BY DAVID OVER. THE INQITIIIE3K. It published every Friday morning, in Juliana Street, in the white frame building, nearly opposite the Mongol House, by DAVID OVER. TER3TS: If raid in advance, $1.50; within the year, $2.00* and if not paid within the year, $2.50 will be charged. No paper discontinued until all ar iearages arc paid—except at the option of the Editor. A failure to notify a discontinuance will i-u regarded as a new engagement. jdnriiseniihls not exceeding a square,(lo lir.es,) inserted three times for sl— every subsequent in seriion, 25 cents. Longer ones iu the same pro portion. Each fraction of a square counted as a full square. All advertisements not specially ordered for a given time w ill be conti jued until forbid. A lilieral deduction will be made to those who advertise !>y the year. Job Printing of all k;nd3 executed neatly and promptly -and on reasonable terms. P.R 0 F £ S SIGNAL (J A 11 Da. Ross FORWJLUD. 0.11. GAITHEB. Forward & K&itbor* ATTORNEYS AT LAW, Bedford, I'a ROSS FORWARD, Of Somerset, and O. H. GAITHER, have opened a law office in Bed ford, Pa. O. H. GAITHER, having located per manently in Bedford, will be assisted during every Court by the former. All business entrusted to them will be promptly and carefully attended to. Office on Juliana street, two doors south of the In quirer office. Dec. 81, 1858. J.SELBY MOW EE, ATTORNEY AT LAW. Bedford, Pa., WII.L attend promptly to all business entrust ed to bis care. Office on Pitt Street one door 'Vest of the '•Union Hotel." June 10, 1859 -tf RTDTBA RCLAY. ATTORNEY AT LAW, BEDFORD, PA., WILL attend promptly and faithfully to all legal business entrusted to his care. on Juliana Street, in the building for merly occupied by S. M. Barclay, Esq., dee'd. March 20,1858. Win. €. LOGAN, ATTORNEY AT LAW. McCONNELLSBURG, PA. 117 ILL practicn in the Courts of Fulton, Bediotu W and Franklin Counties. on Main Street, opposite S peer's Hotel. September 3, 1858. JOB MANN, G. 11. SPANG. a AW" PARTNERSHIP.—The undersigned IJ . a associated themselves in the Praticc of tireLaw,and willprotnptly attend to al busi ness entrusted to their care in Bedford and ad joining counties. on Julianna Street, three doors south ot.Mengel oHuse and opposite the resi dence ofMaj. Tate. MANN & SPANG June 1,-1854. tf. D. S. RIDDLE, Formerly of Bedford, Pa. Attorney and Counsellor at LaJ. ■*4, WALL ST. NEW YORK. All business promptly atonded to. Dec. 3, 1858. " J. W. LINCENFIILTERr Attorney at Law and Land Sarveyor, WILL attend with promptness to all business entrusted to bis care. Will practice in Bedford and Fulton Counties. DSf-Office one door We at of the Usian Hotel. Dec, 24,1858. ef.G&,tfn, G£ 3?a:"zsioi^sr AND ? SCHELLSBUKG, PENN'A. OFFERS his services to the Public in the prac tice of Mcftic'ne. AViil attend promptly to all ca ses entrusted to his care- He will aiso perform all operations on the teeth iu a neat and scientific manner. Teeth plugged and inserted from a single tooth to An Entire Set, Mounted on gold or silver plate, on the latest and most approved principles. TEPM3 moderate , aud all operations warranted. April 8,1859.—tf.' f isifipo*! I ! W:i! stUci T-unctcwlly cwefuilv to all operation m- tJ! ; , -,k lt > a*4 c+f T. v.h plugs*-1. *., aal J It . i.TiittJ Wf'lh futarUd, from ni" to au ftUrw sot. ' Charges oarvtwnaie, w.U a'.! cpmtiuM wurriaki. tJT Terms INVARIABLY CASH. •| Oflk- on Em: IV-l street, Bcdfor.l, F*. v: .- goons. I met, between Bridger aud Ham's Fork, a considerable force of Dragoons going down. .Lett us briefly consider ibe history aud pcsi tiou of this little Army. Iu the former half of 1857, it was concen trated iu Kansas; late iu that year, the sever al regiments composing it were put in march toward the Rocky Mountains. The Morm -ns full sooa learned that i: was to to launched against them, and at once prepared to rive it a warm reception; the Army had no inform ation on the subject, save general reoort.— Detained in Kansas to give effeat to Gov. Walker's electioneering quackeries, it was at length sent on its way at a season too late to allow it to reach Salt Lake before winter. No commander was sent with if; Gen. Harney was announced as its chief, bat Las not yet over, joined it. It was thus dispatched on u long and difficult expedition, iu detach incuts, with out a chief, without oryers, without any clear idea of its object or destination. Enter ing (Jtah thus as no army, but as a number c separate, straggling dotatchments, neither of which was ordered to protect tuo supply trains which followed one or two marches behind thorn, they had iho mortification to loam, about the Ist of Ocfober,jthat those supply trains, without even an armed corporal's guard in their vicinity, had been surprised and burnt by a Mormon band, who thus in effect made war on the United States. Indignantly, but still without a leader and without definite orders, the army struggled ou to iiridger, 113 miles front Salt Lake, which the Mormons abandon ed on iis approach. lltidgcr is many thousand feet above the sea level; and the ground was here so buried in snow that its gaunt animals died by hundreds, and the residue wcro unable to drag the baggage over the rivers and steep mountains which still separated it from Salt Lake. So the regiments halted, built huts to shelter themselves from the winter's inclemen cy, and lived through the snowy season as they might on a half allowance of their lean, gtis- Iy animals, without salt. fepring at length came; the day, long hoped and impatiently waited for, when they could advance, arrived; they had been promised a warm reception in the narrow defiles of Echo Canon by Lieut. Gen. Wells and hia Mormon host, and thoy eagerly courted that reception. If Gen. Wells wcra able, aa he boasted, to send BEDFORD. PA., FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 23, 1859. them to the right about, they would have noth ing to do bat to go. They had grown rusty from inaction, and stood ready to bo polished, even by so rough an implement as Leu. Well. Bui news came that the whole affair had been somehow arranged—that Col. Kane, Brigham Young aud Gov. Camming had fixed matters so that there would be no fighting —not even further train burning. Yet the Mormons fled from Gait Lake City iu anticipation of their entering it; tboy were required by the civil power to encamp as far from the Mormon set tlements as possible; and they have ever a;uco been treated by tho Federal Executive as tho' they had cuius hero on their own motion, in de fiance of, rather than in obedience to that Ex ecutive's owu orders. Whether truly or falsely, this array, proba bly without an individual exception, undoubt iugly believes tho Mormons as a body to be traitors to the Unlay and its Government, in tent on ostablisbing.heru a power which siutll be at first independent of and ultimately dom inant over that of tho United States. They believe that the" ostentations, defiant refusal of Brigham Y'oung, iu 1857, to surrender tho Ter ritorial Governorship, and his declaration that he would bold that post until God Almighty should tell him to give it up, were but the na tural development cf a policy which looks to the subjugation of ail earthly kingdoms, states, empires sovereignties, to a rule nominally the oretic, but practically autocratic, with Brigham Young or his designated successor as de-pot. — They hold that the instinct of self-preserva tion, the spirit of that requirement oi the Fed eral Constitution which enjoins that each .State shall be guaranteed a republican form of Gov ernment, cry oat against such a despotism, and demand its overthrow. The army uudoabtingly and universally be lieves that Mormonisiu is, at, least on the part of the master spirits of "tho Church," aa - ,r ' ganized, secret, treasonable conspiracy to ex tend 'he power, increase the wealth, and grat ify the lecherous appetites of those loaders, who arc using the torms and terms of religion to mask and shield systematic adultery, perjury, counterfeiting; robbery, treason, and oven wur der. It points to the wholesale massacre at Mountain Meadow-, the murder of the Parishes, and a hundred more sucb, as iflftfcaaees of Mor mon assassination for the good of the Church, the f*u;ei of >•. C c aggran dizement of its leading members—to the nil possibility of bringing the perpetrators of these crimes to Justice, to the Territorial laws of Utah which empower Mormon functionaries to sel.-ct the Grand and Petit Jurors even for the United Glares Courts, and impose quakdeo tiona which in effect secure the exclusion of ail but Mormons from the Jury box, and to the uniform refusal of those jurors to iuaiet or con vict those who have committed crimes in the interest of Morinonkm,* as proof positive the.; all attempts to punish Momma criminals by Mormon jurors and officers must ever prove abortive, -and demand* of the Federal Govern ment that it .shall devise and put ia execution souse remedy for this unbearable impunity to ori:ue. It is uniformly believed in camp that not less than seventy-Jive distinct ins usees or murder by the Mormons because of apostacy, or some other form of hostility to the Church, or mainly for the fake of plunder, are known to the authorities here, and that there :J no shadow of hope that one of the perpetrators will ever ho brought to justice under the sway of Mormon <, p°l'td ar sovereignty" as now es tablished iu il.is Territory. The army, there for; . turns an anxious eye to Washington, and strains its car to hear what remedy in to he ap plied. Manifestly, too recent responses from that quarter are net calculated to a.lay this anxiety. The official rebuke recently and publicly given to the- Federal Judges here, for employing de tachments of troops to arrest aud hold securely Mormons accused <>f capital crime, elicits mutterinus of elk, satisfaction from some, with a grave silence be the part of many whom dss cipliuo restrains fretn speaking. As the re cent orders from Washington are understood bote, no employ:.-cot of Federal troops to ar rest cr secure persons charged with or even convicted of crime is allowed, even convicted of crime is allowed, except wkero the civil power (intensely Mormon) shall have ccrtiflod that the execution of process is resisted by a force which it cannot evcrcoioo by moans of a civil posse, ilow tppv ito thi* is to the orders given and obeyed in the fugitive slave cases ai Boston, &c., need hardly be indicated. Very general, then, is the inquiry in tbo ar my, why were we soot here? and why are we kept Lore? what good can our remaining do? what mischief cau it prevent? A fettered, sus pected, watched, distrusted army— au army which roust do nothing—mast not even bo ask ed to do aiiytliiiig in any probable contingency —what purposs does it subserve beyond en riching the con traotors aud the Mormon mag nates at its own cost and that of the Federal Treasury? Every article eaten, drank, worn, or iu any niaanor bought by the soldiers, costs three to ten times its value in the States; part of this extra cost falls on the Treasury, the re sidue ou the troops iudividaally. Their posi tion hero ia an irksomo one; their comforts few; houio, family, friends arc far away. If the policy now pursued is to prevail, they oau rot be needed in this Territory. Why, then, are they kept here? Brigiiam Young will cou tract, and make money by contracting, to put down all resistance to this policy at one tenth the cost of keeping tho aruiy here; why, then, not withdraw it. 1 have nut so bad an opinion of the Mormoua *Ju igo Uradlobaugb asserts that ou the list of Jurors recently imposed on him for the in vestigation at Frovo of the Farish aud other murders, he knows thcro wore cot loss than nine leading participants iu those murders. f ;n;That eaijtrlaincd by tho artny: while I eoa, ! si|sr She Mormon religion, so called, a delu sijh and a blight, f believe many of its de void adherents, including most of those I have u, to be pure minded, well-meaning people; iSo not believe that Mormons generally de light ia plunder or murder, though the testi mony in tho Mountain Meadows, Farnsb, arid c|p or two other cases, is certainly staggering. af- I concur cutireiy iu the conviction "of the ..by, that there is no use in its retention here •Aider existing orders and circumstances, and Hist three or four companies of dragoons would j -&wer every .purpose of this large and costiy ueentration uf troops. The army would cost iess almost anywhere'else, aud could not any- I wSeie bo less useful. A suspicion that it is kept hero to answer . private pecuniary ends is widely en Un tamed ;ai re-. It is kucwu that vatrt sums have boon , made out of its transportation by fivorea ooa tfjelora. Take a single instance already no- , , tiiiOus: Twenty n/o cents pec pound is paid Tjv the tra.importation oi ail provisions ciuai- : -ibna, &e., from Leavenworth to this point.?—i ''ho great contractors were allowed this for j vpacsporsiag this year's supply of flour. By a . little ■ dextereas management at Washington, I they were next allowed to furnish tbeliour ..ere, being paid their twenty two cents per pound for transportation, in "addition to the I prime cost on the Missouri. As Utah Las a Wttcr soil for growing wheat than almost any i tatag vise, they Lad no d'fScuity :n sub-letting tow contract at seven ecu is per pound net, ma : clear profit of 170,000 on tho eocttaot, vtt aoi-.t ritr ;g a •luii. cor Fifths,-• a fiaeor.— Of ee.urse, 1 cxpeet eon tractors / bargain for ; not i >r tuc goversuient: but tome body is well paid for taking care of the public's interest in such matters. Has he done his ' duty? ; Again: Pursuant to a recent order from Wash ington, the AsstSfems Quarteruiasfor-Qcne.al | here i- now selling by auction some TsvoThoa axnd Muieq— about two thirds of all iho Gov ernment u'.vus in this Territory. These tuules ! toJt vi7s each, aud are worth to-day $125 to f 100. i attendee! tho saie fcr an hour or so this .ore.ncoa; tho range of prices vraa from $OO to 115: the average of the 700 already sold j | about siO. 11 ad these tnuico been taken to : arnir. and there prop;.: iy udver-'ised aud; they wo - ;d '.avu brought nearly cost; eveu 'i ;ti hSij &uu! aavo jwdd fa-fet least | $lOO,OOO more than here, where t here i prac- I tieally no demand and no competition for soc'u j au tuuiuecso nerd; aud, after every Mortucu who j can tiiuo i auudicd dollars or ever shall have 1 supplied irimSel;: with a span of mules for half tueir value, oco or two speculators will make as much as they please, while the dead loss to tho People will be at .east $200,000. Nobody here uas recommended the sate ot these mules; they were being horded, under ho carc of do- , I iachments of the Army, a: no cost hut for here - ! men, and they Cculd have tecii kept through ■ next e iutcr in seuiuded luouutari varices at a i cost ot about -v -0 per head; whereas, tho Army i can never move without purchasing a c-oual ; number; and they can neither he "nought here | nor brought here for $200,000 move than these ! f animals arc DOEV fetching. Somebody's interest j is .-iib.-erve l ..a this . -lc, but it is certainly not that of the Anuy nor of the People. The or- i der is .o soil seven hundred wagons as well, ! but these would not btiug $3O each, while they ! cost at least $l3O, aud cutnJ nut be replaced • when wanted even for that, wbiie the Army can- ' not move wituout tuem, aud it-...ipiug them co.-.s absolu'.ely nutbiag. Who issues each orders | as this, and for whose benefit? Look el another feature of thi3 transaction : There is at this moment a large amount duo to officers aud soldiers of this Army as pay, iu sums of §*U to SjioUO cacti, - l iny of tnosc to whom this money is due would very much like to take mules iu peri payment, either to use while here, to sell again, c-r to boar them and their baggage to California, or back to too Missouri on the approaching expiration of thssr terms of enlistment. In many iaslaoces, two soldiers would doubtless eiuo to buy a inulti on which to pack their blankets, fee., whenever their time is out. Hundreds of mules would thus have been bought, and the proceeds of the sala oottsideraiy augmented, if the Government, by its functionaries, had consented to receive its own honest debts in pay meat. JBut ao ! on some ridiculous protease of ill-blood betwecu the Fay and the Subsistence bureaux of tbo War Department, this is refused—it would be too much trouble to lake certideatoa of soidic-rs, pay actually due iu payment for these mules ; so the officers aud eoiuicr* must purchase of speculators at double price or go without, aad the mules be sold for far less then they woula have brought if those who must have the in bad boon enabled to bid directly for them. Two or three speculators reap a harvest here at the sore cost of the soldiers aud the Treasury. But it will be said that Forage is dour iu Utah. It would suffice to answer that idle mules obtuiu it, save iu Winter,only growing en tbo Public Lands, which may a* well be eaten iu part by Government mules as all by those of the Mormon squatters. But let us see hovj it costs so much. There Las recently been re ceived here thirty thousand bushels of con. from the States ut a net cost, including trans portation, of §310,000, or over §ll per bush el. No requisition was ever uia.it: for this Coru, which could have been bought Lore, de livered, for §2 per bushel, or §60,000 iu a:i. The dead loss to the Treasury in ibis Corn is ; §280,000, even supposing that the service re i quired it at ail. Somebody makes a good iking uf wagoning this Coru from the Missouri at ' over §lO per bushel. Who believes that said i somebody has not influential aud thrifty con nections inside of the War Department f I will not pursue this exposition : Congress may. —Lot me now give a sample of ilofreneh oicnt in •he' il aMie service in this quarter : The mall from Missouri to Salt Lake has hitherto been carried weekly in good aix-tnule wagons ; the contract time being twenty-two days. The importance of frequent and regular | communication with bead-quarters, at least so long as a large Army is retained here at a heavy extra cost, and because of soma presumed pub lie necessity, is evident. Yes tha new Post master-General has cut down the Mail Service on this important central route from weekly to Hewi-taont Ay. But the contractors, who arc obliged to run their stages weekly because of their passenger business,'at. 1 because they have to keep their stock and pay their men whether they work or - lay, find that they cannot carry the Mail c .cry other week so cheaply as they can every week. For instance ; A mail front too F.sUd now often consists of twelve to sixteen heavy sacks (most of them filled with Irm..:cd doi-umcuis), weighing as many hundred pounds. Double this, aud no six-mule team would draw it at the requisite pace, and no b&ggago wagon stand the jerks and jolts of an unmade road. $o they say, "Please let us | carry the .Mail weekly, though you only pay us j for carrying it souii-moutbly." But no! this ii strictly forbidden ! The Postmaster at Salt I Lake has express written orders to refuse it, i and of course he at Sc. Joseph also. Aud thus all ibis central region, embracing at least a dozen important Military posts and countless ludi.ru Agencies, is reduced to semi-monthly mail service, though the contractor would glad ly make it weekly at the same price! ' 11. G. biota the „V. Y. Tribune. Banteriug with Baiikrupley. It is not doubted that a prodigious amount of ] urapdy may ho put inside of a man's ekia.— Itov. livs and shoulder-hitters hae occasionally : varied iheir recreative belligerencies by wagers to 3tie the quatiima. It has been proved iu j U.vnrt—at least it has there been sworn to — that- a man may swallow sixty pints of lager beer in a day, and yet live; Those who ive wag i erud oa the Brandy generally died of it. A ; ourieit of anything, however, guod / may produce j deaih incontinently, in such case it is uot the j thing that kills, but tho sat few. Home Tooke, ! in the days of Junius, being suspected of the i authors;,ip of those pangeufc missives, was ask ; how mueh treas a a uiau could write with r,er being hanged, w which he replied that he | was just then trying. I; would seem from this ; fcMtul oi human temerities that there is no rash ness too great to be indulged in. Obristophc, the black Etapcror of Hayti, used to say that if he were to pHeo a bag of coffao in the jaws | Lcli, a Yankee would quickly be round to go after it. People crowd, to witness Blondin cross Niagara on a tight rope because tucy have a I sneaking expectation that t: cy may see him hrc;;2 h •. neck. Like those who wger on the i the chances are that ho will keep ou till he does so. It strikes us that the peopio of this count!y are all wagering with each other to see how groat au amount of foreign iron, cloth, and silk and finery they can import and use up without : breaking. VV ageriug of this kind is uot by any : aieaus a new thing with them. They did it s;gclyju-t afier the peace of ISIS, and it burst : their boiiets so hopelessly that one half of them : uevr-r recovered from the explosion. The war | buil; up our cotton manufacture to a home con ; sumption of one bale tor cveiy tour that were ! grown, wbiie the woolen manufacture at that | var'y day employed nc less than $12,000,000 o: capital, and farmers had a dome mo market i>r food better than thoy had ever had. Shut ting out foreign goods- sent dour up to an aver age of §3. and pgrk to ouc of §l5 daring the whole war. Peace came, and while it opened miual markets abroad fur our food, is do3iroy vd the real one at homo created by nunufao ores, by flooding as with foreign fabrics. On tbo iieol c this deluge came the Act of ISIS, which repealed the iiltlc protection that rcmain cd, and Trca Trade became rampant. A na tional bankruptcy was the result. Labor ceas ed to ho iu demand, because the manufactures wore ruined; wheat sunx to 37 cents, and in many parts of the country to 20 Cents per bush el, while flour wont down to §1 25 per barrel. The farmers iu tucir turn wore ruined by thou sands. Thcv had foolishly consort ed .c gvo up a lioiua market for a foreign one, the price of tun exchange being tie rila of the manu facturers, a., if the fortnor cuuid iivo after the latter Lad been destroyed. The country of cou.c .est its ability to consume the goods which had made it bankrupt, and the imports sunk from ninety million* to Sfty milltous. The country was cleaned out of iu specie, Leak rags were seen everywhere, aad specie no where. la aio3t wagers, somebody secures au advan tage: but in this n-tioml ouc everybody made a loss. We therefore quit wagering,after try ing its virtue some six years, as i; was found that cotton at 7 cents, pork and beef at §S a barrel, and hams at C cents, didn't pay. Farm ers couldn't pay their debts at those prices, just as many of them arc unable to do it DOW. thoy rose up aud required that the labor of the nation—not tho mcro employers who owned forges and factories, hut the man who did the | work in them—should be protected from this | deluge of foreign fabrics. This was iu 182-t. | The country immediately sprang forward on a | career of high prosperity. The labor ef the I nation,, being fully employed and well paid, i was ag-ia able to eousume whatever the farmer ( produced, aud ho found prices to be con.-tatitly going up. Laud rose even above its former value, and this rise, added to tho uuuual proiit o! tho crops, cleared off thousands of debts in cvoiy State, liut the oid leaven of wagering to sec how much foreign siulfs we could use up without breaking, returned on us in full force at tue end of ten years. We had had good times long enough. .Money flowed in upon us ifrom abroad, lb aa'.tca v-.m ,-ut of debt, eve- VOL. 32, NO. 39. rybody was getting rich, and the complaint u that those who worked in forges and factories were making more than their share. The farm er* were told that Europe would buy wheat and pork at better prices, and they again fell into the trap by ietting in foreign food, worked up into cloth and silk and iron, to an extent that onee mora laid the manufacturers on their becks. Then followed an era of good times for lawers and sheriffs, diversified with an ox plosion i. f ail the banks in 1837, and as abso lute an extinction of hundreds of mitlions of capital es if it had been swa'ied up by fire.— The coin of the country flowed out as fa3t ha it could be gathered up, the Government li7ed by shinplastors— jast as it i. doing now; pubiie and private credit were extinguished, and the farmers found the prices of wheat and pork knocked down to one-half. Nobody gained by the wager but the rich, and only a few of tlicw. They became richer while the poor became poorer. This infatuation lasted till 1842, when the farmers thought they had kept the manofactu iors down long enough, and BO again set them on their legs. The country rose up from its sackcloth and ashes as if touched by the magician's wand. Baukrupt States were quick* !y enabled to resume payment, the banks came back into the cash line, old factories and fur naces were again active, while in any new ones were bni'.t, railroads were opened, canals dug, the prostrate West weut bounding onward in a new career of prosperity, and instead of an export of all our specie, an influx of forty millions of dollars within five years established credit, both national and private, on a basis that would have remained solid to this day, had act the old infatuation returned to plague us. The impulse giveu to all forms of human in dustry was prodigious. Iron rose from a home production of two hundred thousand tuns, iu 1842, to eight hundred thousand tuns, in 1b46, while coal, iu the same period, increased its paoductioa from one million two hundred ncd fifty thousand to over three million tabs. The men who mmcd this coul and smelted this iron were uh the wbiic consuming the flour and pork which they kept the tarmora busy in raising, atid as they uiado good wages so they paid good pi ices. Agriculture again prospered, farms went up iu price, and th country was not ouly gcttiog out of debt, but getting rich. A home market for our food was again proved to be the beat. .. .. : uese facts are all historical. Yet, in the face of ihciu, we began ta 1846 the old wagering as to how much foreign merchandise we could con oaae without becoming bankrupt. The banter bus bc.u continued c-vcr since, and is going on wiiile we w.ite. Some oue has said that a nsw generation of fools couics up every three years, and others, that iliey never dia. At this rate of conversion, uad with the sigu3 of ibe times around us, we invoke the small sprinkling of wise beads among us to ci pL'ei out the mental status of tiia nation three years hence, unless a sharp turn is made in our career. A scveu ye.uV itch cf low prices has manifestly begun among the farmers. Nobody opens coal initios, or builds new factories, white nose who own railroads are sick uuto death of tn'-'m. Wheat has fallen enormously since New dear's, and the fall has made more than one man a beggar. As the new crop couies for ward, :t must fail still more, until it goes low enough to undersell the English market, other wise it will remain here. As long as this in sane wagering is persisted in, the process of a general flattening out will go uu. We may uour cp longer now loan aioreuaie, because we novo the ID lues of California to lean upon.— "i :m tnuiiohs she produces merely pass in tran situ through our mints to Europe. Every dollar of if is anticipated before it reaches as, pledged to pay for foreign food. Where should we be if it could be kept among us ? "lUE DDMB iIUTCH.' 5 iron. YV a. 11. Wiltc, e: Philadelphia, who is ?pokea of by the Lceouiptoaitcs as their can d.uato for Governor, recently addressed his po litical brethren :a West Chester. Daring tho course of hi, speech, he indulged in the follow ing liber-i remarks, which will be properly ap i reciaied by that eiass of our fellow citizens for whom they are iuten led—all of whom aro expected to vote the Democratic ticket. Mr. Wit to said: -ila ridiculed the iwoa of protecting natu ralized citizens who owed any iiind of service in Europe. \Ue vjppesiuuu u~