TILE ERIE OBSERVER. REPIJ. I. SLOAN, talt•r - - ---- ---_ SLOAN it KOORM, Publishers. lIATOIIDA Y News of the Week. The Clark sad Twins tragedy, at Danville, Is. this Bt M, ism brat& to • eosehaskoa oa Friday last by the essestioa of Mrs. Mary Twigs, foe basing taken part in She murder of Ostkerias Aas Clark, by ittcloosiag her with eneski. Tb. kashaad of ' Mu. Clark was emulated os tae mum ekarge, aad was heap oa the 29th of last sea& The grime was committed la the spnag of 1857. Mrs. Clark bad bees as a tisk to Philadelphia, sad Warmed to her home is bad health. The poises is supposed to have Dees administered la her medicine. Mn. Tulip acted assures. Clark sad the were the oats out who &amid. e 4 Mn. Clark dung het Mum. Both were outland oft the strumpet - idreamstaatlal aideue. A new trial was applied for sad a writ of error argued baton the Su. prime Cmort. whim the decision of the loner tribuuni was emairmed. Beery don was =ado to obtain a patios for Mn. Twlpp. Petitions ware extensively circulated, aad bet Gov. Neer, after • carstal review of all the eiroomi la eosuotioa with the cue. Puitiv• l 7 r. lased to gnat the result. The cosdeataid woman pass ed ?kends: sight rather comfortably, duping with ha ehilerea la bee arms. SU had* farewell Is her brother sad eldldrea Friday morals& and after devotional as milieu la bar room, was balm the maiold at a quarter past tea Valet*, Lung as the ant of one of bet spiritual adasers. A chapter hung bees read, sad so Upturn' prayer sewed 14) as the sesiold, Mn. Twigp gooks for eta or eight mbratas, prometlag her Mucous, dada:tug her radium is die mad her trust la • jut Judge, only re. young to aeon Wind her two orphan citildres. She was mat 6 Greeted throughout. The mammy of the sone made men lispreadseby bar VOW asd sobs. knot af, ter the asp was draws over her faro she appealed to God la the most smut meaner, sad ski asserted her luso. eau*. At pm eon* sad thirty minutes the drop fell. aid after angatiag fors few mimeos, the 'crotched wo. sea hug Maw A Isounot sad shawl were found as Monday on the beak of the nasal, our Cleveland, supposed to bolus( to a you* yams who, it is Mlle usuaftted suicide by drowsing loud is the esaal. Te the shawl was pissed • letter, *eines la peas* addressed to "Mrs. KitiaJohas Teswasei, Lek.' Is this letter the writer, who sips Until! Lisa 191311 ass, address( her sister statist the she lied frost hese &best • yedff Niue at the solieltatioa of a rung sea who remodeled himself as a Inkwells' doubt bon Detroit, sad with whom she fell is lore.— She came to Cluelud,where be took her to& house of ilk taste, atessipialted rola sad *es left her. She wont to Buffalo sad @peat the twister leading sa abandoned life.— /a the Grim she west to Clevelaad, tad coos after eagagi id as a suit on • caul beat, where site was brutally used by the sea. Drives t. despair, she resolved to std her life. This is the substance of the liar, and then is lit. tie doubt that it is guiniae, and that "one store aeons sate" has sou to her death. It is believed that atiarder took piano as Wednes day aorsieg lest, sa the We of the Pesasylresis r sad, opposite Mr. Woed's Hotel, st Altoona. A middle aged ass of stoat build, sad &bestir* feet six huh.. Is height, Was feud lyiag as the Inch at sa early hoar.— There were ao wars or bruises oa his pewees, with the ex. eeptios of s wosad received oa the left side of his head, which fractured his skull, thereby cassias death. The wetted was 'rides*, gives by a sisagtabot or some other r owed or blast lastrameat. A theory was started that the I adividral had fails from the Repress train going last, hat this was inch doubted. A Constar's Jury was stea m Nod, tad the body was searched. From letters sad oth er doeuusats found la the pockets of the deceased, his • sate is @apposed to be D. T. Denier. The verdict of** inquiet woe that he *safe to his death by a blow balloted by seise cease askours to the jury • Is his poseessios w as a &het frost Chiesgo to New York, and abort 939 is quartiles and The instruct:Was of Judge Bairns, our special Envoy .to Pusgsay, embody the following poiata. He is to do load ample apologies for Arise into the Water Witch, °h ada a rutilestito 0 the treaty of 1158—frivolously with hold by Lopes—to *egotists a trusty of navigation of the La Platte sad its boughs, for Amoricaa ocionierce, and s ooze hideosity for the looses suotitiod by the UMW States Navigates Goispasy, lad private citizens treated with opposseies. The expoditios la sot exposed to he bloodless, Lopez bavlag the mesas for warfare, sad prat baby the dispotddos. The United States bar. game too far lo woes without oboists( all oar dowels, of die trotted Ninths's, betaking the wearing of crinoline I acompatibis with a true Mistimes profession, somas to be r Way suforsod by the minimills" of that &Domini, t ion. At a Camp meeting of the Gaited Briggirakchuseh receatly held near West Baltimore, Montgomery musty, Ohio ilishop Russel &shads say ono with hoops on to partake of the sammeirat, Arming that they would not be "Memo as tb table of the Lord. I'4We advisee have boa rseeivird st Uri Wu Di. p aromas of the arrival at Tort Vaarovor, Wasbiaros tonna*, se die detaehoseat of troops oat oat I• Jaly last This ristarbiseat masistiss of 450 :serails, left New Tort eity is the 21st of July, sad arrived "'Wool soy esessity *Hopi the toes *lose seam This very rapid trairmissioa of troops Wanes ponds of osr Tut trnitory so remote from gash muter, isms less cossimmisisie is those hostas 'harp o f their tomportotios, Its. It Is irtsttrytog to the mars. moat &de halm. the Petra %riot Comm, ass, haa deoldwi that the arse herd by private Maks, Meads& to *orate as warey, are void., The Judge la hi. opisioa, abty vows re history of Maldag, sad ho of des that the Sere at ash area is sot a astral right, sad that it bo la esalliet with both rams sad *testate I aw. US 'triodes is a fatal blow at the whole brood of ski a-phaeton ta Wass The comarity arid so ima ger *So tho verbless trash sal oosatearee. fro lad rte N. &. Leak paper as addrer of Got. D nes to the people of Karst, retiriag from oaks a. thet hoseedesit the radars* of pesos la the test' tory apse . merit es Oa people dieseelvee Hsu os tba tioversor that they have as arras* of local eiril Wh ere shred by thearetre start disturbers or larder. ear; that they hare jsss sessapliabed the roma& ree d* a a a • Logtaktouns, sad it sakes so satirist Morro who may be geresor. He does sot thtak tho territory yet mired for a State orgarsotioa. Then to a friars la %Is Misr eleetioa sot pas ally asolerstest. TM State Samson are dosed for four year; the meshes of the lows Howe for two yrn.— Than are hroolyave Orators, Water of whoa hold over, sad twelve are to be dart Of the bold-oven Doeglae las tight bad Liras Ir. Of tho Sosaton to ha siesta 04 Espoldioras mast elect sigh to four to vr. sate • majority. They 011111110 t tee San than ones WM. If the lore goes Papattliese the elwatioti say go over for two JOWL Col. Illanitall, of Phlladelpkla, boomtown remarks • litiladolpltia joarsakbas bateatad so artideial boa, that will toosouso hew Dubois of cora, aad lay 1.320 eggs per day. 4UL Naratell also kw two oboe lamblues al meet sespleted—ono, hr making raw dies tato embwobs, sad abolleidas BOW" and &soder that will convert a largest tato better, skews, eras, tad @idols steaks. 011assias, of the llsoessebe &owlet to North Catoll so, les aoldwed another ttimopb for the Boo* sad ad ded a sew wreath to tbe *spiel of the geopapbleal par ty. Ite Ws. by botwootrioal lAlsorvadesi, that • pions. els et Ilto Asa hloostaliii Is Jaeltwa musty, Is 11,7311 feet above the sea, which le Wgber Asa the Mite Koss tabs et lies llaapoldre, teetotalers matted au the moat sity.ldislog of our peaks. - - Ws buss shifts boo Salt Lobo to the Mb Sophie -9°' bar. aid pony Set • Imp mesh* of trains we the we* and It la bored that wow of thew bate bees overta kes by yawl, 'bleb bad abown bog= to fall. At salt Lake loolows woo reviviag, wiped hellos misted be. Woes Oho Illerwoos sod Geosilea Geo. Joked= bad about Mid nos Is saws, Wadden obit* tiers were aide at Pedittidpr. with sospis provielese for the wittier. • assesess west threw\ Raniebats es Thant day his. wits two swierissi fres a dhows sestotetod at a hums idtl is Wm&ligtea sisy. The symptoms von Is maw swell imams So lime shish revisited st the time .1 the MOW Seed *kW, is 1857. Tho warm is this imemes WWI Is Um melees of s physisis as Ter& 0.1. illetiltess e. et Pillsbury* who bus bees q.sdisC the stsamse is Tesseeme, emanitted Mei& st the rest. Ass...( Mu. 0..& Is Wilms minty, ea Meriaseriay.- 0•1. & has bees peed*, isressedi sire the Is.. lessetel polo, sad met le sesslass apperemours of testae it. es. Ista Wm. /IL Colo, towitly of asslimby whom i i . h o t Wel dpi in tisabig rawl, essaisted sitioido on =. iss Mr. Tot, Is oeimerwoo of bating ban is die paraise• of • tieko4 to Ms pa .to Chilhemis. —Me Ai** siremema UM dl• Iloa. J. Giese Jour. olPosakeinsim. has ao•optai lb. appolatakow oiltlaletol M Al..ratr Re vill ► et owns. redo lb mat la Cosirosk OM I.llkiliiie • araisl alsedis • aseapiltp. .00TOlita 30, Ls 3& h. Boot rn the ld*. It hie been a fatsvir ---- tharge:of the Black Rs public/a papers and polltieians,that the Supreme Court, la its famous' Dred Scott deci,ion, dealer. ed that "nevus posseeml no rights that white men were bound to respect." Now, while it is notorious that the aforesaid Court made no slush assertion, in the sense imputed to it; still, if it did it hu been more than sustained by a recent decision by the Supreme Court, of the State of Michigan, composed of four very ultra Repub licans. The fut. of the case are about like this, after reading which our readers will doubtless oonelude with us, that "the boot ill now on the other leg." Last year while a steakter was lying at the wharf in Detroit, a oolored man stepped up to the captain's ofice, and wanted to purchase a ticket which would entitle him to a passage' io the cabin. The clerk of the boat refused to sell him such a ticket. He was offered a deck pas. seoger ticket, and was told that by the • reple tion. of the boat negroes were not permitted to take passage in the cabin. The negro's name is William II Day, and be brought a suit against the owners of the boat for damages in not per. milting him to enjoy a plumage with white per. sons. The Circuit Court denied the validity of Day's claim, when he was inducted by the Black "Republicans" and Abolitionists to remove the case to the Supreme Court of the State, which court deliberately &finned the judgment of the court below, with ate necessary costs The De: troit Pies Press, in oommenting upon this Use, concludes with the following pertinestAnd op porta'. remarks: WIG* the Sereme Court of the UnitOd Slates, in the Waage thee sit DtM ithoth o llrommatled the opiates that were met eiliseas the r,slited &thee molar the Federal Ciestilatkia sad lassyste have a diedeet Neel. lectioa that the whole Steels' "ftepublioaa" press, from the mama Weakens, of Naas ta the wester' boaadaries of Muds Ohis, wealkorrer.struolt aad overwhelmed with the most virtuous tadigaatiea. It declared the deal. Noe to be barber's's; and the vocabulary must have been 'stroked for epithets malted to he baled at the tribasal shish had MM dews sash moastroas doctrine as law; and up to this day every othasioa has been seised by this Black "Republica*" press and by the Black "Republisea" condom in Courses and out, to wall the decision of the Supreme Coati of the United States and to bring it late Pctardisrepute. shall await with some interest and muismity the treatment which the Black uliarthlicsa" press and the Black "Repatolless" ensues will deal oat en %Medic:isles of the Supreme Court of the &Me of Ilieltigan;—becanse, If the feeision la the Dred Soon sue wee barbs:nos, lb* is *Woe in tha W Wiam B. Day MN is Gamely barbaroas; if the doctrine laid down as law is the on. ease was ammo. tress, that laid down as law is the other as. is *diets sad meadeloth. The Supreme Court of the United States simply mimed upon the political 'Wu of the sees se. eording to the Federal Conatithtion and laws; the Supreme Coen of the State of !liaise* has passed upon his social states. The one court deeidad that the aegro, by the law, did mot stand upon a pelitthal equality with the whites; the other court has decided that, if not by the imitate law, by lb. law of eastom, he does sot stead upon a social equality with the 'kites. The oast Court &Hided that be is politically an Gamier bast, the other that he is moral. ly an Works being. The ate eteladed from the Federal scartr, the other endear him from steamboat WMs sad litstrelass rjtlrosd cars. The use dealt with him with reaped to citizenship only; the other deals with him with Teepee, to him maalloomL If the eau degraded him as pert sad paring et the body politic, the other has abased his sad tabled him mid shamed him as part amok pommel of the medal fabric. Let it not be supposed for a roses that vs ocosoltssa this decision of the Supreme Court of the State of Mehl. pa. We do not. We DWI vestals it, as we hays sits tithed the deeisioa of the Supreme Coast of the Delta States. Both is our jaalliaat are maisestly rigkt— Neither Court geoid sake may other decdsiem or, if the Buses* Court of this Stale had made any other &Males, they would have merited the &visite and contempt of the whole country. The feet whisk so wish to briag prom's- - oat in this whets emiamidea is, that the Baprisne Court of the Stets of MI blpa is oemposed of four gentle sea of the Blush "Itepablimm" party, widths) , heroines compelled, whoa this quada of lawn came before thee, to detonates it epos sommea Dense prisciples and in eeausvemtlea of theSieseml priactplee of the Black "R•Pailiktha" Airy. h ave both compelled to de termine It in sthordamme the prlaclples of the Demo. credo party sad of the Deed Scott athletes Geed. They have been compelled to%thaowledge, sad to writs it sp an their eadariag rwranis, that the sops is an inferior being, though la ea doing they have kicked away the plat form apes whisk they sought and walked tato oleo. They have been to go farther than the Bred Scott de tidos west,They have been ethapelled to pass upon the negro as asocial belag sad to pronounce him degraded.— They have been compelled to protease' their owe politi. Irma We Wok the Died &Nett doeision wilt stand la MGM, pa hereafter, sines oar ova Black "Itepublicao" Supreme Court have indorsed it, and sustained it, and goo. beyond it. After this let a hear no more howliog and screeching from such papers as the Gazette and America* over the imputed declaration of Judge Tenney that "negroes possess no rights diva white men are bound to respect." The Black Republican Supreme Court, of the Black Repubs lieu State of Michigan, have gpoe much farther than even that imputed declaration. WHAT'S IN • NAM' T—A good deal—at least, so think our republican brethren, as we observe i their journals in furnishing the returns of the recent elections divide the Congressmen el set into two elsses, : "democrats" and "op position." Nothing is said of "republicans" nor of "Americas'," nor of - "people's candidates," as such; they are all set down as "opposition." If they do not design to drop their distinctive name, why this classification? 'ls it because an analysis of the returns would show that the black republicaas have lost in the recent elections ? They certainly have lost in them—more than the democrats. If the black republicans have really changed their name, they have chosen an appro priate one. They, and all the factions with whom they are associated, never ought to have been called anything else than the "opposition," for their whole were" has been opposition to the priseiplos and measures of the dentoeratie par ty, and that is their muse now. They bare no prineiplei or measures of thew own, and never have had any. Whatever policy the democratic party originate, they oppose it. They and the parties which have preceded them have opposed every great measure which has Veen incorporated into the policy of the government, sines Jitter son's time. They opposed the measures of Ma dison and Jackson and Van Buren and Pols and Pierce. What else can be expected that that they will oppose every measure of the present administration? The "opposition." The name is the perfection of the fitness of things. There are but two parties WV ? Black republicans, know-nothings, abolitionists, disunionist., lode. pendents, have no separate exisamee; all are re• solved into the "opposition." Armen THIX.—The Woe of State Treasurer, in this State, is a snag little birth, provided the occupant is sharp, sad not over 000seientions.— True, the salary is so great shakes, but the "stealing in" is capital. And hence, we suppose, now ths l t the "opposition" have a saajority m the Legislaptre, that particular one. in the gift of that body is chasing down guise a amber of the patriots. Oar readers ail recugliet, doubters, when the "Opposition" was welled "Saar for short, bow their cardinal doctrine was that "the oleo should seek the um, not the sin the Ace." Well, epos the hypothesta that principles never change, we west that the olio of State Tres*. nrer la chasing the billowing guide:nes, with a pretty fat_ prospect of catching one of 'am— usingly : Thomas S. Struthers, of Warren ; B Laporte, of Bradford; Bli Q. Slifer, of Uoioo U. Souther, of tlk ; David Taggart, of Nor thumberland ; sad, we dot's know bow wispy more, whose Dann lutv'st got into the newspa pers. 0119. Dss, arrive 4 at It. Leak as Swards; from ;Lwow. aet`eekteWplatrretaesteg to Ow Toni- Wry. 11119 fareiteriel Ikantarit grin psi the *taw el a.u_ weall Ow Itsehlies Nis On 11111111047. A Sensible Yin►. The other day the New York Timis, by all odds the wet reasciSable Republican paper in the Union, had a very sensible article on the'sub- ject of the acquisition of Cuba. The occasion which drew the rinses out was something like this : Daring the last campaign in Ohio, Tom Corwin expressed himself in favor of admitting Cuba as a slave State io case it should be acquir ed by the Government This excited the appre hension of GiddingS ; he thought of the "aggres sions of the slave power," and wrote Mr. Corwin an admonitory letter, instructing him that it was the policy of the Republican party to resist the admission of nay more slave States intothe Union. To this epistle Mr. Corwin lass not yet replied, and if he does, it is to be presumed that his po sition will be explained without being modified to suit the peculiar views of Gidding. „The con troversy between these two persons will develop the views of the Republican pert; concerning this important question ; and ,from present indi cations it is not likely to be a unanimous coo du' Ilion. The "old abolitionists," together with-that portion of the Republicans who, as ithigs, have always opposed,tetritorial acquisition, will doubt less array the,niselves in opposition ; but thou• sands of conservative men in the Republican ranks,inen with Demoorstio antioadento--will 10164 in the wake of the Times, and aid in admit ting the "gem of the Antilles" to the American Ilion. If we recollect right, even the eccentric Genii Smith, who is an Abolitionist becanss be is a philanthropist, and not like Giddings and his crew, philanthropists because Abolitionists, while a member of Congress advocated the ac, quisition of Cuba, slavery and all, on the ground that it would be beneficial to the negro race, as well as of vast advantage to the country And this is the view of the Times, as it is the view of every sensible man It ho has reflected upon the übjecst Speaking of GTDDINGS le tter to Cor win, that paper says : "His prediction that the Republicans will op, pose the admission of Cuba unless her Slavery is abolished is idle. That Party will do no such thing. Now that it has discarded Mr. Giddings, it may be doubted if a single member will vote in the manner he predicts. When we acquire Cabe, it will be with the distinct and general an. derstandiog that she shall come in as a Slave State. The North, would, indeed, gladly have it otherwise; but it is utterly chimerical to ex pent that we are to get that island for the pun pose of liberating its slave population. There In many reasons, commercial and political, why it is desirable that we should acquire Cuba; and when time as opportunity serve, we shall accept her, Slavery and all. It is au existing limits. Lion there, to the establishment of which we have not contributed, and our dominion certainly will not make the oondition of the slaves worse than it has been and new is. On the contrary, by putting an end to the Slave trade, it will vastly improve it. Is Mr. Giddings acting as a true friend of the colored nee, by insisting, as he vir• tunny does, that Cuba, with her hundreds of thousands of slaves, shall continue under the rule of Bpais, and be for all time the sole support of the African Slave trade in the New World ?" The great majority of the people of this clouts try would rejoice at the peaceful acquisition of Cuba. Ito natural connection with the United States, its necessity in time of war for our defence, and its.superior advantages in a commercial point of view, far outweigh all sectional questions of Slavery, or Northern or Southern prepondentnue. The tittle or the manner of its acquisition is an other question, n hich future events must de termiae. A tior MIIILDIMIUL—A little negro boy, but nine years of see, named Charles Point, was sr. rested Saturday by officer Sperling, sod brought before Justice Purdy, on a charge of attempting to commit murder. The boy is just out of jail, where he has been serving out a sentence of six ty days for the latency of a watch. ile improv ed his liberty by taking the first opportunity to steal a jackknife from a boy of about his own age In passing along the street, he met a little child but three years old, $ son of Mr. William Drew, who was playing upon the sidewalk in front,of his parents' residence. He immediately set upon the little fellow, caught hint by the hair pulled his bead over one side, and deliberately attempted to cut his throat. The gash which he wadi wu about four inches long, extending from the windpipe around to a point just back of the ear. Fortunately the knife was dull, and the in cisioti did not injure the wind-pipe or any of the prinCipal arteries, and thus the ohild'e life was saved. His father, who happened to be near, ran to the spot, and secured the young villain, holding him until the offieea- came up. Justice Partly sentenced him to the House of Correction, acedrding to the statute, until he shall be 'twee. ty one years of age. The child who was injured wee cared for, and will recover without serious injury.—Detroit Free Press. K.Amaas Ritionwrtort.—From all accounts, Kansas must be steadily filling -with emigrants. The Jowrool of Commerce, of October lst, pub, tidied at Kansas city, Missouri, states that over fifty wagons left that town, the day before, for different sections of South Kansas. Among them were nineteen families from the States of Wis. cousin, lowa, Illinois and Ohio. It states, also, that the land emigration, for the past two weeks, has been larger than at any other time this year, and adds: "Oar city is every day crowded with detach ments of this immense emigration, and there is one feature about this moving multitude that we cannot fail to admire—it is an emigration of fathers, mothers, sons and daughters, with all their household effects, and thew stook and im plements of agriculture, to provide for their mein swum through the cultivation and bounties of the soil." Panama or Tuausa Mousy.—Close upon the discovery of the immense forgery of Turkish paper money in this city come revelations of at. tempted forgeries of Turkish coin in Engler/rd. Moat probably the woman who imposed upon one of our city printers was a member of a gang who have divided their operations between the two countries. A Greekmerchant, named Antos Ma Calvooomesi, residing in Manchester, Ent. land, was the first party arrested on that side of the Atlantic, the charge against him being that be bad caused to be made in Birm i ngham aisle quantity of Turkish piastres, for oirodati on to Alexandria, Syria and Turkey. About fifty five pow of coin were made ea forwarded to him before the fraudulent nature of the transaction was suspected. Calvooonisai was committed for trial but admitted to bail, the offence being a vaiedemeanor and not a felony. Immediately following upon this arrest Game a discovery that a similar fraud was on foot in London, the parties to it being two Frenchmen, named Boiserrole and Sopa. They bad sego. timed for and procured a die press, and were is treaty for dies for Turkish wine of various val ue, reKereatia theomalm as authorised pate of the Turkish °versant. Begird° n seems to have been • tad by their presenting worn ape, 'sena of ' sad desiring dies that would be a 2 fee simile of their worn etedition. They had so far succeeded that the dies were procured, and impressions takes to test them, and MOW put • chased and shipped to Liverpool. Flagon was arrested, but Bourerrole bad lo ft and arraeges amnia bad been made foe shipping the press and dies abroad. It was supposed that the coinage was to be made abroad sad that Boiserrole bad gone to some foreign port to, restive them. The CISIIIIIkadOS of flegoa had been postponed to allow offarther search for ids accomplies. —N. Jr. , ,,Otexitimag. =, Roonsirrmt, Oct. 23.—Ira Stou l t r ,=ted of the murder of his bream:obis-law, :, ted here yesterday. rr ' rl atik At fifteen mittatee put Oro o' je prof 8h cession, headed by Deputy , reset ed the jail The military ire drawn up in limes so as to open a passage to • jaii. Akatam as they bad arrived and she plus wiped them by the Gibers, Ors yr, Imams; ilea brought down from )6 room to die pilaw*. He wu supported by Deputy SberiS Pond and Merrill, and fop6wed by his spiritual idyll's% Messrs. iloterikiss, Camino and Boardman, and others.' The r(risoner was arrayed la a salt of bleak, and Wore on his head s white esp. His step was tolerably firm considering the het that he had a epell of hinting about noon. Oa resehin i f ie tt ri l gallows he took a seat, while Deputy Warner read the death warrant in a distinct and forcible manner. At the esonolusios of the read ins, Mr. Warner told the prisoner that the time had arrived to put the warrant into meatiest, and that if he had anything to my be had now an opportunity. Stout did not rise, but while seat ed, in a clear and fi rm voice, sai d: "Gesstiessem-1 aft of opinion that there has been oonsiderable vindictiveness in this setter, and where there is vindictiveness it is dillieult to speak. I have left my oracle, which contains an expression of my feelings as a dying man, and that (wafting all I have to say." Rev. Mr. Hotchkiss, then standing at the pri sonar's right, said be would read the whole of the fifteenth chapter of let Corinthians, at the request of the prisoner, the prisoner meanwhile seated with his head supported by hisrigt a and. At the conclusion of the reading of the Mr. Hotchkiss mid he would address thTri - Ze of Grace, hoping that the prisoner would find strength to follow in a short prayer. Mr. notch kiss then made an impressive piapr, *dab In.. terested the audience, if It did not the prisoner. The prayer coneludesi, Mr. Hotchkiss conversed a moment inaudibly with Stout, and then said that Stout desired him to my that he did not feel strength to pray, but heartily adopted the whole of the prayer be had just heard. The Deputy Sheriffs, officers and friends, then shook bands with the prisoner, and Deputy Sheriff Warner put the rope about his seek sad drew the cap over his facie. While the oilleers were pinioning his arms, Stout stood quite ereet; and remained in that attitude till the last. He was quite firm in his demeanor, and gave the same complacent smile to all, in bidding adieu, that he gave at all times, when conversing, since his ar. rest. All being ready, and the spectators standing in breathless silence, at twenty minutes put three o'clock, Sher iff Babcock pulled the fatal line, and Ira Stout was suspended three feet from the floor. Not a sound was heard in any direct tion,_sive the heavy fall of the weight which did the fatal work. The death of the ill-fated man was not as cud. den as could be desired. His struggles for eight or ten minutes were metre sad classed tbe epee tutors to turn away is , disgust. His neck was probably not dislocated, and be died by the slow of strangulation. Drs. Hall, Avery, process and Miller stood near ' and in eight min tea after the drop fell, they mid his pulse was fall as in life. At the end of half an hour his body was cut down and placed in the wan, pre paratory to being taken to the residence of his mother, in Exchange street. Stout petitioned, in his own band, for a emu% mutation of punishment. The petition is writ , ten in a bold, firm hand. Tbere• are some few things, such as capitals and punctuation mispla oed, that evince a deficient education, but the spelling is nearly faultless. There were no sig nature attached to the petition as received by Gov. King, hat it appears it was not the original paper, which was subsequently laid before the Governor by the mother of the prisoner, with a large number of signatures Mrs. Stout was in Albany up to a late hour on Wednesday night, hoping against he for some change in the Governor's detenninadon.— Governor King was not in that city, but the poor woman awaited a teletrashie despatch from him with the most intense 'fluidal She left for a final interview with her son, entirely broken down in spirits. Mrs. Stout appears quite a re spectable woman, and is evidently the best of the unfortunate family. A horrid massacre has occurred on West 80th street. Two persons were murdered, 5 wounded, it is supposed mortally. The victims are the family of Francis Gouldy, Esq., lumber mer. chant, consisting of himself and wife, two sons, two daughters, and a servant girl. The eons, aged respectively 9 and 12, are already dead, and his wife is dying. The others cannot sur vive. The murderer is the eldest son of Mr. Gouldy. He has committed suicide. His motive is said to have been revenge, he having been detected some weeks ago in the net of rob. buil; his father of a large amount. Francois A. Gonldy, the murderer, is about 19 years of age, and was a dissipated young man. He was let in last night by his father, and immediately went to his bedroom in the third story and took off his ooat and boots, then seised a hatchet which he had kept in his room, and crept down stairs.— The father had but got into bed when the son entered the room unnoticed, and split his skull open. He is now reported dead. Mrs. Gouldy receivedlhe next attack. Her skull being frao; tared, and face bruised frightfully. It does not appear that either of the parent, uttered a scream stifficiently loud to alarm the other members of the family. Two young brothers were next ate tacked and are likely to die. The two servant girls were next severely injured. The two young sisters having their door locked, escaped injury. Young Gouldy's suicide, was the first matter which attracted the attention of the Police, who broke into the house and ascertained the s tate of affairs. Physicians were ailed and everything possible done to allay the sufferings of the vie. time. The eldest boy has a compound fracture d the skull. Mrs. Gonldy's injuries are less dangerous, but her recovery seems very doubt-, fal. The servant girls were less injured than any of the others. Nisw Y Oct. Mrs. (Leidy, the young sur oux, derse 28. s step mother, is able to converse, and states that a Frank same in she was just retiring, sad he said to her, "why mother, are you up yet?" Yes, Frank, was the reply, I am up yet. Hp then peened into the room wberaMr. Gould; was, and then she beard some unpleasant words pass between them, and finally heard a 'heavy fall on the floor. She had just go into bed and thought to her self:—lt is pOss&le that Frank hen struck his father? And at that moment Frank same into her room, partially raised the netting from around the bed and dealt her a heavy blow mi the bead with a hatchet. She screamed sad sprang up, sad he repeated the blow twice, when elle fell heavily to the floor, breaking down the siting as else fell. Hopes are entertained of her recove r she is comparatively oomfortable, but her sondities is extremely critical, and ber injuries very dim. prow. Johanna Murphy, one of servants, is suffering the greatest agony, ones of her face is paralised, sad when she was brought to the hospital she was speechless. She is now de lirious and the chances of her living very slight. The ease of Elisabeth Carr, the other servant, was not considered dangerous. Sho says that when she got to the seeond floor she raw Frank with a hatchet in his hand striking his mother and Johanna, both of whom fell. Elisabeth wrested the hatchet from the murderer and ran into her room in the Sd story, but could not ' fasten the door for want of a bolt. He followed her and said "give me the hatchet, Liasie; I do not wish to kill you, I only wish to escape."— ' He then wrenched it from her and gave her three blows on the bead and they left her deid as he supposed. IMP A man always isehiad time ought to be tad w Maw EMI =EMI Ezoontioa of Horrid 'birder in Hew York. Nsw Yam, Oot. 27 OBSERVER. ux'au I. 6 AID i , ii:= i i ~-1 - ---r- ---- -, - ~ - -- ---r--- iha la ' ' to lb "boot at the IVA Ofiaii NOW, Depot, for • eopy Of Kuala for November. !ees et the etatetiegkt of the 4kti4R/ Oemsterre, to smother oakum "Tbo» was no quoruna in the Common Conaoil on Monday oroning—wassoquontly" no bar done tho dry 441wooii. LN sreligive as.. J. JP. lI*D, of tbl chi; is ;bout to realm at Made(haat. aewt rttliiiesma, Midas accepted • call Area • hag/tartan oossreptios thfrs. - J. a. Bdisa's allO4 Ml Shoo sfiverilismsat is so sew tolsais is worthy at Ilia mission of all—espssisliy thoo• rho are " olho 4 r is iliessilerstsulisig. Somebody um "ever ►oar treat to debt, Is a year spent I. slavery." It that I. at, we bays quits a munber of eabeertben wbo delight to speed yeah lo slavery. -- The Nos York papers, fines the Prise Flea, ad vertise "Beeman natl." We presume the nest tight' will be Illombey brogues, sod Stout seek•tiss. It is said there were one hundred sad fifty *opti onal* toe the seat on the &wens Beach made •aeaat by the resignation of Hon. Ws. A. Pewter. Bon. Ciaplord Obarob, of Crawford county. appoint• ad to tbo %promo Judgeslap la play of Hos. Anna A. Polar, redgeod, took kb moat on tbo boweb on Monday hat. A bed of bog or tuts beat aiseorered neat Ustoo Kills i• this musty; bat abeam is ilatiatity sulteleat to jestify the melba of iroe work. hat tie* yot bees mfr. Waal. Elootiotts wUI b• hold next Maeda, it Now York, New Jong, Massoalitastts, *Waist*, Illinois wad Wia. coil/dn. As to Sub testit, not one of 'to eat do won* sham jPonasyintht—thoro is sea mean it that! T. wow Methodis Oben* put wail& No eity unite, to Progwoodeft lady. wad idiom ttabolowl will will meth to till appoorowoo of that pwt of ow ..emwal. ♦te . Prof. Cot.rr teetered at Park nail. last 40,0610 g. on the Moore of mask. The Professor Is Jelin:Wood to noires taste for masts saws, as, sad the Indications are that he will sueeetel. At rails a tba "used that tried oeo'e maim" Way be seen a 1 Haw& Bilio3ll, earner at JIM and Stale attests. Is is a laws unexploded bosbdwil, and was found embed. did in the Waif, ow Um loassloa of t b ► "old Ti rancb Port." Got. faro, of New York, has ippuinted ThursdaX, the I ✓ith of November, aa a day of Thanksgiving end Prey er. Gov. Picker has not yet indiested a day. Perhaps he thinks we have nothing to be thankful for in- Po:mail! Tanis; and, politically 'peaking, we tiibilt we bat'ut. Nest week this trial at Fogs for the ardor of D rnttto.t , which cessured is this city last &maser, will asks plies, Masa UN COM* Is. the prisoner pt a eon slanasce, which we are told will be applied for. Tb• Prot mewls' Attorney will be aesiated 1$ eesdoetioit the cen• by Joss H. WALXIP., lA, sad tbondefetlr• sill be roa ds/tad by Messrs. Lyon Doustasai Are Ire error to be blessed trltb gas light on oar Woo ts oasis? Is tie mallsbnese—lbe ball-beaded °NO RA oy —of the majority of oar "city fathers" to Imp us al mays le orbitals sad mud? Them am, questions that cows items to Me eederstassdiag otevery man mite Wu say re ptd fee Ma eve ostmfert or the repletatton of the city.— Tbo lie, alliated =gyps men i blessing eoaspeeed to a majority at sat city goversisset The Sisters papers *ask ei a rumor that Tow Byer had challenged Illorriasey to light for $lO,OOO a Ade: The Clipper pabilattee a letter from 011orriseey, lo which he declares that after the fait with Rieman, be should retire forever from the ?tile tint We Alcamo& the broken nos* be got ott Long t Mat bas eeedirtaed him la that opinion• Coroners juries reader mite queer verdicts, and hem is the queerest we have mut to a long tram+. An aged eitisen of Schenectady, N. T 4 went to bed last Vriday night as well as usual, sad died ;before lauraiug. The Oor OMIT hold as taliabaat, a4d the jury returned the follow ing verdict • "We tad that, by his extreme ago. and die woo of the boast, the sass Almighty puwer that placed him here has taken him to himsett" The odour term of the Ildinhoru :gtauml Sobo,l ooseateoee• as Moody, the ant of Norembor. This eoltool le le baro of Professors ! Mt/MIKAN and Sseei , thew lobos iMO MAN thotooiebie sitoocoolishod odue-luors d aot, WI bolter*, &lin la Ale part;of the State. For • • ttesilaro tbo reader to referred to dm ad, ertliemobt la ti• other oolomo. -- Beggars are onsestous. The other day o e, largo • Dough to stud • hand with hicnilearpy, visit (Mr 'sae. Ism, tad p 111111114114 it paper, very carsfull ad and preserved between inotoado covets, which led that he was ea exiled Hangerian who bad ra all eons of hardship* la so dui:rain prison, and • sem psuiotima for aid. Not being . reek a thumping defeat in the , great deal of faith in the Roam r ed to the door, and told him to on. He took the Mat ud ' fa our midst, begging w cadet. Beware of all sue itna.The ifolf• i i/states that Gin dwelling hoots* of Mr. George Med° on, of Wert Millertst, was burned down on Tuesday ruing. The Sr., we anderstatd,orl - slashed by s °femme defect turtle disuse,. Mn. King who occupied s haute at the dal*, succeeded in raring about all of Is household property. The boom was ma ritally* • new one, sad the loss a quire serious one to Mr NI , who had ao hisiaranen This is the third dwell ! g hoses that has been burned le that Immediate ebtgtq during the past year. -• Mr. Josses lost his house tit la; Mr. Wm. M'crinwre holm was bossed a week or tiro dines. - Tll4l Cleveland Piendraier tells soma good mime but the best it over perpetrated is at the expense of an en% astride' travelling agent for well known Cleveland Tomb Stow ManalaotOry, who 'stair made a basiness visit to • small own is an adJohdag toasty - . Bearing in the 'tillage that a man la the remote . part of the township had lost his wife, be thought be would go sad me kiln Lod of for hilmconselaticta and a grave mime on his nameable terms. Be started. The road wee • frightful one, bat the spat persevered read lastly invited at the bereaved man's Imam. Bereaved man's hired girl told the spot that the bereaved sae was split/leg fence rails "over in the pastor about two milda." The ladefatigable agent faulted his horse and started for the "pastor." After felling Into all master of mad boles, scratehieg himself with briars and rmahlieg over decayed logs, eh. .snot at length found the bereaved man. la a ssibdaed voice be asked the man if ha bad lost his wife. The man said be lied. The *gait was very sorry to bear of it and sympathised with the man very do/spy Is bis putt agleam ; hot death be (hid, was an insatiate amber, sad 'ha lowa all, both of a high sad low degree. Wormed the man "that whet was his loss was her ohs," and would be glad to - sell - hita a gravestone I. mirk the spot where the beloved ose slept—marble or teems close, ea he *hose, at prices defying coespetitioa. The bereaved eras said there was "a Ifttle difficulty in the way.' "Baran you lost your wife ?" iagalred the' egoist "Why, yea, I have," said the map. "but no grave stag ain't seesesuy ; yea is. the caned *Auer ain't dead.— Bates saunas wrest *soma IRAs r The agent retired PREIS /76 1 .1111.—The Moadvillo Spirit of dr Age enamels with bestrilag enority,upoo the meant brutal prise fight, whisk took plan in Cando last week, the pariloulare of widelime gam la eta last. Whit most of what the .4ge rays ars mgrs—bat it wimps to us that is tho paragraph when it mays, "The tasking Ono* of them brans took pleas in war lowa Bat.--.y., even in an ad• joking strany—Efie has the bean (!) of having had the enqacwor pat la mead.* within her herders, and her astkorities am so mesh as said aay,"—that paper amts nisetisa epos war Aisne sad arena our "authorities" .very unsay. It is very easy to say what "authorities" ought to do la a gives sin, bat it is somotimes very Mat ruh to lad "satheitty" far nob easplalate t Aid mob is ths ease la this. What law is there la lienarylnabi to renal John II °Worry Ming up his quarters in any towasklp i. tin State, not easeelstag himself, heeordiag I. the Mrs lit madisim," pprighoiry se aogistag la • prise UMW the edig provine of Canada ? W. knew of anon but It war omemporary of the Api don, and win pent It sit, we slam him we - will give oar "au thorities' pardoner "ilta" fee aogieetleg their duty. Oidniall'• Milken is arty law to tin emmeary, *uather. Idea" of Eris eseuty are very mush to blame for snouts' lota Alannsey to Mee at six la the sterna& hidain is a sold bath, be will united dein by his traisar—.ark In or fit miles beifermilmikleat--dimpauM that meal at 6 detest, eseakitissif tan beef soak, washed data with a sap of guess mew or a glass of sin—mursise is lbs "mai; art st mitfitahme brpOiffio to Ahm.g.— sad p *mei simear tellulag treat dant to sapper— Isl e it sit do slim linsi e sbess is as law to tin esafaary. ?eating to Amens i.ry patriotic, atter A, mid Doter having a Austkong. We Just point• travel in good round Sax. but Ire prase's', he is still .se lan, tad stealing where be "patriot." lien It seems I.- :us the "aeth--rilles of BIG mom • are Mt so mach to Masers for "Dever 41, weak Iti:*7l What do you think, Yr. Apo? f , * *The cook, the boss es end are tare oa which oar dom east Khasi' njnbing Is passible ,in ideal . ell molted dinner, the tidy se;lii sb ire DE: marks of eivillsetiain. Helve' them:ell is barbarism." ' We led the shoes In one of our exchanges; there is a biratillui to ft:lora: gist' t.isithrilia happiness depend upon the "co4k, the housemaid and the laundress," though-popular In the Wade fif assay, Is mew times so perverted as to appear almost etilieutleae. A lit tle Incident, related by a friend, will illasitrate this. A few weeks sines oar friend and hie audible lady were step slag ate oonatry linage inn, not a theasand smiles from hero, mid deriag the erre/fag were called epos by a gen, Semen and lady who resided in the dilgitlambood . As esual at snob meetings the wows of the salgibothoodi was dimmed, cad among other things tatted over was the death of the wife of a mutual amparetanee, all agreeing that their trieod Smith had met with a graft lam "Tee,' maid the burtliog little laadlady, who just then made her appearance In the room, "poor 111 r. Smith was very War. Imams; Tory unfortunate indeed, and felt very bad; bat then his loss was pot so bad as it might have Way /or Ise And a eery e.azellott cook sof tit , /amity at bit tint." It II seedless to say that the seriousness of the rabliset wail for gotten, in a general buret of laughter at the geed landlady's idea of the mitigating oireamstanaes In "poor Mr. Smith's THE LAST FREAK OF FASHION.—AiI the fluke Instable world knows, and so due the natimhionable. that plumpness and rosy health have foe a king time item eo• led by upper tisodom as exceedingly vulgar. Slate poodle sod vinegar have been an efiential element is fheitionsiblie toilets, white fresh air and exercise were looked num u enemies of beauty, not to be tolerated by the Flora Ma Flimseys of "our good society." Mrs. Pottipher, however, has had • new revelation; at least, so one of the ifew York upon say and this revelation is said to have resalted from the news reoerved from Francs that country air sad pure milk bars had such an effort upon the Empress that elm has become plump, and decidedly inclined to embus poial—what among vulgar people would be coiled "stone. —ld whist% the Emperor has expressed nabouded marts- Amnion, and Jestess it to be andormood that he gneiss the osearecrow system - relinquished as far as poseibie. Thie intimation has occasioned the greatest tionseenatien. The ladies of the email are in .lespair. Large quaatities dimi ties, and pounded rose.leaves, and butter and near, are eaten; bat this nukes then' bilious, sad due set produce the rounded softness sod peachy bloom which particular ly distinguishes the Empress. The young ladies, 'sputa ly tilos*. who ars engaged, drink with the most religious devotion a cdp of new milk three time' a day, lied eat a great ileal of bread and butter, with poodles sod cream— s favorite dish of Eugenie's. (Mom.--Emosible irocian. that Eugenie peaches and cream is a fevorito dish of ours.) Pickle* sod vinegar are wholly ignored, and can be height by the I.arrel for a mere uothiag. Young giadoses it society ars lakiag up the subjeet with enthusiasm. No thing 12 talked of hut l'embortpoini, Dretniabliti are per. featly insane with the rush of costly toilette which re quire enlarging, and mammas speak with thegreallut soar pleteeoey of the inches which have been'added to the MOO Of I! Oil then there le one bright page in lifee written book that yon hate skipped, cod you cannel appreoiate the following from the pen of a lady who fully appreciates the beauties of nature at thii- , M1013 of the year "October in the costa. try is far more beistit.fo' than October in populous places. Here where "woods and testers meet," end when the feet may tread, where the eye. survey, we east Moll along the musical bills and inlay valley* 'bora the wild demote' before the deep mouthed bounds, nod the red fox cowers among the bramble.. Here the 'sound of dropping nets' —the falling I —the hedge. thick with Brim and scarlet berries—soft and bracing atmosphere, fr‘k from the mole crowned hills, all tend to buoy up the tired seal and bathe eye and car and brow with mild delleinassees. Bat In a eity—smoks crowned and monotonous, with her moving tide of busy life, her cold etelleheeesi--one can sir ly look far off to the diataat bills, while the bout loop for a stroll among the deep ravine. and embattled hills.— Come to the woods, ye oity 'tired, weary outs; Co.. new, while the trees have their glory on, and gather health and strength and wisdom from it aIL"7----Ou Saturday but, the deed body of an infant was found 'oa Geeslin. street, about two Miles from Main, la Buffalo. It was berried to the Polteeil Field, no light having Isms thrown upon h wo or wen it lame in its present position.—Miles Nichol s a resident of the third ward, tit the same city, was &pre- , heeded Sooday, on a charge of grand larceny, in means' a cow, which be .old to another party. He, like Topsy, "fessed,"4nd wee sent op. His reason for etealiag the sow was, brie , "want I"—Last week's Waterford isqvirer bee a mul,eepital article, to reply to the charge of the ConneautAkit awirier that:Geo. Dick wee the victim of Democratic "seduction" ;A corning out for Congress ise a volunteer. The Salaam- 1. severe, but just, and we ad vise all our readers to procure a copy and read It.—The grand jury i New Tort are walking into the rescalities of that tarlin ing atty. Ladietmeots have been famed against , 5 1 a number Corporation °Metals and eettnieters, en Olen gee of tra grosfing out of transactions eauseeted with the Stroll Depeirtment. And the It•Oordittfr , ea 81101 1 1461, sent up t the Penitentiary for for mouths Mr. Ittehard Is Burr, of the School Cesamiseioness, for an aapreeek (id and Savage assault men Mr. Wolfe, perpetrated in a hens@ °fill Came.—Among the Jews in Oiseianati, the custom is housing prevalent of patiehlig in tie papers annoenewnseata of betrothani. If the custom should be edupted among ahrlstiens, whet an tasseene ameaut •l gossip ii would seve.- , ---Steturday eight two yosag Ger. mans, living in the same loose at Chaelissiati, attempted to commit asields, 000 by cold poises and the ether by sold steel. Rejected addressee were the cause, is both tat stances, for the attempts' seltdeatruetion.---It it said that Mr. Baritianan's message will take etrong ground in favor of a Puler Railroad BilL He will steteit the plan of eonatraction.—The last Overland Mall brings lettere from San Francisco with Information of the arrival of • vessel from Jape?, announcing new and important eon• eessiuo. by that Government to foreign commerce. pa- W. want to ask the Gazette one gazaitioa! Was Wilson Laird sleeted to the Legitlntact %manse he was, at the time Lecompton was a /ire Ime, as aati-Losesep tea Democrat' If be was, then the Gases* is right ia clueing him, as a member of the Lagiabetare, as eati-Le• composts. if he was not, then the Gamete had no more right to class him tints tha.lt has to elass his ansong,the Repaidlimas. The question is not, what Mr. L. was what the Leemantoe bill waaa live Issas; bat what the people atiderstood he wee when they voted for his.- The Deasooratio party voted- for lda ae a Delaoevat, without an "eau," or say ether prat, while time Bo publicans and old Ulu whip who pea klat i thair lappet% did so tor miaow outaide polltleal eittiolderaloas.— We Wag yo. tha ape* .haply states what la sot trite, when it asserts that he time elected es that loses. Unwell os ns Scriminv iikll4lloAD.—We lean that a man awned Weer, an °venter as the wbrit of the gas , bury Had. was murdered at Oweeord e ea Tisswilay norm fag by as Idahoan i. MS 'motel. The frets. uwe is. tier Mem from the story of as dim who was paresis' the aarderes, an as follows: The trishaws had twee the day before ejected from pnblie house in Usion, where he was tiering a Imlay spree. Be attributed his- ejootment to ()elver aad another over, seer, who with preheat. Tha aszt atoning. is Colter was panto( ea* Of the shanties hs II ILI attested by the Irish. man, who:with a pleb handle beat hies so severely, that he died In a few hours. Aa siren van made to arrest the militias,. but his Meade laterfered andimiablemi him to get away. A teirsed . or s s6o is °Orel for hie arrest The fonespiesb tbs- sisseatat beadlike ilsessipties et tessisbe&sa by tboalleo Oa n—"ab k eetsweskayeave yews akl—ool+Wag,sisab owl .Abook oa esoselbs,listst seatilbeillitiiiiiit=6d. ee yews blue ettieelb, bi MKt i lbr l~rl 641 . foes le *SA lbsra small pea.—laikaa. NEW YORR . 11101Peoptoadeuee of the trieOluervor.3 ' - Now You. • Arba is. arasapialp *Wet liskfte her dm I*, SO Ad 411 e 11•40 rook trout this hia astoalskasot. Stun ettostrustat e n an n pop„ : sap* hears a striklog rsomblaaat te that ss .sha iraialarra la..alisaisarat la ,iasala INftat 4 greatiolo. AO win OW get om o , t h i , 46 ; 4 to latakos usoortaisly, sad ottaol doubt pr nik who wUI be hardy encash to take tithed for , 44 4 trip. IMII=MI The other "sousitios* ou tb• tapir la of kW% N is .lei. {what you try to prosoasoo the saw, thi s k tm : isy and ysahl Lit IL) 1114 Lae soble Tosco, . 4 6,7 6 it ibis, se a 4 4~ to as &Pos t powibto peon, k„, : boo also dtoos reqiioltito wide! an still wort 106_ rb toto is a candidate der popular favor, rig bo t i k t i44 7 , sad .pill. drowse*, Is bet history 114 117 pso, plo wbo sum Ilttio toe opera rub frsatieally t,, logo of bolsi nog at by a gourds* Priocooe loiltarstaro, we kari link of a etriking ek inftit local story Jut bray& oat by the Messrs Appia tou Is leaking a kn. It k estitint , Itioodo sale The plot of the story he simple *sough, bet titsgk api e Now Tort life sod itertieslarly of artist life eat are pignut sad win sal the boob readily-4 o minute we have bad hardly as 7 yowl Iltsratore for soy t s,.. Lesgflow's sew poets Is asdettolag the wt.& pi eritionn sad mute with a good sale. TM Weal pato &rein. , crew OC CUP/tag taiihn than their share of the pablle mutation. well i n d la pie ere quite at a lees to kaow why the sewspop o ,, wilmb mash wake of the "great asill MO/eft blorrlesey o w 16. acre" Tha mom sell aot b Awed to ally - the crowds attest the weengsper Ayes oa the ON mews of the e.aa4 was swatted. The esi strata of lbw amwassaky mated to be shawl lowest deeps. . Tie is 1. that these two we the saes old had whisk Ms Mee the eta for peaty say Moe Wei the "Wad Rehblts" sad "Ileasea" The latter "crowd' data the *emu. This. wee also • the matt, whist Awed s ' tag et gambilleg, wee el the tables was healed ap this der sad disorderly prank Wilier ma be proved doubted. The w Icb amet Rabb ed to to sr.: mirth/ u hide lair Burdett ate. The weather le p sad tlitestasiag Isla. CE TI m - The r • was very 'axiom last week thu 'Meld &dill that tile defeat of tiN Dolicolthsfbni &see wu • sassed by tee Kailas silky °file W. did' do It, sod it is sot my likely questa, 441 t • neighbor will ~s pilsr if be Wiest some see fault lib, we respeothelly call his stilettos to the i • sweats, tress two et the boding opposition • ewe, la which the fact is atialtted that It wheat but rotes:ties that did the business. Iliad— Lad this sue fuse (proteetios) in Peas/Wm* hue mated a decided saajority to the people' ✓ ilia Buts, ewes If eseatiose relative to Kansas tend late the =Mat, sad the People's patty t beet *wised of the aid whisk they received fru ti-Lessesspila besseseste.—Yersi Ass, The taiilf would then have beak the ahamie of t►e premed, year; Lad eves a thine nor admitted that It Ilse had more to do with the ci Miasma's patty I. Peaasylvaala than ores 1b ass News. r+~-r k num the !UMW Herald of Freedom. oct. It CONIIRRVATIVIS TRIUMPHANT —The. Wan journals of Kansas are elaiming a ma, of radar:ails in the next Territorial Legislate' On a careful examination of the returns in our possession, we find the conservative State men, and the Democrats, have trews out of the thirty=nrwerraembers These twt ties will be able t,J set together to prevent and inoonsiderate legislawoo, and wall cheat co-operate in preparing a healthy node or for the Territory if Brown and Naimoli& ties shall have eh...AA a moderate man Marshall shall have elected somber, as same is the case, then the conservatives LI twenty six in the Legislature. W e are with the result in the Territory, se ve ki lts friends will be, and we trust our redid st• seats will find equal cause for rejiewg DRZADPUL ACCEDINT ON rut 80 . New YORK CITY RAILROAD—FITT KILL/X.—We regret to be obliged to another of those dreadful railroad casuali which several persons were killed outrigl more seriously injured, and a Still -- her more or less disabled by contusions The night express train from New Y leg west, met with an accident this about nine o'clock, about a mile east by which the engine. tender, baggage passenger cars were smashed up, involr, of five lives, besides inflicting dangerous serious wounds upon others. The train was running at the usual track being on an ordinary ditch a few feet above the level of the coat_ passenger and baggage oars, it was foul, off the track, and before the speed of '' could be checked, they were completel, the material composing them being over considerable space. The engine upon the track, the spreading of wild the dreatifill calamity. The accident was soon telegrapisi so west, and medical sod,-other aid was ' dispatched to the scene of the accident, ed in time to be of avail to some of the persons. Taw Kitt ax.--Thu following five were instantly killed, some of them fully mutilated: 0. Hurd, a drover from New Yor M. Reed, Greene, (lens:ago Co. A infant, who are unknown. Tan SWOUSLY WOUNDKO.-11. 111 tine, New York city, Elias Huhrir Paddock, Terre Haute, Ind.; Davi( get, Greene Co , N. Y.; Mrs. Dar ger, do.; Mathias Pow, Avoca, N St. Johneville, N. Y.; Wtn. tabula, Ohio. There are several others badly names we have not learned slightly hurt—that is, eatailini, than temporary illness and loom do not know, but is is protokly though there were but two pastfengef train. None of the employers are among either the killed or injurg row we shall probably have fall this horrible affair—the first that 1 on this road.—Bssfulo Ccnneterrial Cmcsoo, The St. Peal, N. T., Pioneer of II states that the definite returit frog of the State except in one district ' the Legisisthre will steed thus: House--Dealoorsts 39; Republica 7, Seaste—Republiesse 15; Demorit'' Tat Lorr B ALLOONIST THCISTO P 11" bedieserally known that the read body Itr• Ira Thurston, the lot been coutiwood with unabated riga, that IMO liOt would yet be tbr _,__lllYsterioss affair. His brother, Nr • migult of idyktictolt minty, N 1, slating in this searait for some time thorough investigation of all the with the affair, sad a close essesoo. i the parties who saw the balloon afw itate flight, have been made Of e Ol ere given up, even of ever recover! It is not doubted, however, say unfortuaste man descended with the loaded from it alive is the bat daring on Lake St. Clair. This advanced by this paper at the toss ef reties, and insisted epos, in the bopes more attention and effort in that directs 8. R. Thurston thinks that is [be condition io Which be landed be ow travel out of the mush sod Perish ed alman could be resebed is • that will acs ever be tomes of his neforts•, All effort to, obtain further 'Rioter, (worse been gives over as perfatli r Free Press. • dad& eliargete, la Tory doubtful Ili* diesel tie orassel defeadled yt sad the - • elae ass be obtalasoi L Lwow* Üb• Le •