„ - otatjeitnie 10. 1 “ ' r • - L• XIL I 44 . 1ap01q 7 1,414.9P;TA1D . ,1 4 WWI, ilri • FrOMEri -j “ . -1„ • Street . 7 tipktogr, *et* MS drr ars. ArdbOati tor otthe City at LXI3 + roe Jim: Noma; '413040(or&-• iiini7Wlo33 iNKWoo 4- 0 °T t 0 01! '' trance fOttfilizWeroef,oo-7..,. ..i.. ..., _..!t , ° ' 44l 'll.l4leitictot Irititss. - -t., s,, ' . Ma* POSJOrnizittTl-°°PO, ' =.:4, LAU', nil, 41,3 9„ 1 ., 19 1 .; .. 24,1/41;ppUla i :;;" ' t,,,,,,, , ,,•f 7 .'--- '''.. i te , oomaribee tr, Tan 1t1044',..,501P1irl ;)It ' 0 0 00 teall irit , o#_. VII 4' 7 . 4 7 1 w - 1 - " ,c..,4t 00 Three es tOi , , .., , ,-,-( b ..! '" ' ". ; (COO Tiely :So aP pte t t. 44 :i„, 7 ' 4 7.,[l,: ki L' co ' i' -: ' i- ' *', ' 2O l2°G Tyrentre, ontdtf %. 1 : 00 ' . ,i , leo, additive' "of TW6r...,n-Q-7.1-41aelL'*... l'e' Int— lil-, ~..,..,{• iiro•yo • .. ... s, w i r, ionusu p er 4,0 ub ot ;T:v el i t yAnti b tr t,: o ,....l7 ~,-, , , , - , .. .,.... -0 - •xtrs4ll4 ttilh o 201 t e l'' 4 9 ". ' - A , mg, a4getts lot ,j- .- ratan/item ar*Jeque .... ~,, ~. 1 eu wa4gf,tit Pa Y l O ,- Ifri".,..' ...frj , zr, , • , '-- a kC AL, I , III II,k -1-4.-ss,%B caulorni* lomak 3 e#,Xl4 - ,III*Iiii;t1 13 20; 0 4 ` • ~1 summit: - f. ... _ - - '- '' - , - .7. "• z " - J -- '-' - - . - EV , VLS. 10"&•''ci ay. 48 J ' COPTIM,8trie:t: .:;; Have reeletied; peeptelurtersOiew stneow to:ircermegiarraia 064 4 . : din* • k t StaiilN.Ougsr Therikets."'• jet fiqe4,o4-14eworireeeeg , Ccrel . dj4iva iiiiikrosae`Bete. • $ 0 VA4eutela.:POlledelpblei: for o! muter Fre 4 ‘baugdukts/XLIAIARACMEE.F4 B —. , ; , SILVZIPWARL4-: „ 47/ .a WitLIAM IO / 1 0 0 1cArsainki e jet -zl6- tiNggif,a ik%177-61.Cr if ..fs fat lif 6 otinil 6 ,1 • isegprigt;ol7 13 ;k 4 .4 1 1. 4 .- .. a r t W 6014440 Z.MOrtlieeie'VgatiWi#ClpMlDPWAMP,Ortiolk * 1110 .107.47,i-. • li::: , 3:44 . 010.111 \ 4 . 411R0 z .) 1 4 i ;; -, 1 ,4 :ilf, 4- !. 74 -1 - ,- .BLIM,EIVPX.ATERL:,. akieS4 ,- tfrs,;'` . ' s W-1 No •04104,ti4W4bottAghtt*-0111#afraW ''-' • ''-= ' 4 104.1, , '1r • -,‘.6 • - . 4.b.,i.. , lid or itibUiliillited . ,•- - TEL - ken& corannuoit - iiEltYrs KETBrAlßiol'i PCMCIMOMETIVOTTPS,. ASTERS. BA/1:-!- -..-- 7.4, , ,typt9p i tiprrnal,z,t.poosic; tOkurap.% , - ' '''•v ' ,,, A ,',7,'-',=F4,44/4,14/014-t.tez.;1,.,,,,,:;-1.f.,,,,,.-.a ~.: , 6 '-':' '44,4 . • - 4,44.1A,N, •,011.0,304 , witii:*-17?4' . _ ==ISMN EMS 2004.41LOSiitalaYAONNTj- INALNUTOrrikEgT: •Res' s riktitAV'pki :604. ',Taw- fad. Aldusu, Rental "PM* 4 4.1 f 14 , 01 4P1ie r Morris Li. Itallow,ell,*ge asq;;i , JAziplikD Jgrq t , WO Jima ;Eat: b2S, AuG l l,l7, inste - TrAtiFS' : , 14:= - 141IMMI rental OtStr14004•01 1 10141a0 Tirreli4_ 4 1•1 / 1 1 a • tfill'Vktdk . ONISE; , & , OOioY,- , R[4: 4 = - oriels Ass - 4 0rmr.we5„;. 4 .,,,,.',. isier to Ihi (tins: ant / 31 4)1Pkibifelikt4i Vi-kr ranter: jailion. `17 2 51-11,4)111117117.11M , n 1111ANLEY;• BitqWkr . 001 ) t . r c _t lt y n .fi BANZINTif c'M / w enn ;Var. todIiZZERKEI. &kW* fi 44.2 lizersurc", - =' ,• Oollectlonal sosta l Allll.Drati &writ - et/rid tiwtrit United Stair apt ttitl Oaatadari out Atil 'matt, litittergtr Con:etc= aim* mai Diet' driven "A1! . 934 , % eland urris . eassik 'i ~ Warna ti boat ant tolit.'`jkaaltali!`! . 1141 . $1 , pugylp.i 14,1, amt Tim Par ti Vd• • stodu t soot the hear"; #4, e 41, if..! 4 WRRY4 4 .I I !""Xe r .!W 4.• IDWALIIDIII'-‘l..ittlin; WX, No *y eland ft' - Pennsylvania and - - . , •- • faiRWS P O WI T:; 'I ' 2r, PCS A - gr-J.1....T , i't.f., ll ) l Cl R.ti BROMBVOINVIAL -- 141011:t *WTI Ant -00)SITIYANOn0 - FROHT4iiii23l2` ,- .41/ - OXOAri - Pay oidaY %tient' loan iii•tiini,:inveionaig. Money: for? noteleaidentireild'Ottenn,, , unt " ea Watts, Any,lettentol inlionairott plompt - attiontion. 'Refer to ' • • , • Wood 13acon;& Phliadelphia. • Dale, RoWANitludirabiltdolptiti;e ds • • Bleitard.ltisdOipb;Philsdelphia.. _ Cluirletaill4lo)o4lPhlladalpida. , " PA7/ _„, „ ~dnings : bnnDs;.,; T -8453/NO - Afhtenriattrai :pIeSPXTUAgi,IIII.A.IMII34.."I/0 ` PIPE PIZ' ORNT.l.lntereekallowad.to Ikpwlicwes ". tad WI ifb Witt Pild Ixbk oM Ikniana ' - onnojokm,Nonnt,Tgrimerszir; (poiraoatilasumerasz,Bomedirail Tula inetntation-bow 10wf4,19i _toulualk orittaih# old} Ckfartftit &ring 7md Ideatat lek tua übrtharn part of the city," • OmooThe will ba open (daily) from tie 2)4 &do*, d also oaIKONDAYB and TSQBADAY& t f!coull oRttS 999 o'clock !JEW* Bin% • . %- 77amail B. - litophen 4i,608-Doak „ 701 RP 4 1-5- 10 4 • -- ".4oaeldeld. 4301614 Ron. Hi 2, ,AleolT•lVOidePPerir Daniel Uzi erkotteri - • J:Wealef !OW, Vfmkid-Olinadd Itob•rtiS. /Mimic& Etsale,,,j, : , .% ~ P.O. 21ImaXer,i Pranolatillert; " ' "John Tampa P.:l4otart;::' . .' ".-41Tiforgi - John --401knXidtar:=:''';' , --V` 4 4 `'f - Praiildant, • ii•efetallititOß4ll WAVING - :l7uND. , ,,inarsti ---- stforkil L.. MST VONTANlffoorsto . ftellflaNirld OSIIINv NUT Streets.' ~--:- .-' 4 -:', - x ; -,,,t 1,:,--,,..„--t , --4-....qr - 7 <:441-, ' Largo and' dmall - oiroi'ricoAvol i 'onAlroldbookA. • mod, without =Ms with NITA 1114- ,CI . MT from Sholloy of t to fhailarbfiritkiiiiniVrs , ' Ofloo hours from 9. 5 ;Of,elook gym 4401, maw moripsy svitiores I.,istatrowoca._ —„; 4EI Mean forrigo'orr logisofti Tsrasiol7otok lila*" from Al nirwAltdaa.,l' , , - ^ .',, ...,1. 7.: ~7, • - - Prosidont—STlPNEN IL cria,.Trq*-',: - ;:-.-i: Troootror- , PLIN'Y NISK__, __: • - Tens -401110 IL 11UNTAN: it.I4D-4 ring rkarcs trr. - Ar TZIIIBI-NATIONAL O.A.IITY ,110101700111: - PANY.—W.AIIIOIII,BOIIWIIpOISIOII,MI, 01 TIIERWPwIia.DII,ImA. , ) , -- • - • Imoolvouvrie'irr vas thiya !gooey Is reeelootie sog6-tuelo oreZli -soll Ant tercet pale from theWtot deseett 141 the, er,w!th.„ The ogee • Ea lopect - eiiset*e; ' tio ' morning tfll i o'clock 1 lOW froxito&"Madoa - 11 . 11 Nr, Vaterday4Tobluooll , ll4l , olooA 1101(1.1110inii?': ROBTIII/11, 104 ,1; 10010,11aor•007, • --„,.-Aniserozsi Nog. tifla7 p [ iwors ...,: '..1, aiirowiti, ,' ~ Ildwarti In Wain; Zasepti B. Bats , ~. :-. &bort Balfektga j ' ; Weasels 10..., . . ~ Omni. K. diektody , .--,,-2,, !,, ,ilosephlretiosi - - 0. Landrith,Maday • ~.',„ , '-' BonsprDiftstristf4ir:i-1 - Soapy is taosiveriad,isiyments rude-deny .. • • ,e_ , , The inrssinisats ars nadir la 'esintoinaty ',llk 114 provisions stAka Obirtdto*ZikUlagn i n WANT' GAGES, GROPIIMD, UNTO 'miasma drst ciao a deaf ties sa will slinky* Indus drOot security to the Samoa. tots, and videksoussat.ts 'to %ha primigukaby glad %to. bility to ills Institution., - _ :;_ -,,,, 1. ~ , sast.ty 06(3K ;kik; No. 88 fig), 11T4.- • 11 PI OM^ OTATX 9 4NINOS,Winak A10.88__C241)%11 - 00.K.f.STRBSW=Ifin Am Pia °MT_ TATANA AMMO FUND:, 0..88 (2411-DOOIE-STRAET.4- fly / N Plat OUPI STAT,III WINGS• - NCO. 8$ (2!i) `D aTitt4g.—"rivx '1 1 "zit 011 pm sTA_TE BMW. FUND:. :eoliths 2titkits.', TEE GIik.),it,WONIMS ox Taz;Oxil Onus. cztimat, PR 0,1813 - 01 t, WOODPB. ~X.A.- x xt . wt. - maw 0xv,a;Ta. 7 730 . . 1 Sari the fit:touts : (Blo.) Jinnocies444tOrilre. pub: -Deb *letter to Dr Wood of title eity,,,,fibm`i gentleman in Maine; which . eye .kai;,glowliagly: of th e , . turfritif merits of - Ids hale tonte....finati evidence:meat havelfai effect, when ,onsornit. DOM a ratable source, If . cora ft cotes ate guwantees of , troth; the atri needs! -ni alia;s;:. =fume, nos usel.taantifferY from. the 'Oita: ..:. _-;' _::,.. , .:-,; , s . ..BAYS, Maine; Zeal2o, - 188C. "-- Profemm 0. 7:ifootitit'o:—..oingiesnisi ii.m i , g my attention vaned wlew-montheeince, tattle,: highly beny , Bo al erode of joar Mali geetOratiimil'als liaticatti make application of it unontny earn hair,.-Widnit hidkai" ' . come quite gray, probibly onedhlrd_ whllei'.- my witty. ' hers were of santo, cbaracter,,, Some Oman mnatha -.l o w 1 pun:ire, - ti• bottle-Of 4oer Inierestorattve;Set used it. I coos found it prat log whatillitsi wasitetr.v-I, used it shunt 'twice. a week. J aoe:pr. eured another bottlefor. which i have nied som ' I can-so w carts y to the world that the grey: or white ' Mrked tally disappeared, both. thi . mytead and, rime% and pay hair has mrn seod•_iti,.nattiraisidoi, and I believe nude; Masud glosay . tban,it - ,.hot been beforellor,twentydlye, years. i tun noarili , y years old. „tnyjnest wile at UM - age of fifty-two. him used Width moue, elfeeti • , - -..- ~ , l'he'abote notleo liitniti deg to yeyt.for yOutvanabli;" . disoormy, -1 alit assured 'that whoever will rightly nos, , si per direal -ne; *ill not have ,oensidosi:lo goats's. diet mi . etatemlnte. -, robiTelthen - of, this rit,i, and a resident hard for the last • fifteen yearti, in . „110:1 known, - to nearly everYtie - her_ i Mid 'adloiblaptsiitimP 'Any se y o n may makea.thennove, iiititinYA•Me - attaehed, fa' at your service. as I triek - to MY mit the= : beauties of, nature in alien rat we a s myself . !„.1 elfri - ..traty, yo.te, • - .. , --,-, -,,, --A; 0, R/1„,Y100SD:„ - ;:itfingiiettjJail, , Milgas. , / - ; • - .' --WOMILIIAILII.Nr_TORAtINC,.,I•,,,,,.. %,:, Professor Wooni.-ifear..fier4 . Baying hadthe misforr. tane to lose tiniksetPoitien of sny,hair4roin -tire yffecte. of. the yellowtesti, In New Orleans, in 1861, tititi:iii.. .need to make a trial of--your preparatiori t - andloUnd it' to Ruiner as the -viiry;.thing-ned, My halt 36 now tideland glosayi.iiiid,,,,no -words oat espnise Myjobligsk idenalto rat lust...tit* to the t ailiicted - suck a treasure. '','•_.• -. `-' 7 - 1/LNLEY /01iNapti,*; ; , ' n o underafidedj iliri7 . ii IC Brag*, lea minitter In regular standing, and Pada a the Orthodox Church at PrOokilea, Mass ,Me le a gentleman of great infinence Idtd italfdflag.f b 9104 :: ''- :•‘•••= :i_r‘.._. - ~, W k1., 4 11 / 1 1 0 , Itiisedetatki;,An'. - 12, 1840, 1 ' Profaner iitooilliiiiellif - : l eivlnt midi; h trial of - -your Hair llostorative;it , giveatne pleeiniro-toltsfitlitit• . 'its tided hes buennuelllentiCl - 10 1 7 1 Wieti011.' - ' dandru ff anciA,coitatif tinedidoy 03,11 ... TM with whi4 : I lav e been troubled troth my 'thrbgli ;: and ,ho also -. . puttered my halt- 11111014-iratii DidionlQ grayi‘telta Ode- - eat color. :•. - I Isitr i used .rior et - kern:tide wittranyttdpic Ilk. 46.416* OP..*PAPreett;:; -4- : - '•-'--5- -,'-g- - j , Z1, 1 111 : ',., - • • - --.-- 102igoA;Yi`' • :.•,•,. I,IE, DRAW". ,', -•' -.- The lieetandift ` tit t Ws. itiVatlea af;Aven - inixo.;viiit' largemiediani, - aid' l'atuTkoestiiii holds Wl* OW , j•-:' iamb "Wig fat 11*54)1110-311...1031416 rAtie:zonsditim Midi .- - A li Isrsiat - trientyper.gentAlticali7 the ll, t retallefur tti•V.4ri a , ei=-10, . 40104 :.*:flittrt; fortiyAdea, - ; : ~, , ._ri , , :r ,..„ 1fit ,„1 1 ,,, AT ,---_-1-0. 'Wtt l iltr4 bt ial t k t g; ;;getni;iiilitibt ' iiiW -r aa t -'" -: 1 1, :.. m i't t hith4644l4.llli,,wligitg l retoi#4l4 ! toliti t ! -4: -, :rF.:04; tgAßarr.littieliSvz - psi , -,;.. , -. , ,x -,- .:, ,- l'e , ' - . , - OW r.tif-Yar 109. 1 10 eta, Mkt fasti.lfemsfe ' -e,A- - .:_-: tisist i iiVe-•, ,- -, rlx - - , l'auttilfria. lhelkiithelfralrAn ' • --1---, --- ,' ,-- T. , -..."••; :. , ' , ;, - '-'-.."--'•'-'4•; -,-. ' ',- .%, - -- -er•i it '.. , :i -i - -p 'fr, vei,,-ti:-.,-- 4 Ait Stla% TANGlrAtS i rtirE g,,kiv! t * Olyt:Suben•Cligarilrtini ° Wiwi : T 610 410-aiti f iC' Vin% 1011,11444 i f 4 11 #44,Ve , 'VA' 4O ; SOHN" 'r _ t '1 . MMEE , Y:4 v a -"' rsik" , I ~vo~;~~iva ~.Y~5:;,;.. • - , Q *Ells" 'TO ADVERTISERS: - • - . • *., • TO4DYPATISEII.B2,!•-ii •• -****: . -TO .- Ai 0 .104/ I .3bit# 2 .• 4 • 14:1,,ADVAJAMPIta: ';- • TUE CHRONICLE Sc SENTIVEp,_ • ' .7..2.05 - onnoraoLiv.t; SENTIIISD, • opßoNroupA:"spixtriEL, ;:4', '43rltrollitOldoLE k?' S2I42INEL, locniidsOlS 1: 411 4..0D NEEE,I , 7,, • • •S_URtIfAIR6.O4I . O AND' WESICLY, - TOSLIWEIO/AgY-MID,W4EILLY,. .' • •; 4411iltIORNOI,PAILZANDIVEZIII,Y,'” • • -. • • - "AT AUGUsTA GEORGIA - AT AUGUSTA,- GEORGIA,' 1 - '• - #T 'AUGUSTA," GEORGIA, AT AIIGUSTA, GEOROIA, '•• *- AuGueTh p.vOII.QIA L i 4tiitf i rattAiiintartAaottag,; • , patotav caltd,cruilitowii - "; . • Ari t k 13,1tdirr'cigtur;flptis,, • ••• A 4B I,IOPAINEIiird4gI4I4A4MQ.N• • • :•• IN ,• ; • ISOUTR.••=- " * ,•• IN _TEE SOUTH. a. •-• IN THE BOUTS. - IN TEN SOr4-.l' •' ,ZT:=4l,tn L JONES = WORK • Olf 'OOLOiTIATI MOE,* XiA r Y7ol!np'Yizinotr pOliti Snria- Pradappir,i 3 OlallykdbluntainVAPP,Cisliiittal, Riallaries; ;a 4d Oopuurroa - eared britaini,Collected and Mg/nand AlatnltrAgienatit Trette_ehtl other Da.. rhlb Viii.attar,Paaddiau,Mig., LEA., S.A. or 815 paies. • • • • • ," juin reastand and rat'aals try' . '.- • - • • :„..' Law Bootrionerei Publisher. and Importarai ••• ""172. : f: Sixth. street' , - NEWILiGAZINS.,,•::ii '' • r '„'• '''. " `-- - ~1 .th ;."': TAP , V . 8144n0N.91 ° ‘ 4min:or mink , V4f q3lll4ol46 l KArinir Izaky to) bad- at au maws' h. Agent, Capt. J. 11: 8011, to ow:weans ijilw % to t '- -I i atitutderiberst Pries ,M 1 :pp .serrare, , ' - '.l. B Y NT& STAUTON,' , Yorasitll/0 3 4 10 81 1 1 iciNdIINVENTii And OHlSTNFrEltreitta, hi. ".."*lt'tcy,2!,o7,_ PIAN M=iMi 4 or 'WILLS/ 4 ' ; • ,ALKYANDIR H. 'MEAUX, iinhhiht,h4,4hoolfclaton ot:the , PoophAkConsehtion, He rAspettrakf I.plraciili!-.614 friends Ito sem* thit kfunhuOloze• , - ' 40-2w* . , . _ .11=11.1E' 0 r 4 -.4;4, • ROT 4.ltAltoa,v 4 •tanreseNTlE BO to the will of the keopiehi,Conientiost. • • *Olt ICAVISZVIt ‘o,l47acti. , - F. ai„s ' ogaza~ldrit ; wisn,. _a-ibisa o the Bohol of the People , ” Pe ' st7. . 41ed, lesteate.t, I pledg r e'm'oOlt , to !collie the Offlop Ito 91444:teiii,iiit4b14404 bj tow. • jpse.toee - S,ISTJENTZ":WARIi v tittSet to thi /.#l°P. of X'lPPla's Parly ARI).4 r 4-The • unilbraligited herebf Oka 141 Mende that h. , itu t. Mindidite".{oitbe Ogee of 'SHERIFF the Com fy Phlladelphiti at tbs ekuirctiiit elem.:6;lf nominated by it ThePeople. ,o ' ' ' • • , Jos t m:pqwsAL. guzutinnaltuOune 6; 1858, - ; , } y1941"..„ Ir4loTif tibtreßESSi4lfilib BITE ' wen. iuriettAtivarAirt:' g;NeO4 fo Demoamtio rules. ji244xa. rLE UK. , : orM.oltrarors , , ootrat ,. rtig,,u, HARKINS, f, t f o lite x :s 2l4Tit • 91:.• ir2/411 siGIOaREGISTER OF„WiLtS,•:: " W . 4 ..: gt"k" 4aomPinsitrz: -, r , AntijeltAit,the 4111 et the'boikple , s Cloitventioa. , ' I. • - WESTER. 13441TiOrOittlIg24°,,t•.44MIV!, OUR& OF 'ORPHANS! CoußT—, ; " JOSEPH A. ". gliyouth;fr o rdl. air to tin moo of the Ditkikatio pkty. _ —LT -9 7 101 ti :W/ 11k J0aN71,09/0, 9Pi • r „rabbet t° - - 68 REGISTER'. hei" - biore th_4lP)sci,lea Nomination. REGISTER 13;••- . • ;OEN ,VAMPAXLIc 01.11111INTH WARD; f - "Subasatpla;rvlmi r : , tovll4m !`"":- ';ifor , Ssale anb cet. isrmsw , , a-Erl FOR SALE;--4. handsome residence, saiL=with all'3Let'srndern improveinentn, laege ilde yord;graperv, eta. SIXTH, near fJP.RTNG , faitlYEN ferms soy., P., LlplD,l63l,oouth PISTE( _ • _ .Btreet, (eenond'atort.) . " a0.14-3.in „ . Amu FOR - - • RALE ~ OR •EXORANOE '•:•••••A. NZ. -handsomunew.manatunil9 -monis; and 40 sexes ? neer (41systed4 &Salon. North Pennsylvania Railroad. Pita pplen4l4llfrulo-ntnindaot,..baskltti—nainispuedi 4 ;Aury person really desiring s handsome 4;0;0140 1 0 ,4 in veisonsnes for. eity . property, will find AU an minimal oitportuitity of accompilebing hn object ; Apply to ,P - 4. 1121 aD0 A.lit South Burma 420 it F it aul46lm SALE OFSA.I9•AL,BOAT.—,Ou Saturday, diagast 91,108, at-12 . o'clock ,M., we will ash at iodate suchen, to the IlistkettklAdoc foc coat, Canal Boat HJAII2IIIIENR. ', Isiniia her anchors , cables, ,buptackjeir - appairibl iiiniture,- end appurtenancee. , ..,'___. - Tho said Osual'llost is now lying at the foot of W Illam stteeti•lticktnetul, in the city of Phllsdelphit, where ; the age ill* take place - ••• • s • -, . . . • D. B. EußeAditr, A. HUNT 11, WM. P. ARIC, aulti-fam t2lst of FOR, BALE. - -A' pretty Cliittake, nine rooms, and one or more eines on Wyoming avenue, :two miles out the libmoud street Turnpike. Also, save , re' Asudeouns — Cottage lots "The neighborhood is healthy, beautiful, and rapidly imploring. P. B. LTND inx.rtz stery)• aul4-1m „ TO IFIE:LET—On account of removal to on 4 riewetnii, hens* No'. 432 CIIIO3TEUT, below Illtb street. Possession may be bed about the and of October,- The position le one of the most den 'table liabliadelphla. • • - ' ,• . Yor tem, of Lae” !lipid: to • . . - • -,, E. CALDWELL do CO. Op,'SALE«-Valuable Huai Estate on 'imil,Nornt l Third street, Secluding TIMER fiTORKB our.Thlrd street, N05.,444 424 and 420. . Also,two foun • storimucx ntriLLINCIM on Alliserristreet: Nos. 411, 419.421; Lot 60 feet Ims:4;e:tending in depthl7B feet to billwin-l-isets an annual rent clear of tostri4if Abut 02,600. 'S APPIT • 7W;11, -LINTON; oullAte . No. 846 North 81XTil street. - _ .. .TQ-0E:Ii T- .t - T7 T,11., FIRST, THIRD, 4 ' - YeUll,lll - 0112 YIPTII Stories, and Two Vegan, of No. 106 /win Street. above FROST, ,iopir to BIEINOP, SIMONS, & CO , - ser7.lot I ' ' • - ' 120 North Whnrolt. ' TO; RENTL:Otmuting-lionee No. 180 Nort&LDelswarli Avenue -witoor extending throtiglitoll attic stmt.. Appkh fl to • • JOHN AL. K NNZDY & 00., • 182 N. Doliware ATentis. _ T 0 4 ' IL EILT-r-The second . dnd th ird stinte of No: 103 ARO II street, oocond door' 9010 34 !Att Pc'— 144°1 ' 4 ppl iilly. s"- - ,6;Liii dc_ ,CO rti l ''‘- alia• ---- tr - --:- 't.. ' , 9 North Wittorfitroot. :100R.,$ - valuable. LOT, In the.vlal• alit °titian Daltiniire . . Depot; Ili in" Improving - nietehiOrapoil: Ycir part!pVarai eypxess J. R.; Box 527 loirt-ogine. 1 bl 6 - tarts. - • ' e ' - ABEWitS gtltikirE% , *N it #Bl4 4 2; Li* * - • LOOK , ANSN, atton4 ta - ali - Prbfeisthifial bmsinegi en trizated tq thdro. ; 130 1 ,, att en ti o n given to t,tto 00/100. ofclatmk. ' • •: - t, ZZZZZZ MOMS. - Gov: Padlcer,ltarriaburg, Pa?, tr. A. MackeY, ,Szesidont Lack lierran3fahki Uenatsi 3sokman, Look Bayed 11.9na ',Ai ' , White; "Leak .Hater •,-. - 131;non : Baia; Lock area' Xairthonae, Philadel 'phia; and; Ei ape, .1:1O.; Philadelphia; Xvaha dc: Watead; hiladeli his Phillip. M. Price, Philadel - • ''''tsoha; Philadelphia; Wilitimsoa; el ; Tenon & liellefokitej Pa.; J.w W. ibis.. - - J1: 264 ! . 48ir — AT - LAW ) ~), Ull ZO LIT, -• • . - 1 IliiittiS Cloosrr, TEXAS, .. , Tw nty „years resident iv .Taxac '' 'Pram, capsOols paid le Land .8 using auL. '''. - 1:1111/30 OPPOSIte TWO OLD oAprrou. • . •Rainuis tp4MpwriL:Daviii 4}Drnet, ghtlideleta. )Valit•,o7 i • ...‘1 ;:-, ..,.• , • _,. ~ .• - .. THOJAPSOICANI 4 :4I. M. GONAB - soy ICONVIIIYANCERN. eNNO.Ikt. airAsaas. - A.TTORNET. AT • LAI • ; Apli t y No. 988 ARCH street, below Tenth. t1h,_.... 4 triliAit I XrOIUNT sa i 3 Of) 'B&W t .. 1' f' TN iLTE(E' - vi ll istillation, • of.: Abe • GITBSTki UT ifillkEY; all the Medicinal qualities are g' fniureadilkil bating,' soft and pleasing 'spirit toe Wlfglig: Wit ' -.water, re °desirable' drink - to guepoirfbiret during this warm weather. Wholesale , 4seriey 'VP ionth•FROIST Street', NIIA.ILTONf Sete Agent,' nulB-lfte. ' And retelledbrDruggiete generally; Ail , _ .. TORT- - lINE4-40•Cinarter:Pipea4 in bond# ...?i,v4tot• liklepl WILLIAM 11plAt P TON t • , ' l ''''''"' ' t '' ''' ' '. 1 . 4 4 0 0 914 /tY•rilft ,t'A'' •41 , 4,-_,:'l' .. , • ..- ... . , t : - . 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PENNSYLVANIA, - ON SATURDAY //TIMMS., JUla 3.0, 1858, OPENING TIIX CARPAIGE IN TEE MYR CONGRESSIONAL DISTRICT OF THAT [Printed literatly.froin the abort-hind Iteport Faxnew-Crrizass : Adopting the language of Peril to Agrippa, I think myself happy becalm I libation - ewer for myself tide day before you touch . ing - ell'the things,wbereerl inn accused. - , A'rew - men in prominent 'phicoi In the country, hue 'who in the future will become less conspicuous, -and a few ineh in dark obteurity who will ever re main there; have arraigned and put me, and those With Whom , / have recently acted, upon our trial' heresy;' But we oast ourselves Upon' God and our otantryand if truth has not lost its vital power and our accusers confused. - ' 7 "Whole as the marble,' ((Medea as tiut rook, • As breed and general ad the easing air —" eitohle the' Prinolido tipn which We stand, and ache gates of Hell 'shalt not prevail itgalnst'it." [Applattsel Upon Wire-laid ,thii broad, founda tions Of the Demooratio party. Upon it le erected' the seared stittoture - or free government: Upon it •rest , the:rights 'of the citizen. I speaker, the, aoyereigrittorthe people.' - ' le wind 'arid. incou• .ttovertible - in'itself. , - rt irt a Meer, 'indefeasible sightondinairledged And 'gintrantled by existing Jane, organic. inn - statute. We have stood by it heretofore, and we will 'stand by, it, unfalteringly intl.& future. It hat,' however,' been Attached, maligned, And . repudiated; and' th.tt, too, I am sorry to Bay, by, Men who, but two ebort years - sine°, 'were lend in its' praise and' bold in its defence. .When panel* add expediency are broughtinto Competition we Can never hesitate which to foillow. Re who - Is willing to enema the latter as his guide;in'priferinett AO_ the fernier, his ahead, schooled httnielf to be a rogue. Noniinferventierf - in ` the-local affairs of States and Territ,oritnLia not, a party policy ; it has be, come a governmental policy. The South invoked it, and,. the North Conceded it. The reason is very DlAin and obvieue.: The line of 1820; known as the Missouri Compromise had existed for thirty:foiir years, and wee regarded es a Sacred eurapseWwas required lo be repealed. It wait preposed` from all. parties 'eV - the Small; It, was declared to he sedfitib.'protorlidive contrary to the spirit crottriTovernmenti'an icaomtailble with the acknowledged rights -of the Aileen. I 'say that ;the acquiesced Id that repeal, for .Northern votes were nei3eistify in eider to secure it. The line.ef, 1820 - purehised, - and there was a large 'and, Valid anestderationr paid for SYs tnek r itr.cOmpenantionlor Abe. edmiselexi , of Bliesenri late the Union a eitivo r Its` isnaehititittionality- at , a latieday .was al leget; and, frieletid'upon teethe same reAsonsthst.l have Isiated: By that coMpromise all,the territory, ;north of that line,inoluding Himself and Nehru 'lia, was virtually made, free, for ,no 'act Of the South could - prevent it being devoted; to freedom. 'The7setnf 1954, 'mown ; e a the' Nobrnake-llansas sed,leStroyed-'lhitibie, and renderathn fate of, the territory- neitiinf It at *leapt uneeitaii.. Iu that' ligialation , the South- had every' advantage. I do not mean to *complain Of it,•beeause I regard Ohs principleriettognised:by it as the tine principle ' 'to !be 'recognised;. bull do still 'assert; that, iii that logieletion; the South -had all the advantage, forth. reasonithat that,whiett was certain 'there- ' torero ,A 1,14, became tumerteituand , unsafe to the, North., The., Beath hactintitirritory atorthAf that , line; bat, = although , : they eondealed their -pur- Pose,ithey believed that they . could' accomplish . the, conquest of that Territory - and devote It to their 'peculiar institution.... The prominent doctrin'e of 'fitenthern - statesmen- he, that an equilibrium must be restored in legislation ; that the balance - 6fraiwer mnethe - Teetered.; and they havelooked in the Senate as the place in which to achieve that object. t If slavery shall be admitted into territory north' of the line of $6 deg. 30 min., the effect 'would be to accomplish everything they have had in View. North'ef -that line .there ie one million I square miles of • territory . .more than there is south of it—enorigh' to. make several States of tionvenient stee-at leant - eight. - The, Territories of- Nebraska aud,Kansse; of thems,elves,_ etn braee of the whole territory of the United fitatet.. They-are greater in extent than. Austria and France ootablitild; et' than any twe et' the Huropeeti States,'oxoluslie' of Russia, and larger than all the erteenio powers together.' The whole of the territory of the' United, States; 'nog now ! embraced Within State lireits, le Sufficient - "to Make thirty-one. Stites as large, each, as, New York and Pennsylvania. A great part of this is. 'taatiOup of territory purchased `from Mexico:. We /layout:qv-in - our possession, one.balf,7more than one-half---eighbilfteenthe of former territory AtMexiixt,And I apprehend Abet it trill-12ot be a `Very lo,ng-thno until tee'reake'rt *lgoiotti part' - acquire the balance: The slave States, ai already organised, cover 200,000 square miles more than free States.-whllit-thelatureltave *tilt( Impale; thin double that of the former. I state these feats ' at present, because they will have en important bearing upon portions of my subsequent remarks. If the South could .acquire the territory of the country and devote it to their - institittions, there r -would be little difficulty, I apprehend, in ascer— taining what would-be the - condition of the metre 1. bitterns of the 'Union in thefuture. If the Territory- of Kansan alone could have been acquired, it would have made the .South equal .in power with the North in the Senate of the United Staten. Every- additiciaal State ao quire& by. them largely increases their power in legislation; and if theyare willing to make large sacrifices in order to acquire a Territory to-day, is ft MA' reasonable to believe that they will bu winters to make as large or larger sacrifices for the same thing tomorrow ? But they never will re ,store, the balance of power. It has gone and It has gone , forever. By - the, wicked and indefen ablest:llB'of he: own ohildren - has the South lost her power, never' to return. jApplause.j You may as well try to reproduce the wondrous figures in the ever-varying kaleidoscope,-the gorgeous hues of the septet upon the painted canvas, or - the-smile of beauty to the early dead Bente forth and forever, I proclaim it here to-night, and let the future speak dila truth or falsity, that the South will -never be equal In real power to the North. To effect it will require them to subvert the laws of Nature, of Asthma., and of production, and the laws regulating population. It wilt -regeireme to ,be willing to part with our national glory, to threw away Northern honor, and to_gliglree speech. Missouri being a bordering State upon Kansas, and represented - by Southern legislators, It was thought that they would have a large advantage river, the North in the population of Kansas. They reasoned that the people of Missouri would Imme diately, upon the requirement of the South, I Joie into ' the Territory of Kansas, and control the institutions There, They had not calculated npott Northern strength and courage, and it was not unreasonable that they should not do so. Looking at the conduct of Northern 1020C1 in the Congress of the' United States—their mean sub servieney to the behests of the South—it was rea sonable,l say, that they should not properly esti mate the true standing of the North. The occur rences following the legislation of 1854. clearly -show this. Tho not repealing the compromise line of 1820, and organizing the Territories of Kansas and Nebraska, passed into a law, and those Territories became organized under the exeen. the sot. In that act the principle for which the South contended; and which the - what, Demo °ratio party of the Union adopted, was clearly, 'distinetly, and miequivocally avowed. And let it Mot beforgotten that Its parentage was Demooratio, and rshaitto.night speak mainly to the Demo. oracy: Tee principle watt neither to legislate slavery into any Territory. nor to exclude it there froni, but to leave the people thereof perfectly free toform and regulate their dOmestio institutions in their own way, subject only to the Constitution of the, United State's. The people were to be leaner feette free. - Slavery wee not to be legislated 'into, nor excluded therefrom. Everything was to be left to the popular contra, free from the interven tion of Congress. I will examine these questions before I conclude. I , will merely state here, in passing, that the people of that Territory have not beeeleft free to form and regulate their domeatio -Institutions as they' desire; but, on the contrary, an Effort has been made to oppress them, and with a high hand, and against every right to-legislate slavery into the Territories. (Applause.] For' five months was that persevered In, and in the end it woe virtually accomplished. The cause of the ortginatoontest for power in the Territory of Kansas I will 'mot inquire into. In the subsequent progress of events it has be come entirely unimportant; for neither the note of individuals 'nor communitiee; nor 'States, can repeal solemnly enacted statutes, nor can the opleione of men, however high , they may stand is authority, counteract successfully the solemn pledges of Statesmen. (Applause ] Congress inaugurated the principle of non-inter ventlon and the doctrine of popular sovereignty. The Dammed, party, I repeat, adopted it, and I will read the language in which they adopted it. They rceolved, in the Cincinnati Convention, "that we recognise the right of the people d an the Territories, 'Wadding Kansas and Nebraska, acting through the legally and fairly.expreesed otts majority, of aotual,residente, and when ever the number of their inhabitants justifies it, to form a Constitution 'with or without domestic slavery, and be , adm itted into -the Union upon terms of period equality with the other States. ' The membera,of that Convention pledged the people of the country to maintain and to defend - their awn melte If they did not do It, then they were faithless. The candidate of the Demo cratic party at that time, in a speech or a reply which he made to a company of gentlemen who visited tend . addressed him, declared that he was merged in the Cincinnati, plattoint and that he had lost, substantially, his personal ' identity. In' other words, be then avowed his determination to stand by the principle of popular sovereignty. . -Itis a sound prinoiple. Tho American people .have always believedthat their political purity rested in the 'witrof MO majority. TheDemooratlo Party, all parties, have express ed their, determination to abide by such a prinel le, there can be no government of the people. Without it, there can be no guarantee for individual rights. • Its exercise, and its o'er else alone, makes this a free government, and gives -to our - people 'the fullest develophient of social, political, and religions rights. iApplause.l Its letee,,on'the other hand, builds up tyrannies, places deepotimi the throne; and reduces man from. his proper Stature to servility and chains. It la there fore healthy, 'lt is sound. It is conservative. It is the only-safe American dootrine. The nation did notmieunderstand us. No part of the _people were permitted to misunderstand us. Nor, I trust, did We - misunderstand =saves, when - we went before thetas= people. . Yet - it *Mild seem,. from , (+yenta whieh have siteetranspired, , that we certainly misapprehend :ed hut own ration, and it iv supposed-by some . that the people 'have no recollection of what we then' said and professed bebelleve; Bat the Presi dent of the United States fully comprehended 444- !4114t*, SP1po 041421 1 0; tO of .1 wEp.NEO4.Y. AUGUST is. 858: , , its maintenance foliose-OHW% for the very purpose of maintaining that principle in its luta& rity, lie budged that Hon. Robert -Walker .should go to the Territory of Kansas and beeemie its Governor.- Dit. Walker dor:lined: Three several times did be refuse to go, 'but Mr: - Buchanan:at last insisted upon his complianee in - order that the people, of Kilning Might -be eel:Mired in the ^en joyment of that sovereignty guarantied to them, in their orgapie 'abt:' And in a letter not Yet* given to' the world, of the 'date' of 12th 1857, a letter in the handwriting' of tins , Presi: dent, Signed with hie min Proper' sign Mitatati.'-/1 7 letter - embracing wen or eight Writtenpsges, the President inelitted• thatGovernor' Walker should tee thatthe Constitution tatKanSalfshodhl be submitted to a vote'of the people; for their rat', &alien or'rejectioniln order to maintain the prig:: oiplo of muter stivereighty. [Applause)' Covert, por Bigler, one of the Senators from this State, util deretood it, for Ida Oineeoh, whieh he delivered in' Kansas, at Paoli, before a thousand people, he 'Pledged himself in the meet enspliatio' terms:that if the Constitution' were not submitteda yeti of; ,the people. ho would go to Washington pad Opposte it in the &hate ; Mid - after' that; in-twe'reversk letters which he addressed to Secretary Simited,7 he expressed' the twist& Whiell it eX-' ieted for submitting that instrument - to . vote` Of the- people' order instill:aid the' 'pledgee of the Demos:ratio party.. Nor did Governer:l3olth' misunderstand:it.' ;No nubile men 'mliturideridirok, it,- ;:f hive in MY mind thelatit theta Cabinet ht.:l doer-wrote Jotters to high, authorities in fiiiorgisr and Kanies'on the iithjeotof the inbaiisiton of the Constitution. He showed, withinuolielsiboratlim,' bow the party was oopinsitter te u fair valuta hones Of • popular ,flol4lreigtitY Orthat which had pined them the Presidential Wootton ; and that if it wee not submitted, no heniat Demo, - *rat could be istredlo support thin Congeal! When it came there for its Ration. We did net stand otirielVes; nor did'we glib the people art 'op portunity to misunderstand mi. -Now, fellow-einem; let to tee whether:We have. redeemed our pledges. The - Democratic' Party 'of the country, is in power—legielative' ,exemitive, and jadiolal Power lain their hand. 'We Ofinnot plead inability to accomplish •orhet we 'desire; and if we have not done what we 'pledged othee/Vos to. do, the fault to ours and b u t that of others, - .We, were placed in legislative and executivepoWithe. sense we pledged ourselves to maintain to, 011301 1 , .ple of popular sovereignty . No Northern' Siete ettuld have been :earned for the then DemOorsitio presidential onndidateif we bad not exprbssed the opinion , ' which some of Uffssihere to to-day. [An- Please.) In that way was thia dielriet parried. and in noother wayeoulda have been carried' There le not a Democrat within the sound of my videelmt knows tbitt , l state a: foot whiett: be -earmot deny ' [Renewed applause] - .In no single speech; which I made before the people of Chester andlDelaware counties in 1856, did I venture tomtit for nnything but the maintainanee of that principle. Who complained of what I then Said ? , Nay; gentlemen,. I donotineed th e outrages in, Kansas. I went _further voted' for the_ investigation into .Karb. ,8114 i faith's; I voted for, the Tangos ' thinitttntion -I did all this, and:ithe Men in our taidst;- new, loudest in their eouiplainte, - Were the very men who sanctioned anteustainedine'vrithibeir wine and their votes. [Applause.] - They made no• oh. jeotion then, but a change Welcome o'er the 'spi rit of their dream " They ,hope to Purchase the smiles of pewee by the basest treachery. [Repeat ect,applauee.] If the peopit of the ,Territory,ef Karities beim not been able, tip to this tline; to baye a Government el their obolee, we hive not kept oar faith. state that as a clear proposition. On the contrary, we have dolman we could to °ripple popular sovereignty there, to defeat the proper growth of - the Mirth, and to reduce, her to a state of subservienoy to the South.' I regard that poet ' Den as so clearly tenable as .scarcely to need atir defence;for,gentlenien,if, the people of the Mirth have" a majority in'thatlerritory, and have been • unable, up-fir- this time, to eXpreni,the yobie of `.that jnajority in the form of 'rule,' and if the tip thematic party of the Country; hang In powei', have been ablest 04 LIMOS tease:that that:voice SWIM' be expressed, and haea,nordenelsopthen, I think, it folions,t ae a neciessaryconseptenee, that we hive not kept our faith; that we have done in, justice to the North, and that the tendency Of our acts is to degrade Our own 'section.' We tatnot hope for Con gressional interference in' the future. It hats gone It is oolong - the thlnge.that.have, Pasied. has been repudiated and disavowed. We have Tested our fortune upon the doctrine of the sovereignty of the people. If that fails, we fall ; but it is sufficient for us if it shall be prci petty maintained and defended. But if the pee. pie of a Territory cannot exercise their power, then what. is the consequenee? Rule passes into the handset's minority, and /have never yet learned; in any of my,sehoolinv in the Deniecratis' ranks, -that-power CAA liNtltill3lltely reside In the bands 'of a minority. If It fails there, it will, fail in other, places, and every failure willincrease the strength of Ita opponents. I say that there is no, man in the-country, not one, who has any re gard for his charaoter _as a man, but will admit that the majority rule has failed in Kansas. In evoker:speech • that I hgvo, listened to coming from,* defender, of the Leooreptosi-Ooristltution In the present- Coersa, I have heard no man declare that the me orityerthissteopladelleneas were in favor, of t at Conetitution ; on the con trary, every fair man, from North and South alike, was willing to admit that the free-State men them wore vastly in the majority. Ought we not to in quire where we have rested our fortune upon a principle, why that principle has not been success fully pu t practice? Ought we not to inquire— is it not our duty to inquire—why it is that it has 'failed; and why it is that power hat been wrested from the proper hands and placed in the hands of those who have no right to exercise it? Now where is the man here who vitt venture to say that the great majority of the people of Kansas are not directly hostile to the Leeompton Consti tution? If they are opposed to it, then ought they to have It forced upon them? ' if they do not sanction 'it, ought It not at once to be re jected? It has never been - defended upon 'the ground that it met with the 'approba tion of the people, and therefore it has never been defended on a proper ground. If the people of the Territory were to be left perfectly free to form and regulate their domestic institutions in their own way, as the act declares they should be, why is it that they have not evercieed that right— and why to it that they shall not exercise it, not in the future, but in the present? Why is It that that Constitution was not rejected at nose when it was presented before the Senate and House of Re presentatives at Washington ? It was maintained and defended, not-upon the principle of the orge nio not, but upon the ground that it was in com -o%mm-with the forms of law. They rested it not Nein troth, and right, and justice, and fair deal ing, but upon a legal abstraction. Bat I am'as willing to deny that that instru ment is supported by forma of law, as I am t, deny that it meets' with the approval of a majority of the people. When a Legislature ie placed in power by a gross fraud, by the incursion of strangers, by violent seizure of the polls, by murder and all manner of crimes; when that Legislature passes an sot authorising a Convention to be called to frame an organic not, and declares that no county in the Territory Mail be represented in the Con. vention unless a census thaltbe taken by officers ap• pointed by themselves, and that no man shall vote where a census has notbeen taken ; when the crea tures of that body, Its agents, fail to disoharge the duty imposed upon them by that law; when one half of the counties in the Territory, nineteen out. of thirtpeight, are unable to send delegates into Convention by reason of thri failure of the requir ed apportionment; when fifteen counties out of the thirty-eight cannot vote by reason of no poll books being made; and when the delegates elected from only nineteen counties meet in Con vention and frame a Constitution entirely re pugnant to the wishes of the majority, who are disfranchised, am I to be told, as an American eitizen, standing upon f,ee soil, that that Con stitution is in conformity with law, and must be held as a' controlling enactment? [Applause 'ln the name-of God, has it come to this'? Why, gentlemen, this is to add insult to previous in jury. It is but aggravating the original fraud and endeavoring to sanctify an unholy and un clean thing. Why did not the President of the United States, when be sent In his Kama mes. sage, rest it upon that ground as a sufEloient one ? Ile did not venture to do so. In that message be did not rely upon the principle of the organic sot, bet he threw himself upon the ground of ex pediency. for he gave as a reason why, Konen should be admitted into the Union at once un der the Leeouopton Constitution, that it would localize the issue and restore • peace to the Terri tory. Localize the issue! I will tell you how it will localize the issue, my Democratic friends. Yon will see in the future how it will localize the issue. I tell you it will localize the Democratic party to the South. [Applause.] It will localize the Do moaratio party in the South, for it wit? destroy them In the North. [Repeated applause J It will localize that large Democratic majority in the pre sent Rouse of Representatives to half of one side of the chamber in the next Congress. [lmmense applause 1 It will localize the Dernooratio candi date for the Presidency in 1860 to his house and his home. That is precisely the way the issues wilt he localised, and that man is blind, wilfully blind, who does not see it. A single word on the English bill, gentlemen, end I leave this branch of my subject. It is worse, as I view it, infinitely worts, than the original bill, for the reason that it is insulting to the-North; for the reason that it degrades the North; for the reason that it does not recognise theNerth as standing upon an equality with the South; and that is 0 thing which I never will willingly admit. It is unfair, unjust, uneour teens, and indiscreet in its provisions. It gives too much to the South and it takes everything like justice from the North. How does it do it ? Kansas at this moment, has purloins 40,000 popu lation. It may be more, it may be less. If Kansas, (provides that bill,) with her 40,000 in habitants, will take a pro-slavery Constitution, that ix, the Leeempton Constitution, she may at once come into the Union as a sovereign State, and have her two Senators, and of course as mush power in the Senate of the United States as the State of New 'lark; but if she will not, agree to cotes into the Union as a slave State, then she shall not come in at all.' That is the English bill, and it cannot be read any other way., If she de mend afree-State Government; then ehe shall not come In until her' population reaches the legisla tive standard which, under the present, apportion nient,, is 04,000, in round-numbers ; and if she does not reach that by HO, which she will not, then the ratio of representation, after 1500, will not be less than 120,000 or 125,000, an amount of multi tion which Kansas cannot reach before 1864. So it is just this: Kansas, as a slat , e'State, can come in now with 40 000 population, but ehe cannot come in as a free State with less than 120,000, or before 14, 1864. That'll the justiee of the legislation of 0 1' Ofi. I, therefore, repent that it degrades the rth. Keepingfn view tho fact that the origins'legis lation incorporating this principle is Democratic, ((which 1 desire you shall not loss eight of;) keeping before you the resolution of the Cin cinnati Convention, endorsing and republishing ,it ; remembering the ten thousand speeches that were made over the land sustaining. that princi ple, from Howell Cobb down to .the smallest man 'in our midst; recollecting too that the majority principle has not been maintained in Kansas, but has been trampled natter foot; and that the people 54 4 1 4 lonitarf sit wp mob, the tougto op Up) . . ) . ifeeitrary rule as the stubjeots of the Reuse of Raps-. ;burg-Loraine, I' want to know 'of you, my felj hilrelltisens, who hae been true and who has been ' ',flee to the tfrinoirde? Who ?:-..:those 'ebb' Mpport the Zecomptan Conslitution and the - English hill, let theme who repudiate and despise thein::, , [Ap 'reuse , L litttfor l the notion of the President of the United Tstatenotof the, Demooratio party, there, would "--hiiye been no question with regard to the fate •of 1E44. aailittlteilon. -ale took- a ground which ;had .„ iperer been contemplated by his friends-by - not IA friend at the &Mir, It was asuneipeeted as il(44anfair. Re exabted a compliance with his s ands. Re made' it the . only test • of- party iY;:and hie creatures new, some of them from M „ iymbest knowteto themselves, seek to destroy, ..it t it u , o y *AT a te f d a l i s o g o t i -,eolok hoar of a Southern Representative , being read opt? of the Demooretio party? It has beeome a cotillion thingwith Northern ones. [Applfillol:] I,,egeoae.veritympiaanuow.iho'Dwildll you 'l — Totiver did. Ent it may moor hereafter,. ',.: - Northern and Southeen ReptesentatiVes have Ik .iliMked difference,ofreoeption frem the; President" • , : hit Cibinet.,A' Northern Representative - foilligifer every measure of the Administration, .exoepting only thakof Leoompton, is, as I have Ould.diearepled upon and. attempted to be die -• itesid , :before • 'WA own: obnatituents,.. and - the .0 ' 'afrit'4.the entirli'nation. [Applause.] A', ,'' A '''''RePremittattve who opposes every Me ' ',Of : the ' Admieistiationi exobpt "the ' Ra as ;measure ; ;measure ; ie : received with :marks * Vjet-telletfrol , ' and great , ' favor 'and' appfeete,;., tlOrt._, Arld I My to you "that W. freeman, knowing I thet--he hail some manhood left with him, will. never l Otte* to, any :such attempted - degradatiettlesett,-1 neyer!„.Pienld despise myeelf, no you wealdtle- SWlStfre.,*rery man - of you , if I (mold agree to it.• Thg,",f:Vutiipot -Representatives who voted against theor,tiy.blilethe'defielenov bill; the'Adiainietrse. thirdtebeekrapt ytelloy; its Nioaragita Proceedings --: , -IniliedsitortvVetngle measure except the Leoomp to ..,s.4o4lodtetjeti: , :every-tnan of them is in good standinikthe President to-day. Rat the' 4°lol *in Representative who yeted.for them all, andYtited only against Leeompton, is read Mit of the Denrieratle party, , Even that Man from the extreme Southii , hoi a little over a ,- year ago—it la nota /atter: only ten or eleven - months atone—who, fre4r a ;White SalphniSprings; in - Virginia, de clever?, 'lttrs v'etient and vindictive letter, that we -had efOralytio Administration and a Cabinet of mutes t if the ,men whom company la most sought end 'esttemed at the :White Rome to-day. [Ap plansel[,:4l, .'- no lPa nn " oa M jb li e'Vr e e n Si ß d it is ];evident .. , s f a t id ho th u e n tly to o m du States; t o nn b d u e- t yea maser not express an opinion - against any por tion:Of'l4bspelley,r.- I admit that you cannot as a 'Nortlierniman'do en, but a Southern man may de nounce hies, personally, and.vinlently, and yet his atandln) t - as a , politicianpoliticianpoliticianand -a' favorite at, the White, Wee. reaim- Unimpaired. - Let me not, bewail . he nifeunderstood. - I admit: the obliga tion of, the, party to - support. their- President an long as tie is trite to the principle on whiCh be was 'efeeteditit If lte :idols* any -principle which "eery:lite 4ti-,Jmeetion: -before -the people and' On Whip . iktelfattledi'for. power, then I have the right,ttiyi It, Is my duty to oppose him., [Great senlansel -I believe with'Ziato, that the greatest felicitYl a people consists in the, qbed;anoe of the 'people it 'the Prince; thatof , the,jince to the law, anti' that the law shallotiniode in, con % funnily to the Piddle good. We have supported the Prinek. We have supported him • fairly. -We 'have oppottid him honestly. ' . We have supported him IS 'dtr as oonsisteney : with previous declare— Rom -anir4pledges. a thousand times repeated, would,,,aik* us. • But the-Prince has nos been faithi" /ferns. (Applause.] Ile has not been faithfullkthat law which is not only Oonformir trwithlt. '' : oldie good, but that upon which, the 'public, 4 ASPends. 'I deny ,the,right;;cf,f. the 0 Preside finale, ne# *reedit - kg! wttSiCold ',', o iiee" f deny h :`,light to - foliates:- new-rtiniotplost That beloags inalt ! patis: l ,ar d riot:to thestrAident." "I believe; ' that the -ltieildine , has tindeareted • :to change tlier4reced of the Democratic party. • 4-t .- • 116•0111 at bar resolved to destroy the' Wrintiplo' of ,mmulargiovereignly, - and that, hi has done so far a*ay one men timid do it: -.for ' the legis.. lation Spat ing to the Territory of- RAMIRO is not the legishi,jon of the people's representativee—it is the legW tion-ofJOMeS Buchanan, President of the United take. (Applause.) Ile has usurped the !testa yo power of the errantry as much as ever a tyr 'invaded the rights of 'the pimple. [Long-oontijetidd applause.] But for his direct In= terferenee vitb,,tho representatives of the peoldO, kept op mojtth after month,- the Leentapton Con stitution wash - lA/Lye been defeated. It was only. .I:larded holm* ttrine sustained by the hand of power, and- Ythidistrilintion ofpatronege. if we are to en eer political: assassination-000mm it does not dein tee_te:. be Milled 'Van,* better name than thatl4.ifwe are to' offer political aismaina lion; or if e„stee to be disgraced for 'standing l against an at - oftilain usurpation, then wo say let the aim fa, litid let the deed be aceomplisbed at ir the allele monied. -We never Will submit. - I never willbmlytei le—never—until I am willing. to part with ‘2", - iyens manhood and selfrespeot, erid maketnyeer hefer of:welid sod drawerof water 5e ,,,,, tethe Bra rlstotent. that tlemendi it of my barite. [Applaus e 1 4. will pot suffer a self-inflicted dis grace. That ii what robjeet to. Those who op pose me may disgrace me If they can; but I will not bear self inflicted disgrace--and that has teen required or tie. I Will never take a step bank warle. [Applause.] Against this gross and fla grant wrongPhime to stand fighting to the last, through, this year, and the next, and the next. [Renewed applause I -I shall ask God for no more will thsn I have to resist it. I shall only invoke hie strength. • -And, if needs he, I am willing to lie for this - principle, like Spar teens, upon Ity knees. [Great applause.] Fellow-cithene : I wish now to bring this mat ter nearer hime—to "localise" it. fLughtes .1 I shall appeal to the record, and by it prove in contestably that the supporters of the Lecompten fraud in the State of Pennsylvania` have been. and aro, falai to their promises and professions. I do not peak of the Demooratio party. I separate these men from that party, for they are no portion of it. [Applause.] Thiele especially the care in theeounty of Chester. [Renewed applause.) The werfare has 'been waged hero, fellow-citirene, principally by one man—Nimrod Strickland—the responsibility of It rests entireirnpon his shoul ders, for he oonstituteethe brains and the effective energy of the whole opposition. In his written correspondence, well distributed throughout this diettlot, he has made a very free use of my name, a feet about• which I shall never oomplain. He has a right to do it, and I ask the closest scrutiny into my stele. - As he is a public officer, like myself, I trust that he will accord to me the same free 'pooch sf him that he has ever exorcised to wards me. Now, if ever there was a man who completely tiled the description given by Lord Byron of Lord Henry, he certainly tothat man: " A friend to freedom and free•boldere, yet No less a friend to Government, be held That he exeet , y the just medium hit 'Twist "diva and patriotism." Ills life is only a history of the enjoyment of one public office after another, and at present, even, he professes to posses a faint hope of public confi dence Having spent the lest twelve years of his life in properiating free-sentare, in supporting the Wilmot Pravieo, and defending Its author, foster ing antipathies to the South, resisting their ag gressions, end denouncing Mr. Buchanan in the vilest Orate of opposition ; be now, with the sup pleness of the vaulter, end the conscience of a gambler. pets himself to the inglorious task of sub verting his own doctrines, and rendering hie own previous career infamous I trust that the men who surround the President of the United States as a wall of fire, will pines long enough. in their demoralizing course 4f Venunolation and proscrip tion, to reward with suitable favors the base in gratitude nd the bald inconsistencies of this mo dem Talleyrand. [Applause.] Of the few other mon in astooletion with him I 'have nothing to say. 'They are not of sufficient prominence to justify me in spenkirg of them [Applause] 'Her men I condemend to notice their organ or its edi tor, who, V he were to express any opinion on the subject, *wild doubtless say-that Judas Iscariot was over-paid in his thirty pieces of silver for his inhuman treason to the Saviour of the world. [Re peated applause ] Bet to the record, and I shall treat it fairly. I wish, however, to say this before going further: some of my remarks may be considered, and ob jested to, as personal ; I have no favors to ask—l shall avoid no responsibility. If the gentleman, of whose name I have made a free use, or his friends, take exception to my remarks, it will be proper to give me notice of that feat at the earliest mo- Meet, for I pledge nrelf before this assemblage to repeat, etabstanti ly, the earns things' in every part of this distrlo and I think they will not at all improve by that repetition. [Laughter and applause j In 1848 a member of Congress was Ate be elected in Able district. At that time a gentleman, whom I esteem very highly, be came the candidate of the party; the free-soil element in the district was strong, and the votes of the members of that party were very desirable. Interrogatories being propounded to that gen tleman, as to the course he would pursue on the questions then effecting the Territories, in volving the Wilmot Proviso, he returned a written answer, which was submitted to the inspection of three gentlemen. before it was heeded to the public press, ono of whom was Mr. Strickland. In that letter (I hove it here, but it is too long to read,) the writer pledged himself, should he he elected,. to exert himself to prevent the extension.' of slavery over territory then free. He declared that slavery was an institution to be restricted, and not extended, and that he was sorry that the policy of the Government, which bad formerly been restrictive, was being changed in these de generate days. A few of these words are my own, but that is the substance of the letter In the some number of the American Republican and Chester County Democrat which contains that letter, is an editorial by Mr. Strickland, in these words. It is under the date of October 2, 1848: "The Free Sod Interrogations.—On our first page will be found,the answers of candidates to the interrogatories propounded by the Free Soil Committee." "The replies of Hemphill, Heckel, and Mur phy are such as cannot be excepted to by any voter however stiong his opposition to the ex tension of slavery." - "Oa this question there is little or no difference between the position of Mr. Hemphill and that of Mr. Wilmot. Both disclaim modern Abolitionism, both go against the extension of slavery." So that, then, the organ of the Demooratio 1 party, on the 3d of Gitober, 1848, deolared that Mr. Hemphill, the Demeeratio candidate for Congress, was upon the Wilmot Proviso plat form, and that there was no difference on the subject of slavery extension between Mr. Wilmot and himself. Now, what was Dr. Murphy's let ter? It is very abort, and here is the main point of it it : shall -fully and unequiveoally resist any, and every attempt at the further extension of slavery to any Territory now possessed, or which may hereafter be possessed, by the United States." That.letter was fatly endorsed by Mr. Strick land. • - The Pittsburgh State Convention which, assem bled in 1849, on the 4th day of July, deemed it necessary to have a plank in its platform against the extension of slavery to the Territories. Z Wilt toad the reaolutioa which was adopted; Risothel, That the Democratic party adheris now, as it ever has done, to the Constitution 'of the country. Its letter and spirit they will neither weaken -nor destroy, and they redeolare that slavery, is a local domestic; institution of ,the 'South, Babied to State' law alone, and with which' the General Government has nothing to do. Wherever the State law extends Its juriadiotion, the lot 1 institution can °patinae to exist, esteem ing it .o violation. of State rights to carry it be yond State limif s . We deny the power of any Citizen to extend the area of bondage beyond Its present dominion, nor do we consider it a part' of the oomproming of the Constitution that slavery should forever travel with the advancing column of our territorial progress." Nimrod Strickland thought it necessary to no tine and defend this resolution of the Pittsburgh Convention. I ivill - read extraote from. his edit° , rig article.. It appeared In the columns of the Republicasi and Democrat, of July 24th, 1849 : , 'Some of oar %Rig friends "profess to consider...l the position avoW .thjAhe late Democratic State Convention Pittah,en the subject of slavery,' Sc new and - . net'r stout with - that heretofore ' occupied by thap on the same trabjeist. • , Ia We do not So regard It. Whitiathat position? The resolution speaks for itself." (Hera follows the resolution I have just read.] What is there In , this inconsistent , with , any former position of the Democracy of Pennaflvania on the came question. - -; • , "In,the first, it avows and reasserts wh at the Democratio' party of the State - has always inaih • titinod,, that slavery in thelitates under-our 'natioraftVonstitution, institution,lasbjeet onlyto.State aotlqn,,aed;,free.frooli.ejitattpl,,qr l int. lerferanoe from any other quarter - "This it the doetrine of the Miran. It I( the' doctrine and' sPirit the ' Of. Congtittithiril and the Demooratie. party has . 'never-adtpeated Detrain tattled a dliferentoneo4 -•••• • • , - the second plate,,tirairololution.eienies the power of any. citizen to carry and nrai n tain,sia-'. very beyond his Btattiorad declares isgaingt the extension of the institution Into free'territory." ""This ie. no , new doctrine for' theltemearatio party of Pennsylvania. has always been theirs,; as is proved .by the whole action 0 6A.110.-Statean the subject." It was Pennagivpnia doctrine during the Mis souri egitation It was re-avowed by the testate. , tion•Of .16,• and no instance can: be •Predlieed'ila• - which the Demeoragy, of pennevivania has ever advocated a contrary We 'thus red that the Democracy of Pennsylva nia, in re-avowing their await - bents on this great question, have assumed no new position, nor one inconsistent with previously expressed .sentiments' —but that they stand now where they have ever stood, upon the Constitution of the Union, opposed to any attempt to'oontrol or interfere with bravery within the States, and'also opposed to -lie eaten- • stun." • " This position may not exactly ,suit the ultra Abolitioniits of the North, or the slavery propa gandists of the South; but it was the position of names - Jefferson, and has"been practisedv,upoti during' our entire national existence, and it .will not fail iorneet the approbation of all friends of the Union and _freedom." , About - the same time a resolution was passed by the Democratic Convention of the State of Maine, in the following words: • • • • . • ~ R esolved, That the institution of human slavery is at variance with the theory,of our iic vernment, abhorrent to the common sentiment of mankind, and fraught vrith danger all.whOconte, within the "sphere of itainflience. 'That the Pede-' , cal Government peening power to ,Proldbit its existence in the Territories of tharnion ; that NV). -constitutionality of this power has bean settled by . judioial construotion,' bp, ootemporaneorts and 're -pealed Rota of legislation, and thipwirenjolt3 our :servants and Representatlies in _Congress to make every exertionandemnloy all their influence' to procure the luggage of a law forever excluding ,slevery,from the Territories of California and New Mexico." This resolution was copied into the col - tonna of the Sable paper to which I have made allusion, , arlgt3heapprobatiOnbr its editor. /hring all this. ifiatt. - elthe panes will show, Mr. Strickland was a defenifer of "David Wilmot and his Proviso, and a brad defamer of James Buchanan and his public ; mita.; When 'G'overher Walker delivered his in angitial address to the peorde• of - Kansas, and after he heti addressed assemblages in that Terri tory on the duty, widish existed to submit the Coro etitution tObe.lrtiosed by the Convention to the decision or :Me people at the polls, this same gen tleman, to whom , ' have • referred, deolared 'that the Democratic 'party • was placed by these acts upon firm and .impregnable.grounds•; that the Constitation.would • 130 submitted for the ratifica tion or rejection by the people of _Kansas; and Abet as . Gov.'- Walker was the intimate and coal denllal 'friend of the President- of .the United States and had gone to Kansas at hie urgent re quest,'lt was impossible to believe that lidr:l3u obausu . did not fully endorse tad sustain his course, Thug has, the Demooratio party in Pennsylvania stood upon - the question of slavery extension, and thus has it stood. particularly, in Cheater county, Rare has Nimrod Strionind stood. - Agati, Irma. - ,the rtquiry,,,ll{ol-IWaftio-1.4,41,14•4-ade h dm:trine of - popular sovereignty& Who is false, Old who is. trite, on the question of ...Southern aggression and Northern hitrailia. don ? Aro. th se the true men who have gone' 'against the extension of slavery heretofore, and who are now • for slavery ,extension, against the forme of law and the impulses of our own Stltte? Or is it those who now stand where they have al ways stood—giving to the South all they can right fully demand , - and claiming the same for our own people? (Applause.( But this man, or these men, may have the consolation to know, that if they have prostituted themselves it h asi been at the beck and bidding of power. If he or they have not been able to withstand the seduction of ' power, it may perhaps be attributed more to the infirmities of their nature than to anything else. At least, they will be able to give the excuse of Flora, the courtesan, who said, when accused, "I have never suffered myself to be polluted by any person leas than a dictator, a consul, or a censor." lAnplanso.l Now, how does this unfortunate blunder, to call it by no worse name, afoot the party and the, country? Ruinously! It has divided the Demo oratio party, and it will continue to divide it, until the principle for which we contend shall be fully recognised. There is no peace. and there can be no peace, while a sacrifice of principle is demand ed. Until false men shall become true men, and until pledgee, voluntarily given, Phan be fairly carried out, there eau bane unity. Until proscrip tion shall be abandoned, and until the right shall be admitted, our warfare. I assure you, must and will continue. (Applause 7 The divergence from the true line has brought the giant strength of the Democratic party down to the impotence of a child, 'and to cad dishonor before the people. ht is this day, before the North, substantially in ruins ; and if the course of the Administration be pursued as it has been begun, it will era long stand decaying, a political Coliseum, reminding U 4 of ire former glory, but echoing only- to its own emptiness What will be the effect in the future? While requiring all our strength, united as R man, to accomplish a Democratic victory in 1856, 'and to sustain ourselves in power, even upon the princi ple of popular rights, what, I inquire; will be likely to be the result of the contest in 1.00, and subse quently, with our columns divided and distracted, and with all principle trampled in the dust? Le• oomptonism has disturbed the country, and it will continue to disturb the country and to impede her Progress , and to dim her glory. It will engender sectional strife, as it has engendered It. It will tend to weaken the bonds of the Union, and to drive us asunder. This sectional strife will con tinue, it must continue, until the North shall be secured in every constitutional guarantee. If she asks for mere, she will prove herself unjust; if she ever accepts less, she will be dishonored. (Appleutte.l My fellow-citizens, we are true to the country, to the party to which we belong, and to the pledges we have made to the people. Between truth and error, justice and injustice. liberty and oppression, there is no middle ground, and there onn be no compromise—none. One or the other of these must triumph in its entirety. Which it shall he is the question which you have to decide. I pledge myself, and I think I may pledge you, my Democratic friends, to tight this battle entirely through upon the great principle which affects every American citizen so deeply and so vitally. To the last ditch, to victory or defeat, to honor or dishonor, the battle shall be fought (Applause I We have pledged ourselves in the past to do so ; we pledge ourselves at the present to do so. We have virtually sworn to do it upon the al tars of God and of our country. and I trust we shall never shrink from it. We must and will maintain the honor of our country. We must maintain the respectability of our own immediate people. We will defend the sovereignty of the States. North and South. Upon no other platform can we stand. and upon no other ought we to seek to stand. But, above and before all, ought we, in the dying worth of Geiser Augustus to he ever roindttil et' our Union." [Applause. Wm. Dnumnoion, Esq —Mr. Illekmnia, some gentlemen present would be sled to hear from you on the policy of the Administration in reference to the protection of domestic industry. In other words, what, air. is your opinion of the policy of the Administration on the subject of the tariff?. What, too, are your convictions on the subject? Itle• Ilienleas—Fellow-oltisene, I am free to say that I entertain no political opinions that I have any,wish to conceal; but, on the contrary, , the more publicly I can express them, the more I will be gratified. (Applause J I am frank to declare that I do not know what the policy of the President and of the Aministra tion is on the subject of the tariff. They have not chosen to publish what it is, and I am, conse quently, unable to speak of it. I will give you my own convictions, which I be lieve are in stria conformity with the position heretofore assumed by the Democratic party. I believe that the proper exnendituree of the Go vernment, its economical and just wants, should bo met by the imposition of duties upon Imports. The national debt at the close of the present Ad ministration, will, in my judgment, range from $100,000,000 to $120,000,000. At this time the annual cost of Government is near to $100,000,000. It is net likely that expenditures are to be re- &coed in the future. The tendency has hereto fore been to an increase rather than a reduction, The appropriations for the present fisoal year reach almost to the sum of $90,000,000, and before its close it will be found that certain deficiencies will have to be supplied. Therefore, I ern not inaccu rate when I set down the expenses of the, Govern ment at the round sum of one hundred millions a year. Now, you cannot, by any tariff law that may be enacted, raise more than enough money to meet there outlays of the Government. Tho Demooratio doctrine is to raise, by a tariff, the money needed: for governmental nemeses. To I carry out that doctrine in practice, if becomes necessary to secure, by duties, a revenue of one' hundred millions of dollars. In laying that tit ! riff there ought to be discrimination with a view ito protection. Where articles are in daily use, entering into the consumption of the poorer classes, and which are not produced here, they ought to be admitted duty free, or upon a greatly reduced scale of impost. Upon those articles which come into competition with the fruits of , American in dustry, the tariff should be so adjusted as to in sure protection. Such, gentlemen, or, my ylowe on tlig ' 4A41401441.] TWO CENTS. AnotherAriother,Word fromNi4ciirjerti'tiy 7 P,oliticf L:lseWhere. Loorreipondenee of - Mr. EDITOR : On the latti - oi . this Montkour , triet Convention Neill be in send& ati May's Laid- Jog. Among the. host of Democratic Candidates; none have been definitely nettled upon-jay pubtie opinion... With ne Lscomptere.and anti-Legompt on have not Separated sworn friends ; not ynkitin died listing enmitiee. But that time may coma;, for if 'the May's Landing • Convention take up n oandidate'nfedged to the Adittfnistretion Kansas pollor,.so certainly is •he erhiPped—se amtninly TrilOthe Demooiatio party in , this distriet sink out of eight for years, John,TAixon, a talented and repritablevlawyer .OriSt(dgton:la the Repnblican candidate. Niion is a aon•ln-law ;lidge Ehnen, of the Supreme Conti, (the latter is, perplatently oppoaed, to the Nadia-box (lOnatitutiOn),: Republican; thogh' '6o'ol4lle to be olio the Amerpan candidate.' ' ' If bets, then he is the candidate of that portion 'of the populace who do not:know4lM (inference botwooe the platforms of Fill fludTrammit.::, - • • lohie• jorkea• whose 'keadquarterelhaverioisi been in your city, is thafitraiiihtlut American candidata , snit, whtqueyr - 1 0 004 tain'of dit fccr..mi*eteedY; 1 4.,flekiell1*- 4, the igrienplinii with Puch 'arda 11'01:1506; t more emigrant l shim" Bewared Ahii 'w.imeriatte must: rnle , Atratirieet"A• ' xitan.riboittebasert to -bear.:theT:DeiaOoiitici 'itaiidard_tltls fall must bend to the Anti-Leoomik ton tieatimeat ; fhp pNtafple will not ,bend 40)4 3 ' and' nc'elftfting„ner truckling, nor Omitting. On, thee natation ielil satiefi't4 subdue the votes and •ridalts'of theWireediiirlefiind woe be tiihei odn dilatefor Vongreseftnisilltrilihre hati',iiiittlY pledaid , -hiniself against the'qouble.dettliiiinte treacherous Administration,- - and then•has . turiteil bkok! . ; . : ‘ln the meantime we anxiously look for tho'lifth, , and •lOok for the right man to be found .for the right 1t is,saifl that, James W. Wall will be the:candidate - in the Second district, and there is strong hope that hi will reclaim that land :Crete', the rule of the' Opposition. • '" lint from part] strife at belie We leek gladlirlO a noblerJetrlfe in' Illiitoni-ko 'tented field where" the ;Douglas and the Lincoln • idly sit lilt and tonrnemont. • ' • -. . . . intto/uniariii we think.of the, man-.who had " rither lie right than be .Pie.v4lewts". and we thank tied that the mantle of Henry„.they hal fallen upon one worthy'M heai it—that out of the corruption and °hoes 'of politica one clear spirli and one knightly heart have that' dares to be right, Ind in the right is as strong ea an - army with banners. I need not say, that I refer to StepbenA. • Don-- glas, yet the .4ja,y„Teieruott 'of the - Democratic camp,. c,Bigier, I stippese,ff ,be, deserves mention in the Same number of The Press, might yedoloe, intim name of the Oily Ajai.j , • . In, the times of : our Revolution, - king george 111 and his minions issued torsts of assistance, by whiah mew's doors were opened; and ailer - Whiai no man's house nor household -goods 'wore longer. sacred-'. T h is nen.theltioned writ of the • minions of Buohana,#, - -i - ibo nit of tecompton—is ton tutee , Worse. It does not open the doors of one's house but it enters' into the doors of a noon's oonscisaos • Witness the - letter 'to Generalldiekle, inquiring, whether be thought as Doiglits thud porn,e4 thoug4. He waS sitar,' end °flood hishead.; Withers the recent letterer' -sit assistant Poet: mastergeneral to aWestern Mall'Agent,liomplain ing that "ho is unfriendly to , tha Adininistra": 'tion." If his Lead is not already off, the official guillotine is ready and,waiting. -, - We all know the 'Oliareoter of4edgellonglas't foes. And in 'spent**. thein' and,oi his posh, tion he might aippreiOtalyusollieliiiidit of James Otis, eloquently Spoken against theAtlts of issist-. alum : From my soul," Otis said; "I deteptieiall those whose guilt, malice, or folly hasluals thOtillny foes. Let the eousefuetteede•Oltat gift - 04117 alit determined proceed.. The a- ot puhtio conduct:that are ivoilii9f,itstitteinazi,` or, a mon, areie Sectilide istate;'iiime; health, and applause, and even life itself, to the..ealls , , of his country." 712 eve to-isr, - rocetviettote4 - 3 - Tao ChieitAo editaby 'Charlet was formerly a resident of Camden: - Tills phia went to Illinois three years ago. - He wait:saki by the hand by senator Douglas, and placed in a lu crative Government neeltion,„ •_ - He, at, that time; edited the , Bureau ,Pounly• Darl;:i: Orders were soon received from Wash ington to make 4 , war to the knife—tho knife to the hilt" upon all Douglass men. - Pine's petty office • and independent „action weighed in the balance. Office Was too heavy and independence kicked the beam, and this Adminis tration postmaster has gone to Chicago, backed up by the money of the " Lords of the Cabinet" —is the keenest hound upon the scent and hastens to be in at the death. Be intends murder, but, it will end in suicide. 0 ! grateful and magnatd mous Pine! • Among the foremost of the tide-waiters atßlll - is Col. Carpenter. He left Kentucky beimuse his vices made that State too hot to hold him. He hung clamorous round the doors of the Trea sury when Guthrie ruled. , And after patient waiting, he too has his toward a reward bought' with a price all too dettx to a freeman—the saorlOce of decency and common self-respect. But It seems that there peace-offer ings are dear to the heart of the Pennsylvania President. Such men as there, Leib, Pine, and Carpenter, hand and glove with the Cabinet lords, give truth to the answers of the heroin Sydney to Salmasius, and " only show that those who have no sense of right, reason, or rt ligion, have a natu ral propensity to make use of their strength to the destruction of such as are weaker than they." But our weakness is our strength. The thnnder roll of the popular voice is already heard from the fields and from the ballot-boxes of Kansas, and it will sink these men and their advisers deeper than plummet ever sounded. They have made Leoompton a test. They have made power tyranny, and they have made the test of tyranny contemptible, and now obedience would be a crime. GEOENK SELWYN. CANDELA, N. J: Female Medical College. To THE EDITOR OF THE PRESS : I notice 111 the North 'American of Monday a communication relative to the Female Medical College of remn syls aide, located In this city. The writer refers to a bequest to the New England Female Medical College, of property valued at twenty thousand dollars in the city of Boston, and with reason,l think, appeals to the wealthy and charitable " to go and do likewise" for a similar institution in our millet. The graduates of the Philadelphia Institution, now practicing medicine with great success, bear witness of the effielency of the means taken for their education, and-prove, at the same time, wo man's capability of being both nurse and doctor. The arguments are numerous which might be ad duced showing the advantages whieh are to accrue to our race by the 'removal of-the great obstacles which has so often hindered the young and delicate female from making known her disease, as snob an exposure would require a great sacrifice of deli cacy in submitting to treatment , from one of our sex. This and many other similar reasons are urgent and of great weight ; but the fact thattµ new, useful, and lucrative field of employment is by this college thrown open to females of Phila delphia, should be in these times, when woman is jug being driven from all her usual avocations by machinery, an unanswerable argument at which the hearts and hands of the charitable and wealthy should open bounteously. With but a little such aid, the Female Medical,College of Pennsylvania will be placed upon a basis as strong as her canoe is good. • Philadelphia School of Design for Women. To the Editor of The Press. Eta : Can you spare a little apace in your paper for the purpose of calling the Attention of the good and benevolent to one of the many useful institu tions for which our fair city is so celebrated ? allude to the "Philadelphia School of Design for Women," as it is called. But really it is a plaoe to teach women to work at other ocoupations at wbish they have had but little, if any, ehance to try their skill before . 'There can be no doubt but that sobeole of this kind are much needed, and that much good must yet come of therm The suffering of those of our sinters who are compelled to resort to some kind of produetiva industry in order to support themselves. very often their chil dren, and not unfrequently their Atte'lands also, will yet command the active sympathies of those wealthy ones who are ever ready to help the poor and the defenceless. • • Let not the more fortunate or the arrogant of our sisters scorn at us for the adjectivesjust used, nor the surface-thinking gallant pretend to get angry with ; for, notwithstanding all our profession of respect for the sex, moat of which is doubtless sincere enough in its way, yet it raises not the majority of women to the dignity of true womanhood, while genius has stolen the needle from their more delicate fingers, and placed it in the iron grasp of mechanism, thereby reducing one of the principal means from which they procured— too often—but - 11 miserable coMpeteney, which has i increased the numbers of those who require work, with the inevitable decrease of compensation. There can be but one remedy for this very un desirable state of things, and it is this : W omen must be educated in other and more profitable em ployments suited to their tastes and Rhysioalablll - and this -the c( Philadelphia bohool of De sign for Women" is slowly but surely doing, as fad mitt 111 for al . Paillo4maoue•will pona4 NOTICE TO CORRESPONDENTS. ClorruPordent! tor , c,Taz Passau will please bear fa rand tie following ruler : name communication mast be see?mparded the rinse ot the writer. In order Winter. itorreetenstot the t YPetiraPki,bet _one aide of the sheet Atoll be written epee. • . • • pd, . We be . gra#l.ohli lo..patienien in Pepns~f. Tanis and ether State* tot coptilbutione giving the enr. , rent news of -the day 1n %sir partionlar localities, the, iegeoriew th?..liurowidieg conntry, the .Izuzuser population, or any Information that will be interesting to the general reader. thisait~ong)eHratof the ki w i es. tablialteeln this obdntry, is . by no means on as solid a foundation Mt some others- Tbe'Neri Eng land school-is 'well , Mistained. by the citizens ef Boston; andtreceiveS annually from the • State of - .ldaesaihusetts sl,§oo. • - - The the" Now Y n rks t uo-ht o , o " t e th mi e perp e tual m r an o o n f t s th n t goodman, .Petei Cooper; who' says " that 'women must enjoy instructiontim the arta 'of engraving on Wood and atorte,..drawing,, painting . in ; oil : sad water colori, decorating obitUi and gIaSMITILre, with such "other instructions in the *aril arts :se .shall be calculated to vridim the 'sphere of female. cm. ploythant." - • Who; Mr. -Editor, will be our Peter _Cooper ? Or, how can one school be put upon an eodering fpondation? Wt7l - not some -of philadelphia's wealthY oitieerieLlmoie in this -important - matter, end leave their naming , riternoilabs of benevolence 'for all time? • !., : ' - • • B. OBIEIMI . . . .., _ _ . , -Ilisitalo Buyers (Sf , Sele4lls 111.1 /Vl l 4 l °s• There are fow_artdoles of Moderninvention whioh emstain mi intimate & relation to the snug eleven' . • household as the sewing mashing, ; For .40 hones ' fit of Our readere „who are not - yet : supplied with. ibis' %Val nable An strumentomt 'expeetto.rber, iess . priblieh' bider. th e fCliessing article from the July. nimber:e4the_,4lerchants' find litpfufaeturere Kag zipo-4111 . 0 of.the, hints suggested in thlit .artist :Wee partlpeltsrfy worihY _thciat. • .I.**l•filliint mitehthe Owteinees, ,whlpb, a .abort • timeetgo,Was.brit an idea; hasnoir. became one of :Om !eked in the country. 'Men of Ingenuity, abound:in Newiloglind; havainverited,patented, '' end Manufactured, and era now offering for sale 'thich en ,eudloss •variety, of machineei that, "al though they; Cannot ‘.f.r.nk,„th.e thing into, the ground," - Yet they have so completely _bewildered those vrithing to bay, that they are;ata less to tell -What machine to select fur their nee. ,- • • ''' , _.ii Ldoksititall, liusob Ines '',.,4.” hand-stiteh -.ma- - thined,"—ihein, stitch and gather machines,"; —hop/ skip and jump machines, . and .4xischivat 'that hive "astonished the scientific it Wailingfon . and citowhere," are eirnumerona, so cheap, - and "sot ingly beantifid,"-thet one can almost afford o buy thenrty thress t as baguets - hi grhaull kbroo -erts. 'get it is 4 settled fact, that arm& machine isa good thing - ' Indeig, its valise, can not wql be .overrated, .It, , - is not only se inlhe ' ii matte of a dollar, which ;,- we Yankees _war- - ship o ranch, but it, is a matter of _health.. to wi es and mothers, which, if once lost; no gold` an - replace:, - Many's man" egg tell ' you, Who,commeneed life with-, a :partner abound ing in health, 'and' iivertthatinding in ambition. to . assist With hor needle 'in' gifimulating. a scalp- '. tansy for after Years- that could: he have assisted , his wife in her tithe/idly toll - by t , furnishing her a sewig machinsi / lii all 'toiAible Ikon now do, be should not now have had ititiakly tilfaindfamily, or perhaps have ,biteri. a widower:: It-wee:not our intention, believer, n writing this article, to-vivo a lactate on 'dom estic i inetitutiens ;' we. deSigned 'thriplylto throw out a few-hints that mai , be found -useful to those who are liable to be impose& upon in making their selections. The gaohines, • Which hare 'been found to - be prectically useful, take the alinttle-stitelt, the two -threadlchain-stitch, and the single, thread, ehaitt- . , glitch. All others have - thee far proved only,Yaltilt 7 -. 'hie for the great amount of ingennity'displeyed in - -their construotion. The ehuttleetitetr machines:, use lest thread than any other, and thestintholin- - not be ravelled: For heavy work it ii Considered the best, but in thin work the , threads' are Table t° break in ironing . or atretobing. ' .., - . -,- 1. - The two thread ohain-atibth machines m ere ga , thread than "any•other, but the seam Is' more elasticthan the 'shuttle-stitch: and' bbth threads , are to n from apatite. _The ridges made,-b''-,the three on the underage is an Objection.. -Amity be ravelled,-but tide is •riit'• an objection.'-The . ili Chain- ' 'Mb mathine.nses more 'thread than the shuttle and less, than , th e Use: th read chain stitch. The 'fie'ain - Oaf be faielled ; but" this is rather n• advantage -than ethos:Wise: The stitch laraora elastic than any Other ;Aug when-a -ms chine, which will do a great variety of. ork,- and upon principle' ' Wid th Walnut" all good r o wing,- Which - is- alio .ospable or lading - silt ' yarlities 'of , thread in ehort and longatitches, emithe found, its -, vowing cannot ,be iturpaeeed:in +beauty and dura bility, and,,zering to' its afinplioity:;and coca of management, is best adapted lo'family.wiirk. , - . All goad machines may, be- used withis small needleyand the smaller ' the needle, ' ad it will carry a thread large enough - tsebbid' the-- strength of the fabric, the betterthe Ark; bill' ' a largemeedle is used, the, so cloth is either injured .- t ie by its rforations ,or the hole made by it is large at. they-thived - tasty comes tilt' -. Short' stitch when a small needle and thread warmed; ' make e best work, egeolany „with the chain stitch. : Smaller thread than la used in hand sew-, big may be need in an machines, foilwoibreadi are left through the cloth at eachwerforation. To those..therefore, who are in treareh of a ..es.^.l - chine - - Ana,- -•., MUWM OB", ch. ate. a boor noedle,' or-use_ttar , etoitafry the cloth ; but If you find a ma :ohinowith which yon can easily and quietly do sit kiwis off latittly-work; bay It! buy It ,! It Yon 'wllineveerigietit.,,,".',,i GENERA.L -NEWS. " Capt.: Pits. 'Dava o ': an old Commander,* the Cincinnati and Pittsburgh paelet 'trade, owl noted In Cincinnati for his vocal abilities. during the political campaign of 1840. died near blatta- , land, Siam,"on the 27th of April last, of thejungls fever. Several months since, the Geistits - an nounced his success in capturing& piratical lest In the Gulf of Slim, he being a commissioned officer in theSiem navy. At the 'time of Ms des th, be was engaged with a 'company • in mining in' this mounts:no. fle left Cincinnati for China in 1854. The deceased leaves a wife and child in Laneas:er, Ohio. • " On Friday.laat 'a, young man named Busch hilted James Magee, at, Chicagailit. There was a dispute in regard to the holm of the father of Busch. encroaching on the grounds of Mr: Boggs.,,He in voked the aid of the law, and had wOrkme-efigag ed in removing a portion of Busch' a 'hope:, when the young "man, in a fit of passion, fired and hilted Magee, who . was employed'as ri carpenter in mak ing the alteration.. The murderer visa 'arrested. He is a law student in the officio of - Mr. Thomas, and is only nineteen years of age. „ Information is wanted of the children, three in number, of Dr:Julien Henry, who died in Si. Louis about twenty years ago. Mr. Henry moved from Pennsylvania to St. Louis. His children, if living, are joint heirs. with others, to the estate of James Henry, who died some years sloes- The. estate, Is very valuable, and is located in the city and county. By addressing William. A. Henry; Detroit, care. Advertiser office, 'farther particulars may be obtained. The steamer Nelly Baker, which plies be tween Boston and Nahaut, was run into on Monday afternoon, while at the wharf, by the Philadelphia steamer Manama Sprague, striking the former for— ward of the wheel and cutting eight feet through' the guards and deck, and otherwise seriously in juring her. The,daraage is about 43,000. Although the Nally Baker was crowded, no passengers were Injured: • The Detroit Free Press says that the inju ries inflicted upon Senator Chandler by the recent gas explosion at his residence will disfigure him permanently, and in a marked manner. Da face will Infer the meat from the ravages of the tite—the lips, forehead,. and nose besting evi dent traces of it, which will remain in the form of soars. William G. Easton and his wife, who were recently engaged at the Union Theatre, Leaven worth, Kansas, have been tried in that city on charge of having set fire to the theatre, by which about forty buildings were destroyed They were acquitted without introducing any witness for the defence, the prosecution having entered a not prof. The St. Paul (Minn.) Times publishes a letter how Orinico, which states that every miner there can make - a fortune—signed band being able to gather from Cabo $25 per day. The principal difficulty is in the extreme fineness of the metal.• which is like bran, and difficult to wash out of the, black sand which the yellow particles checker. Mr. J. M. Freeman, of Clarion county, Pa., has met with a serious Ines by fire He had twent,v five acres of " grafted huckleberries," which be had contracted to deliver in Philadelphia, at $9 per busbel,and had sent forward three hundred bushels, when a devastating fire swept ruthlessly over his land, destroying his crop. The yellow fever is very severe in all parts of the island of Cuba. At Matanzas the sickness is partionlarly rife. the American shipping suffer ing severely. Sinbe June 14, five American cap tains have died there, besides a considerable num ber of mates and seamen. Christian Boldly, of Fayette county, Pa" was killed on Saturday, the 24th ult., under the - following circumstances': Be was engaged in flu ting a coal flat, when a shoal broke, a pert of whiolt strnok a lever which struck him on the head, from the effects of which be died in a few hours. Ir on , J a cob G. Shuman; Me A State Senator from the Lancaster fl'a.) district, died.in Manor township on Sunday last. Mr. Shuman was a man of sterling integrity, and his loss will be mourned by t al a t rga vicinity. re l e o f peraana l and political friends is b a Mr. John Butler 'Stanley died in Hanover, Massachusetts, last week. of consumption, after a lingering illness of twenty years, during six teen of which he has converted only in a whit. George Watson, superintendent of the 131 rent Western Railroad, died at Springfield, 111.5 on Monday morning. The eighty-Brat anniversary of the battle of Bennington was celebrated at Bennington, Vt., on Monday. Senator Douglas on the ti[gmp—A. Scrap of his Early History. • In a speech at Winchester, 111., delivered on the 7th inst., Mr. Douglas said : "Twenty•live years ago I entered this town on foot, with my, coat upon my arm, without an ac quointanee in thousand moles, and without knower where 1 could get money to pay a week's board. H ere I made the first sia. dollars I ever earned in my life, and obtained the first regular occupation that I ever pursued. For the fait time in my life I then felt that the responsibilities of manhood were upon me, although I was under age, for I had none to advise with and knew no one upon whom I bad a right to call for a 1181 tones or for friendship. Here I found the thin settlers of the country my friends—my first start in life was taken here, not. only as a private citizen, hat my first election to public office by the people was coeferred upon me by those whom I. am now addressing and by their fathers. A quar ter of a century has passed, and that penniless boy stands before you with his heart full and gush-. ing with the sentiments which • soils moolutions and recollections necessarily inspire."
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers