Whole No, 2578, JiL J* -_TJ a-? V_2f -c r.- y r Fyj f a OFFICE on Ivi-t Market street, Lmvitdotvn, adjoining t. G. !• nmciseus' I lard ware Stare. C. S. l>r. Locke wtli lie at liis cilice tin' fir K t Monday ul' each luuuth to spend the •jeek. my 31 211. A. J. ATKINSON, HAVING permanently located in Lewis town, offers his professional services •a the citizens of town and country. Office vV'cst Market 10., opposite Eisenhise's Hotel, lo'siileiicc one door east of George Blvmyer. Lewis!own, July 12, 18GU-if Dr, Samuel L. Alexander. n Has permanently located at Milroy, fund is prepared to pis-tice al! tliebraneh es of his Profession. Office at Swine ptri's Ilotel. mv3-]y EDWARD FRYSINGER, iIHOI.KSALE DEALER K HAM lit II RE it (Ki\itS. TOi) UTU.SM IF, &e., &c , hJi Jet's promptly attended to. j<lG /mc wi A*, •¥S ■ptN* U. Jalwdi*',,, Attorney at RaX7 ( utiicc Mat ket Square, Lew istown, will it lend to business in .>ll til in. Centre and Hunling ,l HI counties. !•", 9i jyi'/i'-a MiWiitft., Scigrist's Cld Stand, Xnir lln ('mini liviili/r, Lrtcis/oirn, Strong IS 'er. Lager H-*er, L'ndeiilierger icc! Cheese—till id the best quality nstantlv on hand, for sale wholesale or re tail. A tvt t.. he had daily during summer. my 24-% r McALLSTERVILLE ACADEMY Juniata fount). Fa. <•1.0. / .IFK/P/..1A71, Ti incipal <y I'vofn it tor. I.U'Oli MILI.EK, Deaf, if Alatheinutics. Nr. .Wo, .I.Y.YIi: N CRIST, Teacher of Altisie, h,e. The nest session of this Institution com mences on the '2Gth of July, to continue 2'J tucks. Students admitted at any time. A Normal Department ill he formed which w ill afford Teachers the —I opportunity of preparing for fall exaniiiia- A NEW A ['FA R X'FUS has been purchased, I. hirers engaged, Ace. Teims —Huanliiig. Room und Tuition, per ti, >ssto s,(i) Tuition alone at usual rates, r --*( 'irctilars -cut tree on applicatiop. SILVER PLATED WARE, BY IIAKAET EiJ.I.EY, \ti. li-M Markcl Mmt. I'liilatkljliia, MAN IT'.U"MTiKK OF I • Aielcrl Silver, ami Silrer I'uilrv•/ Fallen, > "alv, Ladles, lint/er Knifes, Cttslnrx, I' i S. f.s I rns, hi Hies, liaihis, Unf it- i I'nil's, lef I'itflwrs, Cake Basket*, Communion Ware, ( V j j.n', Mmj.t, Goblets, <1 v. ■ '• -■ ■ -ral .•oltiprixillg '•/" I'it In u- ti* the h%#t i.t.it- i-'ula utui hunilnj />'</- J 14 tih in a .ser\ aiui iuraVl* artielt* • MI Sn anili ats ami lTivat< I aniili* ' . W A\> rv-jiat'<i in the uta.iii<*i\ tV*l/J.VU WILLIAM LiflD, has niiw uf'ii A NEW STOCK OF Oloths, Gassimeres AM) VEST! NCS, liicii will l,f. made up tu order in the neat '-t and most styles. aplO FRIDLEY & CORNffiAN : S Patent Self-testing. Self-sealing. Premium, Air-tight fHHI CANS & .1 Ills. Patented October 25, 1859. ■SxHtThe Exclusive Right of Making if' S7/ '"'J these Cans and Jars in Mifflin and Ce.n ■xe counties is held by lite undersigned. PHI- SE Curs and Jars being perfectly siui * p;e iu their arrangement, and requiring eminent or solder to make them air tight, T Jae most reliable and convenient vessels 5 it are in the market for preserving Fruits an ;J \ egetables of all kinds. e J possess the following advantages over ? °Hier Cans and Jars that are in the mar ket: F t r.st —All that is required after the fruit 15 ] )een put in hot, is simply to screw the tap down tightly. -£co.\n—They can be opened by a single .urn of the cover, and the contents taken out yne-fonrth the time required by other ves liurd— Besides their simplicity and ease r T, Btffieut aa H the impossibility of step rs stowing out, they show at all times the *act condition of the fruit by simply looking ' e tO P of the cover: if the gum gasket is ncaye, the fruit is good ; if convex, the • '. s g°ing to spoil, but will always show t in time to be saved. or sale by JOHN B. SELIIEIMER, at his Mark C Ve ' 6^ee f i ron manufactory, East i n , street, Lewistown, Pa., also by coun J ores generally. Je 28 iiSS 1 !© 2?WHj2MISIIII1IS) m*£ ©23@lß®i£ wj mwa BEAUTIFUL NEW GOODS! tjA J. BRISBIX has just returned from L ' • the east and opened out a large and wcil selected assottiuent of Goods, which lie offers to the puhiic at very low prices, the irui!) of which will be ascertain<d hy a visit to his store, corner of Market and Wayne j streets, opposite the jail. JAr Ladle's W" ear he has a fine assortment, a few of which we will mention ; ORG AN DIES, 25 to 31 cents—these are very fine for the price. IRLX( !I LAWNS, IT cents—formerly sold at 25. " j LAW XS. G], 8, 10, and 12 cents. BAREGES, CIIALLIES, pK LAIXE S, GIXGIIAMS, &c. IIOOI'LD SKIRTS, from G2J to Si.2s— do., 31 to 50 o nts. A lot of SHOES selling at cost-Heeled Gai ters, SLooal.44—these are worth an ex amination. In Men's Wear, lie lias CLOTIIS, CASSI- I MERES, SATINETS, LN'IUN CASSI- I MERES, JEANS, COTTONADES, &c. | | Men's Gai ors at Co,st, and Riots and Shoes generally very cheap. A fine assortment of GHETOO-T^^FLIHiSIS, qi'EKYSH * RE, W 11. I.OV, W IRE. TAB L E (ITLLRY, \c. rlciisc call and examine before nurehasine i ' elsew here. W . ■ . and Country Produce generally taken , ill • Xel.alige tor goods. I my 17 S. J. DEISBIX. GREAT EXCITEMENT ABOUT TIIE Railroad and Banking Bills IN >ll ET'T.I \ tOINTV, AND ALSO AT THE PEOPLE', i SHOE STORE. - -; In Lewistown. > N /'*S ' . N-i f> *l l N. " ".V ;'• fnrri\ ' Li —; i——lij ! r J>AKE pleasure in announcing that they j I stii! continue the.ir extensive shoe estah- j lishment in West Market street, nearly op- j posite Map Eisenhise's Hotel, and that they have just returned fr ui the eastern cities ; with a large and varied assortment of Boots, | Sliues and Gaiters, for Ladies, Gentlemen ' arid Children's wear, all of neat finish and ex- ! cell.mt tnantifaetnre, which thev will sell ! for CASH ONLY, At Least 2. Fcr font, ifteaper than the same can he purchased elsewhere, j as will lie b v ,' t tveiiing tu the following ' Price List : M n's Pine Calf L' r.F, Go to 3 50 i Kip. ' 2 20 to 2 90 j " Gaiters, 1 75 to 2UO j " W ulking Shoes, 150ot1 75 j Slippers, 50 to .1 00 | *' BrogatiL, jl QO to 140 Be, s' Boots, 1 U0 tu 200 ! Gaiters, 95 to 1 50 j " Kip and Calf Brogans, 75 to 1 10 i Ladies Gaiters with heels, 1 30 to I GO without 1 00 .to 1 35 " Kid and Morocco Buots, with heels, 1 25 to 1 50 | " without " 1 00 to 125 ' " Slippers with heels, 100to1 20 j " •' without, '• 50 to 90 | " Kid and Morocco Buskins, 1 15 to 1 20 , " Kip Calf Boots, 90 to 150 i Misses' and Chihlrens Shoes, and Gaiters, 25 to 1 10 Measures taken for Boots and Shoes, which j will be made at tlie shortest notice. REPAIR ING .1 one in the neatest manner. Having bought our goods for cash, they ; were put at the lowest figure, and by doing ! an iixchisifvlu rash business, customers are made to pay no debts—hence our low prices. TRUNKS, \ ALICES, Ac., always on hand and fur sale cheap. We respectfully solicit a liberal share of ! public patronage. apl9 oticEh I)HRS()NS knowing themselves indebted ! to John Kennedy, or to tim late firm of j John Kennedy, sr., &. Co., will pdease call I and Kettle up their accounts before the Ist day j of October, its on that day the books will be ; put into the hands of Jus. Alexander, Esq., for collection. All having claims against Johj2 Rcunedy, sr., or the late firm of John ; Kesnedy L Co., will bring in their accounts ! for settlement. The stock now on hand will : be sold at and below cost to close the concern, as John Kennedy, sr., intends to relinquish the business. JOIIN KENNEDY & Co. { Lewistown, August IG, iB6O. FIaIUIT AND J. HOFFMAN, Lewistown, Pa., has • on hand a tine assortment of Glass and Yellow Ware Jars of the most approved pat- j terns, and at very low prices. These are war : ranted to be a superior article in that they preserve the natural flavor of the fruit. attentu n is called to our new j mode of sealing, which is done quickly, and combines economy with certainty of preser vation. ORANGES AND LEMONS for sale at Zcrbe's Grocery establishment. THE BALTIMORE AMERICAS, Published dailv, tri-wcekly and weekly, t>y DobVin 4c Fulton, 12S Baltimore treet v ßaltimore, Md. Daily s'i per annum, $4 fur e months, -)3 for 6 months, #2 for 4 months. Tri-weekly $4 per annum, $3 for nine months, $i fur six months, and fit for three months. The ffWik/y America is published at #1 50 per annum, eight months #l, four copies s:>, eight for 15,20 for 20—all payable in advance THURSDAY. SEPTEMBER 27, 1860, TIE MINSTREL, MNCOJLX, THE PRIDE Ol' TIUC X\. TIOX, Tune—•• The Rcl. White, ami 23/ <<:." For Lincoln, tlie chair,' of the nation. The pride of the fearless and free. We'll drink to his health and his .station. Whatever that relntlot; inay be. llis heart bents for freedom remaining On the soil where our liberty grew—* For our brethren in slavery sustaining. The free flag-!!:- Red, White, and Til no. There are lands where the millions are yearning For freedom from Tyranny's chain; For ours let our efforts be turning, To shield her from slavery's stain. For Lineoin, he stands y. jth demotion. Add swears to the Union lie's true; And he'll struggle from ocean to ocean. To plant there the lied, White, and Blue. No sectional feuds shall e'er sever The bands which our forefathers wrought; The anion forever and ever I Unsullied. unstained, and unbought. Is the watchword from Lincoln we borrow, And he stands by his promise so true; Then who will our loader not follow, When his flag is the Red. White, and Blue? Our voices are joined then for union, The stars and stripes are above; Huzza all for LINCOLN ASH HAMLIN Huzza fur the men that we love! The old union ship, when well guided. 'Twill be found that her timbers are trite; And soon will the storm have subsided That threatened the lied, White, and Blue. it All, SONG. Tune—Dandy Jim. '• The people," with unanimous voice. For President have made their choice: And the fourth of March they will be able To make clean sweep of the Augean stable So we'll cut and split and maul auav At the Lincoln rails till election day. Buchanan's " knees are weak" and limber, Since the sudden fall of •• lire oak titular Instead of ships with slave-trade sails, We ll use the wood for Homestead rail.-,. So we'll cut and split and maul away, At the Lincoln rails till election day. And for this purpose the Keystone pledges Twenty thousand mauls and wedges. Now Locofucos all. remember. \\ e U split these rails by next November. So we'll cut ami split and maul awav At the Lincoln runs till election day. Then we'll secure Protective laws, To keep our gold from foreign claws; From Border Ruffians we'll have no alarms Whilst freemen work their Homestead farms. So we'll cut and split and maul away At the Lincoln rails till election day. In October we will make this certain, By hiding Foster behind the Curtin; And in November you may rely, We'll elect "Old Ape " and' not half try. S<> we'll cut and split and maul away And pile the rails on election day. lOMM RgMGiOliS The Good Pastor. BY JAMES K PAULDING. A man full of charity, of humility, and all the examples of a virtuous pastor. Without pride, without arrogance, without hypocrisy, there is a beautiful simplicity in his life and actions, a kindness, a gen tleness, a forbearance, harmoniously com bined with a held .:eal, never tiring indus try. in doing good to all, that marked him out as one of those chosen shepherds sent by heaven as a blessing to some chosen flock Cheerful without levity, he joined in all their innocent amusements of his simple parishioners, and happy himself in the con sciousness of a useful and virtuous life, as well as in the rational anticipation of a bliss ful eternity, he walked among his people not as a shadow darkening all around, but as a sun, cheering, animating, blessing those who had basked in his smiles. Care less of his rest, and his personal labors, he was ready at all times by day and by night to go forth to comfort the afflicted, relieve the sick and sooth the dying. He asked nothing for himself, and gave every thing to others; lie labored not in his own vine yard, but in that of his Master, and the fruits of his exertions soon became visible to every eye. A careful, innocent gayety soon began to appear again in the village; the people went forth to their daily occu pations with smiling hopes, that caused all to exert themselves in their various pur suits. Begging took refuge in the labors of its own hands, and found its reward in the comforts of independence, and flic appro ving smile of the excellent pastor, who ne ver lost an opportunity of rebuking the idle, or applauding the industrious, for well he knew that among all classes of man kind and especially the laborers, idleness is but another name for sin and misery. In short, blessed by such an example, and led by such a guide, it was not long before Elinsburg became the model of a virtuous and happy village; and it might be said with truth that neither poverty nor vice was any longer known among its inhab itants. Such are the benefits of a good ex ample combined with good precepts, and such the blessings of a pious shepherd, who fulfills his duty to his Maker, to his creatures, and to the holy calling by which he is sanctified and ennobled. is followed by shadow, and ohade again by sunshine; and, thus alter nating time rolls on, day after day, dispen sing its light and darkness. The same is equally true of the Christian life. Now all is enveloped in a halo of contentment, of satisfaction, of heavenly peace j and then come crosses and trials and temptations. Under circumstances thus diversified, thus changing, prepare for adversity in prosperi ty, and with a firm heart and a hopeful spirit meet the grave responsibilities of life like true men and Christians. Ever hope for the best; and above all, remember that although the firmament may be enshrouded iu mist, and dark clouds intervene between the sun and earth, that beyond is a sky of resplendent beauty, —a heaven of peace, a haven of rest —where clouds never come and storms are unknown. Strange Story. In a village near Newark, England, in an old thatched house, which has been oc cupied by the same family for nearly throe hundred years, there lives an old man who has nearly completed his eighty-sixth year. A person who had occasion to visit him the other day, was not a little surprised cn hearing tue old gentleman, in the course of conversation, express his belief that he was not only going to heaven, but had been there once since his first introduction into this world. From the account he gives of the matter, it appears that when he was about eleven years of age he was in an ap parently lifeless state—which he called a trance —for the space of nine days, and it was during that time E,at he t],i:,ke he as permitted to behold the glories of heaven. His parents fully believed him to be dead; the passing bell was rung; his coffin was ordered and made; and on the third day his friends assembled for the purpose of following him to the grave. The ciergy- I man of the parish went in to loo!: at the supposed corpse before the coffin lid was | screwed on, and finding it to be warm, lie ! at once expressed his opinion that the child i was not dead, and after ordering the post -1 poncmcnt of the funeral, sent his servant | on horseback for a doctor, who on arriving at the house confirmed the assertion of the I minister, and instructed the boy's mother to moisten the boy's lips with wine and | water twice a day. She did so and on the , seventh day he showed signs of life by mc ! ving; on the eighth day he could hear the | conversation of persons in the room, and on j the ninth day fie was able to open his eyes and rise from the supposed bed of death. ! Since that time his health lias been deli -1 cate, but be has continued to occupy the ( grazing land adjoining his cottage, and has kept cows alter the manner of his forefath ers. At'empt to Blow Vp a Man of- )Y<tr.— During the celebration of the Emperor's ! fete iii Vienna, an attempt was made to j blow up a mammoth man-of-war, named ; the Kaiser. An account says: "The attention of a sentinel on guard over the powder magazine of the Kaiser having been attracted by a faint grating noise seeming to issue from the woodwork, he gave the alarm. A search was made, and crouching upon his hands and knees was diseoverd an individual, who having suc ceeded in boring an augur hole into the pow der magazine, was already inserting the wire to which was fixed the match which he had destined to blow up the vessel with ev ery soul on board, the whole of the ships lying in the neighborhood, the Archduke and all his company, including, besides, the greater part of the town itself. "The culprit belonged to the Kaiser, and turns out to be the officer called in the Austrain service Second Captain, which answers t? First Lieutenant in our own. — He was of course, immediately seized, but before he could be secured, had blown his brains out with the pistol he carried in his belt. He was an Ansirian." BsgyTlie married men of Janesville, Wis., whose wives have gone East or are absent from the city, held a meeting on Friday—at least the Gazette so states. — The oldest sufferer present called the meet ing to order, and a regular organization was then effected, which being done, all pres ent united in singing, ' Come ye disconso late.' Burns' 'Cotter's Saturday Night' was then read, after which several resolu tions were adopted denouncing the long ab sence of married women on visits to rela tives and friends as a serious and growing evil; asserting that any woman's ob ligations to her husband were greater than those to her ' Eastern cousins' and ' relatives by the wife's side,' and suggest ing the formation of a permanent organi zation for mutual aid and protection, and for the promotion of the desired reform. A baby was then brought before the As sembly, and received with great emotion. The proceedings ended with the singing of ' Days of Absence.' The War Department has removed Capt. Meigs from bis position at the head of the Washington aqueduct construction. The Captain will take charge of the construction of Fort Jeflerson, in Florida. Captain Ben ham will take his place over the aqueduct. Details of the recent fearful and destruc tive storm in the Gulf of Mexico reach us by the Southern mails. In fury and des tructiveness it has not been excelled for many years. The towns pf Biloxi, Missis sippi, Belize, Louisiana, and Milneburg, Lou isiana, are all in ruins. In Mobile five steamboats were destroyed, and other prop erty damaged to the extent of a million dollars. About one-third of the city of Mobile is submerged. Several lives were lost. Captain Duncan N. Ingraham, celebrated in the Koszta case, has been detached from duty as Chief of the Bureau of Ordnance and Hydrography, to take effect on the 23d inst., and ordered to the command of the steam-sloop Richmond. Carl Shnrz, the German Orator. Carl Siiurz is a native of Honn, in Ger many. lie receive ! a collegiate education under Professor Kinkul. passing much of his earlier life in Dusseldorf. In the revo lutionary movements of 1848 Mr. Shurz took an active part, and, in 1849, was sen tenced to death for treason to the State. llis escape from the pursuit of the Prussian troops was quite remarkable. Professor Kinkel became obnoxious to the Prussian Government, and was impris oned as a common felon, in the Spaudau prison, near Berlin. Shurz detenniud to release him. and, with forged passports, proceeded to Berlin. Six weeks were oc cupied in the vicinity of Spandau, and at last having bribed the jailer, Shurz succeed ed in carrying off Kinkel. They hastened to the sea shore, and embarked for England. Tu 1851 Mr.' Shurz came to this country and took up It is abode in Philadelphia. He was, at that time, almost ignorant of the English language. The necessity of learning our language became at once ob vious, and the German exile set to work reading nothing but English. To his con stant perusal of the daily papers, Mr. Shurz attributes much of his success in learning our language. lie now speaks it with per fect fluency, correctness of pronunciation, and familiarity with phraseology. With the exeption of Jluffini, the Italian writer, and Kossuth, no foreigner has more com pletely mastered the English. After remaining in Philadelphia three or four years, Mr. Shurz removed to Wis consin, and commenced the practice of the law at Milwaukee. llis residence is, how ever, at Watertown, some distance in the interior of the State. It is only two or three years since Mr. Shurz made his first political speech in English, in one of the Western towns. He was successful, and since that time has spoken frequently in all parts of the country. His speech deliver ed at the Cooper Institute was written on a Lake Erie steamboat, during a day's deten tion at Detroit by a storm. jCFbV'Dr. Olier, a celebrated French phy sician, has discovered that bone does not immediately die when the heart ceases to beat. For, after the death of an animal, Cr. Olier has removed bone from the body to a living animal, and the bone thus intro duced has united itself completely to that properly belonging to the animal. There seems to be no doubt, therefore, that we may mend and replace our bones, as easily as a table-leg. figyThe process of keeping accounts among the Norway lumbermen is of unique style. The book keeper, after comparing acccuuts with the workman, sends him to tlie cashier for his wages, with the amount due to him chalked on his back; and when the cashier has paid him, he takes his receipt, himself by brushing off his chalk marks. The mission of Hon. Air. Lindsay, M. f'. for Ncwcastle-on dyne, England, to this ! country, is much discussed and somewhat criticised by the British press, the d'imes j especially objecting. 31 r. Lindsay is a free 1 trade man ; but though himself a shipping igejg'hunt, it is said hedoes not represent that interest. The object of his mission is un derstood to be to induce the United States to open their coasting trade to England, ; if' not to the world. H@r"Among those who rendered valuable assistance, along the beach of the lake, in recovering the bodies of the lost posseuge-rs of the Lady Elgin, was a noble Newfound land dog, who utterly refused any reward in the shape of caresses from bystanders, i snapping and snarling at them when they offered them. JteiyA. M. Baldwin, of lowa, on the 2d. inst., murdered a neighbor named Abner Munger, with blows on the Lead with a board—then went before a justice (!) while Munger lay dying, complained of himself for assault and battery, was fined oneefoUar and discharged. He then forthwith took himself off beyond the reaeh of arrest. tiffs* A Fx un ting ton (Conn.) farmer, who visited Springfield last week, made a near ly fatal leap from the express train, at Huntington. One side of" his body was completely undressed and skinned. He explained the matter by sayisg he " had cows to inilk." BO=.J udge Russell, of New York, sent enced a young burglar, only nineteen years old, to life imprisonment, on Tuesday. lie was riaimed William McSorely. Bgfo.Xews from Texas states that bat lit tle excitement now prevails relative to in cendiarism. "Rumor" has burned almost every town in northeastern Texas this sea son. g@„The quantity of coal oil produced is estimated at thirty thousand gallons per day, or nine millions per annum, worth over six millions of dollars in the aggregate. i Lynn, Massachusetts, boots are now chiefly heeled by machinery. One; establishment has sold in foar months about 50,000 turned heels. Commander M. F. Maury, Superintendent of the Observatory, has been granted six : weeks leave of absence, with permission to leave the United States. the Houston deer-hunter, says he has killed six thousand djeer in the last nine years, on the II oust* prairies. New Series—Vol. XIV, No. 46, Locofocos and Foreigners. The last Clearfield Republican, the Dree kinridge organ in that county, contains an article abusive of Carl Shurz, who is desig nated as an "incendiary emissary," a "lies it f sian" in politics, an "insolent adventurer," a "treasonable destructive," an "alien, yet reeking with the perspiration of revolutio nary efforts in Europe, coming here to pen; a crusade against the South, to preach ab olitionism. to sow the seeds of disorganiza tion, and to raise the black Hag of disunion and dismemberment." Who, asks the Raftsman's Journal, would have thought that a "Democratic" paper which has de nounced Know-Nothingisin as severely as the Clearfield Republican, would publish an article abusing a foreigner in such a style as that? Who would have conceived that editors professing intense love for the Her mans, the Irish, the French, kc, would permit such bitter feelings of "disgust and indignation" not only to rankle in their hearts, but break out in bitter invective and abuse? It is more than wo ever antic ipated—more than wc had a right to ex pect —but it shows clearly the hypocrisy that the Democratic editors are practicing; towards the foreign-born citizens of the Edited States. We have called attention to the fact only for the purpose of ex posing the insincerity of their professions. It Carl Shurz had been loaning Democratic speeches, we have no doubt lie would have been regarded as the best sort, ola mar.-, and a sound patriot, by Locofoco editor-, generally. The Abolitionists Against Lincoln. A National Convention of the Abolition ists was lately held at Syracuse, at which 0 err it Smith was nominated for the l'resi dency, who accepted the honor in rather a lugubrious letter. Conforming to the usag" of other parties, they put forth a platform of principles, a part of which deserves th serious attention of all reflecting men Here are two of the resolutions: Resolved , That f,r Abolitionists to vote for a candidate like Abraham Lincoln, who stands ready to execute the accursed fugitive slave law, to suppress insurrections among slaves, to admit new slave States, and to sup port the ostracism, socially and politically, of the black man of the North, is to give the lie to their professions; to expose their by pur: I - sy to the world, and to do what they can to put far off the day of the .slave deliverance Resolved, That the almost infinitesimal amount of anti slavery professions made by the Republican party is entirely inadequate to cover or excuse the heavea-defyiag effront ery with which it proclaims its intention t 'quiet agitation" upon the subject of th slave's right to liberty. These declarations against Mr. Lincoln for being conservative, and for no other reason, furnish the best answer for all the unscrupulous charges which have been made against him as an ultra. It may be fairly assumed that lie is about light, ami occupies the middle ground of moderation, when thus assailed by the disunionists at one extreme, and their natural allies, the abolitionists, at the other. N'u better evi dence could, be furnished, iu our estima tion, thai l iris position is the safe one, when he fails to square to the prejudices of either class of ultras. Mr. Ciny and Mr. Webster were both denounced in like manner, and with just as little reason. The Hul/y C'owtird in,the /!>/■{ The Norfolk Herald says: 'Horn Roger A. I'ryor, in bis Ashland Hall speech, while commenting on the reply of Mr Douglas to the secession question propoun ded to him at Norfolk, wound up with the startling declaration that if a President of the United States should have the te mcrity to use force to prevent the secession of a Southern State or States from the \ nion, and no effort from any other quart cr should be put forth to resist the exer cise of Federal power, he, the Hon. Roger A. Pryor, solitary and alone, would be the .Brutus to plant a dagger in his heart.' Republicans at Occaquan, Va., have erected another pole in the place ot the oae lately cut down. Great Reduction in Sugars! Q 9, and 10 cents for Brown, and White Oj Sugars at 11 cents, at ZERBE'S. fIH'RKEY Coffee, and Essence used in. X place of Rio, at JOHN KENNEDY & Go's. LOUR of any quality, by the barrel or hundred weight, at less prices than car ; be had at the mills. ! aug3o JOHN KENNEDY & Co. I)EAN S, Rice aud Hominy—we have ) splendid assortment which we are m at a 1 >w figure for cash. 1 aug3o .TOIIN KJW
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers