THE HUNTINGDON GLOB A DEMOCRATIC FAMILY JOURNAL, DEVOTED TO LOCAL AND GENERAL NEWS, &C. THE GLOM. Circulation—the largest in the county GLIIMITTBKICIM 22. Viredoesday, November 17, 1858. B LANKS I BLA.I! CONSTABLE'S SALES, ATTACIPT EXECUTIONS, ATTACHMENTS, EXECUTIONS, SUMMONS, DEEDS, SUBPCENAS, MORTGAGES, SCHOOL ORDERS, JUDGMENT NOTES. LEASES FOR HOUSES, NATURALIZATION WKS, COMMON BONDS, JUDGMENT BONDS, ARRANTS, FEE BILLS, NOTES, with a waiver of the $3OO Law. JUDGMENT NOTES, with a waiver of the $3OO Law. ARTICLES OF AGREEMENT, with Teachers. MARRIAGE CERTIFICATES, for Justices of the Peace and Ministers of the Gospel. COMPLAINT, WARRANT, and COMMITMENT, in case of Assault and Battery, and Affray. SCIEItE FACIAS, to recover amount of Judgment. COLLECTORS' RECEIPTS, for State, County, School, Borough and Township Taxes. Printed on superior paper. and for sale at the Office of the HUNTINGDON GLOBE. BLANKS, of every description, printed to order, neatly, at short notice, and on good Paper. ger' READ THE NEW ADVERTISEMENTS Gov. PACKER has issued his proclama tion announcing the election ofJOIIN M. REED as Judge of the Supreme Court of Pennsyl vania, for fifteen years from the first Mon day of December nest. DAVID S. EVANS, of Allegheny city, who so brutally murdered his wife in May last, has been found guilty of murder in the first degree, by the Court of Allegheny county. He still declares his innocence. THE EXCHANGE HOTEL.—CoI. T. K. SIMON TON, the well known Ticket and Freight Agent of the Central Company at this place for several years, takes the "Exchange Hotel" on the first of December. " Thad " will make a tip-top landlord, and will keop a tip top house. Eqr- We are informed that our talented young friend, REV. JOHN D. BROWN, preached an excellent sermon, in the Methodist Church, on Sunday morning last, to a large and re spectable audience. We hope he may be successful in his good undertaking, and be the instrument in the hands of God, of bring ing many souls to repentance. May his mis sion on earth be long and profitable, both to himself and the church to which he belongs. Ssow.—Last Sunday. night, we had quite a fall of snow. Monday morning, on arising from our bed, we were no little surprised when we beheld about two inches of as pure white snow as we ever saw. By evening, however, there was nothing of it to be seen, except a. spot here and there. At present writing, (Tuesday morning,) the weather is raw and cold, and the clouds present every appearance of more snow. TITANKSGIVING.—To-morrow is the day set apart by the Governor, as a day of praise and thanksgiving to God. We hope our merchants, mechanics, and business men gen erally, will suspend operations on that day, and unite in offering up thanks to Him who has and still watches over us during the many trials and temptations which daily occur to us all. We learn that the different congre gations of this.place, propose holding a Union Meeting in the Presbyterian Church, which all are respectfully invited to attend. Ser vices to commence at the second ringing of the bell. Legal Tender. Some people are at a loss to know what is a legal tender of money. Most persons are greatly in error in supposing that cents are a legal tender for any amount, and some times captious people make large payments in copper coin, which creditors suppose they are obliged to receive—from the fact that it is coined at the mint and bears the impress of the United States upon it. From the fol lowing, which is a synopsis of the act of Congress upon the subject, it will be seen what is and what is not a legal tender. The law regulating the payment of debts with coin provides that the following coin be legal tender : 1. All gold coin at their respective values for debts of any amount. 2. The half dollar, quarter dollar, half dime and quarter dime, at their respective values for debts of any amount under five dollars. 3. Three cent pieces for debts of any amount under thirty cents; and 4. By the law passed at the last session of Congress, we may add, one cent pieces for any amount under ten cents. By the laws of Congress passed some four or five years ago, gold was made the legal tender for large amounts. Those who, to get rid of large quantities of cents and small coin, sometimes pay their bills with it, to the annoyance ef the creditor, will perceive that there is a stoppage to that antic by the law. LOOK 01:T.—Look out for a well gotten up gold dollar, of the "bogus kind," the result of an ingenious crew of counterfeiters, Nothing but a strong acid will show the de ceit. There are also " heaps "of counterfeit halves and quarters in circulation. These are so well made as to deceive the bestjudges. These coins are new and bright, and there is some grounds of suspicion that the mint is not far off.—/larrisbury Telegraph. There is strong grounds of suspicion that men engaged in the circulation of all kinds of " bogus" money are not strangers in this neighborhood. FIVE MEN POISONED jr DRINKING BITTERS. —Five men were poisoned in Cincinnati, on Sunday night, by drinking whiskey with roots in it. One of the party, named John T. Chester, was conveyed to his residence on Madison street, between plum and elm, where, after great suffering, he shortly died. The rest of the party four in number, found re lief in the antidotes administered. The roots, of which the physicians have no knowledge, were purchased two weeks ago from a root ped le r. KS! BLANKS! The Republican Tariff Senator Wilson, of Massachusetts, in a speech recently delivered, tells the whole story how the Tariff of 1857 was passed, who did it and for what purpose ; how they of New England had struggled to enlarge the FREE LIST and deplete the Treasury.— Read the following extract from his speech : " The session that closed on the 4th of March, 1857, was mainly devoted nY us OF NEW ENGLAND and a portion of the country, to a modification of the Revenue laws. The manufacturers of New England, the mer chants of Boston, New York and Philadel phia, by letter and by their personal pres ence in Washington, implored us, in the Congress of the United States, to modify the tariff before we adjourned on the 4th of March ; and, gentlemen, for sixty days I gave to that effort to change or modify the tariff, my days and my nights. I went to the men who represent the sheep-growing regions of our country—they were mostly Republicans; they did not like to yield up the duty upon wool. We used all our pow ers of persuasion to induce them to consent to a reduction of the duty on wool, so that we in New England might set our machinery at work in our woolen mills—machinery that had long been silent and unused. I think that those sixty days of labor of mine, were never surpassed by the labor in anything ex cept to place Charles Sumner in the Senate, and N. P. Banks in the Speaker's chair. I think, gentlemen, these labors were not with out some little influence with my personal and political associates ; at any rate, I had the warm and generous thanks of men in New England and men in New York, for the labor I had performed in thus attempting to secure a, modification of the tariff, so as to protect the interests of our section of the country. Our object was to reduce the duty upon wool, and to enlarge the free list, and thus save eight or ten millions of dollars that came to us in the real form of taxation, and admit many articles used in our manufac tures, duty free, and thus indirectly aid the manufacturing interests of Massachusetts and of the country. We passed such a bill through the House, and it came to the Sen ate ; there it met the stern resistance of men who wanted to make a reduction equally upon all articles, whether they came in com petition with our industry or not. We passed through the Senate an amendment to that bill, and we sustained it because it was the best we could obtain. We sustained the tariff to deplete the Treasury, to protect and and encourage the productive industry of the country. The tariff men in Congress, with the exception of a few gentlemen from the wool-growing sections, and from Pennsyl vania, gave their sanction to the Act of 1857. Let it be remembered then, that Speaker Banks and Henry Wilson, of Massachusetts, and Lewis D. Campbell, of Ohio, were the leading men who are responsible for the tariff of 1857; and if it be the tariff that has contributed to the panic and hard times, we ask again if the Black Republicans are not the proper party to hold responsible, and whether the people who have been led to be lieve otherwise, have not been deceived. - ,tt - 'Some of the Republican papers scold their brethren in Illinois for opposing Judge Douglas. The Boston Traveller, a highly respectable Republican journal, says: Unfortunately, some of the Illinois Repub licans could not be induced to share the sen timent that prevailed among their brethren in other States. They not only resolved that Mr. Douglas should be sacrificed, but they de nounced the language and the action of other Republicans, characterizing them as improp er interference in the local affairs of Illinois as if the election of a national Senator could be a purely local affair, and as if the nation could have no interest in a course of policy that was sure, largely to affect the decision of the next Presidential campaign ! The opposition in other States, having done its duty to the best of its ability, then gave away, and the Illinois Republicans were al lowed to settle the matter after their own fashion, without being troubled with the sug gestion of people in New York and New England. And a. very fine settlement they have made of it! They have been beaten on their own field, fighting the ' battle after their own fashion, and so have contributed to the Democratic cause the only victory it has won in the North in 1858. Such is the con sequence of their plan having been adopted. We do not think any worse could have hap pened if those "impertinent" outsiders had been listened to, and their advice heeded.— What renders the result all the more shameful is the fact that Republicans acted with the handful of Democrats who adhered to the Administration, and were, we are informed, instrumental in having Douglas men removed from national offices, thus becoming the tools of that very " slave power" which they are so fond of denouncing. Merely to gratify personal and political hatred, it was deter mined to break Mr. Douglas down, though in so doing the " slave power" was to be built up anew. What the full effect of this most unwise action is to be, who shall say ? But this can be said, that the Illinois Republicans compelled their party in the nation to throw aside the certainty of success in ISGO, and to return to the wilderness, where they may wander for forty years to come, if not forever. Parties, like individuals, have their golden moments ; but if they neglect to improve them, those moments rarely return. All that now can be said, is, that the future, which it was in the power of the Republicans to order, must be controlled by the Democracy. The latter may behave as foolishly as some of their enemies have behaved; but this it would not he safe to count upon, for their course is invaria bly shrewd when Presidential elections are to be decided. They are then wise as serpents, and destructive as eagles. The fact is, Mr. Douglas, is defeating his opponents in Illinois, has struck a blow at dangerous doctrines everywhere, and it is a matter of rejoicing that his victory is ap plauded, for many reasons, by many men of every party. FATAL EFFECTS OF INITALING OF COFFEE.- On Wednesday last, a son of George Cash el], of Ware, Connecticut, four years old, went into a neighbor's house, and on the stove was a coffee-pot ; he put his mouth to it and inhaled the steam ; it burned his mouth, and, for a few hours he seemed to breathe like one having a hard cold. In the evening he grew worse, and died at three o'clock the same night. The affection of the child appeared just like the croup, and seemed to disturb the child in the same man ner on the lungs. A Fearless Judge. Some time since a gang of thieves frbm the city of Baltimore, committed a robbery and other outrages in the adjoining county of Harford. They were arrested, but asked for a change of trial to Cecil county, upon the plea that they could not be fairly tried in Harford. The request was granted, and last week the trial took place which resulted in their conviction. The Elkton Democrat states that on passing sentence Judge Price addressed the prisoners, four in number, as follows : " You have been found guilty, by a, jury of your country, of two high offenses against the laws of the land, and the peace and good or der of the State, viz : burglary and larceny. You banded yourselves together for crime, for robbery and plunder. You deliberately arranged and fitted out, in the city of Balti more, an expedition to the country for that purpose ; and did, at the dead hour of night, attack, rob and plunder the retired and peace ful abode of Mr. Murphy, a worthy and un offending citizen of Harford county. For these offenses it is necessary that you should be punished, and will be punished, not only because you deserve it, but, also, as a warn ing to others. I regret that I feel myself obliged, by the duty I owe to the community, to speak to you thus, and to impose upon you a sentence which, no doubt, you will regard, and per haps ninny others, as unduly severe. But the time has come when, I think, forbear ance to such as you are ceases to be a virtue ; when example must be made ; when exempla ry punishment must be resorted to, at least in cases of notorious characters and habitual offenders. And I do not believe that more deserving subjects for exemplary punishment can he found than you are. Although young in years, you have the common reputation of being, what I have no doubt you are, old in crime ; habitually idle, vicious and crimi nal ; living, not as God intends man should live, by the sweat of his brow, but in idle ness and vice, and by plundering the hard earnings of the honest and industrious; thus defying the laws of God and man. In other words, I have no doubt you are, and have been for years, common thieves, common rogues and robbers, and banded together for that purpose. Besides this, the frequent in stances in our community of just such crimes as you have committed, and the rapid in crease of crime generally in our country, admonish us all that the criminal law of the land must now be administered with a strong hand, and such criminals as you, are made to feel its power. Obedience to the laws must be enforced. Life and property, man's home and fireside, must and shall be protect ed. The judgement of the Court is, that for the offences of which you have been convic ted, you he sent to the penitentiary and confined therein, for fourteen years and six months." Judge Price deserves the thanks of every honest man for the fearless manner in which he has discharged his duty. Let ruffianism meet its due reward in all courts of justice, and we will not so frequently be called upon to record the blackest crimes known to our laws. We hope the above remarks by the Judge, on passing sentence, may be read by quite a large number of young and middle aged men in this immediate neighborhood—and that they may take warning -and keep out of the hands of the criminal law, for we feel very sure that on the first opportunity offered, Judge TAYLOR will give them a lesson they will never forget. Their conduct demands a se vere punishment. The Grand Result [From the Chicago Times, Nov. 5.] The groat battle has been fought. The last struggle for kingly power has taken place, and Victory in all her brightest plumes has perched upon the banners of the people. * ic- * * * * Ile (Douglas) was not allowed to fight the uneven contest with Republicanism alone.— To the aid of the latter organization, with its boasted majority of twenty thousand in the State, there was cast loose upon him a pack of mercenary troops—men unconscious of an honest thought, untroubled by a conscientous emotion, and utterly lost to all the principles of gentlemen. These men, by themselves, would have been powerless;_ but they were known as the agents of the Sidells, Brights, Cobbs, and other Presidential aspirants; their acts received importance because they were endorsed and approved through the columns of the paper at Washington, controlled by the peculators upon the public treasury. To these men was given the power to say who should, and who should not hold federal of fice in Illinois ; to these men was given the power to remove faithful Democrats and ap point such men as a few dollars would cor rupt. Against the allied hosts of Republicans, and the agents and employees of the Feder al Government, Stephen A. Douglas has ap pealed to the people of Illinois—proud, glori ous, Democratic Illinois! He has appealed to them to vindicate their State from the threatened invasion of negro equality, and he has appealed to them to vindicate the "Inde pendence of the People's Representative." The appeal has been heard. From the Mis sissippi to the Wabash ; from Cairo to Chica go; from the cirumference to the centre there has been a response. What that response is, we have indicated in the heading to this ar ticle. Illinois has sustained Douglas. 'llli nois has elected a Democratic majority in the Legislature larger than it has been for many years. Illinois has re-elected Harris and Morris, and has elected Fouke, Logan, and Robinson, all Democrats and fellow-champi ons with Douglas, of the principles of the Democratic party. The majority of twenty thousand against the Democratic party in 1850, has been swept away, and Foiidey and French, the regular nominees of that party, have been triumphantly elected. It has been said, and with truth, indeed it has been constantly thrown into the face of Douglas, that there is no instance in the his tory of the country where any member of the Democratic party has dared to act indepen dently of the dictation of an existing Ad ministration, and not be crushed. It was high time, if such were the fact, that there should be a precedent of the independence of the people's Representative from executive dictation. Illinois has the honor of adding to her glorious Democratic history the fact that she has vindicated her Representative in daring to defend Democratic truth, no mat ter by whom it was assailed. She has told the people of other States, that her people are Democrats, not because of love for office, but because they love the principles of the party. Offices cannot bribe them, nor can the frowns of power terrify them. They have neither asked nor cared who wished Douglas' defeat; they knew him to be right, they knew him as the champion of Democracy who could not be frightened nor seduced from the true principles of constitutional lib erty, and they have rallied around him as they would rally around a menaced brother, and by their votes they have vindicated him before the world. The champion of popular sovereignty has evinced his confidence in his own great prin ple by placing his interests in the hands of the people ; and the people have proved the in estimable value of the great principle by electing him in defiance of all the power ar rayed against him. All honor to Illinois ! All honor to her favorite son ! Illinois sends greeting to the world the glorious news of the TRIU3IPII. or DOUGLAS ! '5: Decisions by the Common School De partment. In the October number of the School Jour nal, we find the following decisions by the Superintendent of common Schools, which we particularly commend to the attention of School Directors in our county, and all others interested in our public system of educa tion : Election, for Teachers.—The practice of permitting a formal election for teachers, by the people of the neighborhood, is not author ized. by the schol law, and is productive of heart burnings and dissensions, that greatly interfere with the prosperity of the school. Directors should not thus shrink from the re sponsible duty which the law devolves upon them. They should employ none but com petent teachers, if it be possible to procure such ; and it is right to respect the wishes of the patrons of the school, so far as not to force an obnoxious teacher upon them. It is also proper, when possible, to engage the teacher of heir choice, if he be competent for the school to which he is assigned. But directors can readily determine the merits of cases of this kind, without the formality of an election by a promiscuous meeting ; and under ordinary circumstances, this would be unnecessary. In no case should directors resort to such an expedient, to get rid of their own responsibility. They should listen respectfully to objections, and hear the state ments of the parties, but should decide for themselves, and fearlessly select the best teachers they can get. Delinquent Distracts.—in a number of dis tricts, directors designedly administer the system so as to make it more unpopular, and cripple the schools ; and in others, they per sist in evadinc , the law, by the employment of unlicenseeteachers, as well as in other particulars. Superintendents are required to report all such cases to the Department ; and notice is now given, that in every such instance, the Board will be held to a literal compliance with the terms of the school law, and in ease of failure, the State,appropria - tion will' be' withheld. The warrants for the State appropriation will not be issued until the State Superintendent has satisfactory evi dence that the directors have endeavored to perform their whole duty in good faith, and to the best of their ability and the circum stances of the district. Important Land Warrant Decision The following decision of the Attorney General of the United States, upon the prop er construction of the Act of June 3d, 1858, may be of interest to some of our rgaders, and we publish it for their information. The Attorney-General has, at the request of the Secretary of the Interior, given an opinion in reference to the proper construc tion of the Act of June 3d, 1858, which pro vides that the title to a land warrant, issued after the death of a person who applied for it according to the prescribed forms, "shall rest in the widow, if there be one ; and, if there be no widow, then in the heirs and legatees of the claimants." It is held by the Attorney General, that the heirs of a man are those persons "who are entitled by the lex rei situs to take his in heritable real estate at the time of his death. His legatees are those to whom he has be queathed his personal property by will.— Heirs sometimes means children, in common parlance, and the word is so to be understood in a statute, when the context shows that in tention to have been in the mind of the Le gislature. But I am not aware that any reason exists here for taking it in a sense different from that in which it is usually and properly accepted. This Act of Congress, then, vests the land in the persons to whom the claimant may have left it by will ; and if he died intestate, then it goes to his heirs —that is, to the persons who are entitled to to claim his real estate by the intestate laws. "I do not see anything in the general poli cy of the previous laws which would justify us in giving the Act of 1858 a construction not warranted by its plain words. It is true that all the Acts on the same subject are to be construed together as in pari materia ; but where the words of a later Act differ from those of an older one, the later Act must prevail, and give the rule, in all cases to which it applies." The Attorney General, accordingly, draws the following conclusions : Ist, that a war rant issued after the death of a claimant, who left a widow and children, enures to the widow s benefit alone; 2d, when the deceased claimant has a widow, with two sets of chil dren, the warrant enures to the benefit of her heirs or legatees ; 3d, heirs aro those who are so declared by the law of the claimant's domicil. 3The Brownsville Flag, of the 27th ult., reports the following terrible massacre as one of the results of the intestine war in' Mexico. "In the engagment between the reactionist forces, commanded by Miramon and those of Vidaurri, 400 of the latter's men were cap tured by the former, who, after seeing them disarmed, and taking from them their most valuable equipments, ordered his second in command to take them from his sight and do with them as he thought fit. This unhuman wretch, who well knew what would ensue from such a course, placed them in the hands of his soldiery, who were just then in a beast ly state of intoxication. They immediately fell upon the captives, who were entirely de fenceless, and a horrible massacre followed. At the end of the terrible scene, the lifeless bodies of four hundred human beings were found stretched upon the ground, mangled and weltering in their blood." Huntingdon County Agricultural Soci- George Jackson, Treasurer of Huntingdon County AryriczeZ teral Society, DR. 1858, April 23—To amount received from James G win, late Treasurer, $229 75 Receipts of Fair held 6th, 7th and Sth of Octo ber, ISSB, as follows: To cash received for 510 Annual member tickets, $l,OO each, 510 00 To cash received for 823 single admission tickets, 205 75 " 44 three life member tickets, 15 00 " from John Skees, Victualers' License, 10 00 " " Nathan Corbin, " 44 10 00 " " J. M. Barr, Auctioneers' " 5 00 " " John Henry, " " 3 00 " " Daniel Africa, Esq., for lumber sold on Fair ground, 11 08 Cash from John Westbrook, for lumber sold on Fair ground, S 81 Cash from Henry Glazier, for lumber sold on Fair ground, 21 38 Cash from William Peightal, for lumber sold on Fair ground, 8 96 Cash from Theo. 11. Cremer, for lumber sold on Fair ground, 12 66 Cash from William P. Orbison, for lumber sold on Fair ground, 25 15 Cash from William Dorris, Sr., for lumber sold on Fair ground, 3 80 Cash from George Jackson, for lumber sold on Fair ground, 3 25 Cash from Charles Ilollinshead, for straw sold on Fair ground, 75 Cash from Thomas'Adams, coal and wood, 1 70 " " Conunsssion Order on County Treas. 100 00 1858. ca. June I—By cash pd James McMonigal, for premium on trotting horse, $3 00 " 12—By cash pd B. M'Divitt, for extra services as transcribing clerk, 10 00 " 15—By cash pd. John Simpson, (Val ley,) premium on 20 best horse, 1857, 2 00 Oct. s—By cash pd. William Lincoln, pre mium on apples, 1850, 1 00 " B—By cash pd Crotsley & Kean, pre mium on leather. 1857, 2 00 $lB 00 " By cash pd Elisha Shoemaker, Jr., and other policemen, 41 75 " By cash pd John Westbrook, and other policemen, 42 25 " By cash pd Henry Cornpropst, night police, (per contract,) 12 00 96 00 " By cash pd W. IL King, gate keeper, 450 " " " J. M. Simpson, " 450 Z 4 44 " W. IL King, selling ham. 100 10 00 CC " " Exceisior Band, 75 00 " " " J. Kyler, 2 loads wood, 400 " " Alex. Port, 234 tons coal, 450 " "J. Simpson Africa, post. 100 950 cc " " William Lewis, printing, 44 25 cc " i° J. A. Nash, cc 20 50 " due W. Brewster, printing, (unpaid,) 21 94 " By cash pd John Lutz, printing, 10 00 90 69 46 " " J. D. Hight, for work at Fair ground, 37 " By cash pd John Warner, for work at Fair ground, 37. 3 4 " By cash pd Z. Venter, for work at Fair ground, 37Y, " By cash pd Geo. Long, 14 days, 14 00 - " By cash pd C. Hollinshead, 1434 days, 14 50 29 05 " By cash pd. Henry .Cornpropst, 19 days, (1,25) 23 75 " BycasTpd J. Ripstien, 7 1 /, days, 7 50 " By cash pd J. W. Potter, for plow ing and other work on Fair ground 550 " By cash pd Levi E. Westbrook, for work, 45 " By cash pa B. Davis, for work, 75 37 95 " By cash pd David Snyder for haul ing poles and gravel, 9 25 " By cash pd W. IL IL Carmon, for hauling three loads spruce, 4 1234 " By cash pd Adolphus Decker, for hauling one load spruce, 3734 ,' By cash pd J. White, hauling coal, 100 11 75 " By cash pd. John Warfield, 10.403 feet of inch boards, at $1,123/, per hundred, 117 03 " By cash pd John Warfield for four loads slabs, 10 00 " By cash pa Thomas M'Cahan for 4 loads poles, 4 00 131 03 " By cash pa ltobt. MI/Ma, 1 year's salary as Secretary, 15 00 " By cash pd J. F. Barney, 1 year's salary as Secretary, . SOO " By cash pd J. D. Campbell, Treas urer's clerk, 600 29 00 " By cash pd J. Bricker, merchandise, 11 39 . " " Fisher & M'Martrie, " 2 57 " " W. & .7. Cmmou, " 30 " " Jas. A. Brown, " t 4 95 19 2134 " By cash pd Wm. Morningstar fur straw and hay, 6 50 " By cash pd David Goodman, rent of field, 20 00 " By cash pa Abrm. Port fur 20 iron hooks for feed troughs, 1 25 " By cash pd J. Higgins & Son for 3 officer wands, 30 " By cash pd Robert Woods, patrol 3 days, 375 31 SO " By cash pd list of premiums awar ded to exhibitors at Fair, 435 00 $1033 56 Nov. 12—Balance in the hands of Treasurer, 152 48 $llB6 04 1858, Nov. 12—To balance in bands of Treasurer, $152 48 Audited and approved Nov. 13, 1858, hy the undersigned Committee, appointed for that purpose by the Executive Committee of the Huntingdon County Agricultural Soci ety. It. McDl VITT, F. 11. LANE, THEO. 11. CREMER. The English. Laborer According to some of the British journals, the condition of a large portion of the Eng lish laborers is truly deplorable. They can with great difficulty earn the means of sub sistence, while their social comforts are few and far between. Various efforts have been made to produce a change, but thus far with little success. The Northern Times, pub lished at Liverpool, takes the subject in de tail, and in the course of a sympathetic article says:— "We boast of our abhorrence of negro sla very; we romance, we moralize, and we ac tually weep over the tales of African suffer ing, but we cannot afford a passing thought for the millions of white slaves who consti tute the masses of our laboring population. What are these in reality but mere animated machines ! employed only because it has not been possible as yet to discover others to supercede them. As their employment has been the result of necessity, and not of choice, the great object of the employer has been to tax the physical endurance of the employ ed to its utmost limits, and reduce the rate of remuneration, to the lowest minimum.— Unfortunately, the fierce competition of trade, and the unusually overcrowded state of the labor market, combine to render this state of things apparently inevitable. " This is, indeed, a lamentable picture ; but the case is similar, we fear, to a very considerable extent, in other portions of the world, and even in this country. There are few among the laboring classes, however, economical and industrious, who even secure more than a living for themselves and fami lies. There lot is one of excessive toil.— Those who are skilled in some particular art or craft can of course do better. But the mere laborer, even in his best condition, has a hard task before him. There is, morever, too little sympathy felt for this particular class. Their wants, their enjoyments, their recrea tions, are rarely considered. They are re garded as mere hewers of wood and drawers of water, and are treated accordingly. How rarely, indeed, do we hear of any movement intended to elevate the social condition or ex tend the social enjoyments of the merely working classes! Every philanthropy seems to look upon them with indifference or con tempt. But this should not be. There is a season for all things—and due consideration should be felt for every member of the human family.' &S.. See advertisement of Dr. Sanford's Liver Invigorator in another column. See advertisement of Prof. Wood's Hair Restorative in another column. ety $1.185 04 Sudge Douglas [From the Bedford Gazette, LecomptonJ Whatever may be the relations which Judgd Douglas sustains toward the Democratic par ty of the nation, one thing is certain—he has unhorsed the chosen champion of Black Re publicanism in Illinois, and robbed the Op , position of a triumph which they confidently and fondly anticipated ; and Whatever good, or ill, his re-election to the U. S. Senate, may bring to the Democracy, it is not to be de nied that his success has demoralized the Black Republican organization in - Illinois, and has laid on the shelf one of the most talented and untiring of its leaders. When at the beginning of the last session of Con , gress, Judge Douglas opposed the Kansasi policy of President Buchanan, the Black Re- , publicans were loud in their praises of his independence, and literally bedizened MO name with -their glittering laudations. Of late, however, they have acquired a distaste for his "independence," and they now begin to think that Douglas isn't so patriotic after all. 'What a pity that they have been corn- . polled to change their opinion of the " Little Giant," and how sad that they should have been defeated by the very man they fain would have received into their organization Alas ! and alack ! and a well-a-day ! [From the Lyeeming Gazette, Anti-Lecompton.] In the midst of a succession of Republican victories, a gleam of Democratic sunshine reaches us from Illinois. We rejoice with exceeding great joy that we are able to chron icle the complete triumph of Senator Doug las. A Democratic majority has been se cured in both branches of the Legislature of his State, and his re-election to the Senate thus rendered certain. That gallant Demo cratic champion has had many hard battles to fight in the political field; but none before equalled that just fought and won. He has done wonders, and deserves the reward in store for him. For months past he has been continually upon the stump, doing battle with opponents of all sorts upon all sides, fairly cutting his way through them, and carrying the people with him. Such a contest anti such a victory do not occur often. The eyes of the whole nation were turned to it, leav ing other States comparatively unheeded. To gain a victory for Democracy, under such cir cumstances, should cause every Democrat to rejoice, and we have no doubt every one does rejoice. [From the Carlisle Democrat, Lecompton.] In Illinois, the contest was extraordinarily animated—perhaps more so than any that has ever occurred in that or any other State. The struggle was mainly on the Legislative ticket between Messrs. Douglas and Lincoln for the U. S. Senatorship—a large majority of the Democrats supporting Mr. Douglas, and the Republicans favoring the election of Mr. Lincoln, whilst a small portion of the Democrats opposed Mr. Douglas, and advoca ted the election to the Senate of a friend of the Administration policy on the Kansas ques tion. In this struggle Judge. Douglas has been victorious—having carried a majority in both branches of the Legislature, which secures his re-election to the U. S. Senate:— Th esuccess of Judge Douglas, under the cir cumstances, is an achievement which few, at the outset anticipated, and can only be at tributable to his indomitable courage and un ceasing labor on the stump. He was op posed, not only by that portion of the Demo cratic party which sanctioned the views of President Buchanan on the Lecompton ques tion, sustained by all the aid the Adminis tration could give, but also by the entire Re publican party. ,The Congressional delega tion elected is composed of five Douglas Dem ocrats and four Repulicans. [From the Cambria Mountaineer, A nti-Lecompton.] The struggle in Illinois was watched by the people of the United States with an in tensity which knew no waning. From the moment that Douglas commenced the can vass, to the time when the returns flashed over the electric wires that Douglas was tri umphant, the interest did not abate one sec ond. It was not merely the election of Doug las which was at stake, but the election of President in 1860 was involved. Had Illinois failed, the _prestige would have been against the Democracy in the nest canvass. An or dinary man would have given away under the•odds with which Douglas had to contend; the Know Nothings and Republicans dead against him, many of his own party, to say the least, lukewarm. Douglas had only the justness of his cause, his own purity of pur pose, his own eloquence. As a mighty ava lanche comes thundering, tearing down from the mountains carrying everything before it, so did the eloquence of Douglas carry the hearts and the votes of the people of Illinois. His canvass was a triumphal march. Other men circumstanced as he was, would proba bly have showed a leaning towards Republi cans and Americans to have gotten their votes, but Douglas, with a boldness charac teristic of him alone, bearded the very lions in their den. In the veriest hot bed of abo litionism, he fearlessly proclaimed the same doctrines of Democracy, which are current in South Carolina. In no case did he even momentarily favor the heresies of the oppo sition. In the history of politics in the United States, there has never been such a campaign. The success of Douglas has done much to assuage the bitterness of feeling in the De mocracy, which their recent defeat has caused. Illinois is the dawning light to glorious vic tory of Democracy in 1860. France and England. The London correspondent of the N. l: Tinzes,states that there is unmistakable symp toms of a "growing chillness between the governments of France and England."— France is using her influence with the Latin Christians in Turkey, under the pretext of religion, to strengthen her political hold upon the country. She is imitating Russia, whose interference in behalf of the Greek Church led to the Crimean War. Suspicion is being entertained in England that France has her self designs upon Turkey, and that her con quest of the country is almost as much to be feared as that of Russia, with which Cabinet, it is believed, she is in collusion. It will be recollected she sided with Russia, in all the questions that arose relative to the Moldavian Principalities. Her summary treatment of Portugal, the ally of England, by sending a a fleet to coerce that power for her condemna tion of a. French slaver, also awakened un easiness in the British Cabinet. The last ar rival from England states that great indigna tion is felt in that country at Portugal being obliged to succumb to the French dictation. Threatening articles are appearing in the English press. Something will have to be done, or the entente cordiale between the two powers will be broken.