rrit Riteklß Obstrbtr, ERIE, PA StTIADAY MORNING, DEC. 15, 1855 The first fission Congress—the majority of the members of whiob claim to be'elected upon that "great issue,"anti•Nebraska—has spent this week u it did last in a fruitless effort to sleet a Speak• er After Campbell's withdrawal, the fusion vote ran Basics, of Maesachusetts, up to 107 A but still the "rest issue," even with Horace Greeley as Engineer, could not bring in enough to secure an election! Verily,' was ever the hum bug of the anti-Nebraska issue more apparent than now, when those elected upon it' find them selves utterly unable to set in harmony. The mitt, is, and the people begin to see it, too, the Jittery against the Nebraska Lill was but a Fre i< 1. to oover the designs of demagogues to se ..nre the "loaves and ftgbes" of Ace, and the floor of t..xigreees is where they have commenced to :eery out these designs And hones there is •o rga a motion Elf 11 OF TB[ FIULt. —The oontestad election for Sherif was decided, we are informed, during the past week. at favor of the present incumbent, thin KILLP AMICK The facts involved in the matter were SP follows: Certmn persons tiled a petition and affidavit, setting forth that Killpst nck wee sot duly elected, for certain reasons, heretofore opecified in our columns During the pendency of these documents, the Governor, upon full knowledge of the facts, and by the ad vice of the Attorney I ieoend, issued a commis sion to Killpatrick,wbo immediately commenced the duties of Sheriff At this point, Killpst nck's counsel moved the Court to dismiss the said petition, which woe done; the Court consid ering that the commiartion superseded their juris diction in the proceeding A It —V. eD4 ali following az solisceasisat In abil Duatali /9 •0411041 of last week - Illanov•t. —For asarnal days past secret rumor has Pl&Haled the veln‘Ars 3 4 v , wie one of the Pierce oficiais to this {Decay The bobble taliy burst on Tuesday last, and eattnifoissed the offo•fai life 4 our friend F W Traey, Samna Mail Agent at tht, plane. J Ir. "Havens, of this ri;;age. 19 his IllaeroBlo, In what respeet Mr. Tney has bees f..un.l wanting in the adainistration creed, we of course have so mesas of knowing, of this mach, however, we speak uaderstaadingiy —he wade a faithful and ef. Iciest odleor " tray by whoa, or for what reason this removal has been made, we are linable 1 di•iae, for we bare ever heard Mr Tracy lop.,hon et as a faithful and eaergetie Aker, and know his to be • reliable sad elfieiwat latancrat. Mar site Airabnei We think the pooition of Postmaster General is the most thankleas office in the world. Every where be is held responsible fur all mail failures; every when be is denounced if any of his sub ordinates fail to do their duty; and t"y"ro, when after patient ssd laborious investigation, be finds woo sod where the delinquent u, and r:movea him, he is again denounced, sod the decapitated individual held up as a martyr by the local press of the neighborhood The above is a case in point, and because it is a case in point, we tio uee It Foe month, before Mr T was removed, there was constant complaint here, and in the west, because of the repeated failure (.4' the New Y•mit and Ene Mail. Day after day was the woo:idle public told that the cause of these fail ure.wasthenon t .nuecti, , n if the Lake Shore and the trans at Dunkirk Fir a Whlle , truce went down with the public, but wbeu that putoir saw the passengirs come through by the N..w York and Erie road, but rc.) mails, then the public with go,xiresson began to complain to the D,partroent. Theee complaints reached the l' Genera/ from all the Trine:pi: cute, ~f thr west, and to response to them hr sent out Mr Earn . Special Agent for the State o f iltito, to .4-..rtaiu where the difficulty lay H, pr o ceeded n his mission and he traced the complaints from town to town until tie arrived at Dunkirk lie went .nt.. the D..pot there, and be found no Local Agent nn di.'} The "faith• ful and efficient ofFic-r•' of the ../ohreat was at tending to some other "faithful and efLient of ficer s' duty. we suppose, at any rate, Mr E satisfied himsolf. > y personal übservation,and by tOquities made of those"around the Depot who knew nothing of his hus.ness, and therefore were supposed ti talk cantlid'y, that with "n faithful and *getout officer" at Dunkirk as Local Agent, the complaints of mail (mattes west of Dunkirk would be stopped These facts he reported to the Department, and the result was the removal complawed vf And that it we. just, the fact that bake* the removal we dii not get the New 't Mail at the right ume over once a week, ',berm we have not missed but once since• is conclusive evidence to us.. And we think it will bt to every body west ./ Dunkirk We make this etatesseot with o, unkind feelings, or desire to Mill". Mr T but simply to correct the im pression sought to be conveyed by the Jammu/ and the Seraind. and to vindicate the Postmaster Lieneral That Mr T to "a reliable and efficient Democrat," as the .tirnilaef says, we have no doubt, that he of a good, clever fellow, we know; but our advice to ail good, clever Democrats ii, ttleiliess yosi get a you , / dung keep it "' THET DWI!. rat St ',PUT SOYSTrillfil —The bsiieung fur Speaker in Congress has drawn out Koine queer twinge-4..peClStly In the case of Mr Fella, of our State He was elected from a Democratic distrwt last year, when "fusion" and "Sam - ruied the hour; and it was supposed that be was as firm on the sectional platform of John ston. Pollock 3 Co as ,h.we 'worthies themselves In this character Le went to 'Washington two weeks ago, and sin notninsied for l•lpeaker.. started is the race with sixteen or seventeen nasal to back him, all nearly ail from hie oat State He held this until the 28th or 29th ballot, when he suddenly went up to thirty Tbis set kis "fuss In" frionds at home to thinking, sad disking set them to looking, and looking bias Giant eonvinced them that there's a "nigrr is tits flans" somewhere The Pittsburgh Jour nal, as a sample, has the following: "It will have been observed that the insigni beast vote of ti or 9 carnet, which Mr Fuller, of Pa., reeetve4 up to the 215th or 29tb ballot, soddenly alt~is went tip to Su W e have taken the psios to examine this point, vis:— Whether men at first, voting for Humphrey Mar shall, of Kentucky, did, after his withdrawal, vote for Feller, together with Clark, Gillen, Davie, of Md.,llaffinan Kennett, Pause, Porter, Perrilr, Ready , /Licosa, Rivas, Swope, Under wood, Valk, Whitney and Zailitioffer, all of whoa supported Marshall while he we. in the field.— Hai Mr. Faller given any pledge to these gen atir A mr seal reminds . ias a good deal of the fgho caught mother man kissing his A to," said the indignant Gaul, "now Gik, sims -i l e as so suepeet something." The Jourima ined th e rote, and finds the "him* rs" kissing Railer, cad it be. sings M magma something, Mel &well i t Mar Repeal d the Jag Law It is pretty evident now that the first thing the Legislature, which assembles in January, will be called upon to do will be the repeal of the law passed by the last Legislature, generally known as the "Jug I*w." That the sentiment of the Stste is opposed to such a pie-bald excuse! for prohibition, there can be no mistake. It meets Ohs approbation of neither the advocates of the old license system, nor of the friends of the system inaugurated in Maine by that apostle of restraning enactments, the celebrated Neal Dow! Indeed, it is a question already being discussed by the friends of prohibition them selves, whether the passage of this law has not served to sap and undermine the foundation and efficiency of the various temperance organize- tions, which, all admit, have accomplished much, and might accomplish more to restrain the use of liquor within proper bounds. In Crawford County, it we are not mistaken, in some parts of which such organisations were in a most flour ishing condition before the passage of the "Jug Law," there has been a general and wide spread cooling of the most enthusiastic in the cause. The reason otthis is obvious. The mind, unless 1 it has a great object in view, cannot always be timed in one direction—hence the moment the laic stepped in and became the guardian of the tastes and appetites—the moraih.and the welfare of- the consumer of artistic spirits those who bad, through neighborly gladness and love for their species, banded themselves together to re• strain the traffic, tweed their attention in some other direction, fondly believing that legalensct meats rendered their further effort useless. And what is true of one section of the State is true of every other. The Editor of the Pittsburgh Journal, fur instance, says he belongs to the only division of the Sons of Temperance within the two cities and county of Allegheny in which retinues sufficient vitality to bring a quorum o 4 f members into meeting; and he attributes this dwindling and dying out of that benignant and powerful agency to the passage of the, as be mills it, "miserable Jug Law " In view of this fact he goes on to say: "In the only public utterance we have evir ventured ou temperance, and that is near siz yea - rs ago, we dared to counsel adherence W the agencies of moral suasion—associations, lectures, meetings, children' organisations—in aid of the temperance reform, and protected against legal agencies, prohite:ory laws aux the like, as cal• culated to kill off the moral agencies, and then fail to extinguish intemperance, or restrain the liquor traffic. flow nearly pr)phetio the coun sel and protest were, the state of facts -we here just disclosed in regard to toe Sons of Temper ; anti will establish The organisations, which had done wide spread and incalculable good, Piave lost, their function; laws which are strung enough to wake criminals of respectable men, and cut into prison Messrs. &mum, Savage, Shannon, and others:, and yet are altogether too weak to restrict the traffic in liquors, have interposed to leave the Sons of Temperance nothing to do, and they have die banded. The Juo Law reigns The drunkard buys his bottle instead of his dram, said goes reeling to his doom without let or hindrance from any quarter: Thte is what we have valued, so far. Irom the Anti•Liceose Law of last year, or, a: it is aptly called, the Jug Law. The Legillsture will soon meet. Thi fate of that vicious law is sealed we hope; and the soon er ;t is repealed the better When that is done. let us have a sound and stringent Licen,ii, Law. which prop ,st,s eviilation of the liquor traffic, and imposes proper restrictions on thi • retail vender, with proper penalties for viulat ions of the law; and then a heavy license charge gratin sit e d to the ability of the dealer and ve..ider to pa) No more than that of prohibitii.n; but en torce a vigorous Sunday Liquor Law, and leave the rust of temperance reform to moral agencies; then all the good possible to human effort in this plan of reform will be wrought without strife atol passion, imprisoniugs and criminal•nit kings; such as we have seen Such at lout are our vtews long cherished, and, indeed, not rarely ex pressed Mir The Ccizet!e complains that Bare lay, of the Clarion district, and Hickman, of the Ches ter district, vote for RicL•ardson for Speak er, and says, they both rerc elected as anti Nebraska men If our cotemporary will turn to leis own files of 'f.a-t, he will see that Barclay beat a .4 anti- Nebraska candidate out of sight, acd that Hick man was never clangerl as an anti-Ntbraska man until within the last month—Low justly, let his votes answer TLe :fact is, anti-Nebraska, as a political element, is run into the grc.nnd; so much SO that if the election could be la , -31d now, one half of those who are now playing at shuttle cock under the direction of Mr Horses Greeley, would never a e Washington as Honors Wes. SIGNS —The New York Herald thinks that Mr Buchanan, as the Presidential earviidate in 1956, will unite the two Democratic ructions in that State, and thus carry the State for the Dem ocratic party. It is also of the opinion that this re-union cannot be effected by any other distin• guisbed gentleman for the Democratic nomina tion This fact, of itself, if it proves to be a fact upon compairing notes, ought to decide the.. result of the Cincinnati Convention an Mr. B.'s favor OS. The correspondent of the New York Commercial thinks that the recent Know Noth ing Convention at Cincinnati has damaged the hopes of the "National" managers of that party and widened the breech between the Northern and Southern sections of it Very likly; no sen sible politician ought to lay the flattering unc tion to his soul that a band of political outlaws, like the Know Nothings, can expect to harm°. nise It's a moral impossibility. is - William Kisaane has been pardoned by Gov. Cart, on the official applies tion of the Governors of Ohio and Indian; awl the soliei• tation of two ex-Governors of Ohio, the District Attorneys of several counties of thi it State, and about one hundred and fifty othu r prominent men of the West 11:===i It is said the Hon Henry A Wise, of Virginia, has withdrawn his claims to the Demo• erotic Presidential Nomination in favor of Mr. Buchanan. Gov. Cobb, of Geo rgia, is also strongly in favor of Mr. Buchanan. A Vrantxrne'a OPII I I lON, or KANSAS. - A oorrespondent of the Winchester Xe publican, who emigrated Kansas from Frederick °cruel, writes • letter to that paper under date of Nov. Bth, from which we take the following extract: "Kansas, aooording to our hut able opinion, is pettily overrated. Timber is ex tremely sosree, being found only along creeks, La., bat the soil, generally, is very prolific. The Territory has very unhealthy, and the shakes have famed many to sigh for home wiz. Limes will as doubtedly be • free State, for we bare twice as many arrivals from the North as from the SOCUI: The largest city in Kansas does not contain over 1,500 inhabitants, and many of the cities you "read about" exist only in was. Many are NeTiag, and upon the wholo,Kanass is shuns elk I== What they do in OMNI' ( IRAY , of the Cleveland Plain Dealer, is int The last nano which kiss been adopted by the , Washington writing to his paper his impressions ° PP °n ' ent* " 1 t he pet"'wtie party ie that °J . "4U. Of the first Pasion Congress. His piscriptiosi of ti Nebraska" men. Under thissonveniegt elm& lip.) Invite all kinds of ills—the abolitioaists, last Saturday's performance is piquisitt. and inter togas& and will doubtlessisse our %saunas is- I the Know Nothin g , a nd the disaffected politician, s i g h t i nto the way things are done under the en. who calls himself a Deinoerat, and still lingers gineering of the "Sam" and -Sambo" parties i in the twilight of antagonism to the Deawlttle SATCRDAY, Dec 8, 10 !if —H ere l am i n th e iPertY, without nein that the shadows are fast House of Repreeentistivis, in a reporter's desk, i gathering around hill, tad that he DI" soon be having no title to a beat here as yet, exoept as a I lost entirely to those , whose name hv claims. reporter. The hall it Ketty well with Fu- There is not in this tome of anti-Nebraska 149raidiP ' .441144Piii-4N 4 to °l° There is suss onesingle element except that which contemplates less excitement here than in the rural duaricts. ' The giale r i e are th in ly peo pl e d Th e town i tse lf i , a combination fur the sake ci °See and power. is dull, the crowd haring,left several days a l p, ,Itis a dishoneet,lure, tea oorrupting end. li owing, it is said, to the tightoese in the money i h a s been lan is prepar a ti o a. Haire we not sees market. ;in the opposition press, within the last few weeks, Quarter past 12 31 —The House is in order, ; the names of mem b ers being owned on the 2sti I the revolting proposition that men should meet ballot for Slaker Last night the opp osition I together, disregarding great constitutional issues, caucused Bassi as their candidate for peaker. I simply for the purpose of securing the commit. , Members are reading the newsPePero pretty Ben- tees, and the places at.the disposal of the House erally, a delightful and instructive employment . ;ad its officers, and after this, that each division ROLACIGItttLET, "Old N't'hitey,' Ills back of , , , me by the fire, where in a cross legged attitude, !o f t he grand coalition should fall back into its he remains a philoeophical fixture, reading the former attitude, under its favorite chieftain and Na. York Herald. How he must enjoy tie banner portraits therein drawn of him. RICUAIMION, 1 Their whole game of 1856, and the utter bope• with his jolly fine face, bail jest come in, and is i , _ . shaking hands with every one be meets BANKS, its3Dess ut nationalising themselves, is eipmed a mall, good looking bl ac k eyed man, w i t h a 1 tai the c' entry by the attempt together into one countenance beaming with intelligeuce, sits on part) under a name which means nothing but the rght of mein front. He was once a Dem. I antagonism, the elements arrayed against the Dem. ocrat, is now, except on Nebraska ruitte•s, and ~ orra tIC party in the House of Represeetatives!— would make a good Speaker GicetNcs &uo . are voting for him to day, which angers his final lt )(et take the Know Nothings of the booth, defeat. I who ere invoked to conic within this anti•Nebras- The Know Nothings hate WADI. m u d Gib- as fild, b aud some of whom, especially headed DING' most cordially JOHN P HALL stands by Hon. Humphrey Marshall, are said to he un 'ln the lobby. He looks as hale as ever RICA, wi lling emcee of a cambia- from Minnisota, Wurevixte, from Kansas, and t° • °°°e P t the mwas q Caseates:, from Nebraska, are baring a little tiou with their Northern allies,) and, if they' talk by themselves, probably about the uncertain- speak truly, they will tell you that they dare not ty of Territoaial contests, as every delegate com• take ground against the Nebraska bill in their mationed from all the Territories, seven io num-i im a nd OWD 'aity, continue to be the honest re• ber, are contested save two There is no want promentatives of their present conatitneocies. If of celebrities here Buantexeb, the Mormon member from Utah, who was elected in a couch You sound that portion of the anti-Nebraska par• of the Latter Day Saints by the bolding up of ty in the House, headed by Mr. Giddings and hands, sits on the outer circle of seats alone by illustrated by Horace Greeley, you will discover himself, probably thinking over his many wives, that their opp4intion to the Nebraska bill has which he misses most, and cyphering out which i ceased he loves best. "A penny for his thoughts;" yea ,et to show itself in effort° t° restore the more; we would give a dime to know how h e . Miiirouri Compromise, but that they contest them. calcuates to satisfy and support sixteen i that is selves with 1-elarations against the admission his number) sweet, smart and sociable women , of new slave States, et, as to throw that demur at a time, all claiming to be his lawful wedded ,l• eating ingriAlient of revolution into the political conflict MEM 1 P. Sl.—A vote has just beeu taken, and the result of last night's caucusing developed—Rich ardson 73; Banks 80; Fuller 26; scattering the balance. This looks dubious. Not a rote has been added by a change of Fusion cauditntes. Fuller stock is good as any. It tuts just beeu proposed- to Richardson to organize his part of the House and adjourn over to the -Coast Sur vey Saloon," waere smiling, he and his friends can await an organization, and be ready to return when called for. At this writing it looks as though this was the only available plan for or ganising this body. Quarter past '.!P, —Another ballot, Banks, 97; Richardson 73; Fuller 18. This ballot has awakened a little excitement, the first in several days. The members are flying about in all di rections, jostling and laughing. The ladies in the galleries are looking more smiling, as though they expected the tedium of calling names would soon give place to something more interes ing. The 30th ballot is now being taken Cullum, say all the members, is sure of the Clerkship. Many predict that Reeder will be admitted. We think not. 11 he is, whole States, ri not the whole South, will withdraw in a body from the House, leaving it without a quorum, and thus break up the Ovvernuieut. We shall see 2 P —Thirty first ballot • Batiks 98, Rich • arti,on 73. lke. K, '2 I' M.—l resume my note., at the hour and place of leaving in my tormcr munieation Howitu, Conn of Georgia, and lIILLIAED of Alabama, are discussing the prob abilitii a of an organizati,di in front of the Speaker's stand. Conn sa a short, thick, curly Leaded gentleman, hers.ou- and vi%ae,ous, and one of the best parliamentarians in the country. Tile 73 illcnattostiN votes are ino-tly old mem bers, and versel in the tactics of the House, and are equal to at least 100 green members. But the opposition have GIDDINGS, u. w the oldest member in the House, CAMPBELL, BANlis and others, who will make good tracticians and hle leaders. Being Presidential year, this will be little else than a bunkum Congress,—ling speeches dragging out a long session into the dog days. Half-past 2.—Another ballot just declared. BANKS 89, RICHARDSON 73—BA-sits wantin; 11 votes. It looks like organizing: but there is no knowing what another ballot may bring forth We have just called upon Mr. Ilicuwitosoiv, and proposed to take the organization of toese fusion ists upon contract, H.: objects, as he says they are doing the country less harm now than when organized. GRXELEY and SEWARD have had a more. !lo oser has got to be abusive, dictatorial, end pet ulent. He is out of standing with all the isms be himself has started in this country. His fol lowers have lost confidence in him, and ho in them. He is fast falling out with all polit teal parties, and fizzling out in all his moral reforms His last sell to the liquor dealers in Sew York, by whiob be pocketed some 85,00 V, for allowing them the use of the Tribune to de fend and disseminate their whiskey sentiments, has brought down the temperance refirmcrs upon him with merited indignation. baa !pen discovered to be his idol, after all MR preteusihns to morality; and as to his religion, ti.• once pro fessed to a Universalist, then a Spiritualist, but is probably now nothing but an Atheist He denounced SIMARD for not favoring a fu-ion of all the factions without regard to princibles, and (or the pure bake of the spoils SWARD point. ed to the 78 Rtons,upeow men; "there," said A•HottAct, is a, model for yon; stand by your principles, if you have got any, if not, fuse!" This is said to be the substance of their talk. 3 P. 1111.--32ndiallotr—BAmas 10, RICHARD sort 72, Ft;Ltztt 30--seattering 19 The crisis is evidently approaching The Southern Know Nothings are scared. They are proposing to unite with the Democrats on Orr, of South Car olina. 33d Ballot—Banks 100, Richardson 72; scat tering 10. Rere Banks has reached his climax The members are on their feet, fifty of tbe•m at a time, calling for an adjournment. Mr. Clcrk! Mr. Clerk! rings all round the House "Call the roll! call the roll!" cry a dozen voices. Mr Forney. the Clerk, gracefully requests members to come to order, and they do so Teller" take the floor, and now, at a quarter past three, mem• hers are marching single file between them and being counted on the question of adjournment; there being no rules yet established by which the yeas - and nays can be called. All is apparent confusion, yet everything is being done decently and in order. The adjournment carried, members are off, anti so are we. FINE WIVES AND 911. Husain DS. —TLe lies ton Tranelkr says: "A few days since an old man of sixty one years applied at the office of the city registrator for the fifth marriage certifi• oate. His intended bride is but twenty-four, it being her first marriage. This is the vuly case within the knowledge of the registrar of a fifth marriage. Last year one man applied for his fourth marriage eertificate, and during that year more men were married for the third time t iian females. There is, however, a woman in this *it, of about forty years who is now living with herMith husband. She was first married at the age of thirteen, and when icartseu was a widow. At the IMPIIV&Oli of the third year she was mar ried to her third hiudiand. She has had but three shildrea." tati4lielissoks. Take next those who claim to be Know Suth logs in the North, and. if their oaths, mean any thing, the mailmen& which is most deeply writ ten upon their hearts is not hostility to Nebras ka, but hostility to the equal rights of all classes of cititeue, and to those who profess a certain , religious creed And what of those gentlemen in the House who call themselves "anti•Nubras ka Democrate?" and what of Mr. Wheeler and Mr. Oliver, of New York; Mr. Grow of Penn• sylvan* Mr. Thurston, of Rhode bland; Mr Nichols, of Ohio; and Mr. Bank', of Massachu sett,, who amuse themselves with voting in a circle, and with complimenting each other in suc cession? Their anti•Nebraskaisru does not pro fess to go the length of abolitionism, or of a dis• position to restore the Missouri Compromise, and yst they claim to b.• "anti-Nebraska Demo- crai." So witch f.ra El which has pruned W Ire a inero ru n e i f saud—the dishonest pretext fur a fusioo. cue end of the struggle iu the mint 21.if.VVV3 of an ultra abolittuu c..h.,,date, or the one of the Democratie nom inee—that nominee w . ch is the representation of the dqetrine of popul sovereignty and of all tbo-e great principles a a which our institution' rep..se, eon upon which the great Democratic party of the country proudly takes its stand. One of these two ideas must triumph in the orgautrat pm and men cannot hide their indiffer ence to the inevii,shle result by attempting to elf/weal their ..pinions under the thin disguise of anti-Nehraskaistu These rival ideas are boldly in the field. The Democratic party has taken its stand delikerately The union, the enthusi assn, and the dignity with which it bolds .ta posi tion, have attracted respect and admirati.m even among ..uradversarte, That portion wit , anAtILII- e<l With no object of expeilieticy or gum; spa it will be inaintaineJ, wh.llier the reqult is a crown ing victory or as honorable defeat Ifa4kiayk,n I, ft ion KANsAs —A correernadent of tLe Buffalo ewer/ten:la/, writing fr,an Fort Riley, Kansas, culler date of Nov. 12, says be did not see a ne gro from the time be left Leavenworth until he arrived at Riley The excitement in the East ern Stetea about Kansas, is kept up by false re port The Territory can never be a slave State. . 4 . 4, luatters can only obtain one hundred and sixty sots of land, and they are mostly of the laboring Qlu, , , who never owned a slave, and are oppooed titirtur eueh property near them They Lave now the majority in the Territory, and more are sti!l arriving. No slaveholder will think of bring, ing a gang of negroes to settle on one hundred and sixty acres, and more be cannot get till the laud is offered for sale. By that time all the water courses and timber will be taken up by sc. teal settlers of the laboring class. This is prob ably a true statement of the condition and pees poets of Keusas, and it shows eonehasively that if the people of the States would treat the affairs of that Territory as they treat the affairs of the States—mind their own busineise—t he occupation of fusion demagogues and anti•Nelontska politi cal hroakers would cease to be a paying business, and the operators break, as all men who trade in politics on borrowed capital ought to. SW Our readers will no doubt appreciate the fo:lowing humorous derieription of the character of the Erie and North Fast Railroad. It is from that capital paper, the Vittr-burgh Unioh: "GILLAT RAILIAOADIT.—The whole number -of cars and locomotives on the Erie Railroad, says the Newark Advertiser, is 3,168, which, if cou pled together in one train, would reach a distance of twenty one miles, and be able to carry 150,000 persons to one day from New York to Lake Erie. 'file company has in its employ not less than 39ttOperaoos, whose pay, per month, is 323,000, ur per year. There are single miler, on this road whose grading cost not less than 15170,00 u each; and one bridge, near the village of Susquehatinah, built upon seventeen atone arches, omit, 9920,000. The number miles from Jersey City to Dunkirk, is 459, and is run over by the evening imprimis train in sateen hours.— The Company Las in its service sit printing presses, which are constantly at work printia tickets that are never used but once,blanks,&e. ' We can beat that. in Pennsylvania. We have a Railroad him than twenty miles long, that has kept three courts, two legislatures, one sheriff, and a regiment of deputy marshals in active employment during the past two years. It has I , ocupird the editorial columns of abutit three Luudred newspaper*. The construetiun of one bridge on it has oust nearly half a million. It has govertion for its ticket spats, and Supreme Judges for its engineers. Although trains are passing over it daily the principal utmost of un dercound work, boring and ezeavating,remahui still to be accomplished. It has outlived a dews mohai acid as many riots. Its obarter is forfeited, sad ittoarishes as well without one as over did soy el the New &gland colonies. It has been the theatre of such violent excitements that the ears are said to run it merely in obedience to t be popular impulse Indeed, it seems to make no difference in its prosperity whether it i 4 under the Baia or under: the hammer, under Tracy or ander Casey. Affairs in Washington. [Froth tha Evening Natiosal Argus.) WAIIIIINGTOY, Dee. 10th The great free-soil, free-i ,, v, and aholitibu pro phet, Home Grwlel, wows in Ws papur, tle Tribune, that he thinks be "se , s daylight " I knew not what specks he looks through, but as he has travelled amid dark and tortuous ways fur many years, it is to be hoped that he has at last emerged to enjoy the free air of heaven, and that he may experi*noe the pleasure of daring 'eta in the daylight that he may not te- ashomeli of With all my heart I wish his Elopes may be realised. There is a great run on the- Banks today, as great as there was on some of the Masachusettb Banks a few weeks ago, but at present writing I with a different result The Banks iu Bost„t, withstood the run, but the House Brinka men, trout present indications will have to give upend surpend. I profess not to be a prophet, and con-.quen,l) cannot predict what will be the result. or who will be the great elected, though if Banks is not the Speaker, then either Mr Fuller, of Peons , or Mr. Pennington, of N J , will ha the nor most prominent candidates, with what revllt, I would not say. Opinions and predictions of too , who are usually called the knowing one change at least every hour, and the man whom they say will be elected today, to m,rrow is not even men t ioned . We had a little interlude, between acts on the Soot today being a motion made by Mr Thorington, of lowa, to the effect that after the third ballot the member en the next succeeding ballot who shall have a plurality vote shall bt elected Speaker This resoluti , m led to , tonsider• able excitement, and after calls for yeas and nays, and a motion to lay on the tabu., it was final.) withdrawn by the mover flow can the iron men of Peuusylvaoiy Justify their rotes for Mr. Banks, for it uwst be re membered at the last session of Congress, that the Massachusetts men in combination with tuc Railroad men of the West, voted unanimom-iy to reduce the duty on Railroad iron, thus striking at the very roots of the interests of Penosvi- VROIII, and at a time too wheti red the unanimous and conoentra act of the uiettlbern I from the whole of your St.ite u. l r v :it its be iug carried; at a time when the wernben f l ow Massachusetts and from the IC..st, tric.cs'ed at our I fear and felt confident of carrying the uu•a,lre In the name of common aun9e, u w e au weathers from Pennsylvania, r,:pri ntilig as the are supposed to do the interests of State, cut their votes for Mr BAnks? "fury certainly could not ,have read lAA , diliates nu the Bill to revise the tariff introdue,d last and especially the speeches of Mea,r4 Chaudi r, Florence and Witte, or they et,ul.l u t eouituit so suicidal a policy as to elect a man wham. from his previous votes, will assuredly favor any re w• lotion that will remove the duty ou inn iaw more astonished that the Huu Tyv , r., go for Banks than I am at any of the other members, for his antecedent,' hey.. always snweu him to be in favor of a high proti c , ive tariff The House has just adj,.urn , d tl ti,t elver to save mail. Mr. Greeley'sdat, light 1.11 L% u,.it made appearanoe in the Speaker's - Chair LOBBY 31i:sins:a The Latest from California. The Northern Light arrived a 4 M Gen William H Richardson, C S Marshall from the Northern District of Ca!lf .rnil was as sassinated at San Francisco on the h izi,t. of 17th by an Italian gambler named C , ve Hon. Isaac B. Wall, -Cell,ecter of the pert of Monterey, was murdered near Sall La °vial)", together with sum:uptown named William son. The murder of Gen Richardson caused intense excitement in Sat) Frauelsol_,aud strenu ous efforts were made part t , ./ get the waskg. sin out of the hanua IL, law, t r the purpose of lynching him but their attempt , were fru...rat ed by the Sheriff Mr. Thomas ',l":iiiittus , n, who was the assessor of Monterey C... munkr ,, rs of the latter gentleman wA.e L•upp , t•id to be it party of Mexicans under Garcia A part ) of Americans, untivethe Shenti of [lts Coaut3, pur• sued the murderers, and overtook :L• ID at when a fight ensued, during whi,h f the Su-rill's party were /tined Caps Archibald Mcis:ee, R v• - nue tat ter McLean, committed suicide on u ill• vessel during a fit of ttoupor fry in-Jto!) The Indian difficulties to ecntil,u .4 battle had been fought at rogue Riot r, b. teem :>t7f3 Indians and S'Oft Regntt,r, undt.r .pt Lane. The fight la4ted Dino hour , , when !lin troops were obliged to retro.u% Iry It a ~,4;I 'Le. killed and 25 wounded Gen W 0 ,,; d uti to the scene of troublu Dates of Salt Lake are to October 19 i' Ili eulties had occurred betwet•ti an' Utah Indians. Several Morruon4 bl , t been mur tiered The Banking house of Sanders cE Brennan, San Francisco, had fatled Loabilics 5t4(.1.000 Assets nOthing. S..maerain hadfailen, and there tray m'ich Anow iu the mountains, but the winner nili4s ha i n•u yet .tt MIU-rs were awaiting a,' rainy seam:), and 1 , 'tot inuch gold coming in. be grew zircon s, ri..11 n: in vri'ti i,..str 1,r. , 6 ,r,i..i. Aso I passing carp Co,. °fuer, 'he zwi:cda,biA.4 spinet RA:TIRED NAVY OTTICERS —Pin Wasiaingt , ti . the 5i,„, , , , the ,• r n ne p i .hi ng ad'' the wea k, un un correspondent of the Tribe has toe f()11 ""ui :11 erch ..e ar.ll. tqlr t v:l.l3±4 pr , keu and drea.ted with reference to the Navy officers retired by the /on Li...t ben-h, end thrmin alone, and the...:.t-an late Board: 1 sleeps nun) t;a: , morning ERIE A large force o! ex-Navy - officers, who were "slsughtered" under the inquisitorial process of the recent Board, are assemble 4 here 3eck mg. jus• tire, and perhaps veogeaoce, at the hands of Cou• gress. Two hundred victims like these are likely Prom Grocery to Grocery, to make some sensation, between recitals of their Tilt you fi , 1 , 1 ale pia , e th 4 'ion . : eV. , In the 0. 4 /..' wrongs and clamors fur reinstatement It is n, .e I T II w F.V ..s h. , . att AN NOR k itlitoTfie.F. ti . S. C:101011,1.. proposed as a practical mode of redress tor the‘e pl ace , a ,, , , ,,- ow, a, ....._, ,4 W ...I nt lower .1 / 4 , t• Li, ,n 9 u:, Wile! lie Co • 1 .te „:.,..xt• wow ..k....tt.t t”-ton the r•se..) - , sufferers, to select a few individual cases , of hard- ait , ,- ,n,., it ,stage over MOW who Lure ha e ikter hut um; 11- Ethip and injustice, and to int ice the attoutt In ot ':."..",:'.7.'", : " , , , ,`,:,',' 7ZvalneW l 'erlZ : Tireel' i I f ' ; i ei r i :!..4 " ;.• " . i n " :, " .. ' , 3 .1 ' the Senate to them particularly, with a view of i a 1, , , ,, ! Ts.: ( 0 ( . 4 , 4 11 , 40: r it wows rite up i•ou 4. , 1 , 0 •p , e 1,.,1 arresting the pr)motions conseriwut upon their , h. . l a'it in..... low 4 •••;. Z,7 : 3 ; ' : i•l ' ; ' : ".. k : •;i r.- 1 '., . 7 ,. ' t.::: '1.. retirement. A part of the plain, :,,o, i- to induce c tlit i ;,,/ i ; :.a . , ; ;li: We it . :it , J 4 1 ,, 10 ,. colue 0 .0 . 1 : :-. ‘ l n, - , t , tts . ;',.. ( ‘‘',-,1 t ... the Senate to advice the I're-At-at t... t' n,,m.n a t,. , e.t. ,-. Remember WM, they are to be so I for ~, t, 1 .:0 ":I ' V t r ut7CS certain officers who bad been -et it,' te An l l t ' tu 'i:..,*;,...' ';', ~ !;•;.""r ' ''''''"i ll ''`'''''''''' s ' 1 "" '''''"• is hoped that Congress may be per:gilded to r.'- - E 13.11 DANCING ACADEMY - view the whole subject, to snob a manner as will , M „ ,Ort • or Ens Our 1,“ will ruse u .1-.:11,•1 I, VI.:R. Dn. ~ (- ) ,, , ,,•.,„14 vi.rive , feil. rive e. ~ ,ie i„ ie., . restore to position many w'Lit, L“ii.c te. n rei l eti e ' . A . , e .., displaced, in order to advance in ,, r e u,,,,,,,•1:, ii,• re o, Ihin,ing. at tn. successors. A similiar exp,ri need anuses nail. en Thursday. Dar. 20. 3 A 45, ni. nt io t`,,.'.lq; ii , ilf • Lk : 1. - 14'' 11 ft.r I . , ut.,; LA I, .. " li•rt and Ifs< of ours was tried in Eng',lnci j ears ago, mot •,) i,./., , . d.: , J ',. : ,i•ii, P M Tuition e Evenii, I.— Our. for Gene...molt. wilt coovnerir.J at the utterly failed as to lead to the complt.te r, -t,wa tiou of the whole retired Jed , sui ,, equititly to, . at",,, Vo. ": utt Thursday et ruts „Dee 20. flour, of k .7,- , • f ,, 1 , 1 I: . I . I , r n , 1 i r .,.. tt , i , : ,,, tc t , ,, 1 , 0 im 0't i. ;) ,, .. , :c. rttlth•n, td 1 r .c hol e , set was modified In as to allow houorable i,r,. aw - tion and retirement, with the pay of the '..:.tt pre ' ET- 1). , . 1,. 1.‘,5.--31 _ JAMEi 1 1 1.1. AN.). c.'diug rank. Ca___ __.____ Cash Syst=:m Adopteci—Prioss Retlsoed. - _ , ,•1. I•t•t. 00 y'o 111.• - i lik:Pl r. • P.4, , TH .1. CO would i n ( . rui th ,„,,.. ~,.„..... ~„ ~, •rr. an I the I...tedte generally that after 'wog expert. I ' o,llll'4lM. , ' I. Tat DZMOCRATIC NIENIIIF.fts —Tile Wa.,:linc- I , 1 e ~ ~. ie the credu lint= have 'lce rear4s 0 , 1 • •loee their Vrytoli. Lr.. A. , . it..s, time, at,gpe .4,1. . ~ '• '' , tog correspondent of the Journal of o)mmerce 1..5.es After the lr.t "/f J•o••ery lgitl, and Neil Goods ex "'" t'- 4° ''''" ' I ' a "'A ( " 4 1 :: , . ": .''. 7: • , wr.tes: I c . a.,‘ (Oil fur ra•t: and reedy pay. AV* shall airways keep 1 L m c ,,,,:„.„'',. / I c ; sr .,' :• r ,.. — .. 4 . ~1 " ,,`:.',...,,,, ~, ;.- ' ' , 'The Democratic a,:mitii-itration meipb,. r ,. ' a full and comtorm stock 4 4 3 t I IP • " 4 Fanc, Der hoods au3 . ,u,,5ta,,,, •,...: , .:). 00. W... • 1 .... ,; . ' 1 frt , - , Cerif. Rolla and llohoh'i are. Nothing *hall be orozo .nest,. -.. A !-, , -1 , te r it . i t•t n' , 1 , 0 ' •h' - '' •' ' ' though in a meagre minority in the Floit.i., ,pc ' rirantrr,g on •ur int.!, •teoerre a share of publio'patro•n_ l en-.tt* ' • , 4...4 & set the largest share of talent ani, (gip, Ili nt..l) , , , ig .e. Ale all Ife iii per• , [.. re••hittg t o perches* goods St l '"" r ''' debate. In the diseusgions, which will by Shlnfl great bargams to melt and exsto.de oar stoat at No, 8 Perry Biotic. tlaat, and upon Interesting topics; the m i nor i ty 4 r ,,,,,, Deo, 1 isbs. will have the advantage.' A l' ALAI 1,4 V b1i1.N1,,,. A. , bla 1111 .Nil '4 , ' . 3121 r ,1)o Oat? Yeast Oak.. __ I.l l A loll .l l 'int Ith. Yet ‘VIII 4 1 . Arx afire •t: ...... NOTICE. 11,. ...., G• ..:,... etc. , . ii it' i-o•o's a' ' , four Inns*. ra r. e ,i r. e", , fii"rrn4 .11" "*.- W ' 0 16664 C 611 d gots `I" kagiialli TraVekr--Hi Bay, ham I on the right mill imolai meeting of the corporator' •3f tho Er,. n ' e '_'• 15:4 . -- __" v ______ _ _ L_ -__ - Cemetery will he hold , . the oifiee unt ie 5 ee ,..,,,, 7 „„ 11.1'&01A le NOTIOII/ rood to 'Artford? C emetery th• lath tiny of January neat at 7 &sleet. P. If . il - riaß AL• ''• "'" ' " ' .3 • ; Y U. '• BR' '''-' '' .finietkue--Well you be. arse, Dec. lb. 11.54. S. S. SPINCEtt. Y. u„* re. , , 'A' 1 ,1 0 1 1 , 1ef , 4 , :::T: 4 , 111 ' Or, I. ~ I ".1.6111;. 4 004 ' 4 14, ~. 4.•11 co 1,,,a5. , SC": Tra,gekr--.-'ow far shall I 'ave to go before I Uaterte py r er. ' Recretar '' •• pal , •l‘ ~ IP' 4 ... ....- o•, get there? The Philadelphia Deily Newt. e 461..,..eri, ...l . •,le c , , - ,-, , c enenpent evt , r 0r.,.. • lel 11113 6.1. I, e. to "i••." h old p";wimp' shell journal, publiatiod in Philadelphia 'pock w,i! •,,,,a• 1, I 'a. ~ ...,,,, , . „...I - , a , • Jeer:alma—Wog, if yrou turn reaund and ill go I now rake...). Er,e, "le neat morning after Its publier e , our ur,itlsboroini..at knock Jrpl. .., rig. • " t'otber way, coq be yowl{ have to travel about t,,,,, arol tor , uth the moat ii o!aeed in the hoods of fre e .4 ' .4 ; 164 i • 1 " . 1 . - 7 31: - _ ' 1.; - i.. teu miles. But if yeon keep on the way yeou *enter" In Erie 66 early 611.1 'reiv..,, , y e shier. than the ‘‘,.' L .; r , " , i ''' ' 4t , n; ' if ; ••• '" ' ' ' ' New York Dailitn. Il 10l Wei' 't I• I ‘' 4l / wading matter e are Inc •,11t. 41...1 ,1 5. , •• are going, yeo'll have to go about twent;•fuur ' p • g O.' t : ,tl4. Is ise "••••••''.. ant news fron, all puts of the c intry. It. toecritykle ar- --- - ------ e•"• thousand, I rec k on . no •eatints tieing th , it, of t i e a.goelnt od Prig*. 9 0 f . ,!„. ;:.- . „ei:,-7 ) , ,, ,.:,,, , .,, ,, -;,„',„•,-, -„' ',.. •.. : ,...e , ,' Teresa co °lit sub9erjberP ' $4 " r annual ' Subtel4l4l °" :LAMM was by . ooly ill* als oft,' were a , o , nc. "•!: Tu n brumuriss, are terribly ene i te d t b ost wilt be milled at... and, forwarded from Out ease of the opened. i'lteprise• too, cannot be someone.) t.., 5..) • the difficulties in limes. Brio Geo sue. J. R. ?Li:SLOAN, ' Ive 114ot and will he sold at Proprietor, , Dan, I, MIMI. Ttasete, Meru kCo ' De 4.16, 1664. Ntw Yonx, D._e 11 YORE. o.....rorpoodiromi o/ &i. 144 04.treer Ni* Toes. Deoetaber lA. 114.41, Did you ever walk in Broadway? Dtil you ever observe other folks walking these? zee genuine fancy dance without muaio, unl-es you can (and who cannot?) gather niu,ic from the la thes eyes The whole affair been reduced to a science. March those two pretty girl. before et. How preelas asd modest, bat they base out tlitm fine day with a d , ..9-iito 1t is just after lunch tiuie After breakfast, papa and Lruther weut avian to Wall st{cet. They tate brandy at Dvlttionieo'i at 'o vrn, and may he au oyster at Dorning's, awl ieturn to dine en fun. ills at ell The ladies h.pwerer, take cold b, alai boom at neon and then hey! fir Broadway to 'WV "am fellows " There they go ah,ad, looking out for the hautisurnot wou.stachei and liereolMeS two 1.14 CM, rtirtLitt st./bDuti. The girls immediately warn, up int, a fit of aut o mativu One of them te:gins a piquant lot of eaudal tier eyes.sp•trkle and she has en op portunity to thew her prof). lip and set of *ena mel The other patens with a sweet strati.: Lips and teeth &isnot, extlibition Two pa.r of eyes look love at "the fellows " The fellow, raise hats :;ct acquainted— hu: no matter—soon will be A block further dawn, girls get into a stage and ride up to Bond street, they get out and make a long step to the Base Pavement , Ti t !ht stoek.nite and pretty ankles exhibited. Th.• walk down Broadway re-c , .rurnences As was expected they meet' the'meustaclies" again A sweet blush sod Invresting confusion on the part of the gins \Valk still procure and modest, but wait till they go up town at dark Din'nt they see the beaux to-day, and don't they laugh and put on airs, and skip, and look ar )nod them. Who eures? Everybody's iu a burrs, and the street gas is't on yet Then ~o f I ,r.oks over h.r shoulder and her expeetaui blae Tree dei,et the same pair of Shanghais and niouitaches behind, and so another pair a lack eye* IcK,k backwards, and dies the blue eyes fire to the rear and the "dear fellows" kiss their glove tips. and so, and so, anti so forth Here comes a lane) man w:til a broadcloth T ,I:na, and a half military air That's o - ie of the only exquisite• on tie pollee. He is cap tain r the Ward Diatriir, and is oft. ner seen c•iliiliting himself oil Ilroailwity than in his stati o house There's a curious genius with a s .ft bat, a midy face. and unshaNen beard, and a ng, dcril mac-care air lie weares satinet patitai.,ous, a collar withou , a neck tie, and round pea jacket,preciseljr like the eapta:n of a cla.sting sch.emer Every uttertioon Broa war. sometimes afoot, and sometimes the fit.. . of a stage, but never Tuai's the latest pact Thus he :mgs to his Leaves et I;rass•" .1 am the poet of the b,ir And I VII the post at the soot • W, tt Whitman. an American. one of the ronzto est, disorderly, flashy, and sensual; s..atinis, drtuk lug, and breeilin7. So sentimeniiiiist —no in ire m o dest thou Immo ics't Queer kilos, an I queer poetry And yet EiciersQn Las bettOmrs.i . prat-e upon him and his book S ,w here, too, comes tlonueet, and i.eivetsatid silks A pretty woman, but one evidently well up iu toe ways of the w'r. I S'a-e m:.ets a faia• cy man, full of gold chains and jewelry. They smile, that is the only recognition To-night it witi he m .re'eordial She la a lone widow boar tug Oa the I. l :ar)p in plan. wrie-e the ladle. all have night koys ts.' he'll marry some green chap .in the c itry one o, toese days, and finish a profitable -peculation ! N isr we meet bres• Brass in the eye,in thp fate, in the voice, and in the walk oi thc.se two ~eriiresseil and o‘erpainted women They had each ,ints in the of I scripture d vs and tncy called them "strange women " walk be• trays their standing A crowd of vounv girls rune down that stair• way, and .'.pirate on the pa‘o.tneut With "nu.' fliv more run the sewing maehines .0 the fifth -t,try loft- They art , neatly dre.-eu and generally pretty suit um41...t Uri ful in ius• . try in rarely tirnion or impure One of th e m is ahead us trip-i cot; It Y towards home Pit re's a quiet tirttivie and it happy nr,-m,qu e awaiting her. The si.tera f t!,e green %eii are no ni .re They wear br , •K o COI 'fa n e .,l„ re d gait. r' .../11'1 green veils are ou-oiete There I- a to-iiion in everything, and sevrinir girls ilk , . a o h au r .icenAinthilly. 1, 4 the Getlei )t lac •iruCCILI;: room lir'. twounlntz tA) run in and wc.. must 11. ow th.tu The North and East rivtre have r0d , .., and , n hn4 Bra..dwav an I the Bowe r, Frttu earl , . dawn till feu u'doca, the vast hutuili earl. UT t Tou ti the a rr Manhattan the ati.t titlltie up tat. -tag.s, ch.. bioeb.r thr express wan t ; • and gr ‘c r y 4 r .4.0 the and thUghter , 'f , 06. menial and paystaa, th..l..z.t:' , •rs, the jew.sis , he Motr .politau c i, c , A t t ot . tht- bu , l.t-fle tide t Has, not w.th tio short n;trring ;;;' thy' of the earlv morning. but . w. , a thy l aa 1 , I" afielsure uow Tt; re is u ) work f. 4 tb,em tel and tlity t a t * , sWv , p lawn :he walk tnd back inkix and r.flus, the Leartiat -utntuer /.sct:ll of a ha man ..rzeau kg,un 4',2 LAIN Ado Atshrtisistem. SMVIII JACK-fl` k So Ll af.e. ReT• ~•• •.; Ctm• . S , th r • r , err 10l v Oti py, : htr.ay oow. WAS tot - A kg , 'P• :,r[. .h. . ink; 41A r t ,i : o w tt uat 3 , • ,- 1 1 oa - At own e r 101 . , .Yt p- , 4lrty, pa! , tt away. BC D4O 8. M= ALL perefoo4 au..tgritqg t ., are her. ,, y I T'llu s '2l t‘ s 'lte tlr-t Js 11 , 3 , y y,. f an raw,. Li,' 1 , ": T. (-)y BrUSIC v. truw tiA.'rca...vsuos 13 et the 111th ei!nred d , 5t..11, c y 'tad t...0w ui f rvturtiart her to .er till 641 alit rew,e'lleel M KELL' • L• 11:. 11.'1 E.zeautor'b Sale. . ori , :‘ b.r•tsg,v-b I , ,st s., tb , rts' .t .A.1a1. , Mllr. •!: V I. 4 .1” —A 1, •• •• !, ~f b. sLu trt g I 1•r1 fir 611, •.' of Jl , 1111 y A!1 the• -.f intla *.'Ltittt. .11 st.e tvwl , ship. I. rt., C , . , Ltc. , .y. iyivsuli., ..r , t (tact 2ulLi, b. Y4J c.l I,...rtib by t., ' Lair. Z,'l ri /id, • tr • by e. f,/s! VriterC.r.t 1 'l's .71111,0, and of A,...XIAL, 0111 f (RCA. lit • and to a. 1..04, toe . I.e salt ft , 4rt o r t. ! , ti ar,.l to W.,it ~,o.,drri sin 1 7 x.y• piorttl.tB Tenni sa.l ,cta f ,urth oc cone-nia• rLf ol throe equal 4 Unail PeTrig7tit, • ^arei b. j aunt bond and Inurtcsir. ivir, the • 'ay.. Ur ;WI anqaly J P., Vensow, I , ec i 1355 4 trulnintratol es Maio. NOT .1 'ia:, g.v+n that a !the r i•k• • ; au 1 • I.:n 't of tit,aaru 0 11•11"nkrt *t m3l, *WU befuore i. 4 'ale .14 an I pet,* r .no. wf4 k,- Li, the e.te E • e 213th Icy 4,,f J*l nary of et, ,e Lott s e ?' • , t sal tour 104• Let trout the • •ut.h eik9r • ,rn.r of F.ft6 •treete. on toe eat , : .Bue of /tenet street f•et. ittordly parresi:el wrt6 Elf4a street cake 3 , %, feet sof four tusltee to et, rlley , ti -1,•• • steer. tee! ti a tf,rl3 (oche& then 18 .1 I.r;1 • , r 8 • , •nd r..., t I .r•••+. • • •••• t} en al .eg Fee, : 2 , / feet tr. .1 ettNt I he. to the place cif 1,871, • A 4, . ...toCe ut ,a.n..i•ty trig eud tna L In th, Qf n,ni; at tLde:•• t tl, 4r ~• 1,4 rg,! Caleide rtr.at. 1 4 : ' 1!-11 naraliel wun 41. J IC , - we- . 11..0 24,A, rust. t.,.. .s.•l west ,if !et' • , , l.na it 4:b stry ,trees. • %" 1 t," DUrbbrr.: E . Til• r. =IM re( ID t MEE=I7I tabrsal pay:: VAT. rot, pa,i zszo, .1 it — 1 ti r ccier—b , nl‘ , 1 m jr, :..-, I. it'll U A .‘," TS l'') E R Th e Art Of Lovc lis /2.:1,1,r ^ G , ll Boo:. St . w .IWltat'• fr aLI BLISS Off're A. a a 4 . The Way to alb c. ta r ht.TP.!u,,y . .t.., i‘ • .L. aoNpi =1 ! ti = e lii D. • si,f • , 1 .11 , 1'6 I tifFdlUeli vrac.'d • I • iIUNLIIIt- 1 4. t•qii bi• •oit livtag th.ort :114C1/1.41 St ll.e e 3.4. I a ••• g lat -, , ~.t. 1.. L• L.lll 4 ta • •11,,16.1 411 Ott italf .)1 A - 1611..,1111..•Wit, ~ !11,. • .1 ' Jr. 111, 1.. f It • J ...It ~ ..7Nre yr, lk fl . Ili • rl3 • • I lc w aM• I ... 4) ~I .Ll. '.1b , .... , ' EMIZEIMEI 111=11=3 • I u4ll. • .1. MIC=M CQ .ILasi ~ 1 Atilt wan 4 4, ve• i e Jit t,Un•P'7 ~0 . lr _lvet .• •-•,...1.t • •e f II Mfr •0 t tt t I . 111•Ve• I t • A L r • ! Inv, r,c„ e. la pc...e.1.1: • e most asclnitte;. *. • u ust tw. " :tIC ir r ,te; Warr...”} Lite. f.tt ee 1 , , 11 ,be %met 10 l'oy 1011 eVII.OI* a , 7101 ,- • •Onr. t: 114. 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