__,„s i ssalomiggirfr : airm 5f.1 , 64. 'IIIEO AL* itSKS I 6 I - oioloironiehr**** eta t 0 10 4 1 4 0 44 (*Am kii:ThullfAi T. 4404 rso4(lkoiltiu: Purr Amtrak Vitlas4 6 44 ll lroa Nl* Staniuhisgisblillt 0 4 - sum • , : „*. it Tisss..voL. Wl* 00474A4H:. • : sp*i*****iiiiiii,(4`#44l,ne z pas Iparr - ,iiiietxpp. 'll4rers , , • FOE t FA 434)0 01313 i ...„ , Ana% & C 0.,, couvinsitz..wpAosissis. • o ' 'TililiiiD ST2f.S.ET." Weedd reiipieelfifirlOte the attention of the trade to • 141148 'AND ,Wigtiti-BELEOTEp ' FitV*T:r FALL GOtit o Se sew 441'14: We are dolly to tees* cestritiat ourzeiceid ifiteble., (goal. CO 11 # 1 . exte4se our stook. , -!m'-em BALL. 1860 - • _MOT, r RArr4UEZ. & CO.. nolwrinui AND JOBRELRE • • FANCY -1:01.1*:094t0DS• - • NO. .1.0 NORTH .THIRD. STRUT, AYE NOWIRSPAREIETOOPPER TO THE TRADE OE.H.SHAULY AN•IINHHEALLY jepriwim , noqic,?v epos. woti . • . , DitENE3 GOODS, -Vrt n-OOODtionisiowsztse, LACES. - [Lona:. 04u1811[Elaa - non ROL 4 . 0311111 Y 01.01121 TAIMAUHEE; " ' Toti;Hioiryfillt 14 tad Varied stink of •• ' 'PALL AND WilttEtt -SHAWLS. 7 , 4-p or tritiOlithir irvlte th• 'Mention or , qesitsoa Eix. WWII* BUYEn. ffi ria i elh3L'; r..Buirt . 1860. ntwav,Er.,,latiort,E, 8e So. Sille aim • an _NORTH' .T STREET. 1 r KAYS,NOW OPISILTSB WHINSIIIIT AND Ma -4410110b1PizETE , STOOK VII:EN011, "GERIKAN, DAM:EST/ 9: 007,36 Tiri - iiiipii•iiiii?l , 4*Co.widalt a* minima of " -1 'kW* iihkegfixthous hrgiviathithorktigt:,-,, - • liromovila i hit N. -111",10-6.10.6*-4 wimiumiM.Wirioitiikti• 1:01040;1012471:4 ' Itgal l rEn lALPOATERS. AND 'JOBBERS D NIVIN!'PtAr*AWYPI ?lulu? FTWT, " 174 .14.: 1 0n tic 5 1 es *lrmo their ;.- • - . CO PLETE troct OF PAUMPUititiVOMESTIC eoons, ANyl4ls l A*T4tAmf.gwoolipikfasortuleatuf P111110,41111* - 4MORAKKOW jii i 4 : 4l 6o64 ,4s :444 o .lla oo i i i s e siaBo e . • -, , PithfAtikOOlfli o, ko. 5ue,14011.,- M. iittEritOlt & ,T,MV :6Tam, if /I OA-T:3 $ 3 B Y. Win AZ I A ) WW,FP, SMALL W.ASSO; kc. ' : • 'Ali ILMAttoil GANA). EVAIIII; rararalSAMal. MEM . • 1860. c#os3?Elf.'`VAlHAm. ;," • Wei :71errsottersrMeiNdiorseerersred Jobbers of **rm. 0 : 14T . 5 . . ruits. STRAW °PODS. No. $01t211411/A4l waists% blow ARC". ' !' , -,Pliniralome. • . ' g00r45.., WIC. PARKAJ(. „,- scanner D tr,ORK. OP Pia four , 6o aid odds for Wart lat•utigzei.:4lfiocy.„ ` Y uofeaLlalll AND-4 430 / 461 V" N ° — 37 " /1041.g.lgria. OTEStra, immis mac ably! Ifereit, ildfodolififo; •fi 4 -- iS t rido rwite : ~., • • MAMMY • 1 44 , 1k14 WO! . ' ...11r.04 , .1rri1.10 - 9 1 Lrinti Auwporitonsi kw.) . „ILLlThfiltAThlintrplisziou,e sure. c*Tor - 4r. poW2...uteditirs; and , s.u161:11 Tal " doom of oil; ofilrf "„ , ' •8QM00 1 ; , ,139.0813: 1316142141499W2****Y. sta. 114110101 t. AillafT . A AIITIPpf. 10 ....at.L.":` = ' 4 ,- 4 " „Di - ois .010,0111 V ICAY lO WT.* 1,.:4,11,115fid.W • T i° dt":_tty,tr• ad on :2,11 *ICA: :" r Lana ;for q;i44, 04 0 4 . „ , *. • , • -00x1e43cioict4; By,:r,nEE.yrorKft , ,, • * -4_,-fgoinorsm)mitarliox witostko.gasigt mai lit== f all es • f.tot :17777 :IVrELLIO‘ - 004 1 410011114:, .414.410.• , - 7.1 E .W4c - 'tor— ). t : • . ' . _......."' • .._ .• • t 1 '.:- : '•.tL .1 tif ; •• i i r i l' e f ~,•/ ••• •• .' N7\ \ \ \ ‘ ' 1 ii ,- ... e / . • - • *ltiil*.tt . ' ' -- --- ' . -- - -'. • . • - A' .•.:,,V t i l,e ' i li - • .. • • • - A..qty. ~ (..;........ \• ' / 1 ",-Si ..., _-_-_- - ... ..i,„ " q i .: "...L.::: •NO \IN/ // ••• ' 4- 1 1-St• 7 , G .„.... :: ' .....". 'l•C' •,•,,_ L!. 1 • , -, •:: • : i . _„ ;s'-- :: - ; '' ' iiiik . '' ... ~- „..,• '4 .",; .` ,_,...mfi 1 l ;:4 -:-:' • . I -If ' ' ... , • , ~,,,„ •,,,,, f...,, , , ( ./ d iv05 ..... ....aupp . ~,,,,,F > o , •-... ', Ep p , ~... . , ''. .. • .....,...,. . .:. .. t •.:...,-. 1 , •.-. -_-_-, .• -...- . ' It .. ' , Fh11.4 ~,,....; :I:,t,- a,/,, - - ---- :;. - ---. A: •'' l',J f,;.:_,, :....: :' , -- -,..i41l , g_ 1 : l'ill P,___ , \ . - :_f- -.1. , . .... - '....47..../f114 „ . . ~..: ~ 111,....... , ..!0.. , ..q. ---- .t t A . : ,..4-iki,' ( 'F''' : 1 ' i .7 7 .'''' I ' ~. . , , I ..T;, , 4 ' 41 1 7 _.---.,-- - i -------..., --- , - ; - . : - ----•- —A . ...* -,-.._. "T` .1 - 9 . ' , ' , ..4•.-=i , ..r, -....,.. ~ c:.. , _-.--. •- , F • • ----- . - 0 - P . , • , . • , . . ----, ....•••• •• . - 14.4'2„t •.. . . . . , , . . . . • MERE VOL. 4.1-N0.47. L F IC`AND':DSY' GOOf9',JOBBERB JOSHUA •±,;•BelLit.- , • IMPORTER AND JOBBER. No. 213 MARKET ST.. _ . , • ~ • Ma nostapon a LARGE AND BEAUTIFUL AfflioGniant of DaESS• GOODS and 113 H A W. Of the ' " NEWEST • AND CROICEe'r STYLES, . At Ms LOWEST PBIOES. The attention of anti' and prompt eix-monthe snyern inioGad. ' - eeS-If s~LKS • FANCY DRY GOODS. IMPORTATIONS FOR PALL, ISO ikt. L. HALLOWELL & CO b saa MIUMT iTREET. DT NORTH YOURTH BTRENT. Arettlltetited 'to 'efrei to the trade theirs auil varied easetteetmt!A Goode, vniehmed on the MOSTIFAVORABLE TERM. Bs eaperienoed purroth'in the grimiest - MANUOACTURIOO OITIM 01? EUROPE. These have been selected with ogre for FIRST-OLAIA TRADE, Anil Wilt boot' oti,odit pitiis to commoud attention: Owns: Briinsai, from sil Mations of the country, !no invited to inspect opt stook. Tnimse-iii, months coda to , Bloroluints of un• doebtad , manding, or six psi •cent. discount for cosh Tsrptrorpsr &Mt, per ; imam discount tin eid*sur payments. . ' atallustn-ka LARGE AND ATTRACTIVE STOOK Po* PALL AND Mama o t kugs. SHORTRIDGE„ BROTHER. & CO.. IMI'ORi'ERWAZINJORRERB, No. 420 MARKET STREET. and No. 40 M,BROHANT STREET, PHILADELPHIA, NW Wino» comitlete Ihiv of FOREIGN and AM H =CAI, RTOLE'and. 017 • DRY laa.cops. satoetad withw via* tO the Sr te 'atomic , of CASH and the. Mast IMA. attention- MONTRt rsd B eal ra, to tt they mite of the a. • A. F'T.T sTop K. sonarastnt landonttosointmant styles MANU, FAOTUREU FOR THEIR OWN oALEtt. end not to lbs o irairarbara. ,Intlonted oramotiv, at LOWEST MARKET CLOAKS I. OLOAIKS,I TO ' WHOTAF4ALVA. BITYERS. OF THE SEASON. AZ • LOWOOT OMOI PRIOEO. sarlderobants' owiiiniferielsinsdOiloadenred. 304 4 titirt rv - siiS; z 4. south IRNTB atria. FAI44, 18430. lAtirkEti. stptiv, 4 co. . . PC9IBIGN AND D9MBISTIO Day GOODS. . . aoliiin risturaiVentET. & WOW!, DICALERS FORMIUN: AtiD TOMISEITIO !Mr GOODS, 334 MARKET .13111. EST. :Valk atofieronint Elix-months' Ewers, at all motions ate invited to ail examination of our (gook, euB-!m• R. -E M 0 V • A L. • In costal . Ittenon ,of the destination by fire of their Totten Stine 9iolll, • " . . YAIII)..GILLiMORE.6IOO. HAVE REMOVED NO. (310 CHESTNUT ST., , SOUTH EIDE. ABOVE SIXTH, ' niILADELPHIto .They hare now open AN ENTIRE ,NEW STOCK_ •or SILKS ,AND FANCY DRESS GOODS, SHAWLS, GLOVES; RIBBONS, DRESS TRIMMINGS, Together with a LAROE ASSORTMENT of ' - STAPLE AND FANCY WHI. - T"E'0001)S. Etanouprams, MANTILLAS, &o. ZeMak ieo,lved bitt i entail portion of their • FALL- LMPORTATIONS,, itevioutolis fii4P. ens* to dimpler A NEW STOOK. to whisk theytneit• the attention 'of their Motown owl Buyers s,ll.!StliiiTs autt-am WIIRTS, AUBTIE. & MoVEIGII. ' IMPORTERS A.ND 3OBBER3i DRY GOODS, 1 - • rcri 311 MARK= Street above TWA. 4 44 10 itttai s lW. ::: ' -- T.N.Teish, 1 PithA/PZLittIA. , OW 100 b . , ONO - • - ) ilaleiro ALL AND winsit. PLOAHS & MANTILLAS FOR THE li7llOLiEetiALE TRADE. itOrEllti spit 41 r o tTERN ERCANTB 1)11f t/4 :fultAi r igth AM P. " iiaVg" ta LOW PRICES; ,AND •ON LIBERAL TERNS. w ikr. & CO. THE Emus. rixinTILLA mid CLOAK EMPORIUM 70SOHESTNUT 'STREET R *ODD,. MARSH, A, .lIAICWARD, LarrahTEßS AID - WIICi.LE.SALE DEALERS IN DRY GOODS oLOT - HING NO. 309 MARKET STREET. Yet B.a4lsrOttOr Elea now complete and , re\ Jiro, Intysts. , w InEIWILANTO MW OTOBREI,'ADVER- Eu m ir . F ß . V . l , l' icr eVribtleTintses",) t - , - - ADVE Elf 0 AGEIIOYi So _Wi Garner ID I'M ASCII t3tre•ts. Lipriallt or NM for tof rieworrapero. • lial-t[ MA a VAYLEII STATIONER j r 4s y ji mpyeNcy Goons 1911 AufirrelVET, snow many% PatILADELPHIA, . . , 10111401ir 150NEL4.76 Bbli No. 1 Leaf ZwirOiralkitt Yr. r.YerA d re, tiff ammo° annt4k 14 Ott . orSI ?-:-/80 *tell ntrkiMer coup M I C ' 'br oor k toth i t. 00., ASMOIPTI4 44414.16011h16441-1. 04411.,IFMICRIL1410110T9ER -47644 4 ; sea gliouND St, 1110BAN,z4of1ti.d;ri is , vamp_ Vifor.o4o, 14NrenitAgigairtigt; RETAIL DRY tipODS. SPECIAL NOTICE. L. J. LEVY & Co. Announce to tho Publio and their Customers that they will commons to sell off, on WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 5, ' AT RETAIL, AND FOR CASH ONLY. 'Their very extensive and choirs stook of STAPLE AND ,FANCY DRY GOODS. The goods will all be *narked down to VERY LOW PRICES, in order to therm of the stock in as short a time as a ferried private ealo will admit of. ON MONDAY NEXT They will open throe oases of new printod MOUSSELINES, CASHMERES, AND MERINOS. Also, one ease of black ground FOUIJARD, All of Which yrill be offered under regular orlon!. L. J. LEVY & CO. weal be greatly benefited by. au early settlement of the accounts now due them. kill AND ill CHESTNUT STREET. eee-tf IWIO —PALL' OPENING.—'SEASON , o f ago; ' : • Run Stook cif 'Rioin.Boks. Fall stony **op auk. , stl,s i°o took of Fall kands... ILV l f 4 4sT4Veitios. z u 'stook °FON"' ednot. Y0...11d00k o fillnlei W,6IC. , • nit stook OtFurnitaing Ooodt. , ' 063 MLR s & bArildßl.A..Foufrru and ARCH. FALL . OF 180 I - B 3 I3ENS VE IMPROV EN ENTS I WILL I.)P.EN'IN - AA F.EW fiE DFS 1 li THOR. Y N. E. Corner Eicarpt & SP! GEA DEN Sta., ne VrlfeletglitE E XTENSiON. - will open in is few dayporttri a thaotlifloont othok of NEW SAUL GOODS,- Bought for cash. Nail selected - with oaro• to 'which the,. invite the attentihn of their nurnenute onetomere anti the publio generally: , ' . • eel MILLINERY GOODS. FALL. 1860. LINCOLN, WOOD, • & NICHOLS. 72$ CHESTNUT STREET, 11 One bluok below the Girard Douro, STRAW AND BILK BONNETS. FRENCH FLOWERS, FEATHERS, RIBBONS, Cluldren'a and Mimes' 13EAVER HATS. The largest and fallen naaortment of the kind in the City. au2l-tutlis Bm 186 0 . FALL OPENING, 1860. ON THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER IS, Wo will opop our FALL STYLES of STRAW GOODS AND TRIMMINGS, BONNET AND TRIMMING RIBBONS, FLOWERS, FEATHERS, VELVET% AND BONNET 0 RNAMENTS. In beautiful assortment. sad at REASODTABLE PRIOES NEW YORK BONNET FRAMES, BONNET MATERIALS, In all shadea. with FEATILERS, FLOIA'BRS, AND RIBBONS TO 71A IC/i. i5TraN , & COON. 720 CIIfiBTNITT STREET FALL. lATIAL , INERY • GOODTS. Al. BERNHEIII4, No. 21 SOUTH SECOND STREET 1 have note open a oonipleto astorteuent of Rll3 ROM!, ?BAIR:ERB, FLOWERS, and BONNET. DIA %%RUM all the most fashionable' odors and Allem STRAW GOODS, IN ALL THEIR VARIETIES, &0., La A Large assortment of Vernon anti Continental Hale, with Fiethere to 'match, to which I oall the attention Ot ALEACJIANTS MID MILLINER/1 Prices are LOW. and peat Induosine is wUI be oiresed to Osah sod responelbloPunAsusers." THOS. KENNEDY it BRO. 729 CHESTNUT STREET, BELOW EIGHTH, Rove,opofted ft SPIENDID'AtBoII.TMENT of FERMI FLOWERS, HEAD DRESSES, FEATHERS, RIBBONS, STRAW GOODS, AND BONNET MATERIALS, AT LOW FRIOSS. 13(1-2m ti t FALL. 1860. RIBBONS. BONNETS. MILLINERY °COBB EXCLUSIVELY. We have now on hand, end dells reeelvins, a large 'and hendemno assortment of RIBBONS. OF EVERY DESCRIPTION, BONNET MATERIALS. STRAW AND FANCY BONNETS, MISSES' AND INFANTS' HATS. SHAKERS, kn. FRENCH AND AMERICAN FLOWERS, FEATHERS, RUCHES, AND EVERY OTHER ARTICLE IN THE MILLINERY LIND, To whloh the attention of the trade Is &rooted. IROSENREI3I, BROOKS, & CO., atal/12m 431 MARKET Street. North side. st s MRS. M. S. BISHOP, NO. 1010 srAlllhrvartur street a next door to tho Ht. ',w reath) owl has wive lar e and ale nt n i t rt silent of oral .EIZONNEVAAN and as, and is now prepared to furnish Milliners and trierohante with pattern Bata. an3l.lm GENTS' FUONISUING GOODS• J W. SOOTT—Late of the firm of Win • ()heater & lloottm-OENTLEHEN'S FURNISH ING STORE and SHIRT -StANUFACITORY,_eII. 4 CHESTNUT Street, (nearly opposite the Girard Rom), Philadelphia. .1. W. id. would respectful!? mill the attention of his former patron! and friends to h Is new store, and LP! pre pared to Honiara for SHIRTS at short natio°. A per feet St .guarantied Wholesale Trade supplied with fins !Ohms and-collars. sec-ly lICVISINESS MEN ARE ADVERTISING tp the Seat Newspaper/ of City and Octintry—al the Offiessot JOY. & Co.. ADVNAKIYM ACIENTS s IFTH. sud OH NUT Streets Philadelshis. • TRIRUNF. ING> Neer ?wk.. iI9T-if RTIPI JAL ARM N, A N TIFICIA LEcio,raldit lay B. A. 011ADo, and HT fon street, Kowa to Ito. John Nadi T. Out net fittah. tuitlyennen epOroi frAn. nolFl-1m 11.AADISMOVISEVP, c ALABAlit—j. cam fox ko t *EtnERII,L,& noriim ov) 47 e1y , 1119 Mirth BEcort p Bt. PHILADELPHIA, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 13, 1860. "Ctlt Lt: THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 13, 1830. Church Singing. There are few subjeots oonneoted with the Church hat info elicited more comment, or been dismissed row more varied and opposite etand•points, than that of •ohurch 111t113i0. That from the - earliest po Hod singing has -constituted an 'element' of Ohris Han worship, is established by Divino authority When tho early disoiples mot, sethey wars suous owed to . dc . , on the first day of tho weak, the ling ing of Psalms invariably formed a part of Choir devotions; and in tact all through the Biblo -there is a plaoo given to snored song, as a Imre° of corn minion with God, only foam' to prayer itself. Poul and Silas in prison, at midnight, prayed and Sang praises unto God, and the former in ad aressing the olturohes, which ho had been instru mental In founding, oahortod them to admonish one another "In psalms, and hymns, and spiritual songs," bat always reminding thorn that the vir tue"of these consisted in "making melody unto the Lord in these hearts." True worship la always spiritual. That the tendency of muslo.is to seoth and harmonize the minds of a congregation, in order more fully to fit them for united worship, is true, but with respect to worship itself, singing can only be such in proportion as It is *heart of fertng. The simplielly in this feature of social worship In the first centuries of the Church, as all who are at all familiar with ecclesiastical history are aware, was in marked accordance with Its unpretending character in all other respeots. Magnificent churches, high (nor low) salaried clergymen, ohoira of professional singers, and a hundredother. things which characterize the Church to-day,, were then unknown, and so continued until gradually the world and the Church, mainly through the concessions of the latter, became more reconciled to each other. In the course of time, as U. Imams always begot extremes, the excesses to which obnrah•einging wee carried, by em- ploying irreligious trained vooallets to chant the praises of Cod, developed au open hostility. to church mule or any kind. The Friona to this day proscribe it in their assemblies, net merely because 7 they conceive; singing praises to Heaven for hire, with the lips and not with the heart and understanding, to be sacrilege, but for the broader reason that in congregational singing there are devout sentiments expressed, invocations made, and solemn premises given by persona who neither mean what they sing, nor oven fix their minds upon what they utter. It would, of course, be an endlesS, unwelcome, and perhaps unprofit able, undertaking to criticise this, or any other tin scriptural excess into which the Church has been led, both Protestant and Catholic, but we could not evade the force of a remark recenlly made in our hearing by an eminent divine, that If divested • of its arohiteoturo,,lte eoulpture, Its paintings, and Its music, there would ho very little of the visible Church left. It is not uncommon for persons to say, even pro fessing Christians, that they enjoy the music more than all the rest of their church seramea. Shrewd pew vendors, acting on this suggestion, always evince the deepest Interest in having in "ISM- tivo " choir, " because," say they, " that will draw a orowd, (which has become a great church LIMIT tution,) our pews will be filled, the revenue of the ohuroh will be increased, and doininie zo.and-so may do some of them some good with his predrh ing;" so, upon the whole, expensive organs and ac complished oboirs aro voted a " paying " institu tion. Once in a while a thoughtful minister, who knows tho evils of this system, (of turning churehes into theatres for gratifying the senses instead of feeding the soul with the bread of life,) and has the courage to make himself unpopular, raises his voice against it, and oven in some cases succeeds in warding it off, and cultivating denominational singing. There are several prominent churches in this city from which organs are excluded from principle. The denominations in which professional sing ers are employed are but few, and we are glad to, see that,the practice, even in these; is awakening attention in authoritative quarters. • The Bishop of Ripon, (England,) as the roam-erns Press have already .been infainted, has reeenol dressed a letter to a olergymaaiin , diocese „ strongly condemning the practice omploying professional singers.in ohurohea. It is to be hoPitt that his example will be followed by others; for certainly nothing can be mere revolting to the re ligious sense of a worshipping congregation than the presence, on Sunday morning, of: hiradvoeq lute tcrlymu thelr ' pall* inio, hassle:mi. on Saturday, ,eight, were . ensplOYlng Ahoy vocal powers on the boards of theatres, opera-houses i and concert-rooms. Mudd, of oeurso, in its place, and under fitting oironmstanois, Is not to be depreciated : Its in fluence on the mind of even the depraved is ele vating, and as an accomplishment of heaven, it cannot be too assktuonsly cultivated by the most devout; meanwhile, however, it &old be borne 1860. in mind that tho praises bymnod by that Orchestra on high aro net ohantod by proxy, but that, in order to reach the ear of Ilintrrho tame is worthy of their praiser, they must AOIV from the honost hearts or these Who worship. Drawing Room Portrait Gallery. From time to time we have noticed the etebl•plate engravings which, with aecompanylog biographies, are presented as supplamente to the Matratett News of the World, published weekly in London, and sold in this country by the principal newspaper agents, and supplied by H. A. Brown /e Co., 14 Hanover street, Boston. These Portraits are given either with the paper, or Supplied in quarterly parts, each containing thirteen portraits and me moirs. The price of a single part, we believe, is two dollars, for which the paper Itself is also sup plied for thirteen weeks. This brings each portrait to aboutfifecom Octets—to Bay nothing of the accu rate memoirs and the addition of a first-class pictorial for three months. The portraits and memoirs, colleotively de signaled "The. Drawing-room Gallery of Emi nent Personages,' , almost exclusively extends to the illustrious living. In Parts 9 and 10, which we have just received from Mr. H. A. Brown, out of twenty-six portraits only two represent de ceased persons—viz : Prescott, the Historian, and Sir John Franklin. The others here represented are statesmen, politioans, orators, olorgyMen, au thors, miles, actors, musicians, composers, pub. Ushers, vosallets, and warriors. For example, the Duke of Argyle, one of the Palmerston Cabinet, is vis-a•vis with Batunel Warren, author of " Ten Thousand a-Year,"—the Bishop of St. Asaph is companioned by Moyerbcer, the musical com poser; Bit Charles Eastlake, President of the President of the Royal Academy of Fine Arts in England, pairs off with the Hon. and Rev. Baptist Noel; Mr. Waddy, the Methodist preacher, ranges with Mr. Dale, Canon of St. Paula; Sir Riohard Bethel!, Attorney General of England, smiles be nignantly upon the self-satistled and expressionless amour proprc of Martin F. Tupper; and Robert Chambers, the sabot...publisher, the venerable , Marquis of Landsdowne, David Roberts, the ar tist, and Richard Cobden, are in company with those charming singing -birds, Madlle. Vietoire Balla, (now Lady Cramidon;) Mathis. Tom, Ma dame Miolen•Cgnalto, and Madame Guardnial. These portraits, faithful and well-engraved, would have been considered cheap, ten years ago, at as much for one as is hero charged for thirteen. They are of a size nicely adapted for framicg, and to convenience purchasers, even a single portrait will be sent by post, by Messrs. Brown. The host likeness of the Prince of Wales, for which he ex pressly sat, is in this collection. Ten quarterly Parts, containing 130 portraits have already been tooted, and any part can be procured, by remit tance to Messrs. Brown, for $1.25 without the Pa tors. New American Cyclopedia. From Mr. John Mainland, agent for the State of Pennsylvania, we have the Tenth volume of Apple tons' New American Cycloprodia, edited by George Ripley and Charles A. Dana. Here is completed two-thirde of one of the moat important works ever published in this country. Commenced at a crisis when trade was paralysed (in the autumn of 18570 it has been issued with great regularity, and will be completed, although en original work, In lens than a third of the time occupied in bringing out the now edition of the Eneyelopredia Britannira. The volume before us, containing '7BB pages octavo, inoludeo a great variety of subjects from Jerusalem to MaeFerrin. Like its predecessors, Rig full In the biography of eminent or well-known living charac ters at home and abroad. The subjects treated at more length than usual are Jesuits, Samuel John eon, Judgment, Jury, Dr. Bane, Kansas, Imma nuel Kart, the Kemble family, Kentucky, Charles Knight, General Henry Knox, Koran, Louis Kossuth, Lace, Lafayette, Lamaison, La marline, Charles Lamb, Lamp, Language, Latin Language and Literature, Law Merchant, Law of Nations, Load, Leather, Richard Henry Lao, Ar thur Leo, Charles Lee, Henry Lee, Leihrlts, Libel, Library, Lichens, Light, Lighthouse, Light ning, Lime, Abraham Lincoln, Llamas, Litho graphy, Look, John Lecke, Lola Monies, Lom bardy, London, (extremely comprehensive, with out dlifuseness,) House of ,Lords, Lord's Supper Lottery, Lenin Phillippe, ~Louisiana, Lowell Lunacy, Luther, Lutheran Church, 'anti Lord ha . SPEECH OF HON, JOHN SHERMAN, 0 • 01110, AT NATIONAL HALL, LAST EVENING Fkrzow•Orrizeres : We are soon to be called upon to declare star choice for President of the United States'. No doubt the choice of many has already been determined by party relations, by well-settled convictions, and by the chances of both in companionship, Yet there are still thou sands wheeto minds are so unblessed as to weigh reason end argument fairly. Estieclally,is it eo in this great State of Pennsylvania, and in this great city of Philadelphia, whose peculiar position has often enabled it to turn tho reale in previous nen lestsglto make and overthrow Presidents and parties. A s a citizen of the State of Ohio—a State inheriting from yours many of our laws and a large number of our citizens, and Interested With you in the preepority of a common 'Countryl come, at your invitation, to submit 4tomo practical sugges tions relating to the pending pleetion. I wilinot, on the present oedasion, address my self to lite' eupeorteis of" this Administration. It came it:Retorter through the "egenoies . of, fraudu lent naturalization papers, by the _lgo of largo electiorteering (Muhl eolleeted, by.tho promise of future3obs and contracts, and hi , ' pledges, 'repeated iu every form, that the doolrfoo of popular sove reignty bbouid be fairly applied in the Territories. It falsified them all, undertook to ,foroo slavery Into Kaneas; then to bribe the outraged people thereto accept it, and used the patronage of the Government to extend it into New Mexico. It sought, by corrupt practices, to induce the repre sentatives of the people to agree to:this peitey. It has (allowed the dideenioniste 16' control. tite Tolley and' to live upon the money of the Government' May threaten to subvert... , t has steadily refused all reertgaltimr ofand pretoostlee to the Imlustrdairn, 'tereste otthe country, and yet it has lean theoathea,, into debt at the tate Of seventeen ratillon's a yea; .to meet the ordinary expanses or the likßithinent. ) It has continued this policy after the Jogio Of &eta and time : bast demonstrated, its , oreors. _what ) teetotal Upon polfoy which transfers our Western lands to xallrond corporations and non-resident' speculators, insteed of ;rimal settlers, • It has .pertelt+Orl evert 'the , ordinary operatione of the Government, such as 'fife 'establishment of post-' i r o o ni ut a ea n lo pa h i e ti e s e l u n t e re bi i p l ed , ,b l y t Za ,i n } : o T o w o e n e d t . s sa n tle a n a b l y . ;the Mina of ReprosentatiVer, by a . vote 'of 123 to ,61, for corrupt picatfoid. 2 ."lts highest " old nubile funotienery bss reeelyed„ referred,. and eon. ;sidered ,corrupt propositioes ,for awarding eon.: treas. ;lie hen pr6batited over the distribution of sinecure vendee and printimijobefrintlienoonraged tan organized system .of assessments, under threat of removal, to helevied 'Oen all .the subordinate officers of the Gbyerritnent—thus converting the ;nubile mosey and• fie:Weary offices Into means of corruption 'This western has been carried to snob an extent that' friend _end foe cry out against It. 'ln the language (Si Mr. Pryor, of Virginia : " From the by.ways amlltighwaya of the Government the rottenness of carruption sonde up a insufferable stench." It' bee not only need its patronage to Control State and generaieleotions, but it has used It to punish or - ,subdue all the petty sehieme and ;divisions of;tbe,Demooratio party.. If a Demo. credo Representative does not vote as the Presi dent wishes, all his Mende are turned out. If a postreaater hurrahs for Douglas, he is at once die peached. ' , Tho rule laid clown by Mr. Jefferson, in his letter bf February 2d; 1801, to Governor Masan, was, st that fu,i'interferences with tho elections, who. Cher of tWlftiltanr General Goiernment, by °in ters of thedatter, should be deemed cause of remo val, beosuaq, the Constitutional remedy by the elective Principle becomes nothing if it may be etnetbereiby the enormous patronage of the Gene ral Goverment." This rule has been so far de parted from, by all parties, that it seems now to bo the recognized principle that to the victors belong the spoils. 'Heretofore that principle ban only ap ;died to the 'officers of the Government, and it Would appear reasonable and proper that every Administratiore should seloot its own friends for etch places at are within its gift ; but, until Mr ilinetranan elms Into power, it never extended to aontraete,' Jebel, agencies, or employments, where the ocelpenatition Was not fixed by law, and whore the law required the work to be done by the lowest bidder. , . . . Surely the intelligent voters of Philadelphia cannot witth mo to reason with Administration Do• moorats if the logic of earn fsotshou not convinoed them. If they hoed not that logic, neither will they bo persuaded though ono rose from the dead. Brookinridgi and Laic are the hrsrs a t law of the Administration. They were nominated by a sec tional division of the Democratic party, many of which faorton are open Disunionists, ond-thoy were formally confirmed by our voneiable President, sot exactly tis.of regular birth. butte the inberi tofu zindtossersors of the true faith. I have high respect' for Mr. Brccklnridge. In ltin personal oharaotor and doportmont ho is the equal of any one. r t believe him when he says, ao ho has done •in his recent spoech at Lexington, that he never Uttered a disloyal sentiment, but unlbokily for hiM, his fatOtatEonnottOd With those who have first core:plata ant, then threaten to overthrow the Go vernment. Mei who openly • proclaim that they ,Wosild plot treason. to retain office; men wilt. ad rode the disunion of these States if the people . ONO to 01g0, Lincoln, ?resident t Men Who eon. Stine thd ConstitUtiet. 115 inay wish it, and then spy, if fso do not agree with them, they will break no the Government men who change their con struction as often as a sharp' broker will have his bills renewed, each time insisting that we must change with them, or they wlll - break up the Union. Gentlemen, we are all tired of this process. With those men-are have no conteromlso to make. If Ahoy boat tts in the mode rirosorlbed by the Collett tattrin, we will submit to their domination obit fur ther, as we have done in thb past; Lilt if by the voice of ihe peOplo We succeed, they must submit, or bear the nensequencos which the laws Impose. . I now address myself to all others, whatever may bo their political opinions, or whatover hero toforo may have boon their party predilections. I hope all of them will agree with into as to three propositions, too plain for proof. First, that there should he a change of the administration of the Government; Emend, that this 004)mm:int ought to be administered cheaply and without corrup lion ; and, third,. that noithor disunionists, nor those who threaten disunion, nor theta who look only to a narrow, sectional interest, based upon the labor of slaves, should control its operations. If you will agroo with me thus far, I will, in de ference to ear Bell and kvorett friends, declare thit see are all for tho Union and the Constitution, and the enforcement of the laws. We will, for the present, waive all questions of the son struotion of the Constitution, if our friends will 'agroo to take that instrument as it was framed by our forefathers, and as it was construed and ad ministered by them. If there aro any calling themselves Republicans who will not yield a hear ty submission to every clause of the Constitution, amt who will not, under all possible oircumstanees, maintain the Union of these States, then I am au thorized by tho common sentiment of the Ropub lloan pie) , to proclaim that they do not belong to us. I further say, if any Republican fail to obey the lewd in their spirit and meaning, that, without any sympathy from us, ho should be handed over to those whose duty it is to punish nil violations of tho law. In deference to our Douglas friends wo will all agree to the great principle of popular sovereignty, that tho people should rule, leaving open, however, the question whether the article presoribod by Mr. Douglas is the genuine one or a modern contrivance, commuted of dangerous in gredients, and producing injurious effoots. I be lieve In popular sovereignty In the States—that each State should form and regulate, change and modify, Its demestio institutions to suit Itself, without Interference from without i but I boltove that the Tortitorlea are the common property of the people of the United Rtatee, and that in their Territorial condition they ought to be governed try the people of the United States, noting through their chosen Representatives in Congress. And now, finding that we agree so well upon certain plain propositions, lot us again reour to the praotleal question, Per whom shall we vote for President? Before we doolde what we shall at- tempt, it Is well enough for us to know what we have the power to do; for in a republican Govern• ment we can only make our influence felt through the tigeney of parties. Owing to the division of the Democratic party, the Republican parry in the only one that can hope to sueoeed by the direct vote of the people. Thin is a foot I need not dinouss, for it was written et 'the threshold of the contest by the Conventions of Charleston and Baltimore. If the election wore to he determined by the rule of plurality—a rule now adopted by every State in the Union—intelh gent men would consider it already decided ; but the retie of the tnefority in fixed by the Constitution, and if Pennsylvania does not vole for Lincoln, then the election devolves upon the Boum of Re presentatives In that event, the Constitution re quires the Rouse to choose immediately, by bal lot, a President from the portions. not exceeding three, having the highest number of electoral votes. The veto must ho taken by Staten, and not by Representatives. The three millions of people of Pennsylvania will have only the same political power es the 100,000 people of Delaware. We know that, voting by States. fifteen States wilt vote for the Republican candidate, and that the residue will be divided between two others— probably between Mr Brecklerldge and Mr. Bell —depending upon the faot whether Mr. Bell or Mr. Oreekturidge should get most electoral votes. No one can be elected in the Ileum except by unna tural or corrupt bargains or combinations. We know that, from the number of Staten ;those re presentation in the House is divided, and from the well-known opinions of the members, such n coin- ' bination io preotioally impossible, or highly im probable. If the Mites fell to elect by the 4th of March next, the thole° of the Senate for Vico Pro stdent will become President. This choice mnst be made between the two candidates for Vice Pre sident having the highest electoral vole. We ' know, with reasonable certainty, that these two candidates will be Hamlin end Lane, and that be tween them, as the Senate it at present constituted, Lane will he promptly chosen. In my view of the contest, I do net overlook the position of Mr. Dou glees. tic wee nominated in Convention by De 'necrotic delegates from the Republican States, end by almost a sectional veto. Ills strength in therm Staten wee caused by his temporary opponl tion to the Administration on the becompton Con- Whalen. The defection hoe lost him the confi donee of the Democratic States, while other facts will withhold from him all Republican support. Republicans cannot forget that he lathe unrope nano author of the repeal of the Missouri Compromise, to which measure we trees all the me' tonal excitement of the lent six years; that he Justified, excused. orall, Med all the crimes committed in Hannne until the fa p ll of IBM; that after being degraded from his position in the Senate, he still duns to the label el bisporty ; that he was not willins to carry hie "crest emelt:de" to its Memel conclusio lenty investing the pe domes t ic Terri tories with vreol power over their institit tains, hut:that he has step toy step surrendered all that was vital in lt,,unti I. fi resolution voluntary endorse ment of the Wiekliffe be has abandoned even the shadow of popular sovereignty in the Territo ries. reserving only the use of the phrase tie a party err with which to deceive find - mislead the people. Hie treatment of los friends Broderick. Forney. Rickman. Hoskin, and others. hasea him the sympathy of ell those who like fidelity to friends, even in a political ad versary. II is sedition hill. end lion marked failure to meet the responsibility of a unto on the hernestesd hill. the Ramos till. the tariff bill, the Polygamy bill, the bill against gerldoin New Mexico—ell of those (701121eit combined have lost Mr. Penguin the confidenen iii thousands of Republicans who heartily approved end stood by him to hie opposition to the polinr of the Ad ministration on the LOoorapton and Vinglisti balm Whatever may be our opinion of Mr, Douglas — of his diameter end toe ft eneipleferwe Minuet very muoh ler upon the feet that he bee no reasonable holm of an eleotton by the people , or by thee- 101m or the et:inter-- and it is difficult to state where he will get a single plea local vote. Jim strength is only materiel, ne it - may tend to siefest ii direct! ley the people, or may be used in the Hat 01 barter or exehnnee. An 'practical n en, viewing the. contes• 5 a matter of business, we can gee but three probalde results: The election of Lincoln be the People; n bare prwailitti of the election of either Li e thiselsinriden, or Bel l ler un unnatural combination of hostile elements eh Lire Rodeo. or the election of a President by the Senate. Let tie fur few moments look at each of these eon tlngeneies, le theeeetifie election by ton House plea ing• to yon? It'is a etee..tien that affects deeply the bronmerenal emit etJte , end the varioUs ether cut . "'" of the ettvof Philadelphia, fie well an it does all of the tioneervative eleniente MI the' Coe ernMent. Do you wish emir Re p reocetativer te de) eie all of Beet waiter Sir en effort to triple end tarter, ann feea and' combine to melte a President ~tto eon ` TO them le Regfect Off of the mate red Intereots of tiro coUntry at A time we. Tr measures plebe grehlpat ImPortallog'ere togs-ding t heir melon? Shall they resolve themselves Jew , continual neuvue to eiroggle to make men Pre:indent', Does the remote peembility that. by some en foreleen combine tiou, , Uouglee or 'Breekiirmeje • or Rell may elected end Llncolnttefeate,t4covevoimete for ti &Nene/ Nliteli Yon threw' will frame:ire th the Bonne.i weed. eit ree dl iour e meolleetion whatfractured durnag ,111.6 attempt lent tiestion to electan cffheer infinitely' Inferior in dig nity nod importance to the President. You km:avert well that nothing put the extreme moderation, prudent ferrite tilertne.atid pmednenspotltilt the ilmfithlio4 tr party, payed nte country from mermen that worild cat only hap , then deatraeefur. bet whielierbuld halo endinerared the oeistecree, of rthe e tmeernreeen itealf„lfteireh sweep. AMAMI be 'renewed daring tiro metentade at avinler.'lled Intelfewebleiati party iffipeld (epithet 'ell therg %spored have chinblnedinerely to defeat the choice of the ppo r±leettraMo.ttiadtion 0f:341m their deed lament {mesh. I ?reel Mier. I appeal to mg wheiter the). wound ham Mut Annie Modelle for &Deletes, dieetetien, find resolve ot t a 3 lNYsitaii i r. You Pres""dt4° n t ri t e o Ngi' l e n = Vr:d "mit' - k pyrite) mem -1;°"7: Arm', tilt F.T,',P'°l":ol, .31' it. Apit.d • 4,4 9 .# lentiedeatefielt edulaThirkeilheetillge 1 1 . ittiretoeilteet 4 ll gArel:lt i ZNi r eat{ l eVrtgaMtiont j ri l tA tte ; , varlows, tatitiot of delays a minority of the Rouse' may frost 01)13# prevent the &salon of a elpeeker, but nice c:lTft?:2ll%lYar Obneettittanitet them tiniest - ten 6Prthe.canelttricaßgtargariV44] i li t 4ll l er et e rgleli e ot n n I " e f ireZttfigi l iPtla ' r i r :* r aft li i rr,rbettlef l i n blr li ffinge b pre e re l lgroit " . ' t ot= TiIt,W.NTAIT.Prb; n °lf" ioJd 4 sek e k"ton' weeny? We litsvehedaa wetibiltrilre n tgiti t t s f Men. teems by the Rettee, In one of,Efiph Bye °run eßareJr efirabiati teti elecltiahinf•Aleabrtitiettein Preinfe t a r tteredite the other the necesioty yea linpseted firserx,Olayr-, the Meet gifted' and elequent efetesman of hue stet—la etiegnie between ittletentLertet leretord. •Frhitt tevets:) l l3 enemies—amone the 'ch ief of `whom was James ern chenen—a. pretext for fellowingettre 'to , but Imes trete' the false eerie err of" bereem,and sale!' If pur.Bell end Droiglasefereflde pre Toeldeue fee rit figment idee House, let inn meet enure ,rat enema mint to the Oat, lie, Wider the Con at Mitten. bat three much dere. before the Deese, re ser rim ell admit tt at,Lincele will be one. tine know new that Pell hes but Me Mate —Teneeeetto—end Rootlet Trutnnes Illinorlf; Will nat• therm be rather too small a enettal fee either of thost eentlemen G 1 trellis upon ? fe it likely that the friends of Breckumirlee. toning twelve Motet, will vete for Doe elms or Rell ? Why fellow-bitizene. the only greet of the policy to elect by the Home will devolve the *lee lion upon the Veneto. seht re the me P ell Demo. emery h ave a cementy over all. Do me Pell tied Peltier friends mirth to contribute to the election of Mt Beech Inridge ? If to, 'wile nee at onocidetier ' their orgatiiza. t e , tee pen mace trope Sege, and give the people a fair chance to &nide between thrill and foe only vital' ea litical organization of the eat'? , They will have to do it after the bu t whatever my be the reeelt. They will then but be like, the great Webster. inquiring where shall we go. and whither Oen we wander? Arn o :-.Linenln will have the vote of h ey ees in the Hoene, end with Illinnto and lenn ease° th would eleet. Will those two States Jodi as in &Penne Lim. coin? If so, why not do it nnw Perhaps they' expect, after denonneitte us as Meek Ft motildicene and ne den gernua funtatets. end o f Li bentile elements to defect the eleetion nf Lincoln by the people. that ten Repubboan States will vote , for Denglee or Bell. No doubt the Black Republicans are ail chrintinn gentlemen —that they have all studied the great Book. and have been tnueht to return toed for evil t but I mayeetfully euggeot that it would besmear° to rale neon them in that kind of a trade. It to my deliberate cionvionen that no such comle mitten will lefenneented to be the Repube emu; I only epees for myself, and not for these with whom I have the honor and &ermine to net. lt woul be r ther a Mead Partnewhie at beat The °entreating earnes now present eontrasts !Omer.. enough. Archbishop Hughes. and Brooks. the Irish brigade and the Orange exemptions are sufficient. smth nut eddine my diatinenished tumuli§ Seward and Bid ding,, to the conglomerate Leadeta new true and barter. but the people Will not fol/nW ellipsis there le n harmony of enneirle as a oelninon brand Of onion. The Republican pert,. Gannet lend Itself to euoh a tranneo on eritheitt ebandoning its err/rani:oomm its welt-ohe netted principles. and the proud repute tion that jive given it its eresent vitaltty and etrength. It Would be Matinees to do no. Suppose—and I think it is entirely probable—that the P cruse should fail to elect tied the eh:Owner the Petal dent should devolve urns the Senate. The election of a President by the Semite to provided for by the Con stitute-in an a ihrnier re‘ort. It IS the flat medicine age:lint inevitable daorennizetion. It is anti-Republi enn, beacons it remove% the election trent the eenele it in rr Met 11 , e a conclave of cardinain. OT a Neer Diet, than n enrolee election. it in Unequal, becau s e i t rives the citizen of one Mato more petition! power than the ertieen of another State. e he equebt) of the re presentetion of Staten in the Seentegets with gross inegnaiitr when Feriatcra from the smeller States roe totems' the merest minority of one people. can elect it President for the whole people. It 10 eneatontia. he mmer+ it etenres our national ex stenee nod our common cit i zenship in a great nation. and treats the Govern. remetremply so a league of separate States, end the tienntora As agents to entracte. eninmender-m-ehie f of a onnfederated army. An electinn by the Setata will tale great constitutioniienentions onto the dere ti on in offiee of , the Preeldent &miter! ; and 1 have the au thority °Fele Jefferson fog an% it= that it / 3 ,0 10i be a stretch O`the Conatitutien: Any eleetren by the P,nrate would enetinue the narrow. gettional sort corrupt policy of •thie Minim:dr/Bien. A malenty of the elenatore Are its supporters. Mr. Douglee found himself alone in that heti. with Mr. Peel]. of Ohin. Mr. Crittenden ie the lent of the old Rine Reenters. The Demerit:l3le mejerity of that Mounter represent but a smell mineritt of the people; yet. As they repre sent thusly-populated olayS Staten. or emelt free States. And brave enrtified themeolves by electing two Senators freMthe Stette of lettaaft e thee here It ta their, power to elect a Pre:mien; neatest . the combined Aestit of All otherar Even if the dietwoditable bargain of New York politicians could defeat an election by the people. and the name* of Hamlin end Everett shnuld ho tarried to the Semite ea ihe two highest eandidatee voted for as Vice Preeidents, it is doubtful if the Senate would not disrezard it, plain , duty of chortling between them. It in true thee the Coustitutmn says that the Senate shalt choose from the two Merit on the list; but it also energies Me 'noncom or Met atire purpose shall cermet of two thirds of the who number of Sounders. A majority of the whole number eliell he n eceratry to a choirn. Is it Joilging Wired) of Sento of three Se nators to assume that. totter pretence ref the want of a more eh or the mimed(' impotent anal mains t). they will dierecard or elude their plain coeatitutional Mince. and then, to avoid a complete diaereanieation of the Clover:metre impose upon the 'people their siding officer as President of Ore United States? We must not tonic!. that thane Se:Wer e o already exer eieed the power of electing Senators from the sovereign Mate of loth ina, exalt:dine those who acre duly elected be the Loeuiletture of the Mete. Would it he non worse f or them to e iAre gerd their id idn duty. and then resotve thamoolven into a conclave of cardnedn, to select from their owe emitter a Votes. and cell ir , m Preaieent ? aebniit to the Mends ofelDnuelts and Sell whether they can safeev trust the protest majority of the Senate to select of her Everett or Johnson, when that once re , tont,. yeoman end untieru pelmet, may accomplish the election of Breekinndre to simply refusing todineharce ila eonetitutionet duty ? Wilde me Douelem and Bell friends are bargainine. and emu; inc• and trafficking. to defeat the Republican party. let me rim end them that all they cat, accomplish will ter to continue in pow er n. cornices enemy. I subverts. at some length. to tan minter:stave eni eons of Philndelphie. these considerations, to :trowel them that, whatever tray be their chtree in the Mat Illatallee, there in but one line of , safety ler ever) 'patriot who fu opposed to this Ailinimetration. and tent It to contribute. to the election of Lincoln by the People. you rimy say to MO that you are not Republicans and that you do not believe in the theory and policy of the Republican party It is for yon to SIC whether there is any rsilicel orror in the doctrines of the Remit , - been party that would hied on to eneountsr the Sidi rtllfee I hems ireceested. ohm a Rol:ahem in the Pero sense of the term, I approve the entire policy of the Republican party move tho repeal or the Missouri Compromise gave birth to its organization. and an re cently exenunded 10 the platform at Climes:). In this, I mar differ with sonic of this reemotabio aueienee. but I wet ask you to fellow me, and let us s's whether there re anything in the dontrmes or the Wier of 11,0 Repute can earls that ahauld Prevent any patriotic citizen from contributing to the election by the peorle of Lincoln and Hamlin. The oubleet upon which you are Most sereitive—the slavery question—ie one seen which I will ondenver to he ea expireit end frank as peteilee. The radioni differenee between the Republmen and both wings of the Democratic party is on a question of eenstitutiotial law. It is thus um enemas, held' as ideals in the Pouthern States, regarded by the CI - institution of the United Plates as property in the Settle 38110 In Wllleh. lay universal law, boreal. cattle, oxen, and other chat tela ere held; or, are they p,sorts. held tinder Slate lawn to Serelo3, and when relieved from the ditiabihte of State 'ewe entitled to life, liberty. and th e onion , ment of the reward oof the! t own labors I understand Mr. Donate. to admit that slaves are regarded as tiro port., br the Constitution. Thet s ty he easumtlen of thn Breektraidee De moo tarty. ape e one upo nwhich e'l the reasoning of the Ceilloun school of polftlefane is foueded, This in their Icy le slaves are Pi everts , by the Con elitution of the United Suttee, end. [hardline.). any elavehrlder lies the right to take his property, tneluding trio olives. neo any. Territory; that neither Conerees nor a Territorial Leelebiture.nor the emelt of a Ter- Merry eon deprave him of his right. for they are imbor dinete to the copotilution. and Ills the they of all of them to protect him in the enjnyment of lea oonslitu tionei right. Admit the asanmption. end it to hard to resist the conclusion Rut where wilt this login lend us? Who cannot tire ele.ve be oerried into a free Mate and held them as 11.alete ? la It beetl.llllo the °tete Con eilution forte& it? Rut la hot a SWAB Cenatemlon rubordinato to the ronatitutiou of the United States? fine not a oitizen of the United elites the same right rentleflyania that he Imo lionlerritory ? What great% force loin the Conotitu Inn Term., tbeei Starat i a State 'lf try the tot er Conution ot the United e. it is the duty of Conr , ess tset s'avriry in it Territory, why lint in a stater why may not Con lITOS3 raSS a slave conic to reO,JllZe the rights of Southern plaveholdern in Venn sylvan,. be is 1111{Ylee111? If I em told that Couettes line power over a Territory that it hoe not over a State. I am brought bark to the Re pel:bean doctrine; end then it basemen a mere question gonoy whether Concrete ought rot, in the exercise of a Pete voliey. to pmhi bit slavery In nTerriforyefor if it has envoy to eateleish nr reetVate. It certainly has power to prohibit shivery. But these theorists ,'end the power of Congress to prohibit. and moist it mutt pre terit slavery. They contend that the ftenstitutempinens elavory nr property In sloven above alt oose Territorial. or Congressional ennetinents. Their doctrines are the tt irrepressible conflict" in earnest They willn ever be aequieserd in while the Constitution Elands. They propene and intend &perpetual agitation. They say oleves are property by the Ceneteutton I gen es nee. There in en &nese in the Constitution that speaks of them nn proeerty, but we are expressly told by the framers of the Cenetitution that the idea that man could hold property in man wag Carefully o.loll.lded. Property is not made the hams of reprerren- Mime. Your oar property—le rids, stack, morehandire. limner, and the like, vth enter in value an in several itee—le not reereaented Your men. women, rich eteldren nro represented—the poet. alike with the rich. Perrone are represented in the Hoene, Mates In the Renate, °reports cowl ore. And yet *WS. ma teem canted by over twenty member. in the Souse—not as Property. but no e.rsoes. Our Southern brethren ere very writing to elect twenty n ember) , to represent these persona cacti by them slaves. They are Very willing that we should catch the prrsone as runaways under the mime of r• pers. - cm held to omelet." If the Constitution Create .laves under Slate news as prOserty , and net as persons, why is this preporte ens no other represented by members in Cenerese ? Or bee it the peculiar faculty of being persons to be placed in the Cannot Vat lot renresentntion. and property when ,t erotism into a Territory • ' 1 bin doctrine it, a modern invention. conceived in the eutiVe mind of John C. Calhoun. It hen no election in the writmee or meet lice of the father*. The, otiose the words of the Con atitution "are Gully. and by them en re fully described the relation of persons hole to service as a Ptnte Institu tion, Wing ne proteation or TIRIII“ outride , the State e xeept the right ol rerepture when escaping. NO person hold to service or labor in one Mete Ircrlea VIE 7.1.1e9 vim-troy," kr. Why use the word person if they menet Property ? Why use the alma service— , word only applied to the intelligent labor of men—why onn ti e pregnant words" under the laws thereof," mi le', they meant to describe a mere local, winn repel in el it& ion ? Why any of these wetter, tf the relate - in of :nester and slave wee protected in the national Ter ritory? Tf eleven are property like lenges and why any fugitive Meuse in the Consolation? Why not providers fu were horse rtOr 011tt eh, If they meant that slaves Propey. like lour-footed hetet& why did they not ray err? hunch a In rbarlsm would have been rejected with hearte unanimity by the framers State in Constitution, aud mord) used now to extend a State in stitution. created no such by the local law. le it not very strange. that in this noon of the Will century, when Gariteddi Is marching his viotonoun troops upon Naples—when even Louis Napoleon is compelled to Yemenite the righte of nations and of meg—when the Czar of all the Reeelea is removing earldom from the , body of his nubiects—when the yoke of Mohammedanism in Ahern to give way—when Mt nation' are Maiming their natural rights—ie it not vory ntrainire. I say, st tide period of the world's hia tore, te e mpoldient partite in hi e . the only free re public. eh en be dieougaing the question whether ate Tees of linen were like horses, Inches aid .cattle, hav ing no rights which e while man WAS bound to re envier e anthenter to rue in mii mime and It write no neat to protection of life, liberty. or property? Is it not peas ng when the right to liberty la becoming recognized aiming all tee nr lint we &meld be Migmatite the quottlen whether ortp.it man ay be a slave without Ineal dr State ? Yet, the petition of the PerflOetedle DEM is that a person held to ammo in the State of eolith Carolina may be removed from the mrmdlotion of that.litate, and be held anywhere within the Territonen TWO ,CE.NTS. of tho United States as a slaril for lire. The Repub bean party dispute's Chit prot o ooion. and denies to W I.VBTY any authority .wjaierer he,rond the loads, *of "tate law, except only Inch as may. grow out of thtit. Tramcar' which authorizes Oa redaature •of L i t' en 'rapine from servve '1 his: then; is the radical &E. f-rence between the 11 , oubliettn and Peniocratio•lVW t,;.-11Valttothe constmetton of the Conslitution.whi s h we are eau-Vilna to refer to tar lint to be nal than the treat constitutional tribunal of the voine 0 1 a. majority of the people, expressed to con' e.totlmall forms. ft follows from this position of the Republican party that we wad the rormal weenie.* of the /Remise''" i a that of free Territories unit] elavere , a a e mbli s hed u them, either by sole° valid local hog. or the people [IO rennin; a State Coestitution. estatilish player a . I or their &recall° matt bitten, if this• otiritintlYiel ono mot. thee eh men are entitled to, the freedom firl Territory. untrue deprived of it by vend l o cal I k e, Th e Donlooratie Pit tr a wl the other hand, contend that soy al eve h oMer in iv 1 tetfully hold a slave as property Is a la rel tory et lon pleasure, anti that there le no power in loneness, or in the people of it Territory to forbid it 1 It 'denim. however. that when the People Come to [Wan I I State Constitution thor May abolish clay ery upon the amid won that they nay for the eaves as Propene sm i haunted tor the peblie use. Thus the. ism Is rawly , i need. In the absence of local law, is the natural eon , damn of a Territory free or stave, Or it Paltre-irici kw' ,or to establudi or prohibit olave•y In a Territoiy ic 1 ,/, wool not be trontlne.yoq fairly if f did eat otatii that our opposition to the extension of slavery (Peg !earn 1 huller ground• We believe that &were to a , ..uAI. luorr..o, and politiell evil—Dint while we have i on mite to interfere With it where it idproteefed bY .the,lotherity of Blabs lew.yet, wheinwe are letislatieg fir 'the eommen Territeriee of the United Spitee. - we ieltea a it it our la sht ;indicter duty treusejhl cenetitil tome' beaus to prevent its extension. into Any of the We 'rerrteeriest. We beheita it is better fee thapeoele 'of the Territories better for the honor of fair P....eme t...let. and TA'ttee for the people of the Mates. Vet this !exmittitiongl lustltttion shoeld he exteeded no furitilit• At the lait etieureil Of Cootreas t• was wit Witted berets 'the bar °fetal/Am opinion for el/skint the gleeletatind ,In reeard to slavery that I have Just madd to you: I was ol . to e 4 , ST; t o n ign le Wel, and I auvitualltlicetheilato elm' hip i n k t v. , ; „ , it ti iv rair m. 7...tl ei li h r in o even beta . e47 i r r tc have tittered, .reeetionci3 be Weshing on, bp W. 011.1 , 9 Vddleou. by Monroe, by - +JI7. ler-leel Ater. ad pea Y*ll lhearceat meg wbealijustraeati ow Ittetory. i bribtre the present rseetof One , petite Yetis eelmorres eh no expoueders•of the Cowin:Um; and satttoritgaill ionoluded that. ill were puniebrial for uttenee this fen- , would be more honored in` iletrociation with betel xesmenamea they be the enmity of narrow.znind dleitettellehaterwhe 13eliette-ithat slavery , is adieleßY. • q r t i r l iViVr l nighltreNttratted if tipiihgerail'ilit Ft r ' r d an g eA rttr T t a i4 ry vv.. 41.1t.ticrnm ~..r.,,,111.,ft the thibmk trc ,,,,Ked eakerdentsentelV Om , • Zrerrttrint"lrghtbi troll:1 ' 14 erre h tlirtitlP47- i•ories north and meet eraellssepri had existsdrideme tiVk tft WO th-Yresult of st etuttatbrnire by 'which tee rtglfUtTnehil:AVV. a b v . iV giVe l t ` , l rral l PaTi'eal ß ofi ft,e law framed by genre Cley.reariettened IV the emetic era of the Cabiliet et Mr. „Monroe. voted for by a roptirtiorne of the Venetwa and ritereeleleetetialel or he . outhern States, and tie...gulfweed in a by all the Pee ella Wee fernery at' apart forth° labor berreemen mid freemen only. 1t wee a flawed law, retarded or akin to he Oorlhtitntion. which it wee bell' ved no tuthiew hand would disturb or veolere. ft had steed for years *a/termed by the stormof factions, hew Lily approved by all partite and seettene, Mr. Calhoun saw that It at ad in the way of his rant Pelee ; but he did trot hope or PrOpil!e to remove it htehieon as zed from the Slave 'gate of Al illinuri upen 1 to hentiti fel peel tma of Reams. reserved for the label' I of freemen, end coveted it for risntations for Illeieer labor; bet he despaired of removing the old law of t freedom.' The sectional disputes greener out.of the tequiseinn of now tetritore had been seteled by the me-lionise Momenta,. of 18.91 There was not's foot Of toil within the limits of the Cotten States who*. gondition cc free or slave hoiden Was not settled `by some law believed to be beyond the denzer of ricotta The free and slave Plates tied united in electine a President remised to glade be welsher laws. The ;mint or fraternal 'feeling had diesipated till jeal ousies which are natural between the different men tions of a great country. with many diversities of habit and Tibor. 'At this rime of peace and whet. agribitione wigwam led by Mr. Douglas . the moat ambitious a of them all. soueded the tones or alarm, and ender big lead the old a MPTOITIIII6 was removed sad a .alt w. humbug of popular sovereignty wee substituted tot the recent reetrietipn.• The eOplitry was rattled britkilt atroo , ella no( or had faith The formation of a now Mute to resist its natural consequenete was demanded by the people. The Republican party rapidly assumed term and stoentth. No doubt mane Dairies Were said in the heat of arrives that will not bear the test of reason. b t the webettmoe of Its purpose It bee steadily Moaned, end that is—tiat the institution of elaverr ohnuld derive nn practical adVallillge from t he resent, of the Missouri Compromise. I appeal to You. my fellow citizens, whether we have not noted in the spirit of that ~, ~,,,me W e intend, with the blessing of Providence, to carp; Kota al e have seen tee &Mersin this great poldwal mime, one by owe retire into, pnvete life. Mr Pierce. whey was eleetee'Premdent with unexampled unworn' ty. had l tit few supporters when •eti-ing from hie blob position. 'Jr. Boggle, is now involved in the meshes of h' sown I , p leer sehemed, end Is eb incloned and reetithwed by ri aase whose peculiar interests he sought to in:deserve. Where we theme who aided him In Ms week or discord ? lip. Florence, of this city, le. I believe. the only seared monnment of the rare in Congress. Si in onumentum nasals. ...Trample,' The rest aro either quartered upon the robllc crib, as the reoweente of Fgeeetive nieror, or are permanently exiled from public) life • Kann*. after a otreetle of unsurpsored Mite' ihres end violence, is roweled to 11.,xeone the robes of wave ;el gets no a free Preto. Nearly all of the free States floe row Ftertibleen. Frank Weir has plant- NI our steed tot iii the Plate where Atchison raved. red who. if not dee•l, line gone into a deep dead sea of unredeemed &mount, The 'lien Fltalog nr6 teems On deeeeveti as to oar purcole and few year. of Repuh)t, rim Adinmistration will convince them that all we 'w i sh In to wesetve our onus nehte, sad wit to duster) , the Tactile er sinnereignis of rny Stet.. or of the people of ney, Plate. Whet the °mire which politician• have diyarenineted through the &althorn States have done. e*eted they will heartily rejoice over the al:Meese Of the illeoubacan party. We only Seek to to en re to free labor practically what it had be law before Thal. We will recognize end net noon the, term-al ',stuns an to TA iNeit whole the folledere of the Goaernment alweire pree, laimed. -At tempt to 03.t. , 11,1 ale. Very beyond its natural limits. in subordinate all otter greet interest.. tu the protection of sl iv e Moe, to transfer it from Its trim petition an a Rate ' inatitntion, limited flii that le rimiletinn. to 6 Pa t onal institution coextensive with the Territorial limits of the United States. trot roe at nano prOehirrt it con flict in which the Republican party is bowel to protect the rights of free labor and or fred men We cannot avoid it. New theories pro famed mom nswhieti were unknown to our forefathers. We cannot Yield to them wilient nnertinderi nit the very principles upon which 0 a free Government iii founded. stated Awhile MO that, in deference to Mr. Douglas. we ware all for sweeter awaretentr, hit it must he of the old-fashioned. constitutional kind—it mast be the Tovereiguty of the people of the United States over the Territories, the common property of the people. exer mos under the forma eller by the reproseetttl yes of all of the people and of all of rte Slate. in Congress. This in eenuine popular envereiente. by which the voice of each citizen and each State may be heard in the disprention of the common Territories. But if in deference to Mr. Douglas we meat yield this power to the neon. or erieli %- ,,,,,, T0 then let tit delegate to the people full ()ewer. Let them inalto thew MUMS° leaf, elect thew gm ernor and judges and legislatere Let them par their own °seem , . no hot substitute 'Fee- Teti".ietervention for Cimeressinnel interventnen. De not tickle thenh with the doles vo ides that they have power to funs and regulate theirown iustituttous in thir own way. and then by eunnitierr•eontrived words leave them nethin glint a richt to abolish olatery when tll y crone to forma State Government. upon the con dition that the new settlers can gather together money enough to P ty for slaves as property taken for publia one. Do not withdraw the Surettine Court from iishnth inertion oh deciding oril ato suits to make lout Patty Platform , no not avant yourselves of the sectional and patty organization of thee rood to a.complteh 4 party woes* Do not sell out the little shadow Of oars rNzrit) derogated to the people for 211,esa) votes to Lout el neg. If yon want popular rovereignia. if You want to Incite a et regsla in our Terri tenet between free and slave in etittitiobs. let us hive it fairly; no intervention by Con tress. 110 Intervention by the Preeident„ no texecative patronage Bet Bre ie not the eellthr roverearnte or non-intervention of Mr. Douglas. tie rives the people orii Territory no tower whatever, except to override the veto of a Territorial Governer, by is vote of two thirds. in the Territorial Imtisatere. This execatute and judicial branches. and the control over the levied tier branch of n Territorial Government aro an pieced urea the President white the power of the Legislature; over the quest on of slavery is referred to the Supreme Court. 14 Vile. then. the, treat principle o f roe ul a p *oleo-Amity which inspires the eloquence of 81r. Diu el la ,' If so. it is aeh mu end a elicit which the Ameri can people shonlit column. Ui ih its author, to the re cehtnele of each. humbuen as the Rochester knocking:, But Ills mini, twe are tired of the slavery question!' sev erat gentlemen of thin oily bare made that remark lesne• and ON fll Mr. Bowie.. in his recent speech at ifriesbure.eald that we should banish_ the nowt) from th 1 halls of emigres, Iwe I not step iel show that Mr. n whin inteoduced the negro there elk Owe ago. and th t our whole contes. been teput th e Deere where ha Waal tile VOWS aro. Twill not Eerie te 'hoer that the poietion of the Rep:l, l llo.n party has been. front the belanning oftts oreanization to tits m o ment a a jefan. mite one. Mandl:it by the old tea awake instead of fel imiang new liehts upon the subieet of slavery. I Ism willing to hike these gentiemen at their word. end . 1 .. to Ignore the neer, and consider the interests of wt, de people I know vary well that we will tot be in eiinerese three days before that minket will he thrust Witt us 11} the VIODISIIVd alli of eleven , . The Republiwe knit' /lee shown Itself willing to his. COI the great meterlal interests , to the exclusion of the wen* gentian. White the liana." was -Wasting months (ine the last winter. the Wiese of Rentesentatiees wile meturing mealtime of event preetieel importance to soer materiel interests. it wnetturpselled to meet ail vreetteal aihnill , htta , loll (111011 , 1 , 413 0 the day. het te eland of to yin divided and distreeted like the Defeo cretin tinny, Blies met them ail with mitt' mid openr. It not only , shows ven Goat it Manila by its ;wetter; plat form• Li tt It VT0,4)31/3 Ideas in the term of lave late the ell v politioal erg altizatton that thus rranklY matte the reptile Latin set how it steeds triien some of these 'tett question. It propasee to prohibit reingaMY in Utah. All will admit thy to he n diegrneeful stain upon oar natinnel honor. and little less than a pablio dittratie tlik: band of vicious outlaws /should be permitted to ai prime and valeta n Territory lying upon the oath to the Pacific. and exoludint, ter their presence and b tat laws. honest men and virtitteur women Bet a Dernoeratie Senate and Democratic) ?resident win not• allow us to get rid of it, for the name ceolstitutlete l l shover that will wither' ze the excluston or' ily tame in l'ssh wood authorize the exelnston 'or eTavery from 'Kruts.* Therefore,,Mds tveal Is tolerated• said connte. neneed. While weir industrial irtwesta are prostrated trioaelMormon people era enriehed by the ;weeniest of a lure army to keen them in subjection. And more thin that. they are furnished by the armrwith a market tv every ;whelp of their demotes proenetion. Under the act to organise the To rritnry rl New 'Mex. om.Plii the enactments of the Tetrisonal Lecteleture aro rent to °oriel:egg for approval. Among them wan a barbarous law regulating and protecting nettles of tetififrim. or pounces. by wbieh white a re bold for life au s twee This law merlon to white sera. ea— precisely the same principle by which regrepe are held a ;slaves in the Rooth. It is 'c prammel nvellenoon al I the do ne of Mr Johnson. the Douglas candidate for Vice President. that capital should own labor. I will road you one ariction of ,his law: .nation 4. No court of this Territory shall have juries:knee nor shall take colnizance of any lance foe vie ermenian filet mestere me, give thew eier vents for neglect of their duties an tar:kite, for they ate rem sidered as domestic servants to their masters, and they plioniti correct their neglect and faults ; for as !fedi ere aro punished by their olden', wilbolat the intervention of the civil authotity.by reasoner the , t he they enjoy. en equal right ;timid be 'rental those Persons who Pas their money to lie served in the protection of their Property : Provided, That Mott correction shall not he inflicted in a cruel manner with elube or: dupes " a he Reuttioicans in °entrees Proposed to express their d i aapprOVal or tire law—a power which wee ex pressly re...rani bit the actor °entrees oreanizint New Mee:ion—but our Itemeoretin friend. woad not no ;Weser, becnese the some rower the t would authorize tin to reuse white shivery in aow Meet m would nutho- We us to reject their coda for negro slavery. Again. the Rerublican part: wishea (0 repeal the pre slot i M C r feet and treticenite twill. and to substitute grottier. founded neon (ailment and better print ieles. The present law was raver Peered Upon iii detail la either house or Cerierese. Jr is the result of n reanimates of conference. and of in cemlanation of hostile interests athlete an reuniter as th't between Dangles at d Be l. It will neither yield enough to par the ordinary expenses of the Government , nor will it foster domestic industry. Under i teneerailon the Admandratiou of Mr IBuchanen sa ,ii ea t a a a puhlio debt teen the word° of nixed 965 - Nei WO. One of your doweguished citizens. in a regent sti-teinert, met., the increase ol the publin.delit thus It, :34 9 •00e ono i but he rivulet ill.. alt. °entail mode of o't imam , from time to hole, aPpropriattone that moat ~,p se s—redirseirm, in this reseent. the practice of hrohro down railroad eorporritiona. willed in the West , hotel ne. The Atlininist•ation hal been willing to drift, : Cone, homer. bee Alleawber, that something may "turn up, ' alt on thin question, tts upon every other, it lies been divided into factiong. al r. Ilimbenan thought conic changes Armed be made. leiteldr. Cobb. his georetnry of the Treasury. thought dinrently. Demooratie fienetora end Re eresentatives had diverse VIPV6. pa the great boil) were opposed to any chant°. They favored eeneral ad valorem, duties, with an approach to free trade. ale. Sigler and Mr. V mance were allowed to talk generally °hold duties on iron and cool, but thee were tolerated es heretics neon what was pleasantly called 't your Pennsylvania negro. 'They were. by waver. always reedy to vote for loans or treasury notes to relieve the Administration. and they never proposed any practical measure °Crafter for your industrial interests or for an ,cothausted treasury. On the other hand, the Republican party promptly an 'turned the reeponsibility. so far as it Blithe power. not only to repeal the tardier 1657. hilt to propose a now T one based upon certain general P rimy's*, brae were, first, that the expenses el the Goverratient ahould be rev dared to the lowest wee heal bent; and a Republican Howe, by afeadi edherenee to he position, largely eethi oed the appropriatione for the eurrenteenr,Becond. that ' the Treasum notes and fleeting debt of the Government I should lin fended, and prevision made for their MlT men, Thia was dorm as to the Trewuury notes: end it will be the first duty of Congrese, at its next smitten, to provide for the tomtit* debt and unpaid aapr,opria i lion 4 aninantieg. now to_ ee rripApiloooe co. alh rd t to provide for suffi reven u e reye 0 lin new sehednles en tm; I oiled pride, tail which all terheles in raversl use sea IFor rparnifactli Tea. and which cannot be Produced in this country. aliell lie plced IMP. the free bor—by wltioh specifiedirtles shall li e eubehttited, tea far t, as inaction- Ws, for ad vaterenudutten and by whic h the duties le ; THE WEEKLY PRFSIL WIMILLY Puns will be sent to noteterition bs met (pet &Ana:m.ln oiranee,) Three Conies, " 00 Five " 0.00 Ten " " " .111.0* Twenty," ^ " " (to es. adiams)oo,oo T*entr Copiecor over " (to address of eaoh sabot:6 herd eaoh—.— 1.5111 Fora Club et Twenty-one or ever..T• Tin Mid as aunt °opt to theoetterenrof the Oleb.. Youtroaaters are requested to set so Assts fro 'HZ WIMEZT Pam. CALIFORNIAI4MM. Leaned thee times is Month, in t.j &TRIG Claren" Steamer/. vied upon articles which con be produced or repeats ) lured in this country shall be repainted with a re *niece to protecrlon to ah.br.nah ee uf,Apuppfouu t and, fourth. that &Melee of IngurY sho u ld phylitan es• rates orduty. , , , tipon these principles the tariff bill intr ff otrill.'ef Verineett Ws Tar iff ;wasl voottbbdd i r Iti l: all the Republica,* members of the Ronne hat onta. °T end its general principlee were.recognized aria acqpnian• • by the Republican Convention at Chicago. & This bill to iron a etteetße•dett of wt. Reyna ton npoir,,, t h ole s twelve doliaita otam railroad ims, and loonerf ..‘ilisib upon her irpnond from fifteen to thirty other kinds of troll. It Wee prt.roptly .sd,.., vr Hones end dint to the Nenata More than get w a . -' fuser.the 010Se:df the geselost. and in advent's - 4" U lendia,h-atiatepriation tulle. And here I dewing to gill •yearattautiou nee most ex traovdinary Katet o ltr Finatety Done - Ice in hut ifatriabure reeinda , Bea ts that the intermitter Penneylvse la need brogan on , . bat 'that l'enneY Plena atinnot have protection tanttlfits eta gra.quoeculttjaatteled; that the negro aint won. most he put burorCongresg. and that JAM/ OM. ars. o.l . .ware Anted non , last, and the representatives excuse - titers aetrue for their defrost by ear wit they ;Lad - not lire* bh ' consider.them. Noir, gentlenien• it it a relliaaffiraftet Mot that this tend' bill, which has borne the enniciV bitaininte Irma in every liectibliiAtif the cottager. was conaide red by the House and sent to the densest on }nth of May tattoo ample imitator itat tiara Alen sated g nil by the latter bodr On , the test division is peetneell the tell maul next December, the voter s t o od writ low.: , , . • ., Davis.Areg,-.3le.gars. RaYarai• tiFeri. Chertruirrili 1 D Fitzpatrick. Greco , Gwin. Rennph• .." g e.M I : iohneon -of , lithanser, Johuheu elf Tenneigoo, RAM: ' 1 3) 1 nry.,..Yearoc...rolk. Pouptlt-Paah, Rice taadaheT Dldell. Ea bestlen: aarming, wisfail,_apd V o l 0 .,-Z,_ _,"" • CNat 9—V saute Antant, Ogler . ; Uneneroli e .gOrlintek lark, Dixon. Doe t trtio.s.,.Yeasendets. - .Toot. Pa.Uef Hale. Hamlin, ns Retielia King. /0". 30 . 5W1441: tro. PumnerPT E ck,• triumbull, Wade. son. and winged-AD.- -• a / .- - - el •a.- t Every Republican Sonatar,siteludinit Ma "Ifandigt. ur candidate for Vice President. voted Nausea ago ogint. and evert Demnoratiellevater boo twig- ...ewe r it. .Tilis teat Fag made 64 thlrWitOLDll44tela,thfe fore the ediourn rnen.t. Att. lanlfitar who exreotty and saddens theeoVered taTh - 11 . t ht. enrig foot for the interests of Penrutptflilailre/X*OR Vote, Why he Wan _Ant -there t cannot .tall- .It. very sots If he had teen present to vett neglect • the edatennetnaut. and his right-Wed Wal e We Perk; 41 Dltut had noted with him the n' b i g would ' have beestipotteed..lts Awn' bigl , wsZ i = Been mat upon Itipatatee. entity, Ilfr. Denise yew ile a sererientg - grxismotWilititerimutritaltweinsking to the people of Permaylsaale about the .zeilawa, „•ofdaerf industnal interests, When be had it an lUe pwiretai , ~. Ir_ s _4 llY 6liarVgniir pawed 172111`4 1 .11g4 r. 'Annie made a strong on to repeal the dunce • •raitroad tfon ill* arotoweddd bOlstot.,_lthstget - nd voted for it. and in Ills rpaseft •Il he Wade .934 , afeen thin eate tom• rr r ect I II: : a shalt-need the revenues midnights.* i of Tailwind 1r0n..„/ kooW.of no item)Nup sr -we con takeoff the talvesneerithatietclarmaanum OA- - • tf• near° to the grab' tridOstidal illative/tic( th•ailreler, an nun thi s Am_ For that Insane t proaolaw:11- t. t . es t d of sivinirs a 'eft's, foe reenushat watellelessual o duty unto the Ist of July, iff7.'s / cahoot Inge so that on theist of Ilferop," tEDIE, r IIIr. Doealse stated in th e feasts as fellows: si am lordly. tee tariff to a Rotor revenue standard. reV i rr e rept ~. trade men 16• the Mien taint; that fog etas twerp-at, • and at the tame time collect re venue C1164444=111., the expellee. of the Government. be tuber AM for Do other kind nit a land that a rilivennertwitilYg t not you, toy friends. whetter Jon. Doted with more, aafety trust your treat industrial natensta tent new. rising. end rirarous party. that has stoma, me abottr and willornese to pre you protecnon or to Mr.lr. moirem who has exareastd the opinion - I hates Ingetad. - and who failed. when be bed the Ateelft=jen , the benefit of his vote t Yon have et the Itra.ks4 opinions and consistent record of our .il ma.; Mate, who. by hie votes and potion. Lai etint Val in th he is a friend end sunposter of that evea policy ' n r isbioh- Kr, Clay was the author and dildlaaltilitel - e .a P . (' , a n , l a trine R nnbliean nat ty prOitneett to Isachtt es a careThealprenallie that the publie lanes ehattaing., be - sold to sp.oulelore or be graitted to eorporatitute: but '- that they small tic set apart far farms and housa~e - for retest sett lers..sed carotid!, Prattled by boageighsed.•, and pre-emption lava. This is not upon the soincdge • t hat auk tbe duty of the Government to feistbingisniett s or o give land to the poor . , net upon the viv a _ - 'ele that the best wale of dere opine the mounted mum :, '11 11[01i n : 1 iidttinel'uttglelrtTAUlVl4 " Al Western Pastries 'ln ma etenedlat - ft YOU' 4. 11444.31.441 tic high ante. sod, indeed. wherever too labor • a ow Tce earl add to the sprinste o r croup agee., ime vols. to the nation of firs. or seen tare latheio.. ale. . 1. her on a clatter of rogation of land infer muter rhea, the parahreva money of the land under nu ripest 'to tem The Remitblionn party, totereetbaill /OM tibili • • development of free labor and the of 14144 hi est • , free inatittrinin. Pt they are Nowt ' I State,. is the only Pert/ or:seism:ion of pae .eonedew. ' - that can be trusted Witt , tilt development of ads SW' pigmy lo regard to talltditilailda , . - The Reeoblonn nem tientaeoll tiet_Pllf i g te lt,.. misalort of the state of Kea under t h e iso sanattencd be her Rennie.' not eatiteerehecalswitett rer word of a free community who have bravely tutialtis tamed their rights or self. rovernMent. but beauties!), his restored to her Constitution and to out law thievery - prohibttion of slavery which the Demoorstle mete re pealed in MI We wish to preleopte her won of tie • Revise of free gthtea uunn n our Wuetpeu b or d er , iir b o . • , a•irs•stiion will settle forever the qinbtiolt or stetter, en tension. n• -a are. so far re I know, the leadinr ideas • o t• th "i, Republi an Tarty. I appeal to cony candor if they so • not commend theraseires to the, adenine t are men. is this the party which you would coin iM as sd conspire against. and to defestwhieh yea wend- taste hostile elomenta? Is ~t . to defew These ideas tbeeorgin - would risk scenes of yi• lexica in the Isouve.ot the- web- • . . . version of the Constitution by the Hisente of unit Cedapa States.' Is it to de eat this noble radial that you would. looser trust a broke" down. corrupt and deatelatised administration ? Is it for this that yhtt would enotsana in power party that. by a lonr onJoymaot o petrels- - ace of the Government. hsa become r e ckless Sad corrupt. iliumOU will take the rerponsibility of preventing the' ph of the Republiona parry, you wet do sh. hit it will requires close fusion of al l t he elements to , feat tr. it or young and virinotte. has all She and discipline of the old Demomatieinseryt • most of the opinions, modified b) ernertatme. of thee whir party. It hes the is toriderati n dare P,otile'is party. which has innuenct,l its a It adheres to every tin nelple proelsomad by the hubiican patty o fferson. we hate enafideneent the integrity. ard pa t siotism. and wisdom of ear "toad ard-bearers—Lireoln end Gentile if -Mr. linenbir • cannot be recommended 4a a parlor President. kilag General Pierce, and is not reuniter with the etiquette of tormen courts en e , t• ehrheran. we know that honest. faithful. and capable No mon caw kite celebrated debates with Air . Dohelas without ran ad a high opinion of his capacity. Hs is better for haying lt'.ed but & abort tune in Washington. for that cuts at p tialans is not paTticularly celebrated for mod frna eitdes or ririd monde. Born le Kenttleky. t/50C1R.49 1 4 • from a Pennsylvania stock, the eon and grandson or giniand. raised in 'listen& and Illinois Gioillierbyliii warn expe nonce with the went!' and interest. end ratihnu of thepeople. he poomeses the .ante traits of, ober:liner which made Jackson and Clay iti — their day ' and generation leaders of parties end of mens Let as. Inv friends, unite in electing him Presi de n t ol the United Stater. • Au Extensive Post office Robbery. OVER YOUR IItRIDIIED TiXXX FROKTrE WEST TSOY POST ovrica. The Troy Amur gives the following account els recent burglary . The post office at West Troy was entered on Sa turday night or Sunday morning by burglars, sad ransacked and robbed of nearly ail its contents. The office is situated on Broad street, near the.. ferry way. and Is In a new one-story briek, build-' log, rattently erected for that purpose. The but tars effected an entrance at the rear of the band, - tog by boring through the window.shntter with as - thnh augur. A hole was roads large enough to ad mit a man's band, the bolt upon the inside wart shoved back, the window then pried dbernirout too top, and access to the office was easily gained.- The letters in the bozos were all taken out, and also the dead letters of the past quarter, WhLsb wore on the shelves, taken Nut their place, sad , about half of them broken open. Mr. Grattan, the postmaster, informs us that about four hundred letters were dostroyed..a gate% number of them centalning money, checks and drafts. The money-drawers were also emptied of . their contents, containing twenty or thirty dollars. Postage stamps to the amount of sixty-five dollars, - and a package of stamped envelopes, sixteen:del— Jars, were also taken Nearly all the hitters wet.. opened by tearing the top of the envelop,. and after examination the letter was torn in long stripe and scattered over the floor. Many 'Of them con tained drafts for larga'amOunts. whir& the itobbere did not take for fear of detention, but left thaw. . lying on the floor. The following drafts were fiend among the destroyed ,letters: A draft for $1,90 on the Phenix Bank of New York, from the Albany Exchange Bank, payable to ti B Wilson . - A draft for $4138 from E. I Tlnkbtma Company, Chicago. payable to Albert Mader at the Metro politan Bank. A. draft for $4O from the Bank of Ohm.hetes. g. 0,, payable to Michael Hanlon at Bank otl3tate . of Yew York. - • A draft of $67 from Spraker'e Bank. Caaajoha rL•, payable at the Bank of the Itepubllo. - tern is the middle, one hart of Irldob wee <tarried off. A draft for 15 from the Union Bank of .tnetra- payable to Mrs Mary Hoye. A check for $l2O on the Albany City Bash- A letter contenting $8.50 In money from J. P. Malloy, deputy United States morello' efstibeny, to P. LOVIDI43, Wdo relieved or ite contents, Sher letter torn in enrols. The money receipts of the once were taken. The look of the age rre.a pinked, from which the rabbets abstracted the stamps and stamped en velopes. A revolver Wei:o4 to Mr. G. was taken from a drawer and carried off . .. ... The burglars evidently took their own time for , the work, ae nearly every letter in the efftee was broken open and destroyed. Several pieces of candle were found upon the floor, Red the ohaire were drawn up In a manner that fediesUid they were old hands at the ltsinem. Mr. Itriar. who keeps a store next to the post °See, bear ing a noise while in bed, got up and heisted , his window, but could not sae them. ,as It woe very dark and raining. A watchman, , wheat, station wee fIOrOESS the street, ' did' co t boor anything of their operations. Welseenehat two suepieleue characters were observed .in the barroom of the EadatOfte liOfol, about a tileok from the post office, at eleven o'clock Saturday night, and that their presence and' movements wore oemmented upon by several citizens of West Troy. One of them left the :hotel a few minuted afte: eleven, and was shortly followed by hie com panion. They were strangers, and there can be De doubt tint they were the robbers. It will be recollected tbet the Dolmas post office shared a elmilas fate about a week ego. Postmaster Grattan bad the detectives of Ibis on the alert yesterday, and we shouldsot be sur prised to hear of their arrest soon. 1 It is not known bow much money was taken from the opened. lettere, but it must be a large amount, es parts of letters were found on the floor indicating that they contained money. The frig , montary letters were gathered up and will be cent to the Department at Washington. AN Ex-Junan ARRAIGNED FOR MCHDNEt..— A Leavenworth. Kansas correspondent of the E. Louis Rep7/31rrau, seates that there ft much excitement in the former city relative to the mur der of a German milkman named Dore, by George W. Gardiner, ex-probate judge of the county. They had quarrelled about some of the Dare' sows, ;thigh Gardiner complained had trespassed on hia land. Threats wercoiatered, and as Ders on the following avail t4Opthd to dater his horse near the boandatirtlesdhser a estate, he wet Med upon and mortally atoSlndeoll,. The ' , protested. that, Gardlnee r .hed, hke l - - a. of Gardiner swore out an 'a:46.h r ptsba; beiciver ' - .. that tit - 01'0e - - st.teed ; fiats, as the eVideattle dieters.. r , ` She coroner's jury; itt , iheirs Ygellieti`• filed tho-onme upon Gardiner, - and he berieeeissi. I held for trbtl ~ , • .. MATTEESSSS F/Lt•Rp, FTIIII WOOD.—Oner •14 . tue" Down East: STlVelieSni of the past year is a machine for making indlitt ha% for miatTers.4lMl; ont of wood. A - solid. H11~ . . , • maple, baSitef rikakin.• asp, or any ottt=t-saanteci, Ineapen-: me w4d v iarapidly eon " into a fibrous mar, =oh reOshaitnat e white Mired.' bait, and this tastes eiCAlientAlli, 'tar noattrisstis; and iS much cheaper than 'hat or eetten, and better than basks, 0 4 mote, ode; ' ho .-• The meohine la net e a pbae aiya, - atalvait 2 be'set-wo, In any Theo Where weod iq plenty; t'Ateid, - Irbeis there le - water or steam-. power., It ean be - wort-031y 1137 ertittiary toe ' obanto% !'. '7 ' , ' -.T . .: ' ,
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers