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Theme tymi will be rigidly ad 'lcred ADVEnTrsE NTB and Buelneag Notice, Insert ed at the tisual'entos. and every dioscrlntlen of JOB PRIAI'ING: !sXliCUTEltirithr - nontemt manner. at the lowest lames, and with the 'Omuta despatch. fleeing rdothesed a large collection of type, we are pre , pitied w satisfy the orders of our friends Pashtos pirtttnly. Erirestasat. OURVNEQA AND EinCVNTAI tens. siLLarmurc PFIRN'A i M.. ,AAIIILS A 'MAYER grxi.t, nit litit•vms, - X ,Tydaylr - -irswironva, . watcs.an n. swim, ATTORNEY AT LA iY „ 11111.LIWONTR, rA 1./Mee In the A. mode, wed goat VIIHTBD irraeries Timm mast. W I LI AMSPORT. PENN 'A . riewinmom JA_Oii.IIIIIA.NKIN, ATFOHN AT LAN, ■at.e.e►o:tre, rattle* Ofßoo. an the Diamond ono tkor weilt of the I'oet °Moo. . r oviewits, - ArrottNEY At o .: Fl okNi) IVr.At. 19FITAill .:IT 4 . 1it.,., ,ii.r 111Y1C1.1 , Co , 'v.:4 L tt • - Sey 11 , I _ _ il. .1"11)1,iNEI Al' LAW, (nykr nith thr fun James T Unit 15551.1 f. - - - JAPI 6s P. RIWTCI6III6OIII, PITYSiriAN h SORON, Suememor to D. Wm .1 IdoEtro, nostitfiko )111- don, Lb profmmiqOol service.. t, eat, viitzerri ur COTTER'S MILL'S and I Mini!). Office st:the Patio Howe IRVIN, o..tiyrtum, SURVEYOR, OAK HALL 11 1 ill attend to purveying. forma eon& he AI . allhaims•ed LA. Boateltiorg P 0 , wilt re e,i,•• primp, attention. Fub 10-'59 1V11.1.1111 r ILSON LIMN A U 1141101 , 11 ATTORNEY'S AT LAW mike e& Allegany, stmt., in t¢p building (pr etest; occupied by II some, McA !lister, !file & CO Dlllll4llr. Anat. 111,35 4! 61A, Artilimmr- t, - A , ICY f.I.p.POSIIS, PA. i 1 .1.11 attend to all vrotremional bunineed °attested to his care l'artiPulet atty., lon paid t 'tutu', 4c Oltlee tn Elie Ai, ed., eccoud Iloor, with h ut. W a II mall Ja‘nuary 1.1.59 t IRA C. 111111TCILICLI, ATiORNEY AT LAW, 1iKt.1.1.4 NTE, , IV 111 conti nue th 6 vrm•tico of hln prolrnnlou lu I b., r ob, 1.0r010t0,,1110041 1.5 IJia, 1111 d VI '+l ntic ud st promptly ml foltlilmly to All h 111 , 11tle, null Prted to 111111 Deo 23. 050 ly p At I'ORNEr At • LAW, iti , I.I.ICVONTE, Profeir•wirl bumbler', will ' , metre prompt Allen lion Cid )))) made in Centre, Clinton alie CleartleW , (nags on AnelthollY arsot ,La the bullihng for inert? oecuplen/ y 1.1011 4 li'lleott Bellefonte, J une, 80, '59 J. p., WlClthiATfit, 1U DENTIST Ogee end reikdonee on the tat h . Ant t , ,ner nt the blatuundt Beef the Cuti,rt I:otre • . Will L u 1 et him ofttee (rt., weolte oath wooUr , aismenellig on the wit) Monday of be mouth, when h will he awe filing profenitottikl PR. 44, L. riELTEIR, • PHYHICIAN & DULL/./0:1TV, C114,111< Co , ro, °Mon on High SAroot (old 11in4:44- Will attend to I.rulegtelows I calla ae liiretofor, nnd offunp him to iw (newt , and t Oct DI J. 111, 1114 Cli PiIiSICIAN A SUROKON, es i.i.cru.zrs , I . le.Nl au:, 0 , PA O w Will attend to iroforTional c 411.1 s e ber , J i U!'t me , and 'ta") Itkii.mr,tinr. to s Ins Xriethie sod t ,Yal he elite' p 6 nest door to il IA , renldo nes On Spring street ' Oct 28.58 -If A &An How, AtTORN KY AT ',At*, ritait'A Witt attend froihntly to all legal busintM , lutrusto , l to Bpeoial sleention ho Mir eh, to the Orpheus' Court Practice and ri:rening , Ills oflice I) With the Hon James T nate, whore 44, con afigiii be consulted In the gnallab and Garman ■. C MINN H. 11. TrALLIHTIIIII. J T. HALM A CI CUIIIIIII. overawe sAimic, —or— MWES, MoAPASTER, 11ALE & aspoteowrs, cairriut co , re. Deposits Received—Bills Lt. Exchange and Notos Diseounted—,lnfarext Paid on Special Repaint— Ciilleolluns Made, and Proceeds Remitted Prompt ly—Exchange on the Esti constantly on hand .Juste 2nd, 185 g. .1 MI . arovEß, ATTORNSY AND, COUNSHLLOII, AT LAW • uLL•VONTI, PENN'•. Will practice his profession In gie el Courts of Centro County, All butinettif intrusted to him rui be foltbAilly atteadad to. ' ertis!ulor attention willed. Can be consulted in t is In the English language • Office en High at. fot'fferly occupied by Judge Burnside and 1) 0 Bost, Bag BANKING HOUSE, WM. F. REYNOLDS' & CO., BEL.I.EXONTS, OHNTIM 00., PA. Bills of orchaugol and Nona dincountod qui illations made and Ormond', promptij roinitt i ed Internetpaid on 'imolai deposits. Einhango in the gastarn Nage militantly on hand. for 111•• 1) anon- Ito matron 4—, ifirit 7th 11.15,1 ' . IGI acnor, DRUcidisT. AIIILIAVONTIS, PA. 4 Yispiataitai ANO RISTAIk DIALIIR IN O i r i vga, ilfedietnee, Perfumery, Paints, 01le, Var ahes t ple•Staffi, Toilet Soaps, Brushee, Hair and T°olhUrtidblllifianov and Toilet Artlolgg,Trusaels an,4 milder Brims. Garden Seeds. %unmet* will find myet, oak complete and froth, itdd all mold at moderate prices. Ijrfaraters and Phydolans om the country 0 ef titteti to eaathin• 'took THANRSOIVINO SERMON OP REV. JOHN CHAMBERS, AT FIRST !NOV/INDENT musca t PHILADRI SHIA, THURSDAY, OCT. 24, 1959. (The speaker tend, as introductory to his sermon, ] from Bth chapter df Deuteronomy, and Diu l'id chapter of Piritt Timothy. Then, after prayer, he said :-- - II hart announced hi you ink purpose to relieve my heart of a burden that has, op pressed me, for a long time. lam an Amer ican citizen—en American Affniktehof the Gospel. I,love this bible. tloire the Lied of this Bible. I Jere k* co l tintry, its Cool autution and its itws. I am a man of peace. 0415 I hate i h Ilii. die nation . I love it from itlir -- ti Orlhetillrerie to - UM utmost limits et i ts uquirn boundthr* — l ft. eit friar the spot upon which Mlle the first ray 4 the Morning inn, to that far off {Vest where liner the last beams of the sun's evening retirement. I !tits,* from Its gen ie, to Its eircueidurence. I Teve it ar a wail, I am 'ready to live by It aU • nmt : I am yearly to Pit :tie b l ood o' my h. art freek 4 . on its altar, rather than see It tinxtbilig than • unitg. 'hu 'WOrt‘h of eld's Vt l .idn 1,0 ottritolvet and ' the World of mankind is inilnieely beyond price. No powers of arithmetic, no math• emetics! genius, however cultiv dell, can tigers out the intrinsic vaitto Of tf:l4 Alden to ... ourselves and to the race. 'rho eyes of the ctvilfzed send are upon us to-day. Fixed and steady is that gaze that conies fiem ev ery quarter of the globe ; it set 11113 . i111:11. to hover, in its burning look, upon ibis gittncry of States. Thu nations of mankind arc watching us with especial mutt x , tll cause we are eitgagtd in working , out the great, the tnolhentotia problem of self government. the finge'r of scorn hea been pointed ; the pen oi the opponent of Fepublies has been dipped long and deep, and has dashed rup• idly across the page, (I , Fciartiir; the tinpessi btltty of o success. . It has nmy firi option that tae monarch!' Plitrope, and rape rally Eng land. wore jealous of us. II is pOYSIbIe thst in this we may be mistaken ; but the out adage that "actions speak !pore loudly than e orris," comes in to our IlltININ'11.1.) , e. Vile,, ainall in site and itt.)lsl4l3 lil yw,oe., wit t Wl+ ird froth finder the otipiemiive dunimion of It gmliiieeiMiam 4.- ,and amaisatots uf her &r -inks, her navy, her wealth, ire liiiiied (1; with the strength of an 11111111 t glint, and hurled from our necks, idiook frotti our hands, 'mist Ii run our In el, sti r) badge and fetter of political bondage, and stood nu freemen—freemen before the I 'iiiir et se Sulisojuently, nisult alldt,l to injury rou,ed the heart of the yoilog t laid, and Inough t . Min into rt new"d snitch , I ii (1, 111 • lotim: oppressor' 'Plies attt rtiit to i :11 'l l 111 11,;1 ell, as had the I I evimt, attt.topt 01y .1 ,, i the flint fail T It, cause the 1111.1 r t 1/I ?;11 ma tron was info-^d n ith the s p irit of ilie Bible and patriotic unity. Vt by 11111 tit Sl COnd fail ' Bet suite the 1111•11, :I, ii multiplied States of tins Repulili, felt that they wire bound together by hooks of et, mat meet , - as one than they met the eller.; , thi y e , iii quered, they triumphed The 111%1.1 ' 11g fill . with fallen crest, were coin Gland , . d to mum' to their own shores and lel its 111011 e. P . I.I.i:FoNTI , :, PA This spins of Jealoir.,y 1.4, we tlunl,, ; and the monarchies, the di spotosomt of r t urdpirbein to day see no hop.. of triumph nog over this Western hUonuncnt ail sky 0110. r way than by breaking ue to pieces. Tho y cannot break us file can break our ote'ves. i The tootolomeol at moo, 8101 mos IVA 111 the whale three continent-4 are nut opal to the task of severing this fluiun , if we be true to I/II rseldez,. Seeing, then, no li,.;ie olio! than by . divi• thug tug against, oursetses, our adversarial are apt, so a matter of course, to seize hold of that whereby they may mo,t readily ett gender strife —snake 0.4 sr crime{ -lift the heart from the great :irk of the covenant of the Union, and put it down in a little spot here end a little spot there Ifenc . e it is yeti find England particularly, roost impeittnent ly officious in attempting to iniorkie lafth our institutions. her press, hyr pulpits, her forum, her &nap chamber, roll out anathe mas upon us, anti ondcavdr to nfrotch forth the hand to lay itnpon that which biriongn to us, with-which they havirino business And, as the Lord lives, if they aro not care• ful, that arm will one day be smittten from the shoulder, in its intermeddling attempts. We are a longliuflering people ; but, breth• ron, there was's point at which wo found encroachment unendurable ; and there may be another. If wo are capable of working out the great preblom of self goveri7ent, we are csfill fITOT taking care of our own Institu ilins,, whatever they may bo--commercial, agricultural, domestic, curd, religious ; we are capable of,taking care of our own insti tutions, and wo must be let alone: . o Merman as well If, however, the enemies of republics can, b' the utmost stretch 6f their, canning and their power, urge de an tn a spirit of Mutual jealousy, of infirchY, of confusion ; If they can discover, (and they think they have diii covered it.) the means by which an en tering wedge of separation may be intro doted between theso'States, now bound, to gether by ton thousand ligaments of the man heart, and cemented by oceans of holy and patriotic blood.—if they can discover how they may divide and disrupt this Un ion, they will dolt ; and when it shall be done, they will put the iron h'eef of depotisdi DJ :‘,lEaguin,LAL:4l,l"ia upon the t ;attered fragments, ad may suit their pleat-milli or their interest. But, U Uod ! that day cannot come, that day' will never oome, if we be true to ourselves I have no froni the mitgli• mint influence of any power:unless it he sec onded by our owq folly. Sometimes men toll the--'•lf we should war with }lnland, our enemies would burn Boston, and burn New York, and burn Philadelphia; and burn Baltimore ; they will burn every city on the Atlantic shore." tdo riot believe a word of it. That is nOUthe kind of stria that we are made of, to.be thul burned. But wo may burn c4rselves. yl'hile-no other he„ruf dare grasp Oat. helm of the shipAtel 'state, and driq Ate nob's v a ssal wet .tith outedidetnds on 'the rocks, we may do it. In viewing the aspects of mlblic morality in this 'country. one of the most alarming aims of the times, to my mind, is the titter indifference that seems to ,pre s vail with re gard to the solemnity, value and importance of an oath. Every President, story govern or, every Judge, all the mayors, lawyers, mar shabtOusticies of the peace, and all the Leg tetatuneir ire-ritrises e Wean* before Clod, as they will beeper at the (heat Day, to stand by thepOnatitution and the hlwa of the United Stites. Thin is the oath that they take. It is no tilde., The question is, now, is this oath complied with All nat• urklised citizens Hand I want this heard, I %ant it understood) --all naturalized cite aens are, if ponible, wore solemnly bound to the ConNtinition and lass of the tinted Sates by utih r than either President; Gov ernor, Andre, I.aelyer, or the Magistrate For the T., TT that coikne4 to tins Comitry from abroad and it natmalLed, IlrBt solemnly re ;lltVgal.ooO to the (;overomem tinnier which he was bOry solemnly declares ills handoninent of that tioverninent, and then he i‘oluni.illy swears or afflinis before ihe crest I Ali that he %111 maintain the Con stiNtion and the laws of the 1. lilted States, I ask, then. ere wit ofli tel Melt faithful to their oath ? .kre our naturalized caftans ;f iithful to their oath 7 II hat du they ;wear I . They swear T.T. mend by the Cumititution and felts l'oiteri States. What do the (le/instill:Akin sod the Inns r, noire I It is your I 111011efiti tia knew : !t Is your duty jo tilbw IT, .1.4 311 1.1 - (1 1 /., nor 111r3 1 4 .,;11111C, T iT a a t • Taf.Te not T rimmed that lion , at i ttuuen end thaw loos. kuu Sae Lwow to -.Two. {holt tlint rin may know what thee, lairs t• ;IA anti h hat are ) ,T ai •t o tiyi in regard to th, m The Cottst tut, toll 14 iltc compact. It duet+ Hot 1 , 11,mg to the N•trih, our Ott South, 11; the 1::1.1, twr to the %%est. II is Ihe CO Vt . - 111111 t III) hrelhren• trelvreett the Statcs .t 1 tlu. t, in , o . attd oh'', that Constitution re 111 un ;I 'I i , ^ItLI t• 3,1 •ilt 110,114 d 1, .13 r0m , : 1, 13 nat to nte , But lam l , rit I lirtier tools this onth of fidel oy 6, the on and thc Inns But. my htol;.t t rho Lnthnghc itedole you to that l'oleottlitlim as thr 0.1101 Will. i, I,llelo the adopted citizen .11 are bnl.l nirl, r its of ig:Owns Ileing born 11 , le. )1111 1111.1 11,/ otht y Tile l'onlttleitioU "ittl t'.e !• :" t h ou has 3 right tC sc (111111 N.iw. fur i.xample, the Con,titution most positivity and al,ioloitelv : in the plainest and moat unmistakeable manner- -proven that a fugitive from labor, escaping from one State• him another, shall be delivered up tlic Constitution. lam not to day touching slavery, right or wrong. lam looking si [longs ai they are. This iv the provision of the Constitution, If then, the Prooduntor Governor, thejudge, the law yer, or thy magistrate, the cititen (native born or adopted) does not comply with that when it is within hta jur s isdictam to do so -if he connives at kit evasion, if he aids or abets the fugitive in his Hight, ho is before lictivcn a perjured man, and the wa ters of the ocean could riot wash nut the stain. regard to the fogiatetlate law, it is not mypurPose,tc_say,wdether it i 3 a right law or a wrong law. But it is the law of the land. It was enacted by i majority of our representatives ; it received the signature of the President, It became a law. Every pulilic officer td by oath bound to obey it.— Every ailopted,eitizen is, by his solemn oath, made when he received the rights and priv ileges of an American citizen, bound to obey it. Every native born citizen is bound by his birthright to obey it. If the Constitution is wrong, the people who made the Consti• tution have the right and the power, acting the legitimate means, to • alter it. If th.fu. Rive slave law wrong, wi,tJi the wide rests the law making power ; and thai4c God, they have the right, acting through their reprosentitiVeti, to repeal that Or any other law. But no individual man has a right to igniaro that law'; while it is a law you and I and all the citizens of this country are tanind by it. If, therefore, we, as Pres ident, or judge, or hiwyer, or magistrate, or naturalized citifen, aid or abut, countenance or encourage the Volation of that law, or wink at its evasion, wo are pirjurod. I defy mortal man to contradict this. If it bo not so, law is worthless, and an oath is a baga telle. Mikes an oath is to have some obli• un'ess the Constitution and tlia fawit are leisure some binding force, we nisiy sin well throw up the game and let it go. After these general prefatory remarks, r now take up that sruestra of questions,— et:~vr -~< j • • Can tbl t a OILI/0 perpetuated 1" ce. aver, yea, kEy what means, then i By ta• king the Wale formur rule. This, as I have intimated, the sheet anchor Of our hope. If this be faithfully patched and guarded, the ship of State need leer no peril. The winds may blow,,l.lts political sea soiiy rage, th. wrathful wa:tyr.; may mount, the political heavens mayAather blackness. the hghtmnge may fiatlj, and the thundetisdts may be (lashed dawn ; but I tell yott, , My brethrer, if this Bible, lie dlovired„ettjel.ly, prayurful ly, earnestly, no blor•neliatinirlb q“ Itch tiny ralse.,n4 tempest. that crowned heatle : or des putic sceptres can invoke, will ever tht ow gur ship upoh,the Ito shore or put out the light of this American Union. a • In .considering the means by ( Whieb"this Republic is tp be preserved. 1 would remark to the first place, that government is of Di tune nppointinent. If we tura to the 13th chapter of Romans, we shall find this pies tion definitely and absolutely settled. We there read. "Let evef y soul be subject ,uu• to the higher 'powers" (the cirit authorities.) For there is no powers that are ordained of hiod." has apprimted die ment. Ido say, I fearlessly say, that the men who plaint the ,Divine Tight of claim a 'right Which (Ind gar th Iris areal,' God did give a king tffliftrel but (loci gave in 1119 15 I nth. That, hnirever is merely by tile way.. In a government of the p•/ii&, the laws arc of their own selueuon. We are aubjeet to a Cunstitti lion Ordained bystairselves, l'he I,rinalion of that Constitunt %%as an object of long ailicittide to wits as and ilubfo hearts. You rertieniber that hove large mind ed pa trots hi the Constitt4ial'f'onventlon expended upon their task fivo• eeksof anxious thought and consultation ; It. • sausfsetoili issue seemed fat Junin& ; no aylight appear ed to break upon them. 'hen, Franklin (though he hag been SUSI ted of rather skeptical views, on the sot et of religion) made lin grand propositimi lie rose and said that the Convention h been laboring t . in the dark, trying to get ng alone ;he desired that they should gut . me light from Uod, and proposed , that pm ei shotild be of fered. The proposition vu adopted; and if I recoleet anght, in three aye after that ' tfie ronstitution a The iii d StiitCei was rouipliited and signed. Toe ntritivinl. I. would Lice to ti , e fluty i that Slitilneil . t ." 4 154; " .fixfrer* c;tii,tl of our crinitry it b, Cher an °Metal man or tlllint . llll, WlnMt r native buts or adoptt•d, ,0.. a all,pattee to the Cottsttittuott and 11114 iof tlit; LWIt.I '4tiktea, 1., he doeft ako to I 'oll,l ,111,1 tntt a of Ina ru speetr., ;=Late aud t., the municipal author it.os. Ii 11114 gl Cie 011Ipael, ns ellizens, ae are boult,l (Ps db,ne, iu the ltgal author!. ties is not a pule !natter of option We may not say , • I a ill do as I please ; I vt ell obey or nut obey, 1114 soil my trislins or my couremt ace Too are Minot!, my brethren. The official man is bound by his oath ; the adopted citizen is tactful by his oath ; the native boil) C{117.1:1114 bond by his imtruita bin Varthright. , What are the te , cl.lll:i of the II hie as to the duly which all men owe to thetiovern hient 3 The great Tenelier, the Grand Ite former, the mighty Missionary from the skies, who made Juile.i's hills resound with the eloquence of his sentiments and the di vinity of his doctrine, was on one occasion applied to by some persons who were anx iou to ensnare hirq. " Is it lawful, " said they "to give tribute to Cesar I " feta. W 3 ,1 living mid= C.osar's government r Jw. .a,lMell(kilk to Cresar''s laws. Had the son of God answered no, " instantly I the charge of treason would have been bro't r, against him. Hut he, kiiowing their hypoe- Isilty, 'taut .unite thatii-" IA by tempt ye me I Bring me a 'inny, that I may see it." And they brought it. And he said unto them, "Whose is this wage and superscription 3" And they said unto him, ' ox:stir's." What, then, did Jesus say, "Never mind Clew . ; Cuisar is a tyrant ; his laws arc not worthy of obedience; pay, or not pay, as you like ; sad if iGy attempt iii r iVriie you IQ ply, then tight 7 " Did Jesus say that I Not a Word of it. Jesus answering, said unto them,— '''.ender to Caesar the things that are Cro sses and to (kid the things that, are God's.'' in the teachings of Jesus Christ, there is, you perceive, no interference with the civil institutions of the land—no attempt to ex cite the people to riot or bloodshed. Christ says in effect, "Go meet the claims of the Government ; you may not like it, but you are under it, and you are bound to it. The Constitution and laws of this country aro made by ourselves. We may not be entirely satisfied wiell them ; if so, there la a legitimate and orderly Mode by Whieh they can be altered. The adopted citizen has no right to complain if the Constitution and lawa dd not suit him. lie came , to this country of his own choice ; he voluntarily went before the authoritimi, i;nd liying his hand upon this4lortons bFkAr. of God; press ing it Aso 'to his lips as an evidence citadel ity, he took a solemn oath . Unit he would obey the Constitution liwa of the Uni ted States Jr ho riolerittly atfirmed that he would do ad. Didlhe not assume this obli iatio'n voluntarily gas ho any hi to nterfere jn opposition - to the COnitlttition and laws i Does ho 6 Bl do not like your Constitution ?" Then, sir, pack up and go home ; the sooner we aye rid of you the WIWI'. We did not ask, yortreftne 1111VDAY, bECEMI3ER 15,18591, ti here ; and If you have c9me hero to Bind! What man in this house to-day, what man fault, with our institutions and hares, go home; belonging to these Unita States, (and may the time never pome when any mortal on the ttihero'You think you have hett•g, It is not a molter Wien whether we shall footstool of . God Almighty shall be able to tic loyal to the government. The Constitu• say anything else than hest United States,) tion and the laws of thikcouniry : are our what man lla this natio?, wheter his be a na- Omar, 'and on us rinits the solemn duty of tire pr an adopted Xitizeir, jq willing to' lee ,obedience. this Union dissolved 3 You may say there it, the 7th verso of the 13th chapter of Ito is no danger. I tell you, my brethren, then, inane ,we have this injunction : Render, is danger, unless our people come up to the therefore, to all thiir dues , tribute to whom ; great duty of obeying (led, of " rendering tribute is due ; custom to whom custom to Cesar tho things Ihnl aro essita t r's"—un• fear to whom Soar : honor to whom hunor." .'less our pulpits crave tie it cletnor legairrbt 'Phut is the duty of the Ametican citizen.— I the Constitutiun • and the lairs— unless the The ptrforine . nce of this duty is one of the ' i. ministers of, C-0(1 ; regard their obligations method:7lsy Which we aro 90 keel, together an — A - Reach the people their duty of tidelifjr to thece,States in One magniftcent brotherhood, j (*treat e i nd Ildelity to Gild— unless men cease n c;bject of univ.ffsal admiration. , preaching from the alter that it is better to In this Bible, our, guide toward the nraa- put into a man's hind a rifle, a death-weitp• bcal duties of life, without the neVormance on, rather then a mother's Bible—unless ere of which we cannot be good citizens, we 1 cease the agitation and abuse that arrays have also presented to us the duty. of limp State against State—unless we abandon all baud and wife, I need net letrioj,you,by y. Brctionalitun, and resolve that we will adhere referring to the passagea of Scriptoria:: Yea to„the Cphstitittion and the laws, reforming will find them in Ephesians V chapter, zr , y I th - 4,cewititution and those terra, when nee verse, and Collossians ill, xviii, xix and ems:try, y legitimate and rm . :hi-IL giethntle first Peter the !hi chapter. The hurl - Viand ie tlf we :noire on in this will. OUr Republic enjoined to treat with deference and honor ' will - etenahi• 1f thorn le ii in n who would the woman of hie choice. If he fails to do BO wieh to O tine Hype ,. who wad+ this, he is recreant to every principle of tear into fragment& tha banner of stripes and r,temly honor but ho is no viler, after all, stars, and pluck the feathers from the proud than that. perjured governor, or perjured eagle of my country, let htin fall crushed , forta ge7iitig. 5 I...ghing. judge, or perjured lawyer, or perjured mag- and mangled be istrate, or perjured adopted citizen, who l'lnqPi"not wo - Id o f crowns a eti ' 1 (sPol- 1 9 will assist in the violation of the Constitu- sceneries. I hi , to-day, before the Eternal tion and laws of the country. I I Ani, Father, Sun and Holy Ghost, (and if I were on the banks the Potomac, stand• W e have also distinctly pointed out the jog by that vault at Mount Vernon, I would relative duties of parents and children. I say it over the sacred dust of the immortal ) the 1111111 that could labor pr woull tetsh to - the dissolution or,the Amtr scan Union, 'at him be thiatlrma moron at ha regret that my time does not allow me t. 9 dwell on these points, The duty of the child to obey the parent is, 3tated in the most tbiolute terms : co obey your parents in the Lord ; for this is right."— Eph. vi, 1. Parents are commanded to bring up their children "in the nurture and ad monition of the Lord." The parent that is guided. the Bible will teach his child delity to Cied, fidelity to his country, fidelity to the Comtitutifin and the laws. The Christian parent viill teach his child to re hpect the, magistra4y, not to OW or yttlirY them. Why, You may see_ little urchins, eight or te n years of age, running about your streets oftenttmes in rags sod filth, at oth er times Fled in the habiliments s;ol geed aesp's soos—Te P • • • your laws. flax such child boen.brought up '• in the niirture and admonition of the bard Ma he been trained in 'mordants with the principles of this Gospel ? No. -- Flat d our institntions arc to he kept from peal, the parent or the guardian, the father and the mother must instruct their children in the principles of the Bible honor, integ. Tay, patriotisjn dove of country and love of . , rhe race Do not set your children an evil example ; do not inflame them With paSslon, and darken their minds with prejudice (to not bring them up to hate their fellows. but subject them to the !delimit inlidenccs of the gospel. It firmly reces;:ary that we follow the In structions of the Bible. As I believe In the ettistetica of a God, I believe that this book —whatever it 'may be to other people and to other 111a10/1h —I believe that this open, free, untrammeled Bible le, i 1 I haie sill, the sheet anchor oi , try blessed country. I have no other parsers to pre'ent. Again, we have the duties of master and servant (Lear)) , set forth. .•Sercants be oho ahem toThem that are your masters accor thug tn , r lirsh, with fear and trembling. n single esir of your heart, as unto Christ net witl‘eye-service, as men pleasers, bpi as the nervants of (Artist, doing the will of God from the heart, with good will doing ser: vice as to the Lord, and not to mon ; know mg that whatsoever good thing illy man doeth, the same shall he receire of the Lord, whether he be bond or free. And yo masters do the same unto them, forbearing threaten ing knowing that your Master also is in Heaven ; neither is there respect of persons with klisn.'? - - This is th,e teaching of the Holy 'Chest, re member. 'There is no State in this nation (hero is no County in this nation, there is no Town in this nation, there is no Township in this nation, where I would not stand up as God Almighty's minister, and preach these doctrines of His gospel, whether men would hear or forbear. I would preach the duties of the master, just as I would those of the parent, husband or the wife. I would 00- Sir, yob are bound by the God win made you to treat that servant kindly and honotably, and provide faithfully for his tieeds." The master is bound by the very same gospel that binds the servant. I do not go into the question as to the legality, the moral right, the religious right of these relations. I say these things arc here ; these things existed in the days of Jesus Christ. Whatever is wrong this got pel will correct. If we carry out its, %feat doctrines we shall base pease, • Are we all conscielitlimei iiOprossed with this sacred obligation to obey the Conatitu tlon and the liars i We must remember that if we disregard this obligation, we be coMe guilty beforo:tod and man. If any eitizun directly or indirectly violates the Constitution and the lafvs, whether by his own act or by abetting others, ho is in such 'roportion 'dostroling his title to good citi zenship,ind he is a perjured man. =IN Old Noah B's. Question' Old Noah B. was, in his old age, given, when in:his cops, to religion. One day lug •‘ old woman" sent him nut, to Rpl it wood but corwincticross a brandy bottle, be re- turned diume i vory much obrusiicnted," his. &gaud, unaceompliiihed • Taking a seat he commcnad with ; ' Wife—wife do you think the Lord, in 1 goodness (hic) kin send us all into fire evci lutist r' No answer Iron wits, elialrad hisbly &don. a Wife, kin the Lena Intend to bars ninbil in fire everlavtin' I" Mrs B. by this time was boiling over with indignation, but rtil/ no answer (Mc) do you think the Lord mean' , (hic) to burn is all (lm!,) in ere everlastml" This was more than human patience could endure, and she could not hold h..r tongue any longer; she'd speak out if she dild for It, • '' No' yer oh fool, ' nct if he waits for yic to split the wocil '" _..".-...-, r MICAS RIIMIti•T 41/1 S miles long, 8 wide, and 40 miles mud, with a wall 100 feet li:gh, and thick enough for three char iots abreast. Ilahylon was filly miles with in the walls, which wen: 65 feet thick and 300 feet high, *id. 100 brazen gates. The temple of Diana. at Ephesus, was 41''.J feet to the support of the roof. It was a hundred years iu building. The largest of the pyra mids is 481 feet high and. 654 on the sides its base covers I 1 acres. The stones are about 30 feet in length, and the layers 208. It employed 330,000 inch in building The Is hyrnith of En lit Contal ns 300 chambers and .31 halls. Thebes, in ' 14, resents ruins 57 miles round an. 10 es. Cars thage was 23 miles round Athena was 25 miles round, and contained 350.000 catiskna and 300.000 slaves. The temple of Delphos , was so rich in donations that it wan plunder ed of 5500,000, and Nero prijed• !may from it 200 statutes. The walls cf Rome were 13 miles round NEM Two little nigger? were playing in a dung heap. _ " Lonler ! Poto, I sera& whappini big toad 1" v " Whar una ? Sam, I can't see him." ' *hg, thar—right thar ! Whar am jer lapis nigger l" —•• Den hif.him wid he hoe.': Sam whaled away and brought Pete up, all standing, on ona leg, I •) Why, you dratted, jury) 1 13er. dat was my .foot, an' I seed him all de time. WORM! OFF IRAN TUR NEGROZB.—There are four Millions' of people in France who eat no breaff. Some eat oheatntits, and some other kinds of vegetables, meop l e o f Ireland, for a long timu, subiliAteh mainly op potatoes. These feels prove not only that there are large numbers. in civilized coun tries who do not raise their own brea4, 11;10 an equally important fasts—tliey have not the means of buyinut; An Irish gentleman, rema . ltable i t r e; devotion to the fair sex, once remarked "Never be critical on the ladies. Take for granted that they,xre all Ml?dsome and good. A true gentleman will never !cook on the faults of a pretty woman without shut ting his ayes"' ' rr Mr. Suti,qt . has electnfled humanity by the discovery that. much of the, sicicoess in New Orleans is occasioned by bad.health. , 4Tmairi 1 : 41 Mum cu. VOLUM?, 4—NUAIREN 50, 1:1C=1 Our readers have all heard Iha.adory of soaping the clergyman's tiuAarn.all manse meeting—so that when 4e meat tti Mill the congregation together„ 4e Liovrrenfli, war over his brother clergymen, and how he ex claimed : Itrethron„l have Itered the Lord tbitty years and heti:at titlie.itaire never uttered a profane word, but I'll he dr.4l ifl iwn'twle.p the man that soaped that horn 1' Our reade(s, we say. have all hoard this, but lilac perhaps neiies heard the sikattl- as given. us yesterday by a gentian:loi present. Some two days after, a tall. swarthy, wit lamous-lobking desperado, strolled en the grounds and leaned against a tree, liatinsieg to the eloquent exhortation to repent, which was Icing made by the_ preacher, elm' a while he became iuterested, t tindly Addict/RN and khad took a positmn on the SW. ~nd With his facp hetwesn his Lands calle menced groaning in '• the.vry hitterness " of but sorrow. The clergyman walked down and endaarored to console 110. No owner . ` -16.4 """T". 8 0 1- $0 ,1 ri ber4Sitt Oh. no : there Iran paillon for the vilest,— ; he_ was too '44mi—there was no woe cY rot 0 1116 ... ft Why, sigma silsne have pen egomeilleitir said the benevolent preacher—l' born/ yiet stolen I" ‘• Oh, wattle.. than that '•" Ittt i t.,Altvo,you by tooleitto robbed it mule Inttorftncb of tta loath, I", ‘• IVorse--oh, worse than that !" " Moder, is it I" point!, the hotnied preacher Worse than that !" groaned the smitten sirmier. . r ' The excited preacher commenced " peel urC off" has outergarurent. , . 0 . •• Here, Brother t;o14 !'t slinuted,he, "hied my coat-4'as found the fellow that soaped that horn w- Vengeance The following if from the Charlestown corrooporatence of the Balumore Sun The tollowing it • copy of a pliable 1114( received at our Pohl. Office. The letter is authentic beyond question, as the main lie% be soneibierstsd by s-nevekrutresana now here. It will be mad to John Brown this morning Te can Brown, Coder aif Oa • ...I, • , CiraTrAiroodr.; osispps, • - Joba I , lol.llWee is not mine ( t confer:a that I do feel gratified ty, bear I 1! you were stopped in your Oen* adi,pareer at Ilarper's Ferry with the lass of your two sons. , You can Kow appreciate my distress to Kansas, when you then and there entered my house at midnight, and ar rested my husband and two boyp, sad took them out of the yard. and herald blood shot them dud in qv hearing. You cannot say you done it to free our slings, ; ire hr e mono and nerer expected to own,ohe,. but toe of 4 made toe a poor, dies e/mint° widow. with helpless children. While I fuel for your role ly, 1 do hope and ti nal you will melt your jont. reward. Oh, how it pained tuy, heart 14 hear the dying grains of toy Iturbapti children. If this wirsarl gives you at:} MU. solatuot, you are welcome to IL. DIAITALA DOYLE N 13 -My son, John Doyle, whose life I begged ofyou, i 9 now gruwp,pp„stid d eb iroun in be at eluif Milltown 9n ibo 417 of your execution.: would certainly bo there it Ins means wo9l4l,pernnt,it, tt.ott lie A'614% adjust . tha fry- 4rour.d "our neck. of (ioy. Wise t7culd t erl4.t. T.L. 1). Tue Itchisii Pssmos - —Chief JustJee Parsons, during his last, illness * WAS ,iMpcitk i scions much of the time. Afteriii4olo49o of all speech, so long that his fatuilyligkti they should nexus—hoar his voice Sliert, he suddenly revived, and, with per,fefollitfp9l., spoko,for th,e last time en.„ eiii * that formula which he, had utteel I Ntrtdrods of times : Gentlemen of thq i r .tiry,. the case fa clues j ~nr( y0uf.1051. - plealliiretire and agree; limn your verdict." Vtrii camplifil, in his Life of Lord Chief Justice 'Nide' don,roports that the last words of that eminent junet were: • 1 . And now, Gentlemen of the Jury, you will consider of your verdict." Similarity of the hut wards of these learned Chief Justices is quite re markable. Ties Ornsa Fusers ! —An cue/afire, fur a thwarical compsny, 9191007 desirable:, hut we never h!ard,, WI lately, of forget who was willing to pay a high price to ho . him ) self thy, whole audience, and have e thealsi. eel eerePallY Perform 44 his, !tole ,ILMUM mept. We see it stated in 4, western paper, that a man who was to leave 60Wb before the hour of evening repreampstion, yeltervieb ed to ice popular, Upon of players, asked She minager 14c, price ,for kV performance right 04," The., ,! twrnyltre, whinb.ras .the price demanded, being at once agreed to, the " *whence" sat In the middle of the pit, cooked pp* (vo6* Op top of the *rah, 'bud *no6l'4o'll, tlvoritt out, very liberally ! •-• A Nice DiirriotnioN t -rlt fint boo •44 , -. cided in an Englirh Co thianSitigNifi4 time its a tiogal within the meaning of VII i f t lW : Ip • race against . time are eirletfaisilt NOW- Etrabat kt Jaw.