POUJIMIUMATANAIWIRFAUF':'_:: sir IVIIIN-W4-11 10111111111W— onroa. - Folb . Ailicji . o*lmpolio: , .',s‘ : ;.. 11 1 0 00 4 : 114 11 , igillsdeßV*l o 4oPialitit*Fitt4l4*#* Antep40000100 11, 4014 . 3041I;14i. Tian I=:2=Ml iii*Alll6 , o4o/faeaal° s LAU wistAlijOiNiller.l FIVI • C v alintAilliaie 440,7,:, 1 -1." siurrA , A . ,• , Amor, •- PKIXADEUMMINI 4 OI4; . ispooDgval4e, t - _..„„ O Mk rtriajollitAiltiVicAlirr Ohti iAivieb - 4. monoc , V.Ntotz. , *AxmoicAlionw MnoldrnitiVldga,, OftitiWnri: 'OM*, gtOORIWASOPteI'-'- - FANG; < r tfAtErtindintiMic: 11111 W ,P..6447',3n,10?1,11WW!!W. d TIN**44O I 4(MOIWTOSI;II44Ig-l': -40* . ; RAGL III O*- -41 . 0; 04C1411V1Irk 49. W Er AP l G* . P9VgnicgccN I CIIMENNT ' ' srs -$ . . Olin; bif, 001, tiliatibi, tu. followi 0614i0cr:'1: e . - AIKEIUOAN: 74210Cithk- Cr V/ MINIMS names r.AWD fall. witarti emit AMAMI OE.tDPRINTS /110.4*.i441Yi ; Bari *** *awl OSNADOES,' MAO, AND IT , 00 / 3 .11? 1;0A #l4qoBl'.4o''' ENZATK;•,-, • - OANTON 114ANDELA *unto LININOKi • ' asiDiiinAND RIXIMIAMA' MN"; =MVO OVILI AID 00111 WARZP; EDGED OiOliai ADD 'KLEMM; ALV-ItOor o 'AND NAFIEN . OLOTIDI; /1140*'ilni OOPTCABOW//421; BLACK , AND 'NEM • DOESKINS; • B ATISKIN:A/d) , WIMP CAEIRMUES;, rllinni .oo lf ,4 sll " llll2 L ' ii.. issi•Sin Wijinte.TC)N 111148. , 11114:iria !ea dti. A tit vartets. 0011;1111. ' , VS/0 1 .440ffig 'OM Altogi 01 41 . 4 1 .. 8ir444114tt , Pitlit*O• Dozwqpiorcem&a•sita ODATINOL 14 $ACI*Xle* Maw Itithfifik !hal/CALI OttLA Pte: rK.aarad • • - iteIItINGNAK & jirELTA; . Wolk Iltoll7 abilite. sad , , LIMIT*. Street. moTtriNG. KELLY &Xio -- tt ERY- T.% sv.ki S, 31 :mi-3334qm pin* PALL. AI!D , aWI2rTSR ` ilT Lib. Aiiii.:il4l.lo9l4llLX.loollll.. IrWakthisolOososiurted.itlessiiiiL.- L. • - .!.00max(vototiiils. LOO A - 104 : 4:.14 ,1 04;0411 - 10; -1,121124, VP - PA OfUD OU P . 41,11, itc*, JOCKS IL '11014.A.3,91,1, 15iP 4 0112112.4. - MA4Y . tri4v2V - Rzsig WitoLZ- SALE ANDIXTAIL DRAPE& wan , - 0.4414114 ijaikoOkiwOhuilri: .. .aae , % ,7 4:1 :.'' r,Ott . - #.lll9s,,ci! l v!t.. PREPARED GLUE! " • liTlTthi ill.wilitaairsa N 11116" EatkilWAWA' t ioetkrort ,;, = .:• , 11472, lift imam?, Is imams sou kapos.'ssam ssUjrisskum Osistos• la bare tame asap am emeNitotillot Muip,WS*lB. Craft ..** •- • - . _ . lIIPALDMIII PNRAMIEDALI)II imeallsid Malik allieWedell; lad as kalahool am, stare iismettilisf*up'witfralaaar.a.ilwtetMapst u4 seirviThen tied loaser a aoseadty 'tar thaphed ilAtiterdi MOM. Asediagsdatia. altr , lagras notaa *Oa *a Nl** for. spa", KWh sad oast aramialai lark. airtiOdat with la wi t saga* Ililadiabakkos t<mti lissi acid, bilai4simi• taiiiiiiiooll4 fat asiatiOis .44 pamoistir en th. %%Neu loam. or mi. bow thistilatore 04, ..11 mai be mad the Oro of *Mbar/ amediso. Was Iris* saes • •;.#lllo,L,tit grim moot? 16 IL • bark sesessialm PO,. MUM TWW171777M1 our" _ topii.xiksg, 6l . P ti r. ,l4lv i rld4 ".; O:42ALDING At* %was ' ll6 r A lifthiliSiiiik i stlii slaw , 44 1 •1144* - 01 , 0 504 4' .13 1_,4*,,ei1ip MPAIDUIGIMISPAZIP4O AV% lIITANDANY F ~L~~~ . , -4 '44;3'4 - 06E - 17,1!.31.,,C,...:„ , ,f,r ..• " .L• ', i ',' -.' . % -- 1 , V M .- t' MATTSON, -i , -,re 4 , -,- ,4r. " .* , 21. .7, 1..,, 7 ,, i -,1' , ? ,:., : , :v Lci •;:,-., f , S 4 `-' 7 '}P- o i , :ig. l,'l llC+ o li.! . s_h ,l9 .p. 4 , : -,- 1. ,r, f - .:. i, , ' 41.4 0 1,1'1 0 N . sl*•ri;je ~ ,•if,i., i•,.. - i...., I' ',4 , 4sitavii - , - 4. - -5 , 4 111 . - .. 4WRIPIArr," + • • • .%114— .V ', , , ,„.... "-'. `A r 1 e—"... 1..,!......r5 # kt. -; ,k," * ' :i 4, k ! li ... , v e ....,, 'l') ' ` • t-Ii- t. r,Tl-,17.790 3 - 40U1 '. l' - ' ....,ilirsil7llo , lrT '• ' 0 Ak,i,.. , riar..**_l t goicio_aut tautr-, :f .,K 4-4„,,e i vi- alr,tt . ~.... . - - • , -- • ---,i454L4,• , ~, _-: -'' • i t e / _," . . kf 2 , •-•-,-,-; ........N.. \ 4 l //e .r.e. .!$. 4 , t , . .. ~.- . .-- , ..... , 44..,,•-• . . , , 3,.......A.V 4 iy,;(4,./ . . - - . ~, „i• 1 __, ~.."---- 7 - -......-",--.....:, . . ... ' - ." ~.t ' • WIT "I.•:0 T•.•-,3 , -' , - t* •.,,,.....--.‘ . -1- •V • ....' -4 - :" . ' ---- --.." 41 0 4 ' %It • • Ir . _ - - , . Vega.: ' - , N, .stell'llil g i ~e' ~„.. , 1 tie ot , i 031 •fie. et 1 , _ , ~,,, ) •,, ositititii is 7:r.... 4 .- . ... - ' , Jti . ' i. , I 1 111 9: .-, I.• 1 1 ' : 4 I ',: r ., I ' . t. i 3_. IL? :;, .11::/ --....-.-----: • _Ol4-.1 . ~ .. .„, 8 7 r‘J•,• ,s-s- ral a --. • I•Z ~„ ' ."------- ----'-- z---- " ~. ~.. ------• '',llT, ,7 I ;,. ----..— ---... 0 b. , 7 , .i ~ititro , f r .ifirow t-'327 4;cs ityrwrA --14 • 0 404 - , , 41' , t --• , ' . . aiii . T.rt) nnliirl/), ~ ~,,, •,....; 1.,.... `,.,, Ot hirtfliffet Volt r a';/' tr.211,,,: --, CA! friNurs I ; . • ' ' ' '' .v ' 1 '"' /1.95*- 1 !" ' . . " 44411re'Ditrigi..,ritiami*Gi• - 1. 444 : 11:;,11; g0,4877EP0i * SONS, FIFTH AND CHERRY' STREETS, - thl ,, Va?Pir4F/OrY. Invite ihe'attantioi or to lheti Fall stook or r 4 - 41131ER A3IIF,ELS.. AND ,01:i0 A .It TRIMMINGS, • - • , couristilite ' • - - NARcIT-DRENI GIALPA. DOitua. BINDING'S, It.EDVETB, BYINOEBr .- • , • I iktp* AND 610,NNI4Iii08,BUTTON't3, BRAIDS, , • ' BERTHAS,' Ab.i Lc. , I • - - . Our new &balk • 'NW& ZEPRTRORRATANRVOOL, .to., Is yeti - yule i94,e,brep.ote t • ' ofill'bolors end Shade', • 014 iseintie• .6,t , home prod!selban, as Weil ,is. direst ~,oconinniiiestitnalktiiioreiviniarkite. enables ns Dien, 0 4 00 0 00 0 /00100.. ;WA 4 1 2' 'lMORlNG4thltitlikikild r . 11 .0 4 1 4 .? 1 Ag030 1.1 t• [3: :ft' "' -sikonEnfrow EITAREi ;15ECOND FLOOR. • 'I • •-- 11-Alta**AgllMPlWl'' I : -,: ittrc r rnit i rM4f4,7411 4 Pg • N°:"Vi t i : l lBl 34. '' • •-•• rriNi) , , 7 na1it.a.,14 , .Aptc E..PAR Q.UILTT . r!Nvo K. ::- • - - , Bod, say tev a V . a.W 12:1111!WOF re; riori A a l W ie add y l c o o lo rdi l t . 4. V. ' - IHITTTLE AND` DoUBLE-1,001. , STITOIII . • . ,„ ~,„ ADDLIII/r 1110.1•;:;(018,? STMIErrk prtatofpcfum4:l9oP.NßlTO# #I,AOMIIE• from ilimira.,"':;• • • ThisEtt(plime, isist - 41goient askehines stuns ihatirid for an bail I ilia. • =/000 if • eiLX.! torrom, ItailD018; C14. !'"!!!!' #ll kind. M4ki. • WILCOM .GLBIL9i :SEWING MA= #IIIK. •miganersiiiiirdimair t IVOttoitic enbtre te II II .11 PERFUMERY. CITIPTIA.N.L. iii 004 ,- • t PERP:UMERS AND IMPORTERS, ''• i ' .- •'' iiiit iiiiio'vigi 94'. ''' • , ' _ - iio. 31 30Uill AUSTICSTIiktiI, , - • , nye doors *on theor former stud. ' -, 1314:13O: heirsierotia4fi l t i tiii 2,14,,,, & 14 s y nti ld ir . , W . 4 t ir Ike -Isto onoPuns* Coo (It to the o. istrued hin* t! Uteirotyhmi ni ir yes onto may INIV iii tor the viand seli- UO IP I NI S P Q MP III fr!St ° TiI O / 1 C 4 . 6 - :,C. ‘kiplW,OintiiiNti•iOlii4e ;' , '', .',.' -• . : :. Do 4 2 l 4MTS"AreteLiri,' ' alliddrll , ' kir Tirgi tp in" Th oe y 111 l ammo • - t them 4lX=ree , . viott- whir • MU' 4 PAPSIBMGWGIY P44 4 -Eit4 l -4 14 0 - Wai , • - OUIJA tiADE) • I • • - • • FLOWEria BOPRPE,' kiting rsinoved them. 1,, • coasza.rowtxu AVID-MARKET STREETS, ate, aoi►:*ieiLnd`tp _deer th. TiSe i 4rIII and wAtiLvarisic. • • - lttE.eOßEßlfe, • - wnwow, OURTAIi GOOD% ice., AU of the *Mit billt,4•4*, train Prised *Alis to the twat • - - , . OP! , 1) altD vsl,Ysr 144301iiii0KB. . • poittiora sid , Weitem fo visit the tot • "spi. a 0 APR IC , st.z.golgo*FtiuOli AND Duatiurr suesrre. iwltfli :19101-unitoluA., uii[s~k~r:is~: . , , , ; SLEEPER 41:'FOrki /*Zit o WHOLII*IIM.Afftgr :U ACTU/Eft,ft „ ' NBEVIII.I.4IS4.II4r•PAILABOLS, 2 ; sivx HuttnaialD DlTlota Tiroata - nas 07 coutaituito from Et WOO 'nohow. auggi t o t rzbaz i wor..kool 4. make of goods Will -,, n osom mow* bmir thlo voll-onsoo moot, widoi - loomors BUNT Novimage sot *us With 0 1101 . 44 T 4 aulle-301 HARDWARE. w . : 1EN132,0y, op. now' :Tizia,APAVLL 'stool(' oy • - HARDWARE,. .4,IIMARKIn7, iied , 4ls CONNER= ISTREZT. ME,ENT'S. E - FOREST, .. .. ARMSTRONG, & CO., ; lIIPORTERg .&NP JOBBERS -, • . " - OP DRY GOODS,- . - T 6, 77; 79,,91, 83* SI ; r Iltr - A'NE STREET, - ' ,NEAR :BROADWAY, . OFFER' FOR • SALE A NEW AND ELEGANT ~SiOCE. "et 'DRY GOODS for ittif FALL TRADE; tatted to 'oil antiwar of the cosmov: r Tior are 0909 1 14 • AMOHKEAG :AND ~ TT „ • W.AMIEITJ A -- • - PRINtS, • • . ' IN 1111r,'0:11:1!DESIRADLE.. OTYLF.B. TERSE CIELESRATED PRINTS see Alte t CHEAPEST add li' DT istowiiitiNee• UNITED DTATESoma they bte s 7B ,l9 . ..diglita tarttoalaT attention of dardant to them. .4171.7•1 ?' %-, r !,, , ..1 - - • , ~,i,,, ;., . bkittetv PIAtNiSIIIINV:' 'OOPS. I W. 3 o o **4Vattro af ' th' firm of Win . L.Boikmifyve IttlitHlBll-' AMORY'. *44 g • r4141 (Trate Um Ovoid Hord), , , .n•j.. i -lAnlia tiallfrO Ina attortroo of tdo Wood t new idore,dn,d do pro q. filati• for i ay r tr i t donee. A law -mailed wan led iliallaultild 'IV Me itta and WHIM • , '" .: • "1 • saa-ty . _ WRITS'PRIBBRYING BRANDY, putt CHAR ' AND ' 'WINE ITINE,OI4, . 004 Mustald Seed, Bytom /to., All OA ( i n tot Prosiinlag and Piekliag paroopea LBERT Ch-ROBE.IATf4.r; -' • - OltObEttlES. Ki "4, ~A vyitoestagvaffiiiimi4 nig .:.: , yugame, , Lol:llBl44ll44, otherjinouirihf !buds bought at tow rate,. ' WO9*, XCICOUOII, SF 00., Rs. 36 South TIMID etroot.l MARTIN-&-rAYLE 7 B. Atior 0001 4 • wow.., rymplyllt , .. la •ms tipprimio , " 3.. Iwo 1 , ;• ,1 • 444 1 . 11 Lurr - . r 011/00&% c 411-I*Arrils'f 47, lit , • .D. 4 314 "iiil4 - I'g t t -t',%`l4-1,,U1 ellok AN6 MIT . QOO4/1 :0110kB,i1 JOSIVJA X. 4 11 ,04-k3- — P° • • • * .1/APORTENAND JOBBER, • , . No. 0/.6 ' ..III.ALAKET, - Mal POW 400 . ' LARGE AND BEAUTIEDL , . Ansortmeni . nr ' DEESS GOODS and ' . 8 H . A.WL . W. orthe NEWEST AND OROICEST At the LOWEST 'PRICES. The attention of cash and prompt eix-monthe buyers is invited., ; ee-tf 'LAE AND ATTRACTIVE STOOK VOR FALL AND WINTER BALES. KI - AOIITRIDGF„ . : • : ' • IMPORTERS•ANDIOBBERSi. • 1 , 15, 5141i111E l r'fliRE/r1V455 . ' No. 415 Pift.Ao.ll4,lq,lo**lol'. l .l l l - 111.441,,PH1A. IN'tat grie r afrAt d ithwAit•Fii /LE IpS and AKE- . .• . • . .1? 6-p . 0 13 S.' . taleated mkt' fiterests a( CASH' end rhrratimaigtriZeihrit "P" they title , k 7 t# llll t a gle i rVitt i o*rti l iag s fl a t i gn r ; AIT4 bilirhpre ! . • •• • . ~ • , , R ntz lialcid:Ortagtiy, at LOWEST MARKET •,. . • .$44,2m .act.A:TtS I PEADA/tS I . • TO : WHOLESALE BUYERS. EVERY NOVELTY OF THE BEIUSON• THE LOWRBT OAHE imam r. Xir Mere hanteown mutdrustaimuls np Irdeuirud.' IVENS, ,1 ' Np..ON BanthNINTH Strata. - At w. 004. SILK' GO pDs. No. 895 NANIENT BUM a T u . „. m Potax:4 • - 'lee% OH:LITFEES. STOUT. & 06. „ MAXON AND DOMErla DRY GOODS. • anitAu No. 028 MARZRT BTREET. , wan:lulu DICLLIMI IN FQRRION AND DOMESTIC DRY GOOD% 134 DEAREST MEWL Cash and prompt Sir:months' Balers, of all stokoai ant invited,to an anandnitkot of stook. 'ltaitrkta" , , Ivr 'y A - . In • oonseithme of the &attention by Sre of their Linen &Arco B roljt, YARD. imul.avic,R,E., & CO. HATO REMOVED , • TO NO: OM cHESTNUT BOUM eiirkg. Liors spa:ff. I.IIILMAIL4HIA. , Thee ban %hempen Alf ENTIRE NEW - BOOK ' 6r' BILKS AND FANCY DRESS GOODS, ,' • SHAW L 1 3% GLOVEB,-R113.1302414 ,TRLAINIIV.(O.9, oft., Together with. 0141113$ AB3OATMILVIT of STAPLE AND FANCY W :0 00 X) S tt i;r ! EMBROIDDIRIEfIi LA1,18,; MANTILLAS, Ati Hato( reckiive4 bai I. mall dam"' " ,13LePORT4TIONS, ' previous tot fife, theyara ethbas4 to diMhy • A:' NEW , STOOK. to whioh th d, invite the itieMion of their Castomeh and BUMS aueenr . . • . , IL . T WITS, AbSTLE, & iMcVEIGH, iIiWORTIII I / 1 AND iOBIII3IB/ IPi . : D'RY GOODS, Ito. 311: MARKET Simi', Om Third. Farlisis Wittig, ear Ausite, sualtoo T. bloVeigh. PULLADILTIIIA. hn4. Weimer, wenn Burgin. aril-dru FALL AND WLNTEX. OLOAKS & MANTILLAS FOR THE WHOLESALE TRADE. fetIZA ER 4 Igit'W_ANIDE / nio t l E groPtiM . : o l y .0., Which we offe r 1 - LOW PRICES. AND ON LIBERAL J. W. PROOTOR & CO. THE PARIS ‘ 9dAETI4I4 and MOAK EMPORIUM/ 70,8 oHtsTsTyr STREETi wsfm WOOD, ZdAitSU, & ILLY WARD; a.a.• IMPORTERS AID • WHOLESALE DEALERS IN DRY GOODS 01 . 10 7 1 11/.140, NO. 309 ARNIM iBTIEET. Fall Winter eta* . now oaimelete and ritui,tAin COM 3: , SOMBRERO'GICIANO CONTAINS grayly rim CENT. OP BONE ' PROSPRATL OP LIME. " FOR BALE 70 FARIitERB • At 030 per To* ot"2,000 pounds, by • JOS. B. 14.4.14130iq, & ... 8 1 rIat g z ati,No.30 Iforti*AT.R street. ./10.1TSE4ITHICISIIING GOODS. I WILLIAM , YARNALL. . IMPORTER AND DEALER IN II OTJEIE EVELNISJ3ING MOODS; 'No. 1020 CHESTNUT BTHMT. „(Immealetely opposite the Attademy of Fine Alit.) TABLE 'CUTLERY, OVAL WAltiltft. , KITCHEN TABLES, DOOR MATS. , - , , CbOTHEB MANGLEII;&e., ' - Poisenstupotheitoing Itountiouirtne too poiloul 4 l l / invited to an' esstninstloslof this stook of USSPUL 01110bli • )11517-11111faIn „ ipirCIRMEN , VEN .ARE AIN) WISING ZlAgtestlirrsidisera .et efts =IA Copl4l-1!t -' -1 ,, Jdir.',,oor. Ai. d 0” ', . • • . , ADy si t mim Aatill , , -I intrEIVIWRIVMO i)11111* :41p 1101 12 7424 - OTH .8, ADVER tat rgH5 . A 714 int BA 'DT CITV AND - re: ... LI Atr i , "Krifilvere . spdec) !. ,;•:_.. Oleg . lifyri v; : 1 : 44• 11 4/Zir rallar taigntligiVt"lBl-if 1 --..—... 'irt it; it b' - - ART IiTIIIOEAL " vs; viby kirgE n A m VAT -1(U sow raMin Wrinkrit. qms, ,j4kit()M.V4D* b atifatAlt: l •:100: 13 , •••411 Old oriVrorin u, •.r ' 11 3.4..x4,.:P/:V-14 - 71'. 6 t fee4ll4l Vtig t 4 o p or in iq f Pf I ,II , IORAY,,;4: VTEIVLBER, :17, 1860. IlL' dlr . ) Atterktion . .9l'; • FRESIf, • ". FALL; tAtiCioDg. RIV,GEL. BAIRD, Ba. CO IMPUATEBB DRY.: . No. 47 IVOR T,FI THIRD, 87'itif%. Would! respectfully inyite . ifte - ettention - ot thateade to their 1 " , ' • • LARGE AND WELL-SELEOTED, ' Stook . • . FltEsH.. PALL GooDS. *gib they ere how opening: We are daily le 7eoelpi or it lade of freqh and , &arable anode. ; Call end easier% preratoolF.7, r , „ • ae7-71a, 1860.. FALL TRADE. , EL!, 8a 04., , ' IMPORTERS AND JOBBERS FANCY DRY docibtf;,'' NO. 137 NORTH, THIRD RTHRET ) Alt H 140 W PREPARED 31'04:JEER?. To THE TEAlik i ORNERALLY AN UNUSUALLY ATritACTltirE STOCK Olr GOODS, !',' COMPRISING :41'3; t BILKS, RIBBONS, 3E4tg.S Gooris. TE GOODS, ESIBROIDERIES, LACER, CLOTHS, OASSIAIIIRES, VEBTINOS, ROSIBRX, OLovEVANDITRIMMINGS, • Tletherivith s full and vaned emir of FALL AND WINTER SHAWLS. To 'all of Wool, MO invite the attention of c.,611 AND PROMPT SIX MONTHS' BUYERS. S. M. BUNN. , V. C. BURNg if. R. RAIGUEL, W. W. KURTZ, ant!-l m ,„ •H. P. MHO... . • • 1860. iRAO • RAWITEL, MOORE, a (SO., NOB. 220 AND . 222 NORTH THIRD STREET, N i AVE NOW OPEN THE LARREBT ANN MOST ; COMPLETE STOCK , F o REN9H. GERMAN, D 0 ISOI - #7, La.:, DRY GOOl3B They hale aver offered, and to which the attention of CIABK AND SHORT-TIME BUYERS a respeothilly soliolted. , air ror-varisty and oompletenein In all its .deseni ;intl. onrinvaint stock offers Inducement.; to bujein l i nsurinisisd by any other'honie. nu24-tm 44 1 4E0. BENT. siamrTEE. I ss IMPORTERS AND JOBBERS !DRY GOODIE. NOB. 239 AND 241 NORTH THIRD STREET, AsavE RAUE, ltdopeotfully invite WI attention of Boyers to their usual LARGE AND COMPLETE STOCK OF FOREIGN AND DOMEBTIO GOODS, Among 'wich wllt be founds general esecattnent of PHILADELPHIA-MADE GOODS, Atm.& Was variety of new and confined stiles of PRINTS, MERRIMACK SECONDS, to, otol7-2in THOS. MELLOR & 00.. NG: 8 NORTH THIRD STRUT, IMPORTERS or H OSIER Y. iiIHRTEI AND DRAWERB, SMALL. WARES, kc, itaos, Itlmm, Jour( R. rtisturi I IDWASD &ma, Uso.O.EvAto, aul7•2m , :WALL, 1860. COOPER. PARHAM. lb WORK. Imputere, &nabob:lire re, and Jobbers of 'HATS. CAPS. FURS. AfD• STRAW GOODS. NO. 01 140ILT1i IitIRD STREET. below ARO% . „ rittIiADELPRIA. MILTON coopEß. W&. M. PARIIAOI. • . ROBERT D. WORK. Mir MI 'Stock now complete and ready for buyer.. SONVE:II,, BARNES. a 02.. sooKtycLLEAs ANT) PUBLISHERS, No. 37..NORTIITIIIRP STREET, Lager aide; atom Market Street, Philadelphia; %re tfati attention .of Bootie' eller t a s i o tgd toantry rem. t tt i tii h i l i r mi v tgli l egiti s e t Pt k og o eth.r yr " ittirso l ella * n ul e ' :. Disc 431,6 pk Book"; Plapar,lum Attauoaary ionerallv. stA9O./ araynireners pl. many, popular works, amonterhaellaretde °dewing . ..• ' ' ' TH OENTRAL 'GOLD 'REGION,' HY COL.'WILLIAM GILPIN (Late of Mill:R. Armi.) ILLTISitIeATES BY NUMEROUS MAPS. One vol., aro, 6 bou d t in oa :tog g o rie r :AlM ; and a liberal This book I.7%entined the moat wondoilial, 'relent( fin. anti °omens' wive treatise on the geography of par contidedpvi! 1114 4 4. , i Ht l, o Li BOORS: Amiliglite SERIES OP- REAPERB, i , BROOKS' NORMA L'PEIMARY RITHIS/ 8 " TNT ota. REOORIP NORMAI, ,, MENTAL ARITILMEr ^ f. • BROTOP KEY TO 7 ‘MENTAI , ABITITME•4 5 btl. • ....'2ll ote, BY E. BROWS , 4 ‘•Mv , , Professor of Mathernatioit an h .Vansylvania Stare Nor tporaltoimiforinaiduo*w . : ; WHITE'S b01 : :2 . 43001S. , , BY.T: KIRK ViriaT.E. , • • President of PeniutylvantedeomiNerelsli Contra, , PIN 4 T9N'S 'OUTLINE %. MAPS. . • " Tido rodeo of SIX BUPgIULDIJOB Seir MO/tea ittalsicitt every aohdol of note to kbertio• 'gravity is taught. And hie ti.9r#9011114 rot fug set Ibang'rdat Dalai az • virop. qi t t .9.oLi tifisrei pa k tainia lyoke. anB4m clAiiilt,4o.ENX;)4 . o. 3 , . , 7, i f ,f.,,N,A 14 L: slai . a ' ' ' isinT4o4Xoo.." ' km: •._ , P4l 9 6 ,uroz sirm. • Vrtsoo MONDAY, SEPTEMBER I§p. '-`DOPLIS LND;' JOHNSON. Monster Beception to,.Goyernor • Johilson,of Georght. xi\cci=micc4l.v.i3 No'FnilQll liith the Breckenridge DIBIIIIIOIIIStS &e.,&, 'Sc. . Man. Dersobol V. Johnen, the Democratic can didate for the Vice Presidency, reached this city at 6 illolbCit,cnpaiurday,aft‘riloon. If walfroodived aat-priticoused at W4ll2Ut•eircreiVihstf by a coimnit fella Mg Central Dpuglas,qammtiim CiiitC,'Llanied krwrii:Y. Bina in r ih, b, is tlom he sties conducted to 'Abel Olrardr;ilquao. 'my. Jidinsou is a Man of estutasudiui Ateseuce, folly el. feet In helAt, and powerfaity built.' Re bhe the 000ntifitnoe eta roan of Thought and depletion.' d;ter in the eve• nlpg he thid it most enthilehatierreeoption'emon= $ atti r e ilj 'l,6rik 'he *Ur isikiiketo address the A Douglas ' Odwitiiii4 l edithlrlilidiid 4 With ttotlitiltafil- tricifigiohillilVidAli:4oo.hlthd , Cl' ma* IkepirabirY tfi niOnidlnkriiiiklesiVtii : • - -Ai , '',iferikiittierlhi3 litikwidial iittilorirti, • stwd t limiters - ere' l iiiiv*A*.ieg i vHf - , Air.titik.A 7 :' eliiiii'Littled ett'o'flen= miry hi order, and . prolioded 'the following otwoem who iiiVelooteid by sactsiSattea't 7' .- J - ; noirliVittilhes: , . .. i Alp it,fnitilinkittrii,.. .. „, ~ ~ , , i g r Pe aitor,4 -Janie* ewes. . . R . 'rr, 11 . 10:t ~ • ' , V.t,a4ql Bl l 4 ,lrlflt?re T , t , ~s t0 , 11%4 ?gllgVii ; ' ' ' ' Aliallailggai l' i r I Him° , Arno i,, WI h mB. Small, jamookl. B i lditli94 i littpeolit' pen', • • John p: Janos, • " ; Hoorp.o lei. trborri, Jams,' Elliott, -,• • i. Slelueig• Mnrgai • Robetrif. i.e., —• anti. orthr ti. ' ik t a Da itil w D*l i ierty, „ i „; .. ./ s itritti t Nobnotti, : Boil (in n /eV; '' '' "' • Jot n i la:t r i l l, K. Me r. alien, i . 'themes Heinn. Edward Williams, Fate d*lfiNeil, • Joon Clompbell, A. Di 80i if all. David Webster, MI n ' ILE I. ryl • - Peter ?deflate ' Donee° ei - Y dourin, COAtIoN Dilneart, "A tp Sanlil'irtrg. CbaritoLl'homns boyish wood, ' Be ln M. Wright, Jacob Drinkhottoe• Junto esenufer," lames 13. ?I:01°1ton, ...j0n.,./. Morrison, Jelin P.; Pool,- ' l i fe l eiri e otet, . Jo Bt. , John ,Dovlip, ' eltimeol A. Mitt, Joseph Mountain, 443 le:QatM., James you itt ~ ,i , l iv o l li tli,o,rast. Jeanne .iL it t li fj _ , llu , BECRETAR 11 0 . r . ViAllOll3, • ' - ,'r - Joshuu T., 9• 0 711, • b §1... Ai inte r. Antilop, ee QI in, . qr H a rkin, , r %as: r. Miller. at, rf. Tindall, r • 1 ' ex W i fe: H. Nolen. - ilk iltitiiin;, . I .Dontehllun, Jen so Benneily• roa rte. Jan I Agnew, John tens-, ei Hiutiel Bens. Gus. Dining yboloa young.. il ~,,,,,„.,:e.....,„, ~...ee.k. Golan. . DlT.litaiitThian. Pierce Archer, Jr., F. A. yen More. • store taiting his neat, Mr . Kneels said that the mblY Ate to give a oordial welcome to' the Ho , item . el V. Johnson, the Demooratie canal di e To . r.:tthe ;Vice Presldeney„ tApnlense.l 'Mr. Jo a1.:44111k. Mn,, ttiuglae, was doing yeoman sor tie* In.this eause of the party. Ile was to express mitt Opinions as he entertained upon the great quOstions ag it a ting the publia mind. It might be . . wen, for setae. parties to say to these 'candidates, .‘ s orhear, to Speak your sentiments to the people." Al ars. POuglaaand -Johnson put To lights under b shels, did not lock themselves in their homes tuid keep tikar'it from the pnblio eye. There were *wne who said It did' not comport with the dig nify of nominees to take the stump ; but was any man too hick to be heard before the pablio irt , . banal? Tholtlople oonatituted the vary highest body in the net:on—theefountain of all authority. plyplause.l Every candidate wee bound to de ntate his sentiments—whother yi was for the coon tit or spinet It. illevernecSohason was then Infrodueed and re pitved with in7,Mtuens applause, whiob continued fqr several minutes. Witted iltatet wan reati.red, thchonoralle gentleman proosodaal with hie ad— d aia: , '., ' 677.1C011 07 Vtir ROY. RIR.IICIIRt. P. JORMSON 1 FILLOW•OII2t2I,9 OP Pr aireitv atm : Will you accept my 'sincere thanks for the cordial ending'. aim whit% meets me on this occasion [Cheers.] r appal before you as an humble and unworthy .nsprosisetatlye of the national Demooratlo party of the Ualted . states-4epplausel—aa their ohoeen candidate for the Vice Presidency. I appear be. fore you to (Remiss some of the political questions that are involved in the pending campaign. It affords me pleasure to present myself before you. !ad am I of this propitious opportunity to coat- tine with my brothers of the great Demoeratie f tart * l, y P o e u rs rav a Personally, y e:ra l r 0 6 4 e a r ' : r ra h n e g a e r r d t o o t To; until, within the hut two or three months. [A voice, " Oh! we know you well," and epplansial Did, ' my fellow-citizens, we are the children of Wash ington, [cheers,] and, therefore, I have the right Ito shake hands with . you as my brothers, and to extend to you the renewed expression of my most • grateful thanks for the enthusiasm with which you have received me on this ocelslon. [Applense ] ' There is, In point of truth, but one great leading, I :permanent hew involved in this esterase, which you, mg freemen, are called upon to decide at the ballot-box, at the approaching election. That, question Is whether the people of the Territories of the United States shall be permitted to excretes the right of seitevernment within the limitation. of the Federal Constitution. [Cheers.] •We have two political parties in this Union opposed to this principle of popular sovereignty. We have a po• !Cleat organisation in the Northern States pledged, in the event of their success, to exercise the power On the part or Congress to prohibit the extension of slavery In any new Terrltoriss. We have another party in the Unites! States—one of recent 1 origin—a new-born ;baby that has scarcely ant its teeth. [Laughter and applause. I A party in the event of Its accession to power, pledged to exercise the right on the part of Congress, to protect slavery in the Territories of the United Stated. These two miles being apposite extremes is ono sense, have met upon a common ground of union in another souse. They both agree that it Is the' duty of Congreis to exercise jurisdiction over the. subject of slavery in the Territories of the United' States. The Northern sectional party claims that that jurisdiction shall be exercised for the purpodo • of prohibiting slavery, whilst the Southern sec tional party claims that the same jurisdiction shalt be exerolled for the ostensi hie purpose of proteal lug slavery in the Territories of the United States. This, then, is the great question, and it Is for national men of ail parties—no matter by what news they may be designated—it is for every true, patient at, constitutional, law•abiding, and Union-loving man to determine whether either of these sectional organkations shall emceed to power In this countrY; and I appear before you, fellow-eitirens, for the purpose of Communing wills you in' the spirit of frankness, to the end that We may all bo enabled to decide whht is our duty as American freemen. , To some to a clear and satisfactory decision, it is peculiarly appropriate, that we should calmly and dispassionately look at a few of the historical events connected with this 'subject. I will invite. you Only to go book forty years* in the history ht, this Government. When Missouri was admitted into the Union Congreas imposed a provision as a condition precedent, or rather as acoompanying her admistiton, that, thenceforward, slavery should he pr allibited in all the territory north of MI dog: 30 min. of North latitude. r I will not say that the subject of the extension of slavery heal not theretotore engaged the deliberations of Congress and suited the public mind, but this was the first remarks l e Inatenee in which the Congress of the United Sta ses assumed jurisdiction over thie subject, and affirmed, Ile right to limit the expansion of the institrition of slavery within certain geographical bound.: From that day dowh tOtho year 1850, the oubje.ot of slavery hid been a mune of bitterness, of strife, and of diem:mid between the northern and southern notions of the Confederacy. . • • i • When, the Missend restriction was adopted, r. Jefferson declared that it fell upon his ears li e s fire bell at night, and that most sagacious states man glanced with a prescient eye down the vista of e a t o yl t y, and deemed to anticipate and to prediot the Veryetate of things whioh we have on various occasions experienced as the result of that most un-, fortunate action of our Federal Congress. • I shall not call your attention, fellow-oltizens, specially to any notable points In the subsequent history of Congressional legislation On this subject between 1820 and 1850 ; but I may allude to' the Minima Compromise, and to. the' subsequent agitation ,from that petted down to 1850, for the purpose of propounding to you this question : Savo' you over known a solitary instance lln which the Congress of the United Status aestimed to Itself jurisdiction over this delicate and exoiting tubjeot, In which it has not produced the fruit. of bitten:mile anti of, sectional strife? Lay your fin ger, if yoMoan, upon a solitary occasion when,Con green has sought to interfere upon the subject of slavery In the Territories. or elsewhere, that' the publio mind has not been agitated to its profeund. est depths, and our sisterhood of States threatened with separation. Those of you who are old enough, know by experience that theme aro fads., . Theta of you'who have faithfully read the history piper moonily, will also attest that these are treats. Well, now. with this expenenee in the past, tc:iihtho orientation and with a cloud of testimons starlet/ us In the face, that during a lapse of forty seam to ees ry in stance in which Comtism has Bought MI interfere Inth the sublime of slavery. IC has prbduced the 'lounger Int- tem.. and of sectional etrife—the question f • venom I to you is, is its'ise, In lone, after, ,thle'qUeatiell by the compromise of into pea been triton erred, Itoin'Con4 , gr .... totli: parmlb 0 thee Territories, for cirri to r s a s s ame driedrotiop. for the purpose or control I {ethyl I I.'3nel:to( erritortai Legisiaturee ? I applause. shalt we learn nothing by the history of the 'past? i • - The great Pettit* )teary said. that the lamp Of ex.. perigee. Tr i ntlzb r y T . Wad he was glided , end, as it p " af iirsory u ptaidy rhoog u pon drs. d au " us, , r 1To " :1 1 : 6 ant tho path of toe future by the tamp of trio put—taste warning and eschew the evil!, that have beset us to far mer days , and adhere manfully to the pledgee le4:elt we mentally madeto each other in MO, that the at.tti cot of savory ,should be transferred , tram rho mils of Congress, and the political amino, to the poop o oft i t a T 81710771 7N with fun pones to dispose of [Land to se - tle tt. In their owls War.. tureat abooring. artooli tont -. nu o d zL l re 7771r120 44 4 e 0th iiii I s t het i • I . em exceedingly. nosise; ara i laDol7o Oa heard"- , This4oetrine of Lon-., arestilonat titoteCtiOn Tor slavery In tholertnories is not a pews roposition. 'Mani puppet.. lit 'the pre t, day, at the north , and even •at the Oath, that the lu 880 ta ,_. I r., its It modern dilmoVery, and very great ore,i t is claimed by tne extremists of the Honda for having penetrated through the flarkaese and the ,olotids which gathered over the'elatiorial Demo she party of this Union:and disenrar 4 is ng this wonderful theory' that the South Mita tight tO h ave slavery protected in the Territories, no on lecoverr, and dlr. Yancey and hie deluded fol. lowers hot. in Wenn tit a'pritent rightler it. .nt, rial Qovernyntfpr In let% a bill was introduced by the Territorial Corn mAtee. i r ti thasieriete of' the United:Mites., tOongion se it Te ()rearm. (het on, for a long series 0 „yenta. had been left withons Territorial Oran- Maation.er tPontress,and, ee n matter of se If. c reserve lion and redeem ty. the People there organized a tailed ;Vl' ftWeri'll;'.°Vdr,orali'Vg"gri:t.ltriAlff:4l'.ll4:ss/:, nanceispephitatingthe exietenoe of involuntary Beryl tub!, within thitriterY. , •• • . When the bill wanintroduced and was pending for the I l'Uf.`Bial, : T sn ßl r ag:fga1 r 4.Y.7.1 1 :1 ' .747.10r . r .i?jgg 3 ' leant th effect of which was to denier* that all the errdi i g i g. w gr At el'gr_juittillgi l o . f in .rtv r tg, g a T o e n r aTe n tepait t°r 94 and that-the ...morose of the United States, ehon,d gut rantee th erre* j Ogress of elaveholder. with t ihtar proper-. ty Into the Tendon' of Oregon', and the undierurherf en- Joymeot thereofnurttut the continuance of the Terri bet rial condition, This VIE to al) intents, aid purposes, the very. same Proposition which is noW Made' fot Con. , gyessiorial protootion. 4).that day it was known ad a 7 ' CongreationaLguaranty , or the imouritX of slave pre -1 party In the Terrlkitleit during , thy' existence of the rerritcrial state, -r, . . . •rT United niendment verypted down in r the Senate of the Mate. by a large ntaionty. So fagas , f re.i inenilSer,4ll.the •Northern iterietore.•eild , E. very row siderable bunion of the Southern letaratdrirj• ' , Mind 1 A./went , it. I refer to this fellow.olp,srite, this the purees of showing that, en far bank an ;MC genie ,egtearrio of Congressional protection was agitated ; and I=l Ir'itittlnatitertudlPM;lrd%tlintili"Ahlir?Ztert ot, anent ttOn the/ irehnielii t P m earite...s l tenultic'"' . Dint yhe emits session 0 (litittliiiving SCllll7'oo' lefti re A" :1 " 40 4" :1 th9.Y4°)fi t il l 'e' la t i; i gg l thY r rrl i enl, 'toPifit. ',Ziai1r%.6.7A7.52.10g7 uio...*.vg *tweet tragart. v }tip _ mire ,these eyrktiN .48.0., %littler lite OHL fOrOp • Rial'e i t i , / 1141: turritt%iiitintlNPrggs'thaTtablitrftlfg• Repilbl nelit h ott n. 7 i r ^ ,i,' ',,, til . '• •• 4; • Nig ng IMlllialritollorthem-xfirniolist liti t i Nisq 1 14 f'w64ll l, mit ' rb er erdi tria 4 NsM t a ART lOU ri ant` - livery . .11rdti . "kda tanot its hear LI d is64ol. 0.1 Or . /", ii =441'5: I v Y r l c ti r ataiMtl i r t lL MI ...:.. , Patio' filt 4 trNitirl; t ?"' 93 -M I FIV"tr 81:a7'.! 1.....,.. pr....... , ..J..:::-..„,,,, .• ~....._„. :`';,3%3.7 7 " - ` 7 "' 0— l' V ':---"1- * . art 1r • ,'b• , , • •ritrahe: of ,a, long as ertlintlro i eh, `a tOrohor arid traturgritieberent ettreellUpe- Mee I, ,s. ne;batedsfAins 0, hoer inner rinser WWI . 1 1.... Igor ' 011 012. 'Johnson , oat*. tied ithe Wh i rl ,be aptd.sIoriTHIIMPI".SqaPITINVI°Ar.V r 4( cat: ,, ,t„, t 00...,,,,, , 1 1 0 tp . .. . Ar ilk u r e iiat 4 • 11911.111 r . Will * d r ' P W 'Ailla PO. Ad t # tt, yft , „I- • Itz d 1141:4. 1 vka! usivelzoilregkr.,'' 41 rent %yam*. trietr.witltnttlifiatVetlXitiK"7 , e , ro itA sna ta m t e t tel st r i o r i m a t t its ti (At i zsl vi , pf those Tertitotieewe i rnai ; i iti i i i iilti s ti . inten egilitillhe Mad seheitudethrtnrithoit et n , Renti lie, y soppy, verywhere in the North, andin t • e tlotichi were itlartned,.• •• , , •.,r , 1 , ~. • AtIdIVUTIdt Uri t 3, *reposition woe impute In th . Bow o thie United fitates for the appointment of . epee! In nern , ttria, whose duty It should he to take into coedit enation the organization of those Territories, and ' peocemile adjustment of the difileulties in referene • ' to the etibieot of slavery. '1 hat committee was cool- Posed ot anemias number of Senators (corn the North' andft,ont the ,hicuth. widen Ilqqat number from the great *latent puttee of the day. Mr. Clayton, of Delaware, was the chairman of the aoirunittee, and. Mr. Calhoun, of Mouth Carolina, ope of the leading Intellect*, and the ambonitnent dt floutheni wintunetitriWes - a ,meintsit 0( 1t..l After severe I days.ot consultation , you will re- Memturr Ilief Mr. Clayton reported Mille Planate th : celebrated Clayton comical:Mae bill. The 26th simile. of that hill was itrictly a - non-interverituan• section. ,It restrained the notion of, Congress upon the ,aubiect o I gingery ip the Territories, and provided for an appeal to the Bonrilmollouittof the Unt teddtates upon 011,,quee tions'alaing in the 'territorial! InVOlVine human tree dont, Mr. Calhoun cdnaidered that m on promise Mil ne a eeture which challenged his confidence and tuPPert. 1 blenched to ba honoree with anus in the Senate o the united Wri tes*. ttrat time trout the State of Gear, gin. applause,j and, therefore had the apsortunity . o understanding t horoughly the .t.ilsi Win and views of etre Calhoun ip reference to the ll atton. compromise. wash Yale a man; tie woe a statesman, hir advanced i life. Yet sunk , was the geuerpeity of his nature that h Mole Me lly 'the hand and aging led the late his oonfr derma, e conversed, .fneely with Ma in reference to the greet ntereats of the lentil, Ooneerning 'Which we felt elika."kie "anti in allbitelece. f:.l , behove that. th . magma ,of our rights, under the , Constitution is. that Cohere* ended open all. stream Terri- Mei ato, ,the., Iran ,ingtesof Ale] slavehouler en , big property, tittd'' should; guarantee • the. tondos Pi , d.ieltilen i s of that property e i riof thr an ti tete oe 0 th e ' r e rritorlal Con mon: ut,'„jih d Li • rot . ring the alented impactions ,of Plr,,Anyis. of rilisinetiPpl,' Uno clearly see th at even the mbutii her- , stifle not -Wu d in_demarldftg.this. interansy at the 1 Motile of Congreas. We are not harmonious ,fi asking fro i Controls the Protection of slavery ,reeks Ternto me of the United Rates, Amu have on hope that, in fo nt , Congress will 'be more Moraine to the Institution tes t le pry, and the reeognition. of the rights of the moutti v in the Territories than the presser. Co I 'The indication, tull tbat • the' present Congress is large& opposed titwhet I conceive to bethe meanie d mid omisntiltional ri slits. and: therefore. for the sake e harmony, and 'Anion. and for the alike of -htelah ins; thic /walling sobjeot ham the , hells , of Con Streik I am willing to vote f_or the Clay toe Compromise al transfer the subjent torever to. the *Moe of th• •re rittgos I far." said lie, •!1. would rather trust th _ rig u ot the gioutli, on tn la adalmoyi of slavery, in al itsrpiebli anth the perish, of a Territory then with thi Co OrtOS, Or, any we, era likely to have in the future." tolamps , . i ' , . Larded forth* Clayton Compromise, fapplanie,l feel ialigiat where the gree t embodiment and Ineareatio• of hero reureste ,an d nonthern rights. the sten Ca Noun, led. I should be ante. I voted for theretanto an us tar bank as ,181.6 I steed u pon ' the retool' as com- MI ted to the doctrine of non - intervention . I. rolouge applause.] - '' • " '.. t The Clayton Camprornite I'll) trotted the Be t9' bY a large majority. It was sent to the House of it tattee% for their oopenreeqoesbnit A preposition wag made to ray it upon . the table, writaquhuershern i f i cit. out oral? dehots. It ado fetot, bOre r• that all the •- yrentattree from the eolith in the moose. excise ii s. e red shrillest the motion to ler upon tt•Lwante a hart formica Cayes that is an ilidioattnit o ftoisit ern mnt - mant r as far bat keg 1449. the Boulti Maeda upon this re fiord, liy her Unanimous vote in the Renate and by Rh. 7,1:4, l!lreitrt.".rtriPlhojn.."l47;l7.l:l l .Z4l:tilo h ni, tAmt..4o t 1 he reJeation of theura several bills left the Terra°. r' earithout organization unut the year 1950. In that r atenuaresa passed a aeries of bills called the Corn ;Miro I d u m e i ' t i st r a e n " nt ' ll l -ino ' rn m ilt &s : u f r o7l7r U tZ t r ed m I oorrg a tails f i 2 I tnlt h lte ll :e A t ' Al ' i x e l trt ' rf ul th ij e Ls bOtih r gsl i . L a ' s t a r t?6 - trt; 6 . t aeon the United nretroror Texas) and" New .hies leo. rt the aupprnatAnn n 1 the slate trade In the Dtettiot of rumba,. 'flies° inco.ures wera efoooneded to the Awry AS a alSteitt of pactficatron aud adjustment. You remember the agitation. North and Booth. witted they euteadered, bow ardeutly, grow at Ir. and. I may wry, how tltrolr. the acquieicence or the operwation or these comOoreher measures tooth,scused in. both Soottnna of the Crime. In tha and in my owe tate. the contest was esreotally ammeter! and Litter. et by oyerwhelmmru majorities In all the States of the niou.t he OADlStorniatt thelMarel of Itrio were cans ed sa I' finoladjustmeet of the Merritt questhin. end the trans fer of the subject from the halo of Oottgiewi and men& Of potions to the people of the Territories to determine and regulate their own doruestio lestitetioss is their own way, submit only to the Crmstautton Sr tile United Plates. I Applaure.l Si, far ea this question of j elavert_ie the Terntortes a voiles riled. this great ptlnciol of non intervention 9 the sulotroluin of .hat whole *treater() of adpietinect 9t was tor this that is was aoonetable to the people of the United B tsiss . In met other Terminus the Corn jr(ALl,7:ll.7rinil7.ll? LYlT,4l:::fthi.:•eir,`A; but ;fur of ItArtnnAt. Ivr tee sake of removing tlos sob act 'from Co.'s teas for the sale or quieting the auto on. ,from the gat or of ' pottring oil open the waters of the *P iloted wean of politics. [a do p t utli. by a tette majnritY, ;agreed that she srould the Com promos mat soma as a final adJustment._. LApPlouse. 1_ In Plat ;you li rd your National Convention in Baltimore. that ttoto - AntitAt adapted an a part of its crecd— the creed of the National fleutoctotre parts--the elm- . mple ni these Compromise mvenures• lieneral Pierce was nominated upon that platform : we frurht the b neon it; we neliieved victory and he was maven - rated into POwer ilorw Chief hirreetitivotard the 'ref re- FelltiftfVfl mid embodiment of the prom', e of non 10'. lafvenllolli I ApPlAtwo.l The gri.4t Whit party. also in Baltimore amteno.!od. adopted the Couneramuse men• sures es a final betttementrit the Cavell notation Co k so thnt both of the great political parties of the United ?Bates to UM. Which embraced a racy large majority of the lieople of the Confederacy, stood pledged to the doctrine of nun-Intervention- with aiming npon trio part of Congress tAMPIMI.O. . , The Abolitionists and theft toured cameo a matter of course, refused to adopt these measures, and to Incor porate them tote their creed. At that, tune they were comparativelna very insigniacant organization. Thor' , etoodialoof ; they did not acquiesce in this compro mise, but, gnevertneiess, It tie lent. that a meat ma- ; foray of. tne people of Ora Conlederaag which corn coned the treat Whig and Demoaretio parties of the' day, did piedre themsalree to the doetrinoof non-inter-- volition as n final adiustinent of the slavery question. We come on down to int. It became neoessary to; organize governmente for Nebrassa and Kansas, Mr. Douelta [applause, which orintioded for several tint- 1 notes] won chairman of the Committee on Tart-actor,' „At tki a point the immure agate int- mimed the speak ar by goring cheer attar cheer for _Douglas and John{ son. governor Johnoim continued. The b II which Judge Douglas introcimed for the organisation of Nebmsks and Kansas contained a provision whirl!' embodied ea. Instte prantioel in tie application the clootrin a of don, interven:ion to those Territories. That bill doelared tint to ba the intention oi Congiets to legial its waver. Into Territory or out of Territory. hilt to leave the Pao • plc thereof perfectly tree, to regulate and detentions ,their own demean° instoutiona their own way, eel* tent onlysto the Constitution of the 'United Ettatee obtuse); and for the purpose of entirely unfettertng the people of the Territories, the Missouri restnetion was repealed, which enabled them to exercise the largo delegation of leglelatibe powers conferred upon them dl 'our territory South, no well as north of 36 ded, 30 min. rn 1g66 you aT your delegates to Cincinnati, Matt ma, with the ot er Southern States, sent their delegatts to inoi ail, ]you met there to nominate candidates for President and Vine President 01 the United Stated. and I want to call your especial attention to a very mg pifiaant fact. A [enema. in her State Convention. Win, L, Yancey tieing the ohauman of the committee to 'Devon resolutions for the ilet-ten of the CillyVetaille, TO ported a resolulloo, instruatiog the delegates to the. Cincinnati Convention to to there and to demand bf that Convention a recognition of the 'dootrine of not,- interventioo, rind, if it should be rallread, to withdraw. YAleplause4 Tile demand was made. 'She National Dernocratio Convention marched boldly up to the pro position. and they thd tinammounly.• Al) the dale gates 'roman the Swell, without atwitter, voice, voted in tam or the Kansas end Nebraska Sill and tgo deo 'tries of nonintervention. an a final compromise and comp:nit between the Northern rind Southern Dente- Gr rif.'S iii l Vens Pl6 n " ,Vh ' o ]its since _liteome par rid /m , tine "old Public Funatienarg"-44oplawie and /moth terl—Mr. Boatsmen. and Major Breakinridgo of Kin lucky, were nominated by that Convention as year standard-bearers; the, accepted that nomination. ed led pd. themselves, us men of honor, to stand by t he alneinuati platfornl. [-Applattee.) Mid Mr. Bootie an slomaxed,lli -MO letter of acaeptance, that 'this was a moat happy conception. -I.Laughterd That it wais 'proposition an old, as the representative sOveinotent itself; that the tenet. of the Territories. Mollies* of Oho States. should determine their owndomestic troll ir Lotions in the °ten Way. [Applause.) , Major Breckin ridger'also endorsed ,the Walloon, and in the course of - toe canvass otigas„he uttered sentiments as thoroughly in favor of the dootrine of molar oeverci only an, ever , fell from tho of the much-traduced and persecuted Douglas, or Illinois. [Anhui* 1 But it su turned out in the year of our Lord one thousand eight his ,prod 'Ottgty, that new lights have burst in upon the • vion 's Old Publio Fuoctionarr.' and inc lies foun dout that the broLte whit* corned over the strew nin 1860, won't begin to do for lireakinridge and Lae to petit - upon in 1860. [Applause I you are 'Pennsylvanians; Derwin the old man,the Bono red eon or your State—he Lae lived and ft ttened all him life untin the Democracy.• ' • A Voice.. - not all the time,O Uhilten. My friend says not all the limo. Part of his b rill', It said, he him fed upon the sour milk of Fade reliant. [Hoare of laughter.) Well at all events, the over-green'ohaelet that enaireles his brow te-day lies beep wrought by the handiwork of Democrat o friendship. And is It not most mournful, that after he Lea received all the h honor, which the Dernoaratio:lisyti Mtn pan heap upon : after- e has pledged himself to this 'doctrine or nattelial moos; after the people of this North and the South have steed by him 'and eitamlned hi to through evil and through good•reporti that the ear" 'rants of his heart should have turned to bitterness. end „theta should he tro wstere of Statoode gushing towatdo Ins great party Which, elevated loin? [Applause') Tom log around,' lie °totted' the- - Party• that hOnorep him. • Now, rn alb Gm State. north of Mn and Dixon e line. he has kept a crown/it'd guard for h aso e other Mayor* than to Ore even" tree Watt*, to Lincoln. igirl ati A a l Let Douglas be what, he may—loutp epee s, dad a 1 the guilt that eatelianan and his Cablopt , Mtn imagine, ear the, is unworthy,—but can 51r. Buoliatuih lotted up in Its face of the Demerit - nay and tell thent, that Lincoln to be preferred to Douala.? Why, that Is the plan English, when propel-Iv trunslatod, of his actions and hla poliayi ['Applause.) I do net want to 'foliose In wards of disrespect to the Chief Magistrate of he United ,fitates, whatevrir intlY lie my , bye ,e course t ins 'particular. Air ' nn • Amerman citilen, f reertie and honor the! mime which ho has failed to honor. [lm- Diorite aeldalited • tint ir thtend to mortitiuize 'the ciouree qt Mr. 1 uchanan as I would that of any other citizen. I intend, to far as My !Influence may go, to hold'himand hint Afilpinistration responsible for the de feat of the National 'honorees. Ir. indeed. wp must ho dereated , liatielstadOi tell,roor zone. that there Deno dames, no hunmo ins snotty' Oro cite shelter binifrotn and reillafnalbility.'Crhat'ii God's truth I lie Wears what Nils. doing; he knows .very well that by Ming idatparateeleeteral Staaltioriege ticket each ofpt thk etorß.nprtta of -g on and Dixon's line the chanties are that he wilt defeat the party that bee aleitateatitri;and prawn with sunsuits thp party whoa' . , ~ ~' ~ ~~? TWO CENTS. . avowed tined plea Are . tioatilii to our CouetitUttent sad U W: n iv, Voq s o " V i t.hO I Ate eisil6 of hi/ o f o, rim out that all ramst re ate hste,mon dprirmt bell iity rears ofalublie names snit bs dimmed And mildewe d bi rue trees err to mummy that bratotedOold l i r . don., bov c . (*pawned. iti an ban Am n +lra bon Sr avyn ly miewcen if to., T rot thiiil4" . tpeoeie or tlya liotith do noto.ngtritacd 0 g *ph . .. L. Y utider.tand it, t tpd it stau ber VW r0"..."."1!" yak:: PP.:74, 1 : 4 :1 X': Z.l7:,`LX.tlrt,ll=l,l/14, • 1)7""14 ; I Illitir% i t I t'il.tit:', ;ilr:V=rit•llttifi' 40, OA, mi.,. tf t s pubhe endllrlatasitiortlelsl ttistatel VOVIVZI.afriv.-10.:44-4=, =. a ?orc.int ittivargouicar z g t ,. ..z.:irxtrAlmtmirnlfeit.brabet i Nt 1 I ~.. t4i r d. v ..4..n rgi s i:ga . : _ 2o4 , party t at as elevat the Pre d 'Home e ..ti itemply— •• • tit=r —rade *miaow ..• .. ...-. ' nnili Ca i n illatire t t;Vig sr u tlimmrE 7:: ' TAT V °,494 fg.V1 11 1%7VA , 14,1A.AL VALI= . 1 ,8 ~,,,..1 princisteton Yoe uyl 'il theca ee'llielf 7,1 wilfn t be unified with • an .& tit You, aim moocher! man, that the Booth watilait ettiakid T 0... (7,1 g 17,;,}initoel;,giautiideatry..isuP Tic: ' pelf 1 More meant tortes hambi of ea, gybe s. rat ,that admt liter It upon natiOnet principles. ied tinted tett telly u that. to ehealfeyes tip Unit gientiment. -YAK Will neve o ni arch lin to the ballot-bOt And soh for Meehan A. ll atlas for the PresiNeteire latintaeiteritt4!,,west 'An for Johnson. ton.. I 4o oan put nuf orr if ton Will; bat if I htite'Mf NIL I o re, trom the holltuntor MY lie art. if it is neeselitty to ewe mo off toter° the Constant/0s and the UniOnt' lit .) Gore MIMS de tr. kens/ of no: no: we .want you on ~ ~ 1 ht Srmoderi seem Bdeluoirertarhse is the North, and the ((emo followers of Si r . fluohailan, alleys that their °relate-anon to net Paned, but theft, rite fia— Honig Demooratio 'laity, and that Brecklnrukel and Lau( are the nominee* or the , Netional Dit t r arty of the United BMWs. ( N ei., they are not. isn't part a heantlfal tureamption 3 Isn't tt, elemilet tr.( gh. er.] They ought to be ashamed of,theingelites. ,I am not oats Into sn ay/anima On the .r.„,eleftings of t Convention. the( will malroartelSikned 1 Lan in Baltimore, but / wit present winarr.almesr,n tion hioh wilt armee the air ale • ereetal.4ll4efl-vo WM last ail into the coffin of the pretension of nationality Ott the art of Breokinndge and lite (endways (Aweleauff.l Wb aro they I. / he y seceda4 at Baltimore to organize th soiree into a •Convention at Ihrriard Mentz yea Hal ROW Many delegates wipe ano ed to a sta. nortal Convention ' at that halt I Ail' 'Mithowatil not iteeredited to the Friont-*user Theetter CeatiVo l 4 l 9 l l. war{ atiortdited to itmlunomf.' IThat'lrrer.l' Ile delegation *me Florid{ did udders* ;to ask faft-, =smo nto the !Islamist Convention at Baltimore.' 5o far as these been stile td dimmer, there were no dole-• gate' appointed by the Southern States to any Can Yell-r tont at BaltimOre but the regular Demooratto Comma' on If the deo/Want had ereatafttratrawywilitren the/ wet to proceed to Richmond and thenoe to Bettimore , toe e if they could distant UM** the lieliOnal Dem ent o party. They went to Riehmond and. although It i. j in the het Moo.tlfrof Awe , thet round. thsl i fihrtg of tau awed over Vi e tt e gi l .PVt ' itratt h .lll!_l:l4: In tw or th ree others..remmnedr adtottreleS +Joni day to day to Beep the nest egg of Sectionalism warts in the TA ndVinattxultiZabblihsett;MllainMW*lt9:l/ (A elute.) • ' 1 , , ~r , t, arini,tting for tha sake of antnensinf ghat all the :ro s cut in the Maryland Inetlinter 1011, AK /Wain. rid a and Lane were regeWly µcredited, to such a Co vention , what dose It aroount to ? ,it only antounte to Oleo that , they had abqut ope-third. of tne ap , gre ate electoral vote of the united' Mateo, Veil lea um tarcoth rda—and the retalt_s_hoapte anent rthan, lw -ttorde..of the delegates to the ZS itional Diintoora tin Migration still in selslon. rtApilettee.)• Baum* whoyoor Legislature ahal I meet next thine, tome great nu stunt shalt come np before it. led that ms•-tford•of , e h Mental shall be thustuded with the cotton of the tw thirds and withdraw, one-ti rd of the'HAss Mae th dime-room of one hotel. and une-tturd of Am.& nate Into the dinint-room or another hotel, ate then. i eVoi l it n i l Cdro t e; 11 . L e e ,si t ft rall i[ nTily tAragA.trl,e. error TA t,l I ianitere of re 00211.111111 has assembled Oulu, ready to *ewe arm Ineennite be may communicaW, wcruld th t not he en absurd and lodic ron_e_WOPOettlosh+nOt to r.ocirltilli hr 4 e tI'OreTYPN. who • tireltM VW that th tope-thirdwas the Legielature of Peormyttente t I, l /fprilituse.j. Vors on. third of the Content:lon withdrew. eii4 new prochigivi that tbtly (the ohs-third I are, par ...rcAlimcs, tiiii true _Nationtl•DOW10011110 rag 0( the Uttar! r totes' (Laughter.) When I went to tettool I tied that the whole wax equal to all its parte, and that, con eennently the whole was greater than any 008 Or its Parts. TM( Drtelitnridin rhea reject that, 'tut. cootend. si an tneir ptical dam} that one third of Moneta% IN e ual to the ei hots I Laochter antsophause4 Tana lo the pretension of naliauelity eat up by the &fees e.t.a.'s ao to the windy, as• nerwilMir of farther cdomdsriuton. It a amities that any man can fealty he oontrolled by it. Thorn who tie am to it show as WWI of °moor as they door °crouton sense. IA PPla eta 1 'Well. fa , ow citierns. the "old yobbo Innermost,' o ( ;tit him &vein. Inn laughter.] . a witrtela to rove that. e..klnridge was not regularly nominated. tle a• - ye teat he sres net. He paid no spoa the antlitiPy in the al ha* Rouse [Laughter J When they mate a rota over Death., hemmer, he kit taken Ma sum" thane ~ply to say that I think tee Vann Who 'wants to be rum dent ourht to hale tart semis right to taker he intuit et the *eh n(ho os Prelud , ret. ispolsase spit Isath'. Cr) Mr. Buchanan ridini's that Mr. Breelnetidge we. MI moninated secorairry to the usage* oil tee peril by the regular Democrat. Cooventicm, and ho says Doe. tam nun't either " If Dories.. was not timitlarly nocematart areordina to this images of the early. why waa he are v he f•tana if. that Mr. Ituehattell Sad the seeders 1 V.daillcd47.ihr In lb. Ailragnri v io l, hi d i:ll * ilp T le a i 'moor - Mao C o nvention la the nomorat.oo of Boas se as not regular. they have been the emote Of it. sad It. oat not he le their mouths. or in the menthe of the.: riendt, to roiect to the action of the Convention It is It legal propointion knot ato sea. ea well es re the law• tern, thatco tau shall tate advantage or Si. own Wrong', snit ft does net he in the matt* of Mr. ilaelm hart. or SIN tire,tinxdite. or to say that Douglas ,was nut regularly nominate:Lenin if the assertion welt true. lapPladge I Now.feilow cit,xecs. what is this doctrine of non. interrelation? let us eaareta• Itam: see whether it ne at otlttlin that hat NA y North or Birth can rwseonalair yorest !against it. W hat is it ? limply that the people , o f an organized Territcr shall axarctsa the right of colt government wlthin r y es lindtatiocaof theQuist/. I limos of the 1 rite.), Stabs. 'last is the sum and tub ltso,. or L'otleass tinctrlne of popular iseaSHIIIIIItY• l Appiatise.l You bare het d that he arse is favor of gloat:et gorprelintY. It ii untrue. There te no mat i in This Republic with eons. enough to he the leader of a clock of get.e..wno u. in Ist or of squatter anyerelgatl. It 'e an nnitini , tY : hat the pnnetpie of ;ovular *oils reitrity. teat the people of a l'OrTitory haat, the lig ht to exercise the power of self governelent .wittila the II nittatron of the Coaatall Una "of the Vetted dial.... built upon a reek, and the winds of heaven cannot shake it bandanas.' Doe. any hod, here °Went to it? (Ho . ) Don um Breokinndie utan chisel Wit ? i There meson() Pere. I Is thereon; thank Republican who object. to It ? /vent to see that white man, claiming to he an Araerioap °ni sei, native. burn or foreign. who will stand no In the face of a free people and say that free white mei have nut the tight of self soveroment, lApplause t Yet the Neoession party holds that the moment a man reaches the boundary of a Territory and passes the limit of a Plate, thin principle of self-government is stripped from him, as the blacksnake outs his skin in the 'Pflug of the year. I Laughter anti applause.] We con end that lie Cannot abed it; that it re not an outeid• garment, but something that in with% lion, and part of the samara/ of his soul. It was ouroloated for us by that blood of our thaidutionary ancestor., and there ... men so Melt, tnoush he he nel rich as envois and surrounded with ..sury• who oat rise above It, end utt Mark art, co e ngl i e ' , tbotrzli he be clothed in rase, an d, like the lion , of Alan, have not the wherewithal to licher hirasell.l who can sink below it. t Tremendous applause.i . It follows him like shadnw. It throbs to his heart and pulsates in every artery of hie laxly. It flashes in hie kindling . eye and twat s his heart na he bolts UP in the Inge of Reareu and exclaims " Than l find. I am a freeman!" [Renewed applanea.l Wh refuses the right of silf.governmeot? Who wants t refuse it to any American citizen who chooses to go out from his natty° State to seek Ms fortune tit our Ten i tortes ? Observe. however, that this HI a pnriciele that te no ',ordinate to the Constitution. Deng be.; does apt bold that it is superior to the Constitutton, but that It is tight that must be exereised in subordination to the Conetitution. Re plater it where it must challenge the approval and *emotion of everybody buttes Ramat - cans. [Applause.) Even the Republicans. if they were entitled ro.the name they assume, would satietton They claim. before all others. to b. the *erde/lc*, party of the United States. Now. if I understand any thing of 'reeehlteastianko the. pionetelit or self.govere moot underlies ilea whole thing. [ Applause.) tiewho denies Veatmanotpleutletly tads to he a repub bean. The RepubliOsuparv. however, la tiered Ity the misfortunes and wrong. of t the poor, down , trodden Ethi opian. Ch what goods of tears they weepover him. and how they beseech that the Lord, in the fulness of iii. m.eroi j Will strike from huh the ahaoklea of slavery Yet. 1011 9w7eltMens. at the very same inotnent that they thus exercise themselves, they avoi land hold ontoi the do trine 'hat tlp, 'instant a free white man goes tato a Territory. horwrists are fettered.and he las inpionger the right of self-government., [Brent applaues.l I ap peal to every sound conservative man, Whether he he National panto; at. Yancey Democrat, Lincoln Repdb ican, or Bell and Everett Amer tean—t Repeal to every than whojoves Ins country better than its destruction, who reveres the Constitution mote than &tarok! end 1 discord, th (Mine tOtiVard end eland, upon the peaceful And oonservative doctrine of non-intervention.' [4p' plants I I think, sometime,. that non-interyentlon van O , be popular. for the simple reason theg tt demands that we shall lid to Our ugn business, and pot that of other pronto..` Laughter.), There are thrummed& all over the country Wu) see exceedingly offioious and obliging, and Who always negleet their own to attend to the bunnes, of 'their neighbors, on interyeetiort ie. their ens r 'tallow* no intermeddling. It le the doctrine ohm. 0. It will harmonize M m ine ations wirontliareat toting and delicate sectioned interest. It we are to Nave peace allele and to preserve the free institutions ors country, after all the redaction) have [lien to the uti ract,l can see no other elan Umatilla ofnon-taterven on. Let Congress! dttend to its affairs, WAG ntatet to theirs. 4nd toe Terr.tories to theirs APPlause,l I have said I sometime.' fear the doctrine claws-in torvention will never he popular and catiefaerOry to the American people. because I tee evidencesef.restrits. nese and a d spoilition to try to introduce pew ex art meets and innovations upon the establuiltetierder of thie Si.l A lute words , now, upon tire practical operation of the principle of non-intervention, and I shall °rime further to tax your patience. What a the operation of the Prin• eie i s tummy this iif the people of AI "Rennet) , want slavery they earl have ttl andtr they'd° riot Wahl 'they can refuse It. The Republican party 287,0 the people of a Territory that if they want elaVerY they than not have it—that it mutt be excluded by Conaree sionai anterparenee. I The Ilreckinridge party say Yia the teople of a Territory that if they do, not want slavery hey shall trove it. or in other words. thatthere shell he EL Congressional slave node 'for its protectlen in the Territories whethet It exists there or not. 'the true duetting of non-intervention intuit the reverts, Upon that doctrine I stand. f appeal to the people of Pe un +rival:nee al of the North, to stand upon it. When the people ot 4 erritoty . do not desire slavery, beaorinse it is not:imitable to their•ehroine, halate, and opinions. then, en bar as I am able to prevent ii. it shall not di rectly or indirectly be ;forced 4,04 them by Coagree atonal enactment. [lmmense cheering.) On the other hand, if the people intiabitiag a Terri tory adapted to slavery entertain sentiments favorable to the inititution, an desire to have It, then."' far a , oan present it. Congress shall not nate:Dade to oral etude them front having it. I APPiamia. - , Che 1/I°° F u t' be this: If It presto do not want slavery. they Till, he have it; and it tuey do. they will; and that in me . auto rind substance of the doctrine of popular sever ignty We have pry Territories now boltniKing to the toted of New h enters. States which are favorable to the int rod utnion ors very, with tude. where the soil and elmato are unpropitious to the Ali ou t r il ,T e eerxricteoprlieosnaroorstithuentle'edrin"a"fer northern hat I produonone of glare tabor—end slavery will never go into such Territories ender the operation- of the don trice of non-intervention ; and Where slavery wanot SO. I think It a sate taint to say that it does, not need protection. Applau.c a l Where the sod and tillinate aeo the pro nottons of slave labor.on the other hand. slavery will to; and whets slaver! Flit go, the elaverowners , prompted hymn(' interest, will,mo teet their slave Promptly. Inone., either then. id Coon , ressionalintertehtleri Worth a dime? rApiplaUse,), THE WEEKLY PRESS. ism WINILT Pans will to twat to nthentleat ad Mali (per annum, in advaseo,) at-- Three COPIMIN " " I e• T on - It II if Twenty " " fto aidrea , na.. Tweet, Cioinotapar" tto WSW rit each eatewiha)eaoh— —(pat Par a Oheh or Twenty -0a or OVOrare will . 111111 extet can to the aetter-ao of the Otah. tIT Poet:muter, are maned to at we Asia At lhorsintanyPiiii. • ' f - c.i.LllOllllllLi. MON& bead three tbisom likeekla Sift fir Ihe tativnars. The Steel& rion4etere g at Belli, ge eritd l=tAr t L. tr. 14 4 46 : f2Pd..r' be a eveukfil► •-• • — a ___ _ ....... MEC* .m eta •-I ' . , . Cot. r. non. ea. raw_ .n tor. Or. . ' • leans Matted aJtanaNeete Woo* wrimausilumit Vied I nUtZr ab d.gritivarl'll=-- ____ I. i.vw...th...... r 1 ' - • I . No IrsioN IlissoLu •31,1* resole one 4.zre ~ ya =rl=4l.lreed vetoer ..tln't Intro . lte . • Bereir . In mina mile U NeVlisif ih n iUl gi- P l i j . . I n tlfgetp l ejl=l3 " t. Mil Aeg li . : l 6 . . " i Win e ; Vie* •• ,_etenualoi Ir. Mumma ° tit; governor ltanex t p. fartsr. oncltten ' De ntritialati. 1 1 'Can Itlato . .i pea " T r omme " r t n i foitri t j )W_ ISM l' m mtr a nstuniv Van . ant vo ' Pala tna MiantorirriettlMl.ClDl 41141.1 ,W)/0 rola to aux.po t t a. ..swir ........ *Sr i % ;'Re e neck 'That we Nome* smilkanderee S of the • ando Coetral Com Um ma ma Coavenbou. heiCat .1 I Ilk . vim ban atmentad so Mental to Mo•Desso aria of Donneetrarna. Wedged without raen= r t auTta n rt the reen.btreenolneen dat a Itatlaml o outsets/id Almon. : .',/' utalettUt then anioatt!ell. AdOilman's TO'cormannitt .101131110 N. ynt dined - of Tieoplir km - proceeded with music andlanietiii to atiestide Governer Jelisala em i s at • Girarellinsam The baud Waled ilas. im ille sio or a while, after ri wttleit. thstrelthf . •_,, °) 1 farjb_Li - Dlttnoarildo.noittleettsfor ;nite . . o , 3' and Vial • rierldeney. Gimausehlissir red upon the Weeny. slid um /4 IM Adak kneeq . ton ds of spellanse.. , Wee with pro- Ten d sensibitity, the boar , daze , /le bed . It dy spoken Aglow An lag woe* per , et , QoestlonS Writitavoitid tlil__"!TeliNtrae' teirt,worthi- of the - earnest eatemases 'ef her med. The - enthasfeas - exlitited lt,theee helm Mitres woof tb klestbat the Deeseessay ef- Pit „lad Iphha were- faithfal, to Abe, Censtitetiost,” the tin it, and the Taws, roipptatuto J ' "- - - _ t bad even his manse of deloirt ileiL ' Re its stated ntrearstsbegt fens; gel • lemsely rees 'pit aced' inevitable eosehistees. 'He asked ihe pule of •PeensylyaaLs, :11k their mod Mr ant a&aeration, net to brnifijiipomoo• or ptile', Int' by their p ly to unpaid- theft otry.. ripphanj iiiii , thcp•soir ift tin No h smiths deader if the Andy. free Repedilie to r tk e worn : 'Re- theeekt tbet thil WY ahoffil f the sells that thrummed, to was U a smelt ad erenee to gonna nalleitel prbeet pion- INitbr.- al eane..tm aaid, do .not be. Ilie. Let everyw es rt hii best interne* Wien the lam N tillan fanattaiiin :oloil noisier. - Dd Ws, sad • all edit be well. B. thinks for the honor done Was, and eslitreit into the hotel, ' , 1 CI OiDill 3) Mil inia AVA:111 Erma on tint Cals.—Cam of the intent pnbito oontoolemea is the artablithmeat of deep ng ears oa all the groat railroad! to the country. Tka smoking ear has long been aresegeleali Wide tattoo. Something beyond all liar kin jell law ednomeneed on Ma Use of trivia betimes Merle. berg and Now York, via Rearing. Allandriara, of Easton. A restaurant for Is skulked le leek through trills, whore • travel:on may things to set aid drink lass sore oeateatYl tam tbq weld et the Madam 'Meg the med. Tin coronation of the King sad gorses of Sarsdern. took pima August S. lark; at the CO:Ma drid of Dromhelai, moonlit" to the Conatilniket. *bleb prosidaa that It mast a alabreted *at ancient •11 Ike. Among Ma ass t animas men fa tko suite of tan nryal party was hi. &Mom who wall be mono nand by - a !arm sires of Irina!' re Washing...mi. where hip cariatal fir erserat years as arabarstir, Gr tat liberality of ide atsd. fa lb ratted stemsnllstimests, and ins kis aaliablia else nutter and &speckles. StAI To roe A Loire Cahn,—A put, di ealeesyla boat!,;, seer Oshstii. 5. C last Friday. were driven bocie by a rota, air oaa of tro, a little bey three years old. San at NW.' Shari's, will len la the woods Os Sattrilley Dearly two hundred penans tuned eat la isserik. rod ou Sends., a relladarre tereirp adjoins/el to turst In the bursae work. naive the amber niserty lee bud:ed. Ibe 11ttde footilirpg of the lost one ware discovered seer a erect, aid its body Was found in the water a short distaste below. I a , NOTITINI TO WEAl."—The executors of a lady named Desnicad, who died at analsron. 'fringlead, fa lest May. sold the extreerdisory number of 1.%) silk dresses, 74.) velvet austles, NO boaster. sad upwards of Po pairs of arr. ' with innontereble kerchiefs rid scarfs of all colors of the rainbow. vtileh bad bra purebred by the deceased lady witbia tee years of bet de. wise. COL. LANDTI'S wagon road expedition has completed Its labors, and had returned to the val ley. Colonel Leader bad also an Interview_ with the principal war chief of the Paiute Wises, who air* pears, and has promised to keep its wart". quiet for oue year, to give °prenatal to have cense of trouble explained at Waehlagtaa. Thla probably puts en end to further danger to the pony express and overland emigration. SAY.OOII BENAVION. LN JAll.—Stephen MC- Euros, now in jail at Chicago, awaltin4 hie trial upon an Indictment for the mender of Mr. Brown, formerly,ot Baltimore. made a violent attach. a few days ago, on Mr. Petrie, the turnkey. and in jured him severely. The prisoner affects Insanity. tears off his clothing, and keeps up a constant howling. WONL.R.RFCL ESCAPE OF A BALOONTiI..—Prof. Shona, the aeronaut, made a balloon ascension at Marietta, Ohio, on Wednesday evening, about 5 o'olook. When he had reached a height of about one hundred feet, the balloon Inral. Be came down standing ON MI basket, alighting ow the levee. Singular as it, may seem. the only in ha sustained was & badly Luisa ands. LAND IN 3.IAKEHX.—at the lowest calcula tion, there are fltteen theirsand'acree of St. lkary's land. in market at this time. The "oldest inhabi tant" Ise known nothing like it Many althea' of mean; are talking of emigrating to Texas or other Southern. States; and some are making ar rangements to , " Pull up stakes" this falL,-Lron ardrown (Mi.) Beacon.' FOREIGN DEMAND reit BREADETII7EB.—We understand that ad,vioes are expected by the next steamer of a decree of the Spanish Government ad mitHnt Ireadstalls free into that rosary,- We hear also that the supply of material for making bags is altogether inadequate to this wants of the grain trade, and that• makers hime large order/ on hasd for future delivery.---1111 Po* -, Thr ,seasen of the springs is fast drawing to ,Thu following is stated io be the number of visitor:l,st the' Virginia Vsstering:pleoer this week :At the blootgemery-White Selpktir Sprfeel there are only 75 visitors"; Oreentirier,Whlte„2oo; Old Sweet. 300 ; Red, 100 ;-Red Sweet. - 100 rAlle ghany, 100; 'and Salt Sulphur,' 50. The weather Tun interest of Mr. Starke in several noted racers wee sold in Virginia, en Monday. One quarter of Planet, by Revenue, was purchased by Fondren, Williams, lc Orr, at $2,950; one-half of Fanny Washington to the same party, at $3,500, and one-half of Exchequer, to 0. P. Hare, for $1,500. ' GROWIII OF Mnozsors.—Returns from tor tir•llie counties in Minnesota give a population el 114,214. The population of the whole State will not be Ism thanl.7o,ooo. In 1849 it was not quite 5,000. DURING the sham naval battle at 'Cleveland, Ohio, last Monday , Thomas Joice, banker of th at alit, jumped into the lake to recover his tat, which I had been blown overboard, and was drowned. . . • A NUMBER of gentlemen of Frederick city, Maryland, are about to form a jahot-stook - com pany for the purpose of erecting a firet•elasa hotel in that plaza., AT the late term of the Federal Court in Clarksburg, Vs . five persons were convicted of passing counterfeit money. A NEW Sal:merit dictionary is now in the press of the Imperial Aoadomy of Soleness in Bt. Petersburg ; it is a Sanserit-German dictionary. Two colored preachers from Baltimore were not permitted by the citizens to land at St:Leon ard's, Calvert county, Maryland,: last Week. TII ratted Staten Grand Lodge, 4. - 0. 0. P', edit meet on the 17th ltuttant, attliashvilte, Tenneause. • • AN extensive sugar refinery has been built, and wilt shortly be put, into, operation, In Rich mond, Virginia. '"Duamathei last seven months there have been 1 916 oases of yellow fever In .11sysas, and only 24e fatal mum p Orne,Sr•trz, w)o recently killed W. W. Manson, at Wytheville, Virginity kis Deem tried and'aequitted. "StlonieddAsti rwoLiAits have-been collected itt :thilifordia towards • aeonaineret.,arie the r••• Alain o . ir Ike lake Senator Broderick:
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers