Itioutrost gitmotrat. 7116 LAN,SEST CIRCULATION IN NORTIIERNITIWA. E. B. CHASE fk J. B. MCCOLLUN, EDITORS ALVIN DA V I , Publisher. noutrose, Thursday,Sept.; 13 ,L 855. Vtiltottatic Counta Itomivatious TOILIIEPtCEN - rATIVE, LATEIIIIO PON iipringville * ivit TREASURER,- mt. r . 1 ig i'„`,lcLL, (it BlEou-ivose. 1 von ciimmi.: 4 4roxEn, NORMAN FOOT, cot 1 56- ,eW Ztliford. Fan AUDITOR, any eri,ir WELLS, Of lirldiessiiter. sir In our colums to Any -will be fotiN extracts .from letters of the Hon. - G. A. Grow _ to - his fatnily,friends. We have been kindly furnished with these letters, and shall extract from theta for several numbers of our paper. Our readers are under great _obligations for these favors from the old world. Letters From the Candidates., In another column i'Ve_ publish the letters , - of interrogation,by the Committee appointed by the Demecrati : Convention, 'and the . plies of the candidates so far as receii'ed. , — The sameletter i viiiied Only as to the office named, was addressed to all of them. It will he seen that the. candidates place themselves boldly. on the issues before the people, and we believe their sentiments will find a response in the couviotions of a large majority of the people of this county. In deed, we can seeno exense for any man, pre= . tending to have been a Democrat, who per sists in striving to defeat - the ticket: If he does so,. What reason can he render Can L...still say:that the great question of freedom ia involved in - the result I We - apprehend that no m'au who Ms a 'regard for his man hood, will pretend even that such is the. case. He will not pretend that . our nominees are not,_yea More, have not been from the rust hour, firm, consistent men on that .issue. - - Suppose then•those men are defeated, their &feat will justly be attributed - to a por- ' tion of the free soil democrats; or those - - „pre- . .' tendingtO be such. Now can the men .who thus defeat them convince men that they are -. honest in what they profess, when they thus . leave a ticket and a platform . which they must acknOwledge to be right, and join hands with aim . tylio have opposed the Democracy in. every cOngressional conflict, on that issue since the Subject M'3s first agitated -in Con gress. .T.\'‘ie suppose that no one 'will deny that it has been the Democratie, party of this District, - `every time against the opposition of the Whig, or Know NOthing'party, that has - 8.- Mined the free:soil 'question, electing Mr, -- WilltnOt one term 'more than -Duty Usage, and the same of Mr. Griiw .And yet now: it . is this same Whig party, upder, another name • with whiCh Democrats are askedto coalesce and defeat their own men on - that . issue.— The idea is prepbsterous,'involving an absur . • dity too glaring.for ,Lonest men to embrace. If the - Deinocratic ticket is'defeated. in - t its county this fall t , it will be defeated not on the . free-soil issue at all, because that is p an issue between the parties.. It - will be •cause men, professing:to act only with reference to the free-soil -question, . really care -more for their' connection with the Know - Nothing Lodges than for free soil.. - This is the only 'treasonable construction the world . can - put_ on their conduct, and when that shall be ....-. . made to appear, honest,straight-forward Men, ,will be 'very apt to treat them as men.' Want ing in political integrity- and virtue. This is just the position that those free soil Detno crats who unite with the opposition this fall to defeat :our county ticket will End them selves phiced in. In oar judgement the; ' could not strike a more fatal blow • at the principlegi they profess. We hope 'therefore that they *ill look well to the consequences before they mks: such a' step. The Pittsburg Couventiciu. Since Our last, the Republican party has . - held its State Convention at Pittsburg 'nod nominated Passmore Willianigon of Philadel phia fOr Canal Commissioner. It is said that he is not ; a Know-Nothing, and that there , fore a third man will be brought into the field. If this be the.. case, die result will probably be the election of Mi. Phimer by a 'large majority. Judge Jessup of thiss t ounty; who made a speech in the llaltitnbre Con-, yention three years ago in favor of: the Fwgi.: - tice Slase Law, and pledging the Whig paro ty of. Pennsylvania to the South; presided' Over thisanti-Slavery Convention, Whichpi.ss : es Resolutions in favor of repealing that LitAV, declaring that SlaverY is . sectional, &c., Sc. Novi this same Judge Jesiup is the file leader of thc'Republican party of 'this county, which seks“free soil" Demoorrats to enlist, under Ms banner to resist slaverY! A pretty lead , et indeed for Democrats to follow. He pre-. tended to be a Democrat himgOlf till General Jackson vetoed the United States Bank Bill, and theix4ie deserted the old hero and joined _the Bank .party, operating extensively, bim selfas Our maders - reollect, in Bank affairs in this county. Then he turned Abolitionist and made Abolition speeches, .till tke wooden horse at Williesbarre- converted- him, alie n his next strike in politics of the most pro-slayery patine, three years ago. Now he is on the other sideag*n.. Truly Deriocrats, —Jackson Demobtats,4—must he proud of sach.a.leader, and 'those who follow him, if any so'foolish as Io& so, will find thein selves in :the end in - tlie embrace 'of the old Whig .401,0t,T ) : Pay perhaps under ' another: mune," • Mr.liarmen is confined in Jail in Phil adelphia, for FOL ttlf12:11),, of Court in the mat ters-rtrisWent'Orths:Wheeler slave cate.— r From'a careful perusal of _the • facts brought before the Supreme Court in_ his case,.-hie stands in ,Mt thnVtltiOn. - Wheeler bre% his slaves to Philadelphia, and Williamson went on board the h. s itat and tokd thew they t+ Srifurcils. Ars Lail of Paniorritania..whish. eras undoubtedly true t ,_ Wheeler then went d before thetTni l - States Judge and obtained a)utheai cioop i ; giveribi That Nit lain - se - a li4 unlawfully abducted his slave". Judge Kane issued the writ, and :Willianison, instead or matieg tbillegal return;solbat,the questioe of the fn..ed4ni_ of the slaiei could be - tried, contented himself with denying.. the jurisdic tion of the oourtto make tOra produce them; whereupon the. Judge committed himto jail for contempt of Court. - lie thin appli ed to our State Spretne Court, for a writ of habeas corpus to discharge hi* which that Court refu'se t to grant, Judge lin.or dissenting. The SuprZnne Court decide that they have no jur isdiction to reverse the dcrees of the United States Courts. That an' Court is its own judge of contempts, and its - decrees final.— _I . MO " Mr. Williamim - earriei the key ,to his -be prison, c.nd ul yrl l released the m oment h e obeys. the mciydate orthe law and makes the legal return to the tirit. That until he does so, he need not compNA of the hardships of the law, having it in his po;ver: it, any mo mmt that he chooses to Obey if, to come out of Jail. .finox dissents on the ground :that .tit..lgo• Kane had najnrisdiction in the cnse,and.that • therefore Williaptson was hot bound .to obey. The majority of the conrt reply to this,' that the question of Jurisdiction was not one for Williamson- to decide,. and that if partieS may set them Selves up• as Judges of tlio risdictioh, thereican be no poW.er in anieourt to enforce its pracess, and ilint witnesses, Ju rors or any i boelf else may refuse toobey 'the summons of oq Courts -.bpi; denying the right or theiJadge to t6f.the caSel. This they say would - I,e.,prepos,tei*s, and subver sive of al; la wand order, and . hence Will iamson innst till hG will . make the . -proper returncto the writ, all - that then he will' be set at liberty.: Sack is the state. -of the case as we glean from a *lose perusal of the 'Opinions of the learned Judges on both sides. • . Morrnlosr., sept,, s, 1835. OLIVER LATRROP, Esq.: • Year Sir•:—The. Democratic, Convention I 'd this County placed you in nominationfor i the office of Representative,—with directions 1 however to us.tol request of you - a Written pledge that you neither have, nor will! hare nay connection With.the Order called " Know Nothings?' nor with any other secret political Order or society. .We now ask tharplOge. With the reasons which induced this, We haVe nothing to do ; Since the CoriVention unanimously required it. - • , . : But . . yourwill, not he surprised at such ac tion:wlien you consider that the otiiv issue • • • ,and object in the -approaching - contlst - is to 'rescue this jconnty from the dominion of the Lodgcs,— , -Unquestionably the most ..corrupt, .dangerous,niid" wicked system of fraud that ever lifted ambitious Men into power. 'lf you add to tips the fact that the Very nature of this consp4acy is to cheat the voter uncoil se,ionsly into its Support ; you will. .see in this caution but; the commonest menus of self preservation.' . • Respectfully;4,-,c., - .): . .R. B. LITTLE, .; . • ; - - i-- . WM. K..IIATCfI, -Com. . 1 THOS. JOHNSON, •,. SPRINGILE, Sept. t, 1.85 S P. B. 'Lrrrt,'T., EsQ.: Dear Sir :- - --Your faVor of the _6th inst., as Chairmtu of the CoMmittee of the recent Democratic Convention, appoited to inform the candidates of their nomina ion, and ask ing a fth a pledge to the effect that ey are not now, have not been, and 'will not become members of the Know-Nothing or any other secret political society, has been received. In view.of the political occurrences of the past year, I readily admit the propriety of re quiring the pledge proposed especially, with reference to a connection with the secret so cieties now - underfood to be in existence, I have not had, Pei;her do . I design to have any connection whatrer with the Know-Nothing organization, or'ith any other secret • paid cal society..of win, h I have any knowledge. \ e You are aware' ntlemen, that I was-nom inated without.tb least solicitation on my part. • Office I'h:we never sought, but if chos en by Inv fellow tcitizens . heir Representative, I will try " ' to serve tbeni raithfully and well. I desire, 1 owever, that every run who may wish to vote for me shall' icuderstand well my position, and then he wily knoW what to ex pect at my hands.. I leprecate this intro duction_ of rftions opinions into politici, for I do not _believe :religion will be - benefitted thereby. I am, a Protestant-i - a Member of a j Protestant Chu;reh,—and. as such I believe the truths of the . Go.o, in this land of free smelt, will find their - way to the hearts of 1 tneh) ivithout poi liticil A'id The Lord is equal 1 ' 1 to the wolk he has\ appointed, amt I _hope' . Protestant Mulches will repel this 1 interfer; ence of political demagogues, who' seek to take advantage of their prejudices, - before all that is pure and good, iti oar holy religion shall be polluted by the an4itious purpose's of profligate politicianr. 14 them be taught that, at. least, they M must nottdesecr i ate the al tars of the ! Bost High, in their struggles - for 1 political station and power. . , On the question of Oave.ry, I' agree with the ReSolations of yourl.Convention. I - am, and, hate been :Mtn t4'first, opposed to, its extension into free territory; and, should I be elected, whenever called to act with refer ence to t t lia4nv convilltions will be the guide of my aetion,—my influence and my vote :I . shall usetlways, and to their- fullest, extent, for the furtherance of free institutions. 1 My pcnition is now' defined openly on the leading questions of the nay, and 1 have atn- o ed to make it clear to the ripprehension ofall,l Tor. I desire that nii man shitll vote for me fwd : afterwards feel that he _has, been deceived: t - :Accept for yourself I the other gentle men of the Committee. the assurance of myi -v ' : tweet. . .1! , I ; ' ' 4 - 1. - LATHROP; .t' l e - lifoxraok Sept 10,1855; Gentlemen. , : / : , ' - I pare 'your note of t, sth . informing me officially Of ' my Domitiation foi Pouoty Theismr by the late rketooctatic Cool - maim:l - fad redinivirg .f So* filar that 1 hjyri no connection with the Order ' commonly called -K ll 9w Nott 4l o, are- • • - ICan assure you, in the most positive man ner that I have no connection with any , se cret political o . eiety of tiny kind or for any purpose, and that .I look upon such couibina tikins' as a dangerous element in a government like ours, where , the people should have every facility for canvassing, the mend of the can didates 'for their suffrages, and where the etioice of the voter . Should be restrained by no obligation save those he owes to his coun try and to his God. I believe that the Mass ei of 'the people arepatriogc, and therefore, by open and manly diseussion, those who may have:enahraced an error in moments of excite- Meat:will return to correct principles as the error becomes manifest. It affords the pleasure to say that I concur heartily:in the principles laid down by your dOnvonfion.- - From the firsttagitation of. the eitensin of slavery into free• territory, Ihave opposed its extension, and should - I be elected Whatever influence may .-pertain • to the• sta tion, I should feel -myself bound; as a pemo erat-tand as a man, to use " perpetually on the side of freediim." • • Very Truly yours, TURRELL. B. B. ',TITLE, Chairman of Conftee. (Cozistus tcATED.) Montrose -Politics. The Editors of the Knoothing Organ , here, perrnitra certain t4rson, win: is perfect ly known! o "us all, almost' every wcek to adorn that elegant ma! useful print with AUL!! things .as he ean write.: The main feature in alt these 'Communications is a sort of insanc• hiared tOWard a priv.ate citiien,whose offence is that he presumes, in this free country,- to •exercise the right to carry- out his ideas of freedom in the Democratic, insterid of the know-Nothing party. That writer is inflarn,. ed with this hatred to a degree that seems to exclude every Other thought ; and every week alniost, ever siuce last fall,. in every form Of .attack, this moral/mania struggles Ourof him to the edification, no donht, of those men at 'Montrose, who, in the- distribution of labor, assigned him this delightful duty. Well,Mr. Little-Can defend himself if he chooses ; but he Will hardly stop to ? reply ,to those boyish assaults, so pointless in vvir,.--so weak : in de nunciation, and so utterly void of - all kind of ability. Were he to do so,. it would . be Z sT some 'moment's p.astit to quiet him ;, "as the Osprey. does the fi ; who takes it by :-,ov ereignty of nature.". here is - nothing in there but hate, a thing that always defeats its purpose.. , , . , But this . same writer talks flippantiy as a boy; about "Chase Democrats,"-as Sas -quell:man freemen were anybody's Democrats. His school begets such ideas; and these pol iticians at Montrose- regard the people as mete tools, - made by a kind of Machinery, as they make Know-Nothings,—and politics :rs a game; where cunning is stronger than right. The way they Worked the lodge-System last fall, has made them wild with this They have no conception of manhoodi They never knew that a- Democrat, rich or poor, was a very sovereign, thinking and acting As such, and spurning dictation from any source. • Look at these politicians. ,Just now they deliberately, voted the Fugitive Slave Law upon little befor - e, they were crazy for Taylor, with his army of slaves;—and always, they ja - satie - d - the patriarchal institution, just as their God, Henry clay did. And some of them, in common with that. very writer of whom we have spoken, now, ore third degree mentheri'Of the Order, whose oa th ignores Slavery! 7 : Yet, in the estimation of these men, our Ticket is so pro-slavery, they can't support it, withfint seriously damaging their consciences. All at once they are seized with a horror - of Slavery, like a fit,—so,pene trated with virtuous reflections upon that sub; ject, that they can't Sleep,—a very nightmare of rirtue,-setting upon their pure bosoms, un til after electibn ! Democrats might as well keep on plough ing this fall. The work is taken out of their hands; and gill be done on .au improved plan. There will be no more' Caucus, nor corrup tiOn. This new exaltation breaks out into a sort of Church-worship, so sacred that it can't endure the rude gaze and contact of unity-,' spired men; bet must hold its weekly meet ingsl at midnight, in saw-mills, Tanneries, Asheries, and other secluded spots, where un- . :Seal, conscience ,can regale itself -with images of patriotism. And then there is the guar- - terly meeting at Montrose, where these blest votaries meet, the very priesthood . of the Or der, fight at the altar of the Country, .;where their mellow and fused splits- mix together, and exhale like . incense. Why don't they abolish the Offices,—voting is so vulgar, done_ by everybody but nd sometimes by them event After all, there is nothing' like office to cement a' party, and just now they have particular use for them, to hold in bolt ing Dnt eoerats that x+ft, to go back this fall. Mince the fusion of the Whigs that is their IKnOW-Nothing absorption, it is amusing to isee how they love a Democrat. It is a new 1 ! ardor. They caught perhaps a dozen or two; and those few, if they'll only . 'stay, can just rule-the party. Why a Whig stands no tchance for office,—these precious Democrats, 1 that once stood..high in their 'ptrty, lend us such a lustre, that any terms, any 'fawning, is a cheap price for such riacessions; What a dignified set of men these Whigs are' just - now 1. But to return, this movement has. a public and a private aspect,—one political; the oth er, we may as well call 'reli9ibus. The re- /iyioul or in-irate, side does up the catholic question, ignores slavery, and other patriotic citiesin the Lodges; the political, or "Re publican" side, does the voting, takes the offi ces, makes speeches, prints the Organ, and crushes out Slavery ! This - is what is meint_by carrying ones re ligion into politics; a subject never properly understood before. Thus, in Blciomer-Hall; the former side resolves'" on account of the pressing_ nature of the Slavery question, to make no nominations this fall,"--tben these virtuous men take their other, or Republican side, and - go right - up to the Court-House, gad p ri p sre for somisaiiev+4. Slavery /melt; es so unusually hard this fall, that we, lodges; must_ bold on awhile, and .:_lattkolt Republi can Auditor and commissioner to stop that pushing. It wouldn't do for the lodge to go on, and leave, a Democratic--Anli-Starery •Tieket to keep thit monster. that ptishes so . hard, out of the Qoutity. -We must have all. the offices, " even to Constable,". not because. we arclelfiA, but only to stop slavery. .. . Just so last fall, they elected Pollock, and kept 'slavery out of Pennsylvania ; and the outsiders who honestly voted him for that . laudable purposknever -knew, until -it was . too late, that this Worthy 'Executive had. a private. side, known only to- the initiated, adapting him to some other. purpose that they hadn't bargained for.: They could only hear the high,ooble free-soil speeep r —they cohldn't . see certain *making of the gagers around the vest .buttons, that revealed ,the private •side to - the eyes - of the faithful only. • .And .it is always so. The Republican side appears to make the Ticket; but you, will be sure never to find anything but a.Know-Nothing on it ;" unless perhaps it- was one of them prominent bolting Democrats whom they Want to hold I I t till they.get established. Then when they come to the Polls, a Know-Nothing is nowhere to be seen ; -they are all Republicans, moving about sastealth ily there ; !and eschewing all corrupting dis cusSions e i dth rabble' Democrats. What a so)enin businesm,,this country-saving is ; only to be done - by getrat cunning and wisdom -Some men think they can oppose slavery without going into the " Outer-darkness" of the Lodges. ^ Rut they' ansWer, this is because Itbis . .,are unconverted,—k is a mystery, but nobody et:in hit Slavery, but us. Your anti is all pro-slavery. -There is nobody really sincere but us. - secret societies are the thing. The Abolitionists faile,l because they were for light and discussion. The truth is if our country is ever saved,- it must - be done pri -vatelv. . . The bolting Democrat just now, .is.a , queer figute.it is refreshing, these corrupt times, io L commune with such purity. He don't wan't t Office,-not he,—he'll go anywhere " hisyrin . ciples7 go.: But we cever knew his pr i nci. ' pled take him vberelt didn't. look as if office lay.. . • That is a t .ot .the new nomenelature, caught from the 'ma that four times a year. 1 .administers to theSei men; their little stock of 1 political ideas, in ;u icious doses ; • suited to .their respective cap4cities: The thing gets pretty sVeather beaten along the latter part of the quarter; .but the man comes at last, and their strength is. revived. •-" My prinei . ples,".LL:whnt a charm in the Wod, especially when spoken hind, and set in between a brace of oaths.. So disinterested, and self-saetifie in:.; it looks like the martyr Ake, come again to H e ..., th e world.. De'nt,l", beg of you, sus pect these men, because it happens,—merely happens just now, that some of them are in the field, and others about to- come in the field, as candidates; who a little i while ago, were asking" the same gifts from the people, while proclaiming exactly the opposite senti ments. What, a pure. Democrat ! The Con vention, And . candidates of that party 'are pledged to . the - teeth against slavery,—the _welt' question this fall is, shall Susquehanna County,-in its judicial, and executive depart ments, lie under the.dominion of-secret, oath bound Lodges"? - They are obliged to admit this, and yet "my principles" lead s the into that mystery of ittiquity,—the Lodge. But he says, lam fixing for '56. 'Wait till that comes; we don't know how the is strs will come up then-;',.besides yoti :don't advance your "principles" by upholding the Lodge, Whi"et is.the.tool of the South. Do present duty. . . . . .We can't tell what Will bein '5O ; .but we know that these hills are covered with Dem ocrats;who will not leave their party at 'the . bidding of the Slave-driver, nor support Sla very either. -He wifl stand .by her when right, and reform . her - where wrong. - She garners up his confidence :and his hopes ;•he cause she alone bears the Ark of a nation's progress, and.the .elements of her grandeur. Ai times defeated, she has vet reclaimed' her heritage frimi the spoiling of the Vandal; by a law of our being, as sure as is the principle of self-government ; which it is her ruisSiettr to vindicate Before the world. She will again . re=assert her empire in the Republic every ,l . where. To § this party on any one idea, and 'plunge into the awful corruptions . of the L.odges, shows a depraved heart, covering its somerse" t after office, by "the mock - cry . of "nay pridriples." _ . . • . • - For the Democrat. WILLI-01'3 COLLEGE, Aug. 15t11, 1855. Me i ftsraEditors day . . old `V illiums celcbtlted her sixty-tirst cominencement.- - -- An unusual' number-of strangers were pres ent. Th 6 day was very favorable. The 'nor- . ning pieces, particularly that of Mr. Ingalls, were good. l ln the afternoon Mr. Holmes at tracted considerable attention by the singu larity of his, oration. ' It was full of spice and flavor, and exceedingly delighted the . audi ence. Mr. Downer contended ably for the freedom of the pulpit. Such if soul-stirring oration we have not heard in -a long time.— The spec+ was well written and exceedingly well delivered. Mr. Edwards was in- our view the oratoi of the day. His clear articuht . - tion and complete self-possession overcame all the defects in consequence of his recent ill ness. Laseevening we were addressed by the Rev. 11. W. Beecher. Ilia . subject was mirth—its relations to the intellectual and creative nature of mad. It.wassit truly Beech rian effort. . Yours, JACOB SAUNDERS. --. Omsna One it the:eapital of the: territo rylef Nebraska, and a letter writer thus speaks of:it : " Omaha city can now boast of some for ty houses such as they are. There are four stow, one hotel, three boarding houses, two drinking houses, One blacksmith shop, onn steam saw mill' one printing office, twenty lawyers, nineiloetons, one minister, one hun drat andfifty speculators, twelve goyernment officials, thirteenlabies, seventy five legisla tive aspirants; thirty congressional , aspirants forty gentleman about , town, and a few more Petunia geuetullY. Of course the place is im proving, progressing, advancing, going-ahead snl will eventually le a place of considerable oriporta nag, (Letters From Europe.) • • t . .osnoic-May , 3l; 1855. Deai Flip* : • • -• _l , I should have written yon trip Liverpool, immediately on our arrival, but,. as th e letter.. : aould not go Ai il'ai*tunlity, 1 aefer‘44. 'till we shonlcUreaCh this plaice, • • . In creasing the' Atlantic. we had it; nice' view of icebergs, nearly all one day. 'Theri . 3.l were fourtecnjn sight at one time, some which were very fne. ones. The largest was? some 600 feet long; and about 50 feet himl But I hainn . ot time'to give. a- U A6C01114 , of our sea Voyge, and . must leave details till some other time. cf We spe nt Monday in Liv.; • ~ erpool, Mr. thennell son' of henry Grenfelf of N.X. rode out with us e . to. see th and some iiior seven miles into4he coutitry . .;• The buildings here are built for tirne,.and ev ery you are reminded that you i.are in an era country.. There-ire no new build?ags being erected, and no improvements goingon. All. seem to' be z finished, without the -appear ance of stagnation, for there is life and fresh nes.4everywhere. But there is no dilapida:- .tion. .There are no fences except hedges. and Wall laid in weather cement. - At Liverpool the docks are all atone, and Make a fine show. - .No shipping lies outside the wlinrf as with us,: but large -basins are excavated, afterusit.g all of the channel .it nip do to take, and outside of all, next the water, is- a. heavy wall laid in cement sonic 20 feet high, with a wall next the water, some 10 feet wide, called the maiine parade, The docks at Liverpool cover 300 acre, and here they are much larder. Foidrything is on a magnificent . scale: From Liyerpool.we went to chester and' Eaton hull. At Ches ter 'we wont around the ohl, wall,. parts 'of which were built more than. 1890 yeais - ago. The old Cathedral is venerable and quaint old pile of red sand stone, built A. D. 983, though parts have been added at a later date, - —none however since the fourteenth centu ry. At Chester we saw the Phoenix - tower. where Charles the FirstsaW his ariny defeat ed by Cromwel more than two . centuries ago,—and• where he lost his throne. -Ther,e are four archwa” through the .wallfor en trance to the Ciy, mid the streets from there divide it into quarters, .coning together in the eon tre, • . • • From Chester we rode . t Eton flail, four miles, which is the count seat (if . the Mar quess of Westminster. TiHall was dosed, rode t We went over the grot:ds in part. He ha5 : 49,600 acres, divi,F . into a park,.:pleas ure . grounds, and cultivated fields'. The park contains 2000 acres ; covered with :original forest oaks and thicket., .over • which • Were 7,1 e -fit numbers of deer. feeding, and in ..the thickets were innumerable rabbits, patridges and other game. On the one side is unboun ded wealth, and a •proftrsion of everything, and poverty and destitution on the other.— The income of the Marquis is said to be about half a million a year.. In seeing the -homes id . the:English nobility, we realize that our million:nes arm-I.:ally men of small wealth.— .We saw the celebrated race horse "Touch Stone.", He is a fine dark day, and is now 25 years old. The present Marquis, his oWn er, refused =.2,5,00qf0r him. He was Over beaten on tit' turf. - .N St affectionately. -f • .• ) s • G. A. GROW. . BRITISH HOTEL, LONDO:!: June 3, 1855. Dear .friends: Wheal 'wrote you I had seen but little of nmilttii Now to give von a brief and hasty sketch of London. Friday last we visited Westmin ster Hall where Charles, first,Warren Hastings, and others were tried for high treason. It is a spacious Hail . and interesting from. historic - associations. In it are.now held the Courts of Queen's Bench, Exeliever,&c. I The- J udge es, four in number in each Court,l except 'ni ei. Arius, wear ',hick gowns and. powdered wigs, as in- ancient times,—so also do the LaWyers; They present a quaint appearance in the little•dark rooms in which they sit: • London Tower, the place of blOod in Eng land's early history is iniested with- peculiar interest -to all who speak - - the English lan : - gunge. It was for more than : a century the prison house of all - who fell under the dis pleasure of the crown. It -was erected by William the conqueror in his 'attempts to crush out - the spirit of Liberty among the stern old Saxons, and was for a long time the prison house for nil those- charged with high crimes-against tFe State. It is no lon ger used for a prison, but is%kept as. a relic of the past.. It is a vast and strongly fortified fort, with three timers. Around it is a ditch ; land high wall, but there ver& secret passa-. ges to the towers, througkWhich the min- , ions of the King could enter- to execute his bloody edigtts; 0, could the stones of those towers Speak, what a tale of unrecorded woe and cruelty would, they tell! But the times ' that required its erection and continued rise are passed, and it is, now used as- a store house of arms and historic relies, and as a re sort, of the traveller. After • this we visited St. Pauls Church, the largest in . the World ; except St. Peters at Rome: !There is- nod'. ing of particular, interest about it, -save its size and sonte . seulpture. , .. The most interesting place we have visited en account of its historic associations, repte seated in the persons of - most of those who have made the English name and language illusttions,is Westminster Abbey; a Vetter& ble old pile of relish stone used in the mid-, die ages as a CltUrch, and now,excepting the.-'. centre, the receptacle of the monuments of , the illUstri 0114 ded. Beginning, as you: en- 1 ter, with the moll mint of-Chaucer, the fath er • of English poets, - and - passing around ' among the - statues 'of KingS, Queens and no bles, you ; close- the scene with Shaketspear holding a scroll, on which is inscribe these most fitting -hues, taken' frotti his own Wif. tins; and after days passed amid:venemb:e piles of stone and granite, and ruins . of stu pendous castles; nothing - could be .more :ex - . pressive-on leaving the restfrigplace'ef 'their . illustrious ocupauts. • ' - -The eont clikied towers, thi . gorgeous palaces . The solemn temples, the gm' globe itself,.:. ! . Yea, all it inherits shall disco ve, , ... . And like the baseleis fabrie o'a vision . ..- .• • I.4avii'mot, a wreck behind :_ •.'. .- ' - ::: ' i r As a piece of Conirisition it , is, ailinirahle, lint speaking from the marble scroll of. West- ,Iminster Abbey, amid the tombs and monu ments of the illustrious dead, it fills the _soul With gloomy sadness, not to be ;described by words. Here repose, eide,h,i side the rivils . - in life'. • On one bide the iiinidgmeentjir.n betb,.ntid on the other her ‘jietinyt Miry queen or Scotts,—and but.: little separated aFetlie . rival statesmen Fox and " The battle of oar life is brief, The alarm; the struggle, the relief, Then sleep we side by side !" • But; to leave the dead and turn to the liv ing. We, next' visited the stables of the Queen's horses She has 150 in .number for her use and that of Prince Albert and' the Ht . .: tie princes.- 111kof Of them are bay.- Twelve are cream col 4 and twelve blACii. which are used only on State occasions,.at the opening and closing of Parlianient. The • Queen and Pritice.Albert then ride out to *house . Of • Lotds in the car'of•State,—a 'gilded carriage ofireat - weight, The Queen. : ha's* two - ear riageS for attending parties, balls &c. rwhlalt cost each $4OOO. The groom - showed us through to see all the horses, carriages, bar ness&c. 'The Queen is expec 1..41 Out :to, see . the races Thursday, at which into iwe hope to see her. • Saturday we wont to..the ,Grystal Palace . at Sydenhatu, to attend the„..Aniial Floral Exhibition. .The Palace and grOutidsexceed in magnificence, anything I' hitt•e evei .1.45,150,000 have been expended onthern, and. it will take two thousand 'nore to complete them. There are nine fountains,' with prob-, ably 50000 jets all playing and two large cataract and cascade fotintains in course- of erection. The length of the Palace i ,1.008 feet, width pB4:. In addition are two wi'ngs each 574 feet; and a cOlOnade from the wings 720 feet, taking the entire length of the imilding covered with - glass nearly. three fourths of a mile. The highest part is . 170 feet from the ground floor. The Palace and' wings cover.hu area .of 802,780 square feet, and the superficial quay` of glass used in 25 acres. In it are representations of almost every' kind i;tf animal and - plant in the world, iti addition.to the finest specimens of sculp• lure, painting and the mectutnien! arts. . Sunday we•attended servises in NYtttnin ster.Abhy and also at St *Paida. We also visited Hyde Park and Kiinsing,ton- gardens. The Park and giirdens contain 740 aems, of beautifully:ornamented ground. -Adjoining is St. James Park of 83 acres, so: three is in the heart of London. one pleasure ground of over 800 acres. There are in the eitY in all, over 1700 acres in . parks. :Hit ,was a Yen: kee.city'theso-would be cut in lots, seven by nice, and sold to the highest bidder. _Monday . we did but little except call on our friend 4 who had treated . us so pall tel :nt the dinner, at' 6-reenwich, and I;iSit Col. Colt's armory, where he is manufacturing his revel- Vera. It is an immense estahlishineat, -,but not as large as the one . he has in Hartford.— ; In the evening, through the kindness of Mr. Dillow we were iutroqueed to Mr. Fitz - Wi:!- iam a member-of Parliament. With him we went to the' Ho - use of Commons and heard the debate on - the war. _The speaking, takes together, was not as good as most you. hear in ' Congress, though the House is mtich more orderly And quiet. • To-day we went to Hainpton Court ,the 'residence of Cardinal WOolsey, and after wards for a long time, of the King and Queen . of England._ Like everything of that kind here, it'is a profuse exhibition . of magnifi cence. The building covers eight acres, with a large fountain in the centre. in an: opJti court of about one • acre. From the front there are three avenues, about three hundred feetuvide, lined with immense elm,-' lime and linden trees, reaching in a. straight line to the banks of the Thames. - In the cep-'l, tre are two lakes, one about 200 feet; and the Other about three fourths of a.mile long. 1 S4arated from the main edifice by'an oval i basin, is a large fountain filled, with gold acid'i silver fish. In the garden is the largest grape vine in the world. The Main stern . is .thirty inches in circumference, nod 110 feet I long. The branches cover' thickly. a space of .72- sect long and thirty wide,. and it has borne 2,500 bunches of grapes in one season. ~. •' *hen tltis palace was occupied by Wool 7 .; so,' he had 800 persons in his. Suit,• that . _ is set ‘antS. So you may judge of its 'vastness; for thestyle of living 300 years ago did not require the amount of labor it hoes now.:' in its day it was the most splendid palace - in . England, but now it is surpassed fin beauty: t,,, by quite a nutnlier.. Eaton Hall is a intu.th ' finer edifice in type ranee, though the land about it is not qui so fine. _Hampton Court is filled with . paining . and i .'_itulpture,• and many royal relics: - : That Is all -it is • itsed • 'for now. During the days. o 'Henry 'the eight nod Queen_: Elizabeth:o s palace was the Royal Residence, but it l i es not been :'used' !for that for more - than 100 years . , ', .-Windsor Castle haS now takenL its plaee.• This is - a great country to look uPori; ' for Wealtk and age_ have erected here their. MonuMents. - Every incident i. __ ./ niugton .iS frill of interest. That plain,. Immo superior ity of mind which distinguished him atioVe all other men, ' evident in all ehis. actions Patriotism, Chastened by -sound judgment carefill tlviught, prompted. all Isis public acts, and , made them examples for'„the study and guidance of mankind. It has, been said ;That no one con have the -shortest interview With.a truly great man, withoat.being, made sensible 'of his superiority. -; Of I tiori:rmauy, who have some way. earned __ the title of,great,: - this is by no. means true. Its .applicability ‘ to the. character of. Washington is - verified . in. the following interesting circumstance, related by a correspondent;of the.; Charleston Ciourier:' tt "I was resent, says is . correspondent s i 4 When .General Washinggave his, : l t. .Vote. It was in the spring of : ,1799, .; in the . spn 14;4 in , _the! 4 1 .0X 1 A 11 4filt• Ile died the..ltth .of 1:444F „fellowl'4., The ,e4 l -Igo loll i9 Fairfs4 l a9uPtY.- . ;v 1 . 3 4.4 1 0 - .4 OVer . : tike. nwlr,o .honseila,d„lnetrzedletely fronting 61 .4 6 3 4 . Pr!Pro;li The OtrWrAtiDio • jtovvby,,,tt....slight.tlight.ofcrazy4t lrw , wn the • - •1 election ins= . - 'nogress . 4sereritthet*lrds of person in : the court-house . yard. and itnmediate neighboring street; and.' I waik-siandintr on Gadsby - 's steps when the Father - of hls Country. up, - and the 4urt-heuse •.steps; Wndwliew 'within a yard or two of them, I saw eight or ten- good: looking :men, from different ,direetions, certainly withoutrthe least concert, spring simultaneously, land : i place - theniselves . in position]to uphold an'd support 1 the steps should . . they, fall in the general's': aseent : .of . I,sras . immediately back, an d-in that position entered the 'court-. - house; with hi tn—fellowed i s hiS Wake - throagb, • • a 'dense crowd to the iolls—heard -returned with - him to the outward:: crowd • .- - -heardlirm2clteOred by niorelling and pectoris as be:entered-his' carriage? -and saw his departure. • - There were five or enididates - o - tr the bench sitting; and as the General apprOn'cbed them, they. rose„in . : a. body and. bowe d ! smi- I lingly, - and the . salniation :haying bee? . • turned: verrgincefidly,, the General, inatnedi-_. ntely.cast. his ,eyes-: towards 'Ate registry of the polls; when Colonel (L::think• . Was) said ;"Well, Gener.rl,- . hOW . do•yeu:vote I" , The General looked at the :eandidatet, and.. said--" Gentlemen, I vote - for' measures,- not - . I for men ;" and- turning to the, recording table, audibly pronounced .h is vote---4aw. it entered -made a graceful bow and retied ." • -•- A Refactory Judge. JudgesElrnore, of liatisas,'is jtiSt the' . thorn ni.the President's , side that gives him much trouble. Elmore was aparticep crinai nis With Gov. Reeder in bi - s Indian land...spec- - ulations,•and as ;Reeder Was litheaded 1.5 - at he won't stay dead,- Reeder died ; with out. ,a tiOti dr+, but Elmore- is' 'gifted' with' nuric tenacicius vitality, and tefas - es "-AO ac knowledgiithe authority of the- aNe • Whetted ' for, his decapitatiqp or, in_ wirer' went% 'denies " the President's right to. remov him.. from. hi's 7 J udOship and its concomitant emoluments. 11? has written a letter ti.) Attorney I, Gene ral Cushing, stating that he has tint - .violated - a single law of Congress, that under tivo Kari sas Nebriiska ,Act 'he 'belch his office. four years, and therefore respctfully,deelines to con, • - sider himself removed: Wedon't.know-what .President Pierce .will;d9 in thls emergency.— His authority is denied rind:right to,remove defied by the intractable fiansas .fuLlgc. Be sides, Elmore. is liked'-in Kan is, and his course sustained by the people of the I.'4rrito ry,'and if the President persists inhaling Lim removed, he will incur the enmity. of the vo ters of that future - State. What, will he do-t . . Jur. The few Whig papersthatbelie,ve the: - , old Whig , party -si.ilt - 11 ve, ate :tnakingan \ions inquiries after the Whig. State Central': t..'oin- , mittee and want to kuow whetherAliere is to he any_ Whig State Convention held tins. tear. . They express lively fears that the Cotnipittee Know Nothing'. ' The Was . hiugton .Cononon tecuith says:- . - . -.-. - , There is certainly something - wrong ... .sornewhere - ; -our -State Central 4 .. ...A .- urimitteere pedectly. 4)(111 - Threat or have .betrayed and - sold the Whig party 1' ' We "should reiTret to believe. tlyit this - were true—but, judging :.. from' the, upp'earanoe of things, We eau scarce- . iv y come tou'hy other,com,:liisiOn."' . • To which, the Lancaster - Eratr,iner • adds • - t i as th ough it Spoh.e - •nowingly : 1 : "The fears of the - Commonwealth are ' doubtles too well f tided.. The AdminiAta. don- and the State Central . Committei3• hate . evidently been guilty of treachery to the 'Whig .party not .suroused in; infamy -.by" that .of . ' John Tyler or Bendier Arnold, .- History will, class . them alrin. the smile catdlogn.e .of trai- ' tors.". .. • - .- -• cROSSING . THE working, en`►ineer addressed a letter upon a subject of a . invention. Of an extraordinary character. lle claim. te . have discovered a new motive poker which will waft, a .shi p across the Attuntic:Ocean in thief,. dais. ..11r.,Ross wants *OOO to i get .a ntod el for our people. Wejeok opon the state ment of.*. Ross. as a lfaintittg.-' . However, if he succeeds in pimping; amount of money .out of the Boston people on , so: pre ' posteroul a propositonne tilenbove, he will' have ticqunplisheti amore diiikult task than crossing I the „ocean In three days. What does Idr.lßoss say to the resistance' of the writer against a boly passing through it at the rate of forty-twamiles hOurt_ Pshawi 11.1 r.. Ross is a marrinc.., , - hates of Self-Governnient. . By dpiilent.oo - oenoenian.—Always sit next.tollie'earven if Volt can at dinner. Ask no woman her-nge.' Be civil to rich uncles and aunta. . Take no notes or gold with you to a fat ey . -.bazintrnotiting Your oldest hat, Of 'oeurse, for an even nn 'party. • : Don't play chess With' a - Widow. Never contradict a man who stutters:,. Make-friends with[the steard on, board . a Steamer—there's no -knowing. how" nowi . rig. how" soon yeti may .1.1 placed his:- powet. Tu every - strainze house it's well to inqiiirb . where'the Brandy is kept—only think if yeit_ were taken:sick in the night. ' • ..47(.41r-Your own . secrets,- ell no human being yOu'dYe yout; whiskers. - ... • Write' not one-ipore - letter than you can. 'Theroan who.keeps'ttp_a huge .e.orre'7 pondenee is.a inartyrlied, not to•the stake; I but to the . post.. - —'• - - Wind . up . .your conduct, like your watch, once cvery,daY,,examitiintr ti -whether" you. are !faseor - . Row. iit*Dis.cOntent, kW aces 'inuelt• of oui'dis-. comfort, oloar irtiprovemeat. If Plato • . • . • had (tailed man ati• bipt!d, • • bao dAed Inagoitas.tral - his . Tooi,ter. : danitfk - .111, would liars pOurd . • • . . - santztAttnivi?:' Qreparing to settle in .liavjug bei:otne 4.1-gusted Kith Of:Siat,e, oliitianary troublii br111006.1. . . 1:41" Rev. lkir.-*aith,.an Episcopal Mlssia a6- Africa, has aie4 . at Citpe " ratee," said _a y4ting lady, bldok de . cli4Cious for s:tie ; I could . mitFopne• " NVtiv,". armed Fier mother. '`.Ur. G i too rtiticicst to to I`. - could fill a it ~lriiil' tibelatlition .14 gliestiod per wotit(tiiaii it , '\'' • ' Religious Settees , The nostannuat nivotingcif the-Susquehan na:Association will- he l hold lit. Clifford Coin- era: on, the,. first Yilednesday , and Thitraday (.Ard and 4th ) of CiotobOr nO,xt: • E. GVllASOndisir-040- .—John Ross, a IV° n tre4, has nyor of ,Bio.stonc