THE DAILY . ..PITTSBURGH GAZETTE. ESTABLISIIRD IN tiss .. . . BITSTNESS • DIRECTORY; .. M. 1.112.21110114, a 00.!0 ADIVIMON. 0 LCIENCY 122 Naaut "Misr, tirtrYnair. . Inn 21• - •, 10, eas:e street, &atom —.— r. A 0.. no Avosts for tro afoot latlmatal sad Istgelit re.l.ting noannorrefal Pawn Whitt th• United ntatam ad th• Canada'. • Bela Stale for 1856. 9 1111 a /INA Moo, inwr TOM leette the attention of buyers from all • iTatirreWszaini. ra,„ zmat, ,Lowt.,„: ...Ikgratz g .....001 4 = th 5im" , " arortment ‘ Ut9f PAT T ERN BOASTS. 11 1 " 1 , T bi th sy: Wu. ItigaELT RAU., • • 0 11 P ark Phu" Neer York. - - The British Ede Glue ' , Comeau. exam/BAD. LAIKWIEWM.RMIL.A.M.'. - Witrehonse for the United States, tc, JOEUi n.PLiTT, - ' NI MuSAY ACrcat. rim York. WEBS ' be fond a fall assortment - a BON ape ri tif Pollebad . Plate for Storm and Noose front'. 8 caw. Co. ABB./Lough ONs. 8.... X to/ji Imam N. 8.-1 4 V. neri ate:vier:ld to the ti.. atm.. Bowe of stAkdazotroa. Btu* to glued wi th the Plata Glair at Opannur. • mb..ls;sagt, E .. 1!1 ... :1AM1.a1 . a itOMMISSION MERCHANTS, Cotton end Woolen Machinery. tenott.. andltalire, Madrintile noir. &Wn g , - 11nartnissnul Dealers In .thinnlketaftre ArClekr, Ho. O 7 Pine Eit., New York. N. Et.—A Rants Ibr "WOODICURP 2 SLAM IRON WOBJin." EacanCEnseines and. Bolin.; knolzurva__Anonor 1n Noir York far LOWELL DIACHINEIIIIOV alnalanints , Tool. .roan. • Hough's Patent Elastic Skirt,. 4AII I RTES FRANOS, No. 1 Barclay area; , New York. ' TION—NOno aro .pattltto aunt thor hop the atop °Mot pottmt. • All utatomfacturat &tot alien Lek •otsior Do promeatat so:oat= to Isar. rob2o-o • W. JACKSON & BON. ORATE AND FENDER M )(ER, .40 rnoNrsz. 4 OM HROIDWEr NEE .IVE E. paid ry FLEABANE'S PLATFORM BOLLES. THE undersigned having been, appointed acclaerce Mazda the ea• or tame celebrated LL& rosardeccured ttsorlstn,l lanators E. k T. FAIRBANKS A _CO., sithsnr Wird eftentkot of the Wawa coadacialtr motd intriaterfty • lese Frodesores dew. ..eillcares rbeen' 'ablated to the eitvzszsr rmaa ell tbe irelpal Patina& so the United States rzwilda. Dothan the reputatio of bedew THE arAlvo AMU: Z.,E.8 OEN NE NO ETP.EJLE—. Ws_ araoretate& to 1111 orders for Coulter, Portable, 'llonalom-Routrioult; U. coel, Railroad sad (lanai killearalaraltaftiot.lPEMP. . Ito.= Liberty drat, Clommerelal Row aallyd Pitts 'errtsimusit COACH • FACTORY. RIGELOW dt CO., Ilincesneots to E. Y. Bigelow. Ga S 3. 4 1 t DIAMOND 4it.. 1, gag Pittsburgh, Penna. 1 !CACHES, CARRIAGES, PHATONS, bVitasstl i t r t 4 gr. de i stritititto Num Oddities rAa— lUdra let univ = i n lrartantB4. • ws:mdaridatoN &CO wIfOLESALE GROCERS. Prodnee and ,Comminsion Merchant/6 ..LETD MULLIS IN Pittsburgh Manufactured Articles, No 219 Idlborty strut, tome of /noin, okyll PITITHIII3OII. PA ioirsti COOLgy, W LIOLESALE GROCERS AND BOA? FURNISHERS; DEALERS IN Produce and Nttibnrgh Manufacture', . • - .No. 141 Water &Met, my 26 ""C IaTBB AR DGEL PENNA. PAINTERS. LONG SIGN ANE, , 110IISE AND PAINTERS. No: TT : i" en roxitl ai rrk r t, I H lPreetir" gr. All- orders promptly I:tter4ed. to. WlLffiltna Wentad in • superior styl.. 11X. M. WUXI. ROBINSON, MINIS it MIMEOS AND ENGINE BUILDERS, sad Maaasataress of all deserlytlaos - Outtoll6 Moo, Ha9l hiszkot stmt. betmon Iltna- sad daostd - Watches and Jewelry. L a EN hEItOSITIRTS; 16.5 th t.. tams sg iitinstnean . antis. tuts • oll3sldautd Etil.. Patent. Ism, Pk ' Ansbor'• mut IstassWatebsw to open sattlartalessisoollbamost •HeilEin&dreateld " Rob tattiagsq • Keys; Sibtlatitni ClOS,Nzwiletx . . z Pans and Cum Panel% Tooth ibtssaitati.pia Sot and tttal itgpalUngs, &mat Fins..Ear,Rlturat . Cnit• Pins. a - Oh Owlys Lotis.astd 131114 flp,natstat. num lipospa,Entsas and- Vats. Je'L Cana- and, Maras Geod.. &In; p lams stock of ths Cat Beast (Nadu, at The above stoat bsa-branpareMsd wan the Itsataralt and selected with t awl tar th.mattDada-wad be sold at • advance on WattdaniOlocke and Jewelry matted; Gilding and En graving a/seated /11 the bud manner. and Mints Was and isnalry wade to cedes. JAIL twdbraTb. fifth muses liarkst. S. N. WICEERSUM, BALE AND 'I3IVAIL ._ - DIRIOGIAT._No. SU Llbort7 ot. flood oft Wood. Pitt lograls, P. st.osys keeps on -bawl sod for eau Emend sadoosostotosamotsomt of Dross: tdselloiso; Pals toy OW, Pie naffs, .Window GLas of oil Patty, Perfottitf. Patent solPtopttotary ott. ens% eta T° ag°, gm& an %D. Stull/row Zstabllstusuntt of 31. r. Jost ;sotto, No. Liberty stmt.!. shall tr how to tocmz old hinds.= Sltt MIStOICIM Of /dr. Moths. and Mutt nett ..tosins to VOWS Most with on Ithtte, Boa VI, 1866. Itatbsinqi-64 VO 1 t R Btt+at. 41 hay aty—Telculph h' fibs-tit:. OliesDer. Noe drighice. glows. Omcs gam =e eg Cu, I Pittsburgh, Dee. 20, 1514.1 Commercial Rotol, °arrive Oita and N6lO Lens, New Orleana. K. STEEL would moot reap= . fe.IT int= tha trawling igiblie that ha en the alma mud Beta. Th. Hotel by weently taHlartione a thorough retina end namable. ea 6 bta DWI fitted tip_ with new sal Ow ems traniturn. wanening, ga, aa T o Pronleing inn n awe and annum to the ecimint and wanta of the The, table will ba eapplial with the Wig that nu mutate abed. 3bla (total Mai sitnatia in the Imen 4 dlata 'Malty of bosl of the tat', u wl . lbaing oonvimien Lontaw, hypo that by tat its want' , t e tapatrons tar t to rah* that liberal bargonage tint haw era been bestowal owe tido hon. Prioo of Board per Day,lll,oo. Ttis Ilsr will bee stocks 4 with Mao and Isaors Infetri or to on Wow booms inter ette. " AL good Lan.hitow 10. to 13 A. If. Mao obliges and secoroinociating snap/Linn jain....nd" • C. BUaoli;ag pt ._,- -- LE MON k OO.—TRANSPORTATAON AA tim i tig l ia . . 4 4 4. ez .i tessin Cri i m 42 ..lisim bumbler by r MIN and RAILBOAD, tmi000• to auk PM, tb• Banana Mir. We eau um" ow (Asada slid Withal di•Ploot te Pat. rods tbitlinas. Clad sod Sism i = z that MNFili =3-te reader sot to os NA Wastsm t. Th. • _••••• ot D. sumo Plaszi t % l 3 tb• • 14.10• Alumna 1,111 • %errand WO* a, i v itrilit. . I=P X street.stilis - . PITTSBURGH GAZETTE. WEDNESDAY MORNING, JUNE 18, 1856 • Advance Payment.—thereafter no cub wipe= win 0. taken for the Dar Or Wietly Owns. ,oleo perment Is made In advance. Whenever the time le op to which the enbeeriptlon le MU. the pater wet be Invariably &MM.!. unless the enterription le re weed by &dram. payment. All trenelent IC eyeey deeniption. will be squired to be bead In ul Tame. The ordr creeptlo. el/I he when sperlel month Ir or ream, emanate are made. eeplolter V3..PIEt• VW oeittr linsette.-11to ortanslvo else elation °four Wally axadtt arm to con bludness may • most dostratd• moditun of making that , booln•es known onzetrcolatlon 1 between nom Ind Er• thansuld. ruching •moat ovory marobant. msncinteturor and oho boom to Western Ponnotranba, and Eut.rn Ohio. Prom th. Newark DMI7 Adratieer. ltth. Views of Judge Dl'Lean. Chief Justice Hon:blower to Judge H'Lean. 1.4 swear, Tuesday, May 13, 1856 MT Data Bta—Your communication to the Habana/ Ints!Jigsaw of December, i 847, has just been reproduced here, and I have nowitead it for the first time. I have been looking, with no little solicitude, for the decision of the Su preme Court, In the case lately argued, involv ing the constitutionality of the Missouri prohi bition; a question of great practical importance now, when the traditional policy of the country from the period of Independence, on the tub }eel of Slavery, Is Bought to be overturned.— Though it is a long time eince I left the Bench and the active pursuits of the proteetion, and but a short span remains for me here, I conti nue to take great interest in the decisions of the Courts and in the political questions of the day, especially snob as relate to Slavery, which seems to override all other questions, and shape ourentire national policy. I will feel greatly obli ged to you if you will put me in the way of get ting a copy of the decision as goon as it shall be made. And now, as I am on the enbject, I moat suit a few words to unburthen myself, for I feel most deeply in the present oriels. Of course I do not offer on my own part, nor. .neek on yours, any intimation of opinion on the constitutional question now judicially before you, in advance of the judgment of the Court. I know too well what the proprieties of your position demand of yourself and of me to do so, and Indeed your known views on this point leave me, so far no you are concerned, nothing to learn, nor any thing to desire. The broad ground maintained by you in tho communication to which I bane referred, to quite satisfactory to me on that heed. If your con struction of the Constitution were enforced, we should have no more slave States, nor any fur ther extension of Slavery. But upon the great political question of the day—the admission of Kansas se a free State—the Israel now being made up for the decision of the .great tribunal of the people, I feel at liberty to speak freely. You and I are natives of the same State—the little, but patriotic State of New Jersey. Your birth was cotemporaneons with the adoption of the immortal ordinance which prohibited Slave ry in the Northwestern Territory, and secured freedom to the great States of Ohio, Indiana, Michigan and Wisconsin; mine preceded that event several years. Yon were early plant ed on the frontiers to grow up among the hardy pioneers, with those young empires which have sprung up at your feet, as if by magic at the touch or toe wand of Liberty; and I have linger ed amid the battlefields of Monmouth, of Prin ceton and of Trenton. Both have lived to see Slavery abolished in our native State, and both have witnessed from the beginning the glorious results of the humane and patriotic policy of oar fathers, so happily signalised by that bene ficent and inspiring measure to which the free Weal is so deeply indebted. With these results before us, nurtured and schooled as we have been among the men of the Revolutionary period, and intimated, as I trust we are, by the true spirit of enlightened Chris. tlanity, we cannot look upon the scenes of vio lence, of bloodshed and of civil and fraternal war in Kaunas, countenanced as they are by a faith• less Administration, and a powerful but ruthless political party, with deep mortification and alarm, nor without burning indignation. We need, my dear Sir, for this difficult crisis, at the head of public affairs, a wine, patriotic, well balanced, experienced, firm and self-reliant Mittelman, whose known qualifiestione and char acter may inspire universal respect and confi dence with all right-minded men. With such a Sot I shall feel safe, and I am glad to see the public mind turning toward you. It is an augn• ry of good. It lean evidence that the imminent dangers of the crisis are appreciated, for it is in times of storm and peril, that the fearful and the faithful naturally turn to snob as you for safety. The present Congress ought not to adjourn with out admitting Kansas u a Free State. You are on the spot, and as this ia purely a political question, and partakes not at all of a judicial character, you may properly express your opin ions and eternise your rightful Influence in re gard to It. The exigency domande that we over look mere forms. When fraud and violence stalk abroad over oust of the fairest of the heritages of Freemen, sad when it is sought to plant Sla very in the *gin coil of that beautiful Territory at the point of AO bayonet, it is no time to talk of tecbnioalitlek.„:!. The peace and honor of the country are notittlibt deferred to such consider ations as these.'3jus population of Kamm, before the begbanineoVOSlther Congress, and possibly before the close otihipreeent, will run up to 100,000, if the war el.:S.ol6lJan and exter mination now going on there eb4ll be impended by so wholesome and patriotic Intessure. Bat I mat stop. It I should giva,:wsy to my feel ings, I should weary your Waren. I hope my days may be prolonged _Wee. this consomme. tion, so devoutly to tOvliaied, and then I may say with a peculiar . deletion my "uses dimittm." Yours most respectfully sod truly, 3ey . rn C. Hosantowsn. indge IPLean's Reply Ctaour►rt, Friday, June 6, 1856. MT DIAZ BIM Your eloquent and riatriotio letter of the 13th of May was forwarded to me from Washington, and came to ht.nd on my way to the West, when I had only time to acknowl edge Its receipt and my obligations for your warm excavations of kindness and confidence. Since then I have been engaged at my Circuit In Indianopolia. • Ton will have learned before this from the public papere, that the fdlteourt salt to Which your letter refer* was continued to the December term end s reargument ordered. Of course, I cannot now properly esy anything la regard to it, but I must express lox gratiflegalon is kixow log that you are sehafied with ray elm, ►tren dy publicly wowed, ►e to the constitutional pow er of the General Gaon:meat over the subject of Slavery In the Territories. Your allusion. to our native State and Its bat tledelds, and to the home of my adoption and the ordinance, of 1787, so intimately connected with his history, tiring to me grateful remit:de canoes. For New Jersey I have ever oheetished a filial pride and regard; though limited In territory and population as compared with other of her Aster Mates, ale has at all times been strong In those high qualities which are only developed in an advance stage of civilization, and ban wiel ded a moral force superior to her relative politi cal power. My father left Ireland a young man, and landed at Wilmington, in Delaware, at the dawn of the Rovoludon. He boon after be came a citizen of New Jersey, and occupying en humble position In the common walks of life, he aspired to no nigher place than that-of a pri vate in the yanks of the revolutionary army, and bravely bore his part as a . In the battles of Monmouth Princeton and Trenton-- The memory of a father's service, however humble, in so glorious a struggle, may welt be oherithed by a eon with proud satisfaotion. I was born to your County of Morris, but after the close of the Devolution my father, with hii,oung (sadly settled in the north4westera territory, where It has been my favored lot to grow up un =der the coogenlil influences of that immortal Or dinance vihleb has wisely guarantied Liberty forever to thatbeantifal region, and which her millions of peaceful and patriotic people will never 060A1111 I* romance as the foundation of their progress, prosperity aud.power. It has been to maa source of the deepest re gret and of the most painful apprehelsicm for the safety of our institutions, to witness the growing indifferenee and hostility, developed mote generally during the tut few years, to this salutary principle of that great measure of Jefferton. Some, indeed, have ventured to question ita constitutionality, althea& for near ly seventy.yeare It has been the Memo of en loglum with lawyers and statesmen of the high. est eminence In all 110(310118 of the country, and has received the unction of every judicial tri banal In which it has besuidisatuised, and that, too, in the Slave States • • In these latter days .lindro-lanterus, genera ted in the bottomless marshes of party politics, seem to allure quite as many followers as are found in the path illustrated by the parer and and safer lights. emitted from the precepts and examples of the sages of the retolutionary peri od, and political potion swum to be directed Tither by mmiderations of conceived party ne "with than by the suggestions of MASON Ju do, and patriotic principle. Occupying the position I do, it is not permit ted to me to speak Of the traneactlons In Hai*, In their legal-serick but , I may say with itia, that I estattanplate the violence, bloodshed an t{ and fraternal war now transpiring there with mingled emotions of sadness, alarm and mortification. They are the frnite of that ill advised and mischievoue Measure—the repeal of the Missouri Compromlee—which from the first, I have earnestly deprecated; and I have no heal titian in saying that the immediate admission of Sanas as a State into the Union ender the Con stitution already fanned, commends itself to me as a raceme of sound policy, and well calcula ted to bring peace to the Territory end to the country. With these views, I have not been backward in adining la all Imitable ways the adoptions that measure. There are eeveral precedent of which may be appealed to insupport of it, and especially that of the admission of Michigan.— It would do no injustice to any Beet:lon of the country. It would powerfully tend to tranquilize the public mind, allay sectional jealousies, and bring the great mese of the people to the earnest support of the Constitution and the- Union in their prestine integrity. The South would hers no just cause to complain of it, and indeed ongb t freely and generously to yiild it upon the altar of publlo good. Since the adoption of the Con stitution, as many Blare States as Free States have been admitted into the Union ; and the Sl ime stake, while they have only about one fourth of the white population of the country, embrace a much a larger extent of fertile Ter ritory, with a more genial climate than the Free Statee. No intelligent observer can fail to see that the tendency of our institntitms is now rapidly down ward, and all history and experience show that no free government, with such tendencies was ever arrested in its declining career without a revolution, either by a peaceful change of its Roney and rulers, or by the bloody arbitrament of the sword. It is an axiom in government no Clear u any !ninthly° truth that no free govern ment can rest upon any other than a sound mor al basis. In this must consist its strength.— How much of this foundation remains for our model Republic It will be well far the people, yet virtuous and enlightened, to ponder Lassa son. If they do not see or appreciate thekollany ger, it le in vain that they hold the *liter t6r4p-' pi/the corrective. With great :respee;-14111 very truly yours, JOHN M'LEAN. The Hon. J. O. Hountowia. To My Countrymen—A True Statement Crutoaae, June 11, 185 G. To Me Editor of the Chicago Trihtme : I wfah to make, for tho benefit of your read ers, a true statement of the manner in which Free State men in Kansas are treated by the mob which has now possession of the Territory, and Missourians on the border, as proved by my own case. I emigrated to Kansas in March WI, and set tled in Lawrence, where I took no part An - the political troubles, by which the Territory bas been convulsed. In all respects I endeavored to demean myself as a good citizen sod an bon. eat man. On Thursday, the 6th of the present month, I had occasion to go to Kansas city, Mo., with my oxen and wagon, for a load of freight, Consist lag of household goods for an emigrant In my employ, who was with me. On my return with the load, I was obliged to pass through West pori. When shoat a mile or a mile ana a half from that village, I came upon a camp occupied by about slaty or seventy Missourians and Ala bamians. Here I was met by a aquad of these men, armed with muskets, rifles and aide arms, who demanded of me to stop. "Here's a d—d Abolitionist," was the cry, "let us !are him any how." I procured spars which had been given to me by U. S. Marshal Donaldson: but they swore it was a forgery: They proceeded to break open the boxes in the wagon, and to scatter the goods about In the road. When this was going on, I was sent into their camp, where I was question ed thus: "What's your name?" "C. 11. Barlow." "Where do you live?" "la Lawrence" "Where are you from?" "Waterbury, Connecticut." "What are your politics?" "I am a Free State man." "How much money did that d—nod Emigrant Aid Society give you, to come out here?" "Who give you a rifle, riemiher or Billiman?" "Neither, I brought no gun of any kind t,o the Territory." "What the hell did you come mit here for?" "Why to get a home and make money" ' "And to make Kansas a Free Stater "That's my intention now I am here." • • • •. •Why dirm you go to Nebraska; that's 's good country,. and you d—d Yankees may have it; but K111111.1,' you will have to fight for, and wall whip hell out of you, bet we'll got it Union or no Union!" "That's a game that won't win I'm thinkinV' After much more of this sort, interlardsti with impious oaths and ruffianly threats, I was asked: • " , If we'll let you to, will you take a gun and march with the Prolllavery party?" To this I had but one word in reply, and that was, "Never." Immediately there was a cry for ..ne ropes, bcp! the ropes."' These were apeedily brought sod a noose was thrown over my head and around my nook, and I was dragged to the nearest tree. i exclaimed. "You do not Intend to kill me in this manner, do you?" -VENG—d d—n your Abolition heart, and ell like you." I begged, if I was to be sacrificed to their fury and causeless hate, that I might have tsme to &Meet my thoughts .4 arrange my 'mildly affairs. I was told that if I had any property to dispose of, or my peace to make with God, that I would be allowed just ten minutes for both. I gave a man among them, who I learned, was called Bledsoe, and who seemed to think that I was to bo killed without cause, a schedule bf my effects, and asked him to send It to my brather in-law, at the East, whom I named. At the expiration of the little time given me, I wee again dragged to the tree, the ropb was thrown over a swinging limb, and, in spite of the remoastrancee of Medi:4 and of Treadwell, who also began to plead my cause, I was jerked from the ground and suspended by the neck; I cannot tell for how long, but, probably,ifor a brief period auly, when Troadwell, whq was called Major. and appeared to have command, peremptorily ordered me to be let down. ' 1 was again questioned: "Will you leave the Territory if we'll spare your life?" To this I demurred, saying that I had offended no law, or infringed no man's right. The leader again Interposed, and told mq that maims I would promise be coultr , not cave my life. Re told me, that I was guilty of no crime, except that of being a Free State man;: that I had a right to be, though he would admit-that I had no right to stioh opinions In Kansas. .. At last. hid ruffian followers extorted trot me the promise they required, giving me just tirelie hours to make tho promise good. I was then sent with a guard to Kansas city, to see thet: , l_ , did. eat escape. My oxen , and wagon woretakenTpomession of, and l with! lees than flab deltoid is Irk) , pockets, was forced to take the nett boat, and leave the oonotry. In isonolosion, I declare that I have beed abd am a Isw•abiding and parietal man; thee my mission to Kansas eitiwas one perfectly !airfoil and proper, and that so far as I know, ,II am driven but of the Territory only because or my political opiniona—my desire toinake Sanaa a Free State. My Cabe Is not a aolitary one. Every man of my opinions;: who falls Into; the same hands is liable to the same Miring and!thle in Kansas, is called "Law and Order." • (Signed) 0. B %taw*. - , Utah—its &oral Condition, andits Pcllit fealTeraftnds. , ; There Is a singular tionneotion between Sodom. and Utah.. When the math . of: God had sank the aides of the Plain, there flawed Ovelolll ruins • great salt lake; heavy, gloomy and soil itary. In the midst of the old world It etood a monnment, whether of natural or preternatiral power, which ;teemed cut off from the smile's At Providence and the assoolailoas of men. There was something in It which could not be account ed for, and which was unpleasant to tools upon, This la the opening paragraph of • very able article from the pen of the editor of the Chicle. nett Gewtte, which, did our limits permit, we should like to copy entire. After breaking the enbjectia a phil os ophical and general point of view, the writer proceeds: Against any suppression of each an ergant zthlongtini n w. ot hi lden ia tical two , bo u re ° ry t Pen apt o'n4 to agree l4° . The Brett are those who will say that all '0 0 1 2 9. Must be tolerated under'our Constitution. perfectly true, but crimeand vices am not re There is a great mistake se to the tiUttter of fact. People have a. right,ltstder the *Oen stitotion of the United States, to erouldp:God u the please, but they can claim no other right than that. They have no right,' in ` -the or commit of "Religion" to practice anylndecentni or commit any crime. diormeniam, for numb, pecznits Its disciples - to hares dozen law; but ihe'inifs of Ohio call this bigamy and adultery, andi In spite of any religion whatever, WI send the .papetratheiof tusk leasep . the Pengree7. • We apprehend the; many, even Intellionst persons, have Tay looseldesa se to what until. VOLUME LXIX--NUMBER 256 gioa" Ii legally, and what the Constitution says about it. It is very' de/113010 that before the cue of Utah comes up in Congress this subject I may be looked Into. I Religion in a coratitutionel reuse simply means the right to worship God according to the mode and system of the worshippers, and Its practices are held subject to the civil law. The Gravy people at New Haven, who thought they had a revelation to kill somebody, and did; musk of course, be punished for murder or sent to the Lunatic Asylum. 'Society can permit no viola ' tion of It, have because a man fannies it reli gion. In this sense the Constitution looks at it, and the only restriction on the powers of Can .. eta ever religion is contained in an amend ment. It is this, that "Congress shall =keno . law resp ecting an establishment of religion, or pro biting the freermercise thereof." While, the , Congress cannot u estabWili"a religion nor I.‘probibir worship, they have perfect and giant' control osir . every - practice under it which they may deem mjarlone to, society. Dal there may be another and a more dangerond obuisrof portions islitrwlllriot Interfere with the pre/nines of the Mormons, although it will in volve them in a very Unpleasant predicament.— We mean those who set up the doctrine that Congress cannot restrict the people of the Ter ritories 3n eny way. • -The Nebraska act was in tended only to let in Slavery. Its friends never thought of Mormonism and Beads= ' But they will have more than they bargained for. Utah has formed her constitution, and. Will soon de mand admission. She ignortanlavery, and she iynores polygamy and sunari other little mat ters of that sort. She has de idea of evading Brigham Young to the penitentiary dor holding fifty Wing any more than fifty slates Wbakia to be done? The Nebraska prhsol: pie, as It is called, certainly covers the:Oafs Case and Douglas, mitheirechenie of PolleoVmust let in Brigham and his harem - forthwith. Some of their Southern allies, and a great many wind Democrats, however, detllW.altiiier to this conclusion. This was not the feast- they were invited to. The Aturahando example still do well enough on the • subject of Ellaverj; - but as sc wives, concubines, childrim, and some other par ticulars, there are some doubts.'.The thing is a little too overdone. What did'well enough in Carmen and among Moabite, and Amalekites, under the warm MU of Asia, may not do so well in North America In the Nineteenth oentary. In fact, It is very doubtful democracy, and is pretty mire not to draw with the democracy at aIL What to to be detest The Richmond Whig gays: "Beneath the surface Is that horrible moral and social pest—polygamy. It is difficult is say what should be done. Congress has.no right to dictate the domestic laws of any State, but it has Me right to refine to admit a Territory, coto the Union as a &We It will be a terrible diegrace to the Union to have a State tolerating and en couraging polygamy; but it - may be that is the best means of Worming that deluded people." Queer sort of reformation that will bet Dis graceful such a State would be undoubtedly. If the politicians should admit it, to get rid of a difficulty, how vain will be the attempt! The tide will coon beer maases of other kleds of peo ple among them, and then, as in Illinois and • Missouri, tire and sword will terminate the con troversy. The evil which a kind parental hand might have averted, will grOw tip into the fury of civil war inns wiped out by the bosom of destrastien. Utah now elands in Us lonely, isolated condi tion by the waters of the Great Salt Lake. Thera is something which associates it with the most terrible judgments of the peat. There is some thing in it Think fosters evil for the !Chun. It will be well for the sober, consaderats men of the country to look to its origin, its condition, and its demands. Let freedom go tolls utmost, verge •bat let not this Heaven-favored . country embrace a Heaven-defying iniquity for the sake of any party or party question. " BLING . Patent 'Riveted T and Stretched - LEATHER BELTING, From the Itfannfaotot7 of Hoick, Brothers, NEW FOBS. the Belting of this mannfactnro has been awardial the Gold Nadel tad Dipinothe from fray Fair and Inetihite Woman= the United &stem the temd mod of the American Inctitata New York. at their lest meeting in the Fan of 1663. leis oft. Perim quality. ovary lira.• of the buthem Way =duct ed under the yeramel iare or the brincipelrtheir Wee are selethed by thennetar at Matt awn neetring bon". trumrlar treedoco from cote and econa tanned at their own taut atter the bellies and hareyem trimmed o Warned to New Toth thm Lath from vat; =Med bninedlatel7-7Qmod .Watched on machtswe with every rimicese Ldtr cemented and Melted with their patent come Meth. barn which meta a pa ileMy even seeks on- troth MAN orthe band, angst them to run trail. an the pathos, thdairhat a power of mom than 2) per mt. mew thole nudes eordineiT manner. To EMICIIIMieII or all Mader to cotton and woolen tuanaractinera roillaut roilla power makera sawing end planing anatnichments, owners or grat Wlls, tot= ens. Meath verb; Me boas; in abort to errsl7 comomer. Chia Belting I. oacially roccatateud.d. she best of city rehamesa alien to the el:rainy of this lieldrut For oak by_kl. DS LANG; No. an Liberty et.. emelt. Me Wed °Mood: womiawdAnctivwri DELAY NOT. Ye who Consi der a fine head of Hair NATURE'S GREATEST ORNAMENT, but ars It is to lots as BANDEIrd SCALP TOMO, ittdob restorer the hsalthc a lekno of the soap, ulnas tsar to grow on tits Dal sad chocks otor tozosacy to Its faith= out sad es thin. Ifir for sato st_ttor principal druirdits. mad by ths sro. prima. alaTil eta doors Wow Ettoittutsl4. „ =IS Meyer, stout & Morganroth, Sculptors, Stueoo.Workers it Wood Carvers, No. 222 -Penn'et., near Irwin, EIGURES of all kinds; also Ornaments in Pl•Wrot Par% Wood sal Marble , ate. ibr docent buthihm both ioskle sod out. Vrevrinas ofenry dm:dation and style famished et the " ' " A. Krebs & Bro.. • LIT.HOGRAPHEY.B, N. 74 Third Street. Elmweb lialia44. Ll VERY KIND OF DRAWING EN a GILAVING AND PRINTIN4 examato , 4l,l4 tbs test tya. at. =dant& 7rIN. 141214thrl ROCERIES= 11 . 1.13 ends. H. 0. Bum wina qualltr 60 bbl. Loot and Or uhed . hogar. dad ..mbar, 455 do N Holum, brlam.anlilty, brook motranda, 76 do St June. beet liiisernoWb Wolawn. 100 bags =l, Chun Rio Cotbm „ 10 R R and Wm 11 Grant's 54 Tob6Min 8 Log. aft twist Tobaeam • 5 to prlo c 1=1117: 90 texas Soap and 6 do Puri Star& • . With an moortmont at 1 0 1 1 K to; • - • The above satialia 1 MR nall ion for coati or Dots. at short dalos, ea 1 Inland mining _fromntodoom la favor of m 7 Dna lot J,.17 nait. 11031777.0118111T0111112R8R, _m7lB - - 200 Lldrity stmet. The Taylor Aron Works for Bale. THIS elegant Boding .81111, In _Ben= now ered tor ale— bnotlfolly on the won le Motor off Lleklos river.lt Is The moo boat, Is 030 feet long by ISO 'fifth* Mosul:l3*o* of 10 Inch eV. *der 6.120 *eh strolul, sad the other 23 Poch 3:11 , stroke, elth mp. . boUrre. to re order, Alio, roll tan!g lathe,dr fames. with l3 wee of gram* The mill Is with*. two days et heiwg ready to manufacture iron. The shave &lathed =wear .111 *void at Public Aorticoo, tre, pregoiew. WllOl. NEBDAT, Jane Ph. 1836. st. 10 A. bl., terdees pterlatta r 01= hr ;Neste es* Ilber* to be madetown ow the der of ado.— Addrees POWiLL. DUDINS &CO.. Newport, AT. mill Cannel CoaL dIRDERS FOR CANNEL COAL WILL Iv womer. Mad.. If dropped la the order bum at tes ranter of Pound sad Wood tta at Vr. Bohai Wray's !tars 13adtbdld stmt. oppadte tta I% 0.. or at 11. Weema's Kara =WM of Idburrtr sad ifsjets w, Pltta• burets sad In Alleetteartity. at tbe Coal DsDat or dual. DT•ed i%eoraar Paters! sad Leadock sat Tame Dad 07 60 Der toy dalTred or gi •21 at Ile Nev. Nut do LW— 20,) 2_" Tonad drama dollnai. •10 JNO. WHITN co. / . 101".P.ER A BRASS KETTLES-A full J ws r aaussodrtotsa WI a oh m M . o a f t a ,v yc tOmd TirWens. T. J. r h CO. CYPTEN STON ' IT Ws for sale by - B.A. FAUNEHrOCIE CD. ion eonker !test and Wood it. VIIESSE-50 'boxes prime reed and for sal• by J. 6 WITIMCMIEBON. 219 Liberty St. ACON BHOULDERS-5 asks for sale lair to dose Sr . DAVID C. DDRIDT. PEACHES -100 bite halves -reo'd and for sale by WIL Liberty Bt. POTASH -.. 8 casks of•No 1 rcced and for gal. by. WV. ItaCCIVISON. 419 Litmty Bt RAIN CRADLES of eve r vane ror VI sato by i.e .110LE16114COLLwaan R. AWN GRASS aeries: a ißpetios.4rti o fez .1. by J. /iOLw. COLIns- B. SOLI:LES' WE CHESTS for We by Jlata %Mm o m c It. 8 a geOijafgrat . iFW - . Amt. WO, Ratko, liturCting.-0, vatanis. as lov tem. JO& HIJZZLEIM.77-Malct st. VANS! VANE—Spa: As 'fbidisin; I: Palma. Etuda aad otheyinlia ghat allaild.6 Jnot rasa Ind, iitio &Sri oboist Whin aim ma= at 166 . NOMPEI47 Katie st. 411 D & GRASE-Ibt§tiar,l,ll cloCizesum y 001 bags nawlaniol stea er Jamb Pos, lbw aMisawmasz: 00. VOTTON--88 bake now ,landing from •Jj e t Jamb PQ hMt DID MED APPLES-1 -tom on - band and hassle law Iry lot }MAT May *co. - - - - - - L111)---20 kegs No 1 lezd for sale by L Imam a co. - MLS-250 kegs NsSls wed - sizes, in garesadbe sasbr 125 bbls O. Tar bbLP, in r e sto l tadnessiebT 111,1441.-M&CO. puiIVIAN .GUANA Oa t.. • t %gland, (Cr/a4 Dr No. =wok Etna. • 110LKEZik COISZIL T HE IforgealPootiinti. How tay - ICesip is n E M:s llU te r°t xmariel4Alrad st. nusug_ ix isosbazis:PrinThe a "zig . i"t -vmhism,wo7- 'm="l B ROLiWLLi9a