THE ERII.oIN.:RVER. ••NtJ. 1. PALO t "I , Edlt.r 11.1.0 AM 6111 111001 M P.blushers and Propitiators. MATURSA 7,, News of the Week. pampls of Carson valley hare taken the imitative Mier Mina the formation of a new Territory from the MOM portioat of Utah. A memorial to that end has bee addressad to Congress, andJadge J. M Crane appolot ed agent to carry it to Washington. The pop- Waldo& ninths Valley is rapidly increasing, sad atccuag twos. are preowned in the memorial why snob a territory be organised. From Salt Lake City to Carson TaUtry the distance is nearly or quite eight hundred miles by lb. emigrant travel. and by any other route it is too billeatt to be governed by a Governor and Territorial llosgbiateavi located at Salt Lake City. Particularly is this the name Whim we take into consideration the feet that de an*, Latormuse. - Until they ran obtain at the bands of Cleagnas as organised Territory, the people in those valleys earn d the Sierra Nevada must make and administer their SIMS Boni. They are of W literally without government ma& witboat law. There is an additional and strong reason stippling thi propriety of establishing the new Territory at lb* ereelieet poesible day. The settlers of Carson Valley ate falmideski to the Mormons, and the placing betneen Bah Lake sad California a strong and groWing settlement win twid greatly let confine the power and euro the growth of the pbysiaal and moral montrosity of the age. —Am old and wealthy Go(taan named Hartman, recent ly arrived at Philadelphii from Berlin, accompanied by ►ice son Frits. They had not been long in that city ere Fritz fall i• love with a German milliner, and wanted to marry bee. Hat the wealthy father refused to eouotenaacs so Ism it match. /ito a few days since Prits—his father being shiest at Pittaborg—took to himself $15,000 in gold, be. imagiag to his father, and cleared out, leaving a not* stat ing that when the aid man saw dt (o consent to his mind iv with the milliner, and would give him $5OOO t., start bastinees, be would return with the $l5 000, and marry the gist. The young woman. he said, knew of his where doses. Bat we the father's demanding of her a revela tieae she was bras in refusing, and so a policelnan has been apesiany deputed to seek out the wandering Frits —thus far without any success —Tie village of Colchester, 0 13 the Chicago, Quincy, amt ilarliagtoa road, WS" the scene of a sad affair one day ksat •eek. ♦ yosag lady of that place, the laughter. of as estimable ritisaa. had for some time past received - the aldiesses of a young man to opposition to the wishes of bolt greats. They remonstrated with her again and again area the subject, bat to no purpose Finally, the father tall bar be would rather follow her to the grave than see bar OM wife of a man whom be regarded as so unworthy of bar. Bbort4 afterwards the young lady was seised with as alarming Mom, and in three boors more was a aurpets. Just before dying, and wbsin sin knew ob. was boyoad the resell of remedy, sbe confined to baring pro ' sand sad taken a large portion of smote The unhappy lather!s alternative was presented to him sooner than he sealel have believed ponible. —Dr. William GrafEtas, of Alexandria, Huntingdon .east), la this State, was a passenger from Aspinwall on homed the steamer Central Amertea, and is undoubtedly aeons the lost. He went out over a year ago as physi- Mom to the New Grenada Mineral Land Company, and big Iliehereedag lettere may be remembered by many. At one Oimpit he made a moat wonderful escape from a watery rum while on the Carribean Sea, an an open canoe, with Ilwrlnease and a terrible storm around him On that octal- Mem he loot mime valuable iosiggage, but saved bis life Dr Gnats was a young man of very fine abilities, and his law aleellont social qualities bad endeared him to a large Walk of friends in this city and elsewbere He was • palliate, of the Pennsylvania Medical College of the clam of 1854. His mod and bereaved parents reside at Illesurwirta. —Oa Saturday week • son of Mr Edward Lambert, of Jawitalsorille„ Itl., was amusing himself In shooting at a mark. writi• dodbla barreled gon, when, by some strange masessosuntable aaeldsint, he shot himself to the torof die ►asd, taming of the top of hisskall bone. Strange to may, he Bred esteem! hours after being rooreyed home, lassugit he urea, of coarse. perfectly insensible. The poor ember was almost Insane at the loss of his boy, and the people in the community wnre deeply affected. The boy wed *boot lb year" old. -1. H. &brooder, the wine and liquor merchant of Lossb►iOw, stays the Voweter, it one of the heirs to a for ums of 62.01/0,000 guilders, to the city of Amsterdam.— Uhl NM has been aceumutating ever situ* 1780, at com pottt•! Sourest, and has, of course, nearly twice doubled Loma The heirs-at-law have, in the meantime, ine'retued NM is a greater ratio, the number at present haying aesshol as* hundred and twenty A guilder is worth asamodting leu than fifty cents, and any one good at misting will mar at once that Col. Schroeder's shire is about half a million. -0• Wednesday oight of hut week, &I Mr M. E. Eckert, immisespoialog by his wile and two children, in a carnage, war driving along a creek between Port Carboo and New Pth&!robin, Schuylkill .eounty, the embankment over whisk the road was inade,' - ouddenly gave way, and preci. Owed the hem and carriage, with its inmates, into the VOW. The bores was kilied by the fall, and one of Mr gaiterea children. • son about dye years old, was drowned. Mt. Zeksrt, with his wife and the other child, escaped with but alight injury. The drowned boy wee recovered after lasing been 'tithe water about twenty minutes, and efforts woo made to reous3itato him, but in vain' - 7 Tb• iffnagomeri Liodget says. One month ego the Mr. John Slough, of Skippsek township, Moot. gemtstry seamy ; comprised himself and wife and two sons , both la the lush of health and In the vigor of early man. Mel The oldest son suddenly sickened, and within a few days died; withln,two weeks the father followed him, Yd es astarday of last week the younger-sou was buried. The Inseam was dysentery. The mother too, we learn. is etretebod upon a matinees couch, with little hope of reco very: The cam le truly a sad one, strikingly attesting the astenslainty of life. —The Meetlawd Piatestealer says the steamer Telegraph Wage bask from Canute on every trip families of negroes who !awe formerly led to this Provinces from the States. Tar, deserlise the life and condition of the blacks in (ham& as miserable In the extreme. They are principal ly hem Naiads West. Ohio and Michigan are likely to have large aeoseedeas to their negro population from that 111141,01. Tile Canadians have shown a disposition in their Parnament, and in , their everyday transactions, to dis wearnge the negro population coming tc, or remaining the PreViSINIS. • '—A weatasoe life WWI warioesly preserved by her bus bies& la iltaifortishlre,karely, by the process of transfusion. Oka lay at the point of death, when, as a last resource, • vein was opeetd_in her arm, and one in the arm of her kmbreed, and as the blood flowed from the latter, it was trintwaitted by suitable apparatus into the veins of the wits. Alter seventeen ounces had been thus Injected, the psiN Wham* pmeepeble, and the eolorlese lips reddened, Om Oxley eye brightened, end she thankfully said, "I am Wale The twee has progressed very favorably, and the wears le recoveries. —40112 Pellieser, an aged Gellltlitr, bits be. tent toted in W Yew York Court of Swasioes, on the ,barge of bersieryosideestoneed to imprisonmeat for life. The re" pausing asatenotietid that be had evidence before ltiortbst tb pris,wr had served • long term of impriso tWelat b Germasy for mints of a similar character; that be was a aoterioas burglar; that he had nearly committed moiers, and that It was his Imperative duty to prevent 111.6 Ma from being at large. Mode Island Ranks have fifteen dollars of paper ainealsines So one of specie; the New Ilampshire boats tideless; the Conamtiest nine; Mains, Vermont and Sesseiehamiste tour sod • half; and those of New York .817 ihnia. Of the testy millions of specie in the banks alt the Vatted States, about one-third Is In the bunks of the anise st New York, New Orleans and Boston. Rhode Lim& bait alsety-eight basqt" and eighty-fovea towns . —Os St. Lodi Rqpriblectus, loticing the close of the greet flit is that olty, says: "The entire receipts from the gable sad eatrios will amount to's3o,ooo, or thereabout', sad, mist 6/1 the eirmusstroces can boast of being the seem Minima sae held in any State during the year, the Unocal Pals sot eseeptsd." —Pearl-mullee hare been discovered in the Dano river, Tests. One gentleman, living near Port Marion, bas esapkiyod tea men to dig for thee* muscles, and het obtain ed ten tkossand pearls, one of the Mee of • rife ball.— lipseimeas have been sent to New York and New Orleans, to semetain Asir real value. — A s o ram a s girl, la the employ of Mr. Brennan, at Pottsville, Pa., robbed him of nearly $BOO • day or two else. The girl was &netted, sad eoaftssesd that she h a d Wain Ike matey, but had given it all to one Mm. Carey, aaaept ems' tea or twele• dollars. Bbe was to hare met Osrey at Tamaqua. Carry, who Ls well known, is still at easititarkm of lowa, which the "Republicans" adorateltS, was adopted by • majority ,of 1,630. The ai r. sierap *wee, however, was voted down by over sap* histjarilja. Diktat's show the siasswity of " Re- Wane raped to 144 &wow. OCTOBER 17. 1467. GIVAT DEMOCRATIV VICTORY! 1 •• IFIIIIIO ,I AMONG TEM IMPUBLICA Ns GEN.' WM. F. PACKER ELECTED GOVERNOR! ! ABOLITIONISM. REBUKED" THOVPSON AND STRONG ELECTED JUDGES I ' THE PURITY OF THE JUDICIARY SUSTAINED! STRICKLAND ELECT-F:1) CANAL COWKISSIONER ! - , ',Ai N D " The man that Stumped Packer" DEFEATED BI 4 0,0 ac)::: Above our friends will end the result of the election on Tuesday stated in a abort and oomprebenslre style. A column of details would not add to the gratifying fart that the "old Keystone" has pronounced another virdiet to ,favi..r of the Constitution as it ed--and tbit: Nino ea hand ed down taus bj the fathers of the Revolution! The vtrtory is moat complete' From every quarter we Dave the view, of tarp Democratic pins and Republican losses Upon •very hand we hear the expiring groans of a sectional and (mistiest combination, that under lb* guise of pbilan 'hop, has sought to Mot itself let* power in order to more surely sap the fouodatioas of that unity upon which, in the early days of the Reprblic, our lastitutione so firm ly rested • MI honor then to the •ietorioaa Democracy of the Keystone' The ISM to roll back the tide of fanati cism laat year; she is again the first to sustain her "favorite son" in the policy he ill eg a'ily tarrying out both at home and abroad' Below will be found the reported' majorities a• far ea re ceived up to the hour of going to press: Philadelphia City. Pecker's Majorities Is 137 Barks, 600 n Northumberland, 1,500 Schuyik 111, 3,000 York, 2,000 Cumberland. 4.50 - Cent - Or, Northampton, 9 5100 Clinton, 100 Lyeomiftg, 1200 Carbon, Nkmtgomery, 20on WILMOT'S MAJOKITIE.; Allegheny, 15430 Brie, 1320 Crawford, 1000 Warren county, 400 It is reported that Daaphla county gives a small Demo critic majority, and that Lancaster is very close THY RESULT IN THE COUNTY Below will bs found tke official vote of the_ county on all the cont./nod candidates. It will be peen that the bout ed 3000 mej. for Wilmot, of our Republiean eotemponariee hu dwindled down to one third that number—indicating that the backbone of RepubLicanivsm is broken even In Erie county Indeed, we very much doubt whetbee the party will ever rally again under that name either in the county or State They will have to And some other name or what we think is impossible, go back to first prineipler and reorganise the Whig party. "Bleeding Kansas" is very dead' The vote for Judge Tuoursos, our friends abroad must not look upon as a party one. It is a personal oompliment, l i tendered by his neighbors anerfriends of all parties to him self, and through him to the party that conferred upon him their notninattoo. It was given him —firer, because they admired the man: second, because they believed his was& niomination fit to be made; and third, Weenie they desired to thus publicly repudiate the slanders come of the Wit mot pokier, in the interior—partieularly the Centre erat--saw fit to otter against him. The defeat of one of the Repobliean candidates fur the Legislature is another of the result* in the eounty upon which we desire to congratulate our readers. It shows that if a "renegade Democrat" does own the republi can party of Erie county, red can force upon its Conven tions one of his most objectionable and pliant tools, he does not own the people! They ran take care of their own honor, and their own Intends, and when needs bean and will throw off party trammels, and spit the nauseous dose which party machinery attempted to force down their throats. And in this result, we add with pride, the De mocracy of the county claim no inconsiderable portion of the honor. They have shown thiit they are a wive element which, although powerless as a party, Is swinges • balance of power, and when such an occasion offers as that on Tuesday, they are ready to make themselves felt The following is the official result—the table by town ships we will give next week tJOVERNOR Wilmot, Rep. zt3US Packer, Dem. 1 VS.S JUDGES OF RIUPRZYR COURT. ==l Vieoh. " Thompson, Dem Strong, CANAL CoMMISSI4OIEit Milli/ant, Rep. Strickland, Dem ASSEMBLY Warner, Rep. .SO9O Coco ran, " 222 V Hignrod, I odepeaden 4 2723 P ROT HON OT A RY Skinner, Rep. Webster, Amer REGISTER AND RECORDER Trimble, Rep. 305 Rice,ltidepeediaL 1321 As titre was no opposition to the babas** of the - totality ticket, oar readers eaa take it for grauted they ire all sleeted. TRUTH FOR —it is not after we find a gain of truth in the New York' Herald, but the following may be safely set down in that category. It is cot the tariff, or any other measure of political isecimony, to which the 000ntry owes its present difficulties—but Just what the Herald sale—speculation, over trading, and a wide spread demoralisation among the business community. But to the Herald article itself- Is rr Tee Taunt—Oa is IT tic BANCO ♦eD STUCK - J01111111111?—The old whip party hoe and cry against a low tariff Is raised again as the cause of oar late excessive importations. Jinn the late frn trade David Wilmot, of Pnarylvaola, take• up this cry against the low tariff of '46 es the can., of the present revuleou; but we cannot tumour wi3h those high tariff philoeophers in this solotba of the financial troubles that have so thickly tome up o n as. No. We cannot trees them to the tariff of '46; but we eat trace them to the banks'and stockjobbers, the rail road and lead speculators, the fashions, flummeries, lop peries, nineompooperies, aatravag►ens, vanities lieenti oasnese, rogneriek defalcations, embesalemesta, forgeries, fronds, perjuries, and all the other tanalities of a wide speed demoraliuttioe among men sod women, saints and sinners—from puritaaital Boston to Sabbath-breaking New Orleans. Then are the potent causes of a revulsion, and a two hundred per not tariff against these terrible evils of the times would have been as powerless as a row boat in the rapids of Niagara. Millionaire railroad jobbers, stoekjobbers, beaks, settenhoors, peculators and forgers, fast pang see, fast old men, fast women, fast horses, brandy, billiards and faro, ?tench gewgaws, fashionable rirlalries in wasting money, and,all such rubbish, stuff trod abomination, harm dose the bestows. MS tariff of '46 can't he mode the oatmeal or ttia.tevolsioe of '57. We have been enjoying a high carousal, and are now galled upon to foot the bills. That's all. NEW SENATOR FROM TENNESSEEL-The tele graph aonowooes that. tho legislator* of Tennessee has sheeted Boa. ANIIIIW Jocasoi, Governor of the State, Sauttor, Of One. .1., this BUELIO 00•Isserfsial slays, he Is described as ono of the most retaarkablo moo la the coos. try: Though warmly Ifty years of M. he bat worked hie *Ay, step tey pep. to a position sooood to that of the President sully, coder pleats. disadvantage* than ever surrounded a tail who baa best similar rooms to life. Eh was a married man Wort ho mold lead, and Worsted the rudiments of hie odoeatios andel the Pantos of his ezool t lent w its, at each them os he could snatch from his Jabot as • joursoymaa tailor to provide bread for his thsaily. SHARP, BUT THUR.—The Albany 4.pw, says •itteo tram. to frim o•poee, OM a pelletal oeastodity, asst fool& cease. We meet to sanoon.• aeon the hookropfteint Is Novasber, the following; "Onsets& A Co., dealers is lemon wool—aseposiied, owing to the ellen crop, and the fact that the clip sow es bead bee so sale." Soutar Douglas is said to Iwo lost heavily le the cornet rovaloioa, hewing Moo 'aimed is ostooolvo dais 'peculation: is wagers Wide. VI VOICI t 1 1 .6 •W0NF1D1VWX170r4101.....11 1 447. I hr 1110Kriall;i.r• tor ttt r :•. 1.0 ter..lifg top. to the prtnilp.l joeirna:- AlLe et ci . may. artistes tall* the Place of 1.1k.4 . *sew, sod euissaa•aboust iss • orebill *'here di&m —ipr en fry lb, Aire , le t—. llll the fashions. witeh the 1.1+1,011.y ales Mbill.eply Oen oern• I.lboy are rest/ by *heti than digit who write tbem and thins* for whom they are usually wriUen. They ere no longer the mere indese. to sad record of the mann 0- •res of • few stlicklohher•, •pe.os'4tors, rod capitalists -- The are the indica: to exploded .'.p ',mentalist. on other people•• Node. and the howl ..1 hooitolicge.l The heret.dore unintelligihle figures ~ 1 the financial column' hare heen f.irced by popular ne...•••it% into sotnewbat more pr.rou•rien ,. . It. th • e.fitoriel department Still ther.• ‘• sf , ak nods exhiloNol• in grappling with the fee to lioneetly. much tremulous courtesy •aetsai, much truth C•ft uti.p iken, inueh fear Lelf spoken, and much hope tonlly 'Token The eternal rant .•1 "oohddenee" i. tk r ot•thone who Tither know not what to ray, or afrat.l to oay the truth , Conh.leo. , is all that a nee4.11," to the last eel of the broY•ti hank it 'loft. It 1 , to e firet ery of the yoren , le.l bank, tuprt,..ire eone:o,,,n ot the ' , peen lator 4 .0 the vtreete, who hopes by a teininwary "ctonfi acne.." t take care of himeelt• no mob, what comes of hia hundreds of beighbor• her t. wanting is Cone. rlenee, - write. the editor who verYi hi. information from (hove wlio woull have broken public faith If eimtkietice wantibg, who caused it to be to' Sorely the people did not show ad) watt ot enriddetiee, and, ac the cape standiu tt t• ih .r .a t ritir . imin•tertal 1,, nr not show it. Thus a were tender hearted and foolish beaded ert.istic e . tinder riser of which speculators make good rI rte reire.it Whet AL absurdity it ato call un the pro pie to re•tore • retied - en-v. which the banks, and not the pe• pig , Imr e :e broken ft .• people that cupfideoce is to 1.0 restored, i., t h i.e who carried it off.— If the.. In ah tee ti•ind• public conadenne was placed have haled it outright, or buried it alive in Western land., and have placed it beyond the s power of the owners of said "contldence” to dig it from the earth in *bleb it is interred tw.i or three thoutand miles away, is it 1, d a too bitter satire t.. pi :ugly abjure the public to reoture that which they hare throttled, hok•d up, rod packed off to that all but "undiscovered country," AC. Cast] is the cereal eonhdroce 'of course such is always needed by banks and monet Jobbers. and it is nut to be wondered at under ezi•ting eircumistances, they declare that the all now wanting iii a little moreof curb elailidsnee. The action of the rtes. in general im nothing more than a patting on the heal of brilliant mismanagement and glittering e •rrupt ion v attempt to keep up road:fence for a day in so in•tituto.'n or a •yotem which has proved itself utterly Inc:wild.. is equally reprehensible ac the sham itee'f. It must bc either stupidly Polly or wilfully wrong. A bitted matt would ben safer guide under similar circumstances The fiery clamor about him 'maid give him thou. warninio whieh hot cr.... cannot convey by actual obeervation Ile would monis cautiously, if at I all. linre, on the totter hand, are dingo tostokter• of the peopt• who are rupp...ed to he.., the oyes of Argil., 'boor carp ere .4,l:nothing . nor .. than old psolo Spoltring's , whtekt flood charsetorisetl •• more E t po rsrhy pro• end otii—e tnrio•—•peak th ecil.elre.. men who are neither dumb, blind. oor "bar i of hearing," •orabipping like crazy fliodooo the financial Juggernaut that attracts people to it only to crush them' They know, they see, that the Juggernaut ir gilt by the •weat, toil and tery hoomi of the c..ol , linz tnasoe• mod yet call on them to exhibit more of that apirit which ha• already leveled them to the earth The thing railealtr wrong on the .ery face of it Oat of th• e•tl -. .y.teni wbleh n Imn h. a bead now , soinrthinic tuu•t That b , ,nost lobo; 'bail pity the penalty "i rrl.l ,rop,alat.n, rear hart bands •hall supply r nod, 1,4 .•uuntn t t heads, and the I.lll' lap of tram he squandered in must 1. .•rplo.hd' ft t• not seeoraanee with the epitit of the lami, and tnu•t snob res. , lutions in the banking and financial systems as wall equalize the channel, of comfors, by affording shelter to the pour, and bounding within certain limits those who offer bopes for the usage of struggling or economical men's Monty In I$ the farmers were poor, their lands were mon- I Waited the hints could nit i•iiliect‘ their debts—they I rould'ot per their The me-chenu who supplied the country in vati looked 1 .1. return.. Scaree of money, searee of provisions, with utsprodurtire lands, broken banks, and the Government binkrupt, the country was in such a poeition as it n.iver c.,ul l he in again. With all this. and in addition, we he 1 to import wit from Eu rope Ti such a strait bah a conibin•tion of anti-demo cratic peculators and politicians chiefly brought as. Such dire calamity could wit befall us ni.w. The Philadelphia •Press" truly says "The country f ever was In • better condition, as to all natural advan ges, than now. If Ile banks fail, crops do not fail If shspensions of specie pay_ ment. •iceur, thtre are no stvp,n.ione of the rewards of the sesuions Onr Stale credit. Cr.' intact. Our ratted States seennties are sought after in all the markets of the earth There is no epidemic de. dating the land. The Kant .4 alone L••e Ailed the country with lamentation and woe. This is the time to consider whether they can beir amended, or left to die out entirely." Moreover we have not to send for food, bat we are ready to supply it, and will, no doubt, as the European Wien_ ries of the moment will make needful. The war in India, F— t.', must give an increase t o the demand for our cotton, as such as England was supplied with from the East must be seriou'lly curtailed, if not completely eut off, this year. With an overflowing treasury—that does not draw from thl banks as in 1153;, but constantly furnishes . specie; with a bounteous crop, a wealthy farmer and merantile popula tion—there can be no fear of actual want visiting any American hearth through the especial working of this, t 2622 j panic. 2764 2537 202 h This bow of promise, however, mast not seduce .or oyes from the farts uf the panic, nor lead as from the wive •nd energetic ret,rmation of the ill and et rievisace. which the "crisis" so plainly brings to light. 1004 1g441 THE EVIG Of THE TIDIES.—The evil of the pres ent day—that which causes more unhappinese and discus tent—is undoubtedly the over enlist; of, our people to attain great wealth, or eminent social and political dis tinction. Speaking upon this point, the N. Y. Tian says that two thirds of the 111111011•, worn, cadaverous visages which flit up and down W•ll street in agony, any of these days, belong to men who start in life with one of two great objects—to be President of the United States, or as rich as Mr. Astor. As there cannot be more than one President of the United States at a time, and as the office cannot be bad by any mecessfal amount of stock jobbing the mapri. ty speedily abandon all hopes of presiding over the desti nies of this great nation, and Si their wholeattention upon Mr. Astor's fortune. The first step is to get oat of the boarding la( uses into one of one's own, po log ats a ern stone front, and furnished with corresponding Uinta. cenee A large house is the god of a New Yorkers idola try The women, far from standing aloof from the strag gle, halloo their husbands on to bolder ventures. They stake largely, t to, on the result. They buy bolder at the milliner's and jewelers' and carriage maker's, on the faith of their husband's good luck. If he makes a bad 4.hrew, so much the worse fir the milliner and jeweler and car riage maker. There is consternation in the palace, and bailiffs are in the hall; bat the storm soon blows over, and the stars shine out again. 6513 04 A REFORMED KNOW NOTHINO.—Oen. William T. Haskell, who wanted to run as the Know Nothing candidate for Oorernor of Tennesee, and eouldn't, has he. eame "disgusted with the mad hunt after office." Re announces that he has quit politics, and patriotically now proposes to become a public lecturer He sap( be wants in this way to enlighten the people of the United States, England, Australia, and iutly the Sandwich Islands. The Oeneral, it will be also seen from his own words, don't only want to "go about doing good," but is hopefully and manfully inclined. Hear him: "I intend to eschew idleeess,strong drink, tobacco le ell Its forms, live t irtuously and labor assideously. I bees reached the ',emit , ' set lib when a man would not deserve Heaven if he did not think prayerfully and profitably of thinge Rettently I have thought much of the hereafter." Geo, Haskell and Pareon Browelow should travel to., gather. "Mr There are plenty of young gentlemen as welisia plenty of old ones. whose beard, are turning gray, triads gives the former a great deal of uneasiness, and /Apogee the age of the latter To avoid these little per oxides we advise such of oar reader! to use Prof. W 2 Bate fte, i t or otoe, which will, In the coarse of a Yew weeks, change the hair so its natural eolor. It doe/not dye the hair like the most of the hair restoratives, Yin produces • gradual ebony of color from the roots of/the hair to the Goal end, and give. it a doe and glossy Appearances. We have seen many persons who have utpistl it sucieesafally, and pronounced it the only iuventiotrUbleti has come up to their idea of a -"ears fig gray he s." We eoianteneed acing It about two taondas sinee v if we are any judge,of age sad beauty, it has made as affleast ten years younger; in foot we are begtan tug to looktiabityoung, and feel very much like getting a young wit*. The change Is mime leas, and it would be as ditaatilt to find • gray hair now as it would be to nod ao ilea in yde head of the Doke of Busking heat, We ktiow'several ild maids and some young widows, whose looks are Jost be inuing to swume a, silvery hue, and who have liven lit log seriously about resorting to this remedy, and wet-Advise them not to dela, any longer. It never falla—M/iowrs Herald. load,lkrulaiwn l I,' WORK • WORS • woRK S CallArat does ovine WORK +.~ urrostiu. carr.barr. AR - Almost every body Mints it Lisa easy this; to wake a newspaper--aspeeially jest after an election. But we would just like to me his "tr7ll ea." They would ,in soother time, or we ere neyledsm. For leases*, you go into the oboe is the siortibm take out your paper, sharpen up year peas% add Amen your ezeinages pre paratory to a few epos flit for items, bows sad eon meets. Tot get fairly te,nOrk la a very barren 1•111, far they Sr. fined imp patios that la eat of date, whim -ie cones loam, or Babb, or Brown with, "Well, what's the hew. r Tea eardproply to Smith that helm is "vita dog like a seam dog," or a locomotive with a army , sae neer. Smith don't hardly credit it, sad eo yea have to show him Ike. agorae. By the time Smith is satisfied Joon; moue le; sad you hove to "do It meter sad Ind -11 whoa you settle dews, sad And yourself Mole, you tool a good deal' more like " waist yew for ever teaming the trade,' dna "pluniag la" with pencil, aeleatin sad Pastes to stop the eternal cry for " more espy." No, so! this viola( oat a newspaper the week after an election Is no juke! The leading event of the week by been our election on Tuesday. Until within • week dugs ... T oads' day" the political waters of the musty had remained us placid sad stela as as inlaid lake undisturbed by a pass - ing breese—bat all at oboe, with hardly a promontory copies', the ripple of a wave .eoald be beard here and then, sod ere the sleepy politicians who "ow* the party" were aware of it, a tempest raged throughout the length and breadth of their "doseisios" that earned their favorite ma aidate to the head waters of Salt River, sad left their owe hopes of the Sheriffslity sad Congress sent Pall, a perfect wreck' dad sow we appose they will hays to Mpg— "1 error had awe. of broad, Parthathwty largo sad wit* gat what It MI goo AO door, *ad aware co the bettered shier Fur poetise's(' see remit i• the Cowsty,—Speaking poetically, by the by, we are inellawd to think the poilti. ciao. refined to above it. s good deal is the use plight at the !tapioca wight who Aar • halal/ to hi. ows inis furtunee is the following approp.iste ohmic Veen I rnessaber en The ibis pas wet together, I *eel like a nester in thefaU, Kaposed to every .mother: I hal like one who trends alone Bolos bare yard all deserted, arbor oats are led—whess bane an deed, And off is the market started. Their "oats" have led, *astir boas are dead, and off to mar hat started, and a very poor market•t time—And now, to leave politics and poetry to take care of themselves, here is an item of more lmparuisoe, especially to those who like to look through the bottom of • wine glass. A Ten nessee paper records the =aesthete» of • novel became to the shape of win* expressed from **juice of the toms. to. Good Adios pronounce it a bet rate article. Its in gredients are simply the pure juice of the tomato(' and sugar, and it much resembles champagne, having a light, transparent color: with a pleasant, palatable flavor. Won't some of our tomato* growers "tryrthie os."--Speakiag of wine somehow very naturally suggests waltslag—and the beat descriptlos of the watts we ever read is the follow. lag which we had la one of our exelmagest At Bret they more slowly, with matien and rises, Like bones erkenisiteeni•S out •• a rase, For &Mal at tot* Jut like beams at mom Must amble a little to /hew off their pees; The sage plays faster, their raptures begin 4.lke Land:kilts they tip, like Webs= they spin, Now draperies whirl, and the tiny het ay, And ankles, at West, are imposed to the eye her the eballt.eoveed room laiglacies they M/ta‘ He mules upon her, sad the Mp 211•111 upon him— Her hand on Ids shedder is tenderly placed; Hls quite as tenderly circles her waist, They etlU hear la mind, ea they're turning each odor, The proverb that "ens le deserving another;' And these bodily terse often end It Is said, In turning the lady's or geetliesnen's bead, on to the same pillow together, which when dose accord lag to the laws of the Stets mid the chuck, is • very good institution!—The beet evidence we have yet soon of the extreme "tighthets of the times" is an anecdote related of • Saratoga editor. The editor aforesaid was 'wrested the other day in the street by a young lady, row bide la band, who expressed as busty to thrash him for two *eats, for some real or fancied indignity, that she claimed he bad put upon her. The editor fortunately for him, had not so heavy a sans of money 'boat Isimand the excited young lady was obliged to saspead.—We aeltiosthat Professor Stet- Der Is still "plug up" with his balloon is ilinsemet parte of the Snits of New Teak: Ho sod, on asessiden from Syracuse the other day, and same down all safe a few miles from thereto'. By the by, the Professor is not alone in his upward flights "about these days." Most of the Banks of that State bare "gone up" too—bat whether they will make as safe a landing is quite another question, disturb we teal a** why they abould'ot, as it is evident that, like the Professor, they have been doing busisose on "gas" for some time—Speaking of flanks and the tight ness of the times, the Buffalo Republic gets off the following "good one," done up la rhyme after the manner of Saxe. Banking institution., Companies of .trust, - With, other people's amities, Go of on a bust; Houses of long Mending Crumbling in a night— With eto many "senealma," No wonder moneys twit. However, all this is only a swami and healthy re amnion of the financial system. There has been undue specula_ Lion, an immense creation of Ifrtitious values, and now things are finding their level again. There will be dull times for awhile, as prostratios follow", a fever It, bat business will ultimately spring up spin as a Armor basis. For the present we mast economise. Next winter will be a hard one for the poor. Let them hasband their means in preparatios tier it. A dollar saved now will be worth two next February. HON. EDWARD EVERETT IN ERIE.— The visit of this distinguished orator, and the delivery of his oration on the Life and Character of Washington In this city, is an event which will long be remembered by those who had the pleasure of ilstasing to it. We of worm cannot Irmo the orator by the Gerry paths through which he lead.. to the close of his estimate of the character and virtue of die great seas whew. We and sionista formed the topicof his discourse—but we can say, in all truth, that teepees? have and never expect to bear such rich and stowing eloquence fall from the lips of man again. Not only the matter, bet the manner of the orator captivated the muses, and kept his Listening auditors in each a state of wraped attention that we verily believe they would have been willing to have remained tole* the length of time they did. Our only regret is that.there were Dot more to hear it, those' considering the eircumstances the audience was respects. tole in numbers. Imi. Mewerse, st NI &tufa* omits to us with abased titls—ttuit of the Waterford Noquirer.—azootot. It ditrut catwo to as st all--wkst Is the moos bui.. The Buffalo papers mamas* the easpeasha of Messrs Piss" it Co., of that di, ass of the largest Hard.. ware hoaxes la the country- The actuncreica ergs it is now some thirty years Moe the faindatkoas of Ibis house were laid, upon which by Wiest industry, probity and skill, has bees reared sae of the Bret seseeastik establish ments in the ootintry. By its setewpiliting liberality very many of the maasfactories aroused as bare bees established, and largely sustained by its patronage. 111 aU tbli great enterprises which here bees Started mod carried forward for the promotion of the interests of the city, it las stood foremost with a feeterbsg bead while by Its liosorable dealinp it haahailt up for itself a bulimia is poise of maguitude mad importeace squalid by few, sad a reputa tion for stability mad lategritY miaow' by so". W ith the satire eadidesee of She stlesumilfily. Its 'MAY extend ed of eastemers sad eerretesdeste, awns largely *pad its Aiabilitlea, as abasdateee of rrerythlag bat s i ssmey, the metal pomades aid dersagemest, the Maenads' of making soileetioas sad steeds' esalmages especially is the Beaten west of us an such, that It has beau compelled to stuteash to the storm' which everywhere seems to level all beam it. JO' Ms Gooass, ia promising its madam mow that the slootioa ii waaq to muted low to *Woo sod ass• to gamma sows, *tab *op "will est psi* ably swot it' We Malt so, Mm; salsas ow sotossporos, should take a mottos to finish WIWI a batter artists of poetise thew be, bas boos is tM babe *1 doisit far the past few pow. His 'widen base bad easwilk, mesh as it is, dowbesso. It Is said thus are pow had up I. tb rielaity of Buffalo shoat cos livened heats, which have bees honied off the mud is eoaseqssase of the 'sanity of freights. 'lir The trial Ili Mr. James 0. Draymea, eater of the Maw DMOIPS4 as a sharp of eteslisit a limy/ WWI from the post-elles, la Chien" ow waled •P it ib• United Swiss District Cep Is Umiak,. so Trterekl aOrli• Jag. The Odosilases /salami mmilie as easseimughl notion to quasilie ro rieweest, bat the ties et Via ei the eases es its is set yet /zed. Tb. buys ..t...4 Banks Wiespasia, Wises. B Zs. Oesasstint, Nov Toss... takes at •la using. he Geimis. • r # w: YORK: "...0 be Ire ObeeragaJ Ci. . , Orgy Tom 001. 12, lE. Thiele ellre ing to • heat ( For the hilt six days hare hod upon eras The jot", holies in 1 gilds an riis have • their bell to imy up, . SWIM e nalleatoc as they promised, their lesdping hand, and se down we go, like a pile of bricks.— The "street" is a speetaclo for the curious who can afford lobe isabieseested spectators, bet that epos ,d people is mall and daily diminishing. The question is no longer whether Wall Bt, shall stand, but where the million, high sad low, are to gettheir bread and bouer. Within forty eight hours the Banks will be obliged to twine to a decision which will either set us to rights a little or upset us en tirely. People who hare gold hang to it, with a death peep. Owe Datebuisa up tows has termed all his proper. ty into sash, deposited 6111.'400,000 of gold in a vault two nodal under ground and hired an, able bodied gusto keep watch with a revolver. An absurd ,idea po people in such times as this that paper is no real money; the banks are as insane on this point as the ignorant multitude, and obstinately refuse the assistance whioh'would put the commercial community on their legs again. The failures this week are enormous in &mount, including some of the very best banking and dry goods !Krum, but they are not a tithe of what may be looked for; if the banks refuse an increased line of diseounts. . J JOB, Grim winter rear! his frowning' fare in the distance and mechanics unemployed and penniless already shudder in 'siva/Bee, foreseeing the chills and hunger against which no protection can be provided. Half the working men and *omen will be thrown out of employ, and it will be almost useless to Look to the rich for help, for all values are now merely nominal and nobody knows what anything or any body is worth. This is a rather blue story; but it is the stubborn truth. I:niess L'hioago is inclined to make us a magnificent present of hreadstnffs, some of our million of inhabitants will find their jaws growing rusty for want of the "raw material" to operate on. Manufacturers, •t •o) rate, will be prostrated for some months to come. A "Credit Whiner," is about to he started in this city" by a company of Frenchmen. The barter principle wilt meet with more favor just now thee It would be likely to do under any other circumstances and it is not Improbable that this projeet may meet with great success and prove an essential relief to the working classes, at least during the p.tiod of continued monetary stringency. Now, is the time for female heroism to manifest itself' Let some of our fashionable. seize the opportunity, convert their silks and satins into money, the munition of defence, u the Carthagenian women parted with their golden locks of hair to be 'twisted into bow strings. Let the money which bas gone hitherto to Franco to pay for $lO a yard silks and $4O bonnets, go into the books to furni,h manu facturers with money for their operation. Let some poet arise, inspired with exceeding poverty, and sing the praise of calico, that long neglected, despised yet beautiful fabric' Come up to the rescue, "sweethearts and wires" and create a demand for shilling calm, which shall rejoice the hearts of printers in Providence and Lowell, and shed upon their armies of artiuns, prosperity and peace! "So shall we render the calves of our lips." Everything else is absorbei in the money question -- Literature must suffer heavily Already is announced the failure of Harper A Bros., which will be a terrible blow to tribes of authors and authoresses. Amusements are thin ning out; commercial preaching a more popular than po- Utica' presetting ever was Adrieeis plenty, but in no great demand. Everybody bus a theory of his own about the crisis, and amid a perfect storm of controversy and curses, mingled with the cries of the drowning, we are all grad.. ally going to the bottom, unless something turns up. pa- One of our readers, who bas been disturbed by the "music" of one of those feathered pests, called ♦ Unities Hen, desires its to put the folleming "protest" on record. We cheerfully comply, with the simple remark that if i don't shut oft" the wind of the " critter" nothing will VW rows sad impunsenkt mal, sty ormlor per...fakir, &NA moats You 'Las speckled critter, you' Wharn thuuder 're you rqoawkou about • Doesanything hurt you bad• (Sr do you " q uasi k That .ay in Girine, where I oil come from, And so winawkoi now 'rpm eiiiiration•l preguillee• Whatilto mischief do yon pull Your homely head Out's hoc under your wing sod *gnaw k for. What's under your wl , ig to make Y o u w, la. k, You speckled •olor of a Lord Sometkunk offenm4, I reeloin, You'd keep ot there, for it look" better hid What do you get on the fence and aquavit fir • Do you see anythink elan:mak, you while gilled. Spockie-lootder, squaw king fool • How do you ii pose a feller cars read or rite, Or sleep, or lime, you discordant, old, busted, Bran, French horn, with all the keys open Aad the toouthlueee cruised equawking machine' wish I could piseu you, you eyerlAatin i perpetual What're you flunking. shout' —home ' You rascally epototue of a (jowly war-gonr. A congo tom-tom and Aod down-east village brass band' Dry sp.! you speckled parody of a machine shop' Do you think that's muuq SOU outrageous o "cal at You boiler•inaker's exacerbated echo' You squawking abstract of Pandemonium, Do you - think a feller min afford to furnish to)ot tacks, Ando° forth, to chunk you • ah Italy, dog you' May-he you think tonne, coo speckled pagan of African extraction' 111 your ocpuoirktug vies• or are rou 'lean! 0( pie, soy You brueu•tbroated, %O. t Iron lotigeil eulutitiat los, Of foul creation' Here'• ury Mackin' brash a• riot,' RELIEF BILL. PASSED.—The extra ' , elision of the Legislature brought it. labors to a close on Tuesday by Use final passage of an act legalizing the suspension of the Bank■ until July IS5'4. The nature of the provisions of the bill we have no Ricans of stating, as it was not finally perfected until amended in committee of conference between the Rouse and the Senate. We will give the hill entire In oat next, or s synoppis of its proiisions Or Notwithstanding the "Hard Times" Booth I Stewart eontinue to :sell stacks of those nice DeLaines, Decals, Valeocias, Paremettas, Valencia Robes, he., What is the cause of it? Because they sell them cheaper and they are better tieude than can he sold for the prioee 06 • aide of New York. BANK SUSPENSION.—AII the the Banks of the State of New York, and the New England States, have suspended specie payment. Wo . presume the supeosion will be general throughout the country. :401[3IAL SCHOOL MEETING 1.3! EDE:N.IOHW At ra meeting otthe citizens of Edinboro and vicinity, at "Austin's. Hair on Friday evening Oct. 9. for the pur pose of considering the expediency of establishing a Nor se/a Sehootat Edvidorii, Mr. E. W. TWITCHICLL, Esq., was ottoman President, and S. ['late, See. for the evening. The Presideot then stated the object of the meeting, briefly al. lading to an Act M the Legislature providing a system of Normal instruction for the benefit of 'teachers throughout Um State, and elosed,:his remarks by introdsiging to the sadists*. Mr. W. 11. Mtusrnoxo, Sup. of Cot:n[110o Schools for Erie Co. Mr. ARMSTRONG exhibited a perfect familiarity with the subject of Normal Schools. Pennsylvania stands first in her Educational Policy when compared with other States bathe Union. Distinfruished Educationalists here given her the preference as to:the perfection of her Common School System, end the unsurpassed harmony and beauty with which the System Is carried into effect. All great schemes are perfected by experiment and Improvement. Pennsylvania has added another feature to hes already advancing system by providing State Normal Schools, in which Teachers can be thoroughly Educated for the Pro fession, instructing then tow, to teach as well as what to teach. The advantages of such an Institution in Edenboro, intellectually, mid morally considered, are ioestimable.— Its effects will be to make Teaching a permanent Protes tion—to give character and dignity to the most neglected, yet moot worthy and Important of all the Professions.— Heretofore teachers have been compelled to work from ex periment, many of them fruitless and unavailing, each Inc ites/ding teacher loosing the ground gained by his prede• sensor. Shall our children and teachers continue to labor Wader this disadvantage when it can be successfully re• mowed by a thorough course of practical instruction in a Normal School. Mr. ARMSTRONG was followed in his re• narks by Ur. K. W. Beebe, and Messrs N. Clete, S. N. Twitebell, J. B. Clark, and others. It Is understood that immediate action will be taken to establish one of tbis Weise State Normal Schools in Edeuboro. A resolution was passed respectfully soliciting the publication of the above in the various County Papers. The meeting then adjourned subject to the call of th's Normal School Coalmine previously appointed. N. shares, See. S. N. TWITeIISLL, Pres. The Braneh Mint has purchased from the banks 112,000,000 of silver bullion, paying gold, affording some relief. The Union Bank has suspended. There is a harry run on all the free banks. Great excite ment. CINCINNATI, Oct. 14. Further returns give about 10,000 democratic gain in 46 counties. The Legislature is probably democratic. The vote for Governor is close, and the result doubtful. ra2 TO A GINN V -FOl I. Fsse mead rreettiallor CIEMEMI =11==:1 Niw OILLTANS, OCt. 14 LIEU? GEN SvOTZ N/),,t4:11. PILLOW -- Lieut Gen Winfield Beutt is out it a .-srd io reply to the recent letter ~ f Gtiti Pinot/ The latter bad charged, that daring the war with Mexino, Mr Trist, b ligreessent, engaged to pay to Gen Santa Anal "caalt in hand. as ears. esi money. $lO , 040 ," .and that solamtitiently Mr. T. told him (Gen P.) "that Gen. Scott bad furnished him (Mr T.) the money, and that he (Mr. T.) bad paid the $10,000." To this Gen. Scott responds, very emphatically, as (ult.'s:— "Being morally certain that Mr. Trist never made such declaration, it. is almost useless to say that I never turned over a dollar to him for such or any other purpose whatever, and am very sure that Mr T had not a dollar of public money in his possession. while in Mexico, and never more than sufficed for his very moderate expenses in ' Lila private purse; and I certify on honor that I never, at any time, paid to Gen Santa Anna, or caused to be paid to him, Dr to another for his use or benefit, one dollar or m)re, on any ac count or in any way whatever President Santa Anna was at the time, as now, wont) millions, and had, in that office, the irresponsible control of all the pecuniary means of his country. It s is hardly probable, therefore, that he would have stooped to pick up a sack of 810,000 in gold, if he had accidentally stumbled upon one in a pri vate walk " General Scott, in some further remarks, speaks highly of Mr Trist, for his "quiet, unobtrusive mannar and amiability," and who negotiated a most important treaty under signal disadvantage FAlLrae nt MuutiPss —Muggins bas failed He got in a tight pace, hypothecated everything in his possession down to his bootjack and um: brella, and finally retreating to the upper story of the tenement he occupied, took a stout rope, attached it to a strong rafter and deliberately suspended payments and himself at,the same time out of the window, by shinning rapidly down into the back yard, and made off at a round rate Just as his landlady, two tailors, and his washerwoman came up stairs to break in the door of his apartments. He retreated to the elevator of one of our warehouses, though he ultimately hopes to pay his creditors ten cents apiece as soon as be sells his "exchange" (he has an unpaid bill in New York city to which he fondly gives that title ) In the meantime he is writing a pamphlet, urging the formation of "a General Suspension and Anti Paying Debts Union." He has sent us his articles of agreement, one of which is that the fee of ten dollars be "charged to all new members," whose standing is to be fbrfeited if the fee is by any inadvertency paid. Then there are several provisions, one of which squints toward a return to the Sabbatic year, upon which Muggins himself claims to have al ready experimentally entered lie tells us, in foot note, that a twelve month is intercalated just now making all collections and business transactions illegal and void during three hun dred and sixty five days and six hours, is just what the community need Perhaps it is We look upon Mugging as Perentuaily good " C'hicavo Presi Settiot's INJutr.—On Saturday last Mr. ROBERT ROBERTSON, residing, about three and a half miles from Sinelearville in - the town of Charlotte, was very dangerously gored by a bull, The animal was two years old, raised by Mr It and had just been returned from the County Agricultural Fair Fie seemed to show signs of vteiousoesa,, but Mr. ROBERTSON fearvd no harm, and was is the act of taking the rope from th.• animal's born., when he was suddenly attacked, thrown into the sir, acid landed upon the halm cht of the bull, terribly bruised and torn Mr ItossarsoN's son ran to the a.sistance o f hi s father, and found him lying senselet,t, hot bowels lacerated, and a portion of the intcstint.s protru ding At the latest accounts, the injured man was alive, and faint hopes were entertained of his recovery That the bull might do no further harm, he was immediately shot —Ja m,stcarn ./.,urns/ 111113 Wall street was 'comparatively quiet to day There has been a moderate run on the various savings banks, but all the demands were prompt. ly met All the institutions in this city, but three in Brooklyn, were obliged to close their doors At last accounts the offiojrs of the New Yvrk sav ings banks were holding a consultation on their future course They propose, it is said, to pay 10 per cent on deposits The Bank of America and the elkemical Bank coutitmed to Pity specie. The Manhattan Bank, it is said, is doing the same, and it is believed that other banks will follow suit A notice was posted today at the various banks which are enabled to continue business, stating that business will be continued as heretofore ex cepting the paying of specie Checks will be received on deposit in the payment of dotes, and bank notes will be paid and received as usual At. the morning session of the Stock board, it was resolved that payments might be made in certified checks, and there was a general rise in prices of 1 to 9 per cent. At a meeting of merchants this P M , James Brown presiding, it was resolved that thiA meet ing had entire confidence in,,he bank- of New York to meet all their engagements dollar for dollar That it is the duty of the banks and the merchants to afford every facility for the move ment of produce to the seaboard; that the exi gency of the times demand an itntujiliate extra session of the legislature, and that a committee be appointed to wait upon the Governor to sulic• it his immediate action to that end. Several of the banks which closed their doors yesterday resumed their business today. The Supreme Court Judges today held a meet ing, and decided to issue no process against the banks, excepting for the notes given in the usual form. A very st-one; movement is progressing among the Republican leaders against an extra session of the legislature, or any recognition of the sus pension should the legislature be called togeth er; while a large majority of the Democrats and a few Americans and Republicans are uniting in support of the measure of relief to the banks. The political aspect of the question was very warmly discussed The suspension of the banks did not create much excitement It is probable the supension will extend throughout New England, with few exceptions The Banks of New Bedford, Fair Haven, Worcester, and othe r principal towns, have also suspended At N a ntucket and Litrell the banks paid Ppecio through the day The Boston Banks will pay their balances at the clearing house. PET,FASBUR9, a , Vet 11 The Branch Fanners Bank of Petersburg has suspended, bit the Bank of Virginia and the Fzehange Bank are PtIII paying specie DETROIT, Oct. 14 In consequence of the suspensions of the Eist• ern banks, tLe Michigan Insurance Company's Bank, of this city, discootiuued specie payments this morning, and otherwise its business will go on as usual: The action of the bank is almost unanimously approved of BALTIMORE, Oct. 14. A riot broko out this P. M. between the Americans of the Sixth Ward and the Demo crats of the Eighth Ward. Muskets and pistols were freely used, and it is said that several per sons were killed. SZCOND DESPATCLI• —The police captured a quantity of muskets at Jackson Hall in the Eighth Ward. Police officer Jordan was killed and others wounded It is thought several per sons were killed. Another riot is reported as progressing at Lexington market, in the western section of the city. The police captured a large quantity of tire arm. from the new market engine house. At a public meeting of onr citizens held today, the banks were reoominended to suspend specie paytgpot. The Union Bank impended this mor. Ding. Ncw You, Oct 14 BOSTON, Oct. 14 AUGCSTA Georgia, Oct. 13 SP 111, No a:PERI - 1(7 , r n, r ,,, WT. Li.? ( Ili , ~,, , ) 1 ADO tering a p.m k,,,, ~.. U. over bat ON: MALDY- "but ONZ Vall:. to *it , o kw t i r ,,....; ' ever 14 it. Zin or lontlitr- .6.14. t .." abdomwo, • rallies or 410 r, , ooother thaw) is eateloe4 re, a " ' by voter. belt soked, itees4. .1... ~,....'" lost Irslanee bets • . the 111, 1. •I 4 : , . that Mk/. \a.. aro in.- rn .11er, 11 r... 4 ..': Point of a p. 411 ,111.1, 6 1 tut., ~, .. ***, system _ _ vs.,. Of il• • Or ;mot. Not tir dlocoene.. . wee( 1.-(A• 0.77, PRIG 6 (1)•T, 1( Hill: Four itionthe thc trilwinwl of an 1 .11••111.,,nt . frolf eimered rchteor. end mr.l 1 , ,I;(1,1,011 1411 ,1 1 ,, In IVltemaiedecy iherv••• lu . value I.lv • • r„, jury of %iv verdict. lit••rscon thy Antiptil'e.v.(k we .111 1.. re,. In the Yre.ll4 t 4 11441..0t Vi v th.uk The r.dLn .n 4 . .•t t11. 11 (alt 10 pa, aiwn , . nv;ls. , ..tty.....1 I.; a..1;;••••••0.,.1 ;0 , 11; Lena Reporter, Men •.• ,• gait, tweidlt wortiiite 11. Ira 1 104 ; Ur , I iilieu , ;ll.ol;ll3t, r -; k acid 8P. , . kith. Lairron.• M.. • CtoniplaMPl." ihiet.eivienJoureel Pot •l• filevaliet Ynr.r.rari ..I.ltertuer. i. rk•••qt (he Imola ihketor.• Jorraal, from it i• an •••• • ....• • kg. k r and l'slyttatom of t;..11.. . 6,11 t• nort vor . lirmars, r d, b„, Itlinurnatr.sti, Brow-hit., I,..eres...ferar• Idrocestr, W NeUnii,(ol, • tV• rktimatiphra Herald. P.. I.,.berty- 76r, Boor•er, •sd - tuitory l'utainroork Worsen-al, f toanr r r •‘v Tootharhr, •. 'nu hy n . •••r • I it skti. gnat. ran., •• how Atonlanr— I Ink.. s • S. I t font ..-eko, an Imo •• ootOr•r—".4 .•" ' •• • •••• the ...gilt mouth, • .11firryrsils Teouvenatmaj 4 . ,„ ro.section sad fi11...-. Booserdle CAlderver / tarn, It ha toraluable. Pro- (Angriest Taises, If "T• k • to th.• Hrsrt ' W este T. • rkr do.. It, Ky.—"t r. r r y,, (awl, DerrLcarr, "Dr ewes ' 1.9 1.! h,. Head " Another e•litor, 1 . letter it for Pleurisy arui lleartiwrn, SI. A,giltber —" It I, ,err a• FenuLle Cotnplaints • Aouther:.— . lt I the In the West Another nth. has lung the Li111‘• and a Laird t ough, lis. mouth, and her c o mptaint,,,.,„ , Another ut .our phtsiris, far+ .1 a • eunlio , rm.« ,u nit Hess,. loath wrought the mire •.• q „ Salt hu don« whist he enuki net h Another —"I chili of tame dishe• snu quickly cured with the Ltoru iletwaier, ff Y Vi • . Newark Tames, —• It la a Reidarbe, !adorned Eyes, an:. va— corer, ; and Ir. isy, •Tretra„., An..th.r, by letter —"My the and thstreuung . An.dll..r--' . An lard !tent • cured of the enereol of 14 , , half " A c.**••• nf Chr-• 'Ma Palmyra 'ratans!, .• -mu • of -.tilt Ith•um Jefferson Go Caws, hind for urermeeltate use I/1,1 husto• irevorrape- - that ...11h.rtat/ terthrtk u iu Inorr than nao•I c..nanterstlon E-3,- N 41. t. 1.14.1.1" I).lltrlUM.Qllll.4{y . • 1. and p•ii -.•1 1.n pta:•,,e, Iry ordertug • fn, t0 ,, t1.., eat, malady,' Ito. dldon ,, to nal tur 1, . •.I,llt forma or ..er n' nu.' le. one \.• air pints/re, and t'.• 1a..1 , 1111j C 1..., by ma le to 40—n0 MOM, DO 111P141—d tta lA. •ysteat ...lemma and Pews alotrvers.a. NO %Ai iswri.—CT To pr..t. it nn br csas•l4'lleils, the prnt.rrt..h.r mad. arra.urrnsenna, that b. ••••n 111 POI% quauttt , , I t It•it. or t tit , ” a , • .0 - 4.. 4 0 ,000 t,•... alt .• i .ot ,o .1,-,t,ro *.g k. • park...t• • ram 1. d., S• of O.and lu`l .• km. (a. yr* tlt • • ”, •••••• 11, ••• • .t .I a. •rtntik. a•••• •r••••••••,••••1 bt tu pa , rh• t att.,. 2.11 inabier oaf we u /It , . • ' . • 113.1 tIY hi tit., t fvf giostr.o. 4V., or at 1“.•015 . .Ith ni• • - • re 1.2,11,1, 55 - •• • sot. /. ola. day, •••...1. • ••••••v.l—ht••••t.r t.r OM , n. t. 4-• ===l 0.• It. t., A I.:11.r -133 m MARRI lo t , the 'Z.ttt u; t try Rev. Canine• 'ti• . VI.. V 41i \ t. 1..1.1.11'111)GL. 64,Lb nt .0 tt,, 1.! innt ,ri Rev. T r Bradt , „.'.hip, to 1F4.4 AMANDA or ,' ft of (smell toy nab% )1m the Ist tost , by 1t... r niv ANT %„ Mt.. JLLIA A. GR k , DIED I;irtrl ti•ent•l, • •• :s• t. • Ur Jl. :••rt.:• , 11"42. , r. , • •• .•••r. • •• lmc,t 4 l t' that .• • •, 1•••• iertto... wb.r- nom;•• ..;• • :.•• auk, •• Sr.- ft.- rlr•t &et , !F. , . •it•Tpv , n the. 46th it . .. •••nt^! N a'tor ta.r.r.n • , • ti4n I ,rtztli It/ rrieso.... tho 11,1.! liang!,trr .4 I..tin 1 and I WILLI 111 IL LI folklK,cr.r, ......, , rt.-. . l'uldir ._ / :rata, ` •%, All ••,rk •arran:r.: STRAY liitol•L ..t•• •nrtnsure ' ••" reek 11, two e••• I :ht hrln-tleCen hO.• Vt. renr.,•l,l HI. •I.•tetl . The ~nuer •••,tiekte•l ‘.l roue.. Ink, L.rn k. - J %COB 1.4 tlt , r 111,1 b.. I EriP durtai I!NEMII=T:=I . NOTICE To the Stockholders of the ; xy, .otidevi that • meet.t: ent•. •• , ,e,ratt• rill t.e heW at the hrie. , ...t ttee eh, eoth Aty •1; • nu the f .rene..n et clay, the 1.1,, Inkrli•h tlle.petal •torlt han,111,1•1.0. thlrty thou• And 41., • •I 1.. n tat int•reaat mnt mitrw' a' la:, ctortsi.lProttrimn tar war • if,l 11..1 !A calm I t, tr pia ma° poz Iron, tn.l lon to, •• Arai • opktr- 04r:tallow, ,o rio or, it. t. 14. Itt:t7 nrIiNING ng had at all timev, Mali LUC , ‘ l ll. —No lit “et 17 I I !. "r leas& .4ns.outs... (1114 R H %Fat! lirla • I 17. 183 OTICE t. beret), given that .tn 4 1 of tit.• Ert.• City 'Hank, will be Mate el reel, in the city 4,( Kele on 1507, l.et ern the boat. of 2 and 4 •, MMITMNEI MONS. D. D. D DANCING AC BILErCr.XS WILL OPEN THURSDAY v CLAss EVHRV Till 110111, fnr otitiVr ft , .r. - until It o'cio k •ir. 1 la.. r r Geut:em• from Y until 10 o Mona lir! ONi; feapfo.tfulif tend Private Pattie., Nebo.lN no: • the. \Etl' ANI I H 1,4111,4111 Schott oche, of lout aelm.ll, Itaaourka,lrma, Ztutrarlou, t boo., Country Intoory, ftvelsk •E out EUrOtiO and link Ulfttr4 characteristic Fancy Dance. THIttlA..--Ilasiers awl %Nom , ' Twelve I.tmernua. Lathe.' tins. %reg. Getkti•rnen • •• Twel• oft 17, ih.,7 —lt23 • FOR SALE TO FI - RNITI - /?1: PIA C01111,14.1 - F jnrtwrh f , tt •t ' with and U. h , •-• , • hctures, Sr rid •n, EX N • Tho olannuataon of • ' hold al th.• places .h •h' 4 4 Girard t.oruohlt , atiJ •' ' rooL, -I rtagarl.: 11 d 1 Crovk and Fro at IL• Woof Ward icbool .mr• t.r.e rte., V. Kelso, II• roontovi. V•rtheac men, Lertroott Wa•h• ngt • o . rent.s.l. troter...rl Licht,. i•tuanco arof WI. n.., oner.. tt(l. The enammat...o. 4 • the aho‘e !map. • Mt I •• recent at that I w i'..4 l fruit la all bract he. ea,p! -.r I r' be seen by teferr.n.: " that a new e•lito. r' a ° School Pepartroet , ' and .tvlo trl.rti thet•" *. be a rT ea ..arr for arhoola for the T, tar doing thie. heretofore grant..l, ••• ior""' e°ll.ldefi4l the Igla N. re County pavers ..ors Wattebnzg Oct !+, Las 7 =it 11=:1 ti it. s 4 .1 - 1. , t , - rsi I=