun
tingdon, the new Professor at Harvard, who held
a large audience in rapt attention tills very late
hour of evening. His eloquent voice and beau
tiful thoughts will not soon be forgotten by those
who heard him. There was Lieut Maury, Bish
op Potter, of Pennsylvania, no indolent holder
of a sinecure, various superintendents of public
instruction, and calm, dark browed professors from
the colleges of the land. It was truly a noble
spectacle.
Into this grave, learned, dignified and some
what aged assembly, there walks on Thursday
evening a stalwart Englishman with bat, ball,
gloves and all the necessary implements for get
ting up a cricket match! He wanted to explain
the game to the Association and seemed not at all
adverse to getting up a match on the stage ex
tempore. Bishop Potter, the great—physically
as well as mentally—took an interest in the sub
ject. Shouldn't wonder if be joined the "New
York Club."
Thji question whether the reading of the Bible
should be introduced into the Public Schools ex
cited a warm discussion in this body
The absorbing topic of general conversation
is, of course, the frightful accident on the Cam
den and Amboy road. There is a great indig
nation against some of the employees—the con
ductor especially, which really ought to be di
rected against the company. This wealthy com
pany, enjoying the exclusive control of one of
the great thoroughfares of travel, has with the
worst economy provided but a single track. If
they had a double track this accident would ne
ver have happened. But they will bleed for it
soon. There seems to have been very few New
Yorkers on the train The calamity will be felt
most deeply in Philadelphia.
A "gentleman" was hauled up at the Tombs
the other day for attempting to make a heal in
a way at once original and unlawful. Sedulous
ly deliberating on the possibility of getting a din
ner without money, he was struck with the idea
that wide sleeves were invented for the purpose
of concealment. He arranged a fish hook and
line, so that he could draw it up and down one
sleeve with the other hand, and then , went fin
gering the wares of an eelman at Washington
Market—concluded not to buy, but the suspi
cions of Bely were arrotised—the Dodger was
searehed, and the dodge exposed.
AU the fools in the world are not dead yet,
notwithstanding it is the nineteenth century. If
any one doubts the proposition let him consider
that eight female Astrologers and Clairvoyants
can afford to advertise daily in the New York
Herald, and that people will persist in paying $1
to I'. T. L., who swears he will make you rich
in five minutes, with a mere receipt. That trade
is not so good as it was though, but Astrologers
flourish. A man of tact and experience can eas
ily astound the ignorant and unpracticed, and
secure their fullest confidenoe. Then there is
always a elan of fast younggents, who must have
some place of that kind to visit for variety of
amusement, when fiat horses lose their charm and
the paint shows too clearly on the tarnished cheeks
of Beauty, and red wine is no longer nectar to
the lips.
Broadway looks busier than it did two weeks
ago hot cool weather this. Rusticating people be
gin to think of hot air pipes in the parlors, and
hot rolls in the morning.
Rachel is further advertised, and is talked
about in the intervals between Know Nothing
convention matters, and the great catastrophe,
and the taking of Bwesborg. Local news is com
paratively uninteresting just now.
Rev. Dr. Cone's funeral on Thursday was at
tended by a large proportion of the clergy and
prominent religious men of the city. He was
born April 30th, 1785.
There is almost a total lull of local news, with
the exception of various suicides and murders,
which are no longer "news," as it is a very old
story, daily expected. There is a plan now be
ing developed to encourage and pecuniarily aid
emigration from the country to the city.
ERIE.
To Annoys. VIM MIN FROM CATTLIL-Dis
solve canpbor gum is new rum,
making the li
quid pretty strong of camphor, and apply it on
various pins of the body of the animal. It is a
harmless application, so fae• as the animal is oon
(armed, leaving the coat free and clear, but des
troys the lice. In about two or three weeks af
the application, rub on the liquor again, in order
to kill the young vermin that may have hatched
out after the first rubbing. I know of no safer
application which will prevent the eggs cr nits
from hatching.—(br. N. E. Farmer.
LOVE AND ATTIMPTIDS ILICEDIL —An attempt
at suicide came off in Wed Troy on Saturday
afternoon. The daughter of a Mr. Blencowe
some few months since, got desperately in love
with a good looking young man, and wished to
marry him. Her parents would not give their
oonsent, but forbid the "good looking young
man" the house. This drove the young girl to
distraction and "piton." On . Saturday after
noon she pure/tamed two ounces of the article,
and took the whole of the quantity was so
large that it produced vomiting and saved her
life. Medical aid was immediately roeured s
and'such antitodes resorted to as will prevent
and serious regalia from following the young
lady's rashness. lirliether the attempted sui
cide will cause the parents to take a more ra
tional view of 'matrimonial arrangements, re
mains to be seen. We hope, however, that it
sir Solo* Booload, ez-Llaited &atm Esaator,
sz-Aakbaimador of Cleated Amnia% ez-vender of
' rah. sad A rem% gad prima sailor d the Little
Rook ( Gosette and Dositxrai, has takes a
forma breve!! of the Dementia party, la ea edi
torial Wert is his mar, sad &okras his fatale
Wholes to the prWpilis of the America* or
iLatrw-Nc . ithiag pasty. A Tsaaateee paper, in
fotolli% lama tide pelitisal aseabatie paths:.
ease, reakulai that then has mover ban a time la
do hillier, if the hi peaty WWI it mad
alit bin iphommipady Domeorat
4111.4m4 with" sow
mike 11111414.41C1.31r51iL
The Sterling larders.
The Oswego Palladium gives further particu
lars of the horrid affair a Sterlg, Cayuga Co.,
noticed by the telegraph on Thursday. The fam
ily of Mr. Fitzgerald, consisting of himself,
wife and three sops, retired to rest about 10
o'clock. The second son, whose name is John,
aged about twenty years, was but a short time
since bailed from jail in Auburn, by-his father,
where he was confined for stealing a horse. By
his waywardness and criminal conduct, he had
brought upon himself the censure of parents and
brothers, whieb instead of reclaiming him, vii,
bff4ered his feelings to such a degree, that he
revenge could only be gratified by their lives.—
The father, mother, and yowler son aged
years °copied the same apartment, and John
and his brother Patrick another. John refused
to sleep with his brother, and accordingly lay
down on the floor, after removiu g his boots and
stockings. Soon after midnight, Patrick dis
tinguished groans, as he thought, proceeding from
the room of his parents. lie sprangupon the floor,
and approaching the door leading to their room,
met hie brother John, who informed him that a
negro had murdered their parents and brother.
Patrick immediately alarmed the neighb9re, who,
very soon in great numbers, flocked to their as
sistance. When they entered the room, one of
the most appalling spectacles was presen ted that
eyes ever beheld. In the centre of the floor lay
the youngest son, weltering in his own blood,
pathetically calling upon his mother, and ipi
ploring the beholders to remove him from The
scene. The instrument used tocommit the deed
was an axe. He had received two gashes, about
four inches in length, upon the side of his face
and head, severing the temporal artery. lle
died in about three hours, from the loss of blood
In the farther corner of the room, upon a bed, lay
the aged parents, with their faxes and necks hor
ribly mutilated.
The old gentleman appears first to have been
dispatched by several deep gashes in the neck,
completely severing the spinal cord, and the great
vessels of the neck. After which the old lady
appears to have been struck with the same in
strument, upon the tack part of the neck, with
the same effect.
A justice was soon summoned, who, after ques
tioning the two survivin : , sons, ordered John
to be taken into custody lle exhibited guilt
in his looks, which was further evinced by the
prevarication he man 1 fested when answering inter.
rogatories.
lie stoutly denied all knolledge of, or partici
pation in the affair, till about three o'clock in
the afternoon, at which time 1)r Plumb arrived,
in whose family the said John had resided for a
few months, about four years since The 1)r
after summoning all persons to leave the room, in
which the prisoner was confined, kindly converse.'
with him in relation to the enormity of the deed
which he had committed, reminding him of th.
love which his parent bore for him, until tht
fountain of the soul wa%, stirred up and amid sob:.
of anguish and cries of latneutatiou, he confessed
that he, and he alone had murdered his father,
his mother and his brother
-- ...- -
Items from Texas
.......
The Galveston ( than has the election re
turns from most of the counties iu the State, and
says:
Pease's majority for t;overtior, we think, will
be about 6,000 votes It is now L7OO Run
nels, for Lieutenant• Governor, will have, it
reasonable to believe, :2,000 Hell, for Congres.,
over 4,000
In the Eastern Conressional District, Ward's
majority so tar is ti:O. bu, the Civilian regards
the result as extruup ly d,,ohtful, there being fif
teen counties to lwar from.
Three cases, of yellow lc er from the steamship
Mexico are in the Galveston hospital. This fever
has not attacked any of the citizens. Re•
ports from Houston are to the effect that there
had been no new cases of fever for two days. The
health of the country generally is reported to be
very good.
The few returns whi( h gi Jen on the vote on
the Debt bill, say.' the Galveston 2V , wg, exhibit
what might appear to be inconsistencies on the
part of the sovereign people. There are other
instances beside the one cited by our correspon•
dent in which the candidate opposed to the Debt
bill was a minor e insideratiou with voters, in
comparison with the acendaucy of one or the
other of the two great parties.
There was a report in Austin of a fight on the
San Saba, between a man named Taggart and
another named Trailor They are said to have
fought with shot guns and knives Taggart kil•
led Trailor's horse, and the latter cut Taggart
badly with a knife.
The Victoria _Advocate says that the naviga
tion of the Guadalupe is permanently established.
A steamer, it mentions, is plying regularly be
tween Saluria and Kemper's Bluff, with heavy
loads of lumber. This landing is about fifteen
miles from Victoria, and the river is cleared of
obstructions and in good navigable order up to
Colonel Hunt's plantation, nine miles below
Victoria.
The Democratic Majorities at the South.
The Washington correspondent of a Know
Nothing paper thus talks of the Democratic
majorities at,the South:
"It would be hazardous to predict when we
shall hear the last of Democratic majorities at
the South. The worst of this sort of news is, that
as it begins to come late, so it stays with us
longer than the more agreeable variety which
that pleasant engine of deception, the telegraph
brings us. Winston of Alabama, has already
reached twelve thousand majority over Shortridge,
and is still Eizrp. Even Jerry Clemens, the
popular ex-. r, and a hero of the late war,
is beaten out of sight., for the one-horse honor of
Representative in the State Legislature, and his
competitor for senatorial honors, Mr. Fitzpatrick,
rides on the topmost wave of triumph. In Texas,
where Sam. Houston exhorted to willing audiences
on the eve of the election, the Democracy have
annihilated opposition, and will be compelled to
fall by the ears by wa) of vindicating the com
bative propensities of the race In Kentucky,
too, it appears peculiarly fortunate that the first
returns placed the Whigs and their temporary
allies out of danger use each new return re
duces Mr. Moorhwurs majority nearer the cypher
point."
LATFAT PROM TII CRISIRA.—The latest intelli
genoe from the Crimea, contained in the Liver
pool papers, states the victory of the Allies over
Liprandi, commanding the late Russian attack
upon their lines, to be quite as important as es 4
represented at first. The General is represent.
ed, after his defeat of the 16th, to be in full re
treat toward the interior. The Allies also took
four thousand prisoners in the battle. News of
much moment is anticipated by the steamer
which may be expected to arrive to-morrow or
next day, as the Allies wore to recommence the
bombardment of the fortress on the 17th current,
being the next day after the before mentioned
engagement
Tim Ea.scrion IN KapirucKr.—The Louis
ville Times, says it is a note-worthy fact, that in
that portion of the State canvassed by Clarke and
Mo together, where the issues were ais.
ore the people by the two candidaa•w
for Governor, the Aaiun of the Democratic part•
were i m m e nse. meson'. Chute and Mor,•bca.l
were about two weeks in the mountain district,
and spoke every day. The gain in that District
over the vote of 1852, is over four thousand votes,.
If Mr. Clarke could have been accompanied
by Mr. Morehead all over the State, he
would have been sleeted by an overwhelming
majority.
Oaliforaia will soon have a railway built
and, in operation. Tie Sacrament. Valley Rail
road is in proses of oonstenetion, and the Com
pany an already eownneneed laying down the
soils M Raixsinento City. A portion of the road
wee to bort lismi Mind ws4 °peat os the 156
dq A 74814
Pram the Pkw Yost Ti.....
Dreadful Catbastropie—Ta.L=anlons
Idned--lienreaty Obits
Another terrible accident marred on the Cam
den and Amboy Railroad, between this city and
Philadelphia. at mos. yesterday—resulting, as
nearly as we are yet able to ascertain, in the death
of 23 persons, and serious injury to some 70 others.
The particulars are as follows :
The morning mail train left Philadelphia at 10
A. hi., and reached Burlington—twenty
few minutes ahead of time—say a quarter of an
hour after 11 o'clock. There were six passenger
can in the train. Jy the rules of the Railroad
('ouipsmy. the train first arriving at Burlington,
which is the place for the meeting of the trains, is
required to wait ten minutes, and if the other
train does not arrive then, the first is entitled to
the road ; both trains to run, looking out for each
other. There is but a single track.
The up-train waited, according to orders. for
the train from New York, and then came on.--
When about three miles this side of Burlington,
the trains met. saw each other in season to reverse,
reversed rapidly, and the train which had left
Burlington a few minutes before, ran back for two
miles. until it had reached a cross-road half a mile
this side of Burlington.
At this point, n wagon with two horses. driven
by 1)r. Hannegini. an old physician. residing just
out of Burliugton, was crossing the track as the
train backed. The hind car struck the horses
killing them instantly, and this caused that car to
be thrown from the track, while those in front
piled up on top of it. Four out of the six cars
were thrown off the track in this manner, and three
of them were utterly destroyed. They were all
well filled with passengers, nearly all of whom
were injured more or less seriously, and it is fear
ed that the number who are killed outright was
even greater than we have announced above. The
accounts gathered. however, indicate that twenty
three pen/ HIM are killed, while not less than seventy
were injured.
o n e gentleman with whom we conversedsaw
thirteen dead lashes taken into Burlington. An
other. who was present a few minutes later, count
ed nineteen ; and another twenty.
The women and children on board of the train
appear nearly all to have escaped. We have but
four or la front es reported among the dead.
The groans of the wounded in the rooms of the
hotel at Burlington. are described as awful. (Inc
injured and his agony was so intense
that lie Luuld riot remain quiet, but persiated in
throwing hungelf up and down on the settee, groan
ing horribly.
Fru'ii the Tritiune
The train being on the move backward, the en
gineer did nut see the horses and carriage, and
war, not aware of thy. collision until he saw one of
the carriage-wheels lying on the track as the engine
p a ssed over it. The conductor saw the horses and
carliage and apprehended that the train would
trilsr them, but the bell rope was out of order. su
that lie could nut warn the engineer. lie started
through the cars for the purpose of doing this in
p,•rs, but was too late, and the car and horses
struck before he could get there. The concussion
thies the first passenger car off the track and
eitibankinentleight or ten feet high, and
sith the lIP iitutn that the train had at the time.
the next two passenger cars were drawn down. one
after the other, on top of the first, while the fourth
was thrown clear over all them with tremendous
force. The fourth passenger car became detached
from the baggage car, and this. together with the
eierine and tender, was left en the embankment
above and but %cry little injury was done to these
cars or those who occupied them.
The four passenger ears which went down the
etibankinent were literally broken into fragments,
and the wood-work of one of them was reduced to
pieces.none of which were over four inches wide,
e‘ery panel having been crushed apart.
followed scene which those who beheld it
represent as truly appaling--one that would shale
the strongest nerves and sicken the stoutest heart.
The cries of the mangled human beings who were
buried beneath that chaotic wreck of materials al
iii;mit palsied the senses and disabled the arms of
the few who were so fortunate as to be able to
render ;issist slice. Those, howei, er. who could ex
ina ate themselves and were not disabled by in
juries. assisted by the residents in the vicinity. set
thernseli es to wotk to remove their unfortune
companions from the ruins. It was some time.
Omagh. before their task was completed. timbers.
iron wheels and axles being piled upon them in a
confused mass; and. alas, there were too many
who could not appreciate their labors, who felt not
the heavy weight upon them—they were dead.—
Those who were got out alive were almost without
exception, injured in a greater or less degree—and
many were so seriously hurt that their lives were
despaired of, and the injuries were of every de
scription and character imaginable. There were
broken legs and arms, half scalped heads and
frac.ured sculls, and every conceivable kind of
flesh wounds.
Among the killed was a middle aged lady who
wah traN piing in company with a daughter of about
fourteen or fifteen 'ears. The body of the mother
was removed from the spot on a bier, followed by
the stricken child, bedewing the path she trod with
tears of the most intense grief.
Another lady. who was supposed to be from
Patterson. had her head severed from the body.
and they were found a few feet apart. with the hat
still upon the head and the ribbon still unfastened
from about the chin.
A man who attempted to escape by jumping was
caught between the cars as they went over the em
bankment, and his body completely cut in two just
above the hips.
A train was sent down to the scene of the dis
uster from Burlington, and the dead bodies, to
gether with the wounded that bad not been con
%eyed to residences in the vicinity, were taken to
the Burlington depot. Here the dead were covet
ed with blankets to await the Coroner's investi
gation, and every aid that humanity could furnish
was rendered to the injured sufferers.
The ladies of the place came with linen to ban
dage broken and bruised heads and limbs, and to
speak those gentle consolations which woman alone
can utter. The clergymen of the place, and among
them Bishop Doane, were also present, and while
one smoothed the pillow of a groaning sufferer.
another. with hands clasped, would supplicate
!leaven in behalf of some dying one.
DEATH SPRINO —A late California paper
mentions the discovery of a spring in El Dorado
County in that State whose waters flow from a
bed of arsenic. The mineral deposit is thirty
fee tth ie k , and crops out of the surface of the earth.
Veins in it abound with gold and specimens of
this auriferous ore have been shown to the editor
of the Placerville .4 =erica's. The name of "Death
Spring" has been given to the stream. The exis
tenceof it is supposed to account for the mortality
swung the gold miners at the early period of the
California epidemic.
S, 'lie—Bark room of a Know Nothing's dicel-
Gay— Eater tads boy very muck excited.
Little Boy—Oh, pap, get your gun quick,
and come out here. There's a great big Irish
man down in the alley, eating a water
melon. The prettiest shot you ever mw; come
quick!
Know-Nothing--Hush, sonny, don't make a
noise; there's two Dutchmen coming down the
street, and I think I can get them in range and
tumble them both with one shot.—Lowistilie
De mu," ral
BALTIIIIOIII, Sept. 5.
intelligence from Norfolk, via Richmond, is u
u4usl more highly colored than the accounts to
oeived direct by boat. Mayor Fish of Portsmouth
reported dead. Hay. P. Willis, methodist min
iptter of Norfolk also reported dead. Commodore
Page has the fever. The scarcity of wane ie qp
great that bodies are buried without them.
A duel took plow near this eity on Tuesday
between two gentlemen, one of whom is a New
Yorker. Two *hots way and one of
the duellists was slightly
sitoirios.
GALIX I. IBM,
Formerly of tide oily, any be bead at Janes B. Begeres
New York, Ready Made %Wing sad Ilenhaat T a li m i ng
Nstabliskaeat, 164 Man Street, Beta* when le weld
be happy i see ell Isis old Nisei* awl as away as, awn
as viii laver bin with • eall, teeing sealideat that it
will iss to tie advaatege of diode wising CAnklag smoke
A splendid amioetseat of int gsialUp ready ado Ma
im; oeasteatly ea Wei. AIN • large stook et thatieseea's
laraieling GaAs, Rubber Onding, to
to order as regards styles, Qweitty aad Peke.
large Prep6MONI of this listabliskiseat Weeds le !tea
sleek et goods easpesaly ia store, coasprielin all thio
latset styles et Zesty nada Clefts( and hierehaal
lag Gook Meals' lastle to seder la the sham* spew
°Mac Pato as 4 Vest sole la eight been after ember
is Wt. Our sotto Isrisk Wes Ind
stasbarthe seislose, *hi bowies
sad Sense NNW & BOUM
tart 1111. Ise
_ .
114Llarril PAIR 1111111141
OTOa .
.neglected often prove feral, lead, P.00..,,t,
1-- me o w the puts U iisio•
m, a day wtth
PAIN ravritAcTOK. erKeretinn f r 9rat in to ,
them ism* the •'Pile Syringe" filled V2th F.
gradual discharge is as the myringe
'never taus to Cure case, of any age or
'SUZY ease laeteatly all, frequently ear, ex ~ue
eatioa.
Plies are knows by Ilia heat, itchttt, alot 4
sane. Bleeding piles are caused, lenn•nto,l• lb. 'a
of the whole bowels, which then prima the ‘otpatu,a,
tight against the back bones and keep. f,
tbs
.04 aerofelous awl ~..
turning up the Vessels,sically, the
top o f your finger when a atrtnK 1/1 (I. 'i o o
aad Deaf a efitopr. •• TY.III lit , ,gi
salve MI above, al,. 'Ol. N w.
f t o s na cii
th ti e fr r eq ein ue i n ti t,.. ?
perte......0.
t.
fur roue time, end the un•ur ~ I ' l 4 t.1
Oil will b. eutarretr•l at..l .or ‘ I " 1 .•
be oared. I( pri.prrly t •
never Lair.
W. dentine, Esq., of Colucal•o•. in„
Ohio Insarasea Company, wh, *4. 1,.
extreme debility, with Piles, to,, ,
ed by the celebrated Dr. Mott
his life, accidentally heard of ,
statill, "For years, him discus,.
grew worse until life became lat. h ,
eared by Dalley's Pam Extractor
No Pain Extractor t. Konume sink.—
if .Steel Plato Knrravioi Label with .
V. CLiel[ElllEt prupriet.r• Ail
nufacturer. Prito.
k Herron, Erie, Pa
All order. ,11..u1.1 , I
Co., !• , l Barclay •treet, N. w 1 •rk
A C•RD TO TIM LA1.11111.--lir 1 llit i , t.• t,,
riodical Pula fyr Females .102.111,14.. 1.,;
laxities, aid ram tog obxtrueti.u , tr.tnt
All medical men know. as ft• man,.'h•:.
whenever an obstruction takes r,u,„
exposure, Or &LI , Aber , nose, th e
L ".
finmodiatly to decline, and the want .1 - i t , t,
been the cause of se many enneumpt, ,u.
males. Headache, pain to Opt
heart, loathing of food, 30 , 1 , 11.turi.e.1 •,.
from the toterrupti , ,n ..1 u wire
ease, the Pill, will ,
Fall sad 0.11)111 . 1t a c . ~u , l 4
mart Le stnetly 101 l ,wed rad all tits.,
•
males may be •pve W y cured.
Price $1 00 per Sold by all 0 ,
and wholesale awl r, !ail, at the prop.
TER It BROTH KR, No ti Reel 1140
mint he addressed,
$lOO.-Pitu, LAY
ing highly honorable a
dei phi* whether my ',et,
Neuralgia, Ileadaehe and Pam..
whether it does not produce an turn , .
the remotest injury —E. iiilling•ar
Tontine, Dr. WOO 4, Wood'.
years a large livery owner. J
Robert Betham, Esq., Leagoe I
an, Esq., corner of Seventi,
five hundred ottier•, •
children cured a. if by , ,
haver, known as lir.ith •
toured in Philadelphia 'lt -t ,
cured. No long doctors' la ' •
had, nor stain your skin nor r”ii
have tried every thing el-- ,
Rub it well, and keep the l—tt.
'
I'd F, .Llt~
The large bunk. I Are let. t t'lle4 tb. ~ 4,
Ilkerstraltt
T.• tar rp/tTs nJ Eire ty olit
At the solicitation of numer.m.
two of party, I have- b een indured I •
dadate for the °thee of Sherlff at tt,
should I be elected I hereby ple
duties of the offico faithfully, aul
best of my ability.
Erie, Jane 29, 1•5:,
Ereet, 01
Tor undersigned Arr.. at.a-clf ,
office a Sheriff Of Erlc o.,utit,
as binding upoo himself the acti • ,
he respectfully solicits the support , d t.-
tam and if successful in his el .rt. t -
endeavor to discharge the duti...
such a manner as to afford hi• -
their having made the underczn..l
Erie. Aug. Is
Legislative.
We are requested t. artttune• •:,
DI NN. Eeq., of Summit town-ti.p
Leval/aura.
0011IIty COMMISSIO 11 or
We are requepte,l t., fl• •
STEIL, Elk{ , of Suutto,t t•.wn.s:p I- •
ty Counuounoner. au.,;e..t t the •
Laz-psyers of the county
r. We are authortze.l to 114 L. , 11•
Jr., of titrard, for the other -u
CIIOO of the Whig County Ct.hrent,
- 11itttrlistmenis
BRUWN'S TEI
Panwrimia the Para. Krir. Pa . E II • • •
will ruu rrgula r I v to
the acciwatuodaiiou-til [meat. u• th • •
i other .
BAXIMIST.
FARMER: of Krie e.):Anly ail.
subscriber as al way. neer If• •
airbag marks: pries For pod br . it tiv
as usual to pay CAA H for same, •
in Erie. or to his agents at oprintflittil lt • ti -a
view
Erie. Sept...lBU.
iftssoLtrriore.
NOTICE N hereby given that ttir e
ezi4ting between *eller ea War I• Ba 11%1 ••
change Broker., o thte day .
books, !wont and other papers belong.ni IJ the •
with Wm C. Warren, with will .
stand. Mp 1. Anacreon Block '" t Nits,
Erie. Sept. I, I-a ANI Alk
Copyg_lt Rio. Jav2,Grouipl
June 30.-7 MINII,KKNo I l i ar.)
TEAS Can be had ul as e rod dtt.ir
as of any of door especial •",
that Branch of to. Trade----or when• ,t - 4
Isbell to select them. come and t'
June U.-7
At •
C1100013L , ZZIO:
THE underyillllll`li ate ro , riv 11,2 i nwv 4.111%
kind. direct in.., 11, 4 I l i rn. n w hi:hthr ,
a the ebeapien fin I ur I..irls,,na• tar prp;Lie
known SinfP,COrner Stile and n , lll ••
June 3U. t 45 —7 RINDI R‘tt.i - 1. t
DELCO ACIADWAIit.
THE next term of •,..,,t •4 2 t •n. ••
day the , Srb of •frpirmr,•
of WM C 1461, 1 1..1.1.. 'll I'
MILS W 1411414ffi.1., 1.-
The rate* of Tu mon per quarter ar• tt •
For the Greek and French Language. in • i
the 11.11,10 Reader. Geometry above the t/In
Algebra, Mt:greying. EOlanr.GeOlogri.
(teal Economy. Se fence of Governinea, R.
Intellectual and Moral Ph tioroptiter.
For the other Enit t •tt branchey a , d N, 1..• •
through the Latta Re ider.
All charges will tte III:1.14W half or ntt,•• • ru•
J. W WETllolll.SecretAry 01., A I •‘•
Erie, Sept. 1, I$ 5.
LIST OF LETTERS remaining .n I
Erie, Pa., September 1, I , ,
thew/letters will please ray ••A,ii err ;..
Ayer, Chas H
Austin Edmond A
Abrams George Il
Allen Samuel H
Beuesnon James
Boyce Henry
Booman Thomas
Butler John
Booth Nichols B
Burton Jangles
Beck Wm
Baker Jeremiah
Bartlett A Smith Mosier
Barns Albert A Miller r.
Barris Dr W B Miner in, h.
Baker B tior w , 11 .-;
Brown Alden 111,..•ier
Brown Frank 41 • \vs
Brown Monroe Miles lihr •
Briggs John H Morton I.
Brownell Dr S C Mahone, I •
Brown A A Maguire I', •
Brown Wm W Maier mi••
Blossom mrs Ira H McKim
Cowen William McClure I.
Colen mis Henrietta
Cummins Sielia
Cooper David
Conally Hugh
Colgrove G W
Curtis min Sarah C Pettrue i. • • i'';
f!ousgrove Sarah Janis Paul Wiih.oo •
Carter Samuel Rust Wui \
Carpenter Thomas Rods Mat,: is
Carey Miles G Root Lyili•
Cam Samuel Real r•eils
Carran Joseph Sullivan Ano
Carpenter W B Stedman Joseph fi
Carter W M Stewart Susan
Clow William Starch ieort: ,
Cherub miss Martha. Stunts E Aims
Clark Motley 2 Stanton Ara-
Chandler Chas Strop Andres,
Christy R StertinK 4tertruJe
Crouch George 2 Made Will 1:
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