U E . j laltture "referred 'to did not derive its against all the - stePsitiini power from the people of Kansas, he makes sign; the more to alai up for its leek of popular legitimacykhu ; iso ~• ',. 4a " *mu ' s- • "'That Leg lature wsui called into being, - • _ r• ' .fiean „i f _ d the of 1854, and is 'tempi ~ ' n - ;.• 1 : 13 . these , -. , Sri r Co, the very la t Congressional legislati ' •,, late "ii#l,ties ore his recogn z ed ` by the present Ohl , _ l' !,: _,,,,,UNe, • - their ng. f . trate of the Union." . . 'l l * \.,7- Wee blartatight, . 'utiriniset There isimt much of " popular sovereign. " mess of pottage." The eyes of the country " and "a I tvfigovernroent" hers. Thicusur- are on us , fur our cause is the common cause ~ pation is repudiated by the people, but it is of all who love Republicanism. In our de recogniied by •" Congress* end , the " Presi- feat the principle on which the Government dent." • hs pretended enactments are a dead rests will sustain a shock ; in our vietory it letter. . All , the official proclamations and will take: root and be perpetuated:: '-'INi you bulletins of Presidents 'and' Territorial Gov-i t con fi ded no common share of the task. -To •ernors cannot make them law, for i nothing is you will be meted eo _wollen share of the law or an have the 'eutherititliericit, save Wiwi , of Victory- or the "misfortune of defeat. the legitimately expressed will of the people. Be true and we shall triumph. Our task is But If, the Tederai authorities Cannot make diffieult; let Us . meet its. responsibilities In Tan their neimiations laW, thee seem bent on , reliance on the Wisdom of Rim who is the preventing the people \from having any law God of Justice. A future' of prosperity and unless they W i ll stoop to' accept this .. Never usefulness is before the people of Kansas.— let it be ea that the people of Kansas were 'A gat State is rapidly expandinginto pros so :variant the 'principles of self govern. perous existenee. May we hope to establish ment'as to pt the laws thrown upon them in it a Government not unworthy of this' civ by a body o invaders. Such .'a Etta! preen. iliziel age and our Republican institution'', li c.e, dent would r e the seed that would spring 1 CHARLES AOSINSON. up to the ultimate ruin of our Government.. • Torsma„ Tuesday, June 9, 1857. ,An insignificant minority in Kansas may CO- operate!with the invaders outside to pepetu ate thil usurpation, but as Gov. Water* says: ".The rninority, in resisting -the will of the majority, may involve Kansan ',again in civil war ; they mak bring upon • her re: preach and 'obloquy, and destroy her pro gress and prosperity ; they may keep her for 'yearii out f the Union, and, in the whirl wind of agitation, sweep away the Govern ment itself: but Kansas can never be brought into the Union with or• without Slavery, ex ee-pt by a previous solemn decision, fully, freely and fairly made by a • majority'of her people in voting for or against the adoption of her. State Constitution." This has been done in Abe adoption of our State Constitu 'on--has been done in accor dance with',. very principles and require. ments of this inaugural itself, and • we may, well ask, in language of Gov. Waxen; i "Why, then, hould 'thit just, peaceful, and constitutional ode of settlement meet with such oppositi from any quarter?". I cannot d ie iss thia Inaugural, sent among vs by the fede 1 authorities and Territorial GDvornor, without noticing one or two other points, He says _there is a !clause in our Constitution forever excluding the African race, bond or free, from Kansas. There is no such clause, n our-' Constitution,. and it is to be regretted ut Gov. Wautse, who talks so much abon the "will of the people," e i th should net Far given a Constitution emana ting front them amore careful investigation. At the time th Constitution was submitted to the people, a resolution from the people to the first ' stare was also. submitted.-- This was, neither " in" nor ammeeted with the COMititution and has just as much force es the first Leg stare may choose to attach to it. It oiigi ted in an anxious desire to show favor to e peculiar institutions of "her sister 8 "--mpeektly her immedi: ate neighbor, *am of :Missouri. And how has,this coptpromin spirit been metl— BY levesieni :e o, rapine , fire and 'sword. i Such uses as that which he has summit:ally aaidi were in our Constitution ; he expresaly-denieslin another paragraph, to be in it: I UM El , Row much more deeply must, he feel the inter/au of Missouri than Kansas, is aplearent _ when he recalls the debt of graitiide that. the people of, Kal owe that State which has stripped Our p eople of every Oonstitutional . - right, has lure(us in the fia ainsion of civil discord, and which - is trying by the aid of the General verzmreut to place its feet upon our, neck to day._ The first cause of 'a political Strugglepn Kansas was whether Kan. sus should be a fle m or slave - State.. After the invasion , of 1 a still more fearful is. sue arose. whet r. the people of Kansas should have a right `to govern themselves.-- It is 'far this we struggle. The rights- of the people, the , glory of.Republicaniare on eatth, . the integrity of our Government are ell wrapt up' in-the issue. Truly 'we can sat, "never was. so momentous a question Alb mined to tile decision_of any people, and we cannot avoid the alternative now before us .of glory Or of shame." . • - The rightiof i free people we love, the Union We ward, the integrity of the Gov ernment wci will maintain. a The devotion of the people of -Kansas to the Union is ,. evi. deuced by the stern reality of their Zaffetings and their endurance. In wisdom and devo., i ' Con the people of Kansas will , struggle to pres4vesthe Union, should they ever be per . tmitteet,O enjoy the bonds of sisterhood, they will dd so by endeavoring to make the - Union • worth preserving, without which it .will inev. itably -crumble in pieces . We-may with sacrilegious hand tear from the tomb of 1 Wasmaciron or JIMTSON some, perishable Ileac of tie mortalit3t of-those who, while liv ing, were, devoted so liberty and reverenced the claims of God and humanity, and under the ouvei of-the ewoatriking symbol, haite the relzetant'representatives of the peopkt to sots disfrtiuchising A merle= citizens, roi43ing Republicanism of all that is good in it. We may shout' the Union," "the Union," over 1 acts of the most reckless despotism, and her • 'ry our Gurerement into oligarchy and anar chy under the delusion, but the 'delusion will not save us -from the penalty of our folly and , our crime. Let us then preserve the Union by main. waning *integrity of Republicanism. It is an ,3miversal maxim that usurpers never 'voluntarily relinquish their power.— Under whatever guise it may come, the se, tion of those who now pretend to hold ter ritorial power, wilkbe for the continuation Of that power. ' • • „ For Gov. WALICER to urge US into that 'Emmy trip .in which they hope to ensnare our people in wrong; and to talk to ns in • that connexion of fairness and justice is to add infant 'to wrong; , 'While .the great principle for which we have to - contend, is to maintain our right to aelfgoverament, the woad consideration of . reaming [ Kansas a Free State is not tO be lost sight of. -- It is of importance that the principles of Freedom should prevail, not Mils! becalm Abe people • have willed it,• but because his rod policy, and above 4 be: iris cause verity if slavery were -ettbdied upon nst , — here-wotild the towns, and sides, thorail. loafs and' :the commerce - be, with such a - plague-spot' Mr • our eaergiest The **hi would wit'ttWl343lll' the eitifs'tam id out I Iransas„-th b in erailreeds be warmed - Ito char ters of usurped legislatieo. ' • : . - • • , 'The. industrious - settler would shrink from the contamination of Ark labor that would Agrade hie manhood and his' honest toil.— litor Assn wel trace Aii the . misom by *hick the. werrini fmger of a just - - Prvikkante guides the , palicy d pf every - systematic Wrong to -a sure &ay, and entails the -curse that tharoshouiti Ihe so prove:it* 'in the hied that iataleined hi the ;tear* end --Watered_ _"- by the: unpaidmiesk. of any nortied of- the thildrea, , . • ;There is . Mandan "itotharmal line ands laW of the thermometer -" which-may Make. slave .laber -atitinanititiely profitable or.- um-- rofitable,r bat-Aiere hi ,aily no ::"law ' Alf. the( thentieineterc &lief:vent infirtuated: Slavery , profiagandhes ,- front letteivaing to establish the, institution,. where - wise 'policy says it never ahouhltm. it will tbarefon be an i importance duty in us to guard, artfully • the • /0 0 , 3 0Pe049.f iiePtiOlip,4ll. G. F.: READ 11.• IL IL FR,AZIEft...EDITORS F. XI4IOIMI, CDRRISPOOLVO EDITOR. XONTROSE, PA. Thirsday, July Freedom Rational--tanery'Sectional. REPUBLICAN I STATE TICKET. • roa Gorzintoa, DAVID 'WILMOT, Of BrAA3ford County • • _ FOR CANAL COMMISSIONER/ - WILLIAM MILLWARD,Of Philadelphia. .. FOR JCDGES OF 'FOE SCFREME COERT, JAMES YEECIE of Fayette ,County; . JOSEPII J. LEyVIS,''Of Chester County. lam" Byres the principles of our fathers were embod ied by the eloquent pen of Jefferson in the immortal Declaration which, on the_ Fourth of July, 1776, pro.: claimed to the world on; eountres2 freedom, the air niversary of -that day has-been celebrated by. the A- Merit= people with illnminadols and great mioic ings. AII ever the land, - in city and hamlet,.irbertiv er men have gathered together to ternmernorate the heroic achievements of our ancestors, a prindpal feature of the celebration tun been the reading to the people of the Declaration of indepestience- r that workl-famed paper whose undying trutti's nerved-the arm of the Revolutionary soldier to strike for free dom and his native land, and whose words, echoing on the f a r.off: Acores of Et:trope,' st a rtled themormrd . on his thmne, and woke the eppressed rations from the sleep of ages. Perhaps no other state paper ev er exertedso 'great an inflows over the destinies of the Mimeo race. Its self-eridens truths needed no :longlbrmirla for their 'demonstration...—their simple stateinent carded conviction to the heart of every man, for the innate principle of right in every breast bore witness to their truth. The new stir of freedom thus rising gloriously in the West, was haik:d.by the friends ofluman liberty everywhere with deepest joy, as, auspicious of the dawning of universal Tiber ty. „America was pointed to 111 she example and the irp.gf the..world- • Now, wheri n the bunirelhow7r, ../Z 424 r piiionat -trlrth day has just again recurred, it may_ be well for us pause and look back upon the past, and Soberly con sider bow well the high promise of the young Repub- BC has been fulfilled.. Have wArrifortned what the world expected of us? Have we preserved, in its purity, the holy legacy of our Dithers ? Look around! The dominant party in the' countryr—the party who have the government of the Republic in their hands aramtain principles utterly hostile_to those which led our fathers to fight the battiti.r the Revolution and their party tinders and high-priests pronounce the Deciiirmi ! :in of Independence "a aelPevident he," and its principles " atheittical turdraise.'• Slavery, the exercise of tyrannical power byane man over an other, is asserted to be of 'divine origin, aid conga! rurst with the precepts of the Chriatian • reSeinm— Luis, such as reeeived the sanctioir and support of Washington and Jefferson; and have been sustained r pirsti by the whole Amerierm'pettple in the 'present time, excluding Slavery front th , e e territories, are now pronounced 'tmor.natiteitionai - FIT veal' . Men,. 'Oared in the image of their ifik ,.with sorb to be saved,. and with-the feeßirFa and ' lons of our Common - humanity, are told by highest Judicial functionary in the government th t they haver no,. tu el rights- which 'white men are' lie . to respect, be -1 cause. at some remote period, th it ancestors were Taint in Africa. In fine, for the 'rpose of uphold m;.l ing, strengthening, - aner extending' an " institution 7 which the patriots bribe Retake abolished in one f:. half the States, which thcxclud from the Terri-' 1 terries by solemn act of Seagram, and 'whose exist ence they deplored everywhere ` unchristian and undemocratic, a curse alike to :master and the slave,, and a source of weakness the Republic,-.4- ' the whole goveruMent is warped rom its original and legitimate prupdses, thb big sources ofjus tice are polluted, and our country, instead of an ex emplar of the principles of freedom d justice, stands before the . world the champion . , oppression and wrong; • The influence of the ' example given to the people of other lands by forefathers, their children are fast destroying. An bulk) change in s l au oar country.so apparent to distal; observers, unfelt and unheeded by ,ourselves? we not. pause, and, in view of the many startling 'events—the ma ny daring encroachments of the e Power—daring the last four years. ask ourselves hare all this la to •m ore: Where will four snore - y in the same es veer leave - us' Th ey will either h eave us, bound hand end foot, ender the heel oi t alare-dtiver, or they will fad the tree - hea rted A ' can people, sec.' eying like flax in lire the paltry • of party and of i faction that have bound thetn, fig in their majes• ty, and, with one mighty effixt th ring o ff ibe hate fuland disgraceful 'lloirinion.of arrogant, slave breeding aristocracy, and g their Indepen dence. We have faith in the . le. However li ke de ceived and misled for a tin r they Will yet see their duty and do it. We tide our' * ' ' the time when the principles of freedom and ' ' shall resume their sway in the councils of t he übEe. Till that hour =nes, we shall sell joyfully tiehrlwate air coum trill natal day; as ratnuiemenstitte4l the heroic a chievements and glorious pine; ' 'of our fork/th em; but we cannot firiet gat then a dark cloud tests Shore all thehind, - ovi ' • the banners, that-stream on our treeet MN,' 'ainttin,g or i r e . , ininesofheaven from the noblest fa eof government ever formed by man. God speed flour when we may mili ill 'againinto the *414 of 014' clout, and may, Without inipliiitg a mitniath olioii ourselves, recite the words and fiords of the •,pa-.. that* otishit .!:,,oirolittioii, Orlin tainted *liter et feee.pepe., tie Pleledelphis uee to exercise Ide griht by.. • • agauurt leading Re* Weans; embt up end retailed' by 01211—* *# allY*3 ll *treat a itaisat. tab* pre4gbitiry rift of though Itie w pet: 'Wleratithe fiventl‘el otiAtic Atim*; .g;u* ander eid ire iceiteut "tci View 'leaner; sable AlrA Terms itiemnins intl.lo4 ' 'or he Otomroor„ kosooilido `nor, and Renryll. Bart fora' Resolutions; of the Repubtzaii EM=7= fa''Senator Arnold Douglas made one of his char acteristic doughface speeches at Springfield, 111 , on the 'l2;h of last month. Judging from that speech, be is guAllit as ignorant of his country's history , as Judgejtaief himself. To show how much reliance can be placed on his statements, take the following example. Ile says: • • . "Did any of the.origi . nal thirteen States abolish slarerv—much less _place - the negro on an equality with the tithe nut--dnring dm Revolutionary strug gle" Ristoev 14©m* the emphatic answer, to. Not one the thirteen Meted Stacie abolished Slavery during the Revolution." This asserdcw 'aye/ boldly wade. but it is wt. true? . The treaty et t peene which MIS period' to the Revolution and wired eat Independence was con. chided Janusziloth. 1783. In Porden`e Digest of the Lawn orkenneyleruds. eighth trliticuk, page tAXI. rill treletuui the act of3hwch Insole°, soot nisa &Amer to Pimaornturut which act that:Mow ing is s section: : . • •• penodi, twarell newness and mulattoes as abets, who shahs been, inlitiu *his State. shall not be deenscd and- eclashluod u servants for life, or slues ; and all serritude for lift; of shivery of chil dren, in consequence eche shivery of their mothers, in the case eta children bcqkwithin this State, fmte and alter the aiming of this act, 'ilia be and hereby laatierlY *AP awsh_estirivielied i and forever abol ished." This la bnt'ariarnple of the awakes misstatement/ 'old= lit4rh tire speech ithetuwia. Some of them are sett ata , Tered . l!t the article, we copy ' from the tional 'in another, cohmut. t gra committee of Professors of Harvard llni vetvity, Cambridge, Nam.; who were appointed la decide the controversy growing out - of the offer by the Boston 'Courier' of WO to any one who' could exhibit in the presence of a cornmlttee any such mar velous phenomena as are clalined'hy the Spirituallits to be spiritual Communications," after en examina tion, hare reported that Dr. Gardner, who officiated on behalf of the spirits, failed to produce before them any agent or medium who'. "communicated a word imparted to spirits in an adjoining room," "who read a word in English written inside a boOk-or folded sheet of paper," WhO answered any question "which the superior intelligences must be ,ble to answer," " who tilted'a piano without touching h, or caused a chair omove a foot," and also filled to. exhibit any phenomenon which, under the widest latitude, could be regarded as equivalent to either of these tests; and that therefore the Dr. is not etitif i led to;thesSoo. Professors Best. Fierce, 14ais Apses, B. A. Gould, Jr.. and E. N. Iforskonk cOustituted the Conunittee. gar Pro-Revery Amerisittnism in - Pennsylvania ii hest represented under the similitude of a serpent.-- The nuladelphia 'News' is its head, and three or four puny sheets in the intei4constitnte its caudal extremity: It has poisonous firws in its head, but no sting in its MB. Being at present gaunt and weak from hunger, it will moon die of starvation,. unites ta- ken into the "Democratic"- menagerie and fed. It is stated that a certain Slitunacratic anike.charwier has contrived,* device Soy getting its head "in a string;" and that being *neared, the ignobly tail will : follow, of come. The "animal" is to be exhibited' through the State by its Shainomsfic captors, in the hope of beguiling some Bre-liie voters into the sin of voting against the anise of freedom, t gr We obserTe that some of the most (Dishonest of the 'Arun Democratic papers_ are attempting to cast, reproach on the RepubDcan party, because of the defalcation which has come to fight in the Ohio Treasury. The Shameless hardihood 'of the attempt; is apparent to all who are aware of the kin that the defaulter is not Mr. Gibson,-the Republican Treasu rer, but Mr, Breslin, his predeceuor in office; who was and is a Democrat! E ir The Grand Trial of Agricakrd ;Implerents and Machines at Syracuse, vile& is o eommence on the lath hut, wider the dheebo' of the National So ciety, promises to exceed all precedent: Already ninety-three Reapers, NoWers, or combined Reapers and Mowers, have been • entered for -competition, while four hundred 'acres of Grass and Grain haw been secured on 'which to test their 'respective mer- lar The Ron. Wstuan:L. liascr, Secretary of State under President Pieree, and one of the ablest leaders of the Desnotrade..party, sus fonAd dead in his room at Balatoo, bT. Y, on Saturday,' Sim Fourth ofJuly. Be appeirad o boathia weal iseahh ass 13 • 11 .0 11 911. Mee lsae Ideaffecapfunt year. . • ur SnObble IQ' in thelhingeratie Convention at ilarzisimut that, " t.he TetinglWpaiio bad never been anlthin rine thin the ti r e tho" c ( ee thiP - Xt "*_san't'airgdfli elo" - louck it **Liu& 5401,1,4-so FOilk etfing.' Vir Godiers +dy's .Io rid Ally it eboiCe nuaber—and Elte al:new seeieerele AU of at teettive readimt, set eitoet firerit diet ail Mew '6044, Iged "-red serer-lbasliode nainifeit theiriatesese le kb eel of kis Wont, OMiftW4 bouteire4. The Mei erthiki papier ;ieeliaiiein eely Reriesi. Irgivilligtrelt • tied:/,' ea tee Roweituctie ieeit.loe theteigekiiribcetri,teeteo le ,So `gete`iss lipporitraen imatiek te getibe "ett - Attie*. rieinOmieg . , for •a *Rag ettet or fi ti ont7 :j ied meg. • UP- airs& g`Amer~ News,' coatis eller.- • atorlia are Nuakaitie as; Omni of Amen; as leach Jac •Treractiiaticr,g4; of theetittaug *forme Wm,' 6 - 'leol4'. SOW natt: arnalati - "ice=lib& Vojta -Haste; Treasury _aabjaekto • oirigLia $28,000,000, a I,CliAalt/Icattiriliositneorly hale nil/ions ; in NOW York idiligkee; nearly a million; is}lgladelpitai favo: two ; Alrlaanappwatai of three millions, and hallo Audio> 04.474, too and a halt , Cornetist* stet • • *tot iletclit Untimit 430Tak • t,:A111113N • , were adopted. tho'Ne tut The 'Tame' say.ty,. ' "Whether am looj th. rwamitif through which HayoriVocid cant ope to evade the force of thii do. *kin imd•romisuirthr game of mdfilication mit an archy, we cannot yet determine, He is. a desperate gambler, with all the ruffianism d Our Cht at WI back, and will persevere th-ldsiebeiliou'ethatbe possible., , it„-4..tritkinAt-PnetPtaidAylki9, schrift th e Cliiirtti'lnitipilititit,'lte-‘tind his heinettliste cabal will swear IS hito nonentity. The COMM Council may be rolled on to,fidlow rind back - him in anv'new. iniquity that he may are fit to attempt.— °he Herald' and'," he Journal of Commerce will probably approve and se* to Ophold whatever he may choose , to try,. Buk.ontaideilthe huire yet still limited circle of those who kook to ltis irWator *ppm , . tunity for public .plunder .or impunity ilivice and I crime, we' think ho SO have lbw kdlowers beyond this point." - • It will tie recotteete4 that the `Montrose Berm:mitt: follotring Its Instincts; or Inferring that of course the cause of anarchy and misrule was, the Democratic cause and would be *she'd a Bettumratic Court, took aides with Mayor woods 14 hia rnmanly dim to the State authorities. The' Democrat' as , cured Its readers nat .- the great miss of the people of the city •enstained and, defended the enures of Mayor Wood, and . that the contest. was, kw minty, not be tween Governor Xing and Mayne Wood, but between the people 9f the city arid the 'Albany neurPere-'— On the other hand the New. York independent:.a religious nedspaper pnblithed on the spot, asps that "the Mayor is austabled by ihei ' !lersid and the `Journal of Commerce,' while the.' Poet,' the 'Goa. rier and Enquirer: . 410 ',Trlterne," and.the ' runes: and the great Wye! respectable end substantial cit izens are strong in condemning the Mayor." Per hap; the 'Democrat' considers the 'abort boys,' and rowdies generally who, with his police, are the May chief' supporters, as constituting the people, on the same principle that the few Border Ruffians who are undertaking to make laws for . Kansas, constitute the people of that Territory. owu , y 4 D•wzg • mV. , . • ;ks.s.t=ztvslg;st. ,, , , g , l.a.-. Bros, (Deauxrist. ~. Mot and Bloodshed on the Fourth In New • York. a - A terrible riot occurred in- Newi , York City oh Independence day.' between the "Dead Rabbits" and the "Bowery Boys," by Which ten or more persons were killed and eiuht.y_ w - The Dead Rabbits, are Irishmen, bet --Ao the Democratic party. and are great enosof ^ Fenusndy Wed'," and foes to the '. pew Metropolitan police.— .--seik. 'The," Bowery boys" are mostly native' born, composing a few Republicans, and a consid erable number of members 'of the Ameri. can party, while probably- about half their num.ratre Democrats. A feud has long' eslitsid.lietween the Bowery-DO:6s 41,11,1 the Deltd. - - Rabbits. . Mayor Wood having on Friday issued orders to his police,to disband and-give place to the Metropolitan polite, in conformity to the decision of the Court of Appeals, violence was threatened by the par tisans of Wood among the ignorant and de praved inhabitants of the Sixth Ward. '. - Ex-Councilman Kerrigan and his brother relate the following version or the riot, ;which seems to be confirmed in many particulars On Saturday morning, about 2 o'clock, two pol icemen, one of them named Florentine., were pursued up Bayard Street .by a -large crowd of the Mulberry-street rowdies, :who pelted them with stoma apd fired stie;b4 at them. The policemen, took refpgn in, the porter-house No. 40 Bowery. At theetime there were only a tew sleepy boys in the bsr-room, and when the assailants rushed in they began to break everything in the place. The boys leaped out of the hack door.,and through the windows for their lives, &done of the policemen escaped to MeCluskey's coffee . and cake saloon, 'near by, while-, the other got into the street, and retreated,Ate. charging hit, revolver at the ruffians as' he went. The Dead Rabbits, mill* MulhOery. street fellows 'are called, broke in the *in: down of No. 40 with brick-bats, and 'gutted the place. They then went to the cofree,and cake saloon already mentioned and belt the policeman, broke the mirrors, and destroYed .all they could, out of pure -mischief, hating done which they retreated with" three - cheers for Fernandy Wud," and "three groani for the Metropolitans." , One .of the Soiree) , Boys, named . Bartlett, who went to induce them to stop, was struck in the head With 'a big brick-bat, and -fell senselest. He resided in Chrystie street, where he was subsequent ly taken. Soon after this a squad of Police men from the east side of the Bowery arrived and drove them oft .' ' I ' About three hours subsequent to ,this at tack; the Rabbits came in strong torie from the lower part, of the ward up Bayard street, .armed with stones, clubs• `and pistols, and shouting "Three cheers for Fernan,J4';Vood!" and groans for the lietropolitins. • The -Bow ery Boys, however,' met them at the top of Bt;yard street, and diove them bank to their ,P Nothing further transpired Imp') the "after noon of Saturday. About 5 o'ol*, lyslond of Metropolitan Policemen werOtoming, up Bayard street,; on their way to tlieir poste in the Seventh Ward; when they were biased and hooted .by the mob. ' A few britAr-bits meek thrown, and I be` police then set ugim Site took driving it before them. it is said, that, con tent with 'dieperiktg It, they refitnnect into line, and were =pain& off toitduty, when. the, Melberry street Miele ! supposing they. were retreating, wet upon Alien* *lda fresh violenee,' and -drtrre- them'. up 8iy11741 stunt and Into the Bowery. Now del Dead Rah bits were , on' forbidden 'ground; the Bowery Beys cleitning trscluaiiiir, contra over Ass part-of the Wel& So i ;_arben tinipolace called 1 upon sit goud . eitilene to, assist 'Sheen in %awl **mg the rintees, thti lays evslaed in: , For e - while the al!ene.was is Thiel.* surcoild-• be trielletfor. On.eitig eide r piettals were fwed and - brietc.bati throws inekrunintiy. . i-- ~ ', - . Vie itolben74usis ref** Iglid• carte, "ikons, :barrels sod linnber intti a barrteade in Mulberry street" at4ti -junction with Hey, sit ' -- Tbe. Bowftr4, Boys &Holed ' thehlres; ample by dragging the old irtwe eirehrges fries taste-werswidow yard And piling them up aidtiumbereesrte and Labe* sistfortdoh *allied s what/0W barrieedeliowoise Bayer street logo, its i jonotiet :Ai Eliaabeth.;.- Ude laud meant seek °that the hap. roots pelted away at one another in savage . - - • - . x For tAe - buleireadmr.4spudficqa. . style.- In *ulber To those Conoeined. 1 4 4. r* furious for goir A .-- :, • -tie .- ,• .. , of . . . irec: ...7u"..the h (hp to rs , of N. : - .t= ~ . %,:,,,. . - . Alli ! the t - ,; , , i Teachers' ''' , ~... h- _ , e d*ciel , f orltamen . , ~,, ,- 1 trine, on: '''" - a :-.4' ni . l . , 27 41. ...,', tilt ,'; • ' ul t - ! 1' 1 Illid ' 4 , 6 °,„ -- .. milt en' t -,... ty egiliimt . .oolii,.. ,tkabe -: -.. i. „.. the., P : * I# An ',, Pit schools . ...'..": d . - isNk'hiceintilitheie sii: c . I.e re.' ' sbotitaki . '"' e r quint:tents of the 25th Section of theliclool law or and * women g( - 1864 and '55. The following Direeteritrere.present, brick=bats (113 'sr.- - • - . T is W. wat aot i, E. Barnum , a, ..it ;too,. W, .T. _ them , with pistols fintl rou,skets.. The women, 1 Bosley and J. W. walker, W. Watson, p res id ent.. anti out and ,filled their. aprons with stone s in the ewe.. .... . ~. :. : . - • and brickbats - , and retreat, to the s'ocifi of . . , ._!. . . if. I t - ~a a „ aa ni ynotaly rew a y! , ,t, 17 *!, Board, , to es, ,. - their houses,' when . ce -... • discharged - them iiiitiiiit's unitOreliiir, and tit Make a suiteient'iipPrO• t 'P ansth rP. °Dee :" • . ' 4llerr° l" cetmribt ght 10641 ; f "'mthil .Ictoorfintle aOw olLtiet; t!) Pw- ,. -- t he ). f :- ,"' ~ - -- '- -- br ave l y, - bet , Assw some portion of . their chase 'sho'noti esur f b6 O ; Iskib-,44,1y11,42 schools c i aucwis , to the, - Bo.wery . Aloye. • , A number of the rioters were arrested by 411.414-154*&44 • 1*°41114 " 416-4 4414 at 11411343 " tite - Poilte - - Mid Tod" ge - (1 In"the - Tomhillifit"'lt teachers; and W.T. Mosley* and TX:Welker ' en the 'Dickerman and Miss Jr X Baker on the', part of the .. , . at op - - -•- old not seem to thafight: . The. women panel' the Directors,. was appointed tri, ntlee a prop- in Baxter Street would load .pistols and mas er selection of text hooks lion the w in use kets and send Their little boys out to fire them se pe, off, knovving that anybody would be ashamed the Board , viz who reported tbe. : - ; following list, which Was adopted to shoot at them; - One old 'man supposed to, :. • : . . be the person lying dculat* the ' Whit.strief- Webb'. Normal Cards and First and 2nd Reeder's; station, was ii• t k b --, k i .b. pu I ric ts ram Is chimn ey ' . • Toweesintermediate, Th ud, reurrh, and:, Fifth .itea-. den; Geographies; Cohen 'and Pitch's Buries;. Eng. and 'throwing them' down, when a -ball struck him and he - fen from the roofto the ground, iiih, Grammar, Clark's Primary; Stoddard'" Juvenile dead. , At length, to use the olaMie phrase of mantel, Intellectual -anti. Pra c tical Ationnetielt our informants, " The Dead -Rabbits r came to Webaher'e Scheel Dictionary, • the conclusion that they had a pauneh fu I l';' and • The Mieniell Preantble end teselettneeclrere then they might as well block. " . - , They according. parsed, by the Board : .i' • . lisent off a boy;rivith a white flag to the Bow. Whereas, the State Superintendent has ,decide d cry barricade to ask for a cessation ofhosti:- . that a teacher's month is "haply the current calendar ities. This ; being agreed to, both , perties month with the Saturdays andSundaysonlitted: and Withdrew and *the Police removed the- barn. , whereas, we . belknettbie regulation wilt reluis in fi • cadets. From .that time—a bou t 71or 8 o'clock nal advantage to the schools; by gaming the _pupils , —the riot ceased.--7Tri6ut!e. one day in eae.h .week for "reenetion eli for each work as shall be required of theta at bonsai" thereby. offering greater inducement for More regular at tende--the rest of the week; by giving the teachers better opportunity for: self•impivernent, therefore - Roared That we shall require the schtinla of the District to be closed on Saturdays, as well as Sou days. And kept open every other . day in th i e month, strictly 19, - Ompllance - sith the decision of. :the State. Superintendent • ,Resolvexi, That we believe it to he the duty of Teachers to devote at least a part of the thno thus omitted from the labors of the school retail, to im provement in, their vocation, and to embtWce every opportunity within their reach to do ito, especially if offered to them free of elune. Resblved. That hereafter, the Board will require the attendance of every, Teacher in the District, at the Teacher? Assrciatioi, held ever] Satorday . Sl- , ternoon, it the Ward :school, in, New Milford, ex pressly for the benefit and improvement of tile Teach ers of the District , and regularly attended bt compe.. tent instructors, and frequently by the County Su perintendent. Rewired, That every failure to comply with the above resolution, under ordinary wirciwnstanccs ,:will be followed by s deduction of twenty-flre cents from. the wages of the delinquent, in the absence of a rm. Jonah/ excuse, offered to the Distr!etStipetinteadent, who is President &the Association. Reached, That these proceedings be published in the county papers. Extract from the minutes. r J. W. WA LX*.l4 Seery of fleed, End, Zr•Otrzio District Superintendent. -We had the pleasure, yesterday, (June 30th,) of seeing Wm. F. M. Arney, direct from; Kansas, of which Territory he has be. come a citizen. From him we learned sey. eral items concerning affairs, iu the Terri tory. The whole -number of votes east by the Border Ruffians, alias the " National Demos racy," fir delegates to . the • Conhtitiitional Convention, - will not exceed '1500,.0ut of population of full 20,000 adult males. The bona fide Free State men 'refrained . every. where from voting. . The other side are .split into two fictions —Moderates and ultras---the latter headed by Stringfellow, Calhoun; St.' :Matthews, Jones & Co.; te other -by Gov. Waliter i whose fiction is in a minority in their . party. The ‘point upon which they divide is on the policy of submitting the Conteinplated .consti. tut ion to a general vote of the people for rat ification. . - , , A new Aptestion has aprang up' to iierplex matters. The usurpers saiv that none' shall be allowed to vote this 'Fall for delegate: to Congress, and for members of the Territorial Legislature, save the few who --have been registered. This• is done to prevent four. fifths of the Free .State men -froniyoting.— A committee.tuul Waited upon Gov.. Walker, to ascertain his opinion st 4 to - who were en titled to vote,•but he had declined to give an • - • - Trouble was brewing. The Free State men are bound to vote at that election, at all hazards. Crops looked ,well in the- Terra°. ry, and the prospect-of - raising a supply -of bread/stuffs was flattering., Emigration Con: dulled to flow into Kunsas• in an • unabated stream; Speculation and enterprise were making long and, rapid strides. The Free Statesmen were taking a csrefhl census of the population, - setting: forth, The number of voters who•had 'been residents for six months. 2d. Voters in th e Territn. ry. 3d. Women and children. - '4th. Col ored persons—free and ;lisv'e.. In the county of Anderson, in which 'Air. Arney resides, there were .fully 600 vi:ers. Six months ago them were not n dozen.. The county seat—eyatt—contains.two hundred and fifty. voters. • • The Free State party were united and harmonious, and sangithie of sneeems on, the first opportunity they eould obtnin to Show their strength.—Chicago Tri6u,aer. Mr. Douglas on the Questions of the Day. Senator Douglas has been making an elab orate speech at :Springfield on the Questions of the, Day—Kansas, the Dred S(...ott Dees ion, and Utah. The . synopsis given in the Chicago Times of the 16th ult.,,is copied into the Southern papers, with unqualified expres sions of approbation on the part of the Dis. union 'papers. The Richmond South lauds lit as a specimen of bold and commanding. statesmanship, and evidently regards Doug; las as :As man of the Democratic Party for 1860. We do not wonder at this, for, al. thotigh the full report of ~ the speech has not yet reached us, the positiTis taken by that i gentlemau, as stated in the synopsis of his remarks, are all' that the extreme Pro-Slavery party am demand.. - He concedes nothing to Northern Semi ment—he'is implacable against Black Re publitanism--L-he drops hot a word from which might, be inferred even a suspicion on his part that affairs in Kansas had not been conducted with exemplary fairness. In relation to the Kansas Question, his seems to be the bold Southern Policy. .The Convention law is a fair (Me—all the People entitled to 'rote were secured ...by it in the .right of voting—if they stubbornly refupe to exercise this right,on their own heads will rest the consequences—the Democratic Early in COngrees and in the Territory will have done its-duty. The -inference is, that should the Convention 7 -the Free State Party hay ing refused to vote-4mm° a Pro-Slavery Constitution and send it to Congress, Senator Douglas-will not 'hesitate to advocate its 'ratification, holding the Free State men re sponsible for.the 'result. Not a. word about the propriety of submitting the Constitution, when; formed, to a' popular.vote in the - Terri- tory+the policy to which Gov. Walkerlas pledged himself and the . Administration:-- On this point, deemed vital by the Southern ultrast, 'Mr: Douglas chooses to withhold i his coneuiTenee with the Administration, not die pleased, probably, to WIR confidence for hitt' , self* its expense with' the extreme Southern Party. • i .. . _ The, iDeed &act opinion he sustains with veheinemie, remarking that • the two _points' settled by it are, first, that negooes are, not .citizens, secotxily, that Idly ristrictim upon, Slavery by Congress is unconstitutional.; • - Bit* Republicanism her rays, _repudiates , this deciision; puts • itself in Oppositionto:the Constittition and ' lawis. ,Is goes ibi . neitto equality - and anarchy—and- on these 'issue's; he is prepared to meet it' , , This is cairn*, but iti.4.truthfide Rise' Republeanism-sill net Perinit you to Mane imps kw it.:-it will make' its ow* issilm, and coitipet-yOu'to 4;l5Rj froa t !them: , The fi rst- him; it , makes is, s. cocaine 6f the Thichasticst ititidepesthwice.' 4 7 " 41t-.! hilt are- torn , 'etted fi.-u endowed.. by' their' CreatOr?witli - eirtairt , ;inallitiabler righto, l ',Astintlfree, lull& 'llbehy:eind thii porsititofistiopittass.tt' thio3k - Rei . inblitsitleiti - idfirnis, I Bla* A Dettimiiiy. desire .: : Bhp* Repufdieeeism islnnitainOd.--btleit• kilo* Black llemocraerbtßvw:Taiery.! Anotier - pobit it 'mikes. hi r :titettlie . Peopei the fObetakt.Of Leiriare , triore;eetigil- then aid StipreineCitirt;-the inteir . or Lawi and When they come , fo inde •:that the intertireter - zilis sents thern,l heruwill them;' aerreet the 'rd. .- Black Reimblieen m nvitqt the oppoeeni or tbe Cosethetiliti;iir‘ Lew* . bet the deutriotned ezemy eitboe&who - per; yert them and-those who - uphold their per- Later from Hanna sustain its usilf•patiu... ' .As to Utah, Mr.-D ouglas has ~Ati doubt that the. President will - da his duty boldly; but he - adinonishes him incidentally as to the course he ought to, pursue. Remit:ire Brig. •ham—Yonntsmd all- thir-Mm•motr fatieficatte ries ; till their places with bentiles v ge,ed,,ird true men • sustain this W ith triAadequate‘ military ?ores ; inquire into the robberies, mittod, and -punish them,_ If possible; but t should everything fail, then repeal t.lif.t organ ic law, blot out the wank:trial orgaaiw.tion_of Utah,.and bring the offender* there to trial . under thAaw of 1790, before; the - tribunals' in the nearest argabized States or Territo ries. This would be hismethod of dealuig with " the bestial and treasonous practices of Mormonism... If Buchanan" should pursue this course, he,would wait - to -be following the guidance of 'Mr. Douglas-shoubi be de cline to de , so, and fail, his faihire would be attributed to his not_ following so •good ad- Mr. Douglas, has spoken, and wo.suppose he must now be considered s candidate fiir the succession in 186 1 )--with special clainnt upon the oonfidence .an 4 sympathies or Slavery ,Propaganda of the Sou th.—NetiOnai Er.g. . IrrE:MS: The grasshoppers that have threatened-to destroy, the crops parti of islinesoi fa, have been killed:. by the reeentieold - and wet. weather. :It is ,said bushels of dead grasshoppers, in.masses,. may tke-faans ort the prairies. . . It should be refnembered by postmasters that, for the, Protection of newspaper publish- ers, a law was pasied not long sinee;.reginr ing them to notif:v the edit Ors of any phisor remaining uncalled for, within five weeks, or be held thet nsel ves.. responsible. • There is a warm. contest going . on in . Car : Lon county between the Demoptats in favor_ of the sale of . the „Alain' tine and ld° are opposed: to ic. :gr..Telan , the 'late atem r ber from that county, voted for-the and General Lilly has brought out on,e,Willianis to beat him fop the. nomination. AiTelan ! is a fast roan, we supp,ose he„,syilt henotain*.. ted. . . , Advices truM - I,eavenworth. Kan* state that on thellith:tilt.,`Jantes Lyiciihe Reeoid: er and Probate_ of the emmty; was killed by a Fteo;State man, named Haller.• Toe affray grew out (Wee- election to fiir- va cancies by the City .Couiuit of Leavenworth: Haller-was arrested. ilere Wafrineeh ;ex citement resulting from-the &flair; and a.'tiot was apprehended.' - , • The Kansas pt., rrepondent of the Nyv'' York Times' sci ~va.c Whilst speaking of the matter of Stayer" in Kansas; alio*, MO tolay that' 'since I &info into' the Territ4:ifyr:,l Live not seen half-a - dozen slaves. :I atninfornled; on.good authority. that there are ' more thnn 200 in. the 'Territory, andthat of tfiese not: five:per.ceat; are engaged itfijgrrealtarar pursuits. it' In ancinnatkOhio- re.-Itaking . , place of h • horses omnibus -I mes s express wag 011g, &c. The Commercial, of that city, ants they are , eqUallytreetable, post less ,by 20 to 40 per cent ; the; consume forty per -cent. less food, are 33 per cent more- durable, and move with it steady unyielding celerity., that recommends theme to ail who . :have tested. their.merits. • • . The fitintingdon',Journu/sayi the Pernoc*, racy there are "split all - arMind;" 'and daily "Splitting worse," about the :sale nf thePub lie -Works. , The wing-' opposed :to a Talc is under the superyision of General.,WilsoilAtr: Pitilken ' and Postmaster Colon ; and ':the wing in favor of a sale is led" by Major Campbell, John Anderson, and - John Sett: The hitter party have the . ' Globe :on' tteir s side. • . . . Among the distinguished visitors to' Bps ton last week. was B..Grniz Brpwn, Editor, of the St. Louis Deinocrot, thy torgiin ut . th e Emancipation party in Missouri. . ig. r n Mgrandson of John Brown, tini first United ates Senator from Kentucky,, PreSidot,cif the Senate in 1803; and, one of the ,greatest men of that state. Ills grandmother was a sister of the late Ilev.Dr.John M.. litison of New York. • The reports of Senator Siimtier by , the Persia,saysthe Boston Transcript of the 2011 i; are notso: favorable as his Mends could wish: - : I . His chief difficulty appears to be-lit ; his spine, as he is easily fatigued" . by walking ; and a ft er having been:setited any considerable-length of time, he moves about, when vising like a veteran of eighty .years.i 'He is now visiting. the rural distribts of France.' 7lia mind .is very active', and his spiritSquite-cheerful. l r• • . here was an unsuccessful atteatO blow' Up Rev. 0. 8. - .Frothingluirn's (un itarian) Church, in Jersey' City, . lighted on the flour and aft - the it's : I turned It, is lhought:that Me: F' AnO-StavW. .ions have awakened. a prejudice agiulst;' him, which some rasetili *ere:Only:lvy ii aceountable accident prevented froragratify ing,in this sacrilegiOus Way: • The Richiriond - 4 - in abandon Jug KhcitV nothingism for'. pm.sliivery Deinocracy;' indi cates its belief that the question of4laveitis - ;the only one that can- ptamietifty diiide :par ties at present,- that the Democratic party , i4- fully pledged to the. aupport-ofskivery ; and that the attempt to keep uran Americin par ty at the South only divides and vveaktris ttis political • poWer of the South. Northern Americans are slower'in perceiving that: the same - thing:la true:of:the . - It is stated as a faet illattratiie 41:Adipose manner IS *hid) the fiioneiat ifiltira of' OW were cofidaeted assiet Ai; ifediliqt,feni.'4 Adniinistriitin* thiii,itreilin, th4r Deniocritk Treasurer' liiiis alloWid:*te z hold,tifit'llegef o r: / ten months `with6tit . biskiiii filed iik t r,b4 . r It is believed ,that . 11e expects 't0! .. 14140:- e principal amonni' 4 of: his' dedileatiron'4 in this period, 441 so shield those fir. 'Odds became VS tx0144.14:` ' '' Chat leston Mincer* . insists .-that (be' Mormonis have A right tO:dematsi ,tißkk-Ultilt shall be admitted into the sUJoiouasueStiktoo ' ill spite ef their. Ppolygamy eruicisveit reek 1 ertunent n ,loncither of allink,it arsuiasisknbx nontliet *ilk the Constititina and La*tottlin United Statea.:-. TheMercenkinithiNieivlsii. It sus shady mow* thataf Cotgoitebiliitt power toistaiodetete beam ltri s ufloaall" is* Of Poi it fiilliPoYcitrillay.beiascegite/ocak lawa , ofismsstinslasiry.,--:,, .1 , ,a: L. , -4 , -,--f,:, !,-Nalrfkm. Latt-..Tie esad sigaga•cf an important: acts ;mod, by Abe laset4l ow, Ned whinkliroeg, bac, operatietiluntes& stilly, provides as follows—" That .lem. the tax imposed by section thiettof the act appreve&=stay:. -8, '1854k tfdr the rh,githitlon and continuum:4 . ot Olga,' of sdocatio' it vi entitnei tee/UAW ) en4rikimpaiotes*ons oat tweinpaikiesow.co sfaits- fr eemen, guatile tit case be less than one dollar, Aptircliallifii* ' 21, 1857, WZ..= • ,:;:4 31 17. - ki.,. • . • •-•••- o f P . • • • requested by Secretary Thom? 4 - h .. 4 vs certain co mpetes • - • . • .. al p , his resignat ion to takes th.''..l••.-"*ent of his successor. - " - • the Matto* Inn Competry. ELECTED, JULY 6, 1867. Foreman—J. r.,W. Riley: First Assistant For Katt. :.; Bee.oo4..4seistsst Form P.-ilaister. Treasurer-41enry Clowns.. - Seeretary--S. M. Wilson. " Pip/nen—A. EAtawhq. , _ Assistant Pißenta. w —J. F.Vrowtey • - • -Tratatnes . t - 11 .enOPTi4E, 1 9.; 9 iTe'rt Crane* '' * ' • t 2 . l riltintkriheilUirktiihit 4itdise an alarm of fire, to repair tethe smote of danger, t o impikreigniot property, and stdmi ou rcuring wateyor o • tilt m. pa. gu They sbill lisehlrqsw i ssAk an_ a. tie the seconded' TresatiiWiertioport the . to each Semi•Anattel Meeting of the Cotopssy. They, will also not be musicwCtskatßotelththlirtthalls, of th e Company for e .xectlbr i feiiiettiniaance st the regular Seml-Anneal isurtfeciel M - ,De busi ness, when Per/Innen-el " shall be subject yr 00i113* . ` ffipoire,4!, ,, s !ay impose. • Coarrocition..-ificti Oirrbe- the Episcopal Charckiick - NorthlketemPerirlsyliank will be beld,ricOrseir, P r ey 071,, The Iblkiiring .190t4IPtheardesPirtlie 'ureic% which 8B are aillielroliia*lY' l6 4o4l 6 IttitoV• - Titcaswii, 'July (!owiew4d oe. P. nt., Service and-Serni‘tt. Famas; MM..* mviaNirSr•Aimlinr• AOC Senrice and Spelt*. p.• - ft,jlli•ionaiolpoiag. Sarcrapa.‘4,l6 ; rt...m4ffterito-Viidnig. a. m., Service and.Sention; gennon to SOMA; a. tn.., )11 . :d drieilicii3et4lSChelt /4 , IL li fir . -0 0 " 108t ad :Se n 5 1 9 / 4 1. , 4 :1 1 . 3 ! )- / Cl oht Serviceg.: e , On Thursday aftentoon, Julyll4l4: et if eels* the pews of theichurih r inllN,4 ,• • _ "Uk In Lathrop; 'llly 44 by. 310.47 - DooGe b of B.tookiradk. FRAIL& WA% /114)4 and .misit-#l4O *Air, 4 1;0..01,*te kola ;daft • . • :In•New Milford, aistkithi* iliteTA. Way Eta ,Csetr,us 144_31iss:Zusuct Bum& In Montrole; Bengt K,. . 1.434 / 3 /4- 1 4ANFlay SO if* /cu Do!rnitri troth ofßu,l ,- ' 4 in Ibla gt9 1 4 OP2ds .by 'Bet! 14"4, Jonx I. TnAns. of sicholsf.io, and.tin Plcx.enixo of Oitison.. >WEIL • _ . . On the 4th of June - fas, thaereitkiestas Al O. $, Beebe. Esq., in Jessup, Bungs. DeWttew, in the IFth - year of his age, • • !lonia, 4nne4.12:, Ttif t an t VA .wife Westgate, daughterlntl Wa._ • 29 L years tmdl4 offiiebte constfteticarshepossessidstrigatvitupaisetWemi f t She etPetieneed. religkat,hr:the '6l, Mae d the churchil4l4 , 4) .TiemP4fied. 4. her the chanietertieti ofthe Though dear 1 , trust it* eternal Ow.' •-• - 1 •""•* , I .`"‘ 1 - T. Ilt.iti.•\ . • 4 \ ') - }larfatilniversity TER* if:6k liiiiitution - MHE yAmi WM com -1 mend:, on the 19th• of Angiiht,•4o4 continue On' .weeks, 141.- emu malice on_ the trey Wedpephti" iti,j,./eminber thntinue" th irteen 'wee* sma" elOl4 u ponthill:Votat dkr of !brat. SPRING tERif Will aim s/mei at thtrelpset of thestwinteilknit and , etintirme win*, thirds of a term, oi.. eight and &half weeks, and elan' - the fitstweek, 31ar. _ • •Attrtare i rOU.. - • REF. F ALLEN Teacher in 'Ancient Lan/mark • list': Lb Rico/2050N ,EOggSh Ikanches, and /tar erratic. . • - . , 'Miss 14:11. RlCOAEOSioN,lhiterittirattd`Paint' Ti' 2. X EN SE% Turrtox ' Common Branches,, per ienn,...'.54,,b0; Natnral Philimo?h3t, Physlotoe, 6,00. Ancient Latigna,vorand Driving .am Painting, .:... • .4,00. " on the atitar, Voc.al )134c ' adaPt4d to.eointiittSchotifir, :Reim Reuy perßeiie ; -Expertlie 410:' li otttlUziot , .incinding4 l oNa ori-Wging% 149 0 Pft' Reek . thet.u,sti4 apaosetueOs tOdoloy*,:whe wish td boikittie.n!siihes. - Payment, one hilflit*friniii;:_the' tsdiee;- hilt Ai the middle ofthe term. ' - Harford, JnlY 8; 18.37.-8‘; Horse . Rakes! ROA es .., • • . nwww: , k GAREATT bare;tisl -- reotived another lot. of the Celtebrailea-nintrnis• lug 'Make*, olickarO 411444* \A l f thit bate - 430 them to be super:tot - to tot! ' 41 1— ft " • ..Sniths l'oarlas; ton* S. Rakes, on hand #ertig'bv ' - - . 4 1* 8, ISt."' ' 7-cit-emenotit. D" ;n AREWS poupittipi Dyseatry. A *lie cars: Psis*la as instal; by :AL TURRELL Celeiaateil7rl'etititte'-Comp*ant A new orthuA "iecOoV-t iirre' reign *lo4' iihOpiajtsfati- Inver Ceingtikts, +' • 11RITLBY it;=AD. July 8,1857. - - , ' ItATIAIiTOOI.II,' • - CYTUES;Sniths,ltakes,,Pltehfo '44 , ,tnidlosond tho! Qultutbiigne Stoitis.kr sab • - • 1111NnEr & READ. ot.g . ..tEgittkan c i pp:4mm 3:untroat;;ulrß 798'1.= - ' .000.,Bps; RIKEts-AAPVlLCE9Jostlca`ki. t orbig eh* by - nit Itroqreseoßily , 3, 1937. "Y‘, Wissii • - Cask , 1:1:1IU Tits—lTT will pow price 11Ifbr'm"m'wiiai .04142,25!.,119:111",c; 4 Nsir Jul t 8;'h" •• - - Tojk.27*.F. , ,:toss,r2ii,it trp 1 11TH „.. • . yit•Cfh; sir. ire eloslnk bs•itigowl, kiierrisirotheabasifidibtolliouit, shoe' Id , ' lo o , 4 l e4 l 9: 4 +Pi