Independent Republican. (Montrose, Pa.) 1855-1926, May 08, 1856, Image 2

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    The 1i?a,Pc,06.0..i1000,1i041i.
_CY. F. RE4D it 11, H. FRAZIER, ::?ITO.R.S.
,
e MONTROSE, PA
Thursday, May ath,
c an didates''ind Platform!
When th*e. Pierce land Douglas party re
pealed the;Mis.souri Compromise, and: threw
open the `door for the extension of .Slavery
over a.large extent of fertile territoil which
bad been consecrated to freedom fora third
of a eentury, there' : were, nit one-ihondred
men in Snlauebania 3 couity but looked upon
the.act as:a breach of good faith betlveen the.
different Sec - liens of Union, and a gross
wrong to the people of the 'Free Slates:—
'Scarcely a min could then be . found' to justi.
fy the act; or restrain his denuncia4n of the
National Administration, 'as ono of the most
corrupt' and time-serving that ever existed
since the organization of the" Government.—
And patriots were! 'then plenty !ho were
going to reform ,the Democratic _party,' and
fmake it more Free - Soil. We were Igravely
told that thre was no real difference of opin.
/ ion npon the questiOn among the .people of
the Free Stites, and that when the Democra
cy °idle North hactia Chance to speak out on
the subject, the party would be set right, and
the Denzeratie partit—tiould be the real Free
Soil p - arty. ; Well, 'after some two! or_ three
years! dodging and shirking, the party at the
North has spoken out, and defined
.its"pasi
tion, and is now ready to enteethe 'contest of
1856. -
The Washington' Union, the leading organ
of the old Hunker Party, boldly •publishes its
programme to tie World, and first ',fuld fore. ,
most is presented Eke ,Yebraska bft . Says
tho Union, ‘,‘ We want no alli6 wh do not
'col-client accept Our platforni on the great
leading issues of the day, and we Will recog
nizenone who expNt - al, the least,-; moilifica
dm-of-the Democratic reed . , on all ques
=tions which make' up Or platform, ln this
-contest, we accept the issues involied in the
'Nebraska bill, so vauntingly tendered to us
by the lately exultant ab4litionists; and that
• issue we cheerfufty islate
,iii the fore ground of
•our programme..:
.., ' -
The N4i6nal•Coniention is to be held 'at
• Cincinnati within" fnur weeks; the 'Platform is
-Already constructed by the wire-wcirkers, the
main plank being the. Nebraska ; and the
-Northern Democr*4 are just asked to walk
•:up ° and set their hands and seals to the docu
.nientrthat the Southern nigger-driVers have
prepared for them.l There is now to be no
dodging or diving, but whoever hesitates in
measuring six feetLjir the dust,: at.the com
mand of his Southern masters, is to be cut
- - -offwkthout the bgt;efit of clergy. •
One of the , mostt, disgusting spectacles ever
witnessed by freemen, is now being *enacted
by the several candidates for the Presidency,.
Pierce,. Douglas, and BUchanan.' They are
.`just now running a tilt to see who can, dive
:the deepest, and come up the dirtiest, id the, 1
tarthest;South. , : All principle Os throri
overboard. Character and qualifications are
' , entirely .loat sightl.oi; and the only open cities. ;
flan is, , what can be done,the beat to secure
:the siipport of the three hundred thousand
-slave holders 'I 'As far' as principle is con- -
'denied, there is . ' not a farthing choose be.
tween Pierce, Buchanan, and . Douglas, and
it the country is to be cursed with au adn,ii
istratlon directed by either, proVably the on-.
Jy choice that fould with any proptiety be
. made, would be founded on the Same reason
as that uried by' the , hi, in the ;futile, when
.; the swallow offered to drive. away the flies
. that were sucking, his blo&:1—" It thele were
driven away, another more huiwry swarth 1
- would come, and ;Suck the lastreMatning drop
of blood in my vein." -Eigho of
• public pl under
, a year, have pretty well gorged
Price and his , office holders, butishould " old
Buele fs be let at :the public crib, if .*e may
Lite • corpora ls
in judge of h 5. w crew by hts '
this Cangressional district, 'twice -eighty
- millions would hardly be a taste' for them,
but . , lite the Writ; 'leach's .daUghters;
_they
woUldstill cry," Give, give."
All the Presidential candidates will soon'
be . in : the field,' • *nd passing e , Otits are fast
Zen onstiating that before the Ch.letionin No;
'verober, there will be but twO, parlies, the
- free masses of itbe North on ane side; and
the nigger-drivers of the 'Smith and their
•houghfaced depitties on the other side. And
the question to he deeldiid, is, shall the govern
'anent benStninistered for the benefit of.thr l ee
hundred thousand Slaveholders and their three
•
tared a half millions of slavea, °T whether the
twenty milliona of free white meu :wall also
be taken into-rtbe aeocTut. More - titan half of
theorganized *ritorY of the country is now
\••• Slave territory and with slavery i jn Kansas,
the preponderance would be much greater
The settlement of the Kansas question
• will be an iinportant event; for freedtho
. timmghoUt the world. If Kansas isfree, that
& stop is put tito the ettiroachinents of the
Black Power of the South--ettreiWlee
ry._,lromes ittatio,u4 and Freedom sectional.:
According to the last census, there were
almost six white freemen to One slave; and'
the Hunker Democracy. take the groUttd that
it slave driver and his negro slave are of more
account and entitled to more !territory than
six white freemen
• - .Whatever may be the result,* political'
atmosphere has now cleared/hi, :and those
_supple' hypocrites who have bPeti iso "x-alOtia
to
. "reform the party in the p l irtyr4,,ii ll iiow
• have their 'mask stripped oil, andbr ll becom
-
pelted.to show th up.colo . "While bun
dreds men! who truly hone t stlY desired'!.o
see the DernOcratie party stand out boldly
on the side 'of
,freedom, will now takNieir
places in 'tile Republican milts, othera will
fall back into line at the crack of the whip ,
and that wilt' be .the .last heard front them of
*skating ivnieSoil sentimeßts ilk the party
1 1
\,•
i
Certatft ftee4paperiii - elaiming to be opp osed
,
to the est ension of slavery, carry floating at
their triathesida the mare of Fillmore end
Donelson.. To say nothing about Donelson,
1 who' ts the owoership . ofe hundred alayea.
.13R
and d 'sued, in accepting .the nomination,
that he ried-itk the institution of Slavery, ft
we earn see any consistency in the support
'of Fillure by an opponent of Slavery'exteit
sioo.‘ Him was Fillmore nominated? When
teimerican National. Council struck out of
eir platform the odious twelfth section, and
inserted' wishy - -washv' substitutes Meaning,
.. i .
tilaut tie same thing, a portion of the es
tr eine southern Delegates 'bolted'--with
drew iit disgust. Butdirectly after, when
they ford' there was a prospect of the nomi
nation (If Fillttiore they 'recovered I heir goitd
nature isud .went into 'the convention and
helped imalte . the nomination, and then the
Free Soil men bolted. This show's that there
was known to be something',to rely on in
Fillmoie'ecase, moresitisfactory tothe South
than any platfortn.. ; .
But w were ho were these Southern Delegates
1
that were so sensitively 'alive to Southern in.
tei r ts,land l et so willing to accepk_Fillmore
as their candidate 1 Some of them - were
me,mbers ott Congress who officiated at the
itrnolat.ten . of Henry M. Fuller on the altar
of Slavery—men who, after their victim
,had
Stibiervied the intended purpose et distracting
the Nocihern vote on thSpeakership as ranch
as-pusstble, readily de4reed him, joined hands
with the sham-Democracy, and attempted to
'elect a South Carolina nuliifieilfor Sieaker.
Put Fillmore in the place of Fuller, and the
tioMmee of the CincinnatiVenvention in the
, .
place o 1 Aiken, and here we ?Ave foreshad
owed the course of the SoutherniCnow Noth
ings in the Presidential conteat. , . 'Yet some
Northern men seem .t. shut .their eyes to
what is transpiring before them: They ap.
pear desirous of being imposed upon. Their
tnotiVes ,we do
. not pretend to
,'understand,
but we are convinced, and We 'believe they
are convinced, that if Fillmoreis kept in the
field together with a . Republican 'and .a Dem
°erotic amdidate, theSouthern - ,Knciw Notli
ing,s will `desert Fillmore as they deserted
Fuller; F.
and the only , question - 1 .4' interest con
nected with hieronning will be,yhether, at
the North, he will keep more voi l es (rem the
Republican candidate or from. thettemocratic.
KANAS . AFFAlltg. : lSfesrs...sherman,.. and
noward,Uf the Kansas . Investigating Commit
tee, have arrived at Lawrenee;and are busy
• 1- •
;with their investigations. Mr. Oilier,- at
.4tSt
.laccounts, had not yet arrived . .oov. Robin.
, • -
and` ex-GOV. Reeder arrived frog .. Washing
- • I.
tort at the came time as the 1114* - ,mentbers of
ithe‹-.Committee; :April' •-o..rh t SittUrday,
April 11 . 4}1 1 the notorious She .To n es,• the
;:-Misouri Postmaster sho.,elitimS .to -be also
[gieriff of Douglas CoOOty,.KanSaa, mado his
appearance - in. Lawrence and attempted to ar 7 .
rest S. N. iVoiod for the reseui of 'Branson
in the FAII of 1855. Failing this, he re
turned on Sunday, and - attempted to arrest
two men, Tappan and .14unroe - ,44' r the rescue
of Wood, - the day before 7" commanded,
some fifteen citizens of Lawre - to assist him
in executing the (bogus Legislature) laws,
and on their refusing ; he took their names.—
Apri \ l\23d, he again_appeared ttit Law;rence,
with a detachment of twelve tinited States
troops, detailed from the force at Fort Leav
enworth, and under die'cotornand.of Lieut.
Mclntosh.. The troops vt-gre•,`sent by' Col.
Sumner, on a requisition from GOv.Shannon-
Several arrests were made, no -the least re,-
aistange being -offered to theli. S. forces,
claugh the authority of sheriff Jones was de
nied by all to the last. The p4sons arrested
are all Free State men, and artimmee,John
Hut.c.hinsorrr'd. F. Warren ; ki Hunt, A. iJ.
Smith, J. G. Fuller, and E. D.,Lyman. The
first, four were arrested for relising to assist
Jones on Sti . ?ftiay, and the last . tulo . for assist
ing in the rescue of Wor:id thezday before.—
About 10 o'clock in, the even' following the
arrests, Sheriff Jones cam of a houie
where the prisoners-we co ned, and was
proceeding to the sol iers' eamp4when a shot
was fired at him by an unkni4tatand,ilie ball
passing, through the legs of hie-pants without,
injuring him. When he arritiO within the
tent tie remarked that he had ,beenshbt at,
and at that instant he was again ,fired at, and
a ball lodged in the middle4Zhis spinal col
umn. His lower extrentitiev ere immedi
ately paralyzed, and lie probably cannot re
cover.
The pro-Slavery'rnen at Leavenworth swear {
to revenge the blood of Jones - „upon the Tree 1
State men. The occurrence iS . much re.gret.
ted by. the people of Lawrilee, who - have
..
never countenancedunnecessi ~
gy violence, and
who are ignorant of the 'inirdirer of Jones.
It is believed to be the \ pniiiy of -the, Slave
-State leaders; now that \ the Congressional
ComMittee are on the ground; to incite Free
State men to viplence-and to. tiolation of law,
but the latter are dete ‘ rmineiF;tO avoid any
resort to Violence, as log as gossible.
The people of Lawrence hale held a great
' meeting , condemned this cowardly assassina:
tion, and resolved -that the perpetrator should
be brought to justice ; and y. Robinson is
sued 'a proclamation, offering a reward of
five hundred dollars for the 4etectionand ap
prehension of, the culprit. 'This course is Cer
tainly -in honorable contra - SC . to that of the
'proSlavery men, who, when a Free State
man is murdered, act as thonhh they cOasid
end the 'nyder' - --...rricii6tott.
1 ). ,
s sl
Q ar'
, Thc !* ose Der weret , publishes, i
with tiona:exu tion, ari #ticle from ilie3;
ntr
Philadelphia N Anieri4n laudatory of
Jame Buchanan. It is not many months
sinee . the Dingle?. at - glraveiy `informed its
readers that the North : Asterieun was Am old
Federalist paper, and in , fitiOrof re.establish
ing the tinitedStates flanli,, 4 h is well known
that Bue.hartan was a Federalist while the
Federal party existed , atidifiat fact may so
mint for the North American's partiality to
him. -. . i ..
,tar - We would di
Republicans :of Montrose
the , call of tha President -
Association, wiuch &Pim= lq
for o meeting tni Motu*
NM
Mon - and ;Prelila
meritotiotra' t"
fair Northern douglitactis professed to ad.
vocate the Kansas-Nebraska bill, becaust they
were in 'favor of popular sovereignty. Kant
sas having beeziorganized under thitt
, provis 7
ions of that bill, and the popular sovereigns
of. Kansa s having sidopted.a constitution - and,
asked to be admitted \ asa Free State, these;
samedoughfams now.oPktse its admission!
On *hat g rounds do they op we it's In cast
.\
ing about for some excuse , for their inconsist 7
ency, they pretend to have dir -ed that
Kansas has not inhabitantienoi
it to admission as a Stat. 1
Slave States have been Omit
population than Kansis Posse&
best authorities, that Territory now 'contains
from forty-five to fifty thousand , inhabitants.
Tennessee was admitted to 1796, and had by
the census ot 1790 a white population Of only
82,013; Indiana wak odr4itted in 1816, and
had - by the census of 1819; a white popula
tion of 23,890 ; Louisiana was admitted in
1812, and by the 'census Of 1810 had o white
population of 34,311; Iliississippi was admit
ted in 1817, and had by thepensus Of 1820;
a white population of 43,176; . Florida was
admitted in 1845; and laid by
,the - Census of
1840, a white population of 27,043 ; and
Michigan was admitted in 1837, and had by
the census of:1830, a pop i :lation of 1,340..
The enemies of freed l m must find otlier
excuses for their opposition to the admission
of Kansas,- than the, want Of Sufficient popula
-
.tton. i
,rgr*F. P. Blair, Gsn.4ackson'sl old con
fidential friend,,and edito of his national
or
gan, the Globe, during h 4. administration, has
written an interesting letier.addreased to the
Republicans of. New . York, whigh•containst a
review, historically and politically important,
of the rise of the " nullifiers." A er expOs
ing the dangerous enterprisei of the nullifiers,
to whom both`Jackson and himsel were "Op
posed,- 'the Writer then IproCeeds o identify
the present Democratic party wit the I
hoOn, Tyler, and Polk nullificati n party,
showing that almost all its proMment men
were engaged , in the warfare :Taint Jackson
and the Union. party. He then enumerates
tr 4. tests - of modern democracy, compare's
them with these of the days of Jefferson and
Jackson, and denonneell those who uphold
them as the foes of - freedom and republican
institutions.
ear' Referring to the argumentwthet are
begintunk to be frequent in the sOuihern pa
'
pers in favor of - the re-o
Slave trade, the Tribithe_ remarks that if'
Pierce, Douglas, or any of that Stripe 'of pol
iticians shall be elected the next President,
we shall no doubt be informed by the pro=
.gressive-Democracy that any restriction on
,
the introduction by Soathern gentlemen Of
such 'property' as they may chooie to bring
with :hem from Africa is pnconstitutional ; and
truly if it is unconstitutional to forbid their
carrying their property' into tha Territories
and there enjoying it, it is equally: •une.onsti
tutional to forbid their bringing their proper
ty home with them from 'Africa.
PRIVATEERING.—Dui i ing the sitting of the
Peace Congress just closed at Paris, it is said
that much attention was giien to a proposi
tion to incorporate intO:the law of nations a
provision against privateering in time of war.
The proposition is mentioned as a new one,
but Dr. Franklin,
,m en or: a m l ission to
France, proposed to French Gov,ernme.nt;
with the'concurrence oficongress, that a stip
ulation to the same effect should be inserted
in they, eaty then about to be formed \ between
the tfry) Governments.
-- •
Mr Hon. J. R. Giddings writes hnme to
the eishtsbula Sintinq that be haSsaid or
done nothing against the nomination Of Col.
Tremont fur the Presidency by the Republi-'
cans; Ad helms exiiressed no hostility to,
nor preference for, any candidate; but that
he expects to support the nominee of the
Philadelphia Convention, provided is
known to be right- 7 -openly and fully unnmit
- ted to the Republican policy.', Giddings has
taken the right gr0u1..3, exactly.
•
fcgrT,he. Washington correspondent of
, the New York Tribune, says 'that neither
Pierce nor Buchanan can . be nomipated. He
adds, " Mr. Buchanan his budded ,, bloomed,
•
and gone to seed quicker than any candidate
ever did before him. If. neither Pierce nor
Douglas: can ' } tot the . nomination, they will
combine their forces4o have a southern man
nominated, so that at the next turn of the
wheel the nomination,lwill come North again,
for the benefit of their erowtf."
Itar The People's Couverition of the State
bf Indi,Fia met at I , :idianapolis, May Ist, and
nominated Judge No. ton for Governor, and
Conrad Baker fur IJieutenant Govern Or.--
Speeches were made' by Col. Lane, ~.of *tn.
sits, Gov. Ford,,,of Ohio, and Judge illorton,
of Indiani. Strong, resolutions in favor of
freedom in the .Territories and the admission
of Kansas as a Free State, were ad4ted.
far For a year or two past the .Montrose
Democrat 'has had much to say about " I , Wel
mot, Jessup_dc Co.'? l Since April court, we
tiotice that the Democrat gives the firm as
" Grow, Jessup'& 9:,L" Will that paper be
so kind as to inform us when and how 'the
old firm dissolved, and why Wilmot went out
of it ?
CoNciwr:—ProfeSsor Daum gave a con
cert in Montrose last night. Of the perform
ances, (said to have heen excellent) w can
not speak• of our own knowledge, the usual
custom of furnishing the Printers tickets has?
141,een forgotten. IA second concert WU
b4given thin (Thuriday)-evening.
CRUSE DIFEICCiT: TO CONCEAL—Good old
Jeremy Taylor says :
" There,are, in the - machinations of almigh
ty mischief, so many motions to be coneen•
trated, so many wheels. •to move regularly,
and the hand that turns them does so tremble
and there is so universal a confusion in the.
conduct, that, unless it, passes suddenly into
the act, it will be Prevented by' discOvery,
:Mk if it be acted,' there enters in such a :nigh. :
ty borror that the" face of man will tell what
his heart . did think" end his hands have! done.
And after all, too,it was seen and observed
by Him who stood behind the cloud; who
shall also bring every work of darkness unto
light on the day a strange discoveries and
fearful recompenses." •
'the attention of the
I .Bridgewater to
le Roma bl l ican
lotherOolunil l
dog nen.
- , 1 , James: Raebenaz
4n
Both un - r the Presidency of Washing n,
reared in t - pOlitical faith of Jay and !fa 4:
ilton, Jdhn Adams and John Marshall, it ; as'
by the Fedaral' i peril that Mr . . Buchanan Ikea'
l i
cfierisheil itto tkOlitiCal importance and d s•I
tinction.' .1i was Asa Federalist that he as;
twice elect44l to; the' Legislature, and'at le Qt'
twice to Digress. I Even 'so late as 1826, 1
his name fiptres in .Nes' Register (Oct. 284
as one of till five Federal Members [f in]
Pennsylvamal of the XXth. Congress:, sten;;
.yeara earlie4 - he delivered a Federal 4thlotll
July Oration, in which he inveighed sgai i st,
' the weak Imd'sricked acts of Mr. Madiso "ii,
Administration' most explicitly and unsilari
ingly. . And never, so far as we can lezirn,
has he recanted these' views or expresscl iin7
\ contrition for their utterance. .. I si
\lt is fashionable juSt snow to bo 'National'
aud \ to commend aspirants as
.' National' hi
theiriews and inclinations. The term ii
rank enough to make the bones of 'Jefferson
rattle in \ his coffin ; it: implies all• there is in
' Federal' and much more; but 'we have
schooled oneuerves to bear it pretty well.-
Jast now to beNational' implies a heart
devotion to Slave -catching, and sois not Very
fragrant; but Mr.43Uchmuin is (or was) ,' N -
tionarin a tar higher. and nobler sense '
I
'I bus one of his earliest important votes.
Congress (April 29, 1822) \ was cast in r
of the bill ' for the preservatlon and reps
the Cumberland Read,' whereby the .Fe{
al Government asserted its right notonls
. . . .
collect.tolls on roads , 'running .. through St
lint authorized the 'President to • enhanct
reduce those 'tells at :his Unchecked diScretioiL
The. Virginia_School:Of strict eenstructioeis f
fought this bill as utterly stibverSive of to r
Rights and • flagrantly unconstitutional ; btu
Mr. Buchanan went•for it, and it prevail d--
Yeas 87. j Nays 68. H (tiles, May .4; '2 .) •
- Mr. Buchanan r we believe, has, voted for
every Protective Tariff that•has been parsed
since he first entered ' Congress,. His
{vote
helped ' , pas; 4 eas,'los ; . nays, 192,) the ITI4 r
iff of 1824. which received but 'one vote' rem
Virginia,:end none from the Carolinas or: 'veer.'
i
gia ; lie, voted also for the Tariff of 18, r-
the Bleck Tariff'l--::' the bill of abominatioUs'•
:,
•!.being the higheSt:and most protective or
discriminating ever passed • by ICongresst--
Pere, again ; he steed with his otrn 'State sed
nearly all the heartOf the Unioii againA- the
solid phalanx of the' CarolinaS, Georgia,l.kla
barna, &c., with all, but three from VirOrtia,
and these three belOnging to z evhat Mr. Jeffe
rson used to term !the outside ro*a.' qn the
i 315t..0f December ; preceding, Mr..Bucluman
! said r- •1 ' .
, .
. .
"He profektd toibe friendly to domestic manufac
tures ; more than that.; be believed thit - woolen goods
required mote protection . Ile had no doubt "on khe
subject ;' the question was cas to the amount of Iro
teCtion." Vika, -tali: '5, 1828.] 7
I • '
—Mr. Rlichanan; we regret to say. as Ihe
began to have iiSions of tbe:White HoUset
reversion, and- th l :anderstand that . tie mart
Could receive tbe
,nontination lot his party
Without the . indorsement of the Virginia pol
iticians, grew by( insensible degrees mYst'eri
oils.and diplomatic: it: his utterances , on pte
question 'of Protection ; .but he never faltered
when brought to the test of •the Yeas and
Nays. The Tariff Of 1842—our last decided,
ly, aVowedly,-eniphatically, PrOteetive theas-
Ure—passed the Senate by, his .vote. Yeas
24 ; Nays 2311 fr. Buchanan among the
Yeas. • .
ning of the African
1111
- But how comes it, some I willlask, that
.
BUchanan, who cOrnmeneed and so tong.4 l l,er,
•sisted as a thorough-going Federalist, ri j ow
appears as a leading and - orthodx Deriecilat 1
We answer, simply,' by virtue of his .lAckion
ism. 'When Gen.%'ackson waSfirst brought
forwardas-.-a gruididate for the Presidency,
he was not*iiosed as the regular Deino
crude candidate, - tut itted against that Can
didate,-who was. Wikittn,-.11.1 Craw for rof
Georgia:. Ger..JacktOn l brid recently W. riiten
to President Monroe that ' now is the time
to exterminate the-monster, Party;' had urged
him to ignore all merely, partiSan - considera
tions; and to call at least me - leading/ Vele'r.
alist • ' into: his- Cabinet. ',The Federal i sts,
i
then a
were
ority in , the whole. c atn. ' i
try, were gratified and won'. by .thiw den on-
stration, and large numbers of I them 'ranged
under the Jackson banner, especially In New;
Jersey,-' Pennsylvania ' and Delaware: I , In
Pennsylvania, most of the leaders of the tWol
old partials ran a-mce to see which should get.]
ahead in Jacksonism.• Federalists ne MOre
surrendered,their-Kcullar vieWs in thisethan
Democrats. Gov. NrNan Nesslef Vermont, in
going over . from Adams to Jickson, appealed
especially'-to FederaliSts as such to unite in
:the support-of Jackson who had removed the
-ostracism which they had long enAured. 11dr.
Buchanan was one of the earliest and Most '
zealous•Jacksonians ; but it • was not! till he
had been such for . years that he had reason
to suspect that being for Jackson made him,
even nominally, aliemocrat. ';Butt- he fikind
it just as easy .to he called a 130eritccrat ,as_
anything else, and a good deal . Moro Iprofita.
hie. than to be termed a Federrlliit ; so he can
now counsel ' brother Democrats, and•evinca
solicitude for the triumph Of Democracy, as,
well as the' best of them. -' ' - I !
• •1
'Will nobody vote against 'Buchanan as
an old Federalist !' some will ask. Weans.
wee, Not one . ! Thongh the fools all not all
dead, there are not so many of therm as is
often • hastily assumed. We have . Often
known candidates in thi‘ city assailed: a s old
Federalists; but they' generally ran at the
head of their respeetivOtickets. Thefacts in
the case will not beat 14r. Buchanan . ; but . a
stupid and futile attempt to conceal 'the !facts
May do so. Set forth the- naked truth and
all will be well. -- , -.Ar. Y. Tribune.
. . 1 , ,
THE INDIiNRIN OREGON.—Extract Or aiet
ter from a gentleman in. Oregon to ;Os , cor
respondent in Washington,dated Oregon City
February 28 :—" The Indians are in. alitate
of - open war,
with the exception of a few
friendly tribes, fi:im the boundary of Califor
nia to the British line and from the PaCificlo
the Missouri river. Generally, I am sorry
to say, that the Indians have had the best of
it in their battles with the soldieri. 1 1 . %
In one engagement in Southern Oregon
some time ago (a month or so) less than . loo
Indians fought one hundred and thiriy-Seven
regulars - and two hundred and fifty Volunteers
for three days, never yielding an inch, and on
equal ground. For one hundred and i thirty l
nfiles in Southern Oregon, where every{ clalfn
almost of the inaiti route was taken up 'by ,
settlers,*not a hors is standing, - cropy des
troyed, cattle driven off, families - in rdered
or had to flee for their lives. Whe 1t - ..will
all end it is hard to sky. We vei 1,800
i l
regulars and 2,500 volunteers, yet little
or no progress has yet been m einVielling
these .disturbances."'
1
• • . ,-- 1 . *-
Tint LIBEL LAW.—One ood, act ivied by
t h e legislature at its lat session was th&bill
relative torlihels. It / was amended ; in the,
Senate so as to refer .nly to criminal! prose-
Icutions, and was -,... ad' to by the notise in
,that shape. , J- 7- ,r
, , ,
"That from ,d after the pa‘segelof dna
act, on the tr*s of indictments for writing orl
publishing. II a ibel, the -truth of the,4 matter
I
charged as i libeloustnay be given in,(4,idence;
and if the jury In each-ease Shall find that
the *rind was Written or pal:4186(1 from good
inotiv ' and fob justifiable ends, acid that the
mat so eharged was true, it shall .lopenttii
to acquittal of the defendant or; 'defend:
_ , : . • ',/ ' . 1 , 4 1
itt
Awflil Minuate and
anama Plunder of 'A:aerially' .
!t P. . . . ,: . - • i
, ; •71i Me Editor of 4? le N. Y. 21-Mune. , . : ' •
, Stu: One of the most frightful :butcheries
find robberies of Americans took Place at,Pan-
Ama on the night. of the 15th of April. On
the afternoon of that day tbe passengers per
steamer. Illinolaarrived at the-Railroad Do-,
pot at Panama on their''way to the; steamer
J. L.- Stephens; but owing to the:' . tow tide
they were detained on shore.: 4 . ,portion of
the Passengers by the Cortex,frem Sari Fran
cisco, were also, s topping at the Several hotels
in the vicinity. Of the depot.' There could not ,
Idve been leaS than 1,000 or ,1,2* Amer- ' x i,
leans •congiegAted about the railroad ter- h,
.minus.° About - sunset a difficulty 'occur- i ii
red
one
one of the Illinois pas:sirgers and K
one of the negroes, which was, fly -joined t i
by friends on both sides, and a general, row d
now commenced. Pistols, tatiVie-knives,
swords, muskets, clubs and rocks Were freely v s
used; acid with deadly effect. The Americans ri
were generally unarmed, having only a few
.p
'small revolvers, and, consequently, after a
short struggle,! had to yield - the, grOund. The N
natives were yeenforeed by large numfiers. ; -- e/
They now made an 2ttuak upon the different p
hotels_and drOve,all the inntatealeut, many a/
'of Whom sought safety, - As they suPposed,. in
,the depot Wilding.
About this time the Police (Geld save the ti
term !) was called in requisition ; but instead q
of attempting to restore order, it is positive- i,
ly known that a portion of therili joined the t i
negroes and Made the assault uPon the depot. t ,
The police and negroes fired upon the crowd, ii
;
and,: drove every man woman
.and thildfrom
' the building. Who, in their fright, an in - every
i „
oirection—soine to the -boats, and others to
„ ~..t . I
and
t , tiiteti [gust' wood:;,.whe're th 4 remained 1
.- during the night ; and with the expectation of i
i being nitnidered 'when daylight appeared. A ' o ,
large number, were fortunate ~ .entingh to get
on . board of the Small steam; r, and were con, al
veyed to the J. L. Stephens. Afier the na- c:
Oyes had eieconiplished their Woijk of death,.
sand dispersed all / from ;the'.groulid, they coin- 0 ,
nieneed plundering the Ittage, lend destrop
a
ink; everything n be foiled in the betels.—
The paSsengers,in theirAitdden flight, leftund. ai
lost e%'(6 thing. .Afterplunderiii7 all 10 be ri
found in the hotels/ th e bla c k . 1 - T 71 3 attacked a
the Depot balding. which contained a large
Amount of lu“:tere and treasure, Lall of which b
~,.- .r, .Y
the rascals o'it-itieil.. They -- then commencea a to tear up tbe Railroad
. triteli, and to pull
down the Te' l egra ph pekt. : z, and elestrilyed both t 4
Railroad and,...relegra r li' otliee.. E' They were a
aware that the Exp: ess goods, would be bro't ti
over hien Al , pinwall that night, and had laid . , t)
their male: ol seize. -hem Tlie • tore up the - v
. l' ~- , •-. Y
track in'the r:einit v -i-f t he depot,- in order !I
,
that. the ergi l nc might run off; but 'through t
the exertion. of *Jr. William:, (A .conductor !
' g
on the road, 'the Express train was stopped
1 .,
by his signals. before reaching the flital point, I]
and -tlia lives of tiiiii onboard and the goods o
were saved, and lite, train p . a. back to Aspitt-': 1
wail.'where•it remained at the time the Phil! i:
•
adelphia ztil,c:d. • . . . ,: '
There were twc•rity-five ' Americans fund l
dead innuediateir . around 1116 depot in the
, ..
morning, Most of whom ,were tvsengers• c z
front the Coretz, but this tuiriduFr is probably
nut half that were murdered,
_. Of the natives
but few, coni paratieely, I
. thiak were slain. -/
1
Soon after the cotnineticeidetit of hostili-
ties the G‘Hernor of Panama and the Amer- . 1
roan Consul I Were on the ground but their ex- ,
erti•ina to quiet the riot proved iineffeetuil.--- •
It. is reporte4 by some of our passengers that •
thi...-Governlr in the first iustanee tried to re-,
store Order, but afterward ekourageti the
murder andlplunder. - My slight. aciplaietanee
With Gov. Dean forbids ale froM giving any
credence to the latter report; 1
The Spanish portion of the inhabitants, of
Panama.. we'ru touch friglito,ned. . Every
house and place of bitsiness.was instantly
closed and barred, and but few:.i•entured Out
upon the balconies ' during the night. The
'hotels in - the city Itere' closed and guarded
until mornipg. , -' . ',. . • \
Of the amount Of money:and other effects
lost' by the 'passengers I can '"
!rißitebut 'an • im
perfect. idea. It is , supposed by Many 'that
not less than $lO,OOO would cover the. a
mount. True it is that a la* sum .is kist, l
and rilueh more probably than: f ever will be.
.ascertained!' :
Many of'ihe steerage Passengers' declin,e.
giving a statement, preferring,'! suppose,• to
i
defer t.until they see what action our. Gov
eminent will tide in the matter: before mak
log their claims known. . . ' •
One cireninstinee, Must not pass unnoticed.'
A few of the ladies and gentlemen who had
effected their escape by. wading, some to their
waists, in the Water to the small boati,- pro
ceeded to 'the Cortes• for protection. After'
some delay at the ship Capt 'Collins. admit
ted them on board,. but they Were reafsed
the userif booms or any. bedding or' refresh - -
ments: -' ';, -..- •N 7 RAIN:SW.I.
I, or
rcf
i c f .
, to
3 tolit,
1 or
Great Suffering in the West.
'U. $. S otdiers Eating !heir awn Companions.
. 1 •
• The .foll Owing is an 'extract fi.oli a private
letter received by the editor Of the Military
Argun, New : York : A
;,.. - ' .:
' Furl Pierie,E. T., Marche .5, 1850.. k
most horrible affhir; happened?, ; between.ihere.
and Sioux city in. December; laSt, wifich is
alinest too bideous to re.liite. Three .-oldiers,'
named'Rigert, Wicker and Cornell deserted .
Three .•
companies D and It §.e . Cond ; ragoons,
about the first of December; and / " atted down
the.rieer..; On their way theY yeftook four'
persons from this place, who j. were proceed-.
ing in the 'same direction, and .as self preser
vation suggested the idea (istrength.in num- -
bers, they ;Mutually ogre d to; travel in corn-.
pany. Up to this time and 6r sonic ten ..orj
twe,lve, days after t iit junction; the
. weath- 1
er had. been - remark: tly Mild.and pleasant.—
. A few days after,. owever, -luavy snows, ac
companied -with / intense cold, set. in, which
' continued' wit /..but little intermission' for
thirty or fort days, duritag.4ich'!time but
little progre s was made. At length their
scanty stos, , k of provisions gave out, and.star
vation seined inevitable, for . they were •at
least two hundred miles in-aArect line from
the ne rest Settlement. 1; •
14" r six days, witheut; a particle of food
th scOntintted their course dOwn the . river;
b t made very little progress towards thei
,destination: Under these aecuinulated suf
feringsthe soldier named Cornell died, an
the others, to appease 'their I,hunger, cut - u
his body and cat his. flesh. The followin
night one of the civilians died; and his god
was disposed of in like manner. On the sue
ceeding nig4.,twO more of the civilians died
but is the party was disco(*red shOrtlyafte .
the living were spared y thettecessity of mak
ing any further meals,uPon the dead bodie
of eotnpanion?" - .
They -were - feund. by a ; party of Majo
Howe ssecietnand, and when first discoverer
they„were redaling themselves upon the ;arni
andlegsitheir unfortunate companions.—
"The survivors were taken.tO Major I:lowe*
car *and under proper ; attention have a'
-- leovered.; '' '
ger In, Mr. Bitur's recent letter, to the R
putllicana of 'New York, he states that M
Buchanan recommended the deposit of $5O.
000 of Government moneys-in Simon CAM
ron's bank for the purchase of the Washin :
ton Globe ' of Mr. Blair, for Preaident. Poi
and aowthe Union' which was the fruit
that purchase, is &mug all it can to cut M
Buchanan'a throat. This -iuolts like retrib
tive justice. .;
E
tering akthe Taber
29tfi, of the citizens
the presenillation-
ExtensiOn of Slave
•_,,i .brasieti ,within .:the
~a rico-in - promise • and. in
favo ofißepairipg the Mi " 'efa arising &env
%.
•the lollatiotviot
_Good Fait in its Repeal,
and f restoring thh action an osition of the,
Fed rail GOventment on the sub of Slave:,
ry t the principle's of Washingto and JAI:
erson, in response i• to a call publish din the
lvrpapers yesterday naoruirig. more
ar y response could; not lave been gin n to
ty-cAtB.- When ', th e hour Tor - organiza!on
td rrived, Hon. Edwin D. Morgan call
le :
o i l
- I
0 -
n ee :, tiAngvlitojahot,mclearn,
interesting .t ricid .m ß ad en e j. a F n ..Btier w
ir n President.
an etised report of, the proceedingir of the
to üblican NetiOnal . Conventioti, held at -
'it tiburg in February last. - •
,
moving the adoption of the report, Mr.
✓ ..M. Evarti spoke with troth:and • earn'
st ess upon the principles of the Reptiblim
't ty and nn the Struggles between .Freedom
end Shtvery. 1- • . .
on. - Mr. Bingham, • of Ohio, was the next
•
pecker ititrOduCed. I , His appearance was
he signal for whiirst of loud applause. - The
ue non which .the country. was now to •an
nt r was, ho said, whether the President of
re United StateS should be permitted to. al:
ti- ho• Constitution, so; us -to make it estab
, i
ish injustice.
,-
. die.
c e e n. a i J in, ..: d W io .
1 ,
tid Y tt e it'd :w p ag rot p r r a t e s t e e ti d i
•! 4 ; c e l l
e t e o r
s t . h e , H an e - :
proposed resolutions•against: the rep mal of the.
Mi solid Compromise And , the outrage's on
Ka sag, and approving: of the pioc.eadings
if . lie ,Pittsburgh Convention..
I heir adoption! was seconded by Mr. Noyes,
iii., on being put to. the meeting, they were
tar led unanimously. • .
• fr;lHorace Greeley urged the impletance
X aktug the issue in• the corning '
is skeet, as sitnple, as practical as possible.
Vin. C. Noyes; Esq., was loudly called for,
mi; spoke briefly. He said theliew political
•-a ks had a compound of all - parties—there
at . Hard Shell and Stift-Shells, and some
le • tlenien who are suspected of having in
;t rs past been on'intiniate terns with the
A, hairy Regency, andlhere are some Whigs
(41 those of the fussiliterous . stiata; (latigh - -
te ) hilt Whigs of Progress,whose hopes'end
1 , • p•
i sctions are not all buried in the graves of
11).ir leaders, tint who look to the interests of
th 4r fellow-men, - and who do not desire to be
vi •wed,at some] future da'y •as curious sped- -
in ins in some new.Silorian museum. (Laugh-,
to .) "Now, what has brought these men tai.
gaher—what W the cause of this combination
nt men who n4-er acted together before 1--'
1' e reason is because, the theory and practice
ut this Goveirninent is perverted, and is!'at- .
to nptedto be Perverted much.innre, by . the
in erterence - tat thel Government,. in
,the per
p•tuation of Slavery.. • "
,t ,
Letters were', received from the following
g ntlhmen, heartily approving the cause, and •
r lirettitig their.inability to attend:. :From
S nators,,ward, Sumner and Wilson,j-lon.
B adtora 'R. Wood, Hon. Martin Butts, Hon.
O B Matteson, Hon.: IL W..Dehalay,•of Kati:
s s - r -lett. Zenais Clark,' Hon. Lyman Trum-•
b 11, Jarues-D! Fessenden, Hon, E: B. Mor
n, Hon. S. Galloway, Hon. - E. P. Hurlbut,
I on .I T. C. Day, Hon.- F. E. Spinner, Hon.
k T.ll. Kelsey; Wm. C. Bryant, Hon, S: Col
iv- '
Hon. H. W. Taylor, Hon.. R. &Acorn,
• Wade. U. S. S.,'Hon. S. H. Titus. I • .
-Tie meeting - adjourned at 11' p.- M. -With
ree.hearty cheers. . . I
. - I •
I
. ~ . .
• • 1 , ' Nr-Arebster's ' bpuuon.
The Pennsylvanian, in . :order to propitiate
t le - •ilut.h toTavor of Arr. Buehaoan s pretett
.l
s ons to the,Presideney, takes the around !that
"Slavery is a National, and not Lpezil 'Usti,
411 ?
t Hiatt, and may"..exist anywhere with' ; our.
I otitis, nziless proscribed by municiina iv.' . '
Now Daniel Webster in his-day ‘as stip
.oseld to:kno* something of Coytitutional
Jaw. f, If the Pennsylvanian will urn to page
309 Of the fifthyolunte Of his % orks ' - it I will
find the folloWing opinion of A r. Webster on'
this 'subject_•.% 1 .!-; • . . ,
•Ia
• : . It will not Ile contende that this sort of
perstmal.slave i ry exists general itiw: It
exists_ only by local law Ido not mean to.
ileny the validity of t at local law where it
is e4sblished ', but 11y it it!,.. after all, local
, law. :It is nothin ' more,. • And .wherever
1 thutllocal la* dos not . extend, property jn
;persons does Ino# exist.- Well, Sir, what: is .
InOWI the demadd on the.part of our Southern
friends? -T , y say, 'We will carry . our lo
cal faves . wi us wherever we go. - ; Weinsist
that!Cona ess does us injustice unless it es
;tablish go e• in the territories in which •we IwiAh
/ 7
!to ' our, dotal law.' This deinand i !l for I
!!onellisist,:and shall. resist..i It Vies upon the I
idea/that there is •an !inequality., unles;_ per-
!so Sunder this local law . . aid hOldlng prop
! rtY by authority •of - that . aw, Can go. into
l i
! tre* territories, and there e24ablish that !local.
law to the e*clusisin of!thejederal law. Mr.
.President, iti.was a maxim,of the civil law,.
that, between slavery and. freedom,. freedom.
.shoUld always bepresumedrland slavery must
always he•proveci. Many qtie.;stion arose as
the status' of an individual-- in" Rome—he
vek(presumed to be free until he was proved
to be it slave,-because slavery is an exception
4r : the general rule. Such, I suppose, is the
general law Of mankind.• An individual is to•
to be, presumed to be free, until a law can be
prOduced 'which treater ownership in. his per`-
'son. Ido not dispute the force'and validity
of the ! local law,' as I have already 's „but
! say, it is la matter to Ie proved 4, and,
.herefore, if;. individual go into any
.prt of,
:he. earth, it is to- be. prOved that they are not
ivernen, 'or else the presumption, is that they
=
MI
eating in New: York
e wt
..Y(
EINI
. .
That iii - .our position precisely, and it is the
poSition of the Republican party, as we 'mn.
derstand it. It is the true doctrine t, the only
doctrine .that can give peace on' this slavery
question' If it be trut,:as the•Pcimsylvanica
says, that "Islavery isi \• national.:not a loCal
institution,' the nation ;:ints jurisdiction over
it, and complete jurisdicti on. We knoW of
no doctrine ithat would suit ;radical 'abolition :
fists better. 1 ft ,is - madness for the• South to
give it countenance, . • ...-
A Hann BUT JUST RzatrKE.—The Pitts'
bUrgh Gazette, in noticing the North Ameri
can's article, and its fulsome 'praise of Mr:
Buchanan .bespeaking extra honors for him, ott
the plea thet, he *as the friend nul .. prothoter'
of pennsylimnia's interests ; Well says :•-•" 'We
Can; rdnenther the time we think, when
the North American thought . James Buchan
an 's free trade., principle's and advocacy of
".ten cents,a day'' as_ fit wagea for a. laboring
man, were .anything hut promotive of Penn
sylvania interests. Has James Buchanan
changed, or the North American',"
gair:A.lnow Judicial District has n
fornred by . : the last Legislature, composed of
the countiOr of Columbia&Wyonting, and Sul
livatr, and we learn llia Gov. Pollock has ap
pointed WARRIN J. WOODWARD, BRI., Of
Wilkrisbaire, as Proident judge, until next
faii's election.
Esollllqtrii RAtutrom) 'llsoairre.—The
neipte of the gain Railroad for the first eight
working thveNZthe present month, it is re-
Polled, 11E4 0 01 1 W to - 03 0 , 000, . equal
aver* of MAW" per,.osy. •
oen. Welke, war. .
Thesieamship Orizaba, Cap!. E. L 'rink.
lepaogli has arrived at New York,. from San
Juan del Norte, having left the pOrt on the
evening of the 21st inst. The defeat of Col.
Schlesinger at Santa Rosa is confirmed.—:—
Aboutlo of his men are reported as raiising.
During his trial , by CouttAnartial, while on
pare!, he deserted , . It is supposes] that he
'went over to the Costa Ricans, 'having si)l
himself to4hem before the battle. On the i
7th instanesp_ e Costa RiCans took possession '
of Rivas wigs 2,000 Men. On the litliOeti.
Walker with 600 men at eked them. At.'
tsr a fight of I'7 1-2 hoop he was obliged ik,"
t it
abandon . the city from . w tof ammunition,
leaving 600 Costa Ricans ,dead on thi fiel
and a' large tiutnber wo u nded. His loss in,-
Mod, wounded slid ttsis sing is reported et
al ut 100.7 . '
~ :
.e Costa l Ritani on taking possession of
Virgi Bay fired indiscriminately onevery
person Iv
can citiv
the Tpu
GOen•
died Cu
aboie thi
azola
with th
wounde
in tided
~ie
B. 7 . abc
Altierita,
his con)
acted w
who are
party,
Cost - a
B
against
are said -to lie in favor of peace, and win not
invade Nicaragua. They . received the ( Cotn:
missioners of Nicaragua in a friendlyeanner,
and have. discontinued 'the enlistment or
trdops, and even disbanded some of the new
levies. The intercepted correspondence be.
'tweet' the - British Government and Costa
Rica, in which the former agrees tocontrib.
ute 2,000 stand f , f arms to the latter, 13 13
caused great, excitement among the-Mimi . .
cans in Nicaragua.' Quite a numbeiof
nie rifles were taken from the Costa Ricans
at Rivas. There were also several English
and French men seen in their army.
The English frigate.. Eurydice, Ctipt. Tarl.
eton, was the. only 'vessel in the, harbor of
San Juan, and her boats were constantly oo
duty watching the movements of Ameran s .
Passengers who came down' the river in the
steamer were prohibited by them frOm going
an shore. ,
. The most serious features of this stirring
intelligence, howeyer,nre these which relate
to the -alleged -sheeting dqwn, in cold
not
ofseventy American' citiiens, who do not ap-
Pear to have taken any active part 'in the
war. ',These _Atrocities are fully set forth ia
the conirnunieation of Minister Wheeler tot
the_Costa - Rica 'Agoverninent,—and are no I
dout the burden of official 4espatches with'
whieli,Ditajor Heiss (also a 114 - -sengei in the
Orizaba) is charged. : -
if the statements be tree, that the format
Costa Rica are now in possession of the Tran.
sit-Ronte, and that the efficers declare a de
termination to exterminate every American
now in the country ; s determination, more
over,' to- be ; actively supported " by.the au
thorities of 'England and France,'! (who ar e
charge 3 With supplying Minnie. rifles, amnia
nitionf&e.,) the exigency is one . which Would!
seem to demand - , at once; some action on the
part of the gpiernment at W4shington. h
..I
is one thing-to shoot down or "exterminate . ]
the. proiiissed " fillibu l ster,"-:•-he. goes . there
with the understanding that . he may , be shot
or exterMinated, , '--but quite another thing tO
I be murdering in cold blood, peaceable Ainer
ican claims '
• and even women and children;
—who could have no interest in the war, one
wav or another. .
,
Qom" The steamer Illinois, from Aspinwall,
with Ci lifornia dates to the sth inst., . reached
New York April 30th. She brought $2,000,:
000'in specie. The mining regions of Cali
fornia/promise a larger yield-than during ny
previous year.- A strong movement was in
progres4 fora 'weekly Postal connection with
Missouri. *brisk trade has sprung up be
tween San Francisco and the Russian Posses!
sions. The Indians continue hostilities in
Oregon and Washington _Territories. They
.captured thit steamboat-Mary on'the Colum
ya. Various conflicts had occurred, and in
, ne betivecn the volunteers acid the Indi
ans, 40 of the hitter were.killed, ancl:the . re.
mainderof the force routed. , The battle took
1 place at Cannell's krairie.
ileptiblicguAssociation.
The Republican '''Assoclation of Montrose aid
Bridgewater will meet at the Old Coert smise, Oa
Monday evening next, May 12th. - Business cif iuzpor•
lance is theft to be transacted and the attendance,or
all the niembers., and such others asedesire to join the
Associyfon, is requester. retail! Wets, Prot.
IWgewater,. May 5, 1856'.
- Notice. • r l '
-The Secretaries-of the, different loards of School'•
Directors in the county will:please sec that• there it
no delay in forwarding to me the Annual Report of
their respective Districts, which is decoct the first of
June. Each Secretary has ipeeired, or will receive,
soon, a blank form: B. F. Tcwltsicac
Ilartord, May 6, 1856. •
Teachers' Exasninationsi •
-I-will be in the Towns . ruentioned below on die
following named days, for'the purp'ose of 'accommo•
dating thpse who were unable to attend my first es•
atuinations:
*;li May
Franklin, May . 19th, .. . ..
nefrick, Mgy 22d, (Nahalist Church) 10 A.
Clifford, May 236,. (Clifford Corners,)-10 A. u.
Lenhx, May 24th, (Glenwoml,) 10 A.
Tlibinsin, May 26th, (Murnforffs) A. Y.
B. F. Tswg.sway, Co. Supt.
or Rev: A. 0. Warren will preach in Montrose,
the fourth Sunday in May; at the usual hours, audio
New Milford at SP. e day. - ,
4 111A3RrED.
At the, house of William 1C Ilateh,',lfontrose, Ref
Ist, by Rev. A. 0. Warren, Mr. MARTIN TINTSBLRT
to Miss DIANiTIA hurt, both of Lathrop.
Ni On Wednesday the 16th instant, by the Rev. I.
L.d.Staples of Brooklyn ' Mr. B. J. BliaNsta. of Am.
rat, and Mis.s CkantssaMTFAlS of Springville.
•
Bridgewater,' on the .28th of April, M. TON .,
atm., aged 3 year3,•4 months, and 13 days.
REMOVED
kro DRICK . BLOpt, front Akan;
•
,Qulniky scrtoout ihrOisbed with Liberia o f
t-7 different.sizes- at Now York retail prices.
at the Post Office. •
e: : c. 0011181 in
inkEALER IN-SADDLES.. fiarneoh.Truido,
Air ue; sti,, Montrose, "ea.'„ 171 1
Dirt Wihnoti ' I .
LOCATE of thet , laiopithic and- Hototorlid! 1 !
Colleges of liedieble," is now, permwelTY.
catod in Great Bend Pa.
April 300858,
• , - - JUT RIMMED
Av 4 mITY or liii4anida w ire:ibmisbea
Japanned Tin"illiet Crockery, Glasorare , P e t
fkaxteh,tirocerles, ,Fancy, Goodavi`levelry ,
Spoons, - Gold Spectackm,:rerfometY, DruVi
Pidatas Die4iUMV&C, " _.. 1
Xonttose, Mayl, ABEL ' TOBBBLib . "- - .
the
SEWING Birds;„,B4eoka4 ,rowilier4 BOO*
rl
'Balm of a tlionmMd ,Boireirs, and nearly I ea
ildn Ido at: 11714401
NM
11
10 A. V
IRA