:ilAGMI MLLS GAZEf)t; 8/Niagara Falls NY Gazette/Niaga… · a m i ••: • -..•: :ilAGMI...

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a m i ••: - . . : :ilAGMI MLLS ; GAZEf)t; WEDNESDAY, AlJGUSTvi^,. 185/k. -Bailroad*-EreighU, &c. W e cannot afford to take dailies, (paying tho difference,) nnd nre therefore indebted to chance fo£ a copy of the Buffalo Courier, of the 18tli insl. * * »-• Ex-Goy. Hunt on Fusion- Jess doings of-tho Missouri borderers, and W o find in the New York Commercial that (be permanent settlers will- finally'jire- AfaertUer, of the rjetdj ir»st£n lengthy -\t\t vail, and further thkt-lnpJbffj nclioi will U'r from Gov. Hunt. Hi is-dated ayiKxHc-"" $epeod upou now party* . „ „ -Ourj:Qtemj)orary gives in a formidable array of figures exhibiting Buffalo and Dun- kirk in contrail, as the freight carrie'rs for the West. Tn this mailer we do not feel ; called on to boh 'party in a newspaper con- troversy. It only occurs to"us, that, accord : in" to the editor's figures, it would be of. lit- tle inlportauco to Buffalo, if to the large "amount which passes that city in transit, • were to-be added the Dunkirk freights.— The editor's, table of freights is-brought "up .. to the 1st of August,-''—from what starting .date .wo nro not informed, bul suppose it to embrace only the period of navigation.— Would not thi3 contrast bo less striking if lie were . to select ouly tho period of five ino'titlu.fronilstof December lo 4$lof May, vrhori all transportation is by railroad 1 Is there uot n very extensive freight connection between tlio New York anil Erie, and State Line Roads, al Dunkirk ? If so, how would tho Now' York and Erie be a gainer by rail* / i u g , via Buffalo, even, if it owned the Hor- nellsville branch, which it certainly cannot nfford to buy i " Wo aro speaking now only of transit by railroads, and wo only spoke of that in alluding to the suspension bridge. "Our colerapor.uy riiuVt not suppose us quite so romantic as to put bur humble selves on a par with them, in reference to the immense freights passing thnt city, to nnd from Lake Erie. His fortnidnblo figures were surely not called for by anything we said. •• . . W o . do" not profess to know much of the policy of the N.Y. and Erie U.K., but in- * fer from tho formidable opposition waged by tho Central Road against it, through * tho Hornollsvillo branch, that it has no sto- , mach for a contest with its gigautic compe- titor nt Buffalo, but'-choaos to rely on its nearer proximity lo tho Western States for intercepting "tho western traffic.- n o w far success has attended this idea, wo are not prepared to say, for unlike our cotemporary, wo liayo no.slatistics to give, as they do not very nearly interest us. Wo have lioard^ however, that tho traffic between Ilornells- ville and Dunkirk far exceeded that on the .-Buffalo, and Hornellsvillo branch, both in. passengers nndJreight. - - i: The ed'rtor tells, us thcro is no line of Eteamcrs from Dunkirk running in conned- lion with the Bail Road, and that there are * six at Buffalo. All true, perhaps, but wo * have heard too, that excepting a very short portion of tho year, some of these lines tun : •• at a loss, nnd nro sustained by the Central Road as a menus.of more effectually prose'• cutirig tbo war against the Nets* York and • Erie. • . . . - p^rnhT^lirTusl.7"an(l"is itwe^y~(^efTer9* from various individuals asking an expres- sion of opinion.^ : on tho-pending arrange- menls-for-disbanding the Wh^-party 1 with a view to the formation of a new party on a Northern sectional basis. *";;-*** Coming from such a distinguished source, tho views contained in the letter will com- mand very general attention. . Tho great length of the communication precludes our giving il entire ;. n few extracts musVsufr organizations at tho Kd7lli." The letter closes with.tbe following senti- ment*:— ''^'X < S \ ' \ . ( - A dlfftKence of seatimenl between the sec- tion* in regard to slavery is natural and un- avoidable. H -existed originally, but this was, not sufficient to keep the colonies asun- der/in tho great struggle for American Inde- pendence. It em bar raised, but did not.de- , .The Concert To-Night ... " Our'citizens, ana strangers, should not Tail- to Ve present, aTThe Concert to be gifijri by Paitl Jnlien at tho Cataract House th'if eve* nidg. His.nrputntion in-Rurope nnd in-this country is a .sufficient guarantee that the entertainment will be one of a high order. Julien will be agisted by the celebrated pb nnist, August Gockel, nnd also -by Signor Carlo Hechti. We presume it is only ne- cessary to'call the attention of the public to tho fact that such a concert will bo given fice After slating his attachment to the prin- ciples of tho Whig party, that they are en- deared to him by cherished .recollection}, and by ye.vs of honest effort in their defence, and that if the Whigs generally, me prepar- ed to disperse under a sentence of self con- demnation, if tho party is about to commit suicide, he declares he will have no part or lot in the proceeding. Of the. approaching Stato Convention he saya:— - ; .;.. ;., .- Anovel spectacle will bo presented when the delegates assemble in State Convention to perform the enviable office of pronouncing that the Whig parly is nO more. It has been suggested that ther should speak for themselves, as some of their old.associates, 6till loyal to principle and true to their ante- cedents, may question the validity of the fu- nereal formalities. It will propably be urg- ed in answer to our objections, that if we are deprived of our own party 'Organization, another stands ready with open aims to re- ceive us, and thnt- nothing more U inten- ded than a Protean change of shape.— In other words, it is an cxhiliruting metam- orpl OStsi and not political annihilation, to which wo aio summoned. This view of tho caso deserves serious attention. It brings us at once to tho question whether the for- mation* of a NoTthern party on grounds re- lating to riegiO slavery exclusively, and ig- noring the real objects for which our federal system was designed, is likely to prove _salu- taiy or'u-eful. ' Will a,party soconstitute^ confined ns it must be to tho fiee states, confer any practical good upon the country! Will its efforts advance the interests of lib- erty and civilization i Can it emancipate a single slave or improve the condition of ihe I - African race? Will its struggles for supre j Western Railway, has opened an ofhco at inacy strengthen tho .foundations of Aineri- | No. 21, State street, Boston. The Boston can freedom and independence I Will it i Courier speaks of the office ns one more lIolinTtliing for commerce or internal im- j emrA ] j„ j ts character than anv in the citv; feat the efforts of wise men and patriots in M% even ; to brin gouf a full house the formation of the. union, aor ought it ° ° uow to prevent ho stale* from acting to- gether in a spirit of frieinllv moderation, aud'with a due regard, lo 'conflicting inter- ests and feelings, in carrying -out tho benell- cv'ut puri>u<vs of the compact. It becomes necv»ary to this end that parties should be ba-s'd upon principles which have some con- nection with the ieal objects of the consti- tution, Hiid with the exercise of those gener- al powers which were intruded to secure tho national prosperity. A local parly or coal- ition of parties, united ou a single idea, and differing in respect - to most measures of fed- eral concern, presents no guarantee for its policy, foreign or domestic,.in conducting tho administration of the country. It con- templates but a meagre jHjrformnnce of po- litical responsibilities. Iu iny opinion no substantial good can come of such a movement. It can achieve nothing but to keep one-half of the United Stales incensed against the other. Neither tho plan of the crusade, nor its probable consequences, accord with my convictions of duty. Many valued friends, with whom my views agree on most questions of public policy, have come to a ditjWgnt_£aii'-lusion. Il must be so. . Many nre going to tho cru- sades, and .we will wish them all a safe re- turn. For myself, instead of forming new political associations, let me ndhuie' to those cherished principles which have the appro- val of my best judgment, and which find a re ponse in the sentements of my heart.— We are invited to wander after strange gods, but some of us must adhere to the ancient faith. I am still n W.hig. nnd do not intend to desert the ship, even if I am left alone.— PBOF. TAYLOR'S CONCERTS.—Our exchan- ges in-Orleans county; and. at Lockport, speak in the highest terms of Prof. V. C, Taylor's concerts. The concert at Lock- port, last week, was well received, indeed, so well-pleased wero the hearers that a request was made to have it repealed. Prof. Tay- lor complied. .Tho Journal says that " the performers executed their pieces admirably, as was sufficiently manifested by the long repeated applause of the delighted listen- ers." A musical friend at Lockport writes us.thai Trof. Taylor's concerts aro better than anything of the kind ever produced there. As Prof. T. has made our village his residence, we presumo ho will be prevailed on to favor our citizeus with' something of the kind at the proper time. The Slate Normal SchooL The Superintendents of Common Schools of the several towns throughout the State, excr pting those of tho counties of Chemung, Fulton, Schenectady and Warren, will meet at tho county seats of their respective coun- ties, on Monday, September 3d, 1855, at 2 o'clock P. M., to desiguato pupils to the State Normal School. Substitutes should in all cases bo appointed,so that the quotas may bo full. Each county is entitled to send to the Literary Notices. THE NATIONAL MAGAZINE, for September, u at liand, and is one' of>the best numbers of that excellent'-periodical that'we ( have everieen. It opens with a-porlrajt of Bish- 6p~B*ker,-the yonngestfoMbVneiT-Biyhops;--t*lent$-we-niay-point to the career of p r , of the Methodist Episcopal- Cliurcbi.'accom panied with a biographical history. There are a large number of engravings illustra- tive of ten different articles. Among-the articles aro " William Hogarth," '* James Montgomery," " Story of Ancient Nineveh," "Judging from Appearances," ic. The l^lilional is ono of the best secular maga- zines now published, and is furnished at 82 per year. HOVSEIIOLO- WOKDS, for the coming month, is received. This clones the 11th volume of a publication occupying a pro- vince peculiarly its own, and ono which ought to have a wide circulation. Chas. Dickens stands deservedly high ns a writer, and besides" him there are others of about equal note whose pen* are employed in writ- ing for Household Words; among thorn are Howitt, Cornwall, Faraday nnd Mary Bar- ton. The text number commences anew volume, and furnishes a good opportunity lo subscribe. The terms aro $3.00 per year (free of postage.) Putnam and Household Words will be sent for 85,00 per pear. . Ad- dress Dix ck Edwards, New York. " '• GODEY'S LADYS' BOOK for September makes its regular appearance upon our table. Tire ladies will have it that this is the best of all the Philadelphia magazines; we can- not dispute with them, the fact is made so apparent with each recurring month. The A Business Sketch of a Business Man. /*. -W.e'copy'-tue followiug sketch of the life of a very •extraordinary man, from an tdi. • torial Di the N* Y> Sun:— u As ao illusfratiou of business tact nnd 1 - School a number of pupils (either in tie or Others must decide for themselves ; but "be ^ ^ . ^ ^ ^ number of ^ ^ our hrm answer this—we seek no change. , ; , l , . . fessqr Hollaway, the proprietor of the moa popular medicines of the age. The rise and progress of this extraordinary maT have had no parallel during the present century. U^ has Visited nearly every Court in Europe aud obtained permission for the sale of his preparations from most of ,the. crowned heads of the Old World. The queens of Spain and. Portugal, the kings of Naples and Sardinia, grapted him nudit-uces; mid in St. Petersburg!!, which city he visited a hhort time before the commencement of the wnr- he was treated with marked consideration by the lato Czar and the nobility. "Traveling in an elegant private carriage attended by a courier, his equipage attract ed attention in the towns nnd villages thru' which he passed. The hotels \vnere belodtr. ed were besieged by persons of the first distinction, nnd the best society on the con- tinent courted his acquaintance. " The subject of theso remarks is unques- tionably an ambitious man, nnd his skill and Enterprise have placed him far in advance of alibis predecessors and contempoiaries in the same profession. He stands alone ; and the fact that he can maintain his high po- tion, d-spito the Interested assaults of envy and presumption, proves that his mediciues have an intrinsic value, which the world un- derstands anil appreciates. '•The sums expended in advertising by iii . nnd excellent reading number before us is full of nice engravings ' Professor Hollow ay would be incredible if they were not authenticated f>\ his b<»>k«. His payments to the press range lri>iu -^lj ),. ^ | 000 to $200,00.) per niMiu.iii. Th.-r,- is i I NATIONAL AGUlCtn.TL'UAL K x i i i u i n o The Boston Atlas states that lb*;i. M.'P. Wilder, President of ihe Unu«*i States Ag- •printed language in which his advertise- and least of all such a change a3 they would briug u>." ° —_ j i jt-fT Mr. P. K. Rnudall, who has for some time acted as traveling agent for the Great bers of Assembly in such county From a table published in the Albany State. Register we learn that there are three vacancies in Niagara COMnty to be fillt-d.— The i.ext terra opens on the 17th of Sep- tember. i S T The roof of Mr. A. Grant's splendid », , new block on Main Street felt in last night, movements, for domestic industry or for the i ,, . , • . vr . c „ii t . i. .- . e i in • i 1 .. • ' , ., , . ..- , , tlyjre ts scarcely a point u est or South Tor U was-n fiat.roof and uot sufficiently suppor- promotion of the general welfare? Is it . *, ' . - . ,\ t J M consistent with the example and teachings j w,llcl) through tickets may not be obtained, i ted. The upper story was finished for ncon- of olir,republican fathers, or with the idea {Passengers are tickete*! to the Suspension j cert or lecture room. It is well that the of a federal system that the people on ono i Bridge by any of the various routes leading j roof fell in when it did, for had tho room side of t|.e Potomac should combine them- j , ftm , . U j e Q w R R flm| Micb i ^ ea occnp5l!(l ;U l l i e l i m e lherc wonh| hrtve selves into a party to take possession of the _ * » , „ ~ ,-,,. .._J. -,._,, , , , r vr « ' i Government of the United State-t On so-. Cc » tr ••' , R - U - to Chicago, and all the points been much loss of life. W orkmen co.nmcu- ber reflection, my honest judgment nnswers j West or Soutli^ We notice that Mr. C. E. j ced clcnrwig away the ruins this morning me in the negative. | Shaw is attached to the office. We can ful- ] preparatory to replacing tho roof. More Gov. Hunt aigues that if a Noithern an- j ly endorse all the Courier says below of this, j care will be exercised this time to have it properly supported, ricultural Society, has made application foi the use of a plot of ground of forty m-.-s. near Boston, on which to bold a Grand N »- ','. tional Agricultural Exhildtion. in October nest. It is proposed lu have, in connection with the show of fruits, flowers, implements, cattle. <fce., a magnificent horse exhibition, which shall execfed in extent and beauty, thnt at Springfield, two or three years since Various cities have made application for this great display—Philadelphia tendering $5,000 to cover any anticipated excess of ex- penditure ; but Boston, thr ugh her leading citizens, has guaranteed £ 10,000. 1 meuls do not appear. j The ramifications of bis business extend from the foe;.I point—bis va.tl establishment in tliv Strand, Loudon—over the who!—fa;-; l of the uailh. " Ttiis extraordinary" man is now in this country—in this. city. The Tribune, in a just tribute to bis liiachless enterprise, says, that having, like Alexander, suhdtied the Old World, he is now preparing to conquer the New. "Professor Holloway has not been tempt- ed hither by-a thirst for gain—for his wealth is sufficient to satisfy the most exigeant woY- shipper of mammon—but by a philanlhro pic desire to extend the benefit of his medi- cines among a people whoso character ho admires. Everybody is, of course, anxious ti-Slavery party is desirable, all the people ' u ie, and add that for merchants'and ship lof the free, slates should enter into it, be" j pers it i> the route for speed and safety: cause the very proposition implies tln-t we ! "The Great Western Railway is ono of arc to l.o met by the South in solid array. I il'« finest, if not the first, railway on this ,„•. ".---,—,-• e ' , „." i coiuinotit. Iu equipment and management < came Iiome by the America We wish our Buffalo cotemporarics would . i|lC l,raul,Cil1 t "' uk ' n,: >- ,,f ilK,b - ii - co " l ^ ^ r a r e ,.„on a scale which roads of mo.u year- ' bo to banish those sentiments .,f .ni^ht witti profit imitate. .Persons going *. ITEMS. John B. Gough the 7 Temperance lecturer, iC^'.Messis. Hunter ic Ostraiider, of Buf- falo, have just issued a very neatly got up work entitled "The Buffalo Business Direc- tory." It contains advertisements ©f "most lo see the greatest advertiser in the world.— of the business fiims of Buff.do, and also) In a very short period, the Ainurie.-in rcpu- many in Rochester, Chicago, New York, j talion of Holloway's Piils and Ilolloway's Philadelphia and other places. It is a vol- ume of about 230 pages, and is to be pub would .friendshipand brotherhood which gave birth : VY.-t uill find this route enjoys many ad- lo the Cdiistittition. On the general subject of slavery the Gov. says:— You must not infer that my sentiments concerning slavery have undergone any change. My opposition lo the introduction vantages n o t po.-se—ed by otheis. A sight ot the Niag ra FnJIsyor the no less wonder- ful Railway Suspension Bridge, is worth the etist of a passage to Chicago. There l>eing but two companies owning and managing the line*-between Suspension Bridge and Chicago, frequent changes of cars and bag- n gl m 1 ** * - ij.' il:- I ^5 H '.-j ; '. -pf slavery into free territory is unalterable. I P*»« ;,re ' voided, and a unity of action and As a representative I resisted it to the best i interest sceiijs to pervade the entire line.— of my ability; as a citizen I will sustain all I H°*W>n merchants and shippers can by this just and reasonable action calculated to ! lme forward their goods and merchandise to conlinc the iusiitulion lo its present"limits. I t!l ° W nnA l n c B W c,f an >' «'f ect or (ie " On this subject the position of the Northern ! '"J" fin,l = n ,ead )' explanation at "No. 21 State Whigs has been uniform and.cQnsistenf,nhd^ r eeti "here the entire business may be why shall we leave the-high ground we have | transacted through the agents of Mr. Han- occupied to nidi into an unnatural alliance \ ,1;,n . wI,os . c molto »—' Speed. Safety, Com- with recklrss, unreasoning fanaticism? If; fort and Economy.'^ I am not disposed to reduce the negro to a j g^- Ilt , a , Mtnt0 l o l h e nni0Hnt 0 f over iiolitical stalking horse for partv purposes, ' , . ., , ' , ,, ,, 1 , , I i ,i . t * r.r . i thirty thousand dollars, was sold at auction you must not conclude (hat I am indifferent ; . to his true welfare. 1 would gladlyYco-oji- ! last week on the opposite side of the river, orate in every rational plan for nineliOhiting j \ y e understand that a large number of his condition. But wo are. hardly called LiJders werfl nL anJ tl); , t thcra wns upon to forego all other considerations and | . , ,, . . ^ • • make him the exclusive object of our teal «onMil.«rabU compet.tton. One gentleman nnd solicitude. from Hamilton bid off a number of tho In rho first place, our power o\cr the sub- ! most desirable lots, and we hear he mtends ject is confined to very narrow limits. Each j to erect a large hotel upon them. We bo staUv l ,n.stregul. 1 ta3nu\po|.tiol the political | lievc lhe sa , feS ere fu , l0l i 10ix . ttatus of iL« colored population. It is the ' . . . . .' „.. . . , . . I„..I . C : i. t • .. . , \ . . i : i ,ii"-t pectiiiK»n of the proprietor. 1 Ins is duo in ntulouottirriglit or evetv state4o tUvtdo the ' ' ' (plestion for itstlf, ii-d.^ndant'of external ! no small degree to the liheral system of ad- iiltorferehei. llf njl the people of the free j vtrllsing whi^li no one knows how to use so states should join the Abolitionist* they l() i, aler ndvantage than W.'O. Buchanan. ! u would not have the power t<» liberate a slave Charles Eilet, Jr.. has been compelled by ill health to resign the position of Chief En- gineer of the Virginia Central Railroad, The Grand Lodge of the Independent Or- der of Odd Fellows, of Northern New York, holds a Festival in Buffalo to day. The N. Y. Tribune learns that Mr. Fill- more is having the most brilliant success in English society. A firemen's rjotoccurred in Baltimore On-Saturday night Three of tho rioters wero shot, two of whom it i3 thought will not recover. drop the expression of " natural terminus of a railroad." Nature, in many cases, has • nothing nt all to do with lhe matter. Who, 10 year3 ago, would have fixed—for exani- plo—lhe termini of threo railroads, (two of them tho most important on the Continent,) n't two opposite points on the Niagara Liver, where tho.banks are over two hundred feet high,with a deep and foaming rapid between them. What had nature to do with such a"! terminus as this I And yet what does our neighbor, see 1 We have shown him all the .figures (wo had, we shall havo more by-and- byc,) giving n freight traffic across this gorge -of 1200 tons a week, during the snow storms of last winter, for a period of six weeks, and wo now call his attention to the fact that tho Great-Western Railway, al- though only n year and a half old, already realir.es tho necessity of a double .track, which is now under contract,for construc- tion. How many railroads in'the United Slates could in so short a period show" a like necessity, and a hko action? A double track ' from this^o Rochester must follow,— indeed, the want of it is now;tovcrcly felt. The gentlemnnly editor of'tho Courier will find this Suspension Bridge "knot hole" a much larger one than his fancy has painted it.". There is already n tremendous leakage '•• t h r o u g h it in Iho wny of travel. Even at this season of tho year, when the " sit lines" nro in full blast, $130,000 per month i3 the figure showing what numbers get through tho hole,-nearly all of passing between tl "" tAt<M * . question is solve.!, it becomes u« to exercise j O ' c ; 0 ck in the morning, and proceed lo! be omnipresent or his cars nre a " leetle As to lW.'« 8 »x lines, wo think they 50 mo cliarify loward lhe citizen* of -other U, , llurc h lM , n on theCanandai- longer than we had suppa4e,L The Express will crow beautifully less. Railroads will, state* where lhe African clement constitutes .... ,, „ „ ., . , - ... . ; ,. , ., t . . . . . - . - . . ,». f«i,iil.'-. m»*« «r it.. .,i.»u ^««I.LI! .. I "iia and Nngara rails Railroad wilrhc in appears to have monopolised the u»« of 'in our.opipion, 8lrirU^icm of their splendid one-rounli or more of the whole population. B"^ -- .-.,..,,'«„ , ,i' fi . 1 r'T^ ., ,.V i It appears (o* me that our political action Waiting to convoy th.-m to the hall*. A cabin fixings, anJ doom them to the" more i , ',', , ,. , , , . . . ' , • • • , , ..,,• . . . ... , . ., 'should be directed to subjects over which j brass and cotillion band will accoinpan hurublc office of boarora of burthen, Even wo haV(J tmnQ etfective control, inste«d of fished yearly. We learn that about 4 000 copies will be circulated this season. It is one of the best advertising mediums to be found. . . . XS?" Preparations are making lo cele- brate the Anniversary of the Jerry Rescue at Syracuse on the first day of^pctober next. /37~ The Dunkirk Journal says that more than two thirds of the freight passing- O I O over, tho Lake Shore Railroad for the East meets with transhipment at Dunkirk, thus shunning Buffalo. Sour Stomach, Weak Stomach, Rising or Ointment will.rival their European fame." Foreign New3. _ ARRIVAL OF TltK ''AJIEUICA" The Steamer America.arrived af Halifax on the lotiiinst, from Liverpool the 4th. There is little, of importance in the newa l>y this Steamer. .We glean a few items. A French dispatch, dated July 20,fcay*: "Our approaches on the side of the Malak'tf advance considerably. We now touch the place. Everything is prepared for.a general action in about fifteen days. 1 ' JI'LV 21.—Gen. Simpson telegraphs: "Cholera lias neaily disappeared. Tho Russians continue to hold their strong posi- lion on the Mackenzie, and the strong range of bights overhanging Urkusta nnd the Val- , ley of Baidar. Il is reported they leave also •\omiting of Food, Distress after Eating, a ,-„ rye of artillery and infantry at Alaska. Dyspepsia, and its train of evils, have never! The French have pushed forward the whole found so perfect a emedy as in Prof, llum-j of their cavalry into«the Valley of -Baidar fe J. S. Clcqdinen has resigned his office as i p j, rt . V8 « Specific Homterqiathio bv.M.epsia i ro>lin o lhe Sardinians upon the I. ft bank Attorney-General ofthe United Suites for the p,,,,; MJW ]e mf nnd ; ffi0 , - of lhe Souhai River, and communicating T :. „ „ n v , i,i n „Mn . ' wiih.the I'reiicli up»n the Chernaya, wlnlo Territory of Washington. they are just the thing want <l. Sold nt Ah ,|.e- high ridge protecting Balaklava is Hon. Franklin Dexter, of Massachusetts, has written an able letter against Fusion. General Todleben, a distinguished Russian Engineer, - died lately. • T."G. Booth, the Comedian, died in To- ronto on Saturday. . The Kiiigswood Tunnel, on the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad, is 4,100 feet irVlength and about 28 feet in width. The entire Kentucky delegation in Con- len's. Price 25 cent's peKbox . . 1 1 . ii JloHoxcar/s Pills, an unfailing remedy for! . *«"" V. "~' + ^'''"*':'S^"''.'.! Yul] l^^'i^A ,. , J e , I,, , r '-.,. nation seems to reign in tlio camp ana disorders of the Chi>st and Lunrrs.*—Oil- . T ^ . . ' .• J gb ruige , e, guarded by" the Turkish army.'' The Times correspondent writes : " Stag- all dbordors of the Chest and Lungs.-'—Oli trenches ; even tho heavy firing has died ver .Thompson, of Little Fa s, New York, „, ,'. ,i.^ „• / , , . * „ „ .,„,> .' , .' I . I , il away ; yet tlie approaches advance, and was certainly in a most deplorable state of j ' ^ ^ ,, |a »,[„{„ m , irer ||j0 creU 0 f health ten weeks ago; Ins lungs, so the doo-| ll)p ' Mrt |,; k ^ wMc ,, it - will now roqilire aI | tors told him, were com letely gone, his),. ' , •,„ ' f ,., ' D „. • ^ , , ,, . f,,_ , , . , . . , , * •»„ ', , tli". tenacity of the Kus-ians to-liold. A tew chest, and in fact his body genera ly, had j j &inco - lhe UmAlxTiH 8UW ^| H | i„ « sca.cely an atom of flesh on it so thin bad I lH ,,, uhin2 rido Us ,„ froIll o f t | lu Fri c he become, in addition to this lie had a ; . .. es- h Jiar 28.—GorchnkofFtelegraphs: •'Ye«- terday the enemy opened n heavy fire which Fu nil it* essential proportions, slavery as it exbts would remain untouched. In our own state we have conferred a certain degree of jtgrTlni Dunkirk Journal states by ail- cough which completely shook him to pier- ces (these aro l.is own words;) he has in<t ... H I I'TI r itti t i • i ICIU.II IIIQ ennui uifi'mii fi nv<»» \ mr .lilt*-. gress supported the bill repealing the M.< ! called on Profefsor IJolloway to inform linn j U ^J lw|> |lo .,' ^ . ^ )fl V] \ i M Bc sonri Compromise. Not .one has been le- llmtal these cmnplnint* have UxM^em.-ved j U()I1 We rtip | it . (J Tvitl, vigor." rne d I *- v "°" 0W V? P,l, v !,U, ' r ,0 '""' , ! M : 1 l h e m i Advices from tlm Crimea to the - for sfcven weeks and lw«> days an t lie now' ... .:, • ,. ', . . feels hotter than ever he ;,] in his life.— S3T »>e wi I not dispute Uie omniscience i..., ,, .. ... ... .. . *™ _ « . ..| These Pills will readilv remove all diseases toinacl '.hority thnt the grand excursion lo this j of the editor of the. Buffalo Express, and if J 0 ( { \ t 'MX. for the benefit of the Dm kirk Fire, he can make his readers believe that he is .. ' . . . «* . i pace, lor the lienem oi me i;ui KirK r i r e , HW <-•" •••••n« ••<* •<...>... .. ,..»,» ...... ... .. . t numbers get through freoi om upon the tolorcl race. But when ' , .... ,• .... J, „ ,-i i - , i „//,i . mnv i, a „••,. i THE boirru or OU>K.N IIMB.—In Mr. Beu- . . b . i i n .i . /i .. i . ..iii/- Department, wu take pace on I-r day of at al hkclv to hear all that may be uttered ,• .. . . of whom nro Americans h«»H they^io permitted to vote, to hold of- I " "• ^ . , , , , " . , ' , ,. . , „. . tons forthcoming volume of his thirty years t-rrt fiee and to narlicinntn in tho lde««inrr« of' this week. The pail V will take the Coin- ' bv another, w by its all right. \ye must IKS . ie Eastern and Western ! panic ipaie in uie niessings or » i , : ' . , V , , , in the SennU", occurs the foil-wing pns»nge, social find political cqualhvl Until ihi* modious steamer Empire, at.Dunkuk, nt 81 pcrmillcil to rctrmrk, however, that he must J. ^ ; , .. • • ;• . i. i * '. . . I: . ' ..i i ,.I in allusion to tho decline of the Southern ami 'canals', for many purposes, seem to bo pass- tvA«tingotir energies on question* which tho, ing rapidly into the region of old fogy ism. Tho diminution of Canal freights nnd tolls looks like it. . Making Buffalo tho terminus of the Erie rond would be a first step loading with ctr- tainty to the abandonment of the line from ^JIornelUvilla-to-DnnVirkr—Dw*-oufOcigb- pompany the i'vciir-ionists and all ether necessary arrangements for a grand nffaii, both for offensive epithets and low billingsgate. It may retain the monopoly. What we stated was upon the authority of common report, In UulTalo, and may be trim or may not, we cannot say, neither do wc care. £*T Tho Buffalo ExprtSi declares that constitution of the country has placed be- . yondour reach. Wo may skirmis.1, near ph-asure and comfort, will bo secured.— ihe outposts; but when slavery is nMished i Tickets for the trip aro placed nt the low- it mu t be' done by lhe people in the slave- ! price of $2, being less than one half the fare holding states. Whether they will be con- Lf | nC ^ ua J route. The arrangements will I the Fusion movement is prompted by the verted to jnster views of duly Mid humanity L o n ft \' cnU |0 " n( . romnVHhlT . .,. irty c f same spirit that actuated bur fo;efalhers in by partizan clamor, harsh reproaches, and , , , > , . . . - , i.i .- ... . , ,, «• '*>*• constant blasts of f, ir v from the Nortli is an 1 *»» »»>"dred, thus aftording^it.te.^ of tho j their struggle with tho mother country bor seo any justice or sound policy in thus depriving the people living on this lino, of tho railroad facilities I hey now enjoy, and which are rapidly developing their wraith nnd multiplying their numbers ? It seems to u«, Uiat in view of such an event, the high virtue of magnanimity,' real- ly has something; to do with Ino question. ' ' Thi recent census shows that Buffalo con- tains apopulalion of 71,400. inquiry which nppeals lo the candor of ever) honest philanthropist. Gov. Hunt dfnonncfs the absurd theory of territorial sovereignity, up-n which the Nebraska Bill tvn< ba. ed, and also tho-arm ed invfijion T.f tho 'Missouri mob. lt» his opinion the proceedings in Kan*,a<_mn«l b< I four hundred, thus atlording^ilizens of tho . their strugglo with tho mother couiifry! neighboring rdlagcS A f.lenf^nt-ainlTrhrarr -Vrry-likclvT-biM-w|in«ft-t«a-will-b«-thrown opp'irtnnity of vi«iting the Fall*. 1~ | ^7" llemeiiM«T that John Hawkins, the temperance lecturer, speaks'in tjhji Metho- dist Chinch tin"* evening. £<T The Ali'aiiy Aryns \> in error in deemed of u<> legal or m.raf force until law | Mating that Sheriffs Clerk* and Ju Igos aro and order are e*tabli«hed,--a diity-Woogjig , to be clhw-ou [n cv v ry .county. .Tlie more to the (tovernment. Ho think* a msj-'ri'.v ! imp'rant of our count)' of the South even, will not uphold tho law i last fall for two years. cffici * were filled overboard I Jt<T Maz/.ini, in a communication to tho Ixmdon Pott, gives his opinion of the plan- ning of the Crimean expedition thus:— 'One would say that tho man who first planned the Crimean expedition wanted to solve this problem : How to sink in an ap- parently plausible enterprise the best blood of Esigfand. and make her defenseless for a timc"of rfeed. States:- "It is a tradition of the colonics that tho Soutli had been the seat of wealth and hap- pinc-s, nf |M>wer and opulence; that a th/h population covered the land, disponing bar- onial ho«pilaliiyj nnd diffusing the felicity which themselves enjoyed filial all was life, and joy, and affluence then. And this tra- dition was not without similitu e lo the re- ality, as this writer can testify ; for ho was old enough to havo seen (after the revolu- *.ion) the still surviving stale of southern colonial manners, when no traveller was al- lowed to go to a tavern, anM was handed over from family to family through entire A^li»A~^rhen-luJida)'a were days of fcsriyjty aiid expectation, long prepared for, and cele- brated by master and slave with muric and feasting, and greal concourse of friends and relatives; when gold was kept in desks or chests, (after tho downfall of paper) and weighed in scales, and lent (o neighbors for short terms without note, interest or securi- ty—and on bond and land security, for long vears and lawful usance; and when petty litigation was at so low an ebb that it requi- red a fino of. forty pounds of tobacco to make-a man serve as constable." 29 th announce continued preparations for a giand expedition.' All the lighter vessels of the fleet were assembled at Kmniesh. It was-reported in Paris on the 3d in«t., that the French Government had official notification that the bombardment of tho Mal.tkoff and Redan has been resumed preparatory to another assault. JI-LV 30.—Gorehakoff telegraphs : "There " has been a partial cannonade on both "sides, but nothing of importance." It was telegraphed from Constantinople on the 26lh that tbo B.vdii-Bazouks had murdered General Beatson, but Lord Pan- mure in Parliament positively contradicted the report. Tho Viceroy of Egypt i* negotiating with tho Bedouins to serve in the Crimea. Kamiesh and Balaklava we*ro crowded with vessels recehtly arrived for tho secret expedition. The French Government flas chartered ninety-seven small steamers for river navi- gation, each to convey 600 men, ., Tho -Loats—bglojg-to._cpmpanica on the Rhone and Saono. Just as tho steamer was ready to »»U from Liverpool the following telegraphs dispatch wa* ?enl from London : ', " /The Weekly Newspaper, jtial issued, wj*. " We loarn that tho aiego of Sevastopol » about to be raised. Also thai a communi- cation has just been received from Germany by the Western Powers which may lead to startling results." ,. BnKAn8TCKr3.-r-Market-for Wheat and Flour declining. Corn, no demand. •s- '. ( . . 1 .- V : - ! •i " I" : I | 'V >'* a Thomas M. Tryniski 309 South 4th Street Fulton New York 13069 www.fultonhistory.com

Transcript of :ilAGMI MLLS GAZEf)t; 8/Niagara Falls NY Gazette/Niaga… · a m i ••: • -..•: :ilAGMI...

Page 1: :ilAGMI MLLS GAZEf)t; 8/Niagara Falls NY Gazette/Niaga… · a m i ••: • -..•: :ilAGMI MLLS;GAZEf)t; WEDNESDAY, AlJGUSTvi^,. 185/k. -Bailroad*-EreighU, &c. We cannot afford

a

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:ilAGMI MLLS;GAZEf)t; WEDNESDAY, AlJGUSTvi^ , . 185/k.

-Bai l road*-EreighU, &c. W e cannot afford to take dailies, (paying

tho difference,) nnd nre therefore indebted to chance fo£ a copy of the Buffalo Courier, of the 18tli insl. •

* • * » - •

Ex-Goy. H u n t on Fusion- Jess d o i n g s of-tho Missouri borderers, and W o find in the New York Commercial that (be permanent settlers will- finally'jire-

AfaertUer, of the rjetdj ir»st£n lengthy -\t\t vail, and further t h k t - l n p J b f f j nclioi will U'r from Gov. Hunt . Hi is-dated ayiKxHc-"" $epeod upou now party*

. „ „ -Ourj:Qtemj)orary gives in a formidable array of figures exhibiting Buffalo and Dun­kirk in contrail, as the freight carrie'rs for the West. Tn this mailer we do not feel

; called on to b o h 'party in a newspaper con­troversy. It only occurs to"us, that, accord :

i n " to the editor's figures, it would be of. lit­tle inlportauco to Buffalo, if to the large

"amount which passes that city in transit, • were to-be added the Dunkirk freights.—

The editor's, table of freights is-brought "up

.. t o the 1st of August,-''—from what starting .date .wo nro not informed, bul suppose it to embrace only the period of navigation.— Would not thi3 contrast bo less striking if lie were . to select ouly tho period of five ino'titlu.fronilstof December lo 4$lof May, vrhori all transportation is by railroad 1 Is there uot n very extensive freight connection between tlio New York anil Erie, and State

• Line Roads, al Dunkirk ? If so, how would

tho Now' York and Erie be a gainer by rail* / i u g , via Buffalo, even, if it owned the Hor-

nellsville branch, which it certainly cannot nfford to buy i " Wo aro speaking now only of transit by railroads, and wo only spoke of that in alluding to the suspension bridge.

"Our colerapor.uy riiuVt not suppose us quite so romantic as to put bur humble selves on a par with them, in reference to the immense freights passing thnt city, to nnd from Lake Erie. His fortnidnblo figures were surely not called for by anything we said. •• . .

Wo. do" not profess to know much of the policy of the N . Y . and Erie U.K., but in-

* fer from tho formidable opposition waged by tho Central Road against it, through

* tho Hornollsvillo branch, that it has no sto-, mach for a contest with its gigautic compe­

titor nt Buffalo, but'-choaos to rely on its nearer proximity lo tho Western States for intercepting "tho western traffic.- now far success has attended this idea, wo are not prepared to say, for unlike our cotemporary, wo liayo no.slatistics to give, as they do not very nearly interest us. W o have lioard^ however, that tho traffic between Ilornells-ville and Dunkirk far exceeded that on the

.-Buffalo, and Hornellsvillo branch, both in. passengers nndJreight. - - i :

The ed'rtor tells, us thcro is no line of Eteamcrs from Dunkirk running in conned-lion with the Bail Road, and that there are

* six at Buffalo. All true, perhaps, but wo * have heard too, that excepting a very short

portion of tho year, some of these lines tun :•• at a loss, nnd nro sustained by the Central

Road as a menus.of more effectually prose'• cutirig tbo war against the Nets* York and

• Erie. • . . . -

p^rnhT^lirTusl.7"an(l"is itwe^y~(^efTer9* from various individuals asking an expres­sion of opinion.^:on tho-pending arrange-menls-for-disbanding the W h ^ - p a r t y 1 with a view to the formation of a new party on a Northern sectional basis. *";;-*** Coming from such a distinguished source, tho views contained in the letter will com­mand very general attention. . Tho great length of the communication precludes our giving il entire ;. n few extracts musVsufr

organizations at tho

Kd7lli." The letter closes with.tbe following senti­

ment*:— ''^'X < S \ ' \ . ( - A dlfftKence of seatimenl between the sec­

tion* in regard to slavery is natural and un­avoidable. H -existed originally, but this was, not sufficient to keep the colonies asun­der/in tho great struggle for American Inde­pendence. It em bar raised, but did not.de-

, .The Concert To-Night . . . "

Our'citizens, ana strangers, should not Tail-

to Ve present, aTThe Concert to be gifijri by

Paitl Jnlien at tho Cataract House th'if eve* nidg. His.nrputntion in-Rurope nnd in-this country is a .sufficient guarantee that the entertainment will be one of a high order. Julien will be agisted by the celebrated pb nnist, August Gockel, nnd also -by Signor Carlo Hechti. We presume it is only ne­cessary to'call the attention of the public to tho fact that such a concert will bo given

fice After slating his attachment to the prin­

ciples of tho Whig party, that they are en­deared to him by cherished .recollection}, and by ye.vs of honest effort in their defence, and that if the Whigs generally, me prepar­ed to disperse under a sentence of self con­demnation, if tho party is about to commit suicide, he declares he will have no part or lot in the proceeding.

Of the. approaching Stato Convention he saya:— - ; .;.. ;., .-

Anovel spectacle will bo presented when the delegates assemble in State Convention to perform the enviable office of pronouncing that the Whig parly is nO more. It has been suggested that ther should speak for themselves, as some of their old.associates, 6till loyal to principle and true to their ante­cedents, may question the validity of the fu­nereal formalities. It will propably be urg­ed in answer to our objections, that if we are deprived of our own party 'Organization, another stands ready with open aims to re­ceive us, and thnt- nothing more U inten­ded than a Protean change of shape.— In other words, it is an cxhiliruting metam-orpl OStsi and not political annihilation, to which wo aio summoned. This view of tho caso deserves serious attention. It brings us at once to tho question whether the for­mation* of a NoTthern party on grounds re­lating to riegiO slavery exclusively, and ig­noring the real objects for which our federal system was designed, is likely to prove _salu-taiy or'u-eful. ' Will a,party soconst i tute^ confined ns it must be to tho fiee states, confer any practical good upon the country! Will its efforts advance the interests of lib­erty and civilization i Can it emancipate a

single slave or improve the condition of ihe I -African race? Will its struggles for supre j Western Railway, has opened an ofhco at inacy strengthen tho .foundations of Aineri- | No. 21 , State street, Boston. The Boston can freedom and independence I Will it i Courier speaks of the office ns one more

lIolinTtliing for commerce or internal im- j „emrA] j„ j t s character than anv in the citv;

feat the efforts of wise men and patriots in M% e v e n ; t o b r i n g o u f a full house the formation of the. union, a o r ought it ° ° uow to prevent ho stale* from acting to­gether in a spirit of frieinllv moderation, aud'with a due regard, lo 'conflicting inter­ests and feelings, in carrying -out tho benell-cv'ut puri>u<vs of the compact. It becomes necv»ary to this end that parties should be ba-s'd upon principles which have some con­nection with the ieal objects of the consti­tution, Hiid with the exercise of those gener­al powers which were intruded to secure tho national prosperity. A local parly or coal­ition of parties, united ou a single idea, and differing in respect-to most measures of fed­eral concern, presents no guarantee for its policy, foreign or domestic,.in conducting tho administration of the country. It con­templates but a meagre jHjrformnnce of po­litical responsibilities.

Iu iny opinion no substantial good can come of such a movement. It can achieve nothing but to keep one-half of the United Stales incensed against the other. Neither tho plan of the crusade, nor its probable consequences, accord with my convictions of duty. Many valued friends, with whom my views agree on most questions of public policy, have come to a ditjWgnt_£aii'-lusion. Il must be so. . Many nre going to tho cru­sades, and .we will wish them all a safe re­turn. For myself, instead of forming new political associations, let me ndhuie' to those cherished principles which have the appro­val of my best judgment, and which find a re ponse in the sentements of my heart.— We are invited to wander after strange gods, but some of us must adhere to the ancient faith. I am still n W.hig. nnd do not intend to desert the ship, even if I am left alone.—

P B O F . TAYLOR'S CONCERTS.—Our exchan­ges in-Orleans county; and. at Lockport, speak in the highest terms of Prof. V. C, Taylor's concerts. The concert at Lock-port, last week, was well received, indeed, so well-pleased wero the hearers that a request was made to have i t repealed. Prof. Tay­lor complied. .Tho Journal says that " the performers executed their pieces admirably, as was sufficiently manifested by the long repeated applause of the delighted listen­ers." A musical friend at Lockport writes us.thai Trof. Taylor's concerts aro better than anything of the kind ever produced there. As Prof. T. has made our village his residence, we presumo ho will be prevailed on to favor our citizeus with' something of the kind at the proper time.

The Slate Normal SchooL The Superintendents of Common Schools

of the several towns throughout the State, excr pting those of tho counties of Chemung, Fulton, Schenectady and Warren, will meet at tho county seats of their respective coun­ties, on Monday, September 3d, 1855, at 2 o'clock P . M., to desiguato pupils to the State Normal School. Substitutes should in all cases bo appointed,so that the quotas may bo full.

Each county is entitled to send to the

Li terary Notices. T H E NATIONAL MAGAZINE, for September,

u at liand, and is one' of>the best numbers of that excellent'-periodical t ha t 'we (have everieen. I t opens with a-porlrajt of Bish-6p~B*ker,-the yonngestfoMbVneiT-Biyhops;--t*lent$-we-niay-point to the career of p r , of the Methodist Episcopal- Cliurcbi.'accom panied with a biographical history. There are a large number of engravings illustra­tive of ten different articles. Among-the articles aro " William Hogarth ," '* James Montgomery," " Story of Ancient Nineveh," "Judging from Appearances," i c . The

l^lilional is ono of the best secular maga­zines now published, and is furnished at 82 per year.

HOVSEIIOLO- WOKDS, for the coming

month, is received. This clones the 11th volume of a publication occupying a pro­vince peculiarly its own, and ono which ought to have a wide circulation. Chas. Dickens stands deservedly high ns a writer, and besides" him there are others of about equal note whose pen* are employed in writ­ing for Household Words ; among thorn are Howitt, Cornwall, Faraday nnd Mary Bar­ton. The tex t number commences a n e w volume, and furnishes a good opportunity lo subscribe. The terms aro $3.00 per year (free of postage.) Putnam and Household Words will be sent for 85,00 per pear. . Ad­dress Dix ck Edwards, New York. " '•

GODEY'S LADYS' BOOK for September

makes its regular appearance upon our table. Tire ladies will have it that this is the best of all the Philadelphia magazines; we can­not dispute with them, the fact is made so apparent with each recurring month. The

A Business Sketch of a Business Man. /*. -W.e'copy'-tue followiug sketch of the life of a very •extraordinary man, from an tdi . • torial Di the N* Y> Sun:—

u As ao illusfratiou of business tact nnd 1 -

School a number of pupils (either in tie or Others must decide for themselves ; but "be ^ ^ . ^ ^ ^ n u m b e r o f ^ ^ our hrm answer this—we seek no change. , ; , l , . .

fessqr Hollaway, the proprietor of the moa popular medicines of the age. The rise and progress of this extraordinary maT have had no parallel during the present century. U^ has Visited nearly every Court in Europe aud obtained permission for the sale of his preparations from most of , the . crowned heads of the Old World. The queens of Spain and. Portugal, the kings of Naples and Sardinia, grapted him nudit-uces; mid in St. Petersburg!!, which city he visited a hhort time before the commencement of the wnr-he was treated with marked consideration by the lato Czar and the nobility.

"Traveling in an elegant private carriage attended by a courier, his equipage attract ed attention in the towns nnd villages thru' which he passed. The hotels \vnere belodtr. ed were besieged by persons of the first distinction, nnd the best society on the con-tinent courted his acquaintance.

" The subject of theso remarks is unques­tionably an ambitious man, nnd his skill and Enterprise have placed him far in advance of a l ib is predecessors and contempoiaries in the same profession. He stands alone ; and the fact that he can maintain his high p o ­tion, d-spito the Interested assaults of envy and presumption, proves that his mediciues have an intrinsic value, which the world un­derstands anil appreciates.

'•The sums expended in advertising by

i i i .

• •

nnd excellent reading

number before us is full of nice engravings ' Professor Hollow ay would be incredible if

they were not authenticated f>\ his b<»>k«. His payments to the press range lri>iu -^lj ),.

^ | 000 to $200,00.) per niMiu.iii. Th.-r,- is i „

I

NATIONAL AGUlCtn.TL'UAL Kxiiiuino The Boston Atlas states that lb*;i. M. 'P. Wilder, President of ihe Unu«*i States Ag-

•printed language in which his advertise-

and least of all such a change a3 they would briug u>."

° — _ j i jt-fT Mr. P. K. Rnudall, who has for some

time acted as traveling agent for the Great

bers of Assembly in such county From a table published in the Albany

State. Register we learn that there are three vacancies in Niagara COMnty to be fillt-d.— The i.ext terra opens on the 17th of Sep­tember.

i S T The roof of Mr. A. Grant's splendid », , new block on Main Street felt in last night,

movements, for domestic industry or for the i ,, . , • . vr . c „ii t . i. .- . e i in • i 1 .. • ' , ., , . ..- , , tlyjre ts scarcely a point u est or South Tor U was-n fiat.roof and uot sufficiently suppor-promotion of the general welfare? Is it • . *, ' . - . ,\ t J M consistent with the example and teachings j w , l l c l ) through tickets may not be obtained, i ted. The upper story was finished for ncon-of olir,republican fathers, or with the idea {Passengers are tickete*! to the Suspension j cert or lecture room. It is well that the of a federal system that the people on ono i Bridge by any of the various routes leading j roof fell in when it did, for had tho room side of t|.e Potomac should combine them- j , ftm, . U j e Q w R R flm| M i c b i ̂ ea o c c n p 5 l ! ( l ; U l l i e l i m e l h e r c w o n h | h r t v e

selves into a party to take possession of the _ * » , „ ~ ,-,,. . . _ J . -,._,, , • , , rvr « ' i Government of the United State-t On so-. C c» t r•• ' , R- U - t o Chicago, and all the points been much loss of life. W orkmen co.nmcu-ber reflection, my honest judgment nnswers j West or Soutli^ We notice that Mr. C. E. j ced clcnrwig away the ruins this morning me in the negative. | Shaw is attached to the office. We can ful- ] preparatory to replacing tho roof. More

Gov. Hunt aigues that if a Noithern an- j ly endorse all the Courier says below of this, j care will be exercised this time to have it properly supported,

ricultural Society, has made application foi the use of a plot of ground of forty m-.-s. near Boston, on which to bold a Grand N »- ','. tional Agricultural Exhildtion. in October nest. It is proposed lu have, in connection with the show of fruits, flowers, implements, cattle. <fce., a magnificent horse exhibition, which shall execfed in extent and beauty, thnt at Springfield, two or three years since Various cities have made application for this great display—Philadelphia tendering $5,000 to cover any anticipated excess of ex­penditure ; but Boston, thr ugh her leading citizens, has guaranteed £ 10,000.

1 meuls do not appear. j The ramifications of bis business extend

from the foe;.I point—bis va.tl establishment in tliv Strand, Loudon—over the who!—fa;-;

l of the uailh. " Ttiis extraordinary" man is now in this

country—in this. city. The Tribune, in a just tribute to bis liiachless enterprise, says, that having, like Alexander, suhdtied the Old World, he is now preparing to conquer the New.

"Professor Holloway has not been tempt­ed hither by-a thirst for gain—for his wealth is sufficient to satisfy the most exigeant woY-shipper of mammon—but by a philanlhro pic desire to extend the benefit of his medi­cines among a people whoso character ho admires. Everybody is, of course, anxious

ti-Slavery party is desirable, all the people ' r° u ie , and add that for merchants'and sh ip lof the free, slates should enter into it, be" j pers it i> the route for speed and safety:

cause the very proposition implies tln-t we ! "The Great Western Railway is ono of arc to l.o met by the South in solid array. I il'« finest, if not the first, railway on this ,„•. " . - - - , — , - • e ' , „." i coiuinotit. Iu equipment and management < came Iiome by the America

W e wish our Buffalo cotemporarics would . i | l C l , r a u l , C i l 1 t"'u k 'n , :>- , , f i l K , b - i i - c o " l ^ ^ r a r e ,.„on a scale which roads of mo.u year-' bo to banish those sentiments .,f .ni^ht witti profit imitate. .Persons going

*. ITEMS. John B. Gough the7 Temperance lecturer,

iC^'.Messis. Hunter ic Ostraiider, of Buf­falo, have just issued a very neatly got up work entitled "The Buffalo Business Direc­tory." It contains advertisements ©f "most lo see the greatest advertiser in the world.— of the business fiims of Buff.do, and also) In a very short period, the Ainurie.-in rcpu-many in Rochester, Chicago, New York, j talion of Holloway's Piils and Ilolloway's Philadelphia and other places. It is a vol­ume of about 230 pages, and is to be pub

would .friendshipand brotherhood which gave birth : VY.-t uill find this route enjoys many ad-lo the Cdiistittition.

On the general subject of slavery the Gov. says:—

You must not infer that my sentiments concerning slavery have undergone any change. My opposition lo the introduction

vantages n o t po.-se—ed by otheis. A sight ot the Niag ra FnJIsyor the no less wonder­ful Railway Suspension Bridge, is worth the etist of a passage to Chicago. There l>eing but two companies owning and managing the line*-between Suspension Bridge and Chicago, frequent changes of cars and bag-

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-pf slavery into free territory is unalterable. I P*»« ; , r e ' voided, and a unity of action and As a representative I resisted it to the best i interest sceiijs to pervade the entire line.— of my ability; as a citizen I will sustain all I H°*W>n merchants and shippers can by this just and reasonable action calculated to ! l m e forward their goods and merchandise to conlinc the iusiitulion lo its present"limits. I t ! l ° W nnA l n c B W c,f an>' «'fect o r ( i e" On this subject the position of the Northern ! '"J" fin,l=n , e a d ) ' explanation at "No. 21 State Whigs has been uniform and.cQnsistenf,nhd^ reeti "here the entire business may be why shall we leave the-high ground we have | transacted through the agents of Mr. Han-occupied to nidi into an unnatural alliance \,1;,n. w I , o s . c molto » — ' Speed. Safety, Com-with recklrss, unreasoning fanaticism? If; fort and Economy.'^ I am not disposed to reduce the negro to a j g^- I l t , a , M t n t 0 l o l h e n n i 0 H n t 0f over iiolitical stalking horse for partv purposes, ' , . ., , ' , ,, , , 1 , , I i ,i . t * • r . r . i thirty thousand dollars, was sold at auction you must not conclude (hat I am indifferent ; . to his true welfare. 1 would gladlyYco-oji- ! last week on the opposite side of the river, orate in every rational plan for nineliOhiting j \ y e understand that a large number of his condition. But wo are . hardly called L i J d e r s w e r f l nL a n J t l ) ; , t t h c r a w n s

upon to forego all other considerations and | . , , , . . ^ • • make him the exclusive object of our teal «onMil.«rabU compet.tton. One gentleman nnd solicitude. from Hamilton bid off a number of tho

In rho first place, our power o\cr the sub- ! most desirable lots, and we hear he mtends ject is confined to very narrow limits. Each j to erect a large hotel upon them. We bo staUv l,n.stregul.1ta3nu\po|.tiol the political | l i e v c l h e sa, feS „ e r e f u „ , l 0 l i 1 0 i x . ttatus of iL« colored population. It is the ' . . . . .' „.. . . , .

. I„..I . C : i . t • .. . , \ . . i : i ,ii"-t pectiiiK»n of the proprietor. 1 Ins is duo in ntulouottirriglit or evetv state4o tUvtdo the ' ' ' (plestion for itstlf, i i -d .^ndant 'of external ! no small degree to the liheral system of ad-iiltorferehei. llf njl the people of the free j vtrllsing whi^li no one knows how to use s o

states should join the Abolitionist* they l ( ) i , a l e r ndvantage than W. 'O. Buchanan. ! u

would not have the power t<» liberate a slave

Charles Eilet, Jr.. has been compelled by ill health to resign the position of Chief En­gineer of the Virginia Central Railroad,

The Grand Lodge of the Independent Or­der of Odd Fellows, of Northern New York, holds a Festival in Buffalo to day.

The N. Y. Tribune learns that Mr. Fill­more is having the most brilliant success in English society.

A firemen's r jo toccurred in Baltimore On-Saturday n ight Three of tho rioters wero shot, two of whom it i3 thought will not recover.

drop the expression of " natural terminus of a railroad." Nature, in many cases, has

• nothing nt all to do with lhe matter. Who, 10 year3 ago, would have fixed—for exani-plo—lhe termini of threo railroads, (two of them tho most important on the Continent,) n't two opposite points on the Niagara Liver, where tho.banks are over two hundred feet high,with a deep and foaming rapid between them. Wha t had nature to do with such a"! terminus as this I And yet what does our neighbor, see 1 We have shown him all the

.figures (wo had, we shall havo more by-and-byc,) giving n freight traffic across this gorge

-of 1200 tons a week, during the snow storms of last winter, for a period of six weeks, and wo now call his attention to the fact that tho Great-Western Railway, al­though only n year and a half old, already realir.es tho necessity of a double .track, which is now under contract,for construc­tion. How many railroads in ' the United

Slates could in so short a period show" a like necessity, and a hko action? A double track

' from this^o Rochester must follow,— indeed,

the want of it is now;tovcrcly felt.

The gentlemnnly editor of ' tho Courier will find this Suspension Bridge "knot hole" a much larger one than his fancy has painted it.". There is already n tremendous leakage

'•• through it in Iho wny of travel. Even at this season of tho year, when the " sit lines" nro in full blast, $130,000 per month i3 the figure showing what numbers get through tho hole,-nearly all of passing between tl

""tAt<M* . question is solve.!, it becomes u« to exercise j O 'c ;0ck in the morning, and proceed lo! be omnipresent or his cars nre a " leetle As to l W . ' « 8 » x lines, • wo think they 50mo cliarify loward lhe citizen* of -other U , , l l u r c h l M , n o n theCanandai- longer than we had suppa4e,L The Express

will crow beautifully less. Railroads will, state* where lhe African clement constitutes . . . . ,, „ „ ., . , - ... . • ; ,. , ., t

. . . . . - . - . . , » . f«i,iil . '- . m»*« «r i t . . . , i .»u ^ « « I . L I ! .. I "iia and Nngara rails Railroad wi l rhc in appears to have monopolised the u»« of ' in our.opipion, 8lrirU^icm of their splendid one-rounli or more of the whole population. B " ^ -- . - . , . . , , ' « „ ,

, i ' f i . 1 r ' T ^ ., , . V i It appears (o* me that our political action Waiting to convoy th.-m to the hall*. A cabin fixings, anJ doom them to the" more i , ' , ' , , ,. , , , . . . ' , • • • , , ..,,• . . . ...

, . . , 'should be directed to subjects over which j brass and cotillion band will accoinpan hurublc office of boarora of burthen, Even w o h a V ( J tmnQ etfective control, inste«d of

fished yearly. We learn that about 4 000 copies will be circulated this season. It is one of the best advertising mediums to be found. . . .

XS?" Preparations are making lo cele­brate the Anniversary of the Jerry Rescue at Syracuse on the first day of^pctober next.

/37~ The Dunkirk Journal says that more than two thirds of the freight passing-

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over, tho Lake Shore Railroad for the East meets with transhipment at Dunkirk, thus shunning Buffalo.

Sour Stomach, Weak Stomach, Rising or

Ointment will.rival their European fame."

Foreign New3. _ ARRIVAL OF TltK ' ' A J I E U I C A "

The Steamer America.arrived af Halifax on the lot i i ins t , from Liverpool the 4th. There is little, of importance in the newa l>y this Steamer. .We glean a few items.

A French dispatch, dated July 20,fcay*: "Our approaches on the side of the Malak'tf advance considerably. We now touch the place. Everything is prepared for.a general action in about fifteen days.1'

JI 'LV 21.—Gen. Simpson telegraphs: "Cholera lias neaily disappeared. Tho Russians continue to hold their strong posi- • lion on the Mackenzie, and the strong range of bights overhanging Urkusta nnd the Val-

, ley of Baidar. Il is reported they leave also •\omiting of Food, Distress after Eating, a ,-„ rye of artillery and infantry at Alaska. Dyspepsia, and its train of evils, have never! The French have pushed forward the whole found so perfect a emedy as in Prof, l lum-j of their cavalry into«the Valley of -Baidarfe

J. S. Clcqdinen has resigned his office as i pj,rt.V8« Specific Homterqiathio bv.M.epsia i r o > l i n o l h e Sardinians upon the I. ft bank Attorney-General ofthe United Suites for the p , , , , ; M J W ]e mf n n d ; f f i 0 , - of lhe Souhai River, and communicating T :. „ „ n v , i,in„Mn . • ' wiih.the I'reiicli up»n the Chernaya, wlnlo Territory of Washington. they are just the thing want <l. Sold nt Ah ,|.e- high ridge protecting Balaklava is

Hon. Franklin Dexter, of Massachusetts, has written an able letter against Fusion.

General Todleben, a distinguished Russian

Engineer,- died lately.

• T."G. Booth, the Comedian, died in To­

ronto on Saturday. .

The Kiiigswood Tunnel, on the Baltimore

and Ohio Railroad, is 4,100 feet irVlength

and about 28 feet in width.

The entire Kentucky delegation in Con-

len's. Price 25 cent's peKbox . . 1 1 . ii

JloHoxcar/s Pills, an unfailing remedy for! . *«"" V. "~' + ̂ '''"*':'S^"''.'.! Yul] l^^'i^A ,. , J e , I,, , r '-.,. nation seems to reign in tlio camp ana

disorders of t h e Chi>st and Lunrrs.*—Oil- . T ^ . . ' .• J

gb ruige , e, guarded by" the Turkish army.''

The Times correspondent writes : " Stag-

all dbordors of the Chest and Lungs.-'—Oli trenches ; even tho heavy firing has died ver .Thompson, of Little Fa s, New York, „, , ' . ,i.^ „• / , , . * „ „ .,„,>

.' , .' I . I , il away ; yet tlie approaches advance, and was certainly in a most deplorable state of j ' ^ ^ , , | a »,[„{„ m , i r e r | | j 0 c r e U 0f health ten weeks ago; Ins lungs, so the d o o - | l l ) p ' M r t | , ; k ^ w M c , , i t

- w i l l n o w r o q i l i r e a I | tors told him, were com letely gone, h i s ) , . ' , •,„ ' f , . , ' D „ . • ^ , , , , . f,,_ , , . , . . , , * •»„ ', , tli". tenacity of the Kus-ians to-liold. A tew

chest, and in fact his body genera ly, had j j &inco- l h e UmAlxTiH 8 U W ^ | H | i„ « sca.cely an atom of flesh on it so thin bad I l H , , , u h i n 2 r i d o U s ,„ f r o I l l o f t | l u F r i „ c

he become, in addition to this lie had a ; . ..

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J i a r 28.—GorchnkofFtelegraphs: •'Ye«-terday the enemy opened n heavy fire which

Fu nil it* essential proportions, slavery as it exbts would remain untouched. In our own state we have conferred a certain degree of

j tg rT ln i Dunkirk Journal states by ail-

cough which completely shook him to pier­ces (these aro l.is own words;) he has in<t

. . . H I I ' T I r i t t i • t i • i I C I U . I I I I I Q e n n u i u i f i ' m i i fi nv<»» \ m r .lilt*-.

gress supported the bill repealing the M.< ! called on Profefsor IJolloway to inform linn j U^J l w | > | l o . , ' ^ . ^ „ ) f l V]\ i M Bc„ sonri Compromise. Not .one has been le- llmtal these cmnplnint* have UxM^em.-ved j U()I1 W e r t i p | i t . ( J Tvitl, vigor."

r n e d I *-v " ° " 0 W V ? P , l , v ! , U , ' r , 0 ' "" ' ,!M:1 l h e m i Advices from tlm Crimea to the - for sfcven weeks and lw«> d a y s an t lie now'

. . . .:, • ,. ' , . . feels hotter than ever he ;,] in his life.— S3T »>e wi I not dispute Uie omniscience i..., , , . . ... ... .. . *™ _ « . . . | These Pills will readilv remove all diseases

toinacl

'.hority thnt the grand excursion lo this j of the editor of the. Buffalo Express, and if J 0( {\t

'MX. for the benefit of the Dm kirk Fire, he can make his readers believe that he is .. ' . . . «* . i pace , lor the lienem oi me i;ui KirK rire , HW <-•" •••••n« ••<* •<...>... ..,..»,» ...... ... .. . t numbers get through freoi om upon the tolorcl race. But when ' , . . . . , • . . . . J , „ ,-i i - , i „ / / , i . m n v i,a „••, . i THE boirru o r OU>K.N IIMB.—In Mr. Beu-. . b . i i n .i . /i .. i . . . i i i / - Department, wu take pace on I-r day of at al hkclv to hear all that may be uttered ,• .. . .

of whom nro Americans h«»H they^io permitted to vote, to hold of- I " "• ^ . , , , , " . • , ' , • ,. . , „ . . tons forthcoming volume of his thirty years t-rrt fiee and to narlicinntn in tho lde««inrr« of' this week. The pail V will take the Coin- ' bv another, w by its all right. \ye must IKS .

ie Eastern and Western ! panic ipaie in uie niessings or » i , : ' . , V , , , • in the SennU", occurs the foil-wing pns»nge, social find political cqualhvl Until ihi* modious steamer Empire, at .Dunkuk, nt 81 pcrmillcil to rctrmrk, however, that he must J . ^ ; ,

.. • • ;• . i. i * • '. . . I : . ' . . i i ,.I in allusion to tho decline of the Southern

ami

'canals', for many purposes, seem to bo pass- tvA«tingotir energies on question* which tho, ing rapidly into the region of old fogy ism. Tho diminution of Canal freights nnd tolls looks like it.

. Making Buffalo tho terminus of the Erie rond would be a first step loading with ctr-

tainty to the abandonment of the line from ^JIornelUvilla-to-DnnVirkr—Dw*-oufOcigb-

pompany

the i'vciir-ionists and all ether necessary

arrangements for a grand nffaii, both for

offensive epithets and low billingsgate. It may retain the monopoly. What we stated was upon the authority of common report, In UulTalo, and may be trim or may not, we cannot say, neither do wc care.

£*T Tho Buffalo ExprtSi declares that

constitution of the country has placed be- . yondour reach. Wo may skirmis.1, near ph-asure and comfort, will bo secured.— ihe outposts; but when slavery is nMished i Tickets for the trip aro placed nt the low-it mu t be' done by lhe people in the slave- ! price of $2, being less than one half the fare holding states. Whether they will be con- L f | n C ^ u a J route. The arrangements will I the Fusion movement is prompted by the verted to jnster views of duly Mid humanity L o n ft \'cnU | 0 " n ( . r o m n V H h l T . „ . , . i r t y cf same spirit that actuated bur fo;efalhers in by partizan clamor, harsh reproaches, and , , , > , . . . - , i . i .- ... ., ,, «• ' * > * • constant blasts of f,irv from the Nortli is an 1 *»» »»>"dred, thus aftording^it . te .^ of tho j their struggle with tho mother country

bor seo any justice or sound policy in thus

depriving the people living on this lino, of

tho railroad facilities I hey now enjoy, and

which are rapidly developing their wraith

nnd multiplying their numbers ?

It seems to u«, Uiat in view of such an

event, the high virtue of magnanimity,' real­

ly has something; to do with Ino question.

' ' T h i recent census shows that Buffalo con­

tains apopulalion of 71,400.

inquiry which nppeals lo the candor of ever) honest philanthropist.

Gov. Hunt dfnonncfs the absurd theory

of territorial sovereignity, up-n which the

Nebraska Bill tvn< ba. ed, and also tho-arm

ed invfijion T.f tho 'Missouri mob. lt» his

opinion the proceedings in Kan*,a<_mn«l b<

I four hundred, thus atlording^ilizens of tho . their strugglo with tho mother couiifry!

neighboring rdlagcS A f.lenf^nt-ainlTrhrarr -Vrry-likclvT-biM-w|in«ft-t«a-will-b«-thrown

opp'irtnnity of vi«iting the Fall*. 1~ — |

^ 7 " llemeiiM«T that John Hawkins, the

temperance lecturer, speaks'in tjhji Metho­

dist Chinch tin"* evening.

£<T The Ali'aiiy Aryns \> in error in

deemed of u<> legal or m.raf force until law | Mating that Sheriffs Clerk* and Ju Igos aro

and order are e*tabli«hed,--a diity-Woogjig , to be clhw-ou [n cvvry .county. .Tlie more

to the (tovernment. Ho think* a msj-'ri'.v ! i m p ' r a n t of our count)'

of the South even, will not uphold tho l a w i last fall for two years.

cffici * were filled

overboard I

Jt<T Maz/.ini, in a communication to tho

Ixmdon Pott, gives his opinion of the plan­

ning of the Crimean expedition t hus :—

'One would say that tho man who first planned the Crimean expedition wanted to solve this problem : How to sink in an ap­parently plausible enterprise the best blood of Esigfand. and make her defenseless for a timc"of rfeed.

States:-"It is a tradition of the colonics that tho

Soutli had been the seat of wealth and hap-pinc-s, nf |M>wer and opulence; that a th/h population covered the land, disponing bar­onial ho«pilaliiyj nnd diffusing the felicity which themselves enjoyed fi l ial all was life, and joy, and affluence then. And this tra­dition was not without similitu e lo the re­ality, as this writer can testify ; for ho was old enough to havo seen (after the revolu-*.ion) the still surviving stale of southern colonial manners, when no traveller was al­lowed to go to a tavern, anM was handed over from family to family through entire A^li»A~^rhen-luJida)'a were days of fcsriyjty aiid expectation, long prepared for, and cele­brated by master and slave with muric and feasting, and greal concourse of friends and relatives; when gold was kept in desks or chests, (after tho downfall of paper) and weighed in scales, and lent (o neighbors for short terms without note, interest or securi­ty—and on bond and land security, for long vears and lawful usance; and when petty litigation was at so low an ebb that it r equ i ­red a fino of. forty pounds of tobacco to make-a man serve as constable."

29 th announce continued preparations for a giand expedition.' All the lighter vessels of the fleet were assembled at Kmniesh.

It was-reported in Paris on the 3d in«t., that the French Government had official notification that the bombardment of tho Mal.tkoff and Redan has been resumed preparatory to another assault.

JI-LV 30.—Gorehakoff telegraphs : "There " has been a partial cannonade on both "sides, but nothing of importance."

It was telegraphed from Constantinople on the 26lh that tbo B.vdii-Bazouks had murdered General Beatson, but Lord Pan-mure in Parliament positively contradicted the report.

Tho Viceroy of Egypt i* negotiating with tho Bedouins to serve in the Crimea.

Kamiesh and Balaklava we*ro crowded with vessels recehtly arrived for tho secret expedition.

The French Government flas chartered ninety-seven small steamers for river navi­gation, each to convey 600 men, ., Tho -Loats—bglojg-to._cpmpanica on the Rhone and Saono.

Just as tho s teamer was ready to »»U from Liverpool the following telegraphs dispatch wa* ?enl from London : ' , "

/The Weekly Newspaper, jtial issued, w j* . " We loarn that tho aiego of Sevastopol » about to be raised. Also thai a communi­cation has just been received from Germany by the Western Powers which may lead to startling results." , .

BnKAn8TCKr3.-r-Market-for Wheat and Flour declining. Corn, no demand.

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Thomas M. Tryniski 309 South 4th Street Fulton New York 13069

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