THE ERIE OBSERVER. BENJ. P. ALOJN, sdlt•r. SLOAN & MOOSE, PUBLIINEXIIMI itATIMRDA Ir P . ,..7; 7 ; "' 7.r '' MF7jrn .6 7=j7 • 71 TOR GOVRRNOR, HON. WILLIAM F. PACKER, =1 TOR CANAL OOMMISION61,• NIMROD STRICKLAND, 1=1:1I 113:1 News of the Week. —The Philadelphia Nora American says "It 1141411111 pro bable from present appearsnees thatt honest Congress will pass bills for the organisation of the embryo Territories of !tirade. peseta', Arisonla, and Neosho. Wises Minnesota shall be admitted into the Union the number of SWAIN will be thirty two.' ► Oregon and Washington :will raise the number to thirty fear. and Nebraska and New Mexieo to thirty six; and the four new Territories when admitted, latrease the (droll) to forty. Should'Texu and California each be divided into three States, as Is proposed, tbe num ber would be raised:to forty-six. Then - there Is the pro posed State of Superior or Itasca, making the number forty-seven. We have omitted Utah; but if that Territory be admitted as a State, the number would be forty-eight. This number would be reached without any division of Nebraska, Oregon, or Washington. But the former is large enough for its or coven States, Orogen for three, ind Washington for two. These calculations serve to convey an idea of the rapid growth of our republic, the immense extent of our unoettled territory, and the importance of the legislation affecting it." —A most singular trial has lately taken place In Mont real. Dr. Jean Baptiste Pheophille Dorton, a person of gentlemanly appearance, of standing sod poeitl,n in 1110eiety, and in the p ion of wealth to the amount of upwards of $9O 000, was charged with stealing silver spoons, two promissory notes for $lOO, a gold-headed cane and six books from Doetor L Donan, (whom he ►ttended in his last sickness,) on the 20th of June, 1851, near:y six years ago, and the chief witnesses were two brothers of the prisoner, who saw the goods taken. The accused said that the charge was the mink of a conspira cy to ruin him, but the jury, after an absence of Ave minutes, found him guilty. When the verdit was announc ed the prisoner staggered in the dock, and was ashy pal. The sentence has not yet been pronounced. —lnteresting intelligence has been received from the Plate survey of the Okefenoke swamp, which covers nearly • fourth of the map of Georgia. The great swamp does not appear to be a swamp after all So far from being ha. pedwi by water, the expedition suffered severely from want of it, and were compelled to sink three wells for drinking and cooking pommies. The anderwood also was found of almost fabulous thieknees, through which they were compelled to cut their way with knives, whereby they were so much delayed as to be in danger of starvation. their supplies beilig exhausted. The most erroneous opin lOUS have been entertained of the extent and nature of the whole'region. No published map gives any idea of its geography. The survey will prove a fortunate venture.— The submerged portion is found to be easily drained, whereby thousands of sere, of the most valuable cotton lands in the South will be reclaimed. --The will of Miu Elisabeth Gelson, daughter of the late Jnn Gsloon, merchant, of New York, was offered for probate a few days since. After making various bequests to her relatives, Ac , to the amount of $15,000, the will distribute• $16.000 among- missionary and other charitable societies, at follows To the American Board of Commis sioners I,r Foreign Missions, $5.000; Board of Missions of the General Assembly of the Presbyteries Church, (at Philadelphia,) for the promotion of Domestic Missions, sa,oon, Board of Fiticativn, same Church, $2,000; Ameri• can Traot Society, New York, $l,OOO. A handsome dona tion is also made to the American Bible Society. —As the steamer Commonwealth came alongside the wharf at New Londoo, Ct., on the 27th nit, en the pass age from Norwich to New York, a lady walked overboard, and would have been drowned but for the hoops in her dress, which rendered the same somewhat balloonish, and withal answered the purpose of a more oomplicated life preserver. The night was very dark, and it was giearly half an hour before she soul." be extracted from her peril ous situstlon, daring which time the hoops were sualcien buoy her pn an.l it is stated that during the quarter ending the 31st March, about !000 dead letters have been opened at the Dead 1.-tter Office, containing money amounting in the aggregate to over $11,000; and already -eights of this am-'unt hap been restored to the owners. The esti mates of the department of the whole number of dead letters received in former years, under the high postage system, was three millions and a half. Under the low postage prepaid system it does not exceed three millions a year, although the number of letters mailed is far greater. --John Miller, aged twenty eight years, died at Indiana polis on last Friday night. The Journal films a brief his tory of his sad ease. ❑e . was born in Dayton, Ohio—was left an orphan with a large estate, and to his own guidance —beeatne a "fast young MLR." and rapidly spent a fortune which was eounted by:tens of thousands. Ile kept a circle of dashing young fellows about him until his money was gone, who then deserted and left him. He sought Indiaug polls for a home, and there, in some menial capacity, lived for. time, and died In a strange garret, frieulless and alone. —Tile very Csol:sh story started in Week,lave°, that the National hotel siekoeis was eaused by poisoned tea, has actually put it into some people's heads in eft that the ("bin's , ' Sr. putting arsenic in their tea eats, in order t•, pay off the "English" and "American" devils, fur their attack upon Canton. The consequence is, there le a very general abstinetlee from Sosehong, Epos, and Gun powder, to the great mortification of the tea merchants, who hare boon baying up recently arrived cargoes at high prtees. --Memphis is decidedly a place in its way. A few days since a case was pendia( In the Comma' Law Coact of that eity, is which a Mr. and Mrs. Halbing tad filled Philip R Bohlen, for breach of marriage contract, in fail ing to marry Mrs. fislbing when she was Miss Agnes Handwerker, and the jury has given the injured parties 81,250 damages' The idea of Heibing easing Hoiden cease he did not marry his wife, is certainly the richest thing of this feat age. -Mn.i Cooper, of Soottevillo, New York, *loped • tow days mince with • serried 'Gasp named Story. She took two daughters, aged respectively twelve and fourteen, with bet. Ler bullhead followed end overhauled her at Detroit. He took Fie young daughters in ,ehazge, but turned his erring wife adrift. She had been robbed and deserted by her infamous paramour. Verily " the way of the imps tremor is hard." —The Greensburg Dessorrae has eowimenteed tics pabli elation of the oonfeesioa made by Heigh Carrico& It shows that be was a most atrocious •illian. Corrigan, it will b. remembered, wee tried and eoe•ieteetfor the mea dow of his wife, Mary, la the Court of Oyer and Terminer elf Wtottnorelawd county, at Tolsraary Term, 1836. —it Cara, an motion for seduction has bees brought by diary Abrams against diehard R. Joao& The plaintiff was a prang lady of rare personal beauty, bat peer parent age. The defendant las wealthy eonneximas, who oppos ed the promised marriago. TI• Jury found a verdict of $l.llOll damages for plaintiff —The Washington oorrehrpeatleat of the Philo&lpbta Nerd Amoneast sr that CoL Palmy is to baeone tie of dal editors of the Washington Mimi. It also says that ear government bag goolaed to take no part with Esitsad sal !moo sistoot Class. Noonlity to to b• oar pod the. —Bakst, tits liquor mero►aat, whose }Lary Asa romatly married Doss, the ooae►man, coos upon • tin* wt., be wasn't quit* is as ►o is sow, lavosktod an smut's eompotted sailed " Bittiors," • slight quaatity of *►t•► is bolieved by ma• 7 to add to lbw vales of • gte oasittsit, so —Wbile several Degrees Weaning to Dr. Silky, were esigaged i• clearing up an old field, situated is the upper porcioa of Libers, eouaty, Mo., tit/ killed, en abort fuer turret of the 11441, twerp-sue rattle sashes and ore woe/win ssak• ! SOlllll of the int aseutielsed were of large size. This story is voeeked for as tree. The Wyokof gold slaps in Pangslee ermanty, V..,. k w ,. b oon so ld for $4,600, on an oseantion. The whole amount, says the Warrenton Whip, spent upon these works, noel , ' not hare bout low than sh.,iee. - - A factory foe saatitaeterlag parolee wadies hem been eensateaeed at Los Apples, CaL The olateeial fr. which they arto nude Is °Waited beta the astanal wisp at that place. —According to tbo moral No leiriabip of /tisk land, in Ylk comity, in die onatisni Adrift is PosimgA, vas* baring but right nimble& Janknen inernsidp ii Pnittor county bac fiorriron. • —Hastiest= tie form bee pined libes• posses slim ii impriossinss‘ H. firing la tie rimming, sad Osiris books in din after* The Mimi Chem i Jeers& ef the 30th alt.—a peesisest "typeblieea" pelet—esegeris se follows: *What lases de the tiveliteht sus et teases weed, deem peeteetio• Is the sestets* et their pellikal right*, sad ad ddrit.7 i, fddsod wed I' Thew an new geseestied thou la the eppvistunt et siker. _- ----- APRIL 11. 1.8817 "Let the free State nos take ears that meditate 4 lost by saprisioas se tioatantly refusal so so to Um palls sad speak the rest tit the ballot box. If ever eacearseemeat to etalgratkes to Isa ias, it 4 at thieNaoseat, whea the prospect of trseqaality ad severity to all LI 11109/1110110d." We are glad to as that ese "repablioan"printhm right feeling enough to condemn the etzateimplatad refusal to vote of the free State mien of Kuzma. Seek refusal exhib its dearly that partisan passion is paramount to love of "freedom," or regard for the paws of the country. If the free State Rea of Immo will not vote, hew ens they (tom plan if above who do vete, sad soasequeatly obtain the DOOtOel of the least goverameat, exorcise the powers of that government to raboarre their owe pompoms. A dispatch from Washington to the Assornated Press, under date of April Ist says that "the Administration has 'initiated Bean of the promedinge in MIDDY hewn( in new "the election of deiegairm preliminary to the formation of "a State ossatitation; bed with the inteatiou aaddeeire to "terminate the distracting question of slavery, will assist Mn - carrying forward the measure which has been com "minced in the Tiurisory for that parpo.e, leaving the "people at large, without any reference whatever to their "political divisions, to settle it by a free and natnusimeled "vote for themselves. It having been repeatedly asked "bow indepoodeat suffrage can be exereieed, if the laws of "the Territory are to be regarded ae valid, the reply from "the best mare« of information is, that the law providing "for the election is a fair one—ia explicitly declaring that "all free white male museum over twenty one years of age, "residents of the Territory on the tint of April, shall be "entitled to vote for delegates t. the conststutiosal eon. "voodoo. This is to be administered without regard what "ever to any test oaths. Goy. WsLittn and his Secretary "of State, Mr. STOWOON, hate repeatedly said their efforts, "in accordance with the views of the Administration, will "be to Henn fair expressions of opinion to all the people of kansas,while they will easefully abstain from any act "which could be construed into partiality on one side or "the other. Whatsoever way the citizens may decide, the "Administration will be content. Ger. Matzen repeats "his opinion that Kansas will b• alms State." This, then, being the position of thiAdministration and Gov. Wktatit, what more de the Abolitioilsts in and i.ut of Kansas want? But, says their organs, tin «ens wit! be taken by "border ruffian' 06011110, and a fraud will be imamitted upon the "Pr« State saes" in that way—then there is those edited "test oaths" whiff!' we will be eotn- Pelted to take hiders we san vote—and then, to add to the rem total of the impediments *bleb we will have to en counter before we can ozonise the right of suffrage, there will be armed bodies of "ruffians" from Missouri at every coays.unat precinct to overawe and prevent the free exer cise of oar rights. The best answer to these °him:lino", a. the ant of the territorial legislature itself providing for the election of delegates to the Convention to form a State. Constitution; and ea we have not space to insert that tioeu moot satire, we avail ourself of the following admirable sy nopsis of the main potato in those' bearing upon the vies tions at issue: The moot Important fact, (says the author ity from which we quote) connected with U.S law in ques tion, is, that it abrogate all de presiusa lute of A. Territo ry epos tie saitism of NM *cans, ife. It becomes in fact She only law of the Territory as regards the exorcist i.f the rights of voting and citizenship. It was not necessary that the former laws should be repealed in express terms. They become unoperati•• by the more recent enactment, and are as much a dead letter now as if they had been /spong ed from the statute book, of Kansas. The riot in question explicitly states what shall constitute "a legal water." in the Territory. and alone must be the guide it. this inqalry The act provide' that an enomeratton of the ichtittitants shall in made by parties da:y authorised, thatafter returns of the number of inhabitants are mods, the lists shall re main open till the larst ilk of May next, at such plisses as shall be most con•enienfa the Inhabitants of each coun ty or election district, for the purpose of hearing evidence of fact, and making suet' eorreetions as regards the omit don of any person's name from the returns, or otherwise— this information being acquired under oath. That when the lists are thus revised and oorreeted, eopies shall be fur nished without delay to the Governor who shall cause them to be printed and distributed generally among the inhab itants of the Territory," DJ well as posted op at the polling places. The wools number of voters are to be divided by sixty, each division forming a representative preeinsil to elect members of the eonventioas the eloction to tokenise* on the third Monday in June next. The set them provides for the appointment of proper r .to.ii r • ..ti to DO sworn; and 4•0141Oe• that any attempt to aseeosee by (Arent* or jorce, or by ear eider stalassfri Wawa, direeely or indirectly, re sesloesics any qualified voter to the free ere vise of In. rvykt sisfraya, siail be yeilty of a etes demeanor aedpeesebed by pee nog Sees than fin hundred dol. /ars, or by issywisoosisni of not left than tires asonrks. A fraud in the roust-as committed by any returning officer is punishable to double the extent just died. On the whole, law is drawn up fairly and justly, surrouaded by care ful revisions to ensure regularity, and providing . those nece safeguards recognized by long established pre cedent. It wi all the difficulties 'solidi the/armee die. race/el Territorial lase created. No teat can le ' , evinced sot reed sized is A. present act, becassips obey are inernists i tent &Dia its spirit and text. Bat it smooths the way for an honorable and jest solution of the question and we cannot wonder that the Adminlatration is saaguine, under this view of the subject, of ultimate and spoirdysoooses in quiet ing the Territory. We have reason to know that Goo,. or Walker's inatvredoiss nip/feisty tare tie rowed tkat elis last not Vibe Linyielateire impersedes all it. preeVisee esteset meets iiseoseiment with it, and that all such lots art Incon sistent, whiciNnivide for any form of oaths or penalties not expressly reaffirmed la the last law of the Territorial Leg islator,. Ne lawyer of any staxyling will dispute the ac caracy of this position, whilst no man of eon:uses sense can doubt its wisdom and fairness." If slavery be established in Kansiu, therefore, it will be the fault of thesfreeStato man, solely, Th e y beve, cover. ding to all amounts, a largo majority of the electors of the Territory; they can vote without taking any test oaths; the President of the United Busse sad the new Governor of the Territory are dotertniaod "to sown to every rest. dent inhabitant the frog sad iadependont impression of hie *plates by his rote' Whet sore an the free State men ask? They one wake K*llllllB afros &au if dory deuce, o r, by refusing Miro to the polls, they can allow slavery to be established. The solution of the question of freedom or slavery rests mainly within their central. CAN'T co HlJl.—Thio Phßadis!pada Now pistillate. a card from J. Alesaniker insuption, Rsq., *soot the Delegates from Philadelphia to the Republican State Convention which nominated Mr. Wiliest. Mr. 8. declares kis deter. minutiae net to support that nominee. "Mr. Simpson. says the Na.., is as Amoebas sad IN favor of an Assert sea policy which will siartearage and protect Americru ls• tereats, and ospeollilly Americas labor. B. repodistet, therefore Ilia sismaisatima of a siaa Notoriously lams an as avowed Free Trader. Mr. Simpson is sot alone in this diderstsation. Thousands of others will panne a like comm." OP • As the white-washung season is omenst on apses, wspablisit the feflowint recoips for th. 111100111 of oar tidy housewives, who ors scar ambitious to rake owerythlag *boat float look 'hi CINM as a asw pia." it Is said 14 b. aa eztolleat rassip• tar a mask: To Y•t■ WW2 WARR ►oa ALL BOILDIXaS, fail Da lit Otrr.—Take clean lamps of wail hunt 11ms , sleeked.— Add olio fourth pound whiting, or burnt slow pulverized. owe peitad of leaf sugar, three quarts of ries Seer made Into a this ad well issued paste, and ono plead of clews wit glee diseased as eabtaid soaker* do. This may be pat oa cold within doors, but het outside. This Will ►s as locilliaat as plaster Paris, aad retain its brilliaasy for many years. The ewe sad of the Preeideet's house la Washing• tea is washed with Oksisnads. DX BOW'S Rariew.—W• hare the April somber of thb laitethly. Asa mood of the industrial iatereets of tha Speak awl fa &et a the Radio, this Borba is loyal. Rabb. In addition to this ft 'Detains may able paws epos the rarim spiking politied gambol's of the day ran Um ablest Writers of the eiostry—aad thus milieseir s alibis Weed a prefect vedinseesa.of tatonsatioa open all outileets intimates to ski Poltdetaa, the Editor, or lb. Meroliaat. It is ribitined et SS pr unman to a elnii of three, $11; tea dab of M. S&L Hook nuniliers eon bo supplied Ot lbs Woilthistosi or Err 0144111111 blew. Th. GM twelve Maim aro apodiraied Isis three velar's, ridded "Belabors flaitee," imilasosety pintas" sad Imo* prise $1 for tle ..t, 1840 pares. Add...., J. D. 11. Ins Sew, Washington fifty, D. O. APPOINTZENT 117" rHs passlDENr.—A. T. Warns& Postsastor M Yea lrak, lowa. vie. Ws. Patter. No. Ws award tl• above appoistormat lila • good deal of planers. Mr. Q.. grearator to this *Goa is a yang skaa of iserkiihlllo mew aid porsovasesa sad his paper, tis Ka ska& Mu% 15... oftbeirory bsot to tiniest' of Ism. adavitbe bear that boa "Mier boy" be INN, be bee Ile amity mid en will to asks a gaol Ass% mid that be willnewoOmi beak fa the diosherp et his &this. w heassisdnuia, —A olovo of Ms Tao% as,ll7. o lboks , od at ootoottikog Woo L oth 41 go* Wit* or •kWh sod slabbed blot to the Writ. rim Pros Std. Um of Zama& Ili, The Brie Olissrusr is iefersed that the soros* ... Wallis/ et ear loader INN week was the remit of a typograhieal weer, the treed " having best litigated by the som fer " leelpeet iseq We hare ao &W ptelher u, however, that her Saeitattaa eetsooperaryie sole l. the belief that Is is better for • people I. b. Whe reto, for emit *sedition la atieeesary I. eaten the seeesee a modem" Democracy Its party ow Moab to the Bala of tilinoie. and such .iris ea the 6th, in the fire Petits district, which Rare Bechanan 11.50 vitae; Pritemeat bat 211 aad Maoris 37.—PreSci6e Ceemr. •We give the Crag L abe benefit or its arm" sad also Si its assemptioas laniard to oar belief ague maltase! eels. nation. Of the hatter we have only 54417 thus they en eharatiteristie. We never expect • Regmbilla4, to tell the truth when its opposite will serve even a dalittltsi gorse; and hence it does not lapis. as to have that paper impale to as the "belief that It is better fur z e people to be Illiterate," when we only said we were ° tempted" ewe times to think free schools a verse whore "only" papers of the Carew kind are tolerated. We bettor* dith Jeronimo, that error can be tolerated where raison is left free to combat it ; bat we have ear doubts whether reason is left hoe to eombat error where the mind is fed with nothing hat error. Thus, the errors of Paganism will always pervade the minds of its votaries if they are never taaght any thing else ; and co will the errors of Rspubliesaism always per. rade the minds of its rictimiu, (not votaries) if their minds are not illuminated by any other light than that shed by such luminaries of error as the n 10... But enough upon this point. The rvueor seem( to think that the Demo• matt': party' owe much to "Eqpt in Illinois," and the "Five Points district" its New York, whieb it says, "gave Buchanan sso Two.; Fremont bat 29; and Fillmore 37." In ail things relating to the character of the inmates of the "dye points," either lo ignormthe or Tiede's, or any thing else, vier. free I. aoknowledg• that oar oetempo rary her the advantage of us ; bet when he amrames that " Egypt oftd.inols" is democratic because of its ignorance, we are disposed to d,sput• the question. What is 'goo. rune.' in the opinion of the Censor, and papers of that ilk, eve 7, body is '' ignorant" that don't appreciate ibis wonderful virtues of Black Rspahlieanism, while every body is " ii crate" that don't subserihe to the doctrine of et Greeley, shed eroekodile tears over "toile in," and worship in a Sanctuary dedicated to Vl,e of the " Holy Rides." In oar 'violet', the regrets the laws of his votary—performs th e duties of a citizen when nailed upoo,Nittber is maintaining the laws, or in riding, who respoets the rights of his neighbor, in 1 holds sacred that toleration of opinion which lies at the foundation of all ire* government, Is an intelitgoot,man and a good elthen. whether he can read and writs or whether he can't. And we infer from the way they voted down in " Egypt of Illinois," that this population of that ositnh slandered district are of this character. Certain we are that we never heard of a Con vent being banned there. beeanse Its inmates chose to wor ship God In a manner different from their neighbon.— Neither have we any acaount of there having ever existed a "Hiss Legislature," in " Egypt of Illinois," with its smelling committee to pry into Ladies bed-rooms, and etherwiest maltreat the "gentle sox," merely because the bed roam was occupied by dieters of Charity, and the " geniie sea" were Catholios. If our recollection serve. u., such outrages only thrive In "educated" " intelligear . lit wrse:, e 4.z ttz —that Stassarthusiette within whose soil trea son g erminated +re the wounds indicted upon the bodies of the patriots of the Revolution by British bayonets had healed, that Mssmachusetts whose null was illemboated by 6144 lights during our see.m.l war of Indepeadenoe ; that Mostiaekuottts.da abort, that "intailigeady" voted for Fremont and Jose., and as "intelligently" attempts to nullify !no legal enactments of the Federal Goren. moot. THE JiIOISTR r SYSTEM.—The New York note States that of $ll2 16, of isQuey mating w that °Moe, but lc,' during the month of Fehruary through the insecurity -t the meal., $B3 In. t.o•tbinls, was to r•Rutered let. ter., There 110C1114 t•, 1..* very little doubt that the Regis try 'piton a•tually /rrilitates (road on the part of Post Office .Itrtale, by pout/leg out iAr lettere .rash cartela rweeey, an I wcticb it a therof3re en object to eaeal.—ix rkeftie, The above statement, originating in the New York nines, hat heen the subject of numerous denuneiatory paragraphs in that numerous class of political Journals that delight to findini, something to base a aborts against the °Seers of the Federal I4overnment : In most of the paragraphs of this character that have 'come under our obeervation, not on:y is thy, truth of the allegation of the Timms taken for granted, but it is also assumed as a legitimate Inference that because pooh losses have occurred in this case, there for* the entire Post °Mee system is rotten to tbe core and the °Scuds, from the highest to the lowest, dishonest.— It appears to have assures(' to these grumbling ass- Nabors, that there are thousands of dishonest men outside the Poet Office department, and beam in many eases, lou seut`llihri"--'i ''suTar its.. fotePoCofCe And It is bec ause of this idea of outside rascality being most happily filar trat,•l in tee very eases complained of by the Times that we notice the matter at this time. When the wholesale charge of the Times first appeared, it attracted the atten tion of Mr /10/brook, Speeded Matt Agent for New York, who immediately cammenced an investigation, whieh re sulted to developing the fact -that the Poet Master at Sew York held receipts for all the registered letters IMO mersted 10 the list" published by the Them. Them re °sifts were signed by a young man "regularly employed and authorized * to receive registered and all other WWI for the Tim , . oilier." Upon being made acquainted with thee* tae's the Tines "games down" handsomoly. and says : ••We have satisfied ourselves by pinions' ezaminatioa, that the stove is substantially correct, aad that the to•ae. or money contained in registered letters has boss due, to some extent, at all events, to the sulfaithfulness of agents in our own employ. We dente, therefore, to relieve the Clefts in the Registry Department of the City from whatever suspicion oar former stalemate °atlas gab jeot may have involved. We way add, also, that we an satisfied that merchant, and business Imes generally us far too careless in regard to the clam of pervious who are sent to the coot-offitie for then letter. It is very common to intrust this important sod responsible duty to those na p/oyes.* who are in the most inferior positions, aad whoa,. the most inadequately paid,oe their writes. A direct temptation to disheatiety is thee thrown in their way.— We are satisfied that the matter deserves more attention than it receives." Very true; but then bow much better it would bare beeo—how much more honorable and just—if, before send. iag:iu slanders broad:east:ovor the country, tke rime. had aßeertained the faeta in die case. They were within its reach. 'The receipt book at the °See I. at all times open for inspection; hence we:say:that while all the repa ration has been made by that paper that it can make, still the injury is not atoned for. For how many who have read the charge will ever see the acknowledgment f Not one in ten. POP" The Voeiritetioe is mistakes. No one who reads the Otwroey's strictures' epos tit* past and pretest rookies of the Ginteue upon the tariff question, would supposes that we were an advocate of " Pritootioa." What we have said about the Gureue in etnusection with this manor was legitimate criticism upon its inconsistesey. It formerly professed to regard " Protection" as the only salvation of the country -- it joined heartily with its party in this Mats in Jetionneing tl,s comic of Wilmot while in Compose— Iron within a month, It endeavored to make a point against Senator Bletes upon this very idea of Preelection—and yet it no* etuitilles itself, shows its want of fair lied itoncintLie journalism in its attack on ilitiman, by heartily Joitiieg .n the rapport of a Free Trade sandidat• for Gov. *root.. We to hcli•ee " that proteetion to Home Maan. factures Is not a luring issue;" bet that is no reason wby optimal that bas attempted within a month to make it a " living keno." shoold not be held to its own position. If Senator Ilmt.ac " betrayed the Iron interest" io voting for the rwlection of the tariff—sod the Gamete says be did—thee in what position is the Gazette now, in support tug a Pre* Trade candidate for Goversor " What to MA 00 for the goose is sane* for the gander;" hese* when tb• Oinease eats its ewe words, and swallows the denonesations it has Neu for years bleeping upon the hoods of the opponents of " proteetion," we will lot It ME Mail the( tines we mast Dothan* to remind it of its pew and pregent opinions. NSORO roTERS.—Tb• New Tort Loghdataro has a bill before it that provides for as aammodatoat of the Cast stitatioo go as to allow all tho migrate ia that State au equal terms with tho ',altos. Negress to that Stab rota sow, subject to a property qualilleatioa, however. trader that ysalttat*on it.,. are sow shoat 11,111410 Alegre wooers is the Sate. To eztoad free ramp to all &ogress would add too avow/and votao, leaking the whole seers veto la Now York 16,001. The Anita, Astor, la esessaostieg ea this proposittoa, estimates the tree isoleced pagalatitka at the State at upwards of 00,000, searly all whisk meal= is tho remote" to whit& it 'WWI Were slavery was abolished to awl Stat. Tito asualsor otoolared ?shwa whist tho proposed ameadisout to tho Cloastltutisa wadi eresis, It estimator at 10,000. It tithsks the ateseetro, hoerwrort will prows unpopular, and ra.prodooas thai vales of 1846„ TUB risoalm ors as follows : For aver Constitatiar-- AMOS ne Prser• sairgewL -JUN Against IL WASS Afar* it 112.284 - iftiontrfer- isikrity .1.11,611 Is aselyzieg the Tote it reasarlui fist "die pepaladea which had the least alloy of the Afriess eleisimat, were 'meet &epeeist to great this [remake se t►ie duo; Irbil' the reasareities is shish it ezistall were versos* le it. Just i• properties I. their esperlesise its eiraseasr sad amasses.• -- 1 41 Ow* • leise samid bps dot abd tall Mt. Bak 1411101111sse t. pnnw abelikille Imam* it XrJl.li NEW YORK. (Clonrmms it the Me 011swier.) Last week opened rah May weather but en Wednesday we had s blast el wind teem the ~ .7 Mart of die North Polo, widehniased all living soil heeaddsillblege to 'Mak look fate the armee& depths of their winter woolens. The baldosablas hare loses quiet eassyb as them le eeitilell jaM sow Is mite them mad they hely birth, meovolvd from ski sheet which their weak some experienced at W extremely improper Wowing of "John Dean sad his Wary Ann." By the 'Ay, din aserdieys are nuking a feriae* at Manias die adrenaline le this son eel** embalmed is wend thyme. astuidlebed" to the maim sir of "Midas sad his Dimaii," tsr the very moderato eonsideratiss ".sly one inst." We quote the .1110,601" as %rho sells it "llor all yaw stirs labor& wlie herb ismaghters Oar, 0 0f elabia4 ygnag ermielurr rd hav• 7o belnum, ...lgsielkir If arSIM WNW. for I tell yes they esa, "Thus by try, bitingly ever yin or MT N 4 z7 Alm" I eemseeties with the "Imeereeting saideet," we any myths* there's SS soda gulag ihr remade that this joilybish maalunam has withdrawn his aids for the promat upon his fair Illariaama, sad retired late tie reentry to get rid of some of the "Imes" or to ho groomed hate eoaditioa.— Rio yams bride Maras to her Wm to meditate over loves folly; and /*ha, with his $l,lll h his pocket one lazariste la the men gelds of Columbia Comity sad try his head again, perhaps la the beeimem in whist' he has preyed Maud! melt • prolleieat. Leek out for the head room ecsaebssea. Jam Is s whole: team—hot, for shame, Joita, to sell year kit ;bride to Amply. What will the girls think el you alto, (him? There has been a little set-to botween the luminaries of ho NW Matilda Herres, prima douni‘Laara lheaLleester sad Mrs. bleitaboa, • tallow candle whist' will not be hid limier • bemitel, thong* It maid hardly illaminato • pint msg. Thom worthies get rotaries' over each others failings through the medium of the petalo prose, when (bey hero ao more 'lmportant manors to otmtpy their attention. Ole Ball, t h e num who draws melody from the (atomiser of the meet anateledloas of creating*, who draws 6 thou' sad harmonies from • single o•tg-t, is adding to his for mer reputation by his present perfornmume. H. is one of dm Doren wonders of this part of die world. %einem of every kind madams very quiet. Teas, Are crashers, sad bandanna "wipes," in feet, every description I of greeds derived from the celestial ematry, are held very high, and paying enormous proles to the lazy houses en gaged la the China trade. A. A. Law and Bro., one of the largest China importers was • large purchaser last week of owl expensive sad valuable paintlap. This is one of the Last okleetionahle entravagansies of the times, to say the least. Lem mosey paid for costly dreamland rims for those adornments of home which cultivate at once the mind and heart would be an improvement in our doomed, economy. Cotton Geod. of home =sabot:are bring pretty fair prises new, though all our manufaeteries both of cot ton sad woolea fabrics Itrii,oehrg money at the prices-olk talned in this market. The importers are doing a losing &mimeo, sad some heavy failures may be looked for, es pecially in the silk trade, if the presentstata of things con tinues long. Waiters debtors are disposed to' stay oa t 'West, at least, very few of them appear in this city either in person or by proxies in the shape of batik notes. The Times has • queer development, whfeli may be cow, nestled to losers of registered letters and those who pay Melt simile pew women Amon Mme age that "paper rib. Hai m . a a m regoommeremiallted to their ease, but in... ~..lead. Bet ea Saturday, Hr. Holbrook, poet ogiee agent, pablishm i'Macmasnt that the poet °Mee had roosipat for all the letters which it was said sever were re solved! The nose I. reply, soma down handstomelyand says that the statieshent is easiest—that 'the thefts were eoramittad by their own clerk, and adds: "merchants and business me. it/morally are far too careless is mord to the class of persons who are mat to the post °See for their lettere. It is Tory mammon to intrust this important and responsible duty to those insrpsloyesta who are in the most inferior postdate, and who are the most inadequately paid for their sonless. A direct temptation to dishonesty thus throws in their way." Horrible stories are told of the condition of Potter's Field on the 4th Arians, comer of .sth street. They are cutting a street, through the resod. it would appear, and in the 00111111111 of the work, the laborers have dug right into the thickset of the human rewash Many of the coffins have been brok►n in half, what bones, fragments, and other ghastly remains of mortality, are ozpoood to viol/ and piled up la beam. The boys in the asiighborhood amuse themselves at sight by pailiageandlos in the skulls, and carrying them about ,AMra fashion, to fright*. pea se the viclwlts wig eesma of Mao. .64410 heir pot and was datterod by t h e wind. Upward of one hundred mass with the »maims of poor mortality, the old and the yam, have been distributed sad hustled about, The Nicassagna aura is Me topic of the day. TS. friends of Walker are in ecstasies, and the goatlemea who arrived is the Initials, deserters fro. the "fillibluters" army prodleting that the Geeing would be "crashed oat" at Ri va•—ara obliged for the somas, to hide their diminished heads. The St. Marie. L jubilant and they do say there is already, as active lucidity for passage in the TOW on the mars trip. The Brick ehureh ill almost gone; two walls only ale standing. Trinity eitareh is in great trouble at Albany and her boomers and defenders form two very violent and haste* parties among iplempallans . here. The annual Trade Bala of books are going on new, and good priers Or. understood to be obtained for standard works. SPUNICY POLLOCK.---we take it all back. We thought Pollock—fometintet Governor—had not spirit enough to meat an torah; but be has, and we make the aconssi• ieworolik„:„Zho late mongrel Cancer'. Sion, asys the Pittsburg Mao., treated him • most shame faL It was composed of the represeotatives of all the foldout :that bad made him Governor, they assumed still to otoupy the same position before the country—being simply that of hostility to the Democracy, In that he was with them to the utmost—be was their Chief—and, by all the rules of amnion deossey sod tie uniform practice of parties, he was entitled to mots friendly recognition, to something elm than a scornful, silent contempt. Bre tilt 'mead Aims by urateid 4e slipliket notice, a eras! moth to say was, bet especially ya/liey a as aviring ',alit:el.:m.- 11mq bad Axed up a Hetet after two drays session nomi nating a eswildate for seamossor to the Governor himself ands ewe* of redeem for the Eloped* Bench, under stood to be distasteful to hies. They passed a batch of pompons high-osuadiag resoladous, is which so settee whatever was taken' if his adastaietradon. dad Mien some plateaus, wraolhare of the Couvention. tall on bits to appoint to the mane, ea the Sepses* Beach sue of the Commotion's aandtdays , This was toe musk. The Governor derstiaed to *Nags tho gendoosse. csOress•d his chagrin at the diamaticey tesruclls himself, sad said that she bad desired to support the neesieees of the Conren• dot but after its amoral he:44 pot ese bow he could take aay part is the easous.".. Me spoke as a MIS of spirit would do, wed he has earrbsd:war, the eentinierste he then espreseed by &probating Mr. Amman% of Lyaseeing ermisty, to 111 the vssnsq se Mai Swish opoosioned by Judge Black's ireelipuitioa. Doti Mr. Veer& sad Mr. Loots were urged upon May but the men who nominated them had beealted him sad the vindication of !basalt prompted him to velem another, Maytag the Coavestioa to take tare of Its ems favorites. The pommel friends of the 00.0“bor will probably sorry dm mottos still further mad All. their dimmitisfaetima es the day of the election. filr• TM agorae be. /hoovered a mare's autis the het Am we have sot mistimed the apiphatosal of CloPe limning le the Iliareheiship of NOW York—ad it Were flrem that Om that wo de am spume of that appoialmeat. Our ..tgbh.r is Wisely tee het. We k.ow of so teases why we 'bestial:huh /Imam We have not him tides; eme at Judge Iliiirasta's rem is the P. 0. Depertuest, ad eau at tie Ilasidesesit Judge DOUGLASS, sad we are tree to say that at wither time * we Aimee saydriag that did ma heads Aegisthus& True, lb* soisPaPerg Marge him with ail eerie of "evil prsetisee," bet is hie gam ma is that of nest peddle sea, it is more Aga dimly, 'the devil is set half as Week as he le refireastad." he this as It sug, wader the possess eimusetmem Mem Sleek liembdesimathrestasi ta sandy asii eel at *alight the imigiese of the Ommise Omit. tho appoistamat of Imams is vent epertiess....ibe beet is het that amid ham hem salls--44 hi Wait lite sea to meats the lam is the hie of the Obiarrem all die ether Clergy of the "Hay 1*.." that dam lift their traitorous Wads. MORAL 11EPOPY.—eilbeet WM% prev of MGM MU, ha tai. ....q has Use appoisted P. IL, at thespian Wes Ira IfieMaires, remoreit. Kr. White I. a See time sealseal theseerst. M. Itanispos Is s blast riembliese, Thigh sesseste ter the Italles. Cheery Hill le the pies where they hem' the ellyy of Presiolest Plow We 4th et July seder the sepaileludeems et a Wash myelitis's presstrer. —ls It sot nunisibb tiller.* that wiles s pug bit, eats be am hisamplibioll ht s rish bead* oho mow i• smile wit that sibs say rapt Tb. - Cbleseb sod Timairii, of limish, an 4 be t with &nag Dow* st 1611/ 4w'110 41,1 4 Obi% al salmi SW it is understood that stater is In be let into the Canal to day. x, Talc, Apia •,1661 IMP' The Warren Bank has not changed officers as reported in several Of our cotemporaries. EMI Pen and Scissor Items. Mir A steam flowing mill, owned by Rev Mr. Woodruff, was burnt at Conneaut Ohio, on Saturday morning last. 116 The mud is just seventeen feet and xis inches deep in State street, at the present writing, by actual measurement. in. Summer bulbs for the garden should be procured now, and planted as soon as the ground has become entirely free from frost. l e _ Snow two feet deep in April, is a opvelty even in the vicinity of - the Lakes—yet we were blessed with just such a novelty this week. It has dispppeared now, however. J Goaldiog, Houston it Co , "spread them selves" in our columns to-day; bat we assure our readers their stock will bear " bragging on" to the full extent. _ ,s, Mir The Conneautville Courier says a ',rut, in Beaver township a few days since neglected, while his wife was being confined, to call media cal or other aid, and suffered both wife and child to die unattended. am. We notice that our old friend RANK, for merly of the Danville Herald, is now "grinding ont" republican thunder for the Whitewater (Wis.) Reyi4er Why don't he send us a ppei cimen of his "shrieks for freedom'" NI" The lion. Charles B. peorose, Senator from Philadelphi,i, died on the Gth of pleurisy, at llerr's Hotel. Tue event was announeeti to both branches of the Logislatare, when an im mediate acljournuvut took place A man from the country, why e wife had eloped and carried uff the feather bed, was in Inniavi:le in search (if thein—not that he eared anything about the wif!—."but the feathers," said he, "them's with IS cents a pound." say. Hon. Samuel Brenton, member of Con green from Indiana, died at his residence in For Wayne, on Sunday evening last, from the die ease, it is alleged, he had contracted at tho Na tional Hotel in Washington. lir Our lady readers will not fail to read the advertisement of Mrs. Curtis, in to-day's paper. Madame is always up with the times, and hence her shop is a fashionable resort for our fashiona ble ladies war A I Harrison, son of the Hon John Scott Harrison, and a grand son of the late Gen Harrison, has been appointed second lieutenant in tho 6th r.giment TT S. Infantry Th. ap• pointinont wa• on , of President T'ierce's last official act-. se,. At the rilarter oleeti m on Monday, in Cleveland, OP' Dom ,crat's ..I, , cted their candidate for Mayor by 342 majority, and the balance of their entire municipal ticket by a similar votc This is a great gain; arid straws that "Mee linz Kansas" is deli; ' oar Charley !Cello's, of the Springfield Yon• pariel, in a letter to his paper from Westfield, N. V., °Wm, i..r th,e , b•nuttrul Wage the hon or of his birth place We clam the same thing =thus demonstrating 9rl^ WAN , eqn prHluec two great moli :II a cotitury air- We see by :...s that the dwelling house of Chester 1.. eau, to ).7..rtli.Er,t town. ship, w 3.4 ennsume.l, with the c,intents, by fire on the night of Friday work. A young girl, aged i; years, wa, • s •ror.•iy iDj lir.' 1 by th • fir,- that. she die 1 i.w..tity-f ur h ittri aft .rwar so. Th , l na:nrs',z iti .n C:4114 , in the prop)-e I amendovnt4 t, the m.'itn , t,n, has failed in the low,n- 111111 , , tbn I,Pgislature. Its intent was to r.strain foreign,born persons from voting for a yew- after procuring natnralization papers, and in it4^ll . , was a paltry specimen of Know Nothing want ,nness my John Dean, the er , achman, is n)minated by the wicked D.2ino'rats as a candidate f , r the next Presidency. The rascals say, he has just such a qualification,—as a preceding candidate had, i. e. he ran away with, and married a rich man's daughter,--and is Irish besides, and will carry the Irish vote ! Wt 41 for John and his Marianna: The old Court Flouse, that eye-sore to every man of taste in the city, is "going, going, gone." It was bold by the city to N. Murphy, for something over $3OO, who is now engaged in taking it down. The roof is already disap pearing, and soon those who know it in its hot. ter drys, "will know it n) naore forevor." So goes the world! - - Jo" Warratits have been ;13.11 , 4 at Emit Deer township, Allegheny county, , for the arrest of six young lacier, claarr , l with riling the school mutter of that. district on a rail It appears that the school master refused the use of his school house for the purpose of holding singing schools, which gai.e the young ladies great offence. So great is the ezeitemeut that the young ladies have secreted themselves to avoid arrest. stir- Editors are atilt in luck under the pre sent Administration. Greene, of the Boston Nut, and Gray, of the Cleveland Plaindralrr, have been reappointed to their respective offices; while Sharpe i nstein, of the Milwaukie Brown, of the Janesville Standard, Walling, of the Keokuck 'times, and Young, of the Sara toga Republican, have each received the appoint ment of Poet Master of their respective plaoe4 "Coming events cast their shadow before." Pr" The Obeerver hap of lato alopted the Doily Nl' ICI iii a sort of text book.— Gown.. The Obserrer his "adopted" nothing of the kind. We copy from the Nears articles showing the "signs of the times," just as we copy from °der papers opposed to the Democracy. The News is the organ of a party in Philadelphia that last Pall polled a good many thousand more votes than was polled in that city for Fremont— and hence, what it says is entitled to weight. The Gazette can't, "whistle this fact down the wind." stir Connecticut has almost redeemed herself. Her election took place on Monday, and the re sult is a virtual defeat of the "coalition."— There was a pellet "Anion" betweeen the Black Repshiseans wed - the Know Notbingo, under th e nem of utishict." Una this amalgamation the Abentioni chre t nput is septets del*, IMO Weil* reeeived moue 3000 votes; bah thew cites eat iN alamibod - *sragisksof is CM -40- - spite of "Coalition" "Deed Scott" and "Bleeds ing Kansas," the Democracy had drove their op ponents very near the wall, Anving•siected oat member of Congress certain, and run another so close that nothing short of the official returns will tell who is elected In the last Congress, all the delegation were Republican. Well done Connecticut! Mir The Gazette admits that Gov. Walker is a native of Pennsylvania, but says that at an " early day be became a resident of the south, and received his political education under South ern influences," and hence, " is to all intents and purposes a Southern man with Southern proclivities." Our cotemporary is again at fault. Walker was hire in this State—was edu cation in this state—was admitted to the bar in this stay—was married in this state—became a leader in the Democratic party in this state--and did not locate in Mississippi until after he was :15 lle is now 511; and has fir the last nine years been a resident of New York—so that " to all intents and purposes" he is a Northern man with natimt , ti proclivities, which is just the kied of a man w , • Want for the liovernor of Kansai ' Ow . Relations with China. The extract that follows, from a Washington letter to the New York Tim' s, throws more light than we have yet had, upon the appeal of France and England t.) the ruited States f)r en opera tion against China. It would clearly appear that, starting frost the original purpose, to establish more intimate dip. lomatic and commercial relations with China, and to transfer the residence of Representatives to the imperial city of Pekin, the design is now, to secure an alliance with our governinent to hostile operations The refusal of our Admit', istration, is to be taken only, as against a war like alliance, and in this the country will, un ediy, approve the decision of the Government. The latter from which we mate the subjoined extract. bears date, April 2d instant : Chin I All I Chinese affairs have engaged the attention of the Cabinet for three sittings, at the instance of the British Minister, and have finally reached a conclusion. In orla- -- , that the possi- Lion of the Government may property under stood, it is as well to begin at the beginning Shortly belore the late Administration went out of office, Count Sartig-s presonted himself with a despatch from the Minister of Foreign Affairs, asking the co operation of the United States, in a course of policy marked out by France—. Eng land has kept conveniently in the backiground,i —for extending cornmercial,relations with Caina, and transferring diplomatic negotiations t Pe kin, instead of transacting them through the subordinate Governorship at Canton. The in terview rested upon verbal conference, and the argument employed was the ready acquit:Genoa which France had given to the doctrine of mari time law, enunciated by the Administration.— Besidcs, It was asserted, that the American Min ister on his way to China, had assured the French a nd En g l is h mi n i s te rs Of our support, and there. fore it was claimed partially through that alleged committal Another interview followed within a few days, and then Cunt Sartiges was enlight• ene I tin' no committal 111 , 1 been mad- by the Ano ricau Ministcr-- i Mr Parker—a , had been stated, and that the t;overnment could nrt and Roll:1 ii ,t abandon rs principal of neutrality; that we had not causo.t.f war with China, and would j on in n t aggr , s , ion ; and that if outra, g were cominitted urn the Am_neara flag or up ,a American citizens, redri ss would be prompt ly and suintuarily taken, as it had been in a case which extorted apology after the punishment had b. , _11 inflicted. The ciao stool in this attitude until the arrival of Lard Napier. lie Presented hiarredentials in a speech, which went-far out of the usual way, to conciliate opinion here, and, not c ,ntent with that official declaration, he indulged fti the most honied personal profdsbi..n. 11. wi. willing to o•)13,- ,1 • almr-t anythiri-gthat was ask f , and was, accorl , n4ly, gar; lir• to'c, • r yb dy in a little whde he st , owe I li;s ii.4n I, with an earnest re quest that thi United Statcs would throw the uyiral p )wer of its weight into the scale by join ing England and France against China; atter the arrival of vie last steamer, thesa solieitat:ous be• came more urgent, an I the reason is palpable.— lo Ird Palmersi w as , iur(t , i the House of Commnns that our Goverument. had approved rozoluet of th , autliorvi - in China And he more than intimated ttir opinion that it would co-operate in the policy Intended t be prosecu ted there. As France. and Lug;and had appointed spe cial )linistev, Ler I N iptor saw that if the Ads .n 'would cr. that length, without eo n ! iging iu.the orration4, wotil I has- • the b, with i'f a - ' l3 g "' I , "`"i"n justify his ias.surance an I to ,ireugtiva po-tion Hi iii appeal made to the country uu this que-tion Hence, his ; ffJrts wero dir• - c'_•il that end espciiiilly, an 1 it was in this c Aft l e c t l the nArne of i; ;sterner Walker became suggest• ed by the ; intereqts liere, which is ever Indus triJus in presenting 'Ili!) for every avalic.bie or vaumgeous p..,1tw0. What L .rd _Napier wan ted, was a •pccial mini-', r, not carin. ; l a ti e ; who received the appiat menu It was the prestile of the ac• Vil.nlol,ttis employers required, and nut the man .\iffith,: stuff aboui Walker's chart of China policy ii-ganamon, fe: he never submitted any such char to t lie I Ls , . Administratbm, when teuderd the mi r sion, a- t:.; r i-)rdi will show. lie wanted a rie,rin•.!c mime ion for Cochin China Japin, and all that part t I the globe, and pre, pared himself far it by drawing the .outtit to China, which was subs• quently r •turned when the mi s s: in wits declined, and Mr Lane appoint bid in his stead After much deliberation in tho Cabinet, the President has at length detcrunneil to follow in the path of Mr. Marcy, by refusing w join the alliance, or in any way to crimpromiAc the neu trality of the United States. N.) Special Minis: for will Li appointed, because in the opinion of the world such an act, , conforming as it would to the c,•urse of France and England, would be re garded as practical, if not professed co-operation- Lord Napier is informed of the determination, and is less cheerful than tin was a week ago,— If the Allies want war in China. as they undoubt edly do, they must take it on their own hook.— It is n d ituprobaple that de American 11inister, Dr. Darker, may sta.!. under 'he ri.he of rotation. Ile is old, given to fixed ideas, and though skill. ed iu Chinese, is hardly thought tin to our no tions of progress; however, he may he esteemed among the Celestials. The Americanm. rchants at Canton arc divided in opinion as to which should he the policy of the Government, some in clining to the English view, bat others of experi ence and sagacity strongly preferring an inde- pendent and neutral attitude as the most desira ble in every aspect. Prom Washington The Administration bas compiete,l arrange_ menu relative to China, and William B. Real of Philadelphia, who in now hero has been ten dered the mission. fn addition to other vessels the steamer Minnesota will proceed to China.— Orders for her preparations will be issued to morrow. The Land Officers in Minnesota have been di. noted to continue the withdrawal of public lands falling within the probable lino of the Railroad routes established under grants of Congress.— Pre-emption claims based upon actual settlement and not for spiamlation, made up to the time when the lines or routes were definitely fixed on any of the lauds withdrawn, will km allowed, provided the testimony is akar and The otiseattf the newly created !And Districts mill be established at Brownsville, Daketh; and ihinalca cities. • - W ASHINOTON, March 8 Jaw A [Licraideurrespondeete, I *aria to-day from good authority, tiro eat administration does not entirely 4 the preoeeding'ooe, in their view. r proposed change in naval warfir • the abolitiou of the right to valour• ships by ptiblic armed V, fowls, as vt.' vateers its laid down in Secretary Ma, upon privatecring It i 4 eminent will insist upon the ahol.ti , . ll tides I learn also that lettere have to our ministers abroad to suspend furl on this matter, until they reeeiv. funk. tiona. /or the trim Obeerrer In the last number of "Otmert,....• ed au anonymous communication ov. r tune of "Druggist," styled "me. ostensibly the object of which w0u,,1 to guird the public against t he itur meat or handling "burning the community against parties tray with !mall lamps and exhihiting a nt ry to the manufacture of that am., receipts for making it, while tlo. r "druggitit" is to prevent the u:. alre.i.iy popular lint cheap dt.,,,,, r) know", and that lie may by its I, fogy /NU put money 11l 1//: , tIJ fr• It Would be strang.• in 1— .1,1; to. in g-nerating artifitnal ltgto by or name it might be railed .hou.l!. oppvsition No new disc9very in at,:, science has ever yet ken made with mar,• or less ~p pomition, won: upon the want of knowledge or ign• r utiil , y of the discovery itself, and qt. from selfish and interested notions saf•• and valuable digeovery in that in• Dec, ,r,ary, Lae been made is true—t. fully rded by meta of chars ter and It wa- originally tile .Vcroi In the c,t ill 'to.* It. , If Sew Yterir, but it:•Lort f wrid it way alto g to priutnpal citlea and t St it., mil in die Capitol at th.. Lit brar,clicz, of the at, I by them pronounced the cheap!, ligbt :,w in u-e Tun! fault Vi Car. 11, IN il••• 9% , , i •CIJ ed, rep we ku.,w that a. 5 ' ;15 gen,raill o- known mud 01.: ch,apo, Wyk Which it Can lw rurtiako,i 1..) 02 , 2 C , 4l.,Utatr 11111.4 • t'''t G,. vt , fluid i.kr m Ic I Idd hi k 111 , .11-, lA, )1111 tt isAtr! c ' e,rilluat ;;1 to th it • :;1. guy ids cu-:ewer 1T go—l ha. a run ii.iiwu "1 - Li,ight.wr Druggtst, , ay, thlt the Lew I.r• c ,, Qt !tilt ttti per eclat Ith , re o't it uni. .Irugs, i.UI 'Jilt is i to fl MAID/ tri 'hill, uedot. 1:111, io :he ut:w pit paration how VALI he know what it .aught pr prratiou is -old at nue , 101-lar p r fiirui:-u the twat and a bet , , r sivy 1. , . L . r garwu, ellerpe*t I furno.o thry l6, fui 1-10 -u , 1%% r fl ar• ru ft .r 64 , ,,i.t*1 1 u. aril 1 a • Nr, : •11-1.• i, rj• '• gp. , En r . Unt—i in/ • WV ; Vi r M• nay furl... r wat. , • ti •a:I oh • Dru e : --;17"1.:(.: I -1 - L NOl ILE %I/ 1/1/. 11'11111131.17Vrt Idso J. %v. 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Ratchelor>s Flair 1)1, injureal hr other Avec faded or s 1014 be•SlitirrAl V brown nr I la. k. •••• ', it t rrtiElmit , at the Ariz Is w h o ., .01.1 nr applied In 0 en iro-f•-it article it nut wltien will prniwo 4 aI n j• taken of the PtlirrllivifiZ • 4 towitet h r 1.. 'Cr I 4 , 4trt• of an lIIIITATIO‘ Called •• of l . • a. V. Y . are! hawked around 1.. i • • Aeaterita It, S. arc To , in publienvet coon 11R. r.1•'19 f enc. rxrierivvre., s•llL•,r of Trnistiox., confirm... a. • rnns dl torunf of prir‘fn f.tian ) • i'laee, litx.trestfer. S Y. ni.,r'.srm.•nt on 11., t I . talp. TO P.% KENTS.-- 11 , 1. • • .1.•••” err mint f•entn. n'• • '• it in lop well parent. t.• • And • fr.qunnt• mine ot the. • ,•1 limath an,l rrotlaritl r•••,••t •• •he rAN Ktetro I+ kept in n •Lte • I" n•• nfthe•• 'llP•tr I I. ttint" I " r‘rt 1.. ••••,..11•• In- (•-•• :•••• • \ I , m na..ve r t..t.. .rtn• r 11,4 and tp.art-h.), t• n•••• hea . iL, , ,r, to Ow atnni*-11 and t...•••rla, ' ant I.• t &H fo ai • ie:, pun) re tie , 3 otal•• I ). • • Qro F I NTE 1.:..+T TO FE.II I.' We ...... npn.i ()so allenttort • • • • I Irtl•P p•u• to Ft, Ti tn m.. in ntrlon• par,•..l I. ora•tr• J 1•:•, , ' Y elnn,t Pm: •• • tlhal or in ..ry in HI, an , ea 1, 1 ,11 •I I• ' nat nh••• of pool Ti 0•41,,n;_ i.n.ler • •,••, EMI t , ••:• 'oar ~, I ttmr, I.' • tt• ••• m I wroth. r 4 .• w.trt larr 1•11,11 r..i • lion-ottn t;••• 'll sr rrr • ; r.. 1 "guy ri.l, it r ot • SP•lnMPter MA” , 1•• •, , orr C.. t••• 11, 1 ,. • ofthoet • • .I..lirat.• lima friend+ vs' pipe • -it'd .rst•lyrror tm.tir I.r. :tout trt , lform :. rrnt Willie • • A ISE Fl 1. r'• rIrI.F.X/I),S u. t! ..V .Ir rHOUV/ \NI/. It • I S• 11 t brir-yr letrorn t hr. akm, .• It, .' 011 t re. rrr • 'tort rr•orir.r, +llol\ , igtsy .soms 'ld wrtlor, e;oor ;on tyro or Orr I KKK," toth the t. sr? • ; ';, tihti 1..11 r newli r.i•llitatot,rl;to only Itfts be all Drt.,7o. S.D. ioct ith, ~ ,e 3 • u. /W. r moor' watt to Vosoroirs-- Dr. Al. n 1 iwn.11.•1 1, • • cult of A; 11 S I °r. ••••.I.•• p r ...., IN 4 .• ..111%11 CW11.141/4 I r. ..• ran I•t to !rht, ~.t ••• 11, o i rrt too* ..Inetro; ,•••111.• V. rant°, Intr. .1...,••1.- I pale sari ;10 Atli, ennnttataarnr.innc , •.l t•• t • • hoo.th vale** •100 otru , ••.l a oo r I I enure, , n. s '.lh innolw• ;. n nal of .oc a retool) loot boon • ~.a•ir• *nom,: ytton?, :1,4.14,1„, • th 4 isonrt, io.tthing ..4 thn inter oal :lon of nature.. an.' tho ltilbali InrariaLly rrmedr Ali th.o. .411kgieloo• in lb. rote ot Thine I .Ile n 100.1.1 nese, 1 e 1 talc. r d.." hr oleo , to canoe a allararrtic, &U M° , fro. t -oars northing Ininrinun in 14. nr n dirartneas armml.tnr ~, 1. , Tivron my • art' when. Vser•• ~•••• n• a • • tett. r, Jr to I , r I. Yaw \ - "rd (Til i. r.O It.-rn a. ut mtnra nt motif. - A (.7 VI I Or for kirelneaa of 444 • gide and frit 4. :„..4 • for me In e•WIII104.11110 Ott has. lawn .Me ho sass my lonalm•• 4..444 4" 4tb al, throo I. rqs,,l , ,r a ahon of 1114arotua,• a• •• .1 M. whn tsar« atom! 11 me, en.l mine 4144.4, •• land wig. ander obilgationa arbleh I eat% that aigh rw,losems mill meet lla ore rvaanl 1111801111111104 bout Mt umiak*. .: r e ! 1 , ~.,, MEI tl I -5.1.1.' 1