l*Peoeo RePtibliekils OtROUL.&TION, - X)l6. C. F. 0161 D ft H. IL- FIZAITER...E.DITORS X: 100111 S. CORRESPONDING EDITOR MONTROSE. SUSO... CO., PA. Thursday:Natehiber 11, Val. Notice:---Mr. g. V. Fruzisft is oar traveling agent, Authorized to receive sulmcriptions, advertise ments,.tc.,aiid to collect moneys for the :Independ ent „Republican.' • Special Notice.—All _persons indebted to this office, either for job work, advertising, on sub-' setiption; or otherwise, will confer a 'great favor on us by paying up without further delay. We prefer that payments should be made in money, which we Ulna need- brit we will-also take train or wood at . Montrose market prices. • - . or We this week issuer the Republican earlier, and therefore bestow less attention Oe,itkediforial columns, than usual, because of li - quantity of job work we nave, to do the latter part of the week, ' • tar In the third line from the bottom of the solutionof.proi)lem on our. first page, for read - Qua All 'who have subscribed. to :the fund, -raised 'for the Sufferers .61 - the late accident here, 'without, paying, axe reqUested....to pas iii-theirsuliscriptions to Charles 14esie; who may be _found at the Register and Recorder's office. CCM _"M*7 Persons hating rooms to let toStu dents of the Susiquehminn County Normal ,Saliool, - or- desir l ing to take' boarders, ,w !l. please leave their names with Prof. 'Stod dard or C. Read. T . MrOn Tuesday morning. November 2d, the Wife of kr. Grant, - Of, Gibson township, lost j her life in the following mtanner : She . and her husband had returned hoMe from. a party abqut 4 o.''elock in the flflorningy and she ley down near the fire to get a little . sleep. When-she awoke her clothes were in flames; she rushed Jo her husband,' who was lying on a bed in the room, and heflimg a blanket over her head to extingiiish the 'fire ; but she probably inhaled' some of the :flame, Which caused her death_a short time htter: Speaking of Mr. Whitney, chi Lecture here again next Friday 'eteningi. .T. T. Tfeadley, the celebrated Author,remarks: In, the represene:altn of King Lear, espec ially, we have ,been deeply, interested. The ideal of Shalcspeare seemed 'to be fully; actu alized by him in the pathos and spirit of the draMa, and given with wonderful_powei and effect." . • nr The Fraier river excitement his en tirety subsided ; and the miners are return ., ing to California, disheartened and destitute. The Republican majority in Wiseoe •~siu 1 s about. 5000. Last year the Republi•. cans elected the Governor by only 118 nia jci4ty,-while the Democrats elected five of ' the eight State officers. IRY" TEM NEW AmEiticAzi Cra.or.rnls, Vol. 111,. is. received. It is nearly . thi4 ,yeatis since a complete CYCLOP.EDIA was pub lished iii this country : since that ' time we have doubled both our population• and out: area—peopled :the Gold Regions—Discover: ed a New Gintinent--g ne through .a War. - 4 -buried our third generation 'of-great States raen,la Clay, Calhoun; ,Webster, a c tid Ben ton-1;12a towns like Chicago- 7 .a our Rail ways—our Ocean Steamers=mir Iron 'lions -es- r -invented the Photograph—the l . Electric Telegraph and the Lightning Preislintro : duced Cheap ° Postage-=Sfeel •Pens—G_um med Eriyelepes,-Lucifer Matches—lce= Oninibuses--Chloroform, etc., etc. These matters are all dealt within this work. Ful- . ler in every department - and for every period i.than its predecessor, it has a net addition to it of the. events ofthis period. In Vol. 111 will be found blogmphies . nf tbe following eminent . Americans:Nichols Bi - d-. dle;:the Beecher family, James' - Gordon Ben- net,. Col. Benton; BlennerhasSet, Boardman ; F. P. Blair, Bonapaftes of 13altimore, Dan'. jet Bocine, Vice President Bi etkenridgev. R Breckenridge, Jacnes l and . praStus Broolr4 : lind numerous others. The Blogra: - Phies - Idiotic are wOrth.the price of 946 tcil ume. Pnblialleti - by D. Appleton & N. Y. " t'eterson's Counterfeit Detector and Bsuik Note List" is corrected by/ Drexel &, 'Co:the,"viasknown : Bankers , and Brokers • andls one of the best Detectors of Counter feit or Altered Notes, published in i this coun try. The November . nut . n / ber fully describes eighty-Six new •counteiteits, and - contains a -facsimile engraving ofe bogus Bank- Note that is' being, altered Ao various Banks all _ over 'the country f an 'which is being put. in: -to extensive 'circahttion. It also_ contains sere* pages of other valuable, information otrverytning appertaming to Bank Notes; 'We have no luisitation in pronouncing it a • compete, reliable publication: : It. is pub. lisbed by T. B. Peterson 6i Brothers, No. 306 Chestnut &feet. Philadelphia. _ . Messrs. Fhillips, Sampson & co., of Boston, will publish on the 13th inst., ! s •The • Autcrat of the Breakfast Table," by .Qliver -Wendell Holmes, with fine illustratimis by 'lfoypin: It - will contain VA Tips. We • anticipate a Agular " Uncle Tom" sale for Millwork, Its immense popularity in the Atlantii; Monthly, has .prepared . the public mind for its- reception. ' The same firm will publish, on the same „day, “ Poor and Proud, or the: Fortunes of Katy Bedbtirn," s: new ;juvenile. Also on the , it;9:ooity,l4 Earl Iciegler," tad " Walter Beyton" beoks for the you •••_. The Ilieetielke. The Republicans •lirie Swept ~ evet ything beforethem... in the recent elections in the Free Stites. The baksulraervieney Of. the adrpiniition and ‘a partisari'SupremeCourt to the StiVe Porwer, is begitining'to be appre. elated by the masses of the Ncirth ; they be gitt'toicel that the protection of our free in stitutions against the inroads :of 'tyranny, is worth a struggle. These elections show l,!cr easy it is for us-to achieve vietory, when we are true to ourselves. , . . In NeW-York State, although there were four tickets in the field, and it was hoped by the shamociacy that the straight American - ticket and the Gerrit Smith ticket Would draw off enough cotes from,Morgan to -elect Parker, their hopes • were disappointed, and Morgan and 4me rest of the Republican State ticket are elected by 17,000 or 18,000 - majority—ahout the Demgcratic! majority .last fear. . Of the thirty-three Members of . Congress, the Administration will have but four, and the seat of one . of these will be con tested. Not a single Lecompton Congress man has been elected in the State, outside of New York City. it appears to beconceded' thus John B. „Ilaskies (anti-Lecompton -Dem ocrat) is'elected over _ his Lecompton compet itor by small ‘nuijorityL—twentione. The State_Legislature is RepUblican by a large majority. - In Massachusetts, N. P. BankS, Republi can, is re-elected Governor ; by more than 29,000 plurality over Beach, Lecomptonite, 'and more than 17,000 majority over all. In'the State I2gislature, the Senate will stand 37 - -ite publicans to 29 Deinocrats,l9 straight Americans, and :4‘ to hear from. All. the Members of Congress are 'Republicans.' Bur lingame is re:elected by 446 majority, al though . the sham.llemocracy and Straight Americans under the lead of ex-Governor Gardner and ex-Whig Choate, united' against him.. Charles Francis Adams and Elt Thayer are among the Members elect. ' In. Michigan the *hole Republican State • ticket is electAlby from 6,000: to 10,000 majority. The present indications are that the Legishiture will stlmii-- 2 .Senate, Republi cans .22, Democrat 4 10 ;, house, Republicans 40, Democrats 33. Howard, Republican, is defeated for Congress in the.lst District, by 100 majority:. The Republicans have carried New Jersey. The five Members of Congress elect : are all anti Administration. The result on the State ticket in Illinois is in 'doubt ; but Douglas bas triumphed in the election of a majority of the State Legislature, and will be re-elected United States Senator. Never was an Adininistration more em hatieally condeffined and repudiated than that of Jamesßuchanan. Every Free State in the Union has pronounced against it. - --7 r:v New Jersey has chosen a clear anti Lecompton Delegation to Congress, as fol lows: John T. Nixon, Joht►=L. N. Stratton, Garnet B. Adrian, Jetur R. _Riggs, William Pennington; of whom Adrian and Riggs are anti-Lecompton Democrats, and the rest Re publicans. The Legislature is decidedly-Op position without connting anti-Lecompt ‘ on Detnncrats, of whom five . or six are chosen. It is believed that an anti-Lecompton Sena ter will be chosen,without difficulty. • nr . The official a4rago Republican ma• jority in Ohio is 20,926. .Chase's Anajority over Payne for Governor last year was 1481. Fremont's majority over\Buchanan was 16,- 623. - The Tribune thinks that the triumph Of Douglas in Illinois - will make him the Democratic candidate fur President in ISI3O. It seems probable. „ rEr The slave 'Derricy the littlestateft - Xtelaw majority, Mf" lion. John Potter—" Potter of woody Witeonsin",—who showed ,such prow ess in aid of Grow against the chivalry in the Kitt. affair ls.t . Winter, is re-elected to - Cdngreis. In the elections that have already taken place', there is a loss to the administra tion, as compared with the present Congress, of 2 311 embers. . • 'O7 We give below the -vote for Con gressman of a few townships in Tioga'coun. ty this-Fall, as slidwing the way in which the invincible freemen of that county sustain G. A,Grow and the principles of Republi cani.ma : Gaols. PARKHURST: VAIL. Charlestown, 270 48 Belmar, • • 257 47 . Sullivan, 204 O . Tioga, • 216 2 Elk, 17 0 Knoxville, 46 • 0 Union,, 124 0 Rutland, 126 .Middlebury, 173 0 Congresdonal Delegation. The new delegation 'to Congress from Pennsylvania will stand as follows: 1. Thomas B. Florence, re-elected. 2. E. Joy Morris, re-elected. 3. John P. Verree; vice Lindy. 4. William Millward l . vice Phillips., 5. John Wood, vice Oweg Jones; 6. John Hickman, re-elected. 7. H. C. Longenecker, vice Chapman. 8. John Schwartz; vice J. Glancy Jones. 9. Thaddeus Stevens, vice Roberta. 10. John AN. Ktilinger, vice Kunkel. 11. James 4. Campbell, viee-Dewart. - 12. George - W. Scranton vice Leidy. 13; William 11. Dimmick, re-elected. 14.•Galusba A. Grow, re-elected. 15. James T. Hale, viceliAllisOn White. 16. Benjamin F. Junkinj vice Ahl. 17. Edward Arrherson,ivice Wilson Reilly. 18. Samuel S. Blair, vice Edie. 19. John Covode, re-elected. • 20. William Montgomery, re-elected. 21. James K. Morehead, vice Richie. • 22. Robert McKnight, vice Purviiu3ce. , 23. William Stewart, re-elected. 24. Chapin Hall, vice James L. Gillis. 25. - Elijah,Babbit; , vice John Dick. .0f the. foregoing, Schwartz and Montgom ery, are Anti-Lecomptor.iteS; 'Florence_ and Dionnick are 'Lectnuptonite_s,' and the rest, 21 in number, (counting Hickman, who vot ed the tut Republican ticket,) are Republi. cans. From Washingt on. Special Diepatcleta r.•T) WAsnINGTON, thurs.,,Nov. 4, '5B, The triumph of Douglas in Illinois excites more feeling het thanitli: the rest of the State elections. It. is felt by', the Adirrinis. tratletuit the seyerest hlvw, they haN'e yet received., • - • It Wstrengthened the reports of the with drawal from the Cabinet of Secretary Cobb, to whom the Lec.ompion policy of the Ad ministration is mainly attributable. - The Supposition that the Secretaryship of the Treasury, if vacated, will be offered to Mr. Erastus Corning, is generally entertained in political circles. The Douglas Men of this city intend to make a demonstration to morrow flight, in Celebration otthe Little (Jinn's' viet _ A llmit.tico I'asss:---The following ex tract from a recent letter "bee:LAG:la'," the Washinglon coriespOndent of Forney's Press, furnishes an explanation of the manner in which.the Leconiptonite newspapers are. kept alive : • , A number of parties interested in -newspa pers are now in Washington, tier the purpose of obtaining, funds to continue their eater- Priiies, Chief among these are Senator Itig ler and Cal. Florence. The former is pret• ty well understood as a sort of broker -in newspapers. It is believed that a considera ble sum is paid-over to .him cult of the post office printing,. from which funds he reim burses himself for certain advances to a jour nal in your State, which has been violent in support of the Kansas policy of the Adminis. •tration. Whether he has Made any money by, the transaction I cmino,t say, but it is cer tain that thcifunds have been paiit over': to him to keep tl and other journals in opera. •ticn, and that he as indemnified himself :for any pert4mal expenditures 'on the same ac count, Colonel Florence receives from the same source, for his newspapers, front $4OO tb i , 500 a month. A good deal of panis4ias been created by the rumor 'that The fund from whie s h these subsidies are drawn is to be stopped by an in% est igating committee of Congress. There seem to be- good grounds for this rumor when you recollect that tens of thousands of dollars are lavished upon newspapers of no sort, of use to anybody except to defend Le compton, and that these, tens of thousands are notoriously a part of the money p a id by the treasury to Mr. Wendel!, who is a part ner in the printing of the post office- blanks, and. ‘Aho pays over to the parties alluded to their - respective shares—they doing no print ing whatever. The amount of ni,oney expended on Le compton newspapers, out of the treasury, if Mated accurately to the people, would hardly l 'be believed. 1 wOuld not he-surprised if it • would build magnificent post otlii:es for Phil ' adelphia, New York, and Boston. Thi s f act alone goes to show w hat a:desperate cause it is which tequire - s such expedients. The very newspapers sustained by these bounties are deserted by the .people, and they are now rapidly sinking into decline. NEW JERSEY.- . —The Newark baily Adver tiser -i)f last evening .makes the Opposition Mnjority for Congress M the several Districts as rdlows: is , Pi'tri 111 Distri 11 I\'tli DiAri Vat Distril Add the can) in the , position Thousand. I Th Richmond South gives the fol lowing sun.mary of IS.'nator Douglas's ical creed, .s unfolded in the canvass just closed in Illinois ; which summary the New York Tribune pronounces "pretty accurate :" 1. Judge. Douglas affirms the original and essential inferiority, of the negro. 2. He denies that the negro was intended to•be embraced within the abstractions of the Declaration of Independence, and asserts that the right to freedom and equality ~was pre. dicated only of the dominant race of- white men. 3. He denies the privileges of - citizenship to the negro. 4. He affirms the compatibility of a con federac-v of Free and Slave States, and the possibility of their barnionious coexistence under a common Constitution. • ?au have carried . re, by.a diininished • kfle a'rms the absolute sovereignty of the Ratea i respect to-161r doinestie insti tution 4, and denies the authority of the Fed eral Giver meut to discrithinate against the interest.sof Slavery. - 6. Ile itruh•ate - s a policy of non-interven tion, as bet teen the free and Elaveholding. States, as % ell as behseen, the latter and the Federal Gr vernment. 7. He s pports the vfreision - of the Su prenik Gw t, and assert% l'or Slavery the riaht"of co onization in the Territnries. 8. He ti )11 - dds all the guaranties of the Federal C nstitution in respect to the rights of the &Jut . 0. Ile n aintains the dignity and iudepen• dente oft e Senatorial function, against the encroachtn tuts of Executive usurpat ion. 10..11e rousts his opposition to Black ReoubliCan stn at every point and upon eve ry principle. 11. Ile pledges himself to fidelity to the organization, principles, and nomittets of the Democratic party. [t•W" We notice•with pleasure - that S. B. •Chase, Esq., of Susquehanna county, is a Frominent 'Republican candidate for Speaker Statethe Wiese of Repreqntatives of this State at the coming sessionF. Mr. CtrOe. is eminently : deserving and capable. of the of flee. and would be a popular Chsiiman with all-the members of the House who would respect. its dignity and decortim. We trust he will be elected by a vote complimentary alike to the House and. himbelf.'-t-Potter Journal. ,o Coot Rastatrry.—ln Cincinnati, a few days since, two sharpeff accosted 'a country man stopping at one of the hotels,- ald stat- I ink that they were detectives, declared that he was s suspected 'of dealing in . counterfeit money.' The ruralist asserted his entire in ' nocence ; but they said. that they would search him, and took him into a private room, when they found .$lOB in good money. One went i to conslilt a detective concerning the bank notes, and remained away so long that his ccinpanion also departed in search -of the del. yer. Of course, neither returned, and the rural and unsophisticated - fellow learned to • tate that heo-was victimized. TUE P that his w tyontinuirqa to open a and morn' of HEena House oil formanee training. than Gla deal bet .chanan o t.—John T. ...... 2,500 t--John L. N. Stratton-...2,500 tt—Gamett B, Adrain'.... 530 t—Jeturit•Riggi GQ9 t—William Pennington.. ..1,650 EMI • ote for Jones (Straight Ant - eri. st District, and it makes the Op• ority in the State 'about Twelve • IZE noirwas.—Morrissey says fe's•connexions are opposed to his in the "profession." He ,inlendi 'grog shop ;Lod lead a respectable life in future. We do not hear 11' s reappointment. to the Custom ce which he resigned, ris the per: of its duties .interkred with his He has not been flpgged worse cy Jones, and he stands a good !r chance on another-trial. Mr. flu !ght to . do something for him. Hoh.Da~Fld'Wii in It Will heVetitylh'ktriAla 'many friends ot tll . o,ll . 6t.'Davld'Wiltiot In this, sect ion of Pen ttsylvania.. to leacnithat ,U As, reelected Prsideot'Judge.,Of.thiqu'dictal District corn posed, orthe ,eourtles tif': , StOquellatina end Bradford by Alargely•litereisetttiejority. Ills oppOnent;,was 11. W:'Patrielt;"an " :,Id - - line wtig." . The tWiCciiantiest eve a major ity for Judge l Wilmot of 4.630. Ills ma. jority last year over Parker I n ' Governor in the IWO cdunties was 4,36 s—exhibiting, a h a ndsome increase in.his,rnifjority since then. I We nommen(' theSe figures to the :Men• tion of Mr. Senator Welsh.. fitter Volnis- Mg fairly and squarely last Winter to resist with his vote the miserable partb4mship (width -attempted to break up Judge WiliMA's 1 District; in,ordcr to punish him tier his po-. litical opinions, our Senator " eat dirt," I chewed his own words, and descended to th e 'petty meanness of voting for the big which 1 was ii,tended to 11.gislate Judge W, out of I office for &ring to oppose Lorc)focoisin. The' 1 Ilou-e .f Representatives, boa eeer, with a I spirit. honorable to its members, rept d.ated Ithe paltry " revenge hill" of ,the Senate, and • the pe4iple have again endorsed the purity, } integrity, and legal ahility ofJudge Wilnuit, The above figures show that our Senatpr "dirtied . himself for nothing," therettre.-L--- The paltry meanness of the matter is utter ly de;picable. Senator Wel-h, we opitie, I,A ill, not again attempt .to leglshite Judge Wilmot ont ! of Ace after such an endorse ; meet by ,he People of that District. For Ibis part•in the transaction he should hide his I head for very shame.' It is really gt at ifring . .... hto know that the ind e p e nd e nt P e ople of that glorious DiArict have thus signally rebuked the petty demagogues mho wished to do the dirty trick of remOving a man from office 1 becam-e be did not belong to their party, 'against the earnest protest of et% hole a ma : j,rity of his fidlow ,, elt i2ens.— York .Eep. C l o The following important eitettlar has hoer very extensively disseminated ; and the statistics obt a ihed i n ri pply to i t „111 b, published in pamphlet fitrm i fin the. itiftwitta. tion of the public. It is to be hopeii that all w h.', are possessed of information valu a l,ln tor the_purpo-e referred to in the circular, Neill commutticate'it to the committee: t OEFICE OF THE BOAti.D OF TRADE, PHILADELPHIA, Oct. !n,_.16513. • DV: Stn,—ln 'pursuance Of a Resolution, the Executive Council of the Board 61 Trade of Philadelphia, the undersigned- !vivo been appointed a Utimmittett of the chard to correspond with influential - corporations ands indi;iductis throughout the State, for the pur pose of °buil/log the most extensive and ac curate information-possible, : with regard to the present depres-ed condition ofthe Indus trial ami'M,anufacturing Interests of-Pennsyl , ‘ t ctlia ; as well as to elicit their opinicm upon the causes which have produced this depres sion, and the proper remedy therefor. \Ve therefore beg leave to address you up on this sulject, solititing a reply ut your ear lic-t convenience. We would be Wad to learn, let such an extent as you may be wit- Wig to coo for so desirable un cod, the general condition within the past fifteen years, of the Manufacturing or Industrial itt tx•rests with which you are most titmlliar ; the period of their highest prosperity', and pregret-s and extent of its decline; together with your crew of the immediate causes of !welt depreskion, it any aists, and your opin ion of the proper measures to be taken. for the restoration of their,furtner prosperity and Igor. VV - shall be.glad, to receive any col lateral Information - Zettring- on this sulileet, within the range of your observation, niore especially in reutrd to the necessary partici pation of the Agricultural iti,terests of your neiglibighood in this depression of the Indus. trial and Produying communi Very respectft4ly,your obef SANICfI:6C. Moa n. Ji, nn NVEt.sti, N. 13. Tit..llPsoN, nnowN, A. J. LEWIS, S. V. EitiocK, TimmAs K JR ISRAEL MORRIS. The reili F rns from Massachusetts are excetalingly refreshing. The Democratic par ty, aided and abetted by the adipmere Whigs, is just about where it was ; 4nd just about whe r e it is likely to be, and that is just nowhere. The Republicans carry every thing—all the Members of Congress, Gou'Ver: nor, Lieut.-Governor, and other Executiv,e officers, the. Hope of Representatives, the .Senati3 and the Executive Council. Mr. Banks is re•eleeted Govetnor by over30;000. Lawrence, the :,inieritlin candidate, is left 'most dismally oht in the cold, and ill 'future ages will be obliged to proJereaffidaVitS that he was a candidate at ail.. In the Congres sional elections, there is much matter for • eongratuhltion.' Many of the new men will be solid acquisitions of the party of Freedom in Washing , on: In the Illd Congressional . Di-trio, Mr. Charles Francis Adams i s e l e ct. , ed. In the k lVth, Mr. Alexander Rice, an iutelligent merchant and sound Republican ; is'enosen. Mr. Buriimiaine is returned from' the Vth'Distriet, and Mr. Eliot, an old and useful and trustworthy Bleniber, succeeds R. B. Hull. Mr. Thayer returns from the-Wu).- cester District. But there is little' necessity of recapitulating the (letups het+. -"The parti colored combination of lienemble Wigs, of DemOerats net at all venerable, of all the "sick and tlw suer, the halt and • the blind ; of the fretful, the fusy and, the nervous, is in a most distressing condition.—N. .Tribune. ;'.The following article on the Speak . ership'ia extracted from the New Castle Ga !`zelk, whose editor has served two 'terms' in the Legislature with Mr. Chafe ; and hence speaks . understandingly : SPEAKER OP THE HOUSE OF REPRESESTA- Tiv , Es.—Arnong Other privileges extended to our party by its majority in the Douse of Representatives of this State, is the selection of officers of our faith fur that body. The Speakersbip, first. in importance, should cause the members to exercise the greiZtest caresin the selection. It is a responsible and trying position, and requires a' man of superior qmilifiestions to fill the poSition acceiptible to hiteself and fellow members.. In looking ova. list of members to single one who among : the number, in.our opinion, possesses the necessary qualification in the most emi nent degree, we " s unhesitatingfy selected the name' of Simeon B. Chase, of:Susquehanna county, and we believe every member who has associated with him in the Legislative Balls, will bear us out, in our opinion of his fitness rorthe position. That the old, mem bers reelected will getteitilly support him, we cannot doubt, and_ the new members, to Whom it is : particularly important that a well qualified, gentlemanly and courteous presiding officer &mild be chosen, we confi. dently recommerid him. • We hope to_ have the satisfaction of chronicling his election. ny - The folloiring definitiOn of an 4 Old' Line Whig" ascribed toithe Ifon.'Edward :•Bates, of Missouri, will be recognized as an accurate one in _some localities far removed front "Air Old Line Whig is a man wliq .takes his liquor revularly, and votes .the Democrat ic ticket occosionoil,y." From the Chicago Tritune. the. Three-Fold Endetiver t4Perpetnate the Daminauce'of phery. 11fhe\*Athat,'.the Np tli s , co `pta-tk fahtingagg4ssietitPon the Ws 4in n latOr, - #ndattereOp*ytAa by every DAnocratk do*faoleOhir er. spo 4an liaot beirOr - OpeatO, Atm inaq bonest though not wetinfornied inn have come to regard it as having at least some foundation in truth,:, We undertook, a few days ago, by a citation of the leading historical factsin- otir Government relative., to-the acquisition of territory l and the organ ization of new States, to p r ove that The Ii- on s share had always fuller to the :South— , thetthi North hadifrom the beginning aided in strengthening the political power of the South; and in, perpetuating_ its controlling Mflitenee in the Administritiottorthe Feder al GovernMent, This has been the fact front the organization of the Goverment to, the present . day, and neter more than now. Notwithstanding the .free States are numerically greater th a n the slave liStates; and should, bv: the genius of our institutions, have a controlling voice in the Federal Guy. eminent, still within'the last flair years, each °tithe three branches into'which it is divided has strenuously labored for the extension of Southern interests, at the expense .of those which pertain to the free States. Let us see if thisis not. Co. 1. The Legislative department has labored to this end by the rep9al of the Missouri Compromise, opening itYl our territory north of 3&i 80' to the incursion orSlavery, by . sanetioning the lawless outrages; perpetrated by Southern ruffians upon_ the Free-State settlers of Kansas, by denying the latter all redress for their many grievances, and,-final ly, by offering to admit Kansas into,the Un- . I ion Its a State with forty :thousand popula tion, provided she would come in with a slave Constitution, or compelling her other wise to remain under her.Territorinl . organi zation until she shall have „a population . of ninety-theme thousand four hundred. - The Judiciary has sought to accomplish the same work by giving an interpretation to the Federal Constitution which is eriniva. kilt to an amendment of that instrument, whereby Slavery is made the eon - noon law, and its proteetioe guarantied in all the Ter ritories of - the United States, in' defiance of the will of the people thereof, or Of the ac.. tint - ) of the Federal Congress, 3. Lastly, tve have the Chief - Executive of the nation,sustaining both the action of Con gross and of the Supreme Court in the -pre mises, filling Kansas with officials and troops to form Slavery +mon the people, , and pro claiming in the• Silliman. letter, and in. the special message -of February last, that Slay. cry is as: n o tch an institution of Kansas as it is of Georgia or of South Carolina. "These are facts within the. knowledge of every citizen, and they clearly)show that Slavery, not Freedom -theslave States, not the free—constitute the aggressive power in the Government, a power which will not \ reSt satisfied with any thing short" f complete and 'luiet submission to its behests. • The centre and focus of Southern Democ. racy - is at Charfes'mn. There is published the Mercury,. that chief organ _of southern opinion, andur there the next Democratic Pres idential Convention is to be held. _The in ,fluencej)f Cis boon's name and the authority of his opinions will linger in that political, metroplis; the Mercury, so long his organ, ' has not yet, lost its prestige, but speaks with the boldneSs of tither days in defence of the interests and rights , of its section. That. journal regards the recent elections with em inent disapprobation. W hat little confidence lit telt in Northern Democracy is sadly shalt en. Indeed it has come to the conclusion 1 that'no Northern Democrat, not even the roost steadfast, is fit to be trusted. At the late, session, it-wivs, " The Northern wing of the Democratic Party divided in - tWPIO, and o ne half deserted the Administration, desert ed their„brethren of the. South, and went over to tbo I.3 4 aeh Republiettos on the Kansas issue." This. co?tainly. was sufficiently dis heartening. But it was not the worst. Hear. what the .:Iferear'y has next to say : "The either halt—being a mere fraction 'of the 'North, represented by smne 24 or 30 •tneuiln•rs in the II Laftle Of RePresentatives, and a half dozen in the''Senate-were sup posed to he sound. They were bepraised in .the-Souih as the gold purified—martyrs rea d' fir the stako=raig..tAs' in their holiness, dauntlessness and purity, clothed in-the white ,garments of the Democratic fitith. - They go back 4b the people armed with troth, the whole power of thc'Administration, awl the great issues "f - the Union to support them.. Alas! they did not even make a fight. They' went down, on their knees at the first shout of abolitionism, and crawled and prayed fur pardon'and mercy, with abundant premises •of future atonement. They forthwith, as one Inom. from Marne to Kansas, gave up-the Kan: sas Conference Act, mid pledged themselves to vote for its violation on the first motion of the, Abolitionists in Congress." There is truth in this littnentation... The Lerompton members did 'exactly what the Mercury charges. They repudiated tin Eng lish bill. 'English himself was compelled to. do so, or •he beaten out of sight: It was hard enough to he reelected even with this . concession, and the-help of the AdMinistra: Cum. But what would the Mercury have them do ? illey wanted_ to go back to Con greys. Does the Ifircery blame-14mi ? They could not he elected in any part Of the North so long as they adhefed to the Eng lish hill. If the Mercury wishes to retain a: party iti the Free States it must not irnpoie conditions so degredhig. . Charity should in duce it to excuse - Some slight concessions to Northern dpinion. The people this side of Mason and Dixon's line failed to understand why Kansas free must have a population of 90.000 before she could' be , -admitted when with Slavery she was not only allowed, but bribed, to come in with 30,000. Btit the Mercury refuses to pardon this natural feel ing at the North: It emphatically declares -that if, at the next session of Congress, the pledges so made shall be carried out, and the other pledge in fitvor of a' protective tariff, " the Democratic party will be dissolved." The. South, it says, t° will then stand alone, faithful among the faithless."—N. Y. Times. Tent servants. Comtni (tee, TuE FRENCH EMPEHOE.—The • Liverpool „Mercury says---" Pert:sons residing in Paris . are of opinion that tine star of the .Emperor Napoleon , is waxing , dim. The talent and intelligence of the eMintry' say they ' are ex ceedingly hostile to the present \ system ; the tradeS people of Paris arc all Orkanists, and the workmen are getting very tired of the man of their choice. The speculators on 'Change are, perhaps, the .only persons in -France who dope the, reign of Louis Napole on may bell long one.' On the same author ity, it may be stated that the Legitimist par ty exists but in name," This maybe all true, but coming'from an English source, it .must be received ,with some graMs of allowance, Epistle to Gerrit Smitii. DEAR GERRIT ' : I tarn happy to ba able to allay your appiehensiOns. ' Though a good many votes have, been thrown away, on Moor.. gan, yet 'Parker, Is rii4Meeted, governor; Yotifs,, - '`rktunmx, South Carolina Speaks. From the New YOrk tribune. • ‘, -Products of thiladelp ' The ballot-box i n p oinsy l v has sent forth a•cfy from every, elect* precinct for A..wctioitto„,,Aule_r:,: a t . • indril.i.oi. Vw ,c 4, ,-• Orllthat :WOO, .o:*feryllie 3ipicc 0 ,hi, 2 4 .aeVhialkins Olen 'tte''''. ti re.;tltiudly thio, ankiPth f im one as -siteetoer 51:0 thin Shilti,hltr:O''''' i'lighl ' nfor6t.d'. - -', ::: k A: bur Ma t. etura r amount 'annufillY t o 1171,000,000 We turn out t5,000;000 worth of bNitg. and shoes, and millions' ot ya?ds of carpeting. A single manufacturer of power-loonis last year disposed of 800 while this year•he has been` unable to di— pose of 'a lhint. (.), that. nuMber. Then.. 1 looms will produce - 20,000 yards of goods per day. Their.products anishipped to aV foreign countries; even Africa consume , iheilwand. would--use up stvuntold amount it a free commercial _ intercourse could he e. a'bli;hed. in a West hulia island the tray. cl ) 4.r, fides Over a yailrOad built ty.,'Philadel. phia engineers, hi - a' Philadelphia, car, and draw} - by, a ,Philadelphia locomotive. • A - Phiradelphian is now laving a telegraphicea ble between Cuba and * Florida. Cuban, so gar cane is - erujieti in Philadelphia-made mills, and granttlatO , in Philadelphia-no:0c f ilms. Ike plantatiOn wagons. her4plough:l. harrolvs, hoes, spades, •threilting-machines, and fanning-mills, are, all the_ product o Philadelphia factories. _ • Go into a thousand .towns. - in our own country, and the paper on. a Alionsand par tors, the .blindi in the windows; the sofa. chairs, and other furniture, the piano and the music, all frOm .Orlistiops here. The preacher in his, pulpit reads his test fronflme of Ilifinfko's Bibles. The physician. gradu ated at some Philadelphia [college. Hi.: books contain the imprint of some publisher here. Ile visits his patients in a Philadel phia-made carriage,. cracks a. Philadelphia• made whip, blecds with a :Philatielphia.made lancet, and the tnediiline he prescribes, will be found to have been put up by some. Phil. adelphia pharmaceutist., • - I { et the catalogue be , followed up. as i mad-, there is really no end to it. • Our I;o4n ufattgrit% crOwd.every ward of the city, and their ducts radiate in all directions over the cojntry. What wonder, then,. that all these diversified interests sliould lave united at the late election to.demand that their l ti a- Loac should be 'protected ? It may' require time to enact that , protection into it .law, but. the gage and the prospect is that it Will now assuredly' come.—Press. linITING A DNERITITII A STEAMBOAT.— Captain Cole, of the steamer Columbia, on hiS last trip,dewn, when . a short distance. this side of Point auxßarques, saw 6 deer in the water about three miles from land. The boat was'h4aded.for the animal, and after ar rh'ing within a • short distance of him . was stopped. The deer came near the gangway, and a rope was- thrown over his llead,• by which.* was drawn on. board in an exhaust ed state. Tie was kept alive until the 'next day, when he regained his strength and activ ity, and made so much trouble that he was killed and .seryed_np to the paAengers and crew, who : iiere ,much gratified with their change in fare.—.Defroii Free _Press. . • TILE NE 117,i P4PER IS ScnooLs.—The Susquehanna • County Nor,mal Sehool, in Montrose, Pa., J. F. Stoddard, A. M., Prin cipal, has set an eptrOple.Which all the schools in the wide world would do 'well to imitate. It has introduced Life Blitilratedas readsr. We do not-say-that all schools every wher should adopt our weekly. But we insist that - no greater improvement vin be made in school exercises than the practice of reading in the classes from some good and .uuexcep tionable neApap,er., _ The freshness and ever-changing variety - of the contents. of a newspaper have one advan tage -over hooks its frequent visitations keep the young mind interested and attent ive, while the news Rents of the day, and the leading, artielos of living writers on the practical topics of the serve better than's:lly other method can, to- acquaint tile student with the real, earnest, workiug, and trwving world arOund.` 'Well do we, reinent her how eagerly, iiithe times that tritta toys souk we k'eized upOiT any- stray newspaper that incidentally found its way into the Old. dilapidated, and smiiky kg school-house i n the baekWoods: ,"We would devour 'its eon tents as the thirity earth . drinks hi the first drZps of rain. •Nothing, would escape our ey cs ; every sentencd - wonld awaken thought, mid every tholi,itht wonld7be remembered.— Life Illtedraled,- • - • , . Jury List, November Court, 1555. GRAND. JURORS. , k Ararat—Daniel Avery. . • ( Auburn—Lafayette Sanford. ' .. 13ridgewater—Walter Allen, Isaac Griffin. Clifford—M. tl. Stewart. • • • , Dimock—George Walker. Forest Lake—James, Slater, jr.:, John S. Towne, Chauncey-Wright. V Great - Bend--41arYey IT:111;P. D. Case. , Gibson--William Thayre. . • .. ' Ilarmony--Cornelius Show. Ilaiford—Dayid.W.'TitllF. . \ ' Lathrop ..,..q. B-Bailey,Alfred Pratt. . Lenox—A. R. Dutin. , - . . .. Liberty-Russell Southworth. . Middletown—James E. Stone." New Milford—Philander Phinney., .., Silyeelaker-Thona4 Rogers, 2d. .. Thomson--George P.. Blaudiug, Emery Crozier, Joel Salisbury. ' . ' TRAVERSE JURORS . : !Inst. Athnth--..Joliathhn.l3unneji, Jonas Carter. APolaconLJohri•Foster. • Brooklyn—O.- A. Eldridge,T.. L. Gere. Clitrord..-Peter - 13ennetti Joseph Miller, Jonathan Burns., , t • - • Choconht-Henry Porter. .s - Dlintiek—G6Orge Blakeslee, Wm. Stone. Franklin--J:•L". Merriman. Forest Lake—Gecirge IV. TavTor. - HolmekWilliam Owens-. Great Beud--..Charles Mayo.' )larforti---AmassaChase, Georgead, Carpenter. Itcrrick—lsrael' Round. --JCssuit—R. S. Biiebard, David Shim. • Lenox—John Baker. Stephen Beil,Clinuneey Scott. Middletown—J. Canfield, jr., John Davis, 241, Jas. Jones. , . • • Montrose—D. R. Lathrop, Yew Milford—Nelson•Spragne, WM. C. Ward. Oakland—Stephen Frazier: Rush-44m. E. Limisley; Gillead Picitett. Susquehanna—Daniel R. Pope. Springville-4. 0. 7 D. Risley, Seth Stark.. . SECOND WEEK . . Apburn—Noah Baldwin. Joseph "Carlin, Traey FrWk, Isaac Low. • Bridgewater—J. A. Athertdn; Luther Catlitylfar• tin Newman. Brooklyn--J, Q. Dullard, IL G. Bailey, M.L.lifack. Cliillird-thomai 'Burdick, Dacia - Stevens, John Tinker, William JOltt'f. • ' • ' . •'Franklin,-Lyoan.l3eebe, °hark+ WarneF. Gibsom r Griswoltl 13111,, David Richards. . IferriekEntstuit Beimett, Thomas • Burford—Watson Jeffers. . JaelNon—Etislia Brown,- Horace French,. Alonzo • Lamb, Jonathan 11. Mills. Lenox--E. It. GroW, John G. Howe. ~ , Montrose—H. H. Dunmore, S. A. Woodruff. • Middletown—John T. Buxton, , New MilfordL-Netufnlltiger. • ' Oekland—Williatii C. Wood. • - Susquehinna. , 4ndrew Bronson, GaYlOrd*Purtis. Silver Lake—J. W. BrackneY, Ezekiel 11. Gage. , Don ation Vidt —There will he a Dona tion given . by,the colored people of Ziop'a Much, at BLOOMER. HALL, on Tueaday F.Fening, Nov. 16di, for thePastorpf Zion Church.• AU friendly- to tie cause of Christ invit ed are to attend and donate. . -Republipan Meeting. ~ T aws; G. - 24;• GIVIW .1611 address a-, Ttopublican 11 licking?* thu,quirt Muse; in:Montrose, on, Monday oppii,ng, SOT.4OCr. lIRIN 1130. - ' • Ifltr.iWitftners last Evening With the Greet Orators and Poets—Mx. OROUS,PATIIETICAL, and SCRIPTURAL, at the ACADEMY 'TALL, Friday Eceting, Nov. 12th; a t 70"efoilt.' See Programmes.- AZmission 26 ete: 112rfitudent's may obtaiu Tickets at a , reduced -1 pike of their Teachers. Special Notice .— R. F, TEWKSBURY, CO. Supt.:,:will Lecture betnre the Dimock High School, on Monday Evening, Nov. 29th..,nt Sqject, GrraZed Schools: A general Invitation is extended to all. B. Al. Brost, Principal, JEducatiosial Addressek.—An addrfp i be , Idivered before the Students of the I Srine. County Normal School, in the Acadenir fJall m Tuesday, Nov: 9th, at 4 o'clock p. m., -by-h. B . Little, F. of Montrose. Subject, /me mire. to Yrahful Culotte." Q:1 'Priam% Nov. 12th. at 3 o'clock' p. tn., hi the Academy 13, S. Bentley, Et4l; 2 _ deliver thn a Ores& Subject; " Why do &anti men rue to higher poßilions and MOT ezalta . worth ir4 a t world t/t4a others I NatiPtre Salle - The Public tire respeetfulfj invited to be present. ireacherts Eraminations;—l will meet eanclidatot for the profession of teaching, for the porpo.m of examination, as follows : D4ot, I E. Hill (3 . 8, a. llarnionr, Jadißon, *" : 7 Na. ' . " 10 T, 11111 " " 10, 10 "" [fair°, T, Farrar " °ill, 10 " ( Center •" " 12, 10 '' " 111, 10 " Brooklyn, Ifon ro.e New Milford, Ward " " 16,.5 " Great Bead, Lodereville;: " 16, 10 " Franklin, Smith, 8. 11., " Ll),,rty, " IS, 10 " s'ilyerl.ale., Bracknoe , " 19, 10_" Choeonut & Fendsville,B. A. Kinney's " 20, 10 " Apoincon, Buff . = S. H., " 22, 10 " . Iliddletaln, • Baldwin " -" 23,40 " " Forest Lake, Towne " " 24, 10 " .TeQsup, ' Cornell " " 25, 10 `• Meal, . Granger's" "'26, to " .Aohurn, ‘ Low " " , 27, 10 " sp - ILnp-ilk,. 'Village ' " - " 29, 10 " _ Blalock, Academy" . ''' 30, 10_ " Lathrop, " N Newton " Dee. 1, 10," Cslllnal & Deaden; City • " 41, - 2, 10 " Ilerdek, Uniondale" " 3, 10 " Ararnt, • Church , . " 4, .8 ~ Thomson, Center " " 2 p.m. A portion of the examination will be written, and n part oral. Each. eandldate sWould be provided with at least two sheets pr good,,fools,* paper,pen and ink. All should he punctual. IZo one ~rdl be admitted to the class atter the examinatioucommenc es. B. E. Tg.WESBURY, CM Supt. Oct. 26, 1858. • . . • . 31071TROSE PRICES CERIIENT. cor.r.ncTED WEEKLY TOR TULAZPCIILIcAN Wheat - 9 bushel, Rye bushel Corn, bushel, Buckwheat, 11 bushel,.. Oats, 7 0 bushel, Beans, white, 101 bushel, Potatoes, bushel,.... Wheat flour, J bb1.... Rye flour, i hundred,. Corn Meal, 11 hundred, Poi k, 19 lb.. Lard, 7 0 it, .. Rutter, I , i T. Eggs, I V doz., 121 cts. 18 . (g 90 eta. 12j ctg The Oxygentited Bitters. for , the cure of Dy4p....15 or Indigestion, Liver CoMplabet, Asthma, Costiveness L re oss of Appstite. Fever andisgue, heart Buth, Water DmekAdi. !tr. :sea Sicirness. Scurry, :Sanwa, Ilecithiche; Ening, and Gthrial Debility, or say disease having Its origin in imperfect diffeatials. • These BITTERS. as all classes of our fellow-citizens, inchthri Meat:ere of l'ougnwi, Lawyers. Phyllidank Clergymen. Phallus, Fanner. sins other , tevtifv, are the owes am. CnTAIN. and P 0,12. szoa..-A-ECIFIC for the Immediate reHef and permanent cure of the creel eoreplaints which in some phase or other of Ey sisip.a atitictour raeis. Three BITTERS were dixovued by kr. Georg. and in their formula differ entirely 4 that tif asysotaw preziazithie of medicine. Containing no al I—no mineit—m noslon. Oruc,—in their maim tonle. not stimula g.--retalningtirdr cirtuey in our clime ; they are "a combination and a formindeoF cf SitthinP villeh known no rival In extermthatlng dbrease and of oo toe the system to ICI pristine vivor and health. No matter of Gs. stgodiag, or however Induced or ehronlc halts Character the La ea, mar matter that l" 'metaled the skill of the nhysithz. and re±ted the efforts of Madlelne, a single trial of theaeMitter- Girt. ttn- gdil•Ter that his disease IN amenable tothe properreardr. te,tinoote of the many cures etfeetedliy this Remedy', referara Imo t ,tho W rttteaeertlecatcsfromdistinguishediadlrlduate 6 ..va 41 ever Get land. Dyspepsia Cured. Ti'. great no lat er of gum effected be that ado-Milk compound...is far toned OXYGENATED BITTERS! hal established It ir. e.s pnllnqlnitr one the only reliable medicine for the speedytare of los thiligs-stile. Asthma. Liver Complaint, Fever and Ar.o. r Bm-h, Arn‘rit v. Ilea?" Burn, Costiveness, Piles. Head MIA Nervnasoe.s., nod all disorders of the Stomach and Direr, ire o,r qogle trial rift satily the sufferer of Its wondreg powerand superiority. SETT{ W. FOWLS Jo CO. Proprietors; Berton. Accvl . .N —ABEL TI ifP.ELL. Mantrope, WV. C. WARD. Nr• rtt J.'f.CAP,LISLE, G rest, lend, WOODR I' FF. ock. Lin. i.e. OLMSTEAD, nandaff. EATON' dtlIOXLEY,lise ford. September la, 18.55.-ylcw Sheriff's Sale. 1174 Y virtue of a writ of ;L . A., issued by the Court liof Common Pleas of .usquehanna county, and to me directed, I will expvse to sale; by public ren..lue, at the Count House, in Montrose, on Saturday, the 2. nth day of Nov., 1858, atone o'clock, p. m., the fol. lowing de , ctibed piece or parcel of land, to wit: - AI.L that certain piece or pardel- of land, sitc• ate in the township of New Milford, county afore said,-bounded and deScribed as follows, to with h^• tinning at a stake and stones in a lisiclof lands Of Ed. 4 , in Tingley ; thence north 45' West 16 rods and 13 links to a post ; thence by land.,of Richard RiChard , son north 15° east, 95 rods to a 'poist and stones 'r thence south 45' east, 12 perches to a post and ) stones; thenc north 45' east,. 6 perches to a sups tree; thence uth 4.5° east. 4 perches and 13 links to a post ; the me . by lands, of Geo. W. Tenant,south 45' r.-cg, 1 - I perches, to the place , of beghititg,, can tainitm• en acres of land TBOVe or. less. iTaken in execution at the suit of Geo..W. Tenant, use of Jo4a W, Watson, vs, Julian T. Watson.] JOHN YOUNG, SherifT. Sheriff's Office, Montrose, OCV20,•1858. Mass Meeting IN SPRINGVILLE:, EVERY DAY IN. THE INNEN!! Q rp EC lIIES, by \ the subsei ibere, upon the al I:lftbsorbing subject, of selling good(eFon Tun PAY. Convinced that the ". Nimble sixpence is preen• bic to. the slow shilling," we proposa dealing upon that plan. By selling paying the "Jilighest Mar* ket PrieesAr all Lie& of PRODUCE, "we ez• poet a .1? um r _ Drsr Goodet LACK %tido; sPRINTS in endless variety, De Wm.= and Gingbams, - lhe beet to bolted,. riOM the City of " Great , Notorialy." In t"nt .every thing in the line of DRY GOODS going low "FOR THE PA INITH A SON'S. CLOTHI'M•G. - . UNDER COATS, Over Cads; U Pants, Test, and Collars, . Hats, Caps, Doan, and Shoes,, Cheap fathe DOLLARS., at SMITH & SON'S. Groceries. FOR re one we know not, we cant m ake a rhyme, With this kind of Goods, et this present time, Suffice it to eity, we've all kinds, and-enough, Flom a bbl: of Flour, Sugar, Coffee, Rice, Fish, ,tc, to et centS worth-of A'l fresh from N. Y., dud going low; very low t .. ---- SMIT HS. .. . . T_T ITCH up the team, bring along your Grain,J 1-I,,ter, Egge, Feathers, Paper Rage, &c., and dot forge: to bring the Wife, Rabid, and whit. Cash . yeo have to pare. Yours in Trade, • 3. ,Jr.,SMITH Jr \, & SON. . Fpringville, Nov. 10, 16.5 - . - . = • To Musicians: - 13 - ARTICULAR attention is called to the choicer* riety of Violin, Guitar, and Bwiti. Viol &di:F . 4 sine.of the hest qualities in inarket. Also .a grol selection of Violins, !lowa, Pegs, Bridges, Tail Piero, Finger 'Boards, Rosin; &c., Accordeons, Flutes, fikl , Drum Sticks, TuniniForks, Instruction -Books, Su Call in at the Vat iety Stoic of ABEL TURRELL , Ifontroso,.Nov. 3, 1859 142"c)tice:. 11.v', LL persons indebtedßLAKE A. O. :, of Dithoek, are requested to call and.settle aecounts by payment, or siete c ori or before the first day' of December next, or show eauso:ten days th i re after, before Amos Williams, Esq., of . Spring , Why judgment should not be obtained.. Respectlltlly, , A. 0. EILAXESLEE. - Diniock, Nov. 10; 18513.—tf •: ' - *. 'For Bale. - 4. ,,, k FIR ST CLASS INSTRUME:T for taking Am.. PI btotypcs, flagtierretnYiles;•: 'v.,: col:sista,/ a Cantera•Ttiha, Box nor Statd, R nectar and iron Vend Rest, all of which are 1(1004 io9cing &der, ; and will, be, salikvery 'cliciavi x . t. .. , &READ zt. .3zipitrasc; act.-2 , 4 1848. .- /1;00 @ /1,25 624 ets. • 624 cts. 50 cte. 374 cn. . 75 ct.. I ts:0 0 ® /7,75 • .... . 2,00 ® 2,20 ' - 1,75 12.4cts.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers