THE ERIE OBSERVER. BENJ F. SLOAN, 4F:DITOR. SLOAM i MOOIIE, PCILISMZII3 SA TV/41 1 / 1 T , DEMOCRATIC STATE NOMINATIONS. CANAL COMMISSIRIIii, GEORGE VOTT, Columbia 00. ♦DDITua OIXIIILLL, 3.11.0011 TRY, Jr., Mantra: may 00. a CIIVEYOR GINZRA.4 TIMOTHY IVES, Potter Co The Nob of Friday Night ilsewisere we have given front the columns of the Go ma*, the Afteritelt and the Conscitatien, their resP•otirs eerldelle of the disgraceful affair of Friday night. We have done this in order that our readers east have • fun vim., from three different stand points, or 0011 of the most das tardly sad uncalled fcr exhibitions of mob violence and outlaw vandalism perpettsted in any community. There are the pictures, let thus all be road, and then let as hear so more in this community about "border raillans,' "Ms seed invaders," ee an y of the clap-trap phrases with which the Gamow and American have been tickling the ears of their 1116111 ere of late. In denouncing this mob, we are hat echoing the sentigents expressed heretafere, times wittiest number. The Philadelphia riots, the Louisville massaare, the Cincinnati and New Orleans destruction of Isaliot.boxes, all met car condemnation ; and shall we fail sow, when mob violence is at our own doors—when men's private property is sacrificed to appease the mad fury of the rabble—when the sacred precincts of the homes of citi zens are invaded, and their wires and children compelled to soak shelter in flight —shall we now, we say, hold -ear tongues, and tacitly acquiesce. Shall we &nooses crime afar off, but whoa it stalks at our own door, and finds vie tints in our own neighborhood, 'remain dumb, for fear our own property will share a like fate' We bate had as much reason as any man in Erie to rejoice at the destruction of the Cleastirorion office, if we would allow passion and not prlneip'e to govern as. In times past, as is well known, that paper made most vituperative and slanderous assaults upon Is—assaults, let us add, without provocation and without e. Since then it has pursued the same course toward many of our citizens; men whom we daily assoeiated with, and who, it we did not always agree with, we DM respected. It is not sympathy therefore with the payee, or the proprietor, that ire • • et 10 condemning this outrage . It is an tate nee of that mean and cowardly spirit 'that seeks to s te itseif in • wanton d0t...1;z. t...1; z. struetion of the property - -of-sto enemy. It li an otter ab horrence of that spirit of lawlessness whi , -trif not chocked renders private property useless, and life and liberty worth- less. That there ever was excuse for a ?nob of this kind lin er our system of Government, we deny. If-the press misuse its privilege and deGervirates fr.sua a free to a corrupt and licentious instrument of slender, the law affords to the slandered the proper redress; and es long /11 we pro fess to be- law abiding citizens, and are governed by laws, we should neit"ier eoantenance by silence or other wise & resort to any other mode. But admitting the plea, set up by some, that the establishment deserved what it get en amount of past *flews against some of our MCl sena, the mob of Friday cannot be justified, because it was composed of men and boys whose names never appeared in its ootainas, and whose personal existence we doubt not was sink:sewn to the proprietor. If we adopt the code which appears to be so much in vogue of taking the law inte one's own bands, in God's name let us carry it out oonsistently, and let the person aggrieved seek satisfaction, himself, and not allow half grown boys, easdidates for the Penitentiary, and other rabble of that ilk, to take up our quarrels, and in redressing oar grievances disgrace the fair fame of our homes' This much we have deemed due to the subject in a gen eral way, and now the inqairy arises, why was not the mob suppressed' We have a Sheriff whose duty it Is to preserve the public peen , . and maintain law and order.— indeed when be took the oath of office he swore to do this; but did he do it?' Not that we can ascertain. It Is said be claims to have been "out of town." This excuse of " out of town," is • very fashionable excuse among the " upper ten" when they desire to be iiiootilde to unwelcome .isitors. Admit that ho was " out of town" in the early stage of the riot, it does nut relieve him from censure, for when he arrived b. should hare immediately summoned a pow and dispersed the crowd. On contrary, the attack upon the private dwellings of Messrs. Tracy, Johnson and Walker, and the threats made to pay as a visit, all took plain after the Sherif of Erie County returned to town.— Cowman upon this want of-decision, or ...at or soma thing else, is unnecessary! It speaks fur itself. We con fess, however, the Sheriff is not alone to blame for not having the affair suppressed. Have we no City Govern ment/ For what do we pay city taxes? Li it merely to fee officers and repair streets, o, - is it to employ a pollee in name and in name only? llave we a Mayor' If so, where Was her Have we magistrate.' If so, where were they! la short, have we a City Government at all? If we have, where was it! The Mayor we understand was among the crowd of lookers on, bat we do not understand that he made • single effort to stay the fell purpose of the mob.— If we do him in this injustice, there will no one rejoice more heartily than ourself in being corrected. We have always held that whatever private feelings an official may entertain, when be takes the oath of office he sadrilices those feelings at the arise of duty, and henceforth the path of duty sad not of private inclination, is the path for him. Now the plaiq path of duty for the Mayor of Erie was to suppress this kiot at all bastards, and regardless of emthequenees. Ile dii'not it! And why he did not do it, is just what this community would like to know. We have a very vivid recollection that a few months sine* • drunkest fellow 11140 an unprovoked, bat not coy eoriou smash upon one of our City Fathers, whereupon the Mayor issued a proelamation 'tumble to the emergen ce: but here is a ease of wanton destruction of preperty— the Mossiest of private rights—o gross diem/banes of the public, peace and trankaility of the eity--and although a week has interrelated sines it occurred, we hear of no ef fort made to bring the offenders to jsatios, or to windiest, the city government from the Nal blot which such supine seas loaves upon it. We make time remarks with no unkind feeling towards a single member of that body; but we make than because, as they are the represen tatives of the people, whatever stigma rests upon them to equally shared by all! It is said that one of the main. ben of the C 019111013 Council was, if not an actual partici pant in the affair, an active eider and abettor. We do not know whether this is to or not. We were not there to see, We trust however that it is mot so. But if it la, thew saes ben of that body who respect themselves, and splurge:late the responsibilities of ;bolt bmcial station, should take ear ly and prompt act#on to vindicate themselves from sack association as well as remove the blemish which will oth erwise remota upon the character of the City Government An we'A Ihabgbail PitaEggliciany Cloasidered Hu a Inns the right to the enjoyment of his own prop erty? Ivory body saurus this question in the allisso tire Her • wan the right to use his property aa will but promote his own interest, and provide for ilk., easestoosooo of his family' No body dispute this: at tar from it, wiry traasaotioa of basin's, is based urns It. Time, the mer chant rolls hfi goods to thaw who pay but. The Doctor v i s it s hu rich patieat ant, bonnie he sow tat fore is per slowly*. Tits Lawyer Is obswialoas to his wealthy client, whoops propensity to litigate is strongly dovoloped, while he samba dm poor devil who is unjustly oppressed by use werugraismal seighber. The Farmer, tea, will soli his imam sa a eiromacisad jots," rubor lima to • baptised shristisa, if** jew will pay Was mom to short, the Dwooorsoy of weds la omnipotent; it Wish all didisetkic It obliterates the lopli arts between jew and goad* she ird pow, bead and lift for it reads ow mad geed* rich gag pow, heed sad hoe. bo Slist.aintot whore the men assn it M realized for a gkvea ioniser or • given newts& OW while theliwo of trade aro OM a Lorele. tura s sot pa am the an of adowww•act dresawit tont water into via", w swam So bread. lleekee, k in of tend' inadit o ky em p i a s the Farrar Uwe biloirsio toe Noir easseised Jew," if Ow Jew pays his. a *Mg price th an M 7 body Woe, dos and that ho has Mood wheat for die Jew how owl woke Is Jew, s g ladiedbaa ft wads the Isidoww a ha tist. boas loks sibild•• To panne the 'felons prise it gismo, 1114586 owl a boat dhow Wow* - ad beim .. Mt ezpoosemi la" W. am at sesillsorin dm' Moldy = 7 s MM., AV bis , biSitasil _...MAY i ► ISIS. AO , - -.- all the aline firm the abdominal mum' of all lb. slut elpilerea be the «make We ! aotg P. yet Ilit the aillia moires of reasealag eloped by thousWitstrimor *Wire asearllitearhar la the Illit than we liars Oiled a al pAttu for .1. L Johnsen whoa ha v Net ge 4 It say sera* oho.** mid be preeell Wilda& *am a Illeilabont dome la a hex of Nieleelleratai Were leattagerp" Prialkag jobs Well- blade hit **realises, ilea so leas as we pursue it shall west for ',my mss lOU attires as to de se t sad is willing to pay for it. Every I n d y i g ip i g m skpb se for s e we sea tee, aid we de - lot know WY we have not the seise right. Lewyers gine their servtose, for a so ostderailes, to the thie4 the bur gear, sad woe tbo murderer, set ao sae tatagtaue for a moment that the riot of osaies that Beryl*, is proof that L agsrers an partisipasts in the guilt of sleets charged I na d o g, burglary or Warder. Aad It is squally clear to us that we, who base rinds" inallesisi and Otter beta -0., for Jobliag, Sea petit a " Sitaaglltar jab, and still have ao more ooaseetioa with it than the Lawyer with kis ell - eat charged with may grime ammo& In eowelasloa we advise some of these "wise sea of the East" to be ea eels as possible. Tile Noerver Is gigs, to . live, sad breathe, sad remain ea* of the " laudations" of like oily foe ma* time yet. And while it may Dot be 47al way. able to net the wkiel triad, we trust by the help of past .z aad within industry, sever to be own - pow to dors 47 the outrages of sash a mob as that of -Friday of bt, eitlier by redwing to extend that courtesy which a comatear)assanity dictates, or echo the influnous sentiments of their who, too cowardly to do It thwaseires, like the isoakey,lnee die Ignorant and the vicious to pall their own ammo oat of the ire. Wyse', ran UauT—Three oriour ladigennt sabscribefl quit **a Monday (Moor kas it thirty, we hear) for choos ing to wadi. good Sainaritaa toward the proprietor of the Coestitiseies, aad allow hha to get out his paper on oar press, Om his bed been thrown ince the street. Fifteen others, however, immediately stopped in aad ailed their place, *d paid in advance, whisk just makes oar list good, and twelve to go aad come on. By the by, we would like to hear froth our brethren of the prees upon this salty/. We do not know that we ever beard of a newspaper being whipped into subjeetioa by the cry, " stop my paper," and we *Gold like to hear vbetber any body else ever did. Witt they tell as How it looks Abroad. We give ektracts below from two of our ex changes, the ,Fredonia Cenaff and the Conneaut ville courier' in order to let our readers see bow the events of„Priday night last week look to those accustomed to the rule of law and order instead the mob. Both of these papers have, from the Est, 8 ympathised with Erie in her railroad diffi culties. From W. Prodena Chw►. - . Sate inert he a dalsghtral place to tr•tde in if web oeeurenr.• are tolerated ' She border roiling" are In a closer nretitnety than laaa have lanyard. • • • a • • • We lean. abw that when Lis older was tors down, ther took h 't rot ostAle law library and all his law latpeas, sad air/1W them Into the ittret and made a boldly of them, and destroyed all the prtnt ing matarbda. The attar* waa a mood dastardly set, and a deep thazraee to tb, city Fr. the Owmairutoilk Casirur (.Inreser has always maintained that the rtr,hte rhfeb Erie cialmest as her own and for which she has been enatending, rere pbely bar der; but mob violence and dtenederly proceedings we moat condemn. Cirountstaime• do eat palliate the matter; no pro roralkm will justify the endangering of life, and the waladive •tractiou otpcoperty. If we are not misstaketa Erie will rue the day the hands of cilium were kilted againet ether. It t. Ar letter to eager wrong than to do wrong. Rawl; Bill We give in another column the bill passed by the Legislature restoring the franchise of the Erie and North East railroad company. In doing so we desire to call our readers attention to a few considerations relative to the bill itself, as well as our own position. When, in February last, we ventured to suggest that Erie mold make more by compromising than by running the dangers of futtfre Legislation—that she could drive a better bargain, and secure more aid to her projected public improvemeets by frankly hold ing out the olive branch of peace, and seeking to .eal the wounds of the past, than by further litigation—there were those in the community, even among our most devoted friends, who went so far as to doubt our unity. But they will agree with ns sow we think that they themselves, and not us, were the victims of a halucination ! We bill whist' is now the law, and hence must be sustained, does not concede to us a tithe of what the Railroad company would then have willingly granted. At least that is our opinion. We have no doubt, bad common prudence prevailed at the time, we could have secured the construc tion of the branch of the Western road to the Harbor by , the way of the little Cascade,* branch of the Eastern road to the sum point by some equally. feasible route, and besides thelloo,ooo to the Pittsburgh road, obtained material aid to the Little Valley. But no Compromise was the watch word ! « Fight on, fight ever !" chimed the popular voice, and against our better judge. meat, against our sincere convictions, in the face of fears that have been more than realised, our oommunity determined to stake the entire issue upon the bizaard of a die, and win or loose. And they have lost. We regret it—regret it; beeline 'we know we could have done better! In saying this, however, we do not wish to be understood as regretting that the controversy is over; on the contrary, we are of opinion that a settlement uptin the prestat basis even is better for all con cerned than three yearrof doubt and uncertainty brooding over the town, such as that we hare passed through. As to the bill itself, If it shall be the means of building the Pittsburg road— end it will build it if the railroad Company carry it oat in good faith—oar people will secure 4:wy its passage, a railroad to the interior from which they will derive more benefit--by which the town will reed fe more accession to its wealth and pop. elation—than by the ooesissaion of a dove Lake Shore roads. In view of this fact, is it tike voice of wisdom, or the °widest* of rod tense, to turn mobocrats and tear down and burn prirate property in order to show oar disappoietenet ! Or, turn driveler, and go mourning about the motets, &awing the town irretrievably ruined —that the streets will be covered with grass, and silence and desolation brood over the market plea ! Not such is our philosophy ! We have a good deatof faith in that trite old maxim, "Make the beat of a bed bargain." t There Is monad phi losophy in it; there is good sense' in it; yea there is moral courage and yunkee energy in il— if there was a little more of all these qualities diffused among us, and less of the propensity ascribed to young crows Ind noisy politicians, Ire would not be half so near rein as we are.— We therefore say, Putney's bill is the low ; we sunset help it; the town has sestended for her rig*, bawdy her rights we bairn, and when ever lioelleve,*Lbesa fired-how It is melees to Cease--sad now let us " oaks 146 beet of a bed beripkia;' not *sly pesesably and, es law abiding eitinos, chontelly wittiest*, bit let us reviler the Mae hag rood all the aid is our power, and thus it eattribute to our prosperity in every way Meads Wier fisierowessitts reportairi liW vaahig amitiaskg t&. ittprovemests Kowa, Mom, Oreshad, " *ad% 041 01ftsofi, Sir*, 41. 111 1ftem. Naito Venialks, &glom Aba he the Skill* sad Bt. 1 piss" awl but dies ta • am isms*, at wariad Oho trommaimlif sopplialei Where We Steno! 44. . ..a. ' I Too TOO Yu-reitxs. --Muir . 11 . 0 he. 1.,. , nor , . Nei d' 0 ad suotheed 1114mellag lqpilie MbraskA ow.- t.er. the ?Iv—, IMlNglos rid Besionowr and low aa Se PrelleggiSfisigglaws mesa, tbslimo aalauoa Isersesa and lOW of it sites- Wiped. irubittehos resew hi warmly lot Plerne k 4ohlie the fast at iiiul, sot lio , boari end esprwed liotie lattsl. Me . aitretninahlr" to in .hr dad *Magi Br alOpaligu. 112 tru th , in tooof no.' tsils lle to 11.) quits rn.114, ad* e indigo to tin Orli - t .i.g. iiitthoit oar nalighbet, with all his eautins, will br moist: waits . , ort .fie to engage to the light. The 1... mina illy a his pm- Ileeculiat While he professes to revere thr Lorignatian of Bo- Ors *Ws tilt Put Odieetuedea Pfau. Lilhoithowdees Mori poo gehtiti4 oirshret Pierre--as serum likel, from prrirtil in.ll - IMOt either go with or turn mcalnot them litit sr. doubt not hell deport se "may POefrl to bin. toot,. always IcinJiti, le rim than persiedat etnuthk•ration• yr Loch form so lore.• a part in lb* isetiwe doer mamma humanity. Self interest is pa , , varrally premix —Gwletie =I It is hard for one who is not a Democrat to understand the perfect toleration of opinion which *nista in the Densoeratie ranks, and hence wears not at all surprised stile tenor of the above ar cle from the Gamtte. Now, wben whiggery temporarily obtained power, it made the reeipi ants of public favor the herdsmen of those who dispensed it. It admitted of neither toleration upon the one hand, nor freedom of action upon the other; but the holder of office were expect ed to think, vote, and talk just as his superior thought, voted or talked. Thus, when Mr. Fill more sneezed, his Post Master Generul sneered, and so it went all along the line, from the pa rent bureau in Washington down to the $1 per quarter office away off in the backwoods of sun down ! With a Demeeratio Administration, like that of Gen. Pintos, the converse of this is cor rect. In accepting office from him, the recipient is only expected to be honest, capable, and a Democrat. Ile is nut expected to surrender his freedom of opinion upon minor questions, s'beh as that of party nominations; but least of all is he expected, when hi, ..wn Scat. . ha, untni ably indicated her preference for the succession, ani that preference is, like that of Pennsylvania .for one of her own eons, to place himself in tie, tagonism to that preference 11, oe•s the ile• attempted to be conveyed by the Ga:ctic that lie will be called upon to take up arms to put down the I'resident or Mr. Biedianan premely prOposterous as well as ridiculous NVe are called upon to d neither To adopt the language of the Washington Cuion , •• It is 11 1 1 t disputed by any ,ne that the• Democrats of Penn sylvania have a decided preference for their own distinguished eitiz .n This prefe - reee.: w.,s ex pressed in most emphatic language by the State Convention, End at the Arnie time delegates were 'appointed under most stringent tuornclion, ti go to Cincinnati and v 11., nomination last and all the time. The Fame Conv..ntion, however, in no mincing terms, approted and ,n• domed the administration of President P re , -- In the opinion of the Wtnacro.ey uf thi.t no ble old Commonwealth there was no T - cy i n expressing an ardent pref-renee for Mr. Buchanan for the next Presidency anti an ardent approval of the administration of President Pierce " And there was none , both are men the Democracy have and will be proud t.. honor; both have done the `. State service," and bah and too true to the principles and mission of the ttemocratic party, to allow their re-retire friends to undervalue and belittle the great cause of popular rights by encouraging tiNious oppo sition to either. And hence it that while we admire Gen. Pizacia and endorse his adminktre dentin all essential particulars—while we would cheerfully and heartily labor for his re nomina tion and election, were he the rbnie.• our own great Commonwealth, and while we will do the latter should he receive the nominatiion at Cm einnati—we are bound. by the unerring yrties of ru...404,0 7 or .1. s qeetn t , , vootain their choice--especially when that choice is one so e min e nt and worthy as Mr. Buettii.riArr. With the attempt, on the part of some of big over-zeal ous, and indiscreet friends to get up an issue be twesti the friends of the different aspirants for the nomination, we have no sympathy. We, in common with all his true fricuds, repudiate it; and we have no doubt n0w,21121 he has retprned to speak for himself, that he too will repudiate it. We trust our anxious cotetuporary is satis fied. If ho is not, then we can only point to the following manly and well conceived tribute from the North American as evidence that in the "old Keystone" there are not "two factions" on the quesdon of the Presidency The .Vorth Ameri can, as all our readers know, used to be the lead ing Whig, and is now the leading anti-l)emo critic paper of the State The altZelly had better study the political horoscope a little, and thee it will see that our position is not one of much doubt and uncertainty : Says the Ameri can: "No public mat seer ,meal Is a more toteresttog nod tinprearter relation to the nation, to lumnoelt anis curl to 11J11.1.1c11.1na, than does Mr. Buchanan at this meowed. alto reputation as a statesman atemeffly enlayeing Samuel a long aeries of year., for he his been In our public moor& tor 'math fortv,l is Airbag and surer now them it aver wain The retroefwet of 'hot I,Ohtle life, enlisted as It may be--and we have often had ~0 1151, , u to chaSOUt front his spin tows--ettewe nn a,t, or word.ld themght of tntldeh ty to the Cootli tutbon or the Union, threatened as it muietimea arms to hare been, in ruriolla guartms and through. tut them has tit tire any an Illepowentotles, as Senator, is esittnet Ytna4 r, audio private council. lir. Buchanan ham, Vor, n high Ita'l,,aul In tits, which mooting:ly Phi - MI.I not be disrertni , ..l, tin' sinewy , nn puhlte comet, Sur thee years, while he ne,..r his eutusions, has made hint, an a g•roaye r xeoo.r room i ff m,„,„duite omitanaeota,„anst ha, madded him to name', anftx.er• baps control them, 1, I,ln +I 1.1,14 imitrtott • titnotgh the lollsrenn. of thin cee• ecerar•top. 111. d.phnuntr„o doet trl a LLgl JUI1OLOP; of international adman, to Itt it,' and just!, e• 1 Theta has , estn a ion cnient e tort and miennte gamy warm. ilmt 'Jr. }tocioosso rept...0,04M o• atamnd We were ante alio lot..irrity. hut Lbseret.on, Lin approeutioe to an eminent degree Ones ebb. and dangers which fag Indiana nan a• they dmitt norm awl nearer to tho page of that whirlpool *Mel often origadr, and a l ara y, dwmta,;r. , curl thorn, all we were aver Di Itialteen &raw of that sentiment of hon or. ,i,ih ea r. Ma mote, that Outdo sa,erstry poise of the Ansonia n boort. and whore very rensitlernesa nun he Wary othinulatv.! ant shooed dealigolos zed tommaskierat. men (K all this we am IMF that t i n triad to executed, and so t a r as ht., as ...et can effect then(,. ear erprctatt"no are realized., the nation thank, nod o f t. cream Mine Patutay 1 rants too bap gnat 1.10.13 to be proud of hhii, and to raw* the kiwi greeting the ha* SO often ,01.11 I,la. It t. not stay W awnid, or to use without fear of mhwonTtrnct inn, phra w wide& party has stereotyped, hut in a brooder aoi Imo, wiper. OUS ran (Las It was ever tita-I Won% s Or run a i tit pr,ctoon car, that it, Bothasse is welcomed lack as Peutorhanla's "%ratite goo." Brawls anta I. proud hint, and what Peons i hank" dues do, oho MOISIII tut MT So, 5.11.1 any it with tut acebdin 'wider and wi der than has ever bete heard Phew, for there .• a local swallowed operating in air behalf much stronger than totlitiod organisation ern amused. tl la a sentiment, t 0,., that we tout rs lfl not he tri lled with. The etre of l'hiladelphio—if wt may venture an to de. the once Whig rite of ftilaotelphia —cordially waleouse• lb. non. Her mem of husineac her inerchswas, umendlietorr ears and artisaas fiat that they am hook with °onkel...nee and on a ...ennui etateramot when, "Pry experience onkel him practi cally consioreatevo, sad Who as • Penacvlvanaan, feels w Ph on and for ma. Ora in SUrprilkoi to /WI la Our ote.wte sod Ist clonal inter mune how diving and "Tweaked tide feeling is. It is manifesto, in an. pr o mpt &Won of our enotatemsl tarot. It wes even man 1110 in the unpremeditated amf iaformal loot IlDfrOr Mr. Buchanan', Mend's, without diellopkita of weinucal party, where were fumed ityporigmaaell eitineue, oral I pouf. -.tom, and paraulta, who weaned ha ha hetnaltilt *nether ~ 111, by a dielnienrsted desire to of fer • proper acknowledgemout to a iistorioaa public pervaat.— Philadadolda means In do honor wheitorfor LIM bean au faitlitully earned." Ihrootinen's Btxt,ws.-..We copy the following from the Independanee (Missouri) Messenger : "The great notoriety which tlfh Rev. Beecher has given himself, in furnishing Sharpe's rifles to Sanaa emigrants, has giree these weapons the name of Beeeher's Bibles A lot of these formidable weapons were on Wednesday last ex posed for sale in meaty at swine. They're,* brought here free the Territory by the.ownen sold, and the proetseds - invested in provisions. They went ass from $l2 to 16, 'Web is about half whist they eves at the East. Prom the fact of their being sold, mad the low price whielt they brought, lase as to the eonelneiott that the diffi culties in the Territory may be considered at an end. Should the reverend gentleman and his pious coadjutors learn what disposition is being made of Ms guns,' we hops it will have a Widen sY to stop his impiess, unholy, sad mittehievions baraspes, in inciting American oitisens to gnomon aid civil war. Re will probably now mei shot the Eidson of Know would prefer bag tie shape of provisions, and farming mime s, 'Ma are fatly than areas for this purpose ofsheodigtheir fellow eitisens. We admire the good swim Of those ewe for turning their weapons of war late agrienlraral rests, sad will do wing ere on to foroieli a nar. hog to ail yin loop wimb to make she nag die.. pliggigke their acir." • A MOB AT LAST! - tsttte i)/1.44: it ‘43sl) IP I Vlllloll , leSer , lay night. tne eeirzet.. arm, it, lea/alma tidellermanteit - un t rue ;.y s. • ~.sled , •om the hlgbe-t i the f• • ' Be' • Mimic% fat bight this 64..1.4 era- ..tchett •n ! t` 'tor,: Largest of the preen abratd, • . . • this ar dela actssamessep.m tent 'dim. as w.• beei tiewh redone' nips) facts of the out . . .1 I. Coch ran was met 111 or at :to, .5 • 1, . 1.• ~ iii • ' 4 "• ties by John ‘rallier, a • `J. , ht.:MOOD "om and C. ..or read: re td•Aille.•t the,, LFI I•een a personal recaantersrmic tin.• since. in ' I been setreediy Lau.llo/. Lie mow at they Azuok 13. and a tight .icourred, tlia.detai'.l of wh , ell we refer the reader to the various tatementi state ments which we eoll from t; • ...11•1 of e..ntliotia.:: 0-- 'tints, and which 1M rich party tell hi.. nen Finer. tu••• fr. , n the Garage, Anseriee4, sad Csemirsh , ... It t. but Just to add, that the statement at D. B. Nl...'reary t e.,r....1,erat...1 by NNW.. J. C. IdeCreery end Feces .ri. and r enrr.,b. °rated by circumstances cumin L101 , 2t,1 t• .0., 1, 3 ...her par ties. But with this. as a pabhe 1 .u7rial:•t. we blln r"th log to du, except to eondetc.l the Attnek tint tnfttan , e whether perpetmeed by el e er :,td with this ..uiphst boldly. After the tight C., it LAM git'h IT! I crowd togetbi r sod addressed then, in rui. , .,ince ',int led 'ay the (,“ . n. and Americas. Altar ,etrie hty or '1 hnti'e , l of what are called the ' . e.1 , .r! -ushed up.rl the office of the Coestaattem, awl eat ,tl . l the twit. male In the utfize, bit the I.le 1 property of 11 \leCrL CAttehey• to gether with tl.O to I .1 l'au "vy, SN., which had hein let , the papers ,d - nuinde , the - ram. ed. From this ~t •n, , tit, t. pe , reed , . d to tho dwelling. ,d Mese:, . t. i Nr..ik.r. and cornmen , ol thr,win.: • L tt• :Le .1,,,r1 an,.l windows. At the h ,ut f •re:'rod aktv the 11L-o art 1 ,t 3 . 11,11,,r but with,,ut injury v. 1,. the Sash and Fact,,r, Fifth streFt, w %tr.; Ul&Cb:ot r) 1., a ~ 1 ;a t stroyed. A. we h3vst.• r u. a • th' affair vre, have oily t ltt the ".V ii D. H. 111 ren ,rnrr•ureni On that evening, I wa. •i , Linz ro to laa in looking over e.ape pti• • . T • I. •, • aotywa. in the .alp, r • . C. McCreary were etandta.; 0 ,, t • .I t • •1 , but could hear thin c-n et-int r .i..., r r gaged at tny la'de t .:- • liAt • 1 ••••t• ~/ door, and log ui., ' n.l It. , '.` Walker, both In. I *ran:, t. Old d I.l.!aat:, an t w , vn l . • I paw C , chraa partly r.; 34 , iri•t I i •aa,t a • •• ,it r•i• end of alt.) 11411, eLi .t , • o • In the fare with hie flit. Fercnp. . .; •,( thypelt came into the hal at too *ln ,• tun 11 ,er log heat•et the Buhr, w v '.•.1 •1..1,1.• • but the hall b‘ ing reri rarro , , • .• him el•mr off, at how.% •r r0v..r,.. • I a, oily more. They both •.:oet: , el aCvn, r .rtt• 7 4 • tng ti.J uthu, Form., . eougl,. \‘ 14 t i t 444 LI and drew hun :ts !LUC% whiltt .1. C. .14t•Crea•v Ir l triv , slf I arm and pulled him int , tor Ale. v •I it the dour leaditii4 th IT - r ;.010 1 ,•• ago** out, le, to tok,, - swat • • s r.. ot • ..7411:1 rrrtie to4other. 4 7 .,rarin et.4tel. • .• . the noel the r .arntrl - “.r would nut open. Al.!Creary ant urys t .z.- not to gu uut, th..t there mo.,t 1.•• n them: be •itiot Wlllt , •r struck hi r I that ho had lost a draft or some ~,Lier 3 r - W•pieliod up a paper or two Ti at :my r. said troy were a-pt th - t H. p.:" I t' open t m.r a paper el toe lot" picked up and r.n%,• to hiti •:ud I. • Walker \ thqtt etc,ht o ter, ; , • 'Tar t t Coehran picked up a I,r , A : to/ . 1 1 : 11 !.1. ond Walker turned about t s , •• to thew about t eon,. aid , t' •,, - .1 t' kt • Creary an 1 ,' ;hew. Cttchrua tirt.r. it T r I .rlt.•r when we etepi e 1 I.er,,p , t t ; • • ' . ; He then threatonwi • . ; „ f the way. 11.! drew 61.• k a 111. r •, t t. , t wa.e prevented th- e, in •A ,• - , • ;, 1 . • int , a r I'l It , ir• i RP I 14..1' IL( the r.,,0n I • •. , 't •', ••• '‘' i'kqr the brick. whie'n on Ow haul. W.‘iker I t•n ,n • • : • A J,'l 1,14 and th , y - and tarn, a him govern'. • • an attempt to part them, tort was ,t,'• .1 :ly tvrc or L'ar,,e taros by i • J, etrike rue if 1 age..n inter • hou.e and ic , ro - i Jetta Trr., •-•ta:v.t, 11 R f ri Went of tad. in u far as they cacao tv MI:" • of town during the dny I P. M. The old court 601.,, 1. when I rota:nod from my farm. :409t3 After lb , mot, e,,121 meneed tearing down thd f D. I: M, Crean Hog end yonweelf, R th • 1;1 •• s• rt rn,v. About PI lt a; -tr. • by me house, Irvin ..;r `' '•4 .Irl.l c.,:rtrn,a co d b roa k iag Lo d, - a•lt r• • . to the u( John d r. C . .• pelting. They then estuo:to lae•tt. • mr. 1 • by: stones, ho., through the I- a l . ~ ,w 4 the parlors, and Lr' •rn la, •t ; .11• ILt „ nj fro at parlors. They u., I- !,, • .•,.. 1 „1 succeeded an entering the fr , ,at da - I - • la.c. • I ala et opinion that they w(ro 114 . 1,r r..‘ar .21 one hour. 1 cannot .ny whether any ' , kat withal mi house or not. I fared n..ne re t.,:•• hot three or four other peron- hosi•les ti.o ‘lO my family in Dr , . house Iv , • ,• • ~ w commenced. Very li.spectiui;) t.r., tV A T 1: \l_l. = Our city Las agu.ta heeotne the thr Jet, .. ;,, . tux bunco and consequent excitetnen: Cnrw.o ~ ut ~ur u , . settled Railroad gnevance, On ~:tern—n about 4 o'clock Mr John IL Cochran. ..: tu. tirm ,t ty 3 Cochran, liankers,) etei le l in , .. t 1„• I •,•: t„, , I tics to transact eume husine , o. with Mr I 'I Irt n. M.l sic Dealer, whom be was as. to I n earing the door he was struel, the h. ru . i.n IV Walker, wh, It is said was trrue.l nnh . r , his list. This blow, hlw, vex d, I it ••Ir4l •1. 1, I•u; three other aocompliers---J. it. I:e.-zuwer, and David McCreary mime Lately le 1 :01 , 1 i•rii tally heat his pers.:l-1 , 2,1...0z ht.,• '• v. Mr. Cochran defended matt:n.ls. ih • ~ I . Ran to gather and, the w•railv.t. Ron'. The flour of the oft a wan_ i• w.ti, 1,1.. l;: aaa.alt ww 411. SperAt4 40 . i ill :1011 4. ereaee , l an I th.• r Wet , k tut I'Cr w n. " : • • t 1 written upon the ~ .intetianceN • r •• , • • I , , • o'cl.tk, kr. t uehran aids'—.,t the t. , r Wrirht's klielinzgo wu t.t.tu:t u p on h ie per . ien, as a 1... r.•%t..vr 't ti. .•,. !t ,r Ode manner, the villatnuu , .n 4•.• . cowl tt the eta' 1.1 r lr elt ta. i tt , t l , t.t • : &mast,' b . % iiireltrigA, upm, th •, , i• 1 , , 4 4 tt-al city. operelt waA t tt,t•t•re z. I r. 1I • d Armed that we, the rittrent ~ f E—. 1 r u, ti•tar !••••r:1, stones and around our home- fir wiut,.. : .•,1 11114 ..1. raged people. He a...k.trt• to trllibt.,,A, I. a tire umaeher), and mt., et, u-. He Flowerer, it.lrtred n. it• r I t, ti• people inu.tt gu .r I 140ir -1T re".' {ions would Out. tfiltlee.so.,l • pomAitt,: &II moved by one 11111il.ssi tit a .1,.1•4 the:: war , the Coneritwhon otheo. 1 ro-• w,,rt t.t,t.eu cod. The entire office material Wm , 10.1 vo,I, t , .•: with er erytiting enoneete.l flit, thr Itur, , - the law libraries of Johntau l. \VI nary, atta it.tp,•r•, seeounts, ke. The building, to the sad commatod by fire. w,,..); we. ,• .•,. nv. ....tly —Ol,l if ordinary duiletta, ~ nll, wit); , t•Aehar 4 , .1 La ter In the e•eniug, tereral • .a•l,ut Hilipstriek who had Jost arm std ,i. the Bring diseontinuod. wiwit of c xtrliettp,ri h •Irg completed, the people gradually dlepersed. Iletvie:n the hour. of 10 and 12, however, the iiwe; ,L; J. 1.. J ,tili eon, John H. Walker, and John A. Tn etc 3:IM and WiladoO. and Min . & wen. broken, .1 to. , ,tr. At the two latter Ocoee pistols and g11:11 , were tire t !rum but no one way injured. Tw r toree drtittl.er, wsen assaulted Mr. Thomas Dillow an.l ~ t heria , at • ...r -mprifuLt,..ch an d E ig h t h Inhtlik r. 11..111 for shale. Thus crated th^ eront.al A“ti, • that eventful night. That the reader may uhaerittan t ).1.: wua rr the ewe stands, we add that it heartily atti•r• %es the ~ utrage. of Pride. night. Ono may wonder how •t c.. 0 lA.,' I over the outrages of the border manes," in Ka i nStl... Out ap_ prove of riot at home; but we n , .t; the rlitierence m pain. At hone it is only white men that are neob'.ed, but in Kan sa, why there I. a • nigger iu the fence:* =l3l=lll We left home on Friday morning busi lleta in the western part of this County, expect. lag to bedetained until Saturday el,enin.4. We, however, accidentally retnrn-d the same evening and reached our residence shortly after vii „erk. We learned within a shArt flow .f a reneounter between Cochran and young Walker and of the disitotafitnre of the former, but it being a in otter with wisielPwe had to tioniernove then gave but little heed to it. Within perhaps ten or fifteen minutes aftestrard., we learned with DIM prise that the Constitution office was a - Art.(l,m ed"—for what reason wa know not, nor were we informed We forthwith starod flr the of-. floe. Primed', actuated by a regard for our per sonal safety, met us on the way and interposed objestioas We, however, disregarded their en treaties sad passed along until at the corner of the square, near the affixes destroyed, and with in fall view. At this time the' work of dertrue lion was entoplate--tbe scanalderiug rains ..f our property above referred tn. 4 A largo cAncourse of persona were asettubled of oltnost " all desk SON Ida eouditloar -Aeons, silent, Borne talk=• tageipad aipisading, imkise yelling like.demona, oaf "sumo eiteready pluming every thing 444. , pm .no U. NCI as I Z.. i ••. Ihir th.• n t o A. t!, , , ' i I ' IMMEII I= w'.• 1 I =MEE l . "r ) i • ), =I t-o• 1..• • •t •- . .•• • • oing. kn 1• • 1 r .1111.,1 portable within reach. few - law books ised soma other ithall article's Were craved by a meri torious oleoa of citizens, hied have beik restored to us. A Lennon, belopeog to thiqtate, and sow entrusted as we should judge ffb Tea im• proper hands, was paraded near this-loins sod a salute tired:- This part affthe periodkantiiiiseem ed to be principally managed by two °Seers in Erie, one of whom is the father-in-lir of the mayor of the city and the sheriff of theloountjr, the -awe who set fire to and burned the rrilroad chr near Parade Street iu July last.— We then returned to oterdwelting. - Shortly af ter dark we learned that liquor (probably of the . worst quality) from some source, was gratuitous ly and freely distributed to a certain class of destructive,. Shordy him O l die (the night being dark) about two hundred as nearly 04 we could jedgo of this usfortunate *less of tu: it—actuated tzy no innate motive, having. no interests to peril and phronsied by the adminis tration ..liquid poison", as before spoken of, ass-mbled tumultuously is front -of our heti,: and immediately commenced hurling missiles of various kinds against windows, doors, &c. Our family were r..moved by a route through adjoin ino•o lots to the residence of John 11. Walker, E. \V rAnaincd in the house with weapons of &fence in our hauds and more at command, and had we ben so disposed, might hive killed or wounded au almost indothaite number, but desisted, resolving not to endanger life unless our dw, Iling w.is bro%en into. The crowd, after a ihort time, (li-i•• r..ied at the instance of a mem ber of th City Council, who just then came up, and who de , erv,, alike their gratitude and ours. TI • atta-k, ou the other residences above stated full .w,il in quick succession No shots whatev er were tired either jute, or out of our building. MMIMMIFA The Late Excitement ••••• itittne'llate conteMpotaries 1.1.1 N narrating. the circutnasanee« v prweedisg., we Anil tievoto bid •p.: , ••• t 11 , '• tlithjee; It appeara that about I ~ttoriv"wt 0f that dui, Mr sinti, • tt.* /Alt& of ttg:lll.AN A itt Tl. -tryi....l ;•• • t tt'or eallea tLc ronstiatoti. 1 , 1 qu. ~t NI he 141itit..1 t l'•• • . ;IN , 1,,,.114,4. .•nt.•ring .1, , A • th , ' had by Jolty \V \V I ~••• 1.1 1., I 0.11 • if IV ont t. pr,,etrated ' I • .•.• M: C..CURAN represents.) , , l't t..t )N 1)%., eo ~ti NI 1141. ealllll bi* It r .1% 1 , :••10 k •11.•(.01.0 , . , 1 111 . 11i.111{f ',is -1,.• 100. t rnnld. nip Mct of ,r , hl.• its nature and total!) ! • ~• I ihn.nri. t like tlk .1 ti !AL.:natio.. A Lc:o. , ct•ol,sl .o•. 11 .1 • W ui s elehati::.e, .11,d hil , •r . 0. 111 , •• I. ~i 1 r tin 1 , tletuillt.4 the facts ot ti, • , aud the ~ l it rage , 4 1.. tii4dll.lPt, rite and 'den. I . I 111 t•' •' t• t. ;•,11,,r Iva 1 ill•stril3 ekt it. ,111:1 • , •t' \l;t it. C th- work .1. • '• • • •f ' IA • • ~•,.• re•.. lere4 thenetek , • 1,, ir , ' , .on. • ..n tho itallr , ad questmo. tifol 1:1 • I toe'', doors et. I 1..• .1•• • •• eft' the most fenrful and tiepin., eharnetor—a fearful ovidencr of the irritated cor.- .1 t ..t t ,•• o , tb , le tunel eonos...inent upon t•lw ... • e, over Erie, of lorel4ll eorp. , rut ions thus nlitir in its a.p..cts--regret 11..' .i,• 1 \II I 101:1•11 1 . 1 , 114 11t, , 1 111. , 11 4•1114.• ett 1110 ...r.‘"..lret attach I I 40111..11t11 , 11 of I'll. HO% ' , paper uthoe nn 1 riper. 1:11•10114,iii , .: ill nr i p pApyr---c..ilerall) nielersto , sl ~I 1. , r• the purl. . u 1 3.1%. , eat, , ,.." 01 the 1,...e1r0, 1• , 1111.1'11 . 11 ntrainst - Erie 1, I ~• t'„• eI, tr.tet.... e.ty toll its inlittlotwit , hIl t,e :to v. , of .I ,, ite , I.y tt• (1.111:1111!111 . 1- :.ffiil:/ , 11 and 1.0r1C./ uo e , lOll rual.i 11 , 1A11/111 re*l/It from .111111101 r) l/letit4.l ter kt'yililig it. il• i! /I 114 , 1 St.,1 , 1••••1, tor int,r.•••te.l nl it. • rt. are ntoindattly Ode to recite it. to Ite.t u. m.oal iteritnoteote , spirit and pursue tt's 1:•• ,a' , le 1./l '• . 111tIr roJrse And. then, the street of ..... d ikg twist be nkjuri. , no shr•.:l,l—our tt tl , iv ;lire a illeit It trill t , 'lt' 1 . r. u. .01 e g:rt• to thi• njiogl-ti. of l'llltlllll4 all 1 soil. ntdt,l. I. 1 MEM 'UV . 0 ' MIME ra • •' ‘9, flur;!, , ri.t, m 441 1, .4111 hrtm, , t 14,• to " AP Er • •, ! importaxi,, fl.ro ari • lo.zt, .11 •• nt. !Alm sop,. rin .11 ip 11 , 111: t l l, w out . (..1 OBE =lll EINE Sow b too fast, neighbor! There are isLine , itiodliock —or mth..r three, for Warren county ha. fzot a voice in it as well Cniaf r•I :tu It i very true we " prc-eri , Judge, - but that is no w!,y Crawl •rd the new one - without eon h balauts- ~f district. 'Wc up pr Out - .t nor. matter much where t!,O r. w dult; • . :tics fr , m, provided'he eompe o.nt inAn. Thu-, if Crawford has the best in.,n, we v ..1 g 'bun chP, rfully; if Warren has the be .• titan, tl on we will go fur him; and if Erie has the hest wan, t curse, Crawford and Warren him' W. , d^ ti , ‘• knew whether thene at- any 'tspirants here or not, though. we are inclined 1.• think that our friend 13.,11011,1T h.is .in eve upon the '• little ,hiker." It looked way t i ns a few week since when he mount. ed the " woolly Lorsc, - and, " shrieking for rod, square into the Republican ranks The name oi Judge TnoMI'SUN has been rug hut whether he would consent to give up hi- ti tot pract.ce, toi the insignificant pay of thi• ofticv,. we ;.re not Avis...J. Should be (and as • IVO Cdl.l, we'll a-CA 'tarn) then Erie . ooutity len; to say in the matter S!, m itt n ,itt be a candidate, we can freely OV.•11 n rov, WI• will cheerfully acquiesu in a !lent in lit or of any good man, whose putt real minable, nte right, either in Craw ler I Isr Wa , re•.. In the 211 , 1t1 time, we would • • - ir neighbor of D, niocrot to cultivate • spirit or ass scifisLnt It seine times pays bet tipe cud than it,. .. And above es, let him 9.,t forget th.it at the same time irawford, Warren and Erie elect this new Judge, ' ford ;in 1 Env elect a Congressman, and that •ii• re is sime tinit.s wisdom in doubling trp.tr.- a or.lt r t draw hea4y l , sads over a rough if road Thin Congressional district is a ratio r rovitrli rc.ad, but it may be traveled with .inc elution :111.1 careful driving. , Miserable Meanness :Pi • City Philadelphia has been disgraced br action of her Count its in refusing the use ~ f n•icpenili.ticc Hall for the puplie rieeption ,ztv..o by - )ur citizens to James Buchanan The Coutiei:s, tin all occasions heretofore for some v• sr. hash, have never hestiated to allow the Hail to he used for receiving Any eminent eiti zen.of any p lineal persuasion whatever. The HZ., with their consent, has even been appro priated to the purpose of publicly receiving mere private Associations. .Even Black Hawk, freab from war upon the woman and children of our frontier+, was Iteated to the public courtesies of the llall. The only exception was in the cue of President Jackson. That was the result of very violent party and local feeling, and is re grettpd by all truo Whigs that now cherish that name. James Buchanan, yhatever may be his opin ions of pcd.lic affairs, and whatever may be his puliticll prodilectione, is a gentlemen in charac ter, standing in private life—eminently, and al ways a gentleman—a courteous and high-toned ati4 amiable gentleman. He is an able, and dis tinguished teanspitiasinis. He has represented our Suce ill both Houses of Congress, and was re a peer of our first statesmen. He hawh l. ed the chief seat in the National Cabinet, sad has represented our country at two of *filmi est Courts in Europe. Ho is just returned from as embassy, wbich he left amid the universal re spect of Great Britain and of Eur Ope. He has maintained with equal prudence and bialsiness all the interest and alkthe honor of the United States. At leaving triglasd, the great ww‘rwi politan city oi,London tendered him bar Sprawl hospitalities. Oa reaching this oonefiVAol . great city of New York hasten to trait,-vi rklie weerteliee. He ,00twes Arai* 1 191 1 1 1 i 1 ^• 7 his nativ..! l'ounsylvaais. Bat the mePnelitiPt that (' mmouwealth .4' which James 'Buchanan is a most distininicnistied sets and iinammtl, the l'en7igytran n city of Philadelphia Istly_m_r fuses to his friends theme of Independence HW for his public reception ! Shame, shams ! Not upon the City, however, wlifase people without distinction of paity ire eager to welcome James Buchanan, whose first einem'," of-all shades of opinion and association have f o rmally greeted him, and whose big heart from river to river, swells with shameand indig nation at the wipers - Med meanness of her Conn cll., Shaine upon the Know-Nothing tomtits and mice who have crawled upon the top of the municipal body politic, and there vex the City with their petty but annoying mischiefs. We are heartily sorry that the wag? of Mr. Water man, of whom we would haveNinaketel better thing s , glionld figure in such indecent cutzipanion ship with such fry as Cornman, Welsch, Per ilenry and Ridgeway. That obsolete anti quity, Charles 13. Penrose, of oourse took ocensi sion to air his fossil remains. He won refuse the Flail to Mr. Buchanan because of Mr. Biz ! chanan's political opinions on the tariff, die. I WL , u 1 , 1 ,,q0 that the gentlemen always goes for giving tile Hall to our firemen friend*, because they arc good at teupilly and running. Would he Lave voted for Black Hawk, before he ascer talio .1 the Indian's opinion of buck-shot? These Councils will soon find out that they have net only committetl a mean trick but a very silly on , . The magnanimous citizens of Phi's d, Iphia will soon have - on opportunity of aveng tl.ir insult to them, and they will avail them .,f the Qpp)rtunity by a majority of thou . ban.l, —J . /Lib( Arjus " F inney 'II Bill." Ir, A taehttsry to th• A , t In , orporating the Erie end North Sass ttatlrtosti Co. Passel April,2.2, I M I I. :q.CT11..1 , 1 1. lit a enacted Lyy die &nate and ilrpresfuta.tiws of do C'unineorsucalth ?f I lit (hileral Assembly met, and it is Ivreb o ri enacr•rt ty authority uf the same, That the Erie and North East Railroad as origi• naily located and constructed, be and the same is {Krebs/ legalized and confirmed, and declared to be in full ceaspliance with their act of incor poration, passe4 the twelfth day of April, one thuttstiud ight hundred and forty-two, and the suppleuisial.. ibises s Anything in the said acts or sails-lune ta the s eitrary notwithstanding. St.( •) That the -Aid Eric and North East (..dnpany • hs!! make such change or talsas the &drabg toad at Ilarborcreek, pe t 70 , 11 M:;11', St3ti at sad the saw-mill built by issue as , l ler+, as the R , ad Commissioners of II acrsek township may indicate; the said l: ad l•eiug first requested to pe tit, nt th. , Court of Quarter Sessions of Erie tut t appoint viewers, under the act of, the titbit. , u:h ul Joni, unc thousand eight hundred an i rt e - , ix, entitled —An Act relating to high way- s.l bridges," and the supplements thereto,• tat• n i opsu Ikiffalo road where chang._ in the same, the value of the lands t Ikon a.st the damages done to the saw a- •:.rtaliti'd and determiued under'the said a t snd its tuppletuents; the costs thereof t.l r— I , •:: l,lurr4rd it) the said township by the Er, • I N .r.:11 East Railroad Company; which said I .11 , ': , - r .01 shall be construct. ii in a proper wannl r. au 1 within a reasonable time after the rightt. dois ,s sablished, and the said Com . mi—seieri have for that purpose put the said lr Cumroy in is - aaession of the lands up on sal:eh the said rubls road shall be built; all dial-leo , . it any shall arise, growing out of the c. u-truetiou of paid road. to Le determined by tlis (;.atria of Erie county, as in other cues Sia Tint the said Erie and North East Csmpany shall make the same or equal I connections, and afford .qual facilities to the Suni.iury and Erie Railrostd and for the conven ience of trade and travel as it makes with and ittrlrils to any (oh. r Ptaiii - nad `4.1 . 4 '['hat tho Erie and North East Rail road I' ..1, within six mouths after the passaa.. i tu. ae:, s..nstruct a branch road, equal t., :,.I le-,pacts to the main line of their psi V• ; t .It L:t.ll `, :Ind curvatures, to the har t, ,a • .ot ig rouss.l,..r the .. , 4unbury and Er e io Railroad, either by an independent rot. rin ccuusetiort with any other rued hay- Ina the same tsruainua; and within three months atter the pas-age s.f tliis act, subscribe to the t-dburg and Erie Rrilroad Company Pour Hun dr..l Thsu-and I tollars, to be paid at the, discre ti th. list, an-I rtli East Railroad Com pany in ea-ti or in the coupon bonds of the said Er! . as I Nsrill Ei-t Railroad Company, bear itv an interest of sevAu per cent per annum; or In-tend of such subscription, to locate by such r .u.k a- they may deem most practicable, and ' eemui, are the c al , truction of such portion of tho it.alu lint ~f the Patslstirf, and Erie Rail• real, betty. en the harbor of Erie and the coal ..f larst.r caunt‘ • as shall cost not less th .1i I ' flz • 1.11r,2.1 thousand Pullers, and com p si! the same within two years thereafter. / s ho said Four hundred ‘ thousand Peters shall he expended between the c al fields of ie. r csunty and the line of the Lakeshore isroa , t, au-I should the Erie and North East Haar of Canipany elect not to subscribe to the s to g y; ot the Pittsburg and Erie Railroad Com pan:— but ta construct a part of the road of said cutup my. as cantemplatsal by this act, the Pitts bur:,.. an-I Eric Railroad company may transfer to sail Erie and North East Railroad Com pan'. the tights, and privileges of the Pitts burg and Eric Railroad over that portion of the real -u to be couatructedi end should the Pitts burg and Erie Railroad Company refuse or neg lect to make such transfer within three months, the , ' and in that ca,o the Erie and North East Railroad Coinpauy shall have ..l1 the privileges an I f:sta hiss- over that portion of the road so to be •inatrueted by any route between the afore said points that said company may deem .most, advisable, that are now vested in the Pittsburg and Eris Raßrsail Company. Tie Gnvernor shall retain possession of the Eris and North East 1:sill-nal under the act of the ilth day of October, 1555, until the provi- Mons this act shall have been accepted by a vote of tie stockholders of the Erie and North Ea-t Railroad ( srupany called for that purpose; and f , r the purpose .above mentioned, to con struct a dauble track- and-for other purposes, the Erie and Nuf-th Elul Railroad is hereby author issil to not tit exceed fiva hundred thous and dollars of coupon bonds, in amounts of not lass than one hundred dollars each, bearing sev en per c. ut interest payable at snch times and pl.tec.• as tae said company may determine; and the -tire. t. rs tr. iy. .1 they deem ica , iv 'sable, mortgage the Rio!, a.lan4 tt. apptirtensnees to ware the paytu‘nt of :=l , , nod any right of way or vaallorfals necessary .-or t y nut th,, , , -1,,a11,he1i.-quire4 envier the provisions of the set of the nAteteenth of February, 1949, entitled "An Aet Railroad Companies." The Legisla• tore hereby reserres the right, hs ease the company mi.. use 07 abuse any of .t. privileges , to alter, araitad or an nul the charier hereby restored, as well as all privileges hereby rue lerr , •l whette. or the public interest say re luire the earn •, M sneh manner, however, as to do ad in. justice to the , orporators. And elitists and parts of seta hereby altered and supplied, or in any way Inconsistent herewihils, he and the sat:Gear, hereby repealed. Sue. $. That :IA suits now pending, or hereafter to be brought, by nr against the said company. shall be tried in the cbant. re the raid Road is located, as in ease of indivi s suing; or being sued. Appeoos / rd. Governor, April 22d, 18. A. AN' tit? PLAYED ON A HARP - Or SZVZIIAL STRINORI-The New York Tribune gives the particulars' of a 323,000 swindle jag perpetrated in that city by the head of a commission house heretofore in good repute. The party in ques• Lion is a deacon in a loading ishuroh, and bee by his profession of piety done much to pin the con fidence of thoie dealing with him.—The swindle was committed by checks not provided for. The !tarty left town en Friday lastiostensibl, for the purpose of being moried-in a neighboring city, snotessd oil which he took with him a frail sister, • , hindlihs another one in a cos ..tion • - the mosso shortly. One Ban •s a dealrer to the seises =CO, sad the ! D . der of the smeatis tad among se Abeet received from this Joao stetieg h Ortsfore the letter silt rem be-weeld be fats **ask betgosed to for the rupees. 41strrti ane from • ' be _ -+---- NEW YORK. • elat Eris Okwrq.) New Peons reignes In the Orient, bat the occident I, le, Badly puptatiotia. To soy nothing of thelibolitcro, ran of Yank*. Sullivan Fillets Slog it with the Prise., H. of she Soistioneh islands, thermic," era prominently Wog, the public in New York. The former actor" to the tragedy have been apin brosght on the Matroima, boards, and two of them, at beset, with stem:fit /Nit, mem Liaa, who sided Ilsher In hie escape bad ►en mak stated and received a tboassad dollanrewsrd fee kis vq,. able servlees. Our reform Mayor seems to ha",, the principle of encouraging the prevestios of Probably it is due to this ocototkieity of the kayo, that the New York Polies have Wooster famous for net lag thieves and murderers. Again, Jaime. Irving, o h" indicted fat sidles In kilns( Poole, has jest bees aWsiat ed Supertoteedeot of lislidiap. A very sire for this tragedian Baker himself 14 going through u m , firm of a trial, finally to be acquitted, sad then to be p eii ,„ 2 „ off with some 'nee/immure. Conaeileasa Bcrripn "„. her four of the same caste,) phyfally Pet a bullet et a t man's abdomen on Tuesday Ise". Nobody 00414 4 „ 4 „ him and be was discharged. The Mayor will * no' i 1 444. And some place suitable to the eosinelosan's talents. im t Walker failed to dieeweer them, and therefore an, neglect ed sun of genius returned from Nicengti ► tut ewe, disgust. Bat " blood will tell," and therefore this "e," the ancient family of the Kerrigan' a " bouoi, to botcher, by heavens, or die"' With all this explosive material, time honored and ". warded, we are likely to hate a lively tune when tie blaze of the Presidential canvass is brought to It, fall heat. Bone, sinew, and pluck are going up to a highs ( ure. Brains are at a dieeount. They are not pratti'c nor creative. "0n the contrary, quite the " ths law celebrated Now York Legislature the tai ett „, yowa t i wen, the poets and orators, which N. To r , sty sent as her representatives. Thesis Sampson/ of municipal intellect rivalled their greet prototype to his destruct '' , nese, and exeelled him In the skill with which they head led Lis primitive weapon. Upon the whole, prehahly it is less hazardous to pension hos/skies, 0 1 . 1 , 0 p . ipeums.r.. Sow(' of the vowelise New York article to to he retailed L. t h e Riehmuud folk) next month by our Mayor, In the ere) of a le.•ture before the Mount Vernon Association' apin "'Ale character of Alexander Hatni!li,n." The Ita-bni.ei people were moved to institute this Wood to Bverett, from the fart that Bald Wood ~tte, told tohltacu ill that city. " Orent oat. from little ae on , gr''"•" The body 0' young pierce. who myeteriou•ly dial. pear. d last February has been found, thrown up bum ocean, on it..eitswoy Beach. It it suppound that he au nut murdered The manner of hi. gettinz into the er g , is =till the .orstery, however, authentic records shtar hat during toe past year nu fewer than t e e ry iwrsons have this= at.spiwar-li in this city and Ilr-I.!rn The talkie of seven of them bat erbeesn ewe% ere.l All to stient al to tb ilsouil late of the rest la there any thing more start• ling than these facts, in the reeoriis of violent , e and death of the cities of the old world , Well may l'iew - York treat Idle et the dark =ttndows which threaten human if, witl is her borders The great core, army which is paid to gum life 1112 property ti absolutely worse doe e..e ' wa d danger have struck their fatal alarum at co many (loon that our citizens have been awakened from their sleep of fancied security. and men are furred to entertain thoughts which they ,tier out irkasper to each ~tArr 4,1 ale nut the citizen alone who is to pause and IJok well to the pathway of tiis daily steps, but the stranger is all , inter tested in demanding that our atreets and dwelliags •Loa ld he s"ue,•wli more, free from outrage than a Cassette war path or •ampment of Bedouins. To da) th- , •ity is alive with eiettemeut: ..f minted gro..f an 1 c.ougratialatilea. The corporate ro date twat l oyfolt) brava, frmn the city ihn :rouge: , are welcoming Jas. Enclo.nan h •MC t.. Ls ea Lee land There are ether 'tenderly drooping at he mast Down our great , a thousand men are following a gallant moldier to the gray. The ea. upward to. poiiilmly, a great future tit. other doer. *at.' to his rest And the tboug,lth se crowds ton car,lcs.ly from the erapeai banners and hearse, to jot the utt ,, t a• careless) stream which otruggles into the I.; .iern t yr', R.,, a to have a eight at greatness. The renowned capt.ito of the Empire Club, while et•rodonc near the watt. t ag er .w.l at the entrance, was aalic.l if he wag ut Ile rep l ied carelessly that. "he tlidc't care a great .tea: ot :t." Pro'oably that deity which to the unpenoua ea Cuatetu Howie at prestnt tttf!th.t• •‘,l the ply The grort beinoeratie , oariive• nt, to c a Cioeinnatti, will try the nerves of the Doctor! Let tit that the result will be "a good og.; ' ti ,, “ r3l Tom Thumb know here exhit•itin; u his et boot, am 1 i•taiust, the new prerat.l.,a winch has rust. ....I oUI Watalt ! , 111C0 Barnum trotted him out Barman] , 0 also arou4 , looking 9,,edy bet hopeful. The 3.irers^ i.r rent which stranded the great 'h.,. man is on th, tarn, and t- ti,,ir float ng him out tS a summer sea. Barnum is hound to shine yet 'The old landmark of youthful holida laughter. the kmerican Museum, is about to pl.e away, and ttself to he numbered.,l4 one of the by gone retnembrancor of Broad way. All our places of amusement are tr,taiing to the north with the current of population. " Butt.'r an 1 , hews and all" will 5040 administer extremc unction to the I wee part of the city Contracts and corruption aril I.otet ~ n for some years to the regions of the City Hal,. and fashion. beauty and wealth must Won be sought Iv ly In se only who can command the price of a sitponny r if to the privileged vicinity. Contentment prefers ae• untry sat tags to the host of city lota. ERIE AUSITKLE Ac THOMPsoN • .1. r and Cortkutissiob Illorrhant. In.l Fl..kar, %Tat, r U n. and Plartr.r Ell l %-' •tn,:. Erie. Pa URA ND OPENIN G SPRING AND STINKER 000D8 TI HISSIALS, TES ( I. &..y Neck Hnon in .t.nt and ars corkstantl% m,tnm.-r• -t.•ck of •p-rag mad Samar Deo .n.t entire!) [Not., arul embraein such litylea nl `4Japae •m' k • • -, r• t.. , ..•1r an are el n.•nllh meet 'with in the Brit /‘re t.... It, non thorrotelt knoal,l,r• of the Market and tin an.ntwu .'nal , lr on to offer iii.• grater part at oar .took it 1... MO ruler.. The attention of tie baring tt it , tt t • art ..tatutuat ion of our stork. beildivintt It to he Ow i.IiI2II4EAT, yO1•:T COMPLETE 1\ ASzoOIiTVIEN'T• tth Yuan and elegance of idyl., and at I than rit , ‘ other him.. can ilhildt in ti do rile W. • • a.• feel that an examination of we /dock a or t•.: Tlllit tI 4 , / • .t En.•, 'tat 111., li5A- 51 E that lb. ninon Keiantlfal Panted I _.••• •• ntrtiseat in Plain and Ararr.l 1,ia.1... •,•• .• Sigh enhini.l Stripe. ast Plaids to lie found r l'"' ••• SI k Shawls t Shawls ! *,TOR' opening French and Zirotrh Sitar lA, Stotts. nlo rr '' : 1 . 1 The lialtsemmete Shawls of the Sea,. flaw►nd Erahn,Mleeed. Whit"Cn*P°' recelred from rmatom by ?}yip RepubAr Black Silk Shawls, • toh.re.l and Black Tbllarrt •;Int• I. with , LIL slot \k , Mrnoo, emboarro,imi every vanity Ileurume Erie, 344 11.136. 61 TIBBAI- , . HAI - MlCattlACUrieS. ( . 4)llPLynt Assortment In rtrery rartet, t h. AIL and Swing Cberodartto, VI .10 z. Lars. an.l Edgings Mourning Collars, Drew 1. kJ Cloth for working, Koaltet eq Cotton and Ih. " • oornt,l at 61 TIBBAI-'4, Conoentratad Attra.otion. of f•arpet In wreral rade' arid • ni, rt 'IN r r•••• sod beautiful :Snaps, many of them •••;:rll.ll : 4 • 111 I's Stair •••rport and • rai and eonaplen• Ku's Matt. tr., rroub fur eihlbltion and sal.. vt Env, MAI J.I. 1 ' , LA. TIBB k 1 . 4, 11.VVF - & New Goods. SPIKING i 1 0 1/731111KE ISTY LE$. 0111111 C. BEEBE is ao* receiving a tars. and e..l Irtr..to•: •t..e.k of '4.14.1s and Fancy Dr, emu!, to wlort. •ou , • inTito the attemtioS °fill. among his Mork li..rman Swaim and Ingilah Dram Airm Fn .:Jell Prints., arilllania, Muslim de Lain., and Chan d. tan , . Farr! and Plain Silks, Press Trimmings all Si n .!., !qtrs.., Curie. lneertings, Slik, Tbrbet. Cirape, bulls •!”, SW , m -Ms...wills* corded and Omens Skirts. White threta, Hootery, Gloves, liandlagecialek Cravats, trnand Ronnetta, Paranoia, Vinbirellaa. Ladies Kit . ..Moo , 4 .""'' nienne and Veinin g ., Check Cmushissrs• for novo wean ' , c.a.."' -""' Tlcka, Napkins. Towlingcrash, Linen Inuniiet. Ta Cofer,, Curtsias, Muslims. A Isms si ' ock of new Cainavnerva, and Vending,. Sheeting and Shirting" ' and Nona and Ile, a Clothing on hand. Clothing mina in O• 4 'T abort notke be a good woettnan. Alec, a r ... 1 ;moron... , I 4.4• Papers listovitea all pioniona wishing to novenae.. rood'""''' ' great bargains to call and examine his Fin . Erie, May 1, 1156. I. CHICAGO it LAKE SUPERIOR' glint wrzAmint LADY KLOII.N. Thonar aor ic i a 1 Una Master. will leave Erie for the ithwtr and IntermMiatr i.orts iunnedfately on the ofgentng of oftwqratool it J MORTON. 4toof. Erie, WA) 3,, Eil3ri HEW ONE PRICE CASE STORE! Al, notified laat wrek that I was meriting an "`" 4 ' 4" "r DRY Gikinvi, I will nowsstate that they In, Of /0 , 1 „,„ h, esised and are nrypa fitr inwpmetion, and I flatter 'hr GOMM itml PRIC4`4 • ill OM pasral satitdact,on pious hurter no with their "absm ode. grk, Ida) 3, 13.56.- WIC F Id • PKlll'lreirr -- - - - - _ QUAWL/4.—ctop., 5i..16 , s il k, w or , i ,d, Th,i,t and a lart• aamortmeot of 4111 1 /mat'styloo of Shawls 6 , r t h. or ^ " v :". rano( elver for Cosh, at i RISPFK \ t‘ May a, 1866. ANTILLAM! MANTM '!-Ta Ilentillax itr ,,,, t ''' i i - - ___ itlifie: Qom two dollar. op. Coil v . vr ar i d . 7 2 . 57 ,", Er H .,. _ _____ _ - - - - - ---- - puREMO DT. suki4 IOLLILIa„ ,„ ;m t . iw irmal d w anuintnaen im 1.. d I h of 1 , 11 4 a. , -aza h . l .l F rr ita,l y .7,, IMO. WIL 6 KIN l'h . .R N F ! —— - - r_l_LOTllll4 and 11061ERY ad al prima and qualm.... el ..11'....--= Ulf illay 1666. Wk. I.' RIND E , " . _ T WILL state for the Ildiseemittee of all, that I Ilve • asfortanot of Dar 9001$ whisk wen. bought I". , 1 ** , 46 11 •bi• umfill•k god 1 home te eel Mew o • Taste for rash. My Meek la large, and all I ark is a sail:, Ng Goods realigned.' Gibe we a nal and judge for y ru Goode oboes tril6 pieanare. May 3. ISM F. RINDLIMa rr _ pinUelfrltt 0001hMe—Tbe toyed see ' . 4 1. 01- " N te "l Deateebe Geo& ern aimed before is this cit, fr!!!.. hl May 3, MIL RINDIAA' • M !!.. al elitti sad emme,bb. 46 `4 g ar,. all asbies *or ma by . 14,11111 b. J 1 NOE' EZ3
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers