Jircatarnt's JHrssmgc. Fellow Citizens of the Senate and of the House of Representatives : _ The Constitution requires that the Presi dent shall, from time to time, not only recom mend to the consideration of Congress such measures as he may judge necessary and ex pedient, but also that he shall give informs- ! tion to them of the state ot the Union. lo do this fully involves exposition of all matters j in the actual condition of the country, domes tic or foreign, which essentially concern the general welfare. While performing his con stitutional dutv in this respect, the President does not speak merely to express personal convictions, but as the executive minister of j the government, enabled by bis position, and ; called upon by his official obligations, to scan with an impartial eye, the interests of the ; whole, and of every part of the United States. Of the condition of the domestic interests of the Union, its agriculture, mines, manu factures, navigation, and commerce, it is ne cessary only to say that the interna! prosper ity of "the country, its continuous and steady advancement in wealth and population, and • in private as well as public well-being, attest the wisdom of our institutions, and the pre dominant spirit of intelligence and patriotism, which, notwithstanding occasional irregulari ties of opinion or action resulting from pop- 1 ulav freedom, has distinguished and charac terized the people of America. In the brief interval between the termina tion of the last and the commencement of the present session of Congress, the public mind has been occupied with the care of selecting, for an ther constitutional term, the President and Vice President of the United States. Thedetermination of ihe persons who are of right, or contingently, to preside over the ad ministration of the government, is, under our system, committed to the States and the peo- j pie. We appeal to them, by their voice pro- ] nounced in the forms of law, to call whoinso- ! ever they will to the high post of Chief Mag istrate. And thus it is that as the Senators represent the respective States of the Union, and the members of the House of Represen tatives the several constituencies of each State, so the President represents the aggregate pop ulation of the United States. Their election of him is the explicit and solemn act of the sole sovereign authority of the Union. It is impossible to misapprehend the great principles, which, by their recent political ac tion, the people of the United States have sanctioned and announced. They have asserted the constitutional equal ity of each and all of the States of the Uni on a< States; they have affirmed the constitu tional equality of each and all of the citizens of the United States as citizens, whatever their religion, wherever their birth, or their residence; they have maintained the inviola bility of the constitutional rights of the dif ferent sections of the Union; and they have proclaimed their devoted and unalterable at tachment to the Union and to the constitution, as objects of interest superior to all sub jects of local or sectional controversy, as the safeguard of the rights of all, as the spirit and the essence of the liberty, peace and greatness of the Republic. In doing this, they have, at the same time, emphatically condemned the idea of organiz ing in these 1 nitel States mere geographical parties; of marshalling in hostile array to wards each other the different parts of the country, North or South, East or West. Schemes of this nature, fraught with incal culable mischief, and which the considerate sense of the people has rejected, could have had countenance in 110 part of the country, had they not been disguised by suggestions plausible in appearance, acting upon an exci ted state of the public mind, induced bv cau ses temporary in their character, and it is to be hoped transient in their influence. Perfect liberty of association for political objects, and the widest scope of discussion, are the received at; 1 ordinary conditions of government in our country. Our institutions, framed in the spirit of confidence in the in telligence and integrity of the people, do not fcrbid citizens either individually or associa ted together, t; attack by writing, speech or any other methods short of physical force, the Constitution and the very existence of the Union. Under the shelter of this great liber ty. and protected by t e laws and usages of the government they* assail, associations o have been formed, in some of the States, of indi viduals. who, pretending to seek onlv to pre vent the spread of the institution oi' slavery into the present or future inchoate .States of the Lnion, are realiy inflamed with the desire to change the domestic institutions of exist ing States. To acc ruplU.h their objects, th<*y dedicate themselves to the odious task of de preciating the government organization which in their way, and of 'calumniating, with indiscriminate invective, not onlv the citizens of purticui tr States, with whose laws they find fault, but all others of their fellow citizens throughout the country, who do not participate with them in their assaults upon tue C (institution, framed and adopted bv our ! fathers, ami claiming t-.r the privileges it has secured, and the blessings it has conferred, the steady support and grateful reverence of their children. They seek an object which they well know to be a revolutionary one. 1 hey are perfectly aware that the change in the relative condition of the white and black races in the slaveholding States, which they would promote, is beyond their lawful auth that to them it is a foreign ob ject ; that it cannot be effected bv an}' peace fu! instrumentality of theirs; that for them and the States of which they are citizens, the ! oniy path to its accomplishment is through burning cities, and ravaged fields, and slaugh tered populations, and ail there is most terri ble in foreign, complicated with civil and ser vile war; and that the first step in the at tempt is the forcible disruption of a country embracing in its broad bosom a degree of liberty, and an amount of individual and public prosperity, to which there is no paral lel in history, and substituting in its place 1 hostile governments, driven at once and inev- ibi\ into mutual devastation and fratricidal carnage, tram' rmin„ the now peaceful and felicitous brotherhood into a vast permanent 1 camp of armed men like the rival monarchies of Europe and Asia. Well knowing that 1 such, and such only, are the means and the consequences of their plans and purposes, : they endeavor to prepare tiie people of the United States for civil war by doing every thing in their power to deprive the Constitu tion and the laws of moral authority, and to undermine the fabric of the Union by ap peals to pas-ion and sectional prejudice, bv indoctrinating its people with reciprocal ha tred, and educating them to stand face to face as enemies, rather than shoulder to shoulder as friends. It is by the agency of such unwarrantable j interference, foreign and domestic, thar the minds of many, otherwise good citizens, have been so inflamed into the passi mate condem nation of the domestic institutions of the ' Southern States, as at length to pass insensibly to almost equally passionate hostility towards ! their fellow-citizens of those states, and thus ( finally to fall into temporary fellowship with s the avowed and active enemies of the Con stitution. Ardently attached to liberty in i the abstract, they do not stop to consider i practically how the objects they would attaiu 1 can be accomplished, nor to reflect that, even i ; if the evil were as great as they deem it, they i have no remedy to apply, and that it can be I only aggravated by their violence and uncon- i stitutioual action. A question, which is one |of the most difficult of all problems of social i institution, political economy and statesman ship, they treat with unreasoning intempe rance of thought and language. Extremes beget extremes. Violent attack from the north finds its inevitable consequence in the growth of a spirit of angry defiance at the • south. Thus in the progress of events we had reached that consummation which the voice ; of the people lias now so pointedly rebuked of the attempt, of a portion of the states, by a sectional organization and movement, to usurp the control of the government of the United States. I confidently believe that the great body of thsse who inconsiderately took this fatal step. ' are sincerely attached to the Constitution and the Union. They would, upon deliberation, I shrink with unaffected horror from any con- , scious act of disunion or civil war. But they have entered into a path which leads nowhere, j unless it be to civil war and disunion, and which has no other possible outlet. They have proceeded thus fax in that direction, in consequence of the successive stages of their progress having consisted of a series of see | ondarv issues, each of which professed to be ; confined within constitutional and peaceful limits, but which attempted indirectly what I few men were willing to do directly, that is, to act aggressively, against the constitutional rights of nearly one-half of the 31 states. In the long series of acts of indirect ag t gression, the first was the strenuous agitation 1 by citizens of the northern states, in Con gross and out of it, of the question of negro emancipation in the southern states. The second step in this path of evil consist ed of acts of the people f the northern States, ) and in several instances of their governments, aimed to faciiifate the escape of persons held to service in the southern States, and to pie- i vent their extradition when reclaimed accord j ing to law and in virtue of express provisions of the Constitution. To promote this object, I legislative enactments and other means wero adopted to take away or defeat rights, which the Constitution solemnly guarantied. In | | order to nullify the then existing act of Cou -1 gress concerning the extradition of fugitives from service, laws were enacted in many I States, forbidding their officers, under the severest penalties, to participate in the execu tion of any act of Congress whatever. In I this way that system of harmonious eo-oper j ation between the authorities of the United States and of the several States, for the uiain : tenance of their common institutions, which existed in the early years of the Republic, j was destroyed; conflicts of jurisdiction came to be frequent; and Congress found itself compelled, for the support of the Constitution, and the vindication of its power, to authorize i the appointment of new officers charged with j < the execution of its acts, as if they and the i officers of the States were ministers, respec • lively, of foreign governments in a state of j mutual hostility, rather than fellow magis trates of a cerumen country, peacefully sub sisting under the protection of one we'll con j stituted Union. Thus, here, also, aggression was followed by reaction; and the attacks ! upon the Constitution at this point did but serve to raise up new barriers for its defence and security, j The third stage of this unhappy sectional ! controversy was in connexion with the orga j nization of territorial governments, and the j admission of new States into the Union.— | When it was proposed to admit the State of Maine, by separation of territory from that of Massachusetts, and the State of Missouri, formed of a portion of the territory ceded by | Fiance to the United States, representatives in Congress objected to the admission of the latter, uuless with conditions suited to partic ular views of public policy. The imposition of such a condition was successfully resisted. But, at the same period, the question was | presented of imposing restrictions upon the residue of the territory ceded by France.— That question was, for the time, disposed of by the adoption of a geographical line of : limitation. In this connexion it Atoulu not be forgotten 1 that Franco of her own accord, resolved, for considerations of the m> st far-sighted sagaci ty, to cede Louisiana to the United States, and that uccession was accepted by the Lnited I Stat.-s, tiio latter expressly engaged that "the inhabitants of the ceded territory shall be , incorporated in the Union of the United States, and admitted as soon as possible, according | to the principles of the Federal Constitution, j | to tiio enjoyment of all the rights, advantages ; ! and immunities of citizens of the United | States; and in the meantime they shall ho 1 maintained and protected in the free enjoy : ment of their liberty, property and the relig i ion which they profess"—that is to say, while it remains in a territorial condition, its in- . habitants are maintained and protected in the . free enjoyment of their liberty and property, with a right then to pass into the condition of States on a footing of perfect equality with i the original States. The enactment, which established the re ; strictive geographical line, was acquiesced in rather than approved by the States of the Lnion. It stood on the statute books, bow ever, for a number of years; and the people of the respectivo States acquiesced in the re- j enactment of the principle as applied to the , •State of Texas; and it was proposed to acqui exec in its further application to the territory acquired by the l nited States from Mexico. But this proposition was successfully resisted ' ; by the representatives from the 'northern States, who, regardless of the statute line, insisted upon applying restriction to the new territory generally, whether lving north or i south of it, thereby repealing it as a legisla tive compromise, and, on the part of the I North, persistently violating the compact, if compact there was. Thereupon this enactment ceased to have binding virtue in any sense, whether as re spects the North or the South; and so in effect it was treated on the occasion of the admie- I sion of the State of California, and the orga nization of the Territories of New Mexico, 1 j I tab, and Washington. Such was the state of this question, when the time arrived for the organization of the i : 1 erritories of Kansas and Nebraska. In the ' progress of constitutional inquiry and reflec tion, it had now at length come to be seen clearly that Congress does nut possess consti tutional power to impose restrictions of this character upon any present or future State of the lnion. In a long series of decisions,on the fullest argument, and aftpr the most de- j ' liberate consideration, the Supreme Court of' the United Stutes had finally determined this < point, in every form under which the question i could arise, whether as affecting public or 1 private rights—in questions of tho public 1 domain, of religion, of navigation, and of servitude. The several States of tho Union are-, by force of the Constitution, co-equal in domestic leg islative power. Congress caDnot change a law of domestic relation in the State of Maine; no more can. it in the State of Missouri. Any statute which proposes to do this is a mere i nullity; it takes away no right, it confers none. If it remains on the statute-book un repealed, it remains there only as a monu ment of error, and a beacon of warning to the legislator and statesman. To repeal it will be only to remove imperfection from the stat utes without affecting, either in the sense of permission or prohibition, the action of the States, or of their citizens. Still, when the nominal restriction of this nature, already a dead letter in law, was in terms repealed by the last Congress, in a clause of the act organizing the Territories of Kansas and Nebraska, that repeal was made the occasion of a wide-spread arid dangerous agitation. It was alleged that the original enactment being a compact of perpetual moral obliga tion, its repeal constituted an odious breach of faith. An act of Congress, while it remains unre pealed, more especially if it be constitution ally valid in the judgment of those public functionaries whose duty it is to pronounce on that point, is undoubtedly binding on the conscience of each good citizen of the Repub lic. But in what sense can it be asserted that the enactment in question was invested with • perpetuity and entitled to the respect ol" a solemn compact? Between whom was the compact? No distinct contending powers <.f government, no separate sections of the I nion, treating as such, entered into treaty ' stipulations on the subject. Tt was a mere clause of an act of Congress, • and like any other controverted matter of le- ! gislation, received its final shape and was j passed by compromise ol'the conflicting opin ions or sentiments of the members of Con gress. But if it had moral authority over men's consciences, to whom did this authority attach ? Not to those of the North, who had repeatedly refused to confirm it by extension, aud who had zealously striven to establish other and incompatible regulations upon the ; subject. And if, as it thus appears, the sup- j posed compact had no obligatory force as to j the North, of course it could not have had I any as to the South, for all such compacts j must he mutual and of reciprocal obligation. : It has not unfrequently happened that law givers, with undue estimation of the value of the law they give, or in the view of imparting to it peculiar strength, make it perpetual in terms; but they cannot thus bind the con science, the judgment, and the will of those who may succeed them, invested with similar responsibilities, and clothed with equal au- ; thority. Marc careful investigation may prove the law to he unsound in principle.— Experieuce may show it to be imperfect in detail and impracticable in execution. And • then both reason and right combine not mere- i ly to justify, but to r€>quire its repeal. The Constitution, supreme as it is over all f the departments of the government, legisla- j tire, executive, aud judicial, is open to amend ment by its very terms; and Congress or the States may, in their discretion, propose amendment to it, solemn compact though it j in truth is between the sovereign States of j the Union. In the present instance, a politi- j cal enactment, which had ceased to have le- j gal power or authority of any kind, was re- ! pealed. The position assumed, that Congress had no moral right to er.act such repeal, was ] strange enough, and singularly so in view of j the fact that the argument came from those j who openly refused obedience to existing laws j of the land, having the same popular desig- j nation and quality as compromise acts—nay, ! more, who unequivocally disregarded and condemned the most positive and obligatory ' injunctions of the Constitution itself, and sought, by every means within their reach, to deprive a portion of their fellow-citizens of I the equal enjoyment of those rights and priv- j ileges guarantied alike to all by the funda- ' mental compact of our Union. This argument against the repeal of the ; statute line in question, was accompanied by another of congenial character, and equally j with the former destitute of foundation in | reason and truth. It was imputed that the ! measure originated in the conception of ex- | tending the limits of slave labor beyond those i previously assigned to it, aud that such was its natural as well as intended effect; and these baseless assumptions were made, in the northern states, the ground af unceasing as sault upon constitutional right. The repeal in terms of a statute, which ; was already obsolete, and also null for un- f constitutionality, could have no influence to obstruct or to promote the propagation of conflicting views of political or social institu tions. When the act organizing the Territo ries of Kansas and Nebraska was passed, the inherent effect upon that portion ol the public : domain thus opened to legal settlement, was ! to admit settlers from all the states of the Union alike, each with his convictions of j public policy and private interest, there to i found in their discretion, subject to such lira : itations as the Constitution and acts of Con- . gress might prescribe, new states, hereafter j to be admitted into the Union. It was a free field, open alike to all, whe- j thcr the statute line of assumed restriction , were lepealed or not. That repeal did not open to free competition of the diverse opin- ; ions and domestic institutions a field, which, j without such repeal, would have been closed against them ; it found that field of competi tion already opened, in fact and in law. All the repeal did was to reliove the statute book of an objectionable enactment, unconstitu- | tional in effect, and injurious in terms to a large portion of the states. Is it the fact that, in all the unsettled re gions of tho United States, if emigration be left free to act in this respect for itself, with- , out legal prohibitions on either side, slave | labor will spontaneously go everywhere, in preference to free labor? Is it the fact, that the peculiar domestic institutions of the southern states possess relatively so much of vigor, that, wheresoever an avenue is freely open to all the world, they will penetrate to the exclusion of those of the Northern States? , Is it the fact, that the former enjoy, compar cd with the latter, such irresistibly superior vitality, independent of climate, soil and all other accidental circumstances, as to be able j to produce the supposed result, in spite of the assumed moral and natural obstacles to its accomplishment, nnd of the more numerous population of the Northern States? Of course, these imputations on the inten tions of Congress in this respect, conceived as they were in prejudice and disseminated in passion, are utterly destitute of any justi fication in the nature of things, and contrary to all the fundamental doctrines and princi- j pies of civil liberty and self-government. Tho argument of those who advocate the j enactment of new laws of restriction, and condemn the repeal of old ones, in effect avers that their particular views cf government have no self-extending or self-suetaioing pow- j er ®f their own, and will go nowhere unless forced by act of Congress. And if Congress ; do but pause for a moment in the policy of stern coercion; if it venture to try the exper iment of leaving men to judge for themselves j what institutions will best suit them ; if it be i not strained up to perpetual legislative exer tion on this point; if Congress proceed thus to act in the very spirit of liberty, it is at once charged with aiming to extend slave la bor into all the now Territories of tho United States. While, therefore, in general, the people of : the northern States have never, at any time, arrogated for the federal government the pow er to interfere directly with the domestic con dition of persons in the southern States, but on the contrary have disavowed all such in tentions, and have shrunk from conspicuous affiliation with those few who pursue their fanatical objects avowedly through the con templated means of revolutionary change of the government, and with acceptance of ti c necessary consequences-—a civil and servile war—yet many citizens have .suffered them selves to he drawn intooneevnneseeut political issue of agitation after another, appertaining to the same set of opinions, and which subsi ded as rapidly us they rose when it came to ho seen, as it uniformly did, that thov were incompatible with the compacts of tho Con stitution and the existence of the Union. — Thus, when the acts of some of the States to : nullify the existing extradition law imposed upon Congress tho duty of passing a new one, : the country was invited by agitators to enter into party organization f >r its repeal; but that agitation speedily ceased by reason of the impracticability of its object. S.\ when the statute restriction upon the institutions of ' new .States, by a geographical line, had been , repealed, the country was urged to demand ' ; its restoration, and that project also died al ! most with its birth. Then followed the cry j of alarm from the North against imputed Southern encroachments; which cry sprung in reality from the spirit of revolutionary ' attack on tho domestic institutions of the i South, and, after a troubled existence of a few months, has been rebuked by the voice i of a patriotic people. Of this last agitation, one lamentable fen- 1 | ture was. that it was carried on at tho inline- i | uiate expense of the peace ami happiness of ; the people of the Territory of Kansas. That was made the battle field, not so much of op posing factions or interests within itself 39 cf the conflicting passions of the whole people of the United States. Revolutionary disorder . in Kansas had its origin in projects of inter vention, deliberately arranged by certain members of that Congress which enacted the law for tiie organization of the Territory.— : And when propagandist colonization of Kan i sas had thus been undertaken in one section ; r.f the Union, for the systematic promotion of ! its views of policy, there ensued, as a matter ! of course, a counteraction with opposite views, : in other sections of the I nion. • In consequence of these and other incidents, i many acts of disorder, it is understood, have J been perpetrated in Kansas, to the occasional I interruption, rath r than the permanent sus i pension, of regular government. Aggressive and most reprcheusible incursions into the Territory were undertaken, both in tho North and the South, and entered in on its northern ; j border by the way of lowa, as well as on the ! eastern by the way of Missouri; and there | has existed within it a state of insurrection I against the constituted authorities, not with ! out countcuance from inconsiderate persons | in each of the great sections of the I nion. | But the difficulties in that Territory have [ been extravagantly exaggerated for purposes ! of political agitation elsewhere. The number and gravity of the acts of vi >- | ience have been magnified partly bv siute ' ments entirely untrue, and partly by reitrra ted accounts of the same rumors or facts.— ; Thus the Territory has b interpose in elections, to i | see to their freedom, to canvass their votes, j or to pass upon their legality in the Terri tories any more than in the States. If he 1 has such power the government might be , republican in form, but it would be monarchy ; in fact; and if !.•• had undertaken to exercise j it in the ease of Kansas, he would have been .justly subject to the charge of usurpation, and of violation of the dearest rights of the people of the United States, i Unwise laws, equally vritli irregularities ut elections, are in periods of great excite i ment. the occasional incidents of even the freest and best political institutions, Rut all experience demonstrates that in a coun try like curs, whore the right of self con-.ti tuti ui exK:- in the euaaplete.-t form, the at- ' tempt to remedy unwise lcgis! ttion by resort t ) revolution, is totally out of place : in .*- • i much ;i> existing legal institutions afi.wd I in re prompt and efficacious moans for the ! redress of wrong. 1 o ulidcntly trust that now. when the peaceful conditi .n of Kansas aif irds oppor j tunity for calm reflection and wise legislation, either the leg; dative assembly of the Terri ; tory, or Congress, will see that no act shall ' ! remain on its statute book violative >d' the ' | provisions of the Constitution, or subversive ! of the great objects for which that was or dained and established, and will take ail • ; other necessary steps to assure t > its- inhabi- j tants the enjoyment, without obstruction or I abridgement, of all the constitutional right*, privileges and immunities of citizens of the United States, as contemplated by the or- ; ganic law of the Territory. Full information in relation to recent events in this Territory will be found in the documents communicated herewith from the Departments of State and War. I refer you to the report of the- Secretary j of the Treasury for particular information . concerning the financial condition of trio | government, and the vari us brauches of the • public service connected with the Treasury j Department. During the last fiscal year the receipts from customs were for the first time, more than sixty-four million doi! :r*. and from all : sources, seventy-three million nine hundred A. eighteen thousand one hundred ami forty- I one dol'r: which, with thehaianceon hand up to the Ist of July, 1855, made the total re sources of the year t • am Mint to ninety-two million eight hundred and fifty th >usand one hundred and seventeen dollars. The ex penditures. including three million doii irs in execution of the treaty with Mexico, and excluding sum* paid on account of the pub lic debt, amounted t sixty million >nc hua : drcd and seventy-two thousand four hundr • i and one dollars : and, including the lain r, to seventy-two million nine hundred an 1 forty-eight thousand seven hundred ~ i ninety-two dollars, the payment mi thi-< j count having amounted to twelve milli n seven hundred and seventy-six thi-uMmi three hunurc-d an 1 ninety dollars. On the 4th of March, 1855, the am •: -r o<" . the public debt was sob, 1T was a subsequent increase of $2,750,G for the debt of Texas—making at te! of J7l,- , 872,037. Of this the sum of $45,520,559, including premium, has been discharged, ; reducing the debt to $30,737, 120 : all which j might be paid within a year without emuar- • 1 rassing the public service, but being nor ve: due. and only redeemable at the option* of the holder, cannot be pressed u payment bv the government. On examining the expenditures of the last : five years, it will be seen that the average, 1 ! deducting payments on account of the public ; debt and ten millions paid by treaty to Mex ico, has been but abouts4B.ooo,oo. It is : believed that, under an economical adminis- I tration of the government, the average ex penditure for the ensuing five years will not exceed that sum, unless extraordinary occa sion for its increase should occur. The acts granting bounty lands will soon have been executed, while the extension of our frontier settlements will cause a continued demand , ior lands, and augment receipts, probably, ' Lent that source. These considerations will justify a reduction of the revenue from cua j turns, so as not to exceed forty-eight or fifty i million dollars. I think the exigency for such reduction is imperative, and again urge it upon the consideration of Congress. The amount of reduction, as well as the ! manner of effecting it, are questions of great • and general interest; it being essential to industrial enterprise aud the public prosper ity, as well as the dictate of obvious justice, j | that the burden of taxation be made to rest : as equally as possible upon all classes, and all sections and interests of the country. I have heretofore recommended to your consideration the revision of the revenue laws, prepared under the direction of the Secretary of the Treasury, and also legisla- I tion upon some special questious affecting the business of that department, more especiallv the enactment of a law to punish the ab- f\l W3 or P a P e " the files of the government, and requiring all such books and papers, and all other public property to bo turned over \jj the out-going ; officer to his successor; ot ahv, e(Ju j • £ ; disbursing officers to deposit all puVjVm in the vaults of the Treasury or in other legal depositories, where the same are con veniently accessible; and a law to extern] existing penal provisions to all persons who may become possessed of public money by deposit or otherwise, and who shall refuse or neglect, on due demand, to pay the same into the treasury. I invite your attention anew to each of these objects. ro.vrK'suED. r IMIE elections being over and the excitemenf attending them passed away, and it being r considered dangerous nowadays to keep on hand! bank notes, the proprietor of "the People's Store would again invite attention to his magnificent depository for replenishing the outer man and woman on the scientific principle of saving money, which accommodating establishment is in East Market street, and can readily be ! distinguished from ail others by its piles of beautiful goods and wares and " that sign," ' Which, like the Star spangled banner, is fanned ;by every breeze. The Ladies, gentlemen,mer ! chants, traders, farmers, laborers, and all oth ers are therefore invited to a grand display (od ' mLaum f-rtc) of a most extensive, beautiful, and cheap stock of Staple and fancy Goods. Tbu , exhibition will remain open every morning, af ternoon and evening until further notice, and ail concerned are rc j iested to call early and procure good seats ■- performance com merces cnrlv in the : -!:.iiu beautiful when made up, that a young lady of our acquaintance had for several au\- an idea of setting her tap for a handsoni* gentleman sin* had eeri actoss the street, tinjj dre**cd up, when she discovered it was her old beau Scene fourth will be a display of a choice se ; lection of t >/r j JZzZSki ' ? "■> ' r~ g-* . intended exclusively for family use, comprising ev< iy article usually sold in that line, ami of course cheap, whether quality or pries be con s;dered. Au int-rtnissioti of some time will here be allowed in order to give the audience an oppoc limits of r aiuining an extensive slock of READY-MADE CLOTHING, j well made out of good material, and cut out on ' v.-ir-i I fie. principles. The fifth scene will present a rich andvand , slock of i. Queens ware and Glassware, with side views uf Hoots and Shoes, Cutlerr, Ladies' Gaiters, and sundry other mailer* plea sing to the eye and purse. The sixth scene is a rare spectacle of Rimr/rs iv> bosket TRi.nsuncs, which always produces a marked sensation among the i.\ :.-es, and is frequently encored.— I bis is really fine. This is the general routine of the exhibition, '.but the scene* are often varied hy thr iritrocuc tion of othet uilieies, use ul, ornamental and | pleasing. The performers in t!.;s exhibition, from the manager down, are all unrivalled and relebra > ted tar am! wide lor their politeness and atten . t:on to thrir numerous customers, and blessed with the most unvarying patience, which is dai ly exemplified in tiinr taking pay either in gold, silver, bank notes, <>r country produce. JOB. F. YEAGER, Manager. Lewistown, Nov. 27, 1850. TO THE TEACHERS And Friends of Education in Mifflin County. 4 MI.LIIXG w:Il b< held in the Town . a H i!!, Lewistown. at 10 o'clock, A. M., ; • .-v'DA\, Ihtcember fii'ih. 185<>, to organ * a perm t i :nt County Association and make other art mgcnieiits to improvn our Pubfc. ■' ; o : A i ill atc- i dann* is earnestly rc v guested MANY TJKACHICRS. Agricultural Meeting. 4 MRETfNO of the Mifflin Countv A.gri cultural Society will be held iu McVev town on the Tursdnij of DccemWt. — Subjects for discussion— 1. Advnnt;tjrs and disadvantageaof Gur.nu aiid other fertilizers. id. improveiiient of Horn Cattle in Mitflin county. A punAinil attendance of the members is requested. .JOHN STINK, GEO. 11. CALBRAITIT. (iKO. MITCHELL. Jr.. JOHN IIOSS. DAVID STIX L. J r „ A. 11A RSII tiAP,G Kii, Conaiuittee of Arrangements. Mi YevtoHU, Nov. 27, 185 G. A RARE CHANCE TO COMMENCE BUSINESS! J'pilF subscriber has a stock of DRV L GOODS and HARDW ARE on handant ounting to about 52,500, which he will sellar a bargain, or exchange for a piece of land if suitably located, to any person who may de sire to engage in the -Mercantile business.— I hey are principally staple goods, and such as command a readv sale. no2o—tf * CIIAS. RITZ. Stray Oxen and Heifers. CIAME to tho premises of the subscriber, y in Union township, three quarters of a nnlo south of Relleviile, a Red HEIFER, with crumpled horns and a large bell; a yel vrith white back and face; a J 1 EKll nearly white, slightly speckled on the sides; and a deep red STEER, 14 or 2 years old. The owner of said cattle is re quested to come forward, prove property, pay charges and take them awav, or they will be disposed of according to law. i uo2o—3t* JOHN LAPP.