. , earch ; .you dill find . .more bacikert hank notes the cotta4es •of ..the laboring . • poor than anywhere else. And these, 'Miserable Shir . i_ . rlasters, where,are they P ~.After the_ Itviilo tha of-1831, laborers were glad . to oGtatt► eniployment, on any terms; and they often ,upon -the express condition. that should ',accept this'. worthless- - trash in ravment. Sir, an entire' suppression- of bank note; of a brier . denomination than value,pfone week's *ages of the lateg trian,liedabsolutety necessary for his prf, Re'ou,ght always - toreceive his war- f.n.ts in gold and silver. Of all then on earth; ti:e lahorerla,thast interested in _having a s tied and Stable currency ;' ?'he ,soU rind state the' ,currency -will !7,7..ne:finather most happy effect -upon the la-1 man,j He . will receire his wages in ' silver;ld and and this mill- induce . hint to y up; fox future-use, such a portion . them spare, after satisfying his. iminedi oe wants. • This he will not: do at present, be.linsehnknows- not whether the trash which be is.compe . lied to_ receive as money, will-continue to be of any value a Week or a niontlihereiifter. A knowledge of this" fact :e'rids to banish economy from his dwelling,..l and induced him to expend 'all his . wa,geNns ra l Pialtas possible, .lest .they may: becom e Worth ear. on his hands. "'Sir, the laboring classes understand :this subje.ct•peffeetly.. - his the hard-handol and , firm fisted min y the country on whom i ive mnst.rely in the day of clanger, :Who hie Ihe riiiist friendly to the passage, of thin. it is they With ale the most aidemly in'faVor of infusing into the ,currency of the con, ttv a; . very large amount of the . 11reciuus nra- Os." • • • .• i • ,; • Since the delivery of thi:tspeech the - ilenilent Treasury 13ill has been in rat : tit...al for ten years, ar.d. worked so a:thni vahly that no party at this day, .and no ,con, sid . crable body of men anywhere of jeots •to its provisions or profess a desire to .111),"2;ii, or' change it. "Et: has saved thousands of ba,-; men fin Tuin, and protected' .of thousands of laboring men froni the ellocts of revulsions which would' othereise have thrown them out of employment- Mr. ,Tha • chanan could have given no better evicfence of the possession of great 'political sagacity, than bistearnest advocacy of this great meas. pre.at Olat early day, The• soundness of hid Siegs an 4 the, wisdom of his conclusions have been clekTrOven by the. unerring' .tests of, . time and experience, and the, deeper all that . *pertains to his course upon 'this question is agitated by the opposition .and investigated by the people, the more popular, will .he be collie, and the more thoroughly will he be:. Applaudi!d by all right' thinking men.—Pcnn- Lsy/vanian. ' • , ' • t The Lancgter Examincr published 'the home of Mr Buchanan, an . 1(1. Whig' ' paper, 'holds Clio following language in refer ence to our distinguished candidate : We know the man as•one Of our most re.; spec ted citizens-:--a gentleman of unblemished personal integrity and unusually agricable, inamsers in his social intercourse with all Classes.; . • We:know. him.as the friend 'of the poor widows of this, city, who, when the piercing Masts of each- suceessive winter brought: shrieks of cold, and hunger, and want, in the frail tenamenta of poverty, .-zoull apply to ;the Buchanan Relief .I)onation' for their ,an, n . supply of wood, and sitting down !with . their orphan children in the. el:eeifiii warmth of a blazing ffre, lift their hearts in silent grattitude to God, and teach their little ones to bless the name of Janes Buchanan.— As a 'Citizen, a ineighbor a frieia l . ---in a word, a's siinPly James Buchanan, we` yield .to ;man ire the measure of ;Or respect and es teem. Filial:Pere Ratification Meeting in Philadelphia. _ ,PEEILADELPFIIA; July 2-10 P. M. , Ayerilarge and enthusiastic Fillmeri rat iAcation meeting-vas held on Independence `square to-night. Four stands were erected for speakers, at the principal of which Henry White, F,sq., presided, and .loliu T. Sander frson, David' Paul Brown, and John Carlisle, of '"Virginia,tddresSed the multitude. )George - W. Read, William, powers, and others, spoke ' st the other stands. Large 'Fire at Cambridgepart, Maw. • BosroN. July 2„1856. Abcint midnight a fire broke out in Cam , bridgeport, destroying the Wharf of Grale,Du4 ley 45; Co. with a larze quantity of lumber:— Tfieir loss is about. e;40,000. The stables' of J.. Bright; the grocery. of J. Purrnge, and ,the .segarfactoiT of llowlett; ivere * also de stroyed. Two 'fire engines were burned. All othe,firemen escaped' withdificulty, some of them being-driven-overboard: No lives were List, The . Straight Whitt of Mum BQSTON July 2. 1836. The Whig State Ceatral Committee; in sea r s • lion at the American House to day, voted to call, a State Convention, of the Whigs of Itass achusetts, to be held in Boston, on the 3d of September next, and in the: meantime to is sue an address to the people. Hon. B. WintbroP, Geo. S, F. Curtis • Esq., Judge Warren, Hon. Seth Sprague, George F. Cur , ti;i N., Hon. Geo. Lunt and others . spoke 'before the committee, all urging the necesiuly of keeping the .übig party intact in the pres ent crisis, and advising a "masterly inactivi ty" in regard to Presidential compaign, so far as the expreission of any prefercucel for candidates is concerned. . ; - Democracy at a Premium. - 'The New York Tribune 'dwells with cm . phasib on:the fact that Col. Fremont has ney '•:-er 'Viten ariythii4 brit t Democrat, and, thinks this-eircumstaneeikes him stronger on' the cannily than Mr.Buchanan,masmueh ins he 'wait* n time .a federalist. We are gratified (says the Union) to see even the - Tribune paying so high a compliment to Democracy. It was only a few years - ago that the. Tribune • considered it an unparilon al;leiolitical sin, to he a Democrat; now, ho'werer,Detnocracy is so good that ley . looks for all the high effwers of the gof , eminent among those - who cart claim' the lion or. of -haying 'been "Democrats. The differ , eueelbetween Mr. Buchanan and Col: Fremont on this iioint: is riot - more "striking , than, the contrast: between their: respective qualifica tions on the score of ability, etperienee, wis dornamblic_serrice,-and statesmanship. Mr. Buchanan - was a :Densocmt alien' Col. Fre tenni had just •escaped from his - siraddlir.g pi:other, and r ahat deserves to be specinlijr no- Jed, a I,hat Le is n Demzerat yet. -Cot Fre )4oll:started out a Democrat; hut, as good r, , . :a:thing as -- Demeeracy -is, he abandoned and heeame'a Black-Republican, at the ,very' l tine - 7rhea_ the fidelity of all Democrats ' aeeded to preserve - the Integrity of the Con-, ititutionand the Union. - Mr. Buchanan btar - 'ted bat .more than thirty years ar) got right, and has-remained so ever since.-- ..0014nanont - started right; but bae.kalidnnd -- - tot %%Tang, 'and is;nowarong. • Mr. Bu -ehainn lqurtFoleadistrt 4 na embraced Dem , - 9erai7. CoL• Fremont .quit Democracy'. and - atethtu.:44 Fedentlimilitnit Black Republican sins combined. Yet the Tribune dwells as his liading tezotqmenaation. ,, —Readinp Ga• • outrost giemotrat. . , 1L LARGEsT cincutattos NOKTltElrai E. B. CtIASE, Eutrog: GEO. A. ORASE, ASSISTANT. ".40iitrose, Thursday.. July 10, 1856. * * *"'NE ARE ALL. Egtur, nErcirm GOD AND TUE. CONSTMITIOti. " --James Bkhanatt. • Democratic National Nominations von JAMES IIUCIIAN 411 A•linsylvania • FOR VICE PRESIDEn, ' JOHN C• BRECKENRIDGE, of livitucky. Democratic State Nominations: . . } L on cas4 commissioNen, GEORGE SCOTT, of Colu►nbia County. FOIL AUDITOR owsratra:. JACOB: FRY, R., of 3fontgomery -. Comfy Mr' MI Cotntnonieations, A.lvertisentents, 'and Notiensannyiliind, must, to; receive 'an in sertion, be handetin on %Vctinesdays by 10 A. M. .131::n1; Deds, Ltases," Dintraets, Bonds, Mostgages, &c., constantly On haFnd at this•offwe. .We also give notice that we will fill any of the i• above iw,tromonts at charges so: moderate as to Lprove a saving to those iwving, that kind of bust '. nest to -be done.- • --- - - - ' Arir We are regnested to call attentionAo the agency of Mr. Blowers ad‘'ertiseil r' Mn; CITA4ES . 1.110 Imper sonator; gave the.citizens or this place a rare treat Al his impersonations,'Of some ,of , the great American, and European Orators on Tuesday evening last. , : * jr 4 r Martin Van Buren is out with a long letter in favor of Buchanan. t Read the extracifiom Mr. 13uchan an's speech on liar first page On the laborers ofthe country. This is the speech in which the Whigs charged him of finsingthatwAgei should be reduced to ten cents a • clay. ° You • can judge from the sentnucnt whether he ev - er said so. • kV" Two young lads were drowned at Gt. Bend last Monday week, while bathing in,the river. . , • . •=ll=T l gam- A young, man ,nanied Casswell, :in Fork Like or Middletown was acchtentally shot last week and almost instantly euis.that his gun was discharged as lie was in the , act of taking itlfroin the pace where it Was standing in the mean; the ball enter.; his-forehead,,;. Wehave . .: not the partica7 lan, and only are what we learn from ru tmot.. IM=M jrs' No very, serious 'Accidents occnred here the. Fourth. A little son of Mr. George liter had his face somewhat badly burned with powder, but we believe is not seriously 'injured. Brooks was brendlit into Court for trial for beating. Sumner, one - day last- week, but the ease. was postponed at the instance of Mr. Sumner's ceunsei on the ground that Mr., Sumner was not able to appear and tsti • fv. llerbert, the Me.mberlf Congress who allot the vaitcr at Willard's IlOtel,in Washington, has been-indicted by the Grand Jury for mur der in the first degree and committed .to jail for, trial. If about one half the members of this Congress were with him it 'would be bet ter for the country. ar Vs mP. Stevens, F.q. - of ll~ . ile Park, Was abet and instsntly killed near that village one alernnon Ile was riding with a Mr. Jones, When some one stepped into the road behind the carriage ;and fired a load Of . buckshot; several taking effect in the body of Stephens. The horse' took fright acid ian, preventing Mr. J. froth seeing by whom the bbot was fired: Three men have been arrest ,ed,exanained and committed to Jail at . Wilks barre one of whom bad !threatened to shoot Stephens on,, account of a diffictilty about some land. We believe,iMr... S. formerly re sided in the Eastern part of-ilits county . Normal School. We invite - particular attention to the com munication of the County Superintendent of Common Schoi)ls teldaY. We are right gratified thatidr.Tewksbury has taken this thing "..b'y the bums." -If the people will now back blm up with the prop er encouragement, a resolution .in the educa tional-interests of the county may be effect. ed, Let a school, exclusively: for 'Teachers, be opened, Where the teachers ,ofthe county may be user:Aled for'the one objeet of prep =film for their duties; and there let them bend all 'their effernies•in the work, of a.c - ' P . tete disciPline.' In this way . system may be arrived - at that w4revolutionize our hi th erto unsystemized method of teaching. ItNeenaS to us that the great considerations in this enterprize,-are a good recitation room, and ateapness of board, and we would urge that somo responsible persons, kt each of the 1.-places owned in the Corneae ideation, should I immediately take thi matter-in hand. Let there ben little competition between the plaees 4osig,nated, for it certainly is a very acquiiition.to any place, to . have this School located in its community. Ad ditional-to the routine of the School; and as fOrher inducement to the public in the vi- Cfnity its loeation, we would suggest to the ,SuPetittindent; that:t r io should • . provide for st leaktit:Me public lecture, each ~,ireek, competent speakers On scientific antiects. In arranging for 'board we would-- suggest o a t farmers _ liberal:ay consulted in the immediate rielaitz,:,as Imre no doubt -that they would , add materially. to "the in ducements. 1 ; . • , - Friends of take hold of this , matter earnest. Put 'the -plow • into the old pasture lot; beam deep . ' and turn it 1:p In Jail,. from the bard pan. It, has. been cropped on the surface till - it yields but little save milk weeds Mad 'pennyroyal. Rip it all - up, tear out tho old atumps" - by'tbe roots and. trim up the Young timber. Then sow good seed, harrow It in: deep, and you Will get a decent crop. Shall it, be done Tlie'roarth. We have no reports •of the various--cele brations about the county, thougliWe bear that the day was generally observeddln the different townships. • . In Menu.* we had a Fireman's parade and dinner. , Fountain Uose Company; No. 4 of Ilingliamton; paid us a visit—a company Of first rate fellows. They made a fine' ap-, pearance, were received with a, most hospit able welcome, and left highly pleased with, their visit. The parade was well ordered, and the torch light procession in the evening splendid; Of the dinner we cannot speak not. being pre.Aet4 At 4 o'clock a company sat down at a ta ble prepared in . Searle's best style, disenbsed "_the good things of mine host," and honor ed the occasion with appropriate enjoyment. . each,l to the benefit of the Seheel It. m o st i also - he understood that no; spOulation is to I intrude upon its interests ;and Oat theleach-i . : Ms in atlendance am to haVe their . board, Ali el, ruoin,bed &c., (those who CIO-tiot choose lo furnish themselves) at the nett+ cost at t ci t,st,' to say nothing of a .leatietion In their favor; And it must be further! . utidiffstood that thiS is a special arringe - mMit fir the benefit of the Common SehoolS of tlei County.L-thit its interests are net !to be 1)1)kt - id 'or woven in , I ' • -. ' , With the interests of any It i istit; l ll ion of learn ; • t ' ' -. , • .1 , ; ,i : .., t • . c le f,. airieolv in -existence ` —tna it shall he A .trenientiotts ratification Mee(ing WaS i r". . -, ~ . i _ 1 ,- , 1. separate :ttitt oistinet f ron t', ev e ry . ot her inter heldtin l'hilatlelpitia last week by the friends of Mr Filltrior;t.i - It is said that: 1 largos Inee6mvs esor held in that city.— i be * • it was one of i I. anti at the . end of tae, Itekn, cease to . .. , I . 1 the ts . t And now I invite all, Whether '-frterel ,- e - or.. :I • - 'After asossion of - seyentecu hours the Senate, ; 1l the Wleg Iressess in PhiladelpliM sup- ' ~ leachers, desiring to atteed, to inform me by last Tuesday !morning, passed Mr. Toomb's I, peit.Mr. Fillrottre,e‘ettpt tlte,„North AMeri can . o . s not fairly decided. ' 1 letter f - tin it desires and prof verve:; Bill for tho adMission of Kansas as a State. - 1 and that as yet • 1 The leading! foatprei of the Bill are as fol. 1 , Th i s maiisa‘eii setts st,4tt . l _ ll 4, ll l,e,.. a ii'' c oil : - 'lt'et till act - iinmedititily, •prienptly, Mid loam. It repents the acts of the Territorial LW , - ', en,ergeticaliy. There. are lot:it:ivies to be Log- : vention broke - tip in a. rosy. On the •Vote. for - - islature, suStainingelavery, and making \ita pen- ,i , _. , , I ~f . - overcome, whielt must 1)(11' . stitimotiited. The al oftense to Write, print, &e., - against it. -It I noun:tit 1 rem?nt . itto (se more volt .t s than ..--, ' Catintion School - interest 'Of Srsquelittinin C0., - tdsolishes the Territorial Legislaure and places . Fillmore, and tliere Wlisi some thirty scatter innA,assiime a higher p l ositton than it has [ ' ~,- the people under the protection (tithe . United 'mg. The next..aliot gave Fremont a major- t . o l rileriy . o,.:cilpio. i I .. . ..., ity over asp'i'll'll, any sp'i'll' one hundred Fillmore .. the 'iris has cOCanto wh i l States authorities It provides that five eon:- e' t i e:it:hers who are mis,sioners shall be sent there inune.diately to deleg:ttes ce.ee4,l : and put their - faVc4iite in barelY allmel of their pupils In qualifwations take - n census of the Territory and record. the nentination. lint the old Tiziv.StaL• down for lit Itst " . siop:krep i, v s.cliotitiallii prepare tilerii. m nae of every actual settler. Copies of the . lt uc h nn an. ! . • • • I I• I 1 , soles: fur the grent work of t":aching., Yes . , L names of all the voters at each poll are to be - - A Into; Fillinore rneetino• Was held itt . furnished to the Judges of theetinn, who are not n • ; • `-' . 1110,411 TEAclitso - -:tecrehiny that shall 'rake tse - ' ranton last wl.tek . It, is said thatithc Fill ta receive any vote ; not recorded; and in order the budding intellect " lido tic and blossom more vote in Li ..t.trzie county will be!large. that every man entitled to vote may be recorded, • • as the rose"--:that. shall eto the child. as , . the Commissioners are directed to visit every Put down lit chanan's majority at ! . 511,900 . thud magnet to the need l e —lnttract him . the election District after the census is coMplete, for in Pcnnsylvan4. Nothing less, . . . tn4inent lie come; within 016 p:tie of its in -1 - . the purpose of correcting their li . StS and additirr the , _ ._, fluOtee. Thetis What We w ant, and what we ' • • Frem!)111 ' in- Cottgrevi... • any who may' have ,been overlooked. And' in order t hat-al I free Slate men who have beer. Everybody is o ever heard a EtiPublican - - 7!+ 1 . 1 / a Pe before our school will satisfy _•, L driven out of the territory by the . disturbances,- spt , jik, nitist.hare heard the orator grow fin i- parents, or meet the W. MS l of the Coming, 1 may h ave an . opportunity ,to vote, it provides oils over the ex?-tenee . of Slave' yin ;the Dis- n ''' l l" 7 '.lti°l'• - _ , that they shalt be entitled to vote if they return trict of \Columbia. Indeetl,it..has eygr been a .._; : 1 tarford, to the territory by the first of October next. No cardinal - princittle of' the free-sailers'' that in other persons to be entitled to vote unless they the Distriet. %Odell is under the ex cl us i ve ju- ;t : - :To; now reside ia the Territory. No tax is requi- risdiction• of ;Co' ogress, slavery 0,0,,,ia iiel . -...i The ' T ,,,, Presby le site as a enalifieation. • I !:,=-..... - - On the da y that the Presidential election shall abolished. 'Nis - has been one of lit 3. main i T ,„ n ( 1 1 , - t fe e ' , _ VfaS, the iiipillar; the:ellititte, one of the ' - 1 9- inciFil 1 Satiree of eons diversity" of pinion and more he held in the States, an election is to be held in itetits ' in their istock of trade. Now. hey have,l .! - ..., e enitat;ton than prafit.l Tiet Speaker him the Territory. for Delegates to meet and Comm a Fretnont as the embodiment, of their priori- I Self, State Constitution, which is to be presented to - was almost anYthing else but. prt.,-passess ples, and we lill look at his •J . - eeord very , i ir. ', ! .. Congress in ..December, anti-on that Constitution in nppearanee, and Ibis ssurned airs, and . they are to be admitted as a State, without ref- short - though. - ft iti. lii I Zit:l, he w4s - elected.. unnaturaltone of vo i c e] would on th e s t ar t ' erence to their population.'. The Bill also pro. f to.the trnitall - StatesSanate, served ;the short P L- rejudice anintelligent au lone against him ride 4 for a milli:lent military force to protect-flit I term and ftti4sl of re-election. • 'I ~ . 'We went, with the ex ion of hearing- a. [ballet:boxes and the people.. - . I - We give these leading features of the Bill as • Brreferring to the Congressiennl Gilobe, ii . temperance lecture, bin. his dodgide- off on vol 2, part.-2,, pal -, e-1 - 6,50 we firid - tha-Con - the - lte shivers question was a dead! setTcr, and we gather them from the debates and let ter rrri- 19th `dal' . off September 'lB5O, Mr l'l,ti le .moYed - ' - . . . • • the suppressed bosses irt flit 'trent. • parts of Th e tent. We have sent for a copy in fell, anti hope . • I • t to re-con4it a Ilia - referring toj runaway ' room, showed that it rqttired. but a 'erenth II to lay it before our readers.next week. •It re- , ' i • District of C lumtill to the ceived eveiy Deniocratie vote in the Senate.• Its I Sla v e s ' 9 '',.'e .:9 I , i's'e create-one general blursti.of. indignation.-- pa passag,e by the Ilouse is deemed a certainly.. cortenittq on the District of COlunpitt, with The nominal lecture . th'iouiltout,. was on the ' Thronghoet the %hole debate on the Bill, a instructions to report a Bill abolishing Slave-. I 4rineiple of loss cumni l ng ler "nigger wit," 1.. most commendable spirit of conciliation and cont. ry, in snit District. Ou this Motion the Yeas heriginal arguments were, m erely l nothing, the . . 1 premise was manifested,—indeed more than We and Nais tvere c a ll e d as follows. i t II anecdotes were stale; losti. ofthem7 we ~ had have seen in Congress tbe past tWo years. North ' YEL4 , ntidTdn, Ciln•v, Davis! . f mss--. ;:heard when . mere sc oo I! nrchint and the ' . ..and South r -I-all seemed animated with the one ij .- odgelof Wis., Ewing, little, Hamlin, Seward ! ! - FtltiOpian zest With w ich he got them • oil purpose °idol:yr jus ti c e to Kansas and her pea i ' : I cn and Winthrop. ' . .. - ! ! 1 ' would lead one to - believe he had taken les pie; From the synopsis ;of the Bill we cannot •• , e . et sas. Messrs Atchison, Dallier, -Darn r . t L ,„ 0 , 3s of Sands° . in.,' iliggor tOitnicey' ." ,' The see any valid objection to it anti we have not , km on, rl ; ,, t.., , Cass,Coop- t slave drivers of Ahe least doubt that, should it become a law, a s :`"l l ii rmi r' t 13 •" 1 ' Butler,. ' • --' . ' ' thefionth, 1 the Xanms' . (itie . .4.7 . itProbably will, its provisions, faithfully execu- er, glay, Davis of Miss, ;Dantson„ .' Dayton, tion, the mock praye4; (ultered as . they: Were, led, Will restore harmony eVerywhere. So far Dieitn.Son, Dodge of lowa, DouglisS, Dawns, !:on cousecrated groind,) Would seem 'to do as we can see, every possible . guard is thrown _' F eitilr;.Foote, FREMONT, Gunn, loustort &C, almost anything else , h:Mt. avor the catiSe of -.4 lb,. -;„ h t.,,, of t h e de of' the territory. 1 .41 in all: . '- - . `I ' lemperence.' The so -If _ rent repetition of . . _ And so the day wore pleasantly away, at togthcr furnishing occurrences for few re gretato anybody. All seemed cheerful, hap py, ftiendly and satisfied. an early hour 6f evening the stietts were quiet, and each went his way, undoubtedly feeling that after ' all, ours is the happiest, the freeit, and the best government on . 'earth; and; feeling a stronger -determination'than . ever, to do in their power. to perpetuate these bless ings to the latest posterity. The Karon..it Bill Paioed by the Sell= aroun. peopi It striVei the axe at the root of the tree., by overturning the wrongs inflicted through the Bakes Legislature, and placint in the hands of the pmple, with ample - -protection, a full and toinplete remedy for their.wren,git; giving them the fullest opportunity for'Constrnetinert govern meet that Altai] reflect their own wishes. We believe this is all any reasonable man desires. 3 proposes to restore the Missouri Line. Al that is asked 14 that the people of Kansas shall be permitted to enjoy their rights as Amer iean eitizerecand that. they should have the right of forming,.their State government, with rut me leetetion froth abroad. This the Bill just pass ed the Senate gives _them in the broadest and amplest manner. The unconstitutional and bar barous Acts of the territorial Legislature, by it, are repealed, so that liberty of speech. freedom , of the press ; freedom f discussion, are us amp. ly secured there as anywhere. - The house Bill' alinitting the territory with the Topeka Constitution, first voted down, was finally reconsidered and passed by three majori ty, some two or three Democrats changing theii . xotee. : . This Bill, however, cannot pass the Sen ate. Even the Republicans are IVA - unanimous. in its favor. Several of their leiding members voted against it, and the New York Times, one of their molt influential journals, is against it.' That Constitution was adopted last fall, and probabty not one half of the present settlers of Kareas had iuy voice in its adoption.. Besides, it was not adopted. under color of any law, nor by the authority of any legal power. It was. merely the work of a political party, and te sanction such a proceeding in constrecting the fundamental law of a State. would sanotion mob violence and anarchy. Suppose for instance that that the pro.slavery party of Kansas had held a convention composed wholly Of its -own members, nobody else taking part in its election or prottedings, had adopted , a constitution ad mittinislavery and applied to Congress for ad mittanee, as a slave State, with a slave Consti tution. Would not every, reasonable mind're... colt at the grossness ot \such , a proceeding!--. And yet we, should teeolleet that the pro-slavery party of Kansas have the same right to lake, such a coarse to make it a slave State, as the . free State men have to make it a free State.— This is a government of law,—the only-4fety for 'anyb Ay is Within the protection of the law, and so of any interest. ' Under such eireumstan. ees it is evidentthat the House Bill/besides the dangerous precedeut . it would eoblish; should not be passed. Even the free State mea of Kan. ass who-had nothing to do WA forming the To peka Constitution bad Sll'her have their views and wishes consulted ittttaing the 6ranic law of future S:ate, y)111!e another -iargo a ass • • ~ „• 7 ------, •' ------7------- --- 1 would revolt at har)og u Constitution forced 1 up. on them With the 'fitrtaing . of which they • have ; had nothing to do.: The quarrel Would thu4-on- I ly be kept open and aggravated. • : i i SuppoSe the floilsoßill:shouid. pass and ,'that the pro.slavery paty in Nebraslia should then I call a Convention, hdopt a 'slave constitution, and i apply. for admittanie. What excuse could those voting for the •Teli t elm 'Constitution - for Kansas offer for rejecting , them ? :None, for limy would i have•set the examiee of atjuiitting by revolution, and by their • oval . precedent they would: be 1 I bound. Such a thiarine cannot be tolerated one 1 moment. We mold go back to the root of the i evil, T rip up the whOle wrong from the foundation l and then - set it rigbt4 it has always been el:tim ed by the•free Stale- men of Kansas that , they have a large majoity in • the territory, and we have no: doubt the' have. Let us, then, have,. the Kansas troublps fairly Bottled—settled by the_ Peqp/e,fhentseltes, for no other settlement Will be satisfactory and Ming peace. This we believe the Senate Bill is Pesigned, to aezompligh in the most thorough *met-, and we therefore look for its Speedy pasitage by the Ilouse - . , ' • PoOticall Items. TlieNational "Council of Know Noiltings have been ; in . st.', , sitioti in 'Philadelphia the past week. TWenty-ihree States wet*, repretented A resolution iaOrsing the nomination 4 1 :of Fil more and DOnelion waSunanimonsly adopted. This puts an en 4 to-the question of Filinore's rawal. • • Th ft Massachasetts. Con%'.ention resolve.) to enclolrs'e t.o ,candidate f(a. Presi dent, but to vo4 as they preferred among the canlitlates - • ithir readers will thus see that! both Fre ,- in q nt and Dayton voted with " At.chismf,the boi•der ruffian,." that Slavery should be ,pro teeled under the national flag, And now these trin are the • nominees of this it sMaculate • ari-slavery party for President ; and Vice. President, over the heals of Seward, Chase, :tiid others who have stood, tip itt,d borne the, bnrthen in the heat of the II • . The truth is these nominations have been: Made without reference to the principles of ,the candidates. :They wouldjustlas soon, fiir as principle is concerned, lave taken Atchison as Fremont; if they haul; supposed: • grey could elect hiM, anti Cue Ispoils. 7 —tl indeed, Atchison's.' record on the, .Slaveryi; ..nestiOn Ss just AS free 'soil :is FrOmont',s • • both voted together in Imore ins:l l :l:t:ices • than: this on the slavery question, as ‘4 Shall sbOw I . next week. But Atchison has liever been brer .theltocky mountains and. fid •on hors. meat. •If he had mils , !lone that,l their histd.-. • . like their record would have shown a wort-. • tderful resemblance, and, we have no dquilit that they would at least have Pui.: the".'uor. l t ider ruiftian" on forthe "%gee. I A County Sc 11. The time has come whet filo :interests tf e, Common SelsoolS of Sioquelsannis county • gently demand that a county Norma: SchoOl:, be held forthe pOrpose of hettek . preparing far their. responsible ditties thisse teachers • • who Rrc to take :charge of them.' . That some should be.opened • . ithmediately is being urged by the earnest friends andanisiOus teachers in. every quarter. ,of the count/. This deldand Y .propose to meet the cOm•: . ing Fall/oetween the dosing of "the Summer Schools. and the time. for the examinations to coMMence, preparatory to the opening of the Winter. Schools. H / That a School of this kind must . Le Add seems to be " - finality"--trhe4s •it can be held so that the lomiton !school' interest May reap the greatest advantage therefrom, is a little more difficult to deters:a:l2e. That ;'it I • should occupy some central lotiality Will be conceded•by" all .: , Aird any onis looking. a round for such a would, being Itc - ; , qttaintnd with the eisuatj, • nattrally - select one. of-the following named pla4eS, : :rose, Newfilforit, • _Dimeck,l• •Tiarfor4, or • Ftrookis.u. . • . .Arid,l now propose to.the Ifriein4 :of 'the .f the iferaid.Ao; -make i: n slave State.. •In 1 ‘lifferent lo e alities-thatithey report 4o the itn , -7.1', - ilte. end the: people will•!llni, • if' they trust I m ediat4v what such Plaie 'May . ' lie'Ptble th do:: (this. party, the* they Will .be sitoply elleated,i . in behalf of BUC:11. a selihol, tp •" t.loritinite 1 ' for.:' into: bringing theold-Whig inirty'into , power . ten or eleven weeks, oOrom the lat?,er part of' underianotber name.. . • . , I August to the fore part of Neverribfr.." -I .... ! IlepOrt what- kind of Recitation hooinlean 1: .'.ED . I.TORILIeIf. 1 7410Ti*GS. •,- . . , L be furnished—what. apparatus, sifeßt as black]: It is Said that the app%le clop of . Pentisyl- . , . •1 I • ' . vainill be heavy ....The Mayor of: boards; maps, globes ik . e—lihw of * w veryea , • for the aceonimodatiOn of Te el 1 Washington, D. C., waslreeently attaeke.,l by a aceonitnodation for board, like. ts l lt drunken crowd, and severely, - though not 1 fatally injured .... . Ailviees from.,Texas •say all the : particulars,..possible 'to iy w • ence .tO It. , ' • It ; Must be distinctly understOo that lam to haVe. the exclusive managementi- and con trot of the educational course—HtliAt my time. is tc,berpent free of charge; to Ithe Teachers : —that what- tuition nt,ty . 2„le 41[4 rged -is to bring to My aid suish Teachcrs!as Prof. Stool dard, Prof. Davis, Prof. Clar i k, tt> d other-- all or the 'above named, given en-; couragement and promisedl that they will be present and !end their aid,* t 4ait one. week • 1, his " sailing seven throe; around the earth," many Whigs.' lie has barely obtained the beirr , captain at sea, S. E. 4 . W. constitutional. age (35) for . the office of 1 ice Sic. i 'displaye , l so!muCh-of the . cliaracter t ilresi 4CO;. t° which ho . been is, no office-seeker, bat a man of excellent 'of the,bragadocia and bombast;. as to', lead dignity, strong .domestic attachmenVs,.steadv one to :Believe that it was Mpre . lfor the ! exai- habits, and scum Would even Laden of great, 4 .1" and 14rhaps political pre- , " adorwthe Preiidential chair, It,is a goal, ferrnent,qhat belabors, than for the real good. sign, amid - all ; the . threatening. ones of the cht i l 4 l k_ tune.-, a -great excited political eonven-, of the T rll3 perence cause ) la • tion should so conliallv:Select two stic.h'niei if he hal any influence at all; it was in savor. for the first offices_ of. ..the nation CalginnY of runi,land , rowdyisia ; and would; therefore, Will find ii tt i o to feed on in the characters Of as- a fneild of Ternpereace, and himself, ad, these - - .vise him instead of spending a hUndred More nights in privation, and fatigue ; to stay at home with his fainily . li where he belongs, and. seek an honest calling t 4. support. his wife, and children : for indeed, the inducements to a man of ordinary. simsibility must be. very great, to the s:icred ties. that bind him - to a , tlear home, to tear himself from a devo ted wife, and children,_ and volunta rily spend a hundredl long nights, and : lone some days in a strawre I land. As the hat t o . was pawing around, ;we noticed a young lady' throw'[ina bo,l'itet.,in chatige : Wheal : es this Was done'in botioi-of - bis ~complitnentt hq, tugger'," of his repeating the meek' prayiirs, or giving tetnvereoco such on•the.lotticklw i welare i ttriztblo to soy. - Dr. E. F.WilZfoT. alas. GL Bend, July •14., The New York lleral,tl i*.otte of , the lead ing Fremont papers.; and. claiinito be hiss spec i - al organ. Last Thursday that paper in an article advocating F remlont , used the follow ing language itt veferenee to.liansas. " We hive alwayS contended---ns we now contend---that the Soul.; aro ontitl4d._ to at _ . . least an equilibrium of iower in die; Senate. They are—for the sake ; , f self-sustainin,g bul wark-of defence ; and for the Sake of peace, i they, are. This eltfilih tum of - power • tittft Jost in the admissiOn o California as a free State ; but ICansa 4 wi I, restore - it—sixteen slave States to sizt n free Stalks., f t et the ed golden-opportunitl ' y, theiefore, be appropriappropriate .,' ! Here then isl f one of ho lea.r.nfr ',Fremont papers of the cezintry, (4vocating the a ri min siim of Kansas ] as a 0 1 / a l i ve State. The people may depend ' t thatl . this Freixiont game is no more not less than a game roe pli, /dun, der. They care nothing about Itausas, only to make a hiie and; cry] . about. Greeley sup ports him to makeK:tras, a free . 500 A, and ny soma sera--}vhal i - -0., giylng 6 in Look Here. 6fijk. ih at s am H o uston will Iprobably- desert the • American party; and jotti the Democrat in support:of 140nm:tr... . . The lion. P. S. Iler tett, of CalafOrnia, has been- --comiuitted . to jail at Washington. for !die Thoin as Keating; on the Bth of May ; hat. May -or Wood of New York jhas wri(leti at letter: declining the nomination for 'Cl , oveklitir of that State.. —The .N. y. Courier staff'-that the total and partial ions of vessels St tring she . past .six inonths (Mats in value toathi -nn paralelled stfmof sixteen .f dollars . . ------ cry ....,.„...e .on. any ottua,..-, , ... .....The general committee of . the.. N.. York ; ken a severe oath,that.tio:getoverable, conk- Herds have so -modified their: call for a iti4tiou of even 'es-should keep r me *l# '''2 l -eia • . State Convention,.that both Herds and 'Sefts York through the Celobratit4 .. ..ef.lndePeitiiS -•. will meet at Syractise•On the • 30th inst.... A - ente day,..blit the .Fates Were againNtArgliftr u .- Correspondant writing-. •to thO .'Philadelphia 1 I had to endure it. The afiltir Went of mach, Pennsyli.anion, says ": the 'New York Herald in the stersayped - manner ;_it-: rained in the has lost 1000 subscribers in that.city since it mond ng;but mit enongt(to - materially: dam- - came out for Tremont:"- • At this late B eP' ige the . Military. • display, , which was - - `iery: , •• .. • 5 . , net will be able to supply the wants oe his flue. There- were Something like two: miles' pa\trons, - ‘it.ltout goilt , to 'the egpeir'er of pro of soldiers on• parade, cavalry, artillery : . atid .. euring a new steam press 1, .„ ,We learn, ty infantry,. arid titel; really, looked as i(in the the arrival of the Amprica,. that Lord Char .case,ef-,the threatened war with Johnny-Bully • .onden, declared in the House . of Lords that they might be able to astonish that respects the ministry, :would not advise - the di' 4 ni"s" l ble r ktintlenran" This city, When it . :4lr**l.: in • of Dallas .. : .1 i‘tv is, the 111-01 who inurderel l - itsholidity gear, looks very smiling and Ms , Johnston a few ryeeks since in. ItollidaYslturg y tractive ; partiCularly so. from the thousanda. ,ltas been arrested and imprisoned It is .i of flags which float from - the..staff-end spire, eurrently..reported that 'John vanbnrea. is rand mast in every direction.. .- The ships. in about to wed the only daughter - of John C..1-the harbor are net content. with Merely dfs- Calhoun . f.:, .The old! line Vi of Erie C0.111.,1;,.i„g. their colors and union-Ja4,l:oitt'lli4 - • I Pa., had a gatheringla.st week, and s ii°P.k 1 are dressed. in•signal flags and streainers,from '- hands over a common -resolve. to supp4t . the ' deck to main' truck—hot; 'American s_vesseli - Democratic ticket.: ~ .Lt. Governor . I-UttilYr only, but those of every 'nation Under the sun _ of Ke"tuelq_ died at his residence on. 'flints - show their respect.for.the great day of rejoic .day the 24th of June.. ..The American Press ing, by putting on their best array . ... -Tbe,city and Republican, of Lunerster, a .-whig. Parer • t-really looketinviting, and, to.' aperson.whe ..,. of much influence, in the county, is out i had not seen' the same thing tithe and again, strong, for, Bueltpnars.... A dispatch Trom St. 1 there would have been •no' - .-more interes t ing - Louis, states that Wm. Gay, the agent of the 4 place to spend ; a day.. Shawnee and Wyandoit Indians has: been .On.. great feature ryas ; the inangnratiOn . : Murdered by thew .--': ..The Russian war coat.'-ceremony : the new Washington Statute at England and France each $400,000,000...: I Ltnion Sitnare..., A . .. beautiful- addiesv Was Mr. Sumner is staying at the country resi- I made by Dr. Bethune; and 'other: tierfo' an of Francis P.- Blair, Esq., of Maryland Ices were'indulged in,. which .were - , sup . ... Yellow Fever Iris tiroken out in the • yis t o be appropriate, to the occasion. s- ' ' , eitiitY of New Orlenns, and many - -faririlies are • Thi- ien , ornanient . : to the city is really leaving for tlie.Nerth.:. „The life of: James.l admi rabic as a work- of art, arid, those; gentle -I - -Buchanan is 'immediately . 10 be. issued by men - whose private purse; paid. for :the - same . Dit by tir,-Jacksen, N. Y.., ..General- Tom. are entitled to all - hotter and praise. ThelTe-. Thumb has writtena big letter -to.Barnntri,l teran corpse of 1812 also went to the Sqtfare . . . offering his services in his,.the hour. of ad- -at noon, marched round the statue and. firet. versity ..:: ..A: ship to he named James ~B:ts.. a national salute in its honor,- - and.- this Tiirai chanan,is soon to be launched from theyard at all-;- not one penny of - the-money' apprOplia- - Portsmouth, New; flarnpshire..:.The old ted by the City went te.do'honor. -to'the only line Whigs of the Ashland-District:Kentucky. public work of art of which New York ' -can ~ have presented lion. J.C.Breckeuridge . a finei vet boast. Shame be to' the-Genital:4ooo- • .:. Coup span of horses, as nttiken of their esteem for : e a for. i t. . . . . ... , . . , . - him. They support' the Democratic ticket, ' - I think there ; wne•nOt ... the -: average amount . in thitt region Loa. : man. - - : .- --• of accidents this Year ; I hear-of :-.110 :deaths' • natchstinsis :mil Breekinridge. •: - -by poWder, and time ; hospital:" returns , shonr:`-. The Washingto'tVeorrespondent of the Rti--11 - • wonderftil diminution in tbe".trumber, pf•-• !)iv. r;tara 10corder writes thus of the Democrat- ken- heeds, find- trrielrirea , ' legs' andliinia, is candidates: . ' • Whether this is owing to..more care, sett man„ a bachelor of sixty five, not mixed4if:bet-- "James Buchanan seems to be . their tiro- , . : ,' -, .. .ter firearms,l cannot try. , • At-any: rate there. up with the modern strifes, long the - :catidi- '!s a Marked Impreriement . .-in.• this respect over date of Pennsylvania, lately pushed forward . - preceding. holidays. - Now• that the ugleriont with determined resolution, and with signal 4th" is oret,the.eity will-assutrio-again itacni- - saccess. He Bar goo .habkifi, a ' cleai Irend,a, ternary"lir of business-lilt - re- . steady firmness of mind, ; large-experienee,and -, ' • -. . lax its -proprkty- . again 'until 'New_ . : ' Year's; a hiish impartial spirit. ' He is a . Presbyteri an' , tlenominationallv, and 'a regular church- . Day.- . , . . . ....... ..„ . .. ;per. kind to ministers, and a D firm believer •By the arrival. -- or the' lialtio this•toomtur, ~, in.the necessity of religion 'as the copse vas aniiby the advtces per all the late - European tire element in the prosperity. steamers;of,their_repltb all' fears of war with - - land are tic. Johns C. Breckenridge is a young-Matt,: • , ~ . ,t _ • , - .. - .- ,.. • of a noted Presbyterian family of 'llentuelti;: se.. t . at rest; Inueed thern.has been-in this city ' ' . le , irlitiare a ira'ntison of a - former attorneyleneral.of no' eal anticipation of war , 'peep .- the - United - States, end • the ‘.-nepheyv: of. three Well informed on the: subject understand per - Presbyterian ministers, a'. memberof the ; la . st fettly•w_. well that all the war talk is • hierell:the Congress of Mr. Clay's district, voted foi Mr - • - -- • =EC= . . . . . . . . . ' - °six For Nen no FttnnriNt.---Mie.foll-iikw ing dialog'ne tool: place lately in, li6ston, in a speech inatle by lion.-1;: F. IlaHeti with an Abolitionist by the aatna Of Sweet : . ' - . Mr,' Sweet-- , No sir; Ido not agree' with that ; but are you.. in favor of freedom I fir Mallet—Yes, nll over.,:. • • ' Mir.. Sweet I thought that you-Were in fa vor, of Mr. liallet—That's another of your unhap py dehisions. Now. !e u§ - test:ts clamor of antili.-ansas men •abOnt,"freedotri".rdefitiition. Allow me -to ask, are you in faior 'of free dom? . . Mr:' Sweet— , rtainly I am.... Mr. lialiet are you in favor of •Freedonr - of tlie white people of liausas, Nebraska and Other Territories to . settle the quektion of slit- Very for themselvei . • , • • •" •: ... . 1 • s I Mr s Sweet—No,sir,.l . RW not. Nr.'l.hillt-414n you are not in- favor o White freedom, but only - negro, ' freVtioni ! This:is the test point, . . . - . • . 11-I.ACE: fol ip-wing expressions of itepittiiicirikinti i.beneennhot tni phcell -before Atie rebpie . too . . , i)ften.:. . . . • „ . 1 "The' Union iripor. worth supponingjloon. tiecti oti with ill o . So u i h."----iVeze ,l'ork ':rei- . . hune. • -- . . . . . , "Tile Constautton Is a ruproaelt And, a league. with 'l'ophet,"—Garriso4, "Sharp's:: [titles are better' than Bibles," 1 -- Rev: Henry Ifrard . Beecher. - I, "I,et the Union. slide."—.Y. P, Banfrg. ~ k The authors of these sayings - are all bril liant stars in the Slaeleltepublicantirrnatnent, !and of course n3tleet the viewl of the faction to which they are Attached. • I Ant: TITEN 11.1"1 , 00,1111i:S. - timi readers need inOt be reininded of 'the Jeremiads that have been said and sung, iu the spu!pit And . out of it, over the terrible blews struck:at freed - opt in the repeal, of the Nlissoori compromise;—' ;The Black Republicans Inlet in the Convert Li ,n, adopt what they call - a ' * Platform - but 'not plank,not event a‘splinter is there about jot retorationi Were all these crocodilo tears I a iniserable - sham • • 11.cti . - V,#l. :‘)!'t;:41,60.-ic..-t-. NF* s - 1956 Sii r ice s,attlowtt to iadite - criy last weekly epistlo2, the ry bole country l.has unaeriorie its annual p . uritieatioit by fire: •;•., The great gursi)owder testae l i,aa enven btua-ted Yankee Land has - . ci...acited its whiskerA with inpurnerable py rweclutie rtbsurditieF. 4th of .4uly in the is"-well enottg,h; ttigre i lhe gattint ,er some pleasant . . grov&. to heat..the: oration;, the dinner out. node, the treel; the tritiOe lrt the.rustic •liiitss . -I.otad.: 14e j o) . .1111 laughing , of the Slinday )Schocil dhil dron ;• the - mortrning salute of-Aliirteentota4- ' 4 --- fired 'on .the. blacksmithsativil .- . l and'lhe ring- I int; of the churili: bell at sOntise; all have I something in them in which it does the - heart i Xo`l to PaitieipAte.. Itutiri the - - City- it is • a I. t di&reht -- storyit is little . morn dust, more hoise, - , more , crowding, . mora ; ftghtiog,. more rowdyism i - , More unpleasautnesa.:of. elr--- vilind,.:tlian on. any Other.._day::. .1 had: tv lila' 1111 a noisey bluster of our unpopular administra tion, "on either . side of the Atlantici illicit must bare something to ;it up a cry abont,to di: ecf public attention fromits toe. manifest shortcomings. The people Of either nation . had :no more intention: of deliberately cut ting each other's - throats than they bad' of ' rnarchin,g in "a solid bedy - into the Atlantic. The - thing 'was utterly imp - ossible—the in- Wrests' of the two countries are bac. closely in terwoven to be Sundered - by the sword at the biddihg . of the Madheallel political ,entpirics; - who, by the chance of fortuhe bare attained the reins of power, and . Who at this moment Ostensibly rule . both nations. The public journalists, who by the very neeessity of their business know mere of thew matters - ',-than 1 any ow else; who arc required every 4..!ty to 1 fermi he popnhir pulse -and ' know the etXllot i • - • temper of the nation, have never for An ;in stantre anyon tead. collisi _between England , ... • •• and Ailneriea. - . ' • • Our prospects of tbeatrieal'amusoncats for the ilex t 1 . 4 w months are bright andlhittering. At th Boe w'rey Theatre, the • Managerial ex . k. petit-Dent of• John Bronghturt has. proved a de, . cubed sucee.ss and ho is havin , ; a Very excel_ lent run of business. This is, very good news to write - , for J . ohn . has : many . friends who proliesied his failure and defeat as A manager. lie luts, however, proved that - he 'ciptio only, write plays and books .: to thesatiafaetien of the,public,-and that he can ,3: o l4iit —Ak tiW ters better thou „any . other t1a, 44 , - 4 ,, !ask„,--erf can so manage a theatrical establishmen?... © , to please hi!, putronfs ; and-7 4 :aput Money iiA his purse.'' ' ',,- , ~ - • - Mr. W. 4,. Fleming, who tOok Burton's plate for -tins : S.aminer , seam, has made a most miserable failure aftei:keeping open for six mights, HO .persisted in playing five act tragedies,withlimself -as thEi . , - tierZo with the _ _ • thermotneterup to 9.otleg. ,pr c ourse no eno desires to la, VictitniZed 1.0. that extent, anct the e eneequence was be did..not pay the ex pence oc' the hOus.e, 'much ,less the_ .salaries of the•cempany. ; Tbe last night there: was any performance - Mi. & Mrs.' W. 11. 'CrisP Tar ed "Assurance " London to a hou se of. forty wire &Atm; as the bare rent of t ' house for . the, -'- ' .- tvetung-was 1y t o nnN I, _l , easy that. this:kind:of thiag 444 not 000; /b e next night, tattle - ugh, "Riohard : , was 0 . xi t t Bounced On the hills t , there w no play ? tha
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