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' ..„.• -.-.:.- - :'.: , -1 , 141.., , ,,yi ,:i---:I.-0.6.iforc 'y,-,artiglintlir.:,l7.,T.•^7,-„,-...,...oilititiANNo,:: :': '::ll47o: ' , A iN k t fZ ilb # l _,L.,,,,. ll : 4 - t t l T:7c . "* l74 '-;''"-!, i•-•••=f 7 ' - 4;;;;C44-a„ Oli -:-.''''(:' ''''Etigiehiffaf• '-' . *- ''•.{ 4o -:../41-k4.41: 1:4 ,1- , : 119 0 . 111*. tt,,, ~1,.,i :' 4 - 7r-.4' A r", , i-c ,4 --,,,,,-,-,----. ,, if,t'.',;-f ,".... --;._,:?-4;: - .4,1, - A, lkj , : - ,. " 0, , ,,ti... - ~:, .1 . i i ,; y: .. ... F ,,,,..,,,),-1 -,: . 12,- , y, ),- , :.,, ~.: I, '-1 , i ~.., ..:, .z.17!1. 1- 41F:tialijk - V - SH Ct LVO AZIr I3- . '-;.` '::- - - ,•tltriZt .1?,.44 ,2 i,Tii:50 r 1, --:' -' ,:-., V %'', , ~, 5'01 : : r, .1 i ~ ~, 1 _,„,,,,,, - , -ii,* , :.1 1 .4M,r,r,....r:, .-...t.„ , r ,, ...,_, , ,. , , ''')- „, '.., ',. ~ •.: y ri,l - .;.,i;:,,,i4k , ''lr 1:,, :; - t:.'l',. - ,:•,- , 2 1 .A.N 1) . - :, , , , - -.1.,. 5 i - AGAN ~ .,1.:. ,, ',.: -,::0--4ETT.,,,r GAIRAMEENTEL REEMI 1010031EV11119.111: ADL4OIIO/1 , 4 .• ice` •oPER ciobtOp ••••.• ~, t , - ' -11,03'11431•NT5 -- 4ND .•licaNntUtit:-. .1-;„;-14.. A . , •••• , , -,,:. t, .: ••,.., • t„. • - ~ ....e.' ~,, ~-, 1 :, '•y?: -' ,7 . -, .- ''/ elrLiatitifilli TUE COITOPOEPOI.4ArI',ON:, ' - !To I.loooisiNii,baliaeli of akuspactstwigh LA 0 . .1 .:- ' .-,-:,5.'..,:."-!,,'i ,-- iik . iii - + ," Orii i i s' i ' a ke_J!i t''.i- 0 . . t . i.l - gt; , -,,t'l-.; -$ k-i .1...4:: - . ,, AIt.IIARGAIIII. IN - : . • . = i .. .., '' 7 }" 01.0, ( . 1 1!T., js • • i t - -:. • P$ i 0 P.C(X)*?? • • - • -- J,;: - FaNNOIi , I4biI:IOIAZITTLEi I " -... • . . 115.3. Vif-*,,1t.41 '.ll ', :K . -PI:101 - N i IS 1.„- : •,..- / -.‘" i:4oo.}(94 l o, l 4Z,i l ,TlOutri ,- -.., :: -- j , ~ ~ ,','•:-;' `''-: iiiiistiiiiit'siOali Eriitilit ''' LA Dlll9 , DEEM; TRltilfl2loB. 71 - -; NEW ' , GIOODEL 4 I ; ;.; LA S 714) Aul4 clounia. I '.O.4IO3I.MITIra!ALLS.: _ ‘: -_ MISTAADWIRIMOUNIIOI I II. , 1 . , i,;7049Pair10;140 11/APPEAL= b 11, , n = NPMALITY4IIIIS32I.IIM) .; TifilitaiS, AND' 007 "i .!••?, 1,42;*"A.-"P Etirjr4r4.-15 • sinIithaI,A4rD.ZEPATIL ; Co a rsii or ;Exeirrit*lD ors*liii ;; C1.071-113,,CLOrlsH10. MIZE ,CAASIMERES. fI arqiemmitotthe,abovio at Y. STEEL*AWS „ oNgigrittr pif..ead".-ninusia.rtriurzn warms fai • • • , , , ~.. , 1 - ,; : .4t, F.A.IidII4BBEMERES. 1 .-. .. ... f-- • i h i ty .:i i tr i soll Dieleable &lbw . 1 .., , , ~, ..:' :, ' 1.. ..' ' .'rrr. ..'''... , 7, 1'1410; and -' • ' - x i i , ~,: ' liii Alija 4136414 . • ~ - 1 , -- . • , .4...,,, A r.. 41 • K wilr.: ..•. , ~- ' ', MO% ''...‘ •- , ' y il ' ' a • attl , ht -.4:: J• gi+atil io r i -- r• s. ot.,„ ra se La , ' l ,l.a r lr i T.J l, F. 4. 111 . ‘ do .., . • lOilif 17 Isailli i ' 1 a t 4..,,,aiii elicits ~-,.%;........kite.40,g.i.,!... --••• 1 allawitioa it their AY! -- ' - r to . . " • Pl* - - :1 • Alime&ti iittVtaX,sert l ittikai. , • - i i - 11141/Ll - . "; kftlk i t a i. ..;;;;;IZi • - cy. 1 'IIIIACCAII•JE litarntagB;:, itterr : :: AJPituttrzfrtvao . Ltxce e r t ! ., - , ii i , ' '' ' - *Lma' Sty et named dale* ~_.,,, ~_, ..- 1 '.. 0 k l * 011111itiMOS. 16114 frill - VAL , ;.`,, -• p - ,.. 1,; ~. , •,„°, ~,--Al l- , , ?? 11 4 11 V IAT O rA" •"': • •., Vila iff5.0.11.11111 0 9rDEIMOBIFP11. ' ' '.." erAnutis sad ' Bordirnk hid - . ,' - f. )10 filtll i Man lidloool.l i , fi :h• ~ vsnirty. ~, 1 V...1= DiustA lit tioyellild NitailY, *s.--- i - Li ti* .- di -t. . , - 1 FW•lak liiiim 410. illipioNs. Wirt 'lid '''• i ill* • ' L4'4 Tap ark iI a 00)11111.M Oa •; , : , 4;,,, - .“1. MUM ' T -,, ag V., s“ '... •'' - 'VELIAPDRSSIii 000D8.-41111GALNEL; •..„; 6 1 1 irßomoeuirrkim t • .:41. :•-- - , .7 ; • _ • " /Nee Geode, °COS. o f zz. Pi11 . 111001 .., U OW' SEINE ./ • Agg 4 , PalivrAii FOUR 0- AND 1 i ' l 7 4riv lat i = r arro i lltiir A g 1 1 I .l' Ill" itro )i , 8 0 U. oit % -' ' '•-• - `: . ;i4 .- !'-•- "-!' ' lt.t. , ,' -1 .. zidANDNLL, IFOURTN AND ARCII NtrootsArill hava.thrOttri Yiik GaAs 117 DA .silvessAO NOtulArals "",qr i'l+ =ZEE 54. ,teak nigs. r t i arotortU pu nt tii irsow:a 1,41 ,vtiso i'd,',A:lo6lllllldlh f•=, :FAMILIES =WEEDING IN Till onteforpc td Swift Irsisillas at ,:!:_AlViat + 6 RIEK ,TALBEET ' G. • ROBERTS; er.; t--,IWPARI /LT 11R : ' • `r Phakiartet-"nat:1111-6,14.11.11.: -1 4 ,?3•3 7 -1, ,, ! . ; . 3 7 ,.. .01.41..3-0--A:„Ti r ! " . t3"d , ' P. 13 7.) • f'•,l 'LAW, 404 1 4T.Y. Oita Nat Potak, it ,31r3 'L2f ..= 0,1%, ' • : • .•3d-'4.1-s.l.llloll,atitThMllll4l6o6l. T., aot h r •- Jamit • te;4, • ,Mlolo4Pri 7tL,r40.4- - 4.114,44.0*' ? - ,':# - . 1 , 4 :;-:',i,•-',,1.•:.,_•:, Jll, 31; :, N i 4o - V'ESTINGO. ,~. -_-. WTI I===l V . Aw4ir OW M... 4;1- 6.4.4 +~~'l7kk7;4zY.fcSry°.i~'fi~~A"~~uFN ✓Y n.. 7: ~=:01:.-~~.1:va ~~ ~. , eorr .y r . - y . rrl t r C.,' !+ P; v' . _ __ _____ _ _ __ 1 ., ..V . :'''-4 -1,. ..m-'*' - ' l ' - ' ' . !on ~-- . 11, .11, , - i-;-; :; J, - 7.- i i - : , 1,• •;:-• , , -,-, 1 1 1: ;.--% i 0 . ' •. , J , ' - .- . - ,- ' . 1. •':- -- '"- 'i. .A''''''f I't / I, 4 o. l l::,lTorall , J9` , Ji , j . ."''Jj'''' 1,1 j , J , ..il _'. -, ::' . '1 '-, ' `7 . t ;1. , r: ' ., --‘' I 4. , 'tk 134 .• . ~.L .,, , i I ' i , /IA ~ ; ,::::,„14:- : 10. , ,q. it! .t . . 441.....'2 A ::: 1,. , , J., .t.,, t „',' J. ~' .. ' •' '' .. 11 , J.. J - ,•`,..- - ' . ..:.: _' 4 ,21'.' .., .).,.41.0.•;ii: !.- ~ ~.:, • .!- - . - .• , 1. ,' :,J i ' - - e t y .; i l- .. .. - - - ' .... I Et 1: JLJ 'qr . ' •• J . ,IJ J , • .-. I . y ..j ,- , r 0,.. ;Y . ... Oy ~ p k., „ . .•,.:.„.„..,,,,,,;•„..,. ~ y, N,, tk I ?„,,,,, A .,,,, ~ , ~ i - . .- „. .- , , I ~. 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' 249 --:- '- - ' ":' ''''-' -'.. .- ' -.' -„• , . -' ' ' ' ' '-' - - PHILADELPHIA;I :' ; , ...., .. „ , ...:;:i ; „A., , Two , ~..,• ,_. • ~., ,-,•., , ,„- . - PESDAY,, • IVIAY:'! 22 - ,'',l: 60. .. ...... . _ —........ r... ;-i •.i ~,,,,.;:,;::. t ,'cir'l i,•+s MEM =PIM Y~ :vii::-3 p~..,~i. by-=i 610'0DIEL'I `I ;;;;;';') , YNONNETO FOR LADIES: , • • - I :ff follipfize; i• 1 • Catißdir. ' '. 134 :!?m 1 6 " , 11 5 1, 9 1 i Asts l 3B,l BONNETS FOR PROMENADE ' - , somvirre , *o!t opEre4; L ' BONNETS FOR TRivkialtilo.` • I r. • "•• • - •,,BONNUTO.FOR ~N ONILTOOF STRAW: ' " '" NONNBTO OP blLlt " " . •: ,L1 1 9,74 4 KTi 63 4n.Y.- ' I :NONIKETO oRRAF. - , BONNETS AT ALL •pitioim"- • ; LINCOLN, WOOD, NICHOLN', , 443-ontpirrfttristtt.et;; TP,'OI , O4E Tgs, SEASONS•. - W. bitvg loadoinumaiii rednation in.prioes , " S • T A FAN OY:SONNETSf • aPBOSSI LACES, • FLOlSTAS,`eicani; ILLUSIONS, MAIM& i•Wslsao? w opm4lis almoiatifta 'took of Ale BLOOMER WWIIIs eljlirt IISBZOWn. Age. BLACK 'kirk SONNETS.' ! .STERN 'O9OIC Ige 'CHEBT - 14U'r Etreet: ri,10.4,6A fttigOki 'FLOWERS as••iami t oat the Wanes *foie 01 ; 71. _IMPORTATION OF 1 ;, "I'VRENCIH . rtiO`WEßki O 9 .ospg pc s", of qui, nOffs4 goods.qa d this lIIMBNEIB . ELORITION. stEitlys & .128 - 13111113TNIIT Street. F.RENO4 = FLO VV RIS. itiONTUERS: E S. JmrtoNnrd,• t , - 'A SPLENDID AtISOSTERNT. i 1 t/103: KENNEDY Na'749.CSFBTNUT,BatEET. timi!ETlNps. WHIG TO THE ARGEA'INLPCiItTATX CIARPETINGS. Sad 00ilimiliOst,foised sakt Tazo<ueg TAB•AUC.TIQN•B :IVeakaU 00r par AN . TUAZ ifTOOK .OF, 8li088EL8; AND TAPED CARPETS AUCTION - PRIOE4. -BAILY 'a 13ROTHE 06.10 4 011118 T h UT, STREET ==E9 ATTINGSI , MATTINGS . ! MATTI ti lllll. al t im ! d i mattin go, -v l4 ) i t l ” 4 10.114,6 oa t irs L. %tea 1 1 t SECO Br , ;.: . Ibov.SPRUCE. wen% lipusx-ruum,sno!G Gcoo)s: QURIMIOR RESILIGERATOIcB, S „ Moat Lasrpred anit.Dism linos AND aidt.446, ‘•• • I FOLPITTI4II Wrilute, issttil apsial' gas Carsits aad mauls'. 1 7i,E111,11ALL'S • HOUt32 11941NISHING: ivroßsi • Cll/ - FAT NUT, EITZKE7. •'igitatity a Ai; itodeiai yr Alas Aruk - MEW 11011 K ADTEUTISEMEIM. A UGUST BILMONT &AV ~ •'ANKER.S _1 asw 106E3 R *sr WU, of Croat to Tridlittors Or THE WOULD, - = -- • , inoramur eau , ' lioness. sinosaowni I • os _ ''AIX-1410/11tOtt. 'IIIAMILFORT. VIRIII I I NA. AB7O - 21pili CORIUM R'ONDS 8 :€l6.otiii,Niqr-• SPRING: tirrOdic 0141ININ(I , -•„C. SO NIERS & SON i i • " • • . NO.: 32 SOUTH FOURTH STRNET. •• • 1 , NEAR ORICSTNUT, Will dire out Oa bilasies of_ thew i elegant f ,BV;RXN . Ci' STOCI (it Min AM) isinar vnum at .R.d.ed rn Ai. • Tailori:lttOiektliatie; and eptii its in;lteditl awns lased sham the trissisic: rnslo42t IaOTILING! - AT;!;#4,THAD - 19#013LEIALE alitikE,LLES' HArtICNESS. Fot* WILL p4OSE '9IIT . AT 141'141,, „: UNTIL,JUI4Y- let, tonititisdai of the Elosant StOok f • o ‘p 114# AND 011.111d1CD,, aLoTpuricir. tar' this, mims' fi—rareiwiiiiii will And it to their adviOtta. to tititWatksitai*oltabonadiittali.. , bitAittArig ItAIiKNESS. L,.1/14- - - • • f MINI* . AND' HHAD.P.S. WILLIALELIVIS. - No.'lo Pit= scent irniEßT, 1.4,`;,; k W sok eskikiviywnditakter of i , B S -.I IiNINVOW SHADES. birres,.... ,464 lailsimpostawriii Is' ejty, at PLO 7 11R0 7 1I'liiiitilii4d, lettered . WOW* • attS43M tit :rr •.:I.: .ftr 7 - feast -Atop .AL: -- .. -011 - '• ,' '' • • ;. 4 1 1 f triirrtiort & o v a l -10111180ATORIAL SPORTS. ' 1 - " - 44 1 . • ~, sne h l , " L .,,i . r i j L telenPer r nialtßFAVTlFitt c v G ..... „: ~ ..,., __ ._, Lt 1 e iarc If n, . or tmigind to quakti, of .A ... *; - -.; 'ffir_ OMt jgg i ftemi it tklith ..,, pitoriel ON 8:-2,800 pieces Hams ..Ito h " "" ges°' Imi V en T ed LigSalm on '........Em RI ./uptrio,r i qa uslisia, . r a t , f eittak att4 o4 . 7.ll74 ....tais l Ap i t e rs ou r i lgra su p... perM pi f rat ti y a u e a t m r aticia rar a r s a i r k el , Lit sall new, Orme, son, ssa Caws L nem. above Front. shift i- , .. ,i: ..s, , VltlitiiSHl6l6 14.411Ermxig atekiriT .STORE I: • • - -MOVED ,OFSEVENTIIAN ' CHESTNUT. ' CRAVATS, 'SCARFS, ' ; • • ; ENAMELLED COLLARS; GENTLEMEN'S FURNISHING woD8; ALL' KINDS UNDER WEAR; • SHIRTS MADE TO ORDER; • .1: • FOR 89. - • - CORAEVENTE AND.CREBTNIIT. • - ait&thigth .3m • GEORGE , SPENCER. , 01NTS v PURNISHING GOODS • • , v• • • 839 CHESTNUT STREET," 4.4115101N1N4 WEIRD Hours; OPPOISITIS 0011/WINTAL 1107.11.10 - -Ku Biwa/in-Store a large ntonk of FINE 'OII.IitTIL ' TIES, " COLLARS,' 'STOOKS, VNDER MEETS, HOBIEKY, DR RB , - GLOVES, fbo4 , 6yeryoilieirtiol• in Furnishing , line, of ihe,LA ,...r.tutr 8 r u f z,4,41,114, ! kt the LOWEST PAIGE& pROCLAMATION 11 I- ' t R. C. ifellOßN & CO. ,Not 41 and 7 North fIrXMVE fltr i set, , 00ntieff GENTLEMAN'B ‘FURNISH hNritni .ild ' lliend ° l:l,4l=th n eff4 . }l,ll , l. ` pr at least until duenotleei.QiT to the contrary. ' Thus an nonnoementia made o sr that our numerous oar trona in this alt, and eisew ere may know that thew or ders. adddreased as above, will always reach rte wheth, er they happen'to We oar adeertiMmess fa tea nines raises fyr the time Wins. or not. • •—' - Maas sat this out and paste it in your meta rand um • - snyl.tf ' ` , WI 'BOOTT-41ito of the firm of Win -4.4. oheiter St ' ilhott—GENT.ljEhtEreB F0R1411311- ISii&TORE and KURT MANUFAPTORY, an 9, TNUTtitreotansailiopposita the GtrardiElonite;) r iladelehia. 1 , J. W.& would lesseietfullal , t the attention of his •forniergatrons end friends hi e hew store, an 4 is Dre amed to fill orders ;or BR ICCS at short wilt*. A *sneer fits - attest:Med. Who Is Trade suoShod with ise Ithift end Dollars.. J • • , . • iwllly LOOkiNG GiaesEs., OOHING-GLASSES, . PORTRAIT AND PICTURE 'FRAMt3, ' EI!TEkRAVINCITS, . OIL PAINTLNOEIi &c. JAMES S NAB,LE & SON iMPORTERS.: MANPACTURERS, WHOLE SALE AND RETAIL DEALERS. EARLES? GALLERIES, 616 CHESTNUT STREET, lU.fU)WARE, & NEFF, NO. .10D NORTH THIRD STREET, Have now in store a most complete stook of . HARDWARE, of lato impprianon. and American manufacture; which they offer to the NEAR TRADE on the very best terms: - • . . see-Em ,'" JEWELRY, &c tteTtiEt i ,“& . iio.-1211•NORTH SECOND EiTEEBT, % -•, , • • ' 4M.EELICW WATCHES, . GOLD. ANDSILVER CAM, AT t TIM -LOWEST JOBBING4RICES. -.ltha-tm•2l PAPER HANGINGS. Ika. Tc PLO§E BUSINESS tiART, MONTGOMERY, lk CO:, 11211 . (111[413XNUT STEM Will fell oil throng thin winter and unit their -' • ' • Isige dock • 'l 4 A.PER HANGINGS, of every 411,rfaiy cumnootadrorith the btisizisal, GREATLY )IBDIJOKD Difi PRENDE piptuta AT PER. CENT. DE- LOW 008 T. Nesuse4 Tapered, caa get 'groat B AROAINS. 79EWIRti MACHINEB. ;; -WILSON „ SEWING • MACHINES,. :- HENRY' COY,' Ageit, ecrl catEntivr STREET, SEcOlp PLOOI. htnehines, with Oietstoie, on hire to Priinte Farni 81Ancti OFFICE*: • r West !TOE . Strost. Trenton, .1. • 118 0144TRAL CQUARE, , Earion, : . . .10;4m lvirl LT 0 X & GIBBS' SEWING.MA cIuNE.-Thp groo.t emd bumming demand for Wan' k. Gibbs? Beenne.Maohtne le guarantee of its 13711WasieCiehirunsellialiggiIltilltrOAIR" •MERCHANT TAILORS. O. THOMPSON TAILOR. N. E., COR. SEVENTD AND WALNUT STREETS. Olothitig made TO ORDER only. A'Fine Stook of Mate - dab alwaye on hand. 2Y.7t.--Biringenr visiting the City, are: it liefted to leave their Memory', 1 • • ap23-2m MEDICINAL. . . . A V P.S. WINSLOW, r . , - . IVS. AN EXPERUINDED NURSE AND FRIWALE Ohyrioial, presents toghe attention of mother* her . -SO 0 T-H INO ,S Y R - OP ' • roil., OHIL . DR , EN. T.E'EtHING, which, greatly facilltatee the'lproosdie of teething, by teftentog the gen . re,duotar geriuntra t Will al ,lay A.Lt. pAirii_mi • -,- - SURRTO REOULATR " rIik VOWELS) . Depend upon it, mothers, it will give' rest toyouinelves id. • • - • • ' • RIURFAXXO' lERALT# TO YOUR IN - PANTS. We haVe OM Up and bald , thie artiole for over ten team. endear& air. tit oon 134 fidenee and truth of it, what we he never been able to say of any - I other medialne,NlSVEß, HAS . IT FAILED In el BUY OLE INSTAPICE,TOEF Pti w eer A 0, cwhen timely. geed. Never did t,,,, know an instance of Megabit - notion by any one ha used it. On th 6 oon trary. all, are delighted tct with its, operation*, and watt in terms of lughest ...., aommendetlonof Myriam. erd &Teets end Medical Mr %id tnes. We speak nr,this matter • !'what we do oz, orr, ,, after ton tea m , expertenothandile4seoer ;; 4 ' reputation for the fulfil- Ca o e f e ;ra t ' ir tfinsla 4e t trl i s sZlergs,..t i amirgs ~,a,..ticu r ia .... i. E , otriein t t zt en or twenty fiNF:lialpl:po B 72oll 0 Fe n iesorieon dr 01/e uitsfiterit= 5 B d c hamtn ge l d i l l ;ot ... never- tigyartiott i i l i ii_ THOUS 13 ~„, OF. OABES, . Wide only - relieves the ow hlid from' vain, h il t in. -"retest'donna:Maud . els, oorw i rots tumidit y . en gives tom end snare, Og tO the who 'detain, •It re- eve GRIP G MITER rot i pA u ttr in ai ttlif t el 0 COLLO and overcome arm raleionr. - w led, i hot ,4 speedily remedied, end Itt 1 death. , We believe it the , x , r r z igr i to Te ri ! in argil% &DV td W wh:ther i't arises. doll . teething or from enyother _... oense. We would say to every mother who hag ", °Mittel:llloring f rom toy of he foregoing emiteunte do not let your prelude:les, yi or:,t h a .Itriti Ole 0 others, eta he between your suiferidg 1 an . the relief that will be glum —yip. aBIiOLUTE to tiY SURE—to follow the ,use of OM me pine, if a , timely mod, Flail dAreo- Vous or cur 1411 r o c: oe gang each home, Irene ys mile of guRTIS dr. P.BR trifrilengr Yin:, is on the onteide wispy/ .1 , ' the world. • Printii pe I Mgr No. iird r igreg i gnw York, I rites at tents a bottle. .42,14, - pRINQE IMPERIAL ' bi-i: A'MPAGNE,.: FROM DE VENOGE & CO.. BEEBE/N. FRANCE. t Sold'hy all Retiree*& Dealers throughout thee.) nny. ' This fine' brand of CHAMPAGNE, which tin I I the mist year was confined exoliteivelyz to the beet tab es of the Continent or Esrope, has now obtained the , moat unbounded stoma and populanty in the countryl It le, recommended by some or trio firet phymoiane of the city of New YOE, overall other wines, on account of its ex treme purity and delicacy, and those who once try it m all use any other brand. Although only oriel year Was elapsed singe its introduetion into thieoraintii, the is demand enormous and eminently increasing bur ersengimenta are inch as to moire the quality f the Wine being ipanantaiged at itsi , prasont high std dart, The Prince .fineenal is imported solely by seb we being the sole Agents of Mews. De Venom' & G o o. id this eesainey. , E. V. HAUGHWOUT & Co.i ti ti r 4.0 an d di BROADWAY, New York. Sold „ear' pizyis & D4ALA. ,' • 001 mArticET eltcein. , inht Ihri ft. OW ), t #.40 , i - "" i 1... ve, bommistijoi „.! DRESS-000DS.; ;'r f , . ,:tirOtili.T.TA2 L 13AILI WILL OFFER THIS SUPERB A'SBUR;t4I4I.ICT • or 't v „ SUMMER DRESSet:ll6l=4i A.uoTioiq AT ViumsB i • FAIL BELOW THE COST OF IMPORTATION. 213 MARKET' •! GUILTS. ' , ALLENDALE,- ' 41.44:E5, LANCASTER, MANCHESTER' MARSEILLES QUILT ALL SIZICN, FOR,SA,LE BY JOSHUA 213 MARKET STREET'. tn `, 4 : 'my9-tc , ' TERRY,' PRICE; Co., ICAHRET BT.REE7;.' , IMPORTED!' AND YOBSILTLB , 0L0T14.8. Have now on hand large and well:seleeted et*. blob they are prepared to sell at thb lowest war* prima . • WALTER EVANS 4 "BOAR'S AD BLX-001113 SPOOL COTTON. --, rior to an, ever Imported, in strength, Imtoethe - Masi:kits, for machine or hand sewing. • • '• ' LENGTHS •WARRSNTED.' t • "We have tried Bliani& Co.'s tear'sjittarl geld_ KRA* Cottens,,and find them ex° Lie* s t wilsoN, M. F. tr. Co., SOS Broadway ! rt. ; C. CAAVILLB, General Agent, Ne w J. B. "HOWELLifAgent fort Phltddelp ittsa l li i i L otinutae bEw!" goo: Philadelphia. SHIPLEY, )IAZARD,•& IlljTolUl,o4. N0.N0.119 COArrNtrr . • OOMMISSION- MEROHANTB • , 1 FOR THE SALE OP ; r PHILADELPHIA-1114 mhB-Cm GOODS. • • ; . WELLING.' ' COFFIN, &, 004 118 OFEESTNETT STANiT, Or by the reakage, the followbig #eserirtiou Cr a.mE)EttoAN GO©.DS Or standard maies and in ireetyarlety ' YJIINTti OF lITXPIAIt AND FADOY STY*? D.GEAO/TED AND DROWN .311,01TING8, AND DDILLS. DISNABIJKOS .TRarri„-. CORSET JEANS, piLEBLar LND tiAlOtaZitEc CIANTON FLANNALS A:0 PRINIT.p LIMNOS. LINSEY% KENTUCKY JEANS, AND COI TONADES. ALL-WOOL AND UNION CLOTHS,. BLACK AWD 1 Atroy 02,88/11.BREL DLACK AND SIIXED DOESKINS. ATINETS AND UNION OASSIMERES cahitmySl TWEEDS, CASHMAILETB, &o.; Auk MOUNTAIN • OIINTAIN HOUSE. • • CRESSON, CAMBRIA COUNTY; PA. This favonte place of Rumania XISIORT win be opened for visitors about the middle ofJune.under thamansge. merit of Whf. S. CAMPBELL, of the bt. Lawrence Rotel, Philadelphia. Since last season a number of im provements have been mode•oonsisting in part of a new building, containing some fifty additional rooms; a. new 'bar-room billiard room. barber shoji, tenpin alley, and beta-rooms. About sixty acres al ground have also been enclosed, tastefully mid out in walks, and planted' inehrlib .bery. , Cresson is aituated on the top of the Allegheny town, tains, ti,ooo feet above tide water, directly on the line of the Pennsylvania Railroad. For punt, of air and water, and grandeur of scenery, it presents attractions that cannot be excelled. EXCURSION TICKETS ; Will be issued by the Pennsylvania Railroad Company 4T HALF I.HE USUAL FARE. myff4t* HALL'S PATENT • • PLATED, ICE PITCHERS ; , „ . Entirely different in their eonstruotion from all Others and WABRANTI D to keep the, ICE LONOER than any Piteher now in 'anent a temperature of seventy de.' areas Fahrenheit. The above Pitehers will keep the water Cold for twentylouy hours. A pound and a half of ice in three plate of tester Will last seven hours and fife y,five minutes; while the same quantity in an ordinary atone pitoherlat the same tem , - pprature, only laete two hours and fifteen minutest • Persons should not confound these Pitchers With those usually sold. but Inquire for HALL'S PATENT. WM. WILSON & 80'14; - Sole Agents for the Manufaeturer.: ' R. W. Corner FIFTH and CHERRY Streets. myle-tf ay T • :PltS E. MoCTE, PHILADELPHIA PHOTOGRAPH TABLISIIMENT, No. 910 CHESTNUT ST.. (Over Roblneon'm Looking-Ple; SPore.) ivorYtiPen, colored and plain Photographs; Da gnerreotypes, end Ambrotypen. iny4-1m ST. NICHOLAS HOTEL, BROADWAY. NEW YORK. When completed. six years ago, the BT. NICHOL ei was unuremally pronounced the Most magnificent. con venient, and thoroughly organised establishment pt the kind on thin continent. what it wee then it remains to day—without a rival in eine, in sumptueueness; and in the general elements of comfort and enjoyment., The Hotel has accommodations for one thousand guests, in , eluding one hundred complete sultan of apartments for Six hundred persons can be comfortably seated at the tables of its three public dining rooms, and no thing that modern art has devised for the convenience and social gratification of the travelling pupil° has tie•ri omitted in its plan, or is negleoted in itlvraotioal The early reputation 01 the house at home and a road, derived from its magnitude. Its superb appointii9oents, and ita home-like comforts and luxuries. hes beep en. }lanced every year by the on wearied exertions, gf the proprietors. nigl7-em TREADWELL,'WEITCOMB, & CO. ' JONES' 110 TEL—The subscriber Would mindfully inform his friends and the outdid, that. be has purohased the lease and furniture of the Jones Hotel. Important additions are now being mad to it: for the convemenoe and comfort of guests. Indiv duals or families visiting_ the oity will be sure to And a cm econd to none in Philadelphia, and every exertion pill he made to merit their patrol:tare Liberal arrangements will be made with venom do lma Board by the Week, Alonth, or Year. • mh3l stwam AARON GiAOR. - UFFICE OF GERMANTOWN PAM : IM, GER RAILWAY COMPANY —Ptmion, ttfp,' May 17.1560. Patine is hereby given that an eltation for Prat t l i tt. nine Mancgers, and Treasure, of Germantown P Iv.: Ear Railway Company, will be held at the office rale Connally. NIXTR and DIAMOND tittseteon BA URI DAY. June 2,3860, batireen the ours of to Alb • AAA two P. M. , WM. 894GERL , mat tje2 tieoretam 0118.-3,500 Gallons Extii-IlleaohedElo phttnt On. 0,000 gallons extra-bleached yylale Oil, COCO gallons Racked Whale Oil, 600 gallops No. Lard Oil. Lao gajlone No. 1 Machinery Oil' 8,000 gallon Re fined reacing_oll, MO gallon. Una Oil; to gem a yar 'Sale by HOW 1,1 4 ' , X• ABll OOltliU4 r •Yr, C. 0... o. 1(1 OUTO WIIAR.VI4I. ' naTIT +ILYA ANISE SEED—For sale RI , L by ; ' WIITHEL BROTH %R Nnrth kt 131TC11.--400 Bbls. PITOU, A: size barrels. in store and for ikte_by ROW.; ASIIBURVER, & CO.. No. 16 BOOTH AM ART f . . MACKEREL-3438b15. •Nos;114, di INA Mackorpl, .in wholes, hnlves.quatercand eikh, for NC° by ,0. 0. ti A PLEft M OR myD ARCH Street,second drmrabove,Ferbt. 'MARTINBTATIonESGigproAvnt,EI:BIA:I4' FANCY i3 . 0( - 1 / 15 : ',.,, 1: poitrlrmy - : •. . . lOU Al NUT faßgE;'- i - , Low st4v.toit . tal-iy 1 ~.- Il l ' ;:i .': ''' 1 ! VA,..DIMPHIA: ”nnativithr nn mann rerTnplowv 41 , 011oi rtml•R IQTEWART , S PAISLEY MALT.-10 Pun- Owns of thie Virminisz just received and for sale in bond by etgOlt_GM WHiTgLEY. m712-31n 134 !SOUTH .ntorm opvit ,11 , ..(U,),::' , ..11,', i li; ',.!'1,1„'",-,:1‘.11..,-Iftt'l'l ~~~; ~ FROM 'TUE ,GRIAT . ••• SUMMER: R.V.SOUTS. ';emu-. ~;,,..r-.; .r.na= ; iirl tot.. t • c 4.* s TtrEsiikt, MAY 22, 1860 Beau Brunreaell--No. I. There reigned in England, from 1794:t0 1815, a inerfef.ribsedre birth, whorm sway, Its Auto drat of;Fashion, was complacently,: dnd even submissively, acknowtedged during nearly the whole of thdt;Peried.' beeniriimortal. iced lithe poetry of Byron and ;Moire,' and anecdotes-of' his Sovereignty yet - linger in the 'memory, of society.' We speak of the cote-, bmted ;re Beau Brummeib" ; ; This man's life was: written, in a gbasipiy, - alight Manner, by Captain lease, in 11344, but. the work is•ont of print'and rather Unto in the Market, Mr. Terridspri has lent us copy, 'Which will Etiolates inwhat we ahall,rel to. We have looked'into a doienlriographicaldiction arles, English,Prennli, dint-Itidien, Tithed Hiding any mention . -of ;Bruno:dell. But, in ' the aecond volume - the A:cur '..gyperfcan, Cy. 414*there is a life ; of, hiiny cOmpilbd from Jesse, neatly executed, embodying, the lead ing everiblopildVery Sitignitti;career.! . ,; George BryStairiirdurell reigned asiKitigtif Fashion in EtighinCity„d,Ao,4%tiy,eof-ratil9.. birth, or I :9# l 4so_, fiur , 81 41 y bz#llo*Por , des,"o44claniikfian,l4listrinspirittrriiVrod;'' 04 1 fie into til*h.:kelietite'l:;ondbiti,dad. once in . seat st4ok_he citing: to it Nylth , the ; tenaiity of a thiniiit'"npon` luau. It ,d great Aiteidriess,hriniense satizfroirl, and remark -able audacity,,ail of Which'hertsini - te 'trample - *On itigprand, the nigh-born:and the vealthy., 'Thidirofa, , insiird out - of England, hasi been to ilizipise and thirdtall 'except their own clique and Bthrainell ,turned their own ordnance-against` themselves. • Haughti," and - 'exelunive at bewail,' tcllie best krowUed him , doWn, if I:hirbad not brought that process tebear upon Coniequinfily, their: eak plaids sub r.ti`tated. to.hia Strong will; for there'idno slave sioloWly.and'croitching is a tyrreit, - wlion the : time comes . for his own abaiement. , ' Brnmmell's grandfather kept a small COD , pfitieneri shop, In one of the small stoats off St. James'—vrhen• - the latter really was 'the otahlonable centre — = and, to pay his oWn rent, It lodgings ' 'gentlemen: Such, in Year-1761, shirrtly after George the _Third =became King, was 'Mr. Charles .Tenkinson, a 'quiet of a barenifted o*littirilY in Oxfordshire, ;who bad bedn educated at the Charter-Herne, (where Thackeray's Coloael.Ne*coine was ,also brought .up;)' and, about that thine, Just when Lord ;Bate became Minister, was so lucky as to be appointed Under-Secretary of own rise was singular. ' At the age of nine he 'succeeded to his father's title and property, viz : a Scottish earldom, •with .ex tremely little to maintain' it. He married ;Young, his wife only, daughter of the celebrated Lady Mary WortleyMontega, and tad. a large family. At the age of two:thy-five, Scion after his marriage, he was elected one Of the-sixteen representative peers'of ScOtland; :A great honor, no doubt, but involving the heavy annual expense of six months' residence London. • , WWI Introduced to Frederick, Prince of AllWee,i(rather of George III.,) some ten or lifirelve'years later, by a singular' chance. = He crieket-match in the vicinity 'of 'ondon,' find a shower of rain'came on . , which *402#101 . 4&0 - - Vir, l corwho-uras .alsch iVSolit; retire•te-a tent. Which -had been laird tip .for him - The Prince intimated a de. !sire to Play whilst,, or whisk, as it Warr then called,) until the 'weather became fair ; again. A fourth hand was wanted—the etiquette being that nobility only should play cards with royal ty. - Lord Bute, who had been brought to the field in the chariot of an apothecary who lived nar him, not having any other place of shelter froni the rain, remained in the carriage with his pharmaceutical friend. Ono of the Prince's gentlernett-in-waiting, seeing him there, invi ted the Earl to the honor of Completing the Prince's whist-Party. The invitation.was as and the Scotch nobleman played his -cards se well that the Prince requested him to pay him an eartyVisit at his residence at Kew. This casual acquaintance soon ripened into as steady a friendship as royalty, proverbially , capricious, could entertain. In 1760, Lord Bute was made one of the lords of tlie bed. 'chamber to the 'Prince, which involved resi dence in his palace. .- The Prince died in the following year, by which thine, Bute, then only thirty-eight years old, and a handsome man, with courtly, manners and some sagacity, ob tained great ascendency over the future' George 111., then only a lad, arid also secured the unlimited confidence of the widowed; princess. He became, in short, Governorlo Prince George, who was entirely under the joint influence his mother and Buts, even afterhe became King. The scandalous chroni cles of the time have more tban'intimated that the Vrincess and the Peer had far ton inti mate a friendship, but, against this is the . fruit that Lord Bute'alivays continued on the most affectionate terms with hie wife, and wall de votedly attached to his children. About a year after' George 111. became sing, he made Lord Bute one of his Secretaries of • State, and created Lady Bute an English Baroness in her own right. Soon after, the elder Wil liam Pitt was compelled to quit office, and in May, 1702, Lord 3ute was made Prime Min ister. Tho strong sarcasm of Wilkes, the pseudo-patriot, and of Churchill, the 'poet, greatly prejudiced the public mind, not only against Lord Bate, but against Scotchmen getterally, (ho was accused of having flooded thelmblic offices with his needy countrymen,) but the climax of unpopularity was reached when Bute closed the Seven Years' War by making peace with the French, on terms so advantageous to them that • the public ,voice declared that ho and the Princess-Dowager must have boon bribed by the enemy to' don gent to it: In 1789, Lord Chancellor Camden expressed to Mr. Wilberforce his conviction that Lord Bute, (then living,) had got money by the peaeu of Paris in 1702, grounding this belief on the fact that, as his pateroal estate wax not above £1,500 a year, and ho was only MO tenant of Wortley, (to .which his wife had succeeded ) ) worth about £B,OOO to £lO,OOO morn, be bad sank 800,000 in land and houses. 'The emoluments of his Mike were only £5,000 a year, and he held it only ton months—namely, from May 1702, to April 1788, and never again had any public employ ment. :.When Bute first became Secretary of State, ho gave the first lift to Charles Jenkinson by appointing him under-secretary. At that time, .Jenkinson was 84 years old, and appears to have had alappy knack of advancing himself. He successively became Secretary to the Trea sury, Lord of the Admiralty, Lord of the Treasury, and Chancellor of the Duchy of Lancaster, and also was created Baron Ilawinibury and Earl of Liverpool. Ho merits the :character given him of having been' (c :singularly dexterous, shy, silent, and successful matt, who, like Jupiter or Homer, did more by 'a MA than others by a harangue—made More as a scene-shifter than any actor on the stage of Westminster—continually crept on while whole generations of highfliers dropped and ,died; and at length, like a worm at the bottom of a pool, started up to the surface, and nut- , tered in the sunshine, Earl of Liverpool." Brummell, the confectioner, had a son, a school-boy at the time, who wrote upon a card; for. the window of their parlor, the affiche A.partments to Lot." Jenkinson, passing that Irv, and looking for lodgings, na•teo dflar, and near Whitehall, where he litd to ;transit& his business, as Under-Secreta y of `State; was attracted by' the singular ben4ty of' the handwriting op the card, entered the house, Midteisame teriant'cif the apartments. lore 'oyer,..having a great deal todo,"lientade,young rtunniell his amanuensis, and, a cSuple of years later, when he himself was made Joint- Secretary of the Treasury, obtained a clerk ship in that department for young Brummell— Mon Pi- 17 nd hthi, ..1.` . -1 'who, be , it noted, , was father of the a t Beati.).% Of all pnblie men' of hit tithe Jenkluson was the most latioriotiALocci, i,,fttip . wlieftl-horseis •of the GOvet•niaent.', HoapPreciate4 industry and Integrity in otherS,and then were rilliain 13 1 , Brummell's characteristics., Lord. N rth was Prime Minister from 1770 to 1782, an during these twelve .years William Brum - ell, ap. pointed to this confidential office • thr ugh the recommendation of Jenkinson, was t o great man's private secretary. During the', greater part of this period. he also held three other offices, his whole income being 12,501 a year --With•pickings! • •, , , , • • A. thriving man, he took a wife, (Nati, of the Iteatitlers Of. they day, yoMigest daughter' of Mr. Richardson r tholottery-centrabtot. , .; When Lord North quitted , office, Brummell retained all his, appointmerits; eXcept the pri vate "seeretaryabip. ! Soon :atter, Nilitut Wil. Mai ' Rite become, Pretnier,,-,lt ,appeafed wise unto William , hrummell to. exercise the 'ilithe of resigeation = so rho surrendered• his three officeai l , receiving a handsome I.lle;ponsliat fromtrhe Crown as a reward:ler his 'services. He quitted-London to live at ticortitiry.seat; (the Grove, near Donhington Cistle;) *hid' had once•been.the residence of GeoffreiCttim: cer, the Root, and here became a popular, }hitt-, Pliable. country gentleman,;techiving — the :beat seciety-T-amorinvbich wore Fox and , Sberidan'. Ittj 7B #Therisexied•tilie,etlice . eflilgUShariff e'f; ,13er*shfres otie `lol,i , i'ieilliin to ,jt",tlQlpr,r.',.,'Xn:',3793, , liie "rrife - died,',Vitil; a ,year', j anY tr.,?4_,Siterier death, hisTovin.quUrred.,• • : - , • .f•'. :, :: - - . William Bpi - rainsU jejt two sons, oy ithota • , the Beau' ..' was the older, and one daughter: lie provided for theee children, by liegiceath ing•tho•suni of p 35,000 to be equally 'di;rided among • themL-Mtch receiving a third,.with accummulation of interest, attlio ago of twenty_ t ; • • The 'eldest hon;,Ge4rge,Bryati Brumes°ll, ,born in,lnne; 1778, tvas not quit& fixteen ht his , cather's death, and was ut,CtOn College four years before that event occurred: Here we - may leave him for having accomplished the most difficult partioi 'our task—namely, his introduction. More morrow. • Charts of .tbe Japanese Coast.', • The labors of our GovernMent in 'cOnnection withlaparkiraVe not consisted elouril in the. formation of a commercial treaty, and in in viting to our shore's, and talOg proper * mew: cures for the reception of a great Japanese Embassy, but the coast of. that country. his. been thoroughly explored ,by the North Pa elite Exploring Expedition, under Commander, Roams, of the 'United States Naii, and by Lieut. Bnoofte, in the Ifenninfore Cooper. ° lle'information obtained by these two expe dition:s has all been carefully arranged, and is now in possession of the Navy Department, at Washington. It forms the only accurate guide for the navigation of the:Japanese seas. The chart in present use was issued by the ;British Admiralty, and, though Correct in some Tar= ticulars, contains many glaring errors, as some of the localities it describes as navigable are solid terra firma, and vice versa. Since such an extraordinary impetus has .been given to our relations with Japan as will, in all probability, lead to extensive corn-. merce, it is to bez hoped that -Congress will promptly order the publication of the' gence referred to; for it will give now Security to life and-property, and the important ie.: searches of ' our paring , and skilful .officers should not be suffered to moulder away in the' archives of the Navy Departmnnt. ."i, • -Oar efferhs ',to ; ; win the ,regard: lof, the Japanese hive ,heretoforo beetqre-tharinently successful. Tho inforinatiori they baud glean ed that the Dutch has enabldd them to; appre elate American progress ; and as they doatrait us with that rich ; but 'conservative country, we derive much benoilt.ffiom our advanCed po sition -in their judgment. Their hinieris• -population, industrious habits, and great wealth, 'render it probabiss that, when their old prejudices against foreign nations afe com pletely broken down; an extensive and 'profit able cornmeredmill bo established. Bat its growth will ho gradual, particularly the safe or exchange of American articles to the Japanese, although there are many .. , things they will be able' to sell us on more advantage ous terms thin we can purchase theta from any other nation. • A.. Voice, from Clarion County. corrospondenoe of The Wens.] The detestable "Pennsylvania proposition" of GeV. Bigler, with its slave code and African slave trade planks, has fairly - aroused the indignation of the people of the Twenty-fourth district. ' Clarion county, last week, fired the first gun of rebuke from Bigler's district,' and when it is re membered that this is the great Deniocratio county of the Northwest, and hitherto in the einteLos of the Administration, this demonatration is most significant. The resolutions of instruotions to tho dAlogittes front the district, to vote for Douglas, troremluaost unanimously passed. ' The meeting was 'addreesed by Messrs-I W. L. Corbett, B. ,J. Reid, and C. L. LaMberton, when thp Eon.' Q. _Pluiner, was introduced by 'a deputy United States marshal, evidently with tholdesign to stem the tide lu favor of Douglas instructions. But, on the conclusion of the address, the iostrua Bons wore repeated . with a yell of anthlisialm. But two dissenting:votes, one of which was thd afore- Said doputY-ITnited State's marshal. ' lion. A: Plumer is ono of tho delogatei from this district to the National Convention. Will he violate tho will of the people, and disobey their 41- .91,3'41(41n5: 1 ' We 'shall see. This week, Little Jefferson, the home of Colonel Blood, the other delegate, fired the second gun for Douglas. the likewise instructs the • delegates to cast their votes at Baltimore for him. Thissneet ing was large, and the most harmonione one wit-' nessed in that county for years. It was a meeting of the " live " Democracy, and not of the 'drum seek ing politicians. - This uprising of the people in favor of the ," will of the majority " prevailing, is rapidly extinding to the other counties, and by the assembling of the Baltimore Convention the indomitable Wild Cat" - district will raise her vole° in trnmPet-tonei for Douglas and 'against secession. Yours, Vox POPPLI.. Democratic Meeting 3n Schuylkill In purausnoeuf a call, a mooting of the perne : Olney of St. Clair. Schuylkill coUrdyoras held on Wednesday evening, the 10th inst., for the !air. poso of forming ,a club, and sustaining the course pursued by the Northwestern and other delegates to the Charleston Convention who favored the nomination of Stephen A Douglea for the Prosi denoy, and the reaffirmation of the Cincinnati platform. ' The meeting was largo and spirittiol. • Presidont, Col. Jonathan Johnson ; Vico presi dents, Wm. Short, John Dawson, Jacob Re ding, Michael Roney, Roos Davies; Sooretary, Dr / John T. Nicholas. Thd following ,resolutions were read, and adopted: Retolvtd. That the hemostatic party is neither a Pro-slavery, party 'nor en anti-e.avery party , bdt one national in its views and purposes, determined tn,pre i erve the union of the States, and to protect the fights of every portimi.of the Confederacy, against every assault, no matter from whence the attack proceede. ltisoltvd, That we condemn the secession archthe Charleston Convention of a portion of the, Eeethern delegates, as acts unworthy of true Democrats, and more particularly. a Pert of those from our own atal the welt knowing that Atephon A. Douglas is the choice of an overwhelming majority of their constituents, Resolved: That We do hoartly approve o. the plat form ' , opted by the convention at Cincinnati ih latd, its intaintrued by Judge Douglas, without any seetional interpretation. I ' Resolved, That no do endorse the nominee of the Reading Convention, the Hon. Hoary D. Foster, as the Democratic , candidate for Governor, and pledgehinn our hearty support. we do approve of Mir Reproien.attvir in Congress, and other goodgind true Democrats LI their measures es regards the tariff and homestead bah! now under consideration, • I • Resavoi, 't hat we approve of the adherence.of the Hon. F. W. Rushee at the Charleston Convent i tn, to the Cincinnati platform, pore end simple. and mini mend him and vtr. Hettenstem to sapped s`elen A. Doug/as in the Baltimore Convention. • Resolved, That , having implicit confidence in ie in tegrity, ability, and Democracy' of Stephen A. Driuglaa, and believing that with hie nomination our success be comes a certainty t behoving, also. that Woolen et• e ouglas m the choice of the people of this countr that .Douglas maiority Mall the votes in tnh Charleston Con mum have been east for him, and that nothing but a hoboes emmeition, goyerned by personal hostility, rather than devotion to prmeiple, defeated hie nomination. „ RlSolued, taattp, that we utterly' condemn the . course of William Bigler in the Charleston Conventcle, as unworthy of a Pennsylvania Demoorat, and that we cannot see in his acts anything but an att.mpt• t ilie disunion of the States, and demoralization of De 7 Resolved, rhat these proceedings he' publiehe in all the Democratic papers in the count!; ales in the hp,- ' aelphla Press. ' ~H Cnicwr,—The Cricket, maieh . betiFeen the Philadelphia' and GerruantOreiceinbi has been concluded. The Philadelphians came off victorious haying scored 68 on the first innings and 108 on the second innings. The Germantown score was 40 on the Arid inning and 66 on the Bound. /MCIIMEII t=•:1 !' CLARION, PA., May 18, 18t10 County. r -41 I 1 1 , 1 It F 4 IKE MMM - Letter of Hon, A. K. Stephk WepbliebTow the letter recently 191 the distieipit rhea tleditan-Mon. A.H. St in regardto-the-proceedinga at Oharleaton, Pcilin of itto:Pkttaobtatia Pktyaoiatttintoi Passamat_mitiorAmpartame : _ _ _ crisnortner,s4dOta., ; May 9 1 , 184 ''' , ' ' A titaterConvention - should be called atlanaarly til tirna day-.-and • tin§ cortvention7shoold oon daf the , whole • siihject earthly anti dispassionate , with' •, the-eober - second-thought," and determ rarivh•-!! Ake r- to ,sond - strropressuitattea tOjtiehlao or to Baltimore. The correct determination of ques tion, iii Tv - WY ff:Tiv iniPeed upon and siFitad t ;that isoebither-thi4leetringi of - new-inter, isyl Congress vritk. slavary_in. the Territories ght. to be adhered to or abandoned by .th `South,' This is a - ibil grave and serious queis orii:and ought_noL to b. &aided rashly or tabmipos. rately. Zl•ci . such . small ; eaattere however dh promo, `tied of this or 7thitt 'individual; however worthy- or unworthy; onsfit,to enter into its oonsidettP , tion. -- Eli a great stitjeet of, public prilleyoof,, .footing the vast-interests of 'the present land the futuro-_-.ltAnavb.-suinecossary, and lentirely In useless, Joe me to .obtaudeiray fissile •Mifilif -question, ini advande . tlf :the nieetini f,„„farell, ()alienation, -twee-whom- Its decision ay , pH- Anarili devolve. I cannot, however, sem i f 'your' tectaest tilthout doing so, to a limi gilt'; at butt This L7thaltdo. 7 .in :fie first plasm, tiken„, I assume, as to ,unquestion.ed, and . unaueittable fact, that bod;ratertietitaan, tutatated, has - ale 1 sa any Yearil , rodePred,"Pefie6ised,'atid` yam ass the setUegalekteriagothit~; iBY , ~frPtt efvol44l4, irMeist4latelpti#plsk bri o, . thigleiler 144 pass po low ppclAg as tot of alikirit UtiNo" Terzitoilds either for or . agatpst:tt,,l4 ds Uott u tZt l tt o mibifikaskweese elide t I st f' ..' or i ViiIeitHILAUP :osoooradi OtiagedligtirlinleoW'M W? RAtbrbwhcrtsop..4klawitip4.. , gke s urn pies of sal -gov t' plgoift, hits - bEetr'imitiedilYi'hOilthertr doZtidnir: ardiohnted! bye Mr; LOstholin7=in Lit 43140 6saaWho thsiAlikieJunse,atBrsed, Yellit9f 44 0 t 1 10 0 Eloodi sibpted-ai taw* mojustment..fingly, 'lsakcie,..lol39, 41; Aland 'or thd Triouth k , ptift.rotth qjhe,. 111k0 its l estiblishihdrehietiden "join AID enied'aint rwittieaddAls blid settled ,r, liouthi by party convenOoneendEllate,ssehmatear in every form that it people can grve sitathqrilettlee, eirpressiori to their will and w r it hes .., The! minuet 'no* be matter of dlipute: "It 'ti Mabry, abide- Wily ''Axed upon - the record he fhO'facf that the 'colony of.GeOrglawas settled ander the .siesiOms,of , Ogisiteropo, or Mat the war of the Aneerieran Niro- I lution was fought in resistance to the unjust claims' 'of power 'ori thp pert of the British Parliament.) - .. , "'-I refer , to this matter of hiatbrybonbrieted with. .theitiobjectitudercenaldetatiiin barelyim a start; fog point—to akom.hom wir dead ~in veletien tuft. l -4 is noP 4:perr.qamition.,-.lt has beennp before,r, and, whether righte or mroNly, it ,hits , - been de-. Cidea:‘ - -Latferddirited'ietbkid jot as theSodtb naked that' it shear liel-Ptidt, however`, atikont ic•giesV effort and se pv1614.341 struggle. be vitiation : new is, shall ,the South,abandon fur own potation In that decision and settlement!. !This- iathe'qireisf ' thin 'virtually, presented by the - action - of these.. ceders' from the Charleston Convention,: It ths grounds Upon tvitioh , ' they-liaard' mak settee. .01.,_ stated.in othovinerde . it ailment/ to this -7.1 Whititheit the Southern States, 4fter all that has tin pleas 'on the subject, should pow revere ,thelvirevioes Iniiirie,• and • demand' Congressional "antertestitton for the proteatiott Of-slavery in the Terri es, as a condition-, of their =remaining - longer- in the Union. For I take lifer granted that it winald , beT considered by all pa the, most mlachievaisa tole so make the demand uniers we' intend to peshi the tit: sue to its ultimate - andlegitimete.teeelte.l INN. :the South, then, make this demand , 'Ore iplim., and when made, in assent falba* tli obtain t, shall she secede from the Union, as ikportionof, er - dif." legates, (some under, instrnotions, and wipe from ' their owe free will,) seceded from the . ConsfentiOn, onitheir failure to get itgranted there?' ' I , Thus stands the naked question, ai Inn Muni it, presented by the action of seceder iiteita full dimensions; its le n gth , breadth, end d p,41, in all its magnitude. - ' . • It. is presented ; not to the' Denioeiatte' Pare .alone;: it is true; a Convention - of duet pare may first act on it, but it is,,preoentod• to riaa s p ur a m. to theiwbole people of the.l3outt, of-all s T 4 irt 4 :eti. And men of, ell' peruse should; duty and timely' consider it, fdr, they May nit have toUdie. nn it,'Monefor. later. ,-.. .' • :,. '• , 1 , It rises to importance high shwa any - pertY bit ganization Of the present, day, and: kitten end ought to, if need her aweeP =them ma filial board. '.74llqudgm's7it ts'figatiiiit,ehirdliseerest it were a new question, ptetieitted "in' its' present ` — • light; for.the first time, ray Views, upon it might be different from what th ey: are:- :*..e'.,_*' * The only cause ; of . com plaint I. have rd is, 3 thim hen-intervention, F.e established in_ oissd, carried oat in' 1554; is net tindeistedd at the North., .as it is at the South•;: thati4iiile Werlmbit94 itir ,terivieg i' the.whottisebieetitheretheMenetttsthsta , and the gmiat,prinelplee of sialf-gcre• plains! it," the common Territories are teleran% Oar settlement 'by Southern: people, with , th.fr eri a lentil otherwhe -pievided 'byfi BMW tat 6n. ; The Id enderintlimppeirtein COO Seetiedeet' dee it the North maintain that ruder it the *Math of-an' organized Territory can protect or exoludi Itof' property before the fOrmation of a State Camedtu tied. This opinion, :or oonsbructlen Of theirs, is what is commonly dubbed." spatter 110veteignty."' Upon this point of difference In • construedion of what aro " the great principles of self-govern;ent,P , under. the Constitution of the United State s , great , deal has been said and written. We have heard' if In the social binge, In The fo- ' rum, on the hustings, and in the halls oftgisle tion. The newspapers have literally green with dissertations on it. Pamphlets have been published. for and against the respective aides. Congrem_hia spent months In its disoussion, and may spend' ai many years as they have monthswithout e lving .at any more definite lir s a tisfact o r y cone' ton -in relation to it than Milton ' s perplexed Spit to did ir upon the abstruse questions on which thee held such 'high and prolonged debate when they res., soned : . i "Of Providence. foreknowledge. w il l, and fate ; Fixed fats. tree Will, foreknowledge. ategi.itsq And ro,nd no end, in Tendering mazes tom." , It is not my puridose 'now to - enter the 'list of these disputants. My own opinions upon the inb-, jest are known ; and it Is equally known thisethis difference 'of opinion, or eonstruotlon, is nh new thing in the bistory tr this subject. - Thash who hold the doctrine that the people of the Territories, according to the greet principlet of- selrgovern merit, underthe Constitution of thaNnitesi States; Can slavery by Territorial law. and i ray'. late slave property, ali all property, held -the i same views they now do, when we agreed with lem to stand on those terms,- Thereat is also historic I. The South held, that under the, Constitution,the Terri torial Legislatures could not elelude slaveryl--that this required act of sovereigntyro do. "Stona . gen: Vernon of the North held, - as they now do, that the Territorial Legislatures could oontrol slaytepkopea , • ty as absolutely as they could any other kind of property, and by a system of laws could vir'llitaly exclude slavery from amongst thorn, or p ent . its introduction if they chose. , --- That point of difference, it was agreed b both Sides, to leave to the courts to settle. Theo was no cheat, or inrindle, - or fraud, or double-dealing" in it. It was a lair, honorable, and tionstlthtional adjustment of the difforonoe. No assertion be de claration by Congress, one way or the other,mould have affected the question in the least degre;:, for if the peoplo, according to "the great prinoi les of , Aelf govornment" under the Constitution, have 'the right contended for by those who espouse that tide of the argumbnt, then Congress could net ant! esit-: not deprive them of it. - And if Congress didnot have, or does not have, the power to exclude Isla- .very from -a Territory, as those on out std e con tended and still contend they lave not,-then they could not and did- not confer it upon the Territo rial' Legislatures. "We of the South hisld that Congress had' not the povier to exclude, andicould not delegate- a ,lower- they ,did not possess+also, 1 that the pooplo had not the power toexelude tinder the Constitution, and, therotore, the mulit,l. agree-' '. meat was toialto the subject out of Congress, end , leave the guostido df the power of the' . people 1 where the Constitution .had plaoet li— with the .courts. This is the whole of it.-, The questton in dispute is a judicial one, ;and no aot.of Congress, nor any resolution' r any party Convention isaU, in 'any way affect it, unless we first abkndonrthe poste . lion of norointervontion by Congress. :- - 1 , But it seems exceedingly strange to me, that the people of th'e South, should, at this late day, he& to find fault with . this Northern construction, as it is termed—ospnoially'sineo the decision of the Su ' preme-Court, in the mum of Dud Scott. In this connection, I may be permitted to sty that 1 hare road, witti.'deop interest, Abe:debates o 4 the Charleston' Convention, aid partiCularly the able, logioal, and eloquent apecoh of lion. Win. 14 Yan cey, of Alabama. It was, decidedly, t lie etrongeet argument I have seen on this side of the question. )3ut its greatost Tower was shown in its - eon4lete answer to itself., Noyes did a man, with greater eloarness; demonstrate that "squatter , More eign ty," the bug-boar of tho day, Is nokin'the antes bill, all that has been said to the 'oontrat net.' withstanding. This' ihe put :beyond' the' porter of refutation.. But he stopped not thero—he wet on, and by reference to the decision, Of 41_4 reuse Court alluded to, ho showed honaltith a ely in ii is most pointed and/ thrilling' clitinti, that th - most frightful doctrine could not, bypossibility, b in it, or in any other Territorial bill—that it is a.tionsti tutional impoialbility. • With' the same ..gokister. hand ho showed that the doctrine or " squatter so vereignty" is not ththe Oinoinnati platform ; !then, why should we of the South now complain of , non inteiven tiop, br ask a Change of plattorm? . , What else have we to do .but to insist tipioh our allies to stand to their agreement? Would' it riot have been - mash more natural to look for Illnching, on their side than on ours? Why should we fiesite or want any other platform or principles the that , adopted at Cincinnati? If thos a e re w w lio ili s ih too t d ot l with us B U t s an on d i o t n , l i n t, t w h h o y oo s tt o o u s l t d o w f . 18 . 5 , 1 ) .1 t , lie equally willing?, For my life I cannot no, unless-we art detentalued to havo a quarrel with the North anyhow, tin general account. If so, In behalf of oomou sense, let us put it us upon more tenable 'ground! . These are abatidaist. For our own eharsettes saki let us males It 11130/1 the aggressivei aota of our . ehmies, .rather than any• supposed shortcomings o our friends, who have stood liy.us so steadfastly n'ao many constitutional 'struggles. In the na a or pa li tin:Abel and Minor I `l4lt; us • tidE make it idson's point which may sodirectly subject us to the Oargo of iiiiitlat of plighted faith. ii/hatevee may betel us, lot no ever be found, -by friend pr fop, as good as odr.word. These are my views,, frank' and. earnestly given: " : . - ,_, -Tilegreat, tlllOgiOrl then, Sc, Mall ste eta ..by onvprumiples, or Shall 'we, mitring loose fro mfr. • moeringe whore we have been safely anchor d so many - years; lannoh oat again - nth ',en own sees,'npon now and portions adventured, ti the, guide nod pilotage of those who phere Ahem etrif to have no more fixedness of ;lurpfee sori.sta llity as 10, objects or policy than, the .aluftliwidsl 1 11-49: which we Shall ho driven? ' Let IfilLge, i decided by the Convention, and decillisTyti 't hat wisdom, coolness, and forecast which beoomes tee men and patriots. As for myself, I can say, what- ever may bo the course of future events, myjadg meat in this crisis is, that we should stand by our principles " through woe" as well as "through weal," and maintain them in good faith, now sm ii=;= Ai. if) e " .- ta Y PREIO. to sosarneys b r trhi04.64011.0.- „ .00 Ms' ; • .1' .; 6.00 , " , Tivinty"'" " (10ami5420..020.00 i f ira 2 liCOll4,o;vit • ; ( 0 0.1 1‘ ~ . .1.20 Far Twititk:Oniproi - 'over, ,re will seed in atria:on:kith:, iettoi4o4l tie dab. N'oelahaitirs act as 4santo Icr ThirW222.Ll.V2ise. " „. tiaidd tim•,for tat* IC4lifomis e , s. written by Itepbens,— , i Ind tire nrly e tri' , I 11 t - !7 i, ' 12 / 1 1 Viel"b . rotiatil 'tiiey l ,"Wa;* ma the Rs ,4 poem, rialrielpvtrotrinl- "001DInOtt rain. I pyttildkryitbatuau.pteeibly ariesTo us from them I Lw , CATV Oelpallatimeal impowribility the/ tiPtelnylergeatteraovereimuy P. did ale e • at hinflieettdonattudiady deMonftratid. 'Par, if it di ins;thera, wad ratan, all that its sedan • advocates eimin toss it, Ira mhos' prudes' danger reatilyrank it. , /ben'atotirding to` their doettina. ha n th mnyastrim a d ; right, of. expiration to 'the =extent a PoPelation.. hold AO *very Wilk end wil go, hider' Oiieratlin,,wherever the people want it. ' %ratios .roved Vetinetawr,'.lfentuaky, tdissouri, diabanta, , and :Lek • ,withoot anylavc to protest it, and to Tuna aping •1 Trolibiflhelt;:atiol they. will "cam to otettAbe soll,Trodusticin,' and po- Fir. 'klsetes thmaatand law VW , afe,, if -*eider arn.fitteraaanfon, se elallitje le ettorworsetiet: ao sat of Con gress_emtimmairititoaly Ter#ltory--egshist th trti,43 1 .74M 144 Mad maim •the rivers ow • tors MOCIMMAKjbII4 of ihe -If we hay to eifonyVelf th twit "of 'perdition to C0Z0,910, ,910, bait thar•llattiv. In 'the - eolesisatioe o asw Twili" l " 'an* 4 3 Y. 1 1°N. tide delletenay never bi supplled,Simny moh. set of Congress ettai*P4 filtfirfer". o give ittimilt would be as vat - es pet; Of Xerxes . - :to,viantmd the waters .of the Ile Mont by erld gam In, Me; do, i ce, portend 4,11 have no feats Si the laititntlon of ala I ff!,rattitntaitalt,lit4mior met °Lir, if opr people bre 11101 rue th.emeeivea4trao, stable, sad loyal liaidirititelides lettleCtoilay ; audit they itottthettrae, hsheissittige Tborprof any ;10M 11 3.. 1 1441eYmtof;(00111•10aOr knew OD , arn . .f ray,iltaa. Nth ' • kailiatil- • 3 4iftettemiNe • . Plimatridliihriery t ivelis Via • bt men ' " 411 ", i • IV -teen , . wit Otilkstrkw Otonor at Ae,diaauidyn, iaiesolimr on. Truth is oinedpetans msdltast pre- Itstl:-- -We hive only to .ibiletain ihu7trutit wi Iroamet, amid. *MICR =settle.: Oar Veda= uioa an telfflClP4 l l l ,tstaikilhalean'aied defy allis from wit hout,&prelim 'Um pea gyretf.iWiLkire galsita:biaiffiriat t hEl feexabe aro" - tellimJa a lineMmylierisslie;re„' at hat At thelittfilk tltstritkiNeasaltioa,. dia order, and, anarchy.- It • work* Xsaltssay Mat ilkesobeeinlnded and teen a iledwhertiahastorbe'ensayeitito • 11 7.aphgvh,trm.. Aug ./4w g dat aught 'to be min To 1 e adparned Convention at Baltimore. • kiniand•mide ChtileitiM A T 4i. • 14 4 &RDA to , 6 s.sieiturtesptire.' llartemity be InlOarea , ow ttliw.POS% aaanniaation ran doubtlom !:it some man whom. the party everywba den tipOrewith the skis seal and the same attlo Ib. wWek , they eateied. and Wirelthe *test • 856 , when the,Plote PliletiPlee Were involved. ft title , theta be s fattare,,ls. tba lye posaibil ntl iesentain - LeD 'tha;olia ini mum for z • • atuandoor. Ilfte a/M-dadAtee great pa lmist Nemixratlo patty the . „ IttlatlS ligam ent **MeV bei so I totaidand . held the Usk a to ' • tepolleY, Mid hAtrolled-its ter alei, Ira harase mew :looked with a , opelhat seifookfailial, of Ate wily - pert, North WWI 14 rely itt' the' - lost frying:lrisue when • • % tedonal rights wire' Itent'let it 'not. be d to as, in the midst of the di/rites that may -none, "you didlt!" In 07 , 7 aid say event, let et - the reirriMeh, of - lonto Pull'. rest upon you . hu'h' •• . dawn tat our • ,• • • • .• vi the wrhelc. MT* r two of.tho 111111114 F Ai; 41°' t‘ 4. l mOtteriliMiniteitlitoky. lgormsaqeseaegel The Prattl - . Ky., Mayls; INIO. Ba y ing restated this beantitnloili, I WA male etiempt to Millet uper your reeds(- BIM passing 'camas. is,Ate PACcity,l bare Miami tiro*, knee j left, sthfiedelphie, whist Lin dell this plate ow n ifir: - 0 4 .2 1 k, cloudiness ,! , sower& wftthathwent7-firis of .the dale. gams the . ! 0giii4.4.5 7 60.0ma Vale; I Beshvillitailinaferamening t and pail a visit to Biturnoud Ative,ln Berle* comity, fy, one and *half miles boil Ts:va'racalr tilaitgow sta tion, • 4 u l elf PqUiee_ l l;e:4l4,d,Weelotille • Ica/freed, ` war ';‘, 1 17 44401 1 ..fr0ni BAY /at eute of the city inarts; estmett from a 'riper!'' - th the Phillips, 'itudegistii 'Clete' of inglathWtettish will five you as imperfect wow gn it ilk " i'ldtAltlik *ay Wipe um. Ss. °of , hettety, arealiw.nrenesiesei lato mitiltedly , Me* the taretoil& et the f i le tritattereg thi tegingdassl i ; 0 1 1. i d l st seilietibeet meta teithaidge ensiNseurthel t 0 ,.. uoneiturelij amfameetuenn 4401111 Are reminded 91 hheorleal.trelsommaro, I f ilMigin t - SK tb .* l 4 - anlil l lol6l, reeks, end now Me am tn p reuse, t new e' tomsriog ,p,oeuthda, end now, %egad*. cad *Meerut ' "" • - , Tuning. mu muse evaile,ctre beet with_ Ihoelimax et,. meuglaphiestrwomient% We enter bans ellent end . meltureb* at "tieith. Listen I wiliest; dmilitery'kurtier ot wales—themthoing if something i obis ed, perhepethe fall of one drop of water in some Matsui - hollow: , The stelactitre end atalagmin how. grand! Oa *Uttar side is quer bestow, Beneath, how diuy to behold! Aeolic.; 'whet <donde of lowing drapery, &stoma of MIMIC litddless;arehltedinte; omit:tent of carved work is thelorm of a wreath of garlands of flow ers, of leaves twirled, together. - There, too, wir - nein to sett sculpture as et , the Swot workmanship —4Mitations of some Boman dgarea, reedy to start ap intOlite,. - 'There hgures are from &pudic aloe to microscope llttleneas u' • " I followed my guide to the cooling waters. How J/nre ' • TWO InOrmnring streandeto pass on perae rabic , bat we bear ‘their whispers. •In ad 'sanding; 'on the right side, we, see popish figures and groups of animals—birds, * Babe?, .qu e adrupeds. and serpents—anelmany ancient-like formein ana tomical structure: In : the climax, we led grandeur titiparaleiltd.larger omits there are; but &vies preseritinggreater twardy, and more of general interest, there. are none. In- this nave monotony is broken, and many other than inviting figures present themselves. • The full length of the cave is about one third of , a mile. The dent-Inaba of: various looslitiee and squirtmentsthe Inner Grotto,'Bell's Spring, Echo Hall, Semi Dome, Ae., together with apecial objeois of. interest, the "Organ," «killer of Salt ,' " Columbia Coluoin,""(sixty feet in diameter, or tiatnciata with' fluted Idsliotites, their crystals magnificent:id the light.)"'Arminfilin Stalagmite," '&6.; oamipy much space in the report,. which the author intends to embody Inc- work to be hereaf ter published. lie states that daring his many fears of travel In Europe, Canada, and the 'United States, forgetters! observations in natural history, he hasher win:tinned aueh a gem as - the Diamond Cave. . ' After reaching daylight again, .the party pro ceeded to.tlie Mammoth ()soo t five miles and. a half from planiondOeve: and entered it t the gateau of nearly tiro ‘ what is blown -u the abort route, and after a few hears emerged again into daylight, - maoh pleased with iheir visit. And now; ho! for home. CALEB. The Tariff Mak - of the Chicago Plat. T(10 Y. Evening Post, a leading Republican uend free trade, paper Ltuta..obnatruag the taint resolution adopted at Chicago: . > • That our readers may 166 for themselves that the zealots of protection Wive to eionse for pretending that _the Chicago. platfonis favors their policy of co Copal! ink the °mummers of .the, opuntr7, the in mimeo- 6104 *flat:oxen, farmers, artisans, me obaclea, bbopiceepers, tradespeople of all ao rta, to become.tribabiriee to the lords of -the milts, the owners of daotozies and forget and foundries and iron and coal speolea of slavery as detest :able in principle as that which is founded on onlor wo quote the resolution, and" a& that it may be attentively considered - ' - " Twelful—That, while providing-revenue for the support of-the Geeterel - auvernment by duties upon huports,sourid,poljoy, ~requires inch an ad justment of Ihise psopoats as to encourage the do velopnient of the ibdttstriat interest of the whole country, and We etitmend that policy of national exchanges which seettrea to theworkingmen Übe .ral,wages, to agriculture remunerating prices, to mcchisd4ca 'aid manufacturers an adequate reward 'foi their skilli Foliar andintirpHse, sod to th e nation 4300asiierelal prosperity an d independence." Not a wdrd about hosteler duties—they are too heavy already ; Rote syllable in commendation of the.prisiCiple of taxin_the, , farntur,Las Randolph ,nised' to ray, to help his neighbor set pp a spinning isouy. If that 'was What the Conventton meant, it was easv to say it the tires: we pay are too low for the good of those who must pay their, the ,Couvention could haveitaid so in ten words; if it 'were intended to ask ". reatoration of old burdens for the benefit of the mill owners - , the dictionary 14 full of plain Epgliih terms which would -have ex praised their meaning beyond the possibility of Mistake. •Weat, then, - bas the Convention, said in regard to thiseinestioni • .- E;lntp y, that, mime provide a revenue for tbe Support of the Government by laying duties on the merchandise resolved from abroad, ire Should adjust"7:-tbat is' the word=we• should adjust these duties with the ‘ greatest ' regard lo fairness and equity, in suck& manner a• that every publio interest of, the country shall _be uninjured, and that the of natioueresehanrsa is 19 heconi meided—Meshtng; iffeettrits; the exchange of pro. :dusts betweed"Mition•—:llPhiekehall best promote tbp welfare ,of 'worirmeb - tad employers, farmers, tneobenfoe, menufaeturers, merobanta, and WI Otber,iilasspe ,ZTothing of all this can be done by high ditties; nothing of idt this can be done by main - eaon &lei; . nothingnfall this Can he dime by cutting off the supplies efertittota abreiad,for restor ing thu_heavy tax paimportedwoollens and cottons. b hen Ave talk. of the " industitel interests of the whole country," *hat do see ma?' es the odentestiip dr a boil mine, or of la,fergeoir a cotton nr.eroelierCtuillt Induatt*,qtreiverly any form of labor, the rannifartous aedapatbm of those who wenn...that-room with anal, and employ iron tools, and. weerAottens-eart wiellime—people Whiti pursue - tiny tort - of toilche'weyer humble or iteds4d.l.:ThishiL te be ctimidered It!.the`M*ditiatisidit '.' :of &WWI ten adopted by the OhicasePottatitioultreiainpre hensive sdough to include them all. The lamsdreas must have cheap sad-irons, the farmer cheap dry chains ; we must all have cheap clothing and cheap fuel, and the only way we can get them is by low duties. The system of national exchanges, by which 'this is best effected hi a system of realm. Gal free trade. ~~~-.~-<-; ~-. f 1 . • t :
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers