-INTELLIGENCER & LANCASTER!AN. GEO. SANDERSON, EDITOR. A. SANDERSON, Associate. LANCASTER, PA. t AUGUST 4, 1857. CraCUJLATION, £lOO COPIES I Subscription Prigs, $2,00 per annum. BBMOOKATXC STATU TICKET. FOR GOVERNOR. s WILLIAM F. PACKER, Lycoming County. FOR CANAL COMMISSIONER. NIMROD STRICKLAND, Chester County. FOR JUDGES OF SUPREME COURT. 0 WILLIAM STRONG, Birks Connty. JAMES THOMPSON, Erie Connty. Intelligencer for the Campaign. Being deeirone of placing oar paper within the reach of all who wish to nnderstand the true issues involred in the coming Gubernatorial contest, we offer it at the following rates; commencing at any time during the present month, and continuing until the first of November, or until we get the official returns of the State election: Single Copy,. $0,50 Ten C0pie5,...:'........ 4,00 And an extra copy to the getter up of a All orders must invariably be accompanied with the cash. . Post Masters and others will please act as our agents for getting up clubs. County Committee Meeting;, The Democratic County Committee of Lancaster County will meet at the public house Emanuel Shober, in the City of on Saturday the 15th day of August, 1857, at 10 o’clock; A. M. Every member is earnestly desired to attend, as business of great importance connected with the approaching campaign, will demand the consideration of the Committee. 11. B. SWARR, Lancaster, August 4, 1857. Chairman. The following named persons constitute the Committee: H. B. Swarr, City—Chairman. .S’. W. 11’. —James Peoples. Adamstown —Henry Stauffer. .S'. E. IK—J. B. Kauffman. Brecknock —Reuben Sbober. jV. IC. IK—Col. C. Carmany. Bart —Horatio S. Kerns. Lanc'r twp. —P. E. Lightner. Caernarvon —E. D. White. iMmpeUr E.-Jofi L. Li^htner. Clay —John Demmy. Lampder IK—Samuel Long. CoUrain —Robert Jackson. Leacock —John L. Lightner. Columbia N. IK-J. M. Watts. Isacock U. —Dr. A. S. Bare. “ S. W. —M. Clepper. Littteßritain—V,. S. Patterson. Cocalico E. —Cyrus Ream. Manheim. Bor. —J. E. Cross. Qy'jijiM W. —Joseph Landis.- Manheim tivp. —ll. Schreiner. Conestoga— John Martin. Manor —George G. Brush. Cbnoy— John 11. Smith. Martic —William Wentz. Donegal E. —Jacob Spiese. Marietta —Nelson Maloney. Donegal W. —Henry Funk. Mt. Joy Bor.-J.H. Brenneman. Drumore —S. B. Moore. Mount Joy twp. —J. Heistand. Psirl—T)r. Samuel Ringwalt. Piradisc —Dr. J. J. Strawn. Earl East —M. E. Stauffer. * Pam —Hiram R. Holl. Earl West —Henry Kafroth. ’ Ptu/ua —Henry Herr. Ephrata —Gen. J. L. Gross. Pryvidence —.John Tweed. Elizabethtown —J. A. Gross, llnphn Masterson. Elizabeth —J, S. Keener. Strasburg Bor.-W.'i. MePhail. Eden —HeDry H. Breneman. Strasburg twp. —James Clark. Fulton —Samuel Wicks. Salisbury —T. W. Henderson. Hempjleld E. —Dr. S. Parker. Salisbury —Wm. F. Baker. ffempjield W.— J.M. Weller. Warwick— Dr. Levi Hull. City,N. W. IK-Capt.J. 11. Ducliman. Washington-^. Charles. Address of the State Committee. The admirable address of the Democratic State Committee will be found on our first page, to which we. invite the attention of our readers. The Main Line Gone. The Main Line of the Public Works of the Commonwealth passed into the hands of the Pennsylvania Railroad Company, on Saturday last, by Proclamation of the Governor. We are informed that, under the construction given to. the law by the Governor and Attorney * General, the Company were not obliged to pay over the two millions, or any other sum, but merely to give their own new bonds for the payment of the entire amouut ($7,500,000) for which the works were sold ! If our informa tion be correct, we should like to know how much the public debt of the Commonwealth will be reduced by this fancy operation ! W e should have had no objection ourself to be the purchaser on such term 9. Any individual, or oompany oould have bought in the same way. It is a most capital speculation for the Penn sylvania Railroad Company, but, we appre hend, it will be a bad business for the tax payers of the Commonwealth. Railroad, Ac. Appointments. We learn from the Pennsylvanian, that the Philadelphia Division of the road, extending from Columbia to Philadelphia, will, under the new regulations, be under the direction of George C. Franciscus, Esq., whose title will be “ Superintendent of the Philadelphia Di vision.” The maintenance of the Way De partment from Philadelphia to Columbia, will be under the management of W. H. Wilson, Esq., whose title will be “Resident Engineer of the Philadelphia Division.” The duties of Mr. M'Causland, Master of Machinery, have been extended to include the Philadelphia Division. The office of the Division Superin tendent will be in Philadelphia; the office of the Resident Engineer at Downingtown ; and the office of Master of Machinery at Al toona. The appointment of Mr. Franciscus,original ly from this city, is highly popular with his numerous friends and acquaintances here. He is an active, intelligent business maD, well qualified for the faithful and satisfactory dis charge of the post, and will be able to render general satisfaction to the Company and to the public. We are pleased to see so good a« man succeed Col. Mitchell the worthy State Superintendent of the road. H. J. Lombart, Esq., is the General Super intendent of the whole line from Philadelphia to Pittsburg: Abolition Harangues. We are sorry to learn that Bishop Simpson and Rev. Dr. M'Clintock, two of the .most learned and eloquent divines belonging to the Methodist Episcopal Church in the United -States, now on a visit to Europe, have so far forgot the spirit and intent of their mission as to be found, in the City of Cork, in their public addresses before the; Wesleyan Confer ence, fulminating a tirade of abuse against a portion of their fellow-citizens at home, who choose to entertain opinions 6n the subject of African slavery different from their own. We had expected better things of these two dia stinguieh3d Ministers, and are sorry that the high regard which we have so long had for them is weakened by their recent course in Europe. If they had been sent out as agents of the Abolition Society, instead of represen tatives of the M. E. Church, their-offensive remarks might have been excused on;the score of harmlessness; but going as they did, they seem to have forgotten the object of their appointment, and have taken advantage of the occasion to not only slander their own country and its unequalled institutions, but also to grossly insult a large and respectable portion of their own membership, even in the Northern States, (to say nothing of the South ern,) who beg leave most respectfully to differ in opinion with them as to the character and consequences of slavery in a portion of our happy and prosperous Republic. Messrs. Simpson and M'Clintock may think they are doing God service, and we suppose they do, by fulminating their anathemas directly against slavery and slave-holders, and indirectly against the great Democracy—the dominant party of this country;—but we doubt whether they are in the line of their duty to God or their fellow-men, or whether either the Church or themselves will be benefited by their fa natical zeal in the cause of Abolitionism. direct the attention of capitalists to the valuable properties of Mr. Gemmill, in Huntingdon county, and Mr. Huling, in Ly coming, county, advertised in this paper. They offer great inducements to purchasers. The President at Bedford. President Buchanan, accompanied by his niece, Miss Lane, and Miss Black, daughter of the Attorney General, left Washington on JVedneaday last, and reaohed the Bedford Springs on Thursday evening. He expects to return to the seat of government on Saturday next. JgpCapt. Henry, of the U. S. last week at York, Pa., in the 66th year of his age. Also, Commodore Newton, of the Navy, at Washington City, a few days since, in the 65th year of hiß sge. The Political Campaign. | Traveling for Health. For anything that appears on the Burfaee, ] The ‘ last number of the Boston Medical a stranger might well doubt whether there World has some soggestive hints on this sub was an important election to take place in ; jeet. The writer thinks that in our country Pennsylvania in little more than two months . there is much travel, ostensibly for health, from the present time. It is true that one ! where in his opinion, the injury far surpasses party (the Democratic) and two fragments of the gain. Inexorable Fashion says, we must parties the Black Republican and Know Noth- I go from our home in dog-days; 1 and, in obedi ing) have their candidates in the field for j ence to her mandate, there is a rush in all our Governor and other State officers, but there is J cities and towns, from the metropolis down to neither contest nor sign of contest so far. Here j the smallest village, to the place where this and there, to be sure, a faint squeal breaks j “ goddess ” specially presides. This is the out from a nigger-worshipping sheet, but it season when the quiet and comfort of home scarcely produces a ripple on the smooth car- are the most healthful and necessary. Bat, rent of Democracy, which flows gently along . instead of this, we find people determined to with noiseless but resistless tide. The furious exchange the large, airy, brick-walled rooms storm of last autumn, when “ freedom shriek- of the town, and the cool mattrass and fine ers” and “Kansas bleeders” beat the air , linen, for the heating cotton, greasy feathers, with frantic and hideous gestures, has been i and dirty sheets of a tavern, or pent up vii followed by a calm in the political atmosphere, lags, or watering place, hotel, or boarding and in the light of unclouded reason the great house. army of the Keystone Democracy, without! But who, asks the Doctor, could live through note of drum or shout of captain, is marching a hot Summer without visiting Nahant, New gallantly to victory, with scarcely a show of port, Saratoga, or Niagara ? He does not opposition. The whereabouts of Mr. Wilmot, deny them an occasional trip to such places, the champion and standard bearer of nigger- but protests against taking, the hottest season ism, is not certainly known. Perhaps he is ,to make these visits with the expectation of at home —perhaps not: When last definitely thereby promoting health. At the season heard from he was in the low groggeries of usually taken, he says, the organs of digestion Philadelphia, endeavoring to persuade their are least oapable of discharging their funo habitues that he can drink more bad whiskey tions. They sympathize with all other parts than Gen. Packer, the Democratic candidate of the body, and, like them, require rest; and, for Governor, which is doubtless very true; he asks, is this the time to leave the frugal l indeed, if he cannot he has greatly reformed wholesome fare at home, and rush to the within a year or two past. He may be there , gathering places, where every board groans yet; or, finding Mr. Hazlehurst, the eandi- : with its life-killing feasts, and where the lux date of the Simon Pure Know Nothings, cer- uries provided and the exciting presence and tain to hold off from him about twenty thousand . example of hundreds of mouths, eager to re votes in the city, he may have made a straight j ward the purse at the expense of the stomach, coat tail back to the wilds of Bradford county, ! render it next to impossible to obey the laws there to mourn in solitude the foolish ambition of health ? Where, besides, this poor pack that led him to seek the nomination of a de- , horse, this groaning organ, is -teased with funct sectional party. mineral waters, wines, bitters, pills, tobacco The Cliambersburg Valley Spirit remarks juice and tobacco fumes, to ease itself of its that there never was a time when the Democ- cumbersome burdens. racy had promise of an easier victory than Dr. Smith maintains that there is nothing now. Our opponents have positively nothing more delusive than the generally received im to stand-on. They expended all their capital pression that people are growing better, in the contest of 1856, and lost the great stake because, as they suppose, they are gaining they played for. Principles they have none, flesh. Under the spasmodic action of this The issues they raised have been decided paraphernalia of stimulants, there is often an against them by the people and by the courts, appearance of more flesh. But it is diseased Their candidates have- no popularity—their not sound, healthy flesh. For every pound of masses have no enthusiasm—their leaders such, nature will he revenged, have no heart for the work that promises no Hence it is, the Dootor argues, that most reward. The Democracy on the other hand, i persons, soon after a return from these fash have everything to buoy them up and urge ionable gathering places, have an attack of them onward. Their, principles are trium- dyspepsia, billiousness, sick headache, pul phant. The destinies of the country are in monary affection, or cutaneous eruption.— their keeping. Upon their fidelity to the , These abuses, occurring periodically, under constitutional platform on which they stood : mine the best constitution. in the Presidential struggle, rests the perpe tuity of the Union. i ; -- uuiimu 01 tOlij. The strong arm of a Pennsylvania President: More than half the so-called diseases of the rolls back the waves of fanaticism which, season, and the deaths of children which occur rushing from the North and from the South, in August and September arise, he says, from meet on the banks of the Potomac and threat- - this fashionable dissipation. No place is so en to disturb the tranquil sleep of the Father good for children, if you wish them to live, as of his Country. A Pennsylvania Governor, a quiet home. But to take them to places’ of by his wisdom, his moderation and firmness, fashionable resort, and stuff them with tempt is restoring the clouded sky of Kansas to its ing viands, gravies, puddings and pastries, is native brightness: Gen. Packer’s election, to cheat them out of two of the best things' in evincing as it will, the settled determination the world—a good conscience and a good of the people of Pennsylvania to abide by the stomach ! verdict rendered last fall, and to stand by the statesmen who are struggling to rescue tho Union from the perils that surround it, will tell the heartless agitators who have disturbed the peace of the country, that they have been weighed in the balance and found wanting, and that the days of their political leadership are numbered. Where will Lancaster county stand on the second Tuesday of October ? Although, as we have said, there is neither a contest nor he sign of a contestin Pennsylvania, as re gards the State ticket,' still there are certain localities in which the opposition may make a spirited fight for county officers. Lancaster county is one of these, will hardly yield the spoils they have enjoyed so long 1 , without a struggle to retain them.— But we can conquer them if wisdom governs our nominations. From the candidates who will be before the Democratic Convention, a ticket can be formed which it will be impossi ble for our opponents to defeat., Let our best and strongest men be put up, and victory will follow. “ The Press.” Col. Forney’s new paper, “ The Press,” made its appearance on Saturday morning last, and to say that it fully comes up to pub lic expectation is what every body will admit. It is a neat, well printed, large and exceed- ingly attractive sheet—strongly Democratic in politics—just such a paper in every respect as has long been needed in Philadelphia. The salutatory of Col. Forney is an admirable ar ticle, dignified, but strong, clearly enunciating the policy he intends to pursue. The political character of the paper will be best explained by himself. We quote the followingparagraphs from his address: I have already announced (what, indeed, was universally and justly anticipated,) that the political department of my paper should be conducted upon Democratic principles. It is equally well-known that the measures and the men of the present Administration at Washington have my-heartiest approbation.— I have known the great statesman now at the head of the Government, and acted in concert and confidence with him, ever since my first youthful association in politics and editorial life. The most agreeable services which it has fallen to my lot to perform, were those given to his cause. My attachment to him grew not more from admiration of his pure and up right character than from a profound regard for his intellect, experience and patriotism.— It was my good fortune, with many good men, to assist, not obscurely nor inefficiently, in crowning a life of usefulness and distinction to his country and himself with the highest honors in the world. The fruits of that result are already ripening for the Future. The wis dom of the popular choice is being daily vin dicated by the quiet and content which have followed the stormy scenes of last year, as the sweet sunshine follows the destructive tempest. Ilad Mr. Buchanan not been, as he was, my first choice for President, and yet approved himself worthy of the high trust confided to his hands, by regarding, respecting, and pro tecting the rights of the citizen and the rights of the States, I should have done every thing that one man could do to uphold and to strengthen him, and to gather around him a united public opinion. The performance of that duty becomes a proud satisfaction, how ever, when the consistency, dignity, and ability of his administration, are so many proofs that he well deserved the persevering and enthusi astic preferences of those gallant men who have clung to his fortunes through good re port and through evil report, during so many long years. lam not writing as a partisan—l am not ambitious of printing a mere party paper; for, while with firm faith and unfaltering footsteps I will follow constitutional principles to their logical and legitimate conclusions, I shall at the same time seek to convince those who. may differ from me, by reasou, not by recrimination—by argument rather than by declamation. And I am confident that no man, looking at Mr. Buchanan's administra tion, up to this moment, with disinterested and elevated motives, will deny that thit states man has achieved the Presidency at an auspi cious period for his own fame, and at a for tunate moment for the welfare of the Republic. • Jno. W. Forney. We have only to wish Col. Forney abun dant success in his great enterprise—we are sure he will,deserve it. William L. Marcy. —We are indebted to Brady, of New York, for an admirable photo graph of the late William. L. Marcy. B®* One or two deaths from yellow fever occurred in Philadelphia last week, brought from Havana. : Taking children to such places the writer i denounces as the very consummation of foil'- Having tried their viper teeth to no purpose upon the Packer file, the Black Republican editors are now seeking to strike their poison ous fangs into the reputation of Judge Thomp son, one of the Democratic nominees for Su preme Judge. They charge him with being a drunkard. Had they charged him with being the cr m pan ion of Cain in the murder of Abel, it would not have been farther from the truth. As an offset to this whole-cloth lie, read the following from the Erie Dispatch, published at Judge Thompson’s residence: “Judge Thompson is a Democrat—we are a Republican. In his political conduct we have not always approved of his course, but as a man and a jurist he has ever had our admiration and shall have our support for the office to which he was nominated. We know the man and do not know his opponents— hence we are not grabbling in the dark. The legal ability of Judge Thompson is ot a high order—socially he,'commands the respect of all, and is a friend to the oppressed, he has hosts of friends who are politically opposed to him who will give him their support; because they know that he, as a jurist, will know no party ; and that he has no friends to reward or bo enemies to punish. Our opponents~here David Wilmot, the Black Republican can didate fur Governor, is out in a most imploring letter to the Know-Nothings, begging and criDging. for their support. He puts himself “square” on the proscriptive platform. lie is for having all offices held by “Americans”— in other words, he wants “Americans to rule America.” lie thinks that German and Irish Mechanics ought not to be allowed to compete with native born workmen. Negroes born on the soil are natives, and, according to his doc trine, should have the preference over white men who happen to have been born on the other side of the Atlantic. To such degrada tion has‘Black Republicanism sunk. Let the German and Irish population of Pennsylvania remember this when they are asked to vote for Wilmot. Two British vessels recently arrived at Port Spain, Island of Trinidad, one of the British West India Islands, loaded with what they call “ Portuguese African Emigrants , who came to serve a voluntary apprenticeship of ten years f but which we call disguised slavery, and the slave trade of the worst form. Does any intelligent reader believe for a single mo ment, that one in a hundred of those poor creatures came to Trinidad with their own consent, or that they will ever get back again to their native country ? This is British hu manity ! And yet the same Englishmen who are directly or indirectly engaged in the traf fic talk by the hour about slavery in the United States, and shed crocadile tears over the “ poor slave ” of our cotton plantations! Out upon*the arrant hypocrites. High Salaries. —lt is said that Mr. Moran, the new President of the New York and Erie Railroad Company, is to receive an annnal salary of $25,000. The superintendent of Stewart's extensive sugar refinery in New York, received some years ago a salary of $30,000, but after filling the position for eight years, resigned it for more profitable employ ment. above short paragraph is fraught with meaning. In view of such princely sal aries paid their officers, is it any wonder that so many of the mammoth corporations, which curse our country at the present day, eventu ally fail to meet their obligations, after plun dering the masses of the people ? The only wonder is that they are able to keep their heads above water as loDg as they do ! Our Minister to Prussia. —Ex-Governor- Wright, of Indiana, left New York, on Satur day, in the steamer Atlantic, on his way to Berlin, to which Court he has been appointed Minister of the U. States. Governor Wright is, we believe, a native of Pennsylvania, and is a gentleman of high character and eminent ability. The Crops in Indiana and Illinois. —The Commissioner of Patents has received a letter dated Evansville, Indiana, in which the writer states that the crops of southern Indiana and Illinois are beyond all precedent. The “oldest inhabitant” says that nothing has been known like it. They are now harvesting, and the rust has done no damage. Corn is late. The crops of wheat, rye, grass and potatoes will ex ceed, from present appearances, all former products. •Judge Thompson Republicanism Begging ! English Slave Trade The Minnesota Imbroglio. The Black Republicans are endeavoring in every possible way to misrepresent the facts in relation to the existing difficulty in the or ganization of the Minnesota Constitutional Convention. These misrepresentations are corrected and set right by the following ar ticle which we copy from the St. Paid Pioneei-, and which presents the action of the Demo crats in a favorable light; and all these facts verified, it is not impossible, in view of the stubbornness of the opposition, that each Con vention will presenta Constitution to Congress, and ask for admission, resulting in a submis sion of both Constitutions to the people. The Pioneer says : Our Democratic cotemporaries in the East, in giving publicity to these statements, should he guided by' the following facts : 1. The Republicans, in pursuance of a de termination arrived at in tjok posses sion of the Capital on Sunday night, while the Democratic members were at their homes. 2. At 12 o’clock, M., on Monday, the Con vention was called to order by the Secretary of the Territory and the acting Governor, he at the same time, being a legally elected mem ber of the Convention, A motion was made to adjourn to 12 M., next day, and the motion being put, was voted on by a quorum of the Convention, Democrats and Republicans, and declared carried. No division was called for, and , the Convention accordingly adjourned. 3. After the adjournment had been legally carried, and so declared, in a.-cordance with Parliamentary custom, the Black Republicans organized, but without a quorum of legally elected delegates. 4. The Democrats have elected to the Con vention fifty*6ix delegates—all of whom were legally elected ; but six of the delegates, owing to the rascality of certain Rbgisters of Deeds, were refused certificates, in order to place the organization in the power of the Blacks. 5. The Republicans claim to have fifty nine members ; seven of their number hold their seats in violation of law and of justice, thus reducing their number below a quorum, and placing their Convention in the position of a mere partisan meeting. 6. The fact is not susceptible of successful contradiction, that the Democrats have a ma jority of the whole number of delegates, and that this majority is composed of men legally elected, while the so-called Convention of the made up to the required stand ard by bogus delegates—men who, in claiming seats, show that their rascality fully equal their impudence. Another Comet Coming I Those who are astronomically inclined, will be gratified to learn that another celestial vis itor is “ on the down track," and is said to be making excellent time. There are strong hopes entertained at this writing, that no part of the earth but its inhabitants are likely to be struck by this aerial ‘locomotive. M. Ver net has calculated the orbit of this comet, which was recently discovered by a Berlin astronomer. It appears to be approaching the earth so rapidly that it will soon present a fine object to the naked eye. At present it is behoved that it is not Charles the Fifth’s comet, of which there has been so much talk, and destined to come into collision with the earth on the‘l3th of June. Its position is in the constellation Perseus. The comet wonderers can now start a fresh excitement. The Foreign News, By the arrival of the Europa at Halifax, on Tuesday, we have three days later intelli gence from Europe, and have received also, the details of the news by the previous steam er. The intelligence is important. The proceedings of the British Parliament have an extraordinary interest for Americans. The discussion upon the call for the letter of Secre tary Marcy, upon the privateering question, will be found to promise future trouble in regard to that question. The leaders of the opposition are using the opportunity to assail the administration ; but is generally admitted that some action will be necessary to prevent serious consequences. Mr. Roebuck had made a bitter speech against Lord Palmerston, in which he charged him with having entered upon an unjust war against Persia, and by withdrawing the troops from India to pursue that contest, invited the Sepoys to mutiny.— Mr. R. appears to be the boldest and most in defatigable member of the opposition. The prorogation of Parliament was shortly expect ed. The speedy completion of the Atlantic telegraph cable had been announced, and it is now probable that the- attempt to carry out this great marvel of the century will be made by the Niagara and Agamemnon during the present month/ The intelligence from Spain leaves the Mexican question still unsettled.— The only news items of interest from France are, the death of the distinguished poet Beran ger, and the announcement that eleven mem bers of the opposition have been elected to the Corps Legislatif. We have the details of the mutiny in India, which show that the spread of the disaffection is more extensive than was rep resented in first advices, and that the most vig orous exertions of a powerful force of British troops will be required to restore quiet, and maintain the prestige of the British arms.— At present, it looks as if the conquerors of the Indies would be,able to inflict a severe chas tisement upon the insurgents. The commer cial news is of importance. Cotton had advanced. Breadstuffs were dull. Mount Vernon Purchase The Ladies-of Virginia are making power ful efforts to raise a fund for the purchase of the Mount Vernon estate. The following letter (enclosing a check for $5O) from the President of the United States, will be road with interest by every body: Washington, 25th July, 1857. Mrs. Wm. F. Ritchie: My Dear Madam : —The annexed is my cheerful contribution to the Mount Vernon As sociation. Will you be kind enough to present it in my name, and to assure the ladies who have undertaken to raise the funds necessary to purchase “ the Home and Grave of Wash ington,” that I most ardently wish them success in a cause which ought to enlist the sympathies of every patriotic heart ? Yours very respectfully, JAMES BUCHANAN. The Richmond Enquirer. —The noble stand taken by this paper agaiDSt the nullifiers who have attacked Mr. Buchanan’s Kansas policy, is attracting attention and eliciting commen dation from all sections of the country. The Rochester Union says : “ As the clarion voice of the able and intrepid Wise turned back the tide of Hindoo-fanaticism and enabled the Democracy of the Old Dominion to achieve one of'the most brilliant victories known to our party annals, so the Richmond Enquirer,& ‘ leader’ that ‘ has never lost a battle/ in a continuous warfare of more than halfacentury, now rebukes the fanaticisn of the Southern ultraists, and extends its magio wand to a lay the threatening storm. It is putting forth a series of articles of convincing logic and tremendous power, the burden of which is, that every consideration which should weigh with a party regardful of the Constitution and of its own principles and pledges, impera tively requires the Administration to pursue the very policyin respect to Kansas which they are pursuing.” Admirable Sentiment. President Bnchanan, in reply to the invita tion to the banquet given by the city authori ties of Washington to the Railroad excur sionists, wrote a brief letter in which he ut tered the following admirable sentiment: Railroads are truly said to bind- the differ ent portions of the Union together in bonds of iron; but neither iron nor adamant is so efiect ual for this purpose as kind and patriotic hearts from different and distant States united together in bonds of mutual respect and affec tion and in a common love for one whole, great and glorious country. * t'iTY AiVO 'COPSTY AFF tilts. College Commencement, &c.—-The Ceremo nies connected with the Fifth Annual Commencement of Franklin and Marshall College commenced on Tuesday morning last, in Fulton Hall, before a highly respectable and intelligent audience. The ceremonies of the day were preliminary to the regular exercises of commencement day (Wednesday.) and consisted of the Biennial Address before the Literaiy Societies, by Darid Paul Brown, Esq., of Philadelphia, the Dedication of the Societies’ New Halls on the College grounds, and the Annual Address before the Alumni Association, which was delivered io the evenlne in Fulton Hall, by Rev. Jos. Clark, of Chambersburg, ooe of the most talented yonng writers and orators in the coun try. At half-past nine. o'clock, the students, preceded by Hepting’s Brass Band, marched from the College to Fulton Hall. A short time subsequently the members of the Board of Trustees also proceeded irom St. Paul's (Ger. Ref.) Church, where they had been holding a business meeting. After prayer by the Rev. Dr. Hodgson, David Paul Brown was introduced to the audience and greeted with applause. He proceeded to deliver a discourse which, like all his masterly efforts, was profound and eloquent, though it did not possess those bold, striking, extempore charac teristics which have made his efforts at the bar so popular and successful. His theme, “ Force of Character and Im provement of Time,” was profitable for instruction and afforded a wide range of thought and illustration, though presenting but little opportunity for the speaker to indulge in those affecting and truly eloquent appeals which we have often heard from his lips on previous occasions; nevertheless, his argument and illustrations were inter spersed with frequen sillies of wit and relation of anecdote, which elicited loud and frequent applause. The discourse was mainly addressed to the students, and abounding with good advice and friendly counsel. Mr. Brown spoke about an hour and was frequently interrupted with applause. In the afternoon the Society Halls were dedicated, the address for the Diagnothians being delivered by Rev. Geo. Russell, A M., of Pittsburg, and the Goetheans by Dr. Steiner, of Baltimore. The interesting ceremonies were witnessed by a large number of gentlemen and ladies, and posessed much interest. The Board of Trustees met in the morning and re-organ ized by re-electing Hon. James Buchanan, President of the United States, President of the Board. The old officers were re-elected, with the exception of the Vice President, Rev. Dr. J. W. Nevin having been elected in place of Rev. Dr. Bowman, at the request of the latter. A second session was also held after the Biennial Address, and they again met in the evening at 6 o'clock iu the Lecture Room of St. Paul’s Church.— Express. The Commencement exercises were resumed on Wednes day. The attendance was very large—the ladies and boquets being greatly in the majority. The addresses were delivered by Geo. Silvius, of Heading, l’a.; John Ault, of Aunvilk*, Pa.; George W. Willard, of Columbus, Ohio; William Leaman, of Paradise, iu this county ; J. A. Peters, of this county : and the valedictory by William A. Duncan, of Adams county, Pa. The addresses taken as a whole were unusually able and interesting. The young gentlemen from our own county, Messrs. Leaman and Peters, acquitted themselves in a highly gratiylng and creditable manner, and elicited great appflauee trora the vast audience. Both of these gentlemen, if we mistake not their characters, have a brilliant future before them. The valedictory of Mr. Duncan fully sus tained his previous excellent reputation as a finished and eloquent orator. The addresses throughout were listened to with the greatest attention, and elicited the highest commendation from all who heard them. They were creditable alike to the speakers, to the Faculty, and to the College. The atten dance on all the exercises of the commencement, season, bv strangers and our own citizens, was much larger thai upon any previous occasion, and goes to show the deserv edly fast hold Franklin and Marshall College has upon th< public. The benediction was pronounced by President Gerhart, and thus ended the fifth annual commencement of the College. Railroad Appointments.—We learn that MAlires D. llOLimoos. of this pity, late State spent on the Columbia and Philadelphia Railroad, has been appointed, by the Pennsylvania Railroad Company. Conductor on the Philadelphia and Westchester road; and Mr. Sample, late Despatcher at this point, conductor of local freightbetween Dillervillo and Philadelphia. We have-not heard of any other changes in the minor apppointments. Burglary*.—The shoe store of Mr. Gable in North Queen street, was broken open [last Monday night and robbed ofa number of fine shoos. The robbers opened the shutters and cut nr broke out a portion ofa large light of glass iu the bulk window through which they purloined the goods. Mr. Gable cannot tell the exact amount of the goods stolen, but probably $4O or $5O was taken. The in dicatious are that the parties were disturbed in their opera' tions, as less than half the goods in the window were removed. Cricket Match.—The Cricket Match that came off on Thursday last, between the “Conestoga” and -‘Keystone” Ctubs of this City, resulted'in a victory to the former—they having made OS runs to 51 by ih o “Key stone.” At the conclusion of the match a tnedlev game was got up, which resulted in a-tie. Payment of State Tax,— On the 27th ult., Charles M. Howell, Esq., our County Treasurer, paid into the State Treasury $118,455 18, beiug the amount re ceived by him for State purposes to that time. This is upward of $lB,OOO more than was received and paid at the same date bust year, and is much more than has been paid this year by any other county except Philadelphia. State and County Tax.—Up to the 15th u!t., Mr. A. Fairer, Collector of State, County and School tax for this city, paid into the County Treasury $13,000 of State and County tax, being the amount collected by him up to that date. Celebration'.— The colored people in the Ticiuity of Christiana, in this county, had a grand time on Saturday last—the occasion being the anniversary of the emancipation of the negro slaves in the British West Indies. Street Preaching.—Her. Ai.fred Nevi.v, D. D., preached at the Duke street side of the Court House on Sunday afternoon last. llev. Dr. Hodgson will preach at the same place on Suuday afternoon next. Tiie Turners. —The Turners paraded sev eral of the streets yesterday morning, accompanied by the Fencibles’ Band.and proceded a short distance from the city, where the day was spent very pleasantly in the festivities of a Die Nic. They nude a fine appearance. Accident.— On Friday morning Mr. Philip Dorr had his left baud badly mangled in the Card room.of No. 2 Cotton Mill, in this City. A Big Fish. —A mammoth sturgeon (the second of-the season) was taken at Safe Harbor, on Thurs day evening, by Mr. WarM. It is abuut six feet in length, weighs about two hundred pounds, is ‘‘alive and kicking” and can bo seen in a pond, rear of the Mansion House. Camp Meeting.— A camp-meeting is being ield this week near Mount Joy, by the Albright Society. To Be Sold. — The remaining portions of the York Furnace Bridge, not can ied away by the ice flood last Spring, are to be sold for debt by the Sheriffs of York ind Lancaster couuties, to day. Barn Burnt.— The Grain barn of Benja min Uostctter. near Marietta, was struck by lightning on Thursday week, and burnt to the ground. The barn was filled. Coming Down.— Very fine potatoes were sold in our market on Saturday morning, at 60 cents per bushel! Butter brought 16 to IS cents, and liggs from to 15 cents. New Patents. —On Tuesday last, Mr. E. M. Cloak, of this city, received Letters Patent for his supe rior Smut Machine. ftvv. Letters Patent were also granted to Charles Schnepf, for an Improved Corn Planter, which is admitted to be the best machine of the kind ever invented. From California. — California dates sth have been received at New York. There is no important news. The primary election of delegates to the Democratic Gubernatorial Convention result ed in an overwhelming defeat of the Broderick party. Weller will doubtless be nominated on the first ballot. The miners have held a meeting denouncing Fremont’s Maraposa claim, and threatening resistance. Business at San Francisco is unusually de pressed,and several heavy failures are reported. California Road Expedition.— The road expedition, under Capt. Leaohe, arrived at Des Arc, Arkansas, on the 17th ult. It con sisted of one hundred men and forty wagons. The company pitched their tents on the banks of White river, to await the arrival of the oxen which are to haul the stores, &c., for the use of the expedition. The Government stores were received at Des Arc, two weeks previous by river, awaiting the arrival of the wagons and mules which came overland from Mem phis. The train will be divided at this point: the ox train proceeding to Texas, via, Belknap and Chadbourne, thence on the south side the Llano Estacado, or Stake Plain, to the Rio Grande ; the mule train will pass through to the northward of Forts Belknap and Chad bourne, thence through to the Llano Estacado to-the Rio Grande, at or near Fort Fillmore. Col. Leache proceeds with the mule-train, and Capt. David C. Woods takes charge of the ox-train. . Sugar. — The stock of sugar on hand at the Philadelphia Custom House, on Saturday last t was 15,035 hogsheads and 274 G boxes, against 7,797 hogsheads, 508 boxes and 3000 bags at the same period last year. And yet, with all this abundance, straDge to say, the price of sugar is nearly double now what it was then ! Rebellion. In Kansas. This is the right name for the movement of the people in Lawreuce, and the Washington Union properly uses it. There can be no ex cuse for these madmen.- The New York Com mercial Advertiser, an Old Line Whig paper, says ; “ If the people of Kansas, or any portion oi them, have deliberately determined to ‘ resist’ any attempt to enforce the laws by the collee tion of the taxes those laws have imposed, Governor Walker wi'l utterly fail in his duty, if he does not employ whatever force is neces sary to put down such open rebellion. And the men who suppose that in refusing obe dience to the laws and in resisting the Gover nment in enforcing tbem, they will have the sympathy of any considerable number of their iellow citizens outside of the Territory of Kan sas, will find themslves egregjously mistaken.” We have another stronger endorsement from the New York Times, a paper which sup ported Fremont and the Black Republican ticket, which says : The inhabitants of Lawrence have set up a Government within a Government. They re fuse to recognize the Territorial Government —-and the Topeka Government has not recog nized them. They accordingly proceed to re cognize themselves, and to constitute a free city .in the heart of the XeTritoy. They take up what is an absolutely anomalous’ground. They go back in the most literal manner to first principles, and establish in Kansas such a condition of society as obtained in Israel be fore tlie days of the Judges. If there were no shadow of a Government in Kansas—if open civil war raged in that Territory, and the bonds of the Federal Uuion had been loosened —we could understand the propriety uf this proceeding and see its relations to civil order. But the most infatuated defender of the peo ple of Lawrence must surely find it difficult to dispose fairly of the facts set forth by Gov. Walker in his Proclamation, which we publish to day. It is imposible that any man of common loyal y common sense, occupying the position of a Federal officer in Kansas' should look qui etly cm upon such au absolute and contemp tuous disregard of his authority, and of the very existence of the Government which lie represents, as is manifested by the citizens of Lawrence in their municipal organization. If a peaceful solution of the Kansas question is impossible, if it is inevitable that civil war should again break out there, to spread thence throughout the Union, let those who cherish this belief make it plainly known that we may understand what is before us. But let us not hear cries of “ peace ” from those whose conviction is that peace is a chimera, nor pro clamations of regard for law from those who believe that law in these United States has become alternately a farce and a tyranny, that our Government is an irrem ediable imposture, and that nothing can se cure the quiet organization of a great Terri tory of.the Union but entire withdrawal from from that Territory, of every pretence and ap pearance of Federal authority. Politics and Religion. The New Ilork..Evangelist, a “religious” paper, publishes a letter dated Concord, N. H., in which the writer savs : “In New England *it will soon become a question for the churches to decide, whether n Democrat shall be received into the church or be allowed to remain in it without discipline. According to the common interpretation of the late decision of the Supreme Court, those who endorse it by their votes or their influence are doing all in their power t<» rivet the chains of the slave, to make servitude—involuntary, oppressive servitude—the “corner stone” of national government, and at the time, to secure the moral assassination of a race.— The Apostle Paul seemed to indicate that those who “ approve ” of such things are more guilty than those who do them. Our churches cannot tolerate fellowship with slaveholders ; indeed some clergymen think their souls in peril by associating with or corresponding with thbse who consent to meet with them as equals. If Christians at the North cannot sit peacefully with a delegate from the South, how can they tolerate northern brethren who approve of the principles of those delegates, and vote as they vote on the great and absorb ing questions of-ihe day ? This aspect of the question is rising in this State. The New York Commercial, in referring to this foolish and illiberal assumption of eccle siastical power, and to the further fact that a Free-Will Baptist deacon was expelled from a church in Michigan a few days ago, because he voted for Buchanan for President, and thereby aided the cause of slavery, very justly remarks : Such preposterous assumptions of the right to dictate to a citizen to which political party he shall adhere, and to make his political opinions the terms of his churchmanship, every man with a spark of independence m his breast will treat with the contempt they deserve. But the effect of surii assumptions will be to destroy respect equally for religion, its ministers and its ordinances. Whoever really loves religion and desires the perpetuity of the church, exert himself at once to crush such a proscriptive spirit, arid will emphati cally denounce the assumptions which it implies. Fidelity of ft Slave. At a meeting of the Palmetto Association of South Carolina, some weeks since, Mr. Keitt, in the course of a speech laudatory of the deeds of the South Carolina regiment in the Mexican war, related the following instance of devo tion in a slave who was attached to the person of a brother of Preston S. Brooks : “ When another regiment tied, and all the horrors and scourges of war were pouring down upon the gallant Palmettoes, bathed in the blood of their comrades—when Shields said ‘who will follow me?’ and Butler said ‘we will’—Brooks, yes, the stripling Brooks, cried out, ‘ yes we will all follow you to the death’ —and be did.. The same ball which pierced his body shivered his musket—and a shivered musket was to adorn the signet with the motto satis meruisse. When this brother left home, Brooks told him, his father said to his old body servant, ‘ go with him and take care of him —I confide my son to you.’ How did the good old negro act? When the baptism of blood was going on—when perils were lingering around —when hot ignition of stratagem was every where—with none to watch the wound ed boy but this old servant, he was at his labor of love, taking care of his charge.— Crushed bones worked out from the wound— he gathered them up and preserved them. The noble spirit passed out and the corpse alone was left. What did the old and faithful slave ? The regiment gave him a mule and cart—soldiers helped him to make a rude coffin. With his own hands he placed the earthly remains of his beloved young master in this hearse-—he conveyed it to Mexico—he erried it to Vera Cruiz—he bore it on shipboard and by railroad to his old master’s home, and delivered the body and the bones of her child to his widowed and bereaved mother, at the lintel of his birth place. This is literally true. In classic story—in legendary annals—in ancient or modern time—where is the equal of this touching story ?” A Negro appointed toOffice in Wisconsin! —Secretary of State Refuses to File the Bond.— On the 9th day of July, 1857, a com mission, as notary public, was issued by Gov enor Bashford to 11. Nolan—a person of nut brown complexion and negro extraction, who has resided in this cit / many years as barber, ice cream saloon keeper, and leader of a cotil lion band. He also invented the “ capitalu vium ” and “ tricopherous,” two varieties of “ dog water” in general use and circulation for the hair. The commission is isued with all the proper formalities, and the bond required by law is signed by Wm. H. Nolan, and by Wm. B. Jarvis as bondsmen. But the Sec retary of State, Col. Jones, refuses to file the bond, and on it we find the following endorse ment :—“ This appointment is in violation of the constitution and therefore void. "—Madison Democrat , July 16- Minnesota Politics.— The examination of the official returns, says the St. Paul Pioneer, on file in the office of the Secretary of the Ter ritory, shows, that at the election for Delegates to the Constitutional Convention, the Democrtic party had a majority of over sixteen hundred. Yet the Black Republicans talk of their bogus Convention representing the political sentiment of a majority of the people of the Territory. ggy* Mrs. Emily Campbell, wife of ex- Postmaster General Campbell, died at her late residence in Philadelphia, on Friday last. JOHN 11. BRENNE9IAN) of Blount *foy t will bo a candidate for the Legislators, if nominated j by ibe Democratic County Convention. aug4tf29 r PO THE VOTERS OF LANCASTER X COUNTY.—I hereby offer myself os a candidate for SHERIFF, at the approaching election. New Holland. /BOUNTY TREASURER.—I offer myself to the voters of Lancaster county as a candidate for Gounty Treasurer, at the ensuing election. Lancaster, Aog. 4. DHERipp^LtjY, —We are authorized to O announce FREDERICK DERN, of this city as the people 8 candidate for the office of Sheriff. Should he be elected, he promises to discharge its duties with fidelity. nprSS tflft W E WOULD ANNOUNCE THROUGH T T the columns of your,paper the name of John H Breneman, of Mt. Joy Borough, as a . in didate for the Leg islature at the ensuing October election, subject however to the decision of the Democratic County Convention. T'O THE VOTERS, OP LANCASTER COUNTY.—FeIIow Citizens: I offer mjsoif to your consideration as a candidate nt the next election for the office of State Senator. Should I bo elected I will en deavor to perform its duties with impartiality. BENJAMIN G. HERR. Slrasdcro. Juue 30th ’57, tf24 OHERIFFALTT—IIIRAM L. THOMP .O SON. of Providence tw’p., will t w a candidate for Sher iff of Lancaster county, at the eusuipg election, if nomina ted hv the Democratic County Convention. iu> IBtf IT X\, r « are authorized to announce that M J ACOB F< »LTZ, of this city, will be a ciudidate fo Clerk ot the Quarter Sessions of Lancaster county if nom inated by the Democratic Convention. npr 14 tf 12 TyEGISTER...WiIIiam Kirkpatrick, of AX. llus city, will be a candidate for REGISTER, at the en.-uniu election, if nominated by the Uuion. County Cnn venttou. juue Id td* 22 PF '“* Gei1 ' MICHAEL R. WIT ,, *l/'* v 1 Lancaster, will be a candidate for the office of . IIKRIFF, at the ensuing October electiou subject to the decision of the Union County Convention. aprT tny 83T The Rev. C. S. BURNETT, while laboring as Mis sionary in Southern Asia, discovered a simple and certain Cure for Oiiismnptiim, Asthma. lironchiiis , Coughs, • bid.:, JVVrroMi* Prhilit;/. and all impurities of the ; also, an’ easy and effectual inode of Inhaling the h'auetlij. Actua ted by a desire to betiefit his suffering follows, Ji« will cheerfully s.-nd the Recipe (free) to su*h as desire it. with full and explicit directions for preparing and successfully using the Medicine. Address, Rev. C. S. BURNETT. aug4 Bm-‘> 831 Broadway, N. Y. City. &ir EQUALITY TO ALL! UNIFORMITY OF BRICK:— A new teature ot business: Every one his own Salesman. •Lutes A Co., of the Crescent One I'rioe Clothing Store. No. 200 Market street, above »>th, in addition to having the largest, most varied and fashionable stock of Clothing in Bhiladelphia. made expressly for retail sales, have consti tuted every ou>* his own Saiesmau. by having marked iu figures, on eiu-h article, the very lowest price it can he s"hl tor. so they cannot possibly vary—all must buy alike. The goods are all well sponged and prepared and great pains taken with the making, so that all can buy with the full assurance of getting a good article at the verv lowest price. Remember the Cresreut, in Market, above fdh. No. -JOO f«i< 2 ,; iv-:> .t co. IMPORTANT TO FARMERS.— A F. BAIR 1 would respectfully inform the public, Unit lie has (.then tin* old established stand, formerly occupied by S. B. Haines, and more recently by N. Bair A Brother. in the rear of Dr. George B. Markley, in East King street, Lan caster. Bii.. a half square east <>r Sprecher's Hotel, whore is prepared to furnish those celebrated THRESHING MA CHINKS uml HORSE BOWERS with the improved Friction Geared Shaker, which for lightness of running and effi ciency of action stands unrivalled. N- B—Repairing of all kinds attended to at the shortest notice, and iu u manner that will make the article repaired as useful as if new. lie invites Farmers to come and ex amine his work, and purchase if they see proper. ifjf-The bust of reference can ho given. July 8 tjui 25 Fine, beautiful hair—Jet blark i»r brown; Or tresses, curling and gulden— Is the certain result—without chance nr doubt— Of the use uf LYON'S KATHAIKOV. Tlie immense sale of .Lyon’s Itatlialron —neurly IjOOU.UUO bottles per year—proves its excellence and uni- Titshl popularity. It rest ires the Hair after it has fallen out, invigorates urn! beautifies it—making it soft, curly, ami glossy—cleanses it from all Scurf and Dandruff. aim! imparts to it a delightful perfume. The Ladies universally pmnounce it the linear and most agreeable article ever used. Sold b} all dealers, everywhere, for 2a cents per bot tle. IIKATiI. WVNKOUI- A C ».. Proprietors and Perfumers, tid Liuekty St., N'e\y York. my 2« tf 19 MARRIAGES. On the ‘Jstlt ult , by the Rev. .1. H. Meti 'e*, Mr. David James to Miss C. M. Yeager, both of Columbia. At Washington, Lancaster county, nu the g.S'th of July, by thy Rev. A. H. Kauffman. .Mr. Samuel Bargolo Miss Alary Ann Kise, all of Wuahinatoii. On the 22d ult.. by Rev. Pinn. Thomas Smith, of Philadelphia, to Kary Pud«r. o| Columbia. i>n thy 21st ult..at Elizabethtown, by the Rev. \V. 0. Laitzly, Philip Oldweiler to Harriet K. Ilershey, both of Elizabethtown. On the 14th ult., by the Uev, D. Hertz, Jacob Heller to Ulizabeth Mur, all of New Holland. On the luth ult., by the same, John Grime to Ad-liuo Ivillian. all of Reamstuwn. On the 20th ult.. bv the same. John Adam Lberly of Reamstuwn, to Eliza Frankhuuser, of Kphrata. THE MARKETS Philadelphia Market. The Flour market continues dull, and standard shipping brands, late inspected, are offered at $G,75 ber bbl., without m llnding buyers. The demand is limited, ami the ooly sales we hear of are 2UO barrels Ohio extra at $7,5b, aud 300 barrels Brandywine at per bbl. For home uso prices range at s»i.7s@S fur common to choice brands aud extra, and $S 50(5,9 per bbl for fancy lots, as to quality.— Rye Flour and Corn Meal are quiet. The former is held at $4.75, and the latter at $4 per barrel. lhero is more doing in Wheat to-day, and prices are steadily maintained, some 5(57, 1 000 bushels mostly now Southern, having been disposed of, in lots, at. liW<tvlif»c • for fair to good and prime reds, and 165(5175c. for inferior and prime white. Rye, old, is held at 100 cts., but a sale of 600 buajielg Den- is reported to a distiller at 05c. Cora is less active ard only about 3000 bushels Pennsylvania yellow have’ been sold at 89(cL91c. —holders generally asking the latter rate. Oats are dull and lower, with sales of 3000 bush, old Pennsylvania, ot pour quality, at 50c. in store, 1000 busk, new Delaware at 50c., aud SUO bushels inferior do. at 4fi@ 48c. Great discovery.—soo Agent* Wauted immediately. Enclose Postage Stamp, and address j. M ROSE, aug 4 4t* 29 Atkinson, N. 11. WANTED .«»A SALESMAN In a first Hans wholesale Notion llouso in Philadelphia. To one who can influence a fair amount of tmdo a libera compensation will he allowed. Address, BALDWIN, LINDERMAN & CO., Box 111, Philad’a l>. 0. aug4 It 29 Notice —The Lancaster county AGRICULTURAL SU>M ET Y will inert on Wednesday the lStb day of A ugust, is .7, at the C’>urt House, in the city of Lancaster, at 2 o’clock, p. in. Punctual attendance ix r*iu~Hted. D. G. KSULKMAN, aug4 3t 29 Secretary. V'INK TEACHERS WANTED.— To ll take charge of the Public Schools of the Warwick dis trict. The County Superintendent and Directors will meet at l.ichtenthaler’s Hotel. In Litiz, <>n Wednesday, Angust 19, at 9 o'clock, A. M., for tin* purpose of examining and employing teachers. SAM U EL WILDER, Prrs't. au«4 2t* 29 Teachers wanted wanted for the schools in Penn township, nine Teachers, ut a lib eral salary. Schools to be kept open four months, from the Ist Of October. Applicants for schools will he examined by the County Superintendent, at the public house of Christian ilershey on Tuesday the 18th of August, at 1 o'clock, P M ’ aug43t* 29 AARON LONGENECKEIt] Sec’y. (Examiner cony.) Applicants for eating house LICENCE IN LANCASTER CITY. .Yorth Ws.st Ward —Ju/Tries k McDonnell, D. FULTON, Clerk of Quarter Sessions. Applicants for license to sell LIQUOR RY TIIE GALLON. Gmr.doga Township —S. M. James. D. FULTON, Clerk of Quarter Sessions. aug 4 3t 29 INFORMATION WANTED.—On TUES DAY, the 21st ult., a boy by the name of JOHN KREINER. left Ins home at Jacob L. Beiler’s, on Mil Creek, in Upper Leacock township, Lanc-ister county, since which nothing has been htard of him. Ue is about 16 years old. had on when he left, a shirt, good pair of cotton pants, and old straw hat, without shoes or stockings. Any person knowing of his whereabouts will confer a favor by communicating it to JACuB L. BK/LBR. Address,GrofTs Store I*. 0. Lancaster couuty, l*a. aug4 3t29 A MARKET FARM FOR SALE—Con taining FURTY-FIVE ACRES within 8 miles from Baltimore, on the Washington turnpike, near the railroad. Access to the city six times a day by the curs. The farm has good improvements, is well watered, has plenty of FRUIT of all kinds. On it is a bed of IRON ORE of the Black Clay bed. Half of the purchase money can remain three years. Apply at this office. Refer to me, aug4 3m29 GEO. BARBER, Baltimore, Md. MORE NEW BOOKS? Just Received, GEARY AND KANSAS. This book gives you a full history of the far famed Ter ritory of Kansas, including Geary’s Administration ; its discovery, geography, soil, rivers, climate, products, pro gression, Reeder’s and Shannon’s political desertions, Ac., Ac. The author, John H. Gihon, M. I)., Geary’s Private Secretary, claims to have rotated in as unbiassed, plain and comprehensive a manner as possible. For sale by aug4 1f29 MURRAY, YOUNG k CO. J MARTI*.] . BTRVSnURO. fj. KIHKEAD, Dentistry— martin a kinkead having associated together in the practice of * DEXTISTKF, /Eggs will endeavor to render entire satisfaction in all operations entrusted to their care. Being prepared lor the Manufacture of TEETH, wo will ba enabled to suit all cases, with Block, Single Gum or Plate Tooth, oithor on Oold, Silver or Gotta Porcha. 43“ Office— Main Street, 3 doors E** l of Kchtornacht’s Hotel, Strasburg, Lancaster couDtj. N. B.—l take this method of tendering thanks for the liberal patronage heretofore received, and hope by the present arrangement to b« enabled at all times to attend to those requiring our services. aug4 ly IN THE MATTER OF THE ESTATE OF JoUN N. LANE, Jate of tho City of Lancaster, Merchant, dec'd. To the heirs anil legal representatives of said deceased.— TAKE NOTICE —That the Orphan’s Court for tho Connty of Lancaster, has appointed the undersigned Auditor to make distribution of the moneys in the* bunds of James B. L-iuo & G- Taylor Laue, Administrators of the Estateof Jno. N. Lane, deed, to and among those legally entitled tberoto, and that he will meet ali parties interested, on Tuesday, tbo Bth day of September,. 1857, at 2 o’clock, P. M., at the Library ltoom iu the Court House, in the city of Lancaster, when and where you can attoud it. you see P r f °P er * GEO. M. KLINE, Auditor. Xhcro will be brought into the same distribution, the moneys in tho hands of George Martin,.(as per account tiled at the June Term of tho Orphans’ Court,) Trustee ap* pointed by the Orphans’ Court to sell certain portions of the Real Estate of said Jno. N. Lane, dec’d. 4td 29 [Examiner copy.] GEO. M. KUNE. JOHN STYER. aog 4 tf 29 WM. ELLMAKF.R, tf *‘29 Saturday, August 1. J. MARTIN.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers