I ""-•! I L,„ I !Jo tiAzt, ___ _ _ I=tll=tl= j'z'r B ..qPDAY SIOUNING,W7-F-111, 10, 1852 _l3 . l.age oti oug Lest `Page a report of the fyr.interierting prottediogn of the etockluitd. ”1 . ,0 the. Pennsylvania; Raiiroml, ut , a reeetlio , .. ,121,14 , 1 rat btoriday; in reference to Seibsiriptillil tef, $.20,001) to , the Ohio and PonusYlianialitall• i rotid Compatiy.t 'We trust the otockholdere by • theii votes will ratify the recommendation of the Imeotiag. Tbe;;libseription asked for is just is 'lMPortint to DitiCentral road and Philadelphia, as to the Ohio and Peousylvatiiit rand and Pitts. burgh. • . • • _ .'ffi'n great lorig"ii of. tile I;eatarti of Dr. M'• 'Gip. too preelii,lnd : one usual variety to , ilay.- 4attey Fa • ins, bitbe eaelianr,e; for tbat otos , :::•Inviy; 'learned, andTprotound ail.lrees will cum ' marid. intfentionT . ,pv no one,' who inteileat4al feast, pave it peinsab 2ur sport of it '... , ,,, , ; . :Willfia'f,irt l tooirett in ovary . parei atmoat anatfor,'Verae, and striking pitravaalogyof 114:learned lectukr.being givea • Kwbaves.pi•tittpi • ends copies, which may be - i• r jobaultiniWt. tbe counter during tho day. Shf ,.l tPUse 011APprik+entuttseg or the 'Quit en•litintriiy„. u nerieit 01' eiseluticwo •• Wren - - poemeit re4reeotiug and reaffirming the conitirrontioto nieitonreitof the loot Cengreso. ontl Pl'retittily: -L erelornin it the Fligitioe Move Low. Theinta we. 4101 to lit Otieltepteeentative, cTraii,:itite.i.2iLllt;lik, lilted in the negotivo on oot : ikon ttnil n0.3-o,•ttan . cerrectly • 1--;rektnientiir, -- /fin-en,tittliq:er'inlniai;eit the .re 0100 °Vette vote ti isento - iiiirnceiti net room. • - , • • 111,..t.u.A0.the ors.nit:l'r before six o'- ~e.lo6l4''onif itriiiit - theerOtitot?on with die rectayltriuia•il.iiroa.l. At file tlirlApc..tbOAlto.high tresbet,the Obio,river did nit rad& the . tritak by eightur telt fr 9, itud ale iill,ohitirictious caused .hji hill slips bare been ierucinl„ ,The Ohis'and Pastisylrahim Railroad rtl iti:goO4 ritoniug Order ijnd passisiglirs by this 1 -route xSocti•Pittishurgh 'troth (11crelaud in aborit Tbci,• . Lail 'has" teen defeated in 'the 1/.;a6..:,-.. - §e,,.llfarrinbtirsh letter au first page. - , - .. ..::-AVelOvitoatteetifllo the eqrcetiomeot of the Semiokey, ie st:inetitOtion of oat `.;- I ,leetai , lisheireOtitatiop.. on the b nk M the .01egtieil river,obeeit "a half it mile libiree the plettitardhooo of l lit- Tat Lsign - Nevtasnosi.—T ho - Clev eland item, eret,.of April 8, gives the following item,: Schooner. `Speel, arriecil at Chicago, Anrildh.l, from Milwenkle, with a Corp. of iron, tobseCi, wooJ,•enii matches, all the pro duction of Wisconsin! . —Samar - phi - . iv ,ve - 1 in the ice, some twenty i l-jm:s•Filea!,belwrie: and the irtrlior of _Erin Ls el toe con - Incl. - it Gen..geoil,:the owner of ifa Ohio; is 40th/done, tree, he troghtliot to leefipxreij."<o.ltresiu it is;thst the ps.a,engerri . itiffered severely; that 'dim women and children, some of them' ?tick, moot sadiynegiveteit. We hear thlit the issen,gers on board the Ohio have passeg rese r. flaitions, Sze. -,.Steamer Alabama arrived at our port. 'yes. terday ifterrioon, with a gioilly,lot of posoe.- ; gtes„ part of them from the steamer Ohio. She' came from Ashtahnls: DR. M'GILL'S LECTURE tsrthoi Itglf , Plvstrargh G,sette.l Bi/itorY. ChaPkci 5 Ar The cglau.,4FPL,' Sfiaw j_ 1."4.4114. • rS t . " 4 .4114 .• Gnu 5 TA,,, , Th pea! 7 - 757 ,--Ati,?,.AMPtit Triitern • • Ever na.ne pi , evnlenee of evil irk our fallen world - the pretest of w promise to IL ere .hst been si Protestant's's! • extntil;:which we define to be an earnest-imp°. • tp'the Werraptien ofpotil'S truths, and the conseiineutoppreistob of innnie right. All true-. well,be called n • piitest, for hith -.-wito it been. been minor in proportion to the ex .,.tent of mrkzesi, impiety glad crime. It only - - ,htis.it.beeti e mlenwitnews against the evil which reign.; the ottrr peculiar institoteAr, but eren intim limit.: of such 4 visibility the longest chap .-ter in. Ito hiltery, is filled with. stone" of . . .!'taast 'aad bitte'r contest. Before the deluge to .crown its testimeny against a world in Wickedness, it Sad. signalised ateepach of refer ',:aiation, when, saitis said in Scripture, 'men - .:,:kieganto call - upend:le namefof the Lord." and thenceforward Wan dsroinlahed more and more, ;snail it shrunk to the person of a solitary. man, , even in the corm:mated family of Seth. Noah, waged bythe ppit of Inspiration, a preacher of riglatemmatim, was clearly a Protestant minis• ter, and yet the lethnnlogical trpansion of 016 ",.family itself criiild not make Cathalicism not 'eras trtat relipjon. Ageinit became a protest, parrower and .narrower, more and more sects._ • , Wan, yenoplesse, twilit it shrank Once more to Abe pairtoittof a fOlitary individual;. Abraham.) • 'Wand from tile firer. accents of the Gospel in .-Eden,lhinnglidill the ago, of antideludian and Otiirrcbalpiet'y,, the'spirit sad the form alike trnerrefigion.srere 'emphatically Protritand Aacl.:iftiiwarda, when the lineal .church was . ;nada identical with' is.,Commontrealth among tee -nations, the protest of pietism within its bosom igainat dead; ferinalier.itt ratigioo, eatitfactiou . tirittitneig .anderant ceremonies, dependance on ...".the..tinetedeat ID iteli crwr,"o a hum st,priest;eancti• ' inoelons hypeftifiyi vaiti,traditiont, and neglect :of the SeriOare,.emsnyer owned and oberithed Hen get* de - pieihninentl3F th e Church, eten. in • ~tilailrintion fromiliangergeons and highly (afar- i .,:,; ; 04 ' , albeit of Jewish Catholiotem— Wherever, en der.i.W :dispensation,. a etrtgele: has been re .. scaled of reality against fortp,'truth againster ra ?betty agates: bondage; and Soand..conser zaniest a niitan npostacy,llhare Pretes intitiant.happht itachronlcle history of tWe,}f}oet - ebetn or coarse, th.t r it4l6n of ithtt term Protestant which attaches' it followers of. Luther and:Calvin after ::•? - ...ilittl.tiitenf , t3iffe 1520 . , - 'and - still. more the in vidieipAhnitation-tif it:Which attaches..it to all thatiatatfienS:'erratia beterokineous and lull • air opinion: Onrltoictiouti ieioot appellant*, froprietY: in . 7 inirilid'4llliii.aratokatl en etymological right.' tnLitltelil Mini !divine wad Air, than that cent daerertlbility with which Popieh Prelates-make PoperY . nitil Christianity the tome thing. So' for ad Profeitantlem ii.opposed to Popery, it has EfFilllstizint Teem:li or ages id history - PrrUy age of prophecy, extending front Epoch to. &mai:sq.:4n age 4„ , predominence, from, lohn to Coustatirine. - • stngglo extenci c r ing from Constantine great Raton:notion! -rouillify.—An lige 'of antagonisin from *egress jleformation tothepineut time. .. • of.gloitions consummati on, which Is yet 'lathe ftitare. : • - Indulge me'in ii briif desent Upon each 'of ' these periodic, in succession. First, en age propheoy„PropNets awl apostles were all Pin matins:, ag not the- least ilinstrions of Wein Protestenth ~agitinet -.Popery in- particulai.-4 ".Naoch;.thiriceiventh front Adam, prophesied of • tintsCitha go Je,the way.of Cainetin - greedili ' r pfter,„ther - wity.of"Balescto for a reward—raging ;intires of theseci, framing out their Own elaine; katgareninetr9rdl—hin ,- .:' ilitiViera.o , 7 s o ,, in at thrall because of ad - „ rpnixge - Ito w' far this whole 11841},e,tiiti R pat e i it'464l. of false teachers who are ilifolemot, cc. rtaT greedy,' Wastrel, ettameless, - ineddlintpoli. ticiant±rand eleophantle eburtiers,., rent row for -them. characteristics , aro identified in Popish prieits'and prolate's, judge ye. - •• nu t let portrayed with still more exact and ex ' clesive Prediction, this same Pepsi speatroy, is the 7th chapter or Me prophecies; whereconfes:. 4 1erdly ate .nYtehelitcd• the 000Cetairv,powers..pf pprriincipt importance which till op the political history of the worid from Daniel tOthe present time. 3 The fourth, or:Roman kensplre, appears oe a beast with ten bons, denoting the ten . Re -.' tuatt..Gothia kinglonisi into - which that stupen-, • douipmwer was dist ri buted by the irruption of , Northern barbariani,, The iprophet, ,consider. itia. or attentively observing /these ten bores, i. beheld another little,born - coming up afterlterle,f precisely the develepment of the Papacy to whin began to figure in history imtnetli , ately after - this partition of the Westertimapire, and Mine np by degrees, answering with Perfect. etcactsess to the prophet'S desc ri ption. It is a - • little horn, small political power in respect to territory, Compared with other kingdoms of ...Europa This little hem grew up among the ten horns, after Ahoy, ,were established.— The Papal,power spriuognp In the very.seldst of, the ..ancient kingdom, Which via plus distributed. I This little horn, again, .was diverse from the other hprne; and the Papal power is neither pa- titled ~altogether, nor yet ecclesiasticalirierely, bet, tpipolitice-eceleelaatich date, diverse - from any other which the' korld ‘ has ever Been. Be fore. this little horn,. "three of the first borne. were plucked up by the r00t.," whica is•after wards explained as "subdtfing three kings." Now history has 'recorded exactly that the Her oil, the OsterAlotios; and the Lombards, were respectively ntibdried through the influence of the Roman Pontiff, and for hie sakepto glee him dominion over the territory which tlioy' succens ively attempted to bold. This little horn has I`eyes like the eyes of Man." What could be thernespresaive of that keen, wakeful, and urn .versal. vigilance with whlelishis peculiar despot bas watehhd the whole - world for the purpos,e of extending his power; and by means of his spies,. and emissaries, and denote or auricplar conies- Flee, sees with almost übiquitous Observation, whatever may condone to the advantage of his ghastly dominion. . Again, it haft "a month that p phke-very great things"-"gent words against the MOit lligh.". This same prophet hail said to Nebuchadneystir, "the Moat High ruleth over the kingdom of men, and giveth it to whomso ever he Will." But precisely this prerogative the Papal power has delays' usurped, singe ever it - appeared amongst the tee. Float the day when Pope Zacharias gayer-the kingdom of the Franks to Pepin, the usurper, until the day whin Pius the Nlothihurnt forth in joyful gratulation at the tidings of the env if' Wet by wticicthe perjured Louis Napotedgcruahalthe Republic or France, and made himself a. lawless dictator, the Pope, whenever be dare, bee affected the attribute of ~.tni potence, in • dinposing of I thrones and' eon- gives. .• • Further of thiO•little horn, it is said 'that his look • was more stout then hie fellowi.' Who dose not remember Gregory" . VII, that made the F:olipernr of Germany, Heide Iti,etaudthree daps together, barefooted and bareheaded:at the getessupplicriting his mercy,while the Pon tiff himself wan•eneceectil with Matilda of T,us. nony, within this castle of Siint Augelo,and a score of similar illustretions. Again, thin little horn in said to makesifer with the saints,' and to.,eorear out the salute of thLlikost High.' Whet scenes of hitter perisecutioqoifeithful.'histo ry recall, to Identifiyabin ,Perseidtien with Pa pal Rums Think of the,ferecieue wars of er.- I..rmivation agitinst the Albigenses., the Walden ses, mod the Iluguitthis .. ..thf.,Frince: the thirty years' war in , Germany, ; so brutal, violent and" perfidious; the murders,' of Ireland; the lames or Smithfield in England—in abort, an awe gite of bloody persetntiou which bee driven Irons life, according to careful and credible histeriaus, more than 50,000,000 of human bp i:v.B sinee the developement of that power in . fittli 'Again , this little born is said to 'think to 'change times and laws.'- filar lord himself fix ...l the time of separating,. the tares from the wheat at the mod of the world. That must be cheeped, says the Popt;.l.will separate the sores froth the wheat, no*, and accordingly this ismade tbepreteat. fen 'every Othattle which he enjoins against die heretics— fle'changes laws, bulb of God sad man:_ The 'marriage relation ions ordained as a law. in -Paradise . itself, con firmed by the lips of JOsua Christ, practised by Saint Peter himself, and pronounced honor able in ,ill, even by en unmarried apostle. 'Br theltotean Peetiff forpib it to alt iTelesi.tics. • and annuls and iliB4oleett that' plea/etre ereofig . atrothers.l,nes we might w+fitio of the see . pot commandment, and the: injuuction 'search ,the scriptures:' and utany-'ainnher positive law or tied ii cheeped at the pleasure ef the papal authority. 'And as io ;lumen has, it ils a !ogl ed necessity from: t h e *bolo tenor of papsl uM . lrmtion, the dietipa of iiilddoranl,tho teach iurS of Rellettaitie,elfOl a wtitd aide obnervatien lawn' d that all'humau lawgel .coostitutions are held 1.: beabsolithely• et . thedinprie.al of i the Pontiff (lees, m o re. it ingrell;..telef. this little horn ted...Ohey shall tu sag, ye t.; his 1110miti t .on to con ..time•th, end to „,,..f.u. , ;.i,t.4freend ” Now file temporal dothitdon of: . the opethaa been sir "ltially.takan ham biin'Yeiree - . ore the dai. when ,Nadia femerked that :t . aa .klutfa of Freace Ifboa bin-feet und,tieup hit ed." It slut 1a• I . eu in 1798. when Rome"erav sacked by the - Flench, nail a flomanithpubliepeocleimed, and then again, when he'was degraded by Nepoleon, nod most of all, when he sealsil his own deposi lion before earth'end heaven by abiietting, ea ,-Set's, in 1848, andleft a patriot people 10 de cree with all possible eelenknity that his tempo n.l dominion and spiritual dnminionkre divorced forever. Noe - is this flabbier declaration multi fed Icy his bloody raters, and inquisitorial ven geance upon the patriot, •If Rem,-:_".t man May do anything with hap:Olds," said a Pepish prime Minister, ttelner , V : ,to mate a rail of ' them," and as t01d...0-4nel powiriwe may ley. witisa dletingulnhellartltepi that 'N , in dead-at Iteart, and living at theSthltemitiss." • .- . .Setth 'le tints., aprekileroC. th e prophetic al .."...fiagitelia.Pretelauk. ' : ••" lathnew.lnerk i p .. igt - 14711tfrAt . Akinoofarilliiiikc- •': ' .. ' — ".••••Arliferood einaloninue, SI cfatiAer: First Timothy, 4th thipter, arid first four eereee: ; Hebrews., oth chapter, from the 4th to the Eth. ithelusive—a lea/lenge which rennet be under stood aright, in my joilsoprtnt. either by (..slviit ist or Arminian, . ' wi,thltht Crepreing it to the Churchtr • Rome'—notnn dodividital, but scar-- +erste a OStany. rfoi seething does the latter 'clause of the sixth 4ertse,',lFActibe the eiththody anCrifiee 'and blesphemons deifirstion.ef a - . - Ter ie the mass._ i l • • 1- • . . . Popery is foliating lila Ser . ipttareseitery day; 'let it therefore - earn° and Work quilt. nature in our own happy land, Get it came and mortle to cowardly-and renal preaS, whentir'Cr it' can, and lty-up a n politicians Of every party with its solfragv,s,viral march its minions to the bal. ld ban with - perfect concert end iireiristible triumph—let it come rood dictsta' to Congress what laws shall NI euspinded for its special ben efit, end to Cabinets who 'shall be appointed Minietere. abroad ant Attorneys at home. and ,teat among the Indiana of the West, and ell the While insult and dtgpise too * magnanimity of Prthestant forbearaline. Let it then - make its I,.,bfif-ex of Bibles high as (beclouds - of Heaven, and from the alms of that pyre one Bible will Chase tt thousand, and two putten thousand to filkht, for one that the Bible had won from infi delity before. These, and a thousand Similar atrocities, are doing a great work foe 'God and hia_trath —the Protestant miracle—the ever &s -ecedin- belitork of nor holy foith—tbe fabil went of ancient prophecy, which is destined,"on • the day of its maturity, at surely as the ordi fiancee of. Herren exist, to explode Popery and Infidelity at ouce and forever. We come to the second age, that of prat:oral. ounce. For tome three centuries of early Chris tianity, the wellidg of its own pure fountain, and the power of its, apostolic spirit,' mastered the elements of corruption which assailed it on ev ery, eide,_from,dlite philrisophy, pagan idolatry, Jewish legality, and internal strife. Troubled as may have been the apprehension of such as 011/ the enemy coming in like a Hold, and dis eolvod as must have been the beautiful incor poration of her pristine form, by the tasting of the perseentiona through which -the primitive clinrith was driven, there Was a protest during all that martyred age, which made Satan fall like lightning from Heaven, and of course keitt "him whose coming is after the .working of Ss tan,".-down in comparative abeyance,.. until' it traversed the world with the glorious gospel„ Mid then wrapped the scarred militancy of its figure in purple to sit upon the. throne of the Cowart. t . The Virgin glory of our noble religion was !ti e together andrlietinctively Prolestant. Proles. trier; for the Bible Wei renal With Itereag ,ro 'march by the edeainent people, emit anode a test, ticaletnchtnalie4;,tinnitiesiO4Aschools--Yeates . tantiforpraysioNtitteafireregiadanniamentend tainisinred, and Milers of hicryaindperforined 1 In thi.tertrentar tongues which all the people -coultriuniersttuatirrotestent; for the • eonscl once Was free, and Gelatin of 4ieromooisl ban-, dege was broken, and too right of private judg ment suniversaily 'eierciaed—Protestanh'fordhe diversity of opinion among minister's and pela:ple Watt ire great as-at !heprnenf Say, tinkVen .mittle by the earliest infidels, - ouch es Patella - 1n the second century, an engegment against". vital eltristianity,• just as it now is by Infidels and :replete in. common, end explained then - 5 . . - si, ts , 14 . able Apologists, as an evidetrieafAhe'., ry life it-infuses Into ignorant onule;•and a M nit of evicting nod conserving the tiatthla its putts tyl'and st.the woraka•nceeltsta rydiawbock which toll intelligont - freedellbi tenet Ohm.' for the pee-. cloroi privilege nffreeditn. Foci the - age when cluistianitytputeph.ed gbiriously over learning and power , prejudice mul persecutiOn, until it 6nqncred Abe ansessible world, war an age of Proteetant -peculiarities, to the whole variety of their eiaellenaies r and defeats.. And pit it was predotaietutt merely;•"noPeathollo lathe repel Sense, nor shvolateln , tlit" !attire Stole which 'we * anticipate, bat • irotesting all 'the while ep ic:dead-that "mystery of iniqultr . .Whieh had begun to vatic", beneath the eye or Apoetol ie discernment - 1' • ' ' ....,.., ~.._ .... , ~' . entottiel and Swami witn,wlnitersieed,s - - - &teeth that' Ws aerden, leasetfaieetchel avocet.. 'I bey ion of some forested Debit Mae; .. ` . ~. sin t er : woo beet, • (who could, barn Stentepstreeid . • The tars of 8011, oti meat tettg ettAtedtt , .. , . ::•,t • r. . - • och...nee ye visa_ Ansa tOs4 etottltaber tahies. - The notion of a priest instead toys preebyteryi,, a separate order of men,. and of a Initial"' caste to stand no -pectiators : between Goa - aud man; thOnotida of a charmin the sacraments to calk; Vert the coal by its tildaficeey; the whimsy of some purgation bersti , the' present. life— 'the austerity of living-4o coma .lonely 'Place; aloof from aredlock,•an3 the ditties of life; the moral .obliqulty •of. telling allit:' for some good 'end, these were 'tome 'at tee elementa :whit& maker tip .that sad .apoitioj wh3efi'Ate denoted ' nate. the...".Ct s nib.. Of.BOcae3" , ' and, Ahem) were creeping in, And , rapidly inhalng prevalence; when Paganientwastorenstly vaispnahed. They 'did prevail, sad witimast now pass 011 to g,e think great ago of 'Protestantism " ... • Titan.—lts age of 'straggle within. ' Soon Atte:the union of. Church and State tin der 'Consta ;Cethntine( the, elfin:Ma. he What is. _noir called olleinin; r iseestituted.! the :Perigee . Bova ' of .religioft,' and flat-wighty,powei of -...- --'- :',.-`' ~ e .- - - " ,- ,• ' '.."- t' - , ' - ', - n , :" - ' , .""'"'" - '''.' '''' transformation, h had constituted the force of primitive chrititit i y, fell into the condition of minority in numbers, and futility in efforts. A vast hierarchical despotism came on, which like Pagan Rome, incorporated in her Own hotly all the idolatitee she professed to vanquish, and all the cruelties she preieuded to meliorate. Bat always, somehow and Some where, a spirit of resistance within troubled that fungous and I foul corportity. Athentmius protested against the Arian heresy which bad won at length the Emperors and even the Pontiff Liberian. Au gustinetrotested against the Pelagian heresy which had also proselyted:men the Pope Zotim ins. Jerome protested against the divine right of prelacy, and insisted that the whole -bluer: - cities' structure was a mere invention of man. Pigilantian protested against the grow • ing.superstitiotis of virginity, pilgrimages and adoration of relics and deadsaints. Gregoryihe great himself, the first of the name. protested against therclaim or being unieersalilligtoP, by any man, as blasphemous Had damnable pre sumption. Clmidins, of Turin protested against 'ie worship of. Images; Ilerenger against the alomiditiesl of ii'ansubstantiationii Reiman! Against absurdities of cuariology The A ihigen wes -protested against the besotted teduiation of CSOBtletl and temples, and - the Waldenses against the prithibitihu of God's word to the laity and the corrupting wealth qf the Chord,. Wickliffe against the wickedatsts of mooktult fraternities, and the lawless-tyrannies of Popes Huss, and Jerome of Prague mg:ail:lst the nog' eht ofp reaching the gospel, and the denial of wine in the Sacra ment to theconimon people. These:me but salient 'points in theiliiedivrhich might he crowded with innumerable iThistrations . equally pertinent. livery abomination of Papal Catholicity has fie.d a renowned protest argaiust it, within her cern boats Sometime. this Protestantiain was, partially triumphant, - and bade its mark upon the symbolic developments of wilet in now call ed Catholicism, Fl 3 when Athanasius succeeded in fixing the doctrine of the Trinity in the creed and Augustine mmeeeded in winning . back the Pa. pacy from an approbation of Pelagian infidelity. tint far more frequently it failed under storms of anathema, silenced iu dungerens driven radials the wilderness by the,,tword of murder one L.. yietseention. , - Nor wis thiskettinguishable epirit of pea.: test confined Vth a !succession of brilliant 'iudividualeciond occasional sects or societies that shone athwart the Egyptiun darknose of Papal Apoeteek Rings uud Emperors, richools and rouncilt'Were often - eignolly Protestant. Anil I do confidently assert that everything good in law, liberty and learning, everything thee ban `contributed to the glory of modern eivilltation, having its origin prior to the great Reformation, In the product of this same sempiternal pretest, which Catholicism could tourer shake out of her bosom, until God himself sent it forth under the lead 4 - Luther and Ca lent. Popish ptelates toll its that the commas law, trial by jury, representative goverument, and eiinititutional freedom, are pure legacies of Ito. mug Catholicity. Wonderful magnanimity of the old mother chureth-to bequeath all Game hoe ens only to heretical children! Strange that the faithful nowhere ogee this earth enjoy altch benafactions at her baud! Why dote nottiathes lie Italy, tn. Austria, or Spain, or Poringal -why do nit erearthe so called republics that are Papal—France, Mexico, South Ateerica,ior San Magino, (that little - Going which Archbishop Ilughen hoe bet:legit:to light, and which' Pius IX4 is sham to lint tin his breechea ',whet I eO-: joy thisOomfueu law, thie -prefoutel, quiet, fie. cure emintittlioual liberty, which the hereties alone hilts established le two wort:l47 The truth is,:and I tell a when I Veil,. it, Giese peerless Rherfies,..tere wen, end du etist tii npite of llethalit4tat... Bishop linghes , 14 : 1; SiohAp irronnor cent', dirt each other es toNttc origin Of tbiiinuou lute The Pittsburgh Prelat,e 4.. TR -that it in wholly the Frolortlin of tlttn:iliel, hat Lt.ithap Hugh, hr , toll us in hi+ I'e r :wore -u the lachno of Pro ieotanliOta that it is it Protest oat law- A.aleall penmen this, of( tinittplilitto.tr inf*llitilow_ Not only •o, but.'hee have ...ruching !Lie an Irish boil from iiishop.o . .Codoor nil:wet( IG etfiruis the cammen tomato in, wholly a Ilatholia boon. out Yet whoa he speak,. of Angfeitine'.. misuse ti convert the - Augto Saxons, who were Parana A' wince', the British Caristiautry luring been away, he coy. that Peer' Uragery eoiut• cal out to the aliseionary the eu, , erroe eacellenne or the English in.titutious atonal; estetiog., Hew flirt, institutions card 6? Peasn engirt first, raid of CatlioLe orig'a nit:rewords, is rade. er_lueompepliensilde, antes ths icticr tic'ils of the Prelnte betrays what rre be the fachabat Pognoiem and Romanist.; toe is all important f,artieular• identical. le *ay alone his consistency is waved, and viewing the matter in this light, with the additions' rtl mark that the whole etructure of Pipal Cstha Unity is:selitical, : more than religion., are pans.. Ongtottlannalegene ifirsver.sager.riatia, the ff iltlfd9Zl Los of Englne4. More egrrgimislyarrant paraiotios were nee. er uttered by learned and sane men, thab the' misertiens of these dig-nit...b.. reopeciitig arc origin urear institution,: tad 1 would l 100 much like a Paplst in doing work of superero gatiou to tittrtNit an .eltb.rito reply. Evert great epoch Winch you COll make in the history of English jurisprudence. anslcoustituttontl l tili ,• erty woo a memorable day of Protestant con flict with 'Papal Catholicism. The first of throe ,occurred in the reign cf Henry the 11, the first Piatitlgenet King. Who is commonly eJll•ddi ed the Father of English Common Lew; end al though the early yearn of his reign—the first pin or seven—were team of bigoted devotion to the l'Apal power, the whole remaitbler was one cootie...l etruggle against its lantern, usurpa tions. Von remember Thema. a Beekett, who from being to disololuie Leave in early life. nod o gay, voleptuoya and prodigal courtier in err ring the State, became the most ascetic of Mar. tale, and marvelleas of saints just us Moon an the palliest wee dropped opou hiseihonblere, and he wan male Archbishop of, tlettZierill , l7 A certain Priest committed :an gun of wile de bauchery, andihen umederal the Father of the woman no destroyed. A voiectif public itlin. nation throughout the !realm, :fruited with the demand of the Monarch himsel(thet the wretch" eni malefactor should be breughj to rustic.., in the civil tribe:mile of the-land, Which only were competent to punieh Ouch a crime; but the Pa pal Clergy, within Rehkett at their heal, refus et, alleging "the privileges oil the Church " The affair led at:length to the Council of colon, in which Sixteen Canons were ming led for the.purpOse !moiety of inaking'erodelias tictfameneble to Common Lew like other men, for the trial and puniehmeni of rich earners.— Theie Canons were in every' Important portico ler annulled and corned to,y, the. Papal auth.ority -nresieted with a martyr's Vent by Thomas a Beckett; and when be fell at the cline of Buto diet, beneath the bludgeon?. of Henry's faithful friend., he was enrolled, as a'Rriiiit of the-high net order, and mirociles were said to he perform el at hit tomb. Wee not this n Protestant; struggle? The next great epoch of the Common Law and Constitutional Liberty, wan that of the. 'Magna Charts, wrested from the infamone John by his velorousbarone, iwho persevered through all the thutidera of the Veticah, and the tenure tif. excommunication, just ae Luther allidiarils did, until they toccompliabed their object Won nut this also, a Protestant' etrugglef The next great epdch In the history of the Common LAIN .WWI the reign of Edward I, who !n - regaided as -the Completer, ma Henry . It wan the Father of Eoglieh , jnolaptudineea-itheathe .. hlagna Ifeohtaittedlitual establiahment,' and the right of phonier tepreitiptetirin watt greatly. enlarged, and ninny and hipartant regulations made foram consolidation of the legitimate pewee, anal the near.) protection of to Brit the reign of Edward - wee to one particular. the most highly Protestant which England ever enjoyed before the-;days. of Ed weed Vf, for during his .reigthltre, Clergy of, England pro testedngeloat thef.Pepo of Rome, and thy King nod people protested, , : arenr.to nets of violence, :Modest bott.elergy- and .Pope..l.de reign the first Statutea were canned against Mertrualth that.: Gorgon evil, in the civil Conamonereelth. Look down through the whole sequel, how the pnemie . s .of British - liberty and law, upon (he ithreer; were talky,. Papistn;open or disguise:l, 'and ,th , e safety of the - . constitution was settled only by the total overthrow and perpetual ban ishment of the Papal Jumesineil hie non. the Pretender: .4e to the trial , by jury, even that is alien to the whole genies of Popery. Allow me to read from a Papal newspaper, published in Italy, a paragraph or two,. permed by. Cain°lice during the late jubilee of freedom which, the fink joyed when their shepherd was absent al Bluth: Unlike the Romish Iliship in hie leentre, I do not gather toy . . testimony ;Iron; -enemies to the Church - of. Rome, tin front e gt' a friends. lip so teens against PresbyteriaAthe3 most inadmissi ble of all authorities, thillinf the renegade who , naturally hates the char'ell'he hos forsaken; and by, all the rules of Christian courteny, • bls malign allegatioas should be taken with' the ut most allowance, or rather wholly *excluded. I shall render good'for this evil, and read only themselves, and these also perverts froulkOodeetalat nobly° will not wantonly 'dim:pelage Their new fell oM I hold ickroy hand a Mums, of the Roma ;A,dicrtiser; edited by Mr..llemati son, ales!' - ' , A' lltuLcelebiated poeteig—one• of those morbid di ,10anti: whose examine love.of ATM ber - jule his °tar religion, and could find. rest: for him no-, where.ut' in the sistique, and botutiftilly paint od'laP of the Old Scarlet Mother, that sits in the Eternal City. ~ . The paper &ono which Tread-is qoPtoluher 3160008. The 'editor hint= self lhms writes: inauguration on theltal last Peninsula of one of the moat important civil, institutions whirl him hitherto distinguish- ed Great Britain froni the Continental natter* bas lately' taken Oahe at Turin. - - The altered political Mate of Italy could certainly bare been demonstrated in no stronger light than by the op polatmenttlf,a jury to try a newspaper editor Par 'Kea, al We pass, the tiotloll, by jury, when appalled Despotical wai lifted for n little from Italy, wee held at Turin among the willies of Piedmont, where a Protestant: strag gle had been held to some tirelva hundred years. The editor goes on to quota from a con temporary, who in also a liontart Catholic mi. itor,t-on the same subject. ..this Institution in of great antiquity, mince it flouristAkt In - Raly • ill We time of the Lombard &militia:ion, which aderiitted the principle that itterivOntd easee o 0 freeman could be judged eiceptby freemen, hie peers. The various people of ClOSlntlirViio were always esteemed great ,Incisef liberty, originally possekeed this privilege, but absolute "despotism, by little and little, huallyriestroyed every trace of mi liberal an imtitation, and in our Ones we have seen military an 4 mixedcon, wiretone judge of politieid misdeeds according to tho supreme dictates of the Cardinal tory of State. • England tilone ei /..-preeerecd this tree mode of judicial pro Mg. How that Italy, also, has received herb mte of free dom, the triboual of jurymen had 'returned it, existence," Alb " ' • ... • - The fib-arch of Rome has not oply itruggied to' stifle the Counutt Law of EiliOalitt liutio)• ' lidaired I, deprive the world of erer,7,other cods 1 by , whfch imliglilmted notions tire,ilow.governed. I bee would not ti alley the civil liisetihe raudeets ot Justinian, &collection Of the obt 71tortittuthi rimpruilence, which WWI accideottilliffietcovereit ot the a:ege of Amalfi ill the twelfol cenlitry; In fall into the hands of the eager nta- mill:whew ' tin, lawyers of Bologua, without csireme unelit -1 iness,which led Ler to employ Jolki tiratiaa and ,others tomix up with that law horowntlespotic 'ordinatieles, hod thus p toduco !bit Miserable ainalgoni - ktnisto as the Conon low,rattillounded 1 ou forged deceetsle tet Laureotius Valla.demi,o nitrated even before the Reformat init. - _,_ Rot while we roamtuin, thIL no .14 by:which milightened.nations ot - Christeudrin4irti,govekn• ed'eit present owes its origin to PoOtt tlatbuli, city, there is ono code which is .cettaltily her. own, stamped with her own genius, embls :tined with Lei. glory, and still reatarod,, sin' perpetuate,' whorefir she hoe power - to Tule ' r 4 mean the Holy ()Mee for rulings:m{os 'elloal‘de prarity, or the Iniimisitiou. Theca: trif4l :for yow,:perfectly, ,onique,,compl ifnd 'lies!, etainently.Tapal; , and no. ffefinitlow eh cannily sets forth f{ patine :is to say '4(101E44 re , verses every mailoirof the ceentneckffitr f and ett ery principle of conetilutional4fherly. le it,a 1 groat ntaxim'of iloglieb and Amiiiiern freemeh that. trifling offenses shall not b4igidly ar raigned before the trip anal of the tint', dr sop- Mir Its non 'ewe! There, a . wy,' a look;'- 'Emile, a blunder in genuflection' tine seer . ment, or in the presence of ,o l'elePt,..iras nutrugh.to forfeit one's liberty and We. Vit itli principle of •CoMMOTI 111 W and s,,epatitiation&d. freedom, that no man should beithretordwlllt- . Out C-91.116 skihno, and a trial give:lMM at Vie own demand or that of his fringe Therr . the'ruspeeteil vat consigned to to dtininton, with out the slightest knowledge of hit...ha - inch, and without a possibility of a trial, ,cuttill It pleased the inquisitors themselves: -and ' emery friend withut. who would dare to •talt.,ailuestion In Lis behalf, was liable to the sameahrrible calf- - ognumnt. . to it a principlo tit . Common I.pTt .nd tlouvii• tutional Liberty that the neouned • •• ;tholl he curt. fronted with the witnesses ojtaiu34 Ml:it:and 00 mon shall lic , compelled to 'erinibtritiv. - bitnselfT There no Into rode n.. 0 or lte:V7 tt wilt...ell or itiforiner. null sorry mat wact cputpelle.l do I, a wittiera'agninct los own la.-ay lull life. II meenroor 'pereeentora cuold'•tirit trap hint dli , lcross mtestititutt ;they rt . boo to the torture and the raok..until inn. cent,* • iterti idetoted guilty in order to obalit that td• Spnld in judgment which'echl.l no-14w fount' in the trial. le it aluteltmetital proitaaiun of OUT odd constitutional trredom and lace, that cruel mid unusual punishments shall nor' 11;rre all the bottom or•ilibtring, ilk the varie ties of ingraion; at. 'dl 11,4 •gl,oouy rani • ;teriotta terror. with Hell itself could ;nets gine' wove annployvairc• talvhl/14 , 4 1 4ethM jt a •' mot; am - I ehildren. wh,ss only mini was tod rE the rscreive - of tlial private julgutent which tio.l Ito .1,111110 , 21 r' teary ea. indtri.la it rrepansibility Ile - net:Mee hae the Frsneh them. 1t,[11,11 ealdal‘....,to (,r tf,y h a d nay echrion. •Lien they limit.- into thainquivitioti ett Abell td to the year Part, andaw ihe.nierreti ar•ongernout. Ihr going 4rigiigilt hu.. maiiity. her:lnto ro tech e.varpreatial it She e-eue Who, facto ea they wired the rs then.elven, wlio ti theyAld ehrshetrea, awl •luornsil them to a [Arad' ddrdrlflU,l. tau their, own dlddhlk/d. as 1,01.1 1 for the two milluitt;licha which 1441 hailt,dt of ice coot nationa attain itnelt r • • 4n , 1 in Inin, 'knit ns *um, se the fops .4.41441 "Cithl>l44tl444 11.41 from It44tot, .44 the..Tisiug 44.144m00 . 4 314,44)4u4 clingt.ittitiowtl 1444crty; 1,14c-1145444 teyitepilltiite„.,4l2,e- "tilt .: 4 t td tnyiiment#llt hninanity, jOtire awl Ott:. 1 Vie Este been (ohd by Itdmr* n ferret we'. Ire .1 great jUipaterity in the pips) (not, vest:tug of Itanto, 'Ahem where the mor,!e. 4ien pontiff real ter, , and where thegibeat under arand - k..w the!iirioniple of intoteenncv.nhould tut undeent.el,wui what oar ought 1.. be made of' it, lie iinptimltion liands.,4 mill 'and indnlgent ita tan extreme. Rome, kt the part of the world where.lntratuity .stitiered the keart for the e ;kg of religion, end that, without the exeep tuni, of n'ily coontriew,riiher of thoae where the ,piootion hay exiettul, Or Of Ibig+ where it Lan torn unknown —those where Cathoheity tort Erg preJl , ll/11.1.1i. or where Peotestautiern hoe triumphed " Let 11,1 compare with thin inthruettfpg Male ment ttic teatimuny of e. ROMDEI Catholic editor it ROMP, from his own pereoual olineristion, dated April 7th, 1019. “The 11nrpof itolividuale who had rendered thetusehree ot '''''' tint, to the' church.OKl in n loading to two or three year,' ego, of which we bare at.unihnt testimony front the it.imenietherts • ,elms, clearly thorn that the dismal nuder, ground prisons, and 'other,plecee of confinerurni, hiertrat no itime hitherto been without their om Happy tenant*. The dark dungeons, the *rift, ed carerhs full of bones, the pitfalls by which'. unwery:victime were precipitated. the rate . gine” below, excited the: borrorit the holiday kochion lthms,pe on Sunday last;:stitfoYdtocked dui crowds to r; part of the building, explibeir sympathy was excited by the 'despoiling . and complaining inscriptions whlelt covered the atolls of *.net of prison cells ranged around 'the . garden. One of them In the English :tongeS,, forms n,pawerful commentai the atrocity the inetitntiou, and : , conve*a , .with tout:Wail worlt of condemnation arAloiciri. unholy nrikipators. it is no follows,' 'Jo lea tie I o,ristienfed/il . " • Ins now. that very restored by—. the immediate direction and approbeilon of that -Man whom Bishop o',.G'onniir—is hound bit: e. dreadful oath, end hrihe firet 'prineiple faith to regard as an Infallible. head and 'Woe , shlpful wooer. Think yen that : if the 'lotion- Catholics h,ot the dopretnnoy in 'numbers °Yee this Republic, and 'the BevervlgnPontiff.regiedie.' id it no sieceseary for the extirpation of heresy. to establishthe inquisition among no, to the et; , for subringion of avery : prieffiple of our enlights ened jurisprudence; that the prelates ebb OW praise Oar glorious law and COnOlitElliol3, would ' hositsite.a moment in sealocis .codspeatintil • R in true, indeed, that the common canoe and; ; ontemen hanunity of many Catholic-peoples' would revolt frotnit.. [tin oleo true that there', to everlasting liar among the smote et+ dienedictlues,paptuthlns, CarmelifiesAlguelloi ans,Tmitciscans, ienulte, and Jansenist,spfind what pot hosts of bitter Internecine sects, ikhich. ever embroil nod convulse the old mother ttrith mutual jealousy and hatred, infinitely more In tnise than that of Protestant, denominations to wards non soother. These nnrocreoe fradtrok tire are jealous of the Dontinicono. to whom... binge by'Papal grant:the Soly,Office of tag tho _and just no ArchblailW Hughes affirms that the jealousy of Proteetant Remo towarde each other led the Americans 0f..; ter the rerolution to extend equal constitution al right+ to Catholics also, which even Washing ton himself would out otherwise have been will: log to concede, ea we navy WelliraY that if wd 'tempo the horrors of mquieltorial jorieprol dence when Papists get nut upper hand, it will, ho owing to the jealousy of netsin Popery S erif, and to the deeper sentiments of humanity still surviving in the people; eirteinly riot to any love of law, liberty, or justice in a band of micleslastica bound at all. hammle" la ohey the ; wired sin'onthe eaten hills. Doe, it occur to .any onti in reviewing obis third ago of Protestenitsm,:that tho long pro. tool Iluripjg the, dark ages did:: not bestow the some welliregtilated coustitiational freedom and law arbioh we inherit through Great Britain upon other Papal countries! The explanation is perfect!' easy. Nowhere else wns there the same impulse and opportunity of resisting the reign of Papal intolerance. The Isles of Great Britain were' too distant from the despotic cen tre of spirituel thraldom to feel its immediate influence. And if you lohk for .up upon the niapat a group of islands at the north-west of Scotland, you will see ono ..of the,. Hebrides, iit. significant in alto and position,, called gy, Ina. There, in the middle of the Gth , con i c • ry, watt phuited in school, il3 which thd &tip tures Were taught, missionariek *ere trained, a nd su independent judgment ja religious matters /fearlessly cherished. Prom lone, missionaries penetrated England as far an Northuniberland, with benign and auspiolotti auhcese, , befero the missionaries from Route ooni,Ptuakonny considerable progressamonF the Attila Saxons.' Again, the ancient f orm d • British. Christianity had. fled for 'asylum Into Walesathen the Anglo Sitiens look poasessinit of England, and than two distinct centres of chrlatlon seal Veen afteniwards formed, to dia. 'pate with Homer:Air enpremacy in England......• Long and nbsthiatn ',Wipt4he contest between these three rival intltleaces—the Presbyterian from ions—the . Independent from %Wales, and the desfando from Rame,,,sed theagh the hem mentioned eltimitely prevailed,* was a:victo ry which could never stand absolute and matted. The very imptdoe which the conflict bad communicated to the British mind, made it strong far invastigadon, sod comparitively wakeful and independent. Such, too, was the. fact ip relation. to Ireland, from which, Indeed, lona had been evangelized. Irish prelates Nast over the glorious memory of Saint Pa trick,and the .high religions civilization which in early ,times distinguished ,Irishmen, and' their missionaries all over Europe:unfit is Co il true that frelrnd, for some WO years af ter conversion to Chriatienity, 'rd in Western 'Europe as the iniula sooriorom, the ;,Wand of the Sainte. But I. deny that Patrick V. o papist in the sense that Bishops O'Counor and Ilughee are papilla. His Haien *ere too early by centuriee in bring him into such a category, with historical fairness. His whole character, opinions, labors, sacrifices aml successes In teaching the common people, as kwell ecelesiaslics the Word of thal,evinee thittlat'was infinitely more to Protestant then , a Pi:glint.' The most palpable proof of this de , Tratlon, and, the only one which I can atop to lay before yowls feet that the Popes were never settled .with the religion of Tritiuml un til it was nod' Subject To tfie erown of Eng land, mid' brought; hinder Oho influents of lhst Itunianiens 'Which the Popish emissaries Lrut given, to the ,tiaglo Saxon. You talk eloquently iff the, wroogs•of bleeding, down trodden and detratled Irelond,ye patriot Pa pists of the Emerald Isle. but ye have your ho ly father, the Po'ltr, titthank for all the bondage in whicnyon hare groaned for ceatnrieivand Hint too, a Popo, who Was not .111 informed re• spec:ling the merits of Irlstechrietiantly, for he eau native of England, the only Englishman that ever bore the keys of Saint Peter, .Adriten IV. In 1166,'1M gave Ireland to Henry 11, on these rwo cooditione: The Finer —That ho should convert : those 'bestial men;the native .Irish,' (Arlo die faith. Those were his very Aso 13ccoans , That ha should be to publican (or his - holitrespfmgatber Peter pencirfor every -hearth in .theltugdonv .1.1601* called Ay ti ' e.im• potion[ irish tificrwatda, 'the .Yeinsii..""snaike money.' There is your glaiitins . religtan , at .Patilek, countrymen of nay father, for I Um &bud to know that he was en Irishman—there Was your religion of Bt. Patrick, which you rightly boast made the Irish Christians the ad. mirottrinof Europe Tor centuries, denounced by a Pope who knew it well, to be that of 'urn, ;who 1110 A ho converted over. again by an Anglo 'Soot Papal eittholiciem. And what could It be but a spezi . es•of Protestantism—the ancient Minion of ireland—for bestial min; is a techoi “Itiry at Rome for denominating Protestant heretics. Irishmen, I tell ytm the truth of Ids tory; whet, I nay (hit you - Were robbed of St. 'Patrick's religion seven hundred years ago— robbed by an English Pope who Fold you to en English King for the ticice of a penny a ‘ hearth, through all the homes of your Lathers For the pultry,smoke mine; which his,greedy holiness demanded overall that gem of the ocean, the precious trudltions of Patrick were dishntiored— bin independent chore h war crushed—hire hem, tieeut institutions rubvertcd-- the brave chief- - . Wu, Roderick O'Coutior, • who may' hare 'Teo s sire, for aught I know, of your right raverrod tlietiop himself, woo cold. iota vassalage, owl Ire laud—glorious whl It eland—Lae hues kicked, and uumg,leil, stuifirampled, ever sincr, , ut the pleasure •of a grown that bought bar ,to the e..tuumu market of kingdoms at Rome. • The Fortint'itut is that of outage/Mop from without, encoding (rout the Reformation until the preatMt Limo. Whoa all the efforts of man) Kos and many kill‘k had failed to Worm' the autit'britiliari Hierarchy of Rome, or liven to retard its dbornerard progress. the Color from' Ilearen sanity,. "come out from her m . r.prople, that ye be 'tow partaker...of her plagues, - teas raitrageously PrOttl..lool.l .11 ood lord, elope nut] but indicate a iest partieutersap the eintagenistic.paistion of Piotettentinlii oince that toemortililr Relorontein re•l-:-.The vitality of 9litmono pmeted over to 1 - rot , eLintieta. No Papol ettentlinti 4 f territory by tmerionary effort has kern permanently kept ..„,.. th e time of the Iletormothen. fate Xovi. Cr the tatatenlJennit, whose almont superhuman z..ti enrrtml Romaninin to the remotest regbfon ~r the tel won but n meteor in the nice, anti all the rettooree, of Popery hate trot beet able 14. retain, ho centime,. h• elected Row quick vrotlt tlrirrn Out (nem t'hina, India, Any,,in in, ne-4,lapett, n.tt, to mention many another Cloy 'or (mince. 41iir garrrhlneall ha, b,, , e13 ha I 41, 7 aal a natal 01,1117,111, If i•nani, le r!ril the 1 Ea4l.iira of 'Japan, in urger, if. Immtible., to open ot tottumerce wills it, rich resin:tram Antl why I, that oonsuierco denied is the while l'hri,fien wont at prenent.. Ohligittglliin donhtful natl.'', cre.litahle eltapt.l4 eittier.lita harbors with the cry. of otp.r.twtiot7: ~ 4..,itn.....ltoraitistal tel . gpt , 4 - s siPsiirrAiszthetritlY . ti W r titii7ei f a it;tir•E' AfF th i a trealtle 'hipsl talilliollarift gat into that:king iltow.After tar lirformntion, haptiactl its intnaera , aortal idol:mien which were strikingly aimilar '4l heroirn, atst•rsilled it Christian almn,t in a Jay Bbl jest tut they do in this favored aunt, try, they soon platted to seise the power of giv eroptetat itself, anti overturn anti remodel aC Or , ding to:gbeir owl, political nuance the aim, is tratlon• of es Empire. Detected in this an. gratecul•treasots, they were drive)? out with foci ; ottn Dam and evir alaet that lime the imply,' foreigner tents death who happen, to he coot optuitht chorea of J•pan. Jost i n the rotor way, and (or the vane reason, they here driven out .ot Abizminin. Commerce itself has claims for lii4emnity ripen the Papal religion, which ell her 4451 e of indulgence, could never mace to die. *Amer. ,• In South America it in granted her uttesione hose but nano — permanent footing. hut bowl— .;11y roally.esuiverting the anti VON to the religion , .I"Jetins, 110 oversprevling their tiontinent with iiiiilions of 01111i:est people, transformed to the hnpcs and blessings of Christianity: na she hod no tnncli tauter opportunity, with sill the ancient ,•caltare cif the Aborigine, at her end nod middle ot Ameriat? . No, but by exterminating the no. li•Ot forth, most part, with blood thirsty cote , guest, or -degrading them to slavery, or at the Huey hemt baptizing their idolafries, giving to itio,,ir ancient gods, ,the tipanlifh famine for the •rrinity . arofillainta, pt• linmholdtlhas rtatnarlted, fitlct iehtiO4 Weep retain cverr their -war donors I sinned the ehrierfan ohne. lint tits, ,oltko thane transient, nomirial, and I balligrouseruisilv of loisalonaries leo in flame, htivie the PUfeettla, Protestant miasinus. lee the frosen continent of Greenland transforin abidingly byriliatiilfoll of Ilernhulters, the . Moravian brethren. •• Lite the 'ales of toe Patifie, t tort; sinew in a day to light, and peace, and Clay, rind all the !amble of a chi-Jauntier/ill:a -, lion, with no enemy on earth to fear hut the l'firsii;- , and beastly, with which a Papal propa odlsm-now seeks 'to enter that Eden! See the western coast of Africa, not to speak of its I.tiguthern extremities, now lined with Protest. 'not colonies for hundreds of miles, stifling the thTe traffellwhich was begun by Papists, and finds the iiinly.purts in Christendom which' are I,npen to its infernal traffic, in countries that are prone.] Gy the Papal religion. Bea India and. not to dwell upon them, nor upon thta great North4Amorican ,Cciatinent, where Prater - tang missions, and Protestant S - etilittioilt y ili\TC. Mode already the. Meet happy an knit :Topes' people on/the earth, and where the ear. Ate ladlan fades sway only because he refuses 16* be civilized by the mildest session of theGon. pet, What effrontery, then, to tell no that .Prn r .• tentlsm has not gained one nation. alone the fifty years after the,Reformation. „ •We are told of the vast decline of Presbyte:• ,riattism in France, bugland, Genera. Holland, : .'ho. Bat why not id Hontland,” and the ',North of !reined, the only. countries in Europe ,itherelt hos had a fair opportunity for develop lag its true tendencies, and the operation of its , •own Representative government. I deny (hat Preabyterisaistu decllnee, where its Datums to otyt corrupted by union with the fltate, as in Geneva and Holland, or crotched hyllse'veloked ,intuieranue of the civil power, through the in -I,,ituMme of Popery, as it was in France, and in' llnAlentltoe„ . ' by the-very same Catholicity, by pheriticaly veiled in the, fhmily of the Muerte. These calumniators take care to 'NMI itt silence o' Memorable fact which the world is reading, Hatt he sloe an Preshiterianistas was put down its'EmucrillY the persecuting fury of the Pa- • pal power; then Papal France from the verr sum mit of her Augustine glory ran back Sp the , mast horrid infidelity irhich the world ever wit- nemed—many of the Priests . themselves rushing . : along, and leaping foremost into the gulf of Istronioni Atheism.. And who Joel nor linow:,that infidelity is lurking throughout Eu rope i s the hoshm of Catholla Universlties, and that every now anti then, an avalanche from the !bosom of the Papacy tumbles down to the vor jei,uf in fi delity, as in . the late movement oi , . .footage, - and the two hundred churches which I Wetikoser„to Neological Infidelity through die- : ittit at the riptculous miracle of' the holy coat • at 'Treece. The mallgo, authority which the • 'lllAop quotes for the decline of Presbyterian MA. Independfint Churches, ie false in every/. tetrtimelitly False in regard to France, for in' .spite of 'Mottoes annoyances from Catholicityt ' Among, time PrlesM and Magistrates, evangelical' yeliklots has • been reviving, and but for-the la: ti,lortiocc .with which it bee always hitherto 'been:Chocked, might by this time &fee develop :o,f the beautifuleoutour of the Huguenot church. .:Faist,lo regard to Genera, whore we may say msre,,beet authority that more than half the 'oldest and most intelligent fomilles ore even gelicillrefeasor4 anti 'where a renowned -thee logteal Seminary, with ouch mesas 7.rAubigue aud Hattesen, are training Ministers to preach lher'doittines and .Polity of Calvin In all their purity end freshness. , • . . . . Fain in reined to Holland and England, and Our owalieer England; for although Presbyte :Minims cannot be held responsible for any haciteliding 'there, still it is a pleasure to - Bay that'll** l'ilgrini Chuich, to a lint 'majority of lieriiimple, la orthndow,ond even in Boston, the strocaleld of Itialtariaalsor, that Infidelity la 1 dying out every day, and Churches are eptioging up to adore, not the Virgin Miry and dead saints, gut the Lord that bought then:`.-Coo Popery, anywhere, boast of ouch recuperative life as thin, unletts it be in the political warld, where indeed. it has a revival of its URII peCV liar Upas life, in the melancholy ieitiirection of despotic power which now fills:the hearts of freedom and humanity. with sorrow. ' Secondly, Constitntional freedom alit the prliiciple of repre,entation Lave come out to the rib of Protestantism: Everyjvhere, and in all things, iu church and stole, in monarchies amid republice,from the old notion of a reorient. nical or universal council; ton modern chaVer, in Pemsylvituin, for the incorporation of a Catholic cemetei,e, the Chorch - pf Rome has la bored for ::00 years to crushLthe. principle of Representation. Thr first twin !park.; after the Reformation with this principle woo with. the republic of Venire, where, but for the ouce of Paul Larpi, himself an:enemy to Rome, the Venetians would have joined the followers of Luther. Look at Spain, which was once the most largely Representative conotey of Europe, not excepting, England her,elf, hat having be come the moot devoted of all kiumilomn to-Papal Catholicity, now Iles despotism annihilated the powerful Curtis, and the eristence-of her mu, nimpal immunities—a worlitif ohne : Ritter:it which' Ferdioand and Isabella, the Cotholic,tegac,who established the Inquisition in Spain, and who stipulated fur one-fourth; of 1110 slaves that her missionaries could gothrr,in America—whom Archbishop Hughes; , hotoir;and whore earrings he pants with pions 1011rille to find,that he may have them iced to the lola id Washing. t • tweed! emit,. Spain, having sprung to the highest iii•nown,,frour au almost completely democratic reprenentatiou of thel people iu her Government, which hail been sue tained by her ancient,independent Gothic church has bemime the basest.ef Meadows in Europe by eacreficing to the genius of popery the last grain of that glorious itdmixtur, of Castilian aristocracy, Arragonea republicanism, and Cal edonia democracy.., • • Remember also ttirr the Papal. hatateld of rep'. reseatothe government once filled theeellap of SIM* Of Vrit/gigur der, and had the traikid, tied everything-rea dy for blothug tb per 'motto whole represen tation of that conatitullonal realm. And the wretched Garnet, a Jesuit conspirator in that plbt, who was executed by the , binds of .the elimmon hangmaa, is enrolled as n Saint in the •Caletclar, and actually worshipped in Rome and Spain under the name of Saint Henry. 0! Saint Henry, by thineintercession and thylpurr! merits: procure for an the pardon of sin! Look la the tyrant of Naples, the special hired, end dear. sae, and generous host, of the fugitive Pope! how he grinds down to the dust whet lit Ile constitiltional freedom he was compelled, in day of consternation, to cCinceds. Look at Po pal Republies, trithout • a representation worthy lot the name. 'France, ignominious France, tru ly a constitutional government, for she has hod five-constitutinws in leas than fifty yearn. Mex ico sort Sonth Americo—wretched 'alternation. between popular anarchy on the one hand, awl military dents-aim upon the other. - lamer, hinted already bow the Papal pewee raged nattiest the Presbyteries, Synods, tel Gen eral Anse:eddies with which the Huguenots once spired over France the henutiful divelopeinent of Representation, not ceased not wrong. outrage, and perfidiously betray it, until the re of the edict of Neat: banished it ant of her sie;ht. Within her own busimono general council hoe ever been held 111000 the Council of Treat, at rho Reforiontion, and no tine oaks any more for ouch a Repro...Walton, corrupt and rnstiarpi even no. at wan by the overshadowing power of the Parley Dead, utterly .lend it the bosom of 1 . 1•11111 I lathalicity, is every move r aired towards n reprehentatiou of the popular will Keen the charter for incorporation of tho I•,..,every of :taint Mary's, in tke peightmrheml of ear beautif.it Allegheny Cemetery: tulles the Bishop himself alleluia Pere/dent, without election, and pier,. Lim four Vtlt.oolllof the twelve Managers ; suit four tnore•ttet he clergy o( his Limes, tlina leaving to the winil - body of C.,rporators be.tite,e, only one third of the votes 111 any trinoarenient of its interests. Sole oar potato. they will 101, I`, for ill it 1,1.0,11,10 t 0 manage the terielatoreit this land, nod untor• innately Papal intrigue now manages then, 411•3. The law of 17::0, in Peon , ylvania, which Ile.' redcarefoilly our Protestant tlarpor.itions in 1110 amount of property they ought-hold for re li,it/11111.1Ar0. LlllO been repealed, by the influence rd Ill.tholie Prelate.., and sow in thin la. ridden Commenwealth may he held by these ride corporatem in /00110111i0, free frolllllll.ololl. Tou welL•indeeo,l„, they honor that our country in 110 i a Protestantlifie,and avow the hope that it may, nt no very distaiji time, bedeciiledly Ceti, • r.4,11.41 . 11:0, IfigVlTlnt r itilliMlTlattratilt". V4ow the contempt of that Predate for majeritjen, tdtd therefore, in feet, for all-repres4station." Catholic Maryland, fl in - aald, was the first risioWfg oar States to rive rig-i and full toleration 4n nattees of rio.cienee. The first Proprietary t Maryland woo eieoego Caivert, or lAwil Ital . tinsiire, 411 amiable ,gentlrmou who woo hob!, sod bred a Protestant, and tiepame a Papist lut -neer he had not strength of mind or patience enough to deterinfre which woe rightpf the three competing denuininatiens, the Episcops. Ilan, Presbyterian qr independent, and who car tied along with hill" prod natured lethargy of soul, the feeliagu nail former associations of a Protestnnt education' into the Roman Catholic Church. (tad whence did Catholic, Maryland ,get the charter which thus matcher free? Not from Spain, or Portugal, Italy pr Austria, Plat from Protestant England, itt's time when Pori. tan mightinene, like the injureilliananoon of old, wan laying Reheat!. on the pillars of on conetitntionel despotism. A time when the Ilamtidens andCromwelln, Vanes and Pymeand Mittens were abroad in the majesty of popular rights The ...titillate declaration of freedom" for conscience in that Colony, which Bancroft admires atol Hughes applauda him foradmiring, no the politician had expected, wan eimplyiin all its circumstances, no these are betroYed; upon the .pages of thereon himself, a craven' manifesto which trembling Papistn put forth to protect themselves in their wealtomess, under an apprehension of being dealt with by Puritans as Me Pridestantn in Ireland, the ilimuenots in France, the Lutherans in Germany, anal the Waldenses in Piedmont- were just then dealt with by Papists. No sarcasm of the Prelate can avail to hide the evil ponicience which the Iloman Catholic ,Colanists of Maryland must hare felt when they raw the powers of their Church employed, all the world over, to . crush the liberty of conscience 'where it lay In 06 grasp But there is another aspect; in which we . may view this boasted example of Catholic Maryland., Were the Boman Catholics a - majority • of 'the pronle 'when that ..sublime declaration" was made in tho Assembly of that Colony in IGO. If not, then the admiration of Bancroft rind the boast of Archhishopilughtli are hut . little Glee than ridiculous. And that they remit; weie 'not, is testified by no tees an sintboiity than chi; •historiaa of Maryland, 4101alvi himself, in the fa. o W 4 4 l spßnegri where, epeakiog of, hitting the opportunity to persecete for *conscience 'Raw in Mitt7litud, he says, "the proprie tary dominion had never known 'hat hour. The Protestant religion was . . the establah ed religion of tbs. mother country, and any hffert on -the part of the Proprietaties tir op press its followers would have drawn dOin de- Struction on 'their governtrient. The gerpt , ~ of the Coion.itti ocee tfrurli•to Prote.torts nd y by their nuitoril and their participation i the legislatifir power, they were fally.equal to - heir own protliction, anditool pOwirful• for i pro prietaries in timievent of sn'Open collisie d'he safety of:the hitter Pan thereforelidenti il with 0 system of religioun toleration.. We might evince:the opposition tit - Boas to the I right of, representation from her prohibition of the Ilibie,w here it was first revealed to the human mind, and establiehed in the Hebrew common wealth. We might CVil:100 it alsotroMthc unblush. ing avowal of conteropt fur the right of pliiple judgment by the Bishop of Pittsburgh, along with his declaration that dnr institutions ere found. ml on relights; a religion that is initial upon the Most pocket slavery, which the huMen mind Can imagine—a Mimicry which • great Philosopher of History thila churactc:rixes. "We can csoceive th'e notion of that philoso pher, who. when one told him that his house ~was on fire, said, go and tell my wife, I sew ('meddle with household affairs. But when one conscience, our thought., our intellectual exist ence are of stake, to give up the government of one's self, to deliver over one's very soul to the authority of a stranger, is indeed 'o ruortit sal cide, is indeed s thousand times worse than bo dily servitude—then to become s mere appurte- Demi; of liks Ca" • ' : ' ' If the repel religion be no congenial Ohl ,! our free institutions, why do not the Most alma; 'iluto despotisms in Europe labor nod lavish their wealth for the propagation of it in these United Sweet' There is the Leopold Foin;dation in • Vienna, under the very brow of the dispotin abuse of • Ilapsburgh;, and within the purse strings Of its liberality: 'howled itiamediately after a course of publinhothree there by Fred erick von Schlegel. A memorable sentence of which lecture to as follows: But North Almeria& bad been to France and the rest' of Europe, the real school and nursery of "all th ose revolutionary iniociples Natural contagion, or willful propagation, - spread this disorder over many other countries." Was Schlegel ,ignorant of the political tendencies at 'the Roman Catholic Faith', Sind Metter:Lich too, the ItloBi ,Imgicious states - Man in Europe, that theiwbuld both labor to establish the Leopold Foundation for crushing this groat source of re volutintutry princip les- , The Sal* of despotism and of liepei, buoy too well that just as minty as the &feet follow, thenaiiii; the glorious fabric of our constitu. - Clonal liberties ea touch deteated, will tumble to sake ma arenas they dull have upped sad rir: fined it. by the dissemination here of Papal . Catholicity. - Tho Reverend gentlemen finding hie strength. eahaustrd, was constrained summarily to indi eatertopics more without illun,ration, and t. Its cotmltpted by stating the necessity whleh he hail Veit to call things by their right niimes. Honied diction, said brionay snit the dectirer who comes softly piton lowan the Ito , mita. Priest at kladricl latefj aid upon,tho Queen of professing to knee, lu reference 'to flier lilajwty, and unfold eta hbruble petition to her ormencyoxbile his traitor hand W 33 grasping a dagger for the heart of hie gmeimis sovereign. *catholic . Prelates elms now upon the sorer-. tip people of 'the Veiled States, and aimustem- . Mite I have been in. studying, the history of the, Church and the world for years, -to mark the Contort'e and iereatilities of their treason against' the welfare of man, Ileannot forbear to, cry out dagger, a dagger: eton.yhen the people may shout ,a petition, stay a. meek Anti modeet peti tire. ROE weslitNaroN lenrrnpondetin , of nailr ti r stntilaToll. April 4. ._ Although Abe current of opinion Maang the widi'Benatore on Satnrilay appeared to be 'de faruir.of selecting Philadelphia as the plac64l inciting for the National Convention.yet livarn lflat the point in considered, by no means nettled, . , Oil it is434lieved that a majority,of the !louse .. 1 1 , •,e ai. T o to substitute. Pittsburgh or Ciucin ncii. ~ N' Fork-., alai. is advocated ...by sonie ineinbir of boil Muses.' •:, . ItmaibliAsitisidered determined that the Con ventionVytilbnot assemble 'before the let July, and, by honsegnence, that the adjournment will not. hefore the Ist be tkie 10th of Aix. salt ?hie litter t eault will be 'justly held • .1 Ppblic pisfortooe. ' . i, ',. - e ,-- , i i ..;1 mayha e omi tted t tt yesterday that ~„... r . to S a Andgrt.Matsgum..af. tb. G,.44;lclided ficatt.whig, hl#re`talinisp,. awl 87enitor 'Jaime. or T a ms.. ..i of this filitee-liort, secret:oy. ' 'MOPS gentle men, as officers Of the meeting, were eipointed a committee to confer with such a committee ale .shotilikhe appointed by the Whig members of the Honor . The intelligence troen California and New York city has again sent up thethisa stock.— : The rejection of the Boughtsere.olutions in the Coilifornia democratic convention has taken the partisans of that gentlemen with unutterable surprise, Mr. Marshall, in his speech against the 'old fogies,' unePin reply to: Brecken ridge, said that not :only' was the .little Illinois ian first in thediearts of the California ( derama racy, but the other candidates were 4 riolithere.' At that very . .moment Intelligence wax/ ou Like way !Other of the total discomfiture of the jat.tg.?., the dispersion of his forcer, and the tri uniplotit(noccess of his.most prominent .ndver sary. In New York city, too, the Judge was supposed to.haVe had a strong hold upon the h Get iolo of the polit last leaders, Rat from that quarter he ieceives the unkindest cut of all Ruth committees young lius,and old 'our, herr; turned fogies, given Young ,America the told !Moulder. and come out for Oil Quiotuple,' 49 the buys call him. This is truly an awful stroke of fortune, and no a fast personal friend r,fthe 'Judge,' I extend:to him the assurAtice of Illy profoundest sympathy. To•morktir we him!l haven decision upon the eoruprotoi,i resolution of Jackson,the accession ' int. . The ultieut of tt,i movement to notely to ''etittcrriteftie fit:4itire xO4l it appenra to me that no friend of theconstiintion,int well wisher to the - perninnent harmony of the. Union, C6O hesitate to:vote against it. ; Yet I ,grently fear that the number of each will ' be fatted load.- ,inate to resist the tide of nilrvflity that is nwaroping independence of sentiment. in both purti, , s I Presume the resolutindarill he pas• iced by a very:consider:Wt. majority.' The Gardiner case in beginning to attract at. • tention front the apparently arbitrary couree'of the gorernment in ren‘tril to it. Dr. Gardiner is charged with having defrauded the. govern•, unent,tbrough forged papeniduid - fabricated tea . cf a quarter of n million of dullars,-- i • The money h. all been enjoined in hank, and the axused hen voteritiirilLreturned -from Ell • MI.II tri — onth#, the' t• ! ?strict Attorney asys - hp--has not eollecteil the I repindlo teetitunuyon - w tch to prosecute: 'On Friday tlarditr's coit;tret propoeed to go to trial with what testimony each party bad, The court refused. The coonselthen bled a 4, mnr.: ter to the iodic - intent, which in to he .isrgned early meal Thislitdicates s strong.confi deuce that thst,goiernment cannot convict, for if beaten ortS . l; motion to . gna'ilt, a; prisoner is invarinhly prejudiced with a jury. Dr. Dahl win, of California, luta , hei'm arrested on the charge of iturloioing papers from the .titote Depapttnent,Juid — lias been indicted. It is void that duplicaten remain of all the impor: [ttsnt papers in his case, alleged to have been abstracted. Joins. IVAsnraproN, April 6, 1852 Jacketio's resolution 'ptiased to-daypy ad ay.: crago majority of tyettly-eve Or thirty 'votes on !the diffArent divisiCuli, € Jackson is a Cleorgis Se cessionist, who whiii , sigibist what is called the, Compromisii-when thatinheme passed the Hattie . io 1814, and still,,repudiating lied rejecting it, was re-elected. 'When such a man speaks of thit compromises of the donstitution, he means that sdmething was intanded to be cOnceded to 431avery: which the fact of tha'instrument dose not express. lie abandons, pro hat rice, the fa orittj Santhern doctrine of stxict const, ruction, 'and falls hock upon cArtnin neireao . rded tackles, which if admitted, may make; Wad do • make of the ConAtitntion whatever a time-ftervingmajor ity'llAsigre it.to be: ?ttr. JaCkscul has discovered that the South gained Mich ore than she hoped.for in the so called` Compromise, 'and Is now noxious to make. his peace with his party friends by doing what he can to confirm it. Oo motion of Mr. Haven, of N. Y., lackaon'a 'Ventilation, which' appeared to , bean exclusive eadoteetnent of the Fugitive Sine Paw:, mapng special mention of it alone, was amended b ' 'eddieg, to it the extract from the Piesht'entti Message, to the effect that he, the Freeidedt, considered the temprotniec , • ;it a whole, a permanent setOment and edhattnent of the queatians Ahem). Thia pee haps drer out the sting front the animaPo tell. It diluted, at leant, the potion *Midi moistened Int fang. Dot the what; proceeding vas grate; • no, and amounted to very little. There woe some party management in it. 'Perhaps the passage of- this iesolation will keep the subject out of the Democratic' Convention, - ,here there will be both Nentialanista aid Free Sailers : Who will not core to Commit them eselven or their. COO. lititOf WM to these' extra'professions. There werolu any motions upon which upper es,tly tent votes were, taken, bat the disorder prevailing in the bull was so great that I could net get the scan and nays., Tomorrow I shalt endeavor to analyze these votes, - and andw the position Of lUenand parties upon this question, which no votes in Congress under.lhe4retence of suppressing agitation can nettle , for the'pep. For tlin present Tuley nay that the South generally supported the resolutiode, while five: ,sixths of the megative.iote was from the SOfth. The regent : cdinmercial intelligence tram the 'Pacific thows the importance of rapid and di. rent communioation with California and Oregon. The trade between the ports on that coast and Chins and the East Indies is . increasing with unexampled rapidity. The completion of the pwymn,.Miilrutol will ffurtild a facility which ' will diminish the time' and, expense of passage cad transit between the eitetevn anti .weetern coasts. Bat it In principally in View of the ne 'grilihtions alleged to be pending in relation to Central America, and the rigfiti of the company which has inderiken the improvement of the ?liar Ban Juan, miclemplalca building a 810 e canal, the( tjei - sadden eitensinti of our coViee in Inlet - eating at this time. IThaftt trhiptanal is to he constructed over thate'oute is herillydaubtfol, and an American company has been eharteped to perform that great work. If its pini giO. not foiled.by British Intrigues and ,ppphdition; the company will folfil its engage- Merits. This'erholebuslisers was thought to 'be nettled by the Clayton anti Balwer Trearty,liut it appears the country was deceived, In any new arrangement that may be made, It to to be hoped that : Great Britian will be ellowed.to ac quire an further control over the canal ihan wan contemplated in the lasttonvention. The Japanese laland4 necopy an Important inte r medi ar y positil'on betwien ' , Ann Prarielaio and Shanistudo. 'lt the squidton, which ds to conce,atrate before Jahr. nada. Commodore Perry's command...dell tntotain from the Em.. peror the liberty to •e•tahli,b a depot of coat' . i tti tome poincia his doniinions with e - lege of touching there wlth fair ste am rout one result will amply rept,T ill the ex ensn'l4 the expedition ; It it not pi s obahle thet aigrette will grant any cuotiertowards the ee . , tehi tt eec of t steam line between 'Asitt . Red the North west cotist, but piivateve4erprise vilti rely boon secomptisb the objecti• .neid it will be perfectly proper to enefAtiagetit by paying a hberalpeiee for the travail, molten cf the malt:, . , e isza..2 • , • mt.' SPRING ARRANGEMENT, ennsylvania•RO.Rp:ad..Esprey4 Packet Line. V . I:eirfrie l'itteitgrykNrso York, i'h//04/phiJiiried •• • " - . . -310 miles 'Lail Road, 72. miles Canal . T I 1111 1 . 11 114411. litTY ic ill ItrUks. FARE Iro ILARNI.P.III,I 1141.T.4* xgrrxr, 13.K1 Plt,..vrt SW t`conr.z.u.r. • ul N . allga r ti . otr . a u .o'l4 ,Ponn•rironio .Koilrood. 'A 4.,arket Bost lessr . (ISM lAr,h tr.rx ...tocat6-' oriorkro s sts.lr. V.00,1 . .4{414. at, Lit Ai r, Jlr Jor t 0,0,1 ilk arrilinQ fit rldioadohio or' ltalloaor, oorlr non won... • Ballim.,ro •1111V1,1 1. . burr], 11 , ohzprro. Troia Caro. 41 B.itaaorlexed. Solopolionos i o n en 1., I bat est,. onAeloe tfißo p. um . .. 4 Wothingion env mania - lAoraing, Fur or o!tior mforrool.loo,Arpl, so . . •. To . trt - Agrotr. .1 31E`sf111 Fri, I 3.10n. - 1:Orkor. - or to D. LICE M, CII mml2. • •Nelsou'e First Premium riAGUEItItEOTYI'I.IS Pest tyfier . ..thii(rAng,, 7'6ird d • ITIZHNSAmd attmgers who. trktiliii rib , • J•ttt a¢ autn'rot., urtutle au] 1141.1. utc.oidai. at a 141, tuud.rale sill Bad it tt.ir• uu,at tajall at utl I lutturn .otatlittuatut.whet. en tint mtrahttlou • euseaugoed, ue au ti wade , tit rine ttut," unput b.at attufp.kl. 818. our! Ektultglyv oaring:Wu , . pu...1 fur part., ttUb - 11181rucetuur lila. Walt , : uwettu I Mud. atul hnN¢D u4tuirt.o:l the ty•Utut N thataat , C. twit' .uuatthr444--tha rolt•tngui. psa Ph iladulphia tis. York. Ilt.Bl,ltatlnt tturtail bt, slue In oar to lb. patrons ul lb. Att„a4ttleol ][murittat'.- tro. tutus tiastSurius,7+a-18M444,Wnr sutus,4-1.• • .. lUxua urrn uptuallag, all 8 • zuulativer • =1.3 i MR. SAIII . I. true Vitow lat you rum pyl St, fur sww I.:La . krosie It' it going with • ruoh, Pine°T haittak.rrularo ate , Inhutl Th.. article We wiring qa iserea , •sti.inction. . I oars A. N. hARTOLET; . . I.r.eLaele, detrecni - Cb.,. New nutrients. leTreuutuitr—Deer left lie. r euientiiy l'etroleumi It Li ail itilt.end more to IL . durum (rum Treeriet seiiiieurasteue. eel! rapidly: Truly Lour, Vc.r sal. byD.e,int• kynersll, 1tret.0.41.1. we city usses:Jawl . • • jadr - Go wimp. you will, talk aiabitt what . tea taut. and you .that see hrar nrsat An nadm nraparatlon. k4/11•0 to are PaalPlnnl Ih. U. Flnfanikii P.epqr, Arabian Linlin• qt.'lltoslaado .cn• um, r.dnarkabla cur.• of Se., GO an, 16,nn1. an an rater nal named;. Ofeible to !man ia all diwia.a w hlan'a.drld poaubly G 1...e11te4 ti..( enat kind. itlon adr,rttaananni I , Carzeifp insurance UotOrpany.or-fittaburgtl • -•—• r e. maesiti. TAMIL/A. I. set: OFVCE, 94 waTze. arms:Ear DART ADD WOOD SIBEETS.) • Ger AND VAIR/U titilDl ON +RN .11113 AND Mii,I.IIPPI RICHILA. ikl)..l4l.ll4l[TA at.l, • ' • ers apamat Pas .a nuff. ie-n7} of lA,. ARA aed/SZ.I.VP.V.ITIGITIO.N at,/ TN • . 1222133 • • c• “• Ilu.•)i • ' . . 31. 1 - 1‘.:1 WWl', '. Kara D. - Ilarb6l.b. Fatnci.. ln " , ..Ik7 m C 11. I.l.ltranl ycz.ll.ln. .1. 11..14-r Ilt aut. • I 14.21,1+1 ,Sze..ll•ll 1 . . RINTiNn, of all rcil,dg - exioutd . . 3:16 hi. ctn.,. • Ith 4.alsou.a.tut at relinosiAble rzt;A: ill 1.4 given to Poolerri wad Pro. gl".C11114 Tor ‘gr.hi.bition• acki °CAN,. Rill film of L.,11‘14, I n.itAtionr, Lb L. is4oktOicre Iltlia te., an , neat:; awl pravitly ritiabFL. Removed, # . • , • Itr.t3feE•ndrce Wright, AI. • • Suroono h., remote, . Meg, ''' ap4 dwelling.. to =i'2. Peott at, below ... • • lixo4 Weir' 1N SL ti .I)ISCOVERti , .Tbe • yeatt4 'of gl . l.armie Vxxxoiroon bating tlixpoeed of uxeat trolettr, the Pit xietys., Yle,xxx, Kit bag .texer, to oft, it Lt tlye Antrican 111,, boat ett: Llay 4.4-414 In All '• y..xt141.1 the "wait it in exi - ee - utit.tllX ' yattokultiftbeW phyotrignia, inlyarylaittOuton y r : road rottialete tyre.. We raotinik parants alygoet detail It your chiLly. o exhibit ljnef;yrupirxxis at Ewing trotibted with ar. , runk.. !me rent •m. 0.. hut owl; ameba.. • bottle ot 3l'Lan,s Aertuiltige. 004 thus rare . l4extt'isist . Mei: . brds. Tbr cult , .r tb a Vermilt , tl Ittitet4. oTers day.. mud tit-rotor., It must Le 61R/reeding all °lilt, fcr role b: 3latvbsnts and Ittoggb.t, in lawn atti conotry. AtTlt.i. We sole opt ietor„x 4p1V.1.1w:8 .i:1(1U1. t CO.. yo 141 Wands • Lectures to Young:Neb. calllE Rev. W. D. Ilorard Bill delitter . the uat lecture r.f lla...tler in On Arn.nd Praalnlortast I . l,,tren, nu Yana et. on t <rennin- qrabbalL, April.ll. I n 2, at baliprnt .e,rn r.'el.rk. • aplo • Library Meeting, rf — VIE regular. Quarterly - Meeting of the Mont ty ernutn.l2l.h looL. at ball pan 7 cinack. ' ALVIN WILIiUnNE..7. I.lonrual and Pat copy lima.) • • 31ORKISON, Aftortia:y and Cocmael- - J •t L. 11111,•Avatotrd to ha , 41, U ,ul,l.nret, b.-at rotalb. httsbardi. 1 ' splCtleti Rev. Dr. Kellikelley's Feniale Seminary, - AT KITTANhillIce *related •Ith Kllllkelleg In renructing thls an•Ool. The number ttf Boarding Pupil It lienlte4 to Z. TILOS rag 'Ashes or TO.. TWO ruts. , .r• - • oan and 'tuition In Drawin g Uerm.w' and I~tln, Plano ' ..... ..... .$l,O. - et . eb Drawing what paha .. .. • 10.00 i. mod Stationary-0! .... ... ; .... - Ir~ceniti—A: 6. 13.1rYrng hnran. J. . SaDIWWIe :. Stolen , . • . :1 - 4 1 R031 the residence litre. JoseediinsOooi4:: L , Lerty .freer. tette... Muter end slot, oamka • 1 , 8 +Pilat/ Mato. A hatelenspe reward mill tet pea lot *be reorlery of the shore property. •• • AMERICAN HOTEL. Broadwit . y; Corner of Barclay SO et: the vitae; . Dow YORK. . • I at...a ht etliketth . . THIS w,PI known bode haßr~clalll ben bu, teampleht hart, wee Emititnte has hems et-. throe awl 111.1410 il9PMrrilleut./ made. fartho ...Wyman:We • Its (ineJta: Tha It .is chart:dog, Witte 44•115tir uppultp. ttu. emit. with Us tlslielatii Weser, ',aws awl shßubbery. laid hall. heat and !wattle I walk. wet itntB.ll' ' tallotitteetit Fountain, throwing flit egd oak, sn knelt snot. It the wet , itesitatie Ur( T for thltim mil tit uneaten eavalltei wt ptawatzw It cri also rxt.nqu.ly deorible tar Mu blehibahki beteg.: ran reeint I retested W their Weilitea Thollestie Is thetittelel awl In the Ann otJ;TAB/11l :IOU; Uld.riala J. C. ' , Alin. Wha has pith..A i atal Rdl swam. Ills the tea Is thanes*. awl DEXTF.R. °maws, 11 , it.keettee et the linked states !leek Wish.. awl late • kalhburik LIMO: .111 attend the Mort. sal ltiousatti . lieptetattak J. H. LUCAS sOII eitiel or: at km. kW!: all the tleelret Llitatthit 5 .5 15wi61 V. r.vrks• 1.11 of the Winthrop Maw, . • • All the del/Miran( Ida mama will enti-tently b ibr,nd on ay. table., awl the boarsJor meal. me meanest m to wilt the emmertioest et ail; tither athsullaa le paid to tbersnamaa -Mr make them rotator...ie. 5.1 Su Mit • rtlatielliAlle• at our Homer piton, ask- tho kind' patronage Or the tea !elk. e lemma. tr. p oedlot • Wall Paper. ; • FRESff arrival frt . = Phil:4e Do.poi. of al moot•rely Mod pod Or. , ortOg - .1 of Wail PlotpOoo IPoia lhn loon% prin.. op 1.3 the foot c.,01y that poor, to derinol. THOS. 1 . . 4 1. 1 1 , :tt. oplo yo. 5:a1,. Of t Figured Paper Windowßitode. JUST reed from Philadelphia ::very ex.- too.. re savor:meat of Al helos hod Is. Mal • sr. at rar.oly of her ant beautiful pagan., T11.131a, v.% LULA, a Shades and Blinds. . IF HAVE reo'd it large ANA, 151 l4lOahir L 1+ bailee and Split Palatial and Trivia raga f masts kor salt. %131 .1.a6 I Alt!) GREASE—{ bids. for • J 1.., by ''P HELL 42,14_0 at. I'A War ae. IV A. GILVENFENNEY X CO. - 76, 4th , ierassuan . ho hold PGA of 'III. thtlen. and lot. 4 of Bancroft skkietner of The Uhl./ $l-4, .lilt I_l Al4lS—fl. tea. and •!, ha 1.. Liggett's ( 1 / 4 pler. O.) Playa rural—a rase. oxides—a. Ingmar n katoaly o, for sale by PLI.L . Iting74, spin s aaol 711 R War aL TheVorld'at Fan' PREMIUM SAP S, DEPOT, GREW: bl.Ol - 1., warts( algal?, (PEI IV SIG , : MAIDEN LAPP Ann la ALL yruerra YORE: TILE - subscrib,r Oared far hro and Bar al.A.Proof Inn Paha la ttltarliiii,ll with theshele 11 1 t.V . 11 , 1 , 4 t Inaltinn in Le nJoo, .bothhe -1.41t141) (tejJ award...li Medal. The AaPPrician Yale. twill last at en We thardea. alto aanartlnlq bhp atoll nacJal tor the rim PagjEarn sad be . racer fallal nu obtain tLr torn prenalain whet. ha grabs. lean pot to roatpetli. altb Warr/ for that purpyse. aialtiaqua have lova rci.lteJ trots Ma (divans. watt known torreausalla boo wilabar• had anal, tack., ',ape," awl moo.) p en .la.a. °spars er a... L a -within lb. 110 thlr y a, vials Alan others, to area army rroro Oa. Mar. ',Mann Alan too., and Mr. J. L. Watkins, lath. re too at Pan Masan. amber, &Anan and Nalco Ina las-karma A th..ln the great are turner of Liberty gad Nat a rats, slid 410114111 • Phuda Bowman In Jen, r ottzuo litarketur or (( en ALIJA P r c LACK. wlaeik eni a ie....1110 lbe Dame of Atrues , A lb.. Ind= IMWorld's. Erbil:Mina. sad Ak• Jan,' to* best Lack for U. priva amnia eent.-1. is lag knot mount pose der, ant thri. y ho larger th.•reut. odasa be Mac ebanarabla 1 incite all punt:sacra to seises. in •1 in-alai Inventor We beta. parchaanc, End aseLle for alinossires. who l ion hest Inn. Burglar an 4 Pagan I roof Yeas coan. bland NL3 11481117.1 i No - k. IA 137 and re) areal Clef Park. inlstrN JO. Fankal. Walual strict. Pb holelphan le-sallartaana, Cbherlll Hynes W Mauna. flivramtle, tras v t ry • lAtalsollfab. R. /mood. Va . 1p'0,12.• FISLI-400 bble. largalslo.3 sLackezett 441 La toga. ti OC4 • 41a - itomott. urns; t
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers