The press. (Philadelphia [Pa.]) 1857-1880, July 14, 1858, Image 1
4Allo4ifitOtatigitel MI , 1 ~,,,I . s.‘a - ' -- ' , 3 4 05 4 44 0 i Twaitum4l , 4%93 o m l .; ,„;:i4.4.4,14 .7- , , *,,..ioutgoi4aftra*-Iri :f 1 2 - ,': ; ',, , - , 4,-ttfititivit, N4yeittoittavii-topirrlEti. ',.:Astit: l / 4 41 - Attis , 'ol...llssMs' b , c.titglaiit**SzArr ;LI , • 0•11 :,.z i.e. .7 ,i i .m ..i` Vft''filli*Olililleai* lll43o *to - ( 944 / 11‘ , <t . 1 :I,' li 4.ll4l4iiiii.6oo,thOltrAtill,tieLl i t, th IV i xtiMalis i Tarllr ir its= lll.74 A t „ ~ far s thus oadersd . : ' 7 ' 1 , : '4 ,l 4 l e , t , '''' j'" '': ' i ..,-v. 1 , • Pi.o. -..t#,zwi ilf . z *104:4 A** il i ' *:' ' 4 . 1 / 4 „:14444444i1itt) .. tistitidAt4oo 0,1,160.-.,. ~,,* -.-,:.-.,,,mee..,v;%, ,_ ~, I+4 lIT ril. lll.o s t - ittiblitriw • ••• , , , ergelk warn )11t i ... N .:A ti_elki - . ,1111 MN' tot Sl l ,frillit.."g:lln: t:akook.7,:f !TIP.. .. ItZci to Ta l t , ii,.:5t4.33.7.)1.rrn . :t: 'at -: itgentr.O.Ptait'+-:. 4 ,C4:44' ,- ;...U#V4i*Wittaitle;ll).. 20 00 • riNn t r a ir t A ll a r r ie Sslk% 0906# 1 /14 1 ‘ 4 . - 4 -1 ''.,` '-.-X* II Club ' ..aViEtatit4lii%X ? Afil sikA t' 114 ' 4 ' mo t co - to - • 44 . ("V- • *I P •,., .1 ~• li cirtif, Mairra:ll"l 44414 e ,:billitt qiikalkta 1 . C ii %Elf ` 7 12&% 1 A) rai Rumors., , tat.• MIMI* WI go , $ . 4 - ,..-1- 1, _ , ,"••'. •sailti ,• 'Pth" - •%r , • • 1,117441-itottit*ri,l44,:t , = woo , * low., - 4- -, 1014,44Att - ttA 2; .00tatae,.. 7 ..„ 401e7rgentiThMilttladsbohta pt. ths pate iit Mid% tr Z l sS a l e W N O!!•/ 7.W:ilk! AT° - 1 'MO ~ , c z . glialnat*AlLE,l24l:44/ , - - 1 4 -,,,:. LA , Sinfer,f)aplyitioN Wildfit I 3 ".1: - i - -`, -.li'`..- ALIACU,F,II.OrOXIIR4 , O retimvsiMir4:l4l 7-7. ..:',.4. - .: , 1.10 , , :-.- - Intk.pereguabrunisp sernireltil - 4-4 ° •*Q- - „ ;!-, „N.-A, 14 ,V O.94IIS,I6OIIIMAIMINIMILIT ETATTB, J4l' ” ~.OUMlA*Maljeo eteti di; .-- fot C log -- , '-- ,14- 1. 4 4 ' 4 4aTiggLEl4o,6tAttl to =stab , of i latira . l•-•! - , iiiT4e ii i i g i v ii i. ~..-•-, s.--,iinze, ,...,, - 4401 f....u. - "Al - e•r , -7 - ' -,...7 — v0tt0„ d&wv< . . _. ar.• ~_.., - ‘.tairracacrintias'Aiiiturott -'''' = ' I, ;0 , i tfi :MNOVPAAPUt. RAE • !,,,, an ,-- fiviat ot fri ~,,,-, ? -,:,.... ; ,-,-,A4,- t , - -- I ,f t, - ' 1 1 ,,:: ii. 1 ,714 :. - 4:i , . ' ' GYM 4i: t.ll -, ,, t . 'in r,. •4 . . ' l ',lB $ 2... I NgeiiLYM •:'..r..1,1441.09,4 " - ,' :`;' ardralkarenarituahir fyi . . — Elf lr..ali . i. :lAlti - i it... .1 .. -. ..1'1it 2M i 1 1 '' 1'11a.... ,.1......._ ____-ira ,sar m• ' 41. • 1 saSH ; ;1; 1 " - .74-, 1' .F.-14 . - -- ,11,:ir,1,11= tit 1!• 319 c 4 ' 13 P'l Nal k.. • : - ..ildfi .t litiCatcrrThe ailabaoribers > l 0036 g ~ 4 . 01#41.1184:111611Ta for theialsoflOßElGN ~ . ; : Ltilaiilirlii, itiillDW LB /h i sortildlieipeatally _ _ __Ass the , attention , of•the...trade to their Ista:o4:Which . , .3 , ..Aley,sre,olllOrig Wowed trilos..:Otti.tribrteilentlicut, - ti I A Pal t is 47 .', - "If . Al , s` l v d -- . ' %' 1 ` ' ' 111 01111111; 0 ain klidi—% Tkiet,i k,z,Vaittir, Riesst, 1'; . , ..rpliosiiMith, Bees,twakesiptnis il' tete; Ltat;*ghlpi ... • ... , ......i.e. r#l ll 9ll l 4,oeilaleiriciv- - • , • • 1 1 nr;rrz 5 i,..... , A 1110, edebri l pi pit!, ease leans , 5t2fe . 003.41b44 ' ~ ;:fa iii l obb r e s ~. .........,../ . ~ . ~ : I:: i-15.1"neistleP7itel etba Airensr"olld‘ 5 * 14 4 ; .4 "1 ( ' " °41 0., , S '' er.i-ir....i)..,::ici'1 , -; , ' 1c1....•i , 1•4 , I , , ' : ' . '" .1111 MT slut ionA AVMS /ft !awl zoun4 sett ,crril .• , ; ....Alt tissk,ol.3.l.viv... ''••li ~,, I ~ , , : l ,Nul . • ...I • ' , ~,,, iti , " pi. ll 4 l l?tieileoe. "Petite! Iliepll)34 !Mein. , ~:.:,..;,,,, z., , ~.c rmi r s ), 41s rig toi. l. l, ll lo . l. l, 4egu tt i ii o rm, o T orn iee i s' 44 - t i stnor t , , ,-- .• 4?,.. =„,instv,es.: qi k,..tet. .. ,,. K. ,1 1-!e4... , .- , .f 4.• ---1 -: ," .1 :,,. ?,,,,,, , i. -,. ft s ys AIM" , rie,POPtahAlet.fraßildfitict,_.„l—. *. .. es stuff goes; Shovels ana i ppariesi; 40. ill imp. , .1 - , -. .,Tseterigesdseseesh ORnirsatt itiltieteties3ts.• ' L,.(l_eat. iset-WeonstitgittAii rig* itaresrairliefics of lit laMii °Wein iiiiissilet Veran k Altil,,lisichets; Hilt. • ••• ' law* PlittairOlattbkr Too_ ,fs - ad:lles - - 'es ', -!-. , -143 . ' ~. ,;•.41, . 40,> c, ,, , , ...7.vi..; ~ ,eiet, weryjormig iicoro,',. • I,..,trigf . r.:-R-.,41.eff; 1 19.,.. - 4141. 0 WPFM!" etr°Bl--.' WI, 1,, •L, 5,• . P 4f l 4 P Yi4 l . JLM ----- -' :'n;'/Ir - li -- g-1. 6 131f1AIM'I'llf1011; = 1-18'.13:ORTH 0 1 11J1 striStYWßEfBthieVbilintiliOal • " 4 ` MAWS and tannang Premazirook Omits, s9:r-m; intrmming P,AurtAloon s orrq, PO. ,4947 • ii.11.343..4D Ailiv 0/..:TAILO 2,3415444 h. WSW 811.11pT, .4.scryw Errxvr.:. A large irid woll'iolootod gtOedilit CLOT= tot VA.99111131M alorayi onland. • , - . ,ail Clothing =dela. thia.llotaik9OhnioniVO43l"; bozik tho boot quality and In tha most hahlonable AK Parthrobx . glum .to wt: ltltLratf GAMUT, v c • 14,40,3 T plizobi: ; 1110_0/13 i/ 3 / I .9EBTher , stilisaritior ILP. Ina oalutadjalirge Ilild;*triadt driek of MAL and won, yid* hirwill sell *Me ichee' 4 plots, - F. •• - • GZO: iril'AVlol34, 11; BesorasaPlPTll and MERIT Mc.' S _ .R.ING - STOOK OPTOOTS*.ND d)101Ei —JOSEPH K. ratimPOoN.k , itatv, EST Stre#,,palt NOSAVand 8 IILANELIN PEA:Ok , have 11011110, Store • & Jur and wati r matort44 Valera BOOTS 44 Era - 44019r _a ej rad Esatarn upparsoturk ia"th wlllob, thokApir tor,0411:911 . b .. e4Ssmo,f9f Oa, or iinaoreattl, A Bgera arelneitea,tn_tP.! oRd :111,1[140;i CWAticaa'' ROABB, ,Sitokal`R'Par . qc 1 ....,'" I=4 ,iniopwrig - g-i;MlOntsetiareed-ruid tAfi, in 4 intl.pdr3tLiftg!, 44kn . , ! 64:4:00er:Rou4111 . " Attie strpi,;24.leAti iii 'ta,?ikAgtuSit. faF . tuffsidii4:.ther.ettsbnitia Norsk rlata.Videkvw. ' 4234 4 , a ArAngGLELIVA'ASkt,:SMITH, „" 4 .IS7OI,EWALV, ..4 DRUCIOISTSpioatii46t tofotif oY EncObliti 4 6 113rV ' *7l,4AisPif-...44l°TA?V*#!'" ' " BarVeno . o4.- • Biwa , • t -; • Tyll>4,9s4'i. 47, 4 : 0 1PT5. 41 4. - SalaCi .• , ‘AJ:IM& , ,LEAIO; 2, ZEIST4I I, PAIN i ra, We':• = s . _qr w, ,•,0p..: thb pybtlei 'Mae .0 ,1 0/1 1 I-Ql l uYsrals4l.l_4o:., lik- 81 40'r_edgetodi *VI! "that ittenuott - of Opormsirs I Wear stoat., ZISOIMIM '. 10 4/ 1 4 Br We..00tf5000.0144.0X404.tit. • WINDO,W- 1 .0 L. itlf;Ei trir - • T GLASSM::-Wdr PP - • . Winfe 144—FHB largo VAltreigCoWd . of • - %:01,wil'oongtintly Itand'ittablea:tfirto *U with 4 9 ertteles the Au low,esma, °thee ilowipan the elf*. -.- • - ,..0.1101.thLA , • • , 416Aytt *ably of esoonitilmi 614114 101. - t 11a«. `~'lR99sA BEEN TACILif4X Z l O *fit gMili4.l:4-; I:er.l, Ilginti**X 2 4 l Wo*,l.Y.ia.glOO* 73 -, KO. A 2i514. A rno:lis,itittair43a;b2miovgn,lo4o2/01.,.:,3-,„ ' tt • • , .IFRIN44I;II4I'.4,AIitS -i--2'-frAli'llfG -12SLVIYAbIllemnpakiste de Fl OAT , , the it' Cot-their GLASS Jalliik P 4. _4- trsde or •tentu= - JittrOIethI , IIOI4 , POLIESSES , SLATS WASS tor StOtOsor4killlibg Triads: Rough 7Mb,, Aorttlioosi stul Skylight* OW Ellivorhtilleto,- or large tA 4 - ettl, tor lititors. • The Glue he 404 at the lowest said ditr.r:,ttor,t4-every re aFt t, say - .- -7 `etheriropetted. • tt't. = • z ItlfOßM.llf.tiaa. ; • ' ; rhihrenot Wlndole:tattille`Nftirohot t: 11 B. tor/ orlOplEilksourßLON • altiggP.tr.Lr - • ildladalPhits 14110 ' TS - rati . q,', Ja• ; ' lariiAtailia%llr4:4', - fW#7l i ei3Yta en `ol - r.loo*-176 7 701JA. 881 E 8 DWN oiirkitatton, and of , al[ !Vat MinpiOnet • RePaisnaVifirsdki, iiiatM,, 'with ft's.uti, • • errablellt Br!wketg, 0 .44,414 4 4: 4 0:1 I, M I VI I A 4g. salt itamlardEnglieb,W,Prenelt ; •- r".;76,17.: • tO the SlPierbacintOt - " 61r4tii s t," " , 00 F.ARttIC satt,l4o " ° J;e l. ' '• 7agBgllT 1t0b1444.41111410144J, c - ifiiiiar; - , 0,...(710. 4 5i , 2b *:4l*AiiDS 1 .4, as N rtooosegi,foira,ll4 so *lf ki:4otiouye st.gxrins i In Atio, 6s'.4.i.dr t , 5 t..p.x..„ frorit - lafratii 7' •""'f" - -`.`rr 7.-" ,-- :2lol3Qath PRONT stteat4: - •. d l I 4v0444.00-7 - w-loildifitikb 'iliti* -, .4.-.,— ,, , ,, i ?fix , ,..V0.1 .?...1 - Te-- ~., .11,4Le5;!F(944/ - ~,„„,,,I • ii ii i i• ; ;4 01 4 ~..I.a ~, i r," -- '- , , , :i,,c'T-44,1 . ,'"i , iiiiiiiiTA. 4 4., 1 / 4 :,-,:. ?' -' alinisi''N?:T`'' . '. .31 - 4utAterf0....,40,,..... 1 ~-.:: c00k,i,..- 4- - 4% .4,040:40484teiw..f . 4 ' 1 ; f1,i1z5371 , 1 1 - - - , f i gip .. • 444 ., - ,.._.....*•.,0re50ff . • 'viz . 1 . 1: , d 1 03). -,0*.061, • , i,.... g ~•_ „ti.., la /SO ' TiN ZIA• elf, ''' - r ''' ° 'lu'rwTjik•rfg '-'l°''L'-14rF'I49xrtrPV;CA.WjP4t0rijri, r, ' ,. - 4 * '.' :' . •- -0 1 ,,r40.1 1 445 ; ,cni ,F,.. f. lotiork* _1049 - 10 a r a rtta , Va' ;et, 7•M . g. 9,044,7 rtB6By), , Tyosts., ifEkt?& l altibii‘byltoEB MI ~:' "ri 4 47.- itt.#lo,l4 l mitiortroketiSloliti4edsh., - " ;'41, - ., .c. • : 7 - ,,:. ~i., - , -,.. •AN•$.O.4-.ds *I 00 , 10,_5p7,V IRV 1 . ..L'V ‘ .. , Y.l4 . ,ritt l i Alii, )44, ' • ' ,- ' -.. --.:yoiti•iw.o.'..g.iltoupsrivi‘*2o oia..-464,04 - _%:. •: .1-ii-p_.*o-, pp : iIk4OXLM , IllidlieD4VE; rgit*ef 'Lg. ,- - BUR,.'-;..Vrixig.aol46 - . Ala' Retail • dealers In , Wine", ;- OrtilL* 6 4 lo, V P9OIIifVENTAI street, 8, E. -•- t . . r .11'4 , e; . t .rt;r-i' t•l'+' i ilr / • . , . / .1 '3 1 ~~ . ,_., MEE -`140. - , 294. ; , 0 ..--g , - igeolublifattorts• • - ivu•rf - - 1 - ‘SR:Vr-14201:Zilfs:e." j • -_4oty,earf 'lcriittyrolf - 4541dietatwoisit ' , t tt lirs) irnoWtrei.44; bid AS Ds cprit 4ll l9a l toblitiiA!o.4l"atiliti , icasmrsigdzig 6" --- Lb_i_4lll4lf.2lttlat .^- eitylot OtroOgribirif. 'rand' tinuPA. Afidoot BB N.:MA:Snail/OW Me 0'0611.0 i 01.3kcOnOrilAntint)o*ABIEITSITT4treffilr 079:a-ly 700 I , A 3004 z ,;: Y , .) 04:3104 - `l` :!0 44:c0. 44i look over th 44. itikbkrtt;AtlktaFiurgictorY ' l l . ' • ..-I.lll:nrittriykeßAusC liwtottr.Lielimetier ittytru anb Reos la buying Account Booko, I Voila - oll'Rrttoolc io6d it fair pioeil : • Jul-2m •Ertytt, (*psi EYEBY 1(t T' • tit uieai %;1'• P.NBA42' arni'sA • • mfmiltoi; erected trepexterise `40:4 the , have en ,coin.. beautifully 'laid out _ Kit I ;Parlom - Ohambere are try and ponifortaliVfn lobed, aqd the,prolipeet from eMiudatie , for belay' painate vixtelledl or half a century these Springehatti Wieti'alebrated for their' uttailleleatuslitieganilthe treat Slane Of the Vetere In ekrenleafee..tifiner— Thy temperature of -the-water is fr*.dpgreee„and,foplathult delightful and invite. rauri g , i,l ° aulni-wn(4 l WI& B t n t an A gag" ) : and fish Persotts in pursuit of, health or pie/mural will find tiitA saiihettlefightidFretiati, and ito ',neantesito the' Pennsylvania Esdififadaviitieheittneeigire it &Acadia in-the State, The proprietor has had years of experience lirithilbusineon, -Ruda paineerttpublemill be- spared to rake - gaits eoriifortible: Zak* ran ,from, Ilentingdon to; the Spritmie on the arrival of the:different Ralirdad trans ;,. faro 26 aria. '"litt a lies tdefenzmddated at umbrae, • • , - r. ...a:L1 a tunirAz , t..." TtO,PHOVr. " • i jyLam `O9 oi!Ei SFAINGS, - • - iIditATCIGA Apia 37,1888 , • , CIAisip,TOICE BLIC. '. 7, Thitritilgthe list Sunni anattemp PU t was made to de. calve the public, hi perfume ‘olfering what' they , called 'ALCONORMS WA Elt;to ftorotonhtidis ; and at the ipritieof obi cents The WiIIOLESALD pito of 'the; GENUINE CONGILESSiWATER, at New York, toting abodt.74. ante, per glow. the imposition of thus Preteridlogto sell lit retail, for leas than cod, and with out s allowatire,' latlght, Cartage, and Breakage, is. apparetit Oar pitibstild wale has been to empty LINE bottle of-gehning 'Otago= Water WO a Ifoun:' lainoind-thereby Christening its total °outputs.: • We have ENVER tiold ConggrsarWater..l Fountala or in youth or Apix . OTEISR DESCRIPTIONS THAN diary4lised GLASS BOTTLES. _The cork of every bottle - of the gennifiele Maeda tf CONGRESS WATER C do Pflitrand if withotittheltifords and letters, it is 00IINTERVELT/i.e , - , -VIA RE & oglidf Proprietors of Contralto-Spring. "G ti )O.O3ESR-CONGRESS SPRING- NCITEIt, Isteawet direatii *Om the-144"g itpuat ogy alware s onzletand, in Pint..and _Quark Bottles, and or BROWN, Olieurtat sad•llrunist, )11. oornr• 944101413/ And WPM lit!eepo, - 1001.1Ger1uNE 4 110U8141BRIGAISTINE Beatleitt.74ll.l:3litY glitirtt . , Proprietor, This Marge and eleipuitly looeteq. !forme le hole open pr - the meptioaotyleltorg. :• ..J.lTqrullApeoireek or 51.1.4 per day, - - , . Teksfoets -01 , ,Ciuuden autt-Atleutle Roliroad ; get out iplet;,lichtre 'a earufortable boat Wapt Benj. TarneFj' tillßO In i . i . Oditilnin,..tto.:cpFey toota- to- the : '`, „ < . $ll VAA...BAT-EflNGizi ' A - th 7 ~ DELAWAII39 :HOUSE, °ARE' J . .erbflairstoUtm and ToDuktt _Howie - is now open for Mei rrpo pt iop,of : rlafter9:. For boalth. rentention,' or plea& fin; it itt njatuilnymed by any on Cho Iff TANES Arselieff yrpirietor. SEA-Bil.T.lllNat-003LAN MOUSE, OAfT, ,73-71113 • reell.dentowd'and; 'uvular givele NO4 open to 'receive wieners, „ -It zhea - boen put in complete order, juni wary attention will be given leigueste to'tbalielh6lf vait The table. will ' be obi:adroitly oupilliri vitlittio luinriee of the Amon. ;Chet*, moderate; tobuit Mier 1024-emer , AglrlSAMlNOTProprieter. WTlo.4tl l 4 l lltno CA Z Y piu'.- 14 0 L iiel l oP -14 Asg 'oletreek?"' childrei(and lie w rieints hislt price. ? :"14 ~...MippAi4.4tit..wracqi, proprietor, uIiIIOUNP/41.01 4 1.11tJ SPRINGS. HOTEL, 6 umo CA im.vs PROST RLISLE, PA., AT I'GE GAP --OF,TUR 8011211 SIOUNTAIN.t—The subscribir of the Bt, Lawrence Hotel, Otteatnut street; Philadelphia, hay- Aug leased the, &barns popular stunwrer resort of the late proprietoiVainsii Tf :Patton; 'rail open the genie for the , reeepthirt of guests on the 20th Of June. Terms mode. -rate:•—;Address-•• ' • • •• A. G. MULLIN, ,s - , Blount Holly Springs, • Jelkitiow • : • - Cumberland county, Pe. I%iiiNSIOLI niAtrini 011UNIC:= 3,T4,This ;legint establishment, beantifedly?eitusted ilieluihkietthe Lehigh,' Is now ready, for -14te temp tiou of suramer_elsiters. _There to no loealtiy In Peon sylTania, nor, perhap h in the United litatee r whlch coin blues no ninny attractions fis the valley thu 'Lehigh, the above Hotel wilinford,a most aimfortoble home •to vleitets desirous of viewins the magnificent scenery, inexhatatitilleintipas, or skti*odOus vorics of mt or this late ttusreglon. • HOPPER, Proprietor. , 41111 LE WHITE . SULPHUR AND OLIALY ' .1 nr,A.T.s EIPRIBUB,O DOUBLING GAP,. Pewee, "ailloPetl es..ossa, and, are amenable In , eight hours front Philadelphia, by-way of I.l6rrlsteng, thence on the ;Ottmlietiand'Valley Railroad to Neweilte,theoce $n Stages 'eight miles to the liplangs, where you arrlSs at 6 o'clock annum evening. ..- Nor partnerless,. Inquire bf Messrs.' MONO McMichael Simnel Hart , lames Steel, B. S. ~..q ,, ,7,",.0..,. Proprietors of Merahante' Hotel, Ala *his; - . . , SCOTT 001 , 14.14Propriator, .1. , 4 o'r ' 7,4 , ' - N!valktle stircf ,, P , . . . - ,13...„1,1), I! ,0 RD' - ,'Brili, .-4T 111 8 ,- weaplordwn.and_delightfal Bdonoor - Ilesort will be otainedihicthe reception of Visiters on the 16th of - 7nreoLadiCept'Oped nettilltiolot'of Oetobir. , , ' i r The tune and rpiclolifi'Bulld log* erected last pear are now fally-oorapteted; turd the whole ostabllshinowt, has 'Been I funathed in superior style, and the -accolOolo4l. floss will be of a cautraptep not exce ll ed io ,any Trost of The Melted States. , ~ , - , llie "Motel: illit bi inder mt ibeinagement oCifir. 6. '4l:l,LiaiN ; whole experience, courteous manners, and Attiaticur To- his grfeete:glire WO amplest asettrance of 'eivinfort and - k(itd triettinent. • ''- , ' • - ' -In addition-to the other meant of access. it is denied , lerorn got 49 Bialpessengers gan reach Bedford by, 6 oSynya, ride/mos Mambersburfi. ~ ~,; „., , ~-. #. The , c:FeitatisbYtiati , inadeaatonstve arranneraints to -*apply-dealers sod4ndleidnits'wfth " Bedford Water" Ay; the arartal,Tarboyjand in bottles, at the fuhowing veless.7atthir Springs, els s" '-- ,'" • ' - .- floc ;barrel andbery)..o, '. "' - $4,00 ...111, w ~. ',:.-1 1, 9.: oak) ' ' "IEOO - .„.....1 120., , mulbeg y) -,• _ $4, / 8 00 ' }l Do: 5. 0a,).,...,0,44 , :,2 1 00 • ' ' -;''; 'oarbol. 10 A0r,:..,,::. ...:. r . , • 3 t 36.. !'r9tottletl,l, ' pipt Of doieit. • . • .1;60 t Tbi4 Weds kw' - Wettilleinlimied; SO that-pur- Aialmil inerr' , depend ispOti , readying'. the' 'Water fresh teed toreiet; - 1.1 r--y..11.,- ., ~,,:•,-: 1-, .-,. ,t , - ,-, 11' Aus4mitissis tilscn;l4 be Mansard to , -, --2‘ , fflittkPßCPßO4BlidittaftAft SPRINGS Oil '.-, ' ' - .Ai:tit u kg tcpstway-'- ; LiNCIABTER COUNTY, ' ' PA , IVIII - *peal:pie:ooth , clay, ,of tune for ylettcmt: This Aeoltby samttier retort has tunny advantages which • eounuerids It 4 to the publie, In search of *home place eeerkidithennonittabillx daring the hot seeeozi.'f It la vibrated tiretviihiindred-fiet above water level. There tare.=graded,valks tihrotigh: dense , forests, slid 0.1410 Athetwi 47,the'W*3; IMO Ire many, springy of the - purest ant% water.ety , a teroporatureer 49 to Id degrees of Farm /44” c Abe oksarvatory overlooking an i:rint - of 40 Mlles' square., ofliirras, to the ,hlcheet elate of cultivation,. embracing of Lancaster soupy, end pidnfilo ten other counties. no teener, , Wes -away. In the BinintliarY cif tnonntaint at the dis tance of 70 wiles, blviltogethen: one ?cif the moil grand and erteuelvvpanotaatioViews to be met With in 1 103T.eyinAly.. 2folkind of eyideudo has ever been known' i fierie atViby 4144a0n4i7. ttiii year. Many beautiful drives itive'good ivada. "hotel *lli wicounnodate cola 'Tei•tiblY IWO bereOnn: library Variety of 'WAILS. 411 the nioderil ituprovetnentivow In nee In first- obis waterlog 'Places will be found herev.--All vegetables rativilnu the 'bizini - -TtiehosWhely,itiployed In every department. M 6,lhik ProPflittere bluwell that he will be able 7O,Xlvevutiple:lat4 tOrn sfaatienato:hia guests. Goodcrtable rain* 4 4 : ,0 I** 5? ,I P ea w 144- "ogee an 30 4 /44 _ lrerAirttetil4littion cad l a~dt , l.Crams, - •,"- '• TRUED and Volts Streets,' - ' zunme.,:skitui, f :7 • No. 4711318THTIT Btrset, . ~ga On See Proprietor • . • f kt:l4Pa 9 avast% zosiobsepars lll . ti„ .. Tlbavlter eoan , 4 Ivelf-ithii '• • = • • t: . :-• 1 Ot,itig _ ,- -11.11,1c1)itteit. j I_IFAXBISio , BOUDOIR , • SEWING MA . a - s: OfirNE to &Tepid to Die public ea the remit ratio !,6"..leliisKfirlOS4BsiSrlog Mot:Sine th jai.: It 'will new from ,e'# to. flAt):::dlls1M1 i.e . an thOh, sti'ell' Uncle of 'goods, ifisMsi ; s4, - -,kaa, , i , hsg'gli; l P,tsi;tl.o,'firiast:pelobrice. •• It jr, • ork.hout,eswegerSithe ifipPlast isi ltd, mechanical too -1 skuctiOu lye!' muutesmA Pt! I,Pi.. run !I#lB : kepi in order 1 hya ahlld bf tirelyo yenta of,. rigs. ?The nonAmtifr of 1 this machine, and The 4 VOITT Orcrte yogis, are warn ranted to be swamp...a I,y any other. Its ispeodreages goratiea4l; 4*-4 h-u mm t Etltol l er per min -1;14:::The. I:lll4.usii,op4e4'4ll:4qfpli the 'Spool", 1 . 1 1 ! . .V0..ii11Y., , 4 4, iirM!, L 4 'o7.,ith*holl4l :411r=0,1!. I. a ! 4.thimviasii,74l4W,lT.Riery haoritii the lan d, and 4 4 Lint PlitSS. 8.. 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Abc , ..lenate, the iiouse of. li4prasents;. .tives i ,no one dreams of Challenging'bia` right, to. take yoteizor even cc - dine, ;with the r:e4iisidentit' ifhe beissuch 9 ventrioal legislator ais'ibatworthiirribtfeeeti:, Jane, Cheney - 'Brit, in •Engiabd,;:tbe fact of Orders" 414.0f1.04s t" the ICoin.., • : n ; „i; quao.pcliiprohibition does not extend to, the Housp:Or' Lords: - in the lint Plann,,thnt Inisemfily,,connnottly, caged '"The 400i, : legui10,,,e.p000(siflords'Afit1101 — ,*:: mptisti 4 l l4 lolo 4 7ifellfiiitio. and abikut*folters.hiiiidieh `and'*ilutedf 'bittei4Mlikiiii#4:llO'fise;:ofj,;M:o four bun t.Tior4a ;fifty c elpit „members in ; tho,-Hoiuie. of Commons., .„ z ; Serelet tui say,in-reply'lo corteOpridenti who late asked for information on tbbrpOint, thifmik payrifent Whatever' is 'Made to any member of either House of parlitiMent—no- Wary,' rib. ' mileage, money ' alloWance , ;of , - any"sort ! TWo.hundrad y ears rgo, .countisa .hadpv,:tilpir„ representatives, called mitnights of the shire,”: and boroughs had to pay4ho gburgessesw whom they ejected to' riprekent . them in the Commons, but the' amount was Comparatively small, chiefly coVer r lug", their" travelling:ignensee,:tiod not pro : 'vidingf.ietka l inialritenance that ANDREW the t ,loportintible, who ,represented ,the Jown: ottell r efter the Itestorition of Cuannis 11, wee the last who was thin paid. Audi'wberever Anicirpayment was Medd, it came' irectlY from the constituents, and not,,as in this countrY, 'Out of the public' Treasury. Several amdll boratiglianomplained of it ,as a titi,:andlooklo electing rich men who without. Cost, to the voters. One . of, the five ccpolits'! of the Charter, which the working; sand generally .'unreptesented. classes in. England so much desire to obtain, is a return to theliving a salary_ to every mem ,ber of.the-House of CoMmons. • ', The Church of England, casl:ly law estab lished," is the,Protesbint Episcopalian, and is pretty repreSentedin the genie ef Lords. Three Ai:chin/hop/tend ,twontY:seven:Blahope constitute .tike Spirlimil Lords" 11 Parlia ment. Nominally placed In the Lords to pro tect the temporal interests of ic the Church," it might be suppotied:that tlfese lawn.:sleeved, silk-enrolled, and very reverend' l' i sthars in God Ouch is their ordinary title) would keep within their tether; an speak and vote exeln-' lively on sacred, or at least on clerical stbiocts. .They hare olten been found, however, mingling very freely In political discussions, fiercely de-, bating, in party discussions,. for or against the Ministry. Before long, in all probability, the Archbishops and Bishops will be relleVedfrom the trouble of acting In any' legislative cape city." In the debates on the Nefortn Bill, in ltitl2;wheii the Episcopal Bench (as it is call ed) voted, almost to against, progress, they wore,„curtly recommended, by the late Earl Gnsv, 4 I to set their homes , in order." There Is -something• unseemitin seeing the Reads of the 'Church angrily Mixing in party warfare;-and as attendance in Parliament for six months in each year takes each Archbishop and BishollatvaYS frcim his diocese for the• whole of that period, it is considered desirable by the friends of Progress that their legislative fhnetions should terminate, thereby remitting them from cc the pomp and vanities" of wicked London, back to the dioceees which they were respottlyely appointed to superintend and live In. , , Occasionally it happens that a Peer of Par liament Is also a clergyman. The latest case was that of Mr. EDEN, who was appointed 111 2 shop of Sodor and Man in 1847—a see which • does not give its incumbent a seat in Parlia ment. But in 1849, by his brother's death, ho became Baron AUC K LAND,. and_ a temporal Lord of Parliament, sitting and voting in this capacity until 1854, when ho was translated to the, soe of Bath and Wells. Immediately, his status changed from that of a temporal to a vi a-Ulla; Peer; the slaty-eighth Bishop of Bath, a diocese feundetl'as early as 905, being a more imPortant personage than the third ,Baron •Atext,AND, a peerage conferred in 1789. Clergymen, it will be seen, actually are part and parcel of one branch of the 141114 Par. !lament, and, if a peer be cc in Holy Orderfi,” ho is not therefore prohibited from sitting in the House of Lords. That Is, the fact of his having been ordained, in the Church of Eng land, does not deprive him of his hereditary right. But,a Commoner, who is so ordained, is expressly declared, by Act of Parliament, to be utterly ineligible to sit in the House of Commons. Were an election bold, for a va cant conoty,,or bero,ughseat, and a clergyman . to obtain every vote but one, a lay candidate obtaining that one, the Returning Officer would be bound to insert the layman's name, as the person duly chosen, in the Writ of Election Which he has to return to the Clerk of Parlia ment. Kale returned the clergyman, on the groand, of hia•belng elected by a - majority of tint tuseerablerCcitamOns, on learning .the fact,' would' iMmedlately Order the, writ of eleition to be fun - ended, by striking. out CM clergyman's' name, and putting that of the One-vote layman in its place. • Hero an anomaly' arises, • Though clergy men of one persuasion cannot sit in Parlia ment, thoie of any other - can. For example, the borough of Oldham, in Lancashire, is re yresented.,hy 'an kloquont man, named WIL LIAM Jounsox Fox, who Was educated for the Dissenting Ministry, nuder the Rev. Dr. Pm SMITH. For many yearwhfr. Fox officiated as elergyMen in a Dissenting Chapel, in -bury,London, ,and drew many .heareis to gether by his eloquence. He is allowed to sit in the'Commoni, and has so sutler ten years, although_ he is a Clergyman. Why, then, alunild any distinction be made? The answer Is, the Law of England recognises, as " in holy Orders," only those who belong to the Protestant Episcopal "Church as by-Law es ,tablished.ll 'lt wholly ignores all other ordi nation, tme;eery:othbr church. :Bow alumfin Catholic Clergyman, if &mien a member of - Parliament, would be dealt with brill's same prohibitory- statute, is a pnzzling question—, The Thirty-nine:Articles of the Church of" England declare the Church of Rome to be ,44 idolatrous;" pit, if a Clergyman of that te idolatrous" Church read his recanta- Hon end Join the Church of England, the va lidity of orffinntion is admitted,, without question, on tko ground oiApoatolical Seneca .elen;.we believe. And thus, on ono hand the Citurcliofßelne is solemnly banned as "Idola tr99l,'; while, on tho other, its full 'power to confer "Holy-Orders" is admitted. Incon elatent as, this:May appear, it is'the het. The reason why Protestant Epitieopal Cier gymen are not allOwedlo sit -in -the HOMO of Pompons may be worth mentioning ,here.' Ono orthe most.ceiebrated public inen4during the "relgd of Gionoz 111 was Itir..J erns gOSINS' TORSE, now- most faventhir. remembered by, his ingeniona philological - work, tc The Diver 7 siohe of Puiley.' , He - cokamencetV life as a Olergyrrian of the Church of England, and Of ficiated wench for,tem .years, When he' aban doned, his'clerical title, and plunged lute the .arena of arena of politics, taking the side of the note dons JOHN WILKES, and displaying so much a writer as well as a speaker, that the authorship of the Letters of Juntas 'was _once attributed to him. Rut, though he cast offi' the clerical title; belcOnid'net'abanden the clerical Profession; for ~ !once„,it :clergyrniti, always a clergyman" was the dictum of the I§w, rho ptalott for no bar e but 1119 4911049r4 =EEO : , !:;,-,,,,,1,4 - . OL:ADELP! - 14 - „i'Ob4's l :4Y;', , " , JULY 14, 1858. . refutiod.to ic pall" ;hlm,.(intho,grotindlliatbe - . Wie - a . ClergyMan. For over„twentryedra peat follpWing,,,MossU Tomrs annoyed the do- . yernMunt in,eyciry way he_ pould, and at. last was committed to.the TOWer, on a charge 'of" Pip Treason, tried andat9ittted. ,' ' - ' ' TWlce beitip 6 'as a parlianktary candidate, ferVestmirir4er, he was , returned td - Pants-. Mont - fee - o,d stain, hi May; 18(it, by the ea- - -centric ',Lod- Csiszpronn, who , owned that close' and corrupt:borough. "..d. propoSaLwaa made to exclude him; On the ground or his, being a clergyman, bat Mr. AunraprOs6"(arr terwardilriSpount Stikentri,) who'was' t.hen ,Prime 1S fin snUffing,oriiiii iirti- lent antagonist, and brought in an Act di3clara tory of the future iiiOileibil!ty, Orborioits cc in Mob; Orderer' •Accordinily,- .when kirlia- . moat was dissolved, in 14,02,:kfonni Tootix'in 1 tegislatlie career closed:for ever., , ,r-. ; , - ' 1 --The''moiement which has jast,conirnence, -in England II for the Edpoal orthe prohibitory 'Aet! of I.Bi/1, 7440 h will tatu'Place, lio,dci fib t , , ;almost; immediately. • -4ho , constibitiew-and: Koonce of the ,British ,Parliametiiwill:tttoi- Nitkir".ile..a*milatefi. , to ttope::,o.r. tkAf . :oit;p - , ; 9 ,ur lic rOt OrAit*ArttO* . 4i t, lk Ffitlc trtiV"ti'eT*4•: - .4,e , v ia. step it" 1111 9 o l losi Aictiiiii •,-; ,t,-: - . - - ~ --z-' , - 4 rl" , ' '' ' il. ' . t...'{" . " - - - ,•;.5'..i. ' Mr. Johrs-7414saut PlaytosiAta - ,o,aptititt of lath Light xDragoonsithar, recently ; Tritented tie • the world an interesting volume, undei - the Attie' of !.I:Tbiqtio:;•Or,llinglitat'Coniiittgaaiters,:and pfga. ern 'Bivouac," , It account Of • the i march of ; hie regiment from their oountrz, , quarters, iirt their voy,age.to the :Crimea. ~ At Constantinople; uhieit' °Ordained three thousand sons or *ars and one hundred and ninet • Thoraes, made an acquisition in the person of an'Atierlean amateur: Mr. Clayton's aegetintof him is so graphic that we transfer it to our columns : -' ".We took onboard that dayquilmerloan gen tleman, proceeding bs attunsatetir the•OriMee, whose easy andtineopithitioated manner:. especial ly at tlitmer, ;Was the Ahem. 'of all beholders. For instance: if he, by ()hawse, saw a better co s! - tato in his neighbor' 'plate than he bad' in his own,, he AtiMply, without hesitation, -. plunged his fork into It, and began quietly to masticate the plunderediregetable. - .7llerwlut alsoespaislallY'eent.' municativo as to his own private.family aft'alisi for he once- confided gently to us that his wife made,a system of flogging her children nil round every-,whetber tbey_deserved it 'or net,' because it was nearly sartain that-the oritturs postareqeire the birch before..the• day was cut, and she. liked always to get her business over early in the 'morning.' This curious an= cadets was - followed by another,- a great' dealh more so : A cousin of his, in whom the passion for fox-bunting was so strong, that having unfor tunately lostboth arms and both legs in action; he notwithstanding fixed himself on his home's back' in a machine, something in ehapelikerto a gigantic eggoup, and went amen country holding the reins his teeth, and when they became all extracted by the hard-pulling of- the animal, ho then fixed: - the reins tightly to a ring in hie natal Ihis gen tleman besides favored us withoccastenal remarks about. the frigidity and undemonstrative and phlegmatic' 'anemia:4er of the Scglishla 'general : That when tie we. in london, they-looked - at' him ,from head .to foot -se if, they were mea suring .hint, for „his Amnia, or about' to dig hie grave; and that if he Met any one with' whom hi bad made .an. acquaintance, riding perhaps_ up and dorm Rotten-row, the first time he° or she passed there wet certainly a dismal attempt' it a smile; -the" neon& time 4 ghastly grin; the third time a pretence "at being some onenise on the other side- of the- road; or else they bowed ' wildly testae imaginary person np in a tree, and -the fourth 'time they -looked deggors at him.' Another important fact we also became acquainted ' with, which, however, we might with little diffi culty ' have - divined, vie that 'our friend never, from the beginning, obtained any success withthe fair set.: first, because ho -had - neither brats nor gold, wblob era the chief requisites for the attain- Ment Of' any rand result - among theto,". espe cially_ with 't h e last of the ' two ; for' the smiles of a pretty Ifolllart are the tears or the - purse—the latter must be drained to insure the continuance of the termer rrando secondly; by some unfortunate• decree hf fate,. ladies Invariably caught' 'him loolfrag 'at them when they wore yawning, and it was natu ral they should be enraged, as that process gene• rally produces watery eyes and red noses, which may be striking, but scarcely becoming. , This Yankee gentleman was really moat refreshing, for, like a bad shot, he always kept the game alive. By-the-by, he told us a pointer be once possessed was so keen at his work, that missing bite one day on a pertain shooting excursion, he sought him in vain for' weeks and menthe:, and still no clue oould be found of the lost animal, until one day be came wren the skeletons of a covey of partridges in a potato field, and a few yards off was the skel eton of his dog, still pointingl So eager and sharp was tho beast at his work,' that it had pointed itself to death," PROFESSOR HART VINDICATED Tor The Prose.] In yoUr paper of the 13th inst, there is an arti cle signed "Division 0.," which, with the avowed pretext of defendingTrofessor Bache trom imagi nary injuries, oasts slurs upon the present Priam pal of the Hi h School , which are at least uncall ed for and unjust. Itis not my present purpose to vindioate Professor Hart's source by endeavoring to detract, from the justly, honorable °bunter of his predecessor; but, while according to Mr. B. all the praise which his talents, perseverance+, and public worth demand, I will say, that at, least an equal degree of gratitude is due from the commu nity towards one who has for over sixteen years been engaged in maturing a plan, having for Its object, not personal _aggrandisement, but the widest pubile,good. As a former pupil of Professor Hart, I will, by bearing evidence to his uniform kindness' and gen tleness towards those. under his tutelage, beet re fute the grave charge of "cold end rigid for mality 7 which has beep brought against him. I have gene to him seeking advice, and have re calved it as from a father, asking redress from in justioeonil havollever asked in vain ; and in him who harhein accused of being destitute of human. sl mpathy with youthful character, I have found a generous, sympathising, and warm-hearted friend. Professor Hart has always met obstinacy an. rebellion in pupils with a determined yet genti. firmness . ; possessing power , he has never abused it, but, by its judicious exercise has given to the High School that character for discipline which it has, and justly deserves, and which is essential to the existence nod well- beineof every institution of the kind: Pained as I am to see such glaring injustice done to one who has so little deserved It, I am anxious, by a speedy refute! of the charge thus publicly brought against him, to vindicate a pro captor whom I shall always remember with grati tude and respect. Knowing that a "'ward of justice" is never ex cluded from your paper, this needs no other re ooinmendation to give It a place In your columns. N., 90th G. 0. Nader this head the New York Sunday Nor• our* prints the following precious story, which will do very wolf' for light reeding such hot weather es this: A Fifth-avenue love (MO has recently come to light, which throws the most wonderful romance of ancient times into the shade, .and promises some slob developments A younger eon of a wealthy Vall:street banker is the happy man who was beloved' by two daughters of an avenue millionaire, and , both were bent upon having him for their lord,and rooster. But banker junior -had a preference of his own, and not being a par ticular favorite With paterfamilias, proposed so midnight elopement. The favorite fair ono jumped at the idea s and agreed to moot him on a certain evening, on the curb, after all the family bad retired. .- Bee -sister overheard the proposal and acceptance, and resolved to thwart her rival, though her projeeted plan for so doing was as curious as ingenious. She fol lowed, and caused a friend to follow her sister wherever she went, before the appointed night had arrived, noting carefully all her actions nod purposes. The intended bride bad tier suspleions, but they were not very deeply fired, and hence she was rather careless in her preparations. She .bought a dress for the ocousion—a' dress of a peon liar material, and had it made up by Is dreams ker. liar sister being-informed of thi; procee.l - did the same, causing her mantle to be ()swiftly modelled after the other; shee also pur chased- other things, for the same reason, and copied her slater-rival in everything. In the , room of the bride elect a large °bevel glass reaching to the floor, was one of the adjuncts of the toilette, and a veil of thin lace was lying over it, when not in nee. On the morning of the appointed day, the scheming eider obtained access to the room while its proprietor was riding out, and by the aid of her bribed menial removed the hooka from the back of the glass ; she then gasped all the quicksilver from the back of the glass, and after removing all traces of her work, left the room. Towards evening she again stole it,, dressed Iwo travelling dress, he., similar to her sister's, and ooneealed herself behind the mirror—being there enabled to survey all that was going on in the room, through the lane veil. while no one could perceive her without going close to the latter for some special purpose. Soon the bride bleotoarne in, slept a short time on a lounge ,and near 12 o'clock hastily arrayed herself the garment she bad prepared. She then went towaid the eheval, carelessly threw aside the veil, and behold what she supposed to be her. own reflection. Could it bo? Was she her sister instead of herself? Was it not a delusion ? liefi'mame her sister by that dress? -She moved her arms, she jumped — the reflection did the same. She was indeed her alder instead of herself, and, full of this idea, she resolved to fly to her room, look the door, and throw the key out of the win dow, so that no one but herself should run away with Banker, Jr. ! . Away she, darted, half ormsed, when her sister went quietly down tb Banker, Jr., palmed herself oil os her marer, Was hustled off to the residence of a certain olertnan, and married lit th e dark. Next morning, the poor deluded bride thot was to 'be hardly dared to look at a ruttier; but when she did, a fearful suapleiett flashed across her mind, and off Oho went to' look at tire cheval. Then there sues a time. Pater Amato., and meter ditto wore called up end Issioroned that the bird bad flown. Nothing has HMO been beard of Banker, Jr., and his ingenious wife ; but It is re ported that they sailed in the Pasta, last week.- The enraged father will start in pursuit by the Mit Itvgatr. ;Om 91)1 , 944'0 c/zomi-ry. PUILADELPHIA, July 13, 1858 A Remarkable Altair. REgint OF:SENATOR DOUGLAS, Ohleag.;, JuLy 9. !-• Dolmas said : „ ; can fled no language which can adequately expresi to this vast assembly my profound grati tude for the magnificent welcome which you have egtonded to moon this'ocession. This vast sea of human Taus indicates how deep, an Interest' is felt by,ite people in the great questions that mi.• tate the public mind and underlie the founda tions of our free rinstitutions. A reception like this, so vast in numbers that no human voice can be heard to its extremes, so enthusiastic that no One, men can he the object of the enthusiasm, ; clearly, shows that there is some great principle widish sinks deep into the human - heart, and In volves the rights and liberties of a whole people. 'What has brought you together with a unanitni tv and aeordlelity never before excelled, if equalled en any occasion? I have not the vanity to believe thet It is any personal compliment to me. , It is an 'expression of your devotion to that great principle ernment to, which my life for many years .as been and, inthe whole of the future, will be, devoted. If there is any one principle dearer and more sacred than all °there in' free Governments, it is that which nesertathe right of every people to form and adopt their own funda mental laws, and te marine and regulate their awn internal and domestic Instituting. When I.foundan effortbeing made, during the_ recent session of Congress, to, force a Constitution von the people of Kansas against their will,, and to, force ibit,,Ktate Into the Dillon with" a Consti-' ,tlitionsthich the peolle had rejected by, ten thou:. sand majority, I felt bound, es a man of honor, as 41. Representative oflllinolk,bound by every eon , - pideration of tint*, fidelity, onded patriotism, to re eist to the, utmost of toy, power the consummation :ef AO fraud. We diti.4esist It, and resisted it succeitsfully, until the attempt. was - abandoned: ~We forced them to refer that' Constitution book, to the people of Kansas, to .be accepted or rejected, its they, should decide at 'anelett4ien WhiOlt. ie fixed fitithe tint Monday in Atignst. 'it is true that the s ode of reference and , the form Of submission d o lls not snob es. I could Sanction with toy vote; r the reason that it.diemiminated between, free . States and slave States—providing that if they OftMe 111 with the ,Lecompton Constitution they could be received with 35,000 ; but if they those' to demand another Constitution more consistent with their sentiments and their feelings, they ihould'not be received into the Union until they Had 93,420 inhabitants. [Cheers.] I did not consider that mode of submission fair, for . the • reason' that any electien is a mockery Arida Is not free, ,any election is a fraud upon the ;tights of the people whiehi holds out indueements, for affirmative votes, and penalties for negative *OW, ['sheers]; but while I was not satisfied with ,the mode of submission, while resipted that mode to the last, demanding a fair, a just, free mode of submission; still, when the law passed t hoe placed it within' the power of the people et Ranges at that election, to reject the Lecomp tonConstitution, and then . make out another in harmony with their opinions and their principles instead,' kdo not believe thst either the penalties •on the one hand, or the •inductementsen the other, are going, o force that people ,to, accept 'a Consti, Intim to whist' .theparevirregottellablit opPosed. All I can say is, that if their votes can bb Control ferny sack oonsideratiou, all .the sympethy that tine hem expended upon them has beettroisplacedi 'd all the efforts made in defence of thoir.rights of, eeitgovernment were, made in an unworthy Astute, if they,ltre- to bo influenced in the re salt by these considerations. - • 'Bence, my. friends, I regard that Lecompton battle as having been fought and the victory won,. *taupe the- arrogant, demand , for the admission ,under the Lecompton 'Constitution 'uncondition ally, whether the people.wants it ornot, was aban-• Aped, and the .013410 whichrecognises the right of people, to decide. for themselves was inbititutedln 14 place. My friends, while I de iv,eted coy , Vast energies; all my ,energieb, mental 'and litygleal; to the vindication of that great prin eiple and while its -result has been such as will _enable that, people, to come into-the Union' with 'Oh a Constitution as they desired, yet the credit lef thli great moral victory is Mho divided among *large number of men of various and different ~Pelitual tweeds. [Cheers] I , rejoiced rwhen I roxid, in this great contest, the Republican party eentipg up manfully and sustaining the principle that the people of each Territory, when coming into the Union, bad a right to decide for them selves whether slavery should or should ntt exist within their limits. • seen :ilie:time when that-principle was controverted. I had seen The time when all par- Iles did not recognise the right of the people to Lava elavery or freedom—to tolerate Or - prohibit "Slayeiry as they ohose—but this power was claimed by Vie Congress of the United States to the min ,al6,9f the decision of the people of the Territory, soul :when I found, upon the Crittenden-Mont, gomery bill, the Republicans and Americans of the North joining With, and I may say, toe, some, glorious Americans and Old-Line Whigs from the Smith, rappleusej like Crittenden and Bell, [ap plauie]—when I saw these gentlemen uniting with a portion of the Demooraoy to carry out and vin dicate the right of the people to decide whether slavery should or should not exist within their limits, I was rejoiced within my secret soul, for I saw an indication that the American people, when they came to understand the principle, would give It their cordial support. The Crittenden bill was as fair, as perfect an ex position of the doctrine of Popular Sovereignty as could be carried out by any bill that man ever de vised and it proposed to refer the Lecompton Con stitution book to the people of Kansas, with the right to accept It or reject it, as they pleased, at E. fair election, to be held in pursuance of law ; and in the event they rojoatod it and formed another in its stead, then they became a Stole under the Con stiltitiOn 9f wbioh they approved The bill was just in all its provisions. I gave it my cordial support, and I was rejoiced when I found that it had pasPsd the Rouse of Representatives, and for a time I entertained the hope that it would have passed the Senate. I regard, therefore, the great principle of Popu lar Sovereignty as having been vindicated and made triumphant in this land ea a permanent rule of the public policy in the organization of Terri tories and the admission of new States. Minai , . took her position upon title principle many years ago. You will recollect when, in 1850, after the passage of the compromise measures of that voter, I returned home; that there was great dissatisfne- Lion at my course in supporting those measures. [Cries of shame."] . I appealed before the peo ple of Chicago at a mass meeting, and made a vin dication of each and every one of these measures, and by reference to that speech, which was print ed and circulated broadcast throughout the State at that time, you will find that I there said these measures are all founded upon the groat principle that a free people ought repossess the right to form and regulate their domestic institutions In their own. way, and while these things were conferred by the Constitution upon the people of the States, saw no reason why the same principle should not "extended to all the Territories of the United totes. A general election was held in this State a few months afterwards, at which all these questions were thoroughly canvassed, and members' were in structed in regard to the wishes of their constitu ents upon the measures. When that election was over the members assembled, and proceeded to oonsider the Merits of these measures—and what was the result of their action? They passed reso lutions, first repealing the Wilmot Proviso in struction' and in lieu of that they adopted another, in which they declared that the groat principle which asserts the right of the people to make their own form of government, and establish their own institutions, is the birthright of freemen, the gift of Heaven, and a legacy from our ancestors, es tablished by the blood of the Revolution, and that no limitation on that right must hereafter be in serted in any government for then Territories, el ther se a Territory, or in their Ocifistitutions when they become States. That resolution, thus de elating the great principle of self-government, as anplicablo to the Territories and States, passed the House of Representatives in that State by a vole of 01 in the affirmative, anti only four in the negative. Thus you find an expression of public opinion— enlightened, educated public opinion—by the re presentatives of Illinois in 1851, approaching nearer to unanimity than has over been obtained on any controverted question. That resolution bas stood upon the statute-book of Illinois—on the journal of the State of Illinois—froni that day to this, a standing instruction to the Senators from Illinois, and a request to her Representatives, to carry out that principle in e,ll future cases. Illi nois, therefore, stands prominent es a State which stood forward early, and established her platform, concurred in by Whigs and Democrats alike, ap plicable to this slavery question—that hereafter the people of the Territories and States were to be left perfectly free to form and regulate their do mestic institutions in tzar own way, and that no limitation on that right was to be permitted inany form. [Applause.] Hence what was my duty in 1854, when it be come necessary to bring forward a bill fur the or ganizetion of Kansas and Nebraska? Was It not my duty in obedience to that Illinois platform— to that standing instruction adopted almost unani mously—was it not my duty to incorporate in that Nebraska bill the great principle of self-govern• meal, -declaring that it be the true intent and meaning of this not not to legislate slavery into any Territory or State, nor to exclude it therefrom, but to leave the people thereof perfectly free to form and regulate their own domestic institutions in their own way I did Introduce that principle —incorporated it into the Nebraska bill, and per haps I did as mush es any living man in the anklet meet of that bill, [ appleusej by it establishing that dootrine upon the publlo polio' , of the coun try I then vindicated that principle against assaults from alt amnions of the Union. During this last session it basilic my duty to vindicate it from assaults from the other section of the Union. I vindicated it boldly and fearlessly, as the people of Chicago can bear witness, when it as assaulted by Free-Soilers, [a voice, Yes, old hey,"] and during this Congress I have vindicated it equally boldly and fearlessly when it was attempted to be violated by the almost uni ted South. [Applause.] I pledged myself to you on every stump in Illinois in 1854 ; I pledg ed myself to the people of other States, North and Smith, wherever I spoke; I gave the pledge in speeehos in the Senate and in Congressional re ports+, and to every form in which I could reach the publie mind or the publics ear—l gave the pledge that I, so far as the power should be in my hands, would vindicate that principle, the right of the people to form their Own institutions, to estab lish free States or slave States, as they chose, and I that - that principle should never be violated either by fraud or violence, or by otreumvontien, or by I any other means, if Wires in lay pewee to prevent I it. [Applause.] I now submit to you, my fellow ; citizens, the queetion for your decision, whether I have not redeemed that ple4ge in good faith? [Voices, " Yes.") Yee, my !rinds, I have re deemed 'it in good faith, and it is a matter of heartfelt gratification to me to find these assem- Wed thousands—this multitude of persons assem bled Ibis night, bearing their testimony to the ; fidelity with which I have vindicated that princi ple:end performed my pledges. In connection with that I will be entirely frank 9 1 400 t, WOO to OOOM tttO Sett Qf IM=l the people of cash State, and of midi Territory, North and Sotithjthlteide for themselves, and to .havoslavery or not, juggle they should Choose:. I am equally frank to say to you, that my opposi thin to , the Lecompten Constitution was not predi cated Upon the groun d thatlt was a pro slavery Codi/illation Mor would my action have been dif ferent Hit h adl been a free-soil Constitution. My speeoh against the Lecompten fraud was Made on the 9th of December, while the vote upon the sla very clause In the Constitution was not to on un til ther , Msf'day or the satne:mOnth—nearly two weeks afterward. I tiiadeley speech against the Lecompton monstrosity, 'Solely upon the'ground that it was a violation of tholondemental princi ple of free government, on the ground that it was not the act and deed of the peoplo of Kansas,*and didnot embody their They were adverse to it. Hones I denied the right of Congress to force it upon them either as 'a free State or as a slave State. [Cries of "Good," "Bravo," "Hear hear."i' I deny the right of the Congress of the United States to force a free State upon an Unwilling Peo ple,' lA'vOiee—" Gootlagain."l • I deity the right Congress.to force a alayeholding State Upon an unwilling,people, I deny your right to force a goad thing upon a peOple unwilling to receive it! [Laughter' The great principle,' the right 'of every community to jUdge , and decide fur. itself whether a thing is right or wrong—Whather it is good for them to have,it. or evil for thent to adept it—the right of Tree aotion and the right of free thought—the right of free judgment upon dhe question 'Sentra-roe to every 'true American than any other right under a free Government. - Nance my objection to Lecomptoa was, that, pit undertook to force a Conetitution upon that people against their will, in Opposition to their winbet, Ind for that reason violated the great principlenpdnwhieb ail our institutions 'rest. - It is no' answer'. to this argument t d say, that slavery is an evil, and hence,should- not bq tole rated. You must allow thp, people, to deelde 'for" themselves 'whether it Is a good or an evil., You 'allow them to decide for themselves whether they desire a Maine liquor law or not; you allow them to ,decide for themselves what hind of Muni% School system they will have; -yen allow them to 'decide for themselves as to what kind of a bank-. ing system they will adopt, or 'if 'they will have any; yon allow them to decide for themselves the relation between husband and wife, guardian and ward; in feet, you allow them to deeidelor them selves on all other questions; ,wtiy.noti let them decide ? Whenever you' put 'a limitation upon the right'of any people to deoide What laws they want, you have destroyed the great futida-' mental principle of self-government. [Applause ] In connection with this subject, perhaps it will not be improper for me on this occasion to allude to the position of those who have chosen to arraign my conduct on this same question. [A Voice— Talk . more to the crowd, and not to the people around you there, Another Voice—Three cheers for the Administration.] I have observed from the public printi that but a few days ago the Republioan party of the State of Illinois assembled in Oonvention at Springfield, laid down a platform, and nominated a oandidate as my successor. [Voice—" No ! never !" and slight hisses.] I take great 'denser° in saying that I have known personally and. intimately for about a quarter of a century the worthy gentle man nominated for my place, and I will sayalso that I regard him as,a kind, amiable, intelligent gentleman, and an henorable opponent, and hence whatever issue I may have with him will he an Issuirtif principle, and hot 'tine involving yerson ality.- [bond applause.] , -That gentleman made a speech before that Re publican Convention, mlitoh had. unanimously nominated him for the Senate, which speech was evidently carefully written an } well prepared. It constitutes -the basis upon which he proposes to oarry on the campaign during this summer. That speech lays down two (patina propositions, which I shall now notice, and upon which I shalt take a direst and bold Issue with 'him. In, the -first phase he- eats. out in his epeeists to' Say, quoting froariiSPripturo, that a hoose divided against Itself cannot stand; that the 'American thivernment 'divided into an equal number of free and slave States, cannot stand; that 'they Should :all be the one, or all be the other. In other words, he animate, as a fundamental 'principle of this Go vernment, that there must be uniformity in the laws—local laws add domestic institutions of each and all - the States of this Union. - .11e; therefore, invites all the non-slaveholding States toiband to gether, organize as one body, and maim War toxin slavery in Kentucky, upon slavery in 'Virginia,' upon slavery in the Carolinas, upon slavery in all, the slaveholding States Of the Union, and to per severe in that war until it shall be extorininatod. Ile then invites the, slaveholding Stated to band together as a unit, and make aggressive war upon the free States of this Union, with a view to estab lish slavery in Illinois, New York and New Eng land—in every; free State of the` Union—and keep up that warfare until it shall be firmly established in their thrifts. Ile advocates, boldly arrolearly; a war of sections—a war of the .North against the South—of the free States against the slave States— * war of extermination to be continued relentlessly until the ono or the ether shall be universal, and all the States shall either become free or become els ve. Now, my friends,l must say to you frankly, that I take bold and unqualified issue with him upon that principle. I assert that it is neither desirable nor possible that there should be uniformity in the local laws and domestic institutions of the different States of this Union. The framers of our Govern ment never contemplated uniformity in these in ternal concerns. The fathers of the Revolution, and sages who made the Constitution, well under atood that the laws and institutions which would fruit the granite hills of New Hampshire would be utterly unfit for the rice plantations of South Caro lina; they well understood that the laws which would snit the agricultural districts of Pennsylva nia and New York would be utterly unlit for the large mining districts of the Pacifid or the lumber regions of Maine. They well understood that a great diversity of climate, eon, and pur suits in a Republic as largo as this, required dif ferent, local and domestic relations in each lo cality adapted to the wants of each sopsrate State, and for that reason it was provided in the Fed eral Constitution that the thirteen original States should remain sovereign and supreme, within their own limits, in regard to all that was local and inter nal and domestic, while the Federal Government should hats - certain specified powers, which were general and national. JA voice—"Thet you may never j The framers of the Constitution well understood that each locality, having separate and distinct interests, required separate and distinct laws domestic institutions end police regulations, each ' adapted to its own wants and own conditions; and they noted on the presumption also that these laws and Institutions would be no diversified and its dissimilar aft the States would be numerous, and that no two would be precisely alike, because the interests of no two were precisely the same. Hence I assert that the great fundamental principle which underlies our complex system of State and Federal Government contemplated divinity and dissimilarity in the Moe institutions of each and ever State then in the Union or hereafter to be admitted into the Confederacy. (Applause I Hence I conceive that my friend. Mr. Lincoln ;It es totally misapprehended the great principle upon which our Government rests. Uniformity in local and domestic affairs would bo destructive of State rights, of State sovereignty, of personal liberty and personal freedom. Uniformity is tho parent of despotism the world over, not only in politics, but in religion. Whenever that doctrine is pro claimed, that all States must be free or all must be slave, that all labor must be white or all must be black, that all persons in each State must have the aline privileges, and be governed by the same regulations, you ' have destroyed the great safe guard of the (Athens, thrown around him by the Constitution. How is this uniformity to be resoomplishod, if it was desirable and possible? There Is but one mode in which it could bo brought about, and that one mode would bo to abolish the State Legisla tures, blot out State sovereignty, and merge the rights and sovereignty of the States in one con solidated empire, vesting Congress with plenary power to make all the police regulations, and do mostio concerns, and local laws throughout the limit of the Republic. When you shall have done that, you will have uniformity; then you will Immo all the States free or nil slave; then slaves will vote everywhere or nowhere; then you will have a Maine liquor law in every State, or in none; then you will have uniformity in all things; local and domestio, by the authority of the Fed eral Government; but when you have uniformity, you will have constituted these thirty-two States —independent at present—into one consolidated empire, with a uniformity of despotism reigning paramount throughout the length and breadth of the land. til,pplausel Hens% my friends, I am driven irresistibly to the conclusion that diversity, dissimilarity, and variety in our local and domestic; ,Institutiont, are the great safeguards of our liberties; that the framers of our institutions were wise and sagacious and patriotic when they made this Government a confederation of sovereign States , _ with a Logisla t•tre for cash, that Legislature having the power to make all domestic institutions and laws to suit itself; and if we expect to maintain our liberties, we must preserve the sovereignties of the States— we must maintain and carry out that great prin ciple of self-government ineerpbratedin the com promise of 1850, endorsed by the Illinois Legis lature in 1851, and embodied and carried out in the KensasHebrstska bill, and vindicated this year by the refusal to bring Kansas into the Union with a Constitution which she had voted down. The other proposition advanced by Mr. Lincoln in his speech consists in a crusade against the Su premo Court of the United States on the ground of the Dred Scott deoision. On this question also I desire to say to you unequivocally. that I take direct or distinct it with him. I have no war fare to make on the Supreme Court of the United States [applause], either on account of that or any other decisions which they have pronounced from that bench. Tho Conetitutionof the United States has provided that the power of the Government— and the Constitutions of the several States had the saute provisions—shalt be divided into three departments—the executive. legislative, and ju diciary. The right and the province of ex pounding the Constitution•and the construction of law is vested in the judiciary established by the Constitution. As a lawyer, I feel at liberty to appear before a ()dull and controvert any principle of law while the question is pending imfol o the tribunal; but when a decision is made, my private opinion, your opinions, all our opinions must yield to the majesty of that authoritative ad judication—[Cries of "Good," end cheers]—and wish you to bear iu mind that this involves the groat principle upon which our rights and 'our liberties and our property all depend. What security have you fur your property—for your reputations—for your personal rights, unless the courts are to be upheld and their decisions re• speeted, when once finally rendered by the highest tribunal known to the Constitution? I do not choose, therefore, to go into an argu ment with Mr. Lincoln'in reviewing the various decisions that the Supremo Court has made either Upon the Dred Scott case or any other, and I have no idea of appealing front the decision of the Su preme Court up ,n a constitutional question to a decision of. a town meeting. 'Cheers.] I am aware that Imminent lawyer of this oily, now no more, once said that the State of Illinois bad the most perfeot judicial system in the world, sub- Oot tO One emqtion, which oeult4 ne Qured TWO ,CENTS..; Oght = imencimetit: ' 'The; amendment: was , that the laws' shetild:be, Etienged so as -to :allow an ay. .peal frdmrthe - decisions of, the Sitlran* Wart of Illinois, . on all ,constitutional. questions, - t.l.' two justices of the peace. - 101mers and lingfiterT MY friend Lincoln assures ma that ' , that' !imposition was when I. wee aT..T.udge of , the Supremo Cpart., If that belttie ; I don't,think that thatlaot adds any greater importiuMe Or weight 4.6 the kuges- Con._ It matters not to me whorwas en the beach; whether-Mr „Lincoln or mysef, a Lockwood' oi.a Smith, or Whether, it was a Taney or a Mershon ;,. yet Die decision of' he highest tribunal of a autism on the Constitution of the country, mot be 'final until it has been reversed by equally, high- autho rity. Ilencel ani opposed to this dootrint or 3i r; Lincoln's by which he proposes to take 'err appeal from the decision of the. Supremo Court of the Uni, ted States upon these,high constitutional question!, to a Free Soil or Republican cations situ ted iri the' country—yes, or to any other &eons or wa-meet,' rug. I respect the decides of ,that au ust tribu-: nal ; I shall bow in deference to it. ' I ra a law abiding man ; I wilt sustain the Cohatitupon of my country as our fathers •have Made it, and l_will yield obedience to the laws, whether/ like Clamor not, as I find them on the statute-book: lltlillertio thin the judicial tribunal anti theconstitnited soothe rities Snail matters within the pale of r ituisdic-, Con as .defined by, the Constitution. , But r — sii eatiallyfreo to say that the readotteisigned by Mr. Lincoln for.iesisting . the decision of the Court in • the Dred Scott oate,does not commend,ittelf to my approbation. lie objeoteie,it because that deci sion deolares theta:Pitt& deseen'ded froth African parents' wbo"were brenglitirete and eold all Oas( is not and cannot be a eitisen.ofthe,United States. Ife says' it ie. wrong' because it de prives 'the' negro' of the - -benefit 'of that 'blame of "the lOonsbitti , Lien. which : sags Ahat. 4 eitisenapf.,..„. one State shall enjoy all Abe '„privileges, end immu nities - of the citizens Of the several Statell...' - In other , ords, hethinks hie tironcheesdie it- de prives. the negro of the,privibigee, immtirlitlee, and rights of Cititenship, WhiCh pertain i actording to - the decision, oniflo the white Man. -r IN. free to say to you, my fellow-eitisene , that intro ,opiii- 114, this goierpnient of aural* fol./100d on a• White baste. It was made by white men forllke:hotiellt orwhlte men, 'to he addiinisteriditif'vilite men ' in such a manner eel they shall'ideternaine. -It is alao true that, a negro or Lidian,.or- lint other man of an inferior race to the White man,ishould be permitted to'enjoy, add humanity requires that-he should have all the rights and all the privileges and, all the immunities which he is capable of exercising. consistent with thasatetyofqsociety,•: Pornl give him every right and every privilegewhieh Ms ca pacity will enable hlni to enjoy 'consistent with the good of -moiety where he lives,-.: But yod may ask me what are those rights and privileges ,My an ewer is that each State must decide -for 'self the nature and extent of those rights . -ri Inois has determined for herself.' We' have deeideri that the negro shall not be a: slave, ~ .-M. e , ha ei at Om same time, decided that heahall notvo nor hold office, nor carve on ,jutieb , tier enjoy poi tical , pri-- vilegee. - I deny the' right of an othe State to` i complain of our policy on thatosubjeet, or tojn tarter° wither attempt to changeit... °Ohs Ober' hand, the State of Mainehrut decided-that in that State a--negro-may vote"on:arEequality,with a, white maM‘..The sovereign - power otlia ne bid a right.tot prescribe that-rule for herself. Illinois c l . has no -right to eomplainef Maine for nferring negro suffrage ,' nor' has Matte -any rig t • tii , in.: toilers with. or eimplain: 'of Illinois for deny-, leg - negro suffrage. On the p other hand, i State of New York has decided in her- Constitution that a negro may vote, provided heorrim $254 wordier. property, and not otherwise. "The rich ,negro may vote, hut the poor -one shan't. - Althougld that dis tinotion does not commend itself to inyjbdgment. yet I say that the sovereign powerhof li ow Toil, had a right to prescribe that , format the elective' franobise, if she 'obese to do's°. -,. On the other hand, Rentuoky and , Virginia; and other Stites, .have provided Get degrees, or a cartel oless,of them -in , these- „States, shell' be .slalte having neither social nor political rights.--Without en- Vorsing the' p ropriety of that deolsion“ assert that Virginia has the same power, in virtue of her sovereignty, to haerate,slavery within her limits; that Illinois has to hauls]; ,it, forgoer cronsber. borders, ' ” ' ''" ' t I assert the right of each State 'to decide Air' itself on all these questiewand I do - notlubaoribi to the doctrines of my.friend Lincoln, thin unifor mity . is' either desirabie Or possible. Ida not ao -knowledge that they must all bo - free' or that they must all be Owes.. I do mot acknowledge that the negro mutts° . par equal everywhere or, ne. where. • I do not neknowledge ' that Gni Chines@ must hive:the :lame rights 'iii California/ that - Wis would °War, wen him . here. . I do nne imported into this ountry , °know,- ledge thet - the 'Coolie, , f , must necessarily be put on an equality ith the white races.--Irdo not acknowledge any ,of these doctrine of .uniformity in local or demesne regu: Wong in the different Btatee. Thuityou‘will see, My fellow:mitt:eta,' flint -We' bine lietwen Mr: 1 )1 Lincoln and ,mvself, , ,,s - th e , respeotiv candi datesi for . the 'United States. Senate, _a made up in 11 direct, unequivooal, fair !slue. Ile goes for uniformity of - •domestio - iastitutiens, , fi.ri the war of notions, until one or the other shall yield. I go for the great principle °fhb° Ne braska bill, for the right - of the - people:of earth State to decide for itself:. On -the other point Mr. Lincoln goes for a warfare upon , the upremo Court of the United States because ottheir judicial decision. I yield obedience to; and ac quiesce in, - the final determination of the highest judicial tri bunal of the nation upon our Constitution. i lie ob-, jeots to the Dred Scott decision, because it 'does not put the negro in possession of the rights ofelLizeni ship on an equality with the 'white med. lam utterly opposed to negro equality with white men. I repeat that this nation is a nation of white Peo ple, a people composed of:European descendants. a people that have established this Govermbent fey themselves and their posterity; and I am in fiver of preserving not only the purity of their bld, but the purity of the Government, from all mix d races ci or amalgamations. •We have seen the e stets of those mixed races of superior and inferiorraces. this mixture of white men, and Indians, and negroes We have seen it in Mexico. in Central America, and in South Alumina, and in all the Spanish Atherican States. Its result has been deterioration, demora lization, and degradation, below, the eapicitY for self-government. -I am oppbsed - to takihg any. step that- recognises the negro or Indian as the equal of the white man, to have a voice in the execution: and administration of the Govoi n merit. I would extend to the negro and the limn an and all dependent Mee, every right, every pri vilege, and every immunity consistent with the safety of the white race, but equality , ha never should have, either political or social, or in any other respect whatever. Then, my friends, you see the issue is very distinctly drawn. I stand by the same platform that I haverso often proelalnied to you and to the people of Illinois heretofore. I stand by the Democratic 'organization, yield obe dience to its usages, and support its regular nomi nees. I endorse and approve the Cincinnati Pint form I adhere to and intend to carry out se a part of that platform, the great principle of self-gov eriarnent, which recognises the right of the people of qaeli State and Territory to decide for them selves upon their domestic institutions. .In other words, if the Lecompton issue shalt prise , ngain, you have only to turn back 011 d 800 wheie you have found me for the last six months, mad then rest assured you will find mo in the same pasition, battling for the same principle end vindicating it from any assault from whatever quarter it may come, so long as I have the power. • Thus you have the outline of tho propositions which I intend to tissues before the people of Illinois during the coming campaign: I have made up my mind to appeal to the people against the combination that has been made against me—the • Republican leaders having formed an alliance, an, unholy and unnatural alliance, with a portion of unscrupulous Federal office-holders. - I intend to fight that allied army wherever I meet them. I know they deny the alliancebut yet these men who are trying to divide the'Democratio - patty for the purpose of electing a Republican Senator in my place, aro just BB much the agents andtbols of the - ettpnorters of Mr. Lincoln. Bence 1 shall deal with this allied army just as:the l ittissians dealt with the allies. at Sebastopol ; that is, the Russians did not stop to inquire, when they fired a broadside, whether it, hit an Englishman, a French man, or a Turk. Nor will I inquire, nor- shall I hesitate, whether my.bitiwa shall hit these Aeptll)- Mali leaders - or their allies - who aro holditig the Federal offices and yet acting in concert with them. I do not include all Government office holders in this remark ; such of them as are Demo crats, end show their Democracy by remaining in-. side of the Daman-ono organization and support ing its nominees, I recognise as ,Demoorats: But those who, knowing they would be voted dawn in side the emooratio organization, go outside and attempt to divide and destroy it, in concert' with the Republican leaders, have ceased to bo Demo crats. and hence belong to the allied army that is now fighting me and my principles. - My friends, I have exhausted-myself, and I cer tainly have fatigued you; by the desultorY remarks I have submitted to you. - I will not.go on longer to-night. It is two nights since I have flacon to bed ; I have a right to a little sleep to-night. - I will, however, have the opportunity of meeting you and addressing you fare , to fees en{ /trust, more than one before tfie November elec tion is held. In conclusion, I must' again say to you, and justice-to my own feelings dementia it at my hands, that I should say, my gratitude for the welcome you have extended on this occasion knows no bounds, and oan be' described by no language which I could command. I feel that Pam literally at home among my constituents. This welcome which you have extended has amply repaid me for I every effort that ever I have made in the public service for the twenty-five years thatl have held office at your hands. It ,not only compensates for the plat. but it furnishs an inducement and in centive for future effort which no human heart , could feel which had not witnessed the magnificent reception you have extended to mo this night on my return. * . . • A case involving the question whether a member of an incorporated benevolent model, oan sue the society for benefits has recently been tried in Newark, N. J. A trait was brought. against a bonovolent society by one of its members, before Justioo Sandford, and tried on Wednesday before fury. The suit was brought to recover benefits claimed to bo duo from the 25th of May to the 21,t of Juno inclusive. The defence sot up by the anneal for the socioty was that the member was not sick during that time, and that even if he were, he could not sae a society of whirh he was a member for benefits. The testimony of three. physicians proved that ho was ill, and unfit for la bor during•tho whole of the time. After a patient investigation, aud long arguments on both sides, the jam , gave a vordiot for the full amount de- Mended. The Richmond Enquirer says "Report says that R James, Esq., British consul for has lately been h< nored by the appoint- Inon sul-general to the Black Sea, (Odessa.) Virginia, eut o r o that ho is allowed a month to decide, and that he inclines to accept the mission, doubtless on account of tho promotion and the largo salary." The blackberry trade in Now Jersey is a source of much _profit. Hundreds of bushels ere sent daily to the Philadelphia •ird New York mar kets. The "season" lasts abut six nests. Some families average twenty dollars per week in ga therin the buries, Ilex*/ COEiXilipasDansTil. - )12 ‘4 0116 1* !IT= Pixie win yloso• bat la 2 4a6 th IN /4 7 1, 4 i 2 O ll l z_, *feu oonoenoteetion meet be, useompoided . by the name of , tbe-writei. To order _to Ware comatose/ of the ripbgrapby, bet one Ede irt a sheet should be writ. basupoo. = . 'Verdun! be area/obliged to gentlemen in Pennell• iniffinn*pr contributions giving the cur. rant 7 ,:iewe or the Qq Sa theirgartinular locentiogn, the nO , Stiing noun*, the increes• aR oiSeny Intornonon*ltrin intoresting t " 1,0 iinoraireadar, • - , 1 9 . 8141 4 1 4-4 NEW& „ . .• , The ..Salispn„,pdatis,), ottierver of, Saturday .giVes the'TellieiFe ',gbbonntofthemannerlawhich thirstreellorthat ctly are watered : "In sprink ling the strestirtip'fiv town; there being no supply of aqueduct vister,"thetfind it obirreuient to use !tot water for the purpop from the tanner's tanks. It Seems a little e d d„to cool ;beetroots with hot ty'ater:, but fn one respect, at lesif,lit bitter than acid *stet'.-' 'Sot 'water keeptilhe deitilowe more eifeettially: fOOld 'water is- apt to lay on the sur face in little puddlesti. , but hot water permeates the . dust and tit:Ann:WV wain lt. ..Tbey say that a tank of hot water,„will 'go nearly ea far again in sprink ling the ' striate itea - tank of tedd-water. So 'too, imirettlnk theii:lisirkOhtilanriers find that hot , ffateL , Will , wpt•aS meek again las cold. This is owing. to ,tkietpeeetrating power of the former. It 'oaks right into 111 - ,e, hark instead' of running off Salt waterlepreferfed to - fresh, is 'it crusts the - surface of the etre:Cu:to scne' extent. and is, there fore, more serviceable In allaying the dust!' . r.ThoMostoti Transcript says: e, Mr. Albert /Sniuner,,of.:Newpert,-11: , L., his wife''and child, some time since were shipwrecked, and all un doubtedly perisb,ed,, My the presiamption of the thewire,iiiid Child died'first, and the husband became:entitled' tethirpreperty: Mrs. Sumner wastvdaughter --the - -Ister Walter -Ohanning, of this Gifu, and enjoye&ther.ixteemeota large estate. Under these olrettmetenefe„ more thexi $30.000 became legallyrveited-in the Mr:Sumner, and 'throilik* hfui , ortnfirto — hili Motherland sitter and two brothers—,Oharlets - Settleeti4ir- Senator, and tjteerge thuusserfAutzt The: eleattfWas administered mpon by Mr - °some, Mumner,end with the consent 'of all thateliiiis, ihei'tihole of this property, which the deceased had derived fret:ills wife, has been zitirentabsetoiterlibittotis:”=,'.' - •Aa `attachment 'Wits istraid - or Monday, at the init. of Mr. Oalline,-4 Mehlleareditor of Capt. Diviere.- and "ItelibV-ftheriff - Yroncis levied upon thee/41W of the ideptain remaining at the Hotel Napoleon, Hoboken, •I 4 T, J ',consiliting of two large trunke,Wlth.their eontente; a bet,box, a asd. 'did end bridfe,'-a swerdedid' to bevel* n used by him in the Crimean war, - and Alaigtezdaguerreo ' tYPo hielleifari tali Zeuare oostutne. The ore ditor's !ilim le one kundied dollars, and the goods are supposed to 'boatitgotenf lo cover it. Nothing itas - Aeen heard ofltie v iikiptain'yet:lit. it in *up posed.he remains concealed somewhere in Hobo ken...-. The .whereaboate of. Miss Blount ia still a EMer,:inetAt Fir:qv:Mane at, the Napoleon Hofer, The ''lletilithascrilie ' 4:)rietipendel_it of the "-Elkton thiarYlind)WArft , ,iinder date; of July 2, suite-Sas folloshrt.'"A" - 'eon 'of Alexander Being, who lives ziearliount Pies eant,diecame overhe sted In the harvest field,onAdonday,and was thrown into a state of delirium, ,In thitcoodltlon be went to the hontie of Alin Brown,Tx ; a near neighbor where his mittens and appearance" se - frightenect MTKIHown. that She - felt convuleions, which caused hitr death on Tuesday meriting. Mrs. Brown wait a daughter of Mr. John: Batton, of the eighth.distriet, "51 a young and interesting woman, married '"- ThnOleiseland (014o)P diadakranrionticea - the arriesliwebst pity of - Mr - .Tames Banks an eminent member of the' bar atFeyetteville , N . C. lie come...says the Naiad/oiler, to 'tarry out Ihe ,will of the ,late Mrs., reryy.,who,,appolated Mr. Batikete See 'that her six slaves,-Caroline Perry and' bee Ate childimOutve - Heil freedom and $10,000.41 main -as-he estate -Is settled. Mr. Banks brings the freed *rimer here, arranges 1-with.Jedge Tilden to-receive the money when he shall-send it and pay it over- to and advise the l iess'aetteire Inert how to invest it. . ThefolleWint 0041 - eillee matters - relate to this State: Estabfieh'aurdoent Hickorytown, in "Northumberland nantityrElias-Wirt,' postmaster : on the rent° from Dalmatia to FAMOnt: Appolutments—,David Hosack, postmaster at Iriebtown;llleteer county, Pa., vice James Long, resigned; Joseph 9ardner,postmaster at Carter's Mills, Indiana eountjl Pa., ,YlOO Samuel - McCart ney, resigned';-Alexander - Brown, -postmaster at Merrittstown i .Fayetta county, Pa., vice D. Gil- More, resigned: A writer Iu a NeW'York,paper says that the .“ Artillery Company's of Newport, Bhode Island, Is the eldest Company in the' United States. It was, organized in 1741,suider,a Charter granted by tee Colonial 'Amenably; Oleo b. was 'confirmed to them when thechlony beosthe a Elate of the lJni ea,whioh,they atilt, nstaint-the present members :geirding with jeatoue pare the anelentreputation -of the dups. - They are oti parade five or six times , eryear,lind-arei ever ready for seise duty. .The oldest'persowin'NeW Bedford, Mass., ,is IHm.Blisaboth Fuller. She Is ono hundred and one years old. She is the, granddaughter of the 'Rev. Mr."Callender," who came from Europe with his family, and settled in Boston. - She was born in Newport, R. 1., Her . father was a - entering man: who came to Newpo'rt privions.te.the Rave. She hat u'diughter - at -the rye ago of seventy-fair. -Both are yet lasty and vigorous. .AS sun-rlee -salute was boil* fired et .Perth Amboy ? , Mew Jersey, on Monday morning, a boy fourteen years - old, son of - Mr. Swath, who was engaged !with' his father' In raising the flag, se. cidentally got in mango of the - eannon, and was strook by the wad In the neok, which carried away tho side of his face and rendered him insensible. in which -condition he lay tllt Ave o'clock in the afternoon, when to !died. 7 During the past WeOk two detachments of troops, numbering 'about one hundred and fifty each, have bean'rent from Governor's Isfand, New York, one to recruit the Second infantry at Fort Ridgely,Minnesota, the other to recruit the Third infantry in Novi Ideate°. The ,military foroe at the island is'neir said to be quite email—about one hundred and fifty men—then harvest, reason not being favorable for drumming up recruits, Edwin A. Stevens, Eag., who has for some time - part been very ill at Princeton, N. J., was on Monday removed' to his residonee at Hoboken. A car was prepared maritally for the occasion—a cot being suspended from the roof In such a way as to Obviate the jolting of the oar, and a muslin awning placed about a foot abate the roof, 40 as to protect it from the raya of the eon. Mr. Ste vens is still quite 111. The Buffalo Daily Republic learns that a new telegraph instrument is being invented in *that oity. It is a printing telegraph on a very simple plan, without ,the complex machinery of [loose or Hughes. and almost as cheap as the Morse registers and relay magnate. The gentle man engaged in it ie connected With the telegraph office in that city. The Republic has scarcely a doubt of its ultimate success. ' ' -The case of Thoinasi Ferrier, whO was com mitted recently to prison in Montgomery county, -Pa., for tbexturder of his brother, William Fer rier, of Plymootb townsbip, was before Judge Smyeer last Tuesday week; on a writ of habeas corpus to admit the prisoner to bail: The Judge remanded the prisoner, although bail almost to any amount was offered. John E. Owens, who is a great favorite with our play-goers, takes a benefit at the Howard Athenieum, Boston, on 'Friday evenin_g, when ha will appear as M4111901= in "The Hypoorite," Dromio of 'Syracuse in_the Comely of Errors," and 'Richard 111, "by express desire" of the author of the tragedy of that name. The Boston Traveller says that the shoo business in Lynn, at this particular time is very dull, Western buyers not having yet come to market. The spring and summer purchases wore made later this year than usual, and, from precast appearances, the fall trade is likely to follow suit. Mr. John Shakspeare died at Langley Pri ory on the 10th of Jane, in his eighty-third year- The deceased• gentleman will be remembered for his princely benevolence in giving the sum of /5,000 for the purchase and preservation of Shakspeare's house atStrittford-on•Avon. • The stockholders of. the Fayette County Railroad have determined to put it under imme diate contract, and are now fixing the point of lie connection with the Pittsburgh and Connelleville road at Connollaville. The Boston Courier repommenda that when Mount Vernon shall have wine into the posieseion of the nation, a statue of bronze or warble, to dome appropriate part of the domain, be ereotcd of the orator by whose efforts it has been secured. Marl:J.lo:4, a farmer, residing near Morris ville, Pa., Was thrown from the driving seat of a mowing:maohlna, last Monday week, and was so dreadfullymangled by the cutters that he bled to death in a few minutes. - It is generally supposed that the value, of foreign ouinit is fixed bylaw, but such is not the ease. The coins of foreign countries are not a legal tender in the payment of debte,,thongh they are taken at their valuation at the mint. John. 11. Wolf, for a long time ono 'of Oa oontluotors on the Philadelphia, Wjhnington and Baltimore Railroad, has resigned his drum. Thu president of the road addressed him a letter bear ing testimony of hls zeal and worth. ' The Boston nisileers have been presented with a' ail:pounder raised from the deok of the 84 gun ship Chessmen, of the Russian navy, sunk in the harbor of Sebastopol. Ex-President Millard Fillmore is suffering severely from inflammation of the oyes. They era so weak that he is obliged to forego reading almost entirely. The New OrleattS Bee thinks that as it is Much later, in the season now than when the epi demic diseases usually appear in that city, therm is a reasonable hope of passing a healthy summer. John Af Moore, of the Fashion lino of steamboats, has recovered $20,992 from the South. Carolina Railroad for obstructing the Savannah river by erecting a railroad bridge. Parson Brownlow; of tho Rnoxvillo Whig, says that if he is denied the privilege of going to heaven after death, his second choice is Balti more." ChM.los Barrett and Henry Williams have been arraigned for trial before the criminal coart of Washington, D. 0., for the murder of Realm Lewis. James J. Willett, en industrious and' sober young man, employ - el as a brakeman on the Pennsylvania Railroad, n as killed at Conemarugb, on Friday last. Miss Abby Walls, 'aged nineteen, of Wal tham; Mass., was dr ,wited in the Charles river, on Saturday, by the urettin; of a call-boat. Brignoll . and Ammi o are to assist Miss Ab. by B. Pay in a covert at Saratoga Springs to morrow. Lieut. Magruder, of Washington, D. was killed in a parrot • hi:e i n hie way to ()rank Salt Lake with the ILa army. Regnald ; 11. Fealty, for o rly of Norfolk; Va., charged with *be rder t Robert Tbomp. son, at Montgomory. bar • ten acquitted. The military of Rich .I . opose to erect a monument in boors of tng amilton, of am New York Ferc•nth regime • Mr. Thomas rem ed the ma••• nagenuant of the Vedette L.Atre, ew Orleans t Witteh house was be, w g . his sup. WM.