Hon. 3: Glancy Jones on the tinu-fitow a Chutrch \ wns Oared of ass qUellitten. • _ ". . inontism. As the Hon. J. Glancy" Jones, of Pennsyl- The: larford Times relates the followingi . Yenia l has, with commendable prudenee:sand'iCongregational church in , a, neighboring State, rooderation,refrained from interfering., official- gat BO completely in the presidential ctri- Iy, tle Committee of the Whole On the test for Fremont and Jessie, that little 'sewn ..state,of theZnion,) in the interminable Kin- Lion was given •to religious questions. . The sits ignitable, we'publish-- - beloir his speech - minister was constant-ly; praying and exhort upon • it, delivered on . Saturday evenil s ig ding upon political issues, and his deacanaud last. to the happy throng--that serenaded laymen folltiWed Bait - at the prayer and con him -amcrng others; - on the , occasion .of the ..ference Meetings: Finally, a worthy old settlementt of the imbroglio in both Houses farmer, one of the staunchest and _best mem on the day before. It will be found full of hem - of the church, and . a firm, undeviating good -sense, - and characterized _throughout by Democrat, was called upon to offer a prayer. .the manifestation of a-conciliatory and states- "0, Lord," saidbe, "uphold the Democratic in inlike spirit, His. position of Chairman of fiartY, which hai received thy support ever of the Ways and means. Committee propers since the great Jeffersonian struggle. Contiuuu 'ly pr4cludel him froth participating in the to blesi that party which has, under thy ,pro - late Kanns-debate. So ho has had no °ppm.- tection- and uovidenee, brought great' bless ,- (unity ,of Making known his views officially, ings upon tins, republic. If it be thy pleas ' on the subject, arid we therefore depart from ure, .arid Lbelieve it will, be, 0, carry that our usual rule of-publishing no Congression- party through this struggle to a competent al sPeeohes, - to bring them before the public: triumph.. Bless James Buchanan, the tried am deeply sensiole of the and honest statesman, and guide,him safely honor you have done me in this mark of to the Presidential chaih Bless John C. your appreciation of my efforts to,aid in se- Breckinridge, the young and zealous Demo curiug the passage of the bid for the crat, and aped to him the patliNof duty Its . sion of Karma's into the Union. It -has-cost well as that which leads straight to the Vice our-friends a good deal of intense labor; but Presidency. Give them' victory. .0, bless labor is,well spent in -so good a cruise; but the opponents of Democracy ,personally, but why - has tlie country, from one extreme to the utterly destoy their fanatical and injurious other, been SO intensely interested in this great. schemes, if it be thy_will to do so, as I verily - measure! Was it because the admission of" . believe it is, Be on- the Side . of the Democ a new State into ihelinion was such an ex• raey, 0, Lord,. as thou bast Been for the last traordinary 'event. as to_agitate the popular fifty-six years, and on the - -tth . of March next mind tile the upbeavings of the ocean? Cer- .we shall witness the hiauguration• of .Pennsyl tainly not. The admission of Kansas into vania's favorite son. and the people Of this tlks Union, under the Lecompton Constitution, country settle down in their peaceful pursuits, was one of a series of those measures which instead of . riPing wickedly section against test the devotion of , the American - people, to section, in erest againswinterist, and man the Constitution and the Union. It was the against hislarother. And Cr, I beseech tine. sublime spectacle, after month- of painful especially to free Christian churches from the suspense, exhibited in the Bells of .Congress. political strife and bitterness which are rend by;.,the representatives of the true patriotism of our common glorious . country, in yielding up their personal and peculiar views,- but not, principles, to _offer on the: common altar of . their country,• their devotion to that" Union, which the patriotic sires had founded in this heaven-born spirit of nrutual concession for the welfare of the common brotherhood` "You do nocexpect from me on the prts ent occasion a lengthy speech; it would be. both out of time and place: But hare al ready remarked that the, passage of the Kansas bill WaSollfiof a series of measures which hare at varions. Points in our country's history tested severely the stability-of the Union. • "The Missouri Compromt - se of incr inau gurated a peace policy-with the rptirest mo • tires of its‘autliors t the evil - of which thirty years of prudential' counsels and energetic lay hors have scarcely overtone. The compro raise measures of 1850,ignored that restric tive line—the enactments of that Congress rendering it null android by construction. The Nebraska act of 1854 simply proclaiined this construction, and boldly asserted the doc trine ple of, the Territories. should be left free to form and regulate their domestic institutions in 'their own way tollwrexclusiou of Congres sional intervention' \To the ablennd patriotic inaugural of out Chief Magistrate we 'owe the " bald and manly politlCal avowal of the true construction of the Nebraska bill—that popu 'lar sovereignty. Means the recognized right .of the people of a Territory, when. sufficiently numerous to nonstitme a sovereign State in -_ the Confederacy, and not till 011,4 P form and regulate their domestic institutions. A - construction also 4anctiorred by the highes't - judiciary of the hind., `..lt has been reserved' for the Thirty,fietii Congress to consumate this serieSof measure.; '• carrying out the suggestions of the clear and able message of the President to fix the limits e, Of non-intervention "by Congress. The Ne. , braska'act extended it to th; domestic in-ti -tutions of -the inchoate State—the act of _ yesterday creterruines it shall stop there, and the supremacy of Congress by directnter centioe shall be unipestioned• beyond that. By -the •Nehra,-ka aLt, Congress is forbidden s to'touch the constitaan, or even to subinit it. 1.3 . a• vote of the people, that being within the .exelusive p - rovince of the State itself—''by the net of yesterday, Congress does submit the landordinatice to a popular - vote; .tlius.dssert • ing full jurisdiction over the public lands, boundatirs, etc., in which, as the custodian of the States, it ever. _will-intervene when the _ faithful=-execution of the trust requires it. . °I regard- this, my fellPti-citizens, as the consuOation of our policy in relation to the. whole subject of. Territorial rights and Con ._ gressionat jurisdiction:it Our country. may now repose in peace, in its final settlement of our domestic policy, and every man in the land may rejoice in the - assurance of the security of life, :political equality, and' the safety 'of his property. ss' - • ..t.` It is a peculiar honor to_ the aiministra - thin of 'James Buchanan that this vexed and . • . dangerous question should be settled under Lis auspices. I have but to add, that after • the admission of Oregon, the fOpulitCon of which may ifs shalt, I hope to see the policy settled, at least by the Democratic party, that "no State shall be admitted ;into the Union hereafter -without a population sufficient to . entitle it .at least to one representative in the "House of. Repre,entatives, as fixed by the lastqWeceding apportiontnent. I have been, • longer than. I:mtended when .1 - ,began ' and • agent • tendering you my thanks, I bid you good Washingfon Star. N. TAR B)DY FOUND IN A BARREL—A MSS-, N t EBY %Ain - AILED UP.--,—Tbc Chicago papers pub : lisp full revelation of the mystery of the body found in a barrel at the - Hudson River Railroad Depot in New York, in March last : wad the,hody of Sophie Werner, a Ger . man woman' who - was murdere I, or possibly - committed suicdein Chicago. Sophie was. the wife of a barber, Frederick-Werner. - Ijor • bQband deserted her, running off with anoth • er weman, abont a - year ago.. Shortly after, she became. acquainted with - a journeyman barber,named Henri Jurnpertz, who former • ly worked in Spring street, New Yoik. They • lived together as man and wife, and she lov ed him devotedly he got - tired of her, and tried to getaway. - They went towaukee he came back to Chicago, and she followd him> A few days after her arrival, as Ise as serts, he found her hanging by the neckin their room. He cut her flesh to see if she waa'dead, and upcin ascertaining she was so, be became much perplexed how to dispose; of the body: • Some portions be„cut away and buried• on the prairie beyond the city, and, Dually; with\sa dull knife and 'jaw, hacked • hei to pieces, stowed her in a barrel, and-got the barrel shipped to New York. ,This story is one ce uniaikated depravity,. and more • ; horrible in its details than that of the murder of Adams, to which- the leading drown - "Sitances bear a close lesemblance." Tuz PLEA or IxanNrrx.—A- negro in Louisville broke upon a box belonging to a comrade, containing three silver dollars, Ind • - stole one of ,the pieces. Having been ar arigned for the ibeft;the usual plea of.insanity • was' argued, the counnel declaring that no sane -than take one and leave two dollars ke hind. Wbereupon'the Cuffee Who was rob bed,,exclaimed with great emphasis: "Missa, I 6311 pulhat nigger ain't crazy he broke My box open and took de dollar out. Now, 'if be had broke de box iipeo and put a dollar 'e 'd say be wan crazy." His argument - iftchtsive t and the thief was apt up. ing them—asunder, destroying their useful ness, anditirnlng . them Unhappily into tnere political Let us bear something of thy Word on the Sai Alb. We have al ready been piled to fullness with political fanaticism, a c d .our has tinned stump orator against the good old party which thou in thy wisdom has upheld so long, and so repeatedly guided. to sietory,and sustained in the' establishment, of sound measures. O r taim his mind from these things, and direct his attention to his legitimate religious duties or turn him Over directly into the hands of the Federal or Abolition party, and let them .take dare of him, and Ovvide us a true minister of the gospel. At any rte the present state of things cannot last. If politie:sare,to rife, I shall claim one half of the time in behalf of the DetnOcratic party, so that there may fair discussion within these walls. Atnen." - . This Was a stumper. It was the first prayer ever offered in that church for the success of the Democratic party and its nominees, though hundred of prayers and exhortations had been made against that isarty. When the old man finished there was a silence for half an hour and the meeting then adjourned. And thus ended — the political preaching in that church. From that time forward are minister attended to his gospel duties, and left all the. political. questions to besettled -by the people outside of the church. Again 'the society prospered, and there was a bet ter feeling. among its members—more Chris tian charity, to )re 'brotherly love. Tin old man's earnest prayer was ans..vered - in more respWs than one. t kr': I;.tv days ago - , says- an Lglish pa• per,.a couple residing in thancrighborhod of Bridestowe, Devon, went to , the parish-church to be married. The bridt;roorn, instead of taking his intended bride at the church door. and accompaning her to the altar, walked' thither with the bride's sister who was one of the bridesmaids. The bride appeared to have thought that h.& intended husband had changed his mind at the' last moment, and she retired into a Pew in a•very dek.:cted state of mind. The ceremony proceeded,. and- it Was not until the clergyman came to the-im portant question, "Wilt thou have this wo-' man to be tby_tvelded wife?" that the bride groomfwas conscious of his mistake. He then. booked round the church, with astonishment,. and exclaimed, "This is the wrong maid, Air'."' The right maid was st.on fund; the ceremony was again commenced, ritid• the right maid, was married to the right !Man, Much to Oil satisfaction of all Fifties. A QueerCocern ! Black Republscanism isa queer sort of . a contein,,take it in any shape. his a regular' '`little joker" institution --a kind of -now you see it and now you don't" aff.sit! It sheds its principles annnally as a horse sheds his c%at.. Like Mica Orr it is always "waiting for something to turn up," it waited , for the Cluakts to vote, and it waits with cat-like instinct to catch the Democracy asleep; then - it comes at it, but alien tepellod it scampers. away •aith all the agility of tte same animal;, it'ir3.4. as. many names-as Quien Victoria's eldesi daughter, or theUpeful heir of Wash ington Mug ins, who named his Eol3 in 185 . 6, J. B. J. C. F. M.. F. Noggins, on the principle that one of the three candidates for President would be elected, and little Muggins thus bear ta' cognomen of the victorious .champ ioni! Whether' talking for fteedoin or voting 'I9F - slavery it has the assurance of a Yankee clock pedlar and the impudence of a drunken `Birder Ruffian. the ghost of Hamlet it has "speculation - 1n its eyes" and -i,ready to trade - or sell, s 9 ikat it may be_ of the in* !- Take it horizontally or perpendicularly or any other way, the republican party is a sin gular institution and very bad win.—Seneca N CO4, FREMONT BEATEN. —The `Supreme Court of California has decided the case of Biddleßeggs-in the Merced Mining Company, --reversing the judgment of the Court below. The question involves the title of Fiemont too the Mineral wealth of his Mariposa claim.— The Courrdecides against Fremont, and that a fee simple to land does not cafry with it the title to the gold extracted -therefrom. This is considered a great triumph for the miners. George N. Shaw, formerly of Boston, is Pres ident of .the Merced Mining Company, which has contested the-case at great expense, and, it is supposed, will reap great advantage from the deciston.—Boston Post. . Air-The election of City officers took place at St...?au/-, Minnesota, on the 4th inst., and .resulted in th choice of • Min. Norman W. Kittston, the regular Detca rsitic candidate for Mayor, by a majority of .2413 votes over the combined forces of the Black Republicans and irregular Deratxtrats., AA the opposition in -their desperation are heralding every local election—even thal,of constable—as an in dication .of the People's views t.ln the Kansas question, se coot: bend to their notice this voice frontbe Northsesi. • ROBEtiRS m KArmAo.—Advices from Kan sas to , a late date, gii;t3 - :further detaili of the depredations committed upon. residents of Kansas, by the .... 4anditti under the command :of.Jim Lane. On a fate occasion, Lane and his company, after committing a series'of de predations in open day-light, was pursued to the woods, and under cover of art ambuscade commenced firing upon his purifiers killing_ one and wounding others: Over• a thousand dollars-worth Of_ the stolen property was re covered.' VatrAst = gimp:oat. UTAIt --tteporte state N that the Mormons• tre fleeing from SAL Lake City, and that Governor Cutntning bad entered it'by invita tion. ,This indicates that the - Mormons will I finally submit to the laws of the United Thitesdp.y. May 20. 105 S. A. J. GERRITSON, Editor. IZOIT;TP.OSE, PA... DEMO CR ifTIC NOMINATIONS SUPREME JUDGE: WILLIAM A. PORTER, PHILADELPHIA. COMMISSIONER: IVESTLEY FROST, FAYETTE Special 'Notice. A L L persona indebted to the late firm of .L 1 McCollum! dr, Gerritson 'for subscription to the Montro#Democrat are hereby forbid den settling with J. - B. MoColitun, or - soy' person in whose Aland; he may place the ac counts. Said accounts lave not yet been as signed to liim,tin consequence of his having refu'ed to render. value for them as agreed upon before the firm was dissolved; any col: lections which ;be may make_ will be fraudu lent, and his receipts void, until further notice be given. • A. J. GERRITSON. Montrone, April let, 1858. • . ,Blank Notes. We shall print, in a few days, a quantity of Blank Nottk of the most approved style. All those who order one or more quires, can have ateir names inserted without additional charge, also their place of business, and with or withimt seals. All orders Should be sent in on or before TueL•dav next., '■'See elllingo of time for D. L. & W. It ou fourth ixige. lertrn that a difCulty occurred_in Springville a few- days since, between George A. Wilson, and one Julius Bullard, which re sulted,in the former receiving a very serious injury. It seems that the parties were not on good terms, -rind on this occasion a quarrel arose, when Bullard threw a. pair of black smith's tongs lat Wilson. bitting - him on the side of the . lfad. At last accounts_ his fe covery was co - irsid6-eil doubtful. Bullard was committed tol answer. /NT" Howl tiruch are:Spanish 'quarters' worth I" seems to be a very difficult question for the people of Montrose to settle just now. We have no-Opinion to offer on the subject, but would giVre notice that _during the next 30 days, six i " guart4s" of any kind—not even excepting American—will pay for the Peutocrat forlone year in advance. • We have c - ontracts by which we can dispose of a ton of therri during that time, to a pretty good ad .vantage. So!bring'em along in any quantity, lest you lo;e money try .keeping them, as eventually they must come down to the Gol , ernment rates or cern.e to . circulate, for what Uncle Sam orders malt be done. jat - The students of the Normal School held a meeting in Academy Hall, May 6th , and adopted a pre tmble and resolutions ex pressing - thkriks for the efforts of their in structors, Pruf. Stoddard and others, to ad vance their moral, intellectual, and physical interests; al4-approving Mr. Stoddard's mode, of Normal instruc,tion, and inviting him to re•urn and reopen a school in this placezext fall. A resolution of publication was also•adop ted, but for some reason the ptoceeuinas were not handed us until this week, although they appeared - in the Pri.utlican, a wtek ago. .Those wishing" us t) publish "news" should not ktep it back until ,it 'gets "odd," for in such leases it is very apt to go under table sine P. lion. ,S. A. Douglas. . • While this gentleman was laboring in the tanks of the - National Democracy, the Black 11.!publicans i t were fond of calling him "Ste phen Arno/4 Douglas." Since he has taken This position) with these gentry, listened to their liia's4S, voted with them, and allowed them to boldly',stvow that he was a "con vey:;' we are inclined -to think that he fairly e'nllll4l to the signitleani-accent upon itfA l middle name. ire based his opposition to'the Lecompton Constitution t.pon the gcound that the fram ers failed to do the same thing that the fram ers of the Constitiititt s ti of the United States tb oo; viz: sirtlit their work, entire, to a popular - rote, foi3::ratitcation or iejection. This otjection, cotniigfrom him, lia4 no merit, for it is well knows i- r that he helped to strike from - the "ioumt,s' 14" the cla'use requiQng_ the p"puliti nitiftiatiOkof s ,a constitution. In the course of the debate he admitted, that no precedent bad le.tri established for the sub mission of constitutions, and that in faCi, a non sub Mission was not a valid objection, if the lustrunient embodied the will of the peo ple. Ills opposition was fitildly- narrowed dawn to the single point, that the people of Kansas did not approve the constitution; be openly evolving that if ho believed they did, - be would waive their present want of sufficient poptilatiOnj and ,admit them without delay, By the prov4ions of the English Bill it is proposed fp settle this fact. If they vote "proposition h accepted," ther e are to be admit ted under the Lecompton Constitution ;, if they vote t'proposidon _rejected," the wifolo question fills back to an enabling act, requir isg a new constitution to be fraincd. Cer-_ tainly . no,bill could be- framed that would more entirly cover his objection, and had he I been at tiO consistent in his professions, he would havp given it his support, alit provides ',that their adtiiission depends upon' the adop tion of the l Lecomplin.ConstitTion. It will not do for him to urge dint he con siders thend grant a "bribe" to- the people, for it is coded verbatim from bie enabling act of 196, nor can he consistently claim that he opposes it on the ground that in case ' they refuse this proposition, they are to stay out of the Union until "the - population nuth. bees the ratio fir one Representative, fur his N \ enabling act Of ',56, before refered to, provides that they i,hocld not be admitted 'until that time. Soj that. we find him noir opposing what he has advocated but a short time since. The fact ia, he opposes the Administration for the same I reason-that Giddings does— i he ex -pects ,to.: in position by the aid of the Fre. moat rote of '6G. - , The Latest Nears Itsimts.—One of Jim .Lane's "free State" ruffian', known astiCapt.,Montgotnery, at tlie• head of 250 mounted bandits is engaged , in robbing the settlers, abcut 150 families hay- ing been stripped and diiven from theii homes. Montgomery is the notorious lanatic who destroyed ; the ballot-boxes at Mound city, Linn county some time ago. These out rages explain what the." influences" were that the '" Republicans" boasted they would ,use in Kansas, to prevent the carrying out of the provisions of the English Bill. A few doses of hemp would benefit them very much. AT WASHINGTQN.—Steps are about being taken to investigate the outrages upon the American Flag by British Cruisers, and de mand redress. Upwards of twenty -vesels haves been fired into, b , arded — and searched, within the last two weeks without a shadow of authority. if those things continue the year cf 1812 will have to be fought over again. THE INTEREST BILL --•Much interest has teen manifested in regard to the act repe.al ing the Usury Laws. It has not yet keen signed by Gov. Packer, and according to the doctrine advanced in his Inaugural Address, will,cerNinly be vetoed. We refer 'to . the following passage: _ The !propriety of signing bilk by the Gov ernor between. the sessisons of the Legislature. has been questioned. It does- not accord with the old practice, and is 'certainly liable to abuse. During my term it will be strictly confined to the first ten days after an ad j,,urtunent, and all bills not then approved. may be considered as awaiting-Ate next meet ing of the General. Assembly (43 be returned the Executive slkapproval. rif We have received a copy of the Le coMpton T.),Demoorat. prin.ed since h.ar lag uf'the passage of the Engles Bill, which n the course of a long article says : "There is nothing in the propositiOn made by Congress, but what ant' and every man in Kansas, desirous of securing its peace and prosperity, may honorably accept ; and •we veniute to perdiet, that a large - majority of our settlers will do so,by a vote of acceptance, when the proposition isidaced b e fore them." . This opinion is a significant one, coming as it does from a paper that bitterly opposed the Leconipton Constitution.. . frg'The Minnesota Senators har•e drawn lots.. General Shied& drew the term expiring in March, 1850, and Mr. Rice that ending March, 1863. Correspondence of the Daily eennsylvanian. Washington; May 16, 1638. It has now become mio:1•04. AI 'dairy occ ur ence for e k utrages to be committed on Ameri can mewl:lnt ves.els by. British cruisersi . and: the ridiculous plea or excuse set up,, on the part of the Ltritislt Government,is the suppres sion of the slave tra&.—Whey fire into, over haul and watch,. our vessels, in American waters, at that with imptinity—alleging or rrivintr as an excuse, for this high-hand.d and m• outages conduct-tt,at they, (the English Government), are determine to 'suppresi, this trade in slaves. Whitt 'right have they to to search our vessels, event'supposing t• at they are engaged in the - Slave trade 1 The ri l iirt of search we have nlwayis denied ; The 'United States has always denied it, andit is too late in the day for them to recognize it now. • Thee recent outrages. I understand, will be made the subject of Cabinet consultation, and, unless I am 'greatly mistaken in the titan who is at the head of the Government, these insults to the American flag, and to the American citizens, in American wirers, will' be rigidly inquired. into, and speedily too. These outrage» must be•stopped. The pro - per course for our Government to pursue in`the future,under the circumstances, is to augment. and increase our squadron, in the Gulf of and on all ostler points where our commerce, or our 1110411)4ot- vessel- are inter fered with, and that they, the officer•, be ic structed to.protect ears commerce from the indignities and insul offered themby these • cruise's. Lord Napier, the Btitish minister,--not long since stated in his cotnmanicatiou to Generill Cass, that the English Government contem plated augmenting their fleet`on the West India station. They 'had already done so be fote his letter was addressed to the Secretary. And he desired—Or pretended so at least— that the United States would increase their flee, in those waters, which would, in his judgment,. have a tendency to suppress the African slave trade, but which, in Nit, would only increase their . business of boarding, searching, and conkrating American vessels —in other 'cords to plunder American cold merce. • - N -IT Is rumored in Slipping circles in New. York that the Sombrero Islands are about to be 'sold to Ettgland for a very hanthome stint. The - Island consists of guano deposits, from which a good many cargoes have recently been taken to ,Palti:nore, England and New York. The prie.: i is about $lO per ton cheaper than she Fermiinn ;wide, owing more to the cheaper rate of transportation, however, than the original cost. JMA Chicago pilper, alluding to the two rival Dotnoeratic Conventions that have re cently been held in Illinois, mutates the - ful• lowing : A little weazle-faced,. pipe voiced Douglas man came up to Jake Newsome,. a compara tive. giant in weight and height, and inquired ofJake—"Sir, which wing do you belong to I" "Wing r replied Jake, in a toice of ditto • 'TeP, which wing- of the unterrified . Demoe: racy r asked the little fellow.- "Wing, 11—;-,11; we belong to„no wing. The whole bird-is oars." far Bishop Potter held a confirmation recently in New York, -(says a paper of that :city,) , at which a lady presented herself, to whom, he was quite sure, he had administered the vita before. As she, approached, he asked her if she had never been confirmed: "Qh law yes, Doctor," she , replied, ""you have con firmed me twice, and I want\vou to confirm me again—it is so pod for my rheuma tism !" PRETTY WELL "Piactszn."--We notice that_ the trustees .of the Agricultnral Satiety of Hillsborough county, N. rr., have placed on the committee on darning and patching, John H. Patch; Joseph Patch, Timothy Patch, and Edward Patch, all -of different towns. If this isn't a patched , up committee, we should like to - sec out, Lane's Bleu Tumid itobbers • Kansas. The following is an extract from a letter to a mercantile house in St. Louis . : Fort Scott, April 28,1.8": . The difficulties hire are far worse than they have been. On the 21st, a party of Lime's men commenced robbing the citizens on the Marmilton river,only eight miles above our town, taking their horses and guns, and plundering their houses of everything of value, iu daylight. One of them .came to town,-and, upon affidavit,* writ was obtained from Judge William's against the drives. This was placed in the hands of United States Deputy Marshal Little, who, with Captain Anderson and - twenty men of his company as a posse, proceeded to arrest them. They came in sight of them about eight miles from this place, on the high prairie, and ttursued them about one and a half wile., to timber. They then took their position in a place which it - was dtibgerous to approabh. They waited until the Marshal's party reached within a bout forty yards, when, without a word being said, they fired upon the advancing party,end kept up firing, wounding Capt. Anderson slightly, and shooting his horse iii three places--killing one of the s 4dient and one horse, and wounding a -thied bore. The troops were only armed with pistols and sabres, but they wounded. three of the banditti. A e4rge could not be made upon them, 'as there was a creek with high banks between the parties. The Marshal's: party then fell back, and send a messenger rifler more men and guns, but before they arrived, the rob bers had fled through the latish. The Mar shal captured about $l.OOO worth of rooper.. tv that had been sto!en from the citizens, in horses, buggies, &c. Eight men have been s h o t befme this. In ethisequenco of thee diffieulties.businese is at a stand st:II in this county; most of the good men have teen run out by this party, and our loan is threatened. Two companies United States cavalry are here, but they say they do`not fear these, trips, as they Can chip them out. An appeal has ben made to the Governor to denture martial law in this part of the• Territory., The Black Republicans' and. the Admission of new States. The admission or rejection of new States, with the Democratic party, depends upon the single point, the Republican character of the (,constitution each may present, when appli cation' \ for admission it made. The Black Republicans, however, set up different testa. They make the demircratic ins•itutions of a people the pretext for denying them aimis sion into the sisterhood of states. This doe ,. Trine was plainly promulgated by Senator lisle during the discussion of the application of Minnesota. who declared that be would not take Minnesota now, or at .any caber time,so long as the Constitution of that State contained a provision on the Subject of color , ed people which did - not suit his peculiar notions-as to equality of the races. This N . same position was assumed by other Black Republican Senators, though the reasons given may nut be exiled, similar. All, how ever agree, in ignoring the one requisite point: ed out in the Constitution, and each set up some standard by which to try each case that may be presenrel With one, the . objecrion .is that colored men are not allowed all the rights an& priviliges of white citizens; an other oljects to the admission of any more Slave B:wesinto the Union; a tbird repudi roes a State because her Constitution admits those foreigners to vote who declare an Wert t inn to become citizi-ns • of the United Slates; and others have equally fanciful and unsatis fric!ory reasons to justify their course before the country. • The jticonsi=tent and ridiculous pc:I:Ilion:in which such• conirary reasons for _doing the same thing, planes the opposition party be. fore the nation, ha= not escaped the attention of ail New York Times. -In alluding to the debate on the bill for,admittina Minnesota, that journal says : 'I here is a-feature in the current debates wor ty of s ttention. AVhile the Kansas question was pending, it was constantly asserted that the Southern party wotqa resist the admission of any free State. until Kansas should come in as a slave-State. The question of admitting Kansas has been referred to the people ; and now the principal opposition to the admission of two new free States comes from the free State members, or those, who acted with them on the Kansas question. In the• Senate the opposition comes mainly from the Republicanssand in the House it is said a strong efilirt is making to unite the South Americans and Republicans against Min nesota. The party .hearings of the question would probably explain this singular fact. The Times has fairly stated a portion of the truth, but not all. It is true that the Black Republicans assessed in the meat posi ' tire manner "that the Southern party would resist the admission of any Nfree States until Kansas should come in as a slave Sltte," hit: that is nut all they asserted on the same sub jee.t. The same men also stated than was the intention of the_Southetu party to vo'e against the admission of any more free States into the Union, without reference stall to the manner in which the Kansas question should terminate. Yet, what are the facts ! Be fore even Kansas is admitted, we find the Southern party voting for the admi-=ion of Minnesota as a free State, and contending against the Black Reiiublicans, who opposed it on all kinds of pretexts, but really because the Democratic party are in the ascendant and have control of a new Statue. The Southern party base their action upon the Constitution of the• United States., They limit their inquiries to the point stated in that in t trutnent, is the Constitution presented by"the State applying republican bolts char acler and .provisions, and when that tact is ascertained they vote for the admission of the State. This rule is a tale one. It lies law and precedent in its favor. But the opposite course pursuet by the PIRA Republicans is dangerous in all its aspects. It tramples - on the clear meaning. of the constitution of the' United States; substitutes the Changing ;and uncertain notions of a sectional political par ty, for the sine, logical and patriotic action. of a body controlled by law and mason, and if carried out would make the admission of each State depend alone upon the political complexion L of the National Legi-lature and that of the Congress by which the case shall. be determined. Such a plan is calculated to ' alienate the different sections of the Union, and hence the party that adopts it is justly chargeable with all the evil cons.equbnces flowing from its being put in execution. But look at the other fact in connection with the action of the Black Republietid par ty in their recent attempt to prevent the ad missitna of Minnesota. It is well known that the leaders cif that party object .to all State Constitutions which do not allow the coloied race full equality-wkib the whiles..ind that the latest Constitution. for Kamm, adopt- . ed by the Ariti-Slavery agitators at Leaven worth admits the black men tp vote by the side of the white freemen- of that State or Territory.. But while the Black Republicans' ate thus-willing that negrtte shall vote, in the face of the fact that the Supreme' Court of the United States loot decided-, that. they are. Dot, and eaunot beciime citizens of the United Stites, they object to the admission of Minnesota because, they eay, the Constitution of that State admits those foteignenito vote who declare aw intention' to become citizens adds-Republic. • Us man be black be shoila . vote in open defiance of the Constitution and the'decision bf the Supreme Court, but if be ,be White, and did- not happen to be born • on the soil, thew ultra defenders of freedom are for excluding him Flom all participation in those primary proceedings which are to shape and mr , uld the constitutions atO laws of the young o,tates of the West and all other sec- i tions of the Union. This is Black Itiaibli can consistency—this their idea of frevslom this their platrfOr "elevating' the condition of white laborers in the West, which they pro claim with so much . vehemence in all their election harangues. It is evident that the application of either or both of these restrictions to the admission of new Slates would -be attended with the most disastrous consequences. - If Congress has a right to interfere with the domestic in stitutions of a people, to say -what character of institutilins shall entitle a - State to admis sion into the Union, what exclude it, then a mere - Political ninjolity will at-all times over: ride the Constitution, and perpetuate its pow er by refusing admission to State; whose rep resentatives are Oppo‘d to their political ideas and opinions. Ag eii negroes are to:vote at the primary elections in the Territories, and Ithe honest, intelligent emigrant. is to be de. 'barred (torn that. privilege, though he may own and cultivate hundreds of acres of the soil, and thus have the deepest interest in the estibli.hment of a good government, the ef t feet will be to hinder entigration,_and throw the rule of the Territories into the -bands' of worthless white men aud s vsgaboird negmis, who have no, reasons to wish that law and order shall rule instead of riot and turbulence. While suet). would be the inevitable results flowing from the adoption of the two promi nent ideas of the Black Republican . patty with reference to the admission of new States, still they have kreen_ pressed by, that party during t beNwhole struggle tin the Kansas and Minnesota questions, and therefore they may justly be said to constitute an essential por tim. of the • Black Republican platfdrm, for -the future That such a position is clea,ly in violation .of the letter 'and spieit. of the. Constitution, none will -deny, while its perni: cioui tendency in fostering and keeping slice - a bitter sectional feeling,cannot be queitioned. Yet triei Black Republicans aredetermined to act upon this sjatem, and the country must approve or rejettt h.—Pennsylvanian. TOE COOLIE TRADE-NAMES AND THING& —Nothing appears more strange than %ht ease With which simple minded people may be imported upon by the names of things Slavery, as it exisqs in the Uinted States, has been denounced as a most disgraceful institu tion, and foul blot upon the escutcheon of• our country; and yet it is probable that no. milder form of slavery has ever exi=ted in any part of the wroth]. The Coolie system, on the other band., is the most inhuman forin of servitude.. The Coolie slave is of but little value, and consequently is not an mbject of much care. Ilis.master has_but little interest in preserving his health or lifefiir he can own him but a few years, and consequeritly'work him with far greater severity•tbau h. would o ne who was a slave for life, and of much The English people paid atundred million dollars, and sacrificed the property of. the people of Jamaica to get rid of the name of slave! y, because it was odious to Ahern. They now permit people of their own race to he held in the most cruel Wildlife, iof to be worked to death in a few years, bec:iu they are not named slaves. The trite Seniiment. The Philadelphia Evening Argmi, of a late date, in noticing the general approval of the democratic press: of Pennsylvania, of the pas sage of the Kansas bill, l'ays : LThere is but one hitherto professedly De mocratic paper it, -this State, out of the city of Philadelphia,sio far as our knowledge ex tends, but what now c•Idiall) uniits upi s rit the conciliation bill offered by Mr. English. for the settlement of the Kansas brawl.. and that is an obscure weekly sh;et, published somewhere hi 'Chester or Delaware county. All :he other Democratic parts,. however they may have felt disposed-to differ with the majority of the pony, and with otir nible President, now cordially and efficiently unite ; 41 'sustaining the pacification bill, which so ,honorably settles this misr.:liisious question,of which everybody is tired,sick,and with which We public btoi become therougly disgusted." The Pre-ident, tt is stated, o:n municate his reply to the S nate rosoluti.a3 , as to the outrages by British cruisers on our vessels on Tniesday. The Government is in possession only of the facts which have been published in the newspapers. There is reason to believe, however, that or h e rs have beet, al ready -dispatehed to: the Home Squi dr or which will render a repetition of the outrage, on the part of the English unpleasant. his under-t .od Lord Itlaoer's attention has also been directed to the subject. .The result of all ibis will be that these British: cruisers will and American guns between,them and our merchautmen. Upon no subject is thi, Government . firmer than on the utter repudi ation of the right of search. It is believed the outrages are more numerous' than the public has any idea of. Cro ans.—lt appears from the stibjoined advertisement, which we copy from an old Boston newspaper, that cigars first came into fashion about the year . 1806: "Brought from Havana, a box of cigars, a very rare article! The best of tobacco rol led np. to the size of a small fiver, and of a bout five inches in length, foromoking. They are prefcried by nut Spanish . dens to the pipe., Those who may wish to enjoy such a luxury swill..please call and try them. • wk. STOCKTON," Now, the amout of money em,ended for cigars every twenty-four hours, \ Phila delphias alone, would purchase 500 barrels of flour. , N A Mon LAW DEC istos.—diiief Joitice Shaw; of Massachusetts, has decided that II ices ttr sellingliquor in violation of law are common nuisances; and. . may be abated by anybody'. Hu therefore expressed the judicial opinion that a mob of rued and wo men who destroyed a liquor store , at Salem. were justified in their action. Law in Massa chusetts seems to be a strange contrivance for confnqing the, rights of property and im periling the peace of society. It is easy to Gee the citinsequences of such jucli o dicta as this. It xvill Wad inevitably to repeated riot,.outrage, and bloodshed. 4 8.grA Gentleman of 'Norfolk, Va.; bad a fine, negro, to whom he gave the .privilege of brring opt, and keep one' half of the wages. A short time since, the negro come home to his waster to tell him that the man for whom.he teen working wished ,to buy biro; and, would give 81200 for .him. “Well," said his master, "what of that 1 don't wish to 5w311.” "But, you ogee, ma‘rat,'', said . Sam, "Pao had a cough sometime, and.'epees I'm -gnin' into tbe denumption. "I 'don't 'Teo I shall lastrrinett two or three years, and I'd hice• to take that mat in r Two hundred barrels of eggs are shipped daily frotu Pittsburg to the east. iirecassivar will adjpani 'oho tho ith day otivitw • . t, . liaiiiii,l4(ilimpt. Same cf the Republican paperelere quite jubilant' over what they , term a " iiictory" of Judge _Wilmot, because a Democratic lone of Representatives refused to make its new at rangement of Judicial tlistlicts which would -leave him off the bench. We admit that the' softitearts (heads) of some ofthe Democ ra ti c 'Refire.s motives were : limpid upon ti thOletilly to prevent them from making a roper at rangeinent of ' Judicial.. districts ecause .it would leave Wilmot , minus a Jud ithip, but _ what have his friends to Wag ahe!, t - .Over two thousand citizens, and,bearly the entire bar of his own county, tlified.that the • dutsadministration of Justice emended such arrangement of the , district ar,i was pro posed !. -This application was *iced up by three thousand petitioners front the otbei county of his district! What a:Judge !—: second Daniel ! Not only five thousand indepe dent men, of his 4istrict, and a majority of 1 e bar, but the entire political party opposed to him, as well as Whigs, and Republicans, and his pre; decessor, appointed by Gov. Polloc!k, certified that the due administration of Justice de manded the change proposed. Such a Judge! . Wilmot was compelled to hover around Eha_Legislature for weeks, appealing to the ympathies and the pity of men. whose hands ere raised to lash him ! *What A patriot! proud, noble man ! _s Not only does he stand confle L inned and spurned by five thonsaad men and majority of the bar of his district,:tint after a deliberate hearing and fell disetission„ sod tip his coax ing and begging, be was condemned by , a Pennsylvania Senate, which was d+tinguished ' lir its purity and its intelleet, ,by t h e passaee _through that body •of the met to repeal his district I Oh, what la generous noble heart'd man . David Wilmet, must be, to face such a withering rebuke and continue in thC.position that has brought Bitch htunil. .iation and condemnatien upon him ! Such a dispeu-er of Justice ! I Saved from removal by trick, Ili. anu lugubrious tears. and beggail only by the skin of his teeth rind' like. a culprit who has cheated the he now sutra and,crows like a is cock just escaped from a gene breve man'! , • And )et of what has Wilmot From his earliest manhood to the i silent be has been almost constan --pampered-and fed, and [latent ~—a public pauper living uponl , labor--and what has be done toi himself! How has he served his! , He orig inated no public act, and Tariff uf '46, which he afterwatill and denied, he never, even sup* measure of distinguished benefit t Instead aserving his country in importance, be permitted himself the'tcol of Van Buren to offer If infamous "proviso," which set procrastinate a war, to aid ,ant enemy, and trydistract and dell country, ilineing it to the verge, Oh, what a statesman !' . I Wallow in: in the plethoric fatness incident -......- . 0 a life of office, and ease, he ventured into the field as a oindidate for Governor last. fall, and after wandering about the State in hot search of congenial spirits, he f l ailed even to unite or rally his own party, and ceive vanes enough s i'o estal;li.slr i that he was a candidate! Oh, this our David !I , - This im)baculste . Judge who 'arrays all of tlr opposite peke. 11 party_ in his district against him, and Republicans, and Whigs, and the bitf ! , Tbir ',Winer cap' crying for pity, oh, pity, snv me and give me quarter, my enemy ! This insatiate offirJe seeker and offwe-hnlaer, who can lire only by office 1 .-. This statesman,who disowns. the only amtd act of his life. and whose mime! stands per mutant only =n connection withiollv, and fa naticism, and injury to the cointry! This , t Gnbernatotialwspirant without votts enough to make it.certain that be was caniitlate— the squeaking, quaking braggart, who>rvould beg his victor for pity,thht Juice might be stayed I Yet in the face of all this, tlit Republican papers have the effrontry to boait---over . such a hero ! Oh, Moses, what a heto !—Harris burp Herald. : ____ _ • . SE!qATOR DaVG LAS ' S POSITION.L—A dispatch from Washington to the Philacl,elphia 'Era it4 Journisl. says: " The anti-Leeompton Democrats who'opposed the English bill are• preparing ati address to the co+try to vindi cate their course. In the meantime, however, their leader, Judge Douglas evices a dispo. sition to return to the Adminis ration 'ranks. His speech on the Oregon hill o. Wednesday, opened the eves of a number .f his friends who had suppo , ed ,that the br•a , :h between the Senator and the President was irrepara ble" OeIrBAGIV. BY Blirrtsit . CoosEtta.--The outrage` by British cruisers upon American merchant vessels "continue, and almneet every day we are called on to record fresh offences. From Boston we learn that the brig Robert Wing, (which arrived on that,Nort Thusday morning) bad been , overhauled errs} her papers examined. _ The causer, in thisjinstance. fir..d a blank shot, and did not, like t tlie Styx; firpt notify her intentions with bullets. It is gun-boats authoritatively ieporto • hat British 'were searching all' Yesseis - takini , in 'cargoes at Sagna.la vert flag a like, and Witten r," Tunes" insists the 'nation not submitted to the people by the Cosfetenee Kansas bill, whilst the -New Yoyk Times," a leading Republican paper, uas the follow ing language upon ;he %ame sdlject : "Now it is unquestionably true that the Kansas kill. as passed, does s limit the is& compton Constitution to the' popular vote. ; Whatever may be theform' of the, bill, that is)he fact. tie txople cf Kansas, under that bill, have t 6 power and the opportunity to wject that Constitution if they see fit. t , FROM Ileatoo.—The steamship Tence;res has arrived from Vera Cruz wi b dates to the 7tb inst. :The . news indient the epee& downfall of the Zuleog - v Go ern.ment, the forces of Gen. Vidaurii having , OR one of the ‘' hardest battles ever . fought ial the country- Gen. Zuleogri is greatly distressed for a *t of money to carry on the government General Juarez was warmly welcomed on his arrival at Veta-Cruz. - To Pretvaxi Ssasztvoi'neeze is in stantaneously dispersed,"dispelled, semired, broken up, by preising, the fidger upward w• ;abut the division of the .no 4, at the point tehere the upper lip, imide,jOins the gum Another plan is to expire all the air possible , from the Inns, the Moment yen perceive in-- diention of a sneeze: . " . 141101 - 1 CHUNK, May 17.—Charles A. WW.. - hams, d member ot the lag liegi.latuti, re-,. presenting Carbon and. Lehighinounties, died' suddenly yesteidny, at his residence at Ra.k. port, of paralysis: ,- - - 401 IN W. FORNIIII and liottonitelllichne) tare been requested,- by the Biro* Republic ans Of Debterare count)% td attend' their bounty settle" on the 33d ult.( A heedless par , id bargain, r, and that for gallows-- ucy banty e! Such a o boastl-- prvent mo itiv in Office A in office loiher men's distinguish !country t— i, except the t;i repudiated S i ted a public I the people. anything of to be made s famous or vel only to clmfort_the nub his own ,of civil war ! d:d not re evon,l cavil ow 'great is:\