. . . ' it.ga. TEC C - present indications are, that{ men; hieing ' ' one-third of -the storming the Free State -men of Kansas will not force, *ere killed and wounded. - ,_ participate in the vote to be taken on ttie The.: old- King said to be 90 yeirs'ofl pat of December, upon the Slavery clime age, szirre t rule.red to, Capt. godson and I of tecompton Constitution. : his.earArT;i t beit, smileslitliithfbc DeIV Thai election is to be managed by crea,H hi;. Ake was *co m p.it ` led ,by hts chief tures to be appointed y Surveyor ,qeneral I wife," {Their . Hies were Spared..'Twci':Of Calhoun, and the returns are to liefeceri-i his setii and a'gra' ndsini, alatiOaptkiredlOl-: ed, counted, and declared by him. In Capt. Hodson, about five mileit froth Del view of the known character of C.alhogn ' ;hi, were shot on the spot, and their bod-1 it is probably of little consequence to the 1 les'broaght to the !city and exposed at ! *hilt Whether the Free State men vote orithe police - office " 1 - .- -' 1 . teat. The Johnson county and McGee! ' They spared the king who-Would loon; ,county frauds will be enacted over atrain, die,'and killed Ili 'iori . = - , this cattinff-off i only upon a more gigantic so.. 10..-- IVasYs.:.l . 0 1 __i the hopes of a sueeession. .. _ _ „..: ..., ington.Rtpatilic. . 1 ... _.. ... ___ ..... ... -. e . 'How often we hear men say such a one! The ...Sou/ h., the 'Groan of the. ultra Pro-1 'died poor " As if any body could die' Slavery party, has a strougarticle recom-, rich, and in that act of dying did notj mending action by Congress to take nteans , loose the grasp upon title-deed and bond,. to establish' an exclusive metalic currency. I and go away a pauper, out of time. No ilt is also said that the President's 3les.sage I gor;3, to jewels; no lands or tenaments. l will halo a strong leaning in fa for Of the I And yet men Lave been buried who did! cessation of all banks of issue:- . The state I sliel sieh-- - lied worth a thousand thoughts : of the times-is', also propitious to such a Pf; inn-'l - ly, a thousand pleasant memories, I ella"g°- The Democratic party, one of f oia a thousand hopes of Wary, I whose- favorite notions. has been Hard f stoney,. is now in pbwer P without a shad- 1 • FotT `.tex.ea govern the world--the lowof an :opposition] to any unaepial po li cy partridge box, the ballot box, the jury bus, iwitieh !they may choose to- adopt.'- We i and the band boi: 1 fancY, however, that the great-number of i . k... - influential Democrats who have been wont to humbiug the, working people with the cry Of a'specie currency, while they were! up to their oars in ,banking speculations,: will be able , to keep up the use of " shin- I plasters" and ‘..worthless. rags," We shall see.—.Y. .K ;Tr/7,04:2e, . , I The Trii t uas of the 27th ult. gives us: extracts front Thanks&ivit n , discourses by ~ • 0 Henry Ward Beecher, Drs. Chever and' Chapin, in all of which we note a very close application to, our -present _necessi-1 t ties, They all alike trace our evils to ex-i travagance, over-haste to be rich, unrest, and crime., The remedy is penitence, contentment, justice between man and ' ' ' man, and peace with God, , 1 ___ . 1 Vottre COIIDIERSPORTi - PA., iro'rp;i7g, ac. 3, 1857. 1 T. S. CHASE, EDITOR AND PUBLISHER titiv`The 4nancial crisis in Great Brit ta‘iil 19th ult., was fully equal to that with us amonth earlier. Had not gov aliment stepped in with a, f‘relaaation of S he hank act," serious results might have: ensued. Louis Napoleon did likewise in! Yrines. Mir The Legislature of Missouri, un der BOrder. Rufflan influence, has refused to charter a Methodist Univenity, to be lo cated at the seat of Government, Jefferson City; and yet large numbers of Northern Methodists still support the party which gives Border Ruffianism all its power of mischief. If that is not "licking the hand that smites them" then we cannot see what Would be, . Mir Charle s Sumner has completed , an other act of the farce he has been play ing for nearly two years past. He has just returned from a trip to Europe, whither he went "for his health," If he -will take to a sugar -teat, from this till spring, there can be little doubt now but he will be entirely well by that time.— Aron:Pig Gazette. Having eTeused and defended the bru tal and cowardly attack on Sumner, the Gazette now meanly insinuates that his health was not injnred thereby. It takes as ally of Border Ruffianism to get down as low as that. !`The Buchanan press has taken the anti-Bank feyer again. Gentlemen, your party have now, and have generally had, the control of the logislation of Pennsyl vania. If you mean anything, by your talk against Bank bills, you will speedi ly drive, all l3ank paper out of existence. Heretofore you have induced the Whig .Party tohald you when you got into one of these fits. We hope no one will now - do so foolish a thipg, : Let us see the . era of gold and hilvor currency inaugu rated at once. Dpi" We ask the attention of the Farm ers of our county tolhe notice of the Ag, ficultigal Society in another column. It is strange that while the counties east and west of us have their annual -. lxhibitions And Fairs, with the greatest success, the people of this county should - treat this important subject with such apathy. Let there be a good turn-out on Tuesday even ing of Court week to hear ?4r, Johnson, and let, the people take hold as if they meant to work; then, nobody need doubt the result. We are told that beside the speech of Mr. Johnsoo of Warren, the proceedings w,ill be otherwise interesting, so let there be a grand rally. tar The Philadelphia Press, (Forney's paper) is still pouring the hot shot into the BOrderituffiarr Constitution for Kan. sss:l4, is sustained in its conMelty the - Piirrisbtirg Union, Pittsburg :Post, Wir ren Ledger, Lye omiog Gazette; and we • I . -,presume by others that we have not seen. the Press sti d firm, we shall •to o le. to see "popular sovereignty"- 1 yet :bone : oly applied to Kansas -affairs. But the - 41ninistrition shall find means to rtr „) ?hase,cmgnierc!nee in the Calhoun -ICallUa fitAd as it did in the repeat of the Missouri Compromise, then look out p.ore trouble Aim we have yet wit; litood. - The people of icariEg4i will 'nev er orpic to be ruled by I,.eontemptible 211 4 00 41 r • . which fell J po Brit; hands_qp- the 20th Septpletmsl was rO.-xpeupied on' the 21.sti put Pie trhele it t i f the gpee3y expelled. in the Be mis 1/4 Ifkfi t el officers itnd 11178 London 7 (Ines, says, in its issue of October 4, There can' be'no doubt 'that the object for which we ought to consider ourselves to hold India, is the future Chrittianity and civilization of the peop1e ; !", It then proceeds to shoW that t bis, is practicable. after beating the bush for three quar ters a century ; after sanding ont i( young, or sons of the best families" --,s. prlgs r of nobility- 7 n), India to . ran riot there in fOr tune-making and , debauchery; after more experitnents in governing than Brother Jonathan ever theitOt of; John Ball just begins, to perceiye_that #o makelton, est people ,put of iniankincr p eve should' make Christians of them. Astute John ny Bull when he -is shut up to it; when no other. 'way presents itself; he thinks about wearing the yoke and bUrden of Christ ! Where - the Itainhers•Vener4lty As some of our Hunker friends are very busy . just now in crying down the Banks, we shall take-care t. 4 lefour reed. ers see to what party the Bankers gen. orally givetheir support. The-Hon. Jno. A. Gamble, a leading Hunker Democrat Lycoming County, is . President of the Jersey Shore Bank. A largo majority of the Directors belong to the same party. The same is true. Of the Lock Haven and Williamsport Banks. The , following extract ftOM .the New York correspondence of the Washington Republic shows tbat the, same is true of the Bankers of that seat of the money power: . : "The feelng favor of a fhor on;.,:h bank reform, • arid of substituting g.eld and silver for paper in the smaller channels of circulation; is strong and gen eral. As the banking interest, however, is so potent with the Democratic party, to which the great body, of the hankers belong, very small hopes of any effective reform eau. be cherished, until there is a change in the depositories`" of political power, Popular So+ereignty, It is Et ennewhat signifioant, that the par. Ity which repealed th blissonri.Compra. wise under the head , of vindicating the doctrine of popular soereignty, should at the same time have engaged in - a system. , atic and National Plan for acquiring pow ler by frandulent reli i irtls; and illegal Voting. Every body nowiknews that the first elec , tic;t in Kansas was cariried by I.lfisidurians; and. yet the Tarty which "was shouting for 1 popular`sovereignty, insistedon sustaining this fraud: • But tel come nearer home, 1 The, same party, because the vote itt Shar- on' TowashiP was not-polled at an aban. I dotted School Houses bnt in the new else for the same districti' deprived a member; of assembly of hid„ seat, and put in his stead a man, -who had been &Bearded by "popular sovereignty” and the legal vote. We are led to mike these 'remarks at this time,. bytherp - firnsa ' I of a petition to 1 the Court of Commenpleas of lialiCaster county, ,wlmich alledges that William Oar, rater secur e dhis , election ,to the ee of . 'el ' ' t afft" Prothonotary by illiegal voted; OE they specify: atfollaws :, " Youi.tekitianit Stun ? ind'repreaept . /—cam:phsiu,!ottEis4li !tl your holm, thit on theArti4Aeetion Peter Martin reeetied I a nisioriTtfOrall - tie legal totes*throWn in this .county tuft he* Office of Prothonotary —that the several wards of hancaster eityilli?gal. votes,* the natubek oPon:6 - -linndEed and, mere, were thrown liamAai-peotsi;thereby altering O h re a'nit; anetiansitiehim to be retlisted:ai elected,' • wben,in in; fact Peter Martin was eleeted:'. 2 Yourfetitiouers proceed to spec- If y some of those illegal votes, ankthey represent fonr - thinorS thaF in The South" ettst=:Ward 'of said city Jacob P. Kline, Henry Simon, George Free, Jobn Peterman,c4ohArßrannott,, Gyn.* Ditch, Jacob H. Beechler, Washington 'Bowman, Cliailee Dern, Michael Lint, Ja cob Miter, Geote pyerly and forty iitlers, 'being illegal • Voters, did then and there vote for William Carpenter for the. said ofilee of Prothonotary." As this matter is - to undergo a judicial investigation, we shall await the decision of the Court before expressing an ppinion ; but. we- say now ; that - the-: stupendous frauds committed, and attempted, to be emu:mitt:ea by-that party in- Kansas! at every election ever held there—with those committed' in - Philadelphia last year as appears from •the inVestigation into the vote for District Attorney—show that the party leaders have no regard. for the purity of the ballot bpi; and thgt they are will ing to, secure oirtee ;and power by any means, no matter how corrupt, liincha.itaiVm Work,. " Kansas. The following pithy sentence frein the Tribune's Washington Carrespondence, gives a faithful picture of what " popular sovereignty' means - in Kansas, and of Buchanan's agency- therein ' "A-strong cenvictiori is felt here that the crafty haud.of-Gov. Walker is visible in the work of the Constitutional Conven g9ll of Kansa4.4.. ~,Some ,of his, most, inti mate New-York friends made that detilara tion to-day, and there are other ear-narks which strengthen. the proof. If the in strument received in - Washington be really that adopted by the Convention-- and it is authoritatively accepted as. Quell —then it is very clear. that the whole Kansas, battle has to be fought over again. To preclude the people from voting' upon every part of the proposed Constitution, but a Slavery clause, is a direct violation of, the professed principle of the Nebraska bill, beside being an outrage upon popu lar rights which' arinavates all the wrongs heretofore suffered in that Territory. No mode of escape is offered. No alternative is -'possible. Vote !or not vote, .the Constitution must be crammed down the throats 'of the majority, by .a piece of chicanery the most insulting and audatihms yet divised by a desperate min ority:- Does anybody believe that even the, moderate men who have counseled _forbeafance, who have stood. between the two extremes, seeking a fair adjustment of the difficulty, will submit to an impos. hire so monstrous as this ?" • - A.. Hopeful Change. It gives us -great pleasure to note a disposition aniongithe Northern Buchan an press, to sustain Governor Walker in rejecting the. Oxford fraud. We. clip the following from the last Lycoming Ga zette, and lay it bafure our readers with great pleasure: • , "At the late election in Kansas the evi dences of fraud in the -returns. from .ox ford precinct, Johnson county, - where so palpable - that Gov. Walker rejected thorn entirely. This makes a difference in the Territorial Legislature of three Council men and eight Representatives -in favor of the Freo State party. By this act Gov. Walker liar again shown, in the most em phatic manner, that 'whatever is done in Kansas must be dcine fairly. had he !been in the place of Reeder,• when the first election Wll3 held there, it is probable there never would have been any ground lei the Black Republicans to raise the cry . of "bleeding Kansai s " c would have annulled the whole fraudulent vote at once, instead of first sanctioning it, and afterwards denouncing what he at ,first gave countenance. The Governor's ac tion_. in the Oxford, affair will bo. apt to giVe a quietuZ to all 'attempts at fraud in Kansas•eleOtions hereafter, and to Kan sas political capital,- All good citizens will rejoice that he has had the wisdom and oc9rap . to akap,i6 NTlmenlie did.". There is no mistake luil that; last sen tence: All good Citizens - will rejoice that the Oxford fraud is . not to, be.nllowed to overthrow the will of the, people of Kan. ras; and we rejoice that the Gazette, Press, l and other , papers of that party, have 'at 'last sustained a Governor in Kansas, when he set himself against the deviltry of the Border Ruffians. If they had taken that step three Years' ago, much trouble, and crime. would have been avoided, It is true egongh :that Reeder enuamitted a great blunder in giving eirtifioatos based on, fraudulent returns, j4t . . sts Walker, committed a great blunder in allowing the Border- Butimp gerryrOider tie Ter 7. ritory,,eo as ; to.*ake possible to ;cootrol the entire - Territory by framlnt one Or pea preciPete• • .- But when Reeder discovered his error, p.nd . .xmdertook . remqtly 'the, eNqi, so far 40(l.:Peutti t if e Gazette and . its party at the North , had stood d ' a sus , tained him , as they now sustain' (*Tremor Walkif t they wo?ald have prevelitecl.4 the (crime and nait.ry thit'.ahme market:l the track of the alministratiiiii . in Kitties. i We prpiest4ll,hererore arakust, 'thc, - above liiitnaniy attack OD Ei:Gay. liced4l; His itraininions,';''disnkissat from "office _ the moment he 'l=hoWed =a purpOS3, tic - pUpa 1 stop to the fraud of the Beader-Iluifians4, I with the approVation of the Gaiette and j... ... , injury l itic. mends, -was sufficient .- Qom - 1 . I 1 mom decency "shoUld prevent anylmcniber of that party - from ever mentioning the • name of Realer, unless to ask liis pardon tallif Kti' o 4Nlle.S 'forthe WrOis . in* qi" of 0 , ,,, _ Jo.. me abandoning him at a, time when he' most I deier'ved their support. ", ' -' The Kansas Bogus Conlita- I.lo"niat Convention. Opr readers are aware that'a body call ing_itself the Constitutional Convention Of Kansas, has been for sometime enn cocting a plan by which'Slavery may be forced into tbat Territory. So conscious. was this body 'and the President, , that it was a u:surpatiort, that a force of i ncar. ly 1000 United States troops guarded it froui the People. Did such a thing ever occur before ih. the history -of•the United States. i t: Convention framing :a Con stitution for the people, so odious and hateful that it required the army to pre. tea. it front insult and destruction, and this under the cry of securing popular Sovereignty. mboldened by the protection.' - of the army, these Kansas - usurpers have adopt. ed a Constitution for Kansas, which can mt be changed until HO, and then only by a two-thirdi rote of the Legislature. Put even then "no alteration shall 'be 'made to affect the right of property in the ownership of slaves." -So it; will be seen, if a majority in Congress cari be lulled into sanctioning this usurpation, SlaVery will be fastiened on the new State in defiance of the wishes of nine-tenths of the people, Put In . addition to this, the Conven tion have superseded Governor Walker, and established a Government of its own, as the *following sections will shot!: SEC, 8, This Constitution shall be submitted to the Congress of the United States at its nett ensuing session, and.as soon as official information has been re ceived that it is approved by the same, by, the admission of the State of Kansas as One of the Soverign States of the United States, the President of this Convention shall issue his proclamation, to convene the State Legislature at the seat of Gov ernment; within thirty days after its pub lication. .Sholud any ; vacancy occur by death, resignation or otherwise; : , in the Legislature or other office, he shall order an election to fill such vacancy; Provid ed, however; in case of, refusal, absence or disability of the President of this Con veation to discharge the duties . herein imposed on Itim; the 'President pro tem. of this Convention shall perform said du ties, and in 'case of absence, refusal, or disability of the President pro tem., a committee consiAing of five members of this Convention or a majority of them shill disoharg the duties required of tho President of this Convention. Before the Constitution is submitted, !We President of this Convention, or in his absence by reason of his death, res ignation or otherwise, the President pru tem. shall by proclamation declare, that on the 21st 'day of DeceMber, 1857, at the different election precincts now es tablished by law in the Territory of Kansas. an election shall be held, over which shall preside three judges, to be appointed by Comtnissioners, three of Whom shall be appointed for each county by the. President of this Convention, or in his absence by reason of death, res ignation or otherwise, the President pro tem., - at which election the Constitution gamed by this Convention shall be sub mitted to all the male citizens of the Ter ritory of Kansas, over the age of twenty one years for ratification - or rejection, iu the, following manner and -form : :The votirg shall be by ballot. The Judges of said election shall cause to be kept two poll books by—Clerks, by .them appointed; the ballots cast at said elec tion shall be endorsed --Constitution with Slavery, or Constitution without Slavery. - Ilere is no submission of 'the Constitu . tie% but only the Slavery clause, and even that is a cheat:. Every vote Polled, will be a Vote for the Constitution. In this shape.no Free State man.can vote, . . Lnless Congress shall reject this mon, strolls proposition - to enslave a free people the trouble in Kansas, has but just begna, VIOLENCE ANII CIUMEIN.)THECITr&s. —Old Dr. Beecher said, twentifive years ago; that if ever'Anterican liberties were destroyed, the destruction would coin netiOg by riot and tatirder in our large cities. How strikingly are events :tend ingin that direction I Our police ays tents are , becoming matters of great im portance, of the first consideration forthe security. of life axi a property. Our police haie ta, berdeubled, trebled, quadru pled if neeeesary, and armed with a tele graphie system .that vrill-giveinstant no tice :of any Attack at any place in ,any quarter, and the, ability to concentrate a litiffitieit‘ force at thelx)mt entrage to Moth - prevent the escape ofthe rioters. ; ind4F4, no - expense,of kborrtimig44 spared t i restore Aineii&in :cities to the Itoildition of order And safett :of ithith it Wks:Once their pride to,boast. be:. lieve this, can be done, andAhe int er est, • -- pecritiary and otheti , "ivisei of every- citiaen and ...*Ol-wieher'efiis :49tiittry reitttifigi that it should be. Indeed, it is not -op tional witbus. It nqist , ba done,*of our libertie.s lareat an eudr.—.M- 0. Bulletin. The - safety - or - the - land is In the ~.Lointry.{ l l Let.the millions out the cit ies be ti l ue to titerOigvei," 4tid the Cities -cannot. tartii it is ; mostly all the virtue, .'iit'elligenee and !ietivity of our large towns; :come from. the country.— They are the "salt of the earth" these— die country born in them are. Let us I only be, las we ought-to be, incorruptible ; proof 'ag-„iinst all the blandishments, pride !and " file show,' the cities , and the I country is safe." " God, made the country-, and man made the town," says Cowper; and we believe it, whatever our friend Greeley may has't said to the contrary, notwith standing._ - Two Portraits Well Drawn. The - , editor of the Erie Constitutiou has been travelling,. How a country ed itor oan save money enough to indulge in such an expensis;e luxury, is moro . than we can guess. But brother White has performed that.feat—that is, saved mon ey in these pinching times, and has trav elled all the way to Chicago and back. Like all sensible editors, he has given an account of what he saw and heard; and the following - sketch from his pen while in Chicago; deserves to ,travel all over the Union. Better iiicuesses are seldom drawn. "Who has not heard of I"Liting:Jous i WENTWORTU ?" WC picked, him out first time trying among the attendants at Mr. PArrEgsoN's church. He occupied the seat right' across the aisle from us— and we ( could not ( help thinking "there sits a curiosity in a double sense :" "Long JouN WENTWORTH" about whom ( We had I heard . Fo much, and—a - mayor i , . 1 ' atlencbry church ! There is Yethope for all ,t,he w - Jrld. ' "Long .Joint" is at I present Mayor of Chicago. He used to , beldng to the "unwashed, unsanctified ( Democracy," as Parson Brownlow calls 1 them, but of late years he has acted with ( the Republicans. Since he quit the I D.emocratic party and left his Old associ-, j ates, he has greatly improved in appear- I ante, as well as in his habits, from what we are able to gather of his history. He is what a not too precise person would I call a -"overgrown lubber."l He is de scribe as formerly having been slouchy, not over cleanly z not addicted to church going, and possessed of about as much piety as is usually found among sham Democratic politicians. But if this was his fOrmer condition, he has changed wonderfully, and we were not a little grat ified to see him joining in ehe devotions and sitting in the sanctuary "clothed and in his] right mind.". Republicanism be otettoth cleanliness—"cleanliness is . akin , . to"—sotnething better. It exercises (a purifying and sanotifying influence over those who are won orcr from the. ranks 'of the enemy, and most generally effects a complete moral as well, as political ie generation.. About as good a way- as any to reaCh and convert the followers after t 1 the strange gods: of umdern . Domocrsey, r-is to instil Republicanism into them, and I the other graces follow..as naturally as contentment follows an honest, industii- Gus life: WENTWORTH is qiiite a giant i in physical proportions—a man of indoin itablc energy and wonderful firmness and independenoe... Decision is written on I every; lineament- of. his face. He is not ' very popular us a mayor, simply because I any man who-fills that office in a large I city, hand undertakes to do his' duty, can notti e popular. - The fact that he is un popu aril about the best, evidence one need require of his official integrity. He ! t is its doubtedly more desirous of ad:Anis- I terin the government so as to vindicate the IFsi and pmnieTto good order, than for the purpose of winning the golden opin-I tons I . ofthose who flatter rulers that wink I (at, crude and suffer the laws to be violated ( with impunity. . There is not a criminal I nor a law breaker . about Chicago that does Ina hate "Long :Jout:," most °or .. 1 diallY. , "Among the throng- at the' Tremont I House we observe STEPHEN, ARNOLD DotrOLAss—the great originator of Mim i bug squatter sovereignty—the apostle of Ailogus Democracya man who has done more injury to the cause..of Human Free ; dem ' and more dishonor to the-Con-stitu -1 tion, than any other living or dead .poli ticiati, , His head is a great. bundle - of 'wire.:wOrking political machinery set upon a frame work of-Lilliputian 'dimensions. That ha is a great man, according to the partisan perversion-of the term, none . will deny, That . he. is a goad 'man in any sense, none (lark affirm. He looks the politician-'the modern Deniocratic poll.- - tician- 7 -the whiskey drinking leader of a Nihiskey deluged"partY. He has the hon or of having; 4orie.more mischief than any other, Tenn ofihis size in ancient or. mo - qui:times.' 1 .- - . - ) • . '' Arran nannid Irteteber, up iu Lakranffe, Cass Co„ advertisei his wife as having "left bis bed and board," Am., whereupon the lady bas,esused to be inserted under the advertisement these words " aboirei is false t hive never left his bed, npz I-E%sa--butjhe hai *iiiiii.[sii - detetinitted Er. rd-mein Itikg_as mitoth'llo"! !Remember. that Pithy,Mater • 'Mid mildly dmiru, IhanlcFgiririj Day oecu onthe2Gill ult., in 20,0 f the States, - as hollows New Hampshire 1 Delaware Massachusetts, 31aryland, . Rhode Island; . Connectieut, Tennessee, No-York, • Kentucky;.;... New Jerseyj i • ' Ohio, Pennsylvania, Illinois, " • ' Michigan, Wisconsin,. lowa, Texas, . , In -Maine, Spitli Carolina and 3lissii. silipi; it tocilt r place on the_ 1911 ult., and in Vermont nti!tho 4thi 'tilt, ' Thus 24. of the .U. Stateshave this ynar cOlabrated 1114 good o ld Ftstial of the: Puritan=. . : 6=l= KEEPING TUE We do not believe that the majority of citiiens in the Borbuol ' however it may be in the.!country; are especially iu fault as to observation of troly But it is a pity that the tewu-clock and its keeper cannot set x good example in this respect. Last spring the congrega tions were annoyed ortabbilth mornings, as they have been the past two weeks by irregultuities of this sort. One day - the clock broke - down froin this cause. Is 10 to 11 o'clock on Sittiday - morning the only tlnie in all the week;that the town clock oan be wound up and regulated? We see by the Teitine, that Sabbath desecration is, practiced in New York, Even Mr. Collins'endlis beautiful Ocean _ .-. . Steamers do it, Does Mr l ,, C. net rement. her his awful affliotion wlien the Arctic. went down throe yearn ugh, off Nova See , • • i Sco tia, .and carried w i t h he. his wi fe and .. son ? Ot why, does lie send out his new . i . 1 • Steamer, the . - ,4dm'cr(ic, oh Saturday, to • 1 pass Sunday:in her trial trip? The . 1 fol lowing Which We out from the. Tritons or the 21st tilt, interests 3ts here: “.117;LL ./7' ~.A i''.''i To die Editor of The N.Y.' Tribeine. SIR; The -Engineer's trialstripi of the Collins line of' ocean .steatners have com monly occurred on the Christian Sabbath. The Atlantic went to sea on Sataday, April 20, JSSO, arid reth'nod on Monday ---40 hours out, and 24 of. them sacred. time. The : Pacific wa . announced •. to I leave Saturilay,'May 18, 1550, - arid retimr on Monday; but an ','unexpeefod delay in the arrival of goal;" ;and :not respect for the Lord's . day, ~ e auiedia postponement till the Monday_ follewing. We believe the same course was . pursued in the case of the Arctic and the Wilda, Thia,Adyi atic returned last Monday' from ; her ex perimental trip. ; !• ' • . . ~' • Aside froth all questions of right and duty, the unfortunate career of this Corn; patty cannot .but seise the doubt whether such needless deseerations of a day which . has been'grtarricd by the laws. Of the eiv.. ilized - world are projitaLle. The Cunard: line is understood to mit:4d everything of the kind—not merely out of deference to , English public sentiment, or as a matter of principle, but as a theasure of safety; humanity to their :entPloyees, and profit to the stockholders. i Which is right! - Yours f lespectfu- .1 By later dates we the Adriatic ;was to -.le tr-day P. 31. ; ! 21st' ult. amid the elieers of assembled! thottsan s,. on her frst trip, fur Europe it was discovered that her ; engine had,been brokOn during her trial! trip the wed:: before-; imdshe wasobliged to stay over from -that till Monday.— Remember,the -Salad' day and keep I it holy." , BI - Eogaehspot•t ?rice-etliteot, Corrected Weefr.ly for the Journal,. .1 1 BY SCHOOMAILEK & JACKSON, Dealers in D4,Goodi, Groceries, lfatsl 4 Caps, l Boots 4 Shoes, CrocAteey, Pork, le ter, Meal, Notions, 4-e. 4-c. • MAIN STR.ET., COVDERSPORT, PA. - ; hhlJ, Fcera, superfine, bbl, " sitra , . " rocs, " " • - SALT, a ft Co! MEW? 100 tbs., BUTTER, `t2ll:l'., " " I ".. .": . WOOL, " "; MAus, " .", • SmoyLosEa,,llo ;b., - DBEs SEIE, '"1 "- MAPLE SicAn; TO lb., Damp AriLio r " " tl "j Bush* WitiveßCAK/~ 4 3 ' BUCLWiII4T, 1. , --u OATS, I i vy" CORN, RTN, 44 44 POTATOES' " VDoien, - HAT, .Ton, Dep. Hand, green, Id 41 d ry , . CALF " id -" " - , The Potter County AgriCultural, and Horticultural ilocietp% THE St$TH 'ANSUAL ITEETING of 041 -IL Society will be helaat the Court llMut", o TUESDAYI.EV.EIiCiG I t Csurt: itecki (!2 inst.) - i - , ' 1 The Election of 0 ers forthe ' ensuing year, - and' tither busini .ss of importance win engage thelattention o the. Society. S. P. ,KowirsoN, - . ESQ., will address the Society' upon subjects 14:1 interest to all, Farmers!generallY, and all intereited in Ag ricultural 'pursuits, a 2 respectfully inritecys -: attend. - 1_ JMO. :41AMILTON,--ate'i. SABBATAIITAN earn that just as • ye the wharf Sat: 50 13 1 00 i - 30 00 .3141 . 2 SO, If! - 12 4 ' . 25 3 0 . 121 Mil . . 10 1 351 10e,i3 - Ili _ 2 20, . 3 54 _t • - asGs! iiMli - St d od