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P O L I T I CA L here, w e are obliged to g iv e th e exam ple.— W e do not see w here this state of th in g s may le ad ns-to. In dependent o f the lo ss o f specie trad e betw een th is city and M exico produ- a com m ercial movement of $ 1 7 ,000,000 p er annum, o f w hic h we have been m ost cru- cUy deprived, to a dvance the in terests o f a fe t e la n d speculators. .c ONEIDA WHIG H Dunham Alfred W insor 10 4 0 W hipple 4 0 W Whip] 6 A B W illi N N W eaver ellington 10 F Wel i A W il .................................... G F W icker 10 4 GaboonW rig h t & J Williams boat b’r 5 A V H W ebb T R W alker N Whi] illiams 10 ipple K W illa rd I Sarah D Whipple Elizabeth Wood E R W illiam s 5 5 John W ells D Wager James V f W illia m s for Young Meii’s Association a j a guilty of; e ^ regret ously eflever si uijd we regret-more th a n Si, th at the ly be regarded, by those who consider the whole air arid aspect o f this .number of the Knickerbocker, as to some extent participes crimi- nis. T hey are ccrtaiufly fitted to producq distrust. Ta l e s o f t h e W^o o d s a nd Fie l d s .By the author of“ Tw o Old Men's Tales.\ In one vol.-i- H arper & Brothers. wm^mhave in fact apportioned this etock, aedordioato the published list, to our political friendi, H-onrht to be kno n a t once so a t to relieve Ihe eo li- sioners from the execrutioiii which are heaped up- on them by our political frienda, (not Ihe most le - U U ca , T uea d w jr, A a g n a t US. 1 8 30 ' Ik t e r e s t Sa c r if if . d t o Pr i n c i p l e.—G en. H a rria on 's farm, a l ibe Jiiorih BemI of ilie O h io river, contains some liundreds of acres ■ o f aa fine c o rn crowriif a s any in th e world, and it is not suitable for w heat, or sm all grain o f any kind. Many y e a rs ago, when c ory c ould not be sold for more than e ig h t or. ten 3 per bushel, th e C en eial established a dis- .c e n ts ( l tille ry , in order to comrert hls^surplus ^emn in to a more portable and profitable a rlicle for - —^ ( time^it cd tiia ry inte rest, he set th e noble exam ple of aacrificing gain to principle, and abolished his d istille ry . In bis address to th e Ham ilion.C o. a g ric u ltu ral society!-, delivered five years ago, ( a c opy o f w hic h will b e found in onr paper to -d ay ,) he beautifully an d feelingly alludes U t h is subject in th e follow ing e x tr ac t: “T h e ex p o rts o f O hio are generally tht substantial com forts of life, w hic h are every w h ere acceptable, their arrival hailed a s a b lessing a s well in th e m an sio n s o f the rich, 8 s ii n tt h e c o t u g e o f tt h e p o o r - b y th elu .v u rio u s a s ta e r—by lux inhabitant o f th e tr o p ics, cloyed w ith the lus- cid h s product o f his b urning clim ate, as by th e poor negro w ho m iniste rs to h is w an ts.—j A l as ! th a t th ere should b e an exception ; th a t a soil so prolific o f th a tA v h ich is ^ood, should, by th e perversion of the intentions of the C re - n a to r, be made to yield th a t which is evjl—t .c .For Preslkeut, A G D auby E E vans 5- T Mooney H enry Morey .c Preslkeut, WILLIAM HENRY HARRISON .c t, FRANCIS GRANGER .c F o r V tc e .:P re s id en t, E g an & C lark 25 J McGregor^ Mayna 3 Mitch( [itchell J S McBride John McNull J McCall , James M u rp h y .c ,i, s f A m erican p^ggj few m onths since, flattering sundry Th e Bir d in t h e Bu s h . — W o learn from E n g lish papeis received a t tins office th a t th e story w hic h w ent th e rounds of the ; p^, sudden dem ise of a g rea t-g re at.g re at uncle in E n g lan d they had becomie the legal h eirs lo an im m ense e state, was all humbug. T h e M an ch ester T im e s it is all the w o ik o f a\” no torious sw indle r whose name is Jo sep h Ad- says i d y , and who m akes a business o f announcing to pe r ^n s by ad v ertisem en t th a t he is in pos- session o f in form ation w hich deeply con cern s tb e m /a s a m eans o fe x to rtin g la rg e fees for ap p afetit services. Since th e M osher affair he has been d etected in a sim ilar tr ic k at M anches- te r. H e w rote a geij,ilemen th a t he w as h e ir to £ 3 4 5 0 , w hic h he would put him in th e w ay ___........................... . „„ j o f obta ining i f he would send him a £ 1 o r- I t resulted, o f co u rse , th a t the fortune w as located in th e moon.—iV. B ed fo rd Ga- . . . . . . . . . . . I ............ilanek and Luihcr Biadish. Gulian C. Vcrpl liobcrt W ,Mott, JoshuA .A .Spencer _ Cynthia E llis’ 5 Jam es F a y 10 arper T h is book contains two interesting and impres- sive stories—the first illustrating, painfully illus- trt^iiig the prodigious folly of sacrificing happiness to obtain wealth and title—and the second portray- ing vividly the fcnrful consequences o f yielding to vicious habits aW passions. It contains also some poetiy. I f we mistake not this is the book which made so much noise a t the south, and came back in such hot haste to the publishers, on account o f some animadversions on slavery found' in it. It may be had a t T rac y ’ s. Unhert c T w n .a i, Oumoiius Harson, y a m e r S i i, a\” W ml\ 11: Sarah Fuller For the Wlilg. a\” r i ,A r i o s i .., S '\' PH- 11: s S H I k ’’' s s r r a p s : ' M Bagg treas F ire Dep. James M urp hy Herman Norton Joel Northrop ■The Observer says that a“ few months ago W h ig considered Gen. Harrison unw orthy of h * w 11 satisfactorily the States.” W eclial- ■ uch declaration in office o f President o f the U n lenge the Observer to show any s the columnsvpf the W hig. T h at Mr. W ebster was ■ first chofce we freely admit. But it does not Gen. H arri- when it is perfectly evident that the publii follow from this that we should oppose son, i mind h as settled on him a s the candide posed to Mr. V an Buren. W ith all deference to neighbour o f the Observer, w e think it would be e in him to sa y as^little as possible abc [etternichs” and i out “tacticians,” until the party finds Another head, and until the doings o f the pack- m of office-holders a t Baltimore has “Metter i , ed conventior passed from the memory o f t le. 'the t peop S Farwell Northrop N CN ew e U g s - Noyes R Northwa; Orphan Asyl C ^ ^ e O O NeU ly j r 25 8 um Society W C Noyes E l e c t io n s .—//irftffltta.—The Cincinnati W hig o f the 12th inst. gives the following a s the result o f the election in Indiana, as far ns heard from. Representatives, W h ig , 26 do. T ory, 7 Senators, W h ig , 7 do T ory, 1 T h e whigs are also said to have been succebful in the counties of Vigo, Putnam an d Indianapolis. Keniiukij.—In 44 counties heard from iii Ken- tucky, C l a r k , the whig candidate for governor, has 23,736 votes, Floumey, the to ry candidate, has 16,482,—Clark’s present majority 7,254. In the same counties in 1832, Breathitt, the Jack- son candidate, received 23,001 voles, showi fection in the t lelory ran k s o f 6,522. ^ T h e JESSE BUEL . George G raham 5 W Fairling GAM.AL1EI. H. BARSTOW. Ma n u f a c iu r e s i n Vir g i n ia T h e people !1 o f V irginia a re at le n g th becoming aware th a t th a tru e in te rests o f th a t state are identified w ith th e e ncouragem ent o f Ar ,— meric an industi and en terp rise, and are tak in g m easures to e tablish factories and e n ter into m a nufacturing operations th a t will ultimately repay th em in a ric h e r h arv est th an th e y e v er reaped from th eir fields o f golden g ram or nauseous tobac- ‘'\ w e notice am on? o th e r in stances o f th e Te g kind, th a t a jo in t stock company has been for- ined a t D anville,.w ith a capital o f §50,000, all j subscribed, for th e establishm ent of a cotton factory at th a t place. T h e president and di-: rec to rs h a re been elected , and th e 't- I puted to ^■isil ,-eral o f the most im portant tenon, for th e collection o f t! th e i m necessary to th e successful j prosec tio e enterprise. nforniation sculinn o f th On o d a B . a n k .—T he award of the commissioners appointed to distribute die stock o f this bank, a p peared in the Observer of T u ealay last. T h e task, owing to the large amount subscribed, w as a diffi Osborne Mr. Do n k in ’ s Le c t u r e s — T h e following trib- ute to the tro th and value o f Phrenology, and a so to the abim ies o f Mr. D uakin, its aceomplishi advocate and d e fe n d er,-n o w delivering a conr of lectures a t th e Hal! of the Young Men’s Assn, cialiom ^w e copy from the Gospel Messenger o f iafjgdSay la st. J Guild N015)’ ator, to yield at evjl—t sc a tte r life and death w ith an equal hand.— T o ilie heaft-cheerin g p ro sp ects o f flocks and h e rd s feeding on unrivalled p astures of grain, ex h ib itin g th e sc rip tu ra l proof th a t the seed h ad been ca s t on good ground—how often is th e e y e o f the philanthropic trav e lle r d isg u s- te d w ith th e d a rk unsighily m anufactories of ____,_^ il oison lo th e bodv and the a c ertain poison—p y a o u ll A m odern £ n c a s or U lysses m ight m is tak e th em for entrances into th e Infernal R eg io n s, n o r would th ey g reatly err. But un lik e those passages which conducted G re cian an d T ro jan h eroes on th e ir piou, nes to w hich all v retc h w ho shall us er- ,c o n d u c e n ter th em are cult one, and wc do not believe th at any division Amo u n t o f Cu s t o m .—It is stated th a t the nue which has accrued a t the N ew Y ork Custom house during the la st tw o quarters, exceeds nine millions o f dollars. tj^ely satisfactory to r distribution could have been - J C Gun James Plant Phipps iafjgdSay ening to the introductOTy^ectuw on this subject, last tVednesdayeveniwg, and ju s-' *T h e main o'bject'of the le cturer’s address was to movements of the human mind are to be profilablr carried on th rough a careful n ltc -” —•- Illogical construction o f those los organa which th e caroe^convinced o f the proprietjynf suspendins r riel ie‘ fears entertained . .lonupn, honesty to those , ingUiecl plain on mainly instrumental in procur- charter. no one can deny. W e do not com- for we received all, . more soundness o f discrim- R Au g u s t .—T h is n Th e Kn ic k e r b o c k e r heir, though containing sonqe excellent prose articles, and poetry of an unusually high order, is--w itli all deference-be it spoken—in our opinion inferior as a whole to many that have gone before. *' Orgai Remains,”“ Salt W ater Sketches,”“ T h e Siege of Antioch,” and the“ Letters from Palm yra,” are all very clever. T h ey will be read with interest. But here an d there interspersed we have other piece which deserve unqualified reprobation. W in .could un li , Observer says y the W h ig h as been com- pelled to yield to the“ political ‘ Mertinechs’ ”—yes, that’s the w o r d - o f its party. AVitli w h at grace from one w ho had lo swal- nd give can such a c h ar' r the Bolters \ the county government to those whom low witli all their h ard terms, an dcDourmneed as traitors and federalists! A nd then again, when it is remembered tliat Mr . J ac k s o.n OT A fEEUNO IN CO .MMON WITH THE REPUB- Pa r t y ,” and that the Observer w as com- modest does the Editor appear in m aking such liiist the d to the Metternichs o f it's paiirty, give cliarge as the above again; ic W h ig ! AV B G ra y Ely Platt S & ccled; and 1 , even a .rA^rr of f a ir n ess ^ the distribution, we disuos«l the S Getz D P en fieU jr 10 Mrs C W Prentiss 10 5 T Pomeroy ■ 15 8 in silence. But such is not the case; and the cx-F cilenient which exists among all classes is no more have been anticipated from the course commissioners have seen fit to pursue. disuos«l to nass the m atter,over should have been disp sed top the atter C C PG rosh 5 R H igham 15 R Huntington 10 ...r ,ful c oun try . In his m essage o f D ecem ber J money to purchase public land ! T he question ari- whole, perhaps they have no more reason fortitude vic to rio usly displaved bv every dis-i en A.vos Kf .v d a l l for bis influence ! ! ’ .a load ofobloqby which, how ty iplion o f troops engaged, as well a s the I if this .st.itement is true, (.and we see no reason oiWAem , no W ro A fe man cov COLLECTED FIRAINESS WHICH DISTlNGCtsHD .‘fa\ ,* tnomli''p'iecr the Washington ' the commissioners have been accessary to THEIR COMMANDER , on HR occaslon requiring . Globe, were SO bitterly opposed to the Distribution | noprly of the slock in the hands o( gent th e UTMOST EXERTIONS OF VALOR AND DISC-: of the Pubim I p ^ o sfu ‘^ r ^ d | a rt ouppropriatlon, v . ----j itor, who makes it. (Kufus Dawes.) is a man of dcrlake lo say. Others can judge ; '1 s — ;iu—\ ,e .'w i ' , — ; “■ - ~ T h ..,h .,..a .t u .« , .h s Iry an d storisrira/rather than poHlirnl. cliarge of favonlism, and o f having prostituted J Halstead unusu-J E H iiunan 25 Susan H arrington 1 :y o f tlie commissioners and tlieir reckless disre-G W H ubbard garJ o f < lie claims of those who must be tlie princi-A House 13 'pal supporters o f the bank, if it is supported at all; M H art 20 it which now prevails continue, -A Hitchcock & Co 10 ixceedingly embarrassed in [ \B H arrison 25 I Carm i H a rt 10 a fair and E P H an d y 20 of the stock should be made Sylvanus Holmes 25 their influence in obtaining the C Hurlburt have been utterly disreganled; yet, on tlie D H H astings b to be dis-Jo hn H ogan site party. B .Hurlburt int p arty W a rd H un t to he sure, been well cared for; but, if a tithe D . H unt J. rts are true as to tlie despicable measures H . Hutchinson •esoned to secure to themselves an un-K-Hurlburt cannot hut rest under H R H a r t ' obl ever lightly it may sit E H art •1 sustain. W hether N Hallcck 25 25 25 25 ■i^ this mo-Burton H aw ley 25 !5I e x er t i o n s ' ISE.” — R ichm ond W h ig . •nUemen so G Huntington From the Nashville <Tcm d id not GEN. AACKSON S PREFERENCE. g t oo' ^il rn l. .0 th in k fo r h im ^elf-^11 Ke wish- as what G en . Ja pkson th ought. ; vetUgation to ait during the recess, aud ferret out v» e h ave h eard a nother mqniber of the same ; the transactions connected with the bod y seriously ----------^» .' ir, ....m ;- Bon had rent coun try and w as now about to retire life ,he o u ght to be gratified in th e -c shall not un-S H arvey of this matter N Hull jusdy liable lo tlie T H arding nr families, J C Uustin; ;ial stations to provide for»thcir H ti gs connexions and d .’pcndants, no one will doubt for a Samuel H all 10 moment who is in an y degree conversant with the H ubbcl & Curran 25 facts. T here-^ no necessity, however, for us to go Manuel H ogan of the charges made against rc-^is with giving a list of the applications and aw ards in T Hull this city; and should our limits permit hereafter, J M H atch A Hickcox ou\§.:..so.x oypas.'..g-75: L’:/pa.n'l( 1n'1I.—‘ Tfle eulilul of lhz MIrror.yu|n1uL\ed in \\'xuh|nzh-n Cny. in cnmlnenllng ucenuv on me nh..<e.c nflhe ‘ nrnxnvui(hm-—u\ A.\m;v.‘urmv'mn an.» Hrlpnim. nu have induced e the Eklitors tcTOdmit such a tis- sue o f irreverence, and profanity, and Unmeaning Marlingspike’s Y arn” ? It would disgrace any periodici standing: hov babble as“ Jack ar!lin s :al, no matter how low its w much more then is it to be regretted it should have been admitted into tlie pages of a work so deservedly popular as the Knickerbocker. Nor are we less siffprised at the admission o f the elaborate though short defence o f Hume’s argume ;ainst miracles—a defence’certainly uncalled for, still misplaced in such a work apology o f the Eiii- ^ ced, dt have a word to say. It is obviously prs, w ith which it is introdi natter. On the“ Dit Jotton M ather,” w errors o f that somewhat celebrated manwere mani but piost of them were the errors of h is age. Peabody has insulated them and made tliem t rors o f an individual, unrelieved qualities of the head or heart. O r, if such qut are adverted to, they appear to u s to be adver duc^ ed by an y redeeming alities ted to after the manner and with the purpose ascribed by, hy did not M r. Pea- o d ^ h i at praise.” W .ders of the good as well as the evil to“ faint his rea i which marked the character o f Cotton M ali N ay, instead of alluding lo a dia ry existing in pri- vate and public libraries, and hence inaccessible to the great mass of community, w hy did lie not quote, and thus enable us to decide on its contents for'our- selves. T h a t would have been fair—that would have been manly. The course o f Mr. Peabody is unprecedented. Palm er JJ^ T lie Observer does not w ish to impeach the intentions the whig candidate for the Presidency. O no, far from it. But it will give currency to vile falselioal, and then refuse to publish a refute tion o f the calumny—a refutation so full and ant pie that the most skeptical must be convinced of tl utter groundlessness of the charge. Desperate ii deed must be the condition of that party whose o: gans find it necessary to try to destroy the reputi tion o f an lionest man, in order to advance the ii (Crests of their own candidate. ie‘ fears entertained by some piona persons, th at the science p ut the tru th s o f th e gospel in we?e without fou'^dMiSn. ™Mr D^nkinVa°8 m\ on* y conhrm ed us in this matter, but unless we great- mmm. H Rogers D Reed J Rogers E H Rogers No r t h Ca r ou n a .—T he Richmond Inquirer, the leading V an Buren in V irginia, is o f opinion lliat Spaight m ay be elected Governor, but th at N.orlh Carolina w ill ha rc a whig; legislature i If this be so, that slate is safe. paper I C P Ge n e r a ^ J Gen. Gaines’s ^psjuis .J a c k s on has countermanded f ition on th e Governor of T en- lent of mounted gun-men. Tbe> his le tter to Gov. Cannon,'—. esident says in H Rogers R Snyder Ca s e o f Ra t u b u nAu l e .n .—T h e Buffalo Jour- nal o f Wednesday afternoon says, that after a full examination, commenced on M onday afternoon, and continued until Tuesda] charged with being concern B. and L. Rulhbun, w as full] to aw ait die decision of the grand ju ry upon says “'I’he obligations of oar trea ty with Mexico, r well ns tne g eneral principles which govern ou r intercourse with foreign powers require us t» maintain a strict neutrality in the euptest which limits and jurisdic tion, would be uoaulbon.sed and highly improper. A scrupulous sense of these ob-« ligations has prevented me th u s for from doinc ........‘•r„g „h ,c h enn authorise Ibi .......•* — lerement is unmindful of then our gov iD ) b m, oni to be equally cautious and circumspect in .x ,present instooce must-be considered* and unlesi quisition may furuitli a reason to Mexico* for sup- posing th a t Ihc government of Ibe U. S. may bm IE 5119:\. V: Aspenccr 25 s llfm Stacy 2. Jam es Sa; S Standi Ut ic a a n d Sc h e n e c t a d y Ra il Ro a d .—From the Collector of this road we learn that the receipts thus far from this end of the route alone, have b ^ n upwards of fourteen thousand dollars. A n sum has in idl probability been received a t the end o f llic route, which would swell the amount taken since the first opening of the road to twenty eight thousand dollars. The fall travelling has not commenced, and we have little question that will be fully sustained in the st months to come. A g a in : W e must express our d'lslike of the ;le headed“ The Eclectic.” It is an insidious at- Clm iining,” c lack, in favor of“ ourow n eloqi the great body o f evangelical Christians America and Europe. T h e writer aim s the shafts o f his reasoning, ostensibly, Hobbes, Mandeville, Rocliefoucault, Olhefs; but after stigmatizing them a timents which can be held only b y the morose, malignant, and cross-grained; and after eulogizing the ancient Eclectics, who formed their flieological schemes out o f the philosophical works of Greece and Rome, as well os the Bible, this disciple o f “ our eloquent C hanning,” very adroitly transfers, in die following paragraph, the whole load o f odium which he has accumulated on led, the good and the evU—meaning b y the former, those who have the essential element o f virtue—the I love o f God—in tlirni, and by the latter, llioSe who die sentiments of Helvetius and ,s infernal sen- linguished writers above natp to those who be- lieve there are but two classes o f human beings—- the heads of the dis- have it not. “much easier, requires f a r inatian, lo have but a two an beings, Ou:i i no names, but who does his drift 1“ It is unyueslionably,\ says he, d less thought and discrim- ',wo-foldjporg.L classijifalion o f hum U : members o f each class being sup-' posed lo be Ihe moral anlipolks o f the other. A s a llie- ory, it is beautifully simple; but is it correspondent to the condition, docs it satisfy the varied pheno na o f humanity ? W c think every m an ’ conscii ness, to say^ nothing of his observation, must falsify it. ‘ For,’ says Lord Bacon—good authority we the minds o f aU are at some lime's in a are sure—‘ more perfect and a l other times in a more deprav state.’ But to the theory once more. Docs it he monize with what of our fellow men ? I; if the palpable ovcrsigli r eyes see, and our ears hear. Is it not, on the contrary, guil- ty o e ht of real virtues, and does it not look with loo severe and scathing a glance upon m any human actions o f a noble and prai worthy nature ? A h ! we fear that sickly sensil ity is its chronological antecedent, while toe know that a surly misanihropp is its natural consequent; santhropy feeds on any supposition favorable to its cheerless and heart-oppressive views o f man. I f it could be proved that nine tenths o f the human fam ily are morally worthless a nd utterly deslilute o f the feebUd scinlillalions'of true virtue, how the dem- onstration would g ra tify the fe w delicious Timons o f our world t H erewe have plain sailing. T h e writer’s aim is manifest. It is made manifest in the italicised encqs, which—we speak o f the last-;-as is usu- ally the case with the wrilufgs of those who tread in the steps of“our ow n eloquent Chanm ng,” con- tain s a misrepresentation of the sentiment they con- demn. W h o believes that nine-tenths of the human family are morally wortldess in the sense in which the writer obviously uses those words 1 W e ven- ture to say, no one. A nd as to the charge of mis- anthropy and sickly sensibility, so confidently level- ed b y this writer against those who hold the opin- ion which he' opposes and misstates; it is equally groundless. W h o are the men who have Been more distinguislied than others for their philanlhropy- ,who have most ardently desired and mosl, success- fully labored for the illumination, puriP)vj»nc®i“ nd prosperity of their species ? T hey who are ever and anon talking about the capabilities and perfection o f human nature ih the present state, or they who defend w hat th irw riter, not understafiding or erwise misrepresenting, \iepudiates with so much I scorn? Let the impulsive poWer which moves the ■ various engines o f benevolence in operation at the present day, answer. Sickly If we mistake not, that saddle is j T h is attempt—inaidioua we must call it—to identify 1 Evangelical Christiana with such men ns Hobbes, 1 Mandeville, Rpchefoucault and others, and by the ugg o f exaggerating terms, to cast odium on their I doctrine, is ungenerous not o n ly ,b u t unjust. W e ! t , . sensibility, indeed 1 i on the wrong hors ,he u ght to be gratified in th e AVe h eard v ery recen tly a gentlem an fortune, influence, respectability, gravely g u e , “th a t as it was im possible for the gr m ass of th e people o f th e United S tale s to u. personally acquainted w ith th e different can d id a te s fo r ih e P resid en cy , th e opinion ot G en. j ’ ' Ja ck son ought to exercise a governing influ-j ^Re n t l e m e j e for a particular cession, is not denied, ' masons to office, and have t N o r can it be denied that the powerful in-P '/’ • should pot, in the eventalluded to, feel ihonl scru p le brought to bear in behalf of a of the masonic iostitution. Whilst the fact of any rticular candidate. such applicant being an adhering mason would A ll who will not jo in in th e support o f this eertainly not be regarded by me as constituting a irticular candidate a re denounced as enem ie s of prefcrence, I could not, at the same time, p »n i ministratioD. T h e patro nage of th e government ly closed ag ain st the friends of al! I d a tes, sa v e the fa v o r e d one; ' tu b e . ID all other respects, well entitled thereto. 1 gentlemen, very respectfully, ^ Yor obedient servant, ..,p.' p orting and vindicating a C h ie f M agistrate ami Charles Ogle, Esquires. , w ho, in an eminent, d egree, enjoys ih ------” ' -------------’-------------------------d eq cc and love of h is country, princij iwed and p ractices pursued w hic h siriise a t ■ p resent—Li< ielson and Bn — ■ - the confi Court for the Correction o f Errors.—Au- ta blished with mathem atical certain ty , th a t a J*'® following commuDicaliod from Chief Justice this city; and should our idf it to the diS'erent towns t ij < B ArrUCANTS .J. A Spencer permit towns in the county.\ E C o n k e y - B J B Cushman S Comstock 6 E S Comstock H Clark Apollos Cooper 1 B F Cooper Alex Campbell W m Cattell A Churchill 4 B Cushing T E Clark H Collins D Childs S lW B Clark J M Church T Colling L W Clark M rs S Clark G C Collins 1 P Campbell 10 M ary Chambcrl H arry Camp 5|J Cunningham 5 John Camp a w Crafts 25 J G Crocker Reuben Irons 25 W m Johnson 5 4 A B Johnson 10 5 M M Jones 5 20 10 Joseph Jam es 10 10 C B Johnson 5 25 D James 10 25 Jones & W h itin g 25 15 B 'Jam cs 5 25 T L K ingsle y , 20 25 6 W Kirkwood 10 M Kirk'wood 10 2 § J ( 10 S Kellogg P V Kellogg C P Kirkland 25 H 'K now lson J H Keeling 15 J F KitUe 25 G Kirkland 10 A dam K ills 5 25 8 R S LaUimore 10 10 4 T LaUimore 10 R Lamai-ce in 1 1 J Lenncbackcr 20 G IF Ladd 10 J J Lyon 25 D A L yons & Co 25 25 10 S Lighibody 5 ,David Lewis E Seymour Seymour lojC R Smith .J. Anson Shapley t r a .—T his superb piece of tatuary can now be seen at the Iiall lately O ' 1 by die Mechanics' Association in L aw Build- St a t c e o f C l e o pa ings. T he high encomiums bestowed upon it by itors o f papers in our principal cities are, we think, well merited. T he exhibition will close on Thursday o f this week, and llioscr’^wlio wish to-see .,p i ..d u .f .I« i d „„ ,1 . p d *” opportunity of paying their re.spectsto tl>c beau-|,,.,ve il representation o f Egypt’s hcniilmiis Guccn. H Armstrong S H Addington Lyman l Scranton C Spring From Uie Rochester Democrat of Wednesday. Th e Wh e a t Ch o p.—Vho harvest in th-s p a rt o f Ihe S tale is over, and the npprekensinns of a light crop confirmed. With n few exceptions, F best farms iu the county have yielded-no ni Jlj *” 7 ; / ^ beau-|,,.,ve heard o f several parcels giving froindO to 60 have means g eneral. T he prices o f w heat will doubt- less he high. ‘ , however, o f a ||yll ' 'T h e r e will he no d an ^ |ip|,i. T e ange , a ine the increase in price wil roinpeiisato Ihe farmer fur w hat th ere is below ai or -iaary crop. a ftimiiie ; and perhaps die r D N’ All!-n 25 6 Seymour Gerry Sanger f(Jannett C Shippey 5 D Saumet 15 5 A Seymour C Simonds s Abbey A T Butler Enos Brown B Seymour Th e A ij ia n y Un io n Gi a il s. — T ins fine c paiiy arrived in our city on W ednesday last, and were escorted to tlie National H otel h look of a collation served up “I ’” in the usuql good taste of the proprietors o f that establishment. They left town on Friday morning in the cars. hey W W Backus E S Brooks .M Shepard L Smith V Sihith . M ary Bryant H Barnard Is s- th a t this distribution had been made in coiilurmity one of those persons whose names were mentio such an aTtcusnlion is any IhiiiB b u t agreeable. In r s li r r it struck me th a t if I could m eet\this and other gentlemen who enterlain similar iidjiressions in a jieating Ihe accusation,under such circumstances ns precludes any exculpation on th e part df those meu*Bho, o rT ra en T L eT n“ pmliM*vrith mfsetf in this distribution, and have therefore no mijliority «y % r o 7 e ; . s % ‘ u & ^ ^ ^ and who is suspicious of unfair play, will consider Er 7S S S S E S out bvsome th ree o r four W higs, of those belong-an ing lo th e pa rty in this city w ^o were to receive ilri'bulion that I have heard o f any such litt, ' butioD o f any stock by any commissioner* or by a n y o ne for the commissioaerf* I am as profound- !.VryTSSLf?r'!el'’d ' X r t 7 n» rumors o f the day in relation to them . I ehtertain, = 1 1 ry treat to scan this famous Kst. to see how each of us are guaged by onr plitieal friends, and wh was the quqntum of merit or importance, as mei lat a s. by c llu rch BiU in the House of Commons on th e w as to comeon night of th e 18tli ult. when two important amend- raents w ere to be moved, and it was thought \fc ling of t'ne e sta b lish ^ \tS s IS attended with hail, than- L Bainum- M ary Brown 10(T F T i Ira A Thurber P T h u rb er and that the g ro at pi Wh a t d o c s t h i s m e a n !—T h e following ' sions, it seems to m e proper th at the reason of my ind T ‘ :,l ^ ? aT m tiiU o ^Sf' M Bagg s Bcanlslzy r. Banku: Wm §.-max Clrptmcr )0 Jliljmx S Thompson J C L u n d 15 Blaitesley L Lawrence J W Livingston Anson !^ittle A T hom as Job T aylor T rac y & Son \tS s .. IS storm, attended with hail, than- had no accomplices. I am as pure as Brutus and Sanet, and like them wished for the liberty of m y Muc^ excitement was caused in P* \ ’-J ^ e tr ial and conviction of the Editor of the G azette,.. an objectionable article, or, as the Gaaeife sa y s, - belong-an attack upon th e good sense o f the pal \KSKocstton to morH anarchv. which sui provocat oD rd y, pports an- King Louis Philippe, had a t length Conseated to advance King Leopold of Belgium,'-the £40,000 sterling agreed upon as th e marriage portion o f th e Prmcess Louise o f Orleans, now to e consort o f th e King o f Ihe Belgians. Advices from Spain show th a t tho Queen’s troops have met with some reverse. On the U lh Ju ly . General Evans a t the hehd of OOOO troops a t- tacked Fontarnbio, which w as stoutly defended by The Carlists, who nnmbered 4000. After meeting m tb partial success the British Iroops were .com- pelled to re tre a t with coosiderible loss. Several women w ere seen during th e engagement fighting bravely on the side o f the C arlists. T he accounts from the Asturias were on th e whole unfavorable to the cause o f th e Queen, The cholera has again made its in ? 4“ e^m ind t o T r :,l t t ^ ? a T m tiiU o ^ S f' u s m e n o f N ew sp a p ers: o«“ 7 ^\h ‘ n SAV.VGE. m e n o f N ew sp a p ers: ‘ ,President, &c. Hugh Coveiftry Hugh Crocker V. V .Livingston 25 T iffany -------------f m a g istrate, Gen. A ndrew Ja ck so\ w as elevated to the office o f P re sid e n t of ili U nited S late s. (fn n v Copy.) A i .b a . v t, July 30, 1836. .luslice f the .SupremeCourt. G L Blown Polly Cozier Manchester Pen n y Sc Resolved, T h a t by th e election o f his broil and G William Hei Resolved, at by the election o his broil ?r soldier and statesman , G en. W illiam Hei of Chief .luslice o f the .Supreme Court. ofChief .luslice o f the .Supreme Court. L -iaac Bond Polly A sa Campbell N F Vedder J F J Vedder Helen P Vought 25 10 ?r soldier and statesm an, G en. William Hei ill tic th w ill, w e believe, experience ill prac tic e th e benefit f th principles, while in th j - will, we believe, experience ill prac tice benefit o f th ese principles, while in th e j o n My present office was given unsolicited. Cndei - ® due of the honor conferred, it office given unsolicited. F D Corey - his leading panizana, we llaya already mni lhum ..=,,...|.md and mum; deserted. principles, j - My present given ® due sense of the honor conferred, it - conferred, it was ._..........§ ..., .:.,5.......... m mu heen |n|‘lue_uc¢d by (Wu ton-Ida.-mans. a., Ille huungn nflhc cau is «.|...¢a -it was grate D G Bums II B B:-any H D cn io R Co mm e r c e w it h Me x ic o .—T h e dis: lus effects o f the w ar in T e xa s upon ou r mmerce (sa y s th e Boston A tlas) begin to inifesl them selves. 'Rhe following ex tra ct from a le tte r from one of th e m ost respectable houses in N e w O rleans is worthy^the a tte n tion o f our m e rc h an ts : ;:;.?;;a';:::_:;;;;::;\r.t' ,......, _......~. ..‘. um-zinrgll-W ml ud:nbm1l|:d prumul In the lm lerm‘ have bun m_man=.i u_r|§iId'nz1Aue_d, and n|| mined. :T£.|?.'-'L'§’ \up .'.I‘.'Ju'G'.‘ All (he cnu-ex argu- ~W D Broadway Jacob Bois 5 s W W Wright Squire W hipple W W hiteley caraJncceMnry. Tbe'’ b!T .l!!'eM >rf “lh'7'lMl’ t e m caraJncceMnry. Tbe'’ b!T.l!!'eM>rf“lh'7'lMl’ therefore not materially increase the labor§ of th e in of retireof -l r ** ^ Bradley ’ J W & C R Doolittle L, Morgan therefore not materially increase the labor§ remaitting judges in consequence of my retire pow ner Delia L Morgan W arren W right tion of our m erc han ts: Ne w Or l e a n s , Ju n e 25.—W e look for th e clo sin g o f th e ports o f M exico to ou r com- m erce ; and w e apprehend the most fata l con- tiequences to our com m erce from th e T ex a n w a ^ ; a lre ad y are w e f ee lin g lh e effects o f i t ; o n r p a p er circulation is based upon specie— M ex ico supplied th is pla ce, and this pla ce bled to meet fieu h y o f exchanges—hence th e,d istress ihi o a t o u r co.'nmercial cities. So small is the i m ou n t o f specie in our banks, andjpo je aloi are the directors to retain it, th at any house a hipping th e smaHesl amount o f specie, wouhl have i t s acc; .............................. the banks* ^ the largest i remaitting . ... “W... .......u.......... .._ um n In: unn- ‘tun wiI| counts: in n few day: in a Court (an an H‘nn-rlinn rm... n.. ........ ..... L. ,. . S i ' s : - .0 McDonough H . Dwight pow ner McDonough 25 .u.. vuu cuultnz |n n Iew nnyl n a Court my me goraeclion Emzn, lhe vacancy may he upeamly |lc . ' I am, gun ‘ 1 4. §5Z_.'li1'lf.‘.. whh [rent rupech Your nxmlm '- um. urv‘l. - .l_y0}iN SAVAGI . U S Dexter . . Sylvester Doolittle 25 W illiam s His Excellency Governor Ma wc t .Brown Delano ! Daniel Dodge s ' S ' e j Joseph Birdseye ...\ ““ .them 7 A boy bad four apples to -w p Ballou I Baxter 5 20 C H ayden J H ardaw ay ay L Hoadley HV H & G W W o o d lO W arn er 5 Wellington 6 ________j C P L Butler then took place, inconsequence o f the sudden AnnBreese prostrnlioii of Rallibua, who Is one of the proprh S Beebe j r L ors—- .— ,_ > lar.------------------------- H M Benedict Dupiey J C Delong John Delvin Dupiey C McCombs Allen M unn James Mapes W Devereuz John Dickey M aria W WilliamiSO Mbiry E W illiam s 10 ,_ slroyed, and 3,000 boles of tobacco and mahogany. R-Cuttiss 20 20 25 .Z M Mason W W illiams ex the cause of th e Queen, The cholera has again made its appearance in AustrianLombardy. Austrian Lombardy. A dreadful calamity o~— Grosswardein, in H unger R D Dudley