puPiix7 , ' BEIMINCir t-: rlintlirt.:, 4- ,/ Obilt*:"l6 4 'iatteditiriaT E,lllll l 3 . ll . lll l TWILIO *MO isiii, - 14 10 • 10 ' 110 ; 411111 4 11 ; Ca_ • 1114, ft4 41 .• msZtfrolipitzo+l44V a rr i 4rw tbk ti u ll `t" ° , e r opti7 • 14 , ( * Vr- r4.lB:l, i l i t 1:401; Doti; • ait V114,14 1 0EP, .I F t• ;-3 • illFlfq i1rii40•14941'.114 • 1044,-I,pkinpo*lll •be-litikt.to:Balloaribenr tkr. modh la hiltraion) Pl* , f Itf Ott , ;_; TOL, . 16.1 The irlatt ii . : 44. t e ti . 4 ,•4ll ,i l t l i al 01 1 114 11 00 1 r 1 01 14 4e4 4 144 1110 - 014.tr11 il3epr,o4aimitemlc.olloo44oo 110 - Mt is Agana 'Atm ! • F• F •I • • • F f•F,F . .‘..• ' 7.".. X1a11,111 _ Tilt'. ~_ - rx,':,:pittgg lift liE AP EST ANtI,4IESIti.„- . _ p ~.1 , 0 i, „. ~_ , , , ,„. , _ C WEEKLY NEWSPATRRIN'TRE'COUNTRY. Ii.WIZ!. ti, _ trtAillAtf, - -i r gi n t a -, 4 , 44 , I' Itill ..__Tml irtifro 1--- 4) 4 14 1 0 0, V5 i the Olt, of rtusdatf f i tell . ' It "it- d 6 lipOntNationalltiottpfoti:athd4lll” dPfialdeft6fiAtfittutlitt atOtt666 2'10614 tottot 4 4tin! .. Oink , l e t f ; strAtff(l.V,it "PR ,b, doyo,{B4 to:co •_!•._ sal* wow, dli-totrlstor foinlrfottoitif /64116'06661 1 ~ . Nita 66idottdattr , d1.W.66611 4,4 14torodi lad. Iffidted4 . it,..,.-Vid a fiat° gr 66. try, _ittottit os www )211to .ptitaiiitidir -, T • moure , viewut , oit oaueatvhito ~ p iirag ~,,': , Do4l9,BmOrtirlsq . pl9 l oo4irq - `44+ ''. ~ 14' t 1 - 41 1 4 3 217 7 .4671 1 1741 t ,olgogiWriblic,liiiifebytiterirpria t , • "II MAtak i pili a. ,. 1:10Wt 1 ''' 1 " - - . ZAheatithe ikriifigaliteD. Tti: Wi . 'l,. , ' ingl s ta 4410se' sf i t t ',AI( =‘;;t4 - 1,, ' :i.o 41- . -,1 --iiiyk t awspoo: Aci,ft 7 11.341 11/1010,0141111.1 :1 4 2100 1 4 11 t• -*Mkt , tra Cue ii- - . j,i• , ~, L • _" -- ..: -•.--_ •-w-•• , -.J. Q• loyiy !. , ntr -tf ~ I Tst ettilhaiii*ots4totasidiagrotzc , v-plij 41,, , f,p • 4110illntetil044414Wlit -41 , 7f,-itti ; 4 6. .i - --i+:4, , :+h• ext r atitSa Til lrralrttitf*fel , " ' 'Pan 46rt ‘ ift-.- I* 44 4, 044 4rA M1 : -, -,' -t‘ JY. - , 'l l :4'A'• t i „ ' i'''.. , " ',l4‘ 7:::': 4 ::: '" i . , .,, , ,..,-- 1 -I, . 4 ' o aiwo; 4 1 . ..' 4 k‘ r i ''' , T T - 77" - -,4; ~.1 “40 4 •ir -1.311 tr - 11.1 4133.:ILl. 'Ad.* stiiiiiiilti . ' ' '- . 41 . ta,4 44%1' I , :t e i ciOnfai i 4 4 :: s.' v '" ,4 0 7 t, piiiiii4,4lliVeitiottowt I MON, ti&liin' Otiottoit'llikint,iftftdoWatt,..ft tost.tt , o6l' , l 'id t , grATARRVI)PAUTPALSV,'' ‘7,:s 49 0,7 1 1 1aftetla . iig o: 4514/04MLf anrso7o l , IV And.allAbis dotsils amidssiser tlestaciir Ittolhopplo# . maw, maim. thowsAvlrn . mimic/4i ari Invirkt toNivi Ind tkikaliti4 001164 mi: t daMORUSTNLITIItreot: a===l Ar41 , 440/4./41 1 4 #X, #9,QK 3 tttr t , i,it titt r t - , trir r Tio r.; latt s io it . 4 r , , , . / ~, ,6, ~,_., , I POrt •. , / a iiiiii. `Atles 1 - 6`o ritie*x.' ila ‘,l ' oft iris ram BAR. By Ow Right NA: 141011b04/04 0 LISittartifirterinbarbt marl VboA , 4 1 tralVrb%th 41 114: 1 1:41 1 4_ 1 gill o. t 4 e 4 , , , V+,t . Oil ,7,1,.tif. A VAI.Or my )1 gas items AMILISLOS: .I , ,b4olNPlTibarmi i iMaillgaltln.lialgrarr& r Datioaimia D ytkb bi lnk/kPila b c l i i aillla !faoba i t r iVi i ri i iiiatiLgtet t i l e Akta:' , DaWridri . Noba,br Dl4POMOPlarkesur. Lem tabby la D vo,o2Pkrba,b,lAieepgrite9 ; , R I,II 6UPI i OPmPP. t ION: OEN PHI PO T' pj ti a/ WaOli,byOttris; Id% N noA N I , reitAX,Ili M VWlb4 at. 1 5 4 4 1 ..7 t a1a r.: i n ~ :-..4 0 ~s, l 1....1, ,1 g, ~” ~ . ~ ... 1 1 / 1 1,1404PD6LAWCIRD itnaltßangsr. alga.. boot Story, "I t s Dna' og,T4by Monsab Morels NO imago% Or ila Introdioirosi lug Pft iteg; by. ihvarorawgh tabs. 1 viilp,vlPowol•o: sitridANsitiwitoitifitatt444 'TWO lb P/Ardrialtriiiiili Natal Dar by by. - rearta` BablboWbiralblarb4Oi NW LitMOlD:kittrikito4, Li7 mlh tit tar tlealtre4 tiip 4 46 4114 9 , HITS OP PLA By Dr. Shelton M gp4is ifi=itfttieraLionriiOng}.. fr alia'pe . ll, Piens, trfftraits,lo Al V 6 0 ° ,9P 1 ,1 t tfi 2 4 kY , btM DOLANAtini I Oaraplarta Or Taut? e -.1 -,,,, Ito •,: ttim SO 1,, 1 1 , J 419 1 / , ' ' 4 1 44....rni g t, 't ... ~... as low* ivm .• .../ ....T.A. Vag i4P oP *um, 1 Alispi'l se. , A vol., . f 44 1..„ !LW EDOAX ti rt) till iiii , t , 'ATT 0 " t Ira nM* l g l a"' 'WV tialtac 11149.4% Phari. Mo i/. , Pries gig. .0 XS . llr W U - M-''-i ,- E 0 ' P . _ .1074.50) oi Oict sta , .. u.4Nestilrant, - zun._ agrox •-* :-...,..:, .a, to.gratirr„ the *Amor our "A port *0 i a ad 11410`the bdoklblitturpt) bliittd )1 • thAt ", i 44111***ill /OW bw, wilotookAlittintioP -'? MaP 4 wiCAPP.' WOO* a , ' 4lllatiji4 , / GUS Yokoo:of bolo iimodoa *SO -43allooit - owl" tlookaparroloo4l,oo,koisidsolooki ler Mi V ll4 # l.ll L , ti ' -•-, , '.., 4:.11 ~ ,1 ` . i , I' , ttLtt,r , .1. /441 10 4,MP, er.s 34( ! tt i l lgaloitAtiff7MMt.„ own tit, ni . booki Millet , , ,o 4 io,voFympay, MANS? iGREATARYTA3OO,4.I3m4,;) A.1411"N0.-, US CHRBTNTIE Sind:: Ni 3:1:4U .6.4*.e , 1 sbot wi. tik farotker uoi, la tay. 07.4, 134 ' ill) iop.a.r; „ . woof* iittodri ,o. , • . sr: ~,,-, ro, ', - •••• c , • 'll ' IptAILEY,"&P - 0040gE§TiCitOprog. 1040 1 170:ill iiitTP74ool , 44 l ,StLY vow sharlovootioni on- me , oroitt ... - TL i t tisu d. ru k um ." 4 , l 49:fr:F, #4o'd mat 'lrag"" f au 1 • ••" .. , .• r „ ; Stei4l: 4 o;)"4, • ,00toupdtiovertIolas• fak.tba. Dfemen4 lined DAM*,d Knot DIXHIOS , IG'wli!'l psi teiWe' et ''olll.l*. 6rAilik**ll4ll*6o4*-4a,kiri " tVit; ' ootll4/n i ntic.:;'. '- i=omotooloordocon; 'Jr/WV* !lIKOMI4OO.II4ri-$!"" o'o-40 4 kf1..4 geramiLD ..4isions,,,fiasur, mowing' 4.. 'igassa Mirld• two et tioiriot , 64114 , & , • :;. w 221 SOWN TRIAD STILES , t, BELOW , r,IXIVA. Loral A •:"."u , 0., -' ktmem-miftApAri,„,t4,,. ~, ~..,.....,r ~.. .ivtz-4 . ,,, °X..-,,tt, , ,ri.u,h_r.,. „it..., ik, ...., ...._, ...., 4... i. . 11 ... t...,„.„... , Thu. A et I olina,a 1 404,1 4 7 1 T/5ur,WA1. 4 _14,,,, , • i.• 1 , k sr , J :, I' OS. ,•' , 7 7 :71.7 - 1: "rwq ,- :1 , -;,,, -, '''''• Uly Y r i ri4Orritelf ,;,11 . ,, LLI_ ,4n , rp z. ,,, ' ,, , ,,,, 1 , 111_10 fa: - r ' •- ' '4 , 4 " I i• 4oll4l44l3ilitiatniC liblY_ . ololl t ait' • ' killtrs ' 4 i9111N10.11.8 Itrior'SiTB 4 `!.' i ... smoulder , grms , c B.w/raga ir. Fsrg.l4,lrii, ~,,,,„irroem., .vAAi„ ~:,.. ;„0,,..,. , ,600**14 ~ .0, ,, , ,ociotet i"! , , ~..1, 1, spygig, , Ls f• q; 11 , 1/ WILIAMSI " ~,,,i IeffIPAVTORBES es altrAlf , 40-14' (PSTABLISIIED ' 1812 ;) - ' 1 irtticonatun *rpm *lob • miaow enturni• 4 i latin sasortinenVoY "ArlAlatart dad seription, constantly on hand , ar moo ta 4lerT natal! • on •ot ind Barnalnglacta 'ioatien noo-titt atfinsi'DUßOSQ, •E5..13014, ,, law ^of -sontokoi corsow* oow-winnoiniamommoo4 -volume otv aisrxmor,olocoinogrotr Mlri i A mmo: D.Yree ''` 3 at P. DO11101112.11:1110; , , ,'Kcrof,eqrtiL fit - I 4:1,,r,44Nr.X4C4AZr"..4.0V114 1 , „ t a tis i ki , . Atm 4004 esims.-164310; --- • • ~ ,, 1 44: 1 1. 44*.;', . .1 .1 tO tn lit t ff NIT : " 1°44/i4144 lOt otikaittos lit t •r iql. , t 170,04,170,,.. - 1 1d11 t lat i 5.12 1 1 1, 011, 44 , 4 !g 6 il . ,l 49N"Thth li el il i t I 'PLIMS-011111#1:4 OAtTA. : 11 ° 4 4 X ,77 11 4 1 4 1 a i rTr i."1"* t - ' 01 4 1 0 1 4 ' - 4 t tkr ' WNTi l f3A3l - 471Takti iLtdicoolifAlvs 8911113 i. .wilisteerner I BIIOAD and- 'pi .XXX.I I I I, otter , dellesalci ta*.solim y ,* p ito *ititOyste 45ittliti lifirtedt..sygiee% . • t- "17.4ta AtripiotuCNTlV-HOTEr NEL-% , ' _Aron Itisrr, : V; , `PRICAZELEUIA u . sol4f. „_ si . KoliTaßllN tk soma, psormagisio.' O.,COTT HQUaff4citittar . of Amin :LA - 0 emalvdadlikolvfl4 )N ' .lq , • - s lintieutor, • • • ' • •• •• - IRON' , 'MAN T XIAApnritERS cAerrAtisp). 6 • 016 -- r'" akfCsuos MA NAL! • Thilivirti/MR invantiorp—bilAg teirklmeMn. AsitciliddriAp liptsl.llwia qwfv.0141.4 to the Amid., lit iblia=4a slow otrpre4 for m rife fin Anyvroble..termf.i `oMigt l6ll ,lfP lll4 bto hi 40.0 pidtisg 14,111to.afJoiat Mock ta l k!". f o r olorge_ettof th bose. . ALVAN WXWMAS, 44 '0 4 0 4 1;04AM Mitnikt N•Yr MC , Lo of „„,„t. 9 ,IrtyL ,climitAlS , - ;alsortnig•uk it *Vont cva , , karat !Wilted. Witiz"; ek l ' , U4Ssiotilarrivettbottsir a " at ," ' 77 1 9 0 0.•t0 r 0 is & MACIAI4B7I4 " II ~:p ~ - i 0 . p ,! .. . f . I f• it. •5' < i:.. -•,•• , . • • . ~ , . _ _. ~s'i : </- , i-i..„:5 , , •?s'v ' 's..tivOi -v". l " , '• , '•it4 ti•ti' 44 it.,ltii i ' ' 'f 1 0 `i 4 ..• ' % t I ; • • , , N l•-\5•t ri.t.,5., • , . q• , ••44;5 5 .,•••.-m4.1:- • _ ' xt5.• ,, 51.6:x.r . ',1.•#.• . 5 kk..1%..te0.a4 , 4.04-rek-...-- , ,,,,,5r.?•,--•-•••'; ,•-• • - "- ', ''.: ' ''-'; -- ..,,. • ''''v v '''''''''''...' "'"' ‘4;.' - '•'• tV• I t' ( . 1 - ii • -••'''''"' ''''''-''''''',.,-;... ----* Af4.O - - vv ' "v''''' s. 'v v '''-''' - , -----0 , •.. ~ , ...„ ..,;,. , •,, ~ 0 . • ~- 5 . ‘ •,, , N• s'..\ , At ~'• ;" It.' • _ -, , 1 ' 1 ......., APA, ~..-.- . .•••••:.,`.... \ 0\1!.":„. , ... • ) ____., ::: tt 1, t,4 , Clllf -.'---.. .. .f ;;11111111 - , ' . •/ • • C:=:::: .' ! • ...J.....yert ' \ ''... .../ ' (-' ', 4 , ... 1 ;L B . , .li,_, ~,f / ~.. ~,, , , ,, -:,...:,,,,_,5-..:. ~...1-111ils.. ~. !:ic..4,,„ --...40.-•-z.,-.- 7 .]:•••.-: „,--••,'• •.- ~ .i•i , ,-.._.„ , , ~ ...1 .•, •.. _ •t, • ..• ...:• • • ..._ I 1 1 ~,j,, ,i,. . 0, 1 ' 1 " tr '', '."),!" ' I C '': ' ' 7::::, 1%...,,, '''''' .. ~, laitztl .NfErf, IC. , -. . f =....;,,,' , i .. dd, , f1...::E.,‘. ..---:- :. 44 . -- >- . ," i ' " l' . • I'. -1 v. - -. • -7.,, . '•,V/ ...• .AL 'mo . . , 1,9,,,"4 `.1% W, ,' '',! 1 .' ~ ,a s ~,, ~„ ;;• . e, , ,.. .4 : . e:771.,,,T \ ..,„:• ,, , , r ~ t... .....› , , ~._ , , :i.. ', ,:' , 41r "i'•".. N1 „ 3. _ ,, ,in '. ' ____ ,4 t.• t: , ,t,:11 i wAr •,. 1 f : ,:1 , ,„, i . . . ifig 15:•.t.:" t t 4:: : : 'f• . :.:!• : : .'t '' ' ' '''' ' ••• ' l ' ' l' ''' '. '' •'' '• ' ' '1 1•, I '' ' :''', ,' '' • •• - • ' 't - ' 4 ,. n '•,. • l'i !.!•• ! i : I • I . 'Yeaf'="f'ski? f /4 S. 1. ,, 1 1 tt NOte NO. SO., 4 V'i ttt at . . ?rat, ISiStRICTu OQUIZT •FOR THE MITtAND,OPTINT r'.The."Boath'Vrelitern Ba , ring Itund and Building Ann. „ vefl7ollWOrelithten: , Let.e Muth•Tatou,' .410,itihr, Alto, applaud hythe Court toMetrlbute the, 'taw erhihig from ;kale =Owe 14990 writ pt the fellow, in reel , certifo on,ylecgoc rx4ittati"Vlifili,7l.Wgiat9Prearte,°4l th 4 diewitaeor one undled . 4d'elgliteeti filet can eitard the stet' ifile*Of uylkiitiotlithiStreet, the eity• or eofitaiding in Natoli , sold 'milieu, atxpid /sixteen. feecand Int length or depth that,breadth savotttfennetleet ail Inehee , --will attend to the duties Of bla .fipp)tatmorit.,.ot Jlia, an% N,o,..7o.l,Waehingten. SyMiltellt4 1000, On Idanday, tioveinber,Eik,,at four, o'clock At” *holi s aud.irtvere peraohe are, required 'to plotent 'their • thipyrod, from ootedoe iq upon Olaf••• - • `- • ' • • • A. HURRA. - T STEWART, go29idlbtle , r i . • 4 . Kt Additor: :114XittO, 00tIgT - Flon ttfE 'ACCT T, AHD, poIINT,V, PALITADELPitIit. - • t at baw Beai ato WM fir E. IV, •Motrioon of Jott, v ir t, pur. googittio# NO. 'l'.(Tt. 1 17 4klatta l ligi4olby tout to 'Citribute . the :0 1 14 be "We bt personal property iindek itrli,oraattenalb the duties of his appointment. L butrtioodoy. , Nattember...94l,-3.85T, et 4 okllock P. b1i0 1 10t,N0...74410,001kt05h10, 8410W004 tha. AV ,Eol:Mikitt rhoA*94llo4l4° AlitP4T,tFe. rep. l 1 4 • in -tr•pt.?,,,,,,,„d0„,,,, rc,p, oOrn ug rbi4"494 11•11411.tRIt.T i V ar • T 4 • • cot ' ' '" "••• ' ' ja --------- ' STATE . 011 'JAMES ,KELSH, SE., 'DE ,' I ceased{ 5.,.: , 1 oi HUHU. Letters of 7Adtainletratlon to the estate -pf - AIiXIMAKISH,Or.,-lateof Philadelphia; deem:led, ' , AII e Imaltiutal %re Reglater of Willa to the pi ' . 7 Inds. 1 4 494 he salttpatate are request e4 4 1 4, - -, iedlattpayinent, atel,,thooe having deluge 1K I , laraii toretthmtp pae idinlattratog, ArAtinatiog i A z 1 L m" - 4 '. iamktstiaiono 4 1 -,11 4 : 4 . I , IU W, 4 1.1*1r of PIC L 'Aitid Pruno ste, • : 1 ` ,, i feA .*,l4fOr - bt - :::: -- 4 4 - r 11116 , 10pbta., Pa,,, Qlri.P . ~ ,,TVIS HEREBY GIVEN:, THAT 46 rk.-Z,ToN t glyVi l Valinrir w e ta ` ilig e i t tP iC t o ap e , - dri 4 ll44lotratiqult TOwAftlP; in'thti . Contr, of. Pi1ibt01gh11, ,, 310,44 iiefiiii hobo' Of !Manilla no 141; ,, aiw iiiiivuth,-,18501 thh kale 'Wiling beenloat iii rtu jigii i tylial 0:-.roc“!:. I . P. 71. c, Wfx3.64.hteth4w*, ~4 , '/4, . `, ..r , r1 040,7 . 00ciP-;;, 7, ,lostratoi 04, Zeth, Aeta, • ' 110TIOA-4 11t00h1k00901141% Of pefitookiLolooro, of, •IL, t retoilleets laiteelefe f)ptorrot the ßenti o 'onsyyronto& t illibo t ? i oll'at Booltio4-bodoe; )11 if', 'ninth pltly ot lecttoo'i it, A. 11.2661, tit 7; diolook, ildUrrothfe *Vellibito &rapt or'roject the pro-' 'Tpflosteof 'OA tot of'Artombly; onlitird , P , Ant pro , 41 11 4 11 * am ) eaterePtion'of'oPede popOooto by the, pioutotosi for Ago. tulle, dobtorko" :APPreeed , the Utlvinottkot.' •d) "^ ny`Order4 thitlktie of , Dlrtcto"., 4 i°F":l 4 li l . •IWTi Pif 3 / 9 :S9FA ,, A")It i !nI PRb e • riIItARDI3:OI,K.:-;-Thrzi.Aossitlx)44 October **ea nii‘tteg orttwateigatitceTsor ,tblilikaritilllbeNtliii the Baelii4 Reese; TURS, DAl4.the third &ref Novemberateatt, at leg- e'clockg . Wt tattle:lnto eaniadecot49ll APt 4 0,thelOgialatur9, Aporred leth Insts,)l,F,Lgtipi,i; 40,1,a pcoitcpg for .the ,reaumlitt oti4eciewpe , iAt . lj , ,,tfi:panka; icr the obt9ittl,; , , • ';'" rid* : ,i 0„ ' isollAFintit, clight6i: ' Q.O:I2IIWARIE iBA gars PH thADELPII4, , '1,7 Oat. 21i 1857.-.4:1301e1at meeting of the' Otockbold- , N I iirtor,A rillq 111/m liolAM the, Dnalcing-hotse, on i11# 28 ,0 A Ad Al . of4ovomikke Oixi;at,n,',Abjalc, H1%7:141 l 'it: getVl4:1 3 11 9 :PiriArj egi ti !, ,ititsor erne ifliTonlolipeeiiiinkinfents by th+M v ac; • oiad feritierrellOVoebbtors,”..l AT -0 , i vlqf pr,l, t lir 4 002SAINS4D4 tidi 5 .4 ,ijtJ , II.,P.STEEC, - OBAkier, lj r 'ettOPTA44:›Nok'fbr:',lrt y) , ffpeatel ibitgltbe Iblethuele- 4111' be field' ,0, " B OII6Iqoii"DIONDAY; the'selociiht ilsktdfklqo ember" nettfat elelob)clb.;lo 'tele Übe loael.dtiitteiiithe'elat of' the lfregielature, tinkered Lb% lath Inotii•ebtlAted: "t An MA peovidleglor the zestunp. *eel psysionts by , the Banks t IBA for thp rplhg. leed,bedet.erzelne upon lbe,eane.;• ,I„,s t ypxdar,qf WI Board at /*Octopi, <id 9,;Vffit4.R.,-.9e111r: 1 1 040.M 7 tr l it.RMER,S''' AMY ;11E0T.A.N= , J.* SitqaPizatiatillii,%octdbei22;'lBs l o l ' jevlli 'th t'N ineetleotor the'Stockheld , Ire fir toldibeetiCAll p elb.* the Iloakd. of Intbotois• itifitoilliovoyultodi Of ,the seventh: •socalon of the act cr the GeneraLfuseembly of {his Statei eat:4lo4V An act ; =Slot taccolocoptiop.of pacic,paymento, by the 1114 for e yetlif of ,debtor , '? cpprocid the 13th 01101,prpOotebei,A.D.1867;lia held at,iho thoiklog.." posee4l l o4o44clattbh, oft TI7IOIDAY, Cha thlid 41y , of Mt 4)a'orclOcir, M fot , the' thellaolkeOr ihbll6oalderatlet aiceptAnto of . d *Milo& ettheaaltlaet •• B y ord‘c of the Board, 1 • ocatEdiNB If. LEWIS, OachlOc.; : • ~IrLA PAT O' , ; - • "f elt gisg . optobar, gpeided Meeting, a the' litoeitholdere otAttip tisoewtil be ,field at the Den4ll4= -Mks. on #4,TIIEDAVitho illet inst., it 12'0 , elopit,to make hlto,eensiderstkin the Mt e(:th6 Leglihtture sp. , PYol4 4 .the Anti: ll W., siot 'nmi , lBl4, tor ree raeginptles of apetdepapionte thyDhuhk, And [tee thoreDero; di: dopy - , "" imealol- 11 ,414':i EI NiE9AERTIIIe itWOßSliV r ttk UttinAlflCS'' Ir t ittrp.. 1.16,,1 Yfillt;hphtetitiAtitribt , r • : . satintuil Median for Diteetore , will 16161 i et the Itenrientetton MONDAY; the ,18th',11syjot 1104iem ' her j?ettirri the boil of 0 - dielbbk A and, 8 (Pei M.; ihtt onIMMIDAY,the'Sd day of Novem. Ithhineitt lOonierid)ldetliig °tilts Stockholder& will be ;Bad atete Banking Rouse, at 4 o'clock P. M., agrees. Olshaiter. :•94 t 4 , 04$ 'N•I4I- LEWIS, °ashler. a rZ PHILADELPHIA., .13A1T*.:,- . • • ilg,4„' , 1 1 1 p)31,riiiA, October 1:1,1851.4—The annual meeting of 1 13tOCkholderi of this It/Armin. be. ileld at 0.1.144 k, AouinkVio'4dolidari the Muth . day of .Novotaber t. Vat 12 , o'dlock MI "The &antis]. election for Directors will be held at the Banking house, on Monday, the sixteenth day of No. Voizuher next, P..-./ , .. B. B. oomEDYB, ....xagmetknithltill:. , 4 -, 1.,- ~ t. -,; - , , - s 1 : Cashier., r ANUFAMtraERS.',:;Agp •ALEPIIA• 8188 , BANK; - ,pci. 4; 1667, 4 4keanimalmeetingof,theBtgckhotdoreof thla Bank will beheld at 1.10.41*192310nce, on incsday; Riovem,; WS, at leto?clocli, A. . ThaittlatalelcotloX' for trutreen : Atrootoro, ro'lletire the lazalnini Yalikt,.lo. l o b:0111 at the BA9ktn Bowe, on Noadah.NOTAVAl'lf.th'ir from. 20 OCIPCk; M., , 3 p •m• -• 41,0, zaw - An 4:::, ~,„ - 7'KgoOAßD;'Oestiler. 1 4 1M0 1 "*TI '. 'BANK 'OF , PENNsYL- C ti orrig,puteLmusit44:l6taber 12;1861.. - fliclgtandallMeeting of the ElteeirateldetiLer thie Bank' win boaeLtst the Banklaviloase, on .Towlay,ithe 4tl,t of November seat, at 22 o'clock M , • . ,d,d24nierki tuovl3 .; , x , „ , • BANK OF P.ENNSYLi ,V *AKA, PfiIIUDVLPHIA, OotoLux 12,1967.. • "the Annual Election, for Diregtora of thte Bank will be held at the Banking-Home, on Mosu the 10th day' of 'November .next, from 10 o'clock A,. A 1.,. to S o'clock 40412711jaWtaCti0 . 1182 8. 0. PM.MEII, flashier. y OW4;0; O:;$OOr,V,T 6 Pr$T LAW, WallixicipOrt, Lysoriiing oopcii, yam Norlirldat! stAOI O 49A Boofripg coloting chime; `,l'.ioilll;ilAda, l lllttilmi Booth ' , Philadelphia. 'Theajaphele;'&ra, , Pills." Norcross & Row& 00.,1 , 5 , Smith !Wants & Co 4 1 I . E * S'.E fiti'§; ATTORNEY AT LkW,No,2 MAX RaltnnT, 110U1114140*N, will rattend ,wltb punctuality, and to the best et his abintatittt busindig entrusted te Ids 'care, oclr3in DOUGHE . R . Corusq . v . f 7 4 ?• 41 , 14, ? 3 ! ku t iy CUSTStreets:Plitla;felplifa. Irtai:SVIDAI,Se':ITTORN'Y .AT 4.7.4L1AW. AlNTBRitrosd.Pqttir Pi. 'it, .14 galk.S7 .. GAS LI . G • .11.5.T.f1E UNDER VA Ana& wouldreepeolfullyeaU the attention of the, otabliitti tbalooli tbaktboy halm sad modally reducing the pries of Philadelphia Nee, ;from $2.26 par 1000 feet ;to the low-price of 1111.bd per Indil,feet r by their Miltilil, .REINLATON,'WhieIf Waves 65:per Cent., a clear Raving' ,If 71 cents on 22.2 d, thereby reduelogthe price front , g/ it 28 to 111.60, per 70100 feet: '' , • ' , • . ;., We are ditty putting the feet., Vitali the princi pal '6,nd proinlnent buildings In the city, churches, Wm ;Atlas, factorials, betels, and other 'Peelle buildings. ; ,i t ea alto been B la4ed op at tip Philadelphia ' Es • d ew , tt, M c Oadrads or certideate* in leveret , the 'said ll atra l a , ter; korrrikkalni brilleg.trind it, elmdring the lam a , urlng,,aan be 0.60# at ant o men:' -. ' ' . ( s ( „store.y lgatyg 4 rtilrp generally ire erbildstdd.' i d tiksod in , ord to, Colt of Reolators IrOill upwards, A cteS, log . S SS: Orders thtough '3llnodt :Destatelkhr,ll,npt!Y it, tenths:lli). / 14., , g,_pinti , eakritici enterprising and persevering man wan .t o sane` for the BffilirEif Aka lI ' LATON. ; ,4aPst mate f row) , $ 2 to 35 tier INV , ” ' ' ' '` ' ' ' ~.. PIODNIVP %• ,NNIOLIT lb ,CQ., 12 ' ,! ': l Odige;No,,,at tiontivPifth street, , , 400llt , ltro .;, ;, t , , , 1 ~ *qs, to 11104 , 11.1iespatch. , . /WARP 01? NEW JERSEY. Pi PEcril,lTtPlt COMPANY' , 17 :• 11 1 - * V i itigp tW JP•M6M tei neetprepeopi to :votive ;: erd4r. for this important .niesusto, Pot ell lastda, u,paisirlatch ashes tali benefieledi Vie Marl la more than a aubstltute: ' dAProfeasor Copt, in ILO ;aonual report ,to 110 te,gtsla. *re of Npw,iterseyi sags :1 , The value of theta Marla SS NI_StiIiSSIS. In•Athe ,hell ned,llittily eultiv'ated, distrkt Which lute i beeP 41 2 afold, Alroot , made, by the fr.use ; . but It may be interestin to oximliii the causes of their great value In Agrihfil it're;utad to compare them with, ether fertilisers— ~Tforinample : The Potash alone may lie taken at in average - Of fare ,per cent. of the whale 4aiglit of Marl, a toulyel trlieo , dry weighing lgblOf eig hty nude ktte prnerar mentionedw ocil:l4Cit3o,=ri Lea r if , ulyap. aar:l Is in a bushel of uniesood ,11 ood mines," And again— , .it IS, probable that the greatfralue of the Marl Is lobo, foMd in the fact that It 'contains; nearly ail, ,the sub. 'stances necesaary to make. up NO ash Of, .ctr common • Cultivated ideate. .. ' • . ) t , ... ~ , , I i ' • rPrke, delivered on: board vesael,af: 4 0 . Wharve.„ s d‘ the company at Portland Heights, on llaritan Boy, New Jersey, savem eents.per bushel. -For forther,,kartiow ,, lad, seg. olfeithilt; sent Tree of, postage. :Were for other fertilisers will receive prompt attentlop...address (either of the undersigned. - : - ' ' i , '; . k.,j ~,,, CIIARItEB SEAS, Ple ' sident: ' Pikeville Post Office, New Jersey. • ' 1 , ,1 t. , , TAPPAN TOWNSEND, Treasurer, • . t, ', No. 82 Nassau street, New York. I • ethibigunt. W.`krwooo, Secretary, No o lo Cedar street, ~.. , . ~ 5 41,,8,.....rh0me.a11ing ; hfatlitte Jpring' Min', 'Ana Id r/m Rd early ' ()Mena .o.,t,twr, eg.III I'"il tote. , . ' ' '; ' * ' eet2o.oo' inoirßlt ttED.'-.NOTIOE, TO (111:118ilittnIA PARMERS'ARD STOREKEEPERS are now , Prepared to unka. for 1 ee k iNipeprai 014Pler &id d the ttowv.rop,• h npv i mi , wei yimbotactinS, fonerei Apidinit,POrnme, t o ou i adds awl can, at all ti th es, aseerteun toe price d% , at 'da can, at poktiee :wlehlog pimples, by whico'to lealpa.orwited. aatortaalltij can hare them Cent by , , mit, • 141;0104E 4 00,, - , ;4o•Reirth prat, and let Water *treats ILlCOYE:3Re2lalerBoxo? OE(AD: luiPae t , ,vicsak, pia 11;11WOOND mos, 1. 7 .#14001: 00,4 Cir, bate b 4T a t i v,.... 1.1 4,1; :.'S"°'!. ,1 19 teroxvletza,, orlbl9iter titroat <lOlO HANGE.-f3OWHY CHAD 0119 APX. 111,- , 041344 ~i r~ ~cu~ V, ~ ,~~ •~ ~i MONDAY 'NOVEMBER '2, 1867. REVIEW Oie KANSAS AFFAIRS—TIIE AD.' ' ''MINIATRATIDN'YINDIVATDDI.' WhatinOr elite may be said and. seen of, the' ,recent Kansas election, the large number of votes, 'pelted ;Must strike the country as a' distinctive mark, .of,the policy ot the .A.,:dinia, Jiitratifin of GOY. Aileen in'thatTerritery. .Beyond thY, j ii''iyi,4 ,O practical' A'oniar bei fore us. all; of the repeated, persistent,' and .frapdeleit declarations , of ' the Republicanspriest andlaynien-,tlint '' , ,the' People: Q( 1 Kan„' ;ass , ate prohibited by; the, Geverninent from. .exercising th elf ' elee.thitt' rights: ' Thia ', elOc-' tiiin, then, without eonalilting . details ,or , re, 'bi' sci far as -the' ascendancy of this or that parii,isenticiiiiied; yOthatit, knoWing of paring , 'for -Anything- beyond the ,oideeil.„ fact' that, ,fhp'*''9,e l e,'hasqiibi' l f - te' to fofe, , gnrl have 'doted, is an iiirarwheireineriiblike to those who have published and; proclaimed to the world that the 'government bf Kansas it a 'stupen dous fraud upon honest elections; ,tthat it is emploYing 'the army of the United' States to suPPreis'tlie 'yoke Of thio'pebple, and to Corn pUl-thomrto obey Ailaws .adiloh •are, nut their, 0 ,,,,,i,0! A f4ll t., , lri: •;/: e , ;:, ~ .:t . . , 3 , . .. . jaii!nfiiiiitdeUfffiri, way inad4, furl- weeks, age b 'President'. Womagy ;and .others, of New if,4s,r;JO:i4en'tliii isineri bf the late general ,Osetlpn, and to Minviei Nreiildent puclinivx 'Of lreaoliciry; to the ' honest lgoveinment of, the:Oraintry,'M the ,ridudnistmtion, throngh , finv, , WatnEn, of ,atfairs in' Kansas— 'it was a biddsttoki; of 'policy, evifichigequally a reek lasi'ffisregabd'of truth,, #tihanieleas presump.: tion,, , nperi the,eredulity and tgneranee of the American, people,; and a- disgrecefal abandon- Med.` of all the rules Of courtesy and of, loglo in the presentation 9f the oase. ' , ~ Itwill be remembered that in the organic act of the Territory'of.Kaneas; Congress express ly declared that the people thereof should be perfectly free to form and regulate, their own hatitutioim 'lb their Put miy, subject only to ,Vie' Censtitutien of the United'' Stetes.; The object of this declaration, ibis evideny was to 'surrender, on the part of Congress, anyoutho- i? t ty which the Federal Government had bet` ; orp 'exercised over the organization of'Stato sys tenia Wiilfin tlie'publie. Territoriea, anti to, leave the whole responsibility of such organizations Oen the people especially 'interested; therein'. 1 Mr. BUCITANAN came into office abdut two years after Kansas had been put under.ad ministration., Tho lifist government' of tke T§tilichir',Wita'tOlita,,it's I was toOvery other eitizenief,th'Onited 4 1(.stes;„it htstoricalfact: Ifelifound;! when , he , entered , 'since, that ;the 4rritorY t Of,'',Kaniffia' had been ftillY' organ zed, under. an act , n,t , .o.9ngtnaii:ixisied , anti pProved 'in ~ 1864; , thatia Governor, Secre tary; Judges;,' and,,,Other ' officials had . ,been appointed by 'General, l'xirien and poriffini: I'd by the Senate; -that a ' territorial Legis- - iature and`e delegate to Congress had been iileated;iind „re-elected; that, laws ,had , heen, eaadtedhy that Leglslatute and.' approved by theloal eirl'eutiiiil,that the titleOf Mates had Peen,iegillated ;banks, railroads, and munici pal corporations chartered, pollee established, 4 L heMlattOns'of. husband and; wife; parent and "child,' v guardian tral : ward ,' marriage' and di orce, andid Other of the 'Multiform, rules of ;civil government fixed and put into operation. lAll these elements and acts of government, !Partaking '6l - thp',' usual conipmind of federal ;and lficot author4y,„Mic 13WilIANAk found in *Aniina niien.be: eßtored his Afigli ,oillee,„, „ I We may infer l _too, that inasmuch as the government or' Kansas - was made matter of opociatidtOzeilt.th!that!manntry, andisrae:.meen di' lost the a the into' canvass; •llit' flu cumvachads iyen its proper managernent.aildue reflection. He could not fail to see that there nithfad 'great ;public' excitement and', radical ; differences, of opinion, between the two great' sections or the Union, touching that manage-' went; He was anxious to execute the laws in their letter and spirit.' He was not in the dark, either:in regard to ' priniiiPles 'or facts. Con gress bad defined the former, as ,applicable to the Territory; the latter bad.become historl. , eel; ' What was past could not be changed. In this state of affairs, .Mr. BumfaxaN ap pointed ROint .I.' WALIiER to bo Governor of the' Territory. Mr. WALKER' was a distin guished and confessedly a very able man. He luid for' many years been a Senator in Con. iMss, Mid was the immediate associate of Mr. , Buenanaw in the Cabinet and during the Pre, shlency of Mr. Pordr: I:1'6 Was a statesman of great ability, and ,it is rot too much to say of him, , that ho had impressed both friends and .eneMias'w,itlf the depth of his attainments and the. remarkable, vigor of his intellect. lilr. Wamika waif no novice, then, who had a repo. tation to, make, 'nor was it likely that he would enter an office, which had been the political grade 'of all his predecessors, without a distinct avowal of the ideas by which he proposed to conduct the concerns of his trust. , The fun damental principle of his administration, which . was endorsed by the President and all hiit',Catinct, tind approved by the whole coun t`ry, slid which, ye see now has been strictly en & Teed; is embraced in his solemn declaration to tlici'people; of Kama's, "again and again re peated, that he would, ,to the extent of his power, secure to every bone fide inhabitant of the Territory, without fraud or violence, free from.all foreign menace or interference, a full'and Pair exercise of the elective fran chise. , Thus the Administration of Mr. BUCHANAN aosupaed before the country to direct the then existing doeernment of Kansan. It is certainly difficult to see how any man can find just cause eo,Oaidain of such a presentnient. Even those 4holelleved thnt fraudd had been corn- Mitied Inat fgoVernment 'Must have been', impressed with an irresistible conviction that thdycould not be repeated. The people were called upon, to correct past errors, if any ,existed, and to establish for themselves, in their own way, just such , institutions as they might think best adapted to their condition; and 4-ov. WALKER, in the midst of abuse and idetraCtipm; front the extremes of both sides, slant anly in his own !defence, was supported by to, large portion of the federal troops to ena,ol,9lita *Carry ant the views of the Pre: sldent In secitring us a free election. ' ofn this actual state of affairs, President Tri/OLO4Y;PI9feqBOr !I,IaltAN; and others, of ,New Haven, addressed 'a memorial to Mr. /3ilanAams, in which, after -asserting • the fun 4,ainental priaciple of our, political system to be just what the Democratic party 'and Mr. BeenfolAi(declared it to be before the Prost .aential nthiduatioua last year, and just what Mr. WALKER was faithfullyenforeing in Kan *, as is, Seen by the results of the late election there, and precisely what the Re- PubliOand have uniformly denounced, viz: ‘4, tbafthe people, shall Make their Own laws and, elect their own rulers," proceed, in their memorial, 'to' define' their it position," 'in re ference to fact;, thus: "That`Governor Walker, of Kansas, openly re• presents and proclaims that the President of the United StateB is employing, through him, (Walker,) an army, one purpose of which is to force the peo ple of Kansas to obey laws which aro not their iONIS, nor of the United States, but laws which, it is notoriouS and established upon evidence, they nev'er:made, and rulers they novor'eleoted." sera qua' article of impeachment, which ,is based wholly upon evidence taken 'before the late Investigating Committee of the ,House of Representatiyes, touching election 'frauds in Kansas, upon the claims of General Wtirriiimy land E-GOvernor RKEDER— a com mission which had no earthly power over the affairs of the Territorial Government proper— Mr. liven/lAN, with, Mateo courtesy, as We think, answered, that after consulting ,9 the plainest and most palpable historical fade," he ci fauna the Government of Kansas as well' .established as' that of, any other Territor y." Thls was, Ofeonra e, a flat denial of the truth of ,the prdmises of President WOQLSEY and his as . sedates. It was something more—it was just "such,a rebuke of their ignoMnac,presumption, and wlckedness—in assuming tlto gaistoooe of I NOVEMBER,'. '2; „1.857.' 1,1 1 , ..'t - ; PHILADPLP-MA; '`); ;MONDAY Ice facts" which had no earthly touridation.and, on, that assumption arraigning the President s of the United• States befora.Ale` cOuntry Chief acting partrin a gigentio blettion frond,. rired'th'e sulii.eisionof.goye,rniannit'l4lCalisafiL7, as was duo.to classof sehoobuhn whoteMighti, for the moment, klittla political notoriety, and I again to faia into /lamps,' fer:the`loWeitt pail.: Bair purposes, , the 1 fimatical ionsiana. of sihn country upon the subject of slavery. • The existence of 4i a weil , eStablionedicior. eernment," :conducted. by officials , . duly pointed, 'elected, end paid ; out 'of the . ; Pe#l4 Treseurg—Loilleials 'pledged before tliwwboie country rd.' secure Ito 'ty r peopie 'ached , tit 4. absolute control of their own afteirswile.hal regarded Elan sufficient !denial of the i(positlineis assuined, 'that GOV. ; ,WAintsn, was iiainplor : ing an army to compol,thf3,pOi.plo of ftnissinkto obey laws whielcare tot theirown, nor, of Oho United Strifes," Sic;,' Bait Vresident•!oOfeni puts,in, a technical • replication 4o this texpilcii, ansWer,,in,those ; tatniiet, The 'feet's, tlienii4 , memorial • stand uncontradicied : l4 You (the President) evidently consider a tri.. umphaist reply." We know Of no, better WY,' in this conflict of testimony, ,tty: which to determine the matter in contrbyero, thin to. put the piainOst and moat palpable I'ititin4hal facts" to Which Mr. BUCHANAN tothiretli Octane Whore Of We have given aboyo, against the naked, and 'Wholly, miSuPported assertion, of Forty achoohneti of New Haven,' that Gov. Wp.kana weal , employing Jim army,,to,finno; the people . to obey laws which are ,telt , their own," • • ." • .1 Grautini, boivever;timt election franda had liken committed in Kama, we submit to, the Now Haven politicians,,if the pre:pet remedy ci IS the abrogationf government, and nultnerit bl 4 'Mu . % ? How long would' out. aye tem, of any other,' lisander such idimnik tration of affairs ? Are election , frauds, so destructive that they should be visited with paralysis of the GoVeintuent against Willett they nre perpetrated 1 Is 'death, in 'this new practiCe,•the heat and only remedy fdrdiseaset Is life to bo recognised only in full health, 2; The purest gold is not, without some alloy. A" selirchlng'iinalysis will dated poisons oven in "Wholesome water." ' We•still insist that', well.ostableshed, government may exist; )be Valid, binding, Capable of n3alting'laVel tind of right enforcing them, without being absolutely perfeCt. , Certainly amongst the attributes of government none,.is, more Obvioils than the * right to'flx the evidOnte by which a law , shall bind the ; people. lire utterly' deny that such evidence isproperly adduced before any corn ruittee of Congress, or, when ao adducts), that it is entitled pi' the least consideration in this 'respect. The memorialists assert, tonching• 'this Point,' i fe that nothing should beAreated tut government or law which prelentstion'vldebee; ,of authority;" and they appeal to the records •,of the Investigating Committee "to proVe' that !rands have been committed' ik Kansas; and they'detide that'such frands,thus established, vitiate giivernment and laws In that Tdrritory , There is a class of men in all ,countries whole visions are sealed to:all thtit 'ls good, and who, perpetually gaze upon those 'thing/ which' affect aociety•on the other. side. That unaPprOachable mirage of excellence, forever receding; forever pursued, is .the• life of their theories and the heaven of ' their: hopes. "Call it Burgundy," said Bonifaoe of his ale, "and it is weeks guinea a quart." Say that the people of Kansas have been called 'apoh to obey laws inid rulers not their own, not' of their election,; and no matter what the faets may be, there are thousands who will believe it. Assertion is an ',oxcellept ,substitute for feet— • " like truth ? will servo their turn ad Nor is it easy to determine itsi>slsity in theinilliSt ;of oiiiiiioinirut. of things upon which - President ,Weoissx and! his assoelates relied, when they declared Mr.; Wlraga to be d,olbg in Kansas just what ho never did and never thought of doing ; but: wo think, and the country will think, they carried the joke too fir, after Mr. BucninAx was civil enough to notice their trash and ,to answer Ahem, and flatly deny their statements by reference to " palpable historical to declare again that their first assiiitiOns " stand uncontradicted." It would" bo folly to insist that the government 'of Kansas bits ever been at all perfect. Mr. BUCHANAN And the people of the United States would never have felt so much anxiety about it If they had thought so. We nil expect from our Donni 7 cratic system much that Is good, and that good is a compensation for the Inevita:; blo, existence of much that is evil. The ballot-box with us is, the great conserva tive malady for the existence of all man ner of political diseases—aaws and indi viduals are referred to its arbitrament. It is revolution, put into harness and subjected to the operations of specific rules and govern ment, by which grievances aro redressed and the rights of individuals at the same time pro tected. Of all the elements of our system, it is the one most important and vital to its perma nency. Treason against the ballot-box, then, is a high crime, indeed. President Woonscy repudiates its peacefnl remedies, flies into a passion, and calls upon the people of Kansas to assume to, themselves, by force, the exer cise of the powers of government. Now, it must'not.bo forgotten that many of the laws which are denounced as bogus and invalid were approved by Gov. REEDER. him self, the chosen champion of the Republicans. This fact, wo concede, amounts to but little. It does not cure a single error ac wally committed, nor sanctify a single act It is, however, noteworthy, in connection ,with the history of Kansas, indicating the origin of government there, and the ,parti eipation of many of the persons therein, at an earlier day, who now denounce the whole system as not only fraudulent, but void. A far more important consideration is to be found in the forced political and speculative immigration, by which, it was avowed, the Republicans would not only capture the Ter ritory, but turn it into a species of rendezvous for the collection of recruits to act against the whole slave system. We submit that such was the origin of difficulties, and that the parties engaged in that monstrous agitation tire morally responsible for all the blood which has since been' made to enrich the soil of Kansas. It was natural enough, and ,inevitable, that the South should counteract against such a par tisan, sectional scheme, and that a great strug gle should follow between the North and the South, Those who expected lose must have been wilfully blind to our past controversies on the subject of slavery; while ,those who knew the fruits of agitation, and deliberately promoted their growth, are political incendia ries of the darkest and moat criminal type. A war of opinions followed; and war is not a philosophic but a passionate pursuit.' So, if both parties in Kansas acted unreasonably, and were governed by hatreds stimulated into per petual life by the groat parties to the contro versy, they did just what everysane man might have expected. But if it was a crime, originally, to embroil tho country in Kansas agitations, through' the instrumentality,of speculative emigration, hot bed eitizenahlp,,matallin prayers, and Shalim's rifles, what should be said now of President WOOLSEY, Professor SILLIMAN, and their assn elates, priest and layman, who, in the face of pOsitive declarations by Mr, Buenassx ;and Governor WArarna, that it is their purpose to secure to every bona fide inhabitant of Kansas the right to deposit his vote, and to give cont. plete effect to the will of the majority in that Territory, upon federal and local matters, still urge' on and seek by misrepresentations to keep alive and embitter the old controversy We have before us the fact, that at the elec tion held a few, days ago the people voted, that" there Was no attempt made to de prive the majority of their rights of control, that Governor 'Manz& employed .the army not lite force the people to obey 'laws which are not their own," but to protect them in the exercise of all their elective franchises. Is it said that President WOOLSEY did not know that such would be the course of admin. lsiraffte In ktioiiiAl' i i i ttre i linaivei that' he is' uriablO- , tu t point to, at single , word, i or , deed, Rtfet',4talid, i)oll?Y7tie . d ; Vi, 3fr.i BuenasAtt or ,OPie , ritor "Vritiein; Willalf Min i tie :benefited 'll4O - *lrarification 1:of his aesertioll, ' O 4 , the iitiople of Kansas were deprived". of , their , mi t tlithial rights, 1y - raftlipi r 9f thoeplfauctiona ,rlps t while, oti'ihe ,other,lKan:dithe recent oleo iii)!I kKfiniss a filir . <l . ositiNT i tdif i invinY hit' tilie'werithii'ire milerlY i gilatitiiene'a false.' ,-AuJuiltf - ffY ibis of eapretaion - c"eitc,Miiing lipiolittracternf the memorial. in 4 ropitgaiion, .101ittis:" . Tootlyog r .hq , , the': 'signori; beerise, lq liiiiiitiPqpt.„ Oat ~i)ii)ii• ' ;object „ was ' '_not ;tofohlOttinatz t -i t ot, jo ; correct , past ; abuSes, i L fl l4k . ''eAlatetf , ,for, they ; reject , the only re ,fileilAttiltaitlit,of• elt i ecting And :90; and • assail end;` 4h , Ah, oily, f iartlat; •that , have 'the ;10 4. F.:1 1 il , ifllk ii - -1!.'40 ( 5'6,, ly . mi l flici; lie c'an sn PreattlinAßoonutai antl,Governor WA/4 1 ) 11 4 1 ' 4 - • ,-., x ,,,,,i,„d i , f tg0k1, deelated to the country, „I, I t al" i flginienipailaf piinciplo of, government Utittultitt , +% 11 1 abet the people shall ronii - ie ;t'Pir,fti,i'firiwa otict"oi,:4:thrir 'ownvFoldra,' 414414aiutilp*coo . wg:;ihe . ylif,a i foth' 1 Titlitatifereed ibis ',principle., ,_ !The object, i Ai.rtje!r:Tioil 4 Y "iro gg Y ;',Ki not to settl e iihipaiepirairedress' i grievances. ,, bni. to embroil , it t '9 , 4ol.r.Yfrik:'!!4#okAkititioils''hgt'io,' A :Apo ,', t_t to: oloito perilous;: hOt, to, jitaig- Oki` r , ,fi but , ' to foment var. , .. We can inert, „Alias' i `each ''`incti, 'ilan,•i;'<ttlterwise thanipinaidiaas , demons; hearing ;the torn{, :of irilwitill 4 , inonstrous progenrof social, ',lnd" -'l„ " ititiO,',:piolitiOef,' ' ie,yilS, in; their ' train. Thciirmaktittifr.alucgatiaas and Guy. w;tifiiß 'partaff,W i fttuals.which,were coinuiltted, if at 41,4 'lons ,i)4141,),1114, ,i4siloined . ',o ffi ce'. 'They tieettiletfore'octiberm'of an intention to renew "thoeo frauds, hithe cute of salmon , deClera.: Vona of,good, faith towards ell., the peoph) i stf Kaiiitialltilsialow ' in the ' faff .: oft facts Ale.' , loitexibititii litto i "ihe`M i ftni, Weil Mimi mit to aflame every material statement of their Car respondence. liftoff'tdijebirtlien i , is not to Correct abutleil;but i feliertiMitatie theni,ie pre' , tii,`i&iiitielt!ediekiellislient;ills•peaceful,sel hemont of a M3:ihr'er'itY - Which:lied it's:origin i' the , wildest passions, and; which holds its . f)prilc.; Ns Al* by, that,,i,i!igr , aefti! ; tentite Tttllt isaivordta;ba.saidnpdn'the'nocessi- Y. 411094)40Ynmit 01.0, imuY 'IN, civiKanthorities,in Kansatt and, upon ,the par-, it'9tiqnAlble therefor.' Who is it. thattgostions tin?, force of the ijovernnient. (bid , Jaws tifAhat Territory' iWittik,ik that ymini , iatmtbn , tialidt•tiox as the' oniy,kinaanttil reattlinittil ot, go litie ibiSeals it a. people to (bar 'reig4o l o4ol'Fi'ikl ' ,;i:4l4# ;i0 4 7 n . i . 0 90 Aettateo. taxist,ing organiqatiniza ;;It is sure- P ty Oifdent Thlititel'usse 'elatmb Jr . ,Teittitotlet -gOteruhriontluthis country ie.^al togf4Al4 ,#l:Updtk:Ay4, f uldte . (, efiftiodo; if, 'w4 may sti speak—the ofitablisliment of iwniranent orOile Weis `bpiTiriereirl34 tlio rted of Ctm gr9R 0f , j 8 4 .4 ) : i114,04'00 0440 1 07, which is to hbleseettedried throughltho agency of ex tstiyikepit.p4 IE 1#4t , 100/,11100 7 ~.toly,- A l}at. 444 . 84ftitti ',af.tbp Milted Stotesitt fele:knee; to the Tight of the il;o l ooh;AOinipg ol Yriii6,rjeil 'NY.4tem,, to, hold ellAve4 sOprigas,they,oiertifroo to etitOthill thelf l 'On late Itialfiltiiinfi l ;oil. fire secure edihd Will vie' .4.g..r0 ; 41 . ey ought to be leathiffeeh.; , ; ;cf Ito ireiiepollit i in tietuid d cohtioi.etpy, uca, betvtecoutho Adcnintatration and the Republi-' can tu9tyPtOt yttildebt- Wootii . but . b 4-: tWeen'ti portion . 4 the, Peniteeratte t iiarty l end, lholldnifehitnition t to that which has &lime in Ps4o'ollf6ti u mw o ft the Cost; aboutfilmed shelf , nti ti.e irVitutto‘the'pedilo' 4110;1,0714,07 fe 'rat 4a.itioltdPrErdet - qh . p.:`" • ' Governor WALKER fa arraigned and soverelY condemned .by . Colonel DATri, Mr. Senator HUNTER, of Virginia, Mr. AurcArtrvi SU of Georgia, and many other prominent poilticiatui, for urging upon the sitting conven tion at Lecompton the propriety or such sub mission. . Thoro is no use,nolv in mincing the matter. Governor Tirm.run has from the commence ment of hinadnithistration, officially and indi vidually, Insisted that good faith to the people, justice to tho Dernocratie.' party and all fair dealhig hi politics,to any nothing of the princi- plea of our elective system of government, demand that any Constitution which shall be adopted by the convection shall be submitted to the people of Kansas for approval or re jection, under a free election. It is remarkable that Col. DAVIS and Mr. llax•rgr., while 'they take the ground that the convention is the only legal tribunal by which the question of submission can be determined, in no wise commit themselves to the anti-De mocratic principle, that the convention, and not the people, of Kansas aro the proper par ties to settle the terms of the organic law of the Altura State. in urging the practical disfran chisement of the people of Kansas, they shield heinselves under tho assertion of an assumed technical right in the convention •to make a Constitution absolute without permitting the people to have any further voice in the matter. We call this, in legal phrase, sharp practice. We regard it as an unworthy and wholly Inad missible process of establishing permanent State Institutions. Success in such a work:is the triumph of the few over the many—the triumph of management over morals. It, is the object of Senator IlincrEn to establish in Kansas a State Constitution, with or without the concurrence of the bona fide inhabitants of the Territory. If the former, typ pronounce It a subversion of the principles of our Go vernment; if the latter, his condemnation of Governor WALKER, because that gentleman has thought proper to urge submission, must be received as a disingenuous pretext, con cealing, in fact, hostility to the Kansas-Ne braska act; and last, though not least, to our whole elective scheme of' government. With great justice the South has condemned the organization of' the Topeka managers and men, and has insisted upon a compliance ton the part of the people with the act of Congress of 1854. Mr. Hurrmt now sets np and :0 7 tempts to enforce a principle of administration not only kindred in its' nature to that of Topes ka,butons which, in its practical effects, Is cer tain to be more utterly subversive of popular rights. But it is alleged that, Governor WALKER violated the principle of non-intervention by urging submission to the people. This, we take it, is another way of condemning the act of submission itself, without seeming to be responsible for such an absurd position. Those who take this ground Certainly do not favor submission, and of course advocate, whatever their language may be, non-submis sion. The fact that Governor Wsracua urged, in his Inaugural address, the necessity of a Oil and fair vote upon the ratification or re jection of Any Constitution which Might be framed by the convention, and even subse quently denounced a contrary course as fraudulent, and pledged his opposition thereto, offended no man who was honestly in favor of testing the will of the majority upon the terms and conditions of such Constitution Wo make a distinction at this point, which we regard as vital to a correct understanding of the matter, and it is this : That to demand the ratification or rejection of the Constitution ' of Kansas by the people is widely different from urging approval or opposition to, any given provision or principle to be embbdied in that instrument. To urge submission, for instance, of tho slavery question, does not carry with it the least evidence of approval or disapproval of the institution of slavery. There RILK, then, no violation of the doctrines of non-intervention in demanding submission. It involved no principle which could final ex pression in the Constitution itself. Its re sults, too, were presumed to ho, wholly uncer tain. If in flivor of slavery, It was the will of the majority whlbh alone could settle that point; if against slavery, it ; was the majority of votes which alono Could so determine. In this view, the ,denunciation of Governor WALKER for violating the principle of non intervention degenerated, at once, into hos, , 1 a tdity tht'Ddatodmtio party • xli9 .112 f. olone making Govermg,)y,Awa l aiorte res,vo,ll!Tli 3 ): svitlfa vietvor,drarder •Siff FluPPCift, to his anti-Demeeratie-nowsubnai sal on dect ripe,. will he' a signal failure:l The iNertbern De' meemey; ive'bOlthie,the great masses of the 'paity'eferyt ihere; ihaiiitElih thatrarly Can itttion bd'fi.ithgd . o tiftVattfing pyeldioi appreynt or ,t'qj action to nn,h , people. NO PRAY API, 541 03 4 0 1 3 •AfiY , platform. ilt: la the thoneet way, the, xigtlt way, ,, and ;the' , only' :way , 'left, ; byl whicli )qo , intin 'manlike/. territorial , affairs; ' North '91 1 )15 . 6410n fo' it •iff 'OppOSldOli qfiri.",o4,ld''l'odlollls' self-girt-ern tOeq—lO :We .theol*;;Pri'etlee; a l nd tradt: troupe 664: 'eti r dtifiti_tiel i ---til' gklarfAtionti of the 'Democratic party, its men and its anti . - ,didates....Colonel-Ds.ytanitillpeatdettqlorrell have no more power. to 'alterlbia of4laort-, Can notifies than td revers@ We laws:of grafi tatfoh. It involves a prinetplii•which exists, operhiCi and tfontrtllsi our ( affairs, indepohdent dr,rddin:aiiifoltuffonit 'it is i siinPly Rio rlgbt ih4SelyOs. To eines tion tblaright is pfolit,ihtruyil attOipelis . Overthrow, dby,tlic oft)lllNri9F, purposes) must he:regarded op inyolv,ing a pe ruke of priuciplo and an abandonment of the great a Octiihes of our democratic system. I There is, Wo tire Old to see, but oho Demo- Crittic rSnreaditatittla 'ln' Congresi , from lb° ftdi States who to in'ako Di@ of Kansas in, the matter , SulitOitting the Constitution toe popular vote. In the'Sootta, Die Richmond Enquirer, the organ of, the Ad dinistration• party in Virginia, is unreserved dematidingthat •Me pooniti aro the control- , • Poier',and that'llielitctlen of tho conven lion 'sliduld go 'to for' rejedion con principle' ,Viill',triaraPb, arid 0 1 9 PR Fesl4 , eiti take:•gi,'conse quences, ,„,, ,•, „ The North Appeals to the, Teeple interested, andinsists; arutwill ever insist, that they shall settle 'for' themselves the question•of , the recog nition or "rejeCtien of slavery in the , Territo riend tie ard' cohlklerdiliat 'the' pirty In appealdfd any 'other trlbn-' Male not, to deliberate' 90* the question of :slavery, but, to estahliehthat, natltutionju de lianee of,tlm .will of the majority, is very small indeed: •WO conunend. this ,preseatnaent ,to President WOOLSEY, and. we appeal to. loritotivo deeloations ' of the Adminigtra oii; Goy"PrAittie, and ilia DemoOratle; Oren "North; 'afid Soutli; to prove . Oat such, ariathe doltriimi . of the great De_ mocrucy. 'Meanwhile, ldr. , Byettaniof, assailed by natlelatu, traduced by , misrepresentations ; like General •Jagnianf, appealsdo the truth of• ble7 tory;Mid to tho practical results OC his goer brnmeM, to vindicato his , Motives and justify the wisdom of his adthinistnition.. ' " THEiIItICAL ,Our fa'ir i city'ls'folinnatt.;•at this 'rnonient, in, lhayitg at 'each thedtie now open at least t,tip, , perfetmera first,,:tateatillity, ,At . the l decoy oi,M.tude, there are Mr.'Cizettr.f TREWS and, Mr. RICHINGS at the Arch Stree,t; Theatre; Mr. and, Mrs. L. DAVENPORT and Afr. -, Wunavt,ty; at'the Walnut Street Theatre; Mr. thiattrairr and. Mr. and Mrs. JOHN St4AN. Mr. ?if/Mims Etta 'played to 'What, put info! albeatre ordintir l Ysite,.weplds be called a; large ,audieriee: !Sors urOdr.a di4dvinJ tap ,at the Academy of Music, where Whai peculiarly and preforninentlY, itdaPttt it 1. 9 1 singers, militatasi to +some extent, agediatit niters; For an opera, hearing Is the main point s tin&ti largo le required Air the , voice to travel ever p*Vici 'travel ihinnerb.f as OVery 'recent opera has been, with brassy accompaniments which - nearly overpower the Ordtt4tryi singing Tellers we find that,vocalisti are einniiihed to strain and labdr to inakd 6.ent: selves prominent 'above 'the dcioinpaniment. Compare Verdi with Rossini, and it will be seen lloW trtio what we' aft) saying is. The accompaniment, whose undercurrent should glide, as it ,were, beneath the singing, is now beard in rivalry Titit it, and the singers, to have a e'lacce of being hoard, are compelled to strain tbeit voices,' to be audible= above the music—thus reversing the order of things. More tine voices have been broken by this straining, shouting, and screeching, than cats well be believed, on first thought. But it renders more necessary than ever a large theatre, to convey such a volume of sound. And all constant opera-goors 'know that the best part of the auditorium is that which is remotest from the stage. But such a position, when a play is being acted at the Academy of Music, is untenable—if hearing and seeing the perfOrmers be desidorated. Mr. Maxuaws, for example, who is by far the most natural comedian on the stage-4be most arlivticallynahtral, seeing that, of coarse, the effect is produced by skill as Well as in tuitive capacity—does not raise his voice on the stage much above conversation tone. Those who hear him, and who are near enough, also, to watch the mobilite, or varying expression, of his features, leave tho theatre impressed with the idea that they have, for once, wit nessed the very perfection of acting. Those who 'sit remote from the stage catch but an im perfect Idea of his ability. AnOther drawback, emanating from this actor himself, is the great indistinctness of ;his utterance, arising, it seems, from its wondrous rapidity. Speaking distinctly, so that a performer can be clearly heard and thoroughly understood, all through, is much better, in our opinion, than tiny ra pidity of utterance whatever. In his own play of Patter vs. Clatter," this rapidity prevents mostof the audience from understanding, half what Mr. MATH Ews says. A whole sentence run together Into one sound, as if it were a single word, savors of absurdity. Mr. MATHEWS can not be aware of its very ill effect , -particularly in a large house. In the Olympic, at London, which watt a charming band-bos. of a theatre, every single, sound could be distinguished; and so, also, in the English Opera House (The Lyceum,) where he 'and Madame VERTRIS struggled no long, with better.. hope than 'for tune, but not - in a great theatre like that in Broad street. With this drawback, we can givepfr. MA THEWS rank as the soverelgn'of eccentric'com edy. In 'genteel comedy, he takes a high place, also. There is no better representative, any where than Mr. MATHEWS, of Sir CILARLEs COLDSTREAM - , In his own comedy " Used Up." He has great ability, and more versatility than any one, at - first thought, might give him credit forfor' he individualizes every sepa rate character. What', for examPlo, can be more different than the nonchalance of Air. 4ffable Hawk, the speculator, and the hen peckedness (we must coin a word to express a common thing) of Mr. Mopus, who married for money ? We are glad, thr the sake of the community, that he remains another week at the Academy. With the exception 'of Mr. Biomes— almost the last of a fine school of actors, whose .like we shall not soon see again—Mrs. SILSBEE (ill the single part of Mrs. Mopus), and MrS..3OIIN SEPTON, the very queen of sou brettes, Mr. MATREMI has not been played up to, in any adequate manner, by the performers at the Academy. They might have taken a lesSoif front Mr. Rictuses, who played care fully and well in every character ho assumed,. and took the trouble of being perfect in the , dialogue of each—u necessity too inuell ignored by others of the company. ; , Arch St. Theatre, as we have had occasion to notice More than: once, appears to be the best-paying house 'in Philadelphia. Mr. WIIEATLEY has two diatinet merits—as a ma nager, and as a player. lie took this theatre , at its lowest ebb, and has worked it up into so degree of well=deserVect popularity which, we hope and believe, la remunerative to Von. The present season opened well, with decided improvements in the theatre, as regarded de coration and enlargement of auclitorial,spfwe, withi, a large' ace:ession of fine scenery; a iireat augmentation of wardrobe and properties;" and the engagement of two such performs ire as Mr. and Airs. DAVEs FOJIT. lie has , lately TWO' CENTS. added , Mrs. Bowxaa, who, tlityogh ' far n iinill being SO, accomplished a performer as Mrs.; PA,VE.WPORT, is an agreeable' actress, and has. the , good , . fortune to be popular, also. Mi. Vrtraaxptsx, has the amusing w,eakneas of ad • 'Frtiairig his as ~ the great Star Company"- Ibouglbovitb. the, exception of himielf, ,11fr. O l d ~304. ,13l4tAxpos.T.,, and 'grit. BOWERS, ttiere ili ItOk Olin in that :company who could play, I li a i, , , , star,"axll pay , expenses . ; .13utit isjnote. le ir,capltal workiug, company, every mem r , t`,9l Istlelt is ffs,l4y . , etttitloiltO • the praise of 1 rPtiPPPll* lB 'sprps , -c_r„ whicho l o.4B 4r, asu)Eptcgs, liA,. ITllfsxpElllCl,44 Rife, and - tr.- Ci o satitOyopid, be, aciojaitiortaany;tiliere, , though not quitooßtitle4 to be tfp . lafekamoiig the , litilril-!' , ),1 1'4 0 ,R41i t t.1f!" 11, ,- 1 44 ,1 ", - Pt41,.2f . , iiv,ery ,d,e3c . rApto F t,,F9 bropgbt :b i p , t,„;fiy: . 13.:: WHXATLiri ;AlleirlP:. P E W :j el l:l ift! PPT i t irLda , 4 ° ,4• We should especially notice his ShaloPtiartati produetions,,t4e, acerlery4 .F.F#l,ar i np i ll,, all4 , ii_lk .4utest accessories ,of 'which , are.oltroa.sid,-, lIF liable. , What the' Viblibli, riXtfillia 'stilts 'ea, scene—meaning a ,partiCutail, copablo,teneaa,,,4 till that ' Is' presented , to • ttml , andialsco—ta studiCd 44 the ,(lick Stiet Theate r iufd "eitte ; , cessfulty accomplished. , , „, „„ , • • To:n4Slit; a Rely:lieu?. Olie,4'..`MNlFtr..ll, Of Spades,'? Immo 'Unto in prapani,tionA ,R 6 4, brought'oht ith IE I T ye in which Mr. 'and,'"Mrs, _VAN:Arai:4 : l r crl,ll „ • iVilliton and &Sae. , 1 0f thislieit, we need only Say that Mr. DA:eiseowlos: William '(thonett' 'ir. P. Ooese still playithe 'Oart)ls the best now On'tlre'afa el " c ', ' •/, ' There has been. ' a „recent reilitcll4 in 'OR). prices of admission? to the Wainpt stiect. Theatre, Which drawing good houses.. We Wylie - AY , ailip(4 l .. l , 4—because low prices will not of' themsalres. All a thee tre. rick, attractinna (they remain for the. present. ,week ~..also:); have been Mr. addyrs.lons SLoail, and tlilasenats. . Let us take a r singio'evednei performance, (Saturday; for instance,) to 11.: lustiato the Capapilitles of , these actors. The opening piece was Px.a.ucui'sSomebody rElse,":with the - plot exceedingly like that of ;cc The Loan ofiLoiei." There la a dull; Duteby !hero, and' a love.aick damsel in,pach:—ln one it iii';Pcter Spike and Clearridti, (in which KEELEIr.and Madame n1416,4 1 / 1 the' Cockneys almost to death,)'oultike.other, it is Hang Moritz, by Air. §LOA l lr x and Zotifte, by Mrs. STONEALL, with a lively, pretty; saucy, high-spirited young lady named Minnie, to do all the ptii"whiCti - yciritiS'ised to'ilb in, the firSA piece. iouire,eicept was fear folly lachrymose where the author teat tier .iy lachrs:tnt, ho only . 'sentimentally l'Oin-alck','sisi 'done pretty well bj rs. Srolniatc: ',.?irin.'nfe; RS merry one, 'hY '§i,oAn e ' was' it good, ie presentation., , made the' play,', and funny play it: was—aniusing;A'firsi, troth its phlegmatic dulhiesa; and capital , aftet-i wards, from a ccrtain'earneatnesa' which' threw! life into the part. Wai4 Pug, with his angular ,acting, and lutiah totien„, did nothing with tbe chnr,actcr . of Eraitt,! whicb, In an artiatkOephig; hdght be' Milan 't4 great deal of. la "The Stage-Struck Bather," fardct with little or a, plot, and 'that little by o means intelligible, Air. Cit.tarniti lads; inadi what is called a hit.' The wh ' olo`' action, thouglk four or ; tlyugher "tempts, itp in th Piay?, lay ,I?etweett, himself and hire. Sioux who , took plc, part,, anct, gerei it V , ery l lve , ll,'b . uo of a ,:siage7struct "',ltir.:,ptricitt Yaqnsestatned puree parte T ,And was . net , vely good in, either., But his,lmitation4f porlitat Actors were the again points. , TlyttAi dultiike R.sss ; wtts fat lure,, tor:thlinAt - he 'Aae the action, he . ndesedl tbc, tusking , if lyintf; tiope thiies 144 liat4e.tl the .4ath lb r itv?;-artd , t-*llw-kbetee.f.' nuneletion on the. voWels, tug witlt his endlifg late sentences in a(', cannot easily be forgotten. Mr. P11.47f PRIM linitated. him . ,tta if be , • bad never heard (and laughed at)' the original,. but ,mereiy, copied a bad copyist.' • Tlitt late Juxl4s BiII:TVS 800 Tit ivai better. %Next ip merit, and indeed .a very capital imitation, was a fragment of a 'nigger scene—limp, voice, look,,and featutres closely resembling— after T. D. Rtes., Tlketi came 'a remarkably accurate, and spirited , 8 614 4 :44 t W. E altravolv was hie otT•to the life, The9e Was BARNET Wrtmeent <who by theway,sent* home, by the Perdu, hitt lortrth - $5,000 to his lawyer, W. E. Routtiso,i, 'or New 'York, for investment,) redolent cr.f, the Irish brogue. Best of all was Mr. Cluuttattatt's imitation of Mr. - FORREST, a remarkable hit, which, with that of the redoubtable 13J \BNEY, was encored. After all tbli, Mr. CHAKTRAIT 'wound up by playing filose, his own original and unapproach able part, in the local dr: rata of «A Glance et New York." This even'ing he repeats his Mai tations, and plays the ham in a new local mete-drama called « Li nda, the Cigar written by Mrs. FRANK Warcarr, of. Baltimore, better known formerly, perhaps, as tlld beanli- ! ful and gifted Miss Louisa 'BREUER: At Sanford's Opera Reese; where the black faced opera has found "a local habitation and a name"—being call( 'd "the Ethiopiati,''— Das GARDNEa is at lit .me for the present, and plays, as few but hims elf can play, in a (color. ed) extravaganza, call• 3d "The Old Folks at Home," to which are added singing, dancing, and niggerAlialogue,o n the familiar and popu lar style. We suspec 1 that SANPOED is making a torten°, in Eleventh -street, even though the times are as black as t he fades of' his perform ers. His tact and abil lity fairly entitle hint to such a pleasant rewart I. The Baltimore Troubl es —0 rg anlza tl o n of the Militia—The Propc csed x'own• Meeting. (From the Baltimore pap Me of Oct 31. f A number of the commanding and regimental officers wore com Mission yeiterday,• and' LPOre COMlliintoll3 will be issu.ed to-day. In the dif ferent regiments where the higher offieers are al ready commissioned, es well a a in some of those where they have been merely - nominated to dhe Governor, the names of parties to becommissioned oaptains have also been handed in—all of which are expected to be acted on wttiout unneces :eery delay., The dignity and importance of a military oominission of mums requires that none but these of high oharacte r and dhieretion should be evedowed with the powers and re sponsibilities attaching to such i t position, ; and these are the qt talities which are sou ght for, regard less ,of tiny of her coimiderationi. The adjutant general of the Imllitia of the State la John 'Wilmot, Esq., who resid es at Annapolis, and it is only from that officer thar t the various fasts relative to the existing condit ion of the regiments e an be officially obtained. The , branch of the sir rice which now engages more especial attention, i a the third di vision Meryl: cad militia, Major Gene red John Spear Smith, commanding, who is to our, )1 and embody six reg iments. of not less than GOO men each; making 9,600 men, and report to the Govern, it to-day as to the progress made. Of this third di" Mien, Colonel G. P. Kane is the Inspector, and the division eon- • slats of the third and fourteenth brigs de. The folio wing official notice from the' Mayor ap pears as au advertisement : • area's Orrice, Friday Meaning, Oct. S.o,lB.s7.—lte pre sentathui having been made to me that arrange mtmta are. now going forward to convene a mass Meeting In Monuumeat &Bowe, at 4 roctoc t to-morrow ("Saturday) afternoon, I moat respectfully request that do such mottos bs held durlrg the pre sent excited rude of the public roma. THOMAS EiWANti , Mayor. ,The Stift contains also in its news columns' the following paragraphs: Yesterday some seven boxes of old million,' ac coutrements, shipped by Mr. Savage, of Colunibie, Ohio, and consigned to Messrs. Roberts dc Co., of New York, arrived at Camden station, on one of the freight trains of the Baltimore and Ohio Rail road, en route for their destination. They were about being placed on board another train for transmission to New York, when Mr. England, the agent of tko Camden nation, received a letter from the consignee directing the freight to be kept op storage at Ida expense, he having learned that the:consignee hod failed. The boxes were mottling!) , placed in the company's warehouse etc Eutaw street. ; , A fearful report was instantly circulated by the I• idlers in the neighborhood, to the effect that a grand armament had been furnished by the; 00-' vernment at Washington fur the use of the citizen military on Wednesday - . Quite an excitetrinaWaS created and a crowd collected. Threata were made looking to the seizure of the alleged arils, by a mob. The keeper of the , warebouse rearing personal violence, the officers deemed it necessary to ask the protection of the authorities, and the Mayor was waited upon. Ilia Honor directed the 1 Chief Marshall toplace a posse of police in charge of the warehouse, and to further difficulty is ap prehended. About k quarter lellfore • ten o'clock, yesterday morning, a party ef eight or ten young reel) went to the armory of the ?flank Vernon Guards, at the corner of Baltimbre and Frederick streets, broke open the door, and book therefrom sense twelve or lilteon rifles, which they carried off. There was no excitement, nor ad any one in the neighborhood know what was going sza until the parties were seen to leave the premises with the arms. Several remained outside and on the opposite side of the street while their comrades entered the premises. After nearing the rifles they proeeeded up Bald- NOTIOT TO COBILTAPOIDOITS. mind the following reap : 4 • li"rf 4 ,o o36 4lefigin _ti;ml ° ght the t aatokof thq, 'Apr. At +44is b 0 . Ski typography, bat act old* sheet 144% bk." written upon. We eltall , if gently 4Elkier4li'ileitte*WAA 2 40 4aWft• Taw* and'uther Sisk" far ene flying Ws• cur rent nava at Weeder be it)0117.4.61,1414 the V e n9eneAlw,WW#KrA th4 tA i r" N T Putgliertlol. lea.e nk irkt! M!liPer mti6 g to the general reader I • - - mitre and Omagh Halliday atreetf,bul,,yrn eseekd - -,, ndt learn what was done with the guns. irbe.proceeding was witnenie - dby several citizens, tentiturixoed•ttrat Adepardes hrlid On rigid to sat at thetditlif;eo9llY, wag it. dime. , ,Ixt, the snot- - noon ! gat! parties returned and canded off more of ' ,the rifies, in defiance of mural of 4he tdcmbers of 1 - the eontponY, who" were rent.' Auldrort wee , Made onalwunday 004 ter pralF late the building at tha corpa or (lay an 4 rent atreeta, - thewppet pert 'of which is bectipM , by meetil of the m il itary colt , Painea an 412 nnlnnly, Th. sl99r, 'bream; re- • eistfd the eff?rt i , and the,T ,c?nhiiotgain admit= The 411th:tort Amarkei ofickijmajaEl leerill . 14 nen tr. a despitt449L% sh!IT , t 4 . 4ppa ,,..... l i'dank of tile Atlanta ted P rep . thi r T7 tier' hair 'bah &are or owiritof Ligett, to. time, ' Vresident,l 'siting -the allot:United EOM. Uncial r: 't# maintain order rip. ,BaWl*Tri on Wednead,uT . et. We most earnesdi• • labpi"tnat'our am. • . . ndent has been- erroneously informed, and t ea ' adop w eT w if il l i tcbeen; * At e r p , , ly on the good semier'sred:Jpetriotic judgment cg:Preajdeet. danoltati ate - Iv t, ii initir nit ar *wrote Wesel.. We•oakaaaareldm thit the put. lenee berg *NV, ''lllted 'Plata tiddie upon Um ny-iiialin .Vit'ta 4ri gr ift e A, l i r ea r pa l m _ imaiiP4 l 7c.Tlltbft34 4 1 -Itll vie t% If i n ,al e i , l i g it iritircoltiVtre q iiren c atiO l untthelllna - Ittadtl • .11 11 c• a ~ ' r I'. • • l * irtfet t r l it leire igr d azia 'front A t, hi y, . utili.a tytney; etteVersk- • 4.001 neVAnilaida Bhe 'a Attorney; Q. I.l)wieweya. . ifareditW.34eZ bieeelpt4glret S. Illexi , !der,„ admit terra,_eiLegeowtt. ,the ieteldu and Oh titiitroinilt of `threeroieinet'ametiott in eailhei oat Vistititietf off: , t -, ,,,n• . 1 -.,', , I :••,•itt, '.. ~ 'it razarinilli._ i : , : .Businents,.4lll.„Bl,--PA. erAtnment in Fels-- inn. tO, the Guyernor'i: yrOnlamation'46ntidenM without ibitentant. , "rheirtdidtiere ' leually iwi- Edsto 4o nerve. t•Otan• nt. , ..tladetyt pot view, than 200 4 ,10 / 1 -kl•T! - 0 2u - 7Ftillit ! 44 0.. 0 ,4r 5 4 41 . 1 Qt • the Goiernur. , • A "tarts 'number' areigfelintitifti :two *atria 'lei, tir a natio:KV eitrehemat,tintiantitt nf, tte3 ti...n - , Fi1 1 4 9 . th'lif. deter a l int fntl t4 l / 4 , Y.,i l r f i te t c t il ". (the °idol.. - • ' ' " • i 'Amoite• titt'Aribriointit 7 tal luting Ingainsittinn 1 IGaiiernnrb .Irfar4tlynVi Zal. ‘. ' 1 .4,o9matteeco*sustip g orten privi3iivintoltiftsie 'are nun - infdakidting ern ttneoo , rardoe,iirginglivet jwithdraward4 Me iirodlldnallon. 1 • r... , . , • , ,pinogn pf pump Waco ,likitan out of the: lannory of 'do! Ainfoi Artilion: darn ing 'fast Eight.' orie*all atibsegiehly orpenredlita.s 'pane, Maar :at other Wain inisiing t.b.li • 'yih., 0 . ,, , :,0r:. , , , 1 .Z' .4 r. a . GAWAIUC:Vtv's: . Tr., a 16eident of Ifeltifohie,l'it4 was feareavillob typhoid fe w er, *addled on , ifte follovrittrWednesk..., day.! tram, sonficted .tO3 theirdinia resting dace on. Friday, and pn. Salitith Maiming th'e fatolli"itiro e ttgaifi'%ftited 4 abl'anoilisr Caw. FillllStitiOri fatbe* , °flP4' .17 9 nDS , ;ni3l*"'.° , a 3 1 01,41 WiTlYbur had Ii iitip,prerThnsli pa tut' In4;finenti of lea healtli;-tOolk gig ibefaboof the beast tefteir.esaaliziasdokftbPaf 44 1 14iiin 1 ifra, Sarah yearb Of Jowl!yenulon, of Fine ioc,4,:llforns 0040; IT. Y., commit Lk *dela, witelri'lionday,44 hanffings nth eitzeilthi kir aproulast „WA 111141 ioi fot 4 .' effrgfrli4. , :tr4lifefigY. morning, soruntil igrovered it ''vras - studpOsed- she lid 'Rohe toitsitii dedglitieriiiidihg in Vsii.neligitt lorhood. i Sht.ltatiAbptuattad,frpikwAkoord..g ,Tong last., The a ,iotiye for her selldestrne Ipot knOtin. '`A purse doilthiing $143 hiwag ibimdmettrileloorpeell I o i. , 11411.J The Mayor and - others inSt,ratithiten a meeting to derise_meanaiii relief for the people of &llama eountz- ThajOyssitze IA kiss been. reir resented`Whlid` hi I` eaffithiltdesent bided mu 'setts ofttiut eduatnttuitalifbb peOpto et POI= es equilty,itreAsreateppci with atairation; they entire cop, ?of tyro yei:rk bend 'River °IT j • hoppeia,lo , that Mere ltal noelialuabot of oato.cir ,heat et their ?Orin; growth. ,in, the *soli ootintk. Tbey,iippf r iid y ? the bamatit;for - help. , The Oiticlnte t t limy 11;s an a t pay):it i of arlati). thateirport ferry boat IdtillnOWn)-Imd Maki IF illtglitriASlMPLlV 41, Vrernili a r,s1 Rilenetjej l2 eteKs 00146 Veg to e poor fete ins,a4e, used their &twist attititpts sivouttlir fe'and'bietlteli tbiwerliarf be istmgiremiehergs, - %-it .Serojed..-seek.keerirser, ,lhatikell9n4lbe )4Np: w t , and had m 4 ,fe Whlortilalit die river IRA vatittViag a emit/Wight& Ito wits onamesaftit.2..7 , Corzrenticeoflhe Major, GsuoridEot the seveoll.f•DiyAsiewit of the 'several Brigades of the nufoimed Volnittee' ia of Pest lvalst~ ' itiit 6e held killogriitinetMA vlityl,the deg" et-liereenhery k.;.for:the,perpose of Whiff futliu.Pl44twifflbY theficierel Assembly of thsTopecton wealth rd y fniltused to demise Atifileigen l a Y itollaCibitigtaliti4PlAllll3 nod-the 6 ,,,,,, isomeid►3lfiffiruPlaber•itiv —be restored "414, tosTer puid - wettion. , The Stat e Li 'said 'tic litive; pro duced during the 'priemit set evei 208,000,0) krltrir of groist-rniore thin six bailee to each men; weenie', end ehiid in , ihe Vatted States: The sintif aeon/ay:of Ilinaibmeseodomil ere eaillian sixlacesbeel basket 4 1f.U 44 2 t` MA yet th e whale anteenbitting forward to merles Islam thin It bas been 111 some jest* wbeii there .were not an mid dling elope. -" • We learn from the Village Record that the new "Bea' orCheeter Velly," at C'esteerille, Will open for' banking bom noes on the 4th of No rensber, It •is not 'proposed to accept the Relief Law, tut to do busixem s a specie-paying hank— rodeendtig 'all` its notes and deposits in coin. Spikier deposits of bred estossble paper will be also receleed; and paid oat% kind. , The gum total of 'racing prizes for the past yeas', in Englandi hes been essilchhsted in Bell', Life; at One million and forty-seren thousand dol lars. " Doncaster races' 4ure highest, reaching $78,250 Goodwood V 7 ,57 5; BPoem E -52,000 ; the ,aix Newmarket noselinp , $ 200,000. The receipts `of the grand "stand at the recent Doncailer races tn . :v=4o to $18941. Abigail JOnes, aged eighteen , years, left her home iaidiaersrrille, on the 10th alt., sinus which time she hes nekbeen beard from. She is of Welsh parentage, but• Speaks English. Her parents are much dietrested at her absence, sad any informs tionconeero ing her would be suitably acknowledged by•addressing W m.„'ll. Jones, Idlacesrille, Schuyl kill gouty, Pa. The name of the gas-litter who perished in the late ire in iltdeago' Is John Towers, Instead of 'rai l . Irv; parente•seside in Baltimore. When young Towers should- Mae of age be would hare fallen beir to a targe-;frittune.•_ He was nineteen 'years of age et the time of his death. - The otore'of T. Bidet', in Tarlton, Picks way, manly: Ohio, wass " robbed on Wednesday night last, of from fifteen hundred to twenty-five hundred dollars' worth of pods, and some money. A, re ward of one hundred and Atty dollars is offered for the recovery of the rats and the apprehension of thesthief... • Tho,Glortch or •the Evangelical Association in 'lefferstown, Labium county, Pa., which has been recently repaired and unproved by the addi tion of.a steeple end new bell, will be-again dedi °needla the wcirsidp of God on Saturday and &nu dity, the 14th and 15th inst. . Willis-tit 'Jones, found guilty in Monroe county, Vs., of the murder of Jos. Hooper, a free colored man, has beensentenced to eighteen ea in the peniten4ry. IR. brother, Fielding Jones, art ecoompliceywes renteneed to fifteen years' Un prisonraent. - The day appointed for the convention of the Synods of Allegheny, Ohio, Wheeling, and Pitts burgh, (originally the 26th,) has been changed to the tint Tuesday in December. The change has been made on account of the appointment of the 28th 'pros for Thanksgiving. The body of Ira E. Smith has been found under the- /Inward Rubber Works, which were blown up at Providence, It. I , the other day. no was not employed in the works, bta was pealing along the street, lathe thee of the aciident. The Tuscaloosa Monitor aurtourceea the death of W a well-known e itizen of Alabama. Ile was one of the earliest settlers of Tusallooss. For twenty years, be represented the county in the Legislature. His age was 73. The body of a young woman about twenty years old was found in the Mississippi, near Har risburg, Minnesota. Her throat was ant from ear to ear.- An inquest disclosed no particulars of her death. It is stated by the Appleton Crescent that the Governor of IFiseensin wilt soon pardon the penitentiary convict - Leahy, "ez•moak of La Trappe," imprisoned for murder. A young man was thrown violently against the judges' stand and killed almost instantly while riding a race at Centreville, Maryland, on Friday last. L ' - • • , • Thomas Trust % Swift, of the firm of llalls beind, Swift'h Co., of Ciacinnati, is dead. He was the son of ex,Mayor Swift, of Philadelphia. . 3 4lig hawking, colored, has been convict ed.at re4erick, Md., of the murder of John Diggs, also colored.' both free. Gerrit Smith is lying quite ill of typhus fover.and neuralgia, at the residence of lion. John Cochrane, in New York city. James T. Diggett was killed at Lewisburg, Va., list week, by an old pistol going off enddenly. A Mr. Wicker, of Kansas City, was a few days thee robbed or sok at 'Barnum's Hotel, St. Lou is. . „ M. B. D. Lane, of Virginia, a third-class 01,660) clerk iu the Pension Bureau, has resigned. Mail Robbery In Wyoming counts', Pa We lAni that on Friday lest, Toren Ball , acting as deputy postmaster at Pierterille, this county, Watarrelted for rubbing the United States mail of letters and money, and bound over in the sum or $2,000 to answer this heinous crime. We under stand that an agent of the Post Office Department passed over the route on Friday for the purpose of detecting the guilty one, as StllpleiGtS had b ea n entertained for some time in this locality that all was not right. For the purpose of decoying the young man, the ag_ent placed in the mail, prior to its reaching this ollice,ta letter containing money to the amount of $25. After leaving the office the wa il was examined, and the letter and money found missing. The agent immediately retuned, and made diligent search for the missing Fackage o and finally found it with thizyoung man. Re en deavored to eecape from those in pursuit of him. bat was finally wintered and searched. We un derstand he acknowledges to haying taken from the malls during the last six months, some dozen let ters before, and this one contained the smallest sum of an; be had taken. Money has been lost by business men in this locality which had been depoeited in the mails for New York and Philadel phta, but never reached its destination. Where ft was taken bad always remained a mystery.— Tsindhanitork Democrat,
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers