he. lip3epe h eht ,110IILAT-lONI-2.60C c F., REA L) 4 If. If. FR A ZIER, EDITORS. •;. X.'LOOMIS, CORRESPONDING EDTL'OR. Et D. 11 MD We . /d. , - STATE' TIC'KErT. • •AUDITOR . GENERAL, • • " VIOMAS E.' cOCOAN, OT f ORK cotTxTr. TOR S s LTRYEYOR, GENERAL, / WILLIik 11. KEI3I; OF BERNS COUNTY 'COUNTY • TICKET . FTOR iinx.i k Ton, • WILLIAIi JESSrp. -{Subject, to decision of Senatorial Conference.] ' 1 TOR : REiRESE;STATIVE, • . GEORtE T. FRAZIER, of OaklsOd FOR iDISTRICT,ATTOR-'ST, ALBERT CHAMBERLIN, of Montrose, FOR COUNTY COMIIISSIdNF.F., MAELON C. STEWAIIT, of ClitTord t- • FOR COUNTY LTRRASURRR, DA\rID W. TITUS, of Ifarfctrd: - 't FOR COVICIY AUDITOR, CFIACEY WRIGHT, of Forest Lake ?on COUITTY SURVEYOR, • yiTILSOI J. TURRELL, of .Fore.t -Lnke Election, Tuesday, October llth. . ~,t.-r . 0 10..liiirV Star mid Chronicle, edited by 0. N. Warden, }:eq., a sen- Bible article on State Senatcr,for this District. vw- The Montrose Dernbcrat calls on ti,-; io publish \ General CUD'S tipinion on the naturalization Anestion. thoughtare had published all the different opiik. ions held by the venerable premier pn that subject that have.lieen made public. We, certainly have published three or four ,different ones. If the - editor of the Democrat has discovered another, will he ..be BO kind asito let us k.love what it is p • We endeavor \to keep up'srith the times-in most. things,' but Cass ..bets had so many opinions on this point, that we may have missed one if them. • LtirSenator Dooglasitas written, and-given to the • public through the medium of Harper's Magazine, anew manifesto-on popular sovereigrity iri the Terri , ttiries, ind its bearing on slavery. - „Tlis argument is closely analysed-by the New York endurt,,,' and • 41 shown l i n be far from.satisinctory or demonstrative. ?The goterning power in a Ten•itory-is either, in the people that lite thefeiti, Or in the Federal Crbvern-, meet; for it cannot be Pretended that Stai r e Laws 'have an l y_autli;)rity - or, binding effect beyond StatZ: imits; and if the geipl government can ilot legislate for the people of, t c Tertliories, the power pf self-government belongs to the settlers as; Cleared from all the obligations and dis4i • • thictions made by municipal laws, a - . 1 teen stand cm' an equal footing, and those Who meet in a nets and i • unorginized.Territory, me .t as equals by virtue - ot • the inherent rights of in i anho:ld, A:atter may have ' been their condition in 'society - elsewhere, ` Suppose . then thlt two men, one a white man, and the other a negro with uncertain antecedents, meet in t Territory-as yet unorganized into a community : what are theirresActive righks! • Clearly, by this ' • doctrine of popular sovereignty, they arc equal. The loci of any State or municipality link no force ' here, but the territorial government must spring out „of the right of self-government inherent in the inbab -Itantis. It follows that a slave taken to any territory becomes immediately free; and the equal of his Inas ' ter in every political right. • Finally, says the Craig - " if there in anew thing that' the Senator brings, ij is this—that the people' of the lerritories without "H_M,.....,..11"""Zinidard4910144641n11777 . . .. • , . .."'"'"niir tom the Constitution, but from the indiridual Ananliood of the inhabitant—to establish. laws for '_ themselves. 'lf this.position is maintained by Mr. Douilas, be is a radical Abolitionist" .. . . - !lit - is not maintained by,liirn. All his clap-trap .. , - abou 'popular sovereignty in the Territories' spring lag from the individual manhood of the inhabitants, • intuit glgor notbinga; for he proceeds to , qualify or , semi the statement of his doctrine in the following , . lelgtiag• : , - " . The principle, under our pOlitical system, is that - wary distinct political community, loyal th the Con , Itlittion and the Union, is entitled to all the right.Z.; 'Wiley., and immunities of F . /elf-government in re , spirt to their local concerns'and internal policy, sub ' Jost only to the-Constitution, of the United States." eve it will be seen that "every distinct political .1 J N $ tirmmaity"-Is the object of Mr. DouglaS ; .; 'doctrine • I not .e very Individual. He does not toad, the no '• - - rpaaisecfpoptitations of Territories. Ile . does not ,- rem to retoetirs their existence. Beginning with the djscussion of Territorial—which is.one with indi viduil—sovereignty, after a few pages •of labored quotation and collation, he loses eight of his' theme, ifrhs ever arm It, and merely reaunounces; in a loose d unsatisfactory paragraph, - the old, doctrine of Elsie Rights, or communal despotism, as it is under stood by alaveholdeis. In feet, after' a tremendous dratkat original phildsopliv and the exp4unding of fiat prjimiples, be Gdlto back into - the arms iof his acuthena friends, and there we leave him. 1 .1 I ' .. _ t ar The Republican Association of IFtishiog,ton ''sirle having prepared and published a - aeries of Politi cel Tracts, under the sopervision of the Cepgression; ..IRepublican Executive Committee, vr ch it is ear nestly hoped the friends of the Re lican cause will tate immediate steps to have put in enets]' eircula . tom. .They are furnished at the cheap rate of seven 'ty 4ve cents per hundred copies, free of \ postage.— •:The following Tracts have already been published : ' TractNo..l: Rote we are Goi;erned.—.l3eizig an ex i ' pose of the Frauds and Expenditures of the present Administration for party purposes. Imot. No. 2. piirfor the iandless.-iteing a complete anaiisis o the votes on die Homestead Will. .Tract No. a: Attitude of National Partits in retpfct to a Pa, il es .Railroad. : . Tract No. .. 2 . 7 a., Slave Trade.= ;., • , Soviing that proceedings'and debates-dtiringthe ' . hua Peron .of he late 'Congress indicate .s most ' - ed deterioration ofmural seri...inlaid at the South . in - pert to the A.friime slave trade, and are, fearful ly . inous o f the. near approach of the thne 7 when, at y rate - in the Gulf Staley,. that *hemp i unit-el , y ieprobatedirallic will be us beart4sustained tie isinstitution of slavery itself TM' et No. :;.- 2 - land Bottles to the Pacific—The liisttetyield ton : tr e. • Tract Nti..6. OppositiOit Of the'Senth to the - 11.4t#9,pment of 'Oregon avid of Washing ten Zyrito fir—Thr Inlsreste of the- rid, - 111oiders should be addressed to Lewis ClePhane ' j t • &Teary National Reinbticiation, %shin ( . 11/Di Aa. . • - :'..: • .i : . /if ' -- - -. • ~. 4 • Er" With referenCe tcithe time and place for th meeting of the RePitbln Senatorial. iea Conferees for this District,' the DrOford Rcßorler publishes the following: ~ ' i • . . ' . ' , At the llepublicri . Senatorial Conference, held Sept. 5,18.5 a, l.be..f 'lowing coal i tions 'were ado - ii cd : ~ . 1 -... . .. • . ' " Resolved, Th at the' basis of 'representation for the Senatorial District be for itradford five votes ; for` Susquehanr,a four votes".; 'for Wyoming two voted ' " Reitolreel, That the Senatorial Contlirent;eldir kft District shall hereafter meet at Camptown; in Brad- , ford-county, on-the first Monday afterthe last - County . Convention shill have been held,/ . These resolutions,' which We suppose will ' still be held as binding, will bring the .Conference *meeting tiuMonday, September! 12 at Camptown, in this 'county, a central point, and a time which. seems to be convenient. Toll: any other day, will he to cre ate confusion and miiminlerstancling, and for which there'h, no reason. *%,e presume: that the Susque hanna Convention was rot aware - Of,. the passage lof this resolution, naming the time' and place-of meeting for the Conference. I ,.. I .4 Q tgrlt has been a onestioh with many whether a publisher could.enforce payment in accordance with his published rotes, in cases .where no 'Special eon: 14ract can be s proven.. This. matter hassiCently been decided nc the Supreme Goat of Indiana. A fon , troVersy existed, telitivg to tiehirge for advertising, between the Commissioners of,llatifilt4 county and the lintriot newspaper." It vas held by the Judge as follows: • • : "The Published terms of new:amers constitute a contract.'. If work is given to newspaper publiihers, without a special contract contravening the published terms, the,publisheri can charge and - receive accord ing to the terms so published. It is not neceSstiff to Hprove what the work cost dr was worth ; the Pub lishers have a right to fix the value of their columns,' and if so fixed, no other questions need be asked,but the price thus ehirged f an be procured." : N This is a matter of some interest to.publisliers,and when Once generally understood, .may present. cost and diffieulty. on thepart of persons advertising. If there are no special contracts made, they may ex pect to abide by the, published 'rates of the paper thfOugli.m bleb they•Overtise.. There is nothing un reasonable or unfair in this. - • Vir The well•knOwn flint of T. B. -Pete'non and Brothers, :e Chesfnut, itreet,Philadelphia,barejust .commenced publishing a remark - ais cheap edition qf Dickens's inimitable vcorls of fiction, It is tailed " I'etern4le 'Cheap EFlitionfor the Million, of the entire 7 , r - iting - .1 of ,Cli &ries Dicker:le, Boz," . and will be issued complete in twenty-eight Weekly yoluines. 00 volnMe will be.mblished regularly on each and, -e-sy EN'atarday, - iintirlhe whole number ,of voltitncs -twenty-eight-:—is completed. The low price pied t).y the publisherslor thernis centsa volume, nr the whale twe?;ty-eight TONIIIFS, for five dollars.-- A complete set will 14:fOrwardedirrr of postage, bY mail, ta any part of . the United States, to anyone„by the pulllishers, oir receiving a remittance of fife dol lars for the twenty - -eight yonmais, threeciollars will pay Tor thy. first eourttsen, volumes ; or a remliitance Of one dollEir . will I pa'y for he : first four vo4nies. The volumes *ill neatly printed, and . 'eactil volume will contairi . ldu large - detaro pag-! es, pri4d. on fine white paper, and kith palier cover. Va.• cominend the determinatioM l of this iititerptising Philudelphia firtn, to furnish they complete .and entire n Molts 'of 'ehatles' JNe - liens at al Price co reasonable, that all persons 'whatever -.may) passers a full set, and direct the especial attention ofii oit reintCrs to the fact. , _ . . , TIC imports of foreign merchandise have greatly exceeded the, exports from our 'country..,; FiriCi!_ the; tariff of li , -til was establi;hed, and the difference has. necessarily been paid in sPecie...." , 'i r . , The spdcie which accutniilated in the go‘ntr . %- un:.. der the tariff of '42, the otieriing of the California: mince, and the henry exportation, for se!reml 'years) of American bre:it:sitars; tirfveti ted, fort - number - o f ? , yearS, those,-finaticial diei:tiFers yi. iieli.::kar4 ship come upoti.thc country. { Thetari -of '46- !iins i til:f tered, and the - dudes,instead of. / heing increAsed were reduced. nth: incrCased the importation .o foreign goods, and the'expiirtationof gold and slice from the:rnited Stiites. '.- ' •-, . . The iliends of free trade. contended that as -then r.a, a few-'dollars in the treasury mere. , than vrit needed at. that particular time, a redtMtiorA.f the dti ties was ahsolutely necessary, to prevent ttie, govern l ment from hitt-file:in unneese.ssarramoiiiii . :9l monel in its vaults., The condition of the treasury far th Itt,-.t two or three years might haye reminded them .1 the seven kine" that camefrom the rivJ and, after eating the seven fat ones; Were themselv9 as "lean and ilifa;'oretl" as. before. .1 1 The financial disaster?. of '57 trem , caned by: th, country's being tirainilil4l it.? coin; Europe alfeett - ;(1, bin t tlie.ditfrculties tbere.irere caused 'I,,Y the suspension (Cher: litnerican trams, and die failu - re-of American merchantsin maiiin:g i)aymentt Lar g e-quantities of foreign" goods arm shipped est 7eek.t,t,;Afm- .products oflfte States, at least ; but gold, American gill; in larg, quaptities than can be obtained from !California. the protective Policy had been sustainet!, thousaM now unemployed, or unprofitably .employed, won hive been engace'a . is manufacturDrig,. aud:euvor hundred Millions of dollar in gold aid silver ,whil is pow.in Europe would' linve rentained'iti The tinittl MEM . Increase the anfaint'of specie in the - countr ' ereni.P the cumber'cumber'of buyers and consumers o tattler's produce, and you will increase the %al pro duets. But if the buyers are, fl .destitute of money, the Slirmers 7 are then .in situation. . . - . , The tuoßt wealthy nations areithosc which a, most extensirely engaged : in manufiictiiring, those are weak and poor Which depend,entirelj . / agriculture. • , England sends the productions q her o every quarter of the globe, to the - remotest / is! fact o r the seas, and fills her vaults with the precioni, Boni all parts of thawarld. ...k.mertim zysta* ' factories and adds to the wealth of Engla d, bY . an extensive consumer of her fabricat:oh‘. . If a farmer sells produce to theamoutit of sl' makes a store bill of 120 Q, is he gettiig rich of Upon this principle, if the , United States _buy u the amount of ttiOuiooo,ooo than-they sell, ar! carrying out a sound financial policy ? • ... Whilj the " free trade" men f l ie E n gland t ei6. they callthemselves the " 7 u/V-curi:ency" Virginia aid Idassachitsetisp among our Statei: the former is an agri libiial district; i ter a manufacturing region.- t irgin hi, in ex t , , territory, IS tutte• mes larg,. "than ..11a.ssachus 1 and yet in l'.. , Zu the real at . personal estate o:- achusettr exceedcd thilt o 'Virginia by the ' man of $14:4000 t Otio l And/ . 1 this.statomentmea ly C., e half of. the inhabitants o' Virgkaia were iuclu I f ed property.* . , 1 i \. . .. • The Democrats, 'Mt e - days of\ tbeil integri y r s titinetl'the protective , , cy: "With the view 'of pi. tecti . ng home muutditet 3 Ma, Core s had indreas' d the duties upon impo i rts . for to the t ectiou of De t eral Jackson to'theotliee . President. The 'tan 1 , rotection 'r an a t. a .. s; which as .piss{ d . 'q - len.. 1 4me '. 7 .d . • , dreiv Jac Aciu. Lath t .vfinti 12, lifemti il . 'd tiles Aet;emiet) if -11 , t 'the . \uocra6t.lof te , •ics of the nullifiers, ri• t m\all .1 , .t. Tim re/atti g , . .., ch, moteme :t .1 . 1" ; t c.ongen all =SS For tAr Indto see "MonsietiVe Motte".cr l oss the river on a rOpe str ehed froin 11Aden's Elovator• to the %it/amine l opposite. : . At de appointed- !time /the 'per , i .former n ade his . appearance' and/Started - out role in.hued- _T 1 0 w an ...:/ rtg ered in- whitio tights, atid wore on'his hea&a'hat decOrated with ribbbns. After procding tremblingly: along to 4 point abOut,thirty feet from the shore, be lost bissbalatice and• fell Spraw r ling . into the: ,vater bert4th, losing hold of his .bidance:p6le, whjefi Stueksuwight in the mid dy; bottol. / De MOtte rose to'the surface, wagand icked up ~y one of the boats in tit t ten :ince , He was orought to,shore exceed . ingly dat p and shivering from cold, hutlinf divested` f his ambition; for having warted hiniself s rnewhat ano:k pulled on a pair of ,pantalooi s over his Itiglits;, hestarted again and after ninnynarrow escapes, iucceedeS in reaching the eastern shore id safety/ He afterward returned by the'saMe route, and was greeted'yrith applause as vociferous_ al= thost as the shouts Zf laughterjr.4nd /ridicule which wentup when his, misfortunetce,urred. • It is sad that De Motto designs , ' to oross, again . soes- time next -weeis.--.Roaeiler I Dembera ~ '- : , ] / , • n SING U by the . about a n •da County "since by t .traordinal a widow took it anything that diet —An untl - t i rried man, Philip Peznian,' residing to of New-London, Oriel ?. his death a few days in,of . a singulir and., ex. lived with his mother, id abOut a (year ago, he that .11C, ought not to eat Ind water. Ile liVed on about five pr. six Weeks . 4 611 FRDA . I.t ame or. P r ile HO sic) y, Game Ix? , the adop . tiM I , Ty freak; T 1 'woman', an I,t) his ii;eal but bread f ilone until' took - a n tion that- his j itoop he ought not, to eat 6 wimid not drink,, :only the bucket as it came ,r7inetimes j e would re= of-paileil- should be Odd drink. For forty- Lis j death he:ate ,not - a other is iiositive. He s frequentlk' for an hour l: he lived • iin j bread, be its part sbcit,ild be, baked ago," whe he .a,gaiii I hands wee,so dirty. 1 . bread; and . water h' as he insii•ected it , in from the Well; and quire Ma, a. nUtnhe drawn, be ore he iN, 1 . .three da s leflire mouthful, as hiS n -would w sh his ban at a tim•. While] Would ref uire that I' • then e wanted he could n, nspeetthe gular free naane, alt her subjee e Would - bleak efl". and t. , 1 When e heeamp sa pt go out, t "en he. would' I water brouuht him. It I H is as a • k. 1 - e l as ountless Ilouo he.. irked 'pretty t,s.--ROme . N. Y.)-Sen• I 1 by itself, eat it as weak that tate-fuhy was a si .partially well ion o find. . Si CE OR F 1• ,nt, of 13ehfmrn, Texas) givetrait ac. l' horse, ilch,l, paving ?escaped from was four) seven weeks afterwards t e aboht a ►fliiii and a lialf from the t hen he escaped' he:eatried off with h of twenty-five feet, < f f rope which "43 his neck unit which raggingq on ~ had eau4kt in ,4a bush and kept •ly fastened all that time, Unfur e Rope had ; so caught, that he . had, e feet of ether to p . :lriy .upon.— bondage he had, of Nurse, cleared f ound him,land in addition to 'the 'in hls-rehch he had biiten off two Igs font' ilehes in dlemeter, and. tamps .t.o the very ground,: and ~ unks'and Ilml” so fares his . lariat h. g No rii . ill, had fallen during, the wet*:the round, and', in the last s'it had n t,aven sprinkled. IThe I ! an " American" horse, .of good , . cen I .- 4.4 Vwh he escaped-: when - found, Iperf,eet altelton. Great' caution ed in giving him water .tin& food 'as found,' tindte rapidly recovered z nd at last hceOunts Wait doing well.: - 1 3 - 1 .'• , • NIA, 1.4101 , +-A- few da,itkego - -nye lutf.:Beacoih hlr:thad, on on South Qottonwood align mmane. deet frotVhe nose t ; the .f tip - . Of r id weipin ipo pour,ila.:Re`W . 4ll' 1 ' ith s a hot in:his toonthi..3Veighint nude, when tie doge diede at hin t to.take pi:flip-in a ; tree with 'his jiii Ike rgi tiy-lite. C4l4oll4i.:[,ti:i. I CALtio ! tie HO' his ranch, -tiring eigti the tail,- a first seen, twenty Causing hi rixeiwlpti CM ist4 notottolttm, i • 1 • ; 1 '„ ~ ' i'' -President. Pierce and . bia wife' lave ret i, ed from Europe. The - Obj6et of their visit-;-theiTeitoration of the heath"of; Nir.'iPier - - -ielpartially aecompliihed., I ...., Lie h few `charms' for ,- lite!, Dysd ;peptic, wh chi, not to he _wondered ati when' we take in a unt the amount of bodily 1 e . , i suirr ing winch o' , endures.-, By- the Use of •. ANY Ox,ygeratedlßlitera, the 'Achim is revers.' ,Cil add th ebright side Of life appeara..l ) 1 .1 . i • lb T gratifying• ' , I • ..... t imust c to our -, emo- . , irati`c brethren to learn that Brigham 'Young is sound on slavery,. He regards it as,!equal ly with polygamy . a "lliv,ints institutiOn."-- The new " Un*rsity South" has . mot! beet( Orgaized; but really the Faculty Might An ticipate. a little, and:confer the the degtiee of Doctor of Divinity On/he-Mormon prbphet. 1 .... The 'export of specie from New York,. from January' Ist of; to Saturday last was, in round .numbers, - $,47,000,000, - -and from. Boston about SIO,OOOXIOO-totai Sr;7,OOQ,OCIO. The reeeiptadu the same period. -froml Cali fornia and othetisourceq, have hot exeeeded' $28,000,000. The difTerende, $29,00,900,. lies m been awn from_ banks and-th poet:- l i•) ets e, people. 1 : •': • '• . • . • .../.. Alton (ni.) - • has, 'accerding •to the Courer, a Wonderful _young lie mathematician. tsesses the- „astonishing facultyolgiving 7 -- it stantly-and I witho4 calculation r -,-a cor. rect answer to any arithmetical problem thht May be \put to lkint,' - 1 I , 1 - .... be root root of _a l Sarsaparilla has repb tation wide as the world; for curing , one class Of disorders that- afflict mankind—a reputa- Loion too Which it deserves as the,, hest- hilti te we p6ssessi for scrofulous - ix)iziphlints. it" to be, brought into use, its • Virtues !haat be concentrated andciambined with other Medicines : that increase its poWer.. Sdine re liable corriponml.of, this character is_lirtati eh needed in the., CO M,1111Init• ltead •the ad .......,....iii,ouiq. - - .. iseineritsf Div l ...4yer's,. Barsapardlaln ' our Colunins; abd we know' that it needs DO engo- Mium front thit' to give our citizens confident , e in what he offerj,÷oroatt, gyra T cuse, N. Y. " . -. In the late speech of theHoni. lan - Ilickmari at Weatt Chester, filled, •as i usual, *Atli hold and nerve'', thought, be ocia. Sion to utter the-foliowing signifiCant sentenc es ti'' " Aslfar ns I am concerned, the - can be ito fraternity in the Democratic' pa ty un tll the lasf, sparkl efipOlitical; fire . shall , be cOlied dui : of ;Iv Lecomptonite•• and the: 44,w947tolkill.hiMia to exclude him from, dfOe. ,We'maylineit; be able to elect men, W )16m we IWOuld;'kefer,, but_ Can, certainly etiti &felt he ti faithless , . euemyl i •and. Spa defeat will - ;?by no - rnea'pa uni'evor-''. t itA It will-indicate a I salutary lesson,i and - hi4p.nitivin4 \bad principles from the market l i:•:a demand for good ones. 7 - 1 • ..• 1 • i , ri t : Th. 'l l 4lashington lieliublic 1 s ay s t t the.present indications are, that we are; to in 1869'a . repetition of the game which' gg..io . successful br" 1956; a, Dertiocrotic I„(rAilidential nonlination• of a tnan: to 1# Olin.' ended to the NOrth, by an •artfully. contiiv. M. beliefrat he is distastful to the .extrem .lXii of the Southii , It Wes in that Mr. Buchan :;' was Made palatable to the free. (States; While the Southern leaders; Who •Understooti, t*sir Man; as they always understand men ; bughed 'at the sunce.'ss . of a trick, of which to' this day they ire. enjoying the frnits.l It is, Nii the ,same character that the, Southern' Jadetis, as - weibelievO, are-now intending to.. l u ei eh t i h i Air. Douglas 1:0: ti l . s fr t e. o ve th n e t . i P n r , e a s a id va im ee y flof The rhe . pp l e4ances to, the contrary area altrether' l eeeofive.. Southern denunciations f Mr. incinnati Convention: ' The.'mask,is oft' ear i fier, and it remains to be seeil e if an interval 'di four- years is , lOng. enough ti i i: preOre ,the ccientry• for; a successful :.repetition of le trick Once OM ar.d. seen th'r'ough:" ". _ ' a • • :.A gee* joUrrial'aimounces that the Prince of Waleslis about to • pay, a visit to !Canada. ' NO primps- of - England has visited America since the Duke of . ClarenCe, after ; Wards *intern' iy, came as a midshipinan on a than of . war. : ilia royal Hi,tiness lAlbert :ElWard, Prince 'of Wales,. bake of S.ix'any, Prince of Saxe I Coburg 'antt Gotha, (Grand Steward. of Scotland, Duke of Cornwall and . Rothsay, Earl of Chester, Earl of Carrick and - Ibublin, Baron IRefnew.,, and Lord • having the sles, is nearly 1 eighteen years .old, haying been, born November 9th, 1941. , lie is a a well trained and well informed youth,' not Over vigorous ini health; nor 'over. brilliant : in intollo9t. -'l-, • • ; • I t r`• • I .... , Noire; , from 'California ,states. that ljorace Greeley ihad giane'on a visit to Col. Fremont.:: .A-duel bet Ween Seriatore OW in and Broderick. Wei expected - to take place imn - tediately_ after the election.. '• ' 1 , ..-.. The toarier and ,Enquirer ;learns • that the flight Bishop Potter-has" 'Com pleted his arduous Summer viSitatiou,l With: , out any failure' h Ins appointments; cheered' ' every where IY large congregations, and many proofs of`i 'Vigor and . prosperity, ,in . the: Parishes of the: Diocese. The Bishop is: at present with higpriiity at Essexi and may resume his inhere fl . At a few days before The ir...onvention. 110 is in - pefeet' healthi none Ake - worse but rather better for his incessant and greatlaboqi ' • F .. " i' . • .. . 4... *The Washington .States accounts •In thisi,., manner., for Mr. Buchanan's recent die i play of interest ii the suppression of the slave trade: ." The spicy diipatch,received at - the State riepartnient, some time. ago, through Lord_Lyons hasletirred up our Government to some decisive action in regard to the Slave trade mr the . Cti#l, of Africa. Tha z ,diSpatch referred to advised :our Government that,' so , far as our.squadran on t e.. coast of Africa was concernedivesSels thpriaing• it, iintiead .of doing seriliceiOn the- ast, were 'generally cruisingiin,the delightful island 'of Madeira. A record Was•fernishaf the State departinent by the British Government of the moven:l . oMS. of . our-whole sqUadrun, giving' thenutrther Of days they were in - port, where they sailed to, acid how engaged.... it was abOwn et:inclusive; ly thatlie had,fitilid. entirelyAo tiomplY with_ the treaty stipulation regarding the member of guns we, were require , to keep ;ha the At. rican coast:" i - - . • ..-:Chief Juitice.TanCy, of the' United 3 States Supreme - Court, isin the eighty-third year of his age. , His-eiglit, associates- in 'the court, with, one single exception,-- are ;three score years. and j teti, and some of them con siderably - exceed that'nurith'er; •: 1 . 'l. - ' ie ; . : .A- Convention of lPelegates from agri cultifial iocietieii in Southern Pennsylvania; s'ppointed to Consider the propriety of estah• lishinga model!an'd: experimental farm in one of those countiei met in he rooms of the So- i - 1 - • ciety for'Promoting- Agi i lculture in Philadel- : phia, Aug:; 18, and appointed a committee to prepare an adOese{o the public, ' 1- '." -. r ...... ,The, Gall atin .(Tefea) Exainener aays; .ii:Cul. James GlimMr, of the California Over-" land Mail Corritiany;,infofiria us of the .exist-. ence'of a remarkable spring on his route; 280 tifijes east of El;Paso on - the read le:Wing to SareAntoahi. It is fully 150 feet! in.,diarne ter,iind lias!been sounded. to. ;the depth- of 9,ooofeet withigut finding bottom; ::The stir face -is as smooth .as..that of a, thounudif lake. Ithreake out, Itninibg tibOnt three', milea, and . . thin "disaitpearty and again at six miles distant rink:mars, for9ng kstreain . fifteen to twenty feet deep in marty;pl . o4,2,,lt,is atrongli.lni- Oinnittedlisith!alkall alid*titine fitrAt',vittio:( ties alibi liiiiidliditti Liaiii:}lol6; '.J 1' „ The Deinocriits of the 13lair r . Clear= field,:and_Cairihria .: district-recently , met at Tyrone, and after one hundred- ballot's . nom ingted a Mi. - Durbin for SOlitor. •• • . • The annual - ineorne•Of Mi. Wm. Mae donald;.the owner of Flora.Teraplfy is said to be .$30,009... lie resides frinaltimare•, Baltimoie,Patrinc says that' :e property of the late George BrOWn, who dk in that eity'last week, 'is estimated at ft - 4,000;• 000. - -•-• • • ' MI . is reported that Stet ensbn, the eel . - ebrated :English engineer, received .t 22.5,000 for the plan of the Victoria Bridge, at. Mont. real. • . Lately, Mr: Stalter, of SlO:itshurgh, Ileciclanl'wenty, killed a-large rattle:snake, which. he carefully skinned. • Some tinle at= terWard, he aceldentlly cut: his thumld•• with the isitifc he lad used for the pnepose; when. his hand. End arm began to swell. The fami. ly sent for a physician, whni,ttoq)eing l itiform-: ed.' of the , filets of the case, pre.scribed -for the swelling, and left. -My..Stalter daily : beearne worse,' when the physichin was again sent :but found :the unfortunate' man pitst Meqiclti • aid. IfefOre he died i his body was: Cove.ril with . liv id spots, resembling that on the snaky ' he had killed. • e LOuisville DeHao arat •s.iyi !hit Afajr`a.. Diinelsom died recently. in, Lou lisana olegspelas. Dotielson was 'tor-. imerly: the p ivata secretary: of President - Jaekson;•and'the 'eclitor of . the Washington: i Globe. :In 1850 he was a- candidate 'of the. American _party tor. Vice President. r_ Ire:re; !moved from Tennessee .Louisiana a N , * iYears.since.: : • • • - • • •,. - - :. The English peers • announce the _ , . ' destruction by earthquake, on' the 2d of June; or the ancienteity of- Erzroom, in Turkish Arincnia: 'According to official .returns," 380 dead b!jdies Lid been taken front' the _reins and abOnt 200 wounded. OVer "200, 6 houses . were laid in ruins, 1500 nearly/destr4cd, end some 1200 otheriinjured.,;Shocks, more ales§ severe; were felt nt,intervals daring eight.consicutive da s ). .'• It is a singular-fact that the destruction as'ilmost entirely -con fined to the Moslem uartdrs of the city, and only..tvvelve Ohristia" slost their line, ~ ./ - • ..' The OsWegolpeople have s)arted..a. new 'excitement. , ‘.A. l l ( inan is sail -to -have invented Ochinpry by which'be walks with] ease on:the srater, ! and exhibited himself sue r . cessfulli op a reeent occasion. ../..`.kretU s itied,Calif!oiniap riddled home a week 'or two tigo, with betweeti l fift . ein and sixteen thrkusnOLdollars in - old comi, - Feel.- ing it unsafe to'keep so much Money abdut . `Mtn, 'and suspiciousof the honesty of kink ing institutions,: u determined to bin it, which he accordingly did, without' informing any one of the . locality: 4. few - diys•. altos,. wards 4 - ie went out , riding, when .he was thrown from his horse and instantly - killed. Of course.•ho_one knows wharf; ihe money is, although it has been Searched - fOryCry careful !'. . .:. '- ,' •• 1 - Ina ." The Commissioners' appointed-to ap. 'praise damages qn• the - North Branch. Canal, advertise that they Will meetin pursuance - of theirappointment, at Athens on the7th inst, They will, as far as practicablt, examine the claims in the order. in -Which they -occur, - commencing at the northern b4undary of Bradford. • ' An- Indian war hitsbroken out in_ tb • northeastern part df Sact'amoto Talley. A party amen. hired ,by the in that vi-1 c' y NS; ent out Indian hunting ati&killed 14 male Indians, one squaw, and one - White :man: Who was With the Indians. .The squaw was' killed. While shielding a, - "buck" I With her body. The white man's corpse was-not re- . cognized, bulhis•scalp was taken. It - is said that - the Indians are well ,trupPlied With am-, munqion,-and.such articles as Sugar, - coffee,' Which are 'prestimed to 134, obtained through the " squaw men" on Brute. creek, where there are forty or fifty.. j •• .. The 'eCcentri6, English Ma ni .who joined Garibahirs corps from ;-pure love of shooting at such:game-as Austrians, always took out hit) ritemoranduin and mdde a note on't, every time he brought down c one of the eneiny. 'The results of hisseascini of shoo ing counted up 25'head killed certainly, and. 10' more -under the head of " une;ertaiit."-t—. Amoug' other recruits Garibaldi; had two Frenchmen, rnernbefs of the Par Jockey Club; five Americans, ti few: G'ortinuis, and . one:, Chinaman. • . I 4.. A co'rreSpondent,•writing from Clear. field, Pa; announces that - "Senator Bigler is hard-at work laying the ropes[ to secure his reelection to 'the Senatls in'1861;" • :A letter from , Dindort it that Mr,. T 4 C. Evans, of New Yotil mid) , went to London to persuade" efts to revisit this Country On a rest and ,who O offored him most Magnific has, notsucceided. • Mr`; - Dickens; cannot afford, at'any price, to.leav't ( and "All the Year •Round").,forr, which his voyages mid' tour wouldl Press. The Miasissippratt says di libation of the repeal. of ,slave"-t is confined to - no - particular party citizens, but is fast becoming the pi „timent of the Southern people ; " ier,"f it adds, "our Northern 'fell( are convinced of the fact; and mai minds to accede to our just deman, ter for thepcace, and prosper* ofi ical union." • • • • -1 t Louisville Joiintal sa riot be denied that the RePublican 'really at this time the only'well co and united political organization-hi tei." •- • -The Sentinel, a paper pu lisped- at sill; Marshall county Va:„ has " - een suspected of free soil tendencies, and-in_order to relieve itself from Suspicion; its editor says: ." We do noflike negroes, frec-or bond; and would rejoice to hear of every ono laeing. ex ported to Africa, or settled somewhere by themselves. The South is!bee9rning so nix ed up, thst.sman cannot feet safe atly mote in Marrying there, for fear ihat hits*ife. will prove to have black Negroes tre•so fully kept hi their 1" sphere" by northern white men; that;' as;amr sonican'alwayi find out "uegito ii)ood''' by tradition, and jt" is comparatively safe_ to • marry dark 'ecimpleeted•wonen 'there, with out danger of ainalgarnation, ad 'very corn-, mon in the South. digit is free-soilisin, make the most of it." •••- I I • _ Air AaTzstatc frorn an exchange that they hate an ttrtesiaii well at Ky:', whictr:is 2;080 feet in depth. 'Three years were occupied' in , ,boring it. . 11 , is piped'for only 90 feet, and the - Water pour forth at a rata of 230 galloits per indiarte.—.=. It rises in pipes 170 feet abOve th r su e'.rface, -end has a temperature of . 7.6 r to-. h, i 3 perfectly isauini forth, snd has a specific graiity of 1.013, furnishing, accord• lug to analysis, the • gases,' suipbrated hy drogen, carbonic acid,_ and- nitrdgen, eon taining.most of the'chlorides„ sulf;a:ies, hi carbonates, and "phosphates with: iodine and bnynid• magnesium. 'The taste .is r eoinbi pation" salt and snlphur. py; teuehirig some of the screws about the niacrery, it throws a- stream of water A2O teet" bo've the pipe. . A deep , well tilt throw, this Louleville well! We should like 19 gee Aie.aqtk American, • OEM NI fonus us -Ic, who re- 14 . r. Dick tour, Dent it appearg', rp England' ,r r tlie., time 'occupy.— the ag- Ittle lei: -class of Opuier seti . - • !The soon= 4w-citizens tii) their d, "the !Yet tour polis. 9" it can party is concreted the coun- lIMI , 1