t 4 o 'b'.‘ over ' water.” ihey v | e Vslf-bea.wd U«uon mt-n): »»"> ud t>l«.-frb the King, Gcd bless the faith* s defender, The devi) take the Pv>pe and the Preten 'er; jjtii -wu* the Pretender is and who the Ktn^, <3-cd ble-s usall, is quite another thing. ’ * 1 charge now, as I have charged before, that the governor ol New Jersey wa? elected m th»- interest ot Slavery, and that Democracy, as olhcered and ■ — r . in manned iu New Jersey,is iu syrapi.thy with Trea-• -Mo ■PwitHroENT A year ago . I { * 0 son and Rebellion. If you decorate your Senate i low“'hSS thia Ueli-latore in Chamber with tin American ling, a rtata flag must Ee.-elnt.OLS offered and aavocatea^ B b e elevated beside it. , . „ majority ot the senators upon this noo 0 -j be doctrine ot State rights, a political falsehood resolutions sought to purchase peac v and a delusion, is boldly proclaimed as part oi the «f national honor. which the dominant new got pel of peac-. Three weeks eiuoe the Sena- Tbese: resolutions abo“t wm si , eccd at ouo , tor f.om Bergen tMr. Holsman) declared himself .party in,the ? euat anued the morality of in iavor ol a vigorous prosecution of the war. and omluona and Q r Louis Naooleon I congratulated the Senate that since he was in Dick Turpin, Ta«y taflSd favor,now ot a war wi'h white men, in the next year with the Jangnage of Macc y he would be eloquent lor carrying the war into with the f h^ e of me t"a“io“ Alma, with At. icans. Bat, Sir, the Peace Coni- nnttee met at the New York Hotel on the 22d day |br when onier .iub i v p Vfl riiatin« of February, desecrating the anniversary day that W? 8 * 0 “ SrfJre which justice must ty nd and break, the Senator irom Bergen, _ in a most the^ idenUcal then the great popular heart stirred to its depth, language of the pronupciainento of the Rebel and conscience, with so delicate a voice that it is UOQgrese, dt £ a * es b8 ,>, 0 13 often stifled spoke in so clear a voice that Us ac- and has been 6 H l ? e _ firing cents could neither be mistaken* nor its mandates upon Fori Sumter, against the war and for P<*ace* Mv accusation against * v Democracy asit is” hath uscameup slowly to the help of the this extent. Democracy in New Jersey is without •Tord against the mighty. Mental servitude had honest purpose or principle. Tf Democracy pre iflcome an attribute of the Norm as much as bodily tend to be for war in Pennsylvania it is for peace Servitude was an irstitution of the South, till, in New Jersey. And when Gen. Lee was march- Sth as much wit as truth, a son of New England iiig tbiough the beautiful and fertile valley of the ■aid, replying to Daniel Webster, “Yes! there Cumberland, up to HarrNburg. the Democratic North; it is tae South all the way up to parry was joyously assembling in the State Capitol Jjarfada! ll of Pennsylvania to nominate George W, Wood- Soon it permeated the minds of the people that jward, who said ‘it was a siu to think against when a Chief Justice said,in the latitude of Wash- slavery,” and that the time must come wheu the ingtonCity 1 -that a negro had no rights wnich a South could fall back upon her natural fights, and white man was bound to respect, ’' the trne intent > use all the means she possessed or conld command and meaning of such language in the atmosphere jin defence of her slave pro erty T - of Charleston was that “no Northern mudsill has • No wonder thar-Geu. Dee hastened .to ratify a any tights which a Southern gentleman is bound nomination so opportunely made! No wonder a to respect.” Then the shotted guns of Snmter single voice was uot raised ou behalf of an imper apened, while manhood and moral courage took iled country in that Convention, which abandoned l&e place,tii.- tbe mind and heart of tue American tile latitude ot Harnsburg as too suggestive of snot people, of concession and pusillanimity. j and shell. And it rs nut singular that a retired * “We have refnsen allegiance to oar principles: ! Mejor General of the U S. Army, who would we have refused to pay the price of national honor • make a “ca* ital engineer for a - titionary power. ” and virtue, and we are sued id ihe courts of destiny • wroie hit* distinguished considerations, on the eve ai d the case is this day on trial. ” Andlneednot , of a roost significant tleciion to Mr. Woodward, speak of the eagerness with which the eyes of ; who bel eyet that ‘‘Slavery was a blessiag!” Bnrope *re turned toward America, that land of Ado while this subject is in my memory, let me Wtich adisUnguished Englishman (John Bright) say that tbe sadrest fight that my eyes ever beheld B&ys: “Privilege every morning, with blaiaat wa.* the sight ofthe weary thousands who thronged breath* begins to curse breause it (America) dares tbe bridge across the Susquehanna on the 19th day lobe prosperous and happy without a monarchy, of June in the j ear of grace ISC3 Old men, ten witbout an arietociacy. and without a pries'hoo *, der womin and helple:-s children, lo' the first time who are the licensed venders of salvation wrought aliens to their hearths and homesteads, had s,ath bylove.” ered together their household goods and sought mr. President, I confess the hesitation with shelter from the Gmhs and Vand.-.is of oarbarism Which I approach the discussion of tnis bill which —sought shelter and proteciioi ou the peaceful is sow before :s the Senate. My only desire is to banks of the Juriata. The recollection if these f reclaim those sentiments of public policy which scenes will never be effaced, and till they have believe are intimately connected with ihe future ; passed from my. mind, let no man ask me to pacue gloiy and grandeur ot my country. And, Sir, I in my eff rts to point out-to my countr men the trust that I belong to that class who believe the > perils which threaten th» Republic. One of the greatest glory ot a freeman is to be a good citizen. • finest passages in Roman hiytory tells us thai a.ter And a good citizen prefers liberty to luxury, and i thebattie of Canme, atter disaster aad defeat had Aouor to profit. He holds that next to dying for ; followed the Roman General, the Senate went be cne’s country the greatest glory is to live tor her yond the walls cf the imperial city to thank their inteiest and honor. X have no-aspirations no am- General that he had not despaired of the Repub bitions, which do not go forward in longing for that lie! peace which shall dawn upon the end of th.s ter- Totbatmanwhowouldstopthevictoriousban xible and righieons war, a peace which, in the ners of the armies of the Union, by caviling at the language Lincoln, “X hope may Proclamation of Emancipation, 1 would answer come soon, and when it does come will come to ! that it was six months after the Head of the Nation »tay and will be worth the keeping for all future t had invoked the “considerate jurgmentof man toe.” w kind and ihe graciou? favor of Almighty God” on Whenever I look upon that flag,Sir, with every that proclamation before, standing by the unnum impulse o< my heaft, there rises a sentiment of bered graves of onr dead in the nation’s cemehjry, •affection, of honor. I know that God has given this we could say : “Uf th* two great effo r ts to euslave country to men who can defend it, and to women the English race, in body and mind, the first met who in its service consent to the sacrifice of their its grave at Marstcn Moor, the second atGettys husbands, their brothers and their sons. And the i burg.” man, whoever he is, and whatever place he may But to return to the political decline and fall of fill, who will not protect and delend the land that New Jersey. In iBt9 both & ousts of this X«egisla gave him binh, is a dastard and a coward. ture by jo nt resolution, cedaied Slavery to be an The bill before the Senate, Mr. President, is en- evil, and instructed our Senators and Repreaenta iitled “An Act to regulate the appropriation of tives in Congress to vote against the extension of moneys raised by the authority of the State for humau bondage in the Territories. (Pamp. War purposes.” I frankly confess that I differ with I*aw r s, p. 334, 1649.) my honorable friend, the senator from Union (Hr. But soon the leading politicians who represented Jenkins), in the views he entertains of the causes tbe dominant power, became by social ties, or by and of the conduct of the war. General sagaoity the powerful mflueuce of interest, in favor of ex and uprightness cannot contend against thepreju- tenoi-g Slavery into the Territories. New Jersey dices among which a man is born, and those who became Pi o Slavery in sentiment, or at least, the advocate the passage of the bill are influenced by dominant party wt re for slavery with the Union, prejudices which have grown with their growth, or, if need be, without the Union. In all events, as silent and yet as all-pervading as the air they were for Slavery. which they breathe. As God hn* no attribute It sent Senators to Congress who defended the which sides with the oppressor, so man ennobles institution. It sent members to the lower house Rimseli by becoming the an YOv*ate of the oppressed, who worshiped the shrine of Jefferson Davis then Bishop Hopkins may thunder, in a small way, to as now, the leading spirit of Southern aggression, a very select audience, that slavery is a divine in- a monster monopoly, which subsidized news- j atimuon, and compel buß auditors to bow down to papers and treated the consciences of legislators as ihe narrowest interpretation of individual texts, a merchantable article; a corrupt corporation, But the heart, relying on the spirit of Scripture. which may yet ieara that “corruption wins not still whispers what every grand thinker the world more than honesty, ” aided or abeued this spirit of has ever produced boldly proclaims—that all men Pro-Slavery fanaticism A man who was for everywhere ought to be free. Liberty and against the despotism of the men who "You cannot make science utter a liein the face of called themselves the “master race,” was os era- Ihe universe, and declare that the sun moves cised In private and In public life, round the earth and the earth stands still. The 'lt was then that James Buchanan made terrors of the Inquisition are nothing, and Galileo ton a test. He and his viceroys made power tyraa whispers, “E put si muove. ” “Jt dots mooe ny, and they made tyranny contemptible. I .then Ay 1 And New Jersey moves. Only felt, as I now feel, that obedience to such behests a year ago we were threatened with revolutiomn wasacrime. I declared, in 1655, that if the creed the North if a single soldier who was not a white of Buobanan onthe-Kanzas question became the citizen should enlist and fight against “Slavery in policy for New Jersey and the country, the Demo arms”—and now a single township in the county cratic party would become a political and moral of Warren has paio SlO,O 0 for bounties to colored abomination. * . soldiers, and not less than 3,000 .black .men have The money power and the slave power triumphed, left New Jersey to avenge their slaughtered and controlled Democracy In the district in which I brothers at Wagner, at Port Hudson,* and at resided. The Kansas candidate who believed in 'Vicksburg. Ay! Even New Jersey moves. Buchanan was nominated and defeated. Never again will an insolent majority on bended I said in the Philadelphia l 3 ress y October 19, knees supplicate for peace, add herald to all the 1859: •♦Themanwhoischosentobearthe.Demo world that this war for Law, for Liberty, audfor cratic standard this Fail must bend 10 the Autl- Bumanity is “causeless in its origin and danger- Lecompton sentiment; the principle will not bend ©ufctoihe liberties of the people.” Never again to him, and no shilling or truckiu gon that ques- Will men offer upon the floor of this Senate to join tion will satisly the peoule or subdue the voters of any ol the sister States of the Union to carry into the First District, and woe be to the candidate for practical effect a war upon the Federal Govern- Congressional honors who has already pledged ment. The utter change of front in regard to Sla- himself against the double-dealing of a treacherous . very did not take place till alter the year 1856. But Administration and has then turned back. * so wide-spread and so thorough became the delu- From that day to this, I have been in undying sion about Slavery in the remnant of the Demo- hostility to that sort of democracy which hates cratic party, that they unconsciously became the liberty, loves slavery, _and would rather celebrate apologists and delenders of haman bondage aad the funeral rights of Constitutional liberty amid oli its villainies. the incantations and orgies of {secession and Re "We find the present Executive ol this State de- bellion, than see tho triumphant advauce of ci vii claring in his inaugural address (page 14, 1863): ization which strikes the soackles from the slave «‘We are told that slavery is the cause of the war, and tells the oppressed to go free. _ and that the war can never cease and the life of the Since 1860, the history of New Jersey has been nation be preserved until slavery be abolished. written se that all the world may read It, I yield This has led to a departure from the original pur- to no Senator on this floor m regard lor the honor pose of the war. This is the radical error of the ■ of New Jersey—dearer to me than life itself. ; ror Emancipationists. Slavery is no more the cause i her I have made sacrifices which it does not be* ©f the war than gold is the cause of robbery and : come me here to narrate, and for her fu-ure destiny murder.” I I shall do battle with my latest breata, hoping, Compare this with the avowal of Alexander H-- ; a 7 praying, that she may yet be f ee. But, Stephens, the associate of Jefferson Davis, in a , Sir, and I say it with shame, the political history S eecu delivered at Savannah on the *2lst of ol this State foT three years is,one of which no pa-; JKtrch, 1861. Be says“ The new constitution ’ triotcan be proud, save as its darker lines are has put to rest forever all agitating questions rela- 1 made glorious aud lustrous by the deathless cour ting to our peculiar institutions. African Slavery age of New Jereey soldiers. They have made Os it exists among ns is the proper statuß of the ne ; crimson; on every battle-field from Roanoke to gro in our lorm of civilization. This was the im- ; Gettysburg, with their blood ihebat.ner of victory, mediate cause of the late rupture and present re- Mr. President, I may be charged with being po- Tclotion.” j liticai raiher than argumentative. But, sir, this Between such eminent advocates of Slavery as , is a political qnestiou. It is a capital cause we 'the Governor of New Jersey and the Vice Presi- are now The Nation is on trial for itslife. dent of moribund Confederacy, who shall de- The Democratic party ha* already been tried and aide? condemned, has it anythiug to say why sentence of this State, excepting Jeff. Davis’s of death should not be pronounced against it! I majority in the city of New York, ldo not know pauce for reply. Who are its mlvocat*B I Where it is seriously contended that ‘ ‘Abolitionism Isittbesage of Moniiceilo, Thomas Joffersou, oiid Sececsionism” were the causes of the war. a "Virginian when > irgtnia was th? “Mother ol Yet such was t&e opinion deliberately expressed -Presidents, 1 * and not the grave of Northern pa by Joe) Parker m bis inaugural address in 1r63, iriots? No.. and boldly avowed in his annual message of Jan- ; Who is it, then, who cometh with dyed gar nary 12. 1663. ! meats to defend “Democracy as it lbl” Ah! Now H. tbinis that if the policy of Emancipation had ; I taltoW Potheen inaugurated the mass of the people in I 'i T dellot *^S Sfr t T w »Uhrti?nhaniwws O'- rttp Southern States woold have * •auppli- Hurte ol the Hermitage, | y •Med then TulerB and returned to their atle- * urr . thH ull, t or from Ber K eu 1 311 - Holsman), Ar V hL“ran: a few words upon this measure, tutl--^ ere son eanuot And any fugitive slaves. which I understand has the sanction, ol the Demo iom Wwf "k 1 " 18 ahoutid. There, where wis- cratic caucus, aud I have done. beeu toT a of ihi** terrihl« rnutoat. thwv I oppose the bill because Slavery, uke Achan’s wedge of gold is First— li contravenes the laws of Uongress. i tUn,! ’ aBd they gladTy teardtfwn the Second — it is agalust public policy and Ent tn Ker, ,wV Un u '> ‘ “>»? beautiful flag ” ag.inst the rights of mankind. • and hentrehre' S?' whare beutratity prevailed- The laws of Uongress passed in and sinco the • larbsTlem ii a miS” 18 " betweenffeedom aud y p ar 1662 authorize the President to enroll, arm, uSiert we i w bere nentrality pre. ' equip and receive Into the land and naval service •ninsfto e n ?i o . venior Br ‘tmle te th?eat- oi the United States such number of volunteers of Sierir “ We, .„e W onhstment of negroes as sol- African descent as he may deem useful to suppress eouth Cardin,aapplauds’" 8 N6W • lerB6y ’ wllil « the present reoellion, for such term of serviceas he assertion that outside the m Under 6 'and e ’hy virtue of these several acts of a- Hdv Ta -Ssri DO , legislature that Congress, as lam informed by the Chairman of »A d f eral Government by i the Military Committee of tbe United Stiles,Bo,oo:) pasa re as the one colored men, many of whom, were once slaves, of unlessi J be the Legislature a &d are nowfieedmen, are enlisted in the armies to heart is of lho Vh-ou. At least 3MOO more of these des it. re^s*, thls pifeed Africans, about whom the majority ol the ahtii Senate talk eo much and care so little, are em asonevs »nis for P art °f l he ployed by the Government, though they do not wear kaisea.'fm^J!? 1 . 1 * °- r '**¥•**: may he_ hereafter a soldier’s uniform. These black men carry a flag . 3l6vineiit of a » p d for the em- 'Which is the symbol ot nationality, of power, and - Cfiendinc aeai«R?^£« 8 . as P9^ iers i an y one ot liberty, and th/*y have never disgraced it. It is, for each ann evpv? o.vfrrov,B!olfß 0 .vfr rov,8!0IfB of thlB act eb ta.ll then, the settled policy of the United States Gov *uhject to a fine of ncS I r 11CP » hpon conviction; be ernmentto employ black soldiers. Theexperi lars and impiieoiiTnpnt taa n flvehnndred dol- ment has been made according to law. Itha3buc five sears’’ “ment for a term of not less than ceeded. '•R^s?«,? ouWbeBlad to know vrbafK..'4.k< And now I suppose the Legislature of New Jer-' meets the anprevHi «f the Govc7nr^fS er sey sends greeting to the War Department, with ' a measure whs uronoaprtrJ. ?? Jersey, instructions to desiet from enUsting, under a pen policy Of^ls?ftL b n°? UTxt ? (for.citizens of this State) ol “attne not less turner thelaws of the XJniten Statea i than #5OO, -and imprisonment for a term not lees Aanctipn of the Executlue °f this Stnin tbe • tba n five years,” lam pleased to be able to state glHd to erfdit him with BUBtHiuins the ; lb at Democracy with Edwin M. 'Stanton does not aDerhlft own fashion. I appreciate the bopw? ( mean “strategy and peace,” but means “Fidelity •Jbesof^ Jnel Parker, butl am not bouwdtoSJi. .to one’s country.” The prospect, therefore, of * iff*;***! iiolitteal virtue, which writes a svmil® ! impreEslng the peculiar views ol a majority of this . - ihitieg letter to a meeting « m that aunrier is qnltefclender. .. •gftlnet the mspensionnt the writ of habeas cormiß -, Theo t > jpc r And says, in the lace of a popular mMontv of nearly ?fcS OTtotin ' ba ’ rraB ®^ bfc Go^ erifUinen *« If to deceive two hundred thousand, that tbe FroctainAtinn ivf not a new game which is now Xmftscip&uou is a mistake, Intimates that it is un- eritmil I°*. tbe .firpttime. If to the Gov jonstiTutumf*l, and ends by declaring it an “obstacle the?itV.H« U 1a0,,, y anew foe with ,an old faoe, for the way of peace.” ooatacie the eleoHon of Horatio Seymour on a war platform • Sir 1 ‘we have had too much of this stvle of ZJ a J e ! nt °? load *'theocc-sionfororganizingaQarmed worting the Gov-rnm-m. New da "?. J ? o °re " h «“ «“ y «•* fell of Uni n men with nrh.ni.»h>c 1 t * llb v Ccba » d sword t Xike the liavnitere In the a.ya ofTbe PretSnrler 1 "he Mncerity between u». The South hold lh»ir win«.gta»w»U) there lm. anan.Cfw l ,p V anlhiB war in the intere t. of Slavery. They , . 10 tueir Up, anddruih wage n m the lntere.t ol Slavery. We began tha NEW JERSEY FOR THE UNION. S* •]'CHOF tH . HON. JAM-8 M. SCOVEI OH IHi Mil BEIOhE X a£ N£W JEKSEX Sj 1 AXE 10 IMEhJSOH MEN EOS UiO OOIOBEIi tOUilEfiS. THIS DAILY EVENING BUL T " T AT : PBILAuyiPHIA. SATURDAY: M*T?CH 19; JB?4 « : ti *, l(i OU lv/. «. VV4.I ■ -I.V t t«i u vi t •will *ndit »*y subduing tat* rebitli *n and by sub.ugatiiig the “fugitive mis.-ra” m the j»oi*‘h * ihe w.rfor ub id necessarily and justly in tbt* interett of Freedom, f r -flayery is tae lion mtteway. Gi d b ud»* up the auou's wounds witb Emancipation Th** Oo istitution was meant io * ‘BFi-ure liberty, * * liot to prote.-t Slavery. No principle of law is plainer than the one which • deuiea to a S>a e the power to pass laws in conflict with ti e Jaws ot the Uuited states And this bill piau’ically raie.es ibo.banuer of resistance Decause it r»Bists me law of the Federal Government, and I am gWd th«t the Sen-ttor from Union (Mr. Jen ku-h) abjures the political heresy of state Rights. Peibaps we can on nch opinions. If we want the opinions received in the day- when our Constit ution was fiamed, we will not take them second hand irom our Chief Justice. We will let the men of that day speak for themselves. How will onr American magistrate sink when arraigned as he will be belore the tribunal oi humanity! How terrible will b* the verdict against him when he is put in comparison with Washington’s political teacher, the great Montesquieu, the enlightened xnagist.ate ol France, in what are esteemed the wotsi da\ s of her Morarchy ! “I he argumentlromthe differenceof race which Taney thrusts forward w.uh p&s-ioaate confluence as a proof of complete dk-qualiflcation, is brought forward by Montesquieu as & scathing satire on ail the brood of despots who were supposed to uphold Slavery as tolerable In itself. The rights of mam kind—that precious word which had no equivalent in the language of Hindustan, or Judea or Greece, or Rome, or any Anti-Christian tongue—found ibeir supporter in Washington and Hamiltou, in Franklin and L vmgston. in Otis, George Mason and Gadsden, in all the greatest men of our early history. “The one rule from which the makers ot onr first Confederacy, and then of onr Natioaal Con stitution. never swerved, is this: To fix no consti tutional disability In any one. Whatever might stand in the way of any man, from opinion, ancestry, weakness of mind, inferiority or incon venience of any kind, was itself not formed into a permanent disfranchisement. “The Constitution of the United States was made under the recognized influence of the eternal rule ol order ‘andnght,’ so that, as far as its juris diciioD-extendf, it raised at once the numerous class who had been chattels into the condition of persons*, it neither originates nor perpetuates inequality.’ * If the Constitution does not perpetuate in equality, shall we ! Thomas Jefferson said: “ The opinion that they {the colored race) are inferior io the facnltles of reason and imagination must be hazarded with great difficence. ” (Jefferson’s Works, vol. Sp. 366.) He said afterwards: **l express these views theiefore with great hesitation; but, whatever be their degree of talent, it is no measure of their right. Because Sir Isaac Newton was superior to others in understanding, he was not therefore loi d of the person and property of others. ’ * We are now paying the price of our National vices as well as virtues. If this Nation had been without virtue*, we would, possibly,have been at peace, but it would h.ave been the peace which fol ows dissolution and death. The monumental Bunker Hill stands for Pres cott and Putnam and Warren, and it also stands for Salem, the colored man who shot the gallant Pitcairn, ps he mounted the parapet Red Bank, in the Revolution, and Bl&densburg, at a later day, attest the valor of the colored sol diers. Onr unfriendly legislation will not stay the eter nal laws ot o?der and right. Let us rather hasten the advance of that day when we may “realize tiuth witbontsuffVring,and follow the triumphant road of justice without watering it with tears. ’ * 1 he ivvolution through which we are passing is a n*ce.-sary one, and if we are true to ourselves, it will be one fortunate for all the world. Let us en deavor to elevate a race which, for centuries, has been despised, and in doing this we elevate our selves. The struggle will soon be over. The right never fails in the eternal year* of God. And this country will become what Garibaldi and Cavour dreamed ib:'.t Italy might be. Privilege will no longer stalk in our tireets while justice speaks with “bated bieatb and whispering humbleness. 4 * And as we look over this continent we will say of our native land in the next four years that, “Under such an AdminiMration &z that of Abraham Lincoln this nation will become what itonght to be, and what I believe its Divine Author intended it to be—not a vast plantation for the bleeding ot human beings for the purposes of Inst and bondage, but a now valley of Ji horiiaphat in which the nations of tbe earth, acknowledging and woishiping a common God. will a-semble and celebrate the resurrection ot hi man freedom. 11 ' TOBACCO ANO riEGARS PENNSYLVANIA SEA LEAF TOBACCO. — 10 Ca**' Pennsylvania Sea Leaf Wrappers and Filers, in store and for sale by GEORGE Ab- KIN’S & CO., 154 North DELAWARE Ave nue,. mb!7 HAVANA CIGARS.—3WO Havana Cigars re ceived per Brig Marie Louise, and for sale by GEOFGE ALKiN’S & CO. * 154 North DELA- W AKE Avonne". mh!7 Havana cigars.— A good assortment constantly in Store aud bond— at lowest rates for cash. STEPHEN FUGUET, Importer, mh‘2-!ftnos No. 216 S. Front Street. Tobacco.— oaj?es andekson’S navy Pounds. 57 cases Pennsylvania Seed Leaf Tobacco. 45 Hbds. Maryland Tobacco. 25 Hhdfl. Kentucky Shippine Tobacco. For sale by BOLDltf & WARTMAN, No. 105 North Water Street. * ‘‘ * VIRGINIA MANUFACTURED TOBACCO THE FIRST ARRIVAL SINCE THE WAR BROKE OUT.—iJS boxes superior sweet lnmpa Sust received from Norfolk, now lauding front schooner Florence, and for sale by THOM AS WEBSTER, JB., General Agent Union Steamship Company, 1i North Tielnwnre a-enne. XTOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN, That the un dersigned has made application for the re newal of Certificate No. 5745 for one hundred shares of stock of the North Pennsylvania Ran read Company, issued to him and dated the eleventh of November, 1863. . ' fe24-w&sn-Bt# . T. KIMBER, Jr. LOST— A CERTIFICATE of 5 per Cent. Loan .. of State of Pennsylvania, for $516 05, dated March 12th,.1830, No. 754, in name of WILLIAM MEREDITH. Also, a Certificate of 5 per Cent. Loan of State of Pennsylvania, for the sum of $2OO, . ated June 30th, 1845,. No. .1452, in name of ELI K. PRICE, Administrator of William Meredith, in Trust. Application has been made to the Audi tor-General for a renewal of said Certificates. ELI K. PRIOE, feO-hmft . tsr„ an AtvD gtrttfft ET ARTIN LEANS, NO. B. Ground expressly for our sales, “ua • -> Wblcb we Invite attention of those in wan of reliable articles. Also, INDIGO, STANCH. MUSTARD, <*«• tf extra quality. J -ju jb**! Orders by mail, or oitj" poe’ laJ qno tg. • S ®®B§SS??s i§BS£ ■CIOB. SAL.E -A p "v F Io t H.^WXNSOR~& .-v~s —57ir,ails l>a-ra landing, and Tor sale D by JOS. P B. BOSSIER & 00.. 110 Sontll VbUVM. COMMISSION, BY J OHN C. AKRISON, Nos. 1 and 3 North Sixth Street MANUFACTURER Off- The Improved Pattern Shirt, FIRST CUT BY J. 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