Indiana State Sentinel, Volume 4, Number 9, Indianapolis, Marion County, 1 July 1848 — Page 2

3 aMaua State Sentinel. " EiiRVU VHJILA5CE is THE PRICE or LIBFRTY.

!JAAIM)MS, JULY 1, 1S4S. Our Terms. The following will hereafter be the permanent terms ' of the W'tekly Indiana Slate Sentinel; (7-Payments to be made always in advance. Oae copy, one year, $2.00 Three copies, one year, 5.00 Vixe copies, one year, 8.00 Ten cop!e?, one year, 15.00 Twenty copies, one year. 5JÜ.0Ö So mi -Weekly. (Published three times a week durinp the session.) Oil' copy, Äl.rO J Three copies, sjfJl.l.CO Or r-'-iV d.irinir the session, 1.00 J Oil PKKSIDENT, GEN. LEWIS CASS, or MICIIICAX. YOU VICE PRESIDENT, GEN WM. 0. BUTLER, or a i:tucky. !2Uiii:.vri ai, electors. E? A.TORI AL. KOKKP.T DALK OW K.N of Poev County. Kr.r.yKZKIt M. CHAMHKULAIN, of KIkhart county. DISTRICT. 1. Will NIF.L LHKK I 0., of Uairison county. 2. CVKU L. DUNHAM, of U'ashu.gt n countv. 3. WILLIAM M. .".UCAUI'Y, if Funk Im county. 4. CHMiLKS II. TKsr, i f Wayne county. 5. J M KS UIICHKY, of John-on county. C CiKOKGK W CAIiR, . f Lawience cunty. 7 1IKNRY SKCUKT. of Tutnam c-unty. s. INlEf. MACK. f Tipjf canoe r.mr.ty. 9. GIIAH AM N. HI (if. of C s county. 1U. ANDREW J. HAItLAN, of Giant county. .llarion County Democratic Nomination.. ) den. JAMES P. DRAKE, 'ices, I HENRY miADY, For R"resentati i ) POWELL HOW LAND. For Prosecuting A iinr my, LUC I A N RA R 130 U R. For Sheriff, CHARLES C. CAMPBELL. F,r Record-r, CHARLES STEPHENS. Ftr County Cm:r. is ioner t A A RON ALLDREDGE. Frr Conner, PETER F. NEW LAND. The Wayne County Record and the Quakers. On several occasions within a few years, we have beu implied a- a inittcr of justice, to speak of the liberal and m itiauiin us tone which generally characterised the Wayne County Record, while it was in the hinds of it late publisher, Sarnl. C. Meredith, Esq. Though an uncompromising whig in principle, he seemed to have imbibed enough of that truly democra'i' spirit of Toleration, which, while it did not de. ter him from giving ni st cflicient expression in fivor of the policy of his own party, enabled him to jude of opposite views with orne decree i f honesty and candor. It becm, however, that s noble a spirit d.d not answer the purposes, or correspond with the feelings of a very larjjc prti.-n of tire federal whig party of Wayne county : f jr Mr. Meredith thought it prudent to sell his piper to men, who, less scrupulous, could do better crvict' to whiggery. From what we h ive ccn already of Mr. Mered. th's successors, there is no probability tint they will fail in consequence of any of the attributes of honesty and liberality which injected his character and course. They are evidently free from any quility of that kind, and are as unscrupulous as the mo-t dishonest of their coadjutors in the work of wiii'' iniruitv. We are induced to honor the Record with this notice, because of a recent act of deception in regard to oursehes. H iving certified our readers of the character of its present conductors, weshall not feel b iurid hereafter to bestow any further attention upon its misrepresentations than we feci to be perfectly convenient, 111 the alienee of any thing of more consequence. The late Journal, a few days since, copied an extract from a short paragraph of ours, commenting upon the course of the Richmond Pall ldium, win se editor, as a Senator, 1 ist winter expressed the most i it'iis" disgust of Taylor, even refusing to give a vote of thanks f r his .ervicts in ui unholy, unjust and ungodly war," but who, after the disgraceful surrender of tho "Natiuiial Slaughter House," to his demands, 11 jw ., hef Is to the right about, like a thorough-paced I) .ujof ice, and swears allegiance to the previous o!j"cl of L;s vorn an-d contempt. The extract made by the Journal, expressed our opinion, that, notwithstanding all their previous affirmations, based though they were upon those principles which they pr- es to regard ns morally, relig.ously and politically fiuidanipntal in their creed, suh of thf (J d- r.s ir!m are i'jries, w ould nevertheless prove false to their professions, and would, after all, vote for the Sliveli oding General of the Regular Army, whose noniiiution had been forced upon the whig convention bv "Southern Dictation.' This extract was purposely perverted and falsely construed by t ie Journal. We knew this would bi t .e case at the tune ue penned it. Rut we are not to tie deterred from sp 'akmg the ttut'i on such an occasion, even it' we were sure that, as the Journal fays, Taylor would gain "an hundred extra votes" by it, through the adroit misrepresentation of itself and its coadjutors. We will give our neighbor the credit, however, of miking a comparatively fair extract from us, and depending upon the force of his own mise .ustruction, and tlw gullibility of Iiis readers. f -r tiie "extra votes" which he hoped consjqucntly lo ob'ain. The Record practices a bolder rascality, and nne . 1 , 1 ... ii- 1. winch comes a Iittic nearer to unequivocal lying. It ,, j. . ,, , ,, t i . 11 very well knew tli;it the Juurnal s construction could , j, not be critic illy ni-iiiineil ; jt saw through the wicked de-ign 'jf tiie Journal, and more bold in villany, it deliberately han s the punctuation of the extract, so as to make us appear to say the very thing wc did not say. Whatsoever may be our opinion of the Quakers as a Bijciety or community, much as we may disapprove of and wonder at t he fact, that so many of them are tories in politic.' 1 sentiment, yet we have too much self-respect, if not too much respect fir them, I t sutler ourselves to become, their servile llalterers, and 'icslabb'.r them with the sojt snap so freely poured upoi. them by the Record, either in the hope of their "hundred e.xtra votes," or their dimes. The extract quoted from us and thus misrepresented, was written deliberately, and with an end in vie .v. We knew it would be misconstrued by whig cd Jitora for the purpose of exasperating the Quakers m-rally. Put in this way only could ice reach the e-'ti'Tally. Put in tais way only -trs of the men to whom we wished to sneak. We denned to let them know, the tory portion not ex a cepted, ihat the eyes of the whole World aro upon them, awaiting to witness the stand that they will take in such a crisis as this: to see whether they will prove utterly false to all their professedly most cherished principles and practices. The result will soon be witnessed, and the world will learn whether or not the great body cf men and women, professing principles kindred to those of George Fox, William Penn, and hundreds of other men of olorious mernoiy, w ill voluntarily th ow themselves into the Triumphal Process i"n of a Man of War and a Slavery Propagandist. When they shall d this the World will apply to Uicm some epithet m re odious than that of Tory. Superfluous h'-i the veteran on the stage, As the Whig National Convention said to Harry Clay t tins gallant Harry Clay. Alus, poor Yorick!

$100 Ilt'uaid. We arc authorized by Stephen S. Harding E?q.,of Ripley county, to uflVr a reward f one hundred dollars for the production of any document from General Taylor, previous to the Philadelphia Whig Conven

tion, pomp to nhow that he is in favor of extending the ordinance of Conprees of 1787 over all territory cquiml by the United States. iIr. Ilardinp holds himself in readiness to pay the above reward whenever the document is produced. Laicrenceburgh Register. Q7"-Mr. Harding is the Liberty Party candidate for Presidential Elector in the 3d district. Our neighbor of the Journal pretenJs to believe, and ha3 so published, that such a ' document" has been published. Here then is a chance for him to get the reward, if he can find ti e document. It s a slim chance, however; and would be just as slim if the reward was offered for Taylor's opinions upon any other question. He has said himself that he knows nothing about politics. 07"Here is the vote of the Indiana delegation in the National Slaughter House, as Horace Greeley of the Whig Tribune calls the Philadelphia Convention. That btauty of a politician, Milton Stapp, it will be seen, was the only man for Taylor on the first ballot. Let these votes be marked and studied. 1st. 2J. 3d. 4th. Scott Scott Taylor Taylor Taylor Clay Tavlor J. D. Defrees, John Heard, F. Roy.l, Milton Stapp, E. Con well, S. Meredith, M. M. Ray, Jos. Warner, Paul. Sigler, R. C. Gregory, D. G. Rose, G. W. Ewing, Scott Scott Scott Scott So Ott Taylor Scott Clay S-ott Clay Scott Scott Scott Sott Scott Scott Taylor Scott Clay Scott Taylor Taylor Seott Scott Scott Scott Tnvlor Taylor Scott Taylor Taylor Taylor Taylor Seott Scott Taylor Scott Taylor Scott 07-Speaking of Major Semans, his whig brother of the Brook ville American says Iiis Maj. Semans's unpatriotic and Anti-American denunciations of the war and the army in Mexico, would curse any party or man that had to be responsible for his ebullitions. There is another editor in the Slate that ti.e Taylor party would be well rid of, but we fear he will not go." Who is hit by that last dig ! Some one who thought that "a regard for w hig principles forbid the nomination of Taylor by the whig convention"! As to denouncing the war" what whig editor, except one or two who were in favor of ''robbing the Mexican churches," didn't do it ! Be a good boy, Clarkson, and you shall come up here to 'hcad quarters" after Old Zack is elected! 07- The New York " Christian Advocate and Journal," of the 14th ult., in noticing the whig convention, says, "The closing scenes of the convention manifested no great degree of unanimity. The nomination of Taylor was anything but gratifying to a large portion of the delegates; and many of the whigs of this city and State, on receiving intelligence of the nomination, were by no means sparing in the expression of their disappointment end indignation. Gen. Taylor's great strength is in the South. The State Journal has been unable to see anything like the above in the disaffected whig papers, it is so blind! Wonder if it will sec or will believe the religious pa; er from which we quote above? The Democrats aro completely used up by the nomination of Tavlor. They are ashamed even to lie on tbc old man." Wayne cn. Record. "Ashamed even to lie !" Well : that's more than can be said of the leading whigs, any how. They have commenced the canvass by a series of most infamous lies, and they will lie all through it. What else could be expected from men who have forsworn all that they lave professed to hold dear in principle; who have assassinated their great leader and "embodiment," and who have been compelled to support a man who has no more regard for them than he has for a gang of his own negroes ? The Indiana Sentinel says tbat the efforts of the whig pirty are "bootless." Chapman knows very well that tbe effort of the whig that kicked him wasn't br.nl!t-ss ' Tsu. Journal. The State Sentinel never said any such thing. Tho assertion that it did is the common but poor trick of the Louisville Journal, fo that it can base upon the falsehood its own blackguardism. We should not notice it, but that we Fee it copied by the sub-editor of the Cincinnati Signal. If cither the palsied old wretch of the Louisville Journal, or his pa'try copyist at Cincinnati, desire to try their prowess in kicking, upon us, at any time, they enn be accommodated. Gen. Taylor "is untainted by the leprosy or politics," says the Wayne County Record. or course he cannot be a whig. So they talked about Tyler in 1910. Put no sooner was he President, and had thwarted the infamous leaders in their flagitious courses, than they showered upon him all ports of abuse and foul epithets, and even prayed for his de-ith ! Just so will it be with Taylor should he be elected. 'Gen. Cass is a regular " Pottonious in politics." Whig Tomahawk. Yoti had better take another look into your Shakppeirian vocabulary, friend Pausman. We shall otherwise have to put you on a par with your classic brother of the Lngrange Whig. We shan't allow Y015 t0 tomahawk Shakspcare, even if we permit you to scalp Cass. . . ee .. (rv"tien. iass nas never oeen eiecieu 10 omce uui once by the people, says the Journal. Well: Taylor 2 ' ' ; . 3 never has been elected even (men by the people, and neur evil voted in his life. Now how much is the account in your favor, gentlemen. Just think of it ! A candidate for the Presidency who says himself that he has never yet exercised the privilege of voting." Inman atoms andUellkfontaine Railkoap. Tiie Hoard will organize this diy, at Muncie, by the election of the otlicers of the company. In our last, for the want cf correct information, wc stated that tho amount of stock subscribed was about ,5;:UM,(KlO, and the amount subscribed in this city was $70,000. Jmucc we wrote the article we learn that the amount subscribed in this city is over $1J0,(ÜÜ, and will be considerably increased. The company have every encouragement to jocccd rapidly with the work. O-The immigration at New York last month reached the' enormous and unprecedented number of ou,s- From APril 2 lo June ,hcrc have arrived at quarantine 52,103 immigrants that number 14,00(3 arrived from the UGth to the 31st of May. Average per day of immigrants, 935. 07 All householders of the city of Indianapolis will be furnished with a copy of the ordinances of the city, recently revised and printed by order of the Council, on application ut the office of J. G. Johdan, Esq. Or-Judge Chamberlain must have told some home truths in a late ßpeech at Fort Wayne, for the Times raves like a very drab, and curses like a convicted felon. We hope the editor will feel better after the blister is done smarting. " Who is General Taylor V Ind. American original Taylor paper. Wall ! Plieve he's the man wot recommended tho Bloodhound recruits for the Florida war. D'ye ever hear of that 1 -

TELEGKAPIIIC DESPATCHES. PuiLAPELrniA, June 27ih, P. M. A postscript in the European Times contains some farther intelligence linn trntiemi'tcd yesterday. The house "of M. Thiers, in Pnris, was attacked, but the nu b was repulsed bv the military. The Austrian General, Rndetsky, readied the rear of the Sardinian army, f rcing its retreat. The Sikhs revolted and killed two Commissioners, and maacred nil the Pritish troops.

The N. Y. Tribune, at the latest dates, was still hanging cut aaiiM the support of Taylor's nomination, though it had not determined to oppose it uncon ditionally. Greeley, able as he has been deemed, is nevertheless unequal to the crisis. There he stands, shivering in the wind, and just as likely as any way to be driven on the lee shore. For bis own fame, it would have been better for him to have taken a determined stand at once, either against Taylor, and thus have manifested his own integrity ; or in favor of the nomination, and thus have shown himself quite as much wanting in honesty as party hacks generally are. As indicative of the position of this most noted and popular whig editor, we extract from one of the Tribune's articles as follows: 44 For our own part, we take time for reflection. If it shall nppeur to us that the support of Gen. Taylor is the only coune by which the election of Cass can be prevented, we shall feet bound to concur in that support. If mi tliM re.nirarv. the developments of the next few days ! shall prove that the Free States arc now ripe for the uprisIN" tchick must come sooner or inier. una icnun inuinination has 1one rerxj much to precipitate, WHY THEN WE AUE READY. Our present impression is that the lime has nt quite arrived but ice shall see. 44 We will not be one of a hundred thousand only to r;Sa nn i nil np n.1 ii t fl ,B : but if there are One Million reidv and in n fair prosper t tfmt Hie bulk of tho Free States tnn be carried acainsi 0111 ijiur nnu vne in a . iiv.i. i Free Soil insue. we are there. Willi such an uprising Cas would be no where, for we don't believe the bouth means to support so recent and shameless an apostato frm Fre; Soil in preference to an extensive slaveholder Only let the issue lie plainly between Taylor and a Free Soil candidaie, and we stand with the latter; aa between Taylor and Ca?i, we greatly preler the lormur. " 4 But you are bound by ihn derision at Philadelphia, unci vnur nlt-dffe to sustain it.' No, air: we icould hare been bound il the convention had heen jovemed by the ; acknowledged principle of the party, and had nominated candidates expressly to embody and advance those principle-. In hying every resolve expresaing a devotion to Whig principles on the table, the Convention laid our obligation to abide hi decisions there also. They must be lifted together. i Hut why not come out at once for Gen. Taylor ?' inquires a friend ; "you must see by this time that all refiitnice if unavailing that there is no alternative but Cas or Tay lor ' My friend ! what is the hurry ? There is a Free Soil Convention in Ohio this week; the H.irnburners in our Slate have theirs alno this week ; the antiTaylor Whigs of Massachusetts have theirs next week. When these three Conventions shall have been held, tho lav of the land may be belter seen. If they shall only serve to exhibit more elearly the hopelessness of resisting the Philadelphia decision, why that is poinethm Munificence. The Hon. Abrott Lawrence is said to have given to Harvard University another sum of sjöU.OtiO for the use of the Scientific School which bears his name. Pkemember that. Abbott Lawrence is one of the Princely Manufacturers of the East, for whose benefit our Whis are constantly urging the enactment ot a ,v . , . , ,T . l.i . .1 T 1 Protective land. We observed that t!ic Journal, a day or two since, endeavored to show that layb-r was in favor of 14 protection." Ho may be so, the sugar planters of LouMinna have always been so ; and he is one of them. Is that any thing in his favor so tar as weot the est are concerned yveiuinKiioi. y. . i. lir !! . 1 ... .11 . our interests are injuriously affected by protective ta- . riffs. Abbott Lawrence has made millions ot dollars through tleir operation ; and he has made those millions out of the Western people. We should be fools to give him more when he does not know what to do with what he has nlreadv got. (trJust two years ago, says the Pennsylvanian, Mr. Senator Werstkk, in anticipation of a disastrous and expensive war with Mexico, made the following gloomy prophecy in one of his great speeches. We place it upon record as a curious and interesting relic : "With respect to loans, I beseech gentlemen not to deceive themselves. There is money enough in the country, il is true, and the credit of the government will be good; and if gentlemen suppose that a loan is to be contracted in this country for the use of the government, to be paid in specie, in the expectation that that specie is to be locked up, they will find themselves mistaken. Those who hold capital will consent to no such thing. I take it for crantrd, then, if loans arc to he made, the new method of keeping the public money must be abandoned.' 07-The half million of dollars premium paid on the recent government loan of sixteen millions, is practical evidence of the fallacy of Webster's soothsayings, which, when first tittered, were copied by the whig papers with great flourishes of trumpets as lis extraordinary judgment and wiedum! Louiville Demockat. The publishers of the Louisville Democrat were unable to issue any paper on Monday, '20th July, in consequence of the villain ous and dastardly act of a party of scoundrels who appear determined to destroy that office. On Sunday, after the hands hnd left the office, it was entered by these miscreants, who tore to pieces the power pres; went into the imposing room and destroyed all of the forms, reducing the whole to pi. They then set fire to ihe office, but ir was extinguished after it had consumed a large quantity of paper. This is the third attempt to destroy that office. The proprietors say they cannot divine the motives of these attempts, and the perpetrators so far have eluded detection. The Utica Convention. The Cincinnati En quirer of June '29, says, "wc find in the telegraphic despatches of the New York Herald, a partial con densation of the leading points of the letter of Mr. Van Puren to the convention. He declines any nominatian for the Presidency, and reiterates his determi nation not to aain appear in public life. He, how ever, approves of a nomination hy the convention, and of the course of the Parnburners in the Baltimore convention Mr. V. B.'s letter is said to be four columns in length. roRTRAIT OF TIIF. PlMNCF. OF Ha!.N BURNERS. The Pioston Chronotypc has drawn the following portrait of John Van lluren : 4Mr. Van Ihircn is a largo, rotund, florid man, who Fpeaks etraipht. forward, with a rather liiphkcyed and not very musical, but still not unpleasant voice, and with a distinctness that can be heard to a Croat dipt a nee. What is more, he cuts with a cold, keen sarcasm which is terribly killing." 07-The whigs condemned, without reservation, both the Florida nnd Mexican wars, and tho Presidents who administered the government during those wars. Hut they justify Taylor for serving in both for pay. The President, they nrguc, was the Master, and Taylor a mere journeyman butcher. Very complimentary, indeed ! The Sword and thf. Pur.sE. The St. Louis Union thinks it would be a capital commentary on Whig professions, for a --military chieftain" to canvass the country in full uniform, and with his epaulettes on his shoulders. Holding the sword in his hand, he is now rrrasninr? at the nurse a state of facts at which n i ttho Whigs were once in great trepidation. 07-Some "malicious scoundrels" have been de stroying shade trees in Cincinnati. The Commercial thinks "the rascal- rhould have every switch of the trees worn out on their naked backs," and so do wc.

Picture of the L:ite Convention. The editor of the Xew York Tribune, who, it is

alleged, walked to Trenton after the nomination of; Taylok, in a fit of disappointment, is giving more j rare disclosures of the doing of the late Federal ( Convention. We can imagine what he would say, and how he would say it, if he were commenting upon similar practices in a Democratic Convention : On the first ballot for President, Mr. Clay received 1)7, Gen. Taylor 111 votes Gen. Taylor 11 nhend. But the CUy votes were nearly nil cast by representatives of Whig States or Districts, while the Taylor votes come mainly from States and Districts which have generally been locoloco, most of them hopelessly so. Maine, Virginia, Alabama, Louisiana, Mississippi, Missouri, Iowa, Arkansas and Texas supplied 52 of them ; Locofoco Districts in Pennsylvania, North Carolina, Kentucky, &.c, with tho only Locofoco District in Vermont, furnished full half of the remainder. We doubt whether all the Districts which voted on that ballot for Taylor would have elected thirty Whig Members of Congress three months ago; we don't say they may not elect sixty on the next trial : that remains to be seen. By the way, that vote from the northeast corner of Vermont for Taylor must be on astonisher to the Whigs of that District. We had heard that one delegate from Vermont was unreliable for Clay, but had no dream of his voting for Taylor. On the other hand, the 97 votes for Mr. Clay were nearlv all cast by the representatives of Whig States or Whig Districts. New York, Vermont, Rhode Island, Connecticut, Maryland, with the representatives of the most decidedly Whig portions of North Carolina, (ö,) Kentucky, (f.) Indiana, (VJ,) Alabama, (1,) Virginia, (".) and of all the famous Whig strongholds of Pennsylvania Philadelphia City, Lancaster, Chester, Allegany, Beaver, Union, &c, were there. But while the City, Lancaster and Alhganv, which gave some 10,000 Whig majority in '44, had but one Delegate each to vote for Clay, (and one of iuee muugu unanimously insirucieu lor iav, was ai . ...... . . . heart for Tavlor, ai:d went over to him, per contract, on third ballot.) Perks, with her 5,000 Loco Foco majority, had two delegates present to vote for Taylor, botli elected (one by the State, the other by the tl.l rint 1... I... ..I I'l ... .....r. n.l 1. .-.,..,. ,,B,1UU u ""'y iiifii, aim u iut-.s uuu ty lliem to be tor Ulay. liie vote tor iiay from V irgin'a caine lrorn the only JJistrict in that ötatc which sent a Whig to the lat Congress, and never did otherwise. True some of the Delegates w ho go voted meant to vote ultimately for Taylor, if that should be necessary to his nomination ; but with this intent their first vote for Clay, was only a more unmistaka ble proof that what they did not mean their constituents did. We believe the votes cast for Mr. Clay repre sented twice as many Whigs as the votes cast for Clen. Taylor. Among the people themselves we thmk the disparity still greater. Arkansas had but one Delegate present, who cast three votes throughout lor Tavlor. lexas had none, yet she cast four votes on every ballot for Taylor. We d j not say this v;:s unfair, but there was no Clav Delegate who had more than one vote, and no vote for Clay from a State w hich sent no Delegates. Louisiana had ten Delegates present out of eigh teen appointed, of whom fifteen were supposed to be for Clay w hen appointed. Fight of them were thor oughly for Taylor m Philadelphia, one other was for Clay on the first ballot, hot determined to go for 'Pay I I I I . mi i . w . C t 1 1 Il.i 1 1 . t ...frk it-no .nrlnln tn A "fc ' ...... I Clay more iiarm than good; while the tenia was tlloroughlV lor Clav. ihe Delegation nail ten votes to cast ast, six for thrir own State, and four for Texas, ! ,..!. ...I. .. i t .w- ni.,,,,t .....i ni'urir IU'iit Whifrc iiniiau hu 5U3.H.I.I n iiuui .'lit n. um uui ii." . n tjc Statewe mean fuc!l as would have owned themselves Whigs this time last year.) It did seem to us nothing more than fair that the real Clay man 'present should have hnd om vote in the Convention ! liut the majority of the delegation had a taste for i ihnrrifr nr irti,-, I hev nuide Dr. Lrashear a Vice ,,,....v- . - p.:.,....; bllt ,r;ive lum no Vut0. assiffiiiiiff six of , " J - lnejr 0;vn um,or U) vote for Louisiana, and four to - rwj r-i vote tor lexas. so that while Dr. brashear did not vote at all for Clav, .Mr. Pullitt voted twice on every ballot for Tavlor. Was not this rather ''running the thing into the ground! From Tennessee, the 1st certainly and we are confident the lid district, (.Mr. Crozier's,) intended and expected that their votes should be cast for Clay, to say nothing of the 9th, (.Mr. G. A. Henry's,) where in no instructions were given. We know that Mr. Crozier was for Cl.iy when first chosen, and Mr. Roadman (of the 1st) was till for him when in ISTew: York, only three days before the Convention met. Gov. Jones was chosen a delegate from his district, but two Taylor men were his associates, so that he was not allowed to vote, and the whole Hi votes of the State were cast for Taylor on every ballot. It w as worth something, how ever, to the friends of Clay in Philadelphia to have the benefit of the counsels Miid the pleasure of the acquaintance of James C. Jones. 07"A friend writing from Logansport, June 25th, says, 1 IinU tl.e prospect every wnere encouraging If the Democrats of Indiana but make the effort our principles demand ol ks, we can carry trie state ior . . . . - .-....! Cass by ten thousand majority. Let us do it. Where is .Mr. Owen ? Where are our District electors : Are they yet in the field?" Several of our electors arc in the field, doing good service. Chamberlain, Mace, McCarty and Harlan, and perhaps some others, arc nddressing the people, with great success. Never were our prospects all ovrr the State better than they are now. We are y confident of victory. hftviinr nreviotislv written to him not to tnako any , ... , ,, ..ii.. I I .i t ill reply UlilU 110 SliOUlU gCl Hie letter WlllCil Uiey i.ouiu Drenare for him. v hat do the wing people think of - fi.:. 1 ...1.-. ..r ....I. .!. Kiii-ii :i 1 r;i HS..11.1 11111 ji niia. linn v ii.li ui 3ulii u. i.auui07Thc Columbus, O., Statesman 6ays: A new paper is to be started here by Mr. Hamlin, of Cleve land and Mr. Vaughan of Cincinnati, two of the very first men of the whig party. Mr. Hamlin was late a member of Congress from the Loraine District, and Mr. Vaughan late one of the editors of the Cincin niti (iazette. This will be a strong team, and will soon collect around til it n nmverfnl orirnniratinn nrrnitmt id it a powinui organization against for the Buffalo nominations. Gen. Taylor and Whig paper in Michigan illustrates the prin ciples and measures of its party in the present can vass, thus Sound the hewgaj, strike the tonjon, Heat the Fuzguzzy, wake the gouqaong ; Let the hud hnzann i lint. Hum turn fuzzlegum dinjo bim.' (V7-Thc Prndford Reporter, well known as the spe cial organ or Mr. Wilmot, and the leading, if not the only paper in Pennsylvania which has professed democracy " with a Proviso," manfully wheels into line in support of Cass and Cutler. Gfn. Butler. This gentleman, the Locofoco nom inee for the Vice Presidency, is an honorable, highhearted, and liberal-minded man. Lou. Journal. Prentice don't dare to abuse Rutlcr in Kentucky, and therefore is mean enough to pvjf him. Puffery, from such a source, is not needed by Lutler. ftrTlie Raton Rouge Advocate says that General Taylor has doffed tho military cap, and taken to wearing ft broad-brimmed, Quaker looking beaver. Well : wo suppose that the Quakers and Anti-War Whigs, can now go for the old General with clear consciences. Whatever may be thought of Martin Van Buren's political honesty, he is undoubtedly one of the keenest and shrewdest politicians that ever lived." Low. Journal. 0 ! just found it out, have you 1 The Memphis and New Orleans steam packet "Clarksville," was recently burnt, and twenty lives loa.

frVWc learn oil good authority, that after Tay- it will only go down for a moment, to aii-e under a new or- timher ; So.OOO siavr; 7 ton hay; 10 do stone; 35 eord , . , e . Y ; r-r,,... gatozation, a t it Ins d nie heielufoie. There aie two anlag- tatibaik ; 20 krg lard ; 3 head cattle ; 57 hhd bacon ; 12,lors nomination was forced upon the Whig Conven- ;m!.lic )riJcipI nhrreilt 1(l a!l fl)ims üf govemment, one 106 lbs b,c n in bulk ; 23.S2S lbs o;her tieuht. tion, his particular friends held a caucus at Washing- tending to crntiaiise and consolidate the powers of governcity, fur ,l.c purpose ,.f concc.ing a le.lcr of .c j "t,';, XZVi ii1 .4., ccptai.ee L 1 transmitted to him for l,i nigiialurc,- , b. ,. jwn the high. r t. . wi.h the iÄV'r '1.

VI hi;; Tildis. I AN..., Jui.r 21, If. 11. , . 1 . , , , , posing ulut I iMiiii iv i'i !. 4 .'itli'l i. lifi'twili at i 1 lie 1 11!, li- u i... .' 11. 1 1... ! .. I iSifTn ty Willi ai'J 1 1 tin ,.,(..,,,.,.,. - I t.,k , III I Hi .lr:i .lit j I I ti in 1 1 iln ! in J f I f . 1 .M. 1 Ij tat- l!n f..t. e in I. ü ! id. ii.- I'm, 11. .-I I o.ti'J 1

Pinke' Unit I, 1.. w . iiiiri i.y Mi h. f.- . ). j Cl'y , In! 1 ciOi-i it 11, y none, 1 1 1 1 ! 1 r 1 l ''. - 1. O'.i. , m.'l Mlilllbi' ! "I n. I I'.ulli i," :,, l a; j.i .ir-1 fl .. '!. jMOl tint nil. ! Ii i. 1 .. - II,, 11 ,i Iniin ..I it,, 1 e.'li'li'n for Ihr l'irihoi y in riiniUr w-ty. In loUi. ! M.(Jlilrr 111 Ihr rvt-iui.jj b,iit f..i,i,il II,, I ..ii,r im-, I hii'.v If' wh, lud bIIkI, in 11r11l4t1.11 .l my l.j.'l 1 r o', 1 h WonU "jii- li-il tin- ri.ru foi 11, p," w In, Ii riv i'Ml Iii m'oil of On? itmiik luaijr l,y rrr. On ..i.kiii .v r lh irelrf for Oine IikmhIi tuck, I tm in Uir , liin.u .f iot.uk .o-p-iKile my nane ai.-l that .f a fun.. I, -m- on. 41k at.min the Slate K utiti I, 8tr. N-w, it i l.ui j.Oir in ,ay tlul the liquid Hnc v 11II1 11 hy Miyir in A.nl wl.rn on iny way to the nv i,lyut Um- n-mjik ih ll.- wmk .f rri ni.e who inij:ht hive trrn, mid ongl.t in lr l.tlti i m.. yiil. 'I n y t.iiiscl Vt-5 and inai.y nil. vi. i.( my jii-.H-inal Ii n nl at lhr capital it is nninr haiy In nay tli4l miiIi a it-maik wa i ver Ih'iulit .f hy me, uoirh I .lar d unri a iit.ic legrter. Who the bijy tnau i, or Inr uhat .innic In- i tuu'i-i his j;-nnjs in the eiy cni.teiii.1ihlr l.inii.f 1 1 j-i vei tun the ciit i'Tien t, and supplying ieiir4ik lur the lia veiling rnrnrnuni'y I am unahle to divine. It tri-int d, however, Out theie was quire a feeling fur Old .ic, as he trailed hirn.on the pait .f him who ollirnod as hontlnid, so. I no .ji.s was paied lo Irll any ui win, wi.u, to know it, Out eveiy one on the icgiMtr Mine the I'll 1 1 jJ I ft. 1 tun vrntiun wn for Taylor. If the obpet be to make votes for fieri. Taylor some inoie successful ami manly rmans intht be n soru-d 10 ; if it be to serine custom f r the House, it will piove a failuie ur I much mistake t tie feelings of tiavelUr. It is possible that I tie pioiietoi f the IIoue knows nothing ot the mnaement of this icjjioer for the public ee, but tiue it is hi some one is thoroughly apprised of it, and well itpaicd to execute onlrrs with raaiiiesi and depath. Yoins lespectfully, A. J. H. fjT" We think the proprietor of the hotel above alluded to, would 11 t sanction any thing like the base tricks above alluded to : indeed we are sure he would not. (Ju-t now, by I lie way, Mr. Coats is abBoiit.) It is the work of otne vhi loafer, 110 doubt. who thus seeks to imitate tho gna'er rascalities of his masters. We bhould like to find out his name : we would give a greater notoriety tliau ever he will obtain for it until he gets to the penitentiary, where lie no doubt belongs. l-,is. Greensduhg, I?id., June 21, 1S4S To tf,e Editor of the Coon Skinner . The smis of the political zodiac are pn.ientiuus. The ui.ivcrsal whiipaity is on the eve of dissolution. Ih.it old party which we have so often met and defeated in the heat of political waifare is dissolving. "The knell hath koolled" "the edict hath gone oim. i lie tu! t-iiiuuwi.iivin ui ,uc '"'"'i'' ' ... . i .. 1 J .1 .U. I. .1,,, that ratty is sacnficed, and the discoidant elements that compose it are lurnouog asuimer. lite me rnmiiy emj ose il are tumbling asunder. Like the mighty empi.e i of the gicat Macedonian conqueror, the death of i.s embodi ment is the sirual hr it dissolution. Alexander is üetd and Peidiceus n in the lei ncy. Mr. Clay is laid asi.le and Gen. Tavlor has pnscHori of Iiis linj. He sail he would lather gee Mr. Clay Pieidetit than be l'lesidiin himself; tin nam ed hirn the line Hut A ni ig. uns, Pt.dtmy, Cr. terui, and Ihe v.ili.iiit Kurnerxs (Scott) disdain to stand ihe iufeiion of Peinicm, w hom they once equalh d, oi st 'Od ahove. Kacn sive tie of inhlir plan. lei," they VMinly hope l te caniei . . . . by li i inta the hi-h places of po fit and honoi they hope lor the emolument i i.iine, ana intiiy snout -ueneiai .. .. .. ..f i Taylor never sui lendei ' 4-a li'tle m ac El .pt i vy J P. ülaf; in the noitheast, &.c i while another nurnen.ns uiviun wheie the m.in stienth of ihe (tat) whi,; paity he-, headed by the (.- d-hle Daniel, have olhd a convention to meet at Woiccster. .Masachiieto. on the zstti ot the cuneni . . . . eccaMo:i miv demand, in sunnoit if the i.iii.cinte. lo which thev aie Dleded." Ihe fcew- Yoik Tiihune, one of the m-i ir flu ntial journals in ihe I'lii'ii Ii as f I a 1 1 il that it will rem will rem -i in still awhile ere - - - ; .. cojnri.i.i.ng toelf to the .egency of IV.du cus ; a. o it events shall prove ihat the fiee State aie lipc f..r the piii"g which must come soonc. or lam," it will lead , ir in a new move of Ihe noith gmu-t the south. A raliticatioti rr.ectn g which was cal ed in New Y-ok to meet on the evening f the 14lh inttnnt, was poMpoi ed without dy by heavy vote of the whig genet al committee. The whigs of Boston the hot-bed of federalism, have declared that C.en. Taylor is not iaVlll, , IIlJt4rUlllltCltf...iÄ.V.V'..Jv.QV..... - lon . ,f,at he js Il0t a whig, if judged ty the opinions he a whig, whin tiled by the stani!aol l our party organizaenieitaiii moii pjestioos of public policy; that he is not a

I" .der, tiusiu.g to his own power and n fliu nce is settm up i p,cklev ; for Countv Commissi,. ner. Dann 1 Dunlaw, an impendent eMiblUbmrnt A oimeroiis div.M.n, I will .a9 UIian i v concnrm j J,v xu. Cl)Ilv,.,',t'ol s laciioi), of the old whi party, have made a total . - - abandonment of all , rim iple, a?.d , .nned .hen fa.th to the ' -" I o meeting was amlressed by .Mossrs. A. co it-tilof Gen. Taylor, L ir "held toucher by the rohe- lU'se and J. M. llanna, Lsqs. Alter w hich tiie fol-

whig, il measined liy the Inghci sUnaaia 01 principle, 10 ; - , which the whig of Massachu-ett, and of the 1.01th havejIU''' L,as' pledged themselves solemnly, deliberately, and often; that

if succes can attend the paity only by the saenhee of whig rnnoinle?, or some of them, th y du not mean to he thus suecesslul; that they aie deuimi.ed Vj support a candidate whu will not sulfer us to te over-bal.mced ty the annexation of fo.t.gn te.iilory.nor by the fu.ther extension of f-laveiy, which is equally lepugnunt to the feelings ud iu 1. rnpanble with the political lights of the free Mates ; and that they "believe it to be the leolue puip,-e of the whu people -f uui oe tue leMJiu.e puipe 01 uie wm; peopie .u ietU to M.,.;M,,t .hee sentiment,, and cany into e design which they inatnte.!. Mi. Witton of isettsdeclaied in the con ve.oi .n after the nornma.MavofcCliU; effect the M as-aclui" tiou of Taylor, ''That lie would giound aim o hme, and j-o help hin God, he would do all in his puwei to defeat the election of t tie nominees. " Mr. Allen, of the same State,'

pioclaimcd that the whi paity wa there an 1 that day dis- bration in this city on Thui-day. the I3th day ef July int. no I red. On the icceptin of the hew? of Tayloi's i.omina- A procession will be fooned at 2 o'clock, V. M. ; an oaiint tion in New Yoik. Iloiace Greeley al'!irs.e.l a laige meet- will be deliveied byKev. U10. C H. Tarson at 3 o'clock, inn, and it repoi ded to his speech by three cheers for the de- The public, at. d especially the ladies, are leepectfnlly infcat vf Gen. Taylor. vited to attend. The nominal ion of Taylor bruised the heait of the little By order of the Committee of Anancmeots. 9-'jy 13 rifie (Gen. Co til s) of Kentucky, and piechided Gov. Junes, and the galbnt Doniphan, of Mu., from being pri sent at the II elisions .Yofic. ratificati on rmetinu in l'hiiadelphia. Mi. ti.illoway, of Rev. C. Craven will preach in tf;c Couit Iluu-e next SunOhio, said that he was an ultra whig Hut he would not day at 4 o'clock, P. M. now iepu tiate the nomination but tint the whig" of Ohio -

would not embiace the cau?e of any man not thoroughly indoctlinaU.tl w itll ,fie need of the paity, not pledged to cany WUUIU UUI VILi out its wise and patriotic measutes. Mr. Hamlin, an exI .. - . - ... .. . . . . . . .. ...I... l.Ii.a r ... f Tn-.. irw. UirUllM VI VOUliltSS, UIIU lll a n in; ru.vv;. l.i vi.l..U Ohio, has bolt.-d and the Hon. J. K. (iddiD has been home and tinned the wliole Westein Uestivo a-unsi u. uiuvrrsal coolness lias met U Ihiourioui tne nee stares, aim innuential mf n, who have heietoioie acted enthtMiastically with the whig puty, iefue to commit thenrelves for Tavlor; some have come out lor Cas KcasLning thus: A northern man, not bein: a Mavttiuliler, is ccuainiy sounaer on me . . a . t 1 V m it er of the extensi n cf slavery, than a southern rnau, teii p a slaveholder. All tins mu.t show to an unpujuJiced mind that the whig puty as row organized, is about to cease ii existence. Yea, the dcath-ratlle is heard in the ihoiax ol its existence, cat lower, but by removn g ail oostacies uom me wa , aim pivI !. . .11 . I .1. .... ... I.. I., r.if. I.. .irt.i.UirA inz an equal ciiantes, a neai ) iiki uc, iuupciuiihuhiih. al,j ,tllOWI1 -Il.e piiticiples, as befoic lemarkcd, are ins beloic lemariiCu, are innarties under Some name d for lllC eMablihmciit of . , heient and must ever exit; and anu nrganiznuui win cercomenu . .. . r . . 1 I m. nr h 11 if.. Iii. Vülillr ni sacii nave 1011: vecu contending w ith each other for the ma-teiy, -ud in tome c untiics Ihe one. and in others the other has liiumph. J. T.ie libial toinciple H now tiiumphant in Kurope. With pome few exceptions of limited peiiods, it lias always teen in the ascei-dency heie. The whig party may abandon its name and fa'e organization, and the practicul policy of .'dmit.itiaiion for which it Ins be n contending to h'tig ; but il will lise with a new name and andei a new uigiiuzatiun, and with a tew ad oinistiative policy, tending to the estalhhmei t of that funda mental piinciple of llinr f ith, di-cl ued by H-imiltou "ihn the common people aie incapable of self government They have not daied lo avow tins piinciple openly, but the ineasure h(vc (jh a ,at wav,lhal lhc dul, of appuhcllMou cm d see their tendency. This pnncinle will always live il$ votaries, and it behoove the

dcmociacy, as the 1 1 uc fiieiiJs of mankind, to be a I wry. on on Umi Mnml y nrxt mot -r. tint .aiJ rl-lu.n, lo ci.tupor tlir vtJ the walch-toMcr of hbeiiy, aud ready lo meet at y assail- and crrtiiy the irsult to the fN-crrtary 4 ihr rtni;nt. ants of popular liberty -any who deny e.thrr epen.y or . i;. SrcV. '"S;.. coveitly, Ihe equa.ity of mui.au 1 to inontain mvicilatt- Ihe federative chaiactet tT our union. Hut 1 tvul clou, for the ( fOtC N.IIjI'. pietent.oi I will ruu thi episilc to an iutnmiiiable extn.t. i rnHE ut.norii.iT hayrtfvr a!r krvtral Sintrs und part of HUKATllIXr. ' ö State of bis ini.iovcd I'atrnt Whtat Drill, which hr wi.I I tell on a rr.lit of twi lve months, at wl l sair piir s, o as to ru " ' nt lr tl putchasi r to iratir In.m 100 to .'oO oer . nt. On thr purTerke II At'TT, June 2G, 1S43. chase moiiry. Tin- uh.cnt r ha lome trrnlory lokrll.of MESSRS ChPSIANS Si Sr NN . Fhe whus held a meet- his improvt'd Ji.utde tutnig llnn. an,l Hjx Ur.ke, nl.ich tieing at the Couit House in this town on Saturday Ut, to iat- , eidMly the l t martonr of thr kind m th.s country , c . . , . , , . i , Mo-!-l of the alove rnachnun rati bo ii-en ;.t o.-ts llot-l. (all ify ihe nomuution of I aylor aud illmore, and to Dominate I tuJ lhe IU,h(n,.s. u j iA'l'l.lN(, - . a . . i . i

Insteid of sucti an outpounn ot the wnij oi me "limner county" a vvs to have been expected had the nomination teen 9 itisfac'ory, the meeting wa tu derate in numbets and wanting in enthusiasm veiy few p-rsutis fiom the country were in attendance. An addles and lesolutious weic adopted, which will furnish you a rich fund of amusement when published: leoudiatmü a they do some of ihe most cheiished doctrine of thr late whig parly and atÜiming otheis at which (Jen. Taylor will be as gieatly surpiied as their quiJ-nuncs weic at h'u Domination. Arrangements wcie made for Ihe latificatioii convtniu to be held at Koit llatiison in September next, and speeches weie made by Missr. Guokiu,T. II. lilake. Doctor Luca, and Hudson. A lesolutiou was adopted for going into nomination for county offices, but a fieice opposition was made to nominating any candidates t and duiing this discusi u it was tated as a well known fact, that theie vete ihiee h mdied whigs in Vigo county who were not reliable, fhe adoption of the leMilution wa leeonsideied and the meeting wa declaieJ adjouinrd while ihe noes weie voting on the adj uuiing moti n, and the coon huuied of! in confui m, some twenty who itrn-incd uttering a faint and feeble cluet for old Zach. You miy lely upon it that a veiy conside able number of whig in Vigo will not suppott Taylor. Dille, Glazier it Co. aie out against him openly, but by hr the larger number of the bolteis will not be heatd of until the ballots are counted. They will ny nothing in the mean time, but will quietly give the ticket the go-by. I am happy lo assure you, that the democrats of V igo are united for the warm aupput of Cas and Butler. With tbe exception of one mn, who will not support Casion pel Jona I grounJi, 1 d not ki ow of a deinociat a noi.g us who will not give an enthusiastic suppott to the ticket. nirvv Look out for good news from OLD JULK .

Wliix Pisnllt tion. QyThe whig of Nalick, .Mass., npoo the return il itcii Wilson, tle'ir .legale to ,; ' ,: Jademhia - ' ul""1 Convention, held m tii tii:g rod r.o-tfulJv passed a f ri.Mljnf,M !lkf. . " Id h'd. That we the w bigs of Nntirk are not

m't Int d'giad'.l ns to jive the In? to all nur past proI"iioih, !i tir.tonr.'riir mi rscifs wwi'.v, hypocrites, n.'ai'H und Junis for the s:im; of a whig victory ; und we do therefore repudiitc the nomimtion of Z'ichary Taylor, and will do our utmost to d f at his election. Two hundred whigs of Natick have signed the call for a ronventioti ot Worcester. Moi:k I)j;skktion. The JNIount Vernon, Ohio, Tiioos, docs not stand up to the Taylor nomination. ll-re is what th editor ays : 14 We cannot we dare not, in conscience support the lioinm ition of ( ; n. Taylor until we know hisvi'ws n the Mexican War and the further extension of hliverv." (fj'lUi Painsvilic Telegraph, the whig organ of Lak! county, Ohio, says "The nomination of 'leu. Taylor has !ard us in a mnst unpleasant posiiioti one which we had not anticipated and upon which genuine whiejs arc divided. It is another melancholy instance of the irresistible power of southern rule and dictation. We are fully satisfied that a large majority of the whigs of this county, and wemiht add of this congressional district, are opposed to the nomination." The Xenia, 0., Torchlight, a strong whig paper, introduces the letter of (Jen. Tavlor, recommcridini? the employment of blood-hounds in Fl ridi with the following remarks : "Flop.iha Ih.ooiiiiouNU-'. We remember 1 have gotten up some very 'spicy articles' un the subject of the following letter in 110. We didn't dream then that any such contingency could arise in which we would Irtve to support its huuvine .author for President we don't dream so yet, and we begin to think we never shall. We remember that season, seeing some banners re ith ditgs painted on ih-m. Wonder if the Taylor party would like to purchase them 1 We presume this letter affords the evidence of (Jen. Taylor's statesmanship." day Comity. The Democrats of Clav countv met in convention on t,e o tl j f the'p,!oose ,f nonnnatiior can,i. fP il, A .,.,.... .J,....;.... 1. IJ T "Milium l"l UH .TUllSl V 1 LL I H 'II. 1 I'l II n I . X ' H lllll. ,, . , . f, , , ., ... .' 1 rwiüen ; Amos Hedge and 1 hos. est, Vicei'residents, and m. . Houston, Sccretarv. AM the townships were represented. A committee of one from each township was tip;oiuted, lo whom were referred the nomination, which had been made in open convention, fr the several offices to be filled; which committee reported the following ticket, to-wit : pur Kepresemative, Join T. Alexander; for Clerk, ieo. -ill l .t lowing resoJutlnis were adopted. Resolved. That we will. " sink or swim, live or ' - - , ' - 1 111 "k I) .1 j Lass U - Dotier. R'solied, lnat we cheerlnily nd pt the platform laid down hy the Paltiutoro Convention. Resfh'vtd, That we will tied the ticket this dav preI cented to the voters of Clay county. Messrs. A.T. Ii"sean! D. K. Williamson were nom inated as Assistant Electors (alias " T.hundn-rrs.") (ior tins rountv. Ll'n uie announcement ot ttieir title of Thunderers, all present 'pulled out the vent ; . r 0f lht.ir fl basket, and suffered the stream of ' , , i i t merriment M fl..w clearly. j 1 be convention then adjourned to meet w ith all their feliow-eitizetn in ma." meeting, in How ling Green, on Saturdav, the i-'Oth of July. , ..p , , ... , , , . j 0 'iavL' bcc obliged to condense the above proccedings, because we Ind not room to give them in 1 ljf:x. L.ANE. 1 his officer, our .Marion, arrived yesterday from Vera Cruz, escorted by Lieut. Waters j i f r,,MiSIn.1 .nhmt.ers. The Gen. , , , ,. , 11. . .1 : "- n.m, nsusni.ms no mi.u 00 i..e ro.tu. il ;is sai.i, u lew ias .igo, wi.u 1 areues would send Jarauta to bring our commif .oners i(, tu 1 U with him ; Lot the simple Jact that lien, l.ane ns reU,rntd, Will keen the Padre Well in the back , . . . ' ,. ,,,, ground. Arne rican Star, May Jih to talk with him; bot the simple fact that Gen. Lane -TTT 1 I. O, O. F. OU'Ill ation. The Independent Outer if Odd Fellows mil hive a rilfll;trr it'll. ! By the Rev. J. F. Lenee. on the 27th June, ISIS, Feriukand Locis Wfrbe to Miss Fhedtrika Wube, all of ...... ...... llilSlllJ'. 2?I:iflisoil Iii!i:iit:uo:is KaiIro:tT. Business for the week ending Saturday, Jukc 24, Outward 4ÖU iaci -ei ; 1(11 t ri whi-ky ; 35 do mclasses; 160 do salt ; ö d vinegar; 1G do tar; 10 do oil; 5 1 . . J O . i r r . r- i . r l .k negi iniwuer ; o ian miin ; j uuie ; vo iun con ; u.ouu feet lumt.er : 100 f, et ti-nbei ; 2.t 643 ILs ether fieight. Inward. 442 pasener ; 16 h ie; 7o0 tilfl"ur; 15 d laid; 14 d tu ter; ö do beef; 16 d. wheat; 6iH) huh do; 1624 Jo Coin; 920 d oats ; 6 0 do short ; 40 1o ee 1 ; 4 to no oian; XMiuorneai; oo.vuo leet lumhet ; JH.tn U lert eimiin f. tue iHimimr .f dctf rinimns wlirilir Mi liall t Irv ird or noi, 10 ne apiien in uie iitircn.ise 01 .111 i iiiinii;ii r irr r.i.cn.e una - . . . . 1 . . r- ... .1. . apimratiin: A nl v kt-.", lh t:uy C.-nnl limr ilir. t-.t Oi-ir l'rapiraiii: .1 n.i w ikt-.', me t-iiy t Tirii n vr oir. i-i in-ir 1 rtlnt ''"lehn jr lumiimn for surli rhfO'oi : I hnrfurr, I, :. A. rhapuniii, President ef thf City round et I ndiv..,..lM, lrr. proclaim, that an lection will l IwlJ n the eipHih day f Jul jr. u i.. . r ..;. -. .. ..i.,- ... I, - . k. person following, to wit: 1st Ward J. Little's 1 1 oM, Mr Flirtt. Inspsrtor. M tu OmiM 1 1. iir. Janw- ;iilrp. lo 3d lo Citv raloon, Amin- A lnj.lon, do 4:h do IiikIi it Si hool House, IW-njamni Mct'hne, io 5ih do Jim. K la Turning Shop, VV in. ! W jirint, 1o Clti do WaKhinctoii Hall, Tlx I niiirllaii, 1o 7th d. IhMnct School House. J no H. Ferjrun, do Fu lli piirf.r" f li-riiiiniiig lifili- ln t rrnn in rf h ! tunidrrd tiolt.us of Ihr Uxat.lrn of Uir city rIiiiII hr lr ird or n4, tole aiHied to the puri'lii- of an a lditt Mi.tl Fire Knpne udnp par.Hus. All oioiliflfd voirn w lionrr in favor of tin Ivy f urli tatwitl eiidotm on tfinr hallotn Uie word ' Fa 1 ," a n 1 tli.te opp.wd Ihrrelo lhw,,rdallTl.', '-i-'- oneuvi.cn.r. m.,.,.j cWd ,t jM.:VV and 'c I'. r said election, ,to I ird in four rarh ward bv ihr liiifttr ilirrf, will n-rl at tlir Council fh.iinti 1 ivift 11 . iri vi ivwiriAV'i i 'l'lio t :i ialii luv. I'tii.. iif X'..' I ' r ' CirtT.1L $100,0410, Cfcarfrirtf lf. 'BP 11 K dirtttor ol thm c i.iiiai.y are Mime of thr moot wealthy and Vi tiitluri.ti.il nirti in Nrw Jrrsry. I..r pui.l I i ihn c ity. '1 h company M ill nture nvrrrhrt iuIij-, funnluir, ti.fr, Im t-'ltna , and nanufartifir, not exieedit:g Jj.OOOoii hij link ; alrsi, vrrl, car- , gura, and treight DIRECTORS IN NtW JI.IliCV. aoitCRT w. rGPti, Candr. .'iMtii ioolb, Camden. jotcrH w. coor a, Camdrm. juhi w.miiiu, Camärn. KicHtMO rk.iLH, C'timJrii. ii. l. nv I.KLI.T, Cum Jen. tiiiHti Di'ii, Cumiicn. muH Tut, Cumätm. i. k. cowptKTHwaiTt, Cumdrn. J .. titiTH, Camdem. 14 AC MICKLK , L'urmJt. 11 I. Hi uui ,Srcy . It. W. UCIH'.N, 1'rraiiirnt. A'plK-atun tor (tistitance may be m.idr to t'H AS. V. CADV, Arrnl Hl I ndiuiisN.ia. (Ottirr in Stair H.mk lliiildinz.) 9 K.ALKD rropotalii will hr irceivtd by t ti undrignrJ, at tho ? otticii of the Stcictary of Statr, uuiti i o'clock, Saturday. tb .l day of July nrjt, for ihe drlivery of iXYF. HV.SDliF.l) .1X1) TirtLVi Y CÜHDS of Pound split w ooj, uital Ic Ior tlir l.t gikla t ure ana the i'ubhc l)lti rk. Tlr wood to bedtlivtrrd by the 1Mb. of NovemLer. llond and curh y w ill be icpiired from the uc CeMful l.idJtr for the prrfotmance of hi cntract. 1. M A I I H K, Auditor. SAMV HANNAH. Treasurer. 9-3wls JNO. H. I llOMl'SON. frcrrUry. stliT4Tro. wax .T ' BV a yomirf man, a SalrKman, BooL-kerprr, or sjitant, in Dry Goods Store. Having three yean experience in tl.tj l.uiins, he cm give good rccoiinm. la' ions : lie h ill maWr him lf uset ul to thokc vlu mn tiip' him. Kr luilio r paiticu larsadJii'CHS. CIlklLVLIt, tbrouu I'.O. N. B. H w ill erifagr a Uook-k.e'r or Accountant In an oitcu in the cit. U-Jwli