Emumuitatious;; - . - \ Lotter Dein a Demasserat. '' _ , Counzak.ortz Oct, 5t14.1859; 11s. Enrrott.--Allaw me, /telissbisile Ate public and yourself in ttegaJvd• - fs'lt Vormerstie meeting held Airing last punt% week. ` I h4:40 you will publish the taming remarks in order: to refute the ..*IPPOINFthis-Itliverticle'referritcgle , that ammtiatiiiiiittnikPaliiirPf the. 29th of wiroutowitpavention. -.._ ' . ' UTKs, 1 0 1. 116 ..1'.1 0 0 , ' 21 0 3 4-.0 14 Bc Doltgs:lo.'elan• 4ilO , tgWAVAe - TficfititiertheobjtOflle MbeTillg,. alnrwtpa4o94s your readers b lies log, like fle4*.mspLthis Conn f,, otlywitqlro , ,-, 7 gic‘Triiiira 0440! 1 I nigi*thwitrala agsprQuaky, 4 ' , - 144 ilk ev - ' e i -iiitiiiii:Wai ihe tirj4j ~ ---,,, f.,. f.. reeling - . , . 4 .;!;, 1 74F,r. VI% gpTi, i prtB, : Itj l 4 ,l t i r i l t - n " tin g• !C .4 4 *tiOn. Winll9o, -wi*iP.coeisalit where (mutton h pfpp_ erOted, 'Ur.' the. whole 4 . le: ~ . jou ler. : e "conducted. With, - the, nt , . I. ,' - ,it enM , s; : 'ThiS 'Prialudet4he Wei ' ..... ,T ` : r t n ..•: t f °3 r tin g ' : • . s L . OP atc,ul of any sort merepropos -4 . ari,_ng tlie,meeting, nor 'the naive, f folyorbiriniiriliciiied. - Ilk 'Vent "did net as 4r,,te0r41. about, any, particular, person kil:FitOrko:'at Sheriff,. and could: have " . ap i ttiekelOp f _pe..erp,athent With .‘regu: 7peltOr Coca those , have beep " wi I lily 11#,n;per , flr. Dent bevel:milt ~4 , ‘ kick, - l a 4 V,.! , ; . 4410, 1 _," The ki4lng i s a li o , Otrr- enious javeati ol l natural to Ili 4 l,..feko!m i , s ept of 'your reporter.: So far fOlig,-I.P..ererat *Sent, , at the, meet / 05011.% stip diipositioii to insult qt .‘ lf-,kone t sFl.llr; pent re'particUlar, was * L ytle; w4several other faithful Dem 114*.Twa°111 4PP*tEI , 10 a post of 'Odor, su ,6 - 06 siov. , . Aitka,f,r:ip., iipitt's!is .iliotit' Messrs. '` snit 11. Ilird;',ts ,is entirely un • , 1 liktlip - repainder of its contents, kimes. were 'Pet mentiona, as S. ILlCOsligriaa4lat 414 at 01 to make 0- pomiustions to , ,of4ev. ~,,Whi4,thi.tire:iiing ft - finely concluded to Z 2 44 t r ,s l . 3 9#,ta -rzY" is Jii,Fe:a . ria° an 9. m Ni ..).sp,, was, Mr.llurt s name as ha . , 4410110 a s any other, and 2d, Will pioalgamverApcmit','"w i hat they can, tic .prohibit;. •:'t ' • '. , . • ' eiflyortbadji presented facts" you might • tlijstAkt,ithe candid considerations" ofl - xcirkvaadroi Jai, Cteier: rcly on the result 1 p3tdoceet by such barefaced falsehoods as ttriposeit Upon you by .your reporter in re polo Abe. Democratic meeting during!, 1116 , twassl Week; ' . -., . J. • { W4tiblisti- the above as a matter of einit t itrl .l; Lii:writer pf . it, 'who, we will 8 0 1 44_ ". " ' "" 4011. tOPY. 1 / 3 one of our first spipkutost intellig, nt citizens'. AVe would bream t‘,l7 and the poblie that our in dimilittt elittethe proceedings in the meet riff 7digt , ii(i 4 th Was a -full-blooded Demo I ph but. ire imt at liberty to give his spumy z eyep..44gli •it were demanded. T g lige.AernOiklakerl-out? was:a - figurative eartstsias; may templet:di used , in the mameetica.sre used it in. , Our informant sgentiebe. ail .naures; but the inference • ittikimpiaMkstable , —En. Jona.] ' st; ' t:;:at :#4onir:Questioii. " For :xi Potter Journal. ..A . kr mttj*Ambleitt what perplexity the gglitor,o""arty constantly finds itself, en the ethieet of Slavery. It leas been gut : pd. pt uverendover again by. their ieliticit ~oloct- A S, and laid away to Sleep tkajleflot4gath, but like Banquo's ghost 10,, A esn unhidden, and ' obtrude, its 11#IMNII • - . 6 igt°llicit private caucuses le iseinb)ies,_, carrying cooten- Fe. um.licipsrin, and..ptrife.,whereier it goes. Slavery, the hidrC-headed . mot , . .i4f s reliloskklicstifmtui breath .blestS eve mth". pg : thet it:touches; that with purse at Irinsolence ded iCiic a e n 4 " to u l ires i lick . the eve . r . Y dust til 4 a a i it ° •-44#1ng.• has .held the party in its relent- Zest OA :An till all' iti ,etrcngt,h .has be -191;.0 Wfqlc9VP and, ,its wiso l l4-ttle folly '4 4 (cot4s., .It. kap 'become a sick patient AVlttted,from the crown of its head ...410. „poles, of its feet : . . The must .etni • tanietaiskjilfill political doctors of their .10Y,„1.4 1 iIITIVilistte4 all their elan upon Ott stek.Petitint; hut their , nostrums have i lorerid quoit Medicines which have only .. ,:ktmgediarntske:phe disease the more in. durable. . ' - ' ''' ' - ' . .7Aiiewitit has ` bas brat; ht num( the party 4 1111,1).ellMak,'PitY, this sickness 1111(0 41 . 1 . 1 1 ' What 'evilgenitts has 'shorn it of , . gttkatiCcomeliness aila thanged ski t :Ip — intake& such ""hideous -ugh irzei •litlt _ LtrtteAds,kut to be seen, to 'be I?•4oll4lllltratitestedf •It is because they hi s 4 f p fr teA f F om the simplicity and Vial ot t 'purpoie that - charadterised' , •- .. It is because , the love of 11," . . „ . ._ly i';`' hisitited-the soul Wash • -11104, 44 1 5J.91.hic valiant hosts to' "into. .qty or to stet 'Lai died' out of their de ''..tretllte 4Olteloti left nethiog in its place tt-solit Afruilatitig venality. It is be - •1 6 i" OP 4,0 ietttbat reeks for nosh -.t 4Piloit . :ge oNgilk. idileA., Ot,)t, ~ 6 4.0 . fee,b --&ow toggrogolum,okin l, neithei has reateet . to the rights of mad, has take n the the nation . - • : - h PO 01.4146.04,41Cr;iiighrlasuel or ne atonal, iiiisiltave their euhtioatieg point, Apt telvevq,r3o wows when the am , e this natiihwereaß tutlogiebasing,. so lifftvik.dowi r op liovr.,. Thokoionorosi ties have come up beim the .441 - erietUt Rrititipte i t Ateneh, and; it al anuma a Viiitona conscienie that even now clauses us it,oFe healthy and vig., !trues MOCricruishakit . aid tretible like • au ovaleaf. ........... Sow have the mighty fallen ? HOW true ,it is that our -God :is a God that judger in the earth and that he will by 571:vs.Deteis ciatieletrty tbiOpe; ed ifes selatieo. trhiriereiveats of be Ore are faist , Wuceraing--its .pnd soap like the old Whig party slat bat 41 fea r years ago towered du its strength sod routed the hosts of democracy is many a hauls-field, ~ it. will-lukwavassed-.away f to be chronicled among the things that were. -Mg _ooVee.4..thwilOYi f9r PO ran who is friend to his rage' will have cause to mourn Its departure. " PuEt4x. t ;..4 . & „ oWitlitUgis;' 34141,41,41 . • . PA.,.: 0; . 0,59: Ti Si CHASE EDITOR AND; PUREIHER. itzpqls4ol7 . l's4la,Ziehit, 1858. AOrron, of ,York. gifitVEYOIVatNEIIIIi, WILLIAM. 11. IqI1)1, of Berks. Rep Olin)) CotottoScat _ FOZSTATZ SZNA.TOZ, ESAACSENSON, of Potter,. zPcis Asszmutar, LEWIS SUNS, of Potter,. ' LORENZO KWILLISTON, of Tinge ?pdbjett`tti "decision of Conference.) .- • .• Pon SOIMIPP, . ; AUCIIIIIALD JONES, • ' Pon Conomen. Dr. HENRY B. 'MUNSON, Pon Corwrv..Commtestoems, 'EDWIN TUATCIIER. • Fon COMITY AVDITOR SPENCER. A. SLADi - , Fon COUNTS' Summon, • zAvstom F. ROBINSOX. Y. The bitteiest poverty is that of the spirit ; the most tormenting hunger is that of the soul." - re• The editor has just returned from a visit to his friendi t in Crawford"Co ; , bet net In time to snake a mark in this No. of the JOURNAL. "fie hunian heart" says Luther, "is like a pair of ruiNstoner. if good corn is plaied between them; they grind it into good meal. But if they have no corn to grind, they 'grind away theruselvel." B6rThere is ever an uirrepressible conflict" betieen right and wrong. _Ev ery person in community exerts an mflu .enee for or against thc right. Reader; haveyou ever settled withyrourself, wheth er your influence in the circle of your, ac quaintance is for good or for evil? :.-The election in California has re sulted in . ttie electiOn of Milton S. La tham, (Lee. Peru.) as governor, by about 20,000 majority; also, other officers to match, • The Lecompton candidates for Congress have also . probabiy been elected : thoUghlhere is some doubt. Mr The editor, as was stated rather irreverently last week; has gone of, where to; or when he will return is more than we cah guess. No matter; what we want the ;reader distinctly to understand is, that wears editor daring the absence of Mr... Chase a nd Ida, "for better or for rerse,", . If the JOURNAL IMILS itOtt dur ing that time, give tis credit for it; but if it don't snit, just please t) blame the fellow who:wrote that marriagCnotioe last week. ' tar The Senstorial Conference of the Bradford district lxxllottcd two hundred and thirty-three times, and nominaVed ROY. dEORON LANDON, who Will worthi ly represent ale Wilmot district in the Senate of this State. Although we have high regird for JUdge Jessup. and sheik] : have rejoiced in his - nomitiation, yet we believe Mr. Landon will make his mark on the legislation of the State. more effectually than JugdeJessitp would have done:: 'We believe' Irish, of Allegheny, and Landim, of Bradford, will do, more for the Republican owe than any'other two undk'buthe'Senlite: Wein consequence of the extra labor imposed upon us by the Agricultural Fair, held here Wedhesday and Thursday, we are compelled , to postpone the publication of the JOURNAL until this Friday morn• ing. • We would here state that the Fair is a perfect suceeas—the display of veg etables greatly exceeding that of last year, 'bait is quality 'tied quantity--a state mutt which few will be , willing to believe in view of the heavy fonts that have pre •vailed during the sessile. The display of Cattle and Horsesis also larger and bet lei, We believe. The receipts ,of the So ciety will 'exceed those of last year con siderably, we are inforined. Altore, ther the Fair does credit to the farms and farm ers of Potter county. • - li-. The editor of the Warren Nail, who was one of the Senatorial Conferees from that county, speaks'as follows of the - "Dir. Bastin mine to this 'One *no MEE ~ • - .• -. . fikeOlfritiri 'ago , from Waterfurd; 'Fa% Cana!, read lan/With Messrs. Johnson & Bnitnif i apd.cOnitwenced plastics in Con dersportlioeir after be wasadinitttO the i:./.11 - ICioon s acquired the prittico oN thentliigh t _reliable, business wao, and th e 'eputation:of igeod laWyer and ti,i4ntif sousistrukisal common sense. 1 " Rah erredtwo years in the Homie at Harrisburg, -where his position Wair among the truest and ablest of thatliO4. Whits our peruonal prefereasee'Were very stivingly in fever of the re-nomination of Mr. Scofield, we take plessuniiiiassnring these - of cair:reaidetti who_ do not already khow gr. Benson, that te.ehoiei of the party:has not been unworthily best Owed. His experience -in legislation; -liit-teiu. peitte, industrious habits; his:prictical comprehension of buSinessi his evilness of purpose- and -ardent Itepuldleimitini f as well as eonaiderable - hientificationl with i our local and liallroad. ititeresta f are' suffi cient viarranties . for ns, that O ur ' strict will be faithfully and'ably.repiSsin ed in the Senate for threeyears to coma,. :His nomination wan warinly.pressed,by,Re. publicans of his own Coiling, and we trust that hewni receive the saine4ocirdial•sup: port front Warren County thatwe should hate expected from , them kaa animal), like theirs, finally been the unanimous choice of the Setiatoriafbonvontion:".' Roll up a Rig Votefor the State • Ticket. . . We fear there - is too much apathy in relation . to , the importance of a full vote for ,the State Ticket. Everybody seems to take is for granted that we'shall suc ceed this fall as we did last. Soya Shall if we poll a fall vote. - But if.onelthirrl of oar voters in each , county : stay at lhome we shall be ignobly defeated. : Ho d s • in this county ? Have nay arrangears " b 3 been made to bring out a full vote Do we grow, indifferent :to "the Skate • ket because our candidate for Sheriff,j or As sembly, or Senator, was not. - nomin a ted ? If such is 'the ease, then We - are - I mere apologies for Republicans, trader rye to have the general government against us. Mark this, a good many - Who are now cold and inactive, will next year be very active in pushing their own claims for some office. The people will do 'them selves great service if they will take note of the grumblers now, for one of them will deserve -support a year hence. I i:iAn other thing; the Tiocruship that; brings most of its voters out forte ticket this year s , other flange .being eg al, ought to haysmost• right in the Co 'colon nest sear, so far ait nominating i candidates is 'concerned. • • Now, then, I tus all'go to work, and so give our eicellent -. State ticket a rousing majority. ::- ' lllold _ On, Will IVpte 1 1 • ' The admirers of Simon Cameron are drawing it a little too strop . at is well enough for mere opposition op/ye/thine and newspapers, to endorsn without re in serve the course of ' aileron ; but what he has ever done to niitle him to the especial support of Re Jilicans we are not informed, Ilene Ave protest against the resolution of t e Senntorial Conference which met her °lithe 21st Sept., endorsing "di emirs Simon Canieron," as out of correct. The resolution re Resolved, That this con ally approves of tho emirs Simon Cameron; oar Semite end that we have entire con ability as a man and his p. statesman. • - If that is - intended to ex .ress'the sen timents of the Republicans l ;of this Sena torial district, it is not true for they do not approve the course of Senator' Camer on in his failure to vote ag ainst the pas sage of 'the' Licompton Swiintle ; nor in hi s vote for liacianau'u spitailr in, in crease the. standing army , or be United States by fi ve regiments, in his fail ure to vote against the admission of tb bogus Senators from Indiana.- • Here , are three gay important acts in the-!'course"- of our Senator that the Republicans of this district, so far as . we ace acquainted with then, do not apin'oviv Mr. Owner on is a successful banker) ,he •has made his mark as a politician ; bUtw-hat has fie done as a Republican ? We iaow . what David Wilmof has. done, Thaddeus Stevens,Or John Hickman, iTChn CoVode, or S. A. Purviance, and OVerybcdy knows) what, the Hon. GALUSIIA A, .Gaow has done_ kir freedom and freemen ;,but what has Simon'Cameron done? If heshonld receive the , Republican nomination for President, we shall doubtless g iv . e him a cheerful suppcirt; „but we protest against putting-him forward as the choice of live Republicans; and of , bringing his name into every little caucus that may assemble. Great Men do not need any such lifting as that. - The “Ircepressbie conflicts) . Senator Douglasand all his ,support ere professed to be horrified at the deo. larations of Hon. Abram Lincoln, of Illi nois, and of Senator Seward, of New I York that there is an irrepressible; conflict b tween FOiditti and slavery. :And set, MEI ---- -- ---- -------- 7 - - . .."-- Shat does Senator Doeiglai 40;1124 go + ut`Fulkll2" speeches -cei: Otit l _he'ultAl! dennuils otthe` Slavepoirti.- : . $i : .own fa* hi tatifeet ' --a agareine An favor of *patter likiiereifintY ` has set: ; th4whele 7. , . utb intssuinotiouisnd hid clhioapeeil• Cii . disints nothing else buL An 'Maven' question, thus .showing that Dotig,lan hipseltemnot if he would,_ Camp from the *inflict. ~ The 2f. Ir. LulePendied -thus forcibly states the Intel po4ticin of affairs : is i : - , , ; t "In :the straggle: between-Freedom Ali Slavery for theepolitical control Of this nation, we are on the eve orUgreatet and - mom decisive Confliet • than any bith." erto engaged in: . All parties see that the ope issue in the neat Presidential election (pilaf belbat of siavirl." 1' . I Thisis shown by the speeches of Dog leg; and by that portion of :le Dernicm er which dissents from his 1 Rion. The *th is, virtue and vice, Liberty and asiavery,.always have and always will war upon each other until one of them is con q ered'andsubdaed. Hope i * the enie t nee ordespotion, *whether in Europe er . merles, requires the freedo l la ot,' speech 4d of the pr to-be - . abolished. ' Louie apoleou can o ly maintain his despotic p wer by ert/b ng ant all fr4doni of the p ss in France and'Slavery is continued a the South b the same meens„,. 1 j i The publicat ion of Helper's "linpend. leg Crisis," and the ezitence of a half Jaen anti-slavery .papers in the . border slave States shOws the "irrepressible con 7 ict", to be • not altogether hopeless tor = :„.. om. We trust that every ono of our renders, will ' do something to end this con flict in favor of the right; Let us Brio est a few things that eaeh - of us can do. 1., Vote pr no apotegistoeSlavery for any loffice,• whether Township, County, State or National. • 2. Support Ile minister who .is either. afraid or ashame d to preach lagainst the = sin of Slavery, and the sin of aiding otb. , ‘ era to hold slates, the same as against any other sin. 1 ' , . ; 3.1 Circulate :vigorously and persever i gly, books, inlets and newspowera whose' loth:Coco is in favor of freedene and has iirmity, and against slavery and cruelty. Here is abunilant wak for alt. Who .i ta there so indolent or so indifferent as to :Swain idle ? - :I ir - =I .altratter Soverelguty•d+Who Be -t:s" neves Iltsit 1 . l'fbea.ropu,, es fall out honest - men get ;beir die . 'So: when Douglas and Ad inistration m o n quarrel, freedom is en uraged.. Senator Douglaslis trying to nmbug the freemen of the I North with he idea that the people of a Territory are . upreme mod may settle the slavery quel ion and all others for themselves. He I news be t ter; for, says Judge Black in \Peply to Douglas : . " A Territorial government is merely movisioital and temporal. It is created ,oy Congress 'for the necessary pieseria- 1 . .11:In' of order and the pu;-poses of police. he powers conferred upoh itare expreis: , Cd in the 6 rgania act, which 'is' the' Char iil er of its existence, and , which . maY be banged or 'repealed at the pleasure of 'ongress.! In Most of these acts the pow r has been eipressly resered to Con ' ress of revising the Territorial laws, and he power,to repeal them' extsts without neh reservation. This wail asserted in ! rite case of Kanzas by the lutist distin guiihed Sehatorain the Congress of 1856. The President appoints 'the Governor, . ages, and all other officer whose 'sp- Ipointtnent is not otherwise provided for, directly or indirectly, by Congress. Even I the; ' expenses of the Territorial koveni ent are 'paid- out of the Federal Treasu y. The truth is, they have 'ho attribute f sovereignty about them. • The essence f sovereignty - consists in • havin g no au , erior. gut a Territorial 'government . lhas a superior in the United States Gov ernment,. upon whose , pleasure it is de pendent for its very existence---ii whom ,[it lives, and Moves; and has: it being = who-has made ; and can unmake it,lith a! breath." - • , - I Senator Douglas:has on various °via isions assented to this view . of the hood' , tinti of a Territory. I Ho did so in his speech at Springfield, ILI.; on' the 12th of I - ' June 1857; in which, says Judge Black : " He , exPressed hiS'Opinian strongly in favor of the absolute and unconditional relies/ of the organic act, blotting the-2-er ' ritbrialliliernment out' of existence, and putting the 'peoPla under thel sole and ex clusive jorisdictiOn of the United, States, like a fort:arsenal, dock-gal 4 or Inaget zine. .He does' noi, seem to late had the ,ter at idea then 'that he was i liroOsing to extinguish'a sovereignty, o l _in trample ,upon the sacred rights of an independent people," - ' . ' The foll Owing extract" from a report made by Douglas to the, Senitte, flatly cbutradlcts his Ohio speeches : . I "This committee in theirreports have always held that a Teriitory is not a soy ereiijn power; that the sovereignty of a Territory Is in abeyance, suspended in the United States, in trust for the people' when they becotpe a State ; that the United States; as - trustees, cannot be divested of tho.severeigoty, nor tis Territory be in of the Hon. I ,lace,and in- as follows : mann of tile! Hon. r in Conaress i ftdeoce in his triotism as a SE= iligaiS misted with the fightto, issume.iind odise f*, without, the eiMiontstof Vmeisedi slat theatepnblieatiti say;That attpownrWwol, Territorial Legislature ire 1404114 - ceeffees Joie te end: :1.41, y . tti*a. , the power itercised by Coning l iter the . qt(est!hia Of slavery: in the Territories from- the adoption of the"Conatitationdown , to the OrgitititiehitliifOregon, tfiarand ought to I fur ezereised until 'all lof the territory of _ the United Stites' 'lien be free. The I reason' why COnovessi ought to prohibit elivery hi the Territbries nom as it did in the days of, Washington and Jefferson, thus stated by the4l 7 : r: Independent : " Slavery is . .a _crime the system of slavery, gait exists in these.Usited States, ' is a moral wrong, st ; 'pin before God, crime against' man, and no government has a right tecommiti'crime, to sanction iniquity. Mr. Douglas may not be capa ble of feeling the force of this trgument, I but it is the only argument which is real; ly valid against the extension of slavery. For this same reason Cmigress has the right' to prohibit-slavery iq every terri. tory under its jurtsdietlow Upon , merely . technical legal grounds, Mr. Mingles denies the right of the Federal Govern went to inter - fere in any way - with the question," either to establish, to- protect, to abolish, or to prohibit slavery. " Bat i if a company of Druidii in Nebraska ter ritory should offer human sacrifices in the name of religion; if worshipers of Moloch. should set up their rites in Washington territory, and should roast children 'alive ill a heated brazen hall; if a Companion of free negroes residink in New Mexico sheuld revive the African custoin of slay ing fifty or a hundred parsons_npon the death of their head )311113, te Federal Government would interfere to prohibit and abolish such praCtices, for these are Crimes against human nature, mimeo against moiety, incompatible with a state of civilized life. Slavery is such a crime; a crime against nature; against humanity, againat God.; and every civilized com munity is boubd to aohlieh it, or of pro. hibit it. The grand fallacy orbit.. Doug las's argument lies in igniging that feet,. Indeed, he even recognizes the right of priiperty in human beings, and compares the slave to a horse, an oz„ of apieee of dry g oods . But every man's moral sense —uness that moral sense has been oblit erated hypolitical sophisms—traebes him that it is a crime to , treat a man as a chattel, an article of Merchandise. Ev ery madknows that ne, majorityof num bora in the community where he. dwells,' can have right to make him and his chit.' dren slaves. Mr. Douglas treats the Ties- I tion orslavery as if it had no moral bear. ings, as if it were wholly the opiton of any community to establish slavery or to prohibit it. says, " If the people of a territory desire slavery, all they have to do is -to pass laws &Motioning and pro tecting it. . . . lithe people of New Mexi co want a' slave-code, they have a rigiit to it." But a people -in their organic capacity have no more light to commit a crime, than an individual has . ; no force of majorities, no sanction of " local laws" can give , that right. !Nei can others sit idly by c aod see one portion of a comma nity commit a crime against another por tion, and not protest against that crime in the name of fin - inanity, of religion, and of God. ' Let no friend" of liberty' be deceived by Mr:Douglas's fiction - of " popular soy. ereignty ;" nor by thi3 like sophistries about " free labor"- and free Holt for iihite men: The battle of freedom in -this - na tion must be fought onl the high •• ground of moral principle. • Better lose ten'eiee. dons than abate one iota of that principle. for a taking political s phisnl. Terrible Sullerlu#s on the Flair's. • " Two MEN SUBSISTING ON GRASSUOP PERS AND BUFFALO BONES.—We . find the following in the Ml:whetter' (Kansas) Express : _ News recently reaolied Fort Riley by two soldiers who eamei in on express dir ty. from Prairie Doe creek, that two men who had started fair Pike's Peak were ly ing in a starving condition at one of the distantOnoccupred stations of the late ex press company of Jon ce & Russell- The soldiers reported that if adequate means were sent to their telt; it was - still possi ble that : they might e found olive, al though they were left. in a deletions And feeble ; condition---Ist Lieut. Chas. Grif fin and two others were immediately dis• patched •witiv . What- limited: means the qnartermasterAit the Vat could , furnish. The philanthiropiemission reached its des tinatiowon the third Oay. Both father and son were found even in , a worse ',con dition than represented. , They had been at the, station eight dabefore theyorere relived by the small q uantity;of tea, ha-, con and bread that the -,,,sergeant, who first discovered them.; could spare, who gi, Lye. strict- injunctions to eat very spar ingly else death mould ensue—Aheybeiug so weak- they could; Scarcely staird . np withobt'holding on the door. „- • - • It appears that thel had lived op grass hpppers and Mildewed corn picked up from among the excrements left by the animals which had Fed at: the station. Providentially, a few!: young shoots of corn were found to bespnaging up about the station, and a druid skull of a .buffalo had been - thrown aside-. They caught from twenty to thirty ;grasshoppers every morning while theleir ras still on,. the grass, until, they become. to fainifto pro cure this scanty suptilY- of • food, -which they had to husband, an order to make . a eta - of gunishopisliutalo and young-corn stalks. In a amen tin et eat at .night,. to promote sleep and vettidelirinat. - Thu they - sustahle ( nutil 'they obtained the. cupful! of (about a. quarter of a pound,) two le of bre:et\ and a pound or two of left hi , Abe sergeant.—When fonta Mr.-Griffiii, they were too debilitate beimmeiiately moved.--He leo * left private Maehler to take care of tb and went lin:another *day', ,ride‘ to rej his - aragou,sebiehleid been blokeint camp at Prairie Dog 'creels., The father, statew that his7.4airte W. Frost, that heis fifty yearif - Oid,o that bili - sore Thoteu - PniekartinAterist hien, is seventeertyears oidathtleidest siz ohildrea--tbe five others,,behisd Pottsville,,, , Pa. If* 4 vpik4maker trade. He.fitalte4 ROO, Itioriail $6O with his -wife, Be Told his t int to Leavenworth, CitY,:frow.wbuna I started OW Ifir.A- Ye*, days' Amm o Nears. Mountain an4LlTaddook. snide' a t . 41 60 aticenaiUn,trinu Troy,' N: and wen lest. The . . following telegrams emeni of theie -read witil ThOT, 11 . . - Y., tuesdny, Oct '3;1859. A dispatch was received in this cit this -evening from Prof. Li. Mountii ; dated Ottowa, O.• W., Oct. 3. It was is, follows - - it Lost an: Landed 300 tittles north Of W 4 tertown; in thereanadawilderitess: We we four days without fOo — d. ,Brought out by I t ditto guides in canoes, etc: Please infor ma wife. l. , . 2 . .(sigtted) ' - 46 .1011 N LA MOUNTAIN .• OmwA., C. W., Tuesday, 0ct.,3, 1859. Prof. La' Mountain and Mr. Haddock, came into Ottawa to day, having laode.4 150 miles north of Ottawa, in - the gr.. Canada wilderness.' r' ' _ They were brought out by Ind6' guides in bark canoes. They traveled in their balloon 300 mil. and, were up in the air only °from font a, ' For over font days .they; have been ity' the wilderness, without food and with r Weans of striking a fire. ' They were rescued 'most providentinly , hy,a Mr, Catneign, ;elm was huutinvin. bet with Indianguides.. : • . • THE GRAVE CROV Or THE OHIO LEV..At the meeting of the eineinnatti horticultural Society on the 3d, Mr. chanan made a teport On the grapeculturt,: stating -that the grape crop. In the , Valley id the best since 1853, and in 111o':„ souri and Illinois it is also nearly as g00d..; In Maryland, Tennessee, .Georgia, North and Sont,hCerolina, - late frosts'.. and the rot shorten the. crops at least - au half.: With in twenty-miles artintid Cis einnati about 2,000 stores' are in . - vine % yarsh * uhieh are estimated to yield . thit year, 350 gallons of nine; to the siere, ot . an enrage.: _Soule vineyards will pm duce 600 to 800, gallons 'to .the acre; . others,. from - neglect, not more than. 150, Mr. Buchanan says be - invariably ' fond the largest, crop in- the best pruned and', best cultivated vineyards: - The vintage will be two weeks Earlier this season - 11aq 11.m5a1, and the quality of •thouine ahouldo be - gooii, for the grapes abound in juice* and saccharine matter., : • - - , . Ax lxicantas.litieititsx.:,-jrbecelnx. tauque ~(N. Y.) .Deasowsct learns :that - , Judge Chamberlain or ilandolPh-,-reecet• ,- Iv received a packet : o4nm) some plate in Pennsylvania,- by mail. The_ packnge looked as though it' might. have contain miniature likenesses, bet upon retuevin the outside wrapper, the= Judge -toecap suspicions of a certain string thatsketse to be connected with the contents. of th ,-- package. He called in , a ..ieigliboi, an the package was carefully :opened ; and - i„ found to eontain two pistols loaded With nowder and ball, capped and cocked,lll" string communisating with. the _ trigger" The Judge has- strong suspicion as to who was the friendly donor of this- vain .. able, present; , 2 - := PRICE IF CCIIRET _ . . • •,. Corrected evetylyednesday, 14X. 1 A. Sltr4s • 131 NS, wholesale and retaltoealeria Geo: :caries and , Provisions, Mail Street,. - CCipDEASPOIVT,i.k. _ ' APPI.Cis green, ti_bulh., ' s ; $ 75 to 106 Ll do. -dried, " , '2 50 SO PF! Beams, . • , 41 .: 3.2 2.00 Beeswax, VI Ib., •.,.. , . 20 25 Beef Hideff,:" '''.. -. r. - I * Berries, dried; /0 quart '''' - 10 — II BUckwheat,libush., '' '• ' , 44 - — is Butter, 11l lb., , _ ' 16 'l7 Cheese, ", - - • • ;- IS 11 11 1 19, "• IcOrka 9 bush., l .o o , - .1 124 Coax Meal; per ewt - 25 -.213 Eggs, V doz. • ' - ' ,10 . • 12 Flour, superfi ne,'lP 4'oo . 700 do donblo Otra, ;! S , • '; 600 700 Home, *1 - . 12 •46 Hay, V tton„ 9 00-, 3 10 00 Honey, V lb., „ ". 16 ~. 1 21 Lard,- - 1I ' ••• 1 6 Maple Sugar, per b., • 7 . 8 JO -Oa", .1? bus 7 2-1 ' • • 40 - - ; 1 1 Onions, " .00 Pork, 1 111,bbl; , , 19 00 • _2900 do ~1 3 4 lb., - 10 7 7 1 do to whole hot," lb., ' • 6 -. Potatoes, V bush.i.„ 31} ' - ' 44 Peach 0 1 4 4 dried, V Ibn • • 25 Poultry, .; r Rye, V bush., • '%! - 64, 75 Halt, V bid.i ; •-! 7 406 do, V sack, ' ' • TrOnt, • • - • 404 •050 Wheat, V bush., - - • 150. .1-475 White Fish, per. „ • 651 WoOl; - 29 33 • • __ y Nees Vor'Countt iti nee - To - the independent I offer myself as a candidate"' for • ibis MSc. of count' ,COMMISBIOAR.zatIhe monist election, respectfully - soliciting; t h e T 0 12 , 0 .1,44 the people. .. ItKilofl6 , tu ...4sznoanz, Sept. 27, 1059, • p=ml 13 DUNS
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