THE ERIE OBSERVER. BENJ F, Su) AN, EDITOR. 0 APi . .f r MO ORE, P r S mATURDA Y, Topics of thiVeek What of the Sunbury and Erie road? This question has been in the mouth of every one ever sincsrthe result of the elections of Directors became known. A couple of weeks since, when the additional millkin subscribed by Philadel phia, had been perfected by Councils, every thing bid fair for the speedy comm encemen t o f the work at this end, and a vigoroni prosecution to its final completion. But the man who indulges in any such hope now must indeed have faith firm u adamant, and strong as hooks of steel. The very fact, that there has been an entire change' of the Board of Directors—that it has again fallen into the hands of those who have fed I and fattened upon its past vitality—is enough I to demonstrate the abeense of all hope for the future. Railroad enterprises that flourish do not change their Board of Directors and President yearly. On the contrary, the best men are se lected, and then the question of ]'resident and Directors is ended until the work is done. This has not been the case with the Sunbury road. Ever since its revival, there has yearly been a contest for the privilege of searching for the golden egg, supposed to be somewhere in its bow els, until the last; and then we are inclined to think itsalmost inanimate body was given to Gov. But an for the purpose of escaping blame should it ultimately breath its last, as it was likely to do. But the Governor, by careful nursing, brought it to life, with a fair prospect of ultim ately completing the work In short, under his management there was a fair prospect that the road would be built. This would never do, and so its enemas, combining with those who had heretofore sacked its life blood, sought the oc casion:of theannual election of Directors to again get possession of it; and they have succeeded! We know these unpalatable truths will not be relished by some of our readers; hut it is better the people of Erie should know now that their hopes of twenty years, in regard to this improve meut, are blasted, than three or six months hence When there is danger, the brave man meet , it at once—the coward alone puts off the fatal day, and in the meantime hopes where there is no hope! And we believe this should be the course of the people of Erie in this case. They should know what they. are to expect, and meet it:ac cordingly; and so far as we are concerned they shall know it. We propose no remedy We have none to propose But that Erie will Lave to look elsewhere for railroad communications than towards Philadelphia, it seems to us to be too plain to doubt—at least till the present gen eration of broadbrims disappear from the stage of action. • P. S. Since the above was written we learn the Board of Directors have organized by electing a Mr. Merrick, of Philadelphia, President As a part of the history of the times We give the opinions of Judges lit.acK,Lowittv. and KNOX, upon the Erie railroad cases, in our pa per to-day. We are no lawyer, but it does seem to us that the argument of these gentlemen up on the constitutionality of the law forfeiting the Erie and North East charter, is conclusive. The &wanting opinions of Judges Ltiw is and W b- WARD, which we regret we bare not room to publish, are also strong and masterly produc tions; still they by no meads compare to the tren chant and dashing argument of the majority of the Court. Our Know Nothing brethren hive been having a "good time" at their National Conven tion at Philadelphia this week The slavery plank—i. e. the 12th section—of their national platform is the rock upon which they seem likely, and undoubtedly will, split. The Southren "bre them" appear determined to keep it in, or fight; the Northern faithful to strike it out, or bolt.— How it will end, time alone can determine In the mean time, the following is the state of the case at the last accounts: Nita 1 • 05k,1 ,- tt. lit The Traiquars report t.l the aoutce of lie. Auo "oat, t oo/$l. Ilt I II PO .% Th• ne•tlou tctrike Olnt th. 11111 ...clout a tit probably hot mule be a 4 .-utbron tutu. stet ttortbettil dvl.late. nr quite t - onfttlent that it at/I to rlvrtet; Th• 1 thto tot, t.i ,o the tntofnutt re.n.lntton of June, and Fo out .that i• tarroo, or ioufsething quite as strong Hall past ten tt cit. 4. P me of the \ •trtle"rn men oho hare heen to Catlett. , talk routhlentis Ilt c 1.1 1 .1 , 10., Ito I 1'11.% an iiitor.l• Lolling the 12th nectl4 43, bul p.dotttutuh.. •11 r ildrituhlirart elaust "our.. the South bolt Th.° .. touthern member. tbu•itie‘l t • Sutton ta.unu 1,, It I_ol to th, last. The North. ru •ieletrat.. in rnartio I It , ' 1 , 12th set - lion mutt • t the out t Or, r..uttain in rlie, will ri..; go tato the canvass with a prostate") platform u oar And while we are recording the doings of political bodies, we may as well 'tell our read ers that the "old whig party" had a spasmodic oontraction of the muscles, indicating life, in Washington last week. This action is thus re corded in the Trubunc: "A conferance of some fifteen or twenty gentlemen, formerly in public life, who have heretofore acted with the old whig party, assembled on the invitation of one of the Senators who still acknowledgl his whig allegi ance, for the purpose of counseling as to the pol icy to be pursued in the ensuing Presidential campaign, and especially calling a National Con vention. Mr. Vinton who was appointed chairman of the Committee 6f States at the last Whig Con -vention in Baltimore was present. The persona Isrho attended represented the four sections of the Unioti. After some discussion, it was de termined to make no movement towards a nation al convention. The last news from Furope, bought by the Canada, still farther strengthens the hopes of peace, though it is announced that neither France nor England have ceased their preparations for war. In England the Queen opened Parliament on the 814 of Dec. Her Majesty's speech ie neither for war or peace, and hence is severely handled by most of the London press, except the nesse, which of course praises it. The Daily News sip: "The speech was short and ought to have been shorter." The Morning It•rald mills it 'naive, unsatisfactory and indecently brief. The opinion on "ohange" was not favcr. able, sad consols receded, it having been expect. ed it would have spoken more definitely of peace or war. But the most importantinformation, aan easonnoement in the London Morning Advertiser as follows: "We regret to hear that at an interview which Lord Clarendon and Mr. Buchanan had together at the Foreign Office on Tuesday, very angry words paned between them relative to the Cast& American question." In relation to this, the Washington correspondent of the Trainse telegraphs, under date of the 19th, that there must be some mistake in the drat We peril despatch of the Canada's news, alleging that saw words paired between Lord Clarendon and Yr. Buchanan on the Central American quireiret. Neither of these parties are likely to resort to snob arguments. Besides there has been no imporbmt correspondence between the two penmen* on this subject sines the Proof &airs awns% whieh troaldipprolut any extreme *elm or adios. . PSBRVARY 111, 114311. THE CASE STATED AN. We have elsewhere given it as our opinion than the hopes thi s community 11 , -ury Ward Beecher, the notorious Hever have indulged, of end of New York, recently preached a Sermon the nitimate completion of she Sunbury and Erie , In which he pro it as hit decided opinion that railroad to this city, are finally dooinol t , di a ap.l-n k" . pointment flow this result has been brought I ill - 1 Sharp' , BM-- would be more efficacious proventin::. Kansas from becoming a Mave The State thin the Butts. That our readers may about it is not our purpose now to enquir.: fact itself, blasting as it does the anticipations of . hi t the evidence upon which we write, we quote twenty years, is sufficient to di-hearten and ren- :i -hart par tgraph from his defense of a Rename ',dill -lied to the Independent, his organ: der c areless anti-indifferent alin—t any communi- '' ty; but in our ca-c it t. doul,lv ,-.. still is , hi', t. . Ili believrd that the Sharpe rifle was a truly faith to believe that then , i., (.‘,.r: ,, y 3n,1 ‘l.. r. __ :. ?It, , li agelle). and that there was more moral 1 Lot :: .Tv ' .. ll 1. : .‘1,(1. 1 . 0 one •-f , those instruments, so ter as the ity enough left among us t,. induce , . , ,%. ho l der, of Kansas were concerned, than in a of our true position in retard railroad ota tt t . rs , i huntirvu gibles. You might just as well, said and if it can be shown that, in any other direr- ' l'`. "" tl " i tt b l e to buffaloes as to those fellows , l who follow .fehinson and Stringfellow; but they lion, we Can secure the eomdrurtion of r iiiiH iin aie a supreme resp,et for the logic that is ow provements which, while they will not -iiptly ill. li „begs ... 's rifles. The Bible is address place of the Sunbury, will greatly add to o ur id to the conscience, but when you address it to growth and pro.perity. that we a iil have th , ' them it his no (4feet—there is no eonseience good sense to embrace the opportunity, even the r'" though in doing t o some of our preemeriv, n o. , V. I'll), is not this straoge doctrine to come Lions may have to be modified or ibitiolouttl , trom 3 disciple of the Meek sod . Lowly—Him who mike as never man apake—who taught, if We do not know whether any such oppi rtutt•- i 111;01 smite thee upon one cheek, turn thou the ty is open; we have neither the ear of th 0.,,: who i other also: and who, in all things, exemplified build railroads; and, since our disagreement with tint those who advocated tile polity _ ,d , the t.th ~rt int loie which endureth much, and that mercy , Willett 14 born of Faith! Sharp's rifles a "moral January last year, we have net the ear of the op a l , , ,, nry" twireefficacious than the Bible! Strange ponents of those who build railroads: We il'IN t• d wtrine this, t ) emanate from the mouth of one the car, however, of our reader:, awl her their of ' • i o o Al's anointed:" But then we have fallen up benefit we propose to look at our riilriiail matt, r on strange times; or rather, we have gone back as they are, and Itthem draw such di ductions t i tie tints when Ministers of the Most High as they may deem 'rpm-, and if a partial ri tnr t I,lt the doetrioa, and acted upon it, too, that dy is at hand, they arc the cite-; tii appi) it tie ITlontment of death and torture was a more Au we said above, there are Pit faint hopes of the Snubtory road Bien out' ucialibor of the (;ac'/t , gives it up--,,r at least, h 14 no hopes of a revival under a )ear In our , pini)n might as well have pat it ton p•ar , : Tho Little Valley is ticJ up. 11“ is. It i.• qc to inquire. The fact that it is so is -uffiei. ut The Pittsburgh and Erie is in the same categ...ry; or rather, unless there can be life infused .nto it by some galvanic process, it will never kick, at 1e :-t duriaig our generation! Now the t i oe.tiou natur ally arises, i. there no way to untie t ..• Valley road, to galvanize the Pitt-burgh, and at.- cure the completion of one or both Without now committing ourself t t any !ine for galvanizing into life either or h. h r projects, lot uc look back a I.ttle Erie has offered to take, and what -h. h,..n offered with a view to ....mpromise our railroad difficulties lu June last at a rneetin , City Councik, before which f our it• izens appeared, Erie agreed to e.,inpromise upon either of the following pr =EMI= 1.,,r r r • h EMI I. r•• • I r' • _ p • r• 'I ~,• Intr. , I.r 1 i• , -• ' I— ~,i;rird 1,1 •. • , hzl ,4 rr• rr r.• ,•. 1 •• ! These proposition., which ID tb n, It, i.. 1 not contemplate the eiinQtruction of a i0...1 to Cie interior any direction, itzt,L•r th eonfideut belief that tile Suuboi ) r .1 , 1, k It. construction, would obviate Ow in. H .111) such conditions W.. ..tid then .: under OR circumstances, our e;:y atith ti But these prop u. ircr,‘ •••• pt 1 1). railroad companies tht , l . r kit as we can tell him In ;heir howev. er, the railroad, companies oflereil t 1.161,1, ~ r what was equivalent to it th. , Poi-1,111- 1 h anil Erie road to the Harbor, and 3 liraneli tic North East to the same place 'Pi, ati ptance of this offer was urged upon the ( by all citizens doing business on thi , public ili l• was rejected, however; and we :tr., but what is iutinthdy wor-e. w, ar, :1 , our rudder and main ..tay, the :•util.iry an En , • road, gone past recovery Now the gat sti,m comes up, ha: not the tio.e airic 1 v,I, r effort at a compritnibe can I att. ,upted Ni;:!! honor to both us and die r.ii ?road ----- TO compromise any matter of di , puto • , m , .thm2 must be yielded on both sidev, and we I,k carefully at what we agreed t , , LA,. and what we were offered. the t S 0pp0 , 4,n;:: in terest' were not so tar MAU t 'LN ;.: seem: Erie lifrered to galized where it ii—ti ruu a. the company would hinge ti; ,, trick from 4 feet 111 ineheA rn 4 L e i 1 1 „.1 1 lii company would n ,, t agr , r to !his; lot! •t the change it offered to ,uhoi rih. -11.11,(r)o t • the Pittsburgh road and lould t braurli ot Erie and N E ri.ad to the Hari, the hopes our citizens then enterta,nod in ra }yard to the Sunbury road, the rertuon ..f rtt sition wav eminently proper But I. it r,‘ nett DOW a different state of aff.tin, Ind wit change, is there not propriety in att t. , bring about a compromise upon a bast. , Aucwriat similar to that offered by the railroad eritupanii last summer' We throw out these hints with the full e.-,n% i c. tion of our responsibility We throw them ~ut however with an honest f,r :be pr., -1, its and growth of our city—a .ity we are !Iron I to call home —and which, had l'inlad !phis ed leas; and acted more, would Lave bveu Lre the first in importance no the Likes That they will meet the views of all oar frienu., we cannut hope. Diffezence of opinion, Imwever. is no crime in this country; if it wire the editor wh , , in advocating public measures, has tint commit ted one, would be a curiosity mirk we have hinted may be , prernalui, We are not infallible, but we are confident IL. on lees there can be some plan devised whereby the blow, which the defeat of the Sunbury n.ad given our city, shall he averted, th:,t her days have come and `see fu C.:1 , .• it ig useless to enquire by whom the. Low ha- 'Peen struck; neither is it the dictates of tidwu to re ject a part of a promised blessing„. 11 , 4`.511.1,.. we cannot obtain the whole. That Tax Bill. A good deal has been said in one of the city pa pers in regild to the bi::;ntroduced into the Legis lature by Mr. Whallon to authorize inereased taxa • tion in this city. No one would object to this, and least of all Mr. W , if the facts in regard to the character of the bill would be given at the ume time; but as these facts are withheld. and an effort apparrently made to hold Mr W re sponsible for the whole matter, we have ileemeil it no more than right to state the character of the bill, and also to say that the bill was got up by Mr. W.'s constituents, sal sent to him for pac saga. As their representative ht was in duty bested to have it reported—especially whey, i t 3 may p far from increasing taxation, it is a hill eq u a l i ng ti ze,dogt . in she oily, and reducing it two mills in the alum:ll 4 litiye beep pay,ipg for Pars Palt So Inuit for the 44.14* If in oraissi Pastion. OE rl t•. EMI =men Sharp's Rifles vs. the the Bible efficacious "woral agency" in converting the 111:1- c,invortvil than the Bible. The tail of a cart, with an application of the lash to the disbeliev wa, th‘: "great moral agency" used to c uvert t L.. contumacious Baptists in New Eng latol The t•take and the faggot were onoegreat m, ral auencies;" and we have read somewbere of ilk.• application of a thumb screw, or a few tur3 avuy upon the rack, as having more effi cacy than the teachings of the Bible. But that `harps rifles were invented; that was f ,re the St:hull !Tonto and the Printing Press , iitlu- .1 light among the people, and thus die 1, -led the d.irkness which enveloped the public tr. 11.1 Ip•rc we have, in a land of School iu an age of ciriiizstion and refinement, it, oNer which the "dove of peace" secure. I) le.ver.,, a mini.ter of the Mdt4l.. High profain tnl ti,e name of Iliin he professes to serve, by unseliniz violence, and inforcing such counsel b) ,•ialioing that the derdly rifle of Sharp has more mural power in" it, "than in a hundred ' Strange doctrine, we repeat, for these tine;.. bur not strange if we but consider its ore.:in It originates to that spirit of intol• 1-r.tni••• whieh cut hro,k neither difference of uor difference of Frith. The faithful Flo—ultnan is taught to believe that there is more • rnurai ptwer" in the scimitar "than in a hundred" „i the Uo it. 01 the Prophet; hence he propagates his .1. votion at the point of the bayonet. The Cathiiim taco thought there "was more moral I —wer in the stake, the faggot, the rack, and the thnmh ..ercw, than in a hundred Bibles," and iiee he , iiing,ht by these instruments to bring tile e , st ..heep hack to the fold! The Puritans, t tree l th , "moral power" of the lash, the p,ll irv, Lail the prison, in preference to the Bi ke., an l there was no doubt &lechers in those 1.13 ,- : who 'toad up and proclaimed that "you alight as well read the Bible to Buffaloes as to the 1 , 11,,w; who" professed a faith different fritn theirs But we need not enlarge; the times are sadly out of joint, indeed, if this doctrine of Beecher meets with the approbationof the Chris urn public UM K Now NoTHIN(' Expose.—Two expelled nii•lnhers of the Know• Nothing party of Lanese (...only, have recently issued a pamphlet of ~,u it t thirty pages, giving a "History of the Progret:s anti Downfall of Know Nothing i•rn 111 Lancaster County " It gives a graphic hi-tory of the manner in which the order was tir-t estatilli,heil in that county—the first step Lavin . 2 been to sends delegation to Philadelphia t, be initiated into the Know Nothing mysts ri( 4, at. a i , idge in Eighth street near Market, whore, presiding "in Pontifical majesty, sat his ii oar .r, Jac,.l) I.lnom"—then recounts its rapid progro.-, and how speedily the great Apostle of \ nia-onry, 'Thaddeus Stevens, became one of whol- concern, "the goveriu,r wheel" All It' which WAS followed by a rapid decline of the (I , ler, until there were uone left poor enough tu .1 it reverence, and Laving "gene up like a r wket, it fell like a itiek;" and the tricksters, id played out their shallow game of deccp tt,(a, iorimilly mot t ) disband, as the last act of their .. , titemptible drama The history of this ful bawl of political conspirators in Lan ei:ittr. is its history in every county in the Cow Is in Eric, at all events'. assi_ A Know Nothing lodge wiui burnt out by the neent fire in Syracuse Their furniture, in veutorwAl, acc , ,rding to the Standard, four brok en cuair.=, a three-legged desk, four volumes of T:., .4firiaMortk, a lot of choice snug- compot.cd by "Seth," a copy of the Bible iu and a brazen eagle with silver wings .cud a blue tail The bird of liberty wa. saved and all the lest was destroyed. 1114— Uuc cif t4e Members of the present Uni• tel M ater House of keprese t utatives, Mr. A. G ta.,t, of the fourth Kentucky district, bar been iu hetetl laS, two grand juries there for bribing v.i.i r. u, the late vanvass, as we learn from the Fr t tnkf nl eorreTondenee of the Louisville Pour hi h ~a)e , that if the eases are ever brought to trial tliey y;;II develop° some startling facia entim eted with the witioagt.u.°E.,:. of elcbtions. Mr. T is ~u.. of thoee who have a great (Wei )4; arq liis.ut the nece,..,ity of 6 , ,k inti rie l sos ruling Amer- ErII *fir ".Inothervßiehmouti iu the kid." Hon, r. 4 II WA YN E, of Georgia, one of she Judges of tho I cited 4 tates Supreme Court, is urged by the Mi:•souri Deniocrut as a ountildate fcr the Pressdeucy. Houton ie isitid to be the origi uator of this movement. Doubtfull Dos The Grand Jury of Susquehanna eottuty List week ignored the bill of indictment for libel preferred against Mr. Chase, the editor of the Nlontorse D , mocrest, by Judge Wilmot. Served the, prot4ecutor right If editors are to be prose cuted and convicted for telling the truth about public men, there is an end to the boasted free dom .4- pre., iu this republican country of LEM ~_-- - -r- k ir s ensor 7..05i1100 Georgs it ig c rei t; receive compensation for Mg . %°441 " " •• in }lostoo, and at his suggestion • the filh, paid ,Tter to the German emigrant aid society of that easy. l' or seusxa; Seater Hale chit no de. cline rseeiving serenty .five ' ant** for leeturiag in this city! That's the diaereses betpeen geoglia Ektaism,an aid a gaakse banal The Erie Cases We have read earefull the the Judges at the Supreme t'..uri uu them.. i ~ t tht Clevolao(1, I' a io4ville nu .kliklabilst Co°1;11y, agaiust ~ f 16,1 t h e E rio and rtli Eset I : 4ll DN:lorliv't sepls Motu. Til 114.0.. LitAt of till Wwit- OM road, althoogh Hi might hav, I Mkt faittf4i, if thr Court lima frit thrmgricrll at liberty t 4. have free , l our 14 , o • • • • 1" , branoes, still, the deeiewn ,:,„, mows bench, wt. will , Impl .•ur- • • - • remarking, that the opiuiou 4,Ta t i ge 10 a ,,k. t h e organ of the Court, a , il•e I. Imp! •• :.„ formanoe. The space awl tlhnr hpetnwed nron it show clearly, that in corn pari -.a wit! , ter and question, nivolv.:tl ,tii ease, it ins con:,idered quite In the cam, of the Erie and Nvrt'a the whole five Judges deliver opinion- especially for the majority, LowriP i short coinciding opinions with hi:a. 1.• opposition to the majority of the 11ourt tk ,i favor of the R Company, iieetipi4•oltne rte. nt). pages, which is just the uu.• third h, whui pamphlet c ontaining everythine in 1, .th ea.e4 Woodward agrees with Lewis in hi , c:tictui•ion tad with the Aber Judges iu oning which phenomenon, though we supp.,e perfect ly unclesstunditte to Lawyers awl .1 utige:., ertheless to wa gomethiug of a Curt it y Black's opinion, ftom the fact that the pro ; minent position was given him by his breihren t,f the majority, as well us by intrinsic is the striking feature in the ease. Ills manner and style from the first to the last, is ju-t what the occasion required and was entitle.i to. hay- ing examined, no doubt, with care all tli,.. -mat points and matters of the (-ago, and polished hitn• self that they were euinei.dcut_ to lit, geto views, he !aya bold upon the strolag and leading points and puts hie deeil.ion upon gnat principles of Law and Jtwiee \V like ti way of reasoning from thi• entire base of a t the great, enntrohng It %IWahs 1,, comprehensive mind and giv, a:,..uran, • , citizen that general and fundainentai pri111.11.1.•`: are the guideboards of the Judiciary particularly in cases involving the olysid. 1-.11.... , and effects that the progent on/ -, ' suspicion of favoritism or prejudie.. n Lie;l .i • upon, or a straining after sharp and in r p will unavoidsidy engender The ,:ylO opinion is equally admirable It i- tu'.l captivating sentences, Which at ..nee pr. re the force and cultivation of thi it result of the case that • notwithstanding the amount of barloug li is ken done by all the whi•••-haire.i, headed little poodles that money r p;ac• procure, is rOcllitlitional The opinion of Lewis, and the i••• . therefor, reminded us irrestibly t 11,• • hired to pick up fig., - z .. erl by the j" in It certainly very queer, if the Judge .h 1 , •en elude, by the time he finished his .at piC.II. log, as the boy did at the end fir-t div* labor: that there was'ut much to Le made ~t.l„l,eli "d—d slippery hide hasim 54," WILL New Tura. Suu , (not ltaymond's Time) in speaking oi tion:of BANKs es Speaker, says: "1) result teach our political frienaq that lauaucuit) is more needful than ever, and that toed jcal °miss ought to be healed? Doc it not, t.trungti, en the cause of Union Llein,,erie.y, u I. in Congress a fearless minority, machine, pi: 4 l,- lain& fighting? Does it not tesieh our lea,letn4 -the Republicans are not to be sueerea .1 wn, u se_ laughed at, but, exoellont ta.'Aiclan ar D.• vigorously met and thrashed? D .c. it not demonstrate that llindoolsm i 9 llyp •ri; ' changeful in its Union ant 11.): to be relied npoo?—that i:s w. timid one? In all heart, cue true Ilenioerit. whilstcalling to the Republican ot M t "Mr. Speaker!" may well .11.tercuirie to have keener eye when next the flint is f.“ an other shot at the bull's eye of vioory a ..11 the old Democratic muslict, "Hickory," and who- , e barrel is goo.l steel." Hard to Please. Frew tAi Jour ma q i ..cout • For weeks and mouthy past, the A. 1.1. Republicans have been inalignieLt lit of the United States beeau' he dill hot "rd. r troops to Kansas, to protect tilt. ;11 ir legal rights and privileges, and to put 'hp t unlawful interference from abroad At. tenv:ti the President has issued his Pri,c,amati, Pouncing his purpose to do txzetly thi-, t little more, via: to suppress insurrt ettou to Katt sae against the laws of that State and pi :he United States. This last is more than 0, pr,•ivli ers of peace and good will to men thruo,;!, :It • muzzles of Sharp's rifles, bargained for 11,ty would like to have the national forr.t to repel the "border ruffians" of bu: not at all to repel the Abolition "rurtitn• - enter the Territory with arms and atuunitl , :ta compauying or following them, for the expr..— purpose of resisting the Territoriai 1 jov( rnment and setting its officers at defiance. Tio, u.A: i on may well be thankful that it h:lb at its heel a man whose eye awl heart embrace the whole country, and who will not loud himself t, prom.,r t h e schemes of sectional selfishness and auiblti ~1.- - The troops that he will send, will reprcevnt the nation, and under the lead di judivirm and mt. ligent officers, will doubtless tont to corroet wha. ever is outrageous within the Territory, %vitt imported from Missouri Or Massachusetts 1L • presence of such a force is cppareutly the , 411 mean. of preventing an armed I. distant day, between the Territomi autuot;tt - of Kansas, and the revolutionists, L.) the AL,. lition Republicans of the East de:.ire t.. prove n t such a collision? We doubt it; .ind heave, per haps, their greatest objection to the interpositi.o of the national government. They have pri•diet ed bloodshed, and fomented it—and a by should their . isbor he lost? Foolish men they tell their dupes that the way ) o prevent b100d.,114.41 to Kansas / is, to send on a plenty of nharp s and emigrants competent to use them. The wsy to prevent an explosion, is us buy a keg.of - der, light a match, and place it within an such of the bungbole: (n; in our opinion, if Mee snohnsetta and other Eastern people had net at- Lo faestall the question of slavery in Kitties, Missouri would pot Lucia n:temptekl it. The Abolitionists and their abettors commenced the game, and if they were personally their to play it ovt, we should not be much disposed to emnplain. But tu_ pnt forvrard comparativelT innocent men to take the brunt of the eoulliet; while the chief iactiptore sheik behind tine is neither fair nor hosterablt. It 6. l'etv• me, just like Abet:iambus. 11lir A blookpard in Oolumbus, Oh'o, hvl re. ?elatedly insulted Nome school laisscs that city ti 4te iteet Indecent manner, end the oktrage wo o to the 6,-,Wiellft of ate - parents of the girls aid I.4ebuisfw:ipth, eivb"ehlrupen°7l:Bo4"oll oanweet":"on, iont;;;;:obta:lnee States iota: ' ... 4 'ked the brute who commi.te,l the outrage, into his bar-room , and there, in the p r,.,,_ ewes downy witnesses called is for. Oa; porko sate am ammadral a iow ► AmiringlideZ bood a rail ad am blow, and 'milky 'klaibid ibe NM" *ls Ms *SOL fisniedhin right. \••• Till'. ()USEEVER. 14AL. IatiERARY IIiMISOELLANEOIIB I DITOI4.I4CIItT-4 11%T. al) , , 2, 7 l , 1 411110.. 1 . ....... ~....- .,_. • 1111, w WOK. Ilek ~IWO .111.0 IMO art 01.0411 111.INIMOVIMOM .1 MIR . =MO If pr 4.1.•kr,01.• 1111!MMIII EWE= =I EMI rir .• • .". EMI :" 111 ' " • • .. q.,11 •• • v_. - rt The .I:ley,isn "71 .en• I ' C4a, s t I ear earl ,1 . , Loom 1.4111 1 1. :..n Now for Fox IL • t.,• rl,.a ok.obiatil . 11 oil 14u, 4 4 1 ttrit ,•t a hitt CatlitT.—t:v! f 4 n*Y. e r i r"" • -t kirowlit "NUL Sulk rsr - t, wire in • trout of •mt' ^ • at. en -- for—tbenhoo p ~~'t7 1.4 A , - • :7 loaMe amen. linosnot Maitinst *doom tows Tobacco pooled ous d passasus. W s think this Is nonlikly: but isn't it poison packed lanorthing ohm To our kw, tit certainly to; then art thousands who think tiwy an t°U without it' . Jell • 41 1 WV imul• 4, I Mt =I - 4 I= =I I=ll=l=ll3 %lo ..1 ot•I ....~.A p, . ~. ISM IN I • rkt!toofh MN • in 1.1 NM IIME:M=111 .1•411 I t4r.7 Ilk ULM* Mlt M. alit I AGE. _ • Tian a. iola4nt. :t or if ; t.tt lotto illttut• and with t. inmptr. thrto w.th a truarr ' , r rrog i llai Hoodoo( ,frok t.ll. the whob: •to r - r fie g .,%. 2110 }'Rutty 111 1111. 1111, , onalit fit 'Ririe !•.• or run ma). sLe tuti j 1%161t. 111, a ran iwerPt Mi• boot i. ityr.kitet. ' nee , s , t; r. i t.,lllmrt -Detriostast ISIEMI =II =I II en 4111.01. IM!.1=11111 . 1.,.• •*. , uvt tmnrn oar flit• 04. , that t..., = WASHINGTON r r jig, otrwrooir "KIWI K , ►KS. 1 . 2, I' rh ve... V. 11 kullne " " • 11111 t u.• F,ervi IP ir• ...6,e /•• ..t • '..t ..... •le 1-41/if t.. -I‘. I •4111161 t to • 44,11t,1/flil 111 the pee EOM 1.4 '1 ~11, • 10/1, 13 111 04 SO •04.11,101.44 , . • • ..1 %• 1 ...- • t i'rstotome t• 441 tub 4.1.63011-. The Tut , I. - Alf. keifrt. 10,11 t/16 .1 I !,• r. 1.11,: a - rau isa. rn•la up • 1.n1. . latt It hat. I+ I .•1 .l• 1,•• na.ll _6 I I.i , 1 r,•• • frl.i.i EMT iA f•'l ••••4 • t •• • ..el' • 1 i; 1' • I ••111; • 1111/ k• a hrilitlrot EMI I .1 • it It GO , It , t.•l It . • 1. 9. u It. I 1,. , h • v•-•-•••••ht , •11 , ..r 14 1 418.1 1.. e.811t1.. II•• I. 1 11,1. 414.111104 11. w 1.110 1..U11.01 , ••• bv tb. l'- fst, ..• ...a ~lint all ra rvrvlv. encaare .1 • ,11...1.1 ~,,,., 1 1111.110 !writ) .4 lb. fr I•.r. • . • . 1 i 4 liA • 11,11.2. araV r ibnaipt. •I kll2-1.1r , . 1 . 4 •11 lit 1 I - • ntru.i,,n W.,. 11. .F 1110 t, tlge ralptnynkent •.4 VIPs 141C41 1•1611 . 441 but AIM ostil :A-sot OW • I ^l.O.- IT t. 1:• 'l,lO 111.81 flu , K5...,. 1• •• I)k , .11110.141,f tlir as.s ilEmcm:a rt, . r .t •41 frt.. tLe Scuate ,ppropnat.ii, flail tt ;t•rn 3,1.1 li• •.rg•tnn u, Atli/ bang, that th • T „, • • etst, •.1 11,1 r C m, i. r A • .11 , 1 ,4 for. ,114.11 nit • ‘ll.l al., (ea.: tr Ind Otithe an. In •‘. I. " l u.• fn: • r. Jistrirt an.l 1. • , • 1 ,4 , • di..: 00't a al.an. . . . • . . •El 0 tit , 100. •• Ell . , it i• oft Ills I k•. p• r, • ,••.I •f o•• lio ••••• .t ••• to. 1.• t 4wri. ifl t...• . 1 t/, i• •• ,r 0 -or , out trt, I. •• PI RR 1 11,14• • •• r IS. 111 1 , • •••••• • 11 01 1 . WII,I, •- 111.11 , 5 1 . 111.. 0 1 n •' • • J rhu. It" •ii, MEI 1 . • . 1.. M M .:: t•P ti.. 11 Ii• I ••. • . t .0.•• • .•• Knle, , "tiokt i”Alr • .+1 .1,0 0 . 1 .4 .t I MEI . • 1 Ouvr t tr,Lt I tt, • , ,t Ir. ..t li, • ~01 '. • A k. • k••••• 0. Ettil $.1.1 it • ~•u ..; Lt .tt , t •,. , r %trwries with pwrf.itt trnpnr., , , td. • - . ' .ir w,', 1. OE, .1. ,„.• Opt .1•0•1 a4tut, MEM •:114.rtCP. attPutli.tki -•-• i n oth‘•• 4rl. or (h.. t Hot. =EINE ICEID 111=Eill NMI • %lib rn 1”.4. , • . n.•..k' .ks4Jo&s 111111921 Iv a.l , 011_ "1.1 1 a.. 1 r r ta• Mil *ifs ,. • •11 •• •' • .•;.• r I. 4701,7/4-• 11- Just Of. =3l ^ ~ ,t * 4 I 1.0 l Mill 4 'law Uvf V"*t oian .1 lime:. Nteieiliiii•sikt • w• tt , , u 1.. 1 , , ihMOrnur% utar, the =EMI =II 4 I. .14. 3. If th.•r.. wa. ng I i 11 h:. I %At IL. =1 t.,, 11 s 111.)% r-7t r t no • .Jala • If.. I rr.s kr.,t 0 rolost • , n Fran , •, ' • (.•••••, J ,01 '4 , • •Ir vr” dr Nno, • • • . =I 11.. alrm..r I. ( I . • w•.br war , yr... 1, ••I .46./ ro I. rr.l t =EI MEM 1=1111•1!!1 itatisio - =X =El= lIIM=I2IIII =ZEE MIR =MI I=MIEE MEM ' • ••r • • ' tot. r• •• . •,• *, • • ."'`Vi b•• L . A. , t. r •ri bi , tn wrkprin tt,tt r t , it Att trier,* la anti WI!. a- I 'm Br`" ,l ^ a' -- ..1 1.• the ,rn at Hipvttalpcmv 0 1N.., t..n tt t Ito rt -g - luat-ti---tit qr. " %11.1 1110 , * N •tild X. 11.4 e„.) -- \ 1 A. 11.. 11,0 Nn rn*" I MI N, t 4.noi , 4 MERE t 1111‘11tUttlIt• IS 11, MI 111 , 041.1 IN a It. t • 4,tat44.4,. that th• •i• I. .41 401 AYH 11••• Pt. , . • nwl••• •• •. • h•••• =1 r •tr , ,,rtir• 1 rti t u, .1g,141i =II L• 11 4 I •-tlt+. • N.ll I, 1.1 4. tlf wortlimps have In moll:ten Amu.- 4 - • II• 44.,• 0,,n-n71.14 ?y•••ousattou 14 the MEM t:. .•• .Ik. tor.• e. folorPttlitota .4 thvir it ram ratlJ (vie. /11101, k • 11.1 110....1.,11.14•11 1414,40 i. ••ik all the =CI MI vt. I ~ 2.., ,„,, ./ rtlinunent ' =ln - 1,1104.' ..e tl.• lrlM left • C 141.11 ttl:_kl4.r k 1 Walt,. • An, turt.lihic I' Ifl N% nt, ott pfk.kgl t,e Wood 17 r, b .1 I Is) 1 t o ELM lesonothlti—Veen rerp•••••411 t• matouuce 141.4 pit larAlfk.ll , l* se Itrd.tensibut fab.lio .1. r -r •h • .tier. nf COIIIIU, is Mill Fret Want Frit., Feb. 24 18f4. Ma. EMMA , --Please an Uef tke name to W. V, Braley Caudittaie RN' (.7 1 1 1 3TAIBLR Itor the West wrrd Witte eloar P ( l l* 4 866 t f d r 11 4111 " at los Ist,lepe 1.1 , en I 'viers (Ask' War W. C. DRAT.ZY. Me t FtSr wry NIL ;$4, . • *I, Camegmayidis*lMAll WAS Weser pet is ses....disia wielk as anis smistomilsi Olt Miesmomtis tals Kenotr4 Dort. AbinlethY, b sopho obst ttas ttto bael atoll NIP mom WNW' I. " wi' l l oomot ratan for disarm es Loop Loma sot &stow rep* mega • ill •••• _ _ sibyl) bet promptly yet out 4-p...r.'4 1 aro•r-r-, t om a tom sot u. so Ow" o f P.-.«.+..+. DO. lobs IS, 13/11 , • t t tf AO , l l M iti t tltt Rnmor to a trtratf " ' 4 t-hil , g me , t Fr:rims t..4..nrortmlasr. Mir I :Is %•• Mr I • . r•• 11.. • 1••••ti•41 ,1 thlt 11/kv g g g Tor oci•lirt...qt, t.. v..u, 1,,m ,ea., 1 • 'l.. wrrit. f 111 MEE a• • .r• .k‘t he •to a r..ti v, zi.j n r l ••11tral At /..r.t-a, Ibtat Will all :•Mni win ME= '• int =II • jll/ • I til• • ,••• 1!! • MEE I= 11. L r.b..ltact 111.1 tp a P/ill to tr tucerre-f Fron thon, r',6l 141 i.. r.l 6,, AIN In., - let VI r, OEM tL Wei., , irll I. I • I , T • MI% .[..wd Itut tpe 141 4 444trur5: 144 NEW YORK eff:m \ ut.ry , 1 , .5; ~• A rin.. - 1“.: .ts In r spa au. dal. m.uuuleo. fliYh4 .110 she r.tlrtlt,ne's 11=11 lIIMM3I=IIII =I MIME L, a 111.., ah. !.. • /It t- aIA i• r 1110 1 1:0 ' t t qua.' .0 :e .. ~ ~. wr L ~.... ~,,u~ ti tl. , 11,1 , ,•11 ‘, I L111,14,1.11E Illirl irli=l l.n•.t••~ •f •.• LIN I, 1 !MIEZ= I Ti,.. ..•n ka" n :Awn • F yn tLr I'v vin , i .•.` I.t =1 ;1 • , , m•lrt ti.. i.e... to -At (• I=l2 111= .. ~~ zu,..rn .t .. ~ tb.. ~...1 MIES 1111131=1 •. X 011 Ma it 411% 4; ro 44, I 14411 I. • l••••• 1 w.••• 1; ' 4 lb,r•.••• t 11•••••• In tLat m.r , 111,... 1 I* .1 IP' , rt • • yd. E ^4,11 ..rly 1.. ~,, r ..111 ln.limt .1,4 , 11, %•!. 1, ...kV Waite! 4Li, Xtir T, ...tag twvekne% . um, ti.. in i, iw ~.1 11,1 am . n. Iv( till Mil: the t,on. :b• groat as - rn.trrvirtitr ,r• ". ii I 4.1 r. tt. t I .4.1.‘ •,,,• 4,4 11,„, f I , :J . A: , •J part,elturi% 1 11.1 .- 1411.• . I 114 h • .. : 114, r 1.,11 • .1. , 1/0,1041/01, 10.14.• 4“.4 cur MI a day , 0 , ' , 1•111.A•14,Wd 11 , n. .41 SPECIAL NOTICES. taper. I woe toderbollael. 1% 1,111,1, NIA Of 1..41 , .1,, •t,,.. OM V., ado hr Yrlo. 2, 19N1 UrW• yr.) 1•1 r l .ll Mroiles's No •nedsiu P.." 1" %I.) u. n •I, lat ils.titutp.a di 1 sovnea, I": fin el Til. rmints , 01,1yentii , t1 1 wiJ♦...q • It 11,0. =ZS@ tne. rfraii 4 Wrp.tll.l.lltY*llll4l/411(.% PAIN t. Ude riot. talltrial 4 linti, M %CIO T. I ' ► ERR 11•14,1: Id tH.k nevor EitilAir 444 untque ;My—. 1/1.1/1 , 11 , /14411 11111114.10 ~,,,, Tigho , niar, .101.4 •• 1 / 1,41 16 r • th . ...n , ll. 0t airier, lata , I==ll Oia , .rt ..1 , tftwaleis havreiriossisraedL Aser tau 4 0 „,„ ighgt j• al rope reimen4l PVIVI 16.• 401(404; Wl4l VI4 r ,, , .4400. Clear. :A Its wirlaniti,e yr , p•rta. tr‘. IJ •).t. ra , an.l wtll, If alt imp 4 re %batter in the Aurtu• , 411.; ~ =MI h• 11 pr...lonro .11N+1 tn •1.1,14 121::21 11 • a OiGwsr /Mae! Picom Fur.-_ Mat.. 11:ncmvoel thP ('n, and HVNiItY ! , k1 ry an. e.rubbrefrit.. Priev Z. et Ll' • • • •,. re' .4Jltirdwro 0)11,11/ LP . 4 • liarcbiy vitn+.l, New Y. , rlr, F.,r isle by FL HERR ,, N, N. , tirEVICKTIDODY WILL I I.t.r i ri.4!—MPI cannot trip II ~.„,... York, Use rust philtmotilwr, 4a. L,.., at not of lb. boo on Ito.. low', biaortago * b« Nu th..h0,.., „ rolotbe nude of anattoo it, .0 sa, i. a apemt, to to our., to lot 'on 1.,'4. • .4 ~.oh a., 11 , %pale a opur 1.•••••• 11 • tM • i,ll t.• , r , thug war. L... 1• L e% Katbartio,_ w 0 h., hr far t, paratmou u.ll. awl Crow:,,., n.r aprol Thoir dowasion r 4Prfol rlgintry in nmolovinfc, „‘„, , Inudruff az. I mu' • IP Ow 6 , . /Er? / Lil I 1111= prtirrstaa.l4i Ln. e WY/. tt 11.. fit p•' tat.. Lind. ut Übe - till .4.1 1., ..:,i. ut io lor 1.1111% • n el.*• an It& t ITH, IT YNK,H r l4'lll. A. IBACHEIAIRNHiIthN, d many from th. - r i WYI• A. HIA('/INlAllit' , •••,.zwu 4.1'4 (Vie, •11.11 t, la I b. , in•UUAL ari.13.1.1r... ~n far .4. . ' ... 1;E!1:11GEEM=IMINI I= =I ,~F i pU~ MIME WIL ii. OAKLEV, lho r J. 11. SOU 11, .1. FLETT/IF.R. Troor, (' %RECLINE 111 Y rE11?....0n. 11. LEI E Vl./CTI:11E11. !.:/. r r. -; PAItIC HALL - O. DA 1 El E]l NI:. IEU. V. Ow. •h^. Lawntither 1 amber !read..,. ' rl. • •t• t. u , ho 16111 Al :h. P..r • f••... - I 1 • ....111111r0r. At • , 1,4 a. QM II F' 14 11 • F r0w...11,41! Expr••••, VV KIFF.• and I Fls , k rtor* T• -••••••r• fk• • ••••• ••.•1 are told %......1...111•11, -. 1 i• • to pie•m• Liava rfivet 1.1'• • .• 346 ija1g•048.1.0.1 Collars F.. 14..•1iFF 111011.110 r .••r l / 4 , !Lift, A ,• ..t . • 1..• I , .11. •11 , ! tip ' ti• gr. H - W. , lA. , I , .1 a ~• • pr,‘ 0.1. 41 - 0 0 o,uct t In r s•zt..ment, havitig , ut ill leg at anat. Erie, FPIX 111!11111 1112111111 1856 . To the Fanciers — A ryl BOWE L• 4 . •P, / • 2fotl 01. ' - to MEE jt Imo mat :kW 411 aslocitiol with rnst .• 1ne.1141. iedlllo , ll • .parusuble anaer. F l . F-1 , Lt.:. it", ETC= tjt.Mir re, ITtli .1 I r••• ul trestto.r, and cur au. r 1 not, a...pigment •f t r• .n .t• t!.. "la , f, gratirc i. t l4 Su,! EN Daguerrobtypee for 35 and 50 Ftwit .164 w we. 'taro. vor, low prix t..0k0 little rwlttr , * will p'on• ea) , `• Inn at the , 1 toorieso par spa.tkliti t ; f. v. .1. ... ` %w t.. S V r ne. pour to sit. Not' todltot to moo. , ndoir r ot:wr 1:1911:1 so. nn•lendrin.i sill ntl•••••. • • ennwe al h.. ne4., in lb.. ••• u.. tl2 • ••el, P y t• b.. • ye. iqed. V alnable House and Ltx fj . E ht• f 1•••... rf %rt. a. 4 TnnAn c• • ~ h nil I?, 6 .rrn..1.4n • n , ••1 ..illerrnto • MEM lIMEMEMIIIIM , r • 11+46 T HR mbeerftwr pn , ood or I" it ~tr•r• krte 21, TAT XL( LAW , . AT T}IF. !TORE 1.1 17'I IS DA V, sa) ,ius•thi , • t , kbene,l thwack% U/Ge 111311 tftiWit t 1a1 , 4 - 14.11 be soil. cheap as the ' some nn ban ~• ont exeettlo.l t Ott r t tir4NTED • •:". to paid 1at4,11, , • • 3,utiq Fus , 10.000 I tx,sl. kool f n ~.•I ' h up ut Erir, reft 1046. t tt • • - pry 17, 11M1be of br•t ' 'r" ust for gale •t ~•d. _lft.r F.t , -- 31 lit il k••.lis mak ,n P . . 4 Particular Map / 41 14wherrilleors 4,, tho raw &Au" t.. tilloden•mtna vO. V r.. it " ' .n.I Kate. nwt• 1= 121INEIZE! IM!=1131 1. S. ..t!I porftta• to tali,lipti hvel.lasat reh. TEE GROCER Y I) PICAULAr".. err 11. e r -lit. N.—, C 648,405,1.. '" Pro• woo hoot tat " I.r Woe to tr•ttth•r " ' •t prior. ti.', • '" TbP,t 'autistre.f., ••• . • ' of itto, 1 , 14 GO., rlklll. J era.ttett, r • wy t .n.,l. Huttu...., td , i• • r ' LiPr. Alum. 110. Flan , •lion* y , • ••••• NUN utoor IVY A I • .r• • iv' .4 way name, intra or •• N" %min bo 1 ant • •111 • • rairroW oftgrh, Trent% 11s , - , • - Prowl FFnh, ~r 1 4 ,14—. why .1' ISit, Fel, 2, li.id .41 ---.— Lumber Vlll- -I€4 WE 11.:1 p.o •11.• 1 1 . 4 11,-411,4 - I 611,000 f...t A/.4 I 441.000 ' I 0,1.18 u " ' I . 1.0.1111 V '• VI 61t. 0.0.. I , 30,000'• •• "' I i , .Z.nr.,,i 14w/1 from good, i ou •., "" ,. ..- 4., le,nuo f.t. of ,tesight t ,,,,,r,,.; .. , 1.,,„„ lt 12 mmi 14 44.4 14111. ••• ••• ' ' . bne Feb. hi, Isfis, A. t-1, . . ... Pesch Orchard 1 0 1 )41 -11 adllft IDT Mlt. turr,,‘ I.• ...;IN: . leikleafflell 44 .111% I, I h.. , •••,. tli ilkiii it in Ihp acre I.i. If ~ : - . it VII aillortt In %coiner ',arr.! , i :i.. 4 t ii l • ' ' o r .: !' ni:,:`4 MBE Erie Feb /q 41 6. ti Ce Pl° L • I. PICKKONs sB4.m.d aou polarnt ..rtbelr are. 11..," Itt". alith .40 nahl,t 21 ;••• hay% out:-"..d ulaihnoa r .z.Nl the hp•L ••••••• • 1 • '' • irthis locertalailsic lb* dab. • . =0 -Test tir 4 \ 0,134',1i of For One Night Only Another Arrive lEEE= rn 'um, ,w: , A vevn e+ NEW STOCK 44 Ibe Clamp Rao Ld .1....
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