The press. (Philadelphia [Pa.]) 1857-1880, August 17, 1860, Image 1

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    THE PEMES.
104DINID DAILY, (SUNDAYS NXONYTND.
*Y I . OID itimssisit.'
elefOirliti. S 1 VIONSTNUT
f it:moi.,l , !LEsso -
; T.* sitka:ciiii. sea W . intai. sayable to tlie Csitter.
iliktiforitits ;oleo( the Cary at Six nomaLni
'net;` /kitting; yelni*imaati - Yea Stew Moms!;
Mitts IDattUY ' ! At !u` Na'n'Tne—invariebil in ad
iasediibt t***o4olPd• •
PREM.
igiiied id; risheiiib•roouit of the City at Tutu Dot.
LAU Hnt7-01**Tig. IA edeetee.
RETAIL PRY 4490D11.
,W A i ltl3',ll R T 0 N
100 OglitfilttfTOTßEET, above Tenth,
SOS Bona BBOOND STRUT, Wow epruoi,
tit♦a bit tessivii4 •
LAROB ABBORTNENT
r;1:77u:77
rat ewes*
GLASSES, FRAMES, &c., &0.,
At 1110 Y
31314 n 13 OMITS PER YAER T 047 REPITIR
FAR PRENoII ORGANDIES AND
t A Writ—TMl boot butotmost oito. kid
WI)I be IoN *SS IMUI tea knportaitott, to
01.41 coo Wawa of stook tbui
AI.. oft Snewser Goods aloud Mow cost, to !bake
way-for tor Pl/1 00060
- ; °RUGS@ *DANS k NOM
ea , ZIOKTO sad ARCS Innen. •
Qfall ARMS% BROTHER!. are desirous of
'velliat ef tee somaindir of dish. , tumor goods.
Wm* omit their astern Moot, and km seam
et c
then irm anr ec.
wound andel/.
tneil add the.
. ards sad Velollllll.
aleteima lad De Laines..
t rger
a bbalrgy.
de e add mama
ea and mulles.
mores a dCoanue.
Wag( MUM , . UT aud alellTD aroma
O ) TAROS 4-4 FIGURED FRENCH
Brilliants, earshased at a aaariflas, to be
airtier sal% wwth
/1100 lassortinent Close Callow Just mei**.
a. au tair latest stylee Chows and ilnds at the love*
Pl ianwei brims NartgatmoljAkaad. 808.
• •
sill' - . Ai It A ow &
ARCM burins,
'SSOFFING4.-ANO ! , =BIIFMTDIOB OF
po p,
~4,..1 ,t 0 ,,,, m ,.
7trat ir caz.....„
i „ 1r .:L. 1 1 4:r !Faint.
se mini , iss . - isid bordered, as.
MIA and ,7,0 Flannels.
• - = MIER 000119
As Wreathe vary knit*ang always at Ma oanant
easekst otos. whasaurstatd Want.
BAK (MIMS
la taide:aad * ads of twourc k
01 Cl4lOl, Itsatles, sad /Asa
IL tods,asteattsklas
1 apt " M. eerier AM' sad .
gELL-I-NO-OPVII I
I , ' - MONK TO OE
i l la '
s r° . A r , 8 / B ft M will L IliTllBlPThmli
o 1 w 1
t
rLs
o Uts lOth
W ,
- • T TiIiPTINO PRIMA
k W* lanthis anti Points, ,
mat i. w r i zt A r ;Id Answis tia ke
fgliffiTO *lll rEfitios te n. VP( Dht &MT 1
p i ea .., t f iv em UMW. td d Epoires,
a ROT II.&a s itVTRILIOt at
N. B. Onriai 11TAVUTIAINIMIN.
VIAND - NE CHARLES ADAM & SOWS
...... r . ,
...2harleit Mews& eon's Linens
4.ainOte Marley Adams & • oil;s libei4atits. ,
Amuse Cluirkm Ts & ROO a Heiman.
nn Ghat* Li anus it Ron'a Planows.
Amino Merits A ass & Ron's Whita Good&
'Rambo Wearies Andoitm ilon's 'FLAW Goods.
*AU , . • ILIGHATO. mad ARCH Strimitit
PERFUMERY.
ciruirgrazgx' la 004 -
PERFUMERS A 117) IMPORTERS,
R•h 111119TID TO
af SOUTH FM:MTH !TIMM
Five doois obirre Mem former stand.
• •
O. &Co. Mee lerchared all datt igaterude. moulds.
40.. of the We Irm GUT 11,,Pwrise Co.. (No ne
Umlaut eteeet.lsod lorilidaed a their styles to their
owe misty, with - mon, sme ranee for the et tea sea
son. =Om the most oompiete emeartmeut of say Nom
10 On &Hanky. •
C. ac Co. ooatlnpo the importation of .
DRISCOSETS' ARTICLES,
ofirhiah their meek IN sow eery complete. • They MIA
ppm no twos ut their attentiza to the wants 0( their
eneeessere, sad malt reorder the good sushtarof their
eat-toot • :
81ICIZ FINIDINGS.
1th4.143 kiAIiTON &i C.
IMPOSIWRS'AND DEALERS IN
SHOE STUFFS.
/SENOR AND. ENGLISH LLSTUWS, GAL-
Li*Nl3, PAilefit LE&Tilliit, 10.
000/1 FOR CARRIAGE MAKERS.'
Ka. as !O 7TB eincozsD STREET. P010.1010100,'
LOOKING GLASSES.
LOON . O-021LAN8213,.
?omen AND MUDD DRAKEN,
ENGRAVINGS.
OIL PAINTINGS. &c..
'Alas S. EARLE & SON, •
rhrßoarmes; MANUFACTURERS: WHOLN
SALpg AND RETAIL DNALBRII,
EARLES , GALLBRIES,
MO CIONTrIUT 'MST.
JULY IST. 1660.
. MEW FIRMS ' Ai ORANGES.
BrantoNANTa IN WANT OP BLANK BOOKBesa
W supplied [roma very usperior seseiroseat made from
lAaaa mod. or made to order.
WAIRAATED AT LOW TIMM
WM. P. MURPHY A SONI
NSW !MORE.
StAtionere, Lithographers, sad Letter-Prue Frisian
SIGN OP TWA LIINIZA.
No. 319 OIWSTMUT Mom
Id irw-tf
CHOICE HAVANA
CIGARS.
OF VAJLIOTIE BILS.NDS
0. H. KLTTI3OX,
QPASICLING AND STILL OATAWBA
P`.. 7 WINE%
itanotramnitto ar
J. E I-LELB
Oinoteuutti, Ohio,
Always ce hand. sad in hots to ant oarolataata,
CHARLItiI F. TAGOAKT, Bola Amt.
No. WU M *MST attest.
PATENT
PLATED ICZ PITOIIZR
SSW* different is their oesetreetke Eel all others
sad WAN RAIIITED to ken tko WE LONGER Ems
any Pitaber now in ant sub temperate» of seventy 0-
mow The. &ball Melons will keep the
meter no 4 fortioleretheres._, -
A Donna lAA *lf of too In Woo NUM at water irsll
test swat hews old Ans-fine fosisagel j veils ti. ism
4nentity in en °talon, sions *helm, at ILO amino on
noentsre, Oat( buts tiro Went lad Moen onion I
?niters skald not onfenniir these ?dam bIA
those molly mold, bat Ismaili' for
jr4I,I,7,II`,PATIINT.
WM. ANTLISON & SON.
Boie Assai• tor a* blimmiscitanw.
IL IC Comer FIFTH W 01131111 i
atWf ' '
B . ANDREWS & SON.
TRUNK.
TA S% AND TRAVELLING BAG
M A,Ntf7t ACT URERB,
tin. 8/2 (X/11/BTNUT STIIIBT. /11/I.4DBUnIA
'(uoder Joliet' Hotel.)
illii - PA*ORY, NO.11" SOUTH 131X21. IMO=
irthhei, ,
. -
ill.' STILL'S
•-, .
M: CRIVTALINI% hiQUI&R
l an.24ofej mit
t..r ii.„ ' , 4,r i tfifiiithsv no7i co sztsg s :
d OS• . " 11: t.' in iti nature and offealg o ltOM
re
an y aw sn we tot - *smarm vorswitt ._ ult u :
plow, .11 , merle lit, uest. wan% mann*.
wawa; . • lip•ree - • •• ••• , fine irotit saiMiller
or oor 0. •• • , ftr.4 sat, trod agiur. "
• • lar . - ...
gull - 11114/110111111
' Ily 004ri tir eLd flue street&
~..6 , ... wt h..,..„,....,..
"virr.,w, rests.
th ft%
street.
...,;_.. .' .... 0-, 0 2:a.
«' 4,
~,„f iaimish
•e,—.. 1".!. , :::', - .7, , ‘..` . ` ,
VOL 4.-NO. 15.
SEWING MACHINES.
WHEELER & 'WILSON,
SEWINO. MACHINES.
898 ORRATNUT STRERTIRECOND FLOOR.
W . Y. UHLINGER & c.;0.13
immix AND DOUBLE-LOOP BTITOrt
SEWING MACHINES.
p.A.Muze
AILORD
SitORMAKERS,
SaDDLEES,
No. 626 ARCH STREET.
Prim of SHUTTLE MAGariNE, SOD.
' Priotiof DOUBLE-LOOP STITCH MACHINE from
INS towards.- • -
Tke stapled mid most ellolant maoldnas mann
faotarod, for an kint's of nag.
P. B.—MACHINE BILE,, COTTON, NEEDLES.
OIL. eta.. constantly on UM* j7a4lm
HARRIS* BOUDOIR
. SEWTNO MACHINE.
env from .two nimbi - without the trouble of re
sleitioettwee with little or no Judas.
NUS I VAATIAV Plat a . fair MO T . : hi . Mite Iphi a"end
WILO +X & SEWING MA
CBINR. no treat and inoitasing demand for
;Wilcox 4 'Abbe &vim( Illitohio• 2 0 1 a Lamar co
atraWebatri l S%ralggo. l 7is 6ites"T'AlN
• rapt'.
110IISE.FURNISHING 'GOODS.
SUPSRIOi EXPRIGE!CATORB,
CRILDRIM mea Arm oAKRIAGNs.
Is (treat Wrists.
rualaruiti Luaus.
voly eigeful u a➢resdies Carpets and Mettini.
YA.B.NALIA3
41'f'AD atori;frzi i f lc kA
Me. 10110 BIRKS?.
Inuaoiuttoly oppoodOethe Aostiomy of Fia• Asto,
41•214 f •
PAPER HANGINGS.
TO OLOSE' BUSINESS.,
4E7, XONTGOMENT, &
• no. in - mit:mu slim,
will Yil , Kt. 44 . 0u1t Usti viziter and next Nam task
t# d
PA.PER
watuages oven misty minssotsd with the budassa
AT GREATLY =WOAD MONS.
LEI PNENOR PAPEXIS A 7 N PEA NEM RE
, LOW COB 7.
firiess Irma= Oar Krum Pasined, of EN seed
BARGAINS.
111-1/
J N. SLIM. ic GO., 116 WALNUT ST.
g. 4 2 (m 1" fig WA Street.
: Et. CO, alB iff.A.LNuT
AROMATIC'CORSIIAL
DIGESTIVE
AROMATIC_ CORDIAL
DIGESTIVE
AROMATIC CORDIALDIGESTIVE
AROMATIC CORDIAL '
WILL CURE THE DYSPEPSIA,
WILL CURE TEE HEARTBURN.
WILL CURE CRAMP IN TEE STOMACH; /tp.
Read theiblin!itW. • certificate from Lion . J. B. II 08Ti
04 11. atittabal. ,in Distant of - Pennsylvania:
__. ;;_ • - Praggansynts, June UAL
anlllfB. J. N . Ailed # Co.— 04010/1111011t A member
y family. tAving suffered with the Dyspepsia for
several years, wee Intel y recommended by a friend to
try your Oonial •• and I eat happy to say teat before
Mthe olintst et one bottle alte_oissid enjoy her
all a g appetite, without feeling the Welt
IN& moo. i take great gleactisin resomWnding
it loan who are aglicteg. , L'• • - •
• • 3,11,P0gr. U. Si hi: E. ..at Pa.
• IlfilMATreDloEsT iirir , CORDIAL —lbis excel
bitt and agreeable ereparadon mope Orthe bey mean.
ir the 'appetite, promoting digestion, and
of
t ti o mtij u n b itto the Osmanli, which hie )et
Rim an o Osman 'receipt; and has Win in nee for
sway 'vary n the familiar or the manafeettirers,whe re
WI • WirciAr'f:L 9 D MP . f ri 4x.
-pi . ACH, a am Wane .or ...caption ; 'Ali
rlrreXilt.":". r=11 4 .1°J741.1:11 TS=
r SOOlair aillexplade the im:sentalicy of contracting
dlliPallida.
wjeaSele tat red °fifteen ingredients. Ritter' and Arc,
aa only reedit to be tatted to be approved tind
ellMe .
la a aiaarkat beverage, and may be used with
etyt idesaure. and advantage by invalids and by
thole in health.
To .he had at Ste leading - Dm giant ' and Oroglire't
itv&art_titialt, % ra zors 11011414. . .
Ma".?''''.a Y. N. KW VZ & 00.,
)0/#-IlfotatO , • . II la WALNUT Street.
ET illitBOLD 7 B =TRACT 81101113,
11 :40 , ' ' • - TOE e_ PEAT DIURETIC
Pot Disease of the Blaier. Kidneys. °ravel, Drossy
. ORELdintO WE athi FBB, ice , ko.
SalSi
t 6 diseases o those organs egpetienta
jonenibw j vi .ktr u
bs aFtpl ua O w, SYMPTOMS,
1.14 1 13 :4 11 4eni k 1)1 7 417; of Breathing.
reit
UN rtddBl iOF in ti lkUilbt.lLAS
,
YET• id.
These MERtrilmikget r o mp, vrbkib
es= roUpt;tiet ,,, Itrithr i pal i feileptio Fits.
' rwoofro iffltEreVW A ()Nob;
g the err i bl i .ll tietti pluret".
. a r eal • Ufa e - .
Aut is oilman to have the ' dgeured 'effect in the dis
arms anuniV. whether N I T P.m
MOP D ATION, _
MUIR TION,UR u ER EXCESS:EL
innmeri 1 3 181.1 8 1PAIVIMair
T ?MIMI'S.
potifmatss o cares of from one month to twenty
four standing inn ppopompsey the Hed•oiae, and em
armee of the MOIR Made al reiv a iti We phatmet., I.
FIqV I I ;Ira if /0 Pr loam T114:?g
~.t. low .... T. " . ientl.t
Plalad•lpluish
CAST -STEEL BELLS,
F.OR CHURCHES, FIRE ALARMS, la..
1011, RALLY IT
NAYLOR & 00..
ism/ . 190 COMDIBROR Street,
ENvLISH BROWN STOUT,
Koren ALE. IN STONE AND GLASS,
BY THE CASK OR DOZEN.
ALBERT O. ROBERTS.
DEALER'
m
FINE GROCERIES.
Came ELEVENTH and VINE Wrests.
R . SHOEMAKEIt, tit 00..
IMAM PAINT&
OILS AND 'WARTIME&
lathiest 'Corner FOURTH AND RAGE ammo.
1011-4 en
CABINET FURNITURE AND BIL
IAARD TABLE&
MOORE. et CAMPION,
No. ti6l Solna SECOND STRKET_
•
aosneetion with their Gateways Cabinet Balinese.
are now sireaufer i nef r a wsilo i cat i gle of
Arid hays now on hand a full sapply,finished with
ISDORK & CAMPION'S !MHO NED CuItHIONS,
Which, ars pronooneed, by all who hare need them, to
be_suserior no all °them.
For Ilse avidity and finish of these Tables the mann
fastonere ram to their sumeroils patrons throughout
to. Union. wh oars familiar with the oharaoter of their
work. Mr
RUMNESS MEN ARE ADVERTISING
ra gwort Nownpapers of City and Country—at
JOY. CIOE. & (70..
AuWerti AGENTS.
Ftrra sod 0 TN Scrota., Philadelolla
TRIBUNE B ?NW York. tyll-tf
• -
GOFFE E'S VA MAO
PATENT •
,
Pot Plata StOokin iTTlNG uad Fano] Kinttint ;
, .
Meoklaeo for frmainv towers, Marta to.,
ail MM.
lib Btsoblis• of Land 1. Van LS and 14 and 3 and S-Rib.
on kand and nuine_fo order.
Thaw XIV s tie the plain English Baring Needle.
vim Vtt le. mid any • atitaWat and moat MUM
k
Morje &VI I Family ' 'Knitting Machine, for
paaulv sad Plantation tut la a raw and anooetetel
in My mitt taventkant of the am and rank'
I with the 80*nz 6......_itane.
Maier sac
N'iKltrilv irgikpwAy, 'kw York.
1 1•1:4110 ' MIRY a. I,l3E.Avont
PIIILADELP 4 TA.TER,RA OOTTA MA
NMPACITOMV, NEVEM fII and GERM NTOWN
- rood Iwo tole cURIITNUT street.Vitritod Drain
sod Wages Pipes. Ventilating Flee, HOU( ir WPC and
Moats Flues me* of
_Terra Clone, and or suitable aims
for every edam' tniodings...This article is worthy the
attention of ad par Dee plating on huddling. Large
ease saltarage pipes for roty dratitp_ge, water vim war
raated to stand armors pressure. We are now prepared
to float:set witbsjtote or corporations for th,t artz pie in
sag apesitoy. Ws warrant our goods to thgeo w not
PODOr So say other made in the united Mates or
0113211118lital Chimney TOP , / mid Garden
maw -
lop .R. OORRON, REAL ESTATE SRO-
Jim , RER AND CONVEYANCER, NORRIaTOWN,
74,Leant& '
Altaan,
_STORES, MILLS, and HOTELS FOR
SAL. ht ornery . Dunks. °heater. and Do4lWitra
Count U. Tatting froth 10 to feeaorini. in annal_. DV, Was
Persona **flying Will be mown PrOPenteß flea 0 1
charge.
Dondellrintglee negotiated at fair rates. HAN D
SOHN KY 1 40 , 0 'd for gala in gorrletwn, Yon,-
torn, al intent ate 5•60011. POr 4311.01NC1P1 and
fiLl dean sten, amnia S. R. CO
jankant Nonfat WO, Fa.
MARTIN & ,QUAYLE'S
STATIONERY. Toy .R A i wAiwi amnia
IostiVAISUT SCRAM
1111,0 W ItLEVIISITE.
ratiADELrmi.
FAIRBANKS , PLATFORM SCALES,
ZlPj mi° " nirtianggitt4:s,?,6.
. _
. v.— -• '" ' %
. Z . 0 , - •...-;,, r, 1., . . :.:;\ ‘i I i 1 ,,,:•••••: , , . , ..rfe„ A- ,
\\ /./
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IK: .", :=-
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f lsizi
• t A-' - -;....a. a__,,......„ ......i....,,
. ~ .
.
...• ~...,
y 7(.:. ....._ :.. •..... 1-: 7- - ' ""V '' '' . t'ir IVt4 - N ''' . ii . ::.l., ' • - -. III F , ~.,.P. 71,-,17 --- •IS •^1- `• ' :.^ !. ' - e* l''
~..,...,.. ~.,
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~.,,,.,..,- tit?„,... . f -r„i ... ir., , 1.5 ,-.,, r , 0 ,- -„,„@:, -.„--_-_- ~„ ~., .
ri , ;., . fJ
. „.4 .1 / 4 " . "'"tr '-' ' I'l 23 eity›, ' ,a' ' • . ' .7 ' . ' ft ',',111-... : , 4 „,,,,,-„,,„,..1.,,,‘,/
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' r . “ :.... ', - qc. , ..." '..7 • :....:I",' , ~. „
'' ‘ •,,,----,-,-........- ,- -. 1 ---,L.,.... , -- -- Zr- - ''',-- , - "'MO- ~ .. .'' ~ ,. Y., . ..... •"1
-tor. -- - ....".:.,,,--- ,
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IStait'lutpond.kindr.
BIEDICINAI.
EXCIIROIONS.
SEA tiATI-lING.
ATLANTIC OITY, NNW JBENEY.
M 4 HOURS FROM PRI-LADEL.PRIA,
AOROMMODATIONS FOR 8,000 VLSITORR
ATLANTIC CITY is now conceded to be one of the
most delightful Sea-aide resorts in the World. Its bath
ing is unsurpassed t Di beautiful unbroken bench (nine
miles in length) is unegnalled by any on the Continent,
save that of Oilveston; its air is remarkable for its
dryness ; its smiling and Ash;ng fhoilities are perfect I
its heels are well furnished, and as well kept as those
of Newport or Saratoga ; while Its avenues and walks
are cleaner and broader than those of any other Pea
ks:lung Macs in tee country. •
- Trains of the CAMIWN AND ATLANTIC RAIL
ROAD leave VINE-STREET 'WHARF, Philadelphia,
daily at 7.M A. M. and tP. M. Returning—mak Phil
adelphiaat 11 A. M. and 7.45 P. M.. Fare *LSO. Round
trip tiokom, good fqr three days. $1 80, to be hurohued
or exchanged at the ticket MUNI only, and not of or by
conductors. Donation 00 miles. Sunday train leaves
Vine street at, &PO t. leaves Atlantan City at e-SO
P. P.1.--rtoppingen', for ,wood and water, , &telegraph
extendithe whole length Of Die road. .1e79-if
!' X 0 Tr yo n SIONS
, x&tret ' rAllpinErtu
• • A LE TOWN, end BARTON.
Exettemon Timis e to the above-nemed palpts ga m
for three demur! leaned by the NOIATM YENNISYL
*lt i al , § A lli=ggrai lif iger. firi t
Bold detV2. to other plebes !Sandal e exam:dad.
To•Manoh Chunk,. —Si 80 1 To Bethlehem. "...dee 00
To AllentoWn.. t .. r . 2.26 ITo Beaton .... —2 no
Pains, In **vars . ! the Man And YDSVMStIO. and de
ll/Yr:l Zglia.inge.!ntr,V l Tll ft O AUIYK and
its environs. which been styled the
"SWITZERLAIN.O.O.FAM.VRICA.t ,
Trans leave Er'ONEltad WILLOW Streets for
Maneh Chunk. at SAO A. M. and 6 P.M.; For.h'eaton, at
y o z . a; for BethleheithAt 8.20 A. M., If M. and 6
ON SUNDAYS, ONLY TRAIN
per Bethlehem. at....
. . . 8 A. M.
Treans_peas BPRKS street twenty minutes after
leavens Willow tree t.
No Excursion Tickets sold on the care.
sue 24t ELLIS CLARK. Agent.
sig ir i g" FOP' CAPE MAY
AND
NEWRK.?
Datir_atoi 0 Mock A. M.
NEW YORK AND PHILAIMILPHIA STEAM nevi
- armor COMPANY.
The ape ocean steamer" D.141 , 4,WA 2E I O:Rt., CAN
NON; noel_ToN, Cam. uItoOPLIA, endKENNEBEr,
oiNEBEU,
Cawt.JOHIMSON, form a DAILY Lulli . ;Weep Ante
Caoe MAL. and New York, leaving from first Pier below 21PRUCE street Otiggiday exoeptW,st 14.44_ A. M.
Retuning, leave New York from Pier 14 NO tiTH
141 - Ylntata Pad. Leave Ow Mey (2291:0223 except
edletB A. M.
Fare to Cape May (carriage bite inalnded)....tn to
fkriAnte do do- . do —.. 224
- Season tieketeloarringe hire 'extra)— .. 800
Fare to New York, usbin—. 2 00
Freights for Dane May and New York taken at low
rates. Goods destined beyond New Ybrk will be for
warded with despatok_ free of oomndesion.
JAMES AU& KR DICE, Agent,
jrl2-Im 314 and 316 South DELAWARE Avenue.
PHILA DELPHIA AND
Ril t d. , DING Bal LRO_AD._ DE
krot.LopEnT Tq l _r " oiio?i n ttmcfz,mrta;
wi be open r r exrenn e on: .
Wants for o we , at Tioket °Moe, Broad and Oellowlnll
Street,.
/0 Niagara Falls and rehttn.---.. eta 80
Tintffli And return..—........•-- 660
Tk uneenand rattan— 8 50
Fortier pertioulark see • smell bills, or npply to
'hone% Agent of the compralir Cedowtoll
streets, or to _ . 1 0. . BBATY,
General Agent bil t Readmit ilrnad, Philo.
G. 6. lOLLS. Gen't Bupenntendent, &ending.
.17/1-tf .
&AEAFOR CAPE MAY.—The Swift,
and eommodions be steamer, GEORGE
WAstilleltikON. Cant W. leaves Meh
emet whirr avem Tuesday, "Thursday. end Paint
day morning it 93 o'olook. returning on the kntorme
chats days,
Fare. carnage hire ;winded— 50
Fare, servants, oaaruag. e hire • 125
8811110111 micas, damage hire antra. • • 00
Bones, earrisses and freight taken. £O9 tau2t*
FOR THE 8E A -
SHORE .-CAMDEN AND
figANT ORS ROAD.
, 81.118 M ,R ARM , NORMENT.,
On and MiterfidlNlDAY, Y trldtui on the Oam
rind Mumma Icitilroaa wil ran as follows t
train Wye! Vine-street wSarf...... .7.8)1i. AL
Prue train OrtoPP,lns only for, w and
_
-COO Al.
"mm th t tlikllff eirk l arlrrANTA ls I'.
AL
Exam, a tra • US A. Al.
Accommodation ' tria Rp_Raibuy_„..........—.6.21 A. Al.
. • • 8 D Y -TRAIN&
Ueve VMeatreet 4
Leave Atlantic; at ...... ' I' . M.
onli'Mcapodwater.
Fete to Atianrio When t; ark/ purchased
for
igrattore.
iattklitti g .to * L Be iarchr4 t g p e t iT t n *
Roast aloe only, arid nor ofor by condu ctors. g
Monthb do. Ft • 16 *
j!reiiht must be eiritriered at - ddoper't oatby B
The vompany wilt not be recommit e for any Coors
pistil received and reeelpted for by their Agent at the
YOUlt•
_
BPF.GIAL NOTION
Te Aooymmodatiou Tratn to Si em na/tor trillrun
through to Atlantdo 'Tory Batumay oon until tut
ti On.
th wnro uo ugn flatmate atoned at Aura
Agent
Amu of the day at
trinaJe tt-tt -atrant terry. JNO. U. BRYAN L . ,
• .
TO PLEASURE , TRAVEL
LEREL-Grand Exonrsion from ?Wade-
Ohla g.;.ilagms Falls k Montrtai',Quebeo, River Clamo
r White Mountains', Portland,' Roston, Saratoga
Prings. and New York. via bake Ontano, River R.
WSW'S. Grand Trunk Railway. Splendid enamor
AGNET for Saguenay River, and return to Philodel
fillft via Portland and Boston or Saratoga Springs . rare ,
for the round trip toe follows i
From Ph il adelphia via Quebec. White Mountains, Bog.
ton and New Yin k .. .................- . 836.410
From Philadelphia via Montreal, Saratoga Springs,
- aniiNew York . . ..-....-..-... PIM
Prom setup to Saguenay River, and retorn.--.22 oa
From hiladelphia to Niagara Falls, and return- 16.00
Dotal& good until October le._ VW
For Excursion 'Ficketa and ad information asto_ route,
&o.,_azgli_at the oftloe S. W. owner of SIXTH and
GlisaTrs UT Street& GRAB. S. TAPPEN,
jell Sin General Agent.
PitEPARED GLUE.
SPALDIN4YS
PREPARED OLT) E 1
A STITCH IN TIME BA VEO NUM^
ECONOMY i DISPATCH!
BAPS THB PISOESI
As (leadoffs fiU Asrnex, sem la wall-rodsoiaisd
faimatit. it to veal desirable .to have some oheao and
convenient way for repairing Portofino, Toys. Crooke
ri, fte.
• _______
13PALDING1 1 PREPARED GLUE
assets all such emergenoles, and no household can afford
to be without it. It is always ready and up to the stink
ing Point. There is no longer a neoessity for limping
shahs, splintered veneers, headless dolls, and broken
oracles. It Is lust the article for oone, shell, and other
ornamental work, so popular with ladies of refinement
and Mete.
This admirable preparation is need oold, being oho
lineally held in solution. and possessing all the valuable
qualities of the beet bloat-makers' glue. It may be
seed the place of ordinary mucilage, being vastly
more cohesive.
"USEFUL ire EVERY ROUSE."
M. 11. .A brash asoompanles ewe bottle.
PRICE TWENTY-FIVE CENTS
Wholesale Depot, No. 48 CEDAR Street, Now York.
Addrere
DIENRY 0. ,PALDING a CO.,
Box No. WO, New York.
Put up for Dealers In Cases oontelqing four, eight,
end twelve dozen, a beautiful Lithographic Show-esti')
aecompanying each package.
AT A single bottle of
SPALDING'S PREPARED GLUE
will save ton times its oast annually to every hounohold.
Sold by all prominet Stationers, Druggists,Raz&
ware and Furniture Dealers, limners. ari 9SIIOI
#1,070/4
Meroltants should make a note of
OPALD.END'S PREPARED GLUM,
en soaking up their list.
IT WILL STAND ANY OLIMAT';
skag-mwf-Y
MERCHANTS ANDOTHERS, A DITER-
J.TX TIRE FOR PAI,L TRADE TN BREIT CITY AND
COUNTRY NEWSPAPERS. (et publishers' priose,)
through WE,II%TER't
ADVENTI.ING AHENCY,
S. W. Corner THIRD and ARCH Streets.
ST' Coll or send for List of Newspapers. JOI-tf
HAVANA OIGARS,T—A handsome as
sortment en Lord, by most arrivals, corn-
Prittnt;.., • Perigees,
Figaro, A t 'mono's,
prepterto. Black Bes,
Amino. Zasagosans.
Adore°ton. Arroyo Hondo, /4.0., &c.,
Of all sizes and qualities, for sale low. bs
cilAul.l4. 8 TETE.
auS-IBt 130 WALNuT Street.
RPANISII ,SaFRON.—For solo by WE
t".." THERILL & BROTHER, Ho. 47 and 49 North
sHOon. 11 tit mot. End
AAPEFINFD BC:OAR..—I,OOO Barrels LO.
VERDI fi'S Cnished, amuse and fine pulverized.
A. k and u Dolfee, and relined Nagar. for sale
DT JANIKB ORAHAm k CO.. i.vAITIA street.
1101011 TO RICO SUGAR.-250 hhdstn - e•
dinto and strict!) , prime quell?. for sale by
Jeettto *VI* 1' 1.. 1.1. - TVI I• a f or
JAVA OuFFEE.-1,000 pockets prime
Awn, Cone, for wile by TAMES OItALIA6I k CO.,
I,KTI E IA fitrent.
kAlt •AP RI A . —if onduras. for solo by
WETHERILL & BROTHER. 47 and 49 North
198 MP. ik 'fun
barn-la Pitch, in stor e and
go. Sf. r a w n , . p y s TA w irm ASEBURNER. &
fIiIEBSE —l3O Boxes Herkimer county
cheese. ror gee br O. 111ADWKR & GO., No
, ‘,41,4 ~mid ilAn, + Rnwr.
VARNISH-5U' bbls. r o. I Bright or
toe VarilLeh;re and fo_rjole bLROWLEY,
&0110U&NE.a. & Co CO., 10 Synth WHARN't.e. anU
PHILADELPHIA, FRIDAY, AUGUST 17, 1860.
61,1 e Vl,reoF
FRIDAY, AII(1178T 17, 1860.
41 Punch'? on : National Defences.
When Oliver Cromwell was on the eve of
one of those great battles which, for a
time, abolished Monarchy, and amblished
Republicanism, in England, he gave pithy ad
vice to his bold Ironaides, in the following
words : ic Put your trust in God, my boys, and
—keep your powder dry." Nearly two min
ries later, the Duke of Wellington embodied
the same precautionary principle in the yet
briefer sentence: a In the time of peace, pre
pare for the chances of war."
Actuated, it Would appear, by much the same
idea, Lord Palmerston lately impressed the
lirltish Legislature with the necessity Of put
ting England upon the defensive, as the best
way of preventing,-a • French invasion. Ho
calculates the cost of this at about nine mil
lion pounds sterling, 4,4000,0000 but there
can he no doubt that itecannot be done, in the
thorough manner he #ntemplates, under a
total outlay of twenty'riillions, egltnkttrabout
$100,000,000 of our money. ThO first instal
ment of two millions sterlhaft,has been voted
already, and a regular drain of two or three
millieas may be annually expected, for several
years. y
Napoleon's recent letter to Uqunt Porsigny,
his Ambassador in London,laii been driwn
:from, him by this Palmerston' movement,
,tind
protests, with a great deal of iridignation, real
,or affected, against the injurtice of imputing
'to him any feeling in the sllghest'. define
hostile to the safety of England. No' doubt,
if Napoleon consulted his own interests, be
would not quarrel with Englind, the very first,
European Power which recognized the
pire. Let France once be opposed by Eng-.
land, and what will its situation be 7 The
other leading European nations are eager to
quarrel with Napoleon, who, by turns, •has
contrived to irritate each of theta, and a' now,
'European combination would not find . It' very
,difficult to suppress the nephew,' as in 181ty
lit suppressed the uncle. No roman is wise
at all times, the proverb tolls us, and per
;haps* Napoleon still cherishes the hope of
wiping out the disgrace of 'Waterloo—which
Prance has not forgotten.
In the last number of "'Punch," just re
teived by the Persia, there is a significant Ca
ricature of the sentiment of the last Napoleon
,letter. It is entitled g , ala mode Francalse,"
and represents John Bull, with tte traditiona
ry obesity and attired in the traditionary buck
skins and top boots, busily engaged, in load
ing a bulky blunderbuss, with the old rotund
!bullets, eight to the pound. On the floor be
hind him lies a half-exposed plan, on Van
bon's principle, marked "Fortification."
:While thus employed, John Bull is interrupt
ed by a visitor, in tho person of Napoleon,
liked up more like a brigand than an emperor.
',A Minnie rifle is slung 'over his shoulder; a
tremendously lame sword hangs by his side ;
and a whole armory of revolvers Is stuck
around his body in a belt. Of course, not be
ing in good odor with gngland, at present,
Napoleon is drawn with remarkable ugly fea
tures—the nose very specially exagixerate4-
remarkable-looking • muitaire, called i
Paithful Ally, says "Eh, Mons. lull, younre
hot afraid. of me ?" and John Bull, sternly
ontinuing to ram the bullet down into the
lunderbuss, testily answers, ge Oh no, not
afraid in the least—l *llly follow your fashion."
Interesting- , Let4er . froni Constant'.
Tho following extract from a letter written
by an American gentleman in Constantinople
to a friend in this city, will ho road with
much 'Merest : •
CONSTANTINOPLU, July 17, 1800
The civil war in Syria has been very terrible.
Nearly all the — Maronitotarritory has been clew,-
toted with flee and sword. Our last acoonnta in
form us that the Moslems of DM:13(4E011B have risen
agalnet the Christians, and that five hundred of
the latter have been killed and wounded. There
Is a strong outside pressure which le hastening the
oonfliot between the followers of Mahoraet and of
Christ. 'Bat, believe me, when I tell you that
Mahometanlem Is mercy itself, compared to the
Christianity of the 'East. Our minister here, Mr
Williams, bee Just been called upon to endeavor to
procure Christian burial for an American Protest
ant, which has been resisted for Ave days by an
immense moo of Armenians, beaded by theirprieste.
E'er five days the disgraceful epeotaclo has con
tinued the dead body remaining during the whole
time exposed upon the ground, and the mob of Ay
monlans, which last evening numbered four thou
sand, refusing to allow of the interment. These
are the Christiana, over whose cruel wrongs the
Christian world is willed to weep, and to curse the
tyranny of their Moslem oppressors. Turkish
troops in large numbers, have been sent to the
scene of disturbance, but as yet nothing hes been
accomplished, and the corpse remains unburied.
Letter from Allusouri.
[Correspondence of Tho Nana
CLARKSBURG, Moulteau county, hfo,, i
August 13, 1860.
You will have heard aro this that the election in
this State resulted in plaolog Claiborne P. Jackson,
the Douglas candidate, in tho Gubernatorial ohair.
If his eleotion was oertatn, how much more so
will the nine electoral votes of this State he given
for Stephen A. Douglas in November next—from
this foot?—
Claiborne F. Jackson, It Is true, run on the Dou
glas ticket, and claims to support him, bonuses he
considers Douglas as the regular nominee of the
Democratic party, while, at the same time, he
condemns the doctrine of non-intorvention—the
grand issue involved in the present struggle.
Now, I, for one, and to ray knowledge scores of
others, could not see how we could consistently
vote for Jackson in supporting Douglrob unless we
voted for men and not for principles; and, conse
quently, gave those votes to sample Orr, the Oppo
sition candidate, which Douglas will receive next
November. .
Brockinridgo Is littlo spoken of, and then only as
the Disunion candidate.
The crops in this motion of, the State have been
much Injured by the recent drought. The farmers
expect enough feed to keep their stook over winter,
but nothing more. AUTBENTIC. k
Au Interesting Question for Shipowners.
A very curious ease, whiob Cannot bo devoid of
Interest to the owners and masters of ships, oc
curred recently In the port of Bremerhaven to the
American bark maul Park. According to law a
seaman voluntarily discharged by a shipmaster in
a foreign port is entitled to three months' wages,
and the United States consul is required to demand
the same from the Captain before furnishing his
Clearance papers. In this ono, however, a seaman
was arrested, and imprisoned by the municipal au
thorities of Bremerhaven for woundiug n citizen of
that place while drunk, by pushing him off the
plank, and the captain ci the bark, after a fruitless
application for his release, was compelled to go to
sea without him. The United btates consular agent,
Doting under the instructions of his superior, the
United States consul at Bremen, demanded and ob
tained from Captain Pendleton, the master of the
bark, three mouths' wages for the imprisoned sea
man, and twelve dollars due to him at the time of
hie arrest, Avhiett sum the shipmaster paid under
protest, because unless he complied with the de
mand be ouuld not obtain hie papers from the eon
sulate
On arriving to England, it appears that the cap
tain la,d the case before Mr. Campbell, the United
htatee consul at London, and Mr. Ihery, the consul
at Newcastle-en-Tyne, both of whom gave as their
bpinion that the demand for extra wages in behalf
of an imprisoned seaman would affect a ship un
justly, and should not have been made. Thu case
Is a peoultar one, and, we think, should be laid
before the Secretary of State, and the opinion of
the Attorney General as to the interpretation of
the law be obtained upon it. It is at best a ques
tion of doubtful justice, and it appears to et that if
a seaman can obtain three months' wages, and
procure a release from his obligations, upou desert
ing his ship in a foreign port, by committing some
slight breach of a municipal low, involving pothole
a. merely nominal penally, it may be very hard
upon ship captains and *mars.
PAIITI-GOLORED LITERATURE. Formerly
there lived in London a goldsmith named Thomas
Wirgruun, who had a craze for pnbibming his own
writings. lie hod the paper wade express!) , for
him, so that each loaf in the book shoutd have its
own peculiar tint, and if the color of any sheet did
not suit him when printed, bo would destroy tho
whole issue, and have u now lot of paper ,Lade
In this way he spent his loft:lnc of $2150 000.
Nom long ago, while several gentlemen
were dining at a club in a neighboring city, the
conversation turned upon a clergyman who was
personally known to only ono of the parry. " What
sort of person ho?' !molted M. The answer
was certainly more emphatic than reverent, fur il.
replied instantly, "As very an ass as ever was led
oat of a stable " "I suppose, then," said H., who
hitherto bad been wholly silent—. I suppose, then,
that when he is about to common Divine service
he says, ' Let Uf bray ." "
• isPiinaoxa• of •
HON: HENRY S..FOOTE,
08' T.ENNECSEMID.
DELIVERED AT HARRISBURG, PA
On Wedneedny Evening, August 15,1880,
[Reported for "The Press..]
M FELLOW Cleaves It sff,,rde me high grail
&dation tole invited as I have been; to adetreen,
upon the public questions of the day, so large a
number of the eitmens of Pennsylvania as I find
here assembled, 'and under oiretunirances so adept.
clone to the patine of the Union A few weeks since
I confessed that I felt nealight uneasiness in re
gard to - the fate of tbe'Republie. Recent events
have Much , relieved my solicitude 'neon this sab
jecit. The, true-patylets of the oouptry, of all par
ties, seem to have become fully aroused to the dan
ger of Rtiorisin. and iha nedeaslty of a tiOnibliation
of energies inbrder. to prevent 'the disruptloki of the
Confederacy evidently on the de
cline at the Norty',iedin as olearl,V - on
the wane litilhe-Boatle. , •:[Applannel T 'cannot
doubt, from what L psiteenalfy know, tact imitable
arrangenients 'will be eftertly set on foot, both in,
the slaveholding and non-shiveholding Eicist"egotth,
Union, for the tleifett both Of the
and that of thettioathern Reseentunialin Are**
hold the grand result of the Presldeptibl contest to
be now almost aseertained. - '' A Ilnion 'President
will be elected - in November nett; liat the people,,
or afterwards in Congress; and, whether that I . yee,
sident shall be Douglas or Bell, Johneme or Everett,
the Itepubliii will be safe. • - -- • -
y own preferenere hat been lobe ;Ince &tiered.'
am well satisfied that tbere la no man now in the
nallettliti all tespects'so welt fitted fertile pedant'.
•
aties.of ,Prealdential idly ae eitephen A Domelike,'
Of Illinois , [Greet applause ] It la qatte matt
fest too,'as I thank, that the pope* sympathies
are , beginningto dtritley themselves - I,3'lde favor
in every ;loaner of the Union in a mere ittiking
meaner Loan at any former pellet' efitheAlanyiele ;
and I venture to predict that iplke kregrese of a
taw weeks from 'the present thud, fridientioes cf
popular regard for this 'dietinguishad - gentleman
will be exhibited -in all notions of the Uoufetlerit
oy to an extent' which will
reasona
ble mad that his' election in iNovinaitier next. will•
certainly occur. [Loud cheering:], Haviog dong
known this gentleman, having served with !hire
for several 7adrll in the national dennalls, havieg
been a , diligent observer +of his oourao in peddle'
life even before my pereonel acquainteome with him
was established, I feel justified In asserting the
opinion that there is no individual now to be found
within the limits of the Republic better calculated
then himself in all respects to meet• the reeponei
bilities' odnileited with the ndminlstration of .tha
pnblia onneerns ail the Chief Exeentive blagistrato
of the Uniob for the next tour years. [Applause.]
, confess that my sympathies have been deeply
;stalked in his behalf on account of the extraorili
nifty assailment to which he has beenistibleoted in
querters whore ho had a right to expect and to
claim both friendship and support. No man of
Modern times, in my judgment hue had mote difil
&Milo to cem
enter, and more impediments to our
mount, than the individual nominated by the Do
mooratio party of the nation for, the chief executive
bononiof the Republic. He has mat all these dlr.
fienitiee, overcome all them impedimentstwith an
energy and a boldness which have never beep sur
passed; and he now 'stands before his countrymen,
in my opinion, as more decidedly a popular favorite
than an y man that has appeared 'upon the public
arena since, the days of Andrew Jackson. [Ha
mann. applkusel
-Anti why should not snob be the ease ? Is not
our Presidential candidate endowed with all those•
qualities of mind.aed heart calonlated to command
the respect of enlightened and patriotic men,and
tolled aquiline that in the °Moo of Chief Alagie
trate he wonld ,ao conduct himself as not only to
preseive the dealt/AM quint of the Republic, bet to
maintain and promote all thogreat interests which
belong to us eca people ? most happily for
himself, wholly -unidentified with the Administra
tion now in pewee. - 110 bee never for one instli,t)t,
In all his publio life, manifested the least Molina
tipn to sectionalism, being, as the country well
knows, as decidedly opposed to Seeession in the
South' as he is to Abolition in the North; and
having on all 000tmions been boned ready to exer
cise the most perfect justice and impartiality both
to the elaveholding and non-slaveholding interests
Of the country.
Vetere Z prooecc farther, I feel compelled, some-.
what out of the Coerce timidly pursued by me, to
bestow a transient retioe upon a certain editorial
article which made its appearance in this city a
few hours sham The riper which contains It I
'hold in my hand, and 1 end It entitled The Patriot
and Unton—rather a strange title, by the way, for
newspaper devoted the support of the Yancey
secession ticket. The article referred to reads ae
follows:
Ex.Uovernor Henry El. Foote, of Mississippi, is now
en a mission to Pomo !yenta. as the advooate of a
strgeht-oat Dowdier electoral ticket. He cornea bore.
probably. CO counsel wed) the emanates which meets
to-dav, and is Renee end to speak t • the e iurt-room
this evening. He is recresenteo as a biiiimat seesker.
and. in...point of volubility, is ansurpim Bed by any max
in the Union Derma Ina tette in the Unt i ed States
Penal* he fillet more pants of the Contrvatonal Globe
then any single Senator ever did before or ever
h-a shoe. He signalised almieli by threatening to
ousels the Union, acid ea One nnOtii ,, nr imi y
far a:. to-app oint tiff day for oouu
that ettgantrong ev•ht. whioh. luck for rho .of
not come .4 +weird. n te appointment. on snot r en
heisirew a ;antra in on , . &rasa. yararnaar far it*
Menne° ;Mooting tail Benton. Banter Iwo. irsi.eiti
acted thedperi to st i n f relater, ,, a h nd re figitof the Union, he
Voliel t g e ; attn e in minim Tosition, he re
turned &pungent ban rn pc. read •to e brace any ratan
anOrdlna mit field for the display of his talouta. lie
One now undertaken the work of dannitinii ilia Demo
cracy of rennert ref la. and wvi oartanenoo operntiona
tau evening at the overt bowie."
I know nothing about the editor of this paper,
his antecedents or protect affiliations. I contest,
though, that I Inspect him very strongly of he
longing to that very nametotte class of stipendiary
pantalets whom this meet unfortunate and blun
dering Administration hoe now under its control.
As to my volubility as a speaker, or my former
copious contributions to the Congressional Globe,
I bare nothing to say. I have hut little to say
either in regard to the enggestiott of ray having
been formerly a Ireow•Nothiug I confess it to be
true that I opposed the Administration of Mr.
Pierce, so soon as it become a mere instrument in
the heeds of Davis, cushieg, k Co. for the build
ing up of sectionalism both in the North and in
the aenth, and in attempting to control popular
elections in the States and the Territories by force
of Executive patronage. I have never been au
advocate for the proscription of any body of' my
countrymen on account of the entertainment df
religious opinions, whether Catholic or Protestant ;
nor have I ever urged, either in writing or orally,
the least extension of the term of probation pre
scribed by existing laws to persons of foreign
birth, before being permitted to become natorai.
iced. Let me go farther, and (omen that the man
is not living who can look me in the foes and
charge me with having ever in my life called in
question to the least possible extent the distinctive
prinelpiee of the National Democratic creed.
lApplatuse
It is undoubtedly tree, however, that as an anti-
Pieree•Ortehing-L-Co. candidate I was supported,
some three years ago, by more then two-thirds of
all tho members+ of the California Legislature, and
that I wee alone prevented from being returned to
the national Senate by the direct and nreleeciable
exercise of Executive influence from Washington
oily, the effect of which was, by a tingle vote in
the California Senate, to prevent the two lionises
trom going into joint oonvention for the choice of
United States benator. It is also true that the
very same result had only two years before arisen
in the State of elireissippl, under the operatic:it of
somewhat familia instrumentality. .If I am "a
bankrupt in politica," It is at least certain that I
never was an applicant for chloe to any Adminis•
trillion ever existing In Washington. It is also cer
tain that I have voluntarily resigned every public
station which I ever held before the close of my
term of office; and that, during . the last twenty
years, I have not been defeated in 4 popular con
test for any official position whatever. [Applause.]
I do not know f. ma whom the editor of the Pa
trtot and Union obtained hie information in re
gard to my having, on the occasion to which he res
tore, as a member of the United States Senate,
threatened the d eetruction of the Union on a par
titular day ; I only know that I never uttered mob
a menace to any life, nor even thought for an in•
etant of tieing so. 1 reeellect that on ono occasion,
during the tempestuous period of nee, I expressed
tome apprehension that a serious collision of arms
might occur in the House of Represeutativee ' in
m
connection with (ations then pending ; but titsa
familiar with the pages of the Congrer.Tional
Globe will do me the Jawice to aoknowledee that all
which fell from me on that mansion was in the lan
guage of warning and of earnest deprecation, which
the most content Union man might have uttered
with perfect consistency.
The affair between hir Benton and myself,
which has been so unkindly and illiberally alluded
to, I am pained to be compelled to notice at all.
That gentleman is now in his grove, and the un
kind relations which once existed between us aro,
°remorse, at an end forever, If I draw a pietal
in the Senate, us charged, (which I do not deny,)
every man who was then a member of that body
well knows that it was done purely in self defence,
upon information received, assuring me that u
fierce personal (Week was meditated, and under
circumstances fully Justifying me in supposing that
my life was in actual danger. The pistol was not
presented, no attempt was mode to use It, anti the
Senate of the Unit, .1 Settee, after full examine.
nob of all the torte, acquitted me honorably or
any improper intentions in the strain I had not
sapposed that there was a human being in the
world, whether in the pay of an Administration or
not, who would presume to bring up this matter in
the manner In which the editor of the paper called
the Patriot and Union has regarded himself as
authorized in doing.
It Is not true in any sense, as many here know,
that I mime to this city, at Ibis time, fur tho pur
pose of giving advice to the supporters of the Na
tional Democratic presidential - ticket, upon which
aro inscribed the names of Dough's and Johnson,
in regard to the course which they should pursue
touching the proposed coalescence with the Brook
{midge and Lens fact ion in Pennsylvania. I should
regard it as eminently presumptuous in me to in
terfere at 411 with a matter of tech delicacy, though
I am fr e to confess the high gratification which
clarinet bat feel. that no such disgraeeful compro.
mine of principle es that which has been ea erre.
goxitiy demanded by the leaders of Yancoylsm in
tide State, at the hands of the Douglas and John.
eon Committee now in eession, boo been acceded to
by them I Loud tippler's.° )
Lied they accepted such a proroaltlon, they
would, in Loy judgment, have completely &meta.
lised their own position before the country. and
have fatally weakened, elm, the attitude of the
Demooratio supporters of the Union mime else
where. It le, indeed, of high importance to secure
the defeat of Lincoln and !baulk' in Pennsylya.
nia ; hut I hold that P would be anything but re
parable to labor fir the attainment even of this
object by the eaerifico of principles such as the
attpportera of Douglas and Matson are now sus
pr by becoming identified In the least pos.
Bible degree with the most corrupt Administration
that the country has ever known, lapplattse,j by a
ihrmal reoognition of the mongrel Presidential
ticket whioh that Administration and its confede.
rates have brought into the field—alone, as I be
lieve, or panel - pally for the purpose, by such
means, of securing the election of Linopth, and
thus producing the exigenoy upon the arising of
whfoh the Yanoeyites of the South hone to be able
to withdrair the cotton States of the Union from the
Confederacy., It seems to theft would be eminently
absurd and ridiculous on the part of the worthy
committee, in whose presenoe I am speaking, to
enter into arrangements of any sort with Mecca.
trotters of the Breckinridge and Lane ticket to
Pennsylvania, inasmuch ea it Is quite obvious the ,
that ticket will not' have even a nominal existence
for more than two weeks from the present time. It
is doing gross iojustiee to the good sense and keen
sogacity of Mr. Bre:Alert-Igo himself to suppose
that be will long continue in hti.,prisent dieoredl
table attitude, when, by doing so, be moat Inevi
tabiy defeat all aspirations whiob be may oberl ,, b
for inters political promotion,' and brinkebtmt also
a united demand on the,part of theffriehds of the
Union ip the Legislature of Kentucky for the rts
eignation of his senatorial position.. ThVinforms
lion which has reitehed"us; vra:bltt thillast Week
free:, If.entueky mid 'other States of rave South, is
such •as to satisfy us ; beyond reasonable doubt,
that Mr. Breekinfidgels not at ail likely to obis&
a ,inajok ll 9 In a altiglCSOUtherfi' Siete of 'theft**.
irossraey, , ,exempt,lerheps, jw,,,thelMtatitf 894 th Otprolliaa,tied even the viiri or AM lips
pp R{tl
bete butlittle chatifiesMlO Isftilintfitirell he base;
• iddliereatittelo veitaiehrepolithe Dublin expebailon
of any r approximstiag, W.- Union ,pintlutents
between this titneand the Ills plio; , tally in Nevem
• bur.' ILaughterabd enplane. t "
Ishalt presently diantie•both.thei'ediforlal
uptiv !saltier end nnitnewn: author, after
ifei.,traelkito suggeal that it wile rnori'than probs..
fblk np et theidesk it' that' Wiest 'renowned
'and:. Iy.ohivaltone Penmiylvanletjuriat .who at
'prevent otiouplei,.withent in the alig.ntest degree
honerhag, that high 'judicial phioe'ishith was once
adorned-raid' magnified by a Wirt-and Johnson,
a Legate and ,te Crittenden, -, Theedltezial spot'
men in question was evidently, designed do operate
(WI may employ the' classic phivieolOgy of Mr.
Buchanan himself on a certain noted beeasion in
Pennsylvania) as a "real eockdolager.li • [Laugh
tor] It undoubtedly smacks strongly of the. nam
by-pamby 'thetorio and slip-shod 'testa which so
signally obaraoteristd the late foroibledintble, self
refuting .responses of Attorney-general , Black to
the Ilarp*P3,-.lll4Tizine article of Sonata- Doug
lee Applattiel • '
. Ana now, let ua advance to the consideration of
matters of more gravity and importance.. The
Presidential contacts In active progress. ' I have
already atated'My-Pteferenoe for Mr. Douglas, end
have Itres,ented,spiros sf . the generel; reasons .upon
which my, support of bis plaime is based. With
your consent I shall go alittletnore into portion
less on this head, 'The highest doctrinal • merit of
Mr. Douglas is, In myjcidgment, eiesnpport of the
principle. of popular sovereignty; and the in coo
l:MOW/h. with' this' principle 'that 'there halt berm
manifested the fiercest opposition to this gentle
man's olefins to Presidential honors. Now, I bold
it to be undeniably true that Judge Douglas,
however ably helots defendid • popular Sover
eignty theory, has originated no new views onithis
interesting, subjeot, but occupies
,pr wisely; tho same
position in regard to it thattais been' occupied for
many years past by the phobia/cm:Jared° party of
the Indeed. I must say that I :eget-a what
Mr. Douglas' defends as, popular sovereignty
to bo a vital principle in any system -of -free
government.. The right of legislation , in regard
to all concerns strictly domestic, is a right asserted
by our colonial fathers 'bag anterior to the
Revolution, and adopted ;Wen 'by the imperial
tlovernment of; Groat Britain, whilst still controll
ing the exterior concerns of this continent; main
tained and permanently established by the ltovo•
lutionary struggle, and asserted by all the °ham
pious of Demoontoy for more than sixty years past;
formally embodied in the Deinooratto platform at
least twelve years ago undet the name of non-In
tervention, and as snob constituting an essential
feature In, the Compromise measures adopted in
1850; re' enacted in the Kannosiiebraska bill; in
serted anew in the Democratic plittform of 1855 ;
and recognised in all the speeches of leading De
mocratic statesmen made in support of Mr. Bache
Presidential pretensions, as also in his own
letter accepting the Presidential nomination, and
in his inaugural addressas President of the UMW
States.
I shall nottrouble you extensively at MS time
with the reciting of documentary matter of any
triad- It would be altogether profitless and unen
tertaining ; but there are several gentlemen to
whose doctrinal declarations on thle important sub
ject during the Presidential campaign of 1853 I
shall venture to call your attention for a minute or
two, because of the ',polo! connection which they
have with therreSiden dal dented now in progress. I
shall commenoe with Mr. Breoklnrldgo, who, In
spoeah delivered by him in the Rouse or Repro
sentatives on the 231 or March, 1853, In diseussing
the Ransas-Nebraska bill. sald :
"It w II be observed Mkt the right or she people to
resale e in their own wet all their ornestm inetitu•
Lone Is left whoity untouelvad. except that whatever is
done must be done in aeoorfienes with the Curuditution,
the supreme mew for en ell.,
In the Senate of the United States, on the 25tit
of Iday, 185 i, whilst the Nobraska•Kaneas bill was
under dhouasion, !dr:Benjamin of Louisiana sold':
" We find, then. that this 'maniple of inefiWendowe
and {eV iropownitat of .the F lu oyle in the clamant Lem
torits of the UoJecloraoy annuses ell theee eon-
Mena opnions, end en,b es us to bani.h.frors lho
hats of COnsress another le tti te moos of clisOonteut
and excitement." (applanse.l
This u the saute Mr. Benjamin who figured so
Illustriously in his late Benatortal oontest with Mr.
Douglas, and who exhibited the amazing effrontery
of attempting, in a formal manner, to read Mr
Douglas nut of the PamoorAtio party of the Union,
he himself having but very recently united with
that party, and having, in foot, beoome one of its
numbers upon the solitary question of Mimi
eanism, his own birth booing been, unfortunately,
elsewhere than in the United dtates. •
Genets! Lane, the •present very accomplished
oandidate for the Vioe•Presidenny of the Union,
and on what is now generally recognised as the
Secession tioket--4hosti - classical eplitles have
found genera! ofronlation of late, add who made
such a singularly amusing epaeoh lo the oily of
Philadelphia a few weeks ego, in which his do
e: untie relations are so facetiously referred to—de.
livered a spook' at Oonourd, N. B.y th stuptstub.r,
1858, in which he is reported to have used the fol
lowing language :
"'there Is nettling In the law, gentlemen. but what
every enlightened merican heart should approve.
he Idea unorpors'ed in the ttansas-Nebraska bill is
the tine American erinelpi• fonAd bill does not esta
blush or protect slaving , int loaves the poop eof the
erotories roe to regulate their own local nffmra in
Me, owri way. Is there any men who cite object to
thatideat le there env American citizen who oan obJect
to that principle 1 Oentlemen I deeire to sly that the
p Maisie ins rioratenl in the Kaunas Nr brash& bill is
the very principle ro d ranee of which your forefathers
erne ed iivo the service of their country in the Herein
{loll/111, War; fur the Am nowt colonies, two years
previous to the Parquet.° of lndependence, as entre
th a bailie principle we now flat incorpo.ated in the
Ranee-riebraska bII Upon examination. you will
had toe Dealer .tion of Itiglits, mane October 14th.
ors, tisane that the p. Oohs or the several colo
nies are entitled to the free and exclusive power
of leg slat on Id thei several Proviccial Legisla
ture. in, all ones of internal policy, This was ye
fused by the crown, but reasserted by our for, fathers
Upon this issue, the battles of the Revolution were
tolight; by the bleed of our lathers this principle of self
government was estab stied t the nett refused by the
km. was sep.reit, consecrated. and established by the
best blood that ever flowed In the vein. of man 15 ould
You now refuse to the people of the renitence the
rights your nob e sires demanded of the crown and w n
by their Wood thus placing y.urselves in opposition to
the right of seer-government in the'forritories, thereby
mu Wog the position towanla the lorrtiones that
(lease the hilt( did to the colonies P'
Very bravely , and patriotically spoken, General
Lane! and had you adhered to the clartrinea set
forth in thin speeon, and been the regular nominee
of the Domooratio party of the nation, wholly un
connected with the Seeessienirts of the South, and
unidentified with those now in power, it would op
pear that your claims to the eooond aloe in tan
Republio might well be sanctioned by that portion
of your countrymen who might find reason to be
lieve that you aro actually yourself tho author of
the speech which you are reported to have deli.
voted. Laughter.]
Lot me lay before you now a short extract from a
spacer delivered at Weal Chester, in this State, on
the 18th of September, 1858, by Mr. Cobb, the pre
sent Storetary of tho Treasury, who is now one of
the most violent opponents that Douglas and point
lar sovereignty have had to encounter in the pro
gress of thus canvass, and who in tho most unblush
ing manner has,' within the last two months openly
repudiated all the politioal principles which be, as
a National Democrat and supporter of the Union.
aided so zealously in maintaintug in the year 1851
Mr Cobb said
" I stand upon a principle. I hold that the will of the
majority of the pee le of Kansas should decide Ms
question ; and I say bete to night. before this P•oPte.
and heron+ this country. that I for one tooth abide the
decision f the people there. I void to the right of the
People to govern. • " My friends, you observe that
tic, matter Ist the MUM winch /6 premium!, ! stand
upon a rine ple. There I planted myself in the onin -
niennement of th ie arxioneni—the right of the people to
se f government. 1 intend to maintain It. and to stand
by it, to carry it out to untoroe it. If it operates to the
exclusion of the people of Inv toetion of the country in
those turntories. tie it go. It in the Constitution 01 the
country, on • they have no ndht ti, complain i if it ope
rates in their behalf. and for their protection, I call
upon you to say It it pot right that they should have
the benefit of it f"
In a preceding portion of tho name speech, Mr.
Oobb bad said :
" Whether they f the people of a Torritoryl decide it
by prohibit lit it, according to the one doctrine or by
refusing to lass lawn to protect. es contended for by
the other party. in immaterial. The irrmlority of the peo
ple. by tho action of the lerritorael Legislature. w dl
decide the question, and all must abide tae Contemn
wnen made." ,
Now, I undertake to assert, (and lam cure that
no dental will ever be ventured upon,) that this
language of the august secretary of the Treasury
to at least as sweeping end comprehensive as any
language Tibial' has ever been employed either by
Mr. Douglas or any other supporter of the doctrine
of popular sovereignty ; and I confess that I have
been amazed and disgusted at the extraordinary
illiberality and unfairness displayed by Mr Cobb.
in undertaking now to subject to the meet serious
pnbtio odium a high spirited and enlightened De
nreoratio statesmen, whose sole crime, in the judg
ment of Mr. Cobb, (if crime indeed it is ) seems to
be that behest remained firm and steadfast in support
of those fundamental 7)6l(l°ov:tie dootrineafrom the
further support of which Mr. Cobb and his present
asscalates have so ingloriously moiled. I beg you
to consider, fellow•cirizons, that for perm cring in
the maintenance of this noble theory Mr. Douglas
has boon denounced, ridiculed, and scoffed at, alike
by the Secessionists of the South and the Republi
cans of the North, these adversaries being neon
[ raged and sustained by the Administration now iu
power and the whole body of its stipendiary edi
tors.
Allow me to P•ty hero, in passing, that there has,
perhaps, never been a greater mistake committed
In the world than that into which many good
people, both of the North and of the South, have
fallen of late in regard to tbe true nature of popu
lar sorereignty. or non Intervention, as advocated
and maintained by Judge Douglas and his political
supp,rters Neither be ner they have ever assort
ed such views on this subjeot as those which they
ere amused of advocating. " Squatter sovereign.
ty," in its only true senm, wo have neither ap
proved at any time nor attempted to maintain.
We believe that no one but a madman would un
dertake to urge upon the enlightened people of the
United States that the mere squatters upon the
publio domain—the unlooated, unsettled roamers
over the surface dour unceoupied Territory, with
out nodal organisation of any kind looking to per
manency of residenee, have a tight to regulate and
to fiR the political destiny of the people who shall
TWO CENTS.
in future become the aotoal residents of each Ter.
ritory. -
But we do Contend, and we contend most earn
estly, that when any portion of the American peo
ple, as free as we are and possessed , of that true
orimal sovereignty without which liberty itself
,must become a mere shadow, shall, on the invita
tion of the Government Beelf—yeg, upon the basis
of a formal compact with it, a eorepaetfsed faith i ln
the Congremional womb:non* neuforrhall Pre,sfat
•tioa rights upon actual settlent—estabtfahedirme,
selves upon any portion of the pnblle land witlithei
view to permanent Settlement and einltivation
thereof—when they shall formally apply Oar -sash
lands in the mode prescribed by statute and 'bee
mme the actual owners thereof—ethenegagpodeell
,have, In addition, reared their domeedimemaiona
AO the wildernem, erected towns, teillfeneirehes,
'established school-honees, become in all respects an
'organised social sioatraunity—than, and not before,
twiner' Congress, as the joint agent of all disgust 's
of the Union for the dieposidon-of Abe puttile lands
lend Othet property of the Govisiiimeot,Thell have
looked 'into the condition oVtheee settlers:beim
p osi ng them fitted fetexerdshettke Ant at
m selr
leovernentlu regard to mere Nal 'ooneeromonle,
land prieregurising them *Cell havaAevemsoneetit to
I:thelefination by e thein
.of a Tereitorial (femora
nese:aid :hide; siothilly titian ' the appropriate
Npal% the oetabitelunent oftheh a Gorormsent—
ithefraweitliens of dm Territorisek,!auder the eir
teemiszistill selcknad, ball as full /*helot legida•
Ilion lii regard to all domestio affairs as the. proud
lest and most potential 'date' of tliii Confederacy. Loud shetirhag l' lids to met be the' proper view of
tte remeteree. else the' people of the Ter
ii,tories, however nobly descended, -. however
fu ly entitled to all the rights and privi
legee of American citizenship; would be, to all in
rents and purposes, mere serfs to the General Go•
vernment, and the Territories themselves would
Isseoine mere nurseries of slavery. •Whets you take ,
1 into consideration that Congress has constitutional
1 Power to keep a Territory out of the Union just as
long as it pleases; that its authority to admit or
refuse to admit new States le foil and unqualified,
Without the leant appearance of limitation as to
time, ,you perceive, felloseeitisees, that if the doe
rine now contended for so fiercely by the saver
cries of popular sovereignty In the Territories be
°erect, Congress might hare refused, oven up to
ho present time, the admission of a 'tingle new
State into the Union, and would thus, having, as is
irged by the interventionists, full .authorlty to
ako laws of every kind for the people of the
erritories, have retained in a state of tutelage,
pr rather of actual' and gtinding servitude, more
than a majority of the dreetiorn Mimes be the
Bepublia. For to be compelled to .ohey perms
notty lake, In . the making of which we haye;no
pertioipation, direst or indirect, fc, all, over the
World, recognized as a date of absolute slavery ;
nor eon any more satisfaotory definition of servi
tude be possibly elated. That our forefathers in,
tended to bring about this unnatural condition of
iMege—that the wise and patrietic•framers of our
governmental institutions ever contemplated such
a wholesale degradation of more than hilt of our
free population, no man can suppose who knows
anything of the virtu a which adorned those sego
And far-Racing statesmen, and the firm and alleo
-1 innate regard which they ever displayed for the ,
bertiee of their deeoendan ts. Bad this strange and
defensible doctrine prevailed from the foundation
of the Republic, it is evident the Federal Govern
iiient would long ago have become the most Um
iuugh despotism that the world ,has ever known.
The fact is, though, that this theory is too absurd
lb need formal refutation ; and a venture to predict
that the day is not far distant when all America
Till j /in in asserting the doctrine of popular wive
eiguty, and that those who shall eppose it will be
verywhere recognized by men of sound and die
driminatiog intellect as either monarchisteor mad-
Men. [Chem..]
Before.' dose this address, fellow-citizens, I feel
stied to lay before you as clear and distinct a
tousent as I am capable of making, of certain li
important facts of which I have some reason to be
lieve you are not fully cognizant. There are pre
tante as I suppose, a considerable Member of those
Who are yieldieg a zealous Bopped to the Lincoln
said Hamlin ticket I trust they will listen to me
With patience whilst I utter certain declarations in
regard to the platform upon which their cane idatee
are presen ed to the American people. If any one
of those refit:red to rhail regard me as doing the
least injustice to his party or his platform, I should
bh pleased to receive at his hands an immediate
correetion: ,
It will be recollected that the Compromise mem
wires of 1850 wore passed by the two Rouses of
Congrese, titer a long and excited struggle, by the
united support of Whigs and Democrats, of
gorthern men and of tonthern men: 'The whole
tenantry did not of ones acquiesce in those enact
menta. The "higher law" - agitators of the North
opposed them most strenuously, and for awhile
even menaced armed resistance to the act for re
vering fugitives freareerviee, whilst the , estreniiste
of the South, beaded by Ithett and Davies and
kindred spirits, threatened an immediate breaking
np of the. Union ; In other words, the e rreceasion of
the Southern States of the Confederacy, because or
the admission of California, the adoption. of the
District of Columbia bill, and the purchase of eel ,
tahrterritory from Texas. In the letdown of 4850
commenced the fiercest political struggle, that has
oiler taken place in the South—a struggle between
the friends of the Compromise enactments on the
ode Bide, and _•the. advocates of : secession on
the other, which contest ultimately terminated
in favor of the Union cense. 'But I Implore my
fellow•chisens of the North to bear in Mind that
the extremists of the South could be defeated in
ttjelr attempted disunion, and only one way; that
t friends aid supporters of the Union cause had
t pledge themselves In the ttuatmilemn , and eine
qdivoeal manner that If their tellessecithiens of the
Sdoession faction would acquiesce in the Compro
mise enaotments, and consent to remain quietly in
the Union, then, in the event of anyone of various
COngressional enoroaohnienta specified in what was
leiewn at the time as the Georgia and Mississippi
Upionplatfsen, being at sitty period thereafter con
suPlatated. they, ft lends and supporters of the Union
a& they were, would themselves not only parti
climbs In the act of breaking up the Confederacy,
attic would actually take the initiative in the erotic.
Si' this pledge ahem, I repeat, were we able to so.
etire that aciniceoence id the Compromise Met
mitre!! of 1850, which put an end to the struggle for
scission In the co King of this pledge, nine
tehtbs of all the Union men In the whole South de
liberately participated. Now, one of the exi
grinciee specified in the Georgia and Misaiesippl
platform of that period, upon the arising of which
the Union mon hound themselves to cO-operate in
the set of secession, was the exclusion of slavery
from the Territories of the Union by an act of Con
gr'ess. Thoth who suppose that this pledge '
made
by the Union men of the South in 1950, will not ba
complied with, kr.ovi very little indeed orthe cha
racter of our Southern population, or the attri
hetes of them who vanquished the emcee
eon (notion of 1850. It As true that we
heive a considerable nuitiber of empty an 1
ostentatious bluetsrara among us, whoa* most
eihnderLeg menaces, I confess, are.not touch to be
regarded but it ie as certain as that the
firma
ment is a,ove ns, that if such an sot of unoonstltto
tional oppression and outrage as that specified,
shell ever be perpetrated. the whole South, without
a 'dissenting voice, will feel themselves driven to
thl, dread expedient of disunion, and all the
pelmet of earth will not be of potency anfdoient to
prevent the amt. Why, then, in the name of
Heaven, fellosecitizebs, do any - of the lrlends of
the Union in the North insist upon the election of '
Libeela and Hamlin upon the platform with which
their nu,nee stand'now connected, when this fear
ful catastrophe which all patriots would deplore en
pridonnily, will be certain to result from the eleo
tiOn of that ticket' 1 Apelause.l
But this is not all. ' There is a body of faction
tete at the booth, at the head of whom is William
Le Yancey, who have entered into a formal cam
paid, now of more than a year's standing, binding
there corporately sad individually, in the event
of a fieenblican President being elected in No
vember next, to unite in •: precipitating the cotton
States of the South into a revolution." Mr. Yan
cey's position, in what is known as the Breckin
ridge aod,Lene faction, is unmistakeole; Ile is
the Magnus Apollo of the whole Secession MOW.
meet. lie' preptiled ' the celebrated Southern
Lague scheme ; he In the author df the famous
l"carlet Letter ;" he devised, the whole pro- ,
gr more afterwards aoted upon by the Jeacting
faettons at Charleston, at Baltimore, and at Rich
mond ; ht is the projector and framer of the pe
lidos' platform upon which Memre. lireckindsige
and Lome aro now running.
Until be made a ratification speech in Washing
ten nay, Breckinridgo and Lane were hardly con
sidered, even by their most admiring friends, as
having entered the field of Preddontlal contest.
Mr. lancey is acknowledged as the loader of the
political faction now supporting Breekinridge and
Lane, from the Pacific to the At!untie ocean. I
understand that even here in Pennsylvania the
aapportere of Breckinridge and Lane are hoping to
have Mr. Yancey soon in their midst, and to catch
intipiration and confidence from his eloquence.
Now, I very much fear that many excellent oink
rens in this part of the world do not yet know Mr.
itincey's precise attitude in regard to secession.
. dt Bo happens that I have in my possession
pamphlet copy of a speech made by this gentle
men in the month of January last, in a Convention
called Democratic, which seam:Oiled in the ally of
Montgomery, Alabama. Ihis speech was pub.
lithed under Ida own special sanction and super
vision ; end therefore a taw extracts from it cannot
hut prove edifying and entertaining to those who
are at all curious as to what this new political
entity known us Yancey ism" maw really mean.
Beer In rated that this harangue in Montgomery
wag intended by Mr. Yancey as a defence of him•
self against the charge of being too -ultra upon the
slavery question. Referring to another speech
which he had previously made at Columbia, booth
Carolina, and quoting from it, with no appearance
of disapproval or regret, he said ,
" tint the true question is net Are we ttronrer than
we have been? but are we ND strong as our neces
sities restdre Are we as strong as we tirtittully
ought to ad? This quest on must be answered in the
negative. tan we have en 7 hope of risi.tine ourselves
end doter 203110010 namely., In the Union 11 there is
seat hope, It wood hot our duct to MAI the SUMO.
WO sete mimed io
within
a F o o t r w o i l i e hqo b s a e r w a h n o o hate hens;
; nope as lone, .eu 11017 as
hoer, as it mat be reasonaoly Indulged; not aci mu h
,1 Upton,
o,
i e rn Ut e w th it e h re th
w e ho t pea no,,bl6l,hnuesdacuti;ungy,
among
withal)) , expectanon that tirouth °Main justice
n a
.1 1
„. 1
o ur people, in going out of the Union."
This as you will 'perceive, is precisely the pro
gramme upon whtoh the l'accoyttes have been so
see.toutly operating They have been acting with
the Democratic party of the Union for awhile in
order to get additional strength for the execution
of their Distmlon scheme. So coon as a," reasona
ble " ported of delay shall have terminated, they
will strike for secession, and expect to carry out of
the Union with them all their deluded allies.
But he continues :
. 1 if we remain In the Union, we met demand are
petit of every unconstitutional a t neaten the inente.
tem ot slaver). vv., meat demand a repeal of t. e riots
of 1107, 13.9. a d
You aro awaro, my friends, that tho Et of 1807,
hero referred to, in the act for the ea . ppression of
the African slave trade, for the reopemog of which
infernal traffic Mr. 'Yancey had Introduced a mo
tion In the Commercial Convention, which anew
bled in Montgomery, Atacama, Perim months pre
viously. What it this repeal shall not be obtained?
lie answers the gnomon preaor.tly in a highly ex
plicit manner :
If, however, a Bleck Republioan should not be
elected, then in perinlnne of the Indior of mating th s
contest to the Union, we should inlnate miasmas .0
THE NV ETAS Ll YK ttti.
Tr: wastr.v PAESI Rill be tint to ribearibers Or
melt per suthum., n eA am, oe.l --AMA*
Three Copies. " ' " •
Five " e.llO
Sem*
Twenty •• .• (to oN addreas)2o.•
• Twenty Copies.or over " ( to 'Odra* of'
each subscriber.) esoh
For a Cluti of Twenty-one or overalls will ewer ea
extra ooeY to the setter-tw of the Club.
PagtiablftrlF•r• ribuilAd to net se Mears tat
Witintvr Pans.
•
(PAWN/AMU FILZIS.
lowed three times s Month, in rase for tie igailierete
Stemmer.
°degrees:4loh would lead to a Tricolor all pap,
siltation lams agairst saver), It ire "es ' aed '
tam to Jew. a syst em of mutdatton, rytee teeth
should seek Per independence out o( the ULOSP
• I , beg you to notlee, fellimacitisens, :that
nistier who Skill erec ted President, wakes milt
repeal of the enactments epugged, One be ;sonnet
Mr. Yancey, with the fall approval, of the balm
which 'he_ now...blade in the death , sad to who
Meagre 1 J 5 r9okbeenlitS stud Lane are ehterly lad eb ted
I for their nomination, it in favor of withdrawi ng
from the Union.' Mr. Yancey and his associates fa
We Banat hare long ago declared, that is the event
of'a.ltepablionn being elected to the P
Pay would attempt to break up the U ti nh
be and hiscostlederates both in the Forth: and in
the South, in co-operation with Ihir Instibanan
bis cabinet, and chiefly through the instrumenta
lity of anbordiaate offiee-holders, ere nor doing
pritoliely,what would meal °endues to the produc
tion pf that terrible result. Pot nothing den be
more abalone then that the running et Seeable
dge and Lone ticket in the fres Stater of the
Norio pap have no other erect than to bring about
be abatraotion pf a few thansand votes in each of
tree States frown Pcegine and Johnsen, dine mut
iplying the ascots of LineObt's election. That
fireolcituidge stunillt net earthly alums* of ob
its the veto of a single free State in the Utdeu
is so gibpipudy obtain that no man having say re
spect for hie ahaucter would venture to assert the
contrary.. trislillwithlit the teat month or two it
might hairs beito-,plausibly urged that there was
some tooptibility,af this tick et being mute/NW by
the El *or of Oregon and Califs eta ; but the laPt
walla from that distant feldeit bring us the most
ciozolusive evidence that and Johnson will
be glistened in California anifOreeen by the most
oval : whelp:ling majority ever -yielded id • Peei/-
dentist tidies in that notion of thhoonetry.
I hive afrepixonterted, and now meet earnestly
innst,.upen wool etidence as I deem absolutely
oonolueive, thud - the whole plan of operation for
this eruldential canvass of the Preskinridge and
Lana party was matured in the toted of Wm. L,
Yancey, of Alabama, tend I few of his Intimate u
aoaletea Jet me, then, read to you another ea
trait ;tom the speech already, cited :
"To obtain the Ltd the Poem ace nt this rented
it m ;romper, to makes tonstset in the Ceartestou Con
vention.' ( • hat contest bee been „made.; -in sort
twir • Mgr Ise stamen to gill pr. se ins gle , time to de-
CIPIOn." what wir. thee *lnfirmly adhere to the ac.
comet Demoitiatio mead.) Illate-rithletmln keen
out or that Ceonvention,,, that nens cto must inevitably he
a c ei ce t the gout,; Ana thetiuthertatlmletAtv..r of the
Dougleg doctrine, or veldt toe eadomenidntOf the
el bead platform, tiaderlotaet Dittebst creme ?bolter
for his ertltOinies# Tao litektemutlinrmin elhould
.pre
13:144ntIttAVnItkarreiginetTrihrrtr,lidt=o8tn!
denial :of these domino.- eridoreedi we • snall'hare
peeler hope of triumph within thellatoo. If deuced,
in my oPllttOn the t4tete-rt gbh, wing atost, Wed* from
the convention and Sew* to the woo l..lweAlo OIL the
youth without °ionization' of •uttlies; Oroome
another Convautionupou toe Mew ottlieur wind plea,
and go into Omelette= with acoplutato nominated by
"4a Ll i tln ft l a tr ' eglitel ' U 'lP4 prlgit .fitioata
met be Olseekl. , If Mut dile; t en t shade- heiy in
my opinion lb* calf - Jima of landau for the Wont us a
witbdrswel from toe Umon before. be 'ball be mango
rated-,betore the', au-ord. - and the Wawa of the rena
l-al Cloven-mint shall bealsoeo• in the hearing_ of thee
party. I would largest that the anverel Metef,la
panel, ttiremahou dby law remota the- Cove I nor, when it alien
be nisch,' manifest that the Bach heoubiloan candidate
for tbe-Presiderr bee received a- =Surat- of the edeo
thral rate. to call o Contention of . Meqatcloar-R1 Me
S l a t es."' 4"Pnbie ie. time to Pleat*, fo their safely
btfore ilt art, of Mora, ,
All whO,have bean diligenews toilers of the pro
gram of events for list Menai Oetwo mint be
aware that the Charm of prooeeding hare delineated
has been' most faithfully followed put by the sup
porters or Prechinridge. and Lane in the South up
to the present period. - The - views eat Pith by Mr.
Yancey, In hie Colenible speech, are yet main
tained by his followers In the South so fax as I am
informed of - their action, without the least qualifi
cation or: atiatomenf: BeVeral of those who hare
herettlere been tecognited as occupying a conser
vative- attitude are beginning tp employ language
of the meet extreme character. It is with Moo
tango and mortincation that I feel bohnd to refer
to the 'Mout fetter of Mr... Orr, of. South
for the parked° ' of, illustrating, tide matter more
fully. The language .vOlah read. from a
very recent produattori'd his is well calculated to
alarm the friends of the Union, whether located in
the North of in the South. , I feel it to be certain
that Mr Orr would not bare thought of sending
forth his letter, had be not been prompted to to do
by the state of public. aentlinent in South Carolina.
These are his words : •
"Lincoln and Hamlin, the Black Begaldicati cool.
nres. will be elortisd in Beyond/et neat, and the south
must then decide the great aucetmg Whether tee,' Anil
submit to the domination of !flack liernblt ride, tee
fundamental principle of their oreamaation beteg an
open; uodireamed. arid tie:dared warspen enritetato
hone. f believe that the honor and eafetv of the Bouth
In that contingently will resturethirpregnp;seeemon of
tee etavehoheing Btateit limn the UZIIOI%, and failing
then to otibun. from.. the ,free Mates additional and
higher guarantees for the protection of our rigid and
Property. that the areeeding &ate. ehomd. proceed to
camellia awaive Government. Rat *bite I think amok,
would be the imperative date - of the dente ahonid
emphatically reprobate and mind - late our *shame eat
ing for its object the separate Sesellialot With Caro
tuna.- If Georgia, Alamos ' atm Misrtsalmi alone.
china no a enrtion or the Musette and' Bair cosi..
would unite with Ma , butte ip •coran3oll IN` ORPROR upon
the election of a Black Repubhcan. / Wm* Wm my ail
ment to the iielloy."
I have ever deolared, fellow•cillionst Mare
opposition to the breaking up of this unto. on
Recount of, the election of surindlvisioal whatever
to the Presidential once, In accordance with the
forms prescribed by the Constitution IWO; nor
shall I everbereaftar become an advocate cf thls
&SWAGE' scheme, merely on the ground that Messrs.
Lincoln anti Ifamlin bare been elected by a ma
jority of the Amerioan people to the two highest
ufilces in their gift, though :'confess frankly to you
that the occurrence of such an event would greatly
alarm and inanity my feelings; ;dnd r am sure that
I should find it difficult to miern my mind from
the impreaaion en naturally arising lu such a esae,
that the general sentiment et the North had be
en:ls so decidedly hostile to the institutions of the
South that it would, be imposaihie to maintain
the existing - ttnion for any considerable petted
of time thereafter. I beg you now to consider
with me the probable consequences of each an
election.
You must agree with me that it is quite evident
that Mr. Yancey and Ms eonfederatea of the Soutb,
would lose no time after the election of Lincoln
should have been ascertained. in taking the steps
already agreed upon for "precipitating the cotton
Gtatea into revolution:" Suppese, if you please,
these steps to hsveluseti already taken; suppose
the execution of the revolutionary scheme Thum
agreed upon to have briea commenced, is there any
man of Intelligence and discernment In any of the
Northern States who could come to the conclusion,
that under such circumstances as f have already
named, it would be at all possible for any rogue
ler, formal opposition to that scheme to be
successfully carried on by the supporters of
the Union In the South 1 shall speak to
you with great explicitness oa this inter
esting poiet; and I feel bound to_ declare that
should the revolutionary movement ,spoken of be
soca eommenced.'lknostor no power 10 the South
ern Petition of the Cenfedereey able to cope with
the secession faction, whew Tanks would:' bet inaae
diately swelled by the accession of large number?
of Southern men now avowed and true friends of
the Union ; and I have not the least conception
that therein any eonsiderableramtberof men to be
found in any portion of the 3outh where this un
fortunate excitement Is prevalent, who would be
'Trilling to risk the consequenees,ef open opposition
to this eeoeealon movement.
Recollect, my friends, that the diattnion propo
!Woe% to come upon ua in the South immediatety
upon the heels of the Presidential elisctkot, when
all the extumerating influences of the conflict will
be still in cation; bear in mind, L pray you, that
the indignation and resentment enkindled by The
Drown Raid" will not yet have evaporated ; tiatt
the scenes of ineendiansm and ruin which have
jolt been enacted In Texas will be yet freshly re
membered through the alarcholding region; and
decide for yourselves whether tt i 3 or ie not reason
able to =ippore that the Dirunionlats of the South
could be arrested in the execution of their terrific
scheme'.
It is not necessary that I ehonid remind you that
the people of the Smith are intelligent,-astute, Vigi
lant, sensitive to everything affecting their own
domestic repoeo and safety, and observant of all
movements set on foot for their injury. They know
very well that if Republicanism shell be. ones
seated in the high places of Federal power, a eye
tematio course of hostility already matured in the
minds of certain landing ohieftnite of the Republi
can faction will be carried into effect, without any
probability of nese/safe! resistatsce 04 the part of
the Southern States. They anticipate that slavery
will be first excluded from the Territories; that
then the abolition of slavery in the District of Co
lumbia will follow; then the repeat of the fugitive
clove law; then, when, by the admission of sew
States in sufficient number the dispirit) , now ex
isting in point of political strength between the
North and the South shall be magnified to the ne
cessary extent, the Constitution of the United
States will be subjected to curb alteration as to
enable the enemies of slavery to destroy it by one
single net of national legislation.
I. em free to admit that the reputation which
[ Mr. Lincoln appears to sustain in private and
eoeird life, for integrity and fair dealing, might
well justify the respect and sympathy manifeettel
towards him by those concurring with him In sen
timent upon the subject of :flimsy.
[ „i th e n ass no
language of harsh et enunoletion towards him; It is
not necessary that I should do at : but I appeal to
the conservative members of the faction LOW sus
taining him in the North, and I put .10 them the
question whether or not this gentleman is not
likely, should he attain to tho Preeetential station,
to be under the almost exclusive influence of the
I Greethys. the Chases, the e swards, and others of a
similar stamp; and is it, thee. to be expected that
any cot eidt table pordon of the people of the South
would be able to flee themselves from the Delia
'
tads and anxiety so naturally engendered by his
elevation to the Presidency, in time to organise
effeacively for the defence of the Government
against these who are so certain to assail it In the
manner already p strayed ?
Thera is one ruditional viewer this matter which
I may bo allowed to present. Suppo.r. my fellow.
cititena, any three or four of the cott. , Stated of
the South to hove Weill) gone out of tic Union lu
the manner exhibited in tee letter of Mr. Orr;
that, after having thud consummated what with
certain persona has been a long-oherished scheme,
the seceding :gates shoul4 bend eommisaienera
to Virginia, to Tenwsee, to Rentocky, and
other bouthern members of the Confederacy cf au
eminently conservative east. annooneing formally
that they had already erten:el the act of with
drewal from the Union; that they were firmly re
solved never to return its limits; that they
still denied to be associated with their Southern
brethren with whom they hod en long lived to har
m my, and who were equally uith themselves in•
tere‘ded In maintak.ing and preserving the in
of
,the Sento, and tumid se,:_t7est the expo
dioney of a withdro trot the par: of those. Sra tee
edit lingering within the Union; and an entra...,
into a new Confederacy in prefetenen to rein.ir,
lag in the old one. where, even in em ~
(0, 1 ,e, . 1 the set of partial aecesaion
ac,so.i.pll-'red, the position tf the rernamkg
Sierra of the South had become ro
featly helpless that racy could no longer here t..
maintain their local rights and interests egalt.-%
the overpowering strength of their advers..m.
the Notional Commas—la there en individual here
present veto can doubt the reruit of snob an op: 1 - .•
cation?
i ehtti'd be quite killing, bat for tbe 'Ceuta ct
the hour, to expati*te et great length or, tn. in
resting but melancholy Futj But tact.* 1!„,
other tonics vbtoh demand a brief notice. Le u.a