gtirann titttiott. gwunte Dinsociuma PRitiOirtsa Oulu TO MID, WI 01411 TO FOLLOW." Wit it Pditor and Proprietor. LEBANON, PA. WEIDIMDLY, DECIIMMIR TUE inEriredous PRESS ON TREASON. The _kr mpathy manifested by the Republicans and their party presses, and also by the religious politicalfan sties of the New England States, for the traitors, conspirators and mur derers of Harper's Ferry, impels the religious press of the north to an ex pression of sentiment. Below we give two extracts from well-known and influential sources. If there are any Christian sympathisers with John Drown and his gang in this section of: country, they are respect fully requested to read and ponder the . following : From the Philadelphia OhrietiarlObeer ver John Bro.w.n , enters upon his work delibernlejy. 'He is not acting under the sudden impulse of revenge to retal iate the wrongs which he or his family have suffered. He has been meditating this .mighty scheme of .revolution •eied robbery for many years. Such is his own confession, and the testimony of his wife confirms it. She says that for twenty years he had been thinking of this bloody purpose, or devising means to effect it. To discipline himself and his sons for the work ()Need], he rushed into the ' roils .ef -his party in Kansas, and th-re, as reported by his friends, acted the part of a midnight assassin. One morning there were five men found dead in their several cabins, in one neighborhood, which he, with a band of a half dozen outlaws, had just scour ed at the hour of midnight. This is re ported in a paper conducted by men of his own party. This is but one of his many feats of the kind. It is midnight exploits of this .horrid character, that John Brown schooled himself for the work of an incendiary and a leader in the late conspiracy. Re was et 'home amid seenes-cifllikKod -and murder. 'lt was in such act nee he was so disciplined, as to exhibit the brutalstoicism display ed in the Arrnony, when he felt the pulse of hie dying eon with one hand! while holding his rifle with the other, giiirg orders with great coolness, to the bandits under his command. Such is the convict whom the Inde pendent lauds as a man or "conscientious tategrity!" "He &toads forth," (we quote the words from the /Independent,) "he stands forthi . in'hismotives,.spirits, and his intention,rthe'bravest, truest, no blest man • Firgiotic (has : t eem . since the race of Revolutionary heroes passed away!" + Such is the murderous sympathy which the editors of the Independent cherish for the most reckless -midnight assassin known in this country—a con vict who, unprovoked, had both taken the livesof hid nelethora, and prepared Weapons to put into the hands of thou sands, to spread carnage, and anarchy, and crime, through the land. No words in our language, are strong enough to express the utter detestation with which every Christian s and every gitizen should condemn the" corrupt 'and cor. ?typing sympathy with the most atrocious crimes, betrayed in the words iust quo led. . From the Presbyterian. Is MU USER A Czpset--In one of the foreign items in our present issue there is an eztraci • from 'the correspon, dance .of the London Daily News, in which the writer speaks of moral degra dation, and mentions in illustration the case' of an individual whom the 'Writer had seen most devoutly saying his pray ers before the alter, who turned out to be a notorious highway robber.' The valet and MI ,brigand were combined. We need not go ifar however, to And thin species of 'moral , degradation. Professions of piety, 'united 'with the most flagrant crime, or theAsanction of it, may now be found nearer home. The New York independent, and ijour- We of that kith, bare been week after week eulogizing the chief actor •in the late terrible Harper's Ferry tragedy, and speaking of him in terms which, would imply that he was a saint, as_ hero and a martyr. Surely k is time that these gentlemen should look into their code of motels. It has heretofore been the general sentiment-afTivilized•count ries that murder is a crime; is that idea Ire. coming Obsolete? Have we fallen to the depth of degradatmo in this Chris. lien land, that an outlaw may invade the homes of the unoffending ,hurry their souls inko eternity, and by deliberate, long premeditated design attempt what, if eucceseful, must have resulted in the indeacfibable horrors of wholesale re• pine and murder, and yet he heralded to the wegld as a devout Christian, and hie wordsikteaaured up as those Oa dy lug tritirtyt. 114 aturder no crime? Are professed ministers of the gospel so fallen from their highs office that they can sing pmane in hooey of a man whose hands' were reeking with human blood? Beautiful teachers of morals are they! Let us not travel for samples of moral degradition—we have them at baud. What are we coming to? vs. "Give us die Speaker and we will give you the Clerk" say the Re publicans to the Americans in con grbss. They say-the same' thing to the Anti-Lseomptonites. Of course a party abut thus barters. for office and spoils,thns aright to charge it oppo nents...ndtbl.bding a "plunder party," a oband of.,robbers," &c. They are opstriota'.!Tatildkidnuit keep Congress from orguni*ing ter 'weeks because theroamiot *effect a saiiifsetory di vision of the . "ospoalf?4llWe'readm mend to our opposition friends to wash in Ow Jordan, SEir The friends of the Constitution and the Union held a meeting, at " Jayne's Hall, Philadelphia ; on Thurs ! day evening last, at which ,sorne 000 people attended. Hon. josVph R Ingersoll presided, assisted 'by a I large number of Vico Presidents and ISecretaries. Union and Constitution resolutionfr , wore presented by Hon. B.c.geed, and unanimously adopt eid. 'Joseph R. Ingersoll, William B. Reed, Yildge King, Hon. Henry M. Fuller, Josiah Randall,, Isaac Hazel hurst, Robert Tyler, Benjamin H. Brewster, - Jared Ingersoll; COlonel James .Page and Richard Vaux were the speakers. • The sentiments utter ed by each were cool, patriotic, and truthful, were well received. The scene was deeply impressive. Our national banners waved upbn every side, whilst our State ensigns and coat of arms were proudly exhibited: Young men conducted their aged fathers to the latform ; men of all parties met in kindness. Our South ern ffriendssee , *ihgled with our eiti .., z om ens'd.but one . feeling seemed to actuate .the. throngs, and that was :'Union and. the Constitution." A similar meeting was held last week in Eoston, at which an immense number of people attended. Eloquent speakers. addressed the assemblage, and letters were read from Ex-Presi dent Pierce, and other national and patriotic men. Itel. The "locofocos want to extend slavery," is the constant ding-dong cry of the Republicans. They know that they are telling falsehoods when they say so, because they cannot name a Democrat north of Mason & Dix orite,line who entertains such a view. And in the Smith . - there are just as many of the opposition who contend for the principle as there are Demo crats. Why net then meet the ques tion fairly, or what would be still bet ter, drop it, and put an end to the dangerous agitation. But no, neith er would snit them.'Without ;Mis representing the- position of the Dem ocrats their capital: in' the nigger in vestment•woula be lost, and without the agitation the Republican party would not be in 'existence. - The . be ginning, life, and end of the Republi can party are all hnigger," as was tru ly said by Mr. Lincoln,. the Republi can leader in the U. S. Senate, last week. His exact words were—" The Republican party has its origin in the question of slavery, and we perpetu ate government by maintaining the question." LPOLLING IT AT TILED/1.-Our neighbor of the PLibanon Denzokrat, ie. eentainly tresspassing upon the intelligence and good sense . of his readers when he hopes to make them believe some of the ,misrepresent Lions he perpit trates. For instaneelast week, we are told that the ground work of the Dem ()cretin party is "Nigger trade, Nig ger increase, and slavery withont end, and being such every good , Christian should join - the Republican paints 7, which occupies a middle stand between the Dernearatiic.and Abolition parties —the Utter Airing O'er Nigger free dom." Although:the misrepresenta tion is so glaring and unfair, yet-the acknowlgdginent, that the Republican party is half nigger-trade, and half nigger-increase, half slavery without end, and half nigger freedoin,is amus ing, and perhaps about fair. How IT. Woux.s. 4 ---The excitement which prevails in the.publis mind; in reference 'to our sectional disputes, is very seriously disturbing the relations of business, sad ificonti n ned will cause .z great deal .ref suffering among •iowr .merchants and 'laboring population.' A. great many of our trades depend upon the Southern . . - market, some have suddenly ceased operations for want of orders . from the Sou thi' and consequently employers haVe had In discharge "their workmen. This'is partictilaily trying in this' period , dof the year, and will be still more dis tressing unless such oenfideoce is re stored as will enable business to flow naturally and properly in arts legiti mate channels. If Congress has any respect for the sufferings of free white men, they will cease talking of the imaginary wrongs of the negro, or ganize the House, and let the govern ment proceed in its harmonious and usual course. The sooner they do this, the sooner will confidence be re stored.‘and the sooner some of their constituents will find a• demand for their labor.—Phaadelphia Ledger. Jam' Congress did not organizelast week, and consequently the Presi dent's Message was not delivered.— If an organization is effected this week we shall lay it before our read ers in the next issue of the Advertiser. The opposition are in the majority, hut being unable to divide the "spoils" satisfactorily, the country must await their pleasure and convenience. The members receive $B,OOO a year. The people, who pay tbem,will remember that the Rouse of Representatives in 1855 was also in the hunts of the op position; that similar scenes trans pired before the organization was ef fected. In • that .session, Speaker Bankasvas elected.An the - 24 , .0f - eb •rnary, 1856, ovitile President Pier ce's Message was sent in en the - 31st of THE LEE'ANOIST ADITERTISER.---A FAMILY NEWSPAPER. Decetithtr,l.Bss. The best curative) for imielcseenes and- neglect of duty, weAttiow of, is for the people to take Care that a majority of Democrats are hereafter returned to Congress,— If they are a little bad sometimes— they are not near so had as their op ponents. Our neighbOr of the Courier, is amused, tickled, and . enjoyed "hearty laugh," because we confessed to a fear that the Constitution and Union are in danger. Nero fiddled while Rome wits fhimes j Belshazzar feasted when the ,hand-writing ,ap peared upon the walliand - our- neigh bor _enjoys a "hearty latigh'!-*Tien the most glorimis fabric of government the world ever contained is on the brink of - itestruction. It there no danger! Why Were men - assembled by : tens of thousandi in Sayne's Hall laSt Week, perhaps at the same moment our neighbor was . enjoying his "hearty laugh," if there was no danger ? Why are-Simi lar meetings held : all over - the try, if there is no danger? Why , do the,great and the geed, the aged and the young, the rich And the, poor,- all join in addresses, resolutions, and prayers for the Constitution and:the Union, if there is no darqer. Those people—those acts—these prayers— all, all, must be "humbug" if there is no danger. ST4AINING A 'POINT---The .Courier says, "the census of 1850 showed the White population (of South Carolinal) to he only 174,563, while the ive - gro population was 303,944. This , Shows South Carolina to be emphttically negro' State." On this Ickt some, de rogatory remarkS rehifive to that state are - rnade,:and which we have already seerveoPicd iii Some of the opposition ,ijournals word for word d frgirre'for figure. The point s made by -Um 'Courier Will, however, lose .conlitterable of their force when we tate that the white .population of South Carolina, instead of being 174,- 563, a. stated, is 274, 563. and that the Census of 1850 says the latter and not the fOrmer. The difference is ma terial, and "nay have been a typo- Eraph i cal .e rror, but. a verycon ven ien t one for the purpose. In some respectS the error would have been a .trifling one, but in the present ease is of great importance. Again, should not the very fact of the preponderance of the negroes over the whites in Stateslike South . Carolina be reason - for dis couraging assaultS like those of Har per's Ferry, and which :now fill al most every northern opposition paper. Their very weakness and danger should 'COM niandgfor them the sympa thy-and protectioydf tha.north. Ara — Those disposed-to enjoy "hear . t3.'r:laughs" over the-fears of those that see i 7 the present crisis an impending dissolution of the Union, are earnest ly requested to read the Speei.lvtif that great patriot band Statesman, kverett,lnto.day's paper. e trust-it may emlii levity, and wake them up to an .ap-, predation of the danger now en shrouding our glorious - eonfederaey. When Merl verettfind it ineuni bent tberostruni,and Pray fel ,. to mo the Constitution and, the Union, there iS danger.: . . . .AV.! The Peono/uaniait :says; in speaking of the late tremendous Un6 on meeting - Phikidelphia; "that withou l t the aid and assistanee of.the Democratic party there- would , not have been an Union Muss Meeting at Jaynes'' Hal on :Wednesday night laiir A aarge Union meeting was held in rfarrisburg, Satuiday eve ning. Geni*ainfc!rt presilled, t .ana 3 to Messrs: Briggs, Aldrielts, Amber on, ifaldeman,, and,others made speeehqs. Gen. Wm. H. killer offered, a .series of - Union Wern adopted with ...peat enthasiaSii Nearly all the oppssition per's aelf6avieb and sneer at 1,110 trillOn ,Meetings 'held in Philadelphia :and other places, calling them unnti-John Brown meetings;" thus - showing their disunion aims. JOY vs. SORROW.—OryTu!aday,Ter nando Wood was -eleeted May or of New York', triarriphingover the greatest obstacles inthapS eVer'plae ed..in the way of a ea,n4:lidate., -Saturday his. Wife:died, having. given birth to a datigh'terthe day previous. Her interest in her husband's success in the election was unfavorable to her recovery. THE CHARLESTON CONVENTION.— . The Natiqnal Democratic Exeeutive Committee met at Washington on the 7th inst., and fixed Monday, the 23d of April, as the time for the meeting o the Charleston Convention. THE StFALZEMACY or THE LAWS.— The Rev. Jr. Bacon, in his discourse to his people OR - Thanksgiving day, took the opportunity sharply to re buke what he denominated an unman ly, unpatriotic ' eunclatittian spirit, man ifested at the North in regard to the tragical affair at HaTer's Ferry.' speeifie'd three- portionlars =in in which we were in the wrong :--Ist. In de riding the fear occasioned lay the in- vasion ; 2d. In blaming Virginia for maintaining her laws; 3d. In sym pathizing with the insurgents in their unlawful net. On each of these points the doctor spoke with great plainness and solemnity; and many, if S not most of the large congregation present, felt that the reproof was just, timely and important.—Hurtford CCU. rant. oar The Election in New York 011 Tuesday of last week, for Mayor, &C., resulted in the success of Fernando Wood, the Mozart Hall, (Democratic) candidate: His majority is 'upwards of 3,000. The opposition candidatm were Haverneyer.(Tamman3r Hall, Democratic,) and Opdyke, (Republi can.) The other candidates• on the Wood ticket were also elected. The vote for Mayor was as follows: Wood, 30,05=1„ Haventeyer,- 26,781. Opdyke, 24706. Majority of both Democratic candi dates united over the Republicans, 35,129. New York city is good for this majority for 'the Democratic can didate for President, nest . .-ear. .• Loss ..or ' 0 - ANAL Boars.--On the .evening of Friday 25th ult., says the Columbia Spy A 'tow of seventeen Canal boats from Baltimore to jfavre do Grace, encountered a severe gale, and nine 'of 'thenumber broke loose from the tug, eight of which were sunk. Of the latter four ,were total ly lost, the remainder being .raised and repaired. One of the._ sunken boats had iromore, 'the balance .were empty. 'Of ' the number, only one'be i longed to Columbia—the boat Equa lor, McGinniss, Captain,' owned by Captain Crowninshield. ' She was sunk, but taken.to Baltimore for re -1 pairs. One life was lost by the acci dent. Jonathan Rowell of Northum berland, Captain of the boat ,Napole on, was drowned. lie had been ae tively jnorumental . inroscuing a num, ber,olhands from the sinking-boats, and remaining to the last on one of the vessels had to jump to save himself from going down 'with her. He fell short of the boat he attempted to gain, arra cried to the men to throw him something on which Ito .save himself; but they were in such alarm that they could extend him noagsist tance' andle went down. He 'lliad in- hie pocket at th Oil me of his drown ing some five Or,:aix hundred dollars: One of the, boats lost belonged to William McConkey, Dig of WV rights- ville. . -RELEASED oN BAIL.--On Friday I last, application was made for the re- I lease &Jelin P. Famous, who is charg ed with the shooting of Mary Eliza beth Eagens, in :Montgomery county, in October last,. full particulars of I which we published at the time. The defendant' will'be eight yeara 01d.% I December, and the' deceased was be , . twoen eleven and twelve at the time lof her death. ilnititti, the prestunp • tion is that pirsonS are not individu ally responsible under seven:------between I seven•itati fourteen, it is subject of proof; and • titer fourteen, incapacity filkigaelearly pitmen. After Aetir 7 ingi 6 l3ettNstinign.r whi64144 itk eetutd duecti !before the magistrtte who Com ! niffte'd him, ;*.kkal arguments of , counsel, the coni!t':admitted,the de- !ifendant to bail in .the sum:of $2,570, 4nd he Was taken borne by hislitther. A .1. 0 R MIME xx.CCIDENT.,,it Man Liter ' (174 Impaled.--. 7 •A.,,passenger ; on the steamer Red j'tilius :Meyers ; met with a most 'horrible accident ring the last trip .of that: , boat. was sitting on..a'bnle of eaten, on the larbored > rle , of- the boat; near the engiiieS:' "The it is bell was rung to, Stop ',thn engines, when the;engineer' on 'dirty , saw a` snag above. water t andeilled to Meyers aitd affother sitting by him to. get out of t . ye-Way.*=,Meyers did not heed the Warnlng, 'and the snag struck , . a :bide of Cotton continguous to that upon ' which-he was; iiiqing it over on him. .A_TpricNrik , 401"; Ali 3; erigir)Or aawo pi 41 !ohs srrsrg st4o Mey ers about midway of ; the body, Nithicill fOrePtililln :againstl';und: thretifgh t • the partititinni , and one7teg wasjanlette tween the exhaust-pipe and oylindeit, a space of only four. inches in ! I 'o Tiolenf ifitS the VOW that the snag literally impaled , 'him, entered his body'between the legs . and coming ont;at the side; and his Tones.coining in contact , with * Wks of iron three quarars • of: an An, thickness, broke themin two. • A deck passen ger wiiS•the first to reach' him tint had to ; eut .and- horribly mangle his leg with a, Bowie-knife, in order to release it from between the . cylinder and escape- -side-pipe. - Meyers lived only about three-quarters of 'ail hour after tie accident, and was buried on thc• r shc!m near the seetrie of the oc cuirrence. He was only about twen ty yearsef age, and ran away from home seven or eight years since, en 'listed-in the" - army, and had not bOen heard from until a short Unto since. His parents, who are supposed to re side in this Statec. had procured his release, and he was on . his way from I Fort Smith to. join them; When the terrible accident happened.— geirtiii4 Avalanche, 30th ult. . • , 0:7 - PittoroszTrows are now pending he. tore the legislatures of Mississippi, Ten. nessee, Alabama, Genigia and South Carolina, for the speedy removal of the free negroes from those States. In consequence of this action, numerous petitions have been already received from the ,free negroetrby these several Legislatures, asking permission to enter the condition of slavery. CONVICT EenarEn.—John C.Cleaver, a notorious burglar, who wee - convibted last February, at Norristown, and sert. tensed to fifteen years' imprisonment, escaped from _the Montgomery„. County Prison on Saturday last. He was.con fluid in-the upper tier of the East side of the corridor, and was em. ployed in winding spools for the wear ens. He made his escape by breaking through the arc% which forms the ceil• ing of his cell, and then cutting through MI inch board and a tin covering which constituted the roof. From-the roof he descended to the _ground hv a rope : made othanki of yarn looped together, , which he fastened to one of the battle- , riireata on the front if rewrdol46loo, is arerctl for,his appre hension. PHOSPUORUS ,AND 'PHY9.143.---Ak Ger man doctor, supposed to be a descend ant of Dr. Faustus, in Hanover, York county, Pa,-was called upon by Mr. Pe. ter .R.eed to attend his daughter for sore 'tkroat. The doctor attempted to apply phosphdrus;Aithich ignited,set the girl's clothing on Gre, burnt her person-severe ly; arid also set the house in flames. So disgusted was he with his ill success with the phosphorus and his great suc cess witlfthe fire, that he -attempted to blow out his brains the next day, and was only prevented, it is supposed, by a lack of something to blow. SAD" DEATH A Bzink.--The New York Courier records the death, from burns, of the wife of Lieut. Godfrey Weitzel, of West Point. She was mar ried on the 3d of Novembei. On the morning of the 22d, being alone at the time, and feeling faint and dizzy, she resell) go to her bed-room. Leaning a moment against the mantel, her skirts caught fire, and bekre her shrieks were heard and assistance rendered, the flames had reduced herclothes to cinders and so terribly burned her person that she died on the 24th. The appalling event has milled forth artonusual ex prisSion of sorrow at West Point. Speech of Edward Algt erett. At the 'Union Meeting in Boston, on Thins - day 'evenifig of last week. Sir, the North and the South, including the Northwest and Southwest. have beceine fiercely, bitterly arrayed against each other. There is no place left in public life for those...Wlin love them both: The *or of words—of the Ptese, of the platform, of the State Legislatures, and, must I add, the pulpit?-..has been pushed to. a point' 'of exasperation, Which, on the slightest untoward ae * eident, wine rush lo the ?needy arbitrament of the S'whici. the peat ancient master of political science (Aristotle). tells us, that .though revcdur tiOnS;de .n 4 take plaee,Yhr small‘miuses;Abay:de front small causes. He means, sir, that, when the minds of the community have become hopelessly embittered and exasperated by long . co conned ir ritation, the sligh!.est occurrence will bring , on the catastrophe.. , . • In fact, it seems to ma that'svablfare.reached state of things which requires all geed men aid good patriota s toferego for a time all, mere party projeets;and cialeutiitiefze, and to abiutlileMl or dinafy PoliticOl issues ; which calls, in a word, upon all who love the country, and • cherish the I Union, and desire the Continuanze of their) bless. ings which we have till lately enjoyed wider, the Constitution transmitted to us by our Fathers, and which I regard as the noblest work of polit ical wisdom ever achieved,—to meet as one man and take counsel: for, its preservation. It is this feeling-that has .brought me here - to •day. It will probably be said, Sir, that Stolle who entertain views like these, exaggerate the gravity of the crisis. I wish I could think so. But fear it is not we that exaggerate, but those wro differ from us, that, greatly—and soon, I fear , it will be. fatally—anderrate the ominous signs of the times. I fear, Sir, that they are greatly mis led by the one-sided views exclusively presented by the perty , Pfess,!and that" evirenly Upoti f tlie r partY , PzestreXilasivin for thefrtimprestion's, - arld that An y -are lianteraiisly ignorant of the state of 'opinion and feeling in the titter ,great -section of teertntintry. iI greatlyqear that the mass. of' the community, tlong accustomed to treat all 'alarm-for the stability of the' 'Union its groUnd ail prcifessed anxiety far its preservatioe es insincere, or, if sincere, the result of nervous timidity, have nufittedlhemselves, to measure the extent and the urgency of the existing danger.— It is my own deliberate conviction, formed from some opportunities ef.personal. observation, and from friendly correspondence with other parts of the country (though I-carry on none of a ptifrit , ieal nature), that we are on -tlitt'very verge of a eenvulnion, which will shako the 'Union to .Sts foundations and that a few mete "steps forward, in the direction ‘le 'Which affairs have moved for a few years-pait,‘Will.bring us-to thaeatastrophe.. But I sbnllttlqct o 4 4 k Pernliftlf Wet alLth is is im rtginary thatthe alarm ot the South is JiCtitiouF, or, rather', groundless panic. fur which there is no sub Stan Ohl cense—fit sithject-fer er thari'serious anxiety, But 'see; nti ;s i igne-;OT panic in except for a Fuckliburs Her! per's Ferry,-when, in the .•bitufusinit , "Of theirst surprise, anti in.profound ignorance of the extent 'thiTdatiger, the etipldiu n ity, • wits-for a short time paralysed';' t ate- niit"Sure that, a town of four'nt Tee hundred , fainilies in thieregine, lova ' dad ittotnideighe by a "reselute lianr,of twenty men, entering the . ,houseS of infitietrtial citizens, and hurryinctifem from; their beds to a strong ; hold previously occupied, and there holding them as hostages—l am not sure, Sir, that an equal panic would not be created till the extent of the danger was measured. "Baides, Sir, it the - panic had been muchatiore extensive, than it was, the anies of, great and brave, communities are no tri‘ der. Bons said he could not frame an indict ment against. a whole' people; it seems to me equally in bad taste' at least to try to point isticor at:a Stath,like Virginia. Tho French are,reput, ed it gallapt i pu4levertike *Wilk : but, .the letters say that even offer tlie:great victory': of,Solfe, rine, a handful . of 'Austrians,' straggling into is village, pet. aeorps of -the French army—Ahou:s. ands strong—to flight. A hundred and fifty melt 'overturned the Preiseh monarchy, on 'the' coca. aiOn to which I have already elluded, in 184— When circumstances of the .case are taken, into consideration, I suspect it will he agreed that any other community in the country, similarly situa ted, would have been affected in the same -way.— A conflict of such an unprecedented' character, in 'which twelve or fourteen persons on the two sides are shot down, in the course of a few hours, appears -to me an event at which levity ought to stead rebuked, and a solemn chill to fail upon ev "ery mg " • ht thinking man. I fear, sir, from the. tone of some of the public journals that we have not made:this case our own. 'Suppose a party of desperate, misguided men, lin ter-a veselved and fearless' leader,- lad been or. ganized in Virginian to cont - sand establishthern`. selves br stealth in Springilield; in this State, in. tending there, after posSeieUfg, themselves 'at the unguarded hqtmef inideightef the Naticitutl;Ar reory;to take advantage of etuna, local cause, of disaffection—say, the feud. between . Protestants and Catholics. (which led to a s- Vetydepterable oc currence in this .vicinity a few years ago), to-stir up a social revelation"; that pikes and rifles 'to arm twee ty-futB'litind k ed men, had been procured by funds, raised -*,by„ extensive supseription's throughout the; SotAth- 7 ..thet attire dead of a Sun day night the work of destruction. had begun by shooting dime an unarmed Mail, who had' refus ed to join 'the invading force; that citizens of the first standing were seized and' imprisoned, three or fear others killed, "and when, an theentire fail ure.eT the conspiracy, its leader had been 'tried, t hly defendedtbrebuird (reef, his -own part of the country, convicted and executed, that through out Virginia, which sent him forth on his fatal errand, and the South generally,' funeral bells should be tolled, meetings of sympathy held, as litlhe de: th of some' great benefactor, and the .persort•whoshad plotted to put .a pike or a rifle in the hands of twenty-fire hundred men, to be used against their fellows, inhabitants of the same 'town; inmates in the same !senses ; with' an'ulte 'tier intention and purpose of wrapping the whole community, in a civil war of the deadliest and bloodiest type. What,- air, should we' feel, think, say, under such a state of things? Mr: Chairman them who look upon the exist ing excitement at the South as famitioni 'ex travagant, have, I fear, formed a' very - inadequate idea of the nature of such an attempt.as that which was made at Harper's Ferry was intended to be, and would have been, had it proved sue. cessful. It is to want of reflection on this point that .we must ascribe the fact, that any ciillized man, in his right mind, and still more any man of intelligence and moral discernment, in ether respects, can be found to approve' and sympa thize with it. [Applause.] It appeari fi•om his own ,statements and those of his deluded asset'- , stee, of his.blographer, of his wretched wife, that the unhappy man wholasjustpaid the forfeit-of his - life, haditit'yeitre meditated ti geeerakinsur reetion in the Southern States; that he thought the time had now comet° effect it; that the slaves were ready to rise and the non-slavehohling whites to join them; and both 'united were ready to form a new commonwealth, of which the con stitution was organized and Civello:ere chosen.— Wit b this wild, but thoroughly matured plan, fie provides-weapons fur these on whose rising he calculated at Harper's Ferry; be seizes the Na tional Arsenal, where, there was a supply or arms for a hundred:thousuod Men, and he intsinledik unable to maintain himself at once in th e u p o n etreatto.t. the mountains, „and..front their fignesses harass, pare lyze, and at leng revolutionize the. South. To, talk of the pikes and rifles nothilig iilleaded for 'offensive par poses; 'is-simply absurd. [Applause.] The first "t almost fltilbaoPartY , Al'ite; to shoot down a free cetera& man,..wbont they. were attempting to - impress= itud who fled from them. One !eilltt as wellsay thallbe rifled ortlinurnm of Louis ,ein poleon was intended only for self defence, to be used only in wise the Austrians should under take to arrest his march. [Loud applause.] No, , air, it was an attempt to do on a vast scale what I was done in St. Domingo in 1791, where the tot ' ored population-was about equal to that of Vir ginia; end if any one would form a distinct idea wh a t such an operation is, let him see it—lot as ' a matter of vague conception—a crude project— 'in the mind of a heated fanatic, but as it should in the sober pages of history, that record the re volt, in that island; the midnight burnings, the Wholesale massacres, the merciless tortures, the abominations not to be named by Christian lips . , to the hearing of 'Christian ears—some of wbieh, ion the English lan too unutterahly atree' for: guage, are of necessity in the obscurity .of 1 the Latin tongue. , Now let us take a glance at the state of things I in the SoUthein States ; co members as they. are with us in the great republican confederacy. Lot us confider over what sort of a population it is I that seine pontos among us think it not only right and commendable, but in the highest de gree heroic, saint-like, God-like, to extend the awful calamity which turned St. Domingo into a heap of bloody ashes in 1791- There are be tween three and four millions of the colored race scattered through the Southern and Southwestern States, in small groups in cities, towns, villages, and in larger bodies on isolated plantations; in the house, the factory and the field; mingled to gether with the dominant race in the various pur suits of life; the latter amounting in the-aggre gate to eight or nine millions, if :I rightly recol lect the numbers. Upon this 'comitinity; thus composed, it Was the design of Brown,te letloese the bell hounds of a servile insurrection, and to bring on a struggle which :for magnitude, atroci ty and horror, would have stood alone in the his tory of the world. [Applause] And these eight or nine millions, against whom this frightful war was levied, are ourfellow Citizens, entitled with us to the protection of that compact of govern ment, which recognizes their relation to the col ored race—a compact which every sworn officer of the Union or of the States is bound by his oath to support. Among them, sir, is a fair pro. portion of men and women of education and cal turc=of moral and religious, lives and characters —virtuous fathers, mothers, spas and daughters, persons who would adorn any station of' society, in any countty—men who read the same' Bible that we do, and, in the name of the same Master, kneel at the throne of the same, God, forming a class of men from which have gone forth some of the greatest and purest characters. withal adorn our history=illsishington, Jefferson, Madison, Monroe, Marshall. These are the - men, the 'wo men, fur whose bosom pikes arid rifles arc manu factured in New England, * to, he place,,,, in the bawds Of an ignorant subject -niceosupposed, most wrongfully, as recent siventahave shown, to be",,,Weiting only for an opportunity-toms° them., -When'l contemplate the horrors.that would-have ensiled; bed the tragedy on which the curtain rose at 'Harper's Ferry been acted out, through all the seenee.of.fireand sword. of lust end murder, of rapine and desolation,-to the final catastrophe, I am filled with emotions to.which no words can do justice. There could of course be but one re sult, and that well deserving thelhoughtrui medi tation of those, if any suelithere bp, who think that the welfare of the -colored race could by any possibility ha promoted by.--the success- of any such a movement and who areivilling to par chase that result by so costly a sacrifice. The colored population of St. Domingo amounted to but little short of half a million- . while the white population of the Southern - gtates.lalone, the a...ramie outnumbers the colored race in the ratio of two to one; in the' Union at largo, in the ratio of seven to one, and 'if (which Ilea+-' en avert i) they should be bro .ght in cimittiei, it could end only in the'extermination of the latter after scenes of wo for which language is too.fttint, end for which the liviiest funny has n 4 Itaetilltan images of borrpr. Such being, the case, &Olin One may ask, why does not the Stoufhfiitify her self *against the possible occurrence of such a ca tastrophe, by - tieing away with the one great source front which alone it can spring? This is a question easily asked; and sin not aware that it is our duty ut the -North to rths'irer it; 'but it ' may be observed thiftvrerit and tatlichl 'changes in the framework of se , biety, involving the rela tions tl2,lloo,olfio'bf men will not wait on the 'bidding of en impatient philanthropy. They can only be larought about in the lapse of tiitte by the steady operation of physical, econoiniktil -and moral causes. Dave those who rebukb the We tinnanee of slaiiesitTeiikiiiiered i thikt neither the present geiteratMettuP bikpitctitalilfg one is re shot's-it/le 'for' it iittitell tie Tha . A:Tri cano lave trade Wit)ti , ifeilliY 'act, id 'o4agresi tifty r phe LriNkrS'lt i and tuany.yeitrs earildeA't?,)i aiiiiepar4e Sowlhema re.. colored !copula:tit - it with the exceptiphipsyiffips.o4 few hundreds surreptitionsi,x,intro i.d s SOIL Their ;a n cestere t were icattiwyeit thot i ziliPa altkitrid:Newltltigluxid.. :[Loud mp: plauSti,]. betwebn: three' and four inillfons. Has any.person,_ofany party or opinion, pro ' posed, in sober,%ftenattl teapriictical method of wholesale einanelpfittan?l I. believe most persons, in all parts of the , Mountryi areMPopinion that free labor is steadily ',gaining greeind.' It would in my judgment aavo itready „prevailed in the two northern acre._ of the.,Shiveholiting States, . had its advanes not boon unhappily retarded by the irritating 'agitations of the day. ' [ , Loud ap plause] .But has, any person, - .whose opinion is entitled to the slightest respect, ever undistaken to sketch ant the details of a plan for effecting the change-,at. once, by any legislative measure that could ,be: adopted? Consider only, I pray ._ you, that it would,be to ask the South to give up one thousand millions of property, which she holds by a title' satisfactory to herself. as the first step: Then estimate the 'cost of an adequate - Outfit' far the self-support ef the emancipated millions; theft reflect on the derangement otthe entire industri al system of the Sele, and alt the branches of commerce and manufactures that depend on its great staples; then the necessity of conferring equal political privileges on the emancipated race who, being free, would be content with nothing less, if anything lees were consistent with our po litical system; then the consequent organization of two great political parties on the homer color and the eternal feud which would rage between them; and finally, the overflow into the free States _of si vast multitude of neetly,and helplesa, emigrants,-. who, being excluded frotm many of thew an/rumens others, from liansee,Jboistier , Pue'lartgliftito'woold,prove doubly-burdensome thair i gre admitted, :Sheeld we sir, vdttliisll our sympathy for the colored- raee.; tr,i2rta-,,eNO•Yr cordial Iteeptiotto to two or three Hundred thou sands destitute emancipated 'Slaves ?- 'Mae Alot every candid man see, that every one of these Steps presents difficOltips!of the inosclottnitiehle, character—difficulties forwhie6, so far as r know, no man and no' plittf"!bee 0400 a solution ? Atlls it; sir, for the attaillanenti,of-mbjeots we manifestly itripracticafie,eirsts get 4 •td c ,-„„b y , i t it Moody pathways of ta *' l6` P ` aille,ltturderi:. that vie mill allow trio stupendous lion' threat .eus us to come upon theenuntry?, we per mit this enviously compacted thedy Wittg, the nidestadjustment or. htlinan +wisdomtigghtfnipie ces ? pries of "No, no.1")---Will'yti beautiful, symmettio form; paral.taktNiiiestatr ful'arin of public strength rtlinite ty this great national intellect? Where sir, 0 where will be, the. lee of the. United, States?..;i -19 here our rapidly in ereasing.influeneeinif the fain ily nations... Already they are rejoicing intim. divisions. The Whiehl here reed, in coinmenting upen the e y elatoat , H arm -, Zierry,divelleupettltas.einatithinglhaViteillsitim pel este keep the peace.with the Powers of EU hyitliA; in our international relations, I meant to have Spoken of. the wreck of that infigialfielmt anirrett tually beneficial commercial ititerconise` which .now exists betneen the producing anil-tnanifee turing States—on the hostile -tariffs time .of peace and the habitually reelliritlCbOrder ware by which it will be aenihilated;'Magian t to have said a word of the navy; of ihe:;l4:demstates, and the rich inheritance of its"commove glories. Shall ers we et those e e h u a p p t p h y i d ? „ T sh The memory h te of our fath- Men of the Vorth and the South stood together-Yer-theeeert: try, on hard fought fields; when the South tient her Washington to Masseetinnett s , sa d N ew E g land sent her . Greene to 'Carolina—is all this f ti o - r- . • s g b o a t -tahle-1 jointth e' counsel. labort that we t t h ilf l o tr ha ea re t this all fotgat?" and'W"ll:w o'4 tatit,great einetimipit ;.+.9 , Irta it proverb ana -a, ,by-,vend d t lieaniem to become a the nations? [Cries of "No, no, * 1 . 4 • fellow eitizene, no, a thousand times Thi i3r tthrious tiofcrt shall not perish. Precious lega cy of our fathers !it shell go down honored and cherished to our children. ILund applanse.]---- Getterations unborn sitalredloy.Acprivileges as we have done, end if we leave diem poor in all besides we will transmit to them the., boundless wealth of its 1/Mailings. . [Loud akplanie, follow ed by three cheers.) _ _ Immediatelrafterttheconclusinn of Om Hon, g 4.1,7011 El /iron's : etiiihatiCitnd 7Ologneot fiction elation - of every tendisticy to disunion, the 'nu mease assembly broke forth brio the most raptur ous And vehement applause. Nine voelfroua cheers were given for the honorahle gen tlemalt, followed -loy.....tiW;clanning...of.htnsdo,..searing.sif hots and handkerchiefsi and nveryokinumstration that a sincere people could give of satisfaction and What Everybody Wants. EVERYBODY'S LAWYERS COUNSELLOR IN BUSINESg, BY kRANK CROSBY, • OP vex PHILAPELPHIA net. IT TELLS YOU How to draw up Partnership Papers and gives general forms for Agreements of - ' all kinds, Bills of Sale, Leases and Pee- IT ,TELLSYGLi How to draw, up Benda end Ilion; gtigeS, Affidavit', Powers of Atterney,,Netea and tills of 'Exchange, Receipts and Re.- .. . - IT TELLS YOU The Laws for top Collection of Debts, with the Statutes of Litnitation, and aMoqut.and kinCof kropagy Exempt from Executionin every saw. IT TELLS YOU How to make an Assignment preper ly, with forms for Composition with Credi tors and the Insolvent Lana' of every St**. IT TELLS YOU The legal relations existing *two* - Guardian and Ward, Master and .Atipren tics, and Landlord and Tenant IT TELLS YOU What constitutes Libel and Slander; and the Law as to Marriage Dearer ' the' Wife's Right in Property, Divorce and Ali mony . IT TELLS YOU The Law for Mechanics' Liens in or; ery State, and the Naturalization Laws o'f this country, and how.to comply with the same. IT TELLS YOU The law concerning Pensiorui how * obtain one, and the pre-Eruption Laws 'Re - , Public Lands. IT TELLS YOU The Law for Patents, with ,mode or procedure in obtaining one, with Interfer . ()noes, Assignments and Table. ofjeee.. IT TELLS YOU How to make Your andhow to Administer on an Estate, with the'law and, the requirements thereof In every State. - IT TELLS YOU The meaning of Law Terms in Goner al use, and explains to you the Legislative,. Executive and Judical Powers of both the Generat and,State Governments. IT TELLS YOU HOW to keep out of Law, by showing Ho* to do your bus** levelly; thus sav ing a vast amount of property, and WWI. tions litigation, by its timelynonsultation. Single copies will be sent by mail, postage pedd *EV ery Farmer. Every Mechanic. Every Man of Bueiness, and Everybody in Every State, on receipt of $l.OO, or la law style or binding at. $.1.'25. slop() A. YE AR can be made by en terprising men eve rYWhotec...inli ding the above Work as our inducements ifetery liberal. . 7 For - ffingkiltdffics of the Book, or for terms to agents, with other information, apply to or address JOINT E. POTTER Publisher, 1 No. 617 -ffintsoneSt.,- k'hiladelphia, Pa. Nffir. 1859 Reward. • TWENTY DOLLARS iti offered Ma reward fur the Motion and convictleu'of 'anfperson for the talc.: fog of rails from the fences of :LOTS belonging to thie undersigned in and near the Borough of lA/bonen, and for committing other tle.predationg,, porch as taking of' Potatoes, Indian COrii,irnit,* Enffranilißelds, without the , knowledge or'cousont of the owner/Lc Jos. Karel/. I, George Stiarely, • - J. W. Gioninger, .f. PrTrants. . • • J. }lf-Blister, ' Leaher. • Marshall, Bridal/ Hartman,; Michael I.sniser, Sant'l Harbesson, Adam Ritschcr, C. Greenawalt, Philip Arnold, J. George C. D. Gioninpr, Simeon duilford, J. P. Tlniherger. Levi Kline, Jeremiah Bahuey, Wm. SI Breslin, A. H. Embich, D. M. Karmany, • John Witmoyer, Sanel Behm, Gee. (Heim, Jacob McConnel, D. Stichter, Adam 'Weaver, Jacob iteadle, Jos. H. Miler. Henry Sc..nock, M. Hartman John D. Krause, Solomon MAndly, rananuel Meily, Joel Goodhart, • J. Krause, . Shirk, • Orth Light, Lest Daiondort. Lebanon, Doc: 7,49 , 59.: • • HOSTETTER'S STOMACH BITTER& VA.:proprietors and manuraffifrers of 110 - T ETTER'S STo3lAtin BIT TERS can appeal with perfect confidence t• Physician.. and eitizi ns generally of the United klnues, because the article has attained a repu tatidtilteretofore unknown. A few facts upon Ai.. :point will speak Inure powerfully than volumes or bareassertiou•or I.l:.zenlittg.ptiffery. The consumption of llostetter'S Stomach 9Sif ters'ar. the task year amounted to ovens' belt 'bottlet, and front its manifest steady increase in times past, it is evident t hat during the coming year the constupplion'will reach ntqlrollo million - bottles. This inunense amount emthl never htive*been Fuld but for the rare columned in the preparat Gait, and,.sanction of the most prominent plitysiCianh in 'those sections of the contitti Where the article is best known, who' nut only reeeinnend the Bitters to their paticnts, but are 4 iently at all times to give testimonials to its file:acy in 'till casys of stomachic dcrangcurentli and thediscases resulting therefrom. This is trot n temporary popularity, obtained by, extraordinary- e fforts in the way of tram= peeing the qualities of the Bitters, but 'a solid estimation of an invaluable Medicine, which ii destined to bo as ClUititilltitS time itself. H ostetter's, Steinaells Were bare profeti a Godsend to regions whoft Peter and. ague and TATiMIS other billets eomplaints herd counted, tli'ar . Vlti,lhas by hundreds: To be able to +tate entilldently that the , . "1/itttior i are a certain cure tor the Dyspepsi a Ilisentes, is tb4.ltd all eyed pleasure,. lt. removes all oi - o T orpotor from • the •stomsebepurifies imparts renewed tittilitrtertlienerrou'aysfenf; giving it. that letie for the rest ondibro ofltaaltlit.t }Gaper/ties Apoei the stomach ; liver, and other digektire organs; mildly but ptilreffidlY, it(d'Xcitite,tialster'es thein' to a conditiou essential to Ihe .4044i:discharge of the functions of nature:- ••,!* ••• Elderly ptrbitit's' May use per directiont - On• the bcktre, and they will fad in it a stimulant peculiarly adapted to comfort cicclittia yowl', as it is folelisittlf fd'the iffhtte,. . invigcs?itting to the bowels, excellent as a Tonic,. and rejirrenating generally. We have the evi dence of thousands of aged men and women' 'Who hale experienced the benefit of using this :preparation while Suf f ering frtun stomach de rangements and general debility; acting under .41Dittdvice tif sphysiciane; thpy hare abandoned • gal.:, deleiericius. and .fairlY tested the :merks• oft this , aitielm;. A , few words to the there , are c'ertahr.Werittlairhie.}l ailkliWA,are BO Saritlai . ngllkpt. sinic , underAhe relation of another 'stink/ ehild - 18..5e absorbingly tender,Ntliit . ltke , mother, espectiell,a; idaipt`lor wferget her own health in ter extremeanriety •for•lbet infant. Shmild the period of maternity finite' during the summer senson j the, *iiir"df• body anl mind is gezerally aggravated: Here, then, is a necessity fora stimulant to recupe rate the' energies of the system, and cni a ble the Mother to bear up under her •exhnutiting trials . and roponsibilities. Nursing - mothers gene ' rail/ prefer the Bitters to all other 'invigora tor* that receive the endorsement of physi cians, because it is agreeable to the taste as . well as •certain to - give R permanent increase of bodily strength. ' ' • All those persons; m whom erP . ltrixe • larly referred aboie) in wit: stifierers4rtim fever and.ague j CJI.usO malaria, diarrhoea; dysentery, andtgestion, „Inas 'of * nppctitk„.pild all ,diseainktor deratints - of the• stotnaoh, :ikfiperannuated ' itival*':persons'tif`liedentalr oeoupation t and'Auridng Inotbera, . 4 01;ketriiitelt. their own physical welfare by * .giesstr _Otter's Celebrated Stomach - Bitten! a CA U.TA9 I II 4- A using any of to many unitations,prcouVTr feitej but ask for HOBTETTER'S Untranwir-n BEOMAtn Birrras, and*see that each:bottle-has the woldi Dr, J. Hostetter's Stoniaclil3tt‘iin" • blown oh the side of the bottle, and ataniPed on the metallic cap covering the cork, and observe that our autograph signature is on the label _ ear Preuvired and sold hy..llolB i r.ZursvEß & enntrTie,"..rittelAWiekillaidlitididlr-by all dtroeitin, and dealers e throne:tint tall troitetd;StatitOlaire-r ries,and Chao:may. By Dr. Geo. Eon, D. 8. UAW, AelrAlkt,462, non;J.C. Eeltscr, Fredericksburg: 11.. D. Over it Dine Manville ; Mama Early, Dermyrt