. .. I ',.' ,; 4 ~,, - : 1. - . ,- , , ,-. ', IT' 7,,,, - s - ri., , , r ,v,..,.:, ' '. 1 , ,- i..; i .. lt ~ , - .5.,,e, 1;,.' ~, ---. .- -,`,' * • ' P. , - , - -lin, * "ietlifith.:: • ' , ._ ... - .l l grr• e , 'a i .= AlP 4 ' . •" o- ' II F ,---...' -...1.-,,r , .. -I,P,'<7 . ~,,- ,"''''.4lq."l7:,ll4‘'`4 ;14 4 ' 1 % .-;45:4#",:,04,::::0rt-rjt.'':,,,.:t ..,r, ~ . , ._.ri.4l.::ll4artrit*tir; tilting . _24, 18611,,.•;,,,,, ..;;:**4;Anlt,' 4'l • ''' ,-. l g .".- • '-- a *IlL *" - - p-A6a....1. ' ki r d : 46oo4 . .liirAWT F "ri l LaA l ku: '.! ' Milik 41 liAlseSititzat, ...4 lemon,* ;"-Ileeetie - 1-, ,'", ' ' ,-.' . - -,' ' ' ' '' ' CN ' ', \ , OIL' „,: , i _ ,- ~ , • t ; ;I:i i iiiiii*'' - "lrmunntrton, Kay ft -- -`Allet:Lagm ix. " Asii.alklogelooi. teau° - lel eigiMi t i.: a' M c WM lo fIA .4000 —....„. 4 41r:.,, 'itecei-eans- elovermagettAiwy, , ~, . ' - Wrote*/ lrghtlelerer , ..° , ummemeottilbelMOrtillistios/. X'l•er ,tegg,- , riim Mitfigiiesseutr***,-40400 0 1 4, ral r " , ' 144t-Crat° o **4°4,ltli n i• t 4 4- 1 , ;!!1 . ili; .- 'g i v en, '-. --„,', tlpplit.lb,enfllAls-..kirOCCOW--P b y 'faletefial'AUlla.•felo:4lo.oo*-‘o',ltal oonie ' Oitatliniulturalisid, but to tile 4 11 ,9 4 / 411' • ",-4,. -. w ei iiieti y - - gt-: , K ' ~,:, Oltot ol s .'O pri;k 4l okl , o l 2 4. :ioiliffg ,i3alit44;fi.4 only iftliqkki eb?..4 joitOt'Xllotill#ooE - frigk t - ii 'o9F-°.." fi ri: - , ciniat.**W reason ~; ,it,to l 4; Viol: Woo . :--!"*.,,Xiti4.40.0Wir1 03 thP,4 6 01-'oloh `- - -,`,631 41 ` Or:4k 0 1; '1 10 C1664411 or-IVinlon in '''''liiheAii -,3*i3**41W"9.141#1,(14 'for iloof ' mgeded itarg, , ,its44,'W:et -ay , 1g1i*01f.404430.# 1 401i-lel - i4 0 0 1 0 , , / 7,,,ftiligilgi , it ioffilmas. It imeigusteog that . OW - Fienartiotitnnieiliere4, - idibtilitint -. '`,lidedtKreo:4 - 40 , 04,0,:tit; r#r e. ~.,r- a iiedil aiiiir , , - ; ~...:;. „,..-„,. - i -•.,---: - - tt r e0, 0 00,0 T ,..0 0 . ,- Ittito , rg" , ;.( ifiLit -, AI ' 431: 51 ; 11.0 '' hig 4 Y 13 , '-I.ttWAVA444 - 00,04t0f kti,t;Pts'Act 'oak ~ otet.l- 0 10itoieir ,Idekeeilit,cioultei,allii.. ,443W- 1 0 , 14-oX74 ol4 oozik. o * 4' '.:, ';s4lelaWif ygli4te - by , the Ores* - - " him;41044, 44'1' .4403*via47 - . o' , ~. .t raf t . roiteffokoilict ti0d004,..i. anathar , , - oonntrii:An.ith.e ..WeniSC:ll4... Veld: iiita - iNi iine: ce),4avi.tvitoffeittiee. , , A.: ' ~- , .yret our CAlliignidriOoli.'ibm'Not?.olosOla, #ol:4oo.l.lfXotOetot4t'ig;toMlt to' ,r . pugeet4t#,ltas lief , tigelSeir I ttlip a' .French oWW., 4 ;oo4#o4,o4*tet* jo=t l 'Oil* lit. ..-: tifraimentriegt it Mar andiliksiereille ; Met • 'bi-Wig:l4 l 4i4,t,..*Xatitt Atiteit*d tet*lgieri' Wilt ranhulffthe P reach, Govern. oeeePotlitAPf 4.04 3 / 4 4 .70A 1 1 1( 4# ; -that ' .talt*Mroll(irittflliailterole Wise ai4;;wiihig;miom l 6 3 f-hu 414 4: , t 11 44; . ..#100-*lthg: i''f'i..;.tl,i net, l .°! 1 0 1 wt; 4;1142.4.1nhie1f; -f- , i,t )t,-. ?„,-;.:- ~,, - 40-40***** al r "640* condition - ‘oliett#lood amierui, it le **hike We SbC;4l4 kcitiii A7i4C. l o# ll ( B * - tee sibiolia;,tliex•WY be eftedietwed Tide loverrefor ten or twenty iSlitetift, n femiggjoresl 4 ,* only NORA: fek". l ok ` ' . et 0413 0 1 ":0, 3 l o o o t thog ghtheftef!tol fl'lliz'aa .. rigiantlteiliill.4ety; - std ;even .sif tliiii.Ontfi to*iiiit,trnti: 7. ina 'fiatilla:_suso , 44oo tskOas,' ihe . onitiAtet 41 -UMW elhfig?ten ;; if they, may, be thitk*ideVjirtilill# T9r,io 0- ihiseie Ao'o o ' complied to abandon hot only tgeli treeing*, baCtli,lC:wiligal ',Ma - 141114ren` Of: ',Ardliffeitig birth„94l44l - , °Ali:tibial:not then alone; it. eaaasatia*i. 44l o4*'llirat -IV al:iistaiallaad ' elthegier And we beilardonedfolexamln inethe'ianniaese or this eciltiesslin; Va.,' riot Vitittleiratilrederallsts as trell as DetiO; orate denied the olaim tunergetnal alleglari6l. . Anstis.'iluise” who suiesestlallyMtacked It MS ;Jesus 'RAY, Of Aririlnia=to whtisi isglak - on the, subject we; Me. nideily, ; indebted. `for the, leneeheg ide*e ; , -,- ..- ~ . , - .. -- . ; _ ! 1 401(000e , tioyo .tk, Pr, Afel#, _latch bindot , h olShble r et i to the Mogi in , riteri 'for that, : yrjiiictki*lik.*P4t 0. , r s-tki'Obt jteettfn— A*glepe* l Al,otivms th e e lt; the One ait,Ont,-ppintue, reiiVl4:4l t , 0 401. .0. , Natural a llegiance to ` fltetket tO due % liiii":lol‘'ilin , "fraii. iiilliie 'the kinei OvattdOnt,f.l:4l#o4y,tidi ; piintr„ tbeir -' birth. - /mita' idiegliaxge - is 'inch - , is is 'due' from 'an alitfil*srrinifor - ,naleng ifs he geon.. tines Iritiiii - thrt king's disibiloruf and pfetee= ilo:i04 1 4;* 6 4#1:#4:0400 4 :„ . r.0;!tiref . transfers hinisedt fromibialdngdom to another; but otui:64sygoiii444Wo Ziglisifict, can/ cet i t S m '''Y eo4a .V O',f .43 hAte 'AI h°4Phteit, ? " dace, - orcircO4 i*or , $7 Aticigsi:bit*s 700 , cotiont7o4 ef...the idgyPitere. For it le apnE eipti otigiaiiii.sartitutiiltiOilliiiii • seht#t ht Me itliie.f' 6 o l 4fit - .** . f'641 , 4! 0 -,44 , - ; i0, not' -by iTio.taiiit,tiflotajton rip.in orioli;jru;iiif or 4(Bo4lltilie..rultaritt:4iteiit_ met ip Ms fromen?'—BlaCkstondm Oommeir bola , joi• tep: 8 P 9 ;:. 8,40140$ . 4 *,tfte!ir4' the: . Ell i rilifir:' - 01 . , lb ,13p , ' , 1?e,yetistg 6#llgyttice of • a „thd* :*tti '':( Rif; laat'ikof W 4 44 6 4 46 Witbistbbir,dopListplik• ' on tbst „ground ' that elaiii - ed,:ttie right itall'ziati4*re "tte#Oilh.i they liett - thetif-:Feief on' hoerd;ouri,merchinty yritiMe;:aiiii . *lai r ebdiiimed'ebtedf.,:p "ttiClit'Oelirzbetintii:ddip coot*, :and , . Grieei trltale:.±..f‘io'h - okkiume thikbintendiseAnge:enfor,oeti'ller, is , if , be -11°,4-thotal'of Ofigo* oi***iiiit 14`140i& , i , • that o . ..WwiitXeiltim *4th:the itrbete#' reiiiikihnt4wciliWO7thitie Aiiiikliiii,liiiiil44 Ex€o ll‘th;.*C: 44 oo o .l !i'.'4, , WOOottle AC ndnintriOnniintbsikete,'ind 'Ottatt‘iielf gni re..44W4l;4*,; ~ r ' lZ. ', ,t" V ';:7:. , w hen .1,, povereipt ?ermitgl , a . subjoit to , :44 11 44,4(.*.firKOPoet.F9;:hial:Veliti , 1 4 0:: duties air a reter„eseeeV It:- pile -hallo' , rainy alm.,_lN oi.,llAWlWiete,ye4ii, iiioiiieri, thetn'eito yextollltiOicer, -MN* „the :mid-, merWigefeneelf,itlionfoo4-I.Or t Ahiffeifiritgui coon t111303/0r1443°,:161 l'o 4 . *Olt; end he'ntetiitnietV at cirCkti native;-pouitii i - In` l ' e t t4l4so4.. .ox** 4o4i fOl o t Xi* : lati°1111') 4ubotn*litlior)tantictraeukeisc i t'o ife ii inett:citliii iiihi sii re - tli t i iallse 4. . eithrips ; ,tiff:protsetion , oPthei2 sore •rein otetifklgAlle44 iikiiit; renounced 7 ' 0 'WM, :fge4,hile*ette:lattertcP give' . it it? -But the giliatiaaia; 4 hi liolllit-*Slectliti Asstied: Ibiletiimlidt-iew;e67-,Tset.i ° -litis : e o ve l n 4. i o /Sif64L I,l‘o lottb Pe'tlol4ET his sgiiito4 • odetii 4 r 4 s4. # l 'o a o iii 4 bot o io M bve ,jilt foliellbe',4ntr it 0w ini4304000444000#**0104 his moverekgrf,is bound to protect hinwg Yet thie'lfool4'he74:lom l: ,„ll l iietfAht tip ""- reiggf,i'mid iliOnsiwors,:itertigilts S rfeletir da1Y14 1 14 4 4 , 1* a lob* 't r Pfi allowed_ to olekgrotiteelltefoiloh'etheilihts 44 Illgaril- Sired damn, he, aanot, be compelled tO•tenet the 0" 1 7 . 474 1 )1 4 .144 101 414 4 19 Moro to thltAk . . ,t'bis tilfW,.„ i';..lleleffilt,Obllged *Mason or 1 411 , 41049-eo;l:ll,theiNairinneles, no defy to do-eri,letatitglit, eemlaiue tibia:former 11kno. reign?, V We: 441n#4', mar - sitiipetill ; And store Offithieitilhe for, adzilaiogii be way for'. eltilf#f 'Ca 4 .lo l ' ,cif'a" subject tuuot return et i . .het#o l litiliko *iiiiio;* l 4 ,B 7 ik iiiw he'll t oink 64 if by law be .is Ad' obliged to'CgMfrpg_ , i tthilif it depe n ds . OM, ' ilk elmice,On ' fikk;a4ApissaltthaFafara, Oa aailfaiik 14'44 rlikhr Allegiance springs from; and therefore can - t otilY exist *idle UM - relation of adifireign,, and-enbjeetexiats r altd'- when the, sovereign' hat, permitted that relation to be Ignored, ye T ,440 :0 1 4*_ ,_c01 1 4 , *,p4 :04.1000 0 oicti, Rpm... ~..,wm0„...7.,..,,,, ...„,... , ...„.x:4-.._,,.3.., , :,,,, ,, 6toiwt focAtopw#6.matioo, 040" , c.,00*._00"ii.p0,0"401.400f 9;00.0,0,, zomo.thw*Wag, *nlitlitiOlklritiN , in in-• %Slat' leltle. ?Adam Pn,t tc. *44lSthe Oise of,u9prr. - 4 xfotii: - -firUlapio9., of ik . Piii- • . bibitiote by_ tiii.„:l,4 'Jew, enr 144131 - mer ialt 11,h(*itlY 1- 00 1 **Ogerg:lhotheO Wank and 1 4 44 e siiiiit course itblw:lik: eineyi cc 40,140.-ITheropli , ofsee ft y i : o oot r y ' ti**ld*XarittiaWOl owed : oaf ovoti**liii,t o4 . l l+lt; 44 *( lll °"'ittsi and**o=niCailmliedi thOiettrom 'other 14,;W: 4 1 ,6 4big ,fur 's, nionient:,.. hoer this quieticp#i*Ndi*lldCiyi timi•Oldiat, mid, most 'lda* didiiiisb*iane:,- - Yiiiiiiiip, -- tbii:Or9eki, 't - . 3lll o)l l 4P nw ;:.*: ,, ,.* i fteifiii- 4 i'l the' ineotto! , of ' neffunfteati*JerFod4ieli*Neliiilie of 04..... - ,1 444,. pip alslci4or AM ft:m*3744' evei;l *PidOed' ' , ..'" ifitieCieltholktb4-ligat " t h e '44414(.4. , , Wu* liiii;ilo.4 o , 44„ iiiit:*imi no hft,),o,tiadOduAttibeirMiurgirottiVfoolti n i es ., Th74,o***:o 44 i**l o o flk. o 4o'ith - s. Prhtelfiro:4J,, ...etk -ireoticfK;Of ,, ,iiohtrOeati°°; ' oiclito , mayi { of this , a MOO! honorable to 'Afoll#oo 2 ifYif t lo 4 , ..;14zfo;s '• Mall Ai 4 ltr.*aiayiaaiatlaiiti3 ,4 4 l 4jile..lietleO. , • 'S a - ll )- 1 41 -1 10fakt - AlYade Tad's/ L i - bad 4 4 "~ k* Wit *iota* otnk oiiundt;iinWi , lter ::***o t -wi al iiion,..i t h 1.,...,., 4. ..,....44,,A.,„a.***, ' ' lilib4-'.l 4 0 :ArilidliiiintY#4d1;an i entOttaeb,.. , i 34 -- - 14 9*/Y.,;)ll ll arOalistrogth sad 01 % , ~ thef4ho,o4-4iiiiitli;iyjiliko C lol i , ItSbilitW 344 ibellffibld ;s u bjec t ' ' of o ' l 'i.PVitl#;k:clilijalli-4411111016146 , E1 POO .P.'*; 'r' `' -1 /$4 11 4' '441**4 1 14414" Ostfillijeflt.g e l. , '-' - -1 1 1 1 04 44 - eilkuif . ' ' 4 " rt i ', ', 1, ' illrlA t ArtWoiroifr -0., ' it* i. oi ; - ' .1,4 1 k # 4 - se*liiii.ki4 , - .., o44, l444 l .ketborirtorliti‘o4 l6 l l ; to any ic 444.90000400.0tittovrtb* and igAred) or_ ituretreennitO'-by friondthipOlheneveloncei.A. eithient(el. 401S''own people. i..4i:ollooo,ll.lstlftlrf Rpriliteintori , , I fOr by. onip &neuters In tht!-coint uiericierociati ofthe'ReMart:iianie; .by whirl no an -- can be a citizen of thin one OM- MonwealthvlY_ which no man-can be. cam ' ..toictir 3 kilitTilit b*-gill, nor.rersain ' baitt This is the firm figkr4itiOnl'of our - ' litierty; . that every man ihridifhlie-itiCilsOintCpoliet ev ery ithandonlii rights at his,eieCtinm?: - - It dile net appear; therefore, perpe i*Al4lo°9.'',P*ltitiird, ; go qteeksor k the , Romans.' , As next See. whe ,Pici%,tkleeottitailanced; by the' chief writers • .111:;the - 1 litivaer;tiOn_ and • I, 'ljObr-rOrAtife' ifimlntsisidoo;fiffirtna.' that 'ic a' eveh:in their owa - oauator.k/r . - eliderres) ljjli:bo denidini;t46 . rine stion i/ethey-'4 = Subject . catYwitheer, crime, with. Aratv..:`,*ealf;ireni`.the,-enliiection :and : etsi'-7 :dience whichT•le te, the , nocietY" _under which' be . -Vrilaf'bore2± -, This;hee . pflirmi,...the iiiiichitainlyib; arid' he • represents the 1 Ittd'iWoialoweas4 me ; swa'. l of ;France, Spain, the Ifettierlinds, • itio2lriannani 7- The , Czar forbids thiti folds ce#l4l,6".iii( 4 0,!0ne thelfort- but .he:Mide,tfutt that is -because tho:fiffiribi• Are ilizver; and thelatteilehMito !, ; BeSurtler saya.:, 4 .f,ln England, the subjects ‘4O - 4****ti?illeet` and nore'liarlimiler ikr 4444 in',:the no vieelia then , elsewh ere, In :virtie of Li ~ ,right Which tier there call' alio- , iigiref ;.'lntlhlOole.not prevent the English. fromwethdriwing 'fiem the-kingdom without the pertillestorVofAhO . Itiniu'and Witinflhey babe estlibtithed the:11 1 001* olieivheretneititec Alii latherny of `6410A tee'tlie)eislloe . .t!ie', 'iiiiioeei liave44fartliai iioar:e*4.iliem,.! - P. , r : nraedmaihook 2; Sec. 280, holds tbeitight of a1#41".114,i* i110ar;',..,E,1X90, t . 5 ... 9 9, 1111 i) i cp • iftftvetii li:siAiiiilfe4 irkiegand that be d'On= ititiffills,:lkitOthe*prie rilniblic; into 'whlob ,fie: ifilitiity,entire,,lt',fiiboye:ii: from soon .that " ono ceases lo le a citizen so soon as he 'illiliglY removes with:that design from Ile -native baimtrY;inejidne - iiir.self to - another. gtate,-settUng.tlmin Ma fortune and lamily , Mdces the. laws forbid-subjects to *love.", That alse Was ihe_opinion - Ofyurfinirmrihk: go i.:AO.iitliiiii*fhilfilieit'or removal bath, A)rcen - lvitillillialicigili,illiaiiiat'aid - the anbjecit Attlee Nnisaill and bin :adonis nidef ,the pie *find eta forelliiefitate; the - CatnniOnwealth which he , left hath -no longer any-authority Over him: l ! :Local also denied - theEnglish' doctrine of -perpetual , allegiance because of liith.4*:Gey . ...eig. - , - 2; i 207,,, ~,,,_ '. ': ' t y.orsi; mentions three cases in wilich this rlOtinf*atrtatlei,eitiste in defiance 'even i a:l4lftri,.:lticid jays: fo -the contrary : 1. ithe: _ ye( the: aubject cannot fi nd anbalatence at ficnie.t:lTharii s idoletifo l # # 1 )-0 1 /0 1 -- t4i 144 ; 4. Nliere,tfiere is any oPpreaslonin "idaiters Or onneehinte; „These, tumbril., are lint.olaraplea of a panchliddarralei:vlz :. The right 'Or fiTeri e * 4 lkrf 4 4 6 4 MI ow n, hap-_ Olnealii and hi; end, net Idit , eiatroirelifif fa .tbe oily mad eitelnalvejudge of what tslll.beat ica cioto -that, BYAKESIIIOOK, ch. -2, (whcise tramilater,‘li,orniio4n,. had - exilatilatid 'him-` self) 'aitYs - i ' ,«1f there:be tole . * tdproldbit efpattlationiit de lawful-for a subject .to trarti ferMB'9V4o: - */4' ; t l3 .4nho•' l !a3' o ) is the ::citse witirever 'the epantry is, act, a prison. ' llt tong be tedious to cite from other writers. 1 TheY . geneirdirtonour in the opinions already elted-At Whelieiled Suit none of them deny, thougt(sente ~of. Stein qtrallo, the right of .ex *Whitlow; ,', •-• : --,, . „ *. • ' , - i That the obligation of perpetual allegianise to not` - founded' ill 'union 'or 'maintained 'by writers on' public': lair - Pi/011. letie t : we. hot ; ;ii_reed7-shalro. That It does not accord with 'tts - laW-'er 'prOctice of England herielf; we moll - nowPreceed to shoil , . I iii.this. - la# Of 'England, , and also by the civil - lair, neftwallzOtion:ptits 'an alien einctly. it the same Mate wit' he had beet; born in: tae king's_legeance. , . _The ,neituralfeed. -old:, 4ii,:kol'iiiki . ,,itAtii . :eii:it inrypenie,' t &inept td_Ottirente - oid of *iii#:otkii - f,y4k it, he i t dbeeit aiWeitive.itirnairbjeise,-.l:Biledoin.; .0 4 ;IfV!!,:doddeiron;lBB ; -Dogiatiatlivil - LaW,' `p: 2„ P, li," a. fa.- ~ Row, if perpetual alle • glance be, es it is asserted, a principle Of nisi. Arra/ law, that principle . mot _be a part of .the, law . of - England. ;Moir, then;, does it hill/pen ,that. slie„ can 4 ;Mttiraiiie , an , allen--r -that, ,tec,„ite, say,', give ; himall, the rights him all the duties - rife native ;l4nw , subject ? ..Cian she destroy his perpetual. ofikindeetractible duty of allegiance to his Own' sovereign 7 1, , Yet she has never hesitated .ttdo'ti&l'lriSa'stlittite pasaddin the reign of Suilen AWirt„ she iiattirallied all foreign Pro- . stanti,,Whateyer:.,.; Thus she undertook to, i it Save:them froMthis allegiance to theirown , .iltitial!neitieign; Whloh'iihe,:irt , tke :same lime, insists that theyetumet put or or be A *dyed froni,nct;ient etrew . lbyrrearing idle igisil4..:4l4oo {tier:;,, ,—'; '' - : . , , -, isy thils eso. IL ; e;.3,,confirmed by Geo, iilio:2sforeignseatitenWbo alto:lid serve two, YearrifitwAritish merchant s Ship or .shlP.of yr. Weribythat very ; act; and without : their o th; - aliplieatithi,:ei:Consent; Made naturalized „Eritisk rinhjeetil-that . is , to say, they were - sl ig sol T eti - from ail allegiance to their own Bove-, iWiniK riAtintt.ifierpettral allegiance 'to the idverifga- filt -England imposed upon them: , The nxerelse of ,this poWer • by Great - Britain ilietis'thatabe luta never actually *, treated alle giance as mpetireland founded on a. princi.: `plc Ofmiireintaytair,..or else she bas trampled Itltuitierler '764, Myr iiiiregardedi the rights. 14` other Etatemand.. sovereigns whenever. she foiria it kerlintoritit to'de CO. - Let us suppose A:Olie.illideYsiehtt statute. as 20 Geo../.1: .16 Smut - born in%thoTilited - §tatee. Neves on •bOirlfitl3l74l4l,oollo,roo* . !‘,-** i , dreg Bd. ;tali doolarei war agaiest the 'United States, aid then. the ilmeriesur seaman who has g4ne:lionte :'to " 'defend 411 tend c hili - country. is at)erwards made a prisoner of war while r eddeaverbig to defend his home, Great Sri- , lefn'woeld' exegete -him is a tridtor, because h 4, bad taken ‘nti arms against hex; though ;he: had 'not 'applied 'te Great ,Britain for na. tdrillsitionirand though, according to her, ft ' owed -PerPetnat tillegiatiee. lo the Vetted E t ilil 'in, ixteatise which, he i, Was i6 , l, l3 y o uf ra t , h i s e t t i sh rin e ci w pl o e ttl o d f n ionic/ 'laWl-becinie'ho was true 'to his trtral: allegiance: :Se - - if remembered that il l 'ibis double allegiance was not The foreigner's orn Tint, 'and yet _ Gregt_Siriteitt-wonld bold' h mrespoinilble tor its'aimPosed consequences. 41c 1. it, is dm law of England (and of this 43 Pliestriali4 1 44 ' , 1 ,•-"illiti hires local elle-, 'glance Ito -the Goyernment-mider. which he lives, while_he litesunder it. ‘7:705 1 01 ease of War between his native cerintri 04,04-4eri 'hit dreribiewibowaratC local'lair.7,..2 , Ohliges ' him to *time eiffeithini to tiaii,litieif Row, then, -can the law of ,the same llbst‘, oblige MM.' at the name thee to beer 'titre allegiance to the -ti,ntyilif 'Me :birth 7 Bfippolie the Ilion to reside' in 'England: She declares that by a principle of intiVersal law ho owes perpetual . allogianee I. the of WO birth; yet it' he should owing war leave his family and effects' *return:thither, and adherfito his country men agelast,the.fiusen of England, he would, by the-English jeW, be dealt with' as a traitor. Whit iiittia:bilt to assert ; that by the law of 'England local 'allegianae is -stronger and of rrierOblidiniforce,than 'the supposed allegt ended birth? If the alien defends' the coun try Of his domicil he may be, held as a fret * bijiutt of fito blitti ; and if he adheres to the latterche is a4mitoi to that of his donti- C,ll:and , - ell- this 'by the :law 'of the very . „ . same_OuntrY 1 „ this' :local, allegiance - either -inspeade _that ;of .birth, ` or it does not. it. ,doni, ' then,= in case of ' a' permanent Anti.tixed changevof domicil, the allegiance of 11114;n:ins$ pe_ainrinananUUsaapended; and ltaii m destroyed ;.hat if It .per _aeon does.ept,suspend it dim the doctrine of per idlleg4nce A fn conflict 'with ;that Of to}uil alleglanee r and is therefore not law.-' So 1 40 ,11 :Pit* '44,„4:4'.'calinifit supported'; rtolie ellogoitkO,of an alien be temporary. , l bet,k,4o:hpi - reSsiderice 'temporary, and such lithe follows Whiner; jleltial when; by, naturalization, his residence s bas,become - perpetual. The reasons given for perpetual. 'allegiance do not wirrant.it. , It is 'isaidJltrile Bono-1, because the subJecti are Kndee fiialdat'a prblec#6o g; because he is , bbtdulite l proteet thini .af all times and in all , The answer is eirrhins,. If allegiance - , - ,bl) (U6'1166680 of; protection; then It must' cease. When the' subject has renontioed, or Whenthe sovereign Witlat give, the yrotettion4, Otherwise the laW•musrcoiltirgle j w n the ; reason of it has. Ceasedi,al4,okt,lfeuld be against a'inaifm. of, larth It woubtbeukoleas, 6,Ver, :Sint ouf.thritabyAbik'con„- filets 'of!this law - withiothiirand well-settled ruled,, sad `with - reason= itself. : Indeed, the English lawyers themselves, notwithstanding what Buorretroms arm* do not rest this rule on natural law,' or on any law. It is now rested on the precedent made in 'Calvin's case; in which twelve of the fourteen judges bold that the ante-nati, or Scots born after the Accession of burrs I, were natural sub jects pf the,King•of ,Englarid.. Of this ,de cision,, and of the doctrine ' of perpetual al- larice,lltamen- says, (Oonst, ch. 6 -- cc 'tangly, be observed that-this hightlYing creed of , picrogativa mingled itself intimately with thiarquedien of naturalization, which was much itrgned on the inbniachical'principle of perin'inal - 019 - glanVe to" the -sovereign; as op poses fiithe half-republican theory that lurked. in Itio • contrary propoiltion. M Alla giin`cel,3, - Sate Lord 7 l4coii,‘" 1a of a greater eitent and filmentilovi,thaoaws,or kingdeims, and cannot consist by the, laws merely, ho caus9 it bean before laws; it continueth after laws, an'd , it 'lkiirrylger` when •11,yes . aro sus pended andlihie not had their force.ii-:Shitil trials, vol. §96; AO' Lord 'toxin; 4i What-, soever duo, by the, law, or tonatitrition of than may, be altered ; nein'rel all4lance or obedience •of,the auliect.to tief adyereign x cannot , lie"altereil ; 'ergo; natural- or tolliii,Severeign Is not, tine bY the law .or „ constitution of man.';=--Id: Thrisii:are . the,grourids On which no less advol' ca4a,tinin Lordal4nou and,(loiciV,reeted v tids doctrine,, and its..aapporters. are lieleerne to, the - antbority Wel OIL derive from them. " , bat tils-iiCia a queellen orinere, English law; it 1p equally a question of American law, `antlaCleatit stneo,JulY 4, 1776„fwe' affirm that - the lait,of perpetual alle,glanee has had no.ex. istertehlu the Tlniteei S#ites. • .• • . • Awiig the injuries anditanrpations tending te 'Vrattny over, theso States, theDeelara flea' of Independqueienntnerated these.: That the king , c; halt 'endeaVored to: prevent the, population of these States • for that purpose, obstructing the laws for natnialization_ of 'foreigners p refusing 'pass others to , courage their migration thither." - For 'these and,otter,capics the polonies, were declared to <be ft absolved , from all alleilan;a" to the British Crewti." , _ • 2 T 1103148 Jet/lesson (ind no higher autho-, tity can he named) fully recognised the right expatilition:: . early 1779 • be:pro ;pared an act which finned the Virg,* Legis- littera itiwhieh it is denominated the" natural right of all men." Jeff. Works, vol. 1; p. 80. See Bannon's Etat. at Largo, vol. 10, P. 129. While Secretary of State under WABIIIMOTOBt, JErreasort wrote to Mr.' *oasts, our minister at Paris, respecting Mr. GENET Orir citizens • are certainly free to divest themselveti ef that character by emigration, "and' other' acts manifesting their intention,' and may then become the subjents of another power, and free to do whatetior the subject's; of d0.",--AmeState Vapors, vol. 1, p.. 169. Enikoso Rannenrir who succeed.; ed •31r. JErsleasow;ln reply tb the French. minister, wrote t et I cannot donbt :that Cap- - tab:l Tamtor has taken an oath, to the" trench lepeblio; and at' the same time LaeknOW :triage My. belief. that ;no law of any _of the States prohibi4 expatriation," &c. The Boa stitution of the United Stites expressly dele gates to portgrees: the power', to, naturalize foreigners. The second section of the act of 1796, passed during the Administration. of Wasentares, expressly requires the alien to ( 4 absolutely and entirely renounce and abjisre all aldegiance'luid fidelity to :every foreign prince, potentate," State, or_ sovereignty, whatever;'' and particularly, 'by name, the prince; &o;, whereof he was before a citizen or subject :A , Now, by the, well• settled law of England eel of the world, mere naturalization at con fers the and uftquottfied privileges of a subject , born Within the king's ' dettilnietts." WoonnzsosriSeo. ,vel 1,,p.-232;- or an Atams.- gotta :tonne it,' che is put • exattly in the same state is if he had been born in the Ring's d0r0.;874. , • Bq too bias . Civil Litv:i ttlfateralliatiOnmakes the per. aims -•natttralizeil of the same condition with the ,nittfire2. l .,—Donnt., p2rt '2,, p. 11, 2.9; Etiiii - de:tartratititt4lo:.2 , 2l, act of*reuvi _which ;donfer the iorrer to nataiiilfze,,asst:222 the alien's capacity to be naturalised: The I.lnitcd.:-SWetasiume ..his right to repounie allegianeo, , beeanse they require him to'do la, i t by the . . of.ark Oath. lf the IT 'ited States ahoild admit the right of any fol. ign princeto the allegiance of a, naturalized citi zen, thoyinust alsO adthit that it is his duty' to bear that allegiance, and yet at the vety.same moment ,'they requiro him by'an oathito ab jure and finiever renounce it.' ''' , 31ackatone'# Cominentarles ,the'litte - .Tudge Tocrzna;forrnorly -a - professor *jaw 14 and friary, a judge: of the Dealt of Appeals, and afterwards a Judge of the.Unitedi States court, has folly vindicated' . the right ofexpatriation. So teo did the late 'Judge , BrOkiaridgo, •in a note to be found in hitya ' . In Talbot v. Janson, 3 Dallas, 183, the weight both of argument and'autbority are decidedly in favor of the rigbt of expatritition. •In Murry v. the Charming Betay,2 Cranoh; 64, C. J. MAR. matt-held, that. an American, naturalized by anotherGoyernment, was not entitled to pro -teetites; as a citizen ef. the United States ; and the Prinelide of that deOliicin is decidedly against the English role. The most elaborate defence .of the latter 'was. by jOIIMION J., who, in Shank v. Dupont, 8 Peter's Rep., 258, said : "I ,had this question submitted to me on my .eireuit' iiome years since,. and I then leaned in favor, of this'rlght at_eleooon (of, expatriation ;) but more mature, reflection had satisfied me that I then ' give top much weight to , nature/ iewond the suggestions of reanniand justice;ln a case which ought to be disposed -et' upon the principles of political and positive bliv, and the law of nations I" By 'concession; then, this rule can only be es;.• tabliehed and-`maintained by tho, denial of a na tm:al law, reason, and justice." But, although the Supreme Celia of the United States bas not yet decided this question, it. has been de cided, and ,against the English Ole, else; where. Thus, in Murry v. McCarty, 2 Munf. Rep., the 06urt of, Appeals of Virginia ex pressly maintained the right of expatriation.; a. The State of Virginia,", said udge °min, "did hot presume lo confer this mat on citizens, it being one of .oaramerint authprity bestowed on us by the God', of Nature.". The same point - was expresSly decided &slate as 1889 by the Court of Appeals of Kentucky, 2 Dana : Rep. 172.. The court therein de chired that expatriation wee a practical' and fundamental American doctrine, and that, in the' absence, of a statutory prohibition, a citi zen may s , in , seed faith, abjure pis country:' , -; Yn Sri:manner tlll.Oll, 2 Paine, Circuit Court Rep. 655, The' Court said: a In this country expatriation is conceded to be a fundamental right. As far as the principles maintained, and praeticb adopted, by the Government of' the Gaited States, are evidence of its exist ence, is fully recognised. It is constantly, exercised, and has Airier, in anyway, boon re strained. The general evidence'of expatria tion is actual :emigration; with other concur rent acts showing a determination and felon- Son to transfer allegiance.". , . In AcheOtiv. Barns, 8 Blaney, 86, Tartu- MAN, Ch. J., said that perpetual allegiance - Was a rule founded : chiefly on Calvin's case—but it was ft not compatible with the Constitution 'of .Pennsylvania, or her sister • 13t'ates." Ii Dorsey v. Dorsey 7 Watts, Rep, 349, Gipson Oh. J., expressly maintained a principle utterly inconsistent with that of _perpetual allegiance; indeed, ho expressly asserted it one principle of finite allegiance," and that our "law of alle giance is different", from that asserted by England. - Mr. MAIRJY, in his reply to Cheva lier Housinann in the Koszta affair, states the true rule thus :--44 There la a- great diversity and ranch confusion of opinion as to the nature 'and ebligatiens of allegiance. By.seme, it is, held to be an indestructible Political . tie, and though resulting from the mero accident of birth, yet forever binding the subject to the'sovereign ; -by others it is con sidered a pOlitihal connection in the nature of a civil contract, dissoluble by mutual consent, bllt, not so at the option of either party. The sounder and more pretalent doctrine, how ever, is that •the citizen or "subject, having faithfully performed the past and present dntios resulting fre,m ,bis relation the sovereign powers; may at any time release himself from the 'obligation of allegiance, freely quit-the land of, his birth and adoption, seek through all countries a home, and select anywhere,that which offers hint the fairest prospect of happt THE PRESS.-PHILADEIMA, SATURDAY, JUNE 25, 1859. ~. tads for himself 41d.,/dispoaerity,„Nntitzt - tite s ; - ' ', ' Doctor Bailey: -: ' *1 esivever Riney bti - laced l ' We find the Naltottal , Bra' Of this 'week as 813 vereig4V. Tit , ~, ~ P,,_ ~•• ‘ . . ~ . ~, . „,, went. ' does notitufsiViet , ;,eirlikfor which ft, !elm. 1 . usual; among our ekeltangets. ~T he paper stored; yait;ritt: - 010zerted for the general; -, e press the day DefOre4he persia • brought rtllo Intelligence of its editor'® !loath, on board welfare of'ol:o". : peepiN iirhas bee?* eppres sive to individuals, this right to withdlanr reds . .. tect ,- *ko. on , his way to England. Acoole on a Run basis, and similar/If priiisipli big,paniteriirbis eldest pen, he - went abroad, to UM right whioh-legitimateif Testatenee to ti- recover the lost blousing of health. ' Those ranny." • .. , . 1 -- 1 Woollens of family and friends, whose nature . : it. is to hope against hope, induced him to If it be said that the return'otta nateralized on citizen bathe country of his birth aevivee- his „dertake the voyage, and this is the end! He dude's and §bligelloris,,We, rep% ilikt lie. too 'llOl, -return .to them no. more I Tho circle would the return of any AirteDeprbein:ClD: 'le' larOl* the , lionsithold , desolated!. ' Tho zen revive his duties and obligetictui. Nii , l ihadow:of thri sorrow has fallen heavily upon ,one had denied that, and - ins:Jim' 'qualifleatiou li multitude roc time , .tried friends, and the supposed to beibued ineineratoAsesrassews light of-life has gone out in the'bonsestead of letter is a distinctiim 'witheint ei.clifiqienoe; a bereived faintly. ' .4. .", : The question, and the only ea4returai—does ' We were.never personally acquainted with the more allegiettee: of :birth lei+ die to such he , deceased ; , politically we ,have ever been a duty or ObligEtiblii tbit•ofirtjje- relisn - . of a an opponent. 't We believe that We have never naturalized citizen to, the •coindiy of l i tsibeld-art opinion or advocated a single , public in hirth,he- tly-bii,doaspellad; - ha , lielf,orut 1141 measure in common with him ; but we have Does that 'politica/ tie , continue after his,.'neyer undervalited his qualities, ;worth, or naturalization by this country; or dies It m en 1, work. , Its established an anti-slavery paper in isair.:?:' That' is, the,:able , qteasti* and" igter Washington 'nova than twelve years,ago, when 1 bold, notwilbstaeding ;the ,0011t011 • of. , the discussion of the question was practically Adininietratimil that it then ea , that; isrni 'prohibited ,in the District—when ADAMS and Patristion le a : nntitietrigst;'reelintieriiaiirth 9trisesos:were the only Y(illTosentetivea of his :a basis and similar In principle' tik tket which tirly.tn the House of Representatives, and justifies, residence, to tyriiinY4: ' ' ,.4 '' "` `;:4 ' *WO Tt 1:14n had not yet entered Upon his soil: - , , ar , lC , careef in the Ferrate. 'Ho livid to the the - 'third of Abets Senate, and a majority of that Itottitsr; maintaining in their places the doc trines 'and policy which he advocated. ' Im liadiet history will recerd'thie as a triumph, - ,and , :iMpartial jiiskiee, will acknowledge his !share of the achievement: as honorably won. ' : 'itiiiiazard nothing' with:either friends or '164 1 in saying tbat UM Era has for twelve ymits, been the best ,conducted .weekly paper 1.,0f tnis or any other country. The talent em ,,Plo/ed 'in its literary department has always beep otthe, best' grade ; at, least half a dotion ofiroluni'es have beeri republished from its .celitmus;arid some ef them hold a high rank lidillWllteratere of the Dumb; the political 11.4044 4 -Deergredfdblitildp - ritts vilifoh — siiii. !daily neliderlieditte peiTty for which it was published ,have always been such as were en titOd to it . portninent record; The miscella ,* , itsiti,isaid'gtineral departmenta of the' paper Away:Shore the marks of careful supervision, an 4 were well and scrupulously kept up to the tone of the highest style of journalism. In a W i t, elleutside 'of the editorial columns was In formliweltdOne, affording such a paper as gets, , itself read. through by . its subscribers, an - well repays the time devoted to its pe mail: • - .Of tho Doctor's own articles, it would bo stt4 , lng.little to call them well, thought out and Ipetively presented; it is saying a great deal Mere, yetnot too much, that they wore aheass so . Hie Jeaders - were really entitled to the miner , They compelled attention, and always ,Opened their subject so that dissentients .felt thhy; had its most authoritative array before lb*, and, if we may jedge'l4 their accepts Mice in his own party, Mends and partisans field them In the highest estimation. He was ever candid, cautions, earned, fully-convinced, ind even as moderate as his courage and corn -initmente could' allow. lire do not recollect t91 . 3#1 , 4 seen .fir-tiesrd him charged with reek ;Open In statement, or 'dislitgennoutiness in teoussien; be was, doubtless, too well peisua ‘ of:the right and the truth of hie position, 'ar4 liei was certainly too well furnished with he aiblitty and with,the judgment required for ,ititodltiiation, to fall into the common Vices of 4;artleaneditorshie, The example-of his con liTt In the office of journalist and advocate otieldMet fall to command the respect of those 'trio pat him to be In the wrong and resisted lii.i opinions. No paper could be more, cone- Mitts, considerate, respectful; and just to'op oisents, sa determined and even embittered as is Were. Au Abolitiimist had much to bear retie:bear in his day. The evidence of his ,eornage and prudence, of his skill and force; abounds in the . history of the long struggle 4hich ho maintained, and the large success *Ala his ermined it. His wisdom was aspe `chtty item . in ,the feet that be never sot:ititi , made ' his paper the organ of hiaLlattf is ' to- .enslave it to party lade* -- Hic keit.'•.lddiself. well, free. .'or AriviiiniSO;. lie avoided patronage; and , his l ,iiiilif:japperrted" him bravely and peraist tityttirent.all changes of tides and move •-: auhs;Without astral in return the sacrifice K„,h i lts'editiTi4fteedom. The man who works sitich n plan of 'PAM:life; With - rmett sue. Ae r tecgyfillit be in character, Apt aim, far above edkr*ty. iiii Mends ' reonal and ioliti "_ t,''vri'douit not, will have ninth more and lorthier'things to say of him; but this much 1 14duii - tO'hinv frames persistent opponent, 'and 1 iorivould'ilot••willingly withhold our word of shrtew for his ..early death, and of ayiepathy %Oh tem( -'who Must henceforth fool it us an Jo-operable loss. '-,, We are•awaro that Mrs. BAILEY has been 'tug accustomed to the -management of the c o ncerns and the conduct of the paper In all Da departments, except the strictly editorial. I'l that place could be as ably filled as it has been heretofore, the Era might still, in her hinds, hold the position in the party and with Die public Which • it has so well earned and `Maintained. May the change that has fallen upon her and her little ones spend its force ttiOrit touching their Ware well-being—with nt lose but that which is inseparable from wi d *hood and orphanage. , • The Position-of- Ettephen . , it'titltitttfkfte.; • Judge Dovorss jeat completed anothei I Sotithert ton; which he appropriately 'o4ototi: by going back to lila hothe'irillinoisteatensto more mingling with his constituent's 'jets/. friends. _Ho May, therefore, be antiposeirto" Understand public:sentlinett is thelforth'aisf in the `Sthith; hence Sigiddevese' which is attached to the letter mtblishediSibe tolegraphie celumts of Tnu Paa6a ißr„.3 , o4ltet.7' day, and in all the other papers, andyrbichwe, 'conceitre to:be, important enough tot:map:Ott; corrected;' to-day ::Iratinixarort, Jane ¢27185ii," :Kr Mean Stit I have received yoritteites,,in-4„. flatting rhather my friends era , at4.Werty.,-fd owesent my name to .the- OttarlOton oliventleif ler the 'Presidential nomination. llifore this 'question' min be : detailialniefp ti will - betteoeseary to understand 'distinctly ispon what issues tbkeattyase le, to - he, eaudtrated;.. (as I have fitiL,faith,they , witty the. Dersiseratio party shalldeteratbe, In the PreeldentialeleCtion of 1860, to adhere to the prinolplesemboditain the Compromistirdeasnres of 1850, and ratified liy the people into the Presidential eleotion of 1852.8 mi re-affirresel-in.thesKanewNebraska 'sat 01854: and in eorpors tad Into, the ' Oincinhati Plage fro Of: 1818—as expninfaia by Mr. Dnehanan , n:ltteUt-', teraocepting the I:nimble:Con; and apptS,lletk the people fe, hit. eleotion—in, that *Oat, ,tny. friends will be at liberty to pre s ent my nameto the Convention, if they see proper, to do sot - If.. on the contrary, It shill hooeme thetieliol of the Democratie patty (whiohl oannot an otpkOel to repudiate these time•honored prineip ewer, whioh we have achieved so many patriotic, lit nmpbe ; and in lieu of them the Convention well; interpolate into the oreed of the party Stich new issues at tba revival of the African - slave trade; Or"- a'Compeesional slave erode for the 'Territories, or the doctrine that the Constitution of the ..licited Btatea either establishes or probihl te II e'er,: Zratthe Terilteries,beyond the powerof the people legally to contrel it an ether property—it is due to hartdor: to say, that, in molt an event, I could notliocept the nomination if tendered to me. Trusting that this anewer mill be dee:siert:at' oiently explicit, I am, very, iespeotfullyijohr friend, _ 8. A: Doofthall. , dJ. B. Donn, Req., Dubuque, lowa. '-There is *gallantry in this letter whiob; ,are net' iorprised to see, h:as'aransed lite' ad miration, of 'Polltical 'opPetients and. aided the enthusiasm' of political rapt** 4:titig DOUGL4O propososmo act of dieerganization to ' the Democratic party, riepfants hireeelenpon the recognised-and accepted principlesof:that party, and although he abstained : from Saying the word, the whole tenor of his comminick firm Is to the effect that whenthe doctrines( of a:great political party are rejected and betray:; ed; Wis idle to plead in Ito behalf the skeleton of a mire' , 'Organization. This deelaration'of principle on the part of .Strimak A: MOLLS shorild go forth . among theDeme crony as an'olive brinah + harmony. qa of the frei States it offers victory In every .114-: presentalsre, Senatorial, and, Congressional To the South it proposes no injuatice't for the double reason that he whonolfers it bats been the • Dfci.long champion of Southern' rights, and •because: the'prittelple itself 'hair been, endorsed ,and approved, every (miasm-, vittio Southern statesman, beginning' link RORY, OLAI L Ot Keiteeky,"and..endinewith, ROVIRT .IC,T.:llarirrinttj of Virginia. • Tf the: ultarlestou .Convention Is not. , the- more , 01)110 -of custom , " houses, post - officee, navy. . yards. United States •.marshals, and , ,Idabinet, Ministers', reJoiect. la „this op -PortutiltY- presented by the propositioisOrit fltSrlikW A. ; DONOPAS.O ,:coneolidat4i -Deln'ecratie party ripen a platfcirm Which will , the gospel of our._ polittoot—ozdvailoo---: generations to come. Judge DOUCII4S, if. we know the matt, does-not otilis aic condition. precedent » that he should : b e the candidatik, , ' All that , ho desires Is that the , pledgest and prineiples of the Democratic party should be religiously observed. This done, the scdec-', Oxon of a .standard-bearer will ho a secondary 'I consideration. - We cannot refrain laying before our readers the following hearty ex pressions of approval from two of the-lead ing papers of New York on the great letter Of •judge Dovonss : Vim' the New York . Tribune, Republiean.) • ; - 34t: Doilies hat fulled his proclamation of policy ftir the Charleston Convention. It contains no thing to startle his friends;; nothing to •• elate his atomics. In tote and sty,te it, is certainly a very happy evasion. of, the Scylla and Charybdis 'of 'Anterieen priblie men steerog for the White Douse -'being neither vague nor vaunting, but clear, onnsistent with: the latest published conviotions of the Illinois Senator, and. temperitely firm. Dad Mr. Douglas always epthen and.writton in' the vein of ' the 'letter whiab we ppblisb to-day, he might have beeiehaps, less-notable as a West OM. politioian.-b •he „would certainty hadeleen stronger:as an Amerionst,sbitesman than Int actu-, ally is. Mr. Dangler' Consents to' be a nandidate";'it Cherioston, should his frlonds think it ad v iralto to bring him forward there, but only upon condi. Cons, and upon conditions whiob he dessnot leave to conjecture. It the Demooratle party at Charlet!• ton, in convention aseembled, moan to adopt the. * revival of the African shoe-trade, the 'extenelen and protrotion of slavery lathe Territories by Con. gresslonal legislation, and the eonsequent destruo tion of the doctrine of Popular Sovereignty as late gral parte of its "Platform,',' then Mr Douglas wilt decline to stand on that platform. This resolution •Mr • Douglas' has already repeatedly announced himself to have unalterably taken, and it is axes°. !talon as sound and patrOtio as it; is shrewd, and politic. [Vero the New York Tioses, independent] . ,41f all the Presidential Candidates, Mr. Douglas is the' drat in the field: with his deolaration'of prinelples, and we are bound to'aay that it has the' eininent merit of being frank, manly, end intelli gible. Mr. ; Douglas, whatever be his Wilts, is not wont to diagunat or soonest his opinions, and here we 'hive them In 'their' length breadth,' and blintriese: Mr. N Dory,' of ' Dabitotim lowa, hiving inquired whether his friends might preeeot,bti n4OOl at., Charleston as„ a candidate for the Presidenoy, Mr. Douglas yeplies, that they ioay do so if , the Conventionlshall adhere to -r the, •time•honored dootr(ne of the Demo• mega party as expressed in • •the':Ootipromiseo of woo. the Presidential • election of '1852,-the •Kansas-Nebraska aot of 18)4, the Cincinnati platform of 1858, and in the letter of Mr. Iluolt". nun, sesering the nomination and expanding that Platform. But if the Charleston Convention shall set np a new doctrine in favor of the revival of the edam trade, or of a Congroesional Slave eode tor, the 'Territories, or denying , the right of the people in the Ter ritories to regulate slavery just like other mattere relat'ng to property, wny, fn that event, M. Daglasi, walk-net swept ite, nomination, even ' flit were toasted to him. Now, there is no doubt that in all the Demoaratie party there is not another man who Would be so strong a Preaidential candidate, in the North at least, as Mr. Douglas. But, at the same time, there is no other prominent Democratic , otatesmatt who has so small a (Maimed receiving -the nomi nation at Charleston., This waives true before this letter was - published as it is now ; and the sirepie reason why this strong man cannot be nom inated in, that he hes not always been ready to submit to Southern dictation on the livery ones but has followed such a source no he thought best. And with onoh a Hate of things before his eyes, the next Democratic orator wilt glorify that patty on the ground that sectionalism -never en ters its sacra enolosures. - Let consult, Dols gins on that subject; There is in this city now a professor of the art magical, by which &ignor • Blita boa made groat re• pastier/ and no small share of property. This in a modest, unassuming, skilful man, born in Franc elf Italian parents, and called , Monolour Barry Eisnjuart. He obtained, hie education, in th 4 are magipta, in Paris, and has not been long in this country, • Analog hither, be had the misfortune of being almost lost on the passage. Ho contrived to get up a Cabinet, with the -articles necessary for his performances in public, but after he had availed himself of these aide, two or three times's hiaCabinat•was burned by accident, and he new Makes his living by • Parlor Magic, or, eloight-or hand. • He has performed, on ',slava evenings, to different portico in the alrard House, all or whom are enthusiastic) In their praises of his skill and' adroitness, as well as of his unassuming and • gentle ' manners., Occasionally, he ,no (mi te an Invitation to attend. private • parties, Where be performs a variety of capital Woke on cards and sleight-of•hand feats—better, We think, than any artist we have: previously seen. Jais terms for amusing a party, during an evening; are very moderate. We have thus alluded to, him, because ho in an ingenuous as well as au ingenious man, and we venture to predict that when, by his 'own industry and the genorosit; of his patrons,. he is againable to get up a suitable ,apparatris for public ,performances, he will attract crowds to witness them, His address in Mons. Ono), B. FR South! Eighth, ascot, near Walnut, Parlor Magic. t, l *ht. he, Camden and Atta i n tic Railroad. l iErtim the sweltering sunim er.heat of the oNoWiledlhorouglifares of our city, there is no *age more consoling, invigorating, and beneficial, than the bracing atmosphere and AlealibTrestoring ocean bath of the sea-shore. tO ihepse vihe ' aro' fortunately able to spend elveral ,eonsecutive days, weeks, or oven MOnthsf aveay from their city homes and avo chtionsi:reanY of the pleasant country retreats the fashionable springs and watering-places : y ofcr importer attractions; but to the isen of , our citizens, wile have at the moat bita feW days to Spare, and who wish to make he best possible hygienic rise of their - limited 14 e, there is no point so available' as At= sidle City. separated from Philadelphia only by a- tWo-kours Journey, thousands are Oabled to practically realize— " Wow WIW' tlx°Y Who, hearth, toil and tumult of their live., Real to look down where naught but 00640 .40, but for the Camden and Amboy Railroad, Itkinitailgh in vain for the moat agreeable and viltiabM of slimmer reereatiows. tTI6 numerous excursion trains run upon ttis road during the " heated term," with their Oleg freight of thousands upon the cars, as wpil, as the extraordinary amount of travel in Oie, , regular trains, attest its great pt blio n,flity, mad the high estimation in which the advantages it offers, by its cheap and speedy blt nsit to the ocean, are held by the great dy of our citizens. The Philadelphians and izetui of surrounding neighborhoods, who visit Atlantic City dhring the bathing season, mud be counted not by hundreds or thou staid/Oat by tens of thousands. Of these, a N,••iry largo proportion consist of toil-worn, staving, penned-up, mon and women, whose ftortunlties for such relaxation are few and between, and, are treasured np in their lniarts among the moat agreeable recollections Ol their lives. T he running arrangements of the road, A likougli generally excellent, are singularly difeelive, considering the character of the tinvel it is, mainly designed to accommo dtife, in one respect. It runs no trains on - *day,' and by this prohibition prevents many who oai illy afford exemption from toil cta working-days from going to the sea shore. We understand, hoWever, that this subject will probably be brought to the consideration AA.) board of directors at their meeting on sllnday next, and that many of the phy fans of our city havo recommended that Sonday trains should be' run upon the rid as an important measure conducive to health, . inasmuch as they know of nothing batter calculated to preserve or re-establish ir Many cases, than a trip to the sea-shore, a' every barrier against such journeys 'olibulti, therefore, be broken down. We hope there will Wino serious objection to this more l' m nt. It is a measure of humanity, to which a) prejudices and over-nice scruples should giro way. • , ,-iVn wow, refer any of our readers who wish .to; retire 'to the country for the summer to the famished cottage, an the Germantown Railroad, .thit Messrs, Gammoy L don advertise to rent. It isle, snug little pleat', and aoooaa b tho olty telenty times a day, IiTTCXB AND RUM, .4STATH, TUBBDAT NBXT —A. laWe sale,. Bee Thomas,. Bons' advertisement?, adetion head, and pamphlet oatalognei issued to r* , ,itro :workmen aro - bully engapd in col , 1 11 9445 ci!. l l9a. Wats amok. BY MIDNIGHT MAIL. Letter from “Occasional." [COrrapondanoe of The Nape ] WisurNarow, June 24, 1859: The question is, whether Mr. Buchanan read! Ouosiaional?" r am not prepared to say poet= they oleos he enclosed to you, over his own frank, the amount of subsoriptton to your paper, and then directed that it aimed cease coming; but it Is a fact that whenever " Oooasional" makes a strong point, or unearths the vermin who are trying to burrow into the vitals of the Republics, somehow or'other the feet reaches the Presidential ear. when, some wadi' ag6, I an. nonneed, on the highest authority, that the Presl - had determined to snake John Appleton— !Aside tent, &Mean , of, State—his guest and com panion in the Peesidentiel mansion, the Intimation was immediately carried t 6 his Majesty, and the pleasant prospect of the Assistant Secretary was autrbilid, the. PresidenV informing hire that be had reconsidered_ his ,purpcee, and had concluded to paddle his own' canoe for a little while longer. , The management of newspapers at Washington Is a outlaws study. It ventilatecand illustrates the whole solenee of Administration patronage, and, gratittallY,.the newspaper, 'whiteier its party, becomes eheortmd in the desire to please power, for heie is the very oentre and heart of Federal once ; and while all other journals throughont the country, sniped at greatly redtmed, sates ; when they adiertbie for the avert:intent, the papers arp,paid in full; and as the President 'and &measles exercise unlimited power in the distribution of their favors, the) , can Rend to any newspaper profitable johp,almost • without end. I forbear mentioning the names 'of the Opposition ,papers here, that, while taking: issue with; the Administration on certain safe questions, generally ,manage to comeforwardwhonever there is a die. Oussion of an'AdOeintstiation 'project, aid assist the organs of the President to got Lim out of the diffienity: only mention it to indloote Ikon di wait it fa for a perfectly independent paper to be maintained at Washington. The E6ei6mini.reitirgiil—tbe leading Cithlilio paper of the United Staten—read by, awl repro settling an immense majority, of the Irish adopted oldens, rind Wordily Deniocrati4 . innii its grQuAa. ag4npt_lbp.littter, 4:3!,n. Case in u _rng ; to, Ithe ProteattOn, of nainrallied citizens; tfhle, itnd"lho 'Motioned arid' vigOiduis" opposition of Hfcrper"s, , Tl , :esk/y—the greatest: ntentipepor inihe eountry—sre'ambeg the list Meadow' of the feeling which the he Otero lettet , hoe aroused, . I oleo find,eiroulating h6ll3 , BisCond , letter of Jahn Botts' in reply to Gen. Cass's ox. planatory apology to Mt. Hofer, of Cincinnati, which in important as containing anew fact, and as proving that the purpose of the. Administration on this subject of naturallastiun is not anew thing ; : bat is the:reel:tit of the settled policy of Mr. Bu chanan. I copy-from Mr. Botte's second letter in reply to Beoretary Cam, the following extraor: dinary development: • This le no new cintenilon the Se?rettry:,; is one upon whieh`be bee given an opinion beffire: _I have had planed in my hands a aorrespondenee ,betvreen It gentleman of this oity.and the kapartr) -mantel 'State ' whirls' tenloin, in which the aoo• Woe of 040 Le Clare /otter. is Odrallood,,not, mi a matter of banded, for then theta was "tto war ssic, toting not as in a case where the liability existed atlhe time of einigratiOnaor here the .pertr had , ensterated four years before he was liable to be °ailed On fOr military service-*and yet he was de-. flied the .protsetien or. the ,gloyerament, ,tad was told that liepassmort or eartinoote of oltssenship did not entitle him to :the proteMlOW of , owir Government,' but only , requestoef the- , preho- , lien of foreign Goveromouto,Md, that hie notnrodi nation hero did not exempt itlin from the obliga tion to his native country, which to thie day bee deterred him from goieg abroad I submit the Obrrogpoodeodo without farther comment, and wait to soy what explanation will be offered by the se.' oratory for this letter, which was written it seems by his direction, and at the same time it will far nish an opportunity for" more twisting, and squirming on the part of those presses to es• cape the responsibility , alreadY'reating open the Administration of their seleotion or of that which they are disposed to rapport. Anti M. 'terra. No. 51 Llamas. ernes". Haw YORK, 11th March, 1858. Hon Jams Cass, Boo's! State, Washington, D., a, Dean tirs. ! The guestion - has been'asked me, by party who wishes to visit his native piece, nano vor, Germany, whether he would not be protected by a passport from the U. S Government, be be ing a citizen of the UnHid States: having become se more than three years ago. He left Hanover when be'was but ',Wools years of age, and hasp. aided in the United, States ever since. He boa been told that if he returned to Hanover he would be subject either to military duty or to the pay ment of a fine, as hie Government would have had a claim upon him for military duty bad be re mained, in Hanover' till he atrived at the age of twenty. , The party towboat I refer is anxious to visit his parents and remain with - them rishbrt Hite; but until he feels confidentor being able to do so Without molestationyhe his - dative land. - ' ' : I must beg leave, therefore, to trouble your de. pertinent for its views upon the subject. I see no reason why an American passport should net pro tut- him is well and as fully in Hanover aa in any Other pert of Purope. ,1121 have the honor to be, very respeedfulii, Pier 'obedient servant. R. H G. ....._Bsranntarar op STATE. WaSUISIOTONII6th-Ara174108583 , To R. H. (I , Rwl New York. DEAR Sift : Your letter of, the 11th instant has been received. -In reply,l'aut directed to inform yea that a passport is a mere eertiffeate of citizen • ship, which requests foreign Governments to give sal lawful aid and protection to Its bearer: - It' does not exempt him from any obligation or penalty which he may have incurred to the Go rernment of his native country prior to his mita 'lineation, if he should voluntarily repair thither. AM, sir, your obedient servant, - JOHN, APPLETON, Assistant Secretary. The initials only ,of the gentleman who wrote to the department are given, at his own request. The Washington Constitution, alias Union, of this morning, contains the following significant allusion to the recent, affectionate reconailietion between Hon. Wont J. Walker and Hon. James Buchanan. It Is olear from this authoritative an• nonneement, whioh appears under the head of the Administration organ, that the peace which has been declared between the high contracting par. Übe is intended to-be lasting and perpetual. lam now, more than ever, convinted that the President intends to lay down his arms and publicly confess that his war upon Governor Walker, Frederick P. Stanton, Stephen A. Dangles, and others, wee a most aoandaloue and infamous crusade. How many more are ready to come in and accept the 'terms now so freely offered ? "How. ROBIIRT J. WALICaIt —Within a few days wo have observed that several name have alluded to the reconeiliatina 'whlott hag recently taken place between the President and the Bea. Robert J. Walker, and have sought by innendo to make it appear that the renewal of friendly intercourse between these gentlemen was the result of certain conditions and °ones:adonis. We know that such an inference is utterly untrue ; and that white the President Is deeply gratified that amicable rela tions with his valued friend and former colleague are restored, no terms were made and no political concessions of any kind were proposed or agreed to, either by Mr. Walker or himself." Tee Richmond Enquirer continuos boldly to play its cards in,favor of Henry A Wise for the Presidency. In the number which has just been received here, I And a strong bid made for the Dickinson herds of Now York, which may be regarded as a slap in the face to the Seymour wing of the eerty in that State, and a tub to the whale of Bennett, of the New York Herald. : THE LATEST INIE W 1.• BY TELEGRAPH. Washington Affairs. WASIIIVOTOS. JUDO 24 —Lord Napier, In a private letter, received by the beet arrival from Morons, nue be does pokantielpate any movement fu the Woman* body which will mend him to a poet different f.om that at the flagne, which he expecte to teeth in July. A report hie for some time been torrent that eon, mender Maury la to be detached from the Nation,' Observatory Those beet aequalnted with the sub) et ray that It ibis shoed tate plate it wonhl be with the view to place him in soave satiric. as a commaader. In which rapacity he bas net served slime his elevation to that rank, and that without Inch serviee„he would not be lii the line of further promotion. Opt. lIIIVINOO4I 'Commander Dabigreen, and Lieut. W. L. Maury, have been appointed by the Navy Depart ment to a beard to rear molt ent‘ll drearner ae tri‘r be lamented The trial will commotion to morrow at the Webehington Arsenal. . WABUISOTON, Ante —Tbe War Department hes Issued general orders with the view of enforoing the greater porid ble mine* in tho military service, espe claily lie to the conreysnoe and dletribritton of eripplles. No buildings are to be 'rooted, nor any extraordinary exponre Inoorred except by authority of the War De partment, end no persona shall be hired for purposes imm•dtatety connected w th the troops eXoepting the necessary gulden and interpreters. All Wed persona not attborfsee by the tow of three orders WIII be forth•ith discharged. and the servicea, if eel:Weary, be perforried by the enlisted 'men. The reaelp's Into the Treasury lest week were $1,200 000. The, drefle Issued were $1,421,000. The amount gubject to draft to 51;016,000, Another Slaver Seized. New Yoe ¢ , J une 24 =An arrive' Millie tort motto having mien on Slay 26. in lit 6 20, long. 26 SO, the bark Ardonnea, bound for New York, in charge of a mine crew from the TT B. ship Harlan. The vessel had been seized on anapieton of being engeged to the alive trade. From Santa Fe. Sr Lcute June 24 —The emits Po mail has arrlced at Independence with dates to the 611 Net, The lenotmatio Oonvention was to meet at Alba guanine on The 7th lust. It was expected that Mr Utter, will be the nominee f r rebection to Congress it he Oppoeltion talk of nominating Colonel fit. Vraln. lowa Politics—Republican Nominations Ilhaeleoros, lowa, ,Ttolit 24 —The Republican State Ow:mention, which met at tea Moines on the 224 'net t nominated the following ticket: For Governor—B.l. Kirkwood. Lieutenant Governor—t 4 B. Enkal. Judges of the Eupreme -Binh—L. P. Lowe, D Stoektou c and Cobbe B a ld w i n Iteeolutioni condemning the Oist.nalaraliestion let ter, the slave trade, and the Onteseohuaette amendment wore plastid. Another Death Irian the "National Hotel Hisettse.” Ottatlentnettan, .Tnne 21.—R00.D F. Dob'son ei-mdultier of - Ceagr ea trent thin district, died herd to day tram the diaewtp whioh h 9 onntmetsd et tea Ne• tlonal hotel, In * Waahing , on, in the spring' r 1851. The Expected Steamer Nova Scotia. ay.:naval. ;nee 24 —The steamship Noes. Beebe. cot. Doing 'oonattlered dne at Farther _Point before to.mor., row, the telegraph Imo her been elcaed for the night . Her ;Edelen en.ll be tour dare toter. ' New liampshire Logieletnve. - RE® VIRBONAI. LlBEtlitY B LL INDXI/1311BT POS AWED c 9 N O OBBI N EL, June 24 —ls the, UM, t .4ey. the further seuelderstiou of the persousl•lbqrly 1 t I wti indrflottely t , setk,ose I by s sots if 2 ' l 7 .4 S in, 14 Dips. The I,igteletteti Witt sapuu - ou to•mortgo, • rgN,CITY. AKILFBNICITITEI T 1316 IMIAIN73. ' Ws -& 01.mit s Azallt-6TIIIIY Tax&ta® Ditle,an&lfogllah Opera. tabDoxfOcni's Giiirine.-6sietitions from Ploys, Gams from Opera', Pantsmimes, Dsziolmi, and 81 , 38 1 . K. PilimstrLyearis Ao.t.marr OF VIM JINN AI2I.—XX bibltfou of paintings and atsituari. Tim Raman on or Ortinz.---Two young men, giving the names of Henry Johnson and William Harris, were committed by Alderman Matter yea ; terday morning, on the charge of shoplifting. It appears that a day or two ago they _ stepped into the hardware store of Marne. Langstrath, b Co-, in Market street, and examined, some,ent.. lery on the pretence of purchasing it Sam after their departure a lot• of fine reeked knives was mimed. Suspicion was directed to-those "youag men, and when tbeyoalled in the next morning' to praotice the same game, the Lpreprietor quietly slipped around to the Central Station and gave information to the Mama. Marshal Blackburn and Mr. McGrath, of the city telegraph 'tattoo, went to the store, arrested the men, and handed. them overto Dateetives Franklin and Sohlemm. Who proceeded to work. -- up • the case. 'Oa the person of one of them •was found 's! re ceipt of Harndem's Faeroes CepunariY, • cc' knowledging the „trinsinissfort of ' a package of goods to &Imlay InNe» York MY. A'mes sage was inetantly sent to - New York 'With orders to stop the deli Very, of the boa and 'to Tatum it to Philadelphia ; .The box was reamed and received by Officer Franklin, *ha opened it and fond a lot of goods to ,themairte of about $l5O, Imam:Medi) , Stolen. The goods consisted of diver: forks, floe table cutlerycooprbe, pooketbooks,. cowing silk, and a large number of very superior pocket-knives, 'fixed up in'paekages.rWy _for, sale. 'Fart of the I cutlery was Identified belonging. tvaleasts. Field, Larigetrethrd Co.' • When arrested, Jobneen feigned f the indignant, and talked of,hts' character and positionmost Pa theticelly. Finding that dodge would not work, be and hirroirmrade resigned themeelves• to , tbeir fate, and entertained their captors,- in the de Motive cilloe, with a minute and' intereetinir his tory of their exploits. Harris, the elder' of the two, is about twenty• Ave yeirtiof 'ego, well dressed, dark complexion, and sharp eye s ,; Johnsen, who did the most of .the tailtiegole &boat, tweify one year, of ago,_ rather small, very dark features, and droned in the bighist foal:don: By the way., we I have often noticed,- when ;looking, sorer the "Rogues' Gallery, that the persons occupying it, when taken, were dreesed -the latest:mad meet Approved style. Gleagary bats and Mornhf caps, -garrote collate- and 'Sentry coats, hats -with - short rims, hate with long rime, and bats with cell-attn. hintlega;litegantermstseettetetned.fleldrarkerteli7r !all - figure in the collection of light angered gentle men that adorn the walls of the detective (Moe. Harris and Johnson were not exceptions to the rule. On the contrary, ' , they Sported beat/Wel jewelry, oeptiyating ,apparel, end smelted high priced cigars, through a, high t prlinid Meerschaum, with a transmatent, &Mbar lac, aid colored with the desirable saffron our cltytexattiatteri smoke so hard to attain. The story of these young men's lives is an inter esting and a strange one. Originally front New York, they started in, the career of At'ekednesa, when-mere boys, travelled; all over the Vaien,.end being apt at their business made large stakes, lived fest, and„spent " Young Men in years they arenld Men Ma: variance'. They freely eauvaised, In the course of their conversation, the character of the different States they bad vialted; and gave touch aralnablerinformatlon 'cm' to "the araitimes of • tbe oonntry yielding the beet returns.. The Sinth viae a very floe field, many goodatakesvreretpade, bid 'it wag very dangerous, the people "Ilked„to" shoot": A pistol or a noose - wait the general, pun- Jahment administered to travelling thieves by the. 'excitable people who live Millie southern Atlantic border. The Mississippi _river, and the Slates lining, it, as far up Ate Missouri, wore regarded as eireellent 'plaoett to mirk - In ' .thmigh at "drabs the gbod people of..that regirovtook. to Judger Lynch" when an unfortunate xoniff" happened to fall in their As to. the Weet—jorra, Illinois, Talents, Ohio,' and,alorit theline of, the greet Western - railroads, there was some little bushing! if) 'll:4;:dorif,-,note. withstanding the large number of Weitera de. teotives Who lay - in that region- •We were sorry. to hear snob a bad account of the Western °Moors as Mr • Johnson gave. They were cinlok et arrest ing, but were easily managed, it the prisoners bad any Money If be was peer, be_ wag oonikied,' with all the ceremony of offended:jostles, If be had Dradtra good haul,he was relieved pf- a large portion of hie gains, furnished with enough to pay, expenses cut of town; and ordered to-go. •Be 800. °wilfully did this plan -work, that Johnson and Harris were amazed when a 'liberal "offer'for their freedom waa refused.Ah,",eral the restatrisa, with mob bitterness , and =O4 profanity thin we would like to print, " we were getting along Ant. rate, and doing a splendid baleen, until we struck this hole " This unintentional compliment to the present force Speaks more then oottli be'said in a pretty long item. , , - ; A true bill was found against the d rfendante by the Grand Jury, and they will here a trial at an early date. While we rejoice at the prosperd, of two sash expert- and, .professional thieves,-as thbae• then appear to be, being removed front society , : we cannot but regret the necessity which maids them to prison. - ASOIOIIREs so Intelligent - 7 4 f- one:third of the ingenitty evil:teed in plundering the hitt , sane of this country bad been 'devoted to an honest milling, tt, career of promrty,and,fortnee. would have been theirs. There to a strange laser nation about the• life of a profeasianil thief that'd attraots many unthinking and unprincipled Youth, but when we remember the inevitable fate that overtakes- Oren. the most renantatfal, the ro mance of rascality loses its illusion, and the hall, Gee of Justice possess additimmtpeater. : . . , ANNUAL REAATTA.-1410 spring - rega tta of the Sebuyikill Navy will come-off to day. and should the weather prove favorable, will doubtless be witnessed by a large crowd of the friends of the parties who compose the; &ewe of the different barges„For some time past unusual intermitted. itotivity hero b een displayed by_ aka; 'loyeere f and very nuirbrollinfret6tiing'the - boats • that hare been entered for the contest keve.beerrroWed ever that portion of the river intended for the race course • so that the rowers are in excellent train-, log and will doubtless perform most admirably. These racist will come off at the hours of. 3, 4, and_ 5 o'olook in the afternoon The first will be by skeleton boats and the. second' by six-oared rig gers, for which the Atlanta, Lucifer, and Intrepid have entered. The third race will be by barges. For this the following clubs have entered "Quaker City Barge Club,” with their boat Cygnet —n-Bacheler'e Barge Club," with their beautiful boat Iris—and the " Independent," with their boat Whisper. The signal for starting will be the firing of a pistol by the commodore They will start from Further Rook, on this side of Girard Avenue Bridge, and will proceed tr Columbia Bridge and return. The winning, clubs will be presented with a set of liege. PASSENGER RalthioA_DS.—The work of lay log the track on the Chestnut and Walnut street Railroad is progressini very rapidly. The work men are engaged on Walnut-street. It Is antral. pated that the read will be finished in the course of a few weeks. When the proposition to build a bridge across the Schuylkill, - at Chestnut street, passes, Council as it will pass in the souses of a few days, we will in all probability hire two roads to West Philadelphia As far as pleasant riding is concerned, Chestnut and Walnut streets are as much superior to Market street as a sharp knife is to one filled with notches. CELEBILLTION.—Wo are informed by a cor reepondent that the Friendship Fire Company, toasted in Third street. above Brown, intend cele brating the coming anniversary of National Inds pendembe in an appropriate manner. At nine o'olook in the morning they will be presented with a beautiful Amettean flag, in behalf of the ladies residing in the vioinity of their house Cannon will be tired from the base Of the cupola every half hour during the day, and in the eve ning the house will be brilliantly illuminated. A bend of musk wilt also perform in the cupola from seven to ten o'clock in the evening. ROBBICII.Ir.—Two brothers, named John and Thomas Mollvain, had a hearing before Alderman Freeman yesterday morning, on the charge of robbing the store of Mr. Samuel Cummings, at No. 202 Union street, in the Fifth ward. They are alleged to have stdon thirty del. tars in money, a revolving pistol, and toverarother articles of value. When arrested by neer Stew art at Sixth and Walnut streets, some of the pro perly was found in their possession. One of the brothers was in the employ of Mr. Cummings. They were held to answer the charge at court. INDSPSNDS.NT 01? COUNClLS.—Friendship Fire Company, located in 'Third street, above Brown, intend celebrating the owning anniversary of National ladependenee In their own way. At 8 o'clock in the morning they will be presented With a beautiful American flag, in behalf of the ladies residing in the viololty of their house. Cannon will be fired from the base of the cupola every half hour during the day, and in the evening the house will he illuminated. A band of trut° will perform in the cupola from 7 to 10 o'clock in the evening. LAST DAY OP TI Min.—The Fair held at Ja3ne's Hall tiering the neat week, under the atti vices of the Washington .114 mnment As , oaiation, haa teen complete spaces°. The object is ens well worthy the consideration of our eittsens, std the inducements held ow fOr visiting the Fair of Ouch's eharaoter, that we feel assured that many will avail themselves of this means.of oontribot• ley to the erection of a monument to him Who was " first to reams, first in war, and first in the hearts of his countrymen." The Fair will close this evening. OCCASIONAL FIRE YESTERDAY MORNING.—At an early hcoir yesterday au alarm cf fire proceeded from a large building, in the rear of the gun store of Mr George IC Tryon, No 220 North Second street. The fire originated in an apartment upon the list door, occupied by Gray dt Frank, refiners of gold smiths' sweepings, and caused about $3OO worth of o f damage. The ate is very large. and surround ed by 'ray combu e property The flames ori ginated from afu oe, which was built in close coated with the MA. THE - SEVENTH &anon of the Board of Sohool Direotore have elected Thomas Allison a member of the Board of Controllers. A special meeting of the Board of Controllers will be held on next Tuesday, the 23:h instant, in the Con troller's chamber, Athenaeum, at four o'clock in the afternoon. DROWNED.—Petor O'Rourke, aged eigbt years, while playing at IVilliatn.etreet whorl in the Nineteenth ward, on Thursday evening, fell overboard into the Delaware, and was drowned. His body wan recovered at an early hour yesterday morning,.and conveyed to the residence of his inmate The coroner held an inquest. Rosner. me Mora —An unnatural young ster, named litiohael Bradley, was taken before, Alderman Shoemakeryesterday, and charged with stealing the sum of twenty dollars from hie Mo ther. After a hearing, the alderman ifeht the adept in youthful depravity to the of Re fume. ID AN ag g nus 0R0891NG..--‘ 4 A. sublicriber ". asks us to remind the Arch•street and Fairmount Passenger Railroad Company that the crossing at Twenty seoond and Arch is in a very dangerous condition. A hint is aufficlent,as, of course, it will be repaired— FLAG FRESENTATIONi-=-Thiti ladiMi of Siring Garden deeign preserithig the• members of the Friendship Engine Company with a magnificent silk Amer:eat flag. on the taming cf the 4th of July, and halo ibleoted%Mr. William' Dunn to re present the wishei:of the donors on the ocoasion THE CASE OlUldOSllZA,l,COneldPfable sym- ; p‘thy has been excited for this young Man now 1 Oordlood. In Moyamensing on a °tinge of homiclee. • We loarh that a purse has been made up In order to pay °eines] to conduct his detence. OorieNalt. FENNER held an inquest on the body of a matt named Moßenna, who had died very suddenly on Thursday in the d ztb ward, at a hones No 138 Meadow:rot. Verd:ot ofdeeili tom natural *a atm FINANcIitkAND/Argitils - kitith. , rlhe 06,0 y noiiii.--,:,_ • - •,- iiiriafii.PlWVeire 141840. Almost all ^ shielre to.day were dni"andlo ' earY7olty and State loans were-a shade --better.• flatiwissa and Rimini Y.aliroad Aimee went down= lower, declining If td „X , One 'small, eels_ of Reading. Railrewl-ntoelf was - made et2l)( _ Nothing was dOne. 'in the other fantiui. The money market ii gate Settled at the rites-we have quoted all the' wish. yiret-elass.P•eor_..ells e fast aa it appears on the market at 7 to tgi.ger omit Good single name paper gas at 8. fessaad else's noted vary from to to 18 per cent. The payment of the in - • target on the city loans due July let roe whist' our . Cannella made previslon'yeaterdey, can Maly fall to make the market still more eaey:. '' -. The Now York State loan of $356 000 w ee awarded yeateidayost Albany. and at in average of niWut 101.11. . The suceeiefril bidders were : • Thomas:le ;Bios., of Now York 260.000 at 101.27 100 *Met 101.11: - n sr ..... .4., 003 at 100116 ;1013 COO et 10101 - Williamsburg Oily R ... ank.... ...... - ..• 25 Oftstlll.o6.s. r• John Sill . 20.000 0103 91 .. -...” . 25 Meat 100-96 The eggregate amount of b'de wee oaf", 8660000 ..,. We cordially endorse every word of What tie - Ledger soya about the Camden and 'Atlantic Itellr'oed in the following extract, and urge upon the new board the adoption of the suggestion without deosy.: .. The new, direotora - loans well - known - ti "the iutilie, will MI strength to the managerrost, and, give:psintrance to the public that theroad.will be road. se Mildest, ea 'pant : " b'e. fol N. Broadhead will no doubt be re;elietid.giest, dent of the oomparry at the find meeting of the,diree. tent Thorn le Paeans - thbri In be +Ade& IZIo the present, 'molten! management of the road to aceommedat. ail (dames of citiz me requiring the advantages ot.eea air,. - end that lien fiagiErladhp , mering train - torrid late &why evening ben from the' share Mimi pmearc t , z from their inability to Inge pate of two &qui, aid unit ble , t o Incur, Alre EXpenitebr tan Illetill are now shut out from WM Privileges and plea:Mies of the beartr,'?r. .-.. The Shoe and Leather IT-porter Avg of the - i i hila. delphia boot and elm Minket. Ch it thegrasping of Western trade the miming - isitot has decidedly ha. proved dariug the week, and a much better feeling is 1 meutfeet. though pbbere, to all slireotione. sot. with Monk esul , on. Illannfaelmere era moving on gradually, ant a fair amount of work Is now bens made. Ohara are being tilled - from , city,' lbtekra.arnithe demand for' „. , . , good workiiistla larger that recently. , ~ . Track laying on the southern terminus of the nuts. slept and Tennessee Railroad her recommenced, and will oontinize'rwithoitthifirrigifoic guitilliftikotiir Wen - - . ~ for huilnees as far si tiro Toitkensf , river': a distirr'es o!' seventy- two miles frMst Alemphis,on or abouttke first day of °Mahar, and, In all probability, Lathe 0 striatns: I depot, a 'dietaries of eight mfies beyondhe - rimie r by , .... the latof shivemher. The with* reel is:ender contract, to be completed by the Snit day-of January, 186 t T he reoelpteor tide:road thylKeight ino - iatini t efng Nay 31ati.18.59, artionnted iii gm obi 88: , - The following are the latest dnanotel advice( hem II ea- Intact...so nnd'r date of Inns 91; A tolerably fakinqttlyy Sea righted ; forneyeine• the depirinia of the coati steamer of the Rotht testae, but the rites are unclianged,'sey gal% - 1 1 0 ma - pe r month on collateral. gold duet Is coming in quite briskly. showing that the lai:lessor the spring was ibe real came of the sassdlesee of. the retwiptit i gniviorm li tliehniddie of the decent manth: , , .. In bireloso dollars, the' only Italy ; yripo' Aid was g14,- tmo at 8 per omit premium, The 5Pa.c.0f.,554 life Deasy - reales bad been or will bo shipped 14 Ott,tuusot Ifen;. aan 114.0114 - C The iineipstehisWill tali iiiiiiig ill ihw mirolus now lying own , : >,':' i I. - --; ', r - "• .." . The following are the ctirreetgeottllo9l for elirMli, dementia egeblnge; fr..e.; ai iningebedl li' Crock's, & G,., bankers, No. 40 South Third Streit:. • . '-' - "' ' .fild Amer. li D 01... 1 04); 'Old 'American Geld- 6 i., '.,.... hi , r.,. 1 02* Soyereognit..•.4 Wield ta • noantek 'Dotbiri."...;.. 'I 07 Napoleons S ai6 filmdom's 1F0Laci.....1 itmg Ten Thelma. 7 ES Beath Ant, it ....1 Tan Tbalers.Pmis,.. 8 ai., l'iverfrano pieces:... 01 ien Guilders'' -S 98 Garman Orovias.f....l 08 - - ifip a rilak 1k0nb1005m,16,24 ', \ Trade& Crowns 110 IPitrlot - • is ..I5 00 si. York Ix per to -XisrerttebergAlmilh36o9ooo. Norton El.. par to 1 . 10 die . Olankurati ,do . ..:L tolt‘t,' Baltimore _snag.— X die Lanindlie . do - -I &IX , Rlotonortd":du „; liter% tlia.rit touts do Vi 01.% , g Cfnerlestest do 14 ex ale Chicago ,do 2.Xtogfg t.„ lievsnitala 'do to 1 die. Olseetind - ; - Otr.. "i 'XV , t - Kobl'e de %to 1 dia.iNaatnrille ' - de -- -* - 1 - li en N Orleans '. du ita - INAULlNintrylibr. ,:do - -;:. :14-ls LIED we:Rasura. '- : Biiiiiie - ' - - I' -'• -, -:--,' Eliiiiiie .-- --- . 1 „ 160 acres - 87 1 les um - - 85 150 do . ,-" = " ,-- 721120 `do„. . ..4:','.,. 4 :”: 74 89 do `-;- -- - -- St '5O - do - 84 49 do,: - 100 40- do ..... '- -4,,, 1 C 6.- `The following la the amount ..al coal tremporterl , on. the thilidelphia _end Reading Relireed•detlagf tie week ending Thiiiiihiy, Juna.23.lBfi9l ..,, _ _, _ „.....- ~_ Prom Pod Ciebon - ' . 1.6".-1114; .1V2417' -" Pottsville 272342 lilohaylklll Haven 32.007 le " -Auburn . 5, Port-Oilliton • "" Total for the wreak 735,1211 rxerttraely Ws year - - T4174.7.1te . Total - - ' -111211 t OS To flame time last , • T following in the Amount of soar transported on the Beboyl6l,ll Itiohrstiori, for the week ending Ttriard diy, Jane 21, 1864: - - - - - ; , l'2tas. CNC irom PorVOattOrk " • "":11 209 00 ". ... - .1:019 00 u Schuylkill Haven 18,042 10 u Port Clinton - 2EOI 00 Total for walik. - 44,751-10 l!roriostily tkla year 405,297 16 Total. -.- - 443,5005 - - - . . ..........____ 1"o Jame thus but year....,, 321,445 15 - ' The felbiwrisifiiithleibebt ',et .tbi, Vikiiiii_vall e* cps) trader, for the weak enabsii taint 111:..inii..fei".14" 68460111, /I comparedwith Isat year t ~- •,, ~. -' • • Wee - &um, 11kt:3174118y coal CocePeny....l.lB9 13 . 14 541 13 Lan year - ' - - 2,16112 ssmtpe =M!!!!!!!!!!! l_ 03 43A85 as 1187 04, - 12,182 17 Short Mountain Mines Lest year. Total amouot Lan year Decrease 407 Tuaregs. 2,211 12 '1 . 115e lost report of the Trevortoo coil trod, follows : Boa week eliding Jae. 18 - 8 294 07 Prevlooely 48 964 18- Total' 60,249 05 The 81dpi:teats of coal over the /Wetland= inn Broad Top Mountain italiroad, for the week ending Wednesday, Jane 44, 1869. mounted to .4. 4140 tons Previously. We year 65,438'' Total eines Jan. 1 . To moan One teat sear 38,187 Increase ]9591 " 21/-1LAD52.21116 BTU= .E. 1.02.228.11 a►L7B, June 24, 1822. _ 1111.011.111 D MAILI/r. Naomi. &op., 'AII[•NdiZ.N7OOI, AID IIIxiMLNOZ szoratos, sowzawar: gonna:was' AID 011.2881178 Mtg. //Re 100 Poona Be.. cash 93% 1 5 00 do 90k 990 Cdty 6..2 oto O&P 907( 600 do 98% 1410 do RR O&E' 98,16 403 - do. AMP 031 1 2000 do FRR..‘. 96X 1000 do sox r oo on N0.....11 04 1000 Ecoo °anal 6a... as 2000 Road R 6J, 186... 78 71.01 do '70.. 81 4000 do. be 81 BOARD. • t Pato& 25% 10 6112•11111 R 68 16 -•- 68 10 do '5B 6 48 68 4 2 1 .288 6%. B Belt 21. 10 Oonalll4'B Dt.. 26 2 Own& koi 11.2d0.1 0 1M 5 - d 0.... ... . . 1211( ' 100 Rienira R 66 7 25 Vatavlsam R 47t 60 Rest abirn 21,V BMTWBEtti BOARIM 1000 Bead B Be 13.. .73 50 .111coire B 7 4600 Bantaßed Top fa 65 , 11100 ND BOARD. IWO City 6s, B on 2000 Lehlet Nat ft.— 94g 400 do • 110 M 2 Oons-Rx.. Bmik. 9t l c 600 2d3,3d et B To.: 93 6 61orth Oat, pref .lo9 1900111 min Ut m Ts . TO oLoon4c4 PRIODB-DULL 814 soot .6fd. ALSO. 17 8 68 Mt 1 033 Bahl rs Mors. 8 9 1%114 emlnoff.... 98X 98% " Fret IN as /1 In ed.. 86) 96& " Into 6. 76 •71 " Now In off 1003001.• Wmspn&llm 8 63 1 ‘ .7 Penns 6e 9.134 94){ "le lit wits..:7o" 71 - Beading li 203 21 • "M. 45 47 " bd5 , 10.... 80X 811( 1,94 WOMB.. 103{ 10%. '. mt es ) 44 in 96 WOW& Nay. 48 48ye " do 3 86 7231 78 1 Poona R 8% 8 Penns B -89 X 19141 " 60 - - 04% 64g "24m es ..... 87 88 "10s 89 90 Mar Ososl Clan. •6834 65 Ostawists R.... 4% 5 "pm! 108,X109% " let nil 841 . 61 62 NW Slav On , 82.,,99 71 24 &Sd fit E.... 46 47 'change, June 24. sOAID. 42000 Minroarl 60 SAKI/00 Mith Cent It t6O 28X 100 1 Marlon* 3d mt 76 2( 0 do 4703 , .1i 20 Bk I f Commons 100 MO do *3O 313** 50 Fulfil* Mail 3 672( 260 OM & Oble It 6310 115 N Y Centred 73,4 240 do 130 53 301 Harlem It Trot 343, 10 1114 1 , IV& Nls - 81( 300 do ied HI 100 Stith illnst , 27% 100 Reading It 180 42% 400 do . 430 26 1000 do b 604111 190 111110014 Cent 11 691; 100 do KO 42 140 Clay & Tot It 46025 400 do 46041% 100 Obio &HI 11 53069 100 do 42 100 do 53% 100 . do 41% 100 - do: 681( THE MARKETS intros —There Is no change to note to either Pots or Pearls, otiose remalnlng steady at 16 25045.31,y for Pots, and $l5 31.3 i for Pearls, With Wei of 75 bole of the to na or. GRAIN —"Wheat le doll and declining. with a.lea of 6 000 tot at $l. 81 for White Kentucky, $1.40 for n 124 Illinola, $l.BO f•r new Amber Georgia. SI 6.1 for mixer Southern. Corn le quiet, with salon of 10 000 btl Wratern m i xed at 80a836; yellow Wee'ern at Bt'; round do at 81B84e. Bye le dull. Barley' la 0 Oa are dull. at 4204413 for Southern Penneryirania and Jersey. and amber , for State, Canada, aid Western. - noon =The market for etatWimid Western Voir is unchanged for andiron and good fresh ground but heavy and So lower tar inferior ;Emden. with fair re otdpte and Baler• of $,200 this at $5 756,6 for empetflota State; 103 15m640 for txtra do ; . 3.5 80e6 10 for sorer flue Western; $6 25e6 75 for extra do, and $6 tOrtd 00 for extra brands round hoop Ohio. touthern Pkur in noel:lanced with aloe of 900 halo at $5 76mr SG for mixed to good, and $7.4049 for extra bleat. t aovtmo:m-I'o - k Is dull and heavy, wit`a Baled of 100 bb cat $l6 BIA' fop Mess, and SIBSQ for eIIIII.P. Beet In quint and steady, with eaten of .100 bblo. at 80 50 MT for Country Prime. $BO9 25 for do. Meta. sloo L 3 25 for repacksa Chicago, and 616 60 for extra iliac". Ba. con and Cut Nests are heavy and dull at 03i rano for SbOulder. and TX 4s01( for lianas. Lard ie quiet, with sales of 100 bbla at 1014'01110. Butter and Cheese me Unchanged. la quiet with. email nine at 26X0. Markets by Telegraph. OINOINNAT/, June 24 —Floor ie held more firmly at 046 xQ.. W biekey firm &VOX. Ptovbdeall &M. beelNedd, June 24.-Bsles of Cotton for the reek 040 bates The market aimed-quiet, the receipts for the week wrre 1,500 Mies, Kelton 4,760 for the ride week lest yeer; the exports for the week lore been WOO balm: The stook to port is now 24,000 bales .• °EARL/MON, 'nee 24 —gale, of Cotton for the reek 2,900 bielee with a decline of acing, mostly for inferior qualities: better grade. are Unchanged itilfdling fair closed at 12,3 The moot 10 pert It 24 590 babe BSLTIIt R 0 JCICB 21 —roue is dull; Howard street and Ohio breeds ore held at $7, but there have been no soles r.t that price. Wheat unchanged. Corn is dull; white sod yellow „750804. bacon firm; skits 58)(c. beers Pork id quoted at $1725 Whilkey dull ; Ohio, 28s. _ Municipal Election In Norfolk. Noitrom, lane 24 —The election for Mayor has re• nulled In Mr. Fergoson, the Opposition candidate, being oleoted by rico majotity over Mr. Lomb, (Democrat), the grestnt Urovakeut- The g1i.5 4 4 0 4 Mai - • - _ 701 784 14 91714 889916 610 01 - - 11,102 OS ,3,047 01 - 97 832 18 .8,484 34 '35,191 08
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