EZ!===l . The tirsiparscioai . , for the Ninth Annual Exhibition of the Pennsylvania . State Agri cultural Soclety,to . ins' held in this city, on,the grounds nortlfwest o the Market-street bridge on the` 27th, 28th, 29th,and 30th 'of Septem ber,, are widly progrOssingpand the' exhibi• . tfoit promises to hcan eminently . euiicessfiil -Tbe.list of premiums is cry large and liberal, u it embtaces fiftY-four classas of ar-• tides, and quite allarge number of difeprent • specimens in each/class: :Thus, inducaments are held out for the display of nearly every article of agriculture or of domestic manufact < ure produced in our State .; , and'all who feel &laudable pride in their pr.oducts will have an - opportunity.of fasting their e.Xcellenca by a comparison with the numerous . articles , which will doubthiss be placed o* exhibition, Ind:of having theirAuperkirity, 64tested. and confirmed by appropriate preinfaMs. if! they merit them. !! PennsylVania almost poss2sses; at this day . the first rank among the Agricultural States of the Uniorf. She is certainly,jwe think, en titled to claim a . position as theiscoondlagri 'aultural State, and if her natural inivaltaffes are properly developed, we believe that' she can become the first, and 'permanently, hold • thatorank against - all competition. •' • According to the census of 1850, b ut !three States of the Union, New York,, Ohio!, and Virgin!:!, had a larger. nurnber of acres of im . proved land, and-butone state,i New York, • was greater hi- tha cash value of, her farrr.s.— The value of fanning' implements nnd • ma chinery in our State was also i'much than try other except New york. put, two - States{ New York and. Ohio, e4ceeded los in the number of horseS and cattle.; pro. duet of wheat was greater than I that or any other State in the Union, beine15,367,691 buibels.; while that of Ohio, which -ranked next, Was 14.487,351 bushels,- 'and of New • . York 13,122,498. Our prOduct of rye was - also greater than, that of Any other State, be: ing 4,605,160 tisnels, ' that ofl,Nevi York was 4,148,182' liusbels. lOur product .of oats.was 21,538,156 bushels; being, 'much greater than that of-any other !State except New York-26,52,814 bushels. 04 pro duct of Indian. corn' exceeded that ofi New York, but fell far behind that 'of Alabama, Georgia, Illitioie , lndiatia , Kentucky, pi,Missouri, North Carolinia, Tennessee, and Virginia .. Our•produer of biickwhe4 was - 2,193,592 bushels==a much greater 'quantity than that produc'ed by any other State except . `New, York, which yielded 3,183. 955 bit - shels. •', Our hay crop amounted to 1,842, 970 , tons —a much larger product than that o' ally - State except New York,Which yielded 3,728,- . 797 tons. Our product of I clover-seed Was 125,030 blishels—a larger - quantity .. _ _ :than any other State :produeed.' Our pro duct of butter amotinted to . 39,878,418 lbs.: - , --a - much greater "quatitity ;than any other 'State produced except 'New York, . which , yielded double that amount. The produce - of_ our gardens was more valtiable than any other State except New York. In the; qUan tity of wool produced, we fell - hehind only . two States—New•York and, Ohio. Thus it will be seen that in nearly a 1 the igricultural-productis of the Northern . fates . we ranked very high —that we far surpassed all of . the States except New York-and !Ohio., and, on a general average of the value of : dims and their products, Pennsylvania was second only to, New York; which'- bad i then nearly 4 , 000,000 more. acres of improved land within her borders, and about .510,000 .aereLmore of unimiroved land , than Penn . sylvania. I N. York, has long - been ;famous for br nu merous agricultural societies, and 'we'd l () not doubt that they have 'exercised a gre:et, in fluence in stimulating her farmere to increased exertion ; but Penncylvania is fiery liti le he, hind her in agricultural - producti, and, if . the "'tura] advantages of our State are properly developed, she may yet be.enablecl, notwith. irianding-the inferior numbei.of acres of land she s, to outstrip the 'Empire State. • We know. of no race of men more thrifty and industrious than the farmers of Pelinst 1- van* and one of the most beautiful f sights ' th the world is the bounteous evidence of fer- . tility andrAricultural bkill which is p esent - *din the bosom of any.: of our numerous .-. flourishing agricultural counties. But most of oar:farinars'aro plain, Modest, ;unpreterid tag men,not at.all given to ithe practice or mak ing ditiplays, - or of btowipg their own !trim ' pets, and herkee the worldsees or hears little of their skill, nor of the large pioduhts .of _ . their farms, unless it is enlightened b i t y the maids of the census, or the presonce of their Stops In the markets.—Phi/a elphia Prey:. • poctlbvtotto • '.... The annual election of State officers and lifernbeis of the Legislature df Vcirrnont took place September 6th. Hiland Hill was the Republican candidater,,afid John . 0. Saxe the Demo Critic. The returns. indicate the re-election of the Republican State Ticket by about the same majorities as last yel • also . a small Republican gain to :the- Lep lature • over last-year, when the Republican nt jority . was very large. So much for runnig the funny man, Saxe. ' , • , ,. It is reported that tne Hon.. J 1 Kennedy is to- be . the independent cai for Congress in the IVth District of Ma against Bon. Henry Winter-Davis. .... 'The f I E . uropean . trails conth bring accounts of a great religious, rev. Ireland:, • s • 1 . , .... '27e St. Petit Times announces the - appointments of the Hens. Galusha A.Grow, • Schuyler Colfitk, and Frank P.! [flair, jr., to address , The people of Afinnet-c4.1.: ` 1 ..... The Republican State Conyentio - of ` New York which met at Syracuse, Sep ens' , ber 7th, put in nomination.the following list of candidates : Secretary of State, E. W. Leavenworth, of - Onondaga; i peaty ler, Robert Denniaton, of Orange; 1 Attorney General, Charles G. Myers, of St. Lawrince; • State Engineer, Orville W. Story, Of 'Alle gheny ; Treasurer,., Philip Dorsheitner, 'of Erie; Cana! Commissioner s Ogden N. Cita— pin, of Albany; Judge of-Appeeli, yenry E.', Davis, of New York ; State -Pt ison _ln- , apector, David I?. Forrest of Scheneceady ;' Clerk of Appeals, Charles Hughts,_Of Nyti.sh• • ington. i . " . • • .... Charles S. Olden; of Mercer -county-, was nominated for Governor of New JgrAey, . by the Opposition Onvention which met at Trenton, Septenlber 7th. 1 : •.. • Mr. Alonzo Jiitchcock, of Chicago, -claims to have been the inventor-of the Arm strong gun, for producing whit:lran „English man was honored with the title of ndbiltjy, - .... Annie Williams', a zeamstress, eon).* inlited suicide in Phil i adalphia on Monday by asialkiwing an ounce of laudanum, 'purchased with the-laat penny she possessed. , A local „paper deacribed her as "only 25 years 'of age, and posessed of a person as,, the fl lady you will meet on•Che.stnat street.r She could not 'obtain wok to support her. .... Jesse Richttrdson;iof Henry County', Va.,-being in love and having just received 'a doggioir from his father, walked out and hung Ihrtielf- tii a beam in the barn: ' ' - . -, ....Troia an advertisement jot's North Carolina paper we learn that a company of 'Zest aves is shortly to be' formed in oneof the tons of -I,l* State,' ,- , - " ' .... The N.atio`stal'Era;2 referring to the late tnaitifestO of Se)rettor D s t i gl aNtiubli shed ic Harper's Magazine„ fires ' a hot shot into ' Iris pet doctrine oP . squattet. sOyeriguiti. It 'says : " Thewiltelkargumint:ol.Mr. Doug. las is directed egatost they peed • of "the R,e publican party, 44 he' aitempts . to .lishow, that the right q theift.' ogle of -a ; .; Ter ritery to form their- Omtitutionsle 'Olio lute. lie therefore dittiesditties his ies t he right of Con. gress to prohibit Po6yanni - as -well - as Slav ery. He leaves no flaw ihis -statemen t of 3 his position; through , Wh 'he can escape. 6 from this consequencl e squids pledged before the. tol adtrir Vali into the Union as a State, *ill,' thslinstitution'riveted upon it l. Should ;Mr. Muglas be• eleCted PreSident he will Ile bound by. his: sol.)mn and o ft -repeated pled,des, t i throW no obstacle in the way of the .'.PolygaTous Mormane.— His policy. otstriet"non-in arvention will for: bid that he shduld aen attmpt, by the 'ex ercise of Federal patronage, too - diacottra4te the 'pestilent and vicioue systeel i on the contra ry, he is bound to:welcottio Brigham YOung and Herber' Kimball wih open arms I- to Washington, as liaited Stlites Senators, with an escort of a dozen wiveriencit. We draw no , fancy sketch. iWit hape strained nothing, but have fairly st-ited' the Position of Mr. D." I a _, ..., Senator lyersort Ot t Gibrgia thus ex presses himself - regarding; Free"laborers of the North, the ,Mid-sills oTsociety, its' , Sena -tor Hammond eloquently ;calls them: " The, proud and enviable (04ondition of: the poor white man in the .outit, cdmpared with Ithe degraded white slve'of the North,-is owing to the existence of African Slavery lin !the South. - If thequ4stion of iemancipating ithe negroes were to-diy siubnhtted to thdimople of Georgia, nine 'Mit of tettwho own net slaves* would vole in thl negatilge.. Slavery; Must beinaintained2-i the Unkm if possible—lo, ut of it if necessary—qteaceal4 if we may-...fore ibly if we meat., ,I,,He wa.4once an adv,o6te of Squatter - Sov . ertignity,hut has repented and recanted the-, errpr. 1 Sukisequent..investigrt tion had.convinced ihina!that the true the& ry in relation to the Territorial Government" of the Uhion is that it is both the power 'and duty of Opgress to pass taws for the prOtec, tion of Slavery wherever it',.,exists, or May exist, upon the soil." , E - levee ..An engineer Was waling on the, est St, Lcmis, one-day last week, when a nirribl6 thief snatched his watch, aKraluable gold hunt er; and ran off at a. sPeed . that bid fair to d'e- fy pursi,iit. It, so% happened, however, that the party robbed had with', him a' large New foundlarid dog, and initead of troubling-him self by running, he spokes few words donh-. dently to his , four-footed, companion. 'Off started the noble animal, ind before the thief had gone - many block's he vas &egged to the earth and,secureil by his I=ingular captor.— . The fellow thought 'it hest to tublnit to the warrant disple i yedtio formidablg rows of teeth—and made no re.itstanee to the ma jesty of the -law. ; . i , ' i ... ~I n an article on" iThe' Gratoriiiir of Printing," in the last nunfber of The 'PHs ter, occus . the 'following : "'Where any person's name ends in a, and- we dfsire to represent I him 4 the possesspr of soTething, we think it desirable as well as correct (inasmuch as it is impossible to represeia it'otherwise in speaking) to add an s aft the. apostrophe, and, say or write--' Jon Os's literary C&k.- peed.'.." We wish all prifters would ,follow the hole- ) -!... . I The great 'Atrierics P n telegraphist, Mr. Hughes, has added:what ii said" to be. anoth er great impi-ovet4eht in tote scignee of: tele graphy. Tie has townie& a telegraph which supersede' the whi)le systOrrt lif telegraphic signals now in use.. Th 9 riew instrliment, without requiring more items to bp used ttan at .present; transmits Messages, indica;Jhg ,t hose messages tot the eysk, by. the ordinary letters,of the alphabet. The ,advantage of the instrument is thatlit gin be used. by any person who canslen a-missage. - It is small and portable. Any - railway guard may carry one in his pocket.l 1. .? • .... Accordin -to tthei. Keokuk 'Atoned, bouis Paulsen, th ceiebr4ted.chess player, is about taking his'd partung from that city to New York, to.chiileite Ntorpliy to a match game of chess. - ! s : ..... The Mier; 0.6.47rer learns that. a message" was sentry tele g raph, on Wednes day, from Albany! to ,Kalisas City, and an answer received lithitt the short space of six hoirs l' , --- .4 - . ' ..... The .Bra'ord unty Agricultural Society holds its atire4l s ilair the grounds of the Society. at ihe Bor ' of Towanda, on. Thursday and Friday; 6th and 7th . :of October s 1859. Ex-Governqr-Aavid R. 4 Porter has - been •clecteo Vice Presrat of;llie Sabine and Rio Grand Rail Road Oomparp, and designs !fay: ing for Texas; in tbe cOr9 of amonth or two. .. There - - is, in gti g tpnd, an excess of 800,000 females Over; males.' Th:s dispari ty is'caused by di,. wars 'find standing arm ies, by the drain of men Or Mercantile and naval marine, - and - by the !eater. number of males who emigrate tot Colonies and to the United States. In London are 100,000 young men in shOpsi'ancf % warehouseswho cannot' marry by reason 9f the smallness'of their salaries. lithe Other cities are included, and those in the ntechanicil trades whose *a ges will not justifi them iii taking a wife, the result Must 14 th4t there are nearly if not quite two, rnilliinui of females in England who 'cannot ,get marriep. i • . • ...... The- Rev. 'An toiniitte 1.4 Brown • and Susan 13/ Anthony will i hold a Woman's. Rights Convention at. Mattinsburgh t N. Y., Sept. 16. They tire now stumping Jefferson , . County. ._, I • i ..... Crawford's plastec cast of the ,Genius Of Liberty, which was brcinght from Italy in sections,. has been - put up in the old House - hill at Washington, D. .'i.C. . The figure is -twenty-five feet id. height ;from its . pedestal: The right hand res4.upon Ihe hilt of A sword, of which the rif int!reacheve the feet. The left hand grasps wreittis,•&nd rests upon a shield. The head-piece .i n - tars- figure of an eagle, with wings half stp sd. The body is \ clothed in is royal ro,be.-„The statue,- when cast in. brdnze, 'is to sitimiunt theTdcmci,of • the Capitol. . ~;.. . ; .. Tffe Bavor Whiy : states' theta man residieg-I,4tween that citßuid Bucks Port, on Saturday-list diseharged a load of. shot-at a Stage coach full' of peoplei because some of the - passengers plucked a few choke cherries from his tt i ee as the stage 'passed under it.- 7 - A2portion of the gauge tdok effect. uPon •a. young man named Dias itich. ''''A complaint was made againsti the perpetrator of the out! I . .: . _ .. A Salt Lake 'clarirsponderit,of The' 4 •San Ilyineised . l34lleiiit flayS : Judge'Cmdle biugh is about going to i Orrson - Valley to re. , main. lie tells Me, thit lie could 'take seier al wagonloads ofthe extr wives Oldie Mor mons; of the youngest C wholfave asked him to take them.off, and would delighthis , kind heart ito do ao. Hetr, ould . give them the transportation himself, but he doei not know what_ to do with them."' . .:'..... A new fancy' which has seized • upon Parisian belles, sags 7** . .Cori ' ilou ' rial, -le the crusade against Bonnets, and' which, it is said, the Enigraes isAutte willing to join. Two ladies-of _the ,liigfiest.fiwthicni are already ti) be leen daily 'driving iii the Bois with no other coiflhre that!, a tace.vAil of sqaure fOrm thrown over the,kair, ihicti is. full dressed, and :ornamented 'With boxiot ribbons, . . .. I tr'• ' f - 4.- ' ,Im P. , thdate Iland, CM MEI rage Tile, lOetikaeOf,. itep!Mi,qo.- CIRCULATION; 2304. O. F. RBAD . (6:II. 11. .I.PIAZIER,.EDITOR.Sf. iP. E. L ONIS,' CORRESPONDING EDITOR Ircavir 50.2 3 I. IPA. IWZA;c4y, Wyd. /5, ',/655, STATE! TICKET. • FOR AUDITOR GENERAL; THOMAS : E. COCHRAN, , OF FORK. COUNTre •! • FOR SURVEYOR GENERAL, WILLIAM H. -KED', OF MtRES COUNTY. COUNTY TICKET. • • • TOR SENATOR, WILLIAM JESSUP:, [Suttjeet to decision of SenatorisfOonferenc'e. ' FOR RICFRUBRNSATIVR, 1 'GEORGE.T. FRAZIER, of Oakland. •:: ,4 FOR DIRTRIC. ATTORNR o 1 , ; , . ALBERT CHAMBERLIN, f °those. oft corrN7 commisemsza, MAHLQN C. STEWART, • FOR COUNTY TRI/817REfi, - ,j3AVID W. TITUS, of Haiford. 1 • FOR COUNTY AUDITOIti , • • . CIIAUNCEY UPRIGHT, of . 'orest Lake • ronAotnirr sunxsiroxi, WILSON J. TURRELL, of Foreit Lnke.. Election, Tuesday, October The , Late Democratic -Comity 'Convention Under .ordinary circumstances, we 'should have . been surprised at the resolutions passed by the last self-styled -Democratic, Convention of this County.—. FOr a party which has for tears thr:ovin _Overboard' one principle after an titer, until it stands before .the world the admitted amimaid of Slavery and the stip- • pie and willing minion Southern nigger -breeders, to attelopt to promulgate th lika that they have any a nrinciplei" trliatrr , r,.. Seems using strange; .but when'ita coulee is reviewed an la iortneus windings and the systematic deceptions -i. luta Practiced for many yearsare remfmlieredi-anYt lig that the lead ers may now tlo, or attempt to do, can hardly be'. a l cause of surprise to anyone. From 1816 , to 1852 there professedly was only one Marty in thiS . County • • op the question of Slavery,. extension ; and when, in 1848, a few national Democrats nominated "'Uncle] Jonah" as a candidate-fo; Congress against Hon. Da vid Wilmot,'the thrice u l seven votes i he received intheConnty .very aitisfactori demrstmted the feelings of.the Democratic r o rs of th s part of the Congressional District upon the queatiOn of Slavery extension. ' • <•,.• . - I • . - • •, • 1 Judge Wilmot, from that time on, was recognized, loth North and South, as . ibi chanipion l ,tuad• eloquent expounder of Abe great phriciples of j"Yrer soil, jr,fe labor, andfree men - i" and upon 'those principles tire Democracy rallied around and, sustained hiip . with a unanimity almostdnprecedented; and When he re tired trona Congress, in 1850, Mr. Grow, was selected' as acknowledged champion of the gieat . panel . .., plea Of freedomihat bad been so successfully - upheld . by his immediate predecessor. No sensible :change took place in the"publit mind till - 18541' Mr. Groa was then serving his second term, vihent-theattempt ed repeal of the Missouri Compromise i once•more set the whole country in a-blaze of excitement which haF , ended in the total destruethin of the Democracy of, the North, rendering the fragmepts f thttt oneg.; great and glorious party A-Mere append ge of South-_" ern atlave-drivers--With no more willof its own, than, theliegro of Alabama who is driven. to- is daily teak in'the cottonfields. - i ! ' , The ' , peat principles of . Truth mid. J,uatiee never: , change.: however , fickle and false the Men who prof feu their advocacy mai be, tke prinelpl6treinairi the I E=2 In attending the late Dettiocratic Conrention,while looking at some of the managers who were trying to run 'the:" machine" aid tighten up some the screws to keep it together, our mind insensibly ' run back" to 1854, when the Pierce Administration old out to the slave-drivers, and.gaveinto the hands of the South the sole and axchisive management of die Democrat ic party. By referring to The Regielerkif February, 1854,9fe find the first mover: ' favor Of People's Partf: , , • • • • "The People's Meeting, to rotes& et:ainat Slavery in Nebraska." • , . . . • • " The citizens ;of .Snewpaeltan4ut Corukt who are op- posed to the :vieUtion of thd Minoan `invited, and the extension of Slaie Territorj; s , invited , to meet at the CoOrt House, iri,lifontrose, .n. Wednee-. day, thd Bth day of March.deXt, it 1, o'lock hi the afternoon, to utter their aims. pi' oteit against the threitened breach of faith, by Ole repel' of the. Kie -1 sottil Compromise, And theft. determined - hostility' to Any entvolebmcot the SlaNe Power d, the rights of free labor in the Territories secured y that . com pact: The Hon. David %limit has con nted to ad dress the meeting."—Fed.lo, 1854. +.. •- 1 To the shove call? were signed the, es bf R. V .. Little, M. 0. Tyler, A. N. Bulla [ rd, A. Latbropi-IW. X - Hatch, James Mead, Alvih Day,And . otheri. 7 ' - . , In - pursuance of the said'eall, there wes convened One of the most earnest' and enthusiastic _meetings ever held iq the County—which was presided over by the Hoe. deorge Fuller, assisted by lion. 3f . C. Tyler, Ariel Carr, Eeq., and others as Vice Presi dents, while Hyde Crocker,;.T. A. Maine, and others, were of the Camtr.ittee to draft resolutions to express the sense of-the meeting.. l• , • • . Now, suppose some artist had been presept on that occasion, and taken the moral and 'politienl dd guereotypee of,the above' mined Deniocrets, r and preserved them carefully till !mit week Monday, and then .hung thern,up in the CoOrt House while the Convention was .imreesion, and then just fished them to. see thethselvis as others see them l" - - We wish that Judge Tyler, just before. he made his-epeech in the,last Contention; could Ile reed -ids old reschition, offered by him in 185'4, at the meeting in which he officiated as Vice President.- If he would not,. like Major Downing, have felt a kind of "sinking in ilia 500ta," then We are : misteken.— ,That our readers may- remember the resolution to ithich wo allude, weiteri_printit; eerbatini et liter - isu'im, and hope the Judge will read :it nver.carefully„ inn- see if he does not find it entirely consistent with ilia' present course.' The following is the, resoludoi offered Ville Hon. M. C. Tyler, Mardi 8, 1854, and lititualmously missed "Resolved, That we artimunstrainedlmwarn eve tly Representative in Congress, North and South,East led West, befcire he easta,his vote, as he lovespeace, -M' -- he loves a Sacred compact, to look in. the face the - roost terrible.agitation, as well as the most deadly de= 'termination of the people of the North, now and Ibt , ever, not to. rest, Shorlld that nefarious bill pass, Until it shall be expu v ed (ions the record. that it would have disgraced. • We have mat the Judge's /speech, madebefore the . , late Convention, - which we regret,. an. our itadirs !milli Isle, no doubt, to see that and "the resolution . ios,heij imit if tie :hdp w 341 write kind of auko biography, commencing with the reiolution of 1864, and ending with ih l e late speech 1:oeforrill:M Conven tion; tho'inte.nnekt' t o parts to be wel l . spiced with. pe Pi rsonal Inelden* cLinoralrefleetions, and entitled' ".ver Year's in 0 Life of a Demoirittio Nlitician,r in ouriludgment it will go off like hot cake . -'• '. "R. B. - Little, an thor of the speakerkw also one of HMProteitsu4s of 1854, and etude a speech on that - occasion: r did noChave the pleasure of lie tening to ,it; but ere informed : it the time that it . was able' and convincing, and that the borne thrusts made at thealav';drieers and their institution would lisatrYthing.but* leasing to a Democrat 'of 1859.- Atthat time, kr. Little bad been as abi, earnest, and. protesiedly enuacientious anti-slave.r i man for many years; he 'claimed to stand far in advance of , such Free Boil men at Wilmot, -Jessup, and 'Grow. .: he wart not 'only io posed .to . thel spread Of Slavery* over territory no free, but lie believed Skverj Mor ally and inherent), wrong, and that what Was morel: lY wrong no law ' uld - mere right. lIQW Mr.. Little could trample and r his feet the principles nf half a lifetime, , descend - rem the high moral pllsition he had for occupied In this community, and become the mouthpiece and oracle of a party whose whole mission is to tratriple in the duet the dea.reit rightsef nian,the right to "life, liberty, and the pursuit of happinees"L-andtti place the destinies of 4iB -coun try entirely iuthenands of the. Stair) Oligarchy el the South, ilia qh tion hard to answered by his best friends. - ;I , o tt. N. Bu ll ardo e resolution - maker for the late' Convention, weir among the Free Boilers of 1854; but he war one oi. ieree's Postinasters at the time, soon relapse d , • and soon relapsed Ma the embraces of the Hunkers. The resolutions' f the late Convention ', were - no .doubt.designed to islead, like thote adopted by the i party . in fFP. Leek at the first three resolutions) ir they mean anything, they mesa to squint towtowardsear . Douglas and popular sovereignty; but the. auther of the resolutions, rte Well as every other intelligent - Man in - the quiver:Won ; knows that the , National Demo cratic party repudiate Douglas and his - tpiatter Bev ereignty, and only use it for the purpose, of decep tion. Look •at the resolutions -of the Demecratic State Convention that assembled in March last. Pop ular SovereigntYwaa trod under toot, and kicked tiat , of the Converithre: i And just look at the. address-of, the Democratic B ete Central Committee, lssued on the.Oth of June last, which states the position .of the party, - rind rea,is as fellows : • '-. - •• Where, let .sk, resides the right or eminent domain over a Ter ritory of the United States? Ie it u not admitted by aaallll to be with the Federal Govern ment? Where shall we look for the right and. pow er to ascertain all Terriunial liouredaries ? Is it not in the Federal Go - ernment ? Where shall we seek the right and power and duty to dispose .of alHands -embraced in the Territory ? The answer v is; to the- Federal Governmht. Where, in the Government el a Territory, is led ed the executivemithority ? It is lodged in the hail eof a Federal -Governor. When.: I .is the Judicial poOerrof a Territorial - Goiernment ? In the keeping of a:Federal - Judiciary. • Where is the legislatii!it power ?II Everyone knows it did npt exist, and that it could obtlegally exist,' until called_ into tieing by the Fedeial Congress, iu the organic act of Territorial Gcliernineut. in all these dmuonstrations of pow 1 r; and th - esexan be none . Others outside ol them j a Territorial Government, we behold the, di. sect, p skive, and ta ngible evidences of the presence i of the vereignty of the Government of the-United, Surteal, ex c luding to preteniiona of Squatter or Ter ritorial Legislative 'sovereignty, or popular oevereigti iy when used as, a conveitible term with ;these, as nbitii alike untenabl e in f i t,. and prepostertius in logic." Isere: . - . * lsere we have the clear and Well -defined - `position of the Democratic ;art yin Penn Sylvania, with Mr. Buchanan as its leader; and, Yet, with the vague and distdpt hope ofcatehing a few votes, the party lead ers here falsify. &ds and history, and attempt to stand upima platform that is not* theirs,• and one from which they know they will pe driven;abd .will :kick from under them In-less:than - six months. One of the. resolutions approved of lar., Orow's Homestead bill, when the whole Contention - knew that the Derliocr.ttle - Party; as a party, - bad opposed the bill for'years; that the poiiey of 31r. Buchatiad and - the party was ' . re kill the bill, that the proceeds -of the public lands might go into - :the Treasury an , f be applied towards the cerruptand extra...regent ex pense; of the Government. ", - i• . '• Could the iasne at the North be as fairly - made L. tween the parties as - at the South, there would h.- little difligity in settling , the ... Whole questi on in Is short time. There the Rile question is, What will :tend most to spread; strengthen, and 'perpetuate 'the ; system 14 . Stareryj and When that iii - once settled, there Lea.remarkaile unity of purpose and action. 'But at the North i: is di rent. The leaders,- it is true, have the - siinti object in- view, but they dare not aiterept* . t.s ll eaup4,hment by direct means; • hence that kind - of ring subterfuge that is constantly employed to keep the party together at the. North, causing it to.profess one set of principles and sup port:another. Evei7 position taken* by the Demo cratic party at the Nab for the last six years has been abandoned as soon as .the South. saw fit to change the programme and adopt another set for' Suppose some : One bad met tit?? Democrats 'to Whom we lair° referred, when they weed fired, with - zeal kr, the ytine!ples that were promulgated by them in. 1854:, and had addressed them as follows: "Gentlemen, The position you have taken is a true and noble one ; the great prineiples you are now nil lying,.tii ;nand!) are those that lie at The foundation of our Republican Institutions; let the 'Northern Demedracy but maintain the position they have taken, and'all will bewell-- - the South will soon yield, and . ourllepiiblic.xn institutions will be 'on a firmer and 'Mere enduring basis than ever. But, gentlmen, you cannot be trusted, and you, all of you; Will soon apostatize andbetrity the Prineiplea - that you no* rofctis tesustain ; The Missouri Coinpromise you will soon dee are 'be-Unconspfutionalj notwithstanding ! yOur present indignation - at the prcittpect of its repeal. When President Pierce shall removeGoyerner Reed er for his exertionktopreserve the', purity of the bal lot-box, you will, after a little grunibling, sustain the President hithat act. -' Wiled sholMissouri ruffians. .. shall ini .o ttie Rinsed and force upon its inhabitants a hogoa p -slavery Constitution, you will calf it popu lar sovereignty, and denounce the Free State men and their friends for attempting tai *serve the Het' that they have under the Constitution of their count ~ When the Territory , shalt be overrun by armeibanditti from - the slaveholding States, burning . ' their towns; desolSting their fields, and Maas/ming the defenceless inhabitants, you will stand . by - Pres- idenyPieree and the Slave Power, add denounce your old friends and fellow lben as /arteries 'lnd abolitionists. You; will sustain Presido4 Pierce in his treachery to thei"Northitnd free principles,4nd descend with - him until the Constitutional limit of his term Shall arrest his downward course - -, Ond then , you will sustain his eucececor , and when Mr. Buchan au, ithrough the'rneitus of. a corrupt Court, ittempts io overthrowireedcdn in all:The Territories of the tipiou, you will declare It to be Democratic ; . and; further, when Missobri shall impetus a Slavt). Consti tution upint Kansas, against - the exprosal wish of nine-tenths of her citizens,, you will sustain Mr. - Bur chanan in - his attempt to force the odious rme.asure through Congress, In short,- gentlemen, you Will surrender all your ptiuCipiea as. free Northern petuo ems, and become Wrnere appelidage ,to the Sauth; to vote for such, men and sustain. such : mertetures as shall bo dictated tit You." : . .'.... We say..kuch a charge , or rather , succession of . charge* at heat time,tipuhi.have no doubt been rc pelkd with ecorn, and treated as the cgs:6lloos .of an overlreated -- holgination. .But we ask our readers to look at the fietai end carefttlly follow. Ott courseed the Democratic party of this sect* of the country for the last ten years,—and then serwhett er the foregoing Is all , Imaginadon, or 'am, ray of facts that cannot be overthrown Or ainsiteh. , But lei die caae . be as it may, if they tiro honest, - and 'have changed thus often through principle and, it loye of truth andjustice, than they are cirtaluly unfit for PO . .. litical leaders; for,. if they are right now , to Judge \ 3y their formtzr political coarse, they will ell be Wrong' before the year is out.. Nutdf all *elk' shifts :and faults have beenwittloutragitf . to '011'1414, and a mere adberencito4ariy, then foe a much. 'itivager. . tmufon'they about Of all men on $a confidence in an F. , MICH out of ten, reach him. never kid ~ we hive, fkoliticallyi 'apostat~ Free Boiler, o pOticat. resurrectio. =ENE rr T 1164 i 4 w cle, declares tor, login any&mthe l 'olizet It thinks a long one,Aut o en by . .t/ le applies. zenship. Tie to' I L 8., dci e.l the Institution of otherwise, — lct ; i.bp by renounce'alrall United States whe i to-be wielded In b er Prince, Potenta! er, ezcept,tho Pri Power, to which I helpme the god o .hibith* all Nortitehe State all they harp_ . e period of probatio ta to preacribe the oat for the honor" of So would probably be 1 10M11/113Wear that tlavery, by all mean est ot iuy ability; and giante to the Govitn.. ever that °vent meitt ' half of Slavery, and h e, State,•mtd Soverei. colof Darkneit called] promise to be forever Slavery." I I tar The Repub ford. County met a, Senator the first d i rotes; John C. Al Elhanan Smith, 0.1 declared the nomi Sena tetial -Confer Smead f and 0. 11. etamation. The king for District- - rer, - WM. A: Th , Newell for Nunti l for Auditor. [eon County donTenti.n enroll- Towanda, Septembe9 tith. Poi 110 Cresol ted—E. Heed:Myer, 54 .ems, ti; Henry W.,Tracay, B,i; Whereupon E: Reed Myer watt . ie s eubjeet to the de'bsion . of the -nee. For Representativer, Thoa. l' erry were re-nominated by ac . Cher candidate are, G. If. Wet , ttorney;.Wm. Griffis ior Treseu -1 -mos for Cominisslonr, Jae.. J. zurveyor, and ,Jere. ',Travis, jr. MID or The ilepah initesi the follow George G. Waller Preston; for Dititr Almliteirs, Jeans leant' of Wayne connty.hare nom: : g tieicet For Reitrimaentatir, for gontmlasioner; Warr3ni' M. let Attorney; Henry„Teet; . for Mureford Edward LY Atwater. of that County- have =nominated - .ditor of the. • Honesdale Herald, WilliantAntrtwell for Comtnia , and,ffertry H. Brown 'for AU& ':_o‘dward for Diatriet Attorney. The Shamocrac U. B. Beardelee, for Repreeentetiie *loner, - John Regal tore, and Jackson i Sear'? D. is the right of the Teiritory, and eve • 9pnfederacy, to cl , themselves" sa ter as the queit is no tinfoil and no this question ofS and . each political itaelf,.then the Ste' idliVit the Afrioan ilassichuietta to d, !mks takes the : positioti that "it Ipeopto of Over/ State:, of evety political eommunitY Within tide !cide the tfueation orSlayery: to liMt,is to say, soya ,the Tribune, rower Slavery itt concerned, there Federtil Constitution. If, upon very, each Sul , each Territop, ommunity has d poaror to suit e of Miesissip I hai the right, to Slave Trade, and the .Statei of: • cline any furtherreadition of Phu. away'negrods. Our render! the Republicans 1 Spring of 107,1 sand Eight Hiond *hen the: had, ft tents tiTeS, enact a which act they re./ iff of 1846.1139 a Democratic Con • • country was prosp Branch Democrat While those wi , Eno* Nothings i. Democratic tariff . is President and S, . Rill not AR to remember that. ad Know Nothings - dicl ..rt the iyear of our Lord One Thou d and Flit y-Sown ; in 'Congress, ajority . hi the Houle of Repre. d pass , the present Tariff-Bill, by uced the Tariff of 1846 ; the Tar i!emocratic . Tariff. passed' by: a sx, and under Its 'operation the rous beyondall.preeedent.—North ked free-trade Depublicana and the gOUSO . were reducing- the I f 1:84.6, where were our Democrat ,. nate I' • Ur The - ITon. death at Bonfon, • A. Rowland, D. I rianCborch in 11, four years pastor in Norark, N. J. ..141e Democrat announces the epteniber sth ,cot the Eel:. lletirY I • - ,tottnerly pastor of the Preslyte 7 oesdale, arid TO; the last three or I .f the Park Presbyterian:Church Rowlanttwas.borg in Wind: his f.ther, grandfather, and reo,' for two or more generations,, g - i'egationat Church. -Mg gieat- , et mother's si•11, was. 4enathFf the Fame town, and farous for; and . theological writings. •• Dr. of much a ot several roluir,ep'en relig died in his fay-fifth veer. • ' sor, Conn.,.' grent•graedfaCei . cr pnittors of the Co grandfather, on t Edwards, !Joni hi his metaphysical Rowland was - amt log :writer, and' on iota - subjects. ALIP to the- Pittsburghitzeite the present year Is a good ono onii one nit two pievioni bad yeara. a general rule, idundmit: - Re intuelty, Tennessee, Illinois, and !tes, says thit'the yleldli - not so lexpected. Where twenty and 0 were 'earrected,' the threshing ;at disenchanter—has. shown 'a t to twelve, and in, some :special, I TO Mean bushels. But; though tgo surplus 'as some itssert, there plynll the aptnal.and prospect country.. The corn crop bids ing tlui countrytogether'. The I re will be no very great perttut:. 1 rices of grain. : . According wheat crop of thii in comparison .wit , The yield is not; a. cent news from fC4 other Western St e ! bonhtiful as was evert thirty humid machine—the gre yieldorfrom eigh instances from teni there is no such II is still enough toia ire wants of the fatal° be good, tak inference is that thi nent change . in the = The . Fort 1 SCott, being the twe. Brothels' cheap we e nes of Nigel," by Sir Walter ith volume of T. B. Peterson' & klv lame- of Waveiley Novels for • the Million poi a '• n of the Weverley Novels e of:8 eheip .edition, end' •Tha_World-wida r will ibetira a ready- • prove, • we trpet, re unerative publiihers. co! mendable to do anything will, even infa small .egree, stay the preserit raging :appetite - for peniicio . light reading. Satisfying the craving@ of those w o desire fiction; ' with some of the healthiest of its .rder, 'is • preventingi.eVil, and negativelyoit least, doing good. There lire no 'works of the imagine ion which can so eiTectinilly ac complish this as the -ovelsnf Sir Walter Scott. It is astonishing that th .ugh - so ninny iohitnes there should bo found 'so llttle, that 'religion .or morality would disapprove. !l er beauty or style, copiou@ness of expression, vlvidnrs of deo4l i ption, and interest of subject, SCott atin a in the fiiiqmost rank.` His works wiltbe read always with interest, aid pot I,nn frequently wi6i profi One volume Is issued every Saturday, and each o eis got upir fielit:ltyle, till of the same size, and are printed , az. the nib; .43(25 cots a volume, or Lb whole tircht-y-sis - voltimes. for five dollars, and sent 'free of 'postage-6" all, .on re ceipt of this sum. T. is low prieelhould place a set df them within the • ch: Of everybody in tiwi land... . . - . . 1 - • • Fo'dhe independent .R ep l ub liean. , To th'e Several Towtiships offirmed County. The Law which has been'published hieur- Conn ' ty papers Of late, for.lhe County to purchase an es- tate, buihteCitablo bdlldings, and furnish'ihe 'mime fcir the Poor of Our County, gives the people power . to approve or disapprove of said law it itr October election ;- end as it to of impoilaticene the County that the dichlidn made by the people boa judicious one, If - m(lWe a some t forethought . and calculation on the-subject it fore thr voters aroprepared to decide the question.' 1 . - •• k . ' And now, flr the inforMation of other ifiarnsiiips, -I giveti statereenticiati re 'to' the" Pooriin Forest Lake township; also Isoliciting semo' - etatement 'to be-made itioui-publie prints; froni'vaclitOwnship in , poor_ the County; shOwing i 'whethetthey hive an or or not; and, if any, give the numberand' emiensit of euppo s it,-Ac.... Which will give 'the Mquisito informa tion Wanted•beibre oor election. Fo:rest Lake township has four persomN who are comfortably supported, mostly among their i connee thin/idid friends, at &-costof about $lOO per year; , , . but if eippotted'hy the - Coduty i • set fOrthin said law; ... the estimated tost would he alebts2 , 63 ; omit than they could poisibly earn ;: and before wp-conild coma to the wants of_ the . Poor in a . 'County house? _we should bevel° pa 7 an e;tendetdexpenao in, fit ting Op as eindflithutant, awl ever aner)br PfltairiV whataver. tho ;east l ot In nine that lees oindialulai at Officers naceemary t.45' carry on such an establishment as it Omuld ind 4 if ,weean'have a fatten:lent from each toirsdalk in the County teripeirtirg theliPoer, we elisilbe betterpro• pared to decade whether there' is *Mill for said law et - the preitefit,thio, Forest take; Sept.:l!, Int!. •,' . • will , ever ;• • •,t &rd. from vet en nahin; ebenld be to be ink than citi something , Foity years ago t h ere - was fierce excitement thrtiegh the land. The slave power had gol a hold in Risen - nth and:despite tfie injus_liceof the scheme, were determined- upon her !Lam issten as; a Slave Stito. The North was alarmed. The press-and people saw the.denger as well as the outrage of the act which the South, sought to :accomplish, and meetings were held to give expression to pltblic .opinion.' • oneof these gatherings was held at Lan caster, Pa., and the •following re/Auden': were . unanimously ado pted by It: ! , Resolved; That the Representatives in . Congreile fromithiedistriet be, and they 'are bitreby requited to mite their utmost endeavors, as Meniberkof the' ,naticinal legislature, to Prevent ,the Xxistnee !of. Slaitry in any of the Territories or States - Wilicit may,be erected by Congress. : •1 - • Aii the opinion of this Meeting, that as the legie: - .• latare of this State willsoon be in session; It will be highly deserving,their wisdom and patriotism w take into, their early aYtd at ger bus coukkration. 'the preerlety of last* IT our Representetlves •in the national legislature o use thereon zealous and strenuous exertions to it hihit i thei existence of slay eryin"any. one of the T rritartes or StateS which - tnay hereafter be crea derby Congress; and that the members of the as ertlirly from ohis 'county be . •requested io embrait , earliest opportquity of ' bringinttlye sul3ieti befo the House of the Legis• lature. 4 , . • That thaAnion _orals' ado& the members of Congress , who, at thoi last session, installed the causeAbf justice,' huminity ; end patriotism in op -posing the introduction of Slivery• into th State, ,then endearored to,beformed Out of the Missouri Territory, are entitled to the -warmest thanks, of every friend tekumenity. . • ' , ,Wlu;Ltloes - the reader. suppose . was ,the unholy, "agitator" who dared -to endspger the Union by framing,, reporting, old, backing with . ' a Lspeech, these highly " Inc endiao resolutions? Who was so regerdlesof of the i 'veetetle — onstitutibrial leghts of , the South," u to urge "our Representatives In the national legislature to ,usi tne most strenuous exer tion:, to inhibit the eiistetiee of Slarery in ler ose of the Territories or. ..13tates whic h may hereafter be created by Coveeisl":: The vile miacreant i was no 'Aber than James Buchanan, now Presit of the • United.. States I FeWLwould think ' the an . whit, drew up these free-soil resolutions,. could have so far forgotten theirleaChing as to engage ie a . con spiracy to force sievery upon : an unwilling people. But' forty yeant ago Our judiciary had not given us the blessed light of Ifti,ed Scottista, our public men were not willinite eat'dirt at the.comniand• of the SOuth; and the sentiment iit the above resolutions was all Rut unanimous in. the North, and bed many advocates in the South. l't . wits' good De l Mocratic doctrine then—why Is it not nowt! - Will so me mod , • ~ mod ern bemocratenlighten us oil the point l—q3ucyrna Jouinni.• ' . . • ! • ! • ! - • support lawful or I do here , out Of the shall cease r only oth • ty whatev the Slave ,aithful. So • _ • The filaire Trade. "Occlude, al," the t.Varthingt...m correspondent of the - Philad• phis - Press, :writes:to- that-paper- as ;follows: • ; Mr. Jeffe -on Davis; fermally announced it tO be his purl) , e to introduce a bill, on thi meeting of Congress, t. repeal thdpenalties in-the law against the African Ave trade. - This will brings new rind startling iss;'ebefore the people for the Presidential campaign 01'1460, My information froth the authentic and recent, is to the' ffect that not only his this traffic been reopened, but that it is now vigorously and flagrantly conducted.- Some of the first men of the South are-engaged in it, and' it is asserted-that a numberof vessels have - been char - tered at Stivandah, and arP now absent, for the pur pose of - landing cargoes before ' the. beginning, of winter. I forbear giving 'the damns of the leaders in this enterpilse, not because they themselves re fuse to speak; of their - connection . sith-it, but for other reasons not necessary. to cue:Aerate. A very strong sentiment:is greiwing.up aping - the.law pro hibiting this traffic, and I am /IFFUT - Cd that any at tempt-to inflict the penal:APß will he resisted on the spot. Meanwhile, Justice Campbell, of the Supreme Court,- devotes hitnielf, with hereitletin 'energy, whenever a case is brought before hiin, '0 convict those interested or implicated in the 'business. He is -denounced bitterly ar the modefn Jefirey,s; but, as he ii &man of great will and indomitable pluck, he seems rether - te court than evade the pails of his reSponsible position. Many hundreds' of the Southern, eople openly take the ground / that it is impossible to enforedklaw which is repugnant td public sentiment. Will he a enricaispertaele- to see an A,merican Senator , (*liming to be progress-• ice andliberal, standing up in the face of - the civil ized world, demanding, eu-the hands of Congresi,. the repeal of the law against this most-cruel nude in human beings. No question of territory, of Le comptoin or anti-LecoMpton,- could excite' more in; tense feeling than must be aroused by this move- . ment of Jefferson NV's. repeat, upon the most distinct 'autholity, that the traffic is now vigorously prosecuted; and that hundreds of Africans are being -landed on the Southern coast. I . ; Wittig Paorpt SeLn AS SbAYES.-.--1 he:Abbeville pan'iter gives a eurlitia,plece of villany. Xt appears that Patience HiCks, a!young woman abont 17 years Of age, who was held ass slave hy John Guildford, a citizen of 'Henry ko;i4y;tin,ler of , l aale made' to him by ono James C. Wilson, was brought before - judge Williams , under Writ .of habeas corpus, stied out-by Mrs. Cuss A. hicks, the-mother of said girl who arrived in the town of Aberdeeir.on' Tuesday; the fith - olt.• 'On the trial of the case it was proved , M r that Wilson went to t,he• house of Mrs. Hicks, in • Columbus, Ga., about:the first of hut March, whore ho remained sick for several weeks., On !di recov ery, he desired to marry the young lady, and' find-. In : her mother was epode - ed. to their Mirriage, ha stole her away, and bit:ought her to the house of Rev. John G'uildfo ' rd to whom =he • Sold her for a slave. Onlisreturn to, Columbus, he ptoeured her • brother, a boy of about 15 years old, and sold him , to a gentleman of Georgia. The girl was worked - Oil the iilantationand - is considerably sunburnt! - which makeslier ap . pear rather dark. The girl Patience had an infant daughter . The.eiose - Wia tried before , Judge Williams, of the Probite Cohrt, and the Mother and child were ' rele4Sed front the services of Girlidfort. The Rattner states, however, that the counsel for Guildford have : taken the case, to the Su- . . preme Court; not with the4xpeetation of igen g the girl, but in nrddr to clear Guildford of u cost, hnposeilitpon' him bi the Judge of Pro• bate.. Where Is the villala Wilson, we should like to know !—Selma (414. Sentinel. Comm ox Dercus.—The Hon. Thomaa•Corwin,' Of Ohio, recently wade a speech at Ironton, Ohio, in which he Kari his ()Pinion' of Douglas'' positieu. 'Corwin '&A11 of humdi, and in *jovial Manner says many good things, wbleh cafinot fall to hipress- the reader. with the good sense which they display.— , After discussing Squatter Siirereignty' to his 'heart's content, he thus Fefers Ito his aelf-appointed, ohm . pion: , 1. . • s Douglas is a respea4blc gentleman, and a man Of considerable. talent; so am !, - (laughter) het I dif fer with him du that point, and I have the Adria -take of standing by the xide of Washington, who put his hand upon nij• bead,snd said," My son, you' are riiht;" and laid his haternpon Mtepheea head, and stud, ."You'must go to school.' That is what 'Washington, Jeffeniioa, Madison, Monroe, /Schelde; and Calhotiu would sayi too. •• While I am hi cora4 piny like that, lam co tent to remain. • • 11. lie.tbue dispatch' of the Democratic pretest for . selzitig Cuba Ityloree it antis r, • ' •I , - • You say :ire extend the area of freedom. That is like this : to make. a coin free, you :put a pistol ,;to his head and blow outliis brains. 'You call dui pre,' 'lona quesddn, and taker4be vote With saltpetre and lead. • Thar is whatlOU mean 14 do with Cubs, GM God Almighty will Oita yoe as he did , the whitened wall.- , I . iir Sapoleon sent : 1 - ,or Fciuche one day In gr • t rage, and told - h i m Wit a tool;; wee not At to beat the head ofthe police, Ewae .quite; ignorant of what was palming. "Ptirdonr me; SiitiP, eald Poncho. I luniw that tour idejeliy, had- my dlifithwal - already, alAned in yonipoeket." GNapoleon changed)de-tand, aid kepi hla An 00 -Asitator. Tax GaAli Eastiax,—As thia.rnfituttro4 steam-. , ahIP Is ibisui - to - corne to our Acres ; the ',following cqrrect table .of her dlinensiOnewill bofounri highly interesting Vo•many of our readers:l'Length between: perpendiculars, 680 'feel. - .Ditto,orer all Ofilupper deck, 691 feet. Breadth of ,hull, 08 feet rßeight from bottcVii of ship- to top of iren*upper deck, 69. feet. ' Diameter of - Paddle-wheels, 66 feet - . 1 !Ditto of _, screw-propeller, 24 feet. Nnmber of blades Ito ditto, ", 4.1 Weight. of • acrei-propeller.'4o 'tons. , Height Of prineitial saloons, 18 feet . W'efghi of • !tee In: the construction'of the hull, ab0yt 1 7,0660 lons. Ditto of ship,-.with machinery, coals; cargo ,I and 'full equip- Meta, about 26,000 tens. Draught' Of iiiier at tab weight, 80 Ilt. 6 inches, Weight of each Cif the pa= , die-engine cylinders, about 30 tons, iliumber:of ditto, 4. . Diameter of ditto, '74 inches. Length .0. stroke; 14 inchee. • Peddle er.gincs, about 1,200 liaiiee poli" cr.' Weight of each of •screw-engine: 41inders, about 34-tons. 'Number of ditto, ..,4 . tietrieter . of - ditto, 84 inches. Length of stroke,. 4 fcet.l screw engines, about I,6otkiforie power. ;Weight of shafts • for paddle engines,.tel tons.' Weight of :hafts: for ' ' Sere* engines, - .160:00.• .\Numberlof beapre to pvl.- dif engines, 4. Weightcif•one pair of ditto, I:land ing funnels,.9s ions. Thickness of the Pates lr. the bitilkheada, -} inch. ' Ditto in the' skins, f i inch.-= :umber of the rivets used in the construction of the ship, about 3,0126,000. Numben of' masts 61; theme tree will be - square rigged, as welll'ar fore] and . aft - gged, )The remaining two will,be'forel ir.d 'aft, : ' A ged. ,Total -quantity of sans{ -in 'sails, about ,200 square yards.'There willbeltwO acrew-iteam rs, one carried on each side abaft 'the paddle boxes, as jolly boats. Their dimension! are :---Leligth 1 . 00 !feet; beam 16 feef;_ineasuremeni:nq comp; hor4 . power 40, And,there Will be about twenty l ordinary boats carriedfriaddition, with-Masts find sails corp. : • The : Next eristis..—Ne4t year. the .Bth census of the United States is, to .hi. taken. This enumeration is one of the most laborious :and cult tasks which the Goveretnent 114 to perform. A timely suggestion is made by the ..ifsitionel. liyeM g Fneer, which is Worthy of censideritionjunl.Which We quote, In the hope that it may tie heeded - liefore the census-takers shill be called'' upon to discharge their duties. ,The suggestion is . That each firmer, this fall, as he 11,there his crops, shah keep something like , accurate account of_ 'ha quality and value of the'same; and if he Swill- take the trouble to make out a statement °fils names and ages of his family; :number cf scree- of land cleared and timbered; h the number and ages of his-, servanta ;. the number and vales of his horses and mules, the nember of bales of cotton, barrels °limn buskelt of wheat, oats, rye, barICY, potasfees,- etc., and the value of each, and leave : if in some place where any member of the &rally, :,whei may be home wheethe deputy marshal shall call;c.in resalt get,hold of it.. This will save time teaU ceinterned, and very greatly, mho. to make ;the censui returns perfect; complete, andiatisfactory.` . . Bridgewater. Baptist Ass c ation. - -The Thirty-Fourth Anniversmy of this Aisociatipn will be held in the - Baptist- Church/ in MontrOse, on . •the 21st and 22d days of this month.; 'Bannon on Wednesiiity,.at.lo o'clock, a. m.,17 Rev..; WiC A. 11/14an, of Jackson. • ! A Committee will be at the . Charc h' On" Tues 4sy Evening, to assign places . of enteitainment.; ; Montrose, Sept. 7, • .IJ. C.; Booms*. A2iOTiIER BULTDATLY QUEkTION%--7.43 have a-new proof of the absurd haste with which rn our Gvement backed down- froiMPlresrdent • Polk's claim of territory' on the W. coast up to 54' 46'. The' which -propriety' dictated was that offered by Mr. Adams in 1826, extended the treaty line due Westfrom the summit, of the, Rocky ;Mountains..-at lat. 49.=; instead of which our AdMinistration consented to fun down as far as the gay, 'so' as togive the British the wholeof VincOnver's • Islandnow becoMing a Most-ialuableteyri .tory. See the'results bV the lateSt netva:. Victoria dates Eire •to:A'ugtif.q. 6th- The .Island otiSan Juan, betecn Vanconver's Innd and the main land, • claiwd ,our Government as,part of W :ashington territory - had been occupied by sixty United:,States troops by-order of Gem...Harney. Gov. - Douglass has issued 'a ,protest ing,the island for the British-crown, and, had also 'dispatched. soine armed -vessels and two hundred sappers arid minerithere. The United States i , enela MaSiachusetts, ireffiertion Davis. Shubrick, and: Active, and - British vessels Tribune; Statellite,! arid Plum- . per, were-either anchured' ; off the islabd or - irk its immediate vicinity. It was unofficially slated at Victoria, that the matter Would he compromip.ed Jby the joint oceupancy of the island.until the • Brit- '• ish and United States Governnientecotild be , Advised of the existing state:of affairk Gen. : Harney was expeeted'at San Juan on the sth of August. [A late arrival inforMs Ina" that Gen. Harney, on the 9th, ordered" fear :cam panies of artillery frorn.Fort Waihingtom te.: re-enforce Capt. Pickett, who -di I &copied San Juan unmolested.] • \ TERRIBLE FALL 11 - 11 . 011 . , A, 8AL1.001 . f.-Mi. Hall made an &Scent in a balloon from New., castle-oti-Tyne on the 15th-nf',"Angust.t. - \Viten descending, the grappling irons failed to bold When they touched the eartbjand concussion threw 'out sorne ballast; which caused the balloon to rise again Suddenly while Mi Hall. Was in , the act of alighting.-- His feet caught in the ropes; and .he was cat.- tied up hanging hiiad downward. be came disentangled at the height of abut 12;0 feet,.and fell the .earth, dangerouely, but the surgeon thought not fatally, injured. - The balloon sailed , off at an immense blight over the - German Ocean; with a little dog tut, pas senger. . ' . 4 1st t Ilar The Pittgon -Gazette states,t e aftendanOe at jho Camp-meeting nisi' that place on Sabbath before,last, was frorn twelip td fi fteen thousand Terions 'and that'not less than twenty thousand, in all,. were-at ttio meeting. . . • E... C. FORDELI.I4;.- - - •AGENT kat. — , . • , - rl, 134iihoifts...$eb)ing iii4eficqe - .. prflints Machine lijust whet every family *Mate. Some With ..„ of keeping house without one of BAIITHOIXS NEW AltiLY SEWING stAvams. It mutes* lOCiiiltel, pre• tenting the some general appearince.apon both el mash* Water* sewed...and censr? me. It is one of the best me !nee now In nee. Persons wishing to obtain reliable machines are wilted to-eall kJ E. C. FORDIIAIWS ruralture - Store.-Illin titre -3. doors Velow PPP' k Webiteseoftlekhefore plutlisaing else bassi Pries from Sao to end. . . ,• • Oro/toss or xn a Pilis!...LEor simplicity, dun' illy, end exceed ing neatness of. work, and to fact for every: desirable quality, they cennot hi exeelled.—S en nes 'TIMIS ANA MINUNOLI. 1.. i It is mimed tenably mai of the beet„—iirsoar Comte& .-• , One of the mostusefarsad effective 'autchluesi in: the institet.l. N. Y.' Caine' •ews. • ~,. • 1 s. ; These machine, make ettellent work.:—N. T. Sri: . r - Montrose A ril 13th, 1932.41 , - - • • 1/011PROSE .PR./CAS Cintii T. .. Wheit. it hu5he1;.:;31.1 , 042 41.33 Whoa flourlf IbbL. 111;00G afXl Rye. - 671( cents Rye tourfole,t .1, 7..t0 Corn. , .1 . 4 cents Corn meal if cwt, ).7b 0.1.10 Buckwheat, - York 1011... i I ' lOg 12 mac Oats.. ...e. VS (3 !IQ rents Lwil VI ts ...: ..F - . ' le K: te cent( Bella. white......... . . .4, 44,0;1 - totter P 11.1 . 1 19'@ Li recta past..•k 4 Ceaditggs P dozen: , {77!e cents . . - ° • 1 Dr.Wishirls Italian' of WiAd Cherry. —Where the above preparation is known; It•iseuireilertibli•hed se an Infallible Remedy for the cure of Corona Cott* floss TiNAIT. 110.111SPCIM. liaosournit Recruit* or Bloom Pant in nt silence. Caoer, Ptnooneo Coven, and e very term of 11131:MON Alt WWI. pL trlNT,thst It were • work of anyeperogationtei speak et Ito went. • Discovered by a well known physician more loan twenty y rem since, It dm by the w Werth' cores It boo reread been cOnstaut:y E appreciating In public tam until its pee and Its puraticoare ok• universal; and tt la now ktnnell and cherished b) all i son th eh. rani in leateinj who have been restored to health by I unite the Oust Rearms for ail the diseases which Itprefem ea t due. i nirJaines Clark: physlcbso In Queen Vietoria; m . filved ii. sr hts oplolon that . CONSUMPTION CAN UP, CRUM! i - /he whole history of this itedielek fully' cpubms the cylnion Di' that eminent man...Thoneandlean testify. and bare ' telermed• °AI erten all other remedies had RAW, thla has emegaitly Cored: the 1 when the Rafael' had weUnigh despaired, thle as oCerdad nom.l. ate relief i. that when the physician had prouou red. the disease:U. .cerable, this has tempted It entirety.. ,`: -. .- I The virtnee of tide Wallin are alike appti ' eto cure a ell ( -.1 Cold or i Confirmed Censmoritlon, and Its pow Ma' safe , ne o n, speed*: pleamot, and effectual remedy earonst 'nettled. f.'," Cannon i Perelman none unless It hoe th . whir n , signiori of ”1. BUT rs" on the wrapper, as well tie the rioted name of Ile proprietors. - • -•— , . ~ Pr. Wislar's Lti, alsawof irs7 Cherry. The Immense sale of this preparation lithe beat, proof of the ret• nation le which It Is. holdrby the nubile. . 1 I For the cure of Conelm;_ Col da Whooping Cinch, Croup:Drone:l.. al and PultriorutrykffeetiftaaMaltdheasteof his Throat sad Lang lactuding Consumptitm, Its Mammy, la astMdsh ag and Its vaine!gl• unable. Thermal 'manias butte writtenalguature of "1 HUI To• as wall as the tainted mime of the Proprietor ninths outes , wlVplir. • SWIM IC VORIS k tio.. Prwprievirs, 00520?. '...sixTs.—AßEL TUKRZLL. MenitromiT. Wit'. , .4 C..0.P, New Ilitlfat .1, T. CABWIJA.9 . Ieat Beg O. Wi:RM, Pim. ADZ. J. (4,OI,IILiTUA T & 1101141. Mg' II 1 1 1
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers