BY DAVID OVER. S V E B (! U OF <;OIj. JOHM W. FORNEY AT YONKERS, N YORK, ON THE 23D ULT. Ma. PRESIDENT AND F ELLOW-CITI ZF. N S l am glad to appear for the second time iu this Congressional District. M? first appearance was uinier circumstances somewhat memorable, or at least the remarks I then made at Tarry tjwn have contributed, if not to my reputation, certainly to my notoriety. Tbey have been printed tinrc widely, and abused umro exten sively, 1 think, than the remarks of any one man occupying so limited a spice in the public mind. They were undo deliberately, listened to patiently, and lain here to-night to say that i have nothing to leiali. [Loud cheering.] Intended necessarily to be personal, from the fact tint 1 iu some sort was the repre sontativo of an autagouisiu to a great betrayal of principle, I sought, ou the occasion referred to, to set forth my own caso in defending the principle, and iu so doing it became my duty to expose what. I conceived to be au act of the most monstrous duplicity of which annals con tained a record. In this appeal a citizen of the Uni'ed States indertook to arraign 1 lie President of the United Statos for a betrayal of trust, to set forth the causes which led to that betrayal, to depict the consequences of such ;>n act, and to invoke the puuishmeut of the ballot-bos upon that betrayal. [Lsu of "Kansas r.s a Free State." That was before tiie election of 1856, and upon this warreot, thus spokeu without the pledge of secrecy, Mr. Hickman went before his constituents and was reelected, and he was found among I lie first in Washington along with your gallant represen tative [tremendous cheers] to opjiosc Leeouip tonism iu ail its phases. Then began the most fearful persecution upon a public man which it has been my lot to witness. A series of per secutions and abuse began, which I will not at tempt to describe—so much so that Mr. Hick man was compelled to go armed, iu order to defend himself. Yet he has triumphed ; day and night he toiled, and the result has been that he is returned to Congress by a spleudid majority. [Loud cheers.] I would that the story of that canvass ended here ; but I re gret to say that while the people of his district were recording their acknowledgments, his beloved uDd gifted wife, who participated iu all his interests, whose heart palpitated to ail his hopes and fears, who had iecn tho stay of bis life, tottered into his library and died in his arms. I would uot profane the sacredness of his grief by political allusions, but I am obliged to believe that she was the victim of tho re morseless persecution that pursued bim. But I am here to say that I rejoice in tho issue of the late canvass tn Pennsylvania, because it baa vindicated both mc and my great State.— [Cheers.] Iu the speech which I made at Tarrrytown I said tbiugr that have invoked the attacks of the Administration papers of this country from Maine to Georgia; it has been made the staple of calumny and fabrication. I bore it patieutly and allowed their acousatious to accumulate for a while, and then I published a simple vindica tion of my statements. Not ono of these as sailed statements of mine has been proved to be false. Not a single allegation made against the Administration at Tarfytown has been proved to he false—not one. They stand before the people charging the Administration with being guilty of political turpitudo aud treachery, and for this reason I am rejoiced at the vindication of the people of Pennsylvania on the 12tb of October last. [Cheers.] J can very well ima gine how Mr. Buchanan feels at tho present moment, how ho goes back over the unfortunate stops of the last two years; how he seeks excu ses for the greater disaster that has befallen himself and his policy. For iu our State this was not a question of the Tariff or Revenue laws— it was simply an issue between Mr. Buch anan and the people upon his Kam-us policy.— There was not—there could not be—any pro text; the issue was fairly and fully tried, aud tho result is before the country. As Mereutio said when he received the stub of the indignant Thibault, "The wound is not as deep as a well, uor as wide as a church-door, but it mill do." [Tremendous cheers.] We say to this Admin istration, We have fought you when you had nearly four years of Federal power before you, and were surrounded by a hungry army of uu fed and insatiate bounds; and we shall fight you BEDFORD, PA., FRIDAY. NOVEMBER 5, 1858. now, whgn yan have but little more than two years of power and your dogs ha7e nearly all been gorged. [Great cheering.] The whole career of Anti-Lccompionism has been a career of triumph; we have driven those usurpers from one point to another; we compelled them to abandon their Leeouiptoti pe-licy; wo compelled them to abandon the English bill, and opp there is not a white mm running for in the North wiio dares avow himself iu favojf of tho policy of the Administration—not oneff [Cheers] Evon Mr. English has been compel led to abandon his own measure to save himself trcm defeat. They have been compelled to ad mit tho justice of our position, and that those who act with Mr. Haste in, and with the inde pendent Americans, Democrats and Republic cans through rut the Free States are right.— [Cheers.] Yet, what do we see? They have set a prioo on the head of Stephen A. Douglas of Illinois. They follow him as if he iitul com mitted soma dreadiul crime. A murderer, or] a man tainted with treason, could not bo more bitterly persecuted; and only because he has been true to principles that the Administration' hive failed to deny or controvert. Thp issues, however, between us and them remains. We are fighting the great battle of Popular Sover eignty. [Cheers.] That is the issue. They can not escape the reckoning. No Charleston Con vention will save them unless they come for ward und acuept the dootrine which they now repudiate. No power —no patronage can save thorn. 1 believe to-day, if the official vote had been stricken out, aud the people voted without interruption, there would not be 10,000 Dem ocrats in Pennsylvania n favor of the policy of the present Administration. [Cheers.] fleooe they, arc bound to submit to crushing defeat hereafter, or else come forwird and on bended knees accept the policy which we stand by to day. That is exactly the issue. lam well aware tint tbtw e in high stations in Washing ton and elsewhere ate felicitating themselves that those who act with tuc will be divided, and 1 know they are looking forward to the day when by means of packed conventions they shall get such nominations as they wish. But, gen tlemen, the day of independent men has ar rived [great cheering;] the time has conic when no nomination is biudiug that discards a great and imperishable principle. [Cheers.] I say further more, nnd say it deliberately, as one man speaking the sentiments of many thou-ands, that if the Do upcutie.jMx J .V desires sueaess in 18(50, tiiey must get rid ol this Administration at once and forever, [cheers,] it is iu the way. It stands in the pathway of progress; it belongs to the past; it is identified with the past, and if they undertake to oarry it along, it will be liko a healthy man carrying a putrid corpse upou his shoulders. [Cheers.] There is no rescue but in this policy—no deliverance hut in this course. Those who have been bopittg that Mr. Buchanan might come down without a popular decree, hope in v..iu. What cat; he do 1 Can he reeali his hounds now assailing Stephen A. Douglas without losing dignity! Can he fol low the example of Broekenridgo, who has had tho manliness to no,no forth and raise his hand in horror at this indecent proscription? No; for he is ho author of it! lie is worse than this, he is the author of the most .scandalous doc trine that has been promulgated i:t this country he dares tell us that the President is the Gov ernment. His motto is not liko that of Old Hickory, "The Union, it must and shall ho preserved," but "Tho Presiseut and his policy must and shall be sustained." It is in vain to hope that a man committed to a dogma, to a despotism, like this, can bo sustained by any party. He is iu the way. his men are in the way, and they must move off aud lot the groat train of Popular Sovereignty pass on without them. [Cheers.] I kuow such language may be regaided as treasonable, but it is time we understood each other. I say no nun iu Mr. Buchanan' . Hasbro.— [[Cries of we will,' and cheers.] As to the jptber Lecotnpton ticket which disgraces the ' namo of tho Democratic party, 1 trust it will I receive the fate which befei the Leejmpton tick bet in Pennsylvania. Ar.d finally, gentleinc-n, [let me say a word in behalf of Mr. ! 1 askin. — [ [Cheers.] Lot mc say to you, there have been [-wavering men; I have been in Washington aud se-n that lit tic column of Democrats who, du ring those times, stood around the ling of pop- Inlar sovereignty; there may have been some Who wavered, there may have been some that trembled, but your glorious Representative, never. [Tremendoui cheering.] No never! hjProlonged cheering.[ He never had a doubt; [in inspired confidence and courage in other*; [lie made those btdd and brave who were them selves timid. What he may do hereafter, is pact the qileation; he has done well in the past, Ifrust him f.r the future. Believe in him for pays that are to come, elect hiut and he will go n|o Washington; the proudest man iu all the I Free Status, except John Hickman. [Cheers.] j I thank you for the attention and kindness to ward me; and I promise yon, if ever my servi ! dips are needed, 1 shall come among you with pleasure, I trust, however, 1 may never be kieeded, lor I think this principle is so well es- that noboJy hereafter will fight it.— I hope you will do for us what we have done for •■jiA.. X. toki *(Jiat MM! would do, and that prediction has been fulfilled, now send us a line by lightning, telling us of your victory, and then wc shall be quits, at least for a lime. Cheer after ehecr resounded through the hall as Mr. Forney took his seat, closing by thrco [ rousing sheers "for John W. Forney." Til 13 LITEST ItOMAIICFi. i The Cincinnati Gazette gives au account of a i ease which occurred in that city recently, which, i as it says, sets an example for loving husbands ; that has no parallel on record, aud but for the criminal reality connected with : t, would throw the latest romance into obscuiity. It appears that the elder brother of a family residing at Naples, Italy, married a wife consid ' etaLly his junior, and she became the "old, man's darling." Like Melnotte, he'd "have |no friends that were not lover*," and with j pride lie pointed to his pretty wife, and made I her his idol, his temple of devotion, morning | and occning. Iu an evil hour a younger bro ! ther, Michael Angclo Gitto, looked with loving ! eyes upon his sister-iu-law, and she was won from her allegiance to her lord. Tho guilty pair made their escape to this country, bring ing wtih them a little daughter and leaving the husband and two little boys in their deserted Italian home. The brother lover aud his fair companion reached Cincinnati some mouths ago, and opened a confectionery store ou Main sires c. In time the husband learned their whereabouts, aud takiug his two motherless boys with him, he sailed for that city. He at onee sought out the guilty pair, and implored tho wife to return to her allegiauee, but to no purpose. Ho was rudely spumed by both wife and brother, and, as a last resort, tie had them arrested for adultery. Tho case was to come up before a Justice, but umtuil friends inter fered. Unlike the "Misanthrope," who feared the jeers of boys and girls, should they see him with his runaway wife upuu his arm, the cider Gitto, with tears coursing down his cheeks, be sought her on his knees to return with him to the sunny clime of Italy, aud make his home ouco moye a heaven of domestic peace. The scene was affecting ; the picture being rendered complete by the pleading looks aud tears of the little boys, who hsd accompanied the father in his long and tedious journey. There was a choice betwecu the penalty for adultery aud a husband's arms. The wife hesitated, the hus band pleaded,friends councelled obedience,and all combiucd, at length prevailed. Sho con sented to return to Italy with her husband.— The guilty brother agreed to pay the costs aud lawyer's fees, the husband took his runaway wife upon his arm, and his children by the bund, and left the court so overjoyed with his recover ed treasure that he actually kissed the hands of a ftiend who had beeu mainly instrumental iu bringing about a consummation of his happiuess under such peculiar circumstances. Borneo is, next to Australia, the largest is land in the world. Its length is 800 miles, its breadth 700. It contain* a population of three millions of people. It has in part.*, though crossed by the equator, a European climate, and is more fertile than Australia. Mirabeau said that silence is the most clo queut lesson that, cau be giveu by subjects to their rulers. Wc arc not disposed to question the general truth of this apothegm, but we think tho loud talk of Pennsylvania last week had its eloquence as well as fore o.— Louisville Journal. ESfiLISH GWAMM4H. THK Comic Gramcr says : Hut remember, though box In the plural makes boxes, The plural of ox .So till bo oveu, not oxes. To which an exchange paper aids : And remember, though fleece In the plural is fleeces, That the plural ot goose Aren't gooses nor gnoses. We may also be permitted to a.ld And remember, though-house • In theplural is houses, The plural o. mouse Should be mice- und not mouses, Philadelphia Gazette. All of which, goes to prove That grammar a farce, is , For where is the plural Of rum and tool isues i NCJ: York Guzttte. The plural, Gazette, Of rum don't us trouble ; Take one giass too much And you're sure to see double. Tirooklyn Daily .advertiser. I A pair ot blue eyes— Just to vary the strain— Says theplural of kiss, Is—"to do it again !" Howard County Sentinel. The Berks Revolution, A frieud hands us the following letter, re ceived from the old stronghold of Democracy, as it is called, ike day after the election, it i decidedlv good : HEADQUARTERS "Au.MV OF PROTECTION," \ ' October 13, 1858. j .My Dear Misguarded Friend 1 drop you a line, this morning, to let yon koow that the two iloops passed Reading last night, for the head waters of the Salt , heavily laden with Scotch Pipes, having on board a large number of widows and orphans , who, it is rumored, in tend founding an Asylum for the Heroes of Lecotnpton iu that desirable locality. Not "seeing "you ou board, I hasteneu to give you the interesting information that they passed here in safety. Although having a Broom on board, their decks were dirty and filthy. It is feared that they will have a short allowance of fish, aa their Reeds were all broken. At this place they took on board the Rev. Jehu Glancy Jones, who will officiate as Chaplain for the party. The Citadel of Democracy, "Old Berks," was yesterday stormed and : :ken. Major John Schwartz, the People's candi date, is elected over J. Glancy JOIK-S. Scotch Water Pipes, yesterday, sunk Owen Jones' craft. Hereafter lie will, it is hoped, only take u U'ood" ou board. OLD BERKS. THOUGHT A BEAUTIFIER.—A writer in the Home Journal thinks that mental activity tcuds to keep the body young : Wo weie speaking of handsome men the other evening, and I was ivonuc-ring why K. had so lost the beauty for which, five years ago, he was famous. "O, its because ho never did any thing," said )J. ; "ho never worked, thought, suffered. You must have tho mind chiseling away at the features, if you want handsome middle aged man." Since hearing that remark, 1 have been on the watch at the theatre, opera unu other places, to see whether it is generally true, and it is. A handsome row who does nothing but cat and drink, grows flabby, and tho fiuo lines of his features are lost ; but the hard thinker has an admirable sculptor at work, keeping his fine lines in repair, and constantly going over his faco to improve the original de sign. YOUNG AMERICA IN CALIFORNIA.—We clip from the Sierra (California) Democrat the following account of soiue boys living in Dow nieville, Sierra county, who bad gone upon a swimming frolic: "Two of them had a quarrel, and tho larger ono said something about whipping tho other. This was retorted to by u uotioe from the smal ler one not to touch him. The larger boy, however, pitched in, when the other drew a knife aud cut him iu the left shoulder, iufliot ing a large and daugerotis wound. lie cut again aud struck the left fore-arm jn the fleshy part, cleaving it to the boue, and severing the artery. He however, managed to totter to town, and, just as be bad reached the doctor's office, fainted and fell from loss of blood,which had streamed from him for over half a mile.— Tho wounds, however, were not fatal. SOUR GRAPES. —Judge Porter, in his naive let tor of resignation, sayr, with au air redo lent of tho sourest sort of sour grapes: "Certainly, I ought to regard it UP hardship to exchange for the comtwrts of homo, that wuudcriug life which the law of Pennsylvania compels her Judges to lead." But tho marvel is, Judge, that yon never found out the hardships of this wandering life until the people of Pennsylvania voted to have | nothing more to do with you ! DANGEROUS GROUND. —Wc sco that are uowned fire-eater, in Florida, recently pienched a sermon to prove that "Africans have no souls." Ho hud better be careful. How cau ho oxpcct his disciples to consent to go to heaven if they can liopo to have uo ruggers there? — Loimvitle Journal. V ° 45. "THE QUAKER VOTE."—The Bogie:— * nal says tho long tuisssing vote in PcnnsyiT iii i has boon heard from. It is blow, but sure when it cornea. "Wo welcome the loug expected Quaker vote. We missod it in October, 1856, and vainly looked for it in the coming Novoatber. Our Quaker frieriG3 are never fast, but they are famous for holding on when they come. \Yc should judge, by the returns, that the monthly meetings must be in a very flourishing condi tion iu Berks county." *' THE TARIFF AND THE DEMOCRACY.—The Richmond South has an article on the subject of 'duties on iron,' iu which it takes bold ground against the cherished policy of its al lies in Pennsylvania, uird informs theui that they shall receive no aid from the universal Democracy. It adds: '•lf wo know anything of Democracy, tho party will Eof, for a moment, eulerUin a propo sition to impose additional duties on iron." The Mayor of Washington,a Buchanan flun key, rfeused to allow tie Opposition to fire ono hundred guus, within the city limits, over the defeat of the Administration in Pennsylvania, If Buchanan's friends had carried tha State, they might have fired guns at every strcot cor ner, and the Mayor would have applauded them for so doing. The hundred guns were fired just outside tho city limits. Old Buck hoard them jar tho marble walls of the White House. THE DAST CARD.—The Berks county Re turn Judges showed a disposition to throw out the returns from one of the wards in Reading, and thus to return Giauey Jones again to Congress; but the popular indignation was so great that they were compelled to adhero to tho law, and to announce tho election of Schwartz by nineteen majority. This great victory over this Janus-faced politician and professional Presidential diuner-gourmand, was received by the people of Berks, without distinction of party, with almost phrensied shouts of delight. THOSE SCOTCH PlPES.—According to a cor respondeat of the Washington (Juion, tho Penn sylvania election had no refer re nee whatever to the President's Lecempton policy,or to the gen eral jlineiples of Mr. Buchanan's Cabinet. It was the Scotch water pipes which did all tho mischief! The "iron interest," lie says, was ex asperated beyond bearing by that unlucky con tract. causing the overthrow of the Democracy. There is no philosophy like that which search es out the cause of tbimgs.—.A. Y. Times. AN IRON HEART.—A Pennsylvania cor respondent of the New Turk Herald talks pa thetically abuut the President's tender sensi bilities. lie says that, "when Mr. Buchanan beholds tha ingratitude of old friends, the iron enters Ids heart." Wo presume that such a quantity of iron Las by this time entered the old gentleman's heart, that tho whole organ is nothing but iron. LARGE CASTINGS.—TweIve cast iron columns said to bo the largest in the Uuited States are now in process of construction at Ciucinnatti. They aie each 50 feet in height, four feet two inches in diameter, weigh between 200 and 300 tons, and will cost about $BO,OOO. They are designed for the Stato House, Madison Wis. Death has at last divided the oldest pair in the U. States. Mrs. Ludwies Snyder died a few days siuee in Burnside township, Clearfield county, Pa., at the age of one hundred and eight. Her husband, who is one hundred and twelve years old survives her. The Southern Democratic papers are as witty over the elections as brevity can make them.— They dispatch them in two or three lines, think ing "the least said the soonest meuded-" Lou. Jour. James Boon, aged about 85 years, au inmate of the Poor House at Kinstou, Linoir co., N. C., with his family, consisting of a wife and three children, it is said, has iuherited a hand some estate, amounting to $150,000. 'My dear Madam,' said a doctor to Lis pa tient,'l am truly gratified to see you yet iu life. At my last visit, you know, I said you had but .-ix hours to live.' 'Yes, doctor, you did, but I did uoc take the dose you left inc.' EPITAPH FOR A VERY HONEST MAN. An honest fellow here is laid, llis debts iu full ho always {paid; And what's more rare bis neighbors tell us, He sent back borrowed umbrellas. Enjoy the blessings of this day, if God sends them ; and the evils hcur patiently and sweetly. For this day only is ours ; wa are dead to yesterday, and we are not born to-morrow. — Jeremy Taylor. A man hearing of another who was a hun dred years old. said contemptuously : —"Pshaw! what u fuss about nothing ! Why if my graud i mother was alive, she would now bo a hundred j and fifty years old." The Olympiau games, after being discoutin i ucd for fifteen hundred years, arc re-catabiish ed at Athans, in tho uuciert Stadium, by a do | creo of the Quuou Regent of Greece. I An excbungii says that the Indian Chief i Billy Bowlegs, is culled by fashionable ludier i William Cruikslinnks.